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12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,

1r It
~c ~~ rrom
-cber

S.. 14, !977

i--------------------------,

chances m said Dill. Tbe Superinl.endent wiD at aU times have

PQolted in hla Office a current seniority list which will be

THOMAS W. AUTHERSON
Funeral services for
Thomas
W.
(Willie)
Aut her son, 84,
Iormor
Mlddlef.ort and Bradbury
reslden , who died T""day In
Columb&lt;Js, will be held at 2
p.m . Thursday at the
Rawlings Coats
Funeral

available fer lrupection during regular working hours by any
and-or the Organiuhon.
Section F - U there is a vacancy in 8 negotiating unil
poeiticm, laid off teachers who are certified to perform the
._
llrll"•ln question will be recalled in seniority order.
U a laid off teacber has displaced another teacher or has
been recalled U&gt; a position other than that which ~e held
immediately prior to his-her layoff, he-6he will remain eligible
recan In accordance with the provisions of &amp;lb
1

for

above.

Home.

·

s.~·.~~;.r:"'..;~~ l:"'iaf.

Section

··

Area Deaths

!

Pll' 11

Notice rJ. recall will be given by telegram or registered
mall U&gt;the lutaddress given In the board by a teacher. A copy
al th
.
e not1.ce of recall will be given In the Organiution. If a
teacher fails to respond within ten (10) days after receipt of the
above notice of recall, hMhe will be deemed u, have refused
the position offered.
·
·
. .
.
A teacher who is laid off will remain on the recall list for
tweSity.four (24) mooths after the effective date of his-her·
layoff unless be-olle: waives his-her recall rights in writing,
resigns; fails to accept recall .to the posi"on that ·he held
"
Immediately prior •·
w his-her layoff or •·
w a su'-tan"·Uy
...,
....,.
equivalent position; ·or fails to report to work in a position that
beo$behasacceptedwithintendaysafterreceiptofthenotice '
of recall Wlless such employee is siCk or injured .. If a teacher
hu secured tempor·ary employm·ent elsewhere. he -•- WJ'U be
• "'""
allowed a reasonable amOWit of additional lime before being
required U&gt; report for work .
While on layoff, a teacberwillhave the option to remain an
active participant in the state teacher retirement sy~em and·
or other fringe benefit programs. by contributing tl)ereU&gt; ·the
amount hHhe would . have been requiret;l ·u, contribute if
actively employed, the board will contribute. the $mount· thatit
would have been required to contribute it the teacher were
actively employed.
.
. .
.
Section G - AD benefits to whiCh a teacher was e~titled at
the time of hJ.s.her layoff, including unused accumulated sick
leave and credits toward sabbatical eligibility. Will be .resU&gt;red
to him-ller upon .his-her return U&gt; active employment, and he·
she will be placed oo the jiroper step of the salary schedl.ile for
his-her current position' according to h!S-ller experience and
education. A teacher will not receive increment credit for time
spent on layoff nor will such tin\e count U&gt;ward the fuUillment
of time requirements for aCquiring tenure.
Section H followed, of approximately 2,000 words, defining
th~ rules governing the filling ' of a vacancy in any negotiating
wut under the agrement. Its provisions will be published
Thursday. ·
·

Thomaund Jennie Reynolds
Aulherson . He was also
·preceded In death by his wife.
Teresa Gardner Aulher501i ~ a ·
son and a daughter ; two
sisters and 1 brother. ' ·
Mr. Auther5on. a veteran of
the, U. S. Army during World

~':,"d/;.,7;•Cah~~t:'~r ~:~~~

and a member · of Feeney.
Bennett Post 128. American
Legion,. He served as a clerk
for 39 ye•r• for theN~ York •
Central •Railroad. ·~
Surviving ore his son-In·
low and daughter, Paul and
Rowena Johnson. Columbus;
two grandchildren, Roger
Johnson and wife. Debbie, of
Grove City; Charles Johnson
of Columbu.s, and a greatgranddaug hler • Megan
Johnson. Grove City.
Offic iating at services will
be Rev . Donald Raley and
burtal will be In the Mid·
dleport HiII Cemetery:
Fr iends may call at the
luneral home at anytim.,.

New

I1

._

Town employs Mildred Zirkle

(Continued !ram pq1 I)
the dty 's elecU&gt;rate could spell trouble for YQUOK.

HARTFORD, W. Va. Mildred Zirkle was hired by
the Hartford Town Council at
ROBERT CUNNiNGHA~I
WASillNGTON - THE SENATE liAS VOTED to nudge a recent regular meeting to
Robert 0 . C"nnlngham of
St. Marys. W. Va., passed Americans Inward fuel-&lt;!l!icient homes, cars and offices, while answer phone can. and take
away Tue&gt;day night at 10 rejecllng any forced rationing of gasoline. By a 78-4 vole, the care of the mayor's office on
o'clock, Sept. 13 al Marietta Senate Tuesday approved the conservation segment of a regular bssiJ .
Memorial Hospital. He had
Tom Anderson asked
been Ill two years, ~rioos the President Carter's energy program, tbe third segment il has
acted oo . lt had previously passed bills for the Departmenl of COWICi!'s assistance In get·
pa&gt;l 42 days .
Mr. Cunningham r .. ided Energy and to hurry lndtLStrial conversion to coal.
ting Pointview Cable TV to
on Lower River Rd. for two
Within the next few weeks, the Senate plans to act on install ib system farther out
~:,~~- ~~5 '.~~
Ri~~~ r~ining portions of the program: energy taxes, utility rale West Point Road.
Collieries at Cheshire. He refonns, and natural gas pricing, all of which will then be
CoWicil asked pollee to
was ss years old.
compromised with the overall House energy bill. Carter~s plan remind all bicycle riders that
Surviving are ~Is wife, to expand federal cootrols on natural gas prices hit a snag they must have the proper
Anna · Mary
(Weekley)
Cunnirig~am; two daughters, Tuesday when the ~nate Energy Committee voted 15 U&gt; 2 to equipment for riding at night,
Shirley Cadle. Craigsville. W.' send his bill tn the floor without endor5ement. The Senate will which includes a head light on
·Va., and Susanna, at ~ome ; a consider the measure next week.
the front of the bike and a
son. Tlmolhy, at home; two
reflector on the back.
·. An or&lt;liilar\ce dealing with
~~~:r~~~·f:3'~~~'."&amp; :~~
Cunningham. Hooktowli, Pa .;
COLUMBUS - THE 58TH A1&gt;!NUAL CONFERENCE of dogs In town· limits was aP,.
one sisler, Grace Dawson, Ohio Health Conunissioners with the bhio · Department of proved ,requiring .aU loose
Georgetown , Pa .• and eight Health opened U&gt;day with a report of "good news and bad dogs be confined to . their
brothers· Denton C tis nd
ur a ; news" about Ohio's influenza immuni2ation prograin.
owners' proJ)erty. .
·
Harry. • East •Liverpool
William.
Harvey
and
"I have good news and bsd news about the program .. ·
Attending were. May'or
Clayton, Sf. Marys , and state Health Director John H. Ackerman said in reritarks · Charles Black, Recorder
James. of Miami. Fla .. and prepared lot delivery today. "The good news is that as of Aug. Peggy · Riley, and coun·
Arthur Cunningham. 125
Kineon Dr .• Gallfpoils.
1, we can no longer use the influenza va*ine· Tbe bad news is
Funeral arrangement• are that we have plenty of it on hand." Dr. Ackerman said his
Incomplete.
department is beginning an aggressive statewide
Immunization program.
'
'
" A much-needed infusion o( new federal dollars will help
us.U&gt; beef up our staff so that we may Increase olit assistance
WAREHOUSE ON
U&gt; local health departments," he said. " The increased funding
,IS part of the overall national initiative for more effective
lminunizatioo programs."
.

dJ:t;

1

Dissolution of
.
marriage
asked

specify your birth sign .

CONSOLE STEREO

r----'--.:....:.....:..._-1

Augusta
ONLV

COMMERCIAL TYPE DRYER

~ :c:Vh_f!iJ
-

CLEAR, RICH
NATURAL
SOUND

Brown
Smooth

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No. •· 22l To p.m. at he Grace Ep iscopa l

The
Meigs
Retired
Teachers Association have
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob.18) Be cancelled their meeting on
philosophical today. Take thf{_ Sept. 17. The next meeting
long-range view if yO'U have will be on Nov . 19.

hand made embroidered
tops and a great selection

problems. Th ings usually have a
The annual homecoming of
way of work ing out. They will for
Morris
Chapel
United
you .

of party jeans. They 'II

~1-Aprlt 18) It's

TAURUS (Aprii20-Moy 20) You

with
3-speed automatic
record changer, 8-track tape player.
Allegro 1000 speakers. Simulated
wood In Walnut fini sh.

may be . con~emplating refur. bishing your environment today.
You'd be wi se to choose app01ntment s of high quality.

100% SOLID·STATE

CANCER (Juno 21-.luly 22) Be

DIGITAL CLOCK

_'buy may Increase In value far

alert today that something you

numbers p lus Slee p
Swi t ch , Radio and
Rad io-Buzze r Alarms.
Choice of Wheat or
Gold c olor finish.

$49
INGLES FURNITURE

106 N. 2nd Ave.

•

Middleport~

Complete Selection
of Boots- Priced
s2o.oo to sso.oo

Hartley's Shoes, In
Middle of Uprer Block
Pomeroy. O~io
Open:

Po.m.top.m.
Mon. lh,.., Thurs.
· 9o.m.tolp.m. Fridoy
\

0.

RUDD GIVES UP
NEW YORK (UPI) -Mark
Rudd, who silent the !list
seven years in hiding, today
SUn'endered to New York
authorities to·answer charges
stemining from his role as a
leader of the militant
Weather Underground in the
turbulent 1960s.

"

Fa:J Semester.

••

PUBLIC NOTICE '

The Meigs County Board of

Health at their September
1977 meet ing adopted the
following resolution ;
"NOTICE OF
,

-~tlirct.yt.-. m ·~~r

....

""...\""

Stop In and Look. •
You'll Like What ·
You See. At the New
Store in Middkport.
On the T.

DELIVERY OF"

Any sewage disposaJ tank
or vault delivered to any
IOClllidn w,l lhln Meigs County
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) tn S§rious shall be made known to Me igs
County sanitarian w ithi n
situations today, don 't let your se
ven (1) days of delivery .
humor desert you. It's OK to· be
Further. upon delivery no
firm. but make an attempt to tank or vault shall be put in a
hole without first seeing the
·maintain your perspective.
sewage permit issued by
I NEWSPAPER t-:NTt;RPRJSE ...SSN.l
Me igs
County
Health

t
...
...

.....
.."'.
~

Oe_p artment .

( 1t InningS!
All
300 101 011 oo-?16 0
Sn Fr
1011AO 000 01 - 8 10 2
· Mah ter-, . Capra (4 L Ol!vey
(5}, Leo11 (6), Campbell f8 ) and
Murphv; Barr, Lavelle (6), .
Moffitt (9) and Hi!L Sadek. wMoflill , c.a. L-:-Campbell, 0·6,
S11n Francisco, Thomlls
1 H.Rs"
Cll. Clark 1131.

The Notice to Me igs County
Hea lth Department must
InClude :
Homeowner 's name · with
complete address end ~:~hone
numbl&gt;r.
Installer ' s name and acf .
dress .

GILLIAN'S
FASHION
CENTER
.
ON THE T IN
MIDD~EPORT

COME ON IN!

(9) 14, 21 ; 2tc

.

•

.

•

.~

l~

~~~;.~~~-~·~~:~:~~&amp;:e~:~ Roush, Middleport, left, Wednesday at the noon
of the

Lions Club held at the Meigs I!Ul received his check for
made during the recent bole-in-()ne tournament
sponsored by the club. Presenllng the check is Bruce Teaford, president. Roush's feat was
more remar kable because this is the second straight year a golfer overcame 111onstrous
odds against putting a little white baD into a hole from a tee with one club stroke. The first
hole-in-one in the seven-year history of the tournament was .c arded last year by Ron Toler.

$200 and a trophy for his

JNe;~~Roush rewarded
By Uolted Presslnteruatlooal
AMMAN, JORDAN-JORDAN has reported 28 new
· cholera caseo, but says it is " on its way" to containing the
epidemic that has struck more than 2,400 persons in at least 10
countries in the Middle East and Europe.
Both France and Mexico put precautionary measure's into
effect Wednesday, tholl8h no cases of the highly infectious
disease have been reported in either country. Health officials
In Jordan Wednesday reported 28 new cholera cases in the past
24 hours- about half the 47 cases It reported in tbe previous 24
hours- but added they were moving io .control the epidemic.
"Jordan is on ita way to controUing tbe cholera epidemic,"
Health Minister Ahdulrauf Rawabdeh told reporters. J.otdan
h8s now reported a total of 289 cholera cases.

I

~·

"'...•
•
:::.

...••
~
~

..

I

dlacovered

I

that aometime Iaiit Friday he
blld litolen from the work llite
a M ft. alumlnwn extenaion
ladder. Both lncldenta are •
E-RCALLED
under Investigation.
The
Middleport
Sheriff Proffitt again Ia
EmergeSicy
Squad was called
arglna area motorists to

mlnlnl

last achool Iones. Ohio law
Sunday.
provldel apead limit Ia 20
. Dm4 Grlndllaff, Rt.
mUes per hour in the acbool
Raelnt, reported he waa 10nea when Ughta are

a,

wltnl 011 thl Roy Prullltt llallblnc.
I!'\IINIIY at Old Ton lllld
·

Association representative
that they were not helping the
strike by their appearance as
pickets in support of the
board. She said the parents
want to help settle the strike
and that the parents from the
Harrisonville School are
" behind he board of

edqcation''.
Mrs. Cline said it Is the
group's opinion that the
board was elected by the
people and have children and
grandchildren to be educated
and consequently members
are interested in the teacher
strike being settled.

Study underway
on SR 7 project .

Theft reports are ·received

Old us 33 twtnty oak boarda s
ft. kiJ&amp;, 3 lnc:bes thlcll,,lllld a
to It lnebel 'IIIIM. It wu drive wWl caution tbrotllh

A group ol12 Harrisonville
area parents expressed
support of the Meigs local
Board of Education and Supt.
Charles Dowler In the
district's three week old
teacher strike when the board.
. met In special session at the
Meigs Junior High School
Wednesday night.
Mrs. Phyllis Cline, one of
the parents, said earlier ·In
the day the group bad
picketed at the Harrisonville
School were teachers were
also picketing.
. She said the parents were
told by an Ohio Education

Walter Roush of Mid· frecjuent winner as he came
dleport , only the second in inside the top three on live
golfer to hit a bole-in-one In of the siJI nights.
the Pomeroy -Middleport - Other than the hole in one
Lions Club Hole·ln·One by Roush, the next shot
Contest, received his $200 closest ·to the pin W{IS Bub
prize and trophy Wednesday Stivers. Once he came
foUowing the noon IWicheon within I'll", again within
of the club at the Meigs Inn. 1'10". Other daily winners
Roushgothishole-in-one on were Nesselroad and Chad
Wedn~sday at 5:45 p.m. His Humphrey, who came within
was the llth.,liau off the tee, · 4'5" and 2'3", respectively.
on the three-par hole.
Mrs, Mary Follmer was the
. Chris Wolfe was the closest lady to try her luck as
youngest winner when he got she came to within 10'4" of
within 3'3" of the pin on the cqp.
.
Monday night and received
All the Lions extend their
golf haUa and a trophy. Mike thanks to aU those who at·
Nesselroad was the most tended their amual charity
event.

Studies are underway that
will lead to relocate and
improve State Ro.ute 7 from
the Rock Springs interchange
to the Five Points area.
In accord with Ohio ·
Department of Trans·
portatlon (ODOT) guidelines
for project development,
Glenn A. Smith, · ODOT
Dl3trict 10 Deputy Director,
said study exteSida easterly
from the recently constructed
WASHINGTO&gt;:&gt;I-BRANDING CHIW pornography one of interchange at the jWiction of
the IIlOSt vile forms of child abuse, the Seante Judiciary· State Route 7 and U.S. 33
Cmunlttee approved legislation to make it a federal crime U&gt; north of Pomeroy to an area
produce, sell or dl!lribute pornographic material featuring just east of an area known
children.
·
locaDy as Five Points near
The legislation, approved WIBnimously Wednesday and the junction of County Roads
sent to the Seante floor, !leta harsh fines and prison terms for 26 and 53 and State Route 7.
panderers of child pornograpby, making the activity a new
The study will develop
federal crime under obecenlty 81atutes. The measure modifies social, economic and en·
the Ma!Ul Act which now outlaws the transportation of minor vironrnental data and in·
females acro.u slate lines for Immoral plll'jlOfles to include formation such as cost
children of both sexes under age 18. SpoiiBOrB said the change estimates and effects upon
Ia designed to cradt down on the use of young boys lor land and people for
prostitution.
evaluating the various
solutions. Once tentative
solutions are sufficiimtly
developed, a public meeting
Helena Howett, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, 1w reported to the
Departmept of Sberlff J811les
J. Proffitt, that Jtbe 1w bad
ltolen from ber property on

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1977

Board supported
by parent group
of Harrisonville

NEW YORK - THE CONTROVERSIAL television
comedy "Soap" cleaned up in the ratings . Tuesday night,
despite beavy advance protest from religious and homosexual
groups.
The early rating figures from the A. C. Nielten Co., gave
ABC's "Soap" a heavy advanlage over its NBC and CBS
competition, in the lhree cities polled, New York, Chicago and
Los Angeles. A spokes for ABC said Wednesday that lelephone
protests to the network after the show.were light, ranging from
192 protest caiiBin New York and 511n favor of the·show to 35
protests in San Francisco ( 5calls In its favor) .

all through the

beyond what the seller· realizes .
T.he profit could be exciting . .

F460 - AM / FM with
Digital Clock. Lighled

95

keep you looking your best ·",......,("1:0

GEMINI (Moy 21.Juno 20) You
know the right things to say toclaY. . .and people instinctively
know your word Is like blue chip
stocks. If you say it. you'll do it.

\_

girl should own! Beautiful' '

POMEROY-MIODL-EPORT, OHIO

wno

OOLUMBUS- THE PUBUC UTn.ITIES Commission of
· Ohio has modified the authority of Columbia Gas to charge an
curtailed customers for any of the utility's emergency gas
purcbaseo and ordered that self-help customers who use only
their own gas be exempted. The PUOO Wednesday also
ordered that the coat of any emergency gas purchased by
Columbia be aUocaled over the five-month winter hearing
seailon, not over the whole year.
The modificatins are the result of a motion for rehearing
filed by the Ohio Manufacturers' Association and Whirlpool
Corp. They will affect a PUOO order of .J uly 22 that authorized
Columbia to buy emergency supplies without a specific
( contract in advance from each perspective user and to allocate
the coS among all users in a curtailment class.

Campus collectables ·every

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. 18) formally establishing the
It 's a good day to call in markers department on that date as
Where your work or career' is the first new Cabinet-level
concerned. If you feel you've agency in 11 yea-.. ·

not good to Show partiality, but
today you have to . If so. favor
persons with whom you ha'tle
long and lasting attachments .

Tuner ~Amplifier

r~\

the

Church, Pomeroy.
achieve_ your g~als today, put a
. __
. _
governor on your driVes .
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Moderation· is the key tQ moving With Oct . 1 set as the start·up
ahead. Make haste slowly.
day fer the new Energy
Department, Secretary
· SAGiTTARIUS (Nov. U·ooc. James
Schlesinger pledges ·
21) Keep in touch with those imhis
agency
will "keep the skY,
portant to yoUr material welfare,
blue and the grass green '
even though they may be distant.
wh !le . maintaining energy
Qorl't make it "out of sight, ou1 of
suppli.es. Carter signed an
mind ." ·
executive order Tuesday

ARIES (Mirch

with Phono and Tape
G587 - Solid-state
AM /FM/S tereo FM

3

of

do very well with new prefects at ltlvJry Caldwell, treasurer .
this 1ime , but don ' l fee l
traditional methods won 't apply
The.re will be a Democra t .
just because the applications are Central Comni lttee · meeting
new.
· Thursda!J• Sept. 15, at 7 : 30

you're Invited to part icipate in an
endeavor. do give It a fang, hard
look .

Allegro Sound System

··1~ 9

Me i gs · Chapter

Methodist Church will be held
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 201 Sunday. Sept. 18 at 1: 30 p.m .
Joint ventures are a particularly Sunday School will be held at
promising area for you today. If 10 a .m. All singers and

Black
&amp;

"My friends, there are powerful and ruthless forces
In this land
do not want a bslanced budget, who do
not want the federal government reorganized," Miller
said. " To say Bert Lance has dooe something wrong
does not make it so. We know better," he said.
The rally was organized by several local residents,
milS of whom have known Lance and his wife LaBeUe
for years.
" We wanted to go to WashingU&gt;n to support him, but
this was the next best thing," said Sue Bone, a member
of the 'organizing committee. "He's had so much bad
publicity that we wanted to create some good
(publicity) for him," she said.
&amp;lpporters carried an assortment of placard$ some
of which read "Hang in there Bert," and ''We'd eat dirt
for Bert."
The hlgh school marching band played "I i&gt;id It My
Way," as the crowd yelled, clapped and gave a football
cheer for Lance inside the stifling auditori1,1111 .
Calhoun Mayor Bill)' Burdette called Lance "ooe of ·
the great men of our day," and said, "U Bert Lance
tells me he has done nothing wrong that would justify
such an attack by the national media - I believe him."

enttne

at y
VOL XXVIII . NO. 107

mittee," he said.
"Certain persons have publicly, in effect, brought in a
verdict of 'guilty' before I have been given the opportunity to
present my side of the case. It has been a saddening and
disillusioning e:~perience ."
Lance said, "I am secure and comfortable knowing that my
cooscience is clear and that the people 's verdict will be a fair
and just one."
Carter's long-time personal friend traced his history from
the boyhood days In rural Georgia to his arrival in Waahington
in January as perhaps the President's most imporlant pdblic
figure in government.
Lance recalled he delivered papers as a boy U&gt; supplement
his family income, worked his way through college, but left
·
before earning a degree U&gt;support his wife and baby son.
Lance said he Has always believed the American system
rewarded those who worked long and hard hours.
(Continued on J)alt I)

•

•

"ruthless fcr(.'es."

Notices, short briefs

earned a raise, buttonhole the
boss. ·

H901P-Mediterranean design in simulated woad .w ith Pecan
finish. Solid-s!ale AM / FM / Stereo FM Tuner-Amplifier plus
3-speed record chanQer and 8-track tape player_ Quality
high-fidelity speaker system.

CALHOUN, Ga. (UPI) -More than 1,000 residents
of Bert Lance 's hometown held a booster raDy for the
budget direcU&gt;r Wednesday night on the eve of his
scheduled appearance bef&lt;re a Senate committee
investigating his personal finances.
"Bert Lance can come home if he can go nowhere
else," the Rev. Eugene Ward told a packed auditorium
gathered at Lance's alma mater, CalhoWI High School.
Ward, pastor of the Friendship Baptist Church and
cme of the few blacks in the group, delivered the
Invocation.
Miller, who was christened in the same ceremony as
Lance In nearby YoWig · Harris, said the budget
director was the victim of distorted press CQverage and

MECHANIC STREET

American Cancer Society
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 231 You 'll lola led SS28, according to

the attention of the pu bile."
He said that while he was president and chairman of the
Calhoun bank its deposits increased from $11 million to $49
million and its assels rose from $11.9 million to $M.l million.
When ·he took over as head of the Atlanta-based NBG, "the
results were even more dramatic."
He said in 1975 and 1976, NBG's deposits increased SO per
cent and its assets increased from $254 million tn $404 million .
" Because of the volume of unfavorable publicity these past
weeks," he said, "il may come as a surprise when I say that no
deposiler in either (hank) ever lost.a cent :while I was with
those banks."
_
Lance said his experience over the past weeks " has been one
of· profound shock and disappointment. The rights that I
thought I bad as an American have been treated in the most
irresponsible and destructive manner."
"The basic American principle of justice and fair play has
been pointedly ignored by certain members of this com·

Lance at big rally

SALE! GENERAL ELECTRIC

COLUMBUS, OillO- BLOOD TESTS ON 110 construction
workers at Riverside Methodist Hospital have produced only
ooe possible case of Legiomaires disease, apparently ruling
out a construction site as the source of the illness in Columbus.
The Ohio Department of Health Tuesday reported the results
of the tests, performed at the U.S. Center for Disease Control
in Atlanta.
The tests had been made to determine if the outbreak of
the poeumonia-like aliment caine from an excavation for a
three-story wing now under construction at the !Jospital. Jon
O!ristensen, a department spokesman, said the one worker
whose blood showed positive signs of the disease had no
physical sympU&gt;ms and evidently was unaware he had ever
contracted it.
Christensen said the finQ!ngs apparently eliminated the
theory that. the excavation yielded bacteria causing the
disease, now confirmed in six cases in the Columbus area.

Lance has ignored resignation demands from several
lawmakers in the controversy involving $6 million in personal
bank loans and $450,000 in checking overdraft.. by Lance, his
wife LaBelle and other family members while he headed two
Georgia banks.
During two weeks of hearings leading up to this day, th&lt;!
oommittee heard aUegatlons Lance may have personally tried
U&gt; whitewash his SI)Uons as bank executive in order to get
approval of the budget dir~tor 's nomination.
Lance told the conunittee, whose two leaders, Abraham
Ribicoff,D-CoM.,and Charles Percy, R-Ill., have suggested to
Carter that Lance should resign, that he has read "many
critical stories devoted to family loans and overdrafts ."
" I want you to know and understand that every overdraft
has been paid in full," Lance said.
Lance U&gt;ld the committee he wanted to "recite some facts"
about his leadership of the Calhoun First National Bank and
the National Bank of Georgia "which have not been brought U&gt;

Hometown supports

ELBERFELDS 'IN ·POMEROY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

UNIT CALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was caned
to 206 Beech St. at 9:50 a.m.
Tuesday for Jerry Ward, 77.
who ·was having difficulty
breathing. He was taken to·
Holzer Medical Center.

WASHINGTON (UPl) - Fl8htlng for his public life, Bert
Lance today Mid his "COiliCience II clear" and he will rebut
every aCCII&amp;Itian of impnlpriety In his personal banking
lffaln before becoming President Carter's budget director.
"I did not ask fer this fight, but now that I am in it, 1 am
flghtlnc n&lt;t only far my!lelf but also for 0\11' syStem " Lance
said in his statement prepared· for the Senate Govei-runental
Affairs Cmunlttee.
"I am proud of the job I hl!ve done (in the White House
budget office) , but Ia It part of our AmeriCNl system .that a
man 'CIIn be drumnied out of government by a series of false
charges, half-truths, mlllrepresentations, iMuendos and the
Uke?''
Lance appeared under bright television lights in the jammed
Senale AppropHations hearing room opened especiaUy for his
appeJrance. More than 700 periiOIUihad showed up In the early
morning hours U&gt; get a seat for Lance's 90-minute defense in
his loog.awalted "day in court."

FINED $51, COSTS
Wl!Uam Reeves, Pomeroy,
was fined~ and collt.!l, in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor
C!Jirence Andrew• Tuesday
nlghl on lntoxtcation charges.
Forfeiting bonds were John
Workman, Mason , $33,
. speeding, · David Smith,
Syracuse, · $24, speeding;
Robin Phalln, Pomeroy, $33
speeding; Roger Roush,
Syracuse, 530, assured clear
distance; Henry Thompson,
Gallipolis, .$25, speeding; ·
David ·Roush, Racine, $50,
squealing. lites, arid Robert
Will, Harrlaonville, running a
red light. $30.

(Continued from PIP 11
second were included in tbe
contracts last June oo tbe
assumption of receiving state
and federal fund which have
not yet been received.
Teachers In the Plain Local
district agreed to raises
beginning in January.
In the South Amherst
school district, teachers
U&gt;day voted U&gt; approve a new
contract.
..
The
ass o c'i at ion •.
representing
the system's 46
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
·PLEASANT VAIJ.EY
teachers,
earlier
had agreed .
Admitted - Ruth Gosney,
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
a
new
contract
which
·to
Thomas Robinson and Middlep(,rt; Dora · Stevehs,
called
for
a
$425
raise
in
base
dall8hter, Gallipolis; Mrs. Shade; Elizabeth Bartoe,
pay
.
But
the
board
of
Stephen Shuler and son, long Bottom; Eric Hart,
A' dinner party for mem .
·. F~ Thurodoy, Sopl. 15, 1877 bers of Drew Webster Post 39, musicians a re ll')vited to
.
education
rejected
tbe
pa~t
Edna
· Radne; Mrs. Ray Dawson, Pbmeroy;
participate. The public is
Amer:Jcan
Legion,
who l~vlled .
Mason; Th()mas Miller, Blumeriaue r, Pomeroy; Monday, rebuffing · its own
parked cars during the f~ir
negotiating ·team.
Leon; Mrs.
Leycester. Harold Circle, Racine .
will be given at 1 p.m. Sunday
Rally Day will be held at
The
.
teachers
have
been
Discharged - Dorothy
Colllter, Leon; Carl Garrison,
at the pOst home .
.
lhe
Rock Springs United
Warner, . Clarence ' Cooper, working without a cOntract
Buffalo; Elbert Murray
Methodist Churc~ Sunday,
.
·
The Meigs High School Sept. 18 with basket dinner at
Middleport; Mrs. Joh~ Lee Cadle, Ethel Collins, since Aug: 31.
cheerl~aders will hold a car noon .Afternoon services will
The
South
Amllerst
sy~em
· Lyons, Point Pleasant ; Stacy Eileen Swan, Peggy White,
. wash . Satur.day· .!lit the Sugar be lield at 1: 15 featuring the
has 900 students at its twoPatterson; Gallipolis Ferry ; Sharon Brown.
Run Ashland Servlc~ Stallon . Gospel Tones . The Rev . ·
school campus.
from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m . Cost James Corbitt is the pastor.
Edgar Russell, Jr., . Leon;
Only minor chariges were
· will be $2 tor the outside only.
Emest Morrow,
Leon ;
Residents ma y take their
reported
in
the
new
pact.
Hemlock Grange will meel
Robert McDaniel, · Point
Sept. 15, 1817 . ·
vehicles to the station .
· at 7:30 p.m. Saturday al the
MODEL DOC 0580N
TO HOLZER
About
140 .' teacher~ Financial ptospects are very.enPlea~nt ; Mrs. Gary Hupp,
hall. Dues of members are
• Three heat 111ect1ons ~Heavy-duty heating coll1
Th p
E
remained on strike . in the 9ouraging for you this com ing · The .Morse Chapel Church
Patriot, 0 . ; Mrs. Leonard
e omeroy mergency · Meigs LoCal School district in yea r . Oddly enough . old a) Old Town Flats will hold its now payable. .
Normal, Delicate, and No· • Electronlca/ly ·tested de·
Cornell, Point P.leasant, and Squad took Penny Smith
.
situations may yield more fruit homecom ing Sunday at 2
Heat FluH
pendabllltY
The
Meigs
County
ChurMechanic
St
t
H
'
Meigs
County
where
schools
Goldie Ingels, Masan.
1~er are closed.
than new Ones
p.m. All si ngers are invited. ches
0
Qf
Christ . Men 1 s
·•
o
•
Two
cycle
selections
BIRTH- .A son to Mr. and Medical Center at 8 p.m.
The Senior Citizens Chorus
Fellowship will meel al 7: ~0
The two-week old strike bas VIRGO ( Aug . 23 ·Sopl. 22 l Will
present several numbers. p.m. Monday at lhe Mid'
· ·separate 1t1rt switch
Mrs, _James Smith, Ashton. Tuesday night.
the · summer . Material condil ion·s are very The public is invited.
extended
dleport Churc~ of Chrlsl ..
• Commercial cycle lndlcotor
beneficial to you today , .but thi s
vacation for about 3,000
lightmay not be readily apparent.
There will be a county-wide
CARPENTER - There will
students.
. ·
Your g.allis will come through a prayer meeti ng Sunday , Sept. be ·a Gideon speaker at the
• Large u!&gt;'lrontllnl trap NOW
A judge has issued a · source you d idn 't expect. Having 18 at 2 p .m . at the Rutland
MI.
Union
Baptisl
Church
• Porcelai!Hinamel drum ONLY
restraining order in an trouble selecting a career? Send Community Church . Glen near Carpenter on . Sunday.
for
your
copy
of
Astro·-Graph
Bissell
·
is
the
class
leader.
attempi U&gt; end the strike but
He will speak im.medialely
Leiter by mailing 50 cen ts for
alter Sunday School which
it has been ignored by
each and along . sell-addressed,
Proceeds from a Rock A
starts at 9:45a.m . The publi c
teachers.
stamped envelope to Astra· Thon held recently by the is invited.
Graph, P.O . Box 489 , Rad io City Meigs
County . Junior
Stat&gt;on, N.Y. 10019. Be sure Io Leadersh ip Club lor the

HOSPITAL.NEWS

Bert Lance opens fight for his political life

cilmen, Don • Fields, Fred
Fields, Hullng Green, Kenny •
Green, and Vernon Grin·
llt.. d. Abo present were
William Kimes and lUndy
Colegroves, town policemen.

••-••lil•••llilli••••••••••

Sharon Steele, Middleport,
and Frank 0. Steele,
Charlotte, N. C., filed for
dissolution of marrisge in
Meigs CoWity Common Pleas
Court. Barbara KeaU&gt;n was
granted a divorce from
Douglas Keaton .
The following marriages
. were dissolved : Jirruny R.
Lee and Nora E. Lee;
Ladonna J. Taylor and
Russell L. Taylor; James and
Elizabeth Neal; Charles E.
Williams and Maxine S . ·
Williams; Everett i.. Crow,
Jr .. and Nancy Crow. Appointed depl!ty sheriffs were
Elizabeth Mohler and Randy
Forbes.

CODu act

News •• in Briefs

to vlllage baD at 10:50 a .m.
Wedne&amp;dfly for VIvian
Hurlow, Kanauga, Wbo had a
neck Injury. She was taken to
Veter811tl Memorial Hospital
by the ~~quad lllld was admitted to the holpltal.

wiD be scheduled to deter·
SUPPORT BOARD - Harrisonville parents supporting the position of tile Meigs Local
mine public response.
Board of Educatioo In its current stalemate with teachers of the district spoke up at a
For further lnlonnation or
meeting of the board Wednesday evening, and were on steps of the courthouse in Pomeroy
clarification contact Glenn A.
this morning when depositions were scheduled by members of the board of education. The
Smith, Ohio Department of
parents were forbidden U&gt; carry signs or placards by Pomeroy authorities.
Transportation District
Deputy Director, Marietta,
Ohio 45750. Phone 614-373- ::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::
0212.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, fair Saturday and
a chance of ohowers
Sunday and Monday. Highs
Saturday and Sunday will
be Ill lbe upper 70s or the
mid 80s and lows will be Ill
the lOs. Highs Monday wm
be in the 70s and lows will
be in lbe 50s.
BACK IN OPERATION
Both ferry boats were
reported In operation early
this morning
between
Kanaugti and.Henderson. The
llH:ar ferry was shUt down
Wednesday for repairs after
breaking down Tuesday
night. The eight car ferry
remained in operation
Wednesday . .

RALLY DAY SET
Rock Springs United
Methodist Church Rally Day
Sunday, Sept. 18 at noon .
. Afternoon services will be at
I: 15. The Gospel Tones wi!l
be fea!ured .

Private haulers
should attend
Tuesday meeting
The Meigs County llealtb
Department In cooperation ·
with lbe Meigs County
Commlastoners, Ia drawing
up plans to initiate countywide solid waste plck·up
service by private haulers .
Anyone Interested In
providing solid waste
service within Meigs
County Is urged to attend a
meeUng scheduled for 7:30
p.m. Sept. 28, at the Health
Department Offices, 110
Meebanlc Street, Pomeroy.
Those who Cllunot attend,
but are Interested, should
co11tact the Meigs County
Heallb Department before
tbe meeUng.

Weather
Lows tonight to mid 60s,
Decreasing
cloudiness
Friday, occasional showers.
Highs in the upper 70s.
PrQbabUity of precipitation
80 percent today and tonight,
60 percent Friday .

EC135 explosion
claims 20 lives

ALBUQUERQUE,
N.M.
( UPI) - An Air Force
" flyin g command post'~
loaded with electronic
equipment and carrying 20
persons exploded in flames
oo the side of the Manzano
Mountains Wednesday night,
apparently killing aU aboard.
A witness said the four·
engine EC135, based at
Seymour Johnson ·Air Force ·
Base in North Carolina,
exploded "like a small
atomic bomb" after it hi\ the
side of the mountain,
southeast of Albuquerque, at
about 8 500-feet elevation.
Tbepianehadjusttaken off
from Kirtland Air Force Base
after refueling on a cross·
country flight to Nellis Air
Force Base in Nevada. II was
headed to a joint Air ForceArmy exercise .
The Air Force said the
plane, a military version of
the Boeing 707 passenger jet,
was attached to the 8th
Tactical Deployment Control
Squadron at
Seymour
~

She said that the Ohio
Education Assn . . representative - whom she identified
as a "Mr. Westfall" - had
referred to the board of
education members earlier in
the day at HarrisOnville in.
a derogatory manner.
" We are angry because our
kids aren't In school," .Mrs.
Cline remarked, pointing out
that she felt she has a rlgbt to
express herself. She opined
that many other parents not
coming out to express
themselves· have similar

views.
"I can't believe that the
board is not trying to work
out a solution," Mrs . . Cline
etated.
Charles Downie, president
· of the Meigs Local Teachers
· .:\SSOclation, responded. He
said the ieachers would like
to sit down with the board of
education and work out a
so1nlion.
Mary Lou Hawkins , a
custodian in the district, said
janitors who work 12 months
a year are being hurt by the
teachers' strike because they
have no money Coming in.
She said that she hoped a
settlement can be reached
Meigs County Common
Pleas Jndge John C.
Bacon, citing jurisdiction
ln tbe COIDDIOn law of Ohio,
today . approved
a
prellmlaary Injunction
against lbe Meigs County
Teacher&amp; Auoclation
(MLTA) and ita officers.
Sitting In the bearing on
Ills temporary Injunction of
.last Thursday, Judge
Bacon beard testimony
taken by one wllness,
Superintendent of Schools
C'barlea Dowler.
Questioning Dowler were
tbe school board's attorney, Dennis Whalen,
assloted by prosecuting
attorney Rick Crow, and
lor
the
defenda11ta,
(MLTA) Atty Mark Foley.
The elements of tbe
temporary order a week
ago are the basic clauses of
the court order approved
·today, 11ame!y, that the
teachers are ordered to
return to tbelr jobs, not Ia
continue their strfke, and .
not to picket buDdtngs.
Judge "Bacon based hla
rulings oa what be called
these cooslderatloaa, that
2,900 studenltl have loti 14
days of their Uvea, parenu
also bave lost these days,
and be doubted If they ever
can be replioced.

Johnson, an arm of the
Tactical Air Command .
Of the 20 military personnel
on the plane, 13 were from the
North Carolina 'base and the
others were from elsewhere.
Names
were withheld
pending notification of next of
kin.
Rescuers, using light from
flares dropped from the air,
searched on the ground and In
helicopters ·for suryivors.
"No survivors have been
found," Capt. Ben Orren, quickly. She pointed out that
bsse information officer, said she helped negotiate for non·
at midmorning. He said certified employes and 88ld
rescuers found several bodies that at one time the group
In the wreckage, which '!as worked for 13 consecutive
scattered by the explosion hours In ironing out
across the pinon pine-covered problems.
"You
can't
satisfy
mountain.
"It looked like a small everyone In a group. I want to
atomic
bomb-with
a go back to my job," Mrs.
mushroom that lighted up tbe Hawkins said.
Supt. Charles Dowler Hid
sky. If anybody got out 1t
he
Is sympathetic toward the
would be a chance in a
culltodians
wbo are beln&amp;
million ," said Cliff Arbogast,
a retired commercial pilot, hurt by the strike and have no
who watched the jet crash way to make up the Jail later
(Contlnlltd Gil PIP I)
(Continued on PIP I)

\

14

�a

The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, o., ThurSdaY ,Sept. 15, 1m

l

u

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middelport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 1~. 1m

Board supported

Bert {.ance

Ripley coming into Marauder Stadium Friday··

- (Clllllilllittl from pllll)
"But now my ~talim bas been questioned. Charie blla
followed charge. Acrusations haw poured forth. accompanied

bitration on the part of the
in the school year since they board becouse of someone
are b.ired for a 12-month from Columbus or Cleveland by prQillpl and destructive Interpretations. by c«taln
coming in to make local members oc this body," said Lance.
period.
" Ready-made oplnims have been offered affecting my
John
Krawsczyn, a decisions. Mrs. Horky
character,
my ability and my Integrity·" ·
teacher, questioned Mrs. questioned the board then
JaM Wagner about finances why It hires Dennis Whalen,
of · the district. Krawsczyn an attorney from Cuyahoga
said that a new salary Fails, to come in on local
schedule asked for by the problems.
Mrs. Sheets replied that I
teachers, according to a
I
Whalen
comes only in an
newspaper report, would coot
served In the Army during
$89,000 less than an earlier advisory capacity and not a
KATHRYN EDWARDS
War I.
binding
one.
She
continued,
Kathryn Edwards, 93, a World
salary schedule approved by
Survivors Include his wife,
resident
of
315
East
two members of the three- stating that she feela the
carolyn Allen Fletcher; a
Washington St., Oek Hill , sister-In
board is entitled to died
-law, Myrtle Fletmember impasse panel.
at 1: 30 p.m. Wednesday
He said that since the board professional help since the In Pine Crest care Center, cher ; · one niece and four
nephews.
could not meet the expense of Ohio Education Asaociation Gallipolis.
was preceded In death
She Is survived by two byHethree
professional help
the salary reconun.ended by has
brothers and one
and . three nieces:
the impasse panel, perhaJ)6, provided for teachers in these nephews
sister.
Hoyden Edwards, Columbus;
Funeral services will be
It could meet the latest matters. She also stated lltat Ho Edwards, Gallipolis; Monday
at2p.m.atthe White
the
board
has
used
the
Owen
Wllllams,
Thurman
;
request of the teachers.
Funeral
HOf!le In Coolville
However, Mrs. Wagner prosecuting attorney and hla Blodwyn Williams, Thurmon with the Rev. Harold Lemley
Mrs . Ha,zel Morris,
otllclatlng. Burial will follow
said that she had not figured assistant during the current and
Jackson.
hamburg, 50 pounds of turkey, homemade desserts, 50
ELEANOR THOMAS, OONNA WIUJAMSON and
the Rocklond Cemetery In
the costs of the latest salary strike.
She was • member of the In
Belpre.
Friends may call ol
gallons of ice cream, uncountable wieners and other foods
Ramona Hawk, I tor, of the Senior Citizens Center staff
"I think that bolh of them Belhel Presbyterian Church. the funeral
request. Dowler said the last
home alter 2 p.m.
prepared and available on the grounds.
pr~pare hotdog sauce in preparation for Saturday's
Funeral services will be
salary offer of the board at will tell you they are not that
Saturday.
1 p.m. Saturday at the
Yesteryear observance. There will be 100 pounds of
$8,800 on a 1.7 index remains. well versed in school law" hel&lt;;l
Kuhner
-Lewls Funeral
ROBERT JACKSON
. Home, Ook
The latest request from the Mrs. Sheets stated.
Hill, with Rev.
Robert L. Jackson, 52, a
Rlts Slavin, a teacher, said Gerald Brown officiating. resident of 61127 Reber St .,
teachers if for a $9,200 base
neither
the O.E.A. or the Burial will be In Bethel Worthington, died at .8:30
for a starting teacher on the
Meigs
Local Teachers Cemetery. F•lends may call p.m. Wednesday In Riverside
current 1.7 base.
al lhe funeral home from 3 Hospital, Columbus.
Board member Mrs . Association Ia asking to run until 9 p.m. Friday.
He was the form~r
Those wishing may make manager of The Boston Store
Jennifer Sheets said she had the schools but they are
not figured the new salary aslt:lng public officials to sit contributions to Bethel I In the Northern Lights
Shopping Center, Columbus ..
request but that it appeared down with them and solve the Presbyterian Church.
He was born June 28, 1925.
to her that it would run about problema.
In
Obetz. Qnlo, son of the late
. EDGAR FLETCHER
Another teacher, Mrs.
the same as the original
Ardon
Helen McDonald
Edgar L. Fletcher, 79 , Jacksonand
request which was for a lower Dorothy Oliver, said she Jives Route
.
1, Coolville, died
tw. Jackson Is survl ved by
at 3:3() p.m. They will be kept
By Bob Hoefllcb
Winners or" the mustache p.m., both to be held on the base with a higher index. in the district and does not Thursday morning at his
Pie baking could prove refrigerated from the judging growing contest, thickest, tennis courts. Besides the Mrs. Sheets said tl\at the want taxes raised. However, home following an extended his wife, Lois Hurley
Jackson, along with two
pl"llfitable for Meigs County time to the auction time.
·
longest and scraggliest, will center building and grounds, board ill responsible for the she said thai she Ia not on Illness.
children,
Randy and Teresa,
Born In Wood County, W. both at home.
women - or men for that
Through the contributions receive small trophies and $5 the Episcopal parish house expenditures of the district strike for money since she
Va ., he was a son of the late
One sister, Mrs . Gene
mittter - if they enter the pie of county merchants and wlth food coupons going to the will also be used to house part and commented that the would benefit salary-wise by William
and Rose King
bak.ing contest to be held individuals, many prizes will second and third pice win- of the exhibits. Food will he board feels It has made a fair about only $40. She sald that it Fletcher. He was a former (lucy) Earwood, Gallipolis,
available at various locations offer now.
Saturday morning as a part be awarded dl!,ring Satur- ners.
is a complex situation, but member of the St. John's survives.
Funeral services will be 10
Church of VIenna, W. Va. and a.m.
of the second annual olr day's observance which. will
·saturday at the
A trophy and $5 will go to on the grounds and there will ' Teacher Jack Slavin urged listeners could be assured attended
the Torch Baptist Rutherford
servanc;e of ~ 'Yesteryear" . be held both on the grounds at the winner of the tall tale be a number of exhibits. that a solution be worked out that it does . not hivolve
-Corbin Funeral
Cllurch.
Home,
Worthington
with Rev.
Pies will be divided into the center and inside the contest with food coupons for There will be drawings for and that the teachers get on money.
He was a ret Ired pipe IIIIer William J . Dowse.r of .
· thr ee categories for the building.
Sarab Welsh of the and a member of Local 565 flclatlng . Burlol will be In
second and third. A contest to door prizes on the hour with educating the students.
There will he two age guess the identity of baby throughout the observance
judging with Mrs. Suzy
Harrisonville
group, urged Plumbers and Steam Filters Union Cemetery.
Mrs. Riggs, of the
Union, the Parkersburg Odd
Carpenter,
a
home groups for young people pictures will be held with and all prizes must be Harrisonville group, said, everyone to thinlt: more of the Fellows
Friends may call at the
and a former
economist, in charge. First taking part in the three- winners getting $5 and $2.50 claimed within two hours.! "Mr. Westfall" had told her children and less about member of F&amp;AM In Akron funeral home from 2- ~ and 7-9
There will be game stands that money was not the themselves.
place winners in the three legged ccntest and the sack lor first and second.
and Coolville. /W , Fletcher p.m. Friday.
categories - two crust, one race. These will be under 12
Janet Downie, a parent,
So far, there are only two · and other attractions also problem now, that there are
crust and cream - will and 12 and older.
teams registered for the tug included in · this year's other problema.. She com- asked when the next
News
First place winners will of war. The first place team program.
receive cash prizes of $10.
mented that if thla Ia the case negotiations session would be
Second place prizes .in the, receive $5 each and there will will receive a team trophy,
held
and
was
told
that
the
that the teachers should ·go
th1·ee categories will be $5 · he food coupons for second small trophies for members
back to work and negotiate board has made a fair offer.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
and third prize in the three and third .places. CountrY and $25. Second place team
Mike Gerlach, a teacher,
Ute other problema later. ,
ADMITTED - Pauline
categories will be $2.50. Pies Cousins has provided a members will receive dinner
questioned Hoover about bow
Downie
spolt:e
again,
Deren
berger, Pomeroy ;
&lt;eontinued fraai pa•• 1l
entered in the competition number of food coupons certificates from Country
stating that the teachers want he judged whether people
Velnl&amp; Newell, Reedsville;
mlll!l be taken to the Meigs which will be given as second Cousins. Teams registered into the mountain while he a contract "with some teeth wanted him to serve on the
Anna McHaffie, Portland;
Senior Citizens Center no and third place prizes in the are the Meigs Warriors and was standing in his backyard. in it" so that the same thing board. Hoover replied that
Marie Custer, Pomeroy ;
"This is the biggest crash will not lie bllppening year the talka to many people but
later than 11 a.m. Contestants numerous contests.
the adult mining class.
VIrginia Huriow, Kanauga;
I've
ever seen. I've seen after year. He listed some of that he "can't poll everyone." ·
should inquire at the
The first prize in the
'
_
Meantime, live new judges
·
Mary Adkins, Syracuse;
registration desk as to where cracker eating, watermelon have been added to the list of others. I've seen bombs these things as fair dismissal,
A question was raised
William A. Miller Jr., 47, Franklin Ush, Mason; Ella
they should take the pies for eating, watermelon seed persons already indicating dropped, and this would he transfer and reassigrunent about the number of cards Rt. I, Paintsville, Ky., was Thompson, Pomeroy; Susan
spitting event, horseshoe their participation in the one heck of a bomb. To me it policy and procedures for which the board bas received. charged with DWI following a Bum, Pomeroy ; George
judging.
The pie baking event as contest (two age groups) and judging department. The new looked like fuel igniting."
: The cards have been single car traffic accident at Deem, Racine.
reducing the staff.
The
wreckage
was
sealed
well as ail contests included hog calling, will be $5.
· Binding arbitration was distributed to the public and 6:25p.m. Wednesday on SR 7
ones. are Virginia Noe and
DISCHARGED - Terry
The rolling pin throwing Dick Patton of the State off because it is on a introduced into the discussion w-ged settlement of the 9\rike at itllj~ion wlth US 35.
in the "Yesteryear" program
Sayre, Lowell Colllns,
are open to the public. It is centeS! for two agt under sa Council on Aging, Dale restricted part of Kirtland ,. and it was described as a with
(reportedly) · 1l
The Gallia-Meigs Post Margaret Barrett.
not an exclusive senior and ~5 and over, " ' feature Warner, Wallace Bradford the former home of the Air grievance procedure wh(ch is paragraph favoring the State Hlgbway Patrol said
Force Special . Weapons the only way each side can teachers at the bottom. Miller, going east, failed to
citizens program and ad- . for (he winners small and Fred George.
Center.
There have been· govern a contract through Hoover said that a Jiltle over
PLEASANT VAlLEY
!liission is free to all events of trophies and $5 as will the
The latest contributors of
in
the past of nuclear putting the problem in the 300 . have been received. stop for the intersectio!). His
reports
DISCHARGES
- .Clifford
the day. Pies entered. in the horse shoe pitching contest, · prizes and money for trophies
car shot through the guard·
weapons
stored
on
the
Cornell,
Buffalo;
Alma
ccmpetition will he .auctioned also in two ·age grouJ)6.
being awarded are ltacine
hands of a ne!ltral party: The Gerlach said that he had raU and into a field.
Manzano
Mountains
portion
Miller,
Middleport;
Mary
Home-National Bank,
present system Ia advilory heard the same figure all
Miller suffered cuts and
week. It was reported that an abrasions but was not im· Anderson, Apple Grove ;
Headquarters,
Fr iendly of Ute base .
only.
.
Orrell said he could not
Tavern, Middleport L\mch
Board members stated that additional I~ have been mediately treated. There was Hilda Dabney, Henderson;
confirm or deny that nuclear
and Mrs. Richard Holley,
Room, Tony's Carry Out,
binding arbitration takes the received over the earlier 320 heavy damage to his car.
weapons
were
buried
in
the
Village
Gun
Shoppe,
running of the schools out of reported earlier.
Two cows owned by Merrill Point Pleasant.
area
where
the
plane
went
The
Rev.
W.
H.
Perrin
Shammy's Carry Out. Tom's
Brucker, Rt. 1 Cheshire were
the banda of local elected
asked why, since the board killed at 2:30 a.m. today on
Carry Out, Whitehouse down.
Holzer Medical Cente.r
officii!,
Is.
said base officials did
fears
someone
from Little Kyger Rd., nine tenths
(DiachargesSept-13)
Board
President
Wen
dell
Tavern, Five Points Grill, notHe know
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.O.
why the plane,
Columbus or Cleveland of a mUe north of SR 7: The
Wanda Blake, Fredrika
Inc., Gaul's Market, Kay's
Hoover
ccnunented
that
the
to the Boeing 7111 board is elected by the people coming in for binding ar- animals ran into the path of a Bowers; Roy Bums, Mrs .
.Beauty Salon, Mark V, similar
passenger
jet, crashed.
Meigs Plaza, Young's Store,
and members are servants of bitration, all outside in· vehicle operated by Michael Robert Deal aitd dallghter,
Denney,
John
Osby Martin, the Sewing
the people. He said thai he fluenees could not ·be T. Gard, 18, Rt. I, ReedavUle. Frank
removed
and
Meigs
Coun·
There
was
moderate Edelmann, Mrs. Gregory
Center, Middleport Book
believes two problems are
tlans sit down and work out a damage.
Erwin and daughter, Hazel
Store, Gillians, Dudleys,
involved in the strike A deer was killed in an Forner, Marilyn Gwnhert,
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. to standing. Hence, the term Cross Hardware, Ingels
nioney and binding ar- solution.
The discussion moved into accident ate p.m. Wednesday Pearl little, Unda Mattox,
Furniture·, Dutton Drug
DEAR DR. LAMB - My orthQlltatic albuminuria.
bitration. He commented that
Sometimes this can he Store, Deb's Barber Shop,
daughter is 12 years old and
if the public wants to tum the a communication gap that on SR 775, four tenths of a Wylodine McCormick, Arabout two years ago a urine demonstrated by studying the Wallace Russell, H. &amp; R.
school operations and apparently exists as two mile south of SR 141. It ran denl5 McDonald, Raymond
specimen showed excess pr&lt;r urine collected during a Firestone, Karr and Van.
decillions over to someone teachers told of experiences lntothepathofacaroperated McManaway, James
period
wben
the
person
was
Zandt,
Hartley
Shoes,
tein. A year later another
else through binding ar- in being unable to get text- by Wilma M. Sprague, 48, Mulboland, Regina MuWns,
Dan
Morris, Patriot Star Rt.
specimen showed too much lying down the entire time. Foreman and Abbott, Legar
Melissa Nance, Michael
bitration, then the board Ia books.
A single car mishap oc- stanley, Ruth Ann Swaney,
protein. A 24-hour specimen That urine will he normal. Monument Co ., Brown's
willing. He said that he had curriculum director, conAnother specimen is taken Tractor Sales, Comer Bar,
showed tbe same thing.
been told by the county ferred with the two teachers curred at 5 p.m. Wednesday , John. Thompson, Rebecca
Nancy J. Crow to Everett auditor that Eaatern and after the board had moved on the Fairfield-Centenary Ward, Dorothy Willis,
She had X · rays of her after standing which shows Tewkablry Barber Sliop,
Nonga · Roberts, Gibbs L. Crow, Jr., 125 acres, .Southern Districts were into eucutive session to. Rd., two and two tenths miles Willard Yates.
kidneys using . dye · and the protein, albumin.
When that is the cauSe and Grocery, James O'Brien, Chester. ·
everything was normal,
warned a year ago that they discuss pending litigation and south of SR 588 where Robert
(Birtlll Sept-13)
there
is
no
disease
it
is
not
Lorenzo
Davis,
Mary
HolT
Mulne
S.
Williams
to
kidneys, bladder, urethra. A
would
have
financial imminent lawsuits.
B. Massie, 18, Patriot Star Rt.
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Meantime, the group of lost control of hla car which Harbour, a daughter, Letart,
pediatric urologist said there medically important. It is not sletter, Eleanor Robson, Charles E. Williams, 6.389 problems this year. The
an
indication
of
kidney
Bette
Hobstetter,
Howard
E.
.
acres,
Bedford.
was no disease. present that
auditor has warned that Harrisonville said it would be ran off the right side of the W.Va., Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Luther E. Gilliam, Jr., Meigs Local will have at the courthouse in Pomeroy highway, lltriking a· mailbox. Davia, a daughter, Pomeroy:
could be causing it. He did disease or future kidney Frank, Anna E. Lusk, Donna
Koehler, Nina Cumings, Veneva M. Gilliam to Ish- ftnanctal problema nen year, today in support of their Therewasmlnordamage.No Mr. and Mrs. Dale Cox, a
say that some people produc- disease.
If you want to check this William Mayer, Regatta lmt, mae! Gary Blake, Mary Elsie Hoover stated.
ed protein in their urine just
board of education. ~loa!&lt;! cltatioo was issued. ·
daughter, Gallipolis.
members
are
to
make
from being overactive but my further I would think you Elberfelds , Swisher and Blake, Parcel, Bedford.
"It's a case of public
Theda M. Covey, 28, Rl. 1,
!Diadlai'Jet!lept.lt)
Willis L. Anthony, Kathleen representation or doing what depositions today in the Gallipolis, was charged wlth
daughter is . not active should have her empty her Lohse Drugs, L. and z. Shop,
Beverly Adkins, Roy
athletically. He , also said bladder completely and lie Marguerite Shoe Store, Court Anthony to Harold E. Kauff, the
Ohio
Education common pleas court ln improper backing following Bai8den Jr., Roy Burger,
down
Street
Grill,
Kingsbury
Alma
K.
Kauff,
Lot
56,
some people could get it from
Asaociation orders," Hoover regard to the temporary an accident at 7:45 p.m. Anita Carney, David Casey,
A couple hours later collect Homes, Village Pharmacy, Palmer's Add., Middleport. stated.
restraining order which was Wednesday on Georges Creek . Nellie Dennison, Oretba
standing.
Bernard V. Fultz, Exec.,
What are the consequences another specimen and have Burkett Barber Shop, Bahr
At one point in the meeting, issued last week ' which or· Rd. two tenths ofa mile west DIWon, Perry Dotty, Gloria
of having too much protein in .that one checked. If it is nor- Clothiers, Baker Furriiture, Elizabeth Byer Jackson, dec·. Supt. Dowler was near break- dered the .teachers back to ofSR 7. Covey backed her car Estep, Elbie Ferguson,
the urine if everything else is mal you can be pretty sure Marcia Denison, Anna Jant! to George F ; Stewart, .down as he recalled some d. their jobs and ordered them into the path of an auto WUiiam Fowler, Vivian Fry,
·all right? Can she just con· that the variation associated · Kincade, and Welker's . Carolyn Stewart, Lot 456, the statements that have to discontinue the &amp;trike lind operated by Wanda M. Judith Gillian, Scott Greene,
Middleport.
tlnue on with this condition or with standing is the explana- Ashland Station.
been made to him since the to refrain from picketing.
Taylor, 28, Rt. 1, Gallipolis. Fred Gregorich Sr., Brenda
tion.
The
observance
will
Kenneth
Ward
Hartley,
However, pickets have There was moderate damage Hall, Bobby Halley, Mrs.
is there a chance something
strike started.
Albumin can occur -in the feature
entertainment Avis N. Hartley to Clifford A.
might develop later• r don't
He said he does not run the remained at the schools to the Covey car and heavy Gary Hammon and aon,
urine
because
of
a
variety
of
throughout
the
day and two Woife, Mary E. Wolfe, 10 board and that he has feelings every day thla week. Mrs. damage to Taylor's.
know if we should pursue this
Clemma Haskins, Lowell
or just think thaU1appens to kidney diseases. A simple in- dances a square dance at , al:res, Bedford.
A final accident occurred Jeffen, Bonnie Jones,
too. He stated that on the day Cline and Mrs. Riggs said
fection of the kidney may · 5:3()andarounddanceat8:3()
he the way she is.
of the strike, several calli of ·also they wlll encourage on SR liM, one mile west of SR Geor1e Keirn, C&amp;rl Lowhorn,
DEAR READER - Having cause it or it may he
an unfriendly nature were parents "throughout the· 7 1!1'here the chain broke on a Patricia Leegan, Richard
associated
with
nephritis.
In·
had a good examination and
received at hla home before distrjct to get behind the traUer cauaing a large Iran&amp;- Maier, Shirley McDonald,
HUMANITARIAN
creased
amounts
of
albumin
having been told that your
he could get hla elght-month movement to support the former to fall off a semi rig Kathleen _Moodey, Martha
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
daughter has no disease I also appear in the urine durTHE DAILY SENTINEL
Rena Plymale,
Henry Kissinger Is to receive pregnant Wife moved to a · board of educatioo and to operated by James F. Smith; Paelt:,
OEVOTEOTOTIIE '
take
a
stand
on
the
lltrlke
would think you could relax ing heart failure. It must
37,
Baltimore,
Ohio.
Patricia
Pratt,
Lola Proffitt,
different
location.
INTEREST OF
the 14th Humanitarian Award
always be regarded as an insituation.
Eva
Queen,
Evelyn
Roach,
MEI~MAS()N AREA
VIsibly
shaken,
Dowler
about it.
.tonight from the EnCHESTER L. TANNEHIU..
Unexpectedly,
Your daughter probably dicator. The next step is finthis
mor·
Barbara
Roush,
Anniae
tertainment Industry asked to be esCIIIed from the
Er.ec. Ed.
has orthostatic albuminuria, ding out if It indicates
Searles, Janet Slone, Debbie
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Division of · the National meeting. ·Before he left, ning, the takinl of the
MARRIAGES
SOURED
something
important
or
is
City
Edllor
ilepoallloos
of
SUpt.
J:mrler
which is what your pediatric
Sparks, Corbett Stull and
Conference of Chrtmians and however, Mrs. Riggs of the
Published daily elllcept Saturday
A dlaaolutlan 01 martlage l David Supple.
q
memben
of
the
board
of
urologist meant. Albumin is just a nonnal variation.
Harrisonville
group,
comby The Ohio V~ U ey Publ.tshlng Corn.
and two suits for divorce bllve
How much vitamin C any, Ill Court SL, Pom~roy, Ohio Jews.
one of the blood proteins we
CBlrtlll Sept. 1t)
A
spokesman
said mended him highly for hla eda• 1¥ In the common been filed in Meigl County
45769.
Busin~ss Office Phooe 992should
you
get
a
day?
For
in·
ji_...
~
ia
conjunction
all have. It actually leaks into
Mr.
and
Mrs. Gary Joaea, a
dedication
to
hla
job
and
her
Zl56. Editori.ltl Phone 992-2157.
Kissinger was chosen
Common Pleas Court.
wtt!r
1ht
temporary
the urine from the kidney and formation about vitamin C,
Second claSii po.!!l.age paid al
because of "his contribution remarks were met with sound
Wllovene W. Rutt and JIJJllll daUCibt•' Hlmden.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
·
is rea bsorhed by the kidney its value and whether or not it
reltrllllllnl
order
did
not
applause.
Other
speakers,
toward improving
Nat.itmal advertising represenD. Rutt, both of Pomeroy,
so that we don't Jose very is a miracle preparation send
tative W&lt;~ rd • GrUfith Company,
pro and con were applau~ occur. D reported that ftled for dlllollltlan. Fllinl
relationships
among
people
Inc .. Bottinelli &lt;~Jlti Gallagher Div.,
the :h; .,..,. were being
much d. it in the urine. 50 cents for The Health Letter
of all religons, races and during the meeting.
1S7 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
for dlvon:e were lfamlr i.
number
3-3,
Vitamin
C
Anything that increases the
Mrs. Sheets ult:ed Downie poatpoaed.
10011.
nationalities" while serving
(Ascorbic
Acid
).
Include
a
Subscription rntes: Delivered by
HarrllonvDle parent~· wen Smith, from Ruth AniiiJmldt, Now you know
amount leaked by the kidney
what recoUl'lle the board of
as
secretary
of
state
in
the
carrier
where
available
75
cents
per
batb of Pumii'Oy, and lllttJ
r.,uu..ct MepDan WU
will increase the amount that long , sta mped , selfeducation baa in these em lwld for tbe Tburlday Puaw.., Rt. 1. lAinC But' •••,
~. eek. 8y Molur Route \(here carrier
Nixon
and
Ford
adaddressed envelope for mail- servic~ not availa ble, Ont! month,
shows up on a urine test.
matters. She stated that In court IICtlan but wen without from Dmv• R. Pel lOIII, Rt. not tbe lint DIID to eirministrations.
~.25. By mall h1 Ohio and W. Va .,
CIIIIIIII\'Iilte the lll'tll; be
ing.
Send
your
request
to
Dr.
In some people standing
One Year, $2'l.(IO; Six monlhs,
Former antiwar activists her opinion the employe11 their~ • . 11IIJ aid 1, Lq jlottom.
Lamb
in
care
of
this
dltd bihar lbro~ the
they had been lldYIIed by
seems to increase the leak in$1 1.50/· · Three mon th.~, SHIO;
protested the award, saying have an of the leverage.
YOJIII and JUIDcten
newspaper.
P.O.
Box
ISS!,
F.:L'
i
t:W
\ere
$26.00
yc-.r:
Six
month_
s
to the urine
the failure of
Betsy Horky, a teacher, Pomeroy vUJace olle!.oll t11at
KisSinger's selection mocks
$13 .50; Tlltee rnunlhS. $7.50.
..
c-. took cbarp end
ltadio
City
Station,
New
Yok,
the kidneys to reabsorb
IIBid there appean to be a they would not be llllllnd to
SUbls~.:rlptlon priloe lncludcJJ Suncl.!ty
the
memory
of
per1011s
killed
cwiijlleted
• .--4
Times-Sen un el.
t
albumin in sufficient NY 10019.
real han~ on blnd.inR ar- carry etpa In Pclmlroyllnc:e
during the Vietoam war.
amot&amp;ts. ~c refers

(Colltlnued from pqtt

1)

------------------ ---------1

! Area Deaths

Pie baking contest to feature
Y esteryear events Saturday

EC135

HEALTH

Protein in urine

Meigs
Property
Transfers

or

Driver Hospital
crashes
•lnto fi eld

!

By GREG BAILEY

The Meigs Marauders hope
to notch their first victory of
the almost new 1977 grid
campaign when they host the
Ripley Vikings Friday night
at Marauder Stadium.
··
The Marauders of Coach
Charlie Chancey were impressive in their ·initial
·COntest last week, alihough
they fell to the powerful Big
Blacks from Point Pleasant,
IM. The Big Blacks' potent
offense was stymied in the
second half last week aa the
Marauder defense never let
Point threaten after sccring a
touchdown in each of the first
two periods.
Although the defense was
impressive, .Meigs' offense
left something to be desired
as Points' defense held the
Marauders to Just 63 yards
· total offense on the night. But
one bright spot was the im·
pressive passing combination
of quarterback George Gum

to Kenny Voun,o: and Greg
Becke.-.
Coach Chaney, although
admitting his team had first
game jitters (it was Point's
second game), was overall
well pleased with his boys'
performance. Although Point
Pleasant was much bigger
than Meigs, the . weliconditioned Marauders came
through the match in good
shape physically.
Turning io this week's
contest, Chancey was 1mpressed enough with his boys'
.performance to start the
same lineup as last week.
Ripley went IHO last year
and hasn't had a winning
season since 1969. But the
Vikings have a new head
coach in Frank Marino, and
the coaching philosophy of
being offensively oriented is
paying dividends already.
Ripley Ia 2o() in 1977 with wins
of 18-Q over Charleston

Catholic and a 14-13 overtime
Stanley. Van Willford and
thriller over Hurricane.
Ripley runs its offense in a Brent Arnold. All three Meigs
straight I (the backs in a defensemen were outstrighlline) and then shifts to standing in the Point
a "T" or slot loi'J!Iation. One Pleasant game.
Ripley will definitely he
edge that the Vll&lt;ings may
have is their size. They ~ye improved over last season
will be iookihg for
six men that tip tbe 11!'8~ and
revenge
as they were one of
over 200 lbs. , but only one of
the
two
Meigs
victims of 1976.
them starts on their offensive
But
with
that
impressive
line. They also have 16
Point
Pleasant
performance,
returning lettennen, most of if Meigs' offense gets in gear,
whom started at some time I'll put my money on the
l!lst year.
Marauders. Kick-off is 8 p.m.
Coach Marino has a
veteran backfield to work ·
With.
Quarterback Jerry
Ocheltree Is starting his third
year at calling the signals,
and at 5'11" and 175 pounds,
his strong point is his passing
WS ANGELES (U P!) game. Fullback Eric Cline is Los Angeles Mar.ager
back, as Is halfback Mitch Tommy Lasorda says it's his
Cannichael. Cannichael is fault that the Dodgers missed
the Vikings' leading threat, the irony of clinching the
but he'll be running into that National League West title by
Meigs front wall of Brent beating the Cincinnati Reds.
Lasorda said his mistake
was in letting pitcher Tommy
John, who was tired by the
ninth inning of Wednesday

Sports Briefs
starting times for baseball's
Press American and National
By
United
International
League championship 5eries
ATLANTA (UP!) - The were announced Wednesday
Atlanta Falcons waived five by baseball commissioner
players Wedn ,e sday , Bowie Kuhn.
inCluding running back Sonny
The AL championship
Collins, and re.&amp;gned two begins in the AL East
defensive players they bad champions' park at 3:15p.m.
waived earlier.
Wed., Oct. ~. followed by an
The Falcons waived 8:15 p.m. game on Thursday.
Collins, their second-round The series then switches to
draft choice in 1976, along the AL West on Fri. Oct. 7 at
with rookie wide recefver · 8 : 1~p.m., with games4 and~.
Shelton Diggs of Southern if neccessary, on Saturday at
California, running back l : 15 p.m. and Sunday at 8: I~
Billy Pritchett, and defensive p.m.
backs Bob Jones and Ron
The NL series begins in the
Mabra.
.
NL West with two 8 : 1~ p.m.
The two players resigned games Tues., Oct. 4 and
after having . ~n waived Wedn., Oct. 5, with the rest of
were defensive tackle Jeff the 5erles at the ·NL East.
Yeates and safety Tom Game 3 starts at 3:1~ p.m.
Moriarity.
Friday, and games 4 and 5, if
· neccessaty , begin
on
Saturday at 8:15 p.m. and
NEW YORK (UP!) -The Sunday at 5 p.m.

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WeekEnd

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1971 Ford Crew Cab ___,$1349

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'1970.'Monte
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QB
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T
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190

190
170
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C 160

NEWYORK (UP! ) - Thi• wasn 'I any solemn church he was
in, this was a noisy ballpark, throbbing excitedly with nervous
anticipation. So what if it wasn't the most appropriate place in
the world to be asking special favors ? Reggie Jackson, the
QOnconformist, didn't care.
,
He simply kneeled down on one knee right there in the ondeck circle and prayed, only proving, if nothing elSe, that even
peQplewith $3rnillion have to ask for some help once in awhile.
So while ii4,365 others at Yankee Stadium were focusing their
attentjon on Thurman Munson, the man at the plate, Reggie
Jackson was having his own private talk with The Man
UJ)6tairs. He wasn't really asking for a whole lot. Only
everything.
"!prayed to God that I'd hit a home run," he said afterward.
To get on the Big Fellow's good side, Jackson even made a
lillie deal with him.
"'If you let me hit one, I'll tell everybody you did it,"' he
promised.
Jackson 's prayer was cut short by Munson's line-shot single
up the middle leading off lhe last of the ninth Wednesday night.
That was only the Yankees' fifth hit off Reggie Cleveland, the
pudgy Red Sox right-hander who was locked in a scoreless
thriller with Ed Figueroa.
Now it was Jackson's turn to hit and he hadn't exactly been
murdering the RM Sox, having struck out four times in two
nighls. Before going u~ to the plate, he was summoned off to
the side by Dfck Howse"l-, the Yankees' third base coach.
"You're going to be bunting," Howser told him, wanting to
make absolutely sure Jackson understood because ballplayers
miss signs far more often than most people ever imagine.
&lt;Continued on page 4)

and

building materials

Forget
preseason
Johnson says

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY

CORPORATION

OBEY
ALLSIGNS!
TRAFFIC
DON'T SPEED!
THINK SAFETY! "
STAY ALERT!

· 1.

SCHOO·L'S
.

OPEN
.

t~~

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992-2126

155

Close fight
_is predicted

ALLIED CHEMICAl,. CORP.
ASHLAND PLANT

_.;ryour Chevv Dealer''

UP1 Sporll Editor

140
140

night's game, p1tch w Ken
Griffey.
"I figured he had enough
stuff," Lasorda said. "He had
been getting Griffey out all
year. .
"I just figured Griffey likes
balls up and Tommy can
usually keep the liall down . I
guess I made the wrong
decision. That's the way the

.

POMEROY MOTOR .CO.

155

152
171

UNTIL 6 PM

Hurry In For AGood DEAL

By MILTON RICHMAN

MEIGS-OFFENSE

Pos. Ht. Wt. GeOfge Gum
Jerry Ocheltree QB 5·11 175 Greg Becker
Eric Cline
F B 5·11 170 Mike Way land
Mi1ch Carmlc.haei Van Willford
HB 5·9 160 Kenny Young
Robbie Brilton HB 5-10 15~ Bob Seelig
ChuckSm it.h
E 6-1
160 Randy Arnold
"-"ark Mart i n
E S-10 142
Brent Arnold
Kevln lee
T S-9 197 Brent Stanley
Tim Merritt
T 6-2 200 Mark Magnotta
G 5·11· 160 Mark Mitch
John Knapp

ball bounces."
Griffey slammed a two-run
homer with one out in the top
of lhe ninth, giving the .Reds a
9-8 come-f r om-behind
victory.
Tommy John's ERA
boosted from 2.47 to 2.73 and,
understandably , he
was "disappointed.
"The pitch was belt high,
John said. "lt was a great
pitch to hit."
Griffey, meanwhile, could
not have heen happier .
"It was very nice to hit it
off Tommy John," he said. "I
was just trying to get on base.
points.
The Dodgers know we can
SVAC GRID
beat them. We have nothing
STANDINGS
to
prove. We're just having
Team
W L i&gt; OP
Southern
1 o 18 6
an off year."
Southwester"n
0 1 ·0 6
Sparky Anderson, Reds'
Kyger Creek
0 1 10 13
manager, echoed Griffey's
Hannan Trace
0 1 22 26
awkward at first but he's a opinion;
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP! ) North Gallia.
0 1 0 20
Symmes Val .
0 1 6 3lJ Ken Norton and Jimmy good technician."
"I said last week that they
In fact, Zanon lasted a lot w9uldn 't clinch it while we
Eastern
0 1 6 46 Young will have a close fight
Friday 1s games : Southern
in November, judging from longer than Duane Bobick, were here," Anderson said.
at Southwestern ; Symmes
their performances in Norton's last opponent. "At least we can salvage
Valley
at
Eastern ;
Wednesday night's Norton finished Bobick off in that."
Huntington Ross at Kyger
58 seconds of the first round.
Creek ; Waterford at Hannan
heavyweight fight .
Cincinnati was behind by
Trace and Zane Trace at
Neither lighter had an easy In the fight before Norton's one point entering Ute ninth.
North Gallia .
victory, though Norton's win Young scored a surprisingly Then, John allowed a leadoff
seemed more decisive and rugged 10-round viqory over walk to Joe Morgan, who was
26-year-old journeymsn Jody caught stealing,- but Pete
effortless than Young's.
Norton, 233, with a 39-4-0 · Ballard.
Rose followed with a single
Young, 213, a 28-year-old and Gt'i£fey smashed his long
record, knocked out tenth·
rated Lorenzo Zanoh of ehiladelphia resident who is bast into the right-field
Milan, Italy in the filth round now 22-5-2, pounded away pavilion.
.
combinations
to
of a 10-round fight. Norton with
Cintinnati was aided by
used left hooks and right Ballard's head. Ballard, 205, Pedro Borton, 9-4, who
of Houston now has a 24-10 pitched two innings before
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The hands to finish Zanon off at record.
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
Dale Murray came in on the
Cincinnati Bengals know this 3:08.
Young
was
judged
a
winner
Zanon, ·20-3-1, a fanner
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
ninth to record his fourth
is not the time to look back.
47-42 by David Moretti and save.
mechanic,
has
beaten
Alfredo
REASONABLE PRICES.
.
"Our preseas'on ovenill
Harold B~ck , and a 47-41
Evangelista
of
Spain,
who
Steve
Garvey
knocked
in
was good," says Bengals'
winner by Art Lurie. Referee
WE
coach Bill Johnson, "but now· went 15 rounds with Charlie Roth deducted a point three runs with his 3()th
CASH&amp;CARRY
Muhammad
Ali
last
May.
'
homer
and
an
RBI.,single
by
DELIVER
is when things begin to count.
PRICES
" I needed· the works," from both fighters, taking one Johnny Bench to score four
This is what it's all about."
from Young for a low times in the eighth.
· The Bengals posted a 5-l Norton said. "!ile Yllfs a littl~ away
blow and oite from Ballard
The Reds used Cesar
preseason mark' winning .
for a rapid punch .
Geronimo's
three-run homer
!heir last five straight, but
ATLANTA (UP! ) _ Andy
In the third 10-round fight, and an RBI-single by Johnny
preseason records are . Messersmitn's
immediate third-ranked Ron Lyuke,
qUickly forgotten when the , future with the Atlanta ·220o/&lt;, of Denver, came away Bench to score four times in
eighth.
'
re~ular ~ason IS at hand Braves is cloudy, according with an unpopular majority theLopes
hit his 11th homer in
whi~h It IS Sun~y ·
to the docior who operated on decision over the relatively the. bottom of the ftrst and
Cincy opens regula~ season his pitching . arm this week. inexperienced 27-year-old Garvey
singled in Los
play at home agamst \he
Me s s e r s m it h ' 3 2' Stan Ward, 236'h , of
Angeles'
second
run in the
archrlval Cleveland underwent an operation Sacramento.
third. The Dodgers took the
Browns.
Monday to have bone chips
The crowd greeted the
Cleveland too ha_d a pretty and spurs removed from his verdiCt with thunderous boos. lead with three runs in the
923 S. lrd Ave .
Middleport, 0 .
good preseason, gomg 3-3 and elbow and to have a ligament Most observers felt thai fourth on Roy Cey's two-run
single
and
Garvey's
RBI
base
992-2709
or
992-6611
losmg those three gam~ by a repaired in the arm. ..
Ward, now 8-1-2, had .scored
Open: 7:00.to5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
total of only seven potnts.
"He won't have a .real good with sharper punches to the hit Garvey' s solo ltomer
came
with
two
out
in
the
sixth
Bengals coaches plan to year next season," Dr , 35-year-old Lyle, who .is now
7: 00 to 3:00 Saturday
. ~d Yeager added a twwun
start VIrtually the same team Robert Wells an orthopedic 35-5-1.
blast in the seventh.
in Sunday's opener at surgeon sald Wednesday .
Sixth-ranked contender
Riverfront Stadium":~ a year Wells added that he.expected Larry Hohnes, 211, of Easton,
ago. The onl:,o: exceptions are Messersmith to resume a Pa. won the second bout by
at the defenstv~ tackle spots successful pitching carrer giving a vicious beating to
where
rook1_es
E~dte "in the long term."
Fred " Young Sanford"
Edwards and W1bon Whitley
Houpe, 199, of Los Aotgeles.
have
won
starting
Referes Buddy Basilico
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
assignments.
stopped
the one-sided bout 47
Sunday will be the 15th - The Kansas City Chiefs
game between Ohio's two Wednesday picked up rookie seconds into the seventh
NFL clubs. The series is ·tied running back Ted McKnight round, calling il a technical
from the Oakland ltaiders knockout.
7-7.
In the first round bout,
and waived halfback Pat
Leroy
.Jones, 271, of Deriver,
McNeil.
Colo.
,
won a unanimous
McKnight was the leading
decision
over New York State
rusher in the history of
Minnesota-Duluth with 2,963 champion Gregory Johnson,
THISTLEDOWN
yards. The 6-foot-1, 203- · 207'h, that stretched Jones'
NORTH RANDAlL, Ohio pounder was used by the record to 20-0-1.
(UPI) _ Sunprinl won her !ta!ders on the kick return
third straight at Thistledown . un1t as well as the backfield . .
Drivers na:.'s the time t.o bee&gt;tra cautious. There aremore
Wednesday, taking the
\(}\
kids on the road more b1kes 1n the streets. more cars p1ck1ng
featured eighth race.
·
·
up and droppinJi off students. Be prepared to stop at an in·
The three-year-old filly
· slant's notice. lutes are dependinc on you!
carried Mike Moran to a 1: 12
~ finish for the sbr furlongs,
/' • PartS AUTO PARn 110111 How quick you stop depends on a
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...,
Plus AND SIRVICI DUIIRs well tuned suspension system. GOOD
Martha My Love was second
BRAKES are not as ellective with
and Grand Julie was· third.
FUTURE
BUND
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AND
worn
SHOCK ABSORBERS. A WORN
The 8-7-6 ninth race trifecta
QUALifY
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THAT
...
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JOINT or IOLER ARM can throw
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LEAD THE CLASS
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and BRIGHT HEADLIGHTS Improve
Determlr\(! Katie was worth
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to stop.
' Visit your local Paris Plus Auto Parts
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/
M.D. SNOCI iUSDUlU
Parts Plus Senlice Dealer to have
SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER" 17th
your "Stopping System" checked
soon.
·

with unblemished record
Valley was given a 30-6
lashing by Fort · Gay and
North Gallia suffered a 2M
defeat to Waterford.
Two
SV AC
contests
highlight action involving
Class A schools this weekend.
Friday night, Southern
goes to Southwestern and
·Symmes Valley is at Eastern
In the league engagements.
Non-league action finds
Huntington of Ross at Kyger
Creek; Waterford at Hannan
Trace and Zane Trace at
North Gallla.
In most games, the defense
was well ahead of the offense.
SVAC head ccaches will be
working extra hard this week
in an effort to get their offenses untracked. Hannan
Trace, the cellar team in last"
year's standings, showed the
most offensive punch with 22

Probable ·starters

Reds rally to heat Dodgers

Southern only SV AC team
If the season goes on the
basis of opening games in the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference it could be a long
one for just about every
school. Only one SVAC team,
the South.e rn Tornadoes
posted a victory last Friday
night, the opening of the 1977
grid season .
Coach John Dudding's
Tornadoes posted an I~
victory
over
Federal
Hocking.
rn other games, the
defending champion Kyger
Creek Bobcats saw aIM lead
turn into a 13-10 loss; Hannan
Trace was edged 26-22 by
Hannan, W. Va .; So\lthwestern lost a· close 6-0
thriller to Southeastern of
Ross County ; Eastern suffered a 48-e bombing at the
banda of Caldwell; Symmes

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4-TbeDailySent.inel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,SePt.l5, 1977

linescores

Dodgers magic number still four
Nallunal League ROWidup
By FRED DOWN

l1PI Sports Writer
Bob Howsam fired a
message across the coontry
from Cincinnati and the twotime world champion Reds
heard iii01Ld and clear in Los
Angeles.
Mo\or League- Standing•
8y Un ted Press International
Resigned to the fact that
N•tlonal LtitUe
the Reds will soon be
east
W L.. Pd. GB eliminated from the National
Phil a
~ ss .6?1
p;ttst&gt;gn
83 63 .568 1'~ League's Western Division
race after a thoroughly
76 69 .51&lt; 14
Sl . LOUiS
75 69 .521 )Jllh disappointing defense of their
Chlcl'lgO
67 78 ..t62 23
Montreal
New York
se 57 .&lt;oo 32 world championship, the
West
Cincinnati club president said
W L Pet . GB
this season has been the most
Los Ano
89 57 .610
Cincl
77 70 .S.24 12 1'1 disappointing of his career as
Houston
73 73 .500 16
a baseball executive.
Sa"n Fran
68 79 .463 21 VI
" I still think they're the
San DifQo .., , 64 8.ol .432 26
Atl anta
ss 91 .377 34
best starting eight players in
W~nesdar's Results
Montreoal 3, Chicago 2. 12 inns baseball," Howsam said of
N•w York I, Philadelphia o · team now 121&gt; games behind
Piltsbur~h at St. LOUiS ppd
the Dodgers. "I expect them
San Diego 6; Atlanta •
to come back next year and
Cine 9, Los Angeles 8
San Fran J, Houston 2
do the jol) they can do.
Today ' s. Pl'obilble Pitchers.
(All Tlmes EDT}
Houston &lt;Lemongello 8-l_.l at
San Francisco (Halick i U -10) ,

oo the words "as a unit."
The Reds could have rolled
over to let the inevitable
happen when they went iniD
the ninth iMing trailing lbe
Dodgers by one rWl. A Los
Angeles victory would have
meant the Dodgers . could
clinch the Western title by
beating the Reds again
Thursday night.
·
But the Reds, determined
to bow as world champioos
like champs, rallied oo a two·
run homer by Ken Griffey in
the IDp of the ninth and hung
oo for a ~ triumph .
Tonuny John, seeking his
19th win, carried the 8-7 lead
into the ninth . Joe Morgan
walked and was out stealing
but Pete Rose singled and

Griffey followed with his
gam&amp;-winnlng homer into the
right field pavilion.
The Dodgers'
magic
number thus remained at
four - meaning thaI any
combinatioo of Los Angeles
victories and Cincinnati
losses will clinch the title for
the Dodgers.
Pedro Borbon pitched two
innings to receive credit for
the win with Dale Murray
picking up a save.
Ge&lt;Wge Foster hit his 48th
homer and Cesar Geronimo a
three-run homer for the Reds
while Steve Garvey knocked
in three runs with his 30th
homer and
singles and
Dave Lopes and Steve
Yeager also homered for the
Dodgers.
The New York Melsshaded
the Philadelphia Phillies 1-&lt;1,
the Montreal Expos beat the

thr1

American Leagae J\oulldup
By FRED McMANE
IJPI Sports Writer
Reggie Jackson 's star
quality , which has only
flickered occasionally this

after signing a mulli-millioo best in the games that meant
dollar contract with the New something to the peMant
York Yankees last winter, race, or In the World Series.
The
times
and
still is ooe of baseball's most
gifted players in the clutch SW'roundings have changed,
when the big money is on the but Jackson hasn't. He's still
season, always seems to line.
at his best in the " big"
shine brightly in the heat of a
Jackson was a team leader games. He proved thai again
pennant race .
for the Oakland A's during Wednesday night by making
The
c'o ntroversial their three-year reign as two circus catches in right
outfielder , who has gone world champions from 1972- · field then hitting a gameP i ttsburgh at Montreal , night
74 and he was always at his winning, lwo-rw~ homer in
Philadelphia at St. Louis 1 through a season of torment
night
the ninth inning to give the
Houston at San-Diego, night
Yankees a 2-0 victory over
Atlanta at LOS An'geles, night
c;nc;nnat; at San Franc;sco,
the Boston Red Sox.
night
Jackson's performance
X·COmpletfon of susp. game of
7-13 and regular game
Continued from Page 3
against Boston Wednesday
Jackson nodded.
night was his finest all·
What Howser was telling him wasn't really news ID him aroWld effort of the season,
Major League Standings
Billy Martin had spoken to him about it in the and it couldn't have come at a
because
By United Press International
Ameritiln League
Yankees ' dugout only a few minutes before. Anticipating more opportune time for the
East
W. L Pet. GB Munson might gel on, Martin had asked Jackson what kind of a Yankees.
bunter he was?
The triumph , the Yankees'
New York
90 56 .616
Baltimor
81 58 .600 21Jl
"I'll
get
it
dOwn,"
guaranteed
the
Yankee
slugger
never
.
sixth
In !even games over
61)ston
86 59 '.593 31h
having
been
asl&lt;ed
by
Martin
bunt
before.
'
Boston
at Yankee Stadiilm
Detroit
"69 78 .A62 211}2
00
Cleovelnd
&gt;66 81 .4S6 24 1h
"Make sure you do," Martin instructed.
this year, dropped the hard.
· Milw
62 87 .416 19'1•
Jackson tried 00 bunt the first pitch but \Vasn 't able to. hitting Red Sox into third
Toronto
48 96 .333 41
West
Marlin took the bunt sign off for the following pitch, then put it place in the AL East as
W. L Pet. GB back on again, took it off and put it on a third time for the filth Baltimore ·
swept
a
Kan City
89 54 .622
pitch as Cleveland ran the count ID J..and·Z .
·
doubleheader from Torontn
Ch icago
a·1 64 .559 9
Te&gt;~as
79 · 65 .5-49 1011,
• and moved iniD second place.
Now there as n 0 thin le'ift f J -•·-- t0 d0 b t to h't
1 away · The Yankees lead the Or1"oles
Minn
78 68 .53-4 12112
w
g
or a'"""'"
u
Carltnn
Fisk,
U!e
Red
Sox'
catcher,
gave
Cleveland
the
sign
Calif.
69 74 .483 20
Oakland
56 86 · .39.4 32•12
for a fastball. Cleveland came In with a good one, keeping it by two and one-half games
Seattle
57 91 .3 85 3A•h
down, but Jackson, with a little help from his "friend, " caught and the Red Sox by three.
. . Wednesday's Results.
II
square on the screws, right on the joy spot, and got it
"I prayed when I was on·
~ew York 2, Boston 0
Baltimore 6, Toronto s 1st
up. ,. up ... and away for his 26th home run or the season and his deck that I would hit one
Baltimo.r e 4, Toronto 2' 2nd
93rd run batted in.
out," said Jackson, whose
Detroit 5, Cleveland 3, '1st
Detroit 2. ~leveland l, 2nd , 10
Watching the flight of the ball, Jackson knew it was gone · gamewinning blow came on a
inns
even
before it lailded some 20 rows up in the center field 3-2 pitch by Reggie Cleveland
Kan City 5, Oakland 2, 1st
Kan City 6, Oakland o, 2nd
bleachers for a two:run gamewinner that.powered the Yankees after '!'hurman Munson had
M lnnesa·t a 7, Chicago 0
to an ultra-drllllllltic 2-0 victory, ball~oning their lead to 3-1'. led off the inning with a
Texas 2, California 1
games in the · American League and sending the Red Sox single. "I feel very relieved
Milwaukee 8, Seattle. 5
.
Today•s Probable Pitchers
tumbling into third place behind the encroaching Orioles.
a.nd happy. This is my' most
!All Times EDT)
Not once, but twice after rounding the bases, Jackson had to satisfying gsme."
Oakland (Blue 14-17 and
Torrealba 15-5)_ at Kansas City return to the field and acknowledge the continuing wild cheers
Almost as gratifYing as the
(Hassler 9-5 and Splittorff 14·6),
of the crowd, who simply refused to leave the ball park.
homer to Jackson were his
2, 6:00p.m.
Boston (Tiant 10-8) at New
Later as he sat in front his locker, his face bathed in two fine catches in the
York {Torrez 16-12). 8:00p.m .
perspiration,
Jackson said this was his "most satisfying" outfi~ld.
They
were
Baltimore (Grimsley 13 -8) at
Toronto (Clancy 3-6) , 7:30p .m .
~ecJally:ewarding because
moment since being sigrred by the Yankees last November.
~innesota {Zahn
11-12 ) at
Certainly, he had every right to feel that way. Figueroa had his defenS';ve play .had beeq
Ch1cago (Stone 14-10), 8 :30p .m .
pitched well enough, holding the Red Sox to seven hils, but they muc~ ~aligned thiS season.
California (Caneira 1-0) at
Texas (Moret 3·2 ), 8 :35 p.m.
would have had at least two more and might have even won the · Ear~e~ m the year there was
Friday's Games
hall game had it not been for a pair or superlative defensive an mc11ient m Boston when
Boston at Baltimore, night
Toronto at Cleveland, night
plays plays by Jackson in right field.
·
Yankee Manager Billy
New York; at Oetrolt, night
In
the
fourth
inning
with
one
out
and
Jim
Rice
on
base,
he
Marttn
yanked Jackson from
Oakland ·at Milwaukee, night
jwnped in the air and flung himself up against the right field . a g~me durmg the rruddle of
California at Chicago, night
Seattle at Kansas City, night
fence to take away a 'Possible home run from George Scott. an mning because he fail.ed In
Mi,nnesota at Texas, n ight
Again in the seventh, with one out and Denny Doyle on second, hustle aft~r a .ball.
.
he charged in fast and took a tumble but still robbed Bernie
Jackson s ftrst defensive
Major League Leaders
Carbo of a base hit by snaring his sinking liner only an inch or ~e~ came m the fourth
Bv un;ted Press lnternat;onal so off the grass.
mnmg when. he leaped high
. ba~::.Tr.:O"!;· batsl
The
right
side
of
his
uniform
still
showing
the
deep
green
agamstthe
right field ~en~ tn
1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
slams from where he had slid in the outfield ID come up with ~ar George Scott 8 line
· ·
G. AB. H Pet. Carbo's smash, Jackson spoke of how he had struck out three ~Jve bid f?&lt;" .a n extra base
~t~n~":tf~;t
:~;: times in Monday night's game with the Red Sox. He talked of hit. Two ~mgs later he
5;m mns 5t.L
136 470 152 .323 how he had gone to a mid-town bar after the game and met
mad~ a dl~g ~tch .off
~:'Jfr~~ ~1nL
George Steinbrenner there and how the Yankee owner tried 1D ~rrue Carbo s .line dr~ve
Foster Cln
U3 559 111 .3 17 cheer him up.
Wl~ . a runner Ul scormg
5Hme·nltdhr1Lce so
137 .t55 w ..316
"He told me I was going to win tonight's ball game " position for the second out of
,
138 494 1SA .312 . J k
'd . .
•
Luznsk; Ph ;1
134 498 153 .307 ac son sa1 , grmnmg and laking a sip from the can of beer he
Rose c;n
147 595 182 .306 had in his right hand
AMERICAN LEAGUE . .
.
'
.
. .
G. AB H Pet. D1d all that mooey the Yankees had gtven him stU! weigh
Carew M;n
142 567 216 .381 heavily on him, someone asked him?
136m 160 .335
Jackson said it did
s;ngleton Bl
Bostock Mln
139 538 178 .331
.
. ·
LeFlore Det
140 592 192 .3 24
"Sometimes I think about the money I'm making," he said;
R;ce Bos
us 581 188 .3 2' • "how George Steinbrenner's neck is out like it is and I feel I
Rivers NY
128 519 171 .323 sh uld do ll I
,.
•

spo·rt s p arad e

mmm

g; mm:m

Bailor Tor

108 435 139 .320
123 503 158 .314

Brett KC

136 471

By United Prell tntern1tionat
N•tion•l Leagu•
NY
0000100D0- 150
Ph ill
000 000 000 - 0 3 ?
EsplnosiJI enG Sturi"IS, carl
too . McGraw {9t •nd MtC.u
v~r
W - Espinosa. l ·l2
l·
Ca rtton, 21 ~

o

a

the inning,
leading batting average tn
In other AL games, Bal· .381.
limore defeated Toronto
Rangers 2, Angels 1
twice S.S and 4-2, Kansas City
Doyle Alexander allowed
look a doubleheader from ooly three hits in posting his
Oakland 5-2 and 6-0 , 15th triumph as the Rangers
Minnesota blanked Chicago 7- downed the Angels. Johrmy
0, Texas nipped California 2- Ellis hit a homer for the
1, Milwaukee downed Seattle Rangers and Jim Sundberg
11-5 and Detroit look two from drove in \he other run with a
Cleveland 5-3 and 2·1.
sacrifice fly. Ken Brett went
Orioles 6-4, Blue Jays 5-2
the distance for California
Lee May was the hitting and suffered his 12th loss in 24
star for the Orioles in their decisions.
doubleh~ader sweep of the
Brewers 8, Mariners 5
Blue Jays as he drove in three
Home runs by Robin Yount,
runs in the opener and 'Sixto Lezcano and pinch·
doubled home another run in hitter Ken McMullen sparked
the nightcilp. Scott McGregor the Brewers to victory over
carne on to preserve Mike the Mariners. Yount's homer
Flanagan's 12th triumph in was a two-run shot while
the opener and Rudy May's .Lezcano delivered a three·
17th victory in the nightcap. run
blast.
Eduardo
Royals 51, A's 2-0
Rodriguez, who relieved
The Royals stretched their starter Jerry Augustine with
winning streak to a major . · two out in lije second,
league season high of 14 completed the game tn gain
games and reduced their his fourth. victory.
"magic
number"
for
Tigers 5-2, Indians 3-1
clinching the AL West to 10 by
Ben Ogilvie had four hits,
whipping the A's twice . AI iiicluding his 19th homer, and
J
ho
Cowens and Tom Poquette
ason T mpson became the
each drove in two runs in the first Tiger player since 1966
opener while John Mayberry to drive in 100 runs in a
knocked in two runs in the season in Detroit's opening
nightcap.
game
triumph.
Ron
Twins 7, White Sox o
LeFlore's sacrifice fly in the
Dave Goltz notched his 18th lOth inning enabled the
. victory with a seven-hitter in Tigers to complete a sweep of
· becoming , the . first pitcher the twin bill.
this season tn blank the White
Sox in a complete game
effort. Chicago was shut out
once previously in a
combined
effort
by
California's Nolan Ryan and
Dave LaRoche. Rod Carew
had three hits for Minnesota
ID boost his major league(~nd

NATIONAL LEAGUE : Can·
dllart1, Pitt 2.51 ; Hooton, LA
2.6A; carlton. Ph,it 2.70; John,

LA 2.72; A.RtuiCIIel. Chi 2.75.
AM E A I CAN LEAGUE :

T•nlna, Cll 2.St; R ven,' C.at

2.64;

Blyletlen,

Te•

2.83 ;
Guidry, NY 2.90; Rozema , Det

3.01.

•

(2f'd , 10 Innings I

o

Det

000 000 010· 1- 26
000 100 000 o- 1 6 1
W IICOK, Taylor (8) , Hitter (Sh
Foucau lt (10} and Parrish ;
HOOd, Kern (10) and Kendall. '
W- HIIIer , 7 U L- Ktrn. 8-10.

Clev

(1St G1me

002 ooo ooo-

oa kl

2 11

KanCty
220 000 lOx- 5 11 l
Langford
and
Sanguillen ;
ColbOrn, Gure ( 8 ) and Parter .
w - colborn, 11-13 , L-LenQtord,
210 000 042- 9 12 1 8·11 , HRs- Kans.as City, Cowens
101 301 21)0- 8 16 I (22) . Oai&lt;lond, JorgMsen (3) ,

Clnci

LsAngl

USED CAR SPECIALS
1974 CHEVROLET
1975 JEEP
EL CAMINO CLASSIC
CHEROKEE 'S'
Loca L one owner , auto.,
a .c.. tflt wheel , radlals,
chrome wheels.

Local

clean,

svper

car,

auto trans .

1974 CHEVY

1973 CHEVROLET
C-10 lh TON PICKUP

VEGA WAGON
4 cyl. , 4 spd .• CLC .,

Auto ., 8 foot bed .

~chrome

wheels.

'2495
1975 Rabbit, Has A/C - - - - 1975 V.W. Beetle - - - - - - '2995
1974 V.W. Beetle

1

1971 Super Beetle

1

2695
1495

1971 .Beetle, As Is --__.,.---1695
1

196 7 Beetle, As Is

395

Windowlits
Reg. 64'
Sale Price

(2nd Game&gt;

49'

Sed,. Price

Baltlmr
110 100 lOG- 4 7 0
Toronto
000 011 000- 2 10 1
R . May) McGregor (7J and
Dempsey ; Gar'vin and Ashby.
W- R . May , 11-12. L- Garvin, 916. HRs- Toronto, Howell (7).
Sa:ttimore, Dauer (2).

True Temper

Hoppe's

Gun

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel
A Mluurfty uf One Burned lip!

RAP: .

.

Mrs. Pauline Horton, presi·
I'm the only one in my family who doesn' t smoke, bull'm
dent; Mrs. Mrs. Betty Fultz
constanUy being forced to "smoke second-hand" by breathing
vice president; Mrs. Clar~ unfrellh, stinky air, polluted by my parents and two brothers .
Criswell, secretary; Mrs.
· I tell them it makes me sick, but they just smart off, "Hold
Donna Byer, Ireasurer; Mrs. your breath then."
Juanita Bachtel, Christian
How can I gel some righl$ around my house? social Involvement; Mrs. IJNWILUNG SMOKER.
Ruth Bwngardner, Christian U.S.:
Global Concerns; Mrs.
Inside almost every smoker (well-submerged in some! ) ls
Marion French, Christian an anxiety button that responds to the right IDuch . But yO\Lr
personhood, Mrs. Nan Moore, "touch" is definitely wrong!
· program resource; Mrs.
Knock off the criticism and complaints and come on with
Mary Rinehart, member- tactful concern. Does your Dad cough? Is your Mom short of
ship; Mrs. Enuna Wayland,
breath? Can you outlast a brother oo the teMls court1 Worry
Mrs. Lorena Davis, and Mrs. over them - but subtly. Start them wondering about their
Beulah Hayes, supportative health.
.
community; Mrs. Charles
A smart operator llhould wean at least one family member
YoWJg, public relalions and away from cigarettes within six months, and that's a good
historian ; Mrs . J ones, lllls· • start, because he'll help you with the others. -HELEN
sion coordinator; Mrs. Hor·
+++
too , M rs. Genevee Chesher,
.. :
nominating committee.
You'll note Mom said "he," referring to the quitter. That's
During the meeting Mrs. because women generally don't scare as easily as do men. Or ·
Crisl'ell read a letter from maybe they're more fal.ali.sllc ... or habit-prone. Whatever, I'll
the district
fall meetings. bel your mother is the tast one to give up smoking in your
There was also a letter from family. Let me know If I'm right.
the district treasurer asldng
Meanwhile, you've always got one clean-air area: yO\Lr
for an increase in the pledge. own room. _ SUE
II was decided to increase the
+++
pledge by five percent for the
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
next four years.
I really identify with the wom~&gt;,n whose husband "couldn't
World Community Day was be pleased," and had alienated his daughter completely. If we
announced for Nov. 4 at say one word to my father, he starts a big argument, but if
Heath Church. The program we're quiet, we're "excluding him."
by Mrs. Bachtel was on "Ag·
He long ago lost our love by not giving a damn about us.
ing and Death" and included His desires came first. rr he doesn't get them, he makes life
an article entitled "It's miserable. He heaps on the guilt, screaming about ingrate
Almost the Last Game." Mrs.
kids,
Bachtel said that one can
He hates our government, "rotten .h ippies," loud music,
always look forward in the inefficient service (for him there's no other kind), teenagers,
spirit which never becomes · · the world, and he says so loudly with obscenities, In public. His
too old to be renewed. She temper is awful, and then comes "poor me" because people
said the satisfaction of aging llVOid him.
is !ooklng back ~ things and
Now that both children ate away from home, our unhappy
en)oymg memones. She read mother hears aU his gripes and self.pitty, coostantly.
We've tried everything, from tolerance and attempted
a passage ot. s scripture on
followmg Christ and conclud- Wlderstanding tn reasoning. Nothing works. Ignoring him only
THtJRSDA y
ed with the thought that all gels Mom in more hot water. Any suggestions? - WORRIED
WESTERN SQUARE DAN· belong to eternity. To close OVER BITI'ER FATIIER
CING t the Ro al Oak p k the meeting, members DEAR WORRIED:
recrea~on buUL.g 7. 30m;o · repeated the doxology.
You've spent enough time worrying over a father you
lll·30 p m Th~y ·night
Mrs. Chesher, Mrs. Byer, can't change. Now, concentrate on your mother before she is
o.rith ~U Sa
of Ne~ . Mrs. Emma K. Clatworthy, hassled into a nervous breakdown.
Haven as the .:l.er SP90- . and Mrs. ~Y fl:all were . Let her know you'll be on her side if she cbooses for a
oored by the Belles and Se!ius hostesses. Twila Childs was a separation. Give her encouragement on starting. a life .on her
Club. Dress is·casual.
guest.
.own. Tell her tn make an ulllma!um and mean 1t: either her
BRICKLAYERS AND
husband accep~ therapy, which ~y h~lp 1 uproot . his
MASONS, LocaiS2, Thursday
~~:; or he I! lose one long-suffermg wife. - HELEN

Amemorial Jenlice for five
deceased members highlighted the Monday night
meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Hea lh United Methodist
Church.
The service opened with an
organ prelude, " Amazing
Grace" by Mrs. Beulah
Jones. The devotions table
prepared by Miss Nellie
Zerkle featured a round cirde of greenery and candles.
As a tribute in memoriwn
was read for each of the
deceased members, a candle
was lighted, then snuffed out,
and a white ro5e. was put in its
pIace.
theMrs. Kathryn
theKnight
tribu read
names as
te for
Frieda Faehnle was read by
Mrs. Mary Wise, for Julia
McComas by Mrs. Euvetta
Bechtle, for Jeanne Morgan
by Mrs. Mae Lambert, for
Mary Radcliff by Mrs.
Beulall Hayes, and for Francis Klien by Mrs. Edith
Jividen. Mrs. · Billy Jo
Krawsczyn read " Crossing
the Bar" and there was
prayer by Mrs. Knight as
Mrs. Jones played softly in
the back:groWld.
New officers for the 1977-78
year were elected as follows:

us

on

Social
Calendar·

7 p.m. at Meigs Inn.

SUNDAY
P.S. Sometimes w001en stay in niiserable marriages
REVIVAL
NOW
IN
COlJNTY·WIDE
Prayer because they're afraid the children ''won't understand". Make
progress at Free Will Baptist meeting Sunday 2 p.m. at sure your mother ls awate thai you do.
Church, Ash St., Middleport Rutland Community Church.
through Saturday 7:30 p.m. Glen Blsaell class leader.
Olghtly. Rev. Bobby Toler,
ANNUAL IJOMECOMING
evangelilt. Noel Hernnan, at Alfred United Methodist
putor.
Church, Sunday with ustlal
Al,L CANDYSl'RIPERS at · morning aervlc:e, Including
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Smith
~eterans Memorial ijospltal Sunday school at 9:30a.m.; . are announcing the birth of
tnterested In going to Kings wonhlp at 10:45 with a basket
Island on Sept. 17 are to call dinner at noon. Program at thl!ir first' child, a six pound,
.carol. Ault before 2 p;m. at 1:30 in afternoon wil!l the . eight ounce son, Jeremy
'IIOU780. Deadline is lbUl'S- United Harmonizers from Alan, at the Holzer Medical
;day.
Newport, Ohio, Chester area Center, Sept. 3.
• DEMOCRAT
Central talent and other local singers · Maternal grandmother is
• committee Thursday 7:30 taking part. Public Invited. Phyllis Harris. Paternal
: p.m. at Episcopal Church.
ANNUAL HOMECOMING grandparents are Delbert
, LADIES Auxiliary of Big at Mt. Hermon United . and Ruth Smith. Great·
Texas grandparents are Curtis and
•.Bend CB Club Thursday 7:30 Brethren Church,
s
d
1 h Bertha Jolmson and Earnest
~ p.m. Election of officerll.
community' un ay w t
Smith, all or'Racine.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
SATURDAY
• HYMN SING Saturday, m = wot:_shi.A.!2:~ a.m.
-, ,, .J ,. ~ .
:7:30 p.m. at Hazel Com·
AL
Homecoming,
United . Iii 1966, Gemini 2 splashed
· munity Church with Goilpel Morris Chapel
;Echnell Ashville u featured .. Methodist Church Sunda.y down in the Atlantic Ocean
' singers: everyo~e welcome 1' 30 p.m. Sunday SchoolatiO after a th~n-l'ecord three-day
t. ICE
social at
a.m . Singers and musicians space flight.
• prlngs United Methodl.at are .Invited to participate.
~urch starting 6 p.m. Public welcome.
.
JEREMY SMITH
aturday; homemade ice
HOMECOMING Sunday at atarleston, W. Va. Public
• cream, cake, pie, coffee and Morse Chapel Church, 2 p.m. invited.
~110 ft drinks. .
Sunday. All singers Invited;
TUESDAY
VETERANS , . Memorial
:' CAR WASH, SaturdaY at Senior Citizens Chorus wUl
...,
R
·-~•--d Station present several numbers.
Hospital Auxiliary, Tuesday,
..,ugar un """""'
Public Invited
A thought for the day:
7:30 p.m. in the cafeteria.
:Jrom 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. by
MONDAY
English
author John Ruskin
Each member to take a toy
:,ttfelga IDgh Clleerleaders;
MEIGS Co•....., Churches 0 f
said,
"Thai
country is the
suitable for a Child Infant
iiColt $2, outlllde only.
C 1 ·
--;-•
richest
which
noW'ishes tbe
• HEMLOCK Grange
hr It Men a Fellowship· through 12 years of age to be
greatest
number
of noble and
5;atunlay, 7:30 p.m. at hall. meeting 7:30p.m. Monday at Wied as gifts on the pediatric
happy human beings ... "
:PIJes are now payable:
Middleport Church of Christ.
ward.
.;.
SUNDAy
followed by basket dinner at
SPEAKER, noon in fellowship hall. Af::, GIDEON
:'tlunday at Mt. Union Baptist ternoon servtcea begin at 2
:thurch near Carpenter with the Rev. L. R. Mahoney'
::Immediately after Sunday Parkersburg,
W.
Va.,
::;chool which starts at 9'46 speaking and special singing
·
by the Gospel Tones,
;,.m. Pubuc Inv!ted.
.

Son born io Smiths

KeUy

'

Woodsl•sher

Claaninc Kit

3SW2K

For all gauges

'J.j'

CREAM

Rock

SEPTEMBER

SAVINGS

Reg. '5"'

WllH lHE PURaiASE

Sale Price

OIA

78
·sGOO

ONE STEP
CAMERA

.,

•CORDUROY
'

Trve Temper
•

AND T·SHIRT
and WINDOW
$}98

\o

$298

'

yd.

'ton, Phff 21-9 ; R .R:euschel, Chi

AMERICAN LEAGUE : Ryan,

HR - Dtlrolt. Ogilvie (19).

Housloo
000 100 001- 2 6 0
San Fr an
000 012 OOx- 3 6 0
N iekro, McLaughl in {8) and
Hermann ; Knepper, Heaverlo
(9) , Curtis (9) and Sadek . wKnepper , 9·8. L- Niekro, 12 -6.

Clst Gamel
Baltimr
000 200 04o- 6 6 0
Toronto
010 000 040- 5 11 2
Flanagan, Drago (8). T.
Martinez (8 ). McGregor (8) and
Dempsey ; Jefferson , Vuckovich
(8) and Cerone. W- Fianagan,
12-10 . L-Jefferson , 8-16. HRBaltimore, L . May (23).

~~·

LEAGUE:

Cal l9- lA; Goltz. Minn 18·9:
Leonerd, KC 17-,11 ; R .May, Bait
17-12i ColbOrn, KC 17-13.
e1med Run AveriP,e
{based on 144 inning$ p•tched)

IM Mly ;

w- svkn, 5 s. L- Bibbv, 12· 1?.

Atl~ft!l
100 110 lllO-- _.. 10 7
Sn Diego
03l Q00 IlK - 6 \2 2
H a n n a, Leon
(8 1 and
Murpny ; OW&lt;:H inko1 ~pll1Mr
(7). Fingers Ul and Roberts. W
- Spillrier, 1-5 L - Hanna. 2·5
HAs- Atlanta, Burroughs (31},
Matthews (1 A) ; San Diego,
Winfield (2S&gt; .

NATIONAL, LEAGUE: Tave.

19-1; JOhn, LA 18--6; Seaver, Cln

(8)

.·Storm

can.

res. Pitt 61; Cedeno. Hou 52;
Mor:-gan, Cln 47 ; Richards, SO
-46; Moreno, Pitt 45.

end Forsch , S.t .L 11-6.

Sykes, Teylor

Bl bbv , Monge (7J and K!I'\Cflll ,

000 000 ooo- o a o
Kancty
lOJ 110 OOK~ 6 13 o
t&lt;eough, Lacey (A), Newman
(8) and .Hosley; Leonard and
Porter. W- Leonard, 17 -11 . 'LKeougn , 0-2.

Oak I

AMERICAN LEAGUE : R;ce,

. NATIONAL LEAGUE : Carl·

1:10 000 ooo- l 6 2 .

Clev

noJ.

Giilme

Bos 38 ; Bonds, Cal and Nettles ,
NY 34 ; Scott; Bos 32 ; Gamble,
Qi~.
.
.
Runs Batted In
NAT 1'0 N A L LEAGUE :
Foster, Cln 137; Luzrnsk!, Phil
119 ; Cey and Garvey, LA 109;
Burroughs, All 108.
AMERICAN LEAbue : H isl e,
M lnn 113; Bonds, Cal and Rice,
Bos 105; Hobson , Bos and
Thompson, Oet 100.
Stolen Bill1es

AMERICAN

AmtriCift LtJIUt
(1st G•m•}
~~
022 000 IOQ- S 13 1

·Warp's

118 467 lAA .308

,Patek, KC 47; LeFlore, Det and
Page, Oak 37 -; Remy , Cal 36;
Bonds, Cal 35.
•
Pitching
Most Victorle$

observed at Heath

Goroon. Swisher {~) ; DuM.
McEnane-y (7), l(trrtoan (IJ.
Stanhoun pol. Atk inson ( U)
and Car ter . W- Atkinson . 7 2. L
- Gu isti . 0·2.
HR - Chicago.

BUttne-r

("~~~"''~G~~l:llS!'~I'l'O'c~ii1811!l~8!S;~!&gt;
· ~~i~o'*"~lillS,
.Il1
""*it~. . l'll':;ml;:l\&lt;I!=•"WM!.x··
~··

t n: innint.sJ
Chiq
(111 01X1 000 000- 2 6 0
Mn I
000- 000 201) _(10 I 3 9 1
Kr ukow , P . Reuschel t7),
. Sutter (91 , Giusti (11) arte

z

Well, he had paid back SteinbreMer for some of thai moqey
:~8: with this performance against the Red Sox, hadn't he?
.
.308
" It helps,u said Jackson, "but I owe him a lot more .''

Home RunsLEAGUE :
NATIONAL
Foster, Cin -48; Burroughs , Atl
38; Luzinskl, PhU 36; Schmidt,
Phil 3-4; Garvey, LA 30.

we-ctnesaay•s aastbaU leults

Chicago Cubs 3-2 in 12 and enabling BiU Atkinson to
innings , the San Diego win his seventh game. Larry
Padres tnpped the Atlanta Biittner homered for the
Braves 6-4, and the San CUI&gt;I.
Padres I, Braves 4
Francisco Giants downed the
The Padres broke a six·
Houstoo Astros 3-2, in other
NL games. Pittsburgh at St. gan\6 4&lt;islng streak when
Ji!r'r)"'fllmf•ls third hit of the
Louis was rained out.
game,
a single with two out in
Mets 1, PhUJies e
the
seventh,
drove in the tieNino Espin068 pitched a
bre&amp;\ting
run.
Dave Winfield
three-hitter and singled in the
25th
homer
for an
hit
his
game's only run as the Mets
insurance
run
as
Dan
Spillner
handed 21.game winner Steve
Carllon his ninth setback. won his seventh game and
Espinosa's single came after Rollie Fingers got his 33rd
Luis Rosado singled and save .
Giants 3, Astros %
· reached second on an error
Willie McCovey singled in
by first baseman Rich
Hebner after being picked off . the winning run in the sixth
first . The win was Espinosa's inning and Bob Knepper went
8 1-3 innings ror his ninth win
eighth against 12 losses.
for the Giants with relief help
Expos 3, Cubs
Andre Dawson tripled from Dave Hea verlo and
home Stan Papiin the bottom John CUrtis . Joe Niekro
of the 12th giving the Expos suffered ~is sixth loss against
their victnry over the CUbs 12 victories for the Astros.

u; ~~ m
us

~~:t~:tet
Fisk Bos
Bumbry Bel

Memorial service

Jackson's homer sinks Bosox, 2-0

4:05p .m .
Chlcaoo ( Bonham 10·11) at
Montreal &lt;Twitchell S-10). 7:35
p.m .
New York (Swan 8-8 ) at
Phlladelphla (Lerch 8-SL 7 :35
p.m.
PiltsburgM (Candelaria 16 -5
and Demerv 6--4 or Jackson S-3)
at St. Lours (Rasmussen 10-15
and Schultz 6-1 or Dierker 6 -2L
6:35p .m .
Atlanta (Ruthven 7-10) at San
Oleoo (Jones 6-12 ), 10:00 p.m .
Cincinnati (Seaver 17 -4U at
Los Angeles (Rau 13 -7), 10 :30
p.m.
Friday's Games
x-Chlcago at New· Vor"-, 2,
twf.night
·

" I would like to see our
players play as individuals
and as a unit next year as
they did in 1975 and 1976,"
add Howsam with emphasis

~Thtn.l\ySentinei,MiddleonrH'omeroy,O. , Thursday,Sept.lS, 1977

WHITE &amp; ELNA
SEWING MACHINES

The Sewing Center
"Hou.. pf Fabrics"
On the Tin Middleport

Professional
Performance

When you fill a prescription with
us, you're sure that you get what
your doctor ordered. We're
known for our accuracy,

DUTTON DRUG CO.
992-3106

122 N. 2nd

Middleport, Ohio

Lawn Rake
fl

'

1'

Reg. '2"
SolePrk:e

$1

•NYlDN ·
QUILTED

ONE SX70

•DOWN
LOOK
•DENIM
•LINED ·-

FILM GET AG.E.
RASH BAR

CPO

fomt'/r'J'1/ 6a:athef.'"
•

Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. BiU
Waldnig, Tim Waldnig, Mr.
Moore, Chad Moore, Brad and Mrs. Ted Waldnig, Jeff
J

U

The Waldnig reunion was

Olm ICMiftllniSept. •t botlt-storu

- ..

271 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, o.
601 Sth Street
New

Haven, W.

Va.

Pam Waldnig, Kim Waldnlg,
I.ori Waldnig, Beth Waldnig,
Jeff Bowshier, and Chuck

E~d~i~lh~~~Wiiailldiin~ig~,~~Lo~v~e~,M~ec~ha~ru~·co~bu~r~g·~~·

held Sunday, at the re.idenc'e .;;Miiooliiireil,iianlidmAnlidiirliieliiniiia.iMilooiiiiireii'•WIIaiiildiiiniiiilg.
. .
of Mrs. James Moore,Grove "
City.
Bill Waldnig had charge of
the business meetiog with the
family deciding to have next

year's

reunion

at

his

Mechanisburg 'residence .
Prayer was given by Mrs.
Pat Moore and Chad Moore.
A buffet dinner was served ·
and prizes went to Mrs.
Moore lor the best dish and
Mrs. Elizabeth Waldnig for
the best dessert.
Baseball, volleyball, sack
races, wheelbarrel races,
obstacles course and other
games were enjoyed during
the afternoon; Prizes went to
the winners. A fish pond was
set up for the yoWJg children.
'
Prizes went to Jaluis
Waldnig for the oldest atten·
ding; Andriena Moore for the
youngest, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Waldnig of Racine for
traveling the farthest .
Attending were Julius ·
Waldnig, Springfield; Mrs.
Margaret · Moore, Mr. and
Mrs. James Moore, Joe
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Briggs, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Capietta, Hilliard;
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Barnett,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Waldnig and Bob, Jr.,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Alan
Petzo, Shelley Petzo and Ker·
rie Petzo, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
TO TELL THE TRUTH
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) Columnist Jack Anderson
will start a weekly television
InterView series next month,
and his only guests will be
persons who agree to submit
to lie detector tests.
A spokesman . said
Wednesday everyone in·
terviewed on "The Truth Jack Anderson" will have to
give prior approval to use of a
polygraph, truth serum and
voice analysis If 11ecessary to
determine that they really
are telling the truth.
"I've decided to · do this
show," Anderson ·said,
"because I believe It offers an
opportunity for many con·
troversial figures to establish
the validity of their public
declarations, and hopefully
protect their reputations
from scurrilous reporting and
implied malfeaiiiiiiCI!."

You're into shoes by

heritage ·house
OF SHOES
Open: Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30 to 5
Friday 9:30 to 8
Middleport, 6.
N. 2nd Ave.

Autumn

~~~~·
~ ~
~
......r'MEN'S

LEISURE SUITS
Sizes 38 to 46
-Reg . $43.00 to . $85.00

Size 42X· Long

MENS SPORT COATS
Sizes 36-50 ·Regular
38-50 Long
37-44 Short

Rea . 545.00 to

Sale Prices Effective Friday, Sept. 16 thru
Saturday, Sept. 24
LADIES' COATS &amp; JACKETS
LEATHER
s;zed 8 to 16 .
Reg. 5113.50 to 5195.00

'22.60 to

SAVE

SAVE FROM 18.60

lADIES CAR COATS
by BeHy Rose

&amp;

Great Six

· Reg. $45.99 to $90 .00

5110.00

SAVE $3.(10 TO $5.00

On Puritan Ban Lon

SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS
ReJI . 510.00 _to $15.00

7.00 to 110.00

1

Save $2.80 to $8.00 per Pair

ON HAGGAR &amp; HUBBARD PANTS .
Reg. $14.00 to $40.00 Per Pair

SALE 511.()0 to 532.00
COATS

MEN'S JACKETS &amp;
Several styles to choose from
Reg . S60.oo to SJ95
Sizes 36 to 48 regular and some styles In
long

SAVE '9.00 to $18.00
lADIES DRESS COATS
REDUCED 20%
New Fal.l Styles

W)IES DRESS
by Berkshire, Hobnobber, City
Scene an~ Forever Young

REDUCED 20%
1

Of

Polyester Knit Shells

SAVE FROM 112.00 to

LADIES BLOUSES
Lined &amp; UnUned
Reg. 512.00 to $32.00

by Lady Manhattan, Lori
Lynn, Janflen and Catalina

SAVE $2.40 to Sfi.40
MEIGS MARAUDER
SCHOOL JACKE~S ·
. Sized 32 to 46, regular and long
Reg. 534.00

SALE

.20

SLEEVE

SHIRTS

'11.95
To

(1
. TJ'
VV'ald:nt'n~
4
0

By Arrow &amp; Career Club
Sleeve length from 32 to 35
Neck Sizes Wh to n

::..;.:;;r.. 20 %

REDUCED 20%

...'""-..;.,...,...

by Janlten &amp;. Catalina

1

Reduced h

PANT SUITS
by Janlten &amp; catalina .

REDUCED 20%

1 Specia I Rack

Ladies Suits, Pant Suits,·
Dresses, Coats and Spoltswear
REDUCED UP TO 60%

BAHR CLOTHIERS

�•

•

' -Tbe n-ib' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 15.1977

Safety break proven successful ·

Radio Club plans events
POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Make pU;rse from plastic tub
POLLY'S PROBLEM
package label and would
DEAR POLLY - I have surely help a busy housewife.
-n litUe girls' purses made -DEUA.
from small margarine tubs. · DEAR POLLY - Wilma
The ones I have seen were should pul a few mothballs
crocheted from the opening to under . her sofa cushions. It
form a bag and there was a should rid the sofa of the
drawstring to open and close cigarette odor in a few days. I
them. Do you or any of the have done this with many
readers know how to make things. (Keep the halls out of
such a bag or do you have any the way of small children and
other ideas for small things pets.) -ABBIE.
.. that could be crocheted for a
DEAR POLLY - Afer we
r '
church bazaar? I would a!&gt;' come home from a camping
preciate any information. - trip I roll the sleeping bags up
B.W. •
and then put them in big garDEAR B. W. - I have never bage bags and tie them. They
-n such a bag but I am sure are then clean and ready for
some reader wiU be good the next trip. -MRS. A.
enough to tell us how this is
DEAR POLLY -I have just
done. It seems it would he finished preparing green
rather simple for anyone who beans for !lie freezer. I
knows how to crochet to im- thought other readers might
provise a pattern. I would he Interested in the way I
punch boles close together worked out so as to save the
around the top of the tub. An time spent dipping beans out
ice pick or heavy yarn needle of the water. I bought oneshould do it, and heating the half yard of nyloo net which
instrument used should help. Ill double, cut it in two pieces
Next, single crochet in these to make two bags and sewed
holes and then continue in across the top to keep it
any desired stitch until the together. I then doubled this
bag is the desired size leaving and turned the edges over to
holes near the top for the make it stronger and stitched
drawstring to run through. down the sides and across the
This "string" could be made bottom. I blanch beans one
of a chain of single crochet or quart at a time and while one
a twisted rope of the crochet quart is cooling another is
thread. Good luck. -POLLy. blanching and they can he
DEAR POLLY - My Pet poured from a bag into the
Peve concerns the fact that freezer container. I also save
food products are not labeled my coffee cans and fill them
with the time and method for with food in plastic hags that
cooking in a microwave oven. go In the freezer. -MRS.
Although those of us lucky W.L.M.
enough to bave such ovens do
Polly will send you one of
have a special cookbook, it is her signed thank-you
olten difficult to ascertain the newspaper coupon clippers if
length of time and way to . she uses your favorite
prepare certain foods . Includ- · Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
ed in the list should be frcrzen her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
and canned foods. This would POINTERS in care of this
take only a small space on the newspaper.

Rummage sale set
A rummage sale was set for
Oct. 4 at St. Paul's Lutheran

Olurch at the recent meeting
ot the American Lutheran
Olurch Women of St. Paul
and St. Jobn ChurChes held at
thE; Pomeroy church.
Members are to meet at the
church to set up for the sale
&lt;11 Sw!day afternOQn, Oct. 2,
and Monday nlgbl. Members
were. also advised that a girl
scout leaders luncheon will he
served &lt;11 Nov. 7 in the
fellowship ball. Named to a
ncxninating conunittee were
Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs.
Racbael Downie, and Mrs.
JeanBraun.
. .
The treasurer; Mrs. Judy.
Eichinger, noted that SCOPE

subscriptions are due in October and that resource books
may he ordered for 75 cents.
~orations for the church
Christmas tree were discussed and Mrs. Barbara Fry and
Mrs. Eichinger were aJ&gt;'
pointed to purchase
necessary materials to make
these.
Mrs. Davis had a discussion on "God's Hand.Stretched Out" with Mrs. Downie
giving the offering meditation. Mrs. Margaret Blaettnar presided at the meeting.
Refreshments were served
by Miss Erna Jesse to those
named and Betty Young,
Janet Hill, and ;Pastor
William Middleswarth.
'

Seminars planned at OU
Following the general
theme of "Living with
Younelf and Others", the
firlt in a series of evening
minl;mninars planned for
the fall quarter by the Center
for Interpersonal Com. munlcation Resources at
Ohio University will begin on
September 21.
Organized by Dr. Charles
V. Carlaon and Dr. Gordon
WiiM!!Il••, the Center's codirectors, the mini-seminars
are designed to help individuals understand communication processes and
Improve communication
techniques.
· "We have made an effort In
thla particular series to select
subjects that are part of the
'real worl!l'," said Dr.
Wiseman. "Participants
lhould find the information
disiM!!Ilinated at the seminars

usefuL in their everyday
lives."
The topics and the leaders
of the first three meetings
scbeduled for 7 to 10 p.m. on
Wednesdays In Room 460 of
the Radio-Televlslo~ Communication 'Building are:
September
21, . "Understanding Yourself and
others," Dr. Wiseman;
September 28, "Building
Relationshipa," Dr. William
Eadie, Professor of Interpersonal Communication
at Ohio University; O&lt;;tober
5, "Resolving Conflict,'' 'Sue
DeWine, Assistant Professor
on Interpersonal Communication
at
Ohio
University. Further In·
formatiOn and registration
details may be obtained by
calling the workshops office,
~1 .

Gilmore family gathers
A reunion in celebration of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
the 80th birthday of Walter stewart, Richard and David
Gilmore was held recently at Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
the Roadside Park on Route E. Gilmore and Jeannie. ·

33.
Following a luncheon, gifts
were presented to the
honored guest. Prayer was
given by Mrs. James (Don.-) GiJiaOre. Attending were
J1.wme Wise, Becky Wise, Sis
Wile, Mr. and Mrs. James
Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs.
Eu rt Hlgy and children,
fWD ud Kimberly, Mr. and
lb. Ridlud.Gilmore, Rick
Slain· Gilmore, Tracy
PIGW. Mn- Kay Hatfield,
o.r.,. ud .r-ica, Mrs.
~ EbUII, Fnd Zeig1er,
l' ) .... 'l'nM:lJ Manley,
Wape Ze~~r, Betty
C.ldnD,
M;axine
II ' r', Ia) II I R' llicbael,
Til• • Mh
Tim,

..r

I

I

...

BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)
. - The California Baseball
League has announced the
addition of Stockton and San
Luis Obispo to raise
memberlhip in the Class-A
loop to eight teams. ·
President Bill Wickert said
the Stockton franchise wW he
operated by Joseph M.
Gagliardi, owner of the San
Jose Miasions of the Pacific ·
Coast League, and the Sail
Luis Obispo club will he
owned and operated bY,
Professional Sports, Inc.,
owners of U!l' Plloenix Giants
of the PCL.

Several fall adivihcs were
planoed when the Bi~ Bend
Citizens Band Radiv Club,
Inc. mel Tuesday~nighl at the
hall,
The group will lake part
Saturday in the Yesteryear
celebration of the Senior
Citizens Center. They will
help park cars and will also
operate a jail with a third of
all proceeds going to the
SeniorCitiiens program
· Again this year a bowling
team for mixed couples wiU
lie sponsored by the club. A
picnic was set for Sept. 26
with the Wester-n Boo!
Citizens Band Club. Meat and
drinks will he provided by the
Big Bend Cl~l?· Others are to
take a covered dish and their
own table service. Th• picnic

will he held at Forest Acres
Park sheller house at 12:30

p.m.
Ths

hospitalization

of

Alfred White and Etta Will

was noted and both were
welcomed back to the
meeting.
On display was a trophy
which the members won at
the recent Western Boot .
Citizens Band Radio Club
roundup held two weeks ago.
The club also received a
trophy for the best dressed
club at the Barlow roundup.
The club voted to sponsor
Pat Aieker in the Grand National Demolition Derby to he
held In Lancaste~;BERT team members will
meet on Sept.l9 al the hall.

Day safely
break sponsored by the Meigs
County REACT team and
backed by the American
Trucking Association, was a
success, reported a team official, with many ,resident
The

l.abor

RETIJRN' HOME

1

Mr. and Mrs. James
Cl'isweU,and her sister, Mrs.
Helen Martin, Pittsburgh,
Pa., have returned from a
month's vacation. .They
toured Canada, went to
Prince Edward Island, Nova
Scotia, and returned via the
New England States.

7-'lbe n-ib' s.nt!nel, Middleport-Pomft'oy. 0 .. Thursday, Sept. 15, 1977

Ice and F'uel, Ford Brotllers, Auto Parts, Roy Newell,
Modern Sanitation, Ewing Jalonda Root. WMPO and
Funeral HOlne, G. and J. TheDailySentinel.

Kansas City declared disaster area by Carter

nnd non-resident motorists

!&gt;"topping.
The Radio Emergency
Associated Citizen Team
(Rt:ACI') momtors channels
9, II and 19 to assist citilens in
all kinds of emergencies and
with road information.
Several businesses and indiv:idwala assisted with the
salety .break and s vote of
thanks has been extended by
the REACI' team. The groul'
inCludes Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Withee, R. C. &amp;ltuing Co., Quality Print,
Krogers, Beacon Gulf Station, Evelyn's Grocery,
Meigs Plaza, Ma'll&lt; V, City

117 THOIIWI D. IIDL.UI

'1 0000

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP[)
- Prealdenl Carter baa
declared thla flood.«&lt;lcken
city 1 dlsuter - . mQing
Immediate federal aid
amable for the vlctlma. of
ou11 Ooodinc wblcb kDied
more than 211 pe.ikHII and
caused damage upected to
!(Itt! bllllonl of dollars.
Police found three more
bodies Wednelday, ralalng
the death toll to 22 from
Mllllday nlght'a deluge. The
bodies of Barbano Wickware,
41, Independence, Mo. and
Brenda Bronaon, 31, Edwardavllle, Kan., were
d!Jcovered near swollen Rock
Grove Creek. Earlier, the

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Mon .• Tues., Wed.&amp; Sat .-8:30ti15:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM
773-5592

Herman Grate ·' Mason, W. Va.

body of Rev. Harold A. water and pollee said some

Thomu, 42, Fairway, Kan.,
wu foWld In another creek.
Police Capt. 8Qb England,
In ch1rge of the command
post at the Country Club
Plaza lhopping center, the
hardest hit section, declined
to comment If he anticipated
the discovery of more bodies
in underground parking lots.
"We stiU haven't got to the
lower level of the lots,"
England said. "The lower
levela still scare me. 1 don't
know what we will find."
Dlvera could not he used In
some of the underground
water-filled Iota because of
the danger of electrocution.
Many cara remained in the

victims could. he in them.
Carter's
declaration
Wednesday makes Oood
victims eligible for immediate federal aid in
bousing for the homeless,
grants, low-Interest loa1111;.for ,
businesses and special
unemployment compe11$8tlon
for workers who lost their
Jobs because of the Oood.
t\long with requests from
Kansas Gov. Robert Bennett
and Missouri Gov.,Joseph }'.
Teasdale, Sen. Thomas F.
Eagleton, D-Mo ., wrote
carter that the flood-related
property damage " is likely to
run into the billion'\ of

Mrs. Maria Foster's pr()gram topic for a meeting of
the Baptist Women's Missionary Society of the
Pomeroy Baptist Church was
"Ecumenical Roundup.''
Meeting at the church, Mrs.
Foster discussed the
ecumenical rmmdup noting
that it pertained to Increasing
understanding of American
Baptist Women In becoming

By LEE LEONARD
tJPI Sllltell- Reporter
COLUMBUS l UPI) - The
chief of Ohio's Jllbllc health
programs says recent eases
ol Legi&lt;llnalrel dioea• In
Columbus may be the result
of sharp and concentrated
detection which merely
unmaaked a previously
uncategorized type of
pneummla.
Or. Jolin H. Ackerman,
state Health Department
director, said Wednesday the
!Unesa may bave been
identified beforeband aa a
bad cough ... cold, ... walking
(lltlllllollia, and may now he
eJblblting ltaelf at nOI'IIIal
levels in Columbus as
Leglimnaires c!Rse.
Ackerman Jineented his
annual report to the 58th
Annual C&lt;llference ot Ohio
Health . Commilllloners and
added a apedal update on the
lll)'llerioua ailment, wblch
has shown up In siJ: cues In
Columbus, claiming one
life.
. He told tlie oornmlallloners
his department Ia at a loss to
explain the aource of the
diaease.
"We wiD continue to
monitor the city," "-ckerman
said. "It seems to us,
however, that thel'e Ia a
possibility that we are
eKperienclng 1JDUP"IIY alert
and . prompt
medical
detectlm wblch ~mcovered
what might he the ncrma1
level of Legillnnalrel cl•ase
In the communitY."
Ackerman
told
the
commissioners that blood
testing of 110 perlona who had
1nrked on a COilllli'IICtlo site
at Rivenlde Metbodiat
Hoepital yielded only one
with poeltive antibodils to the
dlaease, and he had no
recollection
of
any

-

ooeness in Christ with a commitment to the mission movement. She spoke of taking
part In the three celebration
sof the Church Women
United-World Day of Prayer,
May Fellowship Day, and
World Community Day. Taking part in the program were
Mrs. Margaret Bailey, Mrs.
Phyllis Skinner, Mrs. Ellen
Couch, Mrs. Georgia Watson,
and Mrs. Harriet Sterrett.
Mrs. Skinner presided at
the meeting with Mrs. Betty
Wiles white cross chairman,
presenting the white cross
quota for the year.
The love gift dedicatiOII
was by Mrs. Ellen Couch.
Others attending the meeting·
Relatives of Sam and were Burton · Smith, and
Melvina Birchfield held a Caryl Cook. Mrs. Watson and
Cook
served
reunion on Sept. 4 at the Nitro Mrs.
refreshments.
City Park, Nitro, W. Va . .
There was a basket dinner
at noon. Attending were Mrs.
William Birchfield, Gallipolis
DANCE SATIIRDAY
Ferry, W. Va.; Tanuny BirMembers
of the French
chfield, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
City
Swingers
Square Dance
Va.; Mrs. Harry Bass, Point
Club
of
Gallipolis
will have a
Pleasant, W. Va. ; Mr. and
dance
Saturday,
September
Mrs. Robert Hussell, Point
17
at
the
Tri-Grande
Square
Pleasant; Effie Roach,
BuDding
on
Eastern
Ave.
The
Henderson, W. Va. Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Birchfield, caner for the dance, which
Ricky, Becky, and Randy, wiU he held from 8-11 p.m.
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Sam- will he John Waugh. All area
my Birchfield and Robin, square dancers are Invited.
Julie, and Noel, Coal Grove;
Mrs. Kenneth Blankenship
and Kenny, Proctorville; Mr,
and Mrs. Gary Osborn,
Perry, Ohio; Mrs. Beverly
Parsons and Anthony,
Eleanor, W. Va.; Gladys
Wills, Nitro; Mr. and Mrs.
Wal~r Birchfield, Pooa; W. .
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Slater, Nitro, W. Va.;
Virginia Batten, Mr. and ·
Mrs. Nathan Wills, Nitro, W.
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Osborne and Camille, Illinois; and Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Grant and children,
Debbie, Pamela, and
Michael, Minersville.

• NQT A DISCONTINUED BRAND-X "13"!

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•

theory Ia going to work out,"
said Ackerman of the idea
that the bacteria may have
come from the construction
excavation.
The direCtor said the con·flrmed Columbus cases ao far
have shown nothing in
common exCC!ll they were aU

decline Qf 7 to 10 percent each
year in morbidity in Ohio.
The number of new cases
dropped below 1,000 last year

As far as we can deter-

CHANNEL SPAT
AWERSON, w. va. (UPI)
- A dispute with other inmates who refused to let her
watch the " Black Miss
America " beauty pageant
• has led to " administrative·
detention " for would-be
assassin
Sara Jane Moore.
for the first time, and an 8
Mrs.
Moore,
serving a life
percent decline is forecast for
term
for
shooting
at fonner
this year ,
President Gerald Ford, was

walls. Carpenter said, HJt's
incredible. It ripped stuff
right off the waUs - it also

I lush
"""""'""" 1\aJlJ'li~~~

ripped the waUs out."
About 40 merchants In the
center suffered heavy
damage,
On the eastern edge of the
city, the Big Blue River
inundated several homes in
the Leeds area, where the
Fisher Body plant was
fJOQded.
"I just don't know where to

placed In a detention unit last
Friday night at the Federal
Refonnatory for Women.
Warden Carson Markley
said a color television set was
smashed in Mrs. Moore's
spat with four other inmates
who wanted to view the fourth
part of the mini-series
"Washington : Behind Closed
Doors. ~~

. ')
,._

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&amp;ani&lt;

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11

mine, our -tore is a total
loss, " h~ Said. ..We're
shooting for a Nov. I opening
date. It is going to be a costly
proposition."
Looking at saturated

clothing piled against the

experiences over the last few.
weeki, ·then ·the argument
that we are merely detecting
natw'allevels of the disease
activity will he stronger," he
said.
Ackerman said
the
Columbus outbreak was
discovered when Riverside
Hospital contacted the
department about three
weeks ago "because of the
IUIPicloua nalllre of a second
typical pneumonia case In a
week
which
wasn't
respmdlng properly."
He said other hospitals and
their past records are being
checked for similar cases ..
"ll'a possible people have
been walking ar01111d with it
and treating it as a bad cough
or cold,'' he said, pointing out
that 1 percent of the
population might have
antibodies without ever
repcrting symptoms.
In his annual report to the
conunlasioners, Ackerman
said:
· - The state will be able to
diatrlbute t.o local health
departments for the first
time, atarting ln a few
months, vaccine foc measles,
mumps and rubella. He said
it would be used initially in
clinics foc preschOQI children.
- Syphillis has virtually
been eradicated in -Ohio, but
gonorrhea and ieen..age
pregnancies are on the rise.
-Tuberculosis control baa
been "one of the great pUblic
symplooul.
"It doelln 't look lllte that health victories,"with a

Nitro Park
setting for
.
reunton

INGLEWOOD, Cailf. (UPI)
- The Los Angeles Lalrers
Wednesday released guard
Bo Lamar wbo played lor the
NBA Pacific Division
champions last season after
being acquired from the
Detroit Pistons.
Lamar played In 71 games
for the Lakers last season, .
averaging 7.1 points and 2.5
assists a game. He shot .406
from the field. Prior to .
joining the Lakers, Lamar
· spent three seasons .in the
ABA where be compiled a
scoring average of 19.7 poiilts
per game.

block north were unscathed
and shoppers were out
Wednesday.
Dave Carpenter, manager
of Jack Henry's, a men's
apparel store, estimated
damage to the store at $1
million,

c
b ?
New type of pneumonia m Olum Us
dollars."

8

Mrs. Foster gives talk

An American Insurance
Association apokesman said
very few damaged businesses
were Insured.
"As far as we can determine, there are only 1,358
flood Insurance policies In the
metropolitan area:' said
Frank Lewis, a regional
manager. "Most of those are
for private homes."
Cleanup workers swarmed
over the Country Club Plaza
shopping center, hauling
debris and damaged merchandise from the 80 to 90
businesses hit by rampaging
Brush Creek with crests of as
much as 20 feet of water at
· the peak of the flood .
Many stores just a half

begin," said Mrs. Carl from South Dakota. He wu
Morrla. "I've lost everything. out In the back yard attached
I lost my golden pheasant to a perch and drowned."

•

'

'391

95

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT .
AT 391 fl.

2ld M.

I

Jllst buy a l~rge servigg of Coca-Cola for 49¢ at a participating
Burger Chef and a Star Wars poster is your~ There are four posters
.\ .
in all, so start your,collection today.
·
1503 EASTERN AVE.-GAlliPOLIS
2325 JACKSON AVE.-PT. PLEASANT
\Du get more to like at Burger Chef;"
Burger Chet is a trademark ol BvrRer Chel Systems. Int.. Copyright ©1977. Burger Chef Systems. Inc.
'

'

�~1be DNIY sin"""'·Ml&lt;lo!leport-P&lt;trN!fOY. o., Thursday. Sept. 15, 1m
I-The DaijySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O. , .Thursday,Sept . l~.19'1?
•

Gymnasium opponentsoutr

It's shoot first
then talk, out west

KENT, Ohio ( UP! ) Opponents of a proposed
gymnasium construction on
the Kent State University
shootings site were outraged
Wednesday
by
KSU
President Brage Golding's
proposal to dedicate the
t&gt;Jildin&amp; to Ohio National
Guardsmen as well as their
student targets in the May 4,
1970 shootings.
Goldin&amp;, seeking an end !Q
opposi tio~ by the May 4th
Coalition, held a news conference to say he would ask the
KSU trustees to dedicate the
t&gt;Jilding to the " slain, the
wounded, thO" National
Guardsmen, the townspeople
and
the
university
corrununity ." He said tb.ey
were all victims of the May 4
tragedy.
The angered coalition
ca lled
his
statement
."outrageous , disg usting,
immoral
and
totally
unacceptable."
The
coalition
called
Golding's proposal to use
greenery to cover an asphalt
parking Jot where four

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPl) - fncreasin&amp;ly heavy
violence as a method of resolvin&amp; disputes among
motorists is taking its toll on the streets and highways
of Californis.
A young motorist cut in front of a pickup truck on
lnterstate80atSacramento. A passenger in the second
vehicle shot him dead.
· In Los Angeles, a driver sped along at 100 miles an
hour over 11 miles of city streets. He tried repeatedly
to sideswipe a Highway Patrol cruiser or braked
sharply to cause a collision with the porsuing officer.
A young man in San Jose was critically wounded
after his passenger c&lt;Xnplained at a reckless driver,
who pulled a gun and shot three times.
NervMbattering mipings of civilians and police
officers along freeways are almost corrunonplace.
Where once a relatively minor traffic mishaps or
exchange of angry words between motorists might
have provoked a !ist..fight, now it may invite gunplay
oc vehicle rammings or tire iron beatings.
The Highway Patrol keeps no statistics on
confrontations between motorists, but CHP
commanders throughout the state indicated to
headquarters in an informal survey that conflicts are
increasingly more violent, especially in the use of

guns.
Deputy Commissioner A.S. Cooper, a 29-year
veteran of the CHP, cites what he · calls the
"tremendous proliferation in the ownership of
fireanns " as a key element of the highway violence
syndrome.
R~nlly, a patrolman .was found shot to death in
Shasta County. The killer allegedly was a suspect he
took into custody roc drunken driving.
A patrolman stopped a car near Vallejo and was shot
three times by a passenger in the back seat.
"It makes it tough for the officer," Cooper says. " He
never knows who has the gun."
" Siliper attacks on the freeway are an indication of
the increased violence, " Cooper noted. "Once a week,
we'll have one of those some place in Califonila, .

Guv .

students !~II dead m 1970 " the
final step m U1e slltte's and
the wuversity's t'&lt;Jver-up of
the Kent State shootings."
No work was planned today
because of an agreement
reached Wednesday as an
outgrowtb or an unsuccessful
attempt to secure a
temporary restraining order
against construction. U.S.
District Court Judge John
Manos in Cleveland denied an
American Civil Liberties
Union request for a
restraining order but got both
sides to agree that today
would be spent at tbe site
taking pictures for possible
use in future trials.
The ACLU claimed the sit&amp;
should be preserved for evi·
dence in tbe retrial of their
S46 millioo civil suit against

J~mes

A . Uhnd t&gt;s,

various National 1:uard
men•hers and oU1ers.
Manos took no immediate
action on a second request for
a temporary injunction
again st construction . He
must rule on that request
within nine days.

YOU'RE INVITED

TO

However, tbe Cincinnati
&lt;Wrt Mooday turned down a
similar request by the ACLU
for preservation of the
shootings site roc evidence.
The ACLU said it will file an
appeal of that decision with
the V .~. Supreme Court by
Friday.

BAKER FURNI1UREtS
25th ANNIVERSARY SALE

l

The families of the Kent
- - · -· - ·- ··-· - -· -·
State victims also asked the rvour " E&lt;tro ·, ooch"
U.S. 6th Circuit Court of
floris! Since 1957
Appeals
in
Cincinnati
S
Wednesday for a J(klay stay
~
S
ag~inst . construction on
-.4-,..-,,·~
ev1denha r y grounds . The
/(.~~
1
appeals court, tbe same court
l
that Monday ordered a retrial
F · ·
of the civil suit because of a
LORIST
threat against a juror in the j
1975 trial that cleared Rhodes
PH. 992·2644
and the others, did not say
when it would respond to f.he
352 E . Main, Pomeroy
request for a stay.
~
~
Your FTD Fltwio::t
·~----·---.._:.,..

1

!

.

.I

I

I

We are now offering to you the best values
you've ever s~n- on fine Furnishings and
Appliances.
-Don't Miss This Event
Now In Progress -

I
I
I

I

1

BOARD TO MEET
Citizens Advisory Board to
the Athens Mental Health and
Mental Retardation Center
will meet Sept. 21l at 10 a .m. in
the Microwave Satellite
Room on the third floor of the
Main
Administration
Building.

PH "1 · 295~

1' 1'1£ ·CRI"TI •lN$

F""•endly Strvice

Op"n Noglllslil9

· ism:;~~;.. FDR began it

SALE
PRICES GOOD
THRU SUNDAY
SEPT. 18th

Bemice Bede Osol

,e~ ~..7 ·!~~~~5

•
'
•
Sept. 16, 1177
.. Th is coming year is likely to be a
, more ac ive one than you 've exper lenced for a long time .
Unusual , albeit beneficial ,
situalions will ~e8p you on the

go
VIRGO (Aug. 23·S.pt. 22)
You 're better at mental gymnastics than physical efforts today. You can delegate the muscle power so that others won't be
offended. Like to find out more
·of wha t lies ahead for you? Send

lor your copy

of

Aslro-Graph

Letter by mailing 50 cents for

each and a long, self~ addressed ,

·

Today theHoUBevotesona
bill raising it to $2.65 next
year, with sub!equent llDIII8l
increases
automatically
geared to average wages.
The House alao was
decldin&amp; how the minimum
wage should apply · to
teenagers.
The House Education and
Labor Committee which reported the bill ,_'the House,

evident you 'll easily take charge.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) F'rom time to tim~ you get int u i 11 v e t 1ashes that are
remarkably accurate. ThiS Is one
of those days . Be prepared to
follow hunches.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jon. 19)
It is inClJmbent upon you in this
period to involve yourself in

noted ihat the minimum
wage never has caught up
with the goal of the 11138 act to keep wocking people from
poverty.
At today's minimum a
worker makes $4 784 a year.
For 'the head of ~ family of
four this is more than $1 000
below the poverty line. '

acquaintances. They'll add spice
to your life.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fob. .111
Vital goals will not elude you if
you apply your native Intelllgence today. You are ex·
tremely capable if you concantrate on the situation at hand .
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marc~ .Ia)

The minimwn would have
to be $2.96 today just to match
the poverty level. The House
bill wouldn't bring the
minimum above the poverty

tive of what you may think . It's

situations where you make new

w

line untlllll84.
Some 52 miUion Americans
are covered by the minimum
wage Jaw. Only about 3

t·

1979 53

1980

b

CorD Size

EVEREADY
BATTERIES

FOSTER GRANT
or

PJ&lt;G. OF 2

POLAROID

REG. SOc

SUN GlASSES

.... "''-

PRICE

Reedsville
News Notes

,~,,

FABULOUS
VALUES IN
FURNITURE

'3"

., ..

Don 't be too surprised Jf you 're
much more popular today than
you realiZe . You have many
friends and they may aU converge on you at once.

only •4e99
Type SX-70, Reg. 16:99

only '4.89

22) Stick to

your guns if there's ·som ething
you want to bring to a conciusion
today. There's more than one
Way to sk i~ a cat. Your method
will work .

OGILVIE

BAYER
ASPIRIN

tNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ,USN I

' YORK, Pa . ( UPI) Defending champion Frank

Cotlnn of Selma, Ala., shot a
1-4111deri1111' 71 Wednesday to
' tab the ftnmJund lead In the
30th
annual
Na tiona I
Amputee GoU Tournament.
The first two rounds of the
tourney are to be beld at the
.Bn.nrood Country Club in
Yort !rb11e till final two
·I'OIIIdn'ill be p' ; ed at tbe

CclunlrJ Club

In

Super
sports on
substantial stack·
look heels. Knlt·fit
linings and comfy uppers.
This Is your kind of shoe for
work, for home, for just
about
anywhere.
And
priced super tow, too.

SO TABLETS
REG. $1.09

HOME
PERMAN
400

UNIIS-·VI

Ohlinger

Porn er·ov., Ohio

on~

E

by RexaU

100 Capsules
Reg. '5.9§

MARGUERITE'
S SHOES
Betty

REG. S3.25

BIC

on~

Friday

NEAR THE FABRIC SHOP IN POMEROY

ROOF COATING

MAIN ST.

on~
Type 108, ReR: '7,15

oniJ

CANCER (June 21-Julr 22)

Hours :

9:30 to S:OO
Mon . fhru Sat .
9t30 to 8:00

Ebersbach Hardware

Type 88, Reg. '5.65

LOTION
REG. suo

lr'ue Gemini , you're much more
adept today if you have several
projects going . To top it off, you
perform best under pressure.

chilly morni"9s

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

POLAROID FILM

AFTER SHAVE

with lining for tho$e

Black Asphaltum
5
Black Asbestos ~~

\\tf.. 1'~

OLD SPICE

• 8cr1s and Girls Jackets

cert~:!ions:

lftt\\00 _w;\\BS

•

GEMINI (MIJ 21-June 20) Like a

The strl-8tate section this
GALUPOLm FERRY year
Is led by the following
The
Stauffer
Chemical
of the grievance procedure; recommending of Aaiociatioo
offlcent
selected at the May
Company
here
will
host
the
support and po!tltion on the issue; Tecommendatloo that the
meeting
:
chairman, William
Association not a"'por:t the issue. In event that the Grievance first meeting of the season for
Koenig,
USS
Chemicals; vice
Cmunittee does not wish to recommend support to the the Tri.state Section of the
chainnan,
George Han·
Institute of
aggrieved, assis\•~e may Qe provided to aU individuals in the American
SECTION H - Not withstanding any other provisions in area of pfllper ptocedure, Action and official position of the Chemical Engineers on nington, Nova mont Corp.;
the Alueement. no vacancy in a nt~~otiatiml; unit position will Association may take ptace at any level of the proceedings.
September 21. A social hour secretary, Gordon Harlow,
be filled by the Board until the procedures set foclh in this
.Time limit&amp; stipulated should be adhered to strictly as will be at 8:30 p.m. followed Stauffer; treasurer, Charles
Article (below) have been complied with.
maximUDIS to insure rapid resolutlc!n to probii!IIIS and issues by a barbecue dinner at 7: 1~. Smith, Ashland Oil; mem·
·.Yolunts.ry Transfer and-or Assignment:
concerned. Lack of adherence to the time limits by the
John Bruce, Marketing bership, David Alwood,
Not later than April I and monthly thereafter of each aggrieved can result in the declaration that resolution has Manager
for
Textile Stauffer ; career guidance,
ICbool year the superint..ndent shall cause to be posted in all been obtained by the last level of hearing. Time limlta may be Chemicals, will talk of fire James Cantrell, Ashland Oil;
ocbool buildings a list of !mown vacancies which will occur for extended ooly by mutual agreement of all parties concerned. retardants and other textile public relations, Roger
Benslay,
Ashland Oil;
the fCillowing IChool year.
lEVEL ONE - INFORMAL : Within 30 days of an event or additives.
professional
development,
Teachers wbo claire a ehange in grade and.or subject condition that an individual considers a grievance, he shall
Reservations can he made
assignment or who desire to transfer to another building may discU$8 the problem with his immediali! supervisor. He may do tiy contacting Gordon Harlow Michael Volker , Ashland Oil;
file a writt.en statement of such desire with superintendent not this alone or with his offical Association representative.
of Stauffer Chemical Com· arrangements, Mike Mel·
ford, Annco Steel Corp.; past
later tlwl Len wtrking days after bein&amp; posted.
lEVEL TWO, FORMAL: In the event the aggrieved pany aL~5-mo.
chainnan, Mike Hanes,
In acting on request for voluntary reassignment an~r person is not satisfied with the disposition of Level One, or no
Stauffer.
transfer the following cri!eria apply : individual qualifications, •decision has been rendered within the two days after the
instructiooal requirements, staff availability and experience, infocmal meeting, he may inaugurate the fonnal proceedings.
special criteria established by the administration to achieve
In all levels of the formal proceeding official Grievance
staff balance, and where the foregoing factors are Report Fonns shall be made in triplicate ; one for tbe
subatai!U&amp;Jly equal, the preference in assignment or transfer aggrieved; one for the administratioo; one for the Association.
shall be given to the applicant with the greatest nwnber of
Within five days of the !iJin&amp;, a hearing shall be arranged
years of service in the school system.
between the aggrieved, the inunediate supervisor, and
Involuntary Transfer and-or Reasslgnment:
Association representative, and other parties who may be
Ailmvoluntary transfer or reassignment after September needed to give information relative to the claim. The
This week's free film at the
1 to be effective during the Current school year will be made disposition by the Supervisor shall be added to the Grievance Meigs Community Mental
only after a meeting between the t..acher involved and the Report Form in triplicate prior to the adjourning of this Health Center in Pomeroy is
superintendent, at which time the teacher will be notified in bearing.
"The Lonely Night," to be
writing of the reasons. Therefore, the teacher may at this
lEVEL THREE : Jf the aggrieved person is not satisfied shown Friday at 1 p.m.
option have a representative of his choice to be present at such by the disposition of the inunedlate supervisor, he may seek a
The 6:1-minute black and
meeting. Any reassignment made pursuant to this policy shall hearing with the Superintendent or his designated white film presents two
be in the best interesta of the school district.
representative within two days after the hearing in Level Two, major themes . The first
A teacher being involuntarily transferred or reassigned by completing Step Two of the Grievance Report Form in presents lhe phenoDJenon of
will be placed only in a position for which such a teacher is triplicate and submitting it to the Superintendent. Within the emotional illness and the
next five days a hearing shall be arranged betw.een the process of psychotherapy,
aggrieved, the Superintendent or his designated portrayed through Caroline,
The Board declares its general support of a policy of filling representative (who must be someone other than the a woman suffering from
vacancies, including vacancies in supervisory positions, from aggrieved person's immediate supervisor ), and a . psychoneurosis who is
within its own teaching staff provided, however, nothing representative of the Association, and other parties that may treated by analytically
herein shall preclude the Board of Education from be needed to give information to the clalm.
oriented psychotherapy.
The disposition of the Superintendent or hb designee shall
A second theme shows the
determining that the interests of the school system can best be
served by actively seeking candidates from outside the be completed prior to the adjournment of the hearing .
.
phenomenon of mental health
lEVEL FOUR - If the aggrieved person is not satisfied as exemplified by members
district.
with
tbe disposition in Level Three he may request that the of the Dunn family. This film
GRJEVANCE PROCEDURE
A "grievance" is a claim by a teacher or employee based issue be submitted to arbitration within two days after Level was made to help non·
upoo an event which affects a condition or circumstance of Three hearing. The arbitrator shall be appointed by tbe professional people gain
employment of a teacher or employee or group of teachers or American Arbitration Assotistion· according to Ita voluntary Insight into prevention and
employees and-or an alleged misinterpretation or rules and regulations. Information submitted to the Arbitrator treatment of mental illness.
misapplication of any of the provisions of school and-or Board shall be confined to the information and positions related In the
A staff member of the
lower levels of tbe grievance proceedings relative to. the Meigs clinic will be on hand to
policy.
A grievance procedure is a method by which an individual parties concerned.
discuss the film with viewers
The Arbitrator shall make his report and followtng the showing. Meigs
or group of employees can eJpress a complaint, problem or .
dispute without fear of reprisal and obtain a fait: hearing at recorrunendations in triplicate to " the aggrieved, the clinic is at 236 West 2nd Street
progressively higher levels. Said procedure shall provide Superintendent and the' president of the AssoCiation. His in Pomeroy.
·
democratic interpretation ·and application of persoimel decisioo shall be adhered io by aU parties previously
mentioned. The said report shall he within fourteen (14) days
policies and practices.
An " aggrieved" person or persons is a teacher or teachers of request foc arbitration. Cost of the arbitrators will be paid
Strikeouts
having a grievance. The local Education Association, by the loser. If the decision is not clea.r , cost will be shared
NAT I 0 N A L LEAGUE '
Niekro, Atl 237 ; Car lton , Phil
hereinafter, referred to as the Association; shall appoint a equally.
186; Koosman , NY 181 ; Rogers,
Nothing
in
Ibis
procedure
shall
be
constructed
so
as
to
Grievance Conunittee. The Association shall designate one or
Mil 180; Richard, Hov 178.
more representatives for grievance procedures in each school deny the Association or its representatives the right to redress
AMERICAN LEAGUE ' Ryan,
326 ; Leonard, KC 207 ;
building. Any teacher may consult this representative for before an appropriate administrative agency or through the Cal
Tanana, Cal 205; Eckersley,
courts, if such a course 11eems to them at their sole discretion Clev 176; Blyleven . TeK 175.
assistance.
A " day" in this ~ctlon shall mean a calendar day . The more appropriate. Nothing In this procedure shall be
number of daYll indicated at each level shall he considered as construed to deny the individual, the Association or its
maximum and shall be adhered to in expediting the procedure. representatives, the right to seek redress by Jaw.
No teacher may be · represeDted by any teacber
The tenn "teacher," when used In this docurnenl shall
refer to an individual or group of individuals who are members organizt!.tion otb!!r than the Association in any grievance
of the bargaining unit covered by the policy on professional procedure initiated pursuant to ibis procedure. No teacher
negouations. The primary purpose of this procedure shall be to shall be denied the right to legal advice an~r counsel in any
.
obtain at the lowest level and in the shortest period of time, of the levels listed .a bove.
A grievance may be withdrawn at any level without
equitable solutions to grievances which arise from time to
prejudice or record. Copies of all written decisions of
time.
Both parties agree that grievance proceedings should he grievances shall be sent to all parties involved, tbe Associat..
president, the aggrieved and the appropriate administrator.
handled in a coofidential manner.
No recocds, documents, or communication' concerning a
Nothing cootained herein shall be construed as limiting the
grievance
shall be placed in the persoMel files of any of the
individual rights of a teacher having a complaint or problem to
participants
in procedures described in this Agreement.
discuss the matter informally with members of the
Fonns
foc
processing grievances shall be made available
administration through normal channels of conununication,
without Intervention an~r consultation of the AssoCiation, through all administrative offices of the Association including ..
provi&lt;led ·the adjustment is not inconsistent with teriilll of Buildin&amp; Representatives, and members of hte ·Association ·
Grievance Committee,
.
existing peraonnel policies in effect.
, . ··
Record
of
the
grievance
proceedin&amp;s
shall
be
confidential
An aggrieved teachllr shal) iliiuate .action within thirty
days of the event or condition upon which the grievance IS information. Official records should be kept in a confidential
based. If the Initiation of such action is longer than thirty days, separate file by the Clerk of the Boa~d. Access shall be made
the right to use the procedure described can be considered only by mutual consent of the Superintendent, and the
president of the Association, or a court order. All records of
waived.
The Grievance C&lt;mmittee of the Association shall be proceedings shall be destroyed after three years of the date
available to assist all teachers governed by this procedure. fonnal proceedings were inaugurated.
Such assWance may include: information and interPretation

sc;.o1tt\ .

___ ....,.

Take everything In stride today.
For some stra nge reason . things
have a waY of balancing out in
yo ur favor .

'l

d

encourage usmess w "'"'
more youngsters and reduce
the 18 per cent ~
unemployment rate - tO per
cent 8lllOIIg black teenagers.
He would include penalties
for abue ol the pnwillon to
avoid hlrtns older wcwlwn.

TAURUS (April 20-Mor 2.0)

~

onr, 73~

Rep. Robert Cornell, 1).
Wis .,
proposed
an
amendment
to
allow
employers to pay.o~y 85 per
cent of the mmunum to
youngsters 18 and under
during their first six mooths
of work.
He said .t hat would

today

' Abbutlltown.

Reg. 11.27

will cause inflation.

Wishful thinkers usually bet on
long shots and wind up on the
shOrt end . However, a calculated
flyer is well worth your aHention

23-A~~g.

13 oz. can
•

beyond. It is e~ted thiS
would mean a mmunum of
$3.37 in 1981.
Proponents of automatic
indezing say it is needed
because in the past, when
C~n.gress has reset the
mmunum every few years,
inflation has run far ahead of
it.. Opponen.ts sa
. y indexing

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11)

LEO (July

HAIR
$PRAY

an
the same for ·' each · y~r
per cen m .

•

Revis~ plan s affecting your
future if you feel it is necessary.
The main all.iom of your success 1
is to have faith in your ideas.
They'll work out.

•

Just Wonderful
or Aqua Net

· WASHINGTON (UPI) _
more.than ~e .mmunum:
Forty years ago Franklin D.
Of that 3 million, two tltirdS
d 17
t
Roosevelt asked Congress to are women an
per cen
lnsureforallable-hodiedmen are black, although blacks
and w&lt;men " a fair day's pay are only 11 per cent of all
for a fair day's work."
W(l"kers.
Congress responded with
The pr~ figure of $2;65
the 1938 Fair Labor next year IS a compronuse
Standards Act, setting the. between $3 which the ~
nation's first minimUm wage CIO wanted and $2.50 which
Pr 'd t c t
ted
- the grand sum of 25 cents
eSI en ar er wan .
an hour .
The House bill would
Over the years, this has " index" the minimwn at 52
. increased to the present $2.30 per cent of !he average
an hour.
prodUction worker's wage in

stamped envelope ·to Astro·
Graph , P .O. Box 489. Radio City
Station. N.Y.· 10019. Be sure to
. specify your birth sign.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0'ct. 23) The
ability to acquire what you want
and need is particularly strong
today. If you use your ingenuity.
the sky's the limit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov.22)The
mantle of leadership falls on
your shoulders loday, irrespec·

• Sweat Shirts Slzes4·14
• Sweaters Boys and Girl&amp;

Following II Section ll of the propooala made by the Meigs
Local teachers to the board of education Monday evening in
the currEnt t!Jre&amp;.weell old lchoola strike. Sections A, B, c and
D of the )rOposalwere published Wednesday.

themes shown
in free fihn

"Jk)n thru S.t 8:00a .m to 9P. m .
S•Jilda lO · ~O io ll:J anGsto9p,m

MA;N

Stauffer to host
Tri-State group

Mental illness·

Kenn~th McCullouqh, R Ph
Charleo;, Riffle, R. Ph
~on.• 'd H•nnu&gt;IJ, R I'll

112£

Teachers propose rules covering·
vacancies, transfers, promotions

••

.•
•

•

~ fMlMA·
Come in now and look over our whole new line of Quality F~.
.
.
I\'··'\
a. sseH Bedroom Suites
Uvlng Room Suites
Coffee &amp; End Tables

Breakfast Sets
Lamps

Fine Selection of Carpets

RACINE CARPET SHOP
MMI14

O.vld Parsons, Owner

Mr. and Mts. Frank Bise
attended the weddin&amp; of Jane
DeersatAkron Saturday. She
is the niece of Tom Dye.
Devin Thomas of Spfin&amp;·
field spent a few days with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Waher Brown and Dave.
Mrs. Walter Brown visited
with her sister, Miss Na«mi
Pickens who is a patient at
Southern Hills Hospital,
Portsmouth, recently.
Mrs. Kathryn Dietz of
Belpre,
Mrs.
Gladys
Wllllams, · Mrs. Ruth Anne
Baldel'801l and Kay visited
with Mrs. Ruth Moore and
MlBtt Jessie Hoyt at Colwnbus ,
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead and Jane vistted
with the Ed Her.sch family at
Cleveland recently.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Carruthers and Penny of
Loul8ville and Mrs. Doris
Marb of Cbeflter visited
Sunday evening with Mrs.
BellS Larkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens villted with Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Douglaa and Mr•
and Mrs. Dale Wllllams at
Harrisonville Sunday.
-Mrs. L Baldena

PH, 992-2811 POMEROY

Now's the time ·to buy!

$3,077*
PINTO

$5,128*~~
LTD
2 DR. ·

$3,988*
F-100

PICK-UP

Clearance!

*Based on monufocturer.•
suggested r•taU price.

Big savings at '77
eloseout prices
1io

U

._.

"

I

See your
Forcl Dealer today!

FORD

�•
r -

15- Wonh m UrKkc·

ld&lt;oj
't;d..}""S
lila) :a

t1wn~l'

,

12&gt;

1 00

...

ISO

'"'

i~n

.!!:)

J OO

.II~

E1u., • \K\1 trwr th.l m&amp;mmw u Ia
v;urfu.

1:. ,. lTttUi

per

~~o•l.lf'l.l

lk'r da\

SllOOM RE ST Cerom 1cs on.
nounce$ new winter hours
M011 7-lb lues , 9· 12 l -4 7-10
Wed. 7· 10, Thu rs. 1·• , 7· 10. Call

10 " SO 2 bedroom tra iler. l2 150. COAL , l1 mestone ond ca kium
chlor tde ond calcium brln• for
991 ·331&lt;.
dus t con trol and speceol m •• ~n g
' 977 b5 x 1.4 HOLLY PARK Mob•l e
salt lor lormer a. , h celstor Soh
Home. All electric: . central olr
Work s , Mmn Street , Pomeroy
ond hea t, dish washer. stove.
Ohio or phone 992· 3891.
ref rigero!Qr , washer and dryer.
no lurnitur11 included. Under· CAMPER . $600. Also. hors e
trail er, $450. PhOf'\8 (6U t 698·
pinned and set up on lo t w ith
32'10.
garage. 409 South Second Ave .
M iddleport
Oh 1o . Pho ne SPRING GARDEN Supplie s. Cob·
991-7636.
boge . cou liflo~r . broccoli ,
and head lettuoe plon1s,
yello w. wh it• . a nd red on ion

(614) 667 3257. for clones Let '
get s to n .,d early on our

T'dlt'

B,aker .

a

Tlwuk:. .u•J
,Hont. 1.1oo

mulUnwn. C11.sh 111 advlt l1l'e

Mubtlt- Hot!k sot I ~ ar.U V~~on l Wilt-s
ar·e ' lkX't'pt~ unb \li"llh ~··i,)h .. nh
~-dt"r . :.!5 ceul cl1ar gt for o
uis t:;t:l·~··
u ~g (l.;x. Num~t
l Ull'!

In U.rt of 'flk• S..:u·

gifts. Men ore
we lcome to clones . PCiuline

ATIENTION BOW Hunters! For a
complete line of Sow Hunt ing
supp lies : The Bow Hunter Shop,
New Hovan, W. Va . Phone
{304 ) &amp;82· 2827 . Ask for Dove

_ Richorcb._-:-:-----:--NO HUNTING on Geo rge
-~land's prop.rty.

1'l w&gt; PublL-;her n,'W!I'Vt:'ll tht• ra~hl •
W \'dll or rtjt.'i. t i:lllj -.W. t k't'IUt'1.I L•ll)i&lt;t.'Uot utl Tf~· Pubh:.ht•r \!. Ill Hoi !Jl•
l't' S pul ~t bll' f111 UM•it' !lldH lllll' LIK:U£·

ret., UISO! rll~•n .
P.htlllt'- 9'J".l-~151i

Heal

Saito t"or Sale

Mobil'" Homes

Christmas

11\i!UlUI). C111 N ul
OhatWt 11
l"t'n~&gt; Ptr

ror

Norief'l!

'Ad!. ruunuw. ....u-.:r \J 10•n t-utJ.M'\'Ull\l'
lid):. -.ttl bt&gt; t•harxl'd a: tlk• l tlill}

Ju

TO GIVE owoy : Firewood from a

--

garage torn down . 992·3612 .
.........
fLETCHER WELCH would like so·
meone Ia tlay in home wilh

-

FOR SALE or Trade : House and lot
in Mason, W . Va . 3 bed rooms,
both , living room , kitchen , utility , •xtra Iorge room for recreo·
tlon or TV room . {304 } 773 - ~227 .
after 5 pm::.·-c'~~'~

sets. onion plon f&amp;~ Kenriebec,
c.obbler, Katahdin, Red Pontiac
and Red Losodo sMd potatoes.
Bulk garden sHdt. potting soli,
peat mosfi, fruif trees. and rose
bushes . Midwoy Marke t .
Pomeroy , Ohio , 992 -25132,
Bob:s Market, Mason , W.Va.

(30&lt;) 773·5721.:._
. ----

him . 99'2 - 221~ ,

Monda}

Pet. For information write to
Box 148, Tuppers Plains, Ohio

&lt;57a3._
FOUND: SMAll ton dog . Mile Hill
Rd . letart township. Coli even·

_ lnl!!o 2&lt;7·2679.

--

1\1\)l)lll.ll! Sa t ur~y
T Ul'Mia\

thruFmfay
4P M.

the WI}' ~fore pu ltiJ(,:IilJOn
Swula y
lP M

STA~

Kennel Boarding,

lndoor ·Outdoor runs , grooming
oil breeds, clean sanitary

facilities oe 367 -7112. Cheshir-e .
LOST IN Carpenter-Albany area .
Phone (61&lt;) 367·01'12 .
White with block ond while
head and sm. bloc~ spots oil AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs .
over . Dolph us Burke . (614)
(Min .} Collies . 2 females , 7
weeks old . Shots and wormed .
698-72&lt;&lt; .
Phone (614 ) 367 -0292 or

Miller Produce

&amp;

•

Garden Center
1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

....W..:.11.!.2&lt;c.------------

Fru.JGy aft emuou
WAITRESS AND k1tchen help . Ap ·
ply in person, Craw's St4tDk

NO TRESPASSING or Bik• riding
on our property . Ray and
Goldie little, Rt, 4, Pomeroy .

GUN SHOOT. Racine Gun Club

every Sun . afternoon Factor
only .

Assorted

~~-c-------------PUBLIC NOTICE
'fhe Board of Town sh ip
Trustees
of
Lebanon
Townsh i p , Me igs County ,
Ohio, wi ll offer for sal~ at
public auction one used
Adams Motor Grader . The
auct i on wi ll be held at the
Township garage Sept. 24 ,
1977 at 9 : 00A .M .
The Board of Townsh ip
Trustees reserve the right to
reject any or al l bids .
Lebanon Township

Trustees

Clarence Lawrence ,
( 9 ) 9, 15, 22 , 3tc

Clerk

- NOTICE OF SALEBy virtue of an orcter of sale
duly issued out of the Court of
Common Pleas, in the case of

Emmogene
Edwards
Holstein, vs . Mary Crooks
Turnbull , el at :, being Case
No . 16,421, I am offer ing for
sale at p,ublic auction at the

door of the Court House in
Pomeroy , Meigs County ,
Oh i o , on the 17th day of
September, 1977, at 10:00
o'clock A.M ., the following
described parcels of real

estate :

Parcel No .1: The following
described real estate situated
in Sutton Township, in the
CountY of Meigs and State of
Ohio, to-wit : Commencing at
a stake due North 14'h rods
from the North East corner of
a lot four rods square sold by
William Crooks to James
Ashworth, the same be ing a

part of 100 acre lot No. 296,
Town 2 and Range 12 in the
Ohio Company ' s Purchase;
thence runn ing West 22 rods

to a stake; thence North 22

rods ; thence East 22 rods ;
thenc~ south n rods to the
place of beginning, estimated
to contain three {3) acres.
Reference Deed : Vol . 488,
Oeed Records, Meigs County
Ohio.

Parcel No . 2: The following

described rea l estate situate
in fhe County of Meigs , in fhe
State of Ohio. and in the ,
Township of Olive , and

bounded and descr ibed as
follows. viz : Being a part of

lot numbered three {3 ) of the
Sub -div ision · of the Estate of
Mator Reed, Deceased,
begmning at the Northeast
corner of a part of said estate
belonging to A . W. Cowdery

and in the South line of lands
of Lydia K. Packard is the

Intersection of the roads
leading from Reedsville to
Forked Run lind Tuppers
Plains ; thence East , with
South line of said Lydia K.
Packard land 129 feet to a
stake; thence South 99 feet to
a stake; then ce West 1S2 1h
feet to t he West side of said
Forked Run and East line of
A . w. Cowdery's land ; thence
w ith said Cowdery's line in a
Northerly d i rection to.J ·the
place of beginning , con .
ta ining one -fourth (1 -4th) of
an acre , more or less.
Parcel No. 3 : The following
described real estate situate
in the Township of Olive, in
the County of Meigs and St.ate
of Ohio, to-wit : Being a part
of Lot Number three (J) of
the Subdivision of the Estate
of Major Reed. Oeceaseo.
beg inning at the Southwest
corner o f lot deeded by said
Maria Hoyt to said Dell

Arnott (deed bearing date, of
Ju ly 15, 1901) ; thence east
w l th the South tine of sa id lot
152 11~ feet to the Southeast
corner ot said lot; thence
South 1l lf2 feet to a stake ;
thence West 184 feet to the
West side of the Forked Run

Road and East lin e at A . w.
Cowdery's land ; thence with
said A . W . Cowdery line in a
Norther l y direction to the
place ·of beginn i ng, con ta ining one -fourth {\ -4) of an
acre more or less.
P&amp;rcel No . .e : The fo llow'ing
real estate situated in the
County of Meigs, in the State
ot Ohio; and In the Township
of Olive, and bounded and
described as follows : Be ing
Lot No . 53 in Me Dole ahd
Torrence Addrtion to ReedS·
Ville. Meigs County, Ohio .
Reference Deed : VoL 2U,
Page 151, Me igs County Deed
Records.

Parcel No . 1 is appraised at
118,300 and cannot be sold tor
less than two .thlrds or
$12,200.00. Parcels Nos . 2, 3
and 4 are appraised at
$6 ,000 .00 and cannot be sold
for tess than two -thirds or

SMOO.OO.

Terms of sale: Cnh in
hand on day of sale .

JAMES J . PROFF IT T
Sl"leriff of
Mel vs County, Ohio
(81 25, (9) 1, 8, 15, " '
I

RISING

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Animal Coraline, 992-7680: or
after 6 p.m.. 992·5.427 ,

1974 ¥. ton Chevrolet Suburban .
45-4 engine . A.C.. P.S.. P .B..
under' 36 ,CJCM) mi . With or
without extras . (t&gt;lA) 985-3553.

House . P_:o:.cm:.ce:.cry.!..'-.-ec--ce----: TWO AKC Regi stered male
apricot toy poocfl•s . Shots and
TIMBER CUTTERS. Skldd"' ond
clipped .
· $65
each . WINCHESTER model 1400 12 ga .

Operoton.
Call
992·381&gt;1.
--..._
.
A CAREER with a future foro man
Dozer

or

womon who wants the best

in life. A pay check e1,1ery
week . fantastic fringe benefils ,
olllocol work . Give us o coli ct
992-2480 or write , Western
Southern Ute Insurance . 218 •; ,
E. Main , Pomeroy. Ohio , for information .

I~ 1056·6098
= :.:.·---'-"--- - -

CARTER

owner finance-d. Monroe Coun·
ty , W. Vo. Phone (30&lt; ) 772·
3102 0' (30&lt;)772-3:127 .
COUNTRY formlor'\d wirh sed ud·
-eel woods, wot.r ond good oc·
cess in Monroe County- . W. '1/a.
$1 , 00) down, call (304 ) 772 3102 or (304 ) 772 ·3227 .
VA·FHA , lO yr . linondng . Ireland
Mortgage, 71 E. State , Athens,
pi&gt;&lt;&gt;n~~&lt; ) 592 . J051 .

-~~·-·_7&lt;2_·200
_ 5·:..
· -----

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
American Cancer Society
needs , a
part -time
Executive Director in
Moigs County. Working
approximately 10 hours per
week. Must have some
office experience, prefer
someone that is adive in

the

community

with
experience working with
committees .
Equal

opportunity
employer.
Send resume to American
Cancer Society, P. 0 . Box
692, Pomero , Ohio 45769.

HOOF HOLLOW Horses. Buy . sell WOOD BROTHERS ~orn picker,
tiOde or train . New end used
$150. M rs . Howard Coldwell,
saddles . Horse Shoeing . Ruth
Sr-. SR 7, 1 mile south ot Tuppers
Reeves. Albany . (61.4) 698-3290. _!loins . (6 1.4)667·3368.
TO GIVE owoy : 6 or 8 weeks old COOJ&lt;;BOOK. More than. 130
. mole pvppy .
rnouth·wotering reci pes eire
fea tured in Miriam B. Loa's col·

PARTS FOR 197 1 Galocie Ford for
sole . Phone 992-5858 .
1972 DODGE CHARGER . A. C . and
mony more options . Si-495. Coli
992-5169. ----------~·196-4. RAMBLER. A UTOMATIC,
PS., P.B., good condition . S250.
_ _!~o_n_
e742-3176 , ofter5:30 .

19'72 FORD

PINTO Run -a-bout.

Good condlt;on. Coli •••·1590.

anytime or 949· 2•39, after .4
pm .
. CASH paid for all makes and '1'9761&gt;0DGE CORONET. Excellen t
models of mobile homes.
condition. P.S.. P.B. , A.C.
lS,OOO miles. 985-3567 .
Phone area code 614-423 -9531 .
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro· 1974 CHEVIUE MAliBU , four door
, ducts : Top pnce for standing
sedan. 15,000 mile&amp; . One
owner. Call 949·2678. otter 5
sawtimber. Call 992·5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1·4.46-8570.
_ J!!!L _______~----COINS , CURRENCY. tokens , old
pocket watches and chains,
silver ond gold . We need 1964
ond older sil'#er coins. Buy . sell , STARCRAFT 10th anni lo'ersory sale
or trade ' Coli Roger Wam sley ,
on mini-motors , trailers, ond
742 -2331.
,~~-,----

folddown• . T'ovel•lo' 2s lt.

OLD FUI:tNITURE, ice boxes. brass
bedS ,
•tc . ,
complete
households. Write M. 0. Miller,
Rt . 4 , Pomeroy, Ohio or call

$10,850.00. We sell service ond
quali ty . Camp Conley Storcraft
Soles. AI 62 north of Pt. Plea·

$.4400.00; 20

ft.

mini-motor

__tan t . --------'---~---

992 ·116/J.

WANTED TO BUY
Wanted: Saw logs
$100 .00 per 1,000 up.
Cash on delivery.
Ohio
Valley
Manufacturing
Co . ,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio .
Phone 667-3131.

WANTED TO Rent · Two responsi·
b le working persons looking to

rent rural house or mobile
home . Con make repairs, etc .
Coli Mike , workdays , 992· 2119 .

3 AND 4 RM . furnished and un·
. furn ished opts . Phone 992·

5&lt;3-4 .
CO.UNTfitY Mobile Home Park , Rt .
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concrete patios,
sidewalks, runners and off
Street llcJrking. Phona9fl2-.7479.

CASH! t. Junk cars, Fry 's Truck &amp;
Auto , Rutland . Phorle 7.42 -2081 COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
or 742-9575. Closed Mondays .
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots . Cofl992·7-479 .
NO ITEM TOO large or too s mall.
Will buy 1 piece or complete AVAILABLE AT Riversid e Apts . 1
bedroom , S1OS per month . $1 SO
household. New, used , or onti·
security deposit . 992-6098 .
ques. Martin's Furniture, 20 N.
2nd St.. Middleport. Phone SMALL TWO bedroom house in

992-6370.

Rutland . m -5858.

HOUSE IN country, on land con- FOUR ROOMS and both . Adults
tract . Con make down pay·
only. No pels . 992 -5908.
ment , If reasonable. Phone
SEMI-FURNISHED effeciency opt.
.-W.:~:..'.:.
• ·c____________

Suitable for 1 person . In Cootes
Building over Dulton Drugs .
Call ot opt . l6 or 992-3641 .

---

IF YOU have a service to offer , FOUR ROOM furnished or un·
wont to b\.ly or sell something , · furnished apt . available Sotur·
day, Sept. 17. 992 -3658.
oe looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you'll get results
foster with a Se-ntinel Wont Ad.

Coli 9'12•2156.

·

THREE F'\MILY Vord Sole. TV,
bob.,· clothes . maternity wordrC:tb., Tupperwore. ,.th and
Crook St •• Syracuse.

.

-

-

ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil ot·
tachments . like new, asking

lactlon of her family 's favorite
dishes . Recipes ore organized
by holiday season. In addition .
you 'll appreciate the many
helpful cooking hints including
measuring equivalencies and

emet'gen,;y substitu tions for in·
gred1ents . Makes o thoughtful
gift . Send $3 .50 to Cookbook ,
PO &amp;ox 452 , Pomeroy, Ohio,
of5769. Allow 3 to .4 weeks

delivery .

T-=~
- ~-:.c.~=====:....-...,

FOR SALE

New Co -Op water and
sof1eners, model VC· SYI .
Only i279. 9S
Save SSO .OO on a new
.
Hotpoint Refrigerator.
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
Freezer
S25.00 Discount
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
$85.00
Electric Trim-All cuts with
nylon
529.9S
(II Good Refrigerator $200

Pomeroy landmark

~

ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phon• 992-21al
·

l===----------.....1

Could be registered . (61.4)
_ji98 ·611:::.:.9:c
6·_____________
197S SU:t:UKI GT-550. ~700 miles.
Windshield, crash bar , sissy bar
end luggage rock . Excellent
condition . q-49 ·2575.

TRASH COMPACTOR . leu thon I
~old. 949-2480 or 985-3565.

TOUCH AND Sew Does It AIL Just
like new . Sold for $-449: .95,
Clearing out stock . Must sell for
$8q .95 . Cash or terms .

992·51&lt;6.
SCHOOl

SINGER

Sewing

Machines . Many features . Only
$31 .50 ,

cash

or

terms·.

992 ·51::
&lt;6~·------------

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let

Pomeroy

Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and Co-op water

1 so~tener, Model UC-X\11.
Now Only
.

•279.95
Let us test your water
, Free.

Pomeroy Landmark

9 ... ~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

....

Phone 992-2111

UPRIGHT Sweepers,
19n model. Will sell for $22 .50,
cash or terms . 992·51of6.

HOOVER

$2250. Phone (61&lt;) 69a.J290 .
CANNING TOMATOES, .PEPPERS,
YARDSALE , Fri. ond Sot . crifton, cucumbers. Cleland Forms , TWO STOKERMA'riC cool stoves. I
cool stove bricklined, like new.
W. Vo . Jane Bennett's house.
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine

-

1967 Chevrolel Truck , 283
Two houses above Post Office·
· --------~----­ engine , $300. 1~ cubit ft.
Below the bridge . Avon boltles , -~~Jpnd:c
FOR THE fin,st in wood · heating .. !~~~g_erotor . Coll742-2n3.
glassware. mHk con , tools .
-~__,........_..
stoves, cookstoves and ~ool
YARD AND POrch Sale, Wed ..
stoves, Calf Zion ' Heat Co., 8 WARDS GAS Heater with blower.
hcellent condition. $150.
Thurs . ond Fri. , Sept.,,., 15, 16.
Putnam Drive, Athens . (6U)
Myers 3/,. pump, tank o~d pipe,
3 mi. north of Fair Grounds on
696·11a7 or (61&lt;) 592·61J79.
$50. (61&lt;) 378-6233.
old Rt . 33 .

--

--·---

TRAVEL Pockogo: 1976 21
-V~
A RD~S~
A~
LE~~~,-1.-.-S~~o-m_t_o_J SUPER
ft . Terry. 19n GMC Heavy 1/z 1975 BLAZER ~ · WHEEL Drive.
$4500. 1800 WOtt power plant
pm .
Margaret
Marshall
ton. Excellent condition . Fully

residence , house behind bowl ·
equipped. $10 .200 , both .
. .,. . ing alley in Mason .
9'12·7066.
~
"--;-FIVE FAMILY Vord Sole. ThUn . ~ 23,000
air conditioning.

----------- ----

--

-

--••-u ---·

with built·in battery chorger.

$300.

9a5 ·3615 .

Arnott 's Traile'r Pork. .. ~ood.s.ho~ . !J~- 7755.
Real j.~stute
Syracuse . Di&amp;hes , school
1975
TIOGA
DODGE
motor
mini
·
clothM for children. adu It
MUST SELL this 3 bedroom , 2'h
home . One owner. 10.600
clothing, many other misc .
both. '-JJfit·fover with all the·~ ·
m1les.
Coli
742·
2405
or
coli
items. Rain or shine
tros! Priced for ~low actual
992 ·212'1.
reol estate value for quick
VARD SALE in minersville across
sole I Nice drive to pow•r
from Notional Bulk Plant. TWO BEDROOM home on 1 acre
of land . 992-5502 or 992-7294 ,.
plo11t 1 . $44,000 . 992· 24'f2.
Thura . and Fri. from 9·-4 .

at

.,

£ur=i;;de

Clrpet .. UphOlStery
At

.

992·2206 Dr 992-7630
"Tho OriJinJtoos
Not Tlto ltoiUtoos

•.

.,...

to

.

- --·

rooms, 3 bedrooms~ 2 full
baths, dining area , radiant

heat, carpeted and 2 polios.
A$klng 545,000 .
NEAR EASTERN - Brand
new 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
nice kitchen with breakfast
nook . dining room, sundeck , 2 car garage and
large lot. $3.4,000 for everything.
NEW LISTING- Syracuse
home of 3 bedrooms, bath ,
lot

and

garage.

$17,500.
RUTLAND Older 4
bedroom home, bath, dbl.
carport, natural gas. city
water and

garden ~

MIDDLEPORT Good
o lder home with fine oak
finish inside . 10 rooms,
bath, hot water heat, large
wrap-around porch and w
car garage on center lot .
Only $35,000.
57 ACRES - Near river .
Good Gambrol roof barn
with electric, concrete
floor and water .· Corn crib,
3 car garage and 6 room
house with bath and fur nace . S29,000.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,
balh , nalural gas, clly
w•ter, 2 porehes ond l•rge
garden . Only $7,000.
.
3 PROPERTIES IN I .,...
Large 11 room house with 2
baths and central heating.
Also 3 car garage with ol
room aparlment and gas·
station store with 2 rest rooms. 5 lots in all . Asking
jusl $20,000.
SALESMEN
SELL
PROPERTY, DO YOU
WANT YOURS SOLD7 IF
SO CALL 992-3325.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD ,
ACfDSICATES

&amp;.ll- l ll'n

I

I'

•.

I [J

•'

I KJ
J

~•.

t
I I I J I

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

BORN LOSER

HOVA
wz~ .

'

i?DMAiJTIC.
~ITTW

•

'

EXCAVATING. dozer. loader ond
backhoe work: dump trucks
.and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soli , limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef ·

ElWOOD

BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters , irons. all
small appliances . lawn mower ,

Kitchen Cab1nets - Roofing · Concret~
P ~tios • Stdewalks · New Constructiop-

3625.

fer~ .

day phone 992-7089, REMODELING, Plumbing , heating
night phone 992-3525 or 992·
end oil types ol general repair.

~232 .

Work gvaronteed 20 years ex-

EXCAVATlNG . doter . backhoe
and ditc:ber . Charles R. Hot ·
field , Bock Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 7-42·2008.

perience. Phone 992·2409.

Remodeling.

Ph. !92-7119 "616-1001
Estimolls IPtJI~d lo jM.
6·17·1 mo. ptL

.
.....''
'.

WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small, Phone

MONDI\~ ...

1 COIJ'T
KIJOW

SH/3

,.
'GASOUNEALLEY

ACROSS
40 Ring
I Arizona city
decisions
5 Listed
DOWN
11 Encourage I Late - Cass
12 Prison topic · 2 " Christ
13 Be active
Stopped
14 " It's either
at - "
this -"
3 Farrell·
(2 wds. )
Gaynor lilm
15 Beverage
(2 wds. )
16 Skipper's
4 Devoured
diary
5 Like a ghost
17 French
6 Bulky
season
7 " Thou - the
18 Profit ; gain
man"
20 Fleur-de·8 Audie
21 Wee
Murphy's
22 Coin opening autobiography
23 Lean-to
( 4 wds. )
24 Actor
9 High spiri(s
Cormery
25 Lew ~=------=-=-:--- · 26- Verdon
27 Sooner
than
211 "Viva

(abbr.)
3:i Stein·
·b eck's was
wayward
34 Sidetrack
36 Appraise
37 Gridiron
number
36 Initials on
many
appliances

36 South Court St. Athens, Ohio
Saturday, Sept. 17 at 11:00 A.M. ~

septic sys tems ,
dump truck,
lim•stone , grovel , blacktop
paving , At. 1..3. Phone 1 (61-4)

Selling tho completo inventory of morchandiso &amp;
fixturesofthe Kerr - Hunter Hardware as listed. Many
of the fixtures are antique and very old . This hardware
has boen In business at this location sinco 1893. An
opportunity to purchase merchandise at auc.tion
·prices.
·
ANTIQUES &amp; OLD ITEMS : (FEATURE . OF THE
SALE). Ail bronze National Cash Register with
engraving on top, marble insert, built on 4ft. solld oak
wablnet with 4 pull out drawers . Lar~e National Cash
Re9ister with marble insert - built on soli d oak
cabinet with 4 drawers ; Detroit counter scales with
dble. glass front. weights, glass weighing base, and
brass ~oop; small counter scales with brass scoop ;
small counter scales with weights; very old rack (oak)
for handles ; 7 glass showcases with J?late glass tops ;
cherry cabinet with small drawers &amp; wooden knobs ;
counter with 3 iron bars in front for horse shoes; three 7
ft. tables ; 2 ant. twine dispensers wilh advert ising ;
ant. p•per dispensers ; display table 10 ln. high; box
type display racks: lot all oak wail shelving; 2 eeiiing
'\
tracks lapp. 32 ft . iongl with ladders &amp; dollys,
complete ; H&amp;R 10 ga . single barrel shotgun (old I ;
wooden barrels, kegs, boxes. etc. ; wOOden planes ; flax
cycle ; lamp wicks &amp; parts ; ant. padlocks and olher
misc. an1lques. Office desk ; office chair ; oak chair &amp;
swivel chair.
,
MODERN INVENTORY : Large assortment of
dlfferenl colors Inside &amp; outside house &amp; barn paint by
pts., qts. and gals. (This store has been known for
many years for Its paint business) ; paint shaker; asst .
furnace filters ; kegs 7 boxes of nails; stove parts'; asst .
machine screws &amp; boils; •sst. Gales V belts ;" sm .
cabinets with screws &amp; bolts; asst. steel &amp; wood
screws ; elec. switches, plugs, fuses, etc.; etec. wire 142: a large asst. of U bolts, clamps, eyo bOlts, staples, . ,
tacks, hinges, corner irons, anchors. rivets, brackets,
hasps, washers, etc. ; door hardware; assf stove bolts
to be sold by lot or bo.: some brass fittings; asst .

_ji98·733
;..1;;..------------HARRISON 'S T.V. Repair. Service

Calls . 276 Sycamore. St .. Mid·

dleport. Phone 992-2522 .
BATHROOMS AND Kit chens
remodeled , ceramic li fe , plum·
bing , carpentry. and general
maintenance. 13 ' years experience. 992-3685.

PENNZOtl RUTLAND open doily
till iO. Closed Mondays ,
wrecker service, tire repair .

Phone 7&lt;2·9575 or 7~2·2081.
PIANO TUNING and Repair . lone
Daniels , 992· 2082 . 12 years service to Tri-County. Reference:

_!lberfe:.;.ld::;•;;.·------.,-----TRENCHING WORK dono. Coli
992-3911 a&lt; 992·552&lt; . FrH
estimo:.:l=
e :•.:·___________

ISSTRI 'CT/i!J\.
"{)n'tn-s f'lllp/oyrd b)' fUJ'!(c tmdt·

rompauir$ had 11111111al art•r·
tJJ:t' t•anwti[S ofaboul

11/J.(

$18,300

in .1974 "asqllllft•&lt;l ~\' th!' ( I.S. lkpl
of Utbm: Burmu of Lablw stah~·
ti~. hldldw .\'o. fR7S.

sprays~ lnsedlcldes.~

floor

w1x~

cleaners,

etc.;

ynu meet 1~1r qualifications you
will ·be trained by Pr•~essional
lnSiruclorson mndem equipment.
Tramt•na Part TimebasisiSat. &amp;
Sun.) and Kt&gt;ep }':HUr~Jb, or al ·
tend nur 3 Wtoek Full Time Resi·
dent Trainilll(.
HrtY11 imrlnr Truil1•r Trairri"!!. Jnr.

PARKERSBURG

1·304·422·4080

+

r-Tl"'-r.--r~T:"-,;;i"l

..-+-+-1 Solid

t

.'

h:-+-+-

.Q974 3
t) 972

• KJ8
tQI054 .
.108764

SOUTH
.QI0876
.. A 10 2
tAK6
.93

Both vulnerable
West Norlh E11t

b-+-1-+--l-f--

Pass
Pa,.

1•

Pass

••
5•
6•
7•

Pass
Pass

I.

South

4N.T.
5N.T.

Pass

6.

Pass

Pass

how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

Pass
Pass

J,ONGFELLOW

Opening lead - :Z.

Az a •
z

AND YO!:!JMI&lt;.
BARBAI&lt;it71t
AREA FA&amp;T
TALKER.!

(11117 Kin&amp; tutu,tH $yndic•te, Inc .

BARNEY 1.,

•'

QUESTION FOR 1(00 ..

.3

Pass

One letter simply stands for another-, In this .sample A is By Oowald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 s. etc. Stngle letters.
apostrophes. the length and £ormati?n of the words are all In basic bridge responders \0
Blackwood are in the position
hints . Earh day the code letters are dtfferent.
of Tennyson's light brigade.
CRYPTOQUOTES
"Their's not to reason why,
G A
, Z N Q F J M 0 P A
their's but to do or die." They
JPZYIQ
M
don't have to die, but they do
I
M hilve to respond as asked.
E P D B
D M HI Q
DBQ
MGFAJJ
In advanced bidding there
M
K
D
J
are
several situations where
PJ EAFDB
KMZ
E PJQ
responder will take indepen·
G 8 p
Q J Q dent action.
HAAXJ '. AW
JDRLO
Today's hand illustrates the
simplest one. South follows up
MLMYQ
•
his Blacltwood four notrump
Yesterday's L'ryptoquote: SOMETIMES ONE PAYS MOST with five . notrwnp to ask for
FOR THE THINGS ONE GETS FOR NOTHING.-ALBERT kings. This follow up also inEINSTEIN
forms partner that they have

'

BETWEEN 6EIN6 OEPRESSfD
1WJ ..JU5T FEELING BAD?

.V52

.5

z

A RATHER DIFFICULT

EAST

WEST

. .,_

WHAT'5 THE DIFFERENCE

I&gt;

•AKJ4
.65
• 83
.AKQJ2

Is

I HAVE I.III-IAT 1M( 9E

clubs boost slam bid

NORTH (D)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

r

BRIDGE

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

39 - Tebaldi L-.J..-1.-J"-.J-....Io.-

rotary

mower blades: table with vise; peg boards; several ·
display raeks (wood &amp; metal) ; lol shelving; display "
cabinet with 27 small dr•wers ; Island display racks ;
slant fron1 display racks: chain racks; 3 port•ble floor
fans ; Frigidaire water cooler with glass water tank; 2
circulating gas heaters: · good pl~tform scales ;
garbage cans ; fire extinguishers; new Goulds pump
with tank lor deep or shallow wells; new Perfection gas ·
furnace. - 100,000 BTU !Commerclall.
Come prepared to take home all small i~s.day of '
sale. Purcha~:&amp;rs of fixtures may hava o4 or S days to ,
remove them . Store dosed- nothing shown before day
olsaio.
Terms - calli or check with PID d;ly of ule. Not
r-lible for accldellts.
Owner- Mr. George D: Hunter.
AuctionHr - Bill Jann, Phone 557-:1411 or "7-JI:IJ.

• }UI!I bo sati,fied •ith a JOB
NY
-I'ran NOW flit a Professional
·career Drivm~ a" Big Rig:· We are
a Privatf' Traming School and if

26 Scotland's
- Green
211 C;lp
29 Surpass
:i3 60 to a min .
35 Hitler's
mate
36 Pier
prowler

scan

(HARDWARE SALE)

bo ~k hoe , .

10 Abominate
16 Territory
19 Stadium
row
22 "Mine eyes
have - . . . "
23 Obsequious
:14 Booty
2&gt; Conductor

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,1977
5:&lt;15--Form Report 1J; S:50-PTL Club 1J; 6 :!10Summer Semester 10.
·6:»-Coiumbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
I; Overseas Mission 10; 6:1.5--Mornlng Report 3;
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13; 7 : ~
Morning, Tri State 13.
7:oo-Good Morning America 6,13: Today 3,4,15; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Rporls 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10; 7:30-Schooiles 10.
8:00-C•pt. Kangaroo a, IO; Sesame 51. 33.
9:oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Don•huo 3,4, 15; New
Mickey Mouso Club 6 ; Family Affair 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
9:30-Edge of Night 6; Andy Griffith 8.
IO :OD-Sanlord&amp; Son 3,~, IS; Dinah 6; Here·s Lucy 8.10;
Mike Douglas 1J.
'
10:3D-Hoiiywood Squ•res 3,4, 15; Price is Right 8,10.
11 :0D-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Happy Days 6,13 ;
Marcus Welby, M. D. 4.
11 : 3D-it's Anybody's Guess 3,2 IS; Love of Life 8, 10;
Family Feud 6,13.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving Free ID.
12:()0-News 3,~,6, 10; Shoot lor the Stars IS ; Divorce
Court a.
12 : 30-C~Ieo &amp; the Man 3,15; Ry•n' s Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun .of; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1:DO--Gong Show J; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only IS .
1:30-D•ys of Our lives 3,&lt;, IS; As The World Turns
8,10.
2:00--$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2:3o--Doctors 3,4,1S; One Lifo to livo 6,13; Guiding
Light a, 10. ·
J:oo-Another World 3,4,15: Ail In The Family 8, 10;
Crockett's VIctory Garden 20.
3: Is-General Hospital 6, 13.
3":30-M•tch Game 8, 10; Lilias Yog• &amp; You 20.
4:DO-Mister C•rtoon 3; Little Rasca(s 4;· Gong Show
15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's is 8; Se•ame St.
20,33; Movie " The Treasure of Pancho VIlla" 10;
Dinah 13.
4:15-Liffie Rascals 4.
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Parlrldgo Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8; Little Rascals 15.
S:OD-Big V•lley 3; My Thre&lt;! Sons ~ ; Gunsmoke a:
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13.
S:3G-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 15.
6:0G-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20,33 .
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8, 10; Villa AI ogre 33; Country Corners
20.
7 :0D-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Muppet Show a; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Equal Justice Under Law 10: inner
Tennis 33.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Candid Camera 6; Gong Show
4; Price Is Right a; M•cNeli-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Family Feud 10; Nome That Tunel3; Pop Goes the
Country 15.
8:0D-Sanford Arms 3,15: Making of "Star W•rs" 6,13;
In Search of 4; Wonder Woman 8, 10; Washington
We&lt;!k in Review 20,33.
8 :3(}-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4, 15; Wall Stroet Week 20,33.
9:0D-Rockford Files 3,4, 15; Movie "Curse of the Black
Widow" 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20;
Documentary Showcase 33.
9 : 3~Logan's Run 8, IO; Something Personal 20."
IO:DO-Quincy 3,4, 15; News 20; Firing Line 33:
10:3D-Woman 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6;8,10, 13, 15; Bl•ck Perspectivo o the
News 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Barel! a 6,13; Movie
"Dracula's Castle" 10; Mash 8; ABC News 33.
12 :0D-Janaki 33; 12:05-Kotak 8.
12 :4D-Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; ironside 13.
1 :oo-Midnight Special 3,4, 15; Movie "The Pit &amp; the
Pendulum" 10; 1:&lt;40-News 13; 2:30-News 3; Mary
Hartman 10.
J : ~ovte "Dead Run" 3.
4:45--Movle"The FarOutWesf' 3; 6:3D-Bewilched 3.
Movie Channel 4 5&amp; 7 P.M. -W.C. Fieids&amp;Me.
9 &amp; 11 P.M. - Next Man
Cable Channel 5
7 P. M. - Paoi Gaudino Family Fitness
7:30 -Wrestling
8:30 -Sports Travel
9:30- Consullalion
10:00- 700 Club.

star
30 An ex
Sinatra
31 Brain

PUBLIC AUCTION

coveting ,

Yesterday's Answer

Zapata"

•

Home Repair. Elec ..
plumb ing and heating . Phone
992·5858.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex ·

dozer ,

i;v~l'!'l

b0f;S0J

R""" 2
• ,_..,, Oitio 41769

next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone {614) 985·

sn::AK~

WH ~Re

· GENERAL
CONTRACTING

~~~~'~d·~-----------­

Sf'OT,

IMA"'I~E'.

DAVID BRICKLES '

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service. Phone 9.49·2467
or 949-2000. Racine , Ohio , Critf

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Pomeroy, o.
•
8-7-lmo . '

PU!l-39!13

Jumbles: PROBE SWNJ.P FALTER EMBODY
Answe&lt;: Howthefabricmen:haniiiOIIhe-ofhio
riv,._HE WOFISTED"~EM

~.,.~

•''

Phone t92-Z17o

Now arrange the circled leners to
1orm the surprise answer. as suggeslod by the above cartoon.

(AnoweniiOmOITOW)
Yeste&lt;day·s

~·

SJrK~t~~,OfiG

IN
&amp;~rTAIN.

ARE 'flJH REAllY?

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT :
COMPANY ~·~
H ydraullc Hou

UNIIE.D

17
Print answer here: 11 ( """I,.....X~XI?"""';];Jr-X&lt;;17""';Xl7'""'JJ"

9tJT WE GOTIA JUMP
SAHDY·· WE JUST GOTTA!

..;
' ~·

•Custom
Mak i ng

KJ

\YAMALD

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

SEWING MACHINE Repolrs , ser·
vjce , all makes , 992 ·228-4 . The
.Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authori:r:ed Singer Soles and
Service. We shorpen Scissors.

t).

Cl"""',...c-..'- ,..,..._

'
'•

Rustoleum Paint Products
IWe un ship parts directly
1o your door by wav of
•
U.P .S.

LARRY LAVENDER

ga s furnace. basement,
corner

Calls'""'

~WIIINGS

MOBILE

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
116 E. Second Street .
Pomeroy, Ohio ~S769
Phone 992·3325
BRICK VENEER - New 7

I DUGOH

:.·

J:'

llowo

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

R E ~T OR

tour ordinary words.

'

ins.r.tiottSomces
r...&lt;inl Aooiollle
Blown inll Wolh I Altics
STOIII
WINDOWS I DOORS
i!EPI.AtEMENT
WiNDOWS
AWMINUM
SiDIIIG-SOfFITT

7&lt;1·23&lt;8.

1EAFORD

Unscramble these four Jumbkre,
one letter to each square, to form

ALLEYOOP

Is your 1uthorired de.l&amp;er fDr Urbat~
awnincs and t.lr~ II 1ou wul 1 '
~alitJ frodUCt W ith WIIJIIttrNSe tht
'
ue o JOUr home, or mobilt llomt, ••
ant thtt will enltance its bnutr foJ •
~·rs to eome, this will suit JOUr nttil.
•
he Urban lint is an a\uminu111. hei¥J '
cauct. 1nodiztd 11ilife and posts, •
p&amp;ain or decoratitt. e hwt an II·
pttitnced crewr that hnt cruttd mi"J '
of thew fint qulli\awninJS Mid ear·
ports in this lrtL ost If these ~ro- .
ducb qua!i~or krw interest home im.
r._011ement ns at
loc:JI b.IM. 11L C.tll 992-IOJI o "" tslimolt
or 1top bJ 1100 E. M1in St.~ PomtrOf!
o.
·10.1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

~17-TfC

~fl'jlrul m~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD CWIE
~ ~ I,NI.li.!J~•
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

..,.;.

Kingsbury Home Sales

fret Estim1tts

'

••

6-1 6-i mo.

Of 949-2860

Automltic

baths, 21iving rooms , large
enclosed porch for rec.
room , 2 ca r garage.
storage room . $11,250.00
EXCELLENT LOCATION
LOVELY HOME farge 2 story frame. 4
bedrooms, 2 ba ths, large
rec . room with air cond .
separate heating system,
equipped
kitchen ,
basement. 2 car garage,
next to school. $39,500.00 .
NEWER
HOMES
NEEDED - LET OUR
NEW PHOTO LISTING
SERVICE HELP SELL
YOUR HOUSE.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHYLEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259
092 -2568

Ohio

Phone 949·2101

Tr1nsmission Service

....

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Aloul ·contraciDf

SWAIN

~

Phooe 949-2814
9 1.m. to 5 p.m.

Bissell Siding Co.

No Sundor

Clblo ChlniHII S 7 P.M . - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 : J~oach' s Corner
8:oo-Somelhlng Special
.8:3(}-Cable Spalilght
' 9 :30-Biue Ridge Quarter
IO :OG-700 Club.

lto~d ...

Call Professionals

Ph. 992·ZI71

Se&lt;i.

FLOAT IT!

C.ti111111U1 • piKe pntrS. We ftlftr
i1. 01 do rt •JOOIWK. Spociol price lo - ·

,...,

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES Ph. 37U250

ALRI'~ CY
~i31!E!OD &lt;0

GUTTER
SERVICE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding,
Storm Windows &amp; Insulation.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

I$5VE···

~T~EI'T

,....--------. ....-

8-2'1·pd .

EXPERIENCED
Radl a tor c:::::!!!:::::.
Service.....
the.,....'~ .. h i . . . ....~ ••,

Chester ~

Box34

Ni?'N

FIRI&gt;\·9

m•

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Phonellike Youna

THREE BEDROOM on Main StrHt
irt Rutland. S12 ,000 . Coli

SUPER SCANNER CB onte.nno with
control box and 60 II . of lead-in
992-5147 .
EXTRA NICE Yorkshire mole hog .

loolt34 ' -· 0.

Res f dentia l
and
commercial. Call for
estimate, 24 hour servin.
Anyd;ly, anytime.
Phon• 985-3806

Young's
Carpeting

CHOICE one ocr• building
lots a"oiloble . Coli 992-5869 or
qas-3595.

ONE . YEAR Polled Her&amp;tord Bull.
Con be :regi5 tered . 949-2368 .

~ ire .

Stum Ellr1ction

10 :30-Basebali 3,4; Dickons of London 33.
11 :«»-News of,6,B, 10, 1J, 15.
11 : 30-Pollce Story 6, 13; Johnny Carson 15; Movlo
"Cold Swear'' 8; ABC News 33.
12 :oo-Janakl 33.
11 : ~D-late, Great 1968 6, 13.
1:oo--Tomorrow J,-4 .
1 :30-Mary Hartman 10; 2: 1D-News 13.
Movie Channol 4 5 &amp; 1 P. M. - Gumball Rally
9 &amp; 11 P. M. - Sailor who Fell From Grace With the

MHZ!!
6-22·1

3·1 4-1 mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

rwO

JUST LOOK - ~149.00 per
acre. 135 acres, minerals,
idea l spot for small lake,
tin\ber ,
c ity
water
available , excellent hu nting.
CLOSE IN , OYER s
ACRES , lenced, barn,
chicken house , home has
new kitchen, 2 bedrooms.
bath, natural gas heat,
fru it trees , $15,000.00.
POMEROY- 6:Y• ACRES .
3 acres fenced, home has
new si d ing, 3 bedrooms.
bath , forced air heat, sma ll
barn . $17,200.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
Lot with large 2 s tory
frame . -4 bedrooms. 1112

A WALL.

Speci.ll Occasions" ~~

Superior

dle__eort .

0.

Portraits
Pmporls

r...

$&lt;3,000. 991 ·2&lt;92.
SIX ROOM house at 613 MiU St. ,
Middleport . Good condition . In·
quire ot 439 lincoln St ., Mtd·

MAIN
POMEROY,

!Y ~
~10C K

Weddinp

At!Riftnlries

r......,M2.fll2
or!!Z'Ill
1 ur. " 4:38
SM.£UND SU¥1CE
7·28-i ....

room , twa cor garage, cen tral
air, on acre lot , Nice drive lo
power plorits and mines .

_.?12 ·~38

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

300 llfio SL
P -, D1tio

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house. F.A . furnoce . storm wi rt-

-...

THE PHOTO PLACE

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

______

LJNuSuAL

dle_e2ft .
FlEL WORK , part·time . Call An·
400 KAWASAKI MX with less than
drew Cross . 247-2852.
I'ALOMINO GELDING . 7 Y" · old .
200 miles. Owner going lo col53 in . high . Gentle. 992-5968.

.
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 15, 197_7
8 :DO-Chlp• J , ~, 15: Welcome Back, Kotter 6, 13;
Wallons 1.10.
9:()0-Stor Trek 3: Barney Millar 6.13: News
Documentary ~ ; Rock Music Awards 15; Hawaii
Five·O 8, 10; l~ludlng Me 20,33 .
9 :»-Corter Country 6, 13.
lO :GO-News 3,A,20; Redd FO)I(X 6,13; Barnaby Jones
8,10; Including Me : A Follow-Up 33.
1)

SMAll form for sole, 10'% down,

automatic . like new . 992-3442.

HYBRID pups . Rhode - 30 GALLON HOT Woter Tonk w ith
tub, Gos cook stove . Windows .
sian Ridge ·bock (African lion
5 · speed Boys ' bike . Call
Hound) ond coonhound. Six
7•2·2078 .
mo. old . Moles ond females.
Shorthaired . GoQd disposi· 1967 16 .FT . RINKER·aUILT boot
tlons . Will groW to good .size .
with 80 hp . motor . 992 -3.467 ,
$50. 992·7889.
__gf!•!.E..P:.:."':.:.·__________
FREE COlliE puppies, corner of NINE ACRES mixed hay. C. B.
South Jrd and lincoln in Mid·
Shehan . GreQt Bend .

TOP~ NOT

OWN HAIR, OR
HAIR PIECE?

Business Services

NEW J bedroom house , 2 baths ,
oil elec . I acre Middleport,
close to Rutlond, Phon• 992·
748 1.

2 1A both bilevel from the
owner and save! Lorge fomily
room with flreploc• . eat-in kltch.n with double-oven range
ond d ishwasher, formal dlnirtg

FOUND : VELLOW Tom Cat near
Forked Run Forest. Someone's

HE~

'

HOMESHES for sole , t a cre ond
up. Mtddlaporl ntHJr Rutloncl
Coli 992 H8 l

2.

IS TI4Ai

for So.IP

Phone 992·3&lt;57. ----~
DON'T PAY the added expense of
a Realtor ! Bur this 3 bedroom ,

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
.DEADLINES

guns

~&gt;:state

dows. fireplace in Middleport.

NOTICE

Chock

-

TV Log for easy viewing

"•

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
c.,.h

..

•

l~TheDaily Sentind. Middleport·Pomeroy , O., Thursday , Sept.l5, 1977

THAT WASN'T SUCH A

DIFFICULT QUE6Tt0N

AFTER ALL''

all · t!)e aces. There is no
reason to invite seven when
you know there is an ace
against you.
North dutifully shows his
two kings and South merely
goes to six spades.
At this point North revalues
his hand. South was clearly
thinking of seven when he bid ·
five notrump. Could there be a
trump loser? How about
another loser?
South could not know that
North held four sure and five
very probable · club tricks so
North bids the grand slam
which makes easily in spite of
the bad club break.

Several readers have asked
us if it is proper to show your
hand and claim after trumps
are drawn and the rest of your
cards are good.
The answer is that it is
perfectly proper, but you had
best be sure of your claim,
because there are various
possible restrictions on future
play. In general, it is better
just to play the hand out
quickly and save possible
arguments.
1NEWSPAPER ENTERP.RISE ASSN .!

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 lo: " Win at

Bridge," cl o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 489, Radio Ciry Stalion,
Now Yor~. N.Y. 10019)

�•
1,_The ~ySentinel , Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Th1:11"S&lt;Iav ..Se1ll

F. S. T. Inc. will be
selling at $4 per copy
SYLVANIA, Uhio (UP! ) Errol Schmeits has a
philosophical scheme to
make a million bucks. ,
Schrneits is an Arnway
distributor
in
this
northw estern Ohio
corrununity, who for most of
his 37 years has wanted to
market a product with tbe
financial rewards of the pet
rock.
Now, he thinks he's got it in
a frozen snowball.
His product "The Snowball
Theory" got its start at a
dinner party last year.
Schmeits said a friend began
expounding on a scientific
theory that in 50 billion years
the sun will burn out and the
Earth will turn into a
snowball.

Schrneits said if carried
further, the theory ultimately
asks, " Why worry about what

will happen to you?"
He said cornrnericializallon
of that apathetic philosophy
seemed an even better idea
after last winter's frigid tern·
peratures.
So, F .S.T (Frozen Snowball
Theory ) Ltd. of Sylvania is
producing and marketing an
initial run of 15,000 plastic
globes covered with snow.
Each is inscribed " Who gives
a damn ?" and will cost $4.

LEXINGIDN, Ky. {UP!)
- A top price of $177,000 was
paid for a bay filly by Olden
Times out of Mitomite during
Wednesday ' s afternoon
session of the 34th annual
September Yearling Sale at
Keeneland.

FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE
RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANKh
.. NEW" DRIVE-THROUGH
WINDOW WILL OPEN
FRIDAY MORNING
SEPTEMBER 16th
AT 9:00

SPORTSWEAR

STOREWIDE SALE

Includes our entire stock,
women ' s coord i nate

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16th-SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17th

sportswear .

Famous

makes such as

Marc,

~von .

Regular and extra sl:res .

DRYER
3 Temperature

settings.

Famous GE qvality 1 white
only.

s1ggoo
Men's Jerks
Reg. $1.25

BULKY KNIT
ORLON SOCKS
Solid
colors
and
heatnertones. One size fits
all sizes 10 through 13 .
S!ock up during this 2 day
special sale.

99~

Pair

Two Day Sale!

MEN'S
SWEATERS
Save
dur ing
this
Introductory sale on our
ent ire
stock.
Coa .t
sweaters, pullovers, vests,
crew
necks.
shawl
sweaters. Regular- and
extra large Sizes.

.HANDBAGS

LONG GOWNS

Large selection of shoulder bags and hand
pags . Vinyl, leather, denim and cloth styles .

Keep warm 1his Fall with a new long gown
of brushed tricot or flannel. Sizes 7 to 13 and
n&lt;&gt;tit• thru XXL.

REG.
REG. sg,oo

SALE '6.09
SALE 17.89

REG: '15.00 .

SALE 113.09

REG. '18.00

SALE 115.69

SALE 119.09

REG. 122.00

SALE HALF-SIZE

DRESSES AND
PANT SUITS

- Excellent selection of tall styles.
-Sizes 12112 to 26 112 and extra sizes.
1
1

REG. 16.00

SALE 13.59

DRIVE-UP BANKING
HOURS WILL BE •••

A tremendous selection of ·
styles and colors in sizeS 8
' to 20. Now Is !he pertec! ·

SALE

PORTABLE DISHWASHER
.1 only - Whirlpool port~ble dishwasher
harvest gold, super scour cycle, can be
installed permanently. Reg. $349.00.

SALE 512.59
SALE 114.39

1 Qnly -

•
G. E, portable dishwasher white

YOUR
CHOICE

'29900
·

Many

BANK LOBBY HOURS
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
7:30 TO 3:00
SATURDAY
7:30 TO 12:00
So if you're in a hurry, just drive up
... or walk up ••. to our window, and
we'll process your deposit or
withdrawa I as quick as a wink! No
more standing in lines wh.en you're
pressed for time. You don't even·
have to step one foot inside the bank!
So next time .you want to save time,
come as you are, to our drivethrough window!

new styles just
re ceived~ b lue denims,
corduroys, 100 per cent
cotton tw ill and cotton
polyester blends. Regular,
slim and husky sizes 8 to 1.8.
plus student siz~s 26 to 32
waist.

SALE PRICES
MEN'S
117.95

BLUE DENIM
BIB OVERAU.S
Wals! sizes 25 to 3~ prewoshed blue denim, 100 per
cent sanforized cotton.

~:;r;S1[D" A Home Bank
SPECIAL

For
Meigs Count)

SCAlTER
RUG
SALE
$3.88

People
\

RACINE

~.

HOME NATI
RACINE

N

OHIO

A regular .5-4 .79 rug In
nb long size 24 X 40 incheS,
r
ri nged ends and
fri nged oval sizes 24 x 40.
Excellent selection. solid
colors, 100 per' cent dacron
poly~st~r with non -skill
back .
'

-Girls' sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6X , 7 to 14. Boys'
sizes 2 to 7.

REG. ' 3 . 5 0 - - - - - - SALE 12,99
REG. SS.OO
SALE 14.35
REG. '7 .95
SALE '6.95
REG. '12.00
SALE 110.45
REG. 119.00

FURNITURE SALE

Housaware 1st Floor

GREAT SAVINGS ON QUALITY
FURNISHINGS

-Recliners, Rock.O-loungeiS ONLY '199.00
-4 Pc.
AS LOW AS •449.00
Bedroom Suites Up to 1292.00 Savings on Kimball Pianos
LITTLE BOYS

-Pre-washed t1enims, painters pants,
engineer stripe. Sizes 4 to 7.

SALE 14.19

REG. 14.95

By United Press International
BASCOM, OHIO - TiffiEE SCHOOL BUSES belonging to
the Hopewell-Loudon School district were destroyed by fire
early today, the Seneea County Sheriffs' Department said. A
spol\esman for the department said a fourth bus was damaged.
He said they were parked near the school.
Delbert Johnson, chief of the Bascom volunteer fire
department,said there were 16 buses in th.e school area and all
had been ransacked. He said gasoline was taken from several
~them . Johnson said the fire could have been caused by arson
or set by an accident such as one of the vandals dropping ·a
cigare!U!.
I
BRUSSElS, BEUHUM - ISRAELI FOREIGN Minister
Moshe Dayan left today for showdown talks in the United
Staleot amid reports he believea it safer to reject a Palestinian
state now and risk war than accept it and risk war IIIler.
Dayan took offfor New·York at 1:35 p.m. (7:35a.m. E!Yf)
on a scheduled Sabena flight that had been delayed 35 minutes
because ~ his late arrival at the airport. Because of tight
security measures, the Israeli loreign minister was driven
directly to the plane in his offici.al car.

MUSIC
DEPARTMENT

TAPE
• PLAYER

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER SAYS he
bel.leves pubUc opinion in America is shifting toward support
of the Panama Canal treaties, but warns this country faces
·~ery serious international consequences" if ratification fails.
The shift is taking place both in the Senate and among the
people, carter said in a question-and-answer hookup with the
Radio and Television News Directors in San Francisco Thursday .
Carter planned to meet again today with French Prime
1\l:inlster Raymond Barre and, as he does every other week,
with a group of out-&lt;&gt;f·town editors. Of the 40 senators who
signed a resolution a year ago against any new Panama treaty,
be said, "many ... have told me both privately and publicly"
they now favor the treaties.
·

Portable s.track stereo
player featuring : AC-OC
operation ~ automatic or
manual program change .
Batteries InclUded.

SALE ·s44.88
COREUE
$34,95
4 PIECE
PLACE.SElliNG

EAST CANTON, 0.-TEACHERS IN THE Osnaberg
local school district agreed Thursday night to end their Hklay
strike and return to classrooms tod;ly under a compromise
one-year contract.
They bad gone on strike when they did not receive raises
negotiated in a ·new contract last June. But the school board
said those raises were to be covered by federal and state funds
which were not recei~ed . The new agreement provides a
startUtg salary ~ $8,650 and board members said it was
posaiblea tax levy to cover the increase would be placed on the
Novernber ballot.
·

Otd Town Blue, Wln!er
Fros! White, Fubberfly
Gold. Spring Blouom
Green.

SALE PRICE

REG. 5.95----SALE s4,99

$26 95

1

Sl$.99

a..uB

ALUMINUM
QUART SIZE
SAUCE PAN

SALE
SPECIAL

SHEET SALEI

ln. colors

of coffee,
chocolate, sunray
gold, with cover.
av~ado.

Twin Bed Size (F'Itled or Flat)

$4.49

Revere quality.

Sale Prices

COLUMBUS - PUBUC UTIUTIES COMMISSION of
spoke~~men said Thursday a week-long series of PUCO
truck checks at weigh stations around the state ne!U!d a total of
48 "major safety violations and defects.
Enforcement investigators from·the PUCO Transportation
Department worked with. Department ~ Transportation
inspectors as part~ a national effort to detennine compliance
with safety regulations by coounon ·carriers on major
thQroughfarea. A total of 488 inspection reports were made
with :rr vehicle&amp; being taken out ~ service for major defects,
such·as bad tires and brakes, faulty exhaust systerll8 and lack
of hazardous materials placards.

Ohio

• $25.50

REVERE WARE
Full Bed Size (F'Itled or Flat) SSA9 COPPER BOIIOM
COVERED SKILLET
Queen Bed Size (F'Itted or Flat) SS.99 10 Inch size,
Pillow Cases

YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO -CITY BUS DRIVERS walked off
the job early today forcing commuters and thousands of school
children to find alternatve forms of transportation. Sour~s
said members of Local272 of the Amalgamated Transit Union
voted late Thursday to strike the Western Reserve Transit
Authority despite urgings from their local leadership to
remain on the job.
The local's contract with the WRTA expired Aug. I and its
membership, which includes 82 drivers. and mechanics,
reportedly was upset over lack ~ a new pact that would raise
wages. Pickel line&amp; went up at the main bus depot on the city's
west side shortly after midnight. The walkout was not
santioned by the local's international union, sources said.

Housewares 1st Floor

REG. '6.95 ---"--SALE ~.89

Reg. '5.99 Size 60x70 inches

Size 701140 inches $10.88

~

Reg. $49 .95

Su~ . ONLY •499.00

objections by Whaley ,•. ere sustained and the pomt was not
made.
Judge Bacun ruled that the only issue of the hearing was
whether a strike does exist in the Meigs Local District.
Foley indica led from a legal standpoint he disputes that a
strike is underway .
This produced an exchange between him and Judge Bacon
in which the judge chaUenged Foley on his statement of "not
knowing a strike existed."

The line of questioning by Foley to Dowler proceeded with
Foley attempting questions on coercion , negotiations and the
Ferguson Act, aU of which were objected to by Whalen. The
objections were sustained.
Mrs. Jane Wagner, clerk of the Meigs Local District, was
called to the stand but after the two attorneys conferred at the
bench with Judge Bacon, it was decided that Mrs. Wagner
would not take the stand.
Judge Bacon returned Dowler to the stand to bring out that
the calendar for the current school year was setlast spring and
includes 180 teaching days and two meelinRs for th• teachers .

•

en tine

at
VOL. XXVIII NO. 108

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

by Foley, Dowler said tbe calendar can be
amended as long as tbe 180 days of school for studenlll are
completed by June 30.
In closing remarks, Whaley said that schools have been
closed and hampered by the slrike and services affected.
Foley stated that the schools were closed by the
superintendent and that another remedy ~ law had no! been
taken. He complained also that !here was no showing of
irreparable damage caused and that the plaintif! had failed to
present evidence that the preliminary injunction should be
granted.
Judge Bac~n said in giving his deci.Bion the Ferguson Act is
onw1eldy and madequate in strike situations. He said 2 900
students hap lost 14 days of their lives as had their parents, ;.,.d
he was granting the preliminary injonction.
. It was agreed with Attorney Whaley that the injunction
will be worded the same as the temporary restraining order
issued last week. That instrument ordered the teachers back to
their jobs, forbid picketing and striking .

~estioned

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Teachers dey udge Bacon
President Downie says
MLT A will stay out of

~;~
:~~:?,~~
~~~~;:ro_
J'

Buy what you need now,
seamless 90 i·nch width
bleached snOwy white.
'
Two days only.

Sale prices on living room suites, chairs,
bedroom suites, occasional tables and
Kimball pianos.

Special purchase and sale of discontinued
patterns. An excellent selection, for sofas,
studio couches, chaises and davenports.

Reg. '11.99 Size 701100 inches sg,88

$5.99
BLEACHED
QUILT
LINING

No iron permanent press sheets, 50 per cent
polyester, 50 per cent cotton . Plaid pattern,
fitted ' sheet, pillow cases, top sheet
coordinate.

Reg. sg,gg Size 70x90 inches .

from green or aold.

Reg. $2.39 Yd.
90 Inch Width

SALE! FOAM BACK

FURNITURE THROWS

Size 72 x 84 Inches for !win

or full size bed . 50 per cent
acrylic , 50 per cent

3 nes!ed bowls. Choose

CHILDREN'S SWEATERS JEANS SALE
- Cardigans, V-necks, crew necks, vests
and cowl necks.

BLANKET SALE

PYREX BOWLS

Take advantage of these savings on a new
RCA Color Console Television and enjoy the
new Fall programs, football games and
World Series. .

SALE

--;- Save on warm sweaters for school or
play .

WASHINGTON (UP!)- The United Mine Workers
Union joined the Bituminous Coal Operators'
Association and the Trustees of the union's health and
retirement funds today in a plan to avoid further cuts
in health benefits and pensions until the present
contract expires Dec. 6.
· Cuts in the benefits earlier this year triggered a
rash of wildcat walkouts in mining regioris of the
country, and threatened to bring down the
administration ~ UMW president Arnold Miller.
In making the announcement of the joint effort,
Miller warned tbe agreement de(lended on an
understanding that no further interruptions in coal
production would occur. Any interruption from now on
Miller said, would probably result in "substantiai
:benefit reductions."
I!&lt;Jth Miller and BCOA president Joseph Brennan
called on miners to join the effort so that benefits could
be preserved for the remainder of the contract period.

Special

RCA SALE

depositions from school board members. He said the
depositions had originally been scheduled Tuesday but that he
Whalen and Prosecutor Rick Crow, had agreed the deposition~
would be taken on Thursday because Whalen had a schedule
conflict and could not be present, as he wanted to be, if tbe
depotisions were taken on Tuesday.
Foley told the court he was not prepared for a bearin~t on
the preliminary injunction, Foley said he was "surprised" that
the hearing was to be held
Whalen said he and ·Crow had not agreed to take
depositions on Thursday onless the prelirniinary hearing could
beheld Friday or Monday. Obviously, that has not work~ out.
Bacon ruled that due to the nafure of the situation the
preliminary injunction hearing should go ahead
Supt. Dowler was the only person to take the ~land during
the hearing. He ouUined the situation of the past days sinc-e
schools were supposed to open on Aug. 30, indicating that a
strike does exist. He said that he did close the schools two days
after the strike beRan.In cross exa~tion, Foley attempted
to bring out inf&lt;rmation . a.bout records of the district bu!

!JMW benefits cuts
may be avoided now

SALE
PRICES

WAREHOUSE-MECHANIC ST.

Friday &amp; Saturday

SALE
BOYS JEANS

Cornple!e selection or oltes
In color and black and
while.

449

•

color, features the potscrubber cycle . Reg.
$349.00.

CAMERA
FILM

IS the ~tention of admimslrators and the Me1gs U&gt;cal
Seho?l Distnct Board of Education to open schools of the
~ct MIJ!lday, Sept.l9, &amp;!pt. Charles Dowler said Thursday .
We zmcerety hope aU employes - teac,hing and . non~chlng - will hooor Judge Joh~. C. Bacon s. prelimmary
mjunction and co~e back to work, Dowler sa1d.
Plans for OP_"nmg the sc~ools were anoo~ced _Thursday
afternoon follow1~g the granting of tbe prelimina~y mjunctlon
by Judge Bacon m the Common Pleas Court durmg an hour·
long hea':'"8 Thursday morning.
.
. In_ hiS ~g remarks, Judl!e Bacon ~1d he has
juriadiction m such ma!U!rs as strikes by public _employes
under ~on law· He sa.td lbe pu_rpose ~the hearmg .was to
determine whether a prelurunary mjonchon should be ISSued.
The next .step would be a permanent inj~nction.
Denrus Whalen, attorney for the Me1gs U&gt;cal Board of
E:.b2tion, ~greed to proceed with the hearing for a
preliminary mjunction.
.
However! Mark Foley, attorney for the Me1gs Local
teachers, sa1d he had come to court prepared to take

polyester. Good sef!'CIIan of
solid colors.
$

-2 Pc. Living Room

time for you to buy the
boys' jackets you need for
this winter.

SAVE

SALE 14.49
SALE 57.19
SALE sg.s9

REG. 15.00
REG. '8.00
REG. 111.00
REG. '14.00
REG. 116.00

REG. 523.00
SALE 119.59
REG. '34.00 ---SALE 128.89
REG. 142.00
SALE 135.69
REG. 152.00·---"---SALE 144.19
REG. '64.00 ---SALE 154.39

SAVE 10%
, BOYS
WINTER
JACKETS

KODAK AND ·
POlAROID

LINGERIE DEPT.

SALE

WAREHOUSE-MECHANIC ST.
Special For
Two Days

SPECIAL

Special values in e¥e1J departmen~ al three floors at the main store and
Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic Sl

SAVE 20%
G.E. Commercial
Type Electric

..

•

One size titnlzes tOto 13. A
big selection of solid colors.
Famous Jerks q~flty .

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Douglas

Jane Colby.

Special at the
Merchandise Street
Warehouse

BAN LON
DRESS
SOCKS

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

M»MENS
COORDINATI

~

WASHINGIDN -

DESPITE ARGUMENTS it would

vastly alter politics in America, the . Senate Judiciary
Committee has approved a con&amp;titulional amendment to
replace the "winner-lake-all" electoral system with direct
popular election d. the President. Thursday's narrow (11-8)
margin eendlng the pfOIM*d amendment to the Senate fioor

was especled because of sharp dlvialon between liber~ and
-.vattvee oo the cmnmlttee.
·
'!be amendment, by Sen. Birch Bayh, D-lnd., would
el.lmlnate the Eledoral College that gives the states, not the
people, the llnal aay In elecUng a pretldent. The system bas
· been altal:bd becallle It could allow a candidate who wlria the
pnp!la• vote lo de the election. Conlervatiwa vowed a fight
to pr
w the electoraiiiJIIem - ellller by lllddllnl! the bill
with controverJll•l amendments or t'ttough two alternative
(Oontlaued Clll 1111111)
j
f

teachers will be on their
picket lines at the varioUs
schools in the district Monday, . Charles
Downie,
president of the district's
teacher association, said
today.
A preliminary injunction
was issued Thursday against
the striking teachers by
"Judge John C. Bacon in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. The · injunctions,
reading the same as a recent
temporary restraining order
issued by the court against
the teachers, ordered them
back to their jobs was intended to prohibit striking
and picketing.
Thursday
afternoon,
District Supt. Charles L.
Dowler said the administration and board of

schools of the district Monday
mornmg.
Downie said, however,
teachers will be on the picket
lines in full force Monday
morning and bus drivers
have indicated strongly that
they are behind the teachers.
He said this means drivers
apparently will not cross
those picket lines.
"We are willing to risk the
possibility of jail to stand
behind what we believe in.
We still say the solution to the
problem can be worked out
very simply if we had
someone to negotiate with,"
Downie said. •

WILLARD LUCAS, A PUMPER at the Meigs No. 1
mine, receives his Holmes Safety Award and a plaque
from the Southern Ohio CoarCo. in recognition of his 38
years of accident-free work. From left to right ar~ Alvie

·Purkey, mine committeeman; John Burnett, Safety
Supervisor; Lucas; Jim Willis, Safety Director for the
Meigs Division and AI Hillard, Superiritendent of the
mine.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Gas strike in Yesteryear Mine pumper has
top
safety
mark
Jackson
County
Schedule
Budget,
wages
debated
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGIDN (UP! ) The Bert Lance hearing was
tlie big event on Capitol Hill
Thursday, but Congress also
was busy with such things as
the federal budget, · the
minimum
wage
and
amendments to the Constitu·
lion.
Other business of the day
included final congressional
approval of the federal
government's budget for
fiscal year 1978, which starts
Oct. I. The spending plan
amoonts to $458.3 billion and
includes a $61.3 billion deficit.
·The new budget is $49.1
billion greater than the
current federal budget.
The House, after a long and
stormy debate, voted to raise
the national minimum wage
from the present $2.30 an
hour to $2.65 next year. The
bill, which now goes to the
Senate,
provides
for
additional increases to $2.85
in 1979 and $3.05 in 1980.
Proposals for changing the
method of electing presidents
occupied
the
Senate
Judiciary Committee. The
panel narrowly approved a
proposed constitutional
amendment that wduld
replace Ule ''winner take all''
electoral system with a direct
popular vote for president.
The issue divided the
committee on conservative·
liberal
lines
with
·conservatives seeking to
preserve the ptesenl system.
'f!te batUe is expected to be
refought on the Senate floor.
By an overwhelming 87·7
vote, the Senate decided to
delay the proposed ban on
saccharin for 18 months. The
Federal Food and Drug Ad·
ministrallon wants to ban the
artificial sweelner because of
indications that it causes
cancer, but the Senate bill
would allow saccharin to
cmtinue to be sold unless new
evidence of a cancer link is
found by researchers.

COLUMJlUS (UP! ) -Gov. and produced more ·than
James A. Rhodes has an- 1,600,000 cubic feel of natural
nounced a major natural gas gas per day during open-flow
strike in a geological tests. The most common kind
formation not previously or well drilled in Ohio
considered to be an Ohio typically produced 2:i0,000 to
producer. The Ohio Energy 300,000 cubic feet per day in
and Resource Development such testing.
Agency and the Goodyear
The well Was drilled to a
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. made the tntal depth of 6,050 feet in a
discovery.
project partially fundeq by
The Jackson County weU Ohio ERDA. It penetrates the
was drilled by the NUCORP Beekmantown formation ,
·Energy Co., East Liverpool, which underlies eastern Ohio,
at about 4,300 feet.
~~This major discovery is
further evidence of the
magnitude of the natural gas
reserves -we have in Ohio,"
Rhodes said Thurs&lt;lay.
"It makes it even more
urgent that we work to
CHARLESTON, W. Va . promote more drilling into
(UP!) -A search continued the deeper formations to
today for a single-engine develop these resources
plane believed to be piloted which we need so badly to
by a Lancaster, Ohio official ensure continued operation of
missing since Wednesday factories, stores and schools
during the winter months,"
afternoon.
. Devon Tipple, safety- he said.
"The major significance of
service director of Lancaster,
this
well is the obtaining of
left the Greenbrier Airport at
geological
information that
White Sulphur Springs in a
will
be
made
available to
Piper 28 about noon
drillers
in
Ohio
as weU as
Wednesday but did not reach
adjoining
states,"
said
his Lancaster destination. He
bad reportedly attended a Rhodes.
seminar conducted by
Columbia Gas Co.
Col. Pearl Ward, wing commander of the Civil Air
Patrol, said today some 10
rescue planes will comb the
flight paths between White By LEONARD CURRY
Sulphur
Springs
and · WASHINGIDN (UPI)
Lancaster. An additional 50 Bert Lance is on the offensive
ground searchers have also about his qualifications for
budget director, but a new
been mobilized. ·
·"He was known to fly either question was raised the airways (commercial air- whether the .burden of the
line routes) or a direct fight may have impaired his
route," she said. "That would ability to handle the job.
Lance said his credentials
take him close to Charleston
on a 25-year banking
rest
or l't. Pleasant."
career
and not just the 1972-75
. Lt. Col. Willi.am H. Arnott
of CAP said Thursday; "The period of great distractions
plane is on the ground when he was in state govern·
somewhere. We do not know men!, running a campaign,
where . It left yesterday chairing one bank and
afterno on, and the plane· becolfling chief operating
normally has four to five officer of another.
Lance said his "conscience
hours flying lime.''
is
clear" in a 10-point
Offkials said the plane
ahould have been able to refutation of charges of
complete the trip in about two widespread illegalities and
financial irregularities:
how·s.

Search on
for plane

ENTERTAINMENT
M.C.'s- Allee Nease and
BIU Childs.
11:00 Senior Citizens
Chorus &amp; Kitchen Band.
11:45 - Loretta Beegle ·
. Dance.
.12:00- Francis Andrews'
Band.
1:15 - Kenneth Ward
Family - Dulcimers.
2:00 - Bill Stockwell
Folksinger.
2:30- Doug Circle and his
Ranch Hands.
3:30 - Pie Auction (Win·
ners of Pie Baking) .
3:45 - Bill Stockwell Folksinger.
4:15- Music.
5:00- Tall Tales· Contest.
5:30 - Senior Citizens
Square Dance Demon.
6:00 - Square Dance Music by Strlngduster.
8:30 - Square Dance Armand at the Organ.
CONTESTS
M.C.'s - Joan Stewart and
Dan Smith.
11:00 - Pie Baking.
11:30- Sack Races (2 ages
- under 12 and over 12).
1!:00 - Cracker Eating.
12:30- Watermelon Seed
(ConUnued on Pill' 12)
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Thirty-eight years in any
job is a remarkable career.
Bui when it's 38 years in
mining wltholit an accieent, it
goes beyond being merely
remarkable.
Yet Willard Lucas, a
pumper at Meigs Mine No. 1,
has achieved that incredible
record and looks confidently
forward to more years of
accident-free service at
Meigs.
Lucas has received the
Holmes Safety Award, the
most prestigious safety honor
.in mining, for his excellent
record.
What's the secret? "Just
being smart enough to keep
my eyes open, " Lucas says
matter-of· factly . " I've
always tried to work safe and
to leU others to work safe.
I've told other men to watch
out for things and they'd
laugh at me, but a couple of
days or weeks later.
something would happen to
them. "
Lucas was 19 years old
when he began working for
Consolidation Coal Co. in
Pike County, Va. in 1939. He
was· ·still in Pike County,
working for Bethiehem Steel,
in 1974 when he decided to
move to Ohio to be closer to

his two daughters.
As luck would have it;
Lucas was at his son·in-law's
gas station near the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. office when
safety director Jim Willis
stopped by. When Lucas
asked if there was any chance
of getting ·a job at Meigs,
WilUs told Lucas to follow
him back ,to the office.
A tribute to Lucas' safetyconscious attitude is the fact
that he worked as a motor·
man for eight years and still
has all 10 :.... count them fingers. "It used to be
standard
that
every
motorman got at least one
finger lost or mashed," he
remembers, "but not me."
" I've done most every job
there is to do in a mine,"
J.ucas recalls. "Being a
pumper is the best job I've
had in a long time, even
though there's a lot of
walking to it.
"There's a lot more emphasis on safety now than
when I started: Used to be
there was never anyone who
would talk to you on what to
do, what not to do.lf you were
lucky you might have a father
or a brother who would tell
you, but that was ·it."

Lance raises mo_re questions
Lance appeared to have
won the first round in the
confrontation with members
of the Senate Governmental
Affairs Committee, who fell
into
dispute
among
themselves on parliamentary
points while Lance sat quietly
for periods of up to 40
minutes.

But GOP Sen. Jacob Javils
of New York, a senior
committee member, told
rep&lt;~~"ters after the national
television cameras went dark
Thursday, " There is a
question of whether Mr.
Lance can continue to
function while carrying the
burden of responding to these
.charges.''
~
' The hearing took on a
distinctly political tone

during questioning by Sen.
Charles Percy, R·1ll., tbe
chief Lance critic. Percy was
frequently interrupted by
Sens. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla.,
and Sam Nunn, !).{;a,. who
objected to his approach.
Percy focused on the issue
of Lance pledging the same
14,800 shares of stock as
collateral for two separate
loans from two New York
banks.
" It's not collateral if they
have a piece of paper that 's
not worth anything," Percy
said, referring to Lance's
note guaranteeing to forfeit
the stock in case of default.
Sen. Henry Jackson, !).
Wash., told Lance be had only
one question - "How could
an individual have so many

overdrafts. over such a period
of time?"
''A man in the street has
deep concerns" over this one
issue, Jackson said. "Tbat is
what people are really
talking about . ... I mean
people on Main Street. It's the
hear~ of our inquiry."
Jackson said tbe public Is
"going to say - is that good
management? "
Javits questioned whether
Lance was candid with tbe
committee on Jan. 18 when 11
held confirmation hearings
for Lance to be budget
·
director.
He said the key questioo
was "did you tell us all you
should have told us as a
nominee for high office ... yoo

(Continued
l ,

011

PIP U)

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