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10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy~ 0., Tuesclay, Aug. 22, 1978

Manchin
revokes
Chatier

Chinese troops reportedly
fighting Cambodian .forces

Pet steer goes
back to farm

.

'

By RI(HARD H. GROWALD . "Yes."
OOLUMBUS (UP!) -Kathie Flach and Glell, her 1,200
HANOI, VIetnam (UPI) He said Peking has dispound pet steer, will remain together -thanks to Gov.
BY ANDREW GALLAGHER
Chinese troops and heavy . patched !:llmm artillery to
James A. Rhodes even tholli!h she auctioned him off for
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
artillery are fighting with the Cambodians. "The
rT,477 at the Ohio state Fair Monday.
(UPI) - Although he said he
Cambodian forces In the Cambodians are Incapable of
. The New Paris, Ohio, girl's· reserve grand champion
did not expect the company to
border war 8galnst VIetnam, operating such bill glms,"
was quickly returned to her after it was sold at the auction
cease work, West Virginia
.
Hanoi
officials said today. . . Diem. said. "They are being
to Albert Wasserstrom, representing the WaSierltrom
Secretary of State A. James
The VIetnamese leaders manned by Cblne~e.''
Co., Colurn~us .
Manchin Monday revoked the
made the charge In private
He said the Vietnamese
1
Prize animals sold at lbe annual auction are often sent
charter of the New Jersey
talks with an~ American con- have captured at least one·of
off to !llaughter, a fate Glen escaped because Kathie had
firm responsible for .the
gressional delegatio!! and the !Xg Ollnese guns.
the help of a very influential friend.
cooling tower from which 51
then repealed the allegation
Diem said the Cambodians
Kathie's story began last week when GleM won the·
men f'll to their death in
to
U.S.
~eporters traveling have Increased their army
reserve champion title. She wanted lbe mmey she knew •·
April.
with the mission.
from three divlsims of about
she
would get from the sale to use for her college
Research Cottrell of Bound
Vietmanese spokesman &gt;,000 men to about 20
education.
Brook, N.J .. saying it had
Ngo Olen told the reporters divisions because of Chinese
But the idea lbal she would lose her pet, brought her to
received
no
formal
Peking has sent "advisers aid.
. .
tears. .
notification from Manchin's
and
cadre" to aid the
"These
Cambodian
Rhodes visited the girl and vowed he would try to h8ve
office of his actions, declined
Cambodian troops battling m divisions are fully anned by
the steer returned to her by the buyer after the sale.
comment ,
the Vietnamese border.
the Chinese," he said.
" It's all been worked out," Rhodes told her prior to
Manchin said he took the
Asked if cliinese troops
Diem told. the Americans
Monday 's sale. "I told everyone planning to bid on the
action to clarifiy . his own
were taking a direct pari in Peking is making trouble for
steer that it's going back.
duties; because the company
the .fighting, Diem said Vietnam because Hanoi "is
"What are you going to do," Rhodes asked the bidders.
"has shown a total disregard
"Hurt a little girl?"
for safety;" and to provoke
Kathie said Bile would retire Glen to her Preble County
an
independent
state
!ann because she had come close to losing him.
investigation into
the
Wasserstrom said he was glad to return the steer and ·
accident.
added, "we're pleased to help her."
The Gallia-Meigs Post, scene of a head-&lt;Jn collision
The secretary said if w&lt;rk
Highway Patrol, investigated Tuesday at! :40 p.m., on CR
continues he will apply to the
four accidents MondaY, and 37, one mile east of TR 39,
Pleasants County Circuit
The patrol reports a vehicle
Court - where lbe disaster
one early morning Tuesday
TWO SQUAD RUNS
by Wanda 1.;, Saun·
driven
site is located - to have work
The
Middleport
mishap.
ders,
34,
Gallipolis, going
to
lbe
Officers
were
called
halted.
Emergency Squad answered
At the same time , Gov . Jay a call to 106 Condor St.,
Rockefeller has asked the Pomeroy, at 12:44 p.m.
cars
received
U.S. Department of Labor to Monday for Tom Wells who •. Two
make public the report by the was taken to Veterans moderate damages and a
Occupational Safety and Memorial Hospital where he "" driver was cited to court at
Health Administration on the was admitted. At 7:30 a.m. the result of an accident on E.
.
.
disaster and have OSHA tum Tuesday the squad went to Main St. as the resuit of an
Monday at Camden-Clark
DONNA JEAN HAWKINS
its records over to the U.S. '681 S. Third Ave., for Mrs. accident on E. ·Main St. at
Memorial
Hospital
in
Donna
Jean
Hawkins,
41,
Justice Department.
Dana Hamm who was taken 3:f&gt;B p.m. Monday.
Parkersburg following a brief
1525
Rockland
Ave.,
Belpre,
Pomeroy Police said a
Manchin said the company to Pleasant Vdlley Hospital.
westbound
car driven by Via died Monday at O'Bleness illness.
"should stop now removing
Mr. Merrell' was born at
M. Green, 67, Route I, Vinton, Hospital in Athens following
that debris" at the base of the
Uttle Hocking, a son of the
an
extended
illness.
SPECIAL SESSION
slowed in the lane of traffic
ho,urglass tower, which he
Mrs. Hawkins was born In late William and Bessie Blair
The board of trustees of and was struck in the rear by
said might contain some Columbia Township will meet
Ducator
Township
of Merrell. He attended lbe
evidence at to the cause of the in special session Saturday, a second westbound car Washington County, a Coolville Congregational
driven by Rodney K. White,
collapse. He added, however,
daughter of Madge Gruey Church and was a veteran of
"I assume that they will Aug. 26 at 6 p.m. at the 20, Route I, Long Bottom.
the U.S. Army during World
township building.
There were no injuries and Taylor of Stewart and the late War II having served In the
continue to work."
White was cited to mayor's George Palmer Taylor. A
Pacific Theatre. He was a
.court on an assured clear resident of Belpre ior the past
of lbe , American
member
lo years, Mrs. Hawkins was a
distance charge.
gradua.te of Rome-Canaan Federation of state, county
and municipal employes and
High School In Stewart.
Todd Smith hurt
Surviving besides her was a co-&lt;&gt;wner of the M. and
The Pomeroy Emergency mother and her husband, G. Truss Shop at Coolville. lie
Squad was called to Meigs Robert K. Hawkins; her was a btis driver for the
High School at 9:47 a.m. grandmother, Mrs . Van Federal Hocking Schools. He
Stewart;
two formerly was employed at
Monday. for Todd Smith who Gruey,
the Penn Metal Co. at Vienna,
daughters,
Delores
Hawkins
received a possible fractured
W, Va . .
of
Parkersburg
and
Patti
Jo
leg while practicing football.
Sucviving are his wife, Opal
Hawkins
of
Belpre;
a
son,
He was taken to Holzer
Archer
Merrell; a stepJim,
at
home;
two
grand·
Medical Center.
children, Terry Lee and Sean daughter , Mrs. Richard
Michael Roach, both of Fort · (Judith Anne) Gillian,
Cool ville; a sister, Mrs.
Sill, Okla.
Funeral services will be Howard (Marjorie) Comes,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Christine held at 2p.m. Thursday at the Uttle Hocking; a brother,
Schultz, Pomeroy, Osie While Funeral Home in ijarry. of Belpre; two step
Henderson, Guysville; Paul Coolville, Burial will be in grandson~, Richard and
Andrews, Long Bottom; Stewart Cemetery. Friends Michael Gillian, Coolville .
Funeral services will be
Patty Hornsby, Albany; may call at the funeral home
held
at 11 a.m. Thursday at
Margaret King, Middleport; · anytime after 3 p.m. WedWhite
Funeral Home in
the
Thomas Wells, Pomeroy; nesday.
Coolville
where
friends may
Patricia Vaughan, Pomeroy;
.
3
p.m.
Wednesday.
call
after
FRED W. MERRELL
Nancy Bartimus, Reedsville ;
Burial
will
be
in
the
Coolville
COOLVILLE
Fred
W.
Virginia Wyatt, Pomeroy;
Cemetery.
Jess Pickens, Racine; Nelle Merrell, Coolville, died
Bahr, Middleport; Clyde ·
Johnson, Portland.
DISCHARGED - Opal
Barr. Garnet Potts.

an obalacle f&lt;r them. We will
not follow their line.
"They want all the people's
around them to be enemles of
the Soviet Union."
Diem 'IOU ubd If Vietnam
would allow the Ruaslans to
have military basea In VIetnam, including the deep
harbor of Cam Ranh Bay
dominating lbe South China
Sea.
He responded this "is
smiJething to be discussed."
He added "the United
states knows better than
anyme else that there are no
foreign bases It) Vietnam"
but he did not rule out Soviet
bases in the future.
Asked If H•noi and
Washington will ' agree m
diplamaUc relations, Diem
said
"1 think
our

One person injured in .a ccidents

Two-car wreck
investigated

~--A~~-a-D;aths-1

.

Home

Rhodes •••

is no place for
your valuables ...

ASKEJ) TO REGISTER
Any student who has moved
into the Meigs Local School
District and will he attending
grades nine thorugh 12 at
Meigs High School this fall is
asked to register at the high .
school offi~e from B a.m. to 3
p.m. anytime this week or
next week .

We offer complete security when "insured
for cas!) value" isn't enough ... because
some items simply can't be replaced! Our
Safe Deposit Boxes will insure safekeeping
of valuables with no worry ... and easy ac·
cess during our regular banking hours!

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Marriage licenses were
issued to Marvin L. Monk, 55,
Pomeroy and Julia Alice
Elliott, 40, Pomeroy; Dennis

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"
Walk - Up Teller Window
and Auto-Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings S to 7 P.M.

James Smith, Z3, v ·asemite,

Ky., and Karen Sue Coleman,
20, Pomeroy,

lllitens ,alional Bank

6'6
"-'

. ;,•.

¥

RABBIT RESULTS
Results of the rabbit
judging of the open class
entries ·of the Meigs County
Fair include Brian Whaley, 20
firsts; Randall Roberts, thr,ee
firsts; Della Braglln, one
first; Ezra Van Hom, 18
firsts ; Maida Long , three
first, and Gene Whaley, 74
firsts.

I

eo.o•&lt;&gt;O·

Member Federal

Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Deposits Insured to $40,000 .00 .

WE INSURE

COAL TR.U

(Continued from paKe I)
'
both," he said.
"The entire economy of
Eastern and Southeastern
Ohio will suffer if utilities buy
western coal to meet envtrmmental standard&amp;. Families
will be uprooted, and •ill face
hardships that have not been
seen in Ohio since the Great
Depression," the governor
added .
''On the other hand, if the
federal EPA continues in its
blind insistence m the use of
scrubbers, Ohio con111111ers
will be faced with electric
rate hikes of 20 to 3o
percent," said Rhodes. "To
allow either of these
alternatives to happen would
amount to an ecmomlc crime
aggajnst the good citizens of
Ohio. I caMOt allow this to
hapen.
.. As governor, I wW 111e
every power I have to preVI!nt
massive installation of scrubbers and the eliOrbltant rate
hikes that will follow," he
said. "And as governor, I will
protect the jobs of Ohio coal
miners. We will burn Ohio
coal in Ohio."
ru..tes also contended the
monitoring system uaed by
the federal EPA was
inadequate beca111e It was
on
computer
based
projections and not actual,
m-stte testing.
He said Ohio baa the most
elaborate air-monitoring
system of any state in the
nation and the Ohio EPA

monitoring , results were
drastically different than the
.
federal EPA.
''The facts, based on actual
monitoring, are that pollution
exceeded federal standards
for a maximum of six days in
any single Ohio county last
year," Rhodes slad,
"That's right. Six days. The
federal EPA wants us to
install billions of dollars
w~ of control and operate
them ~days a year to solve
a pollution problem that
n;ists or fewer than six days
a year in Ohio," said Rhodes.
Rhodes said there are
many alternatives that would
be both better and cheaper
than the use of scrubbers or
western coal.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Tbursday tbrou&amp;h
Saturday, fair ; warm and
humid Thunday lhrough
Saturday. Highs will range
from the uppe,r ll8s to the
lower 90s. Lows will be In
the 10•.
:::::::::. :::~:- :::::::~:::::: :::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·

GRID MEETING SET
All boys Interested In
playing football at Meigs
Junior High are to meet at the
stadium in Middleport Thursday, Aug. 24, at 7 p.m.

0£~'~')'--_rh_e_w_or_ld_To_.d_a..;..y_
~·' •

1

DAVIS INSURANCE AGENCY
Across from the Court House in Pomeroy

Bill Quickel

Jeannie Starcher
992-6677
\

I .

,,

rtvera In Bavaria have been told to giVI! lbetr C\lltomel'l a
"nuda alarm ." The Bavarian State Mlnlalry of Interior
paased the word to rivennen after a woman C0111Pialned that
she. and her "IIIISUiptctlng" smallaon rode a raft past the
several nudist bellchea on the river blnka.
., "We'll isaue a 'Judeo warnlnjf aU right," said one
Iiverman . ··Rut molt of our ~rs will just laiJilh ."

,.

r

west , went left of center on a
curve and struck an east
bound auto operated by Mark
Daniels, 21, Bidwell.
Daniels claimed injury and
was taken, by a relative, to
Holzer Medical Center.
Daniels was treated for a .
laceration of the scalp, and
an abrasion of the forehead,
and released.
Officers reported moderate
damage to both. vehicles.
Saunders was cited on
·charges of left of center.
At 4:20 p.m., the patrol
investigated a two-vehicle
accident on · SR 7, at the
junction of CR 60.
Officers report that an auto
driven by Gary A. Pope, 26,
Northup, was stopped in
traffic, waiting to tum left. A
vehicle ·operated by Ivan
Shaw, 72, Gallipolis, failed to
stop and struck the Pope auto
in the rear.
T}lere was severe damage
to the Pope vehicle, moderate
damage to the Shaw auto.
Shaw was cited on charges
of assured clear distance.
Officers report that at 4: 15
p.m., on U.S. 35, two-tenths of
a mile west of SR 160, a large
piece of coal fell from an
unidentified semi-tractor
trailer, strikinl! the windshield of an auto driven by
Catheryn
Richie,
18,
Gallipolis,
The west hound Richie
vehicle incurred slight
damage.
The patrol reported at 8
p.m. Monday a deer ran into
the path of a south bound auto
operated by Jerry E. Brown,
·34, Middleport, on SR 7. fivetenths of a mile soulb of SR
124, in Meigs county.
The Brown vehicle in·
curred moderate damage.
The deer was killed.
Tuesday, at Ill ¥• :40 a.m., a
vehicle · driven by Eric L.
Springer, 20, Gallipolis, ran
off the right side of the
roadway and struck a guard·
rail on SR 160, three-tenths of
a mile north of the Gallipolis
City Umlts.
There was slight damage to
the Springer auto.

representatives can find a
way to do it."
He said "We are doing our
best" in helping trace Ameri·
cal18 still listed as missing in
action in the war.
· The congressmen said they
will receive the remains of II
MIAs Saturday and fly them
to Clark Air Base In the
Philippines en route home.
The eight-man delegation
ostensibly came to search for
340 servicemen listed as
missing in action, but the
Vietnamese apparently
intended to take advantage of
the opportunity to press for
normalization of ties with
Washington .

Nature program
rconunued from Pia•t)

.Classes begin Monday

horses in addition to working
as the librarian at Hocking
Technical
College
In
Nelsonville . A library
program is a "natural" for
her since she can combine
her interest in the natural
world with her knowledge of
books and her enthusiasm lor
using those books to lind' out
more infonnation about lbe
world.
This is only one of the
summ.er activities planned
lor children by the Pomeroy·
Middleport Libraries In
cooperation with the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries, the
regional library system
which serves ten southeastern Ohio counties and
headquarters at Wellston.
The nature program on
Thursday '. Is free and
especially for grade school
children.

in Eastern District

EPA urged to save coal industry

. EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local Schools will open for
the 197&amp;-1'9school year Monday while other schools of the
county will not be ~ until Sept. 6.
Teachers of the Eastern District will meet at the high
school at 9:30 a.m . Monday for a short meeting after
· which time they will go to their respective schools to
IJ'ganize for the year. Students will report for theii: first
day of .classes on Tuesday.
·
·
Stepping Into the superintendent's post replacing
John Riebel, long-time administrator in the district Is
CU~rk Lees who previously served as .high school
prlncipal.
· · . Hired to replace Lees as high school principal is
James Page who has been in the schools of Mason County,
W.Va., smce 1967. He served as assistant principal at the
Wahama High School for four years during .that time and
last year was a teacher at lbe Polntl'lliasanl High School.
Page Is a graduate of Ohio University and received
his · master's degree in school administration from
~shall University. ~s. Page is librarian at the Kyger
. O'eek High School. Mr. and Mrs. Page and their two
children currently are residing in Polnt Pleasant,

"I'd rather leed the klda
ibiUI breathe dean air" - a
cual miner's
By JOE KAY.,
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio
(UPI) - The family budget
will be cut back to where
cookies are a' luxury and
chewing tobacco and snuff is
too expensive. Santa's bag
will be em~ty at Christmas.
That was the bleak future
painted Tuesday by coal
miners' wives if Ohio utilities

.,u•.

are allowed to stop buying the
state's high-sulfur coal in
order to meet federal
pollution standards.
At a U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency hearing attended by 2,000 concerned
miners and families - the
wives recalled the dire
months of the lllklay miners'
strike last winter and warned
that the hardships wifi· be
replayed . unless the federal
government backs off on .the

/

VOL XXIX , NO. 91

•

e

at

ELBERFELDS
B~ Get

Ready for

See our new selections of
scl'loot styles In the men's
ond boys' deportment on
the tst lloor ,

...

Many nut sweaters .
jackets . jeons · shirts lor
the school boys .
In slz.. 8 to 18

PLUS

Hann Underwur - s1ve
20 per cent now.
Sprlngfaal Tubo Socks In
tho bosl colon.
Big .....lion of S.lts
Flam,.l Shirts, , Including
wntern sty ln.
Gym Shorts
And many, many more. ·

.,

\

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1978

By GREGORY GORDON

.

PAINTNG PEDESTRIAN WALKS- Employes of the
Community Action Agency have been busy this week
painting pedestrian cross walks througbout the village of

awar e
'

,,

~.

Pomeroy. Shown painting on Pomeroy's Second Street
are, front, Brian Bauer, a sophomore at Meigs High
School and Ray Deem, standing, a junior at Southern High
SchooL

dleport, has been cast In
1 he ""'•dway- btt,..,.tay
"South PacUic" as Seabee
Morton Wise. The plsy wUl
RACINE - Service conbe preaented at the Play
tracts lor the 19711-79 school · Bos Theatre In Tucson,
Ariz.
• .
year wl!l'e awarded Tuesday
night when the Southern
Miller will he featured In
Local School District Board
two 1olo vocals aacl also
of Education met In regular
numerous dance numberw.
session at the high school.
He auditioned five days
Awarded contracts were
with over 100 aelon and
Valley Bell, dsiry products;
actresses trying out for
Betsy Ross, baked goods;
paris. The play will run
Sand Hlll Coal Co. , coal;
from Sept. 14 throuch the
Ashland · Oil, gasoline;
end of Oct. Miller Is a
:PennzoU, motor oil; transdrama major at Pima
mission grease, anti freeze
College In Tucson.
and fuel ofl, City Ice and
.
.
Fuel; Meigs Tire Center, :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·
tires and tubes; Best Office
Machine Co., and IBM,
business machine repairs;
Brown Fire Equipment Co.,
CLARIFICATION
fire extinguishers.
Keith French, Middleport,
The board hired Wllliam for whom the Middle E R
Hensler as a junior high Squad was called to Midteacher and as junior high dleport jail was not Keith E.
football and basketball coach French of High. Street,
and Mrs. Cheryl Boston as Middleport.
Title I teacher . Howard
.
Caldwell resigned as junior
high football coach. James
Lawrence was hired as the
second semester driver
education instructor . the
resignations of Reba Mlllh'
George C. Smith, Franklin
and Ted Trotter as teachers County Prosecuting AI·
were accepted.
torney, and Republican
Approved was the food Nominee for Ohio Attorney
service application as fUed General, will bring his
with the State Depariment of campaign to Meigs County on
Education. School lunches Monday, August 28, when he
and breakfasts will remain at speaks to supporters at the
the same price this year with Meigs County Courthouse in
lbe eiceptlon of milk which · Pomeroy at 9:1&gt; a.m.
will be 10 cents raising from
The two-tenn prosecuting
seven cents.
attorney believes there is an
The board set substitute urgent need for im·
employes salaries which will provements in the state's top
he $28 a day for teachers; legal office and is cam·
$2.83 an hour for cooks and palgning on a platform of
custodians and $18.15 a day strong, responsible leader·
for bus drivers.
ship, coupled wllb experience
A teachers' handbook in crime fighting techniques
was approved as well nonnal for a safe Ohio. ·
fund transfers. A policy lor
Now in his 18th year of
advancing sick leave to non· government Jaw p,ractlce,
certified employes was Smith serves in a nlimber of
adopted. BillS, the financial state and national leadership
utement and the activity capacities for law en·
fund report was approved. lor cement,
·
Bosrd mtlllbers attendinl
Smith Is a fonnl!l' chalnnan
were 0.1188 Hill, Shirley and preaently serves on the
J~n, Sue Gru-r and
Economic Crime Committee
Betty Wagner. The board for the Naltona 1 District
rec.-d until 7 p.m. Thun- Attorneys Aasoclation.
daf In . the high school
He pioneered economic
cafeteria.
crime and conaumer fraud
On Monday the board met prosecution• In Ohio u the
.also wllll the low- board first prosecutor In the state to
member•
attendin1 establllh an Economic Fraud
Tuelday'a -.lon and Gene Upit In hla office. That step
Yolt auendlng. At that has led to ~ sueceulul
..,.dal a.llon the bOard proiii!CUtlon of more white
diacuaaed · employe collar crime and the
negotiations with no action recovery of niore money for
being taken.
fraud victims than.any other
~

e

I

end up ln arbitration," a
Wlion official said.
But asked if a strike was

WASHINRTON (UP! ) Members of the .second
largest postal workers union
have rejected a tentative
contract agr~ement and
mandated a Tuesday strike,
defying President Carter's
hold-the-line position on their
contract negotiations, union
officials disclosed today .
With all but a smattering of
ballots to be counted,
members of the National
Association
of
Letter
Carriers had voted by about
78,000 to f&gt;B,OOO to reject the
proposed three-year contract, a union official said.
The union's constitution
catG for a strike if the
negotiations are not reopened
wilbin five days of a rejection
vote, but Postmaster General
William Bolger said earlier
this month be would not
reopen negotiations. He said
he hoped that if any of the

'
,,.

now likely, he said: "I'm
afraid so. ff they don 't want
to renegotiate, we'll follow
the union constitution" and
set a Tuesday strike deadline.
J . Joseph Vacca of the
union representing urban
mail deliyery personnel, said
today he could make no
statement until he receives a
certification of the vote from
the union's ballot committee .
AI the Postal Service, a
spokesman said it "would be
inappropriate" to comment
until the service has been
notified of the final tally by
the union leadership.
The proposed three-year
contract calls for a 2 percent
wage increase and twice
yearly cost of tiving hikes.
Although union leaders have
urged its ratification, the
2~0 ,000-member
letter
carriers union and the largest
of the four unions, the 280,000.
member American Postal
Workers Union, have been
bitterly divided on the
contract. The advisory
committee to the APWU and
the national assembly of the
letter carriers both rejected
the proposed contract, but
presidents of eac h union
urged that rank and file
members ratify it.
.The APWU
finishes
contract voting at midnight
tonight, and some disgruntled
locals
already
have
conducted wildcat strikes in
recent weeks.
The
40,000-member
National Post Office Mail
Handlers Union finished
counting ballots at midnight
Tuesday and was counting
the returns today. Thai union
and the 60,000 member Rural
Letter Carriers Union, which
completes balloting on Sept.
I, are expec5ed to ratify the
contract. But in the e\'ent of
nationwide wildcats by the
larger unions, it is not clear
wllether they would cross
picket lines.
Bolger a nd ' Pentagon
officials have confirmed the
existence of a contingency
plan under which Army
troops would be called upon
to deliver mail during a
nationwide strike .

w0 r king 0 n
power plantW~:;.;-··
major ~

four

•

.

.

NEW HAVEN- More than
2,000 construction employes
are at work on Appalachian
Power Company's 1300
megawatt Mountaineer
Plant, taking shape on a 600acre 'site near New Haven,
along the Ohio River .
Concrete foundation work
is nearly completed on the
unit, turbine room and boiler
room . The erection of
structural steel is about 93
percent complete, wilb 17,050
tons already in place, The
stack, which will one day
tower 1,103 feet high to

GEORGE C. SMITH
office In Ohio.
In 1976 and 77 he served as
National Cbalnnan of the
Career Criminal Committee
of the NOAA, and he was
recently appointed cochairman of the Career
CrlJninal effort for 1978, The
Career Criminal concept
focuses on the convlc;tion and
Incarceration of the violent,
l'epellt offenders l'eiJIOIIIiilie
for more than 411 percent o1
the
In AmerlcJ!.
Mr. Smith will be available
lor questions from the media .

.e

protect air quality, is already
at an elevation of 989 feet.
The x-shaped support legs of
the cooling tower are in place
and its hyperbolic shape is
begiMing to fonn . Twelve Qf
90 concrete veils have been
poured .
Work is being performed on
the · hanging of collector
plates and installation of lbe
rapping systems on each of
the four precipitator units,
The precipitators
are
designed to remove 99.7
percent of the solid particulates from the plant's
stack emissions.
Earth moving equipment is
at work backfilling the coal
yard to its !ina! elevation.
Foundation and concrete
work are complete on the coal
barge unloader, reclaim
tumel and coal stations No. 5
and No . 6, Progress is being
made on ihe structural and
mechanical aspects of each.
Basic foundation work is on
schedule for the coal stacker
and conveyor systems.
Across Route 33 from the
main plant site, grid and
concrete foundation work is
well under way on both the
760 kv and 138 kv switch·
yards. In addition, the bottom
ash pond is being brought to
grade and its clay liner being
placed.
Ragnar - Benson, Inc., is
the general contractor for the
construction. Other contracts
awarded are; Paul Coffey
Construction Co... site
preparation; Bristol Steel &amp;
Iron, steel erection; L. K.
Comstock, Inc., electrical;
ll,fartey Cooling Tower,
cooling tower erection; Union
Boiler, precipitator con·
struction; and CSI Contractor
Service, Inc., general work,
cOnstruction (\f . the plant
was announced in January
(Continued on page 141

Weather
Mostly sunny today with
highs from the mid to upper
lOs. Clear tonight with lows in
the mid 60s. Partly cloudy
and more humid Thursday
with highs from the upper 80s
to low 90s.

unions

representing 600,000 workers
rejected the agreel'nenl,, lhey
would subm11 11 to bmdlng
arbitration before attempting
an illegal strike,

,

Attorney General candidate
to speak in MeigS County

·~ "1'1.'\..'

would · result in massive
layoffs and economic disaster
in the coalfields.
" I'd rather feed the kids
than breathe cleEm air,"

Peggy
Graham,
a
spokeswoman for a group of
coal miners' wives told the
(Continued on page 14 )

'

PRICE FIFrEEN CENTS

Proposed postal
contract .rejected

t·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

officials said such a move

Tuesday strike mandated

·
CContinue!~ from page II
~
Dugan who resigned recently. Mrs, Mt:Carty will begin her
duties at once. ·
·
The board approved a number of routine fund transfers
and 8greed to refund $258.50 to John Bond, a fonner teacher.
The amount was taken from his pay for retirement but never
·
had been certified to lbe state.
Tuition requeata for Ivan Lane, JeMy Bentley, Jane
Bryant and Erika Grate were appnived.
Roberta Wilson, formerly principal of the Salem Center
School, was approved as a substitute teacher. Permission was
given for Karen Walker, girls volleyball coach, John W,
Blaettnar, distributive education coordinator, and Jackie
Brooks, home econamlcs instructor, to'-attend professional
meetings.
·
Resignations accepted Included those of Don Dixon, high
school boys track coach; Janis Schmoll; teacher, and Charles
Downie, junior high track coach.
·
Severance pay totaling rT,432.80 was approved for three
teachers who retired. They are Francis Roberts, Helen Smlth
and Roberta Wibori. Debbie Mt:Call and Donna We~r Jenkins
were given continuing contracts.
·
It was agreed to proceed with repair to the Harrisonville
School roof not to exceed $2,000 and lbe junior high parking lot,
not to exceed f,1,000. Aspecial board meeting was set for Aug .
. 28 at 7:30p.m. to fill e:llstinll vacancies in the district. The
buard agreed to pay the traveling expenses involved in transporting me chUd to a stall! residence school. The board will be
partially reimbursed for the payment. Supt. Dowler and Dan
Morris were instructed .to attempt to secure a high school
Spaniah teacher. The present teacher ha.s asked to be released ,
Atlel!dinl! the meeting were Dowler, Dan Morris, Goins,
Bob Morris, Diehl and bOard members, Wendell Hoover,
president; JeMiler Sheets, Pierce, Virgil King and Dr. Keith
Riggs.

BAI&lt;ER
FURNITURE

out-&lt;Jf-state coal to comply
with federal sulfur dioxide
standards.
Stale and mining company

en tine

POMEROY:MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Rutland gymnasium

Limited time only!
GOING ON NOWI

pollution standards.
mother of three in St.
Unjike hearings last week
' 'I know how I felt during Clairsville, " You've got to in Cleveland, which featured
the coal strike, and I don't take your minds back to last statements from utilities ,
want to feet that way again," . winter, wh.en an Oreo coal
companies
and
said
Judy
Garton, (cookie) was a luxury and government consultants, the
Barnesville, Ohio,
Skoal (snuff) was too ex- emphasis Tuesday was on
Her voice peaked with pensive."
predicted personai hardships
emotion, the 22-year-&lt;Jld
The standing room only for the miners should utitities
mother of two, told the audience - so large that ~ he forced to bypass Ohio coal.
hushed audience, "There speaker system was set up in
The federal EPA scheduled
won 'I be any money to buy a parking lot outside the hotel the hearings to determine
anything - not even a pack of hosting the hearings - had whether economic disruption
gum," if miners are laid off. little trouble identifying with would occur if utiHties are
Added Nikki Filicky, a the memories . :
· allowed to buy low.-sulfur,

injured
in fall
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to 736 S. Third Ave., at 9;34
p.m. Tuesday where Mrs.
Debbie Phillips was injUred.
Middleport police said that
Mrs. Phillips fell from a
second story window onto a
porch roof and from there !ell
to the ground. She was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted.
At 3:00 p.m. Tuesday, the
squad went to North Second
Ave., lor Ruth Lewis who was
having difficulty brealbing.
She was treated on the scene.
AI 3:~ a.m . Wednesday,
the squad went to 626 High St.
for Paul Dillard who was Ul.
He was . taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

i,.J_r_h_e_w_or_ld_.·_ro_d_a_y_
maze kills 33 thoroughbreds
HENDERSON , Ky. (UP!) - AI least 33 thoroughbred
horses were killed early today when fire leveled a wooden barn
at Ellis Park near the Ohio River II. Henderson County.
Officials of the race track said the blaze started at one end,
of the older barn and spread quickly destroying lbe barn within
I~ minutes. State police said the fire began all:IO a.m. EDT
and was extinguished within lbree hours. Five persons
suffered minor burns while attempting to free the horses.
Police said at least one person was admitted to a hospital in
Henderson COunty. The others were treated at the scene lor
second degree burns. •

Squ~aking chair i.r.ks ·chess olaver

.

BAG1:tl1Philippines (UP! ) - An emergency meeting of
the world ch ss jury today failed to resolve challenger Viktor
Korchnoi's c mplaint that tillist Anatoly Karpov tried to
disturb him in the 15th game by making his chair squeak.
Chess sources said the seven-member jury, which has
final say on controversies, could not act on the latest Korchnoi
protest since it was made verbally . The sources said the jury
can act ooly on formal written complaints.

AFL-CIO would cut taxes more
WASHINGTON ~PI ) - The AFL-CIO today urged
Congress to scrap
"grossly inequitable" House-passed
$16.3 billwn tax cut
enact one of $21 billion "that honesUy
provides relief w those who need it."
Andrew J, Biemiller, legislative director of the AFL-CIO,
·told the Senate Finance Committee the labor plan could he
accomplished by increasing the current $35 ge neral tax credit
to $150 and granting a 5 percent income tax credit for Social
Security payments.

Videotapes ready for training
CHICAGO (UPi J - A series of five video tapes bein~
readied for training purposes will be telecast only II there is an
impending nuclear attack against the United States, Civil
Defense spokesman Gleason Seaman said. The 15-minute tape
will deal with such things as how to Improvise shellers against
radiation bombardment, what to expect in a noclear attack
and how to monitor and recognize signs of radiation exposure ..
"I hope the tapes are never used for anything other than
training," one official said. "No human being would want to be
the star of the largest and last television show in history -no
sane human being." Another officia l said, "These are being
produced for use in a severe crisis produced in that time."

Terrorists, tremblor hit Managua
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UP!) - Demanding the release
of 100 political prisoners, $10 million in cash and safe passage
to Cuba, Costa Rica, Venezuela and Panama,,a small group of
pro-Castro guerrillas, members of the. anti-government ·
Sandinista Liberation Front, shot their way into the National
Palace Tuesday . At least lour persons were killed and seven
others wounded in an hour-long gun battle.
The terrorists took 67 hostages including Cabinet officials
and many of the nation's legislaiors. To compound the chaos a
major earthqilake measuring 7.0 on the Richter Scale rocked
COsta Rica, Nicaragua's southern neighbor. The quake sent
tremors through Managua and shook buildings and a national
state of emergency was declared . A temporary cease-{ire was
agreed with the guerrillas, who permitted the evacuation of
wounded from !he palace.

·

Minor accident
is investigated

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The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, investigated
a single one-car accident
Tuesday.
Officers were called to the
scene at 7:20p.m., on TR 92,
just east of SR 248, in Meigs
County.
According to the P,.trol, an
auto driven by Jack Valen·
tine, 17, Parkersburg, went
out of control in a curve,
while traveling west on 92.
The vehicle ran off the right
side of lbe road, came back
on and crossed the roadway,
before going ofi the I~ side
then overturned.
. Officers report moderate
damage to the vehicle .
Valentine was uninjured . No
citation was issued .

Football meeting
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION PROGRESSING- Construction of a new structural steel
bulldlnc that wW bou8e the New Haveu fire and rescue squad units is pcogressing. The
Mum County Commlsslm recently awarded a contract to build the new facility , in New
Haven, located along Fifth St., as weU as structures In Letart and Route 87 (Baden
Community).
,
'

All boys interested in
playing junior high football at
Eastern are to meet at the
high school this evening at 7
o'clock.

�•

1m "'

·· - - · ·

.

J

••

...__"

.. ..

.3-~Dilly Senllne1, Mlddleport-Ponleroy, 0., WednHclly, Aug. 211, 111'18

.

Foster's clutch single beatS Cardinals, 5-4
I

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You'll
NeveJ .-Have

-----

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Conserve energy
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to Pa·int
Your House
Again!

TO

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l)!fl,

·cuT H
OPERATill
COSTS WITH
RE
WINDOWS

CINCINNATI (UPI) George FOiler says if be bad
· a buketbaU team, he'd want
Davey Coocepcion on his
side.
"Davey could do the
reboundlnc and I'd do the
!hootlni," cracked Foster
Tuesday night after he
singled home Ken Griffey
with two 0ut in the bottom of
tile Uth lnninll to give the
Reds a 5-4 victory over the St.
I.AJula Cardinals.
Fosler's game • winning hit

off Cardinal right • handel'i
Tom Brw10 that gave Reds
relief pitcher Dave Tomlin
his seventh victory In eight
decillions. Foster's hit came
after Griffey bad drawn the
Reds' 14th walk of the night
and stole second.
But for- the Reda, there
wouldn't have been any nth
Inning II Concepcion hadn't
come up with a couple of
spectacular plays that cost
the Cardinals a pair of runs.

INSTALL

Built and Backed by

ABSOi.UTELY

u·oited States Steel

THIS BEAUTIFUL

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SUPER STEEL SIDING

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COLOR T.V.

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ALUMINUM SIDING

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MIAMI (UPI)- End A.J.
Duhe, the NFL's 1977
defenalve rookie of the year,
bad the stitches removed
rfoin lila surgically repaired
knee ·
Monday
and
Immediately began running
to restore hll mobility, the
Miami Dolpblna announced,
allholl8h he waa not expected
to aee any game acUon for
three to four weeka.
Coach Don SIJIIa learned
Tuesday that a knee injury
suffered by punter-place
kicker Mike Michel Is more
serious than originally
thought and he may be
sidelined for aa long as sii

WASHINGTON (UPI) Running back Tommy
Reamon and five-year
veteran Stu O'Dell were
among four players cut
Tuesday aa the Wuhington
Redslclns reached the 50player NFL roster limit.
Alao cut were two rookies
- cm&gt;erbal'l\.~lke Wllllama
and punter Ge«ge Roberts, a
free agent. In two trades, the .
Redslclns obtained tight end
Grell McCrary !rem AUanta
for a 1980 draft choice and
wide
receiver
Ricky
Thompson
from,
Baitlmore for a 1979 draft '
pick.
SEA'ITIE (UPI) - The
Seattle Seabawks placed a
~lr of vet.t!rana, center Geoll
Reece and fullback Tony
Benjamin, on Injured ll.ats
Tuesday to reduce their
l'OIIer to 63, three more than
the limit mandalied by the
NFL.
The Seahawks, who also

-·

' '"

""

placed Ricky Ellis, a rookie
wide receiver On waivers,
were e:q&gt;eeted to announce
the other three cuts early
today.
ST.

OR
REFRIGERATOR
or FREEZER

.. '

LOUIS ( UPI)
~rterback Clint Longley
topped a 1l.at of nine players
cut Tuesday by the St. Loull
Cardinals, to reduce their

"

roater.

..'

1. The All Weather Stopper 10. Optional ·
••
..••.
2. Thickest Insulated
..
Tinted Glass
.,,
Window In The Industry ll Optional
3. All ·windows Are ·Custom
Burglar Alarm
Made To Fit Tight.
12. 10 (ten) Year ...'
4. Interlock At Meeting Rails Written Warranty ..."'
5. Double Weather Stripping Built and
,
6. Fingertip Tilt-In
By United
,..,,
7. Baked Enarael Finish
States.Steel
B. Heavy Duty Construction 13. AStyle For
.....'",,
'
9. Bug -Out Screen Seal
Ev•ry Home
..
'

United Stales Steel Super Aigld ShakeS eonrorm to meet tl"te specifications
~~ or approved by: Building Otficisls and Code Administrators lnterna tronal. Inc . i~O~A) . International Conference of Building Officrals (IC80 ):
Sou!hern Bwtd.n_g CI)Cle Congress (SBCC) : New Yor~ City : conforms to
FHA-HUD specihCitrons; UL approval of Class C on toot-covering mate'1 81 UL Class, B frre protection If special underlayment requ irements are

ou

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mel

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REMEMBER
THE
WINTER

'

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'

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OF '78

With AMini11um
Sq. Fl. 01 Si~ing, Aid/Or
Minimum Of 10 (ten) Prime Replacellll Wiadows.

LET'S LOOK ON THE
FUEL SAVERS' SIDE!

CALL ME!

SHOP .AT HOME
SERVICE
I

~

The•. 11 AFew Days Call Yo•r Friends And
llii~Hrs Aid Show Off Yo1r H•e With Pri•e.
LOCAL OFFICE (614) 949-27.57

---------------..... 471111 CIMitr)

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sportl Wrtter
When Larry Guta was with
the New York Yankees and
Bill)! Martin took over from
Bill Vlrdon as manager, Gura
iost hill starting spot and sat
on the bench with a 6-1
record.

PROSPECTUS
Late Vince Lombardi said hardest thing In football .wasn't
winning , but winning AGAIN. Broncos at least earned
respect of NFL by going to Super Bowl, and Red Miller
proved to be Inspired leader. He 's got to do it again with
essentially same cast and keep them playing the errorfree ball that sustained them in '77 .

OFFENSE
Can Craig Morton, age 35 and scarred, deliver again, as
he did so emotionally year ago? My guess Is not to same
·degree , and that you 'll be seeing more of young Craig
Penrose. Comeback by Otis Armstrong, who slumped last
fall, would offset some quarterback failures . He 's abetted
at running back by Rob Lytle. The fullbacks are so-so. On
offensive line, the lefl side is possibly porous. None
better at tighl end, though. than Riley Odoms. Fact he
leads club In grabbing passes points up lack of quality on
outside, where Haven. Moses Is best threat. For place·
kicking, old timer Jim Turner Is accurate but lacks range .
Not high scoring 1eam . Rating- B·

DEFENSE
Up fronl ,the Broncos' philosophy is throw those big studs
at you in waves, breaking down resistance . Have enough

mean, aggressive guys , paced by end Lyle Alzado, to do
it. Augmented by top rookie pick Don Latimer, nose .
tackle . All-pro Tom Jackson and Randy Gradlshar
spearhead mobile linebacking corps that's always around
the ball. And experienced deep protection Is built around
Pro Bowlers Bill Thompson, Louis Wright. Defense is th'
strength of the Broncos . Al.so got sensational results
from Rlck ..Upchurch, who doubles as wide receiver, on
kick returns . Miller puis slress on special units - lone
flaw Is lack ot distance punter. Rating- B+

·-

IN.,. IC.WI

0 • •

(tJPI) -Veteran cornerback
BniCe Taylor 81110111

•

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playan

waived

ru.s., ulhe Sin P'randlco

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.... rtiiCbed the NaticJnal
Footb.n Leape'a IIOillayer
1lmll.

•
'

GREENVIU.E, S.C. (UPI)
- The Atlanta Falcons
traded vela'an tight end Greg
McCrary to Wuhlngton for a
cntt choice Tuesday; cut
three players outrlaht and
p~'ed four others on
recaUabje waivers to get
down to ~~~e· 60-player limit.
. 'lbole cut Included running
back Secedrlck Mcintyre,
runnilll beck Dave Flll'llll!r
lnd roolde linebacker Darla
BuUer, Coach Leeman
s..ett did oot releaae the
IIIJIIIS d. the four players put
em recallable waivers.

REDWOOD CITY, Calif.

~

z, ..

Broncos won 't be one-year flashes . They 'll have winning
record again but have strong division foes which wli.l
make II rough to repeatl2·2 mark . I pick them third In AFC
West.

(

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Oilier v,Wrana re1eaHd
. . . dlflaodve taclde BW
Caollll IIIII -bllck MID
Buml. Rollldllnl'P d ....
llld IJu Jluma, wlde

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By ED McFAlL
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The executive bQard of the
union representing major
league baseball umpires Is
trying to declde whether to
strike the American and
Natlooalleagues by the end
of the week.
AttQrney Richard Phillips,
representing the Major
League Umpires Association,
said the board will hook up
via telephone conference call
late today to discuss what
action to take against

MliOr Ltague Standlntl
By Unlltd PreiS lnlernatlonal
Nttlonel LeAtut

E•s•
W.
66
63
. 61
59

Phil a
ChiCIQO
PIHsbrgh

Montreal

L.
56
61
62

Pet .
.SA1
.508
.496

66 ...72
53 73 .421
75 .400

St. Louis
New York

so

GB
A

S'h

8 112

15
171t'2

West

Top hitters

SEA'ITLE (UP!) - Tlto
Nanni, an 18-year-&lt;Jid slugg~r
who was the first pick d. the
Seattle Mariners in the June
draft, was signed by the
American League club Tues.
day, according to Mel Didier,
directpr of minor leagues and
scouting.
·
Nanni, wm was flown to
Seattle hun hll PhDadelphla
home for the qnlng; will be
ualgned to Seattle's winter
Instructional league program
In Arizona, which betllna
Sept. 15. Terms of the
aKreement
were
not
announced.

Madlock SF
Bowo Phi l

93 3&lt;l 106 .307
120 lOt 153 .305

Smith LA
Parker Pit
Conctpcn Cn
Cruz Hou

105 377 11.5
110 AJJ 13l
120 450 136
120 A-46 134
Whitf ield SF
117 383 Ill
American Leaeue

.30.5
.303
.302
.300
.300

G AI. H- Pet,

Carew Min
~Ice Bas
Pinltlla NY
Robert~ Sea
Oliver Tu
Brett, KC
Bostock Cal
Munson NY
Sundberg T:c
Whitaker Dt

119 4A8 153
12A 511 167
93 33A 106
100 3-42 108
94 379 Ill
91 367 HA
119 4.57 138

.342
.323
.317
.316
.311
.311
.302
116 472 142 .301
116 402 120 .299
106 371 111 .299

Homt Run1
National LtiiUt: Foster, Cln
29 : Luzlnskl. Phil 28 ; Smith, LA
27 ; Parker, P itt 23 ; Dawson ,

Mtl 22.

.

Amtrlcan League : Rice , 801
30 : Hisle, Mil 29 ; Thomas. Mil
21 ; Baylor, Cal and Thornton,
Clev '25.

50n. DtHI. __

Stoltn IIIII
National ~eague: Moreno.

~I

East

W- L.

Boston
M llwauke
New York
Detro it
Balllmre
Clevelnd
Toronto

78
71
70
69
66
5.t
49
West

Pet,

.&amp;6 .629
53 .513
7
53 .569 7'h
54 .561 8 1h
58 .532 12
10 ..t35 u
]6 .392 29 1h

W. L. Pet.
68 ss .553
69 58 .5&lt;3
60 63 .-488
62 66 .48-4

Ken City

Colli·

GB

outfield after the Red center
fielder quickly ran down
Scott's baU after it bounced
off the fence. Then the Reds'
shortstop whirled and made a
one·hop throw home.
"I was out in front of the
plate and Davey's throw was
right on target ," said Bench,
who made the tag on Phillips
and prevented the Cards
from taking a 5-4 lead.
With Scott continuing to

third on the throw to the
plate, the Reds ' chance lor
victory was still in jeopardy
when Doug Bair replaced
Hume.
And it wasn't Wltil Bair
struck out Lou Brock and
induced pinch hitter Jerry
Morales to hit Into an Inning·
en&lt;ling Ioree out at second
after issuing a .fourth in·
tentional ball to Templeton
that Anderson drew a deep
sigh of relief.

I

T&amp;IC.as
8
Oakland
8 112
Minesota
56 70 .AU 13 1h
Chicago
51 72 - .415 11
Seattle
48 77 .384 21
Tuesday's Rtsults
Mllweukee 3, Cleve 2, 1!1
Milwaukee S, Cleve 4, 2nd
Toronto 3, Texa$ I
Detroit 1, Minnesota 3
Kansas City 6, Ch icago 3
New York 6, California 2
Bait 6. Oakland 4, 10 lrins .
seattle
Boston 2
Todey's Probablt "llchers

''

'•

•

".

''
•·

EDT)

Toronto (Underwood 6-9 and
Jefferson
7-101
at
Detro it
(Rozema 4-7 and .Sykes 5-5l. 2.
5:30p .m .
Cleveland (Wise 9-16, at
Milwaukee (So-:-ensen 15-8), ~ : 30

p.m .

Kansas City (Gale 13-.5) at
Chicago (Kravec 9-11) , 8 : 30

p.m.

Amtrlcln LIIIUI: LtFiore,
Qet 58 ; Ollont,1 Oak u; cruz,

-42 ; Wills, :rex 40 ; Wilson,

KC 35.

Pltehlnt

Vlctorlll
National LHgve : Blue, SF 16·
6; P&amp;rrr. so 15-5; Grlmtley,

Mtl 11-9; Nltkro, Atl 11-13;
John . LA '"·' ·
Amtrlcon Lti1ut: Guldrv.
NY 17-2; Caldwell, Mil 16-7:

•arnttl R:un Avera,.
t Bittel en 11 J innintt 'ltclled)
NltloniJ LtiiUe: VuCkOVICh,

St .L 2.11; Ro&lt;;~tn , Mtl Ut
Swan, NY 2.41 ; Blut, SF 2.65;
Jones, SD 2.11.

.
.
Amtrlun Ltagvt: Gulelry,
NY 1.19; MatliCk, TtK 2. 17;

Caldwtll, Mit 2.31; Golt, KC

, --------~~---n
'IIIE DAILY SENTINEl.
DE\'OTED11)111E

INTERI!8'r0f
MEIGS-M,._ AREA

ROBERT HOEPUCH

ctlfEdllor
Publbht'll Wu ly ~(.'tpl SM~un.lay
by The Ohio V•lli!Y Pllbli»tUng
Compjlny-Multimedla, Inc..
Ill•
p..w-t S1., Pomeruy, Ohlu ~769.
Bu.s~ Offil'~ Ph&lt;JnC m. 2156.
Edituru.l Phune W.Z..Jl~7 ,

Second cW...

JM*LI!Kt ~ 1'1

Pun'leroy.OhJv.
Nalii.NI advertiatnK r~nrn­
.. u&gt;Je, LAuttlon · AU~Jciltu, 3101,
F.uclkl A&gt;Je .• Ck'WIIIInd, Ohlti44J 15. 1
Sublcr1Pilun nlell: Oeliveft!tl t»)'
i.'ai... r where ava~\ab\e 7 ~ cenl.'l pt·r

2.61 : Hartull', Call.66.
'
StrlfcHutl
N1Uona1. Ltttut: Rlchn~.

Wtt'k. B)' Motor HtM.Ilt where c~un er
.rvil:e
available, One month ,

Seaver. Cln 1661 Montefusco,

111 .51; . Thrt!c murith•, $7. 00 ; ·
t.JIItotdMm' 121.00 )'Nr; Sill months '
113 ,60; Thr~ wunth ~. 11. ~0 .
tiuba'fiption prk"t' indutk:&lt; ~ und.ltY
1
!fin ...~·utlucl.

Hou 236;

Nltkro, "Atl 195;

SF U1 ; Blue, SF 136.
Amtrlcen LtiiUt: Ryan, Cal
205 : Guldrv. 'N Y 19.. ; Flanegan,
Bait 13.5; Leonard, KC 133;
Eckersley, Bot 116.

International league
United Press International

Charleston ·
Pawtucket

W, L, Pel . GB

76 49

.606

72 56 .S6J Slf2

Richmond
Toledo

65 59 .524 10'1'
63 62 .504 13

Tidewater

63 63 .500 1l lf2

Columbus

56 70 ... 44 20111

Rochester

Syracuse

63 63 .500 13 1h

44 80 .355 Jl'h
Tuesd•y's Results
Charleston 6, Tidewater 5
Richmond 6, Columbus

s

1Pawtucket 3." Toleif -2"
! Pawtucket 3, 1o1e88 , ; W
Pawtucket B, Toledo 3, 2nd
Todly's Games
Tidewater at Charleston
Richmond at Columbus
Syracuse at Rochester ·

Toledo at Pawtucket

Thursday's G1mes
Tidewater at Charleston

Richmond at Columbus

Syracuse at Rochester
Toledo at Pawtucket

Detr'oit

nightcap ;

7,

Minnesota 3; New York 6,
California 2; Seattle 5, Boston
2, and Baltimore 6 Oakland 4.
Blue Jays 3, Rangers 1:
AI Woods stroked a run·
scoring double to highlight a
three-run seventh inning
rally and Jim Clancy
combined with Victor Cruz to
pitch a 5-hitter in Toronto's
victory over fading Texas.
Brewers 3-5, Indians 2-4.:
Larry Hisle drilled an RBI
double in the eighth inning to
snap · a 2·2 tie and lift
Milwaukee to a first-game
victory . In the nightcap, Cecil
Cooper's single with the
bases loaded and two out in
the ninth innin~ capoed
a three-run rally to give the
Brewers the sweep.
Tigers 7, Twins 3:
Ron LeFlore, who earlier
set an ALrecord With his 27th

hitter and Bruce Bochte
belted a two-run homer to
pace Seattle in their second
win in seven games against
the Red Sox this year. Abbott ,
1&gt;-10, won both with complete·
game efforts.
Orioles 6, A's t:
Rick Dempsey smacked a
two-run double in the lOth
inning after Baltimore had
blown a 441 lead. Larry
Harlow and Ken Singleton
homered for the Orioles .

they were "always willing to
meet informally " with
Tri-Coun
PhiUips.
Phillips said Tuesday night
the umpires had not decided
Sport
whether to approach the
presidents for a meeting.
"The executive board is
Shop
going to discuss what has
happened before we decide oo
• Fishing Tackle
our course of action," he said.
and Rods
Phillips said Monday the 52
and
Reels
umpires in the American and
1 Guns and
National Leagues could
strike by the end of the week
Reloading
unless owners bargained in
•Ball Gloves
good faith on the disputed
Camping
issues , which
include
Equipment
salaries, vacations, expenses
• Archery ··
and job security.
• Indoor Games
He has filed suit with the
• We
have Gi II
National Labor Relations conse cutive stolen base,
·C.:.rti
ficates
!loard charging unfair labor singled home Steve Dillard in
practices.
the sixth inning to send red·
In
their
telegram , HOT Detroit past Minnesota.
601 Main St .
MacPhail and Feeney, told .Yankees 6, Angels 2:
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .
Phillips they felt the umpires
Jim 1 ' Catfish " Hunter
had a n&lt;Hltrike clause "which resistered his fifth con·
VISA'
we assume will be honored by secutlve win with a six-hitter
the association.''
and Lou Piniella singled
~,Zr.~"#om Courthouse
" Any failure tp honor that twice to drive home on run
PHONE
no-strike commitment would and score another in New
675 -2988
t&gt;e a clear violation of our York' s
v i~t ory
over
agreement and could be very California.
Open SundaY 1- p.m .-6 p.m .
damaging both to our sport Marlnt&lt;~ 5, Red Sot 2:
Monday 1hru Saturday
9 ... m . ,o8 _p. m .
and t o the umpires
Glenn Abbott tossed a fivethemselves," the telegram
said.
The umpires have a fivec::ID
1D
year contract signed in 1977, ·
but Phillips said "it is our
position" that a strike is
!::::
CJor::,.
possible.
He said n&lt;Hltrike clauses
"do not preclude unions from
~ .
~
'&lt;::;:]~ .
engaging in work stoppages
L.JLJV
•
'&lt;:J:":D,..
to protest unfair labor
DO
DO
practices."
If there should be a strike,
it would be the second in the
history of major-league base·
ball. The first was at the start
1970
lea gue
of
the
oo
rro
champ ionship serie s and
lasted just one game.

e~t,

. -·~~
..

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~"e,bt

~

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tcJ

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Save Energy .gg

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on
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CJc=JCJ c::::::::J c:x:::J c::::J CJ (:=J c:::J c::::Jc:::Jc::J c::J C)

s,

32; Smith, SO 31 .

sea

p.m .
New York (F igueroa 1 2~ 8) at
Californ ia {Aase 8-7) , 10 : 30
p.m .
Baltimore ( Palmer U '- 12) at
Oak land (Renko 6-8), 10 : 30 p .m .
Boston
(Torrez
15 -6 )
at
Seattle (Mclaughlin 1-Al. 10 :35
p.m .
Thursday ' s G1mes
Cr&amp;veland o)t Milwaukee
Texas at Minnesota
Toronto at Detroit, night
Kan ~ity at Chicago, night

sixth game in the last seven
decisions . Rookie Ross
Baumgarten, l-1, gave up
nine hits and aU of Kansas
City's runs over 3 1·3 innings.
In other AL games, it was
Toronto 3, Texas 1;
Milwaukee 3, Cleveland 2, in
the first game and Milwaukee
5, Cleveland 4, in the

Gl

Texas (Comer 5-3) at Min ·
Pitt
52 ;
Lopes, l.A
34; nesota (Erickson 13-7). 8: 30
Richards, SO 33 : Taveras, Pitt

Tanana, Cal 16·8 • Flanagan,
Ban 16· 11 ; Torrtz, Bos 15·6;
Sorensen, Mil 15-1; Spllttorff,

CHESTER, Pa. (UPil Wide rec:elver VInce Papale,
who two years ago' made the
Plllladtlphla IIQI8d with no
collt&amp;e footbaU aperlence,
was among 111 players
releaaed Tuesday aa the
Eql. cut lhelr l'Oiler to the
110 pia,.. llmlt.
Pa.,.Je wu jt1lned on the
wal- Jlllt by IICCIId year
defenalve back Martin
Mitchell,
llrat .
yeRr

Amerlc•n Le11u&amp;

!All Tlmti

Runs Ba"td In
N•tlonal Luoue : Fosttr, Cln
94 : Garvey, LA 85 ; Clark, SF
84 ; Smith , LA 13 : Parker, Pitt
81.
American Leaeue: Rlc:e, Bas
103 ; Staub, Det 99; Hisle , Mil
92 : Thornton. Clev and Thomp.

baseball owners.
Phillips said the talk will
take into account a telegram
sent to him Tuesday by the
two &lt;league presidents saying
they would refuse to
participate in a formal
meeting with the union to
discuss job-&lt;'elated issues in
the
current
five-year
contract.
The
telegram
from
American League "President
Lee MacPhail and National
League Ptesident Chub
Feeney did, however, say

STANDINGS

w. L. Pet. GB
LOS Ang
73 52 .584
1h
San Fran
73 53 .579
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
Clnclnali
71 55 .561 21h
san Diego
66 60 .524 11/-1
Houston
58 68 .460 15112
Atlanta
56 68 .452 1~ 1 /1
Tutldly's Rtlulh
Pittsburgh J, Atlanta 1
Phlla 5, San Diego J
receiver-running back Rod quarterback Mike Cordova,
Clncl 5, St . LOUlS 41 11 Inns .
Conners, tight end Rick fir~ year ollen.slve tackle
San FranCisco 7, New York 4
Houston 2, Chicago 1
DeSimone, quarterback Rocco Moore and two rookie
Today•s Probable Pitchers
Randy Garcia and linebacker free agents, wide receiver
(All Times EDT)
Sen Diego (Jones 11 · 11 ) at
Randy 211hUton, oo colleae
Cliff Laboy'
Philadelphia O&lt;aat 6-5), 12 : 35
experience.
p.m .
San Francls.c o ( Knepper 12 -91
at New York (Hausman 2-21.
DALLAS (UP!) - Dallas
2:05p.m .
Cowboys' Coach Tom Landry
Pittsburgh (Candelar ia 8-111
at
Atlanta (Solomon J.4), 7: 35
rnlatakenly let It slip Tueaday
p.m
.
that he had waived kicker
Los Angeles (Hooton 13 -8 ) a t"
Skip Butler, leaving rookie
, Montreal {Rogers 13-8). 7: 35
p.m .
Jay Sherrill aa the only place
Chicago
(Lamp ~ - 1'2 )
or
Major Lea1ue L ..Cien
kicker with the club.
Houston (Ruhle 2-ll, 8:35p .m .
By United Preu lnternltlonal
thursday's Gimes
l1ttln11
Landry said the rest of the
Pittsburgh at Atlanta , n ight
(Based on l2S at bats)
Cowboys roster moves
St . Louis at Cincinnati. nigh t
National Ltiii.Ut
Ph l l~delphla
at LOS Ang ,
dealgned to reduce the team
0 AB. H. Pet.
night
BurrOQhS
Atl
118
385
122
.317
to 50 players would not be
New York at Sen Diego, night
Rose Cln
•125 523 161 .308
announced unUl Wednesday.
Clark SF
176 A59 U1 .307

'I1Ie Cardlrials also released
' I!Wird Dan Aklck, tight end
Bruce Blankelllhlp, quarter·
back
Mark
Jackson,
linebacker Marv Kellum,
tight end Joe Mosley,
Pl'ITSBURGH (UPI)
defensive tackle Nate Plgee,
The
Pittsburgh Steelers
offensive lineman Tom
Tuesday
traded veteran
Wickert and running back .
Edwarda and
safety
Glen
Greg Woods.
defensive lineman Dave
Purelfory and placed roolde
CJUCAGO (UP!) - The defensive lineman Willie Fry,
Chicago Bears Tuesday with torn tendonlln hill hand,
waived lour players, In· on the Injured reserve list to
eluding a veteran and their reach the mandatory 50·
1978 slsth and eighth round player roster limit.
draft picks, to reach the NFL
Edwards went to the San
roster limit of 50 players.
Diego
Chargers
and
The Bears waived wide Purelfory to the New
receiver Trm McCord and England Patriots, each for an
defensive end Mekellleremla undisclosed future draft
and put veteran wide choice.
receiver Steve Rivera and
tight end Ge«ge Freitas on
the waived-Injury list.

' to go alon g
Tuesday night after leading his record to l!-3
the Kansas City. Royals to a 1&gt;- with a sterling 2.78 earned
3 victory over the Chicago run average , The left-hander
White Sox, Gura said, " I'm is a major reason the Royals
grateful Whitey (Herzog, the hold a slim one-game lead
Royals' maooger) has given over California in the
me the opportunity to pitch.'' American )..,eague West.
Gura worked 7 1-3 innings,
Herzog • probably
is
giving
up eight hits to win hts
grateful, too, as Gura raised

.Umpire strike threatened

KC 15-10.

............... ' ........ ......... .
••••• •••• •• • • 0 . .. . . . . . . . . .

~a irt

Cesar

Gura defeats .Chicago .for lith win

PREDICTION
//

a chance to gn nut,"

take

Geronimo's throw from the

'

Sports briefs

•

United States Steel·
.

Garrett followed with singles,
Seaver asked to be relieved
because his shoUlder stif·
fened.
Reliever Hume gave up a
single to Jerry Mumphrey
that scored Hernandez with home," sa id catcher J ohnny
the Cards' second rWl of the Bench.
"I knew I had to get one of
Inning. A buni single by Mike
Ph!Uips loaded the bases and them, though," he added,
was followed by Tony Scott's "even ill had to cut in on the
booming double to rigllt last one and say "I would like
to dance."
center.
Concepcion had to lea p into
"!thought Scott's baU had

straight hila to tie the game.
"II we'd lost that one after
leading U with Seaver pit·
ching In the ninth, It might
have kWed us," said Reda
manager Sparky Anderson.
S..ver wu staked to a U
lead on a two-run homer by
DaMy Driessen In the fourth
and a two-run single by
Griffey In tne ~enth. ·
Ted Simmons opened the
eighth Inning with his 17th
homer of the aeaaon. When
Keith Hernandez and Wayne

Tom Seaver, bidding lor his
12th victory aplnat 12 loases,
was working on a two-hit, U
shutout when Concepcion
leaped high Into the air to.
spear Garry Templeton's
tur'rld 11ner In the eighth
Inning after a double by I.AJu
Brock.
Concepcion's second gameSivlng play of the night came
In the ninth Inning wben ·the
Cards hammered Seaver and
reliever Tom Hunie for six

th e air to

'•

WeeD ,

•

Anderson.
"For a minute I thought I
was gonna have to stop three
at the plate the way Garrett,
Mumphrey and Phillips were
stacked ·up as they headed

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED ·
FOR
POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT AREA

PHONE .

992-2156

THE D

TINEL
BETWEEN

'

'

�•
4 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Po111eroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Aug. 23, 1978

Sporls briefs .
MINNEAPOLIS (UP! ) _
·

Rees Johnson was named

head basketball coach at
Augsburg . College Tuesday,
replacing Erv lnninger, who
· dt
k
·· ·

res1gne

0 ta e a posltl&lt;llln

Fargo, N.D.

J ohnson co ac~~d the
national basketball team of
Bahrain in the Arabian Gulf
this spring and

summer

through the U.S. Sports
· M bil AI H '
Academy m
o e, a. e
also has coached at Carroll
College, the University of
Wisconsin • Milwaukee.
Richland and Winona State.
CIN CINNATI (UP! ) ...._
Veteran wide receiver Steve
. Holdfn, a No. I draft choice of
the Cleveland Browns five
years ago, was among seven
players cut Tuesday by the
Cincinnati Bengals.
Also cut as the Bengals
reached Tuesday's NFL ~
player limit were secondyear linebacker Ray Phillips,
rookie running backs Calvin
'Prince and Steve Geise,
rookie wide receiver Kim
Featsent, rookis tackle Bill
Miller and free-agent safety
Gary Weinlein, who did not
play college ball.
WEST HEMPSTEAD, N.Y.

(UPI )- The New York Jets
cut six rookies Tuesday to
trim their roster to 51
. players, one above the
Natio nal Football League
limit.
The Jets dropped defensive
backs Levi Armstrong and
Roy Eppes, lineba ckers
Kevin Benson and Roosevelt
Kelly ,
guard
Malt
Cumberworth and wide
receiver Chuck White.
The final player cut was to
he annoooced later.

Ameriun

BY Un ite&lt;! _Press lnlernotl onol
N~hon•l League
Pts bgh
010 010 010- 3 9 o

000 001

Atla

000-

1 50

(lot go mel
Cleve
Mil w

League

000 000 020ooo 001 11K-

Clyde, Kern

(7)

and

Nolan ,
Bened ic t
(8).
W -.0 R'Ob in son ( 10 S). L - Mahler
( 4·. 8 ). HRs- P ittsburgh , Stargell
(18 ),
Berr a
(2);
Atlanta .

Matthews 1141 .
san Dgo
ooo 100 010- 3 9 2
Ph i Ia
102 002 oox - 5 1J 0
Ra smussen . Lee (3), Shirley
( 6), O'Ac Qu isto (7), Lol ich t8l
and Tena ce ; cn r istenson , Reed
(8) and Boon e. W- Christenson

19,1il. L- Rasmu ssen 112 .101 .

(9), Br u n o 111 1 and Simm ons ;
Seaver . H ume ( 9 ), Sa ir ( 9 ),
Tom lin t 11l .ana Ben ch . W Tom lin (7 · 11 . L- Bruno (3 -l l .
HR s- St . Lou is, Si mmon s (17) ;
Ci nci nnat i, Or lessen ( 16 ) .
San

F r~n

N .Y .

105 000 010-

7 \3 1

200 000 002-

4 12 1

Hal ic k i, Curt is (9), Moff itt ( 91
and Ta m ar-go ; Esp inosa . Ber ·
na r d
( 3),
Kobel
(7)
an d
Stear-ns . W - Halic k i (7 -6 ) . t Esp inosa t9 12). HRs San
Fr ancisco . ·Ev ans ( 12 ). Ta m ar go ( 1) .

000 010 000- 1 1 1
100 00 1 OOx- 'l 4 0

Ch i

Hou s

Krukow , Her n andez (71 ,
Mc Gl othen (71 end Blackw ell.
Rader (7) ; Lemong ello and
Bochy . W - Le mong ello 19-11) . l
- Kr ukow 15-2).
(Only games sched uled )

cam p graduates
Greg
Sanders, John Rudd and Greg
Bunch.
The three forwards join
Knick veterans at the team's
training camp at Monmouth
College (N.J .), Sept. 15.

HR: s- Cie11e land , Thornton {.25 J.

for service or repairs for 30
days, please stop In and pick
up or It will be disposed ofl

Wilkinson Small Engine Sak!s &amp; SeiYice
Middleport, 0.

498 Locust St.

Tex as
000 100 000- 1 S 0
Tor
000 000 30&gt;t - 3 7 1
Medich and E llis. Clancy,
Cruz (9 ) and Ashby . W - Ciancy
{10-10 1. L - M edi ch (7 71.
001 201 003- 7 11 ]
,
100 110 000- 3 7 2
Slaton and Par ri sh : Jackson .
Perzanowsk i (5) and W ynegar .
w - Siaton ( 13 9 } . L - Per zanow ski t2-6l .

K.C.
003 300 000- 6 12 0 ·
Chi
000 001 020- 3 9 1
Gura , Pattln \ B),- H rabo$kY
(8) and Porter ; Baun'lgart~n .
$( huel er ( 4 ), Wood ( 8 ) and
Co lbern , Nahorodny (8) . WGura ( 11 -31 L - Baumg arten (1 .
1 ~ - HR s- Kanses Ci ty , Cowens

I51 .
N.Y.
030 010 101 - 6 15 0
calif
010 001 ooo- 2 6 1
Hun ter and Munson ; Ta nana .
Br ett (5), D .M iller (8 ) and
Down ing . W- H unfEir (8 -4) . L Tanana I 16 -8 ) .
(1 0 i nn i ngs )

HtJIIITING AND FISHING DAY SET - Gov. James A. Rhodes signs a proclamation
designating Sept. 23 as Ohio Hunting and Fishing Day. 011¥rving the signing are left to
right : Dale Haney, Chief of the Ohio Department of NatUral Resources; (ODNR) Division of
Wildlife ; Jim Glass, chairman of the Wildlife Legislative Fund; Ray Arnett, immediate
past president of the National Wildlife Federation ; Robert W. Teater, Director of ODNR
and Harry Armstrong, president of the League of Ohio Sportsmen. The proclamation was
issued in New Philadelphia Saturday (8-19-78) during the joint meeting. of the Wildlife
· Legislative Fund and Ohioans for Wildlife Conservation . At that meeting Gov. Rhodes, State
Senator Jerome Stano of Parma and State Representative Ronald James of Proctorville
were honored by the Wildlife Legislative Fund for their support of Ohio sportsmen. (Ohio
Department of Natural Resources photo.)

'
Sa lt
no ooo ooo 2- 6 10 o
Oa.k
001 010 11 0 o-- 4 13 2
(8 l,
McG r egor , Stant10us e
Kerrig an 1IO J and Dempsey :
Br oberg , Norr is (2), La cey (81
and Rob inson . W - Stanhouse (6·
6). L - La cey
(8-7) .
HRsBall imore , Harlow ( . l. Sing le ton ( 11 ) .
i::,,,. ,, ,,. ,,, ,,,,,,,.,T~d:y
.,.,,,
8os
000 000 01 1Sea
000 030 02x T iant , Dra go (8J and
Abbott and Plummer- .
Abbotr (6-IOJ. L - T ian t
H Rs- Bosron . Scott 19 ),
119 ); Seat tl e, Bochte ( 9 ) .

. .,, ,.,.,.,.,.,.,... ,.,., ,.,.,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,. .,,,,.,.,.,.,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,.,,,,,,,r:·,

;:;:; sport p. arade : :

2 52
5 B0
Fisk ; ~
W19 61.
F isk

·~i

::!;

·

.

combu stion air intake by mea ns of a
hig hl y srnsitive bi· met.al coil. Just. set

olds Darby , Creek Road and
Sensitive Prince.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)
- The Kansas City Chiefs
placed two players on the
injured reserve list _and
released seven others
Tuesday to trim the squad to
the mandatory NFL 50-player
limit.
Placed on the reserve list
were guard DariuS Helton,
with a shoulder separation
and safety Ricky Davis, who
bas a fractured collarbone. ·
Placed on waivers were
rookie nose tackle Rod
Broadway, rookie offensive
tackle' Larry Brown, secondyear linebacker Ray Burks,
wide receiver Charlie Wade,
a fourth-year veteran,
second-year defensive back
Ricky Wesson and free-agent
linebackers Marvin Davis
and Otis Rodgers.

MEIGS PLAZA

tht' co mfo rt levPI vou desire.
New . t hicker li~iri gs of high

9-7 M/S 12-6 Sun.

0

.

..

·

::::

!;!:
;;:;

;:;;
'i'i
:i;;
By
MILTON
RICHMAN
';;;
winner Cox's Ridge, Wise
UP! Sporti Edltor
';';
Philip, Father Hogan and :;:!
''
NEW
YORK
(UP!
)
No
matter
where
they
happen,
on
u,e·
Buckkinder as well as 3-year-

ACE HARDWARE

..!.] Automatic thermostat controls tile

tempe rature refractory brick.
Q] Cast iron ·IZ:" rates with sci ent ifi cally
des igned .hL'avy duty ri b~~d c0nstruct ion
hard, u se.

g r ate~ fo r coal hurn ing I Model

iron as h &amp; feed

arl' warp resis tant a nd
airtigh t seal \\'ith
Glfu st iron as h &amp; feed

MOSCOW, Idaho (UP!) The University of .Idaho
named Don Munson as its
new head basketball coach
Tuesday to succeed Jim
Ja_rvis, who resigned earlier
thts summer under pressw-e
from a renewed NCAA
investigation in to possible
recruiting violations by the
ooiversity.
Munson ha s been . an
asststant .coach at Mtchtgan
State Umverstty under Jud
Heathcoate.

highway , in the bathtub or on those so-called friendly fields of
strife, accidents generally are due to one thing - carelessness.
And nowhere does this deficiency show up more clearly or
more often than in athletic contests of all varieties.
"Half the games !lost were due to nothing more than plain
carelessness," volunteers Hall of Farner Bob Feller, who led
the American League in victories sill times during his career,
VERO BEACH, F1a. (UP!)
struck out 2,581 batters, hw-led three no-hitters and was voted -- Rookie linebacker Fran
the "greatest livil)g righth~tndec! pitcher" 10 years ago.
Chesley of Wyoming, who
Feller won 266 games and lost 162 with Cleveland for a .621 missed several weeks of
percentage, which still ranks among the highest ever,' and bad practice because of a
he been able to cut those defeats in hall as he insists he bamstring pull, was cut by
could've if he wasn't as careless as he says he was, he would've the New Orleans Saints
wound up with a 347-111 record and an .811 figw-e unapproached Tuesday. .Also cut by the
by any other pitcher in history.
Saints was veteran offensive
Hearing such a statement, most modern ballplayers might · 'tackle ·Marv Montgomery.
get the idea Feller is iitdulgiilg himself in some kind of Alice in
The two were among seven
Wonderland fantasy, but if there was any pitcher who owned cuts announced after a
the raw ability to even THINK in terms of such an morning practice. The other
ooimaginable accomplishment, it certainly had to be Feller. In fiv e were free agents
his time, he could propel a ball from the pitcher's mound to defensive tackle Melvin
home plate faster than any man alive, almost as quick as you Wiliams, wide receiver Ron
could blink your eyes.
George, defensive end Fred
" I could throw all day," he says.
Ford, linebacker Rudy Viney
He's right about that·, he could.
and running back Robert
"I walked 1,764 batters and a great majority of those walks Morgan.
were the result of carelessness . If I'd have cut my walks in
hall, I'd probably have added better than 100 points on my
winning percentage.
"Ordinarily, pitchers don't give much thought to walking
ooe batter, but in the 1948 World Series against the Braves, I
walked the leadoff batter in the eighth inning of the opening
game and that turned out to be the only run of the game, which
I lost ."
Thirty years later, Feller still can reel off the details as
easily as he can his name.
" Bill Salkeld wa s the guy I walked and they put Phil Masi
into run for him,'' he says. 'Masi was sacrificed over to second
by Mike McCormick and I walked Eddie Stanky purposely to
pitch to Johnny Sain . That was when we tried to pick Masi off
second. We were successful, but the umpire ruled him safe.
You remember the big rhubarb over the decision, which was
later proved wrong by the photos.
"Sain popped to right field for the second out and Tommy
Holmes then singled down the left field line. The ball landed
about two Inches fair . Masi scored, and if it hadn't been for
that base on balls, we 'd probably still be playing."
The ·man Feller threw the ball to on that pickoff attempt on
Masi was shortstop Lou Boudreau, the Indians' playing
' manager, who eventually wound up in the Hall of Fame also .
"When I first saw him come up with Cleveland," Feller says,
going back some more, "I thought the 'scout who signed him
was on a Lost Weekend. He looked like he couldn't even move.
Why, he couldn 't even get into service during the war because
of bad ankles, but he was always at the right place at the right
time , In the beginning, I wondered who in the world the !I;COUt
was who signed him. Then I found out it was Cy Slapnicka the same scout who signed me."
Feller, 59 now, is director of sales-6J)orts for the Hilton Corp.
and gives pitching exhibitions all over the country in
conjunction with his job, One night you're liable to see him
pitching in Colwnbus, Ohio, the next in Paintsville, Ky ., and
the one after that in Oklahoma City, Bluefield, W.Va., or
Jersey City. He gets around.
"I've probably thrown more baseballs than anybody in
history," Feller says. "I 've been throwing since 1 was 5 and
never really stopped . l'm throwing good now. Anytime I pitch
iii those Old-Timers' games, I only lay the ball in there. Always
above the belt."
Wouldn 't you know it? Now that he's only throwing for the
fun of it, he's a little more careful than he used to he .

easy as h removal.

G F'ull ~ nd cahinel
ash and

[!] H e11''Y duty firebox
dt•!-.i g-nl'd ··wrap"' cor1St1rucr.i
an t' mbosscd cookin_~;~; su rface.
[] Co ntemporary styled cabinet with
handso m(• wood ·g r~i n ed panel. gold
mesh gril l t o accen t t he da rk bro wn ·
cabinl't color. and a porcelain fi n ish

For You We Have A Very

Stock Both New and
Recapped.

MEIGS ,TIRE CENTER

li ft s off
c·rn(' rgency cooking o n the em
firebox Lop.

AUGUST BEST FOOD BUYS
LiPb~' ' s
WHITE

GRAPES
LB. 69e

FRUir COCKTAIL .................~~~-c-~~ •• 49'
Libby' s
PORK
&amp; BEANS .....................:·~.:.·.~.4f
Arqo
.
·
llfAS .................................~~~.~-~ 31'100

PACKAGED CANDY................. ~-~:~. 3fl00 .

PASCAL
CELERY
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE........... !~·.~:: 3fl00
__su."~cH~~4_9_e_ 1 sP'-GiirnrSAucE ........... ~--~~~~.~~.::·•.s9'

Thursday, Aug . l4 lhru Aug. 26
We Gladly Accept Ftc!. FOOCI Slimp.
Monday thru Friday ·

kraft

7

9 :001il7 : DO
Soturda y 9:00-9 :00

CLOSED

SUNDAYS

BARLEIT

Valley Bell

,

2% MILK ........... .......~~- Bob Evans

· ·

149

................. :... ~ ~·.. ~ 1"

PEARS
~- 49e

G~l·

PAPER TOWELS ................... :~~~--~~~:69'
DOMINO SUGAR .....................5 ~- 99'

,

With $10.00

more

This Week's
Dairy Valley

HAM

SANDWICH

LOOI fOI T. . IIGH
YMIOIIGNOUT n•
nOIIfOI

DISCOUNT COU

fANTMTKSAYIMOI

ON ICIIOGIIIUICt

HOCIUCTO

t'O

50

•ow

l.TID
All JUif
A NWIIAW\11

h ch ol rhine

..,,,,,l.l't

~r1 1 Md

oltms tl

to• ulf '" n cr.

• e-ouo r~

.,,ov••

UuASIY

Salad

'

"

OPEN
24HRS.
hcept Closed Satu~ay Midnipt Til 9 AM liundil,

e•cept n

Does Net Include Hinton, Wh~e SalphMr or
514$. 3nl St.lron!OI

~11,~
·"!~

... ut.. •n JC dh1

rarms·

GOOD

( H I(K(N

Banquet Frozen
Fried Chicken

7 FULL
DAYS

2$ 99
SEEDLESS ·
White Grapes

Meigs
Property

-..

4" PLASTIC
PIPE
10' LENGTH

$299

JOINT

MASON, W, VA:

•

NA .... ~ .•..•.•...~.~-.~~~~~~...• ~ 159·
FRANKIE$

.............~;. ~ 129

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~$1U
SAUSAGE .••.•.••••.••••••••••••••••;••
FRENCH CITY

BACON·..............................~;-..~ 1&amp;9
CHUCK ROAST...~ ...........~~.!l
•

19

EManetta
•
•

: Continued from page 4
: cloely bybli .00, Bob, Jr., in
• car No. A56, Bob, Sr., commonly known aa "Bobby
• Joe," overpowered everyone
~ In the event and came home
: the winner. bi hla "Adam'a
!0 Drilling
Co." Camara.
: Adam's victory came agam.
10me of the area 'a top
li compeUton Including 1011,
: Bob, Jr., Mark Balzano, Don
: Clark and Dave Roblnlon.
it
Another Melsa driver,
: JOlllll Roser Adkinl, picked
. • up a victory In hll puq~le No.
I Co1111r. Adklna al10
llniJiild a ~trona fourth in tile
• 111m1-1ate feature. The aeml
t feature 'll'lllt to Frn WIJIOII
In hll · "!:uckr No. 11",
= IDllowtd by J. c. Holfman,
• CGttGn ..sayre, and Roser
• Adklnl.

!
t

:
!

!

a.. •

Be~f ............. _.,........lb •

AVONOALI

Shortening

S·

••·17·LI . AVG. (SLICEO INTO CHOPS

Whole
Fresh
Pork Loin ... ..

~'119

Salad Dressing

C( r

~

Boneless Top
Round Roast

AVONOAll

· Rice

Domino
Sugar

c

$

40c OFF

10$ 99
SWANSOn

Facial naaue

:-ct.41
MliSVLIQIHO

.......

1

I
:

~
QOVII YALLIY

Margaflne

c

e

Lowfat Milk

.

Grade A
Larae
Eggs..... Doz.
IOUN!'TO,
IWIR
I I Kroger 20-oz.
White
Bread ............... .

___ .. _____

J.II.U41 ... fUt

''

I

...... ..., ......
...J.........

litlllelite,t's

THIN SLICED

Smithfield

11 11·7 ..

$

~~::t~ .................. Do~ 1
~h~=~~:.-.~ . . . . . ' .~ 119

19

Kroger

~· - .............. ,~
CoHee

I
1
1

lb.

$
w.

a

I

••.................•
-llllm
-·
- 1 1. 117
II -lt-IIIIIIJIIIIAI
IPPllcall.l nan llllll IIIII

Hi Nu-2% -

spotlight

:

ELICA TESSEN
SPECIALS .

Waldorf
Bathroom Tiss

c

'( r

I
~-

c

I
1
I

INCLUDES:
Ice CrHM S.nthrlcht1, Ftfdte len,
Twin er.tHe AH Melly' Otllen

I

Heinz
Keg '0'
32·01.
Ketchup ....... Jir ..

:

Freezer Pleezer
Frozen Novelties

I

Detergent
lt.
Ill.

~:

Y(ITH COUPON AND
THE PUICHASE OF ANT

C

~

•

SUPERIORS

Ground

ANY SIZE PACKAGE

~Transfers

: Glenn Tucker, Anna L.
":!fucker to Chester Comba,
"'Jr ,, Hazel Combs..37 acre,
::telart.
:: Goldie Baker, dec. to
::,'Wallace Baker, Aff. for
otrana., Olive.
:: Stanley Baker, dec . to Gaye
:Baker, aka Gaye Smalley,
::;,JoMa Baker Terrell, Hubert
~er. Aff. for. trans., Olive.
• Wallace Baker, dec. to Lily
:IPrushlng, Lola Griffin,
:1&gt;GMa Baker Terrell, Hubert
~ker, Aff. for trans., Olive.
.. Hubert L. Baker, Patsy I.
:Bater, Gaye Smalley, Hobart
:"Smalley, Donna Terrell,
:Walter Terrelt to Byrl
:,GrUfin, Donna J . Griffin, Int.
.,In 15.66 acres, Olive.
:: Harold Sizemore, Jane L.
;:slzemore to Scott L. Walton,
~ eri L. Walton , Parcels,
~ester.
'
.. Larry G. Johnson, Gloria
::Jom.on to Gary Mitch, Sandi
$itch, Parcels, Salisbury.
!"' Bobby
Smallwood,
t.&gt;riscilla Smallwood to
;:aonald Manning, Sharon
t)fannlng, Glendon Mynes,
~therlne Mynes, Parcels,
:-,co1wnbla.
"" Henrietta O'Brien, F. H.
::O'Brien to Patrick H.
')&gt;'Brien, 4.91 acres, Syracu.se
'Village.

99¢

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER .

10 be tll!l&lt;:hl•

Sro••

nottc on rhol ld 11 -.w d 1;1 run Oul o l .:on ad~e•
l&lt;wd •ttm WI• otftr wou ~ou• cr.o oc e ot ~ GOmtJ • •• Ill •
•ltm, "'"'" I VItllblf. •t lll(tong tile ~mt: U v•ngi o• d •••"
c t&gt;K~ wtHch ""'lltn11114t yOu 10 pli!ChiW! I he •dv ~rt &lt; M&lt;I •!11,.,
~co l ,utry

69~

HAM
SANDWICH
&amp;FRIES

ADOLPH'S. DAIRY VALLEY

Kings 1sland t:t~

-

Ph . 992-2101

Simon 's

PHEBE ' S STORE

economic-conditions brought
on by poor government fiscal
BOSTON (UPI) - The
and ·monetary policies, the Boston Celtics Tueeday anbusiness community is fin- nounced the signing · of
ding it harder to make the second-roood draft _pick Jeff
necessary investment in new Judkins to a multi-year
plants and ~uipment to keep contract.
.
productivity high. The result
The 6-foot~ Utah graduate
Is a loss for the entire country topped the Western Athletic
as new jobs !le dormant and Conference in scoring for two
new products at lower prices of his four seaSons and is
lie undlseovered.
viewed as a swingman by the
. The budget resolution that Celtics In the John Havlicek
passed the House last week is mold. "He's got an excellent
a frontal assault on the chance of breaking into our
pocketboolcs of every tax- lineup," said assistant coach
payer in America.
K.C. Jones.

to he in no danger,
wounded in a fierce hour-long when they stormed the
The
g uerrillas
~re gun . battle
between palace.
members of the Sandinista autllorities and the guerrillas
The hostages, at first used
Liberation
Front,
an
·
·
ouUawed faction seeking to
oust Somoza and end his
family 's 41-year political
dynasty in this Central
American nation ,
The government said it
would not negotiate until the
pala ce
workers
were
released .
The Sandinlstas did not say
when they would begin
shoo.ting the hostages, who
include Somoza 's nephew ,
Jose Somoza Abrego, the
coootry's interior and deputy
interior ministers and a
majority of the 7().member
Chamber of Deputies.
· The guerrillas, including a
woman who is acting as
Tomato &amp; Lenuce
spokesman, addressed each
other only by nwnbers, They
were armed with sulimachine
guns, high-power rifles and
homemade bombs.
HSaR S.d
: 10 :011 A.M. Iiili ,oo P.M. Sun .. Thurs. 10:00 A.M. til 12 :Od P.M. Friday and
At least four persons . 1ur ay.
including two national guarcl
See Us AI the Pomeroy Bend Bridge
officers
were kHied
Tuesday· and seven others .

~

PLUMBING SUPPLIES

TASTEE

eroding
ea rnlngs and
savings, destroying · the
aspirations of our citizens,
and crippling the ability ol
people to make productive,
jolrcreating investments.
The poor and disadvantaged are seeking better
opportunities and a chance to
be self-supportive. But the
traditional response from
Washington ahs been to offer
more handouts and bigger
bureaucracies causing more
dependence on government.
The middle class working
population, the people who
make our economic system
run, is angry and frustrated
at the burdens imposed on
them . They lind governent
and redistributing more of
their income instead of
restoring Incentives and
rewards to encourage more
work, saving, investment and .
productivity.
Aiarmed by unstable

who were also demanding the
release of lOQ imRrisoned
comrades, and national
guardsmen ringing the
palace has trapped some 500 .
govenunent workers inside
since '1\lesday 'a!ternoon.
Fow- people died and 15
others were wounded during
the Initial assa~lt by the
guerr!Uas, who were led by a
mysterious chief code-named
"Zero." The SOO employees
marooned in the palace were
not being held hostage ,
however, and were believed

MANAGUA , Nicaragua
(UP!) -- Two dozen proCastro terrorists who broke
into Niaragua's National
Palace today threatened to
shoot their hostages including the nephew and two
Cabinet _ ministers
of
Presideni Ana!ltasio Somoza
Dllbayle - unless they were
given SlOmilllon ariil floim to
safety. · . .
The standoff !J&lt;;iween the 24
heavily armed guerrillas,

•

,.•

700 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

MATERIALS CO.

tuJ LOU \'ered top t ha t

Lui May I wrote the
Congresalonal budset process
Ia not workiD&amp;.In cue people
are settlnc the lmpreaalon
that thiJip are cbaniJinll for
the better on Capitol Hill,
they lhould look again.
Lui week, the Houae · of
Rqn 1 nhtlves passed the
second and final budget
resolution for fiscal year 1979
whlcb . .rts thil October.
The bud&amp;et calLI for a rlae in
governJllent apendlilg of
around 10 pereent over 1978, a
tu lncrea!e of $11.4 billion,
and an addition of at least $44
billion to the total pubUc debt.
Unlea a slllnlflcant change
Ia lllllde in the very near
future, federal Income tu:es
Will claim at least 13 centS of
every tauble dolla~ in 1979,
up from 11.3 centl in i976.
Thll 15 percent Increase in
·dlrectt&amp;l1!1 doell not take Into
ICCOWit the rlae In Indirect
taxation caused by inflation.
Realizing from peat experience that there are not
enough votes now to balance
the budget and cut tues all at
cince, we supported a plan to
Ott the growth of government
adually over four years.
wever, not only did the
lanced budset resolution
•• supported fall (by a vote'
f 1*~ ), but also the
ceaolutlon to moderate
1overnment spending to
!!each a zero deficit by 1982
~y a vOte of 201-206) ."
: It seems clear that the
g~ajoritJ party In control of
~ngreu Is not ready to put
la words into action. Out·
.ardly, the rhetoric is
..pousing the reality of a
.xpayer revolt and the
.,utues of fiscal restraint. In
lictuality, however, the
ludset reveals the same old
gram of incr.easlng
era! spending, massive
letts, and riSing tues.
: The Congreu should be
.bering to one powerful
e:·ge from the people: the
rden of government has
me too great and .It Is
~ng overdue to reverse the
)end. The double plague oE
t&gt;flation and taxation Is

E

Good Selection of Tires In

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

la sting hc·aut.y .

By LEONARDO LACAYO

Y

;'I

e

BACK TO
·coLLEGE
SCHOOL

SAVING~

t•xtend t-cl flangt' for easy
0 E:&lt;lra la rp;e a s h

".,"'~

as human shields against
government gunfire, were
being kept bound and gagged .
The terrorists demanded
the release of 100 political
prisoners, $10 milllm in cash
and sal~ passage to Cuba,
Mexico and· Venezuela.

Terrorists threaten tO ·kill hostages

Washington
·
B Cl
.
eport
arence
R
Miller

E

PRICED
AT

with st•nd high Lenope,re
warp S'tr.cl doo rs. A
V:&lt;i'"ikt&gt;t maintai ns an
matr hin l! fram{:.
D Cast iron flu e co llar
tf'm pNat ures in stride

6-'lbe [Mlly Sentinel, Mid41eport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedneaday, Allj!. 23. 1978

.,...

at the checkered flag. Mark
Balzano was sUth followed
by last week's feature winner
IIIJb Adams, Jr.
;::; .
The Helmet Dash was a ·
very exciting race in which ~~
Hedman accomplished a feat ~,
that Is seldom done. He ,.,
started last and by the fourth ;
lap had passed every car and
taken the lead! Meanwhile, • ·
one of the night's fast •
qualifiers, Hilton "Big FQOz" ..
Wolfe; was running a strong "
third when he entered turn 7
one at fuU speed. As he en·
tered the turn his car .~,
ooexpectedly lost power and . ,power steering at the same '":
time. As a result his car :.
slammed head-oo into the
first turn wall. Wolfe's "Hill ,
Brothers Produce No. 41" ,.,
was out of thaF event, but his .crew made repairs and he ,
finished fourth In the featilre. ·.
Two other Racine drivers '
finished 1-2 in the · first heat. ;,
Crossing the finish line first ~
in his blue and White No. S5 .;
was Bob Adams_._Sr., followed
·eoaiiaued on Pa~te 5 · -;
'"

clo-it-yourself

1

GJ Cast iron rotatin Jo!; duplex shaker

;uTf'S&lt;i tn

MARIETTA - Harold
Redman ,
from
Tyler
Mountain, W. Va., made his
first appearance this year at
Hilltop Speedway, and he
ce rtainly made his visit
worthwhile. In addition to
setting the night's fastest
time, he also took top honor.s
in the Helmet Dash and in the
big 25 lap feature for the late
models Sunday night.
Redman , driving a very
last 1977 Camaro, led every
lap of the .25-lap event
although he was challenged
throughout the race by
second place finisher Earl
Hill. Hill's small block engine
just didn't have enough to
overtake Redman's fierce b1g
. block, but early in th.e race
Hill still made quite a ra ce
out of it.
Three of the top seven
finishers were Racine cars as
Meigs county is always well
represented. Third pla ce
went to Larry Northcraft
followed by Hilton Wolfe, Jr.,
who just edged out Bob
Adams, Sr., in a photo· finish

(2n d game I
000 11 2 0oo- 4100
Cleve
M il w
002 000 003- 5 13 1
Reuschel , Spillner (6). Kern
(9) and Ale•ander ; Rodr igue z.
Mueller (6) an d Martinez . WMuell er (1 .0). L - Ker n (8 -8) .

;:;;

If you have had equipme~t In

and

Oiaz :

( 11 i nn ings)
St.l
0000000040G-4 10 1,
Cinci
000 200 200 01- 5 4 1 Oel
Denny , Li ttell (81 , Schu Jt·z Minn

N.O·T·1-C·E Ill

ITl Ca~ l

2 71
3 13

0 ~-r~ 0~~~~;;, r~:~~~~ ~ ~ ~ :~g ~:c~::t,.;~~~~~. &lt;~:_'k":rnM~;~ :

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (UP! ) - Seattle Slew,
1977's Horse of the Year and
Triple Crown winner.. has
been nominated to the
$150,000-added Paterson
Handicap
at
the
Meadowlands Sept. 5 and is
expected to start in the 1lil·
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The~ mile 'race.
Others among the 41
New York Knicks, seeking
rebounding and s hooting entrants In the Paterson
strength, have signed rookie include multiple stakes

for \'C'ars of

Marietta Hilltop
Speedway results

Linescores
Malor Lenue Results

....
••

.:..

...

THIN SLICED LUNCHEON MEATS

318 -o...... lolot•··'1
Hell ...•.'1'' Henl SMIIII .. .... 52"

110111t hef.. ... • 5

�t• . . . .

.

.

--------------------- -Dollar
opens
lower
Lawrence E. Lamb; M.D.

go a long way to help prevent
women from losing bone
tissue and bel'OIIIing sust."eptiWe to fractures.
OsleoitrthriUs is also called
degenerative arthritis which ·
is a different 11111tter. It is
sometimes called wear and
tear diS!'ase although recent
evidence indicates there llliiY
be other factors involved as
well. Any time there is bone
degeneration and fonnation
of spurs as the bone starts to
regrow, or any other fonn of
degenerati9n of the ~?.hat
results in pressures o the
nerve, you will have p · ,
Aspirin and Motrin are both .
pain relievers and are helpful
in this regand. You need to
talk to your doctor about the
amount of pain your mother
is having and what other
medicines !l'light 'be given to
help take the edge off it.
These medicines are not like·
ly to correct her osteoporosis
or her arthritis but they
might help relieve some of
her pain problems.
I am. sending you The
Health Letter nwnber 6-10,
Os teopor os is and also
nwnber 4-10, Osteoarthritis.
These two issues will give you
a pretty good 'idea of these
problems, but I'd say again
they are- not the only . problems your mother has.
Other readers who want
either one of these issues can
send 50 cents for either with a
Ion~: .
stamped, se lfaddressed envelope for it to
me in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Sta·
lion, New York , NY 10019.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
writing in desperation. My
mother, age 90, i~ suffering
from osteoporosis. I believe
that is softening of the bones
from lack of calcium. She is
in grea t pain and can hardly
walk. Her legs and knees are
very swollen. She does take
Lasix and Lanoxin. She is
also taking Motrin, but apparently' without relief. It is
di(ficlllt for her to get up, sit
down, lie down. The pain in
her abdomen is strong and
she seems to be in constant
pain all the time.
I know she is old but is
there · nothing that can be
done to at least relieve the
pain? Since 1972 both hips
have been broken. She has
had numerous falls on the
right side. The entire right
side and right leg is par·
ticularly painful.
She does take aspirin and
Maalox. Sometimes there is
some relief. AlSQ, what is
osteoarthritis ?
DEAR READER -Your
mother has quite a few more
th-ing s
bes ide s
the
osteoporosis and possible
osteoarthritis. The reason she
is taking.Lasix and Lanoxin is
because she has a tendency to
accwnulate fluid and probably has a heart condition
that requi res · Lanoxin .
Lanoxin is a digitalis
preparation.
You' re correct about
osteoporosis.

lt means
dissolving bones. It is a fre-

quent factor m the high in·
·cidence of hip fractures and
other bone fractures that OC·
cur in older people. It causes
the 'dowager hump in women
past the menopause but,
disconcerting as that may be,
it is perhaps not as Important
as the increased susceptibili-ty to simple fractures and the
complications that may occur
from a fracture in older age. ·
There are quite a few
things that can be done lo
help prevent osteoporosis.
One of them, which every
woman can a-nd should do, is
to be sure she gets enough
calcium , the am ount equivalent to that found in a
quart of skimmed milk every
day . Adequate milk intake
and • a regular sensible
vigorous exercise program

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Norman's Star, driven by
Terry Holton, edged out
Forge Ahead b)' a neck in the
featured race at Sc-ioto
Downs Tuesday night.
Thewinnerweni the mile in
2:023-5. !rna Jerry Way came
in third.
The trifecta combinatioo of
3-t-4 returned $2,526.60.
The 5,029 fa!lll wagered

peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLAR.It

Ualted Preu lalmuitiOIUII
HELLO DOLLY : She calla her9elf "just a country girl," but
the country girl conquered New Ylll'k City Tuesday night, all
the 'Way from \he Palladium to Studio ~. A packed house
cheered Dolly Parton through the Palladium eoncert, flooding
the stace with glfta and flowers and roaring out standing
ovatloos. Later, at the diJco of the jet-eetter•, which was
decked out in her honor 1lke a COWltry barnyand, she was
surrounded by other fans- including a hol'le, a Koal. a mvnah
bird, Arelba Fraoldlll, Robert KeDDedy .k., and Joe Frazier.

LONDON (UPI ) - The
dollar opened lower oo mOdi!
Europe~n money markets
today, reversing Mooday's
comeb~ck
following
indications the Carter
PATTY FAN: The drive to ''free Patty Heant"IS picking up
administration was willing to some heavy backers. The latest to come dQ1m on the side !If
take coocrete action to prop clemency Is Sen. S.I: Hayabwa.ln Washington, the California
the · failing currency . Gold Republican has asked Prelklat carter to pardon Miss Hearsi
was higher.
-who's doing aevenyears for the bank robbery that followed
Gold gained $2.3750 In her kidnapping by the Symbionese Uberatioo Anny.
Londoo - to $1!08, while iri--Hayakawa-saYI she participated under duress - that her ,
Zurich It was U.55 higher at story, "is so bizarre that, lilt were flctloo,'it would fall into the
$207.1250:
categlll'y of 'Improbable possibility' - a story Une fictioo
In Frankfurt the dollar fell writers avoid ·as souncUns too far-fetched." He, says Miss
back below the paychol01Jical Hearst Is a "real-life victim of a real-life, · if almost
level of 2 marks to open at unbelievable drama, and should be aUowed to go home now."
1.9975 marks from Mooday's
clooe of 2.0098, whUe in Zurich
ROCKY ROY: It took NBC!'V's "America Alive" to get·
it was lower at 1.65 SWiss Mllllammad All and his childhood idol together :.,.. and to reveal
francs from 1.6670.
a lltUe-known chapter in the life of cowboy star Roy Rogers.
The dollar was marginally Ali appeared on the program from his Lancaster, Pa., training
higher in Paris at 4.3950 camp, via New York, whUe Rogers - whoni Ali says he's
francs from 4.3875, but it wanted to meet ever since he was a child -went on the air
slipped in Brussels to 32.38 from his home in Apple VaUey, Calif. In the course of the
Belgian francs from 32.3850, interview, Rogers dellghred All, saying, "I started oot as a
in Amsterdam to 2.1519 boxer; at S30 a bout."
guilders from 2,1750 and in
Milan to 836lire from 841.30.
ROCKY BOY: It took NJ!C.1V's "America Alive" to get
Sterling was mixed, comedy series "Bonkers!" - have named eJt·Los Angeles
gaining against the dollar in Rams' Coach GeOI'ge Allea as recipient of their August
London at . $1.9345 from Bonkers Award, "in hoolll' of his IO!lllevity with the team."
$1.9285 and m Frankfurt at Allen was fired after the Rams lost their first two pre-season
3.8650 marks from 3.8550, but games. The Hudaons say they hope Allen won't take offense,
edging down in Zurich to but add, "The Rams haven't taken offense at anything thus far
u 919 Swiss francs from this season, so why shoilld Allen?"
3.2161.
In Tokyo the dollar rose for
the second day in a row,
closing at 191.6575 yen, up
from the opening of 190 and
Monday's close of 190.1020.

Wreckage
of plane.
spotted

Ky. (UP!)
-Members of a rescue team
inched their way on foot
through heavily wooded
terrain toward a single·
engine airplane which
$328,089.
crashed in southeastern
Kentucky oo a weekend flight
from Cincinnati to Hilton,
Turn the other cheek and S.C.
The plane, cari'ying an
the worst that can happen is
that you'll have matching unidentified family of four,
was spotted "sitting in a
lumps.
tree" by a mining c!lllpany
helicoprer pilot northwest of
Whitesburg in southeastern
Kentucky, according to Col.
Thorpe Smith, spokesman for
the Kentucky Civil Air Patrol
based in Louisville.
Smith said Tuesday night
FOR
there would be no word oo
survlvlll's until a rescue team
coilld work its way into the
mountainous, heavily wooded
area to make a clearing for a
AT ·
helicopter to land sometime
today.
"We don't know anything
about survivors and we won't
until that team makes its way
to the crash site," Smith said.
"We are hopeful for
Choose an exciting Career in one of these
survivlll's. U you land in a
success proven fields :
tree you are goi!lll to have a
better cbanee."
The CAP officer said the
•EXECUTIVE SECRETAR~,
airplane "a pparently
•SECRETARIAL
staUed" bef~e gliding down
into the sparsely populated
area.
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
"It bas been established
• JR. ACCOUNTING
that was the missing plane
because the helicopter pilot
•G EN ERAL OFFICE
was able to read the
identification number on the
tail," Smith said.
"We do have a definite
~
CLASSE~
plan," he added . "A team is
on its way now and will wlll'k
Begin September 18, 1.978
to clear an area about an
eighth of a mile from the site
for a helicoper to land."
Financial Assistance Available
The Cessna 195, carrying
Approved for Veterans
six hours of. fuel, departed
Blue Ash Airport in
Cincinnati shortly before
Accredited by the Accrediting Commission of the
Associa tion of Independent Colleges and Schools.
noon Sunday.
No flight plan was filed for
the trip but CAP officials
have determined the pilot
usually fiew a route from
Cincinnati via Whitesburg ;
Asheville; Spartanburg, S.C.,
and Colwnbia, S.C., en route
to Hilton Head.

Lake County voters defeat two levies
MENTOR, Ohio .. (UPI) Two educational tax levies
were defe·ated by Lake
County voters Tu esday,
. lud '
de · ed to
mr. mg one
Sign
avert a state tak~ver of the .
Mentor School DIStrict.
_
Mentor residenlc; rPlPrtPrl a

6 9-mill emergency operating
l~vy that would have raised

an additional ,2.4 million
annually for three years.
. ·ted 3 812-3668
That was reJec
.
• ·
A
.mill
countywide
9
ali~ levy for Lakeland
oper 8 .t Co lle~e was
Commum Y

SPECIAL

EVENING

GALLI POLIS .
BUSINESS COLLEGE
51 . No. 75·02·04728

CALL 446 4367
OR WRITE:

I'GiL'i.iPoiisiij_i~"EiscOii:'rofl
I P .O. Box 749 ,
I Gallipolis. OH . 4S6ll

I()
I

I'
1

Pluse provide me with more lnformllionl

Nlmt
Addren

I
I Pllont
,

No.

I

·

,...
I
Stilt_ Zip_l

City

·I
·1

--·-··--ii-.iji--.-...-

iii.-.-.---~-iii-.-.---.--rJ

,.

. ... . -""*•.

·-

EAST RUTHERFORD ,
N.J. ( UP!) - The New Y~k
Giants released Jim Stlenke,
astarting defensive back the
past three seaaona, and nine
other players Tuellday to
reach the NFLit''iiO-player
roster limit.
Also included in the cuta
were third-year offenalve
tackle Milie Gibbonl, fourth·
year · running back Harold
Hart, flftfi.year lilbt end
Boyd Brown, third-year
defensive end AI Burton and
rookie placekicker and
punter Brian Masella .
I

HOOVER
DAY STOREWIDE SALE
.

* FREE GIFTS
* FREE BALLOONS

Any u .s. made car .:...parts
our. extra if needed. Excludes
service department and
will service Hotpinf and tront -wheel drive cars.
other brands .
We have enlarged

Landmar~­

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

REG. 1269.95
'

For All Your GE T.V.'s
&amp; Hotpoint Appl.

•289.95
Fre e

992-2181

Sale Prices

If. . POMER~~ ~!~~MARK
LMaM•M

$199

-5ALE

S40E . MAINST.

95

POMEROY,O.

INSURED TO
. $40,000

Each plan is designed for a specific need
for our customers and is insured up to
$40,0()():by F.D.I.C.

Q

v

Arw:! In addition to all this ... momhlv or
Quarter!~ mcome
pa id on one , two, lhfee.
lour . sia. 01 e~ght year certificates. Interest
payable monthly il ~oo desue on Cet'tllicates
with lace amount ol $5.000 00 or II'IOfe.

Aooual vrelds are e llec tr~e when princjpal
an\1 imeresr are left on !te!Xlsit 101 a lull yeat•

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

FUU SIZE
MAnRESS

6~.,

6;,~!o/o

QUEEN SIZE

BOX SPRINGS
&amp;MATTRESS

'75'!!
All WOOD

Broad, bright beam of
light helps seek out litter .

Controlled rewind
for smooth
rectraction

6·YEAR CERTIFICATE

3 -YE~R

CERTIFICATE

• CoiiiPDIINH Ot~ • Mltlll.. 11 ,000.01

I

~ Ohio Valley Bank
Gallipolis , Ohio

BEARCAT

SPECIAL PRICE
1 DAY ONLY '

SCANNERS

$6488

Model U4201

I
,

.I

WITH FREE
AlTACHMENTS

DON'T MISS
THIS

REDUCED I

20%

Member FDIC

MAYTAG
WASHERS
AND DRYERS

HIGH-LOW BAND WITH
8 CRYSTALS

MOBILE CB'S

U4127

40 CHANNEL

SPECIAL PRICES
ON All MODELS
GIBSON &amp;
FRIGIDAIRE
REFRIGERAtORS

$13995

Model

COBRA 29 XLR
95
$179
40 CHANNEL

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

20%

LAMPS

20%

40%

TO

COBRA 21XLR
$

2995

TO

50% OFF

OFF BOOK PRICE

WOOD TABLE
WITH

4 CHAIRS

REDUCED

8-YEAR CERTIFICATE

1~ro

•c..,....., o~~r ....... 11.00000

Floor,

ROCKERS
6~ro

• CHIPGIIIOtl Otlly • Mllllllum ·s 1,000 .00

'
4·YEAR CERTIFICATE

Twin lamp
headlight

t~e

Carpef Shift

more cleaning per bag I
You'll like the Quick &amp;
Clean bag changer.

ALL

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

• Big Disposable Bag
• 4 on

AND
UP

ROLLTOP
DESKS
ALL
REDUCED

• All Steel Agitator

16 qt. bag capacity

.rewind

3·MONTH CERTIFICATE

• Co11povNed Otlly • Ml~l tn ufl $1 ,000 .00

HEAR CERTIFICATE

Edge cleaning
plus...

ada pis Cleaner to most
carpet . Special plush
&amp; shag settings!

BOX SPRINGS
&amp; MATTRESS

$6800

GREEN
CONVERTIBLE
UPRIGHT

deep cleans with double
the brushing &amp; grooming
action of previous models.

Automatic carpet
adjustment
KING SIZE

-ROCKERS,

HOOVER CLEAN

Quadraflex TM
agitator

Also with the purchase of a·
Bedrgom Suite, you buy the
Box Springs &amp; we'll give you
the Ma!tress.

McCALL

FREE COFFEE
&amp; DONUTS

edge brusher deep cleans
close to the wall.

FACTORY
SECONDS

'5~- 5;.~~~%

KIDS

BREAKFAST ...... .CCJI'tCE~T
OI'IETM
WITH SMAll SETS
Cleaning
DAMAGED •
00
System _
PLACES
AND
UP

UP TO s200.00 OFF

FREE BALLOONS
FOR THE

The
Ultimate

88

BEDROOM
SUITES

_FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE ·IN OU.R
STORE ALL DAY TO DEMONSTRATE THE
. BEST THE .HOOVER CO. HAS' EVER MADE..

Soft touch cord

Stop in today to learn why our savings
continue to reach record levels.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

AT RUTLAND FURNITURE

AND UP

7 PIECE .

$46800

A,UG. 26th SAT. 9 A.M. to 9 .P.M.

BREAKFAST
SETS
95
$169

FAL1URY$15

V

ONLY 2 AT THIS PRICE ·

I.

_.

All -plans pay_the highest interest rates
allowed by law and guarantee you this
maximum yield.

LIVING ROOM
SUITE
Sofa • Chair • Love Seat

SPECIAL
PRICE

EMpires
solten &amp; condition your
August 31. 197"8
water · with co-op water
sonener,
~~~~~ii~NI!Iil!l~~~
Now OrilyModel uc-sv1. U

let us test voUr water

3 PIECE

COFFEE &amp;
TWO END TABLES

$~OFF
Let Pomeroy

AHOOVER FACTORY
REPRESENTATIVE
•
WIU BE PRESENT TO ANSWER
ANY &amp; All QUESTIONS THAT
YOU MAY HAVE.

ONLY 2 SETS ·

Pomeroy Landmark
W, .c .rsey , Mgr.

HOOVER SWEEPER TO BE
GIVEN AWAY, BE SURE
TO REGISTER

$1295

MA){IMUM
INTEREST
SAVINGS?

WHI'I'ESBURG,

GALLIPOUS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

FOR INFORMATION

....
••

* FREE COFFEE &amp; DONUTS.

FALL TERM

.-

'

'

defeated by about 700 votes.'
The college SOugh\ to raise
an additional Sl.25 millioo
annuaUy with the four-year·'
levy The le_vy would ha•·
·~
provided the first new mooey:
for Lakeland since It was;
formed in 1967
·
·

11011 show you the
route to

ENROLL NOW

DAY

..

1»10

6 -- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., WednNday, Aug. 23, 1971

Relief for
nsteoporosis

""':

MAPLE OR PINE
SUNRAY &amp;FRIGIDAIRE

GAS &amp;
ELECTRIC
RANGES
AU.
DOWN

·6-8 AND 10 GUN

RECLINERS

GUN
CABIN OS

$199

95

20%
TO

AND

30% OFF

UP

WOOD TABLE
WITH

6 CHAIRS
MAPLE ONLY

ALL MARKED DOWN

·ur. ·''ne deoollll. regulil tion• require tttat the re be an Interest penalty rl the princiPII 11 wltndrawn belore
Ml lurlty fi elder wr ll btl ~Mr(' r.,rerest at the annual r11te ol 5'1. It» three months lor ff'ltllme the princlpel wrraton dtl»tit
I

'I

'''

'

�,.
~

Att;;d;n;;Mr;tat; convention of rs~~'~""''(Roush:_Fisher were united I
0
the .Daughters • of
'J America of
'J Ohio ·itman~ :erson. I~\ in Charleston ceremorty
Holter of Chester Council 323,
Duughters of America, were
in Dayton~ Aug. 14-16 fur the ·
84th Annua l Convention of the
Duughters of America of Ohio

CHESTER-Mrs. Dorothy
Hitchie, deputy of District 13.
Mrs. Duris Grueser, Mrs.
Marcia Keller. Mrs. Erma
Cleland, and Mrs. Mary K.

held a\ ll)e Imperia l House.
Others from District 13 at·
tending were three members
of Gulden Gleam Council 254,
Ma rietta: four from Belle

Prairie Council ~9. Belpre:
and four from Perry Council
:?113, New Lexington.
Prizes awarded by the
State Good of the Orrler Com·
mittee included $50 to Mrs.
Ada Morris and $20 to Mrs .
Newell, both of Chester
CounciL
A surprise party· was held
for Dorothy Ritchie Chesler
group motel room. She was
presented gifts and Mrs.
Cleland gave a hwnorous
reading and provided poe!:""
for the others to read.
Refreshments were served.
There was also a small sur·
prise re~-eption for Faye
Hose lton, Ohio State
associate vil'e councilor. She
was presented a Daughters of
America charm from District
13 and bWiches of artificial
mangoes and tomatoes with
dollar bills attached. She
raises these at her Belpre
home.

announcing the b1rth of a son,
Scott Lee Autherson on Aug.
12 at P leasant Va lley
Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are
Laura Autherson, Pomeroy,
and JUnior Autherson, Texas.
Maternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Dewey
Hudson, Middleport .

Annual Grate reunion WV'1J heJdlnzy
on Aug. 13 at Royal Oak Park
U

W. · Va. : Mr. and Mrs. Dudding, Hunti ngton , W.
Thomas Sprouse, Union Fur· Va.; Mrs. Sue Grate and
nace ; Mr. and Mrs. Frank fa mily, Col umbus: Paul
Cherry, Logan; Mrs. Leda Grate, Green Camp ; Mr. and
Lambert , Union f urnace: Mrs. Bill Lyons and Coleen,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Nicholson Applegate, Mich.: Mr. and
and family, Mr . and Mrs .' Mrs. Dav id Lyons, Anderson,
Herbert Grate and family, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Grate, Grate and Judi , Rutland.
Visitors at the r~ union were
Rutland: Ca rolyn Jones and
T.
J . Ferrell, Wilkesville;
family, Marion.
Jeff
Melton, ·Mt. Vernoi1 ;
Mr. and Mrs. John Grate
Rick
Edwards, Rutland :
and Aaron, Letart, W. Va. :
Sullivan,
Green Camp,
Laura
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Brown.
Midille(&gt;()\1 : Mr. and Mrs. and Don Hysell, Rutland.
George Grate and family,
Rutland: David Grate and
Tony, Rutland : Mr. and Mrs.
Pa ul Grate, Marion: Janis

The 35th annual Grate reu·
nion was held Aug. 13 at
Royal Oak Park.
- Of the 81 persons attending
the Sunday reunion ·51 came
on friday and camped
through the weeke,nd. Allenrling were Mr. and Mrs.
Kecve•· Grate and family,
Marion; Mr. and Mrs . Burton
Hedrick. Jr., Marion: Mr.
and Mrs. Robert· Thompson,
Wellston: Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Grate and Jenny,
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. John
Hersman , Castalia ; Mr. and

Can we
~lint Birch be ' 'Sugar
~~~~~;~~·~;o_ .'~ has birthday trained?''

Mrs.

Herman

Grate

and

Vicki , Rutland : Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Grate, South Charleston,

, END or-

r- 5U'""'\11l'"' R
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P'L.1\IIIC[S
nn

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OR~t

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"'SIII'~UI.

~t·..~

.. 11.1 ~S J 1"\
VJe~~,n9

.

hOv••

~"''e,~em \\"-e'\le'l

used'

S' il' bU'\dS

C'~

\11'
l"ll.\

0

·

w.;;.::&gt;

1.

Fra_nk _Wa llace_and ~:: and

~
-'''}:':":

Mrs.

ewpo •

r. an

Mrs. Harold Roush, Rac me.

Ne"'

·

KARL KLOES

Karl Kloos is convalescing
at his h.ome in Syr acuse
following two suq~ical opera~
· tiu ns Ci t the Holzer Medical

Center ·

a

'

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD ••••.... ••••• ~~~.sl.09
3 lb . Ag ar

CANNED HAMS ••••••••••••••••••..•••••••c::..$4.98
Frenc h Cit y

MARGARINE.. ......... ~~:. 69'

bag

97~

APPLES. ....................

ET CHICKEN ••••.••••••• ~: •• s2.89

12 OZ.
WHEATIES .•••••••••.•••••••••••••• ::.x.. 73'
Show
PORK &amp; BEANS •••••.•••••••••••••••••••••• 2/57'
oz .
Boy-Ar-Dee
SPAGHETTI &amp; MEAT BALLS ••••••••••••••••• 54'
DEL
MONTE SPINACH ••••••••••••••••••••• 2/79'
12 oz . Armour
gr avy
BEEF
ROAST
$1.09
oz.
.
Boat

Chef

16

wi th

MENS TUBE
SOCKS
fils 10 To 13
F. ull cushion, white with
strl~ tops . l rr eq ular s of
our $1.00 pro !lOCk. E.l( tra

'ono.

3 $1
PAIR

REG.
'1.29

• • 1 • • 1 • •

111!..~,....~~................~......................~~....~~
I

CHILDS, TEENS, MENS
'

NOVELTY FRONT
T-SHI~TS
BOYS

IS DIVORCE WORST SOLUTION?
DEAR HELE;N :
fagree with "A.D." who disagreed with you on the divorce ·
question.
·
How can the cruel brokenness of divorce he " better than a
nothing marriage" as you say? Surely you know the grief, sor·
row, despair, loneliness, anguish, and often poverty that go
with marriage break-up, not to mention the alJ.I.o&lt;J.often ruined

;~~~ ~;~.~.:·.........~~.~~..~ 169

·

$ 59
HAM ......................... ~~; .....

E-Z CARVE

&amp;tO 16

sa~

BOYS

lUllS

$299

$349

Size

'

66 SHEETS
98' THEME
BOOK

WOME~S

Size 1"110"

THEME
COVERS

e

HAIR
BRUSHES
Htrles

Women 's Styling , tenlng
and bt4\!l';' brus1'111. Slve
6lc.

....

•nt

.SCIIIC ColliS

•wlra Bound-

ple are unaware of how
much sugar they really con·
sume. They don' t think of
th e exceuive am ount. or
sugar found in ordinary putties, deue rta, drink&amp;, anack
fooda, and cereala.
Sure, sugar frequently
c~u aes tooth decay. But the
ill" effects of excetaauear' ue
fa r more dane:eroua in terma
or whal . il doea t o the

SAVE 40'

Mr. and Mrs. 'Ronald Hart · ,Berta, Janie and Bradley
•nd attended the Sayre spent Tuesday afternoon with
reunion.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Halley
Teddy Brown of Dayton and mother at Cheshire.
spent a week with his
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
srandparenl.l, Mr. and Mrs. ·Turley and aon, Kevin, spent
Martin Wilcoxen.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
· · Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dale Ball at St. Albana, W.
Grimm and three children of Va. and brought their son,
· • Green Acres, Florida are Kenny, hOme after spending
here for two weeks visiting a week there.
their parents.
Mr, BW Lake of Athena
County was a recent over·
: night guest of hU srand' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Francia Morrt•
The fellow who stands
· Mra. t&gt;aylene Roblnaon and behind you Is either a friend
• children, David, Berta, Pete, or someone who wants to see
: Bradley and Janie spent what you're up to.
• Monday and Tuesday with
'

Ch0011 Yours lin - While
Our Selectloa II com,letel

·.

Wh•t doe• the Bible
TuchOn:
-. ct..•

chemiotry of the body, and

"End of Tile World"

"r.llll"
"Geel'a DI.Wklc Line"
"' 1..... ,......

the many health pro bl em•
wh ich m ay a.ri1e u a re1ult.
Moat health practltionen
are concerned about mod·
er n
Ameri ca'a '~ aweet
tooth. " For exampl e, the
d o c lor
or chiropraetle
makes ntft ri tion and die tary ·
manat ement an· important

~~(B~C)

hum a n bo d y, vie w i ng it
ati part of a conaervaUve

II Point
Pens
.

IlL WILDON Yt'AitNOCK
will._"'- Mil olllar aabjaeta

PACI OF 10

Aug. 28 • Sept. 1

BIC

part or hia otudy of the

a ppro ac h t o hea lt h reato·
r at ion, m ain te nance, and
d isease resista nce.
I! you were bom durt111
Ute Jut 30 yean, let"a f101
it, you 've a:ot I n addic:tlon,

7:11

A '2.50 VALUE

crutch with 5weeta. And it'a
1oin11 to be harder to bRak
than even the eiearette
habit. But it'o well worth
doinJ . . . for. the aake of

••

BONELESS CHUCK

ROAST.~~~ ...

•

CRISP Y
FRENCH FRIES
Use ont or two med ium SI U .ilOit tots per

seN • n ~ .

U~1nQ

kn11t or Ire nth try cutte r, CYt pu Led po·
tatoes rnto aogut 'I• lncn str 1ps . Rinse or ~ u k 1n

coli!' water Start hn tlng tnough Cnuo SIIO rtentn g
rc til! 1 3 quart uucepan 1\alt fu ll. or a deUI tr,tr
wrhlfl 'IJ .nch of the fill mark. Dry pot ato snrps
on uo~ r to w ~ ! .
A. fOR f:lfiiA QUI Cit FRENCH FRIU
,

•

, USDA. CHOICE

t ho ro ugh \ ~

Hut deep Crisc o Shgrteni ng to 365° . For elet·
tr ic de eo fryer, to ll ow . manu tacMei"S dlr ec·

tlons lor amo11nt of ~otato 51r 1ps to I~ at one
time for uuupan , cook 2 to 3 cups ol potato
sttr ps at ant 11rne, add •ng slowly Cook ~nt il
potiltOes 1re tender 1nd lr ght l~ browned , ilbO~t
10 to t5 minutes. Drain potatoe' on papet
IOwt!!. Wh llt 11'/IIIQ rtma intnQ pO! IIOU . ~eep
tried ones warm rn o~en set 11 tow tempera·
11110. Salt or season as dn lretl .
11 dnrred , troun potat on ean be us ed In
piiCt ol !run potatoes . For out rtsu lls . II)
uout 10 to 15 minutes .n Crisco Shortening
usrnv tht 100~e dire,!ion..
B. '0" DTlA UIIP'f fiUCH fi iU
(lor trul potatou •• trl
Fl'/ pot&amp;tOe! fttll time ill 325 11 101 3!IOUI J
mlnutu . Remove and t!raln on papt r towtl
coo ~ at lust tS mlnutn at room temper1ture .
11 ~u i rt~ coot lor up to l hours . To serve, rt·
nut Crisco to m o i At! lry potato ! trip s 1
n cull l t•mt lor fi tG 8 minutes or unhl golden
oro wn. Drain on Plllt r towel.

CHUCK STEAK.........................~~:.

© 1978 P&amp;.G

BVIHING

LETTUCE .....................
JENO'S

PIZZA ....................~~.~~. 7

GRADE A_EXTRA LARGE

$ 19
9
TIDE ····················~······~ .?.~ ....

DETERGENT

BRING YOUR BIBLE

... ...., will!•

POINT .PI WANT or IIASOII

,

·- =--.:.....
I,
'

.

••~••

•

WestsideII....._,
Church
of Christ
...
CarMr

..

W•l Main !Ito.

_

MAXWELL

HOU~S~E~iT1r=;SHOWIOAT
i
'

PORK &amp;BEANS

COFFEE
3-UI.

$699

W/C

Umit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Aug. 26, 1978

!~. ! •• ~!

~0 OZ.

24

oz.

Cottage Cheese

5

l-(llJP() N

EGGS .......................~~..

~ VALLEY BELL

REGULAR OR 12 oz.
.DIET 1·U P....•..... ~~· ••

YIIINiri.U.te

•

yourhealth.

~

....., .......JL,

99~

a habit, a paycholoclctl

$ 29

USDA CHOICE

Racine Social Events

.

lttUIIr 22'

39e

~~M~~~ST.............................~~.~.l 09

..

OVER FAST
FOOD PLACES. WHEN .
YOU EAT ATHOME AND
SHOP ATPOWELL'S SUPER V
JUST TRY THIS RECIPE·· AND
THESE EXTRA SAVINGS!

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hart Mrs. Bertha Robinson .
and flll1lily of Newark spent · Mrs . Bertha Robinson ,
the weekend with hU parents, Mrs . Gaylene Robinson,

....

WIEDSTIER
DICTIONARY

BOLOGNA ................. ,.~~...

I can picture the strutting peacock, smug in his belief that
hls wile (possession ) had "saved herself" for him alone. Did
he exercise- the same restraint? As for playing around to even
the sctlre, dollars to doughnuts he already has! And now he can
justify it whenever his quivering ego needs a prop-up. She'IIbe
lucky If he, leaves her, luckier if he dies and leaves her a ruce
fat insurance policy. - JANE

Pocket

For Students!

BUDGET PAK

aecret.

$100

SIZE

'UI .VALUE

Unfortunately, moot peo-

0

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU AUGUST 26, 1978

~-

·
DEARHELEN.
The jackass (whO was devastated by his wife's confession of
· a brief affair before her 20-year mamage to him) IS
unbelievable ! Why should this pathological narcissist rant,
"She's not the same!" just because his ego has been
trawnatized? Twenty years of observation should have reveal·
ed the chauvinist for what he is and taught her to guard her

The newest designs ar~d sa vings. Whitt
ground T-sM irts , col orf ul desi gn s.
P erf~cl for Khool. Save mone y on thi s
hot we11 ther fa vorite.

--·

sweets. In fac t, t hey Warft
ag~i n st th e overuse of re·
fined sugar .

200 ct. White

1 1 1 • • 1 1 • • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

46e

5 Hole Punched ·

of fruit- not manufactured

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE •••••••••••••••••••• ~~~. 53'

•

For Pencils, Crayons, E11sers
..,_ t'&lt;&amp;Jt'~.
Clt•r Style ,
. ~"'!':~=-~
~ ~~~

SUPER SAVINGS

NOTEBOOK
PAPER

tiona1 in value? Doctors of
chiropractic , who put partl·
cular emphuia on nutrition
in the ir approach to health,
reco mmend that it be a
healthful food like a piect

15:V4

POMEROY, 0.

DEAR HELEN :
I'm 22 and living on a modest inctime. My mother is ·very
wealthy. No matter what I give her for birthdays, Christmas,
etc. (handmade items or specialty things I ~ afford), she
doem't like them. She has a cloeet full of my presents that
have accumulated since I was a child. At the time she tells me
. they're beautiful, bqt she never uses them.
· .
Don't suggest I dO her a,favor instead of buying something.
She could easily ask the maid. Plants? Her living room looks
Uke a greenhouse.
.
.
What can 1get her for about five or ten dollars that she'd appreciate? -REBECCA
DEAR REBECCA:
.
"
Don't say your mother isn 't appreciative: she's saved a
clOiet full of your gifts- for sentimental reasons perhaps?
Has it occuried to you that she might like your presence
more than a present• Wealthy people can be lonely, too, you
know. So wily not jlring a botUe of wine and spend the after·
noon with her - or take her on a picnic in the park, to a coocert
or museum, for a drive in the eowttry•
If I've guessed wrong and she isn't yearning for your company, then,how about a book, a fine liqueur · or a cootribution
to her fa.vorile charily?- H.

SCHOOL BOX

28e

SHEETS

the opportunity to eatablilh
habits that will affect a

INSTANT
NESTEA•••••••••••••••••••••••• J~~- $1.99
oz. Del Monte
PUFF TISSUES •• ~ •••••.••.•••••••••••••••• ,~: •• 63~
6/69$
KOOL AID
~

%

Sovorol Colore

ce ptable talte. They ha"*

can

298 SECOND ST.

'\ l US • • •By Helen Hottel·!\

GYM SHORTS

coaxing. Wha.t th ia point&amp;
ou t is that parents can train
their offsprinc to like al·

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4

Sunday 10 A:M. · 10 P.M.

r-u;r;;H;ip ~~'l

MENS SIZES $

goi ng back to childhood

J

·

U. 5. 60 West- Huntington

OVER THE CALF

Th 11

mother uaed to make.''
T he motivatio n in bo th
cases is the same-security

IS o z.

.

.I

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat 8 A.M.-10 P.M.

' Almost anything is better than divorce. It is living death for
·thousands and it doesn't solve anything , just creates many
new problems.
• The sooner more people realize how awful divorce is, th~
10011er we'll have reaDy meaningful efforts to build and
restore marriages. - HOPING
DEAR HOPING :
,
.
You'll hear from many readers who don't agree that divorce
is always "awful."
... And from me who repeats, "If you can't make marriage
work, It's better to rectify a mistake than let it ruin two lives."
. . -H.

CAMDEN .PARK

th at laste juot like " what

ece

I

Wellstol), celebrated their
~~~:~Aug.
anniversary
on
W
16.
Jacobs and the fQI'JIIer
Gladys Evans were
marTied .on Aug. 16 1921j at
Hill by the Rev . Carl H.
~Y are the parents
of two daughters, Mrs.
Robert Jones (Mriry Helen)
d Wellston, and Mrs. Gary

'
Hanold (Nancy ) of Colwn·
bus. '!-'heY have four grand·
children.
Mr. Jacobs is a retired
employe of the Colwnbia Gas
Co. and was employed at the
Sutton and · Meigs Compressor Stations for several
years before being transfer·
red ·to the Wellston area. At
that time the family resided
on Union Ave., Pomeroy .

-cblldren.

OF

aomethin g much more nUtri-,

J lb. Rainbow
.

~.

INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL WORKER5-LOCAL NO. 317

36
Sheets

subsequently health.
Is it lfOinc to be aweeta or

SLICED CHEESE·.~-~?:. 1.29 WHITE GRAPES ......'.~:. 89~

.

ANNUAL OUTING

TH_EME
BOOK

child 's lifelon&amp; nu t rition and

S

.a

FOR

VALUE!

most any thinll with an oc·

12 OZ. PKG. WIENERS .•••••••••••••••••~~~·.·.97'

Gal 'po Sj an

FiSher,

nd Mrs

ADVERTISED
PRICES
'
IN EFFECT
NOW!

reward. Incidentally, that's
wh y most older people can't
understand the tastes of our
eeneration with its concen·
tration on the high UJe of
suiar. That's also wh y moll
people te nd to favor foods

quarters

TRIE S, Berdan Ave. , De pt.

d Mr

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, AUGUST 26
'
UNTIL 5 PM

scio utly sat 1sfy mg the d esare

might seem to be a contra·
diction to the security food
theory until one studies the
era when the&amp;e people were
btousht up . Thoae we re the
days of the depre11ion wl\en

li li

CY/ R O II'ID US·

r t lnld·w·o·nl'tllii•T•R•
,.
W.ay
· n·•··-N•.J•.•0.7·4·7·0·
. . . . . .R.ube
. .rtllliiPI!Irlofilfiltll,IBelllplrel.. .

security_ f?od-subc~n·

ite food .. "beans."

and Mrs. Kermit

wr it e t o

A cry lic ¥e rving bowls

Ioo k s

Aery li te® acryl ic sheet, "

Mrs. Inez Hill, Racine; Janet
next outdoor party and out- Schmoll, Middleport, Ann
and-out success.
and Stephanie Radford,
For a free book let , " How " RoCkspringsi Mrs. Ethel
To Care For Furniture of ·Euler, Hemlock Grove; Mr.

Mr. and · Mrs. Corliss E .
Jacobe, 411 E. Seventh

'

And thua it became tht

14 oz .

ca r t's ac ryl ic, kee ping it

clean con be breezier.

1
Grueser, Mrs. Doris Hens er,

Windo w boxes qf acrylic

people could seldom afford

FRIED BAN

and easier. and when t he

An elega nt d ining set and
a patio set with sophistic&amp; ·
t io n could help make you r

lightweight.

the luxury of sweets. Every
dollar wu put int o s taple
foods, and there was noth·
ing more staple Ula n low·
c ost fill ing foods like bread,
potatoes and bean.. Amon1
th e three, beans was a treat.

1 lb . Parkay

A portab le bar/serving
cart for indoo r and o utdoor
use m a k eS serving neater

Elderly people, whe n sur·
veyed , indicate th eir (avo: ;

rc""'tl\

12 oz . Kr aft deluxe

Mrs. Mildred Donahew, Jodi

weathe r's warm and brought
in to beaUt ify t he rest of the
house whe n the co ld comes.

for approval.

':&lt;

~

and Jason, Mrs . Eileen Buck,

hard pat io noor.

cand y as a re ward , eve n ~he_
grown-u p is sh~ wn affection
by a box of candy or a cake.
rs. And so swee ts often become

and Joy McConne lvstlle · Mr.
a nd .
Bruce E~low,
N
rt . M
, d M .

:c:,.c:-

D·

i,S

"'-'" \

'

shatter if they fa ll onto a

the o u tdoors wh en th e

.._ · Cherri Riggins of Jjttle Hock· to keep hi~ from cry.'n11:
• .· . ing, Mr. and Mrs . George Rue tho child " often RIVen
).........,..~

r_Oi,.i_l\:~ ~

[

'

or becauae durin(l the early
part of your hfe you were
trained to uoe it?
'
Acc o r ding ' to hea lt h
authorities . many of our
eat1n11 hab1ta are not ao
much • pr: ference u they
are an add•cllon-ment,"l ~
well OS ph y11cal. Th11 II
especiallY.. true of eatinll
sweeu.
·
If we look at it from •
psycho1o(liCal baaia, modern
society often dioplaya love
and recognition to a child

Yo u do n 't have to be o n
t he o uts w ith elegance just
be c a use yo u ' re din i n g
o utdoors .
Presen t -day pati os are as
well-planned as any o ther
part of th e house-but with
a breezy style all t hei.r own .
T o set u p an ou t d oo r
supper, you might start with
a sleek set o f brunch ta ble,
c h a ir s a nd tea t a bl e in
t h e M arra k es h st yle from
Tr o pit o n e t h at co mbinCs
the myate ry o f the past with
· the vit ality o f today 's good
living.
To ma ny , the tab le tops
are the real hit of t his suite .
Th ey l oo k lik e e legan t
hammered glaS$, but t hey 're
rea ll y of ac r y l ic c_a s t
Aery lite®sheet fro m cv f R O
INDUSTR IES with 1 5 to 2 0
times the impac t stre ngth o f
hamme red glass.
Other ways to pretty up
yo ur pat io in clude e legant ,
up ·to· th e· minut e . aCryli c
hangin g planters . They improve the patiQ's ai ry atmo7'
sphe!"'! and loo k dPiightfully

c an b e used t o e nhance

~
WoWrloffi.
Me.Toni,
'"" •~•
' ••&lt;n&lt;&gt;
. "Mrs.""·Loyd
Lipps and
pacifier -ia often"sweetened

aa•tlO

~\l. ~ .

Portla~d Yc?u~.!~!;;~e..:~e":tb;:::~

U

oRS

&lt;=fR\GtRI'"'
• Rl.
·S
•u

~lint

Mr
Birch of
l'Ciebraled. 'hiS. ~4th b!rthda~
I ~ (Ill Aug. 20 at hos home Will) a
I . family potluck dinner . .
Born Au~. 20, 1894 in Mei~sCounty, Btrch has spent hts
_.,.) entire life here. He is the last
of a family of seven children.
His daughter Leota Birch
.
and a great-granddaughter,
· D1ana Rue , also celebrate&lt;)
~ ~le!r Aug. 3 birthdays at the
1
family gathenng.
~
. . Others attending were Mr.
· . and Mrs. Thomas Btrch alld

J\
·,', .

unusl:
T[UIC'Sl\MGnu ''-

, .~·

t~~~r.:':rJ·. :

Let 's have an
elegant barbecue

3, Michael Norton, Minersvile
Relatives and friends of Molly and Amy: the Rev. and and Betsy Farrar, Chester.
La rry Fisher and Rhonda Mrs. David Harris and
others at the wedding were
Roush were in Charleston, W. Nathan ~ Tim Thoren, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Shields,
Va . fur their ret't'nt marriage I.ee Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mrs. Bertha Robinson.- Mr.
at tile Trinity Methodist Beegle, Zane and Tracy, Mrs. ·ami Mrs. Harold G. Roush,
Kay Warden, Bryan, Lori and
Church there.
Cindy,
Bunni McGraw, all of Rev. Florence Smith, Mr. and
Gomg for the rehearsal din·
ner a.l. the Holiday Inn at Racine; Mr. and Mrs. John Mrs. Jerry . Johnson , Della,
Michelle and JeMifel', Mr.
Charleston and the wedding Fisher, J r., Pomeroy, Route and
Mrs . Andrew Cr088, Mr.
were Bonnie Marlene Fisher,
and Mrs. Pete Thoren and
Eric, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. David Hill

2/$1

CRISCO
3 LB.

$169

W(C

Limit I Per CustomerqQ&gt;t
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
26, 1978

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Aug. 26, 1978

=-=-=

·PEANUT BUTTER
~ OZ. $199 W/C
1

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Aug . 26, 1978

I

�•

'.
10 _ Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Wednellday., Aug. 23, 197B '

''Art of Living'' is theme! Social .
l Calendar
for Methodist
Women
.
·'Tbe Art of Uving" was

program theme at therecent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Forest Run Church held at
the church with Mrs. John
&amp;:ott and Mrs. Kerns Roush,
hostesses.
Mrs. Vernal Blackwood
presented the program using
a worship center which con·
s1ste¢ of a poster, ··TI)e Art of
U1e

a

'

Uving",
family heirloom
Bible, an 1870 Methodist
Hymnal, a stereoscope, and a
wise owl. &amp;:ripture was taken
from ProverbS 31. Mrs.
• Blackwood stressed the many
ways the art of living applies
to our homes and especially
to.lhe homemaker who needs
close con tad with God.
Articles pertaining to the
theme were read by · Mrs.

Miller reunion
held at Forest Acres
Descenda nts of George and
Na ncy Miller gathered at
Forest Acrea Park recently
for a famil.v rf' nnion .

silodium·

class ring
sole

$5·495
·

save

20%
CHOICE
OF FREE
CUSTOM
FEATURES

11 1'111 ~ til l\ ,I\ I .lt hl ~· · t .Ill \
,,1 r h~ ,, , '''''m ' 1:..rur. ' .. u
'"''' -.. ,l,,,h lllll II Ill!

, &gt;~t•

J, ,,,

I'''',

... ... ~,
l(~"t'
w-•. 11 0"" 01 11X1'1

l &lt;~t 1 d t i '

~ .. ~,

-"""

nomo

oorno"'''

R ecog nized
and
presene&lt;lgifts were Helen
Miller, Middleport, the oldest
family member; Tad Reed,
Lancaster. the yoWlgest; Mr.
and Mrs. John Michael, Mt.
Prospect, Ill, the family
traveling the farthest; and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Miller,
Middleport ; the couple
closest to their 50th wedding
annirsary .
Attending the reWlion were
Mrs. Helen Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. James Reed, Mrs. Dan·
ny Bnckles, Paul and Peter,
Mr. and· Mrs. Ronald Miller,
Nancy Beaver, Mr·. and Mrs.
David Bumgardner, Bruce
Bumgardner, Cindy Thompson, Middleport ; Mr. and
Mrs. Conrad Ohlinger, Naomi
and Kathryn, Harry Miller,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
J ewell, Tony and Randy, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Davis and
Bridgett, Joyce Miller,
Marion Crawford , Edna
Slusher, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Elwood Bowers, Mr.
and Mrs: Ed Venoy, Craig
and Kevin, Chester ; Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Miller, Icy Miller,
Syra.cuse; George Miller, Mr.
and Mrs. David Reed and
Tad, Lancaster; Lucy Glenn,
Evelyn Fricke!. Eugene
Glenn , Pataskala; Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Miller, Bever·
ly ; Mr. and Mrs. Mi chael Ohlinger, Albany ; Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Rubel Hillsdale,
Mich.; June, Patty, Helen,
Mickey, and Scott Glaze, Col·
umbus; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Zalusky and Mr. and Mrs.
James Zalusky, Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. John Michael,
I J'.ra and &amp;:ott, Mt. Prospect.lll .

· sfated
Hymn stng

JOHN
ROBERTS
•
CLASSRINGS

.

.
.
An outdoor hymn smg wtU
~ ~~d at the home of Bob
and Karen Brown at 6:30p.m.
on Saturday . night. The
Brown home IS located on
CoWlty Road 45 off of County
Road 1 at Salem Center.
Smgers are welcome.

Another
:c omforting idea
:f rom

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Roush, Mrs. John &amp;:ott, Mrs. Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
Henry Salser, and Mrs. Edith
SOUTHETtN Junior High
Sisson. The program conclud· Athletic Boosters, 7:30 p.m.
ed with the song, ''I Would he Wednesday at junior high
True" followed by prayer by building . Parents of all
the leader. El1l)ll Roush had seventh and eighth grade
a thought from the book of girls and boys playing sports
Proverbs.
asked to attend.
A thank you card was read
AMERICAN LEGION Aux·
from Helen Baer for a
Uiary,
Feeney-Bennett Post
remembrance during .her .re128, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
cent hospiU.lization. The an· (tonight) at the hall.
nual meeting to be held at
AMERICAN
LEGION,
The Plains United Methodist
Feeney-Bennett
Postl28,
7:30
Church on Sept. 17 was
p.m.
Wednesday
(tonight)
at
discussed . · The' nominating
the
hall.
committee consisting of Mrs.
THURSDAY
Edison Hollon, Mrs. Henry
TWIN
CITY Shrlnettes
Salser, and Mrs. Sisson will
·
Club
will
meet Thursday at
present nominations for of·
the
home
ol Mrs. Clara
fkers .at the next meeting.
Adams,
Racine.
Twenty siok and shutin visits
SOUTHERN
Athletic
were reported · by the
Boosteri
Thursday
8
p.m. at
members. The treuurer's
high
school.
All
parents
are
report was read.
Refreshments were served urged to attend.
WESTERN Square Dance,
by the hostesses to those
named and Mrs. Hanson · 8 p.m. at Royal Oak Park
Holler, Mrs. Denver Holter, with Dewey Hart calling;
Mrs. Vernon Nease, Mrs. Western square dancers
Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Harry invited.
ALL BOYS interested in
Wyatt and Mrs. Russ Watson.
playing football at Meigs

Miss Marylou Mills is .
honored guest at shower
Marylu Mills, bride-elect of.
Jeff Riley, was honored
Thursday with a bridal
shower given by Mrs. Jane
Morris and Mrs. Sue Schwarz
allhe Mason Fire Hall. ·
A lavender and pink color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations. A cake
decorated with pink roses ·
was served with pW1Ch, mints
and nuts . Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs.
Nora Mills and Ms. Guyla
Roush.
Others attending were Mrs.
Coral Alexander and Jen·
niter, Mrs, Sally Bland, Mrs.
Patty Roush, Mrs. Hattie
Fischer, Mrs. Dorothy
&amp;:hwarz, Mrs. Gladys Riley,

is held at Racine Locks
The descendants of the late
Hiram and Sarah Rollins
enjoyed a family reunion on
Sunday, August 6, at the
Racine wcks picnic area.
The Program Committee,
Kathryn Blessing Mary
Grimm, Mat\ford Blessing,
had planned a short program
before the noon hour. It began
with prayer by Rev. Baxter,
Vatherine Rollins and .the
president gave a few
remarks. This is the sixth
year for the reunion since it
was restarted Sept. 2, 1973, at
the homeplace where the
Kenneth Rollins family now
owns and resides.
The program included a
song by the group, "0 Happy

.
.

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
•

I

Mrs. Martha Mayer, .Mrs.
Ruth Ehersbach, Mrs. Erma
Turnbull, Mrs. Naomi Riley,
and Mrs. Joyce Mills.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Carrie Ross, Ms. Rose
Williamson, Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Riley , Mrs. Norina
Riggs, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Dill, Mrs. Betty Toney, Mrs.
Glenna Riebal, Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Morris, Mrs. Irene
Hendericks, Mrs. Alma
Riggs, Miss Ruth Mcintosh,
Miss Elizabeth Mcintosh, Mr.
and Mrs . Rex White, Mrs.
Lucy Chips, Mrs. Pal Mills,
Ms. Cindy Mills, and Mrs. Pal
Winebrenner.

The Rollins reunion

Day.' ' Poems were read,
"Why God Made Lit·
tie Girls, "
by Ali ce
Ex tra eye let fur more
Brinker and "Why God
secure fit .
Made Little Boys," by
Nathan Rollins ; song by
group "America"; '"tO Years
Ago, " by Hiram F. Blaine,
and "God Created wve," by
Rachel and Amy Grimm ;
song " Battle Hymn of the
Republic."
Officers elected for the
coming year were : president,
Hiram F. Blaine ; vice
president, Catherine Rollins;
secretary · treasurer, Clara
Capehart; program comyour foot .
mittee, Manford Bless ing ,
Mary Grimm , Kathryn
Blessing. A hountiful meal
was enjoyed by all .
' ng -wearing nlttocrepe to le .
The oldest living descen·
dant of Hiram N. and Sarah
Rollins to attend the reunion
Scholl casuals _. . . comfort by the foo was W. J. Rollins of Letilrt .
r-T&gt;-r-ro-rT-ro-~-r~ He will be 92 years of age
11
"" 1 1"' • . ...
•
, .. •o ••
Sept. 29. Traveling the
' "
•
•
longest distance was An·
•
•
"'
In Town;
f-.,++ ++++-+-,+-.+-,+-H-,+,-1 nabelle (Pauley) Polen, of
1-:-,.,.1.HHHH-cf-:-,b,t-,-+,-+.-+++,-1 Placentia, Califomla, great·
, Brown Calf
granddaughter of Mr. and
•
• •
•
All size s mav
•
Mrs. Hiram N. Rollins . The
not be in stock
•
•
•
•
youngest
descendant was
but
ar, e
..
•
•
Mary Grimm (five months ),
available
on
request .
• •
daughter of Mr. ancl Mrs.
Bert Grimm, Jr ., from
"
• • •
Huntington, W. Va., a great •
Other Styles now in Stock - Dress - Ties,
great· granddaughter of Mr.
Leather Soles and Round-abouts. Black,
and Mrs. Hiram N. Rollins.
Brown, Camel. Taupe and Navy .
The Rollins family plans to
meet
the first SWlday in
Priced '26.99 to '44.99
August 1979 at the Racine
Locks picnic area for their
nex! reunion. Attending
were : Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
"Middle Upper Block"
Blaine, A~ron , Ohio ; Jackie
9 a.m..s p.m.
Pomeroy, 0 .
(Blaine) Humphrey and
Mon . thru Thurs . &amp; Sat.
Betty,
HudS&lt;ln, Ohio; Ronald
9 a .m..ap.m . Fr i.
Blaine, Stevensville. Pa.; Mr.
Closed Sunday
and Mrs. (dike lll.,..sinll and
r

.11 - The Daily Sentinel, MlckDeport-Pomeroy, o., Wednellday, AuR. 23, 1978

---------

(

Aaron, Sissonsville, W. Va.;
Lewis Blessing, Groveport,
Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs. Okey
Capehart, Linda Louise, Joe,
Eddie
and
Mechelle,
Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Polen, Placentia,
Calif.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence
Winebrenner,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Knapp,
Tommy
and
Christopher, Letart; James
Pauley, Diamond and Plain
City; Mr. and Mrs. Hilton
(Joe ) Rollins and Carl Un·
derwood, Dryden, N. Y.;
Helen Martin, Usa and Anne,
Jessi'e
Tetrick,
Allen
Capehart, Mannington, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Webster
Pauley, Letart; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Winebrenner, wls,
James and Kenny, Plain City.
Mr. and Mrs. Manford
Blessing, Pl. Pleasant ; Mr.
and Mrs. Hiram F . Blaine,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Blaine,
Jr ., North Canton ; Mr. and
Mr~ . Bert Rollins, Capron,
Ill. ; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rollins,
Amy and Kara, Belvidere,
m.; Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Rollins, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Moore and Chris, GaWpolis;
Florence Grinun, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brinker
and Bill , Goldie Rollins,
Linda Meadows, Julie, Jonl
and Jenny Clark, David Ray
Barker, Wilbur S. Baxter,
Let an ; Sharon Brinker,
Vienna, W. Va.; Maggie and
Gordon · Winebrenner,
Syracuse, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs.
Hoben Taylor, Pt. Pleasant ;
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Rollins,
W. J . (Bill) Rollins, Kall\ryn
Blessing , Clara Capehart,
Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth
Rollins, John and Nancy, Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Winebrenner,
Harry Klingensmith, Sharon
(Rollins ) Coates, Letart ;
George Rollins, Elgin, Ill.,
Chad and Kristie Rollins,
Muncie, Ind.; Mr.- and Mrs.
Paul Williams, Sherri and
Paula, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
Karl Owens, Middleport ;
Mr. and
Mrs.
Bert
Grimm, Pt. Pleasant, w.
Va.;
Mr_. and
Mrs.
Bert Grimm, Jr ., Ra·
chel and Amy and Mary,
Huntington. W. Va .
Stanley Shields, Holloway,
Ohio; Mrs. Curt (Ruth )
Rollins, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Rollins , Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dollison, Atwater, Ohio ; Mr.
and Mr s . Dave Ogilvie,
wndr.n. o~;.. .

Friendly Circle of Trinity
establiskes pantry ·offoodi

.

dueled the business meeUng
with Mrs. Leonard Russ,
Cleveland, houseguest of
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs.
Genevieve Mein,hart, being
welcomed.
Notes of appreciation were
read from Mrs. Dorothy
Woodard and Mrs. Betty
Whitlatch. A card was signed
for Mrs. Roy Mayer. Mrs.
Geraldine YOW1g reported on
church
members
remembered since the JWle
meeting. There was also a
report on bask et and
cookbook ~les !llllde.
Mrs. Kenneth Harris and
Mrs. Leonard Jewell served a
dessert course.

meetings so that a· supply
base can be esU.blished.
Miss Mary E. Chapman
presented the program from
the study book, " When You
Have Aspirations" based on
Psalm 71. "The urge to
achieve the be.st In life is a
lifelong challenge", said Miss
TRUSTEES of Co!UIIlbla Chapman who talked of the
To~Y~~ship will meet in special God;Pven power which lies
session Saturday at 6 p.m. at . within each one to achieve a
the township building.
. 110111. Accompllslunents are
ICE CREAM SOCIAL at not made without effort and
Bashan Fire House, county enthualam, she said. Tbe proroa d 28 , Saturda y 6 :30 p.m. gram leader read, "The lrn·d
Bring own containers for . parlance ofsmall things': an
carryout. Sponsored by the this was followed by a unison
Bashan Fire Department and prayer·
"· ·
Krista Heaton celebrated auxiliary.
Miss Elizabeth Fick con·
her fifth birthday recently
CHICKEN DINNER by the
with a party at the home of Constant Builders Class at
her grandparents, Mr. and the Racine Wesleyan United
Mrs. James Heaton.
Methodist Church, 5 to 7 p.m.
A "&amp;:ooby-doo" cake was Saturday. Tickets may be
baked by her grandmother purchased from any clua
and decorated by Miss Bon· members or reservations
nie Dietz. Besides her made by calling 949-2671 or
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David .949-2789.
Heaton, and her grand·
SUNDAY
parents, others attending
HOMECOMING Sunday at
were her sister, Trisha, Miss Chester Church of God.
Dietz, and Miss Sharon , Basket dinner at noon. ·Af.
Frank. Seoding gifts were temoon services at I :30 p.m.
Mr . and Mrs . James The Rev. Bertha Kingery,
Start at
Broderick and Jainie and former pastor, gue.t speaker.
Mrs. Margaret Heaton, Special singing by Soul
Other Machines
Krista'sgreat-grandmother. Seekers. Rev. Donald Combs
Start at $19.95
pastor. Public invited.
McELROY FAMILY
Junior High are to meet at the reunion at the Portland Park
stadium in Middleport Thurs- Sunday with a basket dinner
day at 7 p.m.
at 12 :30 p.m.
•
GAWA • .MEIGS Com·
HOMECOMING AT North
munity Action Agency will Bethel United Methodist
hold its free clothing day for Church Sunday; Sunday
low income persons on Thurs- school, 9:30 a.m.; worship at
day from 9 a.m. Wltil noon. II; basket dinner at noon .
The agency clothing bank is Afternoon worship and hymn
BACK TO SCHOOL
located in the old high school sing with lots of special
boijding in Cheshire.
FALL FABRICS
singing, beginning at 1 p.m.
THE SOUTHERN Athletic Public Invited.
Boosters will meet Thursday ALL NEW students tlils fall
at 8 p.m. at the high school. at Meigs High School, grades
All parents are urged to at· 9 through 12, should report
tend.
from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. this
Pomeroy,
SATURDAY
week or next to schooi office
THE
BOARD
OF to he registered.
A pantry of canned foods
and non-perishable articles
will be established by Friend·
ly Circle of Trinity Church.
Meeting recently . at lhe
church, members approved
the new projel'l and agreed to
U.ke pantry itelllll to the

Krista Heaton
turns five

. USED
SCHOOL
SEWING
MACHINES
•4995

lliE FABRIC SHOP

Slcond St..

Conclave
plans
.
.
are progressmg

0.

~,---------------------~--~

......

WHAT 1/ THE FA/TE/T
:THinG In THI/ AREA?

.

'

CLEVI!:LAND (UP1) Cuyahoga CoWlty Republican
Party Chai~man Robert
Hughes ssid Wednesday he is
pushing former U.S. Sen. and
U.S. Attorney General
William B. Saxbe for chief
justice of the Ohio Silpreme

concelebfate mass, the first
time this has been done In a
conclave since the ..-actlce of
.
concelebration
was Court.
"
He
stands
head
and shoul·
intrbduced
by . the
ders
above
anyone
e~ .. the
Ecumenical Council In 1963. .
governor could nominate,"
Hughes said.
Ohio'~ Repu_
bllcan Gov.
James A. Rhodes will have to
name a successor to Chief
JuStice C. William O'Neill,
who died Sunday of a heart
attack. O'Neill was buried
Tuesday in- Marietta.
A memorial s,ervlce was
planned for tonight in Colum-

POLLY"S POINTERS'

DEAR POLLY - My problem t'Oncerns removing oil
spots from our cement
driveway. The few things I
have tried did not work. TONI
DEAR TONI - I have
known of fresh oil spots being
removed by spreading dry ce·
man.~~
Old church laws forbidding ment over them. Or yoil
any Roman Catholic from might try pulling one-fourth
joining the freemasons under poWld trisodium phosphate in
pain of excommunication a gallon of hot water. Add a
have been virtually scrapped, rather generous amount of
but the European Grand scouring powder, slir "Well
Orient Lodge form of and apply to the spots with a
masonry is still considered stiff brush. Rub and scrub
anti-catholic and atheistic. and they should disappear.
The Rome newspaper II Older stains would require a
Messaggero also said stronger solution of the same
"dossiers meant to torpedo a ingredienls and it should he
given papabUe" have been left on for a while. Rinse off
quietly
distributed
to well with the hose. Trisodium
cardinals. It said "two or phosphate can be bought at
three of them, aimed at tile hardware . or paint supply
leading candidates, have stores.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY and Joy - It
been circulating in recent
is
reasonably simple to
days." .
remove
streaks of paint from
Bagglo and Plgnedoli have
concrete.
Use paint thinner
been mentioned for some
and
steel
wool
or a mesh pot
time as leading candidates to
cleaner
to
rub
the paint off.
aucceed Pope Paul VI, who
This
works
great.
died of a heart attack Aug. 6
Did you know that an ice
at age 80.
cuhe
put in the liquid to be us·
The 12th dally meeting of
ed
for
gravy will remove all
cardinals today decided to
fat' ~ MRS.
the
unwanted
hold four voles a day during
E.G.
the conclave, two In "'..-ntngs
DEAR POLLY - I recOIIl·
Far Thurodoy, Aug. 2C
mend that overweight ladies
··
·
.
.
" buY · mtilernity ~N~_ntyhose,
because they have lots ol
stomach and backs1de room.
Bernice Bede Osol · . To remove chocolate stllins
from clothing I rub with
warm water and mild soap

Sax6e, 62, has largely
stayed out of poltics since
suds and follow this with a resigning
as
U.S.
light rubbing with cleaning Ambassador to India in
fluid. · For non-chocolate December 1976. He would nOt
stains 1 use very hot wa!er (if rule out taking the chief
the fabric can take it) and justice's job, but made it
then rub lightly with a mild clear he , isn't overly
soap solution .. - MINNIE
interested.
DEAR POLLy- Whenever
" I doo't think I've got the
I buy a pillow or blanket that ~lienee to be a judge;" he
comes in a large plastic
d.
bag.or envelope 1 carefully
Hughes said he was
remove the article and save pushing Saxbe because he
the ·bag. They are great for believes him to be the
carrying large pieces of knit· Republican with the best
ling or crocheting.
chance of winning. Saxbc has
1 took one such bag, cut the not lost a statewide race since
end off and stitched the tube 1958, when he was defeated
of plastic to an.old bath towel. for state attorney general.
Now 1 have a nice bed pad to
He was elected attorney
put Wlder my small grand· general in 1962, re-elected in
children who may have ac· 1986 and elected to the U.S.
cidents in their sleep. - Senate in 1968.
EVELYN
Saxbe chose not to seek re·
DEAR POLLY- A favorite · election in 1974. Shortly after
photograph was accidentally his decision. then-President
dropped in some water. 1 Richard Nixon named him
dis&lt;.-overed that after lightly U.S. Attorney General.
rubbing it with pet~olewn jel- Former President Gerald
· ·
ly, Iettmg
tt set for a bo ut f 1ve Ford
Ambassadornamed
to !n'clia. him
minutes and then buffing with
a facial tissue it looked
perfect again . -SUE .
The Grand Duchy of Lux·
· Polly will send you one of
.
emhourg
has a population of
her signed thank-you
.
350,000
and
a total area of 999
newspaper coupoo clippers if
'square
miles.
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem,in
her column. Write POLLY'S
LAFF- A- DAY
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

.

It behooves you this coming

Darwin ,

c
part
German
Shephard dog . Friendly . Phone

9'12·5019.

iJ.J

-~-- ~ - -='WI'

---

•

··A gal who iust read a

great
sale ad
.
.

• •••
1n

THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY,O.
PHONE 992-2156
I

'

JoH75·W11 .

COUNTY ' MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The followhtg doc uments
.able contacts can be made to
were prepared by The Ohio
further your self-i nterests .
Environmental
Protect ion
Aoencv during tht previous
VIRGO (Aug. 21-Stpl. 221 Lady
OF FIDUCIARY
week . The effect ive date of
On August lB, 1978, In the
Luck is supportive of you today
in activities wh ere you put all Meigs County Probate Court. each f inal ac11on Is stated .
The Issuance date of ea ch
your cards out on the tabl e. Case No . 12,456, Richard Lee proposed
action i s stated .
1013 M i llerton
Play everyihlng fa ce up and Williams.
Anyone aggrieved or ad ·
Dr i ve , Centerville, OH 45459
reap the benefits . Having trou - was
verselv affected by a tin"'l
eppolnted Executor of
ble selecting a career? S!!t nd the estate of Alice Lou ise action to issue. deny, modify ,
for your COPY. of Astra-Graph W i lliams Parker , deceased , revoke , or renew a permlf ,
Letter by ma1ling 50 ce nts for late of Salem Street , Rutland , l icen.se. or variance ; or to
ea c h and a long . se l l · Ohio .
approve or d isapprove plans
and speclflcetions, may tile
Mann ino o . Webster
addres sed, stamped envelope
an appeal with The En ·
. Probate Judge .cterk
to Astro -Graph, P.O. Box 489 ,
vironmental
Board
of
Radio Cily Slalion, N.Y. 10019 . 18! 23, 30 (9! 6, 31c
Review , Suite 305, 395 E .
Be sure to spec i f~ birth sign .
Broad St. , Columbus . Oh io
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) CondiA3216. within thirty (301 days
PUBLIC NO"riCE
tions look very fonunate today ,
of the effective date, pur ·
Sealed bids will be received
but not solely through ~our
suant to OhiO Revlstd Code
by
the
Village
of
Middleport
,
own efforts . A joint ven ture
Section 3145 .07 , unless such
Ohio
,
Meigs
County,
at
the
could prove a big winner.
final action was prec;eded by
Village
HaiL
237
Ra
ce
Street
,
SCORPIO (Oct. 2C-Nov. 22) lm· Middleport , Ohio u nt il 4 : 00 the same or substanrlally the
same prorosed action . All
portant decisions today shoUld
P .M . August 23, 1978 for the
such tina actions are so
be predicated upon their long· following equipment :
Identified . Such persons may
range effects . The more farOne Tractor - loader . request an adjud ic ation
of
single hearing before The OhiO EPA
seeing ~ou are . the greater th·e, backhl?e,
manufa cturer origin, based
future benellts .
on a proposed act ion to Issue,
the
follow _lng
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21-0ec. on
deny, modify , re-voke , or
spec
lflcatlons
:
!1) This is a good doy to bring
renew a permit, license, or
Engine : Oieset , 50 to 60 net
to ~our bos s's attention the horsepower
variance; or to approve or
plans
and
fine job you 've been doing . If
Electr ical system : 12 volt , disapprove
specifications , wifhln thirty
your work warrants it , a raise or heavy duty ·alternator an(!l
(30) days of the Issuance
bonus may be In the cards .
heavy duty battery .
date . ORC 3HS .07 does not
CAPRICORN IDee. ZZ·Jon. II)
Cooling System : hellvy
provide for adludlc&amp;tlon
A social contact could prove du ty .
hearing requests or appeals
Transminlon : torque
very beneficial for you today ,
on orders. ver i fied com ·
converter
type
.
provided you let her tell you
enforcement
Differential : locking type . pla i nts. or
what she wants to without
compliance schedule letters .
Tires : {lrontl at least 10
aal&lt;lng her too many questions .
W ithin JO days of publication
, 11.00·16 or eQuivalent ;
in a newspaper in lhe effected
AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. 11) pty
(rear) at lent I ply, 16.9-24 or
any person .may also :
You have the necessary stay- equivalent .
. county,
( 1) submit written comments
Ing power today to bring victory
Loader : .4,400 to 5,000 lb. lift
relating to acfions , proposed
in the final analysis . Your lucl&lt; capacity ; .15 to 1.00 cubic
actions , verif ied complaints ,
yard
Sae
heaped)
capacltlj
;
growa stronger IS the clock
or enforcement compliance
self leveling bucket with
ticks on .
schedule lttters ; {2) request
to diO ctapablllly .
PISCES (Feb. lt-Morch 20) Oth· return
a public l"fleetlng regarding
Backhoe : at least 14ft.; 24
ers will happ ily do your bidding Inch
proposed elctlons; and -or U J
duty trenching
today II you llrsl set a good bucketheavy
request notice of fu~ther
; one set each ot
example, rather than Issuing standard, cemettry and
actions or proceedings . All
requests for adJudicat ion
direct orders. A pic ture Is s treet pads ; adjustable ,
hearings
and
pub li C
~Worth a thouund words .
padded seat .
meetings , and other com ·
ARIES (Morch ZI·Aprll 11) In
Safety accessorln : power
c oncernin-g
· your flnonclol dealings today, steering; emergency hand or municatlons
public meetings,, adludlceUon
keep the big picture In mind . foot brake ; seat belt ; heari"gs,
verified
com .
Vou .may have to spread a little IIIUmln•ted gauoes ;
p tai nh , and regulations ,
hydraulic
warning
light
or
seed money to ga in a bountiful
should be addressed to The
gauge ; modular safety cab
harvest .
Lega l Records Section , Oh i o
with w ipers , heater , with and
TAURUS (April 211-Moy 20) You without 11r ·conditioning; EPA , P . 0 . Bow. 1049 ,
will win odmlrollon todoy by horn , front and rear turn Columbus ,' Ohlo 43216 ; (614 )
behoving nobly where others signals , headlights. brake .t66 ·60l7 . Unless otherwise
stat!d In particular not i ces,
are petty . You re big because light or IIQI'Its. two -way
all other communications
flashtrs, front and rear
you think big.
Inc luding
comments on
OEIIINI (lloy 11-June zt) Huty working llghta,· nver1e propoud
Itt ions . should ' be
conclualona could leod you wernlng system, slow vthlcle address•d
elther to._ht Air
,
Utror todoy . A condition tho! sign
Permits and Compliance
All
blcts
should
include
a
migh appe1r unrewarding at
Monitor i ng Provis i on of '
caah price and a price for
llrol glonct will provo lo be cesh
P•rmlt end Approval Section ,
wlth allowance for the
, e•tremely lucky lor you .
whlchev•r Is epproprlat•. at
purchlilt by tht iuccusful
CANCER (June 11·July H) bidder of a 1967 lnternetlonal The OhiO EPA , P . 0 . .Bo•
You 're enloylblo to be around Tractor -Loader with backhoe 1049, Columbus. OhiO 43~16 .
l'roroud Issuance of
· trdiJ, bu( you're not likely to No . 5199-3121 a1 provided by
to Install
be too generouo . Bring your Section. 721 ·15 of the Ohio permi
Wl-! lte Rock Coel company
whole being Into lint by grvlng RtYiltd COde .
Sutton Twp ., Ohio , lasue
Tnt VIllage retains the
· materllllly ae well.
1
to rtltct any anci an . pate 08· 14: 11
LIO CJIIIJ 11-Aut.
Unleu right
Faciltry
description :
the olakll are ou olantllll bldt.
wastewarrr
' you're not apl to pul forth
Applicaflon No . 06·421
Vlllogo
of
·
. mulmum eHort todoy . Whare
Coal Dr ift Mine Leadoul
Middleport
the returno ore high , y,ou come
F•cllities, Mine No . 1.
Gin• Grete .
through like a chomp on .
•
Clerk ·Trta•urer
tNEWI,APER IENl£RPRIIl AIIN .)
&lt;11 9, 16, 23, Jrc
· Ct. 23. lie
year to tak e an acliYe role in
organizations or clubs . Vat u ~

Hb

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'

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'

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....

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era

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STAR WARS NOTEBOOKS
89~

60 COUNT

30 Count

35~
PENCIL
SHARPENERS

MEAD NOTEBOOKS
200 COUNT

s~
Oiamonda are forever.

Sadly, their mountings
aren 't. Bring In your old
diamond jewelry. Whether
you have a single diamond
or a number or diamonds,

we'll help you find now

MEAD NOTEBOOKS
120 COUNT

BAll POINT ·
PENS

'129

beauty and new meaning
tor each one . Ail surpris·

2/25~

lngly effordabltl!J. prloe.
Many remount styles
to choose from

· Candy's Classic
Collections ·
Ingels Furniture
•Middleport, Oh.
"Two In Oat" Store

I

"Two Con'!enient Locations to Better Serve You"

271 NORTH SECOND
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

M2-5759

•'
•

.

25~
60

'·,,

L-----------------------------------------~1~·' :•

Blue Horse

200 SHEETS

~

for

ART PAPER

20~

FILlER
PAPER............

~

·~

w

22 Sheets
Pkg .

•

30 Sheets

NOTEBOOK
FILLER

3

•

TYPEWRITER PAPER

WRITE-RIGHT

'1\bv fasJiion /Qr)oo

Let II§

-...
*

treasured jewelry. ..

•

....
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•

Baclcta

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During .
, Private Sale
'1\bv lifo for your

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19e
20%

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FOUND AT Edson Hart residence .

BLACK , BROWN and whole
.....
.tn
beagle, mole . NtHtds medica- '--A~I"'
I "'h=='-'C.=d'-::1'-~-,'.g=
uon with small hernia . In "
t ose oppose p ease 51 Racine area . large reword . ni(y by saying 'I quit ' . "

Augutt ZC, 1171

the judge kiUed Saturday night"- were to be played at a
bond hearing today .
Eidson was not injured and posed "in the trunk of a car
for a photograph that McCrory showed Davis to indicate
the judge was dead.
McCrory Tuesday testified thai in June Davis said he
wanted 15 people killl'rl, Including his estranged wife,
Priscilla, and witnesses in his 26-week murder trial last
year.
Davis was acquitted in November 1977 of killing Mrs.
Davis' daughter, ,-\ndrea Wilborn, 12, in an Aug. 2, 1976,
shooting outburst at the $6 million mansion he vacated
when he sepatated from his wife four years ago.
Mrs. Davis and Gus Gavrel, a family friend McCrory
said Davis also wanted killed, were wounded in that1
attack and her lover, Stan Farr, was killed. Davis has ·
been free on bond on mw-der and assault charges from the
attacks.
McCrory, 40, said early this year Davis had sought to
have Gavrel's girlfriend, Beverly ~. who testified
Davis shot Gavrel, killed.
·

••
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• ,-A ..••

Blue Horse

ASTRO•GRAPH

PROBATE COURT0)0
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ALICE LOUISE
W I LLIAMS
PARKER ,
OECEASEO
Cllse No . 22 ,456
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

By STEVEN R. REED
FORT WORTH, Texas (UP!) - A.n employee and
confidant of T. CuUen Davis says he discounted the
millionaire's orders to arrange the slayings of 15 ~nemies
until Davis became impatient and threatened lo kill him
and "slaughter" his family if the slayings were not
carried out soon.
Prosecu[9rs seeking to bave Davis held without bond
played tape recordings Tuesday of a conversation
between David McCrory and the wealthy industrialist last
week, in which they diSCljSSed killing the judge in Davis' 4year-o1d divorce case.
Davis was arrested SWlday - a few minutes after
another meeting with McCrory in a restaurant parking lot
- for solicitation .of capital murder ill trying to arrange
the,mw-der of Judge Joe Ehmon. Found in his car were a
.22-i:aliber pistol and a homemade silencer. Davis also
was charged with possession of the silencer - a fed era l
offense.
Tapes of the Sunday conversation ·- in which Davis
allegedly gave McCrory $25,000for sup[iosedly having had

rus.

Polly Cramer

Driveway
won't wash

P,.,;secutors seek to have wealthy
industrialist held without bond

pushed

'

and two.in afternoons, with a
single white or black smoke
signal after each round of two
to tell the world a pope has or
has not been elected.
Before the morning round
of votin~. all cardinals will

By ERNEST SAKLER
VATICAN CITY (UP!)
Roman Catholic cardinals
shrugged oil reports of a
campalp
to
diacredlt
leading papal candidates and
went ahead today with
..-eparat!ons f..- the weekend
conclave to elect a successor
to Pope Paul VI.
Vatican officials and aides
to some of the Ill cardinals
expe~d to take part In the
lleCI'el conclave ·.said they
were unaware of attempts by
any group to sabotage some
of the leading candidates.
Tbe Milan newspaper Cor·
riere della Sera said
"poisonous biographies of
papabill (possible popes) are
circulating under
the
counter, Uke the clandestine
literature
of
Soviet
dissenters.''
It said one such tract
reiterated the oft-denied
allegation that Italian
Canlinal Sebastiano Bagglo
Is a freemason and another
described Cardinal Sergio
Plgnedoli as a "pomp-loving

Saxhe

'

309 FlnH STREn
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.

882-2005

�•
.

12-Tbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Wednelldav. AIW. 23. J97R

Want Ads Turn Unwan-t ed Items Into Cash
15 Wurds ur ur~r

OIL OR gas l&amp;ase. Free . 30 acres.
2 miles north at Pomero.,.
614·126-2701 even•ngs __ _

CK.!ih~-

Charg~

100
150
1.80
3.00

12&gt;
100

I day
2Jays
~dol) i

6days

CH IP
WOOD . Poles
max
d1ameter 10' on lar gest end SB
per ton Bundled slab . Sb per
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pollet
Co , Rt 2 Pomeroy 992·2b89

2.25

:J.75

E~:~~h wort.l over ~ mmunwn 15
wurtb ~ 4 l't'IIL'I pt'r word per day
Ads running otht!r lhHn t'ut_lSt'C'Ullve
t.lays MoJIJ bt: ~.: tulrg!l'd at 1'1w I day

TIMBER . POMEROY Forest Pro·
duc ts Top pnce for stand1ng
sow t1mber . Coll - 992-5905 or
Ken I Ho n by , 1 ·-44:~6:;:·8::::5::_
7::
0' - - -

"'"'·
In memory, CMrd of Thltnkli .. mJ
Olntu1:1ry 6 l'~ llts ~r word, S3 00
uunl.mwn Cll!ih m1:1dvwKe

OLD FURNITURE. tee boxes , brou
beds, tron bedt., desks. etc ,
comp le t e househo ld s. Wrtte
M 0. Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca11992· 77b(J

Mulnlt= Homl" sales and Y•rd !!ales

l:lft! IR'\.'~pl~ Ulli}' Wllh l'MSh wi th

unft&gt;r. 2S l"t!nl chllrge fur acb cw rrylng Box Nwnber In Qm: of Tht! St:nuneL

OLD COIN S, po&lt;~et watches ,
class r mgs weddmg bonds,
dtomonds. Gold or stlver Call
Roger Wamsley 7.42 ·2331

T~ Pubhsher_ r~n· ~ thto r1ght
tu rth l or r~/ t&gt;&lt;..11ml ads ~em~ ub-

197!) MONTE (ARLO. Block wtth
block .nterior, loaded, new
steel belted rodto ls , new bot ·
tery . Excellent condilton $3500
6 1&lt;1-59'1·5615 or 61 4·797 ·4604
The Plains
'
19?5 VEGA STATION wagon 4·
sp., new Mtchehns. AM radio .
{!6,000 m1les hcellent cond1 ·
lion . Great economy cor $1300 .
592·5615 o r 797 460A , The
Plains .

-----1965 MUSTANG CONVERTABLE .
992 5792 .

17 FOOT
1968 Yellowstone
camper . self confomed . good
cond~hon Also h1tch m1rror
e'l'err,thtng needed to hook
up,e ectrtc broke W2 -707A
1970

APACHE

Camper

Phone

tn.seruun.

self ·contomed . heel lent cond •·
lion 992· 7656

•ng Junk cars scrap 1ron bat teries and metals
Rtder's
Salvage , SR 1:14, Pome roy '
992 5468 .

Phone 992-21.16
.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

IF YOU ho ve o 5er'IIIC8 to offer
wont lo bu y or se ll som eth ing
ae look1ng for work
or
w hatever ... you'll get results
laster with o Sent1nel Wont Ad .
Coll992·215b

Munr.l&lt;~)

Noon on SatunJay

YAR D SALE , Sa turday and Sun·
day 2 rntles out on 14 3 Everett
McDon~el res!dence

Tut:J&gt;Ua)

UJ ru Fmlay
&lt;PM
Ult' day

YARD SAl E, Aug 21 thru the 24th
10 a. m. fil 5 p.m. 541 H•gh St
M1dd leport Ntce dr apes and
cloth 1ng and etc Reuben Co l·
liru

lltfor·e pu lli.Jel:lllu/1
Sun d 11~

· 4P M
Fridwy &lt;~ftemoon

IN LOVING Memory of Charles F
Buck Handley
No one heard the foots t eps
Of t he A ngels draw1ng near
When thev took from u s to
Hea ven
The one we loved so dear
No hands so sweet and gentle
No heart so kind and tr ue
No sorrow life could bnng us
Could equolloostng you
It w a s just three years ago
That God called you aw ay
And we wko loved you dearly
MISS you more each day
M•ssed by wife, Dortho and sons
Jock and Lorenza.
IN MEM ORY of my fath er Joe
Maples , who passed away so
suddenly August 23 1976
A heart of gold stopped beating
Two shming eyes at rest
God broke our heals to prove to

us
He on ly tokes the best
God kno ws why you hod to leo11e

us
But you didn t go alone
For port of us went wtth you
The dov he took you home
More and more we miss you
OUr fnends ma y thtn k the wound
has healed
L1ttle do they know the sorrow
Tho! hes withtn our hearTs con
ceo leO
Very deep ly m1ssed by daughters.
son · .n · low, and grondchtldren .
IN LOVING memory of our dear
mother Mary Eblm , who pa!S
ed owe.,; 6 years ago Augusi 23 .
What is home wt t hou t o mother?
A If th1ngs th1s world may send
But when we los t our mother
We lost our dearest fnend
The)l send lime heals ali son ow
And helps us to forget
But hme so for has ani-,. pr oven
How much we m1!1S ~fO~ yet
God knew she hod to leave us
But she d•dn't go al one
For part o f us went w1th her
The day he took her home
Sadly m •Hed by ch1ld r en Ed1th
Arf1e ,. Myrtle Model1ne and
grandch1ldren .

-

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Ventur e Cap ital
$50 ,000 up Start · up Bu y O ut
b:ponsion
Any worthwhtle
Protect Mr Hot! 214 3b8 -7b3S

3bll -15b9

ONE BEDROOM opt
Contact
Vi llage Manor Apt , M 1d·
dleport 9&lt;l2·77B7
~-

3 AND 4 RM furntshed and un·
fu r nished
opts
Phon e
992-5434 .

'2

YARD SALE. End of Spnng A"'e
be ~p de old Bloel!ner's Garage
Wed and Th ur§, Baby to adult
clothing , Lot of m•sc Playpen .

FURNIS HED 3 room apartment
Phone 9419 2253 alter 5 P_!"'__ _

YARD SALE , m progress Selhng
out App rox 1 mile west of
De~&lt;.ter o · CR 4. Starter house
plan ts and some Iorge plant s
Avon bott les. Curto.ns and
many other 1tems: School bus
Camper for sole Al l bu1 lt 1n
refrigerator . Sleeps 0 people .
YARD SALE Wed &amp; Thurs 9 til l 4
581 South 4th , Middleport

8EDROOM APARTM ENT fo r
ren t Coll 949 -2253 after 5 p m

ROOM AND BOARD f or.. one per.
son 1n Po rtland areo Coli
8-43·7514 .
APARTMENT avatloble for sleep·
tng quarters , room fur l or f our
men 10 mmutes f rom Moun·
ltoneer Plan! Hartford W Vo .
Phone 1·304 ·882·3356
SMAll HOUSE to e lder ly couple m
Mrddleporl A sk lor Morgarei
Hoher 949 2655

12 )( 60 1 BEDROOM MOBIL E
home , near Ro c•ne
Phone
992 -5858

8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMES, Pt. Plea
son! W Vo bes rd e He&lt;:k s
lARGE YARD Sole M tsc 1tems
1973 Broodmore 14 )( 6-4 2
Rutland Chur&lt;h of God Wed
bedroom
and Thu rs 910 4. Rom cancels
1973Dorion 14 xb(J:i' bedroom
RUMMAGJ:, S,ALE Firdoy , Augu .. t· 1972 V ictorton 14 )( 673 bedroom.
2 both
25 from 9-to 3 ot Sen tor (111zen s
Cen t e r ,
East
Ma i n
St ,', 1972 Cove ntry 17 x 65 3 bedroom
Pomeroy Good select1on of 1909 Stol esmon 17 )( 60 2
bedr oom
Chi ldren 's women's and men s
cloth.ng , plus 50me household COAL liMESTONE sand gro.... el
ort1cles
co lc 1um chlonde , lerh 1•zer , dog
PORCH SALE Frrdoy, August25 . 9
om to 4 pm Bedspread cur toms , children's clo thing coot s
etc 504 South J rd A ve . M id·
dleport
THURSDAY , FRIDA Y Sa turday .
Turn r~g h t ot Memory Gardens
turn nght at l si Intersection
second house Cloth•ng f ur·
ntture mi se .
YARD SAl E Thurs 209 S 4th St.
l o tsot clothes baby 1tems
toys , plenty of m1 sc. Something
__!,~yon ':.
CARPORT SALE Sbb S 4th St
M•ddleporl 23rd and 24th
YA RD SALE. Rom or sh•ne . Augu st
24 &amp; 25 . 7 to 5. Country M ob• le
Home Pork 1ust post Dorw1n
Follow stgn s. ~:2 770'2

--

THREE FAMIL Y Ya rd Sole Thurs
and Fn Carpet, AM FM rod1 0
household •tem!o leona rd Bo ss ,
~~ Syr ocus.!_9?.3.~
PORCH SA LE Thuts . 2-4th Nrce
h ow~e plants seve r al p1e ces of
ont1que fur niture glassware .
cloth ing b6(J H1gh Sl , M1 d
dlepon .

food . end oi l types of salt . Ex
ce lsio r Salt Works , Inc. , E Mom
5t . Pomeroy 992 -3891
BURR O UGHS SEN SI-MATIC oc·
Phone
co unt •ng moc h1n e
992 21 SO. The Dotly Sentmel
111 Co urt Street Pomeroy
Oh10

-

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1 SHOP MAN I counte rman · Con
ta ct M otor Porh Co
I 57
Walnut St Mtddlepor t. Oh•o

--

WANfEO BABY

-

SITTER 1n Mtd
dleport for pres chool chdd
wh i le
mo ther
tea c hes
r/92 ·'2917

WORK
OV ER SEAS
Aust ralia
A l oco South Amer~ c a . Europe .
et c
Cons fr uct •on
Sole!.
Engmeer '&gt; , Cle n col etc
to SSO .OOO plus E)(penses pard .
For employme nt •nformoft on
wr.le Ov e r !!ieo~ Employment
Box 1011 Boston Ma 02 102

saoo0

-

-~

-

G REA T
PART
TIME
JO B
Demonst rate Merr•·MO&lt;: toys
and gdt, on pa r ty plan Set
your own houre No mve!-1 ·
men! , delt Yery or col lectton
Highest co mm •ss•an . Call Ann
Ba xt er collect 319 556-88B 1 or
wnte Mem Moe Box 1277
Dubuqu e Ia 52dot

-

~-

--

SELL YOUR HUSBAND on the tdeo
o f your gellmg a po rt ti me job
w1th fulr time poy Merr• Ma&lt;:
need ~
demons t rators
and
supeht sors to se ll toys and
g ift~ on home por!y pl an No 1n·
ves tment , del1very or t:ollec ·
lion . Call Ann Bo wler collec t:
319-556·8001 or write Merrtmoc, BO ) Jackson Dubuque,
Iowa S2001 ,
NA TIO NAL CONCERN We Ofe
now bccepllng opp l1cotion s f or
full or por t time Chri sf mQii
help start mg August28 Wrtte ,
g •ving nome, add res s and
phone number to Bow 7A7,
Broadway . M lddleporl , Oh•o
45760 .
~----~

,.

-

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

HOOF HOl LOW Horses Buy. sell
trade or trQII'I New and used
saddle s Ru th Ree'l'es Al bany
(bl4) b98 31q((
RISING STAR l&lt;ennels Boordmg
and groom 111g, all breeds
Cheshtre . 3b7 · 0~') or 367 -0106
---~

LOV ABLE WHITE snow dri ft great
PYRENEE S P upp ~ e~
Phone
1 01-4 667 3838

8 FOOT TRUCK toppe r . 51 75 14 LARGE BUSINESS buddtng tn
foot olu m1num John boot 5 h p.
Mason . 3200 sq It G round
tra der
S300
m o to r ond
floor . 1-304 882·3356 .

94•·1056

19'7'2 PlYMOU TH DU STER , P.S., o.r
cond , new tires econom1cal
good
wo r k
cor
Phone

985-3590

1976 KE 175 Kowosokt 1100 ac·
tual mtles : S650 or best off er .
Con be seen ol 277 lmcoln Si .
M1ddleport

-LI VING RO OM su tte

$50 Sewmg
mochme and cobm et
$25
Stereo $20 2 dressers $1 0
$30 Ches t of drawers $20. An ·
11que polio table , $10 Dtmng
bar , $1 0 992 -5792.

REGISTERED GUERNSEY cow now
m dk.ng . Purebred Guernsey
he1ler to l res hen soon 1 Hols ·
te1 n hetfer calves 1960 1 ton
Ford truck 1966 Olds Cutlass
Supreme I 00 toy •ng hens loy ·
mg App row . 75 • mtxed hoy .
949 7179
BARLE Y FOR cover cro p G rown
from cert1f1ed seed Paul Say r e,
Por tla nd Oh1o BA3 4591

-- ...-- -

PEA CH ES
ond
Bnng contomers .
C horle~ R
Hor n s Portland .
Oh iO . 843 2093 .

FEMALE HOUSEBROKEN dogs, 2
years old Small Fnendly 1
fema le pupp)l , block w1th
d• stinc t1Ye brown mork.n gs. 2
mo. old , small. 9..9 2852 or
HEAL TY PIG S $25 00 and up .
9-49
2b2b
Phone 949 2460
---NINE
PUPS
8 week s ol d. Mother
APPLES
F•tzpatfiCk Orc har ds ,
•s o beagle Also S k rttens
Stat e Rou t e 689
Ph one
8&lt;3 2%3
Wtlkes v.lle 669·3785
- .

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

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

JUST LISTED - SPACIOUS BI· LEVEL . This moy be
home . It his 111 large kitchen with hrts of
cabinets, stove, refri,erator and dishwuher . Beautiful
your dreilm

finish this well -l11id out home we h11ve ftve bedrooms,
utility room and garage. Very ~w heating bill. That's
not all , we have strawberries, raspberries and garden

spoce . Red born-like otoroge building. Located oboul
ten minutes north of Pomeroy iust off Rt. 7. Clll for
more details and appointment. Asking 555 ,00.
57 ACRES- Wi t h a nice 111:1 story house with 3 beCrms .

6 ACRES - Nice l'l, story home m ..tly carpeted with 3
or 4 bedrms , l iving rm ., fam lty rm ., with fi replace,
basement , fuel oil furnace , garage and outbuildings.
Some fencing , plenty of road ·frontage and garden
space . City water and drilled well Loc:. close to

1972 DAT SUN A door stohon
wagon , 2b.OOO miles. A cy l ..
good gos mileage , 250 N 3rd
Mtddlepor t. Phone 992 7329
_after A E_.m .

hospjtal and school at Laurel Cliff. Asking S41,l00
TWO ACRES - A beautllul4 yeor old , 3 bedroom home
with large eal ln kitchen, 3 bedroom•. all nicely
carpeted , 1 bath&gt;, lull bo5ement with TV room . Many
more extras. low heat bill with nat gas forced air

197~ . VOLKSWAGEN

location . Will go quick for S35.000.
•o Acre• of land in Sutton Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn . Pr iced af only $21 ,500 .
A BEAUTY AT FIVE POINTS- Here is an e•cellenf 3
bedrm . house ~ Hf2 baths, kitchen and built In

19SS CHEVY 1 door sedan 6 cyl
auto
Par tl y recondthoned
SSOO. -46 000 actual mdes
9497660
1969 DODGE fl)CKlJP Standard
tram . b cyL Coll949, '209'1 . ·

furnace . All this and two ncle acres of land in a good

appliances, h

.loo m .

VIRGILB. SR .I ~~
992-3325
11&amp; E . Set"nnd Street
LONG BOTTOM - Watch
tht riverboats from your 3
bedroom mobile home. Has

dr illed

well.

su~U~teck and

Ph

with

baths ,

over 3 acres .

EAST MAIN newer

Unusual

business building
city water , natura I

gas and electric . A good
rocatlon tor your business

COUNTRY' HOME room

home

6

with centra l

heating . Large l iv ing with

lireplace, drilled well and
10 acres . Will help f tnance
trade for mobile homes

or

$33.500.
REAL BUY -

frame

home

4 bedroom

on 2 large lots .

Natural gas F .A. furnace,
bafh, 1 car garage . $17 ,500
IMMCULATE- one of the

acre

CANNING
tomatoes

w1•n

fireplace,

all

nicely ·

ca rpeted . Full .... se,T..n.•~u'h wood-burning stove.
Attached 12 carl
1sler Air-Temp. central

IDl"V' .

heating and coolin~~ . cr y low ele c. b ills. All this and

appro• . one acre land. Have a look, Only $47,900.
We need l•rge &amp; small Fums
t
ond Mony types of property
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Asso&lt;iolt , 9•MJU

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Therma I ins.ulation

Phone 91S· ll06

Jack Ginter 915·3106

S.vo30 pel . to 50 pet.
on huting cost

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Battery .

Installation Service
Plomtroy, D.
3-15-tlc

Experi•nctlnd
fully Insured
Free Esl.
Call992 -2772
8-10-lmo. I Pd.)

L

Chester, Ohio

10·30·&lt;

-- ~-

H•. L WHITESEL

ROGER HYSEll

ROOFING

GARAGE
\', mile oH Rt. 7 by-poss on
51. Rf. 1'14 toward Rutlond,
0.

New or Re~ir

Aule&amp; Truck
Repaif
Also Transmission
Repair '·

Downspouts

. . ..........
............
Service
,.._

~~

HOMESITES l or sole , 1 ocre Of1d
up Middlepor l , near Rutland .
C(JII992 ·7481
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 boths ,
all elec ., 1 ocre Mtddleport ,
close fo Rutland Phone 992-

748 1.
VA ·FHA 30 yr . fmonctng , al so
ref inonctng Irel and Mo rtgage ,
77 E Stole. A the ns. phone (614 )

592-3051.

High SchOOl

SENIORS

1

All fypes ol roofing, guHers
downspouts. 20 yurs

&amp;

experience.
All
work
guaranteed . Call Tom
Hoskins, 949· 2160. Free
, Estimates.

P.':. I'D~ H~Rf. OOM~~

17 '(()U~ 00.'1 TA0£?1~' ,C..LD~ ""1
~ Mf IK:»A 0M ~ IJ{)I:£Y

-rn~

/oiDJf.Y.

MYetb
I

ILIERtXj

~ IL~ L.Kt:PIM~~

we use tradi tional settings and ttlso
featur e
outdoor
por tratture.

portraits.

C~ll

I

BORN LOSER

We are currently mak ing
appotntments for senior

Young and the Restless B; Midday Magazi ne 13;
Watch Your Mouth 33.
12 .3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Romagnol(s' Table 33.
I.QO-.For Richer, lor Poorer 3. All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young and the Restless 10; Not for Women
Only 15; In Perlormance at Wolf Trap 33 .
1:3G-Days of our Lives 3,4, 15; As the Wor ld Turns 8,1 0.
2: DO--One life to Live 6.13 ; Bill Moyers' Journal · Internat ional Report 33.
2:3o-Doctors 3,4,15; Guiding Light 8,10.
3·1l0-Anofher World 3.~.15 : General Hospital 6,13.
Lilias. Yoga and You 20,33 .
3·3()--AII 1n the Fam ily 8,10; You Bet Your Life 20;
Montage 33 .

It••...,rKI
.. t:to-r·- ,......,._

H2·2174

WHAT 'THE STUDENI
BEAUTlC:IAN

us Today

• 4 OQ.-Mr

The Photo Place

'78
5

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprtse answer, as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon

(Bob Hoeflich )
109 Htgh Sl.
Pom eroy

ot

level land , ·

FAMILY

HOME

-

4

MAIN
POME.ROY. 0.
NEW LISTING - 70 acre

farm with river f rontage,
cabin, large barn. small
milk house, corn cr ib, old
chicken house and 3
bedroom unfinished ranch
type
home
basement ,

with

near

full
Long

Boftom .
Below
Fair
Market Value lor qu ick
sale . $33,500 .
NEW LISTING- Close In ,
211~ acres

and a beautifu l

newer 3 bedroom A· frame ,
Deck , Many Features

$37,500.
NEW LISTING- Tuppers
Plains 3 bedroom home, 2
baths , full basement ,
garage. central a ir , fully
equipped kitchen , large
level lot, excellent locatlM

A steal at 521.000.
REDUCED TDS13,500- A
2 story home on good street
In Middleport.
SUPER INVESTMENT 4 apartments , 2 other

bedrooms, 2 baths, natural
gas F.A. furnace , shop,
family room , garage, and 3

rentals . Should gross

lots. $27.500.
CONDOR STREET - 3
bedroom frame home with
bath, gas furnace and large

HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL
- S$5,900 will buy lhls 3

lot for garden and parking .

IF 1\UYING OR SELLING
YOUR
BEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
AN APPRAISAL!
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK,KATHY,LEDNA
ASSOCIATES
992-2259,992-6191
992-2561

Only $9,500.
SAVE
MONEY
BY
BUYING THIS YEAR .
HAVING SOLD A LOT OF
HOMES THIS YEAR WE
MAY BE ABLE TO SELL
YOURS. CALL 992-3325 .
FREE CALENDARS .
• Helen L. Tuford
Gordon B. Teolor.d
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

Hous1ng
Headquarters

over

S6,000 per year. Plus a good
small business . $47,200 .

--

Authoriled S1nger Sales and
Serv+ce We sha rpen Scissors .

----

--

HOBSTffiER REALTY
Gtorge S. Habllotter Jr., Brokor
Pomeroy, Ollio, Phone 992-'333
Oil lee Hrs. 9 o .m.-5 p.m .
CloMd ThursdayS &amp; Soturdoy ot noon
Your Full Tlmt Real Estale Broker
This beautllul home Is rudy lor your lamlly to move
Into. 3 bedroom. dining room, plenty of storage &gt;pace
and It has gas steam neat, fireplace and wood and coal
burner. al50. Garage and patio with canopy . Situated
on a lmost on a creon slate route 3381n Racine. Wlll5ell
last at $30,000.00.
Rutlond- 3 bedroom home on Main Street. A lltfle
work could make this a really nice ph!lce . Sells for
$14.000 .00.
Middleport -

nice big older home with 3 bedrooms,
new gas furnace and new roof. Locatl!d on South 3rd
Avenue. A5k lng $15,000 .00.

-

S

USE THAT

NARROW LEDGE ?

--- -- ----- -

- -

. AI.IJ;:YOOP

wm-t "!HI'

~ C1F

'THIS, W!F'- ..00,

'"1111.55 •

DRIVE A LITTLE
&amp;

SAVE ALOT
a.rpet inst,lled wifh

GASOLINE ALLEY

8&lt;3-3311
BID S WANTED on a 1974 bO x 24
M odula r home Damaged by
lire The home IS wel l built and
con tat ned 3 bedroom Iorge liv
tn g r oom , for mal dinmg room ,
kttchen
fomtly room , 1 1'1
boths . You ore mvi ted to tn·
spect !h is home located '1 m ile
eas t of Hor rison'l'ille St Rt. 143.
The purchaser mu st move th e
home not lole r th!ln Oc t 15.
1978. Mo il sea led bids l o 73
Roo5evell Or , R.A F 8 , Ohto .
43217 l o orrtve not l!lter than
Sept. 20, 1~78 . Include r e tur n
address and phon e number
Annou ncement of acceptance
of a b id w1ll be mode no t later
than Sept 13 '1978 Terms :
Cast.. Cert if1ed check or bonk
draft. Th e owner reserves the
nght to re1ect any or aU bids .
For oppo.niment to inspec t the
home colt 742 ·312'2 or Colum
bus 497 · 131 7 . Harold
D
Graham , Owner
10 IC 40 MOBILE HOME, complete
ly fur nished Ou• clo. sole prrce ,

$1888 .00

Call

992 1138

Firestone Store or 9"9·2328 .
TWO BEDROOM mobtl e hom e
Completely furn i5h9d . Air con ·
dll l9 n1ng Can be seen after 5
pm 742 m1.

E•port insfallatlon .

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

'4• 88

&amp; up

9' and 12' Vinyl
Aoor Covering In Stock
Buy where you can come In
and'" wh•t you're getting

- Good selections stocked.

---

cemetery and slate highway goroge. Selling price
$12.000.00 .

MAKES A

WE NEED ALL TYPES OF LISTINGS. WE ARE
SELLING FASTII
Cheryl Ltmlty, Assoc .. Homo Phono 7•2-2003
Hilton Wolfo, Assoc .. Home Phone t•9-25"
Gtorgo s. Hobstetfor, Jr., Broker
Home Phone 992·5739

BED feR
YOU

EXCELLENT FARM BUY - 141 ACRES - The
age prevents her from continuing to operate

the farm and she des.lres an immedlat• sale. 50 to 60

town ·

Wedn esday , Aug . 23

30 Craze
31 Change
32lndigent

BRIDGE

34Bum

Oswald Jacoby and Alan' Sontag

35 Baritone
Gobbi

31 Tree

Right play at right time
spades which wa s

takinq

name

bed!
I lall
down
and
dozed
off!

...

+ K 10 S
WESl'

EAST

+ A 43 2

--

• Q 43

• A J8
t K6

t QJI09113

• Q94

• J 873

.

SOUTH
• KQ109! 7

' band fame
33 Turkish

,'~~ :=
;;;&amp;J~~~:::::L:l2~ 31 coin
Malt

Fully

&amp;.23-A

• K 7 52
t A4 2

28 Singer
Cantrell
27 Nautical
chain
28 Golf score
Z9 Woody
of big

• 10 9 6.

• 7

+ A6 2
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer : East

RUG REMNANTS

Wu t

From S29"&amp;Up

Pass

North

E ast
3t
Pass

South
3+
Pas.s

Pass
Coll742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Gralt

Opemng lea d . t K

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :

or Gene Smith

&lt;

•

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

l

!I

742·2211 .

8·H

• YOU SOiP TilE
IDEA OF 1!-IE
' IIIIN NIE-WIENER11
·ro :;QMEONE?

lo

One teller simply stands for another. In this sample A Is By Oswald Jacoby
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single lett ers. aad "-laa Soalag
apostrophes, the length and formation o f the words are all
The diagrammed
h1nts. Each day the code letters a"' dlft'e,..;nt.

was played in a

... BUT TO THE
LARGEST1 M05T

FAMOUS BAueAeE
WIKER IN 1!-lf;
UNITED &amp;TATES r

match of the prestigious
Spingold Cup . Both sides

CIYnoquOTBS

LKXYYXUW

WH

hand

sem1-£inal

were straining smce a vic·
HXTCFDWAO tory
could mean a national

championship .
East's light preempt had
the effecl of catapulttng
NLXQF North·South into a fourAWYC
spade contract wh1ch reAX quired superb defense to
FDNF
WF
DN H '
defeat.
LXACH.
RXDAAZ
TNKFWA South won the opening
Y01teray'1 C1)plsqaa&amp;e: AN IMPROVIQENT HUSBAND IS lead with dummy's ace of
/I"~"--' ONE WHO GETS MARRIED wmtOUT GETriNG IUS WIFE diamonds and immediately
tackled trumps. He led a
A JOB.-MRS. MEADE !IPICER JR.
spade to his king which West
ducked, and then the 10 of
BAR:-IEY

EWIIWYQUF

FX

HNZ

· WHO IS IT ·-LUKEV, ELVINEV.
SHE.RIFF TAIT,
DOC PRITCHART?

also

al·

lowed to win . South 's next

pla y was a hea rttodummy 's
kmg . So uth led another
heart from dummy and West
won wilh the jack.
It wa s decision time ,or
West. He knew declarer had

started with six spades, one
dtamond (because East's
preempt promised seven)
and probably three hearts
and three clubs. Therefore,
lo defeat the contract. East
had to have the queen and
nine. of clubs . South, because
of h1s overcall , was marked
for the a ce .
Wesl made the world-class
switch to the eight of clubs .
He had to establish a club
trick for the defense before
declarer c ould se l up
dummy's 13th heart for a
club dtscard .
West's eight of clubs was
won by South 's ace. Wes t
won

AXYDLBAAXI
LONGFELLOW

LOQKV WHO'S COMIN'
1:0 CALL ON US. PAW

acres tillable with some very good creek bottom hilltop land . The balance Is In pasture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good Idoes need some modernization) ,
large all purpose ·bern &amp; several oufbuildlngs. The
minerals go with It and It's located In an area where
gas , oil &amp; coa l hove bean found to be plentiful. Nur
Rutland . 60's.

22 EIIJiire
23 Most frilly
24 Discover
25 Mass .

turions 11

NORTH
• J 65

GLORY BE!!

~ner's

nver
21 European
nver

Barnaby )ones

Tomorrow 3,4; 1·5o-News 13.

Cen-

Good Selection 01

IF YOU NEEb
A -SOFA THAT .

New Listing- 3lh acrts located In choice area Land Is
situated on south side at state route 7 between

27 " -

22 Baffle
25 Girl's

,,
WINNIE

Rullond- 3 bedroom . total electric home slluated on
nice size lol In Hutchison Sub-division . Home hu own
well. Sells f04' $32,000 .00 .

Yesterday's ADswer

shape

I'm so ashamed ..
\.jOUr

sq. yd .

Bl uegrass 20; Consumer Survival

8,10: News 20 .
10·3o-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20
11 :110-News 3.4,6,8,10.13,15 , Dick Cavett 20; Poldark
II 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 : Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 , M·
A-5-H 8: Movie " Ride the Tiger" 10.
12 ·00 - Janak! 33.
11·0&gt;-Movle "Going Home" 8.
12 ·4G-Legend ol the Black Hand 6,13, 1:110-

,-------[j--~==~~~ 21Face

padding at no charge .
1976 NASHUA 14 • 65 3 bedroom
I ' , both. underptnnmg , S1500
and assume lo on. 949 2683 or

Valley

K11 33.
7·3()--Hollywood Squares 3,4; Match Game PM 6;
Taftletales 8: MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.33; That's
Hollywood! 10: Nashville on the Road 13: Film 15.
8.111)-{;hlps 3,4,15. Welcome Back. Kotler 6,13; CBS
News Special 8, 10: Once Upon a Classic 20.33.
8 3G-What's Happening! 6,1 3; Echoes 20; Joffrey
Ballet Live from Art Park 33
9.1l0-Richle Brockelman. Private Eye 3,4, 15; Barney
Miller 13, Evening in Byzantium 6 ; Hawaii Flve-0
8.10 : Southle! 10.
9:3G-Movle "VegaS" 13.
lO: DO--Operatlon : Ru naway 3,4, 1S ;

18 Italian

Sons 4;

Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 :

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency
One! 13; Petticoat Junction 15
3~dd Couple 4, News 6; Electric Co. 10,33:
Hogan's Heroes 15

Hocking

's

GIVE M&amp; A HAND

SAVE ON
CARPETING

AI ~

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 110 puzzles Ia avail·
able tor $1 35 poa1plld from Jumble, c/o lttls newapllpflf, PO Bo)( 34,
Norwood, N J 07848. Include your name, address zip code and make
checks payab le to Newapaperbooks.
'

LISSA·.. HO PYTHOfoiS
'ROUND HERE 1

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4% "Contrary"
name
I Freight
boat
DOWN
.--~--"T'--~=- 5 " Up in
1 Get lost!
~:=:-:-:::::-:-:-::::-"\-::::=::.
YES, 'Tl1AT'S Room" 2 Mild cigar
~ISHT ! 10 Hint for
3 External
Holmes
4 Undersized
II Peaceful
5 lnfonnal
Appraise
military
Catnap
title
15 "Bells 6 Diva's
Ringing"
delight
16 Tomorrow 's 7 Relative
film queen
of 38 Across
17 Spirit
8 Subjugate
of the troops 9 True to !act
19 Never
12 Rustler's
Godfrey's
interest
nlckname
16 Swing
20 Major:
around
music

-----

HOWERY
AND
MARTIN
Ex
co .. atmg
sept• c sy stems ,
do1er , bock hoe dump I ru ck .
li mestone . grovel
black top
PO'I'tng , Rt . 143 . Phone I (bl4 )
698 -7331

SC"-RY WEASEL BAMBOO

A name Is - contused-when one can't

~-

----

~

'(OU'RE C C· CRA.l.Y,

Fever 10.
Comes the Brides 3; My Three

15; Disco

~Here

6:1l0-News 3.4.8. 10,13,15: ABC News 6, Zoom 10:
Making Things Grow 33.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8. 10: Over Easy 20. Anflques 33.
7·110-Cross Wits 3; Expohlo '78 4; Newlywed Game
6.13 : GonQ Show 8; News 10: Gilligan's Island 15;

remember-"AMNESIA"

COUl D
ANHHIN&lt;; 51G

B(Jr &gt;OW

~-~

NEI G LER BUilDING Supply ' for
buildmg ho uses. req.p~r wor k
and cob • ne t ~ Coil Guy H
EXCAVA TING dozer. load er ond
~e~~er . 94!: 2508 afte r 5 pm
·
backhoe wo r k , du mp tru ck s
and lo boys f or h ~re . wtll hau l REEVES TRADING Post Poge ... ille:
fdl dirt , to so+ l, hme stone and
G roceries dry goods had
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef·
wo re, feed . Jo ck shop. Speci al
l er s day phone 992 ·7089 mght
25 tb. of dog food , S3, 88
phone 992-3525 or 992 5232 .
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
EXCAVATING
dQl'e r backhoe
cance lled? l ost you r operat ors
and d ilcher Charles R. Hat
li ce nse? Phone992 2143.
'-f 1e ld
8a ck
Hoe Serv•ce
THE CHlMNEV Sweep R educe~
Rutland . Oh1 o . Phone 742·2008 '
rat es ttl Sept. 1. bl,. 373 6057
Will do roofing , conslruction,
weekdays untfl S.
-plumbing and heottng No job
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 23418 _ _ _ _ _ _
_;_c:..;::::.:.::_

bedroom home with garage
and large lot in town .

A

-

Answer

Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer, for

Gunsmoke 8, Mr

r II IJ-rn r I I I 1

Yesterday's \ Jumbles LIVEN

IJ'ITI..E ORPHAN ANNIE

'•

Poorer 15; Merv Grllfln 6: Addams Family 8,
Sesame Sf 10,33;Malch Game 10; Dinah! 13.
4.3()--My Three Sons 3; Gilligan' s lol.ond 4,8: Expohlo

HAD TO lAKE .

BRADFORD, A ucltoneer, Com·
plete Ser'l'tCe . Phone 9-49 2487
or 9-49·2000. Rocme, Ohr a, Cnti
PUDDlE POOL S All s11es and
Bradford .
shapes Swrm pool s, 2 )IO Or ~
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
e)(perience
fr ee est1motes,
Sweeper s, to a sters, 1rons all • ony l h1ng
you
need
for
small applton ce s. lawn mower
underground sw tm pool s, N e..._\
next to State H 1ghwo11 Garage
chemical an d 5upply store
on Route 7, Phone 1{61-4) 985
Al bany ,
Ohto .
Phone
3815
614 ·698 6555. { Ah er b pm 1
614·b89 5'25 1 John Jeffe rs or
SEWING MACHINE Repo1r~ ser
689·5265 Bi l l G ill ette. ) We ore
vtce, oil makes , 992 ·2284 . The
NOT
all wet on PRICES
Fobrtc
Sh o p
Pome r oy

~~

,

12 :DO-Newscenter3; News4 ,6,10; America All ve! 15;

ICOAMEb
..

OHIO VAI!EY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

byHenriArno!dandBoblee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ardtnary words

8·20·1 mo. I Pd. l

4-30·1ft

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Phone 992-5682

~

·1}fl}}N"f rn1}

.....

Gutters and

Zoom 33 .

9·3G-Andy Grllflth 8; Joker's Wild 10, The only Thing
I can't do Is hear 33 .
lO ·QO-Card Sharks 3,4,15: Edge of Night 6. Tic Tac
Dough 8: Variety '78 10: To Tell The Truth 13. Over
Easy 33.
10·3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15: High Hopes 6: Price
Is Righi 8,10; $20,000 Pyram id 13: Paint Along with
Nancy Komlnsky 33.
n ·oo-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6.13,
American Odyssey 33.
lUG-Wheel· ol Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Parfrldge Fam ily I ; Love of Llle 8,10.
11.5s--tBS New• 8, Today's Fa ir 10

(Answers tomorrow)

55 GALLON FISH oq uor• um· w1th t finest 3 bedroom mobi le
homes, enclosed t:iath with
florescent ltght and stand
shower, electric F.A. heat
Onven mo tor . f1 sh grovel
and central air. Over lf.t
992 -3162
COPPERTONE 30 " drop m range
and hood, also Iorge si ze
~r ope~ 992 · 5_7cc3_
• '-~-,-~

Your service . Anv day,
anvtime .

Brakes
Tires

I'll. 992·21•8

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

ReSidentl.al 11nlll commer·
clal. Ci!ll for estimate. 24

Answerhere :. A

_ _99_1_7_1~ - - - - - - - - -

I 97-4 · 124 FIA T Sptder Con ... er ltble
low
(V'ery good cond1i1on)
m1leoge
Coli 992· 7866 or

1973 DATSUN PICKU P ot speed
w•th topper an d mag wheel!..
_':~~ m1leoge P~o~ 8~_2?~~

Muffler
Shocks

J&amp;L

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

THURSDAY, AUGUST 2•, 1978
5:4So-Farm Report 13; 5 5(&gt;-PTL Club 13; 6:QO-PTL
Club 15; Summer Se'J'Iester 10.
6:30-0octors on Call-4; News 6; Summer Semester 8;
For You ... Black Woman 10.
6:-15-Mornlng Report 3: 6 :so-Good Morning, Wut
Virginia 13; 6:5s-News 13; 7:QO-Today 3,4,15:
Good Morning America 6,13; CBS New• 8: Un·
derdog 10.
7:2s--thuck White Reports 10, 7:3G-Porky Pig 10
8:111)-{;aplaln Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesame Street 33.
9. 00- Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue ~.15,13 ;
Emergency One! 6; Brady Bunch 8; Schoolles 10;

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1971
6:»-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grllflth 6;
CBS News 8, 1d: Over Easy 20; Antiques 33. ,
7:110--{)ral Roberto 3; E•pohlo '781; Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha NoNa 8; News 10; Gilligan' s Island 15;
Dick Cavell 20; People and Places 33.
7:»-Sha Na Na I ; Wollman Jack 6; Family- Feud 8;
MacNeil-Lehrer Reporl 20,33; The Judg~ 10; In
Search ol 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8:QO-Movle " Willy Wonka and fhe Chocolote Facfory" 3,1,15; Elghf Is Enough 6,13; CBS News
Special 8,10; National Geographic 20; Nova 33.
9:oo-&lt;:harlle's Angels 6,13: Movie "The Paralla x
View" 8,10; Poldark 1120; Great Performances 33.
10 :QO-Pollce Woman 3,1, 15; Sfarsky &amp; Hufch 13; Jack
Van impe Cruoade 6; News 20.
10 :»-Bix Boldarbecke Memorial Jozz Festival 20:
Rock Sonata for Plano and Amplllled Celto 33.
11 :QO-News 3 . ~.6, 8, 10,13, 15; Dick Caveft 20; Lilla&gt;,
Yoga and You 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Canon 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6,13: Hawaii
Flve-o 8; Movie "The Swinger" 10; ABC News 33.

8 2 1 mo.

BEDROOM SUITE wi th marbl e top
li ving room su •le, cedar war ·
drobe door canopy treadle f
sew tng machine , porc h swtng ,
table , 2 wooden cho1rs

71 CHE VROLET CHEVENE ' r ton
p tc kup , 350 outomo t•c 53 000
m1les New potnt 1ob. 51250 00
Phone 992· 7841 ,

BEETLE , -4
'pee d rodtol s, b3 ,0CXJ mdes ,
g oo d
cond •ilon . $190000
Ph one 992·6115,

MOORE'S

BASS BOA T 15 f oot alum1nu m 20
hp Mere r:no-lor . 985 -ot339

and 11h baths Mostl y carpeted . Big central fireplace
with hea to later. Sma ll barn and ou tbUildings 20 acres
fenced . N ice country setting otf bla cktop road just 6
m inutes north of Ra cine . Asking $.42,000.

991 3904.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
AI

THREE BEDROOM frame home 1n
Mtddleport . Coii992·3A57 .

NEW 5 h p ro to t•ller used on ly 6
hours Cost $316. se ll lor $200
742-2349

large deck . Laroe living room and family· room and to

6 cyl

-

o..

dining room with · shding gins doors l•ading out to
1974 PONTIAC VENTURA
f2000 992· 7453

·---

992·3079 .
HOUSE FOR sole near pool 1n
Syracuse . Call 992 5767 .
LOWREY GENIE organ Wont to
Excellen
t
buy b1gger organ
1 YEAR OLD 3 bedr oo m house, all
cond tl 1on 247 ·3521
electric . Mormng Star Height s
1976 FORD 150 Ranger piCkup
Phone 949-2-424.
V·B. auto
P S . P B rodt o 3 BEDROOM
HOUSE . ne w
pas• · tro ct •on , ru st proofed
olumtnum roo f , reaso nable
30 000 m tles $3795. 742·2753 .
pri ce . 31931 W elsht own Rd .
Mine rsv ille , Ohto , Phone
1978 HONDA 3bO street bike, lik e
992 5754
new Good co nct.lton Good
· . , - - - -tires 900 miles Sell for $450 NEW LI STING · Owner lransferr·
949 ·2123
tng .
er 2 ocre5 cl ose to
$Chools ho spitaL to wn 2 cor
MOTORCYC LE FORso le. Kawosokt
garage , pot1o br eakfast deck . 3
KZ-400 843 ·30.~53::...--,.
bedroom.
Ntce basement
HAY FOR sol e tn the lu~ld .
hardwood · floors . Central 01r
843·2963
Forced orr furna ce 992·S792

die $75 '192 5783

AKC IRISH SETTER pupp•es $50
each Coll3~ 773 5538

-

~

ferent models a t d•scount b ROOM HOU SE and both, tn
pnces , Middleport store behmd
country on 11 acres . centra l
Tony 's Corryout , · formerly
heat , m•neral
r~ghts ,
t5
Do'l'rd C. Mtller lumber Co
min utes drive to tow n lm·
Every Sunday 12 noon to 3 p ,m
medtote
possession ,
698·7191
$ 13 ,000 .00.
742 3074
or
'191·5815.
1978 CJS Jeep 1972 Hond o 450 . _,...,;.c-="'---~-~-~'19'2·5::
15:_:1:...-~- ~-- 60 ACRES house and lurmture
$32 000 .00. Immediate posses·
22 INCH LAW~ mower, 3 ' 1 h .p .
sian Phone 742-2988 alter 5
Br•ggs and Str atton Used .. ery
p.m .
lillie . hcellent conditio n. $50

AK C REGI STERED toy wh1te poe·
TWO FULL b looded female cocke r
sponiel pups lor sole 985 3931 ,

-

-~ ~

CAPEHAR T CONSOlF stereo, 8
tra ck , AM · FM Mu l llpl ex .
Whirlpool
12 washer and
Whirlpool dryer Coll992·6062
IN SYRACUSt: . 'J bedroom hou se
-------~-New
New storm windows
H &amp; N DAY old or started leghorn
alumi
num
bu
ild1ng
2
porches
p ullets. both floor or cage
9rown avoiloble. Poultry Hous· - 992-3219
-•ng ond Autornotton Modern 10' ', ACR~S 8 room house , 4
Pou ltry, 399 W Motn Pomeroy
bedroom, new both , new k•t Phone 992-216-4 .
chen. city water . On Rt 33 1n
Burlmghom 992-7751 .
APPAlACHIAN STOVE CO. 13 dif

BEAT THE October rush G i ve us
your · order now for ar rows
custo m mod e the way you wont
them and cut to you r 1ndi v1dua l
length P1ck up anytime bef ore DEA LER S AUCTION . Public 1n
vtted Frtdoy I pm ltll ? All 'new
Oc tober 1, $5 deposi t w1th
merchandise sold 1n quon1 1ty ot
order
(Eo!.ton Gomegelier+-Oh10 River Auct ion . S37 High-..
olumm um orrows
$26 .95
St. Middleport Regular sole
do 1en
F1b erg loss $ 24 95
_!_ridoy night oppr o_x. 7 p0~m:::·_ _
dozen We reHetch ar rows .
gloss o lumtnum or wood in·
d udes 3 new plas t ic vanes nrck
and .nse rl $1 per arrow Al so
we strotghten aluminum or
rows S SO each on ow Trr SHEPPARD PUPS to 9111e away , 4
mole and 4 fe male I femal e. q
Coun tv Sport Shop North and
mo old Phone 74 ~ 2334
Co u n ty
Spor t
Sh op
Tri
=._:___
Downtown 304·675·7988
FOUR MAlE ktttens . 7 weeks o ld
Block and wh1te . Long ha ir.
CANNIN G TOMATOES . green
7A2 2328
peppe rs Gerald1ne Cleland ,
Reci ne . Oh1o
SP RINGER SPANIEL 2 year s old
15 CU FOOT upnght lreenn . 3
8 1a&lt;:lo. and wh ite . ,. puppies ,
mtwed pood le and springer
years old Con ta ct Mr ~ Lesl1e
Holl man 742 237 4
5pon•els , 992-7,.16 .

-----

DREAMING OF a wh11e Chns tmo!o
wtth no bills? Wonderfu l to
thmk about , bu t 11 co uld come
tr ue Be o Toy l odu~ ~ ho sh~H I
In your home or by orders from
your fr~end ~ Earn t o ~!&gt; and g•ft~
free
Nom e bra nd
toy!. ,
p r 1ced
w1th
r eas on ably
guarantee G•fl!. lor the whole
fomdy For infor ma t• on call
747 -1377 o r 992· 7056 ,

ij by 16
x 7 · wheels , Pr WATI:'M WELL drilling. William T
Grant 7-42·2679 .
$25 .00. 2 700 x 16 Winter tires
pr_$50_oo..:_ £~1 99~ 7__09'2
HOUSE PAINTING . indoor or out ·
door No 1ob too big or 1mall
2 NEW PAIR drapes 7 new
~easono b le prices . 992-6368
dresses , size lb and 18, 6 potr
..
women 's shoes , s•ze s•. and 6 , Will DO baby st thng in my home
o ther mce th ings , $20 .00 lor all
oge' 2·-4 Phone 992 ·7689.
of 11 Phone 949· 2679
~--·---

12:1l0-Jasna
.
12:1l0-Janakl 33; 12:-10-Legend of thle Bloc• Hand
6,13; Movie " The Boy Friend" 8: 1:QO- Tomorrow
1.4; 1:5(&gt;-News 13 .

TELEVISION
VIEWING

2

TH RE E FAMilY Vord Sole f hurs2-4th f' Ftrst rood on left post
WMPO .

-

TO lOAN

COUNTRY MOBIL E Home Pork
Route 33 norttt of Pomero.,.
Lorge l ots . ~oll 992 · 7479 .

YA RD SALE . August23 at 55 S Se·
cond , Avenue Middleport

TWO FAMILY Yard Sole Augu 5t
23 24, 25 . Bedspread s r ugs
drapes , lots of c h i ld ren~ an d
adults cloth tng AI Bob Woods
home pla ce on Rt. 338 4 houses
above the old Rtchord s and
Sons Gra .. el Ptt .
...

1

3 BEDROOM HOUSE tn Pomeroy
or M idd lepor t Despearotely
needed Phone 992 -0318 .

TRACY

.

·---~-~-

!9_1-_73_1_6 ----c--~- --~-­
WE PICK up 1unk auto bodieli buv - '27 FOOT TERRY tra 'w'e l trail er

~dll)llitl. !J' le PutJ LS!Jt'l WllJ nul l.w
~~Hwlbk fur mu~ Hum one incur-

l't:t.'t

Business Services

f~~~t-'-~~~~t ~- ~

WANT AD
·CHARGES

.!3- The O.fiy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Porne:oy, o.,Wedneaday,Aug. 23, 1978

the heart return with

the ace and led another club
wh1ch was laken by the king
m dummy . The heart in
dummy was established, but
it was no good to declarer.
West could trump low and

retain the ace for the setting
trick .
West had played his partner for the right clubs and he
had led the suil at precisely
the correct time . Any delay
in leading that low club
would have assured declarer's contract . To be a good
defende r - as Yi,est obvi-

ously

was -

it

1s

necessary

to thtnk at all times.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

J

(For a cop y of JA COB Y MOD·
ERN , send S1 to · " Win st
Brjdge , " ca re of this newspaper, · P 0 Bo x 489, Radio City
Staflon , New York , N. Y 10019 1

NOPE -IHiS CALL

IS STRICTLY

PARSONAL

i

·~

CALL THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643
I

�.
11 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedneaday , Aug . 23, 1978

Nicaraguan authorities
seek release of hostages

Escapee
•
rema1ns
at large
LUCASVIU..E, Ohio ( UPI)
- A feroale impersonator
serving a life term for killing
two teenagers and who was
charged but never tried for
five other killings, remained
at large today after escaping
from a cell at the state's
maximum security prison.
Richard Tingler, 37, and his
ce llmate, Cle o Vernon
Keaton, 41, Dayton, · also a
convicted killer, escaped
from their cells Tuesday.
Keaton apparently injured a
leg in tbe escape and was
captured on the grounds.
The sprawling 70-acre
facil ity
was searched
Tuesday and .it continued
today although Arnold Jago,
superintendent at th e
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility, thinks Tingler may
have gotten out of the
institution.
"We are still chi\cking a
few things in the facility but
we are also searching tbe
area in conjunction with tbe
sheriff's department and the
Ohio' Highway Patrol," said
Jago. "But we are accepting
at this point that he is out of
the facility .
"There were no hoJes cut in
the fence per se. Our fence
has an elec!ronic device built
into our alarm system, Our
system was beaten but we are
not sure yet how it was
beaten. That is assuming he
got out.
.
"We have told people he
may be using a disguise . We
haven't said female clothing
but we have suggested this."
Tingler
eluded
a
nationwide manhunt ten
years ago that spread to
Canada and had him on the'
FBI's "Ten Most Wanted"
list.

8y LEONAROO LACAYO

of an ages. Desntlny is the largest regularly scheduled
musical group from Kentucky Christian College,
Grayson , Kentucky . Their contemporary sound and
outstanding witness combine to make Destiny more than
just a listening experience. The public is invited to see
Destiny.

MUSICAL ENSEMBlE TO PERFORM HERE
Destiny is coming to Middleport on Friday, August 25.
This vibrant musical ensemble composed of 20 singers
and instrumentalists will be hosted by the Middleport
Church of Christ, Fifth and Main. Directed by Professor
Richard P. Hargrove, Destiny presents a program of old
and new musical selections arranged to delight audiences

Miller new

Logan HS

TRIP IS OFF
The Gallia-Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency has
been unable to reserv e
Greyhound bu ses for th e
Summ er
Youth
and
Recreation Program and will
therefore have io cancel the
planned trip to Ca111den Park.

1---------------~---------.
I

1

Area Deaths

1

MANAGUA , Nicaragua
(UP!)
Nicaraguan
authoclties said today the
leftist guerrillas holding the
National Palace with about
500 people trapped Inside
must allow some ol the
hostages to go free before
negotiations
on
their
demands f&lt;r $10 million and
amnesty can begin.
The guerrillas have threatened to kill their hostages but
have not set a deadline.
Agovernment statement to
the guerrUias said, "We must
demand that you release the
women, children, wounded
and dead . That Is the
condition for negotlatlms."
The goven\ment also asked
for an additional 24 hours to
consider the guerrillas' de•
mands . .
A spokesman for the presi·
dential press office denied
reports tb!lt a number of
hostages already had left the
palace. "No, that's abllolutely
false, " the spokesman said.
He also denied reports that
Somoza's nephew, Jose
Somoza Abrego, was among
the hostages.
About- two dozen heavily
armed members of the Sandinista Liberation Front,
which has been wa~g a

guerrUia war againlt the
of
President
regime
Anastasio Somoza llebayle,
burst into the palace
Tuesday.
Four people were killed and
15 wounded In the Initial
assault during a me-hour gun
battle with National Guard
focces .
Pale
Debayle,
the
(resident's cousin, who was
slightly wounded In the
assault and was evacuated,
said the hostages were bound
and berded Into a library.
The number of people
actually being held at
gunpoint by the guerrillas in
the sprawling govenunent '
building, was not clear but,
according to witnesses, the
hostages Included cabinet
officials and a majority ol the
nation's 7().member Cliamber
oi Deputies.
Most of the govenunent
workers ·tn the building were
believed to have remained In
their offices after the
guerrUias locked all the exits,
the (residential spokesman
said.
Somma was meeting with
cabinet ministers and
officials of the national
guard.
Managua's
Roman
Catholic ,Archbishop Miguel

records

Obando Bravo and . other
clerics went into the palace
Tuesday to cooler with the
gnerrUias and reported their
demnds to the govenunent.
In Its statement early
today, the government said
the guerrlllas bad made
aeven demands.
In addition to tbe UO
million, the
demands.
included a general amnesty
for aU political prlaoneril and
safe passage for all
Sandinlstas currently In JIIU
to Costa Rica, Venezuela,
Mexico oc Panama.
They also wanted guerrilla
cooununiques to be published
In the local press and
broadcast daily.

... -;:r=r::~ ~.. .•

11 forfeit bonds

in Pomeroy court

Teachers
work.i ng

$5,500 civil .
suit filed
A suit in the 'amount of
been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Union Tru.st National
Bank, Parkersburg against
H./ A. Cole, Tuppers Plains.
Filing for divorce were
Merrilee Bryant, Middleport,
against Benny Ray Bryant,
Hill Crest Heights, Md.; Cleo
M. DeTray, Chester, against
Arthur E. DeTray, Perrysburg; Karen Sue Ebersbach
Simpkins, Chester, against
Edward Lee Simpkins, Point
Pleasant.
· Filing for support under tbe
Reciprocal Agreement Act
were
Mary
Louise
Winebrenner, Bancrost, W.
Va., against William H.
Winebrenner, Middleport.
Marriages dissolved were
Elizabeth A. Smith and
James M. Smith . Elizabeth
A. Smith was restored to her
maiden name of Elizabeth A.
Vaughan; Roger Mowery and
Geralding Mowery .

~.500 has

VOL. XXIX

· POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO.

COUCH

I

'•

I

ELBERFELDS

"MR. LEGGS" SUPER BLUES ·

MENS DENIM JEANS

.HUMPHREYS

HICKMAN

unions, explained later :
"They 're waiting to see what

the big union (the APWU)
does.''
·
Officials were reluctant to
predict how the APWU would
vote, partil'lll arly in light of

pressur e on the post a 1
work ers from President
Carte r and White House
economic adviser Barry
Bosworth to . ratify the
contract, and from AFL-CIO
President George Meany to
reject it.
APWU members have been
among the most dis~runtled

Chance of s howers or

thundershowers Saturday
. with mostly fair weather .
Sunday and Mon~a y. Highs
will range from the mid 70s
to Jow 80s with a low In the
upper 50s or low 60s.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1978

•

E. H. Gloss, plant manag.er
of the Phlllp Spron Plant In
New Haven, announced
(romotilllls of five.employees
effedlve;Aug. 1. r -t .
They are N. R. Humphreys,
Jr., performance supervising
en11lneer, to the staff position
of
plant
performance
superintendent; Robert M.
Cooke, performance
· engineer, sr., succeeds
~umphreys as performance
supervising engineer; Wayne
L. Carter, supervisory
assistant, promot ed to
traiQing coordinator; W. R
Couch, unit supervisor,
promoted to assistant shift
operating enginer ; and
Burton C. Hickman, equipment operator, joined the
supervisory ranks, replacing
Couch as unit superviSor.
Humphreys , born in
· Covington, Va., received a BS
degree
in
Industrial
Technology from · Ohio
Universi~y in 1970.
He
completed his oblintion with
the National Guard in 1973.
Humphreys was employed at
the Sporn Plant in 1971, as an
Engineer "B", 11972 he was
promoted to performance
engineer, and in 1976 received
a promotion to performance
supervising engineer where
he served until now. The
Humphreys and their two
children
reside · near
Pomeroy.
Cooke is a native Mason
Countian. He served ih the
Army Air Force Wltil 1946,
and attended Mountain Slate
Buslneu College. He has also
completed engineering
studies with International
Correspoodence Schools.
Cooke joined the company
in 1950, as a helper in the
Instrument Maintenance
group. He
progressed
through the ranks in various
maintenance and engineering '
positions until hi&amp; promotion
to Performance Engineer, Sr.
in 1964. He served in that
capacity until his recent
promotion ..Tile Cookes reside
in New Raven.
•
Carter, a native of
Roanoke , Va., graduated
from National Business
College in 1987, with an
associate
degree
In

management. He has also
completed work toward a
management degree at
Marahall University ,
Carter began with the
company in the Appalllchian
Power Company General
Office · Accounting Dept. in
Roanoke in 1967. He was
transferred to Sporn Plant as
supervisory as5istant In 1971 ,
and served in that position
until Aug . I. The Carters and
their three daughters live in
New Haven.
Couch was born in Allen·
town, Pa, Fie graduated frmo
P0meroy High School in 1945,
and completed his service in
teh United States Anny in
1947. He came to Sporn Plant
in 1950, as a coal handler.
In 1951 he became a helper
in the Maintenance Depart·
ment and· was promoted to
maintenance man in 1952. He
transferred
into
the
Operations Department in
1957, as an auxiliary equip-

Youth
leads
'
golf contest
.

J . R. Wamsley, 13, is
leading in the Hole-In-One
contest being held at
Pomeroy Golf Course daily
from 1 p. m. until darl
sponsored by the Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club.
"Monday winners were
Wamsley, who landed a golf
ball within 11 inches of the
hole ; Johh Thomas, manager
of the Pomeroy course was
second, landin'g a golf ball
within nine feet 11 inches, and ,
third was Bill Childs corning
within 13 feet three inches.
Tuesday's winners were
John Thomas, first, coming
within three feet, 11 Inches;
John Teaford, second, within
four feet, six inches; third,
Bill Hackett, within four feet
and seven inches.
First
place
winners
received a dozen golf balls.
The latter two winners of
each day win a cap. AU Lions
and the public are invited to
participate. It Is
for five
golf balls. Contributions are
made to the eye glasses
foWldatlon.

::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.

Weather
Hazy, warm and humid
today and tonight with highs
&lt;n the upper 80s or low 90s and
a low in the upper 60s. Partly
clo udy Friday with scattered ·
showers and thundershowers.
and high temperatu res in the
mid or upper 80s.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

RARITY - Raymond (Cotton ) Hensler, Racine,
proudly di splays· a six and one-h alf pound beet that came
from-his garden . A beet this size is consid~red a rarity.

CARTER

.

Du~g

tbe 19711-1979 school
year, a closed lunch period
will be obeerved at MelRI
Junior High School.
Parents of ltuclents living
within walking dlltance of the
·Junior Hilb School desiring
their children to come home
for lunch mlll1 vilit the

BAKER FURNITU.RE

•_EL_B_ER
....F..-E..,.LD~s....•...
N_
- Plllll!""O~
· M...-;.;;.;;;ER;.;.;;o~v;;i...l
I

Sheriff thanks Mounted·C
Posse members, Explorers.

'
I
I

Ohioan, 16, stabbed, two nabbed
SIDNEY, Neb. (UPf) - Kansas authorities Wednesday
said they had arrested two men and were looking for a third in
the recent stabbing of a IS-year-old Ohio boy at an interstate
. · ·
rest stop in Kansas.
. Ellis County, Kan ., Sheriff David Wasinger said LeeR.
Allen, 30, an fllinois fugitive, and Kim E. lrYing, 20, an AWOL
serviceman, were charged with aggravated battery in the
Monday morning stabbing along Interstate 70 near Hays , Kan. ·
Wasinger said a warrant was issued for a third person
believed iflVolved in the stabbing of Brad Beach, .16, of Mt .
Gilead , Ohio. Authorities had not released the name of the
U1ird person, who they said apparently got out of a pickup
truck Allen and Irving were riding in near Stockmen, Kan .,
which is 45 miles north of Hays, Kan.
Officials at St. Anthony's Hospital in Hays said.Beach was
in serious but stable condition Wednesday. He had been
.aaN.ect in the ~ecl'. -and-t~a ~•u~&lt;t while as!P.ep on • bench in tbe
road-side sh elter.

Principal's Office and make
application for a lunch pass.
Students are not pennitted
to leave school · grounds
without this lunch pass.
.
The office II open Monday ·
through Friday between the
hours of I a.m. and 3 p.m.

MEIGS COUNTIAN WINS AWARD - Patricia
Parker, junior at Meigs High School and dailghter of Mr.
and Mrs. ~land Pwker of Route 3, Pomeroy, second
from right, was hmored as a winner of the National 4-H
Dairy Conference awarded at Ohio State Fair this week.
The award, which includes a trip to Madison , Wisconsin ,
in addition to a Recoplitlon Day Breakfall at the Ohio ·
State Fair wu Jre.ited by Nobli, Inc. and Centrl!l Ohio
Breeders' Aaocillim. Patty has been a member of the
Better 'Uvestock Dairy 4-H Club for seven Y'"''" and bas

James, backs ·
application
for grant
CO LUMBUS

State

Representative R.un James
I D-Proctorville) announced
today that he is supporting
Pom eroy 's appliciltion for a
grant to upgrade and com·
plete the Sugar Run Park
project.James has sent a letter to
th e Ohio Department of
Natural Resources askin g for

their fa vorable consideration

oi the project.
" I feel that Pomeroy has
just as m uc~ need for this
grant as any place m Ohio ;
and, since the Jaycees .l)av.e
already done such a terrific
job on the park , I want to see
Girl, 10. dies: hurt at carnival
Pomeroy get this grant ,"
CLEVELAND (UP!) -A JQ..year-old Canfield girl, njured James stated.
James said the park could
last week on a ride at a church carnival in Cleveland, died late
help
alleviate some of the
Wednesday at Metropolitan Hospital.
..
.Cheryl Winiarz had been in intensive care since Thursday, loitering problem now oc·
when she suffered multiple head fractures after she plunged curring in Pomeroy and can
from a ride at the (estival at St. John Cantius Roman Catholic prov ide some much needed
recreation for young people.
Church.
In the investigation following the accident, the registration
In his letter, J ames con·
certificate of the carnival operator , Carl Bayer, was revoked eluded, " I believe the citizens
by Cleveland Building Commissioner Carlton Rush .
of Pomeroy have clearly
demonstrated their desire
Dollar opens lower again
and need for this fa cility, and
LONDON ~UP ! )- The dollar opened lower again on most I am convinced they should
European markets today and fluctuated wildly against the be selected as one or the
Japanese yen as traders waited to see the effects of American a pplica nt s to receive a
grant. "
measures to defend the ailing currency.
Th e dollar ended the day at 191.65 yen, down from 192.10 at
Wednesday's close, the Bank of Tokyo said.
'
NOW YOU KNOW
The
shortest adult human
BOOSTERS MEETING
Resid ents are advised to
verified record
on
medically
The Sout hern Athleti c
use caution when traveliDg Boosters will meet thi s
was the . Dut ch midget
In the Langsville-Dexter evenin g at 8 p. m. at the hig)l
Pauline Musters who died in
area due to the upgrading school. Parents are urged to
1895 at a height of I foot, 9.65
of the railroad tracks.
inches.
attend.
Trains used to travel io

the area al approXImately
10 miles an hfJUr but now
they are tra\•eling 30 miles

Jean Ritchhart awarded

an hour.
:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;

'I

. Closed lunch period
. planned

over the contract proposal,
calling for a 19.5 percent pay
hike over thre. years . Some
isolated wildcat walkouts already have occurred.
Nor was it clear whether aU
the unions would honor picket
lines in the event of a wildcat
strike - in violation of
federa l law - by one union.

EXTEN DED _OUTWOK

EASl MEIGS ..,. Inflation and milk .was im:reased from
has hit the school lunch six to seven cents.
program in the Eastern Local
The board em ployed Anna
School District .
Rice to teach fourth grade at
Meeting in regular session the Chester School and Alan
. Tuesday night, the district's ·}Jolter was named vocational
board of education learned agricultural instructor for the
me nt operator and was 1.1lat the district lost eight district. Edward Cromley .
promoted to equipment cents on every meal served Point Pleasant, was hi red as
operator in 1964. In 1970 during the past school year in a mathematics teacher and
Couch was made a unit a report given by Supt. Clark as junior high football coach.
supervisor and served there Lees, The board increl~Jed Tuiti90 for the next school
Wltil his current promotion. lunclie$ for' the 'ife«i schoor· year- wa~ set at $ir.J.09 a
The Couch family, resides in year to 50 , cents for .month .
Pomeroy . They have six elementary students and 55
Barbara Hannum was
ce nts · for high sc hooi ·named clerk-custodian of the
children.
1Continued on page 19 1
studer1ts, a five cent raise, school at'tivities 'funds and
pla ns were made 'to se'cure a
bond for her. Gale Doughitt
was employed as a junior
high English teacher and to
teach voca l music in both the
ju.ni or and se nior hi gh
schools.
Meigs County Sherifi James J . Proffitt today
Plans were made for
extended public thanks to members of the Meigs CoiDity
having a basic bus driver 's
Mounted Posse who donated their time to assist In policing
education course at a cost of ·
the Meigs Counly Fair
$200,
one-ha lf of which will be
Mllllbers of the mounted posse who performed the
1
reembursed by the state.
.rvice, without pay, are Joe Young, Lou Osborne, Sam
New drivers are required to
1 Shaln, Cliarles S!laln, Charles Musser, Bobby Porter,
have the course. Cindy Scyoc
AIM Darline, Corby Cleek and Ed Templeton .
was employed to serve as
Sheriff Profitt also extends public thanks to the
secretary to Mrs. Eloise
Elpb-ft!! 'of Polt 230 for ml!dning the Sheriff
Boston, clerk. Vinas Lee was
~ent'a booth and for distributing the Crime Alert nam
ed to th e substitut e
and PubHc Safety Department literature at the Melga
teachers
list.
Couilty Fair. Takln&amp; part were Sandy Miller. Kl!llnv
A discussion was held on
Killin, Lila 1bomas, Jack Carder, Don Geary, Patty
the time secretaries at the
1'1rUr, John Snyder and Catliy Parker.
elementary schools spend at
~
" - yoWig people we members of Law Enforcement·
work each day. It was pointed
I• Ellplorer Post 230, spc11sored by the Meigs County
that since the elementary
out
Sheriff's Department. They are chartered through the Trl
schools
have head teachers
State Area Council, Boy Scouts of America. Deputy
who
ca
nnot
be in the office of
MUiord HyseU Ia advloor .
the
respective
s~h.oo l that the
Sheriltf'roffitl also commended the fairgoers on their
reduction of three hours a day
1IOOd bebavlor,,as the department received no reports of for th~ s~cretaries provides
any ffil!jor lneldenll that occurred during the fair.
IContuiued on pa~e 101

COOKE

I

I .

time , a lm&lt;"t ,.. i! he were on
the witness stand .
James Lapenta, secretary
or
the
bargai ning
coordinating committee for
the three largest posta l

en tine

'Sporn .promotes five·

1

I

By GREGORY GORDON
Wednesday an~ asked him to
WASHINGTON (UPI ) ·- re.,,pen negotiations by next
Chances of a na tionwide Monday.
strike that would bog down
Bolger said in a statement
the mail system hinged in he
-was
" naturall y
large part today on the disappointed" by the 78·,288 to
outcome of a contract vote by 58,832 vote, but would not say
the biggest of four unions · whether he would recoosicter
representing . 600,000 postal his position that any further
employees.
dispute must be submitted to
The 28()-thousand member . binding arbitr ation "- an
American Postal Workers indication he also is keeping
Union, representing postal hi s options open until
clerks, finished balloting at learning of the AWPU vote.
midnight Wednesday and
After being approached by
officials were expected to an- Vacca, director Wayn e
nounce the results of the Horvitz of the Federal
ratification vote late today or Mediation and Conciliation
·Friday.
Service promptly contacted
The National ASsociation of both sides and asked them' to
Letter Car riers, second meet with him separately." as
largest of the unions , already soon as possible to discuss
has voted by a 4-to-3 margin what steps sh.ould be taken ."
to reject the proposed threeReport ers repeatedly
year cootract. But leaders of as ked Va cca at a news
·that
union
indica ted conference whet her he would
Wednesday they would await set a strike deadline - as is
the APWU vote results before mandated by his uni on's
deciding whether to set a constitution - if the Postal
deadline for an illegal strike .. Service refuses to resume
· next week .
negotiations within five days .
· Letter carriers President J .
" On the advice of counsel , l
Joseph Vacca said he notified am not going to comment oo
Postmaster General William that provision of the constituBolger of· the rejection vote tion," he respooded each

lunch Prlce

THE PHOTO PLACE

or

'

•

Over 2,000

· ~\)G\)S1 AT

at

vote resUlts awaited

~!:astern UpS i..,..J_rh_e_w_or_ld_To_d_ay_,;_

-------------------------,I

FSIJC

•

e

EPA

I

I $ .,............ . '

·'

m

I

9

'

Guysville, Mrs. Ray (Ber·
OKEY R. PULLINS
Okey R. Pullins , 83, Rt. 2, nice) Midkiff, Langsville,
Coolville, died Tuesday Mrs. Leroy' (Mary) Fryar,
morning at Holzer Medical Coolville, Mrs. Ben (Freda)
Center following an extended Carsey, The Plains, Mrs.
William (Judy) . Leach,
illness.
Mineral
Wells, W. Va., Mrs.
· Mr. Pullins was born in
The Logan Board of
Marvin
(Wilma) Bu&lt;:kley ,
Meigs County, the son of the
Education this week emParkersburg,
June and
late Hamilton and Cornelia
Eleven defendants, six of Pomeroy, trespassing; Nita
ployed Ray T. (Skip) Miller,
Donna
at
home,
one step
Yeater Pullins. He was also
whom
were charged with Wisnisky, Gallipoilis, $30,
a · Rio Grande Coll ege •
preceded in death by two daughter, Agnes Bess, East trespassing on · Powell's trespassing; Robert Dean,
graduate , as Logan high
brothers, four sisters and one Uverpool; 28 grandchildren, perking lot , forfeited bonds in Belpre, $30, wrong way on a
school's new head basketball
24 great-grandchildren and
great-grandson.
the court of Pomeroy Mayor one way street ; James
coach for the 1978-79 school
He attended the Orange four step grandchildren.
Snodgrass, no address listed,
year. Miller replaces Scott
SOUTH POINT, Ohio Christian Church and was a
Funeral services will be Clarence Andrews Tuesday
$30, trespusing ; Juanita
night.
·
Fitzgerald, the 1977 -78 (UP!) _ A a9-month strike retired farmer and logger. He held Friday at I p.m. at the
Wilkinson, Pomeroy, $30,
Forfeiting
bonds
were
SEOAI. Coach of the Yea~ , · ended officially Monday with was a member of the Meigs Orange Christian Church
who resi gned earher this the first day of school in South County Farm Bureau and with the Rev . George Pickens Mathew i:lillard, Pomeroy, speeding ; Sharon Michael,
Pomeroy, $30, trespassing ;
year.
.Point as 53 teachers were was a resident of Athens and officiating assisted by the posted· on a charge of
James
Couch, Pomeroy, $30, Veterau Memorfallioaplta!
Mill~r . who will also serve back to work for the first time Meigs County his entire life. Rev . M.arvifi Paxton. Burial squealing tires; ·Herbert
speeding;
Gloria Starcher, no
ADMITTED - Dorothy
as reserve baseball coach, since May 1975 .
Meigs Memory Reibel, $30 trespassing;
He is survived by his wife, will be
address
hsted,
$30, Meffqrd, Vinton ; John
comes to Logan from CrooksThe teachers, members of Mattie Gillian Pullins; nine Gardens. Friends may call at Lorraine Aeiker, Pomeroy,
$30, wrong way on a one way trespassing.
Brogan, Rutland ; Carrie
ville high school where for the the South Poirtt Association of
sons, Theodore, Long Bot· the White Funeral Home in street ;
Don I.ovett, Middleport, Osborne, Reedsville ; Marie
Nancy
Clark,
past two years he has served Classroom Teachers, began a
" . was fined $100 and costs on
tom, William, Robert, Elza Coolville after J p.m. ThursCuster, Pomeroy; Clara
as a coach in basketball, walkout May 5, 1975, over tbe (Cricket ). and Roger, all of day. The body will lie in state
intoxication charges and Williams, Clifton, W. · Va.;
baseball, and cross.,ountry. school board's refusal to Coolville ; Marvin, Gallipolis ; at the church one hour prior Four cases heard
· Allen Mills, Middleport, was Helen Bartels, Syracuse;
In five years of basketball enter
into
collective Jim , Don and Wilbur, at to services.
by
Mayor
Hoffman
fined a total of $750 and costs Debbie Phillips, Middleport.
coaching his teams compiled ba rga ining. The board home ; nine daughters, Lillie
·
on charges of driving while
DiSCHARGED - Clarence
a record .of 68-33, while his retaliated by invoking the Randolph , Athen s, Mrs .
Two
defendants
were
fined
intoxicated, carrying a Norris, Christine Schultz ,
four year baseball coachin g state's Ferguson Act and Wilbur (Inez ) Windland,
and two others forfeited concealed weapon and Sherry Sayre, Robin Savage,
record stands at 43-32.
Miller 's Crooksville team firing most of th e teaching
bonds in the court of Mid- possession of a controlled Pearl Ash.
7'1• Pet . per year on a
staff.
rContlnued from page 1) dleJlQrt Mayor Fred Hoffman substance.
compiled a 7-13 record 'last
The key to reinstatement of
4 year certificate of
six-member EPA panel. " If Tuesday night.
season in the Muskingum the teachers was the electioo • EXTENDED FORECAST
deposit.
·
Friday
through
Sunday,
you can't pay your utility bill,
George A. McDaniel, 51,
Valley League against Class of a new majority on the
$1,000.00
minimum
.
.
I
humid
with
chance
oi
what
good
is
clean
air
?"
Middleport,
was fined $50 and
AAA and AA competition.
school board, backed by the
deposit.
thundershowers
Friday
A
number
of
elected
state
IAiten
of
oplllfoa
.re
welcomed.
Tlte)'
1bould
be
!HI
costs for disorderly manner
The 27-year old coach has a Ohio Education Association,
and
Saturday.
Highs
wUI
be
thaD MO wordiiODii or 1ubjeet to redudloa by the ed!Wr I
officials
took
the
podium
$50 and costs · on
and
A subst.1nti~l penatty is
bachelor of arts degree from the parent group of SPACT.
In
the
80s
and
lows
in
the
IIIII
mut be 1lped wltb the llpM'I addnll. Namllllll)'
invoked on all (trtific.te
.earlier
Tuesday
to
pledge
disturbing
the
j)eace
charges
Rio Grand e Co ll ege nad
· 1ate March, us
. .
Then m
accounts withdrawn prior
60s.
Fair
and
cooler
Sunday
coal
miners
be
withheld
upoa publleaUoa. However, oa requul,
support
for
the
and
Sammy
Little,
41
,
served as an assista nt coach District Court Judge Timothy
to the dote of moturily.
.
.
_
wW
be
dlteiOHtl. Lellert 1hould be ID lood tule,
with
highs
from
the
upper
and
debate
who
should
be
Middleport, was fined the
under Art Lanham for the Hogan ruled that the board
70s
to
low
80s.
Lows
will
be
blamed
for
the
current
same
amounts
on
the
same
addretllllliiiUH, DDI perwoullUH.
\
Redmen during the 1973-74 had violated the teachers'
in the upper 50s to lower
muddle
over
the
pollution
charges.
season.
rights and ordered them
80s.
standards.
Forfeiting bonds were
The new Chieftain mentor reinstated.' The school board
But
some
of
the
miners
Ralph
H. Stone, 41, Rutland,
was an assistant basketball did not appeal the ruling, ·::;:;:;:::;:::::;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::
I
questioned
the
officials
'
$150
posted
on a charge of
coac h a nd head ba seba ll reinstated the teachers June
leaving the scene of an ac- .
• • t
coac h a t Riv erside high 13 and negotiated a new Savage, on the scene as the intentions.
"This
Is
a
political
year
cident,
and
Brian
Keith
I
teachers returned Monday
school in DeGraff and then contract with SPACT.
The Athens County
moved to Vanlue high school
The 53 teachers repre5ent told them, "You knew you this is an election year. Now French, 22, Middleport, $50,
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
. n~a r Findlay as head coach in about two-thirds of those were right and you were it's time to help, " said David posted on a disorderly More about broadcasting names
296 S.tond St.
. both basketball and baseball fired in 1975. one of the 82 willing to make so many Riser , of United Mine manner charge.
Pomeroy , Ohio
before taking the helm of the fired teachers has since diect sacrifices to prove that you Workers Local 1810 in
To the Editor :
Crooksv ille team two years and others have found work were. On behaH of teachers Powhatan Point. 'It's time
In Mr. Hoeflich 's column, Aug. 13, 78, some mentioo was
all across the nation, I they (utilitie s and the
ago .
in other district.
made
regarding the broadcasting of people's names over the
Whil e at Rio Gra nd e
OEA President Sally congratulate you on your goverment) quit playing
air
who
had called In complaints ol wrong doing In the county.
rcontlnued from PIKII)
College Miller was a pitcher
victor y and welcome you politics with our jobs and our
A short time ago I phoned In a c001plalnt to our sheriff's
and an outfielder for the
back to the classroom where lives. That's all I've got to 1974, but later that year, department and in less than ten minutes my name, address
say.'1
Redmen for four years.
Appalachian was forced to and the problem was m every scanner and two-way radio
you belong"
In testimooy that cut to the stretch out work because of
Also hired this week by the
·
core of miners• concerns, the company's poor financial tuned to the sheriff's office frequency.
Logan school boar d was
I
have
always
felt
that
I
was
a
reasonably
responsibh!
Berl Bollman, of UMW Local condition according to a
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
JeffreyS . Werry, formerl y of
NOW
YOU
KNOW
1941, recalled wherrhe was an company spokesman. Had citizen who pretty well mindllhlsown business, but at the same
Pomeroy, as head freshman
Call us today tor your
time I refuse to be stepped on.
The word " posh "
unemployed construction work
foot ball coach and science
proceeded
as ~
se n i or. p ic ture
I .feel this was a, very serious breach of trust by our
elegant
and worker years ago .
appointm ent .
teacher . Werry , who has been meaning
scheduled, the plant was , Sheriff's department.
·
·
"It's not a good feeling to expected to cost $420 million.
We feature traditional
livin g in Ga llipolis, received luxurious - is an acronym
We
see
a
request
by
thlsdepartmentforcitizenshelp
every
for " port out, starboard look at the children and say, Because of the delay, the
se tting s
and outdoor
a one·year contract .
portraiture .
home,"
describing the best 'Hey , I don't have anything,! plant is now estimated to cost once in a while and then we are repaid by having our lives and
Diana K.. Carsey, Pomeroy,
JrOperty jeapordized by careless broadcasting ol our names
" We aim (our ca meras ,
acco mm odations can't give you anything,"' not less than $625 million.
was employed by the Logan deck
that is) to plea se!
and
addresses over the air.
.
. board as an English tea cher aboard ocean liners outbound said Roffman . "I've had to
The initial turbine roll is
A
burned
child
usually
fears
fire
and I most certainly shall
and advisor for the high and on the return to home shoot game out of season to planned for the summer of not call again for any reason.
feed my children.
school news paper, the port .
1980, with the plant going into
Richard L. Coleman
"Clean air and clean water commercial operation by the
Chieftain advisor . She is ' a
37070
Bashan
Rd.,
Long
Bottom, Ohio 45743
(Bob Hoeflich)
are two of the finest things we winter of !980-81.
rece nt grad uaie of Rio
Best typo uf the year so far : can have . But, I have to be
Gra nde Colle ge and was
992-5292
109 High St .
Rdcrem:c
in Gl story to the able to support my family employed on a one year
that is my God-given right,"
Pomeroy
"Ku
Klutz
Klan."
contract .
said Boffman.
Amid sustained applause,
EPA panel chairman Thomas
Harrison told Bollman,
"Judging from the response,
you have probably come as
close to the purpose of this
hearin g as any of the
speakers this morning ."
Elected officials and
miners aimed the brunt of
their displea sure at the
federal pollution standards,
. .
THE HOME OF QUALITY
•
saying they are too stringent
and have dubious benefits.
"One thing does puzzle
"Fiexst~l" · "Provincetown Maple Dining Rooms" . "Lane" •
me," said Fred Palmer of the
Athens
Chamber
of
"Spring Air Bedding'' - "Howell Dinettes"
Commerce. I' As a boy In the
old brick schooolhouse I
drank sulfur water for years.
Admiral - Hoover - Frigidaire Sizes 29 to 42 waist lengths 30 to 36, Pre·
My mother 'would give me a
washed
blue denim, 80 pet. cotton, 20 pet •
spoonful of sulfur and
Armsti'Qflg - Caloric - Speed Queen
polyester
, Flare or straight leg style, true
molasses in the springtime.
western styling.
Yet, 11 little whiff of sulfur
smoke in our breathing is
supposed to kill me."
The EPA Is expected to
release
a tentative ruling
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
the standards Nov. 'J5, with a
final decision due by Jan. 30,
1979.

cage coach

I

lAP

had projects In dairy, veterinary science, sewing,
cookjng, rabbits, flower gardening and small animals.
She has al90 served as club secretary, recreation leader,
safety and health chllirman in addition to other leader!!hip
roles. Pictured above, from left, are Dr. Wallace E.
Erlc~son, Central Ohio Breeders' AssociatiQn ; Nancy
Moore, Co!!hocton Co181ty; Miss Parker and James
Garner, Buller County . In all, more than 50 4-H members ·
were honored at the Recognition Day Breakfast.

I~

college scholarship
The Rio Grande College
and Communit y College
District Scholarship winner
for Southern High School was
announced by DeanS. Brown,
director of admissions and
records for the college.
Jean Ritchhart , Syracuse,
becomes the first Southern
High School recipient of this
new ly · created annua l
scholarship.
In making the an·
nounc ement; Brown noted
that class rank , school activities and community involvement were the criteria
used in the selection.
Miss Ritchhart, a member
of the . National Honor
Society, graduated sixth in
her class at Southern.
Her extracurri cular acJEAN RITCHHART
tivities included three years
of participat ion with the
school newspaper, two years tuition scholarships to be
work .on the yearbook staff, awarded to one student from
student council membership, each of the high schools in
pep cl ub activities, and Gallia , Meigs, Vinton and
·
participation in the senior Jackson Counties.
Recipients
of
the
award
are
class play.
·
se
lect
ed
·
by
a
committee
Miss Ritchhart was also a
st andout in high school comprised of the high school
athletics. A four-year par- principal, guidance coun·
ticipant in both basketball selor, senior E~;~glish and
and volleyball, she captained government teacher and a
both teams her senior year . representative from Rio
The scholarahip Ritchhart Grande College and Com·
received is one of twelve full munity College.

,

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