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10- The Daily &amp;ntin~l. Milltllepurt-Pumeruy, t )., Th ursda y, Au~ . :!4, 1H78

.Mrs. Pratt
Wreck victim is fair
heading
An auto driven by Michael
W. Daniels, 41 , was listed in 17, Patriot. north bound , and l.ambet1 . 26, Rutland, fail ed
Dewey t' ulk ,
Oak Hill.
stop a nd stru ck the fund drive
Medica l Center this morning
A Troy resident , Thomas

autos driven by Fred Paxton.

fair condition at the Holzer

38,
trave ling so uth, m et in a
curve on TR 12, two miles

where he was admitted

to
Wa11acc vellic:e in the r ear.

Elberfelds .In Pomeroy
FRIDAY, AUGUST 25th &amp; SATURDAY, AUGUST 26th

The force of the impat1
west of SR 775.
pushed the Wallace auto into
at 9:;i0 p. m. Wednesday on
Bot h drivers applied their t he rea-r of the Lawson fi'oundation · announces the
appointment of Mrs. Grace
Warehime Rd. just east of bra kes and the Pa&lt;ton vehicle.
Middleport.
as
Mill Creek Rd.
vehicle slid left into the Fulk _ Officers ) report moderate Pratt.
for
the
1978
chairperson
A spokesman at the Holzer au to.
damage to all three autos.
Medical Center said Damels
The patrol ' reports no in- Lambert was &lt;: it ed on " Breath ol Life" campaign.
The " breath of Life"
su ffered a fr a~tured skull and JUries. Both vehicles incurred charges of assured cl ear
campaign.
to . be held in
faci al fra ct ures . He was moderate damage.
distance.
Middleport
in September,
admitted to the int en sive ca re
Officers were called to the
Th e patr ol report s the
w1it. A pa ssenger in his car. scene of a three auto accident wm'dshield of a vehicle driven . supports research to find a
Linda L. Adkins, 23. was at ~ 25 on SR 124 one mile by Mar y Black, :Jg , St. cure for Cystic Fibrosis, a
injured bu t refused treat- cast .of SR 325.
Albans, W. Va., was shal- leading ge netic killer of
ment.
According to the · patrol, t eretl when an unidentified American children , and
According to the Gallia- vehicles operated by Billy auto flipped a stone from the specialized medical care for
Meigs Post State Highway Wallace, 40, Middlepon . and roadway o n SR 7, one mile children with all lungdamaging diseases in 120 CF
Patrol. Daniels lost control of Mark La wson. 19, Pomeroy, north of U. S. 35.
centers in the United States.
his car on a curve. His vehicle we re stopped in trflffi r nn 1.,4_
Local children affected by
i'
ran off the left side of the
CF, severe asthma, chronic
roadway and st ruck a tree .
bronchitis, bronchiectasis.
Daniels wa s charg&lt;:d with
The patrol invest igated
th ree othe r act'idents Wednesda y.
Officer s report at 4:15a .m.

"' · rnE
I
(

"RALlY"
by

Hush Pupp,i~s·

! Area Deaths I
0 . L, UNDERWOOD
Ot is 1.. Und erwood . 72.

Syracu se, ,died at hi s
residence Wednesday night.
Mr. Underwood Wa s dead
on arr iva l of the Syracuse
Emergency Squad.
Mr. Underwood was born
Nov. :10. t905 , the son of the
la te Ma ry Happney and
Robert Underwood.
He retired from Goodyear
Tire and Rubber, Akron, in
1970 after 31 and one-half

and Dora Wood, Syracuse.
Funeral serv ices will be
held Saturday at 3 p.m. at the
Ho'pkins Funeral Home, Ellel
Chapel. Akron, with burial to
be in Hillside Memorial Park
Cemetery. Friends may call
· at the Ewing Funeral Home
today until 9 p.m, On Friday
fnend s may call at the
Hopkins Funeral Home, Ellet
Chapel. Canton Road, Akron
from ito 4 and ·7 to 9 and on
Saturday until titne of ser-

years of servi ee . He wa s a

vices.

member of th e Syracuse

L'hurch nf God.

Eastern

He is s urvived by his wife.

'

Et hel E . Vau ghan Un derwood; three sons , Richa rd
V.. James A.. and Otis R.. all
of Akron ; fiv e qaughters.
Marlene Pa d.ge tt, Akron:
Barbara Starcher and Joyce
Shaw. both of I Lakemore:
Ca rol Shadroskey, California ,
and Gloria Rollyson. Akron ;
'l1 grandchildren and six .

1

J
.,

~

J

?
\

.I

;

\

great ~g r a nd c hi ldr en;

t wo
sisters, Mae Barrett , Akron .

)

•

THE
SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

~

PM£~ I

Pigsk in
Coppe r

•

PH. 992-2644

~

J

352 E . M,ti n, Pomeroy

~

Yo• ·cF rDFio' '' '

fo ur and one-half hours daily.
Lees reports t hat a learning

disabilities tea cher and a
special education teacher for
hi gh school are still needed in
the di strict . Classes · in the
district start next week.
stale funded elementary
library prog ram and a
meeting with representatives

of the school employes, noncert ified, of the district was
set for Tuesday , Sept . 12. Use
of the gymnasium of .the
Chester School was given to
the Chester PTA for oct: 21. .
The board is extending an
open invitation for parents to
visit schools of the dist rict be·
tween 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. on
Aug. 28. fu&gt;ge r Spencer was
named to teach the fifth
grade at Chester. rather than
fourth.

I

FLORIST

~

L

secreta ries was increased to

A disc ussion was held on a

r-------·-l
Your ' ' Ex tr a Tou ch"
Flor ist Since 1957

tttut:tJ rrom Plit£e 1)
fo r
inadequate
offi ce
cove rage . The time of
~ t:unt

1

_.._._...._,._..._.__,_'"

e salute-. . . .-.. ..----The Youth of
Meigs County
The Ra~ine Home National Bank believes in lhe youth of Meigs
County. Thalts why we s upported the 4- H and FFA Uveslock Sale
and purchased 5 animals from Perry Smith, Tim Brinager, Jeff
Sellers, Son~ a Carr and Randy Wolfe for a total of $3,063.75. · Tim
Brinager's steer was dona ted to the Junior Fair Board and resold for
S981.15 bringing the grand total lo $4,045.50.

JEANS

OF SPECIAL

Special school days prices
on little boys' Khaki and
denim jeans. Regular and
slim sizes A to 7.

AUGUST PRICES

Child ren's Hospital in
Columbus.
.
· The · " Breath of Life"
Campaign contributions truly
can lengthen the lives of
children with CF. In 1955
when the CF Foundation was
established, few children
'
.
with
or survived to school
age. Today, thanks to ad-

SPICIAL

YOUR WINTER

SALE

vancements in research and

care, a child with GF who is '
diagnosed early and begins

SHORTS

JUNIOR ·SLACKS

cumprehensive medical care
immediately, ha s a SO per-

cent chance of living past age
18. Of course, this is not
enough,
Half of all children with CF
still die before age 18, and .
lung-damaging diseases still
take the lives of more
children in this country than
any other diiiease e&lt;cept
cancer. We hope everyone
will support us in September
by giving the breath of. life to
these children before their
time runs out.

WOMEN'S SUMMER
.
SHORTS IN REGULAR

Cinch waist and belted
styles in solid colors.
Polyeste r blends in sizes
·J to 18 .

AND JUNIOR SIZES.

•

;:: : ::: :;:: :::::;:::;::::: :: ::::::~::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::

Reg.S10.00. ...... SaJeS 7.99
Reg . $11.00...... Sale s 8.79
Reg. 512.00....... ·sale $9.59
Reg. S16.00 ....... Sale 512.79
Reg . S2J.OO....... Sale 518.39

Sporn

I !Jll
H rl.VI(l
BANK

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK

fiM
·
..... ... ...
'

'

Racine, Ohio

Southem

PRICE

hires tw:o

Crum pMI!(C _11 .

WOMEN'S SCARVES

Burton Hickman, born in
Fayette Co unty , W. Va .,
~Uended Gauley Bridge and
tcholas County htgh sch"'!ls,
g~aduatmg m 1959. He was
dtscha~ged from the U. S.
Armym 1964. Hts em·
ployment at Sporn Plan I
:;eg~n 111 1969, when he was
.. ~.. as a Uhhty Worker
·
In )970, he received
promotiosn to Utility Worker
" A", utility operator and
auxiliary
equipment
operator. He was promoted to
equipment operator In 1973,
and performed that job until
he recently became a
member of supervision as a
unit supervisor. Hickman, his
wife and two daughters

RACINE - Two teachers
were hired for the new school
year Thunday nilht when
the Southera Local School
Dlltric:t Board of Education
met In reo: ed IIOIIion .
• Hired
were
Valerie
J~son, an .elmQeatarr
teadter, and John Snedlller,
who wiU teach In the EMR
fleJd.
The board gave pennlssion.
lor a room at lite high school
lo be uaed by the Rio Grande
College and Community
College for a non-credit
course In the college's continuing education program.
• The reslgnatlQil of Charles
Lawrence as a regular bus
driver was accepted and
Lawrence was named to
serve as a subatltute driver.
Negollallon progress was
discussed.
Attending the meeting were
board members DaUas Hill,
Betty Wagner, Sue Grueser
and Shirley Johnson ; Supt.
Bob Ord and treasurer Linda
Spencer.

"PLAY

POLYESTER SQUARES
AND :oBLONGS

G.YM .SET

•

-Weather resistant baked on enamel finish.

Reg. 52.00

SALE •1.49
Reg .

teache:rs

REG. '54.00

$3.00

SALE '2.29

-Airglide with coolv.ent seats.
- 2 swings with coolvent seats.

Reg. S4.00

SALE '2.99
Reg.

ON"I.Y 3 TO SELL

ss.oo
SALE '3.79

I

SALE '4.49

Run-away youth
is arrested

MEN'S
14-0~NCE

Meigs . County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports a IS·
year-old juvenile from
Dayton has been arrested by
Sheriff's Investigator Gary
Wolfe, "nd Meigs County
Juvenile Officer, Carl Hysell.
The ru n-a way juven ile
pleaded guilty. and was
released to her parents.

WRANGLER
BLUE
DENIM
·DUNGAREES
New Shipment of flare leg
and straight leg styles. Waist
sizes 29. to 42, lengths 30 to 36.
Pre -wash!!d lA -ounce No Fault blue 1lenim. Special
two-day sale. ·
·

'13

'3911

SPECIAL

Reg. 56 .00

res ide in Mason .

MEN'S
ROLFS.
BILLFOLDS

Weather
· Trl -folds, bl -folds,
key cases, credit card
holders.
limited
quantijy,
regular
prices $8.00 to $12.00.

Scattered thundershowers
\ tonight with a low between ~
and 70. Partly cloudy and less
humid Saturday with high
temperatures In the mid 81/S.
The
probablllty
of
preclpltatlon Is 40 percent
todaY and tonight and 20
percent Saturday .

~PRICE

11

SPECIAL 2 DAY SALE!

AND
Hanes MEN'S
BOYS'

BOYS .JEANS

A.

1\tlaU and motor vehicle
sales lax receipts In "elgs
County were up coa·
slderably for .July, lt78,
"""'pared to recelpll for
the aame moalh In 1177,
acconlblc to the moalhly
report of Slate Treasurer
Mrs. Gertrude Dooahey.
ID Jllly, lt78 relaD sale1
In receipt•
totaled
$17,117.90 compared to
recelpll of f48,M.Il for
.July, lt77, an Increase of
$19,81Ut, or 31.80 percent
Motor veblcle sales tn
recelpta for July, 1978,
lolaled $57,Z75.73 ' com·
pared to receipts of
$38,13Z.O lor July, 1177, au
Incruu of "',343.!5, or
55.08 perceot.

$488 ·

COAT.

transferred to Montgomery
County Juvenile Court by
· Judge Webster . Also arrested
and cha rged with · contributing to the delinquency
of a minor was John McBride. Rt. 2, Coolville. He
was taken before County
Court Judge Robert Buck and
sentenced 10 days in jail
which was suspended, and
pl aced on six months
probation.

A Home Rank
For
Meigs County People

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, August 25. 1978

AND
'
LAY-AWAY

Disposition of her case w8s

GRA_ND CHAMPION LAMB - The grand champion lamb at the 1978 Meigs
County Fatr sold for $7.50 a pound and was pw-chased by Racine Home National
Bank. The animal weighed 103 pounds. Shown are , foreground, Sonia Carr,
Tuppers Plains, owner ; second row, An gie Spencer, sheep princess and Tammy
. Ervm . .sh~ep queen; back, Dan Dailey, shepherd, Charles Calaway and Mary
Mora , JUnior fatr king and queen a nd Tom Wolfe, president of the Racine Home
Nat10nal Bank .

GENEVA (UP() - Hljacltt:ra tDday commandeered an
airliner carrying scores of Americlllll and threatened to blow
up the plaile .ln nine hours unless autbOrltiea freed Robert F.
Kennedy's Palestinian killer Sirhan Sirhan and Nazi war
.criminal Rudolph Hess.
They alao demanded the r~ from U.S. priaona of five
inauanawholllaged a hijack two years ago. A New York city
pollceman waa ldlled In a related 11omliing.
The men, calling the1111elvea "a squad of United Revolutlon· .
iry Soldiers," took cmtrol of the Trana World Airwa~ Boeing
7fYI carrying 79 pauenaers and 10 crew over ShaMon, Ireland,
an hOur before It landed In Geiii'IVa.

REG. '6.00

TAKE ADVANTAGE

and recurrent pneumonia are

{ C!)tlllllllt!tl

~

LimE BOYS'

LAY-AWAY
NOW!

I treated at the CF center at

I

•

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

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

OWl. His · car had severe
dcunage .

Hijackers want Sirhan, Hess freed

TWO DAY SALE

The Central Ohio Chapter
of the Cystic Fibrosis

following a one-car accident

Scores of Americans ;,n c_ommandeered airliner

Blue denims. clotton •
polyester blends. 51 zes .8 to
18 in regulars, slims and
huskies. plus student sizes
26 to 30 waist. Select your
proper
length .
Big
selec!ion of styles.
'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Robert
J ohnso n,· Racine ; Ellen
Couc h, Pomeroy; Millia
Hy se ll. Pomeroy; Linda
Dickens, Pomeroy ; Anna
Vaughan, Pomeroy; Errol
Follrod, Pomeroy.
i
DISCHARGED - Hoben
Burnem, Robert J ohnson
Na ncy Bartimus , D~ll~

1

Curtis, Geor ge Dean, Karen

Layne , Ida Wh ite, Mary
Clark, Nelle Bahr, Debra
. Phillips .

.,

TWO SQUAD RUNS
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad "was called
to 336 Broadway at-9:i!J ·p,m.
Wednesday for Mrs. Herberi
Gilkey, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 10:34
· p.m., the squad went to Route
I, for John Hood , also a
medical patient, who wa•
taken tc, Holter Medi c
l:enter.

OPEN

SATUR~Y

Complete

~tlecllon

ary

e

after wreck

Carl HyaeU, Meip County juvenileprobation officer slngle·handedly
captured two men wanted for alleged
theft and anned robbery.
Meigs. County officers had been
notlfled that a car With the wanted men
was seen In Meip County. sell was
traveling Qll SR 124 when a car pulled
out onto the highway behind him and
followed him out Route 124. It wu the
car with tbe wanted men.
'l'be pair tumed off Route 124 and
hea.ded toward DtlnvWe. HyaeU turned
around and punutcl them. He apprebendtd the pair tine miles .,.. of
Danville In GaW. County, juat across
the MalpGaW. Une on Route 325.

fly

WINS SECOND PLACE , TROPHY-Let Ann
IW a IICOIId ,a- trophy .at
11H1 t-Il WA Jllllor Fair Lhulodl Ale at . the MIICI
Count;)'
far Ia~ alllalr IIIII bad the IICOIId laraat
rille ol!llln a daJ. P'1nt pl-.-' Ill Tuc111 Tripp far hll
lllatr wNcb tad the 1lrpll pin Jill' ~=an k,
lAirl RAtNnPm llld 1M Am Raiii!MI~
ol Mr.
and Mn. W1lllv
R&amp;. 2, Coalviiii.IIGtb ,U.Ja IOid
lllatl'll at IIHI aMU&amp;Illvlltocll ule.

r•

JIG!i-.

1

'"

I

Vol. 29. No. 93

Man charged

SAVE 20%
. ~ ... a, wu J1

Fifteen Cents

i_.J~r_h_e...,.W_o_r_ld_To_d_q_y_ Three new vehicles serving
Meigs Senior Citizens Center

olhletlc ""'"'

9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

entine

Meeting with the Meigs · County . The hoard tabled the
County commissioners this matter for additional study.
week were Jim Page, of
Attending were Henry
Fleming, Page and Stolte Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
pictured with the three new vehicles which are now serving the Meigs
engineering finn, along with Roush, commissioners and
NEW VEHICLES SERVING SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER County Senior Citizens Center. Lewis Williams is also a driver for the
Wesley Buehl, county Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
Drivers Troy Ohlinger, Wanda Eblin and Virgil McElroy, 1 to r , are
center.
engineer, to discuss the ac·
cess road lo the multi·
purpose health facility.
Page advised that work 011
the road is nearing completion and stated thai the
project would be ready lor
bidding within the next few
Timber harvests interest Carter
days.
.
Also discussed with Page
GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (UP!)
was the county-wl~ house Presl~nt carter's "no work" vacation was enlivened today by
numbering project and the a controversial proposal: Umber harvests in the Western
BY BOB HOEF1..ICH
for the out-&lt;&gt;f-town trips .
board was advised that wUdernell8.
Three new vehicles - two 14-passenger vans and a five
Following is a general schedule for the daily trips by the
directories would be in the
Carter transferred his family and entow-age from Idaho's passenger station wagon- have been put into operation at the vans which is in addition to Pomeroy and Middleport daily :
bands of the commissioners Salmon River to Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in' Pomeroy.
Monday - Dexter, Langsville , RuUand, Laurel Cliff.
within a week, .
Thursday, and told reporters that Interior Secretary Cecll
Since transportation is many Urnes '8 major problem for
Tuesday - Letart, Racine, Syracuse, Minersville, Port·
D o n a I d B r e w e r , Andrus, who accompanied him on the river trip, had given him senior citizens, the three vehicles, which replace some worn land .
representative of David M. inJormetionabout the Idlho Primitive Area. The area is now out equipment, are considered a real shot in the arm for center
Wednesday - Point Rock, Carpenter , Pagetown,
Griffith and Associates, met lllatHmlrolled !lUI ia conaldered almost certain to be ~ratjpna.,
Harrisonville, County Road 19, Rout£ 3.1, Flatwoods and Long
with the'"board and ptuented • propoled for federal wUderne!ll destgnaUon early neil year.
The rew vehlcles 'w'ehF'fiu!iteif"tl'lr!ili!th'tlllr"lr.S: UrbeTr--Hollow.
·
a propoaal for recovering ·
Mass Transportation Act with 80 percent being granted
Thursday - The Tuesday route is basically repealed and
county expenditures which T"
II IDI!!S
. • ile 1e ak kill!! one
through federal funds and the applicant providing 20 percent of the Tuppers Plains and Chester areas are added .
support the administration of
Itan
the t~ta l cost. Application for the vehicles was filed in
Friday - the Moo day rout£ is repeated and Reedsville and
federal programs.
ROCK, !Can. (UPI) - Clouds of dark orange gas spewing Decllinber 1976, through the Ohio Department of Trans- Long Bottom areas are added.
It was pointed out that from a 1-.k inside an underground Titan II missile silo klUed portation.
CenU!r staff members make it clear that although
there could be a recovery of ooe Air Force worker Thw-sday, seriously Injured two others
Th e 14-passenger vans are traveling to every area in the schedules are set up, deviations are made for senior citizens
up to $30,000 for Mei~s and forced the evacuaUon of hundreds of people from homes county at least once a week to provide transportation for who have eme rgencies arise. Those having sueh emergencies
seniocs to grocery stores, banks, the doctor's office, to the such as illness are to advise the center of their problem.
hear the nucear warhead mls811e complex.
Kansas Air Force teams from McCoMell Base in Wichita center or to other locations where business is til be conducted.
. Money for the new vehicles was provided through a
Those needing transportation are to telephone the center, program f&lt;r the elderly and handicapped in areas where there
were aUowlng some of the displaced to return to their homes
late Thursday If their houses were upwind from a oorth- 992-7886, 00 the day bef&lt;re they wish to be picked up and oui-&lt;Jf. is not a mass transportation system: Senior citizens are
easlerly winds pushing the cau.stlc fwnes. The poisonous town trips to visit physicians or on other important business entiUed to ride any of the vehicles free of charge but
fumes from a jet fuel component forced the evacuation of must be logged with the center one week ahead. Through the contributions are accepted . S!aff members say that
Rock, a rural U]wn of about 200 people about 30 miles northeast week's notice, center personnel can many times plan the out· contributions given on an ability to pay basis do add up over
of Wichita, but government officials said the mls81le's of-town trips so that several senior citizens can be taken to one periods of time.
warhead was disconnected and there was no chance of nuclear location oo the same trip . The station wagin is generally used
explosion.
Eastern teachers to
Two
cars
received
moderate damages and one
driver was cited to mayor's Test tube baby has TY_debut
m eet Monday
court on three charges In an
LONDON (UPl) - One-month-ola Louise Br.own, the
accident on Pomeroy's West
EAST MEIGS - Teachers
w&lt;rld's
first ''lest tube" baby, made her television debut
Main St. at 9:46 p. m. Thurs·
in the Eastern Local School
Thursday after her mother agreed til allow a movie of her birth
day.
District will meet at the high
Pomeroy Pollee said that a to be shown m television.
school building on Monday
In a sh&lt;rt flhn shot at Oldham General Hospital by the
, westbound car, driven by
morning for opening of the
government's
Central Office of Information and aired by the
Robert E. Manley, Bidwell,
sc hool year meeti ngs.
went left of center, and struck British Broadcasting Co., Louise Is shown being lifted from the
Teachers will meet in
an eastbound car driven by uterus of her mother, Lesley Brown, in a Caesarian operation.
general session at 9:30 a. m.
Allee E. Hannon, Mason, W. The fUm was narrated at the time of birth by gynecologist
and then at 10:30 a. m. they
Va . Manley was cited on Patrick Steptoe, whoae research over 12 years together with
will meet with their building
charges
of
reckless Cambrldtle scientist Robert Edwards made it possible for a
principals and head teachers
operation, driving while wunan with blocked Fallopian tubes to bear a child.
for individua l building
under su.spenslQiland leaving
meetings.
the scene of an ae&lt;:ldent.
Mentor teachers may have strike
Classes for all students,
There were no Injuries.
except Kindergarten, begin
. MENTOR, Ohio (UP!) - Members of the Mentor
on Tuesday morning. School
Teachers Auociation meet Sunday night to vote on a poSSible
bus routes will be essentially
w&lt;rk stoppage Mmda)' when claases are set to begin.
the same as last year. KinTeachers are in a dispute with the board of eudcatlon over
dergarten conferences will be
wages and alaowant a voice In determining the size of claases.
held on August 29, 30 and 31,
Contract talks are stalled, which has also upset teachers.
with classes for kindergarten
Teachers had cmsidenil a work stoppage in May, but decided
youngsters beginning SepLAND
-Meigs 4-H'er Tanunie Starcher, Pine Grove, is shown with Bob
against it 10 the seniors could greduate.
tember I.
Eva111 during a ceremooy where he presented Ohio 4-H'ers an "Acre of Wildlife" at Camp
Adding to the teachers' woes is Tuesday's rejection at the
Ohio in Utica recently. In sponsoring the acre for wild animals and rurds, Evans, of Gallia
polla of a 6.9 mill additional operating levy which may prompt
::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::·:::::::::':::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::
County, hopesiD promote conservation education among Ohio 4-H'ers about the habits of
the !late to take over the schools If the schools run out of
EXTENDED FORECAST
';,wildlife. See page 12 f&lt;r complete story.
mooey before the end of the celandar_year.
Sunday
through
Tuesday, lair Sunday with
scallered thundershowers
Monday and Tuesday .
Highs wlll be tD the upper
70s or low 80s wllb a low lo
the low 60s or upper 50s.

UIH In brlefl,
T-tlllrts,

I.

•

Road wotk
•
nearzng
completion

of

Elberfelds In POmeroy
!,

"filled with aploelves" ·Including a "combiilation bomb''
which would el!Jllode aul&lt;matically at 5:30p.m. (12:30 p.m.
EDT). .
It waa not known how many hijackers were Involved.
The pilot, Capt. Robert Hamilton, r~ted the passengers
were calm and c&lt;mfortable and apparenUy there were no
,Injuries.
.
·
The men at ooe point called thellllielves "pragmatic Palestlnlana" and presented a 19-page typed dcicwnent in good
German and poor Enclilh, which Included a wild variety of
allegaUona and rambling demands.

negotiators tried to make sense of the hijackers' demands and
negotiated with them through the pilot.
"filled with ellplosives" and added :
"One suitcase bomb is remote controlled and one is a _ No tr~ps and &lt;Jf11Y a few policemen, standit.Q well away,
combination bomll, both remote controlled and with a timing were VISible around the plane parked in a remote corner of the
device. The combination bomb will under any circwnstances airfield.
Swiss officials said the passengers were calm - so calm that
explode automatically at exactly 5:30p.m."
The hijackers said they would "shoot anyone who tries to one sent word through the captain to a car rental firm that he
would not be picking up his rented auto on schedule.
leave" the plane.
Authorities said the hijacking began just before 7:20a.m.
Among the passengers was the daughter of William vanden
Huevel, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, (2:20 a.m.) when a bearded man woke a stewardess and
who once campaigned for Robert Kennedy. He rushed to ordered her to take a package to the pilot.
(Continued on page 12)
Geneva airport, where the plane landed, while Swiss
'llle statement said two suitcases in the plane's hold were

Meigs officer .arrests
two robbery suspects

•

7.95 JEANS .... SALE '6.79
'9.95 JEANS .....SALE '1.49
110.95 JEANS ... SALE 19J9
'13.95 JEANS.. SAL£ 111.89

'~

They said two sultcaaes In the baggage comparlment were .

The men were Boyd Browning· and
Paul Sindelbecker, no addresses
recorded. The men allegedly stole a car
on Aug. 13 and carried out an anned
robbery at a carryout on Route 327 In
Vinton County . .
Other officers . rasslstlng in the
search were Gary Wolfe, Keith Wood
and Darrell Slone, Meigs · County
deputies, Vinton County Sheriff Ron
Davis and Deputy Fred Pelfrey.'
The men were taken to Vinton County
but the. car they were In remains In
Meigs County. Sheriff Proffitt's office
, wu notified by cltllenl of Meigs County
that the men were in Meigs County.

School bus driving

instructions offered
Anyone

interes ted

in

becoming a schoo l bus
driver?

With proper qualifications,
it can all be arranged through
a new program which wlll
oller bus driving instruction
to prospective drivers . .
Purpose olthe program is to
provide a pool of" bus drivers
who will . be available when
vacancies exist .
Serving as Instructor for
prospective drivers laking
the course In this region, of
which Meigs County is a part
is John D. Riebel, Sr., fonner
superintendent of the Eastern
Local School District:

Entrance qualifications
include: must be 18 years of
age ; documentation of a ·local
and national criminal record
check ; documentation of a
local and national driver
check; documentation of a
medi cal
exam~nation;
recommendation by a local
school superintendent.
Reibel will instruct a 12
hour classroom course for
prospective drivers with
areas covered to include
school
bus
driver
requirements , public
relations, pre-driving in·
struction, defensive driving,
(Cominuea on page 12 l

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This week's winning Ohio
Lottery aumhera:
GGld oumber - 0.
White number - 116.
Blue number - 9%8.
Extra Ca•b'
85%551.

"

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�----- ...... - --- ........ _..._. _

Both

h~~:rdware

and personnel

Fast-talking, pitching Vuckovich beats Reds

Our armed forces believed to ~e .inadequate

By Maxwell D. Taylor.
I am deeply impressed by U"' pre~enl inadequacy of our m1htary forces. There are
a number of groun~ for my pessmu~&gt;~n. To
begm w1th, despite puhl~eal oratory to the
effect that the Umted States 1s and must
always remain sa'Ond to none m military
•1rength, the fact 1s that our forces have
fallen behmd those of the Soviet Union in
many categones, and the1r capablh(Jes
are not commensur•te w1th the tasks they
are likely to be called upun to perform.
The growth of the Sov1et navy creates
JUSilfled concern among securtty planners
Ill Washington. In the course of the curr~nt
expanswn of the Soviet m1htary establishment, the Soviet navy has become
nwner1cally superwr to our fleet m both
surface combat sh1ps and sea-gomg sul&gt;marmes, the latter by nearly three to one
It 1s a navy clearly designed to challenge
Amencan control of unportant sea areas
and to g1ve the Sov1et Umon a capab1hly
for mtlilary mtervenllon overseas at a
distance from 1ts frontiers .
In the years ahead, 11 freedom of actwn
of our forces overs•·as w1ll be restricted
not only by the Soviet subma,nne force but

tnt.tJorllles and preoccuplt!ll w1t11 t!conomtc

also by a shorlllge of sec ure bases needed
to provide logistic support for distant
operations In the Mediterranean wh1ch
until r.ecently was a NATO lake, PohtJcal
mstabiiJ!y m Portugal, Italy and Spain
along with ant1-Amencan feelmg m both
Greet'C and Turkey now renders uncertatn
our act'CSS to the purls and aJrf1el~ which
would be essen!Jal in the conduct of
nuhtary operatwns.
In the Pers1an Gulf region, we have
never had a milltary base worthy of the
name, and the same can be sa1d for all Of
Afrwa ~outh of the Saharu Although we
still have bases m Northeast Asia, we have
announced an mtent10n to make a pro-gressive reductwn of our ground forces m
Korea. In the resource-ncb areas of
Southeast Asia and the Southwest Pac1fic,
we have no foothold of unpurtant'C except
m the Philippines, where President Martus recurrently expresses dlssallsfactlOn
uv~r our presence .
In an 1deal world. we would have potent
allies w1th strength capable of offsettmg
some of our defJcJencJes, but such is not
U1e ~ase . Many goverlUllents are .fragile,
subs1stmg on paper-thin parliamentary

slowdowns, the nsmg price of o1l, and the
growth of local Commumst parties
Certam unpediments to the effectiveness of our anned forces are largely of
our own creut10n. In contrast to the Soviet
Umon , which has built up its armed fort'Cs
rdptdly, m recent years we have permitted
our own to dedme steadily m trained manpower, aircraft, sh1ps, submarines and

~
OPINION ·
reserves of war equipment. Th1s decline
has been m large part the result of
repeated reductions m the m11itary budget
both m purchasmg power and as a pert'Cntage of the gross national product.
Over the same penod, primarily for
domestic pulitical reasons, the United
States adopted an all-volunteer system of
recrlllloing wh1ch thus far has produced
volunteers adequate m numoor and qllllh-

No way
to get
rich!

MARTY! .... DON'T YOU.

REMEMBtR?ffi MEJRA~K.
WE WERE 8\mED IN ~~ WRl~

Europe's
hie:
buddies
- By Don Graff

THAT CHICAGO Atffi-WAR RAUl'.

Franco -German enmity has 1gmted two world wars plus any
munber. of lesser conflagratiOns m our and precedmg tunes .'
The relatwnsh1p between the two peoples at 1ts v1tal center,
geographically and culturally, has, m faet, dominated Europe
puhllcally for most of the contment's pust-Roman history .
ll still does, but With a s•gmflcant difference. Where that
relatiOn for many hundred!; of years past has much more often
than not been one of oppositiOn, today 11 1s marked by coopera!lon
For a few examples, Par1s and Bom are partners m the
development of a new system of monetary cooperallon. The
purpose IS to hnk currencies of the European Economic Commumty agamst the f!uctuallons of the larger world market and
to promote on a larger scale harmomzatwn of all nme member
econorrues. The ultunate result could be a European monetary
WllOD .

Both governments are also pushing puh!JCalmtegratwn bolh
mternally , through next June's direct popular electwns to the
European Parliament, the BEC's legJslahve body. and externally m the development of a common European policy m dea!mg w1th not only Commun1st and third wort~ but w1th the No.
I ally, the Umted States.
Today 's Franco-German rapport IS the delayed frUition of a
seed planted three decaties liack m the form of the multmallonal orgamzatwns established followmg World War II. The
European Coal and Steel Commwuty, the forerunner of !he
EEC, m partiCular sought by meshmg the industnal bases of
!he two hJs!ortc nvals to make recurrent'e of military conflict
unposs1ble .
For many years, however, the new relatwnship looked better. m theory than 11 did m pracllce France ' resentful and
suspicious of a recovered Germany 's true mtentwns, Jealously
guarded Its sovere1gn prerogatiVes In the years during which
Charles de Gaulle re1gned m Pans and Konrad Adenauer 111
Bonn, there was substance to Franco-German cooperatwn .
But 1! was more m the nature of mutual convemence of two
larger-than-life leaders than 1! was a genume accommodatiOn
of the mterests of two peoples.
A nwnber of factors probably account for today·s sJtuatwn ,
some the consequence of lime and, natural development,
others fortunate comc1dences.
Both peoples are currently, m the long v1ew of history , m
unaccustomed strategic s1tuatwns. The French, for perhaps
the f1rst tun~ _~s a nation. are surrounded not by actual or
putenllal enemtes but by fnends . W1th no threatened flanks to
guard, they can afford to cooperate for common good rather
Ulan expedience
For the Gennans, the years smce World War 1i have seen a
firm couumtment to and Jdenhfwalion w1lh the West replace
the1r hiStone and paranma-mducmg situalwn of middlemen
squeezed bel ween host1le east and west
Currently , both natwns are pulihcally stable and
l'&lt;.'OnOmically healthy. President Valery G1scard d'Estamg 1s
fresh from an elechon v1ctm y over the French left, and
Utancellor Hehnut Schmidt 1s m no 1mmed1ate danger from
his oppus1t10n, wh1ch 1s to the r1ght Wh1ch g1ves both, even
though on opposite s1des of the puilllcal fence, the domestic
security to direct attention and energ1es beyond natiOnal
borders and to act mnovallvely
others have rruxed fee lings about the new Franco-German
am1ty. The Bnllsh, economtcally anem1c and politically divided, are not too happily s1delmed Smaller countnes wh1le
welcommg positive leadership from the b1g two, rema1~ wary
of bemg pushed around
And while European un11y bmlt upon a Franco-German rock
has been the cornerstone of US. pulley smce war's end, 1ts
reah7.atwn IS not workmg out fully to the Amencan advantage.
In umty there ISalso strength to res1st b1g brother's pressurmg
and to apply pressure m return, partiCularly m the economic
area where the kmdest descnpt10n of the Amencan state IS
disarray
But cons1dermg the altema!Jve -the prevwus state of emmty and 1ts too frequently disastrous consequences -no one IS
complammg much these days

Berrys World

© 1978by NEA

Inc ~~

'
" ... and one of the reasons I was attracted to
your adminlstratioa was sotrba/1 and we
haven 't played in a LONG t1me .. . "

•

"

•

By W!UiamStelf
(Federal agencies offer
many services to mdiVldllllls
and groups, blit sometunes
11 's hard to learn about these
services or how to benefit
from them. This weekly column prov1des such informalion.)
Gold sells for more than
$200 an oWJce these days and
there's some of 11 still U1Ul11lled m the Umted States.
Lots of Amencans are
aware of this and are trymg
their hand at gold panmng,
offiCials of the U.S.
Geologlcal Survey say.
•·But the best helpful hint I
can offer," adviSes Wilham
Prmz, the Geological
Survey's deputy chief of the
office · of nuneral res&lt;iurces,
"IS to do it for recreation. If
you think you're gomg to get
nch, you 'II be disilluswned."
If you're planning to pan a
few ounces, the survey advises:
- Drive a car that can
stand the roughest, steepest
roads.
- Wear a stout pair of
boots.
- Don 't be discouraged by
repeated di.'llppuintments.
You'll be doing placer rmning -that is, looking for loose,
unconsolidated bits of
material in the bed of a
stream. You'll use a steel
Qlllling pan, purchased at a
miner's
supply
or
"rockbound" store. Gold, the
heaviest of all minerals, will
sink to the bottom of the pan
along With "black" minerals
like t1tamum. You'll have to
watchforthegoldenflecks.
Where Will you go?
There are 19 states where
Significant quanbbes of gold
have been found at one time
or another, and not all are in
the West.
Alabama, Georglll, Soulh
Carolina, North CarulinH,
VIrginia and Pennsylvania
have had the1r ~Old boomletS,
and many of the most successful prospectors who
came to California in the Gold
Rush ~ame from the
Southeast.
But today your best bet ism
the West, near places whose

D ·h
.
.
t
eat with d lgnl Y
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I

·

By Harold Blumenfeld
Death w1th d1gmty .
That m1ght sound hke the
Iitle of a Grade B movie or a
teleVISIOn soap opera. Actually, however , 1t's a hope
cherished b} the tertmnally
ill.
Medi cal

science

and

technolog) have advanced to
the pumt that doctors can arrest or cure most 11lnes.se.s, md uding some cases of canct!r.
But medtcme still has 1ts unsolved mystenes ; those
diseases' v1ctnns . . among
U1em many 111 the agmg

pupulatwn, often suffer pam
and Imsery JUSt waiting to
die.
Their families also suffer
mental anguish as they watch
the agomzing end of a loved
one 's once fruitful bfe.
New help for such people 1s
spreadmg across the country
m the fonn of hospices, which
provide medical care to the
terrrunally iU as well as
psychologJcal and socwlogJcal attention to them and
the1r fam11ies. Perhaps most
unpurtant of all , hosp1ces offer digmty to the patient
awaitmg death.
In medieval days, a hospice
was a way statwn offermg
shelter and rest to pilgrims A
modern hospice offers rest
and medical care to those
who are traveling their last
road, wtth death as their Jmrrunent dcstmal10n
Today, more than 100
hospice programs are 111
vanous slll ges of planning
and development in 34 states
and the D1stnct of Columbia
All are patterned after
England's nearly IOO.yearold St. Christopher's Hospice.
As far as I can determme ,
only $2.5 million has been proVided by the U.S government
as seed money for local
hospice programs That isn 't
very much for such an Important, worthy enterpnse ~
especially cons1dermg the
money spent by Uncle Sam
for many wasteful, frivolous
programs.
For a successful pilot
demonstratwn of caring for
the termmally ill, we might
study the natwn 's first
hospice, Hospice Inc. of New
Haven, Conn. Since openmg
four years ago, the facility
has cared for more than liOO
pallents and their families
Most of the New Haven
hospice's te1 uunull .~o i. ll dl't

ravaged by cancer, but 11
recently opened an m-pat1ent
fa c1hty at nearby Branford
for people dymg from other
ailments.
Hospice Inc. has these s1x
goals, wh1ch could be copied
by other way statwns for the
termmally 111;
1. To help the pallent live as
fully as poss1ble.
2. To support u,., fam1ly as
a unit of care. 3. To keep the patient at
home as long ~s appropriate.
4. To educate professwnals
and lay people.
5. To supplement, not
duplicate , exiSlmg serv1ccs
6. To keep costs down
Surely, one important goal
IS enabling patients to spend
the1r last days at home. A
team composed of ,physicaans , nurses, a sociul
worker, a pastoral care consultant, phys1cal and
psychological therapists and
tramed home-&lt;!are volun!t'ers
IS available around the dock
to help fam1ly care for the
seriously 111 person.
The estunated expense for
three-month hospice stay is
$750, considerably less than a
•'lay in a traditional hospital.
Some hospice charges can be
recovered from Medicare,
Medicade, Blue Cross and
pr1vale health insurers.
But the reimbursement still
won 'l match the total cost of
hospit'e care A federal law
should be passed assurmg
return of all costs for anyone
diagnosed as terminally 111
Many hospitals have empty
beds and some have closed
entire wings. It has bt&gt;en suggested that the hospitals use
these facilities as enclaves
for the dying. But settmg off
sections of conventiOnal
hospitals as hospices could
ISolate the elderly and other
terminally ill patients m
another ghetto They 1rrughl
be treated no differently than
!hey would have been as
regular hospital patients.
Let's think, instead, of the
best places for very sick people to spend their last days
At home , whenever possible
And if not at home, in
..faelhties pat4'med after the
first moder11 hosp1ce
established in England
almost a century ago.
There the terminally Ill can
reahze their hope of dymg
Wl(h dlgRI!y.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. LaJYib,M.D.

Ohesitv a
seriou ~ J1roblt•m
DEAR DR . LAMB·- I am a
39-year-old overweight
female and I was JUS! told
that I'm a borderline d1abet1c
after I had a three hour
glucose tolerance test. Does
th1s mean that I will eventually have dmbetes or w11l I he
able to control this indefinite•
ly by watching my d1et? I
have always been healthy
and this really has me worried.
DEAR REA"DER -- I
hes1tate to comment
specifically on what was
meant by the term
" borderli"" diabetic" since
•-uch terms are not used
uniformly by all doctors or
!he public, but I thmk that
you can conclude from it !hat
it means you don't have a
severe problem now and apparently not one of sufficient
magnitude to warrant using
any medicmes.
We also know that many
people who have abnonnal
glucose tolerance tests and
high blood glucose leve(s will
develop normal responses
after they have elurunated
!heir obes1ty. While I'm sorry
you are worned, perhaps It IS
a blessmg if 11 will stimulate
you to lose any excess body
fat that you have and don't
need.
Obesity IS one of the most
senous health problems we
have as a society. It IS a contributory factor m diabetes.
It 1s a major factor m high
blood pressure and it complicates almost any medical
or surgical problem that a
person may have.
To help you control your
problem I am ~mling you
The Health Letter number
4-7, Weight Losmg Diet.
Other readers who would like
this issue can send 50 cents
With • long, ~. llelfaddressed envelope for It to
me Ill care of this newspaper,
P 0 . Box 1501 , Rad1o C1ty Sta-

I

twn, New York , NY 10019
If you will follow such a
dietary program. carefully
and really eliminate all of
your excess fat , 11 could be a
major improvement for your
present and future health.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband and I read your column on zmc sulfate and noticed wilh interest your comments on loss of taste and
smell. My husband lost hiS
smell and is gradually losing
his S(nse of taste. He has consulted various doctors about
thiS and.they act hke he IS
crazy, as if they never heard
of such a thing. They did
make some bram tests on him
and could fmd nothing wrong
there, but there must be some
reason why this IS occurnng.
Any mformation you can
give us regarding the cause
&lt;r poss1ble causes of this
Situation would be greatly appreciated.
DEAR READER- The role
of zmc and other minerals 10
taste has rece1ved new emphasis in recent times. It has
been pretty clearly
demonstrated that m some
cases, but certainly not m all,
a zinc deficiency may con!rtbule to bolh the loss of
taste or smell.
Every person who 1s had
loss of taste should have a
medical evaluation. Dr.
Robert Henkin found that one 1 .
out of 10 patients With this finding did have a cancer. 'nlat
also means that mne out of 10
did not, but it does puint up
the unpurtance of a medical
evalWition for such a symptom.
If it's really tJ:Ue that the
doctors that you have seen
are unfamiliar with the problem of loss of taste and its
relatiol'shlp to low zinc
levels, your doctor might
wish to write to Dr. Robert I.
Henkin at Georgetown
University Hoapltal in
Wuhlngton, D.C. He. has
pioneered most of the modem
work on the problema related
to loss oflllateandsmeU.

CINCINNATI (UPI) Pete Vuckovlch talks like he
pitches: fast.
"I ccxne to pitch, play to
win and get the hell out of
here," said the St. Louis
Cardinals right-hander
Thurlday nigh{ after pinlling
a 4-3 lose m the Reds in the
finale of a three-game series
that dropped Cincinnati four
game~ behind the Dodgers in
the Natilllai League West :
"I got no Ume for horsing
around," he continued.
"When the batter's in the box
I'm ready. You can't do t~
job.standing out !here holding
the ball. I just keep humping
and humping, try to put the
ball where It'D avoid that
lumber that's flying across
the plate."
Vuckovich, who entered the
game with a 1.18 earned run
average, lowest in the league

mto put.ent1al combat situati01111 and could
lhus constitute a formidable legal obstacle
to any timely use of military force:
Although at present there are indications of change in the national mood and of
some recovery of self-&lt;!onflden&lt;.oe and national pnde, our past perfOI'IIIIIIlce remains a matter of record, one which will
t'Ontmue to cause uncertainty abroad
about our will to take s1des vigqrously in
causes which may entail m11itary involvements. Some foreign oboervers
seriously questwn whether we would again
resort to anns unless directly attacked
ourselves, and fllllnY wonder audibly
whether the President remains truly the
t'Ommander~n chief and prime architect of
national pulley . Such uncertainties weaken
tlle credibility of the armed fort.'Cs as a
reliable weapun-m-being capable of deterring or suppressing armed violence promptly on presidential order.
MAXWELL D. TA YWR is fonner chief
of staff of the U.S. Anny. His remarks are
adapted from an essay in "Grand Strategy
for the 1980s," a publication of !he
American Enterprise Institute for Public
Polley Research.

ty to meet the peacetune needs ol tlje active forces but inadequate in the case'bf
the reserve forces. The fact is that, despite
the high price bl!ing paid to attract and retain volunteer manpower in peace, the 1111tion could nul sustam sigmficant forees in
mmbat w1thout a .prompt reversion to
some form of conscription.
This doubt as to the availability of adequate tramed manpower in war IS but one
factor whicH creates unt'Crtlunty about our
national readmess to use 1111htary force
promptly and effecllvely. -The postVietnam at Illude of Congress and of much
of the public has been one of oppos1!Jon to
further m1htary mterventwn abroad and
of distrust of limited war as an appropriate
means to advance fore1gn policy. Th1s antinuhtary reactwn, which coincided with
the determmatwn of Congress to deprive
Ute president of hiS ability to mvolve the
t'OUntry m another Vietnam, produced the
War Powers Act of 1973. Regardless of the
merit of 1ts purpose, the prov1swns of the
act Q[fer endless possJblhtles for prolonged
debate m the tune of cr1s1s between Congress and the While House over the
justiflcatwn for sendmg troops overseas

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

1,

3-'l1le Daily Sentinel,-Middlepurt-Porneroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug 25, 1978

2-The Dailv Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy , 0 ., Frtday, Au~ 25, 1978

by Ihe

By Murray Olderman
LAS VEGAS, Nev .
(NEA) - There are two
Lynn Swanns. One Lynn
Swann IS the sensJ!Jvc, consummate art1sl who a year
ago threatened to g1ve up
playmg professwnal football because he felt excessiVe VIolence· was makmg a mockery of the game.
The other Lynn Swann 1s
a blithe, free sp1nt who
tossed Isadore Becker,
chairman of the board of
Seagram DISllllers, mto
the pool here at the R1v1era
Hotel, fully clothed. And
then the next day plastered
lzzy full 111 the face w1th a
cream pie. All 111 fun . of
lWfSe.

At the tune - prwr to
reportmg to the Pittsburgh
Steelers for his f1flh NFL
season of knockmg heads Lynn was rornpmg through
daily exercises swmgmg a
racket in the Dewar's
Celebnty Tenms tournament. And lying m wmt for
I. Becker.
Yet there was a sobering
aspect to hiS presence
because in the same crowd
there was one George
Atkinson , a safety for the
Oakland Raiders.
Twice durmg the 1976
season , while playing
agamst the Raiders and
venturing into the1r secon_dary on pass routes, Swann
(IHl, 180 ) was clubbed on
the back of the head by
Atkmson 1 ~4&gt; . 185 ), 1eavmg
the Sleeter with a pair of
bram concussions that Impaired his resolve to play
the game.
In fact, Swann announced publicly in the spring of

WESl' HEMPTEAD, N.Y.
(UPI) -The New York Jeta
cut their rOller to 48 players
Thursday by dropping
running back OulrUe White
for the secmd time In three
days.
White, a second-year
running back fnJID BethuneCoolanan, was waived t11
Tueeday bit waivers were
recaUed a day later. The Jeta'
final cut will be made nnt
Tueeday.

'

I\
-·-. i.I
l

LYNN SWANN, the embattled Pittsburgh Steelers
star, is returning for another season of catching passes
despite his doubts about violence In the National
Football League. New roles belp the receivers.

1977 that he m1ght retu e.
" l was quite serious
about qu1ttm g," sa1d
Swann, " because of the mcreasmg

noiH:!SS~.JIIllal

vwlenee in the gume. and
no one was doing a thmg
abouf it. It was being accepted as a part of football
when it wasn't. So I was fed
up "
Atkinson , branded by the
Pittsburgh Steelers as part
of the "crunmal element "
of fobtball, later sued for
libel andll!M-And-Swann
decided to keep playmg.
' ' After some selfevaluallon and lookmg m-

•RECORDS
-

THE DAII.Y SENTINEL
DE\OTEOro111E:
INTEREST OF
MEIG8-MASON' AREA

· I TRACK AND CASSETTE

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Spurts Writer
Nobody seems to want first
place 1n the Amer1can
League's West
The Texas Rangers and the
part of football. " he smd
Oakland
A's both made a run
"ExCessive v10lenre when
at
11
but
.faded Then the
you're h1tting sumeonp
Ka~sa
s
C1ty
Royals assumed
who's bl:lck is turned fir!&gt;\
place
m
mid-July and
U1at's not necessary ··
everybody
JUS!
natura lly
There are some people 111
assumed
they
were
read)' to
the NFL, notably those
run
off
w1th
their
third
defensive backs who colstraight
diVISIOn
title.
lide w1th hun . who have
But now the Royals are
scoffed at Swann's aecusa·
actmg
as though they really
lions as cry-baby taclJcs
don't
want
tt. They dropped
·•It's unfortunate," he
the1r
second
game m a row to
retorted , that su many
the
lowly
Chicago
Wh1te Sox,
athletes are sllll playmg
4-1,
Thursday
mght
and got
the game w1th the atlltude
knocked
out
of
f1rst
place
- a
lhat thcy '•·c pr uv1ng
manhood. You have to be half-game behm&lt;j,Cahforma
macho , you have to be Angels. But in kl!epmg w1th
tough If you can't take a the way the West is bemg won
cheap shot, you rc not a this year the Angels gained
their first-place berth by
man'
bemg Idle
·o[ don't play fo otball Lu
prove my manhood It's a . Royals' Manager Whitey
Herzog lamented the Royals'
gam11 and It's a busmcss
anemic
attack m the back-toAnd 1! 'sa sii'Ucturcd game
back
losses
to the SIXth-place
If 1t can 't be played withm
White
Sox
·
"It was the pitthe framework Il uas
ching
and
our
not hlttmg We
meant to be played m, and
need
some
hitlmg
and we
1f 1t's gettmg out of hand ,
need
the
long
ball
:·
U1en someone should speak
up I'm not afraid of what a
Enc Soderholm was the
few ballplayers say about
Lynn Swann not li&lt;.'ing able hltlmg star for Chic ago,
to take Jt
dnvmg m three runs with a
"I've proved my self tn parr of doubles, and rookie
M1ke Proly went 8 2-3 mlll ngs,
uu~ four years I've been a
scattermg e1ght hits
professiOnal football
"It showed me I can come
player I've not been afratil
back and pitch mne mnmgs m
to go Ill and take shots [ Sll
back and look at 1! and I two games m a row," Proly
feel so1·ry for t11c guy mak- satd "I'd been concerned
because the first tune I went
mg the conunent "
mne
mnings I only lasted four
It could be t1ckhsh for
m
the
next game. "
Swann when he's thrown
Elsewhere
in the AL Thursmto a social situation wtth
day,
DetrOit
beat Toronto, 5old adversary Atkmson,
2,
Texas
downed
Minnesota,
like he wa s at the Dewar s
4-1,
and
Cleveland
outlasted
event, where George was
Milwaukee, 9~. in 11 inmngs.
also a contestant and they
were together on the court. Tigers ~. Blue Jays 2:
L&lt;lu Whitaker, bidding for
What is the1r relatwnslup·•

SEI THIM

~T

MIDDLEPORT

...-

,'

Middleport,

o.

National Lugue
Un1ted Press International

East

Phdade i ph ta
Chtta go
Pttr sburgh

Mon t real
St Lo u is
New Y ork

W l
66 58
63 62
63 62

P ct GB
.531
504 J l~
504

J l1

59 6 7 468 8
SA 73 .:125 ll 1'1

51
Wes1
W
Los Ang e les
75
San Fran
74
CmC1nna l 1
71
Sa n D•ego
67
Hou s ton
59
At lanta
56

76 402 16 112

TUlll!l~llllncl

-- -

.

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, AUGUST 26
UNTIL 5 PM

I

53
56
61
68
70

583 1
5S9 4
523 8 1 2
. 465 16
. 444 l8 '11

Pitt sburgh 5. A t lan t a 1, n•g ht
Sl LO U IS .4 , ( lncinnlltl 3, n1g ht
New York 6 San D1ego J .
n1ght

Los Angele s 5. Ph il adelph ia 4,
OIQhl

Frn;tav ' s Probable Pitchers

a'

Saturd1y'~

Amencan League
East
W L Pet
Bos ton
78 47 624
M tl w auk e
54 571
New York
70 54 565
Detro tt
10 56 556
Ba lt tm r e
67 58 536
Clev elnd
55 7 1 437
Toron to
s1
39B
West

n

n

L Pc1 . GB

52 .591

(All T1mes EDT)
S t LOU IS I Fof!! Ch 9 15 1 a t
Allanta ( M c W tl l l ams 6 OJ.
bWHllt!S.S OffK:t' Phone 992· 2156 '
7 35 p m
Editorud Phune 992-:Z.i57
Chtcago (burr is 5 91 at
St.-'C.'und t:U.ss pus~ g"' pcntl wl
Cmcinnatt (LaCoss 3 3L 8 05
Pvmeruy, Ohio
pm
Nltliunal ttdv ert.isjnl!t , reprcSt!n·
Pttlsburg h t Ro o ker B BJ ar
WliVC, l..andun A.!&gt;!:IOCIIIIC!i, JlOI
Houston &lt;Ba nnts ter J 8), 8 35
1 BuuUd Ave , Cleveland Oh1o Hm
pm
Sui.JscrJpUon Ta~s Dtlb vered by
New Y ork ( Swan 6 5 ) at
· t:&lt;trrit!r where nttilllble 75 t.~•l.s ~r~
San Otego ( Lolt c h 1 0), 10
Week By Mutur Route where nrrier
j »ervtce not ~mdliibl c . One month, I p .m
P hd adelphta ( R u thv en 11
13 2$ 8)' mall In Ohll.l ~ ml W Va
9)
Los An ge les (Sutton 12
Clht! Vc11r , S2200; S1x nwnl.hs,
lO J. lOJOpm
•11 50, Three montfts , 17 00 ~
Montr eal ( Sc h a tzer 54 ) a t
F....l'ie~here Pi 00 year , .S1x months
Sen Francts co ( 1\"ontefusco 9
$.1:! 60; Three months, 17 50 '
5) , 10 lS p m
SUb8crtptiun pr1cc includes Sunlluy l

·I

BOOK STORE
"Mill St.

1

Rookie of the Year hon ors,
tripled home two runs and
scored on the same play on
Otto Velez 's error 111 the th1rd
mnmg to pace the Tigers, who
Wednesday mght dropped a
double-header to the Blue
Jays
.
Rangers 4, Twins I:
J1m Sundberg hit a threerun homer 111 the loth mnmg
and Ferguson Jenkms pitched a four-hitler to wm1t for
Texas. Jenkms, 12~. struck
out seven and walked none.
Indians 9, Brewers 8:
Andre Thronton belted h1s
26th home run leadmg off the
lith IIlnlllg to lift the lnd1ans
to VIl1ory and offset f1ve RBI

beat hun if we stayed close.
&lt;~Hey ,"

q1mes

Ch• cag o .at Cinc innat i
Montreal at San Fra nci s c o
Pittsburgh at Houston , nighl
St lOU tS at A t lanta , n tght \
New York at San D i ego , ntght
Philadelphia at L os Angeles ,
night

FOR

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OF
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL WORKER5-LOCAL NO. 317

W l
Caltt
Kan (t t y
Tex as
Oakla nd

Pet.

he added, "the guy

ml$1 really have something
It takes more than luck to
lead e league in earned run
avera e."

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For Southeastern Ohio

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p•••••••••••••·-~~---••••••••••
)

COUNT
ON US

STANDINGS

Thursday's Renlts

ROBERT HOEFI..ICH
Ci1y tdtlur
'
Publisht.'t! dil1ly ~t.~l S&lt;ilurdayJ
l.ly The Ohio VaUey Pub11shing
Cumpom) ·Mullimt!dill , lnl ,
1111
r;ourt St , Punlfroy , Oh1o 4 ~769 I

MUSIC
•SONG BOOKS'·

edllors of The World Alm•,.c

s1dc myself, •' '"' explametl,
"( decided that I've never
qlllt anything, and to qlllt
now because of these major
obstacle'S or setbacks 1s not
goOd for the charucter. I
f1gure my character 1s one
that will accept a challenge
and goon."
Last season, he actually
had the best of his fouryear career, catchmg a
personal high of 50 passes,
makmg all-pro agam at
Wide recetver, but generally gathermg less attentwn
because the Steelers
stwnbled mthe playoffs
Swann's h1gh moment as
a pro came In Super Bowl X
at the Orange Bowl on Jan
18, 1976, when h1s sensational catches helped Pittsburgh beat the Dallas
Cowboys 21-17 and earned
him a car as the most
. valuable player m the
game.
SIJII , there 's a tinge of
bitterness when he talks
about the roughness to
which he has been exposed.
"Being physical and aggressive has always been a

•TAPES_

•SHEET

when mf&lt;rmed that the Reds'
Pete Rose had nq!hing but
praise f&lt;r him after his
perfarmanace Thur sday
mght.
"That's good to hear," he
said , sm1lmg , " especially
smce I've got a new contract
coming up. I've got a lot of
respect fiX' those Red hitters,
bot I got no love for them."
"That Vuckovich IS a battler," said Rose, who smgled
m each of his first two at-bats
to account for two of the
Reds •seven hits off the cards
nghthander "And when he
gets you to thinkmg about
that changeup he throws, it
adds a foot to his fastball
"It was so muggy out !here
tomght," continued Rose ,
"that I thought sure he'd run
out of gas I lhought we could

Who wants west flag?

Swann fights NF;L violence

names are redolent With the
romance of gold ; The
Feather, Mokelumne, Con•111nnes, Calaveras, Yuba ,
and Trinity Rivers m Cahforrua's Mother Lode; Alaska's
Yukon, Copper and
Kushkokwim Bllllins; Last
Chant'C Gulch m Montana;
Idaho's Sahnon, Clearwater
and Snake R1vers and their
tribul.anes; Oregon's Rogue
River ; Colorado's Fairplay
and Breckenridge districts;
· South Dakota's Black Hills.
Many of these spots have
been worked and re-worked.
Northern
Call forma's
streams, for mstance, were
t'Oinbed by Chinese laborers
in the 1850s and 1800s and
later by 1!Jnerant miners in
the depression of the 1930s.
The gnzzled prospector
and h1s burro have vanished
but Ill some well-watered
plat-es have been replaced by
b1g, commercial gold
dredges. Lode mming- hardrock mining, for which
you've got to use explosives
and high-powered machinery
-IS out. You 've got to lake a
chance on a stream bed.
Of the 1.1 nullion ounces of
gold produced m !he United
States last year. 60 percent
came from lode mines,
another 38 percent u the
byprodud of other hardrock
rruning, mostly L'Opper.
That means only 2,000
ount'CS of gold were produced
by· (ilacer mining, and some
of that came from. the large
t'Ornmercial dredges.
'
If you are interested, you
should invest 35 cents apiece
m two Geological. Survey
pamphlets, "Gold" and
"Prospecting for Gold in the
U.S.," both available from
the Superintendent of
Documents, U.S. Government Pr1ntmg Office,
Washington, DC, 1»402.
.(Queries are invited. We
can't reply to each letter but
wtll•nswer as many as possible. Wr1te to "THE U.S. AND
YOU," care of this
newspaper.

Sepl. 3- Loula H. Sullivan 11856-1924), the Bostonborn archiiect who was a pioneer of skyscraper
des1gn, and a major theorist of modern architecture.
The essence of hts philosophy was In his statement
"form follows function ."
. S.pl. 4- Rlchl~d Wright 11908-1960), the MlsslaslpPI-born author. H1s first and most successful novel
· Native Son," Written 111 1940, told of the horrors oi
the black urban ghetto
Sept. 5- Jet•• J~m11 11847-1882), \he Missouriborn folk hero of the Old,Wesl, celebrated In ballllds.
d1me novels, and Hollywood films. Actually, he wu
an outlaw who led a gang that robbed, plundered
and murdered.
'
Sept. S- J1ne Addama 11880-1935) , the Illinoisborn social reformer and advocate ol lnternatlonll
peace She was aw1rded the Nobel Peace Prize In
1931 '
Sept. 1- Anna "Grandma" MONa (1880-1101) the
New York-born primitive Plinter of 'tura~ Amer!Cin
scenes_. Shewn ne1rty 80 y..ra old before IChiavlng
recognition for her artistic eflorts.
Sept. I - Ant.... D-Ill (1841-1104), the llret
~ohemlan composer to achieve worldwide reeoanllton. He composed his most f1mou1 work Symphony
No. 9, "From the New World," In 1893, while director
ol the National Conservatory ol Music In New York
C1ty.
Sept. 1- All M. Landon (1887- ), the Penntylvantaborn public olflclal. He was governor of Kanaaa when
he won the Republican prealdentt.l nomination In
1938. He hlld the support of the buall'~Jaa community
and moat of the natlon'a newsPBpera but carrtld only
2 states - Maine and Vermont, aa Franklin D.
Roosevelt ,waa elected to hla ncond term.
f JNIW. .AI'l" I N T I - AIIH 1

Lazo (10 moo ths old ) can good enough even to p1tch for
last of four ~or the night for was asked.
the Cardinals. Because
"Nooe. Why change? I'm a settle down in St. Louis. It's a his team," said Vuckovich,
Vuckovich blanked the Reds big strong boy,'' replied the 6- tough life moving someplace . wilh more than a liltie touch
of sarcasm.
with two hila after !heir foot-4, 225-pound Vuckovich. different every sununer."
The Cards right-hander
three-run splurge in the
The 25-year-old Cards , And smce signed by the
'out the season in the
started
Olicago
White
Sox
in
1974
bottom, of the third, however, r1ghtllander didn't bother to
bUllpen.
Vuckovich
has
done
a
lot
of
they didn't need any more, see how much we1ght he had
"He was 1-3 when he made
"Vuckovich didn't have hiS lost after gomg nine innings traveling. st~-of!s included
his
first start," sa1d Osteen_
Appleton,
Wis.,
Knoxville
rhylhm those first three In- and making 136 pitches on a
"He
beat Houston J4.ne 3 by a
Tenn , Denver, Olicago and
nings,'' said Car~ catcher hot, humid night ,
2-1
score,
went nin~: in rungs
·
Toronto
'
"l never get m a scale to
Ted Simmons. "When he's
and
gave
up
only five hits. He
"Oh
yeah,''
added
right, he doesn't take longer see how much I weigh until
bas
started
ever Since and
Vuckovich, "and there was
than seven seconds between , I'm told to,'' he said.
has
avera
ged
seven-plus
"Vuckovich is a real ooe winter I pitched m Puerto
pitches. He was taking about
IIIIlmgs
each
time
out."
Rico
instead
of
going
back
horse,'' said an admirmg
I~ !hose first three inniAgs.
"You
hear
a
lot about
home
to
Johnstown,
Pa."
'Claude Osteen, the Car~'
That's not him."
Vuckov1ch
's
change-up,"
The
Toronto
club
acquired
"After that third inrung, 1 pitching coach.
The Cards acqUired Vuck- Vuckovich from the Olicago satd Silrunons, the Cards
got a real good reaming from
catcher, "but actually It 's a
Simmons,'' said Vuckovich. ovich during a winter deal White Sox as Its secood-round slow slider. He throws a hard
choice
in
the
American
"Ted makes me work hard, wilh the Tciron to Blue Jays of
ooe, too, and when .he comes
League expanswn draft.
the American League
blit that's good."
from
over the top, he has a
"I was ooly 23 at the time
"I'm tired of bemg a
As Vuckovich talked, he
fa stball "
super
stripped off his perspJration- transient W!X'ker," said the blit I gue5s Bill Veeck (Wh1~
Vuckov1ch
was pleased
blunt-talking Cards nght- Sox owner) didn't thmk I was
soaked uruform.
"How many times did you hander. "Now I figure me
change shirts tomght?" he and my wife Ama and boy

Blithe, sensitive

BIRTHDAY ALMANAC

Comp1led

among starting pitchers, restricted the Reds to seven hits
while notching his 12th
victory against nine losses.
Fmlr of !hose seven hits,
including a two-run h&lt;mer by
Ken Griffey, his eighth of the
season and third of the series,
came in the bott&lt;m of the
third inning when the Reds
scored all of their runs.
But that was after the
Cards had taken a 4~ lead.
George Hendrick's home run
off Paul Moskau, who
departed wilh a stiff shoulder
after the first inning, gave the
Cards their first score. .
They bunched three walks,
two intenlional, a Keith Hernandez double and a baseloaded single by Mike
Phillips off Dave Tomlin in
the top of !he third for the
other three runs.
Phillips' base hit was the

'

SMITH
GB

NELSON

6 •'1

71 7

MOTORS

a•:

11

23 1 "2
2a • 2

500 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-2174

GB

70
68
62
62
56

58 547
57 544
, •1
63 496 6 'h
67 481 a•1
M m esot a
72 438 14
Cht cago
53 72 424 151 1
Sea ttl e
49 77 389 20
Thursday's Results
T eMas 4, Mt nn 1 10 tnn s
Cleve 9, Mtlw 8 11 tnn s
Detrott 5, Toronto 2
Ch icago 4 , Kansas CtiY 1
Today's Probable Pttchers

FOR A USED

CAR YOU CAN
COU.NT ON

( All Ttmes EDT)
M tnnesota (S eru m 7 51

at
Toronto ( Ktrkwood 21 1 1 p m
Seattle (M ttchell 6 121 at
Baltim or e (0 Mart tne z 9 10 )
7 30 m
'
Ca~fornia (Aase
71
at
Boston f Wrtgh t 7 2). 7 30 p m
Oakland (J ohnson 10 6 ) at
New York ( Gutdry 17 -21 a p m
Milw a ukee (Ca ldwell 16 7) at
De tro• I (Y oung 4 J ) , a p.m .
Cl ev eland (Waits 8 13) at
Chu:a go ( Barr tOS 8 10) ,
30

a

a

om.

Kansa s C1ty ( Gale 13 S) at
Tex as (Matlack 11 10 ), 8 35
pm

Saturdly'!. G•mes
Cat lforn1a at Boston
Mlnne$Ota at Toro nto
Milwauk ee at Detroit
Oakland at New York , nt9h t
See~ttle at 8al!tmore, n ight
Cleveland at Ch tcag o, n1g ht
Kansas C1ty at Te Ma!. , ntght

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1977 Ford Mustang II, extra sharp, air. Real Nice. Only
1977 Chev . Monte Carlo, sunroof, air , p .w., p.b., vinyl top, low
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1976 Bu1ck Regal, red with white top, total one owner, extra
$4695
clean.
1975 Chev . Imp., 4 dr . sed., red &amp; white, clean inside &amp; out.
$2995
1975 Buick l.esabre Cust. 2 dr., loca I one owner, last of the big
$3895
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1975 Dodge Monaco 4 dr. sed., real nice Dodge, air, local car.
$2695
$3195
1975 Chev. C-10, •12 ton pickup, 6 cyl., std. trans. Nice.
$3695
1974 Ford T- Bird, red &amp; white, vinyl top. Real mce.
1974 Ford Maverick 2 Or., white with beige vinyl top .
$2395
$1895
1974 AMC Matador 4 Or. sed., real nice, air, low mileage.
$1695
1973 Ford Gal. 500 2 dr., green &amp; vinyl top, local car.
1973 Buick Century Cust. 2 dr- HT. Green &amp; white, air.
$2395
l97J Chev. Imp. 4 dr. sed., air, vinyl top. Nice &amp; clean.
$2195
1973 F11rd Cust. SOD 4 dr. H. T., make a nice family car, air.
$1795
1973 Plymouth Gran Fury 2 dr. HT, air cond., vinyl top .
$1995
1972 FordGal.5004dr. HT,runsrealgood. Nice car .
5995
1972 Ford Maverick 2 dr . Local car, one owner.
$1495
1970 Buick Lesabre Cust.,4dr. HT. Vinyltop,air.
$995

'

We are The Friendly Dealership. Don't forget you owe it to yourself
to check with us before you buy any car, 'New or Used. We can save
you money. See or call one of these friendly salesml!n: J. D. Story,
Ray Douglas or Bill Nelson.

CAMDEN PARK
60
\

\

�r~¥;i~;,~;:::::-:~:;:::;;;:,YMota 's
~

~

B• MILTON RICHMAN
.'.!,.i...
'uPIS--'• Edllor
,.... •
:·:·
·,·,
''\Ew· YORK. (UPI) _: Who says youth is wasted on the'
young? Not today anym&lt;re. And oot around the race track~ for
i, i,', l,

i,.

sure·
Steve Cauthen, only 18, has won $3,462,700 in total purses so
far this year, booting home Thoroughbreds.,Peter Haughton,
practically ancient at 23, has accounted for $896,l21 dr1vmg
trotters. You .think Haughton IS the least b1t Jealous of
Cauthen? Are you kidding? Of coune, he isn't.
"I've never met him but he hal helped me more than he
knows "says Haughton. "When !first started driving, I was a
terribl~ loser. I'd sulk and throw things when I got beat. I
figured 1 should win every race I was in. Then I heard Steve
Cauthen on TV, after a couple of big races he loot, and I
realized nobody can win 'em l!ll.
"Just the way he has of phrasin3 what he says, saying things
like 'You do the best you can and try to get the most possible
out of the horse · made me chanlle my whole thinking . He 's got
a tremendous ~ttitUde, not &lt;11ly toward racing but U!e in
general."
Haughtoo's fathe(, Bill, Ustens to his son and, nods
agreement. Bill Haughton already ISm Harness Racmg s HaU
of Fame in Goshen, N.Y. He was driving trotters before his son
was born and still does, not bepause he has to but because he
loves to . He and Peter will be in the $233,W4 Yonkers Trot at
Yookers Raceway Saturday night in the flfSt leg of harness
racing's Triple Crown. Bill will be handling Count's Pride and
Peter will be trying with Doublemint, both horses being part of
the Haughton entry.
.
.
Speaking of Steve Cauthen in relation to his son, Bill
Haughton feels they're both quite a bit alike.
"Steve's a great boy" he says. "I'm talldng about his w_ay
with people, with the press and with horses. He's a lot like
~te. Both never wanted to do anything else. ~te has always
gone to the races witli me since he was a litUe kid."
The two Haughtons are probably the most successful father. son combination in sp&lt;rts. Between them, they won purses
totaling better than 13 million last year.
"He 's beatenme.mostofthetimesinthebigraces, "says the
older Haughton , looking across the table at Peter. "I think his
mother roots for him more than she does f&lt;r me, "
Young Haughton coot his father the Triple a-own tw~ years
ago when he beat him in the Kentucky Futurity at Lel&lt;lngton,
Ky., after Haughtoo senior had won both the Yonkers Trot and
the Harnbletonian driving Steve Lobell. Father and son
finished ooe-two, hardly more ~nan inch apart. Waiting for
the ""ot-. "'-te
.
.
~1:' felt he had lost.
"Sunuvagun, you beat me again ," he said to his father while
the pictures were being developed .
Ultimately, the official ·annoUJlcement was made.
"The wiru1er is Haughton," said the aMouncer. Suddenly
...-•

1
~~~~:~~:::r:: ~~:~~:r:lr~·~u~~ seapn;de~:.trt8o:kre~d~:~:fu~~

been
getting paid about A, 750 per
hit this year and the Los
Angeles Dodgers figure he's
w.rth ·every penny.
Mota, a pinch hitter
extra~rdinalre, isn't called
oft n b manager Tom
upon
LaS&lt;rda e butY he seems to
makethemostofhischances.
Lasorda summoned Mota
to bat in the' eighth inning
against rellever Tug McGraw
Thursday night and the' 4().
year-old Domin lean
delivered . a ' run-scoring
single off the glove
of third baseman Mike
Schmidt to give the

fldto~I~IV!i{fs
'

I

•i

I-'("
+
.,.·(!(5

Botting

&lt;a .... an m •• bats !

\i~g~-e H.

Na fl onal
Burroghs A fl
120
126
Clark
SF
127
Rose Cin
Parker P i t
112

Pet .
391 1 2o~ .317
27 163 309
463 143 .309
5
·
441 136 .308

Sm itn LASF
MadlOCk

10)
i B1 106
111 .301
93 345
.307

eowa P hil
Cncepcn (;n

122 507 154 .304 u

121 454 131 .302
4
123 47 142 .300

Mic haels has sho wn firm , fair hand as coach. But
Jets as team have long way to go because of previous
organi za tional fail ures . They have the potential to
su rprise ~ few peo ple with scoring thrusts , but th e
defense is t"ust too po rou.s to expect an overall w in ning
season . Mea ns the y' re dedicated to youth program .
,

Ameriun League : R ice . Bos
105 o Staub, Del 100 ; H;Si e., M il

DEFENSE

93: Tnor nron, Clev 8J. Thomo.

Ga~e up to o much yardage last year and they 've still got

P.S., P.B.
AM .FM Stereo

!.On . pet

2 Dr .. blue wtth
white '\linyl roof .

~~~n~:;,9~h.5f03j2_

problems. Front line is a shambles . Soph Joe Klecko
appea rs to be only qual ity player on hand . Got rid of Carl
Barzil au sk as. Richard Neal. Outlook improves at linebacker, where Greg Suttle , Larry Keller, Bob Martin are
yo ung and eager . Addition of rookie Mark Merrill will let
them use 3-4 ali gnment much of th e lime. The se condary
tS even bette r because Shafer Sugns
w and Burges s Owens
are excellent pair of safeties. ready to fu lfill high
expectatio ns. Bobby Jackson has been a surprise at the
corne rs. which ·need help. Bruce Harper is capable return
man . Punting has been disappointing. R•tlng - C-

.,

P itt

1976 PINTO RUNABOUT.....................'2495
o aut o , M1cne 1on rao 1al Tires , J1,000

1975 MERCURY BROUGHAN ................ '3295
Dr ., fully equ ipped . Wh ite &amp; Red .

1975 FORD GRANADA .... .... ..... ..........'2J9S·
Dr . auto .• P S., P. 8 ., a ir .

~

1974 MAVERICK ........................ :... . '2100
• Dr

p s

0 b

dJ "O

S3 ;

Ot { l

oases
League : Moreno ,
34 ;
Lopes ,
LA

Victories
Nat ionil Li!'J gue : Blue, SF 16
6, Perrv . 50 IS 5: J ohn . LA
and Gr i mslev . Mtl 159 , N 1ekro,
All 15 1-i.

V Inyl r oo t

1974 FORD PINW WAGON ..................'l695
Auto lu agage ran

1974 CHEVY IMPALA . ~.?::~ .~;~: .::?:~.".; :: ..'1695
1974 FORD PlNW WAGON .....~ 1.~: .'.:~~ ... -'1495
1973 CHRYSLER .................. .............'1595

PREDICTION

Lugue :

Gu idry .
NY 17 2; Caldwell , Mil 16 7;
Tant~na .
c a t 16-8. Flan agan .
Ba i t 16-11 ; Torrez , Bos lS -7.:
SOrensen, Mil 15:8, Split1orff ,
KC 15-11 ; Pa lmer , Ball 15-12.

Amer ican

P S PB

p

~folen

Taveras . Pitt
Ameriun L e19ue : LeFlore ,
Det S8 ; D ilone , Oa~ " 4 .- Cruz ,
40
Sea
· w .r son ,
KC 35J2;
. Wilts . Te)(
Pitching

1977 MERCURY MONARCH .. ............... '3695
V1nv 1 roof p s

8

Nation• I

•4895

J

OFFENSE

(1£'11 26
.. ~-.. .
Runs Batted In
N• ti oni l Lugue : Foster , em
94 ; Garvey . LA 86 ; Smilh. LA
and Clark . SF 8• · Par~er
, Pitt
.

22 .000 m iles air cond .

The Jets have had three straight 3-tt seasons . Their only
ouest now is to be more compe titive. But any frank
appraisal projec&lt;s th em as losers again . My pick: FIFTH
in AFC East.

E~rnecl Run A11erage
c Based on 117 i nn i ng s pitched)

pounds, lettered aU three
seasons at the Southern
Conference school.
He ranked. third ill NCAA
statistics in aU11urpo1H!
running las t season . he
handled . the ball 83 limes,
rolled up 1,555 yard&amp; and
sc&lt;red five touchdowns.
In addition, he returned 31
·kickoffs for 772 yards,
including a IOQ.yard burst
against Akron; returned IS
punts f&lt;r 173 yards; rushed
four times for 16 yards; and
caught 33 passes for 514

receiver and kick return

yards.

specialist, and David, a
former wide receiver who has
been switched to !uUback.
It's not the first time a
member of their family wore
a Marshall uniform . Their
father, Ray Q-isp, Sr., played
football at the school 21 years
ago. He's now 'a machihe
setter at a Lima automobile
plant.
Ray , Jr. said his father
influenced him to attend his
alma mater, but both David
and George said the decisioo
was their own.
George sifted through
offers from coUeges who
wanted to use his talents in
track.
· •·
"I thought a lot about going
to Bowling Green to play
basketball," said David, a
threoH!p&lt;rt standout at Uma
Senior High. "If I'd just been
. 6-8 ... "
· Ray, who weighs a trim lSI

. Dave, a 6-4 , 207-pound
· sophQmore, was switched
from wide receiver to
luUback in spring practice u
the team moved to its new
veer offense.
In the spring game, he
completed a 7~yard pasa to
Ray f..- a touchdown.

l:.XtCBII~t;e

OFFICE HOURs : 9:30to 12,·2 to s (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) - EAST COURT

1_!!;:.!2~.!.!!~'!;

2 Dr ., a uto., P.5.: P B

1968 VW BUS ..............~~- ~.':':~~~:~: .... '795
1972 PLYMOUTH 4 DR......... -~~~?: ........'495
1971 CHEVY IMPALA ...... ?.?.'::.~;~:.~: ~.--'495
1968 PONTIAC ................ .'.~;;:~~!?: .... .'195
1968 CHRYSLER ...............~.~~:.~::: ...... '295

TRUCKS

1973 CHEVY LUV ..................... :;~ •• ...'1395
4 Sp .
197000DG E 1"• TON........ .................
.. '495
1976 FORD LONG BED ......... :........... '2995

._
,
11 1

""
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,.:
,,
..
":
::~

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--. ·-'"

zrz

'.

____
--

"..•
...

v.......

.._...... J711 ,. .•......
-

Seed and Milling.
.HEADQUARTERS

..

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--~

,

COACHING CHANGE
SI'. CI:.AIRSVIlLE, Ohio
( UPI ) - St. Clail'SYille High
School has promoted Roy
GUlch, c&lt;Kaptain of the 1973
West
Liberty
College
baseball team , t o head
baskethaU coach.
Gotch was promoted from
his role as assistant the past
three years to Jack
Rosenberry, who resigned for
a job in business.

Seeds . Bird Seeds - Oyster Shells and Grit ·
Fertilizers - Lime · Cement &amp; Mortar - Stock
Salt . Water SoHener - Re':lledies · Salt ·
Litters . Vaccine - Roofing - Paints - Red .
Brand Fencing - Baler and Binder Twine Sprays · Gales.

""

.
•••
'

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992 -2115

Pomeroy

team announced ThuradaY .
Tbe BruiJis will play Adams
Division rivals Buffalo,
Toronto and Mlnneaollt eight
tims each. 'Miey wUl meet
with every other NHL club
four times. &amp;mday ntsht
games wUI start at 7:00p.m.
EDT with the usual 7:35p.m.
faceoff for weekday and
S.turday night games, All
S.turday matlneett begin at
1:15p.m. and the Bruinll' only
home Sundlly aftemoon game
oo Feb. 4 will start at 2:00
p.m.

",-

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.'

••
'·'

-··"'

...

'I'

""'

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10-2
THE MEIGS INN·
992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

The

1171-71 National Hockey
League - - Oct' 12 hosting
the Pittsburgh Penguins, the

'"

'"

VELVET

football.
When the trade wu made ,
a apokeaman said, the
Steelers were aware Semour
had a gout cooditjon, but
were not Informed he ~.had
tUlectlve aurgery on both
feet In February. Cmtinued
pain in his left foot prevented
him from practicing or
playing, the Steelera said.

BO!i'l'UN ( UPI) -

''"

APPEARING THIS
WEEKEND
AT THE

PITI'SBURGH (UPI) The Pittsburgh Steelers
111nounced Thuraday' they are
returning IIBht end Paul
Seymour, who was acquired
Aug. IS in • trade !!I' wide
recelwr Frank Lewis, to the
Buffalo Billl becauae he Is
~llcally unable to play

Boslm Bruina will open their

"'

•

lhare Cariin'a excitement. include pony alta, L-stands,
"Don't uk," llhe said when shoulder lila and standa,
querlad about her scbool'l thigh standa anf.ndian alta ,
buketbaU team. "Pep rallies Cheerleaders
ork aymdon't go over well and the 'nasUcs In with
stunts by
crowd doeln't cheer/'
coming out of
stunt &lt;r a
BoYs at Newark CathoDe climb with a rupj
·
wUI even start some of the
"In stunts, · y~ have to
cheers, according to CarUn, have
respect
and
but they siay in the standa. consideration for your
"Boya are illlowed to try partner
as
well
as
out," she said. "They'd get coordination," cautlona
teased, and probably laughed Cathy Ca11011, II, who cheered
out of town."
for four years for her high
At N.W KnomDe, Lauth school in Attalla, Ala., and
Aid- most of the boys are who plana to try out for
occupied with sports in that cheerleader at Gadsd\!11 State
Cia.u A school.
College, Gadaden, Ala.,
Cheering differs for where she plans to enroU this
football and basketball.
faD lor an x..-ay tecmician
"You don't have as many program .
football gamea u buketb;&amp;U
Canon and Debbi~ Knapp,
games," said CarOn. " You ve 21, a senior and foqr-year
got lmger ·to get ready for I cheerleader at Anderson
football where you've got one College in Indiana, conducted
game a week. But with a cUnlc for ch~rleaders,
basketball, there are two and teaching them how to create
sometimes three games a more enthusiasm for the
week."
athletic telllilll.
She alao said cheering at
"Enthust8lt11l is the major
football games can be done part of cheerleading," said
up and down the sidelines, but Knapp. "Bouncy movements
oo a baaketbaU court, the . and jwnpa create more spirit
girls are limited to a smaU and make you look peppy:
space.
Jumpa add variety to your
Newark
Catholic cheers and chants."
cheerleaders shoulder both
Although fans may be emfootball and basketball fused about what the girls are
,duties, but cheerleaders are yelling, .there Is one way to
separate at Westerville tell ,what cheer will be done.
Nlrlh. There are four squads When the girls get in
- for varsity and reserve flrm8tion, they will yeU the
football and basketball.
name of the cheer as an
New KnomJie doesn't field attention getter.
Their very &lt;)lstinct and
a football team because of the
size. of the school, but does precise movements·are made
have basketball, and two on nearly every word they
chM"leadlng squads - one
· \
for reserve and one for
varsity.
Many squads will be
performing stunts . and
pyramids, although many
don't go any higher than two
people on _ pyramids to
prevent injuries. Some of the
LATROBE, Pa . (UP!) double stunts they perform Tight end Paul Seymour,
returned to the Buffalo Bills
by Pittsburgh Steelers
management because he is
physicaUy unable to play
footbaU, Thursday blamed
Bills owner Ralph Wilson for
THISTLE RESULTS
deceiving the Steelers about
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio his condition.
( UPI) - Bachelanl, with
"I don't think Buffalo was
Bennie Fe Delano aboard, woo shooting straight with the
the featured $5,000 Allowance Steelers,'' said Seymour, who
at Thistledown Thursday, was traded to the Steelers
going the six furlongs in 1:11 Aug. 15 for wide receiver
3-6.
Frank Lewis, "That's the
A 10-4-3 Trlfecta of way they operate, They
O'Lucky, Charabeth and probably used '! Utile deceit.
King Leprechaun paid It's pretty bush."
f7 ,838. 70, There were si.J:
"Ralph (Wilson) still runs
winning tickets.
the sho'l'l" despite the arrival
Jockey Danny Weller, a 41- of new Buffalo head coach
year-&lt;!ld Cleveland veteran Chuck Wllaon,'Seymour said.
aiming at the 2,SOO win
"That'swhy It's so screwed
plateau for his career, had up," he said. "Ralph's got his
ooe winner and now stands at QWII way ol doing things.
2,499 going into today's Ralph says who should go for
racing .
whatever reason . Buffalo will
A 2-6 dally double of Raise never be a contender because
A Devil and Storm 'n Sue paid Ralph w0 n 't buy the
$18.211.
players."
A crowd of 4,040 wagered
Bills officials did not
$428,950.

••

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.,

.'

...•

...
••
'"
...
••

:'1

"'.•

loi

"''

.

MANKATO, Minn. (UP!)
-Fran Tarkenton will be the
starting quarterback
S.lur'IYy when the~~~
Vikings play their final
t!l~Nbitlon game of the -.on
•t Met Stadium against
Malo, it waa anpOWlCed
Tbunda)'.
The
VIkings
•lao
announced three cuts to pare
lbelr I'Oiter down. to the
required 50 . They cut
linebacker Mark Bockeloh,
lllfety George Abzlck and
deflllllve back Eddie Woodl.
All three ~ rooklal and
free •senta .

RT. 62 NORTH

I

:;UNDAY RACE
NORTH RANDAL4 Ohio
(UP!) -Eight ()hio.foaled '3year-&lt;!ld !lilies, headed by ·
Royal North , are oo the
nomination Uat for the six·
furlong,
$20,000-added
Cleveland Oaks, to be run at
TblsUedown this Sunday.
Royal Nlrlh, winner of
seven races this year,
including a division ol the
Prlmonetta Stakes at Beulah
Park and the Friar Rock
Stakes al Woodbine, Toronto,
Ontario, wu aecond in the
$53,200 Oblo Scarlet Carnation Stakes at River Downs
July 29.
Othiors nominated for the
race include . N!lble Card,
Brent's Dancer, Trlover,
Ann's Jet, Sound of Belli,
Uttle Lealie and. Spit Spat.

POINT PLEASANT

675-1490
~

GO DOME A
WINNER FOR A
FEW BEANS!
STOP ·AT
TWO RIVERS FORD
WHERE YOU'LL
SAVE JACK!
I

0

Day 50-50 Warranty On Most Used Cars

Steelers deceived

LYMOUTH DUSTER· blue, 340 encine, 2 d,o or•••••••••••••••••••• ~1195

menuon at the time of the
trade that Seymour had
undergone corrective
surgery on both feet in
February to cure an Achilles
tendon problem.
·
Seymour said he was aurprised when he arrived at the
Steelers' training camp at St.
Vinc;ent CoUege and found out
that the Steelers didn't know
about his condition.
Lewis will remain In
Buffalo and the two teams
will
discuss
what
compensation the Steelers
are to receive. Ironically, the
Steelers and the Bills open
their seaSOIIB against one
another one week from
&amp;mday in Buffalo.
Despite the situation, the
Steelers would not publicly
criticize the Bills.
"I'm not &amp;oing to clll them
any names," said Steelers
)X'D scouting director Tim
Rooney, who conducted the
negoUatloos .
Seymour's departure cuts
the Steelers' roster to ii9
players. t

• ••

0

•

0
- ..... " ' " 0

0
0

0

•
0

LIN • black, 29,000 miles, auto., air ••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2695
LTD.· yellow, one owner •••••••••••••••••••••••••····•·····'4195
UMIPH TR·7 • orance •••••••••••••• ; •••••••••••••••••••••• ,; ••• '4895

~974

• yellow••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••• •••• •'2495

~·················

eCOMET ·green, 4 door •••••••••••••••••••••
... '2247
1976 ~MUSTANG II • red, 2 dr., 36,000 milts, 4 speed •••••••••••••••••••• '2795
6 4 MERCURY MON.TEGO MX • bronze, nice car. ....................... :2650
,976
MUSTANG
• whlte••••••••••••••••••••••• o,•••••••••••••••••••••••·
-·.- -·!\t
If ... • :t;"

~095

•••••••••••••••···~··•••••••••••••~••• · '2395
1973 FORD GAL 500 • copper, 2 d[., 53,000 miles ••••••••••••••••••••••• '1995
1974 COUAGAR XR7 • brown•••••••••••• t ••••••••••• ! •••••••••••••••••· '3295
1976 DODGE DART • cream, 33,000 miles ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• '2,95
1975 PINTO • stationwapn, white•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2295
1973 MAVERICK • 2 door, cold, 63,000 milts••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '1995
1972 CHEVY CHEVELLE • 2 dr., white, nice car •••••••••••••••••••••• .... '2195
1975 CHEVY CAPRICE • S.W., creen, excellent car for a larce family •••••••• '3795
1976 BUICK SKYHAWK • white, air, Am/Fm radio ••••••••••••••••••••••••• f3995
1976 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS • silwer, nicr ••• 1••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••f4595
1977 BUICK CENTURY· lt. creen, 26,000 milts, air, P.S., P.B. ••••••••••••'5295
1977 CORDOBA • dk. 1reen, 14,000 milts, loaded ••••••••••••••••••••••••'5295
1975 FORD LTD· yellow, 42,000 ·miles, one owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• .•3450
197s"'PLYMOUTH DUSTER • blu•

1

I

.

USED TRUCI&lt; ROW
1977 FORD F-100 • red •••••••• : ••••••••···~··•••••••••••. •••••••••••••• '4995.
1977 FORD F-100 RANGEl XLT • brown••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '5595

GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI)
- The Green Bay Packers
will W~Yeil their new danclai8
cbeerleaden Sept. 10 In a •
game againat the New
Orleans Salnta at Milwaukee
County Stadium.
Shirley
Volm,
the
prof tonal dancing teacher
leadln&amp; the group, said
Thursday the '11'0111111 will
dance to Ill ldndl of music
ransinll from man:bea to
The dlaco. There will be sa In the .

HOUSTON (UPI) Routon . Ollera today group.
II1I10UI1Ctd tbe releue ol

lilbt piaytn lncludlni 18'17
backup

playera Warren
Andllaw Uld Erneat Kirk .
SAN DIEGO (UP!) -The
l'lleld 411 ID)nd
NBASan
DJeco Olppen. wbo
u 11M tNm trimmed Ita
played
•
tbe llllffalo BraI'Giter till 10 _ . defiiiiiWI
en4 lrllll&amp; Lee IJid wide lut - · will train at tbe
...... Rlclllrd Andera~ . University of San Dleso
Alltl rdnrrl-.,...... beliMina Sept. II.
Collcb
GeM
llbut
M . . . ll1d Xuri XDOII,
ll1d • Rllllll, lltubrclllr
bt wm
a1ao bold a lhrw-da7 roolde
Cllllll atartlalllltDt. 11. , .
.... Dml IIGriiD llld days ...... he wlllllaat wdat
wltbveterm..
lllft~U'Gpclq.

r-...

===.·:·=

TWO RIVERS
FORD, INC.

carefully enunciate.
"Always look at your crowd
·and smlle, even though it
hurls," reminded Knapp.
Styles of cheering may
differ from school to school.
"We do shoulder ltanda and ·
pony lila, but no thigh stands
because we haven't had the
tralidng," said Lealie
Schultz, 17, a aenior at Toledo
Rogers High School.
"We so two levels on
pyramids, althou&amp;h some
schools in our league go
higher," she added. ''Over at
Scott, It's mostly black, and
they do a hoogie-woogie .with
their cheers/'
Uniforms
lor
the
cheerleaders are beccming .
more casual, with pleated
sklrta being very popular. · ·
"We've got pleated sldrts
with sweaters of lighter
weight yam than usual," said
Karla Fankhauser, 17, . a
senior at Toledo Rogers.
"They're more casual.
They're getting away fl;om
the heavy sweaters with Vneclts and · stripes on the
ann.'' she said .
Diana Potter, 15, a football
cheerleadf!' at Westerville
North, said her squad hu
about the same uniform,
supplied by the school.
" We pass down the
uniform, but we have to huy
our uniforms for workouts
and our shoOs," she said.
Ch-leaders are getting
away from the white tennis
shoe or sneaker. Son:le have
saddle shoes whUe others
have the jogging shoe.·

Seymour. c auns
1

Sports briefs

•.•

.

Cheerleaders practic~g too

..

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDA~

ONION
RINGS

""
"~

FIMr

~

Golden
Delicious

,,;

Pom..,

5 Piece Group
From Lancaster, Ohio

OUR

~::

QualiJ'll

INN PLACE

______________ _: 1 •

•••

:'"
.. ,

~.

Wagon . Rac k, P S , P B .. a ir .

1973 FORD WRINO .. ..... .1.~:: ·.?:r:.'.~~:~ ... .'1695
1973 DODGE CHALL£NGER ......2. ::-::.~:?: ...'1695
1973 PlYMOUTH FURY Ill ............... .. .'1295

·

Design and

r--N:W~OOM"Protr,-o:o~--1.

I1

·--:
'"'
'"
....
.;,:

I

N.Jt ianJI L eAgue : Vuc k ovic h ,

OPTOMORIST

BySANDRALLATDD!;R
COLUMBUS (UPI) While athletic teun.1 are
practicing for the'hm game,
there II another team
Jftctldng lllrnoott as hard.
Tbat team
Ia the
cheerleaders - girls who stir
up Ill the excllement for the
players.
Tbey practice IH!veral
holll'l perfl!cting their cheers,
chanll and pom-pom routines
to music, their 11Y11\11811tlca,
stwu, pyramids and jumps,
and their 11111iles.
All the wann-up exercises,
cheerleeding · camps and
cUnica, .and "smiling even
tholll!h It hurts" pays olf.
Gymnastics and stunts in
cheerleadlng "m8ke It more
bnpreaalw" and "more exciting," according to &amp;orne
cheerleaders at a camp Span·
'IOred by the International
a.-leading FoundaUm, an
affiliate of the NCAA. more
"Gymnastics make cheerleading more Impressive,"
said Debbie Sandera, 15, a
football cheerleader for
.WestervUI~ North High
School.
"And more . es:citing,"
echoed Teri Lauth, 15, a
llopbomore at New KnomDe
High School In Auglalze
County,
a
reserve
cheerleader
for
the
basketbaU team .
Fana alao help make cheerleading uclting,
too,
according to the squad from
Newark Catholic High
School.
"We've got neat fans and
good teams," said Diane
Carlin, 17, a aenior going into
her
fourth
year
as
cheeleader.
"01-leadlnc Is the thing
at school," she added.
"We've got good student body
participation."
Winning teams create a lot
ol excitement in the atanda,
and Lauth wishes she, could

t--~-~---.

goodwill trip to Finland
which s'-rts
Tuesday.
ld
Miller said Page will not
practice with the squad, nor
will be m;ake the trip.

~ NEW SPAPEB EN TERPRISE A SSN .!

I

'"

....

Page averaged 12.3 points
per game last season, tiE
third best on the team. He
was a 1so t he B uc k eyes •
second leading rebounder
"th
W1 54
· per game.
Meanwhile, Miller and 11
players went
through

St

RUTHERFORD , N.J .
(UP[) - The New Jersey
Nets announ ced Thur sday
they have invited six players
from their rookie free agent
camp held last week to their
veteran camp starting Sept.
15.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(UP! ) _ MarshaU Ia hoping
for .., little snaJH'rackle-pop
from its trio of Crisp
brothers.
The Thundering Herd has a
wide receiver, a fullback and
a defensive back aU named
Q-isp. and all are f~r
athletes at Lima ( Oh1p )
Senklr High School.
George Crisp, a S.l, 174pound · defensive back,
repor ted to preseason
practice and . joined his
brothers , Ray , a w1de

.•..
-

workouts for a two-week

It"s all i,n the hands of Richard Todd ,• who. s 1abb ed lh e

American Leagu e : R i ce. Bos
31.- H iste, M i l ?9 ; Th omas . M d
2i ; Baylor , Ca l and Tho r nron .

1977
CHRYSLER CORDOBA

·Page suspended

help Marshall

!!rJL . . . .

Watt

121 450 135 .300

Mil 11

~

··

only unt ouchable on Jet roste r. He was remarkable in
early part of ' 77 until he hurt his knee . Club 's future rest s
wi1h him. Wesley Walker was brilliant in debut as wide
receiver. If Mickey Shuler develops at tight end , Jerome
Bark um could play w ide spot again. And there 's sti ll
·
k
•
ld on 1y b e .so
Richard Caste r. Th e runn1ng
bac s s.,ou
good . Clark Ga ines is set , but other set back is Wide
open . Charley White cou ld dO 11 if he didn 't fumble .
Th ere 's i mpor1ant.addit ion to forwar.
d wall in Chr is Ward .
p
'
No. 1 draft pick. He and Marilin owell ·make 1mpress1ve
brace o f ta ckles . Rand y Rasmussen at guard is last link to
Super Bowl team. Pat Leahy impro11i ng on fi.e ld goals .
Runnmg game holds Jets back. R1tlng - B·

SPECIAl.

~vubenleth~~gllgt':a~ f~~:
-

Pittsburgh to its loth straight
' vict&lt;ry. The Pirates snapped
a se&lt;rel~ tie oflloSter Phil
Niekro, lf&gt;-14, in the seventh.
Bob H~ner
hit his 15th homer
~
for AUanta. ·
Meta &amp;, Padres 3
Joel Youngblood hit a
Sacrifice fly and an RBI
double and John Steams hit a
two-run double to pace New
York. Mike Bruhert, 3-G,
scattered five hits and struck
out sil&lt; in 7 t.J innings to get
the victory with Bob
Owchinko suffering the loss.
Gene Tenace homered for
·Siln Diego.

p RQSP.ECTUS

Munson NY
111 .4 77 1.42 _298
4 17 9
Thmpson
118
60 108
.2 8
3 .298
Youn1 Mil D t
94 362
Home Runs
National League : Foster . Cin
29 . Luz insk i. Ph i l 28 : Sm 1fh . LA
21
Parker , P ttt 13 ; Dawson .

1Droc ;

~f.r.r

brot~ers

mind."

American League
G AB . H. Pet.
Carew M in
121 456 154 .338
125 520 168 323
Rice Bos
·
P inie lt a NY
94 JJa 107 .317
Oliver Tex
98 387 122 . 3 1 ~
Rober-ts sea
101 3.46 109 .315
Brelt KC
93 315114.304
Wh
Det
108
379 ll S .303
eosilakr
lock Cal
120 .s111 139 .302

""·

doesn 'i feel age. Should be a
.. in detennining one's

&lt;XJLUMBUS (UP!) - Ken
Page; one of the top freslunan
basketball stars for Ohio
Stale last season,' was
suspended Thursday by
basketball coach Eldon
Miller for the 1973-79 season .
"He's being disciplined by
me,'' said Miller. "He is on
discipiinary probation. He
will not play basketball f&lt;r us
this year."
The coach did not elaborate
on the suspension.
Miller said Page, from
Staten Island, N.Y., could
return to the baskebaU team
nell! year, " if he lulfDls the
r------------~-,------,--, responsibilitie s of the
probationary period."
,
11'0.-:r~
Miller would not discuss the
11&lt; J' f( 1 n '
~ 1
reason for Page's suspension.
r
-:.J/J
"He's simply being discil1 ~ ~
~
"'~~
plined, the details of which
l
~ ~ ~ ~ -"---~~
arenot .importanttoanyone,''
:~ .,~~iw~
~
·
said Miller. "Nor are they
~
••••••
anyone's business in my

Major
Leaoersic..•· .;1
BV Un
ited Leogue
Pr eu lnternat

Crmrlie Mtl
Cruz Hov

'

I30th of his career and it was
his eighth pinch-hit in 26 plate
appearances this · season.
Mota earns $70,000 a seaS«&lt;
1fr()Jil the Dodgers f&lt;r his
pinch-hitting efforts.
Mota
ld lik to p1a
wou he understands
e
Y
m&lt;re, but
'LaS&lt;rda 's predicament.
"It's hard for a manager to
use guys in a certain
situation. I understand we
have a lot of pinch hitters, but
if 1 stay ready and give .one ·
· hundred percent I'll be
satisified . 1 don't blame that
when 1 make an out. I've got
to try to prepare and stay in

"I don't beUeve a pef!«&lt;'s
age has anything to do with a
person's ability," said Mota.
"U I stay ready and do my·
running and do my lilting, I
don't see any reason why I
can't make contact."
Tommy John was the benefa ctor of Mota's hit as he
went eight innings to gain his
15th victory. The loss was the
Phillies' 20th in 26 road
games against National
'League West teams.
.
Elsewhere in the NL, Pittsburgh topped AUanta f&gt;-1, St.
Louis edged Cincinnati 4.,3
realizing that still left everything up in the air, he added : and New York whipped San
"~ter ."
-. Diego 6-3.
"It was the bestfeeiing I ever had in racing," says the son of
BiU. Haughton.
·
"What Impresses me most about my father is the attitude
other people have toward him, his integrity and his honesty.
You always have .to bear in mind we're in a sport based on
gambling . To be regarded the way people think of my father,
RIVER RESULTS
you have to be above reproach , and he is because that's the
CINCINNATI (UPI)
way he has carried out his life."
Fantastic Sport, ridden by
At 54, Bill Haughton has won more purse money ~ ~y Juan Soto, took the lead at the
individual in harness racing history, better than $27 million. far turn and won the featured
That's a mind-blowing figure , but he claims he never really race Thursday at River
has thciught about it.
_
Downs by one length over
"Money never meant that much to me," says Haughton, who Tougours Lecreme. Brave
owns his own stable in Oyster Bay Cove, N.Y., and trains alld Winds was third.
breeds trotters as w.eU as drives them. "I think about the
Soto guided the winner over
horses, not apout the money. I keep racing because I enjoy it. the mile on the turf in 1:38 2-5.
·Retirement? I haven't thought about it although I have let up
Winnie Ship and Jerry Jude
some. 1don't race as much as 1 used to.'~
woo the first two races to
With Peter coming on as he is, BiU Haughton, who has three return $336.60 on the · daily
other children , apparenUy is content to sit back a bit and let double .eombination of 4 and
another Haughton do some of the driving. Pete already has a 3.
good grip on the reins:
,
The crowd of 3,918 wagered
"I didn't know what kind of driver he'd be when he started," $433,909.
his father says, "bull always hoped he be this good."

&gt;N

·C risp

~

Sport Parade :,·.!':· ~!!7~::~a:

!.f'.r..'.:

hit tOns Phils

5-The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., t'rtday, AUI(. 25, 1978

- · ...s ,_.,

"

1974 FORD F·100 RANGER • &amp;rten••••••••••·~··••••••••••••••••••••••• '3495

SAVE
1975 FORD COURIER • lrttn ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• · '3495
1976 FORD F-250 • tan/white ••••••••••••••••••••••• -................. '3895
1977 FORD F-350 • flatbed ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1972 MUSTANG , F~:tt Back, relhnr ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ....!995
1970 BUICK ·. 4 dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. • ~1095
1973 CHRYSLER NEW YOIIER·••••••••••••• .. •••• .. •••••••••oo•• ...... '1495
1971 FORD SQUIRE WAGON ••••••••••••••~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '995

See Bob Crosswhlt.e •
Bill (Ole.) H011 • lobby Roush
I,

\

.

�-

t " "'" ~ . -

-

-..-

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

.;. ,

........

-· ~

... .......

·

0

•
&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Alii(. 25. 1!178

Turns one .Victor Brown

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Ohlinger
celeb~ate golden-anniversary
Mrs. Ann Ohlinger Sisson
served l?e cake, Miss Kim
Ohlinger presided at the
silver coffee service, and
Miss L•urie Ohlinger poured
U1e punch.
Inducted in the decorations
uf the sotial room was ·a
display of pictures showing
the co~ple from early marria~e through parenthood and
grandporenlhood moWIIed on
a "50" cutout.
FoUowing the fel'eption a
family supper was held at of
Wr. and Mrs. Ohlinger on
CondurSt.
Guests at lhe reception
were,Mrs. Hilda While, Long
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. John
ClUlningham, GaUipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Kibble and
Daniele, Chester; Mike Mar·
tin, . Chesler;
Caddie
Wickham, Gallipolis; .Mr.
and Mrs. Harold. Roush,
Eleanor, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Martiq, Chesler,
Allen Roush, Benuce Durst,
and Stella Grueser, Middleport ; Mae Triplell, St.
Petersburg, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. George Skinner and Benny, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Hoeflich, Mrs. Audrey

The 50th wedding annil'er-

san of Mr. and Mrs. Herman

Ohlinger was ~t;le.Qr•ted with
a reception o~l Aug. 13 at the
First Haptisl
1Pomeroy
Church.
I
Hosting the /weption were
U1eir three sons and their
wives, Mr. and Mrs, Bill Ohl·
inger, Mr. and Mrs. ptulip
Ohlinger, and Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Ohlinger.
Serving tab les were
covered With white linen
overlaid with gold net and
caught at the edge with white
g;~tin and gold bows.
Mt ss Debbie Ohlinger
1-cgistered the guesls at a
U!ble cove re-d with a gold lace
doth and featuring an arrangement of yellow •slers
and gold candleabra . Guests
were registered with an
ostrich quill pei1 in a 50th
wedding armiversary book.
Backdrop fur the refresh·
men! 1&lt;1 ble was gold and
decorated with white and
yellow wedding bells. The
l&lt;lble featured the three
tiered cake decorated with
gold roses and topped with
the gold numerals "50",
fl anked by tall U!pers.

Conway Diet Class
welcomes members
Eight new rriembers were

welcomed when the Conway
Diet Class mel Monday night
at the Meigs Inn.
A 20-pound weight loss pm
was presented to Joan
Vaughan and the weekly
.revolving

trophi~s

went to

Karen Smith and Joan
V•ughan . At the ., Tuesday
night meeting held in Mason ,

three new members were
welcomed and one 20-poWid
weight loss pin was awarded
to Clara Lewis. AI the
Wednesday night meeting at
Athens, K•lie Evener was aceepled into the "forever slim
program ,~ · Mary DePue lost ·
the most weekly weight, and
Losi Caul was her runnerup.

7th annual Carr reunion
held at Forest Acres
RUT LAND - The seventh
annual Carr reunion was held
Sunda y at Forest Acres Park
near Rutland . A potluck din·
ner WHS served.
Emerson Carr, Akron a~d
Gertrude Cash, Athens, the
twu remaining children of
John and Mary Ca rr, attended the reunion . Also there
was Mrs. Cash's husband

.

r:::::::=.~
.. . ..

Oarent-e B. The Carrs were
honored with the presenl.t-e of
Mr. and Mrs; Clair Taylor,
lhe former Ethel Winn, longtime friend of the Cam. The
oldest attending was Emerson Carr. Traveling the farthest were Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Carr, Virginia Beach.
Approximately 60 friends and
relatives attended the reu-

YolUlg, Mr. and Mrs. Orval Dorothy Will, Albert and Sue
· Wiles, Mrs. Maria Fosler, Goeglein, Bemiee Evans, ·
Mrs. Margaret Bailey, Mrs. · Mrs. Frankie HWillel and Ar·
Harriet Sterrett, Mr. and lie, Ml'S\ Thehna Grueser,
Mrs. Bud Wilson, Naomi Ohl· Melanie, Mislee and Rodney,
inger, Kathryn Ohlinger, Mr. . Mrs. Joe Cook, Mr. and Mrs,
and Mrs . Cunr•d Ohlinger, William Watson, Mrs. Edith.
Miss Mny V. Reibel, Miss Sisson, Jane Sisson, the Rev.
Mary E. Chapman, Mr. and and Mrs. David Mann and
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. family, and Mrs. Edna
Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs. Triplett, aU of Pomeroy ; and
Mary Baum~ardn er .Mrs . !he hosts and their families ,
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Ohlinger
and
sons, Jay, Jon and
- - - -.....- -..- ·- ·
Joshua, DWican Falls; Mr.
and Mrs. William Ohlinger,
1
'
Cl
Debbie, Kimberly and Steve,
I
Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Ohl-'
j
inger, t..ura and Phil M., and
I
.
Mr. and Mrs.' Ed Sisson,
.
·
.
Pomeroy.
Sending gift.s were Mrs.
SATURDAY
THE
BOARD
OF Norma Champan, Mrs.
.TRUSTEES of Columbia Mildred TUbbs, Mr. ancfMrs.
township wiD meet in special Howard (.ogan, Mr. and Mrs.
session Saturday at 6 p.m. at Jack · Seidenable, and Mrs.
Erruna Ogdin, Pomeroy.
lhe township building.
ICE CREA¥ SOCIAL at
Bashan Fire House, coWlty former postor, gueSt speaker.
road 28, Saturday. 6:30 p.m. Special singing by Soul
Bring own containers for Seekers. Rev. Donald Combs
carryout. Sponsored by the pastor. Public invited.
Bashan Fire Department and
ALL NEW students thl s fall
auxiliary.
at Meigs High School, grades
CHicKEN DINNER by the 9 through 12, should report
Constant Builders Class at from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. !his
lhe Racine Wesleyan United week or next to school office
Methodist Church, S to 7 p.m. to _be !_egistered.
Saturday. Tickets may be
HYMN SING Simday at
purchased from any class
Nease
Church on
members or reservations ForestSetllement
Run
Road.
· Dan
made by calling 949-2871 or
Hayman and the .Hymn
949-2789.
Timers . .Dinner at .noon.

I

I
I
I

So "a}
CaJend ar 1'

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING Sunday at
Chesler Church of· God .
Basket dinner at noon. Af·
temoon Sl!rvices at I :30 p.m.
The Rev. Bertha Kingery,

r:_------_
..,
1 Personal Notes

nion .

'

NOW IN STOCK
I•

FOAM BOARD
5 SIZES

lh", ~"~ 1",
1112" or 2"

-

' t"'

CALL IN FOR A·QUOTE.

•

,.,•

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rush
·Of Bua, Malne, are an-

'

~l?~_!?.Lrt.~z......:

d!ly, Aug. 13, at the Route 33
Roadside Park by the family
oi VIdor Brown hoilurlng him
on his 66lh birthd!ly.
·
A basket dinner with
homemade ice cream was
served and lhe afternoon of
gllffies was enjoyed on ihe
large field at lhe lop of the
pork area.
Altendin~ were all 2.1 fal1)i·

noundnc the birth of !heir

third child, a 10n, Samuel
Joteph, at BaU H011pital in
Mlolne on August 19.

Todd, Mldlelle abel Tual.
CWDminl, Jolm; Mepn, and
Joni Manuel, Racine; Edi
Sluiron, Jlllllie and JaneUa
Wolfe of Jacklon; o.my,
Dee, Debbie, Ominy, Jr., Joe
and Robert Brown; Allen,
Marilyn and Holly WUilamii
and Vic and Kathryn BroW!)
of Minersville.
:.,
,.•

Blueberry conseroe even a
mother-in-klw could love
Blueberries: one or' America' s
· lllli\le berries and one of nature's
· most delicious creations , have
onr major drawback - rheir
arowina season is entirely 100
short for mqsl bluebtrry lovers.
However, the Ball Corporation
home economists havf' come up
with 1 recipe for home canned

...
Mournings
have
...
,.
.
California visitors '--...
;

"'

.-.

~;;:~ 1/ 2 thinly slked. lemon

~
..
.' .

• 112 lhiniY slked orange
1/ 2 cup sudless raisins

I quart M.emmed blueberrie s
Bring water and sugar to boil ing . Add lemon, orantte and
r aisins; si mmer 5 minule s. Add
blueberries and ro o k. rapidly until
thick, about 30 minutes. As mix-

J!I ·U S •

• • By Helen'Bouerlll

ENROLL NOW
FOR

I '

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE·

DAY" or EVENING

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

ture thid; ens, stir frequently to
blueberry conserve which is surt prevent stkk ing. Pour. bo ilin g
10 conjure up vis ions of warm hot, in to hot jars , le aving
summtr afrernoons when spread 1/ 4-in ch head s pace . Adju st
on bread in the fall or wimcr .
ca ps. Process 15 m in ute s in boil·
There arc 18 varit"l ies o f these ing water hath Yit"ld : ab out 4
wonderful berrie s, stemm ing half-pints.

CHESTER, OHIO

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

POMEROY &amp;
MASON, W.VA. AREA

RHONE
992-2156 .

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

[]
WIDE WALE CORDUROY FASHIONABLE COTTON
of 100 percent cotton CORDUROY io olio uiCid
from Lanvin· is one to put over this look
way to. stay warm. designed by Andrevie. The
square jacket and longer

here~

.

''

', 'I

"
:I

~ ~~

'.
&lt;I

"."·'
..!
"
..
.." On special
I

II

..'· Nehrcans;
..' \ 12 oz.

II
I '

n
!!

..:I

..

"' I
"•
il'
'I

.••'

...

SAVE YOUR RC, NEHI, UPPER 10,
· DIET RITE &amp;
... DAD'S ROOT BEER
BOITLE CAPS FOR CHARITY

'I
I

''

.'

'
'•
..''

in mid - w1le cotton
corduroy is Mont1n1'1
f1shion st1tement .

Wear ' 'King 's Cords ' ' for
'
fall and dre~s. like a queen
AcJording to the experts
on
words, '"corduroy"
probably comes from the
French : corde du roi, mean·
in g "king'a cords." Ac·
cording to the experts on
fashion, this strong, durable,
all-cotton fabric is the one
to wear all year roundespecially this year, when
it's the number one fabric
of the seuon in a variety of

Marching into the lim·e ·
wrapped apd qhilt~d jacket
lirht ·is t.he military look,
in wide wale all·cotton cor·
duroy. Wide sleeves and a such as this mid-wale pure
high collar can help keep ' cotton corduroy coat by
the wind away 1 while the
Montana. Tough and chic,
•mart striping and piping this longer coat 1oes beauti·

looks alftl styles that the old

pl eated skirt. The sexily
squared off jacket is of
posh, plush, ribles.s ror·

F'rench
envied.

kings might have

can help draw many ad ·
miring glances.
Another outatandiitg cor·
duroy look is the oversized
jacket, complete with pad·

ded shoulders and long,

fully with the quaint mili·
tary cap. The coat wraps
like · a

robe for extra
warmth, and the fine, up·
standing collar and crlfply
cuffed fuller sleeves are u
comfortable u
they are
fa&amp;hionable .
Natural cotton· corduroy,

duroy, designed in 100 per -

the cloth of kinp, can help

cent natural cottoq' by

make you look an.d· feel

Andrevie.

naturally royal.

·

Marshall University sets date for
fall registration of classes, 28, 29

I

I!

THE MILITARY LOOK

skirt 1re extremely chic.

For a whale of a good
look, Lanvin ha,s designed
an elegantly oriental

..•'

'FALL TERM ·

berrie s. th e blueberr y ha s· a

dis t inc t advan1a.11e O\le r this .
cousin-it is sweeter and its srech
are much smaller.

2 cu ps waler
4 cups sugar

Mn:

r~· u~t~;; ·u~iP ,.i

~rossb reed s

developed by a
l) .S. Department of Agriculture
botan ist beginnlna in 1909.
Though sometimes t.-alled huckle·
from

BLUEBERRY CONSERVE

~

·M,.. R·nr.'"Ons honorei/

He weighed 8 pouilds and 13
ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Lonnie Rush of Rayne,
Indiana and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Bird of Racine Rl. 2.

RC BOmiNG CO•
MILL STREET
Miildh!port, Ohio
992-3542 or 992-3344

'I

I

I•

'
•'
I

'

CALL 446 4367

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985-3301

I .aurel Oiff
News Notes

honored on

Point Pleasant site for
class in mining program

-- ·Son born in Maine

•
Allendance at lhe morning
Mr. and Mrs. Pete .De La Other visitors at lhe MOUJ'II4"
service Aug. 20 at the Free
Ossa and children, Greg, ing home bllve been Mr.~
Methodist Church was 119'.
Pete 1 Joe, Chris and Anna Mrs. David Walters ancr;
Evening ·attendance was 75.
Marie, MI. VIew, Calli, and daughter, Amy, St. Albans:;
W~rd haS' .been received
Mrs. Mike Whalen, SWl· Mr. and Mrs. Tom W!illen!!'
that Ms. Cora Renshaw Is a
nyvale, Calif. were recent Puinl Pleasant; arid Mr. ~
patient in · tlolzer Medical :j;j;j;j;j;j;j:jt:j:j:jtj:j:j;j:jt:ft@:j:@j@jj: visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Mr's. Mickey Wblllen and son;
Center.
.
Pleasant, W. Va.
l:
James Mourning, and family, Point
'
Mr. Fritz Stahl, New
Marshfield, Mr. and Mrs.
Parents of students who did ·
Paul Stahl, Columbus, not attend Meigs Local
•
recently called on Mr. and·
last year and will be
Mrs. Norman· Schaefer and Schools
attending seventh or eighth
f ,
U ..J
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stahl.
grades at Meigs Junior High .
•
Mr. Edward Dailey, School in Middleport are
Attending
were:
Mr:
and:
APPLE GROVE - Mrs.
Wilkesville, called on Ms. asked to . register their
Dana Lewis and Mrs. Ronald Mrs. fke Lewis, Mr. and
Emma Fox recently.
children In the Principal's
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook office. The office br open Russell entertained recently RusaeU Rolllh, Cindy an(
visited recently with Mr. and Monday through Friday be-' at the home of Mrs. RuaseD Eddie; Bell Pano111, ~
with a surprise birthday Lewis, Ronald auaaall'l!
Mrs. Paul Frick and Mrs.
tween
lhe
hours
of
8
a.m.
and
•
party In _honor of their uncle, Amanda and Michael.
D-ella Curtis.
3 p.m. Parents unable to Dorsey Parsons.
Others
presenting
him
lift.t:
Miss Susan Fleshman, make the office ))ours roily
Following the dinner they and cards were David Rolllb::
Lancaster, attended Sunday
call
992·3058
for
.
an
ap·
presented
him a birthday Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morrlai':
morning service at the local poinlment.
,
cake
with
decorations
of red Erin, Rachael and Jaaon, ~ "
church.
Mrs. Anna Wheeler.
·:
roses.
Mr. and Mrs. P.earl Gilkey
•
Bring covered dish. Hymn . visited recently with Mr. and
"
•
Mrs. Harry Stahl. ·
sing at I: 30 p.m.
McELROY FAMILY
reunion at the Portland Park
SlUlday with a basket dinner
· at 12:30 p.m.
HOMECOMING AT North
Bethel United Methodist
Church Sunday; Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship at
' 11; basket dinner at noon.
•
AT
Afternoon worship and hymn
sing '!fith lots of special
singing, beginning at I p.m.
WILL THIS.MARRIAGE WORK?
Public invited. ·
DEAR HELEN.
WEEK-LONG
Revival
A year ago I met a guy I liked a lot. He look me out and
starting this evening at everything was swell. WeU, almost.
Church of Christ in Christian
You see, Jo soon told me he was gay. At first it was a great
Choose an ucitlng Career in one of these
Union, Pearl St., Middleport, shock, but we stayed friends and still dated.
·
success
proven fields: ·
with Rev. George Scott,
We've become very close, are always together, helping and
Columbus, speaking; public also hurting each other. AI one time we talked about marriage,
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
invited to all services which but my kind of love isn't his kind,,or is II? (When his former
start at 7:30 P·!"'·
girlf~iends come around, I'm jealous, and when I go with other
!•SECRETARIAL
guys he's jealous.)
MONDAY
I've tried on many occasions to find someone else, but no one
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
BETHEL 62, lnternaliomil makes me feel as Jo does. We're bolh miserable wben we're
Order of Job 's Daughters, aport.
'
.
• JR. ACCOUNTING
7:30 Monday night •I the
Would
marriage
work
·
f
or
us?
If
not,
how
can
I forget him?
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
•GENERAL OFFICE
·IN LOVE AND HURTING
DEAR HURTING:
You've omitted an important consideration: ill !here sellliBI
attraction on Jo's port? If he is presenUy " bi," which side
(hetero or homo) dominates? Is his love for you strong enough
~
to
make
him
want
a
change
-or
is
yours
strong
enough
to
lake
SQUADMEN SuMMONED
Begin September 18r 1978 ·
Two calls were answered him ashe is?
An
understanding
counselor
might
help
you
face
lhe
proWednesday by the Pomeroy ·
Emergency Squad. At 2:30 blem.
... And, if you decide against marriage, why forget Jo? After
Financial A$sistance Available
p.m., the squad went to
Apprpved for Veterans
Mulbe,r ry Ave . for Anna lhe hurt subsides, can 'I you remain friends? -H.
.......
Vaughan and at 10:22 p.m.,
lhe squad went to Pleasant DEAR HELEN.
Accrodlled by tM Accredltlnt Commlulell If tile
Reading lhe letter from a bereft mQlher whose son corrunlt·
Ridge for Errol FoUrod. Both
A110cl1tlon of l!ldopendtnt Colietel allil Scllolll.
patients were taken to led suicide after constant harassment by police and neighbors,
Veterans Memori•l Hospital I wonder if this might happen to my son.
He's a good-looking, bright boy of 17, but he has a record. He
and both were adlnitted.
did some·dwnb things like breaJdng in and taking thinga, dil·
ching school, etc. when he waa younger.
FIREMEN SUMMONED
Since he was 14, police, probation officers and neighbors
The Racine Fire Depart· have been conslanUy at him. If any trouble happens, my 8011 ia
ment was called Monday at "the one." Police have banged on our door at3 a.m. to waken
9:15 as. m. to lhe Vista him and take him down for questioning.
St. No. 75·02·04721
Stallon in Racine but the call
Right now !here's a hearing pending (it's been postponed
proved to be a false alarm. several times), wilh no real evidence that my son was involv·
FOR INFORMATION
Wednesday the department ed. I paid $1,000 bond. He has been to two hearings in another
was called at 2:10 a. m. to county for stolen car charges and !here's no evidence here
Southern High School where a either, but he'son$5,000 bond.
car, owned by Robert
I can't stand to watch him deteriorate and see that faraway
OR WRITE:
Johnson, Jr., was on fire·. The haunted look In his eyes. l'm trying to keep him out of jail, but
car was destroyed. AI a I've uiled all my savings and I can't affol'd a good allomey.
meeting Tuesday night, the
My son is not the happy boy he once was. - MOTIJER WHO
department accepted Dan HAS HAD ENOUGH
.
Shane as a new member.
DEAR MOTIJER:
Several old lruiams come to mind here : ...Where there's
C l PluM provlclt me .with nten~ tnfor~~~ationl
smoke... " " None so blind... " etc. Ask for a conference .with
your son 's probation officer and lhe juvenile judge who
sentenced him, and listen weD to what they say. Trying to
make a wayward hoy "happy" is not lhe primary goal in a
mother's life. -H.

I

Glenna Milhoan has r~turn·
ed home from a two week
stay in the St. J use ph's
Hospital in P•rkersburg.
Juli Mournin~ •nd Michael
Mourning, children of Mr.
and Mrs." James Mourning,
have returned fr om
Clendenin, W. Va. where they
attended two week camps.
Juli was at Camp Carlisle,
and Mich•el •t C•mp
Camelot.
Mr. and Mrs. t..wr~nce
Reuter, Jr. and his mother,
Mrs. Janet Galkie, Pontiac,
Mich. were recent visitors of
relatives here.
The Swartz f•mily reunion
will be ·held in the Woode
Grove at Allred Sunday .

JAMIE BRODERICK

Jamie Broderick, son Of,
Mr . and Mrs. James
Broderick, Pomeroy,
t-elebraled his first birthd!ly
with a polio party at his
home.
ASesame Street !heme was
carried out. Attending
besides his porents were Mr.
and Mrs. Marlin Broderick,
Erruna Broderid&lt;, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Broderid&lt;, Mr.
and Mrs. David Robinette
and
Nathan,
Belly
Weyersmiller, Catherine
Grueser, Christina Grueser,
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Morris
and Mallhew , Mary
Showalter, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Smith, Sherri and
Michael, Mrs. Don Rouah and
Darin, and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stafford and sons. He
receive&lt;! a card and ·gift from
his great-grandmother, Mfll.
Clayton Roush.
Cake and refreshments •
were served and favors were
given to the children.

.7-'lbe O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fridav. Alii(. 25,1978

The Fall Term gets un· ID cards to enter the Multi·
derway
at
Marshall Purpose Room.
University .nnt' week with'
The period frcim 8 to 8:29
registration scheduled for a.m. · on Monday will be
Monday and Tuesday, Aug. reserved for , students who
28-29, in ·Memorial '.Student registered . in advance and
Center. Classes will begin have incomplete schedules.
Wednesday, Aug. 30.
·
The alphabetic schedule
Marshall officials are follows :
expecting a slight increase in
- MONDAY , 8:30 to 8:59
enrollment over last year's a.m., T-U-V, 9 to 9:44 a.m.;
record 11,221 students.
W; 9:~ to 10:14 a.m., X-Y·Z.
The registration hours will A; 10: 1~ to 11 :14 a.m., B: Ito
be from 8 a.m: to noon, I to 1:59 p.m., C; 2 to 2:29 p.m.,
3:30 p,m. and 5 to 9 p.m. on D;· ~ : 30 to 2:59p.m., E-F ; 3to
Monday-and from 8 a.m. to 3:29p.m.; G; 5 to 5:29 p.m.,
noon and I to 4 p.m. on T-U-V-W; 5:30 to 5:59 p.m.;
'I'liesday, Registrar Robert X·Y·Z.A·B ; 6to 6:29p.m., C;
H. Eddins said.
6:30 1o 6 :59 p.m.,..,.
"E•F-u;
,. 7
Entry into the registration to 7:29 p.m., H-I.J; 7:30 to
area will be by alphabetic; 7:59 p.m ., K-LrM; 8 to 8:29
order,.bases on tbe student's p.m., N-0-P.(}R, and 8:30 to
last name. Students may 9 p.m., S.
register at their scheduled
- TUESDAY, 8 to 8:44
time or in any period there- · 1a.m., H·l; 8:45 to 9:29 a.m.,
after . All fees must be psid at J-K ; 9:30 to 9:59 a.m., L; 10
the tirrie o! registration.
to 10:59 a.m., M; lito 11:19
Registration materials · a .m.~ N~; Ito 1:29 p.m., P;
may be obtained in the lobby 1:30 tol :44 p.m., Q-R; 1:~ to
of the Student Center 15 2:44p.m ., S, and 2 : ~ to 3:59
minutes prior to the p.m., open.
_
scheduled regist.ralion time.
Marshall's Community
In addition to registration College is conducting walk-in
materials, students Will need registration this week (Aug .
21·26). In addition to the
weekd!ly hours of 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. , the college will be open
for registration on Saturday
from 8 a .m. to I p.m. Com·
mWlily College students also
may register Mond!ly and
Tuesday in the Student
Center.
•
Course listings containing
the lime sch~dules ·are
available
from
the
Registrar's Office in Old
Main 1-B weekdays from I
a.m. to 4:30p.m . .and during
the registration hours. They
also may be obtained after
hours from the MU Security
Office, located on the southwest comer of Old Main.
. Students who have not'
previously attended Marshall
should fill out an admission
application
prior
to
registering. These may be
found in the Admissions

.

Office, Old Main_l25, which
is open weekdays from
8 a .m. to 5:15 p.m.,
or
from
the
Security Office. The Ad·
missions Office will be open
Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon .
Late registration and '
schedule adjustment period
will be conducted Sept. 5-G.

An initial class in a newly
authorized mining program
wtll be offered in Point
Pleasant this· fall by the
Community College of
Marshall University.
"Mining Laws and Safety::
geared toward persons
currently employed in the
mining industry, will meet
from 6:30 to 8 :20 p.m.
Wednesdays at the Mason
County
Vocational
Technical Center, according·
to Glenn E. Smith, associate
dean of the Community
College.
The course, which offers
two semester hours of credit,
will concentrate on West .
Virginia and federal mining

Will we turn to vegetari{ln-ism?
ence a-nd social values," h e
explains.
Will nutrition and soi.ring
''Ybu see, we are a nation
prices cause Americans to of free Choice when it comes

framer s' purposes in·
c reased public 1nterest m

· By Gaynor Maddox

healthy eating -

is being

ac hi eved .

fall out of love with beef? to our food ," he adds . "That

"1 NE WSPAI-' EH ENTE I ~I'KJM_ ASSN '

No, says Dr. Duarie. Acker , is why a national di et can

animal husbandry specialist never be legislated ."
and president

of

Kansas

" There is no way you can

lt:=======~ll

State University at Manhat· le gislate a diet for the Amer·
tan, Kan.
ic E:! n people ,'' agrees a n utri·
" I cannot foresee America tion s ubcommittee spokes·
cutting red meat consump- man , T he unit 's purpose in

lion in favor of grains , vege· putti ng forth the dieta ry
tables and fruits ," says Ack· goals , he says, wa s io gen-

er.
_
Acker - along with a
number of nutritionists and
food industry representatives - is critical of the

erate discussion and re·
search on nutrition topic s.
Later , the com mittee may
seek legislation requiring
more informative food !a-

dietary goals formulated
last year by the Senate Se·
lect Committee on Nutrition,
now the Senate Subcommittee on Nutrition . The unit

bels and advertisements.
But Congress IS not about
to try to require people to
g1ve up their T-bones or
hamburgers, the . subcor·

cans cut their intake of fats

Acker - who claims his

recommended that Ameri· m1ttee spokesman tns1sts .

sugars and salt while con: rode is " roast beef forever:·

suming more fruits , vegeta- - concedes that the Amen·
bles grains poultry 1 fish can d1et Is changmg, though
and 'tean me~t.

silddium
class ring
so le

$54?1e
20%
CHOICE
OF FREE
CUSTOM
FEATURES

n9t in a revolutionary way .

" I do not believe Congress He predicts that any shifts
will implement them " says Will be gradual, g1v1ng the
Acker of the dietary goals. ~arket a~d food industry
" People select their food hme to adjust.
for many reasons other than

"Even so," says Ack~r . " I

nutrition and health : cost, cannot foresee Amerccans
convenience family prefer· abandonmg beef. Yes , they
'
will probably seek leaner
grades of beef, but they
won't shift to something

. .
Carpenter
F a.Irvtew
Personals
News Notes Lucy Thomas,
· Pembroke
·
By M;.s, Herbert Rouab
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush and son, Edward, were
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Eddie Hupp, Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp. The birth·
day of Eddie Hupp was
celebrated. He was presented
a cake decorated wilh white
icing trinuned In blue with
picture of a pig. Others at·
tending were Mr. and Mrs:
Rocky Hupp, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Hupp, Billy and Jirrunie
called in the afternoon.
Katie BIIS8 of Clifton spent
a week's vacation · wilh her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Bass at Louisville, Ky. Kenda
and Corrinne Baas returned
home in Kentucky after
spending the swnmo:r with
!heir grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel· of
LOng Bottom - were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel and Tim. Mrs. Betty
McGuire and daughter Recka
of Pomeroy visited the
Manuels Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel
and Mrs. Sid Manuel ;visited
Mr. and Mrs. Harry ·Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hudson
at Minersville.

statutes,
rules
and West Virginia Board of
regulations dealing with mine Regents, Smith said . A
safety and health. Particular Mining Mid-Management
attention will be given to Program also was approved,
1
related · legislation affecting he said.
mine injuries and working
Tuition for West Virginia
conditions.
residents for the course in
John W. Collins of Point Pleasant.is $18.30. Out·
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va ., a of-state student s pay $100.90.
federal n\ine Inspector, will Enrollment is limited to 25
be the instructor . He has st udents.
speclaiized experience in
Students may register from
mine safety and was a 5 to 6:30 Sept . 5 or at the first
supervisor with West· class meeting Sept. 6.
moreland Coal Co. lor more
A two-hour course in "'Coal
than four years.
Mining Methods" will be
The Mining Laws and taught in Huntington on
Safety
course
is
a Saturda)'mornings beginning
requirement for the two-year Sept. 9, Smith said. More
Mine . Safety Technicia n information is available by
assoCiate degree program calling the · Community
approved this year by the College at 1304) 696-3640 .

Pines, ·Florida, and Amy
Caldwell, Col'umbus, both
former residents of t·he
community, ·attended the
potluck supper at Temple
church on Sunday evening
and are spending some time
in the area visiting with many
friends and former neigh-·
bars. They report that their
sister, Fay Kalb, now living
wilh a son in Wisconsin, will
be in Cincinnati at the home
of her daughter nen week
and lbey hope to see her there
· before !hey return to their
~pectlve homes. Lucy, Amy
and Fay are daughters of the
late Delbert and Ola Perry
and have many friends and .
relatives here.

else ."
.
In response to consumer

demand, says Acker, the
beef industry has begun to
produce steak with less fat .
Selective feedlng is increas-

ing the ratio of polyunsatu·
rated fat .to saturated fat in
beef. And research is look·
ing into ways of lowering

meat's cholesterol count.
All this points up the need

B l llll.,'dll' hl .1'11ol'..!,r ' ' '
ot

il l ~:,,

vll,ll1111 r,·.llllll·• 'Ill

I I III I ''11 !.1, ill Ill

I Ill:.! I• • I i l l '

; ,,,, I· •\I prrn

for more agricultural research and education, says

Acker.
" Universities are getting
increasing demands for food

technology and new pro·
grams on food and nutri·
tion, " he says. "Many consumers want to know what
the relation is between fin·

JOHN ROBERTS
Cti\SS I:IINGS

ished meat products and
their own health . This desi re
on the part of consumers is
relatively new."

Whether or not the

nut~i­

tion subcommittee's dietary

goals are responsible , it ap·
pears that one . of their

SMITHFIEW, R.I. (UPI)
- Veterans Ken Ellil and
Mike Patrick Were among 10

players cut Tburaday by the
New England Patrloll.

What doe• the Blbl•
Teach On:
"lxDmllll" , "Ead of TIM World"
"Faith"
"God'1 DIYidlq Une"
"Speekina In r...-•-·

At

MI. WILDON WAINOCK

wW .u.-lhllt aad other .. ~!etta

THE HOME OF OUALITY

Aug. 28 - Sept. 1

"Fiexsteel" • '?IGiincetown Maple Dillin&amp; RODII!s" • ,_,. •

"Sprina Air Blddinf . "Howel

w

..

7:30 EACH EVENING
It ud 6 P.M.,

(Sunday~

Admiral - Hooter - Ffi&amp;ldairt AnnstJma - Caloric - Speed Qu1111

\' ou are invited to

MODERN SUPPLY

BRING YOUR BIBLE
aad lhldy with ..

BAKER ·FURNITURE

Westside Church of Christ

MIDDLIPOIT, O.

&lt;MMr el Blllftnlll aiiCII WMt Main !!h.

399.WEST MAIN STREET
992-2164
POMEROY, 0 .
THE STORE WITH"ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL' ANIMALS.
,L AWNS- GARDENS.
I

••

•

'·

I

(

�... ....... ...... -- ........ .
~

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

MIDOI.EPORT BOOK STORE
Church &amp; Offlet Suppllos

GIFTS

JOhn F. Fultz, Mgr.
TRINITY CHURCH , Rev . W. H.
Per rin . pastor; Bob Buck , Sunday
school sup I. Chu rch School . 9: 1S
a . m .. worshi p serv ice , 10:30 a .m.
Cho ir rehearsa l. Tuesday. 7 :30
p.m . under direction of Al ice
Nease.

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENE · Corner Union and
Mulberr y. Rev . Clyde V. Hender-

, son , po_stor. Sunday school. 9:30
a.m ., G len McCl ung. su pt .: morn Ing worship , 10 30 a .m .: even ing
serv1ce , 7:30 ; m id -w eek service.

wednesday , 7:30p.m.

GRACE CHURCH (Episcopo!).
326 E Main St .. Pomeroy . The
Rev Robert 8 . Gro ves , r ec tor .
Morn in g prayer and sermon . 11
a .m . Ju nior c:hoi r ood n ursery ser -

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Neor long 8o.Ham, l!dsel Hart ,
past or . Sunday sch oo l , 10 a .m .:
Chu rc h ,
7: 30 p. m .:
prarer
meet ing. 7:30p .m. Thursday .
MIDDLl: PORT PENTECOST "'-l .
Third Ave . the Rev . W illiam Knit tel , pasto r. Ronald Dugan , Sun·
day School Supt . Classes for all
ages: e"ening serv ice , 7:30: Bible
study . W ednesdov . 7:30 p .m ..
you th serv1ces . Fuday . 7:30p.m ,

We Fill Dooctors'
Pt-tscrlllftens

ff2·2H5

,_m.,.y

S.rvlet

Mill St.

,_m.,..y,OIIIo

Millclltporl

These M~

POMEROY
""'"~- KUNr

Of Our ReligioU8 Heritage

Are Spon8ored Each Week By The Following:

,_mtrOY, Olllo

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWA-RE

MIDDlEPORT FREEWill BAP·
TIST Cor n er Ash and Plum: No.I
Her rman , pastor Sa tu rday even·
ing service. 7:30 p .m .: Sunday
School , 10 :30 a.m .

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
MHHODI&amp;T CHURCH

vice . Rome Willi amson and Dale
Dullon , loy reader s , ou isting the

poster .

Robert T. Bumgarner.
Director

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST,

212 W Main St .John McArthu r ,
po!ilor . Bible school . 9:30 a .m .;
morn 1ng wo rsh ip . IO ·JO a .m .·
Youth meet in gs~ b&gt;:30 p m .. e11 ~'!n ·
1119 worship , 7.30. Wednesday
ni ght prayer mee t ing and Bible
study . 7 30 p.m.
THE SA LV ATION ARMY 115
Butternut A11e Pom eroy . Erway
and M r~ . Roy Wmin g. oHtcers in
c h arge .
S unday · h o l ine~s
m eet tng 10 a.m .. Sunday School
10 30 am . Sunday sc hool leader ,
VPSM . Elo1sfi Adam s. 7·30 p .m ,
meeting . 11 0r to u s
sol11at. on
~ peekers and mu sic specials
Thu rs day - 10 a.m to 2 p m
Lodt es Home l eag ue . all women
tn111ted 7 JO p m prayer meeting
and Btble study . Bo b Estep
leader
Rev. Nof!l
Herm an.
tea cher.
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP·
liST CHAPEL, Route 1. ShadePastor Bobby Elk ins . Su nday
sc hool. 5 p.m : Sunday worsh ip
5 45 p .m .. Wf!d nesdoy prayer ser ·
"ice , 7 30p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRI ST , 200 W. Mom St .. Jer rf
' Paul . mm tster. ph one 992 7666.
Conservot i"e non mstrumen tal
Sunday w orshi p 10 a. m .. Btble
study . 11 am worsht p . 6 p.m.
Wed nesday Bible study . 7 p m
OLD DEXT ER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH, Rev .Ra l ph
Smllh
posfor. Sunday school , 9.30 a.m ,
Mrs . Worley Fra ncts supertnten
den t . Preochmg se r\l.ces ltrst &amp;
third Sundays foll owing Sunda y
School .
G RAHAM UNITED METHODIST ,
Preaching 9:30 a.m . ftrs t and se·
con d Sun days of ea ch mon th
th ird and four th Sundays each
month , worship ser " ice ol 7 30·
p .m . Wednesday e11en 1ng s at
7·30 . Prayer and Bibl e Sl udy
SEVENTH · DAY
AO VE N TI ST ,
Mu lberry Hetghts Rood . Pomeroy
Pastor . A lbert Oi t tes : Sabbath
Schoo l Su per intendenl , Rtto
Wh i te. Sabbath School. Sat urday
ohernoon 01 2:00 , ~ilh Wo rs hip
Service fo ll owin g o t J IS
RU TLA ND FIRST
BAP TI ST
CHURC HSi ster
Ha r r iett
Warner Sup! Sun day SchOol.
9 30 a.m.. mor ning worsh1p ,
10·45 a.m .
THE HILAND CHAPEL , Geor ge
Casto , pastor . Sunday School.
q JO om . e11e nmg wor s.ht p 7 30.
Th ur sday evening prayer serv 1ce .
7 30 p m
POMEROY
Fl fl ST
BAPTIST ,
Oo11id Mann, mtn tster . William
Wats on. Sunday sc hool sup! . Sun
day schoo l 9 JO o.m morning
wors hip 10 30 a m
FIRST SO UTHERN BAPTIST 28:2
Mulberry A ve ., Pome roy , .Pa ul J
Whtte , Pa stor , Gary Basham . Sun
day sc hoo l supl. Sunday school
9 30 a.m.: mornmg wo rsh ip
10 30 evening w01sh1p 6 30 p m
Mtdweek pro )ler serv1ce , 7 30

.._m. .y

c-,....

Aulllllotlve

KERMIT'S KORNER

Ph. ft2·21tl

seivice, 7 p .m .: Wednesday Fanli ly Tr o1ing Hour , 7 p .m .Wednesday
worship ser~ice . 7.30 p .m.

WIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

NEW YORK
a.DTHING HOUSE

St. Rt. 7

Cllflter

· ROSEBER_RrS
PENNZOIL

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev . James Corb itt
POMEROY. worsh ip ser..,1ce.
9: 15 o.m . ; Sunday sc hool . 10:30
om .. Re~ .
Robert M cGee .
minis ter .
ENTERPRISE , Worship 9 a .m .Chu rch SchoollOa.m .
ROCK SPRINGS , Worship 10
a.m . Chu r ch School 9: 15a .m .
UMYF t» ·30 p .m .
FLATWOOD S. Wors hip. II a .m
Ch urch School \ 0 o.rn..

Pll. 94t-913G

RACINE
MARKET

Whal does FAMILY 'mean ? It
reans th&lt; togerh.d rall!

I It means a father and mother
sharing the beauty and exdtement of God's world with their
dlildren .
The hike together. The picnic
together. The working together
~nd playing together that Home
inspires . Just ask the psydlologists - and sodologists- and

criminologists are

what values

found along '" the logtthtr

misses its mark.

Pll. 915-3301

HOL/1 IT. YOUI!

CIJHitr

RAT~ •.. &amp;UT

DIDN'T GeT A LOOI&lt; AT
'fER FACI!!l

Worship and religious training ~long, too, on the togtthtr
tr•il. Faith grows best in an atmosphere of sharing. Character
thrives in the sunlight of Chris-

'1'hlrlpool
APPUANCE II

tian eJc:a mple.

S.lts-~.ict·Ac-oorlts
220 E. Main SJ.

In the churctJ of your dloice
there's predou ~ opportunity for
you - and yours. The Ch~rch is
the together trail of God's
Fami!y!

510 N. 2nd
•••BUT WHAT

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Rev . Robert Bumgarner
HEATH , Roberl Bumgarner .
Pa stor . W orship
10:30 a .m .
Church Sch ool 9:30 o .m UMYF b
p m.
Rutland · Salem Center Charge
RUTLAND , Wilbur H11l , Pastor .
Worship 10.30 a .m . Church School
9·30 o.m .
SALEM CENTER . Church School
9·45 am . worship 'I a .m .

el WA'-J, G'WAN l IWN, 'IOU
DON'T THINK I

AS EAS9 F~ATTENS ONE OF THE SNI!Ai&lt;~.
WHOM THE- 'I' CAU6HT !JLA5-H lNG THEIR
TillE~- II/ASH ISO! II AFTER THE OTHER •••

THEPtE GOES HIS PARTNER~

Homelllo saws

trail," or lost when family living

I"IGU~OUT

P. J. PAULEY,

2 CGnvtnltnl

AGENT

Markeh

Mid111n Market

1H ' OLDONE
DOESN'T

.

UP WITH

EYE'

Ntlllonwldt Ins. Co.

lab's Mllllet

of Columbus, 0 .

104W.Maln

Pomeroy ftt-2512
Mallft 77:1-572T

m.ma .._.......,,

Home Sills &amp;

-

AthiiiS County .
&amp; Loan

SY RACUSE CLUSTER
Rev . Harve)l Koch: Jr .
ASBURY , Worsh ip 11 a .m .
Chu rc h School 9 50 a,m. UMW
f trs t Tuesday B1ble Study Thurs.
7 30 p.m .
FORE ST RUN , Wo rship 9 a .m .
Chu rc h Schooi iO a.m .
MINERSVILLE . Wors h ip 10 a .m .
Chu rch School 9 a.m .
SYRACUSE. Churcl"t Scnoo! 9:00
a.m . Wors hip ~e rvic:e 7:30pm .

Co.

216 E. Mtln

·m.uss
1lJ'M'i.E OfwHAN ANNIE

Tradllr Sales, Inc.
New

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

lHOUSAHD-

Service

STATE FARM
INSURANCE

I.

tn-3325

GASOUNEALLEY

Don ThomPSOII Ford, Inc.

I

Clovia~

f92-21N

Saturday

.-~~,.,·~

Psalms

40u

Slim lilo\es

Nonsense! Just
tell me where
thinqs are!

You look tired.

461 S. ~rd. Middleport

Whq
rest?r-~

with more

1t

salt'

65: 1-13

THE TOIETHEft TRAIL
Attend The t)r.urch

Of Your Choice

This Sunday

Ken Grover

!

!lOME ... NOW! .

TEN YEARS ...

21'
lltCOIICI
,_meroy

WAID
SONS STORE

Sales

THE PAST TEN YEARS· ·) CARRY AND GO

s. '

214 E . Main
CARMEL . Ch r uch School 9:30
m -5130 ,_meroy
a m . WorshiP,, 10:30 a .m. 2nd and
4lh Sunda ys .
APPLE GROVE . Sunday School
9:30 a.m . Worsh ip 7:30 p .m . I st
and 3rd Sunday s; Proye_r meeting
Wednesday
Wednes day 7:30 p .m. Fellowship
Psalms
supper first Satu rday b p.m . UMW
Oroceri&lt;ls27.1'-14
2nd Tuesday 7·30 p .m.
Gtnoral Mtrcll.lndiH
EAS T LE TART , Ch ruch School 9
Raclnt t49-25SG
Thursday Friday
a.m . Worsh ip ser11ica 10 a.m .
Psalm3
Psalms
Pr aye r meeting 7 :30 p .m .
34:
1-22 46:1-11
Wednes day . UMW fi rst Tuesdo.,7 JOp.m . ·
RACINE WESLEY AN - Sunday
sc i-t ool 10 a .m .: wor5hip , 1I a .m .
&amp;
Cho tr practice . Thurspoy , B p .m .
LET ART FALL&gt;-.- Church School
10 a.m . Wo rship ser11 ice , 9 a .m . ·
MORNING STAR , Worshi~ 9:30
o.m ., Chur ch School 10·30 o .m ,
Mid·Week Servic e Wednesday 8
p.m .
MORSE CHAPEL . Worshp II
o m .: Church Schoo19 :30 o m .
PORTLAND . Wo rshi p 7 30 p .m :
1/o'h~ 5. Tlllrd
Church Sc:hool9:30 a.m .
SUTTON , Church School 9·30
Middleport
o.m .JWorsh ip I stand 3rd Su ndays
Ph. ft2·7155
!0:30a .m .
NORTHEAST CL USTER
p.m
Rev . Richard Tho ma s
M IDWAY COMMUN ITY CENTER .
Pa slor
Let us c1pturt fht' story ·
De xter Rd .. Longs vtll e . Oh to , Rev
Duane Sydenstricker
of your Weddint.
Clyde Fer~e ll Pa stor Sunday
John Dougla s
11
a.m .
Satu r d ay
Schoo l
Anoc iote s
915-4155
preachmg ser"tces 7 30 p .m.
10 a .m .:
JOPPA, Wors h ip
ChHitr, Ohio 45710
Wed nes day even•ng Bible study Chu rch School 9 a.m . Prayer
at 7:30p.m
Mee tin g Wednesday 8 p m.
FAITH TAB~RNA CLE CHURCH .
CHESTER . Worsh ip 9 a.m .,
Bod e y Run Rood, Re v Emmell Church Sc hooi iO a .m .
Rawson , pas tor Handley Dunn .
LONG BOTTOM, Wonh ip 7:30 chot rman ot the Boord of Chris· Roger Watson . pastor : Kenneih
li on l ite . Sunday. Schoo! , 9:30 Byer Sunday schoo l supt . Mornsupt Sunday school 10 a .m. Sun- p m Ct-,ur ch Schoo l 9:30 o.
day e"en in g service 7 .30. Bib le
ALFRED . Worship 7 30 p .m .. am .. morni ng worship , 10:30: tng worsh1p . 9:30 o .m .. Sun~un day eveiling worsh tp . 7:30 doysch oo l. 10:30 am . : evening
teachin g 7 30 p .m. ThursdO'f .
Chu rch School9 ·30 a.m
OYE SVILL E
CO MMUN ITY
ST . PAUL . Wo r shiP II a .m ., p m . Pray er meelin g,t Wed nes·, ser..,ice, } :JO . W.d nesday Bible
CHURCI- Rnqer C Tur ner . pastor . Church School9 ·30 a .m .
day . 7:30 p .m .
Study , 7:30p.m.
Sun da y ~c h r .JI 9 30 o .m , Sunday
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST , Don L.
MT . UNION BAPTIST , Oon
REEDSVILLE . Su nday School 9:30
mo r nin ~ w r shtp , 10 30. Sunday
Sunday
s cl"lool
a.m . Wor ship 7:30 p .m .: Prayer Walker . Pastor , Ronn ie Salser , Wilson .
even1ng Sl..·r ce . 7·30 .
Meeting 7 :30 p .m . Tuesday: Sun day school sup! .; Sunday superintendent . Sunday school.
MIDDLEPORT
school. 9:30 a.m .; morning wor · 9:45a .m .; evening worship , 7:JO
Vis! tafion7 :30 p.m . lst Thursday .
MIDDlEPORT
CHURC H OF
SILVER RIDGE . Worsh ip 10 a.m . sh1p 10 •o o.m .: Sunday evening p .m . Prayer meeti ng . 7.30 p .m .
worship . 7 30. Wednesday even· Wednesday .
CHRIS T IN CHRI STI AN UN IO N, Chu r ch Schoo19 a.m .
lawrence Man ley pa stor, M rs .
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
TUPPERS PLAINS , Wo rs htp 9 ing Bible st udy . 7 :30 .
Ruo;sell Young Sunday Sc hoo l a.m . Church SchooiiO a .m .
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Re\1 . A. CHURCH. Eugene Unde rwood .
Supt , Sunday School 9 30 a .m.
KE NO CHURCH OF CHRIST, ser - 0 Br own , pa stor . Sunday School . pastor : Howard Coldwell. Jr ..
Ellen tng worshtp 7 30 Wednes - llices eoch Sunday 9:30 a .m . 9:30 a .m.. mor mng wor ship Sunday School Supt .: Sunday
d ay prayer mee t• ng, 7 30 p m .
George Pickens . pastor w ith 10·45: yout h serv1ce , 6·45 p m .: School, 9 :30 a.m. : M o rning Ser MT MO RIAH CHURCH O F GOD. prea ch ing on first and th trd Sun · evening w or sht p , 7:30 p m .. man . 10:30 a.m .; Sunday evening
Roc.ne f(ou te 2. the Re " James day of month . Oli ver Swain , Supt . pro~er and praise. Wednesday , service . 7 p .m .
M . Muncy, pes to r Sunday sch oo l,
LETART
FALLS
UNITED
HOBSON CHRISTIAN .UNION , 7 30p.m .
Q· 4 !) a.m. morning wor ship . II
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST . Rev BRHHR.EN . Rev Freeland Norris.
Re" . Keilh Eblin , pastor . Sunday
o.m
e"entn g worship , 7 .30 . School . 9 :30 a.m .;
Leonard Morv1n Mark tn . past or : Slev11 l it · pastor . Fl oyd Norris. supt. Sunday
Prayer mee t•ng , Tue sday 7·30 Gilmore, first elder: evening ser· tie Sunday school supt . Svndoy sc hool , q :lO a.m .. morn ing ser ·
p m
Young peo p le's meeting: " ice . 7·30 p .m Wednesday prayer schoo l , 10 a.m .: morning war · man . 10:30 a.m.; Prover se rv ice,
1
7 30 p m . Thursdo)l .
ship, 11 a .m . Sunday evening Wednesday , 7 30p .m .
1 meeling, 7:30p.m .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST 8APTIS~.1
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO, w orsh tp , 7:30. Prayer meeU ng
Co rne r Si11th and Pa lmer . theRe" . Rac ine Route :2 . The Re \1 , Charles and Btble stu dy. Thursday . 7 30 NAZARENE, ReV. _Herbert Grote ,
Kuby Ot ler
pas tor
Robert Hand. pastor . Sunday school , 9·•5 p.m . youl h 1er~ice . b p .m . Sun· pas lo r . Wonhip service. II a .m .
Pork.er supenntenden t Su nday , om .: morning worsh ip , 11 a .m . day .
and 7:30 p.m . Sunday . Sunday
WMPO Rad io program 7 45 a .m ., Evening services , Tuesday and
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD , School . 9:30a .m. Richard BOrton ,
Sunday Sc hool , 9 15 a .m., Morn. Frtd(ly , 7.30 p .m .
At&gt; ¥ ., Danny R. Cook , po sfor . Sun .
supl . Prayer meeting . Wednes·
tng Worship , 10. 15 a.m . Youth oc·
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH doy' sc hool , 9:30 a .m .. woiship day . 7:30 pm .
tivi l tes and fe llowsh ip lor 1untor OF CHRiST, Duane Worden , service . 11 o.m .; e11ening service.
BRAOF O R:O
CHURCH
OF
and sentor high stude n ts. 6 p .m . m1nt s!er . Bible ~ lafs , 9:30 o .m .: 7:00: youlh ser \lice . Wednesday , CHRIST, G abriel M zr s, pastor . Bi·
Sunday evening wor sh •p . 7 30 mo rmng warsh !p , 10:30 a.m .: 7:00p.m .
bi t Sunday School 9:30a .m .: mor·
p m M 1d· week prayer !ier\I!C::&amp;s, e \len ing
LA NG SV ILLE
CHRIS TlAN ning chur ch 10:30 o .m .: Sunday
worship. b:JO p .m .
Wed nesday , 7·30 p m .
CHURCH , Rober t Muner, pa sto r . e'o'enl ng servtce .
7:00 p .m .
Wednesday Bible stud~ . 6:30p .m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mtd·
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNI· SuAdoy school , 9 30 o .m .; Roy Wednesday service . 7 :30p . m.
dle port , 5th and Mo•n . George TV Church, Sunday Schoo! ser · Stgman , supt : morntng worsh ip .
LAUREl CliFF FREE METHODIST
Gl ot e mtnister . Mike Gerla ch . v ice , 9:45 a .m .: Wor ship serv ice . 10 30 Sunday evening ser.,lce. CHURCH , Rev . Floyd F. Shoo~ ,
super in lendent . Terry Yank ey , 10:30; Ev angeli stic Serv tc e 7:30 7:30. m td· we ek serv ice Wednf:ts · poster. Lloyd Wr ight , Sunday
youthj minis ter . Bib le schoo l. 9:30 p . m .
School Supt .; Morning Worshtp
W e dn es da y .
Prayer doy 7 p .m .
SYRACUSE C HUR~ H Of' THE 9:30 a .m .: Sunday School 10·:20
a.m .. morntng w ors hip , IO:JO meeting . 7:30 .
a.m .. eveni ng wors h ip, 7:30;
ZlON CHURCH OF CHRIST , NAZARENE . Re11 . "cole Bon . a.m .· Wednesday Prayer and 8 1·
prayer se rvtc:e , 7 p .m . Wednes- Pomeroy -Harrison" tlle Rd .: Don poS!or : Bob Moore , Sunday ble Study 7:30p.m .. Sunday e"en ·
day .
Kennedy , postor; Bill McElroy, School supl. : Sundav sct'tool . 9:30 tng w orsh ip 7:30p.m .: Choi r Prac·
M IDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE Sunday school supl . Sunday a.m .: mormng worship
IO:• s tice Thursday , 7 p.n)t'
NAZAREN E. Rev . Jim Broome, sc hool , 9:30 a .m .: m o rning wor - a.m .: e"onge list ic service, 7 p m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST .
pas tor Mr s. Mary Lo th ey . Sunday ship and commun ion , 10:30 a .m .: Wednesday ser~ic•s prayer Charles RuiSell . Sr., minister.
school supt Sunday sc::hool . 9:30 Sunday e11ening youth Christ ian and praise , 1 p.m .; Nazarene Rick Mccomber . sup t. Sunday
o . m ., morning worsh ip , I 0.30 Endeavor , 6 p .m .. w orship ser- youth 7 p .m. Dolly proye, sc hool , 9 30 a.m .; worship ser o. m.. Sund ay e v o ngel tst ic "ice, 7 p .m . Wednesday evening meeting, 8:30a .m. Men's pro)l er vic e, I 0:30 a.m. Bible Study, Tu es·
mee t ing. 7:00 p .m . Praye r prayer meeting and Bible st udy , 7 meeting. Sa turday . 7 p .m .
day . 7:30p.m ,
meeting , Wednesda y , 7:30 p .m · p.m .
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
U N I TED PRE SBYTERIAN
ST . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , CHRIST. Elden R. Blo~e . pasior . JtSUS CHRIS T OF LA TTER DAY
MINISTRY Of MEIGS COUNTY , P1ne G rov e . The Rev . William Sunday Schoo l 10 a.m . : Howard SAINTS, Portland Ra ci ne Rood .
·Owtght L. Zo\l i tl , direc tor.
Middlesworth , Pastor . Church McCoy, supt.: Morning sermon . Willi am Roush, pas to r . Ru ne II
I HARR IS ONVI LL E · services 9:30a.m . Sunday School 11 a .m .: Sunday ntght ser~ices Ratc liff . church school OirectQf'.
PRESBYTERIAN .
Rev . Ernest !0:30a.m .
Chr istian Endeavor. 7:30 p.m . Sunday School . -9:30 a .m .; MornSt rickli n , pastor . Sunday chu rch
BRADBURY
CHURCH
Of Song service. 8 p.m : Pr.achi ng ing wonh1p , 10:30 a .m .: Sunday
school, 9:30 o.m , M n . Homer CHRIST. Mr . Donold Roley , pa stor . 8 30 p .m . M idweek
Prayer e... en ing serv1ce 7 p .m . Wedneslee, s up~
morning w or sh1p . Sunday schoo l. 9:30 a .m.: war . meeting, Wednesday , 7 p .m .; Ray dey evening prayer servi ces , 7:30
10,30.
ship serv ice , 10 30 o .m.; Sunday Adams , loy leader .
p m ..
MIDDLEPORT . Sunda y schoo l, services, 7 p .m .; youth group,
CHURCH Of' JESU S CHR IST. , BET HLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev . Eo"
9:30a.m .. Ric hard Vaug han , supf . Wednesday , 7 p .m .
Located at Rutland on New Um o Shuler . pastor . Worship service,
M orning worsh ip , 10:30 .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Aev . Earl Rood, nell. t to Forest A c:re Poi-k; 9·30 a.m . Sunday school. 10:30
SYRACUSE . Morni ng wonhip , 9 Shuler , pa stor . Sunday school Rev . Ro y Rouse . pasto r ; Robert a.m. 8tb le Study ond prayer se r ·
a.m .; SundaY sc hool , 10 a .m M rs . 9':30 a.m . . Church service , 1 p .m .; Musser , Sunday School su pt . Sun . \ltCe Thu rsday, 7:30p .m .
Sampson Hall , supt .
youth meeting. 6 p .m . Tue..::loy Bi· day school, 10:30 a.m ., worsh tp
CARLETON CHURCH , Kingsbury
7:)0 p .m .Bible Sfudy , Wednes· Rood. Gary King . pa\lor . Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO, ble Sludy . 7 p .m .
Rev . Bobby Porter. pasto r . SuoRACINE CHURCH OF THE day . 7;30 p.m .; Saturday nt ghl sch ool , q 30 a.m .• Kol ph Carl.
day sc hool. 10 a .m .;. Sunday wor- N.AZARENE . Rev. John A . Coff · prayer service . 1:30 p .m .
~u per inte ndenl · e&gt;Jening wort hip ,.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRIST IAN. 7:30 p m . ~royer meeting,
sh ip . I I om .; Sunday eveni ng man. pasta~ . .Fro ~kli n 'Jmboden ,

WILKINSON
Sm.U En&amp;ines

OOLtAA. BILL!

WH AT WE CAN

IN HER E. WIT HIN

PilE ... HM M · M •· ·
WAIT A SECOND .. •
TttESE ONL l GO BACK

BILLS ·•• WOW, A

COM[ ON ANNIE···
lET'S 'lAKE

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

Reuter·Brogln
Insurance
Sel¥ices

am .

I MfAN THIS STUFF
HAS SCEN DUMPED

MI LLION IN THIS ONE

PATES ON THESE

Holland

ft25101

Re ... . David Harri s
Cluster leader
Re v. Sleven W ils on
Florence Smith
Hi I ton Wolfe
Associates
BETHANY , (Dorcas ) Wors h ip
9·00 a.m . Church School 10:00

WOW 1 MUST BE A

LOOK Al THE

. WINNIE

PIZZA SHACK

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

MARK VSTORE

Eatlnor
Carry Our
126 E. Mllln

Middleport

~ fl-6304

' I 'M... I'M NOT 50 SURE
I LIKE MY NAME e&gt;EIN G-

WE'RE IN Tri l5 TO
MAKEMCWe"~
AREN 1TWE?

' Of} I FORGOT TD TEL LYOU...
AS &gt;'AU OF MY DEAL
WITI-1 THE SAUSAGE
COMPANY FOR TI-lE

AS&amp;OCIATED WITH A

OF COURSE I CAN REFUSE
TO SIGN TriE CCNTRACT1

I PROM ISED YOU'D DO SOME
ENDORSEMENTS ... YOU
KNOW ••. TV COMM5RCIAL.7,

Bt!TWE.StiRE
COUL!l USE
771£ MONEY/

NEWSPAPER AD-

VERTISEMENTS...

'WINN I E:·W I ENER ~ .

HOTP06l

I

lj
!-

;)
~

F•IUrlntl Pttp Slum
Exlrec:llon
ftt-2206 or ft2-76JO

l

Rt. 3, ,_meroy

Wednesday. 7 30 p .m .
LONG BOTTOM ~ CHRIS TI AN .
Bruce Sm1lh pa stor . Walla ce
Damewo od. Supl. Bibl e Schoo l.
9&lt;)0 a .m . Preach in g se r"ice ,
10:45 o .m . No evening service

HY SELL RUN FREE METHODI ST
CHURCH . Rev . Herbert Ail ing.
pastor . Sunda y School 9 ·30 a .m ..
Morning ~erv1ce ,
10 30 a.m ..
Evange li stic se r\lic e 7:30 p .m .
Prayer meetin g, Thursday , 7:30

p m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot
Bald
Kn ob
Rev
La wren ce
Glu e senco mp. Sr ., pastor : Roge r
W illford , Sr., Su nday school supt.
Sunday school G·J O o .: e"ening
worsh tp , 7.30 p .m . Prayer
meeting 1 Wed nesday 7:30 p m .
Youth meettn g, Sunday , 5:30p .m .
with Do n ond Ma,tha Meadows in
charge . .
WHITE 'S CHAPEL, Coolv ille RD .
Rev . Ro y Oeeler . pa stor . Sunday
schoo19:30 a.m.; won h1p service,
IO:JO a.m . Bible study ond prayer
se rv ice, Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF &lt;;HRIST.
Lorry Co leman. pasto r : Co· Sunday sc hool supts .. Som M cKi nney
and Herb Elli tt .Sundoy school ond
comm union, 9:30 a .m . Wo n~ h i p
and comun ion , 10:30 o .m .
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH , Sunday ·School , 9:JO
a.m .: wors hip servi ce . II o.m.:
Wedn esday prayer mevling , 7:30
p.m . yo uth services , Sunday , ·7
p.m .: Sunday oight wors~ip , 7:30.
HUTLANO CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Re~ . l1oyd D. Grimm ,
Jr ., past or Sunday school. 9 :30
o.m .. worship serv ice , 10:30 a.m .
Broad cast live ove r WMPO; young
people' s
ser" ice .
7
p .m .
Evangelis t ic service . 7:30 p .m .
Wednesday ser11ke, 7:30 p .m .
MASON COUNT'V
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Cor·
ner of Second and Anderson ,
Ma son . Pastor Fronk Lowther .
Sunday school, 9:.. 5 a .m .. warship se r11 ice, II a .m . and 7·30
p .m .
Wee~ly
Bi bl e Stud¥ .
Wednesday , 7:3() p .m .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , P.
0 . 80 111 487 . Mil ler ,St .. Mason . W.
Vo . Sunday Bibl e Study 10 a.m .:
Wort- h lp ll a.m. ond 7 p .m. Bible
Sludy Wedne sday 7 p .m ,. Voca l
mu1r1 ic . •
•

MASON ASI'I:MBLY OF GOO,
Dudd ing lone. Maso n . W. Va .
Ches ter Tennant . PastOr. Sunday
School 9:4S a.m ..
Ch ildren's
Church 6:45 p.m. Young People's
Service 6:45 p.m . E~ang e li s t ic
Se rv1ce 7 :JO p.m. Wome11 s Mis·
siopo rv Cou fld l 10 o .m . fir5t and
third Tue sda y ~ PrO)ItH ond Bible
Stud., , Wed~sa oy , / .30 p .m ,

HARTFORD CHURCH Of CHRISl
IN CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev .
William Campbell , pastor . Sunday
School , 9:30 o .m .: James Hughes,
supl .. evening ser11ice. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday evening prayer
meeling, 7 ·30 p.
Youth prayer
se1vice each Tuesday .

FAIRVIEW

BIBLE

CHURCH .

Letart, W. Va .. Rt . I . Rev. Charles
Hargraves . pastor . Wors hip ser1/tees. 9:30 o .m .; Sunday school,
II o.m . e~ening worship , 7:30
p.m . Tuesday cottage prayer
meeting and Bible study, 9:30
a.m . Wo.shlp service. Wednesday . 7·30p.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now
located on Pomeroy Pike , County
Road 25, near Flatwoods . Rev .
Bloc~wood , pastor. Services on
Sunday at 10:30 a .m. and 7:30
p .m . with Sundav school, 9:30
o .m . Bible study . Wednesday ,
7:30p.m .

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS
CHURCH , INC . - Pearl Sr .. Mid·
dleport . Rev . O 'Dell Manley.
pastor; Sonny Hudson , Sunday
school supt . Sunday school , 9:30
a.m .: evening wonhip , 7:30p.m .
Proysr and praise ser vice,
Wednesday , 7:30p.m.

THE

PEOPLE'S CHURCH

OF

prayer meeting 7:30 p .m . Rev .
David
James Leach , pastor.
Holter . loy leader .
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 1 mile
east of Rulland , junction of Route
12• and Noble Summit Road (T·
11•1. Sunday Bible Lecture, 9.30
a .. : Watchtower study . 10.30
a .m .; Tuesday , Bible ttudy , 7 and
8; 15 p .m .: Thursday. the«:ratic
school , 7 :30 p .m .,
service
meeting, 8:30p.m .

HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St .,
Middteporl . Bobby·Eikins . pastor .
Sunday School , 10 a.m.: worship
service , 11 a .m .: e~ening aervice,
7.30 p .m . Thursday praye r
m•eting and Bible study . 7:30
p .m .

RUTLAND

FREEWILL BAPTIST

Church - leland Haley , pastor .
Sunday school , 10 a.m . evening
serv ic e , 7:30
p .m. Prayer

,_,ling, Wednesdoy, 7,30 p.m.
CHURCH Of' GOO of Prophecy ,
located on the 0 . J. While Rood
off highway 160. Sunday School
. 10 a.m. Superintendeno John
Loveday. Forst WednHdoy night
of mo nth CPMA ••r\lices , s..cond
Wednesdar WM8 mnt lng. third
through
ifth
youth service .
Geor~Croyle , postor .

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL -

570

POMEROY - Corne; Main ond
Cour t Sis., third floor over
lighthouse Restouront . Henry
Cook, pastor. Sundav 1chool. 10
a .m .: morning worship , II a.m .;
evening se'rvice. 7:30. Wednes·
day evening service , 7:30. fn.
lerdenominationol . full gospe-l.

Grant St., Middleport: Rev . Bobby

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO -

' CHftiST - Gobrl•l Mraz , pastor.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.: morning church , 10:30 o.m. Junior
church program under direction
of Karen Mrar: for children , 2-10,
during regular church hour In
churcb basement. Sunday •vening ssrvice, 7 p .m .: Wedn..doy
wrwk:e. 7:30p .m .

Paatar Dennis Boles . Sunday
School , 10 a.m .; worship service,
11.:30 a .m . and 7:30 p . fTI . Prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7:30p.m.

RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
Of' JESUS CHRIST, Eld01 James
Miller. Bible study, Wednesday ,
7:30p.m .: SUndov School , 10 a.m .
Sunday nights8 rvice , 7:30p.m.

POMEROY

WESLEYAN
Harrisonville Rood;

TRINITY Chrlt tion Assembly ,
Coolville Gilbert Spencer,
poslor . Sunday school , 9:30a.m ..
morning worship , I I a .m . Sunday
evening service. 7:30 p .m .
mtdwee~ prayer serv ic e Wednes ·
day.. 7:30p.m .
MOUNT Olive Community
Church , Long Bonom . Runell
Cline. supertnfendenl . Sunday
School 10 o.m. Youth group and
prayer mee t ings Weodflesdoy 7:30
p m . Church ser..,ices Sundar 7:30
p.m . lawrence Bush, pastor .
FAITH BAPTtST Church . Mason,
meet at Untted Steel Workers
Union Holl , Railroad StrMI,
Mason . Pastor, Rev . Jov Mitchell ,
Morning worship 9:45a .m ., Sun·
day School l0:30 a.m . Prayer
m"ting Wednesday , 7:30p.m .

lftd

BRIDGE

ER .. IE Is

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

MARY CLINIC

VOU'V! GrOT A

/
'·

JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTEI George's Creek Road . Church
school. f030 a .m . ; morning worship. 10:30; eyening tervlce . 7 :30.
Prayer meeting Wednesday . 7:30

CHRISTIAN IIAI'TtST - On the
Route7bypoos . JomeoE . K " -·
posfOr. Sunday tchool , 10 a .m .;
morning worship, U a.m .: even·
ing service, 7.

8

Scoring high with little

vERY, veRY S•c.IC:
eLe-PHAN'r ~f:.

NORTH
• Q7 2

•

l

•IC6~4

• 10 7 2
• J 93

There
will
be
a
homecoming at Cheater
Olun:b of God Sunday, Aug.
r1 with 11butet dinner at

noon.

BORN LOSER

I

WEST

EAST

•J73
tJ
.7 1

•AQ82

+ AKJI09151 + 83

'

P'OVRIOIIB
There
8oatdl
1811 chlchn
barbaeue SandaJ,
rr, at

Clab

at I p, m . Ado
miNion 11 f4 a peraorr .

batl•h11

Mtmben, .,.. "' ,..,.. '

and . . . . art 111'11 cf(lllll.

!.

Pus
Pus

-W--H-AT--AR-E~~A-N~O~~=F=IT~FE=R~T~~HE~BEAT~E
'IE KNITTIN: LEETLE TATER
TO IT, MAW
MAW?

g

'il\1\l

j

t

t

'¥'l
A..A

South

to this South player and

•..,•.,,.~ 1 ' .......

Pass

twelve others who escaped
with the same score.

WHART _

s•

Pus

· Opening lead :

Lola Griffin, Lilly Prushing
East made his best play . to Byrl Griffin , Donna J.
He let that queen hold . Then Griffin, Parcel, Olive.
South went back ~o diaCecil L . Stacy to Menford
monds. He took h1s kmg and Jewell
Joyce
Jewell,
led to dummy 'slO. East was
•.
in with the queen and led a Corrective Deed, Salem.
diamond right back.
Charles R. Rtckman , Lotus
Now came the really big
play of the hand . South
trumped· his own trick In
WID~THATSCRAMBLEOWORDGAME
dummy in order to lead and
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee
ruff a spade. Then South led~ ~
®
·
East with nothtng but tour ard1narywordS.
hearts. All East could do
was to take his ace of hearlll
and a one trtck set.
Minus 200 was worth 61
1
j
and one-half points out of 77
.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : West
North Eut
Paaa Pass
Pua Obi

B . Rickman, A rthur F .
Pauline
K.
Chambers,
Chambers to Ronald Throckm orton , Betty J. Throckm orton. Parcels, Columbia .
Lester D , Haning to Brenda
•
D . Haning, 1 A., Scipio.
Debra C. Johnson to Daniel ,
E . Shestina , Lots, Dyesville .
William H . Richmond ,
Edna M . Ri chmond to
Lawrence E . Richmond ,
Palricia Ann Richmond, .332
A .. Rutland .

.....,====•
PU PER

• 10 9
t AK964
• AQ8642

Weot
4+

Meigs
·Property
Transfers

his . ace of trumps, threw U
ble these lour J ~mbles
East in with the kin!C and left 0 ~~~~~r to eac h square, to loml

•

·~.ery, onner
IIJial lpelker.

IIYIIN SING
There will be abymn ling
Sunday. Aua. 27, at NSetUem•t Olun:b, me mile
north of Pomeroy on Rt. 7.
Tum rlcbt on cowtly road 30,
Foreat Run Road, thnt m~~e~ ·
out on rort~t Run Road. Den
Hayman and the Hymn
Tlmera will l!e f•tured.
Dinner at noon and hymn 11n1
at I : 30 p. m . 11r1nc a covered
dilb.·

tQ853
.KIO~

SOUTH

The afternoon program 1fW
be held at 1:30 p. m with the
Rev Bertha II'IR• • f

Elktno. Sunday ochool, 10 a.m.: .-.or, U
morning wall hlp, 11 : • evening.., There will be api!da) lin&amp;lhg
wo11h op, 7.30 p.m.: Thurodoy by. the Soul Seekers. Putor II'
evening Bible study and prayer the Rev Do!llld Combe Th
m"ling, 7,30 p.m. Affiliated with
bll .: In I
' e
s.s.c .
Pll c .. v ted to attend.
BRAOFORO
CHURCH
OF

...,..,"11

Church . Svncfoy School 9:30 a .m .
WorsMip service
10:., a .m .
Preaching serwices ...,.,.,. Svf)doy
alternating w ith C . f , Wednesday

FRAMIC

HOMECOMING SET

HOLINESS Dewey Ki ng , patlar; Edlton
Weo \ler , assistant; Henry Eblin ,
Jr ., Sunday school supt. Sunday
pm .
t~~c hool. 9:30 a .m .: morning war·
ST . PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
ship. II o m. Sunday evening serCorner of Sycamore apd S.Cond1
vice . 7 30, proyltlf' meeting, Thun• , Stt ., .Pamerov . The Rev . WilHam
day . -7 30 p .m .
··
Mfddle1warth, Paltor. Sunday
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
SChool ot 9 :.f5 o .m . ond Church
8COTCII
GOD - •"ot Pentecottal. Rev .
S.ryices I l o .m .
George O iler. pa1tor. Worship
SACRED HEART, lov. Fathef
will be I
se rvice Sunday, Cl:,.5 a .m .; Sun."
Paul D. w.;ton, p111tor . Phone rouraome
day sch oo l. 1I o .m .; worship Mf·
9'12 ·~. Sotyrdoy
Mo11,
A...
11ice. 7:30 p .m . Thurtdcry prayer
7:30: Sunday Mo11, I and tO o.m.:
meeting, 7:30p.m.
ConfHoton, $otu'rdov. 7·7:30pJft, tile Pomtro)' Golf

MT. HERMON United Breth,.,

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

+K

By Otwald Jacoby
aad Alaa 8oata1 ·
South looked over dummy
with mild dismay. He
thought that if he had hi• life
to live over 1111nf he would
have paNed the our-spade
contract. Then he · decided
!hat may~ there would be
Iota of other players In trouble and he had ~tier try to
aet out •• cheaply as he
could.
So he ruffed the spade
lead, eaabed the ace of dlamonda, noted the fall of the
Jaelt from Welt and decided
lo Jead hll queen of cluba .

M!!~~

""~-

II I tJ

You hold :

t K J 10 9 7 6
"AQJ54
t A

• 2

CENNADI

I I I

LEWBIA

[j

h

DID 'THE l-AWYER
DO HI~ e.EST
IN COUR'T'?

An Ohio reader asks if we
recommend opening with a ~:.;(;.:J.r-=-;:~-t?"'::!-1 No w arrange the circled let1ers to
form the surprise answer. as sugforcing two bid .
gested by lhe above cartoon
We have no real criticism
of a two-spade opening, but
we jllould onlr, bid one. We
Print
nere:
_ _ _ _ 4&gt;!&gt; _
only have 1S h 1h card polnta
(Anawen tomorrow) .
so there is very little chance
that a one spade bid will be
'
Jumbles: CAAZE • DOGMA BANANA WAITER
passed out.
Yeslerday s \
Answer: What 1no deelfl rJf Mid to his pat !NEWAPAPER ENT£RPRISE ASSN . I
WATER WE GONNA DO?
!For u;opy of JACOBY MODERN, send II to : " Win II
Bridge, " core of this new1po·
10, ..... t10~.- lor 11 .3!1 poll·
pelld tram ..lun*lltl, do til ;e a; IS I , lol J4, Norwood. N.J. O?MI. lnCIUdt
per, P.O. Box 489, R1dlo City
Stltion , New York, IV. Y. 10019.)
&lt;
I '

1

.

answer

rn "( I I

I !J"

--No.

--· -·-ond--~10

,,

'

'

''

'

.

�. . ... -'- ---

•
10-The Dally Senlmel, Middleport Pameruy 0 • Fnd&lt;ty , AIIIC 25, 1978

Business Services

15 Wow dli ur Urtdt!r

c.,;,

100

t!O
'"'

'""

E:¥1..-h word wer the rmnunwn 1•
Wl.lf"ili; 111 4 L~nts per word per day.
Ads rwrnu1~ oltwl than t'tlJJSa:uUve

HUHMOUVH~

Wl: PICK up 1unk auto bodtes buy
tng tunk cars scrap tron bot
teres and metals
J,1 der s
Salvage
SR 12o1 Pomeroy

lO • ACNE!, El r com house 4
BEA. T THI: October rush Gtve us
bedroom new both new ktl
your order now lor arrows
chen Ctly water On Rt J:J l
c1Jstom mode the way yoo wont
Hurltnghom 992 ~751
them and (ut to your tnd vtduol
length Ptck up onyt me before 60 ACRfS house and furn•ture
SJ2 000 00 lmmechate pos'Ses
Octobe• I SS c1epostl w th
son Phone 7&lt;42 19Blt after 5
order
{toston Gamege tter )
pm
alum num
arrows
$:1b 95
do zen
fiberg la ss $24 95 HOU St FOR sole teo• pool n
dozen We refle tch arrows
Syro,usc Call992 5767
gloss alu mmum or wood n
3
l.itO ROOM HOUSE
new
eludes 3 new plas ttc van es ntck
alum num roof
reasonable
and nsert $1 per arrow Al so
pnc e 3193 1 Welshlown Rd
we stro ghten alumtnum or
Mtner sv tlle
Oh 0
Phone
rows S 50 eoch arrow Tr
992 5i'54
County Sport Shop Nor th and
Trt
Co unty
Sport
Shop NEW liSTING Owner tron sferr
Downtown 30ol b 75 19BB
mg Over 2 acres close to
Hhools
hosprtot town 1 cor
CANNING TOMATOE S
green
garage pat o breakfast deck :J
peppers Geroldme Cleland
bedroom
N1ce basement
Nac ne Oh o
hardwood floon Cen tral otr
15 CU FOOT uprtght freezer 3
f orced o r furnace 991 5791
years o ld Contact Mrs lesl e
LARGE
BUSINESS butldtng
n
Hollman 742 2374
Mason 3100 sq ft Ground
HEAL TY PI GS $15 00 and up
flo or I 304 882 3356
Phone q4q 2460

992 S&lt;b8

.....

dllys will be tt\llr~OO 1H lht- l dMt
m~morv C11rd ...C Ttumk..s ar d
()b lu~ry (; l"t!U~ ~I WOI tJ s;l 00

II

rrwr unwn Cash m ;ulvant-e

Mobtle Home sui~ and Yard suks
art il&lt;:t:t!pll'd only wrlh r.:ctsh wrth
unler :lb L~ lll t:hltr~e fur I'd!; u•rry·

Ull! lkn Nutnbt'r ln Cart' of T~ &amp;on·
lind

1"ht- Publusl~r rt'st&gt;rv~ tlw rq(hl
1.u t'ilit or re~l any atlb: d~rnt!'ll ob~ClllHial Tht• PubliSher wrU not be
re;por~rb le rur
mt Ulst:r\IUII

rnore l hau one UI(Ot

Phont' 99'l 2150

NOTICE
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mundll~

Noonur S..turda}
Tue~\

lhru Ftldl:IV

' p"

lh e tilt) bt-fore pubhuttr

1,_: YO U ho . . e o serv tce to oiler
won t to buy or sell somelhtng
ae lookmg lor work
or
wha tever
you II get results
laster wtth a Senttnel Want Ad
Coll992 21St!
YARD SALE SofUrdoy and Sun
day 2 mdes out on 14) Everett
MeDon el res1dence
THlJHSO A Y f.R IOA Y Sa turday
Turn ttgh.t at Memory Gardens
turn r ght at hi mtersecflon
second house Clothmg fur
n lure mt5C
'f' ARO SALE Thurs and Fn on Rt
114 Ro q ne 1 m le paiil Htgh
Cec I Srtnager r estdence
Cancel ,f roms
GARAGE SALE Fr
Sot Sun 5
mtles off Rt 7 48240 Eagle
Rtdge CR 31 o1 hp boo t motor
moped bteycle gorde(l tro(l lj)r
camper awn ng
hot water
heater kmg stze head boord
good f dothtng
house hold
rtems
YARD SALE at Norman
Tuppers Pia ns on Rt
and Soturdoy Aug
26th Bt cycl!s~om ~

Weber s
7 Fr day
25th and
.':!_'O re

Sundon

' p"ernoon

Fnda)

HOOF HOLLOW Hones Buy sell
trade or tram Ne w anti used
saddles Ruth Reeves Albany

(bl&lt; l b98 3290
w a s so k nd and thoughtful dur
ng my recent stay at Veterens

Memor ol Hosp rtol I espec rolly
wrsh to thank Dr Raymond
Ho se
Veterens Memor a l
H ospital
Stoff
Un te d
Method sl Sunday Schoo at
Enterpnse those !&gt;endtng &lt;O ds
and flowers and to the many
vtstters You r k1ndness w II
never be forgotten
Loren1o Davts

OIL O R gas lease Free 30 acres
2 m les north of Pomeroy
01.4 7'16 2701 even ngs
PEA HAULERS Country CB Soles
ond Eq_u pmenl CB r od os tape
players stereo systems oil ac
ceuones
hom equ pment
ovodoble
Open
Tuesday
through Saturday For mont m
form ati on Call 8ol3 2Qbol 312b9
Lovett Rd Por tland Oh1o

HOLE IN ONE
POMEROY
GOLF CLUB
Aug 21 lhru Aug 26
5 PM Ttll ???

Sponsored

by Pomeroy Middleport Lion's Club

---~

LOV ABLE WHITE snow drtft great
PYR ENEES Pupp es
Phone
16 1olb673838

=:"----

AK C REGISTERED toy wh1te poo

die $7S 992 5783
fiNO FULL blooded female codo:er
spamel pups for sale 985 3931
AKC IRISH SETTER pupptes
each Coll30ol 773 5538

SSO

AKC REGISTERED male old Engltsh
Sheepdog Good wtth , h ldren
$75 985 o1111 or 9Cn :nos
FOUR HALF lm h Setter and hall
German shor t hatr pups male
Pemale regtslered 2 year old
German short Ma1r 992 2940

197.4 124 FIAT Sp tder Convert ble
{very good cond hon) low
mtleage
Call 992 7866 or
1971 DATSUN 4 door stat on
wagon 2b OCl(l m1les A cyl
good gas mtleoge 250 N 3rd
Phone ~2 7319
M ddleporl
- ~_f!!r &lt;4 p m· - ' - - - - - - 1'OS MONTE CARL O Bio( k w th
b ack Interior loaded ne w
steel belted rod al s new bat
tery E. cellent condtfton 5.3500
6 1.4 592 561 5 or 614 797 4'60ol
The Plotn!l.
1975 VEGA STATI ON wag on 4
sp new Mtche l 0!1. AM rod a
36 000 mtles Excellent cond1
hon Gr eat economy (Or S1300
591 561 5 or 797 ol bQ4
The
Plo•ns

t96S MU STANG CONVE RTABlE
9Q2 5792

1973 BlUE NOVA 3SO 55 2 doo'
floor
99~

) htft

1797

Rod ols

s1575

Phone

JQ71 MERCU RY lull power S900

------- -....-- - -1967 VW BUG Runs good $3 50
99~

5b23

992 3Sbb
1974 DODGE ClUB cob ptcl..up
54 000 m les 8 foot tru ck
cmo per Bot h f01 $2200 W II
_2ell sepo~ly ~7 24~ __

5 Balls for 11 00

2 8 by 16 x 7 wheefs Pr
S25 00 2 700 x lb W nler I res
pr S50 00 Coli 992 76Cjl2

-----

rNO BEDROOM house Rose Htll
S175 per month No pets
Lea!l.e
se,un t v
depos1t
b\.4 678 2513 or wr teA Mar
t n Rt t Box 114 Vtncent
Ohto
FIVE ROOM and bath house near
Rae me Phone 992 5858

TIMBER POMEROY
ducts Top pnce
saw ttmber Call
Kent Hanby 1 olo16

Forest Pro
for stand ng
992 S%5 or
8570

OLD FURNITURE tee bo•es brass
bedt ran beds desks etc
com pleTe households
Wrtte
M 0 M1ller Rt A Pomeroy or
co llm 77b0

8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMES Pt Plea
son! W Va bestde Heck s
1973 Broadmore 1.1 11 64 1
bedroom
1973 Do non 14 x (;JJ 2 bedroom
1972 V ctorton lol x 67 3 bedroom
2 both
1972 Coven try 12 x bS 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 x W 1

~be~m~~~--~·
COA L LIMESTONE sand gravel
calctum ch lor de ferfll zer dog
food and all types of salt Ex
cels tor ~all W orlo.~o Inc I: Ma n
{_lt Pom ero y 9!12 .38.ql

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

NEW 3 bedroom house 1 baths
all ele&lt;
I ocre Mtddlepor t
dose to Rut land Phone '192 •
i' o18 1
VA f.HA 30 yr t. nonr: ng als o
rehnon&lt;mg Ireland Mortgage
n E State Athen5 phone (614)
S92 J05 1

ly furniShed Outck sol e pnce

S 1888 00

Coil

992

223~

Firestone Store or Q49 1328
rNO BEDROOM mobt le ho ne
Completely fur ntshed Atr con
t dtl omn g Con be seen after S
pm i'&lt;411997

----

NEW 3 bedroom mabtle hone
N oms top quoltly I 7 bo th s
total electm Th s 1ncludes all
underpmn.ng olummum steps
and heavy duty ochors cement
blockr; Al so stoVe Mag' Chel
w asher and dryer Con be seen
ouoss from the Hydro l:lectn(
Plant at l etar t Foil s Oh1o

pas tract on
rust proofed
30 000 m•le, $37qs 74:2 :2753
MOTOHCYCLt: FOHsale Kawosok1

1967 HOU SE TRAILER 12.o:b0 All
elec tr iC fu rntshed a 1 cond
washer and dryer 2 ols n Har
tson111lle 741 281b

_
-

We are currently maktng
appotntments tor senior
po'tra1ts We use tradt
teonal seHtngs and also
feature outdoor por
tra•ture

Coli Us Today

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

---

109 Hogh St

BRADFORD
A ucttoneer
Com
plete Servtce Phone 9ol9 1487
or q49 2000 Roc1ne Ohto (ott
Bradf ord

ELWOOD

BEDROOM SUITE w !h marble top
lt v ng r oom su tle ( edar war
drobe door canop)l treadle
sew1ng mach 1ne porch swmg
table
1 woo den cha1 rs
9927114
197b K£ 175 Kowosak1 1100 oc
tuol miles $650 or best offer
Can be seen ot 777 L ncoln St
M ddlepon
LIVING ROOM su1te $50 Sewtng
mochme ond cabmet
$15
Stereo $10 1 dressers $10
$30 Chest of drawers $20 An
I que pofto table ~10 Ommg
bar $10 992 5791
REG ISTEIU D GUERNSEY cow now
m lktng Pur ebred Cuerruey
he fer to I res hen soon 2 Hols
le n hetfer cal ves J9b0 I ton
Ford !l uck 19bb Olds Cu tla ss
Supreme 100 lay ng hens loy
tng Approx 75) m xed hoy
q;q 2J7Cjl

MAIN
POMEROY. 0
NEW LISTING- 70 acre
farm wtth river frontage
cabtn large barn small
milk house corn crtb old
chicken house and 3
bedroom unfinished ranch

type

home

basement
Bottom

with

near
Below

full
Long
Fatr

Markel Value for qutck
sale SJ3 500
NEW LISTING - Close In
2 111 acres and a beautiful
newer 3 bedroom A Frame
Deck
Many Features

$37 500
NEW LISTING- Tuppers

Pia tns 3 bedroom home 2
ba t hs
full
basement
garage central a ir fully

BARLE'f FOR cover cro p Grown
fr om (erllf 1ed seed Paul Sayre
Portland Ohio 843 .tt591

equipped kitchen

55 GAll O N FISH aquonum wtlh
florescent I ght and stand
Dr ve n mota
f sh grovel

2 story home on good street

992 31 b2
WARM MORNING coo l hea ter
complete w tth p pe
00 lb
capa c t y Some as new Con be
seen at 2b4 Rut land St Mtd
dleport Ohto $175
YOUTH WESTERN saddle black 3
used pony saddl es 3 used
Western saddle!!. also new
pony and horse soddles 2 auto
washers
S75 eo(h
Reewes
Trodmg
Po~t
Poge vtl e
61 4 698 5436
1975 DODGE VAN conve rs1on
360 aula P S P B atr AM
FM 8 track Ever ylh ng needed
$4000 f rm
f or comptng
(/q2 1395

large

level lot exce llent location

A steal at $21 000
REDUCED TO 113,500 - A
In Mtddleporl
SUPER INVESTMENT 4 apartments
2 other
rentals Should gross pver
$6 000 per year Plus a good

small business 147 200
HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL
- ISS 900 wtlf ~uy this 3
bedroom home wtth garage
and large lot In town

IF BUYING DR SELLING
YOUR
BEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
AN APPRAISAL!
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK KATHY LEONA
ASSOCIATES
992 2259,992 6191
992 2568

T'NO TABLE lamps 3 bookca ses I
p cture 10 yards 48 sltpcover
or droperv fabnc 2 fold up or
my (01'5 I cor voc .4 electr c
dryer ve nt k t 2 pr oppl once
doll e~ 48 ql •ce ches t I s• lent
Scotts Mower I sump pump
100 It of 1 Inch gol vantred
_p_t_pe Ph&lt;:_ne 'l~2_2!27_c__ __

44 STATE STREET
ALBANY, OHIO

drtlled
HO LLAN D
Super b8
Hoylmer hoy baler good cond•
I on $1500 Phone 992 5.442
BODV PARTS to ftt b8 69 Mon !ego
Tor no Fa rlone or Comet 1 dr
hard top Rear end to ht above
Al so wmdsh eld to Itt obo11e
and Ranchero Set ol headers
to P nto 2&lt;JOOcc eng ne Phone

992 3SOS
1974 HONDA 360 street b ke
Good t tes Good co nd 1 on
L ke new 9000 m les $500
949 :2 123 ...,.....

---

__ _

1975 DATSUN PICKUP

35 000

985 3979
NEE CHI
PORT AB L£
sewtng
moch1ne Brand new Never us
ed W•ll do e11eryth ng Ongmal
cos t $300 w •ll sell lor $200
f~rm q91 5776

-- ---TRUMPET
hcellenl con d !ton
Has (Ose &amp; 1tond 949 2358
--ONE GOOD used Untco gold

You'll

tract

It

down

111uch faster
II

th

8

Phone 992 6333
OfhceHrs 9a m 5p m
Closed Thursdays &amp;
Saturdav at noon
Your Full Ttme
Real Estate Broker
Thts

beaultf ul

home

1S

r eady lor your tam tly t o
move nto 3 bedroom d tn
.ng room pl enty of storage
spa ce and 11 has not wa ter
heat f treplac e and wood
and coat Garage and patt o
w 1fh canopy St lua ted on
a l most an ac re on Slate
Route 338 1n Rac tne Wtl l

sell last al S30 000 00
Rutland - 3 bedroom hom e
on Ma.n Street A l 1tfle
work cou ld make thts a
rea lly n1ce lace Sells for

$14 000 00

Middleport ~ N ce btg
o ld e r
hom e
wt th
3
bedrooms new gas furnace
and new roof Loc ated on
Sou th 3rd Avenue Asktng

$25 000 00
Rutland - 3 bedroom tot a l
e lect rtc home st luated on
n tce stze lo t tn Hutc h1son
Sub dr'&lt;~ISOn Home has own
well Sells fo r S32 000 00
New Ltshng - 3 1 ac r es
IO~ated
tn cho tce area
Land 1s s tf ua t ed on south
s1de of Stat e R oute 7 bet
ween cemeter y and Sftlle
h1g hw ay ~ ar age
Sell ng
pr ce S11 000 00

WE r-.tEED ALL TYPES
OF LISTir-.tGS WE ARE
SELliNG FAST 11
Cheryl Lemley As soc
Home Phone 741 2003
,Htlton Wolfe Assoc
Home Phone 949 2S89
G eorgeS Hobstetfer Jr
Broker
Home Phone 992 5739

TWO REASONABLE
HOMES
Beat the cost of tnffalton
with these two new listings
In Middleport
No 1- Solld two bedroom
home partially remodeled

large

living room w new
carpeting
extra large
dining room Stfuated on
two ntce lots wtth plenty of

shade trees Atilt 800 this
one won t last long
No 2- 12K60'Efcona mobile
home

on

a

nice

lot

completely furnished new
carpeting 18 000 BTU air
condit ioner

cement patio

and driveway Only 110 000
Both of these homes are
wlt~ln walking distance ot

the Middleport boat docks
and Municipal pool Both
homes are not renting

INFLATION BEATER
Just listed on S R 143 a
furnished 12w:60 Prow:Myre
mobile home on !Jf• acre m
1 Rural and well water

available AI $8500 thtS one
won t last long

PRICE REDUCED
COUNTRY LIVING - 2
beautiful acres accompany
thts recently remodeled 2
bedroom home near the
mtnes
Barn
calf lot
storage shed 2 car garage

MACHINE Repa1rs ser
11 ce all makes qq2 218.4 The
Shop
Pomeroy
Fo brt c
A uthor red Stnger Sales and
Ser v ce We sharpen Sosso~

EXCAVATING darer loader and
backhoe work dump !rucks
and to boy s for htre w tll haul
ftll dtr t to so I I mestone and
gr avel Call Bob or Roger Jef
fe rs day phone 992 7089 ntght
_p~9~5~ 992 5232
EXCAVATING dozer
backhoe
and dtlcher Charles R Hot
held
Bo ck Hoe Ser vtee
Rutland Ohto Phone 742 2008
Will do roofing cons trucho n
p lumb ng and hea t ng N o 1ob
tool large or too sma ll Phone

742 2348
HOWERY AND
- - - -

...[J _ _ _ _

well

1'12

baths

sundeck and over 3 acres

EAST MAIN -

Unusual

newer buSiness build ing
w ith city wat~r nat ural

gas and electric

A good

COUNTRY

HOME -

6

room home with central
heating large I iving with
fireplace drUied well and
10 acres Will help finance
or trade for mobile homes
frame home on 2 large lots
Natural gas F A furnace

bal/l 2 car garage $17 500
IMMCULATE - one of the
finest 3 bedroom mobile
homes encl05ed bath with
shower electric F A heat
and central air Over lJ.
acre of level land

FAMILY

HOME

-

4

bedrooms 2 baths nat ural
gas F A
furnace shop
family room garage and 3

ion S27 .500
CONDOR STREET -

Pomeroy, 0
J-15·tfC

lot for garden and perking
Only 19 500
SAVE
MONEY
BY
BUYING THIS YEAR
HAVING SOLD A LOT OF
HOMES THIS YEAR WE
MAY BE ABLE TO snL
YOURS CALL 991 3325
FREE CALENDARS
Holen L Tuford
Gordon 8 THford
SuoP Murphy
Assocloltl

.-Headquarter~'-

31 H 321nfemal

so• 3

3'7 Made

WJiform,
38 Elam's
capital
39 Libyan,...•.• .__..~..___,_'----'--

------

PAINTER lntenor and e•tenor
.!_ou ~up ply.!!'.! e_o~n_!_ 9~2!_
WILL BABYSIT m my home alter
school starl s Betty Von Meter
Syro,use 992 7288

UHVEUTHLYN

---

BIDS WANTED on o 1974 bO ll 1ol
Modular homv Damaged by
ftr e The home •s we ll bu It and
'ont or ned 3 bedroom large lt v
1ng room format dtn tng room
kttchen
fomtly room
I 1
baths You ore •nvtfed lo n
specf th s home loca teC 1 mtle
east of Horr son11t!le Sf Rt 143
The purcho!er mu!l.l move th e
home not lat er tha n Oct 15
1978 Matl sealed b•ds fa 7J
Roosevelt Or R A F B Oh o
43 217 to arn ve not later than
Sept 20 1978 Include return
addres s and phon e number
An nouncement of acceptance
of o b d w1ll be made not later
than Sept 23 1978 Terms
Cash Cerft fted check or bonk
droit The owner reserves the
rlght to re1ect ony or all b•ds
For appomtment to mspecl the
home coli 7ol2 3122 or Colum
bu s ol97 13 17
Harold
D
Grohom Owner

Beautiful

spece Rod bom llkt sforogo building Locoltd oboul
len monutos north of Pomeroy (us! off Rl 7 tall for
more details ond appointment Asking $55,00
57 ACRES-With a nlcel'/2 story Rouse with 3 btdrms
and 1'12 baths Mostly carpeted Big dntraf llrepface
with heatolaler Small barn and outbuildings 20 acres
tenced Nice cou~try selling olf blacktop road just 6
minutes north of Racine Asking $42,000
6 ACRES- Nice l'h story horne mostly carpeted with 3
with fireplace

basement fuel oil furnace garage and outbuildings
Some fencing plenty of road frontage and garden
space City water and drlffed well Loc close to
hospotal and school at Laurel Cliff Asking $42 500
TWO ACRES- A beaullful4 year old, 3 bedroom home
with large eot In kitchen 3 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted 2 baths full basement with TV room Many

V.W.

for
Phone 747 2806
B etween 9 &amp; 10 PM

Local, one owner

owner s age prevents her from continuing

CARPETING
DRIVE A UTTU
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

1974
•

REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

dlllonlng

P S,

road

wheels radials

v.w.

1976 DODGE

BEETLE

DART SWINGER

Special

Dies el

New Rabbit
!redo In

All carptt iftstolled with
p•ddln' at no chorgo
bpert nslaflolfon

Slant

6

cyl
PS

automatic
one owner

1495

eng
local

2995

5

Rubber Back Carpel

5

RIYinlde Used Cars invites you to compare
our used car to any ather u~ed cars. You'll
understand why we are known thrauahaut
the area as:
''The Dealer That Cares About Quality"

"'yd
&amp; up

9' and 12' V1nyl

Allor Covenng In Stock
luy whert you can come in
ond- whit you'regonlng
- Good Hltdlons - Fully
stocked
Good Se ltd ian Of

RUG REMNANTS

Sunday School attendanse
on Aug 20 was 49 Worshtp
servtces were held at 11 a m
on
'The Ke ys of th e
Kmgdom from Matt 16 1319 Attendance at this service
was 32 wtth Howard Flanders
song leader and Florence
Spencer p1amst
Alfred's homecomm'g wtll
be Sept 17 wtth The Untied
Harmontazers '
spec tal
smgers
The u M
IS scheduled to
meet on Tuesday evenmg,
Aug 22 at the home of Nellie
Parker for a post po ned
meetmg due to stckness tn
her family
Prayer servtce ts at 7 30
p m Wednesday evemng
Mr and Mrs Robert
Robmson and famtly of
Belpre ca lled on Ntna
Robtnson and Clara Follrod
SWiday evemng and ptcked
up thetr daughter, Juha, who
had been vtsltmg here
Okey PuUms 1s tn the
hospttai as a result of two
heart attacks
Wanda Fmdlmg IS home
from the hosp1tal
Garnet Bentz has been tn
hospital and word has been
recetved that Edna Van Nest
ts m a nurstng home
Helen Woode has rece1ved
word that her brother
Clifford Hayes, IS expected to
be dtsmtssed from Holzer
Med1cal Center soon
Weekend guests of Ruby

w

Burke were Mr and Mrs
John Heald of Keene, Texas
Mr and Mrs James Burke
and
Rodger,
Purnts
Mtssosstppt, Mr and Mrs
Clyde Burke. Akron . Mr and
Mrs Bud &lt;Al leman F ostorta
Mr and Mrs Ronald Burke,
Debbte and httle Roome,
Cambridge Mr and Mrs
Robert Burke Chester Jerry

PUBLIC NOTICE
Follow ng Sec t ion 57 15 16 of
the Ohto Rev1sed Code the
change tn valuallon f or the
tax year 1978 has been
r ev tsed lo reflect th e new
con struct on values l o r t he
t ax yea r 1978
Values of the new con
struct1on can now be vtewed
at the off ce of the coun l y
audttor
Howard E Frank
Me gs Counly A ud tor
(8) 4 11 18 25 4tc

... Great Sale Prices ilfld Expert Service See

~-- nPPLIANCr -

T

·~rRVICE

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

WHEEL ALIGNMEN l

SPECIAL $

742 221l
have

omeroy r-

4 NEW TIRES
$
](1

trS

'

front whee I

dnve

cars

ClJ

u

lS

)

...

)

Cl.

)

VVATFR
1lll£Nfi

c._;

-

)

I

)
)

)

)

1\NYONl'

)

Let fllomeroy Lindmark

IOfltn &amp; condition your
wlttr with Co op water
sottenor, Modtl UC SVI
Now Only

IN'STOCK

Lar1111t !lelectl• In The Vel~

'219.95
ttst your w1ter

~

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sof.l 221 Play
yo ur hun che s and allow yo ur
tntu11lve leads tn flnan c tal or
ca reer matters tod ay Th ese
tngr ed1ents pl us your com mon
sense w11 pu t you m th e prollt
co lumn Ltke to ltnd o ut m o re
aboul you rse lf? Se nd fo r yo ur
copy of Astro Graph Le tt er by
ma11tng 50 cents tor each and a
long se lf addressed s tamped
envelope to As tr a Gr ap h P 0
Box 489 Radi O C tty Statton
N Y 10019 B e sure to spectly
btrth stgn

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 231 A pal

may have some tnstde tnfor ma
!ton yo u re seek mg today but
you can I depend upon htm to
call ~ou Get o ut and c ttcul ate
or phone lrtends wh o could be
he lpful

SCORPIO (Oct

24·Nov

221

Rather tha n try to fo llow the
me th ods o f others today tunc
tto n m the manner that co me s
tnsltncl tYely
Vt ctory comes
thro ugh use of your natu ral
att nbu fes

23-Dec

21) Pe rsons you II be dealing
wtttl today ha ve long memo
nes The coope rat on and snar
tng you shower on th em wtll not
soon be forgotten

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jon II)

Mul11ple respo ns1b1httes are
nol likel y to frigh ten yo u today
You can handle several impor
tant projects stmultaneously
and s t1ll do a good 10 b

20 Ftb

II)

situation s lhat matter to you
per sonally you II only put out
nominal effort today In thtngs
you can do wh ere lo ved ones
be[lellt your exerttons wtll be
tar more vtgorou s

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE
SPECIAL
PRICE

Expires

Augusl31 1971

TAURUS IAprff 2G-Moy 20) You'

POMEROY
lANDMMK
For All Your GE T.V.'s
&amp; Hatpaint Appl.

Sale Prices

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACKW CAIISEY,MGR
-.140 I MAIN ST
POMIROY. 0

•

s

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On August 21 1978 n the
Me gs Cou nty Probate Cour t
Case No 22465 Jo H caruzz
1249
Glenn
Avenue
Co umbus Oh o tt32 12 was
appotnled Adm nlstrafrt x of
ltle estate of Webster Bogges s
Hodge deceased late o f ll.tt
Laurel Street
Pomeroy
OhtO
Mann ng D WebstN
Probate Judge
(81 25 (9) 1 a li e

----------,
MEiGS I
Equipment Co.
POMEROY, 0
PH 99Z Zl76
lntem1110nal

(8)

Mann ng Webster Judge
Common P eas Court
ProbateD v Ston
Me gs County Oh o
25 lie

rw1e'N

Open Fnoav

Till 7 DO p m

New Idea
For Your
Shopptng
Equipment ... ,. ...... Dnlence

I
I
I

I
I
I

1
1I

L---------J

"Finally, I've found
a MAN-SIZE tractor"
ECONOMY ! 1ctor hlnlll• b111J111r «t~~~th•
10bl Mow !IIOW !ifl b.all•ou 20 1tt1t~
menu Mote wot~ pow11
low" fu• l COli 1 I 911
dnwe

SEE THEM TODAY

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
Reedsv11le.

0

Right now
DAN
MlMPSON

FORD
HAS

YOU BET OUR lEST DEll RIBHT FROM THE ITIIIT I

1976CVCC
HONIM STATION WAGON " '2995

of trades at no.fat prices!

1977 CAPRICE ClASSIC ............ '5295

1976 CHRYSLER CORDOBA .............. 13995

5 Dr

2 dr AM w 8 track stereo cru1se control p wtndows
&amp; power door locks 350 V 8 auto p s p b vmyl roof

air

1974 FORD TORINO.................. '1495
4 dr Wgn

ps pb ac

1973 PONTIAC VENTURA ............ '995
Hatchback 6 cyl

normal channels ol revenue
could yteid a larger return than
usual today Be alert for ways
to gel a bonus or even a ratse

PONTIAC GRAND AM ......... '1695

1973 DODGE CHARGER .............. !1495
2 Dr H T auto

ps

p b vtnyl roof

1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX.......!1495
p s

pb

vtnyl roof a ir

Wagon

P B

v tny l roof AM

1977 PINTO RUNABOUT........ ........ '3295
4 cyl auto trans AM radto f ull glass 3rd dr
wheels w h1 te w r ed trim

ra l lye

1977 GRANADA 2 DR ..................... '4795
6cyl auto t ra ns P S A C vtny l roof AM ra d to ttit
steertng w hee l red w 112 viny l r oof whtte Sharp

1973 MAVERICK GRABBER 2 DR .......... '1895
V 8 auto trans

P S AM rad io red

w whtte tr im

1973 DODGE CHARGER SE ...... . ......... $AVE
P S P B A C AM FM sp it! bench

seats w tre spoke wheel c over s

1973 DODGE DART SWINGER 2 DR ...... '1895
6 cy l auto trans P S
owned car 44 000 mtles

AM radto vtn y l roof
Shows good care

loca l

1973 PINTO WAGON .... . ... ... ..... ...... '1595

CHEV. VEGA ........ ~.~~~...::~ .... '395
967 FORD GAlAXIE 2 DR .......... '495

1974 MAVERICK 2 DR . .................. '2295

au1o a1r p s p b

2 DUNE BUGGrS .......~~~~~.~ .... '1295
TRUCKS
V 8 auto

A cy l

auto trans

302 V 8 auto lrans

luggage rack

Squtre optton

P S A C AM FM lape sharp

Blue tnmm ed m wh ite

2 IN STOCK
1974 MUSTANG II ...........
.............. . $AVE

1974 D-1110 SHORTBED DODGE .......... $AVE
1

1974 CHEV. C-10 ............

FORD CUSIOM 302 .......... '2895
2 WB P S

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

'2595

1974 DODGE D-200 4X4 .................. $AVE

1975 FORD CUSTOM 302 ......... '2695

1975 F-150 FORD .......................... '2695.

V 8 stand

1976 CHEV. C·10 4X4 ...... ~~?!'!.?~....... '4595

ps

pb

LWB

VANS

1972 CHEVY C-10.~~~:!. ............... s2695

1977 FORD F-150 .......................... '4295
1971 CHEVY C-10 ........................... '1395
I

•

RIEBEL'S USED CARS

OPEN TILL 7 PM
hcopl Thundoy &amp; Seturdoy Tlf s 00
CfoHdSunday

1 See Roger Rtebel
2 Conventent Numbers
985-3345 or 647·3463

DAN THOMPSON FORD

LEO (July U·Aug H) Soclol
eneountera will be extremely
benefiCiill today You wllllnrn
11 mu ch from others 11 they
will from you Each will be
buO'ftd up by the experience
(NEWSPt.ttER E:IITERPAtSE ASSN )

P S

MERCURY MONTEGO ......... ~1295

CANCER (June 2t July 221 Stlu

atlons where vou can deriYe
some type of commission
even though It Is a small one
should be the areas where you
concentrate your efforts today

V 8 automattc: a tr cond
FM stereo

V 8 auto trans

1975 VEGA WAGON ......:":~!?.:.~!~ '1295
CHEV. CHEVELLL ............ '1395

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 201 Proj
ects ca lling for tmaginat on or
boldness will be the ones
where you are ltllely to sfline
today Be assertive without
being erratic

auto

Air vinyl roof

Auto

•

1978 FORD FAIRMONT 2 DR .. .. .. .. .... $AVE

St. Rt . 7

1
Tuppe;s Platns. Ohio

mtll north

I
I

Lena Ethel Guthrte
Adm1nlstrat,.- x
of the Mtlo Emerson Guthrte
Esta t e
(8 1 18 22 2S Jlc

u·-ter

8 JG--1977
Cincinnati Bengals Highlights 4, Pilot
'Wilder and Wilder 10
9 oo--NFL football 3 4 lS Love Boat 6 13 Movie
"Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night 8 10 In
Performance at Woit Trap 33 Jaffrey Ballet Live
from Art Park 20
10 oo--Fantasy Island 6 13 Movie Down to the Sea In
Ships 33
•
11 oo--News 6,8,10 13 11 15--ABC News 6
11 30--Evenlng In Byzantium 6, Second Citv T V B
Movie A Place In the Sun 10 Movie " The
Screa"'lng Skull 13 Janak! 33
12 OQ-Don Kirshner Rock Co~cerl 8 News 3 4 15
12 3G-~aturday Right Live 3,4,15
12 so-Movle "Teenage Caveman 13 2 00-Movle
"Oedipus the King' 3 Movie 'Sparta&lt;:us 4
2 lG-ABC News 13
4 30-News 3 5 Oil-Bonanza J 6 oo--Bewitched 3

ARIES (Morch 21 April Ul Your

greate st asset today Is yo ur
ability to get along w tth people
from all walks of !lie Your
pleasant demeanor 1s the key
to ope n doors

s211 OFF

bas

August 26 1971
Your matenal pros pec ts look
rattl er encoura gmg for the
comt ng year
I ro ni ca lly
tho ugh enterp,rtses yo u thtnk
wil l yteld large r etu rn s ma y not
hn1sh as s trong as the ones
you lhought wou ld be s maller

PISCES (Feb 20 Morch 20) In

Landmark

''

Tho

Bernice Bede Osol

Learn ing c an be a .fun e~epert
ence today tf yo u approach 11 1n
that fr ame of mtnd The know!
edge you acquue you II retatn
and later pu t to good use

othtw brlnds

A SO'A THAT
MAKES A
IEQIIDR

ASTRO•GRAPH

AQUARIUS (Jon

Ally U S made car -pori•
exlro If noadad EKcfudH

enlarted

~
a.

NOTICE'
BtdS w tll be rece ved al the
ott ces of Bernard V Fultz
P omeroy
Nat ional Bank
Butldtng
Pomeroy Oi"to
unt 19 o clOCk AM on A\JQUSI
26 1978 tor the sale of one
horse drawn sle gh
The
understgned reserves the
nght lo retect any and a I

Great Performances 33

For Soturday Aug 26

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

Clfl742 2211
TALK TO
Wonclefl or Horb Gr•to
or Geno Smith

Journey to the

Far Side of the Sun 4 Point of View 6 Fat Albert
8 10
12 30-Thunder 3,15 American Bandstand 13 Soul
Train 6 Space Academy 8,10
1 00-Space Kldettes 3, Viewpoint 8 Mr Magoo 10
Wrestling 15 The only thing I can't do Is hear 33
1 30-Grealesl Sports Legends 3 Witness to Yesterday
6 Racers B Film Festival 10 Kentucky Wed
Like to Show lito You 13 French Chef 33
2 00-Baseball Warm up 3,4 15 NFL Great Teams
Great Years 6 Tennis 8 Movie Flippers New
Adventure 10 Ironside 13 Bill Mayers Journal
International Report 33
2 15--Baseball 3 4 15
3 Oil-Greatest Sports Legends 6 Adam 12 13 Book
Beat 33 3 30-Golf 6 13 Way II Was 33
4 00-Do It Yourself with Homer Formby 8 That
Nashville Music 10, Photography 33
4 31&gt;'--Sports Spectacular 8, Nashville on the Road 10
Catch 33 33
5 oo--Star Trek 3 Wide World of Sports 6 13, Kevin
Mabry and the Liberty Street Show 4 Pop Goes the
Country 10. Film 15 j Zoom 33
5 3G-PorterWagoner10 Setter Way 15 Once Upon
a Classic 33
6 OQ-News 3 4,10 Lawrence Welk 8, God Has the
Answer 15 Zoom 20 Studio See 33
6 3G-NBC News 3,4,15 ABC News 13 News I&gt; CBS
'News 10 You Bet Your Lite 20 Economically
Speaking 33
1 OQ-LIIIIe Rascals 3 Lawrence Welk 4 15 Hee Haw
6 8, Black Perspective on the News 33 Bugs
Bunny 10 Wild Kingdom 13 Electric Co 20
7 30--We Think You Should Know 3, Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33 All Star Anything Goes 10, Sellin
of Jamie Thomas13 Once Upon a Classic 20
8 OQ-Bionlc Woman 3,15 College Football Preview
6.13, 1977 Cleveland Browns Highlights 4 Jack Van
lmpt Crusade 8 Bob NewhartlO Onedln Line 20

AC

I

U S Farm Report 10 Kentucky Afield 13
7 oo--Marlo and tho Magic Mov ie Machine 4 Fun for
Everyone 6 Ghost Busters 8. Public Polley
Forums 10 Jabberlaw 13
7 30-Saturday Report 3 World of Survival 4 Ad
ventures of Muhammad All15 Dusty s Treehouse
6 Wacko 8 Grape Ape 13
8 oo--Hong Kong Phooey 3,4,15, Dynomult 6 13 Three
Robonlc Stooges 8 10
8 30-Go Go Globetrotters 3,4.1 5 Superfrlends 6 13
Speed Buggy 8,10
9 OQ-Bugs Bunny Road Runner 8 10 9 30 Scooby s
Laff Alymplcs 6 13
10 30--Pink Panther 3,4 15 Batman Tarzan 8,10
11 00-Baggy Pants 3,4 15 11 30-Space Sentinels
3 15. Kroft! Supershow 13 Little Rascals 4
Bewitched 6 Secrets of Isis 8 10
12 00-Land of the lost 3,15 Movie

OF

CO UNTS
PROBATE
COURT MEIGS CO UNTY
,.. OH i d
Accounts and vouchers of
the
fo llow ng
namea
1 duclar es httve been tiled n
the Probate Court
Me•gs
County Ohro for approva I
and Sl'ftlement
CASE NO 22 16&lt;4 F nal and
o s tr 1bUt1ve Accounl of
Bernard V Fultz Executor
of the Eslate of Frteda
F aehnle Deceased
CASE NO 22 780 F 1nal and
0 str.but ve
Account Of
Beulah
B
Jone!
Ad
m m slratnx of the Es t ttte ot
Charles
E
Burdette
Deceased
CASE NO 22 270 Ftna l and
D•st r bu l l,lfe Account of John
w Ha 1 Admtntstrator WWA
of l he Estale of General J
Hall Oeceltsed
CASE NO 21339 Fma l ana
Otslrtbultve
Account ot
Josephtne B levtns E)(ecutr x
of the Estate of Wilma A
Parmelee Deceas ed
Unless except1ons are f li ed
thel'eto sar d scco unts wtll be
for hear ng before sa a Court
an the 12nd day of Sep
+ember 1978 al whtch I me
sad accounts w•
be con
s dered and coni nued from
day l o day unt I f nally
d spose d at
Any person nteresled may
f de wr tten except ons to sates
accounts o r to malters
perta n ng to the execut on of
the tr ust no! less than f•ve
days prtor to the date set for
hear1ng

SATURDAY, AUGUST 26. 1971

Burke, Ltsa and Trtc1a, Rt I
Reedsville Mr and Mrs BtU
PuUms Rl 2 Coolvtlle, Mr
and Mrs Micky Burke, J eff
Jenme Matthew and Ruby
Irene Rt 3 Pomeroy Mr
and Mrs Buck Calaway
Tammy Mtssy Adam Rt 2
Coolvtlie, M; and' Mrs
Robert Calaway Robbte and
J eromee Rt 2 Coolville, Mr
and Mrs Ernest Calaway
Antta Jane, Rt 2 Coolvtlle
Mr and Mrs
Robert
Calaway announce the b1rth
of a son on July 31 at Camden
Clark Hospital m Parkersburg welghmg 7 lb 1 oz The
baby ha s been named
J eromee Chfford They also
have a 3'h year old son
Hobble Grandparents are
Mr and Mrs Bill Pullms Rt
2 Coolvtlle and Mr and Mrs
Guy Calaway, Rt 1 Reeds
vtlle, Great grandparents
are Mrs Ruby Burke Rl 2
&lt;Alolvtlle and Mr and Mrs
Okey Pullins, Rt 2 Coolvtlle

From Slg!5 &amp; Up

to operate

CALL THE WISEMAN

sliver

con

air

$7495

SAVE ON

•eu

the farm and sho dHiros an lmmadfoto salt SO to 60
acres tillable with "'"'" very good croek bottom hilltop land Tho bafonco Is In pasture &amp; woods Tho 6
room home Is good ( - nttd some modornlzollonl
farge all purpose barn &amp; tevtral outbuildings The
minerals go with It and II s located In an area whore
ges oil &amp; coal have boon lound to be pfonllfuf Noer
Rutland 60s

Automatic,

our
service department and
will servtce Hotptnl and

'"

141 ACRES -

AMX

with black cloth Interior

r::

EXCELLENT F ARM BUY -

JEEP

1977 HORNET

z

280

Cataplller &amp; Terex.

We

furnace All this and two ncle acrH of land In a good
hx;allon Will go quick for 135 000
4G AcrH of land In Sutton Twp Nice building sites,
small barn Priced at anfy $~1 500
WANTED We have a quallllod buyer tor a tow ocru
of land with 1 good home with of least 3 bedrooms

Wtnood Iorge &amp; smoll Forms
ond Mony typos of property
CALL JIMMY DllM,Auoclot.,f4f 2:111

AMC

1977 DATSUN

mere extras, low heat bill with nat gas forced air

located on good road

EKHLFP

BLWW

RIVERSIDE

Diesel Methanic

1976 NASHUA 1.4 11 bS 3 bedroom
1 , both underp nn ng $1500
and assume loan 949 2b83 or

LF

t

\J_t_

Expenenced

'4 •88

EBTWWE

BKV

.

:1

HELP WANTED

SMF

LF
MRJTHELYN
UHVJTHD
!~~~y~ Cryploquole · IT USED TO BE A GOOD HOTEL,
PROVES NO'IUING-1 USED TO BE A GOOD

PU~OLE

-

work It :

L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One Iefler atmply stands lor another In th11 sample A Is
used lor lhe three L s X lor the two 0 s etc Smgle letters,
apoltrophes. the length and formalton ol lhe words are all
hiulo Each day the codelellers are d11!er~nt
CRVPTOQUOTES
YKT

POOlS All SlleS and
sh apes Sw im pools 2 years
ell{penence
lree est notes
anyt h ng
you
need
for
underground sw m pools New
'hem icol and supply store
Albany
Oh o
Ph o ne
bioi 696 6555 ( Alter b pm
614 68Cjl 5151 John Jeffers or
689 5265 B ll Gtllett e ) We ore
NOT all we t on PRICE S

to

lo

Chester Ohio

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Servtce Ph01 tt 992 1478

--'---''-....L.,~

A X y D L B A A X R

WIL L DO bab y stlling tn my home
~es 1 o1 Phone 992 7689

b9B 7331

= +--+--t---1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

WATER WELL drtll ng WtlltOm T
Gran t 742 1879

COIIOhng
sept c sys t ems •
do1er ba ckhoe dump tr uck
ltmestone
gro ve l
blacktop
po~t ng Rl 143 Phone I [6 lol)

NEIGLER BUILDING Supply for
bu1ld ng houses re potr worlo.
a 1d cob 1ets Call Guy H
~':. gle~ 9ol! 1508 ~ft e ~S ~~
REEVES TRADIN G Post Pagu v lie
G rocertes dry goods hard
wore feed tack shop Spec •ol
!_5_1_b~ ~og f~.? S~B~AUTOMO BILE INSURA NCE been
(ancelled? Los t your operators
hcense? Ph one ~2 2143

=+-11-+---l

with up

AlLOW AI

669 5063
Kenntlh Crabtree
691-6196

living rm , family rm

tinent Fr

SETTLEMENT

6 OQ-Summer Semester 8 10 6 30-- TV Classroom 8

•

Social Not~

31 A con-

lQ 30 c

Ex

FRfDAY ,AUGUST25,1971
5 oo--Here Come the Brides 3, My Three Sons 4.
Gunsmoke 8 Mr
R~r·s Neighborhood 20 33,
Voyage to tho Bottom ol floe Sea 10 Emergency
One ' 13, Petticoat Junction 15
5 »-&lt;Hid Couple 4 News 6 Electric Company 20 33
Hogan s Heroes 1~
60Q-News 3481013,15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
Making Things Grow 33
6 3o--NBC News 3,4 15 ABC r-.tews 13 Andy Griffith 6
CBS NeYJS 8 10 Over Easy 20, Antiques 3
7 oo--Cross Wits 3, E Kpohlo 78 4 Newl¥wed Game
6,13 MuppetShow8 r-.tewslO Gilligan sisland 15
Almanac 20 Insight 33
1 3G--Porter Wagoner 3, Gong Show • $100 000 Name
That Tune 6 13 Price Is Rig ht 8 MacNel Lehrer
Report 20,33 Family Feud 10 Pop Goes the
Country 15
8 oo--Biack Sheep Squadron 3,4 15 Tabitha 6 13
Wonder Woman 8 10 Washington Week In Review
2033
8 3o-&lt;lperatlon Petticoat 613 Wall Street Week 20
TV on Trial 33
9 oo--Rockford Fifes 3 4 15 NFL Football 6 13 CBS
News SpecialS 10 In Performance at Wolf Trap 20
10 ®-Quincy 3 4 15 10 30-Monty Python s Flying
Circus 20 To Be announced 33
11 oo-News 3 4 10 8.15 Dick Cavett 20 Cameras In W

Alfred

!tVIWy

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

3

bedroom frame home with
bath gl!ls furnace and large

doing
Z7 Tolallty
Z8 Jokester's

ctal Call
Hour Serv•ce Any day,
anyt1me
Phone 91S ll06
Jack Ginter 915 3806

Tom Bo11cevic

stove, refrloereter and dishwasher

or 4 bedrms

locatton for your bustness

%I Wrong-

Tires

and commer
for estim•te 24

-

MART1N

THE CHIMNEY Sweep Reduced
rates hi Sept I 6 1ol 373 6057
_.'::"~~ ys ~~ I 5
__ _

Low twenties
Jantce I Gettles
Reoltor
Robert~ Huffman
Branch Mgr 691 6300
AssociolesL

not all, we hlvt straw•rrlts, reapbllrrl" and garden

Houstny

WANT AD

pond Located befween
Pomeroy and Albany

don&lt;ng room with sliding glon doors leading out to
Iorge deck Lorgo living roam ond fomlly room, ondto
ftntsh this well-laid out home we have five bedrooms,
ultflty room ond goroge. Vory low healing bill Tllal'l

$33 soo
REAL BUY - 4 bedroom

m les Good t res new po nt
1ob Step bumper $1CjlOQ Phone

Three bedroom home,
kttchen with built ins,
famtly room w flreplace,
d tnmg room 2 baths Pond,
3 car garages Three to 18
acres ava•lable Prtced at
S38 500 w 3 acres Including

Pomeroy Ohto

cabinets

Walch

zsGraiped

Res,dent•~tl

S~WING

JUST LISTED- SPACIOUS Bf LEVEL Tills moy be
your droom home II hal o Iorge kllchon with foh of

the riverboats from your 3
bedroom mobile home Has

992 Sb36

698 6JUO

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
992 3325
2a _e Second Street

devtce
zt Simple
orgarusm

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

J82S

8•3 33t t

LONG BOTTOM -

23 CU FOOT chest type fr eezer

Sweepers toa sters trans all
small appt onces Lawn m ower
next to Slate H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone {b14 ) 985

SIX MIXED br eed pupp es 7
Weeks old Turn r ght at Tex aco
1n Mason about 1 , mtles out
~ Estep s r es1dence
Walch for
s gns

GeorgeS Hobstett er Jr
Broker

BOWERS REPA IR -

17 Placed
trust in,
with on
II Holbrook
It Conjunction .:-~--r::--..,..._

!ICllle
Z9 Follow
In order
30 Heighten
33 Rawboned
35 Hostelry

shape

Brakes

8 2 1 mo

entiale
21 Burned
2% Aasuage
23 Everywhere
H Wee bit
28 Economized

Zl Halstlng

MOORE'S

Ph 992 2848

decoration

JJ "El - "

Yesterday'a Alllwer
28 Differ28 Plant

Z1 Dtulee&lt;ltP

lnstallafton Servtce

(Bob Hoethchl
Pomeroy

,..

Battery.

MORILE HOME lor sol e 1968 Vm
dole 11 x bO w th boy wmdows
Unl urn shed 992 3954

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

-

The Photo Place

12 Esau's

u Colorlai

For The Best
Prfce In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At
Muffler
Shocks

coW!Iry
5 Blanched
I Thor's
stepson
7 Put the (Jianhandle)
I Where to
find Gary
• Goaded
II Paired off
15 Prong •

country
J3 Hint at

I

SENIORS

Service
........
...............

'

Free Estimates
Phone 949 2862
or 949-2160
· 8-20-1 mo CPd I

H1gh School

3 Nearby
t Mather

11 Darolhy
or Nancy

Downspouts

Phone 992·5682
.
4-30-IIC

SPACIOUS

BASS BOAT IS foot olum1num 10
hp Mere motor 9B5 4339

Aut• &amp; Truck
Repatf
Also Transmisston
Repair

r'

Sevt :10 pel Ia 50
.,hettltngcos
Experltnco ond
fully IMurtd
Froo Est
Ca II 992 2772
8 10 lmo I Pd I

zZeal

dry land

~

8 FOOT TRUCK topper Sl75 14
foot alum nun John boot 5 h p
motor and
tr a1l e r
$300

949 20so

0

Mncan

10 Plinth

New or Repair
Guttels and

'II&lt; mflo oN Rt 7 by ptll on
51 AI 1'24 toword Rutland,

CellulOSIC (wood f1berl
Therma !Insulation

lHRH 8EDHOOM fram e home n
Mtddteport Call qq7 3457

lO,.; 40MOBILI:'HOME c:omplete

GAIOOE

I South

composer
5 Set foot an

11 JG-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Movie Brink • The
Great Ro-ry" 8 Movie 'Hand of Power 10
12 OQ-News 6,13 Janak I 33 12 30-Barella 13 Movie
The Man Who Had Power Over Women 6
1 OQ-Midnlght Specla l3 4 15 Movie The Unearthly
10 1 40-lronslde 13 2 30-News 3 2 40-News
13 3 00-Movle Ten Tall Men 3 4 30-Movle
Tokyo Joe
3 6 OQ-Big Valley 3 'I ooBewitched 3

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.. , THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Adolescent
I German
DOWN

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

ROGER HYSnL

~

washer top notch shape $125
A nother
good buy t ra m
Pomeroy l andmark 992 2181
Po les
max
CHI P WOOD
d1ameler 10 on largest end $8
per ton Bu ndled slab S6 per
ton Oe lt11ered to Oh10 Pollet
Co Rl 1 Pomeroy m 2689

GOOD co nd1l on 3 bedroom
w th l
both n Pomeroy Fu ly
nsul eted w th blown m
l 1bergloss storm w ndows and
doors
Carpeted
n good
ne ghborhood wlk ng d sta nce
of town Call qq'] 3871 ofte
~ 30 pm or Sa turday and Sun

CAPEHART CO NSOLE stereo B
tr a(k
AM FM Mull ple x
doy
Whtrlpool
12 washer and
SIX
ROOM house and both on
Whtrlpool dryer Call 991 60b2
coun try on 11 acres cen tral
1978 CJ5 Jeep 1972 Hondo 450
heal m nerol r ghls 15 mtnule
992 S25 I
drt ve to town
lm m~d •ot e
possesSion
S13
000
7.tt2 307.4
1976 FOR O ISO Ranger ptckup
or 9&lt;11 5815
v
auto
p s
p 8 radto

1Cjl71 FORO TORINO 1968 Ford
p (kup Worm Morn ng stove 2
whee Ira ler Used lumber
7.42 2174

DREAMING OF a wh te Chr stmos
w th no b Is? Wonderful to
thm k about but I could come
true Be o Toy lade~ hostess
....;;~;;;~;:.:::..~~!l:o...._;::ln you• home or by order s frol'fi ""'
your frtends Earn toys and g fts
free
Nome b•o 1d toys
reasonably
pnced
w th
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
guarantee G1fts for the whole
Route 33 north of POmeroy
fom •l y For nformofl on call
Lorge lots Call 992 7.479
74 2 2377 Of 992 7056
WORK
OVERSEAS
Austral a ONE BEDROOM op t Contac t
Vtllage Manor Apt
Mtd
Afrtca South Amer co Europe
dlepor t 992 7787
et c
Construct on
So les
Eng.neers Clerical etc $8000 3 AND A RM furn shed and un
to $50 000 plus b:penses pa• d
f urntshed
op ts
Phone
For employment nforma t on
992 Sol 3&lt;4
wrtte Oversees Employment
APARTMENT OIIOtloble for sleep
Boll 1011 Boston Mo 01 102
mg quarters room fur for four
men 10 m nu tes from Moun
SOMEONE TO dean up car s App
ly n person Har old Hysell
I oneer Plant Hartford W Vo
Phone 1 30ol 882 3356
Rutland . Oh o

•

APPLES
F tzpolf"k Orchards
Sta te Rou t e 689
Ph o11e
Wtlkesv lie 609 3785

SUPER TR YKE 3 wheel motorcy
cle 46 oc tuol m les S.495 Can
be seen at Rou 5h s londtng
Roc ne or 'all Q-49 252b

FOUND AT Ed son Hor res dence
Darw n
a port German
Shephard dog Fr endly Phone
992 5019

CET A
TITlE VI
Must De
unemployed 15 of last 20
weeks res •dent of Meigs Coun
ty
meet federal
tn(ome
gu•delmes Con tact O hio Job
Servtees 8 28 78 Equal Op
porl unlfy
Employer
(2)
'oborer 5

SYftAf.;U~l: 2 bedroom house
New storm wmdows New
alu m num bu ldmg 2 porches
992 J'}JCjl

wm CONSTRUCTW AND IN

KZ &lt;00 843 30S3

RISING STAR Kenne ls Boordmg
ond groom ng o il br eeds
Chesh re 367 0292 or 3b7 0106

992 3'10'- - - - , - - - - -

NOTICE
The Mtddleport offtce will
be closed eftecttve August
21
lt71 You mily pity
tlectrtc bUll ilt Dutton
Drug Store or by mil II The
telephone number remains
the s•me and you mav call
the ltsted numbers tor.
lervtce wtfh no toll ch•ro•
Columbuslnd Southern
01110 E lectnc Co

IN

a

111

WISH to thonk e..-eryone who

Sl:N!:tl MAliC 0(
cou nt ng mochtne
Phone
9Q2 '2 156 The Ootly Senltnel
IIi Cour t Street
Pomeroy
Ohto

HOMESITES f or sole I acre ond
up Mtddleporl near Rutland
Call992 7ol~l

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PR08Al'E DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OH IO
IN
THE
MA.TTER
OF

Va Courtrooms' 33

~~*'·"-

WANT AD

OlO COI N ~ pocket watches
class r ngs w.edd ng bonds
dtamonds Gold or stlvet Call
Roger Wamsley 7ol11331

-.

11-The Daily 'Sentmel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
CHARGES

. - .....

....

See Rocky Hupp, oarroll Dodrill or Pol Hill, Gtnorol
or UHd Vohlclo
Monager for a Good Deal on o m 21" '
~"'ddlepart, o

�---..
&lt;

-·

....

- ..... .......

· ~

..

.'

•

'

'

.

• •

•

'

J

~

-.

.,

'

~

•

•

•

..

•

•

•

'

,

~

.

11'"1"" · · · ·

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pmi~eroy , 0 ., Friday, Aug. 25, 1978

··Nationwide mail ·strike possibility posed
GRro&lt;)RY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UP!} An unofficial vote count early
IOOay showed the nation's
largest postal union has
rejected a proposed threeyear contract, posing the
possibility of an illegal
nationwide mail strike, union

By

sources said.
'rhe unofficial tally showed
the vote by the American
Postal Wockers Union to be
94,000 to 78,1)00 against the
contract offer. About 175,000
of the 280,000 Wlion members
were believed to have
participated in the balloting.

An off icial count was
expected to be announced
later today.
- By rejecting the offer of a
19.5 percent wage and costof-living raise , the union
representing postal clerks
became the second postal
union to defy President

Carter's call for restraint in
the negotiatloos - restraint
that carter said would help
hold down inflation.
The vote by the APWU was
considered a determining
factor in chances f&lt;r .a strike.
Leaders of both th~ APWU
and the Natiooal AsSociation

hill top aides would say
Thuraday whether they will
yield to 1111im demands to
return to' the bargaining
table ;
Bolger has lnUied that in
the event any of the four
postal unions, repre.nting
600,000 union employees,

of Letter ' carriers, which
earlier rejected the ·~tract
by a 4-3 margin, ar now
under ·pressure fmm rankand-file members to ~eopen
negotiatioos or set ~S~rike
deadlines next week. •
Neither Postmaster
General William Bolger nor

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

Results of '78 ·fair
horseback games given
Results of the Meigs County
Junior Fair games on horseback held at the Fair on
Friday, Aug . 18. have been
announced.
High point trophy went to
Brett Jones.
Drunkard's Paradise, first
place, Tammy Ward and
Debbie Woodyard ; second
place, Kristin Anderson and
Brett Jones ; third, Penny
Dewhurst and Debbie Porter;
fourth, Fae Reibel and Julie
Elberfeld ; fifth, Judy
Sargent and Mae Nakamoto;
Flag Race, first, Brett Jones ;
second, Tony Kennedy ; third,
Mike Boyles ; fourth , Kristin
Anderson ; fifth , Tammy
Ward ; Pick Up Race, first ,
Tammy Ward; second ,
Charles Kn9pp; third, Darren
Hayes ; fourth, Tammy
Kennedy; Potato race, first,
Dan:en Hayes; second, Beth
Our Interest' is
eater For You

~ 5.75%
On 90-Day
'certificates
5.75 per cent paid on

90 day Certificates of
Deposit .
$500.00
Minimum .
Interest
Payable
Quarterly .
A substantial penalty is

invohd on all certificate
accounts withdrawn prior

'to the dale of maturity.

The Athens.County
SavinG$ &amp; Loan Co.

w. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

FSIJC

-----

Gloeckner; third, Julie
Elberfeld ; fourth, Judy
Sargent; fifth, Debbie
Woodyard.
Apple Bob, first , Judy
Sargent ; second, Penny
Dewhurst ;
third, Tad
Darling ; fourth, Penny Miller
fifth, Kristin Anderson; Cob
race , first , Brett Jones ;
second, Mike Bowles; third,
Tad Darling ; fourth, Karl
Suchoza; fifth, Charles
Knopp ; barrel race, first,
Tony Kennedy ; second, Brett
Jones; third, Mike Boyles;
fourth , Tammy Kennedy ;
fifth , Cl)arles· Knopp; Cones,
first , Brett Jones; second,
Chery l Mowery ; thir.d,
Tammy Ward ; fourth ,
Tammy Kemiedy, filth ,
Penny Miller.
Egg and spoon, first , Judy
Sargent ; second, Julie
Elberfeld; third, Deborah
Woodyard ; fourth, Kristin
Anderson ; filth, Tammy
Ward ; In line barrels, first,
Cheryl Mowery; second,
Brett Jones; third , Mike
Bowles; fourth, Deborah
Woodyard; filth, Darren
Hayes.
Catalogue race, first, Brett
Jones ; second, Tad Darling ;
third , Mikki Conley ; fourth ,
Ma ~
Nakamoto ; fifth ,
Charles Knopp; Figure 8
barrels, first , Tony Kennedy ;
second, Brett Jones ; third,
Cheryl Mowery ; fourth,
Deborah Wo odxard; lj fth,
Mike Bowels.
Dash for cash, first, Tony
Kennedy ; second , Brett
J ones; third, Tammy Ward;
fourth , Mike Boyles ; fifth ,
Cheryl Mowery ; Ride and
run, first, Karl Suchoza ;
second, Darren Hayes; third,
Charles Knopp ; fourth, B. J .
Hunt; fifth. Cheryl Mower_y;
Four corner · stakes, first,
Mike Boyles ; second, Darren
Hayes; third, B. J . Hunt;
fourth , Elise Meier; fiftl!.
Brett Jones; Pole bending,
first , Brett Jones; second,
Mike Bowles; third, Tammy
Ward ; fourth , Cheryl Moery ;
fifth, Darren Hayes.

Carter gets good news, stiff
warning, another challenge
WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Carter has received
some good news, a stiff warning and another chaUenge
from the Senate.
.The good news came Thursday night when the Senate
approved maj&lt;r legislation sought by the administration
to streamline the federal Civil Service syatem and make it
easier l&lt;r the government to lire incoffipetent employees.
The bill, which Carter has called the "heart of our
governmental reorganiZation effort," was approved 87-1,
with Sen, Wi111am Scott, R-Va., casting the only no vote.
The warning came earlier Thursday. A group of
senat&lt;rs warned the administration a strategic arms
limitation agreement- no matter how good - might be
defeated if it reaches the Senate in any form other than as
a treaty.
The warning followed a statement by Paul Warnke,
director of the Arms Control and Disannament Agency,
that the administration was considering submitting an
anns limitation pact as an "executive agreement"
instead of as a treaty if agreement can be reached with
the Soviet Union.
At a joint news conference Thursday, nine senators,
running the gamut from conservative Republican to
liberal Democrat, offered alternative "bare bones"
natural gas legi~ation carrying presidential powers to
allocate gas supplies and curtail low-priority use during
emergencies.
The tar~et of dissent was compromise legislation

favored by the administration that would phase out
federal controls on the production price of natural gas by
1985, meanwhile putting gas sold in the stale of production
Wider leder.al controls.
The House-passed $16.3 billion in tax reductions came
under lire from both flanks Thursdqy - business!saying [t
doesn't cut deep enough, and a coll8umer !!roup
spokesman c&lt;BI!Plaining it cuts in the wrong places. ·
With the House not in session, the only other action in
Congress Thursday alSo was in the Senate;
~Pan American W&lt;rld Airways, seeking government
approval l&lt;r a tnerger with National Airlines, told the
Senate Aviation subc&lt;mmittee it will drOp some of its
!&lt;reign routes ne.:t month "in order to be businesslike and
profitable."
-Sen. John Stennis, 0-Miss., chairman of the Senate
Armed Services Coounittee, said he believes the Navy's
proposed settlement of shipbuilding .claims with General
Dynamics and Litton Industries will be approved by
Congress.
·
- An 'insurance adjuster who was part of a F1orida
"arson empire" told a Senate permanent investigations
subcorrunittee how ooe of his associates bought a house·
l&lt;r $50, got ~.000 in fire insurance and had the place
burned doWI! 45 days later.
-The Senate approved a fivl!year ~2.5 bi111on program
of federal aid to elementary and secondary schools after
refusing to kill experimental projects in teaching the
"three Rs" and several off-beat subjects.

Meigs County 4-H'er present at
'Acre-for Wildlife' dedication
Camp Ohio is one of live a deep interest in 4:-H and in
Ohio 4-H camps that will conservation," said Kottman.
incorporate the wildlife acre ·· Some of 'Evans' coninto its camping site. Other . tributions to Ohio 4-H ·include
camps that will set aside the sponsorship of conservation
acre are : Camp Palmer, reference materials, two $500
Fulton County;
Camp conservation scholarships to
Whitewood ,
Ashtabula 4:-H members, two quarter
County; Canter's ! Ca ve , horse foals to state 4-H horse
Jackson County ; and Camp winners, trophies for the Ohio
Graham, Clinton Corty.
State Fair 4-H Natural
While
Evans
was Resources Day and spon·
presenting the acre to Ohio 4- sorship of the annual 4·H
H, 4-H made a presentation to competitive trail ride. Mr.
him - The Buckeye Clover Evans is also a frl'(luent
Award. This is the highest purchaser of 4-H livestock at
honor given to supporters of the state fair and various
the Ohio 4-H program. The county fairs .
presentation was made by ·
Roy M. Kollman, dean of the
College of Agriculture, Home
Economics and Natural
Re.Ources , the Ohio State
University.
'
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
"Bob Evans has expressed
Highway Patrol, investigated
five accidents Thursday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-vehicle crash
at II: 45 p.m. on CR 40, one(Continued from Poll• I )
It contained demands for the release of Sirhan, Hess, four tenth of a mile south of SR
Germans - some of whom were not even in jail - and the five 141.
According to the patrol, an
Croatians, Zvonko Buzic, his wife Julienne, Frane Pesut, Mark
auto
driven by Ronald Smith,
Vlasic and Petar Metavik.
23,
Gallipolis,
went left of
The Croatians are serving terms of up to life for air piracy in
center,
and
ran
oil the left
the Sept. 10,1976 hijack of a TWA plane from Chicago to Paris.
side
of
the
roadway,
striking
The policeman was killed when he tried to defuse a bomb they
a
paper
tube
and
a
culvert.
left in a locker at New York 'sGrand Central Station.
The
vehicle
was
demolished.
The hijackers demanded that Hess, sole remaining prisoner
Smith and a passenger,
in the fouri&gt;ower Spandau prison in West Germany, be floWI!
to Geneva and, reunited here with his wile Jlse. She, their son, Dean L. Reese, 22 , Rio
and one of Hess's lawyers were then to come to the airplane Grande, displayed visible
and swear on oath t:!iat they bad seen Hess. The demand even signs of injury, but were not
immediately treated.
gave the text, in German, of the oath they were to take.
No citation was issued.
The plane landed at 8:25 a .m. (3:25 EDT), almost exactly
The
patrol investigated a
nine hours before the hijacke~s· deadline.
two-auto
accident at 5:35
They offered to free "all children under 18 and their
p.m.
on
SR
218, at milepost 8.
mothers" along with female crew members at 5 p.m. (noon
Officers
report
that a north
EDT) provided "no one has attempted to break into the
bound
.
vehicle
operated
by
plane." They said two ~d Cross representatives must go
Sherman
McQuire,
32,
aboard.
Swiss officials said the 19-page document was muddied and Gallipolis, went left of center
coofused. It claimed "the United States is led by a bunch of in a curve, striking a south
bound auto driven by Everett
Zionists" and threatened :
McCloud,
42, Chesapeake.
" ln tbe fublre we will blow up American passenger planes by
The
McQuire
auto incurred
using our combination bombs without warning."
moderate damage. There
was slight damage to the
McCloud auto .
McQuire was cited on
charges of DWI .
At 4 p.m., officers were

Tammie Starcher ,
daughter of ' Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Starch~~~ Pine Grove,
was among 1~ Ohio 4-H' ers
present for Bob Evans' "Acre
- For - Wildlife" dedication
at Camp Ohio, Utica. The
ceremony took place during
State Conservation Camp.
In sponsoring the acre for
wild animals and birds,
Evans hopes to promot e
conservation ed uca tion
among Ohio 4-H'ers about the
habits of wildlife. The "Acre
- For - Wildlife" includes
wildlife attraction plantings,
consisting of types of shrubs
and plants that will provide
natural food for birds and
animals. A source of water is
located on the acre, along
with a bird blind that will
enable 4-H'ers to observe
birds without disturbing
them.

I

I

ATTENTION:

I

EASTERN EAGLES' AND MEIGS MARAUDERS'
FOOTBALL FANS - STO~. IN THE POMERdY
NATIONAL BANK AND PICK UP YOUR I1 .
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE AND BUMPER STIC ER.
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

cup.

""

The

event Ia being
by the Pomeroy
• Middleport Uono Club.
Last day of the event Is
Saturday. II II belag held
dally from 1 p.m. until
dart.
spo~~~ored

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

FREE SKIN TESTS
There will be free TB skin
tests Tuesday, Aug. 29 at the
Racine Fire House from 6:30
to 7;30 p.m. which will be
given by Jane. Brown, R.N.

rejected the contract offer,
the dispute be submitted to
bindmg arbitration, the
mechanilm foc solwla a&amp;ch
stalerDates under t.w.
It was Wlclear whether the
unions would or could
consider that alternative ·
under their constltulloos.

Public
•
meetmg
slated
A public meeting to appraise problems, needs and
trends in the use of Meigs
County soil and water
resources will be Tueaday,
August 29, at 7;30 p.m. at the
Meiga Branch ol the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.
building at 216 W. Main. St.,
Pomeroy.
Individuals and groups
concerned about use and
conservation of Meigs
County's natural resources
are urged to attend.
Comments from the·
meeting will be used to direct
the conservation programs of
the United States Depart·
ment of Agriculture. The
Meigs Soil and Water Con·
servation District and the Soil
Conservation Service are
sponsoring the meeting.

REUNION SUNDAY
The annual McElroy
reunion will be held Sunday
MEETING SET
at the Portland Park. A
EAST
MEIGS - All
basket dinner will be served
Eastern
High
School girls
at 12:30 p.m.
going out for volleyball this
year are to meet at 12 noon
Monday at the high school.
I Those
who are interested but
cannot attend the Monda:,:
meeting are asked to call the
pusiness meeting will also be school during the day Mon·
day and leave their names.
held.
Anyone needing more InFILE FOR DISSOLUTION
formation may call Ubby
Filing for dissolution of
Fisher, 949·2378; Jan • Cor·
done, 949-2449; Ullian Weese, marriage in Meig. County
949-2034 or Sue Beegle, 247· Common Pleas Court were
Wi111aln David Baker, Rt. 1,
2724.
Long Bottom, and Joyce Ann
Baker, same address; Ernest
J. Deeter, Rt. I, Long Bot·
tom, and Audelle M. Deeter,
NAMES OMl'ITED
8ame address.
The names of Don Snyder
and Danny Hysell were
PARENTSTOMEET
omitted from the list of
There will be a meeting of
Explorers of Post 230 who parents of kindergarten
assisted
the
Sheriff's . students of Eastern District
department during the Meigs at Tuppers Plains School
County Fair.
Aug . 29, 30 and 31.
Parents wUI be informed of
the time when youngsters will
be..'attending classes.
Students from the Chester
area will attend classes in the
slight damage. No citation morning and students from
the Tuppers Plains and
was issued.
Riverview
area will attend in
At 9:55p.m. part of the load
the
afternoon
.
carried on a tractor trailer
HYMN SlNG
opera~ed by Keith Hollon, 32,
Gran ville, 0., struck the top
An old fashioned hymn sing
of a b idge on SR 7, just south will be held at 7:30 p.m. 1
of milepost 16. No citation Sunday at the Pomeroy 1
was issued.
United Methodist Church . .
Individual and group num- '
bers will be featured. The
Veterau Memorial Iioapital public is invited.
Admitted - Wesley Allen,
SQUAD CALLED
Portland ; Ralph Shalri,
The Pomeroy Emergency
Syracuse; Hannah Van
Squad
was called to state St.
Meter , Long Bottom; George
at
l:39
p. m. Thursday lor
Warner, Pomeroy; Albert
Lola
Zwilling
who was taken
Heilman, Pomeroy ; Alma
to
Veterans
Memorial
Carnahan, Long Bottom ;.
Hospital
where
she was
Kyle WoodJ, Pomeroy; Lola
admitted.
Zwi111ng, Pomeroy.
Discharged
Patty
GRID PRACI'ICE SET
Hornsby, Clyde Johnson,
Meigs Junior High seventll
Charles Chalson, Bernice · and eighth grade football
Molden, John Gl)ftt, Roberta practice will begin Monday ,
Marshall, Myrtle Hayes, Aug. 28, from 6:30 to 8:30
Virginia Wyatt, Albert p.m. at the stadium In
Heilman.
Middleport.

Picnic, sWim party set by
.
Racine Baseball Association
RACINE - The Racine
Baseball Association will
hold a picnic and swimming
party Monday. ·
The picnic will be held at
5;30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Park and the swimming
party from 7 to 9 at London
Pool. Tee-ball, pee-wee, little,
pony and girls team mem·
bers and their coaches and
the families of participants
are invited.
Those attending are to take
a meat dish and another
covered dish as-well a8 their
own table service. A
beverage will be provided.
Suits are to be turned in·
during the evening. A

OSP logs· five accidents

Hijacker

Rent our money
for your new car.
Low cost. Easy terms.
Today's way to go.
Let's talk about
a money-savmg
Auto Loan.
Todayf

Wedaeoday's whlllera In
_the Hole·ln·Oae coat01l
bela&amp; beld at !be Pomeroy
Golf Couroe were, flnt and
third place, Bill CblldJ,
who on his lint shot came
'!'ithln two feel seven and
ooe-ball IDeheo ·"' the cup
aad oa hia third ahot came
within tllree leet ud ab:
lnchea. Secoad place weal
to BUI Hackett who came
within three feet aDd one
and one-lialf laches ol the

School bus
(Continued from PIM•I)
pupil management, safety
and emergency procedures,
first aid, transporting the
exceptional child, laws
pertaining to school bus
driving and two-way radio.
Those taking the course wiU
also be given actual n ·
perience in operating the
school bus.
All residents interested in
the program should contact
their local school auperin·
tendent who will pau along
the names ol the applicants to
Riebel who will set up the
required course for first time
driven. The course wlll be
·aet up on the bull of need and
lntereat. Wallbington County
Ia the flrat to have such a
course set up In the ninecow•tY area oerved.by Riebel.

called to the scene of a twovehicle mishap on SR 7, one
and one-tenth of a mile north
of Pomeroy , in Meigs County.
The patrol reports an auto
driven by Lewis Williams, 47,
Pomeroy, going north went
left of center, striking the
rear of a south bound tractor
trailer operated by Paul
Smith, 39, Vinton. The Williams auto incurred
severe damage. The Smith
vehicle incurred slight
damage.
There was no report of
injury, or of citation.The patrol Investigated a
two-vehicle mishap at 3:45
p.m., on U.S. 35, at milepost
17.

OfficeiiS report, ihe spare
tire from a tractor trailer
operated by Bruce Runyon,
20, Bidwell, fell striking an
auto driven by William
Howley, 53, Roanoke, Va.
Both vehicles incurre&lt;l

Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport busy place

i

A $14,888 REPAIR project · has recently been
completed at the GaUia-Meigs Regional Airport. The
Gallia C&lt;&gt;unty Board of Commissioners granted the
supplemental fundll tn the Airport Authority in April of

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE
BRINGS YOU AND YOUR FAMILY
Many savings throughout the store end the Warehouse on Mechanic
Street.
.
Special August prices on women's Winter Coats. little boys' leans,
Junior Slacks, Women's scarves. Men's 14 oz. Wrangler lttns, boys'
letns, Henes Knit Underwear for men end boys, Men's Rolf blllfold.fold. . .
'
Get ready for school now-the time is almost here.

Elberfelds In

were needed for the fa cility to conform tn Ff A, and Ohio
Department of Transportation regulations .

.

•
)

•

-~--. OVER 600 PRIVATELY owned aircraft currently
land at the Gallla-Melgs ~glonal Airport each ;~ear.
Airport facilities also aecommodate hundreds·of take-offs
and landings bY student pilots, as ~U u being ll5ed by
local industry and emergency health service providers.

BY LARRY EWING
GALUPOlJS ~ The Gallia • Meigs Regional Airport
Authority was established in 1967 by a joint resolution o[ the
Commissioners of both counties .
The airport authority was enacted, according to the
resolution,·to fulfill "the need for reasonable and adequate
airport landing facilities in Gallia and Meigs Counties, which
has bec'OIIle a pressing problem requiring immediate action ."
Ten years later, in 1977, the airport had grown to the point
of handling over 600 landings by private aircraft, as well as
several hundred takMifs and landings by student pilots.
Airport facilities also acc,mmodated over 40 helicopter
iandings in 1977.
The Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport - now a busy location

- is Used by Holzer Medical Center, The Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service, and the Gallia County Volunteer
Squad to transport patients during emergency situations.
Airport facilities are also used by numerous local
businesses and coal COIJlpanies. The 4,QOO.foot runway will
accommodate aircraft up to the twin jet-&lt;engine, business plane
(biz-jet) .
In April of this year, Airport Authority President Larry
Beebe requested a supplemental appropriation, in the amount
of 114,888, from the Galli• County Board of Commissioners.
The additional funds were needed tn implement repairs and
unprovemenls at the airport needed tn conform to FAA, and
Ohio Department of Transportation regulations . .
Continued on page A-3 .

+

tmes
VOL. 13

NO. 30

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY. AUGUST 27, 1978

Bike Rodeo
today at
fairgrounds

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday lhrough Wednesday , fa ir
Monday with ttcattcred thundershowers
Tuesday and Wednesday . Warm and.

humid Monday and Tuesday wilh blghs

•

In the 80s and a low between 65 and 70.

Cooler Wednt!sday with hi gh temperatures In the 70s and lows betw t&gt;en
60 and 6~ .

•

POMEROY - Boy Power, Inc., "!ill
sponsor a Bike tlodeo at I p.m. today at the
ROck Springs Fairgrounds for young
people between the aRes ol five and 18.
Numerous racea and evenu will be
1118tured with~ races w include jumpo
8fld hairpin tUni!L Prizel will be aWarded
winners and racu will be held ,in age ·
groupo. A trophy wW bt awarded the in·
divldual accumulating the most poinll .
. during the day's events.
Gate .fee will be $1 and the first event
will be free . .All others will have a 'I entry
lee. Participants can enter as many events
as they wish.
All release .forms and entry forms
must be signed by the .legal parent or
guardian. The forms will be available at
the gate. Contestants are r"'Julred to wear ·
a.helmet, long sleeve shirts, long trousers
and leather shoes are preferred. Proceeds
go to Boy Scout Troop 249.
EMERGENCY FUNDS OKAYED
SOUTH SHORE, Ky. tUPI ) - Rep.
Carl Perkins, D-Ky., announced Friday
that Federal ~ranaportation Secretary
Brock Adams ha s approved emergency
fuhdirig enabling the repair of U. S.
Grant Bridge between South Shore and
Portsmouth , Ohio.
Perkins said the federal government
will pay 100 percent of the cost of repair of
the Grant Bridge. He said this will allow
the state of Ohi o, which owns the span, to
proceed with aU possible speed to repair
and reopen the bridge.
Joining Perkins in making the an·
nouncement was Rep. William Harsha of
. '
Oh1o.
· I

Gallia School
Board to meet
GALLIPOIJS - there will be a
•special meeting of ·the GaU\a County Local
Board of Education Tuesday, Aug . 29, at
8:30p.m., in the Superintendent's Office,
'· 220 Jackson Pike. ·
Agenda items inciu~ employment of
certificated and classified personnel ;
acceptance of resignations of certificated
· and classified personnel; consideration of
architects for the building program;
consideration of pupil immunization ; and,
other pertinent matters that ma y come

before the board.
CAHOON BRIDGE is pictured as it was 38 years ago . The bridge was.one of 20
covered bridges still standing Aug . 1, 1940, in Gallia County. Cahoon Bridge
spanned Little Raccoon Creek in Huntington Twp. Sixtv.four feet lo112. it was on
(Alai Valley Rd. Tlmea-se•lael News Photographer Larry Ewing copied this
ptcture from the Gallia CoWlty Cornmi.!sioners' journal, and he copied seven other
covered-bridge photographs from the journal. These seven will be found oo Page
A-2 today.
·

GALLIPOLIS - Tuesday, Au&amp;. 2!1,

:~!~:~r~~~·y·:~:~::o:.~~~~·fo:b~~

cbarae• against Oaalel E. Clay, 19,
Lower River Road, aad Kwtla Douglas
· Lemley, 20, Kerr, by Judge James A.
Beanett In GallipoUo Mulllclpal Court,

Two Rutland youths

in cycle crash

•' GAUJPOlJS. - Two Rutland youths
were injured in a motorcycle accident
Friday, at 2;:10 p.m.,.on CR 16, in Rutland.
The Gallla-Meiga Post Highway Patrol
teporta a motoreycle operated by Dwaine
McDaniels, 18, Rutland, overtu111ed when
.~ front wheel lc¥:1tod.
McDaniels, and a pauenger, Michael
flannon •. 1~, Rutland, di*Played vlalble
aigns ol inJury and were taken by
SEOEMS to Veteran~ Memorial Hospital.
Hannon waa treated and admitted.
Hannoll Is lilted In -Y utlafactory

radio and antenna were installed to replace the 30 year old
unit which had been used. The new communication

equipment is designed to provide a safer and more
reliable relay of messages between pi,lots and the
terminaL Pic!ured above is airport manager Ed Atkins.

tntittt
MIDDLEPORT POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Controversy
to be aired
.

lh&lt;tt written st:aiements from the- publil·
will ·be re...:eivt!d by Huntington District
through Sept. !i.
·
II feature of a special mc'eting Aug. 14
was i:l. petition prutesiing the facility and

CROWN CITY- A public meeting will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Crown City
village hall to discuss the proposed
c-oalloading facility south of the village.
This announf...-etnent was the outgrowth
of a specia l meeting of Crown City Council
Friday night, when Cvuncil rescindc'li an

signed by 138 dtlzcns .

Crown Coal Company has filed an appli cation with the Corps of Engineers for
Village Solicitor Warren ~-- Shcels advised approval of the facility, mooring cells of
against zoning ; he pointed out that it was which will be located along 2,200 feet of
not feasible and extremely expensive, and riverfront.
Warren Sheels told Council Friday night
Council accepted hi&gt; advice. .

.Aug. 3 resolution to zon ~ the village.

U~t it COUld adopt &lt;:Hl ordinance governing.
traffic, such as speed and weight of .

Everybody in Crown City and environs is

invited to Monday ni ght'_s public meeting
to present both sides of a controversy vehicles, on the strec~ ~md alleys of Crown
precipitated by tbe project of Crown Coal City. He emphasized that a village or·
Co ..of Proctorville to develop the faci lity dinan..:e would have no effed on sU::t te
on the Ohio River bcmk just below Crown ltighways.
City on 34 acres in Lawrcnec County to

handle 18,(100 tons uf coal 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
daily except Sunday .
Attending Monday night, in addition to

Temporary

HEAVY FIGHTING
BEIRUT, Leban on (UPf )-Heavy residents , will be the two men from the U.
fighting erupted in the hills north of Beirut S. Anny Corps of Engineers, Huntington
again Saturday between Syrian peace· District, who attended Friday night's
keeping troops backed by tanks and heavy speciitl meeting of the Crown City CounciL
There were 35 or 40 peopl e at Friday
artillery and Christian militiamen who
night's
special meeting 111 village hall, who
ambushed the Syrians on friday . ·
learned from the Corps of Enginee'" men

• •
•
IDJUDCtiOn

is issued

!UM$:=~~":::'*"* Chessie

Friday.
CITY COMMlSSION MEETS
Clay aad Lemley are belq charged
GALLIPOLIS - There will be a •:·In co"''ecllon with the Thursday,
special meeting of thO Gallipolis City
midnight, armed robbery of the Bonded
Commission at8 p.m., Tuesday, Aug . :19, in Oil Stallon, Second Ave.
the Municipal Court Room.
.Bond was set at '10,000 each· by
' The agenda in cludes the second Judge Benoelt.
'l'l'ading of the Ohio Valley Bank ~zoning.

~urt

NEW RADIO, ANTENNA - As a part of the
improvement and repair program at Ute airport, a new

.;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

.:;:~:;:;~~=~=~:r~=~=~:~=~=~=~=~:~=~=~:;:;:~=~=~=tt~:~=~i~:;:;:~:;:;:;t:~:~:tt~=~:~:~:::·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

this year \o finance the repairs and improvements, which

Randy L. McGuire, 19, Crown City, just as
the McGuire vehicle starte~ to pass
another auto .
The McGuire auto puUed into the side
of the Woodyard vehicle.
Officers report severe damage to the
Woodyard auto, slight damage to the
McGuirt vehicle. McGuire was cited on
· Charges of changing lanes without caution.
The patrol was called to the scene ol a
two-auto mishap Friday, at 12:42 p.m., on ·
SR 7, jUII north of mUepoat 29. . •
· Officers uld a· vfblcle operated by
c!OndiUon.
·
Carol A. Serugg1, 22, Cheshire, was
" McO.nlell was treated and relelaed. · ~~topped in traffic on 7.
·
Mcll!lnlels lraa cited an charg'" ol
An auto driven by Charles Gerard, 30.
epentinl a motor vehicle without a Middleport, failed to stop and !llruck the
llc:enM.
.
Seruga vehicle In the rear.
Ollletn lnveotlpted a two-.~uto aeThe patrol reports moderate dama ge
ddelll at • p.m., Friday on SR 218, two- to the Scruggs auto slight damage to the
tllltha of a mile nortb af CR 31.
·Gerard vehicle.
'
·• Aecardlnl to tbi patrol, • vehicle
Gerard was cited on charges of
.dri* bJ Walter Wood)'lrd, 30, Columblia, asaured clear distinct .
attempted to paaa an auto operated by

System
postpon
' e's mack
a ban don ment

WASHINGTON (UPil - U. S. District
Court Judge John Pratt Saturday issued a
Sl.•x-day temporary . injunction against a
nationwide postal strike that was to have
begun as early as Monday .

"We just signed that order," Pratt told
UP! from his home, where lawyers for the
two biggest of the four postal unions and
the U. S. Postal Service gathered in
midafternoon . " It enjoins any strikes or
concerted work S\oppage or slowdown and
requires union officials to send out notices
telling members to comply 1 " he said.
The order expires next Friday, he

·

·

POMEROY - George Arnott, secretary
of the Meigs County Rail Service Conunittee, says that tho! Ches;;ie System will ron·
tinue operating about 75 miles of track between Logan and Pomeroy for another 12

for ~cnerators , the Huntington paper
quoted Russ - Baker, assistant plant
manager. The blades arc too bi g t.o be shipped by truck
The newspaper also said that Keener
months despite an abandon,ment urder
Sand
and Gravel at Kerr dubbed the abanfrom the lnterstaw Cvmmerce Commisdonment last year as fataL Russ aiso wrote
sion.
Reason assigned £or tht! contihuance o£ that Thelma Elliott, Gallipolis Chamber of
ooe year is that Gallia County's Gavin . Commerce, welcomed the postponement,
Power Plant depends upon the line for sup- but ""id "!think it's a hopeless case" after
the year's reprieve . Absence of the line
plies.
c'l!uld
deter irdustrial growth. she told
Amott is quoted by Jim' Ross in the Hun·
tington HeraldDispatch as saying that Ross.
·.Chessie hits entered into an agreement

with the American Electric Power Co. to
continue tho! line for a year.
AEP owns Ohio Power. which operates
the Gavin Plant.
Two week.• ago the ICC upheld a ruling
by the Atlmlnistrative Law Judge allowing
fur abandonment by the Chc,.,peuke and
Ohio Railway Co. of the Pomeroy Branch
18.14 miles between Old Town and Creola,
between Dundas and Gallipolis 36.04 miles,
between Gallipolill and Pomeroy 17.87
miles, and at Pomeroy 3.05 miles.
·
Gavin

Plant ret-eivc.s shipn~ent:; of

INJURED IN WRECK
POMEROY - Patricia McCuugle, no
address given, wa1 treated and rele~ at
Veterans Memorial Hospital following a
traffic accident on ltoute 7, two miles
north of the Bcacun Service Station, in
Meigs County. slit was ta~en to the
hospital uy Pomeroy Emergency Squad-

men .

said, and holds the unions and their
presidents legally responsible for ensuring
the mail will continue to be delivered.

dllorine, sulruric acid,· and turbine blades

Governors vow
to cut taxes
~

BOSTON I UPI) - The nation's
governors, gathering for their late
summer meeting, believe the nationwide
tax revolt is here to stay - so they're
taking steps to cut taxes and alate
..,ending.
Surveyed by UPJ on the eve of the
meeting, the governocs agreed there Is a
tax revolt sweeping the Illilion. All but ooe
nf the 50 governors responded to the
survey . ·
Goveni&lt;rs from smaller states, moot in
the south, said thetr flllrly low tax rates
have kept the revolt !rqm hitting them. But
even they uid they wt!re looking lor area•
to cut government COlla.
"The tax revolt has been with 111 f&lt;r :m
years and I doo ~ ellpeCI It to dllappear,"
said Gov. Michael Duluikil, 0-Maas.

There was no immediate response
from the unions .

A nationwide walkout would force the
Postal Service to use federal troops to keep
the mail moving .
The sudden labor strife in the postal
industry was triggered Friday when two
more unions - the 280,0QO.rnember American Postal Workers Union and the 40,()00.
member
National
Post
Office
Mailhandlers :_ announced their rank and
file had rejected a proposed three year
contract .
Earlier in the week, the IOO,OQO.rnember
National Association of Letter Carriers
announced it had rejected the pact.
But th e Postal Service showed no signs
of buckling to union demands that it
reopen con tract negotiations. Instead the
COLLECTOR- Nltk BUlb, ll, oon
service
sought a federal court order to
ol Mn. Celeste 111t1~, S. Third Ave.,
restrain
the unions from going on strike.
Middleport, Is piclured willo bls com·
With attorneys for the two largest unions
pleted colle&lt;lon series - 100 In all - of
present, U.S. District Judge John Pratt
Royal Crown Boltlln&amp; Co. c...
feaiurlag plclureo of profuslooal · tnld attorneys for the Postal Service and
the Justice Department: . "I am not going
baseball players. A S.nllnel carrier,
to grant a tempocary ·(IO day) restraining
Nick Ia a colleclor of all of the .coUector
eau llaued by the company and - order now . U there is l!le slightest
indication the talks are breaklnK down
rumma1e• about baD fields, billl!o
over the weekelld, 1 Will not delay granting
game locations alld otber places where
a temporary ·restraining order."
10ft drinks are eouumed In ordet to cet
Postmaster General William &amp;lger,
dlffere•t l11ueo. Frletlda aDd relallves
eonoumtng an R. C. product also save . who was vacationing in New England, has
shown no inclination to bend from hil
lhe tau lor Nitk. Nl&lt;k hu last year's
position that any union rejection of the
bueballaad football aeries- althouKh
proposed 19.5 percent wage and cost-&lt;&gt;f·
..t qulle complete - alld Ia also
Uving incr...., sp"""d ovm- three years
Cllrreatly werltlq on lhe "Happy
must be followed by binding arbitration.
Days" aeries.

.,
I

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