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'·

1

Logan teacher strike continues, levies lose

The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pm~eroy, 0 ., 'fl!esday, Aug. 29, 1978

Compromise reached, postal strike delayed
lJy GREGORY GORDON

strike.
troops, and pennitted unicin
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Late Monday - just eight le aders
to
avoid
a
For five tense days, the two hours before hWidreds of confrontation with a federal
sides to the postal dispute thousands of postal workers judge who issued an antiwere at a standoff that gave scheduled a defiant walkout strike order.
the nation a scare.
·
that would have thrown the
Director Wayne l;lorvitz of
Union leaders demanded nation's mail system iniAl the Federal Mediation and
the U.S. Postal ·Service return bedlam - the government 's Conciliation Service said conto. .the bargaining table . toP mediator came to the tract talks between the two
POstmaster General William rescue with. a compromise side~ will extend for another
Bolger insisted the contract allowing both sides to save 15 days Wider a process
dispute go instead lo face.
combinin g " " co llec t ive
compulsory arbitration, and
It also kept the mails 1 bargaining" ~nd binding
issued a tough warning to • moving witho~t emergency arbitration.
l!mployees that it is illegal to use of rnexpenenced federal

I

Trends, needs
will be given
The problems, trends and
needs of natural resources in
Meigs County will be appraised and discussed tonight
at 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs
CoWity Branch of Athens
CoWity Savings and Loan Co .
building at 216 w. Main St.,

r--Ai_:~-;-n;;~iil;-1
I

I
JAMES HUGHES
James J . (Mona) Hughes,
68, 106 High Street, Point
Plea sant , died Friday in
Veterans Memorialliospital,

"You call it what you
want / '
Horvitz
told
reporters. "It can be binding
arbitration. It abo can be ln
the form of a neRotlated,
mediated seiuement."
Horvitz, who reccmmended
the plan, sa.id he will appoint
a mediator In the next day or
iwo to bring· the two sides
IAJgether for 15 days of talks.
"lf agreement is reached
during the mediation period,
it will of course have to be
submitted to the various

.

two sons, John ' R ., at home,

'

\

~

Fire •••
(Continued from page I)
Southeastern Equipment Co.,
Gallipolis . CoWicil agreed to
table the matter until the next
meeting to give MuUen time
to study the material.
Meantime, ClerkTreasurer

Bank

£6

DOWNING CHILDS

'I

INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

I

~
.·
~
!

.

.

Bolger arsued he will be
forced tO ralae polltal rates in
advance of hla goal of 2\0 to 3
years if the Postal· Service
exceeds the 19.5 percent wage
and cost&lt;lf.Uvlng increase II ·
already has offered over
three years.

Gene

Grate

Paul VI, ordered hla own
triple crown sold some time
after his coronation and the
proceeds donated to the poor.
John Paul, after thinking it
over briefly, decided he
wanted. no crown at all.
He first told aides he
wanted the coronation
replaced wllh a simpler
"enthronement, " then
'·
skipped that Idea as well In
favor of a mass and nothln&amp;
else.
It was Joon Paul's decision
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., a unit of the on the. procedure for his
Columbia Gas System, has lnvestllure thai caused probIncreased the rate it will pay lems.
· Mrs: Blanch Gilkey, 509 Headley St., Middleport,
Ohio producers for new gas to
bolds her "crazy, mbl:ed up" geranlwn plant. The plant
$1.90 per thousand cubic feel
blooms with flowers in both pink and red.
in an effort to stimulate
development of new gas
reserves In the state.
SQUAD CALLED
Previously, the maxlmwn
The
Middleport
rate the company paid for
new gas was $1.79 per Emergency Squad was called Veleraaa Memorial Hotpllal . Bryan Utchfleld . and son,
to 249 Pearl St., at 8:50a.m.
Admitted - Benny Spears, Harley McCully, Mrs. For':" .
thousand cubic feet. I
The new rate applies to Tuesday for Clarabelle 1\lley ' Syracuse ; Paul Burton, Mullinl and daughter, Mn.
Intrastate gas volumes who had faUen at her home. Racine; Freda Martin, · Elmer Newell and daughter,
delivered to Columbia Trans- She was taken to Holzer Shade; Bessie Tyrley, Charles Parks, Mamie
mission after July 1, 1978, Medical Center.
Proctorville; Vlrglnl . Riffle,. Plymale, Dennis Searles,
under contracts signed on
,.
Shade.
Kathy Thompson, Libby
and after Jan. l, 1978.
FREE CLOTHING DAY
Discharged - John Bryan, Truesdell, Mn. Terry Wallis
In a letter to Ohio
Free Clothlng Day will be Dorothy Demollkey, Ronald and son, NaMle White and
producers notifylng them of held at the Salvation Army, R e y n 0 1 d s, W1111 am Gertrude Wickline.
the change, Columbia also Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy, Stephenson, Anna Vaughan,
said an aMual escalation of 4 Thursday from 10 a.m. until Wesley Allen, Errol Follrod.
CLINIC CANCEUED
cents per thousand cubic feet noon. All area residents in
PlaMed Parenthood has
would be provided in new need of clothing are welcome.
contracts to combat the in·
announced that Ita clinic this
Holur Medical Cealer
coming Saturday has been
fluence of Inflation on
(Dildullllet, AuiUJUI)
operating expenses.
Esther Baker, Mrs. Ken·' cancelled because of th~
BAKE SALE
Columbia Transmission
neth Barnes and son, John Labor Day weekend. Ntn
Rutland EMS will hold a Berridge, Joseph Bla~er, clinic will be held Sept. 9.
supplies gas to about 75 af·
filiated and nonaffiliated gas bake sale Saturday, Sept. 2 at Laurie Cardillo, Kay Cecil,
companies in Ohio and six Rutland Department Store. Mrs. James Cox and
other states. It produces or Any baked goods or donations daughter, Todd Dempsey,
purchases abaut 10 per cent ' will be appreciated.
VIrginia DePue, Chester
RETURNS HOME
of the Columbia System's
Duhl, Mark Gard, John GW,
Eddie Burkett, Middleport, ·
total gas supj&gt;ly' In the ApJennie GUUiand, Mlna returned home Saturday
BARN DANCE
palachian region.
Hamilton, James Hopson,
A bam dance · will be held Amanda Hu~hes, WilHam after a "ay of 44 days in
Friday at Forked Run State Jeffers, Norma Knox, Mrs. l;folzer Medical Center.
park on SR 124 from 8 to 11
p.m. free of charge.
The large dutch bam is
located on the main park road
Wanted ! 2,500 m.ore on the right side. There will
registered voters in Meigs be a live band with square
and round dancing. A conCounty .
E . A. Wingett, Meigs cession stand will be
County .Board of Elections available.
members, reports thai 9,240
REUNION PLANNED
voters of the county have
Victor C. Young, Jr .
registered to vote In the Nov.
7 and following elections as of reunion wUI be held Sunday,
yesterday . Wingett states Sept. 3 at Royal Oak Park on
approximately ~.500 have not right . side near swimming
area . Picnic lunch wlll be at
yet registered.
noon
. All relatives and
It is being stressed that one
friends
of the family are
need register only once.
invited.
Deadline for registration for
the upcoming Nov. 7 election
Is Oct. 7. Residents may
BOOSTERS MEETING
register f. t the board office
The
Meigs
Athletic
located in the Masonic
wiU
meet
Monday,
Boosters
Temple at · Pomeroy from 9
Aug. 28 at 7:30 p.m. at the
a.m. to 4· p.m.
Registrations are also high school. A special In·
being done at the Meigs vitation to aU junto~ as well
Senior Citizens Center and at as senior high parents of
several courthouse offices. athletes are urged to attend.
Unregistered voters caMot
GET LICENSE
cast ballots.
A marriage license was
issued to Clarence Eugene
Jacks, 31, Middleport, and
FUNDS DISTRmUTED
State Auditor Thomas E. Sandy Kay Davis, 18, MidFerguson 's office reported dleport.
that
fifth
advance
SEEK DISSOLUTION
distribution of 1978 state
Fllln&amp; for dissolution of
motor vehicle registration
fees totaling $24,971,814.22 to marriase in Meigs CoWJty
Ohio counties, cities, town· Common Pleas Court were
Jane
Davis,
ships and villages. Of the Melinda
Pomeroy,
aild
John
Lee
total Meigs County received
Davia,
Pomeroy.
$23,154.55.

Additional

ELBERFELD$

Dressing
is Easy

"FLIXSTIIL"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TONI TODD
Toni Todd does your fa vorite kind of breezy so ft look, mingling the heathery texture of Kashmirri
with the fresh romance of a basketweave knit yoke,
front 'n back. Wonderfully full with gathers everywhe re . Elastic-smocked waist. Machine wash-dry.
Blue , Rose or Ca]llel. 6-16 . $32.00
I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

I
I

r

•

~e 8,800-student syst em , school operating levies were
have called for strike a pproved and two were
aulllorization.
rejected.
"The negotiations process
Voters in Ashland approved.
hasn 't even rWI its courSe" a 7.fknili operating levy for
he said because both si~s city schools by a 373-vote
areawaltinga reportfrom an margin.
advisory arbitration panel
Voters earUer this year
before proceeding with talks. defeated ihe same levy, and
The teachers contract does school officials had predicted
not have a specific expiration a $1 mUUon deficit this yeat
date, but trsditionally a ilew and the early closing of
pact is effective each Sept. I, Ashland city schools if it had
according to LTA spokesman l;liled again.
Carol A. Dolgosh, who said no
Voters also approved a
further negotiations are renewal school levy for
· scheduled.
Warren city schools Tuesday,
'In voting Tuesday, two but defeated an additional

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

levy for the school system.
The 5.7&gt;-miU renewal levy
was approved by 1,300 votes
out of about 8,000 cast, while
the 4.13-rnill additional levy
was defeated by 700 votes.
School officials said .tbe
renewal levy was needed in
crdei' to keep schools open
this fa ll. The officials said tbe
additional levy may be put on
the Noveinber ballot .
In Garfield Heights, voters
Tuesday again rejected a 7.5mUI operating levy by 1,393
votes, increasing the chances

of a strike by the system's 222
(Continued on pa ~e 12)

•

enttne

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

County not liable

::.~::.:.":!.~~-= ~ ·~;·: .~ . ·~~·;"::~ $25,809 suit damages

wondering
about
e"'·
penditures of the school funds
may be Interested in knowing
more than a quarter of a ·
million dollars was spentlast
school
year
on
bus
operations.
· Dwight
Goins,
administrat!ve assistant, today
released the following breakdown involved In the costs ot
bus operation; maintenance
repairs, $16,164.62; fuel,
$47,990.76; tires and tubes,
$6,452 . 76;
insurance ,
$6,466.80; supervisor,
$10,751.50; mechanic ,
$9,216.83; mechanics helper,
$9,289.56; regular drivers ,

HOSPITAL NEWS

BAKER FURNITURE

·

o:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::,:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::&lt;:::::::::::'::::::::::

Producer
•
rate Is
increased

Whatever your taste In furniture, you can
choose with confidence from Flexsteel.
Whether you select contemporary,
traditional, modern or ailonlel, you will find
an Impeccable elegance In every piece that
will be a proud addition to your home. This
distinctive Flexsteel study Is available In
sofas. sectlonals. suites. chairs. and 1
unique sofa -sleeper. Hundreds and
hundreds of fabrics. all decor,tor -selecled
for beautiful correctness.

Tuesda~ .

In
La kewood,
the
La k·e wo od T'e a c h e r s
Association wtll be asked
Monday to authorize a strike
ifa contractsettlement ls nol
reached befcrehand with the
Lakewood Buard of Educalion .
Teachers, who have not set
a deadline for a settlement,
today said five issues remain
WISOlved ln the talks. Among
them are money, fringe benefits and contract language.
SUperintendent Richard A.
Boyd said he's surprised ibe
LTA;, which represents 77
percent of eligible teachers~

e
VOL. XXIX NO. 96

voters sought

of wh a t teachers called
harrassrnent.
The d!Bil'lc\ covers most of
Hocking Colllty.
MeanwhUe, teachersin the
Newark Schoof l)istrict will
meet tonight to vote on a
contract offer from the Board
of Education.
The
agreement was
reached earlier this week. It
contains a pay raise , a
compromise between what
the teachers demanded and
what.~ board first offered
and oUier frlnge benefits.
Classes are to · begin

. i

the father of princes and
kings, guide of the world and
vicar upon earth of Chrlsi
Jesus our Savior."
John Paul's predecessor,

warned that the village
finances are "too shaky to go
into a thing like this."
I' m in t he business of predicting things , but
Methods of flnancing were
eve n I ha ve trouble sometimes . You iust
discussed
and it was indicatne ve r kno w what 'll happen next . That's wh.y
ed
that
the
Southeastern
l ha ve a littl e money set aside savings
Equipment would wail until
acco unt. at the Cit izens Nat ional Bank .
February for the balance of
GARNET POTI'S
Fort une te lle r s wo rry about the future too .
the purchase if a payment of
Gamet Marie Potts, 61 , some seven or eight thousand
Syracuse, died Monday af· dollars was made when the
tern oo n
at
Veterans equipment is ordered.
Memori a l Hospital. Mrs.
A letter from HUD was
Potts was the daughter of the read acknowledging . that
"THE FRIENDLY BANK" .
late Thurman and Laura Hill Middleport Village has been
Ma rtin. She was also given a $128,000 grant for
Walk· Up Teller'Window
preceded in death by her sewer extension work In
and Auto-Teller Window
hu sband, Frank (Benny) conjunction with the plaMed
Open Friday Evenings S to 7 P. M.
Potts, one son, Benny Potts, nursing home. The letter
Jr., a nd two infant sisters. indicated, however, that no
She wa s a member of the actions are to be taken on any
Sy racuse Church of the expenditures until HUD holds
.
.
.. , Nazarene
a meeting with the village
MlltLEI'Oitr
She is survived by one attorney and officials to
01110
daughter, Jenni e Isabel Bass
advise them on how
and son-in-law , Brian Bass, procedures are to be carried
i
both of Sy racuse, on e
granddaughter, Bethany out.
Co un cil gave · a third
(Ell en)
Marie
Bass ,
M
rea
ding and approved
. '·
Sy ra cuse; one brother, passage of an ordinance for
Thurman
Ma rtin,
J r .,
the village to participate in
Syra cuse ; eight sisters, Ebna the National Flood Insurance
Member Federal Deposit Ins urance Cor poration .
Imboden and Myrtle Im- Program. A letter was read
Deposits insured to 540, 000.00.
boden, both of Minersville;
Ann Roush, St. Petersburg, from the Morton Salt Co. on
prices of salt for snow and ice
control.
Council accepted the bid of
The Shelly Co., Thornville,
for approximately 465 tons of
street resurfacing material
at $22.90 a ton, tack coating at
Sl a gallon and the uae of a ·
grader. There was a second
bid, but it was not opened
because it had been delivered
some 15 minutes after the
deadline for delivery of bida.
A motion to purchase. a
time clock for...-illage em·
ploye use made.by Mullen dld
not receive a second.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Fred Hoffman,
Councilmen Dewey l;lorton,
Carl Horky, William Walters,
Alien Lee King, MuUen and
See Bill Chi,ds - He Works For You!
Marvin Kelly, president;
Clerk -Treuurer G·nte;
Fisher and Davis from the
fire department and a
representative . of the
~~~~~0·~----------------~----~'~~;
· 23~4~2__j Southeastern Equipmeql Co.

-~!5!i-A.. "

limits."

bus
drivers,: clerks,
o;ustodlans and mechanics.
· OAPSE's cmlract with the
school board expired last
July 1 and was eitended
three times by the board.
Members of the Logan
Education Association continued a strike · agslnst the
Logan School District in
Hocking County. Schools in
the system's 4,500 student
diltrict will remain closed for ,
a seeond consecutive 'day.
The strike centers ilpoo
· individual rlghls, a grievance
procedure with binding
arbitration and termination

.

The Future ...

llli~ens ,aHonal

announcement, Bolger told
reporters: "l jullt don't haw
anythin8 new In llle way of a
money package IAJ offer. I
know wbat my limits are, and
J think that I've gone IAJ the

Superintendent Richard A.
Miner.
The. · 75 strikers are
members of Local180 of the
!llio Association · of Public
School Employees.
The 3,000«udent system's
teachers, members of the
O!ardon Classroom Teachers
Association, met Tuesday
and voted overwhelmingly to
support llle strikers.
'J'!!e walkout began after
the Chardon . Board of
Education halted payments
on medical insurance for 95
non-teaching employees, who
lnclude cafeteria workers,
lo

Solemn mass marking
new pope's b·e ginning

Shirley Edgeton, Mayberry,
W. Ya.; one sister , Mrs. Mary
Wilson , CedarGrove, .W. Va.,
five grandchildren and three By JACK R. PAYTON
great-grandchildren. He was
VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pomeroy .
preceded in death by a son, Pope John Paul.! has decided
He was born June 14, 1910 in Monty.
IAJ ~gin his pootificate with
Pomeroy . Conce rns in· Kanawha County. He was
Funeral servlces will be neither coronation or endividua ls and resource-· employed in 1922 as a coal held Wednesday 2 p.m. in the thronement, but simply by
related groups express at this miner until his employment Ebenezer Baptist Church celebrating mass Sunday for
meeting will be used to help at Lakin State Hospital where with Rev . Fletcher and Rev. the world 's 700 million
develop a live-year program he worked as a laborer a nd Eddie Buffington officiating. Roman Catholic faithful, the
for the U. S. Department of volunteered his services as Burial will be in a Charleston Vatican said today.
Agriculture.
director of the Employee- Cemetery.
The announcement said the
The Meigs Soil and Water Patient Choir until 1955. In
Friends may call at the 65-year-&lt;&gt;ld former Cardinal
Conservation District and the 1972 he returned to the mines Preston Funeral Home, Albino Luciani, elected
USDA Soil Conservation at Central Coal Company, Charleston, today from 7:30 pontiff three days ago, wtll
Service are sponsoring the Graham Station until 1975. to 8:30 p.m. The body will be celebrate a solemn mass in
meetin g
to
fulfill After his retirement he taken to the church one hour St. Peter's Square at 6 pm.
requirements
of
the became a Fost er Gr.and- prior to the service.
(noon EDT ) Sunday "to mark
Resources Cons ervation Act • parent at Lakin.
the beginning of his ministry
which President Carter
He was well known in the
as supreme pastor."
JOHN R. PALMER
signed November 1977.
llrea for coaching ~nd playing
This will replace the
John R. Palmer, 66, 550
The
Resources Con· adult and little league softball Shady Drive, Beaver Falls, ancient coronation ceremony
servation Act requires ISDA and baseball.
Pa., died Monday morning in 1n which pontiffs for centuries
to use public opinion as well · He attended the Mt. Moriah the Medical Center of Beaver received a IAJwering gold and
as scientific data to appraise Baptist Church, Middleport, County, New Brighton, Ohio. silver triple crown inscribed
the natural resources on all where he was a member of Mr. Pabner was born Sept. 5, with the words : "Receive this
private land; develop a five- the choir and the Paint Creek 1911 at Great Bend In Meigs tiara adorned with three
year program to meet Baptist Church, Gallipolis. County the son of the late crowns and know lllal you are
identified needs ; and to . Surv'ivors include two William A. and Roxie Hughes
evaluate progress toward daughters, Mrs. Darlene Palmer. He lived in the
Hicks, Charleston, and Mrs. community of his home for 50 Fla.; Bernice Winebrenner
achieving those goals.
and Ora Bass, both of
years.
Syracuse;
Mary Cox, BidMr. Palmer and his wife
well;
Betty
Wic)tles, Lanwere owners and operators of
caster,
and
Margaret
Cline,
one of the first motels on Rt .
Beverly,
and
several
nieces
· 18, Palmers Motel at Big
Beaver Boro. For 45 years he and nephews.
Funeral services will be
was employed at Townsend
held
Thursday at I p.m. at
Company, Ellwood City, Pa .
Ewing
Chapel with the Rev.
He retired in 1973. He was a
Dale
Bass
officiatlng ~ Burial
member of St. John's Burrys'
will
be
in
Gilmore
Cemetery.
Church and the Townsend's
Friends
may
call
at the
~Year Club.
funeral
home
after
7 p.m.
He Is survived by his wile,
today.
Dorothy Rosenmund Palmer,
and James R., Beaver Falls,
three grandchildren , two
sisters, Mrs. James (Rev a I
Egyud, Pittsburgh, and Mrs.
Edward (Gladys) Lawson,
Palm Springs, Calif., one
brother, Lawrence, New
Brighton.
Friends may call after 7
p.m. toda y and all day
Wednesda y at · Campbell 's
funeral home, 14th Street· and
8t h ·Ave .. Beaver Falls.
.
Services will be held at the
funeral home Thursday at 11
a.m. with the Rev. Carl A.
Stewart offi ciating. Burial
will be in St. John 's Burrys'
Church Cemetery.

t,eje~Done bW today. My wUe
union memberships for final, he said.
The unlms that rejected was away and I almost forgot
ratification ," said Horvitz,
flanked by three union llle latest qreel!lent are the It - but I certalinly mailed It
presidents and Deputy .American Postal Workers thia momlns."
the
National
Pretident Emmet Andrews
Postlilaster General James Union ,'
of
Letter of the 210,0110-member
Con way, the goverrunent 's Association
Carriers and the National APWU,
halled
. the
top negotiaiAJr.
But Horvitz said If talks fail Post Office Mall Handlen reswnpllon of lalkl and said
he would urge members to
to bring a negotiated accord, unon
1· .
Throughout the crisis the report for work.
the mediator will "decide the
remaining unresolved" postmaster general remalped . But the agreement gave no
issues by the lfklay deadline. calm and confident there clue of how the two Bides will
their
biggest
If it goes through an would be no walkout, telling settle
arbitration process, the reporters Monday : " I difference : money.
my
Just hours before Ho~vitz'
mailed
mediator 's decision wiU be certainly

UDIIedPre111Diel'llllloaal
Strikesagainst the Chardon ·
and Logan school districts
continued today, while
teachers In the New~rk
IICbool district vote tonight on
a new contract,
Non-leaching employees
are 011 strike in the Chardon
School Dilltrict, with most of
the system's · 150 teachers
expected lo again honor
picket lines today·
Supervisory personnel,
substitute teachers and
regular teachers who crossed
theplcketllneswerehandling
classroom duties, according .

'
"'

Although a Meigs County
petit jury awarded damages
totaling $25,809.90, Meigs
County was not found liable in
a $480,000 lawsuit that ended
Tuesday in Common Pleas
Court.
The civil action was filed by
Shirley Ann Evans, Rt. 2,
Racine, and her children,
Jason Scott Lawson, Sherrie
LyM Lawson, Amy Lawson,
and Robert Lawson , Jr ,,
against Robert P. Bums,
Gahanna, Robert Franklin
Lawson , Rt. I, Portland,
and
the
Board
of
Meigs County Commis-s1oners . Th e suit wa s
the result of a tw4H'ar ac:
cident that. occ urred on

... 'f'

L

MAKING CATSUP - Mr. and Mrs. George Aibert
Hill bu.sy making catsup Tuesday. The final product will
not be cm~pleted untU today.

Catsup making,
almost ·lost··art
Making catsup outalde in a
large kettle (also used for
making apple butter ) . is
almost a lost art. This does
not hold true for Mr. and Mrs.
George Albert HUI, Letart
Falls.
Tuesday they were busy
cooking tomatoes. After the
cooking process Is completed,
the juice from the tomatoes is
placed In larse crocks.
The juice stands overnight.
Today It wiU be placed back
in the kettle for another

AnnUJJl meeting
st~~:rts Aug. 31
MARIETIA - The aMual
meeting of members of the
Corporation for Ohio Ap. .,.4.\a~:.blu~..P-t."•'Pmll'

.

cooking process at which
time • spice bag, sugar and
yinegar are added. When the
catsup is ready it is taken orr
and placed in jars. This year
(two years ago the Hills made
catsup J they picked 21
bushels of tomatoes which
will make approximately 25
gallQIIs of catsup. The catsup
maklng process is not easy, it
takes several days before you
have the completed product.
But won't it taste good this
winter.

j_')_.;r~h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_·a_y_
HENDERSON, KY. - A PRELIMINARY HEARING was
to be hald today In Henderson Dl!ltrlct Court for Wayne Lee
Hannah, 23, a racetraclt employee charged in connection with
the Ellis Park fire last week in which 3i horses were killed.
District Judge Harvey Ershlg Jr. assigned altorney James
. Esser, Henderson, of the public defender's office, as Hannah's
attorney.
WASmNGTON - A TIIREAT AGAINST two District 17
United Mine Workers !oCala falled to materialize when
offlciala pledged cooperation with a probe of their local's
financial records.
· ·
The local officials had refused to turn over the books to the
· iilternal!onal union for inspection. Ho·wever, representaliYI!s
of the two locala told the International Executive Board
Tuesday in Washington they would surrender the records as
1100n as they were formaUy notified to do so.

(COAD) will be held at the
Holiday Inn, Marietta,
Thursday, Aug. 31, and
Friday, Sept. I according to
Keith F. Molihan, chairman.
The eighth AMual COAD
meeting will include a Thursday night banquet with Pat
Cusick, Washington, D. C.
national director of Community Action Agencies as
the guest speaker, and the
election of officers of COAD
scheduled for Friday, Sept. I.
COAD is an organization of
16 Community Action
agencies In 29 Southeastern
Ohio counties, serving a third
of Ohio's geographic area,
and one-fourth of Ohio's
· population . The corporate
office is located in Marietta.
Molihan, director . of the
Lawrence County Community Action Agency Is
chairman; Joseph Barsotti,
director of the Gallia-Meigs
CAA Is vlce-&lt;!halnnan; and·
Anthony Mele, director of the
Waahlngton-Morgan Counties
CAA Is treasurer. June
Vernon, of the Jefferson
County CAO serves as

secretary.

The COAD organization Is a
non-profit
corporation
associated with the 16
Co!nmunity Action agencies
and other resources service
agencies.
A_g~ong
the programs
COJID sponsors through the
COLUMBUS - JAPANESE NATIONAL RAD..WAYS has member Community Action
preaented a bid for a Sl million contract with the Ohio aau· · agencies are home win·
Trlinsportatim Authcrlly lor development of hlg!Hpeed rail terizatlon, senior nutrition
aervice In Ohio.
and meals at home, foster
The lid was presented by Hotswnl Harada, director of the
d.
Japanese finn. The contract i.l to be awarded early next Garage damage ,

bam leveled

month.
BAYMIN~TIE,ALA. - THENAVY SAID Tuesday Navy

EnllCn Dennis P. Hirtz, 23, Parma, 0 ., was one of the three
·perDII klUed Monday when . a helicopter exploded and

in ·separate fires

aaahed.

Seven Racine fire department members answered a
call IAJ the home of Grace
Krider, Fourth Sl., Tuesday
where • garage caught fire,
The buUdin&amp; was about 75
percent d811royed flremeri
said. Cause of the blaze was
not determined and no
monetary 1011 figure wu ~ .

The Navy iald the three were a pilotinslruclor and two
lltudents. Hirtz was me of the lltudenla. The Oilier vic:Uma were
Malrlne Capt. Alan Arthur Schultz, :10, HiniGn, Iowa, the
lnltruct«; and Marine 1st U. John TIKmas Jenklna, 211,
IWtilllbUill, Mila.
. NEW YORK (UPI)- AU. S: DISTRlcr OOURT Judie
hu llltlld a permilllent lnjunc\lan barrlil&amp; actor Gtorle
HamiiiGn fnm vlollllinl! · antl:traud provlll0111 rl federal
IIICUl'lllta lawa.
The r.deral .flvemmenl 'l'lladay charled HamUion with
leclll'itiNI~ In ClOMectiOII with the sale 'of thouaandl rl
lloCii 1111..., be owned Ia two ama11 COO!panlea.

M1d d 1e p or t ' s F 1r e
Department was called at
10:11 p.m. TIIIIC!ay to Rt. 1,
Cheahire, where a barn
owned by R.O.D. Corp. waa
leveled by fin, It was fqred
the lire would ..,...~ tO
ntarbJ oil welll, ho-,
fin llllbtar~ were able to keep
It confined to the Immediate

QUCAGO - MEMORIAL DAY WEEKENI) TRAFFIC
' ..._ could be r~ced by IIICIA lllln 2D ]lll'oent If holldlly
.IIIOklrllll-.141 - safety bella, the National Safety CoullcU
IIIII lodQ. ·
"I tilt cumat rail 01 _,.1 belt - II malnlalaetllhil
t.bar Dll)' .........,. fo
I * - wiD cia In lnfllc
ICddentl bet- I p.m. local lime Jl'rkla)'llld mklnllb' area.
llcllday ," CauncU Prllidtlnt Vl!lctnt Tullll)' llld,

m

~·

retirement, $18,340.49; workmen's compensation, $649.99;
hospitalization,
Si8,236.43;
other insurance, $318.48;
utilities.• $4,000.26; supplies,
$1,453.96.
·
Buses during the 1976-77
year were driven 378,432
miles and that mileage in·
creased to 395,081, an increase of 16,649 miles during
the 1977-78 school yeat.
Operating bus costs during
the 1976-77 year totaled
$231,555.95 compared to the
$266,848.48 costs involved
during the 1977-78 year, an
increase of $35,292 . ~3.

lj

panions,
fo od
stamp,
outreach and head start

oie than a ·huiidred

Community Action Agency
personnel are expected to
attend the Marietta meeting,
including stat~ and federal
legislators, representatives
of Ohio 's Department of
Public Welfare, Health, State
Clearinghouse, Economi c
and Community Development, the Commission on
Agmg , and representatives of
several federal departments.
COAD Community Action
agencies serve the following
Ohio ·counties : . Adams,
Brown, Athen s, Hocking,
Perry , Belmont , Gallia ,
Meigs, Guernsey, Monroe,
Noble , Harrison , Carroll,
Tuscarawas , Highland,
Lawrence, Jackson, Vinton,
Jefferson, Knox, Holmes,
Cochocton ,
Ashland,
Muskingum, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Washington and
Morgan.
.;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::

LETIERS URGED
The Leading Creek
Conoervaocy District Is
urging all Meigo Couallallll
lo write tbe Envll'811111ental
Protection Agency
regarding extension ol
EPA regulallollll for four
yean oo thai Ohio coal can
be baned.
The dlotrlcl points out
that tbe economic effect on
Melga Caallly will be eslnmely urmful to the
county If lhe regulatiooq'
are nol exlellded. Those ,1
willhlll{l lo write !etten are
to addreu them to Etbe!
Norman, hearing clerk, ·
Ohio EPA, Box IOU,
Columbus, Ohio 43!16.
POOL REOPENS
The Middleport swimming
pool reopened today after
being closed for the past wee~
dae to a breakdown of the
circulating pump, 'Cheryl
Burdette, park director,
SMOunced today.
The pool will remaln open
until September 10 in order
tbat additional swimming
will be available to relldenta.
The pool not'lllllliY C]GHI
each Yetr on
Day.

Laoor

Weather
Rain heavy at times
toni&amp;ht. Highs today,
Thlll'lday 75 to Ill, loiU in the
mld lOa. Probability of
preclpttatlan near 1011 perdnl
today. 10 percent tonight, 80
parcenl Thursday.

been changed from a gravel
road to a hard suriace some
50 days prior to the accident .
Da ve · Spence r, office
manager of the Meigs County
Hi ghwa y testified county
work records showed the
amount of time and money
that had been spent on the
road ($40,000 ) two months
prior to the accident.
Ted Warn er , co unty
superintendent of the Highway Department testified to
the amount of work per·
formed an( inspections made
prior, during and completion
of the triple seal job during
the sununer of 1975.
Ga ry Wolfe and Dave
Cleland, members of the

plaintiffs. Presiding Judge
was John C. Bacon.
Testifying Tuesday mor·
ning was Dr. Lewis Telle,
who explained the extend of
injuries to the plaintifls.
Testifying for the state
were Phil Radford, postman ;
Charle s Lawrence, bus
driver
and
Mary
Greer, a neighbor, who
ali
sta ted
that · the
depression in the road was
not of serious nature.
W&lt;1rden Ours, forlljer
county commiss ioner and

Henry Wells, president of the
board of county com·
missioners testified that an
inspection of the road had
been made an~ the road had

Ra c ine emerge ncy squad

grandparents; senior com·
'ir.JMl.J.tr~ .

County Road 31 on Oct: 31,
1975. The plaintiff charged
that road conditions were
responsible.
Burns settled with the
plaintiff, prior to the suit and
was not involved in the trial.
Burns testified for the
plaintiff. Due to the law in the
case the jury was not made
aware of the settlement.
The jury did decide that
Robert Lawson was to pay
Shirley Evans s~. ooo and the
children a total of $809.90.
Rick Crow, Prosecutor and
Carson Crow , Assistant
Prosecutor, represented the
defendants, and Jerry Todaro
·or Wolsky and Blue,
Columbus, represented the

'

Second grade student
dies ln ·:bUs' accident Gallia County's first traffic
fatalit y of 1978 occurred
Tuesday, at 3:40 p.m., when
sev,en-year old Seldon M.
Moore, Route I, Gallipolis,
was killed in a school bus
accident followin g the sec'ond
day of school.
The Galiia-M eigs Post
Highway Patrol reports
Moore was discharged from a
bus, owned by !he Gailia
CoWity Local School District,
by
Harold
'operated
Coughenour, 29, Rt. 5
Gallipolis, across from his
home, on Kelly Dr., just off
George's Creek Rd.
Officers report as the boy
walked in front of the school
bus, crossing Kelly Dr.
toward his home, Coughenour
pulled the vehicle forward,
running over the Moore

.grade student at Addaville
Elementary School.
Commenting on the accident, which is still under
investigation, by the Ohio
Slate Patrol, Sgt. G. D.
Henderson stated that
preliminary findings indicate
· Moore was struck by the front
bumper as the bus moved
forward , and knocked to the
ground.
The back dual wheels ran
over the upper half of the
boy's body.
Followin g the accident ,
Coughenur was transported
to Holzer Medical Center,
reportedly suffering from
shock. Coughenour was
admitted, and was listed in
good condition this morning .
The victim was born June
27, 1971, at Bangkok ,

youth. Moore was a second

both testified that the road
condition was good. Cleland
introduced his report stating
the road was good.
J err y Powell, co u11ty
omploye, teotllied to pa"'\n&amp;
"'· pe rfbi' med.~ to ,ttte ~road;-,... ·,;

r811aurant.
"l don't aee how anyone in
that Pilla Hut llllrvived,"
uld Noel~. who was
wcr~ In a nearby llore
when the twllter alnlck.
Thou11nda of Louisiana
Gulf Qlul l'llllldinta, drlvt~~
to high gro\1111 by Dlbrl'l 80
lllflb 111111&amp; and. high tides,
betlan returnln1 to their
homes Tueaday. Ultle
ctamaae wu ellllld in the
coutal ..... .
IIDI rain llqUil!IJ drifted
north, hilling areu near the

junction of Mississippi ,
Arkansas and Tennessee.
Eloise ~arp, about 5o, died
in her mobile heme near
frystal Springs, Miss., when
a tornado slammed it against
trees. Sheriff Earl Guess said
several other .persons including Mrs. ~arp 's 69year-&lt;&gt;ld mother - suffered
cuts and bruises.
· 'The death brought to two
the number of people kUied
by the stonn. An oU worker
was drowned when he was
knocked from an offshOre rig
Monday by !Hoot waves.
Other twisters were slglited
near
the
northwest
Mississippi
towns
of
Starkville, Springdale, Cedar
Bluff and Flora . Violent
wlndl uprooted · trees In
downtown Little Rock, Ark.,
and damaged hcmes on the
oulaklrta of West · Helena,
Ark.
An olllcial at Methodill
South Hospital in Mempliia,
operatin&amp; on emersency
power, said 21 persons had
been lrought to the holp!tal
from the tornado scene but
only one was Jn)ured
serloully enough to be admitted.

Power was knocked out in a
kquare block section of the
Whitehaven area near
Memphis International

the

G ree r ,

Lester

Richa rd s,

Tha iland, son of Michael D. Bern ard Gilkey, Wesley
and Gill AM Dorman Moore. Buehl , Don Meadows, Bob
One brother , Douglas, 2, Beegle and Sheriff James
survives.
Proffitt.
Grandparents
surv1vmg
Bill Foster, independent
are Mr. and Mrs. Dna Lee candldate r?r c~m.missione r
Moore, Gallipolis, and 1\lr. · who has withdrawn du~ . to
and Mrs. Stanley Dorman, health cond1t10ns, testd1ed
Birmingham,
England; that m hiS opmwn the road
great-grandmothers, Mrs. was not properly repa1red.
Seldon Moore, Cheshire· and
It was brought out under
Mrf· Verble Wallace, Mer· cross exammat10n, Foster
·cerville.
never
reported
hiS
· · ~The Moores have resided in opinion to anyone since he di'd
th e Georg es Creek Com· not feel it would do .any good.
munity the past six years.
Jurors were Wilham A.
Private fWieral services Young, Ra ymond Col e,
"will be held 3 p.m. Friday at foreman, Donna Davidson,
St. Peter's Episcopal Church Sha ron K. B~ffmg t on ,
with Rev. A. H. Mackenzie Margaret Grossnickle, Ina
officiating .
Teaford, Helen Dias, James
Friends may call at the Gaston and AMie L. Moon,
Waugh . Halley . Wood alternate.
Funeral Home from 7 until ~
p.m. on Thursday.

Twister hits Memphis
United Press International
Turbulent remnants of
Tropical Storm Debra
swirled into tornadoes that
slashed through parts of
Missisaippl, Arkansas and
Tenn.,.. Tuesday, killing
one person and injl!ring
dozens more.
The twisters killed one
wm~an , uprooted trees and
extensively d·amaged
bulldlnss and cars. A l«nado
roared down Elvis Presley
Boulevard in Memphis late
Tl!eeday, hiltinl! a line of fast·
food restaurants and cuWng
through two .lllopplng centers
bul mlsaln&amp; Graceland
Mansion where Presley Is
buried.
Twenty-ljve penons were
Injured, lllOII of them when
the roof fell in on a plua

Other witnesses for

st ate not called were Lowell

Airport . Officials cut off ~as
supplies to the area. Power
poles were uprooted or
knocked askew and lines
littered ihe rain-swept
streets .
At its ..strongest, Debra
drenched low4ying southwest
Louisiana with more than 6
'inches of rain and sent
residents of storm-wary
Cameron Parish IAJ relatives
cr shelters on high ground.
But in Arkansas, Debra
brought relief to wilting
crops, scorched lawns and
from temperatures in tbe
1001, dumping up to 5 inches
in south and east Arkansas.
Agron&lt;mlst Ruel Ne!ller of
the University of Arkansas
extension service said the
rain was timed perfectly to
boost the stale's soybean
crop ·
"It's too early to say how
much the rain will be worth,
but If it increases yields an
average of one bushel per
acre on the state's u mW!on
soybean acres It would raise
the crop's ~alue by $30
mllllon," he said.
sh owe r a a nd
thunderstorms
spread
throughout
the
lower
Mlallsslppi and Ohio Valleys.
Flash llood watches were
posted for portions of
(Continuect.onrgei2 )

Ideas

•
gtven
Input as to the role
resi dent s would like the
Meigs Soil and Water Con·
servation District to play was
given by two dozen residents
attending a district meeting
Tuesday night at the Meigs
Branch of the Athens County
Sa vings and Loan Co.
Satisfaction was expressed
on present programs and
some or the suggestio11S for
future programs included
more reclamation of strip
· mine areas, clearing creel\
chaMels, fighting river bank
erosion and perhaps some
zoning.
It was brought out that
more local and federal
moneys would be needed for
program e~pansion.
The dlstnct has some 285
questionna.ires which have
· been completed by Melp
residents on programs they
feel should be carried out by
the district as another aouree
of input.
These questlonnalrea alonl
with the Input provided by tiM
meeting Tuesday will Iii
complied and pt-.ted to
the diltrict board by Call"
servationlst Boyd Rut!: 1111
Friday.
Rex Shenefield, chalnilatJ
of the ~rd. (ll'Wided over
last nlght s meetlni!.

�···-~..,~-

. ....... .

..

......,_

- ~ · ...,

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Alii!. 30,11171

ott I'"M Tt{e {¥.:1\Gt-r.tcrel.7

Structures after the
Civil War in Meigs
· Invention of the "u()-anddown " sa wmill produced a
new kind of building
material. These sawmills
were in use before the Civil
War. They developed with the
grist mills which were run by
water power. A straight saw
was moved up and down
through the end of a log to
saw lumber or frame timbers. The saw~ lumber was
a great improvement over
the logs smoothed by ax and
adz. Less manpower was
needed . One may still find an
old b&lt;lard which shows a saw
kerf-in a straight line instead
of a curved line made with a
circular saw.
An early grist mill, for
grinding corn only, began
operation on Leading Creek
in Columbia Township in 1825.
This was probably located at
or near Dyesville. The mill
was built by William
McKinstry. A sawmill is not
mentioned. An early sawmill
was built on Raccoon Creek
by John McCully. The date is
not given. This mill may have
been called Star Mill as that
seems to be the only known

HtrreR ___feR ~
of YoU.

houses
became
more
popular. The invention and
improvement of cement
replaced the use of sandstone. Concrete made from
cement and other materials
also became more popular
for foundations. Brick and
metal had appeared on the
scene as buildng materials by
the bicen.tennlal year.
A particular type or pattern
of house was popular about
1900 or before. It will be
called a cube-shaped house
for want of a better name.
Houses of . this style can be
found along the New England
seacoast. A rail along the
eaves was called a .. widow's
walk" while a rail pen near
the peak of the roof was
ca ll ed " Widow' s Wat ch."
This type of rail on a roof was
built because the husbands modular homes are in·
.
were sailors, and wives could creasing in popularity.
It is almost impossible to
watch the sea from this high
point to see if a ship was speculate what will take
place in residential housing
arriving.
._
A number of cube-shaped during the next 100 years.
houses were
built in Thus ends the story of
Columbia Township usually Columbia Township strucwithout the roof rail . The tures after the ·civil War.
following list gives the names
mill site on Raccoon Creek in of owners of a number of
Co lumbia Township. Th e cube-shaped houses in
information about mills can Columbia Township about
be found on page 282 of a 1900. Most of the houses are
Meig s County History still standing, but with dif- '1Written by James M. Evans ferent owners. The owners in
and published in an atlas by early 1900 were Charles
H. H. llardesty in 1883.
Masheter, Ed Masheter,
The Pomeroy Library has a ·F r e d · W o o d y a r d ,
WASHINGTON (UPI) copy of the atlas while Ohio Southeastern Test Farm,
Rep.
Clarence Miller, R-Ohio,
By Clarence
University has a Xerox copy Frank Boyd; Granville Stout
said
Tuesday Soviet-Cuban
ol the Meigs County History (burned ) Ogdin-Wooten, intervention
Miller
in Africa could ·
taken from the H. H. Har- Nellie (Radekin) Vale, keep essential raw materials
desty Atlas. A few private Eugene Facemyer , Cecil
It appears Soviet - Cuban if the Soviet Union were able
the United States and
owned copies of the atlas still Gillogly, Lloyd Place, from
western world and called on intervention in Africa is part to interrupt the shipment of
ex ist.
Jackson Foley, ' Almus the U.S. to assure access of of a carefully laid strategy to . such critical raw materials;
Invention of the circular Chaney, Solomon Townsend,
isolate Western Europe and especially with oil.
the steam engine, the Jasper Rutherford, Jarrot those materials.
During the next few yea~s.
lbe
United States from their
Miller sais the Sovietgasoline engine and the Bobo, · William Dudgeon.
Soviet
- backed revolutionary
access
to
oil
and
essential
uban intervention is "part•
electric motor brought a new Howard Townsend, (razed ) .C
movements
could spread to
to
raw
materials
needed
of a carefuUy laid strategy to
era in building. Log house Claude Chas e and Howe isolate Western Europe and maintain · industrial Sautli Arabia, Iran, and other
eonstrul1.ion began to decline Hannon .
oil-rich nations in tbe Persian
the United States" from production.
after the Civil War. Frame
The first brick house was access to oil and other
As I noted last May, Gull. Already Saudi Arabia Is
Communist involvement in nearly encircled by countries
essential raw materfals.
"Communist involvement Africa is not some obscure that provide bases for this
in Africa is not some oll!cure power play in an insignificant indirect warfare - Ethiopia,
power. play in an insignificant corner of the globe. It has Marxist South Yemen, Iraq,
corner of the globe," said enormous strategic im· and Oman where East
Miller. "It bas enormous plicatlons for the entire free ·Germany and Cuba are
strategic implications for tbe world. For example, it is help~ an active Communist
estimated that 5!&gt;uth Africa guerrilla· force. Iran is now
entire free world."
surrounded on three sides by
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Miller said South Africa ' contains:
86 percent of the world's Russia and two pro-Soviet
cmtains 86 percent of the
reserves ; 48 · per- countries.
platinum
w&lt;rld'a plallnum reeenea, 48
Weotem Europe tmporta
cent
11!
,the
world's
percent of the world's manMaintenance
uncreamed cottage cheese.
around
50 percent of its oil
manganese
reserves
;
49
You also ask abo9t butter ganese reserves, 49 percent
dietary plan
·
requirements
from the Gull,
percent.
of
the
world
's
gold
and margarine. If you are los- of tbe world's gold reserves
and
at
least
1,000
tons of oil
reserves;
64
percent
of
the
ing enough weight or main- and 64 percent of the world's
each
day
pass
South
Africa
world;s
V
anadium
reserves
i
DEAR DR. LAMB - I wining your weight at the vanadium reserves.
Miller said manganese and and 46 percent of the world's destined for the West. The U.
rece ived your diet for weight level that you want to, then
S. · and Europe are more
reduction and am very pleas- you can use these in limited vanadium are essential fluorspar reserves .
Manganese, vanadium, and dependent upon the sea than
ed with it. I think it is amounts.
material used in the
something I could live with
But all fa ts, whether they production of steel and iron. fluorspar are essential ever before. Yet ,. American
" Platinum is used for minerals used in the naval strength has declined
for the rest of my life. c'Ome from margarine, butHowever, there are some ter, vegetable oil of all types, crucibles , furnace produotion of steel and iron. from aimost 1,000 ships in
ttems \bat I would appreciate . or from meats of all, types thermometers, electrodes Platinum is used for 1968 to 4~1 ships today .
knowmg about ·and I am m- contain lots of calories. and making
chemical crucibles, furnace,- ther- During tills same period, the
eluding a list of these in the Anyone who needs to limit his analyses and for corrosion momet ~rs , electrodes for Soviet navy has grown to 981
hopes that you "TU ght com- calories will need to limit his and heat-r e s i s t a n t in- making chemical analyses, ships and is stiU growing. The
m,ent on them.
intake of fatty foods as well struments;' he said. "Jet and for corrosion-and beat- U.S.S.R. greatly outnumbers,
the U. S. .in cruisers, attack
DEAR READER - Of the as the foods that conl&lt;tin lots engines cannot be made resistant instruments.
Jet engines cannot be made submarines, nuclear missile
cobalt
and
items you have on your list, of sweets or concentrated without
without
cobalt
and submarines, and destroyers cottage cheese is an excellent sugars.
chromium.
food , particularly if you use
" It is obvious what would chromium. Zaire 's Shaba frigates. The only area where
In the last analysis, the test
( formerly we still lead is in aircraft
the uncreamed cotta ge of whether a diet works for a happen to the Western World Province
Katanga)
twice
invaded in ca rrlers.
&lt;.:h~ese , because it contains person or not is whether it
if the Sovjet Union were able
If the Soviets are successful
two
y.l'ars
by
"rebels"
based
to
interupt
the
shipments'
of
very little fat. It's a low- safely enables him to
in
Africa and the Persian
in
Cuba-aided
Angola
,
such
raw
material
especially
calorie food whicb conl&lt;lins a gradually lose excess fat or
produces over 58 percent of Gulf, will they move into
lot of good quality protein enables him to rnainl&lt;lin his with oil," he said.
plus calci um.
" It is imperative that the the world's cobalt . No less Latin America and the rest of
·weight at the desired level.
String beans are fine and
U.S.
assign high priority to than 90 percent of the known the Southern Hemisphere?
In addition to meeting this
are a low-&lt;:alorie food as long requirement, the diet should assuring access to those chrome reserves are located America imports almost 90
as you don't add fat in their be sufficiently well balanced materials through promotion in Rhodesia and South Africa. percent of its bauxite from
preparation. Most of the to provide aU the necessary of friendly relations with Ferrochrome is an essential the Dominican Republic ,
fruits , if you don't go over- vitamin s and minerals . exporting nations and strong ingredient in the production Jama,ica, and Surinam. Since
bauxite is the key ingredient
military of stainless steel.
hoard , are fine for P"'lPie and Unless a person learns these international
should be part of a nonnal features, the fad diet efforts deterrence to Soviet - Cuban . It is obvious what would in the production of
balanced diet. AB you will won 'I be very effective imperialism," said Miller. happen to the Western World aluminum- everythilll! from
houses, automobiles, airnotice, orange juice is includ- because most of these people
planes, appliances, satellites,
ed on the di et and you could lose weight and then regain it
1
·
and
electric · transmission
substitute an orange for a as soon as they return to ttreir
cables
would be affected if
glass of orange juice.
previous dietary habits. I
.
shipment
of the raw material
You asked about eggs and
Other readers who want the
-----=~-------------were
disrupted.
they are accepl&lt;lble in a dietary plan that you spoke of 1
Our e1perience with the
· small amount and, again, it can send :;o cents for Tbe
Arab
oil embargo of 1973-74
depends on how you prepare Health Letter nwnber 4-7,
demonstrated
how dependent
them. The American Heart Weigh! Losing Diet to me in
we
are
on
imported
raw
Association recommends that care of this newspaper, P.O.
materials.
It
is
imperative
men not have more than Bux ~~~~ . Radio City Station,
that the U. S. assign high
three egg yolks week from New York, NY 10019.
priority to asauring access to
all sources because of tbe
those materials through
cholesterol content.
promotion of friendly
You might ask about some
relations with e•portlng
of the egg substitutes that are
nations, and · strong inon the market that conl&lt;tin no
ATLANTA !UPI)
tern"atlonal military
cholesterol, but I'm sorry to
Directors
of the North
deterrence to Soviet-Cuban .
say most of these that are
imperialism.
commonly used today also American Soccer League
coni&lt;! in a lot of fa I, although it turned down Atlanta's
application for a franchise,
is unsaturated fat.
over
the
The diet ls probably better reportedly
possibility
that
the
games
if you limit the fat inl&lt;tke. As
far as the jack and cheddar might be televiaed into tbe
cheese are concerned, these territory of other teams, the
are high in fat and frequently Atlanta Constitution said
high in cl!olesterol. A little bit today.
AI Thornwell and Dick
of these processed cheeses
add a large number of Cecil of Atlanta submitted tbe
calories to the diet so they application for the fr.anchise
sliould be used sparingly, if at to be moved from Colprado at
'
a meeting Monday of ihe
all.
&lt;ll 1i78 Oy NEA, Ine. ~----·
~,~
You ca n prepare gravy and NASL directors in New York
cream sauces and creMm City. The newspaper said
soups with non-fat dry milk directors voted against the
" Don 'I worry! We 're smoking those very lowpowder and proper season- 'presentation because they
tar, low-nicotine cigarettes."
ings so they contain a limited were fearful the satellite
I
owned
by
television
system
amo unt of calories .
Unsweetened Cllnned pinea()- Ted Turner, a friend ol
ple is a rea10118ble IOtii'Ct! for ThornweU and Cecil, would
fruits and often goes weD with transmit Atlanta games.

ass'ure access

Washington
Report

saw.

HEALTH

'

Berry S World

a

I!Mh._ '

Meigs
Property
Wallenda Transfers
Dene .HaD to Truman D.
Hall, lots, Middleport.
Dene D. Hall to Truman D.
Hall, lots, Pomeroy.
·
Truman D. Hall to Dene
Hall, lots, Middleport.
Bernice M. Randolph, dec.
to Roxie E . Ford, ceri. of
trans., OUve.
Russell Randolph to Roxie
By MAGEE WCKEY ·
WARWICK, R.I. (UPI) - E. Ford, 6.60 acres, Olive.
Earl
J.
Henderson,
Rietta Wallenda is like any
other 17-year-old girl, that is, Vir~inia Henderson to
If you Ignore ~er balancing m
a 50-foot-high tightrope twice
go into the famlly business.
a day without a net.
She was up on the high wire Her brother Ricky, 22, Is
wben her famous grandfather studying at a Bible college in
Karl wobbled and fell120 feet Europe. Her sister Valerie, 8,
to his death after a strong is too young to work
·
gust of wind caught him off professionally.
guard in Puerto Rico last
Rietla
says
her
March. .
grandfather wouldn 't let ber
But to the blood, bi!Xom work with him until she was
Sarasota, Fla., native, her 13. "But I practiced on a low
life is nothing unusual.
wire waiting f~r that day ever
"This is what I do, that 's since I was 3. And 1 took three
aU. It's aU I know how to do years of ballet for balance

family

•
contmues

and lt's-an I want to do,,.

~

trainins."

auirtes F. Cozart, 100 acre
lot 1~2. 3.3 acres, Lebuon.
Charles
F.
Cozart,
Bernadette M. Cozart to
Charles
F.
Cozart,
Bernadette M. Cozart, 3.3 ',
acres, Lebanon.
;:
Ronald H. Browning to !J
·Mary M. BrownJns, Parcels, ·· '
Scipio:
,
(:
Janet E. Miller, fonnerly "'
Janet E. Tlllls, John L. MWer ,,;
to John L. MWer, Janet E.
Miller, .17 acre, Turner Sub., •,
Rutland.
Brenda D. Haning to .. ,
Jinunie F. Evarw n, Donna ;
L. Eva111, I acre, ·Scipio.
-'
Robert L. Byers, Nola "
Byers to Charles A Ritchie, ,
Barbara A. Ritchie, 1.10 ·,
acres, Chester.
.Lewis E. Stanley, Dora ~ •
Stanley to Stephen R. -,
Tatter110n,
Robyn
D. ""
Tatterson, lot 289, Pomeroy. ...
,James E . Reynolds, ·;
Patricia A. Reynolds to · "
Thomas M. Stewart, Judy A. . .
Stewart, lot 17, Middleport.
Rober! M. Pooler, Betty M. ..
Pooler to Marlon F . .,
VanMeter, Carlena K. ,,'
VanMeter ,
lot
358, .. ,
Middleport.
..1
Steven R. Scott, Sanlk'a K.
Scott to Delwin T. Harford, :
Nancy S. Harford, Parcels, .•
Chester.
Harold Sizemore, Jane L . ...,
Sizemore to Paul J. Pauley, •
Lois A. Pauley, 1.02 acres, ~
Chester.
~

says.
If it hadn't been for high
Rietta is a sell-posaessed wire, Rietta says she doesn 't
yowig w0111an who takes her know what she would've done
career and herself in stride. with ber life .
" At the exact moment of
"I hated school and everymy grandfatber's death, I thing about it. I was never
said I wanted to carry on," any good at it," tile lOthshe said, chaino6Jiloktng in' grade dropout said.
her
trailer
after
a
••
performance.
•
Rietta, in town for a twoweek stint at Rocky Point
•••
Amusement Park, Is touring
•
the country with three other
Wallendas, including her bro•!;
ther, Mario, 21. Now that her
~
grandfather is gone, she Is
United
PrellslnteraalleqJ
~
the star of the show.
STAR SPANGLED JOE: Guess who's comlnng to ajng the •
~~rve never known any
other life. A lot of my family . national anthem at the Sept. 15 heavyeljjht championship ftght E
in New Orlea118 between MU.mmad All and Leon Splllb? Joe •
have dfed doing whall do, but Frazier, tllat's who - the one-time All arch..-lval turned :
I don't think about it," she entertainer. Word of "Smokin' Joe's" latest gig comes frGm ~
said. "When I'm up there, aU Ellen DeBard, of the Cotton Club In New York City where
I do Is concentrate on what Frazier ls slated for a return singing engagement next week. •
I'm doing at that exact Now all we need to make tile All-llplnka " Battle of New :
ffi(Illent.''
Orleans' complete la for Kea Nartoa and Georce Ftlftlllll• to :
Five Wallendas have died sign
up as judges.
·
.
:
walking the tightrope.
Another, Rletta 's Uncle
cAL CAN'T: British Actor Mlebael Cable that Ia. Drive, :
Mario, Is paralyzed from the that
Is. Caine aald recently that since he will be working In •
waist down .
Hollywood
In " Beyond the Poseidon Adventure," he hopes to
Before network televisim
be
able
to
learn
to drive to cope with the Southern Callfornill'
cameras caught Karl WaUenlife style. Caine, who comes from a poor Cockney famlly,llald '
da 's topple six months ago,
the most celebrated fall "I never learned to drive when I""" poor because 1 couldn't l
occurred in 1862 when two afford a car. And then wllen I started maldng money, 1 got a
Wallendaa died and three chauffeur. But if I'm going to live in Los Angeles,lsuppoee I'd I
better learn . I hope It Isn 't hard."
:
others were injured In Detroit
wben their famed sevenl
:
member pyramid
peed.
BROOKE NO IIARDOT: The stars of "Two o1 • Kind" are ,
·
less a May-September pairing than March 111111 November. '
The pyramid act, four men Broole Sblelda, the 13-year-old who "'•yed the child pr"""'tute I
on the bottom level, two men
,..
.,...
,
on shoulder bars apd a In "Pretty Ba~y," will costar with ~e llalw, 112. "Broolte 1
woman standing on a chair, llltes George Burns," said her mother, Terry •1 " _ "Sbe ,
was never resurrected. lt was finds him Iunny and she's usually bored witllldulta." MCIIIIDI
re-created with elaborate said tbere was one demand however from Mia lllleldl who •
safety precautions ·Jaat has made a car- of playing glria aop!Utlcated beymd,thelr •
'February for a televisim years. "Brooke told him she would not I'Wl around wr•pped In :
special about the Wallenda a towel. Burns suggested a bigger towel. A slaJid.ln for towel- j
family.
runnlnl! wu allfeed on! '
i
Toclay's act is a far cry
·
'
from the !tlneritnt group o1
WHERE'S POPPA?: A Las VegaaJqe Tueldlty rlllmlaed ;
streel twnblet'll and jugglers a paternity ault flied against lincer Ettllebert Rllllll*'llblck •
that started the Wallenda by actr• DIMe MJirle Vblcent, laying Mlu VIncent flllled to i
perfcrmlng trlldltion back in rue the suit before tile twoyw Nevada lllatute ollimltatlml ;
All 8 t 1
expired. Mia Vincent, who livet In Callfomla _..., 1
lilt ._ - t
'"-~" ury
r a- Hurnperdlnck fathered her "-uahler, Attielilple
i;m; :
H = · the perforlnera Oct. 22. IflO. Her altomey UYJ ba may appeal to tha Nenda j
appear In purple attn and . Supreme Court or fUe suit In C.llfomia. Htsnpa dlaidt wu ,
~equln suits •nl climb up the appearingalal.al Vecas hotel, but tldnotappearln~.
ropet to tbe 100thinc rockGLIMPB
• -'t
jan 10und of Chuck
El: The American Friends of tha lllbmr Ualftr- ,
Mangione'• tong "Feel&amp; So lily of Jerualem have decided to bellow tMir hl&amp;balt haaar, ,
Good "
~ Scopua ~ward, on Gnpry ~ 111111 omp . _ ... '1111 !
~ act 11111 baa its teStar Wara cut, llreotdr •t work on a movie lllqllel, llllllo ,

•"

peopletalk

••

!

eolia

j

••ie.

aaaembllng to mab a lllevillan illlltlcal ll*lal w1t11 tile •

momenta

W.Uenda CGIIIin Farren whole cnw - Marll a-m. c.rte ll'llhr, llurllla r.., :
lleltlg lllpped On tbe l'llin- with AlttboDy ,.... . . and ,... Ml,tln blck u CJPO llld l
lllck hilh wtte ..W.IklJIIIinll Olewblcc. am, of ~Oitllt. IIJD2 ·-· A IP •
. . for ..,.,. I
a jump Milt over Rocky Lee uyalhe linger, holplldud with • bftcllon In IIIIa :
Point He calll!hl hlllllelf by Mmlca, C.Uf.,lllncl Aq. 12, "Ia llbowlac dlllr latpl11-nt 1
• • down Gil tha wire _ ~~ ~a;
hu been ............ ~~~ :
1
10methln1 Karl WaUeadl
.,.YI" •• lllrln to • Ill Dadllr • 'h•n• I
tri1t1 eo do ..t flllled
doc:tllr .tier
llllocill up tlldlni IIU lliDIIII Jllla As; l
Not .U Rletta'l ~laUm durlnl 1 pme bet aM lbe tlbow'a Clll ed 1 Ltll - - 1
radio Illation priGr to tha
tilL...
· l

.....

oi

Dade.......,

'
c.--

3- The DIIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, o., Wednesday, Alii!. !lfl, l"'"'

f'.d'a Noll;: 'l'lle followlq editorial no oablllltllld by tile Oblo
Departmtllt ol Healtb.
.
Parenta who fail to have their children protected ..lind
disease should cmsider the risks they are takq, botlf
financially and in terms of the health and Uvea ol their ''
children.
· •l
Vaccination Is now available and strongly recammended .
for seven diseaaes - polio, measles, rubella (German ,;;
measles), mumps, diphtheria, tetanus and perlullis -;
(whooping CQ~Jgh). Bu( studies by the Center fOl' Dlleaae •
Control of the Department of Health, Education and Well.-e ,-;
llhow that nearly 40 percent of t)Je nation'.• chlldren. have not ::
been fully vaccinated for these disease$. The rellllt la ! "
unnecessary Ulness, serious, even fatal, ccmplicationa, and an · ~
encrmousfinanclal burden on families and m aoclety at large.
Measles ca,uses encephayti.s, which can leave the child •'•,
mentaUy retarded; 20 years of training and~ at a school for ,7
the severely menially retarded costs about fli56,000. Mumps ,.,,
can cause deafness; 10 years of educatlm at a school !Ol' the :!
deaf costs • •000. Ruebella, when contracted by • pn1J18nl ·-·
woman, can cause the baby to be born blind; 15 :yeara ol ,. ,
educatlm ala school for the blind coati about tll2,000. Anyone ;;
who remembers tile polio epidemics ol the 1115011, with tbe need
for elaborate and long-term treatment, the stagerlng number or
of deaths and the alrnOill countless cases of JseriOUI dlubWty,
can begin to imagine .the financial drain of the disease before ,
vaccination was possible.
..
Vaccination is good inaurance. But It Is m&lt;re than that. •·
Unlike other forms of lnaurance, vaccination protects people
not only against the financial hardship ol disaster, It protects
them from the disaster itself. It prolects children against ill- ..
ness, against serious disability, ~alnst death. Ills protection 'c
that no child can afford to be without.

built by John Shepard on
County Road No. I just south
of the School Lot . John
shepard made his way to
Alaska at the time of the
Klondike gold st rike. He
staked out some successful
claims, ··and built. a brick
house soon after this return
from the Klondike. John
Shepard had the only brick
house in Columbia Township
for many years.
A number of brick and part
brick houses have been built
in recent years. Owners Include Robert Stout, Dennis
Facemyer, Dwaine Jordan!Maude Holcomb, Eugene
Facemyer and Rotert Reeve.
Barns and other outbuildings,
are being replaced with
metal buildings in a number
of cases. Mobile homes and

U.S. should

.

Vaccination, a
wise investment

l'

Pirates humble Reds, 5-0
CINCINNATI (UPI )- Two
weeki ago - Aug. 15 to be
exact - lhe Pittsburgh
Plrateil were II 'h games out
of first place in the National
League West.
" We 'd lust lost three in a
row to tbe PhiUles - shutout
In one game and clobbered 1~4 and It)-) in the last two,"
. Pirate . manager Chuck
Tanner recalled Tuesday .
"Everyone said that's the end
of the Pirates."
No one was saying the
Pirates had met their end
Tuesday, after Pittsburgh now the hottest team in the
league - chalked up its l~h
victory in 15 games with a ~
blanking of the Cincinnati

three hits, one his 20th homer

of the season, and three RBis
to power the Pirates past
Cincinnati, The lou was the
Reds' sixth in a row.
"I'll tell you something
else/' added Tanner. "The
Reds can win the Western
Division title. And anyone
who says they can't doesn 't
know baseball history.
"There's no way anyone
can write off any team that
goes into September seven
games out of first place,
especially when that team
has ga'"es remaining against
the clubs ahead of them."
The Reds have six games
left with the Dodgers and five
with the Giants. The Pirates
Red!.
have games left with the
"The race isn't over by a Phillles and Cubs.
long shot," beamed Tanner.
Why is Tanner so confident
"We're still behind the the Pirates wUI wind up first?
Phlllles, but I'm telling you
"I think we will because the
right now, we're going to win players think we will," he
the Eaatern Division title." answered. "No club in the
Such optimism came easily maJor leagues has had more
Tuesday after WiUie Stargell ups .·and downs than the
, backed up the four-hit pit- Pirates. But the guys on the
chin~ of Bert Blyleven with club have maintained the

' has
same attitude Nobody
felt sorry for himself. And II I
!lee a guy get down on himself, he's going to get a kick in
.the pants."
Most ·of Tanner's confidence sterna from his faith
In the Pirates' pitchin~ .
"The l!il! man Candy
(John Candelaria) la back,"
he said. "No one's pitching
better than Blyleven these
days. Jim Rooker has been
great. So hlis the rookies, Don
Robinson .
. "And we've got three more
starters - Bruce Kison ,
Jerry Reuss and Jim Bibby :backing them up. What club
can match that depth ?" he
asked.
"Tell you something else,"
he added. "When we started
to get hot, we had only two
extra men on the bench: Even
had to play catcher Ed ott in
left field."
: .
The Pirates bun ~ hed
singles · by Omar Moreno,
Dave Parker and Stargell to
take a H lead in thodlrst
inning Tuesday night and
'then scored on StRr~P11'c:~

second straight single as the and Jim Dwyer homered and
Pirates made it 3-0 In-. the threw out a runner at the
third off rookie Red plate, enabling the Giants to
righthander Mike LaCoss, keep pace with Los Angeles in
who wound up with his fifth the NL West.
loss in three deciSions.
PbUIJes 9, Padres 3:
Manny Sarmiento was the
Jerry Martin drove in four
victim of Stargell's homer in run s and Garry Maddox
the eighth. And, with Pedro knock~ In i lu'ee to lift the
Borbon i)ltchlng, Dale Phillies to victory. Jose
Berra's leadoff double led to Cardenal stole home, the .first
the Pirates' final .run in the time , in eight seasons a
· ninth.
Philadelphia player ha s
In other NL games, Los accomplished that feat.
Angeles topped Montreal, 4-1, Braves 4, Cubs 3:
Gary Matthews drilled a
San Francisco blanked New
Yor~.
2..(), Philadelphia three-run homer in the
downed San Diego, 9-3, seventh inning to help the
Atlanta nipped Chicago, 4-3, Braves beat the Cubs lor the
and Houston defeated St. second straigl)t night,. Gene
Garber pitched the last two
Louis, 6-3.
innings for Atlanta to earn his
Dodcers 4, Expos 1
Joe Ferguson slammed a 21st save.
three-run homer..and Tommy Astros 6, Cardinals 3:
Ken Forsch, 8-4, making
John pitched a six-hitter for
his 16th victory to lead the only his second start of the
Dodgers, who .remain one . season and first complete
game ahead of San Francisco game since July 26, 197~ .
scattered nine hits and drove
in the NL West.
In two runs to pace the
Giants %, Mets 0: •
Southpaw Bob Knepper, 14- Astros. Ted Simmons hit his
9, pitched a four-hit shutout 'tllh homer for St. Louis.

It's a
test-Sparky

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Sparky Anderson showed an
incredulous smile as he
pulled off his damp socks.
His club's nightmarish
slump had extended yet
another game, as the Reds
mustered only four hits ,
losing to Pittsburgh 5.0 on a
soggy Tuesday night. The
loss - the team's 14th in its
last 19 games - coupled with
a win by Los Angeles to drop
the Reds seven games out of
first place.
On the heels of a two-hit
shutout by the Pirates
Monday , the latest loss meant
, the Reds' once-mighty artillery ha~ cracked a pitiful 33
hits in its last seven games.
Not one starter was batting ·
above .300.
Anderson could only smile
in wonderment.
~~ It 's a test . to see how
strong you are ," said the 44year-old manager, working
on his customary post-game
bowl of chili. "You've got to
be strong. Only the weak are
going to fall . The strong have
claim to be a miracle worker, got to stand,
he's not predicting the Reds
"Over the years, frolli my
will do a complete about-lace minor league career,l've had
merely because he met with nothing but winners,'' said
them .
Anderson, recalling that
This he made quite clear: previous worst slump was his
But he can hope.
inaugural year as manager,
w,i th Toronto of the International League.
"We were in first place in
early June, by two games,"
he said. "We went about a
solid two months then in a
Fla.; Fred Ridley of Shaker slump. It was unbelievable.
. Heights·, who lost 5 and 4 to We ended up fifth."
Marshall Marraccini of
The latest slump has
McKeesport, Pa., and Randy
produced questions about the
Reifers of Dublin who lost 5 Reds' desire to win. Local
and 4 to 1972 rhari'ipion Vinny sports writers questioned
Giles of Richmond, Va.
Drawing a bye were whether,· perhaps, some of
the high-salaries Reds under
MitcheU camp of Colwnbus long-term contracts were
and Lance Schneider of ·
feeling a bit too comfortable,
Cincinnati.
contributing to the slump.

Howsam has 'pow-wow' with players
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - For
the first time since 1966, Bob
Howsam, vice chatnnan of
the board of directors of the
Cincinnati Reds, met · with
players Tuesday as the Reds
battled to recover from a
horrendous slump.
.
Howsam, who built the
Cincinnati teams that won
consecutive World Championships in 1975 and 1976,
made an impromptu trip
from Colorado and met with
Reds players in the clubhouse
before the S-4 loss Tuesday to
Plttaburgh.
"Originally,"
said
Howsam, "I hadn't planned a
trip here untll Sept. 10 when
our annual meeting of scouts
. and area supervisors Ia held.
But I decided to make the trip
after thinking about the
things I ~eard after chatting
with Dick (Wagner). I
wanted to find out what was
going on ... be here and !lee If
there was anything I could do
to help. The team hasn't
played as well as It can.
"But," he added, 111 stW
feel It la the best club in
basebaU.!'

Red manager Sparky
Anderson and his coaches
didn 't sit in on · Howsam's
meeting with the players.
And ·Howsam hastened to
explain why before anyone
had a chance to penni! his
imagination to run wild.
"I've been involved in a lot
of businesses," said Howaam.
" And from past experience
I've found no one will talk
, when the boss is there."
Howsam wouldn't go into
detail in relating what transpired during the meeting.
"I've asked the players not
to say anything apeclfic about
our· discussion so I don 'I feel
as If I should," he said.
"But," he added, "I was
pleased with the meeting. I
had a good feeling because I
was among friends. "
Howsam did admit such a
meeting was more than a
little unusual.
"The only other time I held
a meeting with players was
back in 1966," he said. ,
That's when Howsam was
general manager of the St.
Louis Cardinals.
"I wasn't there to

Six Ohio golfers advance
EDISON ,-N.J. (UPI)- Six
Ohio golfers, including Ohio
Stale standout John Cook,
wm first-round victories in
the U.S. Amateur tournament
Tuesday:
Fifteen Ohioans entered the
tournament which winds up
Sunday. Seven others lOili
their matcbes and two drew a
bye.
Cook defeated Joe Malench
of Edwardsville; m., 6 and 4.
Also winning were Doug
Hanzel of Chardon who
defeated George Zahringer of
Port Washingtoo, N.Y., 3 and
I; Leon Chlll of Columbia
Statton, wlto defeeled Robb
Pomerantz of Des Moines,
Iq!"&amp;. \-up; Bub Cooley of
Athens,
who defeated
Thomas Gray of Prescott,

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he said without elaborating
upon the brief remark.
"Some of the things pointed
out," he added, " showed why
we have some negative
aspects."
But since Howsam doesn't

criticize," said Howsam. HI
felt if some ideas of the
players were expres~ed it
might be helpful.
According to Howsam "a
ball a dozen players did
speak up."
"It gave me an in-sight,"

Smal Engine Sales &amp; Serke

498 Locust St.

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) The California Angels
Tuesday began mailing
applications for American
League playoff and World
Series tickets to season ticket
holders.
If the Angejs, no.w second
behind Ka!lSU City in the
American League West ,
should win the dlvlslm, they
would host the first two
games of the playoffs with the
East champions on Oct. 3and

(

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LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Bill Webb was named track

and field coach at Cal State
Northridge Tuesday.
Webb, 29, has coached field
events at Southern Illinois
University for the past two
years. He ill replacing Cliff
Able, who resigned Alii!. 8 to
coach track and field at Lnng
Beach State.
· ·

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Sport Parade : ;

1

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
•

NEW YORK (UPI ) -The race Isn't always to the swift.
Sometimes, the runnerup gets lucky and winds up tbe winner
by default, which is how the New York KnickS fi118Uy cornered
the kind of center they 've been trying to sign . for years in
seven-fook&gt;ne Marvin Webster.
Hedilffi'l come cheap, costing $3 million over five years, but
In the current market for basketball players, that 's a relative
bargain. At least the Knicks think so, and they're the ones
shelling out the money .
Only three years in pro ball, the 26-year-old Webster already
is regarded ooe of the better defensive centers in the NBA.
Last season, he was a workhorse for the Seattle SuperSonics,
dominallng the boards in the final championship series even
though the Washington Bullets eventually won the title. At tbe
cooclusion of those playoffs, Webster became a free agent.
With Larry Fleisher, head of the NBA Players Association,
representing him, Webster began listening to the offers.
tntimately, it came down t.o only two teams, the SuperSonics
and the Knick8. Dollar-wise, their offers were comparable and
that being the case , Webster had no difficulty making his
decision.
He would stay with Seattle.
Fleisher informed the Sanies of Webster's decision and last
Thursday morning he c&amp;lled Mike Burke, President of the
Knick8, and told him the same thing .
But then something happened.
The "understanding " Webster and Fleisher bad, or thought
they had , with the SuperSonics turned into a
misunderstanding.
None of the pl!l'lies involved cared to be specific about what
caused the breach between Webster and the Sanies.
Fleisher turned back to the Knicks.
He called Burke back Friday and told him something had
happened in the negotiations with tbe Sanies that Webster
didn't like .
"Is your offer still on the table ?" Fleisher asked Burke.
"Yes," sald Burke.
Whereupon, Fleisher and the Knicks' attorneys negotiated
all last weekend and Webster finally signed with the New
Yorkers Monday night.
·
At Tuesday's news conference in Madia&gt;n Square Garden,
where Webster posed with Knicks' Coach Willis Reed, he said
he decided to sign with the KnickS because "they offered the
truth, II

The Sanies, Webster elaborated under questioning, had
''reneged on a promise.''
"My decision wasn't based on money at all, although I
consider myself a good ballplayer and feel! should be paid that
way," he added.
Among those present &lt;:Tuesday were Sonny Werblin,
president of Madison Square Garden; Knicks' General
Manager Eddie Donovan and Knick players Bob McAdoo,
Spencer Haywood, Jim McMillian and Toby Knight.
Werblin confirmed Webster would be tbe highest paid P.layer
on the team and said the Knicks had not yet decided on tbe
terms of compensation to Seattle. If the two teams can't agree
on those terms, Larry O'Brien, the NBA Conunissioner, will
have to ste p in and decide.
"We asked the commissioner what he intended to do and be
said he would decide after we signed Marvin," Werblin said. "I
imagine the commissioner wUI be fair . I don't think be wiU
break up the Knickerbockers."
Haywood, one of tbe Knicks' ·forwards, looked a!Jlutely
delighted with \be oddi.U.on o1

DENVER {UPI) - An
attorney for the Orange
Crush soft drink firm
indicated to a federal court
judge Tuesday he doesn't
expect tbe Denver Broncoa of
the National FootbaU League
to
make
a
repeat
perfonnance .tn the next
Super Bowl game.
Chuck Laff, a lawyer for
Crush International, made a
court appearance In a lawault
between tbe football team
and hla !Inn. The dlapote
involves a disagreement over
"Or- Crush" the name
the NFL team uses to
deacrlbe Ita defensive unit

w-, -

adml\ted 1tro - •·

"I've played nine pro seasons, but never with a center," he
said. "I mean a big center like Marvin. I need to be in a
championship atmosphere and hi., corning here gives us that
kind of atmosphere .. "

Sports briefs •••

4.

W~kinson

Ariz ., 2 and I ; Jeffrey
Jotmson of Mansfield, who
defeated Robert J_ Heath of
stlllwater, Okla., 2-up and
Robert Fairchild of Shaker
Heights who defeated Chester
Sanok of Clifton, N.J., 4 lin 2.
Ohioans who lost Included
Jeff Goettman of Springfield,
who dropped a 1-up decision
to Douglas Clarke of La Jolla,
Calif.; Louis Moore of CincinGeorge Foster disagreed.
nati who lost 6 and 5 to James
"When things go bad, there
Dee of Ridgewood, N.J.;
is
going to be a lot of
Patrick Delaney of Findlay :::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::· criticism," said Foster, who
who dropped a !:Up decision ·
had two of the Reds' four hits
to Kalua Makalena of
APPOINTSCO~rrrEE
Tuesday. "The thing is to try
Schofield Barracka, Hawaii;
CINCINNATI . (UPI) not to \a It penarate you as
John Dewey o1 Fremont, who
University of Cincinnati an individual."
lost 3 and 2 to Alton Duhm of
President Keary Winkler
Then there was a report
Los Angeles; Jeff Mawhorr of
has appointed a special that catcher Johnny Bench
Shelby who lost 6 and 5 to
committee to study alleged labelled Anderson a "low-key
John Pallot of Coral Gables,
NCAA manager,'' a remark that
violations of
recrultlng rules by lbe Bench said Tuesday was
university.
taken out of context by one
Winkler created tbe Cincinnati-based writer.
special committee In lbe
"The man has been good to
wake of disclooure tbe me for nine years.· He's
university's basketball and always taken the criticism
TOKYO ( UPI) - Sadaharu
lootball re&lt;ruiUng prac- and given us the comOh smashed the 799th hOOJer
tices are subje&lt;ts of an pliments. A man that 's been
ol his :!G-year career Tuesday
o'lllcial inquiry by tbe that good to me, I'm not going
as the Yomluri Giants beat
NCAA. Most of 40 to try to blast," said Bench,
the Yokohama Taiyo Whal..,
allegation• under study visibly upset at the treaUnent
~1. in a Central League pro
concerned lbe basketball of his remark.
baseball game in Tokyo
__
program.
"He has treated us like
Tuesday.
At a football luncbeoo, professionals. We've been
The 38-year-old Giants'
Wlniller uld the university . taking advantage of it. And
firs! baseman needs one
has been asked to make a because we've been taking
more homer to achieve his
confidential lnveatigaUnn advantage of it, I said I
announced goal of 1100 home
of "certain aUeced 'matters thought we ought to have our
runs by the end of !hill season .
relalfnl! to tbe lootbltll aad butts kicked . We should do it
Oh topped Hank Aaron's
basketball programs."
to ourselves, " said Bench .
major l..gue record of 755
Winkler ufd UC wW
In the visitors' dressing
homers last year. Tuesday's
report Ita flndhtga to lbe room Tuesday, Anderson's
homer was Oh 's 33rd this
NCAA
Nov.
3.
counterpart on the Pirates
year.
''Under
NCAA
was warning fans not to cross
procedures, It Is Inap- off the Reds' chances this
PORTI.AND, Ore. (UPI)propriate for tbe university year.
Portland State University
to mate any farther
"The Cincinnati Reds are
Tuesday named Wendy
comment prior to lbe ol- in the pennant race as much
Hawley, an a.!Sislant coach
flclal NCAA staiement," as anybody, " said Pittsburgh
last season, as head coach for
Winkler uid.
manager Chuck Tanner,
women's basketball.
Former UC football puffing delightedly on a
Hawley, 'II, replaces Karen
coacb Tony Maaon said lbe cigar. "I'll tell you why : The
Morgan, who resigned tbe
inquiry "us aomelblng to Reds play San Francisco and
position early thla summer.
do with somebody stlU at Los Angeles yet, the teams
UC, so I won't elaborate they have to catch. Don't
except
to uy It's very think for one second they're
ONTARlO, Calif. (UPI) illlignlflcant.
Tbe NCAA not in the pennant race .
Tom Sneva of Spokane,
clitlml
a
player
wu on
Wlish., with a fast lap of
campus
practiclq
011 bll
198.057, was the the quickest
own
before
be
enroUed.
of four ~Ivers to better the
190 mph mark Tuesday as Wlutt Uppeaed WU be (lbe I
practice began for Sunday's player) came to wateb lbe
spriDI game and did
California 500.
aamethla&amp;
afterward.''
Alao over 190 mph were
Gale Catlett, former lJC
· Johnny Rutherford ol Ft.
Worth, Telias,in tbe Citlcorp basketball coach now
McLaren Coaworth with a CMcblq at Weal Vlrglnht
lime of 193.44i7; Bobby Unser University, laallted be IIIIa
not brotea NCAA raleo aad
ol Albuquerque, N.M., in the
aaaerled:
"H .aybady uya
Arco Eagle Cosworth at
anytbtnc
dlflerent, tbey
192.489, and Damy ~als of
lylq."
are
Carlst.d, Calif., In the
lnteracope PCB Cosworth at
19l.IIU.

~m

6~'

Tri-County
Sport

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CHICAGO (UPI) - The
Ollcqo Black Hawlta have
cut their ticket prlcea fer the

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reductlcllll rqtnc from DO
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5 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Awl . ~~. : ..•
4- The Daily Sentinel, r,!idilleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 30,_1978

Yanks, BoSox continue winning ways
By BIU MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
The inevitable jokes about
the futility of the AL West

peMant race are making the
rounds - for instance,
" Suppose they gave a
pennant
· race and nobody
..

won ?"

place Chicago White Sox for
Come October, somebody th eir fifth loss in seven
has to win be dragged into the games. And the secood_-place
playoffs, but Tuesday night California Angels blew a 4-3
the cootenders were once decision to the New York
again losing with a flourish . Yankees in 11 innings - their
•••
• • • 'I
•
•
•
• I
First, the division lealling fifth straight loss - after
•• ••• •• •••
Kansas City Royals were sending the game into extras
drubbed, 9-3, by the sixth· on Joe Rudi's two-out ninthirining home run.
And remember Texas Rangers, who suddenly foWld
Ma jor Le.a9ue Stannclings ,
Sm it h, SD 32:
themselves back in the race
By United Press tnternationBI
Ameriun League : LeFlor e,
earlier
this week? Alas, they
Nil tlona l League
De t 59 ; Cruz, Sea 46 : Di lon e,
East
·
•
· too were beaten Tuesday
Oak ·44 ;- W i lls , Te M 42 : Wilson ,
w. L. Pet. GB K C 35.
.
dropping back to .500
Ph il a
70 59 ;543
Pitcr.llig
Ch ica go
66 b4 .508 4'1,
(65-65)
with a 4-1 loss to the
Victories
P ittsbrgh
M 64 .508 4'r.z
National LU'IIUI : Bl ue, SF 16SP.orts Transactions
AL
Ea
st cellar-dwellin g
Mont r esl
61 71 .462 }0 1 · ~
7 ; John.' LA and Grimsle y, M11
By Umted Press International Toronto Blue Jays.
St . L ou is
57 74 .435 14
16-9 ; N•ekro, At l 16-14 ; Perr y,
Tuesday
52 79 .397 19
New York
SO 15 -6 : Hooton , LA 15-8
Don Kessinger doubled
Pro Football
West
Americ•n Leaq_ue : Gu i ctr_y
Atlant a - Signed li neba ck er home two runs in the seventh
W. L. Pet . GB NY 18-2 ; Flanagan , BOlt 17-11 ; Gar th
Ten
Napel ;
waiv ed
Los Ang
78 54 .591
irining and . Lamar Johnson
Caldwel l , Mil 16-8; Tanana . Cal l inebacker Ron M cC artney .
San Fran
17 55 .583 I
16 -9 ; Pal mer , Bait 16· 12.
Baltimore Wa i ved de f en · knocked in two others with a
Cinci n at i
71 61 .538 7
E1rned Run Avenge
siv e tackle K en Nova k, w id e
San Diego
69 64 .519 91' 2
( Bu~d on 126 innings pitched)
r eceiver Dext er F easter an d pair of singles to pace the
Houston
62 69 .473 15'12
Nat1onat Lttague : Vuc kovich , fullba c k L arr y Watk ins ; r e. White Sox · win over Kansas
Atlan ta
58 73 .443 l'l l/2 St .l
2.29 ; Swan , NY 2. 40 ; clldled waivers on defens i ve
Tuesday ' s Resulh
Rogers , Mt! :2.47 ; Blue , SF 2.58 ; back T im Baylor and lineba c k City.
ATla nta 4, Chica go 3
Knepper , SF 2.69 .
er Calvin O' N ei ll .
" I still think the Royals will
Pi t ts b ur gh 5, Cincinn ati 0
AMerican League : G u idry ,
Buffalo . Wa i v ed kic ker win the division bec-an~P nf
HoUston 6. 51 . L OUiS 3
NY 1. 77 : Matlac k , Tb 2.26 ;
Tom Dempsey . lin eba cker Joh n
•

•

•

•

I

Sports

transactwnSnight,

Ph i la del phia 9, Sa n Diego S
Los Ange l es 4, Mont real 1

Caldwell , Mil 2.4l ; Palmer ,
Ba ll 2 .59 ; Go l tz , M inn 2.73.
Strikeouts
National Le.Jgue : Ricnard
Hou 244 ; N iekro, All 205 ~
Seaver , Cin 169 ; Montefusco:
SF U6 ; Bly leven , Pitt and
Blue , SF 145 .
Ameri.can Lugue : Ry an , Cal
20.5 ; Gu 1dry , NY 199 ; Leonard,
KC 1.11.5 ; Flanagan , Bait 139 :
Kra'o'ec , Ch i 124 .
.

San Francisco 2, New York 0
Todav ' s Probable Pih:hers
{All Times EDT )
Ne w Yo rk (S wan 7-5} at San
Fran cisco
( M ontefusco 9-51.

•LOS p .rn .
Chica go
( Burris
5 -8)
at
At lan ra (McWil l iam s 6·0 L 7:35
p .rn .

Pitt sburgh ( Rook er 8-9 ) et
Ci ncin n ati ( Mos kau 3-4 ), 8 05
p .m .
St . Louis ( For sch 8 15 ) at
Houston I N iek r o ll · lO L 8 : 35
pm
Ph il adelphia ( Ler ch 8-9) at
San D iego ( Perry 15-6 ). 10 p.m .
Mon t r eal (Fryman 7-8) at Lo s
Ang eles (Su tt on 12-lO l. 10 : 30

Major League Results
By United Press International
National League
Chi
102 000 01)0- l 7 I
Atla
000 001 lOx - 4 9 a
Reu5chel.
McGlothen
(7) ,
Sutter
(8 ) , and
Blllckwell ;
Solomon ,
Garber
( 8)
and
Bened ic t. Nolan . W- Solomon ,
4-4 . L - McGiothen . 4-2. HR Atlanta , Matthews (1 5 ) .

p m.

Thursda y's Games
Cinci at St. Lou is, n igh!
Montr eal at San Diego, n igh t

Phbg h
.102 000 011 - 5 10 0
Cin ci
000 000
0 40
Blyleven and Ott ; L.!Coss ,
Sarmi ento 17). Borbon (9 ) and
Bench . W - Bi y leven , 12-8. L LaCoss, 3-5. HR - P itfsburgh,
Stargell (20 ).

ooo-

Am er i can League

East

Bost on
New Yor k
Milwau ke
Det r o it
Ba lt im re
Clevelnd
Toronto

W. l . Pet.
83 47 .638
75 54 .58 1
75 56 .573

GB
7'11
8 1• 1

7l 58 ' 557 JOih
72 58 .554 11
56 74
54 79

WEST

St l
000 200001 - 3 94
Hous
Oil 00 1 03x- 6 10 0
Vuckov ich, Lopez ( 8 ) and
Sim mons ;
K.
Forsch
and
Boc h y . W- Forsch , 8·4. L vuckov ich , 11-10. HR St
Lou is, Sim m ons (18 ) .

.4 31 27
406 301'?

.w. l Pet.

GB

Kan City
70 60 .538
Ca lif
70 63 ..5 26 "1112
Te)(as
65 65 soo 5
Oa k!and
O'J 77 . 46 3 10
M 1ne sota
57 75 .4J 2 14
Ch,ca go
56 74 .431 1-4
Se att le
49 82 .374 71' ~
Tuesdav ' s Results
Boston 10, Seattle 5
Ba lt imor e 6, Oakland 2
Milwaukee 6, Clev eland 0
New York 4, Calli 3, 11 inn s.
Detroi t 4 , M innesol a 2
Chicago 9 , Kan sas C it y 3
Toronto 4, T e•a s 1
Today ' s Probable P i1chers
(All Times EDT I
Tor on to \ K irkwood J . l and
G ar vi n 4-\2 1 at Boston tEc.ken lev \ S"S and Wrlgt\t B-2 }, 1 , 5 : 30
P m.
New Yo r k (Guidr y 18-1) a t
~al f imore
( Flan aga n
17 -11 ).
30 p .m .
Milwaukee \Ca ldwel l 16-8 ) ar
Clevel and ( PaKton 9 7 ), 7 · 30
p m
Ch icago ( Barr ios 8-11) at
Kansas City (Gura 11 4 ), 8 : l0
P.m .
Thursday ' s Games
"' ew Yo rk at Balt imo r e , nighl
M ilw at Cleve land , n igh t
M innesota at Detr oit, n igh t

Ph i l a
112 040 010- 9 ll 0
San Doo
300 000 002- s '! 1
Rutnven and Boone ; OwChin ·
ko . O ' Ac quisto (4 ), Lee (5) ,
Shi r ley (8 ) an d Tenace, Sweet .
W- Ruthven , 12 -9 . L -Qw chin ·
ko , 8· 11
H~ - Ph i ladelphia .
Martin (91

Mil

010 000 000- 1 6 1
000 310 OO)C - 4 7 2

LA
Dues. T w i tche ll 15 J. Ga"rman
(6 l and Carter ; John and
Ferguson , Oates . W- John , 16-9.
L - Dues, 5-6. HR - Los Angeles ,
F erguson ( 13).

N.v.

ooooooooo-o n

·San Frn
100 001 OOx - 2 6 0
• Hausman ,
Lockwood
181,
Bernard
(8 )
and
Stearn s ;
Knepper ~ nd Tamaroo. WK. nepp er , 14-9 . L-Hausman , 2·
3. H~ - San F ran c isco. Dwyer

Major League Leaders
By Uni1ed Press International
Bat1ing
I Based on lSO at bats )
National League
GAB. H. Pet.
Bu rroghs All
1'15 407 128 314
Parker P it
117 462 14.5 .l13
Madlock SF
96 353 110 .l12
Smith LA
112 397 123 .310
Cla r k SF
128 48 1 148 308
Bowa P hil
124 5 18 158 305
Wh itf ield SF
121 395 119 .l01
Rose Cin
Ill 547 164 .lOO
Cruz Ho u
125 466 140 .300
Conc pcn Cin
126 470 139 .29 6
Howe Hou
117 4 16 123 296
Wa1son Ho u
115 395 117 296
Am erican league
GAB. H. Pet.
Ca r ew Mm
125 472 158 335
R 1c e 8oS
130 543 176 324
Ol 1ver Tex
103 d07 128 .314
Pmi el la NY
99 l56 110 .309
Roberts Sea
106 364 112 .308
Yaz Bos
110 399 120 .301
Munson NY
117 d93 148 .300
Rey no lds Se
119 435 1l 0 .299
Lynn Bos
118 4ll 129 .:299
'Wh1l k.Cr Oet
113 401 120 ,299
H o me Run s
N ational Lea gue : Foster , Cin
30 Luzi n ski . Phil 28 ; Smith, L A
17 , Dawson , Mtl and Pa r ke r ,
P111 23 .
A m er ican L eague : R ic e. Bas
J.J . H1sle and Thom a s. M il '19 ;
Baylor , Cal 27 , Tho r nton, Clev

26
R uns Batted In
N at ional League : Fos t er . Ci n
96 , Gar vey , L A 90 , Par k er , P itt
and Cl ark , SF 88 ; Smi t h , LA 85 .
• Am er ic an L «; agu e : Ri ce , Bos
111 ; Slauti , Del 104; H isle. M i l
95 . ThOrnton , Clev SS ; Thom p son , Det 82.
Stot en Ba se s
N a t ion al Le ag u e : M oreno .
Pi ll 56 ; L ope s, LA 38 , T av era s.
R ic hards , 50 33 ;
Pitt 34;

( 4 ).

AmeriCiln League
Sea
• 11 0 01l01 1l- S1 2 4
Bos
•fl O OSO 00)1 - 10 12 I
Mc Laughlin , Abbott (2 ), Todd
( Sl
and
Plummer ;
Drago,
Burgmeier (]} and F isk . WDrag o, 3 -4. L - McLlluQhl in. 2-5.
HRs- Bos ton , Scot t ( 11 ) ; Seatt le, Re ynolds ( 5 ), Stein ( 4 ) .
Oak
000 001 001 - 2 B 1
Bait
004 200 OO x- 6 8 1
Norr is, Brober g {3). Sosa ( 6 )
and Rob inson ; D . Mart inez and
Dempsey . W -;--M art inez, 11 -10 .
L - Nor r is , 0-2. HRs-Q ak1and .
Gr oss (7) , Cart y (25 ); Bat .
li m or e. Da uer ( 6 ) .
M il w
00 1 230 DOO- 6 8 0
Cleve
000 000 ooo- 0 7 2
Replo g le an d Mart jne z ; Wise,
Hood (5). K ern (7) , Spi llner ( 9 )
and D 1a 2. W - Replogle, 7·2. L W ise , 9- 17
HR S-:-M ilwaukee,
Martinez ( l l. Money (10 ) .
( 11 innings)
Ca lif
011 000 001 00- 3 7 0
N .Y .
000 000 210 0 1- .4 7 I
Knapp , LaR oc he (8 ) an d
Down ing ; Bea tti e, Lvl e ( 8 ).
Gossage ( Il l an a Munson . wGos sa ge . 9-10. L ....,...La Roche, 9 ·6 .
HR s- Bay lor {27), Rud i (1.4 1;
New York , J a c k son ( 19 ).

M inn
100 000 1QO- 2 7 2
Det
000 400 OOx - &lt;1 12 I
Gollt and W yn egar ; Wil co x
and M ay . W - W ilcox, 12.8. L HR - M inn esota ,
Go ttz , . 10 9.
Cu bb age ( 8 ).
Chi
100 0'10 204- 'il 11 1
K. .C.
000 100200- 3 6 2
Pro,y , W i I I o ugh b y (7 ),
La Gr ow (Jl and Colbern ; Gale ,
M cGi lberr y (7l, M ingor i (7),
Fo ucau lt ( 9 ) and Porter . WProly , 5 ·2. L - Gltle, 1J. 7.
Tor
102 000 1oo- 4 13 0
Te xa s
000 000 01 0- ~ S 2
Moore anct Cerone ; Ma tl ac k ,
Clev eland (71 and Sundbero . w
- Moore. 6-5. L - Mallack, 12-11
HR s TorOn lo, Ve l ez (7) ;
Te x as. B'!n iQuez (8 ).

Skor upan and defensi v e ta c k le
Bill Dunstan ; p laced r unn in g
ba c k M ike Coll ier on injur ed
reserved ; obta ined k icker Errol
Mann . I i n e ba c ker Randy
McClanahan and w ide receiv er
Mike Levenseller from Oak lend ; r et urned cornerbac k Skip
Thomas , a cqu ired on wa iver s
last week , to Oakland aft er ne
failed h is phys ic a l .
Ch icago ~ Cla imed lineba c k er Doug Becker on waiver s
from Pittsburg h and r eclaim ed
running ba ck M ik e M organ .
Plap~ d cornerba ck . A tla n Ell is
on 1n1ured reserv e li st .
Cincinnat i - Wll iv ed sefet y
· Jerry Anderson , guard Greg
Fairchild , defen sive tac kle K en
Johnson , wide r eceiver John
McDani eL linebacker Ray Phi l l ips , runn ing ba c k Willie Shelb y
and linebac ker Ron Shu m an ;
signed free agent safet y D ic k
Jauron ; c laimed d ef ensi" e line man Dave Pur ei fory from New

England .

Denver
Waiv ed
wide
rece i \ler Steve Senini, off ensi v e
Glenn
H yde
an d
l ineman
lineba c ker Charles Jackson .
Cla imed defen sive back Ma u.
ric e Harvey .
Detroit - Acquir ed offens i v e
tackle Brad Oates and r ece i ver
Gene Washington . Cut f ull bac k
John
Brockington , offens i ve
r~ckle Craig Her t wi g , center
Melv in Mi tchell, defensive end
Da n Gr ay, runn in g ba ck Ken
Call ic utt and def ensiv e ba c k
Mike Burns .
Released p unter
Hou ston Jerrel Wilson ,. corner back Zeke
M oore , offen si ve li nem an Kevi n
Hun t, Quar t er ba c k T om m y
Oun i ven , w ide rece i \le r Johnn y
and
saf et y
Gu ido
D irden
Merk ins ; Plac ed d ef ensive end
Jim Mol on inj ured r eserve . ·
Los Angele s - Pla ced lin e
ba c k er Da v e Nort on and ta c kl e
Gus Coppen s on in ju red rese r

••M ia mi

Wa ived defensiv e
end John Ale x and er .
Minnesota - cUr linebac k er
Ron Ol$0nO!kl and c ornerba c k
David Shaw . Clai med defensi ve
lineman L yman Smill"l and
linebac ker Paul HMr is .
New En gland Released
corneba c k Bob How ard , l in e
backer
Tim
Peterson
and
defens i ve end Dave Pur ei tor y .
Waived ri gnts to 11neba ck er
Pet e B.,rnes and runn ing ba c k
Jess Ph i! I ips , neit her of whom
sh owed u p a t t r ain ing cam p
th is season .
New Orlean s ~ Obta ined
v eteran ~neback e r F loyd R ice
from Oakl and .
New Yor k Giant s - Wa ived
safety Cl yde Pow ers. center
Karl Ch and ler and r eser ve
linem an Bill E ll en b ogen ;
placed wide receiv er Br ian
De Roo on injured r eserv e.
Oakland Wa i ved corner .
ba ck Maur ice Har vey , place d
r unn ing ba c k Der ric k Jen se n on
iniured r eser ve .
Pt1i ladelp hia ~ Wa iv ed
punter M ilch Hoop es ; rea ctiva t
ed punter R ic k Engl es.
Pl ac ed
on
Pi tt sburgh
wa Iver s I i n e b a c k e r Doug
Bec ker , guard Joh n H ick s an d
lhr ee un iden t i f ied pla yer s ; r ~
clll! ed
two
pl ayer s whose
names w er e not announ ced .
Seatll e - Pla ced l ineba ck er
Randy Co ff ield , d e f en s i v e
ta ckle Ron Ea st , place k ick er
Joh n Leypoldl , I i n e ba c k e r
Am os Mart in, cor n e r b a c k
Edd ie M cM i ll an , def ensiv e end
Jesse O' Neal and defensive
lineman
Bra d
We irda
on
w aiver s.
Wa sh ington - Cla im ed r un
n ing bac k Jac k Delap laine fr om
Piffsburgh . Wa ived defensi ve
end Dun can M cColl, lin eba ck er
Ruslv Til! man , defensiv e end
Denn is John son and offensive
ta c kl e M ike H ughes
Baseball
Bos ton - Announ ced r ec all ot
outf ie lder
Sam
Bowen and
pur ch ase
of
p itch er s
Bob
Spro w l and JOhn L aRo se f r om
Pa w t uc ket effec t i ve at end of
I L sea son .
Signed
San Fr ancisco p i t cher V ida Blu e to a six -year
con t r acL.
Basketball
Sa n D iego N amed Bob
We iss assistan t coach .
, Hockey
Indianapoli s (WH Al Sold
left w ino K ev in Devi ne outr ight
to Binghamton of the ..«mer ican
Hockey League.

their experience, " said White
Sox Manager Larry Doby.
Paul Blair's on...,ut bases·
loaded single drove in Graig
Nettles with the deciding run
in the Yankees' lith-inning
win over the Angels.
Texas, which remains five
games back , lost. its game
with Toronto by beiD8iimited
to just five hits by
journeyman lefthander Balor
Moore.

And - oh yes - the
Oakland A's, who are fourth
in the division, dropped a 6-2
verdict to the Baltimore
Orioles when Lee May 's tworun homer capped a four-run
third inning.
Elsewhere in the · AL,
Boston bombed Seattle, 10-5;
Milwaukee
blanked
Cleveland, ~; and Detroit
put away Mirinesota, 4-2.
Red Sux 10, Mariners 5:
George Scott belted a grand

Webster joins
Kni'c ks quintet

Besides Haywood, other of
By MIKE SIIALIN
Webster's
new teanunates on
UP! Spurts Wrller
hand were Bob McAdoo, Earl
NEW YORK (UPI)
Marvin Webster's new Monroe, Jim McMillian (stU!
teanunates feel the months of WlBigned), Ray Williams and
searching for that elusive Toby Knight.
"Defensively, it has to help
&lt;lbig man' ' were worth it.
" In all my y~ars in the me," said Bob McAdoo. "I'll
league, I've never ' played be able to take some gambles
with a real center," Spencer because I know that Marvin
Haywood said Tuesday at a will he there behind me. I
JX'eSS conference in which the never could do that befU"e."
Haywood and McAdoo have
Knicks announced the signing
had
to share much of the
of Webster . " Everything
opens up when there's a big rebounding load without the
man in there. All the things presence of a ~~natural"
you want to do, you can do. ·center the past two seasons,
I'm anxious to see what it's and the results haven't heen
good. McAdoo, a scoring
like."
''machine," bas been worn
The
Kpicks
signed
the
1J6.
King, ~. 1\-2, 7-5. In the
down
by opposing centers and
year-old
Webster
to
a
five·
Men's Doubles: Steve Mullins
is
dragging
by the end of the
year
contract,
estimated
at
and Mike Coonan over Frank
Johnston and David Wirth, 6- he tween $500,1100 and $600,000 regular season . A Webster in
2, 6-2; Dan Waugh and Greg · per year. As recently as this the middle should change
Stewart over Larry Hile and past Sunday, the Seattle tfat.
Mark Swain , 6-7, 6-2, 6-4 ; R. SuperSonics were supposed
J . Lemaster and Dan to have their big man reFi glestllhler over jack and signed - but it fell through
when _the Sonics apparently
Tony Fowler, 6-4, 7-5.
reneged
on no-trade clause
The results of the semi·
in
the
contract.
final matches were: Mixed
Seattle had a press confer·
Doubles: Mark and Kim
ence
set for Friday to
Conley over Jack Fowler 8l)d
announce
the re-signing of
Jan Safford, 6-2, 7-' ; Bob
Webster
but "The Human
Trevas and Cathy Martin
over Larry Hite and Bridget Eraser" changed his mind,
"They (the Knicks) offered
Cloat, 6·0, 6-1. Men's
Doubles: Mark and Kyle me the truth and that's all,"
Buchanan over Steve Mullins said Webster, adding that the
and Mike Coonan, 6-1, 6-1; decision was not based on
l&gt;an Waugh and Greg Stewart ·money. "Some things in
over R. ·J. LeMaster and Dan Seattle just didn't turn out to
Figlestahler, ~. ~. 6-3. be true ."
Women 's DOubles : Barbara
and Ann Epling over Lois
Green and Becky Mullins, 74&gt;7~ .
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Travaion Mickey led all the
way Tuesday night to win·the
featured eighth race at Scioto
INDIANAPOUS (UPI) Do)ms by me-half length
The Indianapolis Racers said over My Weasel Turk~
Tuesday they have sold left
Phil Siebold drove the
winger Kevin Devine outright winner qver the mile in 2:01 4to Binghamton of the 5. Forge Ahead was third.
Ameri can Hockey League.
The 3-4-1 combination in the
Devine scored 19 goals and ninth race trifecta returned
had 23 assists in 76 games for $1 ,635.90.
'
·the
World
Ho ckey
The crowd of 4,200 wagered
Association Racers.
$288,552.
.

Announce results
•
of tennis event
'

Bridget and Richard Cloak
who co-&lt;::haired the Ethel
Burdette Cancer Tennis
Tournament , held on the
tennis courts at the Stanley
Evans Athleti c Field in Rio
Grande Friday· through
Sunday, expressed their deep
appreciation for the support
and interest shoWn in this
second
annual
tennis
tournament to benefit the
Gallia County Unit of the
American Cancer Society .
Sev eral local and area
busines s es
mad e
contributions
to
the
tournament sponsored by the
Jaymar Coal Company of
Cheshire, which began on
Friday evening and closed
late Sunday afternoon, with
finals in three divisions.
Those
contributin g
-included Thaler Ford Sales,
Inc., who provided the tennis
balls for the semi-final and
final matches; the Gallipolis
Vault Company for the tent;
SEOEMS for a manned
vehicle at the tournament
site ; Faith Baptist Church for
the tables ; Barbara and Ann
Epling who returned their
cash award in the finals to the
American Cancer Society.
Eliminations
in
the
tournament resulted in the
following competition for the
finals on Sunday : Jan Safford
and An gela King over
Barbara and Ann Epling, 6-4,
6-1 in the Women's Doubles;
Mark Buchanan and Kim
Conley over Bob Trevas and
Cathy Marlin, &amp;4, &amp;4 in the
Mixed Doubles ; Mark and
Kyle Buchanan over Dan
Waugh and Greg Stewart, 6-3,
6-3 in the Men's Doubles.

,,oo

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"P.pt. 2, 1978

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Record Scores aft•r the letters ua•d to lndic•t• ttte T... m.

' LIAGUE GAMES

tories, 76-defeats and 16 ties in 33 years as a head coach. Jove, pie, 33·12. The potent East Carolina Pirates wil( take the
that leaves him trailing only those immortals, Amos Alonzo measure of the Catamounts, :!a-15. And we confidently predict
Stagg, 314 Victories in 57 years, and Glenn "Pop" Warner, 313 the Buffaloes will upset favored Mississippi State by a 22·21
wins in 44 years.
count.
Notre Dame's Irish will give it a good nul in their effort to
Now go on with my fort!east :
repeat as national champs but the feeling here is their
FRIDAY, SEPT. !
schedule is a mite tougher than the one facing Alabama. N.D. Penn St. 33, Temple 12
nwnbers Missouri, Michigan, Purdue, Michigan State, Pitt,
SATURDAY, SEPT. 2
Tennessee and Southern California among its II foes . No easy Alabama 35, Nebraska 17 (N )
Iaski However, should Alabama stwnble, the impressive Irish Arkansas St. 17 , Tulsa 14 ( N)
attack lead by passer deluxe Joe Montana and super runners Tex. Arlington 22, Drake 20
Jerome Heavens and Vegas.Ferguson could carry them to the E. Carolina 28, W. Carolina !5 (N)
top.
.
E. Mich. 33, N. Mich. 21
The Arkansas Razorbacks; who startled the football world No. Tex. St. 45, U.T.E.P. 21 (N)
by walloping Oklahoma in last year's Orange Bowl, return a West Tex., 22, Miss. St. 21 IN 1
solid nucleus of 17 starters. Lou Holtz's club finished tf).l.j) in No . Dakota 31, Morehead 20 IN1 ·
'77 and will be shooting for a perfect record behind their fan· N. Dakota St. 25, N. Arizona 2:l
By Major Amos B. Hoople
laslic
runner-passer quarterback Ron Calcagni.
Su. Miss., 35, Riclunond 15 (NI
Peerless ProflDUIItlcator
Penn
State
's
Joe
Paterno,
possessor
of
an
amazing
12·year
Omaha 21, So. Dakota U. 121 N)
Egad, friends, quicker than that proverbial wink, the col·
recordo
f
112-24-1
for
a
winning
percentage
of
.621,
has
another
SUNDAY,SEPT. 3
legiate football season will be upon us.
typical
Penn
State
puwerhouse.
And,
like
all
the
top
teams,
·
Utah
St.
30,
Idaho
St.
13
And what a grea\ season this promises to be with several of
IN ) Night Game
the perennial powerhouses being "loaded for bear," so to· boasts a great passer-quarterback Chuck Fusina. If the Nil·
tany
Lions
get
past
Ohio
State
on
Sept.
16,
and
Kentucky,
Oct.
speak- and one is loaded with even more talent than usual.
That one would be the Alabama Crimson Tide, coached by 7, the No. I ranking might be theirs.
It 's trite- but. true- it's the Big Two again in the Big Ten.
fui, " Bengals officials
the remarkable Paul "Bear'' Bryant.
,.
And
Ohio Stale and Michigan buth figure to wind up in the Top
reported. "Two mini-screws
The Beat will get the opportunity to Wlload his heavy ar·
were inserted in the area of
tillery in the season opener this week ·against a visiting Ten . With RQil Gerald rWlniilg and throwing and Ron Springs
the break to help it he;1l."
Nebraska club that handed the Tide its lone defeat in 1977. galloping for 1,00Q-pius yards the Buckeyes of Woody Hayes
The
surgery
was
Following that loss, the Alabama boys racked up 10 straight figure to take the loop title with the Wolverines second.
Michigan
draws
100,000
to
every
home
game
and
super·
performed
by
Dr.
Harold
wjns and will make it 11 in a row as they turn back the Corsouthpaw quarterba"k Rick Leach doesn 'I send them home
Kleinert , a prominent
nhuskers, ~17 . But more on this week 's card later.
disappointed
.
But
this
year
the Bo Schembechler fbrces have
surgeon who specializes in
'
.
~
.b.~ f..
• ~- ~ •
~ ~ •
hand surgery, at Louisville 's
In response '!0 the 'inany requests of loyal followers of the Notre Dame to t"Dntend with as well as Ohio State in their drive
Jewish HOSPital.
Hoople Fpotball Foret"Bst, here is our Top Ten for 1978. You 'll for the national crown. The Michigan-Irish clash at South
WUJSVll..LE , Ky. (UPI)
Anderson, who is right
l'efllembei', of course, it was Hoople who gave you Notre Dame Bend, first meeting of these two fine tea1ns in 25 years, will be
one
of
the
season's
classics.
Cincinnati Bengals' handed, was injured in Saturto be No. I in 1977 . And at season's end the Irish were the
Ready, waiting and capable of moving up to the top sput are quarterback Ken Anderson day night's final pre-season
unanimous choice for No . 1in the polls- har-rwnphl .
Southern California, Kentucky, Oklahoma and Florida Slate. underwent successful game against Green Bay. He
!.Alabama
Pius Louisiana State, Texas, Nebraska , Arizooa Slate and surgery Tuesday to repair a is expected to miss the first
%. Notre Dame
UCLA.
broken bone in his right hand. five or six games of the
3. Arkansas
11
Some other !up contests !Ius week find Penn Slate kicking off
The surgery was success· regular season.
4. Penn State
against
Temple,
East
Carolina
bwnping
heads
with
intra-state
5. Ohio State . 6. Southern Cal
rival West Carolina, and Mississippi Stale of the Southeastern
. Kenlucky
Conference entertaining West Texas of the Missouri Valley
OkillhOma
league.
Florida State
MACHINE MODEL 538
Penri Slate will run its win string to nme as it tramoies Tem·
Michigan
i'~·~~~ gets the nod for No. I on the strength of quarter.oil" •
,~~::": Rut ruMing back Tony Nathan and their strong su(&gt;'·'
."' 1
n
cast. And behind them stands the coaching genius
Bryar1t, who has t'Offipiled the amazing record of 273 vit'

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•

THE DAILY SENTINEL

lnternallonal Leaguo
UnltHI Presslnttrnal1onal
W. L . Pel. GB
Charleston
81 53 .604
Pawtucket
78 57 .578 3'12
Richmond
69 63 .523 II
Toledo
67 65 .508 12
Tldewaler
66 67 .~96 14'12
Rochester
66 69 .489 l.S'I:l
Columbus
59 74 .44,4 21'12
Syracuse
48 86 .358 33
TuesdiY 41 Results
Richmond 8, Columbus 3
Toledo 6, Tidewater 4
Pawtucket 10, Rochester 3
Syracuse 6. Charleston 3
Todoy's Gamos
Columbus al R lchmond
Tidewater at Toledo
Pawtucket at Rochester
Charleston at Syracuse
Tllunday's CO.mto
Columbus at Richmond
Tidewater at Toledo
Pawtucket al Rochester
Charleston at Syracuse

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ALL 1978
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NORTHFIEW
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!) - Sailfieet sloshed
through the mud Monday
night to record hill ·fourth
victory of tile season by
winning the featured race at
Northfield Park.
Driver Dou11 Hamilton
drove the three-year'()ld to
victory in 2o06 3-5, three
lengtha ahead of Playboy
Butler. Curry was third.
Southampton Lous, JJ's
Cbicago and Don · Ramon
were the firllt three finishers
in the tenth race to return
1228.20 on . the Big Triple.
combination of 7-f·l.
•
The crowd of ~.571 wagered

84

SALE

PRICED

"Your Chevy Dealer"

PRODUCE
29

'·

AVOID COMING PRICE INCREASES

992-2126

TIDE DETERGENT
Limil 1 Per Customer
Good Only al Powell's
Offer
. 2, 1978

luy Nowl
luy Todayl

BETWEEN

CHOPPED HAM

WIENERS

M

At
TtiYI Vallay
A
TV

SIPT. 15

JACKSON

At
llock Hill
G
IIH

Sopt, I · OPIN

f_

IRONTON

Football

WANTED
FOR

Taslee
Valley Bell

A

I

Vida Blue couldn't be
happier, he has llillned lbe
kind of cmlract he always
bad hoped for.
The cmlracl, with the San
Francisco Giants, 1.1 for lliJ:
years plus four ·· option
years.
Neither the GWita nor Blue
.care to say h01f much money
is involved. · But the IM!st
gueas is Blue - till Giants'
No. 1 pitcher with 18 vlct«ies ·
- wUI receive mote than S2
milllm over a period· of
years.
Let's say I signed for life,"
Blue kidded. "Honesll~, it's
the last cmlractl'll ever lli8n
in baseball. Six nure years
will take me to JliY 34th
blrthday and after that it wW
be a matter of going from
year to year to see if I can ·
still pitch effectively. Both
the club and I are protected In
the option years."
Blue did very Uttle of the
negotiating, leaving that
chore to his . attorney,
Richard Sequeira, and
business agent, Chris
Daniels.

CARRIER~

Trophies and cash prizes

RIB STEAK

GALLIPOLIS

Sept, 1 • MorloHo

SiPT.I

SAN FRANCISOO (VPI)-

Bob Lurie, Giants co·
owner, was as happy with the
agreement as was Blue,

ATHENS .

•

agreement

NEWSPAPtR

Sliced
llOKE

Date

STYLIST

were awarded for first place
and runner-up in each of the
three divisions. Rick Cloak,
currently registered with tlie
Professional Tennis Registry
as a professional instructor,
was the umpire for Sunday
afternoon's final s.
Thi s ye ar 's tournament
was a combined recognition
and salute to Ethel Arthur'
Burdette , who has twice
undergme surgery for can cer
in 19&amp;l and 1967, resulting in a
double mastect omy. Mrs.
Burdette has been active in
the Reach for Recovery
program since its inception
and has served a number of
years on the local ACS
Chapter Board .
Results of Saturday's
matche s were: · Mixed
Doubles: Mark Buchanan
and Kim Conley over Miles
and Barbara Epling, !Hl, ~;
Larry Hite and Bridget Cloak
over Tony Fowler and Angela

PORK
CHOPS

1978 S. E. 0. A. L. Football Schedule and Score Card

long-ter1n

a

ox

. PH~

a

slam to highlight a five-run .I'Wt in over year, tossed a
fifth, powering the Red Sox' seven-hitter for his first
-;ictory that enabled ·them to majU"-league shutout.
maintain their 71&gt;-garne lead Tigers 4, TwiDI ! : .
Rusty Staub doubled home
ip the AL East.
two unearned runs in a four·
indians I, Brewers 0:
Rookie right-hander Andy rwt fourth to up his season's
Replogle, 7-2, backed by [)(II RBI total to 104 and Milt
Money's three-run homer and Wilcox, 12~. restricted
Buck Martinez' flrst home Minnesota to seven hits.

slVINGSl
( HGURE
WHEN YOU FOOD SHOP HERE
j

Thursdoy , Aug. 31 tllru Sept. 2
We Glodly Attopt FoG. Food Sfomp.
Monday lhru F rlday
tll7 :00
Soturday 9:00-9:00
CLOSED
SUNDAY•

Vida signs ·

' MIDDLEPORT, 0.

VAN CAMPS

PORK &amp; BEANS
16 Ol
CANS

4/$1

W/C

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
. 2, 1978

r

�,... .

---·

- ... -.6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,-0., Wednesday, Alii!. 30, 1978

Mrs. Vena Whaley celebrated:. Rollins family holds
82nd birthday on Sunday
•

•'
•

held at Plains Elementary
tie Parker, 90, the oldest
woman attending; Harley
Junes, 83, the · oldest man;
C}11thia White, the youngest
girl and Charles Parker, the
youngest buy . Also receiving
gilts were Marguerite Junes
King, who traveled the farIllest, 1400 miles !rom Cocoa
Beaoh, Fla .; Albert and
Dorothy Parker, children,

Genevieve Guthrie, Mr.

and

RNA to hold Sept. 7 meeting
at Holzer French 500 room .

Mi sses
Bro wn
Lea th er
12 1!, t o 4

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
9 a .m .'-5 p.m.

nominated in the near future

lor the selection ol recipients.
At the meeting next week a
date will be set for a poiluck
and swinuning party to be
held at the home of Kay
McMahon lor.the graduating
class of the Buckeye Hills
Sehoul of Practical Nursing.
The graduates will receive
free memberships in the RNA ·
lor one year. Mrs. Beegle
urges the graduates to attend. Relreshinents will be
served.

omeroy' .. ·
· • ..
~"

Closed Sunday

Uteme song, " Jesus, God 's

welcome was ·given by Mrs.

1 lb . Golden Isle

VAC. PAK BACON ••••••••••••••••••••••• !~·.. 1.39
5

French City

·~,~~~-. 5

1.29

·BOILED HAM .............................
1 lb.

BLUE BONNET...........

69

up
lb
4 PEACHES .....................
:. 49'
30 count Mich.

8

CELERY....................~~-~~39'
6 oz. e_f&lt;JI.;...
pkg
SLICED CHEESE .....~1.29 RED KIWISHES .............
:.19'

11 oz. MORTON'S T.V. DINNERS ••••:~~. 69'
oz . can

ARMOUR TREET. ......................................... 51.19
Del Monte Whole K. or Cream Style
CORN ............................................................. 2/79e
4 Pak White Cloud

TOilET TISSUE. ................ ~.~.~~~........................ 95'
.

FOLGERS COFF.EE ............:.; .................... ~~:. $2.89
Campbell's
TOMATO SOUP. .......................................... 2/99'
12

oz.

Jill "Crunchy

or Cr:eamy

-PEANUT
BUTTER ............................................ 79e
11 oz . Box
POP
TARTS.............................:.........,............... &amp;f.
6 oz . Golden Isle
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE..... :............................. 6/7'1
2

~~. :~·

PICNIC SET
A pre-rally picnic is
scheduled for the Hysell Run
Free Methodist Church picnic
pavilion Friday. A carry-in
luncheon will be served between 5 and 5:30p.m. Sunday,
a church school rally will be
held. Agoal of 90 is projected.
Communion will be served
following the morning wocship servke. The host pastor
is the Rev. Herbert Ailing.
The public is invited.

" America", " Joybells' \
"How Much Do You Love' ';
and " I Want to March

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••••• ~~~. 5 1.09 ·

Reg. Drip Eb . p.

Mrs . Barbara , Mullen
hosted a swuruning party for
members of the Sew-RiteSewing Club at the horne of
Dr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens
\Yednesday.
Attending were Mrs.
Shirley Baity, Mrs. Lenora
McKniijhl Mrs . Carolyn
McDaniel, Mrs . Flo

= ~ . . . . :. . ... . . . . .~~~·. 79"

Along .''

Mrs. Marjorie Bowen gave
the ulferatory prayer with
Billy Brothers and Artie Hunnel taking the offering. The
Bowen, diredor, who talked
ol God's Gift of Jesus t.o the
World.
Mrs. Jenny Warth, devotional leader was presented
along with the class teachers,
helpers and pupils. They included :
Beginners, Kay Corbitl,
teacher, Mary Sheets, Paula
Hall, Susie Heck, Beverly
Will, and Jeannie Robie,
helpers. Buys and girls ul the
class reciting memory verses
and singing songs were Jasoo
Hall, Mandi Sheets, Eric
Heck, Jeremy Heck, Erika
Robie, Ryan Goode, Josha
Heck, Randie Rubie, Amy
Warth, Misty Butcher, Amity
Dixoo.
Primary, Gandy Brothers,
teacher, Kelly Wilson and
Patty Edwards, helpers.
Class members gave
memory verses ' and sang
several songs. In the group
were Amy Brolllers, Mindy
Spencer, Mike Parker, Chris
Dllvis, Joanie Simpson, Mary
Lou Butcher, Valt rine Van
Meter, Robby Fric~ .
Middler, Cordelia Bentz,
teacher with Patty Parker
and Brian Spencer, helpers.
The class presented a pantomime on the bapilsm of
Jesus by John ll1e Baptist,
and sang "This Is My Beloved Son."

Junior class was taught by
Frankie Hunnel with Kathy
Parker, Brian Will and Kevin
Phillips as her helpers. The
class also presented a pan. tomime on the feeding of ll1e
multitude by Jesus. They
sang "Two L.itUe Fishes and
Five Loaves of Bread." Taking part from the rniddler and
the junior classes were Darrin Warth, Billy Brothers,
Danny Hall, Artie Hunnel,
Sieve Musser, Joey Parker,
and Tommy Frick, middlers,
and David Warth, Valerie
Simpson, Jimmy Parker,
Jearutie Van Meter, lind
Laura Horsley, juniors. ·
Secretary for ll1e school
was Laura Ohlinger and helping with the refreshments
was Deanna Van Meter. Linda Pu!Uns was pianist. The
director presented certificates to ll1e teachers and
helpers. Crafts were on
display and the program clooed ·with the t'Uflgregatlon
singing the "Ba!Ue Hymn of
Ute Republic" and prayer by
Mrs. Bentz.

. Dues the comeback of
returnable butUes rnean yoor
neighbor will replace all ::...
bet•r he burrowed !rom ·' "'
Oils summer '

King and children, Jennifer
and Scott, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs . Floyd King ,
Newark ; Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Quinn, sun, Palrick,
McCo nnelsville;
Dana
Howell, Shade, and Mr. and .
Mrs . Karl Grueser ,
Minersville.
A dinner was served and
gifts · presented to Mrs.
Whaley whose birthday is today (Tuesday ),
,

PARK .RESERVED
SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 2ND
UNTIL 4 ·p,M,

Barbara Mullin
hosts swim party

Closing program ol the
vacation Bible school ol the
Enterprise and Flatwoods
United Methodist Churches
was held at Enterprise
recently.
The children marched into
the church to the music ol the
Wonderful Girt ." Flagbearers were David Warth
and Jbnmy Parl&lt;er with
Valerie Simpson carrying the
Bible., Pledges were given
and the childr~n sang

"Middle Upper 'Block"
p
O

Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m .-8 p.m. Fri .

buth the Holzer Medical
Center and the Buckeye Hills
School of Practical Nursing.
A committee will be

RECOGNIZED at the Parker reunion were seated,
Mrs. Lottie Parker, the oldest won\an; and standing,
Marguerite Jones King of Cocoa Beach, Fla., who traveled the farthest, and Harley Jones, the oldest man allen·
ding.
·

Closing program of Bible
school held at Enterprise

RAGGEDY ANN &amp; ANDY

The 82nd birthday of Mrs . was c·etebrated SW)day at 111e
Vena Whaley, Ruck Springs, home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Snyder of Newark.
Attending besides Mrs.
Bahr reunion set
Whaley,
Mr. and Mrs. Snyder
The annual Bahr rewuon
and
children,
Terri and
will be held Sunday at Forl&lt;ed
Kinune,
werv
Mr.
and Mrs.
Run Pari&lt;. In the event of
Bill
King,
Newark;
Mr. and
rain, it will be held at the
Mrs
.
Nat
Prentit-e,
Akron;
South Bethel Church shelter
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Herbert
·Herdhvuse on Silver Ridge.
rnan,
Bellefontaine;
Mr.
and
Descendants of ll1e late
Mrs.
Robert
Grueser
.
and ,
Abr~ham . ami Mary Will
children,
Kimberly
and
Todd,
Bahr and friends are invited
Caldwell ; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
toatlend.

and Mrs. Herbert Parker,
Mrs. Roy Parker and .Iackie,
Helen Parker Hart,

Mrs. Gar! Parker, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill White and Diana,
Lola Griffin, -all local; Mrs.
Gladys Parker and Mark,
and Mrs . Hal Parker,
Parkersburg, W. Va;; Mrs.
carol Junes, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe, Lis~. Teresa, George, Leu Keith, Marion ; Mr. and
Torruny, Francis and Mary, Mrs. Charles Frederick,
the largest family ; and Smithville, W. Va.; Mr. and
Pamela and Lester Parker, Mrs. Sam Davis, Charleston,
newlyweds.
W. Va .; Gail McDonald Mills,
Others attending were Mrs. Eli&gt;:abeth, W. Va .; Juan
Ralph Parker and James, Louise Bittick, Harrunund,
Freda Parker Bean, Mr. and Ind.; and Velda F. Parker,
Mrs. Howard Parker. Mr. Griffin, Ind.

The Region al Nurses tended appreciation to all
Association will - hold its who helped make buth proregular meeting un Sept. 7 at jects a SUCl.'eSS.
7:30 p.m. at the Holzer
Pl~tns are being made lor a
Medical Center, French 500 membership drive and
Room.
members uf the Association
Results ol the swnme•· pro- will be getting into contact
jects wtll be discussed. It was with nurses In the area. More
noted that the cotton candy · participation and new ideas
and the elephant ear booths are needed, it is reported,
were both succc'Ssful and since the Association plans tu
Debbie Beegle , president, ex· start scholarship . funds to

··--·
7- The O.Uy Senltnel;Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednellday, AIIIl. 311. Jl"'"

·43rd Parker reunion
The 43r\l · annual Parker
reunion was held at the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School on Aug. 13. There was
a basket dinner at noon with
Hal Parker givir1g the blessing.
Leland Parker, president,
opened the meeting with
Margaret Parker giving the
secretary and treasurer's
reports. Officers elected were
Leland Parker, president ;
Ted Franklin Parker, vice
president ; Margaret Parker,
secretary-treasurer. Wilber
and Nellie Parker were nam· ·
ed to the committee fur gilts
and use of the building.
Gifts were presented tu Lot-

-·

11

FAMILY OUTING"

OF
CONSJRU(:TION&amp; GENERAL
LABORERS UNION
LOCAL NO. 1353
CHARLESTON ·

Strickhind, . Mrs. Nettie
Boyer, Mrs. Betty Wehrung,
Mrs. Juni Hollman, Mrs. Ann
Browning, Mrs. Martha Hoffman, Mrs. Pandoca Cullins,
and granddaughter, Kristi
Collins, Columbus. and Mrs.
Evelyn Gibnore, who will
bust ll1e next meeting. A
dessert coW'se was served by
Mrs. Mullen.

SHOWS&amp; FIREWORKS- SUNDAY
AND LABOR DAY

CAMDEN PARK
U. S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

Open
Llbor
DIJ
10 To 9
SundiJ

SHORT SLEEVE
MENS .
SHI'RTS

Over The C1lf • Extr1 Lona
Our Ref. '1.• "Pro"

Rt&amp;UIIr
Stock
. To 'I"

$300
..

We'll Be pen Monday Labor Day 10 a.m. To 9 p.m.
r:::::::=;~

I
To

5 Hole Punched

THEME
BOOK

NOTEBOOK
PAPER

Reaul•r 49'

RtiUIIr 11.29

37~

sa~

NOVELTY FRONT

II

POLY /COTTON

TEE
SHIRTS
Perfect For School
Boys
Mens
6 To 11
S·M·L

BOYS KNIT
SHIRTS :
V1lues To 15.99

ARTIFICAL, LOVELY

SILK
FLOWERS

THAT THEY'U NEED!
PEICILS • EIASEIS · CIAYOIS

. Re11llr &amp;9'
Now Thru Mond.,

THEME BOOKS • BIC PENS

2

TYPING PjPER • GLUE .
PLUS MANY OTHER ITEMS

For

$100

Yn • The Lawnt Price Ewer

TENNIS SHOES

PLANTER POTS

Some have padded collara.
Perfect for Gym or School
Wearing.

Unltrt1k1ble Pintle

For The L.lttle Gup And G1ls
'

TUBE SOCKS
Rts Size 4 To 7
'

lt~ullr

71'

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Un-Believable . But True. Up to i"
size. Many vivid colors.

\

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E1ch \

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10' LENGTH

PRICED
AT
SAVINGS··

OUR NEW SHIPMENTS
OF FALL CLOTHING

t

.

$299

JOINT

I

·Friendly Gardeners
finalize show plans

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

.

INSURED TO

.V

. . ..,

sr.~.. 6~.~!o/o

BACK TO
COLLEGE
SCHOOL

An~ In addillon to all lhis .. month~ Of
quarterly income .. . paid on one. two three,
raur. sil , or eigtn year certrlicates. Interest
payable monthly il you desire on ce«lflcates
with face arnoont of $5,0CMlOO m more.
Annoal yielas are efl ective when principal

and interest are lelt ondeposit lor a lui! ~ear.•

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE.

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6%~.. 6;.~!o/o

•C..... MII Dilly ........ 11 ,000.00

8-YEAR CERTIFICATE

7;.!~o/o

~

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

t~J

'·

llf
esT0;-1~ :_

5£~. ' 5.;.~~~o/o

BOYS AND MENS
With Jouer Stripn

4" PLASTIC
PIPE

.\ .... :l,L..

[lJ

$100 . $144

SCHOOL SUPPLIES

PLUMBING SUPPLIES

' · Pomeroy
I Personal Notes I

11
300 SHEETS

do-lt-younelf

$40,000

Size

PLASTIC COVER
40 PAGE

reunion at·Racine Locks

MAXIMUM
INTEREST
SAVINGS?

Final cleanup. While ground
prints and slrlpes. Sizes Sm . to
XL. Polyester.Collon blends.

WHITE, Full.cushlon, with multi ·
5I ripe lop•. Boys f1l 8 to )1 , Mens
Ill 9 lo 15. Now lhru Monday.

Administrator Jo Hun- '"""" to students who qualify
Opening cllly of the Guiding
Hand School will be Wednes- tin~ton said the buses will lk for rt&gt;duced pric-e or free
day, Sept. six, with classes 011 re11ular schedule lor all .
areas ·uf Gallill and Meigs
bet~iruling at nine a.m. The
.
I
'
firlrt dly of sc)lool will be a County, as near to last year's
'fhe 1979 reunion was set for hall~y wilh the students · schedule as pO.sible.
·Descendants of the late Love", Hirarn F. Blaine, "40
Parents are reminded that
the first Sunday In August at returning horne after unch.
Hirlllll and Sarah Rollins held Years Ago."
.
children
must have ima family reunion on Aug. 6 at
Officers ·elected were the Racine Locks picnic area .
munizations
up to date in
Attending the reunloo were
the Racine Locks pit'nlc area. Hiram F. Blaine, president ;
REnJRNS HOME
order
lor
them
to attend. Hot
The program . conuniltee, Catherine Rollins, vice presi- Mr. and Mrs. Tho!Nls Blaine,
Mr. and Mrs, Jue. Gibnore lunch program
will be
Kathryn Blessing, Mary dent ; Clara Capehart, Akron; Jackie Blaine Hwn· and daughter, Shannon,
available
again
with
free and
Grimm, Manford Blessing, secretarytreasurer ; and phrey and Betty, Hud!lon; Walworth, Wise. relurned reduced price lunches lor
presented a program before Manlord Blessing, Mary RonaW Blaine, StevensviUe, home Saturday after spen- qualified students.
lhe noon hour. Prayer was Grimm, and Kathr:yn .Bless- Pa.; . Mr. and Mrs. Mike ding a week here with their
Parents shuuld send rnuney
Blessing and Aaron . '!' parenta, Mr, and Mrs .. Gard·
given and Galllerine Rollins, '· il!g, progrwn currunittee.
for
lunch on Wednesda y and
president, had some
The oldest living descen- Sissonsville, W. Va.; Lewll&lt; ner Wehrung and Mr. and applications will be sent
remarks. This is ll1e sixth dant of Hil'l!m N. and Sarah Blessing, Groveport; Mr. and Mrs. Eha Gibnore.
year since ll1e reunions were Rollins to attend the reunion Mrs. Okey Gapehlirt, Linda
started on Sept. 2, 1973 at the was W. J . Rollins of Letart Louise, Joe, Eddie and
Mecbelle, Colwnbus ; Mr. and
homepla~e where 11\e Ken- who will be 92 on Sept. 29'.
j
Mrs. Howard Polen, Placen·
Traveling
the
farthest
was
neth Rollins family now
resides.
Annabelle Pauley Polen of tia, Galif.; Mr.' and Mrs.
~;.;.,
' The program included Placentia, Calif., great- Lawrence Winebrenner, Colgroup singing of "0 Happy granddaughter of Mr. and umbus; Mr. and Mn. Tim
llBy", ''America'\ and " The Mrs. Hiram N. Rollins. The Knapp, TommY and
Battle Hymn ul the youngest· &lt;lest-endant was Christoptier, L\!lart; James
Republic ," Alice Brinker Mary Grinun, five month old Paqley, Diamond and Plain
S~E
gave "Why God Made Little . daughter ul Mr. and Mrs. City; Mr. IUld Mrs. Hilton
Girls" ; Nathan Rollins, Bert Grimm, Jr., Huntington, (Joe) Rollins and Gar! Under"Why God Made Little W. Va ., a great-great- w\)011, Dryden, N.Y.
Helen Martin, Lisa and ·
Buys" , R8chei and Amy granddaughter of. Mr. and
Arine,
Jessie Tetrick; Allen
1'Gr.mrn, ~~cod Created Mrs. Hiram N. Rollins.
10% OFF ON AU WINTER COATS
Capehart,
Mannington, W.
I
.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Webster
. E-IIIIIIMnlly
P'duley, Letart; Mr. an~ Mrs.
1
Special """"lllments
Charles Winebrenner, Luis,
OPEN DAILY
James and Kemy, Plain Ci·
9:00-5:00
ty; Mr. and Mrs. Manford
Phone 304-112-3312
Blessing, Pt. Pleasant; Mr.
and Mrs. Hiram F . Blaine,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Blaine,
Jr., N. Canton; Mr. and Mrs.
Bert Rolliru;, capron, Ill.;
The Rutland Friendly Columbus on October 4 and 5, Mr. ad Mrs. Jue Rollins, Arny
Gardeners Qlade .final plans and urged more members to and Kara; Belvidere, Ill.; Mr.
fora fall flower show to be attend.
and Mrs. Walter Rollins, Mr.
staged at the Rutland Branch
Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. and Mrs. Gene Moore and
ofllce ol the Pomeroy Bolin, co-dlalnnen lor the Chris, Gallipolis; Flocent-e
National Bank when they met Meigs County Fair Flower Grimm, Colulnbus; Mr. and
at the home of Mrs. Dick Show, thanked members for Mrs. Fred Brinker and Bill,
Fetty recently . Mrs. Bill their entries and help in · Goldie Rollins, Linda
•
Willford and Mrs. Joe Bolin, · staging the event •. Including Meadows, Juli, Joni and Jenco-chalnnen lor the show, Mrs. Ray Lambert, Mrs. ny Clark, Dllvid Ray Barker,
announced classes for the Larry Barr, Mrs. Edwards. A Wilbur S. Baxter, Letart;
show, which will be open to trip to the Ohio State Fair Sharon Brinker, Vienna, W.
the ·public on Friday, Sep- Flower Show in Columbus, Va.; Maggie and Gordon
tember 8 and Saturday, where Mrs. Bulin will be WinebreMer, Syracuse; Mr.
September 9, during regular judging, was finalized.
and Mrs. Robert Taylor, Pt.
banking hours. On Frtday, · Mrs. Judy Hart, a guest, Pleasant .
bank visitors will be invited displayed a large number of
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan
to vote for the arrangements cacti and succulents, each Rollins, W. J . Rollins,
of tbelr choice, to detennine named as to variety, and she Kathryn Blessing, Clara
which will win the blue ril). gave care an&lt;\ culture tips lor Capehart, Mr. and Mrs. Kenbono. Following the closing raising them. She cautioned ·nell) Rollins, John and Nan·
of the lobby at 3 p.m., votes members that cacti can be t'Y, Mr. and Mrs. Ross
wiD be taWed and ribbons easily overwatered, and that Winebrenner, Harry Kl ~
laid, for display to Saturday's while succulents require a ingensfnith, Sharon Rollins
visitors, until the 12 noon llttle more water than cacti, Coates, Letart ; George
cloelng.
they do not need as m,uch as Rollins, Elgin, Ill., Chad and
Classes wlll Include : most other plaqta, since their Kristie Rollins, MWlcie, Ind.;
"School Days, Dear Old thick, fleshy leaves are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Williams,
Golden
Rule
Days," capable of storing ·much Sherri and Paula, Belpre;
• leatllf'\ltll yellow; "When We P!Ol,ii\QU · ., te~spoon of Mr. and Mra. Karl Owens,
Were A Couple ol Kids," a . water per week was the Mlddlepo'rt; Mr. and Mrs.
dealgn staged in two con· recommended amount lor Bert Grlnun, Pt. Pleasant;
talners; "You Were My· Girl cacti. Mrs. Hart said that Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm,
In Calico," leaturin&amp; bright many of the cacti that we Jr., Rachel, Amy and Mary,_
colors; "When You Wrote On purchase in stores have been Huntington, W. Va.; Stanley
My Slate 'I Love You So'" a · grafted to give better growth Shields, Holloway, Mrs. Curt
: dealgn not to exceed six In- and unusual effects. The (Ruth) Rollins, Mr. and Mrs.
· dies; and "I Was Your Baah- variety of cacti, both in size J...eph Rollins, Mr. and Mrs.
lui Barefoot Beau" design and appearance, was great. Robert Dollison, Atwater;
• featuring weathered or drift- Mrs. Hart displayed several and Mr. and Mrs. Dave
. : wood.
• books and pamphlets on the Ogilvie , London.
Mrs. Bob Bishop, voting subject.
delegate to the annual OAGC
Mrs. Fetty was in charge of
convention, reported that the the p~gram o~ 'Plants for
new lltate president elected All L.ilestylea. She noted ~--·, -·--·-"~1
was Mrs. Kate Pond, with that cacti and succulents are
club member, Mrs. Bolin, · Ideal for those with a busy
being re-elected assistant lifestyle, since the care they
I
secretary of the state require Ia minimal. Those I
Mrs.
Mildred
Gamlin
ol
organization. She alao noted who have more time to devote
that the amendment to raise to plant care may wish to Columbus has spent ll1e past
the llt&amp;te dues pallaed. Con- pursue the growth of ferns two weeks here visiting Mrs.
All plans pay the highest interest ra~s
sequently, the club voted to and otber plants requiring Bertha Ganaday, Lincoln
allowed by law and guarantee you th1s
amend Its by-laws to lncreaie more attention. Members Hill.
Lynda Persinger and Sister
dues. Mrs. James Carpenter, responded to roll call by
maximum yield.
.
' club president, was honored naming a houseplant they Sue Ann of Wooster were refor her four-year tenn as would like to have. The t-en! visitors of their grandEach plan is designed for a specific need
state news media cbalnnan. . traveling prize, donated by mother, Mrs. Mary Roberts,
The Rutland Roadrwu!ers Mn. WllHord, was woo by Middleport.
for our customers and is insured up to
. 4-H and Junior Garden Club, Mrs. Bruce_Davis, wlth Mn.
$40,000 by F.D.LC.
sporurored by the FrielHily Edwards wmning the hostess
Gardeners, staged an ex- door prize. Mrs. Fetty served
Pioneering, '78 style: driv·
cellent display on birds, their a salad course to those
Stop in today to learn why our savings
' feeding and other pertinent named, and Mrs. Clair ing croBstown ' with the air
Information, at the state Turner, Mrs. Jack Walker L'Oilditioning busted.
continue to rea.ch record levels.
oonventlon. Club members and Mrs. Blll Kennedy.
Some men putter around
' attending alao were Mrs. Secret pal gifts were
the
house - others spend the
· Howard Birchfield, Mrs. distributed to those with
day
on the golf courle.
GOLDEN PASSBOOK
; lAITY Edwudl and Mrs. special occasions.
PASSBOOK SAVINGS
; Robert Snowden : Mrs.
C.rpenter reported that the
club received an award of
: excellent for Its ointry In the
. Publldty Book Contest, and
•Co.,..... D~ ellllt!MIIIl,OOO.OO
one for the 197&amp;-77 Procram
Book, u weU.
Mrs. Willford, vice •
president - elect, 1111110unced
2-YEAR CERTIFICATE
f :YEAR CERTIFICATE
plana for the PrOcrUlll f~
the coming year. Plana to
continue the -•mal therapJ
progrllll at the local school
w.e made. It wu reported
eC&amp;IU ... 0.., • - 1 1,DOD.OO
•CIIIIIOIIIIMII Dilly ••••• 11 ,000.00
that Mrs. Bolin had ~ed
more bulbs at the Jean Prlter
Memorial Planting at Forest
Acres Par~. A dllclllllon on
the reported plana ro. closing
6-YEAR CERTIFICATE
HEAR CERTIFICATE
the poult were dilcuued,
I
relative tO the poUfbJe
movln&amp; of the club's planfor You We Have A Very
tlnp there, with Mn. Bln:hfleld 1o cbiclt Into plana lor
•C........ OilY • . . . . 11 ,000.00
eC Jl ... hi»' •1111111111111 II .• .•
the park.
Good
Selection
of
Tires In
.I
"
The dub reeetvecl an In·
vltatlon ln1111 the Rutland
Stock loth New and
Garden Club to attlltd and
participate In their flower
lbow on September e, In
Recapped.
1\Udand· Plul wen made
... the club to attend Gar·
Gallipolis, Ohio
.._..., De)' Out to I» held at
aaaii)'INIHaD,- Akron,
01 lepleml»r 10. Mrs.
700 E. Main. Pomeroy, 0.
Ca11M11tll' announced that
J!:ahlbltor's and Jafllt'l
"'· tfl-2101
~ II to be held In

Doll showyou the
route to

1 To 6

TUBE SOCKS

Guiding Hand School opens Sept. 6

'

SPECIAL~

MENS AND BOYS

who. need school infonnation
on mentally handicapped
dtildren should contact the
adJninistrator of the Gallia
County Board ol Mental
meals .
New residents in the county Retardation, phone 36Hl02.

'

,,

• c........ Dlllr •111111111• I 1,000.00

OhioValley Bartk
•

Member FDIC .

�-.

~

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport~Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 30,1978

C~mmittee ch~ges

..• ·&gt;'' 'f •.

By WlWAM E. CLAYTON

WASHINGTON (UP))- A
House subcommittee charged
today the Department of
Energy has kept from the
pu\1lic Indications of . a
possible major gasoline
shortage in the United States
by 1980.
The charge was made by 1
the
investigations
subcommittee of the House
Commerce Committee, as
P,.rt of a report concluding
the department's case for
lilting gasoline price controls
is "unleJ~,med, disingenuous,
ANYONE FOR A SWIM? Old Man River has made his
p-eaence known many times to the folk living on his
shores. This historical picture, furnished the Daily
Sentinel by the Meigs County Piooeer and Historical
Society, shows water at an extremely" high level. Do you

and unpersuasive."

know the location at which it was taken' Last week's
picture was of the I.ronard Priode I..ivery Stable, located
oo or near the PoweU's &amp;!per Valu store and parking lot.
The horses were housed below the preseni ground level.

Governors criticize Carter
By PETER A. BROWN
BOSTON
(UP!)
Midwestern governors upset
at what they said was
President Carter's using
ranchers as " political
pawns" Tuesday convinced
their colleagues to adopt a
harsher critcism of the White
House than originally
drafted .
The National Governors
Association on a voice vote
unanimously adop ted a
proposa l calling Carter's
decision " a severe blow" to
the cattle industry.
On Monday, a milder
resolution was app-oved by
the group 's Agricullure
Committee, but it was
redrafted overnight because
farm state governors - led
by Republican Robert
Bennett of Kansas - thought
it was too mild.
carter recently decided ID
allow 200 million additional
PQunds of foreign beef in!D
the United States in what he
said was an effort to lower
consum er meat pr ices.
cattlemen said the move
robbed them of a chance ID
make back some of the
money they have lost in

had sa id Carter 's recent
statement that he would not
raise the import limit further
was good enough, but he felt·
th e stronger association
positioo was needed.
"Some feel that is enough,
but I don 't think there 's any
harm by saying we don 't
support use of farmers an~
cattleljlen as political
pawns,I' Bennett said.
The r~sol uti on passed by
the go.vernors said: "We
share the president's concern
about c!IIsumer prices and
about coo trolling inflation .
We believe, however, that the
increase ln beef imports will
do litUe to lower food prices
for C&lt;Jnsumers- as shown by
the fa ct that prices at the
meat counter have not
dropped.
11
'1'h.e .increase in import
quotas, in fact, could very
we ll have the oppposite
effe ct , loweri ng livestock
numbers and raising the
p-ice of meat in the future ."
Gov . J . James Exon, [).
Neb ., who heads the
agriculture panel, told the
cooference 's closing session:
"Never are we going to have
success in agriculture if we
recent years.
have government cootrol of
Bermett said some officials agriculture. Allow the free
market system to work..•

Gallia board·
rehires Bahr
$200 ,000 in compensa tory
damages and $100 ,000 in
punitive damages.
Last ni ght, the board
reemployed Bahr on an out·
of-co urt sett lement made

without the final decision of
the federal court.
In his suit, Bahr alleged the
non-renewal was a result of

his activities

10

the local

teacher's association and

that was a violation of
freed om of speec h and
freedom of association as
guaranteed by the fir st
the agreement between at· amendment of the United
torneys in the case that no States Constitution.
The reemployment action
det.ails would be made public.
Actually no outrig ht had been rumored since last
when
board
recommendation for e m· January
pluyment w~s made in the president James Blevins
appointed a legal C&lt;Jmmlttee
Bahr's case.
According to item 2-A of the composed of freshmen board
addendum to Tuesday's main members, Dr. David R.
agenda , " Pursuan t to a Carman and James Hill to
settlement , the board may rev iew pending litigation
wish to grant the following pertaining to the non-renewal
person a two-year limited of Bahr's contract.
Following the non-renewal
co ntract as a second ary
teacher in the Gallia County action a public hearing was
Llca l School District, ef· held jn the Kyger Creek High
fective Aug. 2!i - William School cafeteria on ·May 12,
1976 for the purpose of
Bahr.
Bohr was assigned as a allowing Bohr to air his case.
At the conclusion oE that
Biology and Chemistry II
teacher' at Southwestern High hearing, Bahr through Terry
School. As a ro vi ng in- Lee, fi eld se rvi ce coor ~
structor, he will also teach dinator, asked for reone class of Science and two instatement and transfer to
study halls at North Ga llia another teaching position.
During that hearing, Bahr
High School. Bahr will be
paid 14 cents per mile travel admitted to the reasons given
by the board for his non·
expenses.
The C&lt;Jntract is contingent renewal. The board on May
on tlje signing and approval 17. 1976, again voted 3-2 for
of aU releases by aU parties non-renewal.
Six reasons were read into
concerned:
the
record for the board's
Bahr's contract was not
action.
renewed by the Gallia County
Under Section 3319.11 of the
Llca l Board of Education
composed of James Blevins, Ohio Revised Code, teachers
James C. Mitchell, Bruce S. who have limited or supStout, William Carter and plemental contracts which
Cremeens on April 23, 1976. expire iiJ the current school
The vote was 3·2 with Blevins year must he notified in
writing no later than April 30,
and Mitchell opposing.
In August, 1976, Bahr filed if they are not to be reem·
a damage suit in the U. S. ployed.
Bahr's notification Ap\f23,
· Distri ct Co urt's Southern
Division seeking rei n- 1976, attached with the
statement as a teacher plus reasons ·ror non-renewa],
fulfilled the law .

•

t- "nil l)dy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug
you 've been wan ling to ask for ,
lhlo.ia the day 10 do II.
IIICU (Feb . ZI·Morch Zll
Tasks you tackle toda'r' are
accomplished with ease and
efficiency . You should be able
to lake great pride in the

'

l ·' .

Gall ia County 's Local
Board of Education Tuesday
night in special session,
reemployed William Bahr,
former Science teacher at
Kyger Creek High School.
Bahr was granted a twoyear contract on a motion
made by Dr. David Cannan
and seconded by David
Arrowood . The final hiring
vot e was 4.{). J . E . (Dick )
Cremeens was absent.
No details of the final
settlement were released. A
board spokesman said it was

'.

gas
shortage forthcoming ,,

1; '

r-~------------------------1

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be le11
lhan 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor)
aad must be signed with the signee's address. Names -Y
be withheld upon publication. However, Oli request,
names will be disclosed. Letters should be In good taste,
addressing Issues, not personalities.

9~

... ~.~:---

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Can anyone cut down a tree?

The subcommittee released
a 1:wpage report on the
department's justification lor
decontrol.
Oil and its products were
once under strict federal
controls,
which
have
gradually been · Ufted from
some products such as heavy
fuel oil; heating oil and some
others. Gasoline is ooe of the
few major oil products left
111der p-ice controls. ·
Under a 1975 law, the
Department of Energy must
submit deconlrol to Coogress
for approval. Either house
can tum down the plan.
The decontrol plan for
gasoline first was suggestec!
in. ~rly ·1977 bY the Federal
Energy
Administration,
which later withdrew the plan
for further consideration.
Federal energy officials
compiled data supporting the
plan, and the investigations
subcommittee began an
inquiry into the adequacy of
the official justification for
lifting the controls.
" Unless the Department of
Energy can correct the
defects in their published
analysis, it is difficult to see
1J9w the House could accept a

Dear Editor,
Can anyone cut down a tree if they like or it suits their
fancy'
Aboui a year ago, a member of City Council called to
infcrm us thst the trees on "the corn..- of Mulberry Ave. and
Breezy Heights were blocking the view of traffic when turning
left from Breezy Heights. He said the city may be contacting
us concerning this since the trees are in !root of our hOuse. The
city never made contact.
.
•
In the meantime, we trinuried back some of ihe lower
f
branches of the trees without destroying their natural shape. 1 ,..-1
found it very strange for this type of il complaint to override
the real reason for vision being blocked which is one or two
trucks illegaUy parked in front of our house. No one who has
had the v.ision problem has cootacted us personaUy or through
the city. It is also rather strange that our driveway runs
par aUel to Breezy Heights and we have to pull out the same
way everyooe el.&lt;;e does, yet we can see.
On Sunday morning, August 2'1, we were very dil!mayed at
the fact that someone had cut one of the trees down in the
middle of the night , in !root of our house; We feel that this was
tntally unnecessary and wtong for someone to destroy the tree .
'lhis tree wss about five years old and would be C&lt;Jstly to
repla9e. Trees add value to property and we feel that by
destroying trees, or any other part of landscaping, .the
p-operty is deval ued. We are in the process of determining
·whether the tree is on our property or city property. We have
repaired the tree and are hoping that it will live.
It has been just a litUe over a year since we purchased our
bouse a nd we would like to keep the natural living things that
are on the property intact. We have added several trees to the
p-operty ourselves and do not like the idea of any of them being
destroyed.
I hope the person who took ·the saw to the tree realized that
they not only devalued our property but P,ey could also be
responsible for destroying city property. In either case the
person is wrong in taking it upoo himself to destroy any
p-operty belonging to someooe else.
As far as the trees blocking the view. how can we see to get
out of our driveway yet others can't? It must be their attitude.
We feel that if we had a few old rusty washing machines,
mufflers, car batteries and old junker,~ in our yard or on the
corner, not ooe word would be said an certainly no one would
destroy them or haul them away . It is a shame !
The rest of the immediate neighborhood is upset that this
incident took place and is interested in finding out who and
why ? Anyone having information regarding this vandalism
should con\"ct us or the Pomeroy Police w~o· have filled out a
report and are aware of the situatioo.
From a few who appreciate the environment.
Tricia Hennessy Adleta, Donald Adleta
145 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy

1
decontrol proposal," said of the impact of- decootrol show unleaded gaoollne from \'
Rep. John Moss, D-Callf., ·ral.les aerious questions as to full-Service pumps seUlng
chairman
of
the the credibility of the . within a fraction of the
allowable price.
department," It added.
subcommittee.
The department also
The subcommittee report · A shortage of that
cootended
d~rol would
said "the department had magnitude would ltaeH buost
have
no
significant
withheld information from p-ices up to 40 centa a gaUon
.
environmental
effect.
the public ''that indicaies a If cmtrols were lifted, the
· The subcommittee report
potential major gasoline · rewt said.
disputed that, 8aying it had
·
The
subc&lt;mmittee
said
the
shortage by 1980."
found
· such a large price
department
contends
Internal documents in the
difference
blftween ·leaded
gasoline
retail
prices
were
agency for~ast a )l&lt;liential
shortage of 400,000 barrels a below legal ceilings, so and unleaded guollne that '•
day , the subconunlttee said. decontrol would oot boost motprlsts had a strong ...
incentive to switch to leaded ·•
"The failure of the depart- p-lces.
But it argued that some of gasoline "with the resulting · •
ment to discuss this
potentiaUy grave problem in . the de.partment's own figures adverse effect on the "
environment.''
their published assessments

!Jrought conditions exist
over the weekend which
United Press Jnternational
Most · Ohio farmers are ranged from scattered
sharing in the good fortune of showers to as much as one
abundant rainfall this inch in Van Wert County. But
swruner except lor those in all said it was to late to affect
northwestern Ohio where II their production this year for
lirought has stunted corn and corn, soybean and other
crops.
soybean crops.
·
The Ohio Crop Reporting
"It's the worst looking crop·
h~s
reported
I've seen across the Service
country," said Glem Maddy conditions as "fairly good"
of Fremoot, Sandusky County throughout Ohio - except lor
northwestern Ohio.
agricultural agent.
The reportlpg service
Maddy described the crops
throughout the rrildwest as predicted overaU Ohio
"lush" following a meeting of farmers will produce an
national county agents in estimated 357 mUUon bushels
- of corn, down ooly nine per
Boiae, Idaho.
George Ropp of Van Wert, cent from a · record
the Van Wert County agent, p-oductioo set In 1976.
Soybean production was
said he observed the same
thing stating, "conditions of forecast at 115 .3 million
our area crops scares me." bushels, secood only to last
Bob Cole of Napoleon, year's record crop which Is
Henry County ugent, said dry expected to yield 31 bushels
fields in his county and per acrea.
Wheat yield is now
surrounding areas could cut
corn and soybean ~uctloo expected to be 38 buahels per
·acre with production of 42.7
25 per cent.
Agents reported rain feU million bushels, a little short

work again.

I wooder if any!IIe else ever had this experience.
People wonder why young folks don't take part In lairs
etc. Could this be one of the reasons ?
'
I just had ID ge t this off my chest.
Thank you.- Mrs. John R. Murphy, Pom~roy, Ohio.

help them o-wercome tasks that
appeared insurmountable .

0!1MINI Moy 21-Junt 20)lt" s to

your advantage to be a good
listener .today . Someone wllh
your best in teres ts at heart is
trying to te ll you something to

help 1ou socially .
CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 Your

chances for acquisition look
Quite p romising because of the
res ourcelul manner in which
rou approach a task today .
Follow through on any cleve r

"

:::
Wallace Barr, Ohio State, .
University agricultural .;
extension economist, said ,
. farmers In northwest Ohio "
will lose money. "How much
is a tough questliii" hi! said, "
oot added that no matter how
skillful farmers are they are ~
subject to the weather.
Barr said the demand for
corn should increase liS . a
result of strong domesl\c U8e .
Exports are expected to ..
decrease slightly but If the '
expected U.S. corn crop
materializes, end of . year
carryover will increase again
and up p-oduction by 200 '
millloo bushels.
In an earlier forecast, Barr
. had predicted that a cash
price for corn will be
considerably below the price
support level of f2 per bushel.
He said the break-even
p-ice for most farmers Is
about $2 a bushel and
depending oo their yield per
~ere will eam. or loae IJIIllley
at that price.
,...

1

(NEWS PAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

Be sure to specify birth sign

ftighly receptl~e m ind puts yQu
in an ••cellent position to learn
something new today . Th is
knowledge will enlbie you to
go alter a peraona t goal.

First thing to learn about
operating calculators:
whether the pointy end of the
battery is inserted tu the left
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 221 ,-, or to the right.
not importtnt to show your
strength today . Placing all yo ur
energies on your inner res ol~e
is what will w1n you your prize.

SAVE

CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22·Jon. 111

While doing for others you gain
a gre1t deal of ground today .
You won 't . hav~ to settle for
SII!ICOnd ~est. even thou.gh you
concentrated on some~;&gt;ne

ALL KROGER STORES

OPEN

LABOR
DAY
•Open Saturday, September 2

e111 .

AQUARIUS (Jon. 2D·Fob. 111
People are sensitive to your
needs toda y. If there is a favor

Weekly Specials On
Tht Thints You luy

,.

htrydlly Low Prlc11

GOOD 7 IUU Dl Tl
PROBATE COURT o)i
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ALICE LOUISE
WILLIAMS
PARKER .

EKI'I

or

~

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
tl'lell tdvert.Md 11ems 11 &lt;&amp;Q&lt;ured to be readolf

tor 11M 111

e~cn

Kroger S1ore.

e• ~ eot

u

lt we do ,,m IJI.JI of a" ad ver
tiled olem. - d oft.- "f&lt;IU vov• d lOICe ol &lt;o corl"llJ.Ir• tlll!
!Wn. wf\en I Yitllblll . rlllectu'"IQ ti'le umt1 t.a vrnos o r a ra on
Ctltcl WfiiCfl W~llrltrtll ~ou TO pur chase 1 ~ a d...er1 rsed rlfl"""
It 1"-t ldv.rtrMQ pi'ICI Wlll"lon J0 OIVI
tp~erfltally notMI '" th11 ld

DECEASED

case No . 2'2,456
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

n1 Midnight

On Thousands Of
Other Items In Till
Store.

Mut Often.

•Opei S1nday, September 3
9:00 nl Midnight
•o,.n Monday, Siptember 4
1:00AM And Remain Open 24

SAVE MONEY AT KROGER

HounA hj.

llt(l" ClOSID S.ATU.OAV MIDH.C.Hl Till ..... \ UNOA V

OF FIDUCIARY

On August · 11, 1971, in the
MilO I Countv Probate co..,rt,
case No . 22,456, RIchard Lee
W i lliams, 1013 Millerton
Or lvt. centerville , OH •s•s9
was appo inted Eucu tor ol
the estete qf Al!ci Loul~e

Ill 23 ,

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

COP'tltGHT 1971 - lHI IIIOGU CO . l"fiMS ANO HICII
GQ00 SUNOA"f AUGUST 27 THIU UPT. 2 .. 1971 IN
OAll!POliS ... NO POMIIOV . WI IIUIVI lHl liGHT TO
UMtT QUANTiltiS. NON I SOlP 10 DIAliiS; .

M1nn 1ng o . Web!lrter
Pro bite Judge -Clerk
If) 6, 3tc

30

': -

= ::

~- -- -

.

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x .
diam•t•r 10" on largest erid , $8 .
. per tor~ . Bundled 1lab. $b per
ton. Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co .; Rt . 2, Pomero)l 99 2·'2689 .
nMIEA . POMEROY .For•sl Pro·
ducts . Top price for standing
10w tim bet . Call 992· 5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1·446· 8570 .

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A. IN!IPE,CTI!C

Mixed
Fryer Parts ..... lb.
Old

UMIT4 PIGS.

bed•. iron brt'C11 , deskl , etc..
c:omplete hous.holds . Write
M .D. Miller . Rt . -4 , Pomeroy or

WE PICK up junk auro bod ies buy·
lng junk can , 1Crop iron, bot·
teries ond metol1 . Rider"s
SaiVogt! . SR 12_., Pomeroy .
~2- 54611 .

or

Golden Red
Delicious
·lb.
Apples ....

...,,.~mnaLMrua

USDA

CHOICE

Kroger
Pork 'N'
Beans ................ ..

KIOGEI SHEIIET 01

c·

Y2·Gol
.. Ctn.

mlac.

$
16·01.

Cans

THIN SLiCED

Virginia
Baked Ham

KROGER

YAIO SALE . Sept, 1·2. 6 miles off
Itt, 7 by Meigs Memory
Gorden• . CR32. 49355 Eoglo
f
ttidge·loshan Rd . Dishes, anti·
que furnlfure and lots of other

Lowfat Milk
$ 49~
.
Gel.

lrodtey Pooler residence. 1

mile north of Che1ter. W01her .
drain . tile. table sow, wogon
wheels . · baby furniture . can ·
topoupet ancf misc.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

lWO FAMilY Gor.... Solo. Sopl.
:. 1 MCI 2. 10.6. John ~ock ·a

POME_ROY, 0.
PHONE 992-2156

oiMomtMCiooon.
LA1101 YAID Solo. Am tJICIVIng,

Lowfat

••'13'

r•ldence, Mulberry Helghtt,
,omeroy. • vorlety of
for
Mlo IMI~ng clothot, roocrd

It"''

.•

"

-·..,., -·

.-ythl"'
...... : : g:, ;booka,
-"'
........lnfl, do

.._

mudl mor. . Thurs ., Fri . ond
Sat: Auf. 31 . Sop!. I ond 2. 10
te ;..to. Firat rootl on loft post
Chea..r flrehoute. Follow
~· Roln or "'lno.

Fried
Chicken ..... '--~

r:IOOiitu"

~

. . . . .IOWATII

.J tlr

Tide
Detergen+ ...............
14-oz.
.
1..,.

.

u.............6~·01.
c••
I•

MltltiG.or

v••

ME~TS

LfMn- I Jtl.IASI

~

.

•

'311 _Glr'WI•
......,
$1
l•l•t••· .

...... ....

l11111ttf ......

u.Titeuun

MoterOII ........ .... . Cit •

S449

=~~~THIN
. . . .SLICED
~ . . 3-.~ 199

25• OFF LAIEL

G11fprlde

lilt'

98

$

HiNu 2%

ltomo. Phono 949·2566.
I'QIICH sAlE. Fri. ond Sol: 10-4 .

I'JIIill. I

_ _ _,_,t,.ur.-,~~m.aa .•,,, . . , 1

VARD SALE . Thurs .. Fri. . and Scit .
• mil .. oH Rt. 7 on 1.3. 9 lo $ .
Lots of clothing. set's of
lron11one dishes and lots of

A gal .who iust r·e ad a
• •••
great sale ad 1n

I
I
I

$

YARD SALE . Wed ., Thurs . Fri.
Plant stand , flower po_ll, boby
mottr•s. high c:hoir , Speed
QuHn washer. misc. ht rood
on the !•fl po1t the Post Office
in Clif!on . Fallow 1lgns.

1

I

lLMIT ONI COUPON Pll PAMil y

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

8$
Country
Club
Ice ......

I
I

CGIPIII ~~ $1.51 AltiTIIIIAL PIICMISl I
(UCll- TIIS ITII)
. I

,coca Cola
or Mr. Pibb

VAitO SALE , So!urdoy and Sun·
day . 2m llelouton 143 . Eve rett
McDaniel reaidence .
'

DAVID R Simonton residence. 20i
Ook St., New Haven. Thun ..
Aug. 31ondFrl. , Sept. t.

$

3

If YOU haVe o service ro oHer .
want to buy or ••II 1omething.
o• lool•llng fbr work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get results
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
Coli m -2151&gt;.

item1 .

Iii

Pkgs.

m -63-45.

1. 10.4 . 156 S. 3rd. Ave., Mid·
dleport. WOmen'• dre11e1 size
18 'h to 20'h . Mavie profector.
film splker. bowling boll ond
. · bog. Children's clothing. tennis
, rac:quetl , toaster . other misc.

Kroger Sandwich or " II
I
Hot Dog Buns
I
I·Ct.

WANTED TO bvy : ony old motor·
cycles or ports . Does not hove
to run . Reo1onable price~ .

YARD SALE . Aug. 30 ond 31 . Sept.

$

Carolina
l·lb
Sliced Bacon ........ Pka:

coli 992· 776/J.
OlD COINS. pocket watches ,
clo11 rin9s . wedding bonds ,
diamonds. Gold or sllv&amp;r. Call
Roger Wamsley. 7d·2~ 1 .

---

99~

lhe rlghl one today . Apply your

charm and humor to any situation , and you 'll woo others into
·
. your corner .

01..0 FURNITURE . ice bo•es. bron

- -

FRENCH FRIES

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Doc.

01

,-

69~

'BARBECUE &amp;

21} The sort-sell approach is

OhiO .

•

IS

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

LIIRA (Sopl. Z3·0ct. 23) Your

Williams Parker , deceased ,

..

0

BARBECUE

gong really jumping .

lateot Salem Street, A utland ,

WHAT I/ THE FA/TE/T
THinG lA THif·AREA?

. .

(July U·Aug. 221 · This
should be a tun day, involving
much aclivlty . It's probable
you'll be the one who gets the

Aodio City Sl.atlon . N.Y. 1001g:

of earlier expeciatloos.

Some things not forgotten
To whom it may concern :
Meigs County Fair is over, but some things not forgotten.
I really don't know how to say this, but it really bothers me
and I wonder how many others may have had this experience
and maybe not ever known it, we wouldn't have but we stayed
to watch the judging.
·
My daughter had composed a poem and used a picture of
her grandmother with It fer a decoupage plaque to enter at the
fair , . she bought a fait pass (which was the entry fee) .
On Tuesday we took her plaque, picked up her entry tag at the
secretary's office at the specified time. They told us ID take It
to the Senior Fait building and the ones In chsrge would show
or teD us where to put it. This we &lt;lid". A lady told us where to
put ~t . Then it was placed with other decoupage plaques so as·
the Judgmg went on , they came ID my daughter's plaque and
others . Ablue ribbon was placed on ooe and a red tlbboo was
placed oo my daughter's (she was pleased to think she had woo
a ribbon for first time trying this) .
Then there was discussion , the judge (name not known)
took 11 to some other ladles more discussion, they sent ber to
Margaret EUa Lewis who was judging other paintings. I heard
her say It's in the wrong place, you can't judge it. (They had
judged the class 92) the other plaques had claaa 78 oo them
(why I don't know) but this was where my daughter's plaque
was placed. So they took the ribbon off and left it. When I asked
what was wrong they said it was in the wrong place and they
had already judged the class 92. They said "We're very sorry,"
but I'dsay it was their mistake It was there . You can imagine
how this left my daughter feeling (hurt and angry to say the
least (also me).
I think this was unfair to her because the people In charge
placed the plaque. (It was one of the ladles helping the judge).
. I doubt if I'll ever be able to get her ID display any of her

·',,

well apenl. You 'll be able tQ

IdOl .
LEO

former
into ;he Wildli!~ Fun~ th~t
.Y was Iverte •

This
Week's
.
Dairy Valley

TAURUS (Aprii2D·Moy 201 Your

eftorts for loved ones today are

should pro ve to be h!ghlv prof·
itable . Wi thout outside influ .
ence you 'll be able to do what
you know to be right . Ha~ lna
trouble selecting a career?
Send for yo ur copy of AsrroGraph letter by ma iling 50
cents lor each and a long , selfadCiressed, stamped envelope
to Astra-Graph , P .O. 8011 489

·

This IS a great achievement $! 5 million dollars of sport- general pUJ'POses of state Meigs County Chairman for
for the Oh10 sportman and the men's mone that otherwise government.
Ohioans for Wildlife Cont 1
-Submitted by Lyle Swain servation.
mlttees: O_hioansFor Wildlife ~bout $750,000. ~lth the fee concept of The Wildlife wr ld ha ybee
JU
ve
n spen or
'
Conservation, have rescued mcreases contamed m S.B. Legislative Fund . The
$750,000 per year lor wildlife 419 (now before the Ohio Division of Wildlife itself
House ) the ~rmual amount co uld not have brought this
activities.
Interest earned by .the state saved lor wildlife purposes . action. Only the sportman on
on hunting and fishing license will be well over a million the ground that he ha~ a
.
.
fees will he credited to the dollars.
monetary interest in how his
Wildlife Fund begirming July
Judge Tom~Y. Thompso_n hunting, tr.apping and fishing
1, 1979, under a decision of the said 10 hiS deciSIOn that hiS license money is spent could
Franklin County Court of decision was·based on Section sustainthls kind of suit. The
Common Pleas issued August 1533:15 and 1533.33 ~I the Ohio suit was made possible solely
17. .
Revised Code, which states by contributions to WLF from
The WildUfe Legislative that no funds derived from sportsmen througho u( the
Fund filed sUit in 1975 to ask hunting and trapping licenses state.
·
the court to order that in· (or fishing licenses) shall be
The court refused to award
tere_st earned by the state on spent !or other than ~unting hack interest money, on the
the mvestment of proceeds of and trapping (ftshmg) ground that it is undesirable
hunting and fishing license purposes.
.
as a matter of public policy
sales be credited to the
He said that the judgment that the State Treasurer lie
Wildlife Fund lor hunting , of.the court was that the word required to reallocate funds
trapping and fishing pur- :'derived" was intended to that have already been the
poses! and to enjoin the mclude both funds received subject of the State's budget
practtce of crediting such from sa le of licenses and the and appropriation process,
mco me tot he General Interest funds generated which reflect commitments
Revenue Fund.
from the monies receiv~d. made by the General
Currently, at the rate of Further he found tj18t federal Assembly.
inte~est. earned by the ·sta)e ~.eimbursement monies are
No matter . The greatest
HSaR S. :d10 :00 A eM. 11111:00 P .M . Sun .. Thurs. 10 :00 A.M. 1il12 :00 P .M . Friday and
on. Its mvestments and the derived from huntmg and effect of this order lies ahead.
1ur ay.
normal amount of fees on fishing licenses, and that It appears conservatively
deposit in_the Wildlife Fund, mterest on such funds should that over the next ten years;
the armual amount that will a lso be credited to the the ruling could return $10 to
Wildlife Fund.
'
The Wildlife Legislative

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll 1itl The

aboul doing th ings loday

&lt;

~:; . i o·. •

F~nd and Its County Com-

blending of enthusiasm with
warmth produces lor you today
a mannerism others firld most
appealir\g . Your company is
weteomed In any circle .

There are changes in store lor
you. this com ing year wh ich you
might feel yo~ don 't have con·
tr~l over, but it. won't be "any·
thing to worry about. In lact .
the more you re lax and flow
with events , the more gains will
eome _your waY .
YIRQO (Aug. Z3·Sopt. 22) The
quiet manner In wh1ch yoU set

•

Farmers, fishermen, trappers benefitted

results .

Augult 31, llli

.. . .

$351 ......_

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

$311

�-

I

'I

1;; Wunb l'r untlt·t·
.t:'a~h

I WI\'

l.lMI

'o! Ua\·s

LXI
1.8CJ

:l,da)!i

6 da~· s

Aurlion•
OIL OR

:t.(IO

...,

• 1.25
3.75

f:~dt WUI'I.J UVl'l' lht• ll llll UilWI \ 15

wurds lS - ~ l' lt~~lS pt·r wurd J)l!l' !.lay .
I U111lln~ ulh l.'l' th;.ut {'IJIISt't'llliVl'
(IMys Will be dttU').!t~ l itt lht• I dll )'
l'llh' .

1\r.l.!&gt;

In nwmun .• C&lt;tnl " ' Thwtk.s a mi
Obtt ur.r)'. 6 · l'C ttl:i pl'l" wovnl, $: 11)()

minimum . C&lt;ish tn ~dva tt l't' .
Mttbtlt' Hunw ~Ito:. 0111tl V;ir\1 S&lt;~lt•s
an• at'l't'plt•tl unly wtth t•a:.h with
urtier . !5 L't'lll d'U:III'Kt' fur ads l 'l:lrry~~~ Hull Numt.•t' In C~:~ro• 111 Tlw &amp;uI.Jnt-1.

Tilt' Pulll~ht•r n"st'n.'t'S tiM• nl( hl
tu l'dtl ur rt'jt't'l anr dtl!. tll&lt;t&gt;tl lt'\J ubJl'i.'ltolldl . Till' Publ t:.ht't' wtll not t.·
"'SJ&gt;l•nMblt· fur m tw~· Limn uttt· nlt'ut··
l'l't.'liiiSt'r\IUII .

Phum· !19'1-l l~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
· M un l.lu~

NtiOII un S&lt;ltunla~

Tut·sdru
tiH'U F rll.jil \

4P.M .

tlk' da~- bt-furt'

pub hv &lt;~ l! "t l

Sunda\
~ p :\ t:
Fnl.la~· aftt·nJvf•ll

SIN CER E THANK S to bot.h chu r·
ches ol Cheste r . United
Methodist and Church o f the
Noza~ene who were so la ithful
to send such l oo,~ely in spira ti onal autographed cords . during my st ay tn Veterans
Memori al Hospital
Also Ia
each person who vis ited me,
for all the flowers , cords and
gifts r eceived . the ministers for
prayers . ' to each one who ,
everyone rememb@red i.n yourpray ers . Smcemy return home,
thank s so much to aU my
friends and neighbors . tor
visi ts, the delic!ous load , and
ius! showing you core . It is all
so deeply appreciated . May
God Bless each of you
M rs . O t is K. Cas to .
MY SINCE RE thanks and o_p precia t ion to Veterans Memroiol
Hospita l , and th e entire staff
who all ended my needs . in any
ways , dur ing my recect stay
there _ 1 lo ved e-a ch smiling
nurses who so willing ly and
gently cored f or
me .My
therepist . Mark Werry . for his
patience and k indness _ The lob
technicians and all othef\ ." The
gentle c~rteous_ ambulance se rvice . And to two wondertufl
guys , Dr . Te lle and Dr . Pickens .
I shall be fore11e r grateful. They
ore the be st, in my bo ok . I om
also very appreciative o f my
h ome
therapist .
Jeannie
Ander son and home core
' nur se , Bre nda Cunningham .
They hove been fa ithful and
helped so mu ch . With heartfelt
thanks to al l , I soy " May God
Bless eac h o f you always .
Mrs . Ot is Le li tho Costo .ChesiiH .
Ohio .

7' 1, WEEK OLD aU male k itten s
Phone 747 -2328

FOUND AT Edson Hart re sidence.
Darwin . o port
Ger man
Shephard dog . Friendly . Ph one
997 -5019
FOUND IRISH Setter femal e. Lo t
!!_2 ~y~ l O~ k Po!~-----

IJPij}$

lease. Free. 30 ocres.

'1 mt les north of Pomeroy.
bU -716 -2701 evenings .

l 'lt.aq(t'

1.!5

go~

JOHN TEAFOkO Golf Equipment .
Buy', sell , trade. 61.4 -985 -3961 ,

SHOOTING MATCH . Forked Mun
Spothmon Club . Sunday , Sepl .
3 and every Sunday there otter ,
Factory choke guns only .

'J

8 by lb • 7 wheats. , Pr .
OfA.LfNS AUCIION . Public in:
S2 S.OO. 2 · 700 • ,1t1 Wime-r tire•
vit.d . Fri. . 1 pm til ? N ew mer·
pr . 150 .00. Call 992-7692 .
chondi•e . sold in quanti ty at
Ohio Niver Auction . 537 High
1978 CJS Jeep. 1972 Hondo 450.
99B251.
St .. Middleport , Ohio . Regular
lOie Fri. and Sot. night appro• ..
23 CU. FOOT chest type fru~•r .
7 pm .

992-5036.

ONE GOOO used Unico gold
washer . top notch shape . $125.
Anot her good buy
from
Pomeroy Londmork . · 992 - 2H~I .

USCD FARM MACHINERY
MF 16S d'iVJel tractor
MF 255 diesel tractor
MF 265 diesel t rac tor
1977 DATSUN 4 door stat ion- MF 1135 dieseltroctor
w agon . 26,000 mdes .- 4 cyl. . MF 200 two Row Chopper
good gas mileage . 250 N. Jrd, AC Cleaner Combing w ith 4 row
Middlepor t. Phone 991 -73]q
corn head and 13 ft . groin
after 4 p .m .
tab le. New Ideo one row corn
~------pi cker .
1970 RED AMC PACER . b cyl . 3SHINN 'S THACTOH SAUS
speed. AM -FM tape . 43,000
458 - 1630
m it es. $2500. 742-2211 before
l9on. WV .
5. 742 -2874 after 5.
19 77 OLOS VISlA Cruiser sta tion - fOR
SALE :
_
_
wogo n .
Bill
W illiamson .
992
3405
742 -2007 .
P.S.. f-' .B.. A .( .. sof -t-track ,
AM -FM radio . heo11y duty
suspension. radio/ ti res , etc.
Thi s cor is in A -1 condi tion See
Carl N. Hysell , Rutland. 1-'hone
742 -2 184 .

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

1972 OOOpE DEMON 340. Auto ..
4 Crogan , new ex haust "
system . 992-552 1.

- - - -·-·- - ....
~

- -

•ROOF PAINT

CANNING peaches . good quality ,
Freestone conn ing peoches
$7.98 , bring own conta iner .
Re't oil and wholesa le, Bob 's
Market .
Mason ,
Midway
Market , Pomeroy , O h.

-

--:------

--

B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES. Pt. Pleasant , W . Va . bes ide Heck 's.
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
bedroom
1973 Dori on 14 • bO 2 bedroom
1972 Vic torian 14 • 67 3 bed room.
2 bath
1972 Coventry 12 x b5 3 bedroom
1Qb9 St at esman 12 x 00 2
bedroom .

NEED A WATE R
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co-op water
softener, Model UC· SVI.
Now Only

•289.95

19b8 FORO •t, ton shor t b~ ltep·
si d e. With topper . b cyL , stan dard , run5 rea l good , easy on
gas . $900. Coli anytime after 5
_Pm. ?9_3_-~11_?_:_ _______ _
10' SUPER SKEET ER boss boot .
7 '',h .p. Mercury motor . Electric
tr olling motor onQ occe .. ori•• Troiler . 992 -3483 .

----- - --- - -.-POT A TOES. REO pomtioc ond

Kennebec. $0.50 per 100 lb.
West of Oorwin on Gold Ridge.
Cecil Toban . Rt . 2. Pomeroy .
Ohio
POT ,4, TOES FO R .winter . Cobbler
Kennebec and Superior . Phone
843 -2491 . Tom Sayre. GrftOt
Be nd , SR 338 .
1

1971 FORD • ton camper • pecial.
Power , air, auto, dual tonk• .
E. cellenl r unning condition.

Let us test your water
Free

11475 . 99 ~ · 239~ .

POIIIIIOJ landmll\
l:l•ck w. C.rsey. Mgr.
-

·

-

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

Phone 992-2111

COAL , LIMESTONE . sand , gravel.
co 1co:um chlo ride , fertililer . dog
food . and oil types ol sol! . bo: celsiOr Soft Works . Inc .. E. Main
~'.:..:. Pomeroy , 997-389 1.

1' • ACRES located I mile from
M•igs Min'e 1. Drilled well and
_s.ept~c !Y't~m . ~_- 882 :2~3~ .

FIVE ROOM hou•e with both . 37
acres . Born . O ther
out buildings . CN 8. lang~Ville. Coli
?4? - ~·~o to~ oy~t . __

_

3 8~0AOOM hou•e. all electric .
Over 1 acre. Morningstar
_H'!ig.ht~ . ~·!- ~4~-4 ._

BWIHOUGHS SENSI-MATt( oc coun to:ng
machine . Phone
Q92 -715b, The Doily Sen tinel .
Il l Court Street . Pomeroy .
Ohio .

- - -- TOMATOI::S .

--

EQUIPPED KITCHEN-4
bedrooms , natural gas
heat, 11!1 baths. 2 car
with shop over .
127.500.
Good •
Nice large
gas.
large
LOCI.TION res! de nee wllh
'·· kltch&lt;!n and bedroom .
Will
gOQd tor a starter.
Only $13,000.
COUNTRY HOMt - New
3 bedroom , 2 bath home .
H.~s equipped kllchen, nice
carpeting.
log house ,
woods, and garden land .
Asking S.O.OOO.
Are Yo• profiting from
lnllatlon?? B•y Land
and you wiU!!!
30 ACRES · and 3
bedroom renovated home.
In back of town with rural
water . Will take 1 trade-ln .
Wont SU,500.
IASHAN
Large 3
bedroom
home
with
natural gas and T.P. wafer.
Over an acre of land with a
3 car garage. Lots of
o•tbulldlngs . Just 116.000.
YOU ' LL
PROIA BL Y
FIND A .ETTER BUY
TOD . AY
THAN
TOMORROW. STOP IN
AND
SEE
OUR
PROPERTIES.
Holon L. Tufanl
Ger..... ILTutortl
Suo P. Murphy
AIIOC:IIttl

Hnusiny
Headquarters

Any U.S. modo cor _,.rt,
extn if n•eded. Excludn
front-whHI drive cars.

BEA T THI:: Oc tober rus h . G111e us
your order now tar arrows
custom mode the way you w ont
them and cut to your ind ividual
length . Ptck up anytime before
O ctober 1 $5 deposit with
order . (Easton Gomegetter)
alum in um
arrows , $20 .95
dozen . Fi b erglass $ 24 95
dozen , We retle tch arrows .
gloss . aluminum or wood , incl udes 3 new plas tic vanes nick
and in ser t, $1 per arrow. A lso
we stra ighten aluminum orr ows , S.SO each arrow . Tr i
Coun tv Sport S!-. op Nor th and
Tri
Coun t y
Sp erl
Shop
Downt o wn. 304·675-2988 .

-- -

YUIGIL l.t~.:.i ~~
"2-3325
'
. ll6 E S.C0(1~ ~!reel

SPECIAL . Sl~

MA IN
POMEROY. 0 .

.BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

5

ZX' OFF
SPECIAL
PRICE
Expires
Se pt. 10, 1978

--

-- CANNING
green
DRl:AMING OF o white Chr is tmas
pepper s Gera ld ine Cleland,
w1th no b ill s? Wondtnful to
Racine , Oh10
thtnk about _ but 11 could come
HEAL TY PI GS. $25 ,00 and up .
true Be a loy l ad tes hostess !
l-'hone.9 4 9-24b0.
_ ---- ___ .
In your home or by orde rs I r om
your fne nd5. Earn toys and gihs Af-'PL~S
Fittpotrick Orchards,.
f re e . Nome brand
toy s,
State
Rou te
689 . Phone
r e a so nably
pr ice d
wilh
Wilkesville 669 -3785 .
guarantee . Gilts lor the whol~
family . For 1nl ormotion coli
742-2377 or 9Q2 -7056 .

call now far oppolntmont.

Pomeroy landm1rk

....~ck w. car.. y, Mtlr.

-·

------

OFFICE SUPER VISOR . degree in
Busme ss Management
ma,o r in A ccoun ting and ex penence .
Centra l
Operottng
Company ,
Philip Sporn Plant New Hoven ,
We st Virg1n10 252b5 . Phone
304 -887 -20 21:l ..

AOU lOT on Rt. 7 . Nice building
•ile. q92 -757-4 .

cl arinet .

Discount
Pric es

1973 FOf.ID LTO 2- door hard top .
P.S.. P.B. factory air . stereo .
tope deck , 5 new r ad ial snow
tires. Reasonab ly priced . Good
condit i• n . Co ll 992-3402 .

tAiill

Pllone tf2·21t1
'

GE AU TOM A TIC washer . A buv
for someone who con repair .
Pr ic e S15. 992-5250.

.

-

RE DUCE SAFE and fas.t . with
GoS.se Tobleh &amp; E-Vop ··wot•f
_ _p i.!!_s ". N elson Dru~ ----- ­
PlAID QUEEN si 1Ut hide-a -bed
couck wit h coor dinotin9 so lid
wall hugger recl iner . 8 mo. old .
Excellent condition . 9•9 -27b1 .
MYER S SHALLOW well pump . Like
new . $85. Eldon Walburn .

. 992 - ~80
,=
5 __
FIREWOOD . GREEN or seasoned .
9•9 -2358 Of 985-35b7 .

HELP WANTED · responsible per son to boa rd several cots and
dogs unt il pla ced . M eigs Co
Humane Soc1ely . Coli fl92-5427
or 992 -2039
WANT A carpenter to do ~orne
house
repoo:r .
Pho n e
6 14 -098-5715
BAB YS ITTER lor k tn dergorden age
ch ild Grove l Hill ar ea . AFter S.
992 -3 477 .

HELP WA"TED
Experienced

Diesel Mechanic
for

NEW
LISTING
Secluded , 3 bedrooms,
ranch, family room, large
recreat ion room , bu ilt-In
kitchen , separate dining
area, carpOrt, patio. ONn
water, wood burning
fireplace, and l!.. acre only .
$20.500 .00.
NEW LISTING - Reolly
nice 3 bedroom ranch , In
the country , close to
Pomeroy , wood burn ing
fireplace . large 2 car
garage . carpeting, small
garden space and 21h
ocres. A good b•y S25.000.
NEW LISTING - Would
yo• believe In Middleport,
a nice . 1 floor plan, 3
bedrooms with d ining
room ,

enclosed

porch .

large workshop - garage,
plus a 12 • 60. Furnished
newer trailer, plus another
frailer , plus another lot for
trailers. All rented. Total
monthly gross S370.00 for
only S29,500.00.
POMEROY - $6,72S OR
make an offer. not bad 1112
story home with full
basement, needs some
renovation .
6 ACRES - In Syrawse.
modern 1 floor plan, wood
burn ing
fireplace.
3
bedrooms. large k itchen,
dining room , view ot the
Beautiful Ohio, 2 car
garage . beautllul bock
yard for cookouts, etc.
Asking $32,000 .00.
MINI FARM - CLOSE IN
NIce
3 bedroom
remodeled home , fruit
cellar. barn, milk house,
pasture , fen ci ng. large
good
garden ,
other
features , over S acres.
$16,500.00 .
GOOD STARTER HOME
- -4 lots, 1111 story frame
with Ml basement. Sta&lt;ag•
building . Many teatlll"es In
to~n . A real story at
$9,500.00.
LIST WITH US FOR
PHOTO
liSTING
SERVICE, MEMBERS OF
INDEPENDENT
REAL
ESTATE. CONSULTANTS,
NATIONWIDE
REFERRAL
SERVICE .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK,KATHY,LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES

tf2-225,, tl1-'1'1

·Catapiller &amp; Terex.
Phone 7•2·2806
Between 9 &amp; 10 P .M .

•

•')f'n.r. ""'''

~'"-2111

•

'

.

10 ', ACRI:~ . it room house, -4
bedroom . new both . new ki t ·
chen , city woter . On Rt . 3~ in
_Burlingham . 992· 775 J .
tJ) ACRES . house and furniture

$32,000 .00 . lmlnediote posseslion . . Phone 742-2988 alter 5
.p .m.

Rtlldtnllal and commer·
clal. Call for esumate. 2C
,mytime .
Jock Ginther 915-:1106

.A.·D.3

Chester. Ohio
CONSTHUCTEl&gt; AND IN
Bo•J
·IO·JO·C
GOOD con ditiOn 3 bedroom
with 1' 1 ~thin Pomeroy . Full y
; nsuloted
with
b I own in ,...-...,.....,.....,...--,--,--,-"--,--,
f iberglass . storm windows and
doors . Carpeted,
in good
neighborhood , wlking distance
ol town . Coli 992 -3871 after
5:30 pm or Sofurday and Sun· . We ire currently making
day .
appointments for senior

WHL

-- - - -- - -

Pomeroy

Gtor'll•

Hoblletter Jr.,
Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio,
Phone "2-6333
Office Hrs.
u.m.-5p.m.
C~secl Thurt.doys &amp;
Sat• relays al noon
Yo•r Full Tlmo
Reo I Esttte Broker
NEW LISTING- This nice
ho'1'e ' localed on State
RoUte 124 has • bedrooms,
living rooiT\ . dining room.
kl l chen. balh and s•n ·
porch . Nice big yard wllh
plenty of trees and llowers.
Owner desires quick sale .
Selling price SJO,OOO.
Now listing-Nice 5 room
home In Mlddleporl with
bath and detached garage .
Large yard . Selling price
$30,000.
New Listing- 61!2 scres at
cross roads with 500 It .
tronlog' on Stale Roule
12•. Small collage and
melol oulb•llding. ldeolfor
rental
or
business
property . Asking $20,000.
Racine This bea•llfu l
home is ready for your
family to moVe Into. 3
bedroom , d ining room ,
plenty of storage space and
It has gas hoi water heal.
fireplace and wood and
coal burner , also. Garage
and patio with canopy .
Situated on almost an acre
on state route 338 In
Racine . Will sell lasl ol
SJO.OOO.
Rutlond- 3 bedroom, lola!
electric homein Hutch ison Subdivision . Home has "full
basement amd own well .
Situated on nice size lot.
C..ll today for more lnlo.
Selling prl.ce S32.000 .
Coli us tod4iy, we have
more liltings to choose
from.
"
Cheryl Lemley, Assd~ .
Home Pllone 742-2003
Hilton Wolto, Assoc ..
Home· Phone 949-2489
George A. Hobstetter, Jr. ,
Broker
Home Phone 992-5139

3825.
~

---- --

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

SEWING MACHINE Repai rs , service , oil makes . 992-22,84. The
Fabric
Shop ,
PC? m~Ho y .
Auihor ized Singer Soles and
Servi ce. We sharpen Scis so rs .

CALL 992-2238

~ofing . --;?r;;;r;~~~~n .
wiLLplumbing and heotmg . No 10b
too Iorge or too small . Phone

dO-

PULLINS E)(CAVATING . Complete
Service . Phone 992 -2478 .

---

~--·------

REEVES TRADING Post , Pogeo,~ille .
Grocer ies. dry goods. hardwore , teed . tatk shop. Special
?5~~-ol dog food , $3 .88.
AUlOMOB ILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? Lost your operators
license? Phone 992-2143.

- -

_____..__

THE CHIMNEY Sweep. Reduce-d
roles ti l Sept . 1. 614 -373 -6057
_w':~d_?_ys u-,_~1_5 . ___ _

HOMESil ES for sole , I acre and
up. M iddleport . near Rutland .
Co ll 992 -7•8 1.
---~·

· --:-:--:-

NEW J bedroom house. 2 both l .
all elec ., I acre , M iddle por~ .
clo~e to Rutland . Phone 992 7481 .

'l

10

ill l l'l i&gt;rT"oCh-&lt;-1.-.. ........... -

Pomoror, 0 .
J.1S-tlc

.•••

BORN LOSER

.·

-r-

W!-iA"T 11-iE TFWMPI:"T

J I I

~

\CAMIOT

II

•

IJITLE ORPHAN ANNIE
•

'

Yesterday 's

THOVGH1

11&lt;e"T' WERE

-

QUALIFIED SITTE-R. Will sit in your
.ho m e
anyti me .
Ph one
949-2042.

I

--~~

HOOF HOLLOW Horsel . Buy . sell
tr ade or tra in. New and used
saddles . Ruth R"ves . Albany .
(bl&lt;) 698 -3290

shelter
r_:;~:;;~~;5\S'f:n:E'(ii~N;7.:HE~~)$EN;~S"l 1.---:;:::==::::::::::i0;r:Mi"SiW~~lS~'ij~J:~~;]
-00.,.,_111
u To
Noted

- '

JUST LISTED- SPACIOUS II-LEVEL. This moy bt
yo•r dreom home. It hu 1 Iorge kitchen with lois ot
cobinets. slovo. refrlgorotor end dllllwashlr. BNutiM
dining room with sliding glesa doOrs folding out to
Iorge deck. l..ar'llt living room ond fomlly room, 111d to
finish tllis well-lold aut home wo hove flvo btidraams,
. utility room ond gor111e . Very low hutlng bill. Thol's
not 111. we have strawberriH, rllpberrlft and garden
space. Rid bom-likt storogo building . Locottd obout
llfl minutes north of Pomeroy just oH Rt. 7. C. II for
mort dotolls ond oppolnlnient. Asking 155,00.
5i ACRES- With a nice I'/&gt; story hO\JM with 3 bedrms .
and Ph baths. Most ly carpeted. Big central llreplace
will\ heetolater . Small born and 0\Jibulldlngs. 20 acres
llftced . Nice co•ntry setting oil blacktop road I••' 6
minutes north ol Racine. Asking S.2.000.
'ACRE5 - Nice1 'I&gt; story home mostly carpeted with 3
or • bedrms .• living rm ., family rm ., with fireplace ,
basement , luel oil l•rnoce, gar lilt ond o"'bulldlngs.
Some lenclng , plenty of rciad frontage and garden
space . City water and drilled well . Loc. close lo
hospital and school at Laurel Cllll.
J.l2,500.
TWO ACRES- A beoulll•l• year old, 3
oom home
with large oal-ln kllt hen, 3 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted , 2 baths, 1•11 basement with TV room . Many
moro t&lt;tras, low heal bill with nat. gas forced air
l•rnace . All this and lwo ncle ocros of land In a good
location . "Will go q•lck for $35,000.
•o Acres ol land In S•llon Twp. Nice b•lldlng slits.
small bern . Priced at mly S21 ,500.

13 Ghost talk

LOVABLE WHITE snow drih t re-at
PYRENEE S Pupp ies , P one
1-614 -667 -3838,

is "Stunn :...··· a Cricliet term

5Feuful

Orang

7 Marahall

II

II Three: It.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DRIVE A LITIU

18 Smolder

for 90-day
wonders

20 Neth. city
=~'--..J 21 Require

8·J.O

GASOIJN E AI.I.EY

2Z Gorcey
and Carroll

of l.jOUr

Rubber Batk Carpet

bed!

At Low AI

04.88 "'i,Y:p
Vin~

As:::.l

WANTED : We have 1 qualified buyer lor a lew acres
of land w ith a good· home with at least 3 bedrooms
locoted on good road .
_.
Wt nHd lorgo &amp; smoll Ftrms
oncl Mlny types of p.._tv
CALL )IMMY DEEM, Asaoclott,"!"'-2:111

EXCELLENT FARM IUY ~ ,., ACRES - The
owner 1 s age prevents htr from continuing fo operate
the larm and llle dtslrtl on Immediate salo. 50 to ~
ocret tillable with. some "try good crHk bottom hilltop lond . The belanco Is In past•rt &amp; WCX&gt;d1. Tho 6
room home Is good (don need somt modernization) ,
largo all P • r - blrh &amp; Mvorol outbuildings. Tilt
mlnerols go with It and It's loctled In an aru whlro
1111. oil &amp; c081 have boon lound lo Ill plentiful. Noer
Rlllland . 60'1.

CAll THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGERCY 44&amp;3643

-·--·
Ohio .

- - - - - - --

INAN"r .,. .,~
WASHfD, OR

C.ll742-2211
TALK TO
Wondollw Herb Grote
or Gone Smllll

.w.-.-..,r'Uiii
...

-~~•D

RUTLAND
fURNITURE

°

~~============~~~~~~~~:,:··:·~::~:·~~:
- :··:·:~:··:·~~~.~:2·~~~~~~~\~8~-~~
~

Rutlolltl

WINNIE
ALL END?

I I;QN'T KNO.V1 BIRC&gt;IS, BUT
YOU HAVE 10 I'IC&gt;MIT oArlY
. FAG IN IS A 131\LL OF
J:IRE: WHEN IT COMEt'&gt;
10 MAKING lv'DNEY!

T~~l

MAKIS A
liD FOR '
:REDI UDI

lellctt. In 1'111 Y•l•

remainder of the a uction

.

• 94
• 8763
• J 5 43
+ A 10 9

WEST

EAST

9AQI094

.. J

K 10 9 7 2
• QJ 3

• 86
• K8 i 642

-- - -

=-+---+-~- 1

&amp;-:10

• 7; 3 2

•

SOUT H

+ AK Q J 1016

31 Ending for

• K 52
t AQ

• 5

b-+--+-

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : No rth
We st

to work It:

North

East

South

Pass
Pass
Db!.
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

Openi ng lead :

2+
4+

+Q

AXYDLIIAAXR
II

L 0 N G F E L L 0

w

By Oswald Jacoby
One teller simply stands for another. In this sample A is aod Alao Soolag
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
A person may be mildapostrophes, the length and formation o ( the words are aU mannered , s hy, and quie t ,
hints. Each day the code letters are dift'erent.
yet that person can turn into
an
absolute blabbermouth a t
CRYPTOQVOTES
a bridg e table . To talk too
ZAPOYMMKPTJQ
Z A K -U Y
KT much at bridge yo u need
only say one or two words;
in the case of the d iXPVA
SPAN
JIMPQVCYQX agrammed hand, the words
KM
were " three diamonds·· .
YMMYTCKJQ
CP
JUYWVJCY
Three notrump would
have bten a ci nch for NorthIVC
NYYZ
CEY ZAKUY South, · but South wanted
those 150 points ror spade
MYRAYC . QPj VKM
DAJOY honor s . South 's two-c lub
Yesterdoy'1 Cryploqaote: P~EFERENCE BECOMES opening bid w~as strong, artificial and forcing . He and hiS
PREJUDICE WHEN WE REFUSE TO SEE THE GOOD IN partner
were playing weak
ANYTIIING WE HAPPEN TO DISLIKE.-C.E. KATERNtwo
bids,
which means that a
DAHL
•
strong two bid in any s ult
Cl lrr&amp; Kinr Featlftl Syndicate, Inc:.
had to be made in clubs . The

was natural.
We~t 's well-timed opening
lea d took out decla rer' s
most important e ntr y to
dummy . Any other lead
would have given South th e
tric k he n eeded to makegame But a dm iration for
West 's ex ce llen t ope ni ng
lead must be tem pered and
wetghed agai nst his bidding
e rror, an error that ultima tely proved conc;lusive .
Sout h was certain from
the bidding that both the are
of hearts a nd king or diamonds were in We st's hand ,
and t ha t West had length in
both suits . South realized
th at to m ake the contract he
had to strip the West hand of
clubs and throw West on
play where h e would have to
surr e nde r the game-fulfill ·
ing tric k.
Accordingly, South ruffed
a cl ub in his hand at trick
lwo and pla yed the ace of
spades and a low spade to
dummy 's nine . He ruffed
ano ther clu b , exhausting
West 's club s uit .and drew
East's r emaining trumps.
Nex1 So•th led the acequ een of diamonds, West
winn ing the queen with the
king . If Wes t returned a
diamond, dummy's jack was
the lOth Iric k. If he r e turned
a heart , declarer 's kin g
would score .
It was a pretty end play ,
but declarer might not have
pla yed it so well had West
sh owed more discretion in
the bidding .
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRJst: ASSN . t

!Fo1 a copy or JACO{J Y MOD·

ERN. send

sr

'o: " Win

SNUFFY, '-IE GIT THREE DAYS
FREE ROOM AN' BOARD
IS TI1AT 'fOU, CHUCK ?
IT SOUNDS LIKE I{OU~
VOICE ... IF IT 15, !-lOW

HAVE '{OU BEEN ?

a1

Bridge ... care ol rflis newspaper, P.O. fJoK ~89. Radio City
Station. New York , N . Y. t00t9.!

HA R:-IEY

.ill OUR

151N STOCK

.,.~

,..• . . ,

~ufl=!l:)::»

WHERE WILL IT

;\YOU '

Silence often is golden
NORTH

LAUNDRY

Ti-IE:N A CIIRDLE ...

A SOFA

food

~,-:-+-'-+-+--­

~F~R~A~N~K~&amp;~E~R~N~I~E------~--:_~-------rr-------rr----------------------------~31C.n~
FR ~NIC ••~ ERMI E'S
~
~~.~~~-te
~
YouR SHIRT WIL&amp;. B&amp;
"""""'
RI!ADY ToMORROW,
Particle
$JR. DO "'Wb&amp;J
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here•s how
!-

:If YOU N_EED :

31Soft

coming

Z4 Catcher's -

33 Wine: Fr.
34 Foolslepa

RUG REMNANTS
F ram '291' a Up

742-m1

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

35lnsect

28 Raiment

3% Superlative

---- -

Phon e 1-J0&lt;-882-3356.

BRIDGE-

3%Brink

Z3 Have it

•

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

stun or spunl-:;,..1-+--!-

Good S.loctlon Of

,4,PARTMENT ovoilobl• for sleep·
ing quarters. room fur for tout
men , I 0 minutes Jrom M oun·
tioneer Plant. Hartford, W.Vo .

togethers

awake

family

lkly whore you con '""" In
ond- whit you're goHing
- Good Mloctlans - Fully
stocked.

992-S.3&lt; .

9 Noise.
mariner
10 Outdoor get-

zs

2'lltalian

Floor CcNering In Stock

,:.;_:,:='::--c-:-:-:---;--- .

Plan org.
8Leam

e -s o

Y eoterday'a Alllwer . ·
li)AI)onymoua
~!l'btal
know26 "Windbag'
It-ails
Z9 Wiscoll8in
19 Harry
city
20 Wide30 Antagonist

:!3 Relative
of H-hour
Z4 Base
ZS Disorder
N "Georgy
"
d

I feel so quilt4
turn il'lQ 400
Slim out

All carpet Instilled with
poddlnt ot no chorgo .
Expert lnstollotlon.

4 D.&lt;;. \egis.

ilhntb IJOIIIII

17 School

'

3 AND 4 RM. furni sked and unfurnished
opts .
Ph o ne

address!

14 Tropical

SAVE ALOT

ONE BEDROOM opt . Contact
Village Manor Apl .. Middleport. W2 -7787 .

lWO BEDROOM hous.e , Rose Hill.
"$17S per month . No pets .
l e a se .
security
deposit
61-4 -678 -25 13 or write A. Morl in, · RI . 1. 8o• 21• . Vin cent ,

3 Loser's

RISING STAR Kennels . Boarding
Of'!d groom in9 . oil br.eds .
Cheshire. 367 -0292 or 367 -0106.

'· '

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route J3, nor th of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Coll992 -7479 .

2 Peerless

orator

ending

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Jumbles . GLADE MACAW PARLOR NOBODY
Answer : Tl)llhis diet if you want to become a
tightrope walker- "BALANCED"

6Lw·"'-'

992-3357.

9' and 12'

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

. by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Athlete's .
1 They're no
award
gentlemen 40 Shetland
5 Soprano,
Eleanor DOWN
1 French author

WILL 8ABYSIT in my home or you r
home . 12:30 pm oh Mon . thru
WJKI , Thurs. thru Sot . oil day .

------

•

NEW-JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBlE BOOK 111 with 110 puutes lanallllble tor $1 .35 postpai d !rom Jumble, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 34,
Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your name, • ddren, zip code end m•ke
checks payable to NewspapeJbooks.

RiCH, TOO "'

'

WILL DO baby sitting in m~ home
ages 2--4 . Phone 992 -768Cl.

HIM OF DOIN6.

(Answers tomorrow)

YEAH! THOSE GU ~S

WATER WEll drilling . William T. ' ~
Grant. 742-2679.

FRIEND ACCUSED

:rx x)-ll x xxx) HER

Answer:(

..

F"I-A'(Ef'l:' 5 Go i ~L­

0

t
KIJ J

-·

r'·

[]

[) (

....

S.ve30 pc;t. Ia SO
on htotlng cos
Experience ond
I• lly IM•red
Fl'tl Est.
Coll992-2772 ,
8-10-lmo . (Pd.)

NEW J bedroom mobile home
Norris top quality , I '/, baths ,
VA -FHA , 30 yr . finoncing , also
total elec tric . Th is inc ludes all
underpinning. alum inum steps
re tinoncin g . Ireland Mortgage . •'
Ond hiao"'y duty ochers cement
77 E. State, Athens , phone (614)
block s. Al so stoVe Magic Che.f.
..5 9~ - 3051.
washer and dr yer . Con be seen
THREE BEDROOM I rome home in
across tr am the Hydro Electric
M iddlepo rt . Ca11 992-J.457 .
Plan t , a t Letart Falls . Oh io .
IN SYRACUSE : 2 bedro om house .
MOBILE ' HOME. 19S. Libe r ty 2
New storm windows . New
bedr . Good condition . 1900
aluminum building . 2 porches .
Ck&amp;ll nut Dr . . Gallipo lis , Ohio .
992-3219.
Phone b1-4 -Ub-139 1.

byHenriArnoldanclBoblee

b

I YOANG

!II
,,'
•

Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation

BID S WANTED on a 1974 bO • 24
Modular home . Damaged by
fire. The home is well buill and
contained 3 b•droom Iorge living room , formal dining room ,
k i tchen , fam ily room . 1 1 ~,
baths . You ore invi ted to in spect this home located ' ' mile
eas t of Harrisonvi ll e St. Rt . l.tJ .
The purchaser must mo've the
home not later 1han Oct IS,
1978. Moil sealed bids to 73
Rooseve lt Dr., R.A.F .8 ., Ohio ,
43217 to ar rive not lo ter than
Sept. 20. 1978. Include return
address ond phone number .
Announcement of acceptance
of o bid will be mode not lat er
tkan Sept . 23. 1978 . Term s·
Co sh. Certified check or bank
draft. The owner reserves the
right to "jec t any or oil bids.
For appointment to in spe( l the
home coli 7-42 -3122 or Co lum bus
-497 · 13 17 . Ha rold
D.
Graham , Owner .

\.9 ~~ ®

Unscramble these four Jumi:Mes. ·

-~~~--------­

1970 NASHUA 14 • 65 3 bedroom
1 1/, both , underpinning . $1500
end o n ume loon. 949-2b83 or
84J -33 t I .

3.

6:5lf--Good Morning. West VIrginia 13; 6:55-Ne ws 13;
7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13;
CBS News 8; Underdog 10.
7 : 2~huck While Reports 10; 7:3o-Schoolles 10.
8 :1l0-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame St. 33.
9 :00- Merv Grlflln 3; Ph il Donah•e 4,1 3,15;
.Emergency One 6; Brady Bunch 8; Tic Tac Dough
10.
•
9:3()-Andy Grlflllh 8; Family Atlalr 10.
IO.:ClO--Card Sharks 3.4.15; Edge ol Night 6: Tic Tac
Dough 8; Joker ' s Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13.
10 :3()-Hollywood Squares 34.15; High Hopes 6; Price
is Righi B.10; S20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :00-H igh Rollers 3.4.15; Happy Days 6, 13.
11 :3D-Wheel of Forl•ne 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Partr idge Family 4; Love ol Llle 8, 10; Sesame st .
33; 11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10 .
12 : ~Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; America Alive 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :3()-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Search lor
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co . 33.
1:00-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
Young &amp; lhe Reslliss 10; Not For Women Only 1S.
1 :3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 1S; As The World T•rns
8, 10; 2:oo-one Lite lo Live 6, 13.
2:31&gt;-Doctors 3,4,1S; G•ldlng Light · 8,10; 3:0()General Hospital 6, 13; Another World 3,4, 15; Lilias
Yoga &amp; Yo• 20
.
3 :3()-AII In The Family 8, 10; Yo• Bet Yo•r Lite 20.
4:QO--Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; Merv Griffin 6.For Richer, For Poorer 15; Addams Family 8;,..
Sesame St. 20,33 ; Malch Game 10; Dinah 13.
4:31&gt;-My 'Three Sons 3; Gilligan's Is. 4,8; Balman 10.
S:QO--Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Nelghborhopd 20,33 ; Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat
Junction 15 .
5:3G--Odd Couple 4; News6 ; Elet . Co. 10,33; Hogan's
Heroes 15.
6:00-News 3,4,8,1 0,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Growing Years 33.
6:31&gt;-NBC New s3,4, 15 ; ABC NewslJ; Andy Grltllth 6;
CBS News•8,10; Over Easy 10.
7 :Cl0--Cross-Wits 3; Bil ly Graham Crusade 4,8;
Newlywed Game 6, 13; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 1~;
Hocking Valley Bluegra ss 20 ; Consumer Survival
Kil 33 .
7:3()-Hollywood Sq uares 3; Makh Game PM 6;
MacNei l-Lehrer Report 20.33 ; Thai's Hollywood 10;
Nashville On The Road 13; To Be Announted 1S.
8 :00-RedStene ' 78 3; Welcome Batk, Kotter 6; Sellin'
of Jamie Thomas 4; Waltons 8, 10; Onte Upon A
Classic 20.33; God's Smugger 13; Bil ly Graham
Crusade 15.
8 :3()-Baseball 3,4; Damlen 20,33 .
9:00- Barney Mil ler 6. 13; Movie " Dirly Harry " 1S;
Merv Grlllln 19.
9:3o-Soap 6,13;
10 :0o-oral Roberts 8,10 ; Poldark II 33 ; News 20.
10 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4 , 1S; High Hopes 6; Price
Is Right 8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
U.S. Open Tennis 8; ABC News 33; Movie ' Love
wi th the Proper Stranger " 10; !1 :45----Mash 8.
12 :00-Janakl 33 ; 12 :2o-Movle " Halls of Anger " 8.
12 :4o-Legend of the Black Hand 6, 13; 1:00Tomorrow 3,4; 1:50---News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 PM. - Outlaw Blues ( PG)
7 8. 11 P .M. ,- The Deep (PGI

one lener to each square, to lorm
four ordiriary words.

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

TV b-w •••••••••••. S 49
GE 30"

THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1n1
S:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Cl•b 13; . 6:0GPTL Club 15; Summer Semester 10.
6:30-DOctors on Call .. ; News 6; Summer Sem_ester 8;
For You ... Black Woman 10; 6 : 4~Mornlng Reporl

fljli}N} 0'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

J&amp;L

2-dr.
GE
Refrigerator•••••• $225
GE Gas Dryer.... $159
Norge
Gas Dryer........ .S 95
16"· Zenith

and ditcher . Charles R. HotServi ce .
f ie ld , Bock Hoe
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742 -2008 .

.
-7&lt;2-2348
--·---------·-----

Ph. "2·2141

H&amp;R FIREStONE
BARGAINS

Eleetric .Range. .. $175
Davenport ........ s so
exCAVATiNG. dozer : l~der a~d
Oluch
·
back hoe work : dump tru cks
,
reupholstered)
..
$
75
and lo -bovs for hire: will houl
f ill dirt . to soil. lime-stone and •220 v. 9,000 BTU
grovel . Call Bob or Roger Jefair conditioner.... $125
f ers. day phone 992-7089. night
Mobile home
!'~o~e 992 -3525 or 992 - 5232 .
air
cond. unit ..... $ 95
f)(CAVATlNG . dozer . backhoe

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
Ek cavallng , septic
systems .
dozer , ba ck hoe. dump tr uck .
limestone. gra11el. bla cktop
paving, Rt . 143. 1-'hone I (6U )
b98 -7331 .

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
· Installation Service

4-30,ttc

8·2· 1 mo.

-

HOBSTEITER
REALTY
S.

MOORE'S

Aut!' &amp; Truck
Repaif
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

c Bob Hcielli¢h t
109 High 51.

HWOOO BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers. tooslers . irons. all
•mo 'l appliances . Lawn mower,
ne•t to State Highway GoroQe
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985-

~ .

CAPTAIN EASY

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

0.

""'e
,......._
Place
Ill
UUW .

______ __ ______ _

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

'!&lt; mile oH Rt. 1 by-pan on
St . Rt. n• toword Rullond,

portnJits. We use tradi liORil settings and also
feature
outdoor
portrailure .
Call us Today

HOUSE' IN Middleport , remodel ed , 7 rooms . both . centr al air . BNADFORD . Auct ioneer . Com plete Ser -.. ice . Phone 949-2487
992-566• .
or 949-2000. Rac ine . Ohio , Critt
.Bradford . ,
,

•

ol

GAAAGE

BUilDING LOT for
sole in
POmerov . 32 100 of on cere .
Phone 992-3255.

- - ---

."'•
• •I

ROGER HYSEll.

SENIORS

.1

~

8-20-1 mo. (Pd.)

High School

SIX l-(00m house and both , on
country on 11 acres , central
heot , mineral rights . 15 minute
drive to town . Immed iate
possession . $13.000. 742·3074
or ~2-~8!5: - 19b7 HOUSE TRAilER 12xb0. A ll
eleclric , furnished , air cond .,
wosher ond dryer . 2 lots in Horrisono,~ille . 742-2820.

'

.I

-..

Free Estim1tes
'
Phone 94t-2862
or 949-2 160

Jack's Septic
Tank ·Service

.

_

·'.

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

Gutters and
Downspouts .

PhnnP OAii -1806 ·

'•

Service

New or R•

Hour service. Any day,

lARGI:: -BUSINESS bui lding in
Mason . 3200 sq. ft , Ground
floor . 1-304 -882-J;tSb.

.

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING -

SEPTIC TANK
CLEAN IN~

6, 13;

12 :•o-Legend ot the Block Hand 6.13; 12 :S5-Movle
" The Last Escape" 8; 1:00- Tomorrow 3,4; 1:50--:-News 13.
,
Mavle Channel • 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - MacArthur (PG)
9 &amp; 11 P .M. - Slapshot (R)

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1971
7:Cl0--Cross-Wits 3; Billy Graham Crusade 4;
Newlywed Game 6, 13; Last ot The Wild 8; News 10;
Gilligan's Is. IS ; Dick Cavell 20; Mountain State
Arls &amp;. Cralts Fair 33.
7:30--AII -Siar Any•lhlng Goes 3; Wolfman Jack 6:
Family Fe•d B; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl 20,33 ; The
J•dgeiO; In Search 0113 ; Wild Kingdom IS.
8:00-Movle "The Day oil he Dolphin" 3,_., 15; E lght Is
Eno•gh 6.13: Billy Graham Crusade 8; Olio : Zoo
Gorilla 20; Pllol 10; Nova 33
9:00-Charlle's Aogels 6,13; Movie "The · Amazing
Howard Hughes" 8, 10; Great Performances 33;
Poldark II 20.
10: 00-Pollce Woman 3; Slarsky · &amp; H•lch 6. 13;
Calloway 's Climb 4; Billy Graham Cr•sade 15;
News 20.
10 :31&gt;-WIIdtr Wilder 33; Bl• Beiderbecke Me morial
Jazz Festival 20.
·
11 :00-News 3,.,6,8, 10, 13, IS; Dick Cavell 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Pollee Story 6. 13; U.S.

'•

1

Open Tennis B; ABC News 33; ; Movie "Eiiel
Knlevel " 10; 11:&lt;5-Hawall Flve-0 8.
12:00-Janaki , 33J 12 :4D-Legend of the Black Hand

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Business- Seroices

HOUSE FOR sole near pool in
_
Syracuse . Call992-57b7 .
·

1978 PONTIAC CATALINA &lt;·d, . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

-

WORI&lt;
OVE RSEA S,
Au slrolio
Afr ica , South Amer ica , Europe,
et c
Con~t r uct1o n
Sole~ .
Engineer s, Cl eric al , et c. $8000
to $50.000 plu ~ E.-pen!&gt;es pa id .
For employmen-t information
wf 1te
Overu'!os Empl oyment ,
Box lO l l Boston Mo 02102

Bundy

.

TRA&lt;.'Y

Want Ads Tum Unwan-ted Items Into •Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES

.. -

11- '!'be OaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-PIIIJit!l'oy, 0 ., Wednesday, Al•o· ;,v, ~&gt;•U

•

)0- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-P&lt;meroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 30, 1971

...

-- AN' THAR'S

-'---T.H' BOARD

�.

.

•

.

12 .:... The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ptmeroy, 0., Wedneodoy, AU~~ . 30. 1978

Harvard professor heads postal_negotzators

.

r-------------------------

Secretary
:~.~~a ~.~!~~J
Man chin
·n eeds help

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Negotiators lor the Postal Service
and three Wlions, who failed to settle their contract dispute
IUlder the threat of a national mail strike will try agalfi
beginning Friday under guidance of a ~ard University
professor.
· James Healy, a nationally known labor relatlona expert, will
open a liklay cootract bargaining period between the two
sides Friday mornlrig, and will oversee the talks through the
Labor Day hollday weekend, a spokeswoman lor the Federal
Mediation and Concillatlon Service said Wedneaday.
.The talks wiD tun until Sept. 16, if necessary.
Under an agreement that averted tlie Illegal walkout

1

E. L. (Pat) Baldwin, 67,
president of the EckardBaldwin Funeral Home in
Akron,
died
Mond ay
following a seven month
illness.
Mr. Baldwin was fonnerly
a resident of Middleport. He
was born in Osceola, Ia., and
1VOrked as a tire builder for
the B. F . Goodrich Co. in
Akron before be attended an
embalming college in
Cleveland. He then worked

CHARLESTON, W .V a.
(UP! ) - West Vtrgmta
Secretary of State A. James
Manchln says he, needs help
in seeking a court action to
halt the removal of debris at
the site of the Willow Island
scaffolding disaster .
Manchin _called on other
state agenetes and relattves
qf the 51 workmen, .stx ~f
whom were Ohtoans, killed m
the disaster to help . stop the
cleanup of the debns at the
base of the coohng tower on
the Monoogahela Power Co.
~ant.
.·

"My lawyers advised me
that others mltst enter !his
llattle with me if the state Is
to assert lhe Interests of its
citizens at Willow Island," he
said.
"Assisted by the advice of
my attorneys , I have
reluctantly concluded ~at
any immediate legal action.to • Veterans Memorial Hospital
stop this blatant removal of
ADMITTED
Linda
essential evidence must be Rhodes, Long Bottom ; Gloria
b-ought by others with a Decker, Reedsville ; Judith
better standing to seek Smith , Racine ; Rodney
injunctive relief, such !IS Harmon, Pomeroy; Pearl
surviving relatives," he said. Utile, Middleport ; Chester
He said he · believes the Mundry. Reedsville; Brian
family members have a Connolly, Syracuse; Richard
better chance to seek an ' DeMoss, Pomeroy ; Carol
injunction against Research· Lunsford, Pomeroy.
Cottrell
Inc.,
the
DISCHARGED - Minnie
We feture both traditional subcontractor for the cooliltg Johnson, Michael Hannon,
settings and outdoor
tower . The company has Joseph ltaifhill.
portraiture in creating
continued to remove tile
vaur seniar portraits.
debris
despite Man chin's
Feel free to ca II us Holzer Medical Ceoler
decision last week to revoke
Without ob'ligation - for
Discharges, Aug. 29
details .
Research-Olttrell's right to
Mrs.
Kenneth Baker and
do business in West Virginia .
son
;
Louise
Burguess ;
Manchin urged the family
Shirley
Bel
ville;
Ronald
I Bob Hoeflich )
members to seek action in
992 -5292
Pleasan ts County Circuit Black ; Elsie Blevins; J~ssie
109 Hig MSt .
Court, which ·has jurisdiction Boggs; Mary Buck; John
Pomeroy
Carpenter ; Mrs . Ralph
over the accident site.
Cahndler and dau ghter ;
MRS. MArc Eblin and son ;
Zenia Evans; David
Frymyer ; John Guelt ;
Beverly Guinther; Mrs.
Barry Hamm and son ;
Sharon. Harrison ; Clifford
FOR
Hayes ; Judith Ireland;
Sllmley Jones, Jr ; Sheila

r»iE PHOTO PLACE

ENROLL NOW
FALL TERM
AT

Twister

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

!Continued from page I )
southeast Missouri, northeast
ArkllllS88, western Kentucky
and southern Indiana . .... ·
Lo c ally
hea vy
thunderstorms also drenched
portions of southeastern New
Mexi co and West Texas .
Flash flood warnings were
issued foc · portions of two
counties in the • Nebraska
Panhandle and foc Cameron
County In South Tetws.

Choose an exciting Career in one of these
success proven fields :

•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
•SECRETARIAL
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•JR. ACCOUNTING
·•GENERAL OFFICE

Logan

DAY or EVENING CLASSES ·

!Continued from page 1)
teachers next Wednesday.
Begin September 18, 1978
The levy - defeated 3,49().
2,097- would have raised an
• additional $1.2 million
Financial Assistance Available
, annuaUy on a continuing
Approved for Veterans
basis, If approved.
It was the llecood setback
Accredited by the Accredit ing Commission of the
for
the levy despite warnings
Association of Independent Colleges and Schools.
from school officials that
drastic cutbacks will be made
throughout the 4,100-student
system. The same levy was
defeated by a margin of
nearly 2-1 in June.
School officials today said
!he levy wili be placed on tbe
51 . No. 75-02-04728
Nov. 7 ballot. ·
·
The Jcbool board is to meet
FOR INFORMATION
tooight to evaluate election
results and plan cutbacks and
teachers are to meet Wednesday night to discuss the levy 's
OR WRITE :
defeat.
However, President Glenn
Jambor of the Garfield
Heights Teachers Association
t P.O. Bo• 7&lt;9
1 ·said no strike vote will be
l Gall ipolis. OH . 45631
1 taken until a meeting next
Tuesday.
~ ( ) Plea se provide me with more infor mation !
:
Teachers are scheduled to
report to schools later that
Name
Age
I
Address
City
Stalo _ _Zip.,-,:
day for1 orientation sesaions.
The .!I!Ystem's three-year
Phone No. - - ' - - - -- -- - - - - - contract with the teachers
expires Dec. 31.

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 31, 1978

Lanham; Maude Mannering;
Marguer ite McCullough ;
Tekisha Mitchell ; Nancy
Knott ; Patricia Parsons;
Marie Pursley; Mrs. Reevis
Schultz and s·on ; Lynn Slater;
Beulah Swindler; Goldie
Terry; Richard ThoIIIIIs ;
Mrs. Darrell Tilley and
daughter ; William Walters ;
Lannis Williamson II; Mrs.
Lawrence Wood and son .
Births, Aut!. %8
Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Downey, son, Jackson . ,
son, Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Heines,
daughter , Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. John Tabor,
sun, Ravenswood, W. Va .
Births, Aug 29
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Phillips, daughter, Crown City
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roush,
daughter, Middleport
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McCallister, daughter, Kilt's
Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Thompson, son, McArthur

Bidwell man
fined on
four charges
One defendant was fined on
four counis and six others
forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined was Robert Manley,
Bidwell, $250 and costs ,
reckless operation; $50 and
costs, drivirig while under
suspension ; $100 and costs,
leaving the scene and $30 and
coots, driving left Dl center.
Forfeiting bonds were
Clinton Smith, Jr. ; Point
Pleasant, and Vinton Smith,
Hartford, W. Va. , $350 ·each
posted on charges of driving
while intoxicated; Rodney
White, Long Bottom, $30,
assured clear distan ce;
Howard Writesel, Racine ,
. $30, wrong way on a one way
street ; Theodore Fisher,
Pomeroy, $35, speeding, and
Eddie Jewell , Middleport ,
$30, left of center.

TWO FINED
)'"ined in the court of
Middleport May or F red
Hoffman Tuesday ni ght were
Donald Lovett, Middleport,
$100 and costs in a disorderly
manner charge, and Rhea
Ann Gilbert , 18, Cheshire , $10
and costs. on a charge of
running a stop sign.

CALL 446 4367

[~iuwC&gt;usius~EsscoLLi~£1

I

.I

.

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

BOMJS

ACE

CHICKEN BARBECUE
RACINE - The Ra cine
Volunteer Fire Department
wiU stage a publi c chicken
barbecue on Labor · Day
·beginning at I! a.m. Dinners
includlng chicken , rolls, and
a complete meal will be $2.50
and price for one-half chicken
will be $1 .50.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 368 E .
Main St. , at 7:57 p.m.
Tuesday for Carol Lunsford ,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

BEAUTIFUL ~ The flowers In the yard of Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Donahue, East Letart, are beautiful to say

extended
All seni or citizens and
disabled individuals wh o
have not yet applied for the
Energy Discount for this
winter's heating bills have
been granted a 30 day extension. The original filin g
deadline was September I.
Ohioans must now have
their applications filed by
October 1 in order .to be
considered for the Energy
Discount benefits.
All residents of Ohio should
contact their family, friends ,
and neighbors to ensure all
eligible recipients have made
application. The Energy
Discount
Program
is
available; we muSt take the
time today to enroll all of our
fellow Ohioans who qualify
for the be11efits.
In order to be eligible for
this program a person must
meet the three following
requirements.
- The applicant must be
head of household and
- Must have reached the
age of 65 by December 31 ,
1978 or be totally and permanently disabled at any age
and
·
- must have a total annual
income of no more than
$7,420.00 in 1977 or an expected total income of no
more than $7,420.00 in 1978.
The program provides a 25
percent reduction on utility
bills for the billing months of
December 1978 through April
1979 to those persons who
purchase their energy from a
metered utility company. For
those persons who purchase
their energy from a retail
dealer, the pr0gram provides
a payment of $87.50 to the
applicant provided that at
least that much has been
spent for the heating period.

. BELMORE, Ohio (UP! ) Striking. migrant workers in
Northwestern Ohio were io
move into parts of Putnam
and Henry County today in an
attempt to get more workers
to join their campaign for increased pay and benefits.
Ray Santiago, secretarytreasurer of the .Farm Ulbor
Organizing Committee, said
about 2,000 of the area's 8,000
migrant w&lt;J'kers, most of
whom pick tomatoes and
cucumbers, have joined the
wock stoppage.
FLOC has established a
tent city bere for striking
wockers, giving them shelter
and food .
"We had a caravan up in
Putnam County all day
ye.nei'day and we pulled out
hundreds of wockers," said
Santiago. "We wUl have two
caravans today -about 45 or
50 cars apiece - to go into the
· Pandora area of . Putnam
Colinty and n&lt;l'thern Henry
County.
"We will talk to workers
who are still picking in hopes
of convincing them to join in
our strike and invite them to
our nighUy rallys in Tent
City," said Santiago.
"We have been serving
lunch and dinners to the

MEETS TONIGHT
The Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society wiD
hold a working meeting at the
museum ton ight, 7 p.m.
Preparations will be made
for compiling historical data
for the new Meigs County
History to be published by the
society. Anyone interested in
helping with the project is
invited to attend.
SCHOOL OPENING
Bobby Ord, superintendent
of Southern Local School
District , announc ed today
school will open Wedneaday,
Sept. 6.
Bus schedules will remain
the same as last year Ord
' stated.

LEVY MEETING
Sali s bury Township
Trustees will meet Sept. I, at
777 Pearl Street, Middleport,
at 7 p.m. lor the passing of a
resolution declaring it
necessary to levy a talt in
excess of the ten mill
limitation for cemetery
operation and road dust
control.

ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS PLAZA
9-6 M/SAT, 12.&amp; SUN.

·

allowed to leave the plane .
The alrerait of the Polillh
alrUne LOT was flying from
Gdansk, formerly Danzig, to
East Berlin, when the
hijacker took ammand.
· As soon 1!1 It landed at
Tempelliof, American Air
Force fire trucks IUrJ'Q\IIded
it and a group of :Mierican
officers went out to llpe8k to
the hijacker and to the pilot.
AI the same time, the'
Americano closed the airport
to
visitors
Including
journallsta.

EXTENDED FORECAST ..
Fair
Friday
aad
Saturday with a cbuce of
sbowen or tllllllCieniOrml
Sunday . Hilll• will be
from tile upper 'lt.. 10 mid
111. Lows wm be Ill tile 511
Friday aDd from the upper
5h to mid 1GB Saturday aDd
Sllllday.

forest green, sturdy construction, roomy
'

ralls.

Regular Size Trousers $8 ,95-46 to lO 19.95
"Regular Sizes Sh irts 57 .95, 18, 19, 2() , $8.95.

In flvt colors to match
work trouurs listed
above. Two pockets, full
tails.

'6.95
SHORT Sl EEVE

SHIRTS
All Seats Reserved 18.00 &amp; $7 .00
. ~"~lt.L~.Q!.JlL[ l :,t.R\dCf (Jillf.l(, ,[

Huntington Civic Center Only
Tickets Available as Lateas
Showtlme
For Information C.. II

CIVIC

Two pockets: long tills. Size SII4-WI2 l. Mll5·

conoN
POLYISDI iLEND............... '5,95

100 conoN...................... ••.•s

'

Man injured
in accident ·

Snecial milestone reached

Bids are expected to be
awarded within 30 days for
the construction of lhe approaches and land abutments
of the new bridge across the
Ohio River at Ravenswood,
W. Va . The structure would
co nnect Ohio and West
Virginia above Racine in the
Great Bend area of Meigs
County .
Total cost will be ap proximately $3 million.
Six bids were submitted for
the West Virginia side, just
south of Ravenswood, during
a bid opening ,.Tuesday by the
West Virginia Department of
Highways .
The h&gt;w bid was submitted
by Stevens Excavating
Company in the amount of
$1 ,796,279 .15 . It was for
g rad i n g , drain i ng,
bituminous
c on cre t e
psvement, one land pier,
signing and lighting.
Other bidders were L. R.
Skelton and Co., $2,016,367.92;
S. J. Groves and Sons, Co.,
2 44 8

was $1,396,179.99 by the Karl
M. Geutel Construcfion Co.
Guetel's bid is to construct
the Ohio approaches to the
Raven swood brid ge and
includes grading, draining,
bituminous
co n cre t e
pavement, five land piers and
signing. The reamaining bids
were submitted by Shelley
and Sands , Inc., in t eh
amount of $1,405 ,048.50 ;
Higgins Ere ctors
and
Haulers Inc., $1,448,619.50 ;

and the L. R. Skelton Co.,
$1,556,875.40.
.
According to Pat Gallagher
of the W. Va . Highwa y
Department, the bids likely
will be awarded within 30
da ys. However, the state
could reject any and all bids
if desired. There will be an
award conference sOmetime
next week to review the bids
with the contractors who
submitted bids.

Contract payoff

scandal probed

~ ~~ ~ : ~~;c~~~:- ~e~t~~

Dollar
•
gams

.

·.'

Weather

15'hl , L(16~ 16'12) , XLt17-17 1h ) .

..

Vol. 29, No. 97

their own initi ative and
By GREGORY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - sometimes at the suggestion
The head of the General of GSA employees
EDISON HOBSTE'ITER opening the doors of the Pomerov National Bank is a prettY
Services Administration, delivered huge cash payoffs
common sight in Pomeroy. Hobstetter.marks his 50th year with the bank in late S.:ptember.
seeking to break open what to obtain business and
competitive
may be the biggest money circum ve nt
scandal in government bidding procedures.
Asked if there was a chance
history , is asking 35,000
the
massive investigation
J:'
12,040 ,490.78 ; Sh elley and employees to tell what they
would
drive him to give up his
.
,
f Sands, Inc., $2, 102,682 .04 and know about payoffs their
By BOB HOEFLICH
banking, Hobstetter moved been acttve
10 support o
Dunn and Day , Inc., colleagues
job,
Solomon
said many
took
from
When September arrives right up the ladder. In 1931, numerous farn:' groups.
$2,263,941.65.
employees
"are
betting I'm
contractors.
tomorrow, it will bring a three years after he began
Well-known 10 the f•eld of
Four bids were submitted
Administrator Jay Solomon going to leave .. . I've got to
specia l milestone in life to working at the bank, he was banktng, the loca l b ~ nk , for the Ohio side. The low bid predicted at a news beat that bet."
Edison Hobstetter, president elected assistant cashier and prestd ent served a s a
Justi ce Department '
conference Wednesda y a
of the Pomeroy National in 1932 was elected cashier, a member of the Board of
officials
have expressed
long-running
federal
grand
Bank.
position he held until 1941 Directors of the F edera I :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::=:=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. jury investigation will result concern that without more
Vinson A. Stapleton, ·23, east of U.S. 35, at 2 p.m.
It was on Sept. 28, 1928 that when he was elected Reser ve Bank, Clevela nd,
EXTENDED FORECAST
in bribery and fraud witnesses they will have
Crown City, was treated for
According to tl)e patrol, an Hobstetter first began his · president. He was named a J%2-57; a member of the
Fair Saturday with a . indictments against about 50 diff ic ul ty brin gin g
injuries sustained In a one- auto operated by Charles duties as a bookkeeper at the director of the bank in 1932 Execut ive Co.un cil of the
of showers or
people - including GSA em- indictments against many
car accident Wednesday, at Eads, 53, Gallipolis, exiled bank which he now heads, 50 and has been chairman of the Ameri ca n Ba nkers Assn., chance
sW&gt;pects in the case, despite
thundershowers Sunday
3:10p.m. on SR 180, one-tenth from a private drive into the years later. He has served as board of directors since Dec. 1954-57; a mell\~r of the and M..ctay. Hl&amp;ba will ployees, employees of other evidence that middle-income
agencies
it
serves,
and
~of a mile north of Kemper path ol an east bound vehicle
president of the institution 30, lt161l.
Executive Comllilttee of the range from the upper 70s to
private
vendors
and employees have· hundred• ol
Hollow Rd.
driven by Jeffrey Golden , 17 , since 1941 - 37 years - a
Active in Pomeroy and National Bank Division of the mid 80s with a low from the contractors.
thousands of dollars stashed
According to the GaUia- Patriot Star Route. Both notable record, too.
Mei gs Coun ty commun ity Ameri can Bankers Assn ., upper 50s to mid 60s.
in bank accounts.
The
GSA's
top
investigator
,
Meigs Post Highway Patrol, autos Incurred moderate
Born in Pomeroy on Sept. affairs, Hobstetter was the 1955-58 ; a member of the
Proving
the
money
special counsel Vincent Alto ,
the .Stapletgn vehicle, damage.
q,
1905,
Hobstett er · first pres ident of th e savings Bond Committee of ::;::;::::::::;:;:::;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::.:::::::::::::::::: said he now believes payoffs constituted bribes will be
traveling south, went out of ' Eads wa s cited on charges . graduated from Pomeroy Pomero y Cha mb er of the Am e~ican Bankers Assn .,
to GSA officials totaled "in difficult, one source said,
control on 160, passed ofi the ol failure to yield from a High School in 1922 and for Commerce and he is a past and state chairman for Ohio
adding : "'Phe noose is not
the millions of dollars."
right side of the roadway and private drive.
five years he was employed president of the Pomeroy ·for the American Bankers
" It might be the bigg est around their necks yet."
struck a guardrail.
At 3 p.m., the patrol in- as shipping clerk for the Alumni Assn. He is a past Assn., 1965~9 .
money scandal in the history ' Solomon and Alto hove
· Stapleton displayed visible vestigated a two-car accident Pi ttsburgh Co al Co. in mast er of Pomeroy- Lodge
In 1953-54, Hobstetter was
of the federal government ," estimated the scandal
signs of injury and was trans- on SR 7, 50 feet so uth of U. S. Pomeroy.
164 , Free and Accepted elected president of the Ohio
already has cos t the
he said .
ported to Holzer Medical 35 .
He attended the Universi ty Masons and a member of Ba nkers Assn., and the Ohio
And Solomon indicated the govenunent $66 million in
Center.
Officers report that of Cincinnati, 1927-28, where Grange and lhe lzaak Walton School of Banking at Ohio
mos tly
to
investi gat ion , pro bin g fraud
Stapleton was treated for a veilicles operated by John he was a member of Phi -Leag ue of America . He was Univer s it y, Ath ens, was
TOKYO (UP! )- The U.S. wrongdoing over the last contractors who were paid
laceration of the chin, and Stobart, 31, Racine, and Lee Delta Theta Fraternity.
chairman of the Ohio 4-H started during his. term of dollar today gained some sev eral years, is stili a bove competit iv e prices,
bbrasions and contusions of Combs, 34, Gallipolis, were
Apparently quite adept at F oundatio n, 1966-!969 ; offi ce . He wa s a vice ground on the Tokyo Foreign growing . He said its success provided inadequate work or
the left forearm , and south bound on 7.
cha irma n of I he Meigs president of the Ohio Bankers Exchange market.
will depend in large part on products, or were paid for
released.
The Stobart auto slowed to Eastern local
County American Red Cross Assn. in 1952 and served in
Tradin g was li ght as cooperation from a gency work never done.
The Stapleton vehicle in- turn , and was struck in the
Chapter, 1941-46; president of other capaccities with the dealers took a break to adjust employees.
C.UlTed moderate damage. No rear by the Combs vehicle.
the Meigs County Pioneer associat ion during hi s 50 their
tr ading
position
"The employees are saying
citation was Issued.
Both
autos
incurred enrollment down
and Historical Society , 1964- years of banking.
following heavy dealings the to us, 'This has been going on
A seco.nd one-car mishap moderate dama ge ."
1969, and was president of the
Naturally. plans are un- previolL'&gt; day .
a long time . We've known
E AST
MEIGS
occurred Thursday at 3 a.m.
Combs wa s cited on
Meigs Co unty Bankers Assn. derway to honor Hobstetter
The
dollar
ended
the
dlly
at
it," ' Solomon said .
on SR 124 , at Minersville.
charges of assured clear Enrollment in the Eastern during the "Bank Holiday" for his services to the bank 190.00 yen, up from 189.75 at
"I say, 'Why don't you
Local School District where crisis of the nation . He has
Officers report that a distance.
and
the
·community
in
late
Wednesday's
close.
come
forth and tellW&gt; • If you
~vehicle operated by Dale F.
A one- car acci dent oc- classes began on Tuesday
September
.
The
greenback
opened
at
know
it 's there, co me
:Proffitt, 28, Racine, traveling curred at 3:45p.m. on SR 160, appears to be down ap189.60
and
moved
between
forward
and help us.' They 've
east, went out of control on four-tenths of a mile north of proximatel y 50 stud ent s,
189.50
and
190.75,
the
Bank
of
been
scared."
according to figures released
the wet roadway, passed off milepost I.
Tokyo said.
He said the decision to
the left side of the highway,
According to the patrol, a by Supt. Clark Lees.
$621
Turnove
r
totaled
reinstate
two
GSA
Enrollment as of Wedand struck a utility pole.
vehicle operated by Clare
million,
down
fr
om
$743
whistleblowers
RObert
J.
The Meigs County ComPl'offitt wa s uninjured. The Yarbrough, 37 , Gallipolis, nesday included : high school
million
Wedn
esday.
Robert
SuDivan
,
Tucker
and
and
junior
high
,
468
;
mi
ssi oners at Tuesday's
vehicle incurred moderate went out of control when
who were dismissed for
Riverview,
150;
Chester,
171;
meeting
deci!led to submit a
damage. No citation was Yarbrough applied the
RIO
GRANDE
Tuesday , Sept. 5, in Lyne
removing agency documents
142.
Tuppers
Plains,
pre
-a
ppli
cation for Apbrakes. The vehicle passed
issued.
Registrati on times for the !au · Center from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
in an effort to expose abuses
In
addition
70
students
are
palachia
n
Regional ComThe patrol investigat~ d off the roadway and struck a
quart er a t · Rio Grande Students wishing to register
in Massachusetts - was an ·
en
enrolled
in
kinder
gart
mission
Funds
to operate a
three other accidents on guardrail.
College and Communit y for cla sses must do so at the
attempt to show GSA
day
care
center
in Meigs
Yarbrough was uninjured. which will start later and 24 · Co llege wer e announced following tim es;
Wednesday.
employees they can trust the'
students
are
attending
Count
y.
vehicle
Officers were caDed to the The
incurred
today by the office of ad9-9:45 a .m., L,M; 9:45agency's current leadership .
An agreement was signed
scene ol a two-vehicle moderate damage. No special programs at Meigs missions and records.
10 :30, I, J , K; 10 :30-11 : 15, B,
Solomoo, named to head
High School.
with
the finn of David M.
mishap, on SR 5811, one mile citation was issued.
Re~ i stration will be held
C; 11 :15-noon, A; 12 :45-1 :30
the GSA a year and a half
Ted
W.
Brown,
Secretary
of
Griffith
and Associates, Ltd.,
p.m. , N, 0, P, Q; 1:30-2 :15, Tago, has spent much of the
State,
announced
today
Atto
prov
ide profes sional
Z; 2:15-3, R,S ; 3-3 :45, F , G, H
time trying to clean up the
torney
Patrick
O'Brien
bad
consulting
services for an
and 3:45-4 :30, D, E.
scandal that now involves
agreed
t
o
serve
as
chairindirect
cost
recovery
Open registration for those
evidence
dozens
of
unable to register at the person of attorneys for Meigs contractors - sometimes at program for Meigs County to
recover costs incurred by the
suggested time will he from 6 County.
Brown, who is nationally ·
county fo r-- administerin g
until 9 p.m .
federal programs.
Students who have pre- recognized for his voter
SPECIAL MEETING
George Buchannon met
registered must also attend education programs, said, " It
A special meeting of the with the board asking when
the registration process to pleased m e that Pat rick
a cquire their I.D. cards, O'Brien has agreed to work Meigs Local School District the garhage boxes in Olive
parking stickers and copies of towards my re-election. Board of Education wju be Township would be moved to
their class schedule. These O'Brien is one of many held at 7:30 Friday to hire a new location. The comstudents should follow the Ohioans who will be Involved employes and to acc ept missioners- stated that they
I
would contact the trUstees
same time schedule Usted. in our campaign this fall." resignations.
"These attorneys will aid In
and establish a time to move
If an Individual wishes to
the boxes. ·
apply for admission on county organization efforts to
register
voters
and
represent
Paul Nease, Riggs Crest
registration day, he or she
me
at
the
many
meetings
Manor
Subdivision, met to
should stop by Allen Hall.
TO
CLOSE
MONDAY
held
across
the
state,.
as
we
discuss
a sanitation problem
Office of Admissions and
The
CAA
office
will
be
prepare
for
the
Novel1)ber
that
exists
adjoining his
Records, before going to the
closed
Monday
In
observance
election,"
Brown
said.
property.
The
commissioners
·registration process in Lyne
f
.I
J
of
the
Ulbor
Day
holiday.
S.
Lashutka,
Gregory
agreed
to
contact
the Health
Center.
(
Columbus city attorney is There will be no programs Department and have it inchalnnan of the statewide that day according to Joe vestigated.
Barsotti.
attorney's group.
Larry Spencer, Clerk of
The
group
's
goal,
ac'
i:,
Courts, met with the board to •
Decreasing cloudiness cor&lt;lln8 , to . Brown Is, "To
discuss his budget.
BOARD MEETS
tonight, low In upper 50s. maintain the same loyal
The meetinil was adjourned
'The Southern Local Board subject to recall by the
Mostly sunny Friday, high support we have received In
temperatures between 7&amp; and pall elections and attract the ol Education will meet In president. Attending were
R1
Wamsley,
13,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Wanuley,
80.
Probability
of additional voters who sup- special sessilill at 4 p.m. Henry Wells, Richard Jonea
, WINNER OF HOLE-IN.QNE C&lt;ln'I'BI' - Winner of
J.
R.
came
within
lllnchea
of
the
cup.
He
was
Pomwoy,
precipitation 100 percent ported my position against todaY 1n the high school and J lm Roush, comtilt Hai•Jn~
held at Pomtroy Ooll Coune
..,.mted
a
Ht
of
aolf
clubl
by
the
sponsor.
Shown,
1..-,
to
discuss mlsaionera, · and Mary
today, 30 percent tonight, 10 election day registration and cateterla
!ipalllllrld by tile ,_.,J-Micldilport Llana Club wu J.
.-e, J . R. and Bob Hill, preald..t of the Uons Club.
fraud, last year."
percent Friday.
•.
negotiations.
Hobltetter, clerlr.

'

Cltlllt•

RFELDS
I

was the first after five
consecutive months of .
increases. The index climbed
0.5 percent in June.
It was also the largest nonweather..-elated drop during
any single mooth since the
last part of the 1974-75
recession. The indel&lt; declined
by 1 percent in January and
by 1.1 percent in January
1977, but both of those dips
were attributed to the effects
of severe winter ·weather .
The
Commerce
l)epartment reported .
Wednesday that ne.w orders
received by the nation 's
fa ctories plunged 3.8 percent
during July, the steepest
decline sin ce December 1974 .

·o ~

IJJEat.'JIBRAY
TICKETS ON SALE NOW

F.irteen Ce11ts

Bridge bids received

application

O'Brien
appointed

WORK SHIRTS

TONIGHT I P.M.

en tine

Rio registration
to begin Tuesday

· Complete selection of troUser sizes from 29
waist to 50, lengths 28 lo 34. Solid col'!",
khaki, navy. charcoal grey, dark olive,

pockets Including watch pocket .
.
Shirts match perfectly In Size 14'12 to 2() ,
two pockets, lull cut, extra long shirt

·BY JAMES HILDRE111
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A
govelilment index designed
to l&lt;l'ecast the future path of
the economy fell 0.7 percent
last month for the first
decline since January, the
Commerce Department
annoUnced today .
_The newest report, coupled
wtth
several .
other
pessimistic economic
measurements made public
recently , gives a clear
indication that economic
growth during the second half
·or the year will slowdown
considerably from the robust
springtime pace.
The July drop in the
department 's Index of
Leading Econ&lt;mic Indicators

--

180,000-rnember National Association of Letier Carriers and
the 40,000-rnember National Post Office Mail Handlers unlon
all rejected a JX'Oposed three-year contract offering an overall
19.5 percent wage and cost of living incre;ISe.
· l:'oatmaster General William Bolger said the Postal Service
could afford no bigger mooey package and favored submitting
the dispu(e to binding arbitration, where it was posaible the
"no layoff" clause could be eliminated. The unions demanded
renewed negotiations instead.
Both sides agreed to the compromise calling lor a
combination of negotiations and arbitration.

Commission
·will submit

SHORT SLEEVE

. . .. &lt;1«)0

..2-3662

BERLIN (UP!) --' An
armed man from Ea1t
Germany llljacked a Polillh
airliner wllh 80 pauengers to
West BerU11 today and
surrendered to U.S. military
police with a group of eight
other people, a spokesman
for the U.S. Air Force said.
The hijacker SWTendered
his weapon and himaeH to
American Air Police as soon
as the alrcnlt, a Sovlet.made
TUI34 oclginally flying to
East Germany, landed at
West Berlin's Tempelhof
airport, heart of the AUled
airlift that defeated tile
Russian blockade of West
Berlin in 11148-49.
Eight other peraons left the
aircraft with the hijacker and
were being questioned by
American authorities, the
spokesman said.
They · included several
young children.
The remaining passengers,
mostly East Germans, were

MEN'S ·
WORK SUITS

. .

89e YARD

Hijacker s:urrenders

ANOtHER SHIPMENT

FALL SALE
•

·Santiago ailo said an atlor·
ney, who represent&amp; about 100
tomato growers who aell to
Ubby·McNell lo Ubby, had
not responded to the migrants
jX'Oposals.
. The migrants are allldng
lor 30 tO 35 cents. a hamper
which Is 33 pounds of
tomatoes. They are now
getting 21 to 25 cents a
hamper.
Ohio Is one of the nation's
top tomato produers and a
base of operation fer UbbyMcNell I&lt; Ubby, In Lelpolc,
Campbell in Napoleoll,
Hunt's in Roslford and the
Heinz Co. in Fremon.t .

ELBERFELDS

DURING OUR

HEAVY DUTY
VINYL RUNNER

.
.
the least. There are a variety of fall ilowers that are really
sometbin~ to see.
·

striking workers," he said.
"We had planned for this and
we have the mmey In our
. treasury f&lt;l' these meal,!J ..We
dldn, want a strike but it wBB
either strike or allow
conditions to remain as they
are."
"We have cloae ID 2,000
people out oo strtke and some
others are leavlog the stale,"
said Santiago. "The strike Is
definitely growing ...
Santiago
said
repreaentatives of CampbeD
Soup Co. apparenUy have
rejected jX'oposala made by
the migrants oo Mondav.

at y

Index down
last month

Striking workers moving

DeadHne

SAVING

.

arbitration authority) prior to the 15 days."
Healy, 62, an Industrial relations professor at Harvard, has
served on and off since the World War II years as a mediator
and arbitr ator in major disputes """n""'g most areas of
Industry.
He was appointed as postal mediator by Director Wayne
Horvitz of the · mediation service, who proposed the
compromise procedure.
·
Alabor source has said the two sides agreed to negotiate the
mon ey package and a proposed "no layoff" clause the unions
hope to maintain.
The 280,000-memher American Postal Worker.• Union, the

•

HOSPITAL NEWS

High School ·
Seniors

I·

and joined the Eckard
Funeral Home in 1939.
He became a partner in
1946 and the name was .
changed to Eckard-Baldwln
Funeral Directors' Assn., and
a member of the state and
national funeral directors
associations. Mr. Baldwin
was a graduate of tile Middleport High School.
Funeral services were held
at the Church of the Master in
East Akron . .

threatened for midnight Mooday , Healy wa s named f!ledlator
lor a novelliklay bargaining:atbltration period to which both
sides agreed .
He wlll try to first to encourage a negotiated settlement. U
that fa Us, Healy has lhe task of deciding any unresol~ed issues
under a system slmUar to binding arbitration.
The talks at mediation service headquarters need not run
,IUltll the 1iklay period expires, lhe spokeswoman stressed.
" U there Is an agreement prior to then, !he mediator can put
it out lor ratification ," she said. "Also , if he decides alter four
or five days of dealing with these people that there Isn't going
to be an. agreement, he can render a dedsinn (under hi•

I

\

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