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[}.1- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntincl.Sw1dav . Scut. IO. I978

BUsinessman just pawn

Beat••.

Of the Bend

By (;ALE WILEY
FRANKFURT, West
Germany ( UPII - American
bu sinessman
F.
Jay
Crawford, in West Genpany
briefly today with his fiancee ,
insists he was only a pawn the
Russ ians played to win
release of two suspected
Soviet spies from a New
Jersey jail. .
Crawford and his American
fian cee, Miss Virginia
"Ginny" Olbrish, were to fly
to Chicago today aboard
Lufthansa flight 430. He will
report to company directors,
th entakeafewdays leave; he
·d
sal '
Crawford said he and Miss
Olbrish , unable to marry in
Moscow Aug. 19 as they had
planned, will be married by a

By Bob Hoeflich
IF YOU have any questions you'd like to direct to U. S.
SeDBtor Howard M. Metzenbaum you'll ha••e a chance to voice
them &lt;I! Wednesday.
The mobile office of Sen. Melrenbaum will be on the upper
parking lot between Lvnn ap~ Svcamore.Sis., Pomeroy , from
1:30 to 4:30pm. Wednesday. Staffer John Ma~mard will he
happy to answer any questions. The purpose of the mobile
office is to provide district office servi ces to areas of the state
that are long distance from offices of th e senator.

I UNDERSTAND attendance allhe Meigs Athletic Booster
meetings runs about six or eight persons for each sesion - Not
a very good turnout considering the big crowd of athletic
boosters turning out faithfully for the Friday night football
games and the nwnber of youngsters involved in the sports
program. I understand the Boosters meetings are not being
announced as effectively as they should be so that many
parents and patrons of the school don 't know when meetings
are held.
·
. I'm hoping that you will be well advised prior to each
meeting. A good boosters club can really accomplish a lot not
to mention the morale' building influence on the teams.

,justice o( lt]e. peare In tliO
United .States.
Crawford . was eonvicted
Thur sday
of
' black
marketeering dollars for
rubles and received a fiveyear suspended priso~ .
sentence and three years
· probation.
•
The Tass news agency
reported Crawford had been
expelled for his conviction,
but
the
International
Harvester salesman . denied
it.
"I was not expelled from
the Soviet Unidn," Crawford
said. "I asked for my e!dt
visa and I got it."
"I would l'k
I e to come
b3ck " he said. "I would not
like I~ think that I am barred
fr om the soviet Union .
There's no indication on my

NEW GALILEE, Pa. (UP! ) treatment for a finger InJUry.
- A state police command
Hudson ts wante~ on esc~pe
po st in north e rn Beaver charges in.both •1ales and·an
County Saturday directed anned robbery charge tn
a bout 15 state troopers using Ohio.
bloodhounds in a search for
The search was centered in
murder suspect Bert Lee nort hern Beaver Cowtty after
Hud so n, 23 , wanted on Hudson was reportedly seen
criminal charges in Penn- purchasing some food and
sy lvania and Ohio.
ca ndy at the Millgate Hotel in
A spokesman for the Beaver Falls Thursday night.
cummand post near New
A native of West Mayfield,
Ga lilee, wher e Hudson is near Beaver Falls, Hudson
wanted for questioning in the was sought for questioning in
.shooting death of a local man the shooting death of William
and the wounding of his son,
said th e last con firm ed
s1ghtin g of Huds on was
Th ur~day night at a tavern in
Beaver Fa. lls.
..
CLEVELAN D (UP! ) The spokesman sa1d state After months of often-bitter
troopers from va riou s wrangling , Cleveland Mayor
st ations we re co nducti ng Dennis Kucinich and City
consta nt s urve illan ce of Coun cil President George
roa_ds in the area , while in- Forbes have achieved a
vestigators checked reports compromise that will keep
of unconfirmed sig htings . Republic Steel's proposed $10
Ohio authorities have also million iron ore unloading
been alert ed since the area. is- dock in Cleveland.
only a few miles from the
Republic . executives had
border .
warned they were preparing
Hudson es ca ped from to build the facility elsewhere
Rockview Slate Correctional unless the healed dispute
lnsi itution at Be ll efonte , with the city came to an end.
Centre Count y, in early Alternative sites mentioned
Au gust. He went on a for the dock included Lorain
weekend furlough and fa1led and Ashtabula.
to return . He was serving 5-10
The dock proposal had
years [or the armed robbery become a major issue this
of a Chippewa Township summer during the un·
resident in November 1974 . success ful drive to oust
He la t e r surfaced in Kucinich from office, witjt.4he
Springfield, Ohio, where he young. mayor terming the
was arrested and jailed, but plan a ''rip-off of the tax·
then escaped Aug. 25 [rom a payers."
hpspital while unde rgoi ng
Republic is one of the

OON'T know if you are aware of it or not , but Doris and
Benny Ewing visited in Europe for several weeks this
summer. While there, they bought authentic German
costwnes for themselves and their children, Beth , Kim and
Ben.
Hope you have a chance to see all of the family together in
the outfits sometime. Thai's ~ great family too, by the way.
THERE is a strong movement underway for the
establishment of a Christian school in Meigs County.
However, facililles for tlle school are. needed . These could
be a church with classrooms, a public building of some
description , a Masonic building - whatever.
If you have a facility which you feel could be satisfactory
for Ule operation of such a schoo l - whi ch you would he willing
to rent - do ca11992-7760 or 742-2442 pronto .

past months. The doc.tors repor t satisfactory progress .

BEAUTIF UL Pin e Grove will he the scene of the annual
Harvest Fesllva l of St. John Lutheran Chur ch people
beginning with a church servi ce at llthis morning . A basket
dinner will be held at noon and at 1:30 p.m. the Gospel Tones of
the Chester area will entertain .
IT IS estimated there are still a couple of th ousand Meigs

County voters who have not registered. Registrat ion is
required by law and you must do so to vote at the Nov. 7
elections . Contact the board ·of elections office in Pomeroy it
you haven't regist ered . They'll be glad to tell you how to go
about it.
A NEW histor y of Meigs County planned by the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historica l Society is apparently going to
be all about people.
·
Every family in Meigs County - some 7,000 - will be
given an invitation to write a 500 word article about their
family for the book and they will be permitted the use of one
picture.
The society hopes to sell everyone submitting articles a
book but purchase is not necessary for getting your family into
the book. Incidentally. only the number of books ordered will
be published so there'll - at this point - be no chance in
holding out to buy one later since none will be available later .
You should be receiving word about the project in the mails
about the end of September . It all sounds like quite an

Crawford denied any guilt
and said he was convicted so
the Russians could trade him
for the release of two Soviet
citizens awaiting trial oo
espionage
ch11rges
in
Woodbridge, N.J .
Soviet police snatched
Crawford from his 1977 Volvo
statioo wagon on a Moscow
street the evening of June 12
and held him for 15 days
before releasing him into the
custody of IJ .s ..Ambassador
Malcolm Toon.
In
a
reciprocal
arrangement , the
two
Russians
arrested
in
Woodbridge the previous
month and held in lieu a $2
miUion bond, were released
into the custody of Soviet

Phillips, 48, New Galilee,
Beaver County .
Phillips was shot and
killed , and his son, William
Phillips Jr., 21, was wounded
se riously by a ma sked
gunman who entered the
Phillips' home early Wed·
nesday.
The
gunman
was
struggling with the younger
Phillips when the fath er

problem right now. It 's sinus. they say, and I don 't know who
" they " is exactly . Keep smiling anyway.

RECORD SET
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - A
record hig h t.emperature of 94
degrees for a Sept. 8 was set
at 3: 15 p.m. Friday in
Cleve land , breakin g the
pre\Oous record of 93degrees,
set in 1 ~59 , according to the
National W.ea th er Service .

Bus!!l L'!-&gt;S 111 the r_ iep&lt;Htment
s l ur'l·s IS booming this yea r .
Sal es CIIT ru nn ing a bout 12
pcrt'erlt ahe.ad of 1977, will1
must uf the rist:: dut: tu hiJ..(Iwr
volume rather thc111 infl a tinn
Til~ cxceptit'lleil pc rfon na nce
th is yea r ca n pro ba bly bc attribull!d lo th~ hcttvy snows
la)'i t wi nter . accunli ng to a
The Ne:t tional Shrine uf the
Conference Bo1:1nl ana lysis .
In lltid wt::a lher , conMuncn:i l m mt~ l'U latl· Cu nc ~ pt i un in
are indi ne{] tu make as me-m y Wa~lll n g tvn . D.C.. i.s the
purchase:-; a s pos.,;,; i iJ I ~ under l;Jrgt•s l Ct:1lholic churd1in tile
Unitell Sl&lt;tlcs.
oue rui ,r.

.. . . . . · e.. a.•••······· . . \

~al:

'£state:•

Today :
By

I

•

INTERIOR SEWNG TIPS

•
•
•

1
•

••
•

Rem embe r - when you
ar e showi ng th e Insi de of
your ho me. to a prospective
e buyer , firs t lm presslons
e are last ing and ha&gt;Je an
• i m por t ant ef f ect on a
potentia l sale .
I
A clean , well -kept hor'n e
• show s a home t hat has ha d
• good care and ha s bee n
• pr o perl y m a i nta i;1 ed .
e Repa int t he interi or if it
needs it, but use neutral
• color s, if possi ble. An at • tra c t i&gt;Je , c o mf o rtab le
• li ving room is a maj or
• attract ion , bu t a spark ling
k itchen wi ll appeal to t he
• lady of the ho use. It's th e
4 hea r t of any home , so keep

Bed r oom s are impor tant
_ arran ge th ei r f u r
nishi ngs neat l y . Sh i ny ,
clea n windows not on l y are
a grea t a sset, b ut l et
sunlig ht in and br ighte n the
ent ire atmospher e. Clean
out t he clut t e r in the
close ts , basemen t , and
garage. Ap d, i f you ha\le
pet s, cle ar them ou t too
when show ing .

Women are al so sensitive
• •bout ba thr oo m s ; k eep
II them clean and order! Y·

ESTATE , sn Second Ave., e
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7499 . e
We're here to help.
•

\!

e I! spotless . No dirty dishes .

•
•
•
•
•

e

•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

If there is anything we •
1
.. an do to help you in. th e •
field lo f r ea l estate please e
phone or drop in at e

LEADI NGHAM

REAL e

•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
v

HAMMOND, Ind. (UP! ) Four people, including three
children, were killed and five
others were hospitalized
Fnday in a house fire
investigators said would not
have been so devasta ting had
it occured a ni ght later.
Had tlle fire broken out one
night later, the vicr.ms would
have had newly insta lled
smoke detectors and mig ht
have been spared, an aide to
the chief inspector for the city
fire department said.
Killed were Cindy Bowen,
27, and her children, Michael,
8, Christine , 9, and Heidi. 6.
Four other occupants of the
house were burned severely.
Fi refig hter Fred Rodriguez
was hospi talized in fair
condit io n with
smoke
inhalation .
Listed in cTitical condition
was Jean Ann Smyth, 20, who
was sent to the Cook County
Hospital burns unit in
Chicago, authorities said .
Helen Smith , 48, and her
son. Da• id, 18, were treated
for in juries and released .
Maynard D. Smyth, 57, was
listed in fair condition after
mrgery .

Maynard and Helen are the
parents of lhe younger
Smyths and Mrs. Bowen.
Hanunond fire prevention
Capt . ' Leo Sartiris said all
eight persons in the large ·
home on tlle city's south side
were sleepin~ when the fire
broke out. The blaze apparently burned for some
time before being discovered,
he said.
Ironically, the house was
being rewired and the job
would ha ve tncluded in·
stallation of smoke detectors,
said Chief Inspector W.ebb
Lohse of the Hammond Fire
Department.
'"llley were just one day
late,'' he said.
The cause of the fire was
not determined. Lohse said it
might have been electrical,
because · there were three
extension cords plugged into
one socket.

The stale's newest and
most sophisticated nursing
facility-the Pleuant Valley
Nursing Care Unit was
dedicated Sunday and was
slated to be opened for
business today .
Dr. George E. Pickett,
director of the W.Va.
Department of Health, gave
the dedication address and
afterwards cut the ribbon to
the new facility .
While this took place on
Sunday, Gov. Jay Rockefeller
showed up Saturday for
what was billed as a sneak
preview of th~ facility and
took a tour.
Sev.eral hundred people
turned out for Sunday's ~vent
in 90 dsegree plu s lem·
peratures. The 1(J().bed xshaped facility is the only one
of its ktnd tn the stale that
meets all necessary federal
requirements.
Board of Trustee member

•
RICHARD L ROUSH

Temple, Charleston ;
and financial · chairman,
GaWpolle Christian Churcb.
Roush Ia inarrled and has
one daughter. They will be
moving .to Huntington in the
near future.

Shrine

,.,

and fired, killing the father.
Less than 24 hours later, a

the National Abortion Kights
Action League, the Akron
Pro-clloice Coalition and Zero
PoPulation Growth.
The Akron ordinance
requires parental conaent
aimed at teenagers under 15
seeking an abortion and
parental notification for
women under 18.

OTTAWA LAKE, Mich.
· (UPI) - Police said a 48year-old rrian was killed and
four other persons injured
late Friday in a two-car crash
in
Monroe
County's
Whiteford Township.
Authorities identified the
victim as Lyle Kohler of
Ottawa Lake, the driver of
one of th~ two vehicles.
The driver of the second
car. David Goodhead, 21 , of
Euclid, Ohio, and his three
passengers were taken lo a
BIG WORRY
Toledo,
Ohio, hospital. for
WASHINGTON (UPI)
treatment
of undetennlned
Deeply worried about in·
injuries.
flation , Americans feel they
are worse off today than they
were five years ago and they
A 35().pnund sturgeon yields
believe things are likely to go 55 pounds of ca vi• r, and a
downhill in the next five ·2,68().pound ·fish once provid·
years, according to an l'll more than 350 pounds. But
opini on
poll
released it takes 18to 20 years before a
Saturday by the Labor Beluga sturgeon matures and
Department ,
~p.:t wns .
~

i

78 BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS

Be~ in

Nicaragua clUes.
(UP!) ~ Nicaragua today
"The National Guard
wu 1D a alate ol full«llle maintains cunlrol ani order
dvll ,..., wj_lll the city of •
• o1 the republic," Col.
y ' 1• l!l--......
Annda, the Guard'•
·,• ....,. fiiiiiiJir1JI"''l'tl'f111'' ·
ft!IIIIIIIW clitef llidd in·'
8lld troope backed by tanka his latest corn~unlque
flahllnl IUerrlllas for &amp;mday. He pralaed all ol the
p · dlll of every blodl in members of the Central
Leon.
American 'natloo's 8,10Q.rnan
The 'mounlinl death toll U.S.-tralned army ''ftr their
reporledly w11 In the high morllle and efficiency tn
the mlsalooa accompllahed."
Delplte 1ovemment claims
However, heavy arms fire
to the contrary, the 2-day-old' Oared again in Managua
offenaive
by
Mardst &amp;mday night, ani gun battles
SandiDllla perrl1lu trying were reported in progreas
to gift the 1otta1na recJme:of early today In at lout three
Prelldent Anlltalllo Somciu locaUona in the capital.
a final puah continued
One pollee aource said two
unabated on aeverlll franta in Guardsmen and three
the capital and In provincial

-•¢

ELBERFELD$

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PLAYTEx--

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&amp;;:~
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Tlte World Today

..

PlusaNO·Risk

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worked to lreep Norfollt and Western 1181Iway operalinl
allll:e railroad clerks went on strike July 10 have received
bonwt c:becb tQ\IIIIng more than $U m!Woa.
The rallroid Ia paylnc interim boou.a of $2,000 to

Rillciil
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•on aole lor Ill• nrat tim• ever
two

ELBERFELD$ IN POM

y

r

program "Meet the Press," quoted a "pretty good source" as
saytng the negotia!Alr~ have made little or no substantial
progress.
In the first official glimpse of the meeting, White House
press aide Jody Powell, who has been designated official
spokesman for the conference, said "progress ·seems to have
been made, but problems remain in important areas."
The Gettysburg lour was the first time aU three leaders have
emerged from the heavily guarded presidential retreat since
Uleir arrivals last Monday and Tuesday.
The Egyptian and Israeli leaders and their delegations made
an elaborate show of multial friendliness. But although they
waved to the reporters, the officials gave no hint of the state of

tlle negotiations.
However, conference sources said the talks have homed in
on tbe two issues that have proved to be insurmountaWe
obstacles in past negotiations :
-The extent and timing of the Israeli withdrawal from the
occupied West Bank and Gaza strip.
-How to deal with the Palestinian problem in a manner that •
will satisfy the Israeli need for security and the Palestinian
demand I or a sovereign bumeland.
Officials said the conference has no deadline, but participants are expected to reach a conclusion, one way ~r the other ,
by late Tuesday or Wednesday.

17 die .i n
Ohio traffic
At least

17 people were

killed in tralllc accidents

J;-lane checked for damage

To'f::'~~Hac:,en::e~

Wants spacecraft developed
OOLUMBUS, Oblo (UPI) - Alahl Shlrnlut, a Tokyo
lllltllll'l Columbua t.borlt.orlel. to develop and carryout
all aan' a apacmtl, an experiment ltllle.led by one ol the

POR'I'LAND, Ore. (UPIJ - A Ncwlb;oflll Orient A1rUnea . =~on Ohio 2in
00.11 I'M Into a flock of auplll Ill tlbol amday, and the
Belief~· Gtl'bard H
piWIIIw tad Ill lbealrpcrt to c:bldtl«~. ·
"LeuiWI Jr
G1we City.
0111-auD - t thnlulb ID IIIIIM,IIIlllnolller atruck I ,..... bll ~ cnaheci
1.w • Jfllll'llrot.Nomajctrtlalnaa-WUdllcotaiddlerthe 00
13 in IApD Qlunty
Jtdl relunlld to Priln4 Jatnatltinll Airport, and It ~, William Ray ~
mila lrtp to Ha-polll, lllml.
a,Urna,...-bltbyacaru
be waiUd 011 • city lllnet.

u.s

III'ICII•••
r.ter dedicates project

SalueJ

=

, Akron:

Mlcbul

~- ClOUJMBIJI(UPl)-FlnUIIICirllrlltobelpclidkalll ~· 1:. U.U=
.al I iiiiJ4 led, t1J mW!m rttltl;:' tpr•nt pn)ed ....... , . aft 1
.ne":-1a Akron
1illtllll tf .. CUital OlJ - ' IIA. IIIJ.
IIIII Ill\ 1 1Ne
.
·
~dille fa N•.,.... rw 1 fwtt4 r II llllldiJ IIIII

11111UDumuttlltiiLV_,._CIIIIIIctilJ'IMar ' Jllllnue:lleftnC.Treat,
1CGI!tinu_ed!111PIIt10J

•lldlllrllllrtllbciii&lt;UI!inl'* • : 1111w 11

i

..

streamed out of the city &lt;I!
fool , carrying pathetic
bundles of clothes, or in cars
adorned with makeshift white
Digs made of bedsheets,
uncle rlh'lr Is · and
bandkerchiefa.
A Red Cross ambulance
driver whose vehicle was shot
up by a NaUonal Guard tank
said gunfire was !KI heavy it
was impoasible to evacuate
tlle wounded. Asked bow
many deaths there had been,
he replied, "Too many."
The Sandlnlstas claimed to
have scored galna against
govenunent ferces in at last
eight cities since guerrilla
bands throughout the natioo
opened
lighting
swnultaneously at 6 p.m.
Saturday., '

check two
accidents
Meigs

••w••al'ilclera.
,
·
The aperlment wW be lncladecl Ia a BltteiJe.deveiGped
Qlll' ~ payload to be nown oo tile u. s. Nallooal
.Mranaullca and Space AdrnlnlltratiCII'I lljiiiCe shuttle,

employ111 who have been worJdnc lOIII hours, principally
tnriY from home; $1,000 to lboee who have worlred hours
•.W.nllally in aceu of thole IICtl'lllllly requlrtd and • tAl
aD athera, NI:W apokeaman Lou Pbelpe said Saturday.

e

~:

Deputies

in Leon. "Eight masked
guerrillas, &lt;l!e of them a girl
who couldn't have been mtre
than 13 years old, came by

a

5.95
2 tor tOM
MOlt 2 tor 9.10tt

here asking everyone to give
them their pistols."
A National Guard tank was
reported destroyect in Leoo,
but another tank was
atfackintl' a unl~er•lty
science building there alter
dark.
Masaya, Nicaragua 's
fourthlargest city located
about 15 miles east of
Managua, was engulfed by
fires thai burned out of
control
today
amid
cootinuing heavy anns fire.
Residents frantically

$ ;;~;

around Ohio during the
weekend, the Ohio Hichway
Palrol reported today.
Among the vlctlma, who
died in 1bccldenta, were five
rnot.orcycllstl and two pedeatria111.
Also Included in the fatality
count were three Mlamlaburg
residents who Ioet their lives
In two-car crash on a
Mmt&amp;omery County Friday
evening .
The Patrol counts traffic
fataliUfll filch noo.iJoUday
weekend,!rom 8 p.m. Friday
until mltight &amp;mday.
Killed were:
Stulllay

ww 5 P"' with a cirallaUCII of II miiUon, 11M contacted with

$1.50 Off"when you buy two
Crou Your Heart Soft Slder•lras .
(or the same stv1e)

Rush In now for great savings during our Playtex
"Combined suggested price d
tXJ..-XXL S1.55 more
ltD Cup 51.00 more
tt t J&lt;L s1.00 more

•ve

ROANOKE, Va. (UPI) - Supervbory employees who

$1.000ffon
Support Con Be Beautiful ®Bras

for a smoofh. nafl.xalloak \Slder pails.
12714/ 15

Supervisors now striking
~

Sandinlstas had died in a
fresh battle, and Sardlnlata
guerrillas were shooting at
troope from treetops. The
_,..,., uld thin wu an
order to ldl1 the Sanl!niatas
"until the last man."
The Guard claimed government troops retook Leon,
Nicaragua's second-largest
city, at 2 p.m. Sunday, but
witnesses said there had been
&lt;l!ly a truce between 3 pm.
and 4 pm. to allow people to
get fresh food supplies into
tlle blacked-&lt;Jut city 50 miles
west of Managua.
Foreign visitors said Uley
counted at least eight bodies
from gun batUes in the
afternoon at the only hoapital
still operating. At 7 pm.,

~:~~ricano0~ewspa~~

Thla Portage County
t'm!mnntty of 1t,OOO, dry for about :14 hours during the
weekend, has Ita water back today. Residents SIDiay were
told to boll nllr before drinking it after aervlce wu restored
late Saturday ,qht.
A •)'W'-dd water main brolte Friday night, leaving the
t'm!II!!!Dity with llWe water. Repair vren werked fer nearly
M houri lnltallbW a new Jerwth ct pipe belore getting preaure
reetored late Saturday night.

Money Back GuaranteerromPiaytex•

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 103

the Guard Ia on the other

Water restored at Ravenna

~;J ~~

Upto$Soo0ff

than with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, indicating the
major decisioos still to be made on a compromise will have to .
come from the Israeli, rather than the Egyptian, side.
As the leaders and their aides loured the Civil War battle·
fields in nearby Pennsylvania Sunday, Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman !Did reporters, ''we need another two or
three mere daya for things to crystalize."
Begin, also on the tour, told a reporter, "as you can see, it is
going well," but it was not clear from the brief eKchange
whether he was talking about the negotiations or his personal
relationship with Sadal, which appeared to be cordial and
friendly.
Sen. Henry Jackson, D. Wash. , interviewed on the NBCTV

block," said Alonao Abaunza,

•

RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) -

'

en tine

Nicaragua
has
full-scale
civil
war
..
MANAGUA,

READY. TO GO

Hyer, James J. Hall, R.G. beds ."
Greene, Carroll Casto, Dr.
Since 19'11, iliggs pointed
Jack Buxton, Charles Lanah· out, the hospital e~panded
m, Harry Miller, Vitus again , which included a new
Hartley Jr., Dorsel Keefer, 40-bed tower and 10 doctors
T.R. _Friar, Jack Fruth and · offices.
James Farley, who is also
" This summer five doctors
executive director of PVH. have been added to our
In reviewing the history of staff," he said.
the hospital, Biggs said: " It
Also speaking was Farley,
really opened on a shoestring who praised his staff in·
and I have been told many eluding assistant executive
times that the department directors Mike Sellards and
heads were asked not to cash Gary P•rk, for the success
their checks for a while. PVH has had. Sellards will be
Anyhow, the doors stayed in charge of lhe new facility .
open."
Qthers to speak included :
He said the hospital began Mason County Commissioner
with 40 beds and later ex· William Rardin, James
panded its facilities to include Facemire, director of Far·
40 more beds in 1966.
mers Home Administration;
"The project was com- Charles Lanham, who
pleted .in 1966 and opened in represented local banking
1967 wben the Silver Bridge institutions that ·helped to
fell and we were ready to finance lhe project; Dr .
care for our people in West l!i chard Slack, w[10 is chief of
Virginia. Tbe 40-bed long sta ff at PVH ; and reverends
term care unit was QUickly Tally Hannan and Raymond
conve rted to acute care Jablinske.

I

praldentlal retreat.
Carter now has met more frequently ani longer witll

·'lN STCiCK

at y

JaCk Burdett served as the
master of · ceremonies and
during his speech he cited
Gladys DeVault of Point
Pleasant for her efforis in
trying to establish a senior
citizens center here.
Among. the other speakers
was Bruce Carter of tbe
W.Va. Hospital Association,
who told the audience that in
the last year five general
short ·term hospitals in West
Virginia closed because of
lack
of
effective
management .
· In contrast, he and several
of the other speakers cited
PVH's effective leadership
which ha s witnessed several
major expansion projects
since its establishment in
1959.
Given major credit for this
wa$ the Board of Trustee by
its president G.A. Biggs.
They include : Jack Burdett,
William Knight, Cha rles

I Negotiations nearing 'make-or-break point
CAMP DAVID, Mel. (UPI) - The Camp David swnmll
appeared today to be J110Vin8 toward a make-or-break point in
the negoliallooa, with lndlcatlooa that major problema remain
lri the WIY ci any Egyplian-llraell agreement.
Afw a -ltend lull fer real alii refleclloo - and a lour of
lbt I*J'by QeUyaburg baltlelleld - the substantive negolia·
llctna l'1IIWJlld Sunday atlemoon .with a one-llour, flve-mimlte
JDeetlnll between President Carter and Prime MiniJter
MINcbem JleCln and their top advlaen.
~ 1111111, there was no Indication from any side.about tbe
nbject tr result d. the meeting in · the tightly secluded

in accident

l•rgest
employers
111
Qeveland, and leaders of the
drive lo recall Kucinich h•d
charged the mayor was
endangering steel industry
jobs in Qeveland by opposing
the dock. Kucinich and his
supporter~ had argued the
steel company was using lhe
threat of jobs leaving the city
lo force a taxpayer · subsidized deal.

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 11. 1918

lundrtdl:

Four die
in fire

I KNO W your head hurts. Everyone seems to have that

Dedicate nursing unit

I

Advocates to gather Sunday

ca me in . The assailant turned

ambitiollS pro ject.

Willis ·r . Leadtngnam
Realtor

Richard L. Roush of Point
Amb·assadol'. Analoly Pleuant, has been named
Dobrynin.
adqllnlatratlve a~~nt to the
'' As Mr. (Soviet Fereign Huntington dlvlalon lllllllllller
Mtnister) Gromyko said, our
Po"er
&lt;Soviet) aim and objective of Appalachian
Compmty,
effective
Sept.
I.
was to get the Woodbridge
He rlaea to the J101ltlon from
Two free," Crawford told
reporters. "That was the first that of pubUc affaln coorobjective and they met that - dlnator at the company's
Mountaineer Plalit.
objectlve."
A native of Point Pleaaant,
The State Deparbnent has
insisted since Crawford's Roush holds an associate
arrest it saw no Connection arts degree from Ohio Valley
between the cases. The two College and a B.A. degree in
Russians are still awaiting social psychology from Morris
trial.
HarveY College. He Ia working
International Harvester's toward a M. A. degree at
lawyer, Robert W: Booth, Marshall University. Roush
who flew from Moscow, witll began his career with
Crawford, said he will appeal Appalachian in i974.
the conviction, though . He is a past president of the
"whether ah appeal is of any New Haven Rotary Club; vice
avail is another question." president, Middle Ohio Valley
Industrial Emergency
Planning Council; treaaurer,
Minturn Lodge no. 19 ;
mem!ler, Point Pleasant
Chapter 17, Mlsons ; Franklin
Commandery in
Point
Pleasant;
the
Beni
Kedem
neighbor of the PhiUips',
Jack Fowler, surprised an
intruder in his basement.
Police said the intruder fled
thro ugh a basement window
and Fowler fired shots
through lhe kitchen window.
AKRON, Ohio .fUPI) lbe intruder returned the fire Protestin g Akron's conbefore fleeing, but apparently troversial abortion • control
no one was injured.
ordinance, abortion rights
State police believe there advocates will gather in
may be a link between the Akron Sunday for a statewide
Phillips murder and the in· march and 'rally.
cident at the Fowler home.
The event is being spon·
····- sored
by several groups,
including Free Choice. Ohio.

visa that J carmot return."

Compromise achieved Man killed

Maxine and Reino Lind and Miss Helen Sqllth were at
Universi ty Hospita l in Colwnbus Thursday wh ere Reino
Wlderwent another of a series of eye examina tions over the

~~~

Roush Promoted

•
Bloodhounds pressed into service

SPEAKING of athletics. probably not many people are
aware of the work done b}' Meigs High teachers in preparing
the Pomeroy field for games. In the heal of Thursday evening,
Coach Charles Chancey,. Fenton Taylor and Sam Crow were
hard at it , raking and carting away grass. I'll bet their
cootracts don 't include that little chore.

Ont·S top Shops

j

a.rrp.m.

•

County

Sheriff

James J . Proffitt reports
F.
Full'z,
deputies
investigation two
Pomeroy, reslgaed as ,
accidents over the weekend.
cbalrman of the Meigs
LESLIE

The first accident occurred
Saturday morning when Gene
P. Hood, 20, Middleport, was
traveling east on CR 19
(Peach Fork Rd.) and due to
heavy fog, he did not see a
stop sign. Hood drove his
vehicle across CR 20 (old US
33) striking and knocking
down a section of guardrail.
The vehicle came to rest over
the embankment on property
of Jack King , RD Pomeroy.
The second accident occurred on private property in
Rutland Township where
P.o~ ; ;-t W. Moodlspaugh, 24,
l\1. I Middleport, was
operating a motorcycle on a
dirt track, lost control and
Lows tonight between 65. went over an embankment
and 70. Highs Tuesday in Into a creek. He was transupper 70s or lower 80s. ported to Veterans Memorial
Probability of precipitation lloapltal by prival~ vehicle
50 percent today, 80 percent for treatment. Moodiljlaugh
tonight, 'IQ percent Tuesday. received injurl1!8 to nose,
Ieeth and ankle. There wu
slight damage to .his cycle.
SQUAD RUNS
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad wu called EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedauday· tbroa1b
to the Croaaroada at &amp;:U p.
Friday,
mild tllroaP IH
m. Sunday for Mrs. George
period,
wlta. aeatlered
Hudlon. Mr. and Mra.
lllowen
or
lllaadenloowen
Hudlon were putting up dry
Weda1day ud Tlllll'lday.
waD at their ·horne when a
llecllan fell on Mrs. Hudson. HJPa will. .....e fnlll 'II
She wu taken to Holzer -att to 1$ aealll WecJ.
llllday .... Tllanday, ....
Medical Center.
At 1:11 p.m. Saturday the Ia tile 111 aena tile alate
.. ll'rldlliy, LoWI wiD be Ia
t~~~uad went to the office of Dr.
tile middle Ha t. lbe
JUIIfll Conde for Timothy
Sltlorenllo wbo was taken to mldllle ...
Hollft Medical Center.
Coualy
Republican
ExecuUve Committee at a
meeting beld Friday nllbt
at the Meigs Inn. Foltz
pve advancing a1e and -a
bealtb problem ao tbe
reaaoulor bla reslpatlon.
He has beld the pool for the
put 1t yean. He received
a vote of IUnb and au
ovation for bla aervlce to
the group at lbe Friday
meetlllg. Named to replace
Fultz Ia the potllloo waa
Metca CODDty Commluloo
Richard E. J~oes.

Weather

v

CPL. J . L. FITZWATER of the West Virginia Stale Police views the wreckage of the
third train derailment in Mason County within the past five days . The accident, involving 17
cars of a Chessle System train OC&lt;'UITed early Sunday morning.
I

.Chessie train derails
NEW HAVEN - For the plant at Apple Grove, W. Va.
third Iinne in five days, a
Cause of the derailment is
Cliessie System freight lratn under investigation, he ad·
derailed in Mason. County ded.
over the weekend. Aga in, no
In July , another Chessie
toxic chemicals were spilled train derailed farther up the

track , spilling ca ustic soda.
Residents were evacuated
during the cleanup when cars
carrying vinyl chlorida gas
were moved.
(Continued on page IO )

and no one was injured.

Seventeen cars of the 102·
car train, traveling from
Huntington to Parkersburg,
jumped the tracks about
12:25 a .m . Sunday in heavy
fog near the Mountaineer
Power Plant now under
construction by Appalachian
Power Co.
Only five of the 17 cars
were loaded, but West
Virginia State Pollee closed
U.S. 33 near the tracks when
an empty car that had been
carrying vinyl chloride was
moved in preparation for
placing it on the tracks agatn.
One 'car with Stauffer
Chemical markings leaked
lubrl!=l\lng oll Into a nearby
dralnaae ditch, which was
dOifled. The oil wu to have
been pumped out and bauled
away by tanker truck last
night.
C. N. Jaco, a trainmaster
from the Cheasle Office in
Gralloo, W. Va., said he did
t10t know how much oil the
small · Stauffer car was
hauling.
Three can spilled plallllc
pelleu, which llad ~ cen
loaded onto the train "' the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber

WJLIJAM J . HOBBl'EiiER OO.ved 1111 Urd
annlftraary u lllllllll"r tl. the Rutland Branch ol the
l'om«oy National Bank Friday. Hobltetter lbared 1
cteccnted cake with employes. He Ia alao a vice prealdent
ol Pomeroy NaUooal Bank.

~

'*

\j

�~The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-t•omeroy, v ., MOIKJIIy •.:.ept.

.

Browns hand Bengals second-loss in row

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, Sept. 11, 19'18

€TrA

F&lt;l"'" .,o,_..,. S.O.:rneG~U~"'

HULME

N.E. A. ' I

COMMENTARY

HEALTH

t ..,

I l~t

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:

Donald F. Graff

_

·After the Shah, a deluge?
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband and I are both in our
20s and we lost weight on a
low-carbohydrate (40 grams
a day ), high-protein diet. He
lost 40 pounds and I lost IS.
We are trying to maintain
our weight loss by eating fish,
chicken . beef, ham and quite
a bit of cheese. We eat
vegetables such as spinach
and broccoli. My husband
includes one or two slices of
hign-fiber bread in nis lunch
but ne is not a big fruit eater.
!like salads and fruits and we
sometimes go througn a
dozen eggs in a week.
From reading your articles
I am certain part of this diet
affects our healtn negatively
as far as fat and cnolesterol
content. but now cna we avoid
this and still eat protein low
in carbohydrates?
Why does there ~eem to be
an almost instaut weight gain
of several pounds wnen we
reswne eating carbonydrates
of any form ? We find it hard
to hold our desired weight
and wonder if the constant
see-sa w of two to fiv e pounds
is harmful.
DEAR READER - First
about that see-saw effect of
two to five pounds that you're
describing. That's a change
in tne amount of water that
· your body holds.
When a person does nut
have sufficient carbohydrate
in tne diet, tne kidneys lose
excess salt and water. That
acco unts for tne initial loss of
two to five pounds on many
fad diets like you've been on.
That's not fat loss at all. It 's
the loss of normal healthy
water and salt that your body
needs.
Obviously as soon as you
start eating sensibly again,
tne body starts reacting in a
normal healthy manner and
retains the salt and water it
needs.
Yes. your diet is terrible.
The main point in avoiding
weight gain is to limit your
calories to the level that your
body needs, either in terms of
running the body at rest or to
enable you to do physical
activity.
Lean meats such as fish ,
chi cken and very lean beef
are sat isfa ctor y low -fat
so urces of · protein , particularly most fish . None of
. these are high in cholesterol.
If you've removed all the .fat
and don't cook them in fat ,
that shouldn't be a big
problem .
Oleese can be a detriment
to your diet depending on the

kind of cheese you use. If you
use uncreamed cotta ge
cheese, it is very low in fat
and contains almost no
cholesterol while providing
an adequate amount of
complete protein plus needed
calciwn for your diet. Also
you can use fortified skim
milk in the same way.
There isn't any reason a
person can't have a lowcalorie,
low-fat ,
)OW"
cholesterol diet which is
balanced and provides all the
necessary vitamins and
minerals. I am sending you a
·basic diet plan which you can
use for that purpose.
I re&lt;;ommend that anyone
who is dieting should have a
regular , dail y exercise
program and, if possible, the
exercise activity should be
increased. If this is continued
regulatly, it will help immeasurably in protecting the
body against some . of.~he bad
effects from dieting as well as
helping you do a better job
r::ting rid of unsightly body

F1RE DEATHS
TROY, Ohio (UP!) - Two
small girls died SWlday morning, apparently of smoke
inhalation and burns, when
fire gutted their parents'
home .
Fire officials identified the
two
16-month-&lt;&gt;ld Tina
Olambers and her threemonth-old sister Robin. Their
parents, unable to get to the
children, suffered minor
injuries. Fire officials said
the blaze, maybe electrical in
nature, apparently started in
the parents' bedroom.

as

TWO KILLED
MOUNT JACKSON , Pa.
(UPI )
Danny
L.
Shoemaker ,
20,
New
Middletown, Ohio, and Nancy
A. Patton, 21, Poland, Ohio,
were killed Sunday when
Shoemaker' s automobile
missed a curve in the road
and hit a tree.
Terry L. Felger, 23, Noeth
Lima, Ohio, was listed in
serious condition in a Pittsburgh hospital.

peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK

United Press International
HOLDING THE UNE : Bob Hope has come witl1in s(looting
distance of front lines while entertaining soldiers from World
War II to Vietnam, but a picket line iS something else. He
refused to cross one Sunday in Chicago at the Marriott Hotel,
so diners at a formal fund-raiser for the National Committee
for the Prevention of Child Abuse had to make do with a
videoiJtpe of his act. The hotel has been picketed since May in a
labor dispute, but Hope says insurance millionail'e W. Clement
Stone - sponsor of the dinner .- promised him the line would
be removed before he got there. It wasn't - so Hope returned
to the Drake Hotel and taped his act for 'the l ,DOO who turned
out to see him.
FOR THE FOLKS BACK HOME : Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin may be in the United States on heavy business, but his wife was just one more tourist SWlday. Allza
Begin, taken in tow by first lady Rosalynn Carter, toured the
Round Meadow Craft Center in Catoctin National Park - near
the Camp David, Md., presidential retreat. Sbe 'II be going
home with the usual souvenirs of the area - Appalachian
mountain dolls made of corncobs, pottery, dry mounted
flowers and a homemade broom presented by craftsman
George Smith.
.
1
PAIN OF FAME : Rutb carter Stapleton says nwnbering a
oresiriP.nt ;:t monu Kinfolk is no asset - that her evamlP.IirAI
meetings now draw 9r~onderance of curlosity~kers who
are "anti-Jirhmy and anti-me automatically ." And she adds a
lament for BU!y carter who she says was· "very secure and
confident in his work and his peanut business" until Jimmy
Carter became president. She told U.S. News and World
Report in Washington, " ... overnight, you're no longer Billy
Carter, the peanut fanner , or Ruth Stapleton, a wife and a
mother who has a message. All of 1a sudden, you're the
president's orother and sister ... But you can't go back ... even
when Jinunjl's out after six more years, there's no way to go

bi!Gk..."
MOUSKETEERS : NBC-TV is shooting a "Salute to the 25tb
Anniversary of the Wonderful World of Disney" in Hollywood,
for a two-part airing - Wednesday and the following Sunday .
Roo Howard and Suzanne Somen co-hoot the show, which
featW'es cuttings from all the old Disney classics. Among guest
stars : Bob Hope, Ed Aloer, BID Bixby, Ray Charlea, Fred
MacMurray, Gavin Mcleod and Rkardo Montalba&amp;. The show
- celelrating what now is tile longest running prime-lime
series in television history- also will reunite Feu Parker and·
Buddy Eblen, who played sidekick tO Parker's "Davy
.
Crockett," :a&gt; years ago.
QUOTE OF THEDA Y: Lachll DaDe an, plagued for 50 years
by motorists seeking directions at hia house which ~ts at the
· Intersection of five unmarked Georgia highways where be and
his wife have raised six children: "We probably would have
had 10 or IS children if it hadn't been for the people knocking on
our door at night. "
GLIMPSES : Frank8lnlllrllls in New York for hla long-elnce
sold-out Oct. 14 concert at Radio City Music Hall ... .Gilbert
Roland has joined Gleaa Ford, Sam Elliott,.Bea JoliiiiiP and
.llick Elam on location in Colorado for the filming of NJ!e;.TV•s
four-hour miniseries, "The Sacketta" ·
~

..

The focua at camp David and eloewbere Ia, aa _ . , on the
Arab-Israeli conlrontatlon.
But in the Mideast wings, another crilllllluaUon could be
building with W!predlctable conaeqllencel lor the nclon lllelf
and the baiance of a number rllnlerelted outalde ponr1.
.
For the first time In a quarter rl a century, r.,obammed ,
Reza Pahlevl, Shahlnshlh of Iran, Ia cperlencln&amp; 1erl0111
internal opposition. The impact Ia polltleal, but the origins are .
not in politics per se, an area of natlmalactlvlty which the ;
Shah has long had under firm periOIIBI control.
~
Iran has been troubled since the first rl the ye• by .
demoostratlons and violence which are an expteulon· of
somethin~ much deeper aftd not easily dealt with through •
conventional political mellll8 - the lntenae natlonallsn Uld .~
religiOIIB cooservatllm of most Iranians.
..
"
The ~nt Sban slta on a throne won by the ruthleu ~
expediency of hll father , an army olflcer who aelzed power 88
old orders In the Mideast crumbled following World War I, and
. held by grace ol the CIA. He came to power witb hla fatber's
World War D abdicatl,on under Anglo-Soviet JII'CIIIW't, l!nd the
charitable term for hla moJIBI'chical pel'fon11811ce during the
following 10 years or so would be Ushtwetsht.
In 1~. he lost a power plqy to Premier Mullammad .
Musaddeq, a pOlitical ortslnal who got a lot of Wtltem Jftll
for sitting around In his pajalll81 and weeping, but
." We did request a move back to basics, Ms. Queeble- but not THAT attention
who shrewdly maqipulated Iranian rellgiOIII and nationalist
fOrces to rid the country of foreign political and eeonomlc
basic!"
influence. He almoet did it, nationaUzlng the Brltlah •
cootrolled oil industry. The Shah fled the country, to re_turn In
triumph a lew days later upon Musaddeq's CIA~glneered
overthrow.
That proved to be a watershed event for Iran, the Mideast
and possibly the world.
It was the same Shah but a different man who now held
independence
of
the
union
absolute
power In Iran. capitalizing on the country's
COLUMBUS (uP! ) - The Manufacturers and other looking over the shoulders of
since
it
tried
to
upset
a
increasing
oil wealthandhisstatus as the staunchelt U, S. ally
Ohio General Assembly businesses claim insurance niajority Democrats during
favorite
incumbent,
Rep.
in
the
region,
be embarked on a program to modernize Iran
reconvenes this week for a against such claims has the brief session.
short preelection session with become too costly.
Aside from trying to keep Willimn E. Hinig, D-New withill a generation and to make it a military power.
But even a kiM of kings can't please everybody. Land ·
little anticipated in the way of
The House Judiciary the product liability bill Philadelphia, in the primary
substantive action.
Committee is to meet twice bottled up,lnbor wants action last spring, citing Hinig's redistribution, expanded education and importation of foreign ,
ways along With the (e(:lmology nece988f)' to Industrialization :
The House may vote on a Thursday and again Friday on a House-passed item- "anti-labor" attitude.
bill reinstating capital mor~ing to put together a pricing bill now in the Senate,
ThW'sday, two new House angered tbe \faditionali.sts. The lll!thoritarian tactics with ·
punislunent, and the Senate new capital puniShment law. as well as unemployment members from Cincinnati which modernlzatlon has been pursued haY!! alienated the
could possibly vote on a pair
The old one was declared compensation and will be sworn in - Democrat 1 small but growing liberal-to-Jeftwlng educated clau.
of
House-passed
bills Wlconstitutionallast July by workmen's compensation Helen Rankin, who replaces . Since ollls the !!Duree of lran'slmportance and the Shah's
protecting manufacturers the U.S. Supreme Court.
bills now in the'House. House her late husband, Rep . James power, the Shah has been a strong Influence in the producing
and distributors against
A Judiciary subcommittee action ·is not anticipated on w. Rankin, and Dale Van cartel's price boosting, to the discomf&lt;rt ol hll erstwhile
defective products', and has ·worked on the bill for either of the latter two Vyven,
a
Sharonville Western friends. Well aware that hll is an e:tballltlble
banning measured telephone several weeks and last measures.
insurance man who replaces resource, he is det.ennlned to buy for Iran a broad igduatrlal
service.
The Ohio AFL-CIO has Republican Rep. Richard H. base .before the wells run dry.
Thursday recommended a
While the Senate convenes version expanding the withheld nonnal campaign Finan.
Huge chunks of oil Income are also going 111to modern
at I p.m. Tuesday , the House ''mitigating'' circmnstances contributions from
Finan is going over to the weapons, likewise to some Wtltern concern. There · is
will be holding "skeleton" under which a convicted Democratic legislative Senate to replace Sen. " speculation that his ambitions go beyond Iranian aecurlty and
sessions until Thursday.
murderer could be sentenced candidates until after the Michael J. Maloney, the include converting the entire Persian GuU region into an
The Senate Ways and to life in prison instead of the September session.
Republican floor leader who Iranian preserve.
•
Means Committee, which electric chair.
The · House Democratic will officially resign Tuesday
Meanwhile, the Shah has a personal concern- his heir. He
meets prior to the opening
.Organized labor will be leadership has expressed an to take a Hamilton County has one, from hll third marriage. But for a dynasty going back
Senate session, may vote on a
job.
only to 1925, an inconsequential period In Iran's 2,0C.year
controversial House-passed
history, succeaslon is far from secure. Holdlng·the lbrone still
bill providing for public
requires a strong hand, and tbat may bave to be the preeent
financing of campaigns for
occupant's for some difficult years to come.
statewide executive office.
With tbe s\IIIPOI't of the military, the Shah should be able to
The bill, authored by Rep.
ride out present unrest, although he may find It upedlenllo go
Peter N. Crossland, D-Akron,
AKRON, Ohio &lt;UP!) - rights. He said the mooey
He to lei the audience their slower on some programs to quiet the tradltlonallatl: He hu
was approved by the House 14 Antiabortionists are trying to they give is fuMeled into the battle against anti-abortion already agreed to an electoin next year, openly challenging
months ago but the idea of a "subjugate women once anti-abortion movement.
forces is largely a religious opponents to test their popularity agatnat hla. There ill IIWe
state income tax checkoff lor again
Lee Novick , coordinator rl
to
back-alley
one
and
encouraged present evlde~~ee of Ill~ je8dershlp in the oppoll!loJI, either
campaign financing has heen butchers," says National the Planned Parenthood onlookers
to
boycott cooservatlve or lefti!t, and the Shah tends to (ump both
around for several years.
Abortion
Federation Federation ' of . America's Christian Brothers wine and together as ".islamic Marxists."
Crossland 's
bill,
as President
Judith Justice Fund, called for a other "church-backed proThat would appear to be an oversimplification. But should
amended by the Ways and Widdicombe.
unifyil\g voice among all . ducts .~~
tbe.two groups ever find COITIIIlon ground and make common
Means Committee, would
Appearing at a Sunday persons concerned with
The law, passed earlier this cause, the Shah might find himself In a much-changed
provide for taxpayers to march and rally iii protest of '' personal
choice
in year , requires that at least situation.
designate $1 to a political the city's controversial reproduction ."
one parent be notified when a
And in such a situation, the West, which thinlll It has
campaign fund to be divided abortion-control law, she
She claimed the Akron daughter under the age of 18 problems with Mohammed Reza Pahlevi's Iran, may have
among candidates for the six spoke out against sitins and ordinance was passed to seeks an abortion. A seen nothirlg yet.
executive offices. Supreme fire bombings at clinics "keep women in their place " counselor would also be
Court candidates
and where
abortions
are and said abortion, rather called in to try to steer the
legislators would not partici- performed and "harrassment than being a moral issue, woman toward alternative
pate in the system.
of women attempting to falls in the c'ivilrights action . .
The committee also may exercise their freedom of category.
The
ordinance
also
vote on a House -passed choice."
Boston
abortion -clinic mandates that two physicians
BOSTON (UP!)- Ollldren chemotherapists; each move
resolution requiring the state
Approliimately 600 people owner Bill Baird, a crusader be present during an
to give preference to marched from Jackson Field since the late 1980s for the abortion. Opponents believe are wimlng more batuea plotted in advance and
American-made steel in its on the University of Akron right of w0111en to obtain this to be an Wldue burdon on with cancer than ever before, carried out with military
but a specialist said today the precision.''
construction contracts.
campus to Cascade Plaza abortions, was greeted by the doctors and patients.
With )'llUII8 cancer victims
And ·the committee is downtown, where they most enthusiastic welcome of
Other speakers included war will not be won Wltil living longer, he' aald
scientists
discover
the
causes
expected to vote on a pair of cheered emotional speeches the day .
Karen Mulhauser, executive
gubernatorial appointments by about a half-dozen proHe said the law is geared to director of the National Abor- of the disease, still the increased emphula II being
to the state Lottery abortionists.
" holding Women down," tion Rights League; Patricia leadlrig klller of youngsters. placed 111 the quality ol
Dr. Glullo J. D'AIIglo of survival, and on tbe
Corrunission - Robert S.
There were no COWlter- adding that "it's the old story Gavett, executive director ol
Malaga and Alva rene N. demonstrations, as had been of barefoot and pregnant." the Religious Coalition for Phlladelphla said no maUer consequences yean later ol
Owens.
Baird called the ordinance "a Abortion Rights; and Elsie how good cancer treabnent radlaU111 and chemical treatthreatened.
The ''product liability" bill, · Helen Mulholland, state most vicious, evil concept Reaven, a City Council becomes, cancer warriors ment that may have
opposed by organized labor, Religious Coalition for forced"' on the American member who led the fight must find out how the disease damaged nmna1 U.Ue as
has been in the Senate Abortion Rights, read a people.11
against passage of the starta so they can learn how weD as tumors.
Although cancer Is the
Judiciary Committee for statement by the Rev. Joseph
to prevent the seeds of cancer
ordinance.
number
one killer of children
more than 14 months.
!!eWII.
from
being
F. - O'Rourke, president of
It outlaws clainos against Catholics for a Free Oloice.
He told an opening session between the qea of 3 and 14,
manufacturers for injuries or
of a naUonal conference on It ill rare amq cblldnn'
Father O'Rourke said the
damages sustained from Roman Catholic hierarchy is ·
chUdhood .cancer that an COOipared witb the Incidence
defective products which are using church donations by
ezpanded anny ol scientists of cancer In adulla.
more than 10 years old . women to .repress their
The American Cancer
Is needed "lor this last battle
Society,
which Ia sponaartna
and preparations must be
the
three-day
conference,
made without delay so that it
estimated that 8,000 111111'11
can be put Into the field.
"It is on these fronla that CAM~ of childhood !llllCW will
the
really significant be dlagnoled in the United
Statea tbla year. · An
SAN DIEGO (UP!)- The turn, market them for meat advances wlll be made."
federal government bas in San Francisco and l.Ds
Nevertheless, the director eatlmaled 2,DOO cblldrtn will
found that goats are useful Angeles.
of cancer centers at Philadel· die ol the dlae- lhla )'Ill'.
The
government's phis's Children's Hoapltal
and economical allies in the
About half tbe cancer
war against forest fires.
investment in·the program so and the University of deatlw will Involve ciiiJdren
The Forest Service said far has been about PJ,OOO, Pennsylvania said major with leukemia, a cancer of
of which went lor progreu baa been made In bloodformlng u.ue..
~~~~ur:k:P ~ ~ most
manpower and fencing attacking the dlae•e.
firebreaks clear by chewing materials, according to Dave
"The ouUook for the child
The Cape Verde Islands, lyup brush and the program Jones, the Fcrest Service's
with
cancer :tO yean ago w88 ing in the AUanlic 2IMl miles
was a succass.
And now, .a herd ol 800 recreation resources staff of. awe'llng," D'Anglo said In a west of the African coaat at
Spanish goats in the ficer, who came up with tbe Jllper prepared for the mee- Dakar, became an Indepenting. "Every child with acute dent nalion in 19'15 after DOG
Cleveland National Forest 50 Idea.
Fences m111t be built along
miles east of San Diego will the firebreaks to keep the leukemia '!VII dead wltbln years of Portuguese rule.
be increaJed to 2,SOO goats from eating brush weella of the time of dlagnoala
and It w• a rare boy or girl
"
beginning today.
outside the cleared areas, with the ao-called 'soUd' · · THEDAILYiamNw.
Economics i.s what makes Jones said.
bunora who lurv!ved."
DEVG'I'IDTOTHE
the proposition attractive.
Now, he said, more u.t
~~
Not only is the use of goats
balf the cbllchn lllrlcken
cheaper than manpower or
Additionally, lf enough with leukemia antve for
machinery, bu~ the federal
·
~ ~goata
escaped to form a feral more than five )'1l8l'a "and Ill' Tho .0111o ....,. r a .,.,.
government ·does not have to
. pay for the animals or the or wild population, they otber• of tbe Implacable ~:.,... 111. Inc., 111
--..a..y . . -- w '
herders who watch them. . would start crowding deer '-'"-of
_,
~-0f1ko . . 1111.
ll'llallt-.
Beene Bros., a private populatl~, whlcb eat the batna fended off with
lnl:rMilai Ill('! IT"
,Pifld •
nutchlng firm, entered Into a same planta, Jlllltl llllid.
A herder Ia r..unct to be
D'Anglo uld the vletorles ' ~ ..iow'l 1 1 •+ •
five-year agreement with tbe
Foreat Service in 19'/e to herd with the aoata CC~CW~anUy to 10 far have been acbi8VId by ' loUvo. Loodool -~~~. am
the goats In the token lllllke IIUI'e the anlma1a do not teama of doctors and ' E:dlo\.:.._~·
Morena Goat Encloeure. In break through the fencee - ..eaearchen carryln1 out ,
return, Rocky and Tommy and aJ.o to protect them from tllelr attack wltb military I ........111Ill
I
JII'8Cillon.
.
·
IIJllld I I - ... W. VL;
Beene are aiiowecl to graze predatori.
"So then Tommy TsiCpayer said to the big
"A mountain 1lan could
the goats on federal land bully, Godz/1/iJ government, 'lam unwilling to
''llllhlY CGCII'dlnlted bltlll
CGIIIe
In there and make a
firebrealla - free of charge.
pay tf!e bill ... ' "
planlnow 11'1 drawn "' by
. . - · 1111 '
hno - · lUI.
The brothers all the adult shamblel of the piKe !n juat lntlpllldlitllaohur..-,
""'" - . . . . ,
radlalioD therapia Ia and
animals to " jobbers" who, In one night," .._. Sl'id.
. ..
..

of.A ssem bl y reconvenrng
•

I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 4-7,
Wei~ht Losing Diet. which
gives you this type of diet.
Other readers who want this
issue can send 50 cents with a
selflong ,
stamped,
addressed envelope for it to
me in care of this newspaper,
P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station , New York , NY
100.19.

Abortion march held

Children uiinning

Berry's World

Goats joining
war on fires
...

........

_at_._

=fl.a::. . .,......., -·8?:S::'iS::"":=
-:-=-.
r::

~l~"·

'-------,,- - - - - - - - - - '
,llo

,,
'

u , mil

.,. . .;

.

U..-cucumber performance.
"i just happen to be the

late in the third quarter. he on a 51-yard pass from John
play," RuUgUano noted;
Slpe followed with an 1&amp;- got the club moving on a Reeves to tight end Don Bass.
kicker," he said modeatly. yard pass to rookie tlghl end drive that ended In a 32-yard The score Clipped an eightplay, ll().yard drive.
"On that last klclt I made Ozzie Newsome and the field goal by Cockroft.
"It's very hard to lose one
myself do the essentlall witb olficlall -tacked on 15 more
Sipe followed up with a 13total concentration. The yards with a grabbing-the· yar!f scoring pass to Rucker like that," said Bengal Coach
thought of mtasing ne~ face mask call against that tied the game midway Bill Johnson. "Both teams
entered my mind."
- Cincinnati safety Doug through the fourth quarter. "I were exhausted. It was a
Whlle COckcroft was pro- Jauron. The penaltY put the knew I wasn't having a good grueling game."
The Browns• offense looked ·
claimed the hero, bla ball 'Ill the Bt:ngal 28.
game going into · the fourth
ClnclnnaU counterpart, Chris
FoW' runs by Greg Pruitt quarter," Sipe said. "But ragged throughout the first
Bahr, ended up as the goat. and one by fullback Mike then tbinga started coming half, and they were plagued
Bahr mlased a 37-yard field Pruitt set up COcltcroft's together. Their defense by penalties.
A 37-yard field goal by Babr
goal try on the last play of the decisive kick.
baffled me until the last
pulled
the Bengals out to a 10fourth quarter that would
It took Sipe much of tlie quarter. ''
0
lead
early. Bahr had a 30lave won the game lor the game to . Ignited his
Cincinnati scored its only
yard
attempt blocked by
slumbering offense. Finally, touchdown In t11e first period,
Bengali.
.
defensive tackle Earl
"Everything wa~ good on
that attempt. The Bll8P was
good. What can I say, I
miued
It,"
Bahr
acknowledlled.
The Browns' winning kick
was set ilp with a 41-yard
kickoff retW11 tq start .the
overtime period by rookie
0
Larry Colllna. The runback,
which began with Collins
recovering his own fumble,
BY JOE CARNICEUJ
"I tried to throw the ball," to power Dallas over the
took tbe ball to the Bengal 47. UPI Executive Sports Editor Stabler explained, "and Giants.
"The kick return by Collins
lor. far as the ·Oakland about the time I tried, I got Redsklns 35, Eagles 30:
in overtime was the big · Raiders were concerned, It hit. I just wanted to keep the
Joe Theismann passed for
Will' J1*. anOther Ken Stabler ball in play."
three TDs, two to Jean
mlfacle. But the San Diego
Oakland's Victbry left the Fugett, and rookie Tony
Chargers maintain it was clubs tied at 1·1 in the Green returned a punt 80
pure robbery.
American Conference West. yards for a score as
With San Diego leading 2(). The difference in the game Washington overcame a club14 and jlist 10 sei:onds left to was a missed extra pont by record four-touchdown effort
,play Sunday, Stabler dropped San Diego's RoH Benirschke. by Wilbert Montgomery to
back to pass but was grabbed
In other NFL games ·beat Philadelphia.
by
Olarger
defensive
end
Sunday, it was Washington
Amerinn League
M1tor League Standings
8y UnltN Prell tnternatlonal
East
Fred Dean and the ball flew 35,
Philadelphia
30; Steelers 21, Seahawb 10:
W. L Pet. GB loose.
National LIIIUI
Pittsburgh
21,
SeatUe
10;
NewYork ·
86 S6 .606
East
Terry Bradshaw. passed for
It ·was kicked around for Cleveland 13, Cincinnati 10;
86 S6 .606 · W. L· Pet. GB Boston
213
yards and two TDs to lift
82 61 .573 ..v, what seemed like an eternity
Mllwauke
Phil a
78 "' .5.W
Dallas 34, the New York Pittsburgh over Seattle .
1A 61 .521 4
BG 62 .563 6
Baltimor
Plttsbr~h
before
Dave
Casper Giants 24; Green Bay 28, New .
11 6S .5&lt;2 9
72 11 . .503 6'12 Detroit
Ch icago
61 80 .433 241fl recovered It in the end zone Orleans 17; Houston 20, Bradshaw hit Lynn Swann
67 11 .465 12
Clevetnd
Montreal
56 88 .389 31 wiih no tune left for an
and Sydney Thornton with TD
62 82 .431 17
Toronto
St·. Lou is
Kansas City 17; New England passes of 4and 20 yards In the
West
59 85 .AIO :iO
New York
W. L Pel. Ga Oakland touchdown that tied 16, St. Louis 6; Los Angeles
west
quarter to break open
11 6ol .546
w. L Pet. GB &lt;J(an Cllv
the game. Errol Mann added 10, atlanta 0; Olicago 16, San second
Calli
78 66 .5-42 'h
Los AnO
8S S8 .SU
the
game.
·
Texas
69 71 ...93 71/'l the winning extra point.
Francisco 13; Miami 42,
San Fran
81 62 .566 .4
1
12
Oakland
66
71
.462
Cinclnnet
78 64 '. 549 6 12
Charger Coach Tommy Baltimore 0; and the New
63 10 .441 15
Sin Diego
73 71 .507 12112 Minnesot
Protbro
was irate, claiming York Jets 21, Buffalo :a&gt;. On Browns 13, Beugals 10:
17
61 82 ...27
Houston
67 75 ...72 17lf, Chicago
Seattle
53 87 .379 23112 Stabler let the ball fly loose Saturday night, Detroit
Don Cockroft's '27-yard
Atlanta
62 11 .434 23
• saturday's Results
S•turday's R11ults
field
goal in sudden-death
and
that
the
play
should
have
downed
Tampa
Bay
1$-7
and
N.'V. I, BoSO
Clnci 6, San Fran 3
been an incomplete pass. - Det 5, Cleve 2
Denver is at Minnesota overtime carried Cleveland
Chi 6, Mon 3
Mllw 3, Mlnn 0
Ph ill 6, St .L 3
past Cincinnati. Olris Bahr
"There's no way the tonight..
Sea 9, Chi 6
At Ia 71 LA A
missed a 37-yard field goal
officials can justify the call," Cowbeys 34, Giants 24:
TeK al Oak, rain
N.Y. •, Pitt I
Calif 3, ICC. 2, 1st
Hous 10, S.D. 4
said the raging Prothro. " It
Roger Staubach passed 212 try on the last play of
Calif 4, ICC. 2, 2nd
Sunday's R11u1ts
was an illegal play. The rules yards and directed three 80- regulation that would have
Bilt ,., Toro 0
St .L I , Phil I 6, 10 Inn
sunday
's
Results
N.Y. 11 , Pl119
wlll back me up that it was an yard scoring .drives and Tony won the game for the
Cleve 1, Det 4
Chi 6. Mont 3
Dorsett rushed for 111 yard'! Bengals.
illegal play."
N.Y , 7, 8os 4
L.A. 11 , Atll S
Minn
3,
Milw
1
Clncl 8, S.F. 1
Chi 2, Se&amp; I
Hous J, S.D. 2
Tek a. Oak J, 1st
Today's Probable Pitchers
Oak 2, TeK 1, 2nd
(All Times EOn
Calli 13 K.C. 3
St . LOUIS !Denny 11 ·10) If
Todey's Probable Pitchers
Montreal (Grimsley 17 -9}, 7 :35
(All Tlmes .EDT)
p.m.

ClEVELAND !UPl) - For
a while, It looked like · the
Cleveland Browns might
never acore agalnat their
downlitate arcM!vall, the
Clndnnltl Bengala.
WN1e tbe Bengali rolled up
a 111-4 lalfllme lead Sundly,
the Btow1a' offenae 111ly
spuUered,
Bul a 13-yard, folirtlv
quarter touchdown lou from
Brian S1pe to Reggie Rucker
sandwiched by two clutch
fleld,goals by veteran kicker
Dill COclrcroft raWed the
Browns to a 13-10 overtime
vtctor)"OVer Cincinnati.
Coclrcroft'a final kick, • 'll·
yarder, came with 10:36left
In sudd111-&lt;leath overtime and ·
put the game away for the
Browns.
" If you hang in a while,
your offense wUI come
together," said Cleveland
Coach Sam Rutigliano.
"They showed a lot of
character. Sipe hung In and
came up witb the blg playa."
For Cockcrbrt, an 11-year
veteran,. It was anotber cool·

Edwards later in the second
quarter .
The Browns' defense ,
which was tollgh throughout
the game, came out fired up
at the start of the second half
and held Cincinnati almost
totally in check.
Meanwhile, a key play in
Cleveland's only touchdown
drive was a pitchout to Greg
Pruitt on a fourth-and~ne
situation deep in Clnc(nnati
territory, in whic!IP,'e speedy
back got the first down .
Pruitt's running gave
Cleveland a critical boost
throughout the contest. He

gained 120- yards on 22
carries. ·
The Bengals c11111e back on
the next series and Reeves
connected with veteran wide
receiver isaac Curtis on an
apparent touchdown . But
Cincinnati. tackle Rufus
Mayes was called for holding ,
nullifying
the
score .
Cleveland corner b ac k
Clarence Scott intercepted a
Reeves pass on the next play,
killing the drive.
The Browns came out
roaring on their first series
after the opening kickoff .
Pruitt ran for 36 yards and

Sipe passed W yards to wide
receiver Dave Logan, moving
the ball to the Bengals' 14.
A pass-interference call
against Cincinnati linebacker
Tom DePaso put the ball on
the Bengals' four , but Sipe
was sacked attempting to
pass, losing 12 yards, and
Cockroft missed a :U.yard
fi~ld-goal
try midway
through the opening period.
The win by Cleveland gave
them a 2.() record, tying them
with Pittsburgh lor the NFL
Central Division lead . Clncinna t1 dropped to 0-2 on the

Chargers cry 'robbery'
·
. \:,' Dodgers rout Bouton \(.\
t~::
after eaame-endzng loss :;:~y
a~d

Major League
Standings

season.

:~:\,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,1:~:

MIKE SHALIN
UPI Sports Writer
Jim Bouton made his
return to major-league
baseball SWlday - and the
Los Angeles Dodgers were
waiting for him with open

anns.

11-9 OllcagobeatMontrealS. Alou's pinch single tn
3
Houston bested San . seventh mning for Houston.
Diego 3-2.
J.R. Richard, 1&amp;-11, pitched
an eight-hitter in COIIlpleting
Cardinals 8, Phi!Ues 6:
his 15th of 32 starts. Richard
Ken Reitz' bloop triple faMed II to raise his m~jor­
delivered the winning run in league-leadtng total to 'lfo7
the lOth inning for the
Cardinals after the Phillies
tied the game without a hit off
Mark Uttell, 2-8, in the ninth.
Greg Luzinski hit his 30th
homer for the Phillies, who
remained four games ahead
of PittsbW'gh in the East.
Mets 11, Pirates 9:
Elliott Maddox singled in
You can help cut down on
the winning run off Kent
cr ime tosses ... losses that
Tekulve, S-7, in the eighth
d i rectly
affed
you ,
whether they happen to you
inning and the Pirates
or not .
committed five errors to drop
their foucth straight after 11
Take the crime of arson .
consecutive wins . Dwight
You ' r e
paying
an
Bernard, 1-1, got his first
increasingly hevy subsidy
major-league win.
for deliberatly set fires
CUbs 6, Expos 3:
throu'g h your insu-ranc e
Bobby Murcer went 5-for~
premiums .
and Mick Kelleher drove in
two runs to Rive Chica~o a
Insuran ce
costs
are
adversel y affected by
three-game
sweep
in
burglaries. r obberies and
Montreal. Rick Reuschel, 14car thef1s ... plus the
12, scattered eight hits for the
countless C B radios and
win.
bicycles tha t turn up
Astros 3, Padres 2:
mi ssing .
Wilbur
Pinch · hitter
Howard doubled home a run
One thing you can do is to
and then scored on Jesus
support
Pr o grams

The 39-year~ld Bouton,
who last pitched. in a major·
league .game in 1970, didn't
allow a hit through the ftrst
three innings - but was
bombed for five runs in the
fourth, including the first of
two homers by Rick Monday
that sent the Dodgers on their
way to an II~ triumph over
the Braves.
' q wa s satisfied,'' the
pitcher turned author turned
broadcaster turned actor
. turned pitcher said . "I
showed I had good enough
stuff so guys swung and
missed (he fanned three).
The butterflies started going
away in the fourth , maybe I
should bave kept tbem.
"I proved I belonged out
there," said Bouton, who was
12-9 for Savannah of the AA
Southern League this year.
"What I didn't prove was
whether I can get majorleague
hitters
out
consistently."
pr.ovlding stiffer penalties
Don Sutton, 14-10, went the
for
wrongdoers
and
route for the Dodgers,
pr'o posals for strengthened
yielding. home runs tD Jeff
Person to person
crime investigation efforts.
Burroughs, his 22nd, Dale
health insurance
Murphy, his 23rd, and Bob
You can also make it·
Toronto {Jefferson 11 .12 and
Pittsburgh (D. Rob inson 12·51
Horner, his 20th.
.
tougher for c rook s. Use
at Philadelphia &lt;Christenson 11 · Kirkwood J-3) at Cleveland
In other National League
good, strong locks. Mark
(Waits 11 . 13 end Wise 9.18), 2,
12L 7:35p .m.
It can help pay
games, the Reds downed the
Chicago (Lamp 6-13 ) at New S:JO p.m.
pos sessions with your
Balt imore !Palmer 18 -12 ) at
York (Bruhert 3-81. 8 :05p .m .
Giants Il-l , St. Louis defeated toarlng hotpllll
socia l security number .
Houston (Lemongello 9·13 1 at Boston &lt;Tiant 10-7) , 7:30p .m .
Pittsburgh U in 10 innings, and surgical blll1.
Minnesota (Zahn 11 -13 ) at
Cincinnati CMolkiU 5·4), 1 :05
Ch icago (Kravec 1\. JJ). B:lO
Our agenc y prov ides
New
York toppled Pitt.sbW'gh
momentarily to refuel.
p.~t'l~t• (Mihltr • ·10) •t San p .m . .
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Any New York.
Call me.
finan cia l protect ion and
Oakland (Renko 6-10) at minute a guy expected
Diego (Jones H -13), 10 p .m .
"Well,
I
want
to
hear
where
service when crime losses
way
the
But
then,
the
Kan~~
C!lty
(Gura
13-4),
8
:30
Los Angeles {Riu 13-1) at
Sparky Anderson to grab the Cincinnati Reds' manager the commissioner stands on
Mike
occ ur ... but many can be
San Francisco (Barr 7-lll, p.m . ~
California &lt;Tanana 17 -9) at telephone and call Baseball
10 :35 p.m.
this
(starting
Bouton)
,"
prevented . That ' s why we
was ranting maybe he
questioning the integrity of
Te)Cas (Me&lt;llch 7-8), 8:35.p .m .
Tutsdl'f'l Glmtl
992-7155
say - prevention is tt'le
exclaimed
Anderson
.
Commissioner
Bowie
Kuhn
In
M
ilwaukee
(Sorensen
16.10
)
·figured Kuhn could hear him
St . Louis at Montreal, night
the game.
149 S. Third St.
best policy .
at Seattle (McLaughlin 2·6l.
Chicago at New York, night
Feeney,
too
.''
aid
of
a
telephone.
without
the
Giant
Manager Joe Middleport, 0.
'
Plttsburgtl at Philadelphia , 10:35 p .m.
The Dodgers lead , the Altobelli wasn 't as upset as
"When attendance goes
Tutlcley•s G•me~
night
N1' 1on I 1 Footblll League
Baltimore at Boston, night
Giants
by foW' games and the Anderson.
Houston at Cincinnati, tw l·
ahead
of
competition
we've
Standlnas
Toronto at Cleveland , night
IV United Prtts lntern~tional
light.
'
Reds
by
six 1,2 irt Ule National
SW f IARIII NUIU ' l
got
a
sick
.
society,"
fumed
"! understand the Braves
New York at Detroit, night
Atlanta at San DI.Vo . night
Amerlc•n Conference
.l,u1(1111Gbl._ W.W "''ft Cll"'lll"f
992-2143
League
West.
Minnesota at Chicago , night
Anderson.
·
Los Angeles at San FranciS ·
~o~e (lttlc•
plan to start Bouton against
East
Oakland
at
Kansas
City
,
night
91001'111'191011
~n011
102
W.
Main
Pomeroy
"!
still
feel
we've
got
a
shot
co, night
. w. L- T. Pel. Anderson's anger was
us too this week when we're
••u .. u ... ._
California at Texas, night
2
0
0
1.000
NY
Jets
to
win,"
continued
Anderson.
Milwaukee at Seattle, night
home," he said. "The irony of L:~==:__
_j
110 .500 directed at the Atlanta
New Englland
1 1 0 .500 Braves - specifically, owner "We don 't deserve what the it all is he may spank us. So I
M iami
0 2 0 .000
Baltimore
Braves did . The Giants don't
02G .000 Ted Tumen- lor sending 39- either. It's got to be answered can't be too upset - yet.
Mljor LeltUI R-sultl
Cleve
011 001 013- 7 12 0 Buffalo
year-old Jim Bunton against
Central
" But," he added, "I ca n
ly Unl eel Prill lnttrnattonal · Oet
010 000 0?0-- 4 1 l
W. L. T . Pet. the Los Angeles Dodgers
bY the commissioner."
NltiOftll LNIH
R:euschel. Splllner (7), MOnge
under
s tand
Sparky's
2 0 0 1.000 Sunday.
Pitt
200 :JOO 31o- 9 18 5 (8), Kern (8) and Alexander ; Cleveland
And, if Kuhn doesn 't take a feelings. If the Dodgers had
.
. .
2
0
0
1.000
Pittsburgh
N.Y.
o102 001 22x- 11 10 1 Wilcox , iilller (9) arid May,
That the Reds had just stand Andersoo predicts fans lost today, the Reds would be
Reuu. 'M'tltton (.), Jones P1rrllh (9). W- tcern (9-9 ). L .sao
1 1 G
Houston
are going to become
(5l. Tekulvl f7) and Oy.,- ; WIICOK (12-10). HRs- Cieveland,
knocked
off the San suspicious
.000
0 2 0
start one game closer to them."
Koosman, Murrey (7), &amp;.,-nard Carbo (5), A\tKandtr (24), Bell Cincinnati
Francisco Gianta, 8-1 , to
(8) , cornelo (9) and Stearns. W (61; Detroit, Kemp (12) .
Our starr of denti sts and
west w. L. r . Pet. complete a sweep of a tw a- Bernard (1 .1) . 1..- Tekulvll! fir..
technic ians will mak e your
100
000
ooo1
6
1
7) . HRs - P i lii~U£&lt;th, .MJJ.q~r sea
1 o o 1.000 game ser'ies didn't sooth
custom dentures qu icklf'and
010 100 00&gt;1- 2 Denver
!5) ; New York, Norman (2).
Chi
San
Diego
1 1 o .500 Anderson's feelings . II
economically
t&lt;.an City
1 1 0 .500
s.F.
ooo 010 ooo- 1 1 2
Motor L••••• Loacion
Oaklnd
1 1 o , 500 anything, the vjctory raised,
Clncl
020 000 lSK- I 7 0 ly Untttd ~r111 lnttrnetlonal
Seattle
0 2 o .000 not lowered,
the Red
Hollckl, Curlls II), Plank (8)
BoHing
One or two day full
and Hill ; seaver, Balr (I) and
(baSecii.Oft 375 IJ bltll
National Conference
manager's blood pressure .
dent ure ser Yice,
Bench , COrrell (1) . w- seaver .
NttiOnol L.. l"'
.I
Eost
Anderso~ interpreted the
partials&amp;. relines .
113-W. L- Hallckl 18-81. HRI0.1~ SlO ~.1 P3c1~ Dallas
~· ~· ~~· starting of Bouton as another .
San Francisco, Madlock (15), Parktr ' Pit
Cincinnati, Bench (·15) .
Burrghs, All
136 ol35 137 .315 WaShlnglon
2 o o 1.000 Turner gimmick to get a few
cru1, Hou
136 SOl 159 .311 NV Glanls
1 1 0 .500
f · · to the stands
From An ywhere
Chi
003 011 Olt- 6 15 1 Madlock, SF
101':1'17 124 .312 Phllo
o 2 o .ooo more ans tn
Mon
0011 100 20t)- 3 8 2 Clark. SF
139 521163 .309 ~t. Louis
o, 2 o .000 even if It meant conceding a
Rouschol and B I 1 c k w t II; Smith, LA
122 ol31130 .302
Control
victory to the Dodgers.
Fryman. Twllchell (S), Palmer Bowa·. Phil
137 572 112 .301
w. L. T. Pet.
And, a• one might ha·18&gt;. Bohn.,., (I) ond RHCe. W Gorvey. LA
143 572 172 .301 Green Bay
2 0 0 1.000
~
••
- Reuschtl 11•·12&gt;. L- Fryman Rose, Cln
140 510174 .300 Chicago
2 o o 1.000 expected the Dodgers did
•Or. A..J. Staehli •Dr. C.W. Beai•Dr. G.J. S10mbaugh
17-10) . HR- Montreal, Valenllne · Cromrt, Mt l
W 5-43 163 .300 Detroll
1 1 0 .soo rout Bouton en route to an 11·
(23) .
Amtriun Ltatvt
Minnesota
0 1 0 .000
•Dr. W.D. Kimbali•Dr. J.C. Murphy •Dr. J . Ochman
o. AB H. Pet. Tompa Bay
o 2 0 .000 5 victory.
110 lnnlnesl
Carew. Mlnn
135 S02 161 .335
West
Sid tr ked b th Braves
The Riviere Center
St .L•
022 002 000 :1-8 11 0 Rico, Bos
1•2 516 119 .323
W. L. T. Pel.
e 8C
y e
9'9 E. Li\lingston A owe . Columbus
Philo '
0010011.001 o- 6 101 Plnlollo, NV
111 399 128 .321 Los Ang
2 o o 1.000 was rookie left-bander Larry
Mltllnea, ~opez (7), Littell Oliver, r..
113 U7 .... 315 .e.tlanla
1 1 0 .500 McWIWams wlmer of seven
(9); Frllltr 110), Schui!I t10) Yount, Mil
109 •2S 130 .306 New Orleans
1 I 0 .SOO
'
and Simmons, SWIIhl&lt; (9); Roberts, Sea
115 &lt;00 120 .300 San Fran
0 2 0 .000 ol eight decisions.
.onborl, Brutltlr 1~), Ealt · Ogilvie. Mil
112 &lt;09122 .298
Soturday's R11ult
"He'll ~itch against San
wick {5), McGraw (1), Reed Thompsn, 01
t3A S19 15-4 .m
Detro II IS, Tampa Bay 1
Diego to
. n'~ht (Monday) and
(10) and looM, Foote (1}. V:JFisk, 8os
136 "llol6 .296
Sunday'l I:MUih
lfi
Llllell . (2·1). L-Roed (2-3). Munson, NV
135 545 161 .295
Wolh 35. Ph ilo 30
isn't tbal great," said AnderHRs-St . Louis, HendriCk 1191;
Homo Rvns
Pitt 21, SeoltlelO
son, his words dripping witb
Phllodolpllla, Luzlnskl 1301.
Natloftal Leaeuo: Foster, Cln
Cleve 13, Clncl 10
31; Lutlnskl, Phil 30; Smith, LA
Dallas 34, N.Y . Giants 24
sarcasm.
L.A.
· 000 513 011-1116 o 29; Kingman. Chi 2S; Parker , G.B. 21. New Or loans 11
Anderson recalled the
Alii
OtO 101101- 5 10 Pill 24.
HOUS 20, K.C. 11
Reds' 19'14 season opener
Sutton and Ye1ger : Bouton,
· ·- Runs I•Hed In
New Eng 16, St.L 6
Leoo 161, 110001 (6), Devine II)
Nalloftol Lloevo : Garvey . L.e.
L.A. 10, Alia o
when the Braves wanted to
and Nolon, llonldlcl (1). W- 100 , Foster, Cln 99 , Parker.
Chl16, S.F. 13
hold Hank Aaron out of the
sunon llA-tO) . L-Bouton 111-H . Pill 96 : c~rk , SF 93; Smllh,
Mlaml42, Boll G
,. __ so be wouldn't ti'A or
HRs- Los AngeiH, - V
d
WI
'
N.Y.
Jell 21 , Buff 20
~~....
•
(111, L._ 115); hAII.,
t
o),
~~~~.~~l. 01 • NV an
nOok
21
,
S.D.
20
lreall
Bal)e Rutb'S home run
Murphy (23), lurroug I 122 •
Amerklft lta,ut: Riel, Bos
Monday's Game
record on the .road.
Horner (20) ·
· O.t Ill ; HI ••·
1 Mil
Denver at Minnesota , 9 p.m.
·'' The , commissioner
121
;
Staub,
Th
ct 9.4 c t
Sunday, Septtmber 17
S.D.
200 000 ooo- 2 I 0 ·~i~ t2 ornlon, tv ' or v.
Soolllo at Now York Jets. 1 stepped 1n and spoke up then,
'
· Stolon laus .
HoUI
010 000 20K- 3 10 0 '
p.m .
'i
Ande
Rl&amp;mUISI1'1, Shirley (7) and · NltiOMI . LtltUI ' Moreno
, Chicago at Detroit, 1 p .m .
dJdn, he.~~ asked
rson,
·Roborlo; Richerd ond Bochv.
·
A ·. T ·
'
Cleveland at Allanta, 1 p.m.
challengingly
'I
Puioll t7) . W-Richard 116-m . Pill 63; L.• P"'· L AI, over•s•:
Kanus Cllv at New York
And Anderson
.
"'led the
.:...RIImUIIIn
11'·12)
Pill
37,
Smith
,
SO
3
'
Gl
,
l
u
L
Rlchords, SO 3A.
onot, p.m ·
deal f Vida Bl that
• '
A
lean LM-"I
American LtiiUt: LtFJore,
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati .
Reels'
«
ue
Nv - 320 1110 lli0-711 1 Dtl63 ; Crul, sea 4 ; Willi, Tox p.'&amp;iaklond at Green Bay, 2 p.m. was voided by Kuhn.
.01 ·
000 201 1110-4 S 1 47 ' Dllono, Ook .-, Wlllon, KC
Phllodolpllla 11 Now Orleans,
"He didn't hesitate to lake
Flt-1 GoDoge t7) and 31 ·
"tcftlnt
2 p.m.
a stand On that, did · he?"
Mun.,.: ~prowt, Stenl~ (H,
v&amp;ctorlts
san Franc11eo at Houston, 2
Reds•
Hollier t4), DrOVO (71, LM 171 Nai-l LHIUO : Nlokro , All p.m.
asked the
111111111gel'.
- Flak. W-Fit- 06-fl. 11-15 ; Pwry, SO 17-6; Hooton,
T'ompa Boy al Minnesota , 2
And then there WU laat
L- SprOwt 10·2). HR- Iooton. LA 17-1 ; Grlmlloy, Mil 17-9; p.m. ·
Uav when Pete Role WU
Lynn 1111.
BlUe, SF 16.7, John, LA 16.10;
Wllhlngton 11 St. LOUIS, 2 ,..._
hi
Richard, Hou 16-11 .
p.m. ·
'l!arlnghla3,000tbcar- t.
111n111Mel
Amarlcon Ll-: Guidry,
San Diogo ot Dlnver. 'f·m·
"I made a remark In New
·Texas
OOHIIO 20t)- I t 0 NY 21 -2; Coldwotl, Mil 11-9;
Doll
I I II Los Angelos , p.m.
York
that tbe Redl' Ialii
Dek
011 000 Olx- J I 4 Palmer, Bait 1•·12 ; Tanana.
Buffelo at Miami, 4 p.m .
AleX- and Iundborg ; q 1 l7-t; Flan-. hl117-12.
Monlay, htlltmMr 11
~ed. to .ee Pete g• It
NorriS, Wirth W , 17) ond
lamH
...
Averar.
hlllmoro
at
Now
England,
9
and
if It meanl holding him
Robl-. Moy• (II. WttoeiM
"'1111
......
,
'
_
,
p.m.
.
·
out
of
a .,..
aame· I'd uu
~·It," said
Nol-l L...,.., vuckllvlch, _ _ _ _ __..._____
A l l • - 11-tl. L-Norrls tO·
.0).
s1 .L us, ltogon .• Mtl 2.47;
.
.
Anderlon ' "Right away I get
swon, NY Ut;,lu• . SF 2.St; Hou 2'7; 1\!lokro, All 219;
th I
.
Kn-." 2.1•:
·
seover. Cln laa ; &amp;lvlevon , Pitt a call · rom
e eague
BETWEEN
000 010 IIIII- 1 4 1 AMtnca• a..-.; Guidry, 151; Monlefusco, SF 157.
prelldent (Chub Feeney)
oak
ooo ooo OO:t- 2 t o NY 1.771 C.ldwiU, Mil 2.32; , Amarlta¥ L-uo: llyon. Col tena..a
me I ehouldn't make I
Cllmtr end J . IIIII; Br-g MatliCk, TIX 2.421 Palmw , 226; Guldr • NY 320; L-ard,
-•
- IDien, lloblnten tt&gt;. w- hll Ul; Golla, Mllln 2.51.
KC 16ol; lonagan, Ball loiS: llatament like that."
. , _ , (10.111 . L- CIImlt (I·
ltrlkEekeralov.aoaandKrovoc,Chl
AnderRon
paused
lla-1 LHIUO: Rlclllrd; 131.

Prevention iS the
best policy. • . .

STANDINGS

'RiR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

Anderson upset with
Braves own.e r Turner

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

\T&amp;!I 1 .0 0M

·A

____

Linescores

Cust001 fuU
In ooe ar too days

r

DtRonald ERiviere

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

POMEROY &amp;
MASON, W.VA. AREA

PHONE

992-2156

-

,To•••
...........,

THE DAILY SENTINEL.

i

.

,.,.

l'

...

I•
)

•

•

�-~The

.

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~roy , 0 ., Monday, Sept. IJ , 1978

~·· "~"T;;:I;;;·~'""""""''"''·=··'"'"·'''i

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
,•,·

·j

~eds

6 112 out after victory

CINCINNATI. (UPI)- The c)ima~lng a fiveof'UII eighth
Cincinnati Reds had two runs Inning with his ~ homer of
ln and two rumers on bue the season as the Reds
completed a sweep of a two~~::atf"ro::; .:r:uhg~~~= game series with the San
Francisco Giants with an 8-1
and headed for the plate.
" How many rups do you victory.
The Reds' catcher had
need•" the Reds' catcher had
kiddingly asked Doug Bair, looked quizzically at Bair.
"That 's enough," said the
the Reds' relief ace who took
who reeled olf two
Bair,
over for Tom Seaver after
·scoreleSs
innings to gain his
seven inninp &amp;lnday.
"I'D take anything I can 26th save ol the season and
preserve Seaver's 13th
get," Bair had answered.
Minutes later Bench victory against 14 lolses.
It was a case of the heat,
returned to the dugout alter

NEW YORK (UP!) -There always will be thwnb prints aU
over that page ln the reCIJrd. book showing where Jinuny
Connors won the 1978 U.S. Open tennis championship.
No question about it, he blew Sweden's Bjorn Borg clear off
· the court with an impressive 11-4, &amp;-2, &amp;-2 straight Itt sweep in
&amp;lnday's men's singles final and that should've settled,
temporarily , anyway, the continuous debate over wbb is reaDy
the No. I player ln the '!'orld.
But It dido 't settle a thing and the reason·it dldn 't has to do
with Borg's right thumb, which was In such bad shape going
into the match that he seriously mulled over defaulting it only
a couple of hours before he walked out to center court to face
Connors.
Borg had trouble with ht.. thwnb before ln the WCT
tournament at Dallas ln May when he was forced to quit
playing In the final round. It was thought he might have the
' ·gout but that did no\ prove to be the case.
The thumb became inflamed and Borg caught a plane back
Coacb Bob Ashley's Southhome l'o Sweden and had a blood test, which showed up
western
Highlanders scored
negative.
two
fourth
quarter toucbOnce again the thumb started acting up durlng his semifinal
downs
Saturday
afternoon
match with Vilas Gerulaitis Salurllay as a result of the
pressure he was putting on it gripping his racket. A blister · enroute to a 29-14 non-league
developed and alter it broke open, infection set in, possibly victory over the hos\
· from the ~wdust Borg was using to dry his hands on the Southeastern Panthers of
Richmof\dale. The win left
sidelines.
Following &amp;mday's decisive victqry over him by Connors, the Highlanders with a 1-1
Borg tried to play down the effect the thwnb had In his defeat. record while Southeastern
He wanted to be a complete gentleman about It and give dropped to o-2.
Southwestern took an early
Connors all the credit without alibiing. He wanted to do that so
13-0
lead only to see the Ross
much, be even resorted to several bold face lies that were so
Countians
bounce back with
transparent that few had any trouble seeq through them.
·
14
pOints
in
the third period to
"t.e understand you considered defaulting just before the
take
a
one-point
lead going
match and that pressure was put on you to play," was the first
into
the
final
stanza
.
question thrown at Borg in the interview area.
Sophomore Joe Potter led
"I riever considered that," Borg answered.
That wasn 'I quite true becauae the thwnb bothered him so \he way with three touchmuch Saturday night and SWiday morning that he had Dr. downs while Shenn Potter
Irving Gllck, the United States Tennis Association's physician, was the big ground gainer for
examine it and after Gllck did ao, he told Borg he had only a ~ SWHS.
In addition, senior quar50 chance of playing his match with CGMors.
terback
Gene Layton con·
• "Were you given an injection in your thwnb?" came another
nec\ed
on
several passes to
question.
11
sophomore
end
Dale
No," replied Borg.
Newberry.
That was another fib. Glick gave him an injection of
Potter broke the scoring ice
marcaine, a minor anesthetic, before the match.
"About the blister ... " was the start of another question, but
Borg broke It off.
"Let's talk about something elae," be Interjected a bit
curtly. "The thumb bothered me last night and thla morning
but not durlng the match. I've had blisters before. Sometimes NEW YORK (UPI)-Whatyou're unlucky. He (Cmnors) was on top of his game and he ever the record book shows,
ihe real story of the U.S.
put a lot of pressure &lt;m me."
Open
remains a mystery.
Borg, who had beaten Cmnors in the Wimbledon 'inal and
Connors, aching for
Jimmy
had also won the Frencb title so that he had a cbance at the
revenge
ever
since he was
Grand Slam bad he captured the Open, refused to be drawn
humiliated
by
Bjorn
in
Into the question of whether C011110rs or he ·should be' straight sets inBorg
· the
considered No. I now.
Wimbledon final, played with
"I don't make the decisions;" he said.
CoMors, who played superlatively, also shrugged off the the fury of a trapped panthe~
question of Borg's thwnb when he was asked whether he knew Sunday and gained his
about it beforehand. He said he didn't know about it and that' precious vengeance. ·
That much everyone can
wasn't true, either, because be did.
agree
on.
"If he plays with a sore thumb and wins, he 's Supennan,"
It's
also
fact that Borg, the
CoMors said. "If he loses, that's okay, too. He carne out and Swedish delight,
saw hia
played. lf it was bad, maybe he shouldn't have."
dream of a Grand Slam
stomped upon and shattered
on the hard surfa«; ol the new .
National Tenms Center.
Merely going through the
motions, he never was ln
contention as Connors
stormed hiS way to a 11-4, 6-2,

SWHS defeats
..
slLv Ross, 29-14
a

not the Giant bats, catching
up with Seaver '!'bb owned a
3-1 lead when Ufted for a
pinch hitter in the bottom &lt;i
the ~eventh.
"Tom ·was shot," said Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson.
"I threw hard in HOUlton
the last time out and fairly
hard ln St. Louts before that,"
said Seaver. "And when you
come back after a couple of
tough games, you don 't
al'!'ays have the stamina tp
go nine. I was very happy
getting out of there with the
one run scored off me."
Bill Madlock's 15th homer
of the season, tying his career
high for one season,
accounted for the Giants' lone
run off Seaver. It carne ln the
nith inning and was one &lt;i six
hits yielded by the· veteran
righthander, who walked one
and struck out five.
Ed Halacki took the loss,
his eighth against eight
victories. But !lillY one of the
three runs he yielded before
departing after seven Innings
was earned. And he was
nicked for only three hii!J.
Roger Metzger's throwing
error on George FOII!er's

with )~yard run ln the first
peripd. Scott Russell, another
promt..ing sopbomore, made
the score 12~ on a lour yard
run. Newberry then kicked
the extra polnt.
Later, in the fourth period,
Pott.er scored on a 35 yard
punt reiurn and a four yard
run. Adding the extra points ground ball and singles
were Newberry on a pass by
Danny
Driessen
from Layton and Layton on a . and Davey Concepcion
run .'
gave the
Reds one
Southeastern took a third 'of two runs . they scored in
period lead on TD runs by HiD the second lniring. Driessen
and Detty, the team's clime horne with the second
quarterback.
run on Halicki's wild pick.off
Hill scampered over from throw to first base.
the three yard stripe while
The Reds added a third run
Detty provided a 33 yard ln the seventh when · Bench
gallop. A pass to Mitten was walked with two out, Stole
good for the EPs. No game second and BCOred on Concepstatistics were available.
cion's double.
Southwestern travels to
Singles by Pete Rose, Joe
Southern Fridliy night.
Morgan , Ken Griffey and
By Quarters:
Foster's sacrifice fly
SW
130 01&amp;--~ accounted lor the first two of
SE
0 0 14 6-14 the Reds' five runs In the
eighth. After walking
. Driessen, Giant relief pitcher
John Curtt.. was replaced by
Ed Plank, who was greeted
1&gt;-2 victory lor his third Open by Bench'• homer.
championship ln. five years.
"It makes a difference
But the reason for Connors' when you don't have your big
shinlng triwnph and B&lt;rg'•s guys in the . bullpen
dismal debacle may be no available," said Anderson.
bigger than tl\e Swede's And both of Giant Manager
thumb . Unfortunately, an Joe Altobelli's relief aces explanation 15 lost in an Gary Lavelle and Randy
interpretation of words and Moffitt - are ailing.
the apparent determination
As lor Anderson, he's
of the loser not. ro alibi.
l becoming concerned about
Durlng the afternoon there overworking Balr.
were reports the thumb was
"That's three days in a row
infected and that Borg might
have to default. Eventually,
he was given a shot of a palnOlllo College .
killing drug and directed &lt;mto
Foolboll Results
UniiM Press lnternationol
center court to take the rest
of his medicine.
Ball St 38 Miami 14
But Borg, a genUeman to. g&gt;lo U 23 Eastern Michigan
the end, refused to alibi and .. Central Michigan 41 Kent St o
even denied taking an VIllanova 35 Bowling Green
Injection despite the faci ht.. ~rshall 17 Toledo 0
coach and a doctor confirmed Dayton 31 Maine 14
the report;
Akron 19 Western Illinois 3
"I tried to do a few things Central St 32 Lincoln (Mol 9
lor it, nothmg
· special," Borg Youngsfo"!n St 31 Northern
Iowa 14
said about the injury, which C.pital 24 John Carroll 21
he termed a bUster. "It hurt C.se Western 30 Oberlin 14
me last nigh\ and this Alma (Michl 31 Bluffton 14
· b t 't didn't bathe
Ashland 42 Franklin (lnd) 21
morrung, u 1
r Adr.lan !Michl 3 Defiance 0 •
me during the match. It was Wilmington 24 Canlslus 7

Uolled Press Jateruatlooal
Bill Hess would have been
proud.
Hess, head football coach
at Ohio University for 2Al
years before his death this
summer, recruited the team
that launch ed its 1978
campaign Saturday with an
emotioilal 23-22 victory over
Mid-American Conference
foe Eastern Michigan .
"We told the players not
everything would go their
way," said new head coach
Bob Kappes, with tears ln ht..
eyes, "but if they were the
kind of men Coach Hess
thought they were, they
would handle it."
Handle it they did, but not
without a great deal of
suspense ..
Senior Steve Green's 4oyard field goal with 2:28 left
in the game provided the
Bobcats with the come-frombehind victory ln a conteat
in
94-degree
played
temperatures.
The Hurons, who had controlled the game until the
final quarter , had a chance to
wln it in the final seconds
after driving to the OU 21·
yard line, but Craig Motzer's
field goal attempt with 13
seconds remaining was wide
to the right.
"I wanted to throw up
during that drive," said
Kappes , "I was afraid to look
at the field during their field
goal attempt."
Green 's winning kick gave
OU the lead I or the first time
in the game.
Eastern Michigan jwnped
out to a UHl first quarter lead,
but the Bobcats, who were 110 last year, pulled to within
16-7 when freshman running
back Todd Yoho scampered
~ yard! lor a touchdown· on
his first play as a collegian.
After another Eastern TD,
quarterback Nigel Turpin,
who played at spUt end hla
three previous years, ran 10
yards for a touchdown to
Iring the Bobcats to within
two, 1&amp;-14. Eastern, G-2 on the
~son, added anothl!1' TD to
take a D-14 ,lead into the
locker room at )lalflline.
FoUowing a scoreless third
period, OU came to within D-

2» when Turpin connected on the Thundering Herd romped
a 35-yard BCOring pass to to victory over the host
Faron Volkner. OU went for Rockets in their season
two on the. extra polnt but opener.
Jailed, setting the lltage for
In other games Saturday it
Green 's heroics.
was: ·Dayton 31, Malne 14;
In other games involving Akron 19, Western Illinot.. 3;
Ohio's Mid-American teams, Central State 32, Lincoln just
"Jimmy
played very I
a llttle just
tender.
Ball State surprised Miami, (Mo.) 9; Youngstown State weD and put.the pressure on
38-14 ; Central Michigan over- 31, North"ern Iowa 14 ; Capital me. He didn't make many
whelmed Kent State, 41~; :U, John Carron 21; Caae mistakes."
Villanova whipped Bowling Western 30, Oberlin 14; Alma
Connors, who In 1975 lost
Green, 35-28; and Marshall (Mich.) 37, Bluffton 14; the Wimbledon final to
Ashland 42, Franklin (Ind.) Arthur Ashe on an Injured leg
blanked Toledo 17~.
Playing at Muncie, Ind., in 21 ; Adrian (Mich .) 3, - and remained silent about
a game billed as the 1978 Defiance 0; and Wilmington It - said not too convincingly
MAC championship bout, :U, Canisius 7.
he wasn't aware of Borg's
Miami failed to liv~ up to its
Injury.
preseason pick as the team to
beat in the MAC.
Junior quarterback Dave
Wil son passed for three
touchdowns and scored
another to spark the
surprisingly decisive Ball
State victory in the season
opener for both teams.
The Cardinals jwnped out
to a 14-7 lead ln the firill
quarter and held a 24-14 lead
at halftime as they outgained
the Redskins Ul-267 in total
yards .
Mark Hunter scored
Miami's firill touchdown ln
the first period on a 4-yard
run and quarterback Larry
Fortner, who completed II of
2» passes for 134 yards, the
other in the second stanza
from the 3.
At VIllanova, Pa., quarterback Pat O'Brien paced Villanova 's win over BG,
running for 105 yarda and two ·
touchdowns.
But,
the ,
Villanova defe.-.e had to stop
a scoring threat ai the goal
18 x 24-in size, walnut finish
line as time ran out to give
frames . Printed burlap in
the Wildcats the win in a seechoice of designs .
saw game.
The Wildcat victory offset
flashy performances by
JB
Bowling Green quarterback
Mike Wright, who completed
21 of :rl pasaes for 283 yards,
and tailback Doug Wiener,
'!'ho BCored touchdOWIII on
I'IUI8 ol 2, I, I and 13 yards.
Kent State had only one
scoring threat ln ita lou at
Central Michigan, driving to
the Ollppewas' lJ.yard line
before CMU Intercepted a
pau.
Marshall turned three
Pomeroy.O.
200 East Main
toledo mistakes Into scores as

Rutland Friendly Gardeners
hold weekend flower show
RUTLAND - School Days
waa the theme of the flower
show staged · Friday and
Seturday at the Rutland
Brench of the Pomeroy
Na~al Bank by the Rulland
Friendly Gardeners.
Judging the show Friday
were vtsitors to the bank.
_Eacbwas provided a judglnll

Pold-Hayman
reunfr)n
.
.y
held in Antiquity, Sept. 3
The reunion of the late H.
A. Fred and Garnet F. Pold
Hayman family was held
Sept. 3 at the home of their
elder son, C. E. Hayman, Sr.,
Antiquity..
.
Attending were Clarence
Hayman, Sr., Virginia
Hayman, Violet .Hayman,
Kathy · Hayman, Valarie
Hayman, Usa Hayman, June
Hayman, Clarence Hayman,
Jr., Judy Bucbanan, Ronnie
Reeves, Martha Reeves,
' Lucy Reeves, Jolm Reeves,
Steven Reeves, Wesley
Reeves, Charles Lewis,
. Dorothy Little, Raymond
Little, Paul Kent, Jerry
Collins, Melltsa CoUins. Mick
Schartiger, Okey Schartlger,
Georgie Schartlger, Nancf
Stewart, Reda Spencer, JOff
~ncer, Carl Stewart, Ma:y

ilna Ro:cordar

• Auiomlhc tM.,ual ~e co r d Changer

• Cab1n11 OlttmU II IId WOOC1

w•lh CIJile~~tr

lunld port dllrgn·

.

Walnut Color

Wakeup to
something wonderful •••

ZIINITH POWEII-II!IERVI CLocK RADIOS
n.•• s nu•...,..tMfiW - 'Ntwrfng
~ ...........

kMft 110011 GII'OI.Iil IUMitiOnll'lf"'

10 4 Mt.t'1 during po_, rntarrvpllon t

Circle olloYI'Id ' dnlgn. wrtt't "adro or Tone

24 •HOiolt AIM'~ . • ..., llflrltcn, TOIICtl ·n I~

Conlfol, Alarm Chec:klndlutor. lltumlnatltG Oo11l
lctll. Tone Conuol. AFC Stmwii!H
WOOd CIOintl , QfllnN Wei nut ftntth

'79.95

•

INGELS FURNITURE
'

-~==::..~==~-..J6::!!555:::::::::::::::::::::~

POMEROY BEN FRANKUN

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

THE DAILY SENTINEL
and
.'

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

I

arranging to be offered .

•.
THIS

STATES

Rober! S. Nakamoto·, son of
Mrs. Janet L. Nakamoto,
Rutland, completed cadet
baste training at the U. S.
Military Academy , West
Polnt, N, Y.
Formerly called "New
Cadet Barracks" - or
· ~~Beast Barracks," it is an
intense eight weeks in whicb
new cadeta learn the
demanding standards of
military courtesy, peraonal
appearance, and physical
fitnesa expected of a cadet.
A 1971 graduate of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy,
Nakamoto received a
congressional appolntent to
the academy.
His
father,
Robert
Nakamoto, lives in Arlington,
Va.

I

I

THEY Will
RECEIVE
9 MONTHS OF

IN lHE
UN nED

J

DEPUTY CLAIMED
RAVENNA,
Ohio (UP!)Employea Oa Strt»
Portage
County
Sheriff ADen
PIQUA, Ohio (U~) McKitrick,
45,
died
early this
About 100 city em(!qYees, ·
morning
a\
Robinson
including garbage a~ ,power
plant workers, walk~ off the Memorial Hospital.
McKitrick was rushed lo
job today in
e concerning
the h lng
of the hospital at 12:50 a.m. by
government - !tnanced his wife. A hospital spokeaman said the sheriff died at
workers.
The employ , memberos 2:38a.m.
There was no immediate
. of Dayton ftPllc Service
word
on casue of death, but a
· Union i.Dcal lfl. struck the
for the sheriff's
spokesman
city of 2»,1100 at 6 a.m. The
office
said
McKitrick
had a
union said tit/ wildcat strike
history
of
heart
trouble.
was caused lecause the city
was usin~ government
LINDA JETr
programa :o hire part-time
Uncia Jett of Pomeroy
workers fll' union jobs.
City of(l:lals said the lltrike underwent major surgery ·
was njt causing any Thursday at the · Holzer
problem~, other than delays· Medical Center. She is ln
room 32».
In garblge coUectton.

t

·- J
~ ...
gruu:ua~s

Class Fn basic flower

' '17.50

GOOD
AT ANY
COI.L£GE

Stewart, Veta Stewart, Sissy
Stewart, B,;b.Stewart, James
Stewart ; ;Kenny Stewart,
Richard ptewart, Richard
Ables, M Lee Abels, Carole
Schartl(!!r, Chuck ~llins,
Mike Hammond, George
Price.,!
..
Frionds caned during the
day . A chicken and steak.
dlnntwas served at noon
wit ace by C. E. Hayman,
Sr1 ertalnment was by a
U..e band with country music
8J(I a hall game. Officers are
~
E . Hayman, Sr.;
_,resident; Vlfllinla Hayma~- ·
,,VIce president; Kathleen
' Hayman, secretary ; and
VIolet Haym'an, treasurer.
The 1979 reunion will be
held the first Sunday In
September with the president
to &amp;Mounce the location.

Robert
Nakamoto

1"

11.

OFFER

Days," Mrs. Larry Eli~ards,
firill ; Mrs. Joe Bolin; second,
and Mrs. Roberti Billhop,
third.
'
"When We Werli a Couple
of Kids," Mrs. J;lrry Barr,
first; Mrs. Joe B6lln, second,
·and Mrs. Jim ~en, third.
"You Were My Gal in
Calico," Mrs. ljichard Fetty,
first ; Mrs. !1111 Kennedy,
second, and J'llrs. Joe Bolin,
third.
i I
" You Wrqte On My Slate, 'I
Love You ~~ · " Mrs. Clair
Turner, prat; Mrs. Jack ·
Walker, ,JeCond, and Mrs.
William Willford, third.
"You Were my Buhful
Barefoot Beau," Mrs. Ray
Lambert, first ; Mrs. Bruce
Davis. second; and Mrs.
Howard Birchfield, third.

of/God held a picnic ·Labor
Pay at the Syracuse Park.
the Rev . George Q!!~r,
(la.r 1r, had grace.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. B. Loomis, Mr. and Mrs.
I Larry Clark, Wendy, Tamara
Edgar Van lnwagen, Pomeroy, a l!lfYivor ol tile / and Penny, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Bataan Death March of World War II, has returned home' Cadie, Charlene, Lee Ann
from Fonlans Village, N. C., where he attended the
Cadle, Mr. and Mrs. LaMy
annual reunion ol priloners of war from Bataan and
Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. Andy
Corregidor. Pictured with Van Inwagen, on the left, 1111!
Eskew, Lenora Jenkins,
Dr. John Hewelett and Richard Woodruff, both of whml . Matthew Jenkins, Donna
were also prisoners of war. Dr. Hewelett cared for ran
Koehler , Becky Koehler,
lnwagen after he had received a leg Injury in a JapaJese
Paula Barnett, Teresa
coal mine and the Japaneae had, as a result, ampulated
Connors, Norma Wilson,
his leg. Van Inwagen '!'as transported in .a truck bi!Ck to
Marla ·Wilson, Kim Wilson,
the prison area tnunediately after the ampJitati~ Bod
Jenny Wilson, C)iarles
might not have lived had it not been for Or; Hef"IeH's
Burton, . Jo Ann Wears,
w&lt;rk.
'
Sherry Wears, Terry Barrett,
1
J''
Timmy Hysell, Paul Voss,
Beverly Faulkner, Sampson
Hall, and the minister.

Model-JRS 8 7W-l 0 Feilurill8:
• o\Ueor o 1000 Sp&amp;ak~rs wrl h ta mous

sheet, and as they viewed the
five classes, they listed their
preferences for firill, second
and third. The votes were
counted at 4 p.m. Friday and
the blue, red and white ribbons placed
on
the
arrang'emen\s.
The winners :
"Dear Old Golden Rule .

CLIP &amp; MAIL

The DliiJ Senli11l, Court St., Porn1111J, 0. 45769
NAME ........................................................
ADDRESS ..................................................... ,

CITY ...................................... .- ••••••••••••••••• •··
·S'fATE
- •••.•:.. •• ••• .... ••• •• •••••••••••• •ZIP CODE ••••••••••

0

CHECK ,~ ...........

0

OFFER
EXPIRES
SEPTEMBU
30,
1971

/lbe flrilt class in basic
1 ~wer ar.ranging to be of"' tel'ed by the Melp County
p~rden Clubs Auoctatlon
will be held tonight at 7:30
p.m. in the social room of the
County S.vtngs and
Co., Pomeroy.
.
dents interested In
tilting the COW'H are alked to
take bulc auppltea and
· Oo'!'en, or to contact Mrs.
Roy Hoher, IIIS-'TJII1 or Joe
Bolin, 74Z-DO for a ·specific

I"

MONEY ORDER ............ .
I I AliT..•..••...•.....•••.•••.•• ~ .•.... :........... ,••••..••

SOIRY,
NO

REfUNDS

list of items needed.
The coune will consist of
lour classes to be held on
Monday nights with Mrs.
Bolin, an accredited J.udge of
the Ohio Association of
Gtirdelt Clubs, to be the ln·
structor. Cost for the Ioiii'
week coune is p, The ciules
will be tnfonnal and are open
to garden club and nongarden club members,
teenagers and adults.

·Shower honors Rosemary Snowden
and 10ft' drlnkl were served
J~ entertained recenUy after the honored 11ueat
wllh 1 bridallboww bonol'lng opened her 1ifta. Othera
Jlnwnlr)' llllowdln, recent attendinl were Lucille Lewil,
bride of , . Elbw, In the Hope Harper, Ethel Hollier,
.cliJ room of thl fJJriiCIIse Billie Und.erwood, Norma
Willon and Qu1ltlne BlllFlnt Qlurdt of GGd.
Glmll were pllyad with urd.
Sending 1ift1 were Beverly
pr1JM. ballll won by Mary
Faulllner,
Jl181111a MOler, Joy
taktw, Donna Koebler;
Clark,
Alice
Loomll, Bernice
Lan Jlllklnl, and Allee
Levacy,
aDd
Jo Ann Wears.
WJa,
Salldwldtel, potllto dlipa,
Cherry Cadle and Jan

I

'l'wo of the blue ribbon winners at the "School Days"
Dower show of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners were Mrs.
Larry Barr, .left, and Mrs. Richard Fetty, pictured with
their arrangements . .

\
1be Syracuse Firill Church

IT SOUNDS AS GOOD AS IT LOOKS!

• Dual G1te MOS FET and Phase Loc~td LooQ IC Mul! i ple~e Decoder

)

P~nic held

;~U L~ !i 1 ~Y~ tl1X_G~
Pia~"'

J

'

'2".95

1• B·Track Tapa

Social 1
I Calendar \ held at

1

If

Only

• .\Mt FM I Sttreo FM Tu ner ·Amp Wlll'l
AFC and H1 F11ter

r------..-1 McDade reunion

J

I

Take Your Favorite Music
Back To School

Connors gets revenge

Hess would have been
proud of OU Bobcats

5-The Daily. ~ntinel_cMiddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday,Sepi. II, 1978

South Point .&lt;10 Birch (W Val 1
School
Trinity ~7 L.edaemont 7
Foollwl II RHUHI
Tuscaraw•s ·c.nt C.lh 19
United 'r•n lnt.rnatlona I
Al&lt;ron N 30 Canton Central East C.nton 0
Warren Western Rsv 21
C.th 6
Bedford Chanel 7 Shaker Akron s o
l'oungs Mooney 37 Mentor
I've asked Doug to go two Heights 6
i.nninp," said Anderaon. "I Bucl&lt;eye
Central
11 cath a
--~ln
to do Ridoedale 13
can't keep..,. g a man
Canton lkKinley 13 Glen oak
that. But we're ln no poeltlon 11
·
to hold off."
· Cardinal 0 Grand Valley o
Commenting on Seaver's . (lie)
.
MILWAUKEE (UPJ) 13-14 record. And"'""" Cle Cathedral Latin 27 New
Bobby
u-r couted home
London 6
remarked : "He has trl ed to Cle Gilmour 42 Beachwood 6 under a yellow fllg Sunday to
pitch too perfect because Cle Hawken School 14 Unlv win the 250-miJe Governor's
we're no\ BCorlng too many School 13
runa. He hasn't been free out Cle Hts Lulh E 20 West Res 20 Cup 250 USAC race, while
A.J . Foyt relltned lU lead in
(tie)
there- letting everything go. Cle St Edward 51 Shaw 0
the point ~ for the
You can bet It won't happen Cle St Jos~ph 10 Brush 8
USAC
1lock
car
two years In a row, though." Cuyahoga Hts 17 Rocky River champiOIIIIhlp.
Alter firing Ills blast at the Luth -W o
.
U.-.er led lll08I of the race,
Braves for pitching Jim Qallon 41 Tuscarawas Valley
8
coasting home- the Jut ~even
Bouton against the Los Elyria w36 Oberlin o
ln .U. Camaro u . they
. AngelesDodgersaildtakinga ··.Garfield Hts Trinity 47 laps
were
nm under the yellow
verbal slap at Commisaioner · Ledgem.ont 7
.
caution
flag. He finlll!ed with
Bowie Kuhn, Anderson Jewett 20 Minerva 14
announced that Ken Grlffev Maple Hts 12 Garfield Hts 6 an average &amp;peed ol '11.297
Normandy. 6 Rocky River 0 mph on the Wisconsin S!ate ,
will sit out the hY!l-j&amp;rne Parma Padua 20 Niles o
Fair Park Speedw•y and took
series
with
Houston, Richmond
Hf5 7 In - home_top money of $7,11l5.
beginning tonight.
dependence 0
"His heel is ·really
bothering him . now," said
Anderson, "so I'll play
Olamp Summers in right."
Summers made ht.. first
OPTOMnRIST
start Friday night since .his
'
oFFICE
HOURS:
-9:30to 12,2
5 IC~OSE
recall from the Indianapolis ·
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
farm club and responded with
ST
EROY.
two hits ln four at bats. ·
Olllo 'High

I

Happy Harvesters Class
plans rummage sale
A rummage sale was
planned and several ill
members were remembered
with cards during the Friday
meeting of the Happy Har·
. vesters Class of Trinity
Church .
The rwnmage sale was set
'for Oct. 4 and 5 ln the church
basement. Convalescent
cards were signed for Mrs.
Gladys Cockier, Mrs. Ruby
Erb, Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Reibel, and Mrs. Freda
Duffy. Observed at the
meeting were the birthdays
of Mrs. Neva Seyfried, Mrs.
Stella Kloes, and Mrs. Gloria
Dessauer of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
a guest.
A congregatlonai covered
dish dinner to be held ln the
church dining room was
announced for Oct. I immedlately following the
worship service. The meat
and beverage will be fur·
nlshed. It was aMounced that
the Friendly Circle still has
cookbooka for sale. Plans
were made for the Happy
Harvesters to contribute to
the pantry of non-perishable
food for ·!he needy being
establilh~ by , the Friendly
Circle.
Members were invited to
join the Busy Bees which are
111111 quUting each Wednesday

For Tuesdoy, Sept. 12

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

at the cburch. Miss Erma
Smith presided at the
meeting which opened· with
prayer and the_hymn, "What
A Friend We Have in Jesus"
with Mrs. Wilma Terrell at
the piano.
Devotions by Mrs. Joseph
Cook were entitled "The
Beauty of Summer" and )ler
ilcrip\lire was taken from
Psalms 191. She spoke of the
seasons - autumn with its
changing colors, winter for
those who love snow, spring
with life emerging,_ and
summer where the daily
growth of plants remind
Christians of potential growth
' through their daily relationships with God. She c&lt;in·
eluded with prayer.
Next meeting will be held
at I: 30 p.m. on Oct. 5 with
devotions by Mrs. Eva
Dessauer and refreshments
by Mrs. Terrell and Mrs.
Genevieve Swartz. The group
sang "Blest Be the Tie that
Blnds" and gave "The Lord's
Prayer" ln unison .
Mrs. Lillie Hauck and Mrs.
Stella iaoes served a dessert
course from a table
decorated in the !aU mQtif.
Prizes were ·awarded to Miss
Smith, Mrs. Gloria Dessauer,
Mrs. Ella Smith and Mrs.
Terrell.

MONDAY
UNITED METHODIST
Women, Heatl1 Church,
Middleport, 7:30 Monday
night with M.-.. Nan Moore
to have the program, Mrs.
Emily Sprague . \he devotions,- ami Mrs. Kathryn
Knight, Mrs. Frances
Wilson, M.-.. Lillian Smith,
and Mrs. Ruth Bwngamer
to he the hostesses.
TUESDAY
COME AS YOU ARE at
Harrisonville PTO meeting
Tuesday, Sept. 12, 7 p,m. at
Harrisonville Elementary
School.
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
at the school. Introduction of
staff members. Babysitting
service will be provided. All
patrons of the school are
invited.
SYRACUSE PTO, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the school with
staff
int roductions to
highlight the program;
babysitting service will be
provided.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, first
meeting of the fall at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the River
Boat Room of Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and
·Loan ln Pomeroy.
HARRISONVILLE
East·
ern Star 255 Tuesday 8
p.m.
SOUTHERN
LO CAL
School Board Tuesday 7:30
p.m. at high school.
POMEROY CHAMBER OF
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn.
RACINE LODGE 461
F&amp;AM Tuesday. Work in MM
degree. All master masons
inyited. .
.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, 6:30 Tuesday at the
Middleport
firehouse,
t'Overed dish dinner with
beverage and table service
provided. Members are to
take meat, vegetable, salad
or dessert. Suzy Carpenter to
conduct workshop following
dinner.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Alice Thompson. Program on corn· husk

LAFF- A - DAY

Descenda11ts o.f Rose
McDade of Middleport and
the late Ray McDade
gathered at the McDade
home in Gallipolis on Aug. 27
for 8 reunion .
AU members of the family
were present for the reunion
and enjoyed the swimming
pool in the back yard and a
cookout. Next year's reunion
will be held at the home of
Hennan and Thelma Reese
at Cheswre. Coming the
fl ow¥rs by Dollie Hayes; roll
call resporu;e to be a bulb, arra ngement
1.hPm ...
"Memories" using th&lt;l- iast of
summer flowers. Mr s.
Marilyn Wisecup , judge.
EASTERN LOCAL Band
Boosters, 7: 30 Tuesday in
the hand room. Election of
officers, lund raising projects, and hand needs to be
discussed. Band parents
urged to attend.

farthest for the reunion were
Larry Shamblin and family ,
Alexandria, Va. The youngest
there was Curt Arnott, live
months old.
Attending were Bob and
Norma Wilson, Columbus;
Gary and Darlene Shamblin,
children, Sonjua and Toby,
CinciMati ; Larry Shamblin,
and children, Bonnie, Shane,
Mike and Sonjua, Alexandria,
Va .; Dale and Wilma
McGraw, Racine; Harold and
Garcia Adams, children
Chrissie and Bill, Long
Bottom; .Herman and Thelma
Reese, Cheshire; Glen and
Rosalie Smith of Addison;
Oma Arnott and Daren,
Monoca , Pa.; Ray and Terrie
Arnott and Curt ; Beaver
FallS, Pa.; Ronald and
Loretta McDade, Chris and
Mandy, Athens; Don and
Mary Lee McDade, llrian and
Missie, Gallipolis.

..

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

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__.... ...... p %'

I

SAYRE HARDWARE
882-2525
· NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

126 MAIN

SENIQR CITIZENS

SALE

Local craftspersof}s display work
Howard and Geneva Nolan,
craltpersons from Syracuse,
speclaltzing In lapidary, will
be dlsplay!J\g their work at
the Indian Summer Arts and
Crafts Festival.
The 19th annual crafts
ellhlbltlon will be held Sept.
22-24 at the Washington
County Fairgrounds in
Marietta.
The festival is open to
artists and carftspersons

home

25% Off Purchase,
Just Present Your
Golden Buckeye Card
When Ordering.

doing original handcrafted
work tn all media . The
festival will also have
demonstrations and perforntances by country
crafters and wandering
musicians. For the firill time,
it will feature workshops in
candlemaking, weaving and
spiMihg sponsored ln conjunction with the Campus
Martius Museum ln Marietta.
Those
wishing
free
brochures on the festival and
· historical Marietta may write
Brochures, ISF '78, Marietta,
Ohio ~750 .

HRS : 10 :00 A.M. till
ll :Oo P.M. Sun .
Thurs. 10:00 A.M. til
12 :00 P.M. Friday

ADOLPH'S

and Saturday.

•

See Us Altho

DAIRY VAU.EY

· Porn eroy

Bend

September 12, 1971

ble .
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 221 Normally yoU're eMtremely astute

at judging the capabllilies ot
others. TOday, however, you

may gamble that nonproducers

will

becom.~

producUve . Like to

tlnd out more of what lies

•

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

Do not treat your creative impu lses lightly th is coming year.
A project 1hat Is only a fun
avocation could be turned Into
somethi ng ex tremely profita-

.:

.

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

---·-

In Order to Vote in the

"Let me lutow II the nolle

bothen you! ~ ·

ahead for you ? Send tor your

November 7th General
Election
.
.

copy o! Astro-Graph Letter. by
mailing 50 cents lor each and a·
long , sell-addressed, slamped
envelope to Astro-Graph , P.O.
Box 489. ,Radio City S1atlon,
N.Y. 10019. Be sure 10 specify
birth sign.
LIBRA (Bept. 13-0ct. 23) Don 't

In 1841, all membera on
President John Tyler's .
Cabinet resigned except
Secretary of State Daniel
Weblter.
They
were
protesting
the
veto
ol
a
confuse positivism with wishful
banking
bill.
thinking today . Banking too
highly on blue sky hopes leads
only to disappointment.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
You're lucky today, but there is ARIES (lhrch 21-Aprtl 11) Your
a pooolblllty that you may push optimism Is exaggeraled today
It beyond Ito limits. This Is by glasses on the rosO"Coiored
particularly true in career and side. Deal with life realistically
II you hope to succeed.
.
domestic aren .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. TAURUS (April 2D-May H)
It) In situations where you teel Friends you normally counl
slrongly, you could go to ex- . upon will be too Involved In
tremes today to· prove your their own aHalra today to do
point. Uae only moderate mea- you ony good . Don't bank on
lhem to cooer lor you.
lUres.
CAPRICORN (Dec. !2.JM. 11) OEMINI (Mey l1.June H) II you
Bewore that you do not lose preas hard enough todoy you
your cool today In challenging 011n Impose your will upon
sltuatlona. II you do, you could othera. The lmportont conaid!Ike rlako you'd not dreom of trollon, however, will be II the
'llctory Ia worth the prlc•.
otherwloa.
AQUARIUS (JM. ~Feb. 11) CANCER CJ- l1.July ft)
lnotead of dolna your own Avoid. the company of woatrela
thlnga today, you're likely to loday, 11 you tend to be Influsuccumb to tha Influence of enced by their vlbea. In altuapersona whoaeluctvment 11 not tlona where you would nor11 utute aa your own. This m..ly be prudent you'll be
extrl¥agant.
could 11rove coatiM .
PIICII (feb. llaralt Ill To- LIO 1.1111J D-Atil. U) Don't
day .your compaaaiOnate ln- INllle lmportonl -orHfllenll
etlncta . eould IMd you to under pr-u1• today. In altuapromloa to do !hinge lor aame- -where you are leaned on
one le11 lortunlle, even by Olherl your)Ound Judgment
though yow're not In the poll.,MI .. ENTE..... AIIH.)
lion to do eo.
;..·,

.,..-..

YOU· MUST BE. REGISTERED
BY OCTOBER 7TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VIsit the Board's Office In Person
_OR;:_ Phone the Bocird of Elections -OR- Mall the Board

a Carel.
AUO, If you MOVE you must notify the cou~t~ office, Or If
yau are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered,
Phone the Board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS
MASONI~

TEMPLE BUILDING

P. 0. BOX 488, POMEROY, DHIO 45769 ·
I

,

PHONE 992-2697
HOURS 9:1J0.4:00 - SATURDAYS 9:00.12:00

I , .•

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\

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., !'&gt;fonday, Sept. 11,19'1_8

Has birthday

Fred Geoglein re-elected as Grange
master at Thursday night meeting
POMEROY
Fred
Goe glein was · re-elected
master of Rock Springs
Grange at a meeting held
Thursday night at the grange
hall.
Other officers elected were
William Grueser, overseer;
Ethel Grueser, lecturer ;
James Fry, steward ; William
Radford, assistant steward;
Beuna Grueser, chaplain ;
Lucille Leifheit, treasurer ;

Frances Goegleln, secretary;
Ray Pullins, gate keeper;
Susie Pullins, Ceres; Helen
Blackston. Pomona : Nancv
Morris, Florida; Martha
King, lady assistant stewart;
Rollin Radford and Homer
Radford, executive com·
mittee ; Elma Loucks,
pianist ; Barbara Fry, CWA
chairman; Lucille Leifheit,
youth cha lrman ; · Susie
Pullins, juvenile chairman ;

Heather Michelle Knight
celebrated her first birthday
with a party at the home of
her parenll, Mr. and Mrs.
Vincent Knight, Sr.
Attending were Miss Usa
'
Sue King, Vincent, · Jr. and
and William Radford, They are Mrs. Blackston, Christopher Todd Knight,
legislative agent.
Jwnper, and Mrs. Leifheit, brothers ,of He a tiler, her
grandmother, Mrs. A. R.
Norman and Judy Humph· the crwnb cake.
A contribution was made to Knight, Mr. and . Mrs.
reys were received into
membership and another the cystic fibrosis fund drive.
name was proposed for One appeal for aid was anmembership. Mrs. Fry swered. There was a com·
thanked everyone who served munication from the National members relate something
during the past year. It was Grange Mutual Insurance Co. which happened to them in
Meeting time beginning In school.
noted that Rock Springs
Refreshments were served
Grange has two winners In October was changed to 7:30
contests whtch will go into p.m. For the program, Mrs. by the home economics
state Grange competition . Ethel Grueser, lecturer, had chairman.

Ricliard Poulin, Usa and
Joey, Mr. and Mrs. John
Grueser, Angle and Andy, ,
l'&gt;fr . ~nd Mrs. Stanley
OI1Bpn:i~n, Shawn, Samantha
and .Mn1. Rosie
were Mr. and
Ladd, Athens;
Lawrence
Maves. Gdiipolls; Mrs. Rita
Robbie,
Mrs.
and Eddie,
Mr.
0 . W. Neal,
Point P!easa1rt\, W. Va.
In
regime of
Socialist ~~v~~~~All~ende d.
Chile was
In a
which he
military coup
died, repilrtedfy
his own
hand,

Heather
Michelle Knight

'Constitution Week 'theme carried r~So
ial
___lMeigs P.A. T to meet Tuesday
I
c
I
1 Calendar 1
out at. Friday D.A.R. ·meeting

CONNALLY vrsrrs
AKRON, Ohio (UP() .Former Teua Gov. John
Connally, considered a
potential Republican
presidential candidate for
1910, will make several
appearances In Akron thla
week.
Connally, a DemocratwW
turned-Republlcan,
attend a Summit County
Republican
Eucutlve
Committee breakfut
Thursday morning, help
dedicate the North Building
of Akron City flaepital, hold a
news conference and a&lt;lm"esa
the Akron Roundtable noon
luncheon.

meigs High School PAT
(Parents and Teachers) w!U
meet Tuesday, September 12,

•

•

Airman Foreman assigned

Aimwn

james Foreman

Airman
James
R.
Foreman, whose parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Joe R Foreman
of Portland. Ohio, bas been
assigned to Lake Mead, Nev.,
for duty in the U. S. Air Force
civil engineering structural pavements field.
The ainnan, who recently
completed basic training at
: Lackland AFB, Tex., studied
ttie Air Force mission,
organization and customs
and received special in·
struction in hwnan relations.
Completion of this training
earned the individual credits
towards an associate in
applied science degree
through the Community
College of the Air Force.
Airman Foreman is a 1978
graduate of Southern High
School, Racine.

'

A Constitution Week
theme with Patrick O'Brien
as guest speaker was carried
out at the l"riday afternoon
meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Olapter of
the Daughters of the
American Revolution held at
the Lincoln' Hlll home of Mrs.
Paul Elch, regent.
The Pomeroy attorney
presented a short history of
the Constitution, framed in
1787, for the purpose of
providing adequate government for · the colonies. He
talked about the bill of rights,
how bills are passed and the
powers of the president,
along with the freedoms of
religion, speech and the press
in a general discussion with
the DAR members. He noted
that protection for crin'lina!s
is provided for in the bill of
rights, and it was this which
brought about jury trials. He
was introduced by Mrs. Gene
Yo~, vjce reg~--

m

DEAR EMMA- Did yoa
tell tbe dry cleauer about tbe
spoil aod wbat you thlllll they
are? Noo-wasbable garmeoto
should be seot to the dry
cleaner lor the removal of
mildew stains. Waobable
clotbes can be spoaged with
peroxide and theo laundered
with bleacb that Ia safe for
the particular Iabrie or they
cao be rubbed with lemon
juice and salt and pot In tbe
sun 1if tbe color will take It) .
Then launder as W!UII. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When a
small child is eating ice
cream Ill a stick the stick
should be !XII in a plastic
sandwich bag so any dripping
will go in the bag. The banda
stay clean. - MRS . W. H.
DEAR READERS - U one
does not have a plastic bag
the stick cao be pushed
through a folded paper
napldn that wlll caleb tbe
drips. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is that I had always
counted on getting to shoot
the alarm clock on the
morn ing of my first day of
retirement but was disabled
~y an accident and never got
til do ot.
To protect your new patio

country·~ needs for a
.Ound money basis to lower
deficit ~nding, foreign aid
reduction, and a return to the
fundamentals of teaching in
the schools.
The budget wlll be
presented by Mrs. Mae Mora
at the next _meeting. Mrs.
Patrick Lochary noted that
subscriptions for the national
DAR magazine have been
given to the Middleport and
Pomeroy Libraries.
Mrs.
Dallas Weber,
Columpus, was a guest of
Mrs. Vernon Weber for the
meeting. It was · aMounced
that the Southeast District
meeting will be held Wednesday at the Ramada Inn,
Columbus, with several of the
officers to attend. Also an·
nounced was a bus tour for
DAR members to the Indian
schools, Sept. 15 to 24.
Refreshments were served
in the dining room. Mrs.
F.oster, Mrs. Yost, Mrs.

HEADS

SEMI-

BONELESS

69~

HAMs•••lb~ ••$}29

CENTER CUT

IFARM FRESH PRODUCE I

50 LB. NO. 1 AU PURPOSE

99~

P0 TAT0 ES ...........................' . '2'9
NEW

YELLOW ONIONS ...3.~~;.~¥.. ·49~
DELICIOUS PLUMS OR LARGE PEACHEs ••••••• ~b~. 29~

' '

1nal
""""'~""

•...•

SACRAMENTO

46-oz.

Can

......I

MONARCH

. $1.00 .

PRE-FINISHED
GUnERING

'" W. Main St.
Pomeroy,O.

C

.

PE

I

~

-~

Eik:h coupon require• teparate purchate.
Preaent coupons when ordering.

L--~~~~~=~~~~~~~!-----------~-----

· You 'll need no professional help or equipmen! to pu1 up lhis r.,;dy-lo-hang gutlering;
al l ports slip 1oge1her easily and fil snUljly. The
baked-o n po inl film i• •e&lt;:urely bonded to 11-&gt;e me1al
and won'! flake or p&lt;Oei . see it al The Friendly One!

1

---~-----------------------------,
Hamburger and Salad
1

Umit twa

IH

w. Mlln 51. ~I

PDmorov,o.
~~
1
Each coupon requil'fl Mparate purchaM.
Pretent coupona when ordering. 1
Coupon expirea:S.pt. 25, 1f71
I

cou~on

Coupon expitea: Sept.

25 , 1971

requ1re1 teparate purchaM.
retent co,upons when ordering.

----------.----------------·-------

~

-.:;
JEiach coupon r-.ul,.. Mparate purchaM.
- : ~.
PreMnt coupoiW when orderlnt.
111
...

2S, 1971

.

I

------~---------------------------~

KRAFT WRAPPLES ..................... ~::

SLICED or HALVES

891
KRAFT CARAMELS ...................... ':..:· 79• IF.tii&lt;~

-:=
~

..~

:._

"'Go.f .

...... 91111/ 711
, C•{d1MI Ao.,•l • lu• Slorea
00·2().(15

VI

~

CARD I NA l&lt;~

W/ APPLI ITICKI

NAIIICO

NUnEI BUnEI COOKIES
..... ~·~~~89.
.-

C

..UrchiN

KlAn
SINGLES CHEESE ........ ':.;:~- 99c

\~

.FIUIT DRillS •................... ~ .............. :::: 7CJc
VALLEY BELL
24 IlL ttn. $ 115
COTTAGE CHEESE ........................;.

.\

I

\I

----e:"heesebiirser:s.M&amp;"Fieiicill
r
· and 16 oz. Drink
"'w.
MAin St.
PDmtrOv,o.

ELIO MACARONI ..............

W/ITICKI

Assoned ~Wfor•

AMERICAN, PIMENTO o• IWISI

L----------------------~----------~

$l.OOJ

49~

~HUNl

CAK~MII

DAIRY VALUES

PARlAY MARGARIII .................... : 2.:!:.;.
BORDENS

.

I"AaRIC SOFTENER

DOI!!z. $1••

'q,O STORES

Bottle

~

~·

•1•

...

·•

IIALF 6 HALF•••••........•.•.••••••••••••..••• &lt;
2c::.. ~

1

$1.00.
.
CVr.

CAKE DONUTS ....................... ·:~~··
DOLE PlfiEAPPLE ........................'g;,':,' 59• Muou.&lt;n •••o•mo..
J .,., SJit

lUCID CRUIHED ..

13·11) U:•l: I

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

I

$t.ooJ

~0 STORES • CARDINAl fOOO STORES
"'"'
PILLSBURY PLUS

IlLLA
WAFERS ...................................... .':~:· 69• 'd,11l~"
CARDINAL

JUMBO ROLL

29-oz . . jl jl'
Can . . .

wlth · l1~.00

NAIIICO

NAIIICO

TOWELS

\

Box

FIG IEWTOIS ........................................ ':;;• 89•

JOB SQUAD

'

Fries

Pkg . •

WHITE DECORATOR
OR ASSORTED

Our food is tasty. You get plenty of it. And our prices make
sense these days. We know how you feel about the high cost
of living. We feel the same way. So any time we can give
you something extra for your money, we're happy because you're happy.
.

--------~------------------------1
Btg Shef and SmaD French

QUAKER

Ol!~z.JI9!

ASSORTED VARIETIES

BANQUET BUFFET
SUPPE~~ $}39

RESERVED

_

I)

.

ITO JUICE

..

•

. v

&lt;I ON FOODS FOR FALL MENUS!

SALE DATES SEPTEMBER 11 -16, 1978

,.-,.,.

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

RIGHTS

L·

~

I

QUANTITY

-0'.Oo ST ORES

I' .
..
..
.
o~o(F'LU;~m~
',
,:
.
'
•
1
V&gt;J?&amp;
·wv

.

r

Building Since 1915

WHOLE OR PORTION

SLICED
$}59
$399 HAM.
............• ~.~:..
CANNED PICNICS •••••••••••••• ~.L.B: •••

HEAD LETTUCE
3

Opera composer Richard
Wagner died of a heart attack
on Feb. 13, 1883 in the Palazzo
Vcndramin hotel in Venice.
Within 12 hours, over 5,000
telegrams were sent to and
from Venice in regard to the
&lt;..-oJnposer's demise.

CUDAHAY

NICE FRESH CRISP

.

The Department Store of

,

JOWL BACON.~~·••••• ~ ••••••• ~ ••••• ~~~.

".

HERE WEDNESDAY
On
Wednesday,
a
repres e ntati v e fr o m
Congressman Clarence E.
Miller's office will conduct an
Open Door session from 10
a.m,.-12 noon In the Courthouse in Pomeroy,·
If anyone has any questions
concerning t he Federa l
Government, please stop by
to discuss them with the
representative,

swer any questions parents
may have concerning the
opening of school this year.
Also, this meeting is to be
the--reorganizational meeting
for PAT If enough parents
express an interest in continuing the group. PAT was
organized to provide a
channel of commilnica tion
betw een hi gh school and
parents, and was largely
responsible for the successful
Open House held at the high
school last November .
However , at the April PAT
meeting, only five parents
and two officers were present
when five Meigs faculty
members discussed the workstudy programs offered by
the school.
At that time, two possible
directions for PAT to take
were suggested : either
disband completely if parents
do not need the organization,
or limit PAT to a few special
projects, such as Open House,
throughout the year, and
avoid monthly meetiJ\gs.
Deciding PAT's future will
be on e item of business at the
Tuesday night meeting.

~~·

SMOKED

Stop in and try these good-tasting specials!

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

BARBARA SHERIDAN
will be speaker when the
Pomeroy Chapter of the
Women 's Aglow Fellowship
meets Thursday at the Meigs
inn. Doors will open at 6:30
for the dinner meeting with
diMer served at 7.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Siglllll Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday noon at the home of
Mrs. Mary Morris, Lincoln
Hill , for a luncheon.
Members are to take gifts
for their secret sisters.
MEIGS COUNTY GfRL
Scout Lea ders, other
volunteers, 10 a.m. to noon
at the Meigs inn. Program
and adivities for fall to be
discussed.

$}39
BAR S BACON••••••••••••••••••••••~~-••

1:fJ\R

"OURSELf\
1)0-li· 1

Members are asked to take
gifts for their secret sisters.

CUDAHA Y

l

umbrella from theft drill a
hole below the lowest table
support and install a long
shank bicycle pacBock. Then
drill and insert a nail at the
snap conn!!clion_ above the
tsble and brad the end of the
nail.
To make a convenient hot .
plate in a motel or wberever
use your electric iron inmed
upside oown between two
bricks. It will keep coffee or
tea hot for quite a time. HARRY
POLLY - Mrs. R.
B. wanted ro know how ro
store wool garments away
until another winter. A lady
once rold me ro pack them
with epsom salts sprinkled
all around. Now I use the
method on my own things
because I hate the smell of
moth balls. There is no Odor
from the epsom salts and the
clothes keep real nice. ADA.
DEAR POLLY - Do you
fnd your wash cloths wearing
out in the middfe even though
the outer edges are still good?
I cut mine down the middle,
sew the outer edges together
and hem the new edges on
two sides (formerly the
middle ). I get a lot more wear
out of them. I have had many
towel sets spoiled because the
wash cloths would wear out
first . - MRS. J. K.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you newspaper etrupon clippers if she
uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her
column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

at 7:30 p.m. at Meigs High
Scho ol. Princi pal James
Diehl will be present to an-

9
9
~
WIENERS................. ..
SUPERIORS

83 .~

LB.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- MiddleArthur Skinner aod Mrs. 'port Lions Club, WednesJohn Rose were hOstesses. A day noon, at ~he Meigs Inn.
basket of yellow mums was . UNITED· METHODIST
used on the table. Mrs . Women, · Letart
Falls
Thereon Johnson presided at Olurch, 7:30 Wednesday at
the silver. service. A dessert the Letart Falls Olurch. Mrs.
course was served.
. Andrew Cross will present
the program.
EMMA CIRCLE, United
Methodist Women, Rutland
The Tower of London Is ac- Church, 7:30 Wednesday
tually a group of .buildings · night at the church with Mrs.
and towers covering 13 acres Janet Nakomoto as hostess.
along the north bank of the Mrs. Harold Sauer will have
program . Church
Thames. The Bloody Tower is the
U1e one associated with Ann programs will be outlined.
Boleyn and other notables.
"
POMEROY · CHAPTER M
&amp;yal Arch Masons Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Bosworth
Council Royal and Select
VISITING HERE
Masons 8: IS p.m. All com·
Mrs. Alma Cartwright of panions invited.
Ravenna is here visiting Mr.
THURSDAY
and Mrs. Frank Powers and
PRE
CEPTOR
BETA
Mrs. Grace Pratt. Mr. and
Mrs . Roy Dustman of BET A Chap~er of Beta Sigma
Ravenna will come for her Phi Sorority, luncheon ,
Thursday, noun at the home
next weekend.
of Mrs . Mary Morris.

the

BOLOGNA

Polly Cramer

EMMA.

In her OJ!OnlnR Mrs. Elch
was assisted by Mrs. Edward
Foster, acting chaplain, and
then read the president
general's message on the
191st anniversary of the
adoption of the Constitution.
She urged the Daughters to
observe Constitution Week,
Sept. 17-22.
Miss Lucille Smith is
Constitution Week chairman,
and reported · on plans for
placing in school libraries
bOOklets on :the Constitution
provided by Gene Riggs . He
was extended appreciation
from the Chapter for
providing the material.
Posters will be distributed
and proclamations will be
signed. Flower arrangements
will also be placed in the
banks.
Mrs. Emerson Jones, a
national -defense chairman,
discussed an article on the
need · for leadership In the
United States. It pointed out

FRENCH Clll TASTEE

POLLY~$ POINTERS
POU,Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a
pretty beige silk dress, fully
lined, that has brown mildew
spots w too skirt. 1 want ro
wear it on a special occasioo
btit oon't know how to remove
these marks. I had it cleaned
liut the spots remained. -

___

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. II , 1978

'

llte/11

fll.-,.1 aN. IIOf'ft

00·12 ·01

~
-'='

$1 09~

(II)

C~RDIN~l \lr'

...
,$
~

t§

IcA'Ro'oN :II

•

:;(

..

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IWII POPS.........'::

..•

$1 09~
.

~

-...
~

0

"' r ../"
.,

\

�8- The Dully Sentinel, Middleport-Pumeruy, 0., Monday, Sept. II, 1978

. Want Ads Turn · Unwan-ted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES

-

t5 Words or U r ld~r

Cash
1.00
1.50
1.80

ctwugt!

J_OO

1.25
1.90
l .25

a.75

EM,~,_il word over tht&gt; muumum 15
wvrd.s i..!i 4 l.'t"llls pt'f word per day .

Ac.ls nmnirll,( ul.her thotn eorllWt.."lllrvc

days will bto cha r !(\'~.~ at lilt' I dlly

rutl' .
In lllt!Jntlry , Curd IJf TI~etn!Q; ;md
Otntuary; 6 l'tlll.S ~ r word . $3.00
rnmimwn . Ca!lh in advlilll'E'.
Mollilt' Horn to Sllles and Ycull sales
ltrt'

&lt;~ L&gt;t'c ptt"d only w1th L.!illh with

onlcr. 2S L't'lll d\llrMt' fur &lt;tds cuti)'·
UIK Box Nul nbtor In Cart' ~ i Tht&gt; St!n-~
tint! I.

Tht: Publi.sher rt:SI!rvt•s the right
to aht or reja·t any ads tll"t.'IIIW oiJ.
jrt:tluiwl. The PublJSht:r willnoliJto
. re!ipl1nsrble fu r more than one irlL'Ut ·
M :lmscrlw n.

Phunt' !1'92·2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
. 'OEADLINES
M 0 udt~y
Noun un S::iturd~:~ y

Tucslla)'
thru iritli:iy
&lt;~ PM .

the da y ~fo r t' pulllil'l:i \ UIIl

Sund cn
~ P.J\.f

Friday afttonuxm

YARD SAL E Tuesday , Sept.
12 fh r u Friday . H a r ol d
Brewer , Long Boltom

------= --------

FIVE ROOM house and bath ,
remodeled . fully carpeted .
May be seen after 3 p'.m.
PhOn e 992 -3933 .
FARM . JA acres. timber .
Dr i lled well , block building,
older trailer , Old Rt . 7,
cnester , Ohio . 985 ·3897 be tween 4 and 6 p .m .

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

C OUNTR Y
HOME ,
.4
bedroom , 2 bath s, free ga s .
SR 124 . Portland . 84 2-Jlil .

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

-·---=====

EAR CORN, $2 per bu . Corn
sh elle r $550 . J . D . No . 5
mow ing mach i ne , $200 . In t .
Baler S1400. After 6 p .m . call
985 --1131 or 985 -3537 .

-------------19 74
Mo-BI L~
HOME .

Com pl e t el v furn ished with
un derpinning .
storage
bu il ding , a n awning . 992-1-47-9 .

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

The Stars and Bar.;, the
flag uf the Cunfederacy, was
first flown at Montgomery,
Ala ., un March 4, 1861.

SHOOTING MATCH , For ked Run
Sports man Club. Sept, 3 and
every Sunday there olte1 . Foc !ory choke guns D'_'l iv .
NO HUN-TING or tre~opoul ng on
my property without pe-rmis sion . Judy McGraw .
.
.
GUN SHOOT, Racine Gun Club.
Every Sundar I pm . Factory
c ho~e ~uns_on l ~_. _

IF YOU hove o service to offer .
wont to buy or $ell 1 o~ething .
ae looking for work , . or
whatever . , . you' ll get resuhs
foste r wJth a Sentinel Wa n t Ad._

Business Services

~A.RO

SALE , Rose Hill ' 1 mile
from lost light in Pomeroy Oil
Nt . 33. Sept . 10 &amp; ll. Sunday &amp;
Monday . 9 til dark . M en ,
women . little girl s clo th ing.
Price includ~s
coots , socket se t for heavy
FREE ClOTHING
Who do yo_
u
Fed : Tu
equipment . CB an tenn a .
k now
tho! likes b1t0u tifu l
(does not
glanware, toys , lots o f odds &amp;
d o the s thot con pay today·s
include
ends .
_ _ _ __ _ __
pr ices . Great deal s flOW being
sales ta" or
balancing)
offered . 949-2718. W2·39-41 or . YARO SALE . Mo;&gt;n . thr u F~ i . Sept.
FULLY
992-2327 ·
_ _ _ _ _ _ __
11 thru 15 . Srlvio Zwelling.
RANTEED
Syroc u~e~ ~ h ~o . ____ _
NO HUNTING on GeorgE.
Freeland proper ty . Syracuse, THREE FAMILY Yard Sole at the
Ohio .
home of Roderic k Grimm on
---·
Broodwav In Ra cine . Come to
top of hill from l ire Station . turn
right . Time of sole is Wed . and
Thurs ., Sept .. 13 and 14 . 9:00
LOS T ON Rt . 33 near Athens Co .
unt il4 :00 .
hne · 2 adult female Grea t
Dones , block and w hite spo t. GARAGE SALE at Will iam Reeves·
reside nce on Tucker Rood in
ted . Reword for information or
return , No questions asked .
Alfred . Now until sold out. low
bl4 -592 · 17BB .
prices , good quality cos metics .
JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
Also furn itu re, clothing , d ishe s
LOST : ONE tm oll brown dog in
PHONE 9'2-2181
~'.JO_d _:»~ i~U_!S:_ _ --- - - __
Nease Hollow area . If found .
YARO SALE. Clothes. dishes, elec·
call B43 -2272 .
tri c appliances . linens . Hour~ 9
to 5. 11 to 10 of Se pt. I mile
0
hom Langsville , CR 10. Phone
GUNS AN D amm o : Lorge discoun t WATER WElt drilling. William f .
742-20b8 .
Grant . 7ol2 -2879.
o n shot shells, 22 LR 22 Mag
CH IP WOOD . Pol es
max .
etc. Al l k inds of new and used
diameter 10 · on largest end , $8
shot guns . r ifles. hand guns.
per ton . Bun dl ed , slob , Sb per
Sometime s you don't even need
ton. "'Delivered to Ohio Pallet HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , sell
money. We trade for almost
trade or •train , New and used
__c~.~~-o y . 992 - 2~9.:. ..
anything . Fife's . S. 3rd, Midsaddles . Ruth Reeves , Albany .
TIMBER . POMEROY .Forest Pi-a dlepo r t. 992-749 4.
(0 14 ) b98-3290.
- -.ducts . Top pri ce lor stondi1;1g -·- ---- ---,- - - - -sow timber . Call 992-5965 or RISING STAR Ker,nels . Boarding
FOI All Y•llll
Kent Hanby , 1-446-8570.
and grooming, all breeds.
GETV
/'.
Cheshir e . Jb7 -0292 or 367- 0 106.
OlD FURNITURE . ice ba,-es . bra ss
Hot!Jornt
fqlpl
beds. iron beds . desks , et c. , LOVABLE WHITE snOw drifl great
Let Pomeroy Landmark
complete households . Write
PYRENEES Puppies . Phone
S.ll!· Pr i ( t ,_,
soften &amp; condition your
M .O. M iller . Rt. 4. Pomeroy or
lo~&lt; · M 7 · 3B3B .
Jack
W. C.n ·,cy
watel" with Co-op water
coli 992 ·77tiJ .
AK C REGISTERED pood les .
softener, Model UC-SVI.
Mqr
opr ico l.
OlD COINS , pocket watches ,
choc olat e ,
1
NowOnly
1-30-1 -882·3242 .
class rings . wedding bonds ,
PllrHI" ~~'/ /181
diamond s. Gold or silver . Call
TWO IR ISH Setter puppies for
Let us test your water
Roger Wamsley . 742-233 1.
sot, . 304 -773 -5538 .
.
Fr~P
WANTED TO buy : any old motor EXP tRIEN CEO StCRET ARY seek cycles or por,s . Does no t ho"'e
po rt time eveni ng or
ro run
Reasonable prices .
w ee kend work
typing .
Jock
W.
Carsey,
Mgr.
W2-63A5 .
payrolL bookkeeping, tax co m·
DREAMING OF a white Christmas
puta tion , et c.
Cap
give
Phone 992-2181
WANT TO buy : old player piano .
with no bill's ? Wonderful to
r el e r en ces
9B5 -39BB
or
Gall ipo lis 61-1 -446·3874 or
th ink about , but it co uld come
6 14 -6b7 b44 8 af te r 5 pm .
b14· 446 -3945 .
true . Be o Toy ladies' hos tess! TYPEWRITERS: POFHA,BLES, elec·
In your home or by orders from
tr ic. going to sell or tro do them .
WE PI CK up junk auto bodies buy ·
aur triends . Earn toys and gitt s
too . File' s, S. ' 3r d .. Middleport.
ing junk cars . scrap iron , bat re e . No me brand
toys ,
992-7-194 .
teries and metals . Ridll! r's
reasonably
pr iced
w i th
B 8. S MOBILE HOME S, Pl . Plea·
Sal vage. SR ·; :24 , Pomeroy .
guarantee . G ifts for the whole 1974 DATS-U N PICKUP . Phone
son t . W . Vo . be s1de Heck's .
992-5.08 .
992
-6192
otter
Spm
.
fam ily . For informat ion coil
1973 Broodmore 14 x 04 2
742 -2377 or 992-70S6
bedroom
PLAID LOVE seal and matching
ch oir and oHamon . BedroorTI 1973 Dor ion 1ol x 60 2 bedr oom
WORK
OVERSEAS . Au stralia .
suite . All li ke new in e xc ell enl 197'2 V ic torian 1 ol 1t: b7 3 bedroom .
Afr ica, South Ame-rica , Europe,
1WO KITTENS. B weeks old , mole
2 both
conditoon . Q49-27bl
etc
Conslructi
o
n
,
Soles
.
7-4 2· 2328 .
1972 Co ve ntry 12 x b5 3 bedroom
- - -·- Engineers . Cler ical. et c. $8000 PORT ABL E EL EC TRIC drshwosher
19bq Sto tesmon 11 x bO 2
FlU E WOOD . Free manure
to $50.000 plus . hpe ~ ses paid
E: lectr k dryer . Both l or $50 .
bedroom .
'
~-~91_5~ 1 .-!~~ings . ---c-· _ _ _
For employment in form ation
997-5-120 ,
wrile : Oversea~ Employment
Bo x 10 11. Bos ton. Mo . 02102 .

SERVICE

Cellulosic: (wood fiber)
Therma I insulation
Save 30 pct. to so pet.

All ty~s of roofing , gutters
&amp; downspouts, 20 ye,~rs
eJCperitnce.
All work
gu1r1nteed .
C1ll Tom

--·--

- --

POMEROY
Ll'NDMARK.

We are currently n,aking
appointment~
lor senior
pOrtraits . We use tradi ·
tiona! settings and also
feature
outdoor
por ·
traiture.
Call us Today

-------

Pomeroy Landll)ark
9 ..

"'9

!Iii.

r

--- - -

-

SMAll TRAILER ond lot ip
Syracus e acr oss fr om pool.
Phone 94 9-2373 .

TRAVEL TRAILER lor sole. 1972
Mark Twain . 19ft _74'J·25bb.

NTS

HELP WANTED

Discount
Prices

Couple or lady to do
light
housekeeping
for a retired man,
Uve in . Contact •

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

· PAUL ORR

Balloons over
Columbia Twp
BY H. E. '111ROCXMORTON
CARPENTER - The recent aucceuful crouing of
the Atlantic Ocean in a balloon brings to mind the story of
balloons over Columbia Township.
The author wrote a story in the SJrin8 of 1972 which
told of a balloon invasion of Columbia Town.tblp in 1910. It
was ·a thrilling story which was presenu.d to a newSIIWI.
The newsman read the story then looked up and
asked, ''did you see this?" The answer was ''yea.''
then
asked, "did anyone else see this?" Again the answer was

He

Long Bottom or Bu"-m
949-2193or 915-JSN

The article was not printed but the author was
challenged to find the when , where, how and why of the
balloon appearances.
A number of pe~le was foWid who had actually seen
some of the balloons. Dale Dye, Dale S~bury and the
late Elfie Wood were able to provide much information. II
was learned later than Dale Bachner Rutland has a can
from the Philadelphia II balloon. The author knew IIlia
kind of container as a -water can ~Bed on the railroad and
hearing the Railroad stamp in the metal.
A local merchant says he sold such a can as a mUk can
and Pale Bachner called it a mUk can. Seth Nlchol11011 ia
repurted to have obtained a hay . rope from the
Philadelphia II balloon . The author did not have the date
or did he know why the many balloons appeared.
It was the winter of 1978 before the author found
helpful information as he corresponded with people at the
Smithsonian Institution. These people wrote ·that they
believed the author had seen the National try-&lt;&gt;ut race for
the International Balloon races to be held later in theyear.
The date was September 17, 1910 and the starting
point was the Indianapolis Motoc ~way . The
Indianapolis Star provided plcturea and much additional
inf&lt;rmation about the races.
There were two races. One was a free-for-«11. The
,other group was in the national tryouts. There were 13
hallooM in the two races. The halloo"" took off ooe at a
time, and the pilots met with IOIIle aevere storma aoon
after tak&lt;H&gt;ff . Theoe stonns lasted oeveral hours.
The Philadelphia 11 balloon landed in Jbn Folden's
corn field near Dexter, Ohio. Dale Sta111bury and the late
Elfie Wood gave eye witness reports to the aulhcr. A. F.
Atherholt and C. B. Graham were lilled u piloll. They
were actually at the n1ercy
the winds.
Two other pilots reported taking a circular tour of the
stale of Ohio at a rapid speed returning to Marietta a ·
second time.
The America II piloted by Auguatua Post and Alan R .
Hawley was the winner. They landed at Warrenton,
V'rrginia . Their prize as winner ol the Gordon Bemett race
was $5,000. The pUots were approaching \he Atlantic
Ocean near nightfall and decided to land . It seema tile)'
were not prepared to atlempt cro.Ming the AUantlc after
being in the air many hoW'I.
These races hear evidence that people were ~ir- '
minded almoat 110 yean 1go. No cuualtlea or Injuries
were reported in all the r - lbOUSh lwo pllota reported ·
belns shot at .
·

BABYSI TTER fo r k inder garden age
child . Grovel Hi ll area AFter 5.

992·3•17 .
MAINTENANCE . Must hove Industrial Plant Moinlenonce ex·
perience . Pr imar ily o solid electr ical backg round . Apply in
LARGE FUEL od stove . Aft e , 1·30 .
person the week of Sepl . 11.
£&gt;~~0 ~~7_:!696.
Imper ial
Ele c tri c .
3 -4S
·
N
" SCA LE. lrofn s wi th l ty pe
Sycamore , Middleport , OH.
layout. Comple te w rl h all sw1 t·
HO·M
__._F.:...- - ches . h ouse church. !octo ' res.
EXP ERIENCED MECHANIC. Own
Beau tiful. · See Herve )' l ea·
tools re quired. Apply in per·
mon d PO Bo .o: 631, Rocm e ,
son . Riverside VW. AMC -Jee p,
Oh io b-.. Wagner Har d wa re
Gallipol is.
Store

of

of

1972 DATSUN 4 door sta tion ·
wagon , 26,000 miles , 4 cy l. .
good gos mileage, 250 N . 3rd,
Middleport . Phone 992 -7329
after 4 p .m.
1974 DATSUN PICKUP .
992-6192 alter Spm .

Phone

1974 JEEP CJS , MJr .fM rod io . log
lighh, Jumbo 12 " Mudder tires .
Good
s ha pe .
Phone

61053-211b9.
1970 DODGE DART 340. 3 - ~peed .
all st ock , Asking $1 6SO. In mmt
cond ition
7ol2·2143 .
Dallas
Webe r .
ATTENTION MU STAN G lover!o ·
1971 Mach I. Excellent shape.
oir , 302 . Sl700 . 995.330 1 days.
·985-4 1-40 alter 5 pm :_ _ __
1969 CHEV'¥' NOVA . V-8 standard
Irons .
Ru n~
good . S6 50

985-&lt;271 .
197 1 FIAT . 35 m iles per gallon

$595. 7&lt;2-2400
1971 FO'm TORINO GT . A ir. P.S..
S650. Full set of Wilson golf
clubs . bog and golf cart , $100.
992-2987 .
1977 OLDSMOBILE Vis to Cruiser . 3
seat wagon . Well equipped .
7-42-2007 after 5 pm ,

1976 TAN GMC Von . msula1 ed .
paneled carpet . 33 .0Cl0 mile!'. .
s1ondard shill . Good t, res
Good
c ondi1r o n .
~ :qo o .

995·3857

ONE BEDROOM opt . Contact
Village Manor Apt ., Middleport . W1. ·7787 .

3 AND 4 AM . furnished and un·
furn is hed
op ts .
Phone

99'1·5434 .
TWO BEDROOM tro ller . Adult s
_ ~n l r.: 9?~ :_~324:.:·_ _
OUPLEX:E APT . in M idd leport .
m ·3-406.

RIVERSIDE

APARTMENTS .

b•droom opt . 51 13 m o. plus
electric . Monthly teases. Equal
Opportunity HouS ing . Ca ll

__!9!.:~~~_fo.!:.~.Pf~~~'-·ONE BEDROOM mobile home .

992.2598 .

$1295

Any O.S. m•d• car ~rts
extra if needed . Excludes
front -wheel drive c•rs.

.BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE
5

~

OFF

The Photo Place
!Bob Hoeflich)
109 High St .
Pomeroy

UPHOLSTERY MATERIAL p1eces .
Will
sel l chea p
Syl via 's
Uphols tery . across from l e,- oco
Station ,
Sy r o c u ~ e .
O H.
&lt;"f92 ·5162.
GRIMES GOLDtN. Red Oehc1ous,
&amp; Golden Delicious. appl e~ . Fifl·
patr ick
Or chard , SR b8CJ .
H-rrl·b69 3785 .

FIVE NEW Jeep A f Tr acker t&lt;re!o .

S225 . 992-5147 .
36"' FRIGIDAIRE el ectnc range
w hite . $150. 3 piece lamily
room suite , Spo n1 sh ! lyle , $150.
Pat io set , gloss top di ning loble
ond 1 matching choirs _ 550.
992-586 9 or 965 -3595 .

~
1-fu~
fur Sat..
;._---:- - .=1970 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1', both. Ur"\derp,nntng. $1500
and a~s ume ! laon . 949·2b83 or
843-3311.
1970 HillCREST ' 2 1160. Loco1ed in
Sa lem
Ser.ter o n CH \
b I -4 -669 -5742 .
1q11 4 TO TAL HECfli:tC 12.~~:60 A r·

bough addition, Tuppers Plains.
Can be moved or le tt on lot.
l::ven i ng ~ H4 J -/4 14

St . Rt.

o.

'l:lleAPPAh!IGHIAN

MOVli GOBIPANY
QUALITY
WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

In Middleport beTween
Third &amp; Fourth Street-&lt;Jff
Mill Street just behind
Tony' s C1rry Out.

•

Open Saturday 10-4 p, m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p .m .

n• toward

~~~~~;;~
HOME SITES for sole, 1 acre and
up . M iddleport . near Ruflo nd .
Coll q92 -74Bl .
N EW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
a ll e lec .. 1 ac re . M ,ddlepor t,
do ~e to Rutland . Phone 992·
7481
VA·FHA , 30 yr. financing , also
re financing . Ireland Mortgage,
77 E. Stat e. Athen s. phone (6 14)
S91-30S l .

-·

Fif es ~ - Jrd . M idd leport

Rutland,

GOT

T'PO ~ITH

THI§ !IIHARI&lt;.
D~AWIIIt4U

HOW WOIJLP t I&lt;NOW?
YOU'Re THI!f OloJE WHO
!IIU~6E5TEP

WOW! V'MEAIIt
BEFO~S HE
Pl!iiiPPEIIRED!

IT MIGHT

&amp;! CONNI!fCri1D WITH
THe IJNiOIIt-

'fl\J~Nt fj)'fl

Pomeroy,O.

3-15-tfc

BATj-tROOM S AND Ki tch en s BRADFO RD , Auctioneer . Com ,
remodeled , cerami c tile , plum ·
p lete Service . Phone 9 -19 - 24 8~
bing , carpen tr y, ond general
or 949· 2000. Racine . Ohio . Cr ill
main tenance . 13 years ex Bradford
.
,__..__.
perience. 992-361J5 .
'
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR PULLIN S EXCAVA TING . Complete
Sweeper $. toa ster s. iron s, oil
Ser vice . Phone 991-2478.
smoU appliances . law n mow er .
ne,-t to Stole Highway Goroge
REEVES TRADING Pos t, Pogevi lle .
on
Route 7. ' Ph one (6 1-1 ) 985Groceries . dry goods . hard3825.
wor e , feed, loc k shop . Special

......----

__ -

--

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Prlntanswerhere: [

CARD TRICK
YEP -- ·
HE SURE ·
15 ~ ··

1

THE £.10REROOM I I

POMEROY, 0.
SYRACUSE !Rustic Hills)
- 3 b edroom ranch, equip·
ped k i t chen, hardwood
floors. air co nd ., c arport
and storage. $28,500.00.

to

S2UOO.OO .
LETART - Br ic k ranch
type, 1lfz baths, f ireplace ,
central ai r , modert') kit chen , por ches . $31 ,600.00 .

997 ·3325
216 E. Second Street
NEW LISTING - N ice 4
bedroom older hom e w ith
modern kitchen and bath ,
Electric baseboard neat,
city wa te r , second bath in
full ba semen t , garage and
nearly 2 acres . $48 ,500.

NEW LISTING - 50 acr es
in Lebanon Township on
good grave l road . Old 4 rm .
house with e lectr ic . $20,000.

FAMILY

HOME

- 4

bedrooms, bath, natural
gas heat, fire pla ce , c i t y
water and extra lot on Rt .
124. wan t lA,OOO.

s

NEW

L.ISTING

- 3

bedroom fram e home. Just
o ff R t . 33 near Rock Spr·
ings. Nice kit che n w i th -lots
of c abinets, new gas fur·
nace, ut il ity room, dining
and level lot . $29,500.
4 ACRES 3 bedroom s,
en c losed bath, new natural
gas lur(lace wi1h central
a ir .
f u ll
ba ,s emenl,
c arpeti ng ,
and
out ·
buil di ngs . Nice fish pond
ready for vou to stock .

NEWSPAPERS SELL
ADS, SALESMEN SELL
HOUSES . CALL "l·JJ25
FOR RESUL. TS.

THREEBIDROoM ~orpeted ho1ne
fully insulated with I '' boths,
In Pomer oy. Reasonably p1 iced .
Phone 992 3872 .

Helep L. Teaford
G. 8ruci Teaford
Sutt P . Murphy
A11oc:iates

RUN

- o v er 1 acre, 4 bedrooms .
bath , nat . gas F .A. h eat ,
large garge &amp; workshOp ,
other building . $29,500 .00 .

CLOSE

- 5

acres,

bedroom s, bath , nice kil ·
c hen , chi c ken house , barn,
all t enced , part basem ent .
DUPLEX - in Pom eroy,
good c.o ndition , 1 has 2
bedrooms , · 1
has
3
bedrooms, ready to m ove
in to. $15,000 .00 .

MANY OTHER PROPER ·
TIES - CALL TOOA'I'
FOR YOUR NEEDS. THE
.HOME OF REAL ESTATE
IN MEIGS COUNTY .
HENRY E . CLEL.AND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland
Realtor Associa1es

992-2259- 992·2568 .

for thermo

DOWN
I Shrub or

II Punch editor's
pseudonym
11 Remove
office
13 Zola novel
11 Go foodless

tree
Z Benefit

from

3 He

15 Sodium 17 Eusperate
18 Ms. MacGraw
19 Ending for
rob or fib

zo Spanish queen
n Utilities

customer

GASOIJNE ALLEY

I I do is sit
-\;here and take
the

worrt.-1
if 1'm
a bit

late~

Rubber Back Carpet

I Register

1 Fit fiddle
8 Have
it

t Poor

l'l\ see I..IOU
Which car
wash do1.1ou toniqht! Don't ze Baseball
work at?

-·

condemned
Jesus
Yetlerday's Aaawer
4 Burn
12 "Blg D"
Z1 Yeut
5 Polish

coming

13 - 's age
Z4 llesow'ce

mone4!

All car.,.t Installed wltll
podding ot no chorgo.
Ex~rt lnstollotlan.

relative

dtizeM
11 Encourage
zz Notice
Z3 M~l dog
Z4 Nelthe'i vegetable nor

1: 00--Tomorrow 3,4. 1: 55--News 13.

5 and 7 p.m. -

30 Ragamulllns
3Z Macaw
!13 Spartan
serf
3t Noaebag

9 and 11 p .m . .1 r)

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Covering In Stock

ards take tricks

%'7 SlaniiY

turndown

za SoUcltude

NORTH
• AJ 9 6

Zl Allan river

WEST

a•"'"'

Call742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Htrb Groft
or Gone Smith

nta
HIS

• • • S WaSH % C:OULO
"
lf:La!\1! 'ft.tl\~

.-esaD!N"'" 'SitY4

~18WIILJ...V

HAS GI'N!:

702-2211

tiAcqult
u "Coming the Rye"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
-'XYDLBAAXR
Is

Rutland

it:

LONGFELLOW

LATE:

WITH

A PAY·

MENT, YOlYRE

GOtN'FORA
RIDE I

J N LS

( PANT- PANT)
TH05E6UY$

MEAN
llU5&lt;1NE$&amp;!

PVGYSLHH

·u B P P v .

VH

VH

B S•

SLKLHH\YGA.- SWZDRLDS,

DSL

KVLSC,

GWHNSLHH

Ynterday'a Cryptoquele: IF A MAN NEVER CONTRADicr8
IDMSELF IT IS BECAUSE HE NEVER SAYS ANYTHING.L
MIGUEL DE UNAMUNO

Headquarters
The

BAR :'lEY

owner's age prevents her from continuing to operate

tile form and she deslrtl on Immediate salt.

so to 60

acres tillable with some very good cr"k bottom hilltop land. The balance Is In posture &amp; woods . The 6

UH--THAR 'S ONLY
ONE MORE OATMEAL

15 IN STOCK

room home Is good (does n - some modernization),
large all purpose barn &amp; several outbtJIIdlngs. The
minerals go with It and It's located In an area; where
gas, oH &amp; c?"l have been found to be plentiful. NNr

Rut land. 00 s.

,

CAll THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

·

I JU5T
NOTICED THE
NOTCH IN

1/MitOOF

IT LOOK5 LIKE I.{OO'RE
PLANNING TO KEEP
TRACK OF 50METI-IIN6,
81)T NA'!liRAll'T' I{OU'~E
~GOING 'TO TELL M!!

I

'

HEE

HEE
1-lEE
HEE

HEE

I

K QJ 4
• KJ 87

.. 10 9 8 53 2
e A Q 10 3
• 73

By Oswald Jacoby
and Also Soutag
Oswald : "This week's ar·
licles might almost be

CllYPTOQUOTES
NEXT TtME YOU'RE

• 7

COOKIE LEFT, MAW

opponents.''

Alan : " The heart lead
gives South control , but he

can't come to more than
eleven trlcks. The two dia -

tomorrow.''

One letter simply &amp;lands for another . In Ihis sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc . Sincle tellers,
apostrophes, the lenath ond formalion of lhe words ore all
hints. Eoch doy the code letters are different.

'If YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT:
MAKES A

• 10 52

wa nt to watch for quick
losers when bidding your
hand and winning tricks
wh e n d o ubling your

mond losers can' t be made
to disappear. "
• 96
Oswa ld : .. C hange the
North hand s lightly . Give
SOUTH
him one more little hea rt
•KQB43
and one less diamond and
• 7
the slam will be a lay down
• 96 5
agai nst any lead . North has
+K J 82
the same short suit points
Vulnerable : East-West
only this time he counts two
Dealer : North
. for a singleton, not one each
West North East Soulh for two double tons ."
Alan : " Modern bidders
Pass t•
!+
have various ways to show
Pass Pass
Pass 4.
sing l~tons in their slam bidPass
ding since they become of
such great value . We will
co ntinue this discussion
Opening lea d : • K

t.,.,.-+-+-+-

UCompact

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

• 12
+AQ10 5 1
EAST

¥

Buy when you c1n come in

ond- whot you ' re
-Good selt&lt;tlons- Fully
stocked.

.. II· A

¥A 6

nWoody

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Housin!J

141 ACRES -

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

38 - amore

stratagems

Ustadlum
cheer
M Bad: preliJ:
S5 Large
nnlrobe

sqi{.:\;

I Never Promised you a Rose Garden

BRIDGE

contents

mineral
Z5 Coolforted

© leTS Kine Features Syndicat..e, Inc: .

EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

Movie Channel 4
Hollywood Oldie (g )

Zl Decanter

~~e./ t= ·=of

As L-As

'4.88

I Enervates

.

6 :0Q-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15 ; Zoom 20.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
t3 Ending
5 Keep in check

'

6:3o--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13 Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8, lO; Over Easy 20.
•7:00....Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Pop Goes the Country 8.: News 10; Gilligan's
tsland 15; French Chef 20: How To Buy a Home 33 .
7:JO.-Hollywood Squares 3: Dating Game 4; Candid
Camera 6; Let's go to the Races 8; Prl~e Is Right
10; Donna Fargo 13; Abbot! and Costello 15;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:OO....Canlne Hall of Fame 3,4,15:: Happy Days 6, 13;
Sptder -Man 8,10; Saturday Game 20; Movie
"Seventh Heaven" 33.
9:1l0--Movle "The Critical List " 3,4, 1S;
Three's
Company 6, 13; Movie " Hondo" 8,10: Los Angeles
PhilHarmonic at the Hollywood Bowl 20.
9:30--Taxl6, 13: IO :GO--Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; News 20.
10 :31).-Like It Is 20 ; Blue-Collar Capitalism 33.
II :oo--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,1 5: Dick Cavell 20; Over
Easy 33.
11 : 31).... Johnny Car sen 3, 4, 15; Movie "Thes Last of
Sheila" 6,13; Gunsmoke 8 ; " The Bullet" 8; ABC
News 33; Movie " The Brothers O' Toole" 10.
12 :1l0--Janakl 33.

t!?t~«Dtd

SAVE ON
CARPETING

3

1~ .

5:3o--News 6; Sanford and Son 8; Electric Co. 20,33;
Mary Tyler Moore 10; Hogan 's Heroes 15.

The late~! JUMBLES are here in JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111 . Available for $1.35 EACH, po19tpald from Jumble, c/o l"la
neWspaper, P.O. J!Oit 34, Norwood, N.J. 076.18. tr.take checks p•y8ble to
Nf!NJspaperbOoks.

--

DRIVE ALITTU
&amp;.
SAVE A LOT

I XI I ) OF rn
(Answers lomorrow)

O' CARDS!

HAD A CHANCE 10
LOOK THROUGH HIS
CUSTOMER CARD S ···

For Richer, for

Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Klg and Friends
B; Sesame St . 20,33: Batman 10 ; Dinah! 13.
4:31).-My Three Sons 3: Gilligan's Island 4; Gilligan's
Island 8; Brody Bunch 10; Little Ras.c als 15.
5:1l0--Bononza 3: Star Trek 4; Beverly Hillbi llies B;
Mr . Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Emergency One! 13; Petticoat Junction

. \ Jumbles: AG ILE MOUSE SPLICE liN NIA
5
5
atu ay
Answer: What a good clothing salesman does wtth·a
new customer-SIZES HIM UP

CARD? WOW' A
WHOL E HANDFUL

AND WHilE HE WAS IN

4: ()0-Mr . Cartoon 3; Superman ~ ;

rd

MAIN

.FORKED

1:JO.-Days of our Lives 3,4, 15; As the World Turns 8, 10.
2:1)()-()ne Life to Live 6,13; 2:3o--Doctors 3,4, IS;
Guiding Light 8, 10.
3:1l0--Another World 3.4, 15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias, Yoga and You 20.
3:3o-MASH 8; Joker' s Wild 10; Consumer Survival
Kit 20.

Now arrange the circled kttlers to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the 8bo"Ye car1oon .

J

I K]

•

_E_Ib. of dog f~~ - SJ.8B

- Close

Young and the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :31).-Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Electric Company 33 .

WHAI THE'I MADE
WHEN iHERE WA~ A
P'OWER FAI"-URE.

AUTOMOBILE IN SUR AN CE been
can celled? Lost your operators
li cense? Phon e 992-2143 ,

school, 3 bedroom s, full
ba·sement, 2 le ve l lots .

VIRGIL B. SR .. ~~~

·

8-20-1 mo. (Pd . )

SYRACUSE

Love of Life 8,10: Sesame Street 33.
11 :55-CBS News B; House Call 10.
12 :0G-Newscenter J ; News 4,6, 10; America Alive! 15;

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Free Estifnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

...

THREE BEDROOM hou se , 3 acres
lond . Close to school. priced
r easonably.. 992 -5126. .

11 :JO.-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15: Family Feud 6,13:

Unscramble these four Jumtlles.
one le"er to each square, to form
foUr ordinary words .

1:oo--For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young and the Restless 10; Not For
Women Only 15.

New or R.epair
GulteiS and
Downspouts

---

byHenri ArnoldandBoblee

I LIWLE

-

TWO EXTRA n ice lot s in Racine 12
x bO . Hol lypor k trai ler . portiolly
fur nished . Also 18 x 40 ceme nt
bloc k building with
she d.
949 -2428 .

j"jll THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

---

Semester 8; Concerns and Comments 10.

6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50--Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13.
6:55-News 13. 7·:GO--Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning
America 6,13; CBS News B; Jetsons 10,
7:25-Chuck Whtte Reports 10: 7:31).-Ss;hoolles 10 . .
8: ro-&lt;:aptaln Kangaroo 8.10: Sesame St. 33.
9 :00-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15. 13;
Emergency Onel 6; Hogan' s Heroes 8: Match
Game ]0; Inner Tennis 33.
9:30--Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10; Bit With Kn.ll
33 .
10:00....Card Sharks 3.15; My Three Sons 4: Edge of
Nlghl 6; All In fhe Family 8,10: Dating Game 13:
Bit With Knit 33.
10:31).-Hollywood Squares 3,•. 15; High Hopes 6; Price
Is Right 8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13; 1·n ·Performance
at WOlf Trap 33.
.
11 :llO--High Rollers 3,4, 15 ; Happy bays 6, 13.

10:3().-{)ver Easy 20.11 :-.News 3,&lt;,8,10,15; Dick
Covell 20 ; Over Easy 33.
11 :31).-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Gunsmoke 8; ABC News
33; Movie "Interrupted Melody" 10.

Brakes
Muffler
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service
Ph . 992-2148

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1971
Report 13; 5:50--PTL Club 13.
6:1l0--PTL Club 15; Summer Semester 10.
6 : 30-Focus on Columbus A; NeWs 6-; Summer
5 : ~Farm

News 20 ; In PerformanceatWoltTrap33.

·MOORE'S

--

$35,000 .

3', acres with wate r ond sewage
on PQo cock · A'W'e., Pomeroy ,
O hio . 51000 down. Ba lan ce of
$66 70 per monlh t o qualif ied
pe rson . 992 ·57 86.
....,....

on

WHAT'!II
Mlt!l !MNCHiZ

SEWING MACHINE Repa i' . , ~er ·
vice . oil mak es, 991·228-4 . The
Fabric
Sh op ,
Po mer o y .
Aut horized Singer So le~ and
THREE BE DRO O M !rom e hom e in
_s ~~-_!'e ~h~P!.~cl;_sor s_._
WE DO poi nting, gutter , ceiling
M ,ddleport. Co li qrn-3457 .
EXC
A V ATING , dozer , loader ond
----ti le . paneling . r oof r epair ,
IN SYRAC USE: 2 be'd;oom house,
backhoe
work : dump trucks
plumbing and concrete work .
New ~ to r m windows. N ew
ond lo .boys lor hire, will hau l
Free estimates . Co li 992 -7785
alumi num building. 2 porc hes.
fill dir t. to soil. li m est one and
ask lor Walla ce MoHis,
992-3719 .
groveL Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
CHIMNEY FIRES are no fun! Ho"'e
f ers , doy phone 992 -7069 , night
A CRE LOl on Rt . 7. Nice building
yours c!eo ned tho du&lt;itlen woy
phon e t,JQ2.J525 or 992· 5232 .
site . 992 -7574 .
•...---.-- -·
Th e Ch i mne r
Swe;ep .
EXC AVATING, d01e r. backhoe
614 -373 -0057 .
SIX ROOM hou se and bo1h . Cen and ditcher. Charle s R. Hoi ·
tral hedt. On 11 acres. Located
fi eld , 8ock
Ho e S e 11t~c e .
on coun try on Hysell Run . All
Rutland. Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
m ineral rights, I S m inutes to
town , Fo1 Sole si gn in yard . Vo·
Will do roofing , con structron ,
con1 . S13 000 . Sh own on ly to in·
plumbing and heating . No job
too Iorge or too sma ll . Phone
ter esled po dies . 7ol2 -3074
7-1 2-2348.
MULBERRY
Heights . loi s of
HOWERV AND
pri vacy . Ron ch. 3 bedroom .
MARTIN
oVe r 2 acres . Fruit trees , F.A .
co '&gt;' ot ing . $ep tic systems ,
fur nace . Ce nt ral o1r. Uno ttochdozel' , backhoe , dump !ruck ,
ed 2 cor garage . H.W. floo rs.
limes ton e. growel. blacktop
Ory basement. Patio and deck .
paving, Rr. 143. Phone I (b14 )
997 -5797 .
6qB -7331.

Call now lor appointment.

Phone 992-2111

CAPTAIN EASY

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

·-30-llc

NEAR

...

10·JO·c

Autl &amp; Truck
Repaif
Also Transmission
Repair
PhoDe 992-5682

8-n1 mo.

Expires
Sept. 11 , 1971

Pomeroy Landmark ·
9 ...-~~ck w. Carsey, Mgr.

by-~ss

8·2· 1 mo.

SPECIAL
PRICE

PICK YOUR OWN . Red sk m
peache s. 5 .20 o lb. wh ile they
lost . M in ., Tu es . Thurs . Fn 9-b COA L. liMESTONE . 5ond . grovel ,
colc1 um ch lo f ide', liH tili1er. dog
Wed .. Sot .. Sun .. 2 b . Bfi ngcon·
load , and al l types of salt EM ·
loiner!io . Wognel' 's Fr uit For m .
cels101 Salt Wo fk s. Inc .. E. Moin
Laymon . O h&lt;o . 2' . mile s oil SR
St Pam(n oy. qq2 -3B,:9.:..
. ' ·'---550on CR 6 014-749 -1317.
8URRO
UV
HS
SEN
SI-MATIC
oc·
WINTER POlA TO ES, g rade 1 ond
co unt mg ma ch in e
Phone
2. C.W. Pro ff it! . Port lan d . Ohr o.
997-71 Sb The Doi ly Sentinel.
IQ7 1 FORO ' , ton com per !ipe cro l.
111 Court Street, Pomeroy .
Power . air , aut o .. duo, lonk s.
Ohio .
l:xcellen t ru nnlng condrllon
2 8 by 16 x 'I" wh eels , Pr.
$1475 . 992 -2392.
S25.00 7 . UX1 x lb Winter tires
1968 CHEVROLET CA RRYA ll ' •
pr S ~ . OO . Coli 992 -7092 .
ton b cyl. std . Has 1972 engtn e,
. ful ly insulated and carpeted . l9b7 CEHVY FOR ports 1973 Veg a
motor , Hoy l or sole , $.85 o
Good tires . S750. Call 997 -b:JC'IB.
bole . 949-2011 3 or 1W :1. 2849 .
SWEET POTATOES . Red , whil e.
and yellow Phone 843 -24 32. MUSICA L INSTRUMENTS: horns .
Robert W , lewis, li: t, '2 , Racine ,
guitars. flut es _ clarinets tf om·
SR 12-1 .
bones. e tc. To ~ell or trade .

191'2 HOND A 350. E,- cellen t
shape
Wind$h ield . $650 .
~8~30__!.._d~ys CJ85-414p ol1 e f _5.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
lorgelols . Ca11992-?479 .

SPECIAL

_,,,,.,IDE WHITE
eROOF PAINT

" yes."

,.--WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

Chester, Ohio

GARAGE
'I• mile off Rt. 7

•

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

ROGER HYSELL

SENIORS

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•289.95

an huting cost
ond
fully Insured
Fret Esl.
Call 992-2772
B·1Q-1mo. (Pd.)

High SchoOl

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER II, lf71
6:GO--News 3,4·;e, fo, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; 6:30
NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC Ne;vs 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News I, 10: Over Easy 20.
7:00-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 41 Newlywed Game
6, 13; Marty Robbins' Spotlight 8; News 10;
Gilligan's Island 15; Almanac 20; Know Your
Schools 33.
.
7:30--That Nashville Music 3: Dating Game 4; S100,000
Nome That Tune 6; Match Game PM 8: Wild
Kingdom 10; $1.91 Beauty Conte•! 13; Nashville on
the Rood 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.33; .
B:GO--Lttlle House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Welcome
Back, Kotter 13; Unknown War 6; Jetfersons 8, 10;
Consumer Survtval Kit 20; Person to Person :
Selected Interviews 33.
8:30--Good Times 8,10; Turnabout 20,33.
9:oo-Movle "The Crttlcal List" 3,4,15; NFL Football
6,13; MASH 8,10; Movie "Antonio : A Portrait of
the Woman" 20; Opera Theater 33.
9:JO-.One Dav At a Time 8,10; 10:00..:.Lou Grant8,10;

Phone915-JIN
Jock Ginther 915 -3.106

Ex~rienct

12:1l0--News6,13 ; Janakl33 . 12 :31).-FBt 6; Ironside 13.
I :oo--Tomorrow 3,~ , 1 :31).-News 13.
Mllvto Chlnnt! •
5 and 1 p.m . - One-On-One CPGJ
9and II p.m . - Exorcist II : The Heretic (r)
C.blt C"-nntl 5
7 p.m. - Paul Gaudino
7:30p.m. - PPHS-Melgs Football
10 p.m. - 700 Cly~b .

TELEVISION
VIEWING_

•.-.

R.eSidentlal and commerc111 . Clll for estimate. 24
Hour Service . Any dly ,
anytime.
•

JIM KEESEE

Hoskins, 949-2160. Free
Estimates.

F;m::$fe ~

----

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Blown Insulation

POMEROY
LANDMARK

--

J&amp;L

OHIO VALLEY ROOANG
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

-- ---.- ----· ---

-~---~-

DICK TRACY
OLITSIOE-

Coll992·215o .

-~

9-The D~lly Sentinel, Middlepori-Pomeruy, 0 ., Monday, Sept . 11, 1976

claimed as heresy."
Alan : " You mean that we
are going to discuss how to
substitute trick-taking v,alues for point count?"
Oswald: "Let's put it this
way. Cards, not points, take
tricks .. The short suit count
of three for a void, two for a
·singleton and one for a doubleton is fine in the early
bidding. In slam bidding and
competitive situations you

LET'S FLIP
FER IT,
PAW

.····. )
./. (;))
.'.....'

.•
f I

',

An Jllinois reader asks if

anyone has ever assigned
point count value to tens.
Several point count sys·
terns have made this at·
tempt but it just adds too
much c omplication. The ex·
pert just remembers that

tens are important car.d s.
(NE WSPA PER ENTE RPiliSE 1\SSN ,J

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN. send $1 to: " Win at

BridQe , " care of th is .newspa·
per, P:O. Box 489, RadiO City
Station , New York , N. Y. t00T9.)

�10- The Daily S.ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Munday, S.pt. 11, 1978

Southem band
participating

Students still holtle,
worry about education
While striking teachers and
non,.cademic employees .talk
with school officials about
money matters , some
students worry about how the
strikes will affect their
education.
Strikes in six Ohio districts
have put more than 13,000
school employees on the
picket tines, affecting more
than m,ooo students.
Students in Cleveland, the
state's largest district, could
not get into classes Friday
because doors were locked,
apparently by striking nonteaching employees. Those
students were sent home.
students in Logan School
District have not had classes
at aU. Their teachers and
nonacademic employees
have been on strike since
Aug. 29.
Classes are being held in
Dayton , Lima Shawnee,
Buckeye
Local
and
Tallmadge whil e striking
employees walk picket lines.
But carrie Ruth, 18, a
senior in the Dayton school
system, said she was being
tanght things she didn 't need.
She and several other
seniors expressed concern
about learn ing the right
information for their collegeentrance tests which are
administered in November.
Others also expressed fear
that if the strike, which began
Wednesday, is prolonged,
they won't have time to make
up the missed work.
Miss Ruth said she spent
part of Friday in an English
class with students from all
four upper grades and "there
were teaching how to
capitalize ." Classes are being
beld in study hall rooms,

~

cafeterias, band room and
libraries, rather than regular
classrooms.
Attendance was low
Thursday and Friday.
ClaSses this week will be
staggered, with grades one
thr,ough five, nine and 10
going Monday, and grades six
through eight, II and 12 going
Tuesday. All grades should
be . attending school . by
Wednesday .
Dayton's 2,220 teachers and
the scbool board have been
meeting with Montgomery
County Common Pleas Court
Judge Carl D. Kessler to
work out a solution to the
strike, triggered over a wage
demand .
The two sides have been
asked to produce financial
info rmation for today's
session in the judge ',s
chambers.
Meanwhile, talks aimed at
bringing an end to the teacher
walkout in :rallmadge broke
off Sunday, an Ohio
Education Association
spckeswoman said.
"The Tallmadge Board of
Education broke off negotiations ... while the Tallmadge
Teachers Associa tion was
continuing to bargin in good
faith ," said Helen Dorobiala
of the OEA.
She said the action came
. after the TTA offered
counterproposals on salary
and dental insurailce.
'ITA President Dick Burns
said his association "is
gravely disa ppointed that the
board broke off negotiations,
and we remain willing to
meet day and night to reach
an equitable settlement ."
Most of Tallmadge's 180
teachers are off the job but

ann versary sale
-

"FLEX STEEl"
Whateve r your· taste in furniture , you can
choose wit h confidence from Fiexsteel.
Wh e t her you s elect contempo r ary ,
traditionaL modern or coloniaL you wi II fi nd
an impe ccab le elegance in every p iece that
will be a proud addit ion to your home. This
distinct ive Fiexsteel furniture is available
in sofas . sectionals, s uites . chairs. and a
un ique sofa-sleeper . Hundred s and
hundreds of fabr ics, all decorator -se lected
for bea utiful correctness .

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

schools remain open f&lt;r the
Summit County system's
3,500 students.
In Marion, a threatened
strike by members of tbe
Marion Education
Association against the city
school system has been
averted, at least temporarily,
with the ratification Sunday
night of a new contract
agreement.

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

1 Area Deaths !
I

I

GERTRUDE DRAKE
Gertrude E. Drake, 81, a .
resident of Rt. I, Vinton,
died ai her home at 6:45
p.m. on Sunday. She had
been in failing health for
several years.
Mrs. Drake was born on
Jan. 10, 1897, in Meigs
Co unty, (Salem center
community) daughter of the
late Delbert and Mirah
Thaxton Williams.
Survivors include her
husband, Burl Drake. She
was preceded in death by one
brother and one sister. She
was a member of the Huntington Grange.
Funeral services will be
held I p.m . Wednesday at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
with burial in Salem Center
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Tuesday
from 7 until 9 p.m.
GOLDYE JOHNSON
Goldye Randolph Johnson ,
78, New Haven, died Sunday
in Holzer Medical Center
after a long illness.
She was born April 11, 1900
in New Haven, to the late
J ohn and Ann Roush Goodnile. She was preceded in
death by her husband ,
Herbert Johnson in 1952.
She wa s a retired
restaurant operator in New
Haven, and a member of the
Broad Run Zion Latheran
Church.
Survivors
include
one
daughter , Mrs. Mildred
Zirkle, Hartford; two sons,
George Randolph , New
Haven , and Paul Randolph ,
Letart Route •I; four sisters,
Mrs. Mamie Griffin, Carrollton , 0 .; Mrs. Pansy Frv. New
Haven; Mrs. Dorothy Cunningham , Weirton; Mrs .
Sylbil Grinstead , Letart ;
seven grandchildren and 10
great-grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at I :30 p.m. in
the Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev. Geor~e Weirick

lkltch's Response
to Parental Advice
let's face. it . Butch is far more likely to fol low your ex&amp;m'ple than )IOVr advice.
So, whtn 1t comes to teaching· children t"Jbout thri!VSklp the " penny saved Is 4
penn y earned " speech ; and . instead . take the kids with you to Farmers Bank and
let them watch Yf)U open a savinQ s accoun1. Now, that's exam ple.

I!!]
t 1

2

A

The m~bershlp voted 2248 to accept the two-year
agreement. Members d. the
Marion City School Board
will act on the tentative
agreement during their board
meeting tmtght.
Officials say it's Ukely the
board also will ratify the
agreement. There are 7,800
students in the Marion school
system.

Far111ers Bank
PQMEROY, OHIO

officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call today
from 3 to 5 and from 7 to 9
p.m. at the funeral home.
DR. GERALD LOZIER
Dr. Gerald Scott Lozier, 4.7,
died Saturday in the Princeton, N. J. , Medical Center.
Dr. Lozier was the husband
of the former Rea Ann Myers
and a son of Mr. and Mrs.
Hugo Lozier of Loudonville.
He was a son-in-law of Mr.
and Mrs. Aaron Kelton of
Minersville and had visited
here over the years.
Born Oct . 3, ·1930 at
Loudonville, Dr. Lozier was
senior member of the techical
staff of the David Sarinoff
RCA Laboratories where he
had done outstanding work
for the past 23 years.
He was a graduate of
Western Reserve University
where he attained his doctorate in physical chemistry .
He was a member of
numerous scientific societies
and the recipient of several
outstanding acbievement
awards.
Besides his wife and his
parents, he is survived by two
children, Jay Scott, of
Atlanta, Ga. , and Joan Marie
of Oakland, Calif.
Memorial services are to
be held at All Saints
Episcopal Church in Princeton.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p. m. Thursday at
the Banks-Barley Funeral
·Home in Loudonville where
friends may call on Wednesday and Thursday. The
body will be flown · from
Princeton, N. J. to the funeral
home
in
Loudonville
Tuesday.
Accompanying the body on
the flight will be Mr. and Mrs.
Aron Kelton, Mr. and Mrs.
John Austin and family and
the Lozier family .
The Loziers reside at 11
Terhune Road, Princeton, N.
J.
HAROLD BIRD
Harold William Bird, 55,
Route 2, Racine, died
Saturday
at
Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
An automobile mechanic,
Mr. Bird was a son of the late
Fred and Oddessia Virginia
O'Neil Bird.
Surviving are his wife,
Emma Lee Bird : two
daughters, Mrs. Genevieve
Roush, Charleston, S.C., and
Mrs. Virginia Hope Wolfe,
Portland; a son, William
Harold Bird, Racine; a sister,
Mrs. Clara Powell, Route 2,
Racine, and six grandsons.
Funeral services will be

):IUNTINGTON ..,- More
than
1,800
marching
musicians will pre$ent the
half-time show a' the Marshall University - ·Appalachian State football
game Saturday, Sept. 16, in
Fairfield Stadium.
Marshall's 150 - m4!1Pber
Thundering Herd Marching
Band will be joined by approximately 1,700 musicians
fro01 21 high school bands in
the "BB!Id Day" production,
according to W. Richard
Lemke, director of Marshall
bands.
Their half-time show will
be a massive salute to Walt
Disney. The Marshall ba¢
will lead the event with the
"Mickey Mouse March" and
the high school bands will join
to play a ''Mary Poppins"
medley, "When You Wish
Upon A Star," and a special
arrangement, "Disco While
You Work."
Attending bands and .
directors from Ohio include
Coal Grove High, Robert J.
Barthen ; Southern High of
Racine, Jess Bro'wning;
Valley High of Lucasville,
Gale L. Dalton; South Point
Hlgh, Kent Wellman; . Clay
High of Portsmouth, Glirly L.
Billups; Chesapeake High,
Bob Brooks, and Greene High
of Franklin Furnace, John
Bane.

17 die
(Continued from page 1)
25, Bellewe, when he lost
control of his motorcycle on a
Huron County road.
Cleveland: KeMeth Bero,
20, and Daniel Podvorac, 17,
both of Cleveland, when their
motorcycle struck a heavyconstruction grader parked
on Interstate 90 in Cleveland.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Monkey
Run at 4:30p.m. Sunday for
Eugene Fisher who was
taken to Holzer ~edical
Center. At 5:56 p. m. the
squad went to Kyger for a
Mrs. Stalling who was dlso
taken to •Holzer Medical
Center.
BOOSTERS MEETING
The
Meigs
Athletic
Boosters will meet at the high
school at 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
Films of the Point Pleasant
football game will be shown.
MEET TONIGHT
RACINE - A meeting has
been set for 7 p. m. this
evening at the home of Jan
Cardone to dicuss plans for
the .Racine Elementary PTO
fall camivalto be held Oct. 7.
All persons interested in
plaMing and helping with the
event are asked to be present.

:·.Summit effort hinges on Egyptian response
ANDER8()N
-·-M.~M
P DAVID,
Md.

a formula fir continuing

Je
East
peace
IIIOIIatlona
apparently,
llillled today on an awaited
IOJ!tlan response to a
1111 1111 on the future d. the
~led West Bank, confer-IOUfces said.
'ftle conference, according I
II) . dealgnated spokesman
Joc1Y Powell, baa moved Into agreement."
a. "an · lntenae and detailed
MEIGS COWity Senior Cltlzena vlaltlng the COUIIty senior cltiDna center In Pcmeroy will
have a head start on many votera in the Nov. 7 election. The ~~enlon are receiving
instruction in tbe operation d. the votomatlc DIIIC!Uea which will beiiMid for the lint time In
the county this fall. The votcmatic machlnee will make It poaaible to count the votes In •ch
precinct in just a matter of minutes Instead d. boUI'I. Donna Wllllunaon, aenlor cltlama
center staff member, left, is shown Instructing IJI1Ian Napper, Mlnenvllle, on the
votomatic.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veteraoa Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions .:..
Lowell McNickle, Racine;
Asa Hoskins, Pomeroy;
steven
Kirk
Patrick
Pomeroy.
'
Saturday Discharges Linda Rhodes, Juanita
Runyon, Bronwyn Thomas,
Besste Turley.
Sunday Admissions Milford Bailey, Athens;
Joyce Vance, Albany; Aaron
Zahl, Pomeroy; Darla White,
Racine ; Daisy Glassburn,
Rutland ; Hattie Powell,
Racine .
Sunday Discharge - Steve
Kirkpatrick.

r------- ------------------1

I
I

Band parent roncemed

WOMEN'S

(Continued from page I )

CREST UNIFORMS

"It's very unusual to have
tw)' accidents that close
tol:ether, but it's definitely
not due to unsafe track,"
Jaco said.
Last Tuesday night four
cats of a Chessie train
derailed on a stretch of track
between Hartford and New
Haven. Oa Thursday night,
another Chessie
train
derailed near Stauffer
Chemical Plant at Gallipolis
Ferry, W. Va.

Style No. 3531
Sizes 3· 15 .

l ii•II IAior•·
ur Th ~ IH• Il' Of flhl o. lrrrfhl' l'ril ln" tha t

'40,000 MaXImum lnsura&lt;1ce fo1 Each Depositor
Member Fede1al Oeposrt Insurance Corporation

l' rrlt f d l nres lors l.lfr lm r, . ~ r Kat~SJ~&gt; Cl! )',
fi t at• ~~ Ml ~ rl II U rurnrll h•il ~ ll h 111~ Ju·,
~I · I I I IS Slll f lf!l)llnblr In It 11111 1 b .t\llli••rl zr&lt; l
11\lrlllf: lhr rurrr rrl H l r t u lri.,,;~~ T In 111 '•
l&gt; lt lt Its l lll)n~J~r l.u l•"lilt'&lt;.• ul lii&gt;lll' ~tl rr It•
nnmr lal Cll nrlUI" ~ IIi 111~ ~ 11 h)' lr. Mmual &gt;Ide
111N II I ll liUf bt~n U f llii{)U Ull h rc ~ I, J !Jj i
,\ rlmlll rd AWl! U li ,l11 1\. ~ ~l 1HI 1 . 1~ 1 &lt;1111 1 •••
J :JU~~~ . ~MI !lfl . .''lurpl u~ $ :;! r 0.2.~~.HJ~ cm . In
rum• $ ~ 1 . ~ it 9 ,!f l~ . ll ll , J:lf&gt;!'Pii ll lu r t~ ' lfi,H,\ :1,
~~~~ 011 . Ne l A 1~ t s S ~1.~~2 . 0t~ nf1 , l'•rol t11
J: I ,IJOO ,(II10.00. JN WIT.' i.::ili 1\l!l:u t:nr
I hut hrr•unt " •ul" rr ll'l'd m)' 1111 n 1 ~ 1wl 'llhe•l
rn t· ~ttl tu bt •lfl• ~ d 11 l'&amp;lumt..h, Uhl, t h l·
d.!) IIlii !!tit , July I , l ft78 11"11' \' .linnto,
• illltll'l!ntfodtnl uf l ttsUfi!R"l' of flh lfl I St:,\ J..J

,..,

PI QUE DOUBLE KNIT

tOO ', Kode l' Palye s1er.
Whtle only .

______
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;,_ _ _ _ _

I •

..~

NO. 104

MANDIE ROSE

Crest uniforms and
l'lnll Suits. Jr. sizos 3

held at 3 p. m. Tuesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. Freehind Norris
.officiating. Burial will be In
the Letart Fails Cemetery.
Friends may .call at , the
funeral home anytime.

l

lo 5, Misses slzes 'Bto 20,
Holt sizes 14112 to 24'12.

I

I

WOMEN'S

READY TO WEAR

2ND FLOOR

DANA HANING
Dana Haning, 81, Route 2,
Pomeroy, died Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was a son of the late
STU[ OF llitiQ, DlPAJITIIIINT OF IN·
Edward and Jane Carleton
SUitUtl. CUTiriC.UI: Dr CCIM,LIU CL
Tllf ~ndrnlcnrd . Kllllf rt nttlldl!'lll nf Jnaunra
Haning . He was also
m ~ !ttat.f Of Ohio, tlfrtiiJ trrtl~,. t t.t
l nd\l !lllpol\1 Lllr l ll!IIIU!ef l'o , of Jndltn&amp; p·
preceded in death by two
oll1 , 8\tle ijf lndllt~~. h•~ r"Urripllfd • ·tth thr
Ia•·• of thl• lllate •rtJI!~Ib l e to It and I'
sisters, Kate Mello! and
RU!II(Jr \ud !kll'l!ll tM cur""' y~ar • ~ trill&amp;'·
Clara Stanley and a brother,
IK'I Ill Ill\' Bltlr lt l I PDI{)tlrlll t hlli iPi!:U r.r
lntur&amp;nce gn the Mutual l'l•n Ju nri.nel.lt
William.
coodltlon b llbtJ•n b1 IU '""'Ill •tt lemr.rlt
tu ~. •• ~ tlttn 11 . rtlloa·~ tn Ot-t. 31, 19fr :
Surviving are his wife,
,\limII t"l A ~lltll 1460,3 1!1 .6110.00 : Ll&amp;lollll ~
• ~tfl , l 9~ . 8 06. 00 ; !lurpilu U 9. 813, U 3.00 ; J, .
Edna
Cuckler Haning; a son,
•-urnf uor..fl!t.ur.oo; liiHIMIIt~ rK JU .
Harley, Route , 3, Pomeroy;
11~ 1 . ~ 7.5 00 . IN WJTNE88 WHEIEOI', I tll;t
hN I!\I IH ~ .Wiltfflbed Ill)' ntlllt IIIII n.-d "''
two daughters, Mn. Harold
!il'll IO' bt II'Uud I t Ctluml~l . Ohio 11111 Ill,
• nd dltr. Jul7l , 1911 . Harr,v. Jvllp, !Jui&gt;lr·
(Evelyn) Morris, Route 2,
lntmc!ent or lMUIMt r1 Ol!lo. /S EAL!
Albany, .and Mrs. Hllber
(Helen) Qulvey, Route 2,
, Pomeroy, and a brother,
Emmett, of Ca!lMmter. Atlo
IT.Ut . , Oltll DfiiiAIIITIUT IF Ill·
surviving are U grand·
1'-'IUCl. CUTihCATl " t::II,LIAICI.
T1tt llllllfrlllht41, IJitcltrllltmdrot llr 1,_.,...
children,
2t
great·
m ftle ltatt Of Ohio, hlnbr ttrtl"- Ullt
tf
Att*blle. l'ftUCI ..I Llfl lrtiUI'IIMe CCI
grandchildren
and
several
INll• , 111\t ot' lnu hal et!lllllltd w&amp;tb IM
nieces and nephews. '
1a•t or IIIII Bille ltDIIub\1 lll It 1111\ II
IUfl!oriMd ..,,,. 'tiM c.rrfflt ,.., to 1~
Funeral servicea wUI be
In Ulb liLlie I~ IJIPfi!PI'Illt IMIMM of i..,
-•nee. Ill ftrudll etndiUon II lhowri br It•
held at I p. m. Tuesday at the
tutn.ll) IUlt,_t,t lo hut bttn 11 F1\loft tn
lltf, I I. 1171' : Adllltttd A...u IBIS fh .
EwinR JIIUiel'al Home with
IIIIU'JO; Llabllltla Utf,tOI ,IOf,OO · ....I.
the Rev. Alan . Blackwood
iJIIIIIMlll.oo; .,.... tnu:n.otl.oo; • ·
llrftl lllf.80f.lti .OO ; lflt A-t• IU •
olflciating. Burial will be In
.171.00 : CApital IUti,Hl .OO. IN Wrf.
/11- WilD lOP, I IW.rt Mf'Nrtlt lllllwi'W
the Burllneham Cemetery.
1111 .... IIIII - . f •r IMI to tie llfb:N at
CtMIM,
I
Frienda may call at the
" "· llarnOlllt
' · VIII
J..,,4a1 and datt. Jlllr
tf ••
.,... rl ...... 1114LI
funeral home any time.

the Minnie Price Scholarship
award for the 1978-79 school
year. The Minnie Price
scholarship is awarded to a
student Interested in extension or in helping people ·
through the application of
home economics knowledge.
The scholarship is financed
largely through the efforts of
the
Ohio
Extension
Homemakers Council.
Minnie Price began work
- with Home Economics' Extension in Ohio in 1921 as
assistant state leader. She
became state leader of Home
Economics Extension in 1923.
In 1948, the Minnie Price
Scholarship Fund was started
with gifts of 15,348. Miss
Price retired in 1951.
In 1948, the Homemakers
sho~d
Council of Meigs County met
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The natlon's fire chiefs were told their quota of $100 for the
Monday they should be just as adept at extinguishing inflation scholarship fund . The
homemakers raised the ITUley
aa putting out fires.
"With Inflation, America Ia demanding Its public officials by selling door hangers,
do more with leas money," Onclnnatl Allllstant City Manager sewing machine lights,
Martin WaiSt aaid In an address to 6,000 persona gathered at broom and mop hangers and
· the annual convention of the International Association d. Fire other useful household arQdefa. "We've got to asaesa our producltivlty," added Walsh, ticles.
"IIIII IInd out bow we can run more efficient departments.;;
Miss Rose is the first Meigs
countlan to receive this
award and wishes to thank
· PJULADELPmA.(UPI) '- A small radioactive device those homemakers who
worked to raise Meigs
!bat had been Implanted in a cancer pstient at the University County's contribution to this
of~IUII)'Ivanla Hospital Ia reported missing, according to the
scholarship.
Nuelear Regulalilry Cammission.
Miss Price now makes her
...:. The agency however said there w88 no reaaon to beUeve ·home in Portland, Oregon
~ play waa involved in the disappearance d. the device, a
loves to hear from
llllall green stalnl- steel cyUnder about 1\'z inches long and. and
members
of
Ohio
ee-elghth of an inch wide.
homemakers
clubs.
Especially those wbo were·
members during the time she
;. · CLEVELAND (UPI) -A Cuyahoga County grand jury was state leader.
She will be a senior at Ohio
~~... Indicted Ricardo Brown, Iarmer chief investlgatOI' In the
state
University this fall. She
"'i!oanty's welfare depariment, on 13 counts of bribery for
is
majoring
in Home
•' l!llegedly ollerlng to help cbeats get benefits for a fee .
Economics
Education
and
". Brown, who also once served as a lieutenant in the county
will
be
student
teaching
~ !lhlrlfl's department, reportedly waa fll:ed from the
!l". . .rtment earU.- this year becalllt CJI complaints from some spring quarter. She Is a
member of The American
Jtflople wbo dealt with him.
Horne Economics·Association
and
Omicron Nu, a home
~e
economics honor society.
"'
WASHING'lON (UPI)- Citing ligh cancer rates among
workers In specific flelda, govemnent aclentlata now say at
~; 111!11 one of every five cancer caaesln America apparently Ia
:, eantractad at work.
'
"We chooae to uae the ~ 20 percent in order to be
' v1tive," they said In MOnday's start~ new report on
, · _.k ll8lardl rangin&amp; from lllbestas to vinyl chloride and from
jlliraleum dlallllatlil to coke-oven emlaslma.
Students In the Eastern
· Local School District are
required to be immunized
,
against
six
diseases :
diphtheria,
tetanus
(lock:
jaw),
pertussis
(whooping
"' D.p. tmalt In Mont&amp;omery County are not aceounted fOI' now cough), polio, mmstes and
•• IIIII eantrac:ll ~ purchue rl two new lnlcb should rubella (German measles).
· lit looUd al for "pclllible dl.lcrtlpanclea."
a child baa not completed
IJur1aC the nplar elimination ol the to'il'lllblp'a financial allIf required
immuniutions,
IIIUdl from March 21, 1m, throu&amp;b Jan. 31, 1m, alate
the
child
can
remain
In school
,
hlft found the IIJwnlblp Mel not aold Cl' traded the
if
he
or
lhe
baa
bad
least
: ;. :;I 'c'laa,aada Utle cheebdawedboth still In th8to'II'JIIhlp'a one DTP lhot, and at
dOle
of
...,, . . 'ftlly'-lbeenn..Julateult'lt.
1
polio vaccine, and a measles
shot or meules dlleaae, and
~.,..,..
a rubella lhot.
...
l!tARX, Ala. (\IPI) - Army Wanul Ofllctr Richard studenta must complete the
··_...,._of Bailon, MIA., alreld)' f~ a life aentence fCI' DTP and polio -lea aa fast
....._ 11Q1111 o1- ftmalt IOidler at rort Raclter, Monday was u posalble. FaUu,. to do 10 is
· _...., 1 Cllllltinuance until ~ov. 1J for another trial for a rea1011 to exclude from school
at 1 later date. The Board of 1
••
....... ClOIIvlctad "' the rape and munler In Education will accept a ·
IIIII ,.ar o1 Army SpeC. 5 Donna WlJcylllkl, a doctor's statement which
(ConUnued on page 10)
o.R, 01*1, raaldent.
-'
~

&lt;i_);.,__r_h_e_W_or_ld_To_d_a_y_
help too

hnmunization
policy noted

/1

,,
::.fire
trucks not accountable
..

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Will Middleport Vtllage get
a new $19,000 backhoe?
That's the $64 question
resulting from a regular
meeting of Middleport
Village CouncifMonday night
when
council
voted
unanimously to accept a bid
on a backhoe and to borrow
money, if necessary, to make
the purchase.
On tbe ottier band, Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate
warned the vtllage Is In no
poaltlon to make the
purchase and advised be
woold refuse to sign the
note necessary for the

Enrollment
Mandie Rose, daUghter of
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Rose, . down two
Long Bottom, . has received

Rate high in specific fields

'

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OH I0

Scholarship
award winner

,-.Investigator indicted

Be sure lo see ell the
other ityles in women'.s

at y

RACINE - Enrollment in
the Southern Local School
District for the new school
year Is down two from last
year as of today, Supt. Bob
Ord reports.
Enrollment lor 1978 includes 356 high school
students; 176 junior high
students; 461 elementary
students and 67 In kindergarten. · .
In addition, the district has
26
students attending
vocational classes at Meigs
High
School.
Total
enrollment this year is 1,060.

~cer
granted continuance
.

_

.... ~

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
.

~'"*"'

J

iJ

I .

:- ;~·~··~-~·=;'1~1111
I

•

enttne

TUESDAY, SEPTEM BER 12, 1978

parchase.
Council passed a motion
accepting the bid of the
Southeastern Equipment Co.,
Gallipolis, at $19,284, the low
bid submitted, and passed an
amended motion to borrow
funds over a three year
period, if necessary, to pay
for the backhoe.
Council President Marvin
Kelly said there is tile to be
laid and that village workers
are behind schedule. He said
that the present backhoe
would require a lot of money
to repair and still would be
subject to frequent repairs.
He commented that the new
backhoe is ne~essary to "stay
in business."
Councilman Allen Lee King
also stated that the purchase
is necessary "to do the job."
King and Kelly commented
that breaks in water lines and
sewage problems must be
taken care of, and without a
backhoe it would take several
days to make repairs. "This
· would not be service to the
people of the town, " they

Motorcyclists
gtven wammg
0

0

'

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt issued the
following reminder to area
motorcycle operators today.
Ohio Law requires that
operators and passengers on
motorcycles must use some
type of eye protection. The
recently enacted law was in
regard to the wearing of
helmets!
It should also be pointed out
that the helmet Is required of
operators and passengers
under 18 years of age and also
required by operators that
have less than one year experience as a licensed cycle
operator.
Sheriff Proffitt advises his
department is receiving
complaints from residents
regarding cycle operators
without ~ye protection as well
88 a nwnber of operators
under 18 operating without
helmets.
Sheriff Proffitt was called
to the Mildred Circle
residence Monday where
Mrs. Circle was found dead
on the living room Door by
Mrs. Margaret Holter who
lives behind Mrs. Circle's
house.
Mrs. Circle, 71, lived on
Pine Grove Road, Minersville. The Racine Squad was
at the scene along with Dr. R.
R. Pickens. · The cause of
death is undetermined, and is
stlD under Investigation.

~

-~w::~~~te.::tor~=p~

tails of the proposals now on
tightly held secret.
Apart from the usual social U1e table.
The American hopes for the
amenities, the early meetings
were heavily weighted summit conference, from the
toward American and Israeli beginning, have been set
negotiations. Then there was deliberately low, aiming at
a weekend lull while the continued negotia lio ns
various sides paused for between the Egyptians and
reflection and refinement, the Israelis, rather than" full
leading to the current peace treaty .
Conference sol!rces sa id
situation
where
the
negotiations are almost those hopes are still alive and
totally
between · th e Uw outcom e should become
Americans
and
the clear in U1e He'll 36 hours.
Egyptians, discussing the de-

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Will backhoe he purchased?

....,

fu'i

•

that from piints using highsulfur. coal.
·
Saying he has not made up
his mind which route to lake
in a final rule, Costle urged
"sprited and thoughtful
debate" on the issue during
the next three months when
the proposal will be open to
public comment.
Costle said meeting the 85
percent cleanup target could
add $10 billion or more to the
cost of power plant
construction during the next
12 years and might boost
borne electric power bills by
betWeen 30 cents and $1.10 a
month.
· He said applying a lessstringent standard to lowsulfur users would cost less
for cleanup equipment on
each individual plant, but
would add $15 billion to total
construction costs because
more plants are likely to be
built.
"I think this, in teflll.!l of
cost, is one of the most
significant (orders) the
.agency has put out,'' he told a
news conference.
"By 19911 we expect about
200 new fossil-luel-flr~d
power plants to bum nearly
1.5 billion tons of cool to
produce vitally needed
energy for this. country.
"Today's proposal would
protect air quality during this
period of enormous coal
consumption by ensuring that
all new plants employ the
best technology available for
reducing pollution," he said.

VOL XXIX

were saying privately : the
conference, after one week,
hangs in the balance, and the
outcome depends on Sadat's
decision.
The conference schedule of
meetings - one of the few
Items of information being
given out by the official
spokesman - has set a
pattern which indicated the
direction of the negotiations,
although the substance of
. those negotiations are a

•

e

- Radioactive devise stolen

Princess seamed w ith tuck kni t
tr i m on bodi ce inserts and sleeve
cuff s, ba ck zipper.

5TA1'f: OF OHIO . DEI'AIIfiHHT OF II• ·
11 r

'

llr:IIDWARD K. DeLONG
'·-_ASalNGTON (UP!) The
Environmental
'Protection Agency has called
. 'for a '10 billion crackdown on
: Ill' pollution from future coal1ireil power plants, saying the
)lropoaed new standard could
be one of the most c011Uy it
·t.J lasued.
" But the agency also may
eae the new regulations, and
thus cut the cost of
ampllance, for plants that
burit low sulfur coal.
Whatever it does, the .
eleanup move will mean
1liCJier home electric bills
.because utilities will pasa the
COlt of compliance on to their
customers.
· Under the plan ouWned
Monday by EPA chief
Douglas Costle, all new coallind po1rer plants - no
.O.tter what type of coal they
burn - would have to
ltll!ninate 85 percent of tbeir
JIOlelltlal sulfur dioxide pollutlcin by 1990.
- &amp;lch a unif&lt;rm percentage
eutback would cause power
. plants burning low-sulfur
coal from mines in the West
to produce much le111 total
pollution than plants burning
hlghsulfur coal from mines in
the Midwest and East.
qo.tle acknowledged it Ia a
Cllllltrovenlal approach. He
llld ·another option would be
Ill let plants burning lowlllllfur coal reduce their
"'entia! emissions by a
IDnr percent, making their
_total pollution comparable to

Fire chiefs

IELBERFELDS

Chessie

EPA calls
crackdown
I

and daughter, Mary Struder,
Eliza belli Vance, Jerri :
Wallace, Glennla Wallen,
Freddie Watera, Verbl•
Waugh, James Wooldridge.
Birth, Sept 8
. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Mash,
son, Point Pleasant.
Blrlba, SepL I
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Hodge, daughter, Welllton.
Mr. and Mrs. Als Halley,
son, Cheshire. Mr. and Mra.
Tracy Dlcua, 10n, Itadcllff.
Dbcbat'let ·
Louis Blevins, Mn. Ben·
jamin Bragg and son,
Gregory Gooderham, Gus
Henry, Letha Markham,
Todd Mugrage, Ralph Oller,
Timothy Pancake, Ja~qea
Patterson, Matthew Sheela,
Betty Smith, Reba Smith.
Birth, Sept. 10
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wl~~e~~~an, son, Patrlct.

· responsibility for an arm
which used to be part d.
Jordan. He could only accept
it as a basis f&lt;r negotiations,
which would imply that
Jordan would become a
participant in any conference
following a successful Camp
David summit.
Powell said there Is no
basts
" for
Informed
speculation about
the
outcome" of the conference
- appparently a convoluted
WRY of saying whAt officials

Conference sources · Sadat.
They said the Israelis
translated that to mean the
delegations have begun the worked into the early
actual business of drafting morning hours Monday,
the language and details of a finishing details ol the
framework of a peace proposals, which were
settlement, which would be preaented to President Sadat
worked out later by foreign in the morning and to the rest
of the Egypllan delegation
ministers.
The .sources said the Monday night.
The S018'ces said Sadat's
summit las moved into its
final alld decialve phase, acceptance of a plan lor the
after the Israeli and West Bank would not he final,
American delegations since he does not take
worked
!JUI to
' out prCJPQsals. to
.

.....

Evelyn Beaver, Sanford
Bills, Howard BriUUion, Mai'Y'
Burnette, Mrs. Robert Burns
and daughter, Edward
'Campbell, Thomas Carlisle,
Edna Carsey, Betty Casto,
Brenda Causey, Timothy
DeLong, Mabel Ewing,
Bessie Fell, Kathleen Fetters, Nellie Fields, Carol
Graham, David Groves,
Mahala Hagley, Tomas
Hqynes, Stephen Horsley,
Wesley Jackson, Vicky
James, Janet Johnson,
Juanita Lambert, Sharon
Manley, Lyla Patrick,
Harvey Pelfrey, Richard
Perkins, Ida Preston, Herbert Reffett, Dorothy Rife,
Pleasant Valley Hoopttal
Betty Rimm~, Rilla Ruak,
Discharged: Mrs. Joveline. Mrs. Pearl · Siders and
Montero, Lakin;
Lynn , daughter, Mrs. Clyde Smith
Harris, Buffalo; Mrs. Gerald
Shouldis, Ripley; Mrs. Jan
Allen , Letart,· Mary Keams,
Hartford; Debra Chevalier, 1
Vinton ; Clarence Schurman, 1
Letters CJI oplaloa are weleomed. Tile)' lbGUd be leu
Point Pleasant ; Alice Sauer, 1 than 380 wordiiOII&amp; (or Abject to recJadloa by the edltw)
1
Point Pleasant; Thomas 1 and
be 11--' with the
Hancock , Point Pleasant ·,
must
,.....
stpee'a ....--. N-lliay I
I be withheld upon publlcatica. .However, on ~t,
Veanna Cundiff, Mason; Mrs. 1 namet will be dbciOied. Leaen lbould be 1a lood tute,
Orman Hall, Point Pleasant; I addres 1t118 las
1 noutttl
Harley Bonecutter, Letart; . 1
aes, ao pe
"·
!
Crystal
Whittington,
Roberts burg: Mrs. James
Burdette, Point Pleasant;
Charles Sheline, Henderson;
Mrs. Cleo Smith, Glenwood;
I would Uke to take this q,portunlty to elqiiWI my opinion
.
Mrs. Albert Blackwell, on a much concerned mpt,ter.
Racine.
, After bavlng atlencled the Southern.Fedtnl Hocking
Births - A son to Mr. and football game Friday, SePt. I, I was appalled at the behavior ol
Mrs.
James
Merrick, one ol our athletic cilrectora,
Gallipolis; a son to Mr. and
At some time c1ur1n1 !be foar1h ~. the Soutllml a.nd
Mrs. Steve Burton, Pomeroy; began to play the light 1011g. Tben, our athletic direckr or
a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. coach 01', what,ever Ids title, dllplayed an Idiotic behaviOI' by
Jackie Donahue, Pliny; a screaming, in front d. a lew laUidred people, at our bud and
daughter to Mr. and · Mrs. band direckr. The ~e ·wblch he IIMid was not at all
suitable or necesaary.
Jerry Owens, Syracuse.
I have a - who plllyts In the band. lfli Ia not 111bjecled to
thia type of language from bls band director or at IKme.
Holzer Medical Center
U this Is the type ol character we are paying u a coach '
Discharges, Sept. 8
Timothy Adams, Madge and teacher, then maybe we should all talk to the school bou-d
Alexander, Jamie Baker, bef&lt;re contract time ccmee again. - Earl Cleland, Rae

SUAANCIE . C[llflrlUTE OF COMPLIAHC[.
Tlir Un!l.-r~ IJrlfd, 'lllll~ rl!l1r'l11kr i l

(UP!)

mona at Camp David to

phase to see if approiiCheli
can be found to deal with the
important differences that
remain." ·
Egypllan sources said the
principal remaining
difference is the future of the
occupied West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
Powell, Prestdent carter's
pre111 secretary, said the
conference Is als!l "trying to
refine areas where tbere is

STIJDENTS INJURED
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) Two Middleburgh Heights
Junior High School students
were rushed to Southwest
Community Hospital this
morning after being struck
by lightning on the way to
school.
Treated aqd released wu
Bemle Kopec, a ninth grader
at the junior hlich· Being held
for obeervallon waa · John
Rossi, alto a ninth grader.
School offlclals said the
boys were struck during a
thundentorm as they crossed
an open field on the grounds
of Midpark High School a few
blocka from the J~r high.

stated.
Mayor Fred Hoffman was
·in agreement. He sa id the
equipment could be paid for
by three departments of the
village - street, water and
sewerage - with each
department paying one-third

of the cost. He, too, stressed a
water break could take
several days lo repair
without a backhoe.
How eve r, Grate sta ted
emphatically that he doesn't
see where the money fo r the
purchase could come fr(l[n.

Charge false
claims Heller

lie stated the purc ha se
" would put the vi !loge over a
barrel." Wh en horro w1ng
money for the purchase w~! !;
brougl1t up, Grote indicate'!
that he would not sign ti ll!
note.
Tbc five members couu
cilmen present. Kelly. Kir,g.
Bill Waller:&lt; . Dewey Horton
and Carl Horkv vut&lt;!d for ,the
motions on the pu rclm se anO
a Jetter was read frum ti tL
sixlh council mem be r ,
Charles Mullen , who wn:;
unable tc, be present for the
meeting. Mullen indi catcrl
the purchase ,&lt;;hould be mad e,
but

did re comm end nn·

The
Ohio
Attorney Heller said. "This cannot be rondilioning for th€ t;quip
General's recent charge that done overnight. We are now menl. However , the bid a cOhio Power Com pan y is in the ma&lt;ket for reliable cepted Was for o bac1dlfli'
'' ignorin g" Ohi o coa l is long-term suppli es uf washed without air conditioning .
totally false, according to local coa l meeting suitable
Mullen's letter in part .&lt;mid:
Charles A. Heller, the quality and delivery con- " I would like to •;tate my
company 's executive vic e ditions."
viewpoin ts on t h~! pel)l lin1:
president. The char~e was
Heller said Ohio Power action cooccrr'l.ing th~ pm
made in a letter frorn At· already has phased out one chase of a trnt1or - lo:Hicr ·
torney General William J . western coal supplier; did not backhoe.
Brown to Gov . James A. exercise its right to renew a
I feel that it is nf th e utl! ,..., l
Rhodes and quoted in the contra ct which will expire at importance that tl1i ~ pi&lt;~t ;; lif
the end of 1979, and recently equipment be purchns\"1. To
state's press.
Heller said tl1e fact that signed an agreement for the do ollr erwisc would put li te
Ohio Power is the state's . delivery of 500,000 additiona l village in the positi on uf not
.::~:::::: :::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::~:;:::,:,:::,:,:::: :: ::: :::::::::::::::: .largest user of Ohio coal, has
tons of Ohio coal for use at bein g able to provide l) w
created
2,000
Ohio
coal
Gavin Plant in Cheshire,
EXTENDED WEATHER
neressary servil'es etnd
The only reason Ohi o maintenance of the vota w·.
Tburaday through . mining jobs in the last
sevet'a1 years; ·and has an- Power obtained low-sulfur
Saturday, ~oo1 tbroagb tbe
As the Cl&gt;st of equipment
nounced plans to increase C&lt;Ja l from the West several . rl scs each year and the Ya luc
period, wltb raJa aad
that ·usage can hardly be years ago was to mix that of the' dollar tl ecr eases f;"a ch
possible tbandersbowen
considered "ignorin g" Ohio coal with Ohio coal to meet year, small villages are pu• 111
Thursday and Friday.
propo sed su lfur dioxide the position of h~tving tn
coat.
Highs wiD be In tbe 701, aad
"The attorney general has emission reg ulation s thnt pruden tl y purcha se tlt i' H'
lows Ia the 5h or lower 10s
repeatedly made false and were unduly st.ringcnt &gt;md
Thursday and Friday, and
( (' OI)l intU.'rl Oil JWgf' J!J l
irresponsi bl e stat ements would have pn&gt;hibited tire
In the low or middle 50s
regarding Ohio Power's fuel exclusi ve use of Ohi o cua l,
Saturday.
practices," Heller said . " His Heller said.
" We have not caused one
::::::::::,:;:,:::;:,:,:,:,:;:::::;:,:;:::::,:::.:::::::,:,:,:::,:,:,:;::::: Iat est ch a rg es are particulariy disturbing sin ce Ohio coa l miner to lose his
they are complete disto rt ion5 job, and . in fact, have created
about 2,000 new mining jobs
of the facts ."
"We burn from D to 10 in the 1970s in conn ection with
million tons, or more than 20 three deep mine operations
per cent, of the state's annual which supply the Ohio coal
coat produ c1ion," Heiler sa id . burn ed at Ga vin Plant."
·•our intention is to increase Heller ex plained.
UnJtcd Press Int~rua tinnal
Heller stated that Ohio
the use uf local coal by about
Thuroderstorrn s · poured
40 per cent in the next few Power for .a number of years
heavy
rain on :;o uth Texas
ha s been fighting for
years."
early
todoy ,
floodin g
Brown's reference to Ohio rea sonable air quality
hi
ghways
and
streets,
as
·· • Power's ··expandin ~ use" of standards to help keep
U1understorms
diminished
electric
costs
to
customers
as
western . coa l al so is
erroneous, according to low as po&gt;Sible. "Our efforts over the North und Centml
COLUMBUS (UP!)- John Heller.
have heen beneficial to Ohi o's Great Plains.
Parsons, assistant
Water was "up to car
"Two weeks ago at an coal mining industry," he
superintendent of the Toledo Environmental
hoods" on Corpus Christi.
Protection said.
City seh()()!s, was named Agency hearing in St. ClairsHeller added that Ohio Texas, streets and ioolated
executive director f&lt;r the ville, we repeated statements Power is not attempting tu the police station at on e point.
newly established Office of we have made many times purchase coa l rnin()S in either Several hi ghways were
School Management Assist- that we arc phasing out use of Utah or Wyoming, as the closed around Vi ctoria, w!&gt;jch
ance by the state Board of western co al ~ t Gavin Plant,' ' attorney gcnerul chargetl.
received more ttum 5 int:hcs
Education at its meeting
of rain in 24 how·s.
Monday.
" It's been raining all ni ght
The ofllce will provide
and still is," a Victoria pol ire
inservlce education to school
dispatcher said today . " All I
officials in fiscal and
know is that we've got lots of
managerial matters and wlll
streets flooded."
also monitor the Emerg_ency
Scattered thundershowers
School Loan Program.
extended
throu gh
the
Parsons baa been superinMississippi and Ohio valleys
tendent of the N&lt;rthwestem
rnrd [rom Michigan across
Athens,
Albany, New York and New Englund .
Over 125 firefighters from were
Local School District in
Meigs County; direct&lt;r of the 20 area fire departments Richl and, Rome Waterloo,
Lightning bolts struck a
Division
of
School attended the Hocking Valley Ame sville , Nel so nville, high school football field in
Finance in the department of Regional Fire School at l'ri- Washington Twp .. Logan, Whitman , Mass ., killing an
Education ; assistant County Join t Voc atio nal McArthur, Belpre, Jackson, assistant coach and slightly
Pomeroy, Orange Twp ., injuring 14 players and two
superintendent of schools in School Sunday, Sept. 10.
Gallipolis,
Coalton, Syracuse, teachers.
"The
flre
training
classes
Dade County, Fla., and acRutland
and
Middleport.
were
geared
to
pruv
ide
the
ting superinttrldent of Toledo
"The players und coaches
The
fire
school was were knocked to the groWJd
participants
with
up-to-elate.
City Schools from Jan. I, 1978
information on the latest sponsored by the Richland all over the place," said
until Alll!ust, 1978.
fireflghting
techniques", said Area Fire Brigade and lunch Michael Shey, 16, Hanson . "I
The board alto awarded
Chief
Adkins,
Chairman of was prepared and served by was knocked to the field and
special education program
the
school's
Planning the Richland Auxiliary.
charters to county boards of
was stunned but never lost
During the morning consciousness.''
Committee.
Classes
were
mental retardation In Adams,
Auglalze, Clermont, held in e~tinguishment, auto assembly, Chief Lloyd Gill of
The assistant coach killed ,
Cuyahoga, Fulton, Gallla, extrication, arson. electrical the McArthur Fire Depart- Dennis O'Brien, 30, was
Hamilton, Henry, Logan, hazards, pumper relay water ment was honored for his directly hit by .the bolt, the
Lucas, Mercer and Ross movement, and ladder many years of service to the corner said .
McArthur community and his
operations.
counties.
Eau Claire, Wis., had more
Through the efforts of Chief years offire instruction in the than 3 inches of rain Mondnv
Knight of the Nelsonville Fire Hocking Valley.
night and Victoria, Texas,
The Hocking Valley Fire had nearly 2 inches.
Department, participants
received practical training in School wishes tothank TriA tornado touched down
SQUAD CALLED
fire
' extinguishment. Chief County Joint Vocational near EusUs, Neb., winds
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad wu ~aUed Knight located an abandoned School for the use of the gusted up to .75 mph near
to 1:111 High St. at 5: tO p.m. house in Nelsonville which school building, the Rlcbtand Dickinson, N.D., and up to
Monday for Eus- French the owners donated to the Area Fire Brigade, Chlef nearly 70 mph at Watertown ,
who waa taken to Veterans school. The house was set on Knight and the NeiBQnvllle S.D., Monday afternoon · but
fire and firefighters ex- community, and the following caused no serious damage.
Memorial Hospital.
tinguished
the fire . Practical State certified fire training
Cooler air moved today
At 1:67 p.m. the aquad went
auto
e•trlcntlon
experiences instructors: Charles Legar, across the Northern Rockies,
to '" N. Fourth Ave. for were· also received
at a local Earl Goodin, John Hegedus, the intermountain region and
Mlmle Clark, allo a medical
Nelsonville
junk
yard.
Dick Wittekind, Marvin Sells, the Northern Great l..akes.
patient, who wu taken to
Area
fire
Stan
fighting
squads
Wilson, Andy Lemley Southern sections contillUed
Veterana Memorial Hospital.
partlclpati'f in the classes and George Envoldaen.
;
. to have w9 temperayes.
~

'

Grid coach
killed by

Parsons

lightning

heading
office

Firefighters
attend school

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