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I

W-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. July 31, 1977
'

Rhodes signs hill staggering
motor vehicle registrations
vehicles over 12 months
instead of two and allowing
motorists toget new plates by
mail if they choose .
Rhodes mildly objected to
the mandated decrea.se of the
numbe r of deputy motor
vehicle registrars who would
administer the new system
and its start-up costs, but
generally hailed the new
system as far better than the
current ooe.
"This bill is a step in the
direction of making it easier
for Ohio motorists to meet
their obligation under the Jaw
to renew motor vehicle
Randall L. Davis, Carolyn Jicenses each year," said
R. Davis to R. Gene Brasel, Rhodes in a prepared
Right of Way, Rutland.
statement.
John R. Blaker, Susan 0 .
The bill, sponsored by Rep.
Blaker to Roger E. Weaver, James A. Baumann, D,
Cathy Darlene Weaver, .51 Columbus, passed both
acre in 100 acre lot, Syracuse chambers of the legislature
hy wide margins. It woUld
• Sutton.
Gary L. Whited, Teri L. become fully effective in 1979,
Whited to Andrew J . Jordan, though motorists will begin to
Dorothy M. Jordan, 10 acres, notice the effect of the new
Olive.
law as early as April 1978.
Ohio's current system of
W. H. Lowman, Dorothy L.
Lowman to John M. Wells, 18 reregistering motor vehicles
only during April and May
acres, Olive.
Audra F . Weddle, Dan would be eliminated under
Weddle to Lawrence Wedd]e, the new system.
Beginning in January 1979,
Helen Weddle, 1 acre,
Lebanon .
John S. Codner, Beverley
L. Codner to Gary L. Gibbs, Papers filed by
Donna Gibbs, Parcel. Sutton.
Jimmy Blaine McClure to
Robert William Caruthers, ·new local finn
Diane Caruthers, 1.022 acre,
COLUMBUS (Special)
Chester.
Articles
of incorporation
F, Berl Boggs, Ida May ·
have
been
filed in Colwnbus
Boggs to John T. Smith, 1
with
Secretary
of State Ted
acre, Orange.
W.
Brown
by
R&amp;N Motor
Cornelius Phillips, Barbara
Sales,
Inc.,
Gallipolis.
K. Phillips to Dow Ben
lncorp6rators are Howard
Roush, Trus., 11 acres,
F. Thivener, Ruth Thivener
Chester.
Lowell Carper, Helen and John E. Houck. John E.
Carper to Thomas G. Mc- Houck, 201 Kineon Dr. is the
Clung, Madeline McC!ting, agent. Articles were filed· by
Atty. William D. Conley.
Lot; Pomeroy.
COLUMBUS(UP!l-Even
th ough he noted several
potential problems with the
bill, Gov. James A. Rhodes
Friday signed into law major
legislation to stagger Ohio's
system of registering motor

Meigs
Property
Transfers

THIS WEEK'S

July 31st

motor vehicle. owners whose
last names begin wiUl " A' '

which helped draft the
legislatien, would help
eliminate the long lines and
frustrated tempers at the
ends of April and May.
There would be a SO&lt;ent
increase In the total cost of
licenSe plates under the new
· system. Mail registration
would cost an additional

would be required to get new
12-month license plat~ .
Owners whose last names
begin wilh " B" would
register in February, etc.
Th e
spread - out
alphabetical system of
registration according to the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles,' $1.50.
' .
The basix.license plate cost·
would remain at $10, plus the
$5 local county option tax.
The deputy registrar's fee,

•

Airports

however, would increase

from 50. cents to $1. The $1.50
Continued from page D-1
surcharge
lor mail service
WeStern Somali Liberation
would
cos
t
administrative
Front, Ums far has proved
costs.
itself more the master of the
The number of deputy
air waves than Ethiopia,
registrars
would be reduced
willing to feed newsmen a
from
the
current
648 to 228,
string of victory clalms by
eacb
of
them
"full--service
"
the guerrillas.
operatioos
able
to
register
all
Fully aware of an
interested audience and the types of motor vehicles.
The new system would also
value or propaganda, both
provide
the state with a
sides began recently to
better
accounting
method,
escalate their claims to levels
through
a
computer,
than
which independent observers
presently
exists.
judged to be a little short OJf
Rhodes parti cularly
ludicrous - like the body
singled
out the more efficient
count syndrome in Vietnam.
accounting
reforms and the
For instance, the Front
staggered
registrations as
reported alter two mooths ol
major
reasons
he signed the
fighting that its guerrillas
bill
sent
to
his
desk by the
killed and captured nearly
8,000 Ethiopian troops and Ohio House on June 28.
Rhodes said he had also
destroyed 23 Ethiopian
.directed
Motor Vehicle
warplanes in what essentiall~
Registrar
Dean
Dollison . tD
has been asmallscale, mobile
monitor implementation of
w~ese figures reyresented !he bill "placing top priority
about ooe-third of the gov~rn- ;:::bli~~~venience to the
ment troops in the area and
,.1 have also asked him
two-thirds
the. entire
Ethiopian air force. The (Dollison) to be alert to
claims were dismissed as cbanges t~~ ~Y be reqUired
totally exaggerated but there · m the law, said Rhodes.
was no effective way of
Because t~e new ~y~em
cbecking them thoroughly. has to be .phased m to
· The Eritrean conflict now become fully unplemented by
16 years old and Af~ica •s January 1979, some motor
longest war, has been vech!Cle owners will ·be
virtually impossible to follow. · reqwred to pay up to 100 per
_ though with the rebels cent of the
normal
apparently gainiilg the upper registration fee . -'
hand they began to take . For · example, owners
· ·
I' t
·
. whose last names begm with
Journa 1s s on spec1a 11 y "X"
~' Z"
uld b 1979
GOnducted and closely · . or
wo.
uy
supervised
tours
of license plates 1D May and
" liberated" areas. The June ?f 1978 at one and onewarfront was not included in half times the normal cost.
the itinerary.
The P.lates, however, would
This correspondent was be v8lid for 18 mooths- ~t~!
among a handful of reporters December 1979 - when X
in 197~ who r~ched the and
driv~rs would have
beleagured Eritrean capital to renew thetr registratiOn
of Asmara as rebels tried to jlnder
the
normal,
!llphabetical schedule.
capture it.

"z:·

thru
August 6th

How to care for your car
BY CATHERINE BENET
It might have been the
oldest trick since the invention of the wheel but
nevertheless I !ell for it.
Driving into a service station
I asked the attendant to check
the oil. Not being totally
Ignorant to the world of
Popular Mechanics, I realiu
that four chemicals are
needed to run a car - gas, oil,
water and windshield l'jiper
fluid. It's hard to tell if the
greatest of these is gas or oil,
but they do compliment each
other. Bui back to the gas
station ...
The man, not being totally
ignorant either, poked around
(making a big production of it
all) handled the oil stick the
way Bernstein handles a
baton.
"You are two quarts low,"
he decreed, then adding
quickly, "Your htlllband does
know about this, doesn 't he?"
"Oh, no," I replied quickly,
"I have a car not a husband.:'
That statement alooe should
go down in quotable quotes. I
do realize that one can have
one with ' the other but let's
face it, both are costly and
time consuming habits.
But the attendant just
smiled, quite satisfied with ·
obtaining the sought after
Information.
Being somewhat slow when
it comes to male lines and at
limesthe male sector, it took
111e awhile to catch on but
when I did I could have
clubqe.i him with a gas pwnp.
Whenever the male sector
gets to me I adopt a middle of
the road radical feminist
stance. So I remembered my
old feminist teaching and
adopted feminist phase part
II, subplank C, topic 5~ .
Translation : how to take care
of my car by myself.
When starting out on any
new project, it's best to go to
the library and check out an
entire section on the topic. So
off to the library I did go.
I found a fairly elementary
book on car .care with easy
words and lots of pictures.
What r~lly sold me on the
book was the only small sigh
of popularity and credibility ;
a grease Smug .Qn on.e of the
pages. Surely this was the
book for me.
The first thing I learned
was what and where the
. engine was, then what the
battery was. It was already
a familiar object because
of one famous running .

After several days I was - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ... - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
arrested, flown back to Addis · 1

Area Deaths

~;.~ned. and

99~

.!!FOUR CONES!!
Flavors for this Week
Chocolate

Peanut Butter
Raspbeny

TRY OUR

STILL THE BEST
CHICKEN DINNER
OFFERED ANYWHERE.

~ dairy :sle ~
r_ocust Street

992-5248

Middleport, 0.

briefly :
Recent wars fought across I
the continent are similar.
FRANK M. FUGATE
A major conflict is
currently underway in
POMEROY - Frank M .
southern Angola where the Fugale, 80, of 201 Mulberry
pro-Western National Unioo Ave., Pomeroy, died Friqay
for the Totallndependence of at 0' Bleness Hosplta I In
Athens . Mr . Fugate was
.Angola movement of Jonas preceded in death by his
Savimbi apparently has parents, Frank and Margaret .
· .captured huge areas of the Gloechne. Fugate ; his first
· wife, Gertrude Kleir Fugate;
south.
·his second wife, Gaynelle
Mainly because of logistics Wise Fugate, and a sister,
and the huge distances invol- Mary Wipple.
ved, only a handful of
He is survived by a son, Dr.
witnesses have observed the W. K. Fugate, Athens ; a
daughter. Mrs . William
struggle.
~cker of ClncinnatL a
Much the same was true brother, James Fugate,
during the Angolan civil war Pomeroy ; a sister, Margaret
'!self
Dannhardt, Pittsburgh, Pa ..
I
·
three grandchildren, and two
Correspondents were fre- great-grandchildren.
qllently shuttled around rear
Mr. Fugate was a retired
areas and shown captured Pomeroy businessman who
towns, but never allowed to served with the . Navy in
World War I. l-ie was a
the front.
charter member o.f Drew
The story has repeated . Webster Post 39 American
itself in the former Spanish Legion. and the · Disabled
Sahara

where

Algerian~

the ·Sacred Heart Catholic
backed Polisario guerrillas Church of Pomeroy.
are fighting Mauritanian and
Funeral services will be
Moroccon soldiers.
held Monday at 10 a.m. at .the
However, the border church wilh the Rev . Father
fighting between Egypt and
Libya did produce some
photographs to docwnent the
conflict. A rare occurrence
in Africa.

Frigidaire
Duty Washer
·and matching
big..capacity Dryer.

WASHER
DRYER

SALE
'569

American Veterans, and of

To help 'deliver dependable performance, this Frigidaire Heavy
Duty Washer has a heavy duty
motor and other components used
in Frigidaire Commercial Washers.ltkeepstheshapeand stretch
in knits longer with the gent'le
wasH action of the Frigidaire .
Knits cycle, helps keep wrinkl.es
out of permanent press items_ with
3 Permanent Press Wash cycles.
Team it up'with the big-load dry' ing capacity .ofthe Frigidaire ·
Dryer. It lets you dry as much as
an 1801b. load all at once, and provides tender care for everylhing
from dellcates to denims.

!

Paul Welton off i ciating .
Burial will be in the Sacred

Driver

LAFF. A. DAY

commercial which claims
that their battery will start

after the lights have been left
on during what seemed like a·
72 hour football game in
Kalamatoo, Mich.
The part I really wanted to
Jearn about was oil, which
turned out to be the easiest
part. You simply unscrew the
cap and pour. It 1.5 an awful
babit of mine to go overboard
on any project so for the ne~
week I tried to add oil every
night. For some odd reason I
overlooked the part of
checking it with an oil stick.
When it came to changing
tires I mustered that with a
small amount of effort witll
only five fingernails broken. 1
haven't tried to really change
ooe yet but I can quote word
for word how to do it.
Believing that I had
learned all the important
steps In car care I couldn't
wait to stop back at the
service station and announce
my knowledge and skill. So
the other morning I pulled in
and looked for the attendant.
He was nowhere to he found
but in his place was a young
dark haired man, about my
age, niC1! brown eyes ... "Oh,
could you please help me?
I'm not married and cars are
•just the most confusing things

"

So ·much for being a
mechanic or a feminist.
POLITICIAN DIES

TOKYO, Y(UPI ) - Chou
Chu-an, a .fanner member or
the Chinese People's Political
Counciltative Conference to
the fourth · national committee, has died of an illness,
Radio Peking reported
Saturday. He was 86.
TRIAL CANCELLED

POMEROY - The jury
trial Set for Monday, Aug. 1,
in Meigs County Court has
been cancelled, and jurors
need ·not report, Robert E.
Buck, Meigs County Court
Judge announced Saturday.

of auto
jailed
POMEROY - An accident
Friday evening on College
Road in Syracuse has
resulted in the arrest of a 22
year old Middleport man,
held on . several charges by
the Pomeroy Police and for .
reckless operation by the
Meigs County Sherifrs Dept.
according to Sheriff James J.
Profitt Saturday.
Tony Manley, S. 3rd St.,
Middleport, was In county jaU
Saturday morning following a
chase by Pomeroy police.
Manley, allegedly driving a
car owned by Terri Oliver of
Middleport, while attempting
to elude the Pomeroy Police
cruiser, rarr off the road on
the left side and over an
embankment. The sheriff's
report indicated Manley had
been
driving
without
headlights.
The accident occurred
approXimately 375 feet off SR
124 on College Road.
Although there were no injuries, heavy damage was
incurred to the vehicle.
In other action Friday, a 14
year ol!\ runaway from
London, Ohio, and her 19 year
old companion, Bill Oxley,
were picked up In the Dyesville area during the afternoon by deputies and
Meigs County Juvenile Officer.
The parents came after the
girl Friday evening and
Madison. Co unty deputies
.were to pick up Oxley
Saturday afternoon.
Oxley was cl&gt;arged with
contributing to the unruliness
of a juvenile. Charges had
been filed in Madison County
and a teletype warrant had
been sent to Meigs CoQilty.

"I want 110111ething that shuts olf
a TV set when I yell, 'Dinner is
ready'' "

WALKOUT READY
DULUTII, Minn. (UPI) Afederal judge in Pltfaburgh
was presiding over a hearing
again today on a request by
major steel companies to
!l'event a walkout by about
20,000 steelworkers · in
MiMesota and Michigan.
The
hearing
began
Wednesday before U.S.
District Judge Oen!.el &amp;lyder .
Some 14,000 steelworkers
on Minnesota's M-IX !roo
Range and another 6,000 in
Michigan lire threatening to
strike over local issues. The
major dispute 1.5 a demand by
ore-producing locals for an
Incentive-pay plan s!mUar to
one covering untm members
wbo work In steel mills.
Contract talks continue In
Duluth on the local Issues.
The basic wage structure was
established by a national·
contract, but under the
experimental negotiating
agreement local issues can be
negotiated separately.
The steel . companies are
COiltending the locals . are
threatening to strike over
economic issues not subject
to strike action authorized by
the negotiating agreement.
Saturday morning the
Sberifrs Office learned that
two juveniles from Meigs
County had been picked up In
Mt. Vernon, Ohio. They had
been reported as runaways.
The parent&amp; picked them up
later the same day.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
AUGUST SALE! SIMMONS HIDE..A-BEDS
AND KROEHLER SLEEP OR LOUNGE
USE OUR
SENSIBL£
CREDIT ·
SERVICE

Heart Cemetery . Friends

to 9 p.m . Rosary will be held

at ·7 tonight.

Co lumbu s.
formerly of
Hobson near Middleport, died

Wednesday . He retired In
1973

as

a

negotiator

for

property riQhts of wav and
acquisition
of
the

Ohio

Department

of

FURNilURE DEPARtMENT
ON lHE lHIRD FlOOR

Transpor tat ion ; served In
war tinie

with

Department ~

the War
Chief
of

Engineers, and later with the

OPA ; was a

member of

Cynthia Lodge No. 155,
F&amp;AM Aladdin Temple,
Shrine and Scottish Rite,
Valley of Columbus.

He is survived by a sister-

in-law and brother -in -law,

Joseph and Mary Del Greco.
Columbus, and friends.

Services were held Friday
with burial in Forest Lawn
Mausoleum.

Rodeo action

Reg. '389.00 Full Size Hide ABed. ...................... Sale 1311.00
'444.00 Love Seat Sleep or lounge...... , .. ~ ........... S. 1355.00
'648.00 Full Size Sleep or lounge............. -....... : SMe '518.00
'649.00 full Size Hide-A-Bed :............................ Sale '519.00
'684.00 Full Size Sleep or lounge ..................... ,. Sale '547.00
'689.00 Queen Size Sleep or Lounge ............. _..... Sale '551.00
'698.00 Queen Size Sleep or Lounge .................... Sale '558.00
'1089.00 3 Pc. Queen Size Sleep or Lounge ........... Sale '699.00

W. M. RobiDBon

!\. ~eports
: ; :~

\:..;... involve wo~kers in
111eius mr"nes
~~·!.•:~,~!,; th•ee 1r~~
~.= .,'
-e~
.: . SALEM- CENTER . f
of violence and
~

•

struction of the plant was
begun in early 1974, but was
slowed down later that year.
Recently, Appalachian announced that new contracts
had been let for various
facilities at the plant and that
construction were' moving
ahead in an effort to have this
capacity available before the
winter of 1~1.
Robinson, a native of
Uniontown, Pa., has been
mar•ger of Glen Lyn since
(Continued on page 2)

enttne

~f~~

VOL XXVIII

I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 75

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 1977

Reports

'.j.::

threats of violence - ba~ked up lrith shotguns - were
:':: circ:ulating among miners today as a second week of

Steelworkers
go on strike .

wor~:'!e. ::=a:fM~~s:f~ \t:!.;kers of
:America voted ' 'Unanimously over the weekend to stay

:·=.•=,..':·.•':
:
.
:

elf the job." Me.mbers of the union told local media
···· some of their nwnber had been warned by outside

~ ~~~::::.==

PI'ITSBURGH (UP! ) About 14,000 members ot the
·:&lt;· afternoon voted to stay out "until some kind of :::; United Steelworkers of
::=' understanding or settlement is reached," union '.:·.:.:.: America went on strike today
at 15 plant!l In five states in
members said unofficially.
Dissident miners In West Virginia, Ohio and ::: the basic steel industry's first
Kentucky have been 111 strike in scattered places for ,..:,.,::.,.: major walkout since 1959.
The USWA said the strikes
two weeks, pwportedly In protest of cubl in the miners'
centered
on local issues at "12
j.:.•.~: medical payments due to shortages in union funding . :::::
companies
in
Payment!l into the fund are based on coal production : \ : mining
Minnesota
and
Michigan's
~~~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::;;-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::):::~:
Upper Penisula, Joseph T.
Ryerson warehouses in
Cleveland and Carnegie, Pa.,
and an electrical cable
divlslan of U.S. Steel Corp. in
Worcester, Mass.
The USWA said a
settlement was reached over
By United Preoslnlen!aUooal
tbe weekend at the Groveland
TAIPEI, TAIWAN- TYPHOON VERA, lashing northern Mine in !;on Mountain,
Taiwan witb 133 ·m.p.h. winds, killed at least 25 persons Mich., and three other mines
Sunday, crippled the port city of Keelung and broke a record in Minnesota and Wyoming
set 18111 week by Typhoon Tbelrna. Vera also crippled what was are working under an
left of Taiwan's ability to handle containerized shipping, and extension of their contracts.
offlcialssald'/9frelgbterswereadvised to steam to other ports . A union spokesman said he
unleu theY 'Carried their own cranes.
.
did not know If negotiations
Ita re.cuers dug through the rubl!le left by Vera; a new
typhoon named Wanda formed today In the Pacific Ocean 750
miles south of Tokyo. Vera's l~e winds broke the record
set 18111 week by 'J'Yphoon Thelma, which whipped the southern
part OJf the ia1and with 120 m.p.h. winds.

:j ~.: ,.:

.

?

l.

were being held over . the
strikes.
A spokesman for U.S. Steel
said U;e steel industry plans
to sue the USWAfor !reach OJf
COiltract.
"There probably are some
legitimate local issues, rot I
think bjlsically the eCOilomiC
matter of incentives Is the big
issue as far as the
steelworkers are concerned,
and that is not a legitimate
· localissue foc a strike," the
spokesman said.
A prolooged walkout co.uld
curtail steel productioo in the
united States, rot industry
spokesmen said there · was
enough ore on hand to llmlt
Ute Immediate effects of the
walkout.
---·The Experimental
Negotiating Agreement
signed by the USW and the
Big 10 steel makers in 1973
(COntinued on (llll!e 2)
.

Re·c kless driving
cited by patrol

WASIIINGTON- THREE GOP lEADERS today called
a full congressional Investigation of what one called a ·
"blatant political payoff" by President Carter to the maritime

• {(X'

Donald Brian Mink, 18, Rt.
2, Bidwell, was charged with
reckless operation following
an accident at 9:30 a.m.
Saturday on SR 141, three
tenths of a mile west of
Gallipolis.
The Gallla•Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Mink, going west, lost control
of hi.! car which struck a
vehicle operated by Carolyn
F. Taylor, 24, Patriot Star Rt.
There was heavy damage to
Mink's car and minor to the
Taylor vehicle.
The first of two Sunday
accidents occurred at 12: 10
a.m. on CR 2, one and three
tenths mlles east of SR 325
where Jerry L. M~Daniel, 28,
!1;. I, Middleport, going east,

lost control of his car in a
curve. The vehicle ran off the
left side of the highway
through a fence apd over an
embankment. There- was
. moderate damage.
A malfunction In the cruise
eontrol unit was blamed for
an accident at 1:13 p.m.
Sunday on SR 7, one tenth of a
mile ,north of milepost 7.
The patrol said the cruise
control malfunctioned on
car operated by Britton 0.
Mann, 55, South Point. Mann
swerved his car to miss a
signpost and struck a vehicle
operated by Alfred H. Yost,
Jr., 53, Ashland, Ky. There
was moderate damage to the
Yost vehicle. No citation was
issued.

a

Notices, local briefs

HOW ABOUT THIS! - Salisbury twp. trustees
worked all day Saturday cleaning up the area around the

E-R writ busy ·
The Middleport E-R Squad
was called several times over
the weekend: At 3:39 p.m.
Saturday to·Balley Run Road
for Mary Archer who was
Inken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 12 :21 p.m.
Sunday to the scene of an
accident at Main and Fourth
Sts. to treat a patient; · at
12:29 p.m. Sunday to 870 S.
Second for Laura Scott who
suffered an arm lacer~tion in
a fall against a glass door,
Inken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital' and at 8:40 a.m.
Monday to RuUand for Abe
Grueser who was lJl and was
. taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
lfednesday throug~
Friday, chance of rain
dally with highs In Uie 80s
and lows In tbe upper 50s
and 11011:

A public sale scbeduled p.m. to vacate !he hall for the
Republican National Chainnan Bill Brock, Senate Tuesday of the estate of the Fair.
Minority Leader Howard Baker and House Minority Leader late Guy D. Bolin, Rutland,
Pomeroy Chapter 186 OES
John Rhodes, at a joint news conference, called for the has been cancelled due to will
meet Tuesday, Aug. 2, at
circumstances
beyond
the
Investigation into Carter's support for a bill requiring tbat 9.~
7:45 p.m. at the Masonic
control
of
Dan
Smith,
the
per cent of an Imported oil be carried 111 u. s. tankers wilb
· Temple.
American crews. Broclt said Carter awroved the leglalation auctioneer.
even though It W88 oppoeed by the Pentagon, the Cmnm!!fce
SYRACUSE
The
Meigs
County
The
and Treasury departm~t!l, and h!s trade negotiator, !Wbert
Historical Society board . of Syracuse E-R squad an!\ Fire
Strlllllll.
trustees will meet at the Dept. are planning a yard
.
museum Wedllesday at 8p.m. sale Frtday and Saturday,
Aug. 12 and 13 and are in need
VALDEZ, ALASKA- MAMMOTH TANKERS lined up in
of
items to sell. All who can
the ice.free port of Valdez.today for their first fill-up of crude
Pomeroy Lodge 164,
contribute
are to can any of
cil hom the trans-Alaska plpellne. Ilelplte a lrlef shutdown, F&amp;AM, will meet In regular
Clear tonight With lows
woclters at the pipellne'Baouthern tennlnal pushed a rotton · session at 7:30 p.m. Wed- the following numbers, 992from
55 to 60. Partly cloudy
late Sunday, sending a black river gushing at 30,000 barrels,an .nesday. All Master Masons 7181, 99U888,.992-3125, or 992Tuesday with highs near 60.
2119. Proceeds will be used to ·Pro
hour lnlo tbe cargo tanka 111 the Arco Juneau.
.
are ilivited.
liability of precipitation is
pay on the new emergency
The llhlp's destination wtth iiiiiOO,~ balTels oo crude was
30
per
cent today and 10 per
a rtflnery at Olerry Point, Wallh. ·
Rock Springs Grange will vehicle.
and Tuesday.
cent
tonight
!lie was the lint tanker to begin carrying oil from meet Thursday, Aug. 4 at 8
Alub'180Q.mlle plpe1lne to enargy-bmgry Ainerlcans. Four
othtl' llhlpswere awaltlng their turna at the storage tanks.
uni!lls.

Another fault'.fo1•nd ..
9:30 A.M. to 5 P.M.
FRIDAYS 9:30 A.M. to 8 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN

president of Appalachian.
" It Is anticipated that
Robirulon will move to New
Haven dUring 1978 to devote
fun time to the new plant.
When this occ~. R. B.
Ratliff, presently assistant
manager of Glen Lyn Plant,
will become manager of Glen
Lyn," Vaughan said.
The plant at New Haven is
expected to be in service by
late 1980. It will have a
generating capacity of
1,300,000 -kilowatts. Con-

•

of violence

Weather

McARTHUR - Dennis Cable, Vinton
County forester, bas announced the
program for the Vinton County Loggers
,Rodeo, Aug. 6 at the Vinton County
Fairgrounds.
.
A&lt;;tion begins at 4 p.m. with cross-cut
sawing. other events will be a small chain
Ywing, large chain I!Bwing, modified
chain sawing, log rolling, knuckle-boom
loader demonstration, a tree fa!Ung
contest, timber skidding .demonstration
and awardi presentation. Another
hlghligbt will · be a helicopter demonlltratlon at 4:30 p.m.
·
TRADE PAC!' SIGNED
.
TEHRAN, Iran (UP!) "- Afghanistan
and the Soviet Union signed a »-year
trade agreement Friday under which
export of a variety of Soviet goods to the
landlocked fonner kingdom has been
guaranteed, Radio Kabul said today.
· The radio aald Afghanistan will buy
goods worth fll million during, the lint
~~even·yelr pbue Ill the ag1 eement.

NEW HAVEN - W. M.
Robinson, manager of Appalachian Power Company's
Glen Lyn Plant at Glen Lyn,
Va., has been designated
manager of a major n~w
generating plant the company has onder construction
neat here.
For the present, Robinson
will continue as manager of
Glen Lyn, dividing his time
between the two plants,
according to John W.
Vaughan, executive vice

~~t::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::

•

'

hegins at 4

mce again."

CANToN, OHIO - RESIDENTS OF THIS nortbeastern
Ohio city Of 100,000 have fire protection ooce again and tbe
firefighters, who had been oo strike last week, are going back
to the bargaining table. Tbe firemen voted Saturday night to
return to work after 79 of the strikers had been fmmd guilty of
coo tempt of court by Stark County Common Pleas Court Judge
Harold DeHoff.
Canton Professional Firefighters Local 249 President
George Stafanlak said tpe city and union bargaining a11ents
diJcus8ed nooo(X)s! ilemB Saturday and tbat "\her
(firefighters) are back to work and we'll continue on from
there." Firefighters Saturday offered to drop their demand for
an immediate pay raise, but Stafanlak said a salary increase
would still be negotiated.

B~~ S. MANLEY
COLii.fMBUS
Ben
Starli ng · Manley,
83 ,

'

available to Columbia Gas ,r Ohio this coming winter, which is
el)ougb gas to heat more than 31,400 homes during Ute winter,
White said.
"This agreement will p~ovide Cohnnbia Gas of Ohio with
additional gas this coming winter to meet the needs of its
customers by enabling the company to shift a portion of its
swnmer gas supply to the winter months when demands are at
their peak," White said.
White said Colwnbia has been trying for several years to
complete an economically feaSible agreement similar to the
we announced today.
·
"We are pleased these efforts have finally paid off," White
said. "This agreement will give us gre&lt;;t operating flexibility
this cmmg winter should extremely cold temperatures occur

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Colambla Gas of Ohio today
announced a new storage agreement that will make 3.5 billioo
cubic feet of additional natural gas available to its customers
&lt;klrlng the coming winter.
Marvin E. White, Columbus, chaJrrnan of the board of
Colwnbia Gas, said the agreement will enable tbe g11s
cm~pany to ex~e gaa with an outo0f-61ate company not
affWated with the Colwnbia Gas System.
The nalne of the ampany wfth wh001 the exchllnge Is to be
macle was not aMOunced by Colwnbia.
.
·
Under terms of the agreement, Columbia Gas of Ohio will
deliver 1.75 blllloo _cubic feet of natural gas this summer and
an addllional I.7S billion cubic feet of gas ned summer to be
placed into storage.
· .
In return, 3.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas will be made

CLEVELAND - FORD MOTOR CO . officials . have
81lll01111Ced two 1978 modela will be built exclusively at tbe
autllmalter's Lorain, Ohio, assembly plant; the Ranchero
truckaootheMercuryCougar XR-7, both previously produced
at Ford's plant in Atlanta.
Already being made at Lorain are Foro's LTD-2 and
. Cougar passenger cars and Econoline vans, 1977 production of
which Is ended or ending Ibis week. Production for tbe 1978
model year begins today for vans and nine days from now for
autos and trucks.

rnay call at Ewing Funeral
Home today from 2 to 4 and 7

Robinson named
plant manager

Colt1mbia Gas to store
•
extra·fuel for wmter

.

::~:W.:!8,!$.8:S~;:::~:::::::::i*?~:::::~s;:::::::=-;::;:::::~::::::::;::::::::=:::::~:::::::::~::::::;::::~);:::::;

trash containers in Dark ~ollow off SR 7. At noon Sunday
the area was in excellent shape. Tben by 2:24 p.m. this
was the scelie at one of the containers.

Public asked again to help
l

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt again
today, asked assistance of
area residents In helping to
stop trash container area
Uttering. He asked that .
anyone seeing persons
dumping items on the ground
in .the vicinity of the containers to notify his office and

try to obtain license plate
number, make, color, and

type of vehicle as well as a
general description of · the
person or persons involved.
The Sheriff's Dept. is
cooperating with the Health
Department, the Meigs
County Commissioners ana
the township trustees in

Volunteer units busy in Syracuse
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
firemen were called Thur,..
dsy at 8:45p.m. to the David
Parsons home in Racine to
extinguish kitchen grease
fire.
Saturday the E-R Squad
made three runs : at 1:20a.m.
to College Road wbere an
auto accident occurred. No

curbing the abuse of the trash
collection serviC1! to Meigs
County resident. "But it will
have to be the people of Meigs
County who bring this under
control," said Sheriff Proffitt.
He added, "The department does not have enough
manpower to patrol the trash
container areas other.than at
random to catch the
violators. It will have to be by
the assistance of concerned
citizens that the violators are
caUght."

one "!as transported; at 3:40
p.m. David Allen Powell, age
10, was injured at the pool
and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
COUNCIL TO MEET
was treated and released,
Chester Council No. 323
and at ~ :30 p.m. Judy Daughters of America will
Spencer was transported to meet Tuesday n!ght at 8 p.m.
Veterans Memorial Hospital . A charter will be draped in
where she was admitted.
memory of Lettie Meredith. .

Medium ·dam~es reported in two accidents
Medium damages were
Incurred to two vehicles in an
accident at the intersection of
Main and Fourth Sts. at 12:21
p.m. Sunday,, Middleport
Pollee report. ·
A car 4h'lven by John C.

Mayes, whO had visible injuries, Henderson. W. Va ..
pulled from S. Fourth 1St.,
onto Main and·into the path of
liP eastbound car driv~ .,..
Danny Haggy, Pomeroy.
At 3:44 p.m. Friday, a car
driven by Kenny See, Mid·

dleport, pulled , from a
parking place into the side of
a car driven by Mrs. Clarice
Erwin., Middleport, with
medium damages being
Incurred to botll cars. See
was cited for failing to yield
the right of way.

Chase ends with jail·for d1iver

An 18 year old Middleport
youtb was confined early
today in the Meip CoW!ty jaU
after · a chaae by Meigs
County llherlff's deputy at
S:ali a.m.
'nlomN N. Swan, trnellng
north ·on Mnlberry Ave.
sldelwiped tbe wail flwn Sugar Rim MID. DlifUIY
IIINi llf Ron llaliGn, llriYinll
lOuth at the tbne, tamed and
gave chNe out Union Ave.

Swan's vehicle struck and
tore out a stop sign and then
cut arounc! In the road anc1 hit
a road sign on the west lllde of
·CR H (Unon Avenue). He
continued aouth 111 SR 7 at a
high Pete of speed, but finally
lftoP1!ed his vehicle aouth of
CR 5 at Bradbury.
Middleport Pollee and
GaDla Coaa:,f unit&amp; were
rapondlng - fllr allfdlltance.
Swan hu ~ charged

with DWI, reckless operation,

hlt-ekip and wlilluily eluding
an officer after being
signaled to stop. Held on $712.
bond, be is scheduled lor
court Friday morning.
Early Sunday, deputies
arreited Harold L. Whlttekind, 28, Pomeroy, for
drivbtg while under the lnftuence. Hts brother, Robert
James Whltteklnd, 19, was
· also charged with disorderly

conduct after he perSisted In Chester Road, Pomeroy, no
trying to get his brouther out taillights and failure to transof the sberlff's cruiser.
fer registration.
Both posted bond and were
Maureen McCarty, Rt. 2,
released to appear Friday In Albllny, no taillight&amp;.
couirty court.
· Through a telephone Up
Other arrests over the from a reaident, deputies
weekend were:
arrested a person for dumA 14-year-old Raclne youth ping items of unsightly or
for driving a car without unsanitary nature along a
operatot'• license in Letart roadway or on land adjacent
Falla.
to roadw&amp;Y (at a trash cqnTimoth~ Davidson, 20, talner on Ba"!fn Roa!\J.

.

'

Arrested and cited to Meigs
County Court was William
Morris, 40, Rt. 3, Racine. He
will appear Friday in county

court.
Sheriff Proffitt urges area
residents to cooperate In
curbing the abuse to the
areas adjacent to the trash
containers by notifying the
office when they see
violators.

�S-ThP llailySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O, Monday, Aug 1, 1!177

S-The O.UySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, v . Monaay, Aug 1. " "

Direct deposit
offered veterans
Beginning with payments
dated October 1, 1977,
Veterens Administration
compensation and peiiSion
recipients may have the1r
checks deposited directly Into
their accounts with a
finandal orgaruzation
L. M Memtt, director, VA,
Cleveland, sa1d direct deposll
reduces the possibility of a
lost or stoleo check as well as
offering the convenumce of
automatic check deposit
Information cards will accompany the checks dated
August 1, 1917.
The
Veterans
Ad·
mlniStration has been testing
this program 1n Florida and
Georgia smce April of thiS
year Two problem areas
have surfaced in completion
of the authonzation from
mvolVIDg omiSSion of 1tems
that are necessary for
payments
First, many of the forms

:-----kea-D~ath~---:_ !Steelworkers Practices will be reviewed·
zn western strt'P mz.nzng
a...
~~fn~~w~~~d~a:~tt F~~~ :!!~~ sttn~:~~er 1.:
1

LILLIE MYERS
Mrs Lill ie Ed1th Myers.
a resident of Lecla, died

m

Holzer

hove not included the
Fmanctal 0rga11Wltion official's stgnature and title
Secondly, quite often the
beneficiary's payee number
has been omitted
These items are Indispensable The payee
number for a veteran IB 00;
for the widow of a veteran,
10; for a surviving father, 50;
for a SllrVIVing mother, 60
Other payees may contact the
Cleveland Regional Offtce to
deterimne thetr payee
numbers
Any resident of Ohio can
call the Cleveland Regtonal
Office toll.free by dialing
either Akron 5~21. Canton
~113, Cmcmnati 5~.
Cleveland 621-5000, Colwnbus
224-8872, Dayton 223-1394,
Spnngfteld 322-4907, Toledo
241-6223, wa.ren 399-8985,
Youngstown 744-4383 All
other Cities, call toll-free 1IIJ0-362-9024.

Med ical
Cente r
around 4 40 p m Saturday
She had res ided with a

the energy bill, tben labor
mto the evemng on
conference reports.
The energy package has
been
chopped
down
considerably from Carter's
original request, but remams
me of the most sweeping
measures tD reach Congress
thiS year
In addttion tD a 4 cent per
gallm gasoline tax - which
could be hiked tD 5 cents if a
proposed GOP amendment 15
adopted - the bill cmtains a
tax on gas-guzzling cars, a
tax to lift crude oil to tbe
w~r ld pnce, an exteDSioo of
natural gas pnce controls,
penalties for some mdustr1es
and utilities which fall tD
SWitch from ml and gas to
coal, and tax credits for home
wulation and solar and wmd

lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

He has drinking
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

problem

Crown City and Mrs

Rose

of Northup Two grand and
four great grand ch tfd_ren
survtve One son died In In
fancy

F i ve brothers and two
sisters preceded her ln death
She was a member of the

Ol&lt;ey Chapel Church

Funeral serv ices w1 ll be

held 2 p m Tuesday at the
Willis Funeral Home w•fh
Rev Ernest Baker and Rev

a nd

E va n5,

Wi lliam !Bil l) Sheets

was born June 21. 1900, In
Addison Township, a son of
the late Martin N Vance and
Eva Rife Vance He went to

the East Liverpool area In
19~ and had worked with the
nver fleet at the CruCible
Steel D1vlslon of Calf In
dustnes where he was later
transferred to the coke plant.
retlr1ng m 1967. PrJor to his
Army career, Mr Vance had

worked for

Pl~bur~h

based

cludmg the Ohio Dredging
Co , t~e Charles Zub•c Co

funeral home from 2 -&lt;4 and 7 9

Co

p m Monday

energy devtces
Other maJor pending ISSues
mclude:
-A conference report on a
btU creatmg a new
department of energy, which
had been scheduled for House
action Fr~day but was
postponed.
-A conference reporl on
the
Labor-HEW
appropnatlon House-Senate
conferees failed to reach a
compronnse between a House
vel'Slon denymg federal funds
for abortions under any
Cll'cumstance and a Senate
prOVISIOn permitting federal
montes to be used for
aborttons m case of rape,
mcest or m "medtcally
necessary'' Cll'cwnstances.
-The Clean Air Act Although there IS controversy
over how strict auto exhaust
controls should be, House
Democratic leaders are
determmed etther to get a
final agreement before tbe
scheduled recess, or postpone
the recess until a settlement
IBl'eached The auto industry
has threatened tD shut down
operations for a month if
action IS not taken before
Congress qwts for August
. -The rmmmum wage bill,
which O'Neill satd might be
put off until after the recess.
Republicans, opposed to
r81S111g the current $2 30 an
bour nummum wage tD $2.65,
succeeded m keepmg the bill
from reaching the House
floor last week.
-Public hnancmg of
Senate election campaigns
The first attempt tD cut off a
GOP ftlibuster failed Fnday,
49-46, or '11 short of tbe 60
needed Democraltc Leader
Rober! Byrd of West V1rgm1a
has promised new efforts
daily to get the requtred twuth!rd votes

Robinson

y

Dean

Earl Hinkle off1C1atmg
Bunal witt be In Mound Hill
Cemetery
Friends may call at the

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
very womed about my husband He IS only 44 and seems
to be m frurly good health but of these were caused from exhe drinks entirely too much. cess use of alcohol
rt helps to be sure your husI've tried to tell him that 1t IS
damaging his body but he just band gels a good diet wtlh
won't pay any attention to plenty Of VItamins ana pr&lt;r
tern However, if he IS getting
me
35
per cent or more of his
He often ljas a couple of
calones
from alcohol -and
cocktails for lunch Then
your
story
suggests that this
when he gets home he has a
couple of drinks before din- may be the case - he Will
ner. Mter dinner he stts damage his liver anyway 1n
around and has a drink about time
Tbe excess alcohol leads to
every hour until he goes to
infiltration
of the liver wtth
bed around 11 p m He says if
fat
globules
The enlarged
you don't drink more than one
liver
can
be
felt
by the doctor (Continued '!:'!~'_page 1)
drink an hour that 1t won 'I
atthat
stage
July 1, 1969 He, joined Aphurl you I don't believe that.
Little red sptder-like le- palachian at 1ts Cabm Creek
Will this cause him to have
a bad liver' What are the stons may be seen on the skin Plant at Cabin Creek, W
as a result of CirrhOSIS of the Va , m February 1951, and
Slgll.S of a damaged liver•
What can he do to prevent liver. Of course if the ltver IS went to the compeny's Clinch
liver damage' I know people badly damaged there will be Rtver Plant at Carbo, Va , 1n
get yellow Jaundice when accumnlation of flwd 1n the 1958 He was mamtenance
thetr liver IS bad_ but ISil't abdomen - causmg a large supervtsor and operations
there some other stgn before• abdomen and eventuallv supervtsor there before
becoming assistant manager
then that would warn him jaundice
I'd like to pomt out tnllt at Glen Lyn in June, 1966
before 11 IS too late
Robinson attended
I really love my husband 1n Cirrhosis of the liver has
spite of his drinking and other causes and everyone Waynesburg College for two
would hate to see anything who has this problem IB not years and recetved his .BS
degree
m mechanical
happen to him Anythirtg you necessarily a drinker
Alcohol will also damage engineering from West
can tell me would be greaUy
appreCiated Also if you have many other organs of the Vll'gU1la Umverstty m195t. A
any infonnation on the liver body and may even affect a restdent of Peamburg, Va.,
that you could send me that man's level of male hormone. Robinson Is married and has
(Because of the volume of three daughters. He served in
would help
matl
Dr Lamb cannot the Navy from 1943 to 1946
DEAR READER - Your
answer
your letters personal· and Is a member of the
husband bas an alcohol pr(r
ly
but
he wtll answer United Methodist Churcb.
blem whether he wants to adrepresentative
letters of
Ratliff jomed Appalachian
nnt 11 or not. I hope he will
talk to his doctor about this. general mterest 1n his col· at Glen Lyn m 19$0 and held
several posta before becomng
You can help by making him umn.)
face reality and recogmze r--.---------; • mamtenance supervisor In
that he does have a problem.
'"g'E~~~
1966 He was named assistant
INTEREST OF
manager In July 1969.
Regarding s1gns of liver
MEIGS-MASON AREA
A native of Mercer County,
damage, they are hard to
atESTERLTANNEHD..I,
W.
Va, he Is a mechanical
p1ck up unless you are tramed
EH&lt;.Ed
ROBERTHOEFLJCH
engineering graduate of
to do so I am sending you The
Health Letter nwnber 7-8,
Published ';/!1;~,;.. Salunlay
Vlrgima Polytechnic Illby The Ohio YaUey Publishing eon;.
stitute and State University
Livmg Wtth Your Liver to
any,
Ill
Court
S1,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
He
IB a member of the F1rst
g~ve you the inf0f1J18tion you
45789 Bwune.~~ Off1ce Phone m.
~uesteQ.IJtbers who want
%1511 Edltorill~992-2157
United Methodist Church of
Second cloal pootage paid a&lt;
Narrows, Va , and the VPI &amp;
this information can send 50
PmlMroy, Ohio
cents With a long, stamped,
Nauonal odvertiaUll , _ , . .
SU Alumni Asaociation, and
.. u •• Ward
Grlfllth Company,
V1rginw Tech Studelll. Aid
self-addressed envelope for 11
In( Bottinelli and Gallagher D1v ,
to POtS! Offtce Box 1551, Radio
7$7 Third AVe , New Yurt, NY
10017
City Station, New York, N. Y
Sublcnption ra\U Deijver«&lt; by
10019.
Ciii'I'Jt'r where available 7$ cents per
You have every nght to be
By Mot« Roolle whm comer
NOW YOU KNOW
ervil'e not •vadabk!, One Jl'lQnl.h,
concerned. In 1973, cirrhOSIS
Rice
paper Is not made
13,25 By mall in Ohio and W Va ,
(scarnng and damage) of the
~ Ye~~r, f%2Jif, SiJ: monthl,
from r1ce as Ita name
Sll $0 Three month! $1 00
liver was the fourth most
suggest.o It 1s made fr&amp;m the
Elaewhere G 08 year, Sil monthl
common cauae of death m
$13 50, T)Jree monUJI, f1 50
blrlt of the rice-paper plant, a
~be&lt;.:npt1on prtee inCILKiel Sandly
men between the ages of 35
shrub 1n the glnseog family
l'irnfJtoSentinel
and 54 and about 60 per cent
"

be ll,

daughter . Mr. Smelhe r
A WADE VANCE
!Mary France•) Rose ,
Word has been received
Northup the past •lx months here by Mrs B N Price of
Mrs Myers wu born Feb
Addl$0n of the dPo"'th n l ... a,..
13, 1893, In Lawrence County, brother , A Wade Vance, 4.'2
daughter of the late W. H and W Drury Lane , Ea s1
Nancy Kerns Fowler She Liverpool: Ohio, who died
married Davis Myers on July 24 In Norlh Side
July 2, 1913 He preceded her Hospital. Youngs1own, fr om
tn dealh on May 22, 1973
a I all earlier atnls home He
Three daughters surv1ve
had been m fa lling heallh for
Mrs
Wo ll lam ( H~ten ) sometime
Murphy, Colvmbus , Mrs
A World War II U 5 Air
William (Ruth) Houck Rt 1, Corps veteran , Mr Vance

Congress will work
overtime this week
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Loog hours and mght seSSions
face members of Congress
tins week m an effort tD meet
a list of legislative goals
before leavmg Saturday on a
month-long recess
The House has scheduled
day and evemng sessions tD
debate Prestdent Carter's
eoergy program, clean a1r
amendrneuts and an abortion
cmtroversy
The Senate remamed deadlocked m a filibuster over
public fmancing of Senate
election campaigns, and
more than 20 conference
reports - compromises
worked out on House and
Senate legislation - await
congressional action
The House plaMed tD work
until 7 p m EDT each day on

I (Continued from page 1)
1 d&lt;sallowed lndustry-wtde
Pall bea rers will be Claude
bu
a1 Ia
c

"

dredgtng

c ompantes ,

In

and the General Contract ing

He was a member of the
Cheshire Salone Masoni c
Lodge 4.56 and the Wheeling
Eagles Lodge 344
In addit ion to hts widow
Frances Vance at home,
survivors inci\Jde fwo stsfers ,

Mrs B N Price of Addison
and Mr• Carl Clendenen or

St Marys and several nieces
and nephews
He was
preceded m death by two
sisters
Serv•ces were held at 9 30
a m on July 27 at the Untied
Brethren in Christ Church In
Youngstown
wtth
Rev
Clarence Pelley offtclatlng
Burial was In Columb iana
County Memorial Park

DON C JEFFERS
Dr Donald R Warehime,
Gall Ia County Coroner today
rulec the death of Don Clinton
Jeffers 16 Rt 1, was caused
by a broken neck and
multtple~ chest tnjurtes suf
fered tn' an auto accident

early Saturday mornrng
Funeral services wtll be

held 2 p m Tuesday at the
Waugh Hailey Wood Funeral

Home with Rev Gerald
Brown offtctafUJg Burial will
be m Salem Cemetery

Friends may call at the

funeral home from 2 4 and 7 9
p m Monday

ERNEST WATTS
a resident
of 1545 Eleventh 51 , Ports
Ernest WaHs, 80

mouth and a former resrdent

cf Gallipolis, d1ec 1n Mercy
Hospital.
Portsmouth.
around 7

am

He was born In Mercerville
on Oct 22. 1896 son ofthelate
James and Mary Blanken
sh1p Watts
Mr Wat1s was a ret ired
employee of the Huntmgton
Car Shop and a ret I red far

mer

He ma rr led the former
Cressie Tobin 1n Gallipolis In

1927 She preceded h1m 1n
death In 1976
Two sisters surv1ve

Mrs

Pearl Bvfflngton, Porto
mouth and Mrs Olin Myero.
Dayton
services will

Funeral

be

held 1 p m Tuesday at the
McCoy Welherholl Moore
Funeral Home , Gallipolis
with Rev Everett Delaney
off•c•ating
Bunat will be 1n Old Pine
Cemetery ,

Rro

Grande

Friends may call at the

funeral home today from 7
until 9 p m
The
famtly
requests
flowers be omrtted

HAROLD R FRY
NEW HAVEN, W Va
Harold R Fry, Sr , 81, of New
Haven, dred Saturday at

Plea•ant Valley Hosp1tat

Born Aug 16, 1895, m New
Haven, he was the son of the
late Harnson Taylor and

Sarah LoUise Roush Fry

He was a farmer, member

of the Bachtel Un1ted
Methodist Church, and
serve'd on the Mason County
Board of Education
Surv1vrng are hrs wrfe,
Florence E Fry , four sons,

Harold R Fry, Jr, Harry
Russell Fry, and Charles
Cecil Fry, New Haven,
Norman Lee Fry, Palo,

Mlch ,

$IX

grandchildren and

four great grandchildren
Funeral servrces w1/l

held

at

the

be

Foglesong

Funeral Home on Tuesday at

2 p m with the Rev James H
Lewis off•clatlng Burial will
follow 1n the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to A p m

and 7 to 9 p m today

Fruth sharp
in taking it all
Displaying the same type
ct softball tha earned them
to the state toomey dlam·
ponshlp two years a~. the
Fruth Pharmacy team
capttred the district men's
!low pitch tourney thiS past
weekend
Fruth mw moves 111 to
North Charleston fortbe state
tourney Augtllt 11·14. Out·
doorsman's Store was the
runner-up in the double·
elimmation tourney.
PLAN roWED
Granted license to wed in
Meigs County Saturday were
Brinley Franklin Seth, 18,
Pomeroy, to Kathy Sue
Dillon, 17, Mason, and Larry
David Tyree, 24, to Rebecca
Elizabeth Roush, 19, both of
Pomeroy

1ssues

wtthout

pr1or

Jlt'rmt sston
by
the
international USW p-estdent,
now Lloyd McBr1de
McBrtde has authorized
strikes at l61r011 ore mmes m
Minnesota and Michigan , as
well as these steel plants
Republic Steel Umon
Drawn DIVISion m Hamilton ,
Ontario , JosepH T Ryerson
and Son Inc , m both
Carnegie, Pa and Cleveland;
and the Electrical Cable
DiVISIOn of Urn ted State Steel
Corp , W&gt;rcester, Mass.
Negotiations continued mto
Ute early bours tnday m
Duluth , Minn, an area With a
beavy concentration of 1ron
mmes But Industry and
union spokesmen held little
hope for settlement as tbe
talks proved frwtless
USW Spokestnen srud tbe
strike coocerned local ISSues
at tron ore mmes and a few
other plants, rut the industry
mamtamed the dtspute was
over economtc matters that
can only be negotiated at tbe
national level
Local unton offtcials m
Mtchigan's Upper Penmsula
!Did UPI today that at least
3,500
steelworkers
at
Cleveland Cliffs Iron Co
nnnes m two areas were off
the JOb, while 1,600 While
Pine Co employes were also
rep&gt;rted out m Michigan
In Worcester, Mass, a
handwntten Sign was posted
on the entrance gate at the
US Steel Electnc Cable
DIVISIOn plant saymg that the
11 p.m Sunday shift should
not report f1r work, thus
tdlmg a bout 500 employes
Donald
Canasanta ,
president of U S. Steel's
Ingot
Mold
Shenango
Foundry Corp , said an
estunated 1,150 employes of
the f1rm were out Shenango
has plants m the Pittsburgh
suburb Of Neville Island and
Sharpsville m Pennsylvania
and m Buffalo, NY
The steel Industry sought
an InJunction against the
strtkes, but U S Dtstnct
Couri Judge Dante! Snyder
ruled tn Pittsburgh Fnday
rught that he lacked the
JUrSidiction tD ISSue such an
UlJUDCbon
Refused time to appeal tbe
deCISion to the U S 3rd
Circuit Courl of Appeals m
Phtladelphta, the tndustry
satd tt would hie a
compensatory damage swt
against tbe unton tf the
strikes occurred

•

WASHINGTON (UPI ) enVIrOIImental, economic and
wtlh
Carter social Impacts of strip
Faced
adnnnistrallon Interest In mmtng The study wUI
additional coal production dl!ctde, too, which tracts of
and environmentalists ' publicly owned land can be
eff 1rts to stop it, the Interior mined in an environmentally
Department plans a new look acceptable manner, a
at str1p muung Ute billims of spokesman saJd.
Cmgress, after a seventons of coal buned m the
year struggle and two vetoes
West.
A stx-month reVIew by tbe by President Ford, recently
government could yield new approved and sent to
poijctes for surface mining Premdent Carter leglslatioo
the estunated 187 billion tons reqwrmg mining comparues
of coal beneath federal land. to restore strip mmed land tD
The department, ctting the tis approxmtate original
study, has asked a federal condition ,
An Interior Department
cour1 to d1S1111SS California
emlll'orunentalists' effort tD spokesman S81d the study
prevent new strtp mmes
was bemg conducted because
Offioals say the study will of growing pressures "to
develop ways to assess tbe b~gm production from

•

Playing in her flr!t West
Virgmta W0111m's State Golf
Tournament at Ptpestem
!late Park last week, Mary
Roush, Wife of Gary Roush,
aHJwner of Riverstde Golf
Course at Mason, brought
mnor to Ma-~on County when
llle won the ftfth Otght title
after S4 roles of play
The tourney was civided
into SIX fltghls ct 16 golfers
br a Iota I rJ. 96 Mary shot
scores ct 100, 93, and 89 to wm
her fltght
Competition was keen as
the toumammt field had
beeo cut to the 91lh lowest
blndicap from women an
aver the state The cutoff
handicap was 23
J\lso parttctptimg 111 the
tournammt and m the fifth
fttghl qualifiers from Point
Pleasant were Lilltan Hyer
md Mary Ingels, wbo made
very respectable lllowmgs to

bring further bonors to
MMon County ~lfers from
Riverside and Hiddm Valley
Country Club.
Clher representatives from
Hidden Valley who attended
and partiCipated in the
tourney were Lillian Greene,
Sonia Wellman, and Allee

July recOrd of 11-17 Reds
worst since '66 carnpaigri

•

outst.andlng lea~e~ and Ill
ISSue addition.J leaaee."
The Carter admlnlstratim
energy progr1n1 calla for
mcreased uae of doml!lllc
coal reserves to offset
planned declines in foreign oil
Imports Oil rtAJerVes are
expected ID run dry early bt
the ned century, while
enough coal lies burted
beneath the Umted States tD
satisfy the nation's eneriP'
needs for several centuries.
Carter has called for
greater national reliance on
coal - with consumption up
by ~ million tons m 1985.
Carter says he wants future
coal mlnUlg managed in an
environmentally sound
manner

"
•

,
,

'

Mary Roush winner of 5th flight

Icard
For her achlewment at the
tournament, Mary wu
awarded a hmds&lt;JDe sDver
casserole dish given to the •
WIIUlers of each n!glt. Karen
Murphy rJ. Wheeling was the •
wlmer in the mamP,onlllip
flil#lt

Godchild has part ·

Teamsters'

fund spent·
on defense

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admtsstons Eugene Young, Pomeroy,
•
Alberta Spaun, Racme,
ClfiCAGO (UP!) - More
Juaruta Chapman, Clifton; than $500,000 has been spent
Martha Roush, Rutland; from the Teamsters Umon
Millard Ball, Long Bottom, Central States PeiiSion Fund
Harold McGralh, Long to defend three former fund
Bottom, Ju~ta Spencer, offtctals charged wtth
consp1rmg to defraud the
Pomeroy
Saturday Discharges fund, a report has revealed.
Patricta Teasley, W1lham
The Chtcago Sun-Times obHaley, Joyce Klem, Betty tained a copy of the fund's
Eynon, Ann Carswell, Dtane latest annual reporl filed wttlt
Mtlhron, Jeffrey Lewts, the U.S Labor Deportment.
The paper satd the fund
Rtchard CoMolly, Florence
spent $500,956 to pay legal
Hie!man
expenses for Allen Dorfman,
Sunday Adm&lt;sstons pensiOn
fund
Nellie Russell, Mason, former
Barbara Grover, Pomeroy, consultant, and two fund
Allen Swartz, Belpre, trustees, Albert Matheson, a
Lawrence
Douglas, Detroit labor lawyer, and
Jack Sheetz, a Dallas-based
~meroy •
truck company operator.
Sunday Dtsdlarges Dorfman,
Matheson,
Clarence Adams, Doris
Halley, Wayne Hubbard, Sheetz and tltree reputed
Wayne Powell, Julia Spencer, cr1me syndicate figures were
acquitted m 1975 of
Uilie Adams.
conspiring tD defraud tbe
fur!d of $1 4 million
PLEASANT VALLEY
Dorfman, however, was
Discharges - Ema Jef- conVIcted three years earlier
fers, Ashton; Gertte Buck, of acceptmg a $55,000
Robertsburg; Mrs Frederick kickback to arrange a loan
Wolf and son, Syracuse; Mrs. from tbe fund. He served
Harold Waugh, Gallipolls; eight months in jail
Mrs James Fink and son,
Robert Billings, a fund
Mtddleport, Mrs. Earl spokesman, said fund
Withrow, Point Pleasant; lawyers reasoned that "these
Mrs Charles Rainey, New people were representatives
Haven; Anthony Taylor, of the board (of trustees) and
GaiUpolls; Mrs Worthy the board had an obligation tD
Logan, Point Pleaaant; pey because they were found
Daron Blessing, Point mnocent "
Pleasant; Rosemary Barker,
Dorfman, a close associate
Henderson; Jennie Halley, of
mtss!ng
former
Crown City, Archie Pierce, Teamsters' boss James R
Rutland; Mrs David Stewart Hoffa, was accused of
and son, Mason; Shannon masterminding the alleged
Cratg, Pomt Pleasant, fraud scheme.
Richard Seegraves, Oak Hill,
0 ; Mrs. Donald Nott, son, Leon; Mrs steve lllcbmond,
Henderson;
Mrs. Roy Charleston; Mrs. Michael
Meadows, Apple Grove; John Jonea and daughter, Point
Litchfield, New Haven; Pleaeant; Eunice Beller,
Eunice Hesaon, Point Point Pleasant; El111betb
Pleaeant; Mra Burley Jeffen, Muon; Mn. Howard
Geiger, Bidwell; Harvey Roush, Racine; Paul Bush,
Thevenln, Hen&lt;lersod; Mn. Point Pleuant; Mn. Paw
Larry Myers, Gallipolis Grimm and deu&amp;bter,
Ferry; Mrs. Curtis Hent, Letart; Travill Miller,
Letart; Beulah Porter, Point Hartford; Mrs. Ronnie
Pleuant, Raymond Uevlng, Johnaon and son, Racine;
West Colwnbla; Mn. Janet Mrs. Denver Bulb and
Capehart, Point Pleuant; dau&amp;hter, S.clne; Nn.
William Capehart, Mid- Charles Cottoa and IOD,
dleport; Edith Rogers, GaUipoiU, llld Mn. J\nNid
Henderson; Robert Hatfield, Nichols, Point PINU!t.

t

Albrecht and her two
compamons
another
woman and a man about 30
years old -chatted With the
hanker m the library, police
said

Federal Prosecutor
General Kurt Rebmann satd
the terrorists attempted tD "
kidnap Ponto but he resisted ,
and was shot with two 45caliber pistols
Spectal anti-terrorist units
of the Federal police today
reported fmding two cars
believed used by the killers m
the1r getaway
Rebmann said
Miss
Albrecht, the daughter of a
wealthy J!amburg lawyer,
had been mvolved m "the
terrorist scene" for several
years
She transported exploSives
and knew at least one of four
terrorists wbo partiCipated in
the AprU 1975 attack on tbe
West German Embassy in
Stockholm
She also worked for a time
m the Stuttgart office of
Klaus Crmssant, a lawyer for
urban terrorists. Federal
Cnmmal Pohce believe ',
CroiSSBllt acted as a I'Ourter ,
between unpriBOOed terrorist •
leaders and their followers •
outside
·;
CroiSS&amp;nt Is currenUy m :
France and has lisked for
asylum
Police
also
were
mvesttgatlng
whether
Ponto's deaUt was related tD ,
the assassmatton April 7 of
Slegfr~ed
Buback, '
Rebmann's predecessor as :
Federal Prosecutor General. ;
Ruback
and
two :
comparuons were shot to · •
death by killers riding a ;
motorcycle Two suspects, a ~
man and a w&lt;man, were :

arrested several weeks later :
after a gun batUe wtth police •
and now awrut trial
:

•
,:'

OHIOAN INJURED
CANONSBURG, Pa (UPI), ~
- Rod Shoemaker, 19,,:
Venetia, died Saturday of •
mjurles suffered in a single- :
car accident which mjilred an':
Ohioan
:
The Washington County :
coroner satd Shoemaker•, .

car went over an em .. !

bankment, throwing the :
Victim out
'•

••

' •'

RIVER RF.WLTS

CINCINNATI (UP!)
Canasta Glow, rlden by
Gwllermo Milord, won the.
featured race Sunday a~ '
River Downs, gomg the mile '
and 70 yards in 1:42 U.
,
The WJDner finished seven •
lengths in front of Fool's Will :
while Trenter's C0111et was ~
third

'

Queen's Banquet and
Golden Skipper won the first •
two races to return ~ on ,
the double combination Of 6,
,
and 10
The crowd of7,500 wagered~
$758,416
..

..
- '

PUBLIC SALE
CANaWD
The public Nil at tile
rnfllltice Of 1111 lat. Guy
D. lolln I• Itutlantt
IChlduttcl T~y, Aut.
2 ., ' '·"'·
cancelled
clue. ...
to """
cJrcumllflln- btrend 111e
control of Dan Smltll,

....._,.,

CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI)
- Sometimes Johnny Bench
thinks there 's two of Doug
Capllla
"He seems to be every
place you look wben be's
pitching a game," said Bench
Sunday after Capilla, with the
help of a sc~reless threeinning relief stint from Pedro
Borbon, Pitched the Reds to a
6-2 victory over the
Cardinals
The enthusiasm of the
Reds' 24-year-old lefty is
contagiOUS.
"He makes me laugh," satd
Bench
And that's no easy
achievement. Because tbe
Reds' record this month tsn't
exactly
conducive
to
laughter Not smce the 1966
season has a Reds' team
experienced a ponrer month
in tht won-and-lost column.
Joe M&gt;rgan slammed four

hits, one hiB 15th homer of tbe
season, and Ken Grtffey
added four smgles as Capilla
evened his record at 3-3 with
the Reds since his June 15
acqulsltion from the Cards m
the Rawly Eastwtck deal.
"What I wanted to do
most," satd Capilla, uwas
finish Ute game. And that's
not just because I waa
pttchmg
against
the
Cardina Is."
A stramed muscle on the
upper left side of Capilla's
back forced him out Of the
game after Silt mnmgs.
"I did 11 swmgmg Ute bat m
the bottom of the sixth," satd
Capilla "Eastwick really got
mstde on me with a good
fastball "
The young Red lefty had an
tee pack taped over the sore
area as he lalked
The Reds took a 2-ll lead m
the
second
mnmg,

Browns offense
topples defense

in death of financier

·BONN, West Germany
(UPI) - The goddaughter of
one of West Germany's most
promment hankers and two of
her colleagues entered the
fmancter's home with red
roses Sunday and shot him tD
death, police satd.
Police today hunted lor tbe
trto, mcluding Susanne Albrecht, 26, wbo they SBld was
the godchJ!d of Juergen
CAI.U ANSWERED
Ponto , chatrman of the
Several calls for help were Dresdner Bank, West
answered Sunday and Germany's second largest
Monday mornmg by the
"Thts IS Susanne I thought
Pomeroy Emergency Squad' 1t about time r dropped by
At 4 23 a m. Sunday, to the agam," police quoted Miss
New Lima Road for Timothy Albrecht as tellmg Ponto
T&lt;llis, 14, who was ill, taken to through an mtercom before
Veterans Memortal Hospttal, bemg admitted to his wellat 5 06 p m , to the Rutland- secured, fenced.in villa 1n
HarriSOnville Road for Kenny Oberursel, a wealthy suburb
Rathburn, taken to Veterans m the Taunus Mountams
Memorial Hospital, at 6 48 north of Frankfurl.
p.m , Katie Walburn, Umon
After presenting Ponto Wltlt
Ave , taken to the Holzer a bouquet of red roses, Miss
Medical Center and 6 53 a.m
Monday, took Clinton FIBber,
Lmcoln Htll Road, to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, July 29)
Mrs W!U1am Adkms and
daughter, Sterlie Barnhill,
Vayden Blake, Mrs James
Bobo and son, Cora Cox,
Patrtck Dolly, William
Fowler, Mildred Franklin,
Wtlliam Frazter, Marlln
George, Mary Gilmore,
Thomas Gooldm, W1lhe
Johnson, Hurst Prater,
Ktmberly Prtce, Mary
Robbms, Doyle Shuler, Debra
Smlth, Candace Van Meter,
Duane Willlson
(Blrtb, July 29 I
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth
Smart, a son, A:lhany.
(Discharges, :July 30)
Kathenne Booten, Mrs
Gerald Chovanec and
daughter, Frank Contosta,
Claude
Dry,
Dorothy
Jayjohn, Venedta Kearns,
Timothy Kent, Mrs Robert
Knapp and son, Br1gette
Larnmbes, Carolyn Lawson,
lola McComas, Matthew
Mtlhken, Mrs
Roome
Mullins and daughter, John
Peters, Phyllis Pnest, John
Rankm, Cynthia Russell,
Myrtle Sheets, Belinda
Sculer, Charlotte Smith,
Geneva Sorrell, Char-les
Stevenson, Patricia Terry,
Mrs Ronald Thompson and
daughter, Candice Wheatley,
Lygia Wlll!ams, Arron
WISI!Illan
(Birtbs, July 30)
Mr. and Mrs Denms
Martin,
a
daughter,
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
DaVId Mitchell, a son, Bid·
well
(Discharges, Jaly 31)
Mrs David Keppler and
daughter, Eva LeWIS, Mrs.
Dwight McGhee and son,
Mrs Gary Murray and
daughter, Mrs Timothy
Osborne and son
( Births, J aly 31)
Mr and Mrs. Larry
Thomao, a son, LangiVille,
Mr
and
Mrs
Ttm
Wllllamson, a daughter,
Jackson; Mr and Mrs
Robert Hall, a daughter,
Northup; Mr. and Mrs. Alan
Alberchlnski, a son, PI
Pleasant; Mr and Mrs Gary
Hunt, a daughter, Ewlngton
and Mr. and Mn Bruce
Adams, a son, Hartford, W,
Va.

•

Dodgers .nagic number 45

KENT, Oluo (UP!)- Long
runs by rookie free agent
scatbacks Eddie Payton and
Errue Young highlighted tbe
Cleveland Browns'
scrunmage at Kent State
Uruverstty Sunday, with tbe
offense beating the defense

One-yard runs by Cleo
Miller, Brian Duncan and
Mays accounted for three
offense touchdowns and the
final one came on a 34-yard
touchdown pass from rookie
quarterback Terry Luck to
Rtcky Feacher
23-14
Brian "S1pe, the Browns'
Payton, only 5-8 and 175 startmg quarterback ,
pounds and the brother of directed touchdown marches
Chicago Bears Walter of 47 and 5S yards Mays
Payton,returnedapuntfor 36 moved the team 70 yards for
yards and ran 34 yards for tbe a score and Luck's drive
longest run from scrnrunage
measured 75 yards
Young, taller but lighter at
Payton took rushing honors
S-9 and 160 pounds, had tbe with 83 yards m 12 carries.
day's longest run of 66 yards Larry Poole, who played only
on a punt return. SborUy briefly, had 53 yards m 9
after that, the Alcorn A &amp; M attempts
product mtercepted a Dave
Sipe connected on 8 of 15
Mays pass and returned tt 47 passes for 70 yards, Mays hit
yarda for a touchdown
on 3 of 14 for 14 yards and
DefeiiSive end Mike St Luck completed 5 of 8 for 79
Clall' got the other touchdown yards and one !Duclidown
for the defense by recovermg
Reggt.e Cratg and Oscar
a fumble and returning 11 21 Roan each had three catches
yards
tD lead m tne rece1vmg
~~~
department and Feacber had
two
The most serious Injury, a
possible spramed ligament
was suffered by Rookie tight
end Mike Dudrow Others
hurl mcluded recetver Steve
Holden With a knee spram
and recetver Dave Logan
With a bruised kneecap

.flllf!I'IJ
REFINED
Gentleman
OR how

Leaders
By Untied PresSinternat•onal

NORBERT RIWEUX
was the
original

SugarDad4y.

Cbased

on

!J.,.u a "'Y lo refine
sugar.
To help lhcsugarctne
evaporate more
qu&lt;ckly, be enclosed
fUJ~S

coadensahol cotls 1n a

ncuum chamber. A

procell 1ha1's made
thtags a lot sweeter ever
:uncc.

You ctn make your
fulure a httle "'eeter,
too, by buy1og U S.
Sn•ags Bonds through
your Payroll Sav.ngs
Plaa.
They're the
dependable "ay to sne
for aa education.
vacatton. or even
retirement. Bcu.ust they

al... ays pay of!.,.,th
antcrcst.
So buy US
Savtags Bonds.
And be • "••gar
dtddy"tn your spare
lime.
Se;..,.E Bondopoy&amp;%
1nterHL wheJI held lo malunty
f:l &amp;yean (41n:% the flr.t fH.r)
Inte,.a i1'n6t .ubjed to at.lte

or local1ncome taJ:ts. and
feden1l ~-lNIY be delerred

undlrede.pU..

275 at bats)

Nat1onal league

G AB H Ptl
102.421 142 337
97 381 128 336

Parker P1t

Slennett Pll
Luzlnskl Phil
Griffey Cln
Morales Chi

92 347 116 334
99 355 116 327

100 397 130 327

S1mmons St L

Robinson P1T
FosTer Cln

96 336 109 324
98 406 129 318

83 288 91 316
101 394 124 315

Rose Cln

102 AlA 129 312

American League

patent oa a sweet tdea

G AB H Pet
101 394 151 383

Carew Mifl
Bostock M1n

100 393 133 338

Rtce Bos

101 411131 319

Singleton Bal
Pa~e Oak
Blulor Tor
Cowens KC
F1Sk Bos
Munson NY
Rivers NY

94 330 104
90 322 101
89 359 112
99 388 120
97 3.40 1D5
95 376 115
89 359110

315
314
312
309
309
306
306

Home Runs
National Leegue Foster, Cln
32, Schmidt, Ptl-11 28 Luz.lnskl,
Phil 26, Burroughs, Atl 25,

Garvey, LA 24
American League. Rrce, Bos
27, Scott, Bos 25, Nettles, NY
24. Hisle Mmn 23. Bonds, Cal

21

Runs Batted In

National League Foster, Cin
98, Garvey, LA 85 Cey , LA

and

a double by
Cesar Gerommo between
Singles by Bench and Capilla
"How about that,"
exclauned Capilla "I get my
first majll' league hit and
f1rst RBI wtth one swing "
Bob Forsch, tbe C4lrdinal
right-hander who wound up
With hiS 5th loss agamst' 13
VIC!q~tes was
the vtctun,

Forsch departed 10 Ute thtrd
when conset'lltive smgles by
Grifey, Morgan and George
Foster gave the Reds a thtrd
run.
Morgan's homer came off
Eastwtck m the fifth mrung
and followed Ute second of
Gnffey's four smgles Davey
Concepcion capped the Reds'
scormg w1th hts seventh
bomer of the season, leading

Luzlnskl,

PhU

83,

Bur

off Ute stxth innmg Agam
Eastwtck was the VIctim
BoUt Ute Cardinal runs and
SIX or their seven tuts came
off Captlla durmg tbe s11
llUlmgs he ptlchec,
The fo ur htts by Morgan
and Griffey were etght of 15
th e Reds collected off Forsch,
Clay Carroll, Eastwtck, AI
flr abosky
and
Butch
Metzger

Red Sox, Yanks ·
•
•
keep onwmnmg
By BIU. MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Although netther Don Aase
nor Cliff Johnson could be
found on an Amer)can
League roster . Ute f1rst two
months of Utis season, they're
both playrng key roles now m
making the Eastern Division
race a three-way free-for-all
Aase, a 22-year-&lt;~ld righthander called up from the
mmors last week by the
Boston Red Sox, recorded hts
second stratght complete
game victory Sunday by
shuttmg out the Califorma
Angels, HI, on three htLs
Meanwhile Johnson,
acqull'ed by the New York
Yankees from the Houston
Astros 1n an 11th·hour deal on
the June 15 trading deadline,
belted a Utree-run homer his seventh as an Amertcan
Leaguer - tD highlight a 9-2
VIctory over the Oakland A's.
Aase outdueled Angel ace
Frailk Tanana m hurling the
Red Sox to thetr fourth
stratght
v1ctory
as
batterymate Carlton Ftsk
stngled home the game's only
run m the top of Ute nmth
= g Aase struck out SIX
and walked only one
"I've always pitched well
1n July and August I'm a hotweather pltcher," satd Aase,

a native of Anaheun who was
Pitching for the first tune m
his home town. "If I had any
arm trouble today, I was so
psyched up 1t didn't bother

me"
Meanwhtle, the Yankees,

who last week gave
embattled Manager B1lly
Martm an ultimatum to
either " wm or face the
consequences" on this West
Coast swmg, won their
seventh 1n the last etght
games as Johnson belted a
three-run homer off loser
Vtda Blue tn the thtrd
Mtckey Rtvers drove 1n three
other runs With a groundout
and a two.;un smgle Ed
Figueroa went etght mrungs
for hts lOth vtctory.
"I feel good because I've
been playmg a lot lately,"
satd Johnson, who has started
the last twQ games agamst
Oakland and smashed
homers 1n each
In other games, Kansas
City split a twinbill wtth
Chtcago, wmnmg, 8-4, after
losmg, S-4, m 10 mrungs ,
Mmnesota lost, 9-2, to
Cleveland then earned a
doubleheader split , 9-4 ,
Toronto put away Milwaukee,
4-1, and Texas edged DetrOit,
3-2, m 10 mrungs
Mariners 6, Orioles 1:
Glenn Abbott tossed a fourhitter 10 outduehng Jtm
Palmer. while Lee Stanton
drove m three runs wtth a
double and a homer to lead
the Mariners over the AL
East-leading Onoles
White Sox 5.4, Royals 4-8:
Hal McRae drove m four
runs wtth a homer, double
and smgle 1n the mghtcap for
Kansas City after Chtcago
won the opener wtth a Utreerun rally 10 the lOth

highlighted by Chet Lemon's
second homer of the game
and an RBI smgle by Ralph
Garr McRae and George
Brett home~ed m the second
game for the Roya Is
Twms 2-9, Iodians 9-4:
Minnesota's Roy Smalley
drove m three runs wtUt a
pa1r or smgles and Dave
Johnson, wtth relief help
from Tom Burgme1er , earned
h1s second maJor league
VICtory smce 1974 m the
mghtcap
The Ind1ans
snapped a SIX-game losmg
streak m Ute opener when
Duane KUiper drove m three
runs and Andre Thornton and
Bruce Boehle hit solo homers
to give AI FitzmorriS hts ftrst
VICtory smce May 1

Blue Jays 4, Brewers 1:
Toronto broke a nme.game
losmg streak as nght-hander
Dave Lemancyzk pttched
perfect ball for 5 2-3 mrungs
and Doug Rader drove m two
runs wtth a double and a
smgle Lemanczyk, 9-9, left
the game m the seventh, after
giVIng up smgles m the stxth
and seventh Tom Murphy
earned the save

MaJor l,.e.1gue Standi ngs

8't' Un •t ed Prtn lnttrnlt lonal
Natlol'lll Lngue

Chicago
P hil a
Ptttsbgn
St LOUt$

Montreat
New Vork

East
W l
60 41

59 43

S9 ..
S6 48
.48 5.4

Ptl
5 9..
578

GB
11/7

573 2

538 5111
.. 71 12111
426 l7

43 58
We st
W L Pet GB
Los Ang
66 JB 635
Clnci
51 51 500 14
Houston
48 57 457 18 1h
_.7 sa 448 19 1h
Sen Fran
San D•ego
45 62 .. 21 221/,
Atlanta
37 65 363 28
Sunday's Results
Phll adel ph•a S, San Frl!ln 4
New Y or k 10, Sa n Diego 9
Los Ang a Montreal 2. 10 mns
Atlan ta 8, P1tt sburgh 3
Cmclrm at l 6, St Louis 2
Chica go"' -Houston 1
Today ' s Probable Pi1chers
I AU Ttmes EDT»
San F ranci sco (Montefusco 3
91 a t Montrea l £Tw1 tch ell 2 6)
7 35 p m
St LOUIS (Underwood 5 6) at
Atla nt a &lt;Ca pra 2 81 7 35 p m
Los Ang eles (S utton 10 Sl at
New York (2achr y 5 1(1) 8 OS

pm

P11tsburgh ( Jon es 2 4) a t
Houston (L emonge llo 3 12). 8 35

pm

Ch•cago (Renk.o 5 11 a t
Cmcmnat i (Sea\ler 10 5) 8 40

pm

Tuesday' s Games
San Fran at Montrea l, n1ght
San D•ego a t Ph1la n1 ght
Los Angeles at New York ntght
St Lovls at Atlanla, n 1ght
Ch1 cago at C1nt lnnat1 night
PittSburgh a-t Hou ston night

American League
East
Boston
Balt1mre
New Yor k
Detro1t
Mllw
Cl evelnd
Toronto
Ch1cago
Kan C1ty
M 1nn
Texas
Cal if
Seattle

w L Pel
58 43 574
59 44 573
58 45 563
•• 55 455
.. 57 447
44 56 440
35 66 347
West
w L Pel
62 38 620
56 43 566
59 46 562
54 45 545
47 53 470
46 61 430
42 60 412

GB

1
12
13
13 1h
23
GB
S'h
5 1h
7'h

15
19 1h
21

Oakland
Sunday's Results
Cleveland 9 Mmnesota 2 1st
Minnesota 9 Cleveland 4 2nd
Ch1 5 Kan C1ty 4 1st 10 mns
Kansas Ctty 8 Ch1cago 4 2nd
Toronto 4, Milwaukee 1
Boston 1. Cal1torn1a 0
New York 9 Oakland 2
Sea t tle 6 Baltimore 1
Texas 3 Oetrott 2 10 mns

Today•s Probable P1tchers
(AU Times EDT)
Milwaukee (Sorensen 2 4} at
Toronto (Clancy 0 1} 7 30 p m

Texas (Perry 9 8) at Ch1cago
(Wood53 ) 830pm
Kansas City (Co lborn 11 9} at
Mmnesota (Goltz 12 6) B 40

The Mei gs American
Legion team won Its second
tournament victory by
defeatin g Glouster 6-1
Saturday morrung at 11 to
advance to the seml.finals
that same day at 3 p.m only
to lose to Lancaster 2-1 and
ex it from the 1977 Legton
Dlstnct competition
In the f1rst mmng Meigs
scored two runs to take an
early lead over Glouster
which they never gave up
One was scored when B
Johnson walked and B
Hamilton connected for a
stngle advancing Johnson to
second On the throw to first
the ball htt Hamilton and
advanced Johnson and him
another base.
After
one out,
K
Wmebrenner grounded to the
p&lt;tcher who threw to third
trymg to hold Johnson there,
but Johnson broke for home
to score on a Wild throw to the
catcher Hamilton also t1red
to score on the play but was
unsuccessful when the catcher threw him out
Glouster scored 1ts only run
off Steve Baird when Hunter,
who was the pitcher, smgled
and scored on a double by
Faires
Me1gs scored most of Its
runs m the stxth uuung when
Davenport Singled and
Wmebrenner sacrificed, wtth
both runners Sjlfe on the
catcher's error After two
outs, Sayre smgled both runs
m, and Sayre ended up at
second on the throw to home
He took thtrd on a wild pitch,
Wayland walked, and Sayre
scored on a double steal
In the etghth Metgs picked
up another run when Wall
stngled, Carmen sacriftced,
and Sayre smgled to drtve in
Wall

Springsteen
•
easy wmner

pm

New York (Hunter 6 .5 ) at
Cal1forn 1a (Brett 8 8) 10 30

DU QUOm, Ill (UPI)
Jay
Sprmgsteen of Lapeer,
pm
Baltlrnore (R May 11 8) at Mlch , held Ute lead from the
Oakland (Mitchell 0 3) 10 30
start Sunday to wm the 25-lap
pm
Tuesday's Games
Amer~can
Motorcycle
Boston at Seattle night
Assoctatwn
pro cycle
New York at Calif n1ght
competition
Kan City at Minnesota mght
Te)(IIS at ChiCago, OiQht
Sprmgsteen, riding a
Cteve at M•lwaukee 2 tw •
Harley
DaVIdson, won $5,133
ntgh t
1n the contest, the 14th of a 23Raogers 3, Tigers 2:
lnter'nat•onal League
event series
Uprted Press lnternlltonal
Mtke Hargrove ' s smgle
Garth Brow of Flint, M!ch ,
L Pet GB
WJth one out 1n the bottom of Pawtucket W
59 A4 573..
also/riding a Harley, fmlshed
55 47 539 J 'h
the lOth scored Tom Gr~eve Tidewater
second The other top
Charleston
54 so 519 5'h
from third base wtth Texas • Syracuse
fmlshers, m order, were Gary
54 .51 51.4 6
50 51 49S 8
wmnmg run Rehevet Adrtan RIChmond
Scott of Sprmgfield, Ohio,
Rochester
50 53 484 9
Devme, 7-5, was the wmner Columbus
Corky Keener of Flint and
47 59 44J 13 V2
To l edo
46 60 434 14'12
Ketth Ulick1 of Kenosha, WIS
Sunday's Results
Jay Ridgeway of Decatur,
Pawtucket 12 Columbus 10,
10 tnnrngs
Ga , suffered crtttcal head
Rochester 12 Ttdewater 3
IDjUrtes when bts cycle
Syracuse 10 Charleston 9
crashed in the semifinal race
He was hospitalized at the
Mount Vernon trauma
Eureka, the state motto of , center.
Califorma, means "I have
The competthon continues
found 1t"
night 1n Clncago and
Friday
Cubs 4, Astros 1:
Sunday
m Peorta
Ray Burr~s, who had not
won smce June 25, scattered
etght htts m a route-gomg seventh-ltutmg error that alperformance and Jerry lowed Montreal to tie the
Morales, Bobby Murcer and SCQre With a tWO-I'Un smgle, !D
Steve Ontiveros each drove in touch off a Six-run lOth mning
Utat camed the Dodgers tD
a run wtth consecutive htts m VIctory over the Expos Dusty
the stxth mnmg tD g1ve the
Cubs a VIctory over the Baker also contrtbuted a two·
run smgle m the loth while
Astros Houston scored m the Reggie S101Ut drove m three
ftrst mmng but Burns runs for the Dodgers wtth his
blanked the Astros the rest of 19th homer and an infteld out
the way to even hts record at
Mets 10, Padres 9:
HI·tO
Steve Henderson drove m
Braves 8, Pirates 3:
Utree
runs W!Ut a tw&lt;H'IIn
The Braves dropped the
homer
and a SIDgle and John
Pirates two games behind the
Mtlner
delivered a two-run
Cubs when Jeff Burroughs
smgle
m
a four-run fourth
and Vtc Correll slammed
homers in the fourth mnmg to llUlmg as the Mets downed
power the Braves to vtctory the Padres San Otego's
AI Oliver and Qmar Moreno Randy Jones made hts first
FRENCH FRIES
appearance smce June 17 and
homered for P1ttsburgh
was tagged for four runs and
Dudgers 8, Expos 2:
Dave Lopes atoned for a f1ve hits m 2 2-3 mrungs

Luzinski earning every bit
being paid on his contract

Batting

Templfn Sf L

On August 26,1812,
Norbert R1lheux pul 1

•
sandWichlllg

. BASEBALL

Meigs out of
Legion tourney

By FRED McMANE
UPI SJKiriS Writer

When Greg Luztnski s1gned
a healthy, ft'le-year contract
With the Phillies last wmter
he dectded he was going tD
earnhismoney.Sofar,hehas
accounted for every mckel.
And the veteran outftelder,
who has been among the
league leaders m hitting for
most of the season despite hts
slowness afoot, belted a patr
of solo homers Sunday, whtch
raiSed his batting average tD
334m sparkmg the Phillies tD
a iH trmmph over the San
FranCISCo Gwnts
LuZlllSki, who also hit a
grand slam homer Saturday I
rught agaimt the Giants, now
has hit two homers 1n a game
three times thiS season and 10
times In his career. HIS
second homer of the game
snapped a 4-4 tie m the etghth

JnDIDg and was only the
second homer htt this season
off reliever Gary Lavelle
"I thought I had something
to prove thts year," Luzmskt
admits. "I felt that some of
the fans were afratd wttlt aU
the money around that some
of us m1ght JUS! go through
Ute motions 1 wanted to
prove 11 dtd not affect me "
As a result of Luzmskt's
home runs, the defeoding
Nat10 nal League East
cbampton Phillies moved mto
second place m the dtVIston, a
game and a half behind the
Cubs
In other NL action, Chtcago
beat Houston, 4-1, Atlanta
whipped Pittsburgh, &amp;-3, Los
Angeles defeated Montreal, 82, m 10 tnrungs, Cincmnah
downed St. LoUIS, 6-2, and
New York edged San Otego,
1~

W'::~~~.;~

Ho$1e

Mlnn 87, Hobson, Bos, Zlsk, Chi
and T h o m p s o n, Det 73.

Munson. ~;';,~~~ Bases
National Leogue Lopn. lA
~ 0d T:;era~o~~·:n~s, ~,';ha~~~
Cedeno, Hou 32
American League· Polek, KC
33, Rtmy, Cal 31 Page Oak
25, Bonds, cal and LeFlore,
Det 23

k
B
•
l'nns
ma
es
ea•'S
uo
zn 'fame game
'1:'.I:'
• '

Moit"~~~f!rles

Nattonat league R Reuschet
~~~.d~. 3 s1 [•1Jt~~·R:u~ 11L~ 4 1t
2 RhOden, LA 12 7
Amtrlcan league Ryan, Col
14 10. T Johnson, Mtnn 12 3,
Goltz, Mlnn 12 6, Tanana, Cal
12 7, P•lmer, Boll 12 9
E1rned Run Average
1baood on to tnntngo pttchodl
Notional Leo1uo: R Reuschet,

~~.t.~8 f&lt;lltr~1r,'· c~.~.,~~!:

Pltl2 79, Richard, Hou 2 97
ca~m2~~~anBI~:~:;:~ T!x"n:~~;
Ryan. Cot 265, T Johnson,
Mlnn 2 70, Rozema, Del 214
Natlotlot r~~':':"Nilkro. All
155. Koosman, NY, 137. Rogers.
:t!\ 1 c1~l· 5 f 1f1~ord, HoU&lt;Ih 131 •
Amortc111 L•••••· Ryan, Cal
251 • Ta~ano, Cit 162. Leonard,
KC 145, Blylaven, Tex 131.
Pol mer, Batt 132

Ph&lt;pps completed nme of 13
passes for 66 yards and one
touchdown, a three-yard
fhp
to
tight
end
Greg
Latta
In
the
fourth quarter Avellmt, the
Bears' starter for two
seasons went Silt for 18 for 52
yards '
"We had a lot of balding
penalties when Avellini was
m the game," Pardee said.
"Those penalhes hurt us
badly. And they weren't the
fault of the quarter ba ck "
The JeLs led 8-0 after a
sluggish first half on two Pat
Leahy fteld goals. Phipps
dtrected the Bears mto
posttlon for two threepomters by Bob Thomas 1n
the thtrd quarter, which went
along with a 41-yard
mtercephon return for a
toudldown by linebacker Don
Rtves to make 11 13-6 after

.

PREVENTION .
IS THE

BEST POLICY
As
an
Independent
Insurance agency our
primary functron is to
provide pol1c1es whrch
afford fmancial protection
rn case of loss
But, we also have a vital
mterest in loss prevenhon,

as should our clients We
encourage care, caut1on
and safety
preventive
measures which can keep

that car accident trom
happenmg. that bu•ldmg
tire from starting. that
home burglary from being
committed
Prevention saves life,

limb and property

and

helps control insurance
costs and prem1ums
When losses do occur,
our poltcyholders can count
on protectrng and serving
m t1me of need But we still
say - prevention is the

best policy

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 w Matn
Pomeroy

three pennds
The game followed the
enshrmement of five football
greats mto Ute Pro Football
Hall of Fame They were
B t St
d F
t
ar .
arr an
orres
Gregg, of the Green Bay
Pa~ers; Gale Sayers of the
'Bears, Frank Gifford of the
New York Giants, and Bill
Wtlhs of the Cleveland
Browns.
p d
d h te
ar ee sat IS am came
out for the second half
P1anmng t o run th e ball
"The Jets have a good
defenstve line, but we felt
that runnmg the ball would
settle us down and get us on
Ute nght track generally," he
S81d
"We held out some of our
people (Ltonel An!Dme and
Dan Jtggets) so the left stde
of our offenstve lme was
make-shift We were kinda

Flavors tor tms IIVeeK
Chocolate

cunous as to what would
happen 1f we ran the hall "
The Jets helped Chtcago's
cause by commlttmg s1x
turnovers Jets' coach Walt
Mtchaels satd 11 wasn't
Phtpps that made the
difference m the game, but
Ute New York nustakes that
turned the tide

n we 'd been able to
convert short-yardage
s1tuat1ons earlym the game,''
he sa1d, "who knows what
might have happened "
Pardee gave Ute team this
mornmg off followtng that
VIctory 1n which 'l'ralner Fred
Caito reported no major in·
Junes.
The
Bears
began
preparation this afternoon for
Saturday's contest with the
New Orleans Saints at
Chtcago's Soldier FJeld.

•uly 31st
thru
August 6th

!!FOUR CONES!!

~'

CANTON, Ohio (uPI) Advantage, Mr. Phipps.
That's the way tt looked
Saturday after M!)ce Phipps
outshone Bob Avellini In the
firstsklrinish oflhebattlefor
the Chicago Bears' starting
quarterback job
Phipps, obtained from the
Cleveland Brownsm the off.
season played the second
half ruid led the Bears to a
come from behind 20-6
victory over the New York
Jets in tbe Pro Football Hall
of Fame Game here
However, Bears' coach
Jack Pardee refused to
concede anything m the
quarterback derby
"PhiPPI may have looked a
Uttle better after be came
Into the game in the second
half but by then our line
bl~ was beUer and our
overall execution was
crisper," be said

In the semi-fmal game
Metgs lost to Lancaster by a
score of 2-1
The first run of the game
was scored in the second
inning by Metgs when after
two outs Sayre Singled, R
Johnson
singled,
and
Wayland was hit by a pitched
ball to fill the bases.
Wall then smgled to drive in
Sayre for the only Meigs
score
Lancaster scored m the
ftfth and the sixth IDIUngs to
take the lead which they held.
Metgs could have won the
game in the eighth when
England dropped a fly ball hit
by B Johnson but he soon
made up for his mistake when
he caught a long fly ball over
his shoulders htt by B.
Ha101lton
Wall pttched the game for
Metgs, g1ving up on two runs
on 10 scattered hits and two
walks while fanmng five.
Hitters for Me1gs were R.
Johnson, 2 smgles, J. Sayre 2
stngles, and Johnson and T
Wall each a single
000 011 000-2 10 I
L
M
010 000 000-1 6 0
Wall and B. Johnson.

THIS WEEK'S

rouohs, Atl, Bench, ern and ~h 1

74
League

Htttera for Me1gs were M
Davenport 3 singles, J Sayre
2 singles, T. Wall 2 singles
and R Johnson, B Johnson,
and B Hamilton each a
Single
G
000 100 000-1 6 2
M
~ 003 OlX---6 10 2
Baird and John110n

Peanut Butter
Raspbeny
'

, ~anilla
TRY OUR

~#lek'H OUT'
STILL

THE BEST

CHICKEN DINNER

OFFERED ANYWHERE

I dairy lsle ~
Locust Street

992-52,48

Middleport, o.
"

I

•

�•

I

I

t-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 1,1977

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

Parsons finaiiy ·makes winners circle
MT. POCONO, Pa. (UP I)
- Benny Parsons won his
f I r ' t
N AS CAR

ouperspeedway race of 1977
in the trencbes.
A hungry ParlK&gt;ns, beset by
bad luck at Nashville two
weeks ago when he lost a
wheel and hit the waU in his
Olevrolet with 30 taps remaining, ww the $128,000 Coca·
Cola 50(l.mi!e stock car race
at Pocooo Sunday by .45
seconds over favored
Richard Petty .
A packed grandstand
wailed for Petty to make ·his

move with 10 laps remaining
and \lin this event the way he
did in 1974 and 1976.
But ''King Richard's" bid
failed to materialize until the
final 2..., mile lap when he
closed an eight car~ength
gap to a few yards at the
checkered flag.
''I kept waiting for Petty to
make a move and I just kept
saying to myself, 'I've got to
try harder in the cocners, but
not too hard so that I'm gonna
get out of shape' - you koow,
'• try to go to the ragged edge
every corner beca~ I knew

•

McGee captures
PGC by 4 strokes

Debbie Austin claims
top prize of $11,000

runnmg until the final 100
miles when his car seemed to
lose just enough speed to keep
frvm running with Parsons'
and Petty's.
"You've seen Richard
Petty run before-you know
he's a tough man, extremely
tough," said Parsons. " I kept
hoping maybe Darrell would
get up there and start racing
with Richard. Then maybe
Uley'd have slowed down

some."

POCONO MANOR, Pa .
(UP!) - Debbie Austin caUs
them "no brainers" - thoSe

seemingly mile-long putts
golfers just hope to get close
enough for an easy second
putt.
It turned out to be a pair of
''no brainers•• Austin sank for

birdies on the back nine
Sunday that earned her the
$11,000 first prize in tbe'
$75,000 Pocono Northeast
Classic. Austin finished with
a &amp;-under-par 54-hole total of
213.
Even with her hot putting,
Austin didn't clinch her third
LPGA tour victory of the
season until playing-partner
Sandra Post missed a !().foot
par putt oo the 18th hole that
would have forced a sudden
death playoff.
Post shot a closing 70 to
finish in second place at 214,

5-under on the 6,468-yard,
par-73 west course at the
Pocono l&gt;1anor Golf Club.
Jane Blalock, .wbo · went
.into the final round leading
Austin and three other
players by ooe shot, shot a 75
Sunday and joined Kathy
Ahern and SaUy Little in third
place at 216.
Austin gave credit for her
victory to her putting, saying
she "must have putted as
well this week as I have in
three or four years."
Kathy McMullen was alone
at 217 after a closing 72 while
four players, including firstround co-leader Amy Alcott,
tied at 218.
JoAnne Carner,
the
LPG A's leading money
winner, had a 73for a 222 total
that earned her $1115 and lefl
her about $6,000 short of the
$100,000 mark.

disastrous front nine of one
double bogey, four bogeys
and three birdies, wound up
with a 74 and a m totaL
At 278 were Grier Jones,
Bob Murphy, Bill Roger~d
Rod Curl. The four at 279
..crazy."
McGee, a !().year veteran were Mac McLendon, Ray
of the pro tour, Sunday shot a F1oyd , Lyn Loll and Victor
final-round 69, two under par, Regalado.
McGee said he told his wife
to
earn
his
second
befo
re going off Sunday,
tournament victory, in the
"Honey,
the hall has got to
Philadelphia Golf Classic, by
start
bouncing
the right way
four strokes over John Lister
- it's been going the wrong
and Bob Shearer.
McGee, whose last win was way for too loog."
McGee, wbo has now won
the 1975 Pensacola Open,
said, "Golf is a crazy game $104,701 on the tour this year,
.
and you never know what is called the 15th hole, where he
maae a saving par putt of 35
going to happen.
feet,
"the key to winning ."
"I've been in contention 20
Then
came a birdie on
times at least and played
another'paro,'!,
the 16th, with a
better than I did when I won
7-iron
drive
and
a seve!Woot
here."
putt.
McGee
said
on the 17th By Bob Ulmmmgs
Lister, one stroke off the
Palladrino and tight end Jim
pace when lbe round started, bole "I hit the two best Iowa Football Coacb
Swift.
Written lor UPI
had a 1-&lt;Jver 72 and Shearer, coosecutive shots of my life, a
Our
passing
was
IOWA CITY ,Iowa (UP! ) an Australian, shot a 4-under drive and a 7-iron ." That left
sometimes
sensational
but
67 to finish in second place him with a six.foot birdie putt Iowa has « lettermen and 16 incoosistent last season. Our
which he sank.
starters returning from a
with 2765.
team that finished :;.&lt;; in 1976. leading receivers, Bill
Bob Gilder, :wbo had a
Those are the kind of figures Schultz and Tom Grine, are
that bring optimism to any gone. All our returning
running backs did a good job
football progrwn.
catching
ball and Mike
We believe we're going to Brady is the
a
fine
split end.
have a good football team.
Addition
of
Brad
Reid,
wbo
Iowa has Improved steadily was the leading junior college
ip my three years as head
in 1976, makes the
coach. Still, Iowa has finished receiver
picture encouraging.
,
in a tie lor seventh place each
We
won't
have
to
ask
so
PAWfUCKET, R.I. (UP! ) baseman Wayne Cage, of these seasons. Now I think much of our quarterback
- Pawtucket, the leader in Columbus second baseman we have a realistic shot at the because our offense will be
the International League, will Mike Edwards, Toledo third fll'st division . We could have stronger . We want the
host the league's All..Star baseman Wayne Cage, just as well been 8-3 last year quarterback to be ther
game Aug. 9 with the Boston Pawtucket third baseman as 5-&lt;i.
trigger and not the bullet.
This is the best squad since We 've also incorporated
Ted Cox, Richmond shortstop
Red Sox.
Pawtucket manager Joe Bob Belloir and outfielders I've been here. We have more more wing·T. If we eliminate
Morgan will coach the 25-man Wayne Harer of Pawtucket, talent and depth. Physically the errors we made last year ,
squad picked bY the players Joe Cannon of Charleton and we will be a very strong we 'll be okay on offense.
team. People pretty much
Dave Moates of Syracuse.
and the media .
We were third in total
stopped
pushing' us around defense
The · pitching
staff,
Rochester has three
in the Big Ten last
of
one last year. We are bringing in year and coordinator Larry
starters, Syracuse has two, composed
and Toledo, Columbus and representative of each team, the best crop of recruits I've Coyer thinks his troops can
includes Tim Jones of see!! at Iowa during my . move up a notch . Slats
Richmood have one each.
Columbus,
John Larose of playing or coaching days. I against scoring weren't as
The starting squad includes
Pawtucket,
Ron Selak of think we'll be improved and I impressive, but the defenders
Richmond catcher Dale
.
Charleston
(replacing
team- hope this is reflected in our .frequently were placed in
Murphy, Rochester first
baseman Terry Crowley, mate Tom Dixon, who was record at the end of the precarious positions . by
Toledo second baseman Dave called up by Houston), Mike se:.:n~D of the
starters offe.nsive or kicking errors.
Oliver, Rochester third Parrott of Rochester, Larry returning are . 16
listed as . Linebackers WlU be our
baseman Taylor Duncan, McCall of Syracuse, ,Roy Lee probable starters this year. ' strength ~th two all star
Syracuse shortstop Greg Jackson of Tidewater, Larry That's a good indication of candidates 01 Tom Rusk ~d
Pryor and outfielders Mike Andersen of Toledo and bow competitive things are. · Dean ~oore. Mike Jackson IS
Easler of Columbus, Terry Mickey Mahler of Richmood. Most people think our defense the thl!'d star,ter and we ~ve
Morgan also will have
Harlow of Rochester and
coosiderably ahead of the three vets as backups .. We re
Richmond pitcher Mike iS
Darryl Jones of Syracuse.
offense, but there certainly is tw~ deep and exceptionally
Selected for the second Davey on the squad instead of
enough experience on the sohd.
team were Pawtucket a third catcher.
attacking force. .
Tackle Joe Hufford and end
catcher Bo Diaz, Toledo first
The schedule is tough as Steve Vazquez were th&lt;: most
usual and includes a revival consistent performers Ill the
of the Iowa State series defenstve line last year ~
dormant since 1934. The Pac· both return along wtlh
Eight champion, UCLA, and veterans Joe Wtllis and D~n
· Major League A:esutts
(2nd game I
Arizona complete our Sch'!lt:z at tackles and Jtm
By United Press International
Minn
200 021 121- 9 13 1
Molmt and steve Wagner at
National League
Cleve
010 100 no-- 4 10 3 nonconference schedule.
SanFm
010 002 01D- 4 13 0
0 . Joh nson , Burgmeier (7 }
Moat good attacks start ends. Jumor college transfer
Ph il a
020 101 Olx- 5 6 0 and Butl ing ; Waits, Hood (6),
with a good quarterback, but Darrell . Hobbs plus an
Haltcf&lt;.i, Lavelle (7) and Monge (9) and Kendall wAlexander ; Lonborg , McGraw Johnson. 2-&lt;4 L-Wa lfS , 5-4. HR I'm not sure wbo it will be . outstandm~ crop of btg
(7), Reed ( 9 ) and Boone. W~ - CievelancL Sp ikes (3) .
Tom McLaughlin iS a three- freshmen will help make our
McGraw. S-2, L-Lavelle, 6·5.
year letterman who started front four all the more
HRS- PhHadelph la, Luz insk i 2 (1st game, 10 Innings)
{26), Hebner {13), Schmidt (28 ). K.C
010 000 100 2- 4 ~ I most of his sophomore fon:udable .
San Francisco, Whitfield (5).
Chi
000 001 001 3- 5 6 0
Ftve .of the defensive
Pa ttin. Gura no&gt;. Bird (10), season but he'U have to beat
San Dgo
011 005 020--9 16 6 Mingorl ( 10 } and Porter ; Stone, out Do~ Piro, 8 senior with secondary
are former
N.Y .
203A00' 10x- 10131 Hamilton (10), LaGrow (lOl
We
have
starters.
Roger
Stech .and
little
experience.
Wehrmeister, Jones (3), Spill· and Ess ian , Down ing ClO J. Wner (6) , S.!iwyer
(8)
and LaGrow, 6-1. L- Bird, 8-l . HR s three
good
freshman Dav.e B~ker were Sidelined
Tenace ; Swan , Baldwin {6 ), -K ansas
City , Otis
(11);
prospects,
but
it's
hard to by m)urtes but are healthy.
Apodaca (7), Lockwood (8 ) and Ch icago , Lemon 2 (lA).
on
. rookie now. RodSearswa.s aBtgTen
Stearns. w-Swan, 7-6. L 1
coun
co
leader
m
pass
Wehrmelster, 1-3. HR - New (2nd game&gt;
York, Henderson ( 6 ).
Kan City
002 020 112- 8 10 1 quarterbacks.
.
interceptions last year and
Ch icgo
000 002 OQ.2- • 52
Ayear ag.o we had virtually safety Cedric Shaw is a
( 1D'innings)
Leonard and Wathan ; Knapp,
200 000 000 t.- 8 It 2 Kucek (9) and Downing . W - no expe_nenced running potential all star. Chuck
L.A .
Mfl
000 100 100 Q- 2 S 1 Leonard , 10-9 L:.- Knapp , 9-5. backs or linemen but now we Danzy was a regular last
Hooton , Hough
(10) and HRs-Kansas City , Brett {9 ),
Oates ; Bahnsen , Kerrlaan (10} Me Rae (13 ), Otis {l2); Chicago , have plenty of yeterans at year . Lettermen Chuck
and Carter. W- Hooton . 9-5. Gamble ( 19) , Downing (3).
these spots. Fullback Jw Sodergren and Marion Pace
- Bahnsen , 6-A. HR "- LOS An .
Lazar
was our be~t rusher a lend strong support.
seles, Smith 09 ).
Mi iW
000 000 lDO- 1 4 1
year
ago
and Ernte Sheeler,
Thlsisoursecondyearwith
Tron to
111 001 OOx - 4 10 0
010 000 101- J 12 2
PttsbQh
Augustir~e ,
Hinds (6 ) and Dennis Mosley and Tommy the 4-3 811!1 our defense should
Atlanta
100 300 04x- 8 10 0 Haney ; Lem.anczyk, Murphy
Candelar ia, Demery (4}, Te - (7) and Ashby. W-:Lemanczyk, Renn shared the tailback be the best Iowa has had in a
kUive (7l and Ott ; Solomon, 9·9. L - Augustlne, 10-12.
spot.
long time,
Hanna (71 and Correll . wDou~
Benscholer,
~
tQP
Both of our kickers graduaSolomon , 2-1 L- Candelar!a, lJ . Boston
ooo 000 001- 1 1 O·
A. MRs-PittSburgh , Oliver {12) , Calif
ooo 000 ooo- o 3 0 defenstv~ end, was swttched ted, but Dave Holsclaw, who
Moreno (6). Atlanta . Burroughs
Aase and Fisk. Tanana.
125). Correll 17).
LaRoche (8). D . Miller (9) and to offenstve.guard an~ he h~s averaged 42 yards on sb:
Sidekicks m
Is last
and Scott
Humphrey , Etchebarren ( 9 ). "'\ some quality
.
H'l
b
pun
year,
t er .J tm
Sf .L
000 110 006- 2 7 0 - Aase, 2-0. L-LaRoche , 6-.f.
1 gen erg, Schilling who booted a 46
cen
Cincl
021 021 oox- 6 15 1
guards Mike Mayer and Gary
. '
.
Forsch, Carroll (3), Eastwlck N .Y .
023120 lD0-9 8 0 Evans,
tackles Barry yard fteld goal In the .sprmg
(5), Hrabcsky 16). Metzger ( 8) Oaklnd
too 000 01o- 2 8 4
and
Sam game, are the top candidates.
and Slmmo.ns ; Capilla , Borbon
Figueroa , Clay
(9 )
and Tomasetti
PHILADELPillA (UP!) To some golf is a humbling
game, to others it's a
frustrating one , but to a
happy Jerry McGee - now
$40,000 richer -it's j st plain

•

he was going to make a move Also,! made fewer stops than
any minute." Parsons said. Richard (six to Petty's 10)."
Darrell Waltrip, the pole"But it's my crew that
deserves a lot of credit for sitter and winner at Nashville
their quick pit stop handling. two weeks ago, was in the

•

Hawkeyes Sh Owmg
very good stats

Pawtucket to host
IL All-Star battle

Waltrip finished third and
Bobby Allison, the only other
(jriver oo the same lap, was
fourth.
.
Parsons, whose first big
Nascar victory was the
Daytona 500 in 1975, averaged
128.379 miles an hour. a
record for the e~ent at this
track.
Cale Yarborough finished
sixth and lost his lead to Petty
in the NASCAR point
standings. Petty entered the
race trailing Yarborough by
12 points and now leads by 12
- 2,958 to 2,940. Parsons is
tliird with 2,71 8 after
collecting 175 points for the
victory and some · bonus
points for lap leadership.
Yarborough was involved
in a fender-bender accident
on the !28th lap while running
with the leaders and never
regained a contending
position.
" I hit the wall and Buddy
Baker spun in front of me/'

Government can't be God
Carter tells Bible class

NORTHFIELD RESULTS
NO.RTHF IELD , Ohio
(UP!) - Sifting through an
evenly matched field after a
driving stretch run, Osborne
Creed won the featured $6,500
Cantoo Pace Saturday night
at Northfield Park.
Tom Brinkerhoff drove tbe
winner over the mile in 2:00 45 aod a neck victory over
Racing Time and Missouri
Time.
The 2-1-4 10tli-race Big
Triple combination of Good
Box, Dandy Dixie and Sweet
Baroness returned $11,044.20.
A meeting-high crowd of
6,671 wagered $509,329.

SERIES
LEXINGTON, Ohio (UPI )
- Citicorp Can-Am series
leader Patrick Tamhay puts
his slim 17-point lead over
Briton Peter Gethin on the
line this weekend in the MidOhio Sports Car Course's
Valvoline Can-Am.
A crash during practice
June 11 before the Can-Am
series' opener destroyed
Brian Redman's new Lola
and hospitalized him . A
replacement car, with
CAN-AM

Tambay

driving ,

was

destroyed July 23, forcing a
17'k hour effort to build a new
racer.
Work is also cootinuing in
suburban Chicago o~ a
second car for Redman's
anticipated

return

CINCINNATI PICKED
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
American Slo-Pitch Soflhall
League
has
chosen
Ci ncinnati's Trechter
Stadium for the league's
playoffs Sept: U.
'
The playoff with involve six
teams, with the top two
finishers in the playoffs
moving on to a seven-game
championship series in their
home cities.
Trechter is the home park
for the slo-pitch Cincinnati
Suds.

to

CRISISLINE

CAU
992-5554

N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. 0.0.

OFF ICE f,JOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
ST., POM iiOtiiY._ _ _ _ _ _ __

Results, line scores

(7) and Bench . W......Capilta, 3·3. Johnson ; Blue, Giust i
(5),
L- Forsch, 13-5. HRs- Cincln - Lacey (9 ) and Sangufllen,
natl. Morgan 051, Concepcion Newman 161. W- Figueroa. 107 . . L- Biue, 10-12 . HR- New
(7) .
York , Johnson (7) .
Chicgo
010 003 ooo- • 8 0
Houston
100 000 oro- 1 8 0 Bait
100 000 ooo- 1 4 o
Burris and Swisher ; Richard , Seattle
202 000 02x- 6 10 0
Pentz (61 , Forsctt (8) and
Palmer . McGregor (3) and
Herrmann. W-Burr ls, 10-10. L Skaggs , Criscione ; Abbott and
- Richard , 9-9.
Stinson . w - Abbott, 8-7. LP.!ilmer . 12-P. HR. - Seattle,
Stanton (lS).

l11t t•m•J

---------...-......-.....-......-....-..--.
MEIGS INN
PIZZA SHACI&lt;
POMEROY , 0

Minn
002 000 ooo-- 2 S 0 (10 innings) 000 100 001 o- 2 9 0
OA.O 013 10x- 9 8 4 Oel
Cleve
200 000 000 1- 3 6 0
• Redfern , B 1.,1 r g m e r e r (2), Tex
Morris, Crawford (10) and
!serum (2), Carrithers (61 and Wockenfuss;
Blyleven , Devine
Wyneo;ar; F i tzmorr is and
(10) and SundberQ . W- Devlne.
I Fosse. W- Fitzmorrls. 3·6. J..L- Crawtord , 3-4. HRs-'Redfern . 4-6. HRs-Cieveland , 7-S.
Detrolt.
Wockenfuss (9), Ogilvie
... Thornton {17J •.8ochte (A) .

PHONE
992 ·630 &lt;1

112).

•

'

MR. RETAILER!
If you read this you have just been
exposed to the dynamic effect of
newspaper advertising.

Put it to work for you-you'll know it works!
PHONE

THE DAILY SENTINEL

~·

How Foolish can You Get?
Dear Helen:

I left my husbam three mooths ago because be used to hit
me a lot; and then he'd lock me out of the house while he
(sexually) entertained gays. I got so nervot~~~lla nded in the
hospital.
M~ D&amp;nllts .and friends hate him and teU me to stay awu .
from him. But his folks want me back. They're aU planning to
move out of the stale, and expect' me to come along.
Maybihe's tuinedover a new leaf. Shot!ld I go with the one
!love, or lltiten to my paren(4? -DONNAJEAN
Dear Donna :
What you've got here is a liomosel&lt;\lal wife-beater whose
worried parents want him "safely" married. With these three
strikes against a bappy union , coosider yourself luckily "out"!
- H.

+++

Dear Helen :

.
About lefW!andedness and bedwetting. A recent U. s.
News and World Report indicates there may be a connection,
just as mental "cross-elrcults" (when you're part left and part
right dominated) could cause a tendency to stutter or be
slightly illogical at times.
But also we lefties, who are "governed" by the right hall of
our ·brairut, may be more artistic, intuitive, verbal and deep·
thinking than our mechanicaUy.ffilnded rlghty friends.
That's the latest theory . It would be interesting to take a
survey of weD-known writers, philosophers, etc. and see if this
idea proves out. - TafALLY LEFT-HANDED
Helen :
Never thought of a connection between l~ft.handedness
and bedwetting, but there must be something to it.
We have four !lOllS, one left-handed. That one, only, wet the
bed un\ilhe was eight. He is also our only Ph.D.! - A.W.F.

MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club Monday 7:30 p.m. in
garden at home of Mrs. M . J .
Fry, Cheshire. Members are
invited to bring guests.
THE MIDDLEPORT
Garden Club will meet 1
Monday, Aug. 1, at•7:30 p.m.
in the garden of Mrs. M. J.
Fry, Che,hire. Members are
lnyited to bring guests.
REGULAR meetiiig of the ,
Racine Chapter No. 134 OES
Monday, at 8 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple.
TJJEsDAY
ICE
CREAM Social
Tuesday at Dexter Church of
Christ 7 p.m. Public invited.
REGULAR meeting of
Drew Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion, Pomeroy,
at8 p.m. Tuesday. Boys State
Reps Chuck Follrod and
Mark Mitch to be present
along with Meigs County's
Ga111e Warden who will show
films on wildlife and conduct
a discussion on new antitrapping laws pending in
Ohio.

Dear Helen :
,
I divorced my second husband almost a year ago. Didn't
see him for sil&lt;months,.then I got this urge to caU. l'd beard he
was !!ffing anotber woman and was jealous.
We patched things up and at first we were fine. But now
I'm having secood thoughts. The sa!lle old disagreements pop
up.

.

Should I stick it out a while longer or concede that
remarriages aren't wise? Please ask your readers, who have
gone back together after a split. - THREE-TIMER
Dear T.T.:
Remarriages work only if you learn from your mistakes and each partner learns equally weD.
If jealo!W' over another woman was your main reason for
a new try ,I wouldn't give it much chance.
·
Comments, readers? - H.

•
gzven
Mrs. Smith
shower by her church
DORCAS - Mrs. Terry
Smith was honored with a
layette shower Thursday,
July 21, in the social room of
the Dorcas United ,Methodisl
Church.

Refreshments of nuts,
mints, cake, potato chips, and
. punch were served by the
hostesses, Mrs. Delton
Fowler, Mrs. Ruth Snuth and
Melinda Bailey.
.
Games were played With
prizes going to Mrs. Ruth
-ADVERT ISEMENT
Simpson
and Mrs. Bea
FOil BIOSCornell. The door prize was
Federal Land and wa ter
Conservation
Fund
Ac t
won by Mrs. Elma Louks.
Project No . 39 -00508
Others attending were
Munic i pal Park Tenn is
Courts, Village cf Middlepor t,
Lorna Grindley, Bertha
Oh io .
Johnson, Faith Varney,
Bids will be rece ived vntfl
12 : 00
Noon
O .S. T . on
Emma Adams, Della Sauer,
Aug . 8, 1977 for the co!'l
srrucHon ot Municipal Tenn ts Kelly Sauer, Myrna Custer
Courts for the V illage of and Aleasha. Mildred CarMiddleport. "Oh io, at which
nahan, Gretta C~rnahan ,
time the bids shall be openett
Dorothy Smith, Pat Smith,
by the Clerk o.f the VJ!Illlge
lind publicly read by h 1m at
Betty Johnson, Elva Cottrill,
the VIllage Hall , 237 Race
Street , ViU&amp;ge of M iddleport, VIrginia Thoren, Alberta
Hubbard, Susie Fisher, Mary
Ohio .
Blds may be ma iled to the
K. Rouah, Virginia Reese,
Mayor's Office. Village of
Joseplilne
Smith, Esther
Middleport. Ohio, 45760,
Attention : Mr . Fred Hoff.
West, Phyllis Harris, Bonnie
man , Mayor .
Theiss and Lowrie Hupp.
Information tor bidders,
form of contract. plans ,
Sending gifts were Pat
specifiu1ions, and forms of
Brown
and Michelle, Jay ~·
bid bond, performance and
Morarlty and _girls, Karen
payment bOnd, and other
documents may be exam ined
Johnson, Pam Theiss and
.!lind are obtainable at the
VIllage Hall , Middleport , daughter, Debbie Harris,
Oh iO, uron the payment of the
Margaret Johnson, Mary V.
sum o $10.00, wh ich is not
Easterday, Lori Chapman,
refundable .
Alt bids must be in plain
Jeannie Jackson, Eleanor
sealed envelopes marked on Wingett, Emma Salser,
the
outside ,
" Bid
for
Bernice Theiss, Sharon
Municipal
Park
Tennis
Courts. Village of Middleport,
Birch, Donna Sayre, Goldie
Ohio ." Each bidder must
Dill, Donna Smith and Naomi
hlllve on the outside of the bid
envelope his name and ad - London.
dress, and each bid must be

accompanied bY a bid bond or
certified check in the amount
of 10 percent of the total b id .
Ttle bid bond shall be. co~ ­
ditloned that if the btd ts
accepted a contract will be
ent•red Into and Its per -.
formance properly secured .
If the bid embraces both
labor and material such
Items shall be separately
stated with the pr ice thereof .
No bidder may withdraw
his bld for a period of slx!Y
days from the date of btd
opening.
The project Is federally
assisted. Contracts to be
awarded under this Invitation
for bids will be sublect to
Presidential El(ecutlve Order
No . 11246, as amended ,
reqUiring affirmative action
for equal employment OP·
portvnlly . Contractors ue
further advised that the
January 27, 1972 Equal
Employment Opportunity
E•ecutlve Order of the
Governor of Ohio Is also
applicable to this bid fn·
vltatlon .
. The owner reserves . the
right to waive lnformiflltles
or to reJect anv and all bids .
successful b i dder m uat .
comply with the OhiO Work men's Compensation laws
and also comply with all
·' other state, federal and loc~l
ta.c:es and lews.
Succeufu 1 bidder must
proceed with the work within
two weeks of the signing ol
the contract and the project
. must bl fully completed
within 30 working days
thereafter excepting only
such delays al may be occasioned by strikes, un Hasonabte weather or acts of

God.

VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT,OHIO
ay Fred Hoffman.
MAYOR

992-2156

(81 1, 2tc

FRIDAY
WOMEN ' S Aglow
Fellowship of Pomeroy 7 p.m.
Meigs Inn. Reservations by
Aug. 2 at 4464.146, 993-5845,
949-2723 or 949-2325.

Cou rt of Common Pleas, in
the case of Racine Hme
Nationa l Bank vs . Harold E .
Wolfe , et al .. being th e
judgment entry r endered in
c ase No . 16 ,418 . 1 will offer at
public sale at the door of the
Co uri House of Meigs County ,
Ohio , on the ·19th day of
August , 1977, at 10 o'clock A .
M, the follow ing l ands and
tenements :
Si tuate in the Township of
Lebi!!!lnon, County of Me igs
and Slate of Oh io, to wi t :
~ e ing w1th in Sect ion No . 10,
Townshi p No . 2, iJTld Range
No 11 , of the Ohio Company's
Pur c tHISe , bounded
~nd
described as follows : B!!,ng
on State Route No . 12\ , be ·
. tween Groundhog Creek and
Portland , and commencin g at
a point m center of Slate
Route No . 124, said point
being on Frank Al len 's North
l i ne ; thence North a l ong
center of State Rout e No 124,
a distance of 1.40 feet, thence
west 312 feet to an iron p in ;
thence souttl 140 teet to an
iron pin on Frank A ll en 's
North line ; t~ence east along
Frank Allen 's North line 312
feet to the pi .!ICe of beginning ,
con taining Qr~e acre , mor e or
less .
The real estate is appraised
at $15,000 00
Te rms Of sale are cash on
hand on day of sale.
JAMES J. PROFFITT
Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio .

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
AOA YVONNE TACKETT
Rutland , Ohio
Plaint iff ,

NOTICE OF YEAR
By virtue of the order o f
sale duly Issued out of the

No . 15 ,844

- vs-

FREO TACKETT

c-o Anna Welch
Middleport, Ohio ,
Defendant.
Notice by
~
Publication
To Fred Tackett . whose
last known address was c -o
Anna Welch, Middleport ,
Ohio, you are hereby notified
that you have been named
Defendant in a leg.!lli action
entitled Ada Yvonne Tackett ,
Plaintiff, vs. Fred .Tackett.
Defendant. This action has
been assigned Ca'se No . 15,844
and Is pending In the Court of
common Pleas of Meigs
county , Pomeroy, Ohio ,
•5769 .
The oblect of the compiBint
Is for dlvorc ,e care, custody,
and control of the minor
children of the parties. and
other relief .
vou ere reQuire~ 1to ar~swer
the complaint w ithin 28 days
after the last Publication of
thiS notice, which will be
published once eact'l week for
six successive weeks . The
last publlcetlon will be made
on Aug . 22, 1977, and the 18
days fQr answer will com ·
men~ on that dete.
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as required by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure, divorce
will be ;ranted .

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Dated : May 24 , 1977
Larry Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Meigs county
Common Plea&amp; Court
(7) 18, 25 {8) 1, Sr 15, 22, 6tc

No help for skillet coatinf?
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- Most of
the coating oo my heavy
aluminum non-stick skillet
has been scraped off and I
if
is
poswonder
sible to recoat it. If so,
how?
DEAR MRS. J .A. - There
was a commercial spray
made for this but two sources
advised me that it has been
taken olf the market. No one
could give me a solution to
your problem- sorry. -Polly
DEAR POLLY -1 want to
pass on my recipe for the
"sugar starch" used for stiffening crocheted doilies .
Helene should boil one-hall
cup sugar and one-fourth cup
water until it bubbles. Rinse
doilies up and down in this until completely saturated and
then shape flat to dry. (Polly's note -!think this works
better if the doilies are damp
he fore putting in the syrup.)
-MRS.L.S.
DEAR POLLY - Three
tablespoons of baking soda
put in a tub of tepid water
makes a most refreshing
summer bath. Also dust the
inside of your shoes with baking soda to prevent any foot
odor. -SANDRA.
DEAR POLLY - I read
with interest Goldie's disappointing experience in trying
to remove carpet squares and
this is understandable as she
went about it the wrong way.
How to remove such squares
Is explained in the enclosed
leaflet put out by our company that makes such
carpet. The easy way to
remove them is by "steaming" the

ly and gently. Very little elbow grease is needed
to do an effective job or
removing the square intact
with a goOO deal of adhesive

"tackiness" left on the back

when dry. The only materials

required are an electric nat
!ron and several old wet
cloths. I have removed carpel
squares myself in my own
home and the results were ex·
cellenl. Do be sure to follow
di rections. We would hate to
have

square loose. Remove the

square, noting the direction
of the arrow on the back, and
install a new square with the
arrow in the same direction.
caution - use a heated iron
only over wet cloth - not
directly on the square as it
may melt the fibers. "
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank - you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Write POLLY!S

squares loose

DAVID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR

e, 21c

-

OHiOAN KILLED
WINCHESTER, Ky. (UP!)
_ George Crase, Mount
vernon, Ohio, was killed tate
Saturday night when ·the
pickup truck in wblch he was
riding sideswiped a car and
overturned on Ky. 15 about
nine miles south of this eastcentral Kentucky commum~.

·

state Police said the driver

of the tuck fled the scene.

POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Gentle persuasion will
lead to better eating

Rev . 8-17 -73
I,

think

and pulling back slow-

w ith Chapter 5525 Oh io
Revised Code.
Plans and specifications
are on file In the Department
of Transportation and the
otf!ce of the District Deputy
Director .
The Director reserves the
right to relect any and all

181

consumers

squares cannot be removed
easily when desired. Probably no other do-it·yourself
project pr&lt;Xluces such instant
good looks for so little money.
MRS H P M
· · · ·
DEAR MRS. H.P.M. Thank you so much for yout
,helpful letter. For more
specific directions 1 am
quoti ng f rom your b00klet " To remove damaged
squares easily wet a clean
cloth and place over the
damaged square. Using an
electric iron set at 300-350
degrees F , press down on t he
wet cloth · ·to "steam" the

By BERNARD BRENNER
UP! Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) Deputy secretary John White
says the Agriculture Department plans to put strong new
emphasis on educating the
American people in the
basics of good nutrition .
The agency will use "gentle
persuasion and leadership"
to get the private food
industry to emphasize the
same theme in its billion
dollar a year advertising
programs, White said in an
(7 ) 18, 25 (8) 1, B, 15, 5tc
interview.
Earlier , Assistant
NOTICE TO
Agriculture
Secretary Carol
' CONTJIACTORS
Foreman stirred controversy
STAT~ OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF •
when she ., said c(ood
TRANSPORTATION
advertising that promotes
Columbus, Ohio
already' familiar items should
July 22. 1977
Confra(t Sales Legal
be cut back to help reduce
copy No. 77·993
food costs.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
White, in a speech last
received at the office of the
D irector
of
the
Oh io week, said, "upwards of $1
Department
of
Trans· 6i11ion is spent to advertise
portation , Columbus, Ohl?•
until
10 : 00 A .M ., OhiO and encourage us to eat
Standard Time , Tuesday , various foods." Unlike Ms.
August 16, 1977 , for im · Foreman, he did not suggest
provemenls in :
Meigs County. Oh io, on any cutbacks, but he did call
Se,.:tion MEG -33 -2. 22 , U.S . lor a new emphasis on health.
Route 33 In Bedford Town ·
While said his speech_was
ship , by grad ing , dra ining
and paving with asphalt iC not a conscious effort to shift
concrete ; Installation .of
traffic control device ; and by the focus of departmental
constructing: Bridge No . talk about food advertising. A
MEG ·33-0226, a prestressed reading of his full speech bore
cor~crete box -beam super ·
structure with concrete this out, indicating he was
substructure (spans 39 .87 feet concentrating on health
. 40.73 feet - 39.87 teet,
roadway 36 feet between education rather than on the
guardrail I, over west Branch food
cost factors Ms.
Sha~e River .
Foreman
talked about.
Pavement Width 200 feet.
"I'm not going to say that
Prolect Length 400.00
teet or 0.075 m tie .
advertising ts bad or that it
Work Length -1, 400.00feet
should
be done away with,"
or 0.265 m ile .
"The date set for com · White said m a speech to a
plet \cn of this work shall be
as set forth in the bidd ing nutrition conference.
"But I will advocate a
proposal .''
Each bidder ·shall be similar program for nutrition
required to file with his bid a
certified check or cashier ' s education to encourage
check for an amount equal to people to eat wisely."
five per cent of his bid, but in
White said the Agriculture
no event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bo'1,d Depar!J1lent must use all its
for ten per cent of his bUt,
publicity and educational
payable to th~: Di rector .
Bidders must apply. on the programs to push good eating
proper
forms ,
for habits- through classrooms,
qualifications at least ten
community centers and food
days prior to the date set for
opening bids in accordance stamp centers. Nutrition

bids .

1:'.1:'J

BerniCe Bede Osol

MONDAY

(7) 25,

I

ASI~·GIAPH Halln11

$11!1MIIWII'IMIIWIIIIIIM!IIIIIIl88~

Helen Help
~
Social
Us. • . By Helen Bouei i~:::: Calendar

Dear

competition.
The Frenchman Tambay ,
28, began racing only five
years ago and Mid-Ohio will
be only his third race in the
U.S. He fmished sixth in an
Ensign in the Gennan Grand
Prix.

•,

-.;:w.$1:;&gt;;:&lt;:::::::;:;:~~-::m.-.o:ii.

Payrolls up 16%
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Payrplls for production
workers in June wm up 18
per cent over thole al one
yesr esrlier, the Ohio state
University Center for
Business and Economic
Research sald Saturday.
Payrolls for the first sb:
mooths Increased 10 per cent
over the same period of one
year ago.
The state's production
worker employment was up 5
per cent in the June-to-Jflnt
compariso¥ and up 2 per cent
in the sb:-month comparison.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - America;s loat valueo
cannot be restored by government alone, President
Carter told his Bible class.
In one of the President's strongest statements oo the
relationship of religioo and politics, Carter said
Sunday, "we have to restore our basic value$ through
God's word and the perfect eJ:ample of Christ as to
what our nation ought to be ."
Carter said he and Arthur Burns, chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board, talked last week "about the
abandonment of Christian values in this country. "
Carter noted tllf loss of "hard work, clean streets,
planting of flowers, cleaning up a neighborhood,
respect for authority, r~t for law, tbe value of
human compassion .
· "U we doubled our natiooaJ budget, we coUldn't
restore those values," he said.
Frequent "amens" burst forth from the class, which
overflowed the balcony area of the First Baptist
Church. Carter teaches about once a month.
Awoman asked if there was danger in people putting
their faith in government and not in God.
"1 think the answer is yes," Carter said.
A man asked Carter about civU religion, a term
applying to the practice of treating the flag , capitalism
and the American government almost as objects of
worship.
"I think there is a danger in making civil
government an 'image,'" Carter said.
"Quite often we tend to substitute a nation or flag or
a structure or a governmental idea for God," he said.
"It gives us a sense of superiority, which we don't
deserve."

NICKLAUS ADDED
MASON,Ohio (UPI)- Pro
golfer Jack Nicklaus says he
will play in the Ohio Kings
Island Open Sept. 19-25 at the
Jack Nicklaus Golf Center he
designed a few years ago.'
Nicklaus , the second
satd
Yarb or ough
m
leading
money winner on the
describing the crash. "I had
PGA
tour
this year, feels he is
to spin to keep from hitting
in
the
prime
of his career.
him. Somebody's to blame for
"I'm
playing
better than
the wreck, but I don 't know
J've
ever
played,"
he said.
who.l'm more disgusted than
The
Nicklaus-designed
tired. I don 'I think the wreck
slowed us down too much. We course, host of the $150,000
just weren't running good." tournament, is across the
Janet Guthrie finished lith interstate from Kings Island
in the race and earned $1,600. Amusement Center.
Nicklaus tied for sixth in
Parsons won $19,275 and now
the
•Kings Island Open last
has career winnings of
year.
$933,688.
There were 43 lap changes
among six drivers. Parsons
led 15 times for 120 laps. Four JUNIOR WINNER
COLUMBUS (UP! )
caution flags slowed the
Willie
Wood Jr., 16, Lake
actioo lor 22 laps.
Charles, La.; won the U.S.
Junior
Amateur
golf
SCIOTO ·RESULTS
championship Saturday.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
In the final match, Wood,
lrlner Circle came from sixth the son of a golf pro, defeated
place at the half to win by a David Games of Bellflower,
head over Bo Bo Arrow in the Calif. , 4-3. Wood , who
featured $8,000 ninth pace at captured medalist honors
Scioto Downs Saturday night. earlier in lhe tournament,
Third
was
Sovereign fired a four-under par game
Warrior .
including six birdies.
The winner was driven. in
In Saturday morning
1:59 by Tim Ivins .
semifinals, Wood scored a
Hargus Creek and Pentar one-up victory over World
Hanover combined lor a S.l J~nior · Champion Corey
nightly double that paid $51. Pavin of Oxnard, Calif., and
The crowd of 8,727 wagered Games beat Eric Evans of
$547,929.
Canoga Park, Calif., one-up.

$::-The DailJ'_~Unel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. l,1977

task.· shendino
'.1:'
6

6)~ $24 million quickly
COLUMBUS (UP!)- The mooths, but it might be cut to
three moths to take
with others could be fortunate state Welfare Department advantage of the overlap, be
for you this coming year. h's has a problem - how to
said . .
possible you won't fully explol~ spend about $24 million in
Jain also said county
your pos1tlon and thus lose what federal funds befoce Sept. 30.
might be a great ad~tantage.
If the money from Title XX welfare departments could
is
not used by the Sept. 30 tum in as many biUs as they
LEO (JuiJ 23-Auv.ZZI Don't ""
too liberal w ith another 's deadline, the state will lose could, regardless of whether
they feU within the county
resources today. Treat wh at the funds.
you're managing as It It were
allotment.
Vijay
Jain,
the
your own. Find out what hes
ahead for you this oomlng year deparln)enl's senior analyst
by Sending lor your copy ol ·for management and budget .
Astro·Graph Letter. Me II 50 services, says most of the
cents for each and a long, self . money in danger of not being
addressed. stamped envelope to spent by the end of the federal
Astro-Graph , P.O. Box 489,
GETS FIRST TICKETS
Rad io City Station, N.Y. 10019 fiscal period is what was
LEXINGTON
Ky. (UP!) allocated
to
but
not
spent
by
Be sure to specify vour birth
Harry
Johnson
, Dayton,
some
county
welfare
departsign.
Ohio,
was
traveling
through
ments.
It
could
he
diverted
to
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopt. 22)
Lexington
on
vacation
when
several
Ohio
counties
which
Should you regard yourself as
he
heard
that
Elvis
Presley
had
allocation
cuts
this
year.
tess than en equal today, you'H
be at a grE?af disadvantage.
Spending the money would would perform in concert
Evalua'e yourself realistically.
free
some of the next fiscal here Aug. 23.
LIBRA (&amp;.pl. 23-0ct 231 Unfor.
Johnson stood in line 44
tunately, this is one of those days period funds for use by
hours
so ~e could purchase
when you ta~e your duties too allocation.eut counties, by
the
firstuckets
Sunday. He
lightly. Ultimately, this will catch juggling accounts to take
up with you
bought the maximum 10
scORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. 22) The advantage of the state fiscal tickets the concert sponsors
period
having
ended
June
30.
· "if come" may well be the "never
Jain said the state was allow.
come" tor you today . Don't bet
Johnson said he and his
considering
putting as ·many
on anything unless you have all
wife
had attended "three or
biUs
'as
possible
into
the
the facts and the odds are in
four''
other Presley shows.
current
federal
fiscal
quarter
your favor.
SAGITTARIUS (NOY. 23-Doc. for reimbursement, but
Without hesitation, officials
21) Thts is not the day to rely on
say the Presley concert will
others to cover for you. If it's im~ problems might result in
portent, you better be there to billing delays at the county be the highest entertairunenl
event in his area since the
make certain It's taken care of. level.
The state department has Civic Center opened last
CAPIIICOIIPI (Dec, 22.Jon. 11)
Today you'll find it extremely dif- until Nov. 15 to bill the federal year. More than 27,000
ficult to 'fess up to your short~
spectators were expected.
comings. You 're apt to spend government for service
Tickets sell for $15, $12.50
provided
through
Sept.
30,
more time raHonallzlng your
and
$10.
while
counties
have
six
errors than correcting them.
AQUARIUS (Jon. »-Feb. 11)
Auguet 2, lt77
Afrangemenls that you make

Extravagance and carelessness
are your major enemies today.

You could go Into the hole by
overspending or be busted by
overlooking details.
PISCES (Fob. 20-llorch 20)

· If Your Mattress
Is lumpyYour Rugs Are
Worn- Your

You're a good opener today, but
a poor closer. You are reticent to
take your r~htful share of the

proceeds.
AlliES (ll•rch 21-Aprll ,1t)

While your Intentions are noble
today, your foUowalhrough Is awful. Don't build someone's hopes
up, then carelessly dash them .

TAURUS (April 20-llay 20)

If

a

Living Room Suite .

friend is In a jam today, aid him
in any wey you can, but don't
take on his obligations. They•
may be larger than you think.

Is Faded, and

GEIIINt (llay 21-.lune 20) You

tend to take things for granted

Torn .- The

education must "give people today. This could be a big misthe facts about what they take. Something you think Is a
snap could be a snare.
need to eat," he said.
(J..,. Z1.Jutr 22) It's
But in addition, White said, CANCER
great to be optlmlsllc, but tt's
" every form of media used to more important to be realistic tosell food today must be used day. Dor)'t don the rose-colored
to sell the benefits of good glasses.
nutrtion." And that includes
Another focus of this
priva\!! industry advertising, research will be to develop
he added in an interview.
"Of course we're not in a new methods to increase the
position to call . up General nutritiooal quality of the food
Mills and say, you've got to we eat."
do your advertising in 8
Coogress, too, is showing
certain way," the former increasing interest. The farm
Texas ·agriculture bill in a Senate-House
commissioner said.
committee today includes a
"But we are going to use program of federal grants for
our influence and leadership T_n_u_tr_it-ion
__re_s_e_a_rch_·--------------------------to persuade private industry
to emphasize nutrition in its
advertising," White added,
explaining that this approach
wouldn 'I hurt food industry
profits.
" In fact, 1 ' he said, 111 think
solid nutrition research and
education programs could
stimulate the food system
and expand the consumption
of American farm products."
While said the federal gov·
ernment and the Agriculture
Department, in particular, is
on the verge of a sharp
expansion in nutrition
research and education.
In the past, the government
has done too little in this field,
he said, and "within the U.S.
FEBRUARY
JANUARY
DECEMBER
Department of Agriculture
MTWTFS
we have more knowledge
SMTWTFS SMTWTFS
about
the
nutrition
1 2 3 4
1 2 3
1234567
5 6 7 B 9 10 11
requirements of a dairy cow
4 5 6 7 8 Q 10
8 9 10 11 12 •114
12 13 14 15 1 9
· 18
or a pig than we have about
11 12 13 14 15 ~~17 15 16 17 18 1~·· 21
19 20 21 22 2~ .. 25
18 19 20 21 22 2 24 22 23 24 25 2~ • 28
the kinds of foods which a
262728
•
•
pregnant woman should eat 25262728293 ~ 29 30 31
to assure the health of her
unborn child aod herself."
MARCH
But this is changing, be
MTWTFS
said.
Wintertime.
1 2 3 4
"One of the major new
5 6 7 8 9 1n 11
And
the
livin'
is
freezy.
initiatives of the Department
12 13 14 15 16~i8
19 20 21 22 2~ ·' !5
of Agriculture will be a wellKids are sleddin'
262728293.
funded human nutrition pro·
And the gas bills are high.
gram. A part of this... will
{1m/It upuln,~:l~s lo tl1t Gmlut•iii$J
obviously deal with the real
nutritional status of the
citizens of the United States.
When the weather turns cold, heatmg bills go up, right?

lamps Are
Dingy and the
Sttwe

Won't CookSEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

FOR tHAT BRAND NEW LOOK!

Four reasons
why you should join

Coli••nbia's

Budget Payment Plan:

DENTUR1:~ - DENTISTRY
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
Oft J.. J. STAEHLI - DR . K. H. CHUNG -

DJt VICTOA Y. I.IANO- DR G. J. STOMBAUGH

One or two day
full denture service,
partial d!!ntures

Not necessarily. Not .if you take advantage of Columbta's Budget Payment
Pia~;~. The Plan lets you spread ne:&gt;rt year's estimated gas bill over twelve even
monthly payments. We will review all budget accounts periodically and adjust
them, if necessary, to make sure you will not have~ large payment at the end of the
budget year. The last bill will be plus or minus whatever's necessary to correct the
difference between the calculated and the actual annual bill.
You can't take the shiver-out of winter's weather, bu t you ca n take the shudder
out of winter's gas bills.

FOR PRICES
OHIO TOLL FREE

ro join the Budget Payment Plan, Simply pay th e "Monthly Budget" amount
shown on your August gas bill.

1·800-282-6411

~~MBIAGAS
RIVIERE CENTER- 949 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus
Weekdays 8:30 ol.M. to 6:30P.M.
' You ll/ Srmle T omormt•• If } \
fl.4~ttM•CM!MICI004,...,~

:'.!kt·

r nr .· 01 Your :1 cc 1h 1 oduV'

=;..-

'•

�'-The DailJSentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug.l, l9TI

WANT AD
CHARGES

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items· Into Cash

Wordl or Unck!c'
Cuh
CtiM.rxc
1.00
U5
uo
1.90
1.10
U$
!.00
3.75

I WOUlD lik•ro work with retard·
I'd chikfren in ony woy . not past
age 1.t. hper lencttd. Phone

992·7513.

--

FOUND. MAlE hound dog . Block
with tan marking5. Well man· COAl , limestone, and calcium
,.,ed. Phone 98S-A244 .
chlori de ond calcium brin• for
dust control and special mi xing
FOUND • MEDIUM Sized wire
salt for farmers , bcelsior Soft
~ired terrier ry~. young mole
Works. Main Street , Pomeroy,
dog. Blonde and white.. Coli _____Ehioorphone992- ~ 1 _
. ___
992·5325.

-

1600.

Also,

Mobile tiJJme a)ea and Yard iile21
art ~ only Wilh cash 11r1th
order. 35 cent charge for lids l1li"I"Y•
ing ~ Nwnber In Car't" of The Sen·

tuu~l.

The ~b li.sher re.serV~ Uae- rlgl't
kl edit or rejel'l any_ads &lt;iee•ne4.;00.

jection.al. The Publisher will t1ol. ~
responsible for ~~ Uwn une uu.,w ·
ret.'f. U'l.!iel"tim.
Phooe99'k21:)6

NOTICE
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADLJNES
Monday
N0011 on Saturday

1\lo:iday

thru Friility
4P.M.
the day befol-e pubbcatiun

__I!'IO_· - =:-c-:~;:­

PiANO TUNING, lone Daniels. 12
y•ots of service . Phone

FRIENDLy TOY Parties has open- SPRING GARDEN Suppliet, CobinSJS · for
managers and
boge . cauliflower . broccoli ,
992-2082.
demonstrators. Demonstrate
ond
Mad lettuoe plants ,
WATER WELL drilling. Phone
guarant...d toys and gifts . No
yellow . white . and red onion
William P. Groni ol 7.t2-2879
cash investment . na collecting
sets , onion plants , Kennebec,
. . g • no serv1ce
.
cobbler. Katahdin , Red Pon tia c
oh•r6p.m.
o r da I1ver1n
charge , car and telephone
and Red lasoda seed potatoes .
PE NNZOil RUnANP open daHy
. Call collect ,to Carol
Bulk gorden seed$ , ~t.ting soil~
fill 1.0. Clos•d Mondoyt , · . neces'sc;uy
Day .(518) 489-8395 or write
peot moss, fruit trees and rose
wr&amp;eker service, tire repolr.
Friendly Toy ·Parties, 20 . bushes . Mlstwoy • Market ,
Phone 742-957$ or 742·2081 ,
Railrood

1 ~s
"" .

EXCAVATING. BACKHOf. dozer,
tre"cher, low Boy, dump truck

A'Ye. Albany ,

Pomeroy , Ohio, 992-2582.
8ob:s Morket , Mason , W. Vo ,

N .Y.

duds . Top price for standing
sawtimber . Coli 992-5%5 or

3 AND • RM. furnished and un·
furnished opts . Phol)e 992. COAL NUMBER 6, STOKER OR
lUMP DEliVERED . Call (614)
S.o34 .
38-4 ·281•.
COUNTRY Mobile Honie Pork , Rt .
JOHN
DEERE •20 li~e power , 3
:J3 , ten miles north of Pomeroy.
p&lt;&gt;int hitdl . John Deer No . 5
large lots with concrete potios,
sidewalks, runners and off . mower, 7 pt. cut . John Deer 2
row cultivator Ford - two 1o4 in.
street perking. Phone992-7 ..79.
bottom plow. Coll247-2195 .
FURNISHED APT. Adults only . no
pets . Phone 992-3874. · Mid- ASHLEY STOVE Dealers. Runn ing
Special Summer Sale. lorge
dleport .
C61J. $300. Blowers, $40. Call
AVAILABlE ot Village Monor
mornings , (61-4) 698-7191 .
Apcrtments- 1 bedroom fully
carpeted with kitchen op· JOHN DEERE Cro....Qer Backhoe
endlooder and tlump truck .
pliances , furnished . Storting ot
Phone992-7o479.
$104 per mont. Phone 992-7 721 .
Equal houting opportunity .
BACKHOE DUMP truck ond trailer
tor sale. Phone 742-2-451 .
BUSINESS BUilDING in New
Haven , W.Va ., 20 x -45 main LIVE CATFISH for sale to 1tock
busineu corner. Phone (61-4)
lakes , ponds , etc . Phone
742·2255 .
742·3167 or 949-2545 .
TRAILER LOT for rent on Brownell

Kent Hanby, H46·B570.
COINS. CURRENCY. tokens . old
pocket watchas and chains,
Fr~ylifle~
silver and gold . We nHd 1964
and older sil~er coins . Buy, sell,
or trade' Call Roger Womsley,
742-2331.
0 &amp; J's HOUSE of Fabric Clearance OLD FURNITURE. tee boxes , brass
beds , etc .,
complete
Sale, Now thru August 3. T·
households. Write M . 0 . Miller.
Shirt knits , reg. $1.98 yard ,
Rt . • , Pomeroy , Ohio or coli
now 89' . T-S.hlrt Knits Reg .
992·776/J.
$2 .•9 now, $1.69 yrd . .All our
1sf Quality poly . . ~nit' reduced CASH! I. Junk cors, Fry 's' Truck &amp;
price, one toble poly knits,
Auto, Rutland. Phone 742· 2081 · Ave,
Middleport .
Phon-e
$1.00 yard. D &amp; J 's. Fabric , 1
or 742-9575. Closed Mondays .
992·2625.
mile touth of Middleport on
~0 ITEM TOO Lof.ge or too smoll. UPSTAIRS .APT . unfurnished, $100 NEED A WATER
State Rt. 7.
Will buy 1 piece or ,complete
per month. 300 Main St .,
NOTICE OF ELECTION
housetwld. New , used , or antiSOFTENER?
• Pomeroy, Phone 992-6280 .
ON TAX LEVY IN
ques . Martin's Furniture. 20 N .
EXCESS11F THE TEN
2nd St., Middleport. Phone 2 BEDROOM Mobile home for
MILL LIMITATION
Let Pomeroy Londmerk
rent , 1 mile from Racine . Phone
992-6370.
NOTICE is hereby given
soften &amp; condition your ·
992·5B5B.
that in pursuance of a
water and a Co..op water
Resolution of the Board of
HOUSE CLOSE to Meigs Mines on
softener,
Model UC-XVI.
Education of the Eastern
S.R. 12-4 , married couple only.
Local School District, Reeds Now Only
Coll742·2166.
ville, Ohio, passed on the 2Dth IF YOU have a service to oHer,
dav of June , 1977, ther:e will
5
BEDROOM
Home
,
fully
want to buy or sell something.
us test your water
1Let
be subm ltted to a vote of the
carpeted, 13o acre farm for
ae looking for work . _ . or
people of said S~:,:hool District
Free.
rent . Call (30A) 273-2566 or
whatever ... you 'll get resu!ts
at 11 Special ELECTION to be
985-4198.
faster
"
w
ith
o
sen·tinel
Want
Ad.
held In fhe School Olstrlct,
Call9'12·2156.
O!'llo, at the regular places of
't.~J-ck w. Ulrsey, Mgr.
EFFICiENCY HOUSE lor · mo.n.
votin·g therelri, on Thursday,
Wornon
or
couple.
Pri~ocy
,
Mid·
~ · Phone 992·2181
the 25th day of August , 1977, GARAGE SAlE. August 1·5, 9, 1
L-__;__;.-;;;;.;.;.-.-...~.
dleport orea. Phone 992~7~1 .
a.m . fill 5 p.m. located off
the question of levying , in
ooute 7 by-pass on Old Route
excess of the ten mill
ANTIQUE GLASSWARE including '
limitation, for the benefit of
I.a. south of Jacks ' Cafe .
Bisque Hgurines , glosS Daskets .
eastern Local Board of
Reasonable. Prices on bicycle,
unusual antique choir, blue
Educe'tion for the purpose of
new painting •Upplies, toys.
~elvet . Antique chair frame ,
current operati_n g expenses.
boy's ond girl's school clothing
Said tax being: an ad new Lenox chino , autumn patRESPONSIBLE
and much more.
ditional tax of 5.0 mills to run
tern . Phone 992-3283.
PERSON
tor three years, which will YARD SALE. Wedn0$doy , Aug. 3;
Wanted to own and operate 23 CHANNEl PIERCE Simpson
raise a minimum of $55 ,000.00
Thursday, Aug. ~ ; and Friday ,
Beorcat CEI desk model ; clock , 3
annually
candy
&amp; confection vending
Aug . 5. 20" boy's bicycle ,
element
beam , 80 h . Coax ,
route.
Pom•roy
•nd
125,000 BTU . ~ furnace and
at a rate not exceeding 5.0
$230.
Phone
992-5875.
surrounding
oru
.
P!Usant
docting, electric fireploce ,
mills tor each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
clothes , etc. 297 Wright .Street ,
business. High pnllit items. JUST RECEIVED Another order
Fifty cents for _each one
Pomeroy , Ohio .
Men'$ factory damaged boqts
Can stort part limo. Age or
hundred doiiars of valuation ,
and shoes . · Special pri~ed .
experience
not
Important.
BACKYAR[l
SALE,
August
3,
4,
9'
fer Three years.
Boil~ys, Middleport ,
Requires -eotr..-and 51495.-lo
nul Polls tor said Election
tiiJ dark . Baby bed, Hoover
will be · open at 6: 30 o'clock
washer, T.V., children summer
$4"5 cosh investment. For FREEZER CORN, silve'r ·ond
A .M . and remain open until
golden , cl.an. Pick you own .
and winter, and adult clothing,
details
write ond Include
7:30o'clock P .M . of said day .
odds and ends . Roger Eblin
Great Band 338. Phone
your phone number:
By order of the Betard of
residence on Leading Creek
843·2491 , Thomas Sayre.
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ellie Industries
Road , n~in cancels.
Ohio.
TREE
RIPENED Peaches, white or
3938 Meadowbrook Rd.
Ernest A . Wingett GARAGE SALE , Wedo. and Thur•·
yellow
starting Monday ,
MiMujiolls,
Minn.
55426
Chairman
day , onAugust3&amp;_. from 10till
Augus t 1 ot Mason Peach Or . chord
6.
-&lt;412
Spring A~enue ,
Dorothy M . Johnston
Pomeroy. Dishes , clothes, toys
Clerk
and misc.
Dated July 11, 1977
3 FAMILY YARD Sole. Weds . &amp;
17) 2l, 17) 1. 8. 1l. 3tc
Thursday , 9 a .m. till 3 p .m. ~87
Interested in build to
S. 41h . Middleporl , OH.
New Co-Op water SOf·
suit
tenant. National
SHERIFF'S SALE
tenert, model VC·SVI.
Only $279.95 .
Racine'Home National Bank
Fast
Franchise
Plaintiff
Save $50 .00 on
new
Expanding Operations.
Hotpolnt R:efrlgentar.
Rudolph T. &amp;
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
Swlday
4P.M.

'279.95

·· Pomq Landmarll

.

',

WANTED.J

lAND OWNERS

Erma J , Riffle

Defendants

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY
CASE NO . 16373
· In pursuance of an Alia
Execution issued from the
Clerk's Off ice of the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
County , Ohio , on the 21st day
_. of July 1'117, and to me
... "lrected in the case above
J named, 1 will ell: pose to Sale
""·"' at Public Auction, on the
.... front steps of the Courthouse
.. "' of Meigs County , Pomeroy,
· 9hio, on Saturday the 6th di!!ly
of August, 1977 , at 10 :00
~.:., o 'c lock A .M . the
tollowl~g
_., goods · and Chattels, to .w•t :
1969 Ford Fairlahe 2 dr .
"'
VIN 9H30F9D568
~ _, . 'May be seen at . Codner's
u

Texaco. Syracuse, Ohio.
.
Terms of Sale : Cash In

,,. ... hand .
#•""' ~ Taken as the property of

., . RUDOLPH T. &amp; ERMA J .
· · RIFFLE
"'-- To satisfy an execution in
favor of the· Racine Home

National Bank .

~.

JAMES J . PROFFITT
SHERIFF,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

•:· (1) .27, 28,29 (8J 1, 2, ltc

.
....:,:. -

----- -.- -

v ~---·

Indoor-Outdoor runs, grooming
·all breeds , clean sanitory
facilities oe 367·7112. Cheshire .

Phone {614) 367-0292.
HOOF HOLlOW. Buy . oell . trade
or train horses. A.UTH REEVES ,
trainer. Phone {614) 698·3290.
AKC SHETlAND shoop dogs .
(Min .) Collies, 2 femoles , 1
week&amp; old. Shots and wormed .
Phone {614) 367 -0292 or
367-7112.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Animal ·coreline, 992-7680: or
after 6p.'m., 99'2·$427.
BEAGLE PUPS. 9 weeks old , 3
males , 2 female's , $10 eoch .
Phone 949·2590.
AKC REGISTERED Old English
Sheep dog, papers , Champion
blood line, shots and wormed.
Call doy1imes, 992-2696 or
evenings' 992-7262 . .
Will give away 5 part Collie pup·
pies . Phone 992· 3 .. 91 or
992-2012.
FOX TERRIER , 1 yr . old, mole,
black and white. · Phone
742-2101 .
WOULD li!(E to give oway 4 little
kittens to good home. p'hone
992·20&lt;io.

PUBLIC fiiOTICE
TO Opal Richards
.:;.,No known add_ress
..,,. ., You are hereby notified
1964 FORO \1 ton pickup . good
' that you have been named
tires and mo.tOr. Contact Elden
u• oetenctant in a legal action
Walborn, 380 S. Third , Mid·
:•: entitled Leroy R lchards,
dleport ; OH . Phone 992-2805.
......,Pielnflff ,
-vs:......
opal
~ ... Richards ." Defendant ; . that
1976 - CHEVY lAGUNA 350
il"~hls c.ause has been assigned
qutomatic, p.t .. p.b .. air con&lt;H·
Case No . 16,443, and i s pend tioned , am radio tape player.
ing In the Common Pleas
Real thorp, Excellent condition.
'"'Court of Meigs County , Ohio,
Pl&gt;ono 992·2386.
' fl"omeroy . Oh io. 45769 . The
...... ·oblect of this Complaint,.;, for
1m
Dodge Von , customized.
,i""dfvorce. division of prGIJferty •
Hedden , tide pip••· stripes
- and other proper relief .
and scene. Call n3-5909.
You are required to answer
within twenty -eight days
1968 Jmpolla 9 r.ssehger-station
after the last publication of
wagon, 8 cy • 327 mcilor. 20
this notrce; once each · week
iifor slli successive weeks . the · . miles to goll . Don t use oil , ai r
conditioner, heater, new tires .
•·tast publication will be _ on
~uG. 22, 1?77 and the twenty .
Coii949-21U. ,
1 •ight davs will commence on
PARTS FOR 1971 Galaxie Ford for
:.fhat date .
,
solo. Phone 992·5B5B.
, ' fn case of your failure&gt; to
·8nswer,
or
otherwise
1969 FAIRlANE. Phone 992-7915
/ kespond, as required by the
after ~ : 30 p.m.
'ehlo
A utes
of
Civil
: ~rocedure, judgment by
1971
INTERNATIONAL TRUCK
.ctefiUit will be rendered
1600 Seri~H , cob ond chonls,
) aoelnst you for the relief
new point and tires. Excellent
'demlndect In thil claim .
c...,dilion . $2100. Coll985·3806.
LARRY E. SPENCER ,
Cl•rk of courts 1 1970 MALIIU ~.good worlc cor,
$300. Phone 997-5911.
•
MtiOI County

•..'
•

Common Pleas Court

. '

•(7) II, 25 (I) I, I, 15, 22, 61C

· 1973 FORD lTD, her&gt; overylhlng.
Cofl992,781&gt;4.
·

''•

•.

FOR SALE

•

•••

'

•

'

CAMPING

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT ANO ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFF~RED IN
OIFFlRENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN"i DAYS A WEEK,
10 :00 to 5:00

Tra il ers ,

custom mode- SWISS COLONY ,
· smoll tancktms Mople leaf ,
·c ocNER ·s CAMPERS, Solos ,
Rental , Ser~ice , Supplies :
Mei91 28 or 32 to 8o5hoh .
Owner Robert Codner, long
Bott om , Ohto.
8 )( 40 NEW MOO
'-;::Nc,---:-tr-o"ller . -~
reat
tor campsite. Furnished,
.

CRAFTY lADIES
HANDICAAFT
104 West MAin StrMI

Phone 992-6248 ~

-'-----

--~----

Just Below tile Jonn
Boys' in P,meroy, Ohio
Phonem-22H
t&gt;-1S.1 mo.

kellfs Basket
of Ohio

Freezer

$25.00 Dls'c ount

1 Go.od McCullough Chain
Sow
$65

SWAIN'S
Automatic
Transmission Service

Phone 992-5771 .

6 ROOMS &amp; BATH troller for sole.
Phone 247-2252.

PARTS· LABOR

2 bedroom , front liv·
ing room with factcry installed
woodburning fireplace . 1975

1975 ALLEN

GUARANTEED

REASONABLE

Hilkr•st , 2 bedroom . to tol
elec ., like new . 1970 11ornette 2
bedroom . We also hove a cleon
8 x 35 for that second home or
the riverbank. See these homes
al Kingsbury Home So les, 1100
E. Main St. Pomeroy , OH.

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 378-6250
5-27-TFC

National Fast
Food Franchise
Available I

Pomeroy Landmark
Mgr.

I.,

~

.

Kelly's Wet
of Ohio

--

PLUMBING &amp;

HEATING INC.

S1lllll
WIIIDOIIS I DOOIS
Xi • • ·
·~
au.tiUI

LAR~R

300Miin St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-6282
or 992-6263
tA.M.Io4:30P .M.
SALES AND SERVICE

410-1

IB
!J'EAFQRD . .

DUGAN'S

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

~~Al r~:

A!illnment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up.
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Rullond Grode
5&lt;111101. Evening- work by
appointment. Ph . 742-2005. 1
6-S.1 mo. Pd . '

·

NEW LISTING Brick
apartment house, 4 family
size In Middleport for only
S23,000.
BUILDING LOT ln .
· Syracuse. 150x200. Water ,
and e,lectrlc available .
$2800.
l7 ACRES Back of
liactne. Gooq Gambrel roof
barn wll!l cone rete flO!)!' ,
water and electric. Corn
crib, 3 car garage, hen
house and old house .
$29,000.
9 ROOMS 2 baths,
natural gas forced air
furnace, 4 bedrooms, one
extra large mater size. 2
porches and full basement.

_

__.

HOMESITES for sole , 1 acre and
up. Middleport, near Rutlond.
Coll9'12-7481 .

Middi~port,

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

0.

992-5724
,Complete
Sales
and
Service and Supplin.

GUTTER SERVICE
Continuous one pieu
gutters. We hong it, or do It
yourself. Speciol pricn to
· lijtllders.
Phone 949-2814
9 a.m. to 5 p::m.

10

•

m.s:m

Bob Hoeflich

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation .
Ca II Profession a Is

SHOP.

6-16;1 mo. 1

I KJ

NILMAR

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
OOotl. "OAODY"··SANDY,
DIDJA HEAR THAT?

$27,500.

BRICK 7 rooms , 4
bedrooms,1 1h baths, large
living with fireplace.
fOrmal dining, natural gas
. forced air furnace on nice
corner lot In quiet section
of Middleport. S23,ooo.
LEVEL
LOT
2
bedrooms, modern bath ,
dining, 2 porches, out of
water. $15;000.
NEW LISTING- Neariy3
acres of land on Rl . 33
about half way to Athens.
Has a 2 bedroom mobile
home,
stove
and
refrigerator. Animal shed
and partly fenced. $9,200.
NEW LISTING House
with 2 apartments . One
partly furnished. Near
stores In Pomeroy. $9,600.
FREE PARKING FOR
CUsTOMERS.
NOT
EVERYONE CAN SELL.
USE A REALTOR TO GET
THE JOB OONE . . CALL
m-3325.
Gordon B. and Helen L.
Teaford,
Assoclole
realtors.

PWMBING &amp;

HEATING INC.

~ng

se ~

JUST

fiJ Tf\IS JOB, sur
I f\~V~ A re~w~ I'M llm·

\IJH~T

I&lt;? IT 400'RI'

WOI&lt;Jfl0

s~

FeR~

~u ;

with lovely
newer brick home. 4 BR. 2
baths, large rec. rm. W·
stone fireplace, carpeting,
sun deck, patio, carport.

$45,000 .

2-23-1 m .J.

LIVE RENT FREE - 1
story frame, 3 BR, ·bath,
garden, storage~ basement,

HARRISON 'S T.V. Repair . Service BRADFORD, Aucrioneer , Com ·
St., Mid·
plate Service. Phone 9~9 -2~87
Colis . 276
or 9-49·2000. Recine , Ohio, Critt
Brodlord .

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, irQns, all
small applianc~s . ldwn mower 1
33A FARM-. free gos, good woter
next to State Highway Goroge
and fences. Nice Mobile home,
on Route 7. Phone (6J~) 985also 2 1/ 3 A 3 miles south of
3825.
Albany on 681. Ed Holley , 681
South of Albany to Snow~iUe REMODELING . Plumbing. hooting
Store. Take Grove.! rood, 'lr
and all types of general repair.
mile. Phone {614) 698-7255 .
Work guaranteed 2Q y&amp;ars 8lC ·
per'ience. Phone 992-2409.
BEAT THE Cost of a Realtor! 3
bedroom 2'/t bi -level with all SEWING MACHINE Repairs , serextras on acre lot . Nice drive lo
vice, oil makes , 992-2284 . The
Power Plant, $43,000. Phone
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy .
{614) 992 ·2492 .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We shorpen Scissors .
HOUSE FOR sale , 6 rooms and
bath , 'h ocre , lot fruit trees , EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
shrubbery, 3 bedrooms, built-in
backhoe work; dump trucks
brick cabinets io kitchen , utility
and lo·boys for hire; will haul
room with storoge, W~JII · to-wall
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
carpet in li~ing rc;tam. Carport .
' gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef -.
About 15 yrs. old. Well kept,
fars, day phone 992 -7089,
good condition, good location.
nighl phone '992·3525 or 992Close to school. Coli for op·
5232.
pointment , 992-320.4.
EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
IN SYRACUSE . 4 rooms and bolh ,
and ditcher. Charles R. · Hat·
fireplace, natural gas heot .
field, Back Hoe Service ,
Partially furnished, 3 rooms
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
remodeled. Needs. some work.
WILL
do roofing, construction,
Approximately 2 acres. Phone
plumbing ond heating. No job
992-5395.
.
too large or too small. Phone
HOUSE FOR sale (cheop] 3
742·2348.
bedrooms, fireplace. 2 cor
garage , potlo , fully corpeted CARPENTER . floorln.g, ceiling,
paneling. Phonit992-2159 . ·
with 1 acre lot. Rutland . Call
742-2988 .
MOBilE Home Repair, Elac.,
plumbing and heating . Phone
NEW 3 bedroom house. 2 baths.
992-SBSB.
Qll alec. , I acre , .M iddleport ,
close to· Rutland. Phone 992· HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
cavatlng, septic systems,
7481.
dozer, backhoe, · dump truck,
SMALL farm for sale, 10% down,
limestone, grovel, biocktop
owner finonced . Monroe Coun·
paving
, Rt . 143. Phone 1 {61.&amp;1.
ty, W. Vo. Phono {304) n2698· 7331.
/If)
3102or {304) 772·3227.

BRIDGE

28 Eagle's
claw ·

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

29Summon

30 Insist upon
31 Con games

bid too many too coatly

33 -clear
36 Anagram of
20Down

.42

37 Hasten

fO Throw a

U Composer

WEST
.AJt7

Prokofiev
45 The late

•98

EAST
.53

•KQ752
tQO
tK\08
"'A987
•KJ2
. SOUTH (OJ
.KQ1086
• A4
t AJ 7
.643 ·,

J.Paul
4&amp; Recorded

DOWN
1 Meat cut
Z Meander
~"Right on,

brother"

North-South vultf!lrable

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

Wesl

North Elsl

Pan 2•
Pass Pass
Ope 1 1 d Q
n ng ea - •

U.

...
euT I CAN'T
iURN HillA OUT

UNTIL. HE GET&amp;
A JOe&gt; .:. SOME
/NY/&gt;JEY•••

WENDY'S NOT A MD· !.COKINGCHICK . l I\O&gt;IDER HOW
1;HE REALLY FEIOL&amp;

AOOUT ME?

•

CRYPTOQUOTES

l'JOCQP

v

VIJX

F 0 R P,

VP

V l J X

v

p

p

QJCCWX
FPX

Q

~

c

TPX

SD

FORP

TPX . -

\Wd.

Onald: "HO'II' about 110me
articles on bad habltl ol
bridce player• and 'll'!!at they

COlt tbem."
Jim: "One bad babitls tbat
of makliiC juat Une bid too
IIWIY. South hu ~· nice IOUnd
openln,fl

spade bid witb a

diAppolntecl 'll'llen bls
partner puae1 his opening
bid. Then East reopens with a
two-heart bid."

very

. 8:00til5:00 .
Thursday a'til Noon ,

...
GLORV BE!!

WHERE'S MY

WATCHDOG?!

TATER MADE
THREE BOWLS
O.F ICE CREAM
-ALL GONE--

good

ffve-cald tult. Naturally, be Ia

YNWKPNG

three

~

Pou
Obi.

By

'

and live up any idea of playtlJe hand. His par!Der baa
shown a borror. Where can
South go acept down lnlo the
110up. But he bids two apldn."
Jim: "AB SoUth explained
afterwards he had more than
a minimum hand and In any
event the opponents \vere cold .
for thtee notrump."
Oswald: "Thia remark fell
on deaf ears. It seems that
West gave up the idea of
notrump, doubled and set
South 1100 points."

Soolh

Pa"
One letter simply stands for anolher. In this sample A , Ia
u sed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all ':--::-----:-:-:-:--~;-:-.--..j
hints. Each day the code leiters are diffe.r ent .
Ol'll'ald" James JaCoby

·=

Otwald: "At this point :in

lime South should simply pau

Inc

• J 10 83
+96 S3
•Q lOS

fight
(4 wds.)
· 43 Beginning

ULABNER

I

NORTH

Ynterday's Cryploqaote: FORTUNE IS A GREAT DECEI·
VER. SHE SELLS VERY DEAR THE THINGS SHE SEEMS TO
GIVE US.-VINCENT VOITURE

Q. Sat..At '5 p.M.

--~'"''-

of care

27 Worship

u

FRIDAY T.ll.5_

~-

23 Anagram

DYJCODI

Mon., Tues.,

--

~

0,

5 ACRES -

-r

r

l-OOK , WAAT 10

"The Origlnalors
Not The Imitators"

B A.M. to 4:30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
1&gt;23-1 mo. Pd.

I I XJ" [ IX ]

~~tHt/

Free Estif!lales
No Sund'!y '-Is Pleue
• 6· 13-1 mo.

Young's

U

KJ I

WOUlD 6E SAFER TO HAVE
'I'OU ALOHG WlfH ~E···

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or m-7630

Phone m-6282

lot,..,.

WE'RE GOING ALONG
WITH '' DADDY'··

I

FIFRAM

AJocal contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 9~-2860

Rou!t 3, POm,eroy, Q.

Pomeroy, Ohio

MAIN
POMEROY,

'w,roy•.:oADDY"!

WHEN I HEARD A~EL
501'\EHOW HAD TAKEH
CONTROL OF M'l'
HEADQUARTERS, I FElT IT

BJSSF!! SIDING .CO

Superior
Steam Extraction

I [j

JOMAR

6-22· 1 mo.

RACINE CARPET'

Eleetric:al &amp;
Refri!!eration
300 MAin St.

Georges. Hobstetter Jr.

~~eroy. -~-~-

I MEPOT

THE PtmO PLACE

HOBSTE II ER REAlTY

.PomtniJ Landmllk

ft'iflif.\.ft ID'il

7-28· 1 mo~

CARTER'S

.,

"'·"

AL!EYOOP

LfAPI~' liZARDs! IT 'S

.

·

Pl.~TeL.Vl

CARTER'S

Nobii Summit Road
Rl. I
•

SMITH .IILSON·
MOTOil$, INC.
rl H2·2174
" -!
U.-------='--'*

••eel

-

Remodeling.
Ph. m-111' or .,.. 1055
Estimales •ppiiOd to lOti.
·
6-27-1mo.pcl ..

illowtt iMfM I Allla

~h. tl2·3tl3

8:3o-:Btg Valley 6.
.
9:oo-&lt;:ross-Wits 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy
Griffith 8; Biography :13.
9:3G-A.M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8) Unto
the Hills 33.
10:0CI-Sanford &amp; Son :1;4, 15; Dlnah6 ; Here' s Lucy 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13; STudio See 33.
10:3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Price Is Right B, 10;
Jean Shepherd's America 33.
11 :OCI-Wheei of Fortune 3,4 , 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Community of living Things 33; 11 :2G-Biography
33.
11 :3G-II's Anybody' s Guess 3,4, 15: Love of Life 8, 10;
Family Feud 6, 13.
11 : 4~Measuremelrlc 33 ; 11 :ss-CBS News 8; Ms.
Flxll 10.
12:00-News 3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12:3Cf..-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15: Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob ·
Braun _.; Search for Tomorrow 8.10.
~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
1 :oo----Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
~ ~ ~~.!h
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Poldark 33.
Unscramble lhe&amp;a four Jumbles,
1 : 3~Days of our Lives 3,4, 1l; As T,he World Turns
one letter lo each square, to form
lour ordinary words.
B,10 .
2:!»--$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Leonard Bernslein Con.
ducts 33.
2:3G-Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13: Guiding
Llghl 8, 10.
.
'
3:0CI-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10 ;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; What's Cooking? 33.
3: 1$-General Hospital 6, 13.
3:3G-Match Game 9,1 0; Antiques 33; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20.
4:0CI-Misler' Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4, 15; New Mickey
Mousse Club 6: Sesame St . 20,33; Gilligan's Is. 8;
Movie "A Ticklish Affair" 10; Dinah 13.
4;3o-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Andy Griffith B; Hogan's Heroes 15.
S;OCI-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 9; Mister Rogers'
GAVE WARNIN5 ON
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13;. Mission :
"THE &lt;SOLF 'OURSE,
Impossible 15.
5:3G-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33.
Now arrange the circled letters lo
6:0CI-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20; Bill Moyers'
form the surprise answer, u SUQ·
gesled by lhe above cartoon.
Joournal 33.
6:3~NBC News3,4,15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20.
Answer here: THE ." (
7:0CI-TrulhorCons.3; To Tell the Truth-!; Liar's Club
(Answers tomorrow)
6; Country Carnival 8; Lowell Thqmas Remem·
Jumbles: BAKED RHYME . HALLOW INTACT .
bers 3:i: News 10; To Tell .the Truth 13; My Three
Sat~:Jrday's j Answer: The repast aha gol irom a mllle-"A MEAL"
Sons 15; Anyone for ·Tennyson? _20.
7:3G-I'Iollywood Squares 3; ,4; Let's Deal With It 6;
Match Game PM B; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
$25,000 Pyramid 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Music City
15.
B:OCI-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Jack Benny Return 8, 10; Only Then REgale My
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Eyes 33; Palllsers 20.
B:3G-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ; Phyllis 8,10.
11
9:~Pollce Woman 3,~,15; Movie "The 1969 Movie
6,13; Mash 8,10; Play of the Month 20; , Opera
Theater 33.
9:3()-Qne Day al a Time 8, 10.
10:0CI-Pollce Story 3,~,15; Kolak 8,10 ; Piccadilly
Circus 33.
-·--·· •. -'-·
. 11:00-News 3,4,6,9,10,13,15.
11:3G-Johnny Carscln 3,4,15; Movie "A New Leaf"
Yesterday's Answer
·6, 13; Movie "Th" Last Run" 8; Movie "The Last
Safari'' 10; ABC News 33.
12:1»-Janakl
33.
26 Wind-up
37 Marx
:ooTomorrow
3.4: 1 :3G-Mary Hartman 10; News
1
28 Violent
instrument
13.
storm
38 "Gloomy
38 100-yard
dean"
event
39 -out
32 Spiteful
(got by)
33 All atwitter · 41 After taxes
34 Desolate
·4Z Boslon
35 Enumerate
party
power
20 Wages

I.IHEil.l, iASV·· .... "UT PON'T
_Mol&lt;eE INDUSTIIIES
TAI&lt;Ei MV
CAN MAI&lt;S MILl.IONS
WORD·· I'LL.
ON WLADEI&lt;-'&amp;.,&amp;J!.'AIN !I&gt;T/!&gt;V OUTA
Ct-IILD!
THIS COM·

&amp;.

· 1119 High 51.
Pomeroy

N.G. heat. $12,500.
PEACOCK AVE. 3.2l acres
1 Good Uted POUlin Chlin
vac:ant
ground, lovely to
Respond to P.O. -Box 927,
Saw
$50
build on . City water,
1 Goad Used Unlco ~
Portsmouth, OH 4l602.
sewage. Just $4,200 .
Dryer
$10.00
.:........
E lectrlc Trlm·l\11, cuts
COMMERCIAL- Corner
with nylon
$29.95
Rls. 33·7 Building and 3
( 1) Good R:efrlger1tor noo
lots, going at a low $18,500.
INVEST 1'12 story
'
• frame. 3 BR, bal!l, N.G.
heat, porches, small lot to
cut. $7,000.
OVERLOOKS THE RIVER
Jock w. c 0 rsey,
- 2 lots with 2 story frame
the
you
have
Phone 992·2111
Now
home, 3 bedrooms, balll,
opportunity to join a fast
porches, 2 fireplaces, coal
growing nation•! fast food
furnace heat, $6,000.
BROWNING MARK Ill AM-SSB
SECURE BUSINESS - 25
company . Total investment
with , SHtrani;w model 90 ZFO .
years, In same location . All
varies. Cash requir!ld $750. Other equiP.ment for
equipment as listed, stock
approx. $1 S,000-$35 ,000.
sale. Phone 992-6 I 38.
inventory at wholesale
Program includes training,
price.
A
GREAT
HONDA
E&gt;IPRES
Motorcycle
.
advertising, nationol
INVEST
,ME
NT.
Under warranty. 7.-4 miles . Call
account buying status, etc.
ON RT. 7 - and In town.
992-6305.
Very large lot 2 slory
FAMilY AND Masonic Bibles ,
frame home, 3 bedrooms,
metal top work table, ossort'12 baft1, partly furnished.
ment of Butcher KniveS ,
$13,500.
stainless
knives and
USE
OUR
PHOTO
forks
,
table
and
9 chairs , SECLUDED 2 oto,Y older -home or&gt;
Respond to P.O. Box
three-quarter acres , lots of~
L~I'STING SERVICE _
bedsprings and mattress . Small
ANO T H E R " N E W
shade . fertile ground far
927, Portsmouth, 0 H
squora table , 1911 Ford Torino .
garden, 2 cor .detached garaee.
Phone
949·2591
.
. 45662 •
'
3 bedrooms . largo living room
SERVICE TO HELP · US
with
brick
w.b
.
lireplace.
SELL YOUR PROPERTY.
---···corpellng. sunny kitchenette,
HENRY E. CLELAND
9ining room, partial basement
. REAL TOR
with forced air furnace and
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
CB SPECIAL
new hot water heater. located
Cleland
ROBYNWV-23
on Martin Dr .. Pome'roy. Priced
Associates
ALLAOOiN KEROSENE LAMPS and
below markol volue. $17,500.
m-2259,915- 411~
heaters. Replacement parts CB Mobile Trinscelvir
chimneys, mantles , wicks ..
Phone 992·6328 or 985-3573. - L.._ _._.;.m;.;;..·2:;;561=---,.~
complete with weather
etc: .. Stop in ·far demonstration
·proof PA speaker. 2 way
arid free cotalog . Mounloin
.base loaded CB anterma,
leather and General store,
tor roof top or trunk mount.
'power cord, c&lt;Jax, antenna
104-106 W, Union Sl . (6U)
cable and all hardware
·592·547B. Athens .
.Included .
1972 SUZUKI 550, $750. Phone
ONLY
George S. Hobstetter Jr.
949-2463.
Real Estate Broker ·
1971 20 H.P. Outboard motor With
11 roam, 5 beclroam, bath &amp; '12 gas hot water lleol, large
controls. $250. Phone (614)
ofllle nicer homes lacaled on Lincoln Hill road,
667-6'01 .
known os the Edword Stark property,
$1408EEliNE FASHIONS lor $35or
$80 fashions for $20. Coli Jon·
8 rooms, tram•. 4 bedroom home located in tile vll ..ge
ICk. W. C•rsty, Mtr ~
nino Petrol, 949-2786.
of Coolvllt., Oflio, pric.d to sell at $16,000.00.
Ph~no tt2·2111
.
TOMATOES ,
PEPPERS ,
11,~ ures of building site, wooded, sec:ludlld .07 of mit.
cucumben . . Ct.IOnd Fatmt,
. from stat. rovllt 7,
Tuppers P ..lns, Olllo.
Greenhouie,
Geraldine 6 FT. HANDMADE solid aok porch .
Surveyed, 1nd 1pproved by tile planning commission
Cl•land.
swing. Phone 992-5Js.t.
for sewage. Priced 11 $5,000.00.
SUPER S-:'h-o w
_ m_a_n ,.
MINOL TA SRT· 100 35 mm comero FENDER
includes .50 mm , 135 mm, 28
Amplifier COtnflloto with J.B.
If interested call 915-4114 •Her 4:011 P.M.
mm, and W-210 zoom lens ,
lansing DlU speakers. Also.
caws included, $200. Call
for sole. Brother Sewing
992-62911 daily .
Moc"hine with cabinet . Contoct:
Geoo Punn, Rockoprinvs Rood,
3600 LF FENCING of 6'. x 16'
Real Estate Broker
post fairgrounds . White troiler
Yellow pine , 300 glond bloc)&lt;.
Box
101, Pomeroy, Oll.i o
betwHn sawmill ond chipper ',
Glispl• Howard, 4 mite. outfU.
_ mill. '?l_d _R'.: 33; ___ _

.

Construction

.,....._.

SIOIIICoSIIRITT

RAlES

Rovt.2
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576P
Kitchen Qlblnels - Roofing
Concrete
Patios
Sidewalks
New

COUNTRY farmland with seclud ed woods , water and good oc cess in Monroe County, W. Va .

' VIRGIL a; TUFORD, 5
'
IleALTOR
·.
,216 l- S.CIInll Street
Pomeroy, Ohio.,..
"'-~-3325

TUESDAY.AUGUST2, 1977
5:50-PTL Club 13.
6 :00-Summer Semester 10; 6::»--Focus on Columbus
4: News 6; Summer Semester 8; Concerns &amp;
Cpmm•nts 10.
6 : 4~orntng Report 3: 6 :50-Good Morning, West
Virginia ; 6;55-Good Morning, Trl Slate 13.
7:011-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning America 6.13; CBS
N-s 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
7 : 0~Porky Pig 10; 7::»--Schoolies 10.
8:00-Howdy Doody 6; Capt . Kangraroo 8,10; Sesame
Sl . 33.

4; News 6: ~amily Aflalr 8: Elec. Co.
20.33.
6 :0CI-News :J-4,8,10,13.1 5; ASC News 6 ; Zoom 20;
Austin City Lim Its 33.
6 : »-NBC News 3.4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CSS News 8.10: Vegetable Soup 20.
7 ; 01).....Truth or Cons. 3: To Tell the Truth 4; Liar' s Club
6;. Buck Owens 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13: My
Three Sons 15; Americana 20; Montage 33 .
7 : 3~That Good Ole Nashville Music 3: In Search of 4;
Muppel Show 6 : Gong Show 8; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; Price Is Right )O;Cand!d Camera 13;
Nashville on the Road 15.
·
B:OCI-Lillle House on the Prairie 3,4 , 15;; Holmes &amp;
Yoyo 6,13: Jeffersons 8,10: Tennis 20; ·Once Upon a
Classic 33.
8:30:...Baseball 6,13; Szysznyk 8.1 0; Jen Shepherd' s
America 33.
9:0CI-Movle " Lolly-Madonna XXX" 3,4,15: Maude
8, 10; Shades of Greene 33.
9:3G-AII's Fair 8.10 . ·
10 :oo-Sonny &amp; Cher B, 10; Austin City Limits 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15: Black Journal 3F3.
11 ;3G-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Streets of San ranc 1sc0
6, 13; Kojak 8; Movie "Up from the Beach" 10;
• Fawlty Towers 20 : ABC News 33.

GENERAL
CONTRACilNG

"8iiiii

EXPIRIENCED
$1 ,000 down . call (304 ) n23102 or (30•) n2-3227.
VA-FHA , 30 yr. flroncing . lr81anc
Mortgage , n E. Stote , Athens ,
phone (614) 592-3051.
2. · STORY 3 bedrQOm frome
house , F.A.Iurnoce , storm win dews, fireplace in Middleport .
Phone9'12-J.jl7 .
2 NEW 3 BEDROOM House&amp; for
sole. One with 2 cor goroge ,
one with recreation room. Lee
Construct ion , 992 -3-454 or
992-5455 .

SENT YOU A

TELECiRAM?

-

lnalllilll Senites

8.

WIFE:.

DAVID BRICKLES
-

FREEE IM T S

' 1 Z i gla~t'

SHE I.IKED 'YOUR SKETCH.''

5 : 3~Adam - 12

r."·

Greenhouse ,
Gerold l ne
Cleland. Racine , Ohio .

Pomeroy Fore!l-t Pro·

JAYCO

ABOUT
THE

6,13; Movie

1: 011-Tomorrow 3,4; I :»--Mary Hartman; 1 ,soNews 13.

"'0N DAY, AUGUST I, U71

$10,850.00 . We sell service ond
quality . Camp Coo ley Storcraft
Sales, Rt . 62 north o f Pt. Pleasant.

197.. MOBILE Home . 2 bedroom ,
12 x 65 Greenbrier, total a lec .,
unlu.rnished, in excellent cond iHANGING BASKETS.
and
tfon . A sking price. $6500.
geraniums .
C e l and ' s

nigh1 .

.TIMbER ,

folddow ns. Trovelstar 25 ft .
$L400 ocr, 20 lt . mini-motor

(304) 773-5721.
SIOING INSTAlLERS, plenty ol -E-C='0
"-N
-----'0M-Y---::TR_A_Cc-T---:Oc:Rc-w
--:-ilh,..-a-::ll~a-t·
work. Highest poy in area .
tachments . like new. osklng
Pkone 992-3283 , 9 a.m. till 8
p.m.
$2250. Phone {614) 698·3290.

trucks , septic systems . Bill
Pull ins . phone 992-2.t78 day or

CASH paid for o/.1 maket and
models of mobile homes .
Phone area code 61 -4 --423~9531 .

Business Services

STARCRAFT 10th onn•versary sole
on mlni ~moton , trailers, ond

horse

troller. $450. Phone (61 A) 698·

mmimwn. Cash Ullldvux.-e.

12 : ~Toma

WHAT IF I TOLD
THE OOVERN~

~e

CAMPER .
In memwy, Card m Thanlu: and
Oblt'-"'ry : 6 ctn\.11 p.or word, L1.00

12 :011-Janak l 33.

-- ~

Lost ami FOtmd: _-c: - -- ,
~

Aug. l, 1m

OJatTRACY

'

~-

I~

7-The o.llys.ntlnei.MiddlepoJ1·Pomeroy, o .. Moodily,

AND THEY
MADE TATER
ALL GONE

A KallAl reader walltl , to

know the correct rebid with:
•Ku•n•An•AQIIll
Y 011 open one clUb and your
partner responds one spade .
The correct rebid I• a raiH
lo two ipada. If your partner
has .a. four-card tult he can
still play at two spada and If

he wanlllo r,ebld be WOII:I.av
higber in liJadel unieil blhu·
at leaat a live-card 111ll

(For t copy ot JACOBY .
MODERN, und $1 to: "Win 11
Bridge," clo lilt. ltlwtpaper,
1'.0 . Box 480, Redlo City Sllllon.
New York, H. Y. &lt;')()18}

�•
~~~~~=~:::::0) ,V., 1V1UIIU6.) 1 t\~ .

&amp;,

a;.l I

Vance dr.u mming. up new Geneva talks
WASffiNGTON (UP!) Secretary 0! State Cyrus
Vance hopes a 1:klay trip to
the Middle East can clear
the way for resumption of the
Geneva peace talks between
the Arabs and Israelis.
Vance left Washington
Sunday night f&lt;r Alexandria,
Egypt. An early morning
refueling stop was planned at
the Azores.
Vance returns to the Middle
East following visits to the
United States by major
leaders of the Middle East. It
is his first visit to · Israel
shice . the coMervative
government of Menahem
Begin came to power.
"As we pursue our search
for true and lasting peace, it
is good to note that all the

When 'lou
Purchase Any

.

I

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C' 001\ \l \ I}C
u~ ~111r

1 TM

Puts you in FULL control of
everything you cook.
Why? Because you can slide the Amana
Cookmatic Power Shift to the precise
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best suit the particular food you're preparing. If the casserole's loo bubbly hot.
slide the Cookmali c Power Shill lo a
slower speed , and the Amana will respond almost Instantly.
On one of the lower settings, you can
· create the special effects of slow-cooked
recipes , at microwave speeds. Or pamper
delicate items like cheeses, milk and
eggs ~

1. KOOKERY KIT . . .
10" Browning Skillet ,

$29.50

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Bacon

.WASHINGTON (UP!) President carter this week
will send to Congress major
legislative programs on drug
abuse and welfare reform,
and one that would let
millions of illegal aliens
remain in this country
lawfully.
carter continued to make
final decisions on the
legislation as he hurried to
meet a deadline of Friday,
when Congress recesses for a
month and be goes home to
Plains, Ga., f&lt;r a few days.
The keystone of Carter's
welfare reform would be the
creation of more than a
·million jobs in the belief the
best way to cut welfare costs
is to turn recipients into taxpaying workers.
Carter is still considering
whether to provide financial
relief to cities and states, but
apparently bas abandoned
the idea of cutting payments
of welfare recipients who live
ill federal h?using.

.MASON DRIVE-IN
Sun. thru Tues.
July 31-Aug: 2
Double Feature
Program
Mel Brooks'
Comic Masterpiece
YOUNG
FRANKENTEIN
Color
PG
Peter Fonda-·

in

Grille &amp; Ut ility Dish

FIGHTING

$12.00

2. 6 'h " BROWNING SKILLET

.

MAD -

R

Through sources both in the
administration and on Capitol
Hill, UPI learned that the
illegal alien legislation
probably will
contain
provisions oo:
-Adjustment of status.
This would pennit illegal
aliens who were in the United
States before 1970 to apply for
citizenship.
-Non-deportable status.
This would allow ille~al
aliens who arrived between
1970 and Jan. I, 1977, to
remain here with five-year
work permits.
:...Employer sanctions. This
would set civil fines of $1,000
· per allen for employers who
violate the law. There now
are no penalties.
-Improve the border
patrol along the 2,001).rnjje
Mexicaii;'U. S. border.
-Give "labor-intensive"
aid of as yet undetermined
amount to Mexico and other
countries to help create jobs
in those places, thus easing
the need for their citizens to
cross the U.S. border ill
search of work.
The program is aimed at
eutting off the now of tbe
hundreds of thousands of
aliens across U.S. borders
each year to work at cuteate
wages. The sources said the
inducements of the program
would help the U.S.
government to get an
accurate count on the number
of working aliens.
"Adjustment of status"
legislation has been on the
law books for many years,
but the current cut.off date is

. $13.75
$10.00 .
$ 1.75

3. " COUNTRY COOKER

4. MEAT THERMOMETER
5. A SPECIAL COOKBOOK (in
addition to one that comes wi lh

Radarange)

$18.00

6. IN HOME DEMONSTRATION
Ms . Amana will vis it . your home

and Show you all phases of
MicrowaVe Cooking

TOTAL VALUE OF
FREE EXtRAS

$85.00

*Country
Cooker
The Co'untry Cooker allows you to fully
utilize the Cookmatic Power Shift control
and ach ieve tasty, old-fashion country
cookin' resu lts with microwave sp·eed .•:JJ1e
Amana Country Cooker will greatly expand
the varieties of foods that can be prepared .
It will allow you to slow cook foods. witt! an
even heat which wil.l blend the flavor,~ of
stews and bring out the " tan() " in spices . .
Casseroles , breads, and cakes are a · snap
in this COUNTRY COOKER.

s

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229

Home
is no place for
your valuables ....
It's after midnight. Do you know
where your valuables are? Chances
are they're safe and sound right
where you put them, but when
you're talking about important papers, jewelry and other irreplacables ... why chance it? By keeping
your valuables in a Safe Deposit
Box. you'll have the securl,ty of
knowing they're protected from
theft, misplacement or damage ...
t for just pennies a day!

DO

CANDY INGELS
.Will be in the store
Tuesday, August 2,
froin 1:00 . 5:00
To Demonstrate The Phases
of Miaowave Cooking.

Farmers Bank
I'OMEROY, OHIO

BE SURE TO STOP IN

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2ND AVE.
I
'
.

ministers visit New York ill
September fur the openinu
U.N. General Asse~'bi;
session, he said.
Vance scheduled talks with
Egyptian President' Anwar
SadatuponarrivalinAiexandria.
The secretary's last trip to
the Middle East was in
February. Carter then
invited each major leader
from the area to Washington
to discuss ways to resume
direct talks between the
Arabs and IsraeUs.
'Preparations for peace
talks neady collapsed in May
when the Israeli labor
government was ousted by
Begin's conservative bloc.
The labor government had

Major programs readied by Carter

-..._Am,,.

PO\\

leaders of the countries I will 13.
be visiting have expressed
Vance was cautious about
their desire to move toward a his goals for the trip.
Geneva conference," Vance
Although President carter
told reporters in front of his has said he still sees "a good
Air Force jet at Andrews Air chance" the Geneva parley
can be resumed as early as
Force Base .
Despite apparent interest October, Vance has been
in negotiations by the Arabs hedging on the timetable of
and Israelis, Vance cautioned its opening.
difficulties elist.
Vance said last Friday
"We have to note the :•very difficult questions"
on
whether
realities that exist: there are remain
differences oo the important Palestinians can participate
issues and ... we will cootinue at a peace parley in Geneva
to work and try to narrow and on the future of Israeli
those differences."
occilpiect territories.
Vance . scheduled visits to . vance conceded this trip he
Egypt, Lebanon, Syria.. may not resolve all obstacles
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Israel stalling resumption of the
and Great Britain before Geneva talks.
returning to Washington Aug.
Additional , meetings may
be needed when foreign

MIDOI.EPORT, 0.

t

a

a

a

r

$40,000 Ma.,mum Insurance For Each Oeposotor
Member Fed.,al Oeposill""'rance Corpoiation

for . The sources said a work
card probably would be
rejected by civil liberties
groups.
Chairman Peter Rodino, DN.J., of the House Judiciary
Committee, who conferred
with carter last week, favors
making violaling employers
liable for criminal charges.

1948, far too long ugo to affect
many illegal aliens. It is
believed that fewer than I
million were in the United'
States belore 1970.
Those aliens of ''non·

deportable status" would. he
allowed ool)l'to work, but not
to vote or receive other
federal benefits, the sources
said.
One problem, however, is
how they would be accounted

The sources said, however,

that carter will propose only
civil penalties.

Ford first off
with new '78s ·
DETROIT (UP!) - The
nation's auto industry
launches its 1978 model year
toda·y amid warnings the
automobile assembly lines
could still come to a grinding
halt if Congress dues not soon
fmish work on new clean air
S!andards. .
The first of the '78s - Ford
Motor's new compact Ford
Fairmont and Mecpry
zephyr - were due off the
Kansas City assembly line at
mid-morning . ThEdr
immediate destination was a
nearby parking lot where
they will be stored.
General Motors, Olrysler
Corp. and American Motors
do not start building '78s until
next week.
Like the Ford products,
their cars will meet. only the.
current 'TI model tail pipe
standards. They cannot even
be shipped to dealers until
Congress completes work on
compromise clean air
legislation that will extend '77
standards through next year.
Sen. Edmund Muskie, !).
Maine, head of the
conference committee
working on the differing
clean air laws passed by the
House and Senate, said last
week the measure should be
wrapped up before Congress
begins its summer recess oo
Fric!ay.
· Fully expecting a clean air
law before the start of
production, Ford's 26-mile
per gallon compact models
were built to '77 standards for
emissions of unburned hydrocarbons, carbon
monoxide and oxides of
nitrogen.
'"Normally, the first cars
off the line would head
straight for our dealers," a
Ford spokesrn;m said. "We
can store about a week's
worth- about 2,000 cars- ill
the plant yard.
"Beyond' that we'll have to
start looking outside the plant
for storage space," he said.

been negotiating with Van~
and the Arabi.
Begin visited the White
House this month.
While the trip appeared to
smooth over rough spots in
relations
between
Waohlngton • Tel Aviv
relations, Begin relllmed to
brae! and immediately
legalized three Jewish
settlements on the occupied ·
West .Bank of Jordan.
Carter caUed the action an
impediment to peace.
"We still haVe a lot of
difficulties to overcome,·"
· Carter told editors who
visited the White House
Friday. "My own belief is
that they can be overcome."
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Open.Week Days
9:JOio5p.m.

Friday

Baseball

Houston Optioned r lghf .
handed pitcher Donnie Moore 10
WiCh ita .

Football -

Washington Placed on
waivers tackle Ph il Clabo of
Tennessee , guard Chris Dav is
of Nevada -Las Vegas. tackle
Tim Grayless of Baylor and
defensive end Roosevelt Man ning of Northeast Oklahoma , all
free agents .

9:30to8 P.M.

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rnijy

:

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,61

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Marvelous at mingling. Create your own crowd in this

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e

knockouc duo from Vicky Vaughn. Fluid cowlneck

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dress of Oiana'- nylon knit flaunts a drawstring vest

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in buttersoft polyester suede. Machine wash-drv.
Min t. or ~lue . 5-15.

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1-11114
- 8 1 1Os 12 - Wallets
In LIVING COLOR .

REMEMBER!
·GROUPS
tehn •t no

only
when pnotogroplied ond
only $11.95 whim you
pick up your package.

•ddition•l ch•rqe!

3

THURSDAY, AUG. 4 - 12 NOON .nl' 5 PM

CARDINAL MARKET ·

you can't store a11)'1D&lt;ire,"

PLAZA
, SORRY,

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•

IN MIDDLIPORI

ONE DAY ONLY

medical benefits have been warned to leave any
troublemakers in the coalfields.
The advice came Monday in Washington from Sam
OJurch, vice president-&lt;!iect of the United Mine Workers,
which has been unable to coax thousands of bituminous miners
back to work .
"I urge anyone that comes to keep their demonstration
peaceful and to leave their shotguns at home;" Oturch said.
Oturch again implored the bulk of strikers to return to
their jobs "before there's additional cuts in benefits."

.

en tine

Theft of
•
•
wnets
probed

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 76

••

Pomeroy may add light
•
to Its streets uptown

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt said today
his department is Investigating the t~eft of
barbed wire from the Ben
Tom Corp. site at !Wck
Springs .aometime Monday
night.
.
Deputies received a caU
from Jerry Grove, owner of
the TaU Timbers Night Club,
that he bad locked a prowler
inside an outbuilding. When
the deputies arrived on the
scene, Groves told ·them he
had aeen a man enter the
building and had gone down
and locked the door.
When the door was
unlocked, James Edward
Taylor, 42, Long 8Qttom, was
found inside. Taylor main- .
talned he was cold and had
gone Inside the building to
warm ·up, although the
temperatures at the time was
COMMUTER BUS- Bus service is now available from Pomeroy to Athens provided by
66 degrees. He has been
Appalachian Ohio Regional Transit Assoc. (~ORTA). Fare is $1.2li one way from P?meroy
charged with trespassing .
to Athens zone fare is five cents per mile, nummum 2li cents, commuter.pass, 10 ndes for
A report was also received
$10, avilih..ble from the driver. Shown with the AORTA hus is the driver, Hoy Nitz. Below is
today that four cars of a
the present schedule:
ConraU train had derailed on
tracks near the tunnel at
Dyesville in Columbia
Township. Two cars were
Pomeroy T0 Athe
..
empty Jlnd two were filled
PM
STOPS
AM
PM
AM
1'rit1i rock-11a!t, .The engineer
2: ]0
5 :30
Middleport I Corntr of Mill &amp; 2nd)
was J. E .. Hall and the con·
5 : ]5 7 : 10 Pomeroy {Blue &amp; Gr•y Restaur•nl I
2:40
4:30 .
ductor D. H. Nelson. No in2 : 52
5 :U
Rixk Springs (via old Route :Jll
juries were reported.
'
3:00 4:47
5:U 7: 2.7 O.rwin

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5: 51
6: 02
6: 07

6: H

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight, lows
to 60. Chance of thundershowers
Wednesday,
highs between 80 and 85.
Probability of precipitation is
near Z(!ro per cent today, -10
per cent tonig)lt and 30 per
·
cent Wednesday.

7: JD
7: 34
7: 39
7: ss

Bur.lingham
Pratl's Fork
Shad•
Athens I Court St . Bus Stop)

4: 5{1

4:54
4:5'
5: 17

·*'t,t "-"1 bill Wtwen Pvmero; 6 .ttbel\1-trne dOWlldrlYH •1•1 route.
Athens To Pomeroy
AM

AM

STOPS

6:11

1: 10 Athens tCourt 51 . Bus Stqp)

6:~

8:21 Shade
8:]2 Pratts Fork

6:SO
6:55
6: S5

1:35 Burlingham
8 :l7 Darwin

ock Springs ~via Old Route m
"7t'10

1:45 :meroy ·
ddJeport

·ir:::::~=~=;:&gt;.=:&gt;.::-&lt;==~;:;,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,·:·==:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;:=========~===========l\:

iNews. • .-rn Brrefs;)
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J : 12
3:30

PM

PM

3: 35
l : Sl
J ; S7
4:00
4:01
4: lD
4:22

5 :20

4::27

5 ;31

5: 42
·5 :45
5 :47
5 :55
, : 10
• ·: 15

Oo sing·of

open class

A first reading was given
an ordinance Monday night to
provide lighting for streets
that will increase the cost to
Pomeroy
Village
approximately $210 a month.
Pomeroy Council, foUowlng
a long discussion with a
regresentative of
the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. and upon the
advice of village solicitor
Fred Crow, did not pass the
ordinance with a third and
final reading until cost of
underground wiring can be
determined.
Crow asked the cost of
underground wiring just for
the three downtown blocks.
He was told that this would
have to be determined by
study: Crow advised council
to give the ordinance its first
reading and ill ihe meantime
seek to learn the cost of the
underground which could be
written into the ordinance (if
the cost is not prohibitive).
This is the first Increase In
street lights In the past 10
years according to the

Fair membership
standing .at $4
Membership tickets for the
114th Meigs County Fair remaining at $4 each again
this year- have gone on sale
at a number of Big Bend
business houses.
. Memliership tickets entitle
the purchasers to gate admission and parking for the
entire fair, Aug. 16-20, and to
vote or file for the board of
directors of the Meigs County
Agricultural Society, which
annually stages the fair.
The tickets are on sale at
Spencer' s Market, Middleport Department Store,
Middleport; New York
Clothing House, Green

Lantern, Sugar Run Flour
Mill, Swisher-Lohse Phar-.
macy, Five Points Grill and
Gloeckner's Restaurant,
Pomeroy; Miller Brothers
Grocery, Rutland; Waid
.Cross Sons, Racine; Baum
Lumber Co., Chester; Pat's
Market, Syracuse, and from
Nita Jean Ritchie in Tuppers
Plains.
Tickets can be purchased
also at the fair board office on
the fairgrounds. However,
beginning this year, persons
purchasing at the fairgrounds
after the fair has started will
not receive a refund on the
· gate admission they paid to
enter the grounds ·before
purchasing their membership tickets. MembeFship
tickets can also be purchased
from any fai~ board member.

representative of the power pleased" with the water
company. Council has been system and the fire departwithout a contract with the ment; giving extra credit for
utility since July 4.
the ladder truck.
Councilman Harold Brown
Legar pointed out that the
flftsked about a high pressure fire department is in need of
sodium lamp. He was told . new hose. He suggested that
that the sodium light costs 1,000 feel of 2'h" and 600 feet
less per month, but the Q:litlal of 1'h " hose be purchased.
cost is higher.
Legar was told to check on
The electric company is to prices.
install a sodium light on a
Crow advised that several
trial basis to determine the residents have agreed to help
cost of operation and to see if paint the old waterworks
it meets council's approvaL building on Pomeroy's East
Also meeting with council Main Street. The Board of
was Charles Legar, fire chief, Public Affairs is purchasing
who submitted his report for the paint and Mayor Andrews
the department of the first six has offered labor.
months of 1977.
Crow also told council that
Legar told council an in- the reason federal grants
surance officer had inspected hcive been denied is due to the
the ' village and was "well ' low unemployment rate in

A public drive to secure
funds for a new ambulance
for the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was near the half-way
figure Monday.
The fund ·drive opened only
rec~!IIIY wjth a $13,500 goal
a(ld · Monday evening the
contributions were close to
$6,000. .
Additional
contributions
are needed, of course, and
various organizations and .
groups are planning special
events to benefit the fund. All
persons .are asked to contribute since the truck is a
public service vehicle.
Contributions are to be sent to
the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, Inc., P. 0. Bor 247,
Pomeroy. Checks are to be
made out to the Pomeroy
Emergency ,Squad, Inc.
Latest contributors were
Louise Heines, Everett and.
Marie Dailey, Mr. and Mrs.
Sc'ott Shank, Goessler's
Jewelry Store, Shammy's
Drive In, Shirley Guinther,
Pomeroy Flower Shop, Dale
C. Warner, Insurance, Homer
and Palma Goodwin, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Frecker, Willoughby Hill, Evelyn Gaul, Middleport. Fire Department,
Nelda Yockey, Big Bend C. B,
Radio Club, Genevieve Well,
Mrs. Paula Grueser, Dores
Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Kelly, Faye Wilcoxen,
Bernice Hawk, Gladys
·Shumway, Mrs. Louise
Hawkins, Karr and Van
Zandt Motor Co., Mr. and

.
syunitedPressinternauonal
MONTGOMERY, ALA. - GOV. GEORGE C. Wallace,
· .
whose marriage to a woman almost 20 years his jooior has
been marked by occasional publi~ discord, has hired a lawyer
to seek a divorce, UP! has learned.
ReUable sources said Wallace retained Maury D. Smith, a
wre~k
Closing time for ail open
Montgtmery attQrney, to obtain a divorce from. his wife,
Comella, who last, year admitted putting a tap on her class entries Into the 114th
CLINICS SET
husband's telephone. Asked if Wallace had asked his wife for a armual Meigs County Fair . Two cars were heavily
dlunaged
and
the
driver
of
Two
free
cancer clinics for
will
be
·
a
t
4
p.m.
on
Friday,
divorce, a spokesman for the governor, Elvin Stanton, replied,
one
was
cited
to
court
·1n
an
Big
Bend
area
women have
Aug. 12.
"I dm't mow."
.
accident
at
the
intersection
of
..
been
set
for
August.
The first
The fair board secretary,
Locust
and
Broadway
Sts.
in
will
be
held
on
Wednesday,
WS ANGElES- "THERE WAS A DULL thump. The Mrs. Muriel Bradford, will be
aircraft jerked forward and a tremendous orange flash lit the at the board office on the Middleport at 9:13 a.m. Aug. 10, and the second one
on Wednesday, Aug. 31, at the
coclqlit 1111d the sky. 'My God,' I thought, 'I've had it now.' " . !Wck Springs Fairgrounds Monday.
Middleport police said a Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
That was Francis Gary Powers' reflection on how the Russians from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both
NOW YOU KNOW
blutedhla U2 spy plane from the sky over Russia 17 years ago, Aug.l! and 12 to accept open car driven by Donald All those wishing an apSwearingen,
Rutland,
struck
pointment
for
either
clinic
Lloyd's of London is not an
Igniting one of the most bitter cmfrontations of the Cold War: class entries. ·
Powers cheated death that day, parachuting to safety and
Entry blanks are to be one driven by Robert Mc- there are openlllgs for both --: insurance company, but an
Sovletlmprlaonment after his plane was hit in the thin, cold aiP . fiU!!d out by the exhibitor and Claskey, Route 2, Gallipol)s, are asked to call 992-§832 in association of individual
at 61,000 feet ·by an antiaircraft missile. On Monday, flying a the exhibitors must deter- as McClaskey turned onto the evenings or on week.ends. wtderwriters.
television newa helicopter only 90 feet above a suburbaq Little mille themselves the classes Broadway. Swearingen was
League field, Powers was kllled. H.e had been coverilig the In which they will make . cited for following too closely..
California brushflrea by air since last Wednesday as a reporter entry . .
for KNBC-TV. Cause of the crash was not known. It crashed in
Entries are welcome from
the San Fernando Valley suburb of Encino.
Meigs and adjoining counties
SENATOR MARSHALED
except ln. the junior fair
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - .
MIAMI - RHODESIAN BLAcK REVOLUTIONARY where exhibits are limtted to · Sen. s. I. Hayakama Monday ··
.
leader jOihua Nllllmo bas rejected all mediation efforts by the. Meigs. County club members - was named grand marshal of
United Stale&amp; and Britain and aays Ptmier Ian Smith's white and m the flower shows a parade Aug. 28, climaxing
The Gallla·Meigs Com- through Title VO of the Older
goveuuneat 1111111 be ov~wn by force, according to where exhibits are limited to the Japanese-American
munity Action Agency has Americans Act and adHavana Radio.
county residents.
community's Nisei week ill
A CUban government broadcast monitored here Monday
Closing time for enlrles Into the "Little Tokyo" district. received approvaL for a · ministered through the Ohio
satellite Senior Nutrition· Commission on Aging.
night aald Nkomo told a press cmference Rhodesia must be the horse show wit\ llt at 7
Program site In GaUia and
Due to the expansion of the
"liberated by ai'med struggle." Winding up a four-day visit In p.m. on Wednesday, ~g. 17,
Meigs
Counties.
.
program,
applications are
Cuba - which included meeting~~ with Fidel Castro - the the nigh~ of the show and
In
GaUls
County,
although,
·,being
accepted
at the com·
blact rewlutlmary e:qll'eased thanks for ''material aid" there is no closing time·on the.
A$KTO'WED
whlcb be said Cuba, the Soviet Union and other communist horse and pony pulling
Granted license to wed In a site has · not yet been · munity action agency In
Meigs County Monday were determined, a · suitable one Cheshire and-or the Bureau
natlaaa wwe providing. There was no indication in the contests.
Donald Eugene Casto, · 19, will have to be found to of · Employment Service
bro•dc"t aa to the type of aid Nkomo was gettlng, especially
Minersville, and Marcella provide on-site preparation. Offices in Gallipolis and
from CUba.
Fatth Hartman, 18, Long The senior nutrition program Pomeroy for the following
now located In the Senior positions: '
Bottom.
LYNN, KY. -STATE POUCE MONDAY night, found
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
•
Citizens Center In Pomeroy is · Assistant site manager,
llllrijulna ptmta valued at more than $100,000 . be\ng
Tbuuday through
operating at full capacity.
Gallia County.
cultiYI&amp;ed 011 a IICII1heutem Kentucky fann owned by New Saturday, fair 'naraday
SEPARATION
ASKED
The
Senior
Nutrition
Assistant site managerYarll: Yart II pitcher Delli Gullelt.
wltb a ~aee of showers
Filing
for
disaoluUon
of
Program
is
subcontracted
to
cook,
Meigs County.
AbMat • marlj~Me plants '"" c:onft-ted, !1 pollee Friday or Salarday. RJcbs
marriage
·irl
Melga
CoWJty
the
Ga!Ua-Meigs
Community
Each
position is for a 40
IICIIIOellid. The IIIJDIIBprum added It was not known who in tbe 8h, 8lld ovendgbt
Common
Pleas
Court
Mon·
Action
Agency
from
the
hour
week
at $2.50 per hour.
plalnl4 tile llllri~ 011 the Greenup County farm.
lows Ia tile fh.
day
were
Helen
J.
Pickens
Corporation
for
Ohio
ApDeadline
for
receipt of apOdJeCt, will formerly pt.ll:lm for the Cincinnati Reds,
· U-ln New Jeney during tha baaeball seaaop. He maintains :::::::::::r:::~t:t~:::;:::::ltf(:}'t::}\ :~i~~r I. Pickens, both of ~=~: ~hl~~trit~~v~~op ~n~~t,j fi~cations is Friday, August
., .oln ,.. l'elldence at the farm.

entries set

AutQs banged
up in
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Meigs County. He suggested
that persons who are
unemployed should register
at the Pomeroy Unemployment Office.
Jan Judge, In charge of the
cervical cancer clinic, met
with council in regard to
parking for persons attending
the clinic which is now held at
the Trinity Church. Mayor
Andrews told her to have the
people park at meters and if
given a ticket have Mrs.
Judge sign it and the people
can take it to the office of the
mayor where it will be
voided.
In other business council
discussed advertising for bids
for a truck and a n~w pollee
cruiser. Following the
( Conlinued on page 10)

E-R fund near $6,000

Senior nutrition
program
· funded
.

COLOR CHARMS ON
SINGLE SUBJECTS · WITH
PURCHASE OF THE PACKAGE.

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Ppmeroy-Midclleport, Ohilf
Tuesday, August 2, 1977

•

:•..........
ELBERFELDS...•..•.......•
IN POMEROY : .

YOU GET ALL THIS

v •

l.oday w discuss whether the men would stay out.
Guzek said roving pickets shut down some of the mines . He
said the pickets were from outside Ohio.
He urged the Ohio miners to return to their jobs, noling
they would go hack if the pickets were withdrawn.
"There's nothing in the world to be gained by wildcatting,"
Guzek said . "The way to restore the union health benefits is by
producing coal, so the funds would receive the royalties."
In OJarleston, W.Va., wildcatting coal miners planning to
rruu:ch on Washington Friday to protest a cuthack in their

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PACKAGE SPECIAL.

"We haven't set a time when

wranglinl over clean air
standards
ns
tha
introduction of · Ford's
Gemum-bullt nee~a. a '~'~

•

••

Sport!. Transactions
By United Press International
Sunday

Mining

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•

Company has been down the past two weeks due to a
·
strike there.
The UP! said from Bellaire 18 Ohio coal mines were closed
Monday when several thousand m"" walked off their jobs ill
sympathy' with miners protesting cutbacks in union medical
funds, according to United Mine Workers District 6 President
·John Guzek.
rlll1lpl.
Miners in West Virginia entered their sixth week of a wildcat
The roving pickets closed JayMar Coal Company at
O!eshire; UniVl!l"sal and Stewart and Zion Coal Companies at strike Monday with a demand tnat two officials dealing with
Kanauga and Peaker Run Coal at Clipper Mills. Crown City the debt-ridden union funds resign immediately.
Guzek said meelings were scheduled for Monday and
WUdcat strili:es from Meiga County's three mines traveling
in a carav1111 of approximately 30 vehicles, closed down
Independent~ operatloos in GaiUa County Monday.
According to local lawmen apparently no major trouble
developed. However, there were scattered reports that
truckers were farced to dump their coal jn entrance and exit

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pickets shut down independents

• • • ee eeee e ee•

~~~ERFELDS

m.p.g. rmmcar . Originally
Intended for an early August
debut, the Fiesta now cannot
be introduced before Aug. 26,
a spokesman said.
The Fairmont and look·
alike cousin Zephyr are • /
replacements
for
the
venerable .Ford Maverick
and Mercury Comet compact
models.
The squared-off ·compacts
have been rated by the EPA
at 33 m.p.g. on the highway
and 22 m.p.g. ill the city for a
combined 26 m.p.g . rating
with a 2.3 liter four-cylinder : ·
engine and · automatic •
transmission. The two cars •e
are the cornerstones of
Ford's attempts to meet the
18 m.p.g. fleetwide fuel
economy average set by the
·federal government for 1978 .
models.

we'd stop building cars at
Kansas City and close the
plant."
Under federal law, cars
that do not meet cfean air ·
standards cannot be shipped
across state lines to dealers.
The Environmental
Protection Agency could
waive that rule if Congress
does not complete work on a
new clean air bill, carrying
current standards through
1978, by the tiine of its
scheduled recess Friday.
That would allow automakers
to at least begin shipping
their lljlW models.
The first of the 1978 models
from General Motors and
Chrysler are not due to start
rolling · off assembly linea
unW Aug. 8. GM bas warned
a delay in selling a ·111!10: clean
air law could mean a
complete shutdown of its
North American operations
by mid-September.
"When you build cars with
the \dea of just storing them,
there Is aome point at which
tbe Ford apokaman said.
Also beld up by prolmged

BODY mDtfllllEll

CINCINNATI (UPI) ~ 'nle
Hamlllon County Coroner•~_..
office AYI tbe body of a maD
fowtd Thiii'Jday In Boone
CoWJty,Ky., "as that of Scott
Spurrier, 18, Sharonville,
Ohio. .
Spurrier bad diaappeared
July 21 from the Sbaronv!lle
gas lltatioo where be was
working a night ahlft.
Boone CoWJty authorities
!laid Saturday they were
treat ins the 'Case a• a
homicide and work with
Sharonville police on the
investigation.
A spokesman aaid the
cause of Spurrier's death .
·won't be determined for
several days. Pai.hologtsts
identified Spurrier's body
Saturday enough dental
records.

{

Mrs. E. L. Clark, Mr. and
Mrs. George Folmer, Mr. and
Mrs. James Fugate, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Ridenour, Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Hendricks,
Lydia Ebersbach, Shuler's

Market, Nationwide Insurance, Twin City Machine
Shop, Moore's Store, Leonard
Hes5, Roy Betzing, Meigs
Auto Ports, G. and J. Auto
Parts.

Kurfess wants
to be Governor
By LEE LEONARD
"He is not going to
UP( Statehouse . Reporter
campaign against the
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio governor,'' said Chan~er.
House Minority Leader . "That would be foolhardy and
Charles F. ·Kurfe~s. I\· personally repugnant to
Perrysuurg; . will make a Chuck."
quick eight-&lt;:ity airplane.tour '
What ttlrfess is going to do,
Saturday to
formally according to Chandler, . is
annourice his candidacy for offer himself as a Republican
the Republican nomination with a "new approach and
for governor ·in 1978.
different ideas about solving
Kurfess, 47, has already our problems."
taken his unofficial campaign
"We have to seU Oluck
for
the
Republican Kurfess/' said O.andler. "To
nomination to more than half do anything else would fail
of Ohio's 88 counties, visiting m,lserably ."
fairs, speaking at meetings
Kurfess is trying to build a
and
conversing
with hase of supporters and camnewspaper editors.
paign contributors across the
Saturday, he will officially state. He already has some
kick · off his campaign in important c;ommunity people
Toledo, followed In rapid and co.unty chairmen,
order by news conferences in Chandler said, although
Mansfield,
Cleveland, funds thus far are coming
Youngstown, Akron-Canton, from close friends.
Columbus, Dayton and
Chandler estimated .that to
Cincinnati.
be "comfortable," Kurfess
The Wood County lawyer, would have to raise about $1
who began his third decade as million for a primary
a House member last campaign, whether Rhodes
January, is growing tired of runs or not.
his legislative role and will go
Kurfess, who joined the
aU.o~ for the g9vernorsh)p
General Assembly when be
Qext year, according to his was a law student at Ohio
aides.
State, has broad legislative
If he loses, he will experience and. has been a
relinquish the House seat he national leader in founding
has held for 21 years and · and working with Interstate
return to private law practice legislative organizations.
in Bowling Green.
He alsil has support among
"He has no interest in being the
agricultural
and
lieutenant governor or any educational communities,
other state official,'' said OJandler said.
Lawrence Chandler, an aide
Kurfess has chafed under·
who is managing the Kurfess Democratic domination of
. campaign in its early stages, the General Assembly for
Kurfess, who was Speaker four years, and now is ready
of the Ohio House from 1967· to let "some of the younger
73, nearly ran for governor in talent that he has developed
1970but decided M lacked the take over," said Chandler.
name, the .money and the
Kurfess believes fthodes
political power base for the may be vulnerable among
contest. ·
.
younger Republicans just
This time, he may have to becoming active in the party,
tackle Gov. James A. Rhodes and among some traditional
ill the primary, but he seems supporters who believe it's
unworried.
time for a change. .
"I don't believe Gov.
His wife, Helyn, is an active
Rhodes is going to run," campaigner for him. They
Kurfess has told newsmen have a son Todd, · a
from one end of the state to sophomor•e at Bowling Green
the other this year.
State University; daughter
OJandler says the. GOP Ann, an incoming freJdqnan
lawmaker is going under the at Ohio State; and daugbter
assumption that nobody else Laura, a high schoolltudent.
will he in the ra.ce .

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