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

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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

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.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

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2. 6 'h " BROWNING SKILLET

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MAD -

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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

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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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1..

.,
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

:

!•
•

,61

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Marvelous at mingling. Create your own crowd in this

•

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,

.,

•

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

-

"'

- ··"

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;)
··

. 3:03
] :07
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
.

'

.

- fl

.

0

1

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.

•

.

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

•

•

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

•

:
•••

•••
•

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

:

••
••
•••
•••
•••
•••
•••

••

••
•
•••

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 .

�•

.-

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ponleroy, u.. l'ue-sllay, Aug. ~. 1~ 11
l~ The

Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Tuesday, Aug 2,1977
(

Energy measures revised
By STEWART POWELL
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter asked
Congress to leave his energy
package unchanged and got
changes in reply, on a day in
which energy and the
automobile enjoyed attention
on Capitol Hill.
- Congressional action in
other areas could affect the
nurumum wage and school
busiJlg. And GOP leaders
charged Carter with a
"blatant political payoff."
With the President's
energy plan ready for debate
on the House floor, the White
House Monday appealed for
approval or a 5 cent hike in
federal gasoline taxes to
finance highway construction

and mass tramnt. Carter
asked once again that !ederal
controls oo natural gas pnces
be continued and expanded
"I am convinced that the
hard work that the Cong"'ss
has undertaken over the last
three months will resuh in a
strong and effective bill,"
Carter said, trying to convince Democrats to hold the
party line during the
amendment process, which
began today.
His appeal to the House
went unheeded in the Senate.
The Senate F;nergy Committee readied its own verSion of the Carter plan with a
to-e vote to outlaw gasguzzling cars in 1980. Carter
only wanted inefficient cars

tu:ed at a high rate to
discourage purchase.
House-Senate conferees
remained deadlocked on auto
emission standards for 1978
cal'$. Automakers threaten to
halt production if Congress
does not set standards before
the sununer recess Fnday.
Legislative ,negotiators try
again tnday.
The campaign against the
airbag safety device took a
new Ill"!, with Rep. Bud
Shuster, R-Pa ., warning a
chemical used to inflate the
bags was a lethal polSOn and
could tum into an explosive in
an abandoned car.
" A scare charge," replied
the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration.

Carter would make pot
• small doses legal
m
By HELEN THOMAS
"personal comnntment. "
UPI White House Reporter
They gave no details of the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - marijuana proposal, but
President Carter invited new
controversy today with a
proposal to decriminalize
marijuana use as part of a
comprehensive drug abuse
program he is forwarding to
Congress.
Administration officials
said the package would

rev1ew "cWTent successes,
particularly relating to tbe
control" of heroin smuggling,
mainly from Mexico.
Carter also plans to send
his welfare reform message
to Capitol Hill this week
before the month-long recess,
and was reviewing final
recommendations on 1t today
with Rep. AI Ullman, ~e.,
chainnan of the Ways and
Means Committee.
The President scheduled a
private lunch with Terence
Cardinal Cooke of New York,
and arranged to meet later
with Defense Secretary
Harold Brown on Brown's
recent trtp to South Korea to
arrange for American troop
withdrawal over the next f1ve
years.
-()f the drug abuse program,
officials said: "The"' will be
some new initiatives in a
number of new areas. II \vii
be a fairly broad program,
coveriug treatment,
regulatory control and
international activities."
The program, they said,
would demonstrate Carter's

Human bag at
6 for killer

By CATHY BOOTH
NEW YORK (UP!)- "Son
of Sam" now has killed six
people and wounded seven
others and police say they
haven't the slightest idea who
the psychopathic killer may
be.
Twenty-year-old Stacy
Moskowitz of Brooklyn died
Monday in Kings County
Hospital, becoming the sixth
young person to be slain at
the hands of "Son of Sam ."
She and Robert Violante,
20, also of Brooklyn, were
shot m the head while they
were sitting in a car on a
lover's lane in that borough
early Sunday.
Vwlante
was
in
satisfactory condihon at the
hospital but he lost hiS left
eye in the latest attack of the
so-called .'lk:aliber killer.
After. the. woman died, her
mother,
Mrs.
Neysa
Moskowitz, told reporters at
the hospil,tl, "An animal that

HEALTH

L~rence E. Lamb, M.D.

Meaning of,pulse rate
. By Lawrence E. Lamb' M.D.
...
..-.:... DEAR DR. LAMB - I
--... . would
appreciate it il you
·.would send me a wnte-up on

~

'

.•••
.
•..
'f .. •

pulse rate. A friend of mine
~• and a relative said the1r doctor told them they buth had a
' slow pulse rate- 60 heats.
Can anything be done with
·&gt;' a slow rate or IS nothmg real• · - ly necessary' Are there any
symptoms With slow rates?
"•
DEAR READER -- It
depends enllrely on what
causes 1t. A slow heart rate IS
'·• • often a s1gn of a healthy
heart . A vigorous welllramed athlete may have a
resting heart rate below 40
per mmute. In fact most wellconditwned men have rates
below 60 beals per mmute at
rest. Since there are so few
individuals who are really m
a state of optunal fitness and
who do not smoke or drink
coffee we have become accustomed to thinking of
higher heart rates - which
are the nol'm for our not-so-f1t
societ;v,
Roger Bannister haq a
i'esting heart rate in the 70s
when he began tr.a1ning for
the four minute nule. When
he was properly conditiOned
and ready to, break the
world's record his resting
heart rate was m the 30s.
That gave him the reserve he
needed to make that enormous physical effort.
Some medicines slow heart
rates too - as a side effect.
And then the"' are people
who have heart block who
have very slow heart rates.
Those with this medical problem who have rates that fall
too low will have inadeuate
blood flow to the bram. This
can lead to mental confuswn
oc 101!18 of consciousness or
even convulsions. This can be
dangerous. These individuals
reulre • pacemall:er to prevent the heart from beating
.t¥owly.
i,

-...

.

'. .

noted that Carter 's wish to
have the drug decriminalized
1s not new.

would snufl away the life of a
young gir1, blind a young buy
and has killed others and
probably will go on killing, an
animal like this has to be
caught; not to die or to be
killed, but to be tortured lor
life."
"Son of Sam," as he cans
himself m notes to police and
a newspaper columnist, has
killed six persons and
wounded seven others over
the past year with a .44caliber Bulldog revolver in
attacks without apparent
motive.
The killer managed to
elude intensive police patrols
over the weekend and carry
out a threat contained in the
last note to mark the
anmversary of his first strike
with new bloodshed.
Police had concentrated
their efforts m the Bronx and
Queens where the gunman
confined his prev1ous atlacks,
but "Son of Sam" struck in
Brooklyn for the first time.
" We now have an entire
City to protect," said a tired
Deputy Inspector Timothy
Dowd, who heads the special
"Son of Sam" task force .
"Sam is now telling us he will
strike anywhere."
· Chief of Detectives John
Keenan said, " We 're no
closer to catching hi!n today
than we were last week. We
have more eyewitness
description than in the past,
but we stili have no idea of the
killer's identity or his
location ..,
Mayor Abraham Beame
ordered 25 detectives added
to the special S&lt;knan task
force and another 75 officers
· assigned to help the 150 on
special patrol at night and
weekends in selected areas.
Police also appealed to the
public for help in their hunt.
Keenan issued a new
description of the killer ,
which included more detail
h. clothing
onH:~aid the ~an was 25
to 35 years old, a stockY :;.
foot-7 to 5-foot-10 wore blue
denim pants, a way, longsleeve shirt or a blue denim
jacket and light, disheveled
ha' Police said he may wear

There you have It, on one
hand our healthiest people
may have a slow heart rate as
a s1gn o! health and at ~he
other extr~me 1! can be a Sign
of heart disease. A rate o! 60
by 1tself, though, IS not likely
to be of chrucal Significance.
To give you more information
on heart rates I am sending
you The Health Letter
number 9-8, Your Heart
Rate: What lt Means others
who want this tssue can send
50 cents w1th a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
11. Send Y?Ur reuest to me m
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 326, San Antomo, TX
78292.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can
one lose weight m the face by
exerc1smg and diellng] What
IS the nose made up of (the
outside)? Is 1tfat or muscle?
-DEAR ADER - As most
people who have lost we1ght
Wlll tell ~ou the f1rst place 1!
shows IS m the face. tHe last
place IS around the wa1st and
the places most people would
like to re~uce.
The bndge of the nose IS
bune and t~Je tip of the nose 1s_
cartilage. That is why the tip
is soft. There are a few tmy
muscles attached to the cartilage. They help when you
want to give someone the
dilated nostril or they can be
used to pull m the opening of
the llp. These muscles are
very smalL
The nose doesn't have any
s1gmllcant fat so weight loss
m the face will not do much to
your nose. The. nose may
become fat m a medical condi\lon resulting in a large
bulbous red vascula• nose. In
these instances the deformity
that results may reuire
surgery if it is to be corrected.
If you are thinking you can
affect the character of you1
nose with dtet and weight los.s
I am afraid that won't work.

'

tr,-

a~ - an

said,
"I'm
ad;:ing this appeal to
women who are particularly
observant about articles of
clothing ... surely somewhere
they have a friend or a
member of their family who
was wearing these clothes
Sat day night or Sunday
ur_ .,
mornmg.
THE DAD. YSENTINEL
OEVOTEO TO TilE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Eiec. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFUCH
ChyEditor
Publistw!d d¥jiy excep~ Saturday
by The Oh1o Valley Publi.shitlg Comany , 111 COIU't Sl , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 Busmess Off1ce Phone 9922156. EdJtorml Phone 992-2.157.
Secood class poslage pa1d at
Poml!roy , Ohio.
National adverlJSir\g representative Ward • Griffith Company,
Inc.: Bottmelli and Gallagher Dlv,
757 'Third Ave , N~w York, NY.
10017.
Sulxicnption rale11. Delivered by
camer where emulable 75 cenl.s per
week . By MolorRoute where earner
.!ervk'e not .11Yil1able, One moolh,
$3 25. By ma1l m Ohiu and W. v.a.,

One Y~ar , t22 00, S1x months,
$11 ~0 ; Three months , 17 OOi
El!t!wher~ $26 00 year, SIX Jrutths
$13 so. Three month.!i, $7.~~ :
Subsc.TiptJma pnct: Includes Sunday
Tllnt's-Scrttmel
___L

Tentallve action by the
Senate Budget Comm itt ee
could cost teena gers the
proposed increase in the
minimlllll wage. The committee fa 1led to provide
enough money for youth
employment and traming
programs to cover the.
proposed minimum wa ge
increase from $2.30 to $2.6&amp; an
hour.
The Senate Judiciary
Comm1tlee
o k aye d
legislation requll'ing a court
to lind specific intent to
discriminate before it could
order school busing lor
desegregation. Courts now
need only the. existence of
discrimination for the order.
A GOP trio of National
Chairman Bill Brock, Senate
Leader Howard Baker and
House Leader John Rhndes
challenged the President's
support for legislation
requiring 9.5 per cent of
liTiported oil to be earned in
U. S. made tankers. They
said Carter backed the
legislation opposed by the
Departments of Defense,
Treasury and Commerce
because of a campaign
promiSe "to mantime mterests," which contributed
to his campaign.
Chairman John Flynt, DGa., of the House Ethics
Conuruttee, sa1d the panel
investigation into alleged
South Korean influence
buying In Congress was
progressing and 10 witnesses
would testify with immunity
from prosecu\lon.

Syracuse wins
in Stan Musial
Tourney

play

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. No mercy was· shown in
Monday night's first round of
the State Stan Musial
Baseball Tournament.
Portsmouth and Syracuse,
Ohio, pounded out "mercy
rule" 10-0 victones, while
LaRoy's turned back Citizens
National Bank of Mason
County, 10-5. Whitten Coal
defeated Racme, Ohio, by a
forfeit.
Portsmouth scored m every
inning In humbling Jackson
County. Catcher Randy
Arnett led the 11-hlt Portsmouth attack with a ·double,
smgle and four &lt;uns-bilttedin.
Steve Skaggs hurled a twohit shutout for Portsmouth,
striking out four and walking

one.
Syracuse had ntne hits and
was helped' by five Independent 'e rrors. Losing
pitcher Mickey Lockhart,
who doubles as the team
manager, walked six.
Jerry Chapman and larry
Verbage combined on a fivehitter as LaRoy's topped
Citizens National Bank.
Verbage picked up the
victory, giving up just one
single in two-plus innings of
relief. He aflio had a f1!11·
scormg single.
The Stan Musial League IS
an open division of the
American Amatew; Baseball
Congress. The tournament is
double - elimination. Games
are being played at St. Cloud
. Commons and Bill Mire
Field.
Jackson Co. 000 oo- 0 2 5
Ports.
104 22-10 II 0
Sandy, Stover (4) and
Taylor; Scaggs and Arnett. W
- Scaggs. L - Sandy.
Independents

000 000-- 0 4 5
Syracuse
200 152-10 9 0
M. Lockhart and Lykins,
Barld and Ash. W - Baird. L
- M, Lockhart.

Foote's·
•
earnmgs

I

\

NEW WEST VIRGINIA BANKERS AS&lt;;OCIATION PRESIDENT- Charles Lanham,
president of the Citizens Natiooal Bank of Point Pleasant, left, was i~talled tecently as
president of the West Vtrginia BankersAssoctation at the an.nual convention of WVBA at the
Greerlbrier in White Sulphur Springs. l..ahham became pres1dent of the WVBA after servtng
Hyears as a member of the executive council or as an officer. AI right 1s outgoing WVBA
president Curtis T. Lambert, pres1dent of the First National Banlt in Phillip!.

East

his commission from U . Allen Stevenson upon completion of instruction of the Naval-

Aviation Schools Command at NAS, Pensacola, Fla. Second from the left in the photo is
Brooks SaY"' father of Ensign Sayre. The ceremony on May 6 was attended by Ensign
Sayre's pare~ts, Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Sayre of Syracuse . Sayre is now taking 16 weeks
traming at Memphis, Tenn., as a maintenance duty ground oflicer. His permanent base will
be Pax River, Md.

Chicago
Phtla
P ittsbgh
St Louis
• Montreal
New York

area.

-

17,984 total for the we.ek
ending July 16.
Continued claims of those
unemployed one or more
weeks were estimated at
104,175, including 80,000
under the regular Ohio Law,
a slight one-tenth of one
percent decline from the
previous week's total of
104,313.
Joblesa Ohioans filing
claims under all programa
were estimated at 121,438 17,263 initial claims and
104,174 continued claims,
representing IH!Ven-tenths of
ooe percent drop from the
122,297 total for the week
ending July 16.

•

Administrator Giles stated
that3,179 jobless Ohioans had
exhausted their benefits
under all programs for the
week ending July 16. su~
totals were: Ohio Law 1,861;
Title 5 (government employees and ex-servicemen)
126; Special Unemployment
Asllstance {SUA) 71; Extended SUA 57; Extended
Benefits (EB) 1,025; Trade
Actl {1962 and 1974) 38.
The OBES Administrator
noted that $231,547,828 had
been paid In benefits to
eligible claimants from
January tbrough June of this
year.

still unexplored so we will not know for sure for some time, ~
Collins added .
Maybe there are a few hardy souls ready to trade the
!amily station wagon for a string of pack mules and head north
in search of the "Mother Lnde."
H you aren't ready for that, try a litUe punning around
Oh10 some weekend. It is eas1er than you may think and you
won't have to travel, as far.
Glaciers covered about 70 percent of Ohio and deposited
gold throughout the glaciated part of the state. Gold can also
qe found in the unglaciated southern areas of the state. Some
streams in southern Ohio carried glacial deposits, including
gold, away from the retreating 1ce.
Waterways with shallow, flat and rocky bottoms are ideal
because areas where gold may be found are easier to spot and
to work. Gold is heavier than sand and other mmerals. It
settles tn the low spots of a stream or where the water has
slowed.
&gt;
The curve of a stream, toward the inside of the bend where
water runs slower, will be a likely gold spot. Just downstream
from the area where a stream wtdens suddenly also is good
smce the gold would drop from the slower moving water.
Gold can often he foWJd in what is termed "black sand."
Black sand is made up ol )Ieavy' minerals which, becalllle of
their weight, settle to the bottom with the gold.
Gold has a dull yellow color in its natural state and is
malleable. GOld found in streams will range in size from tiny
flakes to that of a grain of wheat. Larger flakes and nuggets
can be found in streams with gravel beds.
'
Panrung is 'the best method for getting gold out of Ohio's
streams. The pan does not have to he a genuine Yukon special.
Ametal pie pan will do the job, but pans measuring between 10
to 18 inches across and three to four inches deep can be found
at some mineral and rock stores lor about $4.
After you have selected a likely spot, use your pan to
scrape away the top layers of the sand and gravelahnost down
to the bedrock. Fill the pan about two-thirds full of sand and
water_Remove any large stones, sticks or other material.
Hold the pan with both hands and shake lt back and forth in
a rotating motion so heavier rnaterlal can setUe to the bottom.
Skim off the top of the sand and gravel. Pick out the mediumSize pebbles and dirt particles.
When there is a half of cup of sand and water left m the pan
use a circular motion to swirl the sand across the bottom. Gold
would be at the end of the trail of sand.
A small pill bottle half full of water, called a "Keeper,"
can be used to store the gold. After a few pans you should see a
litUe color in yoitr keeper .lf you don't, try another spot.
Since gold doesn't go anywhere, panning can be done yearround. But it may get too cold during the winter and the water
IS often too high and muddy during the spring. That leaves
sununer and autumn, when conditions are ideal. During the
fall the water is usually lower, clearer and quieter.
No one knows how much gold has been taken out of Ohio
streams. In a Geological Survey annual report done in 1869,
gold was reported being taken from several points in Licking
County, as well as other places in the state.
The report noted $17 worth of gold dust was taken from a
stream near Bowling Green Township. At that time gold was
worth $35 an ounce. Today unrefined gold sells for around $144
an ounce. Not a bad price, but you would have to work a few
days before finding that much gold.
The gold to he found in the streams and rivers of Ohio in one
day probably would not pay for your lunch.llut memories of a
family gold bunt in the scenic wilds of Ohio would be prlcelel!S.
The Division of Geological Survey of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources has ffiilpa showing which part of Ohio was
glaciated, and thus gold bearing. The maps are available for 20
cents, which includes mailing, from the Division of Geolot!ical
'Survey, Ohio Department of Natural Resources, FoWltain
Square, Colwnbus 43224.
SCHOOl.'! MAY CLOSl
CHARDON, Ohio (UP!) Schools in the Chardoo School
District may be c1oaed In
December because of • lack
of funds after voters turned
down a &gt;mill additional tax
levy Monday in a special
election.

!

•

Superintendent Rici !11lnor
said the schools wlll have to
cl011e in December bee- ol
a lack of funds.
An 8-rniU acldltkwlal levy
was defeated In May.
The board was to~ next
week to decide on a IICbedule
for closing.

Pet

60 42 .588

East

W- L

pm

LOU tS (Urrea 3-3) at
Atlanta (Nll:!kro 10 12). 7. 35
pm
,
San Diego (Sh ir ley 6 12 ) at
14 -6 ),
Phi ladelPh ia (Carlton
7 35 p m

Sl

Los Ang f les ( John 11 4 ) at
New York ( koosman 8-10 ), 8· 05
pm
Pittsburgh (Rooker 8 5) at
Houston (Larson 0-4l. 8 :35pm .
Chicago (Bonham 9-10) at
C l ncinn~ti { Soto 1 0 ), 8 p m
Wednesday ' s Games
Los Angeles at New York
San Fran at Montreal , n1ght
San Otego at Phila , n ight
51. LOUIS at Atlanta, ntght
Chicago at Cmcmnati , n1gt1t
Ptttsburgh at Houston , n1ght

.

SB 43
sa 46

46 58

442

14

56

44(]

14

455 12 1/ l

46 55
44

36

353 23

66

West
W L
62 39
60 46
56 44

average, 34 hnmers and 102
runs batted in . He is a threat
to equal or break Hack
Wilso n's National League
record of 56 h..-ners in a
season and could challenge
Wilson 's major league mark
of 190 RBI

Pet. GB
614
566 41f2
560 S lf1

By DIU. MADDEN
UPI Spurts Writer
Ron Fairly joined the Hall
of Fame plaque club Monday
night by belting a three-run
homer to help the Toronto
Blue Jays defeat the
M1lwauk.e Brewers, 3-2.
The homer, Fairly's 14th
this year, was his 200th
h!etime. Nearly 100 players
have hit 200 or more homers
in a career, but aU of them
are enshrined on a plaque in
Cooperstown.
\
"That 's
the
special
meaning of this homer - the
fact that 1t puts me on a
plaque in the Hall of Fame,"
said Fairly, who connected iu
the sixth inning t.O g1ve 21year old rookie righthander
Jun Clancy his first maJor
league victory.
Clancy spaced seven hits,
struck out four and walked
just one m pitching the
expansion Jays to their
second win after nine straight
losses.
"It was a helluva a per!o:--..
mance for Clancy/' sa1d
Fairly, "especially since it
was only his second game. I
don't know if we're out of our
slump, but I can tell you·the
attitude here is as good as
any club I've been with."
Elsewhere in the American
League, Baltnnore put away
Oakland, 5-1, California ambushed New York, 4-1, Texas
routed Chicago, II~. and
Mtnnesota toppled Kansas
City, 9-5.

Orioles 5, A's 1:
Andres Mora and Kika
Garcia each hit homers and
Rudy May notched his tOOth
career VJctory as the Orioles
crept hack into first place m
the AL East - a half game
over 1dle B.oston . May, 12-9,
went 8 ~ innings.
Angels 4, Yankees 1:
Ex-Yankee Ken Brett outpitched Catfish Hunter with a
six-hitter
and
rookie
des1gnated hitter Danny
Goodwin tripled home the goahead run tn the !ifth 1nrung.
Terry Humphrey drove in
two other runs for California
with a sacrif1ce fly and a
squeeze bunt.
Rangers 11, White Sox 6:
JliTI Sundberg drove in
three runs with a homer,
single and a squeeze bunt
while Claudell Washmgton
and Bert Campaneris drove
in two others to stake Gaylord
Perry to his lOth v1ctory. The

Qh"10 teams

in Musial
tournament

The West VIrginia state
tournament for Stan Mus1al
baseba II teams will be held on
Texas
55 45 sso 6V2
Ca lif
48 53 475 1A.
Bill Mire Field and
Se attle
46 61 .430 19
St. Clouds Aug. I thru
Oa kl and
42 61 .408 21
Mondav•s Results
Aug . 13 i.n Huntington,
Toronto 3, M tl waukee 2
W. Va. All teams in the local
Tex as 11, Ch icago 6
Mmnesota 9, Kansas City 5
Kan C1ty
200 003 000- 5 10 0 Ohto Valley Stan Musical
Californ ia 4, New York 1
Minn
102 032 Olx- 9 12 1 League are in this tourBalti more 5, Oakland 1
Colborn , Littell
{5)
and
Today•s Probable Pitchers
Porter , Zahn . T Johnson and nament.
(All T1mes EDT)
Wynegar W- Zahn . 10-8 L Local Teams
Cl eveland (Eckersley 9 8 and Co lborn , 11 ·10
H Rs- Kansas
First Round
Garland 1 12) at Milwaukee c ,ty, Cowens {17 ), Minnesota
( C~Idwell 2·3 and Traver~ 3-51, Bostock (9 ), McRae (l.ol)
Jackson vs Whitten Coal,
2, 7 p m
Texas (Alexander 11 6' at NY .
001000000- 1 62 8:30p.m., Aug. l, St. Clouds.
Syracuse vs Independents,
Chtcago ( Kravec 1 2 ), 8 30 p .m
Calif
100 020 lOx- 4 6 0
Kansas Clty &lt;Hass ler 6 3) at
Hunter and Munson ; Brett 6 p.m., Aug. I, Field House.
M lnnesot;, (TMrmodsgard 8-8), and Humphrey W-Brett, 9 8
Ma'!Qn Co., vs Laroys, 8:30
e 30 p m
L - Hunter . 6-6.
New Yor k &lt;Torrez 9 10 ) at
p.m., Aug. 1, Field House.
Cal ifornta (Stmpson 5 81. 10 30 Ball
001 100 021 - S 7 2
New Haven vs George
Oaklnd
000 000 01Q- 1 9 0
pm
Boston (Wise 7-4) at Seattle
R
May , Drago (9) and Electric, 6 p.m. Aug. 2, St.
(House 3 5), 10.35 p.m.
Skaggs ; Coleman, Lacey (8),
Wednesday ' s Games
Batr (9) and Newman w-R Clouds.
Rock Springs-Security
Boston at Seattle, night
May , 129 L - Colema_n, 22
Baltimore at Oakland, ntght
HRs- Baltimore, Garc•a (1 ), Bank, 8:30 p.m., Aug. 2, St.
New York at California, ntght
Mora ( 5).
Clouds.
Toronto at Kansas Ci ty , night
Texas at Ch icago, n•ght
There will be a meeting of
Oetro 1t at M 1nnesota, ntght
the
Ohio Valley Stan Musial
C I e v e Ian d at Milwaukee ,
ntght
League Friday, Aug. 10 at
Syracuse Fire station for
Major league Leaders
By United Press International purpose of setting up a league
Batting
tournament and picking an
(based on 27S at batsl
National League
all-st~r team, accol'ding to
G AB H- Pet Charlene
Marshall,
Stennett Pit
98 385 130 .338
Pittsburgh
Parker Pi t
103 427 143 .335 President, Ohio Valley Stan
102 000 000 oo- 3 14 0 Luzinsk f Phil
92 347 116 334 Musial League.
Houston
Griffey Cln
101 400 130 .325
011 001 000 01 - 4 10. Morales
Chi
100 360 117 .325

Ch1cago
M1nn
Kan City

Leaders

Results, line scores
Major League Results
By United Press International
N ationa I League
025 000101- 9111
SanFrn

011 000 ooo- 2 10 1

Mntral

Montefusco and Alexander ,
Twitchell , Alcala (3). Holds
worth {4) , Atkmson (61. Kerri
• gan (8) and Carter
WMontefusco , 4-9 L- Twitchell ,
2 7 HRs-San FranC JSCO, Ale x
ander {2), McCovey 2 (19)

St

203 001 000- 6 10 0

L

•. Atlanta

200 030

ooo- 5

7 1
• U n d e r wood, Carroll (6) ,
Metzger (8) and Stmmons,

Jones, Forster (6), Tekulve

Gossage

(8J

and

Ternpltn 51 L

8-7 HR - Houston, Cruz (12 )

300 000 201- 6 11 0

Ch&gt;C90
Cinci

202 100 20x- 7 9 0
Renko,
Roberts
(4) ,
F'
Reuschel
{7).
Sutter
(7) ,
Broberg
(8)
and Swtsher,
Seaver , Hoerner (7). Borbon
&lt;71 and Bench . W-Borbon, 6-4
L - P,
Reuschel, A 4 HRsChlcago, Murcer (16), Buckner
( 5) Cincinnati. Foster 2 (34).
Bench (24)

99 ill
97 340
102 397
84 293

133
110
126
93
Randle NY
82 305 95
American League

Ott, Simmons St L
Lemongello and Herrmann W Foster Cln
- Lemongello , 4 12 L-Gossage , Robinson Pit
(1) ,

Carew Min
Bostock Min
Rice

aos

Singleton Bal

Page Oa&lt;

324
.324
.317
317

.311

G AB H- Pel.
102 398 152 .382
101 397 136 .343
101 411 131 319
95 331 104 314

$15.8 million
awarded to

NFL playerS

MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)
Ballor Tor
9(1362 113 312 U.S. District Judge Earl
Capra, Collins {3), Leon (5) lind
Hargrove Tex
93 321 100 .312
Correll W- Underwood, 6-6 L
Cowens KC
100 392 122 .311 Larson, who kicked out the
- Leon, 4 4 HRs-St LOUIS ,
Rivers NY
90 362 112 309 controversial Rozelle Rule of
Templeton (5) Atlanta , Bur
Fisk
Bos
97 340 IQS .309
the National Football
roughs (261 , Gaston (3 ).
Home Runs
American League
National League: Foster, Cin League, finalized a $15.8
(12 Innings)
MiJW
000 200 ODO- 2 7 0 34 ; Schmidt, Phil 28 ; Luzinski,
Los Angeles
Tronto
000 003 OOK- 3 51 Ph!l 26 , Burrouohs. Atl 26 , million setUement Monday
102 OJO 000 010- 7 12 I
Sorensen and Haney , c:;lancy Gar \fey, LA 25
that will give more than 2,000
~ New York
and Ashby W- Ciancy, 1 1. LAmerlcar, League: RIce, Bos football players anywhere
tot 103 ooo 011- e ,. 1 Sorenson , 2-5 HR- Fairly (U) 27, Scott , Bos 25; Nettles, NY
Sutton, Rautzhan (6). Hough
24, Hisle, Mtnn 23 , Bonds, Cal from $160 to more than
(7), Garman (10) and Oates, Texas
110 01"' 022- 11 14 1 and Zisk, Chi 21
$10,000.
000 003 0216 92
· Zachry , Siebert (7), Lockwood Chicgo
Runs Batted In
"It's a gr~t day," said Ed
Perry, Brtles (6). Devine (7)
(7} and Stearns. W-Lock.wood ,
National League: Foster, Cm
2 6. L - Garmen, 4 2 HRs- Los and Sundberg, Wood, K1rkwood 102; Cey, . LA 88 ; Garvey, LA Glennon, attorney for the
Angeles , Cey (21) Garvey (25) , {6) and Downing, W- Perry, 10 86; Luzinskl, Ph 11 83 ; Bur
National Football League
Lopes (7) , New York , Hender . 8 . L - Wood, 5·4 HRs- Texas, roughs. All and Bench , em 76.
Sundberg (3); Ch1cago, Soderson {7J
American
League·
Hisle, Players Association. "! hope
holm {15).
Mlnn 87; Zlsk, Chi 74 , Hobson, the matter is setUed once and
c11 Innings)
eos and Thompson, Oet 73,
for all."
Munson, NY 72
S-olen Bases
In a case brough! by John
Nat1on11 League : Taveras , Mackey, Larson awarded the
P1tt
37 ;
Lopes,
LA
35.
Richards, SO 33 ; Morgan, Cin plaintiffs $2.2 millioo and in
By Unlted Press International~
year defensive back Bob Mitch and Cedeno, Hou 32
the Kennit Alexander case, a
American League: Patek, KC
Monday
of Syracuse. rookie defensive
classaction
suit that benefits
33
;
Remy,
Cal
31
;
Page,
Oa~
Football
back Oon Brundri dge-of Seton
Green Bay - 9igned guard Hall , first-year linebacker Jere 25, Bonds, Cal 24 , Le-Flore, Oet some 2,000 players and
.,. Tommy Lyons, who had been Brown of Villanova, first -year 23.
fanner players, he awarded
Pitching
waived by Denver.
Wtde recei\fer Walter Tu~lls of
Most
VIctories
$13,675,000.
., Phlllldelphia - Signed tight Delaware State, rookie guard
National League: R Reuschel,
end BHIY Chambers, a free John Jac~uot of Bowlmg Green,
A 36-day football players'
agent from V 1rOtn1a State
first year tackle Oan Smith of Chi 15-3; carlton. Phil 14 6,
Pittsburgh
Cut .wide WashlngtQn State and rookie Forsch, St L 13-5; Flau, LA 12· strike In July and August,
1974. led to the twn law suits.
. rece!vtr Curtis Lea~. a free place.kieker Jose Martinez of 2, Rhoden, LA 12 7.
American League: Ryan, Cal

90 322 101 .314

Sports transactions

a

agent from Johnson C Smith
Miami Placed defensive
" tackle Rtndy Crowder and
defensive end Don Reese on no
""" recall waivers; released rookie
offensive and defensive tackle
r Jim Stanslk and rookie corner
bac:k Horace Perkins.
'
Atlanta Released rookie
defensive baek Keltll Jenkins,
free agent tight end Michael
Paoh and free agent defensive
back Clifton Sulhvan
St Louis - SJoned veteran
• linebacker Ray White to a
,.,·lea of one--veer contracts ,
slgntd free ag.nt punter Mike

•. Wldm1n of Coloredo, r~eased

rookie defenllve back

Brown

of

Eastern

Doug
Tennessee

State
,
New York Giants - Released
• rookie defensive tackle 8111
Rice of Brigham Young, f1rst -

Metropolitan
University
in
14-10; T .Johnson, Mlnn 12 3;
Mexico City
Denver Released free Goltz. Mlnn 12-6, Tanana, Cal
12-7, · R May and Palmer, Bait
agent tackle AI Oliver.

12-9

Basltetblll

Detroit -

Britt.
a
Michigan.

Foster oontmued on the
track Mond ay mght by
dr1vmg m four runs w1th ~wo
homers Monday mght in the
Reds' 7-e victory over the
Chicago c"ubs.
" Last year I got to thmkin g
too much about wmnmg the

triple crown and that loused
me up ," sa1d Foster when
asked about his fine sea son.
" So th1s year , I'm j us t
swmgmg the hat and letting
them fall where they may ."
Foster, who had homered
m Iris two previous at bats,

Fairly joins 200 homer club

Pet . GB '
577
574
1!2
sse 2

60 44

Bantmre
GB Boston
New Yor k
Oetro 1t
1
M ilw
2
4lf2 Cle\fel nd
12 lf~ Toront o

59 43 578
59 45 567
57 48 543
48 55 466
AA. 58 431 16
West
W. L Pet . GB
Los Ang
66 39 624?
C1n~1
52 51 505 lJ
Houston
49 57 462 17 1/~
San Fran
48 58 453 18'' '
San D1eg0
45 62 421 22
Atlanta
37 66 .359 28
Monday's Results
San Franc 1sco 9, Montreal 2
Sf LOUIS 6 , Atlanta 5
New Yor ke , Los Ang 7, 12 mns
Hous 4, Pi ttsbgh 3, 11 inns
Cincmnat t 7. Ch tcago 6
Today•s Probable P ttctlers
(All Times EDT)
San F ranc1 sco ( Kr'lepper 4 4 )
at Montreal ( Rogers 11 9}. 7 35

There's gold in Ohio
By Alouzo M. Ellis
Ohio Department of Natural Resources
COLUMBUS - The Spanish tlestroyed a civilization for 11
... Custer started a war with the Sioux because the Black Hills
of the Dakotas were full of it --- and men left their businesses
and families for it with hopes of returnin~ rich. Few of them
did
Gold!! !
.
It is caned the root of all evil, the source of all pleasure .
Entire towns rose out of the dll't during the gold rush of 1849,
only to return to dust when the gold ran out.
The lure of gold seems to be as pass10nate an emotion as
love or hate.
Although the miners "49ers" are gone along with Custer's
seventh cavalry and galleons loaded with treasure for Spam,
the gold is still here. As the old 49ers used to say, "gold is
where you find it," and gold can he !ound m Oh1o.
There may not be wild Indwns and there ISn 'I enough gold to
make claim jumping profitable, but you can enjoy a day in
Ohio's beautiful country and still bring back enough gold
flakes to inspire skeptical friends.
Gold is not native 1o Ohio. "It was deposited by glac1ers
which moved across the northern United States from Canada,"
said Horace Collins, Chief of the Ohio Department or Natural
Resources' Division of Geological Survey.
Two million years ago a great sheet of ice began loflning
in northern Canada. This sheet, abuut a mile thick, began
moving outward under its own weight and covered much of
what is now the northern United States.
Durmg what is commonly referred to as the "Ice Age,"
several glaciers covered major portions of Ohio. The last of the
ice disappeared abuut 14,000 years ago. The ice left behind
rounded granite boulders, diamonds, silver, copper ore and
small quanlittes of gold.
Although geologists said Ohio's terrain could never
support a gold mine, that didn't stop some from trying. About
130 years ago a gold mine was started a mile north of Bellville
m Richland County.
,,
Some gold was taken out of the Bellville mine, but
according to old newspaper accoWJts, the only man to make a
profit from the mine was a swindler who salted it with gold
dust, sold stock and skipped town.
Old timers who lived in the village of Bellville during the
1940s still believed there was a vein of gold somewhere in the
hills around the town.
Experts, however, don't think so. "There are two types of
gold deposits," Collins said, "prunary (lode) deposits and
serondary (placer) depos1ts. Lode deposits a•e the veins of
gold found where gold was mineralized with the rock of the

W L

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Let's take a moment for a
look at the all-around season
being enjoyed by George
Foster of the Cincinnall Reds.
Foster, 28, is the most
productive hitter in baseball
thiS season with a .317battmg

A-mencan League

Major League Standings
By Un1ted Press tnterna11onal
National League

SAYRE COMMISSIONED- Ensign Roger Brooks Sayre, right, is pictured receiving

Jobless decrease in Ohio
COLUMBUS - A total of
14,924 newly unemployed
persons ftled initial claims
for belieflts under the Ohio
Unemployment
Compensation Law during the
week ending July 1il• a 2.1
percent decrease from the
previous week's total ol
15,240, Albert G. Giles, Administrator of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services announced todaYGiles said that initial
cla lms under all other
programs last week numbered 2,339 for an overall
initial claims total of 17,263, a
4.0 percent drop from the

.

~

"Placer deposits have been carried away from the primary
CNB
002 020- 5 5 5 lnde through water or glacial erosion. These deposits are found
LaRoy's
500 023-10 9 2 in Ohio."
Geologists agree that the gold found in Ohio, Indiana and
Hesson and K. Henery;
lllinois
came from a source in Canada.
Chapman, Verbage (5) and
"Gold could still be present in large amounts or it could
Goheen. W - Verbage. L have all been eroded away by the glaciers. Much of Canada is
Hesson .

.

CINCINNATI ( UP!) - Sparky Anderson's ears are
pr,~bably still-burning today, but he couldn't care less .
. Sure the fans booed, but they don't know what's
8?lng oo ,'_' said the Reds manager Monday night after
Cincmnati beat the Chicago Cubs 7-e.
The boos came in the top of the seventh inning when
Anderson replaced Tom Seaver W11h Joe Hoener after
the three-time Cy Young award winner had struck out
lva_n DeJesus following leadoff singles by Steve
Swisher and pinch hitter Jose Cardenal.
Be!ore Pedro Borboo, 6-4, replaced the ID-year..,ld
Hoerner, Larry BUttner singled in Swisher and Bill
Buckner sent home Canlenal in with a sacrifice fly to
tie the score at 5-6.
"The fans didn't know that Seaver had already
thrown 120 pitches... that he still hasn 't regained all his
strength after being out I 0 days with the flu," said
Anderson.
"I'm dead out of gas. I kicked It all out o! me striking
out that right-hander," Seaver had told Anderson,
referring to DeJesus.
"Those fans who booed me paid to go to the game,
but they don't know anything about baseball. If they
did, 1t'd he bad .
"Me and Tom," added the Cincinnati manager,
"knew exactly what was going on."
"I was dead when Sparky came out there," admitted
Seaver. "! told him I was 'done. I've go\ to be honest
with the manager. I always have. If you aren't, you
just hurt yourself and the team."
The question of when he first began to feel tired drew
a chuckle from Seaver.
"Right after (Bobby Murcer) hit that homer," was
the 32-year..,ld right-hander's smiling answer.
.
Murcer's homer, his 16th of the season, cl.imaxed a
three-run Cub first inning and followed a Buttner
single and Buckner double.
While blanking the Cubs through the next five
innings, Seaver yielded only two hits.
But he satd he still made "a lot of silly pitches" after
he was ahead of the batter. It was these same pitches
which helped drain hiS energy.
"Because of them," Seaver said blunUy, "I didn't
deserve to wm."

reduced
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Foote Mineral Company from
its Exton, Pa. offices has
reported net earnings of
$643,000, equal to 6 cents per
share, for the second quarter
of 1977 compared with
$1,489,000, or 17 cents per
share for the same period of
1976. Sales were $33.~75,000
compared with $30,028,000 in
the 1976 quarter.
Six months net earnings in
1977 were $2,068,000 or 22
cents per common sha"'
after payment of the
pre!erred dividend, compared w1th $3,603,000, or 43
cents per common share in
the same period of 1976. Sales
were $4l6,fi92,000 compared to
$60,213,000 for the same
period of 1976.
W. T. Barrett, President
and Chief Executive Officer,
said lower earnings were
principally a result of continu~ increased operating
costs without equivalent
pr1ce
increases
for
ferroalloys . Furnace
operating problems at the
Graham plant near here and
a furnace transformer failure
to the Keokuk, Iowa plant
during the second quarter
also contributed to lower
earnings.
Foote's share of the losses
of Silicon Smelters (Pty.)
Limited, a one-third owned
SLlicon metal plant in South
Africa, amounted to $380,000
in the second quarter and
$680,000 for the six months.
Production rates in the
second quarter exceeded
des1gn
capacity
but
depressed world prices
continue to adversely affect
Silicon Smelters '
prol!tability.

Hack Wilson's NL records
could fall to George Foster

Boos for Sparky were by
•
Jgnoramuses in baseball

Signed Wayman
tree agent from

lneball

California _ Recalled left·
handed reliever Ffed Kuhaulua
from
Salt Lake City and
opfloned right . hander Tom
Wallter to Salt Lake City.
Tu:as Placed outfielder
Juan BeniQUIZ on the 1S·day
diHbled list and called ·up
keith Smith from Tucson
Cleveland relief
pitch,r Tom Busk•y to Toledo
and ~elled up reliever Larry
Anderson from the lnternatlon·
al League club.

s.nt

.

'

' Earned Run Av~rage

(based on H Innings pltettedl
National Lea.ue: R R:eusc;hel,
Chi 2.28; Hooton, LA 2 S..;
Rogers. Mtt 2.72; Candelaria,
Pitt 2.19, Richard, Hou' 2 97.
American L111111: . Tanana,
Cal 2.11. Blylevtn, Te)( 2 31;
T Johnson, Minn 2.62 , Ryan,
Cal 2.65 ; Rozema, Oet 2.84
Strlkoouto
National LHtU.: Nlekro, Atl
US; l(oosmen, NY 137, Rogers,
Mtl 132 ; Richard, Hou 131.
Seaver, Cin 124
. American LfiiUI:
25&amp;.· Tanana, Cal
. I
KC US; Blyleven,
Palmer. Bait 132 ·

'{iiOnolrii:

c

Rangers tied a maJor league in four runs as the TwlllS
recurd with e1ght sacrifiCes moved to'within 4'k games of
and the game, three hours the 1st-place White Sox m the
and 56 mmutes long, was the AL Wesi. Glenn Adams also
longest ever for a rune-inning drove m a pall' of runs for
AL mght contest.
Mmnesota Wlth a double and
a sacrif1ce fly. Geoff Zahn
Twins 9, Ruyais 5:
Lyman Bostock homered , went 5 1-3 mnmgs for hiS lOth
doubled and Singled to drwe wm

Syracuse firemen will

wa lked with one out in the
seventh inning and scored the
lie-breaking run on a triple by
Dan Driessen, who scored the
, second run of the mmng on '
Johnny Bench's smgle.
The rally enabled Pedro
Bor bon to win his s1xth game
of the season and tagged Paul
Reuschel w1th h1s fourth loss.
Bench also homered for the
Reds while Bobby Murcer
and Bill Buckner coonected
for th e Cubs.
In other NL games, New
York downed Los Angeles, 87, in 12 mnmgs, St . Louis
defeated Atlanta, 6-S, San
Franc1sco drubbed Montreal,
9-2 , and Housto n beat
Pittsburgh, 4-3.
Mcts 8, Dodgers 7:
Pmch
hitter
Joel
Youngblood singled in Lenny
Randle with one out in the
12th innmg g!Vmg the Mets'

Sk1p lockwood, who pitched 5
~3 lllllings of ooe-run relief,
his second victory of the
season. Ron Cey, Steve
Garvey a nd Dave Lopes
homered lor the Dodgers
while Steve Henderson
con nected lor New Y..-k .
Cards 6, Braves 5:
Jerry Mumphrey doubled
mlhe tie-breakmg run in the
si xth tnnin g -as Tom
Underwood won his stxth
game and AUanta's Max
Leon suffered his !ourth loss
Garry Templeton homered
for St. LouiS and Jeff Buurroughs h1t No 26 and Cito
Gaston No. 3 for the
Braves.
"
Giants 9, Expos %:
Withe McCovey belted a
grand-slam home run-and· a
solo homer to lead the Gtants'
11-hit
atta ck.
J ohn
Monte!usco allowed 10 hits
but struck out 10 in ra1sing his
reco rd to 4-9 . Way ne
Tw1tche ll fell to ~7
Astrus 4, Pirates 3:
Jose Cruz led ofl the bottom
ol the lith lllllmg wtth a
homer to wm 1t for Houston .
Mark Lemongello went the
diStance for the Astros,
despite allowing 14 hits, and
raJSed h1s record his 4-12.
RJCh Gossage took the loss.

hold slo-pitch tourney
SYRACUSE - A double elinlination slo-pitch softball
tournament will be held
August 12-13·14 at the
Municipal Park ball field
here w1th the Volunteer Fire
Dept. the sponsor.
Jackets will be awarded to
members of the first place
team and runner-up team will
receive shirts. There will be,
team trophies for the top two
teams and individual trophies
for the player hitting the most
home runs and judged most
"valuable player."
Entry fee is $50, plus two
Dudley balls, for sanctioned
teams and $60, plus two
Dudley balls, for nonsactioned teams. Teams can
ST. CHARLES, Mo. (UP!)
- Linebacker Ray White
Monday Signed a sevies of
one-year contracts w1th the
St Loms Cardinals and
reported to training camp.
White, who played out his
option with the team last
year, failed to show up when
the football camp opened for
.veterans July 23 because he
SOld he was Wlhappy with the
Cardinals' contract offer.
The Cardinals also s1gned
free agent punter Mike
Wedman of the Umversity of
Colorado
and
waived
de!ensive back Doug Brown,
a rookie free agent !rom
Eastern Tennessee State.

be entered by calling Clyde
Triplett at614-99~125, Ralph
Lavender at 992-5888 or
Jinuny Joe Hemsley at 9923068. August 7 is deadline for
entermg .

GREEN BAY, W1s (UP!)
- The Green Bay Packers
said Monday guard-center
Bob Hyland was placed on
waivers at his own request
and reserve quarterback Don
M1lan
announced
h1s
retlrement.
The Packers earlier
Monday had announced the
signing of Tom Lyons who
started for Denver the last s1x
seasons. Lyons, 29, stgned. as
a free agent after being
placed on waivers three
weeks ago.

An Automobile Policy
Comprehenl§ive Coverage
At Reasonable Rates
Our· policies don't leave a
thing to cha nee ... you can
lean bock and enjoy auto
ownership without a
worry in the world!

International League

Umted Press International

Pawtucket
Tidewater

W L Pel. GB

60

A4 .577
55 48 .534

4 1 /~

Syracuse

55 51 519 6

Charleston

54 51 .514

Richmond
Rochester
Columbus
Toledo

50
50
48
47

52
54
59
60

.490
.481
.448
.439

61!~

9
10
1311&gt;
14'12

Monday's Results
Columbus 4, Tidewater 3

Toledo 6, Rochester 9

Syra&lt;r:use 5, Richmond 2
Pawtucket 1, Charleston 0

DOWNING CHILDS INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

Mic!dle'j1ort, o.

992-2342

TWIN RIVERS, N.J. (UPI)
- The financially troubled
Atlantic City Racing AsSOciatiOn was told Monday to
relinquish 1ts 31 remaining
racmg dates to the state's
Sports Authority.
The
State
Racing
CQmmission satd the state
agency can operate the meet
at a profit because of a tax
break.
In a prelude to a possible
state takeover of the Atlantic
City runrungs, the Racing
Commission also sa1d the
track's Thoroughbred permit
for next year will not be
renewed unless a firm
financial
ptcture
is
presented.
rH1~

WEEK'S SPECIAL
VALUE
RATED

USED CARS

70 OLDS
CUTlASS S. CPE.
'
V 8, automat1c,
power
steering, bucket seats,
v1nyl roof.

'595.00
Karr &amp;VanZandt
You'll Like 0U1' Quality
Way of Do1ng lluslness
GMAC FINANCING
992-5341
Pomeroy
Open Evenings '1116 :00
T•l s p.m. Sat.

Loan.
When you need money for home improvements, or any good
reason, talk to us. We handle HomeOwner Loans quickly, easily
and with consideration. Amounts up to $15,000 available.
We find ways to help.

CITY LOAN

COMPANY

125 E. Mam Street 992-2171

~

�-

'* D

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesda)•, Aug. 2. t9n

Miss Norma Patterson rc;;:;~R;~-,~ ~
honored at bridaf shower t
By Helen and Sue Bouel
~~ ~
::::
Miss

Nonna

Pattersun.

bride-elect of Danny Roush

was honored re&lt;..-entiv with ~

bridal shower at the Hartford
Commumty Center.
The color schen,1e or blue
and yellow was carr1ed out in
the decorations. Games were
, played with pnzes gomg to
Mrs. Mildred Gibbs and Mrs.
Go)dia Reitmire . The door
prize was won by Mrs .
Margie Grinstead. Cake,
punch, JlUls, m4n~s a,nd
pretzels were served.
Attending were 'Sharon Edwards, Connie Gibbs, Mildred
Gibbs, Frances Stewart,
Maxine Ani&gt;ld, Virginia Pat·
terson,, . Marty and Gale,
Ginger Sarver, Wanda Pal·
terson and Angie, Robin
Wagner, Brenda Warth ,
Vickie Roush, Dorothy Gibbs
and Wanda, Juanita Hoschar,
Lynn Hawk and J . W., Cathy
Gibbs, Renita Roush, Nida
Kearns, Margie Grinstead,
Kathlee n Roush , . Kathy
Rickard and Kent and
Rodney, Linda F ields.
·
Ella Roush, Freda Turley,
Kim Gibbs, Beverly Lyons,
Mrs. Thomas Grinstead,

BRIAN FRIEND

turns two
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Friend
entertained Friday night with
a party honoring their son,
Brian Keith, on his second
birthday. The party was held
at the home· of Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Friend in Middleport.
Gifts were presented to the
honored goes! from Betty
Gearheart, Arnold Johnson
Mabel Johnson, Marjori~
Ball, Emma Moodispaugh ,
Connie 1 Joleen Shannon and
Joey Moodispaugh, Patty
Johnson and Gene, Narsa
Moodispaugh, Penny Stewart
and, Darrell, Susie Johnson,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Friend
and Mark, Edna Fulk, Brian
Keith's parents, and Mr. and
Mrs . Rick Friehd Eddie and
Michelle.
·
Sending gifts were Patsy
Oiler and Lisa, Pat Johnson,
Belinda Friend, and Tom
Snulsby. Ice cream, cake and
koolaid were served.

Mr. and Mrs. Hank spent
weekend at Kmgs Island
and on Sunday attended a
Cilltlnnall Red ballgame.
Mr. and Mrs . William King
were m Athens Saturday
nrght for a rewlion uf
" Howard 's SU.rs", an Order
of the Eastern Star orgamUIlion.
Denise Bye rs of Culwnbus
IS here v1s1ting her grand·
mother, Mrs. Grace Glaze.
Demse, 14 years old, is
awaiting further · heart ·
/ .
DearS.:
,. s urgery al Children 's
Your girlfriend may have made ihe decision but you Hospital, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Brown
helped create the problem. Right or wrong, you need a good
and
. children, Chris and
lawyer ! l Who just may win a landmark case.)- HELEN AND
Slllcey, Columbus, spent the
SUE
.
week.end visi ting her parents,
P.S.: And then there's the other side. Read on:
Mr . and Mrs . Everett
+++
Rap:
Bachner . They came
I got pregnant. My boyfriend said he'd leave me unless 1 especially to see the infant
got an abortion . Mom wanted me to bave the baby, but Dad dsughter of Mr. and Mrs .
was very much against it.
Ronald Thompaon.
I held off, butfinally Dad and my b.f. wore me down.
Now I don 't bave a baby - or a boyfriend. He left me
anyw~y.! I'll regret the abortion as long as !live : 1 can't forget
the nusery I went through. Two years later I cry every time 1 .
~ee a couple with a new baby. Help ! - STILL IN MOURNING
NEW HAVEN _ M , d
AGE 17
'
r. an
M_rs. Ro~ald Thompson, New Sim :
Haven, are announcmg the
.
Professional counseling, we think, can show you one loss birth of a daughter, Ehzabeth
doesr 't ruin a life.
Dawn , born Wednesday, Jul y
You need to sort out your emotions. - to understand. that '%/, at the Holzer Medtcal
regret over the abortion is all tied up· with rejection by your Center. The mlant weighed
boyfriend, resentn.ent of your father, and a general feeling seven pounds , four ounces.
that you're unloved and unwanted. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Thompson h~ve
Ask your mother to make an appointment _ today ! _
a son , Samuel Robert, age
four.
G d
·
HELE N AND SUE
+++
ran parents are Mr., and
NOTE FROM' SUE : Meanwhile, get interested in people Mrs. Everett .Bachner, Midaround you . Look for new friends, new projects ahd . dleport, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
1pvolvements. ·Above aU, gel off the "poor tittle me " Thompson, Mason , W. Va .
S)ndrome and try to understand that your father _ perhaps Mrs. Ida Bachner • Middleport , Mrs . Genevieve
even your ex - have their troubles and regrets too.
Lewis, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Try forgiveness : it's great therapy.
Thompson, all . of Mason
+++
Co un ty
are
great·
Rap :
grandparents,' and Mrs. Ann
When you break up with a girlfriend, do you have to Hoffman, also of Mason
" di~or~e" her parents too? They're super, and I'd like to keep
County, is a great-greaton VISiting them, but my ex resents this. -TOM
grandmother.
Is It Papa Wbo Always Pays?
Dear He len and Sue:
My girlfriend (now ex) said she -had nothing against
abortion if the fetus had just barely started. But she wouldn't
ta~e the rabbit test (she said) heca.use she couldh 't bear to
thmk of the rabbit dying . Later on she wouldn't go to a doctor
because she '' hates examinations/'
Whe~ she finally decided she was pregnant, it was too late
for abor!ton , so now she's stuck mewithchildsupport.
Since I was willing Ill lay out $500 so she wouldn 't have the
,baby, why can't I just hand her the money now, and that should
be the end of it? She made the decision to become a mother so
she should have all the responsibility, including financiaL
R1ght? - SHAFl'ED
.
.
·.

u.,

Dau!{hter born

Tom :
. Your ex can't rule your life . If her parents want to stay
fnends, so be 1!. (But don't think this continued visiting will
win your g .f. back. j - HELEN AND SUE
·

APPOINTED AIDE
KANSAS
CITY ,
Mo .
(Special ) Richard C.
Ohlinger, or Mason, W. Va.
has been appointed by V.F .W.
National Commander-in ·

Chief R. D. (Bulldog) Smith,
of Atlanta, Ga., as a National
Aide-de-Camp,
Recruiting
Class for 1977. Ohlinger is a
member or V.F.W. Post 9926.

b

5- The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-P001eroy, 0 .,1\!e.day, Aug. 2, 1977

I M.:.~~~"' ~~M~ ~:~~r•~~~:S~~~EHi;=~~~U:

:·:·

!leba 1.&gt;1bbs and Kathy, Max·
me Fields, Helen Knapp,
Thelma Roush, F lorence
Warth, Mary, Tammy and
Dee Dee, Gold1a Reitrnire
and Wendy, Macy Carter and
Slllcy, Esther Goble.
Sending gifts were Alice
Miller, Belva Frye, Tinuny
and Tanya Gibbs, Anria
McFarland, Winifred Clark,
Jennie Stone,
Dorothy
James, Freda Warth, Donna
Neece,
Deloris Gib bs,
Geraldine Roush and Becky
Becky, Charlotte Kimes, Liz
Grinstead, Gloria Roush ,
Susie
Crump,
Lesa
Carpenlet , Bonnie Freeman,
Mary Roush, Geneva Gibbs,
Mary Kelly, Betty Kelly,
Sara Gibbs, Lois Ann Gibbs,
Viola Stewart, Lois Ann Reit·
rnire, Deloris Stewart, Naonli
Bwngarner, Marilyn Gibbs,
Carolyn Brewer , Jason
Roush, Doris Yonker, Shelby
Duncan, Ralph Ohlinger, Mr.
and Mrs. George Circle and
Cheryl, Esther MacKnight,
Edna Whalen, Opal Hughes,
and Betty Goodnite.

Brian Friend
REUNION PLANNED
The annual reunion of the
Martin and Emma Sayre
family will be held Sunday
Aug. 7, at the Shriners Park
In I;Ulcine.
·
·

Midd!epat
Personal Notes

'

DINNER SLATED
-MASON - The Mason
Volunteer Fire Department
will hold a public chicken
barbecue Saturday beginning
at II a .m . The menu wiJ
include a half chicken, baked
beans, cole slaw and hot rolls .
The number lor delivery is

TIT

Band to seek funds

Gher·yll.&lt;hew were preseuted Meinhart, card and nower
50 huur p1ns fur field scrvic-. chairman reported that
at the rcc.·ent 111 ""tln~ "f the thr~e con~alescenl and two
American l.&lt;~lon Auxiliary sympathy cards had been
of Drew Webster Post 39, sent during the past month.
Pomeroy .
It was noted that Mrs.
A report on the birthday Genevieve Wells is a pallent
party held at the Chillicothe at Christ Hospillll in Colum·
Veterans HospiU.l was given bus that Carrie Neutzling is a
by Mrs. Davis who noted that patient at Holzer HospiUJI,
the Junior members or the and Nancy Walker a resident
unit made 100 tray favors . At· now of the Arcoala Nursing
tending the . rty were Mrs. Home. A thank you note was
· yis, Mrs. arjvrie Goett, read from Mrs. Dollie Hayes,
ee Richards . and and the bulletin from Mrs.
M ·
Mrs:· Lula Han\ pton. Mrs. Richards, retiring Eighth
Dav1s also reported that as a District president , was read .
f1eldsennceprojectfrui\had
Mrs.Pear! KnappandMrs.
been taken to the Young's Hackett
were named
Home.
hostesses for August.
Mrs. Grace Pratt, presiHomemade ice cream and
de~t, displayed the .cer· cake were served by Mrs.
Uf1cates won by the umt at Faye Wilderm uth and Mrs.
the Department convention Gladys Cummings following
held m July. Others reportmg the meeting.
on the convention were Miss
Erma Smith, Mrs. Goett,
Mrs. Catherine Welsh . Mrs.
Marjo_rie Reuter look firs t
place in the district on com·
rnunity service, with MI'S.
Rhoda Hackett taking first
LAFF- A- DAY
place in department on civil
defense, Miss Smith taking
third in department on the
history which s he compiled
and presented at the meeting
to Mrs. Pratt. II was also
noted that Mrs . Mary Martin
had received an award for
her legislative report
A school of instruciion was
announced for Sept. 2!i, and a
Iea dersh.1p t ra1mng
· · course for
Oct. 22 at Chillicothe. Mrs.
Reuter gave a membership ,,
. ·'-·. -·
report during the m eeting . What wme goes well with
and the first reading of th~ leftovers'"
budget was given by Miss
·
~------~.........._. ...,........,....:..:

MASON FURNITURE

STORE HOURS
Mon. , Tues., Wed.&amp; Sat.-8:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Herman Grate

the
street.a beg
noc mg on
doors Saturday, Aug. 6• and
Saturday, Aug. 13 tn a con·
centrated effort to raise
$2,000 necessary for t_he
purchase of new percliS!Ion
equipment.
·
Wtthout the new equipment
the band wo_uld be unable to
per:form dunng the upcoming
school year. PJ~ase lend yo_u r
sull!&gt;"rt to this worthwhile
project.

Mason, W. Va.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6TH

NO DEALERS PLEASE I .
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A .M. TO 6 P.M.

...

QUANTITY. RIGHTS RESERVED'

The lirst three Purple
Hearts awarded by George
Washington for . service
during
the
American,
Revolution were presented to'
Connecticut men.

LErS TALK

ABOUT

USDA

H[AR'~G

CHOICE

AiDS AND
THEIR COS"
For 28 years I have fitted

hearing aids always
combining quality product
and professional Hrvice
with reasonable cost. While
we will continue to serve
those who cannot come to
our office we will now
reward those who can by
fi•i111J the price at 5275.00
for the best known cu5tom
-made and individual fit1ed
hearing
aids .
Prior
medical arid audiological
ekaminati~n enco.uraged.
If you have a question Dr
Wish an appointment call
me at 592-6238.

'300.00
less '25.00
Cash Discount

Diles Hearing
f
Aid Center

MASON FURNITURE

.
' 'H

~··

c

CENTER CUT

1%
$ 19 CHUCK
MILK. :. . _: ... !.~~....... _
ROAST
........
.
G'A TEWAY
LOAVES.

·~

. • ·H

BREAD ................
'

'

CHUCK
STEAK..........

'

BUCKET
STEAKS
LB.

••

• :

10 PAK

' 99~

lOlfz OZ.

I

I
I
I
I
:

STACK
·PAK
1

io~L

49~

•.•••.••
CAN

'59~

1

II
I

1-LB.

VAC PACK

DOG
FOOD

All FlAVORS

25 LB. BAG

: 6

CANS

$1

I

$]39

OPEN DAIL

9 TO 10

SUNDAY

10 TO 10
..

BROUGHTON'S

HOMO MILK ...................... ~..~~~~-~...79~

PEPSI
COLA

i·

CHEPS DEUGHT ·

$ 49

2LB.

CHEESE .......-............................

oz.
aomEs
99~

09:
THURS. ONLY

DIET RITE COLA

QUARTS

.. ,

Coupon Expires Aug . 6, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

'1

' '

59~

NO. 305

KING SIZE
84 OZ.

W/C

BOX
COUPON
-

..

RAIN BARREL

40 OL BOX

'

79~ ,

cOupon Expires Aug. 6, 1977
.TWIN CITY GATEWAY ·

NO. 105
1fOZ. BOX

FROSTING MIX

. 69~

NO. 105

I •

W/C

Coupon Expires Aug . 6, 1977
. TWIN CITY GATEWAY

8 oz. JAR

55 ~

59~

. W/C

Coupon Expires Aug. 6, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

. ...' . ............•..... ...... . . . . .
'

COUPON

amY CROCKER

HAMBURGER HELPER

SLAW DRESSING

COFFEE
1-lB.CAN

BETTY CROCKER

MARZEnl -

FOLGER'S

$299

L_COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

W/C

Coupon Expires Aug. 6.. 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Aug . 6,. 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coup,on Expires Aug. 6, 1977
· TWINCITYGATEWAY

•

W/C

GAL JUG

W/C

RITZ CRACKERS
W/C

48 OZ. BOTTLE

NO. 305

NO. 255

COUPON

j

NO. 305
W/C

CIDER VINEGAR

Coupon Expires Aug . 6, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

·FABRIC SOFTENER

BISQUICK
NO. 155

--

$}69

100 CT.

Coupon Expires Aug. 6, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

79~
t

.I

59~

'

TEA BAGS

DETERGENT

Coupon Expires Aug. 6, 1977
. , · TWINCITYGATEWAY

oz.
BOmES

to ..imH Q!Jantiti~

NO. 105
LB.

9 OL SIZE

8-16

8 PAK

MARGARINE

HEINZ

rENDER LEAF

BOLD

NO. 205

DR. PEPPER

'119

COUPON

BOWL CLEANER

COCA-COLA

5

CO~PO N

L. COUPON VANISH SOLID AUTO.

. 8-16

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

We Accept Federal Food StampS - We Reservt: tne Ril!lt
)

2% LOW FAT MILK...... ~..~~~~.. ~ 139

16 OZ. BOTS.

MAR

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

8 PAK
ALL WEEK
PRICE

···········-········-·

'BROUGHTON'S

79~

$

BRISKET.....

.

RC
16 oz.
bots.

ROLL

CAKE
MIXES .......... ~.-~~~.~~... ..

1" ·

I

CASH SAVER

CANNED
POP

•

LB.

BATHROOM
4
Tl SSU E... ............................ ~~.~: . .

BErn CROCKER

BUTTERMILK .......... .. ..•.....................•...
'h GALLON 69~

ALL MEAT
; WIENERS
;

S

CORN BEEF

PUFFED WHEAT
OR RICE .. ~ .......:.............~--~~.~~.~: ..

5 LB.

EOON

VALLEY BELL

SUPERIORS

•••••••••

·

99~

LB.

HAM
SALAD LB.89~

59~

BOX

LB.

HOME MADE .

SALTINE
CRACKERS

I SCOTlAD

.

69~

SUNSHINE

OYSTER
STEW

~·------1

1 NEW HI.:HO

$149

HILTON

LINERS

I

5 LBS.
OR MORE LB.

I

I
I HEm ·
I TRASH 'CAN
I

I

GROUND
CHUCK

GROUND
BEEF

GROUND
ROUND

DRESSINGS
2 FOR99~
'

POPEYE CEREAL

BANANAS

KRAFT

5 FLAVORS 8 OZ.

20 OZ. CORN

FRESH
&amp;LEAN

2-LB.

FINE FOR GRILLING

FOR

. . ._
. . . . . . ...99~

COTTAGE '
CHEESE ................~~~~ . .

lLB.

CUT CORN, MIXED VEGETABLES
.
OR PEAS
59~
FRESH
AND LEAN

B:~::.~~

PLASTIC

FRESH LIKE

CHOICE

ROYAL CROWN COLA

BROUGHTON'S

'

77~2.

&amp; LEAN

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

PRICES GOOD THRU

w~ ~k\~0

Wtlliam S. Dilts

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

Ching Bandnd

'

W/C

NO. 255

2BOxEs89~ vue

Coupon Expires Aug. 6,-1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Aug. 6, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
-.-· *'•* •i4i4

Beef Noodle, Lasagna, Hash, Chili Tomato

F

�1- '11le Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeruy. 0 .• Tllesda). Au~ . 2. 1977

.

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Ta-lle
removes doa
hairs
I'
1\

•

Mrs . . Willford ,
named president

d(mt; ·Frances

Roberts ,

chaplain; Mrs. Julia Norris,
secretary; Mrs. Mary Roush,
treasurer and historian.
Opening in ritualistic form
Mrs. Roberts had the prayer
·and officers reports were
given.
It was noted that dues of $4
for seniors and $2 for juriiors
are now payable. A letter was

Mt·s.

and Mrs. Bert Grumn, Mrs.
EHeen Buck. Mrs. Gre~

Simpson, Early Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Chfford Morns, and
Mr.andMrs. Ernest Wmgett.
A socra l hour was enloyed
by the group after which a
short busmess mceung was
held. M~s. Morns, hostess for
the prcnrc, gave devotiOns us.
rng the Psalm of Solomon
~th ..her toprc, ""Garden .or
Life. She compared life wtth
a garden g1vmg s1mrlar1ties
of ~rowth in man and pl~nts
whrch both reqwre cultrvalion and nourislunent. She
said t)lat our lives may be fill·
ed with beauty as a flower

formal · celebration will be
held. Those wishing may send
cards to Mr. and Mrs. Woode
at Route 2, Box 167, Coolville,
Ohio 45723.
·

Bollen

... CK.AY~ 0RAAtet&gt; ... ITIS A
81r UtaHTEr&lt; IN UleleHr '!HAN
OOf&lt; Ml:)f!f;: COSTLY MODeLS...

HOMe•
ltOt..-

n. ~uu.•

Da\ IS

WO;t~

llcJd

ticor~e.

Scndin,.; gilts were Mrs. Sue

St~rnan.
Mrs. Cindy
Seyrnorc. Mrs. Sarah Fowler,
contributing to the cold Mrs. Frances Scarberry, i:ind Mrs. Roxie Oiler, Mrs. Irving
winte'r arid th~ hot swruner.
Mrs.- Nancy Manley.
Karr. Jr., Mrs . DebbieSIIItts,
Mrs. James Diehl was apA pink and blue color Janet Hall, Mrs. Nancy
pointed chairman for pr&lt;&gt;- sehe1ne was. carried out 111 the Manley, Mr. and Mrs .
gram · books with Mrs. decoratwns with sandwiehes, Stanley Bryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Carpenter, Mrs . Grinun, rnints and kuulaid being serv· Albert Bryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Sin\'pson, and Mrs. Mor- ed. Games were played with John T. Bryan, Mr. and Mrs.
ris to work on the conunittee . prizes going to Mrs. Brenda D'•nny Bryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Members will rrreet at I:30 George, Mi ss Arlene Ronald Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
p.rn. Thursday to work on thee Scarberry. Carol Sigman, J...ynn . Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
lloJok.
.
. and Mrs. Kathy Elias. Others Norman Bry&lt;~n, Mr. and Mrs .
The flower shuw . at the attending were Mrs. Lucille John Van Meter, Mr. and
. Mergs County Fa1r w_as King, Barbara King, Erica Mrs. Lawrence Russell, Mr.
discussed and several rn· · Elias. Mrs. Darlene Cunn· and Mrs. JWlior Swartz,
dic~ted that they plan to ex· ingham, Cathy Osborne, Mrs. Robert Russell, Frances
hiblt. For roll call members Avanelle Geo rge, Jason Klein, and Eugene Russell.
named fair exhibits. Mrs.
EsUrer West will host the
.•
····~o!·";!t..~(#: ~
·· ,·
~-..:.:-..
~
n~•• •
September meeting.

mother, Mrs. Don•thy Brycm,

00

.0

1 Social Officers to
~
I Calendar be installed

New officers were elected
at a recent meeting or the
Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club held at
the Royal Oak Recreation
Building.
Elected were Mrs. Virginia
Wyatt,. president; Kermit
Walton, vice president; Arthur Skillller, treasurer; and
Gene a·nd Barbara Howard,

Social helps to
raise truck funds
A total of $315. was cleared

fl'l't·utly at her home by her

fluws fn:un the nm1h and wesl

on th• Saturday rdght i&lt;'e
cream social staged under
sponsorship of the Rock Spr·
ings Better Health Club fur
the benelit of the truck fw1d
of Lhe Pomeroy Emergency
·Squad.
The social was a r..'Orrununi·
ty affair with Mrs. J...ouise
Radford serving as chair·
man. Mrs. Roger Leifheit is
president of Lhe Health Club.
The social was held at the
Rock Springs grange hall.

Personal!
8y combi;in9 \'Out Auto
11nd
Homeowners
lnsur•nc• inlo ONE polky
... You may be •ble to

Save 10% to 251{,
On your yeilrly insurance
prem iums.

We will review your
Insurance program
with you free of
char.ge any day of the

ICED 111:8

CALL OR STOP
AND SEE US

RIB PORK CHOPS .......................

19

CARDINAL

LOIN PORK CHOPS ....................
SPARE RIBS ..................................

IS IMPROVING
Mrs. John Werner
(Alwilda) while she remains
confined to her home in Middleport and receives neither
phone calls nor visitors. is improving. She is currently on
limited activity. Assisting in
her care is Mrs. Earl Werner.

$119

lb.

" The

Pound

SJO~

lb

6VA IHETIE$01NNER BELL

WAFER SLKED MEATS .... 2

DINNER BELL SEMI BONELESS$

S

Insurance

$1"

BULK

PORK SAUSAGE ..........

Phone 992-5130
214 E. Main
Pomeroy

Lb

CUBE STEAK ...............

Lb

$

CE NTER CUT

Equal Time

.

.HAM SLICES .................

Lb

BRAUNSCHWIEGER ...

Lb

,

$1l•

sp•

Lb

$1 09

ECKRICH

1••

Lb.

89

Pound

HALF HAM ..........................

159

$

POAK

Pkg;

ciioi»P"Eo BEEF sTEAKs

Whole

Store"

:l· az

SLICED BOLONA ................... ':~:~

39

69•

for men and women

Home improvement loans
avldlahle through FmHA

ina I
. (fORMERLY BIG JIM'S)

. STORE HOURS

LIBBVS

MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 11 AM ro ·&amp; PM

'FR

WE588N

Hl!lNZ

KOSHER DILLS. '3~~·
MONARCH

•

8"9c SLAW DRESSING ..... 'j:: 59'
. ,.
49 ELBOW MACARONI '~~: 39'
PRINCE

-

20 ~· 0Z .

MUSTARD ......... J ..

·. · ,

.

.

MAXWELL HIJUIE

INEGAR

s.11'

BAMA

,

''

.GRAPE JELLY OR JAM .........................
PAEAM

1- Lb.

INSTANT CREAM .......:...... ....................

Can

PILLSBURY

CAKE MIX

Umit one wittl coup on and

510.00 purch8se e.:dudtng
beer, wine

~11d

cigarettes.

1

2 · lb
J ..

~EESE ,
DOI..~R

PI~ER ,

CAN'T n&lt;ROW
A CURVE···

16·oz.$11' ·

'Tl)Wo,WANCII., N.Y.

TRY OUR f-RESH

PEACH SUNDAES

AND SHAKES

~
.

.

'

'

.·

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

.'
Jumbo
MAROI GAAS

140·ct .
Pku.

LIQUID

.ALMD

MOZZARELLA ................................... :.....

8 -oz.
Pkg.

KRAFT NATURAL

8 -oz.

SNOW CROP

SAUSAGE , CHEESE Ofl PEPPERONI

·-

4

c

limit two wilh _coupon.

DRAllE

·

.

FROZEN 100()$
9

PEAS OR CORN ............. '~;;·

.

32-oz.
!lottie

59'

GREEN GIANT .

,,~f

,,

....

CE

2

_

.

16·oJ .

·stc·\

BOWL CLEANER .........................!• . ,

.

991
•TUB TILE CLEANER ...................,.;
'59(
POWDERED C.LEANER ...........~ •.
LVSOL ~AS IN

.

l'f' SOL

·

I

•

'

.18• 01

16

01:

FRESH-0-MATIC ........ ,........... :~~f•
COAST BATH SOAP ............. •••

6,. ·

EDO(i '

69(

.

;

.

l · Ct

BATH TISSUE ...... ,..................

4 -ct.
Pkg .

39'

10·oz.

·

Pkg

BOAOENS

•

28·01 . $

_

INSTANT POTATOES ............................ Pkg
FRANCQ AMERIC~N

129

14V.·ot.49'

,

II:H . . 99;
.

SPAGHETTI .....................................;........ Coo

HUNTS

.

276~-:z:

Umit one with coupon.
THANK YOU

•

APPLE PIE FILLIN_G..............

_20 .01
Con

49(

COUNTRY COUSINS COOKSHOP

LISTER MINT

69':

99C
$1 09

1 -lb.

Ctn.

IZ·ct.

1
89«

COTTAGE CHEESE ......... ,..... ,.................'g;:·

69'

'

•

.

4

YOGURT ........................................... ....

IC.E CREAM OA

8 ·01 .

c....

ICE MILK BARS ...................................... Pkg

1

$

.

9

c

U.S. NO. 1 OHIO GROWN

POTATOES
20 LIJ.

BAG

··149

RED RADISHES-....... ,.... 2 Pkg.
YEU.OW ONIONS ..........3 lbs.

2'

7'

GOLDEN RIPE .

BANANAS
l9~LB.

Washington State Red or Golden Delicious

HEAlTH ' BEAUTY A/f)$
(
89
CREST TOOTHPASTE ......... ~~~·.
REGULAR or MINT

•

12·01

LAWRYS MIX

_

$1"

12-oz.
Cans

49( .:
29(
TACO SEASONING ............................... .'~~;·
~~WRVS
49C
TACO SHELLS ..........................................

CONTADINA

Please, no specials during this three day SOlie, if you
.want specials, order~nslde "without" and fix'em your
way at our compl•te sandwich bar. No . coupons
..
.
necessary. ·

FIS.HER

MIXED IIUTS '~;;•

All FLAVORS

JENOS PIZZA ...... :................... .'~;;~ 9

TOMATO PASTE .. ,................................. Coo

TRIPL£ TREAT...... ~ ....... -.... 55 each or 4 for '2.00
REGUlAR FRENCH FRIES ...•. .2(1 each C1 4 for 754

Hlilo·s ..· ....... ,Ball..,.. 65'

9c MARl ARliE

AGED SWISS ............................................ Pkg . •

IIAPKIIIS

4

698 W. MAIN ST.

TROPICANA ORANGE
32·o• •.
OR GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .: ...... so•"•
KRAFT

DOUBLE BURGERS........... 45 each or 4 for $UO
DOUBLE CHEE_SEBURGERS 50' each or 4.for '1.80 . •

·89( ~
SUNSHINE

MAZOLA. CORN OIL

Roll

Lvsot

.JIM AL.L.IGE!t ,
I~ SNU6 ~YIN CT.,

"

·~

J.,

16 .oz

/

IV{AR DI GRAS

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3rd
THRU
FRIDAY, AUGUST 5TH

~

49'
:~~z. . ·

()A/fir VAlUE$.

We are celebrating
our 1st Anniversary
in the Big Bend area
and for 3 bilf days
we want you to join
us and save.

7?HN)&lt;" 71:&gt;

•z

79'
2 89«
STEWED TOMATOES ...................... c;., .

Thank You ·
Big Bend Area

Tlo&lt;E MI ~~~O~·

89'

TOMATOES .................. :.............. ....... 2 '~;:

Every Time

i'

limit one with COL~pon .

CAMP BELLS

Classic. Elegant. So flattering on the
wrist that Bulova created it in
duplicate. For him and for her. Equal
all ways except in size. With glowing
goldtone case, jet black dial and
strap, a solo diamond to mark 12
o'cloc~ . ·And 'a dependable. ·
precision jeweled movement, Share
a beautiful ti me together. Each, just $39.95

JEWELRY STORE

UOWCCAM

.

$1 J9

"

GOESSLER'S

I~

D . l !.oz.
Bottle

"

MONARCH

They'll Do

CARRYOUT SERVICE

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. - ON THE CORNER - MIDDLEPORT

that will make the home safe 10,000 and 20,000 population.
Loans may be wred to
and sanitary. To be eligible
improve,
repair · or
for the 504 program, one must
rehabilitate
houses and
own and·occupy the dwelling
.
related
facilities,
and to
that needed repairs are to be
prbvide
adequate
water
and
made . and show proof of
waste
diaposal
systems.
ownership (deed). Grant
Meinert said there is a
funds are available to an
applicant of 62 years or older maximum payback Period of
as long as an agreement is 20 years for loans less than
made not to sell the property $5,000 but more than $2,500,
with a mortgage taken on the
for at least three years.
Home improvement loans property as security.
To apply for a home Imare made in open country,
towns of up to . 10,000 provement loan-grant,
population, and to certain contact the local county office
Pomeroy, Ohio
of between of the. Farmers Home Ad- 113 E. Court St.
designated towns
.
ministration.
!......------------~-------~'

Allll!l ( - 21·Aprl 18) Be. !I
leader and manager -of eVents
today . Don't let them dictate to
you . So long as you are up front.
things will go your way.
TAUIIUB (April 20-ller 20)
Keep a low profile today while
looking out for those under your
wing . Let them think they're the
masters of their own fate .
GEMINI (Mer 21-June 20)
You're eKceptlonally good today
at heading up committees . There
may be some slackers, but you'll
know how to handle theiTI.
CANCER (..._. 21-.IUIJ 22) Pull
out all the stops today It you're
working to advance YQUr career
or make money. That's the only
way you'll overcome the
obstacles.

PORK ROAST ...............................

SALE DATES
AUGUST 3 THRU .
AUGUST 6, 1977

Reuter-Brogan

maneuverlngs bring out the best

.. effectiveness II yoU take on too
man~ assistants .
.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jan 18)
Set your sights on what ~ou
know Is attainable today, not on
what others think you can do.
What you achieve could still be
rather remarkable.
AQUARtU. (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Retrain from being critical of
others today. Try to say what ~ou
feel will inspire them and lift their
sagging spirits.
PIICEB (Fob. 20-Man:h 20) Be
willing to extend yourself if lookIng for reward lor your labors .
Forget about leaning on others .
You don't ·need them .

s1n

lb

COUNTRY STYLE

Pound

WI ERS
;

51''

CENTER CUT

B

in you today. You're e"tremely
resourceful even il work ing with

Lb

LOIN END

ASTRO•GRAPH

6-MAN RETIRED ·
~5
LOS
ANGELES (UPI ) •
.
0
Assistant FBI Director
Robert E. · Gebhardt, who
helped Investigate . many
famowr cases during his 30
-.----~~~~~---4 years in the bureau, an·
Q/lf.' I: Sn&amp;.L., CA~ - \ I = h\1'1111 r-.&amp;l_t r nounced Monday he will
~ 1
~, \.;4\110i ~
retire next month to become
NOI&lt;N'IAu.y'
A Q)SHIQ\)
vice president of the Thrifty
"'UA.~ UA.cr-.. 1
Corporation In Los Angeles.
'"""' """"...,'
Gebhardt, 53, a native of
New York City, worked on
Investigations of the 1951
Brink's, robbery In Boston,
and kidnapping cases ·in·
volving Patricia Hearst,
Frank Sinatra Jr. and
O!owchilla school children.
As head of the FBI's
general criminal divwon In
Washlr1gton, he took part In
the Watergate Investigation.

SHOT

REGULAR. BEEF. or TEXAS
CENTER CUT

week .

4

Pt..AY

Pound

There will not be a.
workshop held . Thursday ~
New officers of 'Galli~!" · •
night but regular weekly
County Salon 612, Eight and
workshops will be resumed
TUESDAY
Forty, will be installed in
on Thursday, Aug. II. Satur·
ICE
CREAM Social ceremonies to be held Thursday night there will be a Tuesday at Dexter Church of day night at 6:30 p.m. at
danc'e at the building with Bill Christ 7 p.m. Public invited. Trinity O!urch, Pomeroy.
Darby of Beaver, W. Va . as
REGULAR meeting or Mrs. Elizabeth Harvath, Ohio
the guest caller. All club Drew Webster Post 39 of the Departemental chapeau,
members are asked to take American Legion, Pomeroy, Maple Heights, will be the inrefreslunents.
at 8 p:m. Tuesday. Boys State stalling officer. Pa~tners
secretaries.
Reps Chuck Follrod and . from Meigs, Vinton, Athens,
Mark Mitch to be present J...ancaster and Portsmouth
along with Meigs County's Salons ha~e been invited to
NEW SAC CHIEF
Game Warden who will show atl.end.
For Wecllaid8J, A!JG. 3. 1177
BELLEVUE. Neb. (UP!) films on wildlife and conduct
·
- Gen. Richard H. Ellis a discussion on new antiMonday became the ninth trapping laws pending in
THURSDAY
commander-in-chief
of
the
Ohio.
ROCK
SPRINGS Grange
Bernice Bede Osol
Strategic Air Command ,
POMEROY Chapter 186 Thursday 8 p.m. Vacate hall
replacing retiring Gen . OES Tuesday 7:45 p.m. for Fair.
Russell E. Dougherty.
Masonic Temple .
FRIDAY
Ellis, 58, one of the last
WEDNESDAY
WOMEN'S Aglow
World War II combat pilots . POMEROY UJIJGE 164, Fellowship of Pomeroy 7 p.m.
still active in the Air Force, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Meigs Inn. Reservations by
assumed command of SAC's with all Master Masons in- Aug. 2 at 446-0046, 993-5845, -:::::,~J..J'---' Auguat 3, 1177
949·2723 or 949-2325.
Don't overlook any chances to 130,000·member
missile, vited.
acqu ire add!t!ona! knowledge !n bomber and aerial tanker · THE MEIGS • Co unt y
SATURDAY
your Ch0$en lleld this coming force in a ceremony in front . Historical Society will hold a
ZUSPAN family reunion at
year. Anything you learn wiUbe . of the SAC Headquarters at trustee meeting at the Krodel Park. Basket lunch at
to your Jlnanclal and. personal Offutt Air Force Base.
· museumWednesdayat8p.m.
ad11antage.
12:30.
LEO (Julr 23-AIIIJ· 22) Financial

A loan program through
which the Fariners Home
Administration makes loans
for home improvements · to
the dwellings in Meigs County
of low-income families was
explained today , by Walter
Meinert of Pomeroy.
FmHA, the rural credit
agency of the U. S. Depart·
ment of Agriculture (USDA),
will loan up to $5,000 to needy
families at a straight one peraccomplish whatever you want cent interest rate . The
to by heeding this axiom .
Pomeroy office is 221 W.
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-0.C. Second St.; phone 99U644 .
21) You function exceptionally
Home Improvements are
well with a limited number of
for
repairs and-&lt;&gt;r additions
people today. You may lose ~our .

Highland Park, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Hatfield and children have spent
the past week in Michigan ·
with the Bates family. Mrs.
Bates and Mrs. Halfield are
sisters and daughters of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Smith of
Route 2, Pomeroy.
·

FUNNY BUSINESS

A hrllh.tl :sfluwcr hunonn),!,

Dancers elect officers

methods heretofore unfamiliar to

Card 'shower to be given
A card shower will be held
In honor of Mr. and Mrs.
O!arles D. Woode, Alfred, for
their 50th wedding anniversary which is Saturday,
Aug. 6. For health reasons, no

Attcndin,.: were Mr. and dtSl'USSiull on tl~e weatlk!l' and
Mrs. Andrew Cross Mr. and stagnati•m. T!Je .group talked
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Mr·. of the changing trend of atr

read from Mrs. Florence you. Having trouble finding a
Richards, retiring Eighth career? Send for your copy of
District president, thanking Astro·Graph Leiter. Mail 50
for each and a long. self·
the unit for assi$nce during cents
addressed , stamped envelope to
her term of office.
Asrro·Graph . P.O. Box 489,
Plans were·made for a pic- Radio City Station. N.Y. 1001.9.
nic to be held on the fourth Be sure lq specify your birth
Tuesdaj of August at the hall sign .
(Aug. ·23-S.pl. :22) ll's
at 6 p.m. with members to VIRGO
paramOunt to.your success to be
IBke a covered dish and their secretive today, If you're d9ing ·
owl) table service.
sonlethmg Important. take no
The traveling prize donated one Into your confidence. ·
by Mrs. Roush was awarded Lt8RA (s.pt. 23-0ct. 23) The
to your attainment is a
toMrs. Thelma Walton who key
natural one for you today . Subwas hostess for the meeting. due ,your self-interests and adOthers attending were Mrs. vance the cause of others .
Margaret Yost, Mrs, Shrley SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NO'I. 22) Set
Ables, and Mrs. Eunie aside ~our anxieties today .
Accentuate the positive. You can
Brinker.

Mr..Bates in hospital
Ralph S. Bates of Trenton,
Mich., formerly of Pomeroy,
is a patient at the Detroit
Osteopathic . Hospital where
he underwent open heart
surgery on Wednesday.
Friends may send cards to
him at the Detroit
Osteopathic Hospital, ICU,
Bed, 5, 211 Glendale Ave.,

for Dottie Davis

and du not brectthe in the · and Mrs. James ~ieh.l, Mr.

DEAR .POLLY - I have rwnes. If workillg outside just
tried everything to remove turn on Lhe hose to rinse orr
white dog hairs from my dark all the atrunonia, let it dry
brown polyester and satin and then spray with either a
dr•pes but nutlung does it. I clear satin or glossy
tried vacuuming. a wet polyurethane, depending on
sponge, a wet cloth and a dry the finish you wan I.
Helen could put the amand wet brush .
KATilLEEN.
monia "in a dish pan or small
DEAR KATilLE8N - Try tub, put her bucket in
. pu\ting some masking tape sideways and slowly turn it
around four fingers. with the while scru bbing with the steel
sticky side out, and rubbing wool. !Jrunediately rinse in
that up and down the panels another tub of clear water
· with the hairs. Do any of you anddry. -DOLLY.
DEAR DOLLY_ The am·
readers know of a better
.munia worked wonders on a
way• -POLLY .
DEAR POLLY- One of the door knocker that had given
readers told about greasing me endless trouble. My per·
pans with a sponge but 1 find sonal thanks as this was new
a better way is to buy a one- to me. -Polly.
inch-wide paint brush (scald
DEAR POLLY- Masking
it and then cool ). I keep this tape can be put to many hanbrush wrapped in foil in the dy uses. When beads break
refrigerator and each time I they can be picked up with
want to grease a pan or masking tape as can needles
cookie sheet I dip the brush in and pins. Small buttons can
the shortening. There is no be sortelj, put on a strip of
need to wash it but wrap in masking tape and then more
the foil again and put back in · IB pe folded over them and the
the refrigerator. -MRS. L. W. strip put away in a box. This
DEAR POLLY - Helen eliminates any need to hunt
wanted to know how to clean for colors or sizes as they can
and restore an old brass be easily seen by unfolding a
bucket. I used some sudsy bit of the strip. -ULUAN.
anunonia with fine steel wool
DEAR ULUAN- Masking
and cleaned some very black lllpe is also great for binding
and discolored brass door the cut edges of needlepoint
knobs and back plates with canvas .....Polly.
excellent results. The longer
Polly will send you one of
you immerse the brass in the her sigri·ed thank-you
ammonia solution the more newspaper coupon clippers if
black will come off. If you she uses your favorite
wish to leave an"antique look Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
keep turning and working her column. Write POLLY'S
with the object until y'ou get POINTERS in care of this
the effect you want. Do be newspaper.
sure to wear rubber gloves

RACINE - Mrs. Elizabeth
Willfordis new president of
the American Legion Auxiliary of Racine Post 602.
Meeting recently at the
hall, other officers elected
were Mrs. Leora YoJIIlg, first
vice president; Mrs. Beulah
Neigler, . ~cond vice presi-

Ht\ClNE - Members uf the l-!arllen 1:s. all clc..•rx.·ndinJ!. un
~Hd
the River Gardt•n lluUriShlllt&gt;llt. •
Club and guests mer Sunday
Mr!;. Murn!'! alsu gmt• it
t&gt;Veuin~ itt the Shnne Park m, short talk uu l'culugy wuh
RatiJle (01' a plCrll&lt;.'.
lllt:lllbci'S l'liltH'IIIg 11ilt1 a

o·

Polly Cramer

POU.Y'S PROBLEM

Bridal shower held

Garden club holds picnic

•

_

.

2'·01.

MOUTHWASH ..............................................

APPLES ........................... 3 lbs. 99'

72 Size
ORANGES....... 9 FOR 99'

$1''

. TABLETS ............................... '"·"·
nLENOL
,k,. s109

POMEROY, 0.

CAIE LOTION ................. J~:; 5 1"

HRS.: tO:OO A.M. Iilll :00 P.M. Sun · Thurs. 10:00 A.M.
tit 12:00 P.M. Friday an.d Saturday.

See Us At The Pot11eroy Bend Bridge

l .

I

..,,
I

I .

'

�'

8- 1be DaUy &amp;ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Au~~:. 2. 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~ WUf!..bim UmkL'

...,...

c..Jt

O !.it.rt¢1"

. ,.

100

1.2$

:l.%lo

...

"'
&amp;1\-h wurd ovrr the mumnwn

I~
wwUr; \II • t.~IIAI pt!r won.l V'!' dly
Adli nuudu~: ot ht'f' U.an C'UI'~'UU\'t'

W.ys wUi be t:hllrtt...d

Ja t

thr I dK)

'1114".

In memory, Cllrd uf TI'i!LIP tmd
Obtt~Mtr)' : I \_'t!ll l..s ~r •·mtl, SJ 00
UllllllllWft Ci!ih Ul 1!dV1ill&lt;.' t'

Mvi.Jak!Honw ulto.!lamJ V111d w.l~
Mrt * t.'t.'t!pWd only w1th ~m; h w1th
,IH'd f r.. 25 Ct!l!l d\itf~lt' fut eti.l.s t:IU 1y-

UIK Ekut Nwnber In Carl' ol11~ :k •~
tmd. ,

.·

c

-

TIM!

Pu blbht·r~ l'~~::.en· ~ ~

the right

to edit or L"e}t'l1 i:IIIY 11d!. dt.'l: u ~&lt;~ 'f! •

~.' llurlioll . The Puhlu,hc• 'lo'Jilnut ~
l'el4 kiU• Ib k'. fur mo• t' tlwn ol1t! IH~' ur·

rt!t.1.ln ~rtiQTI ,

Phollt: 119'1-215&amp;

Help WIUIIP&lt;i
FRIENDlY TOY Port1es hos open
ings for
m ana gers and
demons.t ro ton .
O• monstrale
guoronteed toy' ond gift s. N o
cash tnv e Sfm~ t . no collec t1ng
or del•vertng · no service
cha rge , cor o od tel ephone
necessary Call collect to Carol
Ooy (SIB) • 89 83?5 Of wnle
fnendJy Toy
Por ties. , 20
Ra1lroad /'4,ve
A lbany, N.Y.

J&gt;rofessionaJ Senices

For :Sale

EXCA V A llNG BACKHO t: do1er .
trencher. Low Boy, dump truck
tru&lt;ks
Sep tic sys 1em1 . Bill
Pvll•ns . phone 992 2--478 day Of
nigh t,

Bfr!OW N ING M..a.N K 111 AM ~).H CO Al. tu-.,eslun l!o , and colctunl
w1th Sllfro n111 model 90 ZFO
chlonde and co lc tum b nne for
$750 Ol httr equt pmem fOf'
dust con trol and spee•o l monng
sole. P ~one992 . 6138
sol! lor former$ , heelstor Salt
Works Matn !ltreet. Pomeroy
HO NDA l;X PR ES M otorcycle.
Ohto or phooe '19'} 3891
Under warra n ty. 7&lt;1 mtjes, Coli
992·6305
CAMPER . S600. A lso, horse
lrotler , $4 50. Phone {61 A) 698
FAMILY AND Mosonk 81bles.
3790
meta! top work table . .assort·
m•nt of Bu tch &amp;r Kh1ve5. SPHING GARDEN Suppltes, Cob
stotnle s.s steel kn t'VM a nd
boge , coultflow er, broccoli,
lark!
toble and 8 d to1rs,
ond head le n uoe plants,
beds prmgs qnd mo ttre n , Small
yel lo w , wh ite , ond red onion
squa re table, 1971 Ford Torino
se ts. an ton plants , \t: ennebec,
Phone 9&lt;19 -259 1.
Cobbler , Kotohdtn , Red Ponli Qc
on.d N:ed losodo seed potatoes
c FT . HANDMADE solid ook porch
Bu!k gor.den seeds, polling so1 l.
· sw tng P h~n e99 2 - 51 5.t .
peat mo n , frv tt trees and rose
FE"NOER
SUPER
Showma n
bus hes
Mtdwoy M a rt.. et .
Amp lif ier comp lete with J,B
Pomeroy , Qhio. 992-7581.
Lansing 0130F speoke" Al so,
Bob s Ma rke t. Mason, W Vo.
l or sole , Brother Sew1ng
(~)773- 5721.
Machine wl1h cabinet , Contact. ECONOMY TRACTO R wh h oil 9;t·
Gene Dunn, Rockspr ings Road,
tochmen rs, Like new. osk ing
pos l fairground~i. Wh it e trailer
S:!250.
Phone (6U}098 ·3790
between sowm tll and ch ippe r
m HI , Old Rt . 33 .
HANGING BASKETS. pars. ond

Pets for Sale
RI SI NG STAR Kennel Boarding.
Indoor -Outdoor run s, grooming
all 6reeds , cl eon son ltar y
fa cili t ie s oe 367·7} I:Z Cheshire.
Ph9ne (fll4 )3b7-0292.

12205.

SI DING INSTA lL ERS , plen ty of
work H1ghet f po y In a rea .
Phone '992-3283, 'i om till 8
, HOOF HOLLOW. Suy , sell . trade
p.m .
or t ro1n horses RUTH REEV ES,
tra tn e r . Phone (blo4 ) 6'i8-3290.

~o heep · dogs .
{M tn} Collie s , 1 lemoles, 7
weeks old , Shots and w ormed.

AKC SHETLAND

H&lt;llml5 fur Sale

Mobile

Ph on e ( ~t. l 367·0292 or
367·71 12.
MEIGS COUN TY Humone Socie1y

197-4 M OBILE Home . 2 bedroom ,
!2 11 65 G reenbr~e r . totol al ec. ,
unturnid1 ed , 1n eJCcellepl condi fton . A sking pnce, $b500
Phone 992-5771

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mvt1tl~
Nounuu S;itu t~v

1\ltsOO}'

.

thru Fnda}'
4P M

lhe day befon pulllu:ot\Lon

A n1 mal Care ltne 991-7b80 or
after 6 p,m , 992 · ~ &lt;127
·

6 ROOMS &amp; BATH tra ile r for 11a la

FREEZER CO~N . sil\le r and
golden Queen, Pick you own
7•2 ·2101
Po tat o e s Greot &amp;end 338
Phone 8&lt;1 3-2491 . Thomas Sayre
WOULD LIKE to giv• away ori 1itlle
!,. lttens to good home Phone FOR SAL€. Sears Ke nmore Dryer,
1
9'12 ·2090 .
b m o. old und S.peedqueen'
Was he r, '2'/1 yrs , old . Both in
WHITE CAT , 2 mo. old ond :2 yr.
e)(ce l l en t co nd tl ton . Call
o ld beagle' mole, fo give owoy
992-5832 after 5.30 pm .
Coli 992-5&lt;18b
WANT GOOD HOME for &lt;I yr. FOR SALE . Brond·,ew boy s bicy·
cia, o Wtldl tre . Cal l 9&lt;19-2684
Engli sh Setter. female, gOOI;f
char b OOpm
woteh dog . Loves ch,il d ren .
Phonem-603&lt;4 .
CADILlA C COUPE de Vll le , 1970.
WANT GOOD Home . Collie and
l oaded , with new t tre s and in
B1rd m 1x mole L1kes ch1!d re n · very good condition . C. B. dio ..
good wat ch dog Phon ;
$950, Call992·3517 .
992-2502
TOTAL GAS mobile home. 1.2 x 16
wtth e11pando room . Phone

l'ns

ALLEN 2 bedroom , front liv tng room with factory installed
woodburn ing ftreploee. 1975
Hlllcrest , 2 bedroom , total
elec .. like new 1970 Homelhot 2
bedroom We also hOYI!t o dean
8 11 35 for that second .home or
the rtverbonk See these homes
at Kingsbu ry Home Sales, 11 00
£. Main St. Pomeroy. OH .

"P M.
F'nd.-) • fl ~:moo n
CASH pcud for all mokes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone oreo code 61&lt;1 ·&lt;123-9531

TO THE Mlddleporl Emergency
Squod , Dn and nurse s at
Holrer Medlc: ol Center ond• oll
those who remembered me tn
thetr prayers, sent c:ards , gilts
and flowers ~;~nd extended
orher kindnesses . my heortleit
thanks May God bless you .
Mrs Joh~ (Aiwtldo ) Werner

"'-==--

-

-

-

~---

0 &amp; J's HOUSE of Fobrtc Clearance
Sole . Now thru August 3 , T·
Shirt knits , reg. Sl.98 yard ,

T· Shirt Knits Reg .
$1 69 yrd . All our

now 89' ,
$2 49 now
1st Quality
price one
$1.00 yard
mtle south

poly knits reduced
table poly knth ,
0 &amp; J 's Fabric , 1
of Middleport on

State Rt . 7· · - - - · - - - , - - -

TIM BER . Pomeroy ForeSt Pro·
ducts. Top prtce fo r standing
sawtimber . Col1 992-5965 or
Ka!'t t-!_onby . _1-A-4¢·85?._0.1_

9'12·5325.

PIANO TUNING, Lone Daniels. 12
years of servi ce . Phone

9'12/2082
-~---

--- --drtlling. Phone

WATER WELL
Wrlham P Grarll at 742·287c;J

after 6 p.m.

. __

PENNZOIL RUTLAND ope11 dmly
till
10, Closed Mondays.
wrecker service tire repotr ,
Phone 7A2-957S or 7&lt;12·2081

- ·-......,._...... .... WILL DO babysllllng in my home
Coil 9'12~·5-::7~9.:_1"---

EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

•
.~·

..., .
...
.•V

V h~

NOTICE IS hereby given
that in pursuence of a
Resolution ot the Bo.ard of
Education of the Southern
Local
School
Ol!tr l ct ,
Rac ine , Ohio , p&amp;~!.ed on the
7th day of June, 1971 , t,ere
wil l be ~ubm ltted to a vote of
the peOJlle ot sa id Schoo l
O i str~ct
ot
a
Spec ial
ELECTION to be held In the
School O !!.trict , Oh t0 1 at the
reguler plac.es of vot ing
therei n , on Tuesday , the 16th
day Qf August, 1977 . the
QUestion of levy ing , In ellcess
of the ten mill qmllat lon , for

t,.... the benefit of Southern l-oca l

GARAGE SALE , August 1-5, 9, I
o.m tdl 5 p m Located oft
ooute 7 by ·poss on Old Rout•
1-43 , south of Jocks' Cafe.
Reasonable. Pnees on bicycle,
new painting suppltes , toys ,
boy's and girls school c:loth•ng
ond much more .

.

-

~---

YARD SALE , Wednesday . Aug. 3;
Thursday, Aug. -4 . and FndQy ,
Aug 5 :20" boy 's btcycle,
1:25.000 BTU gas furnace ond
dueling . elec-tnc l treplace .
clothes , etc. 297 Wright Street ,

Ohto

washer , T.V., children summer
and winter . and adult clothing
odds ond ends . Roger Eblin
residence on Leading Creek
Rood, rain cancel!!. .

GA~AGe SA LE , w-;.d~~~~

day , on Aogu~o;t 3 &amp; 4 from 10 till
-412
Sprlng
Avenue ,
Pomeroy- . Otshes . clothes , toys
and m1 sc

C.

3 FAMILY YARD Sole, Weds . &amp;
Thursday , 9 a m till 3 p m . 487
S_; _4th , Middleport . OH.
SALE In Harr isonville.
watch for stgns . Stereo radios .
work shtrts Lots of mtsc. Wed ,

YARD

9 u ntil_do.!.~ -----GARAGE SALE August -4 .5.6 trom
9 om to 5 pm Locatctd on Brad bury Road befween Route 7 and
the cro.ssroods . Record player,
mise. IHtms . maple bedroom

_

"' .

------

--------

...

(7) 26. (81 2. y, 3tc

YARD SAL E. W~nd Thurs~.9t~

-....- ...

4. Bar , 9 x 12 tent . deeptl-eeze .
· needs repatr . sewrng mod-une,
and other m1sc. tlems Hols·
teif't 's reside!'lce. corner of Col ·
lege and Br idgeman, SyrocvM,
OhiO.

••

.,

NOTICE OF

----~---

APPOINTMENT

Cue No . 2210&lt;1
Estate at
Oece•sed .

Nettle

Smith,

Notlc@ is hereby given

I'

••'

that J . e . O ' Br ien of
Pomeroy, Otllo, has been
duly appointed Eucutor of
th~ Estate of Nettle Sm 1fh
deceased . l a te of Syracuse ·
Melos' Co~tmty. Oh io .

Creditors

~re re~ulred

to

file tnelr c111m1 with said

tlduciarv wffhln three
months .
O.te&lt;:t thi5 26th day of
July, 1911. _ •
Mann ing D . Wtbster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas,
Probate Oivlslon

(I) 2,

I,

t. 16 . 3tc

'

350

VERY GOOD Used copper tone
double Ovenele&lt;: fr lc range Coli

YARD SALE . Aug . &lt;1 , 5, 6. Swan
and Lyons . Stute Route 7, Tup·
pera Ploms . Electric motor and
fan for fuel otl furnace, elecfrlc
Moytog motqr . adu lt ' ond
children 's clothing. o[lfiques ,
and misc . ttems. Not responst·
ble fo~ o_ny3~c~dent_s
YAMO SALE . Hemlock Gro\le
about 8 mi . north on Old 33.
toke Hemlock Grove Rood, 1st

rood

on

nght.

Children 's

clothing, mines ' sires 12 and
lA , other lte!1fs . August 4 and S,
10 to 4. Call 9'12-7•32CARPORT SALE. ne~~~:t to State
Highway Goroge. 3 Family.
Throw rugt. ct'lildren 's clothes ,
nle -nocks. dithes . 10 till 5.
Thursduy and Fr-idoy. August -4

&amp; 5.

.
~.

1soflener.

Model

Now On1Vl•

saw

Soles ,

1 Goad Uud Un ico

orver

Nobi l Summit
Rt. 1

3 AND &lt;I RM, furnished and un · TOMATOES .

in

TEAFORD(H

cucumbers

PEPPERS .
Cleland Forms .

Greenhouse ,

Gera ldine

REALTOil
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second SlrMt
Pomeroy, Ohio .S769
PhoMff2·ll2S
NEW LISTING - Brick
apartment house. 4 family
size In Middleport for only
$23,000.
BUt LDlNG LOT In
Syracuse . 150x200. Water,

JOO

r•r

-

5

chord ,

only-

--Home- ,

---..----

-

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23

BEDROOM
fully
carpeted , 130 acre form l or
rent , Call (304) 273·2566 or
985-4198.

-

EFFICIENCY

-

HOUSE for man .
woman or couple, Privacy , Mrd·
dleport area Phone 992-7791 .

-- --ROOM -

..

--

THREE
and both furn1shed
opt . 356 N. 4th St in Mid-

CB Mobilr Tran sceiver
complete with Weather
proof PA $peaker , 2 way
base loaded CB arH@nna.
tor root top or trunk mount
Power c:ord , coax, anlenna
cable and all hardware
Included .
ONLY

.

dlepo!.!_ _____,. _____ _

TWO BEDROOM troller , adults on·

lr Colt 9'12-3324.
.
.
~-----TO RENT. RivtrJide Apts
l
bedroom startmg at $100 per .
mo. 2 bedrooms starling at
$138 per mo. Equal Hou sing
_Opportuntty._Cali99'2-609B .

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Wanted to own ~nd operate
candy &amp; conftctlon vending
route.
Pomeroy' ond
surrounding aru . Pleasant
business, High profit Hems.
can start part lima. Alit or
experience not lmporlent.
Requires cat:. and $t495 to
$4"5 cash lnvutment. For
details wrlto and Include

your phone number :
Eagle lndustrln
3931 MNdowbrook Rd.
Mlnnupolls, Minn. 55426

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

$69.95

Pomeroy LAndmark

9-. ~ack W. Clrsey , Mgr.
1Aj1. Phone U2· 2111
JOHN DEERE 420 live power. 3
point h1tch . J'ohn Deer No 5
mow•r '1 pt. cut . John o..r :2 '
row cultivator Ford • f'wo 14 in.
_botta'!' ~~0_!':~!1}'.£:~~- __
ASHLEY STOVE Deol8rs. Running
Spectol Summer Sole, Lorge
CbO , $300 . Blowers, 5-iO. Call
mornings. (614} 698-7191 ,

..

-~ --·

,. ._ .--.-- ...--

K

-

,_

---

~

---

-

,__-

.LJVE CATFISH for sale to stock
lakes, pond• . etc. Phone

7•2-3167 or 9•9·2545.
ALLADDIM ~ER05ENE -LAMPS ~nd
heat_,.. Replacement parts •
chlm~~s,
mantles , wicks ,
ete.. S... in for demon~otration
and frH calolog. Mountoln
Leoth•r ~;~nd Gentorol stor•.

104-106 W. Un ion St . (61•}
FREESTONE CAN~NG PEACHES,
592·5478, A1hens.
$6 . 98 up .· ICE COLD
WATERMELONS
St 19 up 1972 SUZUki 550, $750. Phone
9•9·2•63
Variety
of homegrown
vegetables . At~ens Produce S1408EHINE FASHIONS for $35 o r
'": 50 W.. Athens Ohto We ac:
S&amp;o fashions for $20 Call JOf'l·
cepr food stomps
ntne Pattel 9&lt;1'9·2786
I

of M)ddleport. $23 ,000.
LEVEL
LOT
2
bedrooms, modern bath,
dining, 2 porches, out of
water. SIS,ooo .
·
NEW LISTING - Nearly 3
a~r_es ol land on Rt. 33
about half way to Athens.
Has a 2 bedroom mobile
home.
stove
and
refrigerator r Animal shed
and partly fenced . $9,200.
NEW LISTING - House
with 2 apartments. One
partly furn ished . Near
stores In Pomeroy . $9,600.
FREE PARKING FOR
CUSTOMERS .
NOT
EVERYONE CAN SELL.
USE A REALTOR TO GET
THE JOB DONE . CALL
992-3325.
Gordon B. and Helen L.
Teaford,
Associate
realtors.

:=:
.-.

II :110--News 3,.,6,8.10, 13.15.

::~

one pieCe
gun en. We hong 11, or do II

RACINE CARPET
SHOP6-16·1 mo.

11 :30-Johnny Carson 3 . ~. 15 ; Movie " A New Leaf"
6. 13: Movie " The Last Run" 8; Movie "The Lo•t
Safari" tO; A6C News 33.
12 ·110--Janakt D .
1:I»-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:30-Mary Hartman 10; News
13

~~~
:·:

:::

Superior
Steam Extr~ction

·-::--~

HOMESITE$ for sole I acre and
1,1 p. Ml ddleporf, near Rutland .
Colt 992-7A8 1.

Young's

.

l ACRES - with lovely
newer brick home 4 SR . 2

baths,

large

rec.

rm . w -

stone fireplace, carpeting,
sun deck, pat io, C::o!lrport.

w ,ooo.

LIVE RENT FREE - I
story frame, 3 BR , bath ,
garden , storage, basement.
N G. heat . S12,500
PEACOCK AVE. 3.25 acres
vacant ground, lowely to
build on . City water .
sewage. Just $4,200 .
COMMERCIAL - Corner
Rts. 33·7 Bulld)ng and 3
lots , going ala tow St8,500.
tv, sto•y
INVEST frame. 3· BR, bath , N.G.
heat. porches, small lot to
&lt;UI. S7 ,000.
OVERLOOKS THE RIVER
- 2 lots with 2 story frame
home. 3 bedrooms. bath,
porches, 2 firepl.ac:es, eoal
furnace heat, $6,000.
SECURE BUSINESS- 25
years In same location. All
equipment as listed, stock
i nventory at wholesale
price .
A
GREAT
INVESTMENT.
ON RT . 7 - and in town.
Very large lot 2 story
frame home, 3 bedrooms ,
'h bath, partly. furnished.
$13,.500.

2-23·1 mo.

. RW-Jlisllii!'Jm:~~ :;:.:_

-c-

1'12 a ern of building alte, wooded, sacluded .07 of milt
from stole route 7, nur Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
Surveyed, and owovtd by the planning comml11l011
for Hwage. Priced at SS,OOO.OO,
·
If lnternttd call 985-41N afttr 4:00 P.M.

George

s. Hobstetter Jr.

Real Estate Broker
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio

.

{

.

-

992 -3A5&lt;1

or

- 9'1? · 5455.·~~~­
SECLUDED 2 stor'p' older home on

R\Jt..J

l\1~\He;

As an4fool

. --=---=
~
":. "'. .=____ =
-

~

~

- BOWERS
----' REPAIR -

Bradford .

. -ELWOOD

Sweepers , toasters . irons , al l
small.appltonces Lawn mower ,
next to Stole Hl ghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone {6U) 985-

~!.:;_2200

ULABNER

,'f~)ij~:f1iiln

SHALL I SHOOT HIM
AND TJ.le.J ASK OUESTIOIJS.OR SHALL I TRY IT TI-IG'

LISTEN TO THE ·

:
••

SWAP SHOP

•

••
: 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM :·
••
••

:
92 in the Country
:
•
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••
~
r

• 6

¥t 9;
K 10I 3 2

EAST CDi
4AQ1082
¥ K76
tJ
• A J 103

.s 7 4 3

.,.

•QJ 1083
•Q8

aid
tODoona or
Willis

SOUTH

• KJ 5

• i\2

n able
untashion-

tAQ8765

.. 7 6

DOWN

East-West vulnerable
Wes1
24
Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
bt

how
AXYDLBAAXIl
LONGFELLOW

to

work

North East
••
Pass
Dbl. ·
;t

4•

Opening lead - Q¥

-

By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby

One of the worst bids in
1ridge is what we call the
hints. Each doy the code letters are different.
'Ostrich" bid. Traditionally,
:he
ostrich feels that 1! he
CRYPTOQUOTES
tticks his head in the sand no
Q L &gt;ne can see him and nothing
OQCO
WRHX
ZH
bad can happen to him .
'
H
K
North's pass to West's two
JHRJLGGMHR
S LCZV
_spades is an example of this
N C S 0 type bid at its worst. As he ex·
MG
NHMROG
I M RH S
plained after his opponents
B
M
K
L
?
-had
chalked up 300 points by
HK
oseJL
OQL
H ,K
selling the five-diamond contract two tricks, he had hoped
QLRSV 'QCSBCRZ
YHierday's Cryploquote: SINCE WE CANNOT GET WHAT that by passi~g he would not
WE UKE, .LET US lJKE WHAT WE GET .-8PANISH encourage East and West to
bid game.
PROVERB
That reasoning is fallacious
C 1171 JC&amp;aa Futuna Syndk:ate. lac .
at belt. If East and West have
R&gt;,RNEY

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

o

WINNIE

JOEY!.(? IM IN THE
• WENDY HA&amp;N'T Wl2tTTEN
OR PIONED FOR &amp;OME

TIME.

8/fOWER! W(){!Ll?

YOUGETTfiE
1-1';'01'1£ ?

,,

Soutb
2t
Pass
Pau

It: . Pass Pass

One letler oimply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L' s, X for the Lwo O's, etc Single 1eUers,

c

a game they are looking a
their own cards. know the) .
have it and will bid it.
lf East and West don't hav&lt;
enough to bt'd beyond twc
spades they will stop ther&lt;
and make a part score while'
more enterpriaing Nortt
would either have pushe&lt;i
them too high or watched hi!
partner make a part score of.
his own .
This lime if North had bid
three diamonds. East would
still have bid four spades and
South might well have doubl·
ed . Otherwise, he would pass
· and set them one trick undoubled provided North did
noL go berserk and bid five
diamonds after having bid
three diamonds earlier.

~u~~
A Pennsylvania reader
wants to know il we would
double an adverse one-spade
bid for takeout with :
• A K X•• t K Q 10 lXX 4ol!IX
The answer is a decided
" No ." We would simply over·
call with two d1amonds. You
should be very careful about
doubling one major suit when
you can't stand the other one.
(Do you havo a quNUon rot
tho oxports? Wrlfo "Ask the
Jacobys" care of thll
now•papar. The Jacobya wiN
answer lndlvldull QIJIItlofll If
• te mp•rt. aolf-a d&lt;lr.,u d
envelopes are enclosed. TN
most lnt.,.stlng questtont will
~ und In this column and will
rocolvo cop los of JA COSY
MODE liN.}

THAR'S ONLY ONE WAV TO
CURE TH' ELDERBERRY ITCH

!

•!

NORTH

WEST

1 Chinese
port city
2 tonvince
3 Avoid

OT'HER WAY FOR ONCEE

2

• K9512

A.M.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: • BUY, SELL OR TRADE? :
:

I

31 Puzzler's

plumbing and heohng. No job
tN SYRACUSE: , 4 roams and both,
too Iorge or too small. Phone
fireplace. natura-l gas heat.
1&lt;2·23,8 .
Porfiolly furni shed , 3 rooms
remodeled . Needs some work. ·~·Approllimllt el y 2 a cres . Phone CARPENTER , f looring, ceding,
99~·.:.95::·---,--,---- _PO nel tng. Phone 992-:2759,
HOUSE: FOR so!e (cheap) 3 MOBILE Home • Repair, Elec ,
bedrooms. fireplace , 2 car
plumbing ond heoftng. Phone
garage , ' patio, fully carpeted
9!2· 58:c58
;:.;_-_ _ __ _ _
wtth I acre Jot. Ru t land . Coli HOWERY
AND . MARTIN EJ:: .
7-42 · 29
:.:.:8::
8 '---'---:---,---~
covo tlng , septic sysfems ,
dozer , backhoe , dump lruck ·
limestone. grovel, blacktoP
ONE &amp; If, ocres with mobile home
on river in Pt. Pleasant , W . Va.
. paving, Rt . u :J. Phone 1 (61A)

698-733.-"
t.'--::c•---~--

No bid brings on set

love

--- -------

HARRISON S T.V Repair. Service
Col1s , 276 Sycamore, St., Mid·
• dleport. Phone992-2511.

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

animal
31 Put to
hire
32Ear
shells
34 Opposite

31 Part pf

-

REAL ESTATE for sale. 19 ocrJH
wit h 5 rooms and a both Call

30 Tibetan

35 Perjurer
36Humbert
Humbert's

--

. · Ph~~2:='b4"-.--:-~--

BRIDGE

of
38 Across

three -quarter acres , lot&amp; of
shade. fertile ground lor
garden , 2 co r detached goroge.
3825.
3 bedrooms, large ltvtng room
wtth brick w .b. flreplo1..e, REMODELING . Plumbing . heotlng
carpeting, sunny kitchenette ,
and oil types of general repo1r.
dtn~ng room, porttal basement
Work guaranteed 20 yeu rs e• ·
with f or~ed • atr Ju rnoce and
pe~~ce. P~one 992·2409 ,
new hot water heater . located
on Martin Dr ., Pomeroy . Priced SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser ·
vice , oil makes , 99:2 -2264 The
below market value , $17,500.
Fobri c Shop , Pomeroy
Phone 992-6328 or 985-3573
Authon:red Singer Soles and
SEAT' TfiE Cost of o Realtor I 3
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
bedroom . 2'h baths , bl -level
w ltli oil extras on acre lot. Nice EXCAVATING . dozer. loader ond
backhoe work ; dump trucks
drive 10 Power Planls. $&lt;13,000.
and lo -boys for hire , will haul
~e (61&lt;1) 992-2492
fill drrt . to !&gt;Oil , hmestone ond
HOUSE: FOR sole, 6 rooms and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef ·
both . VJ ocre , lot fruit trees ,
fers , day phone 9t;l2-7089,
s hrubbery , 3 bedrooms , buil t -I n
night phone 992 3525 or 992 brick cabinets In kitchen , utility
5232
room wtth ! o toroge , woll- fo-woll
EXCAVATING.
dozer , backhoe
carpet in livin9 room . Carport
and dttcher Charles R. Hot·
Abouf 15 yrs. old. Well kept ,
field ,
Back Hoe Service ,
good condition , good loca.tion .
Rutland , Oh10 Phone 742-2008.
Close to school. Coli for op__p~nlment, 992·3:?0-4 ._
_ _
Will do roo l mg, cons truction ,

HOBSTEnfR REALTY
8 rooms, framt, 4 btdroom home located In the village
of Coolville, Olllo, priced to sell at St6,00D.OO.

"'::" - • .!::::-

Cons truc t ion .

m-2s.a

11 room, 5 bedroom, both &amp; 'hgn hot wotor heal, large
· lot, ont of the nlcor homu loci ted on Lincoln Hill road,
known as the Edward Sterle property.

~ro&lt;

:2 NEW 3 BEDROOM Houses for BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Complete Service Phone 9-49-2487
sole One with 2 cor garage ,
or 9-49-2000. Roctne , Ohio , Cnft
one with recreollon room . Lee

USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING SERVICE ANOTHER
NEW
SERVICE TO HELP US
SELL YOUR PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leono
Cleland
Associates
992-2259, 98S-4112

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Real Estate Broker

~

~86\..lt..lb

ralllus-• 11od poll11 1 plala or
di:t!uttrliVf:.·We Uve ID I!J:ptrieDM
c~w tlaal hive crta\ed many ul
tbrle line quallty a~1 and car~r\a iD \bbi area. Meet
tbt'lt prolli 'I""Ufy for low l.ak!retl bUme
lmpruvemenl IOii.DI at rwr local
bilk ur S&amp;L. Call 9ft.703 lor a free
etUm.ate • r nop by 1101 E. Maio St .•
Pumeruy,O.
7-20-1 mu.

''The Originators
Not The Imitators"

0.

&lt;?1Hl1\ll:'
1\A~D /t.iJD
Wfo..1U1 A

ruuu

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630
MAIN
POMEROY,

BORN LOSER

Ill yuur authorized dealer 'f1.1r Urban
awning• •ad l': •'lJI!rt8, II
WilDt a
3:'1Jty prudul'l which w mcreatce
"ilue uf {our borne, ur mubile'
hume, uiM" tha wtll eaha~ lla bt!au-ty lur yun lo t'ome, tbiJ will IIU.Il
your needs. Thf: Urban UDt: ls all
il.l:umiollDl, heavy gauge, anodlzed

Route 3, ·Po...,eroy, 0 .
-

I

~W~H~

. Kingsb u~ Home Sales ·

~rpeting

I

I I I I I )-( I I I ]"

Answer:

Q

8 A. M. to 4:30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6-23-1 mo. Pd .

6-13-1 mo.

~ : 50-PTL

IPOLUCEj
KJ r KJ

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Phone 992-6282

Free Estil"oles
No Sundoy c.ills Please

Rem Eiroii'i.
r9--.. Sii.lE -"~:
..;:;--'
-

J KJ

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
300 Main St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

P tccodllly

r

tHERETT

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

BISSEll SIDING CO

Kofak 8.10;

WEDNESDAY , AUGUST 3,1977
Club 13.
6 oo-Summer Semester 10.
J ournal J3.
6·3o--AG·USA • • News 6; Summer S•mester 8;
6:30- NBC News 3.4. 15; ABC New• 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Chr1stopher Cla..,up 10
6:4S-Mornlng Report 3; 6: 50-Good Morning , West
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20
7:110--Truth or Cons 3, To Tell the :Truth 4; Liar' s Club
VIrginia 13; 6:55-Good Morning, Trl Stale 13.
t; ; Country Carnival 8; Lowell Thomas Rf: nem ·
7:110--Todav 3,4,15; Good Morning Amerlco 6,13; CBS
bers 33; News tO; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10
l);T'~ PUT 1T T~l!&gt; WAY, PAl.,.l
Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20.
7: 05-Porky Pig 10.
DON'T SEE: HOW 'IOU CA&gt;J OV~IZ·
7:30-Schoolles 10; 8 :110--Howdy Doody 6, Copt .
7;30-Hollywood Squares 3;.4; Let' s Deal With ll 6;
lOOt&lt; HSR~ ... A&gt;IYH0\'1• $HE: CA&gt;J
Match Game PM 8; MaeNett-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Kangaroo 8.]0; Sesame St. 33
AlWA~S HAvE YOU ·PA~EDl
$25,000 Pyramid 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Music City
8:30-B1g Valley 6 .
9:0G-Cross-WII• 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15 ; Andy
15.
Griffith 8; Mulligan Stew 33.
8:110--Baa Baa Black Sheeo 3,4.1$; Happy Days 6, 13;
Jack Benny Return 8,10; Only Then Regal e My
9 :30-A .M . 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration I ;
Eyes 33; Palllsers 20 .
Commonwealth 33 .
10:110--Sanfard &amp; Son 3••• 15; Dtnoh6; Mike Douglas 13;
. 8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6.1.3; Phyllis 8.10.
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
9:110--Pollce Woman 3.4, 15; Movie "The 1969 Movie"
10 :30-,-Hollywood Squares 3,.,15: Price Is Right 8,10;
6, 13, Mash 8,10 , Play of the Month. 20; Opera
Theater 33
Walsh' s Animals 33.
tl :OG-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15 ; Happy Days 6,13 ;
9 30-0ne Day at a Time 8, 10.
French Chef 33.
11 : 30-it's Anyb¢y's Guess 3,4,15; Family Feud 6.13;
Lave of Life 8, tO; Mak ing Things Grow 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxll10.
12 :oo-News 3,4,6, 10; Shoot for the Stars 151 Divorce
Court 8; M iddaY 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12 :30-Ch1co &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan 's Hope 6,13 ; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1:00-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless tO; Not for Women Only 15;
Opera Theater 33.
1·30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
., ,..,.,
.,.._
8.10.
2:00--S20,000 Pyram id 6,13; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; One Lite to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10; Book Beat 33.
3:0G-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,1 0;
M.D. 20; Romagnoli's Table 33.
3:15-General
Hospital 6,13 ; 3:30-Malch Game 8.10;
8-•
,
Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20; Erica 33.
HE WA&gt;S ASKED ·
4.110--Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4,15; New Mickey
TO LEAVE THE
Mouse Club 6; Gilligan's Is. 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Movie " Hootenanny Hoot" 10; Dinah 13.
COUNI~ BECAUePE
4:30-My
Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
OF THIS.
6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes 15
5:110--Btg Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Now arrange the clrded lettors to
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission :
form the surprise answer, as sug·
mpossible 15.
1
A CAR WILL ATTRACT VERY
gested by the above cartoon.
5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
LITTLE ATTENTION- - AND I HOPE
20,33 .
TO ARR1VE Wrn1 0U'T
AnRACTIHG ATTENTION- ·
6 :oo-New• 3,4,6,8, iO, 13,15; Cry ot a Hurling World :
HIS"[
I'm Hungry 6 ; ; Zoom 20,33.
'(
(Answers tomorrow)
6 :30-NBC News 3,4,t5; ABC New• 13; CBS News 8, 10;
.
Jumbles: TEMPO MAJOR MARLIN AFFIRM
Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
V ""~'er da..,
7:110--Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Pop Goes
Answer · Gave wamlng on the golf courseTHE "FORE" MAN
the Country 8: News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kl1 20; Thirty
Minutes with Larry Groce 33.
.,
7:30-Dolly 3; Redscene ' 77 4; 525,000 Pyramid 8;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; The Judge tO; Break
the Bank 13; Wild Kingdom IS.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
8:110--Gr)zzly Adams 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Marte 13; Good
Times 8,10 ; Nova 20 .33 .
ACROSS
4 Norse
8:30-Busllng Loose 8, 10; 9:0G-CPO Sharkey 3,4.15;
1 Looked the
health
Baretta 13: Movie "The Naked &amp; the Dead" 8;
joint over
goddess
Theater
In America 33; Documentary Showcase 20 .
I Nursery
5 Benchley
9
:30-We
Think
You Should Know 3; Kalllkaks 4,15.
rhyme trio
novel,
10:110--Kingston : Confidential 3,4,tS; Charlie's Angels
II Golf club
with
13; News 20 .
11 Nipa palm
" The"
10:3l)-lnternallonal Animation Festlval20; Book Beat
12 Guarantee
I Fatherly
33.
13 Scarlett's ;
7 Slanting
11
:oo-News
3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
abode
type
33;
Fawtty
Towers 20 .
14 Dazzle
B Lynette's
Yesterday's Atlflwer
11 :3&lt;l-'-Jahnny Carson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Movie
15 BobLy, In
love
': Night otT error" 8; Movie "Sylvia" 10; ABC News
t Show
23 EQuipment 29 Rose
Blighty
33.
17 Jutting rock
mercy
Z4 Pe1agic
essence
12 :0G-Janakl 33.
18 Hackneyed
10 Famed
25 Warden's
30 One of the
12
:4l)-Mystery of the Week 6,13 .
19 Once more
D.C .
guest
bears
l
:DO-Tomorrow
3,4.
Z1 MollWtk shell
hostess
21 Kay
33 Winter
1:
3l)-Mary
Hartman
10; 2:10-News 13.
22 Guamls
1&amp; Choirboy's
Thompson's
vehicle
capital
collar
brat
34 Braid
Z4 Clementine's
20 Strayed
21 Settled,
37 FeastL-..:::O:::lo:IQ.--.....1 father, e.g . •,
21 Freight
as
famine
21 Anagram . •,
or box
a bird
(2 wds.)
of Neal
-n--r:-""T.:'"""Tr-

KJ

CARTER'S

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

Continuous

L----------'----'

---

JOHN DEERE Crawler. Backhoe
endlooder ond dump truck .
Phone m -7479

•A

10 . 00-- Pollee Sl&lt;&gt;&lt;Y 3,. ,15;
Ct r c-us 3J .

~ --

Ali1Jnmen1 ,
wheel
balancing,
tune- up,
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by
appointment. l'h. 742-2005.
6-5-1 mo. Pd .

Bob Hoeflich

GUTTER SERVICE

Mtddleport

-Gt.A.SSwAiE

-

and
Service and Supplies.
l -14-lmo

bedroom frame
house, F A furnace , storm win -

Cleland
33 . ten miles north of Pomeroy . MINOLTAS'RT
35 mm cQmero
Lorge lots w ith concrete pollos,
includes 50 mm ) 135 mm , 28
sidewalks . runnert. und off
mm, and 90·210 zoom len~ .
_stree t porking . P~~e J!2 ·7~7_!·
coses mcl uded . $200
Coil
FURNISHED APT Adults only , no
992-6298 do, ly
and ele'Ctrlc available .
pets . Phone· 992 ·3874 , Mid - ANTIQUE
in ~! ~d i~g · $2800.
dl epor l
Bisque ilgunnes, glou baskets ,
57 ACRES Back of
AVAILABLE of Village Manor
unusual antique choir , blue
Racine. Good Gambrel roo f
Aportmenls- 1 bedroom . fu lly
velvel Antique chotr frame
barn with c;oncrete floor,
carpeted with kitchen opnew l enoiiC ( hina , autumn pat:
water
lind electric. Corn
plionces , furnished . Stortmg at . } er..n. Ph_o~!, _!n- 3283 ·
' crib. 3 ca r garage, hen
$1CU
mont Phone 992-7721. 23 CHANNEL PIERCE Simpson
house and old house .
E_q~ o h~~~Junity_.__
Beorcot CB desk model ; clock , 3
$291000'
BUSINESS BUILDING In New
element beam , 80 ft . Coax.
9 ROOMS 2 bath s ,
Hoven . W.Va .. 20 11 &lt;15 ma 10
$230 Phone9'l2 -5875 .
natural gas forced air
busi ness corner Phone (61• ) JUST RECEIVED Another ord;r
furnace , 4 bedrooms, one
742 22~5 ____ - - - - - ' Men 's factory dom9ged boots
extra large mater size. :2
TRAILER LOT for rent on Brownell
and shoes
Speool priced.
porches and full basement.
A ve ,
Mi ddleport .
Phone
Boileys ,_M~I!port .
$27,500.
992-:26:25.
_
FREE'zER CO~N . si lver and
BRICK 7 rooms, 4
UPSTAIRS APT . unfurnished . SIOO
golden , d ean. Pick you own .
bedrooms, l 1f2 baths, large
per month
300 Main St
G r eat Bend 338 . Phone
livi ng w ith fireplace,
Pome~o1:f h2ne 992 ·62~ _
843~ &lt;19 1 ,_T_!I':_m~s~Sayre ._
formal d in ing. natural gas
2 BEDROOM Mobtle home for TREE RIPENED Peaches , wh \le or
forced air furnace on nice
rent , I mile from Recine Plione
yellow
s turting Monday .
corner
lot In quiet section
992 -5858 .
'
.
August
at Mason Peocli Or -

'

109 High St.
Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Ann i versaries
Special Occasions

992-5124
Complete
Sales

3

Phone 9'/2-3457.

9a _ .JilekPhone
w . Carsey, Mgr .
U2 ·2181

- ~ - .._
HOUSE CLOSE to Meigs Mines on

TELEVISION
VIEWING

:::

I.. I.. I l__]

I'LH2·2174

.DUGAN'S

Road

Phone 949-2814
9a.m. to 5 )f.m .

CHIC&gt;&lt;.~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

THE PHOTO PLACE

Middleport. o.

Mortgage , 77 1! . Slate, Athen s,
phone (CU ) 592 -3051 .

Pomeroy LAndmark

Cj(J2

TH O: !-TATE C'IPITOt..
SHE WANTS TO MEET YOU

..·.;.·. .-:·.···:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:···:·:·.· -:·:·:·:·:·:····.' ..-:;:

- ---

OKAY. !ltM80!
&amp;UT HOW'lL I
t&lt;NOW T~IS

--

7-28· 1 mo.

Vo . Phone (304 ) 772-

uo.oo

~j- :::..,~~- IAjl

tall 7&lt;1 2-2166

4·10-1 mo

yourself. Special prtc•s to
builders.

WHAT A MoSS~ ...
EA$&lt;'1. WOUlD 'IOU
Mlt.ID WAITIIoJG &amp;Y
'IOURSELFt I 'VEGOT AN APPOtt.trfi\EtoJT!

Reedsville, 0. Ph.l71-4250
5-27-TFC

Pomeroy

~eal EStateJor s.de

$1 000 down , call (30.. ) 772 ·

RATES

Phone 992-6282
ar992-6263
8 A. M. to 4:10P.M.
SALES ANO SERVICE

Ph Hl !H!

CAPTAIN EASY
AT THE 1.06 AN&lt;OE:lE!J A&gt;R:POt:i:T
THAT "CERTAIN '10Ut.t&lt;5 LAD""'
HA!io~'T !&gt;MOWN UP l

REASONABLE

300 ~Min St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

WINDOWS
llUMINUM
SIDINCi-SOffiTT

Jack W. Cars•y, Mgr .
Phone 9Y7-2 181

dows. f,jreploce

riEW MOON-troi i;,~;eot

_5-43-C ~
_
-------.-COUNTRY Mobile Home Purk , Rt

.:IE AI'\'AI Tt NG A COLJRT
UROER TO ESC.ORT YOU TU

·.;.

TUESDAY, AUGUST2, 1977
5:00-- Big Valley J ; Brady Bunch 8; Mi•ter Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33 ; Emergency One 13 ; Mission ·
Impossible 15.
5: 30--Adam-12 A; News 6; Family Affa ir 8; Elec. Co.
20 ,33
6:0G-News 3,.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Zoom· 20; Bill Moyers'

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Pomeroy LAndmark

uo

II) Good Refrigerator nao

-z::::z·- ~=- -:::-

NO, ITS STRAIGHT FROM THE GOIIERNOR •
HIS WIFE HAS PICKED YOUR DRESS
DESIGN ABOVE ALL OTHERS FOR THE
ANNIVERSARY BALL.. IT'S FOR REAL.

CARTER'S

IEP~·EIIT

. Electr i c Trim-All, cuts
wllh nvton
$2t.95

for c!ompstte . Furr)ished. $800 .
Phone 992·62&lt;18.

coupl~

Automatic
Transmission Service

RouteT
Pom•roy, Ohio 4S769
Kitchen Cabinets . Roofing
- Cone rete P.atlos' NewSidewalks
&amp;
Constructlo. n
Remodeling
Ph. 992-7119 or 696·1051
Estimat•upplled to lob.
6-27-1 mo. pd .

tet us test your water
F=ree.

3102 or (304 } 772 3227
•
COUNTRY
farmland w tfh seclud ·
New Co - Op water sol ·
ed
woods
, water ~;~nd good oc·
tenen, model VC -SVt.
ce ss 1n Monroe County- W. Vo ,
Onlv ll7t.t.5

Rental , Service . Supplies ;
Me tgs 28 or 3.2 to Bashon .
Owner Robert Codner , Long
Botlom , Ohio

S R. 124, morrted

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Blown
lnsuloliott S.IYices
FlnantiiJ ataiWIIt
Blown tfttdi W1Nsl Att1n
STOIIM
WIIIUOIIS&amp;DOORS

279 •95

2. STORY

Phone

SWAI_N'S

FREE ESTIM TES

UC-XVI .

1 Good McCullough Chitin
Sltw
U5
1 G~:tod Used Poulan Chain

opts

DAVId BRICKl£S

water and Cl Co·OP water

CAMPING Tra il ers ,
custom mode SWISS COLONY .
small ta ndems Mopl• Leaf .

furnished

6- 15· 1 mo.

Pomeroy Landm1rk
soflen &amp; condition your

son I .

--

Phone 992-2291

let

3102or (304}772-3227 .
VA-FHA, JO yr. financ1ng. lrelond

- :.:.= .•

Boys' in Pomeroy , Ohio

N EED A WATE R
SOFTENER?

Save sso oo on a 11ew
Hotpoint Refriger~tor .
1 New 20 cubic fl . Chest
Freuer
$25 00 D iscount

8 .)( 40

804 West M;oin StrHI
Just Be law the Jones

G r eenh o u s e ,
G er o l d tne
Cleland , Rac ine. Ohio.

ty, W

FOR SALE

on mlni -morors, trailers, and
lolddowns . Tro..,ef stor 25 ft
$.114()0 ,00 · 20 tt
mtnt-motor
$10 .850.00. We sell ser'VtCe ond
qualtty . Camp Conley Stor.crofl
Sol as , Rt. 62 nor th of PI Plea·

CAMPE RS,

CRAFTY lADIES
HANDICRAFT

Clel u nd ' !.

SMALL form for sole , 10 "• down ,
owner fmanced Monroe Coun -

SlARCRAFT l Oth onntvar$Ory sole

CODNER'S

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT ANO ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFEREO IN
DIFFERENT , CRAFTS .
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10 · 00 to S· OD

992· 3709.

~~~jjg_:&amp;i_1i#f ~ B~-~;

•

Business Services

l i lt bed ond electric wench .
Phone 992·398A or 985 ·• 1-49 .

Caii992-786A .

Mtddleport . Wed ., Thurs . and
Fn ,.
'

., .

~'"

-. -------· ..
------- ---YARD SALE. 829 South 3rd. Ave ..
;

YARD SALE . 267 South Jrd Str&amp;et
10 Mldd Storts Thurs. oi 10 00.

1&lt;nJ

g er o nt um s .

1969 FAIRLANE . Phone m .7815 SWEET CORN for sole on Carmel NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths:
oU elee . I acre. Middlepor t ,
offer &lt;1 ·30 p.m.
Rood , Homer Circle . Phone
d ose ro Rur lond Phone ry:j'}
9&lt;19-21 77 .
1973 FORO LTD hos every-thin g.
7-481

IF YOU hove o service to otter,
want to buy- or sell something,
oe looking for work
.. .or
whote'Ver
you'll gel results
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad,
CoJI9q2-2156

---

Dated July 11 , 1977

LAGUNA

FORO PICKUP with topperr

PARTS FOR lt;l7l Golox ie Ford lor
sole . Phone 992 -5858 .
·

.

, Board of Educat ion fOr t he
purpose of maintenance end
suite . __....._ _,
ot school s
••• operation
Said ta x be ing , a.n ad , THREE FAMILY yard sale , Wed
d ltional tax of 10 .0 m Ills to
' Thur s. , and fn . of the Judy
run for three years , wh ic h
Kroutter residence. Welch town
w ill _ ro(llise a mini mum of
Hdl, Minersville. Baby clothes
$110 , 000-. 00 ilnnuall y at a
and oil other stzes of clothe'
rate not ex ceed ing 10 0
Phone 992 2971 .
mIlls for each one do l far of TWO FAMILY yard si.ile behind
valuetlon, wh ich amounts to
Country Coustns Glusswore ,
One Dollar for each one
c: htldren's clothing. numerous
hundred dollars of valuation ,
d~o
ond ends . and other
for Three ye ars.
clo thmg Slorftng at 9 Sot .
The Pol ls for sa i d Election
will be open at 6 . 30 o'c lock
ElGt-H FAMILY 8osem11nt so!e .
AM . and remain open unti l
Pool table , rodtos. dishes , odds
7: 30 o ' clock PM of said day
and ends , clothing of oil sites ,
By order of the Board of
mise . Items . Thurs ., Frl , and
Elections , of Mei gs County ,
OhiO .
Sol. , lOom to 6 pm . 413 Sprtng
Ernest A . Wingett
'
Ava . Pomeroy
Por6ung m
Chelrman,
front and bock .

Clerk

:....:::

JAYCO

'"

Dorothy M Johnston

j:.~~

(01,4}-667-62'20.

fioned , om rod to tope player.
Reol sharp. E)l eellent condition .
Phone 992 -2386

992-77b/J
CASH 1 ! Junk cors , Fry 's Truck &amp;
Auto , Rutland . Phone 7A2-2081
or 74~2~~ Closed M~~ doy• :....
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small .
Will buy 1 piece or (Omple te
household . New . u~oed , or anti .
ques . Martm s Furn tture, 20 N.
2nd St.. Middleport , Phone

CKEVY

-- ~·- -

Col1992·3'10.
outomohc, p s-. p .b ,, air condt - DODGE TRUCK . 19b91wo len wtth

OLD FURNITURE, 1ce boJCes , brass
beds.
et c.,
c omplete
households . Write M . 0 M iller,
Rt &lt;1, Pomeroy , Ohto or coli

BACKYARD SALE, August 3. .( 9
ti ll dark . Baby bed . Hoover

ON TAX LEVY IN

1976

7•2 ·2331

Po~eroy ,

NOTICE OF ELECTION

-~::=""

COINS , CURRENCY . tokens, old
pocket watche• and e~oins
Stiver and gold "~we need 196.4
and o lder sll..,er coins. Buy , se ll
or trade ' Coli Roger Wams ley ,

9'12 -6370

FOUND · MEDIUM Sized wtre
hatred tl;'rrter type. young mole
dog Blonde and white. Coli

Au~Si.leo--=-:;c·

.·.
.-.

t 'or Sale

FOX TERRIER, 1 yr. old , mo le,
bloc k and w hi le . Ph o ne

Phone 2&lt;17 -2252.

Swidlly

Lutt.tt.:I:O: -

·.·.·-:-··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-...·:·:·:·:·.·'

WHERE IS HE, CHUCK?
WHERE'S M~ WATCHDOG?

CHUCK? CHUCK?

I

I

�-·
10- ~Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 :, Tuesday. Aug. 2, 1977

r--~-----------------------~

More flaws ·f ound
•
m silver bridge ·
•

PT. PLEASANT. W.Va.
(UP!) -In a city where tbe
word bridge is synooymous
with disaster, ll!ere are signs
that the Silver Memorial
Bridge over the Ohio River
contains !illme flaws .

The span was erected seven
years as a replacement ror
the old Silver Bridge, which
crumbled
during
the
Otristmas shopping season of
1967, hurling 46 persons to
their death.
For an idefinite period, the
new bridge ' wiU remain
· closed while highway crews
examine deficiencies in
welded spots.
A four4nch crack was repaired just Saturday, but
Monday's scheduled reopening was ,l!ell!lf"d when
additional problems were
detected:
High above the surface of
the bridge , a hairline crack
was found .July 6 in a highleilsiOII beam, leading the
state to ban all traffic on it.

Hospital News
VETERANS MEMORlAL

Monday Admissions Johnny Hawley, Cheshire ;
Lori Clark, Fernpark, Fla .;
John Fisher, Pomeroy ;
Kathryn · ·Eyans, Portland;
Marilyn Powell, Racine·;
Catherine O'Connor, Racine ;
Flossie Nelson , Pomeroy ;
Pauline Newton, Hartford,
W. Va. ; Eva Shaffer, Racine;
Herman Caudill, Middleport ;
Homer DeLong, Racine ;
Neva Seyfried , Pomer.oy ;
Catherine Roach , Mid·
dleport; Mildred Well ,
Minersville ; Winifred Nits,
Ewington ; Sherry Sayre ,
Racine ; Roy Frecker,
Minersville; Laura · Me·
Daniel, · Clifton; Traver •
Cardine, ·Racine; Robert
Snowden, Rutland; Lois
Pauley, Pomeroy, and Burt
Board, Letart, W. Va.
Monday Discharge~ Penny Smith, Johnoy
Hawley, Etta Ellis, Floyd
Rhodes, Martha, Searles and
Effie Shockey.

By splicing a steel plate
across the welds , the
American Bridge Co ., a
division of U.S. Steel Corp., is
attemping to make repairs.
" These imperfections
aren't exactly 'cracks, but
they show signs of probably
becoming cracks ," said
'Highways Commissioner
Joseph Jooes.
"Since the contractor is
already there, we thought it
better to plate them now
iru.1ead of waiting for a crack
to develop and cloSe the
bridge a second time."
Deputv
Commissioner

Dean Blake was uncertain
Monday when asked how long
it would take to remove the
proble!II8. He said it depends
on wbether materials are
av~ilable to the contractor .
It 's possible that it will
"take at least as long" as it
has to repair the earlier
crack, Blake said,
Pedestrians . and
emergency ambulance
vehicles may use the bridge
during repairs. But aU other
traffic is
being accommodated by the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge about 16
miles to the north.

Vance, Sadat huddle over
prospects for Geneva talk
ALEXANDRIA, ~ypt (UP!) - Secretary of State
Cynis Vance Imt loday with Egyptian Foreign

Minister Ismail Fahmi for det ailed discussions on how
to get a Middle East peace conference reconvened in
Geneva Ibis fall.
Vance and Fahmi mel alone in Fahmi's suite
overlooking the Mediterranean in tho! Palestine hotel.
The meeting followed a sessioo Monday night
between Vance and his top advisors and President
Anwar Sadat and the Egyptian negotiating team.
U.s. officials described the talks as ''very wideranging" in wbich Sadat presented the woole rs.nge of
Egyptian ideas' for a conference leading to a Middle
East settlement. "I'm more than optimistic," S!ldal
told newsmen Monday. "I -was just telling Mr, Vance
oow deeply we appreciate his coming here."
Vance was to meet with Sadat tollight at the
Presidential beach oouse . The meeting will be followed
by a televised news conference with ll!e two men
scheduled lor J p.lfi . Em .
The chief stwnbllng block is how ll!e Palestinians
should be represented at a Geneva conference. The
Palestine Liberation Organization, desl&amp;1tated by the
Arabs to represent aU Palestiniana, bas been rejected
by the Israel as a terrorist organization.
.,

Nixon smear said false
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif . considered for .use in paying
(UP! ) - Richard Nixon's "hush money " to the
chief aide has denounced as Watergate burglars, Time
" totally false" a Time reported.
magazine report that tbe
The newsmagazine said the
Teamsters Union gave lhe money was not used Cor that
Nixon White House $1 million, purpose, but what became of
He invited the Justice it remains a mystery and the
Department to question the Justice Department is invesformer President if he is a tigating.
suspect.
In Washington, Teamsters
The money allegedly was a President
Frank
payment In prohibit Jimmy Fitzsimmons also denied the
Hoffa from trying to return to Time report.
union office and was
Fitzsimmons cl)allenged

Pomeroy may add

Attorney General Griffin Bell
Monday to "confroni me With
the .source of these
allegations or any evidence in
this regard."
"If the Justice Department
is conpideriitg questioning
former President Nixon, tell
them to stop considering and
just do it, " Col. Jack
Breman, Nixon's chief aide,
told UP! Monday.
"The story that $1 million
was paid by the Teamsters to
somoone in ll!e White House
is totally false, " qe said.
"It's just as false as the
forged love letters ·story, the
foreign bank account story
and all the other fictitious
articles and stories that have
been written in attempts to
smear former President

"caUJng OW' attorneys to ask
if IIIey can find a way to sue"
Time, but expects the
magazine's attorneys
coached the writers well
enough that a libel action
would probably fail.
Time, quoting Justice
Department and
FBI
sources,
said
federal
investigators believe two
Teamster officials arranged
to have $1' million , in two
payments of $500,000 cash,
delivered to a.White House
courier in Las Vegas, Nev, on
Jan. 6, 1973, three days after
a lawyer lor Watergate
burglar E. Howard HWlt was
said to have pressured Nixon
aide Olarles Colson for hush
money.
A secret FBI report, Time
said, describes the .mooey as
a payoff for the condition
Nixon imposed when he
commuted Hoffa's 13-year
federal prism sentence In
1971. Nixon specified that
Hoffa collld not return to
Wlioo office untill980, which
protected Teamster
President
Frank

!

Area Deaths

l

claughter of the lole Riley W.
and Ella Fisher Cardwell-

brothers. Burrell and Frank
MclaUghlin, and an lhfant

brother.

·

Surviving are a son, O'DeU
Mashington
Chaney
of
Albany : three daughters,
Mrs. Louise Plckf!ns of Letart

JOE

GRAHAM

Joe Graham, 49, formerly

of Middleport, was killed

held 2 p-m. Wednesday at
Hedges Chapel United
.Methodist Church with Rev.
Starling Marow and Rev .

Airway

Raymond Weith and Rev. A. ·
B. Albertson oHidatlng.
Burial will be In Reber Hill

The son of the late Add le
Bitters. Mr . Graham Is

Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Bastian ' s Funeral
Home in Ashville from 2 until
A p.m . and 7 until 9 p.m . "'

Monday evening In an ex-

plosion

at

tho

Products Co . ptarit In
Delaware City, Delaware.

survived by his wife. Shirley,

Car turned
•
wrong tune

Girls ending
season with
all star games

MASON DRIVE-IN

=
..--..
-c
-.

Band camp dates announced

"IT'S TRUE. •"

c

z

!

--------:-"""7 __ _

BAKER
. ' f

\. r

"'

FURNITURE

Brown wailts another $35 million

Overcharges, he says, are
for use of nonOhio coal ~ F~"t'ry
. I.

Funeral services will , be

She was . preceded in death

by her husban&lt;l, William
(Doug) Chaney ; three

also a former r!sldent of the

Bend t~~rea ; two sons and a
daughter and two sisters.
Mrs . Yvonne Bareswllt and

Mrs. Marilyn Bishop, both of
Middleport. Mrs. Bareswllt

and Mrs. Bishop and their
families were enroute today
to the Grahams' home at 136
Meadow Dr iv e . Newark .
Del ware .

Tuesday.
The

family

donations

for

requests
the

Hedges.

Chapel United Methodist

ChlKch Memorial Fund.

JANE WRIGHT

•

Burl Burke, 74, Jackson,
Jane Ann Shoemaker,
was charged with failure to
Wright, 32, Salem, N. Y., a·
nalfve of Ga lli pol is. died .
yield the right of way
Monday.
She was married to"'
following an accident at 11: I~ . The body has not been Roger Wright
Sept. 27, 1963:,
recovered
and
funeral
p.m. on SR 160 at the Inand
he
survives
along with
arrangements are pending .
tersection to US 35.
· Mr. Graham was manager of two sons. Earl and Stewart
Wr ight ; her parents, Donald
The Gallia-Melgs Post the Delaware City plan!.
and Vacla Oonally Shoemaker
·State Highway Patrol said
of Dayton. other relatives are
Burke's car turned left in
Nancy AIJ1Ier of , Dayton :"
frortt of a vehicle operated by
John
Shoemaker
of
KATHRYN REBER
California
;
Richard
of
Debra K. Ruddy, 19, Kerr.
Mrs . Kathryn Cardwell
There
was
moderate Reber . 81. a resident of Columbus, and grandmoth~r ,.
Mrs . · Mary Shoemaker,
damage.
Ashville, Ohio, died Sunday In Centenary.
·
..
No charges !"ere flied Jn an Pickaw_a y Nur$lng Home ,
Funeral services will be.
Ohio.
accident at 4:45 p.m. on SR 7 Circleville.
held In Salem, N. Y.. and
She was born In Gallla
at CR 46 in Meigs CoWlty. An County on Dec. 13, 1895, burial will be In West
Carrolton, Ohio.
auto driven by Wadman
Randolph, 59, Point Pleasant,
attempted to pass ·a car
operated by Patricia E.
Cronin, 30, Marietta, when
the vehicles sideswiped.
There was minor damage.
Afinal accident occurred at
8:30p.m. on SR 588, one mile
west of CR 1 where James C. .
Lambert, Eureka Star Rt.,
See our line selection of single rerords (45 RPMI
albums a nell track stereo t•pes- musicalaccessorin
Gallipolis, lost control of his
su~h as guitar strings, violin strings, blnfo picks, keys,
car which slid off the road- .
brtdges, reeds, valve oil and many Items you need to
way into an. tm~bankment.
play propertv - music books - shHt music .
There was minor damage.

VISIT ntE MUSIC DEPARTMENT
ON THE 2ND FLOOR

unknown ; Each vehicle
(Conlinued from page 1)
driven
549 roUes; average 12
reading of specifications lor a
truck COWICil agreed to ad- men per call; 538 manhours
vertise for bids. They will spent, assistance asked from
have to obtain speciflcations other department, three Nixon."
A New York literary agent
before they will be able to times.
Attending were Mayor last year produced copies of
advertise lor a cruiser.
It was announced by the Andrews, Harry Davis, Larry what were purportedly 22
mayor ihat there will be a Powell, Lou Osborne, Ralph love letters from Nixon to the
public meeting of council and Werry and Brown, council wife of a foreign diplomat
Table Radios - C. B's - Scanners . St1reo Modules
.the board of public affairs members, Jane Walton , with whom Nixon was
clerk,
.Crow,
Werry,'
Jack
supposed to have had an
Monday, Aug. 8 at 7:30p.m.
Stop in; lOok around. You'll •ntOY IT.
BOARD TO MEET
Mayor Andrews reported Krautter and Chief Webster. · affair. The Postal Service
The Southern Local School
that parking meters. on the "nte meeting was opened by investigated and declared in
Board
will meet Thursday at
October that the letters were Fitzsimmons, a Nixon 7:30 p.m. in the high school
lower parking lot wall, facing prayer by Lou Osborne.
from
a
forgeries which could nol supporter,
west, have been removed and
cafeteria.
he suggested the entire area ::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:::· have been written by Nixoo. challenge.
Brennan said he was
be' painted yellow and no C'L
parking allowed. Council \ ...
S OW
agreed. .
M~yo~ Andrews said no ,
WaS
REPORTOFCONDfnON
applications for penntts for
Holzer Medical Center
Consolidating
domestic subsidiaries of the
(Dlscbarges, Aug. I)
the use of amusement devices
~----ly
WirW
SCHOLTZ PRQMOTED
Thelma Allen, Gerald have been filed ' with his of- A'
THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
RACINE
- Paul D.
fice.
He
is
having
Chief
Jed
Barnett, David Conley,
County Court Judge Scimltz, son of Mr. and Mrs. ·
WebSter
contact
all
places
Klniberly Conn_, Howard
of Middleport in the state of Ohio, at the close of bUBiness on June 30; .·197'1 published .in
Robert E; Buck oentenced
Kisor, Theresa Lee, Charles with amusement de\'lces and Cbarles Cllliter, Syracuse, · Carl Schultz Jr. of Rt. 2,
response to can made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code,
Racine, has been promoted to
Mollohan, Lulu Preston, giving them 10 days to file a lilts. days In jaB, fined him
Section 161.
ainnan'firSt class in the U.S.
Barbara Simpson, Mary permit. The mayor said Bob $!15 and costs, and placed
National Bank Region Nwnber 4
Charter number 8441
Air Force. A 1976 graduate of
Wagner, Mrs. Charles Willis Hawley, meterman, is ill and him on a year'• proballon
Cashandduefrombanks ..... . ... .. .... , . ... .... .-.... : ....... .. ...... ... 1,037,516.30
a paiient at Veterans
&amp;ou!hern High School. His
and son, Mary Withrew.
U.S. Treasury securities ..... . . , .. ................................... , ... 3,395,461,50
on
con\'lcllon
of
10
cbarges
Memorial Hospital. Ron
wife, Cannen, is the daughter
(Births, Aug. I)
Obligations
of States and political subdivisiorui.. .. . . ....... .. .. .... . ....... . 2,020,106.04
Monday.
of William Thoma, Rt. 2,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gibbs, Miller was named to help out
Federal
Reserve
stock and corporate stock .... , , ... .... .............. . ..... . . 21,000.00
The
~barges
were
Racine. Schultz is an aircraft
a daughter, Letart, W. Va: with police work and also disorderly conduct,
Federal
funds
sold
and securities purchased
work for the village Street
maintenance specialist.
Wider
agreements
to resell .. ..................... , .. ·. . ................. , .. 250,000.00
harraosment, destruction
department.Loans,
Total
(excluding
Wlearned income) . ...... , .. ..... . . ... , . 6,59!i,917 .00
. The Mayor also reported of property, tWo ~ouots of
Less:
Reserve
for
possible
loan losses .. . .................... . ..... 81,737.3S
that the " welCome" sign to asli8ulta, two counts of
IN TOP UNIT
Loans,
Net
..............
... .. .. ....... . ..... ......................... 8,Sl4,179.65
REEDSVILLE - Senior
Pomeroy has arrived and will reslsllng arnst, two counts
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and 9ther
,
be 'placed at the intersection of fighting, and public
Airwoman Martha J. Baker,
assets
representing
bank
premises'
.
....
....
1. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110,046.72
lntoxlcatlon.
of East Main Street and Nye
whose parents lfe Mr. and
Real estate owned other than bank premises .... . . , .. , .. . ....... , . ; . , ..... .... 30,355.65
::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;_
:::::::::::::;:: Mrs. Claren~e W. Baker of
Ave.
other
assets ....... . .. , ...... .. .... . ..... . ..... ................. . .... ..... . 3,164.54,.
Rt. 1, Reedsville, is a
Legar submitted the
TOTAL
ASSETS ............... ... ...... . . , .... ... , .. . , ·. ,, ...•... , . .... 13,381,830.4()
following· · report of the
member of the top security
REUNION SET
The Meigs Girls' -Softball Pomeroy Fire Department
The Eichinger reunion will police unit within . the Air
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps.,
for
the
first
six
montM
of
th~
League will .close its season
be held SWlday, Aug. 7, at the Training Command. She is a
and corps................................. , ... ,. . .. ., , ... . . . . .. ... , ... 2,089,976.45
with' two all-star games and year.
U. S. Rt. 33 roadaide park. · 1971 graduate of Eastern
Time
and savings deposits of individuals
High School and an air force
FIRE CALLS
awards night at King Field in
Basket IWlch at noon.
prtnshps., andcorps ....... ,.,.,, ........... . . . . ,. , ............ .. . ... .. 8,928,312.01
administrative specialist.
Total calls 45 ; in town calls
Syracuse on Thursday, Aug.
DepositsofUnitedStatesGovernment .. , . •. . , ... , . ,.,., ... ., ....... , .... , .. , 13,470.20
Is; (Residence 4; Auto
4, beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Deposits of Slates and political subdiviSions .. . ............................. 1,039,741.62
The junior division game 4; Business 2, Brush 5, False
Deposits of commercial banks ., .... . ·. . .................. ... ......... ........ 5,000.00
LODGE TO MEET
will ~gin at 6:30 with the Alanns 1) ; loss in town
Certifiedandofficers'checks
..... .. . .... . ..... . ... ... ... . ..... . ...... . . .. , . 50,750.20
I ll
Hartisomrille Lodge 411
senior division to play at 8 $7 ,525; each vehicle driven 34 F&amp;AM will meet Saturday at
TOTAL
DOMESTIC
DEPOSITS
.......... . ........... , .... ... ........... 12,127,250.48
Sun . thru Tues.
p.m. All team and League miles; average 12 men per
Total demand deposits ........... . ....... . _, ' .. .......... , .... , 2,911,415.84
July 31-Aug. 2
7:30 p.m. There will be work
awards .w.ill be pre$ented call; 224 manhours spent.
Totaltime and savings deposits .. : . ......... .. ........... .. .. .. 9,215,834.84
Double Feature
(29 ), in fellowcraft · degrl!l!. All
Other
liabilities .. , ,,, ,. ,,,, .. . , ...... . . ...... : ..... , .. . . , .. .. .............. 2,503.22
following ihe last game. The · Out of Town
Residence 8; House trailers 2, master masons are invited. Program .
publl~ is Invited. In case of
TOTAL UABilJTIES (excluding subordinated
Mel Brooks'
notes and debentures ) .... . ....... . .. ... , ....... .'.. ....... . ... ... ... .. 12,129,753.70
rain the events will be held on Brush 9, Auto I, Dwnpsters I,
Rescue
Call
l,
Mutual
Aid
6;
Comic
Masterpiece
l
Friday night.
loss $39,025 plus one
SQUAD CALLED
YOUNG
Common stock
The
Middlepo~t
FRANKENTEIN
a. No. shares authorized 2,000
Emergency Squad was called
b. No. shares outstandings 2,000 (par value ) ......................... .. , . 100,000.00 •
Color
PG
to the Riverside Apartments
Surplus .............. ... ..... ................ , . , . , ........ , .. . , ....... , . 900,000.00
Peter
Fonda
at 7:22 a.m. Tuesday for
Undivided profits. , . .. , ...... , ................ . . ............. . ·....... ... : . 252,076.70
in
RACINE - The SOuthern ching Band will hold band Thelma Siders who was taken
TOTAL
EQUITY CAPITAL .................... , .... , . .... ...... . ... . . ... 1,252,076.70
FIGHTING
High School Tornado Mar- camp Monday, Aug: 8 to Veterans Memorial
TOTAL
UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ...... : ........ .. ..... ...... 13,381,830.4() .
R
through Friday, Aug. 12.
MAD
Hospital.
SHERIFF ' S SALE
Instructors will be John
Rac ine Home Nati onal Ban k
Plaintiff
Dowler, flags and rilles ;
vs.
Average for-15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date:
Riley Rose, percussion;
Rudolph T . &amp;
Casbandduefrombsnks ... : ....... ....... .. . ... . , ......... .. . .. ..... .. 1,083,000.00
Erma J , Riffle
Roberta Maidens , woodFed.
fWlds sold and secarities purchased
·
Defendants
~
winds; Mrs. Joan Browning,
iCii
COURT OF
under
agreements
to
resell
...
.
.......
.
.
....
_
,
.
.
..
.
.
....
-.
.
....
:
.......
.... . 750,0(/0.00
majorettes,
and
Jess
COMMON PLEAS
Totalloans
............
'
................
,
.
...
,
....
.
..
.
,
..
.
,
.....
.
......
6,772,000.00
MEIGS COUNTY
Browning, director.
otC
CASE ~0 . 16373 . .
Timedepositsof$100,000'ormore
.
Ail students wishing to be In ·
1111
In .pursu ance of ·an AIIB ·
in domestic offices ... : ........ . . .. : ... ... . , .... ,•• ., .. : .. , ..... : .... . , .... 454,000,00
E)(ecvtion iss ued from the the band muSt be preilent ·at
0
.
Total
deposits .... . . , . , .. .. .. . ... , , , , .... , .. , ... , .... , .. , .. . : ......... 12,513,000.00 ·.
Clerk 's Office of the Co urt of
Common Pleas of Me igs the high school band room
TOTAL ASSETS ...... ,, ....... . : ..... .... . ..... . ...... , .... . ... .. ; .... 13,382,000.00
County. Oh io. on the 21st day Monday at 8 a.m. Rehearsals
Time certificates in denominations
.
of Jvlv 1977 , and to me and field praf(ice will last
directed in the case abo ve
t:·
of$100,000ormore ..................... . .............. ... .... ........... 222,000.00
named. I wilt ex pose to Sale until about 5 p.m. daily.
.Other .time deposits in amounts
at Publ ic Avetlon . on the Students are reminded 'that
•
front steps Of fi-le Courtt10use
of$100,000ormore .... . . , ............................. .. ..... . ....... . . . 232,000.00
VALUES
of Meigs County , Pomeroy , the $5 camp fee, to cover
Ott io , on Saturda:y the 6th day outside instructors' fees, is
ARE
I, Manning Kloes, Vice President and Cashier of the above-rwned bank do hereby
of August , 1977, at 10 :00
o'clock A .M . the fol!oilv'!ing due Monday. Bring sack
declare that this Report of Condition Is true and correct to the belt fA my knowledge and
goods lind . Chatte ls , to .wit : lunches. Soft drinks will be
FOUND
'
belief.
·
' ' " Fora Fairlane 2 dr .
available.
VI N 9H30n0568
MaJinJng Kloes
AT
The band is scheduled to
MIV be seen at Codner 's
JU!yZ,Ir77
TeKaco , Syra cuse . Ohi o.
perform
at the Meigs County
Terms of Sale : Cast1 in
Fair Thursday, Aug. 18; the
hind.
We, the wtdersigned directors attest tbe correctnesa of this statement ol1'1!80111'ces and
fekln IS the property Qf Ohio State Fair Marching
llabUities.
We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best al our knowledge and
RUDOLPH T . &amp; ERMA J
Band contest, Aug. 26 and 27;
RIFFLE
belief is true and correct.
To N,tiafy an e:~~:ec:uHon in the Nelsonville parade of the
Rodney Dowrilng
t•v« 01 the Racine Home 'Hllls, Aug. 27; the Marietta
PaUlS. Smart- Dlrectora
1111t~et link .
Band.O.Rama, Sept. 10; the
~
S. Reynolds
JAMES J . PROFFITT Tri-State Marching Band
· SHERIFF ,
MEIGS COUN TV , OHIO Festival, Oct. 8; the CirMIDDlEPORT, 0.
-cleville Pumpkin Show on
(7) JJ. n; :If ,., 1.. 2. 51&lt;
Oct. 20.

h
narges
defendant
•ather

r

She married Homer S.

Reber. Ho preceded twr In
death
In 1%0.
I
I
Survivors include two
Mrs. Ralph E.
MAGGIE CHANEY
Falls and Mrs . Helen Sabo daughtero.
C
Elizabeth)
Dunkel ,
ALBANY - Maggio B. and Mrs. Kay Meeks, both of
Chaney, n, Etna Green, Ind .• Elna Green ; a sister-In-law, Circleville and Mts. Oon&lt;old
former resl"ttent here-, died Louise Mclaughlin. Albany, B. CAnnel Collins, Ashville;
Monday
alternoon
at and brother -in-law, Pearly four granddauQhten and ON!'
O'Bieness Hospital. Born In Chaney. Albany; 10 grand- grandson . F"ive great.
Beaumont, Ohio. she was the children and five great - grandchildren sur"vhte.
She was ~ member of thedaughter of the late Joseph grandchildren .
Chapel
United
Edward (Jakel and Sarah
SerYites will be held Thurs - Hedges
Warner McLaughlin. She was clay at 2 p.m. at the Blgonr,· Methodist Church of Ashville,
a member of the Star Garden Jordan Funeral Home n and a member of the Eastern
Club of Dexter , .The Old ~lbany with the Rev . Howard Star. Circleville Chapter No.
Dexter Church, the Albany Mayme officiating . Buria l 90. She was a Past Matron of
orGanization .
Community Garden Club . will follow In the Letart Falls that
Mrs.
fteber was a graduate
Albany VFW Post 9893 Ladles Cemetery . Friends may tall
of Rio Grande College, and a ,
Auxiliary, and the Wilkesville after 2 p.m . Wednesday.
member of Permella ClubSenior Citizens.

'

.

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio
Supreme Court has been asked by state Attorney General
William Brown to order the
Ohio Power Co. to pay an addition~l $35_ million refWld to
ttsrestdenlialcustomers.
Brown said the $9.5 mi!Uon
refWld ordered earlier by the
·

Public Utilities Conunission
al Ohio represents only a ·
traction of the $45 million
Ohio Pow.er owes. its
customers· tor excessive and
improper charges resulting
fromtheuseofnon-Ohiocoal .
'"Ohio Power's customers

have been victimized by
dollar·hWlgry profiteers and
should receive a full reimbw-sement of this gross overpayment," said Brown. "The
$9.5 million payment ordered.
by the PUCO is an
Wlreasonable and unaccep-

lableattempttoappeaseOhio with the PUCO

Pow~r'scustomers."

=mlluty~t e
nonOhio Power serves nearly .
u
·
.
half a million residential
- Overcharged . _Its
~ustomers in 663 Ohio com- customers by $11.9Jlltllion.
munities and ~upplies power
-Used 7este;-" c~ ~ath~r
to other utilities throughout than loca f c~ res ~~~ 81 ~
the state.
ex~es&amp;ve ue costs 0 1 ·
Brown filed a complaint llll ton.
- Improperly charged con·
sume rs $4.2 million for
testing low sulphur western
coal.
-Improperly charged consumers $7.4 million Cor makIn Alexandria, however,
repairs.
Egy ptian governme nt ing"There
is no reason that
officials said Egypt told Ohio Power Power should be
Vance it would be ready to
sign a peace treaty with importing vast amounts of
out-of-state coal when we hve
Israel only if the Jewish state coal resources right here in
agrees to evacuate
that are not being used,"
occupied Arab lands and Ohio
said Brown. "The need for
recognize the rights of tbe IP.rge, expensive supplies of
Palestinians, government
western coal simply doesn't
(Continued on page 12)
exist.''

·

$100 million offered Lebanon
By JIM ANDERSON
Sadat proposed that Middle talks at Geneva.
"The agreement of Egypt
BEIRUT ,
LEBANON E$1 foreign ministers meet
(UP! ) - Secretary of State in the United States next is very positiv.e and I
Cyrus Vance loday offered moot!\ in what could be !be welcome it," Begiri told a
Lebanon up to $100 million in fir,.r' direct Arab·lsraeli reporter
for
Israel'S
government radio station.
military assistance over a ne~tiations in 30 years. ·
Israeli government sources
Vance
and
Sadat
ll!ree-year period to help get
its national anny back on its announced tbe plan Tuesday ea rlier said the proposal
feet following tbe coWltry's after failing to reach discussed by Vance &lt;and
devastating civil war.
..
agreement on American 'Sadat was essentially an
Vance arrived in war-llhat- proposals for a full-scale Israeli idea.
tered Beirut hours after the resumptioo of the Geneva
capital suburbs were rocked peace conference.
by a series of four bomb
U.S. officials said Vance's
blasts and a filii! explosive 13-day Middle East tour
charge was defused just would be devoted to winning
before it could blow up a key the approval of other Middle
bridge . The ·explosions East leaders for the meetings
caused no casualties and it in ll!e United States.
was not immediately kitown
In Tel Aviv, Israeli Prime
whether the bombings were . Minister Menahem Begin
connected with Vance's visit. promptly said he favors
Vance flew to Lebanon holding such a foreign
from Egypt where he and ministers • conference to VOL XXVIII NO. 77
Egyptian President Anwar prepare the groWld for peace

all

munity

Communiquen

11

Com·

was

distributed Wednesday in the Meigs
4lcal School District by the Meigs
Local Teachers Alwl&lt;:iation which
has been at impasse on negotiations
with the district's board of education
for several months.
The-letter: .
We know that you, as a community leader, are concerned with
the quality of education In the Meigs
Local Schools. The Meigs l.Dcal
Teachers Association Is committed
to improving the program for our
llludehts, but we have been faced
with numerous obstacles. This
newsletter Is designed to make you
aware of what Is happening in our
schools.
Since 1975, we have seen
priorities within our district move
away from the goal of educating
students. We have seen salaries in

the central office increase oyer 160
percent since September, 1975, as
Superintendent Dowler added
personnel to that office. Also~ating
into the educational program is the
cost of central office equipment.
Since 1975, the appropriations Cor
eentral ortice equipment has jwnped
from $1,118 to over $16;000. The
money spent on a sophisticated ·
check-writing mini..,omputer alone
would buy new social r~tudies textbooks for all our Students. We have
some textbciol!!'tlto!&gt;-end with World
War n..Some science books do not
even cover the lunar landings of the
past decade. Instead, our textbOok
account has drop[ied 10 percent
since 1975.
One continuing problem that has
faced our district is Superintendent
Dowler's

insistence

that

negotiatiqns be handled by . an
outside attorney. Meigs Local' tax

By Unlted Presslntetnatloual
WASHING'roN - PRESIDENT CARTER, declaring his
concern over "watered down" portions, today signed strip
mine legislation climaiing a seven-year struggle by environmentalists. Carter kissed Louise Dunlap, a young lobbyist for
the environmentalists, then signed !be bill with two pens in the
White House Rose Garden as a light rain fell.
"It Is obvious from the group bere this morning that the
American people have an intense Interest In preserving the
quality of our lives and the beauty of the land that God gave
us," Carter said.
Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., long a fighter for strip mine
leglslation, said those "who don't love the land don't respect
themBelves." West Virginia Gov. Jay Rockefeller, Sen. Frank
Church, D-ldaoo, Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., and Rep. Paul
Simon, D-ID., were among a host of congressmen present.

proposals. Further, in a clear
display of bad faith, they indicated
that the Board.could reject in whole
or in part the findings of the impasse
panel, scheduled to meet later this
month. Areas in which the
Superintendent an&lt;) Board refuse
negotiations are these:
- A fair and equitable
grievance procedure' with binding
arbitration as the final step. ,
- A salary increase that will
reflect the tremendoua Increase in
the .coSt or living.
- A fair disl'nissal and evaluation
procedure.
- Reduction of clasS size.
- ·Teaching transfer and
reassignment procedures that will
be fair to the teaching staff.
MLTA will continue to deal with
these and other problems in
1

'Community Communique.''

20 Fair with Mrs. Addalou
Lewis as the superintendent.
· There are -classes for
everything from children's
clothing to treasures from
trash. Categories for entries
in the 86 classes of the division are children's clothing,
adult clothing, aprons,
needlecraft,
knitting,

crochet, quills, rugs, and hobbies.
The only enll'y fee is purchase of a membership ticket
to the fair, an&lt;! even this is not
required for children under
12, The rules specify that an
exhibitor can make only one
enll'y iii each cla8s and that
(Continued on page 12)

a-

~ f .?w.,'-.*;.'-:1' 1:n::'uU::~':t

'*

(0•"'~ ., ..... a)

=J::ia

-

..

..

Little Mr. or Mis

Pretty Baby

Experiments on
humans admitted.
By DANIEL F. GILMORE
WASHINGTON (UP!) CIA Director Stansfield
Turner iold Congress tocjay
that top secret mind control
experiment&amp; frll!XIl953 to 19M
involved citizens - both
willing and unwitting - at 1M
institutions ranging ft'am
colleges to prisons.
Turner testified new
material found in CIA Iiles
also . showed 185 nongovernment researchers and
assistants were involved in
149 sub-projects of Operation
MKULTRA, the· code name
for the experiments on
human behavior and mind
.control.
He said tile experiments
were conducted at colleges
and universities, hospitals,
penal institutions and
research foundations across
ll!e counll'y,
Turner testified at a joint
· session of the Senate Intelligence Committee and a subcommittee on health and
scientific research following
disclosures Tuesday that
5,000 pages of heavily
censored documents were
discovered in CIA files .
The CIA director said be
·would disclose ·as much as
possible but delete names of
affected organizations and
individuals, woose behavior
were detailed in the seven
boxes of documents in a
.

be staged on August 20th
.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1977

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pretty Baby contest will

WASHINGTON - IN A MAJOR VICTORY of Senate
mlnorlty leader Howard Baker, Rep!lblicans have killed public
6nancing of Senate elections - a cornerstone of President
Carter's election refonn program. In a swift and Wlexpected .
move Tuesday, the ~nate voted 58 to 39 to kill public financing
once it became apparent they could not muster tbe 60 votes
needed to end the filibuster conducted by Republicans and · .
Meigs County parents have
Dixie Democrats.
.
The move also may have doomed Carter proposals for untll Aug. 18 to register their
instant voter registration, direCt election of the President and children to participate in the
repeal of the Hatch Act now prohibiting politicking by federal third annual pretty baby
workers. Those measures were already in trouble in contest to be held at I p.m.
cmunittee. Baker, sometimes mentioned as a possible GOP Saturday, Aug. 20, at the
opponent to Carter iill980, killed tbe measure by forging and 114th aMual Meigs ,CoWIIY
holding a unified Republican minority. Democrats had Fair.
The Elberfeld Department
counted on support from 11 liberal Rep,ublicans but wound up
Store,
sponsoring the contest
getting only four .
again
this
year, wlll 'present
'
$5
gift
tertiflcates
to the
. NEW YORK - THREE HUNDRED POUCE officers are ·
wlnriing
boy
and
'girl
in-each
llwlting f!!l; "Son of Sam'' In one of tile largest dragnets in New
York City's history, but the department admits the next move or seven age categories and in
is up to the gunman who has slain six persons and woWlded addition there will be a Meigs
CoWlty j..ittle Mister and a
seven others.
.
''The ball is in his court," said Frank McLpughlin, deputy Meigs Colinty Little Miss
police commissioner for public infonnatioit. "fie decides what contest. The boy lind girl
winning these events will
ID do."
·
McLoughlin aald Tuesday pollee had ''nothing fresh" in. receive $50 gilt certificates
their .ardl for the lllller whose most recent attack SWlday Jn !rom ElberfeldS.
Categories for the pretty
Brooldyn left •year-&lt;Jid Stacy Moskowitz dead and her date,
baby contest-include: birth to ,
RDblrt V1o'nte, 21, nearly blind.
three month&amp;; three months
WASHIN(}TON -THE MAKERS OF LJSTERINE must to silt: month&amp;; six months to
tell the world tbelr 111011thwaah does not combat colda or sore 12 months; 12 month&amp; to 18
lhroall- but !bey needn't aay lbelr ads bave been rnilleadJns. months· 1• montha to two
, . -~~~~ "'"""' fA the u. s. Clmalt Court of Appeala yean, -~ three year olcls.
bere, wllk:h Tulldlty upheld IIIOt&amp;IIIWilt lJI'dlr !bat Warner- The date for deterrninJng the
Wmbert Co. 111111t l'1lil "carrectlve adYerllllng" to co11111er age btacketa into which the
pilt dalma lbe IIJOUih1raah he1pe flllbl colda. But the court younpters will be placed is
doelll't tltink lblre'a ~ reuon to •'Jpgnll!ate" .the Aug. 18. Only children four
m
f 1 at,
tilt)' ..a to have aet.d Ill good faith. So through ••vtD can par'
tlclplte iD the Llltle Mister

entrne

a1 y

dollars are going to Cuyahoga Falls
as the Board's accoWlt for attorney
Dennis Whalen has increased from
$0 to $10,000. Meigs LQcal Teachers
believe that local problems should
be solved locally. Attorneys in Mr.
Whalen's price category charge between $50 and $60 .an hour for their
services. That's more than over a
third of our teachers earn in a whole
day of teaching, according to the
Board' s own salary figures
published last fall iQ the local newspaper.
,
Optimism that a fair and speedy
settlement could ' be reached this
year after !he trauma of last year's
bargaining faded as negotiations
dragged. Superintendent Dowler's
responsibility to represent the Board
of Education 'was passed on the
Attorney Whalen. They refused to
consider a number of teachef
proposals or provide .counter

By Cluirlene Hoeflich
Meigs CoWlty Women will
have the . opportunity to
display their talents Jn sewing and other creative
domestic arts at the Meigs
CoWlty Fair.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis
is in charge of the domestic
arts display at the Aug. 16 to

•

•

Teachers state case in newsletter
A " newsletter" entitled,

WILL ATI'END WORKSHOP -Two students this fall at SOuthern High School will
attend an upcoming five day "live-in" workshop at Dennison University at Granville called
a Teenage InstltuU! on Alcohol and Other Drugs. Tbe topic or ll!e workshop is "Prevention
through education." From left are Barbara Buchanan, Rt. 2, Racine, sponsored by the
Mental Health and Mental Retardation Board, Gallipolis ; Bruce Pickens, program development coordinator for Southeast Ohio Regional Council on Alcoholism, and Norma .Jarrell,
Rt. 2, Racine, sponsored by Xi Ganuna Mu SOrority. The girls will bring back information
oo what they learned at the workshop to their sponsors and be available to speak to students
and oilier concerned groups,

'

Chris Craft
lays off 65

Retired Record Center
outside of Washington .
These recorda; he said had
previously been reported as
having been destroyed in
1973.
"I ~e you that the CIA
is in no way engaged in either
witting or unwitting testing of
drugs today," Turner
assured ll!e committee. But,
be said, documents showed
this was not true in the past .
Turner said that mass of
documents, some 400 pages of
which were released to the
press Tuesday, fall roughly
into three categories:
·- Details of the 149
MKULTRA sub-projects,
''many of which ·appear to
h8.ve some connection with
research into behavioral
modification , drug
acquisition and testing or
administering
drugs
surreptitiously."
- Two boxes or miscellane- .
ous papers, including audit
reports and financial stale·
ments ~rom ~~c ut-outs ,"

.

involving human testing;'' 14

subprojects " d efinitely
involving tests on human
volunteers,"

and

19

subprojects · " probably
including tests on human
voiWlleers. While mit known,
some of the sub-projects may
have ' included tests on
WIWitting subjects as well;"
six subi&gt;rojects "involving
tests on unwitting subjects!'
The project, Turner said,
also included research on
hypnosis and combinations of
(Continued on page 12)

Hypertension classes
Sept. 7 41·9 are free
A series of claWs free of Telle who will use hyJ\ercharge Cor people with high tension in general as his
blood pressure (hyper- subject, and Robert Schmoll,
t~sion) will be held Sept. 7, 8 pharmacist, who will speak
and 9 at Veterans Memorial on the aspects of medication.
Hospital.
The second class on ThursAnyone who would be in- day, Sept. 8, from 5:30 to 8
terested in attending one or p.m., will feature _talks by
all three of the classes is Patty Thielen, nutritionist on
asked to call Nita Wisniski at diet and Duane Null, physical
the Meigs COWlty Health therapist on exercise . .
Department 992-3723 to make
At the final class to be hfild
reservations. Mrs. Wisniski · from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday,
may be contacted at the Sept. 9, Dr. Nan Mykel, PHD,
number from 8:30 to 4 p.m. associate physhologiSt, will
week days and 8:30 to 12 noon speak on stress and Mrs.
on Thursdays.
Wisniski who is the hyperAt the first class to be he!~ tensiv'e nurse for the COWI!Y,
from 6 to 8 p.m. on Sept. · 7, . will present the summary
speakers will be Dr. Lewis and conclusion.

·Approximately 65 union
of the Chris Craft
employees
Child's Name
Plant in Gallipolis were put
on a two week layoff
,.
Sex
Tuesday.
According to an unofficial
spokesman, the employees
~arents' Name
were given layoff notices
through Au_g. 15. Reason for
.
Address
the cutback was believed to
.
have been a lack of caStings .
.
Birth Date
Child ~ s Age
arid other parts. More layoffs
are expected Friday.
Employees laid off are
Please send entry no later than Aug. ll to
EAST MEIGS - The
eligible
to sign up for
Mrs • Eloise Wilson, 338 s. Fifth Ave.,
·
resignation
of Mrs . Bea
unemployment benefits.
Middleport. Ohio. Entries not accompanied by
Douglas
as
a
teacher Bl)d
Last March, the plant wa8
head
teacher
of
the Tuppers
the 50 cent entry fee will not be_accepted.
hit by a six week strike
. following the expiration of the Plains Elementary School
,
.
the winn . with only union's contract. :Richard was accepted by the Eastern
categories are to be ac- se1ect
ers
Roy, plant manager, coUld Local School District Board
companied by a 50 cent entry one boy and girl to be selected not be reached for comment of Education In a special
fee. Unless the fee ac- blue ribbon winners Jn each Tuesday or this morning.
session this week.
companies the application age group. All entries must
Mrs. Douglas has accepted
the child cannot be entered In be resident! of Meigs County
a job as a fuU. time principal
the contest: Handling the and winners will be selected
in northern Ohio . No
SPRAYING PLANNED
contest will be the Middleport by out of cowrty judges.
replacement was named, but
The Gallia County Health the board hopes to fill the poSt
Business and Professional
Mrs. Lucille Lelflteit, a
Women's Club and all ap- member of the Meigs CoWlty Department will be 1tpraying 11t ·its regular meeting next
pllcations are to be sent to Fair Board, heada the contest in Middleport for mosquito Monday evening.
Mrs. Elolle WUson, chair- on bellalf of the board. There control on Thursday evening.
The board also accepted
man, 331 S. Fifth Ave., were appro~tlmately 165 · The program is . later this the resignation · of June
entries Jn last year's contest. year due to equipment Grlftln who has been serving
- UUie Mill Clllltelt.
Middleport.
problems\~.
l!:atrlea In any of the
Out !'f COWlty )till•• will
as assistant c~n at the

.

which
are
funding
mechanisms used to conceal
CIA sponsorship of various
research projects.
-Reports on 33 additional,
tmrelated intelligence subprojects previously fWlded
Wider MKUL:rRA which have
nothing to &lt;\o 'With the mind
control experiments.
Research into the effects of
behavioral drugs and alcohol,
he said, included 17
subprojects . "probably not

. Board.accepts resignation
of
.
.
Tuppers Plains head teacher
'

Rlv erv'iew Elementary
School.
Hired by the board at the
special session were three
teachers including · Rita
Lincicome, originally of
Maine, who will teach French
and English at the high
school; Donna Lomen, who
recently received a Master's
Degree at Ohio ' University
who will teach vocal music in
the junior and senior high
schools and language arts In
the jWlior high, ( and Ralph
Wigal who has been teaching
Jn the Southern Local School
Dlstrtct, aa an elementary
teacher In the l!:aiRem
District. ""

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