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12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Aug. 17, 1977

chainnan's ree aloue was
over $2,000.
1
. The members ol the Meigs
Local Teachers Association
hope this money is not
wasted, and that the Board
will demonstrate their good
faith by seriously considering
the panel's finding~.
.
As a member ol the -Meigs
Local School Community, you
can help by tontacting your
. Board and Superintendent
and urging them to work
toward a prompt setl\t'ment.
If you have questions or
comments about the Community Communiques, please
con)act the president of the
teachers association, Charles Downie at 992-7739.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
- Wendell Hoover, 992-7379,
Virgil King, 992,2553, Keith
Riggs, 992-3155, Joseph
Sayre, 7t2-2138 and Jennifer
Sheets, H2-2972, and Supt. of
Schools, Charles Dowler, 9922153.

Breakdown ~f negotiations traced
ln this third Community Superintendent Dowler and

..
.

.

..

no member of the Board ol
Education has attended a
negotiating session for at
least four months. These

between both groups and the
Communique concerning the the Board of Education.
Board.
Meigs Local School District,
The Superintendent now
The impasse pan•l was to
we Will discuss the break· has a second assistant, hired
meet on August 16 to suggest
down of negotiations between in part to give him more time actions seem inconsistent a compromise to the Board
the teachers' association and to negbtiate. Yet at the final with the Board's desire to and the teachers' association.
retain local control.
The three-member panel
,the Board of Education.
negotiatin~ session on July
In addition, negOtiations consists of an advocate for
T. o d e m o n s t r a t e 26, the ont-&lt;&gt;f-town attorney
cooperativeness and good handled all of the discussion are stalled between the Board each side and an impartial
faith in the barga ining at the table. Not only has and the non-&lt;:ertified em- third member who serves as
process, teachers waited six . Superintendent Dowler with- ployees, which include bus chairman . The Impasse
weeks longer than us ual drawn from active par- . drivers, cooks, custodians, proceeding i~ expensive.
before
b e g i n n i n g ticipation In meetings wiih a.nd secretaries. That means Using taxpayers' money, the
negotiations, because the the teachers' team, but also negotiations are at impasse Board pays their advocate,
plus one-half of the chair·
Board was coping with
man's fee. The teachers'
weather and lfuel problems
association pays their hail of
early in the year. The fi rst
negotiation meeti ng wa s
.
.·
the panel's cost lot their own
March 3.
·
lunds .
The
teacher' s
PLEASANT VALLEY
VETERANS MEMORIAL
association had hoped to
When negotiations stalled,
DISCHARGES . - Donald settle negotiations at the
Admitted - Daisy Taylor,
the teachers ' negptiating
Roush,
Hartford ; Mrs. bargaining table to avoid
team suggested feder al Middleport ; Charles Snider,
Diaries
Johnston,
Selowlck, spending so much local
Helen
Holt,
mediation, which is free of Racine ;·
Alaska
:
Mrs.
Roy
Smith, money. Last year, the
Jo
Ellen
. charge and not binding lo Pomeroy;
Southside;
Janet
Donohue,
either side. However, this Lawrence, Minersville; Ruth
Gallipolis ; Ada Woch, Bufsuggestion was rejected by Boyd, New Haven ; Lillie
Steven Thacker,
Robinson , Rutland ; Ellie falo ;
Ashton;
Timothy
Sayre, N~w .
Watson, Coo lville ; Harold
(ConUn ed f
l
Gilmore, Pomeroy ; Joyce Haven; Gena Roach, Pomt ·
Pleasant;.
Stella
Neal,
Point
awa
re
that
an~thin~bl:'~/
had tra nspired:"
Ebersbach, Middleport; John
_atsaPnlt, saDet~taMrsRolDhnsss,
However, when Espositri sounded the alarm, the mansion
Casto, Pomeroy ; James Ppletn
l con1us1on,
· " the doc t or sa'd
Scally,·Middleport.
Hotchin ea p0 ·• 1 PI · 0 1. be. came a scene of "'~ta
(Continued fnlm !liRe I l
w
1.
son, Fotn
easan
"Everyone was rWling ljl'Oond trying to .call an ambulance."
show will be · held in center
Discharged :.... John Fisher, Ru
Esposito tried to give Presley mouth-to-mouth
fiel d along with the ob· John Blosser, Bessie Massie, P~~mont~ L utltz, B P~;n
e sanG'
es eMr uKc 'teh, resuscitation and Nichopoulos took over when he arrived at
servance of junior fair night. Marvin Burt, Ethel Roush,
App1e
rove ;
rs.
e1
2. 35
There will be twilight Michael Hubbard , Lois Herdman
Grimms Landing·
· p.m .
.
.
.
G IIi
"I am sure he was dead at that tune,
but we continued
M Le '. Oli
racing at 4 p,m. on Thursday Pauley, Ernest Triplett.
rsr.y · wS1ts e verM, Dea pott resuscitation -because his pupils were small," Nichopoulos
and the night grandstand
Fe r '
ac y
c rm1 '
'd, a dding th at a dymg
. person 's pup1'Is usua ll y dlla t e.
attraction at B_p.m . will be the
P O1·nt Pl easa_n1.• Ge or ge. sal During
the
seven-minute
trip by ambulance to Baptist
SWJShine Express, a vocal
Bat~s,
Sr
·•
Po
tnt
Pleasant,
·
Hospital,
two
technicians
tried
w revive Presley with a
an d instrumental music
Chn~topher
Matheny,
MI.
cardiopulmonary
resuscita'tion
machine.
"There was no
gro up.
Alto, Lester Hall ,_ Ap~ie response," said Charlie Crosby, one ol the technicians. A team
Gp rove
antd Shane Blam, Potnt of doctors at the hospital continued the eff.ort but gav.e up at
1easan ·
3:30p.m,
Our Interest Is
Nichopoulos returned to Graceland to tell Presley's father,
Greater For You
Vernon, that his son was dead. Vernon broke the news to
Presley's only child Lisa Marie 9 the singer's daughter by his

HOSPITAL NEWS

.....

Home-bred fillies, trotters win at county fair
Twelve races with plenty of
local interest was provided In
the first evening ol the
twilight h•rness raciqg at the
Meigs County Fair Wednesday.
Due to the large number ol
enttrn, IJorses were divided
into two divisions to make up
the 12 races In contrast to the
usual six.
In the first division of the
first and fourth races for two
year old filly pacers, Maggies
Pebbles,· owned by · Merrill
Eillott of Jackson was first in
the first race with Lori T.
owned by Richard Hackett,
London , taking second, and
American Ronda, owned by
Alvin and Neal Long of
Jeffersonv1lle coming in
third. In the fourth race,
American Ronda was first,
Lori T. was second and Bye
Belle Bye was third. This filly
is owned by Don Spencer,
Vincent ,
formerly
of
Pomeroy, who was also her
driver.
In the second and fifth
races for the two year old
fillies, placing first in both
races was Ohio Dell owned by
Dorothy Karr, Pomeroy, and
driven by Burdell McKinney,
Middleport. This was the top
animal of both divisions of the
two year old fillies and was
presented the trophy blanket
donated by the Dale C.
Warner Agency of Pomeroy.

ElVlS
• p res ley. . .

Grandstand

OH, WHY NOT REAL1-Meigs Counly Fairgoers wisbes.thls igloo ~ing crea\jld on the
Rock Springs Fairgr~unds Tuesday afternoon was the real thing. Tbe igloo was made from
foam tnsulatwn. Had 1t bee'! real, it would have been an escape from the beat.

i

u.;

Plea made for
clothing and

other supplies

-5.75%

The · Meigs Chapter of the
American Red Cross is
making a plea for ciothing
and other items lor Wayne
and Joyce Cleland whose
home burned recently in
Rutland.
'fhe family are ,presently
staying at 895 Brownell Ave.,
Apt. 5, Middleport.•
They are in need of sheets,
blankets and cooking utensils
as well as clothing.
Sizes needed for their three
daughters are, size three in
everything, shoe size 7 and
one·half; size five iq every·
thing , shoe size 10 and ·one-

On 90-Day

Certificates

....

5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
De posit .
$1 ,000 :00
Mi nimum .
Interest
P ay able
Quarterly .
A

subs tant ia l

penalty

is

inv ok ed on al l certificale
accounts wittulrawn prior
to the d'ate of maturity .

·.

Meigs Co. Branch

half; · size seven in everything, shoe size II and onehalf. For the husband, 32-30 in
pants, size 15 in shirts and
shoe size nine. For the wife,
slacks 13-14, blouses 34-36,
and size seven shoe.
Donations may be made by
calling Mrs . Cleland's
mother, Rose Stanley at 7422063 or Rhonda Dailey at 9492249 or take or send io their
new address . .

_@
Thf:.. Athens Countv
savings&amp;. Loan Co .

2'6 Second St .
Pomeroy , Ohio

t~l

Miller's office
will have
representatiVe
atMeigs fair
WASIDNGTON - Again
this year at the Meigs County
Fair, U. S. Representative
Clarence Miller will have a
representative from his office
located on the fairgrounds .
Miller's representative will
be available during the week
to provide assistance or infonnation on matters concerning lbe Federal Government anf'its programs.
The Congressman's office
will also _be conducting a
public opinion poll on current ·
national issues as well · as
providing a wide variety ·of
government publications and
· documents.
All area residents are
encouraged to stop by the
Tenth Congressional District

r·---------------..;--..

. ,''

... .
,,'

SUM LINE
VAC-

ClEANER

CIJnJI/ete .
WithAl/
AltiiJIJmtnls

PLUS

.

,

.' .

' •

.

. .

Area D eath s

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
1I

1
,

Myrtle (Wallace) Sheets
Myrtle (Wallace) s~eels .
9(), of Jackson, died at the
Wellston Nursing home
Tuesda y.. Aug. 16. at 12 noon .
She was born In Gall ia
County May 2, 1887, davghfer
of the late George and Lorena
Wallace .

divorced Wlfe, PrlSCilla. Also at the mans10n was Gmger
She was united In marriage
Alden, a 2&lt;1-year-&lt;&gt;ld Memphis beauty queen soon to be-lo Parker Shee-ts~on-Oct . 22.
Presley's second wife.
.
1908 . To this union , six
As word of Presley's death was flashed to the world radio chil dren were born ·. Her
.
.
.
.
.
,
•
husband and four children
stations around !be nation began playmg the stnger s records. are deceased . She is survived
Record shops, which in 22 years of the singer's career sold 400 by one daughter, Fern
million Presley albums, were jammed with buyers.
Sheets, Jackson ; one son.
Presley
rose
from
poverty
in
his
native
Tupelo
Miss.
and
Glenn Sheets, Ga Ill polls: one
•
1
·
'
brother, Far rts Wallace,
Memphis, where he cut grass and drove a truck to pay for ~he . Springfield ; ten grand cutting ofa record that eventually caught the ear of recording ch ildr en,
19
great executives.
· grand.chiiOren , one greatHe became a multimillionair~ but In recent years he also great-grandson and several
..
.'
.
'r fl . · step-grandchildren . nteces
became more and more reclusiVe, expresstng fear o ymg and nephews.
· and of the press of his fans . He rarely left his Gra,celand
Mrs . Sheets suffered a
mansion, even renting theaters and exoluding all but a lew stroke in 1,91.2 and had made
personal friends whenever he wanted to see a movie .
her home . w•th her daughter
.
.
.
at 3-41 Pearl St. , Jackson . She
Shll, h1s generoSity was legend.
Is a forme r resident of
He gave nwnerouscars to strangers, once giving a PontiaC Wilkesvi lle, Vinton County .
to one of his hospital nurSes with the apology that it would have
She suffered another stroke
been a Cadillac but " I know how expensive they are to keep." July 13. and was taken lo
,
Holzer Med ical Center, then

·::::::::::::::.-::::::::::==-:::::::::::--:..,...:::::::::-:·:·:&lt;:·:·:·::::::~:.:·:·:·:::·:::~:·:.-:...'!~::::::~::::~~::::::::;::...::*::::...~~

l'lN ews. . . in Brief~

-

Miners
(Continued Irom pase ll

1I

I

Jackson .
Friends may call at the
Mayhew Funeral Home.

Ja ckson

from

noon· Wed·

I nesday until 9 p.m .
will be conducted
moved to the Wellston at Services
1 p.m. Thursday with Rev.
Nursing home, Wellston .
Herbert 0 . Grimm and Rev .
She was a member of the
Christi an Baptist. Church NwmshOuse officiating .
Burial will follow In Vinton
near Wilkesvil le. She has
Noemorlal
attended the First Church of County. Cemetery in Gall· Ia
the Nazarene -since living in
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Jim Diehl ·to
head SEOAL

ELBERFELD$

\!!9E~gl~r

·-

Fall quarterly meeting of
the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League at Jackson
High School Wednesday nigh\
featured a constit&lt;~tional
amendment to permit the
host school to select and
invite the speaker for the ailloop banquet in both footba ll,
and basketball.
sChedules were adopted in
several minor sports, and
Charles Chancey, Meigs High
School · football coach and
athletic director, ·was · appointed to draw up · the
pigskin schedule fo~ 1978.
President Bob Bevins,
principal of Jackson High
School, conducted
the
meeting, which attracted 20
people, including three
women. The group elected its
new president, · Jim Diehl,
principal of _Meigs High
School. Bevins appointed Ed
Stewart, assistant prmcipal
of Galli&amp; Academy High
School, as acting secretary in
the absence of- Jim Mains,
Ironton.
The constitutional
amendment also eliminated
the $75 ceiling which has
prevailed until now as the
honorarium lor banquet
speakers:
In other actions :
-Boys' track meet will be
held in early May' at Athens
High School, on motion of Bob
Shamp, Athens principal.
-Mi ke
Burcham
distributed baseball
schedules.
- Adopted and distributed
girls' volleyball S&lt;!hedJies.
.-Adopted and distributed
girlS' basketball schedules.
- In · a survey, it was
determined that neither
Wellston nor Ironton will
have girls' track, and Meigs
may or may not have it.
-:Admission prices were
discussed, · most ·of ~hem
being $2 for adults. lrolilon 's
will be $1.75 at the gate, ln·
eluding students, but visiting

See

the new
styles .
in
Wrangler
coordinate
sportswear
Denim Jeans Blazers
Vests - Shirts -

T o p s

Gauchos.
Women's
Sportswear,
2nd floor.

return to work. But they
stayed away lor lear of
.
By United Press International
reprisals
from
roving
r COLUMBUS - A CONFERENCE OF SCHO.OL · pickets.
superintendents from throughout Ohio will be held in suburban . The West Virginia Coal
Worthington Friday, the Ohio Department of Education Association
reported
announced today.
Tuesday about half the work
" Complex issues confronting Ohio's schools necessitate . force in one small mine in
display
whileyear's
they Meigs
are
visiting this
immediate attention from aU school administrators," said northern West Virginia had
County Fair.
Superintendent of PUblic Instruction Franklin B. Walter. returned, but about 60,000 of
" Discussions among all superintendents will help prepare the ·state' s 66,000 miners
them to effectively meet the challenges of the new school remained_off the job.
year."
In Kentucky, two mines in
NOT WELCOME
UMW District 9 were
SALt LAKE CITY (UP!)
WASIDNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER'S choice to reported closed by roving
- Excommunicated Monnon
'
head
the FBI is. Frank M. Johnson . Jr., a tob.!cco-ehewing pickets, adding to the nearly
Douglas Wallace, who broke
up church meetings with his . federal judge from Alabama who authored a volley of tough 10,000 DiStrict 30 miners who
zeal lor equal rights, has been desegregation rulings a generation ago, government sources have been off the job since
June .
barred from visiting down· say.
About 8,000 Ohio miners
Administration officials said Tuesday night the months of
town Temple Square "at such
times as he would interfere searching for a new director to replace Clarence Kelley bad were reported out, With about
with the religious practices of ended with the naming ofJohnson, a man George Wallace once 4,000 Pennsylvania miners in
other people."
" called an "integratin ', carpetbaggin', scallawagin' liar." The three counties in the soft
U. S. District Judge official annoWlcement of the selection was expected later coalfields off the job.
John Guzek, District 6
Stewart Hanson Jr., Tuesday today.
president,
said the heads of
Johnson , 58, is a registered Republican from the same
issued $be restraining order,
but refllsed to grant a request district ip which Attorney General Griffin Bell once served as all local unions in his district
Freedom from Shrinking. wrinkling . puckerif'QI
that Wallace be prohibited a federal appellate judge. He hails from the Alabama hill have a greed to order their
You've got it with Wrangler's revolutionmy "Nofrom ever visiting the square, country, and bra sled Dwight D. Eisenhower for the presidency men back to work. Guzek,
Fault" fabnc . Durable pre-washed denim that's
world headquarters of the · in 1952. While there was np official reaction to the report, one whose life was threatened
FBI
official
told
UP!
"the
FBI
is
very
'pleased
that
a
Sunday,
condefllned
the
Sanfor-Sef'
treoted to keep its shape! These
church.
distinguished
federal
judge
has
been
selected."
roving
pickets.
Wallace
was
ex·
Wrangler flare jeans are perfect for today 's
"! don't know what they
communicated for baptizing
fashion pacesetter. Detailed with -accent front
NE'w YORK- LAwYERS FOR DAVID BERKO~, expect to gain," he said. "The
a black man in a motel ·
pockets. plus double-back riser and 4-needle
swinuning pool and ordaining the accused "Son of Sam," plan to rely on a defense of insanity, only thing they are doing is
band. Sizes. 5 / 6-18.
him
into
the
Moron if their client ever goes on trial for the murder of Stacy destroying the United Mine
Set your own pace anytime in this classic multiWorkers union.''
priesthood. According to Moskowitz, the last victim of the .44-caliber killer. .
color~d crew neck sweater. Long sleeves. Long
The 24-year-old postal worker, his hands manacled, was
Monnon &lt;loctrine blacks may
ta~en
from
his
bare
cell
at
a
Brooklyn
hospital
to
a
nearby
weanng
too . made of acrylic stripe knit that's
be baptized, but are barred
'HALF
PRICE
NOW
courthouse
Tuesday
for
his
arraignment,
where
he
pleaded
completely machine washable. Sizes S-M-L
fro'!' ordination.
Senior citizens may purInnocent w charges of killing Miss Moskowitz and virtually
CLOSED ALL DAYTHURSDAYFOR THE
mmrtmg her date. Berkowitz entered a simple Innocent plea to chase tickets to the Meigs
County
Fair
at
.
h
alf
price
at
MEIGS
COUNTY FAIR.
the charges, but his lawyers said the plea will probably he
the
senior
citizens
center
modified to innocent by reason of insanity later. If convicted on
until noon on Thursday. They
ASK TO WED
all counts, Berkowitz ~ould draw 2ij years to life 1n prison ,
cannot be purchased at the
Marriage licenses were
issued to Donald Ray
MONROEVILLE, OIDO - VOTERS IN THIS HURON ' gate.
Eichinger, 18, Chester, and County community rejected a 9-mill continuing school levy
Rebecca Jan Wilson,l8, Rt. 3, Tuesday night, and officials said the sch'l'!IS will be forced to
Pomeroy ; Robert Eugene close before the end of the year. Superintendent Donald Halsey
Major, 18, Rusbsylvania, will meet with the school board tonight, and will notify the
Ohio, and Vickie Lynn ·Moore, . state auditor's office of the 634-582vote against the levy,
Prices Good thru 8-21-77
· 19. Cheshire. ·
. . Halsey s,ajd the schools, which open Aug. 22, will remain
While Quantities · La.st
open until they run out.of money near the end of this year. The
Quantity Rights Reserved
levy, rejected twice by the voters this year, could also be .
We are no1 responsible for typographical erro'rs. Sorry, No Dealers
offered again in November. Voters have not approved a school
tax levy in the Monroeville District · since 1968. The fight
against this proposal was led by Mayor Clayton Lord, who
'FEELING GREAT;
wormed
a committee against increased taxes.
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UP!)
- First Lady Rosalynn
WAS!llNGTON - BOLSTERED BY SUPPORT from
Carter, who celebrates her
Gerald
Ford and Henry Kissinger, the Carter administration
50th birthday Thursday, is
nD__!"
confronts
head.-on tl)e an!VY criticism from opponents of.
.described as "feeling great"
just days after minor the new Panama Canal accord.
Ambassadors Ellsworth Bunker arxl Sol Linowitz, wbo
gynecological surgery.
1.5 oz.
negotiated
the treaties, were testifying today ori details of tbe
White ' House physician
"pr. William Lukash says accord in a hearing of the hostile House Merchant Marines and
Contains No
she is feeling great," said Fisheries Committee, a panel which has consistently opposed
Mrs. Carter's p~ess secretary plaris to transfer the waterway to Panama's controL "Tbe
timing of the signing and the annoWlcement appears to be a
Mary Hoyt.
Hexach!Qrophene
deliberate
move
to
bypass
the
Congress
during
the·
August
On Monday the first lady
. underwent surgery known as work break," said committee chairman John Murphy, D-N.Y .,
.
a n&amp;C. Mrs. Hoyt said the Tuesday.
"The
...
committee
is not prepared to watch lhe American
!l ocedure was "therapeutic"
canal
in
Panama
go
down the drain - or allow its
Please
o I ·Mrs. Carter is in good
constitutional
rights
to
be
violated," he said.
I lth.

Second in both the second and Newhart, takinij third. John
the fifth race was Bwyna A. Volo was winner of the
Byrd, owned by Merrill trophy blanket presented by
Elliott of JackliOn and third in Royal Crown Bottling Co.
both races was Morgan's · The eighth and 1Jth races
LeeaMe, owned 'by Richard were for the first division of
the two year old pacers. First
Morgan of Belpre.
In the third and sixth races in both races was Princess
lor three year old trotters, Time owned by Merrill Elliott
lirst division, 'Avalon Jack of Jackson and this horse was
owned liy Richard Morgan the winner of the trophy
was first In the third with The blanket presented by The
Marken Man, owned by Dally Sentinel. Second In both·
Ronald Newhart, Marietta, races was Avalon Hilda
taking ·second in both races . owned by Guy Malone,
and Salem Spook, owned by Waterford , and third in the
Michael Swatzel, Marietta, eighth was Passport Pete
also lonnerly of Pomeroy, owned by Alvin and Neal
and driven by Brooks Sayre, Long of Jeffersonville while
Syracuse, was third. First Travalon Mickey, owned by .
place in the sixth went to A. J . Price of llickborne was
Mary Porter, owned by third in the lith.
ln the second division lor
Kenneth and Mabel Junk of
the two year old pacers, Mid
Mt. Sterling.
In the seventh and loth American owned by Mrs.
races, second division fo r Sidney Spencer, Marietta ,
th ree year old . 'trotte rs, formerly of Pomeroy, and
Romilda R. owned by Byron driven by her son, Don,
Bailey, Pomeroy, and driven placed first in the ninth ' and
by Edward Humphrey, second in the 12th. Second in
Pomeroy, was first in the the ninth and third in the 12th
seventh with Buggs owned by was Mornor owned by Deane
William Hartman, Thorn· Northup, Marietta. Marken
ville, placing second and Miss Ohio owned by K. E. Owen,
Town Wise, owned by Ralph Marietta, was third in the
Guthrie taking third. In the ninth.
loth race, John A. Volo,
o·wned by Steven Porteus,
Pataskala, was first; Miss
Town Wise w3s second with
Marietta ,Girl, owned by Ray

',

'

NO. 88

VOL. XXVIII

sit Sweeps. As It Cleans"
o Allllchments Connect In AJiffy
.olnstant Rug Pile Adjustment
1 Big Disposable Bag
1 Toe-Tip Sw~ch

.

..

t

SO GREAT A DEAL
THAT WE'LL SAY
IT · AGAIN .

BOTH CLEANERS
FOR ONLY

JIM DIEHL
schools may sell student
tickets for grid games at
'Ironton for 75 cents each.
Five schools have th~ $2
price; Athens will remain at
$1.50. Wavedy so far is $1.50,
but it is considering $2.
- League schedules in
ninth-grade football . will not
include Logan. Waverly ,
Ironton lmd Wellston will not
play jayvee or reserve
football inside the league.
Ninth-grade basketball omits
Ironton and Waverly. Eighth
grade basketball does not
include Ironton, Waverly or
Meigs. Changes m non-teague
varsity football cards were
discusSed.
.,:.The
Bill
Thomas
Memorial trophy in football
and the Oliver Wood
Memorial
trophy
in
basketball · · were discussed.
-To~ Slat'er, assistant
principal ' . at
Jackson,
presented the league golf
schedule, which the loop
adopted . · . ·
-All schools, including
Athens,' wi.l,l have fast pitch
girls' softball teams next
year.
Next league meeting will be
held Nov. 16, at Jackson.

·CUFTON, W. Va. - A
permit for the construction or
a coal barge loading facility
near here has been denied by
the Director of the West
Virginia Air Pollution Control
Commission, (APCC) .
· Carl G. Beard, II, director
of the APCC , announced
today that the permit was
denied William F. Zuspan of
Mason on the grounds that
the permit application failed
to meet the requirements of
the APCC 's Regulations V
and XIII.
The permit application did
not contain measures to ·
control loss of coal dust
during transportation to the
facility, nor did the application contain assurances
that a private railroad
crossing would be constructed in accordance with ·
plans outlined in the application. .
Engineering evaluations-by
the APCC staff indicated that
the type of truck dumping
methods proposed in the
permit were not dependable
dust control methods when
l)Sed over an extended period
of time; also a lack of paved
'haulage roads within the
facility was found unacceptable.
Beard's announcement
today came after careful
consideration of the permit
application and the questions
raised during a pU,blic
meeting held by the director
In Mason on J nne 28, .1977.
The June . 28 flleeting was

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THCY'RE OFF AND RUNNING. An excellent program was

presented at the first evening ol twilight harness horse racing Wednesday
at the Meigs County Fair. Twelve races with plenty of competition were

......... ; -

- offered. Twilight racing will begin at 4 thls evening and on Friday at 4•.
The Eastern High School Band was on the grounds Wednesday.

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THURSDAY, AUGU ST 18, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

the second held at Wahama to the proposed construction.
High School in which The U. S. Corps of Engineers,
residents of Mason, Clifton Huntington District, conan-d
Middleport ,
Ohio ducted the earller meeting
(directly across the Ohio . and promised a decision
River) expressed opposition _later.

Two Presley
fans killed
By SUSft.!-! WHITE
drunkeness. He . was held
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!)- without bond. The juvenile
A hiHmd-run driver struck girls who were 1n the car with
and killed two teen-age girls · him were charged with being
and critically injured a third accessories to second degree
t6day outside the ornate murder. Their names were
mansiQn where rock 'n ' rock not released.
kfng Elvis Presley's body lay
Private serviCes were
awaiting buriaL
scheduled at 2 p.m. CDT
AboQt 2,000 mourners were today in Graceland, the 18maintaining an all-night vigil room mansion owned by the
·outside "ine gates of one-time $40-a-week truck
·Graceland Mansion, where driver who was born in ·a
Presley, 42, died 'l'u,teday of a Small frame house in Tupelo,
heart ailment, wru!fl the car Miss. and grew up in
swerved into the crowd.
Memphis.
. The driver of the 1963 Ford
About 80,000 crying, perFairlane, identified by police . spiring, jostling perSQns' had
as Treatise Wheeler, 18, gathered outside the mansion
GRAND CHAMPION BULL lN THE OPEN CLASS was won by Roscoe Burdette ~nd
Memphis,- was arrested by a · (Continued on page 12)
Earl Cox of Coolville. Shown with the winning animal is Burdette.
,·
policeman who chased him
about a block in a patrol car
before stopping him.
·
11
Lynch 'em, hang him up,"
the crowd shouted as Wheeler
and three young girl
passengers were taken to jail .
Opi!ri class judging has been completed in the rabbit and second in the New Zealands. Kathy Parker, Route 3,
Cans of beer, two empty, competition at the II4th annual Meigs County Fair. This yea r's Pomeroy, won a first in. the Flemish Giants; Brian Whaley,
Route 1, Shade; a first in the Arilcrican Chinchilla and in tbe
were foWld In the car.
rabbit display is one of the largest in tbe history of the fair.
open class, Carla Whaley , won a first and Brian-Whaley a
Names of the victims were
In the one year or older cla5ses, Judy Roberts, Route 2,
second.
;
not released. The Nasvhille Racine, took two first places in the New Zealand class with
.Banner reported the two dead Baverly Kerns, Route 1, Athens, taking a second, and Gene
girls were 19 years old and Whaley, Route 1, Shade, lakin~ a sec.ond. In the Dutch breed,
from Louisiana.
Beverly Kerns took first and Carla' Whaley, Shade Route
In criticai condition at at second. Beverly Kerns also won ftrst in the open class .
Methodist-South Hospital was
In the six months to one year class, MissKerns won a first
Annual conformation judging of horses anq ponies has
Tanuny Baiter, 17, believed
been completed at the Meigs County Fair.
to be from Missouri.
First place winners were J. R. Kennedy, Tuppers Plains,
Wheeler was cbarged with
with
Hilltop Stardust , Western mare , 3 or younger; Melissa
two counts of second degree
FUlton,
Griffin, Ga., on Tinte l;&gt;oddle Bars, Western mare, 4murder, drunk driving,
and
older;
Kathy FUlton, Griffin, Ga., on .Coolhand, Western
leaving the scene, reckless .
pony
pulling
The
Meigs
·
County
Fair
contest
at
the
gelding,
any
age; Bill Cole, Tuppers Plaimi on Phoebus,
driving · and
public
moved_into its third full day grandstand, the opj!n class Western stallion any age; Lisa Warner of Racine, on Suns)line,
of activities today under horse show in the centerfield . Western yearling; Bill Cole on Troubles B, Appaloosa mares :
sunny skies and cooler and the annual junior fair geldings, any age; Bill Cole on Bandit Talent, Appaloosa
E~NOED OUTLOOK
night observance in the hill stallion, any age; Tammy Kennedy, -Tuppers ·Plains, with
Saturday
through ' temperatures.
show ring.
.
Highlighting
activities
·
Little Chief Handrpint, pony under 48 inches; Mo.holta Dillard,
Moaday, fair Saturday and
Prizes
were
paid
In
the
first
today
will
be
t
wllight
hor~
Pomeroy, with Little Honey Bee, pony 48 td 56; Sherry Jdestad
SUJ!llay and a chance of
eight
places
of
last
night's
harness
racing
beginning
at
4
with Denmark's Supreme Son, English saddlebred mare or.
thundershowers Moaday.
pony
pulling
contest
in
three
this
evening
and
the
grandhorse, and Sherry Indestad with Atomic Aima , English
Highs will be Ia the upjler
weight
classes.
Owners
of
the
stand
attraction
at
8
this
saddlebred. yearling.
708 Saturday, warming to
evening will be a program by top four teams in each of the
the low or mid 8ls by
professional musical group, classes included : Lewis
Monday. Lows will be Ill
Sunshine Express, and by Jo- Clagg, Bob Callaway, Uoyd
the low or mid 50s SatUrday
Stewart and Jerry Arnold,
Jo, the singing clown.
aiKI Ia the upper 00s or
Winners of poull.ry exhibits at the annual Meigs County
ponies under 1060; Larry
Friday
will
again
offer
lower 10s by Monday.
twilight horse harness racing Nolan, Leonard Keirns, Jim Fair have been selrded.
Barbara Will, Route 3, Pomeroy, won a lirst in the White
at 4 ·p.m. with the horse McGuire and Son and Lewis
pulling contest at 8 p.m. a! Jordan,1050 and 13!i0 pounds; Leghorn · breed. James H. Bearhs, Route 3, Pomeroy, won
the grandstand. Th~ annual Jim McGuire, D. W. Higgins, firsts in the Barred Plytnouth ROcks and the.New Hampshire
BOARD TO MEET
The -Meigs Local Board of junior fair market steer, Joe Ewart, Junior Cremeans, Reds breeds. Christine Napier , Route 1, Bidwell, won a first
Education will meet. in lamb and pig sale will be at 7. ponies 13!i0 and 1650. Prizes and Bearhs, a second ln ' the Bantam breed. Steve Ohlinger,
started at $40 for first place Route 3, Pomeroy, won a first in the Guineas class and in the
special session , Friday p.m-.
t.ili&lt;l nigh! there were a and moved down to $5 for other recognized breed classes Bearhs won four first places
August 19 at 7:30 p. m.
and two second places with Ohlinger winning a second. In open
Purpose of the '("eeting is numb~r of activities un- eighth pl,ce. .
class ducks, C~istine Napier won a firsl place. . J.
derway
including
the
annuai
negotiation.
·

County Fair judging"results

1; Horses, ponies oonfonnation

Poultry competition

Limit 1

GRAND atAMPION STEER in the 4-H division was won by Paula Miller

Jr. and Mrs. Byroo Miller.

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Third day cooler

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a

BAN ROLL-ON
ANTI-PERSPIRANT

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• : 51.&gt;1«

Clifton coal
tipple denied

IN POMEROY

• "It Beats. A

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daugh~r ol

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'3- The DailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. l8,19'l7

Texas climbs into first place
in AL West after 6-5 triumph

2- The Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug.!8, 19'17

Carters together

Johnson
got no
•
promises

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Repot'ler
•
THURMONT, Md. (UPI )It was togetherness day lor
President Carter's family, as
son Olip reunited with his
wile alllj infant son to help
celebrate the First Lady's
birthday at the mountaintop .
presidential retreat.
A ~~ surprise " was in store
for Rosalynn Carter, who is
• 50 today. according to White
Hous e aides who were
By ED ROGERS ·
serve the full!l).year tenn as keeping details of . the
. WASIDNGTON (UP!)
FBI director. Johnson was celebration secret but who ·
Attorney General Griffin Bell offered nothing beyond that indicated ihat the President
insists "no side deals" were and Bell said "it would shock had done the planning.
The Carters had been vacamade to persuade U.S. me" if Johnson used the jQb
District Judge Frank M. to step up to the Supreme tioning at Camp David lor a
Johnson of Alabama to take Court two or three years from couple of daya with their
daughter-in-law Caron, 26,
the job of directing the FBI now. ,
alter he had refused it lor
_ Johnson was not offered and her 6-month-old son
any retirement favors. His James Earl Carter IV when
eight months.
Bell, who bypassed the retirement pay will be little they got the word from lbeir
cl)oices of an unprecedented more than half as much as he son Chip, 'll, that he would be
search committee that had would receive by remaining joining them.
Chip's arrival signaled -an
checked 230 prospects and on the bench, although
apparent
reconciliation with
interviewed 48 of them, has Johnson does ge( a salary
revealed that President boost _ from $54,500 to his wife after what friends
described as " marital
Carter offered Johnson the $57,500.
job last Decem.ber and was
_ Johnson's reluctance to troubles." Chip has been
turned down.
leave the bench and c&lt;me to living with friends in a
Bell also had bied vainly to Washington was based in part Georgetown apartment for ·
persuade Johnson, an old on the health of his mother. the past week.
The White House said Chip
friend of both the President who was confined to her home
will
take his wife and son to
and attorney general, to be last December and required
Plains,
Ga., to live next week.
Bell's deputy. But Johnson constant nursing care lor a
Although
the Carter's
refused to leave the bench on cerebral hemorrhage.
youngest
son
Jeff also
which he had served for 22
_ It was by pure chance
celebrated
his
birthday
today
years.
· that Bell learned from deputy
Then how did Bell finally associate attorney general - his 25th - he is on a
sign Johnson up at a Newnan, Frances Green·, a former law vacation trip with ljis wife
Ga., motel where they clerk of Johnson's, that the Annette in Atlanta and will
conferred in public for two mother's situatioll was better telephone his mother from
hours
without
being and Johnson might be having there.
Carter has been in
recognized?
"second thoughts.''
seclusion
since he arrived at
"I told her not to say
"There were no side
Camp
David
Monday, but is
deals," Bell insisted in a , anything about it," Bell said.
in
touch
with
developments
White House news conference He said he quietly got in touch
and
today
reviews
a tOO-page
Wednesday in which he with Johnson again and the
report
from
Comptroller
of
formaJiy announced the favorable response answered
Currency
John
Heimann
on
selection. Bell told reporters: one of the biggest problems
Bell has faced as attorney the multimillion dollar
banking transactions of his
- Johnson, 58, agreed to general.

Today's

•

Sport Parade

close friend and confidant
budget director Bert Lance.
Lance has said he has " not
done anything wrong" and
was confident the report
would put him in the clear.
carter met for nearly two ·
hours with Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance and National
Security Affairs adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski' on
foreign affairs generally and
Vance's forthcoming trip to
Olina specifically .

Meigs
Property
Transfers
ROdney Howery, Marilyn
1:-iowery

to

Sammy

Louis

Darst. Sherry · Darst. 23
acres. Columbia .

Frederick C. Johnson ,
Rosalie R. Johnson to
Buckeye Rural Elec. Coop,

Inc ., Ease ., Bedford.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPl j!pol'll Editor.

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Death cut short intended wedding

Charles ·
D:
Burke,
Rosemary Burke to Buckeye
Rural Elec . Coop Inc .. Ease .. ~ NANcrC. ALBRnTON
Columbia . .
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) Brenda J. Weller, Stephen Elvis Presley had given
K. Weller to Ronald Leon
Jordan, Teresa A. Jordan, Ginger Alden, his fiancee, a
!:karat diamond ring in
Lots, 73 , 74, Rac ine.
George Schuler , dec. to January and the couple
Daisy Mar ie Saynders, Cert . decid!ld only hours before he
for !rans .. Salisbury.
Kathleen Nally , James . died to be married Christmas
Day,· her mother said late
Nally to Pomeroy Forest
Products , Inc.,
t i mber ,
Wednesday.
Orange .
said her 21).yearPomeroy Cliffs , Ltd .. oldJo Alden
daughter
was
Pr ime Bu ilders of Ohio Inc. to
Ohio Power Co.. Ease .. "heartbroken," but slowly
Pomer.oy .
recovering from the shock of
finding Elvis' body on the
floor of his spacious bathOn this day in history:
dressing room in Graceland
In 1856, the U.S. Patent mansion Tuesday.
Office approved condensed
Presley's personal
milk but doubled it would physician, Dr. George
ever be of much commercial Nichopoulos, had reported
use . ·
earlier that Presley's road

SoViet ship first to sail

manager, Joe Esposito, had
discovered the body.
But Mrs: Alden. indicated
that may have been said to
protect the young woman.
"She's holding up, " Mrs.
Alden said. "She's one person
who can get herself under
control. But she's very, very
heartbroken."
Ginger's mother said her
daughter was watching
television at Gra~land when
Presley told her he was going
to relax in the dressing room
and read a book. Sh~ said her
daughter dozed off and awoke
about 1 p.m. 1
"She knocked on the bathroom door and did not get a
response," Mrs. Alden said.
"She found he had fallen out

•

WEST SPRINGFIELD, remember Presley, who died
Mass. (UP! ) - Elvis Presley of an apparent heart attack
was " happy about successu Tuesday.
He said Presley was "a
at first, but then "a s~dness
Pole Wednesday at 1 a.m. crept in'' and he ' 'became gentle hoy, mischievous and
Greenwich Mean Time (9 angry at the world," singer most generous."
p.m. EDT. Tuesday), the · Perry Como says,
"Elvis Presley was the
official Tass news agency
Como, who is appearing in biggest name in- show
said.
·
West Springfield this week, business and we're all going
"The dream of generations took time out Wednesdav to to miss him," Como said. ur
of seamen arid polar
researchers came true,"

T~;::~~

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

On treating arthritis
By Lawrenm E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- Yo\D'
commel)ts on Motrin surprised me. I went to my doctor for
arthritis in my knees (real
bad), He gave me Motrin, I
supposed, to help cure it. He
is a man of few words ljlld
didn't comment. Your articles said it is strictly a pain
reliever. I would like to have
your Health Letter number
8-3, · Aspirin and Related
Medicine that you mentioned
in your columnabout Motrin
to find out more a bout these
medicines.
Why is it so many doctors
will not use cortisone shots in
the knees for relief? When my
husband (now dead) had
, painlul knees from arthritis
his doctor put cortisone in
them and he had great relief
for a long time but my doctor
does not do that.
Thank you for your colwnns in our paper.
.
DEAR READER - You
shouldn't be so S!llllrised that
Motrin-is just a pain reliever
in th~ treatment of
degenerative arthritis. The
truth is there is NO CURE for
osteoarthritis (degenerative
arthritis). In rheumatoid ar·thritis .cureS are rare and
may simply be remiss.ions of
the disease. The purpose of
treatment for the common
fonns of arthritis is lo help·
control the disease if possible
or to relieve pain so the per·
son can live a more normal
life.

Aspirin, Tylenol, Motrin
and all of these medicines used in the treatment of
osteoarthritis (degenerative
arthritis). serve only to
relieve pain. You may have
seen TV ads stating that
aspirin relieves inflanunation. That is a half-truth. Its
anti-inflammation action is
ar ·'lplished with much
•ar ger doses than is used to
' relieve pain. The common
amounts of upiriri and
related · medicines used
withrl\t a doc:tort supervlsioo do not have any effective

anti-inflanunation action at
all. Nevertheless ; these
medicines remain the best
medicines available in the
management of osteoarthritis.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 8-3 that
you requested. Others who
want this issue can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
This issue contains list of
cornrnonly used medicines
that contain aspirin. This is
important to anyone who has
a problem taking aspirin for
any reason. ·
One difficulty people have
in understanding what doctors do is thinking that all
joint problems are arthritis.
Actually, arthritis involves
the bone and cartilage. Inflammation of the membranes around a joint or the
tendons is bursitis and tendonitis. These · are often
helped with cortisone Injections because of its antiinflammatory action .
Because osteoarthritis is not
an inflanunalory disease but
. a degeneration of bone and
cartilage simple · os~oar­
thritis is not helped 'with cortisone injections. This means
your husband probably had
an inflanunatory process in
his knees and not just ar·
thritis.
Cortisone is not used lor
osteoarthritis but it iS used in
selected cases of rheumatoid
arthritis. This may provide
temporary relief without inducing any real cure and may
even cause undesirable side
effects. So, it has to be used
carefully in selected cases
that CaMOt be better treated
with other medfcations.
(Because of the volume of
mail Dr. Lamb cannot
answer.your letters personal·
ly but he will answer
representative letters of
general intetest in his col·
umn.)
4

a

State Fair trip
bemg
• annormced

first time in the
history of sea navigation, the
ship crosse!l the massive ice
cover of the central polar .
basin and floated freely up
toward the very top of the
·
·
globe," it said.
The captain of the 461).footSoutheastern Ohio Day at planning to attend the State
long nuclear.Powerec:l- ship, the Ohio Slate Fair has been Fair on another date.
U.S. Kuchiev, and Soviet set for Friday, Aug. 26, for
This year at the fair wil'l be
Marine Minister T.G . the eight counties in Area 8 a new leatu're, a dance
Guzhenko, sent a message Agency on Aging.
contest from ·12 to 12:30.
from the ship to Soviet
Two Greyhound buses have Entertainment will also be
President Leonid Brezhnev been chartered for the held during the day ...anyone
reporting the feat.
Center, leaving for the lair at wishing to participate in the
"The sailors, scientists IU)d 8 a. rn. Cost this year will be dance contest or the talent.
pilots - participants in tbe $6 for seniors over the age of show, contact Susan Oliver at
cruise - dedicate their 60. There has been money the Center.
victory . to
the
60th aUocated to the Area Agency
Money lor the trip to
anniversary of the great on Aging to pay half of the Columbus must be received
Sociatisl revolution," Tass cost of transportation to the by August 23. No relundi will
fair for sen.ior citizens over be made unless there is
S8l'd•
Affierkan explorers were age 60, therefore the cost for someone to take your place.
the first to reach the North this trip will be quite a bit Only 90 persons can go on the
Pole, which has no land under lower than last· year.
chartered buses so get your
it and is only a floating mass
The $6 includes trans- money in early.
of ice. The South Pole has portation and admission to
If less than 80 persons turn
land under it.
the fairgrounds. Anyone in ·money for the trip one of
Robert E. Peary in 1909 riding the buses under the the chartered buses will be
reached the pole over the ice age of 60 must pay full fare . cancelled, allowing only the
in a dog-pulled sled and in for a total of $11. Tickets are first 40 persons who paid to
1926, Rear Adm. Richard E. available at the penter lor ride on the first chartered
Byrd and Floyd Bennett flew half price admissiOn of $1.50 bus;.
over it.
to Senior Citizens if you are
The American nuclear- .
· powered submarine Nau.tilus
reached the pole, sailing
under the ice, in 1958. Its
voyage was followed by 1 . . Letten ~f opinion are welcomed. Tbey abould be 1
another U.S. submarine, 1 · lesa than 300 wordo lang (or be aubject to recmctlon by · 1
which found a break in the ice 1 the editor) alld muit be signed _with the signee'• ad- I
and surfaced at the pole In I dre... Names may be wltbbeld upon p!bUcatlon. I
1960.
However, on request, names WID be dlacloeed. Letten
The crew of the Artica
1
1 sbould be In good taate, addrealng luues, Dot per·
Wednesday lowered a metal 1
sonalltlea.
1
plaque bearing the Soviet
~
\
state emblem, name of ·the. I
AJ~ ·
ship, its coordinates and the
date onto the ice at the
ge.ographical point of the
.I
I
pole, Tass said.
I
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THEDAILY SENTINEL
DEV!TI'ED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Enc. Ed.

2166. Editorial Phone 992-2157.
Secund ·elMS! poslage J*id

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Pum~roy ,

Ohio,
• N11tlonal advertising represe~
l.ative Ward - Griffith Company,
Inc., BottineJU and Ga11a~her Oiv.,
757 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
10017.
~ubtlcription rates: Delivered by
clirrier where Hvail.ilble 75 cents per
week . By Motor Route where cnr.ier
,tervil'e nut avaJU.Die, One ,munth,
$3.25. By mail in Ohio and W. Va.,

One Year, $22.00; Sil munth.'l,

$7.00;
monlh! .
$7.50 ,
Sunday

.

feel sorry for the man . I don't
think he lived two years as
himself. At first he was happy
about success. but as the
years wore on, a sadness
crept in because Elvis was
unable to do the things he
wanted to do.
" Maybe· he was too
protected. Who is to say? One
tl)ing is certain, though, his
death is a tremendous loss
whether you liked him or
not.''.
Como said "it was only of
late" that Presley "became
angry at the world."
"He
wouldn 't
go
anywhere," Como said. 411t

was as though he had become
completely frustrated with
his life.''
Como said he remembered
Pr~sley as "a good boy ... a
fantastic person and perfor-

"He (Presley) gave her a
diamond Jan. 26 but they
wanted to keep it quiet until
the time was right," she sajd.
1
'He was going to annoWlce
their engagement Saturday
night (Aug. 27) when his tour

came here."
While at the mansion
Wednesday, Ginger again
mel Priscilla Beaulieu
Presley, the former wife of
the rock 'n' roll idol and. the
only woman he ever married.

Dear Sir:
.
Can you. explain wily the local sch~l board and the
superintendent are paying a lawyer from CUyahoga Falla, one
of the richest school districts in Ohio, to do their negotiating?
How can it be that approximately $10,000 w~s sent there last
year and now it is beginning to go there again? Our local
economy could use this money.
The Meigs Local Teachers' Association has been trying to
establish negotiations with the local board since February,
1977. With two assistants, Superintendent Dowler should have'
been able to d.evote enough time by the July deadline to have
made progress in these negotiations. Instead of progress,
negotiations have reached impasse. The lawyer. has been hired
and progress stymied.
As a parent and taxpayer, I want local money to stay in
Meigs County and negotiations to progress smoothly.. You, as ~·
taxpayer, shoufd fook into this inauer carefully. Pl.e"!'t lett
your board and teachers' organization kn;.. your fee~p. A. S. Radford, Route 3, Pomeroy.

mer.''

"I remember Elvis found
out one of the members of his
band was having trouble with
his car and he went out and
bought every member a new
Mercedes," Como said. "J::ie
was that way. There was
always that gentleness about
him and many times he would
show himself to be naive:''
Como said he was "close to
him and it was a shock when I
was told the news of his
death. Our friendship goes
hack to before he did his first
show .' '
Como , who has sold
millions of records himself,
said Pr~ley was the "biggest
man in the record"'"lling
business."
"He sold more records than
the next 10 best singers,"
Como. said.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

"She hugged Ginger and
told her how muciJ she knew
he loved her," Mrs . Alden
said.
Ginger and Priscilla had
met twice before when Elvis
was hospitalized for flu and
colon ailments and at
Christmas last year, Mrs.
Alden said.
Lisa Marie Presley, the 9year-old daughter of Elvis
and Priscilla, sat for a while
in Ginger's lap at the private
family wake Wednesday
before thousands of fans were .
admitted to view Presley's
body.
"Lisa loved her," Mrs.
Alden said.
"Elvis told me that when he
first saw Ginger that God had ·
led her to him. He said he had
finally found wliat he had
been searching for."
For Frldor, Aug.

Use biush on rug fringe
POLLY'S PROBLEM .
DEAR POLLY - I have two
dark red Oriental rugs ·
(Sarouk) with light-colored
fringe. How can I clean thefringe on these throw rugs? •
A.H.
DEAR A.H. -such fringe is
usually cotton. A professional
cleaner of Oriental rugs suggested that you use a small
brush and wash the fringe
witli water, to which you have
added a light detergent. II the
fringe is very dirty a small
amount of bleach might be
added to the water but only a
small amount. Rinse with
clear water and the brush.
Comb out fringe while wet but
handle gently. Do not forget
to protect the floor under the
fringe.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY •- My Pet
Peeve is with the manufacturers of b;lby shoes. They
should put some type of rubber or other protection
around the toe and front of
,·such white shoes as the
youngsters ·scuff the leather
off and polish does not really
cover. -DELORES.
DEAR POLLY- Like R.l}.
I also had a prQblem with
sewn on the iruride of cut
. glass vase arid finally tried a
tablet for cleaning false tee~
and it worked so well I now
keep them oo hand. Drop a
tablet in the vase, run wann
water in it, let it bubble and
clean away. I bave used this
on ~era! pieces of antique
glassware that were cloudy'
-VIRGINIA.
DEAR POLLY- For years
I have used brown paste shoe
polish on my scratched fur-

11, 1177

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

a

Aug. 19, 1171
. This co ming year you may sur·
pris e you·rself by the depth and
breadth of your tt1 1nking . Don't
be int imidated by the scope of
your 1dea s. They' ll be practical
a nd POSSi b le_

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 221 Be
hOpeful today if you 're an- ·
ticlpatinO some .g ood news. U
may not arrl'le at the time expected . but ~~ should be th-ere
shortly thereaf1er . Find out more
abou t yours ell by sending for

Scioto resultS
1

your copy of Astra -Graph Letter :
Ma il 50 cents for each and 'a
long . self-addressed . stamped
envelope to Astro -Graph. P.O.
Box 489 . Radio City Station. N,Y.
'&gt; 10019 Be sure to specl'y your
bl r1h sign .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 A
powerful contact may warit to
see you today about something
that re ~ ates to your career ,or in- · ~·
come. By all means . make the .,
lime to see him .
23-0cl. 231
Shou ld you commit your5;elf to a
new venture today. be very optimistic. If yOu think pos itively ,
w
the resu lts ~ill be the same.
LIBRA

:

Letter to Meigs Local taxpayers

ROBERT HOEFLICH"
Ctly Ectitor
Published daily ext.'ep\ Saturday
by The (fllo Valley Publishing Cutnany, Ill CQW"t St., Pomeroy, Offio
45769. Businesal Of(ice Phone 992--

S11 .50; Three months,
Ellewher:e $26.00 year; Six
$18.~;
Three m8Jlhs,
Sub!k.Tipllon price inllu&lt;k!s
Tune&amp;-Senlinel.

help."

.

over the top of the world
smaSh its way to the top of the
world through the ice.
The 25,000-ton Arctica, the
world's most powerful icebreaker, arrived at the geographical point of the North

of a chair on his knee, with his
lace in the shag carpeting .
"His head was turned to
one side and his face was ,
purplish red. She called for AI
Strada, a wardrobe man, for

Sadness overtook singer
Presley
.
.
.

· MOSCOW
(UP!)
American explorers were the
first to reach the North Pole
over and under the ice, but a
Soviet atonnic icebreaker hasbecome the first ship to

wednesday night for the annual pony pulling contest held
as the grandstand attraction .

SOME OUTSTANDING PONY TEAMS such as this
'matched white team owned by Denzil Higgins, St. Mary's,
W. Va ., were on hand at the Meigs County Fair

NEW YORK (UPI) - Tom Seaver comes back "hotne"
Friday night and if he's wondering what kind of reception he'll
get, I think I can tell him .
Oh sure, there'll probably be a few mixed boos here and
there, but by and large, the Mels' fans at Shea Stadium figure
to give him the kind of thunderous welcome he'll remembe r
the rest of his life.
·
The advance ticket sale for this weekend 's series with the
]teds is one good baroineter and the memorable ovation at
Yankee Stadium Seaver received when he stepped forward to
take a bow in a Cincinnati unilorm at last month 's All-Star
game is another.
Seaver , now 13 and 5, has won six games and lost two since
being traded to the Reds in mid--'une. They're delighted to
have him. The Mets are equa ny happy with their end of the
deal, especially over ha ving come up with outfielder Steve
Hende rson, whom they call "Stevie Wonder ." Henderson has
been hitting .321 since the Mets got him, producing 37 RBI ,
eight homers and four game-wianing hits.
Doug Flyan, another who came from the Reds, has been
doing all right as well, and with pitcher Pal Zachry showing
some signs of corning around, and Dan Norman developing
down on the farm , M. Donald Grant hasn 't had any need to .
awlogize lor the deal.
In a sense, Grant is still trying to make the team .
He's board chairman of the Mels and senior partner in
Fahnestock and Co., a successful Wa ll Street brokera ge house,
but often gives me the impression what he'd love to do most is
ge l out there and pitch or play first base-.
Consciousl y or otherwise , Grant is strongly influenced by his ·
background - the same wa y ail of us are. His lather, Michael
Grant, was so good as a professional hockey player in
Montreal, he captained three different Stanley Cup teams and
wound up being voted into Hockey's Hall of Fame.
Grant says he came to this country from Canada specifically
to get away from the hockey element he was brought up in ,
presumably w prove w everybody he could make it on his own
in some totally unallied field. He has done that.
As 10 per cent stockholder in the Mets, Grant is a part owner.
He isn't alone in relating so personally w his team and its
players. Other owners feel and have felt the same way he does.
The late Tom Yawkey was one . He'd come out to Fenway
Park early before the gates opened, put on a swealshirtand a
pair of baseball panls a nd play pepper with a couple of h1s Red
Sox employes.
Guss1e Busch, hoard chairman and president of the
Ca rdinals, used to p_ul on a uniform and shag fly halls m the
outfield during spring training. Privately, some of the
Ca rdinal players laugped about it, amused by th_e obvious
attempt of an older ma n trying to recapture his youth.
Don't for get Ted Turner , either. He wanted to see thing.s for
himse lf he said . So he furloughed his manager, Da ve Bnstol,
earlier 'this season, got all decRed out in full uniform and
tem porarily took over the managership of his Atlanta Braves.
Ballplayers call these individuals "frustrated ballplayers:"
Somewhere along the line, every man with any red blood rn
his veins nurses a desire w get down there on the field and
show what be can do. And when he realizes he cannot possibly
play anymore, he adopts some particular player and roots for
him. This is known as common form of identification, where
th e guy in the gra ndstand identifies himself with the player on
th e field .
All this naturally is in the spectator 's Ol"Jl mind, which is just
as well because if they eve r let him get down there on the field
and actually pla y, he'd probably get hurt. Not only physically,
but emotionally as well.

(Sop!.

niture and it really works. SCORPIO (Oct; 24-Nov.221 Try
Apply according to the direc- · not to be ~Jnduly concerned
tions for shoes and be sure to about a mauer over which you
polish with a soft dry cloth ha:\le l!tt le control. Other forces
are at work , doing exactly as you
after the potish as set. ·
· As longer dresses are now would _
in style I have had to lengthen SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
my slips and half-slips. I a!&gt;" 21) Try to fit Into your schedule
today any deali ngs with large
plied lace at the buttom, used corporations
or legal matters.
the zigzag stitch on my The aspects favor yoU. The outmachine for sewing it on and come should be plejlsing.
have been saved the cost of CAPRICORN (010. 22.Jon. 111
buying new ones.
.
Commercial ventures favor you
Fingernail potish remover today . Devote your energies to _
will remove the acjhesive left anything in this line, There is
when labels are removed small guesllon ol a profitable
from many' articles. Test a outcome.
tiny spot first to be sure it AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-fob. 111
takes kindly to the remover. You 're very strohg in one-to-one .
relationships today. The more
-MRS. T.R.
important the person . the
DEAR POLLY - I have greater the benefits you can
finally found a simple way to derive.
·
remove gelatin salads from PISCES (Fob. 20-March· 20)
molds without dipping them · Joint \lentt..~res are your bag to- .
in hOt water or putting wet day . Most rewarding are th~
towels around them. I simply w~ere you team up ·with ,
loosen around ·the edges, someone who.. ability In the
place the mold on the dish to tield Is greater tl'i~n yours.
be uaed for serving and then ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll111 Thla
hold my hair blower so it Is one of those days when you
n do fun things wHh people
blows on the mold. The salad ca.
you enjoy betnQ around .
drops out with none of it Somehow you'll keep up with
melting. -claire.
your work, too .
DEAR CLAIRE- Have you TAUIIUI (April 20-Mar 20)
ever tried lightly "greasing" Strike while the iron 11 hot- and
the inside of your mold with it's siz:zllng today . If you have a
mayonnaise before pt&gt;uring in chance lor personal gain, close
the ge!Jtin lllixturt'. I find the deat quickly.
this works great and salads GIIMINI (M., 21""- :II) Peo·
COIJH! out perfectly. - POL- pie turn you on tpday and you do
the aame thing to them , You
LY.
he.., e way ol livening up 1he
Polly will send you one of ,cor"';
where you are .•
her' sjgned thank·you
newspaper coupon clippers if CANCIII ~~- 21-.lulr II)
with whom you - she uses your favorite ·Those
ttH oro lucky lor you • • · If
Pointer, Peeve ot Prblem In thay wont to do something
her column. Write POLLY'S spacial for you. acc•Rt It
·
1
POINTERS In care 1/l this . graciouety.
1NI:WIPAPtR~~"t.1
newspaper.

CO LUMBUS (UPI I - Old
Ganga Mine covered the
Scioto Downs' oval in record
time Wednesday night to win
the featured eighth race.
The winner , ilriven by Ben
White, covered th·e mile in
2: 01 2-S, to.lower the national
.season record for two-yearold pacing geldings ori a fiveeighths mile track by one.lifth of a second.
Old Ganga Mine, who set
the previous re cord last
month at Scioto, led all the
way and finished three
lengths ahead of O.A.R,
returning $2.60, $2.40, $2.20.
Poppin Fresh was third.
The ninth race · trifecta
combination of 14-10 was
worth $1,825.80.
A crowd of 4,239 wagered
.$281,970.

Thistledowns
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP! ) - Clendenin, with
Germane Vasquez in the
irons

ran wire to wire

Wed~esday to win the
featured eighth race at
This tledown, covering the
one mile in· 1:39 4-5 over a
good track .
The wilmer paid $8.60, $5
and $3. Nastic placed and
.
Shakertown showed.
The 6-1 combination of
Bysban and Fort Meigs returned $510.60 on the daily
double and there were 260
wirming tickets on the 1..:;.2
grouping of Hasta Larista,
Dynastic Nick and Ye Dee m
the ninth race trifecta, each
worth $192.60.
A crowd of 4,772 bet
..
$469,294.

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Jim Sundberg blasted a
two-out sjngle in bottom of
the lOth inning Wednesday
ni ght to give th~ Texas

' 'll woke us up ,~' said Texas

Rangers a 6-5 vicwry over the
Toronto Blu&lt;' Jays .
Trailing, 5-2, entering the
eighth, the Rangers caught a
glimpse or the scoreboard :
seattle 3. Minnesoto 2.

Ma nager Billy Hunter. "We
we~ awfully flat, tired from
making the long trip home
(from Milwaukee ). We got
away witi) some things that

PONY CHAMPS - The Middleport Americans Puuy League baseball
team , sponsored by the merchants of Middleport , completed the season
with a perfect 16-&lt;l record. Showing of( their first place trophies are, fr ont
row , 1-r, Terry Wayland, Jack Humphrey , Jeff Wayland, Bobby
Duckworth, Chris Judge, Steve Carson, Rick Ebersbach , Tracy Pope,
Danny Hysell, Jeff Peckham; second row, Billy Elkins, Brill Dodson,
Terry Gardner, Davey Hysell, Roger Carson, Tony Scott , Larry Byer,
Steve Fife, John Smith and Mike Miller. Coaching the team, not only in

Sports
.transactions BASEBALL
Major League Standingl
By United Press International
National LeagUe
By United Press international
East
Wednesday
W. L Pet . GB
Baseball
72 45 615
Ptl i la
Se attle - · Purchased th e
69 51 .575 4 '12
Pi tt sbgh
contract s of lhi rd .baseman Jose
66 51 .56,4 6
El Guezebal , shortstop Houst on · Chica g o
66 54 .550 7 1h
St . Louis
Jiminez and pitcher Jose A,lfaro
54 65 ..454 19
Montrea
l
!n the Mexican League for
N ~w York
49 69 .41.5 23 11?
ass ignment to Cla ss · AA A c lubs .
Toronto ~ Announ ced reserv e
cat cher Ern ie Wh i tt was pl,ac ed

on th e \S .day disabled list and
lf kel y w i lt be lost for the r est of

the season because . of a
d isloc ated tendon if'l h is left
foot ; r ecall ed cat cher . R i c~
Cer one from Charleston .
Hockey
Ch icago - Si gned left w i ng
Bob " Battlesh ip" Kelty, for mer ly with the Pittsburgh
Pengu ins .
- Cleveland Acquired t he
rights to W iscons in cente~ Mi~e
Eaves from
St .
LOU IS
m
ex·change for defen seman L en
Fr ig .
Detroit - Signed forwa r ds
Dan Gruen and AI McDonough .
·wa s h 1 n g ton - Acquired
center w~tt McKec,hn ie and a
th ird -round draft pi ck in 1978,
second -round pick in 1.979 ahd
cash from Detro it as compe!1sa ·
tion for tree agent goa ltender
Ron Low and the Caps 1 t hird
1979 pi ck.
Pro· Football
Green Bay - Signed qu~rter ·
back Lynn Di ckey t o a s~r 1 es of
five one-year contracts.
Detroit - Signed free a gent
kicker lan Sunter .
Pittsburgh - Traded often ·
sive tack le Dan Audick to
Cleveland for a future draff
choice.
College Basketball
· Georgia State - Annou11ced
Roger Couch as head coach .
Pro Basketball
..
Wa~hlngton - Signed atl :star
' torward Bob Dandridge.
·

We st

W. L

Pet. GB

LOS Ang
72 47 .605
,Ci nci
61 59 .508 ,. l ll/2
Houston
57 64 .471 16
San Fran
55 ' 66 .455 18
San Diego
54 70 .435 2011?
Atl anta
42 76 .356 29 1!2
. Wednesday 1 s Results
San Fran at Los Ang , ppd ., r ain
Chicago 4, Pittsburgh 2
Atl anta 9, Houston 6
Montreal 13, Philadelphia 0
San Di ego 7, Cinc inn a t i 4

S1. Louis 2. New York 0
Today's Probable Pitchers

(All Times EDT)
Pittsburgh (Reuss 8-11 ) at
Chicago (Burr is 11-11 or Rob·
erts Q.Q), 2:30 p .r'n .
San Fran cisco (Barr 11 -9 ) at
Los Angeles (Sutton 10-7), 4:30
p .m . . .

Phi lade lphia ( Lonborg 7-JJ at
Montreal CYw itchel l 2-8), 8 ·05
p .m .

Friday 's Games
Los Angeles l!l.l Chicago
Atla at Montreat , 2, lwi -n ite
Cinci at New York, 2, tw i -nit e
Houston at Philadelphia , n ight
San Fran at Pittsburgh , night
San Diego at St. Lo uis, night

American L.eague
East
W. L

Baltimre
New York

Detroit
Clevelnd
Mitw

Pet . GB

45 .60'7
49 .581
50 .576

70
68
68
54
53
53
4()

Boston

3
J lh

63 .462 17

65 ,449 l81J2
70 .431 21
76 .345 30 1h

. , West

p.m .

,

(Galasso 0-2)
at
~Minnesota (Thormodsgard 9-9L.
Seattle

4p .m .

Kansas Ci ty (Leonard 12 -10)
at Cleveland (Garland 10-13),
7: :30 p.m .
New York O··Hl nter 7-7 ) at
Detroit (Crawford 4-4) , 8 p.m .

Toronto ICtancv 1-3). at Texas
(Ellis 6-9) , 8:35 p .m .
Friday's Games
Detro it at seattJe , night
Cleveland at New York, n ight
Toronto at California, night
New York at Te,_as , night
Boston at Kansas City , n ight
Baltimore at Minnesota , n igh t

' , Chicago at Milwaukee. n i g~l.

International Le~gue
United PreSs International

'· - .
- GOLF ·WINNERS - Pomeroy Chamber members i-ecently competed in a golf
, tournament at the Pomeroy Golf Course. -Bob Miller served .as charrman of the event.
· Wlmera were 1-r Fred crow third flight; StaJ.1 Houdashelt, high score; Frank Gheen, first
· , flight Winner, 'and .Walter G.,;eser, second flight winner. Not pictured was Torn Bowen who
' had molll putts.
l)i

W l Pel. GB

Pawtucket

68 50 .576

Tidewater
Charleston

64 53' .547
63 56 .529

Syracus~

.

half game ahead of Olicago
and Minnesota.
"Confidence has made aU
the difference,"
said
Sulldberg, who has driven in
T/ rWlS in the last T/ games,
while raising his average to
.295. "Early in my career I
got a reputation for not
hitting but I always felt I

llle league but in the Mason Fourth of July weekend tournament.as weU ,
were, back row , Rick VanMeter, Mic~ Davenport, Head Coach Jerry
Davenport and Jim Miller . LeyHiing pitchers for the season, which saw
several co~e from behind victories and extra inning wins, were Elkins,·
Dodso n and Da ve Demoskey . Davenport gave special mention also to the
boys on the bench who did an outstanding job when called upon . Absent
from the picture were Demos key, Jim Boyer, Greg Bush and Ronme
Swan.

Cards blank Mets,
Phils streak ends

W. L Pel . GB
67 50 .573
66 50 .569 . '12
1h
Minn
68 52 ,567
Kan City
65 51 .560 l'h
Calif
58 58 .500 8 11~
Seattle
50 72 .4\0 19 1h
Oakland
44 73 .376 23
Wednesday's Results
Kansas City 5, Cleve 3, ni ght
New York 7, Detroit 5, n ight
Milwaukee s, Boston J , night
Seattle J, Minnesota 2, night
Texas 6, Toronto S, 10 inns .
. Today's Probable Pitchers
tAll Times EDT)
Boston
(JenKins' 9-ll
at
M ilwauKee (Caldwell 3-5l. 2: 30

.

t om Grieve led off the lOth
with a single but was erased
at second base by Toby

Sundberg followed with a
liner to left, easily scoring
Harrah and elevating the
Rangers into fi rst place in the
American League West, a

;

Texas
Ctl icago

'

club."

Harrah 's fi eld\er•s choice .

could ."

Toronto

I

we might not have gotten
away with against a good

•.

Jl/:!

SV2

61 59 .508 8 ·
Richmond
60 58 .508 8
Rochester
59 61 .492 10
Columbus
54 68 .443 16
Toledo
49 73 .402 21 .
Wtdnesday's Results ·
Rochester 14 Richmond 7 .
Tidewater 4, Toledo 2
Pawtu,ket lo Syracuse 6
Charleston 5, Columbus 4, 15
Innings

· Elsewhere in lbe AL, New
York tripped Detroit, 7-f&gt;,
Kansas
City
hand led
Geveland, 5-3, Seattle edged
Minnesota,
3-2,
and
Milwaukee upset Boston, 5-J.
Yankees 7, Tigers S:
Chris Chambliss belled two
triples and Mickey Rivers led
off the game with a homer to
rock Fernand o Arroyo, 6-13.
Ed Figueroa, with help from
Sparky Lyle in the ninth, won
his 12th game against eight
losses.
Royals S, Indians 3:
John Mayberry smacked a
three-run homer and Hal
McRae singled in the eighth
to drive in Amos Otis with the
winning run. Mayberry's 18th
homer was his first since
Aug. 5.
Mariners 3, Twins 2:
Dan Meyer singled in two
runs in the seventh to back
the six-hit pitching of Paul
Mitchell and Enrique Rorno:
Brewers 5, Red Sox 3:
Don Money and Jamie
Quirk each hit two-run
homers and Lary Sorensen
pitched an eight-hitter to
snap Boston's live-gameo
winning
streak.
Carl
Yastrzemski hit his 21st
homer in the eighth to tie
Johnny Mize lor 27th place on
the all-time home-run list
with 359.

SAV&lt;

UPTO

600/

HOME
/0 IN
HEATING
.

COSTS

COII'UITfGIII fii\"-CC . " M (ffiCI(If- .IT

By MIKE TULLY
UPI Sports Writer
Catcher Ted Simmons
knew before ~a n yone else
Wednesday night that Bob
Fors&lt;:h would pitch the St.
Louis Cardinals hack into t h~
National · League East·
picture .
·
"He had a good fastball as
he a lways does, " sa id
Simmons , after F orsch
subdued the New York Me ts,
2-Q on a two-hitter . "His
cu;veball was exceptional.
He started throwin g curves
lor strikes in the £irsl inni ng
and I knew he was going to
have a good one ."
Forsch allowed a lir$tinning sin gle .to Bru ce ·
J&gt;oisclait and a sixth-inning
single by Lenny Randle.

'JI wanl the next one very Atlanta ripped Houston, 9-6,
Diego
stopped
San
had 15 wins before but never Cincinnati, 7-4, and San
16. Twenty? I have eight or Francisco at Los Angeles was
nine more starts I hope that's rained out.
Expos 13, Pbillies 0:
enough."
For sch and Jerry Koosman
Gary Carter drove in three
dueled through five innings runs with two homers, Stan
'Bette( 'f\.l}en~
but St. Louis scored. twice in Bahnsen, 7-f&gt;, knocked in two
YHE FIREPLACE STO.vE
th e sixth. Keith Hernandez others and Tony Perez hit his
T h t!l unique comotnal!ofl wood siove
walked, Ted Simmons singled 11lh homer as Montreal
and l treplace co.-er panel mstalla irt
mt"nut es wuhout masonry alterat ions .
and Cruz singled home halted Philadelphia's 13It burns seasoned wood throughout
Hernandez. After Ken Reitz game winning streak. Steve
ll'le ni(l l"ll. ..,Ill 1'1!11!11 your home l fl el
sacrificed . and
Jerry Carlton , 17;7, took the loss.
cook yo ur meals. Also g1eat lo"r
camps .;abhis , ski-lodges and as an
Mwnphrey received an an Cubs 4, Pirates 2:
emergency unll in case of powar tail·
. intentional walk, Simmons · Bobby Murcer hammered
ures . Flrebo• : 18" high : 18"" wide , 2A "
scored when Tyson forced his 22nd and 23rd hom~ runs
deep DoDr Open ing: g·· • IJ "" _ Walgl)1 :
to help Rick Reuschel, 16-5, to 150 lbs. B,a ck Panel : Sid. 3&lt;1 111'" high)(
Mumphrey at second.
I n other NL games, his first win since July 28. 42'" wiOe. 01he r sites availatlle
M o ntreal d r ub,b e d Jim Rooller fell to 7-10.
Philadelphia , !:HI, Chicago Braves 9, Astros 6:
Back-to-hack homers by
topped Pittsburgh, 4-2.
Jell Burtoughs and Willie
Montanez capped a seasonhigh eight-run outburst in the.
Atlanta sixth . Trailing, 6-1,
Atlanta chased starter Tom
Dixon, routed reliever Ken
Forsch and h~nded Joe
204 Condor St.
Sambito, 5-4, the loss. Dan
Pomeroy, Ohio
Collins, 2-9, earned the
992-2925
victory.
, fli cker play.
· "We don 't have quite the
number of trick plays in our
offense as we did at that point
la st&gt; year ," Kansas City
You can save $1,000.00 on a
Coach Paul Wiggin said, "but
I hope they're looking for_t~e
new car by participating in
badly," sa,id Forsch. "I've

;!jl

GRAVELY
.TRACTOR SALES .

Chiefs take on
'Skins tonight

By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Writer
This is pre-~;ea son time and
every · team is filled with
little-known free agents like
'running ·backs Arnold
Morgado and Clarence
Harmon . . These
two, flea"-flicker again."
however, are quickly making
Kansas City , t-1 m
·
themselves noticed.
preseason , will start backup
And they will try to Tony Adams at quarterback
continue their impr essive · with No. I QB Mike
early performances tonight Livingston available if
when the Kansas City Chiefs needed. Podolak will miss the
visit
the
Washington entire preseason with a sepaRedskins.
rated shoulder.
Morgado took advanta ge of
Thomas and veteran wide
injuries to MacArthur Lane receiver Charley Taylor a~
and Ed Podolak Saturday expected to see ·their first
night to spark a.23-21 Chiefs' ·pr eseason action against
victory over the Pitlsburgh 'Kansas City. Taylor has not
Steelers with 48 yards' in pass played since fracturing ·his
receptions in a !().point fourth shoulder in last year 's first
quarter . · That
earned preseason game: .
M'orgado the game ball.
Thomas; whose recently
Harmon is the Redskins' signed contract made him a
leading rusher with 88 yards $100 000-a-year player, pulled
in 17 carries in two preseason a h~tring muscle his first
day at practice following a
games.
The Redskins are seeking two-day holdout.
their · lir~ t victor y .ever
In the only other game
against the Chiefs, wh~ ha~e Thursday night, Oakland
beaten Washington twice m travels to Seattle. Minnesota
pre ~season and once in is·at Baltimore and St. Louis
regular season , 33-30 last · ai Cleveland "Friday night
year on a last minute flea- ·

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�:

4-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday. Au~ . 18, 1977

Almon paCes Padres to
7-4 victory over Reds
CINCINNATI (UP()- The
Gold Gloves of the Reds are
more than a little tarnished
today:
.
So is the image of major
league baseball's two-time
World Champions.
" I cannot comment on that

game /" said Reds' manager
Sparky Anderson . " If I do, I'll
have every ch)lrch in
Cincinnati after me."

And that '·amen" you're
hearing was voiced by ' the
29,795 c¥11 customers who
witnessed Wedn~ay night's
debacle as the San Diego
Padres pinned a 7-4 defeat on
the Reds in the finale of a
three-game set at Riverfront
Stadium.
Bill Almoo, a .248 hitting
shortsto-p, drove home five of
the Padre runs with three

hits, ooe his first. homer of the
season which came with two
runners on base during a
four-run fourth inning.
" Five RBI in one game .
Normally that's a week's
work for me, " said the
beaming Almon .
Mario Solo,. the Reds' 21year-&lt;&gt;ld rookie right-hander
who wound up with his thiril
loss in five decisions, was the

.L, A. Guinther,17, is pictured here working on a toehold in preparation for the French
City Ski Club's boat and ski show and races Labor Day weekend. The event will be held on
Saturday , Sept. 3, and not Monday, Sept. 5, as previously announced. The events will he held
on the Ohio River, opposite !lie Upstream Public Use Area in downtown Gallipolis.

linescores
M~1or

tournament, which begi ns
Aug . 31.
Richard s,
an
ophthamologist who
underwe~t a sex-change
operation in August, 1975,
attempted to enter the 1976
U.S. Open but was denied
because she refused to take
an
Olympic:type
sex
chromosome test. This year,
Richards decided to lest the
legality of that decision in
court and received a
·
favorable judgment.
"She is incredibly thrilled
and gratified that this has
worked out as well as it has, "
said
Michael
Rosen ,
Richards' attorney. "I'm not
surprised,
but
reanr
pleased. "
The USTA , explaining its

earlier position , said : ·"The
UST A has had reason to
believe that a post.-&lt;&gt;perative
transsel&lt;llal 'may retain some
physical and competitive
advantages. It appeared to
the USTA that a generally
accurate;
easily
.administered and objective test,
such .as the Olympic-type
chromosome test , was a
desirable screening process
in determin~g sex for the .
purpose of athletics."
In a 13-page decision Tuesday, Ascione had said the test
requirement was "grossly
unfair, discriminatory and
inequitable and violative of
her rights " and added, "it
seems clear defendants
knowingly instituted this test
for the sole purpose of

WIT ."
Richards, a S-foot-2, 147pounder, was a ranked over35 male player unde• the
name Richard Raskind prior
to her operation .

Bowie.Kuhn has new powerskladany
their
annual
summer ·
'[[
meeting , . whose agenda
usually calls for a two-&lt;lay
session but was cleaned up in
just one day.
In the joint session of the
'![;two leagues, the owners voted
·
to change the second
COLUMBUS (UPI)
interleague trading deadline
Formec
.. Ohio
State
to run from March !-April I .University kicking specialist
so as to give teams more time
Tom Skladany says he wants
to evaluate talent in spring. to play with the Cleveland
training. The previous period
Browns but has no intention
ran Feb. IS-March 15. ·
of dumping his agent,
In addition , the owners- Howard Slusher of Los
defeated an amendment to
Angeles.
reduce obligations to minor
Skladany, the Browns '
league teams, in particular at second draft choice, told the
the Class AA level ; enlarged Columbus Di~patch even
the Executive Council from
though he has missed three
0
seven· to 11 members and · weeks of practice and two
voted to bave1hem meet on a exhibition games with -the
.
.
.
bimonthly basis; turned Browns he can step right into
_ No. o'ne was injured in two
down the use of performance the lineup.
mi.oor· traffic- accidents inbonuses in player contracts;
" I can 't be thowing it away
Northfield
vestigated liy the . Gallia· vot!!d to elimina~ the.use of because 1 can walk irt
Meigs Post State Highway
NORTHFIELD ; · Ohio clauses in player collfr'acts to anytime and kick off and punt
Patrol.
.
.
have the team pay agents , without learning any J;ll~ys,"
The first occurred at 3:45 (UP!)- Ace Express sliowed shifting · that responsibility Skladany said. •:If I was a
p.m. on SR 7 at milepost 8. some of his old trotting form solely to the players; and position man I would have
night,
where William H. Swink, 60, Wednesday
overcoming
the
outside·
post voted to have teams pay off been in camp the first day.
Chalfont, Pa:, going south,
all cash expenditures in the
"The Browns know .I'm a ,
lost control of his car which · position to win the featured purchase of players no later kicker so I don't have to be
ran off the south side of the $2,200 ninth race at Northfield than 12 months after the saie . there, so why not lei me stay
highway striking a ditch. Park.
The National League once out for awhile and get a low
The winner, driven by
There was minor damage.
again
voted down by a lll-2 figure, " he said.
At 1.1:45 p:m . on Bailey Run Charles Crouser, covered the margin the use of the ..
"They 're going to try and
·Rd., lour tenths of a mile . mile in 2:05 4-5, his best time . designated hitter during the wait me out and see if I'll go
· north of SR 124, Melinda C. of 1977. and a second away regular 8eason; passed · a without Slusher," he said. "!
Barnett, 17, Pomeroy, lost from his career best resolution honoring the can see the Browns doing jt.
.
control of her car which ran registered last year.
Ace Express returned memo•y of former Chicago I'm not mad at the Browns,
off the left side of the highway
Cubs ' owner Philip K. because I know it's just a big
striking an embankment. $19.40, $1l,.and $5.80. Sandy J{ Wrigley, who died this business deal. They try to
was second and Hilarious
There
was
.moderate
summer; and established a save a buck and the lawyer
Song finished third.
clBIT)age.
The big triple combination "Lou Brock Mvard" that will tries to get a lot. But really
go annually to the league's we're not asking anything
of 3-2-9 was worth $361.20.
base
stealer, outlandish." ·
A crowd of 3,359 wagered leading
beginning
this
season.
Skladany said the dispute
$299,728.
The
American
League
bas
boiled down to a $10,000
DETROIT (UP!) - The
turned
down
a
proposal
t
o
difference
between his agent
• Detroit
Red
Wings
make
mandatory
the
and
the
Browns.
Wednesday announced the
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI ) "! want to play," he said.
trade of forward Walt Placekicker Ian Sunter, wbo appearance of nanles of
players
on
the
backs
of
"
!wanted
to play three weeks
Mckechnie, the . teani's top flunked a trial with the team
jerseys
and
voted
to
retur'n
to
ago.
But
this
is something I
point producer !.;lsi season, to last year, has been signed
the WashiAgton , Capitals for again by the Detroit Lions. the league the powe~&gt; of have l&lt;i stick with. I've come
determining if games should this far.
goalie Ron Low.
.The addition' of Sunter
"!would prefer to play with
. The ·ttec~ Wings also said brought the Lions ' roster to 80 be played in fl:le final series
between
two
teams
should
a
the
Browns;" be said. •·r
they signed two forwards, players, in~luding placegame
or
games
be
threatened
tigw·e
that's on~ of the top
Dan
Gruen
and
AI . kickers Bob Wood and Dave
by a rainoul. ,,
~zations i~ football."
Mcponough.
,
,..
Posey . r
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP! )
- Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn , a loser in
federal rourt this year over
his right to deprive a team of
a draft choice for tampermg,
now has that power.
Baseball owners amended

Two traffic

accidents
p rOVe mmot

the Major League Agreement
Wednesday to give Kuhn two
additional measores to
penalize
offenders
in
tampering incidents. Kuhn
now bas the authority to take
away draft rights and to
impose fines 'lf up to $250,000.
Kuhn s~nded Atlanta
Braves' owner Ted Turner'
and took away his team's
first-round draft pick ~ the
June· free agent draft for
tampering
with. Gary
Ma !thews
before
the
outfielder became a free
agent last year. But Turner .
took Kuhn to federal court
and won back that dralt pick.
"This corrects that situalion," said Kuhn.
The owners were here for

ooo-

?OJ 100
6 90
Atlanta
000 018 00)l - 9 l-4 0
D ixon . Forsch {6), Sambito
~6 ), Pt-ntz {7) ;snd Ferguson .
Hanna . Capra O J. Collins (6) ,
Campbell (1J and Pocoroba . W
- Coll ins, 2-9, t..- Samblto, 54.
HR s-Aflanta , Burroughs (3 1) ,
Montanez ( 16:}.

\ictim of Almon 's homer.
The count was one ball and
no strikes when Almon
connected .
"Soto threw me a fastball
and that's what I was
guessing he'd throw me,"
said Almon . " So I was
ready."
.
Alqlon's homer matched
the orle he hit alter joining the
Padres as a rookie last year.
It was a kid 's ga me of
paltycake, not baseball, thai
the Reds played as they
commitled1 five errors, one
less than their hit total off
Padre rookie. lefty Bob
Shirley and his successor ,
relief ace Hollie ·Fingers who
wound up with his 27th save of
the season.
A comedy' No.
A tragedy' Yes.
Ask Anderson. Because
only a year ago the Reds'
manager was comparing this
same team with the
legendary New York Yankee
Bronx -Bombers of old.
A fly ball to the right field
fence bounced out of the glove
of Ken Griffey.' A two-run
single to left slithered off the
glove of Ed Armbrister .. And
Dale fylurray issued a bases
loaded walk during a threerun fifth inning that capped
the Padres ' scoring for the
night.
.
The Reds' final three runs
· came on a homer by George
Fosler following a seventh
inning single and a walk to
Joe Morgan .

preventing plaint![[ fr om
participating
in ·
the
tournament ."
Rosen said the decision
enables Richards to play for
the Cleveland Nets of World
Team Tennis, with whom she
has a contract. WTT
Com missioner
Butch
Buchholz sent a telegram to
Cleveland confirming the
okay.
· "And Wimbledon , the
Italian and French Opens
should also be open for her to
plily, too," Rosen said . "They
should now fall in line with
the backing of the USTA and

HRs- Chicago ,

' Houston

Ph ila
Mntral

P00 000 000- D 6 J
OA2 013 02x- l3 16 .0
Carlton, Lerch (S ), McGraw

(8J and McCarver ; Bahnsen .

Alcala (8~ and Carter . W8ahnsen 1 7.5 L - Carlton . 17 1.
HRs- Montreal , carter 2 (21) ,
Perez Cll) .
San Ogo

Cinci
Shirley ,

000 430

ooo- 7

9 1

000 010 '300- A 7 5
Fingers ( 1) and

Tena ce ;
Soto , Murray (S J.
Sarm iento (7 ) 1 Borbon (9) and
Bench . W- Shirley, 7· 15. Lsoro. 2·3 . HRs- Dan Diego,
Almon (l I; Cincinnati , Foster
(39)

N Y.
llOO 000 IJO()- 0 2 0
St .L
.
00000'200~- 2 60
KOosman , Apodaca (8 l and
Hodges ; Forsch and Simmons.
w - Forsch , 1-5 ·5. L,- Koosmen.
8-14.
Amencan League
Kan City
· 300 000 02D-- S 50

Cleve

010 001

100~

N .Y .

40 2100 ooo~ 1151

100 010 003~ 5 12 2
F igueroa ,
Lyle
(9} and
Munson ;· Ar royo , Hiller (1 ).
Grilli (5) and M. May . w.. . Figueroa, 12 -8. L- Arroyo , 6·13.
HR ~ New York, Rivers (7) .
Det

Boston

002 OQO 010- 3 8 0
Mllw
210 200 OOx - 5 10 0
Wise , Stan ley (4 ) and F i!ik ;
and
Moore , W~
Sorensen , 4-6 . L- Wise. 9·5. HRs
Milwaukee, Money (21 ).
Qu irk. (3) ; Boston , Yaslrzemsk i
SOr ensen

(21 ).

Seattle

000 001 2QO- 3 11 0
ooo 100 010- 2 6 1
MitchelL Romo (7) and Cox ;

M inn

Zahn , D . Johnson (7 1 and
Wynegar. W:..__M itchell , J.A. LZahn , Jl .lo.

( 10 inilings )
Tor

210 010 OlO Q- 5 \ 2 0

Texas ·
011 000 030 1 ~ 6 \I 2
LemanC.zyk , Joh nson
(6).
. Vuckov ich {8), Wi ll is (~ ) and
Cerone ; Br il es, Knowles (B l.
Devine (9 ) and Sundberg . wDevine , 9.6. L - W I!Iis , 2-5. HR Toronto , C~rone { 1)

•

Bearcats seek help .in
CINCINNATI (UP! ) New University of Cincinnati
football coach Ralph Staub is
hintin g that the Ohio
legislature might help him in
his quest to schedule games
against his old school,
powerful Ohio State .
Staub, who left his
assistant 's job under Woody
Hayes to take the Cincy post,
said Wednesday he has told
. Hayes he wants to schedule
Ohio State.
"Woody told me he just
didn't think it was possible
because of so many future
commi tments in scheduling,"
related Staub. " But I think it
can be done."
How'

.

Westchester golf title
By SHERYL FLATOW
UP! Spol:ts Writer
HARRISON, N.Y. (UP!) For David Graham , the 1977
PGA ' season has been
extremely disappointing.
· Following his most successful
year ever, during which he
won two· tour events including the Westchester
Golf Classic - for the first
time and finished eighth on
the money list; he has fared
rather poorly through the
first .7% months of the
schedule.
" Obviously, I'm not
pleased with the w.ay I've
been playing," said Graham.
" I really can't explain why
I' m not playing well . I've
diversified into other things
and maybe that's taking
away from my game . I'm
putting well, but I know I'm
. not drivi)lg as well as last
year. I drove the ball well
every day last year but now I
can't keep my . dnves
straight."
The $300,000 Westchester
Classic, which begins today
and runs through Sunday, is
the first U.S. tournament
Graham has ever de~ended .
He won at Cleveland m 1972,
-but the event was drop~ed
from the tour the follOWing
year.
"Westchester is a very
prestigious tournament ,"
said
the
31-year-old
·Australian native , "and
winhin!l; last year makes
things a little more difficUlt

•
••

scheduling Buckeyes

Graham
out to defend
.

not
dump antont
e
Wl

MIDDLEPORT T·BALL TIGERS (1977) ~ 'Front, kneeling, 1-r, Todd Hood, Heath
O'Neal, Elise Meier, Mike Southern , Luke Burdette, P. J. Richmond, Lesley Carr ; back row
standing; l\'licky Davis, Erica Kessinger, Greg Rager , Tammy Cremeans, Lester Stewart,
Richie Long, Eddie Kitchen (coach ). John Hood also is a coach.

3 11 2

Splittorff , Pattin (4J, Bird (9)
and Porter ; Bi bby , Hood (9)
and Fosse . w - pattin , 6 2. LBibby , 9. 10. HRs ~ Kansa s City ,
Mayberry t 18) ; C 1 eve Ian d ,
Thornton {22 ].

" Well " said Staub , " in
Iowa the legislature · tool&lt;
control of the situa tion . Iowa
State always wanted to play
Iowa, and Iowa kept saying
no.
" But the legislature
thought it'd be good lor the
state and they told Iowa to
sched ul e Iowa State this
year . Iowa said there was no
room on the schedule. The
legislature came back and
said, 'make room,' and so
Iowa is pla)ing Iowa State
this year. The game already
is a sellout.
"A Cincinnati.:Qhio State
matchup makes plenty of
sense to me. Money is one
rea .On . Why should all the
teams that come into Ohio
State and take away all that
big money be out-&lt;&gt;f-state
teams~ Cincinnati is now a
full state university and that
might make sense politically."
·
While Ohio State is one of
the few schools in the state
making money on its football
program, Cin cy lost an
estimated $300,000 on football
last year.
Staub, a 48-year old
University o£ Cincinnati
graduate who is assuming his
fir st head coaching job, said
he considers Cincy second
only to Ohio State in the
state 's collegia te foo tb all
ranks.
" I'm not saying we s hould
be " playing !)hio State this
· season, but I do want to
. toughen up our schedule in
the future and I see nothing
wrong with developing a good
interstate rivalry with Ohio
State."

for me this time. I don't want
to come back here and not do
justice to last year's play, so
I'm more conscious aOOut
playing well. I'm trying to
think of all the things that
helped me last year and do
th.e.m,.again."
The 6,603-yard Westchester
course is an easy one and the
top scores tend to be
extremely low. It is the type
of course on which lesser
players have . a greater
likelihood of doing well so it is
surprising thai, with the
exception of Graham , the
victors have been the big
money
players.
Jack
Nicklaus has· won rwlce and
Arnold Palmer, Julius Boros
and Johnny Miller also have
earned victories here.
Palmer is passing up the
tournament this year, as are
Hubert Green, Ray Floyd and
Lee ·Trevino. But everyone
else will be on . hand to
coll)pete for the $60,000 first
prize; including Nicklaus and
leading money winner Tom
Watson .
"Even though Watson 's
having such a · great year, I
still think Nicklaus is the •
dominant force in the game,"
· said Graham. "He's the one
to beat. But there have been
so many different winners on
the tour this year that any one
of 100 players is capable of
winning this one.',
And Graham, ·naturally, includes himself among the 100.

•

•'

Look for

happy trails ahead
in Pedwin boots.
With western stitching,
smooth leather,
stacked up heels.

•

•

::::s

THE
"SIZZLE R"
Color- Rust

THE
SHOE
BOX
Middleport, Ohio

SALE
ONE

8"x10"
or
TWO
·· S"x7" .

COLOR
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2 5x7

SAVINGS
AT

•

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Photo Enlargement

YARDS OF EXTRA
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SPECIAL

•

-~

Leather refers 10

'

Sl29 _l

FROM COLOR SLIDE ... s 1.99 .
COUPON llllUn ACCOMPANY OROEA
offer good Aug 17th .. 28th

VIllAGE PHARMACY

Grueser.~~=e.

..

,,
•

.,.
,.
•

.f

Leifheit.
Apple Butter: Inez Carson, i,'~.
Elean~r l!l. Leonard, Route 3, ~
Pomeroy;
Kimperly ~

·
Cucumber, sour: Rose Gin. ther.
Cucumber, sweet: Marilyn
Spencer, Kathy Ann Baker,
Middleport, F~ye Schultz.
Cucumber, mixed: Rose
Ginther, Esther. Mays, Kathy
Ann Baker.
Bread and Butter: Evelyn·
Hollon, Rose Ginther, Inez
Carson.
RELISHES
. Piccalilli: Barbara Murray .
Chow-Chow: Inez Carson,
Kathy Baker.
• End of the garden : Marilyn
, Spencer, Mrs. James
~ . Carpenter.
Sweet Pepper Relish: Eva
•
, King, Route 2, Pomeroy;
: Susan Jane Pullins, Route 3,
!: Pomeroy, and Evt)lyn Hollon.
CATSUP AND SAUCES
•• Tomato
Catsup: Patricia
• Wolfe, Route 3, Pomeroy;
: Helen Wolfe, Eva King.
~
Chill Sauce: Mary K. Rose,
, Kathryn Mora, Route 3,
• Pomeroy,KimberlyGrueser.
~
.
CANNEDFRUIT
Applesauce : Eleanor
•
, Leonard, Marilyn Spencer.
•
Apples, sliced: Lenora
Leifheit, Esther Mays.
Blackberries: Esther
r•
,
Mays.
Cherries: Esther Mays.
•
·Peaches, half: Rosemary
:
Keller, Connie Swisher,
Route I Middleport; . and
Catherine Colwell.
Peaches, sliced: Esther
" • Mays, Evelyn •Hollon, and
:
Catherine Colwell.
.
, . Pears, sliced: Esther
· Mays.
••
Pears, half:
Elarrior
Leonard, Patricia Wolfe,
.. Esther Ma ys.
.
Plums: ,Faye Schultz,
Evelyn Hollon, Esther Mays.
..,.,
CANNEDVEGETABLES
Broccoli: Eva King.
'
...
Brussel Sprouts: Eva King.
~'
Beets, whole: Catherine
:;, Colwell, Helen Wolfe, Inez

~

217 N. 2nd

Chiffon: Margaret Parker.
Banana Cake: Evelyn
Hollon , Rosemary Keller.
Coconut: Altona Karr.
Devils Food : Rosemary
Keller, Barbara Fry.
Pound Cake: Kathryn
Mora, Barbara Fry, Marilyn
Spencer.
Decorated Cake: Nina ,
Miller, Route l, Portland;
Linda Bowen, Swanton ; Barbara Murray.
Chocolate .Cake : Elsie
Folmer, Mrs . James
Carpenter, Altona Karr.
Loaf cake: Erna Jesse ,
Poll)eroy ; Esther M@ys ,
Altona Karr.
Miscellaneous : Catherine
Colwell, Ema Jesse, Mrs.
Rose Dillon, Route 2, Albany.

The expertise of Meigs Carson.
County women m the
Cabbage, Catherine Colhomemaking arts of baking well.
and canning is apparent in
Carrots: Catherine Colwell,
the wide ranged display on Patricia Wolfe, Inez Carson.
exhibit at the Meigs County
Com: Evelyn Hollon , Faye
Fair this week.
Schultz, Marcia Arnold.
Several hundred entries in
Greens: Eva King .
the baking and canning diviGreens: Patricia Wolfe,
sion headed by Mrs. Frances Mary Colmer, Pomeroy,
Goeglein and Mrs. Lucille Evelyn Thoma, Route. 4,
Leifheit were judged Tuesday Pomeroy.
by Mrs. Becky Will Cottrill.
Lima Beans : Inez Carson,
Ribbons and premiums Helen Wolle , Marilyn
were awarded in three places Spencer. Parsnips : Eva
and the winners, listed first, King.
second and third, were as- · Peppers: Mary · Colmer,
follows:
Eva King.
'
PRESERVES
Mango, stuffed : Frances
Peach : Evelyn Hollon, Goeglein, Kathy Ann Baker.
Route!, Minersville; Frances
Sweet Potatoes: Eva King,
Goeglein, Route 3, Pomeroy ; Theresa VanMeter. ,.
Esther Mays, Chester.
Tomatoes, whole : , Eva
Cherry: Inez Carson, Long King, Marcia Arnold, Mrs.
Bottom, Frances Goeglein, Charles Kuhl, Route 3,
Esther Mays.
Pomeroy.
Strawberry: Frances
Tomatoes,
quartered :
Goeglein, Esther Mays, Patricia Wolfe, Evelyn
Altona Karr, Long Bottom.
Thoma, Catherine Colw.ell.
JAMS
Tomatoes, green, second
Black Raspberry : Inez onlytoEvaK.ing.
Carson.
Tomato juice: Susan Jane
Grape : Mrs. James Pullins, ' Evelyn Holl~n.
Carpenter, Reedsville.
Rosemary Keller .
Peach : Mrs. James
Vegetable soup: Inez CarCarpenter, Mrs. Rose Gin- son, Esther Mays, Rose Ginther, Route 3, Pomeroy; Mrs. ther.
Marcia Arnold, Minersville.
BAKED GOODS
Strawberry: Mrs. James
Loaf of white bread: Faye
Carpenter, Esther Mays , Inez Schultz, Mrs. Charles Kuhl,
Carson.
Catherine Colwell.
·
JEU..IES
Banana nut bread : Altona
Catherine Colwell, Route I, Karr, Christine Napier,
Vinton; Rose Ginther, Inez Esther Mays. ·
·
Carson.
· Baking powder biscuits :
Crabapple: Rose Ginther, Elsie Folmer, Catherine Col·
Mary K. Rose, Long Bottom;
weli, Evelyn Hollon.
Blackberry :
Christine
Muffins: . Catherine ColNapier, Route I, Bidwell, well, Altona Karr.
Rose Ginther, Esther Mays.
CAKES
Elderberry: Alice K.
Angel food : Mary K. Rose,
Thompson, Pomeroy; Faye Catherine Colwell. 1 '
Schultz, Route 3, .Pomeroy,
Butter : Patty Parker,
Beulah Hill, Route 3, Route 3, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
Grape: Evelyn Hollon,
Rose Ginther, Alice S. Nease,
Route 3, Pomeroy.
Peach: Catherine Colwell,
Esther Man
Plum: Lenora Leifheit,
RACINE - Kelly Clayton
Route 3, Pomeroy; Marilyn . Hensler was honored ori his
Spencer, Rose Ginther. first birthday with a party at
Raspberry : Evelyn Hollon, the home of his jlarents, Mr.
Esther Mays.
and Mrs. Daniel Hensler.
Strawberry:
Marilyn
A decorated cake, ice
Spencer, Esther Mays.
cream, and koolaid were
SPREADS
served outdoors. ·Guests inPear Honey : Inez Carson.
Honey : Glenda Hunt, Route
1; Long Bottom.
Peach Butter : Lenora · ;:,.::&amp;;~~tw::i! • •en: An lS.8;oif.c'

COOKIES
Brownies: Joni Murray,
Elsie Folmer, Evelyn Hollon.
· Chocolate: Evelyn Hollon,
Margaret Parker, Rosemary
Keller.
Plain Drop: Evelyn Hollon,
Barbara Fry.
Molasses : Marcia Arnold.
Ice
Box
Cookies :
Rosemary Keller, Evelyn
Hollon, Altona Karr .
PIES

Apple: Faye Schultz,
Kathryn Mora, Marilyn
Spencer.
Cherry: Esther Mays,
Lenora Leifheit, Rosemary
Keller .
Chocolate: Mrs. James
Carpenter.
Pecan: .second, Lenora
Leifheit.
Peach : Altona Karr,
Marilyn Spencer, Mrs ,
Charles Kuhl.
Pumpkin: Barbara Fry,
Kathy Parker, Marilyn
Spencer.
Raisin: Altona Karr, Mrs.
Charles Kuhl.

Hensler celebrates first birthday

1r om your favorite
color negattve

YARDS AND

Carr school meets again .

ALFRED - The 16th annual Carr School Reunion
was held Sunday, Aug. 14 in
the Woode Grove fiere with an
Whleb Sullur Suits Best?
attendance of 21, including
Dear Rap :
. two elderly teachers, Garrett
I've turned Rolf down a dozen times. He keeps asking me Christy and Helen Woode.
out. Says I'm young and I don't know my own mind, but he's
A potluck dinner was
the one for me. He's 29. I'm 22. He's tboughtful, humorous, served at noon with Gamer
hard-wor~ing ; almost everyone likes him.
Griffin asking the qlessing.
We kid around a lot at the office. He never gets hurt when I
say no thanks; he knows I'm going with Stewart who is my own
age and gorgeous (but not very dependable).
. .
The other day Rolf predicted he and I would be marr1ed m
a year . We're very good friends_, which Stewart really isn't.
(We can't talk about anything important. )
RUTLAND - Mt. Union
Wbat . do you think of Rolf, and will he win' · Baptist Church recently held
its annual Sunday School
WEAKENING
picnic at Forest Acres Park
,near Rutland.
· ·
Dear Weakening:
· "
·. ·
I'd say Rolf has thdenacity of an English·Bull and the self- · Skits presented featured
confidence of a Great Dane at a Chihuahua convention. But Darlene and Teresa Barrett,
Susie and Randy Kennedy,
thatdoesn'tmean he'sa dog. Far from it!
. Friendship is the finest ingredient in marriage.l'm betting Rilla Rhodes, Carla Smith,
Helen IG.rig, and Vicky and
your persistent pal's prediction pans out. - HELEN
Tammy DeBord.
+++
Senior citizens were
Weakening:
.
If you weren't already half-way convinced Rolf would win , honored with gifts of glassyou wouldn't have ·asked us that question.
ware presented by Sunday
My guess is that Stewart won'tiast much longer, but Rolf School superintendent Don
bas staying power. Let us know the date of your weddmg. Wilson. Honored were Mrs.
SUE
.
Mabel Pauley, Mrs. Ava
Greenlees, Mrs. Wilma
+++
Jolley, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
have three problems : hair, weight and voice.
Tomer, Mr. and Mrs. Jewell
My hair is superfine, has no body and doesn't grow much. Jones, Ray Myers, Neal
Pennanents frizz it. If I don't wash ll)y hair ev01:y day, I look White and Virgil King.
Attending were Mr: and
like an oil factory, but washing also makes it dry and brittle. I
Mrs. Charles Barrett, Sr.,
don't have money for special treatments. Wbat to do?
No: 2, I'm about 10 pounds overweight. Mom says its baby Marlene, Darlene and
fat but I've just got to lose. Diets, exercise; even fasting, Teresa, Jim Barrett and
don't help a bit.
Cassie, Mrs. Gloria Malone,
Three, my voice sounds like I'm plugging my nose. I'm so
ashamed of it I don't talk to the kids very much and they think
I'm stuck up . - HELPLESS Wl\NTING HELP

By Helen and Sue Hottel

P11sbgh
OIOOOOOOl
'1 8J
Chicgo
100 101 lOx. - 4 9 0
Rooker , Tetc.ulve ( 11 &lt;Jnd
over ; R . Reuschel i!lnd M itter
wald . W- R . Reusctlel. 16 S. LRooke-r , '117 .
Murcer '2 (23 ).

Generation Rap

Baking and canning winners

l.eague Resulfi

By Un it ed Press International
N01tional League
San rran at Los Anq , ppu., rain

•
. Richards WIDS court battle
By CHRIS TIJRKEL
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! )
Renee Richards ' legal
victory in New York State
court Wednesday may pave
the way for the 42-year-&lt;&gt;ld
transsel&lt;Ual to play in any
professional tennis tournament in the world.
Richards WOI! a year-long
battle to enter the U.S. Open ,
tournament when the U.S.
Tennis Association acceded ·
to a ruling by N.Y. State
Supreme Court Justice Alfred
Asc.ione and said Richards
can compete in the $462,000 ·
tournament. The USTA
placed her in the main draw
for the women's singles bypassing the qualification
matches
for
the

,~~·rlll!
. m.~··~~~~~~--.,l:lit·:~-,S!II$a-··~·-.n,.,;;,.,.,.,,,..,,,_:

,

·

Carmel News,
By the Day

New Haven, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Circle and family of
Columbus.
William Carlton of Racine
called at the home of Robert
Lee a recent evening. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Dougllis

UJT'S TRUE. .• "

--.
VALUES
.. ARE
FOUND

AT

X. Rose.

Middleport, 0.
992-5759

Beans,

...

Eleanor
Leonard, Theresa VanMeter,
Route 1 Racine, Rosemary

"

Keller.

!:•

snap:

Ileana, whole:

rroril!rd,

Eleanor
Evelyn Hollon. Ine-&amp;

BAKE·R

1. Save up your ll)oney and get a contoured cut from a
stylist who understands about fly-away hair: Then u~ one of
those after .,shampoo conditioners made speCially for fme, thm
or limp hair. (Look what it does for Dorothy•Hamill.) And don't
wash every day : very few heads produce .t hat much oil.
2 Stay with a sensible,1200 -1400calorieper day diet:
heary on the green vegetables; light on starches; ~ost~y fish
or chicken 101" protein ; no gooey desserts; and don t g1ve up
alter the first week! Above all, remember . snacks can add
more calories tban a healthful dinner, Forget 'em !
You may lose no mere tban a pound a week, but you'll be
training yourself toward good lifetime eating habits. That's the
real secret of. staying slim.
· 3. Have you been checked for adenoid trimble? Or possibly
your shallow breathing creates the voice problems. RX : a
doctor or a · speech teacher.

coffee were served to the
following, Mr. and Mrs. John
Wogan, Columbus; Jana
Wiseman,
Cambridge;
Everett, Sherry and Philip
Smith; Mary, Luther, Cheryl,
Visitors at the Douglas Brian and Randall Smith;
Circle home. recently were Maud Smith; Carroll Smith;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Holter Robert Smith; Ernest,
and son of Morning Star, Mr. Shirley, David and Jason
and Mrs. Charlie Matthews Smith; Charles, Judy, Mike
.-and daughter of Syracuse. and Cindy Musser; Jeff and
Mrs. cathy Johnson and son; Teresa Patterson, Paul,
. MARIA MUSSER
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Tuttle of Debbie and Kevin Musser,
Eagle Ridge, Julie Rose of Arthur and Glenn is Musser;
Bashan, Don Rose, Chuck Doug Priddy, R~bert Robe.rts
Wagner of Racine, Mrs. Carl and Anita Musser.
Maria Dawn received
Circle and children and Paul.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) many nice gifts including a
Mbore, local.
The
90-year-old former
Mrs. Jane O'Neil and sons telephone call from her
manager
of the New York
of Columbus spent the . brother, AiC Robert Ray
.
Yankees
and
Chicago Cubs in
weekend here with Mr. and Musser stationed at Robins
at his home in the
Mrs. Robert Lee and family. AFB in Macon, Ga. and a gift back
suburb
of ·Tonawanda today
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Circle from her other brother, A2C
after
hospital .stay of
and sons of Ft. Lauderdale, Jeffery Musser and wife,
nearly
three
weeks for ·a
Florida moved to the Cannel Anita, stationed at Moody
broken
hip.
AFB in Valdosta, Ga.
community recently.
·J o s. e p h "~arse Joe"
Arthur Johnson and son
McCarthy was discharged
Patrick were dinner guests of
Tuesday from Millard
Mr. and · Mrs. Douglas
·Fillmore Hospital, where he
Johnson on Sunday.
·
had been admitted July 27,
Mrs. Hattie Powell ·and Circle attended a birthday following a fall at hishome.
party in honor .of Cathy
daughter Addie visited with
The
hospital
said
Mary Circle one evening last Johnson and Douglas Circle McCarthy , a member of
at the Johnson home on Eagle
week.
baseball's Hall of Fame:--M
Ridge Tuesday evening.
Tbose at the home of Mary
There were 52 .present for undergone a 2'1.1 hour
Circle over tlie weekend were .
. operation to repair damage to
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle, Sunday school Aug. 14. It w.a s the hip.
Mr. and Mn. George Circle, bomecoming day.

HEARING DEULAP.Yl)ED A
CINCINNATI ( . --:
congressional heartllg mto
the Beverly Hills Supper Club .
fire bas been postponed from
Sept. 2 to Sept. 19, U.S. Rep.
Thomas Luken has disclosed ..

Beets, sliced: Marcia Arnold, Lenora
Leifheit,
Catherine Colwell.
· Beans, shellie: Kimberly
Grueser, Rose Ginther, Mary

HWH :

a

HAVE MOVED
Mr. and Mrs. Barry A.
Theiss (Carol Michael) and
Stacey have . moved · to
Denver, Colo. where Ba....Y is
stationed at the Lowery Air
Force Base. Alter completing
his specialized training there
he will be transferred to Mt.
Home, Idaho.

Carson.

Alfred

Cake,. ice cream,, punch and

aI ·
Calendar

,,

Rapi

Maria Musser turns eight

.'
THURSDAY
Ml\GNOUA CLUB, 6 p:m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Iris Kelton.
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING Sunday at
Syracuse Asbury United
Metbodist Church. Sunday
School and worship Service in
morning with basket lunch at
12:30 p.m. in social rooms.
Special program in 14t.ernoon
beginning at 2 p.m. Special
singing by various groups
from church an&lt;l the Rev. and
Mrs. Wendell Stutler.

·

Sunday School picnic held

eluded his parents, a brother,
Jamey, grandparents, Mr. ,
and Mrs. Raymond Hensler, ·
Mrs. David Hensler and
Rachael, R Mrs. Roger
Adams, Lory, Nick and Ryan,
Maria Dawn Musser,
Mrs. Nick Ihle and Nikki, Mr. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Michael Little and Robert Musser, Hysell Run
Road, celebrated her eighth
Angela.
birthday Sunday. ·

Soc·~

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

A short businw meeting
was held with John Van
Meter of Athens, chairman.
Old officers retained were
John Van Meter, president;
Leola Swartz, vice president;
Helen Woode, secretary and
treasurer and Nina Robinson,
assistant
secretary

Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on Aug. 14 was 34, the offering
$21.81.
Worship services were held
at 10 :45 with Charles
Domigan, associate pastor
speaking II Peter 1: "We
must be true witnesses,
develop
and
practice,
patience , strength and
·courage. The choir sang "In
Times Like These," as ·a
special. Attendance was 27.
Alfred's bomeeoming will
be Sept. 18 .with special
singers
"United
Harmonizers,_'' from Newport,
Ohio and others.. · .
The Chesler ·Hymn Sing
will be held here on Saturday
evening, Aug. 27.
The Swartz family reunion
will be held here in Woode
Grove on Sunday, Aug. 28.
Everyone welcome.
.
Mrs. Eva Bibbee is a
patient in a Parkersburg
Hospital.
Hazel (Randolph) Biggs of
nearby community is in poor
health.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Keaton have moved their
trailer home to Sumner.

·In 1916; Abraham Lincoln's
birthplace in Kentucky was
given to the U.S. govetnmenl
as a national shrine to the
16th president.

Mrs. Carol Riggs ' and
Courtney, Karen Riggs, Jim
Hawthorne, Mrs. Mabel
Pauley and Gina, Mrs. Nellie
Hatfield and Kevin, Mr. an.d
Mrs. Ray Myers , Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Sayre, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Sargent, Mr. and Mrs.
Ted H~yes, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil King, Helen and David,
Mrs. Ava Greenlees and
Rilla , Mrs. Gladys Barrett
and Crystal, Vicky and
Tammy DeBord, John and
Terri Gilliall), Mrs. Jean
Kennedy, Sue and Randy,
Mr. and. Mrs. Jewell Jones,
Mrs. Esther Scragg and
Bridgett, Mrs. Wilma Jolley,
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wood and
Joshua, Carla Smith and Mr.
and Mrs. Neal White, Nick
and Andy.
Senior citizens not present
but receiving gifts were Mrs.
Martha . Sayre, Mrs. Annie
Sprague, Mrs. Edith Greer
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Stout.
- Mrs. Neal White.

Lreasurer.
A short program wlls
presented: "Try, Try Again"
from a McGuffey Reader, by
Guy Lee ; "Thanks for People
I . Work With ," and " My
Wonderful Friend ." lne•
Randolph; " My God," Osle
Henderson; and a reading,
Garrett Christy.
Garrett and Violet Christy
furnished beautiful music
and songs led by them with
the audience joining in were:
"Led By the Master's Hand,"
" When I Met the Master,"
"Till the Stonn Passes By,"
and others.
Silent prayer in memory of
those deceased since last
year was for Clara. O'Brien,
Bmmett Hawk, Vere Swartz
and Maggie Chaney.
The
following
were
reported ill or unable ·to attend and cards sent to them:
Jack (Erroll) Follrod, Mary
Carr, Carrie Burson, Bernice
Hawk and Hazel Randolph .
An offering was taken to
take care of next year's
expenses ($14.50) and voted
to have the reunion next year
at the same time and place.
Attending besides those
mentioned above were: Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz, Otto
Swartz, Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Swartz, Clara Follrod, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarenc~ Neutzling,
Ethel Guthrie, Pearl Randollph, Lee Henderson and
Charles Woode .
Prizes were awarded to the
eldest, Guy Lee; youngest,
Nina Robinson; coming
farthest, Garrett and Violet
Christy, and to Waid Swartz,
on his birthday.

BACK
~~~WHY NOT GO
IN STYLE

SHOP BAHR'S

FOR ALL
YOUR BACK-·
T().SCHOQL

CLOTHING.
STILL MANY

!

ITEMS AT

. \,

SALE
PRICES.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

sometimes.
shoes should be
just plain fun
L1k e t hese. Why, just loo k ing at t.!l em make~ you, smile .
And the bounce .of ~ hunky crepe soles, the feel of

quality

leather uppers

and

t he

Conn ie name

m~ke them

everyth ing shoes should be-fun! Oxford in Wa lnut

CLOTHES.
FOR ALL
•WRANGLERS
•JEANS
•lOPS
•JACKETS
•SHIRTS
--- •STONESWEAR

SEE OUR COMPLETE .·
, SELECTION OF BACK
TO SCHOOL SHOES

·~RDINATES

LAYAWAY A COAT
NOW FOR·LARR

heritage house oF sHoEs
Qp~n : Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30 to 5
Friday 9:30to 8
N. lnd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

�-

,

&amp;-The Daily Sent111el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 18, 1977

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Au~ . 18, 1m

Race theme in artistic design is best of show

TOP AWARDS- Rosettes and silver trays were presented to Alice Thomp5on, left, the
horticulture sweepstakes winner, and Jennifer Dean Machir who received the "best or
, show~~ in artistic arrangements.
·

.

' 1~ '

+-::.

•

•
RESERVE BEST OF SHOW went to Pat Holter lor her blacklight arrange\nent. She
was presented a silver tray and a rosette. Jay Carpenter was the recipient of the Junior
Gardener rosette and he will also receive a special premium .

Orlp Carter,

Syracuse community

family going ·

news and recent events

back to Plains

BY JEAN WElL
SYRACUSE - The Racine Locks and Dam recreation
WASHINGTON (UP!) · ~ area at Letart, w. Va. was the setting for the eighth Teaford
Chip Carter is going home to reunion on Sunday, Aug. 7. A delicious potluck dinner was
Plains - with his wife and 6- served at noon with the table blessing by Leo Hill.
·month-&lt;Jld son.
During the afternoon 'I short business meeting was
There have been reports or conducted by the president, Carroll Teaford. Jt was voted to
marital discord involving retain the same ollicers for 1978, who are, president, Carroll
Chip and his wife Caron, but Teaford; vice president, Harold Teaford; secretary, Connie
the White House announced Swisher and treasurer, Dale Teaford.
Wednesday the family will be
Committees for 1978 are, registration, Jean Hall; gifts,
moving· back to Plains where Charlotte Wamsley, and games, Bill and Sharon Teaford.
they had .lived before Brian Kearns is to reserve the tables.
P r e s i d e n t Ca r t e r ' s
By a unanimous vote it was decided to have the 1978
inauguration in January.
reunion the first Sunday in August at the Racine Locks and
It was first reported that Dam.
Chip alone would return to
Gifts were given to the oldest man, James Teaford; oldest
Plains to help in the family lady, Edith Teaford; youngest boys, Jackie Teaford, son of Mr.
peanut harvest, but friends and Mts. Jack Teaford, Racine and Jerami Northcraft, son of
said Wednesday Chip had Mr. and Mrs. Jim Northcraft, Augusta, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
"sorted out things in his Lawrence Teaford, Shanks, W. Va. , received the gift for
mind" and decided to take his having the largest family present and Mr. and Mrs. Dana
family with him when he . Teaford one for traveling the· farthest (Winchester, Va.).
moves south.
Amo_ng the 110 attending were Mason and Nellie Teaford
Spokeswoman Mary Hoyt Wood, Canton; Brian, Sharon, Sonia, Brian II Kearns, Mason,
has refused to confirm or W. Va.; Carroll and Eva Teaford; Dick and Charlotte Warnsdeny the reports of marital ley, Jack, Betty, Teresa, Timmy, Jackie "J:eaford; Ben,
problems, butsaidsh~didnot Jannine, Trevor Petrel; Deal Sr!tith, Fritz Teaford, Thelma
know where Chip was living Walton, Leo Hill, photographer; Duke, Dorothy, Tim, Eric
since he moved out ,of the Bentz; Nancy and Carla Aeiker; Henry, Kay, Melirnla, Monica
. White House last week.
Hill, aU of Racine.
He has been staying since .
Dale, Wanda, Dennis, Dale,-Carla ·Teaford ; Robert and
· in a Georgetown apartment Sue Murphy; Veroni~ Provo; James and Jane Teaford,
with White House family Janice and David LawSon, Sampson and Jean Hall, all of
appointments secretary Rick Syracuse.
·
Hutto.
· · Lawrence, Mabel, Myra and Susan Teaford ; Diana Judy,
Mrs. Hoyt said Chip left · Larry, Carla, Wendi McBride, Shanks, W. Va.
Washington for Camp David , . Dwight Nealis, Jim, Barbara, Beth, Scott, Jerami NorthMd., Wednesday to join craft of Augusta, W. Va.; AI, April, Wendi, Crystal Harmon;
Caron and the baby, who Raymond, Margarete, Suzanne, Cloist Teaford; Edith
went to the mountain retreat Teaford, of Minersville; Bruce, Becky,Sherry, Angie Teafor-4;
Monday with the President, Virgil and Helen Teaford; Rodney and Barbara Karr, Cecil,
Mrs. Carter and their Kathy; Darlene See, Pomeroy; Melvin, Connie, Carri SwiBber;
daughter Amy.
Rich and Mildred Karr; Harold and Ina Teaford, Middleport;
Mocris, Mattie, Richard, Cheryl, Steven Teaford; Melanie
DALLAS (UP!)
The Adams, Portland; Dana, Linda, Jennifer, Billy Teaford; Larry
Dallas Cowboys announced Lee Teaford; Gail Swell, Winchester, Va.; Bob, Carol, Brett,
Wednesday their game with Teresa Wines; Arnie and Pauline Manuel Monette; Bill,
the Washington Redskins in Sharon,. Skip Teaford and Earl and Tee Teaford, all of
•
Texas Stadium Oct. 1ti is a Columbus.
PICNIC IJELD '
sellout.
·
The aimual picnic of the Syracuse First United
This is the earliest in the
season that any Cawlm's' Pre~byterian Church was held Sunday, July 31 at the Dick and ·
Helen Harris fishing camp. A delicious four o'dock,poUuck
home g~~~~~e has solct.wt.
.

.

Jennifer Dean Machir,
Route 3, Pomeroy took the
.. best of show' ' award for her
artistic design portray.ing the
horse raees of tbe Meigs
County Fair in the first of two
flower shows to be staged this
week at the Meigs County
Fair.
· The " reserve best of show"
award went to Pat Holler,
Route 3, Pomeroy, a member
of tbe Chester Garden Club,
lor her modern design depicting "The Midway at Night",
~n
arrangement in the
special lighting class or the
show staged in a darkened
booth with blacklighting.
Visitors delighted in raising
"peek holes" to look inside
the booth where the six ar·
rangements of the class were
displayed.
The
horticulture
sweepstakes a)"ard went to
Mrs. Alice Thompson and Jay
Carpenter, Reedsville area,
was the winner of the Junior
Gardener award. All four
received rosettes. Silvertrays
were presented to Mrs.
Thompson, Mrs. Machir, and
Mrs. Holter and a money
premium to Jay .
Mrs. Vance Hendricks of
Orient, an accredited judge of
the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs judged the
show. Chairmen were Mrs.
James Carpenter and Mrs.
Joe Bolin.
" Meigs County, Fairest of
'emAil" is the general theme
of the two shows - the seeond
to be sta_ged Friday - with
Wednesday's show emphasiz·
ing the fair activities while
the Friday show will feature
places and activities of the
county itself.
Ribbons and -premiums
were awarded in three places
with the winners being listed
.first, second and third respectively :
ARTISTIC ARRANGEMENT
"The Flower Show", a
traditional mass design: Anna E. Turner, Rutland
Garden Club; Altona Karr,
Loqg' Bottom; Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, Bend o' the Ri~er
Garden Club.
"The Fair Q11een", a traditional design using roses: Pat
Holter, Chester Garden Club;
Janet Bolin, Rutland Friendly ·Gardeners; and Alice
Thompson, Winding Trail.
"The 4-H Junior Fair", a
small traditional design:
· Mrs. Bolin, Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, Mrs. Anna E.

Highlights, features of county fair

A thollght f&lt;r the day :
English politician Oliver
Cromwell said, "A few honest
men are better than
numbers ...

OUTSTANDING MEMBERS- Above, Mikki Conley, captured tbe Outstanding 4-H
Member trophy for the Saddle Sitters Club at TUesday's 4-H Horse Show at center ring on
tile Rock Springs Fairgrounds, while Fae Reihel, the 18-year-&lt;Jld daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donley Reibel of Pomeroy, below, received the award from the 4-H Pleasure Riders Club.
Rachael Downie is advisor lor the Pleasure Riders while Junior Kennedy advised the
Saddle Sitters' champ.

FLOWER SHOW JUDGING : Mrs. Vance Hendricks of Orient, an accredited judge of
the Ohio Association of Garden Club&lt;!, judged the first flower show of the Meigs County Fair
Wednesday afternoon .

"The Horse Races" ,
modern design showing motion: Jennifer Machir, Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
James Carpenter, Rutland
Friendly Gardeners.
"The Cliffs at Rock Springs", a design incorporating
rocks : Mrs. Dean, Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
Bolin.
JUNIOR DIVISION
" Kiddy Day", a design using bright colors: Jay
Carpenter, Reedsville ;
o.iry] Foliner, · Route 3,
Pomeroy
·
Specimens: Zinnia, dahlia
flowered, Cheryl Folmer, Jay ,
Carpenter; zinnia, cactus
flowered : Cheryl Folmer,
Barbara Will, Pomeroy; and
marigold, Donita Manuel,
Route 3, Racine, Jay
Carpenter, and Barbara Will.
Potted Plant : Jay
Carpenter, both first and second, with Keith Hunt, Route
I, Umg Bottom taking third.
Handcrafted Items: all
three places to Jay
Carpenter.
HORTICULTIJRE
SPECiMENS
Turner.
Rose, hybrid tea : Pat
''The Midway at Night", . Holter, first and third; Altona
modern design: Pat Holter, Karr, second.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
Rose, floribunda : Janet
Thompson.
Bolin, first and second.
"TI)e Animal Auctions";
Rose, grandiflora : Alice
tradition design featuring Thompson,PatHolter.
foliages: Betty Dean, Chester
. Gladiolus : Rose Ginther,
Garden Club, Mrs. Turner, Che·s ter Garden Club, first,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
second and third to Mrs.

was enjoyed by all.
The evening was spent visiting and playing horseshoes and
yard darts.
Attending were Earl and Betty Harden, Weston, W.Va.;
Joy, Carrie and Shannon Mor~~tlty, Inez Hill and Susie Fischer,
Racine ; Beatrice Blake, Helen and Dick Harris; Pauline
Morarity, Margaret and Sharon Cottrill; Janice and David
Lawson, James and Jane Teaford, Mildred and Tina Pierce,
· Charlotte, Diana and Gregory Nease, Evelyn Smith, and Jean
Hall, all of Syracuse.
.
VISIT KINGS ISLAND
Those in the group from tbe ~~ United Presbyterian
pourch, Syracuse, making a trip to Kings Island Aug. 9 were
Margaret and Sharon Cottrill, Janice and David Lawson,
Mildred and Tina Pierce, Charlotte, Diana and Greg Nease,
and Jean Hall. Enroute home the grollp stopped in Chillicothe
for supper.
IN NU_RSING HOME
The Rev. Linsoo Stebbins, Gallipolis, former pastor ol the
Syracuse First United Presbyterian Church, is a patient at the
Pinecrest Nursing Home, 'Gallipolis, for those wishing to send
him cards.

FUN

FOR THE FAMILY

Wilson Carpenter.
Zinnia, dahlia flowered:
Betty Dean, Mrs. Charles
Kuhl, Chester Garden Club,
Mrs. Altona Karr.
Zinnia, cactus : Alice
Thompson, Betty Dean, Elsie
Folmer, Route3, Pomeroy.
Dahlia, decorative : Mrs.
James Carpenter, no second,
Mrs. Pat Thoma, Winding
Trail Garden Club, third.
Dahiia, cactus type: Mrs .
Charles Kuhl, Rose Ginther,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
Marigold: Altona Karr,
Betty Dean, Joyce Manuel,
Route 2, Racine.
POTIED PLANTS
Cacti and:Or succulents:
Allee Thompson, Pat Thoma,
Kimberly
· Grueser,
Minersville.
Ferns : Alice Ttwmpson,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
Jackie Brickles, Winding
Trail.
Other Foliage .Plant: Pat
Thoma, Mrs. Charles Kuhl,
Mrs: Ada Holter,Thester and
Wildwood Garden Clubs.
Hanging_. Potted Foliage
Plant : Pat Tboma ,- first and
third, Kim Grueser, second.
African Violet: Paul Nease,
Route 3, Pomeroy, first and
third; and Rosemary Keller,
second.
Begonias: Beulah Hill,
Route 3, Pomeroy, Rosemary
Keller, June Johnson,
Pomeroy.
Other Potted Flowering
Plant: joyce Manuel, Mrs.
Pat Thoma.
Any Hangijog Flowering
Potted Plant : Nice Thompson.
EDUCATION EXHIBITS
Plant Propagation: Pat
Thoma, Janet Bolin, Mrs.
James Carpenter.
Handcrafted Item : Mrs.
James Carpenter, Mrs.

.

BEST OF SHOW~Tony Keruoedy, 14, Tuppers Plains, receives his Grand Champion
trophy from Marvin Glasgow of Modern Sopply. Tony cotppeted With h1s horse on the 13:14
age group and was awarded the "best of show" prize on the merit of showmanship,
horsemanship, a pre-show interview, his book grade, and adv1sors grade . The son of Mr.·
and Mrs . Junior Kennedy, Tony also took first place honors in Western Pleasure class,
Reining class, and barrel competition; second place in English pl~asure and trail class ; ~nd
a fourth place ribbon in pole bending . Troph1es for grand champ1on and reserve champ1on
were provided by the Meigs County Agricultural Society .. Eight-year-&lt;Jid M1kki Conley_
copped reserve champion honors. Judged on the same cr1ter1a as Grand Champoon wmner,
she also rode away with a second place ribbon in tbe Western Pleasure Pony class.
.

2"X4';X8'

PRE·
CUTS

• DON SPENCER, SON OF THE LATE SIDNEY
SPENCER, highly regarded race driver from Pomeroy.
. lor many years, is pictured driving to victory in the runth
Tace. The horse, Mid American, is owned by Mrs. Sidney
Spencer, now of Marietta .

JUST
OHIO STATE REPRESENTATIVES-Marcia Dillard, left,. and Mikki Conley, right,
were recognized Tuesday afternoon at the 4-H · Horse Show as Meigs County's
representatives to the Ohio State Fair this past weekend. Marcia is the d~ughter of Mr. and•.
Mrs. Roger Dillard of Pomeroy, and competed in the 15-16age group. Miss Conley os the 8year-&lt;Jld daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Conley of Cooly1lle and competed agamst roders
from !}.12 years of age.

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
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923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00to5:00 Mon.thru Fri.
7:0Dto3:oo Saturday

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Llaky Mulftels

A!MPT£RS

The Deep Throated

. CHAMPION RIDERS- Tony.Kennedy,lelt, and Mikki Conley, right, pose proudly on
, their winning horses after capturing Grand and Reserve Champ1on prozes, respectively ,
TUesday afternoon.

MUFFlE

18" STRAIGHT PIECI '1.75

Tail Pipe Extensions

;ond Tail Pipes

'1"

One 110111 11400

. By JOSEPH ST. AMANT
, . BEVERLY HILLS, Calif .
(UP!) - Authors of a book
about Elvis Presley say the
late rock 'n' roll star was a
heavy drug user but never
: was addicted to "hard stuff"
. such as heroin . .
Presley
first
used
· "uppers," they said, while he
wall with the U.S. Army in
Germany in 1958 on advice of
.a sergeant who told the GIs
under him "he didn't want
· . them falling asleep on duty or
freezing to death."
, ·Ptesiey used cocaine, the
pain-killer Den.oarol, diet
pills, sleeping pills- "uppers
and downers," said Del~ert
4'Snnny" . West and Dav.e
Herbel, the authors ·who
worked 16 years for the
· ·singer as bodyguards. They
were fired abruptly by the
singer's father, Vernon, in
' 1976, and felt they were
· "treated like dirt."
The pair held a news
·conference Wednesday at
· · their lawyer's office in
.. Beverly Hills, saying they
READY FOR THE BARRELS- Brett Jones, _son of corrurlissioner and Mrs. Richard
wanted to ·"counteract" the
Jones of Pomeroy, paused for thiS picture just before entering the dng to compete in the
book's publicity blurbs
barret'competition. A competitor in the 15-16 age group, Brett took tilord place honors on that '• which, they claimed, "overevent and fifth place in Western Pleasure horse class where 13 r1ders showed agaonst ~jun . .•

TRAC10I MUFFL£RS
lUll fils fCII'd Nlon-Nag

•2.07

600 , TDO, 100, t00

1000 S.rltt

,

7 .20

' - '1.67

Mufflers-· •

life Tr..:

C

~ .. Made To Last i:lnd Make Yo~r Car Sound Like New

. - .. e
uaranree

emphasized" drug use · by
Presley, who died in
Memphis Tuesday at the age
of

42.

By coincidence, their book
"Elvis: What Happened?"
was published this week
although they said it was
written a year ago with
freelancer Steve Dunleavy.
"The straight is that ·we
love that man," said West.
West did not corllment ·on · '
an interview by the Chicago
sun-Times jilst qours before
Presley died and printed in
the paper's Wednesday . · •
editions.
He was quoted as saying of
the singer:
·
"His drug habit is so seyere · 1 .:
that I'm convinced he is in.
danger of losing his life.: • . •..
-·
. An autopsy report said
death was due to a heart
attack. The singer'S personal
physician, Dr. George C . .
Nicholpoulos, said .there were .
no signs of drugs in t:'fesley's
body, other than those he had
taken for his illnesses ~ h~gh ·
blood pressure and coronary.
artery disease.
.
When asked why Presley
used drugs to excess, West
said:
·
"The man was just bored:
He could be in the middle of a
crowd and be lonely . He was · .
the loneliest man I've ever . '
known."
·
Herbel, Delbert West and
"Red"
West,
Robert
Delbert's cousin , Helped
-ivrite the book.
Robert West did not attend
the news conference. He wa~· ·
working 011 a · movie. as· a
stuntman an4 could not make
it his co-authors said, ·

.

ALL THIS WEEK

11

FRIDAY, AUGUST ·19
10:00 A.M.-Pet Show
12:30 P.M.-Flower Show Judging
1:00 P.M.-Pony and Horse Running
Races
x4: 00 P.M. -Twilight Horse Harness
Racing
.
7:00 P.M.- Junior Fair Market Steer,
· Lamb and Pig Sale
x8: 00 P.M.-Horse Pulling Contest
. xGrandstand Attractions

1.. AU Parts Zinc-Coated Heavy Gim11e Metal
2. Double Crimpe(l &amp; Loeked Seams with DoUble Wall Construction
3. Ashestu!§ lnt~r ll ead Sh idd
4. Un ibeam

G &amp; J AUTQ PARTS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

.......

hard type drugs ·

AlUM II !ZED STER

Cun~ed

-

•
'•

Presley ·used no

'115

Chrome

-'

and
b~ding materif;lls -

sp3

I

. -

Wilson Carpenter, Mrs ..Janet
Bolin .

TWIN T EXIWJST REPAIR PRODUCTS

Swiss
Muffler Sealer

•.

POMEROY'S EDWARD HUMPHREY drives to
victory in the seventh racing driving Romilda owned by
Byron Bailey of Pomeroy.

•P_arta

Plus .

YOUNG TONY KENNEDY, son of Mr. and Mr~. J. R.Kennedy of T~p(lers Plain_s, and
Bachelor Boy owned by Mrs. Floosie Allensworth of Middleport, are agam favorotes of
Mel!ls County Fair racing fans with Tony serving a' outrider again. Tony's riding outfit this
yeetps In blue tones.
't

&lt;

THEROYALCROWN BOTTUNG CO. trop])y blanket
at racing Wednesday at the Meigs County Fair went to

'

,

John A. Volo owned and driven ·by · Steven Porteus,
Pataskala. volo had the. best speect among the three year
old trotters,
_.

.

There are same· rum·ors

around trying to portray us as
bloodsuckers trying .to
capitalize on the · death of
Elvis Presley," said Herbel.
"People spreading these
rumors haven't even read tbe
book. They don't realize it
was written a year ago."
· Delbert West said he did
not approve of advance
stories on the book written by
their co-author Dunleavy. ·
m said Dunleavy has tried
to "sensationalize" the book
by playing up the drug use
angle ... "the drug thing - lie
keeps bringing it up as the,
main thing."
·
"
cj

,,
·"
'

\.

•'

I

j

�I

1-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thu~y. Aug. 13, 1!117

9--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 18, 1!117

Wheat, corn acreage retirement program is expected

Livestock·, other judging results

r

congressional

By BERNARD BRENNER

WASHINGTON ( UP]) Agric.'ldlure Secretary Bob
Bergland says It's probable
the administration will order

an acreage retirement
program for the 197$ wheal
and corn crops til check
moun\ing surpluses of both
grains.
Bergland, meeting with re-.
porters Wednesday, sa'id no
final decisim bas been made
and emphasized action on.the
program
depends
on
President Carter's reaction
to a pending omnibus farm
biU.
Administration · and

tary. She served as heart fund
chairman and was active

JOHNKAZNOSKI

New Princip~l At
Wahama Pledges To
Be Firr:n, But Fair
'

'

BY MINDY KEARNS

"I am a fil'm disciplinarian and believe in being fair to ~II
student$", was the way John Kaznoski, new principal at
Waharna High School describes himself.
·
. . · Originally from Fairmont, Kaznoski graduated from
Barrackville High School in 11160, received an AB degree in
· education from Fairmont State College in 1966, finished a
master degree at West Virginia University in education administration in 1972, and is currently finishing a certificate in
advanced studies at West Virginia University.
~
An educator for almost 10
years, the new Bend Area
principal came directly from
Parsons High School in
Tucker-County, where he had
served · as principal for two
years. Before this he had been
an assistant principal and
football coach at a high school
in :;;outh Carolina.

His wife, Lorraine, has been
a teacher for 10 years and was
hired by the Ma.On County
Board of Education Tuesday
evening as a teacher at New
Haven Elementary.
While living in Tucker
County, M~s. Kaznoski was
assistant . principal for . two
vears at Hamrick Elemen- ·

From the Meigs
mental health center - - -

Inner growth
Folks, Events, a Plug,
Did you know?, A new service
'

BY NAN MYKEL

· FOLKSPaul Dovyak, M.S.W., whose specialty is working with
adults, hilS been away in Philadelphia, where he attended the
. International Coogress oo Group Psychotherapy, and received
training there in psychodrama. Paul returned in time to begin
co-leading the assertiveness training group with Dr. Nan
Mykel Tuesday. Donna Roth of Athens is the new Coordinator
of the Crjsisline, BiU Breckenridge will be at the Meigs clinic .
Fridays now as he shifts to his new duties as therapist in the
Child and Adolescent Program, Bill joins John Branuner in
Meigs in working with children and youth. Glenn Dayton, who
does psychological testing at the 'lll,eigs clinic, recently
returned from a workshop on creativity and altered states of
consciousness at State University College in Buffalo, N. Y.
GleM recently authored an article in the •Journal of Creative
Behavior ..., A. new face in Personal Advocacy is secretary
Sherri Vining.

with the Brownie Scouts: She
is also a member of the Order
of Eastern Star.
The Kaznoskis .have two
children, Kelli. aRe ei.11.ht, who
wiU be in third grade, and
Derek, age silt, who will be in
secondgrade.
The family now tives in an
efficiency apartment at the
Point Pleasant Inn but their
. future plans are to build a
house in the New Haven area.
When asked what changes
.' he plans to make at the school,
Kaznoski said be would have
to wait llfilil school starts and
.
observe what needs to be
done.

.

sources . HergJc.u •d ·"c.ml.

h•1Wc \ l.!r. ha ve 111d1ntted
Carter is expected to act'tlpt
the bill, which has d earPd a
Senate-House conreren ce
committee and is due for final
con gressional approval next
month. His decisi on is
expec!A!d when he reviews the
legislatioo in a scheduled
meeting wit]j Bergland
Mooday .
Under
an
acrea ~e
retirement program, rarmers
who want to qualify for
government price supports
must idle cropland acreage
equal to a designated
percentage of the acres !hey
leave in production. Berglan~
said any 1978 set-aside would
be " modest" - equal ·to
ha
per ps 15 to 25 per cent of
next year's wheat acreage.
Bergland also said his aides
will meet here today and
Friday with Australian ,
Cana dian and Argentine
officia ls for continuing
preliminary talks about
negotiations
on
an
international wheat
agreement.
.
American officials want an
agreement
under whi ch '
'
exporllpg and importing
countnes would . share the
cost of an international
network
of
natwnally
co~lrolled wheat reserves.
We want (other counlr!es )
to share m thiS, aod they are
willing to do so. I think we 're
going to get an agreement,"

~~.so

tt's likely we 'll have a
sel.aside ," he said. He said
U1e con trols would probably
be applied to corn and other
livestock feed grains as weU

:'\it!J{(Illat wns

ou the protxJsal are du e to
"Pffl in London SCpt. 28.
Turning to UH! coming ded·
s1on on domestic cx•ntrols, the
agr it11lture seeretary said he
was reviewing a wide range
of alternative methods of
dealing with the growing
l,'l'ain surplus - from deep
acreage cuts Lo continuation
of unrestrained production
which would pile up a still
bigger reser ve:
But an other yea r or .uncon.
!rolled gra in production could
cost the ·government up to $7$9 billion, Berphuv"! :-.aid.

~

MASON FURNITURE

as to wheat, because
controllin g wheat alone
would lead some farmers to
increase feed grain output.
Bergland also said Wednesday that if Pr~ident Carter
indicates approval of the
fa rm biU, he will urge Carter
to use authority under older
laws to activate a sugar
support progrwn included in
the farm measure without
waiting fnr its final passage.

Mon .• Tues., Wed. &amp; Sa·t. - 8:30 til5 :00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE

'

WINNERS IN POLLED HEREFORDS OPEN CLASS
- L-r , Lea Ann Gaul, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger

~.-~-·-----..-·~

GRAND CHAMPION AND RESERVE CHAMPION
FEMALES in the open class, Murrey Grey breed, was

•.'.

FUNNY BUSINESS

In 1940, the United State's
and Canada established · a
World War II plan of joint
defense against possible
enemy attacks.

ca.n

CHARCf If

clinic.

•

bills itself as the " Bratwurst
Capital ' of the World, "
highlights numerous festivals
this weekend in Ohio.
A crowd of 150,000 is
expected to visit the northern
Ohio city today through
Sunday to sample· the
German sausage and other
foods . The city will alsn host

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REALISTIC COMPACT

United Press Intel'IUltiooal
Thousands of Ohioans who
loved Elvis Presley have
flocked to record stores
across the state, buying up
nearly every available album
by the legendary rock star.
Overwhelmed record outlet
managers described the run
' on
Elvis records
as
unprecedented, and they
. scrambled to order new
shipments to satisfy the

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album, $2 for a single and for potential Elvis albummassive demand .
" You 've got to be kidding," $27.88 for a four-record set, buyers from record outlet
a spokesman for Peaches Re- Elvis fans swooped down on managers was to wait at least
cords and Tapes in Cleveland record stores, cleaning out a few days, until additional
said Wednesday, when asked the entire stock of Presley special shipments have
how Presley record sales albums in even the biggest arrived.
The
managers
also
were going. "They're going outlets within a matter of
hours.
reported
individuals
coming
like hotcakes - 45's and
"We had just gotten in a in and spending more than
LP's, too. Peop'le were
shipment
of 600 to 700 Elvis $100 each on Presley
waiting in line even before we
opened today. They came in records, and in two hours recordings. ''My first sale
and picked up Presley's stuff they were all gnne," said a today was for about $150
record department manager worth of Elvis ' records,
right away ."
Paying up to $7 .5Cl for an at Rike's downtown store in mostly albums and his
Dayton. "I've never seen important singles," said. Ron
anything like it. It's like Brooks of Record Rendevous
Christmas time."
· in downtown Cleveland.
The supervisor of the "They're especially after- his

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record department at a · live albums - the Las Vegas ..
Lazarus departme nt store in one mostl y - and h'IS 1a test
ColumbUS estimated he had alb1iffi ."
sold $50,000 worth of Elvis
material in a little more than
two hours Wednesday. He
expected to get another
shipment in three or four
days .
Books about Presley also
went fast. Janet Block of tbe
Shillito's department store
chain in Cincinnati said a $5
biography about the singer
sold out In just a couple hours
Wednesday .
.
The most' common advice

A spokeswoman for the
Music World record chain in
Cincinnati said the run on
Presley albums began as a
lrickle Tuesday night, soon
after news of his death . The
stores hadn't completely sold
out by closing time. But when
they re,opened Wednesday,
" The rush really began,'' she
'said ..

ATHLnE ' S FOOT(;ERM
H~W ~0e~'5t~~ ·

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wa tell inf ec t ed sk1n slo~gh ot t
watch H EA LTHY sk in ap ·
pea&lt;! NOW at NELSON ' S
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BUFFALO, N.Y . (UP!)There in: Carter's Underwear, for boys and
The University 'of Buffalo,
girlsBriefs- T-Shirts - White and Prmts.
claiming Its athletes will be
Plus
Girls
Printed Bikinis.
·
competing "on a more
realstic level," was granted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
permission by the NCAA
Hours:
Wednesday to reclassify its
9: 30 to 5:00
athletic membership from
Mon . thru· Sat.
Division I to Division III .
9:30 to 8.:00
The re-classification,
Friday
effective Sept. I, was
announc~d by Ed Muto,
director of intercollegiate
athletics at the school. He
said ail men's varsity athletic
NEAR THE FABRIC SHOP IN POME~OY teams will be classified in
Division Ill, 'with the
;992.-3586
· Pomeroy, 0 .
2nd Street
exception of baseball and ice
hockey .

.

Op en N! ght s ti'I ~ . . POM EROY, O. J

fO( longer lasting

·CONTINUES

Size 0.14

Friendly s~rvi ce

I'

ROOF PAINT

•

SIDEWALK SALE

8al5 and Girls

Charles Riffle, R. Ptl .
Ronel d H•n nmg . R Ph
Mon thr uSat . 8:00a .m lg 9p. m
Scnda v 10 &lt;30 1o 12 &lt;l&lt;• and 51o 9p.m .
, CR&lt;PTIONS
PH . 9922955

·---------~
L-.-.-~---·· -· -· - ·-·~- · --··-· . . . .--J

strong , qu i tk ·d•y ing T· 4 · L
check~ 1 1c~ a~datbuarnn;n~r~~

~~~ter .' T;~ ,

I
!
II
t

KennPth McCullough, R Ph

. •· lEMAIN ·
1- ~--

•

SEW and SAVE

88

CUT

40 CH. MOBILE CB

RESERVE GRAND CHAMPION STEER in the 4-H division was won by Pamela Kay
Miller, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Byron Miller, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

Presley albums rn Ohio gone (like hotcake~)

Ac ousti c suspension MC-1000 fits on a shelf, but
hc:tuses an 8" woofer &amp; 3 " tweeter for fu ll30-20,000 Hz .
Genuine walnul veneer ca·se, 17'!.xB '!. x11 •;•· . Save •so
on matched stereo pa ir' 40-1980

--·- -

I
I

I

5

Ea.

_. ___....,_
_ ___

I
I

REALISTIC ''BELL RINGER"
HI-FI SPEAKER BARGAIN!
Reg.

IIt

1 lb. $3.25

I
I

-

.

I

IIt

•

SAVE· 41°/o

L
II
I

I

I

Reg.

I

ALWAYS FRESH

I

I GAVE AT
1-IE OFFICE .

.

-

II

Save 37% on o ur He al ist ic Moduletle® "808 " Iota!
music system in 11me fo r school' Perfect fo r
a par lm ent o r d o r m . Au to -stop, au to• le vel , phontl
a n d m1ke mputs. matc hed speakers• 14-945

~

r---~----------~--l

0.UMI .t ,...... ... .-br 0100•

SAVE$60

I

l

····~

M

I

I

--""""
'~"'11~~­
s ~ . c ~ ~to•••
01~•• .,,..,, ,
j&gt;IOAI

1
i

the Old Fiddlers Sta te
crafts show. Coshocton and neighboring Championship and rides on
Roscoe Village will be the site .the Hocking Valley Scenic
of ihe Canal F~tival, which Railway.
features rides on an early
The state's official state
1800 canal · boat, crafts, flower, the Carnat\on, will be
FLORIS T
parades and other activities the featured att~action at the
Ca rnati on
Festival
in
today through Sllllday . .
Nelsonville ' will , host the Alliance today through
PH. 992·2644
Parade of the. Hills Festival Sunday. The first carnations
\
grown in the West were · 1 1) 2 E ~o\ain , Pomeroy
~
Y~r FTD Fl(\,. id
}
planted by Levi Lamborn, a
~-~ . -....-...._ .._._.. ........ _.....;
native of Alliance.

lh.ou ~ .. o c••G• I Cll dl ' ' '

EVENTS

Friday, August 26, wiU be the first of a weekly film forum
at the mental health clinic. The first film is entiUed "Between
Man .and Woman," and deals with !he topic of marriage.
Showmgs wiU be announced later. Look for speech therapy to
. be available at tbe Meigs clinic in September. Fotty"'ix
' persons heard Dr. Bernie Niehm, Director of Consultation and
Education, address the Personal Advocacy Conference
recently at Oscar's ·restaurant in Gallipolis. The dinner
honored the current Citizen Advocates. Dr. George Greaves
Clinical Director of the Gallla.Jackson-Meigs CommunitY
Mental Health Center, and Mrs. Maxine Plummer Executive
·D irector .of the 648 Board; also spoke.
'
The women's issues group slated for Meigs this fall wiU
not be a local "first. "
Already, women staff members and wives cif staff
members have joined after hours into suppor~ groups for one
another, Two separate groups are now meeting in members'
homes. Nfue SCnior Friends met with coordinator Kathie
Filsinger recently for a day , of inservice ln!ining. Films,
handouts and ·discussion centered on ways to work with people
who hl!ve had strokes, people wbo are. withdrawn and
depressed, use of information and referral serVices, physical
fitness and nutritioo training for senior citizens.
We hope to see our friends at the Fair . We have a booth in
the new white concrete block building, No.2, andare-featW'ing
a comic strip character.
PLUG
Mary Skinner is looking for 45 volunteers to befriend a
&lt;levelopmentaUy disabled person. · Her . Citizen Advocacy
Program (CAP) pairs Advocates (volunteers) with Proteges
(developmentaUy disabled persans ) in an effort to provide
social, emotiooal and recreational experiences which foster
more independenCe. The youngest Advocate is 16 and the
oldest is 75. Those interested are encouraged to conlact Mary
at 992-2192.
·
DID YOU KNOW?
During the month of July the Crisisline received 339 phone
.calls. Of these, 30 originated from Meigs. Most frequent areas
of cmcem were interpersonal, family, suicide, depression and
mai+lage. There were 42 calls in April, 198 in May, and 363 in
June. The•Crisisline is a ~our telephone counseling. service
which Meigs residents may reach by calling ~.
·
.NEW SERVICE
t1le forensics program is one of tbe newer offerings of the
mental health center. It primarily serves clients who are
referred for evaluation and-or treatment from the ·court,
probation or parole authorities. Secondarily tbe program will
de81 with legal probleiTlll encountered by clients and staff in
IIIII operation of the mental health center. The contact person
l'or !hill JIW'PO!Ie is Jim Lansford, in the Meigs mental health

won by Michele Avis, grandchampion aqd Tom Avis,
reserve. Both are from Shade in Athens County.

GOOD LEARNING BEGINS WITH GOOD LISTENING!

at state fair Monday

28.

.

Gaul Chester had the reserve champion and Diana Cox,
'
Coolville had !he grandchampwn.

Bratwurst capital feature· of weekend festivals in Ohio
Your "E xtra Touch"
B'ucyrus, which proudly three parades and an arts and today through Sunday with )r Floris1 Since 1957

It's 'farmers' honor'
abuse of the free admission .
" We 'll just have to go by
the honor system, " officials
said.
Officials said 158 ,250
persons attended the fair
Wednesday.
Today will be Ohio Fair
Manager's day with a
luncheon for members of the
Ohio
Fair
Managers
Association at the Rhodes
Center.
Also scheduled today is
judging of professional floral
arrangements and canned
products and harness racing
in the evening.
.. The fair runs through Aug.

Mason ,.W. Va .

Herman Grate

773-5592

.:~nd ~DIJ

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Officials of the Ohio State Fair
say they will have to rely oo
"the honor system" during
.Farmer's Day at the state
fair Monday.
On that day, all 'farmers
will be a dmitted free of
charge if they arrive .at the
fairgrounds before 2 p:m.
But, officials said, "Anyb9dy
could really get in for free if
!hey wanted to."
The officials said there
would be no way to check to
see if a person reaUy . made
his living by farming , and
they said they dia · not
anticipate a great deal of

~~----------------~----------~------------------~1

STORE HOURS

Spread rate aPpi-oxitnatetv 500 sQuar:e
·· teet per gallon , depentl ing on .surface
cond ition .

.•

SHOP OUR COMPLETE PAINT DEPARTMENT

E·BERSBACH HARDWAR-E .
!

110

PH. 992-2811

W. MAIN

".

'

'

POMEROY

'

\

�J

10-Tho Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 11, 1977
Movie " The ~eluctant Debuatante" 10: ABC New$

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES '

•

·-,

I
l:i \\,lt'\l, ... Untk·t

In MPmory

l\t).h

Idol~

100

~Wn!!i

IN LOVING memory ol our son
and brother Rtcll. Rowe who
dted one year ago August 18

1&gt;0

~lilt~~

1.1

btla~ ~

'"'

E&lt;ld1

¥t unluu•r l lo..• IUU\III'WLI JJ
:•htrt.b IIi ~ Hltl.s J)t'l ~ 1111] j.)&lt; r t\&lt;i~
1\tU, I Ul\1111~ .ul}lt'r li"•U ~ \~l"l'\ Ui 1\ t'
!Ia~~ '4111 llo.· d~l ):t'l.l a: llu 1 ,,,,,

197b

When the fotnily rneets

liib'

ond vou re not there You seem
ro s,m tie and soy. Don t Cry t
I m only sleep tn g and we 'll
meet ogo•n some day
One

In

heart of 9old stopped beot.ng
IWO shuiy eyes of rest God

Card ;)( rh.mk..· .wo

llil'IUIJI) '

OiJiltliU1. t11~Hb

Jll'l'

'ol. md $.1tltl

ttlu uruutn Ca,.h Ullil.h'..nH·

\t obtk- Houw i&gt;lik'll•tlk.l y,,ld l&gt;..tlt •!~.
litt• i;lt'i 't 1ph'(J Olth

V. l\h L 1\iil ~~~~~

2fl{'t'lllo!.'h&lt;1t~l'flll &lt;Hbt&lt;i/1\~lj.! llu~ Numti•r In Cm·o· tlf l'lw S.•H·

l lldt' (

lind

broke our hearts to prove to us ,
He only takes the besr , From a
wreck ed ~ o r to heo ¥enly r est ,
God look you home to be Hts

guesl

but God dec•ded we
rnust port , He eosttd .your po•h .

· bur

Tift• PuLJoh,.,llCr· n.&lt;M.'t ll'~ tru 1 n:tu
lu t'lltt nr 1 t'Jt l't &lt;IlL\ 1:11h dt\ ' lit d ••1&gt;}t'Wllll&lt;ll Tilt' Publi~ht•t \Io iii milO.·
Ll'Sjl&lt;.l/1)1-li..Jl t • f ,,l llh&gt;l, likll! ''"' Jilt 1•1·
~~~· Ul~ l11lJi l

l?l)(!l!t' Y':fl-:! I:.t.~

Your
we tl

gr ove with loving

co r~ .

T ~ Stlc.\

he&lt;:~rts an~ bu ned w ith you
t t'lere Sadly mtssed by Mother ,

Nulices

lhru FruhH
4 PM
thl tl&lt;t' Ut&gt;fu u' publ•t d l h~l

f ' 1 td&lt;t) Clftt'!'IU~Il1

m~n t mum

17 ,000 lb 2 speed rear axle ,
ratio 6 SO ; 1 m1nimum
Factory re -en forc ed frame
5 speed transm 1Ss ron D 1r ec t m f ifth
All types of engine ·w 1ll be
cons•der ed but b1d must
spec i fy'
cub i c
Inch
displacemen.t , number of
cvt mders . etc .. m1n1mum 350
c u •nch
Heavy du t y front and rear
spr ings witli overload s on
rear
2 speed el ectr i c wipers windshield washers
S1gnal lights with haz ard
sw itch
Heater and Defro ster
900 X 20 tires, mud and
snow on rear - Cast spoke
whee ls
Power Steering
Heavy duty brakes
~eavy duty c lutch
Heavy duty battery
Heavy duty bumper
HeaV y duty A l ternator
Wes t Coast M tr rors
Mud flaps
2 front tow · hoo ks
rear
tow loop
Without dump bed
&lt;;olor yell ow
He vv duty Fr-ame and
Frame
Reinforcement
Bidder must transfer bed
from 1969 Chev . t ruck , and
sno w blade
2 For sale by the V i llage of
Pomeroy lfs 1969 Chevrole t
ClaSS IS T he b tdder may sta te
e1ther what he w i ll g i ve tor
t h e 1969 Chevrolet Chassts or
what amount he w i ll a llow as
a trade. in for t he new Tru ck
ChaSSIS descrrbed .
Each . btdder may bi d for
ei the r the purchase of the
1969 Chevro l et or tor the sale
to the Village of Pomeroy of a
new Truck ChaSSIS descnbed
above or both Each Qld must
contain the full nerne of every
per:son or company interested
1n the same, and the bid mu st
be acc or:npan1ed by a check
or bond rn the sum of S100 00
to th e satisfact. on of the
VtHage Council as a guaranty
that if the b.Jd is acc epted ,
con t ract w tll be entei'ed 1nto
and its pertor_manc e properl y
secure.d
These checks or
bonds w •ll be returned at once
to a tt except the successful
b i dder His check or bond Wtll
be held until the contraCt or
gj ~· is ~~oper t~ execu ted b-y
Ttle
re.ie~t

ngbt 1S reser v ed
any aod all btdS

:C

VILLAGE OF POMERO¥
( 8J.

n:

18. 21 1:

•

NOTICE Glf
PUBLIC SALE .
. Bid s will be rece ived a.t th e'
OUJces of Fultz and Kn1ght,
on East Secon d St reet ,
Pomeroy
Nat i ona l Bank
Bu il ding , P omeroy , Oh10 , ·
until Monday , the 29t l'l day of
August. 1977 . a t 10. o 'c locK ·
•. A.M .: tor . the TJ!;!!fl i:!sto!t~ ·Of,
• ~l li. a~-eth · ·By.er J a ckson,
·sr tua ted . on the, corner, Of
• Grar'll Str~et and Broadway
.S tr~t ; in' tt~e
'Vi)lage Of ,
· 'Mi(ldi~Port., . Mefg~&gt; Co'u ht'y .
• · ' OflJQ . · T he- re-al· etitate was
· appta1sed a t S2.SOO .OO, and
cannot be sold for less than
t he appraised valu~ .
1 will also offer for sale, at
the time and place above
statel:l , th e tallow •ng persona l
property . 1 Gold Wedd mg
Band , 1 Wh 1te Gold Wedd 1ng
Band . 2 Whrte Gold D i amo nd
Solitaire R 1ngs , 1 Pear l R tng
in Gold Setting , and 1 Go ld
Diamond
Solrta~re
R l ng
(damaged sett i ng ).
The
Adm 1n 1st rator
reserves the rtght to re 1ect
anv and a II tHdS . and b 1dS are
subtect to approval of court
Bernard v Fultz ,
Adm in l slrator of
Estate of
El izabeth B~er Jackson ,
deceased .

..

(8 ) 17, 18, 19, 21 , 23. 25 , 28, 7 tc

your YEARBOOK , rncludmg
your SE NIOR PORTRAITS you
w10 hove regular and scenic
backgrounds and props . We
w1H show a \(Oriety of prev1ews
1n full calor for your selection of
pose or poses LOVtl pnces, 30
yrs
expenence, sa t 1~fac t 1on
fully guaranteed Ken G rover

m 7755.

/hr11 1" lmflill\id h\· /aJ)!I fm1~'

lllnli-l "tNj!lolidlt\lhii ' S IA{'I

o1 1Jlhol H11111J/f rlf Lnht11
lit' hul/1 1111 .\ o /8i;

ol conning tomatoes on hand.
53 00 a bus.he l. bnng coo to•ners Ftrs.l form south of
Re-eds ville , Oh•o . State Route
124 . Phone (61.t } 378-6]q5
Closed Sundays .

Hliij&gt;cWanfpff_

1.\'STkl 'l '/1(},\

.~Jfllt•

00 YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX-"
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY PAR

TIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS
DEMON ·
STRATORS. SEll GUARANTEED
TOYS . GIFTS NO SERVICE
CHARGE
PHONE CAR
NECESSARY. CAll COLLECT TO
CAROLDAY (518) 489·8395.

BUILDINGS

-CARHOP apply
-

NO FIITURE?IN AS$ RUT?
Con~idf'l

PARTTuneurFULL Tune Tram

mg Prl.gram. If vou are v:orkm~
I\111 t QULI YtM.Jr-]ob, .tttend our
Weekend Trammg wos!am or at
tend our 3 WeekFl LL T1me Res

4.. 6.7671
NEED TEMPORAR Y cleanmg lady
Phone 992 -3..489
INQUIRE AT General l1re, M td
d~epo~_EKperlence helpful

1dent Trmmn~

PARKERSBURG

1-304·422·4080

~ ~~~iliiiiiiiiii

sso REWARD
IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer ,
wont to buy or sell something .
ae lookmg for work . . or
whatever . you 'll get results
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad

Coll992·2156.
VARO SALE , 137 Pearl Street , MtddleporL Tues thru Sot .. 9.30 to

5 00.
YARD SALE , Fn ., Aug 19 at
Laurel Cltff , Maxine Mrchoel
Glassware , old trunks , porch
swing , salt and pepper
shakers In ca,e of rom , wtl l
hovesole on porch.
FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole M an
and lues , 22nd and 23rd, 9 untt f 5. Lots of nice tfems including cann mg tors , lamps and
1eons Frrst rood to left after
passm g W M P 0 Rom cancels
YARD SALE Cl1fton W Va , Fn
and Sat. Elsie Jane Bennett
res tdence 2 houses above Post
Offrce

'------.--

RISING STAR Kennel Boardmg ,
Indoor Outdoor runs , groomrng
all breeds , dean san1tary
tocd1ttes oe 367-7112 Cheshire .

Phone (61&lt;)367·0292.
HOOF HOLLOW Buy , sell , trade
or from horses. RUTH REEVES ,
trainer . Phone {6U) 698 3290
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
(M1n .) Coll ies, 2 females, 7
weeks old. Shots and wormed
Phone {614 ) 367-0292 or

Clrcle'Jille, Ohio, Boll 523
(814) 474- 8732

STARCRAFTIOth onnlversory sole
, on mini-motors trailers, and
folddowns. Trovels tar 25 ft
$4400.00, 70 ft mtn t·motor
$ 10,850 00. We sell s.ervtce and
quality. Comp Conley Starcroft
Soles, Rt. 62 north of Pt Plea·
sant .
FAIR MONTH SPECIAL on ent1 re
stock See them a t COONER S
CAMPERS on Rambow ndge
From Rt 7 toke Metgs 28 or 32
to Basham. Open evenings ,
too Owner, Rober t Codner,
long Bottom . Ohio

$50. Con
Sycamore

Pomeroy · Forest' Pro.
ducts Top pnce fo r dondlng
sawtimber Call 992·5965 or
___Ke f}t Hol'lby. 1-446-8570

COINS .- CURRENCY, tokens , ofd
pocket watche-s. and chams ,
s1lver and gold We need 1964
and older silver corns Buy, sell.
or trade Coli Roger Womsley ,
742-2331
OlD FURNITURE , 1cfi bo~ee s , brass
bed 's , 'e tc ,
(omplete
hQusehol~s . '~-{rite M D M tller ,
R.,t . 4. Pomero y . Ohio or call
·
992. 1760
·~::.:
· ;:::-'--'-~

CASH I I ' Junk cars , Fr{s Truck &amp;
AUto. Rutlahd Phone 742-2081
or 742 9575. Closed Mondays
NO liEM TOO Lorge or too small
Will buy I p1ece or complete
household New , used , or an ti ques Mort ~n 's Furn1ture 20 N
'2nd St , M1ddleport . Phone

992·6370

The Alamanac
United Presslolernatlooal
Today is Thursday, Aug. 18,
llle 230th day of 1977 with 135
to foll9w.
The moon is between its
new phase and its first
quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus, Mars, Jupiter and

.976. ~esiderit Fo~d wa5
The ev~ning ·star is
In 1 •
·
Mercury
Those born on this date are
nOfllinaled at the ~ublican
National Convention · In · d th . of Leo
ticket of Wl er e Sign
.
'
Kansas City· ""'
Actors Robert Redford and
Gerald Ford and Robert ~e !i1Je)ley Winters were b&lt;lrn on
was defeated in November y th ' date- he in 1937 and She
JimmY Carter and Walter in ~ 922
Mondlle.
f
'
·
l

$een ot 655
Str~et
Middleport

aher4 . 00p~
~ ~-300 BUSHEl shelled corn . Coli
_ (6_1&lt;1__8
_43·26=5=3:._
. -SEASONED LOCU ST posts. Call
742-2790.
FIREWOOD
truckload ,

992·6353 .
992·7130.
WURLITZER ORGAN . 2 yrs. old.
hke new. Foot pedals . Phone

9927206

3 AND o4 RM. f urnished ond un· ' 1975 400 Kowosok i. low mileage.
fu rn1shed opts. Phone 992992 -5510 .
5434
'
COUNTRY Mob tle Home Pork Rt
33, ten m•les north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots with concrete pat ios,
stdewolks. runners and off
Let Pomeroy Landmark
street pork.ng Phone 99'2 7479 .
soften &amp; condition your
FURNISHED APT Adults only , no
water and Co-op water
pets
Phone 992-3874 , Mtd
softener, Model UC-XVI.
dleporl

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Now Only

TWO BEDROOM tro ller adults on-

ly . Coll992·3324
TO RENT. R1versrde Apls. I
bedroom slorlrng at SIOO per
mo 2 bedrooms starting ot
$138 per mo Equa l Housing
Opportunlly. Coll992 6098
10

~e

50 UNFURNISHED mob,le
home on Story's Run , Phone
992 5639 , between 9 ond 3

TRA ILER IN Rac:me , and tra tler
spo~e Coli 949-2654
TRA ILER SPACE available Sept . I ,
across from Pomeroy Elementary ScMool Call 992 -304 4 or

992-3736

IN MASON 2 bed r opt with sto-,e
and refngerator Carp.eted and
d eon . No children or pets Call

(3~1 773~5~
97~7~
· --~~-TRAILER SPACE on l43 , three
quarters of a mtle from Rt 7

Call (61 I) 367·7743

mother cot and blue wh1te, ECONOMY TRACTOR with all at·
T1ge r and block and wh1te kit·
fo chmenl s Like new , asking
t ens Coll992-6034
52250. Phon&amp; (61 A) 698 -3290
JOHN DEERE Crawler Backhoe
endloader and dump truck
Phone992-7479

Let us
Free.

•279.95

test

your'

water

Pomef(IJ Landmark

'9. _Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
llill. Phone m -2111

NEST RUN eggs, by tMe do!en or
by the case . Michael Farms , 1
'I J mtles south on County Rd

25.
30" ELECTRIC Range , wh1te , excellent cond1lron
AM -FM
stereo record player. Call
985-3892 otter 6 pm. fo r mformot•on .

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
R-2
P-.lor, Ohio4576!
Patio5 - Sldi!twal-s - New ConstructiOn •;
Remodehnc

PIL !92·7111 "196-1005
Esllftlotes lfltlliod to job.
6-21·1 mo pd

197 t FORO three- quarter ptckup.
A-speed trons ., uhlitT body . 390
engine. $1,200. Col 992-5 101 ,
Fulton -Thompson Tractor Soles .

-

..

Garden Center

1210 Woshlntton BIYd.
Belpre, Ohio

lo your door by way

NEAR HAD loti:

·

Automatic

COIJV I'-ICED'

Blown
(molotioft Stnicos
f111111Cin!lklloblo
lllown lnlll W.ats &amp; Altic1
5101111
WINDOWS &amp; IJODRS

ot

•cu stom H yd ra ullc Hose
Mak•ni
Phone 992· 21U
Pomeroy , a .
87 -1mo.

WHO

----

--

Colt 7&lt;2·2089
30 ACRES NEAR Forest A cres
Park , $1tJ,SOO Jerry Cline ,

992 7790.

.,

BY

St 33.

20,33

E)(PE~T;;..

9 · 3()-Three' s Conipany 4
Martin 3,4, IS,
Barnaby Jones 8.

10 oo-Dean

!&gt;TRICTLY FOR.
TH~81RPS1

Westside

6,

Med1cal

tO : JQ--.News 20. Amencana 33.

REP LACEllE NT
WINDOWS
AWIIINUII
SIOifK.SOffiTT

.... .

I LOFOD

~

I

it, " do ''

boKdtn.

,...,.11. Spo&lt;•l pricos

lo

Phone 949·2114

9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

lh1·~•·

~16-1

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum Siding.
Storm Windows &amp; Insula.
lion.
Call Professionals

RICH. WELL FED PfDPlE HESITATE

D. Bumgardner

Pool Sales

Bissell Siding Co.

Nobit Sumtnit •aad

RLl
lliddleport, 0.
"2·5124

Phone 949·2101
or949·2860

Complete S.los 11111 Smico ond
plies.

Frtt Estimatls

No Sunlfor Colts p~,..

mo

Call992 748.1c:.._.~---NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
all elec , I acre , Middleport ,
close Ia Rutland Phone 992-

748:C1-':"--~--,---,...,.,-..,...-

TEAFORD(B
REALTOR
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

SPACIOUS THREE bedroom ranch ,
formal dining room . fullyequipped ktlchen 2'11 baths,
centro I 01r, two cor garage,
fami ly roorn Features stone
fireplace and hvtng room hos
bow wmdow Beaurtful locol ion , A m• nor1h of Pomeroy
Upper 60's. By appt , 992 2996.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , t oasters , irons , al l
small appliances l awn mower,
next to State HigMway Garage
on Ro.vte 7. Phone (614) 965·

WilDWOOD ESTATES , Flatwoods
Rood ha-, e several chloce lofs
for sale for res•denc1 al homes .
Zoned fer your proleclron 6 m1.
from Pomeroy. OH Coli or see,
GeorgeS . Hobstefter, Box 101.
Pomeroy Phone 985 -4186

4

bedrooms, bath, natural
gas, 2 car garage and extra

level lot for garage. $12,100.
FLEA
MARKET
Business building ap-

382;::
5 '-~-----

SEWING MACHINE Repairs . servic e all makes , 992 2284 . The
fobrrc
Shop , Pomer oy
Authorized Singer Sales and
Ser-,lce We shorpe ~sso rs .

77 ACRES , excellent t1mber m
Metgs Co ., Lebanon Tow11ship

Col l843·2737
FIVE ROOM house. nice yard
good locat ion . S.S 500. Coli

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader o11d
bocl&lt;.hoe work , durnp t ruck s
and lo boys tor hlfe , wdl hau l
t ill d ir t to sod , l1mestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers, day phone 992-7089
n•ght phone 992-3525 or 992

949-2860
33 AC S, new fences good well ,
f ree gas , good posture, 3 beclr .
troll er, :2 rooms butlt ·OI'l .
located Rt 681 to Snowv ille.
turn at Snowvil le Store , 1.4
mJi e See Ed Holley

proximately 30'x-40'
Dexter for $3,500 .

at

LARGE OLDER -

10

rooms ,

bath,

hot

water

room. small basement.
large wrap around porch,

on corner lot with double
garage. $35.000.
BARGAIN - 2 buildings ;

992· 5858~------

LIVING

· Close to mine area , 2 acres,
2 story frame, 4 bedrooms,
l 'h baths, some carpeting

large wrap around front

ranch

fype

home,

3

bedrooms. 2 baths, cook &amp;
bake units , 2 car garage,

thermopane w(ndows and
nice lot . $34,500.
NEW LISTING - Country
7 rooms,

3

bedrooms,

2

baths. Master has lull bath.
Lots of closets, dining aru,
family room, low radiant
heal bills. all carpeted. 2
patios , and one acre . A

firm S45,DOD.
A WORD TO THE WISE.
DON'T LET PEOPLE IN,
CALL 9'12·332.5 AND LIST
WITH US • &gt;R YOUR
SAFETY.
Helen L. Teaford
Gordon B. Teaford
Assoc lotH

Yesterday's

PROVE 11!

large lot. $31,000.00.
BABY FARM CLOSE IN 12 acres, 4 B.R. brick
homo, nice kitchen, ullllly,
enclosed
porch , full
basement, central heating,
outbuildings lnlce for
building sites). S25.DOD.OO •
WHY PAY RENT - But
this - JUST $4,900.00- 2
bedrooms just remodeled.
bath, porches, 2 lots, In
good neighborhood.
WE
HAVE
NEW
Ll5riNGS EACH WEEK
- OUR NEW PHOTO
LISTING SERVICE IS
SELLING PROPERTIES.
LET US SELL YOURS
TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REA TOR
Honk, Kolhy &amp; Loono
Clll.. nd
Associates

m-22st or m-25"

Behind time because late ln

Answer

bed-"BE-LATE·D"

~

by THOM~S JOSEPH
38 Consonan\
ACROSS
1 Late Mama 39 Fashioned
of song
40 Incensed
5 Cross
DOWN
verbal
I "R U R "
swords
playwright
II Asian r1ver
2 " form 12 Pam!
perfect
,..-'--------.::-;:::::~-~ 13 GramUmon "
matl
cal
(2 wds.)
1
Kf.l0W.
BUT
IT'LL
Mf.XE'
IT'S 01-lL\.f 101&lt;.
case (abbr.)
3WomanA&amp;XJD DOWN
FIVE'
H College VIP
suffrage
r,.,,.
f'A"'MEfJT Of.l
15
Eventful
leader
DOLL-A~.
4 Graduatmg
period
16 Backus or
group
Brown
(abbr. )
17 Thai
5 Ridicule
18 Arthur or
6 Kind of
George
agent
20 Kmg - Saud 7 Hunter's
21 Ulna or
catch
, ~e
-·~
tarsal, e.g
8 Famed
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;:;::=.....J ~ LJ~~-:...::E~t_-~~~=--~ ~~ Hallway
feffilmst
(2 wds.)
items
24- it
My cash box is $4.19
We're related
(amen )
short.
Skeezix!
(2 wds. I
now' Why don't
Spanish
4ou call me
movte
5keezi '
house
·~.·~~1fJ~26 Henry or
Josephine
27 Opposite of
a syn .
Comfort
31 Cheer
32 South

qreat,

Mr.

Wallet!

r.hc"'--o~..;;

WLABNER

WHo I&lt;NOWS??-

IS JT SCARCfE
TI-115

SCENE:
IS

Neighborhood 20 ,33 ; Emergency One 13; Mi ssion :

impOssible 15
S:JD-Adam-12 4, News 6; Fam1ly Altair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33.6:()()--News 3,4,6,8.10,13.15; ABC News 6;
Zoom 20,33
6·3D-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC 13; Andy Griffith 6; CBS
News B,10, Vegetable Soup 20.7 oo--Truth or Cons.
3; ExpOhlo '77 4; ; Liar's Club 6; $128.000 Question
B; News 10. To Tell the Truth 13, My Three Sons 15,
Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Inner Tennis 33.

15; Keane Brothers 8, 10; Wash i ngton Week In

Review 20,33
S:Jo-NFL Football 15; Year at the Top 8,10; Wall
Street Week 20.33.
9 : 0()--.Movie " Summer of ' .1]2" 6,13; Movie " The Carey
Treatment" 8,10; 1977 Drum Corps International

Championships 9, Lowell Thomas Remembers 20;
Documentary Showcase 33.

Yesterday 's Answer

26 Wea ring
a cowl
28 Greek
island
29 D.rcctor
Sergio30 D1d
wrong
35 P1geon
pea
36 Fatuna 's
son

9 Defensibl e
10 Singer John
and
namesa kes
16 Actress Salome
19 Observe
22 Candidates,
for short
23 Istanbul
sight
21 Torpedoed
25 Fondle

,.__,.,.-.,........,__,,.-=..,

9·30--Something Personal 20.
10 ·oo--News 20; Firing Line 33
10:3D-Hollywood Sq.uares 3; NFL Football 4; Woman
20
1l .OD-News 3,6,8,10, Jj; Fawlly. Towers 20; Black
.
.
Perspectl ye on the News 33
11 :3D-Bewllched 3; Ba rella 6.13; News 4,15; Mov1e
1'

Runaway! " 8, Movie " The Nanny ; "

News 33 .

12 oo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Janak! 33
12·4D-Mod Squad 6. Ironside 13 .
1:3D-Midnight Special 3,4,15, Mary Hartman 10.
1;4D-News 13
3 oo--News 3.
J : Jo-Movle 11 Sergeant Ryker" 3 3
4 : 45--Movie " See My Lawyer"
" Pr i vate Buckaroo" 3

WATER WELL drtilmg
Plione
Wilham P. Grant at 742-28~
after 6p.m
PENNZOIL RUTLAND open dolly
ttH 10
Closed Mondays,
wrecker service. hre repa ir .
Phone 7_.2.9575 or 742-2081 .

• LOOK!
TJ.IEY NEED A

t:J/8HWASIICR
HEI2E!

NOT? IT'o
HONEST WORK !
AT LEAST
IT'LL P.&gt;UY US
GROCEI21ES I

WINN IE. 'r'OUYE BEEN 50
WORRIED ABOUT VOUR

t:'AUG~T~ , YOU 'RE MISS ING

ROMANCE GOING
ON HE.RE ;f?/GHT UNOER

A LITTLt:

YOUR VeRY IVOSE !

EXCAVATING. BACKHOE. dozer.
•

18

NORTH
• 53

A88
tKQJ9 75

9

.,3

Korean

WEST

EAST

.61

.9872
YQI0953
tl06

yKJ72

tA83

.,

•KJ97

&lt;1&gt; 52

SOUTH 101
• A K Q J 10

t42
• AQ 10 6 4

Both vulnerable
West

Nortb Eatt

A X Y D I. B A A X R

Pass

2t

Pass

L 0 N G F E I. I. 0 W

Pa$s

3+

Pass

Pass
Pass

3N T
Pass

Pass
Pass

p pening lead -

s•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

WRECKING

All

build1ngs . 9~9- 2654

kinds

The Unlucky Expert has
A
U
U
D
,
cornered
us agam This time
.L F S I
B 1P Z
SL
GUNMQZ
,he was willing to take some of
0 N p MNG P U
N L L U Q the blame for h1s troubles on
N
GMQ
SQ ' L
his own shoulders
B
J
C
N
0
U
I
•
Q
" I was· playmg Wllh Old
DBBJ
ZBM'JU
SY
Bumble Puppy as my partner.
N1z L U1LU . F S I CMG G N J A
I had told h1m last week that
.
when declarer bid two su1ts, it
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: GREAT ACHIEVEMENTS ·was frequently worthwhile to
BUILD A MONUMENT WHICH SHALL ENDURE UNTIL THE .open a trump . I neglected to
1pomt out that when dum~y
FABRICIUS
SUNG Rows COw --GEORG
had shown no mlef est 1n
© 1977 Kin, Futures :!iyndu::•te,lnc

trencher,, Low Bov , dump truck
trucks. septic systems . Bill
Pullins . phone 992-2478 day or
night.

THE RECEPTION WILL

985-3886 .
TWO BEDROOM mobrl• home
furnith.d , c~tral 01t, e"celleni

cond;uan. $3.500. Call (30&lt;)

remained unbid. it would be
best to open that suit
" In any event he opened a
trump agamst the four spade
contract. It took South approxim,ately ten seconds to
pull trump, knock out the ace
of d1amonds and collect
twelve tricks."
We agreed that. Bumble
Puppy should have opened a
heart and when diamonds
were led he must duck the
first round . Therefore, we ab·
solved the Unlucky Expert of
any real blame . Old Bumble
Puppy was brought up m llle
school that never led away
from a king unless unfor·
lunate enough to have been
dealt all four of llle royal
gentlemen
So, although this hand really
er~ed out for a heart lead we
feel that Bumble Puppy would
not have led that suit under
any ctrcumstances.

To answer the many
readers who have asked when
1s it prope'r to lead from a.
king , w~ give today 's hand as
a classic example.
(Fo r

1

copy ol JACOBY
ro. " Win ol

MODERN. send $1

c/o thiS newspt()er,
P.O Sox 489. Radio City Slorlon.

Br;dge, "

New York. NY 10019/

""'RNEY

i

882 2&lt;66 .

either SUit and or.e SUit

of

1971 STAR Mobile Home , 60 x 12,
e"cellent condition , gas heat ,
$5.500. Call
many extras
985-3505 , if no answer , call

6 : oo-Movie

=+--t-~Oid Bumble Puppy bombs

CRYPTOQUOTES

W~Y

3;

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

htnts. E:~ c h day I he code letters nrc dtfferent

992·2082.

8E HELD OOIJN5TAIR5
IN THE D06 HOUSE

i• .ry

I

.f

ABC

BRIDGE

One l ett er ,imply sta nds fo r another ln th1 s .sample A is
u~ed for the three I.':;, X f or the two O's, rtc ~ 1n g le letters.
:tpostrophcs. the lNlgth and formatw n of the words are i\11

PIANO TUNING , Lone Oan1els 12
y.eors of
serv1ce
Phone

10,

,

sold1er
33 Poetical
adverb
34 Eaten
away
36 God of
love
37 Governing
body

Is

HARRISON 5 T. V Repair. Servrce
Calls . 276 Sycamore, St ., Mid
dleport . PMone 992-2522

33
3· 1&gt;-General Hospital 6,13
3:3D-Match Gam e 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20, M.D.
33.
4·0D-Mister Cartoon 3; State Fair Gang Show 4; Gong
Shaw 15; New Mickey Mouse Cl ub 6; Gilligan's Is
B; Sesame St 20,33; Movie "A Joyous Sound" 10;
Oinah 13.
4:»-MY Three Sons 3 _
,
5:0D-Big Valley 3; BradY. Bunch 8; Mister Rogers

1· 3D-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6, Treas ure Hunt B; MacNeil. Lehrer Report 20,33:
Andy Williams 10; Pop Goes lhe Country 15; Name
That Tune 13
8 oo-Baseba113,4; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13; Sanford &amp; San

DAILY CRYPTOilUOTE - Here's how to work It :

l

&amp; workshQp, basement,

I

~

bath, basement, fireplace,
porches,
very
nice

home with _.bedrooms , J of -

porch and garage. SJ6.500.
NEW LISTING - New

Just

J".

Jumbles. EXUDE ABASH LOTION BUCKET

ARf CHEAP
RIOtERS! LOOTERS ..

698·7331.

&amp; paneling, garage, block
storage bldg . $10,500.00.
RETIRE OR REST HERE
- Very little yard to cut.
Ranch type, 3 belllroocms ••

kitchen ,large 2 car garage,

hot water heating system.

HOWERY AND MARTIN Excova l•ng , septic systems ,
dozer , backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone, grove l, blacktop
pavtng , Rt UJ Phone 1 (614)

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

Now arrange the c.rcled letters to
torm the :surpnse answer , as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

• (Answers tomorrow)

50, MV PEOPLE

WILL do roof•ng , con~truct1on ,
plumb ing end heatmg. No 1ob
too large or too small Phone
742 2348.

MOBilE Home Repo 1r, Elec
plum btng and healing. Phone

concrete block In good
shape for only $8,500.
NEW LISTING - Older
them Jorge, large -living

Slim? ·__...-

EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
and d 1tcher Charles R Hot
fmld , Bock Hoe Service,
Rutlond . Ohio. Phone 742-2008.

CARPENTER, floOr ing
ceiling,
paneling PMone 992-27 5_!:_ _

$18,000.00.
NEW HOME - Rench
type, Master B.R. has bath,
2 regular B. R.. bath .
central air cond. Beautlf~l

overlooking the river. New

How's married
life by now,

I
I

WOR't75 USUALL'I
ASSOCIA'TED WITH A
DIRECTORS'
I

.,....-r.,:....,;::.;.:..,.,..-

r.ASQLlNE ALLEY

5232.

FARM FOR Sole. 2 '!J acres level
fond . 3 miles south of Albany,
corner of 681 -692 . See Ed
Holley off 681 at Snowville
Store . 1/2 Mile

COUNTRY

•

REMODELING , Plumbrng, healing
and all types of gene ral repa ir
Work guoronteed 20 t&gt;eors experience Phone 992 2409.

some mend ing . but we only
want $5,000.

OLDER -

0 \\, ASIRTHDI&gt;H 61H
Gi:Rll Flc.ATE!
illAIJK 'lOU,
. ill A~ I&lt; 40U I

BRADFORD
Auct1oneer , Complete Serv1t:e Phone q49 -2487
or 9·~- 2000 Roctne , Oh1o , ..Critt
Brad ford.

and level lot. $35.000.
BARGAIN - 8 room house
on Stale Route that needs
LARGE

Su~

J.i 4-l mo

f.. [).J 1m

HOMESITES t or sole I acre ond
up Mtddlepart . near Rutland.

Young &amp; the Restless 10 ; Not For Women Only 15;
Documentary Showcase 33.

.A.nswer~ ",...,.["""'1,. . . ,I,.,. -.;:t;'1. .-.)"
;;] &amp;''( I I I I

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

NATION IN BUSINESS THAl' 16
HUNGRY AND SORE AND EASIL "(
SEN1 l'O WAR --

AIDC.II contractor

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Hope 6, 13, Search for Tomorrow 8,10

1.oo-Gong Shaw 3: All My Children 6.13; News 8;

Crockett's V ictory Garden 20 ; Romagnoli ' s Table

purl ~

TO FIGHT -- 11' 5 HIE LOSER.

Continuous one pteu pttm. Wt hana

11:3D-It's Anybody 's Guess 3,4,15; Family Feud 6.13;
Love of Li fe 8. tO; Mak ing Things Grow 33.
11· 5&gt;-CBS News 8. AI The Fair '77 10.
12 .0D-News 3.4.6,10; Shoot for lhe Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; M1dday 13, Sea Bird 3J.
12 :3D-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,1 5; Bob Braun 4; Ryan's

K]

en·w lhal ..... ,.., ereal.rd mauy uf

fmc• lJ:Wlhty awniot:;s and carin ll 1 L~ are.11. Most ul ~se pre,_
duc·b qw..hfy for luw intert51 home
impruvcment looms 111 yDUt locMI
t.llk 11r S&amp;L. Call m-;on ftrr a fr~
l"Slimate ur s1op by UfiO E M1un St ..
Pomeruy.O.
i-20-1 mo.

•

1.; 3D-Oays ol Our Lives 3,~, 15; As The World Turns
8.10
2·0D-S20.000 Pyram id 6.1~ ; Festival 33.
2 30-0octors J,4,15 ; One Lite to Live 6,13; . Guiding
Liaht 8.10.
.
3 .oo--Another World 3,4,1 5; All 1n !he Family 8.10;

KlJ

ty fvr }'tMr-. 10 tnme, th1 s "' 'II su1t
The Urbau line •s all
wlumu .llm, ho·avy ~augc , ani.Mir1ed
rillliD!::!&gt; wud pt)s h , plain ur
dt·c·onli\ c ¥1&lt; t' havt' au CXJWMI!IIlt'd

2ll·IIIID.

GUTTER
SERVICE

i

liMRAUD

.. nd &lt;! llrJM?r11i II yw want a

.~ooor nt·ed~o

"Tilt Drill"""'
Not lht lotitalon

Ph 112·3193

...

1

one letter to each square, IQ lorm
tour or(hnarv words

q~&amp;t~ht) pr ..duct "' hkh "'ru mut· a~t­
lb~ ' ~:~ lut· ,,f ywr homt-, qr mt~bile
hum 1. ttot tnat Will toli11nce l b beau-

Phone Mike Younc
AI
992·220601' 992·7630

SJIKUW,OhM

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

unscramble lhese lour Jumbles,

I!!. '11Ur &lt;~ utbunzed d~altr 'h1r Urban

a ~mngll'

..... 3, .......,. 0.

GIIITE~IIIGS

ffi'it

Kingsbury Home Sales

Carpel&amp; UphOISiery

lARRY lAVENDER

33.
11 ·3o-Jahnny Carson 3.4.15; SWAT 6,13, Koiak B;
1}J}'i}Nl
~ TH.AT SCIIAMBLEO WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

Ses~me

,

8 3D-Big Valley 6 : 9:1Xf--CrQSS·Wits 3; Phil Donahue
4, 13,15. Andy Grlllllh B; Zoom 3J.
9.30'-A M. 3: Edge of Nlghl6, Concentration 8; Porky
Pig 10; Unto jhe Hills 33
10:0D-Santord &amp; Son 3,4,15. Dinah 6. Here's Lucy I .
Mike Douglas 10, 1J; Solar Energy 33.
10 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Price Is Righi 8;
Studio See JJ
11 OD-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Bandstand 10, French Chef 33.

~271fC

Young's
Carpeting

one wood and the other

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house, F. A . furnace, storm wm·
dows, fireplace iri M1ddlepoit.
Phone 992-:U57
•

7 . 3D-Wildlife in Crisi s 10.

Mov1e " Deadly Fathoms" 13, Age of Uncerta inty

TOW HER IT WAS

.

B oo--Howdy Doody 6. Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10;

Ph. 37WZ50

Stum Extraction

healing system, dining

2.

C~ECI&lt;ED

5UPER-

.·~'

PARTS· LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
Roftsrille.O

Superior

room fatal. 2 car garage

9.._
W . Carsey , Mgr.
lllil-JackPhone
992-2181

10

8 30--0hio Wr rters 20
9 oo-Barney Md!er 4 , Yellow Tra1 l from Texas ~ :
Hawcui F ive 0 8, Mov ie "Z1egfield Follies " 10 ~

... BUT HIS FIANCEE
TIPPED ME OFF l'HAT
SHE HAD Hl.5 DE516N

•

Transmission Service

U. P .S.

FREE ESTIMATES

New Co-Op water ·and
softeners . model VC · SVI.
Only 1279 .95
Save UO . Ol• on a new
Holpaint Refrigerator.
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
Freezer
525 .00 Discount
1 Gpod McCullough Chain
Saw
565
1 Good Used Poulan ChaiR
Saw
UD
1 Good Used Unico
Dryer
sao.OD
Electric Trim -All cuts with
nylon
129.95
(I) Good Refriterator 1200

CAN GOODS

. . . .A

WELL, HS DARIJ

,

News 8. Chuck Whole Reports 10; 7;05-Porky Pig

Poldark 33

W&amp;APOt.lf A!.JVTHI'-JG
I&lt;&amp;VOLUTIONAR'r' r

SWAIN

•we nn ship parts directly

Gabmets Roof•na Concrele

Krtchen

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

Rusto teum Pa int Products

LARGE
Stucco 3
bedroom home with 2
baths, full basement, 9

r---CASE----LOT----..
Miler Produce
&amp;

·I

DAVID BRICKLES

FOR SALE

Pomeroy Landmark

Morning, Tri State 13.

1 oo--Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6, 1J; CBS

6. 00-- Mov1e " Robinson Crusoe'' 3,4,15 ; David Soul
6, 13; Waltons 8, 10; H oll is Summers Reads 20;

S.W~DOW5KY'S

''"''"'

P~9!Z·2174

1·18-1 mo

SMALLform tor sole , 10% down .
owner financed . Monroe Coun15 FT. Sandusky wooden boot
ty, W Vo. Phone {304 ) 772
wrth 50 n p motor, $650 00
3102 oc (30&lt;) 772 3227
Also Holiday camper selfconlo rned , $2500 00. Coli COUNTRY farmland with seclud
ed woods . water and good ac·
985·4202'-.-~---cess m Monroe County , W. Vo
ONE YEARLING Hereford Bu ll and
$1 ,000 down . call (304 ) 772
one Hereford co w
Phone
3102 oc (304) 772·3227
9.t9 2740.
VA -FHA, 30 yr f i noncr~g Ireland
COUCH (l 1ke New)-$89.95, otr
Mongage , 77 E State, Athens ,
cond1t1oner {almost new)-$200,
phone (6,.) 592·3051 .
•
powe r
mower $20
131
J
Ebenezer Street , Pomeroy , OH .

PARTS FOR 1971 Golo xie Ford tor AlLADOIN KEROSENE LAMPS and •
sale Phone 992-5858.
heaters Replacement parts ch imneys . mantles.
w icks ,
1972 DELTA Olds 88 Royale 4 door
SECLUDED 2 story old&amp;r home on
etc.
Stop
1n
for
demonstration
three quarter acres, lots of
hardtop. P S . P.B , A C , lift
and free catalog Mountain
wheeL Low mileoge, A1 ,000
shade, fertile ground for
l.ather ond General store ,
miles. Excellent con dtfton . 197A
garden , 2 cor dt&gt;toched garage ,
1~ · 106 W. Union St. (6! 41
3 bedrooms , Iorge l•vmg room
. ~ HotcMbock , Novo 350
592-5,.78, Athens
......_.g ine. Excellent condition
wrth bnck w b. f ireplace,
carpeting , sunny k itchenette,
__;$:.:2:::
200
:.:c._C
::.:a:;:llc:9.9:.:2c_·5606
=:.;·__ ~dining (oom , partial boserni"nt
1974 MONTE Corio, Burgundy,
w1th forced o1r furnace and
and wrth a v1nyltop L1ke new.
new hot water heater. Lo cated
$2600. 985·41 17
on Marlin Dr., Pomeroy Priced
1968 FORO -Ca-u-nt-,y-w
-~;;,
below market value. $17,500.
automatic , olr con dittoned, no
_~kone 992·6328 or 985· 3573..
rust . m nice cond1tion Toke681
Strickly wholesale to all.
TRAILER
&amp; LOT lor sole, 75 Elm St ,
ro Snowville Store, then 1/ , mtle
Not less th1n 1!J c•H.
Middleport Phone 992-7307
on grovel rood . See Ed Holley .
~~~
-~
--TRAILER AND LOT for sale on
1975 FORO thrH-quarter ton
Fourth St., Mason . Phone (614 }
ptckup truck Automaftc . P S..
'192·7307."
P.B•. 28 .000 miles Good condi J ' BEoROoM home 1n Rutland .
tion $3 ,400 Caii985·427B .

--

S.ll£5 AND S£11VICE

6:50-Good Mornong , West v;rglnla 13. 6:55-Good

15

CAPTAIN fi;ASY
,; 1, E/'6V! HOW'.S
CA~1 FORNIA ! ... A'-JD
WHAT ABOUT I'ILADEI&lt;.

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 19.1977
5 50- PTL Club 13; 6-IJO--Summer Semester 10
6 JG-Columbus Today A, News 6; Su mmer Semester
8: Overseas Mtsslon 10. 6 : 45---Morntng RePort l .

111r&lt;'(' 'i-ons 10, Almanuc 70 . Consumu ~urvlva l Kit
jJ
1 3G- Hollywood Squa r es 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6,
Price 1s R•gh! 8. Ma c Neil -Lehrer Report 10,33~
W il d K ingdom 10, N ash ville on !he Road 13; Dolly

-------~-

~7 · 2852 . -~-~-

AVAILABLE at V•iloge Manor
Aportme111s - t bedroom fully
carp&amp;ted w1th k1 tchen oppl•onces furnished. Stortmg at
$104 per mont Phone 992-772 1
Equal hovsmg opportun ity.

to ,.,.

tO ; 2 · 1()-

"-J:ews 11.

7 00 - Truth or Con s. 3. Expohlo ' 77 .4 , Liar's Cl ub 6;
'lvuppc t Show A, Nt·W' tQ, Tfl Tr-1 1 the Trulh !3 My

WEEK?''

The Unspeakable

r r~m P 6, 13, M ov•e "Crime Club" 8.
00 tomorrow )..4; 1· 3()-Mary , Hartman

11 :OG-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; MacNeil -Lehrer: Report

$20 o pickup
delivered
Call
or 992 -6109
or

PICK
YOUR
own
conntng
tomatoes ond green beans ,Br•
i!'lg conta iners Andrew Cross
Leta rt Foils . Oh io . Coli

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society COAL. limestone and coktum
An1mol Coreline. 992·7680, or
chloride and colc 1um bnne fo r
after 6 p m 992 -5427
dust contr ol and special m1x 1ng
ALL BREED dog grooming . J. and
salt for formers , Excelsior Sal t
8 t&lt;en nels Rea sonable roles
Work$, Morn Street , Pomeroy,
No driJgs used Coli for apOh•o or phone 992 3891 ,
po1ntment 7-42-31 62 .
CAMPER , $600
A lso, horse
lratler , SA50 Phone (61 _. ) 698AKC COCKER Spo'n1el, 9 mo
block
and
ton
fema l e . · 3290
. Reasonably pnced Chompron S
oP:'R
: :t"N:CG'-::GccA-:R::D:::E:cN:-S
-,u-p-p.,-lt-e-s.-:c
C"a'b,-·
bloodl ines 742·31 62
bage , cau liflower , broccoh ,
PONY FOR sole Call992 -2395
and head lettuce plants,
ye llow , white, and red onion
FREE TO o good home 5 mo old
sets , onion plan ts . Kennebec ,
Water Spaniel , femo le. Al l
cobbler, KatoMdtn , Red Pontiac
black Call992 7185 '--~~
and Red Losada seed potatoes
FREE TO good home-2 mole pup·
Bulk garden seeds , pot'ting sotl,
peat moss . fruit trees and rose
pieS about 5 mo old, m1xed
bre-ed I female kitten , 6 mo
bu.shes . Mrdwoy Mork.et ,
o ld y811ow striped . Call
PQmeroy
Ohio , 992-2582 ,
742-3 162
Bob.s Market , Mason . W Vo .
G IV E AWAY - Blue S•omese
(304)7?3· 572 L

'

be

992·5!92
~22·1 mo.

l1oll Hoollich -

KISSING A PURSE- ·
SNATCHER AFFECT
'&gt;'OUR VOTE NEXT

...
""•

&lt;-•·

r-.,,Hlll
or!9Z-6Zil
I ~II . It 4:30P.M.

THE QUESTION ASKED :
WILL THE GOVERNOR"s
;API~R CW..il. OF HIS WtFE:S

~

!00 llain SL
P"""'f,Ohlo

_,niwruries
Spew! Occasions'

240 GALLON Solar m1lk tank and
compressOr 3 surge m1lkers ·
com plete, 1 surge mrlk pump
Good condition. $1000 tar oil .
Lando Clay, Long Bottom , OMio.
985·4222. ~-REGISTERED
TREEING
walker
coon hound pups and 1973 750
cc Kawasak1 Call992 7548,

367·7112.

TIMBER.

Port11ib
PIIS$pl)rb

NEW FLAT lop guitar and case for

LOST
DOG . Lorge mo le
SALE
20% off oil sandals ,
Weimaraner, short grey herr,
women s and men 's wM ite
docked toll choker collar Co
sMoes . Ba1ley's M 1d d ! ep~rf.
rd 18-33 oreo . Coli 992-7701 or
TO WHOM 11 may concern.
2
Whoever P1cked up the yellow
tom cot with I he white collar by
Veteren s Memono l Hosp1tol
please return to owner. Lmdo AUCTION . FIH . , 7 00 pm
Patterson . 131 Laurel Street
Truckload of new merchandise,
glassware pots and pons , plus
~~oy Oh Call992-2986
other new and used merchonTO GIVE away . o h1ve of
dtse at Oh •o Rt ver Auction ,
Honeybees Coll992 5b44
M etQ S Plaza , Mtddleport Qf,io
Home Phone
773-5471.

CASH pmd for all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone area code 614-423 -9531 .

Wed dines

..,._.a.. ter

YOUR TUNE! POL ITICIANS
NEVER S TI CK TO THEIR
'CAMPAIGN ORATORY ••,

-&lt;!

Radiator~
Service~
p,_ t"'- ........ Trvdl IW hti4..-

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING JNC.

''"""'

..
-..

TELEVISION
VIEWING
r

TA&gt;\E TO T'"E AIR AND t:HANGE

•

EXPERIENCED

CARTER

10'"11' SL

Wickes Buildings

BABYSITTER TO ltve tn Coli (6UJ

a Profe ~1unal Career'

On\ lnii: a· BIG RJ G" \\'t' are a Pn
\'ate Trmmng Scru. ..}! uffenn~ a

. THE PHOTO PlACE

Commercial
Industrial • Horse Barn s
Garages &amp; Worksh ops

EXPERIE NCED MEAT c.utter . Retail
gro&lt;ery expenence helpful
Awl y Ro&lt;1ne Food Market ,
Racine .

'•.
}

.

Farm •

WAITRESS &amp;
In
person Craw's Steak House
Pomeroy, Oh1o

SUMMER C~E ARANCE Sole now at
D. &amp; J's Fobncs below Mid j!!:_port on Rt 7

For the return of our
dog , Rascal. which
disappeared from our
home -on County ' Rd .
18 ·(Kingsbury Road).
Phone Paul Lach at
992-7205 evenings or
collect any time at
446-7090 and ask for
Christy .
Thank You

LJKE NEW Chrysler Ai rtemp,
23,000 BTU , air co11dthoner , ew cellent
condtt1on .
Ptlon~

HUMPHREYS HA VE a good supply

PhQ_!.o~rophy,_:_.,~~---

Saturn.

·

.

- - :::- - o- ::- -,

to

- J ane Walton , Clerk

Salary to be based on ability and previous
work experience. Apply in person • 9: 00 to
11 : 00A . M.and2 : 001o4:00 P. M. Wednesday
lhru Sund.ay .

~

'

I

(

TRI:E RIPENED orchard peaches
Wh•te or yellow starling Mon.,
Aug I Mason Peoch Orchard

CANNING PEACHES , Bring con ·
tamer &amp; Winter po tat oe~
Phone BA3 -2693

'•

.'

Business Services

CANNINC IOMAIOl-:S, PfPPl-:W!:t
cucumbers. Cleland Forms
GreenM o~..ue
Geraldine
Cleland

197.t TERRAMITE lkKkhoe. ~.
' Pho11e {614) 4A6-71SO .

Assistant Manager

$18,300.

SCHOOL PHOTOGRAPHER foe

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed .b ids w il l be rece iv ed
In the office of th e Villag e
Cl erk , Pom,roy , Oh to, unti l
12 o'clock noon on August 31,
1971 ,
on
the
foll o w 1ng
proposals.
1 For . the purchase by the
Village of Pomeroy for a new
1977 tr(Jck Chass is of the
follOWing de!otr •pt lo n and
!Opec if l catlons :
24,000 mtnimum GVW
94 inch Cab to Axle
7,000
lb front
Axle

Applications For The Position of

I J!j.! n 1/IJ/1(1 lr/1'"'/(1/J fl 1111/UIJ (/ 1'1'1 {ljlf. '
I fliJ/11/J(~ of fl,.,lflf

MEIGS
SOUTHERN ,
AND
EASTERN SENIORS - The pnnCipols . supenntendents and
school boori:fs of the d1slrrcts
.des•gnated
Ken
Grover
Photography as the OFFICIAL

.':iuwl&lt;n
&lt;PM

Country Cousins Are Now Taking

ou r

I WOUlD l1ke to thank Or . Ttl le,
Dr
Ptck ens . the nurses .
ord~rlys .
and
atdes at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1ta l
for the1r ki ndness while I wos
there. Als o th~ " 's•tors ond
m1msters who oflered thetr
many proyerrs f or my recover y
V1rgll Yorb ~ug h__

ti.:J\

L

HELP WANTED

wonderful
memories
always keep , we II l,end your

Card u£.Tlumks

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
· DEADLINES
Mntkl.!H'
Ull Sa! lll

our hearts

Br o thers ond Sts lers

NOTICE

N0011

brok~

t "or SalP

H ..lp Wanted

33
17 00- Janak• 33. 12:4D-Rape

GREAT
GRANNY'S
GARTER!!

I'M HUNG UP AFORE
I WET MY HOOK

�•

·u-'lbe Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Porne•oy, 0., Thursday, Aug.18, 1977

VETERANS MEMORIAL

lncorporatio~ opponents win in first round

ADMISSIONS - Delores
Aeiker, P()cffieroy, Margaret
Johnson, Racine, Mark StiU,

Middleport, James Hawley,
Pomeroy, Christi Laudermill, Middleport, John Fry,
New Haven, Louise Bur·
bridge, Albany, Emma
Johnson, Racine, Roberta

. 1
Banlolsls Bill Clor " o
Pomeroy ond Bill C.nnon of ·
Ches hi re wIll be en t• rtainln"•
in t~ lobby of the Pomeroy
National Bank from 10 a. m .
to 12 noon Saturday In con -

was collod Wodne..,.y at 2:.W
P m to t~ Lewis Smith · 1•~· 1 cti on o1 SR
res
u~:...ce, 1n erse
1AJ and 7 lor /&gt;Mr'y McC.rty
who was ~aken to Holzer .

r

a

,

i

Freda Middle;"wart, 40, Rt.1, Portland, and John Flenting, arrival at tbe Veterans Hospital in Cincinnati on July 4.
Request for an autopsy was refused by the next of kin,
45, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, have been charged with aggravated
murder in the Fourth of July, 1977 deQth by arsenic poisoning Sheriff Proffitt said. The next of kin was his widow Freda
of William C. Middleswart, 55. Both are in the Meigs Coonty MiddiOS)Oart, he added. Therefore, the HamUton 'County
JaiL
.
·
coroner. Or. Frank P. Cleveland,listed the cause of deatll as
·
Sheriff James J. Proffitt said that he begin the unknown.
investigation oo or about Aug: l. He coritacled Meigs County
Or, Pickens contacted the various physicians who bad
Coroner Or. R. R. Pickens and Meigs County Prosecuting attended the victim , and oo Aug . 2 the body was exhumed from
Attorney Fred W. Crow m to assist. ·
its burilll site at Sistersville Cemetery and removerl to the
William Clayton Middleswart had died shortlv after his

Middleswart residen ce at Sliversvtlle.

•

I

!

Area Deaths

!~:S~u~·~~~mothy

•

at
VOL XXVIII

Class winners
are announced

NO. 89

en tine
•

.. POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

1

'

an

SHOP SATURDAY·

SHOP FRIDAY

9:30'TO
'5:00

9:30 TO
8:00
11-·-·-·...

DRESSES

JEANS &amp; FASHION JEANS

SPECIAL BUYS
IN FORD CARS

1975

2 89 5

FORD.~~~-~ • • • :?? ....... ~~~..$2695

Torino 4 i:tr., dark green "tin ish, black vinyl trim , 351 v.a
automatic, P. steering &amp; bfakes, wheel covers, radio,
loca·l 1 owner car .
Was 12895

1974 FORD LTD CPE.: ......~~~. s2695

l owner, Clean interior , air, P. steering &amp; brakes,
automatic. like new w-w tires.

NOW

1973 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN $1495
2 seat. V-8, automatic, P.S., P. Brakes, air, good tires.

Was $1695 ;

1912 FORD LTD .. :·.".~s..$_1~?~.~.~~ .. $1295

Cou~try Squire. v.a engine, a·utomatic, power steering,
brakes, dOor !ocks, windows &amp; se:ats, 8 pass .. air. radio.
Like new tires, m~ny more·extras.

1972 MERCURY .MONTEG0~~~~1495
4 door, air conditioned, P.S., P.B., radio, white fin_ish1
blk. vinyl top, good tires. Was _S1695

1970 FORD LID CPE..~~~~:~.~~ .$-1095

,Clean bOdy, good tires: ~ir, V-B, au~omatic, P .S .• P. B.

1972 FORD MAVERICK_ 2 DR .. $l595
2 Dr:,·small

V-8, clean interiorr. automatic,

P . ~ .,

rad_io

1971 FORD 4 DR. V8 ........ ;..... }99
A Dr.,

V~ 6.

"Your' Chevy Dealer"

I

.Open
.,.

Evening~

.

VALUES TO '54.00

REG. '6.95 .................... SALE '5.89

Audrey Woode, Chester
Garden Club, Rose Ginther,
Busy Bees Circle of Trinity
Church; C.- . .J. Struble,
Richard Neutzling, Miidred
and A. M. :lahl, Neva Grimm,
John and Dorothy Musser,
Mrs. R. R. Cuckler, Garnet
Williamson, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles White, Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight .Oliver, · Charles and
Nancy Jo Saltz, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Mora, MPs. Orville
Graham, Pomeroy National
Bank, Mr. and Mrs. Edison
Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Smith, Esta M. Roberts,
c. H. Kuhl, Eleanor, Ralph
and Herman Werry, Edna
Hart, Freda Grueser, Bob
and Nora Eason, Modern
Supply, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Covert, Ethel Hatfield, John
T, Ho!U!llly, Charles H. !hie;
Freda M. Smith, Shirley and
Grace Wolfe, Leo Curtis, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Kennedy,
Katie Guth, Harold and Edna
Triplett.

BOYS'

WOMEN'S SLACKS
Solid Colors
Sizes 3-4 to 20

'1000

YOUR CHOICE

REG. •7.95 ... ............ ...... SALE '6.69

SPORT SHIRTS
- Short Sleeves
- Cut and Sewn or Knit Styles
~Si zes 8 to 20

.'

VALUES FROM '16.00 TO •20.00

BACK TO .SCHOOL
SALE .PRICES

YOUR CHOICE

'

•

MEN'S

SPORJ &amp; DRESS
' SHIRTS .
SHORT SLEEVE STYLES
SIZES S, M, L, XL

lh pRICE

GIRLS' JEANS
- .Includes· our entire stock. - ·

REG~ .-5.~;~:~.t~~:.~~~~~·.~.~~ ~ALE •4.25
REG. '7.00 ...................... SALE '5.95
REG. •1o,oo ................... : SALE •a.:So
REG. '16.00 ......... , ........ SALE '13.60

~-~-----·~·--·~·----·----~----~·~--·------'-

POMEROY MOTOR ·co
"'

REG. '5.95 ............ ........ SALE '4.99

automatic .

HurJY In For A'Good DEAL

992-2126

REG. •4.95 .......... .: ........ SALE '4.19

Goal closer to
purchase \a mbulance .
The number of contributors
to the fund drive of the
• Pomeroy Emergency Squad
for the purchase of a new
emergency vehicle continues
to grow. ·
·
Goal of the squad Is $13,500
and contributions are to be
sent to the squad at P. 0. Box
247, Pomeroy.
.
Latest contributors are ·
Meigs Courthouse employes,
June Eichinger, Carol
Rhodes,. Ruth Crouch, Bill
Wickline, Johnnie Nelson,
Coty Curtis, Mary Hob·
stetter, Ca rolyn Thomas,
Carl and Janet Morris ,
Manning Webster, Naomi
Brinker, Dena Raymond,
Betty Hobstetter, Larry
Spencer, Marlene Harrison,
Nellie Brown, Hilton Wolfe, .
Nina · Cumings, Arizona
Stewart, Eleanor Robson, ·
Howard Frank, Ruth· Moore,
George Collins, Louise
Heines, all of the courthouse ;
Virgil Parsons, Horak's
Carry-Out, Eugene Young.

ONE RACK OF MISSY, JR. &amp;
HALF SIZES

Pomeroy

Untit8 p.m .
r

·

JUST ARRIVED
Black &amp; White
.LEJ\THER SANDALS
OxFORDS
Child Size m~ ·to Womeri's Size 10

CHILDREN'S WEAR
ONE RACK OF SKIRTS, BLOUSES,
VESTS, COATS AND SWIMWEAR

.-

Sizes 2 to 6x and 7 to 14 ·

REG. '2.95 TO '6.75 ....... S~LE •1.00
REG•. '7.00 TO •12.00 ..... $ALE •2.00
REG. •13.00 to '21.oo ... sALE •3.oo

FASHION JEANS &amp;DENIM JEANS
- Includes Wrangler ·" No Fault" denims.
.-Slim. regvlar . husky and student sizes.

REG. '6.95... u

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

SAL. ·• SA3

REG. '8.95 .................... SALE -6.93
REG. '10.95 .................. SALE '8.63
REG. '12.95 ................. SALE '10.13

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1977

Horse. show
• •
competition
is spirited
•

a

Weather .

Sheriff Proffitt, Prosecuting Atty. Crow, and Walter Mills,
southeastern Ohio regional crinne laboratory investigator,
went to the house in Stiversville around 5:30 p.m. Thursday.
Freda Middle swart and John Fleming were there, the sheriff
said.
Ray A. Young from the ProfesSional Polygraph Service,
Lancaster, was contacted, and he came immediately to tb&amp;
Meigs County sheriff's office and assisted in the investigation.
Sheriff's deP\ltles also contacted various witnesses.

Hamiltvn County coroner's office for post mortem
inv.,'\igation. Dr. Cleveland performed the autopsy and the
body was reburied .
.
Final result of the autopsy was returned to Or. Pickens's
office Thursday. Coroner ruled the cause of death of William
Cla~on Middleswart as arsenic poisoning.
A search warrant was obtained late Thursday af!A!rnoon
from Meigs County Judge Robert E. Buck for the Freda

as

1

2 Presley

Meigs couple held,· in poison murder

Notices, local briefs .

Opponents to the in· rest I hear are rumors."
Co mmission
the
Musgrave also said that corporation is to prevent the
of Clifton appear
Whalen said-that the only classification of the type of there has been no evidence contruction of a coal tipple
Medlcttt Center.
to have won the opening person who has talked to him city the proponents wanted that the proponents for the and strip mining.
junction with the bank's
n&gt;Wid in their fight with about the proposed in· Clffton to be made into had incorporation would deny , In a m01·e persi&gt;nal attack
The Syracuse E' ll SquaH on
county fair week observance. Aug.
12 transportod Clara
those forces in favor of in· corporation of . Clifton was not been formally submitted William Zuspan the right to on Elmer, Jenkins noted that
The bank Is also holding a
but it was implied . He did say contruct a coal tipple or strip Elmer had moved to the area Musser, Pomeroy, George watermelon seed spitting La•ender to Pleasant Valley
corporation.
William Zuspan.
Hospital where she was
· '!'he battle came Wed·
u1 want to know why you that clifton would seek a mine property belonging to only two years ago from New Conde, Syracuse.
contest each day'from 12 ooon admitted.
On Aug . 13 Mike
Orleans and is not employed.
nesday evening during a came out tonight and l have Class lV classilicatlon, him.
DISCHARGES - Doretta to 1 p. m . with dally winners Hubbard was taken to
in
two
age
groups
receiving
Besides saying he would Zeck, Esther Andrews, UUy
Veterans Memorial Hospital
He said the reason they
public ~earing conducted by come perpa red to hear the m'eaning a town with a
prize5 . Tuesday's winners
Mrs . Leland Smith,
present
evidence con~ Harris, Oayle' Kesterson, S5
the Mason County Com· citizens of Clifton," stated the population of under 1,000 want to incorporate is to
were Tom Wolfe, Syracuse, and
Minersville,
tradicting
Musgrave's
mission.
inhabitants.
provide
services
and
outh dlv1slon. ond Doug Medl cal Center. toBothHolzer
corrunissioner.
Dessie Boring, Ida Pooler,were
remarks, Jenkins said he Okey Tribble, Jr.
amb, Thornville, adult . admitted. On Aug. 16 Charles
In an apparent attempt to protection for the people.
At !irS! it was believed the
But Whalen was denied his
Wednesday winners were Hilton. PDI'tland, was taken
However, when Attorney would give evidence to show ·
hearing would last several request as attorneys from prove that they innplied Class
Damon Gibbs , Masoo, youth, to
Veterans Memorial
that
the
strip
mining
and
coal
Roher
Medical
Center
hours,
as
attorneys both sides said that if the N status !n their petition, Jenkins gave his opening
and Peter Chase, adult . .
Hospital.
Discharges,
August
16
representing three sid,es, . hearing continued the legal Musgrave said that under the remarks he stated that the Upple would be ecorunically
Beverly Chapman, · The names· of Mr. and Mrs.
proponents failed to meet the beneficial to the county . He
would be given the op· ramifications may affect i970 census, CJiftQn haS
The
Syracu"ie
Flr:e ~
Robert Black, Rutlond, were Department
will sponsor a
necessary requirments said approximately 100 Terrence Dennis U, Priscilla omitted
portuhity to present their future proceedin~s .
populatioo of 300 people.
"
ha"
v
lng
attended
people would be employed Donnally , Eliza Downey,
chicken barbecue Saturday
What little hearing there
BIJluments. But the entire
Under West Virginia law, before a public hearing could and the county would gain Harold Duckworth, Lana the reunion of tfle Burdell and Sunday at Syracuse Park
Black family.
· with serving to f!.egin alll :JQ
-proceeding ended up lasting was, contained opening he noted that the petition take place.
He ·also said he was from the Coal Severance Tax. Harris, Mary Hatfield, Audra
less than an hour- beginning statements of the three must be made up of 30 per
m. A softball' tournament
The Pomeroy E R Squad a.
He charged that Elmer Houdashelt, Agnes Howard,
will follow.
at 7:10 p.m. and ending at lawyers, with Musgrave cent of the signatures of the prepared to submit evidence
7:58p.m.
that
certain misre~resented these facts Charles Knipp, Barbara
going first.
freeholders or property showing
It was at least three
In his statement, he made owners of the given area. He statements Roy Eimer inad~ when he obtained th~ 'Long, Brenda Mullins, Sarah
challenges, and possibly a note that on . the map stated that the petition does to the press indicated that the signatures for the petition. Peck, Orpha Peters, Alta
Porter. John Prose, Mrs.
primary reason for in·
fourth, as t"the le!l_auty'of the previously submitted to the contain this.
John Shaffer and son, Brenda
proponents' petition and map
of the proposed area to be
-------------:;~------------- 1 Smith, Ellen Vance, Brenda
appeared to . floor·b""rd it."
· Ward, Hazel Willis.
incorporated, which doomed ·
Patrolman
W.
Greenwood
8
the proceedings.
jumped
out
of
the
way.
A
Mr
.
This . resulted
from
policeman rushed to a parked I
~
1 Schumann, a daughter,
evidence supplied by At·
patrol
car
and
gave
chase,
Gallipalis. Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Riders competed In 15 respectively, were Judy
torneys Jack Jenkins, · (ConUnued from page 1)
MAXMANUELJR .
catching thel car within a
HOMER
EARL
GRtFFI'TH
Wears,
a
son,
Pliny,
W.
Va
.
.
'classes
Wednesday night at Allan of Coolville and Debbie
representing William
Memorial services for Max
RUTLAND - Homer Earl
Wednesday.
National
Guard
block.
Discharges
Augusll7
·
the
annual
Meigs County Fair Jones of Pomeroy in the
Zuspan, and Mike Shaw, who units were called in to aid
Griffith , 67, Route 1, Mid- 1\'\anuel Jr . will be held
"He came out fighting," dleport
Teresa
Barrett,
Trudy
Horse
Show
where spectators English Pleuure Horse .
Sunday
,
August
21
at
2
p
,
m.
, d ied Wednesday
stated he represents 92 police and sheriff's deputies said Utley, and the officer
at the Dorc as United
Bresenham,
Benjamin
enjoyed
showmanship,
races, class; Robert Greer of
afternoon
at
'the
Pinecres-t
property owners who are in handling the mourners. was hurt slightly in the· Convalescent -Center, Methodist Church with the
Bunch
,
Fioyd
Buskirk,
and
events
which
proved
!.A)tart, W. Va., and Harley
opposed to the incorporation. Three helicopters hovered altercation.
Revs . Steve WHson and
Gallipolis.
Wilbur
Cook,
Lawrence
skills
of
the
competit&lt;rs.
George,
N.W Haven, in the.
They alleged that the petition above the sweltering mass
A retired coal m iner and Freeland Norris' officiating .
Police said the crowd was farmer
Davidson, Wretha Finley,
Opening the 8 p. m. show at Roadster Pony Class; Karen
~sonic and OES services·
, Mr. Griffith was born
submitted to the County outside the ·gares of the 13- standing in the parking lot of
will
also
he
held.
In
lieu
of
Nov
.
9,
1909,
at
Matewan,
W.
Dolores
Garrett,
Ronald
the
race track's center rtng Wood, Coolville, and Fae
Commission,
by
the
acr.e estate.
shopping cenrer across the Va .. a son of the late Elmer · flowers donat rons may be Hatfield, Frances Huston, were the smaller tykes in the Reibel, Pomeroy, nonproponents at a previous - Guards opened the gates str'eet from the iron gates to and Hester Stone Griffith . He made to the Racine ER Squad
Michael Jackson, Lucille '-"ad In Pony, 56" and -under registered Western Pleasure
meeting , was obtained on from 3 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. Graceland, where 80,000 per· married the former IV.aggle in· his, memory .
Jude,
Elton Likens, Cinda class. All entrants in that , Horse; Mike Couby and
false pretense and it did not Wednesday to let the sons gatllered Wednesday to Meade, who survives, on Dec .
1, 1945.
Minnis,
Wllma Reffitt, Eimer event received trophies. Terry ·cross. of Athens,
signify the type of town mourners view the body. City pay final respects to
Other survl vors are two
Rose,
Robert
Searles, Doyle Following was the Registered Western Pleasure Pony; Jeff
classification in addition to adm"inistrative
sons, Homer, of Springfield.
officer Presley.
Anderson
Spaulding , Western Pleasure Horse Icard of Bidwell, English .
Shuler,
the map they submitted, Richard · Hackett and police
and Jerry of Route 1, MidThe car seemed to swerve . dleport;
Inez
Stumbo,
· William class where Judge Jim Five Gait; Kristin Anderson
three daughters,
required by West Virginia director · E .
Winslow ioward ·ihe crowd, sending Mr-s. Freda Swan, Route l,
Swanson,
Kinnberly
Theiss, DOOson deemed Bill CQle of of Pomeroy and Frank '
Law in an incorporation Chapman . estimated about .dozens scattering out of the Middleport ; Mrs . Delbert
Slinny and cool today and C zett Walker, Helen Webb, Tuppers Plains the blue Petrie, Thurman, Trail
0
proceeding , and did not 20,000 persons filed past the wav. No one was hit. Then the {Mary) Swisher, Gallipolis, Friday, highs both days in the
William
Wise.
ribbon winner. Jim Elias of - Horse; Terry Cross, Athens,
specify
precise coffin.
Mrs . James {Margaret) mid 7tis. Clear and cool
vehicle swerved back into the and
Births
Angustl7
Letart, W. Va., placed and Tammy K~nnedy,
Langsville
i
a
Barrett,
measurements nor contain
One visitor was Caroline street and plowed into the stepson, Billy Queen , Tan· tonight, lows to the mid SCJs.
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
William
second;
Skip
Tallah, Tuppers Plams, Trail Pony;
verificatin of accuracy.
Kennedy, daughter of the late three girls.
cliffe, W. Va.; 26 grand· Probability of precipitation is Gorrell,
a
daughter,
Coolville,
third.
Karl' Meeks, Athens, and .
· Following Shaw's . opening President John F. Kennedy,
"Isawthecar coming. The children and four . great · near zero per cent today, . Ewington.
In
the
{II to 56 inch Western William Greer, New Haven,
remarks to the Commission, who stayed in the mansion car seemed like it was grandchildren.
tonight and Friday. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Car· Pleasure Pony class Eddie Barrel Race; Tony Ke~edy,
Also surviving are twO
all the attorneys present about 10 minutes.
leaning on its side," said brothers ,
Edgar
,
of
penter,
a son, McArthur.
Roa,ch of Letart, W. Va., was ·Tuppers Plams, and Richard
· including Raymond G.
Many of the mourners Nancy Mendola, 36, of Gallipolis, and Walter of
~r. and Mrs. John Lloyd, a first and Robiii Riehle Franklin, Pt . Plea:aant. Flag
Musgrave, who repr~sents drove hundreds of miles to · Pittsburgh. "1 heard the Landv ille, W. Va .; five
son,
Jackson.
representing Clearview race; Debb1e Lewts, Letart,
Roy Elmer, the person get a final look at their idol. screaming, the hysteria. It sisters, Mrs·.. Clyde {Ollie)
DUES ARE DUE
Others riding W. Ya . and Kathy Stanley,
Farms.second.
Burnett,
Squire,
W.
Va
.;
Mrs.
leading the drive for . in·
'Dues are payab.le for
Pat Christian, 30, of was awfuL"
off
with
blue
and
red ribboos, Athens, Egg and Spoon Race;
Anna · Whtted , Hanover, W.
c'orporation. held a con· Bridgetown, N.J., one of
. PLEASANT VALLEY
Robert Walter, 3~, a petrol! Va .; Mrs . Paulin.e Odey, membership in the Southeast
Karl Meeks and Jerry Lewis,
ference . out of the hearing Presley's fans who stayed_for fireman, said he was talking Orlando, Fla .; Mrs. Mary Black Lung Assn: They are to
DISCHARGES - Eugene
Terry
Tucker,
.Mason;·
4rry
.
Letart,
W.Va., Dash for the
range of approximately 1SCJ the allnight vigil, said: "t with another mourner when Crabtree, Uykon, W. Va .. and be paid at the home of Ber· - Haynes, Point Pleasant;
Money;
Cheryl Mower)',
spectators, with com· don't have any place to stay "all of a .sudden .I saw a girl Mrs. Jerry (Virginia) Novak, nice Molden, 160 Mulberry · Benjamin Moore, . BidweU; · Val\ Meter, Letart; Mrs. Long Bottom and Grant
Cleveland, and several
missioners Bob: Powers, so I might as well stay out fly up in the air like a nieces , nephews and cousins. Av-e., Pomeroy. Miners ' Mrs. James Boowell, West Alpha
Woodall, Point . Newland Tuppers Plains
Michael Whalen and William bere and maybe somethiiJg dummy, .two· to tlu'ee feet
Columbia; · David Hud· Pleasant and Raymond stake ra~. ,
'
Preceding him in death . journals are also available at
.besides
his
parents
were
a
Trout,
Jr.,
Northup.
Rardin as . well as Ad· will happen."
Pleasant;
dleston,
Point
the
M9lden
home.
above the car. "
son, Bobby, in the Kore.en
ministrative Assistant
Miss Christian said she quit
The incident . occurred Conflict i two grandchildren ,
Lawrence Butcher and her job as a waitress to come around 4 a.m ..
Delbert Swisher. Jr ,. and
Assistant Prosecuting At· . to Memphis. "I told the boss
PI'esley was to be interred Patty Queen, and a brother ,
torney Willliam Woodyard. I'm going to see Elvi.s."
· in a mausoleum crypt at Emory.
Funeral services will be
~ After meeting for ap·
The three girls struck by nearby
Forest
Hills_ held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the'
. proximately five minutes, Wheehir's car were among ' Cemetery near the grave of Church
of Jesus Christ, Route
Woodyard announced the the thousands of mourners his ' mother. who died of a 1, Rutland with the Rev . Ray
Roush officiating. Burial will
, hearing was recessed.
who · remained outside the heart ailment 19 years ago, be
in the 'Rife Cemetery at
mansioo in
all night vigil. . also at the age of 42.
Addison . Friends maY call at
However, Commissioner They were talking .to a- · Many stars, including Burt the Walker Funeral Hollie
Michael Whalen, broke in and policeman, who saw tbe car Reynolds, Ann Margret and from 2 p.m . Friday.to 11 a.m .
said "Attorneys do not speak - coming and jumped out of the John Wayne ,- were expected Saturday. The family will
receive fr iends from 2·-4 and
for
me,"
apparently way, when they were struck. to attend the services today. 7-9
p.m . Friday .
"He doesn't look like that,''
referring to Wpodyard's .call After slanuning into the girls,
for a recess . ·
the driver sped away.
She said of the waxen image
"Wewouldberemissinour
"The car came down the in the coffin. "He looks. like
duties if we don'tpoinfout the road," said Police Capt. G.L. this,'' she· said and thrust· shirt and white tie .
I
•
.
fallacies," he continued. uwe Otley. · llHe swerved onto forward
a
medalion
;Presley ·died on the ·
set a hearing date for private property and then emblazoned with the innage _of bathroom floor upstairs in his
tonight's meeting to hear came back and hit the tllree a younger, living PreSley.
mansion
of
cardi~c
frorn the citizens of Clifton on ladies, who were in the
' 'Presley's seamless copper arrythmia, an errati.c '·
·-·-,-~-~-~~~--~--~-..;-----~-·1'·-·-·-·-·-·---·-·-·..-·-·-·-....,-·-·-·--1
the -pros and cons. Only one middle of the road-talking to a casket was opened and heartbeat doctors said may
LITTLE BOYS'
person has talked to me-the police officer. He (the driver ) placed in the small foyer near . bave been produced bY his
·
.
the front of the p'lansion. He high blood ressure and artery
wore a white suit, light blue troubles. ·
Sizes 4 ,to 7
. .
corporatio~t

,,

TinS CHARMING COUPLE, Mr. and Mrs. Jewell
Story, Route 3, Pomeroy, walked hand-in-hand about the
midw~y at \he Meigs County Fair Thursday. Mrs. Story
bas a steel ball and plastic cap in each hip as a result of
surgery for an arthritic ~ondition. However, that didn't
stopthemfrom taking irrthe fair. Mr. and Mrs. Story have
been married 57 years. They are parents of four children.

-

ews~/si
By Uol,ted Press International
WASIDNGTON - OPPOSITION TO the proposed Panama
Canal treaty is not rock solid amQng conservative Republicans
in the Senate, an encol!l'aging sign for President Carter's
efforts to win approval of the pact. .
Absence of solidarity on the · issue among GOP
cooservatives was signaled Wednesday when S. D. Hayakawa,
R.Qllif., said he-was ready to lend support ''if the treaties look
as acceptable in particulars as they do in outline ... "

STATE FAIR REPRESENTATNES - Tbese six
girls received the top awards irt tlleir class Wednesday
evening at the Meigs County Junior Fair's Youth Night
ceremonies. Designated State Fair Fashion Review
Winners were (1-r), Terry Stout, 9, daughter of Jim and
Dorothy Stout of Tuppers Plains in the top to toe class;
Paula Life, 15, daughter of Pa!ll Ufe of Reedsville, school
,
·e

clothes; Deborah Wwdyard, 14, daughter of Doris
Woodyard of Pomeroy, sport clothes; Barb Douglas, 18,
daughter of Hank and Eleanor Douglas of Burlingham,
coats and jackets; Connie Stout, 13, daughrer of Jinn and '
Dorothy Stout of TupjJers Plains, lounging; and Mary
Colwell,l6,daughrer of John and Cathy Colwell, dress up.

Competition was stiff in the
annual open class horse
show, which got underway at ·
the Meigs County Fair
Wednesday evening and went
into Thursday morning.
Lead-in pony riders all
received an award and the
groupincludedKristenShato,
Gallipolis; Lorie Hayes,
Pomeroy; Kristin Aliens·
worth, Tiffin; Robbie Hawk,
Pomeroy: Mica Jones.
Pomeroy; Nikki Meier,
Middleport; Keith Hunt,
Long Bottom; Rich Hun\,
Long Bottom, and Jamie Ord,
Syracuse.
Bill-Cole took first places in
the Western pleasure horse,
registered only, class on
Phebous with second going to
Danny Elias, Letart, W. Va.
on Buck Is Too and third to
Ron Conley, Coolville. In the
Western pleasure pony class,48 to 56 inches, first went to
Eddie Roush, Letart, W·. va.,
on Star Dust Robin; second to
, Robin Ritchie, Tuppers
Plains on Pet's Ace and third
to Kelly Meeks, ·Athens, ·00
Charlie.

J
·
f
•
•
d
•
·
I
·
d
:r::~~;y::o:,:~;~~~.i!~R-~r;~::~~:~~~~h: un1or air. JU gmg· comp·_
ete .·
·.

was wi\hholdlng final judgment and cautioning against hasty
action.
·

Activities
-at
Meigs·
Rock
Springs
County's
M~PIDS7-TEI,'&lt;N . ..: MOURNING ELVIS PRESLEY Fairground show _ring
fans, barred froin his private funeral,' were promised a last ·
souvenir today - a single flower each from the cemetery Wednesoa:y night centered
where the rock 'n roll superstar's body is sealed iii a around the · Junior Fair as
Youth . Night and the
inausoleum.
•
1
presentation
of •·H, VICA,Withered flowers plucked from a sea of 2,200 floral
and
scouiing
awards got
arrangementsflanki!lg the gray marble mausoleum were to be
underway
following
a
given to the mourners, who strained Thursday for a glimpse of
welcome
by
Niese!
Duvall,
·the white hearse that carried Presley from Graceland, his !&amp;room mansion, to his -final resting place at Forest Hill summer assistant at the
extension office· at 8 p.m.
Cemetery.
Receiving the top awards,
Four miles from the midtown ceme!A!ry, only a himdful of
Grand
and Reserve Cham·
the 75,000 fans who had januned the Streets of Elvis Presley
pion
prizes
resp ective ly,
Boulevard during the three-day vigil, remained in front of the
we're
Billy
Oyer
and Craig
·white-columned, hiUtop mansion where Presley died Tuesday
Bolin,
Vegetable
Garden
I;
of heart failure at the age of 42.
·
Rick,
Jordan
and
Clint
Tur·
.
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT CARTERHASthrownhls - ner, Family . Vegetable .
full support behind Budget Director Bert Lance ,'who has been Gardening ; ·.ratty Dyer,
cleared of crinninal wrongdoing in his $6 million personal bank Soils; Johnnie Riebel, lndealings. But other serious questions remain unresolved . S!lcts; Rick Long and Johnnie
"Bert, I am proud of you," said Carter, warmly shaking Riebel, Archery; 'PattY Dyer,
Lance's hand at the start of a 50-minute news conference Ed Holter, and Mike
McGuire, Sal~ Use of Guns;
Thursday.
Comptrolfer of·Cirrrency John Heinnann said, in a lengthy Terri Pullins and Becky
report, "We do not believe the information developed to date in Phillips, Let's Explore the
the iriquiry warrants the prosecution of any individuals." Qutdoors; Johnnie Riebel and
Lance was gratified. He said the report should put to rest Mark' McGuire, Exploring
allegations about his personal finances, and declared : "I don't Our Forests; Nick Leonard
know of any circumstances wh~e I've done anything and Gary Hutton, Fishing;
Lark Napier and Angie
improper or illegal and I think that report says that."
.Spencer, Aquatic Science;
MINNEAPOLIS - SEN. HUBERT H. Humphrey, former Crystal Roush, Rope; Mark
Riggs and Gary Hutton,
( Calltinued on Jllle 12)
Electricit-y; . David Burt,

WOodworking, G. C. Mar co
Welding; Sherry Arnold and
Jeffers, R..C. Lester Jeffers,
.Katrina Donohue, Creative . Outst
., Mike McGu ire·.
Art- (ages 9-12); Beth Perrin
Reflnished Furniture, G. C.
and Terri Pullins, Creative Raeleen Oliver, R. C. Sharon
Arts (ages._ 13 and up ); Karr, Outst., Ter ri Pullins.
·Photography / G.C. Lbr i ·
Melissa Scarbrough, Helping Louks. R.C. Connle .Stout.
at Home; Brenda Bentz,
Bicycles, .G.C. Laura
Elchinqer, R.C. Pam Riebel,
First Aid.
Outsl .. Craig Bolin~·
Home Funilshings, G. C.
· Model Rocketry. G. C. Mark
Chery l Johnson . ,

Riggs , R.C. Mark Rice,
Outst.; Mark Cl1ne.
·
Flower
Garden
i
n~,
G.C.
Rc
.
A 9- s
sfa :~h::nc~~nd·; . . O~n~~: '
Lambert, tie. .
Vet e r i n a r y Science
·I Normal Anima.lsl. G.C.
Angela Myers alld Beth
Per rin · {tiel. R.C. Kathy
Parker .

·

(Continued on page 12)

I

Judy Allen, COOlville, on

'

Jones, Pomeroy on Beak's Bo
Jangles and third to Tony
Kennedy, Tuppers Plains, on
Hilliop Bob. Robert Greer,
New Haven, on Little Honey
Bee was first in the roadster
pony class. Karen Wood,
Coolville on Bar None was
first in the Western pleasure
horse, non registered, with
second going to Fae· Reibel, .
Pomeroy on Farrah's Prin·
cess and third to Cindy
Wallace, Athens, on Tawnny.
Mikki Couby ·on Miss Ohio
was first in the Western
pleasure pony class, under til
.inches and Jeff Icard on
Colonial Windswift was first .
·in the English five gaited _
horse class. Kristen An·
derson of Pomeroy on Claric~
- McCue was first in the trail
horse class with secorid going
to Frank Petrie of Thurman
on Lobo Look and third to
·. Brenda Williams, Rutland, on
Barrett 's Bu11et .
Terry Cross, Athens, was
first on Buck in the trail pony
class with Tammy Kennedy,
Tuppers· Plains, on Little
Chi 1 k'
d 1 ·th
e ta mg secon . n e
ba'rrel race, horse or · pony,

Hilltop Mike won first in the first place went to Karl
English pleasure horse class Meeks, · Athens on Jiggs;
with second going to Debbie (Calltlntled on Jllle 12)

'.

We're different

'

. BELLAffiE,Ohlo (UP!) -All mines in Eastern Ohio
and the Northern Panhandle .of West VIrginia wete
·apparently working today, United Mine Workers ualou
district 6 headquarters here said.
"We have no reports of any mines out," said a UMW

spokesperson;
Officials at Meigs Mines 1, 2 and 3 said at noon today,
however, the op~ratlons near Salem Center. reniain ·
'clqsed.
·
. Roving pickets protesting cutbacks In UMW health
be110fits bad closed mines In the district earlier this w~k.
However, the mines started reopening Thnrsdliy.

Fair weather for fair

The Meigs County Fair The junlor fair livestock saie
this moming for its will be held at the show ring
fourth day under cooperative ·. on the hill.
Saturday, the final day of
sunny skies.
the
fair the annual pretty
Last night a large crowd
HAROLD KAESER; OIDO STATE University; judged th~ dairy cattle at the Meigs
Ill!
by
contest will be held ·m
was at the grandstand for the
County Fair Thtir~day marking his 30th year to travel to the local fair to perform that chore.
the
show
r_ing at 1 p.m. and
appearance of a today vocal
otrthe left is fair boara member Herll]an Carson.
group, · ..Sunshine Express" there will· be two tractor
and Jo Jo, the singing clown. pulling competitions un·
Today at I p.m., the ·final derway in the area of the·
evenirig of twilight harness grandstand and the cen- -.
racing willget underway and terfleld. Saturday night ~
the evening grandstand at- motorcycle show will be held,
.
.
'
. traction will be the annual as the grandstand attraction .
'
· Dairy cattle judging results first; Kautz, second; get of the junior champion female. ·pony pulling contest at 8 p.m.
of th~ l)'leigs County !'air sir.e, Holter, first and second, Hayes won eight firsts in the
were announced today.
and . Carnahan,
third; classes judged with Leland
.
ln the Holstein breed • produce of cow, first, · secoqd Parker, Route 3, · Pomeroy,
wmners- were: cow, 4 and and third to Holter. Holter winning a first, four seconil
uver, Roy_ Holter, Route 3, exhibited the senior 'cham· places and a ·third. Colwell
Pomeroy, first; James pion and grand champion won a first and a second.
COLUMBUS -~ Bids for a deep ·beam guardraU With
Carnah~~· Racine, second, females with· tee getting the
~eigs County, US 33 bridge
steel tubular hack-up, poata
and Ph1hp Radford, Route 3, junior cha mpion female
replacement
project
between
and bolts will :be water·
.
Pomeroy, third; cow, 3 years award.
Burlingham
and
DarwiJi
in
proofed prior to replacement
and under 4, Holter, first; · In the Guernsey breed,
MEET MONDAY
1 Leland Parker, Route 3,
Bedford
Twp.
will
be
opened
of a two and . one-half inch
James Carnahan won firsis in
The board of directors of here Sept. 13, by the Ohio asphalt concrete -wearing
Pomeroy,.second. Cow, 2 b4! seven classes and exhibited the Gallia-Meigs Community
Department of Trans· surface.
under 3 yeats, Holter, first; all three champion females: Action Agency
hold their
Programme d
Radford, second; senior
In Brown Swiss Carroll monthly' meeting on Monday, portatlon .
estimate
for
rlght·of-way,
Project will Include
yearling heifer, Bob Lee, Wingrove, Route
Belpre, Aug. 22, at 8 p.m. in the
engineering
and
construction
necessary
drainage work and
Route 1, Racme, first and e~hibited the three champion central office.
approximately
230 feet of new
costs
is
$350,000.
fourth ~nd Holter, second and . female animals, the grand
The
existing,
deficient
2G-foot
approach
pavement
third; )unlor yearling heifer, champion bull and won . 11 ..
west
branch
bridge
over
the
with eight-foot berms.
James Carn~h~n. first; · firsts ana five seconds.·
of the Shade River wm be
Traffic will be maintalried
169,923 AT FAIR
Holter, second and third, and
In Jersey judging John
Parker~ fourth ; senior heifer Colwell, Route 1, Vinton, · COLUMBUS CUP!) - The replaced with a three-span, - aroun&lt;l the replacement site
calf, Bill Kautz, Route 3,
exhibited the senior cham·. Ohio State Fair drew 169,923 prestressed concrete box' over a temporary l'liiHiround .
SHOWMANSIDP WINNERS
In showmanship, junior fair, janiS-Carnah~n. was _ Pomeroy, first aild fourth and pion &lt;~nd the grand·: champiorl persons Thursday, bringing beam bridge on reinforced west of the existing bridge.
reserve champioo and Tony Carna)ia;; grand champion. They are the soh and daughter of
~otter, second and third ;
female witli James Hayes, ' the three-day total to 482-473, . concrete substructure. The Estimated completion date Is
Mr, and Mrs. Jim Carrujhan, Racin(
d~ck, 38 filet wide between July 31, 197.
·
JUnior heifer calf, · Holter, Route 1, Guysville, exhibiting fair officials said.
opene~

Dairy animals
judged.

'

Bid opening _date 'is set

will

2:

'

••

.

1

...
i

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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48767">
              <text>August 18, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1134">
      <name>griffith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="964">
      <name>manuel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
