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~The SUnday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 28,

1977

SENIOR CITIZENS' SCENES

HOOFS.. .and • • •PAWS
By MARION C. CRAWFORD
Meigs Cuwuy Humall" Suci&lt;ty
POMEROY - E,·erythm~: is coming up roses

POMEROY - l-"·'t ~'riday shoppe. Everyone knows that for all ages. Bring the whole
82 Senior Citizens went to the Senior Citizens and all Meigo familY and see how many
klli&lt;'llo 11hen first brought home shouta bt&gt; ~~pt'" th~ l••u."&lt;· Ohio State ~'air in Columbus County ladies are good cooks prizes yo,. can take home.
wtlt"Ss ~au lh·~ in th~ enuntr} away £rom uthcr J)t"tlple .
Meig_s County provided o so be at !he Meigs County
There is no charge made to,
CaLi\, wh(tn alloWt..-c.l tn roam free ln the cit} l'ause (l(:lur hair-hour or entertainment Senior Citizens Center on any
Individual
or
awund others' homes ; they tear up flower Ms and they ~" durin~ the day and Lee September 17 at 11 a.m. for organil:atioo l(!r having a
alter those \\ild birds thin sn many of us try l&lt;l encourage or McComas. Middleport , the pie-baking contest.
display or fund raising booth
Games and contests will he at "Yesteryear !I." If you are
;onra,·t. Spreading cat lilt&lt;&gt;r around where they have already received his Outstanding
smelled up the place, will help, by the way. The only other wa} Senior Citizen Award during held all afternoon during interested, can the Center at
"Yesteryear II" and will be 992·7884 or 992-7886.
l can suggest fr.- keeping cats "way from your property is by the program.
fencin~ in your yard and then calling us to acquire a nice dog,
The next trip now being
put a noce house out there for it, treat it well, and it wiU do the planned is the J.ancaster Fair
job for you. keeping all unwanted pests away from your home . on October 13. Cost wlll he
Now then folks, I'd like to comment on some phone calls approxima tely $9 which
we get "demanding that we jump."
includes transportation and
65 Near
ACROSS
123 Bishopric
14 Elglt'a nest
Remember, we have no Shelter YET, we have oo Humane admittance to the fair. Money ·
66 Surfeit
t24 Co14 Adfiltie
f 5 Old JtPtMit
w in d
i\geJlt YET, we have no paid employees YET. We do have a must be paid by October 6 1 SO!Oulderw&lt;ap 67 AneJentGrHk
nobl e
thel!er
125 Ch~f DOd of
16Worm
van that is used for pi~king up homeless injured animals to be and the first 82 persons 1~ ~~~~~.
69 Cnar~:~t tl'le ac·
MemDhlt
17 Prefix : down
count of
126 Limb
taken to the vet and homeless animals that people on our paying the fare will be go!ng. 1e Tall st&lt;toe1uoo
21 Mee ting
71 Swttt river
127 Beeat
22Foot ltw•
Careline have been unsuccessful in finding a home for, thus Please keep in mind when ~~ [~;~·~•
7:1: NatiOnal hymns 129 Clergyman·
23 Pellet
74
Profound
they must be taken to the vet to be put to sleep.
·
· you sign up for a trip to Jet the 21 Oeot•""
13 t Orunkaros
25 Armed conflict
16
Privileges
2lfuol
132 W irtQS
27 Pressed
We handle some neglect and cruelty calls but have Center k now if you dect'de not 2•
79
Chose
Female sheep
133 SPf. .d lot' dry.
togetller
81 Dress Mrdllr
announced through this column several times that the police to go.
26 Flower
in; .
28
Buo•
82 GuiCSO's high
134 Golf mound
30S.uonlng
and sheriff should he called on these complaints, they are paid
Once again the center is 27 ~;':;.!•" for
no1e
138 Sums up
31 Et.ctrteal safety
8o4 Coastline
to take care of such matters. Further, a lot of these calls could asking for help. Volunteers 29111as m•SI•k•n
1371n add ition
device
t 38 Classical
be handled by you, the citizen, by talking to whoever is being and
donations
for 3o Old nome lor
33 Nall'illl of Latvia
851nchnations

folks . We
oow, contrary to the belief of some. have all the countv
commissioners working to help us find a place for the Humanf
Society Animal Shelter.
l received a call from Henrv Wells rieht after my article
appeared in the P"P'l' last Sundar. So, all of you hundreds of
Meigs Countians who ha1•e helped us with our shelter fund, we
have aU three commissiooers on our side, whi&lt;;h•I know makes
you as hai'PY as it does me. Cum missioners Wells, Roush, and
Jones, I feel, are Slnet."re, so plans are being discussed on how
to organize a board of working directors similar to Parkersbur~ and il is anticipated that at least two full time' people will
be hired not someone enticed by a salary buL someooe who is
presently showing concern for animals by working on a
volunteer basis, a county humane agent and a kennel
manager. It is hop&lt;ld that volunteers will continue to cOme
forth to help ''police up" and belp out where possible.
nus venture, Mr. Commissioners and readers, is going to
cost more .than the pound is costing you now to operate but the
services received will be so much more that you wUl never
regret the effort to get Meigs County its own animal control
facility.
Major E. Joyce Miller and Mrs. Dorothy Fisher, president neglectful or cruel. Some people are just ignorant of the fact
of the Humane Soc1ety and myself are wor king on the best that
animals do have feelings, and that the law protects them.
We. W1·u mak e p1enty of announcements loud and clear when
~ssible means of ope;ating a successful shelter. Major Miller
will be conferrmg With other directors of Humane Society the time comes that we have the people to come at your call,.
but the time ls not now, it is when the shelter has been
Shelters and the National President.
.One su~estion is that Major Miller take over supervision constructed and people hired to run it. Please do what )lou can
until such time that Mrs. Fisher retires from Reynolds and can to asstst us m a lot of these matters, we cannot do it alone.
become the Supervisor. She is the "only" one to rightfully have
Awoman by the name of Sandy Selby of Point Pleasant, W.
the )lOSltion, folks; afteraU, the Humane Society .is her baby. Va., won the cute litUe poodle planter given by the Humane
Whereby others joined her in her original endeaver to have Society at the Meigs County Fair. Congratulations, Sandy.
one, she 1s the one who stuck to her guns, kept her interest and
Puppies, kittens, dogs and cats available for free adoption
has shown by her continued dedication tha t animals and the
are as follows :
problelllll tl!!;l ~_epresenthave to be dealt with daily.
The MaJor and I w1lTifo what we can, meantime, and then
'
onceothersarehired, we will get the time to do the things we
German Short Hair Pointer, 5yrs. old, male, gentle. Needs
retired from the Army to do, like fish, play golf, and travel.
farm home to run, 94~2593.
You have no idea of how much time the Careline and this
Fox Terrier, black and white male housedog adult 742article, along with the dozens of other chores presented to us
3162.
'
'
from you, takes up. That Shelter can't he built soon enough for
Beagl~.. I yr. old.. male, nice dog, good pet, 992-7524.
us. We also have a young man in mind, who is half way
Fox
Terrier, 9mo. old, black and white, 742-2101.
experienced to be. humane agent. So you see, we are thinking
German
Shepherd and-&lt;Jr her puppies, 742·2101.
ahead. Manager job open.
Beagle-Min.
Cullie, female, 3 mo. old, 992-7080.
This week we had a call concerning the age old problem of
.
Short
haired
5
mo. old male white with black spot over eye,
neighbors threatening one another because of pets. Now then I
ruce
dog,
good
with
children, will be large dog, 992-2548.
can thoroughly understand someone who gets fighting mad
Coon
Hound
puppy,
742-2134.
when someone threatens to kill their p&lt;lt (and this is against
Border Collie Puppies, 8 weeks old, male and female 94~
the Jaw) but I also understand folks getting darn upset who
~~'
have to put up with animals that are not their own. We have
Kittens, 3 mo. old, I gray, 2 gray w-black stripes, wormed,
that problem on Hysell Run, inconsiderate, selfish pet owners
real
cute, 992·2000.
who are obviously hard of hearing, because they aren't
Cats,
and two kittens, gray and black, 742-2529.
bothered by dogs howling all night long while I Jay awake
Kittens,
black female , 7 weeks old, I yellow and white,
wanting to strangle the owners.
male
3
mo.
old,
both really cute and playful. 992-2639.
BUT, folks, you cannot touch or threaten to touch someone
English
Collie,
purebred, female, red and white, 992-3012.
else's pets. Pet owners: Why be a "pain" to your neighbors?
Try to keep yo\U' p&lt;lts at home. Dogs should be fenced in, and
t

'

Meigs Local teachers strike
voted; schools to stay open

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

"Yesteryear II" are needed. ~ t l~~~~~~ishment
If. you wouJd Jik e to hep
J "'
Goot
3 , .. , • .,.,·c••ome

34 cb;·.r;~, "

during the day or could
dQnate baked goods, fresh
produce or home·canned
goods Jet the Center know by
calling 992-71184 or 992-7886.
A new feature this year for

35 Tr ooocailree
36 Downy
G1rl'&amp; name
38
duolcs

:~ ~o, nlul
arrete

42 Osc~ '""

!g ~t~~-. 0~~i~~i~;
5

" Yesteryear II'' i$ the baby

picture

contest.

Senior

46 Cyoronoidlisn

Citizens, we need your baby :~~:~!~n~
pictures taken under five 49 Letin
51 Auditory
years of age, by September 52 Sulfllt de.,otmg

12. The individual guessing 0 ' '
the highest number of pic- 53 AntlerPO an1mal
. d'mner ror two ss
54 Wagers
t ures Wl'II wm
Po1aon
at the Country Cousins' Cook- 57 Depooil
shoppe.

Another new contest is the
·
pte-ba k'mg cont est. An Y type

~g g~~~6~/a~:~~$

61 UrQe

on

62 Wine drink
64 symbol tor

Qf pie may be entered and we
are asking that those entered
be .donated for thw sweet-

ctyooroslvm

87 Remaincter
90 Intervening

oorood

92 Inlet
93 Food provrama

95 Domain
97 Shakeapearitn

character
98 Printer's
measure
99 Notary public
ta bbr.l
101 Ell'8porates

language
13$ Teutonic deity
140 Fruit
1 41 f'edel digit
142 Dillaeed
t •3 ~il!tl'ler or mettler
1-4 4 Letter

1 -46 lriPC*'
1o4 8 Landed estate
1-49 Couches
150 Ia aware of
151 Unlocks

I 0 .1 Wme CUQ

10 4 Preposition
1OS Adtles lve subs ·
lance
1OB S1ck
flO Areta
112 Canines
113 Nervous twitCh·

OOWN r
I looked fixedly

2 Carries
3 Was in debr
4 Condu cted

5 Teutontc deity

fl: Choice part

'"0

t 14 Soantsh article
I 1 5 Caudal appen·
dage
1 t 7 Walk s
118 Make '! lace
1 19 Solemn vf':l w ·

7 Paper measure
8 Oanisl'lland dlvi·
sion
9 Note of acale
10 Spinted horses
11 Shams
12 French art icle
13 Lamb 's pen
name

120 Note of scale
'21 Compet 110r

35 Htghett point

36 River Islands
37 Part of Atablt
39 Pair
41 Instrument
•2 Outfits
Ate
47 Whip

•4

48 Savior
49 Debate
50 Strtped animal
54 Fuaa
55 Matu red
56 School ol pa int·
Ino
59 Oepoalted tern·
porar lty
60 Lane
61 Man 's nickname
63 Gr ieve for
66
67
68
70

Symbol for tin
Bone
Sesaions
Source of an·
noyance
11 In musk. high
72 Ventilate
73 Snakes

75 Folds
17 Flrelh · tnree

780cea_n
80 Wile of Gertlnt
83 Jason's ahip
86 Pigpen&amp;

88 Scorcl'les
89 Scotliat't capa

90 Ne~et1v11 prel i1
91 Malden. to'ied by
Zeus

94 Clant
98 Note ofacale
98 Every
99 Salt of nttric
ac id
100 Simpler
102 PrtciDitous
104 GrHk letter
105 Substtnc:t
108 Piece of ground
10711'10tedlent
109 Black end blue
1 1 1 Mtnages
112 Arrow
113 Chinese
pagoda$
116 Arable letter
118Huri
119Man 'tname
122 NeWest
124 Ador n
125 Station
1 26Ctlangea
128 Fewest
130 Arttf icial
lanQuage
131 Wi nter vehicles
1,32 Man '!lname
1 35 Great Lake
137 Aga in
138 Path
140 BaKer's product
1 42 Tlrne gone by
143 Soft food
144 Manuscr ipt
(abbr.)
145 Brother ol Odin
14 7 Article
148 A state ~bbr)

Presley

Continued from page IJ.l
where Presley was to have
played on Aug. 23, said about
4; per cent of the original
ticket sales had been
refunded so far. He said he
still had more than $1()0,000 in
tickets left over.
In Portland, Maine, where
Presley was to 'kick-&lt;Jff his
tour, the "Elvis Presley True
CINCINNATI (UP I) - A 'soundness' of these chemical Fans Club" held a memorial
federal appeals court has investment opport uniti es, concert open only to holders
upheld the convictions of nine they (the defendants) set of original tickets. The $5,000
men accused of taking part in about to exploit high pressure in proceeds were cont~jituted
a $4 .4 million dollar nation- sales techniques, bolstered to the Maine chapter of the
wide sales fraud scheme by false and misleading American Heart Association .
But about $50,000 in tickets
which bilked money from representations, "
wrote
1,000 persons.
Judge Anthony J . Celebrezze. remained unclaimed.
The .Nassau Veterans
In dismissing the appeal,
On appeal, lawyers for the
the three-judge
panel convicted men claimed that Memorial Coliseum, outside
rejected every argument the prosecution's evidence New Yotk City, has a seating
made by attorneys for -the was insufficient; that a capacity of 16,732. The Aug.
•·
prosecutor made infiamatory 22 concert, which was sold
defendants.
The court described the remarks to the jury; that the out, would have been one of
fraudulent activities as "an judge in the case showed the l;lrgest grossing shows oo
elaborate scheme to market partiality to the prosecution, · the tour.
Bill Scheid, lawyer for !be
s ham
w h o I e s a l e and that the judge instructed
' distributorships' for · the jury incorrectly in the Coliseum said all money from
unreturned tickets would be
chemical products.
Ia w.
placed in an interest-bearing
"To convince others of the
bank account for six years
and refunds will be available
'fl'\J~~ fe&gt;'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GA..ME \Ultil 1983. Then the left over ',
and
interest, I
~ t...!:!J ~~ ®,
b~HenriArnoldandBobLee money
according to Scheid, will be
Unscramble thes~ four Jumbles, ·
· turned over to the state.
one letter to ea!=h square, to fOfm
comptrOller who will decide
tour ordinary words.
· what should be done with it
theli.

!1-ugust 28th
thru
September lrd

..._,.,.,.....__,.

FRENCH FRIES
25~

With·the Purchase
of Any Sandwich

Stop in
and Register
for the 1951
Kaiser to be

gtven away
September 15,
1977.

TRY OUR

TIDEFm

I"''"""I'""C...•!·-· ........._ ...
FALEY l
rJ I

~~~~~~ur' Lr~]'~Er--~----1. . ---.,
IMORNEDt
I I I J
t
l
- = r .

CHICKEN DINNER

Califano
THEY CAN

BE A RIOT!

OFFERED ANYWH ERE.

i dairy lsle ~

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

-. Continued from apge IH
Security bellllfits to help them
ha.ve a comfortable and
dignified life as senior
cit~ns ...'
"If .we want to defer the
mandatory retirement .age or
eliminate it CIXIIpletely as a
nation or states in this nation,
that's fine, but we sbollld not
break our promise to , the
American workers !hat they
will be permitted to retire at
65 if they so choose to do
under the current system."
·A transcript of Califano's
comments oo this Issue was
made available to reporters
by the American Association
of Retired Persons.
Under
current law,
workers are entitled to
partial Social Security
benefits at age 62 and run
benefits at 65. Many
companies require employes
to retire at 65.
In an interview with United
Press International July 30,
Mrs.
Kr.eps
said
adminiatration officials are
discussing the money-eaving
possibility of·withholding full
benefits until retirees/ reach
age 68. Actuaries predict the
first of several Social
Security reserve funds will go
dry in fiscal year 1979.
Mrs. Kreps 1111id It was
"possible" the deferred1l8Y·
ment plan could become
official policy "within eight
years."
Later, an AARP official
laid the White HOUle later
sent out a "clarification"
&amp;latement aayina tbe reform
plan In quealioo mJabt Ill
conai dered only when
Amerlca111 bom durfn8 the
post.Wcrld War II •'blbJ'
boom" begin r~ In the
next century.

'fr

Monday morning that
teachers had voted to strike.
Dowler said he "will try" to
keep the schools open.
The action pf the teachers
association was taken
following an address to them

• B rze'
• fi
ews . zn

Four want to be 'Queen of Horses'

PRETORLA, SOUTH AFRICA - U. N. Ambassador
Andrew Young ~nd Britain's foreil[n secretary today briefed
Prime Minister Jolui Vorster on an Angl()-U .S. proposal said to
be Rhodesia 's last chance for pease.
Young and British Foreign Secretary David Owen were
seeking V(I'ster's crucial endorsement of the Angi()-American
plan for a· peaceful shift to black majority rule in Rhodesia.
Also at the session, expected to last about three hours, was
South African Foreign ldinister Roelof Botha.
NEW ORLEANS - THE ELECTION of Bob Livingston

as Louisiana's 1st Disll'ict-congressman gives thi! Republican

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·
CHAIR SALE
KROEHLER AND BERKLINE
_.
Regular Price $239.00 tp S29B.OO
Recliners - Ro~k-0-Loungers • Wall-A-Way ·- Swivel Rockers
Occasional Cha1rs . Large selection of Fabrics and Colors. ·

SALE '199-

LORI DARST

r------.:.:....------------------------at right•••

HOUS'l'()N- U. S. DISTRicr JUDGE Frank M. Johnson
Jr., nominated by President Carter to be FBI director, Is
recovering well from abdominal surgery and may be ready for
congreasional hearings on his nomination in two months, a
Justice Department spokesman says.
Robert Havel, sent to Houston by Attorney General Gr(ffin
Bell, said Sunday Johmon could be ready for the congressional
hearings by late October. "Dr. Michael E. DeBakey said be
expected him to be fully recovered in six weeks, so it all ·
depends on when Congress recesses," Havel said.

Conviction of fraud upheld

THIS WEEK'S

salary schedule lor just one
by Dowler, who said in part: this proposal."
He continued, "With the year.
"We have gone through a
The board's main concern
long, drawn out process of infurmation avaUable to us
is
to keep our schools open
negotiation and have com· we have projected financial
without
interruption. The
pleted
the
impas.se problem• for this school
students
suffered
enough last
district before the end of the
procedure.
year
because
o
f
school
being
"It Is the Board's decision 1978 calendar year. We an·
that the majority's recom· !iclpate finding it necessary closed for a teachers strike
S·:«·:;:•:&gt;;·.·S::::::::~-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~;::;:;:::·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::;:-.::::: mendation on the impasse on to ask voters lor additional and the energy crisis.
"BP.fore you make your
to operate our
::~N
l salary and the change in the millage
decision
I ask you to 'think ·
~i
s ;?; index is too costly for the schools.
about
the
ramifications that
"The
cost
l)f
the
teachers
:;::
·
• e e
.
.
j;l. board to accept. We have
will·
result
for your Jives, the
salacy
proposals
alone
would
::&gt;
By Ulllted PreoolnteruUoa~_l
~:1. made a fair offer of $8,800 on
students
lives
and everyone ·
WESI'ERVIILE, OHIO
PUBLIC
SCHOOL the current index and are cost approximately $175,000
else
concerned."
TEACHERS in this Colwnbus suburb failed to vote hopeful that you will accept more than our current $8,400
overwbelmingly enough Suooay night to stage a strike
[1
Wednesday because the Westerville Education Association
had not been able to reach a contract with School BOI!rd
officials.
Teachers voted 221-128 to walkout, while an undetermined
number refrained from taking part. Rules of the meeting said
there must be 350 Bfllnnative votes to approve the strike issue.
It was estimated about 370 of the district's 470 teachers
attended the meeting. Another one was sc~duled late
Four trl-eounty girls are corupeting for the title of 1977-78 "Queen of the OJ;lio Valley
Tuesday .
Horse Show Assn."
The contestants underwent personality interviews by a panel of judges at the home of
HELICOPTERS AND EARTH-MOVING equipment were
Mrs.
Nonna Newland in Tuppers Plains Saturday evening. They were also given a written
required to rescue families in south~ntr;li aoo southwestern
test
on
horse show rules, another criteria of judging. The girls also have won points through
Oklahoma, where as much as 8\2 Inches of rain caused flash
the
season
by attending approved Ohio Valley Horse Show Association shows and by riding
flooding .
in
queen
competitioo
events.
·
Comimche County Deputy Sheriff John Johnson said the
Judging
the
four
contestants
were
Dr.
Thomas
A.
Robertson
aoo
hls
wife, Wanda of
water was about 4 feet deep in tbe Johnny McClung residence
New
Marshfield,
and
Jack
Cumell,
Athens.
The
queen
will
be.
crowned
on
Sept.
18 when ihe
at Cae\le, where rainfall was estimated at 8\2 inches. An earth
association
stages
its
annualfall
roundup,
this
year
in
Point
Pleasant,
W
.Va.
mower was brought in Sunday to rescue Mrs. McClung, who
The candidates are Lori Darst, daughter of David and Judy Darst, Point Pleasant;
was {ecovering from a gall bladder operation.
Robin Ritchie, daughter of Mrs. Nina Jean Ritchie, Tuppers Plains; Julie Gooch, daughter
"The current . was extremely rapid," JOhmon said, "!
of
Mrs. Janet Hlll, Minersville, and Brenda Davis, daughter of Harold Davis, Gallipolis.
weigh about 2'15 pounds and It knocked me plwnb down.
Someone called a front-end loader, which has a big bucket on
it, and we went in !here aoo took graooma aoo the mattress
and all and carried her out the window and .put her in the
bucket of the !rOOt-end loader."

Teachers of the Meigs
Local School District wm he
on fllrike Tuesday , the
opening day of school for the
ne.w year.
District Superintendent
Diaries Dowler told the Dally
~!~el he was advised late

party l;hree seats in !he state's only solitDy Democratic eight·
member delegation. Livingstoo, 34, a former assistant U.S.
attorney and assistant .state attorney general, put the lsi
District office under the RA!publican banner for the first time in
102 years Saturday by taking 50 per; cent of the vote in a three·
man race.
Democrat Roo Faucheux, a state representative who lost
vital laboc and black support when he voted against a
cor!J(I'ate income tax increase in the legi.slature during the
congreSsional campaign, trailed with 37 per cent. Independent
Sanf1rd Krasnoff was third. "'The people are tired of what
they've been getting and now they've got something new,"
Livingston said.

. MOSCOW -A SQUAD OF AMERICAN engineer$ today
are surveying the damage at the U. S. Embassy, where an
eight-hour blaze during the weekeoo brought hundreds of
Soviet firemen into its "secrets" rooms.
But U.s: Ambassador Malcolm Toon reporte(fno security
breach in the fire and said he 51\W no reason to suspect a
"sinister Soviet.backdrop" to the blaze, which was blamed on
an electrical fault.

Weather

Chance of showers tonight
and Tuesday. Lows ranging
from ~ to 70 and highs from
low to mid 80s. Probability of
precipitation is 80 per cent
today, 50 per cent tonight and
30 per cent Tuesday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
. Wednesday through
Fnday, cbaoce of sbowel'li
daOy Highs. wiii be iD ihe
· 80s ami lows lo the lOs.

•

at y

NO. 95

VOL XXVIII

They were taken to tile Holzer
Medical Center by a
SEOEMS ambulance. The
accident is still under in·
· vestigation.
Another Sunday mishap
occurred at 9:30 a.m. on the
Bidwell-Rodney Rd. where an
auto driven by Robert Meade,
67, Bidwell, attempted to pass
as a vehicle operated by
Richard S. Vanco, 35,
Gallipolis, started to make a
left turn. There was
moderate damage and no
charges were llled.
The first of two Saturday

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ROBIN RITCHIE ·

e.n tine

MONDAY. AUGUST 29. 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Senate battle lines formed
WASillNGTON · (UPI) The controversial new
Panama Canal Treaty faces
strong
opposition
in
Congress, and President
Carter is p-eparing to wage a
campaign to win public
support
for
Senate
ratification.
The new treaty, which must
be approved by a two-thirds
vote .in the Senate, would
dismantle the Canal Zone,
make it a neutral art!~~ , and
give Panama cootrol of the
waterway by tbe year 20110.
The current Panama Canal
CQ. would be replaced by a
new U.S. government agency
controlled by a board of five
American
and
four
Panamanian directors. Until
1990 the canal administrator
would be ·an American, after ·
which the post would be held
by a Panamanian.
Senate battle lines already
have been drawn, largely
along conservative and
Uberallines, over the treaty,
which will be signed during
special ceremonies here Sept .
7 in the (I'nate headquarters
of the Organization or
American States.
Republican cooservatives,
who already have criticized
former President Gerald

For~ and Secretary of State the treaty is fair to both sides.
Henry A. Kiss) nger for For that purpose alone, I
endorsing the treaty, are would favor it. But the
aligning on the issue with additional maj(I' advantage
Rooald Reagan, who has is that it would enhance
tremendously our own
called it "a giveaway."
Aware the Senate fight relatiQnships wilh other
could . be close, President cou.ntries in the southern
Carter plans to court public hemisphere." ·
The · President said that
support by holding a fireside
chill over national news "consequences would be very
'inedia soon. Moreover, severe" if the Senate rejected
sources say the White House the treaty, · but expressed
will seek support from confidence "that our nation
persons with .vested interests would have the military
in the Canal Zone, and from capability to defend it in spite
persons in southern states of a threat of sabotage or
with trade connections with other similar threats."
panama strongman Gen.
Latin America.
Carter, the chief advocate Ornar Torrijos said in a
City
speech
of the new treaty, told editors Panama
in a recent interview, "I think recently, " If !Ire U.S. Senate

to us by our posSoission of !be United States still .would
Panama Canal," Moorer control military installations
necessary to defeoo the Canal
sald.
If the ca nal became through 1999, and American
neutral, ·Moorer said, "the warships are guaranteed
Unilell States would not be "expeditious passage" at aU
other than violence.' '
able to close it to enemy times eve~ after that.
1
Critics ·most frequently ciie shipping In wartime. That
~Our continui,ng freedom of
military and security could lead to encirclement of ·action to maintain the canal's
problems as the reason for . the United States by hostile neutrality will not he limited
by the treaty," one · State
their opposition.
powers.H
Retired Adm . Thomas
State Department officials · Department official said.
Mqorer, a former chairman . argue, however, that the
of !he Joint Chiefs of Staff,
told ();Ingress recently the
acid test of the new treaty Is
"will it work in wartime? "
"I have yet to see anY solid
justification advanced as to
why the United States should
.willingly sacrifice the .
SAUSALITO, . Calif. (UP! ) maintain the restored power
stratetic. advanta~es afforded
..., Terrorist bombs and fire at if they conserve," he added.
a Pacific Gas and Electric "H the load is too high we wUI
Co. substation knocked out have rotating outages. We
p6wer to 6,016· homes early have a portable substation
today in this scenic enroute that will operate until
community on San Francisco , repairs are competed."
Bay, police said.
" A number of explosivve
devices were placed on trans·
The only recorded payment formers "
said . Barry
oo the principai was $466.87 Coljsette, PG&amp;E spokesman.
oo January 22, which reduced Fire broke out inside the
the loan to its current $«3,000 station following the blasts
balance.
.
but was quickly extinguished
Bt!tcher said Lance put up by the city fire department.
Reports - never more than
Georgia bank stock as
PG&amp;E crew.s restored rumors - about two weeks
collateral for the Butcher service to most of !he houses
loan under an agreement that within 3\2 hours, but 1,!155 ago _than an lll·month-old
!iives Butcher the right to homes in the inunediate area female child had been raped
in Pomeroy has been indemand more collateral.
of the substation remained
vestigated and proven wholly
"It was an ordinary loan," dark and could be without
Butcher said. "!! was a very electr\c power for another 24 false.
The ~hlld did suffer an
typical loan to people buying hours; Cussette said.
injury,
but it apparently was
stock."
"We hope to he able to
self·inflicted, or happened
Butcber, in Memphis for a
while playing with other
reception in his honor at the
ENGINE BURNED
children
accordirig to Carl
home of State Democratic
The Middleport Fire Hysell, juvenile
probation
Party Chairman William Department answered a call
officer.
Farris, said Lance has "an to the Hobson . railroad
Hysell said that through the
ou~nding reputation."
. crossing at 7:05a.m. Monday cooperation
of the sheriff's
where an air compressor on department using its new
TAKENTOPVH
one of five engines pulling a teletype
communication
The
Middleport Conrail train of 116 cars out of s~stem,
a
16-year-old
Emergency Squad was called Corning had caught fire. runaway has been located in
to Leading Creek Road at Firemen extinguished the
4:01 p. m. Sunday for Mrs. blaze. Damages were not set, Daytona Beach, Fla., and Is
being returned today by his
John Lambert who was taken but the engine
was
parents.
to Pleasant Valley Hospital. inoperable.

does not .ratify the treaty,
that could be interpreted as
the greatest provocation for
fighting." But he added: "In
face of such a possibility,
there must be another answer

Bank loan of $443,000 to
Vance won't be called in
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -

Tennessee banker Jake
Butcher says his $443,000 loan
to Budget Director Bur\
Lance is still current and
won't be called, partly
of
Lance's
because
"integrity."
Butcher, a possible 1978
gubernatorial candidate, said
this weekend the loan his
·, accidents occurred at 4,30 Knoxville bank made to
Lance was an "ordinary"
a.m. on SR 124 in Meigs
County where Larry L. on~The first thing you
Cleland, 28, Langsville, fell
asleep atthe wheel of his car. consider is a person's
The vehicle ran off the left integrity, his experience and
then his ability to repay the
~~h.of the highway into a loan,"Butchersaid. "None of
.A lin
. a! mishap occurred. on ·that has changed in my
· value."
SR 7, two ten!ha of a mUe
north of Addison where a cilr
Lance' who left the
driven by Wesley L. White, presidency of the troubled
44, Columbus, attemp·ted to National Bank of Georgia to
bec&lt;me President Carter's
stop for the construction site. budget director, has been
The right front wheel went off given sharp federal scrutiny
the edge of the roadway • because .of his financial
breaking a tie rod.
dealings. Stock in the Georgia

}
'
BoYs egs fractured in crash
Two teenagers suffered
fractures in their left legs in a
motorcycle-car collision at
2:15 p.m. Sunday on the
Patriot-Gage Rd., two tenths
of a mUe north of Patriot.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol
repOrted a motorcycle driven
by Bobby Joe Ferguson, 14,
Patriot, rounded a curve
sideswiping a car operated by
·. Inls M. Halslop, 50, Rt. 2,
Patriot. Ferguson and a
pauenger, Ronald R. Me·
Cartney, 15, Rt.'' 1, Patriot,
were thrown from their cycle.

BRENDA DAVIS

bank has plummeted in
·recent . montha and Lance
laces huge losses if he divests
himself of his stock ·
ownership while the value is
down.
have
' Investigators
reported finding nothing
warranting prosecution in
Lance's banking activities.
"He has been scrutinized
more closely !han any public
official I've read about,"
Butcher said of Lance. "In
my personal opinion, if Mr.
Lance hlid still been
president of the National
Bank or Georgia instead of
trying to help solve the
problems of the government,
the stock would not have
suffered like it has."
Butcher said his Uriited
American Bank loaned
$515,000 to Lance Sept. 15,
1976 tlllder a $873,000 line of
credit. The next day, the
.outstanding balance was
reduced to $443,466.1!7

..

Power knocked
out·· by bombs
Rumors of
child ·rape
said false

out possible in coufity as students return
.

By DALE RO'DIGEB

•

Furniture Department, 3rd Floor

_
. Apllro!llmately 6,500 pupils In the Gallipolis City and
Gallla County Local School Dlatrlcts are scheduled to ~turn to
claa'aoma 'i'n.,.,•y morning llllll'kln8 !he end of the 19'17
llunn• vacation. Fcr10111tl! will be a lone anlidpeted return
to-frlendllhlpeandmakenew frlendawhlleothen view it
u IIGiDI back to the "old drill!" of slttlnc in 1 c:laa'oom.
However, u time ftWI cl_. f1r the Clll'lllnll of the 19'17711Chool term, !here ill !he poulbWty of a t.chen' strike In
. lbe CCIUIIty IICI!ncQ, tbat would beCin Sept. e.
Ollrpl and counter-ebar&amp;u went public u a 1'1!11111t of
-rille me publlsbed &amp;uldaY. Ofrtclala of the Gallla County
Tlacbln' AIIOclatloll and GeWa County Loea1 Board al
EdDclltlcln bad a ,._blackout" Ia force until late Jail week.
BOllllhr,ou!loillgpruldentoftheGCrA, hucl!'rged the
County bolnl barplned In bed faith. 8lhr llld the board's
--mcpac:UIIe..,. muc:b too meager In view of the pr-nt

~
•

'

.

.

Board aegotlatora believe !be OEA Oiilietve represelllatlves ,Park.
.
ftnanclal status of the district. He maliltalned the board has
Tuesday
is
the
first
day
for
s!tl.dents.
All
students
will
.
from
outside
GaDia
Co101ty
were
sent
here
specUically
to
failed to uphold the old c!litract signed in 1974, thus the
arrive.
at
tbeir
buildings
at
the
regular
starting
time
and
will
promole
a
lltrllle.
assoclatim 's negotiat(I's have taken a hard line oo the current
be_ dismissed at !he regular dismlssal time. Lunch will
Gallia
County
Schools'
teachers
received
copies
of
tbe
contract.
proposals in today's countywide teachers' meeting at Rio be served in both the city and county schools.
The · Gallipolis Board of Education and Gallipolis
· Meanwhile, Galtia Couniy School Superintendent Thcmas Grande College. Howard Neekainp, new president of the
Association (GTA) agreed upon a new tw()oyear
Teachers'
Halnlm reported Sunday the board make Ita concluding offer teachers' IISIIOC!atioo, said the membership WI!S asked to ratify
lall1buraday with a package incr~ beginning teacher's cr reject the board's offer. U rejected, the teachers' executive cmtract Aug. 17.
Under terms of the agreement, the base salary In the
salariefl to tB,OOO the firBI year, f8,500 the second year and · committee has recommended a work-11\oppage if a
system
was set at $8,650 going 'to a maximum of $14,705 for a
satillfactory
agreement
Is
not
reached
by
Sept:6.
.
•10,000 In the final school year of a three-year contract.
Master's
Degree teacher with 11 years. Head athletic coaches
will
report
lor
classes
Tuesday
morning
at
their
Students
In tenna of Cringe bene!!~, Hairston said ·the teachers
received
a
20 pet. increase on the base salary.
respective
schools,
which
will
distnis8
one
hour
early
for
staff
were offered additional riders to the pre~~ent full coverage of
The
package
also includes three days of profesolonal
.
oo.pitallzatlon Insurance, term life inllurance for aU meetings.
leave,
two
days
of
emergency leave: 180 days of 8lck leave
Gallipolis Cltr teachers and classified employee's were in
lnltruclol'l, additional severance pay, addltlmal leave
accumulated at the rate of 15 days per year and ~-half 0(
provillo~», funda f(I' !Mervice education and increases of 20 session ·this morning · at Gallia Academy High School.
accumulated
sick leave as severance pay upon retirement
lndlvld11al
buUdqj
meetings
were
set
for
11:45
a.m.
and
the
pet. fer aupplemental cmtracts and extra guaranteed
based
annual
Gallipolis
Rotary
Clilb
luncheon
fir
1
p.m.
in
the
City
oo
140
days.
preparatloo time for elementary teachers.

�~The DaiJYSentinel, Mlddlepori-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 29, 1977

:I-Tile O.UySentinel, Middleport·Pttneroy, 0., Monday, Aug.29.1977
'

.

These changing times.

Coalfield peace

••

ST. LOUIS (UP[)- !.i&gt;e'w's State Thealer, the last of tbe
downtown movie palaces in St. Louis, closed Its gleaming
brass doors Sunday night.
"It's sad," said manager Don Meyers. "The blg downtown
theaters are going one by one. Everybody's going to tbe
suburbs."
The !healer's interior re{lects the opulent style of the ora ol
its opening in 1924. A spacious lobby opens to the auditorium
and carpeted stairwa~ lead to ornate balconieS. The theater
seats 3,500.
"Il'sa beautiful place," said Meyers, who has been manager
for nine years. "It gave you a special feeling to be in it."
INDIANA, Pa. (UP1) - A bargaining table, the more greatly weakened, still con·
The State was patterned after the New York Loew's State,
Miller
said:
••'fhe
tinues,
December coal miners :strike likely a strike will take
which also has closed. It has a twin in New Orleans, also called
i UEl. COM
answer is to get to the the State, which is still Operating.
can still be avoided, but only place," he said.
if the Bituminous Co~l
The current coal cootract bargaining table, which I am
The thi!ater once played Hollywood's greatest films but in
Operators Association is expires Dec. ~. and Miller is trying to do now. The entire recent years has shown ethnic pictures and films featuring
willing to "dispense with the scheduled to meet with BOOA protest was brought on by · violence and karate themes. The final feature Sunday was
b.s.," United Mine Workers representatives Tuesday in politics and poor ldsers."
Autopsy," billed as a "horror shocker."
The current wildcat . began
President Arnold Miller said Pi,ttsburgh to discuss the
The Loew's Corp: said declining. attendance and rising
SUnday . ·
·format of negotiations. Miller over cutbacks iri !he miners' operating costs forced the firm to close the big movie paiace,
Miller, in ·Indiana for a said he would be ready to health and retirliment fwuls,
The State was filled to overflowing at its opening 53 years
meeting with the policy· begin negotia lions but Miller pointed out !hat the ago. Theater magnate Marcus Loew led an out-&lt;&gt;f-town
fund is lo&amp;ng up to $1 lnillioo delegation on a special train from New York.
making UMW International ' Wednesday morning.
Executive Board, told radio
"A contract can be drawn a day due to tbe "'alkout.
"I'm not bappy with what
station WDAD, "There is · up and approved by the
MIDGE AND RIGHTS
happened
to the fund, but the
ample time now if you membership before Dec.&amp;,
UTICA, N.Y. (U P!)
union
must
get
to
the
dispense with the b.s,"
(but) it will take realistic
Margaret
''Midge''
bargaining
table
and
"A strike can be avoided if bargaining on the part of the
Constanza,
one
of
President
negotiate the difference to
I get cooperation from the operators;• Miller said.
Carter's
earliest
supporters,
coal operators, but tbe longer
On the 'nine-week wildcat offset the loss of revenue, .
says hwnan rights is the key
we stay away from the UMW strike, which, although plus at the same time to seek
issue in the President's
improved benefits," he said.
&lt;f
administration.
Ms. Constanza, the former
vice mayor of Rochester, who
now is an aide to the
MARQUETTE, Mich . President, was in Utica over
( UP! ) -A prison farm trusty
the weekeod to address a
ATLANTA (UP! ) - Con· stricter f&lt;r him than f&lt;r any
"Sub&lt;rdinates" run day-to- who kidnaped the wife of a Woman's Day gathering.
tlnued controversy other official and which in day operations at the Office retired university official has
She said in a broadcast
surrounding
banking every case were much more of Management and Budget, dropped out of sight, interview that human rights
activities before government strict than anything required said Proxrnire, who cast tbe increasing concern for the was important "not only on
service has not diminished by law or ever required of lone dissenting vote at safety of the hostage, police an international basis but
his effectiveness as White federal oficials," White Lance's Senate confirmation report,
locally, because human
House budget director, Bert House Press Secretary Jody hearings.
Officials speculated rights means just about
"I say, that should fit right in with your lifestyle ."
Lance says.
Powell told \he Washington
" Furthermore, the one SUnday that Douglas Henry, anything to anybody. "
But at least one senator Post.
area where he's supposed to . 22, of L•nsing, Mich.
.'
disagrees, Sen . William
Lance, spending the · be expert - running a bank probably was holed·up
Prounire, 0-Wis., chairman weekend at his Atlanta - he hasn't done well. The somewhere in Michigan's
of the Senate Banking mansion, said the Times' National Bank of Georgia is vast Upper Peninsula with
Cominittee, called for Lance weekend report detailed now losing mooey."
Evelyn Vantassel, the Wife of
to step aside - eventually. nothing riew.
"! think I was right in a retired Northern Michigan
WASHINGTON (UPI ) with "an increased degree of East, the Panama Canal, the !hat the Uiiited States was
The separate comments
"But yet every time some- voting against him," said University vice president.
President Carter is said to be assurance " of the U.S. strategic arms limitation one of only a few nations that
SUnday followed a New York thing is rehashed it is given Proxmire. "!wouldn't 5ay he
"They
either
got encouraged by new u.s. con· capacity' and will to act talks with the Soviet Union does not r~ Orina.
Times report that Lance the appearance that it is should resign. I think there completely out of the area or !acts with the new generation decisively around tbe world, and a rruclear test ban.
"But we do not intend to act
apparently failed to disclose something .. . we've been would be a feeling that if Mr. are still in the Upper of Chinese leaders, but he the source said. But he was
Vance's visit provided the hastily," he said. "When we
all financild holdiogs and through
all
of
this Lance left now, in !he next Peninsula," said State Police says full recognition of the unwilling to discuss one of the highest level U.S.-Chinese do make a decisioo about
debts in a net worth previously."
week or so, that he was Sgt. Daryl Prudom. "We mainland remains ''weU into biggest stumbling blocks to talks for either the new China, if we make one of
statement subrilltted to the
Lance said he hoped drummed out because of a hope she's still alive. It the future." ~
U.S.Chinese relations - the Carter administration or recognition It is undoubtedly
Senate Governmental Affairs congressional hearings in lack of integrity and I think wouldn't do any good for him
A.ccordiog IQ a top White future of. Taiwan.
Premier Hua Kuo-leng. The going to be well Into tbe
Committee before . his September would "deal with he's a man of high integrity. . to do .away with her. "
Meanwhile, Carter contact . between the two future and It will be baaed oo
House source, Secretary of
confirmation last January. all these things" so he could
"He' s a man of deep
Officials became State Cyrus Vance's trip to scheduled a regular weekly giants has been latent since what I consider to be in tbe ·
The
committee
is ''move onto something else." religious principles and I increasingly worried about China last week reinforced Cabinet meeting today after a the Nixon administration's best interests of our
investigating whether Lance
Controversy about his think he lives those Mrs. Vantassel's well-being the administration's belief 3-week vacation break.
1971 Shanghai Communique. country."
fully complied with its banking practices and the principles," Promlire said . as three days passed without that this is "a very propitious
Carter said he and Vance
Carter spent 3* hours
That communique was
written request lor detailed extent of disclosure about "But 1 do hope there will any reports !hat Henry had time for contact at the Sunday with Vance, Vice isslied at the end ol Richard discussed at length "the
financial data, the newspaper them has not compromised come a time when Mr. Lance been sighted. Henry is highest level. "
President Walter Mondale , Nixon's first visit to China in ternis under which we could ! ·
said, From the acting his effectiveness, Lance said. can step aside."
described by police as armed
Vance found China's Defense Secretary Harold 1972. It indicated agreement nonnalize relationships with
"You know I haven.'! seen
comptroller of tbe currency,
and dangerous and by
leadership to he c1111petent, Brown, White House Press on the need for increased the People's Republic of
the conunittee got only the any impairment of my ability
relative as a "regular wild · i)rojecting a feeling of Secretary Jody Powell and cootracts between the two Cllina (11 the mainland and
limited information the to carry out my duties at all
man." Henry had reportedly security, and showing a more National Security Adviser countries leading to eventual also honor our long-standing
former AUanta banker used with respect to the Office of
been seen Thursday night, relaxed attitude than other Zbigniew Brzezinski.
withdrawal of U.S. troops . commitment that the people
. for his press releases, the Management and Budget."
several hours after the visitors have seen in some
in Taiwan could ·live -In ..
Powell reported that the from Taiwan.
Times said in a report
Proxmire, appearing on
.....
abduction.
time, the source said. ·
first 75 minutes were spent on
The President told a group freedom."
published today.
CBS-TV's Face the Nation
Lansing police said Henry,
At the same time Vance's China, and the remainder on of editors over the weekend
·'·'
"It's my .impression he did said Lance lacked the
who walked away from the visit left !he Chinese leaders southern Africa, the Middle
·.
meet the (disclosure ) guide- gove.r nment . e:~:perierice
Marquette State Prison's
lines, which were in fact . needed to qualify for the post,
Magnum Work Farm last
Mooday, had a potential for
violence - though his
criminal record was made up
OOLiJMBUS (UP!) - The mostly of petty offenses .
Republican party is alive and
"All I'm doing is praying
ready to win Ibis fall through for that poor woman," said
positive thinking, says state Ralph D. Henry , of
GOP Chairman Earl Barnes. Laingsburg, Mich., the
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.O.
"I'm sick and tired of coovict's stepfather, "He's a
(UP!) - A two-month UMW last Friday they were
MEMPIUS, Tenn. (UP!)- entrance.
hearing about the demise of regular wild man. When
wildcat
coal strike appeared willing to discuss the health
A eemetery employe said
the Republic~n party," something sets him off, he TwQ persons were arrested
in its final stages today, but furid .issue "in depth" with
today in a reported plot to three persons apparently en- the reduction in medical Miller and the IEB at some
Barnes told more !han 200 goes absolutely ~azy ."
Republicans meeting here
Nationwide alerts were · steal the body of rock king tered the cemetery grounds benefits that fueled unrest in time apart from the coo tract
after closing hours at dusk
'
. By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. your torso. Muscles result Saturday to discuss the fall issued for Henry, and he also Elvis Presley from a rQJU'ble and planned Ill "blast in" to Appalachian coalfields talks.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am a from strength type exercises. campaign. "It's still alive was Peing sought by the FBI. mallsOiewn where he. was
remained
a
burning
issue
In
an
interview
SUnday
3()-year-old female, weigh 126 . Your emphasis on "fresh and and ready to go, lind we're Authorities searched wooded entombed following his death the mausoleum.
among
miners.
night,
Miller
said
a
Acerra said no charges had
and am 5 feet 8. I'm basically raw" makes me wonder if · going to prove it in 1'117.
areas, back roads, motels, earlier this month, police
Two
key
meetings
were
December
strike
could
be
been placed against tbe two
healthy and active. I can't you can tolerate canned . or
' 'One thing I think we can cabins and campgrounds said.
planned early this week, but avoided If negotiations began
arrested, who were not iden- .the
reports
indicated
the
First
reduced health care psy- soon.
gain more than three to five cooked fruits and vegetables. do now is begin Ill act and talk without fmdiog a trace of
tified.
He
refused
to
disclose
two
were
armed
with
expounds at a time or keep II so, they may be your next and think in a positive way Henry or Mrs. Vantassel.
"There is ample
now
details of the arrests. menta apparently will not be
them for very long. My ap- best substitute: If not, you about the Republican
Citizens' band radio plosives, but there was no further
discussed
in
either.
if
you
dlspe~
witb
the
b.s.,"
· "I reaDy don't have enough
petite is poor most of the need to get bulk some place party."
operators in · the Upper immediate confirmation to give you the facts on," he
United Mine Workers Miller said. "A contract can
He said he had visited all Peninsula · and Wisconsin_ from police. A third suspect
time, especially if I become and you can get !hat from
President
Arnold MUier be drawn up and apprQved by
said.
being sought.
upset. And I cannot eat fresh, whole cereals or bran. You but eight Ohio counties since have been asked to watch for was
meets
with
the
UMW's policy- the membership ~~!!fore Dec.
Cemetery officials said
Police Capt. P.J. Acerra
raw vegetables and fruit. My can get some potassium froin May 15, and found ''people the blue Volkswagen Dasher
making
International
6, (but) it will take realistic
they had no details on the
mouth starts to Itch and I milk and milk . products are absolutely appalled at police · say Henry used to said the arrests at 12:30 a.m. arrests, but said security had Executive B,oard in Indiana, bargaining on the part.of the
COT at \he rea~ of the
·
Pa., today to seek approval of operators."
· break out in a rash on my although it is not as good a what they see in the Ohio make his getaway.
been
tight
at
the
mausoleum
matisolewn
in
·
Forest
Hill
Mrs. Vantassel's husband
face or arms. I also smoke source as fresh fruits and you legislature ... the complete
All but 18,000 ~ West
Cemetery came after "there since Presley's body was a negotiating team he wants
about a pack of cigarettes a might need vitamin sup- arrogance of the Democrats Leo, 65; said the couple was
to
acc1111pany
to
the
week's
Virginia's
67,000 bituminous
a report" of a plot to entombed Aug. 18.
day.
plements if you truly cannot there."
surprised Henry Thursday at
second
meeting.
miners
were
on the job by the
Officials said an estimated
"I found first and foremost their cabin, which the steal Presley's body.
What can I do to increase use fruits and vegetables.
o11ast
week.
Howeler, an
In
Pittsburgh
Tuesday,
ena
A security guard at the 40,000 Presley fans visited tbe
my appetite and gain weight? They are one of the four basic that people across this great escaped convict apparently midtown
Miller
and
his
entourage
are
estimated
10,000
miners
from
during
the
cemetery said three cemetery
state of ours are tired of being had been using as a hideout.
What can I eat in place of fOOd groups for a reason.
expected
to
lay
the
.
eastern
Kentucky
refused
to
weekend, some standing
officers
arrived
at
8
p.m.
To
give
you
a
better
idea
of
taken
for
granted,
and
tired
Police
said
a
furnace
groundwork
with
the
return
to
their
jobs
1n
a
strike
fresh, raw fruit and
quietly outside the gray
vegetables that would be a balanced diet I am sending of being taken," he Said.
repairman the Vantassels SUnday and instructed ceme- marble building. Others Bitumlrious Coal Operators !hat began in Charll!llon·
tery
guards
to
watch
the
front
colllp81'able in nutritional you The Health Letter
State Sen. Sam Speck, R· were to meet at . the cabin
Asaociation for negotiations based District 17 011e week
while they guarded the brought single flowe~s and
value? How can 1 decrease nwnber ~. Balanced Diet, New Concord, said, "There is later showed up, but left gate
oo
a new cmtract.
before the July . vacation
placed · them on the
my smoking?
Recommended Daily Dietary a will to survive in the without suspecting trouble mausolewn, located a mile mausoleum's doorstep.
The current pact expires period.
Dec. 6.
when· Henry told him his do~ a winding road from the
1 am beginning to feel slug· Allowances (RDA). Others Republican party."
" If we don't control those services weren't needed.
·
gish upon arising in tbe morn- who want Ibis issue can send
ing and am getting from
50centswitbalong,
stamped,
AuthoritiessaidHelirythen
envelope
for it elections,
foundation weto won't
build have
on fora tied
Vantassel to a tree and
.
seven to eight hours of sleep. seltotiddressed
· abducted his wife at knife
I have ~dy been to my to P.O. Box 1551, Radio City recovery," he added.
family physician for tation, New York, N.Y. I0019.
B&amp;rns and other speakers point. Vantassel later
,
The values for the different criticized the new voter managed to free himself and
· ·
vitamins.
DEAR READER - Time
minerals
your reglstratlonlaws,whichwere
·
vitamins
shouldand
in'clude
are listed
pushed through by the · call police.
may take care of your pro- diet
blem and you may wish you in it as weU as which foods legislative Democratic
majcrity.
could have tbe old problem of contain them.
HACKETI'STOWN, N.J. a .d jacent
Mansfield possible motive for the he disliked, He kept his hair
If
you
are
not
as
'active
as·
James Marsh, assistant
not gainirig weight back
again.
.
-r--_...;
.
·
:
....
·
(UP!)
·.
Fo1J111len-year.;,id
·
Towriship.
·
.
you think you are a regul8r . secretary of state, said
slayings a~ IDs suicide.
~rt. occasionally shaving
mE
DAILY
SENTINEL
David
Galvin,
a
husky
youth,.
Friday·
afternoon,
Late
Your appetite might in- exercise program, preferably . Republicans · should take
Benoist, a tattoed ex- hu head or wearing a
DEVOTED TO 11IE
David and a friend, Joon Joo, Maril)e and Onetime amale)lr "Mooican" haircut with a
INTEIIEST OF
. lifted weights and hoped to
ctease if you did quit smok· doing something you enjoy, Bjlvantage of the new laws In
MEIG&amp;-MABON AREA
join the football team when 14, were riding mini boxer, was described by Bln«le shock of hair rrom the
ing. Food migh~ taste better may stimulate your appetite. tlie Nov. 8 election but
CH~L
T~
he
entered Hacketl~town motorbikes oo a dirt traU acquaintances as a troubled' forehead to · tile hack of bla
The
best
example
here
is
a
proiested
the
instant
voter
too. Why don't; you !""tact
ROBERT~EFLICH
High
School next month.
along ·the railroad right-of person with past arrests on neck.
good
walk
before
mealtime.
registration
provision.
.
your nearest chapter of the
way
when Benoist, lying on weapons and drunkerH!rlvlng . Benoist 1111olied marijuana
Housework
doesn't
usually
F
r
a
n
k
I
i
n
C
o
u
n
t
y
Pub!Uobed ~~~~ Satunfay
Instead, young David will
American Heart Association
by
The
&lt;Jllo
Valley
Publilhing
Combe
buried
today.
He
was
the
the
ground,
fired a volley of charges.
or American Lung Associa· take a lot of physical energy, . Republican Chairman
and chnk beer with friends
any,
Ill
Court
SJ.,
Pomeroy,
Ohlo
youngest
of
siuniper
victims
powerful
blunt-nosed
tioo and see if they can tell no matter how tiring it may RusseU Leach said "electioo
His
fatber,
Pil!m!
Benoist,
and
frequently wu Mal on
ts,769. BU&amp;iness Office Phone m
magnum bullets Instantly who once served u a c:ouncU- street cornen early In the
1156. Editorial Phooe 1192-%157.
· shot down Friday in this quiet
you about local stGp smoking become. Regular exercise day registration (is wrong)
· Se&lt;ond class "''"at!' paid at Warren Cowlty cooununity. killing him,
c1tn1cs that you might join. A may also give you more because It opens tbe door to
man in tbls rural rtmmunlty IDirlllnga, bla lt'qll•lnta11011
Autborltles still do not
John notified police and the :50 miles weat of New York Ald. He bad 10 rwr VI, lifted
energy.
But
I
doubt
you
will
fraud."
100:dv.rtiaing ,...,._j.
sincere desire to stop is often
talive Ward · Grilfllh Comoanr.
know the reasoo for the largest manhunt In the City, lllld reporters be welgiU IIIII bid boaclln the
important in the success of get much help unless you stop
Inc., Botlinelli aOO Gallagher Div.,
killin
county's history began.
cigarettes and if you are a
such prognims.
157 Third Ave., New Yoril, N.Y.
gs.
mourned for the Ylctlma.
GcildeD Gilml mmpelltloo u
10011.
David
was
the
first
Three hours"after tbe sizth
Fresh raw fruits and coffee drinker, stop or cut
"I'm """' ......, for ""- a •e111
-··
-- .
t
....
SubocripUon nolo" O.U...-ed br
murdered as Emile Pierre victim WBII found, Benollt, parentl ·-··
TheAimaDac
vegetables are seldom high downonitasweU.
·
of the people tlllt
Jim Alaiwor 111, a P'I""D'n
carrier where avaUable n eenta per
week. ByMotorRouiowherocorrier
Benoist, :/AI, finned with a.~ SUITIIIIIIded by nearly 100 were Jd!led," be Ald. "I Jlllt who lhed Dat to lbe B'IMIII!
(Because of the' volwne of Ualted Prelslllk'l'IUitional
cal~ric foods. U you want to
Today
is
Monday,
Aug.
29,
..
rvi&lt;e
"'"
••aiioblo,
One
IIWIIlh,
caliber
Ruger
semi- policemen, unexpectedly
rna
il
Dr.
Lamb
cannot
galli weight these are not the
. l3.2:5. By moil in Ohlo and .w. Va., automatic rifle with a kllled hlmaelf with his 1111t God'• forllv- 011 Cape Cod bome, uld
the
24lst
day
of
1'117
with
124
On&lt; Year, 122.00; Six montlls,
behalf of my IIIII."
nelibbon JWe)J mlzed wllb
foods you rad to emphasize answer your letters per!OI18l·
$1UO; Th,..e months, 11.00;
telescopic sight, emllarked on weapon.
Friends of lbe )'Oiq DIID Benailt. "Be watlbe Jtlad of
in your diet. Rather you nnt ly but he will answer to foUow.
Eliewher&lt;! $26.00 year: Six monlhl
a two-hour death march
The moon is moving from
Benoist's parents were delcrlbed 8eacillt u a ''loulb ·pera yoalrled to IMIId. Alld
stan:bel, fats IUid sweets, the representative letters of
tl3.50; Three monlhl, $7.50. al
I
its
full
phase
to
the
last
Subocripllun
,...~,
Jndudes
Swuiay
ong
a
ae
dom-uaed
railroad
questlooed by authorities but guy,'' wltll I IIIUI:UW bullil, we did," ha llld,
hiCb calorie foadll- if you are genera). interest in his col·
Tim.,.&amp;nllnel.
spw:
in
Hackettstown and were unable to offer a who could be rougb'wltb " quarter.
umn.)
\
sure you want to add fat to

up to operators

iAR-c. .\S f.~~~t,\'tJ..1i\

1s GRoss

NotSE l~'JC.l \S
DEAf~N\~G

04

- ·-----

Kidnaper
goes out
of
sight
Lance still doing job

Chinese·leaders relaxed, secure-

a

•
GOP IS

alive,
and well

,....-------'-:---_:,_-----.

Suspected body Miners hot on
snatchers held 2!!!e~ts,}~~e,.

HEALTH

Time. may add weight

tune

Crew-e·ut,..tough-talkm·g kill
. er
was· heavil·y tattooed ex-Mann·e

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

"'N.ti:;

~·

.,

'

'

Yankees in front by two games

Reds win fifth
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Ad·
mittedly, it seems an impos.
sibility. But Reds' manager
Sparky Anderson is sllll
hoping.
"U we're gmna win tbe
division title we've got to win
25 or 26 of oor remaining 31
games and that includes
taking all five of those we've
got left with the Dodgers,"
Anderso~ calculated Sunday
after rookie right-hander
Paul Moskau blanked tbe
PhUUes, 9-0.
The victory was the fifth in
a row and the 12th in the last
15 games for the surging
Reds, who open a three game
series with the Expos in
Montreal tonight.
And for the 24-year-old
Moskau the win, which
evened his seasoo record at 4-

4, was his flfst complete
game in the majors as well as
his first shutout.
The young Red right·
hander was particularly
elated that the victory
yesterday came at . the
expense of the Phillies.. "U
you 'II remember," he
reminded listeners, "I made
my major league debut
against the Phils.
I think I showed them I'm a
litUe better pitcher than I was
the last tine I faced them. I
wasn't as nervous today and
I've learned a lot since that
last time."
The Reds scored foor runs
in the first inning, two romtng
on a double by Davey
Concepcion, and added three
more in the second when
George Foster homered with

two aboard to stake Moskau
to a 7-ll lead,
"I gotta admit that the big
lead helped me relu," said
M06kau, who restricted the
!'hils to seven hits, struck out
seven and walked only one.'
This Is the same Foster who
leads the majors with 43
homers and 123 RBI today.
Concepcion's second tworun double of the day., coming
in the fourth inning, gave the
Reds their final two runs
• yesterday.
"You look at Davey's
batting record (a .m batting
average and 47 RBI going
into yesterday's game) and
you might not agree," said
Anderson, "but in my opinion
he's having the best season of
his career.

Grogan rallies Pats
to defeat Steelers

Jly IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
Lugue St•ndings
8¥ United Press tntern~tionat
Nation•l Lugue
M~1or

E;~st

Ph ill
P l ftsbgh
Chicaoo

St . Lou is

Montri!!AI

New York

W. L Pet. GB
71 so .611'1 76

l '~

10 51 .SAJ a
71 59 5•6 a
59 10 .457 19 112
S1

west

w.

LOS Ang
Cinci
Houston
San Fran
s,n Oiego

ss .seo

78
70
62
61
56

7a

.395 271/l

L Pel . GB
52 .600

61 .534 BV2
69 .413 l61J2
71 . .&amp;6'2 HI
76 .o424 23
.t8 81 .372 29 112

Atllmta
.
.~ saturday 's Aesutn
Clnclnn4fl 6, Phlladt'IRhia S
San Francisco 7, Chicago l
Atlanta S, New York 4, 10 inns .
Houston 4, Montreal 0
Pittsbu rgh A, San Oi~o 0
Los AngeleS .4, 51 , LOUi$- 3
Sund•v•s R uutts
Atlanta 6, New York 4
Cincinna ti 9, Philadelphia 0
Houston 7, Montreal '2
Pittsburgh 10. San D iego 1
Los Angeles 11, St . Louis 0
San Francisco 4. Chicago 1

Todo(v~~.'i;'::::~~~~~~·er•

Clnc:1nnat l (Cap ilia 6-5) at
Montreal { Holdsworth 1-0L 7:35
p .m .
Atlanta (Ruthveri 5-10) at·
Philadelphia {C t1r lstenson 12 -6),
7:35p .m .
St. Louis t Urrea 6-3) lit San
Diego IFre isleben 5·7L 10 p.m .
'Chicago (Krukow 8·10} at LOS
Angeles (John 15-5), 10 :30 p.m .
Tuesday 's Games
Cincinnati at MontreaL night
New York a t Houston , night
Atlanta at Ph i ta , night
Chicago at Los Angeles, night
St . Louis at San Diego, night
Pittsburgh at San Fran. night

Left-bander Ron Guidry
threw a two-hit shutout
Sunday at the Texas Rangers
for a I~ victory that kept
New York two games ahead
in the AL East .
Guidry has been a key
figure In the Yankees '
turnaround that began five
weeks ago when they were in
third place - 31'1 games
behind and five down. On
July 23, Guidry beat the
Milwaukee Brewers, and
since then he has a 5-l record
and. Yankees have won ~ of
34 games.
Guidry probably is working
for very close to the
minimum salary, but if he
isn't making tbe big bucks of
his more famous teammates,

he showed Sunday he can
gripe as well as many of
them. He waa 'angry with
Manager Billy Martin for
second-guessing some of his
pitches.
"1 hope he doesn't come

over here again," Guidry
said

in

lhe

Yankees

clubhouse.
The game's only run came

in the sixth inning when Craig
Nettles tripled off the glove ol
Juan Beniquez in right-center
and Reggie Jackson singled
up the middle on a 3-() pitch.
Elsewhere in the AL
Sunday, it was .. Boston 6
Minnesota 5, Kansas City 5
Baltimore o, Milwaukee 10,
Chicago I, Oa!Oand 6 Toronto
2, Detroit 12 California 9 and
Cleveland 10 Sel!ltle-&amp;;l ·

Red Sox 6, Twins 5:

Boston remained two
games behind the Yankees,
winning
when
Carl
Yastrzemski singled home
pinch-runner Steve Dillard in
the seventh inning. The Red
Sox had tied the game in the
sixth on a double by Rick
Miller and single by Denny
Doyle. Larrjl Hisle, who leads
the AL with 105 RBI, hit a
three-run homer for the
Twins, his 25th.
Royals 5, Orioles 0:
Kansas City stretched its
lead in the West to three
games as Andy Hassler and
Doug Bird combined on a
five-hit shutout. John Wathan
hit a two-run homer in the
fourth and Fred Patek drove
in two runs in the sixth with a
single. Hassler allowed two

BeIg T. en Tournament would
·.

name loop's NCAA entry

hits over the first six innings
and Bird yielded three over
the last three.
Brewers 10, White Sox 1:
Don Money drove in two
runs in the first inning with a
single and Sal Bando follow«\ ·
with a two-run homer off
loser Wilbur Wood. Money
later hit a solo homer while
Jim Wohlford, Robin Yount
and Jimmy Wynn had three
hits apiece for Milwaukee .
A's 6, )llue Jays 2:
Vida Blue allowed six hits
to win his 13th game against
!5 defeats. Earl Williams had
a run-5eo ring double and
rookie Mitchell Page hit his
14th homer for the A's.
Tigers 12, Angels 9:
Bobby Bonds hit a pair af
two-run homers, but made an
error in the sixth inning to
permit the go-ahead run Ill
score. Rusty Staub scored on
an error to give the Tigers a
1~9 lead.
lildlans 10, Mariners 6:
Rico Carty hit a pair of
homers and a triple, driving
in five runs, and Ron Pruitt
had a three-run homer for
Cleveland.

He would not comment on rouod-robin by 1983.
KINGS ISLAND, Ohio
"His (Corso's) points have
(UP!) - The Big Ten is the Michigan State football
considering adoption of a probation, except to say that some validity," Duke said,
post-season basketball surveiUance of the Spartan " but they require more
wouldn't
have
played
him
in
Roy
G&lt;lrela
's
field
goal.
On.a
tournament to determine the program has begun aod "the study."
By GREG AIELLO
Corso said last week that
the
second
half,"
said
first-down
play
at
the
New
conference's entrant into cooperation accorded the Big
UPI Sports Writer
Big
Ten authorities would be
Fairbanks.
England
24,
defensive
tackle
Ten
by
Michigan
State
has
NCAA tournament play, Big
Steve Grogan completed
American League
smart
to schedule only five or
John
Smith
kicked
a
32Joe
Greene
deflected
Ten Commissioner Wayne been exemplary in every
the most crucial pass in the
Easf
Pet.
GB
six
conference
games so that
w.
~
respect."
Duke said Sunday.
game, but there was litUe yard field goal 4:36 into the Grogan's pass into the anns New York
77 52 .597 ~
the
teams
could
play more
You can· help cut down on
All for Ohio State, where an
"There is no finality at aU
else to praise aQc&gt;ut the New extra periOd after a 34-yard of Greenwood, who raced 16 Boston
74 53 .583 2
crime
losses ... losses that
weaker
opponents
and
wind
72 55 .567 -4
to this matter. I want to investigation was touched off
England quarterback Sunday drive to giv~ New England its yards at 9:17. G&lt;lrela added a · Ba ltim r e
1h
direct!
y
affect
you,
A17
15
61
67
Detroit
up
with
better
records
and
emphasize that we are a year ago by a series of
in tbe Patriots' 1:1-10 pre- third viclllry in four: exhibiton 39-yard field goal with J.l Clevelnd
60 •• ..465 1?
whether
they
happel")
to
you
seconds remaining in the · Milw
merely exploring a post- stories in the Michigan State more bowl· bids. •
57 78 .m 23
season overtime victory games.
or
not.
45 82 .35.4 3 1
Tornl'!to
However, Duke pointed out
Grogan fl.llished with seven quarter.
season
basketball student paper, Duke said the
against the Pittsburgh
West
that
it costs an average of
Big
Ten
has
finished
most
of
in
25
attempts
The
Patriots
finally
scored
completions
tournament,"
said
Duke
who
W. L Pet . GB
Take the crime of arson .
Steelers.
$315,000
to participate in a
Kan
Citv
75
52
.591
its
inquiry
and
"I
can't
for
a
paltry
48
yards.
Four
of
with
I
:15
left
in
the
third
spoke for nearly an hour and
You ' ~e
paying
aQ
In fact, if New England
Chicago
72 55 .567 3
increasingly heavy subsidy
a half at a press conference comment any further on that bowl game and only four of
Coach Chuck Fairbanks had his passes were intercepted. period on Smith's 41-yard Te)(SS
72 51 .558 A
thesocall major bowls games
for deliberately set fires
inn
73 58 .557
C
during a weekend stopover of matter."
not watched his young That !he Patriots, who many field goal. Grogan's TD toss M
1h
Calif
61
65
.484
13
through
your insurance
the
Rose,
Orange,
Cotton
The commissioner took a
the Big Ten Football
quarterback in disbelief in expect to challenge for the to Francis capped a 12-play, Oakland
50 77 .394 25
prem
iums
.,
and
Sugar
Bowls
returned
shot at Indiana football Coach
Skywriters.
Se.1ttte
52 81 .391 26
the first half, Grogan AFC championship this year, 51-yard drive.
to
their
1977
that
much
Saturday
's
Resulh
In the only other game
He said an ad-hoc Lee Cor~ for the coach's
wouldn't have gotten his rallled from a !(H) deficit late
Ins u rance
costs
are
Oalc;l and 9, Toront o 8
in
the
third
period
to
defeat
SUnday,
rookie
Wilbert
Mont·
tournament
committee made criticism of Big Ten football participants.
chance at a measure of
Texas B, New York 2
adverse ly affected by
"We're not going to achieve
Boston 1. Minnesota 5
up of some of the scheduling, which will find
redemption . He tossed a six· the Steelers was an gomery returned a kickoff 90 Detroit
burglar ies, robberies and
7, California 6
any
financial gain just by
encouraging
sign,
however.
yards
for
a
touchdown
to
the
conference
going
to
a
conference's basketball
car thefts ... plus the
ysrd game-tying touchdown
&lt;level and 10, Seattle 0
going to a bowl game," he
'!be Steelers, 2-2 in pre· ignite
a
Philadelphia Baltimore 4, Kansas Citv 2
countless CB radios and
coaches has recommended
pass to Russ Francis with l4
7 , Milwaukee 6
concluded."
bicycles that turn up
of
post-ooason
inauguration
seconds left in · regulation season play, moved to a 1(H) comeback that gave the Chic agoSunday'
s Resulh
During his talk, the
missing.
lead
on Eagles a 28-24 victory over Oakland (?, Toronto 2
play following the 978-79
time that sent the game Into first-quarter
also
passed
commisssoner
Detroit
12,
Cali
forn
ia
9
defensive
end
L.C. the previously unbeaten
season.
overtime.
Boston 6, M innesota 5
One thi'ng you can do i s to
around a pamphlet he
touchdown
Denver
·Broncos.
Greenwood's
first
The commissioner said al"U he hadn't played so
New York 1. TeJ~:as 0
su pport
programs
at
the
request
of
prepared
10, Seattle 6
though he first proposed the
badly in the first half, I ·in his nine-year career and · Denver dominated tbe first Cleveland
pro
vi
ding
stiffer
penalties
alumni associations of the
period and had just taken .a Kansas Ci ty 5. Balt imore 0
study into the post....,ason
for
wrongdoers
and
Milwaukee 10, Chicago 1
Big Ten schools. II dealt with
J(H) lead when Montgomery,
tournameilt , he is now
Today's Probable Pitchers
proposals for strengthened
several topics Duke said were
(All Times EDT&gt;
a sixth-round draft choice
"somewhat more opposed to
crime i n vesti gation efforts.
City (Spliflorff 11 ·61
instrumental in bringing the
from Abilene Christian, took ~~ Kansas
New YOrk (Hunter 9-7) 2 than in favor of it."
CLEVELAND (UP! )
Big Ten back Ill equality with
You cah also make it
a kickoff on a bounce on his 10 p.m .
He said that while such a Contract
talks between the other major conferences.
Toronto (Ga r vin 9-13 and
tougher
for c rooks . Use
and raced down the Jefferson
8· 13) at Minnesota tournament would generate
Cleveland
Browns
and
their
good,
strong
locks. Mark
Among
those
lllpics
were
:
sideline. '
( Redfern 5 ·9 and Zahn 11 -10). .2, estimated gross revenue of .
second draft choice, kicker financial aid ()ased upon
possess ions with your
Eagles' quarterback Ron 6 p.m .
California (Ryan 17-12) at $750-to $800,000, it would also Tom Skladany, broke off need, grade-point prediction
social security number .
Jaworski then directed two Baltimore
(R . May 13-1'2) , 7:30 cut into class time. He noted
Saturday night and Skladany
long second-quarter drives , p .m .
that ol the major conferei,ces took a job with an advertising for financial aid, limitation of
Our
agency
prov ides
Chica~o
(Stone
13·9·1
at
athletic grants, one-year
and passed for two Ill-yard Cleveland (Waits 7.5). B: tiO p.m . in the country, only the
financial
protedion
a(ld
,.
grants and the five-year rule
touchdowns
to
give
Oakland !Coleman 2.4) at Sootheastern, Pacific Eight, firm.
service when crime lossl!s
Howard Slusher, the Ohio
(Wise 9-5) , 8 : .40 p.m .
Philsdelphia a 21-10 halftime Boston
occur ... but many can be
Western Athletic Conference State kicking star's agent, which gives an athlete that
By MILTON RICHMAN
·
Tuesday's Games
long
·
to
'Complete
his
four
prevented. That's why we
lead.
Texas at Kansas City, night
and the Big Ten don't said Skladany was hired by
UP! Sports Edit«
years
of
athletic
eligibility,
say prevention Is the
Late in the third quarter Detroit at Milwaukee, night
presently have post-6eason Nationwide Advertising
Chicago at Cleveland, night
hest
policy.
"We're
going
to
see
a
tournaments.
NEW YORK (UP!)- A botUe of champagne rested on the the Eagles used a recovery Calif at Baltimore. night
Service as ' ~senior account
by
Frank
LeMaster
of
a
Seattle
at
New
York, night
In other topics, Duke com- executive" for its Pittsburgh leveling off," said Duke,
chair in front of hia locker. Ron Guidry wasn't particularly
Oaklend
a_t
Boston
,
night
"The Big Ten will no longer
fumble by punt returner Rick
mented briefly on the and Los Angeles offices.
interested.
be on an island which gives
Investigations, past and
Alongside the botUe were a half dozen plastic glasses and Upchurch to set up a scoring
Nationwide Advertising's other conferences undue
drive
that.
culminated
early
992·214]
current, into allegations of president
none had been removed from the ceUophane tbey were
and
board advantages.' '
102
w.
Main
Pomeroy
in
the
fourth
quarter
with
a
rule infractions at three chairman is Clevelander Ted
wrapped in, either,
two-yard
scoring
run
by
Art
member schools, Michigan Stepien, part owner of the
The Occasion would have seemed to call for a grand.
Green
to
jV!den
the
lead
to
211.
State, Minnesota and Ohio Cleveland Indians.
celebration. More than one In fact, because Guidry only a few
Major League Leaders
10,
'
minutes·before had pitched the finest game of his prof~ional
Browns general manager
Bv United Press International State.
In games Saturday night,
He said he'd been in recent Peter Hadhazy said he would
· career by two.bitting the Tell8s Rangers, 1-0, on his 27th
aaning
I based on 350 at bah)
contact with Minnesota talk to Slusher and .Skladany
birthday to keep·the New York Yankees two games in front of Dallas edged Baltimore, 23National :League
21,
Cincinnati
routed
St.
!he Boston Red Sox in tbe American League East.
G. AB. H. Pet. President Peter McGraw,
if they call him. However,
130 533 18.4 .345 Who said he intends to apP.al
Guidry a skinny, curlyhaired left.hander who sounds like Louis, 33-9, Oakland topped Parker Pit
Hadhazy said Skladany
Pit
116 .t53 152 .336 his
school's basketball would have to join the team in
Joe Nam:,tb when he talks, had just p06ted his third shutout San Diego, ~7, Detroit edged Stennett
SimrtlnS St.L
121 -417 140 .336
127487 158 .32.4 probation to the U.S Supreme
and lith victory in one of those old-fashioned one-hourand-$ Seattle, 16-14; Kansas City Griff ey Cin
time to play in the last two
Tmpltn St.L
122' 497 158 .318 Court, if necessary. Duke
beat
Los
Angeles,
27-19,
minute pitching duels with bock Ellis. He had struck out eight
exhibition games or miss Ibis
Luznski Phil
118 .441 138 .313
without giving up a walk, and if anyone had some champagne ·washington do.wned Green Smith LA
121 40-4126 .312 added, "There might be some season.
Fost er Clh
127 499 155 .311 announcement within the
coming he did, but he was so high already over the game he Bay, 13-9,1he New York Jets va·lntine
"II looks as though I won't
Mti
104 422 130 .308
New
Orleans,
21H4,
defeated
had pitd,ed, all he really cared about was a ~ft drink. He took
Robinson Pit
109 396 121 .306 next two months."
be
with the Browns/'
and Atlanta heat Tamps Bay, Mmphry St .
11&lt;1 350 107 .306 - - - - - - - - - - Skladany said. "I'd love to be
a couple of pulls out of a can.
American League
· Ron Guidry hasn't been around that long. He's still 3().21.
G. AB . H. Pct.
there, but I doubt it now. I
Friday night, Minnesota Carew M in
127 5'M: 189 .375
unspoiled. Making a name for himself is much more important
TOKYO (UP!) - Japan's want to play."
Bostock Min
126 490 167 .3-41
to him right now than making a million bucks or making a big routed Miami, 33-7, as Fran Rivers
NY
111 456 151 .331 home-run king Sadaharu Oh
Tarkenton
and
rookie
Slnglton Bat
118 415 137 . 330 clouted his 754th career
splash with champagne.
Det
122 520 167 .321 ·homer Sunday - one short of
"Those. guys are such great guys, il'~ a privilege just being quarterback Tommy Kramer LeFlore
Bailor Tor
108 435 139 .320
on the same staff as them," said Guidry. "Years from now, each passed for TDs.
Ri ce Bos
127 516 163 .316 Hank Aaron's major league
Buffalo
visits
the
New
York
Brett KC
107 .440 136 .309 record - as the Yomiuri
when people talk about the great pitching th.e Yankees had,. I
Chi
116 C48 138 .308
only hope my name will pop up once m awhile. The money IS Giants and San Francisco ZiSk
122 426 131 .308 Giants blanked the Yakult
travels to Houston tonight. Hargrve Tex
Home Runs
no thing ."
SWallows, ~. in a Central
National League : Foster, Cin
Maybe now it isn't but the way Ron Guidry is pitching for
43 ; Burroughs, Atl 34 ; Luzinsk i League pro basebaU game
the Yankees he'D
in line for a lot more this winter,
. and Schmidt , Phi l 32 ; Bench , before a capacity crowd of
'
Cin and Garvey, LA 28.
especiaUy if tbe Yanks go on to win and he has a litUe more
55,000 at Jingu Stadium.
Amerlc•n League : Bonds, Cal
time to think about things.
It was the 38th homer of the
33 ; Scott, Bos and Nettles, NY
SATURDAY
31 ; Rice, Bos 30; Hobson , Bo~ , season for !he 38-yearo(!ld Oh,
When push came Ill shove this spring with the White Sox
Gamble and Zisk, Chi and
Oblo College
pushing as hard as they could to get Guidry in the Bucky Dent
who has been playing lor the
Thompson, Oet 26. ·
BootbaU
Schedule
deal and the Yankees doing all they could to shove Ken
Runs Batted In
Giants since 1959.
·1
National League : Foster, Cin
Holtzman off oo them, there were some people with the Dayton at Miami
I ,
123; L uzlnski, Ph il lOS ; Cey, LA
Yankees whO sai&lt;l, okay, let's give tlli!m Guidry, but Billy Akron at Wayne St. (Mich.) 97 ; Burroughs, At I 96 ; ·GarVey ,
International
league
Central . St. at Unooln, Mo. . LA 94 . ·
Martin and Gabe Paul vehemently voted no.
United Press lnterflational
American
League :
Hisle,
W L Pel. GB
Imagine where the Yankees would be now without Guidry,
Mlnn 105 ; Bonds, Cal 97 ;
,,
Pawtucket
73
58 .557
Hobson, Bos an(:l TI"\Ompson ,
whO leads all their starting pitchers in strikeouts, shutouts and
Tidewater
73 59 .553 112
Det
93
;
Nettles,
NY
87.
4
'
earned run average? You imagine it; the Yankees don't even
Charleston
71 60 .542 2
·Stolen Bases
• National League : . Taveras, Syracuse
care to think about it.
.
RIVER DOWNS
67 64 .511 6
Pitt 49 ;
Cedeno, Hou 44 ; Richmond
66 65 .504 7 1
Guidry had only one rough moment in Sunday's game with
c 1NC1NNAT I I uP II .
. Cln and Moreno , Pitt -Rochester
63 '67 .485 91b
the Rangers and that ooe came early with two out in the first Penalty Declined be1at 1Flghth' Morgan
41 , Richards , so 39.
Columbus
6111 .462 121h
'
•·•ed
t bl Master by a hal . eng
League: Patek, KC
innin&amp; when left fielder Roy White enc?UDv
some rou e . Sunday In winning flie 41 American
51 81 .386 22 112
, Cal 33; Page, Oak Toledo
with the haztl, which made It hard to piCk up the ball, got an featured 515,000 Mill Creek 32 ;; Remy
Saturday'$
ReSults
Bonds , cat and LeFlore,
Richmond 5, Tidewater 1
uncertain strirton.Jlm Sundberg's long smaah and It wentfv.· a Handicap at River Downs. Oet 29.
Pitch in~
'
.
Brave Wind was third. The
Pawt'ucket ~. Syracuse 1
Most Victories
Charleston 1), Toledo 3
triple.
uidry truck him 1
winner covered the mile and
National Le19ue: R .Reu·s chel, Rochester 3, Columbus 2
Wlllle Horton was up next and G
s
ou on a one·elghth In 1:.50 a.5 &lt;~rid
Chi Hl·5 ; Carlton, Phil 18-8;
high slider. The ooly other Ranger to get on base was Bert returned S5.80, S3, SJ.
Sunday's Results
Forsch , St.L 16·6; Seaver, Cln
C8mpanerts, who opened !he seventh with a single but was cut
The 6-7 dally double ~~ and John. LA 15-5; RhOden , LA Tidewater 5 Richmond 3
Syracuse 2, Pawtucket 1 .
down stealing
·
Captive Lady · and Anne s 15-6.
American L81gue: Ryen, Cal Charleston 5 Toledo 1
•
· bell
Itch
win · the big Card paid $155.
Msybe it's hard to
eve a P er can
m .
The 7,231 fans bet S796,936. 17-12 ; Goltz , Mlnn 16-7; Tanana, Columbus 3 Rochester 2
Cal 15·7; Torrez, . NY 15· 1"1 ;
leagues without a curve ball, but that's what Guidry is doing.
Rozema. Det 14-5; T .Johnson ,
THISTLEDOWN
He doeln 't throw a curve, only a fast baU and a slider, but his
Minn
14·6 : Leonard, KC 14-10; .
NORTH RANDALL. Ohio COlbOrn,
fast ball has been clocked at 98 mph, which puts him right up
KC U -13.
eGravely Tractors
(UPI)- Lale Charge led all
Earned Run Averege
there with 110111e of the harder throwing pitchers in the league. the
way Sunday to take the
on 117 innings pitched)
• Kubota Tractors
When ·be WBII a tid growing up in Lafayette, La., Guidry's 510,000 Forest Hill Stakes at (besed
National Leegue: Candelaria,
Pi
tt
2.55
;
John.
LA
2.63
;
Thistledown . Bombay Ex·
mother objected to bla playq baaeball.
• Snapper Mowers
R.ReuscheL Chi 2.70; Hooton ,
"I UYed right near a playground but my Mom never wanted press was second and Jolly L4
2.72
;
Richard,
Hou
2.78
.
third.
Lngue: . -Tanana ,
me to to play basebaU," he said. "She thrught it was Brent
• Woodburning
The Oklahoma·bred two· CalAmerican
2.33;
Ryan, Cal 2.68;
dan8erOU1 and I'd get burt. So I did something you're not year-old. ridden by David Blvleven,
Te)( '2.70 ; Rozema ,
Stoves
IIIJII1Qllell to do. I went behind her bilck, always teJ!ing, her I Shepard, ran the six furlongs Det 2.86; T .JOhnson. Mlnn 3.02 .
In
1:12
~·5
and
.,aid
510.80,
Strlk~outs
WBIIgoing over to Grandma's house. I started playmg m the
National Le~gue : Nlekro, Atl
$3.80.
Uttle Leapee and it got to where I was goirig to p!tch my first $4.80,
Rogers, Mtl 168; Koosman ,
The 2·1·6 tenth roce trlfecta '213.
Graoe~
game 'l'h«e wu no way to hide it from.her anyn10re. Finally of Laat Minute Max, Sunshine NY 10; Seaver, Cin 161;
Phone 992·2156 .F or Advertising Service
Hou 159.
my .faih.r and 1 told her. She came, watched m~ and found it Man and Hasty Roan was 1 Richerd,
American League: Ryan , Cal
enjoyable. Slie'a been'bebind me a hundred per cent since." worth $411. The dally double '29.4; Tanana, Cal tpB; Leonard, ·
Pomeroy,O.
Make It Happe(! and Idaho KC 181; Blyleve-1\. T~x 170;
Condor St.
So 1re lbe Yankeea, because, if it wun 't for Ron Guidry of
Eckersle';'. Clev 161.
Protege returned $31.60.
tbey'd be bel*ld the Red Sox right now.

Prevention is the
best policy. • .
FOR CURBIN

CRIME LO_SSES

Skladany in
advertising,

not )dcking

Today's

Sport Parade

DALE C. WERNER
IN._S;

Leaders

How To Change A SQUARE

Into A Good Salesman.

be

• •

Put A Business. Service Ad In lt. ~ •
And Turn It Loose In

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Ti1Ctor .

Sales

1'

�\

'
4-TbeDallySentind, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Mooday, Aug. 29, 1m

Garvey's bat hot, Sutton sharp again
we're stiU 8\;o games ahead." Atlanta Braves downed tbe
UPI Sports Writer
" Records are just stepping New York Mets, 6-4, in other
Steve Garvey and Don stones," commented Suttoo, N_L games.
Sutton, who had been in a when advised his 188th Pirates 10, Padres 1:
slump since the AU .Star victory made him the biggest · Jim Rooker pitched a
break, appear to have broken winning pitcher in the club's seven-hitter and Fernando
out just in-time to strengthen history. "! don~ mean it to Gonzalez hit a three-run
the Los Angeles Dodgers' sound impersonal. It does homer as the Pirates moved
National League pennant mean something 10 me."
10 within 3"' games of the
hopes.
Sutton bung an ()..for-3 Phillies in the Nl. East.
Sunday Garvey went 5-ror..S horserollar on Lou Brock, Rooker breezed to his lith
and drove in five runs with who was ejected from the win as the Padres made six
two homers and three game for arguing a strike call errors, including three by
doubles, while Suttnn pitched in the eighth and remains one shortstop Bill Almon.
a six-hitter for his 41th career steal behind Ty Cobb's Astros 1, Expos 2:
shutout in the Dodgers' 11-11 modem major league record
Joe Ferguson's two-run
romp ov.er the St. Louis . of 892. Bob Forsch was
Cardinals . The victory · tagged for four runs and eight
enabled the Dodgers to·retain hits in six innings and
their 81&gt;-game lead in the NL suffered his sixth setback.
West over the Cincinnati
The Pittsburgh Pirates deReds, who walloped the feated the San Diego Padres,
By VERNON SCOTT
l'biladelphia Phillies, 9-11.
11~1 . the Houston Astros heat
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )
"Slumps have happened to the Montreal Expos, 7-2, the
better players than me," said San Francisco Giants topped. Merlin Olsen, giant aUiJI'O
Garvey. "The key is that the Chicago CUbs, 4-1, and the Los Angeles Rams footballer
now tackling scripts instead
of sacking quarterbacks,
finds his new acting job as
exciting as the gridiron.
Olsen is a new member of
the "Little House on the
Prairie 11 cast. At 6-feet..five ,
250 pounds, he plays a
Bunyanesque farmerwoodsman.
The former All-America,
aUpro defen5ive tackle is not
PINEHURST, N.C. (UP! ) Commissioner Deane Beman your ordinary jock-turned- "First, have there been never personally notified him entertainer.
He
was
any statistical errors," Hall of tlle error and said the graduated summa cum laude
of Fame Golf Classic situation "was not handled and Phi Beta Kappa with a
champion Hale Irwin quipped properly."
degree in finance from Utah
·ru; he · entered the press
''I had an objective,'' Irwin State. He later earned a
interview area.
said of his play in the Hall of master's degree in economics
A statistical error by the Fame . "There was no from the same university.
Professional Golfers Associa· alternative , (to winning ). I
He ranks among the most
tion that initially knocked was shuffled out (of the World articulate athletes in the
Irwin out of the World Series Series ) and I wanted tO prove counlry, so much so that NBC
of Golf has been the foremost I was still good enough to get has signed him to an
thought on his mind for the in."
exclusive
contract
to
past few weeks.
Irwin finished five strokes broadcast NFL games this
But he picked up his second ahead of Leonard Thompson season in addition to his
victory of the season SUnday even though Thompson shot a "Uttle House" role.
with a 20-under-par 264 total record 7-under-par 29 on the
Bearded for the part of
over the Pinehurst Country back nine to finish at 66 for Jonathan Garvey, friend and
Club No. 2course to "play my the day.
neighbor of Pa Ingalls,
way in" this week's World
Rookie Jeff Mitchell took (played by series ' star
Series at Akron, ()hio.
.
third place while first-:round Michael Landon ) Olsen has
There was little question leader J.C. Snead and Lou lost 40 paunds from his top
after Irwin's record-tying 62 · Graham came in at 274. ,
playing weight.
·Friday that he would pick up
"What di&gt;es it take to win
Asked how he felt about
the $50,000 .winner's check . around
here,"
said missing the start of a new
But it was surprising that he Thompson, who had his best
played the course so superbly scores over the 18 years he
and bettered the previous baS been playing the course.
iilurnament record by 10
"I've seen and done things
strokes.
here I would never conceive
"It's hard to go out with a anybody would do," said
five-stroke lead on this course Thompson . "I can't believe
because you don't know what I'm IS-under and didn;t win
Malar L eague. Results
to do," Irwin said. "I wanted the tourruiment."
&amp;y United Press lnternatiol)al
to stay away from holes
Irwin and Thompson hoth
Nat iono) l Lea9ue
002000002- 4 120
where I . could lose two or said they were not too N.Y ,
Atlanta
100 020 12x - 6 8 0
three strokes and make the surprised because · the
Espi nosa , Lockwood (7) and
field come to me. ''
condition of the course was Hodges : Solomon , Campbel l (9)
Nolan . W- SO iomon , 4·3. L
Irwin was not told until six · conducive to low scoring. But 'and
- Espinosa , 6· 11. HRs- New
weeks later that the PGA had Irwin was · amazed at York , Henderson (9); Atlanta ,
Office (Al.
. made 'an error and Graham Thompson's finishing 29.
Marsh h3d qualified as tbe
"When a guy shoots 29, Phil a
000 ooo ooo- 0· 1 1
430 200 oox- 9 10 o
representative of the PGA's that's a hell of a feat," Irwin Cinci
Brusstar (2). _Reed
spring tour in the World said. "Luckily he started a (5),Lerch.
Garber (7) arid Boon e.
Moskau and Bench . W Series.
ways back."
Moskau
. 4· 4. L- LErch. 7-4, H R
He was miffed that '
- Cincinnati, Foster (A3l.
By FRED DOWN

homer capped a

five-run ~

eighth-innin g rally which
lilted the Astros to their
victory over the Expos. Floyd
Bannister sel,tled down after
yielding two runs in the first
three innings and wound up
with a six-hit, eigh~inning
performance for his fifth win.
Loser Steve Rogers is now 1314.
Giants C, CUbs 1:
Willie McCovey hit two
doubles and knocked in two
runs for the Giants as Ed
Halicki scattered 10 hits and

woo his 12th game. The Olbs
are now eight games out of
first place in the NL East.
McCovey's RBI lifted him to
the 1,400-level for his
career.
Braves 6, Mets 4:
Rowland Office knocked in
three runs with a homer and a
double leading an eight-hit
Atlanta attack, which carried
Ed Solomon to his frurth win
arid the Braves dealt Nino
Espinosa his 11th loss. Steve
Henderson hit his ninth
homer of the year for the
Mets.

Gregg 1s wmner
in Porsche 935

'

BID WITHDRAWN

NEW ORLEANS (UPII
- Ofrictals have with·
dn1 wn the city's bld for the
Jt8t Summtr

5-T!Ie DallySentlnel,Middleport·Pooleroy,O., Monday, Aug. 29,19'n

•

•

•

Olympic

Ickx finished second with Jim
Bushy of Laguna Beach,
Calif. • in third .
..
non Devendorf of Los Iori&gt; •
geles won the Executive '
Motorhome competition,
driving a Datsun B210 with
Scott Hoerr of Peoria, lll.,
Hurl ey
Hayw oo d , Oefendorf fmlsbed a little
1984," L1. Goll. Jamn
Jacksonville, Fla., driving a over 42 seconds ahead of
Fitzmorris, a key backer of
Porsche 934, won the Camel Hoerr, who started on the
pole. The Nick Craw.John
the proposal, said SatUrGT race.
Morton
BMW 32lll finished
day.
Gregg was forced back to
tllird.
lith place during the race
when he survived a spinout ,
but worked his way quickly
through the field to get into
contention for the win.
Gregg passed leader Jackie
getting more and more com- Ickx of Belgiwn, when forced
fortable as an actor.
into the pits on the 48tl1 lap
"My character is new 10 the with a broken rear sway
show. They asked me to do bar.
what I wanted in putting him
AI Holbert of Warrington,
together. It helps tllal Garvey Pa ., took the initial lead in the
is an outdoorsman. 1've spent three-hcrur run, starting at
a lot of 'time outdoors in Utah. the pale position with lckx in
"It's a great oppOrtunity. U second and David Hobbs of
"
they 'd made me an Irishman England in third. Hobbs won
'
with a limp and a brogue I'd an earlier Camel GT race
have been in trouble. These here this season. He was
p,eople really know what
tlley're doirig. It's tike being
drafted from college to a
great pro team."
"I:m fortunate there are so
many new challenges in each
script. I have more new
things do to Ulan in all my
previous acting combined.
And they're not capitalizing
on my physical size. They
want an actor not a giant."
Olsen doesn't volunteer his
feelings about leaving the
carnage of football. He
skipped the first Rams
exhibition game this month to
take his children to \be
~ening of a new animal park
in San Diego.
"I've bad to be at the
games so many years, I'm
taking advantage of the time
I have now to be with my
family," he said.
"I'm busy enough that. I
don't think about missing
football. I don't know how
much I'll miss it because the
season hasn't really started.
Right now I have no pangs.
But maybe there will be
moments when I wlsb I were
back out there on the field.
"Of course I'U root for the
Rams. I'd like to see them
win every game. I miss the
people I cared about on the
team. The camaraderie will
be the hardest thiog to
repiace1"
·
. Olsen dido'\ say so, but one
suspecis he won 't miss the
aches . and
pains of
professional football. Not
with his J.Q. anyway.

Merlin Olsen likes tackling scripts

Irwin burns .up
Hall of Fame

Sunday

linescores

------------~-------------. Mntral

HIS

101 ooo ooo- 2· 6·4

Houstn

COMTRIBUTIOMS

WERE MADE
POSSIBLE
BY YOURS.

000 000 25x- 7 9 0
Roger~ , M C:Eni!ney (8) and
Carter ; Bannister , McLaughlin
(9) and Ferguson . W - Bannis·.

·~-·~

'l'

When y0 u give to th'e United Negro College
Fund. you help support 41 private , four-year
colleges and graduate schools. Colleges that
could be training a black professional you may
need someday. ·
Send your check to: United Negro Col!ege
Fund, Box B. 500 E. 62nd Street, New Yorl&lt;.
New York 10021. We're not asking for a handout.
just a hand.
Noone cando it alone.

GIVE TO THE U"ITED I'IEGRO COLLEGE FQ"D.
A mind is a terrible thing to waste.

.

A Pubfic Serv~e c:J this ~r &amp; The ~tising Council
I

'

I)

Rams.
" It would be very difficult
for me to do the same things

every day with 8 to 5 o'clock
responsibilities. So I looked
for something to give me
freedom of lifestyle and new
challenges." · ·
·
Olsen long ago establlshed
himself as a businessman. He
owns
a
prosperous
automobile agency in the San
Fernando vaUey.
He began moonlighting
acting jobs 10 years ago witll
John

Wayne

and

Rock

go. SoderhOlm (21 .

He said he was properly
initiated into movies by a
company of consumate
professionals.
Olsen, who had no formal
!raining as an actor, is that
rare low key, self-confident
man who appears at ease in
any situation. .
''My mother taught me how
10 speak in front of groups of
pe~le," he said in a deep
baritone. "! spoke in church
(Latter Day Saints ) and appeared in school plays. I
memorized a 15 minute
speech in the fourth grade for
the
Armistice
Day
celebration."
For the past 10 years Olsen
bas devoted himself to
motivational speeches and
has addressed · countless
persons at sports banquets.
lie's also appe;~red in five
movies and several television
shows, ·acquiring enough
acting technique to be
considered a thoroughi:oing
professionaL
"We 've completed six of
the nine episodes I'll be doing
in the series /' he said. "I'm

Hudson in "The Undefeated."

Herd's,offense sharp in drill
I

'

HUNTINGTON , W. Va . a ball.contr&lt;il type of of·
(UP!) - MarshaU's offense fense.''
ran 80 plays without a fumble
in the offensive part of gameTailback Mike Bailey and
type scrimmage against Ohio fullback J . ·c. Felton, two
University
formations experienced backs, provided
Saturday' boding well for the ample ball-carrying strength
ball-control offense and savy against the second
en visioned by Coach Frank team in the 2'h-hour. scrlmEUwond.
mage. Bailey bolted into the
The Thundering Herd end wne twice on one-yard
tackle the Ohio Bobcats al bursts, and Felton notched a
Fairfield Stadium Sept. 10. t.ouchdoim besides blasting
"We did not lose a fumble big gains · in ·cr ucial
during the offensive part of situations.
tlle scrimmage while running
Steve Williams, senior tight
more than 80 plays," Ellwood · end, snared a 50'yard touchsaid. "That's a key factor down pass from veteran
because we're trying to go to quarterback Bud Nelson.

992-5554

AT
ALL GREAT
STORES

Elliott's first tally came on
a seven-yard run during a 19point second-quarter blitz
which left the Bengais .with a
26-3 lead at the haH.
Cincinnati quarterback
Ken Anderson hit Bob
Trumpy and Isaac Curtis
·with TD tosses in tbe second
period. Boobie Clark scored
from a yard in tlle first
quarter.
The Cardinal offense has
scored only 25 paints in the
fo ur e-'-'bt't'
10n ga mes and
;uu
had only a 3()..yard Jim
Bakken field goal against
Cincinnati until Jim Otis
scoredmanine-yardrunlate
in the game.
Starting St. Louis quarterback Jim Hart was stung for
three interceptions, one
leading to Trumpy's lwo-ard'
touchdownpass.Starrunning
back Terry Metcalf finished
with only seven yards in four
carries

---------MASON BOWLING LANES
Tuesday Morning Women
August 23, 1977
Final Won Lost
Slriketees
97
31
Green Ghost
92
36
Gibson Mtr. Cily
' 83
45
Mason Furn . Co.
76
52
Erwin Const.
54
74
Quallty Print Shop 50
78
Slow Pokes
30
98
HeacJquarters
30
98
High Individual game
Bess Hendricks 180; Sandra
Grimm. Barbara Whit1lngton
176 ; Betty Robinson 174;
High Individual Series Barbara Wh itllnglon 500 ;
Bess Hendricks 497; Patti
Williams :468 .
High Team Series Slrikettes 2056; Erwin

I

Sf. PAUL, Minn. (UPf)Rick Ferkel of Findlay, Ohio,
held off a strong finish by
Dean Best, Edon, Ohio, to win
tlle 4(}-lap Minnesota State
Fair sprint car feature race
SUnday.
Ferkel picked up $1,500 in
prize mooey by leading the
entire race on the half-mile
!rack ·after starting on the
outside of the second row.
DU QUOIN, 111. (UP!) Tom Bigelow of Whitewater,
Wis., took the lead in the
second lap, and kept it '!li the
way as he shattered a speed .
record in the 100-mlle United
States Auto Club dirt track
race at the Du Quoin
fairgrounds.
Bigelow sped through his
100 Jape at an average speed
of 100.81 mile8 an hour,
breaking the old track record
of 98.155 set by AI Unser in
1970.
Gary Bettenhausen, Moorovla, Ind., came In second,
while Billy CasleUa, Weirton,
W.Va., finished third.

ni tv re Co. 691.

comlletes at State

Cubs go fishing

Slumber party marks birthday

6411

~

PORTRAIT
available at our low discount prices .

TUE.,. WED., THURS., FRI. and SAT.
AUGUST 30-31 SEPTEMBER l, 2, 3

Independent laboratory tests prove

FRIGIDAIRE. All oilrJet COlle
washers

At These Locations
Pt. Pleasant, Ripley, Athens
and Belpre

Construction 2012 ; Mason
Furniture Co. 2005.

. High Team Game - Green
Ghost 703 ; Erwin Con .
structlon and Qual ily Print
. Shop, 694 ; Strikefles, Gibson
Motor City and Mason Fur·ii

•

NEW!

Haning family meets

Carpenter
Personals

11 lliore

"DUO-IMAGE"

Young family
. gathers at park

el(j

• Group. S1.2:&gt; e.dl Mldilloaal •Jed
• PerltODol uuder Ul IIIIUIJt be ~·
pu!H by parut or J ~~&amp;~diu.
cleli1'~1'N

''On the .Rainbow."

ASTRO•GRAPH

• ~ fnlm differeD \ ~dol
&amp;lid cu•to• poHii
• Limit; ODe per I Ubjfft, .t.,O per famil)'
• ltoddhiont.l portrt.ltt •ull•ltle la aU
•tu. It reuon•ble pri~•

• Fl.nl•hed ponraiY

which comes together to encourage and COWISel women
whose families are broken
and to give assistance to
them in their circumstances.
Mrs. Doris Grueser read a
poem entitled " Take Time"
and Mrs. June Sayre had one,

Social
'Calendar

I

BOWLING
.

Fall flower show planned

R,ay R
. et'b /

PORTRAIT
·IN ·

is reducing cockiness

Plans for the annual
homecoming of the
Minersville United Methodist
Church on Sept. 25 were
discussed during a recent
meeting of the United
Methodist Women at the
church.
The UMW will provide the
ham·for the dinner to be serv·
ed that day. A round-robin
card was signed by the
members for Mrs. Carrie
Neutzling.
Members quilted in the
morning with the meeting being held, in the afternoon. It
opened with group singing of
•irn The Garden" and _prayer
by Mrs. Stella Grueser. Mrs.
Kathryn Miller presented the
program on the topic,
"FeUowship of the Least
... .
Com
She described the least coin
as that amount set aside by
the individual and con·
tl'ibuted annuaUy to a com·
mon fund which is given in
the name of Christian women
for ministeries of mercy on
aU continents. She said that it
creates Christian communication acrosa nation,
racial and denominational
llnes.
She also spake of loving thy
neighbor and told of the
African Housewives League

Happy Hustlers gather

8xl0

LIYI~{j '~L~R

UM·W plan day

RUTLAND-A fall flower houseplants, excluding son;
Registration : Miss Ruby
Attending the meeting shOw witll the theme, "The African violets; foliage
Diehl,
Mrs. Binda Diehl, Mrs.
besides those named were
ho~~~~epiants, and wild or
Hills" • wiU be sta g· roadside
Polly Cramer
Oliva
Cotterill, Mrs. Marie
Flaming
flower
display
with
Mrs. Helen Maag, Mrs. Mary ed by the RuUand Garden
Bishop,
Mrs. Ethel Chapman,
Russell, Mrs . Fannie Club, Sept. 10· and 11, at the five to 10 specimens.
Mrs.
Bernice
Nelson, Mrs.
Phillips, Mrs. Mildred RuUand United Methodist
There will be special ex·
Edith
Williamson.
Phillips, Mrs. Ruby Grueser, Church.
hibits - noo..:ompetitive Haspitality, Mrs. Grace
and Mrs. Gertrude MilcheU.
The show, which will be from the Bookmobile, and
Colwell,
Mrs. Marjorie
POlLY'S PROBLEM
nagging and scolding and
openforpublicviewingfroml from the American HanMilhoan.
DEAR POLLY - How do made our home a happier
to8p. m.on Sept. 10 , and [rom dicraft.s with garden related
Staging : Mrs . Ruth
you get creases out of clothes place. A spilled glass of milk,
1 to t p.m. on Sept. U, will cr~ in the educational Erlewine, Mrs. Muriel Foley,
alter lengthening them? I muddy shoes on a newly wax·
feature seven artistic ar·
Margaret Parsons,
need to lengthen several ed floor, etc. etc. can be anrangement classes.
exhibits are a display of five Mrs.
Mrs.
Rev
a Snowden, Mrs. An·
pairs of pants for my son - noying to say the least but
Section 1 which is open for to 10 tree leaves, all ideona
Turner,
Mrs. Stella
some are double knit and they are forgotten in a few
exhibit to · Rutland Garden U!ied; and a !aU. corsage of
Adkins.
some are pennanent press. I days, a week or a month. Use
Club members only has four dried materials.
Publicity Book : Mrs. Lewis
know I have read this in the · this as a guide line - ij it will
The lOth arulUal Young Mrs. William Buck, Jr. and classes - "The Artwork of
Mrs. Margaret EUa Lewis
and
Mrs. Nellie Vale.
colwnn but cannot remember be inconsequentil!l in a week
Family reunion was held at . Dick, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. the .Gods", . an .interpretive is general chairman with
Placement:
Mrs. Margaret
or month do not blow · yoilr
what it was. -SHIRLEY.
Joe Young, Route 4, design ;
Fort Meigll Park on Aug. 21.
" Vacation · Mrs. Judy Titus as advisor.
Belle
Weber,
Mrs. AI)Il
DEAR SHIRLEY - Indeed cool over it but just hand the
Named officers for the !978 Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Joe. Memories", to include a The rules of the show specify
you have read that Pointef in offenders a spange or cloth
reunion were Mrs. William Young, Jr., NelsonviUe; Mr. souvenior from a vacation; that exhibitors may make on- Webster.
Juniors : Mrs. Pearl Little,
and
help
them
clean
it
up.
this colwnn - and more than
Buck, Sr., president; Frank and Mrs. Dan Bintz and "After the Frost", including ly one entry in the artistic ar·
Miss
Edna Mae Swick.
once. Each time I think must Getting up an hour earlier
Amanda,
Byesville;
Mr.
and
Young, vice president; and
bare branches; and " Portent rangement classes. Exhibits
Horticulture
: Mrs. Pauline
be the last but the mail than usual does a lot for the
Mrs. Ralph Clark, Bob and of Thing~~ to Come", an aU- are to be placed between 9
Susan Cleland, secretary.
Adkins.
always has so many requests peace of mind. Get the house
Mrs . Wilbur · Young Richie, New Haven, W. Va.; white Christmas arrange- and 12 on the first day of the
Mrs. Anna Turner is the
show and remain in place unfor a repeal that I have come tidy, the washing done and
presented a decorated cake Mrs. Nancy Pope, Tracy and
ment.
.
aft
4
Sunda
club
president.
to the conclusion that spend that extra time with
inscribed with the names of Tony, Middlepart; Mr. and
The artistic arrangement til er p.m. on
y.
everyone is lengthening the children. The years pass
the Youngs having birthdays Mrs. Pat Hager and Kelly, classes which are open to the
Mrs. Janet Bolin, an ac·
hems. Please cut out the !Jo quickly so love them and
in August, the youngest to the Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs. Larry public for exhibit are credited judge of the OAGC
Cleland, Greg and Mary, " Around the campfire", will judge the show on the
following and save it for enjoy them and have no
oldest.
regrets.
-MRS.
L.J
.C.
future reference.
Attending were Wilbur, Chester; Randy Phillips, weathered wood and hoi col· standard system awarding
Wring a cotton cloth (I use
Polly will send you one of
Ruth and Mindy Young, Mid· Tempe, Arizona, Mrs. Bill ors; and "Harvest Time", in- one blue, one red and one .
a piece of an old sheet) out of her sig ned thank-you
dlepart; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kitchen and Denise, eluding fruits and vegetables. white ribbon in each class,
a mixture of half and half newspaper coupan clippers if
Young, Rutbl,nd; Mr. and Chillicothe; Mrs. Debbie Kit- The artistic arrangement· with the exception of junior
WHITE vinegar and water she uses your favorite
Mrs. Robert Young, Troy; chen Crall; Chillicothe ; class for juniors is "Wonders exhibits where she may lay
and use that as a pressing Pointer, Peve or Problem in
Mrs. Lurene Kennedy, Clarence Edwards, Galena. of Nature", a favorite faU ar· as many white ribbons as she
desires. All entries except the
Galena; Mr. and Mrs. Bill The reunion was the first rangement.
cloth with a hot iron. I have ber colwnn. Write POU.Y'S
For 21 years I have t;u,., I
Buck, Jr., Jason and Melissa, Mrs. Kitchen has attended
The horticulture classes in- special displays are to have
even USN full strength POINTERS in care of this
hearing
aids
always
WHITE vinegar on stubborn newspaper.
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. for several years. ·
elude for junior exhibitors, the horticulture material
combining quatity product
William Buck, Sr., Rutland;
lines but first always test on
dish gardens which must llsted on a card to be frunishand professional service
have at least three and not ed by the committee. The inyour particular fabric .
with reasonable cost. While
1a ts
d terpretive class . is also to
.
-POU.Y.
tha
f
we
will continue to serve
more
n tve P n ; an
have the exhibitor's comDEAR POU.Y -My Pet
those who cannot ·come to
specimens of dried materials
our oHice .we will now
Peeve concerns recipes one
suitable for an arrangement, ments on a card.
RACINE - The Hapy Pi-ecious to Me" with Mrs.
five to 10 of these.
The committees are as reward those who ·Can by
sees in the paper or a
The Dana Haning family Aug. 21 with a picnic dinner.
fixing the price at $275.00
magazine. Often one will find Hustlers Sunday School Class Lavinia Simpson al the piano.
The senior horticulture follows:
for the best known custom
Attending
were
·
Mr.
and
reunion
was
held
at
the
Mrs.
Mary
Spencer
read
the
classes
are
blooming
Judge's
Clerks
:
.
Mrs.
met
recently
at
the
church
for
a recipe that sounds just
made and individual fit1ed
Pearle Canaday, Mrs. Mar·
sc rumptious and then a covered dish dinner. The 12 scripture on faith which was roadside park on U.S. Rt. 33, Mrs. Harold Morris, Mrs.
hear i ng
aids .
Prior
cia Denlso.n.
discover that it does not say members of the clasS were the overaU theme of the pro- north of Pomeroy Sunday, Lena Hooper, Albany; Mr.
medical
and
audiological
and Mrs. Dana Warner,
'e
Ribbons : Mrs. Bernice
what size pan to use. joined by Mrs. Josephine gram. Several poems were
encouraged.
Wum,
Mrs. Hazel T Thorn- examination
daughter,
Jeannime,
Gary
Sometimes it will say a large Ruth Miller of Sarsota, Fla. a read pertaining to faith and
If you have a question or
Mrs. Wingett had the closing
Warner , Columb~s ; Mr~.
pan but what is a large pan? I former resident.
wish an appointment call
Louise Well and children, Jtll
'I'
me at 592-6238.
The lace covered table was prayer. Members sang
have three sizes that I conand
Judy,
Jack
Well
and
Fay
Reibel,
Meigs
County
"Faith
of
Our
Fathers"
and
centered
with
an
arrangesider large.
friend, Robin Taylor; Mr. reserve champion in
Another that sends me into ment of summer flowers. one verse of "Faith of Our
'300.00
and Mrs. Rodney Quivey and demonstration talk on horses,
Mothers."
Clasping
hands
an orbit is for a topping that Mrs. Maxine Wingett, class
SYRACUSE-Members of
less '25.00
daughters , Kathy and competed Thursday al the CUb Scout Pack 242, Syracuse
says mix 9JlO cup cake mix, teacher, bad the program they formed a circle to sing
Christie, Shade; Mr. and Ohio State Fair. She had with , spent Thursday aftemoon
one-fourth cup sugar, cin- following the dinner. The "Blest Be the Tie· That
Cash Dlscou.nt
Mrs. Dana Haning, Mr. and · her at the fair her horse, fishing at Forest Acres Park
namoo apd one-fo~ cup business meeting and offer- Binds. "
Mrs. Hilber Quivey. and "Farrah's Princess". Her near Rutland.
AI the conclusion of.the prOmargarine and spnnkle on ing were taken care of at the
MONDAY
the top. Now you try mixing table before the members gram, a dessert course was . RUTLAND Ga•den Club, daughter, Jane, Pom~oy ; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donley
On the outing were Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley llanmg, Reibel,Pomeroy, and Mrs.
that altogether and you will went to the sanctuary for the served.
annual picnic, MOnday 6 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin White Donna Shato and daughter, Carol Jean Adams, Todd and
find you have a. dough. I program.
Kim, David and Jackie Duf·
at the Forest Acres Park.
and children, Bryan and Kristin, Gallipolis, ac- fy, Mrs. Bonnie Freeman,
Opening song was "He is So
would like for someone to teU
WEDNESDAY
me how to sprinkle a dough. WILDWOOD Garden Club, Denise, Flatwooda ; Mr. and companied her to the fair. Brian and Gary Michael,
Mr~. Brady Knotts, Timmle Also. there was Mrs. Rachael Richard Davis, Jackie Justis,
B.L.
8 p.m. Wednesday at the
and
Brad, Peach Fork; Mr. Downie, Fay's 4-H Club ad- Mrs. Terri Michael, Greg,
Bernice Bede Osol home of Mrs. Carrie Grueser.
DEAR POLLY - If you TAKE A GIANT STEP
and
Mrs. Wayne Cobb, visor. This was Fay's second Lori and Trish!l, Mrs. Cecelia
have a jacket with a hood that
A home flower show to be
Ronda , Denise, Jull and time to participate with her Mitch, Mrs. Joyce Thoren
BUFFALO, N.Y . (UP! ) is tightened with a cord take a Civil
held.
rights leader Rev. Jesse
(jlffir.t
Laura, Kingsbury, and Mr. horse al the State Fair. Mr.
few stitches and tack the cord L. Jackson has criticized
\:.1\:.IU
UMWA Supporters Club and Mrs . Clifford Wolfe, and Mrs. Reibel and grand- and Eric, Mrs. Sally
.to the back of the casing it President carter's efforts to
IOIAn-JI...r!lr.mJ Wednesday at noon at Mid· Dayton. The birthday of Mrs. daughter returned hpme Ebersbach, David and Chris .
runs through so it will never meet the needs of cities, and
I.!.IUliUWJ.!,I\!JV 'dleport park. All miners' Evelyn Morris ajso was Thursday while Fay and Mrs.
pull out. -K.U. ·
wives are invited.
suggested that Carter fire .
Aug. 30, 1977
observed.
Shato remainell for a day of
DEAR READERS -This Budget Director Bert Mbre Opportunities than you are
sightseeing.
would be especialJy good (or Lance.
generally capable Of recognizing
the chUdren 's jackets thai so
Jackson was in Buffalo are likely to come your way th is
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
often have hoods. -POLLY.
over the weekend to promote · year . Scree~ carefully _any. un·
DA. G. J STOM BAUGH
OR. A. J . ST.&amp;.EHLI
·
l
ndida
f
usual
offenngs
that
or!g1nate
DEAR POLLY .. My th
DR.
C
W
BEAL
e mayora ca
cy 0 with triends .
Pointer concerns our most Assemblyman
RACINE-Carol Morris Gibbs, Tina Gibbs, Marie
Arthur Eve.
precious commodity - our
celebrated
her 16th birthday Pickens, Annette Mills,
One or two day full denture
The Carter welfare reform ~ltAy~~r ~~':·1 ~:~~~~. ~!~~~~~ Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
children. I am so grateful for
recentlywithaslumberparty
Beverly
McLain
,
Lisa
service, partial dentures,
progr~, ''~k ~ shcrt step praisal of lh ings desert you to- were in Medina recently
advice a dear aunt gave me in
in a tent on the farm of her Warner, Penny Smith, Vicky
thenghtdirectton but what day . Avoid being pressured into where they visited her cousin,
relines, repairs
·
many years ago which has we need is a giant step," he something wh ere you wind up
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Cundiff, Bunni McGraw, and
Mrs.
Harold
Duncan
and
her
done away with a lot of petty said
buying a pig in a poke. Fmd out
uncle, Will Combs . Mr . Morris. The girls enjoyed a Janis Carnahan.
•.
who you're romantically suited to
wiener roast along with other They were joined in the
by sending ·tor your copy of Combs has since suffered a
refreshments.
evening for birthday cake by
FORPRICESCALLI800 2 8 2
and
is
now
Astro-Graph 1~1ter . Mail 50 cents stroke
OHIO TOLL FREE "
"
"
In
the
group
were
Peggy
Tony
Carnahan,
Scott
tor e·ach and a long , self - hospitalized . .Enroule hom~,
Neigler, Becky Crow, Carol Souder, Greg Cundiff, Carl
addressed : stamped envelope ~o the Smiths called on thetr
Johnson, Todd Vamey, Kent
Astro-Graph , P .O. Box 489 .
son·in·law and daughter, Mr.
Radio City Station , · N,Y. 10019.
Varney , Tami' Comer,
Be sure to specify your birth and Mrs. Larry Stanley and
Michael Warner, Mr. and
Anna at Edison . Anna
sign .
Mrs. David Shuler and
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) You're returned here with them and
Heather, Mr. and Mrs. James
· RIVIERE CENTER
a likeable person . People take to is spending a two weeks
Bailey and Clinton, Mr. and
E. Livingston Ave., Columbus
you readily. but don't let your vacation with her grand- Victor Perry. Mrs. June
Mrs. Winston Varney and
popu la rity deceive you into parents.
Jones and granddaughter
Weekdays 8:30A.M. to 6:30P.M.
Logo For No-Additive Foods?
James Smith.
thinking others will accept your
Frank
Epple,
Middlepart,
also
were
at
the
Perry
home
a
Dear Helen:
analysis without proof.
visited with Wllliam C. Peck few days.
Please settle an argument if you can.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOv.22) and they wentto Parkersburg
Mr. aijd Mrs . Michael
Afriend insists that soon now there will be a special logo Customarily you 're not one who to see Paul Peck who is still in Perry and children and niece,
it!~'
a shaft of wheat inside&lt;&amp; hell&amp;gon - on aU canned or packaged loo ks for a lree ride . This Isn 't
'food!! that are free from additives- such as artificial flavors, true today. You may expect a an extended care nursing Mona Perry, vacationed in
larger sha re than you're really home. He is having treat· the western United States for
colors, etc.). ·
ments and is slowly im· two weeks.
This would be li great llelp to us parents of hyperkinetic entitled to .
.proving.
. Mr. and :Mrs . .Richard
children whose ex1reme overactiveness seems triggered by SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
·
Several
from
here
attended
.
Jeffers
•. Nik1, Chrtsty and
21) Lady Luck usually gets you
food dyes and other ''foreign" things in their foods.
the
Bluegrass
Festival
at
.
Michelle,
New Boston, JU.,
out of. 'tight squeezes. T_aday her
Is happening? -AM INTERESTED
attention could be elsewhere. Lake Snowden near Albany spent several days here Wlth
You may have Ia bail yourself during the past weekend.
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dear A.!. :
·
out.
Barbara
Ailman
and
Dana Bailey and Mr. and
Is oot happening yet, but if allergist Dr: Ben F. Feingold of
CAPRICORN
(Doc.
22-Jon.
11)
Louise
Ellis
are
both
con·
Mrs. Reed Jeffers and other
Sari Francisco's Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program
All Frigidaire Jol Cone
It's possible your mate may not valescing satisfactorily at relatives in the area.
washers have an excluhas his way, the wheal-hexagon may sometime appear on be as ambitious today as you'd
sive UP"and..ctown
Recent guests of Mr. and
packages foods to signify "no artificial colors or flavors." ·
like him or her to be. Prodding their homes following recent
Agitator action. It gets
surgery.
Mrs.
Earl
Starkey
have
in·
Dr. Feingold is well known for his research linking certain · too po i ntedly may only
clothes down to the botZelia Perry, who had spent eluded Mr. and Mrs. Carl
food additives to hyper-&lt;~ctivity in children. He clauns a 30 to 50 aggravate things .
tom of the tub, where
cleaning power Is greatper cent CID'e rate for such youngsters if they follow his diet. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11) some time with her son-in· . Caster of ·Florida, Rev. an.d
Superb
est, an average of 9 times
And he says the diet could be better followed. if "safe" foods Being boastful is not your usual law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. David Wiseman and
cleaning
per
regular
wash
cycle,
way. Today , hawe11er. you may Mrs. •Carrol Woodgerd in family of Woodsfield, Ohto,
had an Instantly recognizable symbol on theU' labels.
power Isn't all
And that 1 3 times more
attempt to embellish your ac- Dyesville, is spending a few and
Donald Jones of
Washingtm legislators and the Food .and ~g complishments and be very em than lhe beot-aeltlng
you get with a
days with her son and Nelsonvllle.
.
, brand' a beat washer. The
Administration have shown interest, but corporations remam barraSsed .
Frigidaire
result Ia cktaner' clothes
daughter-in-law, Mr. and · Reed Jeffers has recetved
resistive (except for ooe or two which "may" try tlle logo as a
Jet Cone Washer.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Mrs. Victor Perry.
wllh a Frigidaire Jet Cone
word that his brother, Chase
customer setvice).
.
Repress any gambling urges that
washer-and Independent
e Unique up and
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Holland, Jeffers, Baton Rouge ,
One drawback: a scant 2ll per cent of all foods on the market may besel you today. lf you're intests prove It!"'
down Agitator action
would loe eligible to use tlle hexagon. This might create more volved in any speculative finan - Jr. and children, Phoenix, Louisiana is again confined to
•Tested In accordance with lhe AHAM
e Flexible 1-18 lb
fear than is really necessary, for aU additives aren't cial ventures. move very Ariwna, were guests of his a hospital in serious constandard HLW-1 sail removal 1811 uscapacity
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. dition.
Ing a 15 tb dry -lght mlxod cotton
dangerous - except, perhaps, to smaU segments of the cautiously.
e Rugged Heavy Duty
lest load.
ARIES (Morell 2t-Apr111t) Op·
population. - H.
·
compon·ents
P. S. The FDA has r--opoaed that Yellow Dye N_o: 5 portunily may come . ~oyou tOday
e Regular, Permanent Press
(tartrazlne) the most widely used food coloring, be identified but you could waste It thral!gh
and Automatic Knil cycle
impulsive
judgment.
Try
to
see
oo labelll as'im estimat8d.50,000 to 116,000 people anrallergic to
Pair up rour Jet Cone
the long -run potential.
Washer With this match·
it(thoughit ''presents no hazard for the general public").
TAURUS
(Aprli20·MaJ
20)
Your
lng Frigidaire Dryer.
Preaently, most Ia bela state - in fine print - "contains
heart could be bigger than your
artificial coloring ... flavoring'' if the product does. For want of bank balance today. II someone
t 16 lb capacity
a logo, keep reading, A.l. - H.
needs your help, do what you
•
Delicate plus Knits, PerWishes to AnnounCe the

Removing trouser creases

HAVE A
PROBLEM?
CALL
CRISISLINE

Cardinals' 0-4 record

Sf. WUIS (uP!) - If
there's
a silver lining in the
ter, S-1. L - Roger s, 14-1 3. HR Houston . Feq:; uson (16 ).
St. Louis Cardinals' 0..4
preseason record, Coach Don
Pttsbgh
203 020 003- 10 12 1
San Ogo
000 100 ooo- 1 7 6 Coryell says it may mean an
· Rooker and Dyer ,· Sh irley. end to the overconfidence of
Griffin {4), Wehrme ister (6),
some of his All-Pro players.
Sa wyer (8) and Rober-ts. WRooker , 11 ·8. L :.....Shirtey, B-16.
"I think perhaps they're
HR - Pi ttsburgh , Gonza tez (4) .
losing some of that
st.L
ooo ooo ooo- o "
cockiness," Coryell said of
L.A.
010 110 nx- 11 17 o his highly touted offense,
Forsch , Carroll (7), Under .. which features seven All-Pro
wood , (1) and RBder ; Sutton
and Oates . w - sutton , 12-8. L---.. players among the starters.
Forsch , 16·6. HRs- Los AhCoryell also took a share of
geles. Garvey 2 (28l.
the blame for the poor
Chicgo
010 ooo ooo- 1 10 o execution, which resulted in
S~nFrn
003 100 OOx- 4 10 0
. Rober ts, ·~ rob erg (4). Lamp 97 yards in penalties in the
(7) and M l.tterwatd ;
Hal ick i first haH of a 33-9 loss to the
and Alexander , w - Hal icki, 12.
Cincinnati Bengal.s Saturday
10. L- Roberts, Q.J.
night.
.
Amedcan League
"We haven't coached tbem
Oaklnd
010 001 112- 6 7 0
Tronto
000 100 1oo- 2 6 0 very well/' he said. "We'll
Blue and Hosley ; Clancy,
Johnson (9) and Cerone . W-:- coach them better this
Biue. 13 ·15. L.- Ciancy. 2-5. HRs week."
- Toronto, Ault ( 11J. Oakland ,
Bengal Coach .Bill Johnson
Page (14 l.
said, "We recognize St. Louis
. Calif
203 00.4 ooo- 9 11 3 has a tremendous offensive
Det
102 151 llx- 12 1.4 1
Nolan . Barlow ( 5 ), M i ller (5 ) team and we wanted to see
and Humphrey ; Sykes, Gri lli what we could do. We were
(3), Taylor (6l. Crawford (6),
very pleased."
Foucault (6J and May . wFouca ulf , 5-5. L- Miller .· 5-6.
Lenvil Elliott, called in
H Rs- Cali for nia , Bonds 2 .(33) . because two-time Heislllan
Detroit , Rodriguez (8) Thomp Trophy winner Archie Griffin
son (26 ).
was down · with the flu,
M inn
001 040 ooo--·5 12 1
Boston
121 001 lOx- 6 11 0 starred for Cincinnati. The
Gol tz, Schueler (7) , Burgmei - former Northeast Missouri
er (8) and Wynega r ; Jenk ins,
Cleveland ( 3 ), Paxton {5). State player was playing in
Campbell C9 l and Montgomery . front of his folks for the first
W- Pax ton, 7-A. L-Schueler , 6· time in his fiveyear career.
6. HRs- Boston , Montgomery
He gained 136 yards in 21
(2) . M innesota. Hisle {25).
carries ·and scored two
~~~~s
g;g gg&lt;/ ~ ~ ; J tOuchdowns ~
o. Ellis ahd Sundberg ;
"They told me to be
Gu!dry
and
Munso.n .
w-. ready," he said. 11 My mother
GUidry, 11·6. L- 0 . ElliS, 7·11 . and fa th er came up for !be
Sea ttle
000 110 103- 6. 11 0 game. Thr~ ,nattered b~t I
Cleve
300 150 Olx- 10 11 0
Abbott , Laxton (5), ·Kekich wanted to play well anyway."
(6) and Cox ; Bibby, Monge {6).
Elliott, who played at
Andersen (8) , Hood (9) and
Northeast
because "the big
Kendall. W - Bi bby, 11 -10. L Abbotl , 10-10. HR s-Cievel.!lnd, universities told me I waa too
Carty 2 (12 ), Pruitt {2) .
amall or too slow," said be
Kan City
000 212 ooo- 5 10 0 didn't think hill performance
Bait
000 000 ooo- 0 5 0 would move Griffin out of the
Hassler, Bird (7) and
Walhan i Grims ley , McGregor apoUight.
(6) and Skaggs, W-Hassler. 7"I don't know if this will be
5. L - Grlmsley. 12-7.. HRa
factor
or not," said Elliott,
Kans,as City, WathM (1) .
who had a 44-yard scoring
420 100 21G----10 16 0 dash in the final quarter.
MiiW
Chicgo
000 001 001}--- 1 6 o
Sorensen and MQOre ; Wood . "It's just one game. But it
Johnson (IJ. Kir kwood (7) and should. enhance my chances
Esslan . W- Sorenson. 5·7. LWood, 6 -7 . HR s- M ilwaukee , of getting more playing
Bando Cl6 L Mcner c221. Chica - time.''
1

' •JP ~-~-

football season for the first
time in 22 years, going back
to high school, the big man
had a ready answer.
"That 22 years represents
two-thirds of my life," he
said. "!can't turn my back on
the game and walk away
easily. I loved football .
"But show business ·
appeals to me because it
operates at the same tempo
I'm used to in football. There
is the same preparation of
performance level and
variety in the work as il was
the past 15 years witll the

.POLLY'S POINTERS

forced out of the race. ~th
less than an hour remaJ111118.

L.EXlNG'lON, Ohio (UP!)
Peter
Gregg
of
Jacksonville , Fla .; won
Sunday's three-hour race at
tlle Mid-Ohio Sports Car
Course by pushing his Porsche 9~ from a lOth place
starting position and early
spinout.

games, citing uacertalDty
over federal financial aid
and incomplete pla01 for a
possible world trade ex·
position.
"The lDdeftnlte nature of
two vital factors In our
Olympic proposal bas
prompted our decision not
to make a formal bld for

Min~rsville

BONUS OFFER : " FREE" PORTRAIT of GRANDPARENTS
Photo Hours: Daily 10-1 2-5 6-8 • Sat. 10-1 2-4:30

Liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

..

bcttter than the
brand's best washer.

1

w"DAY'S FASHION SCENE.
\ .

Genuine Rubies.

Sapphires, Emeralds

DIAMONDS &amp; COLOR

and Precious Diamonds
Now
In
Diamond

4 Genuine emeralds
5 Precious diamonQ,s
in 14 Kt. natural go!d.
Prices Stutlng

Also

22 Precious diamonds
in 14 Kt. WN!e gol~
Pru;es Starting
As Low AI

p"ricei Starting

Chrllrm ·as stoc:k
arriving ·every day .
Lay

today !

away

yours

124t.OO

AlLOW As
$240 .00

lllustra8tont anlargMI ta lhow dttllll

Any diamond 'iiiJithned
new nng.

gr.. t seltctlon

rings.

19 Genuine sapphires

in 14 Kt Two Tone go l~

1

ol men's diamond

As Low As
5240.00

7 Genuine rubies
12 Precious diamonds

stock,

o ·1nner
Rings and Clusters.

~

..ere will be-y;orththe total purcllaso prlco wlien buying if

CANDY'S
The New Addition to Ingles Furniture

+++

Dear Helen:
1 am 24 but people usually think I'm over 30. This is bad
because I'm gay, and guys my age cir younger just ig.nore me,
Cllllsidering me "over the hill" runlels they're lw.stlers). That
leaves mly the dirty old men who somehow guess my real age.
Please tell me how I can get more popular. All I get is
"You're very nice, but ... " and I'm tired of being CEUBATE
Dear CeUbate:
You've cune to the wro1111 colwnnist. Try the ."Youth and
Beauty" edit«. - H.

CLASSIC COIJ.ECI'IONS
106 N. Second

DR. DONALD Sa PRITT
PODIATRIST

Middleport. o.

Memo loMe:
·
.
1 Save CeUbale's Jeller for my "Golly Gee, how times have
changed 1" rue.

t

can within the realm of passibHI· ·
ty and prudence.

GEMINI (Moy 2t-Juno 20)
Financial surpluses should not
be tapped lrlvolously today. II
you'¥e put something aside for a
rainy day , wait for a cloudburst.

CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) Your
luck and good looks get you Into
the starting gate today. The only
th i ng that ' ll wil" the race.
however, Is sheer determination .

LEO

(July 23· ....... 22) In an im·
partant maner you m~y feJtl you
have a lrump card up your
sk&gt;e••· Chec~ before playing tt. It
may ha~e been lolt In the laun-

dry.

Relocation of His OHice

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE
Rt. 2 NOR1H

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA
I

HOURI IY APPOINTMINT

PHONI .(304) 421 0000

NOW ONLY

manent Press , Regular
settings
• Gentle Flawing Heat
e Big over-size door opening tar easy lo ading and
unloading

.

\

�1-TIIe DllllySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday. Aug. 29, 1m
TRAI..'Y

TELEVISION
VIEWING

WAS MORE THAN
THE PART OF THE
--,.-,~fEUNGS,__ _ _ _,
l~ W~.~t'\la. Ill'

Umk-r

100

l&lt;lo;

ISO

:!:dB)S.

3liM)•

1.10

•a.).

.\00

Eadl Wllf'd \1\t"t tho: llUUUUWII I)
w•l«\b. 1i 4 l"'Yfd.lll ~· -. onl I""~" da\
'..\da rw.uw~ uthrr U~&amp;tu L'Uill&gt;l,'Utn'"o·
dol)-:.. "'"Ill bt&gt; t•harged at tt ... 1 dH'
'nth·

lu mt'lllt.'l') . Can! li. Th,;mb 1ull
Ol;,tlW:ir) : 6 L't'lll..s pet Wttrd.
nun unum CttlSh ut advi!.rw:~

f.i

rJO

Mobt&amp;t Humt: SMkti o111kl Yin d lMIIt•:.
IU't" lll;tT"qJl~ uul,\ wtth c ash .&gt;Ntth
Uftk't· 1!t t&lt;enl dwrgt• fllr ctds t•an ·~ ­
UI~ BUll: NWll~r ltl Cart' u£11~ &amp;.'11·
Und.
Tlw Pubh.'olwt· rl'SI'rYl~ tik' n j.(ill
to l'&lt;btor rcJCl'l. ~:~ny ails Ut..,·mo.&lt;tl tob-·
~ ltvl~&lt;~.t.

Tlk' PuiJIJ:o.ht-r

Help Wan1ed

1\otices

, Cash

~t il no&lt;~: 1:1!:

l'l'bpl.otu.tbit' fut lliiJt'l' than unt· mwfl-

rt'l.1 UtM'rttun
Phone 99!-:! l;M:i

5250 00 RfWARO for re1utr\ of (no 8A8YSin£R TO 11ve in . P .0 . 6ox
974 Gallipolis, Ohio .
questions ask:~ ) 01 'informohon l.ading 10 !he return of $150 WEEKlY POSSIBlE wo•king
two male Oogs token tram Rt
with odvet'ti s•ng compoi gn, No
33 neor Dorwtn July 11 . Please 1
e•perianca 1'equired. Send self
lo11e and m1u my dogs very
oddreued •n~elope to r apmush. 992-S848.
pl lc olton .
Cumberland
Research, Box 366. Cookeville ,
RACINE VOLUNTEER Fire Ottpb.
TN 38501.
are sponsonng o chtcken bar·bque on Sun., Sept. -4 starting ot WE ARE now taking oppllcolions
11 00 om . o1 tne Fire Station.
for evening nlghrime and
The Ladies Aux . ore selling
weekend help Applv only in
liome·mode IC ie cream.
penon , Thun., 2 to 5 pm . at the
-~-Blue a nd Grey Restaurant ,
SENIORS OF Meigs County . Tradi Pre"Wious opplkants need nat
t ional and outdoor settings for
apply:..
your portraits . Colt The Photo
Place, Bob Hoeflic~
992-5!_92:,._ SOBER MAN or woman . Century
Bar . E"Wely~u .

-

l.astami.Fv.;a- '- .~ _;;~:=_ .,.----;S;;A~IoLTT"H;;E--=---,
LOST. BLACK ond white mole litt !e nound dog. Contact Howmd
German , 742-2938 . lost in
Leading Creek areu .

NOTICE

SEVEN SEAS
V ISIf Hong Kong , Spain , the
Carribei!ln . we' ll pay you to
do It In the U .S. Navy If
you are 17-to 31 1 call or see :
US Navy .
221 Columbus RCI., Athens,

3 AND 4 RM furmshed and un·
furn1shed opts . Phone 992
S&lt;JA
•

COUNTRY Mob1le Home Par•c A:t .
33. len m iles north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots w it!-. concrete patio$ ,
~idewo lk s ,
runners and off
street parking Phone 992· 7479.
FURNISHED APT , Adult:s only. no
pels. Phone 992-3874 , Mid·
dleport .
lWO BEDROOM trailer, adults on.
ly . Colt 992-3374 .
SMAll APARTMENT, 2nd Street in
Middleport. Suitable l or 1 or 2
people. 992 -5262.

TWO BEDROOM opt , unfurnished . South 2nd . Middlepor.t .
Close to Bvs1neu Distnct . 6
rooms and o bosement , (614)
367 -7514 .
COUNTR"f MOBILE Home Pork.
Route 3J. north of Pomeroy .
Large lot ~all992- 7479 .

STORE ROOM on North Second
Street , M iddleport . Ma in port
of town. modern front , drop
ceiling , cen tro! heating and oir
cond. Room size 25 x 60. In quire at Ingels Furniture. Mid·
IF YOU hove o service to offer .
dleport , Oh_1o._ _ _ _
wont to buy or se ll something,
THREE
BED ROOM
House .
ae lookirtg l or work . . . or
9'12·3090
whatever .
you.'ll get results
t aster with o Sen tmel Wont A d .

OH

, PH : 593-lSU Collect

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
' DEADUNES

CASH poi d ' for oil mokes and
models of mobile homes.
Phone oreo code 614-"23-9531 .
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts Top price for stonding
sawtin-\ber . Call 992-5%5 or
_ Ke~t Hanby , 1-.. 46-8570

MtH1day

Noon ou Sal~,~.tcl_ay
T'*sc.l:i}

COINS, CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket watches and choins,
silver and gold. We need 1964
and older sil11er coins. Buy , n iL
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley ,

lhruFriday
~? . M

the day ~fore publlcauou
Swula}

742·2331.

~P . M

Frulay aflemoon

t'or Sale

t•or Kent

.J

OLD FU RNITURE , ice boxes , brass
beds ,
etc . ,
com p lete
households . Wr ite M . D. Mill er ,
Rr . 4, Pomeroy , Ohio or call

Call992·2156.
GARAGE SALe. here it is again ot
log Cobin between Keno and SALE OR Trode. 1970 Plymouth
Wogon , 6 cyl , std . $600 , or
Long Bottom, twp . Rd . 261.
trade for auto wagon of equal
Storts Aug. 27 thru Wed ., A ug.
11olue. 742·3074 .
31 . Come oiL lots of mdse.

Business Services

COAL , ltmestone, ond calcium
chlonde ond cokium brine for
du" control and spec1af mixing
solt for farmers , Excelsior Sail

CAMPER~

$600. .Al ,o , hone
trailer, $450. Phone (6t.tl) 698·

SPRING GARDEN Supplies. Cob·
boge . cauliflower, brocco l1,
and head leu uoe plants.
y&amp;llow, whi te , and red onion
sets, on ion plants Kenna~( ,
cobbler , l&lt;otohd1n Red Pont iac
ond Red Lasodo seed potatoes .
Bulk garden seeds , potting soil,
peat moss , fru it trees and rose
bushe s. M id way Morket ,
PQmeroy , Qh10 , . 9'92· 2$82,
Bob: s Market , Mason. W .Vo.

(31J.1 )773-S721 .

-

~

._.,. -=-

ill,.....,...,

o.rlll' ...... """ ................ lit! •il ~*
.w;
..•• 11,.., ...... TIIIIHUI-•IM.--.

.........

......

.., .....,.

.-.;

~.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . tl. . . . . .

CNtlll..," ................... '*''
..............
............ .... . ,.. ...

Rtsldentlol
ond
commercial. Call for
estimate, 24 hour Hrvic•Anyday, onytimt.
Phone HS-3106

...._ ., s.f.L Ce1 ttl·11M Ill 1 t N t - •
, *fi., 111111 L ~ Sl., ,__,_ 0.

UO.OO on a new
· Hot point Refrigerator.

I New 20 cubic fl. Chest

125.00 Discount
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
$85.00
2 Good used XL2 Chain

P-9U42l!
w9!12-42U
I A.ll.lo 4:30 P.ll.
:w£S AIID SUVICl
7-28-1 mo.

Electric Trim -All cuts with

nylon
129.95
Good Refrigerator S200

{1}

Pomeroy Landmark

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS

Mary Hobstetter,
Clerk

181 22. 29, 2tc

Amendment is to make ballot
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown has certified for the
Nov. 8 general election baUot
a proposed constitutional
amendment to repeal "in·
staut" voter registration and
to require that voters be
~ at leut 30 days
prior to beDotinl. The Initiative petition
• drc:uiatecl by Ohioans for the

Preservation of Honest
Election was certified Friday
'as havirig been signed by
365 985 qualified electors more than required by

58,i&amp;t

-

.

-- -- - -·-·-. ·-

.

-

--

~-

1967 FORO heavy duty , ,. h .p., flot
steel bed , 4 new tires Ex cellent
condition .

9B5·4290.

seoo.

1q75 CHEVROlET MONTE Cado.
A.C., P.S.. P.B.. tape deck .
$3650 . 992-262B, olle• pm.
1974 CHEVROlET SUBURBAN . ful ·
ly equ•r.ped . towing package,

ECONOMY TRACTOR with all ot·
tochments. Like new, oskmg

$_2~~.:. P_h_on! ~-1_4}_698.:_3~ _.

CANNING TOMATOES, PEPPERS,
cvcumbers . Cleland Forms ,
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland .
TREE RIPENED orchard peaches ,
While or yellow starting Mon .,
Aug . 1. Mason Peach Orchard.

1975 HARlEY DAVIDSON. ex·
cellent condit1on. Gold, has extras , len thon 1000 miles .

low mi eoge. Coli 992-2121 or
$2700. Coli {b") 69B-3:190
the Ohio Constitution.
Contocl Ben Ewing.
APPAlACHIAN
STOVE Co .. Sum·
The propoaed constitutional 197• "VW THING ". •9 .800 moles .
mer Sole. Ashley C-60 Wood
amendment would also
Ho•d ond sofl lop. $1495. Coli
Heaters , $3,.0 complete with
require voters to re-register · Sue, 992-7805.
blower. Thru Sept , 12. We orthe only outherlred deoler In
If they faDed to vote for four ,· 1972 FORO GRAN Torino. good
Meigs
CoUnty.
We 're in
consecutive years.
condition. $800. Call 992-6115.
after S p .m .

Carpenter olf 143. 6't18-719T.

WHAT I TeLl. PIWPLE 1)1!' · (§;~
WHO TRY TO MUSCLE Mt:&lt; &amp;UT NEVE':
15N'T PR INTA&amp;LE, !OASY... MI~D 'Al-l. THAT!

ARe YOU READ Y
FOR MY OPINION
OF THIS JO&amp; ~

a Classic 33.

B: 30--Baseball 4,6, 13; Szysznyk 10; Jean Shepherd's
America 33 .

9:110--Maude 8. 10; S~ades of Greene 33 .
9:3()-Pilot B,10.
10 :00--Sonny &amp; Cher 8.10; Austin City Limits 3S3.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; I nner Tennis 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3.4.15: Streets of San Francisco

,_

lot HiP Sl

'ftlJI}l.\fl fii}'jl

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBoblee

~ ~ ~~ O&gt;

Weddinp

Portraits

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one fetter to each square, 10 form
tour ordinary words.

AUEYOOP
... AN' A ~E ... AN '

Y1I&lt;NOW, DAUGHTI&lt;R ,

AH'M SEt:iiNNIN'
T'LII&lt;E "THIS FEllA!

!!Hlt2
6-22·1 mo.

3-14-1 mo.

I

all. $7,000.00.
NEWER MODERN VA
approved · home,
3
bed'rooms , lovely family

acres, free gas well, 4
bedroom ·home, equ lppecl
birch kitchen witH bul,lt-ln
cook

and

bake

units,

room,

refrigerator. bath, gas F.A.
furnace, and all minerals.

$&lt;\5,000 .

AN APPRAISAL IS A
VALUE
BASED
ON
FACTS. NOT AN OPINION
BY ANYONE. ONLY BY
QUALIFIED PEOPLE .
COUNTRY farmland wllh s~lud·
ed woods, water and good ac:
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo.
$1 .000 down. call (31).1) 772·

3102 o&lt;(:JO&lt;) 772-3227_. _ .

_

VA -FHA . 30 yr. financing . Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E. State, Athens .
phrne (614 ) 591-3051 .
2.

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house. F:A . furnace, storm win·
dows , fireplace in Middleport .
Phone 992-3457.

nice kitchen, car-

pell"9, penel1119, tile, cold
room &amp; storage, central
heal and air cond. "' acre .
$32,500.00.
.
LOOK 4 LOTS - Space .for
the kids to romp In, quiet
area, 6 rooms, bath, and
workshop . In good con dition. Meigs school area .
$13,000.00.
WHY WAIT?
IN TEREST RATES . ARE
GOING UP- PROPERTY
PRICES CONTINUE TO
SOAR - BUY NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
' Honk, Kolhy &amp; Leona
Cit lend
AIIOcllfH
m-2259- ft2-2561- HS-4112

DAVID BRICKLES
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

COMPANY

Rutoteum Pllnt Pruduch
•we Cln ship p•rts d irectly
to your door by wav of
U .P.S.
•Custom Hydrlutlc Hose

HOW PEOPL.E
DON'T BELIEVE IN
WEARIN6 EJAiHIN6

100112

SUIT~

• ' - · Ollio 457it
Kitchen Cabinets · Roofma - Concrete

Phone tt:z-2176

Elti•atoo ........ joll.
6-27-I mo. pd .

Pomeroy, 0.

8-7·1 mo .

TRAP IE

UTILE ORPJ{AN ANNIE

New Construct&lt;n'
Remodelin1.
·
Plt.nl-lm•IM-10115
Pat~s - Sidtwa llls .

Mlkint

THAI IS , IF I
HADI4' T SEEN

HIM IN
TIME ·-

BUT HOW

lllH HQW
COUlD YOO
SEE HIM

DID HE

GET

AWAY

FROM YOlJ,
PUNJA67

BEHIND

HE IS CUNNING
AHD SLIPPERY AS
A SERPENT, SAHIB··

Answer:

Automatic

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
PIL 992-2174

CARPENTER , flooring , ceiling ,
paneling. Phone 992· 2759 .
MOBILE Home Repa ir, Elec.,
plumbing and heating . Phone
(x .

coveting , septic systems ,
dorer , backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone . grovel , blacktop
paving, Rt , l.o13 . Phone I (6U)
698-7331.

I COULO AAV(;
be011'£ '"-OCt&lt;,
'OJ I(J.PW!

Vinyl Ia Aluminum Sidin&amp;
Storm Windows Ia Insulation.
Call Professionals

~u.!

•

~

Alou! contractor
Phone 949-2101
Of 949-2160

HARRISON'S T.V. Repair Service

Calls. '176 Sycamo•e. Sl. , Mid·
dleport. Phone 992-2522.

I KOOW ... &amp;AT
AT 6EC4?b6'S
A~D "f;T f:.l&gt;6.

O\W5 ACOMBI~llOO
Dlt.ti:R MD bAs STAT lOll
OOW, NV OOES WR'I

Bissell Siding Co.

:-:''=='-"::-::-c:--:-o--:--:~,­

ACROSS
DOWN
J Land measure I Regarding
5 Netherlands
(2 wds.)
Antilles
2 Offspring
island
3 Realiza10 Phila. 76ers'
lion (2 wds. )
4 Shoe width
coach
11 Delay
5 Spanish
13 Current
region
14 Blood
6 Begin again
condition
7 Colorado
15 Viva matador!
Indian
16 Mature
8 Red Chinese
17 Library
"drapery"
contents (abbr.) (2 wds~ )
18 Famous
9 No. Amer.
American
Indian
lawyer
12 Director

BORN LOSER

MAAII.IE:D

~

L---~!_=~=~~==::..J l---~~===!::!:=:::==:J ~ L..::.:~_.::;;:!_=:==::!:::~=::;::..J 29 Western
Hemisphere

Fm- .

org.
21 Detach

llo s...u, Colh I'll•
f.- 13-1

PIANO TUNING, Lone Don 1els. 12
years of
service . Phone

992·20B2 .
WATER WEll drilling. Phone
Will iam P. Gront at 742 -2879
offer 6 p .m. •
PENNZOIL RUTLAND open dolly
till
10. Closed Mondays ,
wrecker service , tire repair.
Phone 742 -9575 or 742-2081 ,
WILLING TO cl&amp;on land up for
chipwood . (614) 2-47-2542.

AND

kitchens

remodeled . Ceramic tile, plum·
bing , carpentry , and general
maintenance . 13 yrs . ex·
perience . 992-3685 .

NELSON 'S

PAINTING .

F•ee

estimates. Call992-5804.

STARCRAFT lOth onmvenory sole
on mini ·motors , trailers , and
folddowns . Trovelstar 25 ft .
$.4400 .00 ; 20 h . mini-motor
$10,850 .00. We sell service ond
quality. Comp Conley Starcroft
Sales , Rt . 62. north of Pt. Pleasant.
FAIR MONTH SPECI.. l on entire
stock. See them ot COONER 'S
CAMPERS on Rainbow ridge.
From Rt.7 , toke Meigs 28 or 32
to Basham. Open evenings,,
too. Owner, Robert Codner.
long Bottom , Ohio 1
STARCRAFT MINI ' Motor.s , trailers
and fold ·downs. End ol year
sale. Save $1,700 on 1917 ,
trailers . 1978 trailers in stock .
Uted unitS. We sell service and
quality. Camp Conley Storcralt
Soles. Rt. 62, north ol Pl . Plea·
sont .
'-------~

~

••
•

e

.•

e. ._•·

:r~ ~

: a.

.:

SEWING MACHINE Repai rs , service, all makes , 992-228.4 . The
Fabric
Shop ,
Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Ser11ice. Wethorpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING,. dozer, loader and
backhoe work; durYJp trucks
and fa -bays for hire ; will haul
fill dirt , to soil , limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef··
fers , doy phone 992·7069 , ,
night phone 992-3525 or m .

5232 .

LlLABNER
MRS FLIN-r--

flUTIAM
LIVIt-16 AT MY
FIANCEE!:&gt; HOLJSE"

-R)R

•

Yesterday's Answer

19 Blushing
23 Poseidon,
e.g. (2 wds.)
24 Cissie,
formally
25 Nuisance
26 Suffix for
Jules
insist
16 Parseghian 28 Emulate
and
Sparky
namesakes
Anderson

.aoDo
abstracts
31 Arab land
35 "-and the
' Swan"
37 Itinerary
word
·

FRe:Ef-

EXCAVATING , dozer, bockhoe 1
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot - •
field . Bock Hoe
Service , '
Rutland. Ohio. Phone 7.42-2008.

6:30--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
6: CBS News B, 10; Vegetable Soup 20.
?:DO--Oral Roberts In San Francisco 3; CrosS-Wits 4;
Liars Club 6; Country Carnival 8; Lowell Thomu
Remembers 33; News 10; To TeiiTheTruth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Anyone lor Tennyson? 20.
7: 30--Hollywood Squares 4: Let's Deal With It 6;
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Reoort 20,33;
$2S.OOO Pyramid 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Music Cily
15.
8:00-Baa Bi!a .Biack Sheep 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13,
Jack Benny B, 10; In Performance at Wolf Trap 33;
Music In Jerusalem 20.
.
.
8:30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Phyllis 8,10.
9:011--Police Woman 3; Movie "Having Babies'' 6,13;
News Documentary . 4; Oral Roberts In San ·
Francisco 15; M·A·S· H 8,10; Opera Theater·20,33:
.
9:3[)-()ne Day At A Time 8,10.
10:00--NBC Reports 3,4,15; Magical, Musical world
of Julie Andrews 8; Kojak 10.
.
11 :DO--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13.15: MacNeil-Lehrer Rejlort
33.
11 : 30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mo¥1e "The Out-of. ·
Towners" 6, 13; Movie "Beyond the Bermuda
Triangle" 8; Movie " Trial" 10; ABC News 33. ·
12 :011--Janakl 33.
l :00- TomorroW 3.4.
1:30--Mar,y Hartman 10; News 13.

monogram
Monday, August 29

shock

28 Bill of fare

~-t--i

AXYDLBAAXR
Is

J, 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One letter simply slands for anolher. In this sample A Is
used for the lhree I.'s, X for lhe two Q's, etc. Single leiters,

H2-23•B.

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

CoMing
Tower"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

WILL do roofing , construction ,
plumbing and heating. No jab:
too large or too small . Phone

4:30--My Three Sons 3: Star Trek 4; Emergency One!
6: Andy Griffith 8; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
5:00--Big Valley 3: Brady Bunch 8; Mister Roger's
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One I 13; Mission:
Imoosslble 15.
5: J[)-()dcl Couple 4; News 6; Fam lly Affair I; Electric
Company 20,33.

38"The

29 Intrepid
flyer
30 Baker's
offering
32 Martini
ingredient
33 Suffix for
expect
34- Aviv
36 Miss Hussey
38 Renown
6+---i39 Breaking
· bread
, ; 40 Mottled
41 Playing
marble
· 4Z Anagram of
Nana

REMODELING, Plumb1ng , heating
ond all types of general repoir .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex perience . Phone 992-2409.

Expert joins convnon folk
NORTH

29
{D)

•Q 9 6
•A KJ
t K64
• A 10 8 4
WEST

EAST

• K S%

• 74

• 873
• Q 10 9 54
• 10 8 2
t97 53
.QJ97
.6 3
SOUTH
• A J 10 8 3
.62
tA QJ
.K s 2
Both vulnerable

West

Nortll East
I N.T. Pass

Pass ••
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - ~

~-,:::;--;-::-;;--;-~--;~-;--.,..-J
By'Oswald &amp; James Jacoby '
Jim : "How about some articles on experts at their best
P Q Y • and worst, with maybe a little
LUQ
OF
N..Q.PU WF G
DF
emphasis on their mistakes."
OWRFG,
C Q N Oswald : " I have a jim danGUW
LDGU
GWYG
dy lor you . It is·taken from the
G U W
L W R 0 G U finals of the life master pairs
DF
PQYGWYG
"
of HMO. I sat North and my
YRGENW
F Q P N R G W F partner was one ol the great
Q
· players . He became declarer
·
· OF at six spades. West thought a
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I AM A GREAT FRIEND
long while and finally led the
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS, FQR THEY KEEP PEOPLE FROM queen of clubs. As you can
see, that lead gave him his
VICE . .....SAMUEL JOHNSON

against the jack of ~lubs, tried
the heart finesse instead and

went down

one."

Jim : "Down one Wollld not
be a bottom. I auume -lllOit
pairs were in six notriubp or
six spades. Without that queen
of clubs lead or a heart lead
against notrump by Nortb,
they all were down one."
Oswald : "That ia just why
my partner did not make the
hand . He had noted West't
long study before leadtna that
queen of clubs and decided
that it might well bave bMt .
from queen-smaU. He alao ·
saw that after tbe spade
finesse lost he would bave Iota
of company at one down, If the
heart queen was In the wrona
place also . So down the expert

went.''

apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all

BUILDINGS
Farm • Commercial

WHY DOI
SUDDENLY FEEL

50 BLUE •... 50
DEPRE55ED··· ·

Wicket Buildings
Circleville, Ohio, Box 523

SOALDNE?

{614)47•·8732

I

•

::

--~~

•

MDII., Twa.. \Vta.

.... c

WITH HER NEW 13EAU
TR IGGERED OFF 50Mc· ,_.-c- --.~
_,
TH ING IN51DE YOU 1
WINNIE.

.I

c

Cl&gt;

U77 K•n&amp; FuiUru S)'n.dlcatf', tna.

R"JtNEY

~
•·j •••
.

~

FRIDAY -Til 5 _l

-~

Close Sit. At 5 p.M.

ARNOLD ORATr

uw

1 THINK SEEING 1~UNT'1 5ESSIE

•

.\ e

l~fliS:•

hints. Each day the code letlers are different.
(.'RYPTOQUOTES

-WINNIE.

Industrial • Horse Barns
Gara1es &amp; Workshops

:

RUTLAND PUINI1URE

742-:1211

~~Tll~~~

382:::5:..,.~:-:.,-.,--,.~,--

............
:
*•
............................•
:· ..... :

~~~7 ,~~--~--~vr~~--7.7~~~-;~~~~::~~~k:~~~~Mouth
It wil I All the trees Birds wil I be sendinq
(prefix)
be sprinq !_ will be
their little sonqs
~~~
Slim! cominq out!
of cheer!
21 Shriek of

d-::;)(-"'~&lt;.1'a;-~""11

Sweepers, tooslers, irons, all
SfTIOII appliances. lawn mower .
neJtt to Slate Highway Garage
on Route 7, Phone {614) 985·

111unctay ltU _..

..

GASOLlNEAl

Bradford.
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

........

• •

11'11)

BRADFORD , Auct1oneer . Complete Service . Phone 949-2487
or 9o49-2000. Racine , Ohio , Cr1tt

Convenient Shopping Hours

:

Jumbles: FETID LEAFY POLITE MODERN
Answer: They can be a riotl- "A TRIO"

by THOMAS JOSEPH

r~. l7U250
~17-TFC

BATHROOMS

J

~~

Tr~nsrnission Semce

MARTIN

ITJ[I I J[I I XIJ
(Answers tomorrow)

SWAIN

992-S8S8.
HOWERY ANO

SWIM.

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Salurday's

PARTS- LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

TUESDAY , AUGUST 31, 1tl7
Report 13; PTL Club 13.
6:00-Summer Semester 10.
6:30-Focus on Columbus • : News 6; Summer
Semester 8; Concerns and Comments 10.
6 : •~Mornlng Report 3.
6:50- -Good Morn ing, West VIrginia 13.
6 : 5~Good Morn ing, Trl State 13.
7:00--Today 3.• .15; Good Morning America 6. 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7 , o~Porky Pigg 10.
7: 30--Schoolles 10.
B:00-Howdy Doody 6; Captain Kangaroo 8. 10; Sesame
Street 33.
8:30--Big Valley 6.
q:oo--cro•s-Wits 3; Phil Donahue •· 15, 13; Andy
Grl lfllh 8; .Mike Douglas 10.
. ·
.
q:30--A.M. 3: Edge of Night 6; Concentrallan 1.
'0:011--Sanlord and Son 3,4', 1S; Dinah! 6; Here's Lucy
8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :30--Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Righi 1,10.
11 :CO--Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13.
11 : JO--lt' s Anybody's Guess 3,4, 15; Family Feud 6,13;
Lo•e ot Life 8, 10.
11 : 5~CBS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12:00--News 3,4,6, 10; Shoo! lor the Stars 15; Divorce
1Court 6: Midday 13.
·
12 .30--Chlco and the Man 3, 15; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1:00--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News I;
Young and the Reslless 10; Not for Women Only 15.
1 :30--Days of our Lives 3,.,1S; As theWorldTurns 8,10.
2:00--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:30--Doctors 3,4, IS; One Life to Ll¥e 6.13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:00 - Another World 3,.,1S; All In the Family 8,10;
S : 4~Farm

3: 1&gt;--Generai "Hospltal 6, 13.
3:30--Malch Game 8,10; Lilias. Yoga and You 20.
4:(1()... -Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4,15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Gilligan's Island 8; Sesame 'Sfreet
20,33; Dinah! 13.

Ail&amp;

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT

•

Consumer Survival Kit 20 .

9.·_;ack W. Carsey , Mgr..
Phone 992 -2181

'279.95

1964 DODGE l1ART . In good runn mg condition except transmis sion gone bad . At Pyles
Garage, Racine. $100, pric9 .
Elsie Shohon , Greot Bend .

•

12:16HT-- IF I DID
HE IMPL IED IT M115HT
CO~T ME A &amp;UNDL&amp;
IN AIR FREit&gt;HT
&amp;US 1Nt:55 !

INDUSTR:ISS t !·

,_.,,ollio

1- $100.00, 1-SBO.OO

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

.

Phonl949-2al4

RACIN.ECAR_PET
SHOP

JOOihirtSI.

Otairman Tipp
denies fraud

$600. '1'12-2717.

CAPI'~EASY
YOV MEAN·· 50ME I.INKNOWN
CAI.l-&amp;R WAR:t.ll!D VOU NOT TO
•001&lt; OVER: 'THAT FISHTER.
PLAN&amp; !&gt;&amp;SIGN FOil: M&lt;I&lt;E&amp;

9 1.m. to 5 p.m.

Pool Sales

TEAFORD(g

9. ~jack W. ~rsey, Mgr.
Ail Phone 992-2181

~ Jllllllll. S,OCial '""' to

D. Bumgardner

'!"'.""1·.o.

engine. Real good conditiOn .

Club 6; Fluck Owens 8: News 10; To Tell The Truth
13; My Three Sons 15; Amer icana 20; Motage 33.
7:30-- T~at Good Ole Nas~vllle Music 3; In Sea rch ol4;
Muppet Show 6; Gong Show 8; MacNe il·
LehrerReporl 20,33 ; Price Is Right 10; Candid
Camera 13; Nashv ille on the Road 15.
8:00--Life Goes to lhe Mo¥1es 3.&lt;.15 : Pllot6 •.13:. God' s
. Smuggler 8: Tennlls 20; Jelfersons 10 ; Once Upon

THE PHOTO PLACE

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Free1er

FREE ESTIMATES

1968 CHEVEllE MAliBU . 307

il, • •

CARTER

Save

Young'$
Carpeting

commissioners
reserve the right to accept or
reiect any and all bids .

7: oo-Truth or Consequences 3; Cross-Wits 4 ; Liars

and

softeners, model vc.svl .
Only $279.95

lARRY lAVENDER

yo~~eb~~'Unty

Q

B-2'1-pd.

~--

The IRS claims that Tippa
should not have taken a tax
credit on a cabin cruiser he
owns, should have reported
as income tripa that he
received from a management
firm, and understated his
income as a real estate agent.

.......

Chester, Ohio

Box:H

Q

c.tio _ _ ,.....- .......

Jack's Septic
Tank SeMc:e

,~~.-..­

7 10-llftf

FOR SALE
New Co -Op water

Saws

.,., • ...., .... -.u.M .... -'w
.... 11 ........................... ..

GUTIER
SERVICE

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Kingsbury Home Sales

3:190.

YARD SALE beginn ing Monday ,
CANNING lOMAlOES and 1wee'
NOTICE TO
Aug . 29 . O ld dolls with Bisque
corn for freez ing . Pick your
CONTRACTORS
BID..
heads and Kid bod1es, dishes ,
STATE OF OHIO
992-776().
own . Call 8arboro Talbott ,
A von, tamps, bee:! clothing,
IMjllltioo-•
DEPARTMENT OF
NEW IDEA No. 31~ one row Super ·
Port land . 8.43-4515 .
jewelry , lots of misc . 810 South
F-1Awoilolllo
CASH I! , Junk ~ars , Fry's Truck &amp;
TRANSPORTATION
p1cker m excellent con dttion.
2nd
Street,
M
iddleport
,
Ohio
.
-nlolo
W* I Altiel
Auto
,
Rutland.
Phone
7
..
2.
2061
NEW
IDEA
No
.
7
Cornplcker.
Columbus. Ohio,
{3IJ.I) 675-6908.
510111
August 19, 1977
or 74,·9575 Closed Mondays.
Good
condition
.
Ready
to
pick
.
YAROISAlE. Sept . 1,2, and .3. 9 , to SET OF Sm tih gouges, Torch and
WINDOWS liJOORS
Contract Sales Legal
(614)B43-2286
3 pm . on oldr33 between Me igs
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small .
Copy No . 77-1095
fttPIACOIEfiT
Rosebud . 742-2485
Co
.
Fairgrounds
and
Rock
sprWill bvy 1 piece or complete
1976 HONDA, 550·.4 . Excel lent
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
WINDOWS
ings Church .
1 YEA~ OLD Polled Hereford Bull
Seated proposals w i ll be
house hold New , used, or an t icondition . $1350 985-3597 .
AI.UIIINUII
Con
be
registered
.
Coli
received at the office of the
ques . Martin' s. Furniture, 20 N
YARD SALE, Mon ., Tues ., and
SIDifiG.SOfllTT
D i rector
of
the
Otllo
949-2368.
2nd St., Middlepor1. Ptlone
Wed ., Aug . '19, 30, and 31. At
GUTTUS,IWIIIIIGS
Department
of
Trans 992-6370.
the Louie Pickett residence ot REG. POLLED Hereford Bul l. 16
portation, Columbus , Ohio .
Letart
Falls, Ohio . Next tomo . old $600 985-3819.
until
10 : 00
A .M .,
OhiO
ANYONe HAVING a house for
$Jr1c-. O~io
Standard Time, Tuesday ,
sole in Rustic Hills in Syracuse
Richard ond Sons .G rovel Com- TWO THREE . QUARTER ton Dodge OON1 PAY t he added e)(pense of
Pi. !!Z·l!!3
September lJ, 1977 . for im please coli 949-2405 amy evenpony . Lots of ntce 1tems .
Power Wogan Trucks , 1%1 and
a Realtor! Buy this 3 bedroom ,
· "-tt.l.provements in :
ing .
2 1/i both bilevel from the '-~-.,c;.----~--'-~;.....J
YARD SALE, Mon thru Fr1 . 1 mile
196.4 Coll949·2770
Meigs County , Ohio ! on
Section MEG -33-2.22, u . s. ClEAN MODERN Home w1lh 10
owner and so11el Lorge family , - - - - - - - - - - ,
from langsvi lle on . CR . 10. NEW HOLLAND 163 bushel
Route 33 in Bedford Town room with fireplace , eat -in kit·
acres
or
more.
Coli
(614)
Clothmg
.
.
~omen~
·
SIZes
manure
spreoder
Excellent
ship , by grading , draining
chen
wifh double-oven range
10-16;
l1ttle
g1riS,
!i1Z8S
4·7
;
d'f'
C
9
2l70
557·33B2.
1194
Superior
and paving with asphaltic
and dishwasher, forma l dining
·
·
smoll kousehold items Phone -~ ~~ n . 0
concrett; instell/31tlon of
Stum
E1trKtian
room , two cor garage. central
742-2668 .
1975 MASSEY FERGUSON diesel
traffic control device; and bY
01r,
on
acre
lot.
N1ce
drive
Ia
165.
360
hrs
since
new
,
extra
constructing : Bridge No .
YARD SAlE. Aug 30. 31 ond Sept .
power plan ts ond m ines .
wide
tires , hea vy d1.1ty
MEG -33-0226, a prestressed
1, 10 om to 5 pm . Rorol
$A3,000. 992 -2492
stobol1lers
aux
.
hydroullc,
concrete box -beam super - MOBILE HOME, 11 :w 60. Price
typewriter , bed spread canopy
structure w i th concrete
·
front we1ghts like new. Ca ll 59 ACRE FARM , ll miles from
curtains , ch1ldren's ond adult
substructure {spans 39 .87 feet
$5 , 5~ Call !!._,2-::;
5B=5=B·: _ _
949-2170.
new Ravenswood Bri dge .
clott'lmg . Boots and other misc .
. •o . 73 teet - 39 .87 teet ,
1•113,
Modern home hos 3 bedrooms ,
items. Mrs . Kenneth Russell . 7 FOOT POOL table w1th all the
roadway 36 feet between
Carpet 11 UpllOIStery
guardrail) , over West Branch
NOTICE OF
li11ing
room
with.
wood
burning
9•9-2522.
accesson es. o1r flockey game .
Phone llike Y011n1
Shade River .
PUBLIC SALE
f 1r eploce ond beomed ceil ing ,
twm
s1ze bedroom s.uite,
THREE
FAMILY
Yard
Sole
,
Frog
Pavement Width 20 feet .
You are hereby notif ied
At
b ~un , outbuildings, ond fen cdehumidifier , elec tric heater,
Pro1ect Length 400 .00
that the
Racine
Home
Blvd . and John Street in
ing. $43,500. 949-24bb .
dryer
,
automatic
washer
ond
992·2206
Of 992-7630
feet or 0.075 mile .
Nat ional Bank , Racine , OhiO
Syrocuse, Ohio . Mon. 29 and
heo11y duty, oil good condition , SIX ROOM house at 613 M ill St ..
work Length - 1, 400 .00 feet
Wi ll offer at Publ ic Auct ion
"ThoOri~tlltors
Tu&amp;S . 30 .
obout I year aid 992· 5146 1
or 0.26S mile.
the fo l lowing :
lloiTIIe IMi!JIDn
M iddleport. Good condition . In·
" The date set for com 1969 Pont iac G.T 0 .
2·23-l mo.
quire at 439 Lmcoln St ., Mid·
KUBOTA
TRACTOR
.
I
on
ly.
Model
pletion of th i s work shall be ·
1967 Ford .v.. Ton Truck
dleport
.
l-185
with
5
ft
.
Woods
as set forth in the bidding
Sa 1d auction wi l l be on
Underslung Mower li~t , $.4405 lfJ ACRE of land with 2 bedroom
proposal."
August 31 , 1977, at 12 :30 P.M .
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding .
SO\Ie $600 Gravely Tractor
Each b i dder shall be
i n parking lot of Racine Home
tra ile r , tor Qu ic k sa le.
Indoor -Outdoor runs , grooming
re~:~uired to file with his bid .a
Nat i onal Bank .
Soles ,
Pome roy.
Phone
985-4290 .
.
certified check or cashier's
Minimum bids w ill be S500
HOMESITE~ for sale , I acre ond
all breeds , clean sanitary
9'12-:1975.
check for an amount e(luel to
tor 1969 Pontiac and S400 tor
up. Middleport, near Rutland.
facilities oe 367 ·7112 . Chesh1re
HOUSE
AND
outbuildings ,
1972 CHEVELLE p1ckup truck . New
five per cent of his bid, but In
1967 Ford Truck Terms of
Coli 992-7481
Phone (614) 367-0:192.
garage , and 2 1/t acres , more or
no e~ent more than fifty
sa le wi l l be cash in hand day
t ires , good bqdy , ond runs
less.
A
lso,
21
acres
more
or
thousand dollars , or a bond
of
sa l e
Racine
Home
N.EW 3 bedr.oom ho.use , 2 bottis ,
HOOF HOllOW. Buy, sell , trade
good. 992·623 1.
les' with garage . Good well.
for ten per cent of his bid, • National Bank reserves the
all elec. , I acre, Middleport ,
or tra in horses . RUTH REEVES,
Wm. A . Clonch . 685 Locust St. ,
REDUCE SAFE ond fast with
payable to the Director .
r i ght t o w tthdraw either or
dose to Rutland . Phone 992~
trainer . Phone (614) 698-3290.
• M iddleport .
B i dders must apply, on the
both of t hese automob iles
GoBese Tablets and E-Vop
7481 . -....,-~-.,...-~-proper
farms,
tor
from Public Sale at any t i me ,
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
" water pills" Nelson Drug
-:
~:~ualification at least ten clays
( 8 ) 29, 30 . 2 tc
SMAll farm for safe , 10% down , (Min ) Coll ies , 2 females , 7
SHOT
SHEllS
high
powe•.
$3
93;
prior to the date set for
owner f1nonc9d . Monroe Coun .
weeks old. Shots ond wormed
opening bids i n accordance
22 LR , 79~ ; 22 magnum , $2 .90.
ty, W . Vo. Phone (304 ) 772Phone (614) 367 ·0292 or
with Chapter SS2S Ohio
Lots of used and new guns .
3102 or (304) n2-3227.
PUBLIC
NOTICE
367-7112.
Revised Code .
Trode for anyth1ng . Fife's, S.
NOTICE TO
PJ;,ns and spec ifications
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
3rd , Middleport.
CONTRACTO!IS
are on f ile in the Department
Animal Coreline, 992-7680; or
REALlOR
Notice is he,reby g iven that
of Transportat ion and the
BUILT-RITE PRAM, Englist-1 style ,
sealed
proposals
will
be
otter
6
p
.m.,
992-5-427.
offi ce of the District Deputy
naVy . good condition , $.45 .
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
received at tt1e office of the
Director .
ALL BREED dog groom ing . J. and
Karostan Oriental Carpet. 9' x
Board of Meigs County
REALTOR
The D i rector reserves the
D. Kennels. Reasonable rotes .
Commissioners
at
the
Court
.
12'
wool
,
cranberry
color
.
very
216
E.
Second Slreel
r l ght to re j ect any and all
house in Pomeroy , Ohio , until
No drugs used. Coli for apgood condition , $185. Call
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
bids .
4 : 00 P .M. on September 6,
pointmenl , 7.42-3162.
992-7539.
Phone 9~2-3325
Wi th bids to ·be opened at
DAVIDL.WEIR 71977
AKC
TOY
poodle
pupp1es.
Two
:-ooP.M
.
on
tha
t
date
,
for
the
'FURNITURE
.
CALl992-616-0
DIRECTOR following described County
apricot, $100 each. Phone
Rev . 8·17·73
LARGE BRICK - Has 4
MAIN
work :
949-23-40 before 4 pm. , ask for RABBIT DOGS. 6 mo. old. $10 up .
rentals near stores and
H. W. Circle, Co . Rd . 30, one
Furnish
atl
materials,
Mrs
.
Williams
.
After
6
pm
.
call
{8) 29 , {9) 5, 2tc
POMEROY. 0 .
community activities. A
tabor,
and
appl i ances
mile off Rac ine-Boshan Rood .
9•9-2S71 .
necessary to complete i n a
real investment for only
GOT LOTS OF KIDS?
sat i sfa c tory
manner,
TO GIVE owar, · A friendly , aban- 1977 20FT . SCAMPER mim i- motor
$23,000.
home
,
fully
looded
actuol
scraping or wire brushing ,
1
Here Is your home - 2
doned mae all·white Iorge
LIKE NEW- 4 bedrooms,
pa i nt i ng , reg l azing where
mileage 3860 miles or will
story
frame, 4 bedrooms •
.
PUPPY·
Good
w
ith
children.
natural gas F .A . fu.rnace,
needed,
caulk
between
trade for late model station
1'h
baths,
large heated
992-2S•B.
frames and br i ck , apply one
nice bath and eat-In kitwagon and I'll take the difenclosed
porch
to play In on
(l l coat acrylic masonry
chen. Corner lot In Mid·
AKC REGISTERED Beegle pups . Pt .
ference . Note Vanam an ,
·wh it e
pa int
(Sherwin
bad
days,
2
car
garage &amp;
Pleasant.
W . Vo .
(304 )
dleport. $24,000.
Rutland . Ohio. Phone 7"2-2761 ,
Will i ams or equal) to the
storage,
corner
lot.
675· 4154 .
NEW TRI-LEVEL
following exterior areas of
1974 FORD 1/ • ton 4-wheel driVe
$11,200.00.
Boasting 3 bedrooms, 1112
the Me i gs county Court - WILL GIVEAWAY 3 kittens . Phone
lruck. 4 h.p .. Lock -out hub.
SUMMER OR WINTERhouse :
baths,
family room, office
WASIUNGTON (UP!) 985-4288.
33,000 miles . 1973 Jeep
This home has a beautlfu I
·Au of the front of the
and garage on one acre .
Ohio Democratic Party building facing Second Street
Wagoneer . A.C., P.S ., P.B.,
¥lew of the river. 1 floor
$41 ,000.
Nice .'' 1974 J;. ton truck , P.S.,
Chairman Paul Tipps Jr. in the V illage of Pomeroy .
plan has 3 bedrooms, bath,
LARGE - Want one of
Approximately 40 feet on the
P.B. (6U ) 9B5-355&lt; . Ho•o ld
basement , storage
says charges by the Internal West
those
special
large
side to what is known as
·Brewer, long Bottom . Ohio .
building
, garden, other
Revenue Service that he and the " New Addif i on ." AP · PARTS FOR 1971 Galaxie Ford for
bedrooms? This Is one and
MODEL - H Form·oll Tractor with
features.
$12,500.00.
proximatelv
25
feet
on
the
sole.
Phone
992-5858
.
his ex-wl!e, Judith, are guilty East side to what Is known as
3 olher ones. A good family '
hydraulic . Good condition . 1
ABOUT
18
ACRES ready
home with 2 baths and
of fraud in underpaying their the " New addit ion ." Also fo 1971 CHEVROlET STATION·
set two bottom dreg plows . I
for
st~bdlvislon · and
naturaJ
gas
furnace.
be included in this b id Is one
WAGON . 992-J.i7B
300·A Polomor linear. (614)
taxes are not true.
development in the VIllage
coat of Go l d paint to be ap .
$27,500.
843·2064.
late
e11enings
.
The IRS says Tipps and his plied to the Dome of the 1974 VEGA . 992-2n5.
of Pomeroy. JUST LOOK.
INVESTMENT - One 4
$28,500.00.
wife owe taxes of $90,530 and Me i gs County Courthouse . 1975 GRANADA, V-8, automatic, PICK YOUR own conning room apartment and a
work shall beg i n not more
IMMEDIATE
tomatoes . Also . green beans .
a fraud penalty of $47,311.
A C. , 2 door, 31 ,000 mdes , ex studio apt. Both with baths.
than 10 days after awa rdi!'\Q
Br
ing
contoiner.
Andrew
Cross
.
POSSESSION - Meigs
condition . $3 ,500.
Cellent
Just 5'1600.
. In a statement Friday, of contract, and completed
Letart
Folts
.
247·2852
.
school
district. Lovely 2
992-6303.
105 ACRES - Of nice
Tipps said the government within 30 calendar days ,
bedroom,
equipped kll·
weather permit ti ng . Penalty
HORSe
.
5
year
old
Gelding
.
hunling land lor $150.00 an
actuallr owes him a refund of beyond specified lime shall 1972 DODGE CHARGER . A.C. and
chen,
dining
R., part
992-3113.
acre. A good Investment.
many more options . $1.495 Call
$4 ,093 for the year In be $50.00 per day .
basement
with
garage.
3
MIDDLEPORT
992-SI69.
All b l ds must be ac ·
$16,500.00.
question, 1973.
companied by a Bond signed
bedroom frame home with
PONTIAC VENTURA V-8 ,
SOUTHERN
STYLE
Tipps, who has been head of by two Su.reties approved by 197b
bath, nat. gas heat ,
160
cu
.
in
.,
4
dr.
sedon.
P.B.,
HOME
Has
everything
.
the
county
Commiss
ioners,
fireplace In the living and
the party since January of in the amount of S2 ,QOO .OO, tor
P.S., auto transm ission . Heavy
F irst floor has lovely
two
car
garage.
$15,500.
duty suspension , 17,000 oduol
1975, filed a petition Friday the faithful performance of
equipped kitchen (house
Let Pomeroy . Landmark
NEW
LISTING
i s contract . " eoncl rett!rred
miles. Rolph~rd . 9"9-2820.
with a federal tax court th
wife's dream) , dining R. 2
to is a B idders Bond ac soften &amp; condition your
Reasonable 5 room home. 2
clainiing the IRS erred in its companying bid, which 1q73 PlYMOUTH SCAMP. 30.000 water and Co-op water
bedrooms, 2 modern baths,
bedrooms, nice bath ,
m iles. New rodiol tires . A .C.,
becomes a performance Bond
upper floor has 2 rentals for
findings.
IOfltnor,
Model
UC-XVI.
basement
with
new
gas
to
Contractor
rece i ving ·
P.S., 6 cyl. Like-new. Call
good income. $24,000.00.
The IRS statement said, "It award . A l l other bonds will be
Now Only
furnace . 2 porches, garage
949-2770.
OLDER
OME- 1'12 story
and carport. Want $17,000 .
·.,-~-,..--......,-::-:
is determined that aU or part returned to bidders after
frame, for less than the
1973 GMC 1/ , ton p~kup , 350
award of Contract .
BUILDING
LOT
:._
City
of the underpayment of tax ...
price of most new cars . In
All emptcyees shall be
·engine, outomatic. Also, 1971
Let us test your w1ter
water
and
electric
for the taxable year 1973 is covereel by Oh io' s Workmen's
good
condition.
3
Comaro . M i lo Hutch i sofT,
Free.
available . Only $2800.
Compensation . Yo\Jr risk
bedrooms, bath, 6 rooms In
Rutlond ~742 · 2306.
due to fraud ."
NEW
LISTING
17S
number shall be furn i shed in

Pomeroy Landmark

MONDAY , AUGUST2.!LI977
5.ui;-B1g Valley ., Brady Bunch 8; Mr. ~ogers
Neighborhood 70,33; Emergency One! 13; Mission:
Imposslble 15.
s ·Jil-Odd Couple 4; News 6 ; Fam ily Atfa1r 8; Electric
C:omoanv 20,33.
b.DO--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS ; ABC News 6 ; loom 20.
6:30--NBC News 3.4. 1S; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6;
CBS news 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20.

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

Worlo.s. Main Street, Po~roy,
Oh1o or phone 992· 3891 .

6, 13; Mov ie " Little House an till Pralrlt" f 1 Mov'"Thl Last Hunt" 10: ABC News 33.
12:011--Janakl 33.
12 :40-Tom&amp; 6,13.
1 , oo-Tom or ro-N 3,4.
I· 30-Mary Hartman 10.
1:SC}--News 13.

·•

·, :lU~NDil

\

'

'

1-!ERE, I{OU
GCTA
LETTER
', FROM
SPIKE ..

THUTTV '/EARS
AGO I SAID THEM
WORDS "I DO''

contract on a silver platter.
Yet, he refused to finesse

A Nebralka reader aslts If
the Stayman convention Will
invented in England In the
early 'SOs.
We have seen no evidence to
this effect. It Is purely 1111
American invention altboqll
numerous people other than
Sam Stayman have claimed it.
It Is•a migllty good convet~­
lion.
(For i c·opy of JACOBY
MODERN, Mncl $1 10: "Win It
Bridge, " clo lhia nowtpof&gt;*T, ·
P. 0. Box 489, Radio City S'-1/011,
Now York. N.Y. 10019)

�•

1-Tbe Oail)' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 29,1977

State fair drew
2.6 million

--- ~~;;;;;;..,-,-;,::;,:~.-ney ;;.ld"be--:
leu tlulll 30t woniiiOIIJ (DI" be nbjed to redadl011 by
the editor) alld miMI be 1lped wllb tile olpee's addreu. Name~ may be wltbbdd 11po11 pabllaolloa.
However, on request, IWilel will be cllaeloHd. Ldten
ohould be In good taste, addreulag luuea, IIOI per-

Hospital News

1

~--------------------------(

l

Area Deaths . !

I VETERANS MEMORIAL
.
I
I Saturday Admissions I Rebecca Ward, Pomeroy;
a son, was unintentionally
DONA YON W. BLAKE
Donavan W. Blak&amp;, 80, a omitted from the Beulah F.
Anna Hartenbach, Miner'
Daniels obituary In Sunday's
sville;
Neva Grimm, retired Rt . 2, Crown City, Times.Sentinel.
sonallllea.
1
S&amp;rvlcn for
farmer,
died
at
2:
30
a
.
m.
! Pomeroy; Mary Hackney, Sunday In the Pike COunty
/Ws. Daniels are slahld for 1
1 Racine; Teresa Riffle, Hospital In Waverly . He had p . m. Tuesday af the Waugh·
Ida Marie Sullivan to BIUy
OOLUMBUS (UPI) -In 12 the Miss Ohio State Fair title
1 Minersville; William been In falling health for five Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with
Rev.
Alfred
Holley
ot
H.
Sullivan,
parcels,
years . He was born Nov. 26,
days, the longest Ohio State Saturday in the Queen of
1 Williams, Racine.
·
Burial
will
~
In
flclaflng
.
1896
In
Ohio
Twp_,
son
of
the
Fair in hist"'7 with features Queen Pageant in a field or 31
I
Saturday Discharges - late Alfonso and Elltabeth Good Hope Cemetery . SIIUsbuey.
Wendelyn Sue Wooten to
like the Ringling Bros. and queens. She was crowned by
I Jeffrey Stone, Jesse Swan, Pollock Blake.
VlsltatiM will be held at the
Daan
R. Wooten, ' divorce
funeral
home
from
.4
to
9
p.
m.
Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus and Holly Sttefanyk, the 1976
I Floyd Bush. Leona Henaley,
He was preceded In -th
today
.
by
two
brothers
and
was
the
decree,
Salem.
Bob Hope, attracted just over State Fair Queen, in
, Roger Klein, Kethel Hatfield.
last
of
his
fam11y
.
Survivors
Henry
E. Bahr, Eileen
grandstand ceremonies.
2.6 million visiU!rs.
Sunday Admissions - Tina Include several cousins.
Status of drive explained
lEE
BEll
Bahr
to
Greenup
Miss Gilbert, daughter or
SUnday, the last day of the
Pierce, Syracuse, Anna
In hi s earlier years, Mr.
Lee Bell. 88. Coal Grove,
Reclamation
Service,
1.48
fair, officials said 201,000 Mrs. Maxine Gilbert, is in- Dear Sir :
Hawk, Albany ; Jo . Ann Blake attended the Swan died Saturday evening In the
Creek
and
Mt.
Zion
Churches.
volved
with
varsity
The American Federation or State, County MD Municipal Wears, Pomeroy; MOdred
pe~le passed through tbe
Lawrence Countv Gef'leral acre, Chester.
cheerleading and girls' track, Employees (AFSCME), AFL-CIO and the employees of Holzer Hart, Racine ; Michael He was a past mas1er of the Hospital ending an e~tended
Henry E. Bahr, EUeen
turnstiles.
Crown City Masonic Lodge
·
Bahr
to Howard Neal Bahr,
In 1976, an 11-day mixed churus and Future Medical Center began an organizing drive Ill obtain union Priddy . Rutland; Lui a and member of Lafayette illness.
A native of Lawrence
exposition drew 2.3 million Homemakers of America.
recognition in September ~f 1976.
Phillips, Pomeroy; Fred Post 27rAmerlca,n Legion , t-lls County, he was a retired Kimberly Lynn Bahr, 10
The runnersup . in order
AFSCME signed the majority of employees on linion .Cunningham. East Liver- ,father donated land · and palnfer. Survivors Include his acrea, Chester:
viewers. Officials had h~ed
bulld .the Mt. Zion wife, Mabel; four sons, Frank
Freda Middleswart, aftoo; .as many as 2.75 million were.Terri Mason, Miss Ohio authorization cards and requested that Hl!lzer Medical Center pool; Doris Haynes, helped
Church
.
Arthur Bell. Gallipolis; fidavit, Lebanon.
th1s year.
•
Holstein; Marci Haulk, Miss recognize the "union. Holzer ref)ISed.
•
·
•
Pomeroy ; Robert Moore,
Funeral services will be Clarence, As~land,
Ohio
County
and
Independent
AFSCME
petitioned
the
National
Labor
Relations
B&lt;iard
George
E.
Bowers,
Willa
Syracuse
;
Lee
Shepherd,
held at 11 a. m. Wednesday Howard, Ironton, and Ear of
Higher tiCket charges, a 10
from the Waugh .Halley-Wood Beckley , W, Va .; three Bowers to George E. Booth,
per cent boost in the Fair; Marijo DeRamo, Miss (NLRB) f&lt;r an election to determine if the employees wanted Cleveland.
Home with Rev . daughters , Eloise Spain , Dorothy H. Booth, parcels, •
Sunday Discharges - Mina Funeral
concession rentals, new Junior Achievement; and AFSCME to represent htem. Holzer challenged the petitien.
Alfred
Holley
offlclatln? .
,
Ky .:
Betty
Hearings were scheduled in Gallipolis by the NLRB to Hart, Daisy Taylor, Martha Burial will follow. 1n Ashland
parking tickets and service Rebecca Lynn White, Miss
Hamrick, San Rosa, Calif ., Scipio.
determine the scope of the bargaining unit on February 22, 23, Bailey.
Ridgelawn Cemetery In and Carol Bryant, Ironton.
charges on passes boosted the Ohio State VICA.
Huntington . Frl~ds may call
March
15,16andconcluded
en
March
29,
1977.
Funeral services will be
1977 income.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
at
the funeral home from 6 to held at 1 p.m. Wednesday
As
the
campaign
heated
and
the
date
for
an
election
Holzer Medical Center
While fair officials wonder
Meigs Athletic Boosters
9 p. m. Tuesday. Masonic from Phillips F"neral Home
approached, the union received reports from the organizing
il they &amp;re in the red ink
(Discharges, Aug. %61
services will be held by with Rev , JenninSJs Deeds will meet at the high school,
committee
and from the employees, which led the union to
AT
65,
NOT
68
Nancy Angles, Evalene Crown City ·Lodge at 7:30 p. and Rev. Clarence Corn of- 7:30 Tuesday.
again, coocessionaires "say
WASHll'IGTON (UPI ) believe there was a basis for filing unfair labor charges Corbin, Kathy Cremeans, m. Tuesday .
ficiating . Burial will follow In
they are making money and
Zoar Cemetery . VIs itation
HEW
Secretary
Joseph
against
Holzer.
.
beving the best-&lt;!ver sales,"
Elaine Cruise, Gloria Davies,
will
be held at the funeral
ASK TOWED
The
union
rued
the
uofair
labor
charges
with
the
NLRB,
an
Califano
disagrees
with
FRED J. HILl
Fair Manager John Evans
Sylvia Day, Wretha Finley,
home
from 6 to 10 p.m.
A
marriage
license was
Commerce
Secretary
Juanita
agency
with
the
.
function
or
protecting
impartial
federal
ALBANY - Fred J . Hill, Tuesday. ·
Goldie
Fraley,
Brian
said Saturday.
1
issued
to
Basil
Lawrence
114.
of
Albanr·
tormerly
of
employees'
rights
Kreps'
proposal
last
month
to
Ill
engage
or
not
to
engsge
in
activities
Bonny Gilbert, a 16-yearFrederick, Curtis Fauks, Jackson Coun y. '/'1. Va .: died
Haynes,
~.
Pomeroy,
and
RALPH
CARMEN
concerning
their
withhold
full
Social
Security
w&lt;rking
conditions,
including
the
right
of
old Greenville girl wbo was
Samuel Gibbs, Jr., RandaU Thursday afternoon In
Ralph
R.
Carmen,
77,
of
Doris
Jean
Haynes,
44,
the Miss Chick Queen, wen benefits until recipients employees to vote for or against having a union represent Green, Jeffrey Halley, Ed- Veterans Memorial Hospital, Minersville, died Sunday at
reach age 68.
them.
ward Hayes, Barbsra Hill, Pomeroy. A veteran of World O'Bieness Hospital in Athens . Pomeroy.
The NLRB issued a complaint againat Holzer on two union Kevin Humphreys, Kate War I. he was a refired Born Dec. 11, 1899, he was the
"I absolutely don't agree
farmer.a son of the I ale John son of the late Jacob and RE11JRNS FAVOR
with that," said Califano in
charges. Holzer then filed a charge against the union and the Knotts, Sharon Lewis, N.
MASON DR. IN
and Lusetta Ward Hill. His
WASHINGTON (UPII
NLRB issued a complaint against the union. Hearings have Eleanore Markley, Edna wlfe:"--tena Sayre Hill , Florence Davis Carmen. He
an interview scheduled for
Now Thru Tuesday
is survived by a sister , President Carter's mother,
radio broadcast Sept. 26. A been scheduled in all three of these charges. An additional Menshouse, Ruth Northup, precedetl him In death .
Blanche Saum.
·
Sur-viving are three sons,
uMiss Lillian.'' will reCeive
"THE OTHER
transcript of the interview · charge filed by the union has been appealed by the union to tbe Lawrence Pistore, Marta
Grave side services will be
Hill, Baden, Pa. : Ar· Tuesday at 1 p .m . at Miners - the vice president of
SIDE OF THE
was distributed this weekend NLRB in Washington D. C. The union .will carry the charges Prose, Madeline Rees, John
nold , Aliquippa, Pa.: and ville Hill Cemetery. Ewing Bangladesh as a visitor at her ;
through and will defend against the charges made by Holzer. Forrest Roach, Marion Harold,
by the American Association
MOUNTAIN"
Albany :
four Funer·a l Home ls In charge of
borne in Plains, Ga., today. •
The employees or Holzer have asked AFSCME to represent Roberts, Martha Rose, Leslie daughters . Mrs . Isabelle arrangements.
of Retired Persons.
Also ·
There will be
Campbell,
AliqUippa
:
/Ws.
The - visit apparently ::
them
and
theunien
fully
intends
to
provide
that
representation
"We should not break our
Henry Fonda
Rowland, Peggy Rucker, Hazel Larrick, Baden ; Mrs. no calling hours.
stemmed
from Mrs. Carter's
promise to the American
and to WCI"k toward recognition or the union.
Betty Saltsman , Charles Cecelia Freshour , Sandyville,
Teren&lt;:e Hill
MRS.
ALMA
HOUCK
work
as
a Peace Corps
AFSCME is the largest .union in the nation representing Shirley Sr., Kimberly Slone, and Mrs. Alvene Chapman,
workers that · they will be
in.
Mrs
.
Alma
!Arthurs)
volunteer
in
India in the late
private hospital employees and tbe largest public employee Betty Smith, Goldie Swick, Reedy: a brother. Mark Hill, Houck, 56, w_lfe of former
permitted to retire at 65 if
_ "MY NAME
they so choose under- the
union in the nation, with over 750,1100 members. The District 78 Deborah "Taylor, Glenda Ripley, W. Va .; two sisters, Gallla County resident. 19110&amp;, a Bangladesh Embassy '
M.rs. Verna Staats. Akron and
IS NOBODY"
servicing council fCI" eastern and southeastern Ohio is tbe Townsend.
current-system;"-be-said.
Raymond E. Houck lson of spokesman said.
Mrs . Lou
Arrowsmith , Jasper Houck. Garfield,
The spokesman said Vice
largest AFSCME council in the state of Ohio.
Columbus ; 28 grandchlldrren Ave.) died Wednesday at
(Births Aug. 261
President
Abdus Sattar, a
and
16
great-g
randchildren.
-Fred Haynes, Representative, rlistrict 78.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Elliott, Funeral services were held at Mercy Hospital in Ports- former justice of Pakistan's
mouth, Ohio from a short
a daughter, Gallipolis.
2 p. m. Sunday at Longv iew illness of 12 days. She was
SUPreme court, would Dy
1Discharges Aug. %71
United Methodist Church buried Friday at South from Washington to Albany,
POOLCWSING
Curtis Baisden, Barbara near Evans, W. Va., with the Webster, Ohio. She left one Ga., and drive to Plains. •
OPTOMETRIST
SYRACUSE- London Pool
Rev . · Gerald Sayre of - son. Phil : daughter·fn.law.
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 {CLOSE
Beegle, Saylor Berridge, ficiating
in Syracuse will be closed this
. Burial was In the
Sattar was in Washington for
Kevin Boyles, Wavie Circle, church cemetery. The Casto Ellen, and a grandson, Brad, · the weekend after attending a
AT NOON ON THURS.l- EAST COURT
week but will open Saturday,
Miami, .Fla .
.
Hollis Clark, Florence Coon, Funeral Ho.m e at · Evans was of Attending
ST., POME.ROY.'
Sunday and Monday, Sept. 3,
the funeral and
law cenference in Winnipeg,
Rhonda Doss, Minnie Hale, in charge .
4, and 5.
·
calling at the funeral home at
Canada.
Dora Hash, Julie Kennedy,
SciotoviUe were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Myers. Mr. and
Wanita Kosier, Paul Martin,
MRS. HELEN MURPHY
Survivors Include her .
Mrs.
Jerry Myers, Roscoe
Teresa McCarty, Roberta
Mrs. Helen Murphy, 70, Houck, Roma Baker, Faye husband, Roy H. Pooler, Rt.
· McWilliams, Elmer Miller, Akron. formerly of Vinton, Reese, Mr. and /Ws. Floyd J, Pomeroy i two daughters.
died unexpectedly Sunday Clary and Clar~nce Clary, Jean Sexton, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Charles Murray, Grace afternoon
at her ~ome . She
and Phyllis Reed of ReedPratt, Betty Queen, Rupert was born March 20, 1907, In Mr . and Mrs. John Mitchell, sville;
a son, Emerson L.
Wall~ce
Houck,
Ha1ei
Sayre, Ethel Sebring, Carol Vinton. daughter of the late Thlvener and Mr . and Mrs. Pooler, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ; nine
Sisson, Mary Wears, Mrs. lincoln and Nettle Walters Leslie Clary of Flor ida . grandchildren ; three
McGhee. She married George Buford Houck, Ironton, and brothers. Edwin E. Bailey,
BEST FRIEND May
Lee Williams and son.
DETROIT (UP!) -Mark
Murphy who d led in 1962.
Thomas
Houck, Alliance; Autmer A. Bailey,
tB111hs, Aug. %'7)
Survivors include two sons, Mr's .
"The
Bird"
Fidryich,
a
Fort Ritchie, Fla.. and
Catherine
Davis
and
Be His MOTHERMr . and Mrs . Kirk George of Akron , Robert · P~rslnger, Columbus. Mae Howard
classic victim of the
C.
Bailey,
IBob)
Murphy
of
Akron.
Chevalier,
a
.
daughter,
Jacksonville
,
Fla
.,
and
Raymond
and
his
family
"Sophomore Jinx," has .beim
.s even grandchildren , a
·sever
atnieces
and
nephews.
Chester;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ray
reside
at
1220,
21th
St.,
Ports.
sent home by the Detroit
brother. Walter:.._McGhee of
· She was 'a member of the
Chaplljsn, a daughter, San Bernardlno;Callf., .and a · mouth. Ohio, 45662.
Tigers in hopes rest will cure
MI. Herman E·UB Church.
.,
Ina Harmon pf
Funeral services will be held
the tendonitis in his right Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Earl half-sister,
Cedarville.
Ar:rangements ·
Thomas,
a
daughter,
Rio
at
10 a. m; Tuesday from the
ELSIE
J.
POOLER
'a.J.'Til.
will be announced by the
Ewing Funeral Home with
Elsie
J
.
Pooler,
65,
dl~
Grande;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Martin
" A knee injury and a sore
McCoy·Moof-e Funeral Home Sunday morning In Veterans Rev . James Leach cif.
Reynolds, a son, Pt. in Vinton .
right arm have left the future
Memorial Hospllal. She was flclallng . '
Pleasani; Mr. · and Mrs.
of one or baseball's brightest
Burial will be In Mt. Her·
preceded In death by her
Vincent Knight, a daughter,
parents. Herbert and Francis man Cemetery. Calling hours
yoitng stars in doubt.
BEULAH OANIELS
Young Bailey, and an Infant will be held anytime today at
.
The
name
of
Gary
Fidrych, 23, and the Tigers Pomeroy.
Ewings.
sister .
Treadway
of
Point
Pleasant,
(Discharges
Aug.
%81
hope to dispel those doubts
A COLLEGE
Denver Co·x,
Victor
with a rookie league test after
STUDENT'S BEST
the two months of complete George, June Hubbard, Ethel
Nicholas, Patricia Scites,
arm rest.
FRIEND IS HIS
"We hope that after this Mrs. Mark Silcott and son,
rest," · Tiger
General Edna Thompson , Wilma
Manager Jim campbell said Wiseman.
(BIJ1hs Aug. 281
Sund!!y, "Mark will be able Ill
Mr.
and
Mrs. James Jones,
join our Florida lnatructional.
League team at St. a son, Wellston.
Petersburg, perhaps in late
PLEASANT VALLEY
Visit our Housewares Department on the 1st floor for Freezer Bags and Boxes ..
October ."
DISCHARGES
- Mrs.
11 lt's like the season's over
Pressure
Cookers . Strainers - Foley Foad Mills • Funnels • Food Presses - Apple
That's why Farmer's Bank of Pomeroy is introducing
Charles Stewart, Arbuckle;
Corers and Slicers - Jelly Kettles· Regular Conners. Timers. Corn Cutters. Paring
for
him,"
·
Manager
Ralph
FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS for students.
Knives- and many ather items you'll need to mike your canning.and freezing easier
Houk said. "We told
to go Mrs. James Long, Apple.
and more enioyabla.
Grove;
Lyle
McCormick,
borne, rest and do aU the
It's simple.
thing1he normally does when~ Point Pleasant; Gwendolyn
the ·ason's over, but don't Legg, Ravenswood; Cora
mak any motions - like . Bonecutter, Point Pleasant;
No strings attached.
throwing
a
baseball . Adam McClure, Letart;,
•
Hopefully, he'll be able to Steven Derenberger, Hen·
pitch a game in the Florida derson; Jeffrey Clark, Point
If you are a full-t.ime college or vocational student, (here
Ifistructional League in late · Pleasant; Mrs. Robert
at home, or anywhere) we'll give you a free checking
Masson, Reedaville; Joseph
October."
Oldaker,
II, Hartford;- Ralph
account, with no service charge. We'll even give you your
Fidrych, whose mound
Willett,
Cheshire; Shane
antics and boyish enthusiasm
first 50 personalized checks free.
·
Glenn,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs.
made him the biggest single
Clarence
Vickers,
Point
draw in baseball history in
Pleasant;
Harold
Bright,
1976, compiled a 19-9 record
and 2.34 earned run average Point Pleasant; Mrs. Edith
that got him voted Rookie or Simpkins, Point Pleasant;
the Year. His ERA was tops Mrs. L. R. Slmpkina, West
Columbia;
Mrs. Ruth
among starters.
Daugherty,
Gallipolis;
But his 1977 statistics will
Hubert
Friend,
Hom~wn,
show a 6-4 recCI"d and 2.89
·.·~
W.
Va.;
Ransom
Kelly, ArERA for 11 starts.
buckle;
Mrs.
Ernest
CliU, Sr.,
"The Bird" was grounded
Point
Pleasant';
Mrs.
WIUiam
first by a knee injury, which
Marshall,
Mason;
Jesse
required surgery March 31
and delayed his season's An~erson, Vinton; Mrs.
debut until May 'ZI. He tore Calvin Wright, Leon; Mrs.
cartilage in his left knee Olarles Holley, Ashton; Mrs.
shagging Dy balls on March George Clark, Gallipolis;
Charles Sphenson, Point
10 during spring training.
Fidrych removed himself Pleasant; James Simpkins,.
after making 15 pitches in a West Co.lumbia; Barbara ,
game against the Toronto Demesderrer, Mason;
Blue Jays July 12. Rest and Georgina Van Meter, Mason;
medication have failed to Mrs. Dallas stewart, Letart;
A Farmer's Bank free student checking account will
noticeably improve his cendi- David Gilbert, Bidwelh Mary
ticm.
'- Long, GaUipoliB.
save you money, help you keep track of your pennies and
BIRTHS- A son to Mr. and
"He couldn't get ready that
keep you in touch with your own bank at home.
Mrs.
Thoinas Roush, Hartquick to pitch much before
ford;
a
daughter to Mr. and
the end of the season/' Houk
Mrs
..
Harold
Taylor, Leon,
said, "so we decided it was
and a daughter to Mr. and
best to rest him."
Mrs. ctiarles Fletcher,
Fraziers Bottom.

l

Transfers

Pickel
lines
were
established at all ochools in
the Meigs LOcal School
District Tuesday morning as
teachers of the &lt;Wtrlct moved
into the first day of a strike.
Classes normally would
have opened for the first day
or tbe new school year this
morning. However, teachers
of the Meigs Local Teachers
Association voted Monday to

go on strike.
District Supt. Charles
Dowler has declared that
ochools or the district are
officially opened. He said that
some teachers are at . their
posts, that some school buses
made runa this morning and
that there are some students

in the buildings.
All of the principals of the
buildings wtre at their posts,

Dowler said.
The district's board of
education meeting Monday
night heard Dowler review
the dispute for Mrs. Robert
Buck and Mrs. Allen Downie
who appeared before the
board.
The hoard then _ met in

Morris,
director
of
curriculum; Dwight Goins,
administrative assistant ;
Carson Crow. representing
the county prosecutor's ofrice; Mark Foley and Ted
Bibler of the Ohio Education
Association ; Charles Downie.
Rita Slavin, Jack Slavin,
executive session until about John
Redovian, David
10 p. m. From 10 :30 p.m. to Bowen,
Don
Dixon,
I :30 a. m., Dowler, Dan representing local teachers,

•

Kr.:

WILDUFE CONSERVATION • '- Olairmen for
"Meigs Countians for Wildlife Conaervation" reviewed
their program for the evening Monday night in a meeting
at the new Coonhunters Clubhouse to organize a door-todoor campaign to inform voters or the proposed
amendment to the Ohio Constitution that would ban the

had arm

CANNING· AND FREEZING SUPPLIES

tor a f'ree 9tvdent
Check '':'9 account

Farmers-

POMEROY. OHIO
$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor .
·Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatiOn

NOW YOU KNOW
Although movies show
bankers jumping out Wall
Street windows, the suicide
rate in tbe United States did
not increase during the Great
Depression; it remained the
same as in preVious years.

AIDME!II CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 144
Mulberry Ave.; at 6:10 p. m.
Sunday for Dotla Haynea whO
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where abe
was admitted.

PAYS

LITER

'ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
.
'

i

'

"

~~ ~

.,..

o chec.k'ooo\(

I·

recession.

Commerce analyist Feliks
Tanun was hesitant to make
a gloomy forecast ror the
economy. But he said it was
"definitely an interruption Ill
the early trend or strong
growth ·the economy experienced last winter and
Another analyst said before
the.July statistics were made

J/lijV;;;;;==:'''''':·;,;=:•::=,,i,;''''''jj;i;~;l
»

By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The government's barometer
of future economic activity
fell 0.2 per cent for the third
consecutive month in July,
the Commerce Department
said today. That could signal
a drab job and production
outlook for the remainder of
197'1.
The three straight declines
in the Index of Leading
Indicators was the longest
since the depths or the 1974-73

spring."

He

YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR

rum

IS

leg-hold trap. Voters are asked to vote "no" on Issue Two
if they want to keep trapping. Left to right, Grant Young,
county chainnan; Dan Sayre, fund raising chairman;
Ray Karr, political action chairrrodll; Richard Coleman,
secretary-treasurer; Tom Karr, volunteer, and special
interest groups, l\Dd Greg Bailey, media.

By Greg BaDey
The Meigs Countians for
Wildlife Conservation in a
special meeting Monday
night at the new Coonhunters
Clubhouse organized a door.to-door campaign against the
proposed amendment to' the
Ohio Constitution that would
ban the leghold trap.
-A special guest of the
evening was Stale Senator
Oakley Collins who was
warmly welcomed by the
large crowd or approximately
175 concerned sportsmen,
SENATOR OAKLEY COLIJNS, State Senator, attended the meeting Monday night held
· farmers, and wildlife lovers. · by the Meigs Countians for Wildlife Conservation. CoUins assured everyone he would "do all
Grant Young, Meigs
he could" to help the MCWC . Approximately 175 concerned sportsmen, farmers, and wilflife
County chainnan for the
lovers attended.
·
Ohioans for WUdllfe· Conservation,
welcomed
..
~Weryone.
stressed that .
Farm
Bureau
also
has enSenator Collins expressed trolling forbearers. Collins ·
the battle on the November
dorsed
keepiiig
tlie
leg·hold
ballot is an emotional one,
hls appreciation for ·being added that the · Division
trap
legal.
invited to the meeting and people are professionals Who
anc! that the goal or the
In
other
remarks
Young
assured everyone present know what they are doing.
MCWC is to get the "real
Chairmen reports were
facts" across to the voters. indicated approximately 21 that he would do all he could
It was reported and well- percent of the screened to help the MCWC in their given, and Ray Karr ,
received, that the Ohio signatures on the petition to fight. He said the Department chairman of the political
Veterinarians Association put the issue on the ballot of Natural Resources, action rommittee, drew up
has adopted a resolution In were invalid. It was also Division of Wildlife, believes plans and got volunteers to
respective
support of the leg-hold trap as pointed out thai trappers the leg·hold trap Is the most . scan their
precincts.
must
now
check
their
traps
effective wildlife
an effective means or conserving wildlife. The Ohio every 24 hours instead of 30. management tool in con-

MAKE . ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Ths

en tine

Trap han
opposed
in Meigs

to rest

ACC~~NTI

The strike began alter the
board of education refuaed to
accept rna jority report or the
impasse panel which was
assembled to consider
problema between the board
or education and the teachers
association. However, it was
reported that the report of the
panel was not accepted in its
entirety by its three members.

teachers and that he would
report to the board or
education at a meeting
tonight.
Teachers at one school in
the district this morning
objected to a photograph
being taken of their picket
line. This is the second
consecutive fall that teachers
or th~ district have gone on
strike.
·

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28. No. 96

Economic barometer iJ
skid for third ·month

Fidrych

CHECkiNG

at

'

___.....

OY'S

Act . The teachers know that
discussed the problem.
No solution apparently was it is i)legallor them to strike
and yet they do so In open
reached.
Dowler stated today the defiance of the law."
Dowler said this morning
board or education believes
that a lair offer has been students reporting to school
made to the teachers on are being provided food, but
salary. Dowler further he added that it would be
better if such students
commented:
"So far, the board has brought lunches.
He said also that he would
declined to invoke the harsh
confer
further today wjth the
provisions of the Ferguson

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. August 30, 1977

._

A

•

eac ers p1c et1ng sc

Property

1!11

N. W. COMPTON. 0.0. ·

•

•

Meigs

ByUnlledPresslnternational
'"'
WASHINGTON- WATERGATE BURGLAR G. Gordon
Liddy. "has served long enough," and will go free Sept. 7 if he
pays a $40,000 fine - perhaps in installments - or takes a
pauper's oath.
.
Regienal parole commission~r Joseph A. Nardoza 111
Philadelphia sa!d Monday Liddy kept a club and pipe in his ceil
ror protection, but prison officials did not consider that or
Liddy's participation in a prison hunger strike serious enough
to recommend ~elaying his parole.
·
"I think he has served Ion~ enouldl." Nardoza said in a
telephone interview. "He has paid his debt to society. I
hone&amp;PY think he is going tQ be a good citizen when, he gets
out." Nordoza said Liddy had a "top rating" for parole.

NEW YORK-KINGS COUNTY HOSPITAL psychiatrists
reportedly have found"Son of Sam" susperl David Berkowitz
mentally competent to stand trial. WPIX-TV said Monday
night it had l!l8flled of the psychiatric findings, but did not
· il\dicate its spurce.
. ·
The psychll!trists' report was delivered Monday to state
&amp;tpreme Court Justice .Gerald Held in Brooklyn and will be
opened today at a hearing before Held. The pudgy 24-year-old
foniler postal worker, charged with the .44-caliber killings of
six people was ordered to be presnt at the hearing.
' Held will make a decisjon on whether Berkowitz is (it to
stand trial m the basis of the report. perenae attorney Mark
Jay Heller already baa said il Berkowitz is found competent to
be tried, he will advance a defense of inaamty.

public that # is going. to be
difficult
' for
the
administration Ill explain the
declining indicawrs."
Six or the IO indicators
available for July dropped,
while lour increased.
Prior to May, the index had
risen for three months in a
row after a drop in January
when cold weather brought
fuel shortages That curbed
activity and paralyzed some
regions of the country.
There have been several
bits of depressing economic
news this month, in~luding a
steep fall in the stock market
and an announcement Aug. 18
by Bethlehem Steel Corp. of
drastic reductions in capacity
and capital spending .
Some .private economists
and analyists on Wall Street
have even predicted a nearrecession early ne)!t year.
The
Commerce

Towboat
POINT PLEASANT - The
Producers, a towboat that
caught fire . while traveling
down the Kanawha River
Monday at about 78. m., sank
some 12 hours later.
The boat, owned by
Chaplin Towing Company of
Sardis, 0., was pushing seven
empty barges on a return trip
from the Marmet area when
it caught fire.
Crew members Richard
Kinney of New Matamoras,
Ohio and Mike Doyle, Jr. of
Gallipolis, said the fire broke

::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Reed appointed
to chairmanship ·

COLUMBUS - James A.
Duerk, director, Ohio
Department of Economic and
CommunitY Development,
has announced election of
ll!eodore T. Reed, Jr. of
Pomeroy as chairman of the
Ohio Development FinanCing
Commission and James Imes
as vice chainnan for the 197778 term.
WASHINGTON - ·PREsiDENT CARTER will tajte a
l}eed is president and
per1011al role in the accelerated search for a neogtlated Middle director of The Farmers
Ellt 10lution, accordirfg to diplomatic officials. The officials Bank and Savings Co.,
said Mondliy the fCI"eign ministers of Israel, Egypt, Syria and Pomeroy. He wa&amp; appointed
Jordan will cm1e to Washington "soon after the middle or to the commission in January
Sepiember" to meet the President and Secretary of SLate 1973. lmes is president of the
First tlational Bank or
Cyrus Vmce.
·
.
It hlld been planned that Vance would see the foreign Cambridge and was ap·
ministers aeP&amp;rately in New York dur(ng the U. N. General pointed to the commission in
August 1974.
· (Continued on page 10)
. l

Weather

out in the engine room of the the middle of the river. :·
boat which had a motor of
Kinney and Doyle said
about 400 horsepower. Marlin they, along with Chaplin,
Chaplin, owner or the towing struggled to entinguish the
compsny, · was serving as blaze but were Unable to put
· captain.
the fire out. The boat was
· The boat was In the vicinitY · built in 1927, but had unof Mile 17 or the river, which dergone renovations at
is near the area of the Gus vaijous timeS.
Douglass farm . when It
caught fire. The Leon
Volunteer Fire Department
was summoned but was
unable to battle the blaze due
to the fact the boat was out in
•

Elberfeld appointed Curate
Richard B. Elberfeld, Jr., will assume his duties in
grandson or the late Alfred. Missouri on Sept. 1.
Elberfeld, and son of Mr. and
Mr. Elberfeld graduated
Mrs. Richard E. Elberfeld of from the Virginia Theological
Hamilton, Ohio, has been Seminary and was ordained
appointed curate at St . . to the deaconate at St.
Peter's Epis&amp;lpal Church in Christopher's
Church,
Kansas City, Mo., after a Springfield, Va. He and his
summer or service in the U. wife, Katherine Ann, have
S. Air Force Reserve as been residing In Alexandria,
chaplain at the Homestead Va., for t,he past several
Air Base in Florida. Richard years.

Ohio Environmental District, has done a fine job of
Protection Agency making sure that your in·
(O.E .P.A.) will explain how terests
have
been
the Water Quality Planning
(Continued on page 10)
Program will affect you. As a
citizen and employee of the
Soil Conservation .Service, I Fire~mergency
have been involved with this
program for seven months to
help keep the proposed
program practical and
workable, while reaching the
clear water goal. And Roy
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Miller, secretary of the Meigs
Department
and
E-R
Squad
Soil and Water Conservation
answered five
alarms
Monday and Tuesday mor-.

The Ohio · Development
Financing Commission adPool will stay
ministers Ohio's two basic
finance programs for in• open afternoons .
dustry : the guaranteed loan
,program and industrial . The Middleport swimming
revenue bonds
pool will remain open, Mrs.
The com~lssion was Cherole Burdette, manager,
established to help emerging said today OJ) the days when
and expanding industriai school is in session; from 3 to
firms obtain growth capital 6 p.m. Saturday, Sunday and
and th·us increase em· · Monday it will be open from 1
ployment oppm'tunities llDd to 6 p. m. with Monday being
economic development the final day of pool
within the state. The ODFC is operation.
·
a bipartisan commission
Mrs.
Burdette
said
composed of seven members . progress reports on the
of the business and indusirial children who are enrolled in
community appointed by the swimming classes this
governor for seven year summer are at the pool for
terms.
interested parents.

A cold front moving into the
area . will bring showers,
thundershowers and high
humidity
today
and ·
tomorrow, temperatures to
remain warm. High today
and tomorro~ near 90 (32C),
overnight lows near 70.(21G.).

Public meeti.J:rg, airing of ·
school issues is proposed

.

Wednesday, 8 p. m., August
31, at the Meigs Agriculture
Service Center Conference
Room on the second floor of
the Farmers' Bank Building
(2nd street entrance) in
Pomeroy.
. A representative of the

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, a chance of
showers or thundershowers
Thursday and Friday and
fair and cooler Saturday.
Highs will be In lbe 80s or
near 90 Thursday and
Friday and In the upper 70s
or low 80s Saturday. Lows
wUI be In the 60s.

b~rns, . sinks

Public invited to become involved
in problems .of water quality here
ByBoydRulb
Conservation Service
Are you concerned about
present or future· water
quality of our streams in
Meigs County.
If so, you should atteQd the
upcoming public meeting on

July decline, the department
said, was the change in
sensitive prices, which is
based on the Wholesale Price
Index of 1 crude materials
excluding tood and feeds.
Other indicators that decreased last · month were
average workweek, ·layoff
rate, contracts and orders for
plant and equipment in 1972
dollars, new or·ders in 1972
dollars and building· permits.
The four that increased
were vendor performance,
change in total liquid assets,
stock prices and money
balance in 1972 dollars, the
department said.
In another important
economic development
today, the Federal Reserve
Board increased the cost or
the money it lends for the
first time since AprU, 1974.

Department said the July
indelt stood at 129.7 per cent
or the 1967 average,
compared with an upwardrevised 129.9 ·per cent lor
June.
The June figure was
revised from an originally
reported 0.6 per cent decline
to an 0.2 per cent drop from
May.
A major contributor to the

rescue.units
called 5 times

ning:

At 1: 10· p. in. Monday to
the Senior Citizens Center
for Carroll Tyler, who was ill,
and taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 4: I&amp; p.
m. to Chester where Charles
Spaun and Dave Hannum had
been injured In an accident;
taken to VMH; at 7:31 p. m. to
231 Mulberry Ave. ror David
Kesterson, who was ill, taken
to VMH; at 1:57 a. m. to the
county jail for . Pat Martin,
taken to VMH, and at 8:06 a.
m. Tuesday, the fire
department to Eva Hysell
home at Harrisonville where
a defective furnace had
caused a fire .causing damage
of about $1500.

An open letter.to Meigs Local School Board, Meigs
Local Teachers Association, and Citizens of Meigs
. Local School District.
After numerous conversations with residents of
Meigs Local School District, I would like to take this
opportunity to offer the foUowing suggestions and
observations concerning the present problems in
Meigs Local in the hope that an inunediate solution
could bemad·e to the school opening (?)situation.
I would like to challenge the Board of Education
· and ihe Meigs Local Teachers Association to conduct a
public meeting and answer questions which citizens of
the school district have in regard to the impasse which
exists. I would also like to challenge the citizens of the
district to attend such a meeting, "if it were held, and
express their opinions to the board and teachers.
School board, teachers and citizens are all local
people and we should certainly be able Ill discuss the
situation and reach an agreement which could be
accepted by aU .
Many sad situations are occurring and will
continue to' occur as long as this situation exists.
Monday night the Middleport Police Dispatcher
received many calls asking the same question, "Will
there be !jChool wmorrow?"
"How would you answer this? Of course, the only
answer was, "Yes, there will i"l school, but no teachers
will be avaUable."
To me this sounds rather ridiculous. After all,
school is where our children go to be taught by their
teachers. Without teachers, how do you have schooiJ
· The question or sports and other activities keeps
coming up. But, after all, school is supposed to be first
for education. There seems to be an interest in holding
extra-eurricular practices even though teachers are on
strike. But I haven't heard any suggestion of having a
history or math class in someone's home.:To me, it
should be no school, no extra-eurricular activities.
It seems as if the main issue now comes down to
the salary schedule
· . According to board members, the money \S Mt
available. While on the other hand, teachers contend
that it is.Someone'sfiguresevidently must be wrong! I
believe cttizena should be made aware of the
percentage or increase which was recommended by
the impasse panel and why it was recommended il the
inoney was not there to pay it. ·
In any negotiations, we all know that some
coocessions have to be made by both sides. If both
sides are willing w negotiate in good faith, !'in sure
both realize they will have to make some concessions.
For many years Meigs Local School District
operated very smoothly. It can once again, but citizens
of the district are going to have to make their wishes
known w the hoard and to the teachers.
This is not meant as criticism to either the board or
the teachers, only to express concern as a JX!blic
official ·and parent to what has and is happening in
Meigs Local. :- Fred Hoffman, MayCI", Village of
Middleport-.

•

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