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                  <text>ll-111e DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednesday , Aug. 31, 1m

Irish urged to end all violence By HELEN THOMAS
UPI ftlk Hvuae Reporter
W¥!HlNGTON ( UPI ) Presidrnt Carter, affirming a
U.S. policy of impartiality, is
pleading for an end · to the
bloodshed
in Northern
lr•land and promising to join
others
in · job-e reatin g
economic investments ooce
peace is established .
In an extraordinary policy
statement Tu es d ay,
prompted bY a group or
lawmakers of Irish heritage,
the President also urged all
Americans to refrain from
supporting groups involved in

the violence In Ulster.
He warned that violators of
American law in this regard
will be prosecuted .
The Chief Ex~ utive was
meeting
today
with
Transportati on Sec reta ry
Brock Adams to launch a
special appeal for motorists
to obey the 55-mile-an·hour
speed limit to cutdown traffi c
accidents over the Labor Day
weekend .
Carter also arranged to
meet with Chairma n At
t.nlman of llle House Ways
and Means Committee on his
fo rth coming tax r eform

proposals, and Rep. Parren will. command widespread
Mitchell; D-Md., head of the acceptance throughout both
congressional black caucus . part.'; of the commWI.ity /' he
The President's statement said, but added that the
on Ireland exPressed the hope United States has " no
" that all those engaged in intentioo of telling the parties
violence will renounce this how this might be achieved ."
co urse
and
commit
U a settlement is achieved ,
the ms elves to peaceful Carter said " the U.S. governpurswt of legitimate goals ." ment would be J)l'epared to
Car ter said American join witb others to see how
policy oo the issue has long add iti onal job-c reatin g
been one of impartl'atity , investment
could
be
" and that is how it will encouraged, to the benefit of
remaln."
all the people of Northern
" We support the establish· Ireland ."
ment of a form of government
White
House
Press
!n Northern .Ireland, which Secretary Jody Powell was
&amp;Sked why Carter wore a
·button during the St .
Patrick's Day para~e in the
campaign year which read
" Get the British Out of
years ,
particularly
in Ireland" if he believed in
preparing the field and neutrality.
Powell said someone
concession stand each day for
pinned the bution on Carter,
the upcoming games.
who was unaware of its
During the past year, the
message.
Employees Club received
The President had anothet
sanction to sponsor slow pitch
in his series of promotional
softball tournaments during
briefings on the new Panama
the month of June with
Canal treaties Tuesday and
I proceeds going to finance the
added two more powerful
little league tournament. Not
allies to his team favoring
enough teams entered the
ratification: former
1977 tournament so the event
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
was cancelled.
·
and Florida's Gov. Reubin
A spokesman added, "We
Askew.
apologize to the youngsters
Carter plans a quiet stay at
entering little league next
Camp David over the holiday
year but this action had to be
weekend to prime himself for
· taken ."
a heavy week ahead, with
Congress returning and 18
chiefs of state arriving for an
tax extravangza
treaty signing
ceremony Sept. 7.

KC tournament no more
Mounting financial losses
has led to the end of one of the
tri-county area ' s biggest
summer events, the Kyger
Creek little League Tour·
nament.
At a recent meeting of the
hoard of directors of the
Kyger Creek . Employees
Club, it was agreed to
discontinue $ponsorship of
the annual tournament. The
event has been held on the

Emcees named
for Yesteryear
observance
Four residents have been
selected to emcee the ·con·
tinual entertainment to be
featured during the ob·
servance of "Yesteryear" at
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy from II a.m. to II
p.m. on Sept. 17.
Serving throughout the day
will be Dan Smith, Racine ;
Joan Stewart, Rutland; Bill
Childs of Middleport, and
Alice Nease, of Route 3,
Pomeroy.
Among the entertainers
will be Jennifer and Jim
Sheets
performing
on
dulcimer, banjo, autoharp
and other instruments ; Doug
Circle and his Ranch Hands
featuring country and blue
gra0!5 music by Gary and
Crolyil Bauman, Brent
Patter59n, Harold Smith, and
Margaret Tuttle. Loretta
Beegle will dance The
Charleston, Francis Andrews
Band composed of Brian
Collins, Bill Thurston, Pa ul.
Andrews, Mary Wippel and
Andrews, the Senior Citizens
Chorus and Kitchen Band,
Bill stockwell, folk sing, the
Stringduster! and dancers,
and a tall ta'le contest.

diamond opposite the Kyger
Creek Power Plant the past
19 years.
According to an employees
club spokesman, the club felt
it could no longer stand the
financial losses that have
mounted in recent years. For
several years, the club has
depended on the profits from
Its concession stand to
fmance the tournament .
However, in recent years,
patronage has not been
sufficient to meet the costs of
the tournament.
The hoard expressed its
thanks to OVEC for the
assistance rendered those 19

Meigs
Property

Real estate
exemption
must be asked

Appeals

:

Area Deaths

1

the Holzer Medical Center .

He was bor-n J a n. 31. 1900 in
Mor.gan Twp., son of the rate
Wyatt and Sara Evans Miller .
He marr ied Jenn ie M il ler,
who survl vt!S . as do two
daught e r ~.
Mrs .
John
t Dorothy)
Rippey
of
Ga ll ipol is and Mrs. Hu rley
(Clar a) Borden of Bidwell ; a

Killin•
gs
set 0 f£
-

··

convene

court to

OiJ magnates
. d. guil y
oun
fi

.

of price fixes

Now You Know

Meigs Co. Branch

..-1'7WSl

F'- Sf:IC

QUALITY•••

FOR LESS•••
THAN YOU DO AT

BAKER'S
FINE FURNITURE

Morgan.Belhel
Cemetery.
VIsitation will be held at the

rurwr-"1home from 7 to 9 p. m .

Thursday.

Alfred

· Social Notes

.

h y Phone
-

I

and one great.grandchHd.
He was a member of the
Morgan-Bethel Church .
Funeral &amp;ervices wilt be
conducted at l p. m. Friday
from
the McCoy -moore
Funeral Home in VInton with
Rev . Vance Watson of .
ficiatlng . Buritll will be in

Mille-r , Sr., 71 , Bidwell , a
retired
e mployee
of
CnlltiLothe State Hospitat.
died at S: JO p. m. Monday In

•

:Notices, local bnefs

.
I
son . Scott Miller. Jr- .•
Springfield, Ohio; four grand·

SCOTTW. MILLER
BIDWELL - Sco11 W illiam

Sunday School attendance
on August 28 was 47. Offering
was $26.61. Worship services
were held at 10:45 with the
Rev. Thomas speaking on

"Buried Treasures 11 from

The Meigs Hlg)I School a.m. untU 10 p.m. on both
Individuals
or
Band Boosters bave set up days.
businesses
desiring
to
mike
work schedules at the two
football field refreshment contributions may call 992·
stands for painting and 7349 or 992-7597.
repairing of the facilities. The
RACINE - The Southern
sessions will be held at 6 p.m.
Local
School District Board
Friday night, and at 10 a .m.
of Education will meet tn
Saturday morning,
The food booth at tbe Meigs ~ial session at 7 p.m.
County Fair was profitable, it Thursday in the school
was reported, and thanka cafeteria.
have been enended to those
A hymn sing will be held at
who donated, Royal Crown
the
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Bottling Co., Holsum Bakery,
Church
starting at 7:30 p.m.
D and D Meats, Rutland
All singers are
Saturday.
Furniture; Midland Grocery,
'
invited,
Leland
. Haley ,
Rich Valley Dairy, David
palltor,
Invites
the
public.
.
Bumgardner, and to the
Meigs County Fair Board for
The sixth annual · ·wood
its cooperation.
Family Reunion will be held
Sunday, Sept. 11, at Forest
The Meigs County React
Acres Park with a picnic
team in cooperallon with the
lunch to be held at noon.
American
Truckers
Assoclallon wiU hold a safety
break Sunday and Monday on
The Orange Township
the Route 7 bypass north of Trustees will meet Tuesday,
Rt. 124. Free coffee and soft Sept. 6 at 8 p.m. instead of
drinks will be given to Monday due to Labor Day,
motorists. The safety break Nina Robinson,
Cl~rk,
will be in operation from 6
reported.

Matt. 13:3f.37. The choir sang
"The Love of God" as a
~i.al number. Attendance
at this service was 34.
~ttendance at the Cluster
Hy~n Sing on Saturday
evemng here was 'l/. Chur·
ches represented were
Alfred,TuppersPlaUIS,South
Bethel and North Bethel. The
next hymn sing will be at the
South Bethel Church on
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday evening, Sept. 24.
Lucille
ADMITTED The
Alfred
Church
Wise
,
Rutland;
William
Homecoming will be held
Sept. 18 with the " United George, Cheshire; Bessie
Harmo~izers" pi Newport as Stitt, Racine ; Unda Lou Dye,
guest smgers. Other cluster Letart, W. Va.; Dana
and home talent will be Douglas, Poineroy; Clarence
pr~. ~on_e is welcome. Hughes, Harttord; Ellen
The ill 111.,~ community Stewart, Gallipolis; Sally
are_ the . fouowmg: Martha Sauvage, Racine ; George
Elliott m Holzer Medica) Conde, Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - Frank
Center; Juanita Swartz,
Westfall
, Charles Snider,
Camden Clark; Robert
•
Pullins, Veterans Memorial;
Jimmy Brooks, Parker·
sburg; and Glenna Flanders
Grimm
at
O'Bienness
Hospital, Athens. Hazel Biggs
By Mrs. FraDclll Morrta
of nearby area is in Marietta
A former pastor of the First
Memorial Hospital.
Baptist Church, Rev . and
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Bikacsan and
Mrs. Arthur Atherton have 'daughter, . Sharon, of New
been Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brighton , Pennsylvania ,
Vineyard and son and Mr. called on friends in Racine,
and Mrs. Chas. Barr, all of Friday night and Saturday,
Belpre, and Mr. and Mrs. August 19 and 20, enroute
Robert Duncan of Darwin. home tfrom Athens, ·Ten·
_ Russell Findling and nessee, where they visited
Charles . Wo.ode assisted their SQns. Miss Vera Beegle
Arthur Atherton in digging entertained them with a
his potatoes last week.
dinner Friday evenihg. Rev.
The Swartz family reunion and Mrs. Bikacsan spent
was held in the Woode grove, Friday night with Mrs.
Sunday, August 28 with an Gretta Simpson and Sharon
attendance of 33. .

By JUDI HASSSON
HACKETTSTOWN, N.J .
(UP!) - Authorlties say
Emile
Pierre
Benoist
apparenly went on a shooting
spree killing six persons and
taking his own life after an
upsetting telephone
conversation.
Police said Tuesday they
probably will never know for
Virgie Hobstetter, Robert
certain why the ex-Marine
Moore, Joan Wears,' Myrtle
walked to a nearby railroad
Wilson, Carol Coleman,
bed last Friday and killed
Kathryn O'Connor;
himself after shooting down
six. persons as they !;trolled,
PLEASANT VALLEY
jogged or motorbiked near
Ida
DISCHARGES
his home.
Warbaugh,
Buffalo;
Mrs.
But
James
Courter,
Roger May, Bidwell ; Thomas
assistant . prosecutor of
Huddleston·, Point Pleasant;
Warren County, said police
Mrs. Jimmy Hughes, Ashton ;
believe that Benoist had a
Dennis
Craig, Buffalo; and
telephone conversation about
Norman Henry, Henderl!Qn.
a "private rosiness ril.atter"
shortly before he left his
family's hmne armed with a
.4kaliber rifle.
"There doesn't appear to
was an . overnight guest of
be a motive in the traditional
Lois Bailey. Mrs. Bikacsan
sense," Courter said, at a
showed pictures of their trip
news conference called to
to Hawaii. A dinner was
discuss police efforts to
served
in their honor 0n
explain the factors behind tbe
Saturday
at the Simpson
shootings.
home.
Others
present were
However, Courter said an
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
autopsy revealed that Benoist
Vera Beegle, Mary Ann
had a high content of alcohol
Findley a nd Lillian Hayman.
in his bloodstream and
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sayre
authorities were awaiting the
spent a vacation at Myrtle
results of further tests to
Beach, S. C. Enroute home
determine if he had been
they
spent a couple of days
using drugs.
with Mr. and Mrs. Dean
"I don't think anyone will
Sayre at Harrisburg, Pa. .
really know why," Courter
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre
said .. " Perhaps the reason he
and Brian of J ackaon spent a
did this died with him." The
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
prosecutor said no diary or
Herbert
Sayre. Other guestS .
any notes were found · to
Sunday
were
Mr. and Mrs.
explain a motivation.
the annual Sunday School
Buck
Rogers
of Columbus
Friends and neighbors said
picni~atFort Meigs at 6 p. m.•
and Mr. and Mrs. Sid Car·
that Benoist had been disMrs . Jennie Ward of
penter of Weljsville.
tressed and angry because of .
sister of Mrs. Eva
Columbus,
Bill McKenzie of Gallipolis
the slow disposition of an
Attendance at the Free
spent Siulday afternoon with
. automobile insurance claim, Methodist Church on August Robson, fell . at the Meigs
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
which left him without a car. 28 was ·76. Choir ·members County Fair and is a patient
at Veterans
Memorial
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre
present were 15. Mr. and Mrs. Hospital.
Eric of Bowerston spent
and
Phil Wise of Beverly attended
PINBALL DEATH
Mr. and Mrs. Norman a couple of days with her
services at the local church Hysell and children have
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI )
mother, Mrs. Ethel Johnson
Sunday.
Kerry D. Edwards, 32, Ketreturned home from their and other relatives.
Mrs. Emma Fox spent vacation. They visited In New
tering, was shot to death at a
Mrs. Josephine Reitlimiller
Sunday
with her daughter York, Canada, Pennsylvania
Mad River Township bar
of Sarasota, Fla. is a guest of
Saturday, apparently in an and son·in·law, Mr. and Mrs. and the Wesleyan Methodist her sister-in-law, Mr. Ann
argument over a pinball Jolm Douglas, Byesville.
Church Camp.
Coe,
Mrs. W. R. Swan, fell at her
game, Montgomery County
home and broke her leg. She
sheriff's deputies said.
An unidenWied 31-year..Old was taken to Holzer Medical'
Center for treatment and is
DJIIll was being sought.
Authorities said EdWards now at home . .
(Continued from page 1)
Saturday, Sept. 10, will be
died at the Wright Place
collected by Saturday, P8u! J . Regal, CleVeland Red Cross
Lounge of a gunshot wound to
blood program administrator, said today.
the chest.
~._~~~
"If- we-don't get cooununity_respnnse, !ben iLwilllead to

RIO GRANDE - Senior
Citizens who believe they
may qualify for a homestead
exemption on real estate
Robert L. Reeves, Robert
taxes should file an apLee Reeves to Ronald W. plication with the county
Hannin ~,
Charlotte A.
auditor's office according to
Hanning , .50 acre, Chester.
·an announcement made
Paul J. Adler to Winford
today by the Area Agency on
Judge Homer E. Abele,
Cale, 3 acres, Lebanon .
Aging District 7.
McArthur,
Presiding Judge
Elols Vinson Gitcheff ,
Agency officials noted that of the Fourth District Court of
steve Gitcheff to Charles N.
Neese, Jr., Sylvia Neece, anyone 65 years of age or Appeals, announced today
older, with an income of the Court will convene on
16.56 acres, Satisbory.
$10,000 or less could qualify. Tuesday, September 6, at
Charles R. Lyons, Ruth S.
With an income of'less than 9:30a.m. in Gallia County. In
Lyons,..to Corbett E. Ratliff,
· $3,000 annually, senior adults addition to Judge Abele, the
Juanita J . Ratliff, 17* acres,
could receive a 70 percent court is comprised of Judge
Bedford.
homestead exemption ; an Earl E. Stephenson of Portsincome of less than $5,000 mouth, and Judge Lawrence
qualifies. for a 60 percent Grey of. Athens.
exemption ; less than $7,000
The Court of 1\,ppeals·
for a 50 percent exemption directly reviews all ci1ses
and those with an income heard ortried in lower courts
he!lveen $7,000 and $10,000 in which a decision is being
could receive a 40 percent appealed. These cases may
exemption.
have been tried in Conunon
Those filing an application Pleas, Probate · or Juvenile ,
BALTIMORE (UPI)
Seven of the nine oil industry should have all necessary Municipal or County Courts,
defendants charged with income information in their and may be either civil or
engaging in a seven-year passession ·including social criminal cases.
In addition to three Gallia
conspiracy to fix prices in the · security, and qe prepared to
Mid-Atlantic region were . give their age and current County cases the court will
found guilty Tuesday.
address. For more in· also hear five cases from
Thejury, which deliberated formation, contact the county Meigs County and two from
Vinton County on this date.
for more than five days, auditor' s office.
The Fourth District Court
acquitted Crown Central
of
Appeals serves 15 counties
Petroleum · and Continental
. ·
in Southern Ohio. They are:
Oil Co. Sentencing was set for
Adams, Athens, Brown ,
Sept. 16.
Gallia,
Highland, Hocking,
Convicted were the Societv
Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs,
of Independent Gasoline
The " Pledge of Allegiance"· Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto,
Markete rs of · America, to the flag didn't appear on
Pet. per year on a
SIGMA's executive director the American scene untill892 Vinton and Washington .
year cer1ifi cafe of
Robert Cavin, Kayo Oil Co., when J;:,rancis Bellamy, staff
Ashland Oil Inc., Meadville,
member of a boys' magazine,
ROCKY ·DENIES
minimum
Petroleum Marketi ng and
"Youth's Companion," wrote
Amerada Hess Corp.deposit.
ay..--~NEW-..Y_O.RK (UP!)
it - for a--:--columbuSD"'
Forme~
Vice President
The defendants were ac·
A sub-stantial penalty is
HAVING SALE
program.
Nelson
Rockefeller
says he
cused of a 1967-74 conspiracy
Invoked on all certificate
The
Apple Grove United
never tried to thwart a 1975
accounts withdrawn prior
to eliminate price wars in the
Methodist
Women are having
to the date of maturity.
investigation . by a com·
saie of 17 billion gallons worth
yard
sale
at the church
a
mission he headed into illegal
$4 billion in the Mid-Atlantic
Thursday
and
Friday.
activities by the CIA.
area.
ASK DiSSOLUTION
An article iil the current
Debbie Grate and Michael
issue
of New York Magazine
Grate, both of Rutland, have
~
filed for dissolution of quoted unnamed sources as
marriage in Meigs County saying Rockefeller " quietly
ca lled CIA director William
Common Pleas Court.
E-RCALLED
.
Colby into his office and
' The Athens County
The
Pomeroy
ER
Squad
urged him ... not to volunteer ·
Savings &amp; loan Co.
was
called
Tuesday
at
I:
10
any
information" to a panel
296 Second St.
Pomerov, Ohio
p .m . for Mrs . Laura
appointed
by
former
Eiselstein, Osborne St., who PILOT UNHURT
President Ford to look into
had fallen . She was taken to
THREE OAKES, Mich . illegal CIA actions.
Veterans Memoriai Hospital. (UPI ) - An Ohio man
Rockefeller, who headed
At 3:30p.m. the squad trans• escaped injury Sunday when the panel, said Tuesday, "On
L-~-;-;;-;;·;·~-~-.J ported her back to her home, gusty winds forced his small the contrary, it was the
plane off an airport runway Rockefeller Commission
and into · a clump of trees, which was the first to expose
the CIA's mail intercept
police said.
Police said Robert Ash, 21, activities as well as its drug
of Delphos, Ohio, was experiments..'''
heading to Benton Harbor
from Purdue University
when his Cessna 150 ran low
EIDEDIEs
on fuel. He was attempting to
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!
CLEVELAND (UPI)_ landatOselka's Airport when
Randolph Eide, 89, former
the mishap occurre4.
Ash was alone in the single- Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
engine
plane,
which chairman and president, died
apparently was undamaged. Tuesday following a brief
YOU'LL NEVER BUT QUALITY
in the incident, police said. illness.

Transfers

•

~--------- -- - - ---------------I

HOSPITAL NEWS

Racine Social Events

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

News •• in Briefs

Meigs Local schools closed
duration of teacher strike
About 110 M~igs Local the line, telllng them they
elderly and female teachers
As s ociation were 11 not helping the
crossing picket lines at Salem TeaChers '
Center Elementary School members went on strike teaching profession " by
were being harassed by ·Tuesday in a salary dispute. doing so.
An association spokesman
Meantime, it was reported
picketers.
Dowler said sheriff's said he knows of no that there was no com·
deputies were called to the harassment of teachers munication between
reporting for work. Ted representatives of the
Bibler told wire service teachers association and the
rl!porters picketers stopped board of education on
the automobiles of all · Wednesday. The board did
, had · been entering the teachers who reported · for not meet Wednesday night,
ByUDlted Press Interuatloaol
building with students since work to talk with them. about but Dowler indicated that the
joining the strike, but ~e board probably will meet this
SAUSBURY, RHODESIA - PRIME MINISTER Ian • the strike began.
that any force was evening.
denied
Smith today received a new Anglo-American "package deal"
In a statement announcing
used
.
Dowler said he was
for black majority rule in Rhodesia and, without cornmiting the closmg of the schools,
On
behalf
of
the
Meigs
reluctant
to close the 3,000himself to accepting it, said "we will give it thorough Dowler said there had been
Local
Teachers
Association,
student
district
bur the
consideration." Smith's remarks, indicating the U. s.-British an incident at one of the
Charles
A.
Downie,
danger
to
personnel
did not
peace initiative is still alive, came as he won a .stunriing schools and a personal threat
president,
said
there
were
no
warrant
keeping
schools
parliamentary election victory reported in detail on page 2 made to employes. He stated
today.
.
that he was closing all of the threats of violence at the open. Children will have to
Smith received the latest set of Anglo-American pro~ Is schools · for the safety of Sa I em Center School on make up the days the schools
· are closed at the end of the
in a 3'&gt;!1-hour meeting with U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young personnel who have been Wednesday morning .
Downie said there were 10 year.
and British Foreign Secretary David Owen. While saying .he honoring their contracts.
teachers
on the picket line at
In 1976, a teacher strike
might ~ "a couple of days to understand it corr~tly ,"
" It is with deep regret that
asked
the
here
lasted nine days, but
the
school.
They
Smith said the package contained elements he had not I am closmg schools until
other
teachers
not
to
cross
schools
were not closed.
expected: Sonle were pleasantly surprising rut others were further notice," Dowler said.
not, he said.

Meigs Local School District
classes were suspended
Wednesday for the duration
of a teacher strike because of
alleged threats to and
harassment of nonstrikers

picket lines.
District Superintendent
Charles Dowler announced
the suspension of classes
after receiving reports that
WhO Ct'Ossed

~~~~;,;if~ E~~,;.,:~~;;

•

FAIRPORT HARBOR, OHIO - HIGH WAVES early
today forced distance swimmer Bob Elfers to abandon his
attempt to swim 63 miles across Lake Erie and thereby set a
record for longest continuous swim in open water.
Elfers . was pulled from ·the water at 1:20 a. m. after
swimming about 28 miles, a Coast Guard spokesman said. ·
NASHVILLE, TENN. - COUNTRY SINGER Waylon
Jennings and an assistant to his business manager have been
ordered held for a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring
to possess and distrioote cocaine.
The 46-year.old entertainer, who has been called an
"outlaw'' f&lt;r defying traditional country music, appeared at a
probable cause hearing Wednesday wearing black boots,
jeans, a leather vest and shirt unbuttoned to his stomach. He
made no comment following the ruling bY U. S. Magistrate
Kent Sandidge Ill. ''They (prosecutors) don 't have enough to
convict, but they have enough for probably cause," Sandidge
told Elliot Sagor, me of Jennings' attorneys.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 98

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

cancellation of elective surgery in ho8pitals," Regal said. "We
aren't getting the blood. It's that simple." A critical shortage
exists in 0-positlve and all the neBative blood types, according
to Regal, who said weekly blood needs for the hospitals are
4,000pints and the prevent inventory is less than 75 percent of
what it should be- and it's being depl~ted daily . ·

SMALL WONDER THAT GROUPS grow weary of improving the lot Of Meigs
Couritians. Above, a swing set at the Jaycee mini-park in Pomeroy has been vandslized.
Remaining - and bent off the hooks that support it -is one trapeze bar. The set was
donated r~enUy to the park .

-

Board.
Patrick said a decision on
condition of the United Mine the assets will bave to be
Workersunioomayforceitto made at the board ' s
sell off some assets just to November meeting . A
meet operating expenses, location and date for that
UMW Secretary-Treasurer session have not been set.
Harry · Patrick
said "We do own some shares in
the National Bank of
Wednesday.
Patrick characterized the Washington , but that would
UMW's finareial situation as be a last resort," Patrick
"terribly serious, but not said.
·
unsolveable," following a He said the union has $1.6
controller's report presented million in cash· on hand, of
to a meeting of the union's which $1 million will have to
International
Executive - Continued on page 7 ·
JNDIANA, Pa. (tlPI) -

ELBERFELD$
ANNOUNCING

SPECIAL TRUNK SHOWING

WOMENS COATS
MR. STEVEN SCHAEFFER
of
LANSON COAT CO. ·
.and
MACKINTOSH COATS

FRIDAY, SEPT. 2nd
Mr. Schaeffer is an experienced
women's coat salesman and will
gladly help you to select the coat
style and color that's best for you.
Storm coats · wool coats - ski jackets
- real leather and suede coats -zip
out all weather coats . m.eny wool
pant coats·.

".

Crime solved
Sheriff James J . Proffitt
reported today the arrest of
two Washington County.
youths solved the early
Tuesday morning breaking
and entering of the Royal Oak
Trading Post at Five Points.
The youths admitted en·
terlng the Trading .Post by
breaking out a rear window.
After entering they stole a
radio and radio battery and
oeveral cartons of cigarettes.
The stolen items were
recovered · and returned to
Horace Karr, owner. The
youths were released to the
culltody of their perents
pending hftringa liter In the
Juvenile Court in Marietta.
In other ihetlff's depart·
mlllt activity:
Deputlea are Investigating
a report of vandalism to the.

I'

outside bulletin board at the
Eden Church at Rt. 1; Reeds·
Ville. Pastor Eidon Blake
advised that the plexlglass
front on the bulletin board
was broken out sometime between Sunday night and early ·.
Wednesday morning.
Deputies spent mollt of
wednesday Investigating
reports of vandalism to·
mailboxes, ·stop l!.lgns and
other roadsigns in the area of
the Boy Scout Camp to Eagle
Ridge to Bashan and Rain·
vow Ridge areas. Many of the
owners of the mailboJ:es have
been contacted bY deputies.
The incident is under in·
vestlgatlon. Anyone having
lmowledge bout the maUboJ:
vandalism is asked to contact
the S)Ierlff's office.

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Anita pushing
toward Texas

WASHINGTON -,. HERE ARE THE 38 STATES where
. extended unemployment benefits have been renewed by the
" Labur Department:
Alabama, Arizona,· Arkansas , Colorado, Delaware,
Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa ,
!Uinsas, Kentucky, Lo\listana, M!lfYiand, Massachusetts,
Minnesota , Mississippi, Missouri, Montana , Nebraska,
Nevada, New Hampshire, Ne'll' Mellico, North Carolina, North
Dakota, Ohio, Olkah001a, South ·earolina, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Tesas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia , Wisconsin,
Wyoming. Benefits also were restored in Puerto Rico and the
District of Columbia.

The deteriorating financial

•

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1977

· HUNTINGTON, W. VA . - THE FREEBURN Coal Co. of
Mingo County has been sold to three investors from Ohio and
Maryland, its Huntington owners announced. ·
Freeburn produced 200,000 tons of metallll(gical coal last
year, but productioo has dropped this year due to wildcat
strikes and fiQnding last April in Mingo County. The company,
which has the capacity to produce a II\illion tons a year, has
reserves of 51 billion tons and will have a new preparation
. plant in operation by 1979.

NASHVILLE, TENN . ...: THE MIDGET LEADER of the
gospel singers traveling with the Rev. Bob Harrington and
atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair says their debates on tbe
existence of God are "theatrical and money.oriented."
. "We just don't want to be part of this thing any more," said
Richard Jarvis, leader -of " Uttle Ritchie and My Brother 's
Keeper." "We doo't want our name associated with it." He
added Wednesday that Harrington and Mrs. O'Hair "ar~ doing
something that isn't right."
·
His group warms uP the audience with songs Uke
"America the Beautiful" and "Give Me That Old Time
Religion " before the debaters emerge on stage.

,

a1 y

.•.

AsK! TO WED
A marria'.ee license was
issued to ,RObert Utile, 34,
Che~hire, and Patsy Ann
Ye~uger, 22, Rt. 1, Chester.

PICKET LINES HAVE BEEN formed at all the schools in Meigs Local School District
as the teachers strike went into its second day . This is a picture of teachers ihat were on
duty at Meigs Junior High in Middleport.

the
C'olumbia
Gas
Transmission
Corp.
A
company spokesman said the
increase probably will be
reduced in March.
Public
Utilities
The
Commission of Ofiio was once
more called on by Brown to
give his case against
Columbia top priority.
The PUCO was asked by
him to order the firm to make
elaborate, monthly reports on
available gas, Brown also
wants a detailed account of
the firm's efforts to secure
additional gas supplies before
\he winter heating season.
Continued on page 7

COLUMBUS (UP!)- A 13
per cent increase in natural
gas bills, to reflect the high
cost of emergency gas
purchases, was announced
Wednesday by Columbia Gas
of Ohio, Inc.
The .rate hike was blasted
today by State Attorney
General William J . Brown,
will take effect Oct. 1.
Rates charged by Colwnbia
Gas will increase 'll cents per
thousand cubic feet to match
the increaile in wholesale
G(&gt;sts it paid for gas obtained .
during the first six months of
this year .
"Mismanagement on the

Treaty ceremonies planned
By· HELEN TIIOMAS

UPI Wblte Ho11se Reporter

W~HINGTON (UP! ) PreSident Carter is setting
aside three day~ next ~eek
for talks with Latm Amencan
,

leaders and ceremonials in·
valved in the formal signing
of the Panama Canal
treaties.
Carter is pulling out all the
st 0ps
to
dramatize

NoJI"ces, local bn"efs

The Meigs 'C hapter of
Future Farmers of America
attended the recent Meigs
County Fair. Winning grand
champion In the market hog
' udglng was Brian Windon

!rom Meigs. Also taking a hot

was Gary Hottiday . The
Meigs Chapter had a booth

carrying out "Agriculture, a
Future for America" as its

theine.
RACINE -

The , Racine

Fire Department accepted its

first

f~male

member

Tuesday night. She Is Warlda
Lyons.

The Mel ~s County Dog
Warden , Ke1th Wood . warned
that all

unlicensed

and

licensed dogs found running
loose will be Impounded and
the· owner will be dted to

county court. Section 955 .21
ORC states that failure to
register or confine dogs can
result in a fine of not les5. than
SlO nor mor.e than 'S25. ,(

.. .

hemispheric solidaritY for the
~ontroversial· agreement ,'
with some 15 to 20 Latin
American
heads
of
government and Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre
Trudeau
traveling
to
Washington for the big show
Wednesday evening.
The signing is eXJlCCted to
be nationally televised.
The President meets with
Panama's leader,Gen. Omar
Torrijos, Tuesday to discuss
the document.
The official signing of the
two treaties, which will turn
over control of the SO-mile
waterway to Panama by the
end of the century but
continue the U.S. right to

By FRANK E . GRIFFIS
BROWNSVILLE,
T .
(UPI) - Intensifying to 105.
mile-an-hour
win·ds
Hurricane Anita, the season's
first tropical storm, pushed
towards the South Texas
coast today . Hurricane
warnings were issued along
the Texas coast from Corpu~
Christi to Brownsville, Tex.
At 5 am. CDT today the
center of Anita was near
latitude 25.9 north, longitude
94.3 west or about 200 miles
east of Brownsville.
Anita had increased its
speed to 10 miles per hour and
was moving generally ·
westward. The NWS said she
should continue on this course
today.

1ve feet abov
. At the top of G
ton Bay
approximately 1,200 persons
had been advised to evacuate
their homes, said Fletcher
Hickerson , a civil defense
spokesman in Baytown,
Tex.
Hickerson said "most of the
city is not In danger," but
those in low-lying areas have
traditionally experienced
flooding and closed 'roads in
heavy· storms.. At Corpus
Christi lumber companies
were expected to do a
booming business as Ani\il
approached the coast.
"The lumber companies
are . going crazy with .

business, 1 ' said 'Mike Yuras,
a salesman at a sporting
goods store. "There won't be
enough wood in this town for
people to board up their
windows . ·
The last hurricane to hit
South Texas was Fern which
killed two persons and caused
$3ll.3 million in damage in
1971.
On A,ug. 3, 1970 Hurricane
Celia, tbe costliest storm in
the state's history, came
ashore near Corpus Christi.
· Celia, with sustained winds of
130 miles per hour and gusts
estimated at up to 180 m.p.h.,
killed 11 persons, Injured 480
others and ca.used $453
million in damages.

::::::::::::::::::':':::::::::::::':::::::::::::::;:::;::::::::::::::;::;:::::

Highest sustained winds
were 105 m .p.h and the NWS
said the · storm could
strengthened during the day .
A hurricane watch was in
effect from Corpus Christi to
Matagorda Bay. An earlier
watch was discontinued east
of Matagorda Bay to
VermiliOn Bay, Loltisiana.
The NWS satd tides would
gr.adually...mcrease. al~g the
T~xas Coast reachmg fi.ve to
etght feet above normalm the
hurricane warning area
tonight . The NWS said tiq~s
would be three to five feet
above normal from Corpus
Christi to Lake Charles, La.
and over extreme Northeast
Mexico.
Evacuation of South Padre
Island, Port Isabel and other
bay shore developments
should be completed before
nightfall.
Fringe squalls from tbe
storm reached the Texas
coast Wednesday.
Waves up to 12 feet high,
five feet abuve normal, were
breaking on the beach at Port
Isabel, the Coast Guard
reported.
The NWS recommended
evacuation of hundreds of
persons living on land up to

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, .a chance of .
showers and turning cooler
Sat~!rday. Fair Sunday and
a chance of showers again
Momlay. Highs wUI be in
the 80s Saturday and .bi the .
l)lld 70s or tow 80s Sunday
and Monday. Lows wlll be
in the upper 80s Saturday
Through the use of
_ aDd tn the upper-50s or low•~--'v"'ol!IDteer help, about one608 by Monday.
fourth of Meigs County's
voters have already been
::~:::::::::::::::;:,:,~:::,:::,:,:::':':':':':::::':':':':':':::::: :::::::: registered, E. ·A. Wingett of
the Meigs Board of Elections
E-R CALLED
.said today .
T h ·e
M i d d 1e p o r t
Wingett pointed out that
Emergency Squad was called volunteer workers have
to the LaSalle Hotel at 6:33 p. saved thousands of dollars for
m. Wednesday for Theima Meigs County taxpayers in
Siders who was 111. She conducting the registration
refused treatment. At 9:41 program. There were 797
the fire department w.a s voters registered at the
called to a school bus stop county fair and about 1600
building on Route 7. The registered . at the recent
building was on fire and special elections in the South·
firemen extinguished the ern and Eastern Local School
blaze.
Districts. Registration has
also been taking place at the
yOU
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center.
Additional· registration
The worst hurricane in U.S. locattiogs will be set up even
history claimed 6,000 lives, though the voter registration
hitting Galveston, Tex., on does not have to be completed
Sept. 8, 1900.
until November, 1978.

R egiS
• t enng
•
of vote'.rs

proceeding

Now

Know

District court voids
student's suspension
-

administrators also
COLUMBUS - (Special) An agreement wiping out the stipulates that rules of the
suspension of a student at board regarding corporal
Southern Local School in punishment be followed .
The suit filed on beha If of
Meigs County has ended a
suit in U. S. District Court in Nance by his mother had
sought $37 ,ooo In com Columbus.
.
'The entry signed by Judge pensatory and $100,000 in
Robert L. Duncan erases punitive damages. Set·
from school records the tlement of the case also
suspension of Michael Nance, resulted in dropping the
15, on March 16, 1976.
damage claims.
The complaint filed by Ray
The settlement in the suit
brought against tl)e hoard of L. King of (Jahanna, attorney
education. a teacher. aild for Nance, charged that !he

student was suspended after
he was struck and slapped by
Mrs. Lee Lee, music teacher
who was one of the defen·
dants.
. The compiaint charged that
Nance was struck more than
20 times with a razor ~~trap u
he was being taken to the
principal's office.
Jennings Beegle, principal,
suspended the student. The
suspension was upheld by the
.board of education.
·

�•

Smith given· solid manihJte to negotiate tough
By ERIIt VAN EI!S
SAliSBURY, Rhodesia
( UPl) - Prime Minister lin
~th hu won a reoounding
mandate
from
white
Rhodesians to take a touch
negotiating !lance today with
U.N. Ambuaador Andrew
YOW!f! and Britiah F&lt;l'eign
Secretary David Owen.
Smith's parliamentary
election victDry gave him the
strength he had aoUSht to
a1am the door oo the U.sBritiah proposal to end five
years of racial bloodshed and
to pursue an · •ttntern,l"
settlement with black
inoderates.

With cnnplete·results in rT
out at SO parllalnent raoes,
Smith 'l Rhodesian Front
. .rty had won all37 aoata. 01
the 52.34% votu counted,
Smith's forces pulled 44,228.
Young and Owen, who left
Nairobi Wednesday night for
Rhodesia,. refuaed to make
any estimates about their
chances of persuading Smith
to accept their propoeala for
establiahing a black majority
government «&gt;metjme next
year.
Rhodesia 's main objection
to the · Anglo-American
propoSals appeared likely to
center on who controlo

Haldeman says
it isn't ·true
LOMPOC, Calif. (UP!)- A happened."
report that H.R. Haldeman's
Haldeman read a prepared
book on the Watergate years statement and said he did not
tells of Pre!lldent Richard want to discUss the matter.
Nixon stripping nude in the
Haldeman's bOOk, written
· Ovsl Office is "totally false ... with ghost writer Joeeph
bathroom journalism," Dinlona, will be publiahed by
Haldeman said Wednei!day. the New York '11mes Books in
Haldeman telephoned January.
United Press International's
In her ~wnn Tuesday,
Los Angeles bureau from the Mia Smitll quoted unnamed
federal prison camp here, "insiders" as saying the book
wl)ere he is serving a will show !hat Ni.J:oo was
Watergate sentence, to deny "flaky and falling apart in the
the story by New York DaUy final days of Watergate." She
News columnist Uz Smltll. reported that:
He said he was breaking a
''One of Haldeman's stories
self-imposed rWe hot to talk will -bave Richard Nixon
to reporters wtuJe he is a com'ing Into the Oval Office,
Jrisoner because he wanted stripping off all his clothes,
ID set tile record straight.
sitting down naked behind his
"My forthcoming book, desk and asking his crew-cut
"!be Ends of Power,' will, as aide, 'Now, what's on the
I reported, tell aU- and with agenda?"'
the gLoves off," said
Prison camp spokesman
Haldeman, who worked on Gary Aldinger confirmed
the book before entering that Hsldeman had informed
)rison June 21.
prison authorities l1e was
"Bot I deplore and reject · going to telephone UP!.
the · kind of bathroom
Nixon
r e m a In e d
journalism that produces unavaUable to reporters and
totally false stories auch ail his office in San Clemente, as
the recent one by colwnnist it usually does in such cases,
Uz Smilh claiming to report refosed to comment.
· an incident in my book.
Haldeman Is serving 2\2 19
''Her story is totally untrue 8 · years f&lt;l' obstruction of
- there will be no such justice, conspiracy and
· episode in my book because - perjury, and will be eligible
nosucheventevertook place. fir parole in early 1980.
I will tell all, hit only what

Rhodesio's """"rity f&lt;l't't!S repla.;ement by a U.N. peace!Uing the shift to majority keeping force," and the
rdle.
inclusion of black guerrillas
The Wester n powers into a new army.
reportedly are pressing for
Smith predicted YoWig and
the di sbandment of the Owen would present him willl
exl.sting security forces, their "an ultimatum. ~rom what 1

Com, soybean
prices slump
By BERNARD BRENNER

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Wltll corn prices plunging to
ll!e lowest level in more than
four years, average prices for
all raw !ann commodities
~aper~tinJwytos

Lawrence E. Lamb; M.D.

Lecithin:

good for what?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. without damaging your
DEAR DR. LAMB - What health. others who want this
are potent lecithin capsules' program can send 50 cents
good for? Will they help to with a long, stamped, selflose·weight? What are 8-0ne- addressed envelope for it to
HWJdred a Balanced B-. P .0. Box 1551, Hadio City StaComplex Formula for? I need tion, New York, N.Y. 10019.lt
to lose weight but would like won't enable any miracles,
to know about these like being able to eilt all you
want and lose weigh~ at- the
- medicines.
DEAR READER - I'm same time but it will work if
tempted to reply they are you stick with the program
"good for nothing." Vitamins over a period of time.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
· do not llelp you lose weight.
husband
and I are in our mid
The only value in any vitamin
preparations such as th\Se 50s. We llave an exercise bike
while trying to lose weight that we ride at least five
would be for the individusl on mUes a day at a speed of 18 to
an unhealthy fad diet that 21 miles an hour. Is this fonn
doesn't provide all the needed of exercise beneficial to us?
vitamins you should get from Is it worth continuing? We
are both in excellent llealth
a well balanced diet.
Lecithin is not really a Md llave never experienced
. vitamin. It is a combination any kind of lleart ailments or
rJ. fat and choline. The choline circulation problems.
DEAR READER - As long
is useful but you should gel
that from meat which should as you are in good health and
be part of your well-ballnced llave acl)ieved the level of
diet or your body can fitness to do this regularly it
manufacture it from the should not harm you and may
methionine found in your nor- help a great deal. The addimal diet.
·
tional requirement, thouch, is
Many people seem to have that you be consistent Don't
the mistaken idea that you stop for weeks and then
can take something and lose reswne the same level of exercising. Stay with It and if
weigl}~ rather than going
throUgh the process rJ. using you llave to stop for any
more calories than you con- reason, start at a lower level
swne. About the only things and gradually retrain to the
you can take 'ti&gt;olose weight daUy level you are able to
are laxatives and water pills maintain.
Exercise bicycles and those
to dehydrate you. Neither
for
outdoor cycling both prollelp to lose fat unless you
make yourself so sick from a vide a means of exercising
chemical Imbalance of your without over-streasing the
body that you need to work ankle and knee joints. The
ycur metabolic system over· bicycle supports your weight
time to get back your health. and helps protect your joints
Emptying out the digestive while exercising.
The exercise - done d.oli.ly system or dehydrating your
will
help to prevent obesity. If
body will show loss of weight
on the scales but It won't be you stop exerclalng and con- •
loss of fai. That ia wily it tinlie to eat the aame amount
comes right back when you you may gain from 10 to 20
pounda of exoess fat in the
return to nonnallivillg.
first
year. Just in helping preYour letter sounda like you
vent
obesity it Ia warthwhlle..
need help. I am leflding you
CDr. Lamb answers
The Health Letter nwnber
4-7, Weight Lollng Diet to representative lettars of
provide 1 aensible prCJII un general lnleresl in his colyou can follow to Jo.e weight 111M.)

whi te government.
"I believe that it is possible
even at this late stage for the
white people and the black
people to come to the realization that it is in their own
interests to find a. solution to
llleir problem," Vorster said
in Durban.
Electoral offi cill)s said the
white turnout at the polls was
"surprisingly high." No constituency reported a turnout
lower Ulan 74 per cent.

would be iasued public ly
wllen they arrived in the
Rhodesian capitsl.
If unofficia l reports of
details of the Jroposals were
correct, Smith said, "then it
does not give ooe much cause
hour.•
Young and Owen said in for optimism ... (but) we will
Nairobi that their peace plan, give them very careful
which' had remained a di· consideration."
The alternative, Smith told
plomatic secret as tlley disrepcrters,
''is an internal
cussed the settlement
settlement.
Now
the election
)roposals willl black Afric~n
is
over,
I
will
continue
with
leaders and South Africa,
But biacks largely Ignored
the electlon . In Ule black
township of Highfield, on
Salisbury's outskirts, voters
were at one point arriving at
the rate of two or three an

these plans."

Retirement age ·will continue·at 65
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Carter administration is
moving to &lt;!Jwel fears that
the retirement age for full
Social Security benefits may
he changed.
"No change in llle present
system is inuninent and ...
llle administration is not

percent below a year sgo, the
Agriculture Department
says.
The department's monthly
!ann price report Wednesday
showed corn down 15 percent
in the !ll&lt;llth ending Aug .IS to
activel y co nsidering any
proposal to a1ter the present
$1.64 a bushel, a dollar below
arrangement for retirement
a year earlier and the lowest
willl full benefits at liS," said
since May, 1973.
Commerce Secretary Juanita
Soybeans also fell 15
percent for tile month to $5.34 which have cause the curre~t Kreps, who started the whole
a bushel compared willl $6.07 farm decline will help keep llling .
a year ago, the lowest since retail food prices stable
" Furthermore, I have
lllrough the rest of 1977 and offered no fonnal proposal,"
May of last year.
The overall farm price will hold the inevitable 1978 she added.
Mrs. Kreps stirred up tile
average, declining for the food inflation to something
under
this
year's
expected
storm
by advancing llle idea
third consecutive month, was
total
of
6
percent.
rJ.
raising
the retirement age
at tile lowest level since last ,
In addition to Ule corn and for full benefits from liS·to 68
November. And the farm
parity ratio, which measures soybean price declines in the as a loog..-ange possibility to
farm )roduct prices sgainst month ending Aug. 15 , llelp ease the Social Security
r:iaing farm costs, fell to 64 officials said hogs fell to
percent of parity from 65 $42 .80 a hundredweight ·
percent in July - the lowest compared with $44.90 in July
and $42.60 a year ago .. Broiler
since Marcil, 1933.
.
Administration officials chickens slumped to 23.9
llave already begun moving cents a pound compared with
on several fronts to try to 26.2 cents in July and 23.8
stem the price decline caused cents a year ago.
Wheat rose to $2.02 a blisllel
by bumper crops and a
WASHINGTON (UP! ) from $2 in July. But that low
mounting grain surplus.
The
new, laundered version
Last Monday, officials an- price - compared with $2.97 of
"Soap,"
ABC's
nounced President Carter a year earlier - virtually
controversial
sex
farce
series
llad approved plans to reduce guaranteed that markets will
due
to
premier
Sept.
13,
still
1978 wheat )roduction and be far enough below the is unacceptable, the Catholic
said they may add a simUar govei'I1IIl&lt;int support target to
planting cutback program for produce $1.2 billion in income League for Religious and
.Rights said Wednesday.
corn and other feed grains. supplement payments. to Civil
The
league said two of its
In addition, spokesmen an- growers.
staff
members
have
IIQWJced plans to lock about 1
Beei catUe prices fell from
previewed
the
show's
first
billlon bushels of com and $34.90 a ])undredweight in lllree episodes -two of which
wheat off the glutted · July to $34.70 c&lt;rnpared with
have been rewritten and
cmunercial market by next $33 a year ago. Prices for retaped
after growing public
summer
in ; farmer- potatoes also fell, but milk, critiCism - and foWld "the
controlled,
three-year oranges and tobacco rose.
laundered version remains
reserve storsge programs.
defamatory and tasteless."

System's financial pinch.
She also proposed that
mandatory retirement plans
be extended for those who
want to continue working
beyond 65.
Her suggestions caused
widespread fears among

retirees, and
persons
antlcipsting retirement, that
Social Security eligibility
rules might be changed.
One
senior
citizen
organization said it has
received ''considerable
amoWits rJ. maU opposing the
secretary' s suggestion ,
largely on the grounds that it
would interfere with the
retirement plans of those
approaching age 65."
Mrs. Kreps, in replies to
persons who have writien

affected by anything you may said.
"Looking toward the end of
have read or heard
concerning my comments to llle century, when the size of
the media."
tlle sged group relative to the
The White House also sent working population will be
out a clarification statement, significantly increased, it is
saying Mrs. Kreps was not clear llle tax burden per
talking about the near future , worker will grow,'' she said
but about an idea that might in a statement.
be considered when post.
" N!. Ule proportion rl. the
World War II babies begin . population in retirement inretiring in the next century. creases , alternative means rJ.
Under current law workers meeting our Obligations to
are entitled to partial benefits older people - including the
a1 .62 and full benefits at liS. possible pos1ponement of age
Mrs . Kreps snid her of eligibility - need to be resucgestlons grew out of an examined.
"However, any change In
interest in extending work
life for persons who want to such entitlement shoold be a
work beyond age 65.
long.run consideration, to be
Such an option for future phased in gradually over a
Social Security beneficiaries number of years," Mrs .
should be available, she Kreps said."

about the matter, said :
"Your retirement will not he

Laundered version of

.

.

HULTH

Also·, the price sup;;rt rate
for corn was raised 25 cents a
bushel to $2, a nd companion
increa ses were ordered for
other feed ~rains .
Drops in raw farm Jroduct
)rices do not always show up
qu ickly in · consumer prices,
because of tile time lag in
processing many foods and
because more than 60 cents of
every retail food dollar goes
for processing.marketing
costs which usually rise
steadily even when !ann
)rices are fallin g,
E conomists say, however,
that llle big grain supplies

understand it looks rook ed
and dried to me and they
don't want to be confused by
any act or ideas we may
have."
In another development
lllat dimmed prospects for
Young and Owep, South
African Prime Minister J ohn
Vorster gave his crucial
support to Smith's attempt to
reach a settlement th at
excludes leaders of the five·
year guerrilla war against his

·Students can apply now for

Meigs

college gi-ants up to $1,500
'ibe Ohio Board of Regents plicant will be attending.

wl1l accept applications · for
the Ohio Instructional Grant

Program through December
2, 1977, for· consideration of
awards to college students for
the second and third quarter
or second semester of the
1977-78 academic year.
Grants provided under this
program range from $150 to
Sl,SOO depending upon the
famUy income and the type of
Institution the student al&gt;'

Both four and two year
Ohio state-assisted universities and technical colleges,
and Ohio private non·profit
colleges are eligible participating institutions . Ap·
plications may be obtained
from the fil)ancial aid office
. of the college , various
community agen c ies ,
libraries, and the Board of
Regents.

Cogswell named chief -

of Portsmouth branch
PIKETON - Ralph E.
Cogswell has been named
tbief of the Modifications and
Claims Branch for the Portsmouth Area Office, U. S.
Energy Research and
Development Administration .
(ERDA).
The area office is
responsible for construction
of a gaseous centrifuge
uranlwn enrichment plant.
Total cost of the project is
estimated at $4.5 billion in
1978 dollars and is scheduled
for completion in 1988.
Working in the Construction and Engineering
Dlvtslon of the area office,
Mr. Cogswell wHI be
responsible for managing the
settlement
and
administration of modifications
\

MEIG&amp;MASONAREA
CIIES'I'EII L TANNEIIILL
Eft&lt;. &amp;I.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cllt Edllor ·
Publitbed daaly ext.'el)t Salurday
by The (Jllo Valley Publishint&lt; Comany, 111 Court Sh. Poonoruy, Ohio

Bualnesa unice Phone

m-

2151. Edilorill Phone B21~7,
Secood clase: )llAN&amp;ge paid a1

Pomeroy,Ohio.

advertiling repl'f:HilC.tive Ward • Griffith Company,
Inc., BotUnelli and Gallagher Div.,
Nation~!

751 Third Ave.) New York, N.Y.

11017.

SubM!riptlon nla: Delivered by
L-anier where .vailable '1$t.-a1L!I per

week. By MoWr Route.., 1~ U~:rrier
lerVice nut avaJiable, One month,
ta-». By lllllil in Ohio and 'II. Va.,
Onll! Year, f22.00; Six months,
SIUO; Three monlha, $7.06;
Elitwhen $18.00 year; Siz muotM
'13 .18; Three month.!!, t7.SD.
pric~ includn SUllday

w.,.,.f!On1tinel.

TIIIKI

Transfers
Clyde H. Wines, Gladys M.
Wines to Jerry Eugene
Fields, Barbara M. Fields,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Willie Wise, Dovie Wise to
Willie Wise, Dovie Wise,
Parcel, Salisbury.
Charles L. Shumaker,
Sherry Shumaker to Jeffrey
L. Miller, Belva Miller, Lot,
Middleport.
Effie Maguire, dec. to Lee
Maguire, Dale Maguire,
Marion Maguire, Aff. Trans.,
Rutland.
Robert L. Forrest, dec. to
Jackie Ray Robinson,
Samuel E. Robinson, Cert ..
Trans., Rutland.
Andrew L. Sylvia, Robi M.
Sylvia to Richard J. Shultz, 30
A., Scipio.
George L. Arnold, Dorothy
C. Arnold to Ernest H. Martin
Jr ., Patricia A. Martin, · Reedsville.
Charles R. McGraw, Laura
J . McGraw . to Harvey R.
Leamond, Anna Mae Barnes
Leamond, Racine. ·
Vicki Lee Blake, Michael
G. Blake to Tom Boyd, Inc.,
R-W., Scipio.
Robert Rei,ber, Wilma
Reiber to Robert Reiber,
Wilma Reiher, Parcels,
Chester.
Sam Hicks Jr., Martha·
Rhea Hicks to James Wells,
Geneva Wells, Parcel, Salem.

.Group will push

TIIEDAILYSENTINEL .
.. DEVOTED TO 11fE
INTEIIEST OF

~m.

and Claims to the various
contracts that will be
awarded for this project.
A career government ·
employee with more than ·25 ·
years civilian service and two
years military, most of his
previous assignments have
been with the U. S. Army
Corps of Engineers.
Prior to joining ERDA he
was Chief of the Training
Section of the Construction
Support Branch of the Office
of the Chief of Engineers in
Washington , D.C. Earlier
positions were at the Johnson
Spacecraft
Center
in
Houston, Texas;
Fort
Devens, Massachusetts; and
Loring Air Force Base,
Maine.

Property

.

.,

for new bridge
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
CUP!) - A group of West
Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky
residents plWI to meet within
the next two weeks with West
Virginia
Gov .
Jay
Rockefeller to push for
completion of the East
HWitlngton Bridge on tile
Ohio River.
Construction of the bridge
lias been stalled in federal
courts since the mid 1960s as
residents
and

environmentalists ·battled for
a site away from a historic
Guyandotte neighborhood.
Piers lor tile new bridge
were completed this year at
the confluence of the Ohio and
Guyandotte Rivers.
Construction on the 17th
Street Bridge in Huntington
over llle Ohio River has
forced Interstate tramc to
use llle old Sixth Street
Bridge, cat.sing massive
traffic (ieups.

3--The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, o., Thursday, Sept. 1, 19'n
'

.

Seaver's next goal: 3,000 strikeouts
MONTR EAL (U P!) - slriken ul tot11l to 2, 501 , tJ1e first inning when Dan
Afte r 10 major league ma king him only the lllll Driessen singled home two
seasons Tom Seav~r is pitcher to reach that plateau. runs, giving Seaver all the
starting to thin k ·about
"I am only 32years old so I help he really needed .
milestones in his career.
think I can look forward to
Joe
Mo rgan
gave
Seaver fired a three-hitter 3,000 stri keouts", said Cincinnati a w lead in tile
and st ruck out six in Seaver. "Another milestone I lllird inning with his 21st
recording his eighth straight am looking forward to is 200 home run. The Reds added
victory Wednesday night as wins, l only need two more another run in the fourth
the Cincinnati Reds blanked victories th is season to reach wllen Bill Plummer singled
the Moolreal Expos 6-0.
that height."
Driessen home.
By MILTON RICHMAN
Seaver,
now
16-5,
picked
up
Seaver
was
philoso
phic
"Once 1had a lead like lllat
UPJ Sporl.t Editor
his fiflll shutout of the season about going even further in 1 didn't have to be so fine willl
NEW.YORK (UP!) - .This time, Pele says, he mea ns it. He's - and44thofhiscareer - as the win column . "Three my pitches," said Seaver.
The Reds got two more
sayong goodby to soccer, positi vely, abSQlute ly and {l'lr- he completed h~sl5th ga~e of hundred w~ is a lot and
manently.
·
·
·
· th e _, season . on h1s s1xth t~ e r e a ren t too manr, : runs in llle fin al inning on
potchers lllat get. that many . . Cesar Geronimo's double and
He'll play his last game a month from today at Gia nts straight complete game.
He also moved his career
The Redos scort'rl lwirt&gt; in a sacrifice fly by 41 ('hamp"
Stadium in East Rulllerford, N.J . That's what he sa ys
anyway. He'll suit up with the Cosmos for tile first half of that
contest and with his old Brazilian tea m, Santos, in the second
half, and then he'll he all fi nished.
Don't be your life on it, though.
. Pele has said llle same thing before. Not once but several
I? ti m~ and eac h time he agonized over h~. "retir~menl" for a
perood, then changed his mind and came back to play some By FRED DOWN
City defeated Texas, f&gt;-4, two shutout innings in relief,
more.
Oakland shaded Miuneso ta, wo n his seventh game .
UPI Sports Writer
It was the Cosmos who talked him QUI of his last retirement
Late-inning homers have 4-3, and Detroit beat Carlton Fisk hit a two-run
in . llle summer of '75 with a three-year contract for $4.75 become a Yankee trademark . Milwaukee, 5-2.
homer for the Red Sox and
mUhon P.lus anotller $2.25 million to take care of his income
Jim Rice singled in their
They beat the Seattle Indians 4, Red Sox· 3:
taxes here, and it is the Cosmos who are'doing everything they Mariners on a sudden-death
Pinch hitter Jim Norris other: run.
can now tp talk him out of Ill is one.
·
homer by Mickey Rivers doubled home pinch runner · Oriules 4, Angels 3:
. "Tell us how much you want,'' tlley ,keep asking him . " We'll Tuesday night and came Joho Lo)VIlestein with llle UeDoug DeCinces led off the
giVe you any ktnd of contract you say."
right back Wednesday night breaking run in the top of the eighth inni11g with his 141ll
To which Pete merely smiles, shakes his head, and says no, to score a 5-4 victory over the ninth inning as the 'Indians homer giving the Orioles
lllanks, he's retiring.
Mariners on Graig Nettles' dealt llle Red Sox a damaging llleir victory and . a threeOne veteran soccer official who doesn 't think he will is Enzo homer· with one out in the blow. Jim Kern, who pitched game sweep of the Angels.
Magnoui, llle man who first brought him to this country to bottom of the ninth . ·
The blow came off Frank
play soccer with the Santos team 11 years ago and more than a
The Yankees' fourth
Tanana, who suffered his
half dozen times after that.
eighth loss against 15 wins
straight victory enabled them
International League
Now president of the Southern New York Stale Soccer to pick up a full game on the
and gave Dennis Martinez his
Press International
United
Association, which is part of the U.S. Soccer Federation Boston Red Sox, who bowed
L. Pel. GB 12th triwnph. The Orioles are
Magnozzi believes Pele will change his mind about quitting . H~ to the Cleveland Indians, 4-3. Pawtucket W.
now -in a flat-footed tie for
16 sa .567
also believes money is wi1;lt will make him come back.
The Baltimore Orioles, who Charleston 74 61 .548 21!2 second place with the Red
"I think he'll play again ,'' says Magnozzi, willl tile assur· heat the California Angels, 4- Tidewater 73 62 .54 1 J 1J2 SOx, each with a 71&gt;-55 record.
Syracuse
69 66 .511 71f2 Royals 5, Rangers 4:
ance born of someone who has dealt with Pele before . "Why? 3, also trail the Yankees by Richmond
67 68 .496 9h .
Because he 's the hest businessman I've ever seen and I've four games.
Fred Patek hit a two-run
Rochester 65 69 .485 11
been associated with soccer more than 30 years. Pele has said
Nettles belted the first Columbus 63 7'1 .467 13112 double and scored on Frank
52 83 .385 24'h White's double in a three-run
tH; was retiring three times now. I brought him to this country pitch by reliever Bob Galasso Toledo
Wednesday's Results
woth the Santos team seven times but l gave up doing it in 1970 over tile right field wall in the Charleston
sixth inning during which the
12, Richmond 1
just before the World Qlp in Mexico because Pele said he was ninlll. He now leads the Syracuse 5, Rochester 3
Royals snapped a 2-2 tie. Jim
quilling and not playing anymore. Then he turned aroWid and American League with 34 Pawtucket 4, Tidewater 0
Colborn allowed five hils in
joined the Brazilian World Cup team. You know what I think ? I homers, and says, That's Columbus 8. ToiQd~ 1
six innings and won his 15th
lllink he was just holding outfor more money.''
game willl llle relief help of
where it's at ... driving in
Magnozzi, 57, played eight years himself in the American runs that win games is what
Doug Bird. Doyle Alexander
CINCINNATI (UPI )
Professional League willl the New York Americans and comes this is all about."
lost his ninth decision lor the
from a soccer family . Hts father, Spart.acus, was general
Rangers .
Sparky Lyle, who took over Veteran National Hockey
manager of Livorno, a first division team in Tuscany and his for Mike Torrez in the eighth League defenseman Gilles
A's 4, Twins .3:
uncle, Mario, played on two World Qlp teams and stlll ranks inning and pitched two Marotte has signed a one.Wayne Gross hit a two-run
year
contract
with
the
among the top 10 all-time scorers in Italian socee~ history.
shutout innings, received
homer and Doc Medich
"I remember llle fiJ:st·time I brougllt Pele to this country,''· credit for his 12th win against Cincinnati Stingers of the
allowed
six hits in 8 1-3
says Magnozzi. ' 'We put him in a hotel here with llle rest of the four losses. Chris Chambliss World Hockey Association.
innings lifting the A's to their
"I llave heard quite a bit
Santos players and he was such a hero to the Spanish people also homered for the Yankees
victory over ~innesota .
about
the Stingers' offense
and all the other Latin Americans that he had ID stay in his while Ruppert Jones knocked
Larry Hisle hit his 26th homer
room like a prisoner because he'd be mob~ed every time he in .two runs lor the Mariners. and how potent that offense
for the Twins.
is," said llle 32-year old
stepped out.
Tigers 5, Brewers 2:.
In other AL games, Kansas
Marotte . "I'm very happy to
Ben Oglivie knocked in two
be a part of the Stingers
runs willl a single and a
organization, and I'm sure
homer and Milt Wilcox
lllat I can help them on
defense."

Sport Parade

No one wrong all the time

A big 'thank you'

Summers.
Wayne Twitchell was
eharged with his lOth loss in
13 decisions.
In other National League
games, San Francisco
handled Pittsburgh, 6-3,
Phtladelphia dumped
. Atlanta, 6-1, Houston beat
New York, 0-2, San Diego
eased by St. Louis, 2·1, and
Los
Angeles
blanked
Chicago, S.O.

by Texas, 5-4, Oakland
downed Minnesota , · 4·3,
Detroit toppled Milwaukee, :;.
2, and Baltimore took
Calilornia, 4-3.
Giants 6, Pi rates 3:
Darrell Evans went 4-for-4
and smashed his 14th homer,
a lllree·run drive, to support
Jim Barr's eight-hit effort.
Barr, 12-12, yielded all three
runs in the second inning,

SW'rendering Bill Robinson 's
24th h&lt;rner. before settling
action , New York clipped down to a complete game
. Seattle, 0-4, . Cleveland upset victory.
Boston, 4-3, Kpnsa s City got PhilHes·' s:· Bra-ves 1:
Greg Lozinski hit a tworun , tie-breaking double in a
lour-run fifth to help Steve
Carlton become only the
second 19-game winner in the
majors. All of Philadelphia's
runs were unea rned, as the
Phils
grabbed thei r 14th
pitched an eight-hitter for his
sixth win without a loss lor straight win at home.
the Tigers. Jim Slaton Aslros 5, Mets 2:
Enos Cabell drove in Ulree
suffered his 14th loss.
runs and scored a fourth to
In

Ameri ca n

League

Yanks win on Nettles' homer

11

'"Soap' might get lauchs
from fifth graders," said the
league's Michael Schwartz,
"hit no one above lllat level
will be amused by lim!&gt;'
wristed males and childish
food-flinging scenes."
The league officials also
AUgust31, 19n
complained that the show has Dear Sir:
scenes lhat are "an insult to
l am glad Grant E. Young thinks my mind's in tile right
Catholics" and particularly place even if he thinks my -heart isn't. No one can be wrong all
singled out the shows the time, not even fum.
purported portrayal of
Authorities have said animals are often kept in these legItalian·Americans " as . hold traps for 30 hours, sometimes even longer. He says they
gluttonous gangsters who aren't left in these traps longer than 8 or 10 hours. How long
have difficulty speaking En- does it take an animal to chew up a leg to get out of one of these
glish."
traps?
On Tuesday, the Christian
I did not say, "I was against the k1lllng of deeF, fish or
Life Commission of the 13- other wildlife as long as the animal did not suffer." That's not
million member Southern only an absurd remark to make hit a silly one, and I did not
Baptist Convention called on · make it. Killing ari animal in WI instant and leaving it in a trap
ABC to withdr~w the show. to suffer many hours are two differeni things.
The Commission, which has
Again, Mr. Young twisted what I satd. J don't believe
been spearheading many of anyone is out to ban all sports hunting in the state of Ohio. He is
the protests against the the ooe who said that. I said if someone did say that he was a
program, · called it ''prime nul. All WE!' want is that these animals are captured in a
time pollution" and "sex humane way.
miseducation .''
This country put men on the moon, wily can't they provide
"The problem is not that humane ways to capture fox, mink and raccoon?..,. Mrs, Mat'•
'Soap' dellls will! sex," tile Rusk James, 439 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
letter to ABC said, "but that
it treats sex in an
irresponsible manner."
Not against trapping, but torture
Two
Christian
Life
Commission members who Dear Sir :
have seen the revised shows
This letter is being written in order to try to explain why
said the revisions did not . I'm against the use of leg-hold traps. I had several petitions "'
change their minds and circulate, but quite frankly, I didn't liave much luck obtaining
warned Soulllern Baptists not signatures. People didn't understand what they meant.
to be "misled" because some
Many hunters think we want to ban all hunting and
of the "offensive" scenes trapping. This is wrong! We all know that without hunling
have been eliminated from there _wowd ~ . WI over.populatlon of most animals. All we
the-first show
__:&lt;O"ant ts to eliminate the ag()lly that the animals have to go
"But in th~ second and lllrough.l'~e seen ~y pictures of helpless animals who have
third episodes, the morally chewed their feet off m. an effort to get loose. Othe;s starve to
offensive scenes increase .. death while being held m these traps. The most decisive reason
said Harry N. Hollis of the lor my stand against leg-hold traps is that! had a pet cat which
Christian .Life Commission. w~ up !!" one of them. _He survived, but the trap had
punctured his rear paw and ropped all the hair off rJ. hia tail. I
ask: What did my pet do to deserve such -treatment? What
would have happened had this been a small child, perhaps
YGW'S?
Please think about aU the reasons against leg~old traps
NEW CHAIRMAN
and
then go to the polls and vote them out! We can and
COLUMBUS (UP!)
hopefully
will, do it!
·
'
Theodore . T. Reed Jr.,
Thank
you
for
allowing
me
to
express
my
feelings
about
Pomeroy, has been elected
chairman of the Ohio thiS subject. - Name withheld on ·request.
Development
Financing
Commission for the 1977.78
term.
Reed, president and
director of The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co .,
Pomeroy, was appointed to Dear Sir:
· I was fortunate enough to get a copy of The Sunday-Times
the commission in January,
Sentinel
of Aug: 14, 1977.
·
1973.
like
tosaytoMr.
Kincaide
rJ.
Tuppers
Plains, a big
Iwoilld
James Jnles, president of
the First National Bank of "thank you", for his letter concerning the banning of legllold
Cambridge, was elected vice traps.
Hts letter expresses the feeling and optnloos of many
chairman.
people.
Mr. Kincaidll\nows rJ. what he is speaking. A lot of
The
commission
people
do
not know the first principle of hunting or tz:apping,
administers the state's two
yet
without
the knowledge they will go to the polls on Nov. 8
basic finance programs for
arid
vote
to
do away with I!OIIlething they have been told is
industry : the guaranteed
cruel,
yet
they
have never actually seep the cruelty.
,
loan program and Industrial
I myself have always lived in a rural area, and have hunted
revenue
bonds.
The
and
trapped with my husband and know if they ban the leg hold
commission was set up to
trap,
look out, we are in big trouble.
llelp new or expanding firms
How
many ladies do you see wearing fur collsrs on their
obt~in growth capitsl.
coats? I see a lot. WeUwheredo they think the furs come from.
We have a Wildlife Legislative Committee llere in Perry
KROGH BARRED
County, and it makes us happy to kilow that there are people in
SEA'ITLE (UP!) .:_ Tile the Gallipo1ia !I rea that ar~ out ID fight for the right to tr!lp.
Washington State Bar
I feel if we aU ban together, and get out and talk, with the
A&lt;!sociation voted Wednesday people who do not underatand tile isaue tlley will see where
to deny convicted Willie Iller are doing our young people a great Injustice.
·
'
House "plwnber" Eg!1 Krogh ·
lsn 't it better to have the young people out selling their
Jr. readmission to the bar. traps and running their trap lines instead of Ullng dnlgs? ·
After 10 hours of testimony Wilen they are trapping and h~q they aren't looking for
and deliberations, the Board something to do, they llave I!OIIlelhinl to do.
of Governors Wednesday
So really' all you voters, set to the poill. Let's 1reep the
denied Krogll'' petltlod. The rigltta we have instead of havillg them taken 81111Y. I'd be •
Washington state Supreme happy to talk with anyone who might have any qiaettl.ons. - •
Court will make tile final Mrs. Nola Patton, 3298 Eut, Jlllldioo City, Ohio 43748.
decision.
Telephone 814-887-2171.

:,
••

Tennis event
has soft mood
•

By MARTIN LADER
UP! Sports Writer
FOREST HILLS, N.Y.
(UPl ) - The unpretentious
tone of opening day had been
set when the honor of playing
the first match on the
pl-estigious stadiwn court fell
to two unseeded men, and the
soft mood prevaUed through
42.matches spread out over 12
long hours Wednesday.
In spirit, at least, the U.S.
Open Tennis Championships
don't really get under way
Willi today.
For this is the day when
Bjorn Borg and Jimmy Connors, the two top-oeeded men,
drag tlleir woWlded bodies
into action. It also iS, theday when transsexual Dr. Renee
Richards makes her courtordered Forest Hills debut as

Lookout Mountain, Tenn.,
came within one game of.
losing to Matt Mitchell of
Palo Alto, Calif., · but .
recovered to win, 4-6, 7~. 6-1.
"He was playing very well
and wasn't missing anything,'' Tanner said later.
Harold Solomon, the No. 12
seed, sJso. had to struggle
before overcoming South
African Bernie Mitton, H ; 63, 7-li, while easy winners
InclUded No. 4seed Guillenno
Vilas of Argentina, 6-1, 6-0
over former champion
Manuel Santana of Spain, and
No. 14 Ken Rosewall of
Australia 6-Q 6-4 over Tim
Gullikson' of Onalaska Wis
·•·

RIVERSIDE

victory of the season. Marmy

Mota had a pinch-hit single in
the eighth to tie him with
Jerry Lynch for second place
on the all-time pinch hit list
willl 116. Smokey Burgess
ranks No. 1 with 144.

+ ..H . . . .H . . . . . .H . .

+....,~---..

..

:•

CANNERS
PRESTO

'..

AND

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MIRRO-MATIC
PRESSURE

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COOKER-CANNERS

..

..

Jar Lifters

Cold Pack Canners
Foley Food Mills

.

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· Jar Wrenches

•

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EBERSBACH HARDWARE
MAIN ST.

POMEROY .·

CLEVELAND (UPI ) Right winger Bob · Murdnch
signed a new long-term
contract with the Cleveland
Barons Wednesday to reunite
the team's "Three-M Line" of
Murdoch, Denl]is Maruk and
AI Macadam.
Murdoch, who had been a
free agent since the end of
last season, scored 23 goals
!llld 19 assists in 57 games
before being injured last
year.
CALCUTTA, Ohio (UP! ) Earnie Shavers
turned a ''yoilng 33" Wednesday, still predicting a
seventh-round knockout of
champion
Muharnmad Ali in their title
Challenge~

..
,., ..

..
..

Now's the time to buy!

a woman.
It's Women's Day in the
$462,420 · tournament, and
tw~time defending champion
Chris Evert had the honor of
opening play sgainst Sharon
Walsh at 11 a.m.
Richards, who wUI ·follow
VW-AMC~EEP on eenter court, had the poor
luck to be drawn against
Wimbledon champion
Virginia Wade.
While the women will~
featured in the stadium court
Auto .. A.C., tilt wheel , today , the two most
important men are relegated
radials, chrome wheels,
to side courts. Borg, the top
roof rack, local, 1 owner.
seed
and
two-time
Wimbledon champion, will
test his sprained shoulder
against Trey Waltke . of St.
Louis on Court 17, while No.2
seed Connors, the defending
champion who is botllered by
an aching back, will be oo ,
Court 15 against JasjitSingl'l
of Grossingers, N.V.
Of the seven men seeds in
Auto .. A.C.. P.S.. 8 foot bed . action Wednesday, two were
beaten and two others had
close caUs. But no one had as
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... easy a time as Nastase, who
I'
rWI over South -African Frew
McMillan, 6-0, 6-0, in 46
minutes.
'
The
biggest .. upset
Wednesday occurred when
sixth-seeded Raul Ramire2: of
Sharp. auto., 8 loot bed .
Mexico was wiped out by 111year-&lt;Jld Ricardo Ycaza rJ.
Ecua!lor, 6-3, 8-2. Also
eilrninated was 13th seed
Mark Cox of England, a 7~. 78 victim of Californian Butch
Walts.
Roscoe Tanner, tile hardaerving No. 11 seed from

·• . • e .....,~........~....H

pace Houston to its seventh
straight victory. Rookie
Terry Puhl cracked a pair of
triples to extend his h1ttiJog
streak to 16 games and helped
drop Jerry Koosman to 11-17.
Padres%, Cardinal• 1:
Gene Richa rds stroked a
run-scoring triple and George
Hendrick added an RBJ
double to hand tile Cards
th~r seventh straight loss.
Bali Shirley picked up his
ninlll win against 16 losses
while Rollfe Fingers recorded
his league-leading 30th save.
Dodgers 5, Cubs 0:
Rick Rhoden sUpplied both
pitching and hitting, driving '
in a run and scattering just
five hils, before weakening in
the eighth, to pick up his 16th

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~Tbe ~Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

u., 'l~Y. Sept. 1,1m

READY FOR FOOTBALL SEASON - Boosters of the Wahama White Falcon Marching Band were preparing for football
season Tuesday afternoon by painting the interior of their refreshment stand, located in front of the fleld. Football season
begins for the Falcons this Friday as they host Wayne beginning 7:30 p.m.

Question raised over WS of golf
.

~
BASEBALL

Ferrell cards
an impossible
•
greatest wm

•

AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - If
you'd ask the 20 players in
this year' s World Series of
Golf if the $100,000 first prize
should be counted as official
money winnings, you might
get 20 different opinions.
"I have a lot of mixed.
feelings about the World
Series," said PGA champion
Lanny Wadkins after his
Wednesday practice round.
"!
think
having
a
championship at the end of
the year is a good idea. But
I'm not sure all the ways of
getting in are good or if the
money should be official."
Wadkir.;, one of the last
four to qualify for this year 's
$300,000, 72-.tlole event which
starts Friday on the famed
Firestone Country Club South
_.Course, doesn't have any
argument with the amount of
the top prize, "only if it is
official."
Wadkins, as do many other
playe rs, feel the $100,000
prize will annually decide the
money winning title, as it did
last year when J ack Nicklaus
over came a big edge held by
Ben Crenshaw by winning the
World Series. Some .also feel
the $100,000 first prize makes
the Series purse top heavy.
Ray Floyd, who earned hts
World Series · ber th by
winning a pair of tour eveilts,
doesn't agree.
"If the money isn't
official ," said Floyd, who,
along with Masters and
Br itish Open champion Tom
Watson will celebrate a
birthday on Sunday, . "then it
takes some thing away from
getting her e. That's the way I
feel about it.

"The money isn't put in its
proper prospective," Floyd
added. "We have · a couple
events with $60,000 first
prizes and several with
$50,000 and everYbody gets to
play . The World Series was
more out Of proportion when

it only had four players."
This is the second year Of
the expanded World Series
format and lor the second
year the field . will be 20
players. The 14 prior Series
Included only the winners of
the four major tournaments,

Sports transactions
SP.orts Trans1ctions
By Umted Press International
Wednesday
Football
Atlanta Cut quarterback
June Jones Ill , veteran wide
recei ver. Karl Farmer and tight
end Bob Adams .
Buff.a.lo Traded quarter back Gary Marangi to Green
Bay for an undisclosed future
draft choice ; Waived fullback
Jeff Kinney·, tight end Fred
Coleman , safety Van Green ,
wide receiver Leon Sherrod,
defenslye tackl e James Wolf ,
defensive back .Mike Nelms and
punter Wilbur Summers .
Chicago Wa i ved rook ie
defensiVe back Len Walter .
scheid ; traded offensive tine man Conn i e Zelencik to the
Buffalo Bil l s for decensi ¥e end
Billy Newsoi'ne.
New Or leans Wa ived
quarterback Joe- Gill i am , rookie
punter Rafael Sepuen, ·wide
rece iver Ricky Ri¥as, guard Ed
McEleny and running back
Leon McQuay .
·
New York Giants - Waived
linebacker Ken Mullens, offen sive tackles Ken Helms and
Bob Jordan and wide receiver
Roger Wallace.
New York Jets· Traded
wide receiver .kick r.e turn spe.
cialisl Lou Piccone to Bu ffalo
· for an undisclosed draft choice :,
placed center "R:on Kecman on
injured wa ivers .: o b t i3 in e Q
runn ing back JOhn Sm ith from
Dallas .
.
.
New t;:ngland Placed
rookie c o r n e r b a c k. Sidney
Brown on in iured reser¥e list
with torn cartilage in his knee ;
veteran halfback Andy Johnson
has agreed to new contract .
Philadelphia- Acqu ired vet eran defensive tackle
Art
Thoms from Oak land for ·future
consi derations and w aived run ning back Art Green.
M fddle llnePillsbtJrgh -

back .

Bask etball
OenYer - Signed Oon Walsh
and George Irv ine as assistant
coaches .
Los
Angeles
Wa ived
forward Marv Roberts.
Milwaukee - Signed UCLA
forward Marques Johnson .
Hockey
Buffa lo Signed veteran
cenler Don Luce to a multiyear
contract .
Cincinnati (WHA) - Signed
¥eteran NHL defenseman Gilles
Marotte to a one -year contract .
Cleveland Signed Right
winger Bob Murdoch to a new
long -term contract.
New York Rangers - Traded
the NH L rights of center Pete
Stemkt'IWSk.i to Los Angeles for
future considerations.
B aseball
Ch icago White Sox Re called seven players from
m inors - Chris Knapp , D;:~ve
Frost, John Verhoeven, Bob
Coluccio , Mike Squires, John
Flannery and Tommy Cruz ;
acquired relief pi tch.e r Clay
Carroll and player to c-e named
later from Sf.. Louis for player
to be named later .
Seattle ....... Reca l led -shor tstop
Tom McMillan and $ecOnd
baseman Jim Sexton froni ·the
minors.
New Yor k Mets Traded
¥eteran catcher' Jerrv Grote to
Los Angeles for two minor
league players to be named
later and a " nom inal cash
consideration."

The Masters, PGA, U.S. and
British Open&lt;;. The top prize
then was $50,000.
Hubert Green, this year's
U.S. Open champion, believes
the $100,000 top prize "tends
to be a little too much. It
made a difference last year in
the money winnings. It's a
little too one sided."
Green believes 11 people
know who wins. They don't
care how much money you
win, and the players don't get
that excited about it. When
I'm standing on the last green
with a three foot putt, I'm not
thinking I'm going to win
$45,000. I'm thinking I'm
going
-to
wi n
the

toU:mament.'.'

Wednesday's
line. scores
Ma~j o r L eillgue Resu lt s
&amp;v United Press I nternational

Pttsbgh

Nilltiona l L eague
030 000 ®0-- 3 H 1

SanFrn

300 011 Olx- 6 10 1

~~~~~ta

ggg ~~ ~ l ; ~

Kison , Jac.kson (li), Gossage
(7). Forster (81. Tekulve (8)
and Ott ; Barr and Sadek.. WBarr , 1'2 -12. L- Kison, 7 -7. HRs
- San Franc i sco. Evans (1 4 ).
Pittsburgh , Robinson 12Al.

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UPI) - Gene Ferrell of
Orchard Hills Country Club in
Bryan staged one of the most
amazing finishes in the $year history of the Ohio Open
to beat host professional El
Collins in a sudden4eath
playoff Wednesday :
The two were tied at the
end of 72 holes with Z76s,
Collins blowing the threestroke lead he held over
Ferrell at the end of 54 holes .
On the extra hole, Ferrell's
tee shot went into a lake
fringing the green and he had
to take a penalty shot (his
only one of the tournament)
to. reach the green in three .
Collins was on the fringe in
two.
Ferrell, who led the first
two days, then rolled in a 30foot putt for the victory .
Collins needed three to get
down for a bogey.
Ferrell, a 34-year-&lt;&gt;ld left-

hander,
called
it
" impossible," his · "greatest
victory.''
It was his biggest payday
ever with a first prize of
$3,000. His largest previous
check was $2,800 in the 1971
Los Angeles Open.
He said he thought Collins
might have to take th.ree
putts so he was going lor a
five, too, but his putt rolled in
for the win. He had a 6!1-70 for
the final 36 holes.
"1 just used the wrong club
when I was on the fringe, "
said Collins. HI used a putter,
and it should have been a
sand wedge ."
Tom Popa of Columbus was
third with 279. Charles
Sifford, a 54-year-&lt;&gt;ld pro
from Brecksville who shared
the lead with Ferrell when
the final, 36-hold day began,
flnished with 70-75 for 282.
Defending
champion
Martin Roesnik of Canton had
71-73 Wednesday for a 289.

How they ran
NOR THFIEL D TRA CK
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UPII - Demon · rad and

Malpractice and Gay Project
and the winner returned
55.20. 52.80 and 52 . ~0.

Dark Eagle took turns setting
records at Northfield Park
Wednesday night as both

Demon Tad finished Six
lengths ahead of Star Blend
and returned S-4 .60, $3 am:~

ca ptured heats ot the 524\820

52.80. Opotlo Tad was third .

Otlio Sires Stakes series for
two -year-o l d trotting colts
and geldings.
Dar k Eagle opened with a
whopping t5-lenght victory in

The victories 3!Jsured both
horses berths In the 5102,000
Ohio Trotting Classic, which
will be run at Scioto Downs in
Columbus Sept. 9.

the $12,.410 fourth race ,
erasing a two-year-old track
r ecord
with
a 2 : 04 4·5
clocking .

Other aualifler~ for ' the
classic ar~ : on To Glory, Star

But Demon Tad came right

CoaltOwn, Stardust Kid and

b;lck In the 512.410 ninth race,
covering the mile in 2:04 ?-S
to take away Dark. Eagle's
ma r k ..

Dick Richardson Jr. gu ided
Dark Eagle to victory over

Blend ,

Opollo

Tad,

Malpr actice , Big Sam. Lucky

Lollylad.

The 10th race big triple
combination of 3-4· 10 was

~TbeilailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday,Sep\.1,1977

All will fall
in 7th round

Ohio drillers put down ,81 new .wells
during first two weeks of August

says Shaver

CALCUTTA, Ohio (UP!)Challenger
Earnle Shavers
Major Lngue Stand i n~s
By United Pren tnlernlfiOnat turned a "young 33" WednesNational league
day, still predicting a
E•s•
w. L Pet. GB seventh-round knockout of
81 so 611
Phil a
heavyweight champion
77 St. .516 S
Pittsbqh
Muhammad Ali in their tiUe
1l
60
.s•1
10
Chicago
71 62 .5l4 ll
St . Louis
bout Sept. 29.
60 12 .ASS 11 1 2
Montrea t
"1 am a young 33. Ali is an
51 80 .389 30
New York
old 35, and I'm going to knock
west
W. L Pet . GB him out " Shavers told some
Los Ang
BO 53 .602
Cinci
72 62 .537 B1a
Houston
tl-4 69 .481 15
San Fran
62 12 .4 63 18 1 '
San Diego
59 76 .437 · '22
Allanta
48 8.4 .3 6.4 31 112
. Wednesd•y's Results
San Francisco 6, Pittsburgh 3
Philadelphia 6, Atlanta I
Ci ncinnati 6 , Montrea l 0
Houston 5. New York 2
San Di ego 2, St , Lou is I
Los Angeles 5. Chicago 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
( No games !cheduled )
Friday's Games
Houston at Montreal , night
Atla at New York, 2, tw i -night
Cinci at Ph iladelphi a, night
Pittsburgh at Los Ang , night
Chi cago at San Diego , night
St. Lou ts at San Fran , night

American League
East
w L Pet . GB
'
80 52 .606
New York
7~ 55 .577
4
Boston
75 55 .577 4
Baltimre
63 67 ..485 16
Detro it
Cl evelnd
62 ~0 .-470 18
57 80 .-416 151• 1
Milw
45 84 .349 J31 .
Toronto
West
W L
Pet . GB
Kan City
76 54 .585
Chicago
73 56 .566
21 •
Minn
75 59 .560
3
Texas
73 58 .557 31 2
Calif
61 68 .A7J W h
Oakland
52 78 .-100 24
Seatt le
52 83 .385 261/.,.
.
. Wednesda('s Result!
Baltimore 4, Ca ifornia 3
New York 5, Seattle 4
Cleveland 4, Boston J
KanSas Ci ty 5, Texas 4
Oakland 4, Minnesota 3
Detroit 5, Milwaukee 2
Today's Probable Pitchers
&lt;All Times EDT)
Cley.eland (Fi tzmorr is 6-7) at
Boston (Lee 5-31, 2 p.m .
Detro i t
( Arroyo 7-13 1 af
Milwaukee £Augustine 11 - 15 ),
8:30p .m .
Oakland
( Blue
lJ -15 )
at
Minnesota (Goltz 16-7}, 8 :30
p.m .
Friday's Games
Seattle at Toronto
California at Cleve, night
Oakland at Detroit , night
Baltimore at Chicago, ni ght
New York at Minnesota , night
M i lw af Kan City , 2, twi -n ight
Boston af Texas , night

~0

u~derprlvileged

youngsters who attended his
birthday party at Turkana
Farms.
.Shavers' trainer, Frank
Lues , a·nd manager · Joe
Gennaro said their man may
be arriving at his 210-pound
fighting weight too soon. He
weighed 218 Wednesday.
Luca and Gennaro plan to
keep Shavers working out
daily the rest of this week but
may give him a day or two of
rest if he trains down too
close to the 210-pound goal.
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) University of Wisconsin star
halfback Ira Matthews, who
pleaded no contest to
fraudulent use of a stolen
Master Charge credit card,
has been placed on probation
for one year.
Matthews and teammate
Robert Harris were arrested
and charged after purchasing
clothing and sporting goods In
the West Towne Mall. Harris
also pleaded no cotatest, and
Buenzli had sentenced him to
one year on probation.

I

According to the Aug. 18
issue of Ohio Oil and Gas
Association's scouting report,
81 new wells were drilled in
Ohio during the first two
weeks of August. Drillers
reopened two wells, revised
two locations and plugged one
well.
Wells completed in Gallia
County were by Altheirs Oil,
Inc. on 20 acres owned by
Mabel Hayes in Addison
Twp.; Altheirs Oil, Inc. for
265.99 acres owned by Mabel
Hayes ip Addison Twp. and
Althelrs Oil, Inc. ·on 100 acres
owned by Stanley Shaver in
Cheshire Twp.
New permits issued by the
Division of Oil and Gas for
Gallia County were :
Charles A. Orwig, doing
business as, Orwig Oil
Company, Logan, for 10 acres
oo a revised location on land
owned by C. Van Gilder in
Addison Twp.; Brasel and
Brasel, Inc. Columbus, for
30.7~ acres owned by !Whert
A. and Jo Ann Conkle in
Cheshire Twp.; Brasel and
Brasel, Inc., Columbus, for 13
acres owned by Marlin A. and
Ruby G. Rife, in Cheshire
Twp.; Charles A. Orwig,
doing business as, Orwig Oil
Company, Logan, for 10 acres
in Cheshire Twp.; Cha!'les A.

Orwig, doing business as,
Orwig Oil Company. Logan,
11 .3 acres
owned by
Frederick Thompson in
Addison Twp.; Charles A.
Orwig, doing business as

PRO PANAMA
HARTFORD, Conn . (UP])
- Sen . Lowell Weicker says
Americans are bound by their
traditional values of freedom
and self-determination to
give con trol of the Panama
Canal to the Panamanians.
"The United States is not
meant to be a Democratic
rerun of the colonialism of
European monarchs or the
totalitarianism of Communist
central · co mmittees ,"
Weicker told a
news
conference at the state
Capitol. " What's involved are
thiS nation's pfinciples, what
this nation stands for .
Whatever it is we stand for at
home, we should stand ·for
abroad. "
In 1939, reacting to Germany's invasion of Poland,
Great Britain and France
served an ultimatum on Adolf
Hitler but it was ignored and
two days later the Allies
declared war on Germany.

Farmers'
• •
opm1ons
wanted

WILLIAMSPORT,
Pa . .
(UP!) - Former basebaL'
star Vic Wertz was the top
vote-getter of 12 men selected
for induction into the
PeMsy Jvania Sports Hall of·
Fame, jt was announced
Wednesday.
The top 12 in the balloting
will be inducted into the Hall
.of Fame a t the. association's
annual banqllet here Nov. 5.

$306.938.

•

Evans opening
first ·eatery
in Michigan

Clncl
201 .100 002- 6 9 0
Mntrat
000 000 ooo- 0 3 1
Sea¥er and P I u m m e r ;
Twi tchell, Alcala (7), Kerrigan
(9) and Carter. W-Seher. 16·
5. L- Twllchell, 3-10. HRCincinnati , Morgan (21) .
N.Y .
0002000Q0-2 81
Houstn
001 021 lOx- 5 10 1
Koosman, Lockwood (7) and
Stearns ; Lemongel lo and Fer guson. W- Lemongello. 6-l4 . L
- Koosman, 8-17.

consideration.
Now located in five states
.:..Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, '
Indiana and Wes.t Virginia Bob Eva ns Res ta urant s
definite action being taken." . feature Bob Evans Farms
Hirschfeld said there is no Sausage as the main item on
moderately-priced
"miracle cure" but he told the
co
untry-style
menu. The
members the bureau will do
company
also
.markets
its
everything possible to assist
farmers in correcting the sausage in grocery stores
situa tion as
soon as from the Mississippi River to
the East Coast .
possible.

.-,;~
;:=--

' \~\

~

NOW IS
THE TIME!

ooo 003 010- • 8 2

N.Y .
101 002001-5 9 0
Honeycut t , Ga lasso {8) and
St inson, Jutze (9); Tor rez, Lyl e
{8) and Munson . W-Lyle, 12-4.
L-Galasso.
0-6.
HRs-New
Yor k, Nettles 2 (34), Chambliss
{17l.

Cleve
000 000 301- .4 10 0
Boston
001 101
3 90
Fitzmor ris, Dobson (6), Kern
(8) and Kenda ll ; Aase, Stanl ey
(?). W illoughby (·9) and Fisk .. W
- Ker n , 7-8. L- Stanley, 6 -7. H R
- Boston, Fisk (19).

ooo-

Are you in need of a

'

good used home before winter? We have some dean

homes that have been traded in.

Texas
01 t 000 2oo- 4 6 0
Kan City
010 01 3 oox- 5 9 1
Al exa nder , Bark er (6) and
S.u ndberg ; Colborn, ·Bir d ._ 19!
and Por ter . W- Colborn, 15·13.
L-Aiexander, 13.9. HR-Texas,
Harr ah (22) .

NEW YORK (UP! )
Baaron B P itte nger J r.,
associate director of a thletics
a t Harvard , has bee n
appointed Director of Public
Relations a nd Special Events
for the United States Olympic
Committee, accor ding to
President Robert Kane. ·
He will assume the role
Sept. 6.

Oak.lnd
001 021 ooo- 4 6 1
Minn
200 000 001- J 6 0
Medich , Bair (91 and Sang uil len ; Thormodsgttr d, Burgmeier
{9) and Wynegar. W- Medich .
8-6. L - Thor modsga r d, 10-10.
HRs-Minnesota , Wyneg ar ( 8),
Hisle 126). Oa k land , Gross (17).

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

1975 12X50 HILLCREST 2 IR

PARK RESERVED

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SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 3RD
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CAMDEN PARK

arbitrate bias or equal pay
disputes between members of
Congress and their aides.
The board would have a
large staff · to investigate
complaints and first attempt
"informal conciliation/' Ms.
Grkavec said.
A House . commiSSIOn
headed by Rep. David Obey,
D-Wis., r ecen tly reported
that blacks are only 6.8 per
cent of the total work force in
the House and that white
males earn from 18 per cent
to 129 per cent more than
women doing the same job.
· In the Senate, only 30 of
more than 1,100 .professional
are members of minorities,
Brown said. ·

PRETIY
PEASANT
PRINTS

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
, COLOR SYSTEM

PHONE (304) 428-0000 ,

prominent America n s" to

'

1

•

.~.TimE I

RT. 2 NORtH

HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

Grkavec, an aide to Rep.
Edward Markey, D-Mass.,
said the group wants Speaker
Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass., to
appoint "an outside board of

- i-~

a
Roy Rogers' hambu rger
down his throat.''

Craig Morton starling quarter - money.

' ~-· ~·

Congressmen are greatest hypocrits

GED test to h e given
on Sept. 9 and 10

D

GET READY FOR OLD MAN WINTER!

STEVE KOCH WILL BE demon&lt;;trating the ancient art of batik from Donesia and
Africa at the second annual observance of " Yesteryear" set fOr Sept. 17 from II a.m . to II
p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Koch will be displaying !-shirts. pillows and
wall hangings in which the batik art is used. Numerous booths, games and food stands will
he set up on the grounds behind the former Pomeroy Junior High School for the observance.

hiring and promoting em- Brown of the National Urban
League
told
a
news
ployes.
conference
the
workers
" are
·A number of congressional
aides and other employees on helpless to redress their
Capitol Hill complained that . grievances since the nation's
women , minorities and older· lawmakers have exempted
persons are discriminated themselves from the 1964
against by members of the Civil Rights Act and
legislation like the Equal Pay
House and Senate.
Coalition co~hairman Roo Act of 1963."
"We hope to end the
ultimate hypocrisy where
employees working lor the
nation's lawmakers lack the
simple protection granted by
those lawmakers to others,' '
Brown said.
POINT PLEASANT~ The the test must show proof of
Members of the coalition
General Education Diploma age and social security include the Urban League,
Test (TED) will he given number. Registration fee is American Civil Liberties
September 9 and 10 at the $10. For more information Union, Common Cause, the
Mason County Vocational contact William Edwards at NAACP Legal Defense Fund,
Center, Ohio River Road, the Mason County Vocational Public Cit izens' Congress
here. Hours are 6 p.m. to 10 Center, 675-3039.
Watch, the League of Women
p.m. on Friday. September 9
Voters and the Cap itol Hill
and from 9 a.m . to 3:30 p.m.
Womens Political Caucus.
on Saturday, September 10.
Kevin Murray, an aide to
Those passing will receive
Sen. James Abourezk, Dthe equivalency of a high
S.D., said members of
school diploma .
Congress use the satne
Participa nt s must be
argument in defending the
.residents of West Virginia or
exemption as ·. businessmen
did when they fought the 1964
last att ended a school in West
Vi rginia. Registration is now
Fanner and sausilgemaker law - that they must have
in progress and those taking. Bob Evans of Rio Grande people they trust working lor
announces the grand opening them.
" We have no problem with
September 6 of the first Bob
a
congressman trying to get
Evans
Restaurant
in
NO HAPPY TRAILS
people
who are loyal to him,"
Michigan , which becomes the
FAIRFAX, Va . (UP!)
Murray
said. "We just don't
Roy Roge rs, " King of the 32nd in the family-style
th ink he should discriminate
Cowboys," was hit in the face chain.
in
the process."
Evans
said
Governor
with a pie Tuesday while
Coalition
co~hairman Olga
entertaining a t the opening of William G . .Milliken a nd
another in his chain of family · Detroit Mayor Co leman
Young are among scheduled
·restaurants.
Fairfax policemen at the · first4ay guests of the new
Picke tt Shoppi ng Center. restaurant located off 1-75 at
quickly caught a 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld Taylor in suburban Detroit.
boy who threw th.e ·pie-like Two other Bob Evans
concoction
in
the Resta urants are currently
under construction in greater
entertainer's face.
Detroit at 14-Mile Rd. at 1-7~
Rogers,
66,
and Telegraph Rd . at 1~96.
mome nta rily taken
officials say other

Niekro , Hanna (7). Davey {8)
and Po~oroba : ~arlfon and
6Qone. W- Cartton , .19-8 . L :......
Niekro, 13 -17 .

s•attl•

In 1975, Israel and Egypt
tftitialed an agreement
calling for Israeli withdrawal
· from a sinal! slice of the Siitai ·
Desert in return for Egyptian .
political concessions and
substantial pledges
of
financial support from the
United States.

By IRA R. ALLEN
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Major civil rights groups
Wednesday opened an active
battle against what they
called
" the
ultimate
hypocrisy" of Congress
forcing everyone hut itself to
abide by equal opportunity in

NEW YORK (UP!) - Jim
Tallman , 36, of Nicholson,
000 000 too- 1 8 0
Pa. , and one of New York's St.L
·
san Dgo
001 001 oox- 2 7 1
baclser Jack Lambert reported lea ding har ness · racing
Under wood, Metzger (7 ) and
to camp; waived runn ing back
Simmons ; Shir ley, Fingers (8)
trainer-drivers,
was
killed
In
onecUJ" f
Mike Col lier •. lineba cker Paul
and Roberts . w.- Shirley, ~ " 16.
._,..,.
Harris. defensi¥e end Roosevelt a
pla ne
cr ash
ear ly L- Underwood. 7-10.
·
n
Kelly;.
Wednesday morning in
JEEP.
J.lQ lL
72
St . Lou;s- Cut nnebacker AI
Chicgo
000 000 ooo- 0 6 1
Beauchamp, sa1etv Neal Craig Gr eenwich, Conn.
L.A.
000 t 11 Olx- 5 10 2
and wide receiver Mel Baker .
The pilot, not immediately
Burr is, P . Reuschel (7) and
4 WHEEL ·DRIVE
Tampa Bay - Wai ved wide
Mirterwa ld ; Rhoden, Rautzh an
identified, was also killed.
rece;ver Freddie Douglas.
(8) , Garman (9) and Yeager . W
PICKUPS
Houston M issing from
Tallman entered harness -Rhoden, 16 -8. L- Burris, 11 SftN\
SCQ
pr actice and presumed re le aU.
·~ I
UNJ
sed : Linebacker AI Romano, racing on a full-time level 13
punters Danny Lee and M;ke years ago and since had
·---l--~-'2"'1..,n_,S"'to.,c,k~~--t-'o)son
G~r;:e,.,en_.,.;;;l';i
; n'-'e~b:;;
a~ck;;er;;.r Mar~ _lohn
• dr-iven--=u&lt;oFE,..._cthlllr-lc,OOO--,.;;m,.....J~ID~~c
~
and quarter back
Kaf ' r ,
I·J
RIVERSIDE JEEP
Douglas.
w10ners, acc u m u lati ng
Denver Waived quarter - nearly $6 million in purse
G~iiipol i s, ~ io
back Sieve Spurr i er and named

4 Wh eel Drive
.S
T11N

HOLLYWOOD IUPI)
Barbara Eden, wbo starred
ln the telvtsion series "I
Dream or Jeannie" as B
blonde genie, will marry a
Chicago executive Saturday.
Mill! Eden, 39, and Chuck
Fegert, a vice president of
Marshall Field Enterprises,
will be married In Chicago, a
family spokesman said. It
will he the second marriage
lor both. ·Miss Eden was
divorced in 1974 from actor
Michael Ansara.

I

Orwig Oil Company, Logan , Ohio in Gallipolis Twp.
12.32 acres owned by Frank
Great Lakes Gas Corp .
Shoemaker, Addison Twp.; Columbus, on 192.96 acres
Edco Drilling and Producing owned by Hannen and Oma
Inc., Mt. Gilead, 0 ., for 10 Ha g~r in Raccoon Twp. and
acres owned by the State of Charles A. Orwig, doing
business as Orwig Oil
Company, 10 acres owned by
C. Van Gilder in Addison
Twp.
.
There was a change in
types of tools for W. J . Lydic
Inc. of Zanesville for 20 acres
. owned by Donald a~d Mar- :
jorie Mink in Addison Twp.
and by Charles A. Orwig,
doing business as, Orwig Oil
Company of Logan lor 11.69
acres owned by Frederick
Thompson in Addison Twp.
New permits issued in
Meigs County went to Talbott
OH and Gas Company,
Chesterhill for 29.29 acres
owned 'by Norma Kay Carroll
in Rutland Twp.; Talbott Oil
and
Gas
Company ,
Chesterhill, for 39.68 acres in
Rutland Twp. and Hanley E .
Hardin, Zanesville, rur 66.8
acres owned by Clifford and
Mary E. Wolfe in Salisbury
Twp.

worth $963 .90.
A crowd of 3,134 wagered

Leaders

EDEN ENGAGED

RE'S STORE

EROY 0.

Open : Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9 :30 to 5
· Friday9 :30to8
Middleport,

N. lnd Av e.

•·

'

\

I .

o:
\

.

.

�•

c;;;;~-;;;_;-;d;;;;'[j;'i;athers ~~iC: ii;-1Rutland gardeners
of~:~ - 0eS("endants

Spilng!er, Rutland ; J . J . Cremeans, Patty, John, Peggy
Tauuny . B~b and Teresa Cremeans. Mtddleport ; Danny,
reuArutton~;M
Barb. Darrin and Derek ere.
en._.,; were the etght means, Rutland.
living children or the Rev.
Shirley Sinunons, T. T.
and Mrs. Cremeans - Alhert . Simmons, Melanie Sinunons,
Cremeans,
Huntington ; Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Smith
Maude Smith, Rutland ; Anna and sons, Middleport; Mrs.
Flowers, Huntington, June Maude Smith, Rutland ;
Cremean s ,
Rutl a nd ; Mrs.Anna Hager, Hun·
Theodore Cremeans , Mid· tington, W. Va.; Vada a.nd
dleport : Muriel Young , Norman Flowers, Hun·
Rutland ; Basil Cremeans , tington, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs.
Rutland: and Charles 'ere- David R. Wiley and son Flat·
means, Trenton.
woods, Ky.; Mr. and' Mrs.
P rayer ~receding the din· Franklin M. Day and family ,
.ner was ~tven . by the Rev . Mr. and Mrs. Gary McAboy
Robert Smith.
and family , Huntington, W.
At the reunion w,ere Mr. Va .; Robert E . Smith,
and Mrs. Charles Cremeans
Pomeroy: Roberta , Gene,
Trenton ; Mr. and Mrs:
William LeMaster, Hutn·
ington, W.Va.; Scott and
Tara LeMaster, Huntington;
'Arthur and Glennis Musser,
Rutland; Deidra and Deanna
· Carson, Loveland; Basil and
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Kathleen
Cremeans , Gene Coleman of Rutland
Rutland: Fred and Kathleen hosted a hayride and wiener
Rodgers, Middletown ; Lena roast at their farm Saturday
and· Albert Cremeans, Hun· evening for the Mason Faith
. . tington ; . Lutl\er and Mary Baptist Church. Fifty-three
· Smith, Route 1, Middleport; persons attended the outing
Mr. and Mrs .. Carroll Smith wtth John Pauley giving
· and , Lisa, Middleport; Mrs. grace before the wiener roast
Munel Young, Rutland; Man· · around the boitfire.
.ford Hulton, Middleport ;
Attending were Mr. and
Hurley Hutton, Rutland; En- Mrs. Paul Pierce, Randy and
.. nis Flowers, Rutlapd; Judy, Scott, Mr. and Mrs.John
Danny, Mindy, Angie, and Pauley, Heather and Brian,
Danny, J.r ., McDonald , Mr. and Mrs. Carl Harmon,
..
. . : Rutlan'd : · Theodore Cre- Mrs. Jack Roach, Andy, Tim·
.. .' . ine&lt;jns; · Rutland; June Cre- mie, and Ronnie, Mrs. Winnie
means, Iva Cremeans, Dave Van Meter and Illena, Mike
otto, Stan Blake, Mr, and
Mrs. Paul Wears, Nancy,
Joan and Dannie, Mr. and
Mrs. James Pauley III and
Amy, Tom Glover, Johnnie
Thabet,. Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
.
' .
Anderson,
Jamie and Todd,
· -. · !&gt;party was given Saturday
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rick Ohlinger,
evening . In .the basement of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jim Pauley,
: .t)le · Middleport United
·. Pentecostal Church, honoring
· theadult &lt;;lass·in recognition ' ·
BAKE SALESET
. : (or bei.pg tbe wiimers of a
A
bake
sale on Sept. 10 was
·Sunday scbool contest' held
planned
at
the Wednesday
· •rj!cent!Y, within the church.
night
meeting
of the youth or
· ·The · adult Class .had the.
·.greatest percentage of in· the Bradbury Church of
·. crease over the 'five week Olrist. Visit of the Gospel
Couriers on Sunday was an·
'~riod of. the Ctlritest. Good
.. : ·'food .. and fellowship were nounced. Desi Jeffers had the
· · enjoyed by the 21 who at- devotions . Choir practice was
held following the meeting.
: ten4ed. - ·
ev. JamesandBertha
at ~";ns gat~ red l"e&lt;."enlly
he orestAcresParkfor a

Cr

Anita and · Mana Musser,
Pomeroy ; Cheryl Smith,
Randall and Brian, Mid·
dleport ; Everett, Sherry and
PlullipSmith, RuUand; Paul
Musser, Rutland ; Elmore
Smith , Homer Smith ,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs.
James Spangler and family ,
Rutland; Mick, Joyce and
Andrea Cremeans, Steve,
Cheryl and Julie Cremeans,
Claude R. Cremeans, Lavena
Flower and her family, all of
Huntingt~n ; Steve, Cher)'l
and Julie Cremeans ,
o~k] ey, W. va.; t he former
'-""'
.Norma Flowers and herfamily of Huntington ; Paul
Mw;ser, J . R. Cremeans and
Diane, Rutland.

iill:

By Helt&gt;n and Sue Bottel
Does Acne Ha'!f A Cure?

Dear Helen and Sue :

3l

~

h
fi
•
•
aat er or pzcntc
6'

Missionaries
will speak ••

.

Soct" aI'
Ca Iend ar
.

Gll.UAN'S FASHION CENTER, located on the "'T"
in Middleport, will hold its grand opening Friday,
Saturday and Tuesday, beginning at 9 a.m. Girt
certificates of $50, $25. and $10, in addition· to door prizes

Colemans host outing

· Adult class

·&lt;giwn party

AT
ALL GREAT
~TO RES

r--·------·l

I

Group comtng

I

Goo

!
1

POLLY.$ POINTERS

I
I
I
1

I

..::=-...::.:-----'--------------

-------·---...J

1=23 :Ji•J.i§•I•J g
·\ .

THE FONZV
BY

n •••

Neighborhood
picnic enjoyed .

THE
SHOE BOX

lfS THE

PORTRAIT

IN
LIYI~(j '~L~R

...
..
l~l

~

•

f

lrom diHerot Md•rou..od1

and C:U81om ~

• Umit:

01'1!

per 1ubjed, 1- per fuaiiJ

• Addiliwal portr.lc. ••&amp;i.l abh iD .U
1ize1 11 reuoaabh prku

•

Grov~

$1 .'25 each .dd.itioaalwbjed
·

• PrriOGI u.ader 18 mu1t be pu.ied by IHIIeDI or rutcUU

• Fini.Md poruaiu delivered ••

.core

NEW!

"DUO-IMAGE"
PORTRAIT
available illt our l ~w discount priees .

'

ItA·, ' .

1~..
-~~ :

GIIllAN'S
FASHI0N

CENTER

GRAND OPENING

In the September issue
of Cosmopolitan there's a
coupon worth $15
towards The Perfect Perm.
Bring it to us.

As a partidpatlng Sensor Perm

Salon we 'll allow you $15 towards
a Sensor Perm~"'"

TUE,, WED., THURS., FRI. and SAT.
AUGUST »31 SEPTEMBER 1, 2, : ·

It takes a perfe5.t perm to create
a perfect halrstyle. And because
Sensor Perm lets us give you a
perfect ~rm every time, we

' At These Locations

.

JONUS OFFER: " FREE" PORTRAIT of GRANDPARENTS
· Photo Hours: D1ily 10-1 2-5

6-8 • S1t.

10-1 2-t:30

hair the kind of styling flexibility
it might never had before-.
So cut out the coupon and call

the door prize going to Terry
McGuire, Jr. Attending were
Steve Elder, Recka, Ragina,

Sensor Perm, by Revlon Reahst1c.

CAROL :5 COIFFURES
773-5352 or 992-3829

MASON, W. VA.
"'im.Mif&lt;(;oo~ruiiCI.I ~~~~ rli

•

'

l'trm

A family picnic was held
recently at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin McGuire,
Recka and Ragina , in
celebration of Mrs. Joe
Manuel's . birthday anniver·

sad'~es

A perfect IX'rm every t1mc.

and Belpre

·

might jusr be able to give your

us for a Sensor Perm appoint~
ment. Seeing is believing.

Pt. Pleasant, Ripley, Athens

McGuires honor
Mrs. Manuel

were played with

~~~c:nda~arv:bM~~~;;:

Harry and Jean Roush,
Terry, Debbie, Terry,Jr. and
Patrick McGuire, Bob, tynn,
and Jeannie Arms, Howard
Talbott, Joe, Tim and Sid
Denise
and
AnniearodSearles,
the honored
Manuel'
guest.

Day ordered set aside for . Meigs outdoorsmen

The Rev. and Mrs. Jerry
Bums, United Pentecostal
Church missionaries, will
speak Friday, Sept. 2 at 7:30
p.m . at the Middleport United
Pentecostal Church . The
public is welcome.
Missionary Bums and his
family who have spent four
years in Venezuela are in the
States on furlough until
October when they will go to
the Dominican Republic.
Their presentation here
will include special singing in
Spanish and English.
Missionary Bums is one of
the many United Pentecostal
church represen!Qtives
abroad working in 64 counties
with 2,670 congregations.

My face is breaking out aU over. Jt isn 't terrible yet and 1
RUTLAND - Annual pic- ed their favorite summer
don't want serious acne Isn 't there anything 1 can do' Dad nic of the Rutland Garden flower.
saystimeistheonlysur~cure.- WANTSMORE
·
A report was given on the
Club was held Monday evenMeigs County Fair flower
mg at the Forest Acres Park.
Dear Wants :
Guests for the picnic were shows with Mrs. Turner takThere's no miracle cure for acne, but cerlain treatments Genevieve Ward and Roy ing a first in an invitational
help certain individuals. Popular this year are zinc sulphate Snowden who had grace class, and a second and two
tablets, and, for external use, a combination or Vitamin A acid preceding the picnic.
thirds in other artistic arand benzoyl hydroxide ; one drug rubbed on the skin in the
Mrs. Ralph Turner, vice rangement classes.
morning, the other in the evening.
·
·
president, conducted the
The club voted to donate to
Dr. Gerd Michaelsson and other Swedish researchers at meeting with members the · Victor Rees Fund, the
Uppsala University swear by the zinc approach . They report repeating the Lord 's Prayer. Wahkeena Fund, and the
acne was reduced by an average 115 per cent in 65 persons who For roll call. members· nam· Wild flower Fund.
took the effervescent tablets in water after each meal for three
Mrs . Charles Lewis
"r~IS&lt;I&gt;l~~---~~
months .
.
.
0
distributed the schedule for
1
However, the placebo effect might have been at work here li'~.l.':';;;
' "
the club flower show, ·'The
;IS well as nature's lime clock. Psychologists say that up to
Flaming Hills" to be staged
per cent or patients improve simply heraiJse they believe in the
Sept. 10 and il in the Rutland
doctor and his medicine.
United Methodist Church. All
The .much-publicized Vitamin A-benzoyl hydroxide wash
memhers are asked to help
may. be tn the same category. Dr. Sidney Hurwitz or the Yale
with the staging of the show
Medical School insists it "produces dramatic results in a
on Friday, Sept. 9.
relatively short lime," and ad&lt;js that in 404 cases, the drugs
Dues were collected and Mrs . James Titus conducted
cleared.90 to 98 per cent of a~e problems in near 70 per cent of
THURSDAY
are payable before Qct. 1. a workshop and gave a
the patients, With an addittonal 20 per cent showing marked
EV ANGEUNE CHAPTER
demonstration on flower ar·
gams.
,
172, Order of the Eastern
rangements using dried
Mrs. Sherman Ford, Steve,
But, .Dr. Ron Reisner, professor-in~hief of the UCLA Star, will meet at 7:30 Thursmaterials. Mrs. Marglret
Joey and Patty Ohlinger, Division of Dermatology, reports that while the combination is day a t the Middleport
A thought for the day: Parsons displayed one of
Mrs. Terry Roush, Tony and "very useful in treatment" of the milder forms of acne it has Masonic Temple. Past
dried materials and Mrs.
a guest, Mrs. Terry Hupp, not · proved itself ·as clearly superior to other therapy, matrons and past patrons will Britain's wartime leader Chris Diehl had one or
Tammy, Tracy, Kevin ·. esp~ally tn severe, deep-seated cases.
be honored, Mason night and Winston Cl\ur.chill sent this symetrical design using zinJames, Mr. aod Mrs . Jerry - .
Tl_le history o.f the last 50 years of acne treatment," he obligation night will be message to Nazi dictator nias and boxwood.
Coleman, and Mr. and Mrs. says, "ts littered wtth 'cures• or 'controls,' "all or which may observed, and twenty-five Adolf Hitler: "We (British)
Mrs. Dayton Parsons read
will.have no truce with you or
help some of the people '!&lt;Jme of the time.
Gene Coleman and Jayne.
year pin presentations will be
an
article on gathering plants
Sunday school attendance
. Otber acne aids are ultraviolet light (sunshine is cheaper) made. Officers are reminded the grisly gang who work for drying. Mrs. Chris Diehl
last Sunday was 56. The " chemical peels," antibiotics, and the drying lotions you bu; to wear their chapter dresses . your wicked will , You do your had the gardening tips for
worst - .and we will do our
meetings are presently heing at the drugstore. Don't overlook cleanliness and a healthful
September. The traveling
FRIDAY
·be;Jt."
held ' in the steelworkers diet, although the old belief that yellow foods and chocolate
prize was furnished by Mrs.
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
Union Hall on Railroad St. cause teenage pimpleS is all but gone.
Hazel Thomson and was won
at Rock Springs Grange hall .
between Horton and Pomeroy
A good ~le. : if your acne is seriously troubling you, see a
Fairgrounds
;
basket
dinner
by Mrs. Ann Webster.
Meigs will host the Gallia
Streets in Mason, W: Va.
dermatologist and ask him about these new 'treatments .
at
1
p.m
.
Perhaps he'll have an even newer one of his own . - HELEN County Pomona . Grange
BLACK LUNG Association
members who will present
+++
.
meeting 1 p .m. Sunday ,
•
NOTE FROM SUE: The National Center for Health . the program. National and Forest Acres Park shetlered
Your " Extra Touch"
statistics reports three out or four Americans hetween ages 12 state contests will be held and 3; opened to everyone. Trip to ~
FlorlstSince19S7
and 17 suffer from acne, but only one out or nine ever sees a the subordinate granges are Washington, D.C. being
~
reminded .to take three pies,
The
pel Couriers of Lex· doctor about the proble_~ · Pity.
planned.
·
.
•
two dozen sandwiches, and a
ington, Ky. will perform at ·
VICTOR C. Young, Jr.,
~
beverage.
the Bradbury Church of
SATURDAY
Christ Sunday at the 10:30
at 742 E . Main St., Pomeroy
·
BASEMENT
Sale Saturday with a 1 p.m. buffet luncheon.
a.m. service. The Couriers
FLOFIIST
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m . in the
are Jack Heaston,lead, Steve
auditorium at the Sacred Youngs also will observe
Wilson, baritone and piano,
PH. 992-2644
Heart Church . There will be a thei,r 29th wedding an· ,
and Danny Hamilton, bass.
niversary
with
a
party
given
Polly Cramer
variety of merchandise in·
They are formerly of the
by their children. Relatives
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
eluding
household items and
Revival Fries Team but now
and friends invited.
Yoor FTD Flo• i" t
clothing for children.
work independent. They have
SUNDAY
performed in India,
HOMECOMING
Sunday at
Rhodesia , Africa, and the H.r
you'll find It dandy for play·
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Freedom
Gospel
Mission ;
ly Land. They have also sung
DEAR POLLY •• My ing tug-of-war and your dog
Bald
·Knobs
with
all· day
with such personalities as Pointer is for ·dieters who find will love it.- REGrNA.
Sunday
School
at
services.
Tom Netherton of the themselves eating too many
DEAR POLLY - The
9:30
a
.m.
Basket
dinner
at
Lawrence Welk Show, Vonda between-meals snacks. Try fishermah can easily
noon
.
Afternoon
services
at
Van Dyke, and Dale Evans.
brushing your teeth with a preserve that extra catch for
1:30
p.m.
Speaker
will
be
0
.
The public is invited to at- mint flavored toothpaste later by inserting the cleaned
G.
McKinney.
There
will
be
tend the service.
every time you getthe urge to whole trout or other small
of
new
eat and find those fattening fish in a clean empty milk dedication
lluHh
classrooms.
Special
singing.
snacks are a little less ap- carton, fill it with water and
~
,~,~~:i
pealing.
then freeze solid. When ready Public invited.
MONDAY
My Problem concerns my to cook the fish simply cut
CHICKEN Barbecue
kitchen sponges that get sour away the paper carton and
Monday
at .Chester Fire·
smelling too quickly. I have defrost the block of ice. The
Tractor
pull at · 10
House,
Neighbors of the State tried rinsing them rnore fish will seem as fresh as a.m., dinner at 11, parade at
Route 248 community of carefully and also using a bit when first caught and .will ' I. Games will be played in
Fayal held a picnic Sunday at of bleach on them when they keep indefinitely as long as it afternoon .
the · Belleville Locks in herome sour but . nothing is frozen in the ice.
THE Southern Athletic
seems to help . Any sugges· · My other Pointer is for
Color: Tan
Reedsville .
wi)l meet Thursday
Boosters
tions
?.-DEBBIE.
moving
day.
Go
to
your
local
Games wer~ played by
liquor store and get empty at 7:30 p.m. at the high
~e with others enjoying . DEAR DEBBIE - I put my
school.
vtstting and reminiscing. AI· sponges in the silverware · cartons that have the boWe
THURSDAY
BankAmericard .
tending were Mr. ·a nd Mrs. basket of the dishwasher and dividers intact. Glasses,
SO'UTHERN
Athletic
and
other
Paul Andrew, Mr. and Mrs. wash them with the dishes. vases
Boosters Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Push
them
down
so
there
is
miscellaneous
articles
can be
Francis Andrew, Mrs. Larry
at high school.
·
Collins, Brian and Angela, no danger or thel)l escaping. I packed in these sections and
SUNDAY
Mr. and Mts .. William Han- am sure the readers will be will survive the move
.OURS · Family reunion
. num, . Mrs. Ella HannUm, coming up with their own pet beautifully. Often they fit Sunday at Rock Springs
MIDDLE PORT, OHIO
Mrs. Roy Harutwn, ~r., David ways for keeping them clean snugly enough so they do not
and ·susan, Mr. and Mrs. and sweet smelling, too. - have to be wrapped but
always wrap individually
.Ronald Osborne, Mr. · and POLLY.
DEAR
POLLYWhen
bakwhen
more than one thing
Mrs. Tom Spencer and Jared
ing
a
cake
with
a
mix
I
grease
goes
in
a section. I have done
Mr. and Mrs. Harlis Frank:
the
cake
pan
and
then
flour
it
this
on
numerous occasions
and George Pickens. GuestS
mix.
and
found
it really works. with
a
bit
of
the
dry
cake
were Debbie Dawson, CatlettThis
saves
opening
the
flour
ANN.
sburg, Ky.;- Mr. ana Mrs.
OFFICIAl
DEAR ANN- So have 1and
Tom Osborne, Amliil, and cannister and I have never
had a cake stick.
when the dividers are removMtss Kay Balderson
GRAND
-Reedsville.
- -·~ V!RGINIA.
[lOYoilj
e
dfia:thre
=
s,[oet=s'"Dtur:idy
~~c,~a:_:rt;ons;k;;a;re;~
DEAR- POLLY when
are wrapwant a dog toy that cosis
OF
nothing, is useful and still un- ped in paper and put in so
bi'Cakable? The next tinie you they stand on edge - never
· to 1923, Japan's worst have a sirloin steak or arm flat - and put in so they are
earthquake killed 150,000 'roast save the ring shaped snug and cannot rattle
·
persons and injured rruiny bone. Attach this to a length around.- POLLY.
or rope or ' twisted cloth and
DEAR POLLY - If you
thousands or others.
need a funnel in a hurry and
FRIDAY-SATURDAY-TUESDAY
do not want to ruin your good
On the Tin
one cut away half of a plastic
9: 30 te 8:00 9: 30 to 5:30 9: 30-5: JO
bleach bottle and use the top
Middleport
half for a funnel that can then
be discarded. -MRS.V.Y.
Polly will send you one of
her signed . thank-you
SALE PRICES
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your ·favorite
ON
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
EVERYTHING
POINTERS in care of this
· newspaper"
IN OUR STORE

30 '

7-1be Dally SentiDel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

•

will be given away. Persons may register without
purchase and need not he present to win. Shown are, 1-r,
Mrs. Rick (Lynne) Crow, customer, looking at one of the
many attractive blouses, and Gillian, owner and operator
or the Fashion Center.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted -Roger Brauer,
Sr., Racine; Doris Haynes,
Pomeroy; Clara Howery ,
Pomeroy ; Cassie Baum,
Pomeroy; Wayne Adams,
Rutland ; Jeffrey Collier,
New Haven.
DIS~HARGED Daniel
Russell, Wilma Riggs, Jennie
lies, Neva Grimm, Fred
Cunningham,
Samantha
Pickens, William George ,
Wayne Powell.

OLA MAE ARROWOOD
Mrs. Ola Mae Arrowood,
74, a resident ol Rt. 1,
Gallipolis (Addison. Bulaville
Rd.) died at 8:30p.m. Thu rs.
day in the Holzer Med ical
Center. She had been in

FLARE LEG
Size 29-40

I

STRAIGHT LEG
Size 29-44

.
FRED V. RICE
CHE STER - Fred V. Rice.

PAINTER PANTS
SHIRTS

BAHR CLOTHIERS

1

.,I

SCRIPTO MARKERS

TYPING
PAPER

4JS1

SALE 7r

.·
rea.
y
T t

Eastman hurt
·
· dozer
by bull

PAPERMATE
PEN

CONSTRUCTION
PAPER

:~~~Y a~~ 1o~~rio!o

FILLER
PAPER

gt

TOP SCHOLAR
SUB DIVIDER

6

.-:7.l'
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1l:w
. 1•
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sr

200 CT.

ELMER'S
SCHOOL GLUE

4

30t

.Brian~,~a~n·d~J~ea~~ru~·e~ ___lY:o~ur:s~.'~'------:-----~~H~u~l :!',1~~~~~~,,~a~ls~o~~~~~£~~hiiiiili2iO~c~t~.::;~~~Tfi~~~:::~~~;;;~R~E~G;·~;C~ii;7c;;;:;---~
POCKET
DICTIONARY

STENO BOOK

2r

88'

ACTION SHOES
·AWAy of

lifE

FOR THE FUUER FIGURED
WOMAN
24's

LADY DEVON
PANTS------SIZE 30-40
BLAZERS
SIZE38-44
TOPS
SIZE 38-44
SKIRTS
SIZE3P,8

LADY QUEEN

Action footwear for doing your
athletic thing or just to live
in with jeans . Ours combine
the important com lort features you
demand, but with a lower price
tag . In several styles and colors.

GIFT CERTIFICATES

y

BE GIVEN AlA'A.

GILLIAN'S
FASHJQN CENTER
-

PANTS..,----- SIZE 32-40
BLAZERS
SIZE 38-44
SH.IRTS
SIZE 38-46

:

End of S.u mmer
,

MARGUERIT·E'S SHOES
'
BETTY OHLINGER

POMEROY,O.
'r MAIN ST.
.-~------------------------------=-~-----~

3gt

TOP SCHOLAR
THEME BOOK ·
70

Ct.

3~

REG. 95c

No .- 2 12 pack

On the T

•.

REG. 75c

-

SUMMER DRESSES

PENCILS
REG .. .59c

'.
,,
••

4r ,.••,.,.

STERLING
PlASTIC RULLER

NO

~-~~:=:~~ln~~~§~~~~~~~~-J~

MEN'S
LEVI DENIMS

DENIM
SHIRTS

,.

n.

IN STYLE

Men's and Women 's
(Continued from PBI• 1)
86 of Chester, a teacher for 60
years
died
Thursday
mol'"ninc
be used for September
at the Arcadia Convalescence
expenses.
Home at Coolville . He was a
The union treasurer said be
son of the late Richard and
tailing health four years.
Nettie Folan Rice: A brother.
expected between $400,000
Mrs. Arrowood was one of Pearl, also preceded him in
and $500,000 income by
five children born to the late death.
by Arrow and
October from the Washington
Henry Pack and Rebecca
Mr. Rice taught school for
Career Club
Murray Pack . She marr ied 43 years and was a substitute
bank stocks and some
Ulysses Grant Arrowood who teacher 17 years. He was a
additional money from dues,
died
in 1968.
member of the Chester
which have heen slow in
Surviving are three sons, United Methodist Church.
coming in.
Hurst, Columbus ; James,
Surviving an~ his wife,
Gallipolis, and Jackie of Pauline Phelps Rice. and four
Alternate ways to obtain
Huntin_gton; four daughters,
the needed funds · include
by Maverick
Mrs. Dorothy Massie, Mrs . cousins.
Funera l services will be at
raising dues, but Patrick
Robert (Virginia l Henson , 1 p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
SizelS-17
noted this would have to be
PLEASANT VALLEY
Mrs. Waller (Rebecca l Lane Funeral Home where friends
approved at a rank-and.fUe
DISCHARGES
G
and Mrs. Merch !Glenda)
ALL THIS AND
call a"y tim e. Of·
eorge Rife, all of Rt. 1, Gallipolis; may
convention. He said the union
fici ating will ·be the Rev .
MORE AT
Jordon, Leon; Mrs. . Harold 20 grandchildren, 15 great· Chester Lemley and the Re v .
could put a one-shot
Taylor, Leon; Christina grandchildren . a brother, Robert Hayden . Burial will
assessment or $10 on each
Denney, Gallipolis Perry; · Hershel Pack of River. Ky ., be in Chester Cemetery.
member, but that would have
Mrs. Mattie Dunn, Point and a sister, Mrs . Ruth Smith
of Phoenix, Ariz .
to be approved by the board.
Pleasant; Mrs. Mary McCoy,
She was a member of the
N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, 0.
The UMW board meeting,
Henderson; Tanuny Russell, Addison Freewill Baptist
which also is considering
Mason; Mrs. Lloyd Thornton, Church where funeral ser'1 M C
vices will be held at 1 p.m .
personnel and local matters,
D orst
L e Ia rt :
C oy, Saturday with Rev . Walter
is expected to conclude by the
Henderson: Mrs. Donald Patterson and Rev . John
AWARD WON- Paul Cross, Racine, was one of over
I
end of week.
Gunio, Point Pleasant; Jeffery officiating . Burial
50
4-H
members
honored
at
the
4-H
Recognition
Day
Earlier Wednesday, UMW
Christopher Moody, Point will
be
in
Reynolds
Breakfast Aug. 22, in the Rhodes Center at the Ohio State
Cemetery.
·
President Arnold Miller said
PI ~asant ; Mary Th omas,
Calling
hours
will
be
held
at
Fair
.
Paul
was
named
winner
or
the
Conunodity'
representatives of the union
Potnt Pleasant; Mrs. Charles Miller's Home for Funerals
Marketing award, given by Olicago Board of Trades. The
and the coal industry are
Top ~cholar
Fletcher, Fraziers Bottom; · lrom 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Friday .
award includes a four day trip to 4-H Conunodity
tenatively set to meet Sept. 9
Patricia Beaver, Crown City;
Marketing Symposilini in Chicago. Paul has been a
to discuss cutbacks in
Typing
Lillian
Belcher,
Point
memberofthe Fanners 4-H Club in Letart Falls lOyears .
Black, blue, red.
miners •
health
and
Pleitsarit; Mark Forshee ,
JOHN DAVIS
Paper
He has taken projects in beef and specialty crops and has
retirement funds. He added
Point Pleasant; Marvin Hall,
John Davis. 76, died
also served as a Junior Leader, one year, on the Junior
the . two sides will start
200 ct
Point
Pleasant;
Mrs.
Thollllls
Wednesday
night at Holzer
REG.
Fair Board, and as a 4-H Camp Counselor. His parents are
bargaining soon to replace
REG.
Roush and son, Hartford; Medical Center . He was born
79c
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cross, Racine . .
on March 10, t901 in Carter
the national contract which
Mrs. Phil Queen and son, County, Ky .. to the late Ben
expires Dec. 6.
Crown City; Mrs. Noah and Gertie Bartley Davis. He
Reductions in the health
Plants and so~. Apple Grove; was a retired coal miner.
Top Scholar
funds
triggered
the
Clarence Clonch, Jr., Hen·
.He is s~rvived by his wile,
sometimes viOlent ltl-week·
derson .
Tennie Reeves' Davis; two
old wildcat strike, which has
(Conlin
. ued_ fr
_ om PB.Ie I)
·
children,
and
Theo Homer
Miller ofol Bidwell
South
contributed to !he union's
Charleston , W. Va.; two
defend the canal indefinitely
financial problems,
will. take place at the . Pa~
Don Eastman, formerly of
grandchildren and lour greatREG. 62c
"I have a feeling the entire
American Union and will be Pomeroy and son or Mrs. JACK'S CORN
grandchildren . One son,
REG. 98c
·
Lei
d
S
t
N
A
Haskell,
preceded
him
in
strike will be over next
48's
foil owed b y. a s tate dinn er at
an
ax on,
ye
ve.,
CAiliOUN, Ga. (UP!)
death .
· week," Miller predicted, the White House.
Pomeroy, is confined to the President Carter's son, Jack,
Funeral services will be at
citing sources in his home
Top Scholar
While the festivities are Riverside
Hospital
in 29, left the law firm of his 1 p.m . Sunday at the Cheshire
District 17, the union's underway, opponent Ronald Columbus as a result · of a rather-in-law, state Sen . Baptist Church with the Rev .
· ·
· ed t h'
Samuel
Thompson
of -.
largest.
Rea gan, former California hand InJUry recetv
a ts Beverly
Langford,
in ficiating . Burial will be in the
At its peak, the strike idled
governorandaleaderofGOP employment with .the Connie February to be a grain Vinton Memorial Park.
85,000 miners in several conservatives,
will be Construction Co.
dealer.
Friends may call at the
states, but ooly about 14,500 testifying against the treaties
A bulldozer fell from a jack
He
said
Wednesday Miller's Home for ' Funerals
12 inch
9
2
: West
Virginia
miners on Capitol Hill next week. . and caught his hand. Don is construction of seven grain
p.m.
REG. 99c
• remained out Wednesday.
Carter !tas his work cut out expected to be confined to the silos on his five acres should
REG . t9c
The West Virginia Coal
for him in thC selling depart- hospital for about one month. be. completed next week and
. AsSociation said siitce the
· ment. He was holding tbe
Cards may he sent to the · he hoped to buy his first load
strike began in late June, the third in a series of briefings hospital, Room 664, 35 of corn shortly thereafter.
CLARA HOWERY
health and retirement funds on the canal today, this time Olentangy River Road,
Asked in a telephone Inter·
Clara Howery,
have lost $23 million in with prominent officials and Columbus . Mrs. Saxton was view how he financed the Pomeroy, formerly
· contributions that are based civic leader~ from West in Columbus for about 10 days bust' ness, Carter sat'd, "That penler, died lhis .ioo·n;ron
v· · · d
d
Ve·terans Meriiorial Hos;oital
on coal production.
trgmtaan Arkansas to win following the acci ent kind of borderlines on being
The daughter .o-.f, .. .-•.·.~
REG. $1.49
1111$
OZ.
And West
Virginia's
grass roots support.
helping care for the Eastman my business ... And its not Wi II lam E. and
;,
011
80
Appalachian Power Co .
concern about
·her
The accident
i
children
..
and
X
Scho Ia r
Cloudy, warm and humid Aug. 20.
generating plants. The utility tonight and Friday, chance of
Index
one grandson.
asked the state Air Pollution th\indershowers at night.
Ray.
GO OUT TWICE
She owned and operated a .
o Control
Cqmmission to Highs both days in the low
The Pomeroy El)lergency general
IN HOSPITAL
111MGaMMtiA'S
store in Carpenter for
permit the b~m~ing of higher 90s, lows tonight in the low
11111'11UIO"
Mrs. Elizabeth Jenkins is a Squad answered two calls 61 years. She is ~Yrvlved by a
sulfur cOal at the Amos plant 70s.
Probability
of patient at Veterans Memprial Wednesday. At 3:25p.m., the son, Veri ln. of Carpenter; six
and made plans to import
and eight ·
precipitation 30 percent Hospital. Her room number i~ squad transported Earl Arix grandchildren,
REG. 59c
great-grandchildren.
REG. $1.95
western coal on a temporary
of
Harrisonville
to
Holzer
tonight, 50 per cent Friday. 146.
Graveside services will be
basis.
Medical Center and at 9:03 held Saturday at 2 p.m. atthe
Lot
Cemetery .
p.m. the squad took Sherry School
Thermos Child
Lynn Colmer, Wright St. to Friends may call at the
Blgony-Jordan Funeral
Veterans Memorial Hospital Home in Albany alter 2 p.m.
. where she was treated and on Friday.
released.

$5Q ' $25· ·• $10

TO

.

habitat management for fish
and wildlife for the en·
joyment of all Americans.
Commissioners
Henry ·
Wells, Richard Jones and
James E . Roush furthennore
ordered that the fourth
Saturday of each September
he set aside for observance or
Trappin g, Hutni og and
Fishing Day.

men's
programs
have
benefited numerous species
or non-game fish and wildlife
through habitat-development.
Hunters, trappers and
fishermen , unique in all
America , asked that their
fishing and hunting equipmerit be taxed and that the
money be used for land
acquisition, res earch and

Hospital News

UMW

DAYS ONLY!
COME IN &amp; REGISTE.R TO WIN.
PURCtiASE NECESSARY.

states. They ask that they,
themselves, be required to
buy licenses and that the
money collected be used to
support state conserva lion
agencies. In the last 50 years
alone, these sportsmen have
provided over $5 billion for
conservation programs.
Hunters , trappers and
fishermen asked for the
establishment or regulated
seasons and bag limits so that
sportsmen could harvest the
annual crop of game and fish
without damage to the basic
breeding population . The
result has been that there are
now more deer, elk, antelope
and wild turkey, . along with
furbearers in the United
States than there were 50
years ago. Further, sports-

---------------------------,
! Area Deaths l
I

3
•.

The Meigs County Com·
missioners Tues day ap·
proved
a
resolution
proclaimin~ Sept. 24 as
" Trapping, Hunting and
Fishing Day" .
The proclamation draws
attention to :
America's hunters, trap-.
pers and fishermen have
made contributions to con·
servation, recreation and the
economy , and they are
deserving
of
special
recognition .
Since the tum &lt;Jf the cen·
tury, hunters, trappers and
anglers have heen the leaders
in nearly · all major con·
servation pro gra ms . The
sportsmen -conservationists
are responsible for the
founding of state fish and
game departments in rll :;o

MEAD VARSITY
THEME BOOK
REG. $1.35

Learn your lesson
now in · Back· To·
School Savings
at Dutton's.

5gt

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B.-The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,Sept.1 , l'!n

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
l:ioWonhlll'Under

c....

In J\"lemo11-·

lOll
!50

ECK:h wurd U\~r the mmunwn 15
•on:is IS -1 l~ut:. ~~· ~urtl l"'r ~)
'N,I., ruunulg uUlt'r lnom l\lf!M"(UttH'
days wtll tx- c hat)l.~ &lt;~' thr 1 da)
'tllli!!

In llll!.ln~ Card of Thomk;. ano
OOttuarv 0 l: ~ms Pt'' \lo Uotd, s:s oo
~hm ~ thranet•

Ml;l()tk•Hwnl! sall"l&gt; ano.l Ytud s.lt-~
W:tt! 8 \:H'Vl~ Ulll\' 'Allh l.:ilo!&gt;h vt llh

w'tl~;~r 25 ttut du:lr)(e fur !ids t:&lt;tll,.
U\1( SuA Nwnl&gt;tlt In (&lt;It to uf The Sent ilk' I
Tile Pul.llbhet

t't"lk'l'\!ta t!~ u~ht

tu ~~ ('I 1 t!J" I au.!! .ad;. dt"t' llll'tl
Jt'llH)fli:l ) Tl~t&gt;
•~spmt Yblr

Publisher

o1J.

ll tllnvt ~

hll' llll.H1.' tlmn uu .. nwvr-

rl!oCt Ull&gt;CI1WU
Pht~nc

99'!-:!156

years ago September 1 Sodly
""ssed by husband Elber and
ch1ldren

bleen

leo

and

Roger

Notices
$250 00 REWARD for return of {no

questions asked ) or mlormo ·
t10n leodmg to ttJe return of
two maJe dogs token from Rt
33 near Darwin July 11 Please I
love and mtss my dogs "ery
mush 992 5848
~ACINE

VOLUNTEER Ftre Oepts
ore sponsormg a chtch.en ba r b
que on Sun Sept 4 stcrl1ng cl
11 00 em at the F1re Stot1on
The lad1es Au;o. are sell•ng
heme mode •ce cream

SENIORS OF Me•gs County Trod•
t•onal and outdoor settings for
your partrolh Call The Photo
Place Bob Hoefhch 992 5292

NOTICE

RACINE GUN Club w 1ll hold a
Ch1cken Ba r B Que Sun ., Sept
4, All members a re tnv1ted

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

WILL CARE for e lderly i" n our
home Tromed a nd experlenc
ed 992~ 7314

Mumlm

Noon un So till ilit)

Lo..tand~ =

Tucsd&lt;~)

thru Fnda;
•P M

FOUND IRISH Setter on Bunk er
Hil l Coli Susan 992 -5813

tht'lii:l\ lJt!(ult'pU!Jhtii\IUII

SwJthn

•PM
f

ttda~

Help Wail!ed

&lt;Jftcnmun

BABYS~TTER

TO live .n P 0
924 Gall•pol•s . Oh1o

Box

-NOTICE OF SALE-

By Y"irtueof an order ol sale
duly tssued out of the Court of
Common Pleas, In the case of
Emmogene
Edwards
Hotste.n , lo'S Mary Crooks
Turnbull , et a 1., betng Case
No 16,.421. I am offering tor
sale at publ ic auct1on at the
door of tt\e Court House In
Pomeroy , Metgs County ,
Oh1o. on the 17th day of
SeptemberL 1977, at 10 00
o'Clock A M , the fo llawrng
described parcels of real
estate .
P ar cel No 1 The folloWing
described rea l estate situated
In Sulton Townsh •P· 1n the
County of Me1g s and State of
Ohio, to w1t Com mencmg at
a stake due North. u v~ rods
from the North East corner of
a tot four rods square so ld by
Wllllam Crook$ to James
.A;shworth, tj1e same be ing a
~ar t of 100 acre lot No
296,
Town "J a nd Range 12 In the
Ohio Con,pan"y's P urchase ,
thence runn 1ng West 22 rods
to a stake , thence North 22
rOd s, thence Ea st 22 rods ,
thence South 22 rods to the
place of beginning , esttmated
to conta1n tHree (3) acres
Reference Oeed . Vol . 488,
Deed Records, Metgs County
Oh10
Parcel No 2 The follow1ng
descr1bed real estate Situate
In the Cou nty of Metgs , In the
Sta te of Ot\lo, and in the
Townshlp of Olive, and
bounded and des cribed as
follows , v1z Being a part of
tot numbered three (Jl of the
Sub dtVISion of tl'le Estate of
Malor
Reed ,
Deceased ,
beg nnlng a t the Northeast
co.,.ner of a part of sa•d estate
belong1ng to A W Cowdery:
and in. the South line of lands
of lydta K Packard JS the
tn tersec t1on of the roads
leading from Reedsville to
Forked Run and Tuppers
Plains. thence East w1th
South lme of said Lyd ia K
Packard la nd 129 teet to a
stake. thence South 99 feet to
a stake; thence West 1521!2
feel to the Wes t s •de of sa1d
For~ed Run and East ltne of
A W Cowdery 's land , thence
With said Cowctery's line 1n a
Northerly d irec t ion to th.e
place of beg.nntng, con
talning one fo urth (1 4th) of
an ac r e, more or less
Parcel No 3 The to1taw 1ng
described re al estate s1tuate
m the Townst\ip of OIIY"e, In
the County of Me 1gs and Sta te
of Oh1o, to-wit: Being a part
of Lot Number three {3) of
lt\e Subd 1v 1s 1on of the Estate
of Mator Reed , Deceased ,
beg inn1ng at the SouthWest
corner of lot deeded by sa1d
' Mana Hoyt to sa td Dell
l-~~i.rnott-td ee"d-trelfrtng-aate-o t' _
July 15, 1901 ), thence East
W1th the South line of sa td lo t
1 52 V:~ feet to the Southeast
corner of sa td lot , thence
SOuth 7Ph teet to a stake ;
tnence West 184 teet to the
West S1de of the Forked Run
Road and East line of A W
Cowdery's land , thence w tlh
sa1d A W Cowdery ltne in a
Northerly d•re ctton to the
place of beg.nn•ng , C:OI'I
ta 1nlflg one .fourth (1 Al of an
a cre more or less
Parcel No 4 . The followmg
real estate Sttuated ln the
County of Me1gs , tn the Stateof Ohio, and tn the Townshtp
of Oltve , and bounded and
descr1bed as follows Be1ng
• Lot No SJ In McDole and
• Torrence Add1t 1on to Reeds
ville , Me1gs County , Oh io
Reference Deed Vol. 224 .
Page 151, Meigs County Deed
Records
Parcel No 1 Is appra 1sed at
518 ,300 and cannot be sold for
less than two thfrd!. or
512 ,200 00 Parcels Nos 2, 3
and 4 are appra1sed at
56 ,000 .00 and cannot be sold
for less than two thirds or

..

54,000 00

Terms of sale : Cash
hand on day ot sale

In

JAMES J PROFFITT
Shertff of

Meigs County , Oh to
• (8) 25 , ( 9) 1, 8, 15 , .ttc

For Fridoy, Sopl. 2, 1177

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Wantedt~y
CASH potd lo r all makes and
models of mobtle homes
Phone orec code b 1.S 423 9:531
TIMBER Pomeroy
ducts Top pnce
sOwflmber Coil
Kent Hanby 1 446

t:ampio!&lt; l::quipmenl

'ard alt•

IN LOVING memorv ot El1sobeth
Re1bel ~Nho poned owoy fWO

180
301)

nw1unum

• v1
''

Forest Pro
for stand.ng
9'92 5965 or
8570

COINS CURRENCY . tokens old
pocket watches and chams
s1lver and gold We need l%4
and older sdver co•ns Buy sell
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley
742 2331
OLD FURNITURE 1ce bo xes . brass
beds
etc
complete
households Wqte M D M1ller
RI 4 . Pomeroy Ohio or coli
992-776()
CASH I ! Jun"'- cars Fry s Truck &amp;
Auto , Ru tland Phone 742 2081
or}A 2_._9575~1osed _M~~ays

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small
W1ll buy 1 p1ece or complete
household New used or onh
ques Ma rt•n s Furmture 10 N
2nd St
M1ddleport Phone
991·6370,
CLEAN MODERN Home w1th 10
ocres or more Call (614)
557 3382

--- =--:::..
IF YOU hove o seno&gt;•ce to offer
wont to buy or sell somethmg
ae Jookmg lor work
or
wha tever
you II get results
foster w1th a Sentmel Wont Ad
Coll992 2156

VARO SALt: . Mon th1u J- 11 1 m 11e- STARCRAFl lOth anntversary sale
lrom longS\1 1Ue on CR 10 • on min. motors trotlers and
Cloti'ung
women s.
s•zes
folddo"Wns TraYelstar 25 tt
10 lb l•nle g1rls stzes 4 7
$4400 00 20 fl rntm-motor
s.moll household nems Phone
$10 H~ 00 We sell serv~&lt;.e ond
742 2bb8
quality Camp Conley Starcroft
Sole-s Rl b"J nortk o l Pt Plea
YARD SALE Sept 1 2 3 q 00 to
sont
4 00 Men s women s boy ~
end lillie g•rl s &lt;: loth,ng Odds For ltenl
ond ends !)(XI Lmcoln H1H
YARD SALE 1 2 and 3rd ol Sept 3 AND 4 RM fu rn1shed ond un
furn1s hed opts Pt\one 992
Second house on 4th Street tn
5434
Roc tne off 124 In ca se of ro•n
sole m basemen!.
COU NTR.Y Mob1le Home Park, Rt
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
YARD SALE M1ddleport H1ll Wed
large lots w1th concrete pof•os
th,ough Sot
10-5. Bloke
s1dewe.lks . runners and off
res1dence
street porkmg Phone 9&lt;n 7479
SIX FA Mil V Basement Sale, Sept
2 &amp; 3 Fn &amp; Sal 9 to S Conn FURNISHED APT Adults o nly no
pels Phone 992 3874 M1d
Trombone pool table , mople
dleport
·
bunk beds Kenmore gas dryer
o1l pamlmgs bathroom v11l1ty SMAll APARTMENT 2nd Street 1n
cobmet record album s , lots of
Mtddleport Su1toble for 1 or '2
nite chtldren s clo thes w1nter
people 992·5202
coats dresses , tearts . etc
COUNTRY
MOBllE Home Pork
SIZeS 6 10 teen n1ce women s
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
cloth mg s1 zes 10 24', 9•rl s 3
Lorge lots Coll992 7479
speed b1ke, portable sewtng
moct\Jne baby swmg lots ol MOBILE HOME . 2 bedroom,
other thtngs
156 S 3rd
pnvote lot
4 m1 out of
Aven ue M1d dlepc rf 992 554b
Gall•pol•s
No pets
no
ch1ldren (61"' ) 4.46 3918
GARAGE SALE Sept. 3 4 5 6
lee C1rcl e
Rusti C Hdls
GARAGE FOR Rent suttoble lor
Syracuse Glassware , clothmg
boof storage or other storage
gas range, and ott\er misc
Reasonable rent . Coll992 2623
tlems
ENO Of" Summer Yord Sole Fn
Sept 2 from 9 _. pm Books For Sale
clothmg
records , 8 track
topes and many kmck knocks 1975 HARLEV DAVIDSON . ex
At 527 North Second Avenue ,
cellent cond1t1on Gold , has ex ·
M•ddleport
tros less than I000 mtles
$2700 Coli (6 14) b98 32'10
FIVE FAMILY Yard Sole Fn and
Sot 9 5 232 Soutl'1 Fourth St , APPALACHIAN ,STOVE Ca Sum
M1ddleport OH
mer Sole Ashley C 60 Wood
Heaters $340 complete w11h
SEVEN FAMILY Yard Sale , Sot on
blower Tl'1ru Sept 12 We ore
ly , starling at 9 689 N Second
the only outhemfl'd dealer m
Middlepo rt, OH lodtes •r1
Me1gs County
Were 1n
S t U~s 1eons cover alls .
Carpenter off 1.43 698 7191
GARAGE SALE 340 Page Street ,
Mlddleport Fn and Sot. 2 ond 1 YEAR OLO Polled Hereford Bu ll
Con be reg1stered
Call
3 Someth1ng for everybody
949 2368.
REG POtLEO Hereford Bull
mo old $bOO 985-3819

Pel:s for Sale

YIIIGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) Snap
rudgmef'lts could prove very m1s·

leadmg today. Take the t1me to
SIZe V'lmgs vP before amvtng at

anv conclus1ons like to l tnd out

16

Jm
SPfiiNC,. CARDEN Supplu:!s Cob
boge
caul iflower , broccol1
and head lettuce plonts
yellow wh1te and red cn1ofl
sets on•on plant s Kennebec
cobbler Kotahd1n Red Ponfloc
and ~eel losodo seed potatoes
Bulk garden seeds , pottmg soil ,
peal moss . lrutt trees ond rose
bu &lt;slles
M1dway MorJ..et .
Pomeroy , Oh1o , W2 2582 ,
Sob s Market Mason W Vo
(304)773 5721.

ECO NOMY TRACTOR wtth oil ot
tachments. l•ke new osk1ng
S22SO Phone (614) 698·3290
CANNING TOMATOES PEPPERS .
cucumbe rs
Cleland Forms ,
Greenhouse ,
Cerold1ne
Cleland
TREE RIPENED orchard peaches
Wh1te or yellow stort1ng Mon ,
Aug 1 Mason Peoct\ Orchard

r---===-:;;:-:;-7::-- - ,

fOR SALE

New Co -Op water and
solleners, model VC. SVI .
Only S279.95
SiJve SSO.OO on a new
Hotpotnt Refrigerator.
1 New 20 cubic ft. Chest
Freezer
S25.00 Dtscount
1 Good McCullough Cham
Saw
S85 .00
2 Good used XL2 Chain
1-$100.00, 1-$80.00

Electrtc Trtm-AII cuts with
nylon

$29.95

Cl) Good Refrigerator 5200

Pomeroy Landmark

9.-_;ack

W. Carsey, Mgr.
. . . . . Phone992-2181

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
liiO lllin Sl
P-,OIIio
'-"2-6212
orl92.fm
IA.II. 104:30 P.ll.
SAUSANO SERVICE
1·28-1 ""'

FREE ESTIMATES

..

Blown

~lion-·

r"' ...
lllown
lnll!~'-""
Wolll Allie&gt;
SlORII
WIROOIIS l OOOIS
II£PIIJWIEIIT

WINDOWS
W!MIRUII

SIDifiG.SO!fiTT

GI/ITUWWNIIIGS

LARRY LAVENDER
SJrK .... Oh~
PIL t92lt9l

Superior
Slum Eltr1clion

Young's
Carpeting

~ .... l. ' -· 0.

Carpet •

UphOlstery

Phone M1ke Youna
At

SILVER QUEEN Sweet Corn P1ck
"ThoOri~lllb!n
Boardtng TWO THREE QUARTER tan Oodge
your own Cheap (Iorence
IIGI
Tho lmitolon
Power
Wagon
Trucks
,
1961
and
groomtng
Proff1H , Portland Oh1o
19b4
Call
949
2770
2Ulmo.
somlory
Chesh1re NEW HOllAND 1b3 bushel CANNING TOMATOES Bring your
own con ta iners
Ro~ert
H
manure spreader' EI(Cellent
Roush Rocme 2.47 2190
condtt1on
Coll949·2770
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
(Mtn ) Colltes 2 females 7 1975 MASSEV FERGUSON d1esel 5 FOOT BRUSH Hog w1th lifts
&amp;
$300 or trade for blade Coli
weeks old Sho ts and wormed
I tiS. 360 hrs SH'\Ce new extra
742·2427
Phone (614 ) 367 -0292 or
w1de l~res
heavy duty
3b7 7112
staboluers
au~e
hydraul iC HOOF HOLLOW Horses New and
front we1gt\ts like new Coli
used saddles w1ll toke trade
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
949 2770
ms Ruth Reeves , Albany (blA )
An1mcl Care lme 992 7680 or
698 3290
ofler 6 p m 99'1 5427
t&lt;UBOTA TRACTOR , 1 only Model
l 185 w•th
5 ft
Woods TOUCH AND Sew Does If All Just
All BREED dog groommg J and
Underslung Mower l•st $4405
li ke new Sold for ~49 . 95
Alocal contrKIOI
D Kennels Reasonable rates
save $600 Gra..,.ely Tractor
Cleonng out stock Must sell for
No drugs used Coli for op
Phone 949-2801
Soles
Pomeroy
Phone
SR9 95
Cosh or term s
po1ntmen1 742 3162
01949-2860
99'2 2975
992 514b
AKC REGISTERED Beagle pups Pt
Free Estimates
Sew1ng
Pleasant , W
Va
(304 ) 1972 CHEVROlET p1ckup truck SCHOO L SINGER
No
S.nd.ly
Colb P~"'
New !Ires, good body and runs
Machines Monv features Only
6754154
6-1 ).] IIIII
good 992 ·6231
S31 50
cash or terms
FREE TO good home 1 female
9915146
high power , $3 93
port cocker sponte! and port SHOT St1EllS
1 22 mognum $2 90
22
LR
79
HOOVER
UPRIG-HT Sweepers Real Estate. fur Sale
shepherd 5 mo old 992 7185
lots of Used and new guns
1977mbdel W•llsell~or$2250 ·
TO GIVE away German Short·
Trade for anythmg F1fe s S
cash or te rms 992 -5146
OJ'.fE YEAR old house 2 m1les on
hatred Pomfer Gentle n~eds
3rd M•ddlepor t
New l1mo Rd 1n Rutland Its all
place ta run 949 2S95
BUILT RITE PRAM Engltsh sty le
paneled w1th t1'1ree bedrooms
naVy good cond•llon , s.45
and b•g livtng room , oil
Karas
ton. Onentol Carpet 9 x
carpeted two baths dmmg
Auto SaJ.,.,
~12 wool cranberry color ..,.erv
room . b1g k•tchen with bv•lt 1n
good cond1110n , $185 Coli
Let Pomeroy Landmark
oven, an ts la nd stove and famt
PARTS FOR 1971 Golaxte Ford for
992·7539
ly room w1th t.reploce One cor
soHen &amp; condttton your
sole Pt\one 992 5858
garage On two acres ot land
water and Co-op water
and
PICK
YOUR
own
connmg
1972 DODGE CHARGER A C
For more tmformof1on . cell
softener, Model UC-XVI.
tomatoes Also 1 green beans
many more opt•olis S1495 Call
949 2519
Now
Only
Bong
con
tamer
Andrew
Cross
,
992·5169
letart Fa lls 247 ·2852
1973 PLYMOUTH SCAMP . 30000
CANNING
TOMATOES and sweet
mtles New rod1al 11res A C
Let us fest your water
corn for lreezmg P1ck your
P S b cyi Like new Call
Free.
own Call Barbaro Talbott ,
949 2770
Portland 843-45 15
1973 GMC '!, ton p•ckup 350
~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
engme au1omottc Also 1971 NEW IDEA No 7 Cornp1cker
Good condrflon , Ready to p•ck
Cornaro
Mdo Hutch 1son
....
Phone 991·2181
(614 ) 843 2286
Rutland 742 2306

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum Siding,
Storm Windows lnsul•
lion.
Call Professionals

Bissell Siding Co.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Pomeroy Landmark

1974 VW THING .49 BOO m1les NEW SBE Touch Com 40 C B
radro 40 channel , Tenna elec
Hard and soh top 51495 Call
GcheAway
LIBRA I Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Don 1
Inc retracting antenna anten Sue
992
7805
'
'
-·na matcher (SWR) 3 me ter A FEW crab apples to g1ve away
lei pnce be the lowest common 1970 INTERNATIONAL PICKUP
modula t1on . wollage and SWR
denom tn ator 1f you re shopp.ng
free Phone 992 2021
20 000 m1 1972 VW, good con
gouge oil cables and hook up
todav Sometimes paymg more
d111on 992 2987
fttllngs far radto and guoge All
•S the most econom1cal wa y to
egtHpmenf Is for mobde use
Mol&gt;ileAJnmes ffir. -Sale
_.s..
av,e'-~----------c.l9c;7~
4 PlYMOUTH GOLD Duster '" Colt 99Z:14:4H- aher 5-p
SCO Rp ID (Ocl. 24·Nov.22)
IVY3 speed on the floor
MOBILE HOME , 12 x bO Price
Steer clear of crafty mdtvlduals 11
AM· FM stereo Tope Ployer FOR THE finest 1n wQOd heohng
SS 500 Co11991 5858
35 000 mdes Arr shod~;s Ex
stoves cookstoves and cool
you re lrylng to dnve a bargatn
eel lent condthon 985 3577
1973 Co..,.enor 12 x 60 2 bedr I
stoves, Coli Zton Heat Co 8
1/J both Air cond w1th und~r
toda y Deal only wtth !hose you
Putnam Dnve Athens (614 )
k.now to be trustworthy
1973 BUKK CENTURY Excellent
b9b
1187
0 ~ (614 ) 592 6!!79
P'l""lflg
and utdtty bu1ld1ng
cond1tlon Loaded with extras
992 31'02 ofte~ 5 pm
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
992-7059
1976 BASS BOAT I 977 Mercury
21} Don 1 antJGipate 11 110 9 1967 CADILLAC HEARsE
outboard trolling motor . l1ve 12 x 6.4 THREE BEDROOM tra~er
~
r
anythmg w1th the patent of11Ce
fully furntshed Being trons ler
well dr1ve·an trc1 ler (614 )
wdl trade for anythmg of equal
7b7 '2A77
red mus t sell tmrned•ate ly
today because your 1deas for
value (614) 698 3290
992 7092
t1me-and labor-savmg dev ices
1965 FORO
FOUR DOOR POTATpES FOR w1nter . Ken
aren' t too su per
nebec , Cobbler and Supenor
NICE lOT m Pomeroy whh block
outomOIIC V-8, $145 1968
top drl..,.ewoy . Hos o 65 x 12 2
Rt 338 to Ravenswood ferry 1
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Chevrolet p1ckup •;, ton , V 8
m1 Coll843 2491 Tom Sayre
bedroom tratler Total e lectnc
Take care toda y not to do
outomot•c
power steermg
wtlh central 01r cond1tlonmg
some th1ng thoughtlessly that
~:~~ ~orles Russell Bashon, PANASONIC RANGER Auto Boat
and woad burn1ng (Franklm)
28
makes a ne w fnend feel good at
AC Outdoor bloc"'- and whtte
f1reploce Has lots of e~~:tros
the e"pense o f an old pal
compact
telev•s1on
Cal
l
1%5 CHEV. BISCAYN Wagon 283
Call 992 2438
There s no need to offend e1ther
992-2.448 , _after 5 00 pm_
standard , new fires runs good
11'26 East Mo1n Sl Pomeroy 1975 CR 125 HO NDA Elsmore Ex lOADED 1972 12 x 60 Bor~n
ADUARIUS (Jan. 20· Fob. 19)
Mobtle Home Al l plectnc, cen
Ohio .
cellent condttton 949 2410
Your mate 's v1ew may be
trol 01r and heat , underp1nned
.
soun der than yours 1n a matter 1976 Mortie CARLO w!th tvll vmyl MOTOROLA PORT ABLE block and
ond all ong1nal fu rn1ture goes
aftectlng tne whole tam11y It
roo f AM . tope P S • P B , A.C.
wtlh trailer Already set up on
wh1te te levtSIOn Coll992 2448
would probably be wise to es:.cru1se control , power door
large lot m Mason W Va
after 5 00 pm
.
pouse hi S 1deas
locks and more extras fx
Phone (304 ) 773 5438
HAY
FOR
sale
,
P1ck
up
oul
of
cellent cond•hon 992 6243
PISCES (Feb. ZO·March 20)
fteld Call 985 3555
1966 FORO 4 door 6 cy1 , stan
Analyze carefully the pt1ch toss
dard Good condlhon $300 23 000 8 T U AIR cond•t•onmg
ed at you by an aggress tve sates
Good shape 992 7755
992 2849
type to day Only a portion ol 1!
may be valtd
1968 IMPALA STATION Wogan 9 THREE FOURTH S1mmen~ol Bull HOUSE 4 rooms and both on acre
of lend Includes lurn1ture
Call (614 ) 843_2053
passenger $500 949 21 A4
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) In
S8 000 Ruby Bush , 949·2052 .
TWO ARABIAN Horses Also . p
r
·bustness matters don 't operate 1972 VEGA $100 Call992 2892
TWO BEDROOM home s1tuoted on
1974 TS Suzuki , 'olery good con
by QUI •nstlnct or attempt thiOQS
HEREfORO COW o M (Oil Coli ~1 JID1
1 ocre land Call 992 7294 or
dtti0!1 $525 992 7559
that are too laf out Your best &lt;,1h •• S pm
992
5502
chances he througtl the prachcal
KENNEBEC POTATOES
John
197.4 Grand Prix low m1leoge
approach
Pope. 9.49·2273
2 STORV 3 bedroom frame
S3 .200 985·3519
TAURUS (Aprol 20-Miy 20)
12 FOOT ALUM INUM boot 6 h p
hous,e F A furnace storm wtn·
EVIn rude mo tor 19 It cobm
When deal•ng with pals on a onedows , f1rep loce m M1ddlepor t
crUiser equ1pped w1fh l1 vmg
Phone 992 3457
to-one basts today don t took to
fac ll1t1es and 90 h p Elo'm rude DON T·pAY the odd~d ;~pen-;e ~f
qet back as much as you g1ve
motor and trat ler 1962 GMC
T1H thtngs tn the other persons tamping ~nt
o Rea ltor J Buy th1s 3 bedroom
D1e.sel
Tractor wtth tanem a)(le
favor
2 1/t both bde vel from the
FAIR MONTH SPECIAL on ent~re
773 5238
owner a nd save• Lorge fom•ly
stock See them at CODNER S
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) 'vou
CAMPERS on Rotnbow r1dge
roo, with f1reploce . eat-m ktt·
can be eastly manipulated today
chen
with double -oven range
From
Rt
7
take
Meigs
28
or
32
An erratic assoctate could create
and dtshwos.her. formol d•n•ng
to Basham OpiBn e ... emngs ,
problems lor you Prevent th1sroom , two car garage. central
too Owner , Robert Codner ,
tallow the dictates of your own
a1r , on acre lo t. N1ce drwe to
long
Bollom
Ol'ito
consctence
power plants. and mines
STARCRAFT MINt' Motors tro1lers
$43 000 992 2•92
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) Try
and lofd downs End of yea r Strickly wholewle To all.
not to read more mto others
59 ACRE FARM, 11 m1les from
sale Solo'e $1 ,700 on 1q77 Not less than 1!2 case.
words or ar:::t1ons today than they
new Ravenswood Br idge .
trotlers 1q75 tra1lers in ~tock
really mtended Vou re a sl1ade
Modern home hos 3 bedrooms
Used untts We sell serviCe and
on the sensitiV'e side - so save
lrvtng room with wood burn•n9
quality . Cam p COtJiey Starcrofl r
yourse!t some heartaches
fireplace ond beamed ce•llng 1
Soles Rt . 62, nortl't of Pt Plea·
born . outbutld•ngs, and fenc
sent
LEO (July 23·Aug.22) Your oesl
tng t.d 500 9.. 9· 2~66
performance today wtll come m 1972 SELF·CONTAINED CAMPER
SIX AOOM haua• ol 613 Mill St ,
areas where you feet you can
19ft 74H566
Mtddi!RpOrt Good conchhon , In realize a material reward Money
1977 APACHE FOLD UP Used
qUire ~~ 4JI lincoln St , Mid ·
is a particultrlY good motivator
twiCe ~ 1 800
28-49
dleport!
' t ~EW!iii~APEA ENU.RPRISlASSN 1
~

-;-bOO

---

-

~

~

---~-

-

,...__________
1

m

--

MAIN
POMEROY. O.
GOT LOTS OF KIDS?
Here IS your home 2
story frame, 4 bedrooms,
1112 baths, large healed
enclosed porch to play In on
bad days, 2 car garage &amp;
storage.
corner
lot
$11 ,200.00.
SUMMER OR WINTER This home has a beautiful
view of the river . 1 floor
plan has 3 bedrooms, bath,

basement. storage
building, garden , other
features. $12,500.00.
ABOUT 16 ACRES ready
for
subd ivision
and
development in the VIllage
of Pomeroy . JUST LOOK,
$28,500.00.
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION Meigs
school district. Lovely 2
bedroom , equipped kit·
chen, d ining R , part
basement w ith garage .
$16,500 00
SOUTHERN
STYLE
HOME - Has everylhlng .
First floor has lovely
equipped kltchen (house
w1fe' s dream), dlnlng R. 2
bedrooms, 2 modern baths,
upper floor has 2 rentals for
good income . $24.000.00.
OLDER OME - 1'12 story
frame, fbr less than the
pnce of most new cars In
good
condition
3
bedrooms. bath, 6 rooms In
all s7,000.oo.
NEWER MODERN VA
approved
home,
3
bedrooms, lovely family
room ~ nice kitchen, car·
peling, paneling, tile, cold
room &amp; storage, central
heat and a1r cond 112 acre.
$32,500.00.
LOOK f LOTS - Space for
the klds to romp In, quiet
area, 6 rooms, bath, and
workshop. In good con·
dillon . Meigs school area .
$13,000.00.
WHY WAITr
IN·
TEREST RATES ARE
GOING UP- PROPERTY
PRICES CONTINUE TO
SOAR - BUY NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
H1nk, KIIIIJ &amp; Leoni
Cleland
Altaclltes

m-22st . m-2ua. tt5-4112

•

THE PHOTO PLACE

CARTER

992-2206 01992-7630

9.

..

D. Bumgardner

CAPTAIN EASY

Pool Sales

Pllltra~ts

PISSpDI!s

NoiiSoM•h loo4
Ill. I

O~AY·· THANKS
FOR EVER!.VTHI"'I&gt;
COLO"'EL MULVEY!

LET ME KNOW IF
l CAI&gt;I "" 0~ A!\IV
HELP ON THAT
SUPE.R·Pic5HTER!

Annift~Wies

Special Ocusions

Miiilo""' 0.

992·5721

Cornplolt Sales ltNI Sonia ...
plits.

s.,.

3-11-1 mo.

I

THAT C A~LI!ft'S VOice MEA.,T
NOTHINt!i TO M!!.I!SA?Y..,AS l TOLO
VOU • HE CLAIMIOD TO Be OIJe OF
YOUR COMPETITORS~ ,

Wtddinp

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

loll llooftith

t92·52!Z
li-21·1 mo

~===!··' .

Rustoteum P• lnt Products

•we un ship parfl d ire ctly

ta your door by way of
U P.S
•custom Hydraulic Hose
Making
Phone 992-2 176

Pomeroy , 0 .

1l'ft~Nl

ID'il

:oo-

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

DAVID BRICKLES

••

~ ~ ~~ .,

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

'•

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lenet" to each square,to form
four ordinary words.

•

byHenriArnoklandBoblee

I I K

K•tchen Cabmets Roofm1 Concrete
P1t10s • Stdewalks New Construction~
Remodehna

Ph. 9921119 orl96-1005
EltitNia opplitd "'jail

li-271 mo pd

·I i

cn

I KD

SWAIN

COUL.t7 6E

15
YEAR -IHE.R'E:'S
SOME CRAZINESS
AROUND!

FATSIE

Automatic
Tr1nsmiSSion Service

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1977
5 · 4s-Farm Report 13: s ·so--PTL Club 13; 6 : oo-Summer Semester 10
6·30-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Sem~ter
8; Overseas Mission 10, 6 •s-Mornlng Report 3;
6:~ood Morning , w..l Virginia 13; 6 5s-Good
Morning, Trl Slate 13.
7 ()()-.Today 3••• 15, Good Morning America 6,1 3; CBS
News 8; Chuck Whlte Reports 10
7 .05-Potky Plg 10; 7 :311-Schooll es 10
8 ·oo--Howdy Doody 6; Capl Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
51 33
8 311-Big Valle'y 6
9 oo.-cross.Wils J; Phll Donahue 4,13,\5: Andy
Grlttlth 8; Mike Douglas 10.
9 · 311-A M 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8.
•
10 ·oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6 ; Here's Lucy 8,10,
M1ke Douglas 13.
10 36-Hollywood Squares 3,,,15, Prlce IS Rlght 8,10.
11 oo--Wheel of Fortune 3,.,15; Happy Days 6,13
11·36-lt's Anybody's Guess 3,4, 15. Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of L&gt;fe 8, 10.
11 55-CBS News 8, Ms Flxll 10
12 GO-News 3,4,6,10, Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court
Midday 13.
12 · 36-Chlco &amp; lhe Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10
1 DO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,1 3. News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Nol lor Wo men On ly 15.
1 3!1--Days ol Our Lives 3,4, 15. As The World Turns
8,10.
2 oo--s20.000 Pyramid 6,13
2 . 311-Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10
'
3:GO-Another World 3,4,1S; All In The Fam1ly 8,1 0:
Crocketl's VIctory Garden 20
3 · 1s-General Hosp1tal 6,13
3.36-Match Game 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
•:oo--Mister Cartoon 3, Gong Show 4,15; New Mic key
Mouse Club 6, Gilligan's Is 8 ; Sesame St. 20,33:
Movle " The Big Land" 10; D inah 13,
.
4 311-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Andy Griffllh 8; Hogan's Heroes 15.

a.

~

.... 2
.,_,.,,Ohi
o l57U

8 7-1 mo

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

4

THURSQAY, SE_PTEMBER t, 1977
5 oo--Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch B. Mister Rogers '
NetghbQrhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; M1,.lon
I mposslble 15
5 3().-()dd Couple4; News6; Famlly Affair 8; Elec Co
20,33 .
6 : ~News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6:3G-NBC News3,•,1S; ABC News 13, Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10, Once Upon A Classic 20
7 oo--Truth or Cons. 3; Cross·Wits •• Liars Club 6,
Treasure HuniB; News 10. To Tell the Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Coosumer Survival Kit
33.7 ·3!1--Hollywood Squares 3,4, Match Game PM
6; Price Is Right 8, MacNeil· Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
15
8 ·oo--PIIot3,4,15. Welcome Back, Kotter 6, 13; Waltons
8,10, Key to the Universe 20,33.
•
8 3~PIIol "Good Penny " 3,4,15; What's Happening 6;
Movie "So"lh Pacl ll&lt;" 13.
9 · oo-Movle "The Man In the Iron Mask" 3,&gt;4,15;
Barney M11ler 6, Oral Roberts In San Francisco 8;
Movie "An American Dream" 10.
9 3~Three's Company 6.

"'
"

Business Services

'279.95

more of what ltes ahead lor you?
Send for your copy of AstroGraph ·Letter by mailmg 50 cents
tor each and a long , selladdressed stamped envelope to
Astro -Gr. ao!i P 0 Bo x. 469
~ad• o C•tv Statton NY 10019
Be $Ute to spec lly your birth
SIQO

..

,,

COAl hmes iOI'\e and calnum
chlonde ond colctum brine fo,
du"SI control ond Spectol m1x1ng
soh lor larmen E~cel~tor Salt
Works Ma1n Street Pomeroy
Oh•o or phone 9Y"J JH'Il
CAMPER
$bOO
Also
1-tor se
tro1ler $450 Phone (61.4 ) 69fl

Saws

A ..JAI

••

Sale

RISING STAR Kennel
Indoor Outdoor runs ,
all breeds , clean
fa cili ties oe 367 71 12
Pl'1one (614) 367 0292

CASE LOT
- CAN _GOOD_$

Stpl. 2. 11177
1
E&gt;Jen though 1t may not appear
posstble at present you should
mtt1ale plans lor a long trip you d
like to take th1s comtng year 11
r'(IBV come about unexpectedly

t'or

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I STARTED IT

10 ·oo--College Football Preview 6; Barnaby Joneo 8,
News 20; Dickens of London 33.
n :oo--Newo 3,4.6,8.10.15; MacNeii . Lehrer Repor1 33.
11 : 311-Johnny Carson 3,,,15; SWAT 6; U. S. Open
Tennis Highlights 8; Movie "Gaby" 10; News IJ;
ABC News 33
11 •s-Kolak 8
12 .oo--Emergency One 13; Janakl 33 .
12. oiO-Unolllcial Miss Las V09as Showglrl Pageant 6 ·
12 :Ss-Movle "The Deadly Oream" 8.
1
TomorrQw 3,4; News 13
I JG--Mary Hartman 10

5:oo--Biq Valley 3 ; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33. Emergency One 13; M tssfon ·
Impossible 15.
5 31)--()dd Couple 4; News6; Family Aflalr 8; Elec. Co
20,33.
6 . GO-News 3,4,8,1 0, 13,15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6:36-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh6 ,
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20
7:GO-Truth or Cons. 3. Cross.Wlls 4, Liars Club 6;
New Movies 8, News 10; To Tell the Truth 13, My
Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Inner Tennis 33.
7. 30--Porter Wagoner 3, Gong Show 41 Candld Camera
4, M9tN!I!I ·J..~hr~r R.e,P9JI :tQ.3JO ..nay Williams
10, Pop Goes the Country 15; Name That Tune 13
8 GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3, 15, NFL Football6,13; Baseball
4, Keane Brothers 8,10; Wash ington Week In
Review 20,33
8: 3o-&lt;:htco &amp; lhe Man 3,15,: Starland Vocal Band 8, 10;
Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 .oo--Rockford Flies 3,15. Movle " I Want to Keep My
Baby! " 8, 10. Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.

IBUCHERj
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Ph.l7U250

;.znrc

Kingsbury Home Sales
1111'111MINrifd . . . S. UU .. IIHIJI . . ca!Mitt. II ... •1M •

tulhJ ,..act l'lllcl will

t•

"'* .. Nllt-' fll!li . . . . . . . . . . . . tM
llllt WiflltiiiiiiQI ill ....... llf . . . . CMt, 1M

...~~ .... rwu•••.w•--.
,...., Pll'.

_.tM rHII!IM ,_, ,._ II

....-. w.""' • ..,..._."".,."""
v.l.!.-rlllllllllfiM~N-plliOI·

,.rtlllllll• tttt.!HIIfl- ~....,Ill
llw 111lolomt "-t ~~ . _ II !1M1 llcll
~II S&amp;L til nl7DM Ill 1 hM ""**II

..,.ll.lllhil!t, ,...., 0
1 20-J

IIIII

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

~~1¥16ed

Restdenttal
and
commercial. Call
for
esttmate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 185·3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Chester, Ohio

Box 34

by THOMAS JOSEPH
39 }'ut in
ACROSS
servtce
1 Am., Brit .,
DOWN
or Fr., e.g .
S Cod and Fear 1 Silkworm's

BORN LOSER

I'M /&gt;6 A&lt;;.HNAW

001-l'T /./Et.lTOI 'KJOR Mist: TO
Ml'l a' me; OTHeR 'EMPLOI~'!i5...,.

OF 11 A&lt;? He

8 29 pd .

.

R~~mra~- ,....-----------~

H;,;-E~I~:S--;o~ sole~1 o~d
up Moddleport nea r Rutland
Coll992 7481

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths ,
all elec , I acre M1ddleport ,
close to Rutland Phone 992-

_7481. :~~--~-­
SMALL farm lor sole, 10~. down ,
owner fmanced Monroe Coun
ty , W Vo Phone (:W..) 772·
3102 or (304) 772 3227

. -- --='-~
COUNTRY farmland w1 th seclud-

GUTTER

SERVICE

"so"

Wt hlnl
or do ft '''"""· Spoc•l pncM 10

Conti11M 11M ptttt ptttn.

~buid'"'

m
~EALTOR

dads
do (Jwds.)
8 Expand

!r;"""

•

Phone 949-2114

9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

state
2 Modeler's
wood
3 Births (2 wds.)
4 Cowboy Ryder
5 Portuguese
explorer
6 Ring champ
15
7 What new

17 Make-up item 9 - toeye
(agree)
19 Contammg
(2 wds.)
q-1
ore
11 Like the
L......J...J.!:~.I---- Z0 SIIDplifted
211nunense

·-·
_ 22 Does swns
~ &amp;,1\ 23 ~tadiwn

GASOLINEAL

Well. t

ed woods wa ter ond good ac
cess m Monroe Co unty , W Vo
&amp;.lli-1 mo
$1 000 down call (304) 772
~ 3 1 ~ o r (304)772 3227
VA FHA , 30 yr fmonctng Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E State , Athens BRADFORD. Auctioneer , Com
phone (bl•) 592 3051
ple1e Serv1ce Phone 949 2487
o r 949 20Cl0 Roone , Ohto Cr1tt
Bradford

TEAFORD

10 Shopper
stopper
11 New Orleans
campus
12 Arctic
vehicle
13 Isolate
14 Ninny
15 Cry of
contempt
16 Scotsman's

-z l!

come bac~!

bnde's
mother

Documentary Showcase 33

Yesterday's Answer

Low in
pitch

18 No gentlemen
21 Slop

22 "Sweet" one
of song
23 Benefit
24 Brought low
25 " Is That

27 Word of
inqUiry
28 Courage
or gall
28 Part of

G.A.R.
34 Partner

35

of ptck
French

ER~.;~~treet

Pomeroy, Ohto45769
Phone 991.3325
LARGE BRICK - Has 4
rentals near stores and
community activities. A
real investment for only
$23, 000
LIKE NEW - 4 bedrooms,
natural gas F .A furnace ,
nice bath and e&lt;Jf. ln kit·
chen. Corner lot in Mlddlepo..t. $24,000
NEW
TRI·LEVEL
Boasting 3 bedrooms, 1112
baths, family room , office
and garage on one acre .
$41 ,000.
LARGE Want one ot
those
special
large
bedrooms? This Is one and
3 other ones A good family
home with 2 baths and
natura-l gas
furnace .
$27,500.
INVESTMENT One 4
room apartment and a
studio apt. Both with baths.
Just $9600.
105 ACRES Ot nlce
hunllng land tor $150.00 an
acre A good Investment.
MIDDLEPORT
3
bedroom frame home with
bath, nat . gas heat ,
fireplace ln the living and
two car garage. $15,500.
NEW
LISTING
RHsonable 5 room home. 2
bedrooms, nice
bath ,
basement with new gas
furnace. 2 porches. garage
and carport. Want $17,000
BUILDING LOT City
water
and
electric
ava\lable Only $2800.
NEW LISTING 175
acre-s, free gas well, .t
bedroom home, equ lppod
birch kitchen with. bu lll·ln
cook and bake units,
refrigerator, bath, ges F .A.
furnace. and all minerals.

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

mgress

24 Swruner

~--+-~-+-t Student

drinks

Z5 Baby
soother
26 Little
Beverly
%7 Smger
Margaret
30 Hearty

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR--:_
Sweepers too5ters . "om , oil
small appl ia nces Lawn mower
nex t to State H1gt\woy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985

... K 7
• 42
t A 874
.AJ98 5

WEST
EAST
... 5
... QJ 10 8 613
¥Q73
¥J86
tl0965
t32
• 10 7 6 4 2
• 3
SOUTH
• A 92
¥AK!095
tKQJ
"'KQ
Nilrth-South vulnerable

drink

165,000.
AN APPRAISAL IS A
VALUE
lASED
ON
FACTS. NOT AN DI'INION
IY ANYONE. ONLY IY
QIJALIFIED PEOPLE.

•

Wi&lt;:ked one

35 Before site

SEWING MACHINE Repa~r s ser·
VIC&amp; o il makes. , 992 2284 The
Fobn r; Shop
Po mer oy
Authomed Singer Sales and
ServiCe. We sharpen Sc1ssors

~~~~~~~~~~~~~=r~n
(:
36 orchute
Intact

37 S. Vietnam's,J,.,-+-1-+-4-1anny(abbr.
38 Famed

I'

Italian
family

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

(

m

Will do roofing. construe~
ptumb 1ng and heating No ta b
loo large or too sma ll Phone
742·2348 '

•

CARPENT ER~-;;;--';ilmg
panehng Phone 992 275q

MoBILE Home Repo~E~
plumb•ng ond heal.ng Phone
992 5858
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
cavotlng , sepllc systems
dozer, boc:khoe , dump truck
limestone, gravel
blockto~
pov•ng. Rt 143 Phone 1 (614)
__
69~~~~----~----

how
AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

II

EXC AVATING . dozer backhoe
and d ttcher Charles R Hot
f1eld
Back Hoe Ser,•ce
,_Rutland . Ohio Phone 742-2008

NQTHINcr.
DID YOU GIVE ANY

PROI3AI';LY I

n10UGHT ID WHAT
I TOLD YOU

lABT NIGHT?

m··""''

squeezes out 7NT

NORTH IDI

31Fowl

REMODELING Plumb&gt;ng, heotmg
and oil types of general repmr
Work guaran teed 20 yeors eM ·
penence Pl'1one 992 2409

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re. will haul
ftll d frt to sotl. hmestone and
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers, day phone 992 7089
n•ght phone 1192 3525 or
5232

BRIDGE

resort

All-ls?"

cYJRGJ~-J~~F~O~R~Dk,S~R~.-~-~~
38~2~5~--~-------216

9:3o-Somelhlng Personal 20.
10 ·oo-Qulncy 3, 15 ; News 20, Flrlng Line 33.
10 311-Redscene '77 4: Wpman 20.
11·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Black Perspective on tne
News 33
11 311-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; Barella 6,13; U .S. Open
Tennis Highlights 8; Movie " House on Green Apple
Road" 10, ABC Ney;s 33.
11 :4s-Movle "The Private Navy of Sgl O' Farrell " 8.
12:oo--Janakl 33 .
12 :4!1--Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
1 :oo-Movie "Janis" 3,&gt;4,15 .
1 :311-Mary Hartman 10
1 4Q-News 13; 2 ·3o-News 3; 3·oo--Movle To Be
Announced 3.

to work it:

West

North East

Pass

5¥

'"'

3•

Pass

South

4NT

7N T

Pass Pass Pass
Opemng lead - 54

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

The student knew he had
One letl'h simply stands for another In this sample A Ia overbid, but was delighted
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc Single lellers, with dummy He w9n the hrst
apootrophes, the length ~nd format!on of lhe words are all trick with his ace of spades
hints Each day lhe code letters are different
over East's 10 and promptly
played hts king and queen of
,CKYPTOQUOTES
clubs He had planned to
0
TOWOVNME clatm 11 both opponents
EBBHA
YOE
followed, but East showed out
VXB
YOE
QXM
and
the student had a
OA
YDWX
'
problem . Where was the 13th
BRFBIV tr1ck to come from'
MEB . XOH
SDAV
XOA
Then
the
student
remembered that lhe
XDFFOIH
Professor had told h1m that
Yesterday's Ceyptoqaote': ONE VERY IMPORTANT INGRE· any time he could count 12 top
DIENT OF SUCCESS IS A GOOD, WIDE·AWAKE, PERSIS. tr1cks the 13th might come on
TENT, TIREI.&amp;'lS ENEMY.-FRANK SHUTI'S
a squeeze The Prr .essor

C

would have spread h1s hand at
tins point and claimed. Only
East could stop spades; only
West could stop clubs No one
would be able to hang on to
heart protection
The student didn't know
this, but he worked the sqeeze
anyway He cashed hts king·
queen·1ack of diamonds,
entered dummy with the king
of spades and led the ace· jack
of clubs wh1le d1scardrrig two
hearts .
Then came the pressure . He
led the ace of dtamonds East
had to chuck a heart to •etain
a h1gh spade The student now
threw h1s mne of spades . 1t
had done its work Now West
had to unguard the queen of
hearts to keep the 10 of clubs
and the student's hearts were
good lor the last three tricks.

~~~~
A California declarer led a
spade from dummy when m
h1s own hand H1s opponents
told h1m he had to lead a
spade from his hand H1s ques·
t10n IS "DO I have to play the
same spade from dummy 1
No, he doesn' t. He must
lead a spade from h1s hantl ,
but can change the card
played from dummy
(For a copy a/ JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to " Wio at
Bodge ' c/o th1s ntiwspapet.
p 0 Sox 489. RadiO Cit~ StfltJon,
Now York

,.,y tOor;)

191"7 Klnl fotah1n1 SYndicate, In(

"'\RNEY

PIANO TUNING, lont Dan1els. 12
yeors of ser¥tee
Phone
992 2082

PENNZOtlfW'TlAN0~~-~
1111 10 Closed Mondays
wrecker service, ttre r&amp;patr
Phon• 7~2-9575or 7_.2 208l

NELSON'SPAINTING~

WE DECIDED TO HOLD
OUt? ANNVAL MEETING

ONCE A !(EAR ..

DON'T YOU WAN'T TO
MEAR WWAT ELSE
WE DECIDED?

ROBINEGG
BLUE??

TATER'S

SEAT COVERS

ARE HEN-EGG
WHITE

Free

est• motes. Call 992-SB(W

WILL oO boby;m.~g:;-;Y-~;992 5301
wATER HAULEo.sso-;,no,;; por
~oad 1n Tuppers Ploms ·
Coolville aroo. Coli (614)
667·:1675, offer 5 pm .
Will DO

bobys•tt1~;j;,-my r;;fi

9'12 6309

•

•

•

••

•

�Proposed bill
would help out
beat-up wives
WASHINGTON (UPI)
1llrt.-e H'IU.M! members are

dralting a bill to aid battered
wives, oot an mdependent .
study shows that nl&lt;ll'e men
than women are the victims
of domestic violence.
Rep. James Howard, DN.J., said Tuesday he will
join with Reps. Lindy Boggs,
D-La., and Newton Steers, RMd., in spoosoring a bill next
week to authorize $00 million
over three years to provide
emergency shelter and
counseling services lor
victims 'of domestic v.iolence.

CONSTRUCTIOihJNDERWAV AT BANK- Construction is underway at the Mason
CoWlty Bank in New Haven to add five additional offices, a board of directors meeting
room, and a computer room. The addition will be two stories and is expected to be finished
in January. Shown are, C. L. Spurlock, left, and Donald Byus, of the Neighborgall
Construction Co. at the construction site.

Architect-engineer firms will bid

On

uranium plant expansion project
PIKETON - The u. s. chitect-engineer linn for the
Energy Research and engineering and design of the
Development Administration process buildings and sup.
(ERDA) is seeking an ar- plemental facilities for the

Friends' ·work
is rewarding
By Lula B. Hampton
My work is in the geriatrics
ward at the Athens Mental
Health Center. It is rewar·
ding to go each week and help
with the music therapy and
do visitation with men and
women there. I'm happy to
see them enjoy singing tpe
hymns of the churches and
also popular songs of
Yesteryear, such as "The
Girl That Married Dear Old
Dad", and " Let Me CaU You
Sweetheart". They also
like the marching part of the
therapy. We like to sit and
talk to the patients and listen
to what they have to say.
Sometimes they are just
lonely for someone with
whom to talk. They have
often been ·referred to as the
"forgotten people". They are
always glad to see us, and
want to know when we will
return.
· We, the Senior Friends,
have been quite busy in
August.
Miss
Kathie
Filsinger, our program
coordinatos, showed the
following series of fihns,
Grow Older, Feel Younger,
Tell Me Where to Tum, Don't
stop the Music and The Inner
World of Aphasia August 2.

These films help us in our
work. On August 11, a talk,
" Diabetes and ' Weight
Control" was given at the
Senior Citizens Center by
Mrs. Lynn Murray, dietitian
of Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The Senior Friends brought
some of the patients from
Athens Mental Health Center
to Royal Oak Park ,j.ugust 17
for a picnic at noon, and in the
afternoon they were taken to
the Meigs County Fair. On
August 23, we visited the
Central Ohio Psychiatric
Hospital, Kosar Geriatric
Center, ColumbuS, with our
coordinator. We want
especially to learn bow the
Senior Friends program was
operated there.
· We also went· to Worley
Terrace in Columbus, a
Senior Citizens apartment
complex.
Dayton
and
Columbus are the only cities•
in Ohio with such housing. We
visited with one of mY former
Friends with whom I had
worked In Athens. We also
visited another friend there.
We have staff meetings at the
Center in Athens the last
Wednesday of each month.

centrifuge uranium enrichment plant to be built here.
Total cost of this portion of
the project could amoWlt to
$20 to $30 million. ERDA
plans to award a cost-plusfixed-fee contract to th;
architect-engineer firm
selected. This contract should
be awarded by January 1978.
This will be the second of
several such contracts
required lor the engineering
and design of the project.
Catalytic,
Inc.,
of
Philadelphia is currently
under contract for site
development and plaMing.
ERDA will also be
negotiating lor other major
architect-engineer con·
tractors in the near future. In
addition, a construction finn
will be sought for construction of the new plant and
equipment installation.
The facility, which is
scheduled for completion in
1988, will double the enrichment capacity of the present
ERDA operation at Piketon.
Total cost of the project is
estimated at about $4.5 billion
In 1978 dollars.
Some ~.ooo people will be
· employed in constructi~n of
the plant and an estimated
2,300 will be required . to
operate the completed
facility.
The enriched
uranium produced here will
be used primarily for the
generation of electric· power
in the United States and
abroad.
Architect-engineer fums
interested in the project are
asked to contact: U, S.

''When we say battered
wives, · we're talking about
close to S mlltion w0111en a .
year who suffer injuries at
the hands of their husbands,"
said Howard . He also
estimated that half of the
married women in the nation
are a bused to some degree
and I 0 per cent or them, or 5
miliion,
"are
badly
battered.''

An aide to Steers told UPI
the National Institute on
Mental Health• funded five
studies on the issue and one of
them, made bY Dr. Suzanne
Steinmetz,
sociology
professor at the University of
Delaware, showed that men
were more often the victim
than the woman.
"The Steinmetz study
showed that men actually
experience more physical
violence U}Wl women," the
aide said. "Men do more
damage but women go on the
the offensive more often but
don't do as much damage ."
The study, the aide said,
showed weapons figured
heavily in the quarrels. Out of
the estimated 47 million
~ied couples reported as
bemg involved in some
fighting, 1. 7 mlltion of them .
used either a knife or a gun,
the study showed.

Energy Research and
Development
Ad·
ministration, · Oak Ridge
Operations Office, Contract
Division, P.O. Box E, Oak
Ridge, T~nnessee 37830.

Jeep Clearance
1977 JEEP WAGONEER
Auto ., A. C.. P.S., P. B., till
wheel, cruise Control,· roof
rac:k, radials.

s1200 DISCOUNT
RIVERSIDE JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

·~EL~B~ER~FE:-:-:
· ~Io:--:P~O~ME::": "RO":":-:Y:--.
SEPTEMBE SALE DAYS
FRIDAY, SEPIEMBER 2nd- SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3RD

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
New fall colors and styles. Sizes 30 to 46.

REG. sa.oo....................... SALE '7.19
·
. SALE so 09
REG• Sft
·;;,,()() .......................
.
·o.
.
SALE ~.89
REG • '11.00
'
....... ..............
REG• '13 ' 00""""" ·" """ •· SALE '1169
•
REG. '16.00 ............. :...... SAL£ $14.39

HOUSEWARES • 1ST FLOOR

1 Only 45 pc. Set. Dinnerware.

Sale $13.00
Regular $26.96
•
I Only 4 pc. Place Setting
$16.50 Dinnerware (less 2 cups) Sale $8.00
Only 8 pc. Setting $29.95
Dinnerware Set
·
· Sale 515.00

-'

13 Only Discontinued Pattern Corningware
Platter Reg. $5.95
Sale $3.50
3 Only 515.95 10-cup Perculator
Corningware Discontinued Pattern Sale $10.00
2 Only 1'12 qt. Casser.ole Reg. $11.95 Sale $8.00

~~~~~--~~~~~~-·---S-A-Lf~----~--~

OCCASIONAL TABLES ·
WORK
.
CLOTHES
• End Tables. Coffee Tables. Lamp Tables..
Just received complete selection Carhartt
Brown Duck - Coveralls . Overalls · Jackets
- Hoods . Vests · Dungarees. You'll find
every style and every size, and we urge you
to make your sele'j;tions now in the Men's
Department . lst floor Friday and Saturday.

Hostess Tables.
• Pecan, Pine,
Finishes.

KROEHLER UVING ROOM SUITES

CHAIR SALE

AND SLEEP OR LOUNGES '

Large group of vinyl and cloth upholstered
chairs, including platform rockers,
recliners, rock -o·loungers and straight
chairs.
Values to $298.00 ·

Save 20 Per Cent on any living room
suite or sleep or lounge. in stock.
Excellent · selection of covers and
styles.

SALE .

Special group of discontinued
styles of Playte¥ girdles and
bras.

SAVE FROM

$} 00

TO

$8.95 Pants .. Size29 to44 ...... ·...... Sale 57.88
$9.95 Pants, Sizes46 to so ...... , .... Sale S8.88
57.95 Shirts, Sizes 14'12 to 17......... Sale $6.88
$8.95 Shirts, Sizes 18-19-20 .......... Sale $7 .88
Stock up -n~,;;, on your Fail ·and Winter
Needs .

2

FOR

WOMEN'S FALL &amp;
WINTER COATS

Mr. Steven Schaeffer of .Lanson and
Macintosh Coat Companies will be
in the Ready To Wear Dept. - 2nd
floor- with his sample line of coats
- jackets - wool pant coats : leather
and !Suede coats. Stop in try on a coat
or two and see what's new this
season.

lclnd of easy banking.

Fi."al clearance sale on all
remaining stock porch, lawn, and
pafio furniture.

A great new look
in young casuals!

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
UCINE

OHIO

1

•

Great with jeans, cords and khakis.
In super-soft. genuine ·leather.
Padded heel and new one-piece
wedge sole.

Hartley's

S~oes,

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY,OHIO
OPEN:'
'a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon . thrv Thurs.
t •.m. t.l p.m. Frld•y

S.tui1My 9 •.m. to 5 p.m.

Inc.

BOYS SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS.
Sizes 8 to 20. Solid colors and patterns.
Perfect for school wear.

8oJs '3.95 Shirts .. ;............Sale $1.98
·8oJs '4~95 Shirts ... ,........... Sale s2.41
8oJs ~.95. Shirts ............... Sale •2.98
.
8oJs $7.95 Shirts............... Sale '198

SCATTER RUGS

Special Two Day Sa_l.!!!

MEN'S ~95
FLANNEL SHIRTS
Sizes small (14-14112 neck!. medium (15·
15'12), large (16-16 112) and extra large (17·
17 112), color plaid patterns - one pocket .

•569
SEE lHE NEW 1978 UNE

PANASONIC

Table radios - transistor radios • both AM
and AM-FM- Tape Players and Recorders
- Compc:ment Systems - Record Play_e r. Strack Recorder with AM- F M Radio- Record
Chanaers.

• 2nd Floor

NO. 99

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1977

INDIANA, Pa. (UP!)
United Mine
Workers
President Arnold Miller
Thursday praised a meeting
of the union's International
Exeuctlve Board but had
some harsh comments about
the coal industry.
The board finished its
busmess ·with approval of a
loan of up to $1 million for the
pension fund for anthracite
hard · coal miners, located
mainly in eastern Penn·
sylvania. The loan will
continue the miners' $30
monthly pensions until the
fund becomes self-sufficient
in the early 1980's:
No action was taken on he
pension fund for soft coal
miners - also beset by
problems .
Bituminous
miners get $200 to $500 ·a

He would not elaborate on
when and where the contract
talks would he held, except to
say they would begin as soon
as possible.
Miller disagreed with
comments that BCOA
President Joseph B!,'ennan
made Thursday in a speech to
the West Virginia.Chamber of
Commerce.
Bre!lnan
said;
coal
operators 11 do not seek to

weaken our union. Our efforts
should serve to strengthen it.
We do not seek to deprive coal
miners of their place in the
sun."
Miller responded, "I fully
understand the companies
will never give up the id,ea of
breaking the union, but they
will never do it. Soft coal
operators have spent too
much damn time and effort
trying to destroy the union

• DenJm, nylon, corduroy, fur trim
•Sizes2 to4, 4to6x, 7 to 14

14.00..........................SALE 112.59
REG. '16.00 ......... ~ ................. SALE '14J9'
REG.- '18.00. .......................
. ,,.~~-SALE 'lft19·- .
REG. '21.00•.•.••.••.•.•..•.•
w.E '11.89
1

I. I •••••

REG. '31.00·························· SAL£ '27J9

REG. '41..«Mt •••••••••••••••••••••••••.

EROY
~

••
•

By.DALE ROTHGEB
strike-vote would be taken.
Gallia County's classroom·
The Gallla County Local
teachers
Monday over·
Board of Education and Its
whelmingly
rejected the
teaching llaff appear to be on
bollrd's latest contract offer.
a crash course.
With contract negotiations The board had offered a
at a standstill, no new beginning teacher's salary of
negotiating session ~ and $9,000 starting Jan. l with
rejection o( the latest board increases to $9,500 the second
offer made last Thursday, year and $10,000 per year In
te8chen will aaemble at 6 the final year of lbe threep.m. Monday eveniq at the year contract.
In add!Uon, the bollrd said
Gallla
County
Junior
Falr1rounda for what Is it would provide addltlonal
lleUeved to be a ltrlke vcite. riden to the present fuU
Tbe aecuttve committee coverage of insuran«:e, and
for the GaWa County Local continue to offer the preaent
Teachers Aaaoclation plan of fuiJ coverage for
(GCLTA) baa luuecl an major medical benefits,
•rUer ~that woullladd term life U.urance
If a •tllfactoi'Y c:ontntct was for aU teachers, additional
paareecl upon by Sept. &amp;, ~ severance pay, aildltional
I'~

leave' provisions, provide
monies for
In-service
education and increase
supplemental eontracts by 20
pet. and have extra
guaranteed preparation time
lor element~~ry teachers.
In rejecting the package
last Monday, a teacher
spokesman Indicated the
biggut hallf!llpa were base
salary, teacher claasloads
and Insurance. It is believed
the Instructon want the lncreaaed starting salary now,
not Jan. 1.
The board of education's
ne&amp;otlatinl! team, headed by
County Superllltelldent
Thornu Bainton, hal COD·
tinued to remain mwn on the
subject llating "No com-

instead of sitting down and
trying to solve the problems.
The coal companies have
management problems that
no other business in this
country could endure and
survive," Miller charged,
"and both the general public
· and the UMW members
suffer from it."
Miller left Indiana for a
four-day rest in an undisclosed location.
11

.

.

Five injured in Route 7 crash
fractured right arm and head injury, and William D.
bruise on ·the head. Her Flinn, 51, Parkersburg, the
sister, Emma Lou, a copY driver of a pick-up truck.
typist, suffered multiple Flinn was not immediately
fractured ribs and a treated.
According ' to the Gallia'lacerated chin. They were
Meigs
Post State Highway
taken to the hospital by a
Patrol, Flinn's truck struck
SEOEMS ambulance.
Also injured were "" the Davis car in the rear
driver of a . Gallipolis City forcing it into the rear or the
school bus, Dorothy Perkins, school bus.
Following the impact, he
42, Lower River Rd .,
truck.
which sandwiched the
Gallipolis, and a passenger
Davis
car
between it and the
on her bus, Cindy Sayre, IS,
Kanauga. They were treated
and rei eased lit the hospital's
emergency room for minor
injuries. Mrs. Perkins had a
it.eck injury while her
passenger was treated for a
E-RCALLED
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad answered
two calls Thursday. At 9:15
a.m., the squad went to
Letart Falls for Edna Shields,
a medical patient, and at 11
a.m. went to Route I, Long
Bottom, for Anton Liter, also
a medical patient. Both
patients were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the squad.

RACINE - Another special
session was set for Sept 15 to
review a cost analysis study
to be conducted in the district
on Sept. 8 and 9, when the
Southern Local Board of
Education met in special
session Thursday night.
The study to be done by the
state auditor's office is

Judlt" .

· Supt. Hairston could not be
reached lor any statements
this morning. He was in a
conference
wlih
his
. elementary and secondary
principals.
· If teachers vote to !Jtrike, it
will be the second strike in
the history of the county
school system since conlllllldation. The first was in
1974 when teachers won a
major contract including
118lary increases and other
benefits.
A year after the strike
(1975), the board of education
was forced to go · into an
austerity program and
finished tltf year $60(1,000 In
debt.

bus~

overtumeO.
Gallipolis volunteer
firemen were called to wash
gasoline ·off the pavement.
The accident occurred In a
thick fog, causing traffic to be .
blocked up 20 ·minutes.
Flinn was · cited to
Municipal Court for failure.tn .
stop within the assured clear :
distance. The Davis car was: ·
demolished . There was·:
moderate damage to the .
truck and bus.

Cost analysis
be reviewed

Board and teachers on crash course

PRE-SEASON SALE
CHILDREN'S
FALL COATS
• Assorted styles and colors

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M. - CLOSED ALL DAY MoNDAY • Uaot DAY .

LBERFE

enttne

at
VOL. XXVIII

Charles Rife, Dave Williamson, Merle Davis, Chief Bruce
D. Davis who accepted and Charles Legar who pcesented
the certificates. Others not present were Howard C.
Birchfield, Jerry Black, Roger Black, Homer Parker,
Danny Edwards, Larry Edwards, Richard Fetty, Dick
Foley, Jack Goode, Bill Kennedy, Lewis KeMedy and
James Quillen.

•

•

Stolen lumber
is located by
local lawmen

·.·•3••

~EG.

RECEIVE CERT!l&gt;' lCATES - Twenty-five Rutland
Firefighters have received certificates for completing 36
hours of instruction in fire lighting skill and techniques.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles W.' Legar, Sr., was the
instructor. He presented the certificates Wednesday night
!o front, 1-r, Raymond Wilcox, Jack Walker, Fred
Williamson, Bill Williamson, Red Eblin, Paul Patterson
and standing, Bill Brown, Charles Barrett, David Davis,

to strike

Size 24x40 inches - oval or oblong shape
plain or fringe borders · decorator solid
colors - non skid back - machine washable
and dryable. Sale Priced.

Music

serious threat of flash
flooding. A Mexican weatber
service official said the San
Fernando and Purlticacloo
rivers were expected to flood
all of . the San Fernando
VaUey m the Mencan state of,
Tamautipas.
Deputy David Mariitlez of
the Cameron CoWlly (Teus)
sheriff's department S!lld the
~of Port Isabel and Boca
Chica were surrounded by
water. Five foot tides covered
the blacktop road over the
salt fla Is leading 1D the towns.
"I'd say 15 per cent of the
homes on the Island are built
on stilts and the rest are
trailer homes," Martinez
said. "It's just too early to tell
if there was any damage."

No end
in strike

REGULAR '4.79

t919

AT THE .WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC ST.

17\Tews.
•
•
in
Brief~
:f "
~~

TRUNK SHOWING

CORONADO $1 29
PLACE MATS

slide soutbweslward,
probably to die In the eastern
Sierra Madres.
Meanwhile, heavy rain
moved up the Rio Grande
through Texas and Mexico
parallel with tbe hurricane. ·
Brownsville, Tex. police
Capt. George Acres, said
Mexican authorities told him
it would be "quite a while"
befQre authQrities could enter
the rough mountainous
country where the hurricane
hit.
"It's going to be hard to get
in there; possibly only with
helicopters," Acres said.
"It's been raining bard there
and the roads will be
impassable."
The heavy rain created a

month.
to union members.
The Bituminous Coal
"I look lor nothing but
Operators Association and success at future board
1
the union have set a tentative meetings," Miller added.
By United Press internatioaal
meeting next Friday to iron
Regarding negotiations on
HAVANA, CUBA - THE FIRST U.S. DIPLOMATIC
out
problems
with
health
the
contract that expires Dec.
station in CUba in more than 16 years today began its first job
funds
for
soft
coal
miners
6,
Miller said, "I hope
- helping 84 American citizens living in Cuba to leave the
the
issue
that
triggered
a
10.
because
of the gravity of the
Wand if they wish .
week-&lt;&gt;ld
.
wildcat
strike
in
situation to get down to bard
The{,).&amp;. "interest section" opened Thursday at the old U.
several states.
bargaining immediately with
S. Embassy building in Havana with mission chief Lyle Lane
The board also authorized tell coal operators and not to
calling · it ••a first step" toward reswnlng full U.S ..CUban
UMW attorneys to Initiate waste away four weeks like
diplomatic relations.' But President Fidel Castro, who did nOt
court
action to allow a pen· we did doing nothing in the
appearattbe low-key ceremony, told the nation in a broadcast
sioner
representative on the last contract (1974) ."
speech onlybourslaterthatAmericansare "imperialists" and
contract
bargaining team.
that more CUbans teachers will soon be going to Angola.
One board member's attempt to cut the union adASHLAND, OHIO - Tim ASHLAND CITY Teachers
ministrator's pay by 10 per
Association ratified a one-year contract with the school board
cent was ruled out of order by
TbtirS!Iay evening; thus averting a strike plaMed for the first
Miller, who was supported by
day of clp 11 Tueldey • •
.
a
majority of the 21-member
The colt tract calls for a minimum starting salary of f9.35C!
Two
veteran
employees
of
board.
a year. The contract was reconunended· by the American
Miller told a news· con- . the Ohio Valley Publishing
Arbitration Association and was.approved bY the school board
ferimce after the end of the Company, Helen Davis, 51,
earUer this week.
meeting Thursday the board · .and Emma Lou Davis, 46,
session was th~ best he's had Pomeroy RD· ·(Rose Hill),
WASHINGTON ..:.. AFL.ciO PRF.'&gt;IDENT GeOrge Meany,
were listed in fair condition at
in three years'. ·
in his traditional Labor Day pitch for union causes, Said today
the
Holzer Medical Center
"More of the board
high unemployment bas brought with it a new surge of ''union
this
morning following a
members-a majority- are
OOsting" by big business. Meany and other labor leaders used
really concerned about the three-vehicle accident at 7:20
the occasion to plead fQr legislation tbe unions are seeking in
union and the members they a.in. on SR 7 near the Blue
Congress- a $2.65 an hour minimum wage, a full employment
represent. Today will go Fountain Motel; north of the
,bill and revisloo of federal labor law.
down in history as the turning Gallipolis Corporation limit.
Meany blamed high unemployment for an apparent
Helen Davis, a proofpoint of the union when the
increase In anti-union sentiment wnong employers. "Union
reader
and mailer. suffered a
mineworkers got together
OOstlng and high unemployment have always gone band,inand took affirmative action to
hand," he said. "The number and nature of illegal employer
tactics to deny workers their legal and human rights is
Schools of the Meii!s Local improve programs beneficial
growing at im alarming rate . Union members recognize that School District were closed
many employers are using today's high unemployment rates · for the fourth day Friday as a
COFFEE ON ROAD
to frighten workers interested In· unionization."
teachers' strike continued.
The Big Bend C.B. Radio
For two of the four days
Club, Inc., will hold its
DES MOINES, IOWA - IOWA ATI'ORNEY General schools have been ·~officially
Richard C. Turner said Thursday he and the attroneys general open" and· for the past two
holiday saiety break this
of three other states plan to file aU. S. Supreme Court suit to days they have been "ofweekend at a Route 33
block signing of the Panama Canal treaty.
Roadside Park serving soft
ficially closed".
·
"We claim that they can't give up the Panama Canal
drinks and coffee. Club
Meantime, it was reported
without an Act of Congress," Turner said In an Interview. that Supt. Charles Dowler
Sherlfrs deputjes are in. members will start working
''There are indications they're trying to do it without an Act of and Dan Morris, director of vestigating the theft of ap. at 6 p.m. on Friday working
Congress." Turner said he will be joined by Indiana Attorney curriculum, representing the proximately $1,000 worth of around the clock until
General Ted Sendak, Idaho Attorney General Wayne Kidwell district board of education, lumber and miscellaneous Monday evening. Purpose of
and Louisiana Attorney General William Guste. ·
and 'l;ed Bibler· and Don plumbing materials from these safety breaks is ho give
He said the suit will seek !o temPQrarUy block the signing Dixon, representing the Frank Weaver's property the travelers rest · and
of lhe treaty, scheduled to take place at ceremonies in teachers association; met near Tuppers Plains. The refreshments in an effort to
Washington Wednesday.
from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. lumber bas been located and reduce the number of highThursday to review the charges are pending against way accidents.
CIDCAGO - MAKING METHANOL a 10 to 20 percent negotiations and strike two men for receiving stolen
ingredient of auto fu~l could conserve natural gas and situation . The represen· property and grand theft.
decrease oil imports by one billion barrels a year, according to tatlves are to meet again . Deputies als.o returned
two researchers. Two gaUons of methanol supply the energy of Saturday to discuss problems James Argabrite, 20, of
me gallon of gasoline, Wllliam Morel and Yong Yim of be further.
Belpre to the Meigs County
Bureau of Mines in Mocgantown, W. Va., told the American
Special meetings to discuss jail after his confinemeqt in
Chemical Society· convention Thursday.
negotiations have been set by Veterans Hospital at CinMtt-el said methanol can be synthesized from coal by a the board of education cinnati. Argabrite was being
method caUed entrained gasification. The equivalent cost of Saturday through Friday, held in Cincinnati .for
methanol is between 34 and 50 cents a gallon, compared In a Sept. 9, at 7:30 each evening psychiatric evaluation.
current refinery price of gasoline of 40 cents per gaUon, be at the janior high school. . Possible charges to be filed
said. The methanol produced can be blended with gasoline In a However, the special sessions against Argabrite upon his
lOpe!' cent mixture with some carburetor modifications. Even are subJect to cancellation, return to Meigs County are .
a 30 percent blend of methanol might perform satisfactorily Mrs. Jane Wagner, clerk, felonious assault and theft of .
and pump prices would incr!!3se only one to three cents a said.
·
drugs.
gaUoo, MQI'el said.

~PRICE

MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS.

By K. MACI: SJSJ(
Tampico 100 miles to the
MATAMOROS, Mexico south, said residents of the
(UP!) - Hurricane Anita, villages had been evacuated
after terrifying residents of late Thurso;lay.
the south Texas coast foc two
The storm's h{ghest
dayo ,
dived
sharply SIJ3tained winds of ISS miles
southward In the final hours an hour dlminiabed rapidly as
and today smashed its 150 the hurricane moved Inland
mile an hour winds into on a course toward the
llgbtly populated fishing vil- Mexican
mountains
lages of northeastern Mexico. southeast of Monterr~.
Anita bit the coast !!hortly · · At 8 a.m. COT, the National
befQl'e 4 a.m. COT at latitude Weather Service said the
24 north near the villages of hurricane eye bad moved 25
La Pesca, Las Guayavas, E1 miles inland and winds had
Charco Largo and Soto Ia weakened to less than 100
Marina, 13S miles south of the miles per hour. The NWS said
U.S.-Mexico border.
the storm would continue to
Gales, high tides and wind
on its fringes flooded offshore
towns In South Texas and
raked the coastal oil city of
EXTENDED OUTWOK
Tampico, Mexico. Two
Sunday tbrougb
offshore towns in South Texas Tuesday, a ebanee of
were cut off from the ·sbowers Sunday and
mainland by high tides and · Monday and lair Tuesd!'Y·
partially flooded, oot it ap- Highs wlll be in the 80s
peared tittle damage bad Sunday and in the 70s
been done.
Monday and Tuesday.
There was no immediate Lows wlll be In the 5h
rep&lt;rt on damages or injuries Sunday and Tuesday
in tbe sparsely populated mornings and In lbe low 80s
areas of Mexico where the Monday morning.
eye bit the mainland.
HowevM..- officials
at

·::~.~~~·'"*::~:o;.~'$:::~:;:~::::~:::~::::8::::::::::::~:::::::::::::~~"!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~

and colors

Friday. Saturday Sale

Complete selection of pants lrl sizes 29 to 50 and
matching shirts in sizes 141f2 to 20 neck.
Sqlid colors.navy , olive, grey, tan and forest green.

'19900

One group of ouorted styles

$600

• •

Coal miners' pension fund made wel

UMBRELLA SALE

PLAYTEX SPECIALS .

Sizes 8 to 18. Permanent press- 65 per cent
cotton · 35 per c:ent polyester flannel .
· Excellent plaid patterns · long tail.

any-time

Oak

SPECIAL

BOYS $595
FLANNEL SHIRTS
any- weather,

&amp;

SAI.f

SPECIAL SALEL

It's the worry-lree,

Maple

SAVE 10%

99~

-

Cherry,

SAVE 20%

,J

(

SPECIALS!

WOMEN'S BLOUSES

Hurricane Anita switches direction,
hits Mexico 135 south of the border

Gul cztzes sa e

BIG SAVINGS FOR THESE 1WO DAYS ON NEW FAii MERCHANDISE
FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY

100 Per .Cent Viscose Rayon ~ reversible
machine washable - solid colors and white.
Home Furnishings on the 1st floor. Special
two day sale .
.

-- ....
,..

•

~o~

designed to provide the ad·
ministration of the district
with infm'ination on how long
the schools of the district can
remain open with its present·
financing. Voters of ·the ·
district In mid-August turned ·
down a lO.mill operating tax .
levy at a special election. · ·
At last night's meeting, the
hoard increased the price of
adult lunches in the school
cafeterias by five cents
making the new price 65
cents. Mrs. Joyce Thoren,
school nurse, was employed
part-time under the disadvantaged pupil program
which will pay part of her
salary and the board will pay
the remainder.
The resignation of Don
Smith as a regular bus driver
was accepted and Gordon
Proffitt was elllployed as a
substitute driver. Brownies
were given permission to use
the . Syracuse building on
Thursdays. The offer of Greg
Bailey to coach golfing for the
district free of charge was .
accepted. The· program wail ·
to have been discontinued
because of lack . of funds
xuppXuley made the offer.
Attending the meeting were
Robert Sayre, president;
Dallas Hill, vice president;
Greg Roush, ·member; Supt.
Bob Ord, Howard Nolan and
Clerk Linda Spencer.

Weather
F

I

STEVE CALL of Pomeroy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Call, plainly intended to begin
1\(!hool classes when he went down town Monday to load In necessary supplies. Asophomore,
steve 110 far hasn't needed' them because of a teachers' strike which began Tuesday and
Wednesday and caus4'd all schools of the district to be closed.

'"

Chance of thundershowers
ionight and Saturday. Lows
tonight in the low 70s, highs
Saturday In the upper aos.
Probability of precipitation
30 per cent today, 50 per cent
tonight and Saturday.
1\!

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48804">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48803">
              <text>September 1, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1538">
      <name>arrowood</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1774">
      <name>howery</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2512">
      <name>hull</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1341">
      <name>pack</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1074">
      <name>rice</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
