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                  <text>1o-n.e Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Sept. 19, 19'17

Meigs strike settled
(OIIIItlmled lnm ,.,. 1)

.Supper chili
(OII!Unued tram pqe 1) Standards

of
Safety
violations,''
probers
naid.
But
railings to get to exits, others
they
added
"we
have
been
were pushed or fell over
unable to find any offlcial
tables and chairs which wererecords indicating that these
in the aisles.
were
corrected."
"Smoke soon began cormng
from electrical fixtures and
ducts. While in line, many
people were knocked down
and willked on. Dense smoke
and hot gases then entered
(Continued fnm 1111• 1)
the room with high velocity.
Those patrons to the rear of Ryan Oliver and Shelly Fox,
the line were overcome by first through third; water·
smoke and fell upon those melon seed spitting, Billy
persons already on the floor Dyer, Jack Howett, Charles
and others being knocked Landers, first through th1rd;
down ,"
the
probers watermelon eating, Charles
confirmed through Landers, Laura McCullough,
Jack Howell, first through
interviews.
third;
three legged race,
The report also accused the
under
12,
Ryan Oliver and
club's owner of carrying out
Richard
Lyons.
f1rst, and
major remodeling without
Tammy
Landers
and
Shelly
obtaining permits required
Fox,
second;
over
12,
Patty
by law,
" Although invesitgation and Billy Dyer, first; Tammy
disclosed severai renovation Landers and Glen Schettine,
projects, no record could be second and Rick Walker and
found of their approval by the Paul Holsinger, third.
state fire marhshal's office
other than for the Garden
Winning first in the. rolling
Room." it said.
pin throw in the under 55
Some electrical w1ring years old group was Gene
done at the Beverly H1lls Lyons with Jo Ann Browning
constituted "a clear violation taking second. In the over 55
of the Standards of safety and age group, Millie Stearns was
perhaps of the Kentucky first and Martha Ward was
Criminal Code,
by an second.
electrician
who
did
considerable work at the
Ernest Wells and Earl
club, Jerry Kremer, and
owner Richard ScQilling, the George were first place
winners in a horseshoe ·pltreport stated.
rhing
contest with Arthur
Further complicating the
Musser
and John Brewer,
situation,
almost
no
second
in
the over 55 years of
consideration was given to
age
group.
In the under 55
training
employes
in
emergency procedures, years of age group Fred
George and Joe Christy wer~
investigators said.
They aiso said training in first place winners and Fred
emergency evacuation George and Paul Musser won
procedures was practically second place.
nil and the owner hinnself
stated there was no master
Entertainers moved
plan for evacuation. Such through their paces to the
training is required by the delight of the crowd with
National Fire Protection those taking part including
Association Life Safety the Senior C1tizens Chorus
Code."
and kitchen band, a dance by
As a result, the report said,, Loretta Beegle, the Kenneth
when smoke was discovered Ward Family featuring
"no direction was given nor dulcimers ; Bill Stockwell,
process for the systematic folksinger; Doug Circle and
notification of employes in all his Ranch Hands ; the senior
areas of the club."
citizens square dance group
"The exits themselves which performed at 5:30p.m.
were confusing," preceding a square dance
investigators declared. "The with the Stringdusters
path of travel to each of these providing music. There was a
exits was circuitous, in .that round dance at 8:30p.m. with
occupants had to pass music by Armand at the
through various enclosed organ.
areas. Firefighters found 20
It was a busy day and the
bodies "stacked" in a closet staff and volunteer workers
of the Cabaret Room."
had "had it" when it all
When the Schillings opened wound down. But let's face it
the club in 1970, records - '·A good tlrne was had by
indicated "concern for the alL''
existence of at least 10 major

Good times

'j

SPECIAL
SEPT. 18
thru SEPT. 24th

(Ooallnued fnm .... 1)

.

open during the strike.Teachers who were not at school during
th011e days that school was lfpen will not be pa1d.
"The board of education and administralion sincerely
appreciate the support which the citizens of this school district
have !!hown during the situation."
According to a report last night, teachers were given a pay
increase this year at a base of $8,950 on a 1.7 index for a
starting teacher aoo the. settlement provides for a base of
$9,400nextyear for the starting teacher. The two year contract
will apparently avert complications next fall.
The last request of the teachers published last week was
for a $9,200 base on a 1.7 index for this year and $9,600 for next
yellr. ·
The two year contract provides for binding arbitration on
grievance procedures, a policy for the transfer aoo promotion
at teachers, and a plan which is to be followed in case a
reduction of staff is necessary.
Downie, president of the MLTA, said Sunday night:
" We·are very, very glad that the strike is over. We are
pleased with the new agreement and we appreciate the support
of the community shown to our teachers during the strike. "

l

News •• in Briefs

WASHINGTON- BRINGING WITii HIM a draft peace
treaty and the secrets of all his mysterious week.end trips,
Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan was prepared to begin a
crucial, perhaps decisive round of talks with U.S. leaders.
Scheduled to fly from Brussells to New York Friday,
Dayan instead went to Paris and then abruptly flew home to
Tel Aviv Saturday for an emergency meeting with Prlroe
Minister Menahem Begin. His mission was the subject of much
speculation, but no explai)Btion as yet. payan's flrst
discussions today -were to be a meeting and later a working
lunch with Secretary &lt;X Staie Cyrus Vance at the State
Department, to be followed by a White ijouse session with
President Carter in mid-afternoon.

wite, Emma Jean Jenkins

Lewis.

Oak

Hill.

daughters survive :

COLUMBUS- THE PUBUC UTILITIES Conimission
Ohio opened hearings today on the propriety of political and
promotional advertising by the Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio ·
Electric Co. and the Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co.
The complaint was filed last October by state Sen .-Michael
Schwarzwalder, D-Columbus, and consumer activists
protesting heavy u!ility spending to defeat four initiative
lSSues on last fall's ballot. All four issues were soundly
defeated.

SOUTHGATE, KY. - SOUTHGATE CITY A'I"'''RNEY .
Albert Root has died of a heart attack. Root, who died late

Saturday, was a key figure in defending the city in a mass of
lawsuits stemmin~ from the Beverly Hills Supper Club flre.
He had appeared in Campbell County (Ky.) Circuit Court
as recently as Friday, in corinection with a Beverly Hills legal
matter. The ill-fated nightclub was located in the northern
Kentucky community, near Cincinnati. The city has been
named as one of the defendants in federal and state damage
suits seeking some $1.5 billion in damages for families of fJte
vtctpns.

Two teams tugged

Helen Miller, Springfield ;
Mrs . Phyllis Blanlon, Springfield ; Mrs. linda Connolly ,

Springfield; Mrs. Glenna
Bailey. Oak Hill; Miss Ellen

and Miss Rena Lewis, both at
home.
Six brothers sur'tive:
Foster and John Lewis ,
Patriot ; Hayden, Waterloo ;

William Oak Hill : W•lt•r

Kuhner-Lewis Fuheral Home
in Da~ Hill from 2-A and 6-9

p.m. Monday.

· CLARENCE TURLEY
Clarence A. Turley, 6!, a
resident of 474 Jackson P ike,
Gallipolis. died hi Holzer
Medical Center at 3:15 p.m
Saturday.

He was born Nov. 24, 1913;
in Kanawha County, W. Va .•

son of the late

fl(~Dody ·

Judy Dunlap Turley.

and

He Is survived by his wife,
Gladys Donahue , Turley,
whom he married July 15,

1939.

In addition, four sons and
one daughter survive: Larry
and Kenneth Turley. Racine ,

Gilford Turley, Porter ; Ed
Turley, at home and Mrs.

Everett (Linda) Ball, St.
Albans, W. Va .

Six grandchildren survive.
Two brothers survive :

George Tur ley, St . Albans,
and Truman Turley, Milton,
W. Va. ; three sisters : Mr s.
Delores Elkins. Nolan, W.
Va .: Mrs. Louise Schultz.
South Charleston , W. Va . and
Mrs. Ruth Whitlock , Alcott,
W. Va . Two brothers and two\
sisters preceded h i m in

.identification contest, Sarah
Voss was the winner with
Garnet Ervine and Alicia
Werner tying for second.
Irene Parker of Syracuoe was
awan!ed a quilt. There were
32 attendance prizes awarded
throughout the day.

LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, will meet in special
session at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday with work in the
Entered Apprentice degree.
All Master Masons are invited.

Sixteen girls worked at a
GILBERT BEARD
car wash Saturday at Bob
Gilbert Clayton Beard, 71.
Barton's Sugar Run Ashland
rettred
ex~cutlve
vice
Service station in Pomeroy. presi
dent and cashier of
All Meigs High School Commercial &amp; Savings Bank ,
cheerleaders, they were Jill and a resident of 615 Third
Baity, Judy Hall, Sandi Ave., Gallipolis, died at 11 30
a . m . Sunday In Ho lzer
Hamilton, Julie Kitchen , Medical Center .
Sherne Osborne, Shelia
He had been in fall ing
Sargent, Jane. Sisson and health the Jl" SI two years.
Mr. Beard was born Nov.
Paige
Smith,
Varsity
13, 1906, in South Side, W. Va.,
cheerleaders; Tina Conner, son of the late Jabez Clarence
Maria Legar, Dee Sinnrns, and Addie Caufman Beard
He married Irene Rothgeb
&amp;bin Southern and Terri
Yeager, J-V cheerleaders, on Feb. 1. 1931. at Kanauga .
She survives , along with the
and Kenda Braun, Linda following chi ldren . Mrs. Asa
Kovalchik and Lori Rupe, (Nancy) Bailey, Mansfield ;
Will iam C. Beard, Lakewood
Freshman cheerleaders.
Ohio;
Mrs. Lewis (Alice)
Jane White, cheerleader
Pasquale,
Charles
advisor, said the car wash T. Beard,Gallipolis;
Gall ipolis. and
permitted the cheerleaders to James E. Beard, St. Peters.
raise money for materials
and supplies.
The success of the car wash
was due to the cooperation of
Bob Barton to whom she
expressed appreciation for
use of his facilities .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions Ma r y S. Roush, Racine ;
Margaret Little, Middleport;
Sherry Mays, Reedsville;
Paul Burns, Pomeroy;
Robert Venoy, Pomeroy ;
Mabel Swan, Langsville;
Roger Stearns, Pomeroy ;
Stanley Shaver, Ches)lire;
Mary Matson, Rutland.
Saturday Discharges Eric Hart, Crystal McCourt,
Norma Tillis, Vonderine
Williams, Cloyd Brookover,
Mary Barnett, Vivian
Hurlow; Mary Derenberger.
Sunday Admissions Allison Lee , Pomeroy;
Wanda
Roush,
West
Colwnbia; Virginia Musser,
Long
Bottom;
Wilma
Waterman, · Marietta ;
Pamela Ogdin, Langsville ;
Dorothy Smith, Pomeroy ;
Belva Mohler, Middleport;
Loretta Bush, Letart, W. Va.
Sunday Discharges - Ruth
Gosney, Robert DiVietro,
Angela Jones, Velma Newell,
Sherry Mays, Wayne Powell.

I

survive .

Two brothers and three
sisters survive : Ju&gt;tln Beard,
Columbus ;

Mrs .

Ray

(Elizabeth) Yauger, South
Side; Jabez T. Beard, South
Side ; Mrs. Rod (Irene!
Brand. South Side and Mrs .
John (Dorothy I Sibrell, South
Side. One sister and one
brother preceded him In

Mr. Beard was a member

of the First Baptist Church of
Gallipolis. He was a member
and ~st chancellor of Naom i

Lodge, Knights of Pythlas.
Mr. Beard was

also a

member of the Gallipolis Golf

Club and was a member of
that organization's board of
directQrs at the time of his

death ·
.
He graduated from Pt.
Pleasant High School in 1927
and from N\ann 's Business

College in Columbus in 1929.

. Mr . Beard was ern played
as a bookkeeper for the

Wiseman &amp;· Wickline l'n ·
be In Penlel Cemetery. . .
surance Agency and the
Friends may ·call at lhe McKnight-Davies Hardware

There was a shortage of
team copeting in the tug of
war contest during Saturday 's
observance
of
''Yesteryear ."
Taking first place was the
Meigs Co unty Warrior
football team and second
place went to the adult mine
education class.
DEmma Chapman was
first place winner in the tall
tale cont est with Darrel
Taylor coming in second and
Dan Smith, third. In a baby

Sixteen girls
nm car wash
at Barton's

burg, F Ia. Ten grandchildren

Six death.

Mrs .

Bowling Green and Carl ol
Weston, Ohio.
Funeral services will be
_ehld 1 p m . Tuesday at Pen lei
'fo'lth Rev. W11l iam
of Churcfl
Uber officiating. Burial will

ASK DISSOLUTION
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Cathy Ohling~r.
Mason and Jeff Ohlinger,
Pomeroy, filed for dissolution
of marriage. Grace Huffman
was granted a divorce from
Brady Huffman. Charles Rife
and Aaron Kelton were appointed deputy sheriffs.

. •
l Sextuplets m

Area Deaths

contest closed the f&gt;lh annual Frog Festival Sunday in this
DAVID H
: LEWIS
southwest Louisiana city.
David H. Lewis, 6-i, Rt. •·
The community in the heart ot Cajum country, which calls Oak Hill, died Salurday at 11
1tself "the frog cap1tal of the world," Invited d01rens of local a .m. in ihe Oak Hill Hospital.
had been Ul several years.
celebrities to participate in the contest. In addition lo the t-teHe
wu born June 21, 1913,
number of fried frog legs they ate, cootestants were judged on in Gallla County, son of the
"careful use of table etiquette." To prevent cheating, one rule tate Oa"id D. and Racheal
required each contestant to shout "Rivet!" after finishing Lambert Lewis .
He was a member of Pen lei
each leg.
Church and is survived by his

death .

Mr Turley \\ as a retired
school bus dr iver and coal
m iner .
Funeral services wtll be
held 1 p.m . Tuesday al the
M cCoy- Moore
Funeral
Home, Vmton with Rev .
Steve Wilson officiating.
Burial wtll be in Vinton
Memorial Park .
Friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2-.ot
and 7-9 p.m.

Co. He was la ter employed In
the Gallia County Recorder 1 S

Office.
During World ' War II, Mr.
Beard served on ihe selective

service board.

He began his career at the
Commercial &amp; Savings Bank

on Feb .. 10. 1948 as ass istant

cashier under the tate Frank
Ghrist.
On May 1. 1951, Mr. Beard
became
cashier
and

secretary of the C&amp;S board.

On Jan. 16, 1957, Mr. Beard
was appointed to the bank's

board of d irectors .
On Jan. 17, 1968, Mr. Beard
became executive vice

president of the bank and
cashier. He retired on Dec.
31. 1972.
Mr .

Beard

was

also

secretary and treasurer of

the Gallia County Jun ior
Fairboard for a number of

years.
Funera l services will

be

held 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at
the
Waugh -Halley-Wood
Fvneral

Home wlth

Rev .

Joseph Godwin officiat i n~ .
Burial will be in Oh•o
Valley Memory Gardens.
Fr iends may call at the
funeral home today from 2-4

and 7-9 p.m .

.

LEYDEN, Netherlands "We had eight doctors In
(UP!) - Sextuplets born to a attendance so \wo were
young Dutch couple are in disappointed. " the h,_.,ltal
....,.
good condition and already spokesman joked.
have an agent to handle their
Prof. Jan ~broek Grabusiness affairs, doctors at venhonit, the man in charge
Leyden's University Hoepital of the tirth, said the babies
werebornat10 :15a.m.(4:15
S8l'd .
The four boys and two glrls a.m. EDT).
born SundaHl the hospital in · The mother had begun
Leyden, near Amsterdam, special medical trea1ment
are the first ~~exluplel.! born and had entered University
in Holland and only the Hospital 14 weeks ago In
second set known to have preparation
for
the
lived more than a few hours anticipated multiple birth.
after .their blrth.
The blibies also can clalrn
The 28-year-old mother, one more record of sorts from th~ town of Heemskerk, Uley are the youngest persons
near Haarlem had been ever to have a business agent.
The hospital announced an
taking fertility ' drugs: The
babies·were born tWo months · agent had alreaiiY been ap.
prematurely. and were pointed to handle the sextudelivered by . Caesarian · ·plets' . business . affairs
section, doctors said.
because the b1rth has
"The babies are in very generated considerable
good condition," a hospital publicity in Holland and
· spokesman said. They were around the world.
the first children for the · The agent 's maiD tine of
couple, whose names were business is handli?g the
.not disclosed by hospital affa1rs of Hollands star ·
authorities.
soccer players. .
Three boys and three girls
born to Susan Jane Rosenkowitz in Cape Town, South RUNNING AS DEMOCRAT
.
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Af nca,
on J an. II, 1974 , are
recorded as the only other Evangelist Rev. Leroy
surviving set of sextuplets. Je~Ins of Delaware has
The actual birth Of tbe dec1ded to seek the
Dutch babies weighing . gubernatorial nomination
between 2.2 pQ~ds and 2.7 . next year on the Democratic
pounds, took only 70 seconds ticket. .
.
for aU six doctors said.
Jenkms had announced his
From the start Holland's intentions earlier to run for
newest citizens ;ere given governor as an indet;&gt;"ndent
firsk lass treatment with in- but said Saturday night he
dividual doctors ' laking changed his pians because he
innrnediate charge of each believes in the
infant as it was born.
accomplishments and prinA medical team of 15 was cipals of the Democratic
on band for the operation. party.

Fund. in care of Mrs. Lola
Mae Suiter, Commercial &amp;

Savings Bank, Gallipolis.
Pallbearers will be Paul
Richard

Turner ,

Johnson.
Honorary pallbearers will
be U. A. Cornetl, Bob
Richards, Loyal Folden, Or.

GARDEN

Charles Holzer, Atly. Bill

Cherr ington and Pat Patrick.

E-RCALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency squad was called
to Bailey Run at 10:55 p.m.
Saturday for Mary Archer
who was treated at home.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
issued to Dennis Wayne
Tolley, 26, Rl. 3, Albany and
Barbara June Brooks, 24, Rt.
3, Albany.

FROM

Choose !rom our great selection.
o! types and colors. They're "Sure-to-Bloom"
and easy to plant .

Hyacinths, Tulips, Parrot Tulips,
Daffodils, Narcissus, Crocks, Snowdrops,
Dutch Iris.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FOR OUR TOYS
. II is time for our Dress-A-Doll and Design-A-Toy
program to begin for another year. This yur we have •
new idea for our toys.

Each year the Pomeroy Fire Dept. and Emergency
Squad do more than their share to help our communities.
Now we want to help them.
This year we wilt hold a SILENT AUCTION for the
dolls and toys with the proceeds going toward the
Emergency Squad'.s new emergency vehicle.
. These men help us in our hours of nelld, now let's hetp
them when !hey need us. Do your thing today, come In and
pick up your doll or toy.

.Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
140,000 M3Kimum lnsu;ance FO! E&gt;ch Oeposrto1.
Membe• Federal Oei&gt;osit lnsuiS~ C..I!Of&gt;liJn

25th Anniversary Sale
The Best Values You've Ever Seen

Famous Name' Brands
of Furniture &amp; Appliances

79~

•RIVERSIDE

dairy isl~ .(
~cust

Street

MuiCI!epOrt.

•PROVINCETOWN

•FRIGIDAIRE

•ADMIRAL

•HOOVER

•SPEED QUEEN

•CALORIC

- FREE DELIVER-CONVENIENT TERMS
-LARGE SELECTION$-

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
-- -

M ir:ldle &gt;ort Ot1io

NO.

no

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Shooting cans
not so funny

•

Shooting at beer cans and
soda pop cans on Snowball
Hill for fun by three young
men of Syracuse ended
Monday afternoon with tlrne
to think it over in county jail
and their release later
pending hearing on Friday
upon providing bail of $156

•

ea~h.

SPEAKER IN MEIGS- State Rep. Ron James, center, was principal speaker Monday
eveniilg at the county fairgrounds at a regular meeting of the Meigs Countians for Wildlife
Conservation. James, of Proctorville, spoke against approval of Issue 2 at the November
ballot . Also opposing banning of the leg-hold trap were Ed Schekelhoff, a member of the
state Izaak Walton League executive committee, left, and Charles Courtright, president of
the Izaak Walton League of Ohio.

Sherifi James J. Proffitt
sa1d the men were charged
with disorderly conduct and
firing a fireann over or upon
a roadway.
Arrested were Bruce
Cottrill, 18; Terry Moore, 23,

Cars selling
like hot cakes

and Charles Canter, 22.
It was around I :45 p.m
Monday that the sheriff's
department received a
complaint that three persons
were shooting at beer and pop
cans se t up across the
SnowbaU Hill Road. Deputies
Mike Zirkle and Gary Wolfe
responded to the call and took
them into custody. They are
scheduled to appear Friday
in Meigs County Court.
Deputies Monday transported David Wesley Clark,
22, Rt. 3, Racine, to the Ohio
Co rrections Medical and
Center
in
Reception
Columbus to begin serving
his term of six months to five
years after being sentenced
by Judge John C. Bacon.
Clark had appeared in
February on a Bill of Information charging forgery
and was placed on probalion
in March.
Arrested near Racine tw.o
weeks ago charged with
disorderly conduct and
resisting and assault, Clark

was taken before Judge
Bacon on a violation of
probation charge. He was
found guilty and ordered to
serve the term that had been
in1posed m March
Anyone have an extra beef
cow in his field ? Dale
Teaford , Syracuse, ha s
reported that over the
weekend an 800 to 1,000 lb.
beef cow came up missing
from his field on Snowball
Hill. Teaford said his fen ce
seems in good condition.
Sunday evening Max
Knopp, 30, Rt. 2, Racme, was
arrested by Racine Marshall
Alfred Lyons on a disorderly
conduct charge. The sheriff's
office was notified bond had
been posted in Racine
Mayor's Court. Knopp then
became abus1ve and disorderly at the sheriff's office
where he was also in co unty
court on a disorderly conduct.
He later posted bond and was
released. He is to appear in
Meigs County Court Friday
morning.

While retai l sa les tax
receipts for Meigs County
were down over 14 percent for
the month of August, motor
veh1cle sales tax receipts for
the month were up over 87
percent, according to the
report
of Mrs. Gertrude
realize
the
lrnportance
of
the
even
the
Laague
of
Women
State Rep . !Wn James (092), main speaker Monday issue.
Voters would not take a stand Donahey , state treasurer.
Retail sales tax receipts for
James aiso appealed to ( so far ) on this controversial
night when the Meigs
August,
this year, totaled
to
vote
no
on
Issue
voters
1ssue. The Ohio Health
Countlans for Wildlife Con$59,772.01
co mpared to
One.
He
stated
that
he
would
Department has now taken a
servation met at the Meigs
receipt
s
of
$69,705.64 for
County Fairgrounds, said he be available for any meetings stand and wants the pubbc to
Pomeroy will receive a new fact Meigs Tire Center has
August,
1976,
a decrease of
the
future .
The vote down Issue Two because
supports trapping and does in
truck
for its street departnot want Issue Two to pass. representative from Proc- the banning of the le ghold $9,933.63, the report states. ment within the next14 weeks equipment that enables them
would
increase Motor vehicle sales tax it was disclosed after council ~o repair tires on the road.
James stressed that the torville said that any trap- trap
Mayor Clarence Andrews
in receipts for August, thi~ year, accepted a big from Meigs
disease
ultlrnate result of this issue is ping device produces suf- dangerous
announced
that yard sale and
gun control. The strategy, fering, even nets and other an1mals. Courtright and totaled $65,656.46 compared Equ1pment
Co
mpany
other
signs
must be removed
says James, of the gun types of traps , and that these fellow
lzaak
Walton to recei pts of $34,986.30, for Monday night in the amount
by
their
sponsors
when the
control proponent s is to devices would become illegal Executive Comm1ttee August, 1976, an increase of of $12,235.
events are over.
divide and conquer, and the under the proposed amend- member Ed Schekelhoff $30,672.16, the report states.
The only other bid received
He pointed out that there is
first step is to divide the ment. He sa1d that trapping 1s pointed out that taxes would
was from the Pomeroy Motor an ordmance requiring
sportsmen , namely on the regulated by the Division of have to go for ca rrying out
Company for $11,790. The persons who wish to place
Wildlife and that those people the ban and that many
trapping issue.
larger bid was accepted due s1gns to purchase a permit for
FIREMEN CALLED
James stated that old know what they're doing .
Ohioans would be _,unemto
the fact that the In- $25. The $25 is return ed if the
The
Middl eport
Charle s Courtright, ployed as the fur mdustry
House Bill 179 was the same
ternational
truck is a much
thing, and knowledgeable President of the lzaak Walton brings millions of dollars into Emergency Squad trans- heavier truck and has a signs ~re taken down within ·
five days. Persons failing to
ported Alex Fraser from the
legislators thtew the bill out League of Ohio, _spoke in the Ohio Economy.
greater
axle
weight
.
comply with the ordinance
LaSalle Hotel to Veterans
favor of trapping. Under the
of committee.
Mark Smith, owner of are subject to a fine. In the
Hospital
a
t
1:32
Memorial
James, a member of a provisions of the proposed
p.m. Monday. AI 12:41 p.m. Meigs Equipment, told future if persons do not
legislative committee with amendment, Courtright said
the flre department went to S. council the truck would be comply, they will be charged
•
t
three legislators who argue in anyone may bring a
Second Ave. for a minor delivered within 14 weeks. for a permit.
favor of trapping, said people suspected violator to cou rt.
Council gave a third and
electrical fire at the Kathy Smith also promised priority
in cit1es do not understand the Even if found innocent, that
on
maintenance.
final readmg to an ordmance
Perine home.
issue and many votes from suspect must pay all court
This was the second tlrne permitting Columbus and
rural Southeastern Ohio are costs, a burden that makes it
council had taken bids on a Southern Ohio Electric Co., to
Mrs. Mary Myers, Meigs
needed to erase the city unfair even to be accused of a
truck, the first having been
County Public Health Nurse,
voles. He stated that many trapping violation.
TO HOSPITAL
rejected.
Cou rtri ght stressed that today urged parents to check · The Pomeroy Emergency
people in this area do not
In other business council
their medical records to be Squad tran sported Mrs.
under
emergency rules
sure their children have all
Herbert Moore, Wright St., to passed an ordinance to have
required vaccinations.
Holzer Med1cal Center at 4:30 the Ohio Department of
Those who find that ·lrn·
a.m. Tuesday.
Transportation resurface
munizatiomi are inadequate
U.S. 33 from Nye Ave . to SR 7
should check with their
Raymond M. Baker, 63,
and from Nye Ave ., to the
By United Press International
doctors or health departMiddleport,
told the Daily
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge with
ATHENS, GREECE - JACQUELINE KENNEDY ments
and
make
NOW
YOU
KNOW
Sentinel
Friday
the State
one inch th1ck asphalt conOnassis will receive $26 million from the estate of her late arrangements for needed
At the turn of the 20th crete surface beginning in Highway Patrol's r eport that
husband Aristotle Onassis under the tenus of an out-of-court vaccinations without further
century, only about one in 25 1978. The cost to the village he became ill, causing a onesettlement, a member of the Onassis Foundation board said delay , Mrs. Myers said
Americans lived to the age of will be $350.
car traffic mishap Friday at
today.
The Meigs County Health 65.
Council accepted a bid 10:28 a.m. on SR 7 at the
The board member said the $26 million will be in addition Department holds imfrom Meigs Tire Center for construction site north of
to an annual income of $100,000 originally bequeatlled to her by munization clinics every
the purchase of two front Addison, was in error.
her second husband, Onassis, the Greek shipping tycoon. The Monday from 9 to 11 a.m. and
Baker said he pulled to the
tires and four snow tires for
source, who declined to be 1dentified further, said the final out- from 1-3 p.m. at the county
for oncoming traffic and
left
the Chevrolet truck owned by
of-court settlement was reached in June, 1976. It followed health department offices
his
car
partially went off the
lengthy negotiations between lawyers representing Onassis' located on Mechanic St. in
Clearing tonight, lows in the villa ge in the amount of
h1ghway.
Baker was taken to
only surviving child, his daughter Christina, Jacqueline's legal Pomeroy.
the lower 50s. Sunny Wed- $721.56 .
VHM
by
SEOEMS.
other bids received were
representatives and the executors of the Onassis estate.
Mrs. Myers pointed out that nesday, highs in the lower one from Pomeroy Home and
Baker said he did not
Probability
of
figures recently compiled by 70s.
become
ill.
WASffiNGTON - ONE FORECASTER says the odds the Center for Disease precipitation 10 percent today Auto in the amount of $677.08
State
Patrol sai d
The
and Meigs Equipment in th e
against a winter as severe as last year's are better than 30 to 1,
Control of the Department of and tonight and near zero amount of $750. The larger Monday it stands on its
and several others agree the next few months will be colder Health Education and percent Wednesday.
bid was accepted due to the report.
(Continued on page 10)
Welfare show that children
still suffer from diseases that
ca n be easily prevenled .
These diseases include poho,
measles , rubella, mumps,
diphtheria , tetanus and
and some $200 increase for his ad- Resolutions passed last week
pertussis. Vaccines that have
proven to be very effective uncert1f1ed personnel were mmistrat!ve duties at the due to the teachers strike
given pay increases when the high school as was the lunch- governing absences, leaves,
are readily available.
It is reported that contrary , Me1gs Local Sch~l D1stnct room supervisor, Avice andsubstituteemployesvlere
to what many people beheve, Board of Edu~abon met m Bailey. John Beaver, director rescinded.
The board employed Becky
these diseases were never regular sess1on Monday of transportation and Donna
completely
eliminated.
night. .
. .
Carr, sec r etary to the Tannehill and Adeline
National Hunting and re~ognlzlng the contributions
Followmga relat1 velyshort superintendent, eac h Snowden as kinderga rten
Fishing Day this Saturday of the American sportsman. Parents were eager to have
will be observed by the Izaak
Those attending will not the!r children lrnmunized and open meetmg, the board received flat increases of 29 aides and Deana Denny and
Diane Smith as student
Walton League of Meigs only watch and learn, but will the incidence rate of the moved into a long executive cents an hour.
Connie Lanning and Lynn kindergarten aides.
County, Ken Amsbary also be invited to participate diseases dropped. CDC session to discuss the salary
Dowler announces that a
figures show now that people increases for personnel not Crow received 45 cents an
Chapter, sponsors a field day in many of the activities.
given
add1tional
money
as
the
hour
increases
for
their
third
grade teacher is needed
are
becoming
lax
and
that
84
·
Mayors of Meigs County
at !Wyal Oak Park, ..
direct
result
of
the
teachers
secretarial
duties
and
Phyllis
m
the
Middleport Elemenpercent
of
the
nation
's
one-toBeginning at 9 a.m ., the have signed proclamations to
i~
the
ne-:"
contract
Dugan,
assistant
to
the
clerk,
tary
School
and there is a
strike
or
day's activities will include make this week the official four year old children were
received an increase of 87 1'.1 custodian post open at the
bird dogs, rabbit dogs, National Hunting and F1shing fully va!'cinated for polio of uncertlf!ed empwyes. I
.Th~ nine principals of the cents an hour.
junior high buildmg . The
when in 1973 only 60 percent
canoeing, trap shooting, Week ..
distnct - John Mora, ~ohn
The board added w. H. resignation of Jumor Darst as
fishing, arche~y. Muz,
Meigs Couinty Girl Scouts were itJ illlunized.
Complications from Lisle , Eric Ha _rt, Fenton Pemn and Martha J:lusted to a bus driver was acce~ed
zleloader shooting, and and Boy Scouts are especially
measles
anti other preven- Taylor, James Dlehl, Robert the su~stitute teachers list effective immediately.
trapping . exhibits, to name invited to help celebrate
approved
travel
A letter was read from the
only a few. Free lunch will be National Hunting and Fjshing table diseases are clalrning Morris, Roberta Wilson, G:eg and
McCaHan~
and
Don
Hamng
agreements
for
Lloyd
hoard
of education of the
young lives and there are
provided, and door prizes will Day .
be awarded.
Troops are to 'be ac- many more children who rece!ved 6.55 perce nt 10· Johnson, Anna Sue Grueser, Federal Hocking District
and Esther Scragg for trans- requesting that the Meigs
AI!hough organized by the companied by leaders and suffer permanent handicaps creases.
Central
off1ce
ad·
portmg pupils who must have Local Board and Adand
thousands
more
who
are
"lkes," other sportsmen's Scouts are asked to wear
ministrators
raises
included
special training to schools ministration join m banding
needlessly
sick
from
the
clube from around the county uniforms to help m 1den- ·
Charles
Dowler,
superinoutside of the district.
together in a movement to
diseases,
Mrs.
Myers
reports.
have COIIlributed time and tlfying them.
tendent,
eight
percent;
Dan
The
board
discussed
with
work out mutual problems
money· Sponsored primarily
Girl Scouts in the Meigs The percentages of vac- ·
of
two
pnrents
the
possibllity
of
involved
in nego!iations.
Morris,
director
have
for the youth of ihe area, the Local School District are to cinated r.hildren
Closing of schools from
so low that curriculum, 6.55 percent, and early graduation of their
sportllllen~a club&amp; Invite old . contact their seoul leaders dropped
end young to Cl!iebrate this for Information about at- epidem1cs arc once again a Dwight Gnins, administrative children and Supt. Dowler Sept. 1 through Sept 16 was
will cnnfcr with Pri"cipai approved due to the teachers
serious threat, Mrs. Myers assist•nt, 11.41 pcrc·cnt.
great American heritage of tendinp·
L'
1
y
·
fl
t
tl)n!'luded.
'
c.&gt;r
oun
~
wus
g1vcn"
a
.James
Diehl· on the matter. 'trike.
.. joflnll the outdoors and

Conservation group hears
Rep. James oppose Issue 2

vaccination

e

requirem n s
eed h king

n

c ec

Patrol report
said in error

ANEW IDEA
THE STEW ART SUIT
LONDON (UPI) - Rock
singer Rod Stewart says
former girlfriend Britt
Ekland, who is suing hlrn for
$21 million and is claiming
compensation for aiding his
career , had nothing to do with
writing his songs or making
hlrn famous .
Arrivmg from California
Sunday, to attend a World
Cup soccer qualifying match,
Stewart said, ''I would like to
stress that Britt certainly did
not help me write any songs
or help me with my image.
.People bought the records
and came to my concerts
because of me, not her."

VOL XXVIII

'

CARRIER OF THE WEEK - Barbara Grueser
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Grueser, uncoln Heights:
Pomeroy, 1s a camer for the Daily Sentinel. That fact is
not unusual, but what is unusual is that Barbara uses a
skateboard to deliver_her papers. Besides skateboarding,
another hobby 1s domg macrame. She is a student at
Meigs Junior High .

New truck bought for $12,235

to the Gallia County Heart

Wayne Niday, AI Shoemaker.
Merrell Wilcoxen, and Da vid

.

•
good condI•tIOn

In lieu of flowers. the
famil y requests contributions

Di.lvies,

.
enttne

.

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

•

CJ

Weather

League sponsors

'outdoors' day

furnish street hghts for the
village.
Council set Trick or Treat.
night for Saturday, Oct. 29
from 6 to 7 p.m. for children
12 and under. Children are to
stay in their own residential
area and the s1ren will sound
to begin and end activit1es.
Councilman Harold Brown
suggested that there be free
parking m front of the
Pomeroy Post Office, since
there' · are-' other areas in
Pomeroy, espec1ally on East
Main Street in the lower block
that has no meters at all .
Mayor Andrews pointed out
that if meters are placed in
the lower end of the last block
they are removed and thrown
in the river . It was suggested
that possibly the area could
be painted yellow.
In regard to the post office
area , · councilman Harry
Da vis suggested that an
additional mail box be placed
next to the present ones
which has . free parking one
bemg marked local mall and
the other out of town mail
such as the v11lage of Middleport has. The matter was
referred to councilman Lou
Osbome.
Brown also told counc1! that
the "No loitermg'' ordinance
::·:

··::·::··:·:~:·:::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:::·:::::::::;:·:::::·:;.·:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, showers Thursday aud Friday and fair
Saturday. Highs will be in
the mid or upper 70s Thursday and falling into the
upper 60s or lower 70s by
Saturday. Lows will be
near 60 Thursday and lu the
upper 40s or lower 5Qs by
Saturday.

on v!llage sidewalks should
be enforced as a great -deal
occ urs on the lower block. It
was suggested that the
matter be referred to the
chief of police and letters sent
to business estabhshments to
relieve the s1tuation.
Brown aiso suggested that
a letter be sent to HUD Flood
Insurance program in
Washington asking it to
repeal the 100 year flood plan
-as all of Pomeroy is in the
fl ood prone area. _Due to the
flood plan Pomeroy Village is
unable to receive federal
funding .
It was pointed out,
·however, that regardless of
th e flood act, Pomeroy
cannot receive any funding to
build or repalr a city hall. If a
city building is built council
w1!1 have to do it on its own.
Councilman Phil Globokar
suggested that council
purchase a commercial
weed eater, gasolme powered,
for approxlrnately $275.
Harry Davis, councilman,
reported that if someone
workmg at the cemetery is
injured there is no communication to enable them to
seek help. He suggested that
employes there be given a
walkie talkie. Council agreed .
Co unc1l also agreed to
purchase a grease gun and
grease.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Lou Osborne.
Attending were Mayor An·
drews, Davis, Osborne ,
Globokar, Larry Powell,
Brown, and Ralph Werry,
co uncilmen, Jane Walton,
clerk , Mark Smith, Jack
· Krautter and Charles Hudson. The mayor's report in
the amount of $5,702 was

pay in creases granted : : -: ·: :'·: ;: :::· : : :· : ·: : : :·::,: :::: ::
Admi~istrators
Bridge openmg
4 6 week s
away
accepted.

•

·

•

POINT PLEASANT West Virginia Highway
Commissioner Joseph
"Speed" Jones sa1d Monday
the Silver Memorial Bridge -is
expected to open sometime
between the m!ddle of Oc·
Iober and the first of
November.
_
He sa1d that e1ght of the 16
. areas on the upper llrn!ts of
the brldge that needed to be
corr~cted have been.
If !he weather is good one
defect ca n be corrected every
four days, noted Jones.
Whlle_ there may be 16
defects 10 the uppe_r llmlts of
the br!dge, according to one
so urce, ov~r 20 similar type
def~ts exlsts on the lower
hmlts of the bndge._ ,
However Jon~s _sa1d None
of these are g1v1ng us any
concern."

The com missioner does not
expect to keep the bridge
closed once repair begins in
thes e other areas. He said
they were defects of another.
nature and apparently are
not as dangerous as the
others.
Jones said testing in the
compression areas of the
bridge will probably continue
through the middle of Oc·
tober.
In regards to a possible toll
for the ferry service, Jones
emphatically said there will
he no toll.
The seven year-old span,
linking West V1rginia to Ohio
here, has nqw been closed for
76 da ys. The decision to close
the bridge was made July 8
wnen the first crack was
disaovered.

�2- ThO Daily Sentinel, MtJtUeport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1\1'-'Sda). Sept 2Q,l977

Mr,. l'nocii\1•!'\.-..UIJ.!t'r ....,.~._.
D::tllJ.!l·r In VHur

Ht'itd at the mt•t:ltrag \\ot:s c1
lt·ltt•r rmm Mrs~ Jo:lt•.anur

Gardeners enjoy slides·

&amp;al'k).anJ'' U!Sin~ tilustrath~IS

'11JHilla~

lruw Uw Ofuu A'\!;41t.'latwn of

Slides of beauty in natm·e
were shown by Mrs. Arthur
Skinner at a meeting or the
Middleport Garden Club held
recently at the Columbus and

Garden ('lubs hamllJ&lt;"'k qn
Oluo's Wtldflow~rs. Sill• alsu
rt~fcnt'(l
to Sunun and
Shu~l(•r 's Complete GUide to
Plallt!i and Fluwcrs ror her
cum1ncnt..ary ,.,1 dan,gers.

dub members fur l'Oulrlbutluns lv tht.• Scniur CiLiz.cns

Southern Ohiu Ele&lt;:trie Co.
Mrs. Citrl Hurky, prol(ram
chatnnan, imrudut-ed Mrs.
Skmncr whose slides showed
\'arlolL~ nowfr arrangcnlt"nt..s

on

,,r past years alonl( wtlh
lllCCIIY slnft&gt;s uf nature in
Ml•lgs ClJUnt~ as well as ctlon~

lhc northern st.alt'$
C4lllada.

near

thomkJn..: lhc

~ard~n

.Mrs. J_ayn~ 's·ho'fr!e is·
scene of club meeting

pt'Hgram. An invtt.atwn and
s.·lll,lule uf the Hutiand
Canlt•n Club'..,• n~ent sho•"
NEW HAVEN
"•
' • W. Va. Tlw Flaming Hills" was Mrs. Robert Layne and Mrs.
lll'cscnlc-d, along with an Ill· Harry Miller were hostesses
vn.oliun to the fall . regiunal at the September meeting of
nl&lt;.'Cling of LheOAGC.
the Nehaclima Garden Club
Mrs. Sibley Slack, prcsi- at . the home place of Mrs.
dent, opened Lhe meeting Layne.
with Mrs. Horky readin~ a
The meeting was called to
poem una plulusuphy of life. order by the ·president, Mrs.
Mrs. Walter Hayes read the · Roy Jones, which opened
minutes of the previous with the flag salute, followed
meeting and Miss Hallie with the club song and
Zerkle gave the treasurer's collect . The
members
report in the absent-e of Miss voted to participate in the
Nellie Zerkle. For roll call project Panama " Care."
members !;liked about fall Devotions were in charge of
gardening chores. There was Mrs. Robert Layne. A poem,
a nower display on " Flowers "Drop a Pebble," was read
in Art" by Mrs. John Davis . by Mrs. John Campbell. The
who used marigolds in a group then had a time ~f
crystal container.
silent prayer.
Mrs . Etoila Cassell and
The following committees
Mrs. B. B. Zeigler were were appointed to serve on
hostesses snd were assisted the annual bazaar. General
in serving by Mrs. Malcol m Comm ittee Mrs. Harold
RollerandMrs. Horky .
Moxley, Mrs . James N.
Punch, lemon sticks and Roush, Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs.
assurted wafers were served Phil Batey and Mrs. Donald
to those namc'!l and Mrs. Bumgardner and · Mrs. Mel
George Anderson, Mrs. M. L. Clark will serve on the
French, Mrs. M. C. Wilson, publicity committee.
Mrs. Jones announced that
and Mrs. E. 0. Tewksbary.
the Ohio-Guyan District
meeting will be held on Oct .
22 at the Logan School .
ATIEND PICNIC
Reservations are to be in no ·
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keller, later than Oct. 11. She also
Mr. and Mrs. Wtllard Wilson, announced that a workshop
AI Weber, Miss Enna Smith,
Mrs. Stella Kloes, and Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart joined .
,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Keller,
Randy, Russell and Rodney
at their country home near
Ravenswood, W. Va. for a
f c;t
picnic Sunday.
·
A farewell dinner honoring
the Rev. Harold Deeth who is
retiring from the ministry on
Oct. I, and Mrs. Deeth, was
held Friday at the Parish
House of Grace Episcopal
Church. The couple will be
returning to their home in
Lebonan.
About 60 members of the
Men's
congregation
and guests
2, 4 &amp; s Buckle
gathered
for
the dinner.
Work Artics
Senior Warden Aaron Kelton
Men's
presented the Deeths with a
lnsul.ated Boots
gift of money from the vestry.
Boys'
On behalf of the congregaMen's &amp; ladies'
ltun, Mrs. Kelton presented
Jogging Shoes
them with a money tree.
$10.95 to $12.95
Other personal gifts were
given to the retiring minister
Men's
and
his wife.
Engineer Boots
Mrs.
James O'Brien, presi·
$29.95
dent
of
the Churchwomen
Linemen's Boots
an
original poem by
read
$35.95
Mrs. Kelton entitled Our
Hornets
Minister .. Mrs. Kelton and
$29.95
'. Dress Wellingtons
$23.95
Steel Toed Boots

will be held on Wednesday,
Sept. 21 , at the Hallie Roush
Memorial Mini-Park. All

members ·were .urged to
attend.
.
·
The )&gt;resident thanked the
members (hat helped to make
the Fair Quee'n's reception a
succes!l.
The
program
was
presented by Miss Annette
Campbell who gave a report
on her . work at the Con·
servation Carnp held at Camp
Caesar in June. She thanked
the club for sponsoring her
and expressed a desire for
more clubs to sponsor more
youths from Wahama High
School to the camp.
After the business meeting,
a wiener roast followed.
Others attending besides the
hostesses were Mrs. John
Compbell, Mrs. David Fields,
Jr., Mrs. William C. Gibbs,
Mrs . John Thorne, Mrs.
James N. Roush, Mrs.
Donald Bumgardner, Mrs.
Phil Batey, Mrs. Harold
Moxley, Mrs. Roy Jones,
Mrs. David Simonton, Mrs.
Mel Clark, members, and
guests, Miss Annette Campbell, and Miss Cathy

Rummage sak
plans made

Steelers batter inept 49'ers 27-0

A rumma~esale was planned for Oct. 4 when the Sew·
RlteSewing Club met rectnt·
Iy at the home of Mrs. Ann
Browning.
The .sale will be held on a
vacant lol acrDSS from 148
Butternut Ave.· from Jd a.m.
to 4 . p.m . Club inembers
discussed the possibility of a
Halloween party. Mrs. Pandora Collins had charge of the
meeting with Mrs. Carolyn
McDaniel giving the
treasurer's report, and Mrs.
Evelyn Gilmore,
the
secreta ry' s report. Mrs.
McDaniel furnished the
mystery prize for the
meeting. The door prize was
won by Joni Hoffman.
Following the meeting
Ronald Browning and son,
Kim, entertained with guitar
and vocal numbers. Next
meeting will be hosted by
Mrs. Shirley Baity at the
home of Mrs. Browning.
Refreshments were served
by tbe hostess to those named
and Mrs. Martha Hoffman,
Mrs. Betty Wehrung, Mrs.
Lenora McKnight, Mrs.
Mildred Wells, Mrs. Flo
Strickland, Mrs. Betty Boyer,
Mrs. Lucy White, and a guest,
Patty Warner.

Sport Parade
BOSTON (UPl) -Carlton Fisk had done il so many times in
his llfe, be could do it in his sleep.
He had done it!or 140 games this season alone, and this made
the !41st. Ahno&amp; mechanically, he strapped on his chest
~ote&lt;;tor and shm guards. ll was almost post time now and
With the ball game about to start, the big Red Sox catcher
brought his mask with him up to home plate.
.For some _reason, he had this tense, nervous feeling Inside
him. With SIX b1gleague seasons under his belt, including a
World Series experience only two years ago, you'd imagine
he'd be accustomed to the pressure of games like this one and
it wouldn't unsettle him .
If it's any consolation to Carlton Fisk, he is not alone. No one
ever gets c001pletely blase about such games regardless how
long he has been around.
Crouching down behind home plate and taking Reggie Cleveland's final pre~ame wann-up pitches before Willie
Randolph, the Yankees' fir&amp; hitter, stepped in, Fisk figured
be'd be okay once tbe con test began. He wasn't, though. He
&amp;ill couldn't shake those botterflies in his belly. ·
Nobody among the 34,346 at Fenway Park Monday night
would have ever guessed Fisk wasn 't loose and relaxed
watching him leave his feet and dive into a third;ow box to
make a superlative catch of Roy White's twisting foul in the top
of the first. Some might've gotten a clue, though , by the pitiful
way he looked striking out with two men on in the bottom of the
inning after Carl Yastrzemski's line single to right had tied the
score at oneall.
ll was still that way when Fisk came up for the second time ·
with Jim Rice on second and rookie Ted Cox on third with two
out in the third. Moving up alongside the plate, Fisk found he
still was nervous. Uncommonly so.
He took a deep breath, a couple of them, in fact. The last
thing in tbe world he wanted to do was look foolish .
"I felt like , well, you know ... a little shaky," he confessed
afterward. " It reminded me of the same way I felt after Nolan
Ryan hit me in the head last season."
But he got a hit -a single to right field."
Later, in what was a must win game for the Red Sox, Fisk
did even better than that when he finally moved in to face Ed
Figueroa in the third inning.
Anchoring his right foot in the batter 's box, Fisk kept his left
one outside it until he felt completely ready. Then he stepped
in. Figueroa threw Fisk a slider and the Boston receiver didn 't
get all of it, but he got enough.
'"l'IJe ball kept going and going," said Fisk.
All the way into the left-field nets for a three-run homer.
which was the game-breaker in a 6-3 victory that kept the Red
Sox alive in the American League East race and moved them
up again within 31&gt; games of thefirst-jllace Yankees.
That home run, his 24th of the season and giving him 25 RBI
in the last 15 games, dispelled all Fisk's nervousness. To such a
degree, he even joked with his Yankee counterpart, Thurman
Munson, after fouling a pitch into the seats his third time up in
the sixth.
" I'm not going into those stands," Munson tQld him, warily
eyeing some of Boston 's fired-up fans .
"That's a good decision," Fisk assured him. "You go in
there and you may never come back out."
Fisk finished up completely relaxed, adding a triple to deep
center in the eighth and scoring Boston's final run following
Yastrzemski's 25th homer.
The Red Sox aren't dead yet.
Cox, their new designated hitter up from Pawtucket, could
turn out to be the shot in tbe ann they were looking for. He
broke in with 4-for-4 against the Orioles Sunday and connected
safely his first two times up Monday night , earning a standing
ovation. Not even Ty Cobb or Babe Ruth broke in with six
straight hits.
Figueroa finally r~tired Cox his third time up on a ground
ball to first baseman Chris Chambliss.
"Everybody kept telling me 'They can't get you out, they
can't get you out,"' laughed the personable 22-year-old Oklahoman. "When I grounded out, they said, 'Well, you're
human.' George Scott came over to me and said, 'Welcome to
the big leagues."'

Breeman, a Rotary exchange

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reporter.
Room mothers were named
as follows:
Grade I, Pat Spencer,
Joyce Ritchie, and Libby .
Beaumont.
Grade 2: Pat Spencer, Ruth
Durst,
Gaye Burke, Connie
reen active in numerous comConnoll.
Carolyn Tripp.
munity and civic affairs. He
3: Nina Sailders,
Grade
served on the Conunission for
the Aging for four years, has Joyce Ritchie, Carol Barnett,
been active with the Meigs · Libby Sayre, Linda Wilson
County Ministerial Associa- and Karen Baker.
Grade 4: Sally Caldwell,
tion, and worked in the
Stout, and Nancy
Dorothy
chaplancy programs at both
Schul.
Veterans Memorial and the
Grade 5: Jean Spencer,
Holzer Medical Center.
Faye Watson, Nancy Schul
and Jo White.
.
Grade 6: Marie Probert, ·
Shirley Balser, Sandie
Sheets, Jo Anne Smith,
Carolyn Ritchie, Mary
Bowers and Nancy Roush.
spree." Devotions were given
The school carnival was set
by Delores Taylor.
for Saturday, Oct. I from 6 to
Fay Carpenter as treasurer
llp.m.
reported that $52 had already
been received for the Christ's . - - - - - - - - - Birthday offering. Members
were reminded to continue "The Bible Speaks to Today's
World." Those planning to
saving bottle caps.
attend Venture ' 77 in
The State Prayer Retreat
Louisville from the New
will be held at Cedar Lakes
Haven WCG are Delores
near Ripley on Oct. 14and 15.
Taylor, Grace Cunningham
The guest leader will be
Orpha Fields and Sarah
Naomi Randall of BeattyGibbs.
ville, Ky. A special guest will
Hostesses for lhe October
be Mae Robinson, former
meeting
are Grace Cun·
missionary to Africa. She is
ningham,
Bonnie
Fields and
the daughter of Mrs. Rena
Nonna Greene.
Johnson and the late Henry
A skit to promote Missions
Johnson.
magazine was in charge of
The theme of the retreat ,is
Publications director Grace
Cunningham. Assisting her
TIIEDAILYSENTINEL
were Sarah Gibbs, Bonnie
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
Fields, Orpha Fields and
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Delores Taylor. Membership
CHESTERL. TANNEHIIJ..
Exec. Ed. ·
and Attendance Chairwoman
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Margaret Dodson led a game.
City Editor
The
prize Was won .by Sue
Published daily ucept Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publi.o!;hing Com·
Erwin. The program closed
any, Ill C?W"i Sl., Pumeroy, Ohio
with circle prayer led by
4S769. Bu.sures.s Office Phone 9922156. Editorial Phone 992-~ra?.
Rena Johnson.
&amp;.wnd class postage paid aL
Members and guests at·
Pumeroy, Ohio.
N11tional advertising representending were Grace Cunl.cllJve W~nl - Griffith Company,
ningham, Orpha Fields, Vera
Inc., Bott111elli cmd Gallagher Div.,
Dodson, Bonnie Fields
757 Third Ave, New York, N.Y.
10017.
Lufema Weaver, Margarei
Subscription rates: Delivered by
Dodson, Iva Capehart, Sarah
carril:!r where •n·ailil.ble 75 cents per
week. By Motor Route where carrier
Gibbs, Mary Kelly, Fay
sen-ice not available·, One month,
Carpenter, Sue Erwin, Patty
JJ.z:). By mu ii in Ohio and W. Va.,
· Om.! Year, 122.00; Six month!&gt;,
Maynard, Becky Reed,
$11.50: Three ·monlhs, S7.00;
Delores
Taylor, Roberta
Flst!where $26.00 yeHr; Six monlh.s
$13.50; Three months, $7 .50.
Maynard, Addie 'Brown
Suh.s~:ription price includes Sunday
Susie Wolfe, Rena Johnso~
Times-St!ntinel.
and Earlene Bumgardner.

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Toronto 3, Baltimore l

Boston 6, New York 3
Detroit 6, Cleveland 4
Chicago 8, Oakland o
Texas 6. California 1
Today•s Probable Pitchers
(All times EDT)
Toronto
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4-6)
at
Baltimore (Grfrnsley 13-9), "7: 30

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Ne-w York (Torrez 16-12) at
Boston (Tiant 11-8), 7:30p.m .
Cleveland
(Hood
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Detroit {Rozema 15·7) , 8 p.m .
Minnesota (Zahn 12-12} · at
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West

Monday's Results

p.m.

214 E. Main

8:30p.m.

Pomerny

•

season -opening vietnry over
San Francisco Monday night
was, in the w&lt;&gt;rds of Franco
Harris, ''a good one Lo get us
gning."

"

.

Detroit - Signed center Bob
Lanier to a five-year contract
believed to be worth $2 million.
Portland Signed guard
T .R . Dunn , their second -round
draft c)loice, i!!lnd forward
Rickey Brown, their third -round
choice, both from Alabama .
Seattle - Placed on waivers
guard Frank Oteynick and
forward · Tr~tvls Grant .
Indianapolis - Signed third ·
year professi onal Mike Flynn.
Football
.
Seattle Signed punter
Herman Weaver and placed -on
wai¥ers Rick Eagles, their
third -round draft chOice.
. Wash lnton Reactivated
veteran tight end Jerry Smfth,
who wu placed on wei11ers last
week ,
Soccer
Chicago (NASLl - Signed
defender Clive Griffiths to a
one -year contract with a two
year optio.n and named Willie
Roy as director of soccer
development .
8neb1ll ·
Boston - Claimed ouffieJder

By BIU.. MADDE!'I
I) PI Spurts Writer
The Boston Red Sox have
successfully transformed
those long outs of Yankee
Stadium into Fenway Park
home runs and the Toronto
Blue Jays have once again
turned up as spoilers.
Thus, the American League
East pennant race Is a shade
closer today .
The Red Sox, frustrated a
week ago when one 400-foot
ny after another fell for
routine outs in spacious
Yankee Stadium, struck back
at the Yankees In the cozy
confines of their own ballpark
Monday night and pounded
out a 6-3 victory on the
stren gth of home runs by
Carlton Fisk and Carl Yastrzemski.
Meanwhile, in Baltimore,
the last place, expansion Blue
Jays, who earlier this year
tormented the' Yankees for
six victories in 12 games, paid
similar disrespect to the
second-j&gt;lace Orioles with a 3:::::::::::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;::::::::

PROTEST NOW
Area football laos are ·
urging football laos who
would rather watch Ohio
State play Oklahoma
Satorday Instead of Penn
· State play Maryland 1on
channel 13) to call the
station and-or the Federal
Communications Com·
mtsston In Washington, D.
C. to
register their
protests.
Numbers lo call are:
FCC,
%02-632-7048.
Channel 13, Huntlngion
IABC) before 5 p.m., 304·
525-7661; after 5 p.m., 304522-4581.
Cable patrons may
receive the Ohio State
game oo Channel &amp;,
Columbus. However, Cable
TV ts not available In many
rural comtnuollies of the
trl·coonty area (also
outside It).
:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::::

B~ey ~ld at
wmver pnce
and a pitcher

I vtctnry belund tbe pitching in· notching his lOth win and
of rookie southpaw Jerry eighth in 10 lifetime outings
Garvin.
versus the Yankees.
The Yankee and Oriole
"The only difference is we
defeats left New York in front · got some runs tonight ," said
by 31\! games over both Cleveland.
Boston and Baltimore, three
AI Baltimore, Rick cerone,
in the loss column.
batting just .184 at game
" Three cl ubs have a time, drove irt two runs with a
helluva shot at this thing if we double and a single while
beat the Yankees again;'' Garvin spaced nine hits in
said Manager Qon Zimmer, registering his lOth victory
whose Red Sox complete and 12th complete game.
their season series with the
" I guess this shows we're
Yankees in Boston tonight. no pushovers for anyone,"
"I hit the ball better five said Cerone. "Playing the
times last week than I did spoiler is sure a lot more fun
tonight and they were all than just going through the
outs," said Fisk, who stroked motions at lhe end of a
a three-run homer, his 24th, season."
in the third inning. "It's nice
Elsewhere in the American
to be home and have a well hit League, Chicago blanked
ball go out."
Oakland, 8-&lt;l; Detroit put
Yastrzemski sealed the away Cleveland, 6-4, and
Boston victory with an RBI· Texas downed California, 6-1.
single in the first and a solo There were no National
homer in the eighth.
League games scheduled.
Reggie Cleveland benefited White Sox 8, A's 0:
from the 11-hit Fenway Park
Ken Kr a vee, 9-8, tossed a
barrage by spacin~ seven hils [our-hitler and struck out

learns awaiting the Steelers'

type of performance that
Pittsburgh can depend on to
beat O;lkland and Dallas and
some of the other tough

eight, while Eric Soderholm
stroked his 23rd home run
during a four-run fifth inning
for Chicago. Lamar Johnson
also had a two-run triple to
help Kravec, who pitched his
fifth complete game ..
Rangers 6, Angels 1: ;
Toby Harrah hit his 26th
homer with two aboard to
help the Rangers maintain
their one percentage point
edge over Chicago for second
place in the AL West. Nolan
Ryan was deprived of his :roth
victory. Doyle Alexander, 1610, went ali the way for the

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI)
Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes is giving Oklahoma the
same treatment he usually

be an enormously great
contest," Hayes said. "It
should be a close one. I don 't
think either team has been
tested yet."
Besides Ohio State's win

reserves for Big Ten rival

over
Minne.sota,
the
Buckeyes own a I~ decision
over Miami (Fla.) while
Oklahoma has a shaky 25-23
win over Vanderbilt and
rolled to a 62-24 victory over
Utah last Saturday.
Hayes said the thirdranked Buckeyes came
through last Saturday's 38-7
romp over Minnesota with
only a couple of 11tninor"
hurts and that he expects
injured tailbacks Jeff Logan
· and Ricky Johnson to be able
to play against the Sooners,
although "they won't get to
practice."
Both were in iured in the ·

Michigan.
"To be fair to everybody,"
Hayes told his weekly press
luncheon Monday, "we're
going to close practices this
week. "
Hayes usually doesn't lock
up practices until the last
week or two of the season,
just before the Michigan

contest.
But, he acknowledged
Monday, "I don't think there
is any question that it (Oklahoma) is an extremely
important game.
" Saturd~y 's game should

Bengals looking
to beat Seahawks
.

•

yards of the Steelers' total 175

on their regular season yards rushing.

win.
Tigers 6, Indians 4:
Ben Oglivie's two-run
single In the eighth inning
gave the Tigers the win .
Rusty Staub, who hit his 22nd
homer to trigger a four~run
seventh , led off the eighth
with a single and moved up
when reliever Bill Laxton
walked Jason Thompson
before advancing both
runners with a wild pitch.

schedule .
Yes, the Steelers' offense
scored Z1 point~. but it also
failed to take advantage of
the excellent field position
that Sail Francisco miscues
and the Pittsburgh defense
consistently gave it.
Yes, the Pillsburgh defense
scored a shutout, grabbed
two interceptions and a
rumble and broke up several
other Jim Plunkett passes,
but it was hard to judge

According to Harris, the
49ers' defense made him pay
for every yard he gained. .
"I'll tell you, f think our
offense could use a lot of
improvement. It wasn't as
sharp tonight as it !!hould
have been/' he said.
The fact their defense did
pia y a decent game made the
49ers' continuing offensive
problems all the. more
frustrating to them.
"The thing that bugs me, "
whelher the defense 's said Sail Francisco receiver
success stemmed from its Gene Washington, . "is oW'
strengths or from San defense plays its butt off and
Francisco's weaknesses. we (offense ) don 't back them
After all , the 49ers haven'i up."
scored a touchdown sinee
their third of six pre-&lt;l&lt;!ason
games.
And penalties - seven for
71 yards - were a problem.
VALUE
Three were for the kind or
RATED
rule infraction football
players are taught to avoid
from the time they play in the
USED CARS
midget leagues - clipping,
and the Steelers took another
73 BUICK REGAL
15-yard
penalty
for
headslapping.
AIR
As usual, close-mouthed
Steelers' Coach Chuck Noll
had little to say about the
game, but in this case his

I'

•

'

I
I

I

(

f
I

HT CPE.,

'2995

73 CUTLASS
terse remarks were more
than adequate.
4 DR. AIR
" We could have done
I
better," 1he said, 11 (but) this
1
one's behind us. We 're
looking ror improvement in
an departments."
The Steelers' did have
You'll Like OUT Quality
some bright spots, most
Way of Doing Business
notably the perfonnance of
GMAC FINANCING
six-year veteran FranCo 992-5342
Pomeroy
Harris, whO ran 'll times for
Op@n Evenings 'til 6:{)9
TiiSp.m.Sat.
season is opener against two touchdowns and 100
Miami and Hayes switched
safety Bay Griffin to tailback
against Minnesota. Griffin
gained 58 yards in 14 carries.
Hayes said Griffin's role in
Saturday's !irst meeting
between the two college
football powers would depend
on the availability of Johnson
and Logan.
Hayes W'!S quite pleased
with his team's · offensive
showing against Minnesota
which saw the Buckeyes get
385 yards on the ground and
another 133 through the air.
"We ran the ball quite
well," said Hayes, 11and our
passing was considerably
better than usual."
The defense was superb for
the second straight week , ·
surrendering only 135 total
yards io tlie Gophers and not
allowing them any closer
than the Buckeye 44 yard line
except for a 102-yard kickoff
return by Bobby Weber.
Junior Linebacker Tom
Cousineau was selected the
Check that pilots are lit and gas
top defensive player for the
connections tight. If using oil heat,
Minnesota contest with 16
check your storage tank fo·r wear
participations, while tackle
Chris Ward and quarterback
or leakage. Always have your
Rod Gerald got the offensive
furnace cleaned and serviced. Be
lineman and back honors.
"We felt we played quite
sure you have fire insurance. Call
well. on defense ," said
our.agent today.
defensive coordinator George
Hill, "but we're not real sure
how strong Minnesota was.
.Our only disappointment was
the kickoff return. On that,
Middleport, 0.
992-2342
we made a few mistakes
correct.''

1995
Karr &amp;VanZandt

Bucks buttoned up tight
preparing for Oklahomans

•.. FROM LEAKIN.GGAS
OR OLD OIL FURNACES

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Tbe defensive line beating
Cincinnati Bengals today Cincinnati's offensive line to
took a look at fihns of last the punch.
"Seldom were there any
weekend 's 13-3 upset loss to
the Cleveland Browns and clear holes of daylight for the
then began working toward Bengal backs to run through,
next Sunday's game ag~inst and the yards gained were
the se~nd -year expansion few and hard. At this point,
the failure of the running
Seattle Seahawks.
Seattle lost 29-14 to the game seemed to throw the
Baltimore
Colts
last offensive game plan out of
weekend.
kilter.
The Bengals will be favored
to beat Seattle, but then they
also were favored to handle
the Browns.
"It was just a bad day,"
Cincy quarterback Ken
Anderson said in looking back
on the Browns game. "That's
about all I have to s_a y."
· Complained defensive line·
man Coy Bacon, "I didn't
have any idea we were gonna
play ball like that."
Still, lineman Gary Burley
said, 11 Look at the score.
They didn't kill us. They got a
lead and sat on it. We just
couldn't get into the end zone.
"Freak things, passes
knocked down, fumbles. We
beat ourselves. Cleveland's a
super teain, but I don't think·
they manhandled us:"
Criticaily observing the
game was former Bengals.'
1978 CONCORD 2-DR D/L
defensive tackle Mike Reid,
who .made several interesting

I

•

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Downing Childs
Insurance Agency, Inc.

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NEW YORK (UPl) comments in
"guest''
Reggie Jackson of tbe New column in a _ Cincinnati
York Yankees, who hit .417 newspaper Monday.
with five homers (llld drove in
"Offensively, the Bengals
nine runs, was named tbe . just didn't amount to much,"
American League's player of wrote Reid. "The big
the week ending Sept. 16,
problem .,.as their inability to
Oscar Gamble of the . establish any kind of a
Chica~o White. Sox· was · running game. This was due
second ;, •.he balloting.
in lar~e part to the Browns'

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Inside -are lu)(urious individual reclining fro nt Scats ,
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electric Jigital clock anJ much nwre. AnJ you gt:t all
these "cxua~" at "'' extra charge .
.. But thl" CmcmJ 0/l Jl,esn'r JU~t lunk grent. it's an

OaKland (Langford 8·111 at
Chicago {Stone 14-11), 8: 30p .m .
Seattle (Montague 7-11) at
MilwaukN (Slaton 9-UI, 8: 30 Bob Bailty from Cincinnati on
p.nn .
• waivers.
Cincinnati - Receive£! left .
Texas CEltis 9-121 at Cali fornia (Brett l2-11), 10:30 p.nn.
handed pitchtr Frank New ·
comers, 23, from the Boston
Wtdnesdey's G•m•s
farm system.
Te:1111 et California, night
Baltimore - Acquired v~er ·
Nllnnnota atKan City. night
an rlg.,t-htndl'd pitcher Nelson
O.klond ot Chic-. nl;nt
Briles from Texas tor S20,000
S..Hie at MllwlukH. night
waiver price .
Toronto a1 eatttn:tore. fllqhl

•

But that's JUSt about ali tlie
natioually televised , Z1.0 win
was - something for the
Steeler$ to build on .
It was certainty not th&lt;-

Bo 'sox tighten AL East race

CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Boston Red Sox have claimed
:!::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;: ;:;:::::::;:;: ::::::.:::·:::::::::~: ::::::;:;:::::;::::::: ::::::::: :;:: ::::::::;::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: Cincinnati Reds ouUielder
Bob Bailey on waivers, tbe
Reds have announced.
In addition to the waiver
price,
the Reds Monday also
. · COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohioans. for Wildlife
received left-handed pitcher ·
Conservation opened its campaign today against State
Frank Newcomers, 23, from
Issue 2, .a constitutional amendment banning use of the
the Boston farm system.
steel-jawed leghold trap in Ohio.
Newcomers
has
been
James Glass, chairman of the board of trustees of the
assigned to the Reds
Wildlife Legislative Fund, said the amendment would
Indianapolis farm club of the
result in "uncontrolled wild animal populations in Ohio"
American Association.
and create "severe economic problems" for agriculture
Bailey, 34, played in 49
and fur;elated industries.
games
for Cincinnati this
Glass said tbe leghold trap could not be replaced by
.253 willi two
year,
batting
other me!Jlods of killing, and that fur-bearing animals
homers and 10 RBI. In !976 be
would become fann pests, attacking crops and causing
batted .298 in 69 games for the
flooding.
Reds.
New~omerscompiled a 6-15
record this season, pitching ·
for Bristol, Conn., of the
Eastern League. Last season
he was lH with WinStonSalem, N.C., of the Carolina
League.
Meanwhile, the Reds, idle
Monday, open three.,o;eries
against the Padres in San
American League
Diego tonight.
East
Sports Trannctions
Fred Norman, 14-11, was
W L
Pet. GB
By united Press International
Mondly
New York
93 58 .616
scheduled
to pitch for the
89 61 ,593 Jlh
Baltlmre
Basketball
Reds
against
San Diego's Bob
89 6) ,593 J1;2
Boston
Cleveland - Traded rookie
Detroit
70 81 .464 23
forward Alphonso Smith · to Owchinko, 8-10, in tonight's
67 84 . 444 26
Clevelnd
Kansas City for: an undisclosed
series opener.
63 89 ' .414 JOlh future considera tion .
MiiW

Bulova

~m,------------------------------------

'

dent; Anna Rice, secretary;
Sally Caldwell, treasurer;
and Nancy Roush, news

Chlc~go

CUT ALONG DOTIED UNE

'

Room mothers were named
and a school carnival was
scheduled at the Monday
night meeting of the Tuppers
Plains School Boosters held
at ·school. The new officers
are Keith Webber, president;
Carolyn Ritchie, vice presi·

Women hold friendship night in
New Haven with 'tasting spree'
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. The New Haven . Women of
the Ch~rch of God met in the
Missionary Building .
Friendship night was observed with a "tastin~

Ry POHLA SM1111·
UP! Spurts Writer
PITISBURGH (UP!)
The Pittsburgh Steelers' NFL

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

student from Holland.

Mrs. O'Brien had charge of
the dinner arrangemen~
with all of the women of the
church assisting.
Among the guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Garland Weaver,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Meredith, Mrs. Edith Reed
and Asa Hoskins.
The Rev. Mr. Deeth has
pastored the Pomeroy church
for the past four years and
following his retirement will
serve as a supply pastor· in
the Diocese of Southern Ohio.
During his time here he has

I

3- The Daily Sentinel, Mtd!Ueport-Pomeroy, u., Tuesday, Sept. 20. 1977

I

.

. outsranJing performer, rno. Its size, for example, makes It
easy to handle anJ maneuver. And it has a smnJard 232
cubic inch engine to give YilU the 6-qlinJcr power )•nu
need t&lt;,t cruise cOmfu rrabl~· and pim safd y on"the
hi~hway.

·.-I ·

And G..)ncorJ D/L is covc reJ by AMC's

exclusive Buyer Protect10n Plan .
The G.mco nl 0/L wmes in 2-Joor anJ 4-dn•.lr st:Jan
modd s anJ in a· 4 -dour wagon . Whichever you ch()Ose,
we think w.u'!l a);!ree it\ nne of the finest, mnst heauriful
cars ~MC has ever hui)L 1!'1&gt; ~nt the luxury you W.'lnt;
the &gt;1:&lt;

I'''" noeJ;
apJ a u ~~
rhat makes

~ t1ckcr pncc

an incn::Jible value!

AMC
.

.

.'

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

.,

- · ~-. ~===~~~~~~~~~
.
,.
. ..
' :

�1- The Daily Sentll'll'l, '!llldtUeport-Pomero), 0., Tuesda), Sept, :!U. 19n

Michigan holds on to No. I
NEW YORK fUPII -The 279 pomts and two first-pla&lt;'l' top 10 and nahoruu champ,on
stnp con'jtderahon by the UPt
Universtty of Michtgan voles,
while Oklahoma 8oarct Cf CO.,Ches ThOSe leams
shrugged off its 21-9 struggle ~athered in fuur No. I n&lt;'&lt;is, currtflrty on ~robahon for "\911
KentucJo.y . M ich lgan Stdte ,
with Duke this past weekend but was stiU fourth with 253. ar~
Red I and: s I Cai Jf 1 Western
to retain the No. I sp&lt;lt in the wtal pomts. The Sooners .State ( Colo I
UP! Board of Coaches college
routed Utah. 62·24. but
football ratings by an o\•er- apparently most of tbe
whelming margin.
coaches expected that and
The Wolverines, who had
were not impressed.
their problems defeating the .
Penn State, which routed
heavy underdog Blue Devils Houston, 3!-14, to reassert
at Ann Arbor, received Tl itself as the pride of the East.
firstplace votes from the was fifth with 223 points and
coaches and 370 total votes . one first-place vote.
Southern California, which
Three unbeaten Southwest
NFL Standings
had similar problems in Conference powers helped
By United Press International
overroming Oregon Slate ( 17· CQmplete .the top 10. Texas
Amerlun Conference
E.ist
10\ was seC&lt;Jnd with 303 T.,h was sixth, Texas A&amp;M
W. L. T, Pet.
points. including fi1•e first. seventh and Texas ninth. Salt l more
1 0 01000
place nods.
Colorado was eighth and Miami
l 0 0 1.000
New England
1 0 (11000
Ohio State, which routed florida lOth .
Buffalo
0 I 0 .000
Minnesota for its second
NY Jets
0 I 0 . 000
Central
straight win, was third with

FOOTBALL

NEW YORK (UP I ) The
U n 1t e d Press I nternati ona l
Board of Coaches rop 20 tE."ams

----------~

after the second week ot !he

National League
Monday's Results
( No 9amt!-!'. scheduled)
Today•s Probable Pitchers

college football sf!ason w i!h
tirst -place votes and record tn
parentheses ·
Points
Team
1 Michigal') t'27l C2 -0 I
370
2, Southern Cal { 5 ) ( 2-0J
303
) . Ohio St. (21 (2 .0 )
279
4 Okl ahoma 141 ( 2-0J
253
5 . Penn St . i ll 12-0 }
223
6 . Texas l'ec.h ( 2-0 )
169
1. Texas A&amp;M ( 2-0 )
164
8. Color ado 12-0 l
9&lt;~
9 . Te:..as 12-0 l
82
10. Florida {2-0)
42
11. Nebraska ( 1-ll
)1
11. Alabama (I -l l
22
13. Washington St ( 2-&lt;))
19
14. Notre Dame ( l -1)
17
15. Arkansas (2 0 )
16
16. MISSiSSippi St. (2 0)
11
11 Brigham Young(t)(2 -Cl )
S
0 . Pittsburgh (tie l (1 -H
8
19. Oklahoma Sl. (1 . 1)
7
21J. West Virginia { 2-0)
6
Note : By agreement w ith the
American
Football
Coaches
Msociat ton , tei!tmS on probation
by the NCAA are ~nellg i ble Jor

( All Times eon

Sr. Louis CUrrea 7 4 J at
Montreal ( Dues 1-0L 1 : 35 p .m
Ch i cago
(Burris 12 -15 ) qt
Ph iladelphia
{Carlton
21 9 1,
7 :35p .m .
Pittsburgh (Can-delar ia 17 5l
at New York ( Espfnosa 8· 12 ),

8 :05p .m ,
Atlanta {Rf.lt.hven fi . JO J af
Houston (Bannister 7-8), 8 :35

p.m.
Cincinnati !Norman 14 Ill at
San Diego (Owch inko 8-10 ), 10
p .m .
Los Angeles (John 18 -6) at
San Franc isco ( Halicki 14 111 ,
10 : 35 p .m
Wednesday's Games
St . Louis. at MontreaL n1ght
Pittsbgh at New York , ni ght
ChiCago at Ph 1la, night
Los Ang at San Fran, n ight
Atlanta at Houston , night
Cinci at ~an Diego , night

TRY OUR F.RESH

PEACH SUNDAES
AND SHAKES

~

T . Pet.
100LOOO
1 C) 0 1.000
1 0 0 1.000
010000

W L

Houston
Cleveland
P ittsburgh
Ctnc i nnal i

West
W L T. Pet.
1 o o 1J&gt;OO

Oak l and
Denver
1 0 0 1.000
Kansas City
0 I 0 .000
SeatHe
0 I D .000
San DiE!90
0 1 0 .000
National Conference
East
W. L T. pet ,
Ph iladelphia
1 0 0 l.OOO
Dallas
1 0 0 1.000
NY Giants
1 0 0 1.000
WaSh tngton
0 I 0 .000
Sf . Louis
0 1 0 .000
Central
W . L. T. Pcf.
Chicago
1 0 0 l.OOO
Grl"E!n Bay
1001000
M innesota
0 1 0 .000
Detroit·
0 1 0 .000
Tampa Bay
0 1 0 .000
West
,
W. L T Pet.
Atlanta
1 o o 1.000
San Francisco
0 l 0 .000
New Or leans
0 1 0 .000
Los A(lgetes
0 1 0 .000
Monday's Result
Piffsbgh 27 , San Fran 0
Saturday's Game
M inn at Tampa Bay.. night
Sunday ' s Games
Atlanta at Washington
Balt i more at NY Jets
Buflalo at Denver
Chicago at St. Louis
Houston at Green Bay
Miami at San Fran
New Ortns at Detroit
NY Giants ar Dallas
Oakland at P ittsburgh
~hila at Los Angeles
San Diego at Kan City
Seattle at Cincinnati

Monday's Game
New Eng at Cleve, nigh!

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
HRS., 10,00 A. M. Iiiii ,oo P.M. Sun.· Thurs. IO, _oo A.M.
til 12:0(1 P.M . Friday and Saturday .

See Us At

The

Pomeroy Bend Bridge

Paddy Livingston, 97, dies

Leaders

SEA TILE (UP!) - The
Seattle SuperSonics Monday
placed
guard
Frank
Oleynick, the NBA club's
first-round draft choice in
1975, on waivers.

hUjor League Lead~rs
8y Untted flren lnternattonilll

8alttng '
on .. oo at Nhl
Nat1ona1 LeaQUe
G AI. H Pet.
P~rkl'f" P it
150 609 208 342
Stennett P1l
ll6 .Sl 151 336

~oily Cramer

(~sed

New cure for cat odors
I'OU.Y'S PROBLEM
m:AR POLLY - My cat
wet on my rug and I cannot
g•t r1d of the odor even
though I have used a dtsmfec·
tanl m water and pme
seented ammoma. After
anything dnes the odor is still
there. -PAUUNE.
DEAR PAULINE
Perhaps Mrs. E.P.'s letter
will be of help to you.
DEAR POLLY - I use the
same method getting rid of
cat odors that my mother used many years ago. I put a
small rag in a frying pan and
set 1t on fire. This is not
dangerous if used carefUlly
and it removed the odor completely. Keep a lid for the pan
in your other hand so as to
smother lhe fire if necessary.
1 do not think sprays for lhe

air will remove cat odors. MRS. E.P. (Polly's note' Do
not set the pan on your carpet
but hold it in your hand near
the places that have the odor
and follow directions lor
holding the lid so as to have it
ready if needed .)
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with recipes that say
eight tablespoons of butter or
whatever instead of ooe-half
cup, and three teaspoons in·
stead of one tablespoon,
which is the same. That is
making us do it the hard way.
-LOIS.
DEAR POLLY - To keep
your pictures
hanging
straight, wrap masking tape,
wrong side out, around the
middle of a rounded toothpick
and put at the bottom near
the corners of the back of the
pwture and it will always
hang straight.
A old metal shoe rack can
be nailed to the garage door
or wall to make a great
holder for garden tools.
When one does not have
drawer space ror storing extra pillows hang them on
pants hangers in a closet.
An old broom with frayed
and spreading bristles can be
renewed by soaking -the
bristles in water lor a few
minutes and lhen pulling a

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, o.

..
I

Tmpltn

'S~

t.u S12 18A 322

L.
Grtlfey Cin
s. mmns St L
Fosrer .C in
Sm tlh LA

143 S•7 \76 312
140 484 lS6 371

strong rubbo:r band a•·ow1d
U1e bnstles jusl below the Hendr1cl&lt;.. SO
~tudling.

When brtslles

a~

dry remove the rubber band.
-NORA.
DEAR POLLY - I have
several re&lt;·tpes I use oft~n
that roll for grated cheese, so
r buy cheese in larg• quantllles. r grate the cheese with
mv salad maker and put
sa'lad oil on the grater so the
cheese does not stick. I
measure the grated cheese
tntu the amounts most often
used, put in plastic bags and
mark on each the amount of
cheese it contains. It is all
grated and dues nul take long
to thaw when I remove the required amount from the
freezer, I have no waste
because of moldy cheese and
am saved lbe lime and trouble of grating chees~ every
time it is needed. -MRS. R.L.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Major League Resufts
By United Press lnterrtat ional
National League
1No games schedUled}
American League
100 001 100- 3 7 I
Boston
103 000 02x - 6 11 0
F igueroa ,
Lyle
(81
and
Munson; Cleveland and Fisk . W
- C!e·ve!'and, 11:1 -8. L- Figueroa ,
15 -10 H Rs- New York. Munson
(17) , Kingman (S). Boston, Fisk
(24), Yasfrzemski {25).

N .Y .-

574 183 319
141 A64il 1A1 313
141 503 156 310
1516U 190 30'9
138 512 158 309
141

Rose Cin
Luznsk i Phil
American

l~ague

G A8. H Pet.
146 584 225 .385

((llrew Mtn

Singllon Sal
Bostock M in

Rtvl"rs NY
R tee Bos
LeFlore Del
B.;,i lor Tor
FiSk. 80S

Page Oatr..
Bretl KC

141 4~4
144 556
129 531
I~ 601
144 609
110 .of4d
141 492
134 457
128 51!1
116 4)1

165 .314
l8• 331

112 .)24
194 .313
196 .322
1A1 .318
153 .311
U2 .311
163 . 310

BoC"hte Cle
tAO 310
Home Runs
Na1ional League : Foster. Cin
J8 . Burrovghs. Atl 40; Luz~nsk l
and: Schmid!. Phil 36 ; Garvev ,
LA 31.
American league: R ice , Sos
38 , Sonds ,- Cal and Nettles , NY
35 , Scott. Bos 32 ; Gamble, Chi
31

Runs Batted In
National Leatjue : Foster , Cin
1-40 , LUZtnSk. i. Phil 12'2 ; Bur .
roughs ." Arl 112 ; Garvey , LA

111 ; Cev , LA 110.
American
League :
Hisle,
Mmn 113 , Bonds. Cal 109 : R ice ,
Bas 105 : Hobson . 80s and
Thompson , Det 101
stolen aases
National League : Taveras.
Pit!
64 ; Cedeno , Hou
52 ;
Rtchards, SO 43 ; Morgan . Cin
47 : MOreno . Pitt 46.
American L.eague : Pa1ek , KC
&lt;~9 : Bonds and Remy , Cal 38 ;
LeFlore , Det and Page , Oak 37.

in the locker room, oot lilo!
CI..EVELA'N D ( U PI I Paddy livingston, the last today. There were no
surviving player from the scandals.
Livingston, wbo retired in
American l.eague's operung
1963alter
working tJ years as
season ol 1901, died Monday
a
city
of
Cleveland
employe,
night at the age o! 97.
four
· 80ns
was
survived
by
Livingston played one
and
two
daughtero,
13
game for Cleveland as a
grandchildren
and
'rl
great
catcher in 1901, then returned
1o his job as a shipbuilder. grandchildren. A mass was
Sometime afterwards he was scheduled for Thursday al St.
approached again about ·Malachi's Olurch, where be
playing professionally , was baptized in 1880.
working his way up from
Wheeling ,
W.Va .
to
Cincinnati to Indianapolis.
Indianapolis sold him to
SpllrtS Briefs .
Philadelphia, where he
United Preoslnternational
played for Connie Mack, taler
LOS ANGELES (UP!) also
playing lor
the Los Angeles Dodgers' ri8ht
Cincinnati and St. Louts fielder Reggie Smith was
major league teams.
named Southern CaUC~rnia
He batted against Walter Athlete for the month of
JQhnson and threw to team- August by the Citizens
mate Eddie Collims as Ty Savings Athletic Foundation.
Cobb attempted to steal
Smith, 32, who signed a new
bases, being a contemporary four-year contract with the
o! Hall o[ Famers Honus Dodgers Friday, is hitting
Wagner, Chief Bender , .313 with 30 home runs and 83
Napoleon Lajoie, John RBis.
McGraw and Cy Young .
"They were gentlemen. All
of them "he re&lt;;alled. "There
'
.
was no swearing and cursmg

FITCHBURG, Mass. (UPI )
- The Boston Bruins opened
training camp Monday with
Pitching
Most Victories
24 players and author-goalie
National league ; . Carlton.
Phil 21 .9 ; R Reuschel. Chi 10 8 : George Plimpton.
Plimpton, who has worked
Seaver , Cin , John , LA and
Forsch, St .L 18 -6.
out
with professional teams
American league; Ryan. Cal
t'il -15 ; Goltz , Minn 18 -10,: Leo- in other sports and then
narcL KC 18- 11 ; Palmer , Bait wri tlen
about
the
p 11 ; R .May. Ball and ColbOrn ,
experiences,
will
be
filmed
KC 17 -13,
Earned Run Average
trying lo stop the Montreal
tbast!'d on H4 innings pitchi!d) Canadiens prior to
an
National League : Candelaria.
Pitt 2 55 ; R ReuscheL Chi 1.68 ; exhibition game with the
Hooton . LA and car.!ton . Phil Bruins.
2 70 ; John, LA 2.72 .
.

American League : . Tanana.
Cal
2.SA ; Ryan , Cal
2_73 ;
Guidry. NY 2.81; Bl.,.lev~n , Tex
2 83 ; Rozema . Oet 3.01.
Strikeouts
National League : Nielc.ro . All
242 ; Richard. Hou 188; Rogers,
Mtl 187 ; Carlton , Ph il 186;
Tronto
Oil 060 001 - 3 7 I Koosman, NY 183
Bait
ooo 001 ooo- 1 9 1
American Leag ue: Ryan. Cal
Garvin and Cerorte · R May , 330; Leonard, KC 212 ; Tanana ,
Drago (9) and Skaggs. w Cal 205; Palmer , Bat t and
Garvin, 10-16. l-R May , 17 13. Eckersley, Clev 179
HR- Baltimore, Dauer D)
Det

Bib.by , Monge (7 ), Dobson
171 , LaKfon (8) , Andersen (8 J
and Kendall ; Wilcox , Hiller £6) ,
Foucault (8) and May . WFoucault , 6-5. L - Dobson , 3· 12.
HR -'--- Cieveland. Thornton 1281.
Detroit, Sraub &lt;·22l.
Oaklnd
000 000 ooo- 0 4 1
Chicgo
010 142 OO:J~: - II 0
Blue. Coleman (5). McCatty
OJ and Hosley ; Kravec and

s

Oowni'ng W~ Kravec. 9 8. L Biue, 14-18 . H R Chicago.
SoderhOlm (23 }.

DEALERS PLEASE!
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

RIBEND

.,

PORK ROAST......L.B:••••••
~BEND

.

1
1 ·
•149
.....

PORK CHOP$ ..... ~~:.!.. 09
CENTER CUT .
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39
PORK CHOPS--~~~.1..
LOIN END

PORK

CHOPS.~~~

LEAN

SLAB BACON .................. ~~:

Mon ., Tues. , Wed . &amp;· Sat .-8 ·: ~0 til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

.
9
PORK ROAST ...........9
99
SAUSAGE•••••••••••••••
~

003 003 ooo- 6 12 0
000 000 001 ---- 1 10 4
AleKander
and
Sundberg ;
Ryan , Barlow (6l. Moore (9)
Mason , W.Va .
Herman Grate
773-5592
and Humphrey . W- Aiexander.
16-10. L-Rvan. 19 -lS. HR - . . . . .~H. .+~H. .+~H. .+~H. .·++~~
Texas, Harrah 1261.
.I

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

Texas

cam

BROUGHTON$

1%

HOMEMADE-PURE PORK

LB.

lib.
Pkg.

PlASTIC
GALLON JUG

69e
. .

SLICED

LB.

69~

GROUND
ROUND
' LB.'1 09

GERMAN VIUAGE

. ·3 PKGS f
NOODLES···••••••• 8 oz. Pkgs. ••••• •••••••••• .-. •••

DOG FOOD ••••••• 25 lb. bag •••••• • • • ••••••• • •

...

2 LB. BOX

NORTHERN
ASSORTED

69

JOAN OF ARC

BEnY CROCKER

BANANAS

COLA

16 oz.

f 8-16 oz. BotUes

15 oz.
CANS

~

$1

I

POTATO BUDS

5 LB.

8-16 oz. Bottles

KIDNEY
BEANS

~

PEACHES
29 oz.
49~
CAN

PEPSI
COLA

Chill
Making Time

4
RC

$199

GOLDEN ISLE SLICE .
OR HALVES

W/C

AND

ve

BOX

BROUGHTONS

DIET RITE

8-16 oz. Bottles

1 0o

'3 39

HOMO MILK •••~~~~••
BROUGHTONS

79

•

~

• ' J'

NO. 605
2 LB. CAN

W/C

Gallon $129
K
1% MIL ••••••••••••••

I'

•

NO. 105

LIMIT 2
PLEASE

-

12lfz OZ.

. W/C

Coupon Expires Sept. 24, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Sept . 24, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

VALLEY BELl

CHOCOLATE MILK ..... !.~~.
·Genile Fels Liquid
Detagent ..... .qt. 69'
ltlartan House Meat
Grlly-Sel&amp;ll
12lnar.CMI

DAN DEE

POTATO.

HEINZ

GLAMORENE

TOMATO KETCHUP
TWIN PAK

CHIPS·~·······.~···

NO.l05

32 OZ. BTL

79~

SPRAY &amp;VAC RUG CLEANER
24 OZ. CAN

W/C .

NO. 255

,,

$149

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

W/C

BIRDSEYE AWAKE

MAGIC SIZING

NO. 155

NO. 155
20 OZ. CAN

59~

2

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12 OZ. CANS

8g~

Coupon Expires Sept. 24, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Sept. 24, 1977
TWIN ciTY G .~TEWAY

Coupon Expires
TWIN CITY

...

ggc

CHICKEN

ct~.I&lt;.E
MIX

$ 19

'109

4

CANS
PEAS ··•••••••••• ••• .' ••••••••·•
SCOT_lAD
.
. .
. . 3 PKGS. $ 1· 00
COOKIES ••••• ·•• ~.~-·~··············· •••••
_

CASH SAVER

I J 'h oz •. Box

FROZ~N

~-

TOILET
TISSUE

FRESH &amp; LEAN

BOLOGNA

Hollywood-:-Zero- Butternut
or Milk Shake

SILVER BRAND

or.

HINES
MOIST
&amp; EAS

angel
food ·
cake
mix
Box

ALL MEAT

·sALE
PACK

DUNCAN

HINE S

FORTIFIED
MILK

89~

KAHN'S

CANDY BAR

DUNCAN

15

GROUND . LB gg~
CHUCK •••••• ;

~

LB.

FRESH &amp; LEAN

HINES
CAKE
MIXES

8-16 oz. Bottles

RA-CORN

12

FRANK I ES...... ~:~.~~~:.

DUNCAN

4 RO~L
PKG.

BONELESS

e

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities.

BACON

FRESH &amp; LEAN

89

e

59
GROUND BEEF............ ~~: ...7 9 e
SUPERIOR_:..ALL MEAT

MASON FURNITURE

PORK
STEAK

6

09

On All Uving Room Suites

'SUPERMARKO
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

FRESH &amp; LEAN

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WE AC!:!:P£
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

'1 00 00 TRADE-IN

200 101 000......._ 4 9 0
000 000 -12x- ~ 9 0

Cleve

LOS ANGELES (UPI) Webb Everett, 81, a veteran
borse racing official credited
with developing the system of
classifying horses now used
throughout the United States
had died.
Everett, who died Sunday,
had a career in Thoroughbred
racing that spanned more
than :;o years.
survivors include his
widow, Marjorie Everett, a
member of lhe Hollywood
Turf Club's Board of
Directors.

PRICES GOOD THRU
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24th

--

.. ..... ....

•

�7-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Tuesday, Sept. 20 1977
. .
. '
t

b - The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Sept. 20, 1977

Busiest, funniest coul'tl'oom in town

House, Senate down to work

calls which may be made already been certified ·for
House a bill designed to exert monthly without .charge.·
closing later this year.
.
.
By J ACK V. FOX
your story, sir . Ca se dismissed ."
greater · control
over : SChwanwalder's bill also · On a r~lated matter, Rep.
his niche with one-liners from the
LOS· ANG ELES (UP!)
unqualified architeCts. ·
. A wnman who had failed to pay the .
would .require telephone Casey Jones, D-Toledo, in:robench.
· Comm iss ioner H. Keith Byram
Senators returned from a companies to
furnish duced a bill authorlung
remHining $5 of a £ine and said she
You 'lire presumed innocent until
looked out over Division 60 of the Lns
would
have
.
to
go
to
jail
sixweek
recess
and
quickly
C\lSininers
three
times
a year schools fore~ to close
proved guilty , Byram said·. You can
capital improvements appro. Angeles trart;,: w urts from his
she
4idn
't
.have
because
adopted
fotir
bills.
Sen
.
with
a
supplemental
because
of
financial
plead not guilty and have a trial.
priation and to send it to the
bench one recent Monday morning.
the
rest
"
You'd
rather
Ddirectory
of
include
new
and
problems
·
to
speed
~P
You can plead guilty with an
Senate, hopefully for action Marcus A. Roberto, .
The basketball wurt.Sized room
Ravenna,
chief
sp&lt;inliDr
of
the
wrrected
Iistiilgs.
instruction
beforehand
m
gn tn jail than pay $5? You ever been
explanation Md hope it's good
durin g the current two-week
was wall to wall with people- 508 of
billoo arehitecture, said Ohio
Sen. Anthony J . Celebrezze order to qualify for the
in that place• Oh, for Pete's sake.
enough to get you off. Or you can
~ssicWJ .
·
them - wa iting to enter pleas to
· Case dismissed . Get nut of here."
plead·guilty and go to traffic school.
Both the House and Senate standards are 24 years old Jr., ru:Ieveland, oflered a minimum number of school
offenses ranging from jaywalking to
OK, let 's go,
A man who had failed repeatediy
were to reconvene a,~ 1:30 despite modernizations in the bill authorizing school days this year.
speeding.
profession.
districts
in
financial
Jones' bill would allow
to pay his fine - "Next Iinne bring
Then he got down to business :
p.m.
. The Los Angeles traffic courts are
Roberto said an increasing difficulty· to sell tax schools to extend their class
To a man charged with speeding
the mooey or bring a toothbrush ."
The House was to devbte its
the busiest in the world . Last year,
J)uring a brief recess, Byram
who argued no one obeyed the S5
entire afternoon to the capital number of buildings and anticipation notes to generate days by I I&gt; times the nonnal
including parking violations, they
rela xed in his chambers. He ,
mph limit - "I know that everybody
co nstrucLion measure, an - facilities are "designed by revenues to keep from number of hours. It also
took in $37 million in fines. More
would coWJt recess periods,
· himself, is a form~r polite officer ,
ti cipating a. variety of those who do not have the closing .
in this town is going 63. But 80? Fifty
than 70,000 motorists showed up with
to
pra
ctice
The
notes
would
be
based
public
calamity- days,
skills
an
investigator
for
the
state
attorney
attempts
by
lawroakers
to
dollars."
moving violation t ickets .
ar
chite
cture
,"
perhaps
on
anticipated
new
revenues
teachers'
meetings and
change building priorities.
Aman who pleaded guilty but said
gene~al 's office and a lawyer until
And in Byram's eourt the sessions
jeopardizing
safety.
which
otherwise
would
not
parent-teacher
· conference
his appointment as wmmissioner
he didn 't know what he was doing
Some '140 million has
are not only the busiest, they are the
The
bill
would
allow
any
bewme
available
WJtil
the
days
toward
classroom
time
already been reappropriated
three years ago.
wrong - "OK, I'll send you to traffic .
fuMiest. !t is oneofthe best shows in
He was asked about his apparently
from the last two years for law enforcement officer or following year. Three dozen for the purpose of qualifying
school and maybe they can tell you
town , even if you're one of the
projects never completed.
private citizen to file an school districts In Ohio have under the law.
unflappable good nature and
what the hell you were doing
culprits.
wrong.,.
Majority Democrats have affidavit with a county
whether he could keep it up year
Byram sighed and plunged into
indicated they want to trim prosecutor alleging that a
alter year.
A teen-ager charged with drag
the day's work . First he read them
Gov. James A. Rhodes ' person
has
practiced
"Well, I've done so pretty well for
racing - "Maybe this will teach you
their legal rights and within minutes
original $642 million outlay to architecture without being
three years," he said. 11 Why not a
not to pop your weenies in front of
the apprehensive crowd began to
avoid similar lapsed monies registered.
little levity in the court? Hell, these
the local gendarmes."
relax as they realized the judge was
It also increases the
in two years.
people
aren't
criminals.
They
fe~
An elderly man, claiming his
no ogre, but more a would-be
The
Senate
g
t
a
head
start
pel)B)ties
for that crime from
bad
enough
without
a
judge
chewing
speedometer was off, who said "I
0
comedian who seemed to have found
o.n
the
week
's
session
a
$50
to
$200
fine on the first
them out. "
think the car is guilty " - " I like
Monda y, unanimously offense to a $500 fine and 60
days in jail. Subsequent
offenses, now punishable by a
$200 to $500 fine, would draw a
congratulatory call from
By JOHN MOODY
$l ,fXKJ fine and six months in
President Carter.
NEW YORK ,( UPI )
jail.
Cuomo, who will still be the
Sen.
Michael Edward Koch, a hachelor Uberal Party mayoral entry
congressman from
representatives of nine steel Rhodes after the meeting in Assembly has already taken
A representative
of S c hwarzwalder , DBy LEE LEONARD
Manhattan's Silk Stocking in November, conceded the
companies and the United his cabinet room.
steps to remedy another Youngstown Sheet and Tube Columbus, introduced a bill district , captured the runoff atll : 10 p.m., but said,
UP! Statehouse Reporter
" When you've got a major objection of the steel told Rh odes and the increasing from three lo eight Democratic mayoral nomi· un 'snot over ,'' and predicted
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - State Steelworkers of America.
that
the
They
heard
national problem, you 've got firms , stringent pollution legislative leaders it is too the number of directory nation Monday by soundly he would win the general
officials, steel executives and
Youngstown
Sheet
&amp;
Tube
to solve it nationally," agreed control requirements which late for them to prevent the assistance or information delealing Mario Cuomo, the election on Nov. 8.
union leaders have asked
Corp.
will
curtail
production
a disgruntled Sen. Harry are expensive.
finn 's relocation actions.
President Carter and Ohio's
Carey congratulated Koch
personal choice of Gov. Hugh
congressional delegation for at its Campbell works and Meshel, DYoungstown, upon
on his victory by telegram,
Carey,
its
corporate learning of the planned
help in securing relief from move
In an upset, 35-year-old but did not commit himself to
headquarters to Indiana, Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube.
foreign steel imports.
State Sen . Carol Bellamy woo supporting the · Democratic
And they plan to seek a resulting in the loss of a bout moves out of his Senate
the Democratic nomination candidate.
relaxed tinnetable on federal 5,000 jobs in the Youngstown district.
Instead, the governor for City Coll!lcil president,
. Rhodes said he was
air pollution standards to area.
who
is up lor re-election next
ousting incumbent Paul
"We are vitally concerned dispatctJing personnel from
give beleaguered steel firms
reporters
Monday
the
32nd
year
- promised to play "an
without
reaching
agreement
,
By ALVIN Jl. WEBB
O'Dwyer, a lifelong liberal
Bureau of
a respite from the expense of with the future of the steel the Ohio
General
Assembly
"won
't
be
Starting
with
today
'
s
appropriate
role" to "achieve
UNITED NATIONS (UP! )
crusader twice her age.
installing control industry in Ohio and the Employment Services to - The General Assembly an easy one. "
opening
by
outgoing
Koch, considered a liberal great gains for the city we
critical problems caused by Youngstown
to
help heads into the first meeting of
equipment.
''It is loaded with the most President Hamilton Shirley during his nine years in the love."
But apparently any legisla- steel imports/ ' said the steelworkers expected to be its 1977 session today, facing complex and difficult prob- Amerasinghe of Sri Lanka, House, ran on a platfonn of
The victory made Koch the
tive action on state tax telegram sent to Carter and laid off by the end of the year. problems that Secretary lems," he said, listing at the the first days of the new wntinued fiscal austerity and heavy favorite to win the
23-menfber
Ohio
Meshel
said
the
incentives for modernizing the
Kurt Waldheim says . top the Middle East, session . will be spent in support for the death penalty mayoralty in a city where
congressional
delegation.
Democratic
controlled General
and relocating steel factories
including 'in a city wracked by near- registered Democrats
are
among
the " most Rhodesia, South West Africa formalities,
"We unanimously urge you legislature may be more
will
have
to
await
(Namibia ) and the dispute election of Yugoslavia's default and violent crime .
outnumber Republicans 4 to
complex
and
difficult"
in
its
developments in the other to act to curtail the impact of receptive to tax incentives for history.
between Greek and Turkish Lazar Mojsov as its oew
Cuomo, encouraged to 1.
foreigu steel imports on the hard-pressed industries, such
two areas.
communities
in
Cyprus.
president
and
the
installation
Nearly 800,000 of the 1.9
The. key issues among at
enter the race and supported
"The federal government ewnomy and the people of as steel, glass and rubber least 126 items on J,he agenda
Waldheim spoke as the of Vietnam and DjibOu\i as by Carey, was often criticized million registered Democrats
has got to do something about Ohio . We aiso urge you to companies, to relocate and lor the next 13 weeks involve delegates worked until 11 the !48th and 149\h U.N.
as the governor's ''puppet turned out to vote in the
steel imports and EPA support legislationpending in remodel in Ohio.
p.m. Monday to clean up the members.
runoff, surpassing estimates
the
Arab-Israeli
squabbling
candidate.''
He said the General and U.N. efforts to help bring single item left over from the
regulations," said House the Congress ·which would
of
presidents,
The
list
the
Board or Elections made
Koch
moUnted
a
steady
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., stop the unfair competition oi
Jist Assembly - a debate premiers and foreign lead from the time the polls earlier in the day.
about
a
transition
to
black
D-New Boston, late Mon'day. foreign steel producers. The
In the ,general election
majority rule in Rhodesia . between rich and poor ministers who will make closed at 9 p.m., and won four
' 'We're considering tax jobs of thousands of Ohio's
nations
over
global speeches already reaches of New York's five bOroughs, Koch will face Cuomo as the
In
a
late-hour
assessment,
incentive legislation, but working men and women are
Waldheim appeared gloomy economics - but adjourned more than 100 and includes including Cuomo's home Liberal party designee,
even if that were passed right at stake."
President Carter, the Soviet county of Queens, for a Republican .State Sen . Roy
about the prospects and told
The governor said he would
now, it would not do any good.
Union's Andrei Gromyko and winning margin of 77,fXKJ Goodman on the GOP line;
0
The imports are the primary soon call another meeting to
Israeli
Foreign Minister votes.
and radio personality Barry
discuss possible state tax
'problem." ·
Moshe
Dayan.
Farber, the Conservative
CUomo
carried
only
Staten
· Riffe and other legislative incentives for industries
But
it
is
on
the
periphery
of
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
The
ca
ndidate.
is
an
average
22.6
percent
in·
Island - the city's least
leaders met in' Rhodes' office expanding, relocating or
the
General
Assembly
that
Toledo
Edison
Co.
has
asked
In
the Council president
crease over current monthly
populated borough .
earlier in the day to discuss remodeling in Ohio.
much
of
the
vital
work
will
be
race,
the
Public
Utilities
.
Miss
Bellamy trounced
With nearly complete
rates.
"We've got to get a tariff
the imported steel problem
done,
including
Secretary
of
Commission
of
Ohio
to
the
70-year-old
O'Dwyer, who
returns, Koch had 431,849
The company aslo asked
with the governor and '(on steel imports)," said
State
Cyrus
Vance'.
s
New
approve 80 percent of a
votes, or 55 per cent, to won the initial primary, but
that the wst of nuclear fuel
requested $55.6 million
lor the DaviscBesse Nuclear York hotel room ''proximity Cuomo's 354,222 votes, or 45 not by a large enough margin
By JfM ANDERSON
electric rate increase on an
to avoid a runoff with the
Power station be deleted talks" next week with Middle per cent.
WASHINGTON (UP!)
East
foreign
ministers.
interim
basis
while
Brooklyn legislator .
Shortly
after
10
p.m.,
Koch
from
the
company's
fuel
cost
Clear cllfferences still remain
Waldheim
said
those
talks
applicatioos
for
the
entire
aides
said
he
received
a
adjustment
until
the
facility
on how to approach a Middle
is included in the company's and other meetings involving
East peace conference amoWJt are studied.
Middle ·East delegates ''will
11
ra.te base.
despite
Candid"
and The full arnoWJt requested
be decisive" in detennining ;~::!!::::::::."S:::::~~x:::m:::~~~:~:;..,~~~-.::~~~~~:•'&gt;~;:~"\-;:;...-s::&gt;::o:~::&amp;.w.;!!
in
an
application
filed
Sept.
I
,
''constructive'' talks between
....
the Geneva Middle .•.•
whether
Israeli
Foreign
Minister
Lawrence E. Lamb,M.D.
East peace talks, recessed
Moshe Dayan and U. S. of1973,
can
be y
since
«
ficials.
reconvened.
Dayan spent 51'. hours in
By Helen and Sue Bottel
Waldheim said there has
•
talks Monday . with the
been· "no progress" between
•
American side, including an
Israel and the Palestinians on
Parents Are Hard To Please ...
hour alone in the Oval Office
'
the question of a U.N.
Rap :
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. who want this infonnation with President Carter.
resolution recognizing
My boyfriend alld I planned to get married this month
DEAR DR. LAMB '- I have can send 50 cents with a long,
A statement issued by the
Israel's right to exist.
and we couldn't be happier. Just one thing holds us back:
become quite concerned stamped, self-addressed White House, with the
Almost as pessimistic was
my folks.
about the new things I have envelope for it to P.O. Box agreement of the Israelis,
his view of the problems over
Jim's trying so hard to get them to like him. He even
been hearing ahout eggs and 1551, Radio City Station, New said, 11 The talk was consouthern
Africa
sends them birthday and holiday gifts. But he's scared of
how they contribute to York, N.Y., 10019. You will ducted In the open and
particUlarly a U.S.-British
my mother, so he doesn't hand around our house much.
cholesterol in the blood need to restrict your total fat friendly spirit of relations beplan for the shift from white
She's really a lovely person, but neither she nor my Dad
stream.
consumption and particularly tween our two countries,
minority
to black majority
accept him. Really, he 's great! And we're old enough.
I am largely responsible for your saturated fat intake.
which permits differences to
rule in Rhodesia.
cooking for my family. I want
Almost all fat in foods is be discussed candidly. "
Jim's folks like me -I'm almost a daughter to them.
Waldheim said one section
.· to prevent any possible heart made up of saturated fat and
Why
can't my parents be like this? - A~OST
Among tho.se cllfferences
of the plan for Rhodesia,
SEPTEMBER BRIDE
trouble for as long as possi- unsaturated fat. There are were the question of
calling for replacement of
. ble. I would like to know how two types of unsaturated fat, representation
of the
Rhodesja's anned forces· by
Dear Alinost :
many eggs I can safely serve monounsaturated fat and Palestinians at a Geneva
an
anny composed mainly of
There's an old, old saying which' sums up the
· each day or ·week' I mean polyunsaturated fat Even conference and the new
black gnerrillas, is "ooe of
eggs ·included in other foods beef fat contains all three. Israeli settlements on the
predicament of many "darling daughters" : "How .come
the most crucial questions · such as in · custards, pud- The important principle is to West Bank.
the man who isn't hall good enough for your exceptional
and
it has not been resolved
offspring
. becomes the father of the greatest
· dings, cookies, cakes and limit the total fat consumpDayan, in his first trip to .
yet."
grandchildren in the world?"
what have you.
· tion and choose foods that the United States as foreign
"I cannot tell you what the
Parents have this fumy notion that "their" daughters
I understand that heart at- have little satw:ated fat and . minister~. scheduled a news
outcome
will
be."
should
marry . only rich, handsome, suave, perfect
tacks do give warnings, more polyunsaturated fat in conference today and a
And
that,
it
seems,
could
geniuses. Naturally, a scared young man with only
. sometimes several hours them.
meeting with members of the
also apply to most of the other
moderate prospects doesn't rate.
. be(ore ttiey strike. I hear that
From this point of view you Sena.te Foreign Relations
major problems before the
But if he keeps trying - and he's as nice as you sayif you have had any chest should use corn oil or saf- committee and the House
32nd session of the General
well,
they'll at least accept the inevitable .., after a while.
• · pain ..or pain in the left flower oil for cooking but not lnternational Relation ~
" TONGS UN, WHAT are you doing here!"
Assembly.
shoulder or left side of the coconut oil. Corn oil contains committee.
- SUE
neck follo.wed by · excessive ooly about 10 per · cent
+++
Dear Ahnost:
.tiredness you should get to a saturated fat. About 80 oer
How old is "old enough"? Perhape your folks don't
doi:~or as fast as you can.
cen t of coconut oil and paim
agree with you here. Also, they may f!!fl a young men who
· I'd appreciate full infonna- oil is saturated fat. About a
sends gifts but avoids visiting with them is a little short on
·tion on these topics. I do not . third of the fat
fish is
· courage.
'
think we are having any trou- polyunsaturated but only
Get the three together as often as you can, and help
· ble in this area, but I want to about two per eent of the fat
By ROBERT SHEPARD
system of family welfare is expected on the issue, 1.
Jim turn oo the chann, Good luck! - HELEN
be prepared as much as in beef is polyunsaturated.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - payments, food stamps and probably late this week.
The probe of alleged South
The House voted approval Korean . influence-buyin~
+++
possible since we do not have
Monounsaturated fats are The first round of hearings on aid to the disabled. Critics of
Dear
Helen
and
Sue:
a doctor in this city.
not harmful .as saturated fats President Carter's welfare · the plan say it would be too of a bill to provide govern- moved along slowly as House
I thought I loved Kenny. That's before I learned how
· DEAR READER · - The may be other than adding to refonn plan ~ve be.gun· on costly a~d would greatly ment benefits for coal miilers Ethics Committee
inmoody and mixed up he is.
American Heart Assn . the total fat consumption the House s1de while the expand the wel(are program. · who ar~ stricken with black vestigators questioned· for· Finally I said ''No more!" and gave him back his
recoriuncnds that the total · which you should limit.
Senate moves closer to
Portions· of the ad· lung, a disease caused by the mer Rep. Richard Hanna, an .
rung. His mother called up, frantic, and told me he'd
consumption of egg yolks
No, it is not lrue that heart finishin~ work. ·on anot.her min.ts~rlition 's .· energy inhalation of coal dust. A associate of South Korean
swallowed a bunch of downers. He nearly died,
should no! exceed three yolks attacks always give you a m a Jo r a d m 10 IS t rat Lo·n · .program were rwming into · similar measure already has businessman Tongsun Park,
Now llhe says !'in the only person who can keep him
a week including .aU of those warning. Too often the first package - the energy plan. trouble in the Senate.
been approved by the Senate.
The review of Bert l..ance's
·
straight,
a11d if !leave hlm, I'm just the same as killing
used in cooking of any sort.
symptom is the·sutlden attack
The wdfa re plan was
Carter had 'wanted to revise · The legislation is expected · status continued as the
.
him.
I
can
aee wher~ Kenny gets his craziness - from
:rhe dietary .program you and about half of these vi~­ greeted. wlth .skepticism and the utility rate system .to to beileflt an estimated 50,000 Senate Governmental Affairs
he~!
need to ·follow ·is much .more . tims die before they get to th" outright criticism Monday, eliminate bargain prices for rW.ne·rs, and their survivors, Committee heard testimony
U I break uj&gt;, he may really kll) himaell. But If 1doo 't,
complicated than . that hospital. This is why a de!l(lite a ·plea from HEW customers ' that use large at a cost of $238 million in on the steps that led to
I'll be tbe one who goes crazy.- HELP, HELP, HELP !
though. If you don't restrict preventive program is so im·fiscal year 1978.
Lance's · original
con·
• .your calories from any portant: When the first syrnJ&gt;- ·Secret•[)' Joseph Califano for amounts · of electricity · or
The
House
and
Senate
bipartisan ·supPQrt of . the natural gas, but the Energy
firmatton as budget director.
Dear Help:
source to the point of preven- tom is fatal you need to do reform proposals. Rep. AI · Committee voted only to appeared to be as far apart as
The Senate Intelligence
•
Don't thing ftr a minute that you alone are holding
• ting or .eliminating obesity, something before tl)e first Ullman, D-Ore., Chairman of allow the federal government ever on the issue of federal Committee held a cloaetl
Ken's
life in your hands. U hell suicidal, almost any
• your dietary program may symptom ocl'llrs.
the House Ways and Means to intervene in state ·utility ·funding for abortions. Dif- session to consider reportS
depressive
incident will set him off, and your "standing
not be very helpful.
Because of the voiUJ11e of Committee, called the plan cases to advocate energy ferences on .the issue are that electronic surveillance
by"
won't
slop
him.
J. am sending you The mail Dr . Lamb can not "totally unworkable."
holding up final approval of of Panamanian President
wnservation.
ThlsYOIUII man needaprofeaalonalhelp -and 110 does
Health Letter nlimber 1-3 , answer your letters personalCarter'·s welfare reform
Debate on the ad- the. $fill billion appropriation Omar Torrlijos may have had
hill mother. Make an appointment with a peychlatriat and
Diet,
Preventing ly but he
answer plan involves a $31.1 billioo minist'ration 's proposal to needed to run the depart· an effect on negotiation~ on
see that Kenny keepe It, 'nlen drop out ol hill life: move
Atherosclerosis, which will repres•,ntalive letters of package of jobs and sup- extend natural gas price ments of Labor, and Health, the new Panama Canal
••• give
away
from town, If you nwst. It 'a the only way to keep
you the general general interest in his col- plemental income for the regulation . began on the · Education ·,;nd Welfare for treaties.
•
your
li8llity.
- HElEN AND. SUE
guidelines you need. Others urnn.
. poor to replace the current Senate floor and a close vot.e the fiscal year 'leginning Oct.
Uy

LEONARD
UP! StalehmlSe Reporter
.OOt.UMBUS tUPI ) - The
Ohio House was scheduled to
vote inday on a $500 million
LI::~;

passing and sending to the

•

Liberal wms
New York nod

Ohio asks relief from stee[ ·imports

UN_facing hard year

Differences
remrun on

Interim hike is requested

·Mid-East

HEALTH

!!

Berry's World

.Generation Rap

~

How many eggs?

~

.

-

in

Welfare proposal draws criticisms

.

will

•

'

I

~

t

lltiiST SAVIHS II TOWII

.Social
Calendar
'nJESDAY
MEIGS
Muzzleloaders
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Tewksbary's Barber Shop.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, meeting
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at post home
with Vietnam veterans night
to be observed. All veterans
of VIetnamese war whether
members of \be post or not,
invited to _attend.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noori
at Meigs Inn.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens birthday and family
supper Tuesday, Sept. 20 at 6
p.m. at Ft. Meigs. Bring own
table service.
GROUP 2 of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church, 7:30 Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Dwight Zavitz,
Mrs. Helen Shuler, cohostess. Mrs. Harley Brown
to have devotions. Program
will be "Risk Evangelism"
· and the thank offering boxes
will be collected.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesday' Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Guest speaker, Andy Lyle,
game warden. Cult ural
report by Jennifer Anderson
and Sharon Bailey. Kathy
JOhnson and Debbi Buck,
hostesses.
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN Junior High
School PTO, 7:30 p.m,
Wednesday at school .
SECURE TICKETS no
later than Wednesday for
Evangeline Chapter, OES,
Mother-Daughter Banquet
(Sept, 22, 6:30 p.m.) from
Bessie
King,
Euvetta
Bechtel, Betty Van Meter,
Ann Thomas, Naomi King.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Pomeroy Lodge 184, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday with
wotk in EA degree ; all
Master Masons invited.
PAST PRESIDENT
PARLEY, Drew Webster
Unit·39, Wednesday 7:30p.m.
home of Faye Wildennuth.
Ellen Couch in charge of
devotions.
TRUSTEES of Meigs
County Pioneer Historical
Society Wednesday 8 p.m. at
museum.
ROSE Garden Club; Tuppers Plains, 8 ,p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs., Ct!rl
Barnhill. New Qfficers will be
instaUed.
THURSDAY
MEIGS County Women's
Fellowship of the Churches of
Christ, 7:30 Thursday ni ght at
the Bradbury Church. Pr&lt;r
gram will be the observance
rJ. talent night with all women
and their families of the
Churches of Christ to invited
to attend and present their
talent.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes,
home of Mrs. Jean Moore,
7:30 p.m .. Thursday . Plans
will be made f&lt;ir a visit of the
high priestess of Th"!' Court
on Oct.l8.
WOMEN'S Association,
6:30 potluck dinner .
Hostesses to be members of
Group 2 with everyone to take
a covered dish. There will be
a film. Mrs. Richard
Vaughan will have devotions.

STORE HOURS

MON. ntRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

Capt. and Mrs. William
Paddock of Cincinnati, Mr.
and Mrs. Patrick Lnchary,
and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Kelton were Sunday dinner
guests of the Rev. and Mrs.
Harold De~th . Capt. Paddock
had the morning service at
Grace Episcopal Church and
spoke at the coffee hour
which followed.

SERVICE II TDWII

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT
WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD
STAMPS
,

CARRYOUT SERVICE

SWIFT SIZZLEAIII ................ . ........ ':,;· 1 1"
5 VMIIU IES

SWIFT BROW IIIII SERVE .................... :..:;

CHIPPED

CHOPPED

Pound

FRYERFRONT QUARTERS ''""' 6

CHICKEN BREASTS ...... ····• 99&lt;

sc
.,

ARMOUR

---

HOT DOGS

120L&amp;gc

CHICKEN THiGHS ........... ····•
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS

ECKRICH SMOKED SAUSAGE .........~..., s 14 '
3 \IA AIETIES

ECKRICH BOLOCilllA .... ... . .... .. ..... .';;;·

-- - -PDTITDES

OCEAN PERCH ...... $13~
CORNISH HENS 2•0~;~ 5 111l

RED BUTTON

U.S. No. 1 ALL PURPOSE

RADISHES

.,59,

PKG.

20 LB. BAG

SLICED 79' lb.
CHUNK BOLOGNA .......... ... 69' lb.
SUPERI O R

---

-J

-

CALIFORNIA

•

d

-

29c ORANGES

PKG.

s1·29

CHOPPED BEEF STEAK .... '''"'

Pound

~--------------~$~1~.~.
CENTER CUT HAM SLICES ................ ''""'

1 J 19

COTTACiE SMOKED BUTTS ........... ·''""' s1"

$}49

79&lt;

89'

3\/A II If.T IES

HAM

WHOLE CHICKEN LEGs ..... 79&lt;

FRYER HIND·QUARTERS .. ''""' 55&lt;

&lt;§&gt;'IJ sroRIS • CMHl!NALr ooo srmus
GRA PE . ORAN GE. RED or

"-

Jl't•lililt•l:t

SALE DATES SEPT. 21 • 24, 1977
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

FOR.

BOXsAtn
GS
BACK scHo::'lf JN

Jilt •Ill iJit ,] :1

r::;,~c sroRrs • CAROrNAJ 1000 sr ORES
~
DUNCAN HINES

CAKE
MIX
o_..., ...,.

~'"'"

TO

'""" w"~

ItO 00 ~ ~· en... •~e""''"'
n• • , w.no ...d O.~do.uu
0 ... &lt; OUpo~ n... """'''

Bartlett Halves

19

Dl .

•••

MONARCH
0.0

PEARS

30 oz .

0 STORtS

~~ll S lUR£~ •

Can

I
. PILLSBURY

~

14

STEMS AI PIECES

- FLOUR
·~

Ql.

MONARCH MUSHROOMS .... 2 cans s1

CONTADINA TOMATO PASTE '2~"..' 55'
ITALI AN 01 1000 ISLAND

KRAFT DRESSINfiS ................... ~~;~~ 89'
~1)

~AROI ~AL FOOOSlORES

SI_O Rl S •
~ BOROENS

i 'll\tliJ 4·1:1

.

.

HNSTANT POTATOES ~

.
w
•

"

••

lom!l or!o -•"

~·~·""

.....

~

··'

~oupM.

c

.

28 oz.

80JI ·

•

.

.

.

.

•

;~;,;

~~:··

q_;,O STORES

HAWAIIAN

A·l STEAK SAUCE ..................... ~~;,~ 99'

CABIN SYRUP ........,, ...........
99C •• '~-' LOfi
LOfi CABIN PANCAKE MIX ......

.,

•

......Q .....

ez

S • CII.ROINill FOO OSTOA l S
GERMAN VILLAGE

I

1

1 1'

69'

Can

99&lt;. ·
ROYAL 3 :;::. 89&lt;
GELATIN
limit one w ith coup on

DREAM

.

,,.

WHIP ............ ...
ASSORTED FlAVO RS

'' l!m tl

NOODLES

46 oz.

limit two w•t!l co upon and $10.00 pu r~h ue
~~ e ludin g "buttr , w ine 11nd cigarettes

q,O STORES

t"""""

Limo! IW&lt;I w!ln
o"" eo up6Mo•• !.oml!y,

A

GERMAN VILLAGE

NDDDLES
=·~:·~~~~:~~l

1 -Lb.

J9;

• Pkg .

thr'ee wit h coUpon

l umt lWD

ROMAN BLEACH l
.

W!lh

CDUIJ'On

EXTAA It BSOA BANT

...... 9/24117

PAMPERS ....... .. ... : .. 'i;~· s2l•
LUIIICHEOIII MEAT SPAM : .. . , ... : '~;~· 99'

It C• odonol

~o••l

39&lt;

•~

Oklo Stmu

,

00 00 00

..€

C AROitiAL~IS'

Ct'f iCKEN"' BEEF

CAMPBELLSCHUNKY SOUPS ......... :'c~.:· .69'
DELUXE

KRAFT MAC. &amp; CHEESE DINNER .'.... •:;;• 69•..
ROMAN

MEAL Ofl ChUnkS

LIQUID
BLEACH .........................~~~;~~

DAD'S DOG FOOD

,.....s., "

*'0

""'

STiJA ES • CAAOINI\l fOOO STOIIfS

~ ~ GLAD WRAP

·~
' ~'m"'"' ~~-K":
&lt;"

WERE OINNER GUESTS

~IIEIIDLIEST

~

s:
;;

::

•

"""

·

""''P"!'~ ~- lllm o l~

. """.,; -. ;;:_y •
·-c.;;

.

.

.

.
~\

Roll

14~ . A!ROS0Lor

~

te 01.

99;

39&lt; ~

'

lQO·h .

Lunot

BOTTLE

.

\

1

,~

one

w oth

coupo-n and $ 10 0 0 pu rchB!III

ucluding beer. w ine

SCOnS LIQUID GOLD .......... ,,.,

$ , ..

AUSTIN CARPO CLEAIIER .'!.:.· s1 79

!

~ n d cig~:~rt~~ Ues

~TJ SrDRES • CARDI NAL IOO OSlOHlS.

DOWIIIYFABRICSOFTEIIIER '!:.SJS'

l_

~

J.r' I

' t /2 4 /77
~'"

.,....r

Gaod aFC•odlrt•l Aay• l

a
i?o STORE S

xe;; ,111 ill• 1: 1 FACIAL TISSUE

HL
$129 ~

GAINESBURGER

TEA BAGS

200 ct.
Box

ll m ot o"e "'"h ""''!""'
II"' l•mtf'l

Limit two with coup on and 110.00 purch .. e
beer, wine and cign renes

...,. co•mo"

e~ c ludmg

~

0

;;;

--------:_-FROZEN f(J(JI~r~------------~TREESWEET
FRESH LIKE 18·00
VEGET ~ILE$ ;g:~:

20·01 Co•
CornG"'" " ""'

~~~=d Vegetablos Pkg .

59

(

.

DIET RITE OR

R.C. COLA
16~z_ ,,;

WERE VISITING
Mr, and Mrs. William M.
Moore, Carla and Kathy, a'nd .
Mr. and Mrs. Harry s. Moore,
Jr.· Ashland, Ky. were recent
visitors Of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry S. Moore, Sr., Mid. dleport.

Bottles

FROM THE DUKE?
F ARALLON, ·Panama
(UP!)- Panamanian leader
Gen. Omar Torr.tjos says
actor John Wayne called him
Monday to offer his support
·for the new Panama Canal
treaties, which woilld end U.
s. 'control of the strategic
waterway by the end of the
century.
Torrijos said Wayne
telephoned from Newport
Beach, Calif., and said, "I am
In favor of the treaty. I
congratulate y~u. general,
for the magnificent task you
ha~e accomplished, and you
can count me to do aythlng
for ~ better Panama!'

an

\

Ill~•

t

'~

il o•"'

~

00 00 OG,fl

CARDINAL I

STORES • CA.ROINAIFOOOSTOR ES
TENDEFILEAF

~

l

$13 9 ;

24-(]1

..,.

'bo STORf S

i

~QUI&gt;O O ~·· _~&amp;..,;It

·~
'

.
ca..n.! R,..,., llu• Stp•o•

it•':

SLAW DRESSING

SHOUT PRE WASH ................ '~:: 5 1n 1 ";c.:·~
,,..,, .......... """~"
IPo•UIIO
Q"e

...... ~41 JJ

':.~'iJ s1oR;~~ C.\RDINA l Fooo sTOREs

,,~_.:.:.;·

X3•IIJ

...

4.8 ct ,

13·11Jifte]:

�The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday ,Sept. 20, 1977

I-

•

Let The Want Ads Turn ·Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

l·..'

1$ Wmlb. vr Ut tt~r
I tla)
! da).li
Jc.W).ll

Cast!
100

ChOU't.'f.'
1.!$

300

'"'

. .,

uo

ti~\-

~;!;i

;us

Eat-h wunl uwr tJw muumw n 15
..wds L::. ~ t'f.'hC. J)t'r "' on! p..-r WI '&gt;
'Au- rwuung •.•Uk'r ll~n l'\lf~,·un\t•
w.~~ l•nll bt' l'ha rltt'd a! thr l d&lt;~)
l'~tl'

lt1 11\t'UI~ , Cal'\! II Thanb Ollltl
t~nb ~r wotd. S:J 00
Lnmunwu , C.ill ~oh m.advauct'

Oblt tw ry ti

~h.U1ko Hom~
&lt;II'\'

!WileS l;lnJ Ylil 'd ~It's

i.iCCt'ptKJ uUl \ With &lt;.it.!ih " 'l lh

\•n.lt•r. 25 t'tnl d l.il rl(t&gt; for .. w t1ll1'\ ·

ULto; Sol\ Numbt-r In f-&lt;trt: uf Thr St~t­

luwl
T!k:'
tl• t-ill\

Publbl~r t1'l&gt;&lt;.'l"Wl&gt; l ht• rLJ.(IIL
l"t') \'d au} cub ~'' 11\t:d l.h-

vr

JWlwna l Tllt· Pubh:.ht•r \\Ill IIIII lJr

rt'SJ)IJI ~ Lbl;.• flit" 11 1nn · I tli:lll III II.' uwur-

1'..-c:t Ubc.•rtl.m

GUN SHOOJ. Rocme- Cu.n Club
ave-ry Sun olteri'\OQn Foetor
gum; onlv . Assor ted

Chock

meot~o .

ATTENTION BOW Hunters! For o
comp lete line of Bow Hunttng
h.Jpptie s. The Bow Hunter Shop
Ne-w Haven. W. Vo . Phone
(304 ) 882-2827. Ask for Do ve
Richord1o .
Will SHARE home w ith work ing
person w idowed or older lady
Thelma Moore , 7"2 -30t)5. Rt. 1,
Rutland , Oh1o .
A N N O U N C I. NG
NEW store for Rad io Stla&lt;:k , Ace
. Hardware and Meigs Plaza now
open Monday through Saturday
9:00 to 9:00 . Sunday 12:00 to

6,00 .

Pllvllt' 99'!·215ti

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Munday
Nwn un Saturday

Tucsdon
tlrru F nJa\
.. P.M. .

tlw d.a)' ~f1.we publu:at MI

i

Swu.l a)
-4P.M.
Ft'lday a rt~n;wn

For Wodneodor. Sept. 21, 1977

ASTRO·GRAPH

FOUND: FEMALE Collie. Owner
coli and describe . 992 -31 13.

Route Position

your tradit ional tools today Yow
could forget what spawned you r
succ esses and la1 1 by usmg
hard -nosed tac t1cs

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) It S
extremel y 1mportant today to
tu r n the other cheek Even 1f
someone wrongs you . don··t be
vindictive .
·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You 're still 1n somewhat of a
cntica t phase f1nanc 1a11y Don 't
pu1 out ·· seed money " Of!
speculat1on wrthout an assu1ed
return

· cAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 191
Th ts \5 no! the day tor you to
ch amp 1on · unpop ular ,c ause s
Tnough your rn-ot1ves . rnav be
hof"'o rabt e: results co·utd clo ud
you r reouta t1on wnere 1t counts

AQUARIUS (Jan. 19-Feb. 191
You will treat people by what you
remember of them . rather tha;n
now you feel today They ma y
understand what you do . but not

why
PISCES (Fob . .20-March 20)

•

'
•
••
•

••

•

••
••

Don' t send fr tend s 10 a mer c h ~ml
you know little about Your pal s
coutd get r ipped off and you 'll be
red ~ taced .

ARIES. (March 21-April 19) Be
care ful m matters affect ing your
reputa!Jon today. Someone. who
has a rea l or i magined gnevanc e
may seek' revenge .·

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Ttlere'5 a poss1bHi ty you won 't
use your most log\cal jud gment
a t work to.d ay . Hamme ri ng
square pegs tnto rouhd holes
won t work
GEMI~I

! Ma y -2 l -Ju.ne 20 1

Beware of sharpres and '' blue

sky .. promoters today What ~-ou
have co uld quick!~ become the m;
CANCER (June 21·July 22) An
old an d abrastv·e domes!lc 1ssue
should not bE! resu"rrected to day
It will only cause chaos on the

•

Route
Distributing 7-Up &amp; Pepsi
Produds. Applications will
be accepted ''00· 12:00
Thurs., Sept . 22 at Cheshire
Warehouse , Rt. 7.

vour · d1sdcrrn . and

• -.;~; " Sl' 11!' t :H t : "IIH:HI'HI SE r\ S....\ '

••
•

•••

••

..••
••

•••

..
.••' .

.
•

•'

•

••'
•••

•

'

.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
group opposing State Issue 2,
a constitutional amendment
banning use of legliold traps
in Ohio, opened its campaign
agau.t the issue Monday .
· Spokesmen for Ohioans ·for
Wildlife Conser.vatioo pointed
.out the amendment would
forbid "the use of any
trapping device in a manner
. whlcti wtll cause "9ntinued,
prolmged , suffering 'to such·
(wildr birds or animals ."
· "Ho11' would a court
inlerJJret'tbat 'Jaitguage," the
· ·group, ullil!l, · pointing out
· . trappers · might have no

••

~
PARTS FOR Pn1 Golo)(ie Ford for
so le. Phone 992·5858 .

1972 DODGE CHARGER . A.C. ond

Hrt •m Trur forTrailf'r Tra miltfl, l 'fr

many more option's . $1495 . Coli

992·5169.

PARKERSBURG

1·304·422·4060

1977 OLD S CUTLASS S, 2 dr., hardtop . 992 -2448 or 992· 338 1.

992·5084 .
WANT SMAlL business for lease .
Call992·7355 , Okey Schortiger.

Settlement
made for
$1.1 m illiOn.
. COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio
Attorney General William J .
BroWil. Friday 8llllounced a
$1.1 million settlement with
several bOnding companies
for former state Treasurer
John D. Herbert and his
deputy Robert F . Gardner for
loans made in the 1970
Stateh.o use loan scandal.
Brown ·said the action
closed his case against
Herbert, Gardner and their
bonding companies.
Herbert arxl Gardner and
their bonding companies
were held personally liable
by the Ohio Supreme Court
last December for $7.9
million in loans made to King

Resources Inc., Deriver.
Brown said Herbert and
Gardner .00 had to pay
$3,000 of their OW!l money as
part of the settlement.
In August, 1971, King Resources defaulted .on itS loan
to Ohio arxl filed bankruptcy.
Since th~n the company has
IM!en operated by a trustee,
appoirlted by u.s. District
Court.
Brown, in an attempt to
recover the money invested
by the state, filed a claim
with the bankruptcy court .
He · .00 !iled an action
k ' · to h0ld th t H bet
see mg
a
er r

and Gardn~r and their
bonding corn,panies

were

. it .

Aug. 18t 1977 wbert
sOlQ . its- claim fu .the

bankruptcy court . to Texas
International
Co.
of
Oklahoma.

Anti-Issue Two drive opened

..•

•

meet our Qlmhfi cations you
"il l be trai nrd b)' Pr•&gt;fessiurul
Instructors on m:ldem rquipn)(&gt;nt .
Tramon a Part Time bas1s1 Sat. &amp;
Sun. I and Keep vour JOb. or at ·
l l"nd nur 3 \\"rek }'ull Time Reside11 t Tra1ni ng.
)'OU

CASH paid for all makes and
models ol mobi le homes.
Phone oreo c.ode 614 ·423-9531 . ·
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products . Top price for standin g
sowfimber. Call 991-5965 or
Kent Honby , 1-446-8570 .
COIN S, CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket w atches and cha ins ,
silver and gold . We need 1%-4
and older silver coins . Buy , sell ,
or trade ' Coli Roger Wamsley,

7• 2·2331 .
OLD FURNITURE, ice boxes . brass
beds ,
etc ,
comp lete
households. Write M . D. M iller ,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy . Ohio or co li
992 -77b0.
CASH! ! . Junk cars, Fry 's Truck &amp;
Au to , Rutlo{ld . PhQne 742 -2081
or ?42-9575 . Closed Mondays.
NO ITEM TOO Large or too small.
Will buy I piece or compl.ete
household . New , used , or antiques . Martin 's Furniture, 20 N.
2nd St ., M iddleport . Phone

m -6370.
REFRIGERATOR 28 x
SO
smaller . Coli 992 -7513

or

or

m -2354 .
BUYING OLD picture postcards
before 1q50 of Middleport ,
Pomeroy, Rutland , Gallipolis
oreo . 25' each . All others,
$ 2.50 o hundred . Coli 992-3602,
after 4:30 .

IF YOU have- o service to offer,
want to buy or sell somethi ng,
ae looking for work • , . or
whote11er , . . you 'll get resuhs
fa~ter with o Sentinel Waht Ad.

Coll992-2156.

alternatives to ply their
trade .
James Glass, director of
the
National
Wildlife
Federation,
said
the
amendment would result in
"uncontrolled wild animal
populations in Ohio and

create "seVere economic
problems" for agri'culture
and furrelated industries.
Glass sB.id lite leghold trap
co'uld , not be replaced by
other methods of killing, and
that ·rurbearing ·animals
would become farm P."sts,
attacking crops and causing
flooding.

1973 NOVA 350. V -8. Very good
condition. $I bOO. 98S -3S33 .
1974 GREEN PONTIAC Fire Bird .
1972 350 Hondo , 5450. 742· 2211
or 741-2287, after 5.
1973 FORO TRUCK, Custom F-100,
302. P.S., automatic, topper ,
good tires , excellent condition .
Y92 J.t10or992 2595 .

cucumbers . Cle land Forms .
Gree·nh o u se
Geraldine
Clelood .

BACKYARD SALE . Tues ., Wed ., 10
l ill ? lincoln St ., M iddleport .
Clothfng , diShes, albums , topes
and many other misc . itemS.

RISING STAR Kennel Soardin.g ,
Indoor -Outdoor rUns , groom lilg
oil breeds , clean sanitary
fod lit ias oe 367 -7112. Cheshire .

Pnone (614) 367 -0292 .

or

TWO STOKERMATIC cool stoves . I
coal stove brick lined , like new .
1967 Chevrole t · Truck, 283
engine , $300. 12 cu bit It .
refrigerator. Coii 742-'I773 .
1975

BLAZER

4-WHEEL Ori'.le ,
$4500. 1800 watt power plont
with built -in battery charger ,

$300 . 985-3875.
ALADDIN KEROSINE lomp and
heaters rep lacem ent pqrts .
Chimney , mantels , .wicks etc.
Stop iri lor demonstration ond
free catalogue.
Moun tain
Leather and General ·store ,
104·106. W . Union St ., Athens .
'Ohio . 592-5478.

(304) 887-2529 .

PORTABLE "GE Pot Scrubber"
Dishwasher . Top-loodi.ng. In
good condition. $125 . 992-3844 .
NEW

HONDA

Z-58

min i-bike .

992-2514 .
APPLES. FITZPATRICK Orchards
State . Ro1,.1te - 6~9·. Phone
Wilkesv ille , 66.9 -37 8$ .

525.00 Discount
1 Good McCullough Chain
$95.00
Saw
Electric Trim -All cuts with
$29.95
nylon
II) Good Refrigerator $200

Pomeroy Landmark

PUU-7119oriM-1005
Esliftl.otes .,.,._ IG ;N.
6-21-1 mo. pd

FREE ESTIMATES

VIRGIL B. TEAFOitD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E . Second Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 45169
Phone 992 -3325
MIDDLE PORT

3
bedroom renova1ed home

with 2 baths. Little upkeep
and ·walk to the stores .
$17,()()0.
MINERSVILLE - Nice 3
bedrooms . bath, natural
Qas fvrnace, · large garage
and large lot with view ol
river .

SWIMMING POOL - 3
nice bedrOoms. 2 ·baths,
large

family

room

with

fireplace. bookshelves · &amp;
sliding glass doors. Full
basement , garage and
slanted shrubs and pines In_
a nice locale . ·
·

electric 3 bedroom home

4.

street
in
good
neighborhood. Just $18.500.
50x100 LOT - Near store,
city water , and eJ 2
bedroom air conditioned
trailer. Only $6 ,000.
CORNER
LOT
4
bedroom brick, large living ·

HAMMEAMILL ,

good

condition,

$35. 20' 6" endless belt , $20.
985-4137.

-

-----·--

$150. (614 ) 378·0233 .

~ -

NEED A WATER
- SOFTENER?

HOOF HOLLOW Horse s. Buy , sell
trade or train. New and used
saddles. Horse Shoeing . Ruth
Reeves , Albany . (614) 698 -3290.

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and Co-ap water
,soffenl!r,

FIVE BEAGLE mix puppies to give
away . ·7 weeks. old . 992 -77M .

Model

Nciw Only

10· GIVE away : 7 mo. old Irish

Let

us
Free •

.

UC ·X VI.

with

fireplace ,

large

EXPERIENCED

Radiator~

SWAIN

Service,,_ .......,..., ,,.,.o
h .........

Transmmioa Service

Of

ttNM!tor to the

c-o.

-•''!'!

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

,....,.,

992-2174

•279.95

lest · your · water

'W'a _jack~- carsey, M!lr.
Phone Hl-2111

r "" ... ··-

YOU ARE !

...l'

r---;;;;~~ t_..-.-:!-;--'&gt;-...:.__ _

..•'
'

,..------------. . ,.::..
GUTTER
SERVICE

"'

&gt;0

'
. '
'

c..ti•-""'
p1oct .....,._ Wt lllot
il. ,..do il ,..,..n. Special .... to

3/4; l : 3o--M ary Hartman 10; News 13.

'ill}~~

~

Ph011e 949-2114
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

.,

RACINE CARPET
SHOP
-.
i-16-lmo.
:·'

AUEYOOP

LCOK' IWS'TER'' i:

... ,AJ\.11

WHAT IS
"10 IIC
SHALL'
BE!

NOW WHY CQI'oi'T Yli.LL BE A
c300D BOV AN' o.IUST COME
ALONE&lt; QUIET· LIKE?

FOBEG

I I I

Young's
Carpeting

Residential
estimate; 24

AI

l-l}.llll(l

667 -3349.
APP . 200 ACRES of ground , no
buildings . Tu ppers Pla ins .
Ohio . b67-3349.
NEW THREE bedroo m house , fully
carpeted . f ireplace , dining
room , carport. I acre lot.

667-3349.

Yesterday's

Middltport, 0.

1 Square of!

... IF I()UR MOHl~ ~ ~OST
IT, 'IOU GAfJ !::'AT IT l

plies.

l-14-1 mo.

with

5 Tilting

gener~l

Rustoleum Paint PrOducts
EXC AVATING , BACKHOE , dozer ,
low bov , dump . •we can ship p~rts directly . •·
trencher ,
truck s. septic svstem s . Bil l
to your doOr by way of
•. Pul lin s, phone 992 -2478 , day or
U. P.S.
.
night .
•Custom Hydraulic Hose
Making
·

Pomeroy, 0 .

8-7- 1 me .

L---------~--1

home

has

3 bedrooms ,

bath , din ing ,
modern

Rec . R ..

kitchen ,

full

basement , roofed patio In
.f ront. 1raller hookup .
S29,800.00.
NEW
LISTING
Excellent 2 story frame, 7

COUNTRY farmland with secluded woods, water ond good llCcess in Monroe County, W . Va.
S1 ,000 down , call (304) 772-

3102 or {304)772-3227.
VA -FHA . 30 yr . financing . Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E. ·Stote, Athens ,

phone (6 14) 592-3051 .
2.

rooms, 3-4 bedrooms. bath •
modern kitchen, utt llty ,

na,t . gas hot water heat .
This home you must see.

$31,915 .00 .
LOW UTILITIES In this
small home, 4 rooms. bath ,
porches, nat. gas heat, city
water &amp; sewer . $5,400.00 •
LARGE LOT - 88x200 with
nice Mob ile Home, 2
bedr.ooms , bath, large
living R ., B .G . forced air
furnace , equipped kitchen
with din ing area . workshop
in the rear . sa.ooo.oo.
2LOTSOVERLOOKSTHE
RIVER - 2 story frame
home, 3 B. R. , · both, 2
fireplaces,· . own · water
s ·yste .m .
porches,
basement, 7 rOQms in all .

$6,800.00. .
CLOSE IN - I Acre, nice
two bedroom home with
living &amp; dining room ,
knotty pine paneling, builtIn kit . Garage, part
basement. $16,500.00 .
COUNTRY - 2 Acres, near
mines, 2 story frame, up to
4 Bdrms., Ph baths, garage
block
storage
bldg .
$10,500.00.
NEWER DOUBLE. WIDE
- 6 Acres, garage, storage
chicken

house ,

HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY&amp;·
LEONA ASSOCIATES .
m-22st
m-2568

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house . F.A . furnace , storm wind9ws : firep.loce i n Middleport .
Phone 992-3457.

You're in charqe!
Keep an et.je on the

off

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
oil elec. , I acre , Midd leport,

NEW LISTING - 6 acres
close ln. Newly remodeled

GASOUNE ALLEY

I'm

Call992·7481.

SMALL form for' sole , 10,..., down ,
owner fin cm ced . Monroe County, W . Vo . Phone '(304 ) 7723102 or (304) 772-3227 .

BRADFORD . Au ctioneer , Com p lete Service . Phone 949-2487
or 9'o49-2000 . Racine , Ohio, Cri tt'
Bradford .

ELWOOD

TWO CHOICE one acre bUilding
lots ovoiloble . Ca ll 992-5869 or

985-3595.
THREE ~EDROOM on Main Street
in
Rutland . $12,000. Call

992-6238
MUST SELL this 3 bedroom, 2 '/,
both , split-foyer with all the
tros! Priced for below actual
reol estate '.lolue for quick
sole I Nice drl11e to power
plants . $44 ,000. 992-2492.

e•.

992-32•7. $-10,000.

to

basket ...

work.
Sieq!

Sweepers , toasters , irons , all
small aP,p lionces. lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage
on Roure 7. Phone {614} 985 -

3875.
REMODELING, Plumbing , heat ing
and oil types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years ew:perience. Phone992-2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser vice , all makes, 992 -2284 . The
Fabr ic
Shop , Pomeroy .'
Authorized Smger SQies and
Ser vice . We sharpen Scisson .

~Y11ME:

BLJT-~l"­

ReLGAS6S
CF

LATIE~

Youoo-rr

backhoe work ; Qump truckS
and lo-boys fo r hire ; will houJ
f ill dirt, to soil , limestone and
gravel . Call Bob or Roger Jef •
fers , day phone 992-7089 . nighf
phone 992 -3525 or 992- 5232. ·

Will do roofing, · construction,
plumbing ond heating . No joJt.
too Iorge or tao smoll. Phcm

742·2348.

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

b98-7331.

"WINNIE
I WAB A LDNELY OLD
N'AN ... UNTIL YOU
CAME INTO MY
LIF'E r

"

.

.

.

/

.

OCELOT
.

AGENDA

plenty ot-COLD CASH

:

••
:
••

• •

•:•

DOWN
1 " Sir," to
Gunga Din

2 Disciple of

llARNEY

'o

THIS 15 THE TiME
OF L{EAR WHEN SOME
OF THE LEAVES
6EGIN TO FALL ...

5 &amp; &amp; P .M. - Gafor
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Mars Attacks the World.
(able Channel ~ 7:00 P .M. - Paul Gaudino Fam ily Fitness
7·30 - Specldl Edition
8:30 - Celebrity
9 :30 -

Consultaatlon

10 :00 - 700 Club .

WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER.21,1977
5:45-Form Repori 13; 5:5().-PTL Club 13; 5,s.sSunrlse Semester 10; 6 ,25-Christopher Closeup .10.
6:3D-News Conference .t; ·News 6; Sunrise Semester
8; 6' 45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:5().-Good Morn ing.
West ·VIrglnla 13; 6:55-Chuck Wh ile Reporh 10;
Good Morning . Trl State 13.
/ : ~Today 3,4,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
7' 30-Schoolles 10; 8 ' ~ Capt . Kangaroo 8.10;
Sesame St. 33.
9 , ~Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13.15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
9 : 3~Edge ol Nlghl6 ; Andy Griffith 8; IO , ~Sanlord
&amp;· Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3.4, 15; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 : ~Wheel ol Fortune 3,15; Hoppy Days 6,1 3:
Marcus Welby. M .D. 4; Elec . Co. 20 .
11: 3G-It's AnybOdy ' s Guess 3.1 5 : Family t-eua o, 1,.;
Love ot Life 8.10; Sesame St. 20.
11:55-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :00--News 3,4,6,1 0 ; Shoot for the Stars 15; D i vorce
Court 8; Midday 13.
12:30--Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan ' s Hope 6,13 ; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow B. 10.
1 ' oo-Gong Show 3;; All My Children 6,13; News 8; Not
for Women Only 15; Young &amp; the Restless10.
I ' 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2 : ~$20,000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2:3~0octors 3.4,15; One Life to Live 6,1 3: Guiding
Light 8, 10.
J : ~Another World 3.4.1 5; All In The Family 8.1 0:
M.O. 20 .
3:15-General Hospital 6.13 ; 3 :3~Match Game 8.10 ;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 : ~Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals-Our Gano . ,
Merv Grllfln 6; Gilligan's Is. 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Gomer Pyle. USMC 10; Dinah 13.
•
4 , 3~My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family • : Brady
Bunch 8; Little Rascals IS.
5 : ~Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency Ona 13.

5:3G-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co . 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan 1 s Heroes 15.
6 : ~News 3.4,8.10,13,15; Zoom 20 ; ABC News 6
6 '3~NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; CBS News 8,10;
Pests, Pesticides &amp; Safety 20.
7 , ~Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Sha
Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15; Equal Justice Under Law 20; Big Green
Machine 33.
.
7 : 3~Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na• : Match Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8; MacNeil. Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge 10; In Search ot 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8 :oo-Qregon Trall3,4,15; Eight Is. Enough 6,13; Good
Times 8, 10; Upstairs, Downstairs 20,33 .
9:oo-charlie's Angels 6,13; Movie "A Killing Affair"
8,10.
10:00-Big Hawaii 3,4,15; Art in Public Places 33.
10:3~Book Beat 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1 5; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33.

I

11 : 3~Johnny

Yeslerday's Answer

23 Italian city
24 Whaler's
weapon

32 Register
lor

34 "Little

25 Antonym

Things

of hold
27 Listened to
30 Nimble
31 Maledic·
lion

Mean -"

() 19'7'7 KintJ Feahwn Syndu:att.lru:.

r

Movie Channel 4 -

(2 wds.)

Carson 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Hawaii Five-0 8; Movie "ISland In the Sun" 10;
ABC News 33.
12 , ~Janakl 33; 12:40-Mystery of the Week 6.13;
Movie "The Astronaut" 8.
1 : ~Tomorrow 3,4.
1:30-Mary Hartman 10; 2: 1~News 13.
Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 7- p.m . - Gumball Rally
.
9 &amp; 11 p.m. - S.allor who Fell from Grace with the Sea.
Cable Channel 5 7 p.m . - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
1 :30- Marshall Football
10,00 - 700-Ciub .

35 Consonant
38 Society

gal

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

asks for aces

.2.6

NORTH

+KQ 2
"'KQJ98 543
WEST
"'K 10 8 53
• 10 54
+10983

••

EAST

• J 964
.KJ972

+ 70
o!olO 2

SOUTH 10)
•AQ7
.A Q83
+ AJG4
4-A 7
North-South vulnerable ·

West

North Eas1

Soulh
2 N.T.
4+

Pass 4.to
Pass
Pass 7 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead - IO+

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A II By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
The Gerber convent ion
used for the three
L's, Xand
for formation
the two O's,
q'h&gt; - apostrophes,
the length
of etc.
the Single
words letters.
are all
provides that a lour club bid
hints. Each day the C'ode letters are differef)t.
asks lor aces. It has never
CRYPTOQUOTES
been successful in competi·
lion , but e•ery expert uses the
OF lHE 8UtLDIN!3:...
SWIIWJDQ four-club bid under certain
IN ANOTHER
YAWYDA
EN V L
circumstances to take the
WINNIE 1 11-IERE SEEMB
I 'M ALMOST AF'RAIO SVDD
IWZLDQ
LNAHT place of Blackwood.
PYLA
HZ
10 BE A CA.RD STAPLED 10 READ IT1 1F' I'Titl
The first time is in response
VTLNCT to any notrump opening .
ffiOM !HAT 'MJL~
ZLCYHUHLHAZ
ID~EBIDEOF
WE J
DINO BAI?BARIBI!
11115 mATE!
Trxlay's North hand is a good
ZSNWYAJNVCAT
example .
South opens two notrump.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IF YOU WANT A PERSON'S
FAULTS, GO TO THOSE WHO LOVE IDM. THEY WILL NOT North can cou.n t 13 easy tricks
TELL YOU. BUT THEY KNOW.-ROBERT L. STEVENSON if his partner holds all lour

•

............••. ,......•...•..
.

ITSTOO

:

I .

,•

ROACH

t~~!....:::~J~=--=:::~::::::::~~gE=======~=~~~-:~~::::::::::::-~~-:~::~:~~~Pf'~==.J

E•}

LISTEN TO THE

.

Ju•oble" FOCUS

Answer . Whallhe air conditlomng repairman made

GC02...

c.ovoting . septic
systems.,
doter , backhoe, dump tru~
limestone , gro'.lel , btocklop
paving, Rt. 143. Phone I (61•·'

•
:
SWAP SHOP
••
:1 PM - WMPO • 92.l FM
••
••
92 in the Cou"by
••

gesled bY the above cartoon.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
c;.nd ditcher. Charles R. Hot}
f 1eld . Bock Hoe. Service 1
Rutland , Ohio. Ptlone 742-2op!.;

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

the couch!

BOWERS REPAIR -

CARPENTER , flooring , ceiling,
NtW HOME ·with 3 bed room s, · por'leling . Phone 992 -2759.
·
both , lull -bosemen't , lar-ge
goroge, fully· carpeted , Iorge MOBILE Home Repo1r , Ele~
plumbing and heattng . Ph~ne
deck on back . Leoding "Creek
. 992-5858.
Rood . Phone 992 -7054 . ·
IN POMEROY : Lorge, roomy four
bedroom -2 story home . Fully
equipped k itchen , I \11 bath s,
bos~ment . Coli for oppoint mant between 10om and 2 pm .

...and stc114 off

bab4

SIX ROOM house ot 613 Mill St., "EXCAVATING , dozer ," loader and
M ldd,leport . Good condition. In quire ot ,.39 lincoln St. , M id dleport .

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug-

[llJ(IlX]

Socrates
(naut.)
10 Cohort
3 Woody, o!
11 Lissome
comedy
12 Healthy
4 Liquor
13 Against
5 Visigoth
the idea
king
15 Suffix with
6 Animate
Gotham
7 Detail
16 Hypothesis
8 Wrinkle
17 Dwarfed
9 Mosaic
plant
piece
19 Speed (abbr.) 14 Caught
20 Nervous
lampreys
16 Duo
twitch
21 Mother (Fr.) 18 Footfall
22 Dental
21 Promenade
patient,
22 Anticipate
at limes
25 Dieter's
lunch
26 Swathe
27 Child o!
Loki
28 Air(comb.
1-+-+form)
29 Twine
about
33 Pierced
36 Rev up
engine
37 Drove, as
a car (sl.)
38 Gossip
(sl.)
Not' a
soill
If not
Put up
stakes
42 Kind of
parlor

re~odeled .

992 -

I

ACROSS

!IU·5724
Complete Soles ond Stniee oror1 Sop-

r------------,
I.L
MEIGS
IR
8A THROOM S AND
Kit ch ens
EQUIPMENT
ceram ;c tile , plumbmg , carpen try , ond
maintenance . 13 years ex COMPANY ••..
perience . 992-3685.

dose to Rutlon'd . Phone
7481.

FI6HiiN6.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Phone 992-2116

0.

Print answer here:

BORN LOSER

Rtl

HOMESITES for sole , 1 o Cre and
up . M iddleport , n~or Rutland.

I

1.-.....1"-.I!..-..L:&gt;...L.L.....I.-.J

HER 60YFR'IENI7 WAS

(Answers tomorrow)

HARRISON 'S T.V. Repqir . Serv ice
Call• . 276 Sycomo&lt;e , St., M;d.
dleport . Phone 992 -2522 .
ONE ACRE lots . 100ft. Rt . 7. Fron tage. TUppen Pla ins , Ohio .

WHAI 5HE WAS? GOI~­
CENIR'AIINC'&gt; ON WHEN

~.. V&gt;td'

Noi&gt;N Sommi Roarl

Chester, Ohio
8-29-pd .

KJ

IYARNLEj
[) (

D. Bumgardner
~ool Sales

Call for
hour service.

Box 34

NOW WE ~EVER CAN BE
SUSPECTED OF ANY PART IN
THElR R\551NG --

•

Tank Service

"The Oririno1ors
Not The lmiU1ors

SUSPECT WliA1 · REALLY
lfltl51 HAVE HAPPENED
TO POOR 1.1R . JONES ..

6000! THAT FOOL. JONES ··
AMD THE CONDUCTOR - ·

...•

Jack's Septic

992-2206 or 992-7630

NA:IN lHEY'LL NEVER

r - - - - - - - - . •·

and

j

KJ I

AnniYeiSiries

Any day, anytime.
Phone 985-3806

Roulll P-"'1· 0.

'

!19l·5!!2
6-22·1 mo.

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

I

TANNIF

•

Bob Hoellich

KI

I

Pmports

commercial-

Cirpel&amp;6 UphOISiery
Phone Mike Young

.."•

Wed dines
Port11ib

~27-TFC

Slum Ellr1clioa

KIHCC

••

Ph. 37U250

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each sq~.,~are, to form
tour ordinary words.

..,.•,.

THE PHOTO PLACE

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
leedstille, O.

ID'il

~ ~ ~~ .,

boidon.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

garden space. ·CHEAP AT
$17,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ALL TYPES OF HOMES,
NEW HOMES. FARMS,
ACREA.GE . FOR GOOD
RESULTS LIST WITH US .

SALESMEN
SELL
PROPERTY, DO YOU
.WANT YOURS SOLO? IF
SO CALL "2·3l25.
HELEN L. TEAFORD ·
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
ACCC.SICATES .

......

Mama lit

Superior

bldg.,

WANT IT SOLD, CALL US
AT 992-3325.

•

..:·

around front porch . Want

$22,500.

LI7T'EN• ¥0U 'f:!E A v.! . P. AT
McKEE lf-JDU5TRI55, WLADEK!
WE'RE AS HOT TO 60 ON THIS
NEW FIGHTER PlANE AS

1:'

or949-2860

dining. basement and wrap

.

Plimeroy Landmarli

~Ail·

with fenced level lot . Quiet

..

Ptl'ilnnd trew thttM UNttlt IUif
ollhtlt fine ''~\::-:: 1114 &lt;~&lt;·
pwls. in tttil aru. !IIi tiMII , .
ducb quMi':.: low Nltettst IMMt Nft~I
11
loul '*or
99Z·70~
a frtt Olliftlllt ·
or stop by 1100 E. Maio Sl) P -.
0.
·20.1 mo.

Fret EstitnJtts
llo Sundly Calls P~IM

MAIN
POMEROY,

W.lll
RE AL10R

p&amp;ain •

S-1 3-1 111(1

Phone "2-2181

TEAFORD

::,.

... u....

11t11.. liM is .. .......... """
Pllllo rtii · 1114 posts,

• local Clllllrattor
Phone 949-2801

SJJICute, Ohio
Ph. 991-3993

Heroes lS .

6·11(}- News 3,4,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6' 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6 ;
CBS News 9,10, In Pursuit of Liber1y 20.
7:00-Truth or Cons. J ; Cro•s.Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Pop
Goestt'leCountryB; News ·IO; To Tell the Truth 13;
My Thtee Sons IS; Ma[orette Fesl/val 33.
7 : 3~Hollywood S,quares 3,4; Wblfman Jack 6;
Country Carnival 8; MacNeli-Lehrer Report 20 ;
Price is Right 10; That 's HollywOOd 13; Music City
15.
8,00-Richa.rd Pryor 3,4,15; Happy Days 6. 13; Fltz.
patricks 8, 10; Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
8 ' 3~Laverr)e &amp; Shirley 6, 13
9 ~0G-Movie " The Girl in the Empty Grave" 3,4, 15;
Three's Company 6, 13 ; Mash 8, lOi In Performance
at Wolf Trap 20
9 ' 3~Soap 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13; IO ' O~Famlly
6,13 ; Lou Grant 8, 10; 10 , 3~
H : oo--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNe-il -Lehrer Report
33.
i 1:3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " The Thief Who
Came to Dinner" 6, 13; Koiak 8; Mov ie "Divorce
American Style" 10; ABC News 33; 12,00-Janakl
33.
1 2:&lt;~Movle " The Alpha Caper" 8; 1,00-Tomnorrow

'·'·

~~· · ··~
ooe IIIII will - · its -v lor
1:1•
COtltt, tllis ail &amp;Mit JMt ....

Bissell Siding Co.

LARRY LAVENDER

-

,...

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

Blown
lllillltioft Strric:•
r......,, A..Uble
Blown Ioiii Wtlls &amp; AHies
SIOIIII
IIINDOWS l OOOIIS
REI'I.AC{IIENT
WINDOWS
AWMINUM
SIDIMG-SOFfiTT
GUTTERs.IWMINGS

~ack w. carsey , Mgr .

and 1 coffee table . Very ' good
shape , $90. Coii992 :611A , ofter

fWO
,&lt; \K(
Registered
mole
oplicol toy poodles . Shots and
c. lipped
$65
eocl;\ .
1·b14 -2S6-b(lq8,

I

Ho1point Refrigerator
I New 20 cubic ft. Chest
Freezer

POMEROY - 5 bedrooms,
llfi baths, central heotlng
. NOW SELLING. Shoklee organic -and_ out of h,l gh water .
products , Rowje igh p(Oducts ~ $24 ,000
unfurnished
Block D i amond
Linement.
$2~.000 fully furnished.
992-7825 .
5 YRS. OLD - Nice all
TWO MEDITERRANEAN end tables

60,000 B.T.U AUTOMATIC gas
healer. bcellent condition ,

142-3162.

K1tttlen Cabinets- RoofinR - Concrete
Pat1os- Srdewalks - New Constrllctkln '
Remode(inJ.

____..

~ ,... ..-

TUESDAY, SEPTE MBER 20,1977
S· JO.-Odd Couple 4; News 6; t:lec. &lt;.o. 20.33; Hogan 's

•
'
••'
•

....... 1114=11,._1

JDO Mlirl s~
P -, Ohio
P-992-6212
"99l-626l
llll. 1G 4:3H.II.
SRLES UO SUVICE
1·28-1 mo

WOODED 1 ACRE lots neor Meigs
High Sd~ oo l. 992·5523.

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Animal ( arel ine, 992 -7680; or
after ~ l? .m ., 992 -5427.

Setter· female pujn. 3 k,ittens , 4
mo. old, one black one, yellow
and white, one grey t'triped . 6
weeks old. yellow and orange
long hair kitten . Port C.eriTron
. S,hepherd · female - pup .

Rovltl
· ,_..,, Ohio 41769

STARCRAFT lOth anniversary so le THE PROPERTY of the late John l.
on· mi'ni -motors . trailers , and
and Viol a Jeffers located on US
fol ddowns , Tr avels to r 25 It,
RT. 7 Bypass bv US Rt. 143 .
$4400.00; 20 h . min i-motor
House, property , 29 acres ,
$1 0,850.00. We sell ser'.lite and
more or less . mineral rights ,
quality . Camp Conley Storcrah
some limber 1 A real bargain .
Soles , Rt . 62 nor ttl of Pt. Plea ·
Must sell. $8500. Call J"otln A.
:sont.
Jeffers , Jr. , after 5 pm .

AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs .
(M in .) Collies . 2 females , 7
weeks o ld. Shots and w ormed .

Phone (614 ) 367-0292
367-7112 . .

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

New Co -Op water and
softeners, model VC-SVI .
Only $279.95
Save sso .oo on a new

THRH BEDROOM ronch mosonary
construction. 1500sq . ft . Out of
!own . 992 -3684 , 9t i15 . $16 ,900.

THREE FAMILY Yard Sole, Wed . ·GREEN BEANS. Pick your own. Br ing container. Arnold Hupp
and Thurs .; 21 and 22. 9 - ? at
form , letart Foils . 241·2623 .
Mrs . Mike E'.lom, Portland , on
Co . Rd . 31 . CanCel if rains .
1974 HONDA "Cl 200. Excellent
condition. 4600 miles . W ith
THREE FAMILY Yard Sole. 6th ond
helmet
. Must sell'for be~t off~r .
Vine St ., ·Racine, Ohio. Toys ,
baby items . Chlldren 's clothes ,
disfles . etc . Wed .. Thurs .. and
Fri . t ill 4:45 pm.
·

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

p~

FOR SALE

1976 C-20 Chevrolet Truck with
camper l op, $3800 , firm 1974
Dodg.e truck , 1ft !on, with
camper top , 51 800 . . Call LOTS FOR sole near Meigs M ine I .
742-2316.
742-2746.
1969 IMPALA. 4 dr . Fine condi - FIVE ROOM house ard bath .
tion . New point 1ob. 350
~92-5871.
engme . 742 -2359 .
TWO BEDROOM house
in
1972
El
CAMINO .
Phone
Siracuse . 2 porches , storm ,
~99
:..:.:&gt;~·7.:0=
0 1.'----~--a uminum bu ilding. 992 -5395 .

5 FAMILY Garage Sale . 8-48 logon
St. , Middleport , Sept. 1~th,
20th, 21st , 9-S. Gooddothingof
all 'kinds , dishes , drapes .
bedspreads , ·some furniture
an·d lots more misc . Will be
signs .

you I! anly . million on

Create unnecess,ary tJroblems

CANNING TOMATOES. PEPPERS.

SINGE R
Sewing
FOR SALE or rent : Nice 2 bedroom SCHOOL
Machine$. Many fea tures. Only
Mobile Home , unfurnistl~d .
S31 . 50.,
cosh
or
terms .
rent deposit required . Possible
992 -SU6.
l or buyer to leo'.le mobile home
on lo t in a l;teautiful count ry set - HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers .
ling . 742 -3122 .
1977 model , W ill sell for $22.50,
co&lt;Jh or terms ~2 514b

1970 CHEVROLET BI SCA YNE. New
cond fflon .
tires .
Good

liable for damages because
the investments were. made
.down .you r.nqse at no oneJDday · in violation of Ohio Law .
_Mosl poopfe are no!· deserving or
The ~ate picked up $8.4

!I
••
••

l8i5.

- Pkm M )\\' fur a Pmfessiol1ill
ca reer Ori\'ing a "Big Rig:' Wf" are
a Priv ate Traming Sch.ml &lt;1nd if

home Iron&gt; ·
LEO ·(Julr 23-·Aug: 2~) Loo\

{

~~

No child ren and no pelt .
Depos it requ ired . 742 -31 22.

Don't JUS! be : &gt;&lt;1tt-,fil:'d \\ith ,!jOB

LIBRA (Sept . 2.3-0cl . 23 )
Moderation . tact and lOgiC are

·----

1f''"'''rl

Company Operated

repeat a bad t.nanctal move you
made before 1n a s1 milar s1tua·
non . Chec~ your me·mory bank ,
F1nd out more about yourself bv
s ~nd 1 ng for your copy ot Astra Graph letter Mail 50 cent s tor
ea: h and a long . self-addresse d.
stamped envelope to Astr o Grapt1 P.O Box 489 . Rad iO G11v
Stat1on. N Y. 10019. Be sure to
spe c1fy you r btrth sfgn

______

CARTER

T.RACY, IIYOULD L.l KE
WITH YOU, SIR,

i'll()f!P

,.'

Kinasbury lloml Salts

DAVID BRICKLES

~

$18,300

Open For

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept . 22)
There 's a possibility today yo u'll

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park . Rt
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
AUCTION
Lorge lots with concrete patios ,
A lso, hone
of used m i se and new mer sidewalk s, runn•rs and oft CAMPER, S600
tro1 ler . $450. Ptlone (b l ~ ) 698chand ise at Oh 1a Rive r Auction ,
! !reel pa rk ing P~one WJ . 7479.
3290.
Me1gs Plaza M tddlepor t , Oh1o .
COUNTRY MOBILE H ome Park .
~orn e pho~ {304} 773-54? I.
SPRING
GARDEN Supplie s, CabRoute 33. nort" o f Pomeroy .
bage
cauM iower . broccoli,
Lorge lp ts . Coll992 7~ 7 9 .
ond heod lettuoe
plants.
AVAILABLE AT Rh•erside Apts 1
yellow , white, and red on1on
bedroom , SIOS per month $150
sel s on ion plants , Ken neb9c,
s~&amp;eu rity deposit. 992-6098 .
cobbler, Katahdin, Red Pontiac
10,. .SO 2 bedroom trail er . $7150.
_
m 13~
and Red Loso&lt;fa seed potatoes.
SMALL TWO b&amp;droom house in
Bulk: garden seeds, potti ng so d,
Ru1
lond.
992
·56S8
.
1973 AH ELECTRIC Mobile Home 2
peal moss . frui t tr"• and ros•
bedroom I ' ' both, underpmn- FOUR ROOMS ond both . Adult s
bushes . M i dway Mo r ket ,
9d w ith 10 x 10 util ity building.
only . No pels . 99'2 -S908 .
Pome roy ,
Otlio, 992 -2582 .
992-3702 , alter 5 pm .
Sob:
s
Markel,
Mason , W. Va.
FOUR ROOM furn ished or un(304) 773 -5721.
MOBILE HOME, 8 x 52 . 3 saddles.
fvrn ished opt. ava ilable Saturm -2307.
day . Sept. 17 . m -3658.
ECONOMY TRACTOR with o!l at tachments . l ik e new, aSk1ng
TWO BEDROOM Mobile Home.
$2250.
Pho ne (6U ) 698 ·3290 .
La rge country lo t . Unfu rnished.

--TUES . rught , 1 pm , l ots
-

PENNZOIL RUTLAND open daily TVVO BEDROOM house. Carpeted
till 10 , Closed Mondays .
liv ing room . All new po int .
w recker serv ice, ti re repair .
992-3090.
FOR THE f inest m wood · heati ng
A CAREER with. o future for a man
Phone 742· 9575 or 742 -208 1,
stoves , cookstovei and cool
or woman who wonts ttl e best
TWO BEDROOM trailer . Rea l nice.
sto ves . Cal l Zion Heat Co., 8
in lil a. A pay check every PlANO TUNING and Repair. Lone
992-3324 .
Pufnom Drive , Athen'li . (614)
Daniels , 992 -2082 . 12 years serweek , fa ntast ic f ringe benefits .
'lic~ to Tri -County. Reference : FOUR ROOM t.tnfu r nished apt . in
Q%·1187 or (6 1 ~ ) 592 -6079 .
all local work . Gi'Je us a coli Ot
Chester. No children or pet s
Elberfelds .
992 -2480 or write, Western
ONE
YEAR Polled Hereford Bu ll.
$60 mo . 985-3885.
Southern life Insurance , 2 18 1- l WILl TAKE core of elderly in our
Can be registered . 949-2368.
E. Main , Pomeroy. Otlio. for inhome. If i nterested, phone
1'il75 SUZUKI GT ·550. 4700 miles .
formation .
992 -7314 .
Windshield, crash bar , sissv bar
WILL DO bobysitting in my home.
and lvggoge rock . Excellent
742·2833 .
FOR SALE or Trade · House and lot
condition . 949-2575.
tn Mason, W. Va . 3 bed rooms ,
1.\~'iTh'r cno.\
A BABY sitter for a f ive yeor old ,
both . living room . k itchen. utili - TRASH COMPACTOR . less ttlon 1
-"/ }m 't'l'!i t mpl. ~\·, ·d ~~ /mJli tmi k
preferably in Tuppers Plaint
year old . 949 ·2480 or 985 -3565 .
ty . extra Iorge room for recreo·
tiiJ.: n1m{&gt;m m .1 had al/luwl an 1
oreo . Will drop off on way to
tion
or
TV
room
.
(304
)
773
-5227
,
TOUCH AND Sew Does 11 Al l. Just
fl~l' f(lllllll~r:; of u b111d
work around 7:10am. 992 -7288
offer 5 pm .
l i~e new . Sold for $449 .95 .
or see Y11onne Garten , 2 mi. off
Clearing out stock . Mus1 sell for
Rt .7 on Sucess Rd ., greenFOR SALE or Trade : GEESE . 4
S69 .95 .
Cosh
or
terms .
trailer on left.
111 i.'if.J "a.~
~~· tht { - S. I If pi
young Bore hogs . Coli even Cjlq2 -51 46 .
ings . 949 -2115 .
of La~''· Rlm '0/1 of Lahw .\I!Jit'

Bernice Bede Osol

Sept 21 , 1977
Path s that you 've trod before w11\
lead you to the greatest gams
th 1s comi ng year II you have to
axe vour way through the forest .
1! cou ld be another story

dust t:onh o l and spec ,al m1JC1ng
s alt for fa r m ers , EJCceiSIOI" Soft
Works Mom SlrHt , Pomero y
Oh1o or phone 992- 3891

5•34

Phone (304) 773 -5471 .

1/r'\, fltr!if fill ,\'u.

Business Services

3 AND .. RM , furn •shed and un- COAl . limeston• ond calcium
cMondtt ond colci um brine for
1urnlshed opts
Phone '192-

AUCTION EVERY Fri. , 7 pm . l ois.
of n•w ond used merchand1se
or Ohio R1ver Auct ion Me1gs
Plozo , M iddleport , Ohio . Home

IT WAS NdT UNUSUAL
FOR MARIE,THE MAID,
TO SERVE THE MISSUS
ON REQUEST.

THE 81RD5 ...
THE LEAVES !

aces. He is willing to gamble
on six if South holds just three
and will sign · off at four
notrump if South only holds
two of those desirable cards.
II is possible, but most im·
probable, lor South to have a
two notrump opener with only
two aces .
South shows all four aces
and North bids the cine~ seven
notrump .
.
Note that if South showed
three aces North would bid six
clubs. South might have a
high-suit. If South showed two
· aces North would sign off at
lour nolrump which would be
safe because South would
need all missing king-queens .

~Q~-We keep getting questions
about the Late Easley
Blackwood .
For the benefit of those

readers, we wish to report
that Easley .is not only alive ,
but he should be with us for a
long time .
(Do you hSve a question lor
the BKperts? Wrfla " Ask th6
Jacobys" care of th i s
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individua l questions If
stamped. self·Sddressad
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions will
be used In this column and Will

receive copies ol JACOBY
MODERN.)
.
1NF.WSPAPER ENTE:RPRI SE ASSN.I

�I

10- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Tuesday ,Sept. 20, 1971

Evacuation called off
.

MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- A fire and several
explosions destroyed the
Mansfield Plating Co . here
early today. An evacuation of
the area was 5\arted when
police believed cyanide gas
containers had exploded.
Police said it was flfsl
thought ibe eiplosions had
released cyanide gas into the
area: The evacuation was
started and the area sealed
off.

However, ·the evacuation
was stopped after it was
determined the cyanide
containers

were ·

riot

destroyed.
The cyanide, along with
acid used in a plating

proetlSS, was stored in

a
basement security room at
the plating firm.
Police
Sgt.
Edwin

VETERANS MEMORIAL
. Admitted . - F1Qyd Bush .
Letart, w. Va. ; Don Hooll"r.
Shade ; Brian
Shuler,
Pomeroy ; Ahlx Fraser,
MiQdleport ; John FrY, New
Haven; . Grce .Gloeckner,
Pom~y ; James steele, New
Haven.
Discharged - Allison Lee,
Susan Burns, Goldie Roberts,
Archie !Ufe, Alma Young .

struck by an auto at 10:11
p.m. on SR 160, three tenths
of a mile west of Gallipolis.
The animal ran into the path
of a car operated by Diane L.
Goldsberry, 16, Gallipolis.
There was minor damage.
Nelda G. Yockey, 52, Rt. I,
Racine, was cited to driving
left of the center following an
accident at 12 :50 p.m.
Monday on 125, four and six
tenths miles east of SR 1 in
Meigs CoWlty. The patrol
said the Yockey car went left
o! the center striking a
~~~~~~~~~~ vehicle driven by Gene D.
Wolfe, 56, Portland. There
was moderate damage.

BOOTS
14.00 to 112.00
Ladies Golf Shoes

16.95
MANY
PREID GIFTS
99' to 119.95
1

Use Our
Layaway Now
For Christmas

Waverly edged
in golf match
Meigs · High School's golf
team posted a close SEOAL
victory over Waverly Mon•
day afternoon at the
·Riverside Golf Course in
Mason. The final score was
Meigs 198 Waverly 201. The
win pushed Meigs' season
record to 3-1, 2-3 in the
SEQAL.
Scores were as follows :
Waverly - Troy Bante, 48 ;
Tom Depugh, 49; Harvey
Gillespie, 51 ; Rod Brower, 53
and Greg Sturgell, 53.
For Meigs, Chuck Follrod
shot a 40 ; Lance Oliver abd a
43; Chuck Kennedy , 54 ;
David Kennedy, 61 and Scott
McKinney, 69. . ·
Last ·week, Jackson
defeated Ironton and Meigs in
a three team meet. Meigs is
at Belpre tonight and at
Jackson Wednesday.
'

Bernice D. Prince, 74 , of .q81

Ella Mae Capehart, 90. New

Havenr d ied monday at the
Dalton Nursing Home in

Mochoskay said " a very

Ironton.

Born here April IS, 1887 sh&amp;

was the daughter of the late
John and Sarah

Grinst~ad

Ord. Her husband, Thomas
E. Capehart, died In 1966. She
was also pre&lt;:eded In death by
a son , Thom,as P ., and a
daught~r .

Mrs .

Ella

Rot~ .

·

.

Capehart was a
member of the New Haven

United Methodist Church .

Surviv l'ng
are
four
daughters. Mrs . 0 . J .
(Agnes}
Howatd ,
New
Haven :
Mrs .
Eugene

IEIIzabethl

co·ttle ,

· Chesapeake, y~ .: Mrs .
James A. (Ve"Ya) Hussell ,
i\1\oorehaven, Fla ., and Mrs.

Holzer Medical Center
ley, Cecil Queen, Ruth Roush,
(Discharges, Sept. If) .
Gertrude Smith. Violet
Roberta Batey , Norma Smith, !loy Taylor II, Willard
Beatty, Grace Correll, Taylor, Jr.
Thomas Cremeens, Floyd
(Blrtbs, Sept.l7)
Drummond, Goldie · Mr. and Mrs . Thoma s
Freeman, Reed Gandee, Mrs. Mayes, a son, of Mason, W.
Patrick
Harbour
and Va .
(Discharges, Sept.l8)
daughter, Cheryl Houck,
Winifred Hurst, Ives King,
Mrs. Joseph Coyan and son,
Thelma Lester. Bonita Darla Dunfee, Leida Frost,
Manley, Robin Moore, Laura · Mrs. Gary Jones and
Poling, Emma Reed, Eph daughter, Sally Lambert,
Ross, Randy Rothgeb, Chad Edna Lavender, Estella
Smith. Mrs. John Wamsley Layne, Elton Lykins, Mrs.
and son and Marie Wentzell. Martin McKelvey and son,
(Birlbs, Sept.16)
Darrell Nickels, Jr., Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Carl Reigel and son, Irene
Hayes, a daughter, Pomeroy ; Rus,ell, Mrs. Mark Siders
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Shelton. and son, Charlotte Wright.
a son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
(Discharges, Sept.191
Benny Wolfe, a daughter, . Virginia Chapman, Sharon
Rutland ; and Mr. and Mrs. Drummond, Fern Gussler,
Gregory Fife, a son, Juanita Halley, Shelia
Gallipolis.
'
Lanham, Allen Martin, NUa
(DIBcbargea, Sept.l71
Milliken, Martha Phillips,
Charles Akers, Clarence David Singleton. James
Anderson, Loren Blanken- Singleton, Emma Swon,
ship, Pauline Buck, Cleo Mary Van Meter, Teresa
Caudill, Willard Clagg, Ada Warrens, Edison Weaver,
Clary, Mary Cornell, Mrs. Rick Whobrey, Mrs. Betty
Carl Cox and daughter, Mrs. Wolfe and daughter.
Ronald Davis and daughter;·
(Births,Sept,l9)
Brian Donley,
.Goldie
Mr. and Mrs. David
Durham, Daniel Garthee, Wright, a son, Rutland. Mr.
Ryan Johnson, Goldie and Mrs. 'James Large, a
Lambert·, Mary Lanning, daughter , Langsville . Mr.
Mrs. Rn Milhlbach and and Mrs. William Wells, a
son, Robert Musser, Thelma daughter, Northup. Mr. and
Nibert, Charles Pinkerman, Mrs. Kenneth Reynolds, a
Catherine Price, Marie Purs- daughter, Mason, W. Va.

News •• in Briefs
(Conitnued from PBI!e I)
than normal b~t not as bad as last ..&amp;.ter's record ireeze.
Based on ''very pr~liminary" and "tentative" forecasts,
·the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said the
Northeast will be colder than normal and the Southwest mild. ·
II couldn't yet predict the weather for the Northwest lind
Southeast. " It is unlikely this winter will be as severe as last
winter," said Donald Gilman, chief long-range forecast for the
National Weather Service.

Michael 1Edna) Elias, South

Point . Ohio ; four sons, J .
Alden Capehart, Louisville,

Ky .; Jack G. Capehart ,

Kenova ; Roy M. Capehart ,
Brookneal , Va ., and D!ln B.
Capehart, Gainesville, Fla .:
23 grandchildren, 31 great grandchildren. anc;i three
great-great-grandch ildren.
Funeral services will be

held

at

!he

Foglesong

Funeral Home Thursday at 2
p.m . with the Re:v . John
C~mpbell

officiating. Burial

will follow in the Graham
Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral home after 3
p.m . Wednesday .

Walford St.. Columbus, a

former
Long
Bottom
resident , died
Tuesday
morning at
University
Hospital
in
Columbus
following an illness.
N!rs. Prince was a member
ol the long Bottom United
Nlethodlst Church . She Is
survived by her husband,
Wayne R. ; tnree daughters.
Mrs . Clarence ( Katbleen)

a~insi

the Southern ()hlo

Cool Company In the amount

of S750,000 for person1f irt·
iuries while working In
constructiOf"! at Meigs M ine
number one has been settled
out of ·c ourt. The amount of
settlement was not d isclosed .

CARL HYSELL, juvenile

No motive for the shooting
was apparent immediately
but a spokesman for the
Montgomery County
coroner's office said robbery

broken . The pale was
damaged by a trailer but was
not broken . Driver of a car

Involved In the accident wu
Eugene Morrl..,. A trailer
struck the pole In the chain of
events In the acc ident.

PARIS (U Pil - PABLO
tronsporled o 15 year old boy
. to Moh)can Youth Camp at . Plcas$0'S heirs have ended
Loudenville
for
ap · .C'h years of squabbling over
prow:l'mately five tO six the S2SO million Htafe feft by
Dean, Mrs. Barney (Betty months tor violation of the Spanish artist, the largest
on record tor any artist.
Lh1Fl) Burton and Mrs . probation artd delinquent
Plcas$0 left no will wh~n he
Donald I Bertie Lou) Polley, acts .
died In Aprll1973 at the age of
all of Columbus ; a sister ,
Mr'$. Dorset Riebel, Belpre ;
COOLVILLE-The Rev. J. 91 , .and shortly before had
pred icted the battle among
seven grandchildren, thr.ee Paul Hilt ol Pendleton, S. ·C..
great - gr~ndchlldren,
a will be evangelist for a fall his heirs for lhefr share of his

nephew and two nieces.
Preceding her in death
were a son. Millard Wayne,
killed in WW II and a
daughter, Imogene.
Private funeral services for

the family will be held at 1: JO
p.m. Friday at the Wh ite
Funeral Home In Coolville
with the Rev . -George Frank·
lin Pickens officiating. Bur ial

will

be

in

Reedsville

revival to be held Tuesday

through Sunday at White's
Chapel Wesleyan Church,
Reule 2, Coolville, at 7:30

Columbus.

WINCHESTER, Eng-land
( UPI)
Victor,
the spread-eagled giraffe who
fell live days ago and couldn't
get back up, died today as
T H E
A N N U A L Royal Navy ~xperts hoisted him to his feet In a gia nfsllng. ,
homecoming at the Eagle
Vl cfor's owner , A\)rwell
Ridge Community Church
will be held Sunday with . Park Zoo chief John Knowles ,
Sunday school at 10 a.m . had warned that the lift

CHESTER COU NCIL 323,

Daughters of America, will
meet at 8 this ev_enlng. Inspection will be held and

birthdays

ob-

served. Potluck refreshments
will be served . Those attending are asked to wear

had been ruled out.
The spokesman said
another sister opened the
back door when a man cwne
ro the door. The man fired at
her but missed and the bullet
ricocheted off the wall. Sister
DOnna came down the back
stairs when she heard the
noise and was shot once in

Cllicago, was a member of

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Boswn Red Sox have claimed
Cincinnati Reds oulfielder
Bob Bailey on waivers, the
Rf\ls announced.

operation could be risky
because g iraffes are delicate
animals .

AMONG THE enterfalner.s
at Yesteryear held Seturday
at the Senior Citizens Center
was the Francis Andrew

Band. Mak ing up the group
bes ides the leader were Mary.
Wippel , Bill Thurston, Betty
Osborn , Br ian Collins, Teresa
Coll i ns, Paul Andrew and

Olive Weber.
CUNDIFF DEPWYED
MASON, W. Va. - Staff
Sergeant Gary L. CWldiff, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Elmo L.
Cundiff of 12 Front St., has
deployed with his Little Rock .
AFB, Ark.. unit for temporary duty at Mlldenhall
RAF Station, England. He is
an
aircraft
propeller
technician with the 314th
Tactical Airlift
Wing,
operating C-130 Hercules
transports. The sergeant is a
1972 graduate of Wahama
High School.

chest, the coroner 's office
said .
Sister Donna, a native of
the Sister's of Notre Dame de
Namur. She had a been a
math teacher at Dayton
ChaminadeJulienne High
School since 1973. Before'that
she taught at St. Agnes School
which is now the middle
school.

fortune would be " worse than
anything you can Imagine."

each evening . There will be
special vocal music each
evening .

Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to fol lowed by a basket dinner at
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday . noon . Featured singers In the
In lieu of flowers residents afternoon Will be Dan
may ~ cont ribut e
to the - Hayman's Hymntlmers. The
Leukemia Foundation of public is invited.
America, 22 Et~Jist Gay St ..

Nun shot·to death

today .

A REPORT on an acctdtnt
in Pome&lt;oy · - the weekend
slated lha a util ity pole wu

and probalion officer , today

quarter ly

DAYTON, Ohio ( UP!) - A
nun at St . Agnes Convent on
the city's west side was shot
to death late Monday night
inside
the
convent,
authorities said .
She was identified as Sister
Donna Jean Blaul, 34.
Police, who refused to give
details of the shooting, were
called In convent which is
part of St. Agnes Olurch and
Dayton Catholic Middle
School complex about 6:30
p.m. and found the nun 's body
lying on a step near a rear
door.
An un identified male
suspect, who was walking
from the area , was arrested
shortly after th e incident , a
police spokesman said. He
was expected to be charged .

white.

LANGSVILLE - Airman Clair C. Reed, aou of
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP! ) Mrs. Mildred L CoUrW of
Rookie Rance Mulliniks,
Rt. 1 bas. been aelecled for
technical training at California's regular shortstop
Sheppard AFB, Tex., In the since Bobby Grieb was lost
Air Force aircraft mabi· · for the season with a bad
tenance field. He bas back in June, will miss the
completedbaatc training at last two weeks of the season
Lackland AFB, Tex. He Is a because of tendonitis in his
1917 graduate of Caldwell, left index ling~ , the AI!gels
reported Monday night.
Obio Higb Scbool.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
PLAYTEX~

Something.for
Every

·

NO

PLACE
LIKE
HOME ·

COLUMBUS- A PROJEGrED YEAR-END CASH deficit
of more than $29,198 iio the Frontier Local School District of
Washington CoWlty has been certified to state education
officials.
State Auditor Thomas A. Ferguson's office reported
Monday that a financial analysis requested by the Frontier
school board showed the district would have In close for about
seven days on or about Dec. 12 in order to offset the deficit. The
auditors' report said that should the schools close, the dJstrict
would still have In pay $35,862 for unemployment costs.
For about $162 a day, the report noted, a skeletnn staff
could maintain the schools.
·

for your valuables to be stolen or destroyed. Keeping impoftant papers, heirloom effects and jewelry at home is really
taking a chance. For only pennies a day
you can rent a safe deposit box and have
the security of knowing where they are.
Safe from fire or theft and possible
misplacement.
.,

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS STo 7 P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

WASIUNGTON - THE VETERAN CONGRESSMAN
stood wheezing in front of his House colleagues . Rep. Daniel J .
Flood, a colorful Democrat from Pennsylvania's hard coal
regi9n, was not ill. He just wanted In give the congressmen a
sense of what it is like In have black lung disease.
·
The House Monday passed reforms to a !!-year-old law that
gives govenunenl benefits In miners with the disease. The vote
was 2113-100. BefQre voting, however, the House bowed In the
wishes of the Carter administration and eliminated sev~al of
the most controversial provisions of the legislation, including
one that would have awarded automatic benefits In veteran
miners.

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'

Consumer prices show
•
•
·0.3% rise In August
B, SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON .&lt;UPI)
Consumer prices rose 0.3 per
cent in August - the smallest
increase in nine months reflecting moderate food

Surcharge pass-on
cut by committee

price ln cr eases and the

year's first drop in mortgage
rates, the Labor Department
reported tnday.
The monthly increase,
which translates inroa 3.4 per
cent annual rate , compared
with increases averaging an
annual rate of 9.4 per cent
during the first half of 1977.
Following a 0.4 per cent
increase in July, August
brought the smallest monthly
rise in conswne.r prices since
November, 1976. This cool\,g
irend was good news for
President Carter, who bas
promised inflation wiil not
exceed 6.5 per cent in 1977.
The recent moderation of
inflation has produced an
annual inflation rate ot
slightly more than 5 per cent
over the past three months about ha If the rate set in the
first quarter of the year.
Although August's 0.3 per

COLUMBUS (UP!)- The Ohio House Energy and
Environment Committee has taken a step to reduce the
cost surcharge electric companies may pass on to
coosum~s for procuring out-of-&lt;!late coal.
The committee Tuesday inserted an· amendment in
legislation encouraging the use of high-eulfur Ohio coal
shortly before sending it to the House Ways and Means
Committee for further study.
The standing energy panel voted 7-5 for an
amendment forbidding utilities to pass on the cost of
fuel transportation and delivery charges In its
customers. This would encourage utilities to minimize
such costs, and thus purchase as much Ohio coal as
possible.
.
Utility lobbyists were di•t,·essed with . the
development and said the consumer would end up
-paying more anyway or they would be out of business.
The Ways and Means committee was assigned to
study the taxation. implications of the Senate'!"'ssed
bill sponsored by Sen. Kinsey Milleson, DFreeport.
The bill offers lax incentives to utilities and
companies installing air pollution control equipment.
It proposes credits against excise and fran chise
taxes for using equipment necessary to burn Obio coal.
The credits would result in a revenue loss of about $14
million a year ro the state.
The measure also requires Ollio's air emission
standards to be relaxed ro allow the burning of Ohio
coal, and requires utilities In make an effort to buy
Ohio-mined coal and In justify the purchase of out-ofstate ·coal.

cent increase in food prices
exceeded a Q.l per cent

increase in July, it was a
moderate rise in comparision
In monthly increases as big

Money will run
out in Eastern
A financial cash analysis of
the Eastern Local School
District of Meigs County
revealed a potential year-end
cash deficit of $21 ,741.64 and
could result in district schools
being closed nine days , State
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson's office reported
today.
The analysis, requested by
Eastern. l..ocal School Board
of Education, certi.fied a
December 8 closing date to
State Superintenent of Public
Instruction Franklin B.
Walter, who has sole
authority in permitting a
school district to close for

I
I

I'

I

f;.:·

;__.--·'

.I

I.'·

UPTO$JOO

(Sole ends
Oc:tQber 8, 1977)

\ ._
'

\

· ~

$1oooFF Anlnstead~oras

new beige styles

including .

$1 SOOfF when you buy 2 •

CrossYour Heort~sott Sider oras

* of some sryle

$1000fF when you buy 2*

CrossYour Heortconon oras
.$2oooFF Free Spirit"Pantsnners
$~00Qff Free Spirit .Dody Driefers
in new beige
·

• of some sryle

LINGERIE DEPARTMENT-2ND FLOOR

ELBERFELD ..IN:.P MEROY

agree that the key reason for
this coo ling trend - a
moderation of food prices -

the t'Ost of servioes. Service

eent in August, reversing a

is ''WlSUstainable" in the

months ahead.
Prices of food sold on
grocery shelves rose 0.2 per

prices rose 0.5 per cent in
August, the sma llest lncrease
in eight months.
The Conswner Price Index
stood at 183.3 in August,

decline registered in the
previous month. Although
there was a decline for pork,
poultry , eggs, sugar and
coffee, prices turned up
meaning goods and services suddenly for fresh fruits and
costing $100 a decade ago now vegetables.
cost $183.30. This reflected an
A dramatic 2.4 per cent
increase of 6.6 per cent over decline in used car prices
last year.
he lped to offset increases for
The August incTease, com- apparel, fuel oil, coal.
bined with a decline in gasoline ilkld motor oil. It was
average weekly ea rnin gs, the fourth consecutive large
nonetheless managed. to monthly decline in used car
furth er erode the buying prices.
power of the average
Although service costs
American worker . Real moderated with the help of a
spendable earnings declined decline in mortgage interest
0.6 per ce nt in August .
rates, the increases remained
Although
Ca r ter's substantial.
Gas
and
economic advisers have electricity costs jumped I per
predicted inf lation will not cent. Transportation services
exceed the 6.5 per cent range were up 0.5 per cent and
this year, it compares to an medica l ca re rose 0.6 per
annual rate of about 4,6 per cent.
cent at the end of 1976.
Economic forecaser
The current trend could Donald Ratajcza k had
produce a lower inflation rate predicted the August CPI
than Carter has predicted, would show little difference
but economists generally from July.

OLD SOLDIERS NEVER DIE, THEY JUST FADE AWAY, it is said, butthls is not true
of the Civil War Soldiers' Monwnentthat stands next to the court house in Pomeroy. Manual
Gheen of Gheen's Painting, Racine, is sandblasting the monument. Additional sandblasting
will be done to other stone in front and alongside of the building and the court house will
receove a new coat of paint. The county conunissioners have contracted the work being done
on the court house.

financial reasons.
The examiner noted that if
Eastern Local did close
schools to student instruction
on December6, it would incur
an additional $1,539 in costs of
skeletal staff required during
the period of closing.
Schools would be required
to resume classroom instruction in January, 1976,
when new year funding
becomes available. Eastern
Local Schoo) District has
some 1,042 students with 46
teachers and '!I school employes . Two millage issues
w~re rejected by voters this
yea r.

en tine

at
VOL. XXVIII NO. lll

New

fNews • • •tn BriefsJ
I

as 2 per c~n tearlier this year.
Other Cf)mmod.ilies also rose
0.3 per cent.
Mortgage interest rates declined for the first time in
1977, which helped to ease the
recent inflationary trend in

•

·::!~~":-.~~-:.~m..~~~::~;:;~:;~:!:!:!:&amp;~:~i!!»:.:&amp;t~··:::~~::::::::..--=::::.~*'~1

COLUMBUS, OlflO - FRANK FONTAINE, WHOSE
cock~yed grin and crumpled hat endeared him to millions of
fans of the ·old "Jackie Gleason Show" as "Crazy
Guggenheim," was reported in critical condition today, under
treatment for a heart attack.
Fontaine, 57, suffered the attack :;;tmday while awaiting a
plane Sunday at Port Columbus International. Airport after
finishing a nightclub engagement here Saturday night,
according to a Bp(&gt;kestnan at Mount Cannel East Hospital.

THERE'S

f\6

BERNICE 0 . PRINCE
LONG BOTTOM - Mrs.

ELLA MAE CAPEHART
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . -

HOSPITAL NEWS

Yancy D. Halley, 17, Rt. 1,
GalliJ)olis, was cited to Galli&amp;
County JunvenUe Court for
failure to yield the right of
way following an accident at
8:06 a.m. Monday on SR 7 at
GEorges Creek Rd.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
the Halley car pulled from
Georges Creek into the path
of an auto operated !Jy
Stanley Abrams, 46, R.t. I,
Gallipolis. There
was
moderate damage.
A deer was killed when

.

"We started an evacuation
of
the residential area and an
small number if any"
adjacent
manufacturing area
residents of the area w~e
when
we
felt there was a
ev,..,uated.
possibility of cyanide
fumes," he said. "'lbey did
have cyanide store&lt;! there
and we thought the cyanide
may have went up also but
fortunately .it didn ~ . There
PLEASANT VAlLEY
. DISCHARGES - .Kenneth were either explosions but
Ashworth, Ash.lon ; Leslie th.ey didn't get intn the area
Patsons, Crown City, 0 .; where . the cyanide was
Mrs. Sam Holley , Ashton: stored."
Mrs. Danny Missen, Point
Pleasant; Angela Perry,
Glenwood; Mabel Young.
Ashton; Mrs. Harry King,
HAVE GUESTS
Bancroft ; Ralph· Morse , Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith of
Point Pleasant; Sharon Lancaster were Thursday
Wood, Point Pleasant; · Tina guest£ of his aunts, Mi5s ErPlatzer, Point Pleasant and ma Smith and Mrs .
Maude Byus, Point Pleasant. Genevieve Meinhart.
Birth - A son to Mr . and
Mrs .
David
Gibson ,
Gallipolis.

THE SUIT OF Lowell Jack
1 Strickland,
Minford, 01\lo,

I

.

Minor mishaps reported

Boys
DRESS SHOES ·
13.00 to 112.00

---------------------------. Notices, news briefs
!·· Area· Deaths !

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977

PRICE FIFrEEN CENTS

pollution control plan ·ready
New charge
faces Lance

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency has completed an alternative sulfur dioxide control
plan and will release it next week, according to state officials.
The plan, due out Sept. 28, would be an alternative In a U.S.
EPA sulfur dioxide pollution abateJTient program announced
Aug . 27, 1976.
.
In November 1976, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ordered a stay to enforcement of the proposed federal regula- .
tionsand ordered the.U$. EPA to reopen hearings on the plan.
Those hearings were completed last January in Colwnbus
and consisted mainly of electric ·utility, industry and United
Mine Workers Union officials arguing that implementation of
the fed~ a\ plan would tuin Ohio's high-sulfur coal industry.
The Ohio EPA then drafted its alternate plan, whiCh will be
subject In public hearings later this year before it can be
submitted In the U.S. EPA regional office in Chicago.
The U.S. EPA could then approve the alternative Ohio plan
•
or enforce its original 1976 plan.
Ohio is the only state which does not have an EPA-approved

By United Presa Interuatlooal
YOUNGSTOWN , OHIO - THE ANNOUNCEMENT this
week that Youngsrown Sheet and Tube will close most of its :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::·::::: ::::~
EXTENDED OUTWOK
operation here has shocked suburban Campbell and Struthers.
Friday through Sunday,
, These two small conununities along the Mahoning River
fair
Friday and Saturday
1 Valley depend on steel mills and factnries for much of their
and
a
chaore of showers
. employment, and the bulk of the 5,000 workers ro be laid off
Sunday.
Highs will be In the
live in these cities.
70s
or
low
80a Friday and
'
So, come January when the giant steel company shuts
Saturday
and
in the upper
;down, the bulk of its area operations, the citizens of Campbell
60s
or
lower
70s Sunday.
and Struthers may very well find themselves laying off
Ballots will be mailed to
Lowa
will
range
from
the
paid up members of the
policemen, firemen, cutting back on services, and who knows
mid 50s to the lower 60s.
what will happen to their schools. School officials are already
Pomeroy
Chamber of
predicting some tnugh times ahead. They estimate that
Commerce before the next
regular meeting to vote for
Campbell schools will lose $1.7 million in tax revenue with the
THREE FINED
plant closing . Schools in Youngsrown will lose about $903,000,
Fined In the court of six members of the board of
and Struthers about $650,000.
ldiddleport Mayor Fred dire ctors , president, vice ~ '
Hoffman '1'uesday night were president, and secretary, it
MOREHEAD, KY. - ABOUT 25 HORSES valued at Ronald L. Denney, 30, was announced when the
$175,000 were killed early today in a fire that broke out in a Newcomerstown,. $200 and Pomeroy
Chamber of
horse barn at the Morehead State University farm, a costs and three days in jail on Commerce met Tuesday at
university spokesman said.
a charge of driving while noon at the Meigs Inn.
About 10 horses escaped injury from the fire, which was intoxicated; Richard D.
Directors whose term
discovered about 5 a.m. (EDT). Damage estimates on the barn Helton, 24, San Mateo, Calif., . expires are Jack Carsey, Bill
were placed at about $175,000, the spokesman said. There were $50 and costs on a hit-skip Grueser , Ralph Graves,
no injuries to farm attendants or firemen, he added.
charge and $50 and costs on a Ferman Moore, Virgil
reckless operation charge, Teaford and Wendell Hoover.
Holdover directors are
WASiflNGTON - WITH THE DIFFICULTIES more and Edward Currence,
clearly defined than ever, U.S. and Israeli officials say they Middleport, $25 and costs, Fred Crow, Ted Reed, John
Musser, John Kerr, John
are confident there can be a Geneva peace conference by the intoxication.
Anderson , Dale Warner and
end of the year. The series of negotiations moved into a second
Fred Morrow.
CALL ANSWERED
phase today with the Egyptian foreign minister, Ismael
Crow , president , anThe Pomeroy Emergency
Fahmi, schedule.d to see President Carter at the. White House
.
nounced
that plans for the
and later Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and other officials at Squad answered a call to the
Christmas
promotion should
a working lunch at the State Department.
Armentrout residence in
get
underway.
John Anderson
A State Department spokesman said the United States still Naylors Run at 12:15 a.m.
bopes th~e will be a conference this year. Israeli Foreign Wednesday for Kenneth and Ed Kennedy were named
Minister Moshe Dayan expressed confidence Tuesday there While. He was advised to see co-chairmen of the annual
a doctor.
(Continued on page 14)

sulfur dioxide control plan and is uriique among coal-prod~cing
states because of the high sulfur content of coal mined and '
burned in the state.
Ohio has been battling the federal government over sulfur
dioxide since 1967 when Congress passed the Clean Air Act.
The alternative Ohio plan which has been completed is the
·'
fifth sulfur dioxide plan prepared for the state. When Ohio's
plan was rejected by a federal court in 1975, the U.S. EPA
decided to draft its own plan.
In August, 1976, Ohio Energy Resource and Development
Agency Direcwr Robert' Ryan said the proposed U.S. EPA
plan would "greatly affect" Ohio's coal industry.
"If the (federal) standards are imposed, they will phase out
the (coal) industry in my distr ict," said Sen. Ketmeth R. Cox, By JAMES lflLDRETH
WASHINGTON (UP!)
D-Barberton, during the U.S. EPA hearings last January.
C. Luther Heckman, chairman of the Public Utilities Budget director Bert Lance,
Commission of Ohio, predicted that the fe d~ral plan would facing new charges about his
personal fiMnces that
boost the average residential electric bill by $2.80 a month .
conflict with his sworn Senate
testimony,
met
with
President Carter early tnday.
.White House spokesman
Jody Powell also said he
"believed" Carter met last
night with Senate Majority
Leader Robert Byrd, who

according ro the Washington
Post. told the president he
has not changed his position
that Lance should resign.
Of today 's Carter-Lance
meeting, the press secretary
said, "! don't know what they
·said," but when asked if
Lance had offered to resign,
Powell said "not t11at I know
of."
Lance was an early visiror
at the White House,
apparently meeting with
;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::;:;:·
Carter before the President
had breskfast with Senate
Mayer suggested a pine
Republicans.
tree, live, is needed to be
Carter was sure to face
pl•nted at the tipple site. It
questions on Lance at his
afternoon news conference.
would be decorated during
the Christmas season.
The latest charges contend
MEXICO CITY (UPI) Crow disclosed that the
Lance attempted ro clear up
Pulido C1'112, !6,
C&amp;O • Railroad is not in- Gloria
some past banking )ll'oblems .
underwent surgery ·in a
terested in running a
12 days
before
his
private clinic and paid
passenger train to Pomeroy.
appointment
as
budget
$1,118 for lbe operation. Six
It was announced tbat
director .
Barbara Chapman, secretary weeks later, she com·
The information made
plaiDed of aharp abdo~inal
for the chamber, will be
public
Tuesday was the
working 21'• days for an out- pains and bad an
newest
in
a series of apparent
examination In another
of-town newspaper and 2'h
contradictions
of Lance's
hospital.
days for the chamber .
sworn
te~limony before a
Doctors diacovered two
Attending were Crow, Mrs.
Senate committee.
sets
of forcepa, each eight
Chapman, Paul Simon, vice
Inches long, which bad
president ; Phil Ke!iy, Wesley
been forgotten by the first
Buehl , Scott Lucas, Leo
team
of surgeons. The two
Vaughan, Bill Quickel, Bill
doctors
were arrested.
Mayer, Dale Warner and a
guest, Hank C!eland, John ;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::!:~:::::::=:::::::.:::: ::;::;;:;:_::;:;: :;:::::::=:
Koebel , Vernon Weber, Jim
Bessie Pullins, 72, MidFrecker, Joe Young, Bill
dleport,
was charged with
Grueser, John Anderson,
failure
to
yield the right of
Stan Houdashelt and Thereon
way
following
a traffic acJohnson.
from efght departments cident at 2 p.m. Tuesday on
attended a meeting of the SR336 at the jWlction to Main
Area Volunteer Fire and St. in Racine.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
Emergency Association at
the Middleport Fire Station State Highway Patrol S.id
the Pullins car pulled from
Tuesday night.
Jim Page, Marysville; wbo Main St. into the left side of
is with the firm doing bouse an outo operated by Nancy E.
numbering in the rural areas Aeiker, 25, Racine. Following
of Meigs County, outlined the tbe impact, the . Pullins car
.
.
procedures and \the bene!its continued on, striking a house
county garbage collection for firemen and emergency owned by F re~1it: Joe
boxes be done away with and units ito locating homes to Stobart . The Aelker car
waste collections throughout wbere they are called. He struck a utility pole. There
the county be done by private
was moderate damage.
maps.
haulers lor a monthly fee to distributed
The October meeting of the
be paid by customers wishing association will be on~ 18th
door to door pickup. The ir Syracuse when a Columbia
'
commissioners asked that the Gas Co. representative will
Health Dc~artmcnt an d
haulers submit a plan to the sp~k .
Clear tonight, lows to the
boafd.
ASK TOWED
lower
5Qs. Cloudy Thursday,
Attending were Henry
A marriage license was
Welis, Richard Jones and issued to Jerry Lee Saylor, highs in the lower 70s.
James ' Roush,
com- 25, Rt. I, GuysvUie and Probability of precipitation
missioners and Mary Hob- Connie Corlene Putman, 19, 10 percent today, near zero
tonight, 20 percent Thursday ..
stetter, clerk.
Rt. 2, Coolville.

Chamber to elect officers,
6 new directors this ·week

Convinced death was coming
RIPLEY, W.Va. (UP!) Mrs . Charles A. Marion
looked at her son as he
prepared to leave home for a
brief camping trip and said
she would see him in a day or
so.
'•No u came the hushed
' an!) James Marion
response,
drove off.
Within 24 hours, the gifted,
three-sport athlete and
exceptional high school
student was dead. He slipped
frmn an inflated raft and
drowned in 90 feet of water at
Sutton Lake. ,
His uncanny "no" last
month was something the
Marions had come to expect.
From pn&gt;&lt;!Chool days, he

·~

knew his .life would be
·short.
"It broke our hearts, but it
was like the pieces of a puzzle
falling into place," Mrs .
Marion said.
As a youngster, James
often lugged the huge family
Bible about and begge4 his
parents to read the
scriptures, and In tell him
about heaven and hell.
- "From the lime he was five
or six, he said he wouldn't
reach 30," the mother said.
"He said that God had
revealed it In him and we
believed him."
After his death, . Mrs.
;Marlon learned that her son
had been named a NaUnnal

•

Merit
Schola rs hip
semifinalist, the only student
at Ripley High ro earn that
distinction .
He was a member of the
National Honor Sociei~ . Nu
Alpha Theta math honiorary,
and student council, while
lettering in track, football
and basketbalL
"It was almost as if be
knew something would
happen/' Mrs. Marion says,
recalling
the
last
conversation with her son.
"Ill the last two months, it
seemed he grew closer l&lt;o
G&lt;Jd.
"Jim was a Clu-istian, and
he was ready

tn go."

Christmas lighting project
and Jim Frecker as parade
chairman . A parade date will
be announced.
Crow reported that the
courthouse will be getting a
new coat of paint as will
several other commercial
buildings
and , homes .
"Pomeroy is important,' and
there is a gradual interest
being shown in its cleanup
and paint-up," Crow said.
June 23, 24, 25, 1976 was
tentatively set for next year's
Big Bend Regatta . It was
announced that the Gallipolis
Ski show wants to be booked
into the Rega tta next year.
Bill Mayer discussed his
plan to beautify the old coal
tipple a.r ea on Pomeroy's
East Main Street. He
suggested a waterfall with
colored lights which the
chamber thought was an
excellent idea and told Ma yer
to go •.head with the project.

Doctors leave

tools at site

Driver cited
after mishap

Area firemen

~~~~~i~~~!~t~Jves

Commission ready for
topographical survey
Details, down to room ~ize ,
in the proposed multi-purpose
building were reviewed
Tuesday when Ron Keske,
architect, met wiih the ivieigs
County Board of Commissioners .
The commissioners and

Keske thoroughly examined
the plims whiCh also gave
electrical, plumbing, heating
and cooling requirements.
Keske indicated the project
is progressing as " rapidly as
possihle ." The next step is to
hire an' engineer to do a

topographical survey ol the
building site, he said.
··
Keske was instructed by
the board to proceed with the
necessary requirements for
the survey. subject to the
approval of the county
engineer, Wesley Buehl.
Also meeting with the
commissioners were Gary
Aspin, Co unty sanitarian;
Mrs . Gene Lyons, administrative assistant in the

Health Department. and a
group of rrivate garbage
haulers. Aspin proposeti the

Weather

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