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                  <text>D&amp;-The Sunday Timt'S--SEntinel, SWlday, Aug. 7. 1977 ,

Widow of Powers · President
has him honored

.

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Powell telephoned Mrs .
'the body of U2 pilot Francis Powers to notify her the
Gary ~owers was flown to request would be approved.
~ Washingtcn bY his widow
The U2 flights, which look
Friday night for burial in off from bases in Pakistan
Arlington National Cemetery and Turkey and crossed
with full military honors, Russia on photo runs at
perhaps including a farewell altitudes on tbe fringe of the
flyby by Air Force planes.
atmosphere, landing in
Powers, 47, was an Air Scandinavia, were ooe of tbe
Force officer for 12 years CIA's lop II!!Crets in tbe 195Qs.
before resigning, at the . The Russians, unable to halt
Pentagon's request, lo fly tbe . them, said oothing either and
U2 oo secret spy fli&lt;lhts over worked to improve their
Russia for the CIA.
antiaircraft missiles.
He died Monday when tbe
The secret exploded in
television news helicopter he May, 1960, wben · such a
piloted as an airborne missile crippled Powers' U2
reporter developed an at 68,000 feet about 1,200
unexplained mechanical miles inside Russia. jrt&gt;blem and crashed into a
His capture revealed the
sports field in the suburban flights to the world and set off
San Fernaildo Valley, killing an outburst by Soviet
Powers and a cameraman. Premier Nikita IOrushchev
The Air Force plans the that canceled a summit
Monday"
at meeting with President
services
Arlingtoo, where many of tbe Dwight Eisenhower.
nation's military heroes are
Powers spent almost tWo
buried.
years in a Russian prisori
An. AJr Force spokesman before he was exchanged in a
said the services Will include spy swap.
military pallbearers and
DWICHARGED
honor guard, a rifle volley
DECATUR, Ga. (UP!)
salute, taps by a bugler and
perhaps a fli&lt;:ht overhead by Dekalb County Police ar·
Air Force planes, a rested Atlanta Braves pitcher
traditiooal gesture of honor. Max Leon early Saturday and
Powers' widow Claudia left charged him with driving
Los Angeles Friday night, under the influence of alcohol
and resisting arrest.
family friends said.
Leon, Tl,· was freed on
She asked that her husband
be burled in Arlington, saying $1,400 bail.
The right·hander from
that was what he wished, and
the Pentagon approved, Cuitiahuac, MeXico, has been
rep&lt;rtedly with consent from used mostly n relief since .
joining the Braves late in the
President Carter.
Family friends said White 19'73 season. His record this
Houle Press ,..secretary Jody year is 4-4, with a 4.37 earned
run average.

Normally ,

•substantial profit face a

•heavy tax load, oot this
• burden can be avoided. II
• you buy another home that
• costs as much or more tJlan
• \he sale prlceofthe old one,
• Within a specified time, the
e profit from the sale Is not
• ln~luded in your taxable
• Income.
• The second home must
• be bought and occupied
• within a period ending 18
e months after the sale .

•
-•

plus 144 cans of pop. • •full!

When

:

main •

e

figuring

•

the amount of gain for •
whlcl1
tax
may. be •

postpolied you may dOduct •
for · "'fix -up" expenses if •
they

were aCcomplished •
within 90_days prior to the
sale. and paid fQr no later •
than 30 days alter the sale. •

Check·

with

your •

this

matter •

accountant or ~ the IRS an •
details

if

effects you . It could be well •
worth your whi Ie.
If there Is anything

•

we •
can do to help you in file •
one year) . A 2-year -period field of real estate pleue •
Is permitted when building phone or drop in at •
REAL e
a new home. This tax LEADINGHAM
deferment applies only to EST AT~, 512 Second Ave., e
the sale of a home which is Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699. •
. '
·
.
· We're here. to helD!
1

(This is a new change,
• previous time period was
•

Empty can brings $5 refund

ay_ •

family's
taxpayers · the
residence.

• who sell their home for a

•
•

PLAINS, Ga . (UPI) - main street of the rural
President Carter strolled Georgia town for about an
through the business district hour.
of his home town Saturday, · They
greeted
local
shaking hands with tourists residents and old friends as
and
townspeople and they walked, visiting shaps
inspecting Plains' booming and attracting crowds of
new merchandising industry sightseers. Plains police chief
- Jinuny Carter souvenirs. J.W. McClung said 10,000
After a nationally televised tourists were in town
news conference in which he Saturday, canpared \Vith an
unveiled plans lo overhaul average of 3,000 to 5,000.
the welfare system, the
Among tbe goods !bey saw
President and Rosalynn oo display in the shops were
Carter wandered along tbe Jimmy Carter T·shirts,

. :.

T

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
COMFORT PLUS

if Uley turn down a job.
moves through the legislative
starting
in
Carter said he is aptimistic process
Congress' will approve tbe September.
plan next year with most of
Sen. Daniel Moynihan,' [).
his ideas intact . If that N.Y., whose suhcommittee
happens, the program would will hold hearings on !he plan,
not be fully in place until called it ua magnificent
October of 1980, although tbe proposal," but Sen, Carl
jobs portion "will be initiated Curtis, R-Neb. said it is "a
as rapidly as possible ." warmed-{)ver version u of a
Increased tax
credits ;iuaranteOd annual income .
A key element of Carter's
amounting to $3.3 billion lor
income earned by poor people plan - called "Program for
Better Jobs and Income" ~is
~XJUid also be on tbe books
an effort to "break the
sooner, he said.
There was some immediate wel(are cycle" by weaning
sllpport and -little outright recipients · away from
hostility to the plan on Capitol dependence on government
Hill, although members of and into jobs . .About 42 per
both parties predicted there cent of the jobs to be created
would be many questions and probably would be filled by
possible changes as the plan persons now receiving
benefits under the Aid to
Families with Dependent
Children program.
Persons who are blind,
aged or disabled or who are
responsible for children
under age se'len will not be
mugs, postcards and glass
plates bearing pictures of the
presidential family ,
One businessman was
selling pound jars of

President Carter inspects newest industry
in Plains, Ga., during hour-long stroll

..~!{ear ;:!;~i~~l~~~~=~
•
.
St
•
. d

•• Tax Tip If You Sell For APrufrt
•

e

- An end lo food stamps,
aid to families with
dependent children and
supplemental security
inc&lt;me. He would replace tbe
three programs with a single
moothly lump sum payment .
A famij,y of four would get
$4,200 a year.
- ,As many as 1.4 million
jobs or job training slots, with
child care benefits lor single
psrents. The jobs could cover
such things as installing.
security devices in -h&lt;mes of
the elderly, cleaning up
neighborhoods and
improving school facilities.
-To make sure ''work will
always be more .profitable
than welfare" through a
provision that those who can
earn a living will lose benefits

COLUMBUS (UPI)- John psck of a soft drink at a
Ware got his $5 filing fee bAck neighborhood store last
and was reimbursed for an mmth and when he got home
discovered. one of the cans
was empty. He said . tbe
company had promised to
with Ware who had filed a send someone out lo ·check
suit ~ainst the company in out the complaint and when
·~'1-J~J~te &amp;riaU Clah)ls Court. ,
they didn't, he filed suit,
U ( '-' • Ware filed the suit, whiCh ~g tbe cost of the can of
cost him $5, after saying be pop .::.. 35 cents.
0
did not get any satisfaction
The bottling company
• from the company 1o his refunded him his $5 filing fee
By
•
numerous telephone calls and tossed in 144 cans of pop.
Willis T. Leodinghlm • about a consumer complaint.
· Realt\H'
•
ware had purchased a six-

•••
••
•••
••
••
•

•

PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) -In a
move designed to break the
welfare cycle, keep poor
families together and put
many of them to work,
President Carter asked
Congress Saturday to
dismantle the public aid
system and replace it with a
$30.7 billion !X'Ogram of jobs,
lax breaks and cash
assistance.
The present system, he
said,. Is shot through with
"waste, fraud, red tape and
errors."
It is so hopelessly
incurable, he said, that even
the word "welfare" should be
scrapped along with the.
programs It covers.
Carter told a news
conference he Is seeking:

asks ·hig jobs prograin

Dealer fined
for tum backs

Halperin sues for $3 million

ugenuine Plains dirt" for

$2.95 each. A competitor was
offering the red Georgia soil
in I ounce bags IX'iced at 40
cents.
The Carters lingered
longest at tbe antique shOP
run by " Uncle Buddy"
Carter, brother of the
President's father.
Near the end of the walking
tour, a small group of
demonstrators appea red,
carrying signs that asked
Carter to protect the hwnan
rights of 'the Dawson Five"

-black Dawson, Ga., youths
accused of murdering a white
man.
Defense attorneys contend
the charges stem from racial
prejudice and an attempt to .
intimidate blacks in the
southwest Georgia area.
Some of the Plains demonstrators later met with
deputy White House press
secretary Rex Granum in an
attempt lo draw presidential
attention ·to the case.

C.K.

SNOWDEN

24 Slate SlrMI
Phone 446-4290

TOM WILUAMS, Jackson County Extension Agent, was one of several judging woodworking projects. Here he interviews Rick Jordan who made several ashtrays and a wall
shelf (See Page 4) .

"Count01,1 me for ·

PlOIIIPlt peuooal service."
...... , .....

&amp;

like fgood neighbor,
SlatE Fann is there.
S111e F1rm lnnllnte Carllfllml!
Helme Olhtt1 Bl~ ongtoa, Mlrnoo1

o\olu•• .. ll•

-·- ·-

P7577

DRAPERY
.
.

OFF

MARCO JEFFERS' woodworking project this year
was the construction of a stained mahogany graildfather's
clock which he hauled to the fairgrounds saturday for
judging. Construction of the clock has been Marco's most
important project in his 10 years of 4-H Club work (See
Page 4).
·

VOL. XXVIII

POMEROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 80

of crowding and comfort

tNews.

:::·

BEGINS MONDAY, AUGUST 8TH
Save 30% on Custom Draperies for Your Home
or OHice -:- Large Selection of Fabrics and Colors.
• 4-inch tops are doubled and buckram headed-tops will not
buckle or sag.
• Hand -set butterfly pleats are triple-tacked - pleats hang
uniformly· and will not pull apart.
• Side hems are doubled - adds " body" to drapery to ·hang ·
·
.
· smoothly a.vJ evenly.
• Seams are hidden behind pleats - no lines or fabric face to
mar the drapery's beauty.
.
• Bottom and side seams are blind-stitched - no visible
stitching to mar the drapery's beauty.
·
.
· -• Coverf!d weights sev.vn into each corner- draperies hang
gracefully, evenly .
• Generous 5-inch bottom hems - · giving the luxurious
decorator look.
• Draperies are neatly fan -folded and carefully boxed draperies arrive ready to hang.
.

SHOP:
FRIDAY, 9:30 10 8:00

~thsaid .

OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 10 5 PM

Elberfelds In Pomeivy

:§j
•
~
TOKYO- J~~.:.r~:cr:~ Mt. Usu has

di •

-:

me erne .: ·
Nurses

on

Veterans

:-:-

•

PORTLAND, Ore . (UP!) - Amtrak passengers
arrivinginPortlandSundaynightcomplainedtbetrain ·:·:

::~~~~:~:o:;~nf!~.:~~:':e~dtostanduo

\\l\

" This thlhg looke&lt;t llke an animal train," Jack

·:·:

·::
;I
experience early today when -:-:
Ia d.
·
h d1
·
The mountain in the northernmost main island of at about 3,30 a.m. a man :;:;: . some passengers Y .own mover ea uggage racks.
·Hokkaid'O burst open SUnday in the midst. 0· f a ser;'es of
:;:: The large number of train riders was attributed to a
· sports weeken d lh
· Seattle, lh
· cludin g hydroplane
hundreds of tiny earthquakes that J'olted the reg 1'on. Tbe holding his, st.omach came to ' :''·'
;::: busy
the
emergency
door
of
the
..
d
Se
ttl
M
·
b
volcano hurled baseball-sized rocks over a wide area. One hospital.
· ::::: races an a a e anners aseball game.
stone cracked the cockpit windo_w of an All Nippon Airways · All
(
Some persons with round trip tickets said they
owed to enter, he was led ::::
· · arr•ved an lb our a nd a haIf belore the tnun
· was
Lockheed tristar jetliner carrying 317 passengers and crew
that had just taken off fl:o.m Chitose airport near Sapporo, to the emergency room. After :;:;: . scheduled to leave Seattle and had ilifflculty finding
entering that area, the man, ·:·:
.-:-: space aboard tbe tralh,
· on which there was no reserved
Hokkaido's capital.

~r~:~~;e~

20• ::lpre,J::u:
fYITAWA _ CANADA'S AIRLiNES OPERATED a
a hand gun and demanded "a
.
akeleton·service out of a handful of U.S. border airports today, shot " He told the nurie who
canceling thOUlJIIIlds of peak-Beason reservations in a strike by
· n ed · freed '
f
was a ow some
. omuld
o
the nation's
2,200
air traffic controllers.
th
h
movement,
at e wo
•
No taiks between the controllers and government
d th
If h
negotiators were planned. Each side blamed the other for the surren er e gun · e were
given tbe innoculation.
walkoUt thai began_ at 4 a.m. Sunday and shut do.wn air travel
Th e nurse - who remalhs
·
·
to and from Cana.ds. The Canadian Air Traffic Control unidentified · was able to
Association had scheduled rotating strikes to begin at
if
· ~
mi""''rlht Monday, but rnoved up the strike deadline wben the hnoetr y"optrhoebrlemsta~,f mthremoubeghrs oaf
government announced it would try to impose a settlement in
the nine-month dispute through legislation.
buzzer system. Pomeroy
police and representatives of
the sheriff's department were
AUSTIN, TEX.- JUAN OIJVAREZ METHODICALLY called. They waited outside
munehed his way to the title of world champion jalapeno where they took Argabrite
pepper eater. With the crowd of severljl hundred roaring into custody ..
"Juan, Juan, Juan" the 2&amp;-year-&lt;Jld Olivarez of Corpus Christl,
He surrendered the gun to
Tex., finished his 90th of the mou!Mearing peppers to win the the nurse as he had promised.
"World's Fifth Jalapeno Eating Contest" Saturday.
He was removed to the
"I feel all right. I paced myself- no special treatment," Southeast Ohio Medical
he told the crowd of about 600 watching the event at the outdoor Center In Athens but officials
beer garden of Taco Flitis, a dilapidated Mexican food cafe. there refused to accept him
Brad Arr)t, who won the title last year by eating 108 of tbe .as a patient, it was reportea,
stomach- boiling peppers, ctr:opped ou\ three minutes before because they believed his
the alloted hour was up. He managed to choke down 89 problem was medical, not
jalapenos.
.
mental. Argabrite was
returned and confined to the
· NEW .YORK - FIVE PERSONS, INCLUDING a :&gt;-year- county jail pending further
old girl, were struck by lightning Sunday while watching a investigation.
bUeball game in Central Park.
Police said five-year-old Lessitta Hernandez of
Manhattan, her grandfather, Stephen Cruz, S., and two other
TRUSTEES TO MEET
men were admitted to St. Luke's Hospital. A hospital spokesChester Township Trustees
man !!Bid all were listed in serious condition. Cruz's wife, will meet at 6:30p.m. Friday
Romans, 53, was treated at the hospital and released.
at the town hall.

Pomeroy P~lice
investigated
three accidents over· the
weekend in which one persnn
was injured.
At 12:04 Sunday, a car
driven by Edward Sigler,
Pomeroy, headed east on
Second St., struck a parked
car occupied by Doris Hayes
of near.Pomeroy. There were
medium damages and the
emergency squad transported Mrs. Hayes to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sigler is charged with driving
willie intoncated.
· At 12:22 p.m. Saturday, a
car driven by Alva Will,
Pomeroy, pqlled from a
parking space on Spring
Ave., and struck the right
front of a car driven by
Kenneth Chaney, Shade.
The

There
were
medium
damages and Will is charged
with failing to yield the right
of way.
At IO:i9 p.m. Saturday, a
car driven by Oley Herdman,
Pataskala, traveling east on
the lower parking lot struck
psrked cars owned by Roy
Buchanan , Pomeroy ;

Po Uand
- The cooperation and
r
·
.;:;:
"There was no apology, no
. e•planation and nobody ,_:_:._:: coordination of all the
was taking any interes
. t in the •passengers," she said. :::: agencies involved.
..
Th ""-rlh
f
"One conductor told a passenger who complained to · · · e W='6'•ess 0 J!lany
'go ahead and get off_ it would_make my jo_b eaSJ'er.' ..
individuals to volunteer their
t'IRle.·
·
The train left Seattle nearly an hour late .
::::
So
·
- The health team of six
)
me passengers discussed refusing to give their
.
_:_;_:_; tickets to the condrteductors lo protest the situation and
niedical studenls who were
enthusiastic, eager to work,
·.·. on e passenger sta . a prote st pe titi on.
_,' :_,:
Tacoma poli~e said one man left the train after being
and showed a sincere concern
asked to depart during a ticket dispute in Tacoma.
for the health of people who
:::;
live in Meigs County.
:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The results of the tests

Theodore Woods, Mid·
dleport; Lewis Gilland,
Mason, W. Va., and Roy
Phillips of Pomeroy. There
were heavy damages and
Herdman . Is charged with
driving while intoxicated and
leaving the scene of an accident.

PLAINS, Ga. (UP!) President Carter said today
he has received indirect
information from
the
Palestinians that they may be willing to recognize Israel
and that Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance will extend his
Mideast peace shuttle.
The refusal by the militant
Palestine Liberation
Organization to recognize the
right of Israel to exist as a
MINERS GO BACK
SALEM CENTER - .The
laot holdouts in a slrfke
protesthig cutbacks In
United Mine Workers
health benefits, 1,500
miner&amp;

froin

.'

stam[ll but pail\ its parttime
postmaster $4,785.
Since the federal government's pay scale applies
equally to workers wherever .
they live, small town
postnulsters frequently are
among the conununity's beat·
pale).
The PCJIIal Service until a
few moolbs ago was under a ,
congressi~nally
ordered
·

three

Southern Ohio Coal
company Meigs Mines,
voted Sunday to return to
work starting at the
midnight oblft.
The miners are members
of UMW locals 1890, 1886 ·
and 1957.
miTOREPORT
All ninth grade boys in·
terested in playing football at
Meigs High School are to
meet at the high school
Tuesday at 6:30p.m.

Close PO losers and save millions

11011rn11ta

show a need for health clinics
such 1\S this. A total of 338
persons were referred to
their physicians, dentists,
optometrists or other medical
specialists as a result of the ·
tests. There were liB persons
referred for dental problems,
91 for vision, 46 for hearing
and 7 for speech ; 13 children
were referred for curvature
of the spine. · Forty-eight
persons are being rechecked
for hypertension by the
County Health Nurse.
Nineteen persons were found
who had a tuberculin infection and were followed up
by chest x-rays. There were
76 others who were referred
to their physicians from the
results of the blood tests,
urinalysis or for other
reasons.
The program was fortunate
in having a person from the

·

Ohio Department of Health
present, Carolyn McKinley,
who 'has had a lot of e~­
perience
with
)lealth
screening programs and her .
help and advice were of great
assistance.
·Other agencies Involved
were the County Health
Dep11rtment,
the
TB
Program,
Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Home
Heahh Services, Community
Mental Health Center,
Pulmonary Program from
o•meness Hospital and Meigs
County Senior. Citizens
ProgralliS. The use of the
Meigs Junior High .was much
appreciated as was the
assistance given by Mr.
Dowier, Mr. Go~ and their
staff.
The six medical students
who traveled throughout the
(Continued on page 8)

Saudis hint of breakthrough
on recognition of Israelis

Three
.actions
wr ville, and Nancy Crow,
dissolution of marriage and Ravenswood, W. Va., and
two suits for divorce wer~ Charles E . Williams and
ii!ed in Meigs County Com- Maxine S. Williams, both of
mon Pleas Court Saturday. ' Shade. Filing for ·divorce
Asking for dissolution were were Lawton Templeton
VIcki Proffitt and Monty against Brenda Templeton,
Proffitt, both of Portland; both of Pomeroy, and Joyce
Everett L. Crow, Jr., Reeds- Otto against Vernon Michael
Otto, both of Reedsville.

salaries alooe exceed the
reotenues they take in.
· The paper reported that the
postmaster of Bidwell In
Gallla County, fir eumple,
made '18,848 last year .
During the 11111111! time, be sold
mly ~1,938 worth of atamps.
Guernsey's U8,848
postmaster sold just $5,170
worth, of stamps . . The
whole Moorefield, Clark County,
poat vifice \Otlk in "" for

:.:;"::
recent multiphasic health
screening program held in
Meigs County · The results
'of
.
the test
.sw
· 1'1l be sent to each
person's physician and a
letter will also be sent to the
person adVising him to check
with his physt'cian "'
ln regard

~ : those
se;.~e~al
groups were allowed on tbe train ahead of : ~: ~~~es~=:~softhe screening
already in line, according to Deb Schalley, }'.· was due to:

Court actions filed Saturday

WASIIJNGTON (UPI) U.S. PCJIIal Service records
lbow lbat IIIOI'e than $3
mllltm bi ll8lariee alme could
be uftd bJ'Itbuttlng down all
the 01H poll olfices that
operated In tbe red lut year.
Tbe ~ Plain Dealer
reportH lbat a records
'leal'dl jMOiea 41 per cent of
Olllo'l 1,410 poll ~ en

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

·. - · · •
lt
•
'
resu s are zn

_:_:_:
:.:~_-_::
····
,::::
·:·:·
.'_:'_,:,_:,_:

One injured in traffic accident·
Dep~rtment

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

.

.· · ·

=~~ ,:d~a~~~~~~~eU:~~~-ck~fS:sha:ou:;~~ ~:~~~~~os~ita~~i~::;~~~ =~~~r;?:E~i;;:;~ti~~:~~~!~d \ill w:.~pr::r~=Y

n11 by

'

MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1977

Gun used ,:r'':4:;:~,, ,;:;::=:;::~:::;,:,,'i[

•

up

TillS BEAUTIFUL WALNUT TABLE was designed and made by Lester Jeffers of the
Carpenter ar~, a member of the "Mixed Up Hotshopts" 4-H Club. In 4-H for tbe past 11
years, 1t look hiRI over a year to complete this woodworking project (See page 4). Pictures
bere and pictures and report on Page 4 by Charlene Hoeflich.
·
·

"'

w.,..

.'

BRING IN
YOUR WINDOW
MEASUREMENTS

~

.
enttne

erupted in a belching eight-mile high pillar of fire and smoke,

I"

CUSTOM

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UP!) Officials of
Youngstown Sheet and Tube
announced Friday the
elimination ·of 150 salaried
jobs, effective ir!unediately.
The company, a divisioo of
IK&lt;eep ,;,ith.tomorrow ... Th is great looking
Lykes Corporatim, said tbe
lch~air will dazzl~ your eyes without diminishing your waueq layoffs were part of an
IBooo in with its futuristic style. then add the comfort of
overall effort underway to
back and padded arms. Rock in style and
reduce costs in the steel
to the relaxation of years to come.
plants and offices, to return
the canpany to profitable
operations. .
"These job losses are the
Whatever your style preference
, direct result of ecooomic ·
pre88111'es largely beyoad tbe
cmtrol of the management of
you'll find a good selection
this company," company
president Jennings R.
''The lou of theae jobs Ia
dlstreuing, but we have committments
tQ
our
shareholders and investors
thai mUll be met," he said.
The company blamed
unutisfactory ,· cosl..prlce
relation1hips for steel
procllcta, and a record Row of
imported steel for ·the .
economic pre..-es.

~

~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

are reduced.

the lowest possible prices.

" It is evident, therefore,
that the only pecuniary relief
available to plaintiffs is
nominal damages in the
amount of $1," Smith said.
Lawyers could not immediately determine whether tbe
judge meant to make a total
award of $1 to tbe ~lperins
or to award each $1, making a
total of $4.
The wiretap on the
Halperin family prone was
placed in an attempt to trace
the source of leaks of national
security information while
Kissinger
headed the
National Security Council.
" In view of th~ fact that
there is no demonstrable
injury here, plaintiffs are hot
entitled to an award of
compensatory damages, ••
Smith said.
"Punitive damages are
similarly inappropriate," he
said.

'

Brown bad also fUed suit
against the finn in 1973,
which resulted in an
injunction to prevent .the
dealer from engaging in
further rollbacks.
"Although we are pleased
with this judgment, we are
very
concerned
that
. odometer rollbacks are still
being practiced by some
dealer.s in Ohio," Brown said.
A. new law concerning
odometer tampering will go
into effect in Ohio Sept. 6. The
legislation will require auto
titles lo cmtain the mileage
recorded at the time of the
previous sale, and will
increase criminal penalties
for violators.

Salaried jobs

of fine home furnishings at

WASHINGTON (UP!) Morton Halperin, a one-time
aide lo Henry Kissinger, had
asked for damages of $3
million in a suit against Nixon
administration officials for a
21-month wiretap on his home
telephone. He didn't get it.
What he got Friday for his
suit against Kissinger,
former Attorney General
John MitcbeU, and former
White House chief of staff
H.R. Haldeman was a cloudy
ruling from a federal judge
Ulat will leave him and his
family with perhaps $1 or a
few dollars more.
His attorneys said they
would appeal.
U.S, District Judge John
Lewis Smith Jr. said
Halperin could. not prove be,
his wife and · their two
children suffered any actual
damages from the wjretap on
his home telephone for 21
months in 1969, 1970 and 1971.

and a childless couple $2,200
if no jobe are available for
them. The basic payment 1o
two-parent families and
single-parent familles who.!e
youngest child is 14 years or
older would be ·n.aoo.
nwould mark the first time
that single persons and childless cotllies will be eligible
for federal assistance
psyments.
Under tbe current welfare
progra_m, benefits vary
widely lh. each state,'ranging
in the AFDC program from
$720 a year in Mississippi to
$5,712 in New York for a
family of four.
Carter's plan will cost $2.8
billlon more a' year than the
present system. About 32
million pecsons would be
eligible
for
benefits
compared to 30 million now.
But Carter said it should
result in more payroll tax
Income for the federal
government ~d should not
prevent realization of his
"dream to balance the
budget."
He said consolidation of
programs could save
billion in the next two years
by eliminating fraud .
The plan also will jrt&gt;vide
for $2 billion in financial
relief to state and local
governments in the first year
of, the program, and provide
41
strong incentives" to keep
fam,ilies
together
by
eliminating rules that forbid
assistance when a father
remains at borne.

'1.3

in wiretap but gets $1 or $4

CLEVELAND (UP!)- A
fine was reduced Friday in
Cuyahoga County ·Common
Pleas Court against a
Cleveland car dealer charged
with rolling back automobil~
odometers.
Ohio Attorney General William J. Brown filed a $29,000
judgment against Town and
Country Auto Sales, Inc., last
May. In today's court order,
$20,000 of the fine was
suspended on the cooditioo
Town and Country does not
repeat
the
odom~ter
offense.

required to work.
Those responsible for a
child age seven through 13
will be required to take a
part-time job during school
hours lf one is available. If
they turn it down, their
benefits will be reduced.
Single ·persons
and
childless couples will be
required to work. If they
refuse a job or job training,
they will be ineligible for any
cash benefits. If llley accept a
job·or training,'their earnings at the minimum wage, now
$2.30 an hour, will raise their
incmte so much tbey will no
looger be eligible for benefits.
The basic benefit for tbe
aged, blind and disabled
would be $2,500 for an
individual and $3,750 for a
couple. The basic national
benefit for a family of four
with no other income would
be $4,200. A single individual
who is neither , aged nor
disabled would receive $1,100
•

state has be~n a major ResOlution 242, which does
stumbling bloc on the road to · recognize Israel's right to
a permanent peace between exist permanently and in
Arab and Jew.
peace with secw-e borders,"
Carter,
dressed
in Carter said.
dungarees,
talked
to
Vance is currently in tbe
reporters standing on tbe Middle East trying to resolve
scales of his peanut the Palestinian problem,
II' including Israel's refusal to
warehouse
during
hometown vacation expected return Arab lands captured in
.Ule · 1967 war - land which
to last until midwfl!k.
"We have not had any could provide a home state
direct conversations with
them (the Palestinians),"
Carter said. "But, of course,
they are sending us messages
through the Syrians, the
Saudi
Arabians,
the
By Boyd A. Ruth
Egyptians, the Jordanians.
Conoervatlonlst
So, we have a means to
contact them and lo exchange
POMEROY - As stated In
ideas with them."
a recent news relea~e by the
A rep0rter asked what tbe . Ohio Department of Natural
thrust of ·the indirect contact Resources, "A General Soils
was.
Map of Meigs County" is
"That they may adopt U.N. avallsbie to the public at no
charge.
The color coded sOils map
is placed over a county road
· . map,'so your particular piece
Thundershowers likely of land will be easy to locate.
Tuesday. Mostly cloudy,
The map shows six major
wann and humid both days, soil associations and should
highs to 90. Lows tonight to be useful to those wanting to
low 70s. Probability of know the general nature of
precipitation 70 per cent the soils -in Meigs Cqunty.
today, 60 per cent tonight, 50
The information provided
per Tuesday.
by this map can be helpful-in
·
understanding the main
:;::;:::::;:;::::::::::::::::::;::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:, · patterns of soils in the county
BXIENIJED OtJTLooK · for planning broad land Ulle
Wed~esday through
programs. However, it is not
Friday warm and bumlcl SUitable for planning the
W~day thr9ug!J Friday
management of a·!ann or for
wllb 1 chance of ahowers
selecting the exact location of
•ad lbudershowers each
a home or oth~r building.
tla Hlgba wW 1'1111 !rom
This is because the soils in
tb~\ tG mid 8h ~ 111
any one association nonnally
aortbo:l!d from tbe mid ..,: differ in slope, depth,
to low 101 lD lite aoatlt
stoninea.s, natural .drainage
Lows wm
e from lb~ and other characteristics that
fh lD tlte
to 111 mid affect your suitability for a
... tG low '101 lD tit eoulb
specific land ust.

for Palestinian refugees.
Carter said Vance has
decided to remain in tbe
Mideast
for
"second
conversations" with leaders
thera in hopes of reaching an
agreement for resumption of
tbe Geneva peace conference
this fall.
The President said the
United states would continue
to have no direct contact with

the Palestinians until they
agree to recognize the riglil of
Israel to exist.
"The thing that has made
the Palestinians reluctant" to
accept the U.N. resolution "is
that at the time 242 was
passed it only referred to the
Palestinians as refugees,"
Carter said.
"If the Pa!Mtinians sbould
(Co"ntinuejl ~it page 8)

Soils maps for Meigs available

Weather

moratorium on post office
closings. The Postal Service
has not closed any facilities
since the ban was lifted,
waiting to see what solutions
('.ongress and the Carter
admlnistratioo will propooe
to trim its near $3 billion debt.
When a post office is closed,
Ita customers are picked up
by one or more rural route
carriers, who sell stamp81and
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;,:,::::::::::::;::::
deliver mail. -~

D'!:

•

unglaciated, formed fu place be in an association norfrom highly weathered many caMot be shown on the
materials derived from general soil map because of
underlying bedrock. Solis on its relatively small scale. The
str.eam terraces in the county soil association in Meigs
fonnedover sanoanagravei County join assoc!ailons .in
or silty deposits of varying adjacent counties that have
thickness. The soils on flood- the same or similar kind oi
plains along the Ohio River ·landscapes, but do not
and other major streams necessarily have the ·same
fonned in silty or loamy dominant soils and soils of
·sediments deposited by minor acreage.
overflowing streams.
The maior strin mine areas
The landscape throughout . that nave been mined·
Meigs County Is -charac· are also shown. These areas
terized by moderately steep exist mostly ln Rutland,
to very steep slopes Salisbury, Scipio, and Bedseparated by narrow valleys. ford Townships.
This has been brought about
The limitations of each soil
by extreme dissection of the association for various land
landscape · over a con- uses are Included. Such land
, slderable length of time. . uses are farming, homeaites,
Consequently, many of the , septic tank absorption fields,
soils in the county are too lawns, landscaping, t'Oitds,
steep and shailow for . ponds, and campsltea, and
cultivation and many other picnic areas. Also indicated
farm and nonfarm uses. . Bn! slope ranges and depth to
Much of the land is utilized bedrock.
for permanent pasture or
For your copy of thla
woodland.
"General Soils Map of Meigs
Each soil association County" caU the Soil Con~icallv consists nf three servatlon Service at 99W647,
ominant soils for which it is
write 1o Box 432, Pomeroy, or
named and other soils of stop by the · office in the
minor acreage that qecur Farmers Bank building.
together . in a dlalinct, Ma[ll are allo available at

M~sof'~he C~~~~: soi188 ~ r::.r.:~:h~t th~f,~cl:t !:,.~ ~ .r::tt~P- E~on

�•
:1-The Dally Sentinel, Muldleport-Porneroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 8, 1977

Soto shuts out Pirates 6-0

2-TheDaily Sentinel,Middleport·Pomeroy,O., Monday, AU!\ 8, 1977

TAX VOTE
JACKSON, Oblo (UPI) Jackaon County voters will r•
decide In the Nov, telectloo it
the county should have the
ooehalf per cent piggyback
salea tax.
U approved, the tax would
be added to the slate's four
per cent sales tax on all
taxable sales In the county
except auto purchases.

little bit of both

Carter plays Solomon
PLAINS, Ga ., rUPI) .:.. In
110111e ways it "as like old
King Solomon : rn other ways
llwaspureJunmyCarter. He
decided to go to both
churches and pray r.r their
reconciliation
That's how the Pri!Sldent
settled the dispute of whether
to attend the Plains Baptist
Oturch or the congregation
that split from tt rn the btller
aftermath of a dispute over
desegregation.

Carter went to the Men's
Bible Class at the Plains
Baptist Oturcb at 10 a.m.
EDT Sunday, and to the
worship
servtce
at
Maranatha Baptist Oturch at
11.
On the fourth day today of
his first weekend back
home in six months,
Carter was expj!Cted to sign
clean air and public works
bills during a day of loafmg,
otherwu;e .
The clean air bill gtves

Detrott additional time, but
not as much as It wanted, to
meet
auto
emJss1ons
otandards The public works
bills proVldes funds for about
half of the 18 water projects
that Carter wanted to kill but
no funds for the Clinch River,
Tenn ., nuclear breeder
reactor plant he opposed. , •
Sunday morning, Carter,
his wife and their daughter
Amy went to separate classes
at the PWns Baptist Church,
the biggest church in town -

Kutler trial goes on
CINCINNATI (UP!) Additional prosecullon
,witnesses were to take the
stand today in the tense,
dramatic murder trial of
Cleveland phystctan Dr .
Stuart S. Kutler.
Kutler is accused of beating
eight-year-old Arthur Noske
to death last February. The
boy, whose boC!y has never
been found, was the son of
Ann Marie Noske, with whom
Kutler allegedly was liVlDg at
the time.
The case was moved to
CinClilllllti at the request of
both prosecution and defense
lawyers, who contended
Kutler could not receive a
fair trial In Cleveland
because of extensive pretrial
publicity.
Ms. Noske, looking much
older than her 32 years, was
the first and possibly most
important wttness for the
prosecution. She spent 212
tearful days on the stand iaat
week, telling how she first
conspired with Kutler to
cover up the alleged Feb. 4
killing, then had a change of
heart and told all to the
police.
She testified the doctor, in a
fit of rage, "kept hitting him
(Arthur) and hilling him.
Arthur didn't say a thing. Dr.
Kutler didn't say a thmg. He
just kept hitting him and
finally Arthur fell limp."
Ms. NOske said Kutler then,
unsuccessfully tried to rev1ve
the hoy. "lputhimm bed, put
a rosary and prayer book 1n
his hands and wrapped him m
a blanket," she said, though
admitting 'she knew her son

was then dead.
She said the next day
Kotler contacted his father,
Wilham, who allegedly
advised them to burn the
body m the fireplace
"William Kutler promised
me a new car if I went along
With the coverup and satd
that I would never want for
anything,'' she told the jury
Ms.'Noske S8ld she bought
alwmnum foil to tine the
ftreplace
of
Kutler's
suburban Brecksville home
for the burning, but the effort
failid. "He called me m ...
and there was a charred
body ," she sat d. "He
(Arthur) had no hatr. He was
charred black. Dr. Kutler
said he was gomg ID take him
away. I opened the car door
and he put Arthur's body m
the front seat of the car "
Kotler then
allegedly
disposed of the corpse
Defense attorney Robert
Hanna put Ms. Noske throughf'
a · tengthy, rnteiiSlve cross"'
examination, trying to etictt
testunony to show her as a
bad mother dependent oo
tranquilizers who cannot be
believed. She broke down on
the stand several bmes,
under quest.iorung by both
Sides.
Her mother, Helen Noske,
was
the
only
other
prosecution witness last
week. Unfamiliar with court
procedures and confused by
questions from both &amp;des,
she at one point glared at the
defense table where Kutler
sat and sald sarcastically,
"He's got three attorneys,
that's how innocent he is."

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

PreSiding Judge Harry A.
Hanna (no relation to the
attorney), told the eight-man,
four-woman
Jury
to
"disregard such gratuitous
remarks.'' The 31-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Kutler remamed calm durrng
the outburst and contmued to
take notes from the
testimony, as he ha's
throughout the trtal's ftrst
week.
Prosecutors have satd they
will call ~ wttnesses before
restmg thetr case by about
Thursday.
In an unusual development
iaat week, Judge Hanna told
the jury not to watch a moyie
shown on network televiSion
Thursday mght which dealt
wtth the trtal of another
Cleveland doctor - Sam
Sheppard.
The late Dr Sheppard was
CODVlCted in 1954 for the
murder of his wife, but was
acqwlled 12 years later m a
second
trial.
Ctting
sensattonal pubhe~ty
surrounding the case, the
U.S. Supreme Court overIIIrned Sheppard's conVlctton
m 1964, after he had served 10
years m pnson. He died m'
1970.
Kutler, a graduate of
Wtllenherg Univer:nty and
the Umversity of Cincinnati
MediCal School, was an
emergency room phystctan at
Suburban Commumty
Hospttal when the alleged
Noske killing occurred.

membersbtp about 400; all
white, where he has served
through the years as deacon,
Sunday sch.ool teacher and
supermtendent.
Carter was asked to gtve
the O)J&lt;)ning prayer . With his
mind obviously oo the church
spli\ he prayed · "Help us
remove thoughts of Jealousy
and lack of compBSSion and
love for our fellow hwnan
beings."
The' Plains church voted to
de~gregate last November.
But m the btlterness that
followed, several supporters
of that action, mcluding the
Prestdent's cousin, State Sen .
Hugh Carter, spht and
formed a new congregation.
Carter and his family drove
south of PlalllS to the old
Botts!OI'd Lutheran Church, a
IIO.year old white frame
butldmg where the new
church, which calls ttself the
Maranatha Baptist Church,
holds Its sernces.
Maranatha means "our
Lord come'' and ts referred m
I Cormthians 16·22.
Carter was asked to give
the benedtcttoo, and prayed:
"Bless this small and new
church. Separate tt, we all
pray, not out of a sense of
alienation and hatred, but out
of a sense of love and
rededtcation to thee."
Carter and hiS wife went
later to the Murray family
reuruon, the relatives on her
mother's side, at the Uruted
Methodist Church m Plams
In late afternoon, m a replay
of last summer, he played
softball agamst the news
media covermg him.

THEnAlLYSE!ft'INEL
l&gt;ll1':IIDT OF

MEIGS-MMON AREA

atE6TER L. TANNEIIn.L
Eut.£4.
ROBERT HOEFLICH

Publilbed c:li~

2158 EdiloriaiPbontm-2157
5ec&lt;Jnd dau ~e paid al.

Pomeroy, (}tdo

..
'

want this ittformatton can
send 50 cents With a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for tt to P.O Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y 10019.
Your husband ts probably
not very active phystcally m
VIew of all those problems.
That should mean that he
may be at least 40 pounds
overweight. He needs a gond
diet to lose weight and a
regular sensible exerctse pr&lt;r
gram while he ts losmg. If he
will get nd of all that weight
he may not need any diabetes
medtcme and hts blond
pressure may return to normal. Aside from stopprng corfee the most unportant thing
he can do ts get rid of all that
fat. You can help a lot here by
how you feed him, and what
you keep m the house. Of
course alcohol and 'ctgarettes
should be out of the question.
That Halotestin is a male
hormone type medlcme and tt
may cause his bndy to retam
flwd which makes high blond
pressure worse. The Talwm
can tnduce dependency and
should be used with cautiOn
il!ld certainly not as a regular
medlcme.
I preswne his doctor IS g!Ving him these medlcmes
because of his emotional
state and he may need to, but
if your husband can do
something about himself he
may make the doctor's job
easter and greatly improve
his own health.
You have,every reason to
be concerned, a man in his
age group who IS overweight,
has high blood pressure and
diabetes IS a Sitting duck for a
heart attack or a stroke. The
way to prevent tt IS to follow
the measures suggested here.
(&amp;cause of the volume of
ma1l Dr. Lamb cannot
111111wer your letters persooally but he wtll answer
representative letters of
general Interest in his column.)

WAsiDNGTON (UP!)
President Carter's blue prmt
for welfare refonn mcludes
support for tis "general
concept" from an influential
Republican and a forecast of
few j'rnajor" congressional
changes
from
HEW
Secretary Joseph Califano.
The patr commented
Sunday Ill separate televiSed
mtervtews one day after the
President outlmed .plans to
revamp the costly welfare
system.
HIS changes were destgned
to brt.ak the welfare cycle,
keep poor families together
and put many of them to
work, Carter t&lt;&gt;ld a news
conference at Plains, Ga.
The current welfare system •
lS such a mess the title

Unlike last season when he
ptlched and won almost every
game, be lost 14-11 in 10
mnings.
Afterwards he was greeted
by Sybil Carter, the wife of
his brother Btlly who was the
should
be
opposmg pitcher. "The best uwelfare"
scrapped
along
wtth
elements
man won,'' she r told the
of the existmg system, Carter
Prest dent
SSld.
Even if Congress approved
the welfare plan next year,
the program would not be
fully m place until October
198(), Carter said The jobs
portton "wtll he lfllttated as
PERT NEAR WINS
raptdly as posstble," he satd
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
A key element of Carter's
(UP!) - Jockey Billy Wilson
Donmta ~anuel was an plan ts art effort to "break the
rode Pert Near to VIctory m overnight guest of Mtss welfare cycle'' by wealilng
the 18th running of the $11,125 Deanna Shuler Tuesday at reciptents from dependence
Scarlet Carnation Stakes at Letart.
on government and into jobs
Mr. and Mrs Don Manuel Carter also proposed creating
Thistledown Sunday.
Pert Near ran the mile m and chtldren were at Forked 1.4 milhon JObs or JOb tralfllng
I ·40 2-5 and picked up first Run Lake Sunday.
slots and requiring many
Mr
and Mrs
Hoyt reciptents to go to work or
money of $6,675 while paying
$10 20 to wrn Jackie Pearl Ferguson of Pomt Pleassnt, lose thetr heneftts.
was second and Dancer's · Mr and Mrs Ed Kane of
Backmg for the "general
Summerfteld, N.J vtstted concept" of the plen came
lase was third.
A 7-!1-1 trifecta of Bayatlm, Mr. and Mrs Homer Warner
WhiStler 's Father, and Monday.
Mr. and Mrs Jeff Miller,
29
nephew Howard of Mason
Star Excell and Bye That vtslted Mr and Mrs Russell
Msn combined for a 7-4 daily JWush and family Tuesday
WASHINGTON (UP!) double worth $204.80. The everung.
Alnerican
telephone workers
second race qwnella of~ or
Mtss Brenda Lawrence and
6-4 rellirned $61.50
Mrs Sharon Hupp vtstted Mr. earn more than employes Ill
The 7,192 fans bet and Mrs. Russell Roush and most other so-ealled service
$834,287
famtly Wednesday eventng. induslrtes but less than tho.se
m fact&lt;mes, and this will
continue
despite
an
!mpresstve
new
3-year
1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be 1
l less than 300 worda long (or be subject to redlldloo by 1 contract
I the editor) and must be signed with the signee's ad· I A tentative agreement
I , dress. Names may he withheld upon pubUcation. I reached under threat of a
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letters I nationwtde telephone stnke
at nudnight Saturday was de1 should be In good taste, addressing IJisues, not persigned
to allevtate the
1 sooalltles.
1 frustratton
this disparity
creates among the Bell
System's 700,000 umon
employes.
To illustrate thetr feelings,
I
I umon members stole a line
I
I frOm the moVIe Network for
their negotiating slogan:
"I'm mad as bell and I'm not
Something they don't need
gomg to take lt any more. "
Dear Sir .
The new pact incorporates
This ts to inform your rt!l!ders of a rneetlfl8 held Aug. 2, a number of mnovahve
1977 m the Commissioners office in the courthouse in Pomeroy, benefits won recently by
Ohio. A delegation from COlumbia Township anned wtth a major factory UDlons. And
petition contallllllg more than two hwtdred names met with the ' Commumcallons Workers
President Glenn Watts
commissioners.
The lasue is the changmg of the names of our country emphastzed
that
the
roads. Roads most people are familiar with and have lived on prom1sed 31 per cent
(some of them) all of their lives. WE DO NOT OBJECT TO economic increase was rn tine
HOUSE NUMBERING. We would welcome that, but 1t should with settlements obtained in
not be connected with oiu' malllog address, places we are not the auto and steel industrtes.
fainiliar wtth. Our bank checks, our social securtty, pension
An atde said Watts wanted
checks, bliick lung checks, and any type of mail will have to be union members to feel they
changed to this stupid new system the commissioners are are getting as good a deal as
trying to force upon us.
the
autoworkers
and
The postmaster at Middleport was at that meeting and steelworkers got in recent
when asked how he was dealing witb tt he satd he was !gnorrng nego~tioos. ,
"They exist in a frustrating
it. But we must fight. We 'Cannot Ignore lt. When a few men sit
never-never
land," he said.
in an office and accept a government grant for something no
ooe needa It is time we voted them out of office, and I for one "They work m a f!fsl class
industry and earn more than
intend to &lt;\o just that.
In the new system we will have neither box number or most workers. But they feel
route number, and the names of our roads will be changed. In a they should get as much as
wocld of so much hardships, we do not need aoother hardship. industrial workers."
Union officials, however,
There is to be another meeting held lateral lite courthouse
do not expect
obviously
m POmeroy. We will see that everyooe knows when It is, if we
telephone workers will catch
have to tour Meigs County at our own expenae
At thiS later meeting a Mr. Carr from Zanesville Ia to be up to factory workers' pay.
the speaker.
An average switchboard
People of Columbia Townslup this IS not Communlat operator will earn nearly
Rll88ia. 1blB is AMERICA. Please Investigate lllls matter. Do $8.$0 an hour by 1980,
what your heart tells you Ia right. I do not accept thia way, and compared to an average
I will lake my mail Into another county where this system is hotaly wage exceeding f8 In
not in use. I would like to secede ~om Columbia ToWlllhlp, the bailie steel Industry.
Communications Workers
because I am ashamed we have such people in our government
offici~tls
nonetheless
who would imposfthis upon us. - Margaret Brooks.
'

Fairview
News Notes

I

!
I

. ..... .

·'

PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) - Here are tbe blgbUgbts of
President Carter's welfare reform proposal:
Cost: $30.7 bWloo per year.
Coverage: 32 million Amerlcaos
Changes: Food Stamps, Aid to Famllle8 with
Dependeot Cblldren and Supplemental Security Income
programs to be abolished and replaced with single federal
casb payment.
'
Work: Up to U million public service jobs or job
training p~slllons to be created. Thoae not disabled or
aged or wltb yoUDil chlldren must. wort or lose their
benefits. Those who do work would get supplemental
payments to an Income Door determined by size of family.
Taxes: Increased tax credits for the worldng poor and
tax deductloos for cblld care to free single parents for
work.
.
ReHel : About $2 bWlon In financial relief to state and
local governments In the first year.

from Rep John Anderson, R·
lll., third ranking GOP leader
m the House Appeanng on
NBC-TV's Meet the Press,
Anderson satd he was "not
prepared to say at thiS
moment that I could support
all the particulars of the
program.
"But m tis general concept
of trymg to address the
problems of the breakup of
famihes, doing something
about the escalatmg cost of
welfare, gettmg people off the
welfare rolls and mto
workmg jobs where they
become taxpayers instead of
tax eaters, those are all
pnnc•ples I can support,"
Anderson satd
The cabmet offtcial who
heads the government's

recogmzed a new rank-and·
file militancy created by thiS
dlspartty and other economtc
pressures, mcluding layoffs
caused by automation. The
contract also sought to des!
With the layoffs.
Like workers m other btg

operation
as
welfare
secretary of the Department
of Health, Education and
Welfare, satd he expected few
major changes m the plan by
Congress.
Califano, appearing on
CBS-TV's Face the Nation,
conceded Congress noay
"tinker" wtth p~rt!ons of the
Carter plan, but satd the
administration would push
for the verston that has been
in preparation since Carter
took office.
The program will cover 32
million Amencans artd cost
$30 7 billion a year, or $2 8
btllion more than the present
system, Califano said
Figures for costs were
based on a 5 6 per cent
unemployment rate, he satd.

!

!I

Industries, telephone
employes pressed hard for
''Job security" measures.
They shaved a few dllYs off
the work year, restricted
compulsory overtime and
won supplemental benefits
for Irud off workers eligible
for pensioos.

$11 $0,

Three months,

.7.00i

Elsewhere $28.00 year, SiJ: month.s
$13 5(1, Three monlha, •7 ~
S..bs&lt;ripUoo ,...,. lncludeJ Sundoy
TiJne&amp;.Sentinel.
LEGAL AD
Pursuant to Section 4113 61
of the Ohio Revised Code, I
will Offer tor publiC sale all he
office of the VIllage Hall of
'he Village of Middleport,
Ohio 45760, at 10 00 O'Clock
AM on the 22nd day of
August, 1977, lt)e fOllOWing
motor vehicle, to wit
1970 Ford Maverfck , Serial
No OX91U 208421
The sa ld motor vet·l1c le was
abandoned on the streets of
Middleport and notice was
served to the owner as
provided 10 Sectlon 4S13 61 of
the Oh10 Rev1sed Code

(8) 8, IS, 2tc

J J Cremeans
Chief of Pollee
M1ddl eport. Oh 10

IN THE COURT

OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

YVONNE
Rutland, Oh10
Plamftff ,

ADA

TACKETT

No lS 8-44
-v sFRED TACKETT
c o Anna Welch
Middleport. Oh1o,
Defendant
Nottce by
Publication
To Fred Tackett, whose
la st known address was c o
Anna Welch , M 1ddleport ,
Ohio, you are hereby not1f 1ed
tl'lat you have been named
Defendant In a legal act1on
entitled Ada Yvonne Tackett,
Pla1nllfl, vs Fred Tackett,
Defendant Thts action has
been assigned Case No 15,844
and ts pending 1n the court of
common Pleas of Meigs
County, Pom eroy, Oh iO,
45769

The oble&lt;:t of the complaint
1S for d 1vorc,e care, custody,
and cont ro l of the m1nor
children of the part1es , and
other re lie f
You are requ 1red to answer
the complaint w 1th 1n 28 days
after the last publ1cation of
thts not tce, WhiCh wtll be
published once each week for
snc: success ive weeks The
las t publication will be made
on Aug 22 , 1977, and lhe 28
days for answer w ill com
mence on that date
In case of your failur e to
answer or otherwrse respond
as re~ulred by the Oh1o Rules
of C1vll Procedu re , d1vorce
wil l be granted
Dated

May 2A, 1977
Larry Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Me1g S COU'ItY
Common Pleas Court

(7)

18, 25 {8) 1. 8, 15, 22, 6tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN

EXCESS O'F THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

NOTICE Is hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the &amp;oard of
Education of the Eastern
Local School D1str,ct, Reeds
vi lle, Ohio , passed on the 2oth
day of June, 1977, there will
be subm 1fted to a: vote of the
people of said School District
at a Special ELECTION to be
held '" the School Distr ict,
Amerlc~n Le~gue
Ohio, at the regular places of
{1st game)
vot 1ng therein , on Thursday,
Tronto
100 000 1oo- 2 6 '2 the 25th Oay of August, 1977,
Molw
000 204 OOx- 6 11 1 the quest1on of levying , In
Garvm, Murphy (6} and excess of the ten mill
Ashby, Sorensen, McC lu re (81 llmltat,on, lor the benefit of
and Haney W- Sorenson, 3 S L Eastern Local Board of
- Garvm, 7 13 HR- Milwaukee, Education for the purpose of
Brye (Sl
Current operating expenses
Said tax being
an ad{2nd game)
ditional tu of S 0 mills to run
•Tronto
002 001 002- s 13 1 tor three veers, which will
Mdw
001 130 02&gt;&lt;-711 3 raise a minimum of $55,000 00
Clancy, Vuckov1ch (5), WilliS annually
(B) and Wh1ft, Haar., Castro
(7). McClure (9). H1nds (9) and at a rate not exceed ing S.O
Moore
W- Haas, 8 7
Lmills for each one dollar of
Ciancy, 1 2
valuation, which amounts to
F1ft'1 cents for each Of'\e
T uas
002 000 020--- A 7 1 hundred dollars of valuation,
Oet
100 000 ()00--- 1 8 1 for Three years.
Ell1s and Sundberg . Arroyo
The Polls for said Election
and May W- Ell IS, 6 9 L will be open at 6 JO O'c:lock
Arroyo, 6 11
A M and rem am · op~n until
7 30 o'clock PM . of said day .
Cleve
000 000 01()-- 1 5 1
By order of the Board of
M1nn
021 011 3Jx-11 14 0 Elections, of Meigs county,
Eckersley, Monge 17). Kern OhiO
(8) and Kendall. Goltz and
Ernest A Wingett
Wynegar W-Qoltz, ,.. 6 LChairman
Eckersley, 10 9 H R - M1n
nesota, Cubba~e {6)
Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
Ch1cgp
000 001 001 ~ 2 6 1 oatea July 11, 1971
Kan City
000 100 101- 3 S 0
Kravec, LaGrow (91, W1les (7) 25, (17) 1, 8, 15, 3ft
(9) and Essu1n. Pattin and
I
Mart1nez W- Pattln , .,. 2 LKravec, 7 3 HR Chicago ,

Results, line scores

l

,8~-1}*~••• ?1/t. """""":

Inc • BolllneW and Gallooher Div ,
7$7 Third Ave , New Yort, NY.
10017
S..bl&lt;ripUon rala· Doliv.....t br
carrier when ava.ilable 75 ctnll per
week By Motor Route where canier
.-vice not available, One month,
S3 ~ By mail in Ohio and W Ya,
&lt;me Year, f%2.00 , Sb monlhl,

Phone workers settle

,---------------------------,

l

lltlve WarQ • Griffllh Cornptny,

:t

,.

1

National adverti.linM: reprerser.

Respected Republican
supports reform plan

Too many medications? ~~~~~=d$3,!:/Jloo
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M,D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband is 55 years old,
weighs 190 and IS 5 feet 9. He
bas a lot of headaches, m fact
every day. He has no energy
and doesn't want to eat, IS
very nervous and drinks a lot
of coffee and stays up late at
night. His stomach stays
upset.
He bas sinus trouble, high
blood pressure and dtabetes.
He doesn't lake shots for his
diabetes but lakes a pill for it.
He also lakes Halotestin, for
what I dcn't know, Triavil
and Talwin for pain. He lakes
Vici!IH: for vitamins.
! am sure he wQI become
dependent on all these
medicines but he doesn 'I
believe they contam strong
drugs.
I'm womed that all these
drugs and his life style are too
hard on his body. Are my
worries justified'
I can't talk to his doctor,
because I don't want him to,
feel I don't trust his ability to
~lp my husband. Everylime
my husband goes to hun wtth
a problem he giVes him more
medicine. What ts your optnion of the sttuatton?
DEAR READER - Your
husband needs aO the help he
can get. Most unportant, he
needs to helP' himself In the
first place, he ts taking
Trlavil which ts a combmalion medicine for anxiety and
depression. That means he
should not be dnnkmg ANY
cOffee. Coffee contains cafferne which is a strong
stimulant and negates the effectiveness of his medicrne.
Besldes that 1t upsets his
ltomach. I don't think he
lhould even use decaffmated
oolfee with his hiatory, or tea,
co1u ardlocolate.
'. DrlnklDC lob ol coffee contrlbutel to anxiety and
111 .,.,; dllcJcdel'l. To 81Ve
,_ IDIIN lllfwmation on this
J•
• 1 ,_ 'l'be Haith
._.,
1·1, Coftee,
TIC 01111. c.-foelle.-. who

..,.,.,

., , . OIUo v IIley Pllbllabini Coo&gt;"")', Ill Cooart St., Pomeroy, Ohio
t$'Mt BUIUleu Office ~ M-

season with a 13-3 record and was league
They
a 4-l record m
league
tournament and wer~ tournament champtons.
wbn the "Firecracker" Tournament m
Pomt Pleasant on July 4, undefeated at 3-0.
1..., Linda Williams, Kathy Whitlatch,
Jean Ritchhart, Shari Drehel, Debbte Holsinger,
row. Kathv ~.
cosch; Nancy Roy, Loretta Holsrnger, Pam Vaughan,
Pat Vaughan and
Carol TheiSS, asststant coach. Absent were Shelly Ward andassiatant coach Dave Reed.

Ma1or League Results

By United Press lnternat•onal

Ni111onal League
(1st Game)
San Ogo
001 222 lOG- B 15 0

Ch1cgo
300 100 101- 6 11 2
Owchlnko, Toml•n {7), Spill

ner

(7}

and Tenace. Krukow,

Broberg (6), GIUSti (7) , Her
nandez (9) and M1tterwald W-

OwchmKo. s 7 L-Krukow, 7 9

HRs- San D 1ego, Tenace {11 ),
l&lt;rngman (t8), Chicago, Murcer
(18), Buckner (6)

(2nd game)

San Ogo

000 010 03o- 4 7 1

Chic!lo
320 000 31&lt;- 9 13 1
Sh•rley, Gr•ff ln (3), Tomlin
(6J , sawyer (8) and Roberts
Renko, G1uSt1 {8) and Swisher
W-Renko, 2 1 L-Sh1rley, 6 14
HRs- San 01ego , Richards (3),
Turner {7), Ch1cago, Cardenal
(3), Swisher (4)

LA
010 000 (1()0-' 1 7 0
Ph tla
020 010 oox- 3 11 0
Sutton ,. Sosa (6), Hough (81
and
Yeager ,
Carlton and.
Mc;.,Carver W- Car.lton, 16 6 L
-Sutton
10 6 HR-PI')dadel
ph1a, Maddox (10)
SanFrn

100 320 lDO- 7 12 1
NY
100 030 OOQ- 4 6 l
Montefusco, Lavelle {7) and
Alexander, Matlack, Apodaca
Ul. 6aldw 1n (5)~ Mynck (6J.
S1ebert {8) and Hodges, Stearns Gamble (201
(8) W- Montefusco, 59 L001 000 OOA- s 12 0
Apodaca, 3 5 HR-New York, Boston
Oaklnd
010 000 001- 2 8 o
Randle {4)
Wise, Campbell (9) ~md Fisk,
Mntrol
000 000 11o-- 2 5 1 Langford, Lacey (91 and
Atlanta
001 120 02x- 610 1 sanoulllen w-Wise, 8 4 L.Brown, H o I d r. worth (S), Langford, 7 13 H Rs- Boston ,
Alcala (7) and Morales, Ruthv Carbo 112), Lynn (13)
en and Pocoroba W- Ruthven,
Ball
000 030 ooo-- 3 9 0
.4 8
L-Brown, 8 9
HRs000 OOA 20x- 6 10 2
Montreal. Morales ( 1J. Atlanta, Calif
Palmer, T Martinez (7) and
G1lbreath (51
Rudotph; Hartzell. LaRoche
Pttsbgh
ooo ooo ooo-- o 1 3 (6), Miller {9) and E;tchebar
W-LaRoche, 1 A LC1nc1
000 000 Slx- 6 9 0 ren
Rooker, Tekulve (8) and Ott , Palmer, 12 10. HR- Calltornla,
Soto and Bench W-Soto, 2 1 L Bonds (261
- Rooker. ' 6

NY

Today's

PUBLIC NOTICE

Rio Grande College Is
receiving bids for the ex ·
cavatto11 end atoninG of a
parking lot at Rio Grandle
College, Rio Grande, Ohio.
Bids for excavation and
stoning may be submitted
separately Qr as a com ·
blnatlon Specifications may
be picked up et tht Office of

Buslnns Affairs end all bids

Sport Parade
By MILTON RlaDIAN

uPIIIpoc1a Edltar
CXlOPERSTOWN, NY (UPI) - Ernie Banka goes into
Baseball's Hall of Fame today and leave it to him to come up
wtth the perfect way to go
He has been kicking around the idea ever since his electton
winter and has ilecided he'd love nothing more than to go
m the same way he went out - DlaVUl!l baseball.
"What a w~derful way to go!" he says, and he means it,
even though he s 46 yl!ars old and hasn't played for the past six
years.
rne Hall of Fame people have no objection to his playing in
today's game between the Philadelphia Phillies and Minnesota
Twins. After all, tt's only an exhibition.
If Ernie Banks, who starred 16 years for the Ot!cago CUbs
and hit 511 honoe runs for them, wants to put on a uniform and
play baseball here at Doubleday Field today after he's
officially enshrined, let him, everybody says.
Nobody sees anythmg wrong wtth the idea although it has
never been done before.
.
Bowie Kuhn, the commlssloner, has no objections, either.
"l'llevenrnakea special ruling," he says, smiling .
"Why not?" laughs Ernie Banks. "Willie Mays played here
iaat year, didn't he'"
That he did, Mays coming "out" of retirement to deliver a
(llllch-hit double rn the Hall of Fame game here between the
New York Mets and Milwaukee Brewers.
They see nothing wrong with the idea, although it's never
been done by any Inductee before.
If It were someone other than Ernie Banks, he mtght be
subject to herng called a "hot dog" for even harboring such. a
far.fetched idea, but everybody knows how the Cubs' Mt.
Sunshine never could get enough of playing baseball, and bow
he reveled in playmg doubleheaders, even while so many other
players were danrning them.
" How could anybody ever get tired of playing baseball, the
greatest game in the whole world?" asks Errue Banka, wl}o
enters the Hall of Fame, along with AI Lopez, Joey Sewell,
Amos Rusie, Martin Dihigo and John Henry Unyd .
Nobody can ever recall Erme Banks saying he didn 't want to
play ball, regardless of the circumstances.
"! remember once, near the end of his career, m spring
training," says Blake Cullen, who was traveling secretary and
now works for National League President Chub Feeney.
"Leo Durocher was the manager and Enne had just gotten
throu&amp;Jl taking infteld practice. Leo was hitting ground balls to
some of the other infielders and he bet Enue a Coke that Enne
couldn't catch 10 in a row off him.
"Ernie had finished his stint at first base, but he took some
kid's null and went out to shortstop. Leo hit 10 of the toughest
ground halls at him you ever saw and Ernie got them all,
saying over and over agarn, 'Yeah, yeah, this lS fun.' When he
fmished and beat Leo for the Coke, all the rest of the Cubs stood
up in the dugout and gave Ernie a standing ovation. They
weren't kidding They meant 11."
Monte Irvm, a Hall of Farner himself and one .9f Bowie
Kuhn's aides now, played with BankB one season with the
CUbs.
" Whenever I think of him," says Irvin, "I think about his
stamma, his versatility and his gentleness. He is truly a genUe
man. If he bad any weakness as a ballplayer at all, it was only
that he was too nice.
"I've seen him angry only once in my life. Some pitcher, I
don't remember who it was, hit him on the left wrist. 'You hit
me here,' Ernie said, pointing to his wrist. 'I gonna hit you over
there,' he said, pointing to the left field bleachers In Wrigley
Field Next time up, sure enough, Ernie hit one just where he
said he would.
"Maybe he should have npped some people more, but he
never did. White people, black people, they aU loved him. He
had ooe mission in life and it was sunple. He merely wanted to
play baseball and entertain all those who came to the ballpark
to watch him play .''

CINCINNATI (UP!) Pitching has been a problem
of late foc the Cincinnati
Reds, but after Sunday, Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson
may take a look at youngster
Marlo Solo.
The rookie went the
distance, throwmg a sevenhit shutout at the Pittsburgh
Pirates as the Reds came up
with a 6.() win.
, It was the Reds second win

12 noon, August 20, wllh bids

who
pick
006 010 OOD--7111 specifications.

up

b~

R lo Grande
000 000 1()0- 1 6 0 College rntrvn the rlght to
Sl L
020 010 200- 5 12 0 Seattle
Torrez and Munson. House, relect any 1nc1 all bfdl work
Houston
000 200 ooo- 2 I 1
Urrea, B Metzger (8) and Montague (1), Laxton (3) •. 11 to bo comptototl bY SIP
ttmber ts, ltn. Rio Grinde
Rader, S1mmons (8), Larson, Segui !5I lnd Stinson WSamblto (7), K Forsch (II and Torrez, 11 10 L-Hovse, 5 10 College Is an eqvet OP·
HR-New York, Blair {3)
portunrty tmployer .
Ferguson w - urrea. 4·3 LLarson, 0 6 HR-St
LoUIS,
Auv . 1. 9, 10
-.
RettZ (121

in a row, alter dropping a
Friday night doubleheader to
the Pirates It was the second
stratght complete game for
the Reds alter Tom Seaver
went the distance In
Saturday's 11-3 win.
And It was the second
COO!plete game for Soto who
now boasts a 2-1 record. He
struck out four and walked
ooly two as he blanked the
Pirates.
,"

Chisox stumble
3-2 to .R oyals
By BILL MADDEN
UPJ Spirts Writer
It's beginning to look like
they're gomg to play out the
scrtpt in the Amertcan
League's " Wild, Wtld
West.''
The Kansas Ctty Royals
dealt division -l eading
Chicago 1ts seventh loss m the
iaat eight games Sunday, a 32 vtctory, which sliced the
White Sox' lead to a halfgame over Minnesota . The
second.place Twins romped,
11-1, over · Cleveland to
complete a 3-game SW€€P
of the Indians, while the
Royals, who took all three
games from the White Sox,
are just 212 games back.
Texas, meanwhile, wliich has
somehow survived three
managerial changes this
season, topped Detroit, 4-1, to
pull within three games of the
slurupmg ChisOl&lt;.
Pinch-hiller John Wathan
delivered a one-oot stogie off
rookie Randy Wiles, who had
been recalled from the
ffilllOrs the night before, to
bring home Amos Otis with
the wtnnlllg run m the bottom
of the mnth mrung for Kansas
City.
The pttching-poor Wht te
Sox tied the game in the top of
the ninth on Oscar Gamble's
leadoff homer . But Ken
Kravec walked Otis to lead
off the nmth before Chism&lt;
Manager Bob Lemon relieved
first with Lerron LaGrow,
then Wiles.
Mmnesota, meanwhile,
used a two-run homer and
five RBI from Mike CUbbage
plus four hits and four runs
scored by Rod Carew to rout
the Indians behind Dave
Golt:z' five-hit pttching.
Elsewhere in the AL, New
York drubbed SeatUe, 7-1,
California
put
away
Baltimore, 11-3, Bostoo topped

Oakland, ~2, and Milwaukee
swept a doubleheader from
Toronto, 6-2 and 7-S.
Rangers 4, Tigen 1:
Dock Eilts survived a
bases-loaded jam m the first
inning and went on to pttch an
etght-hltter, his fo~rth win
smce joinmg the IOOlgers on
June 15 Back-to-back RBI
doubles by Tom Grieve and
Jun Sundberg gave Texas
two runs Ul the third. It was
Texas' 17th Will In the last 21
games.
Red ~ox 5, A's 2:
Fred Lynn belted a threerun nmth.lJlDing homer after
Bernie Carbo led off the
innrng with a solo shot as the
surgmg Red Sox won thetr
lOth straight. Rick Wise went
8 1-3 mnings and Bill
Campbell notched his 19th
save for Boston, which swept
its entire west coast road trip
and opened up a 312-game
lead m the AL East.
Yankees 7, Mariners 1:
Paul !)lair's tw&lt;H'llll homer
capped a stx-run thtrd inning
for the Yankees who lost the
first two games of the series
with the expansion Mariners.
Mtke Torrez went the
· distance on a Stx·luller.
Angels 6, Ortoles 3:
Bobby Bonds slugged a
tworun homer and rookie
shortstop Rance Mulliniks
had three smgles and drove in
two runs. Dave LaRoche
pttched three hitless mnings
for the win, while Jim Palmer
was pounded for six runs and
10 hits. m 6 ~ mnmgs in
absorbmg the loss.
Brewers ti-7, Blue Jays W:
Consecutive doubles by
Steve 13rye, Jim Wohlford
andLeM Sakata snapped a 22 tie 1n the fifth innmg of the
mghtcap and sent the
Brewers off to thetr sweep
I.ary Sorensen and Bob
~cCiure combined on a siXhitter In the opener.

Last second FG wins for Packers
GREEN BA_l, Wis. (UPI )
The pauncn around his
middle has disappeared. So,
he says, has nlS reputation as
a drinker.
"I've dedicated myself to
the Green Bay Packers,"
sa1d Chester Marco!, whose
iaat second 4:&gt;-yard fteld goal
lifted the Packers to a 23-20
preseason victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals Saturday
night.
"At times in the past I was
gelling a little WQd," he
admitted, sipping a diet soft
drink. "But I gave up
drinking iaat winter because
tt was beguming to affect me.
I figured I could go ooe &lt;1. two
ways - so I decided to qwt
-

drinking. J I

Marco!, who led ' the
National Football League in
scoring In 1973 and 1974, also
kicked a 45-yard field goal
with 1:14 left, tying the game
at 20.
Earlier, he coonected from
49 yards besides missing a 45yarder.
still, Packer Coach Bart
Starr said he was worried
when Marco! took aim with
just one second left.
''The leg was hurting him,''
Starr said. "I think he
stretched a muscle kicldng
off In the first half. He toia us
he noticed a ·IitUe twinge In
the leg. But we don't think It's
anything serious."
l'darcol agreed.
"It wasn't really hurt, but it
was a little sore,'' said
Marco!, wbo sat out the 1975
season after injuring the leg.
"It didn't bother me on the
kicks."
Marco!, In hla lllxth year,
aald a rigid offseason
program was responsible for

his trim look.

"I was overweight and took
off about 20 pounds over the
Wlllter," he said. "I started
working out three times a
week rn January. And I think
1t's going to pay off.''
Marcol's heroics overshadowed impressive passing performances by Green Bay's
Lynn Dickey and Cincinnati
reserve John Reaves.
Dickey, who miased the iaat
four games rn 1976 with a
shoulder separation,
completed 1l of 14 passes for
147
yards
and
two
touchdowns.
"The shoulder felt great no stiffness at all,'' said
Dickey, who played the llrst
half, then returned at the end
to lead a short drive that set
up Marcol's wlmlng kick.
"When I came back after'
mjurlng my hlp In '73, I was
petrified,'' he said. "But
tonight, for some reason, I
never gave the Injury a
thought."
Reaves, subbing for starter
Ken Anderson - who,
according to Bengal officials,
was being "rested" along
with a number of other
regulars- completed 10 of 12
for 129 yards. He also
connected with Billy 9rooks
on a 61).yard scoring pus that
gave the Bengals their ooly
lead, ~17, with 1:55 left in
the third quarter.
Earlier, the Benga1s bad ·
scored on Qu1s Bahr field
goals of 'ZI and 42 yardl, and
on rookie Mike Voight's twoyard run.
The game appeared headed
for overtime when Marco!
connected with his llrst 45yarder late In the fourth
quarter. But with 29 seconds

are to be received at the
Office of lut;lness Affairs by
to be awtrded on the 22nc1 of
August A S25 refunabte
d.,osit 11 required by tholl

W L

.. •.:..;:.:;.;: :: ... ,,.. . :•. . :&gt;':.':.:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::.;,;&lt;,:·::;:;:;::.=:•••;.: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;: :=::;:;:;;;:;:;.:;:;:::

!ast

Dl!\'OTEDTO 111£

I nternattonl 1 Le~ue
Un1ted Press Jn1erna 1onal

Sports transactions
av united

Wichita
Ch lcaoo WhItt Sox - Sent
right ha,ded pitcher Chris
Ia Mba It
Chicago Cubs - Placed Knapp to Des Moines, brought
outfielder Joe Wallis on tne 15 up retlef pitcher Randy Wiles
dly dill bled li$t; recalled from Des MoinH .
outfielder Bobby Darwin from

Press International

S.ndly

.,

left, Packer tackle Mike
McCoy knocked ihe ball away
from rookie quarterback
Tom Dunlven, and McCoy
recovered oo the Bengal 38.
"I was just fortunate
enough to hit the ball as he

stepped up m the pocket,''
said McCoy. "Then, it popped
out and it seemed like a gond
Idea to pick it Up."
Four plays later, the scnpt
called for Marco!.

.

Rams' fans get
peek at Namath

He got tied up With Pirates
veteran Jlffi Rooker as the
two threw scoreless ball for
612 innings
The Reds erupted and put
five unearned runs on the
scoreboard m the seventh
lMlng, Pittsburgh quickly
found out tts three errors that
mnlng were costly.
Cincmnati, m second place
in the National League West,
ptcked up one game on the
division leading Los Angeles
Dodgers With whom they
tangle tolilght. While the
Reds were winmng, Los
Angeles was dropping a 3-l
decision to NL East divtston
leader Philadelphia.
The Reds frnd themelves
1112 games back of the
Dodgers as they head west oo
a road tr1p.
Rookie Paul Moskau takes
a 2-2 record mto IDmght 'sgame against veteran
Tommy John who boasts a 124 mark.
George Foster led off the
Reds' seventh wtlh a double
and took third in a single ~Y
Johnny Ben~h.
Dave Concepeton grounded
to Rooker, who threw wtldly
mto center field Foster and
Bench both scored on the play
and Concepeton went to third.
Dan Driessen forced
Concepcton at the plate and
then stole second. Cesar
Geronimo walked and both
runners advanced on a wild
pitch by Rooker.
Soto then hit a long
sacrifice fly to right, scoring
Driessen and sendmg
Geronimo to thtrd. Pete
Rose's surprue bunt brought
Geronuno m With the fourth
run of the mning. Rose
proceded to steal second, IDok
th!rd on a wtld throw by
Catcher Ed Ott, and came
home when center fielder
Omar Moreno let the ball get
through him.

!!ij

West Virginians whip Ohio

ct G8

Pawtucket
T1dewater
Syracuse
Charleston
Rochester

62 47 569
58 Sl S32
59 53 527

Colvmbus

50 64 . 439 UV2

R•chmood

Toledo

..

57 53 518

1111
.41h
5 11'l

55 55 .500 7'12

s•

55 498 8

48

65 425 16

Sunday's Results
Syr~cvse 5, Tidewater 1
Columbus 9 Richmond 2
Rochester at Charleston,

21-0 on good passing game

ppd , wol grounds

..

WHEEUNG ,' W. Va. (UP!) - Although the
scoreboard read 21.0, the real tale was passing.
Put stmply, the West VIrgtma All-Stars under head ;:;:
coach Roo Renner had It, the Ohtoans didn't as the
West Vtrguuans routed the Ohio All .Stars 21.0
Saturday In the Ohto Valley Athletic Conference
football game.

Pawtucket 9. Toledo S

Ma1or League Leoders

By United P~i~~~;ternattonal

&lt;based on 100 at bolsl
Notoona!LeaJiu•
G AB H

Pet
109 &lt;147 15A 3.45
102 -t02 134 333
106 JIU 126 329

Parker P1t
stennelf P1t
Morales c;:h1

"I can't say enough about our defensive play I
we were just a littl e btl qutcker than they
s1m"' ns s1 L
103 359 111 326
were,'' sa1d Renner of Paden City ''Our passmg game
Tmplln St L
lOS -t31 140 '32S
went about as we expected, but 1 was pleasanUy ·:: ~~~','i,V c~~n
i ~~ !~~ ~~~
surprised by our running attack, mcludlng Tony StradLuzonsk• Phd
98 371 118 318
wtck."
Robmson P1t
90 314 100 J\8
Randle NY
86 325 101 311
Wheeling Park High's Stradwick scored tw1ce on
Amencan League
passes from Do~ Banda of Oak Glen High.
cmw M•n
G10:~24 ~ 64·~:7
Losmg coach Jay Circosta of Woodsfield, Ohto, said
Bostock Mon
101 422 145 3&lt;4
West V1rgirua played a "super " game
Sing leton Bal
99 347 113 326
.....-L
Rlce Bos
107 4'3A 141 325
"weir passmg attack didn't surprtse me m the :.:: Rovers NY
94 382 122 319
:: least," he sa1d "We worked on pass defense all week
Ba11or Tor
96 387 123 318
but Banda had enough time to throw and connected'
Yount
Mil
1D3
413 130 315
Hargrove Tx
100 345 107 3HI
We just dtdn't do the job offensively, and that was the
Cowens KC
106 Al4 12s 30'1
ball game 11
Brett KC
90 379 117 309
·:·
Home Runs
···
West VIrglnlacompleted 14 of 23 tosses for 163 yards
Nahon•l League Foster. Con
Ohto made good four of 15 aertals for 37 yards West
38. B u r r o u g h s All and
V1rgmia had 257 yards in total offense, while OhiO
257~h~~~~;~~~ 2!~dLGz~~~~~. PLhAI
·managed 120.
26
:;

believ~

jit

;;·...;;,:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;::::::
,
·· =:····::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~.
.·· ··
· ·::.: ·

Carlton adds 3rd
game on Dodgers

enca
League
R 1c~. Bos
29 Am
, Scot
I, nBos
27 Bonds,
Cat
26, Nettles , NY 25, H1sle, Minn
23
Runs BaHed In
Nat1onal League Foster Cin
109 Cey , LA 90 Garvey, LA
88 Lu:elnsk1, Ph 1l 86
Bur
rouqhs, All 80

· Prevention is
the best policy ...

By FRED McMANE
pttched a ftve·htller to earn
UP! Sports Writer
his first trmmph smce Aprtl
As lung as Steve Carlton 19. Rod Gilbreath hit a twocontinues his one-man show run homer for the Braves
for the Philadelphta Phillies, while Jose Morales homered
tt's gomg to be dlfftcult for for Montreal
Young men and women
the Chicago CUbs to get top Cardinals 5, Astros 2:
often ask why they have to
billing agrun Ul the Nallonal
Ken Rettz had four hits,
pay
more
tor
their
mcludmg a two-run homer,
League East
automobile msurance
The
Phtlhes,
who and Ted Simmons drove m a
Dnvers m t he ir teen s and
earl ier twen t 1es cause far
overhauled the Cubs this past pair of runs -.1th a pmch
more than the1r share of
weekend to take over ftrst smgle to spark the Cardinals
t, aff1c acc1dents Reports
place by one game, to vtctory over the Astros
the
Nat1onal
Safety
completed a sweep of a three-' Rookie John Urrea scattered
Council 21 8 percent of all
game sertes wtth the NL West stx hits m seven mnmgs to get
motor1sts are 24 years of
Dtviston-Ieadmg Los Angeles credtl for the Vlctory wtth
age or under, yet these
Dodgers Sunday, as Carlton Butch Metzger gomg the last · youthful operators are
mvolved as dnvers 1n 38 6
turned m a seven-hitter in a 3- two to earn his ftfth save.
per cent of all accidents
1 trtumph.
Giants 7, Mets 4:
37 3 per cent of all fatal
Carlton's vtctory was hiS
Gary Alexander drove m and
m1shaps
16th of the year - tops in the four runs wtth a trtple,
A great many young people
majors - and hts 13th m 14 double, bases.filled walk and
are sk ill ed, respons1ble
dnvers Obv1ously, though,
a sacriftce Oy to lead the
declStons at home.
qu1te a few are not
"I don't thmk tl's me as Gtants to vtctory over the
There's no substitute for
John Montefusco
much as the team," he sa1d Mets
development competence
Ma1or League Standmgs
"The team htts very well pitched 6 2-3 innings m the
and the nght attitudes,
By united Prer.s 1n:ternat1ona1
here
It's a great defenSive r8lll-mterrupted game to wm
National League
mclud1ng
a
positive
East
approach to defens1ve
team
anyway,
but
tt S even his ftfth game against nine
W L Pet GB
dnv1ng
better on Astroturf. I do get losses Len Randle homered
&amp;A 44 593 Ph il a
Our agency
provides
Ch1cago
63 45 583 1
for the Mets.
used to the mound here "
ftna nc1al protect1on and
62 48 564 3
P1ttsbgh
Carlton struck out rught, CUbs 6-9, Padres S-4 :
61 so 550 41h
Sf LOUIS
service In case of acci dents
Dave Kingman and Gene
Montreal
51 58 468 13 1h1 mcluding Steve Garvey three
mvolv1ng young dnvers •
New York
A6 61 430 17 h times, and blanked the' Dod- Tenace each htt a twCH1ln
but
many
of
these
West
accidents
can
be
W L Pel GB gers, after Glenn Burke had homer to power the Padres to
prevented That's why we
Los Ang
67 43 609
VICtory m the opener, but
gtVen
Los
Angeles
a
1.0
lead
CtnCI
55 54 505 l1 V2
say - prevention 1s the
m the second on a smgle that Chtcago rallied to capture the
Houston
52 60 464 16
best polocy
San Fran
SO 61 450 17'h scored Ron Cey. He also had rughtcap as Jose Cardena!
Sa n 01eg0
48 66 421 21
... , ..... b.
40 69 367 261f2 two hits and a sacriftce Oy drove m four runs with a
Sjlturday •s Results
and twtce ptcked the speedy homer and a smgle Bobby
St Louts 3, Houston 1, 1st
Davey Lopes off first base. Murcer and Bill Buckner
Houston 4, St Louis 1, 2nd
992-2143
His sacrifice fly to center homered for the CUbs m the
Ch1cago 10, San D1eg0 5
102 W. Mam
Pomeroy
Cmonnat 18, PittSburgh J
field m the second mrung lust game
Atlanta 3. Montreat 1
scored batterymate Ttm
Ph iladel Phia 1, Los Angeles o
San Franctsco 7. New York 3
McCarver with the go-ahead
Sunday's Results
run, and his two hits gave hun
San D1ego 8, Ch 1cago 6, 1st
stx in hts last eight at bats.
Ch1cago 9, San D1ego 4, 2nd
Philadelphia 3, Los Angeles I
In other NL games, Cincmsan FranCISCO 7, New York 4
nati blaitked Pittsburgh, S..O,
Atlanta 6, Montreal 2
cmclnnat1 6 , Pittsburgh 0
Atlanta topped Montreal, 6-2,
Sf LOUIS 5, Houstoh 2
St.
Louis beat Houston, ~2• .
Today's Probable Pltchen
(All T1mes EDT)
S;m Franctsco whtpped New
Ch1cago ( R Reuschel 15 3) at
PtftSburgh (KISOn 6 6), 7 35 York, 7-4, and San Dtego
downed Chtcago, Jl.6, then
pm
San D1ego (Wehrme1ster 1 3) lost, '9-4
at Montreat &lt;Twttchel l 2 7),
Braves 6, Expos 2:
7 35 p m
St Lpuls (Rasmussen 9 101 at
D1ck Ruthven, stdelmed for
New York (Koosman 811). 8OS much of this season wtth a
pm
c mcmnat1 (Moskau 2 2) at tendon m)ury in his foot,
Lor. Angeles (John 12·4L 10 35
pm

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

BASEBALL

1

DALE C. WARNER

Tuesday' s Games
By MARK FRIEDMAN
San Diego at Montreal
UP! Sports Writer
51 LOUIS at New York, n1gt,t
at PittSburgh, n1gh t
The Rams kept 57,286 eager fans waiting for 30 minutes Chicago
Cincinnati at Los Ang , n1gh t
before showcasing Joe Namath for the first time Saturday, but Houston at San Fran, 2, tw1
his brief third-quarter appearance appeased most worries Olght
Amertcan League
about the gimpy.tneed quarterback.
East
Namath c«npleted 3-of-4 !"'sses and led two long drives, but
W L Pel. GB
64 43 598
tile Minnesota Vikings pulled out a 22-17 decision with last- Boston
61 47 S65 J lh
Baltlmre
minute heroics from cornerback Nate Allen.
60 49 550 5
New York
"It's just a matter of gelling out and doing it," Narnath said. Detro1t
48 59 A49 16
A9 62 441 17
Mllw
"I wasn't sure I was going to play .... 1 felt a little better than I Clevelnd
46 60 434 171/:z
have the the first games of lither preseasons.''
38 70 3S2 261f2
Toronto
west
Fr11n Tarkenton guided the Vikings to an early 16.() lead in
W L Pet GB
the first quarter, taking advantage of a Rams' fumble and an Ch1cago
63 4.4 589
65 47 580
1;,
Interception. But by the fourth quarter the Rams surged Mlnn
Kan C1ty
61 45 575 21h
ahead, 17-16.
6(1 47 561
3
Texas
Then, on a fourth down punt, Rams' rookie Gerald Vaught Calif
52 SA .491 10112
Seattle
48 64" 429 11112
had trouble with a low snap from center and Allen raced in to OaklAnd
42 66 389 21'h
block the kick. He scooped up the ball on the Rams 23 and
Saturday's Results
-netr'o1t &amp;, Texas 5
raced easily into the end zone.
Toronto 5, Milwaukee 3
Boston 2, Oakland 1
In other Saturday adlon, Sa(nls 20, Bean 14:
6 , Cleveland 5
Detroit blanked Kansas City,
Archie Manning completed Mmnesota
Kan!i.!!IS City 6, Chicago 3
17-0, Atlanfl! shut out 5!. 9·of·14 passes for 170 yards
9, Balt•m ore 5
Louis, 3·0, New England and one touchdown, a J2.yard California
Seattle 9, New York 2
handled the New York strike to Tinker Owens.
Sunday's Results
Giants, 19·3, Pittsburgh Reoerve quarterback Bobby Milwaukee 6, Toronto 2, 1st
outscored Buffalo, 28·24, Scott passed 12 yards to Milwaukee 7, Toronto 5, 2nd
Miami edg_ed Tampa Bay. 1l· Henry Childs for the Saints' Texas 4, Oetro1t l
7, New Orleans defeated second TO and Rich Szaro Minnesota 11 , Cleveland 1
C1ty 3, Chteago 2
Chicago, 20· u, Dallas kicked 23 and 21·yard field Kansas
Boston 5, Oakland 2
whl pped San Diego, :U·l4, and goals for the other points.
California 6, Baltimore 3
Green Bay got past Cln· CO'ol\'boYS 34, Chargers 14:
New York 7, Seattle 1
clnnatl, 23 20 On Sunday,
Tony Dorsett picked up 26
Todu's Probable P1fchers
( Atl Times EDT)
Seattle beat San Francisco, yards in seven carries and
California (Ryan 15 10 and
:U·2A.
caught a nine.yard pass Simpson
Kansas C1tv
Lions 17, Chiefs 0:
before leaving with a ollghl (Hassler 6s 48)andat Spltttorft
9 Sl.
The
Lions'
defense knee twist. Charlie Waters
2, 6P m
thwarted 9 straiaht Kansas blocked two punts to set up
Oakland
(Blue
10 3 and
City tries at a touchdown, all two touchdowns and Danny Umbarger 1 21 at Texas { Sly
from within tho Lions' seven· While hit Drew Pearson with Ieven 10 10 and Moret 1 Ol. 2,
yard line. Oexier Bussey and two touchdown passes to give 6 lS p m
Cleveland (B1bbY 9 7) at
Andv Bolton rushed for Lions' Dalles lhe victory
Baltimore (Flanagan 8 8} 1 30
touchdowns.
S.ahawks 34~ 4,.rs 24 :
,
Falcons 3, C.nllnals 0:
Sherman "'mith and Don p m
Seattle {Wheelock 6 8) at
With 10 minutes remaining, Testerman scored on one. Ch1cago
( Barnos 11 AL 8 30
Nick Mlke·Mayer, who yard touchdown runs In the pm
missed an earlier attempt, fourth quarter to rally the
Milwaukee (Ca ldwell 2 4) at
Detro1t (Crawford 3 4), 9 p m .
booted a 37·yard field goal to Seahawks to vidory.
Games
give Atlanta tho victory.
1n
Monday
action, Seattle Tunday's
at Ch1cago, n1ght
Cardinals' running back Washington Is ot Cleveland Mmnesot•
mght
Wayne Morris loti oil runners and Hpuston visits Oakland. Milwaukee atat Toronto.
Detrott , ntght
with 50 vards In 11 carries
Cleveland at Baltimore, n1gh t

'

How To Change A SQUARE
Into A Good Salesman ••
I

.

.

Put A Business Service Ad In lt.

••

And Turn It Loose In

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Phone 992·2156 For Advertising Service

I

�~The Daily Sentinel,

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, AIJ8. 8,1977

Meigs

WOODS L( I l

Property
Transfers

"~T

I U,£ PU0 1/. ••II
ANI&gt; U~l r&gt;kl Of

t:

I&gt;ONl I :'I !!Ill II llJ~ T.

"

I f.tertr ,- ,-JA .oil

~ '~

fl f$.

v '0"/l Ah ..,. .

"

l

'

CREATIVE ARTS was a popular project with the teenagers. Sixteen year old Terri
Pullins of the Bashan Merrymakers made burlap wall hanging, macrame hangers, and
decoupage for her project judged by Mrs. Jerri Samples, a Lawrence County teacher. Terri
has been in 4-H for eight years.
·
.
KEVIN NAPIER'S conservation project, "Let's Explore the Outdoors" was judged

Saturday by Frank Toth, forester for Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and Vinton Counties during
. pre..fair judging which took place at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds .

The judges were Charles
Knotts, area . ~upervisor 1
Jackson Area Center; Duane
Plynnale, 4-H. Agent, Jackson
Area Center; Tom Williams,
Jackson County Agent; Dave
Samples, Lawrence CoWity 4H Extension Agent ; Jerri
Samples, Lawrence CoWity
Elementary Education
teacher ; Frank Toth, Service
Forester for Meigs, Gallia,
Jackson and Vinton Counties;
Andy . Lyles, Meigs CountY
Game Werden. .
Others judging were Lesa
Dearth, Alexander High
School home economics
teacher; Arthur Arnold, VoAg teacher at Meigs and
Eastern; Gary Michael,
Poultry Producer, Meigs
County; Hank Forgey, Gallia
County 4-H Advisor and sheep
producer; John L. Payne, 4-H
advisor of Gallia County ; T.

.

For 28 years I have fitted
hearin9 aids always
combining quality product
and professional service
with reasonable cost. While
we will continue to serve
.those who cannot come to
our oHice we will now
reward those wha can by
fixing the price at S27S.OO
for the best known custom
made and individual fitted

hearing
aids .
Prior
medical and audiological
examination encouraged.
If . you have- a questiOn or

·-------

......

J . Robinson, Mutual of
Oma,ha insurance salesman ;
and John C. Rice, Meigs
Agriculture Extension Agent.

Charles Michael Buskirk,
Janice Faye Buskirk to
Martin Broderick , Nancy
Broderick, 1.08 acres,
Chesler.
Bert Grimm, Chloru s
Grill)m to Bert L. Grimm,
Chlorus C. Grimm, Parcel,
Letart.
Robert W. Caruthers,
Diane Caruthers to (Jharles
Michael Buskirk, Janice F.
iluskitk, ¥. Lot 2i, Mid·
dleport.
Emmett Hawk, Dec., June
Wickersham, Comm. , to
Bernice M. Hawk, Mildred
Leota Smith, Juanita Pearl
Welker, Sarah Eloise
Cullums, Rob.ert Frank
Hawk, Parcels, tedlord.
Mildred Leota Smith,
Juanita Pearl Welker, Ralph
Welker, Sara Eloise Cullums,
Ernest S. Cullums, Robert
Frank Hawk, Ramona Hawk
to Bernice M. Hawk, Parcels,
Bedlord.

CLOSING DOWN
DAYTON (UP!)- B. Lyl&lt;
Shafer, NCR Cclrp. vice lritl."
dent In charge ci pet'louel
resources, says the atrltebound firm will clooe
• productim I!SUAily handled
by 840 members of the United
Auto Workers Unim Lo&lt;lal
1616 and continue only
maintenance functiona.
The strikers, who left their
jobs Friday !light, do lllOIIt of
the production work In
assembly terminals and
teller machines for financial
inslitutions, as well 88 fOOd
processing,
bullding
maintenance and janitorial
dl&gt;ties.
No contract bargaining
sessions were scheduled unW
called by a federal mediator,
the NCR official said.

CRISISLINE

CALL

An
arraignment
was
scheduled today for Alvin L.
Morgan, 20, Bucyrus,
charged with aggravated
murder in the July 21 .
stabbing death of Lawrence
Grauer, 75.
Morgan was indicted
Friday by the Crawford
County grand jury.
He and a 17-year-old youth
have been charged with the
death and a hearing will he
held Tuesday afternoon on
the request to try the
unidentified juvenile as an
adult.

992-5554·

•
•

•

WERE MADE

responsible.

DENTURES· DENTISTRY

POSSIBLE
BY YOURS.

•

•
•'

DR. A. J. STAEHLI- DR. K. H, CHUNODR. VICTORY. LlANO- OR. 0 , J. STOMBAUGH

One or two day
lull denture service,
partial dentures

IAI!illil

FOR PRICES

~OHIO TOLL FREE

OR. RIVIERE .

1·800·282·6411

RIVIERE CENTER

.
•

•

•

By Katheriue Neulzllng
"I've been a Senior Friend
for about three months now
and I've enjoyed every
minute of it. I've met some
••
new friends, both my co- .
'
workers and the people we
I
I
work with at the Athens
Mental Health Center and the
'
Arcadia .Nursing Home at
'
Coolville.
Most of the men and women
••
we work JVith are just lonely
•
with few or no visitors and
they're always glad to see us.
A few of the Senior Friends
have community contacts
that they visit at least once a
week do little things for them
that ~eed to be done and take
them shopping.
On July 1 all the Senior
Friends were taken to the
I
Holidsy Inn at Gallipolis for a
•
recognition luncheon. Our
boss, Kathie Filsinger,
Wi'1en you give to the United Negro College Fund. you
presented each of us cer·
help support 41 private, four-year colleges and graduate
of reward and those
tificate
schools. Colleges that could be training a black professional
who had completed a year's
you may need some day.
service were given engraved
Send your check to: United Negro College Fund, Box B. plaques. One afternoon we
500 E. 62nd Street, New York, New York 10021 . We're not
took a nice lady to town to do
asking fat a handout, just a hand.
her shopping and to attend to
her other business and ' we
No one can do it alone.
had an anjoyable afternoon
GIVE 10 THE UlfiTED ltEGRO COLLEGE FUND.
with her. On July 1S,.we had a
•
·A rn1nd is a terrible thing to waste. .
picnic for one of the former
A PubliC Ser" lce of this ~r&amp; The Advertising Council
Senior Friends at the .

.

1
•

•

5!J

mind
·

949 E. Livingslon Ave. , Columbus

Dear

H.~

Your letter Inspires several questlons: How do yoo avoid
sticky situationS (with new wives, e~.) when ex in-laws stay
ft iends? Do former lrusbarids resent their parents' "loyalty" to
you?
.
Let's hear from other divorced.people who have r~mained
close to their former mates' families. Your experience will
make~ interesting colwnn. -H .

Weekdays8 :30 A.M.Io6:30 P.M.
' You'll S ~ile Tomon owf[ You Tak e Care OJ Yp&amp;. r _1 etlh TodgV'

.POLLY·s POINTERS

Mrs .

Kentucky. the gift of Mrs.
Betty FergW!On and Jess C.
Smith.
,
Others at the wedding
besides those named above
were Arlene Scarberry, Mrs.
Fran Klein, Eugene Russell,
Becky Roush, I.J~ony Tyree,
Michael and Heather Davis,
Mrs. Fred George, Rutland,
Mr: and Mrs. Lynn Roush and
daughter, Cheryl, Lorain,
and Mr . and Mrs. Vince
Scarberry, Mason, W. Va.

Social
Calendar

' MONDAY
JAYCEE meeting Monday
at Meigs Inn 8 p.m.
SOUTHERN High School
Tornado Marching Band will
hold band camp Monday
through Friday at the .school.
TWIN L:lTY" &lt;&gt;hrme Club
m~ting in regular session
Monday · 7:30. p.m. J.l.efresh·
m~nts will be served.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion Aux·
iliary, Lewis Manley Unit 263,
Tuesday, 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Meigs Inn with Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith as hostess.
RACINE LODGE 461
F&amp;AM Tuesday 7:30 p.m.
Work in master mason
degree. AU master masons
invitl)d.
~-- .
"TAXPAYERS COMMON
SENSE" meeting Tuesday 8
p.m. · Racine Junior High
School. Bring pencil and
paper . Howard Nolan,
chainnan.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. James Page
will speak on house num·
bering .

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede ·Osol

Aug. t, 1177
Possibly lucrative Ideas you'lie
never tak en seriously rnay be e• plolted this coming year. This is
wtse. There could be profit
waiting around th e corner.

LEO

(Julr 23 - Aug.

'J
The '!hird llllnual family
reunion or Laura and Marion .
Ourswas held Jilly 2 at Fork·
ed Run State Park.
Games of horse shoe and
baseball were held during the
day. Re cognized and
presented gifts were Roy
Oonohew, oldest man; Ruth
Ours, oldest woman ; Mark
Yoachum, yoW!gest father;.
Becky Donohew, youngest
mother ; Scott Oonohew,
young est boy ; Mala
Yoachum, youngest girl; Bill
Ours of Columbus, Miss .
traveled the farthest; and
· Ruth and Lewis Ours, most
family present.
Those attending were
Audrey and Wiley Ours, Ruth
and Lewis Ours, Mildred and
Roy Donohew, Mark, Nancy
and Mala Yoachom, Racine;
Harry, Sharon, Angie, and
Ivan Ours, Colombus; Jeff,
BOcky, Rion, Michael, and
Scott Oonohew, Little Hock·

22)

Remember who you are and why
you're there and you can deal
ve ry successfull y with large
groups or corporatio ns today .
Don 't be overly impressed with
bigness. Ha¥ing tr ouble selec ting a career? Send lor your
copy of Astra-Graph Letter by
m ailin~ 50 cents and a long. sell·
ad dressed . stamped envelo pe to
Astr a-Graph . I P.O Box 489 .
Radio City Station. ~ . Y . 10019
Be sure to specify your birth

Carmel News,
By the Day

date

VIRGO

(Aug . 23· Sopl. 22)

Move on it today if you have a ·
secret ambition . no rn atter how
larqP. the breadt h o r scope. The .
res 111t s · co uld

b e E;ll( irt'!m ely

reward inQ

LIBRA (5epl. 23-0cl. 23)
ShOu ld you have so met hing
qooc1 ooinq tor you to day tr y to

qlve &lt;'tn old friend a piece ·ott he
ar. lio n Df! vel o pm ent s cnu l&lt;t
rew~r d '/Ou.r qenerosltv

SCORPIO (Oci. 24-Nov . 22)
Yo 11r I11Ck qr ow s i n d i rect
pro portiorl 10 the effo rt eKpend (&gt;(1 today The harder the try . th e
ITinre YOlJ are recomoeME!d lor
vou r efforts
·

SAGITTARIUS (No•. 23-Doc.
21) You may · nave to make A
toi! Qh dec is io n whi c h could
aflf' r. t severa l oeoole. let your
fa irness ouide
All will work
out well

Vou

CAPRICORN (OIC. 22-Jon. 1!1)
The larQest rewards lie today in
;H Aa 5 w here y ou l ac e the
qrea test chall enges. Don 't tear
obstacles - vqu can overcome
\hem

Rollers here for visit

o·

Lt. Col. ( Ret. ) and Mrs.
James RoUer and son, John,
Upper Marlboro, Md , and
their daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Jacko, San Antonio. Texas,
have returned home after
visiting here with Mrs.
Malcolm Roller and Mrs. Eva
Hartley along with other
relatives,
.
Last Sunday evening, Mrs.
Roller entertained with a
family gathering and others
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Roller, Lori and
Brad, Belpre, Mr. and Mrs.

ing ; Virginia, Bill, Louie and
Diana

Huffman , Salem ;

Delores, VIrgil, Patty, Ver·
non, Michael and Sara Ours,
New Philadelphia ; !sahel,
Tom, Kimberly, and Shawn
Edwards, Kettering; Diana,
Wayne, Lisa, Lori, Brian and
Dayne Ours, East Liverpool;
Roger, Sue, Amy, Randy,
Julie and Jason Ours,
Wellsville; Will, Pat, Billy
Wld Ryan Ours, Columbus,
Miss. ; Greg Oonohew, Col·
wnbus, 0 .; Bessie Rowe,
Trenton, Mich.; and Ralph
and Ida .Mae Ours, New
Brighton, Pa.
The 1978 reunion will be
held at Forked RWI State
Park on July l.

Richard Gress, Pat and Mike,
Colombus ; Debbie Roush ,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. KenIWith Cale, Marcia, Missy ~nd
Megan.
John Roller has enlisted in
the U. S. Air Force and will
report soon to the Randolph
Air Force Base in Texas.
HAVE VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil But·
cher, 'Portsmouth, were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
E. E. Stiles, Middleport.

THIS WEEK'S.

August 7th
thru
August13th

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Har·
vath, 'Maple Heights, and
Mrs. Kay Stamatis ,
Cleveland, were Thursday
overnight guests of Mrs.
· Philip Meinhart and Miss Er·
maSmith.

Mr. and Mrs. John Rasp
and Mrs. Elva Hamer of
Fostoria visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Circle and Verna
Circle on Tuesday evening.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle and Florence
were Mrs. Elva Hamer of
Findlay, Mr. and Mrs. John
Rasp of Fostoria, Mrs. Mae
Spencer and son of Chester,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Harden of
Charleston and Mrs. Myrtle
Ables of Bald Knob.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield, Ohio spent from
Monday till Tuesday with Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle and
Verna Circle .
Mr. and Mrs. William
Perry and grandsons, Joshua
and Jacob Perry of Holland,
Ohio spent Saturday night
and Sunday with Mary Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
New Haven, W. Va., were at
the Circle home on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester recently called at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lee and family. Jana
Swepston and Tom Erlic of
Columbus called at the Lee
home on Sunday.

QUARTER POUNDER
&amp;
FRENCH FRIES

Mrs. David Cwnings and
Miss Erma Smith were in
Wilkesville Monday night
where Miss Smith installed
cificers of Vinton County
salon 752, Eight and Forty.

gge

!!FOUR CONES!!

...

Flavors for this Week

Allen Cleland of Weirton,
W. Va. visited his mother,
Mrs. Walter Cleland, Racine,
last weekend. Sunday guests
at the Cleland .home, also in·
eluded Mr. and Mrs. John
Cleland and three children of
Parkersburg, W. Va., Ronnie
Estep, West Columbia, and
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Sloter
and daughers daughters,

CHOCOLATE
VANILLA
PEANUT BUTTER
STRAWBERRY

Racine.

TRY OUR

wERE VISITING
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gibbs
and son, Mark of Sewell, N. J.
were recent viSitors here with
Mrs. Malcolm Roller, Mr.
and Mrs. William Nease and ·
family, Racine, and Mrs.
Blanche Gibbs. Mr. and Mrs.
Nease entertained With a
cookout for the Gibbs family
and others there were Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Gibbs and
family, Miss Glenna SOulsby
of Syracuse.

STILL THE BEST
CHICKEN DINNER
.
'
9FFERED ANYWHERE.

I dairy lsle ~
.
.
Locust Street

992-5248

Middleport, 0.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 1!1)

CHAPTER 53, DA V, picnic, Bus1ness and pleasufe are com patible today . It's a good time to
I ahnost fill the one and two 6 p.m. Tuesday at Forest enterlaln clients or cvstomer s· in
. quart waxed cardboard milk Acres Park. Memhers to take a place that you know all will encartons with water.after they
joy
WED~ESDAY
· are w.ell rinsed. They are reWINDING Trail Garden PISCES LFob. 20-Morch 20)
sealed with'masking tape aild Club 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Ctlangmq conditions may at first
put in the freezer and when I home ·of Mrs. Jackie my!'&gt; tify vou Don't be concerned .
was ready to blanch Brickles. For . roll call Yon will ~el a handle on th1ngs
work them out to your advegetables I am going to members to display dried and
va'ntaqe .
freeze I peel off a carton and
materia~. Progrwn will he
pot the block of ice in the on "Dough it Yourself" and ARIES (Mirch 21-Aprll 181
You' re luckiest today in things
water to chill the vegetables. the arrangements are to he that
you personally manage. You
It does not melt as quickly as "Sunrise and Sunset" featur- take precedence even over
ice cubes do.
those who t1ave more elCing red and yellow flowers.
perience in the fiel~ .
In the winter I carry a spr·
ROSE
Garden
Club
will
lng type clothespin with my
TAURUS IAprli 20·M•y 20) II
name printed on it In my coat meet at the home of Mrs. you're enterprising today you'll
pocket and when I remove · Leota Masser Wednesday at 8 be able to figure out a way tb
gain a subst;:.ntiat return from a
my snow boots I clip them p.m.
source other than where you
together with the clothespin. THURSDAY
earn your daily bread .
They are then easy to spot . LAST OAY for senior citizens
(MIJ 21-Juno 20) Work
and there iS no danger of to buy bus tuckets at $11.75 at GEMINI
from a li st or a fiKed set of plans
anyone taking them by senior citizens center for · today You ·ll be much more
mistake. -E.S.
successful if you follow $Ome
state fair Aug. 18.

welding,

coniiiiunication
(photography and writing
and reporting .for teens),
conservation (exploring lhe
outdoors, windbreaks, Ohio
birds, fishing archery)),
aquatic science, safety with
guns, entomology, and
commodity marketing.

Satisfactions of·work
·as senior friend noted

'

"'-

I wasn't. Result: at 17, I'm married and have a beautiful
11-month-old baby. I'm happy with my family, but I'd rather
have waited five years for them.
Teenagers don't tell their parents because they know the
reaction they'll get. Butjl].l the hollering In the world won't stop
a girl who believes it's her right to love.- NOT AS SMART
.·
Dear Helen:
All those terrible In-law slams! Here's something upbeat
for a change.
·
I'm fortunate. I have been married twice and have the two
nicest mothers-ln-iaw I could ever ask for .
Most ·in-laws, when their sons get divorces, reject the
former daughters-in-law,'but mine never made me feel I didn't
belmg. My natural parents are dead, and I'll always be
grateful for the.moral support my "other parents" gave and
are giving to me. - H.P.G.

.
hamsters, and rabbits,
veterinary science (normal
animal and animal disease) ;
health, home nursing and
first
.aid;
personal
development and leadership;
family life, home economics,
money management, home
management, housing and
furnishings (refinishing,
redecorating, and creative
arts ); engineering with
model rockets and airplanes.
Also included were bicycle,
electricity (the hows and
whys of electricity, and
electric water systems):
rope, small motors, tractors,
woodworking,

~~

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HIS
COMTRJB(JTIOMS

'

uS

4-Hers Projects judged
.
Several hupdred 4-H club
members presented their
work of many months to
judges qualified in various
projects areas at an aU day
judging session which took
place in the new show arena
on the Rock Springs
--------------~-------.Fairgrounds . All was in
preparation for the Meigs
County Junior Fair next
week.
Not only was the quality of
projects evaluated, but the
judges also interviewed the 4H'ers to determine their acta I
knowledge along with in·
specting their project books
before giving that final
grade.
All 4-H projects were
judged except food, clothing,
and gardens. This included
livestock (beef, dairy, goats,
swine, poultry, horse, sheep,
and small .anftna~ such as
dogs, cats, guinea pigs, ·

ep

Ours fi-a.mi/11 uathers

united in marriage

Dorthea Davis,
:~
dau~hter of Mr. and Mrs.
~
}Jy Helen Hottel .~-' John BryliJI, Middleport, and
~
• • e
· . Harold Scarberry, son of Mr.
• and Mrs. Bernard Scarberry,
Mason, W. Va. were married
Ia 'Pill' Pareail• Decision?
on July 30 at the home of the
Dear Helen:
Let's hear it for "C.M." who says, "How dare a talt· bride, Riverview Drive.
suppcrted 'help'«ganlzatim furnish our 16-year-old daughter . The double ring ceremony
was performed by the Rev.
with birth control pills without her parents being notified?"
One of the most trawnatic moments of my life was when 1 Noel Hennann at 7 p.m.
found out our' daughter was on tho pill and ""4.been for over a before members of the fwnily
and a few friends.
year.
.
Serving as attendants for
Her school had made arrangements with a doctor to give
the
couple were Mr. and Mrs.
her an examination and free pills. She had been hiding them
Ronald
Russell of Lorain,
under the mattress.
and sister of
brother-in-law
'Ibis is moral manipulation by govenunent . .More of us
the bride.
should fight back! - MRS. V. W.
A reception followed the
wedding
wi\h the bride's
Dear W.:
tablil
featuring
a three tiered
Had your daughter admitted her affair and asked yoor
cake
topped
with
the tradi·
consent, what would you have done?
.
tiona!
miniature
bride
and
Since we already know the answer to that one (histrionics,
groQlll.
Mints,
sandwiches,
ultimatums, grounding -and your eventual failure ), tell me,
which is preferable: pills under the mattress or an unwanted potato chips, nuts, punch and
coffee were served with the
baby on the way?
cake.
I go along with legislators In some 26 states and D. C., who
Following their wedding
affinn the right of young people under age-18 to receive
the couple left on a trip to
contraceptive care without parental !!_nowledge.
When it's inevitable, at least make it safe !
... And whether you want to believe it or not, ·•·•·
"Inevitability" is often a fact of life these days ... no matter
how parents warn against the hazards of ~arty sex. - H.
P. S. Read on;

ARCHERY was Tmruny Pulilils 4-H project and here he reviews the parts of an arrow
for Andy Lyles, Meigs County Game Warden. Tommy resides at Route 1 Long Bottom and
J.S a member of the Five Point Bucks.
'

Everyone wants. to.· wtn a
blue ribbon, but not everyone
does.
That's the way it is with
any judging; Saturday's
judging of 4-ll projects was
no different.

'

e en

.t~~

Dear Helen:
C.M .'s daughter is smart! And C. M. shoold be glad that a
girl who h88 !!Uide up her
about sex is trying to he

wish .an · appqintment call
me at 592-6238 .

'300.00
less 125.00 .
Cash Discount

~· H,,.." ~ --·,.:.;..,.n.H
.: :. :x: : : ~: ::flz:~z.~.;~~*"~f-1
·
Couple

.

OR . RONALD F. RIVIERE
MURDER CHARGE
BUCYRUS, Ohio (UP!) -

~n.e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 8, 1977

·lOu have more~ ,
over your electric bill than

Roadside Park on Rt. a:J.
From July 18 to 22 there
was a Multiphasic Health
Screening program at the
Meigs Jr. High which was
very successful .
.Rick C':"w .spoke on Cr~e
Prevention at the Semor
Citizens' Building on the
26th, Also on the 26th we had a
picnic at Arcadia Nursing
Horne. When we arrived we
were surprised to find aU the
patients already outside and
very anxious to get started.
The cookS and the nurses belp
with ·the servirig and everything went along smoothly.
Lots of them came back for
seconds and thirds and they
all said that everything was ·
very good. All the patients
were optslde to qt except the '
bed patients. E~eryone .
thanked Ulland said lt was a
very good picnic.
On the 27th we bad our
regular Wednesday meeting,
1n· Pomeroy and our monthly
meeting at the Athens Mental
Health Center to Iron out any
problems that may have
come up.
July wu a good month for
us and we have several ~gs
plaMed for August which
you'll be reading about In
next month's article.

you think.

No matter what we do to help keep
your electric bill in line, there's one thing
we have no power over.
The amount of power you use.
So we\:llike to point out the most
significant places where only you have
rhe bigge,st opportunities to save.

Insulation
6 to;l2 indies.of insulation in your
attic could .save you real money each year.
You'll save even more if you insulate
your walls, heating ducts and hot water
pipes. .
Caulking, weatherstripping, storm
windows, shades and drapes also help
keep heat inside in winter, and outside in
summer.
Lower your thermostat in winter.
Each degree below 68°F can save three
percent of the energy needed for heating.
If you have air conditioning, a higher

.thermostat setting will. also save energy

m summer. ·

HotWlter Use
You can save up to 5% a year of the
energy needed to heat water if you turn
your water heater thermostat down to
120 degrees and take quick showers
instead of baths.
Fix leaky hot water faucets promptly.
And wash clothes in cold water, if you can.
·Washing and drying only full loads
of clothes and dishes is more economical, too.

Applianre Efficiency
If you're.in the market for appliances
and equipment, look for the new energy
saVing features qn refrigerators, freezers,
and dishwashers. Choose an Energy
Efficiency Ratio ( EER) of 8 or higher on
room air conditioners.
While there are a lot more ways
to save electricity, these are the ones that
will make the biggest impression on
your bill.
•

OhioPower~

Working together is the o y way.
I

••

.

.

DEAR POLLY - I have
trouble keeping my . white
lingerie really white. Should
they be washed with other
pastels as some are not supposed to be bleached? Should
I put them In the dryer?· Any
help you could give me would
be appreciated.- JAYNE.
DEAR JAYNE- You failed
to say so I am only preswning
your underthings are nylon or
polyester. Authorities sug·
gest restoring w!liteness by
pouring one-half cup or more
of a liquid cold water
deWgent that has a special
brightener . over the damp
garmentlt and work in
thoroughly. Let them soak
this way for about 20 minutes
and put garments (with .,..
cess liquid from the soaking)
in the washer with hot water.
I only run them through the
delicate cycle. Run machine
about 10 minutes In aU and
have the rinse warm. Some
things will take to a properly
diluted chlorine bleach In the
wash. Nylons have been
knoWn to absorb color from
other things particularly if
they are packed away with
other colon. U all else fails to
restore the desired
whiteneas, color remover
could be used. I put such
.things In the dryer for a short
time until dry but they could
be rolled In a towel and ironed
if desired. ·POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Hazel
could Obtain privacy and still
let light In her windows by using a self-adhesive plastic
paper. it Is Inexpensive, ~
to put on (follow directions)
and can be ,removed
whenever one wishes. Light
comes lhro"8h but no one can
see In from the .outside.
·MRS. J .E.O.
DEAR READERS - Mr.
· B.R. also wrote that he ae11s a
reflective flhn that can be applied to windows so one can
aee out but no one can see In
and that serves as an inaulalot that reduces heat loss
In winter and screens out
much ·heat and glare during
the bot months. Look .In the
· Yellow Pacu and see who
ee1la this prOduct In your city.
-l'OLLY.
DltAR l'Ol.LY - When we
go Cll vacation I water my
houll planll and then enclose
each plut In a pleetlc bq
tbat Is lutened with • twl8t
tie and they Ita)' In good
lblpe fOJ: u Jonc u a month•
('11111 a Polly's Pointer
mall)' yeua qo. l

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r

?h~~·

TUESDAY,AUGUST9~

.. MASON COUNTY

· HELEN CORNELIUS

I JIM EO BROWN

WEDNEBDAY,AU8UST10~

TOM T. HALL
111111111111

bUill

COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

un~auunf .

THURSDAY, AUOU ST 11th

UGUST 9·1 0·11·12·13
THRASHER

BROTHERS

sort ot guideline .

Meigs 4-H Club News
POMEROY - The Mixed·
Up Hotshots held a meeting
on July 27 11.t the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd Sayre. Three
advisors supervised the
meeting of 14 members.
Items discuaaed were upCilmlng judgings and the
delay of the club trip. All
members gave a report on
how they were coming along
on their projects. Horseshoe
and tag games were played
and refreshments were
oerved by Mrs. Paula Sayre.
The neJ:t meeting will be held
August 11 . at the James
Woodyard residence Where
plans for decorating · fair
. bootha will be d!Bcul!lled. Ralph Jordan .

Mrs. Flagg. August 9, the
nen meeting, will be held at
Jim Carnahan's where Tony
Carnahan will clip a cow. Bob Lee. ·

tiiiiUIUUUUUIIIIOIIII :a:BIII\

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Something of value is coming to
you . but you haven 't been able to
gather il 1nto the fold. Today a
person working on your behalf
could break the logjam .

The Hillbillies 4-H Club
held three recent meetings In
July. The 25th and 26th
meetings were held at the
McGuires where Andy Lyles,
Meigs
County
Game
Protector, gave a six bour
hunter safety course and test.
Refreshments were served
the eleven club member~ and
two advisors' by the
McGulres. A meeting on the
29th was held at tl)e Dyers
where everyone shot their
quaUfying rounds in their gun
I
safety ptojects. Refresh·
August 3, the Meigs County ments were served by the
Better· Uvestock Dairy Club Dyers. - Qpal Oyer.
held a meeting at the home of
Julie F1agg. Eleven club
The Sunbeams attended a Tht! tnditional ellgance of
this chair will make it the
members attended , the meeting at the h&lt;ime of Mrs. envy
'of all who see it. A
meeting with one advisor Joyce Ritchie on July 28. touch of class for your parlor
preaent. Sweepstakes money There were two advisors and ' or den. In addill~n to its
waa collected and Interviews eight club members In at· beauty, the ·special "Wall
were dlscuued. Health tendance. A fondue party and Saver" mecha n is·m
problems of cattle was the a Style Review for mothers functions within inchas of the
wall, letting you relax
project lesson topic. A was discussed. R!!Cipes were entirely
In a full recline.
demonstration was given by brought and everyone con· Covered In 1 rich crushed
Julie Flagg on housing a 'tributed to the refreshments. velvet, this stvlish' recliner
belfer during the winter. The fondue party will ·take feoturn the plush buttonUpeet the cartoon characters place at the nen meeting on luf1ed bock and padded n&gt;!l
arms. Why not let us show It
.tas the recreation and August 4. - Connie Stout.
to you today?
1eft 1111hmenta were served by

4
Miles North ·
Of Point
PleaiiCint
OnRoute62

FRIDAY, AUBUST 12th

NaTIONALLY KNOWN
ROCK GROUP

llUIHl.illlUUUUIUUIIOUJa Jl)
SATURDAY,AUBUST1~h

JERRY REED

THOSE DAYS AT THE FAIR
NO GRANDSTAND
CHARGIS .

ALL
FREE

SHOWS!
.

.

WEST VIRGINIA'S
BIGGEST
AND
BEST COUNTY
FAIR

OFFI.CE
5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT

,,

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I

$-The Dllilv Sentinel. Middleport·PQIIll!roy, o., Monday, Aug. 8, tm

...

n WOI"lb or Under

,..,

II$
1901

•.10

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to otter .

want to buy or sell someth1ng,
oe looking for work . . or
whatever ... you II get results
f osrer w1ti"' o Senhnel Wont Ad

'"'

'"'

3.1&gt;

£ach word IJVH tht tnlrlUilWll I~

worm ill • et:nUI: '*' ~wd tJl'l" d.!l)
';tt4 rwuung ot.hto.r than l'WlSeL'Uln~
da y:~~

•n;te

Coli ~2 · 2150

will ~ t,iutr&amp;ed &lt;H tlw I da~

In m~mury... Cat.nJ d. Thanks u1"1 .
OO.huuy • 6 c..'ents per ~ ord. SJ 00 ·
mmunw.n CQh iJ1 advant.~

Moi,uk&gt; Rome sales al\d Vttrd salt$
Hl'e t«:t'eyli!d

urc.lt'r ti

lollfl 8t+c.
Uill'i

only Wllh

l'tlllrhCAtl~

Nwnl:.er

~~~

~;~Sh WLltl

fur o.d.s ~&lt;m)"­

Ca rt' uf Tht.• ~~~­

Tilt! Pubhs.llt't fl!!it!r\t&gt;!!o Ull:l rttShl
to edit t.tr re,tet·t any atb tlt.'CIIlCit_objt!\:\IOIUll. Tht· Pubhsht't "1 ll 1ltJl 00

Tt'!ip\Jli!Hble fur lllUI ~ U1a11Jhe m~ ul·

rt'\,'l.tnsertKJIJ

Phone992-21fl6

.

·NOTICE
ADVERTISING
I· DEADUNES
Mon~y

Noon on Satunla:y

·-

TRANSPORTATION

Columbus, Ohio
July 22, 1977
Contract Sales Legal

Copy NO . 77-993

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposalS will be
rece 1ved at the olfice of ttJe
D1rectcir
of
the
Ohio
Department
of
Trans-,
porti!tion , Columbus, Oh i~,
until
10 :0 0 A.M., OhiO
Standard T'ime, Tuesday .
August 16, 1977, for Im provements 1n .
Meigs County . Ohio . on
Section MEG -33 -2 . 22, U S .
Route 33 In Bedford Town ship, by grading. drammg
and paving with asphaltiC
concrete,
install at i on of
traffic control dev ice. and by
const r ucting: Bridge No .
MEG-33 -0226 , · a prestressed
concrete box beam super structure with concrete
substructure &lt;spans 39.87 feet
. AD 73 feet - 39 87 teet ,

between

guardrli 1IL over West Branch
Shade Riv er .
P.avement W1dth 200 feet
Projec.t Length 400 00
feet or 0 '075 mile
work Length- 1,400 00 feet
or 0 765 m 1le.
" The date set for com
pletlon of t h is work shall be
as set forth in the biddmg
proposal ' '
·
Each bidder shall be
required to f ile with his b1d a
cert1fted check or cashier's
check for an amount eQua l to
five per cent of his bid, but In
no event more tha n f ifty
thousand dollars , or a bond
tor ten per cent of hts bid,
payable to the Director .
Bidders must .!ppl y, on the
proper
forms ,
for
qualifications at lea st ten
days prior to the date set for
opening b Jds in accprdance
with Chapter 5525 Ohro
Rev1sed Code.
Plans and speci f ications
are on file in the Department
of Transpo rrat10n and the
office of the Distri ct Deputy

D•rector .

The Director reserves the
right to reJec t any and all
DAVID L WEIR

DIRECTOR

8 11 73

( 8 ) l, 8, 2rc

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

STI&gt;TEOFOHIO
DEPARTMENTOF

TRANSPORTATION
Colum bus,, Ohio
July 29,1977
Contract S~les L~e9al
Copy No . 77-1Ga7
UHlT PRICE CONTRACT
..1.
PM$.OOOS( llC)
sealed pr.Q9osats wr ll be
recerveO at the oHrce of the
Director
of
the
Oh io
--;. Department
ot
Tran_s r:nrtat lon, Columbus, Oh10 ,
": unt il
10 : 00
A. M ., Oh io
Standard Time , Tuesday .
August JO , 1977 . for im
p-avements 1n :
Athens , Ga!l1 a , Me igs ,
Monroe ,
Morgan
and
.. WaSh ington Counties, Ohio.
' on var1ous lo£:aHons m
"" Di str ict 10 by rehab ili ta ti ng
e..: rstino
tl'lermo~rlast i c
arrows , words. and lines
•1
"Project.Length-OfeetorO
mlles .
' work. Length - 0 feet or 0
miles. .
The · Ohio Department ot
Transpor tat i on
hereby
notif1es all bidders that 1t w ill
affirmat ively Insure that 1n
any contract entered mto
pursuant
to
this
ad vertisemen t,
m i nority
lJJS iness en terpns es Will be
~. afforded full opportumty to
""" submit bi ds in response to
ttl is invitat ion and wrll not b&amp;
"discrim in ated against on the
groundS of ra ce , cotor, or
,· natural
or i g in
in
con J
sideraflon for an award .
J
1 'Minlrnum wage rates tor
th i s protect have
been
predeterm i ned as requ i red
·, bylaw endi!re set forth in the
bid proposa l."
" The date set tor com ... 'pl ittJon of this work shall be
set fbrth in the bidding

proposa l/'

Each bidder sha ll be
raqulred to file w ith his b 1d a
•cerliffea check or cashier's

Check for en amount eQual

!O

five per cent of hIs bid , but 1n

'no event more ftlan fifty
t;ovsand dollars , or a bond
for ten per cent of hl5 bid,
payable to the Director .

Bidderl must apply , on the

proper

forms.
for
q.~allflcation at least tet') days
prior to the date set for
opening bids in accordance

with. Chopter S525 Ohio
ReviWd .Code .
.
Ptaru Wid specif ications
••·on file In the Department
vi Transportation and the
QffiCI of the DIStrict Deputy

Director. T~

Director reserves the
rfthf to retect any anc:l illl

l:ll(!s.
Jll~.

P. B.. A.C..
992·5301

SPRING GARDEN

Suppl1es .

Cob-

boge, cauliflower, broccoli,
ond
heed lettuce plants.
yellow, white, and red onion
sets , onion plonls, Kennebec.
cobbler, Katahd.n, Red Pontiac
and Red Lasodo seed potoloes.
Bulk garden seeds , pottrng soil.
peat man, fruit frees and rose
bushes . Mililway Market ,
Pomeroy , Oh1o. 992-2582 ,
Bobs Market, Moson , W ,Vo .
{304 ) 773-5721

367-7112

Phone

FREE TO good home . One female
cockapoo. and one wh1te mole
German Shepherd . 8oth pups
with no papers Cell after 12

DAVID BRICKLES

COINS CURRENCY, tokens . old
pocket watches and chains ,
sll'ler and gold. We need I~
and older s1lver coins Buy, sell ,
or trade ' Call Roger Wamsley ,

'
GENERAL
'
CONTRACTING

7&lt;2 2331

A:ou1e2
Pomeroy , Ohto •S769

Kitchen (ab;nets · Rooting
Concrete

~2

7467

~298doily

FOR SALE Sears Kenmore Dryer .
6 mo old and Speedqueen
Washer , 2 1/ , yrs old Both rn
excel len t candrt ron
Coli
992-5832 after 5 30 pm.

STARCR AFT lOth onn1versary so le
on m1n1-motors . t ra ders , and
folddowns . Trovelstar 25 ft
$4400 00, 20 ft . mm1-motor
$10 850.00 We sell serv1ce and
quality Camp Conley Starcroft
Soles , Rt. 62 north of Pt. Pleasant.

EXPERIENCED

TRAI'ISMISSION

- CADILLAC COUPE de v;lle, 1970

tec hnrc l on
Mu st
hove
references Elll cellent wor~rng
cond1l10ns, .. 0 hour week
Good pay Excellent fringe
benef1ts Call (6 U ) 593-6656, or
wnte P 0 . Box .. 60 . Athens ,
Oh1o Ask fo r Helen Dougherty
between hours 8 a.m . and 4

JAYCO CA MPI NG Trollers ,
p.m:~----==-==
custom mode SWISS COLON Y. $$$$ SALES EXECUTIVE $$$$
small tandems Maple leaf ,
H1ghly regarded company has o
CODI'IER'S CAMPERS , Sales.
career position open for on ex
Rental , Service , Su ppl1es .
perienced
sales
person
Me1gs 28 or 32 to Bashon .
Regwres self-starter who con
Owner Robert Codner . long
manage himself a,d a fer
Bottom , Ohio
rifory . High commiSSions
Leads
. No layoffs . Expense
STARCRAFT STARMASTER 8
poid fro.nmg . No Investment.
, Camper Trader. Sleeps 8, has
Your future rs now
Ca ll
twod1nettes , o sank . stolo'e, and
1
2&lt;47 · 2"46.
icebox Also, awning $1550.
E)(celler'!t
condition . Call
99'1 5954
SAIL THE
SEVEN SEAS
1975 21 V,
foot Cavalcade
Visll Hong Kon9 , Spa in, the
Camper, for sole Fully selfcarnbe an . We'll pay you to
contained 6 h gos -electrk
do it in the U s. Na_vy If
refrgerotor , three burner gas
you are 17 to 31,call or see .
stove wrth oven , for ced air furus Navy
nace, lots of storage spoce ,
221 Columbus Rd ., Athens,
OH
sleeps 6. Reese Hrtch and Broke
H : 593-3566 Collect
Control
Included
Phone
985 3356 after 6 pm

.eoo.

at S15 ,000 00 .
Terms of sale are cash 011
hand on day of sale .

JA MES J PROFFITT
Sher~ff of
Me1gs County. Ohio

18, 25 181 l. 8, 1S. Stc

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO Opal Richards
N o known address
You are he reby not ified
that you have been named
Defendant in a legal action
entitled Leroy R 1chards.
Plarnt 1ff ,
-vs .....--::"" opal
R •ch ards, Defendant ; that
this cause has been assigned
Case No 16,,.43, a nd Is pend ing in the Comm on Pleas
Court of Me rgs County , Oh10,
Pomeroy, Ohio, .45769 . The
object of th is Compla.nt Is for
divorce , d i vision of proper ty ·
and other propu re lief
You are required to answer
with in twenty · eight days
after the last publ ication of
this not ice, once each week
for si&gt;e successive weeks . The
last publlcat•on wrll be on
Aug . 22, 1917 and the twenty .
eight days will commence on
that date
In case of your failure to
answer,
or
otherwiSe
respond , as reQuired by the
Ohio
Rule s
of
Civil
Procedure , judgment by
default wdl be rendered
aga tnst you for the relief
demanded 10 ftlis claim

LARRY E SPENCER ,
Clerk of Courts
Meigs County
Common Pleas Court

t8: 25 181 1. 8. 15,

n.

FORO PICKUP with topper , 1973.

Call ~2 - 341
SWEET CORN lor sole on Carmel
Rood , Homer Crrcle. Phone

949 2177 .
MOUNTAINEER TRUCK camper.
10 1/ , foot self -contained Coli

667 62il
truck , one tan flat bed Storts
and runs good Excellent t1res
52.000 m1les Col1992-3890
ONE GOOD gas hot wa ter heater

Coll'l'/2-5501

1let

Pomeray Landmark
soften &amp; condition your'

6lc

3 AND 4 RM. furn 1shed ond un
furn1shed opts
Phone 992

5434.

your

oJ V1lloge Manor
Aportments- 1 bedroom fully

AVAILABLE

carpefed w1th k1tchen appliances . furnrshed . Start1ng at
$104 per mont . Phone992 7721
Equal housing opportun1ty
BUSINESS BUILDING in New
HaveiT, W Va ., 20 )( 45 morn
bus1ness corner Phone (614)
742-2'155
TRAILER LOT for rent on Brownell
A\le
Middleport.
Phone

992-2625

rn Mid

_ dlep~o~ri~·~~-----~~­
MO BEDROOM tra iler, adults on ly Coll992-332-4

·--

NEW FRONT Sprmgs for Che'lrolet
P~ekup o r Blazer Six inch l1ft .
Phone 992-5750 otter 5 30 p .m.,
Jerry Well
ELECTRIC HYDRAULIC Tailgate
!rom 15 Y~ foot body Buckeye
von . $200. 2ft camper top for
p1ckup, $100 or best offer.

Phone (b14) b98·3290
TREE RiPENED orchard peaches .
Whtle or yellow stort •ng Mon .,
Aug I . Mason Peach Orchard
SALE DURANGO Western Boot s.

Reg $27 95 · $39 .95 . 20'Y. oH.
ends Aug . 13.
Boilef s , Midd leport

1977

Sole

1~70

IO V1 foot self contained
truck camper Con be seen just
post Wesleyan Church on 1•3
Boyd Krnzel 39553 SR 1.. 3.
Pomeroy , OH ,

3 bedroom mobile home loca ted
in cou"try near Harrisonville on
St. Rt . 143 Beoutiful locat1an
with Iorge yard and garden
Depo s1t
required
Phone
742-3186or7A2 31'12
FURNISHED TWO room effeciency
opt. Cook1ng fotll1hes and
shower. Suitable for one.
Ut1lit1es paid. Coli 992-5738 .
NEAR DEXTER. 12" x 60" mob1le
home. Call 992-5858

MOBILE HOME . Adults
Phone '1'12·2598

only .

TWO BEDROOM unfurnrshed opt
1n Middleport Call 992-5434 or

m -3129.

FIREWOOD DELIVERED . $20 a
pickup

truckload .

Call

m -6353. m ·b10'1. ~27130. ·
SINGLE BOX springs and mottren, us.d only thrH mo. $75 ,

Cot1992-5954

bY

REAL ESTATE for sole. \9 acres
w1th 5 rooms and o both . Call

7 ROOM OLDER home in Mrd
dleport, 2~ cor goroge , cla.se to
town and
school
Good
netg hborhood. $17,500. Shown
by oppomtment only. Phone

m -5502.·

Trim-All ,

no.oo

cuts

wifh nylon
129.95
( 1J Good Refrigerator $2(10

Pomeroy Landmark

9'__ JacK w. '-arst'j ~ Mgr .

Ail

Phone 992-2111

MEN 'S USED Work Uniforms .
$2 50 o set. Bailey's. Middleport.
PIANO , ONE yr old. 'Excellent
condition. Console model .
Pt-lone 9-49-2.. 25 or 9.. 9-2,.26

I%7GMC School Bus , $ 400. Also,
Regency CB bose stotron , $100.
For more information coli

BICYCLE-SAFETY FLAGS
MEIGS
949·2202.
JAYCEES . Contact J. T. Rue,
992-2396 or Charles Wayland ~ WORK OR RIDING more ond 2
mules Pho~~ {6~4 )_~9_8_:_~~ _
992 ·:3972.

·---··· ----··-----

GllllffiS.MIIIIIQ.

IJ your autborb:ed duW:r lor Urban

quo Uiy produd wbkb wiD locruse
lhe nlue of your borne, or mobtle

hum e 1 t1DI! thal will ~lEe i1ll beau-

ty l ur yea r~ to come, lkil .01 .Wt
your a«dJ. The Urbrln Uqe it aU

havy pUj e, Uodhed

po1U: , plall

or

decoridllt We hin •• ~ritaced
crew that ha\le ert'3 tf!d maar of
~~aerie rille quallty •wui.D.p aad caro-l!(lrts Ia t.hii arta. M01t of tbtle proaueu qlUIIUfy for IGw illkrest IIOme
tmprtl~~ meat IDillll 111__yuur 100111
bailll or S&amp;L. CaU99%-7034 lor a free
estimate (II' stop by 110ft E . MaiD Sl,
Pameruy, O
7·20-1 mo.

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

00

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
•
Free Esti~otes
No Sunday Uils Pleue
6·13-1 mo.

Pomeroy

Nobit Summit RCNid
Rt. 1
M iddl~port ,

0.

992-5724
Complete
Sal.,.

and

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
&gt;
Anniversaries
Special Occasions
Bob Hoeflich

Service and Supplies .

I

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

Rustoleum Paint Products

992-5292
6·22·1 mo.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
300 Main St.
Phone 992-6282
or992-626J
8A.M. to4 :30 P .M.
SALES AND SERVICE
7-28·1 mo .

t

lARRt~~DER

nL

~10.1

ro.

IT"5 ABOUT THIS IN·
~ENTIOI&gt;J OF WLAD1il&lt;'5
T~AT VOU CAME' TO
SEe··

MAIN
POMEROY,

0.

2'h story

f rame home, 4 Bdrms .•
carpeting, remodeling , In

good
repair ..
ONLY
$6,725 .00,
BUILDING SITES 4
acres,

close

to

home

in

basement, Jlh acres. ALL

FOR $12,500.00.
135 ACRES - Woodland,
100 acres has all minerals

ASKING 520,000.00 .
4 Bdrms .,
RANCH dining, nice kit., bar, full
carpeting .

Newer home. $23.500.00 .
FINANCING AVAILABLE
Newer 3 Bclrm . ranch .
3 acres , Jtlany

basement, A. C.,
garage ,

2 cit

e)(cellent

neighbOrhood. $&lt;15,000.00 .
JUST LISTED - ..0.5 acres
af the most desirable
bulldlng sites In the county.
Buy all or half. call for
details .
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVtcl!'- A sure woy to
help self your home. We
hove buyers for properties,
let us sell yours.
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR .
Hank, Koltly &amp; Leona
Assaciotu
"2·2259-992-2561
SMAll form for sole, lO Y. down ,
owner financed . Monroe Coun ty. W. Va Phone (304) 772·
3102 or (304) 772 ·3227.~·-....,-...,COUNTRY farmland wlfh secluded woods, water ond good access in Monroe County, W Vo.
$1 ,000 down, coli (:XU) n2.
3102 or (304) 772-3227.
'

--

' 30 yr . financing . Ireland
VA ·FHA.
Mortgage. 77 E Stat• Athens,
phono ~141592 -3051 .

NEW 3 bedroom house. '1 baths,
all elec , I ocr~ . Mrddleport.
close to Rutland Phone 992-

7481.

12 4Q.-Toma 6, 13; Movie " Poor
Tomorrow 3,4 .

HANDICRAFT
BECOME "lli5
WIFE: OF !:LAC

"1'l'lE

A·L~10~R

-

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone "2-3315
CHESTER -

992 2082.
WATER WEll dr illtng
Phone
William P Gron t at 742 2879
after 6 p m

3 bedroom 1

story frame home on large
corner let. Batn. natural

NEW LISTING -72 acres
In Rutland Township .
Farm home completely
remodeled thai has 5
bedrooms, :1 baths, full
basement and carport .
$37,500.
NEW LISTING All
electric 3 bedroom home
lust" 5 years old. Has nice
partial basement, 1 and
two-thirds acres and large
outbuilding . Peaceful area.
Only $20,000.
POMEROY - Nice 6 room
house with 3 bedrooms, 1
full and 2 half baths,
central heating, city water,
and garage. Fully carpeted

8.

~lWI"r ""'Cioo&lt;ofo'-

E:lectrical
Refrigeration
300 Mlln St.
Pomeroy, Oltio

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

8 A.M. to 4: JO P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6-2J.1 ma. Pd .

1

ORPHAN AJfNJE-BEA.CH COMBING
DFCOURSE ·•BUT WE
MUST WORK FAST,

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

PUNJA9·· 1RU55
AND GAG
THESE TWO··

11HINK OF A
SIMPLER WAV-·
BUT IT SHAlL BE
AS '!aJ SAY···

AH ·· CAPTAIN COR~··HAYE THESE
MEN GUARDED··YOU AND THE

RE.5T FOLLOW ME·· NO TELLII'IG
WHAT WE' LL FINO IN MY HOUSE·-

wheel
Alillnment,
tune
-up,
balancing,
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Rutlond Grode
School. Eveni~ work by
appointment. Ph. 742-2005.
6-5· 1 mo. Pd .

~

PRICE

LAYSIE

ON iHEM.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprtse answer1 as suggested by the above cartoon.

KJ I

r I I I I X)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

c:QJ'T T®l Af?DJIJD, BUT IJJHD IS
THAT IJJOfMI.l 11\.6-.T J~T CJ.JJC.
~T\1 ~1'4 KRClll'L?

Radiator

IFI CQJ'T TURIJ
Arou~D.

ACROSS
I Derby
garland
6 June
celebrity
9 Worsh1p
10 Odin 's son
II F1rst of

HOW

CA~I--

----. "·

Service

,_ lito 1111111

a sertes
12 Colleen's
name
13 Civil wrong

SMITH till SOM
MOTOIS, INC. .
l'l "Z.ZI74
'-otr

U.---L-------l.J

BRADFORD, Auctioneer . Complete Service. Pt-lone 949 ~2487
or 9.. 9. 20()0. Rac ine, Ohio , Crttt
Bradford .

-

Sweepers toasters, 1rons, oil
sma ll appliances lawn mow'r ,
nex t to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61.4) 98S

1he Cats have

loaded the bases
with

3825·---~~---REMODELII'IG. Plumbing, heol;ng
and oil types of general repair

Work guaranteed 20 years ex perience Phone 992-2409 .

g

14 "' Bridge of
S1ghs" c1ty
W-.:._~-------"=-J....J !6 High- kite
17 Balanced
18 VIetnamese
Too late, Mister Walt!
holiday
19
Archbishop's
alread~
realm
b'fore Newt ketch it!
20 Actress
Barbara
22 Disburdens
26 Have
dinner
29 Wireless
(abbr.)
30 Holiday
highlight
33 - Tanguay
34 Actress
Merle
35 Jogger's
ga1t

ihree runs

score

!M f\KJTSUR£-BUT!N A

Wl'EK ANY #aJSEW.F.!?
WhO WAN75 ANY WILL

HAVE JC?.~7ftJ_'IT.f.~

21 Almost

30 - over

23 Say over
24 True fan

31 Put up with

25 Due to
happen
27 Commotion
28 Administer

32 Prepare
35 Ski
hft
38 Old note

.! Dl DN'T PLAN ON
WENDY PIITT/NG

WHAT'$ THE IJATTER

WIN, WORRIED Aeou'f
WENDY?

HIM liP.'

53 acres of

bedroom mobile home .
512,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Owner
Is renovating this 2
bedroom home. New beth.

'

hand· worth less
8

NORTH
• K 65
• K72
• Q8 4

• 9732

WEST

EAST

.J 94

• Q 10 7 3
• AJ 6
• 10 6 5 3
. 10 6

.10 9 4
• J 92

SOUTH

37 Town! ••
encounter
39 Small
whirlpool
tO Feeling
groovy

o1o
{0)

AJ 8 4

• A82

• Q 8 53
•AK 7
oloKQ5
Both vulnerable

Here's how to work

It:

I, 0 N G F E L L 0 W

West

North Easl

South

Pass

2 N T Pass

1N.T
3NT

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead

Pass
~

SNOOPCI! Wf.4ERE
'-'AVE YOU SEEN?

AROUND TI-\E WORLD AND
BACK! I'M IN LOVE!!

TH'WEDDIN~

MAW?

(SNIF-SNIF) IT WUZ
A PLUMB-PURTV
DOUBLE RINGER,

.

PAW··

Oswald · "Today ' s hand is a
good example. South lias a full
16 pomts and continues to
three notrump after his
partner's ra1se. He ducks one
spade, wins the second one m
dummy and decides to go
after clubs East ducks the
first club and South takes his
queen . Back to dummy with
the queen or diamonds for a
second club lead to the kmg.
Next comes the lead of a third
club, East cashes t he ace and
jac k and eventually the
defense collects one more
spade and the ace of hearts for
down one "

3•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Oswald "The flatter your
distribution. the less valuable
CRVPTOQUOTES
your hand There just aren ' t
enough prospects for your
QWHM
S I A
GWHTM
D S K M small cards ."
J1m " Thus . we recommend
SWJK
KBEKLXKHTK
NXQEFM t hat w1th 4·3·3·3 distnbution
you should not raise your
UKTWZNK
DSKM
SWJK
P L I A H partner's notrump opening
w1th eight points If he has a
IFC ?
ND~H~NFWZ~
F~T min1mum
16 and passes you
Will have put h1m in a contract
Yesterday's Cryploquote: WE SHOULD NOT EXPEct that 1s likely not to make : if
SOMETHING FOR NOTHING BUT WE AIL DO, AND ~ he
has 18 or a good 17 he w1ll
CAlL IT HOPE.-ED HOWE
btd game and while he may
brmg 1t honie some of the

HOWWUZ

time he will be set often
enough so that he will not ap-

preciate your raise."

alr furnace.

and Is near schools. 512,000.
ENTERPRISE - Out of
town with 3 bedrooms,
beth , central heating and
garage. IV2 acres. Reduced
to $23,000.
.
NEW LISTING - Large ~
bedroom
home,
full
besement, l'h belhs. and
nice carpeting. Conven ient
location In Pomeroy.
WE HAVE TRAINED
SALESPEOPLE TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY.
Helen I,. lHford
Gordall 8. Tuford
A•-iolts

.

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

One leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
for th £' three L's, X for lhc two O's, etc Single le tters.
apostrophes. the length :md rormation of the words are all
hints. Eilrh day the code lett ers are different.

cavating ,

8· 3Q--Lauerne &amp; Shir ley 6,1 3; Phyllis 8.10 .
9:110-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Movie " Griffin &amp; Phoenix :
A Love Story 6, 13; Mash 8, 10; 0Rera Theater
20,33.
9: 3D-'-One Day at a Time 8,10.
10·00-Pollce Story 3,4,15; Kojak 8,10; News 20; .Pic·
cadllly Circus 33.
11 ·ooll :OO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; N
11 :oo-News 3,4,6 ..8,)0, 13. 1S; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
11 :3D--Johnny Carson 3.4.15: Movie " Fools Parade"
b,13 ; Movie "Riding High" 10; ABC News 33.
12:00-Janakl 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4 .
1:30-Mary Hartman 10: News 13.

(studied)

u~erl

1972 BUDDY CUSTOM buUI 12 x HOWERY

•

Yesterday's ADswer

AXVDLBAAXR

MOBILE Home Repair, Elec.,
plumbing ond healing. Phone
m -5858

Movie "Invasion Quartet" 10; Dtneh 'u.
4 30-My Three Sons 3: Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Andy Griffith B; Hogan' s Heroes 15
S.CIO-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rooers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission:
Impossible 15.
·
5:3D--Aaam-12 4: News 6; Ele.c. Co. 20,33: Family
Affair 8.
6 :00-News : 1.6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; Bill
Moyers' Journal 33.
6: 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News13: Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable oup 20 .
·
7:110-Trulh or Cons. 3: American Life Style 4; Liar's
Club 6; Country Carnival B; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson 20.
7·3Q--Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With II 6 ;
Match Game PM B; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
$25,000 Pyramid 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Music Cify
15
8:00-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Jack Benny 8.10; In Performance at Wolf 33; This
Far By Fallh 20 .

BRIDGE

Is

CARPENTER, flooring , ceiling ,
paneling Phone 992-2759.

10 :00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6 ; Here's Lucy B, 10;
Mike o6uglas 13: Studio See 33.
10 .3CI-Hollywood Squares 3,4.15: Price Is Right 8,10;
Jean Shepherd's America 33.
11 .00-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13;
French Chef 33.
11 :3CI-It'sAnybody's Guess 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13:
Love of Life B. 10; Making Things Grow 33.
II :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxll 10.
12 :CIO-News 3,4,6, 10; Shoot tor the Stars 15, Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13: Forsyle Saga 33.12:3D-Chlco
&amp; t he Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13: Search for
Tomorrow B, 10.
1:CIO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News B;
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not tor Women Only 15:
Poldark 33.
I .Jo--Days of Our Live• 3,i, 15; As The World Turns
8, 10.
2 ·00-s20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Phil Ochs Memorial
Celebration 33.
2 :30-Doctors 3,4,15: One Life to Live 6,13: Guiding
Light 8,10.
3·00-Anolher World 3,4, 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
3: 15-Gener•l Hospital 6, 13.
3:3D--Match Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Anllques 33.
4·00-M;ster Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4, IS; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6 ; Gilligan 's Is. 8; Sesame Sl. 20,33;

2 Engo~ged
3 Dismissed
4 Prior to
5 Wa•ts at
table
6 Late pop
singer
7 ~ B. Toklas
8 Ate out
9 Revolve
10 Gloss
15 f' Irst mate

-., C:oin of
tran

742·2348.

AND • MARTIN ' Ex septic systems,
dozer, backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone. grovel, blacktop
paving , Rt. 1-43. Phone 1 (6U)

41 Ottoman
· offic1al
12 Street
show
DOWN
I Rested

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

privacy, water tap$, septic
tank , electricity , and 2

new gas forced

\HERE'S U:5UALLY A

· ~··ttHd'

I

tao.
PRIVACY

I (J [j

(Answers tomorrow)
Satun:ta ·sl Jumbles TASTY IDIOT JAGUAR , FINITE
Y
Answer: Where you might oft011 nnd persons of
standing, oddly enough-SlTTING

EXPERIENC~D .

698-7331.

I

s;MIBUT

Prlntanswerhere:

WILL do roofing, construction ,
plumbing and heot1ng. No job
loo Iorge or too small. Phone

667-6220.

.......... -

I KI

Phone 992-6282

EXCAVATING , dozer, bockj,oe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot·
f te ld , Bock Hoe Service .
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7.. 2-2008.

60, oil gas mobile home with
8 )(pondo room. Furnished with
washer and dryer . Phone (61&lt;4)

byHennArnoldandBoblee

·I

DRIPA

PWMBING.&amp;
HEATING INC.

-~232~·----~----~~

Chester water . $14,000.

l.!dJ ~~ ®

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter 10 each square, to form
lour ordinary words

SEWING MACHINE RepairS, service, all makes, 992· 22841 . Tt-le
Phone 742-9575 ar 742·2081.
Fabr ic
Shop , Pomeroy .
WILL
DO
mocrome!
Plant
Authorized Singer Soles and
hongers
well
hangings ,
Service . We Jhorpen Sc1ssors .
Jewelry, lamp shades , ham·
mocks , etc Call985-.. ll&lt;l .
EXCAVATING , dozer, loader end
backhoe work , dump trucks
EXCAVATII'IG . BACKHOE. do1er,
and lo-boya for h1re; wrll haul
trencher, low Boy. dump truck
ftll dirt, to soil, lrmestone ond
ttucks . septic svstems . Bill
gra..,el Call Bob or Roger Jef
Pul lins. phone 992 -2478 day Of'
fers, day phone 992-7089 ,
nrght.
nrght phone 992-3525 or 992 -

gas heat•ng, and T. P . &amp;

~

I GUESS.

wrecker ser\'te8 . tire repo tr .

IR•E

1

PIANO TUNING , lone Oanutls . 12
yeors of serviCe . Ph one

1 :OD-

ft~llll.\(t\1i)'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

WAr&lt;fl:lfJI~,

CARTER'S

.......

Devil" 8;

1:3D--Mary Hartman 10; 1:5Q--News 13.

804 West Main Stroet
Just Below the Janes
Boys' in Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-2291
6· 15-1 mo.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

PENNZOIL RUTLAND open da1ly
tdl
10. Closed Monday s,

TEAFORD

good

condition, storage bldg .
OI'IL Y $8,000.110 .
REMODELED - Nice 1
floor plan , 2 Bdrms .. barn,
s mall bus iness bldg ..

basement,

Call ~2 ·7481.

m i nes ~

trailers O. K. ASKING
$4,600.00.
GOOD PRICE - 88&gt;&lt;200 lot
on a good street, 1969
mobile

HOMESITES for sale, 1 acre and
up Middleport , near Rutland.

WAlTA
secOND!
NOW t l&lt;t./OW
WHI!RE t'V&amp;
S&gt;EEN VOU
!!&amp;FORE!

CRAFTY LADIES

GASOIJNE ALLEY
HARRISON'S T.V. Aep ~m. Serv1ce
Coli s 276 Sycamo re. St .. M•d·
die port Phone 992 2522

l HAD HI~ PLAIJ&amp;.
LDOI&lt;I!D OYE'R &amp;Y
A"' !!I&lt;PJ;RTl

I'M AFRAID YOU'RE!' WII*TIN&amp;
'fOUR TIMii··IT'5 L!TTE'RL'&gt;'
l/lf4PICIICTICIIL I

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFji:RENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN' 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10 :00 to 5:00

Pomeroy, Ohio

B·7- 1rno

Save

I " Goad McCullough Ch1ln
Saw
US
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
Saw
UO
1 Good Used Unico

$101~

.w..lll&amp;• aud nfJM:JrU. n y_ou wut •

raillajjil aud

ALL Frl6iofT,
TI~H. WHAT·
li~lill VOU 1!LI.
Me. PROM~e
~&lt;eeP
MV~EI.Fl

for Everyone 33.

·

7:3Q--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3: In Search of 4:
Moppet Show 6 ; Gong Show 8; M acNeil -Lehrer
Report 20.33; Price Is Right 10: Candid Camera 13;
l'tashvllle On the Road 15
8:00- Liltle "House on the Prairie 3.4.15: Holmes &amp;
Yoyo 6,13 ; NFL Football 8: Jettersons 10; Tennis
20; Once Upon a Classic 33.
8· 30-Baseball 6,13; Szysznyk 10; Jean Shepherd"s
America 33.
9:00-Movle " The Family Way" 3,4,15; Maude 10;
Shades of Grenene 33.
9:30-AII's Fair 10; 10 :00-Sonny &amp; Cher 10; Austin
City Llmlls 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15,20; Inner Tennis 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Streets of San Francisco
6.13; Kolak 8: Movie "Kona Coast" 10; Fawity
Towers 20; ABC News 33.
12·00-Janakl 33

CAPfATNEASY

~

109 High St.

Phone 992 -:l t76
Pomeroy, 0 .

modernized, 4 Bdrms., 2
baths, large re&lt;:. room ,

Hotpoint R etrigerator .
1 New 20 cubic ff. Chest
Freerer
$25.00 Discount

.....

Summer

6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13.
7:oo-Todav 3.~.15 ; Good Morning America 6.13 ;
Chu&lt;:k While Reports 10.
7 as-Porky Pig 10; 7 :30-Schoolles 10.8:00-Hawdy
Coody 6: Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St . 33.
B.JO-Big Valley 6 ; 9:01l-Cross.WWits 3: Phil
Oanahue4,13,1S; Andy Griffith 8: Mlk~ Douglas 10;
Mulligan Stew 33.
,9:30-A.M 3; Edge of Nlght6; Concentration 8; Tennis

Americana 20 ; Montage 33 .

tiE~

REASONABlE
. RATES

A111minu~nt

r--

WIIIIIOIS&amp;DCIOII5

lHE PHOTO PlACE

•Custom Hydraulic Hose
Making

Only 1279.95
$50 , 00 on 1 new

Electric

.

U. P S.

co-Op

Dryer

RACINE CARPET
SHOP6-16-1 mo.

•we un ship. parts directly
to your door by WIY ol

New

water sot tenen, model VC-SVI.

• - iMII . . . &amp;Attics

ONE &amp; 1!1 acres with mob1le home L------..::.:..:.:~;lll::.J
on nver in ft Pleasant . W Vo .
Phone 992-526"

features . Call
today ,
S34,900 .00
LARGE - Older home,
really nice, remodeled and

SAL~

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEEQ

BISSEllSIDING

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m . to 5 p".m.

_ ~

Over

FOR

builders.

742-2988.". - - - - - - - -

-

RENT
R1vers 1de Apts . 1
bedroom stortmg of SlOO per
mo 2 bedrooms stortmg at
$138 per mo. Equal Housrng
Opportunity. Call 992·6098.

yourself. Special prices to

HOUSE FOR sole (cheap) 3
bedrooms, fireplace , 2 cor
garage, pot ro , fully carpeted
w rth I acre lat. Rutland Coli

LOW PRICE -

TO

FOUR ROOM furn1shed apt Close
to Powells Super Market.
Phone 992-3b58.

~ por~l~':,nl , 992-3204:

Phone 992-2181

2 BEDROOM Mob1le home for LOGAN SEED Wheat Barley t or
rent , 1 mrle from Racine Phone
cover crop. Grown from cer m -5858
tified seed. Paul W Sayre,
Portland . Oh1o . Coll843 -2286.
THREE ROOM and both furnished
apl . 350 N. ,.th Sl

one piece
gutters. We hll ng it, or do it ·
Continuous

water

33 ten mtles north of PomerOy
Lorge lots w1lh concrete paltos ,
sidewalks . runners and off
street parkmg Phone 992 7479.
FUR NI SHED APT Adu lts only , no
pets Phone 992 -387,. , Middleport.

GumR SERVICE

good cond1f1on , good locotron
Close to school Coli frn- op

-~Pome'll'- l.andmarll
• · Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.

COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork , Rt

2-23· 1 ma.

HOUSE FOR sole , 6 roorns ond
both , v, ocre , lot fruit trees ,
shrubbery , 3 bedrooms , bui l t-in
briCk cabinets 1n kitchen, util1ty
room w1th storage, woll -to -woll
carpet rrl lrvmg room Carport
Abou t 15 yrs old Well kept

• Now Onf'lj•279.9.5
test

Not The Imitators"

BEAT THE Cost of o Realtor• 3
bedroom , 2 y, bot hs br -level
with all extras on acre lot Nice
drive to Power Plants $4.3,c:x:l0
Phone (614} 992-2-492

water and a Co-op water
1saHener, Madel UC-XVI .
us
Ftee.

0.

Pomeroy ,

"The Originators

5455.

247·2280.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

3,

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

three-quarter acres lots of
shade, fertde ground fo r
garden . 2 cor detached goroge,
3 bedroom!!, Iorge hvmg room
w1th brrck w .b
frreploce.
carpeting, sunny kltchenene,
dining room , porti(ll basement
with f orced air furnace and
new hot woiS'r heater locoted
on Martin Or , Pqmeroy. Pr•ced
below morkel value , $17,!i00
Phone 992 6328 or 985-3573

FOR SALE or Trade. 1952 Dodge

1Let

NOTICE OF YEAR

By v~rtue of the order of
sale duly issued out of the
court of Common Pleas. 1n
the case of Racine Hme
National Bank vs . Harold E
Wolfe , et al , be1119 the
judgmen t entry rendered m
case No 16,.418. I w111 otter at
publ l c sale at the door of the
court House of Meigs County ,
Oh 10, on the 19th day of
August , 1977 , at 10 o'clock A
M .. the followmg lands and
tenements .
Situ ate m the Town sh1p of
Lebanon . County of Me1gs
and State of Oh10 , to wtt .
Be ing w 1th 1n Sect 1on No 10,
Townsh 1p No . '2. and Range
No ll , ot the Oh10 Company's
Purct1ase , bounded
and
descr~bed as follows
B!..!_nQ
on State Route No lrt, be tween Groundhog Creek and
Portland , and cornmencmg at
a point 1n center ot State
Route No 124. sa•d point
be l n9 on Frank Allen 's North
Hn e . thence North along
c enter of State Route No 124.
a d istance of lAO feet , thence
west 312 teet to an ~ron pm ,
thence south 140 feet ta an
iron pm on Frank Al len's
North ltne. thence east along
Frank Allen's North line 312
fee-t to the place of beginning,
containmg one acre . more or
less
The real estate is appra ised

(7)

loaded, with new t1res and 1n
very good cond1 tion C B dio .
$950. Coll992-3517

Route

NeighborhOOd 20,33, Emergency One 13; Mission ·

7 oo--Truth or Cons. 3, To Tell the Truth,. ; Liar's Club
6; l'tews 10; To Telllhe Truth 13; My Three Sons 15.

KingsbuiJ Home Sales

Young's tarpeting

Brady Bunch 8: Mister Rogers'

11111111111 s.n4ces

Superior
Steam Extraction

---SECLUDED 2 story older home an

mm , ond 90 210 zoom lens ,
rncluded
$200
Coli

Pat1os

Valley 3:

6 :00-Summer Semester 10.
6 ·30-Foc:us on Columbus 4; News 6;
Semester 8; Concern• &amp; Comments 10.

.

Autpmatic
Transmission Service

swAI_
N·s

Reedsville. o. Ph. 371 ..250
5-27-TFC

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house , f A furna ce , storm win dows, frreploce 1n M1ddleport
Phone 992-3457 '.· ,.--,----:2 NEW 3 BEDROOM Houses f01
sole One w1th 2 cor garage
one witl1 recreahon room lee
Construction , 992 · 345&lt;1 or
~2

MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1977

s QO.- Big

TUESDAY, AUGUST9, 1971

s· 50-PTL Club 13.

Imposslble IS.
S·3D-·Adam 12 4; News 6; Family Altair 8, Elec Co .
20,33.
6 00-l'fews 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6. Zoom 20;
Austin City Limits 33.
6 . 30-NBC News3,4,15, ABC l'fews 13: Andy Gr1tflth 6;
CBS News 8.10: Vegelable Soup 20.

Sidewalks
New
·c o n s t r .u c t l o n
&amp;
Remodeling
Ph. 992-7119 or 696-1055
Estimates applied to job.
6-27-1 mo . pd.

2

cases

~

m
1

$800.

1970 FORD truck Also , boot Cantact
Calv1n
Imboden .
Wekhtown Htll 1n M1nersville
or colt 992-'2977 or 949-2617 ,

1-17}3

r

3290.

TIM&amp;£R . Pom..-oy Forest Pro ~
duds . Top price tor stondmg
sowt1mber. Coli 992-5965 or
Kent Hanby, 1-4•6-8570

---------

DAVID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR

Cll •• .u, ."c

,

~

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF

Re"'

FOUND· FEMALE Germor1 Pollee
dog white 1ust o pvp I mtle
out of Pogeville Will grve to

CAMPER, $600. Also, horse
trailer, $A50 Phone (b1A) 698-

endloader ond dump truck
cellent condition. low Mrleoge
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Phone 992 7".c7..:9.:.
. -~
Call992-5348 .
Animal Corelme, 992-7b80; or LIVE CATFISH for sole to stock
1970 MONTE Carlo good condr·
after 6 p . l'n , 992-5.427
Ickes , ponds
etc
Phone
tion , $950
Phone (30 .. )
7.. 2-3167 or 949-25-45 .
CHAR-MI BEAGLES presents AKC
882-2258
Beagle
Stud
Servrce . ALLADDIN KEROSENE LAMPS and
1970 PlYMOUTH . p.s. p.b. orr
Guaranteed. $25 Have liner of
heaters . Rep lacement ports
conditioning, good cond1t1on.
young pups now. $10 wdl book
chimneys , mantles , wtcks ,
Phone 985-3541
yours 20 years e)(perience
etc. Stop in for demonstrotron
breeding hunting Beagles .
and t ree catalog Mountam
Pn.-4 WHITE Tr~umph TRb 1n good
Mrke Krncard , (61 .. ) 667-MI ..
Leather ond General store.
concht •on. Phone 992-7356.
104-106 W. Umon St {bl4)
AKC
REGISTERED
Did
EngliSh
197b MONTE Carlo . 350 V 8
59'1 $478, Athens.
SheepdQg
,
6
mo
old
.
automatiC, orr cond rtioneC,
Housebroken
$50
Call TOMATOES ,
PEPPERS .
A M . radio wrth stereo tape
992 2595 or 992·3.41 0
cucumbers
Cleland Forms .
deck . Dark blue metoll1c w1th
Greenhouse ,
Gerald1ne
llgt'lf blue landau vmyl top . All BREED dog groom~ng J . and
Cleland.
Phone 985-3356 ofJer6 pm .
S. Kennels. Reasonable rates.
No drugs used Coli fo r op· MINOLTA SRT -100 35 mm comero
1972 PONTIAC Cata l ~na P S.,
po1ntrnent , 7,.2-3162.
tnc ludes 50 mm , 135 mm 28

NOTICE TO

bidS

*

l.o5t and-1&gt;1imnd

---- -·

CONTRACTORS

feet

oHu~r

Place (Bob Hoel lrch ) 992 5292,

Television log

Business Services

CASH poid for oil makes and
models of mobile nomes.
Phon• areo code 61A-C23-9531 .

good ~'!__~~-992 - 5109
School. Starting Wed • Thvrs .
OLD FURNITURE , ice boJtes, brass
HEREFORD
8Ull, sn·oyed or
Fri .. and Sot from 8 until dark _
beds , etc .,
complete
stolen S50 reword for informaC 8 . and other nice items. Coli
households. Wrrte M 0 Miller ,
tion leading to 1ts return Con ~2 3)81
Rt ... Pomeroy , Ohro or call
tact lester {Jock ) lothey, Box.
992 -77t/J
THREE FAMilY Yord Sole , Thurs
lb , Middleport, Ohm
Call
and Fr i.. '9 until dorli. Full metal
CASH I I Junk cars , Fry's Truck &amp;
992.:3924 .
bed
w rth
new moHress
Auto, Rutland Phone 7.42-1081
playpen , all sizes of clothrng ,
or 7,.2-9575 Closed Mondc;lys
-~
lots of siZe 5's , and household
ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th all at- NO ITEM TOO Lorge or toe small
1tems 3 mrles south of M id tochmef'lt,, L1ke new osking
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding.
Will buy I piece or complete
:!l!'port ._£oll992_:_~
$2250. Phone (614) 698·3290.
Indoor-Outdoor runs, groomtng
household New , used or anti
oil breeds , dean sonitory JOHN DEERE 420 ltve power , 3
ques Mortrn $ Furniture , '10 N
foc1l1ties oe 367-7112 . Chesh1re
2nd St , M1ddlepor t Phone
poml h1tct-l John Deer No. 5
Phone (614)~7 0292 . •
W2-0c:.37:..:0c....c~
mower , 7 pi cui John Deer 2
1976 CHEVY LAGUI'IA 350
row cultivator Ford - two 1.. m .
outomoflc. p s . p b orr condr- HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, sell, trade
or
train
horses.
RUTH
REEVES
.
bo1tom plow5QII247 -~1..:9.:.
5 :......._ BEiil.-&amp;tui#f'il.roSW
~ -=
tloned, om radio tope player.
__,_
-=-=--_
trarner
~hone (61l) 698 3290.
ASHLEY
STOVE
Dealers,
Runmng
Reol sharp b1cellent cond1tion.
Spec1al Summer Sole. Lorge FIVE ROOM house. Also ontrques
Phone 991-2386
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
end full
basement
680
CW
. S300 Blowers $40 . Coli
{Min .) Collies , 2 females , 7
,ARTS FOA 1971 Colox1e Ford for
Brownell
Ave
..
Mtddleport.
Coli
mornrngs , (614) t&gt;9B-719l. _
weeks old Shots ond wormed
sole . Phone992 -5858.
m -279&lt; .
• Phone {614 ) 367-0292 or JOHN DEERE Crawler Backhoe

·

F'rullty aftemoon

36

chrldren s do lhing ond

v/..Ro SALE ocross lrom Bradbury

4P,M
U1e day ~fore publicaiJuu

roadway

Mo1n
Aug
from
and

m•sc Items.

thru Friday

I

VARD SALE. Fourth and
Street in Ra cine Tues .,
9th and We&lt;J , Aug lOt h ,
9 30 to o·OO Women s

MEIGS COUNTY S.niors . Mok• COA'-. lrm•stofle. and colcrum
chloride ond colc;:ium brme for
your oppomtment tor senior
dust conttol oncl special ml)dng
portrarts nqw
Tradi1ionol
salt lor farmers. Excelsior Salt
bockg.-ounds and outdoor porWorks , Main Street, Pomeroy.
trotlur• used. Coli for prices
Oh•o or phone W1 3891
ond oppotntment . The Photo

CHEVROLET IMPALA, 1973 rn Ex

• 1\lt.sa&lt;ly

?-The DaUySentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. B,tm
l)ICK TRAI-'Y

Wadted to Uuy

ii:~ifiF- =::-=-~

WANT-AD

·Sw1day
4P.M.

For Sttle

Not.ice5

C!&gt;aqo&lt;

!Ill

.

Let Thd Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
C...h

.

··AN' A
DOUBLE
HANKER

An Alabama reader asks if
there 1s any reason why he
should not open two nolrqmp
Wllh :
.KJx ·A ~n +KQxx •AK
None whatsoever. As long
as 22 bi g·card points is m the
two notrump range played by

h1nn

•

(For a copy of JACOBY

MODERN. send $1 to · "Win at
Bridg e." c/ o thts newspaper,
P 0 . Box 489, Rad•o C1ly SlaltOn,
New York, N. Y 10019)

�,

I-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 8, 1977

Pr. PLEASANT - Tbe West Vl.rgbda Department of

' HJclnraya II lt1ldyiJIC

tbe poalbWty of provlclfq ferry
lerVIee for Maaoa Colauty iD tbe wake of further dela)'l iD
the
of the Silver MeiDGI'Ial Bridge.
'l'1UI&amp; word .,. reeetved here late tbll mlll'llinl by
West Vtrpala HIPway Commil1loaer Joeeph C. J~es.
App.reatly tbe ~Is expeded to be dOled at leut
MGtber month ·or loager as additional eraeb were
dlleoverecl lalt week.
1be state Is attempting to work out arrangement~ for
ferry aemee with Dorsol (Doe) McCoy, Mason, wbo
operated a ferry service for 18 montbs following tbe
eollapie of tbe snver Bridge iD IJn.

..-me

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

NOW YOU KNOW
Raccoons do not wash their
food in water because they
cannot salivate. They have
salivary glands and do
salivate.

MASON DRIVE-IN
Now tbru Tuesday
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WET TRACK
NORTHFIELI},
Ohio
(UPI ) - J H Baron splashed
through the wet track in 2:01
4-5 Satilrday night to win the
featured $12,000 Grandview
Pace at Northfield Park.
A driving rainstorm soaked
the park shortly bef&lt;l'e the
start of the featured race
where J H Baron stretched to
a 5'h length victory over
Osborne Creed with Pickwick
Baron in third. ·
The 6-4-1 combination for
the trifecta wagering in the
tenth·raee returned $2,148.90.
The crowd of 6,239 wagered
$514,236.

•

INGELS FURNITURE

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Laetrile .
fatal to
children
OOCAGO (UPI ) - The
American
Medical
Association says Laetrile,
heralded by advocates as an
effective
anticancer
treatment and damned by
opponents as worthless,
should be kept out of the
reach of children because it is
potentiillly dllngerous.
In the current issue of the
Journal of the American
Medical Association, three
Buffalo, N.Y., physiCians
cited the ease of an 11-yearold child who died from
cyanide poisoning after
swallowing from one to five
tablets.
Laetrile Is made from
apricot pits which contain
cyanide.
The Laetrile tablets
belooged to the girl's father,
who has cancer.
• The child became listless
within a half hour after
swallowing the tablets and
began vomiting. When
breathing · became difficult
and the child began to lose
consciousness, "the mother
rushed her to a hospital and
the child died within 72 hours.
The parents tuid thought
the tablets were harmless
and kept them in a vial along
with an assortment of
vitamin tablets, reported
Drs. James R. Humbert,
Jonathan H. Tress and
Kathleen T. Braico.
"Due to the increased
interest and changing
legislation, amygdalin
(Laetrile) is becoming more
available in this country,''
the · doctors wrote. "This
tragic ease emphasizes the
potentially fatal effect of this
drug in young children."
The
physicians
recommended that Laetrile
be packaged in childproof
containers and that a cyanide
resuscitation kit should be
close at hand.
ASK TOWED
Granted a license to wed in
Meigs County Saturday were
Ronald Bruce Smith, 23,
Hemlock Grove, and Mary
Anna Midltiff, 22, Pomeroy.
'

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Middleport, 0.
992-2635

RARE AIR VICOORY
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Rare Air beat Kavasan by a
nose Sunday to win the
featured ninth race at River
Downs.
Juan Porres guided Rare
Air over the mile and 70 yards .
in 1:46 3-5, good for payoffs of
$12.40, $9 and $5.20. Dependa
Brook came in third.
A 10-7 daily doubie of Page
Mter Page and Sharon Tell
paid $74.80.
The . crowd of 7,298 bet
$786,056.

STILL CAN SIGN
Several openings remain
for the free Meigs County
cervical cancer clinic to be
held Wednesday at Trinity
Church in Pomeroy. Meigs
women wishing one · of the
appointments may call 9925832 in the evenings.
IN O'BLENESS
Ray Manley, active Gallia •
Meigs Fraternal Order of
Pollee officer; Middleport, is
undergoing observation and
treatment at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens.
Cards may be sent to Room
305.

Ho pital News
Veteraaa Memortal Hotpltal
Saturday Admissions James Sellers, Portland;
Tina Collins, Pomeroy;
Penny Smith, Pomeroy; Icy
Dailey, Racine; Linda Smith,
Gallipolis; Thomas Sarver,
Sr., Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges Neva . Seyfried, Harry
Pickens, Laura McDaniel,
Juanita Chapman, Garfield
Pauley, Lora Circle, Audria
Arnold, Fhonda Wood, Eva
Shaffer, Robert.J{eaton.
Sunday Admissions Bessie Musle, Proctorville;
Albert Martin, Pomeroy;
Edna Stevens, Syracuse;
Lori Browrling, Portland.
Sunday Discharges - Vicki
Holsinger, Charles Frye,
Kathy Pooler, Vicky Lee,
Julia Leifheit, Thomas
Sarver, Sr., Patricia Steele,
Harold Greathouse, Emily
Lewis, Virginia Newton,
Annette Boyd.

Health
(Continutd from pqe

1)

county meeting with different
churches and organizations
were impressed with the
friendliness found in Meigs
County. These students,
Marty Geyer, AI Christianson, Sandy Clar, Paul Haupt,
Kay Perry and John Lange,
were sponsored by Corporation
for
Health
Education In Appalachia
Ohio (CHEAO). CHEAO may
sponsor more health teams in
the future if the need can be
shown. Persons who believe
this program benefitted
Meigs County may write to
Carole LindStrom or Tom
Robertson, Corporation for
Health Education In Appalachia Ohio. Letters may
be sent in care of the Senior
Citizens Center or the County
Health Department, Pomoy.
Local
medical
professionals who offered to
act as Preceptors for the
students were: Dr. Lewis
HolzerMedlealCenter
Telle, Dr. E. S. Villaneuva,
Dlscharges,Augillt5
Dr. John Ridgway, Dr.
Adeltla Broyles, Preston Harold Brown, Mary Myers
Broyles, Greg Carey, Crystal (County Health Nurse ) and
Carpenter, · Robert Clarke, Dr. Gary Clarke (Thomas &amp;
Heather Clemmons, Lucy ·Thomas Optometrists) and
Detty, Mrs. Ralph Gibbs and Lisbeth Cherrington, Comdaughter, John Grim, Johnny munity Mental Health.
Hawley, Robert Heugel, Esta
Without the help of the
Johnson, Dedrick Latham, following persons who
Paul Metzler, Melissa Miller, ·volunteered their time this
Maude Nibert, Katherine program would not have been
Perkins, Wendy Ratcliff, possible : Blood Technicians
Robert Ray, Lawrence Reed, Karen Clark, Melanie
Charles Reisinger, Wllllam Stethem, Twila Buckley,
Robinson, John Rockhold, Edna Orr, Linda Fuller, Jane
Herbert Slone, Mrs. Thomas Graham, Sheila Powell and
Stutens and son, William Russell Davis; E.M.T.'s
Swanson, Fletcher Welch, Margaret Eskew , Janet
Helen Wiseman, Zana Bolin, Leda Krautter,
Withrow.
Roberta Maidens, Delores
BirthsAugut5
Wolfe and Beverly Dowell;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ginger Dodson and Marge
Pennick, a daughter, Kerr; Lewis, Ohio University
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stewart, students and Jane Ann Karr,
daughter, Pomeroy.
who assisted in Hearing and
DlscbargesAugustl
Speech; Mark Smith, an
Fredelen Angle, My~le Optometry student at Ohio
Arms, Sterile Barnhill, State University, Drs. Gary
Carolyn Beaver, Becky Clarke and M. K. Fugate.
Brown, Roberta Crabtree, Candystripers June WamsCloda Dray, Sybil Frenc~, ley,
Paula Eichinger,
Linda Gilliland, Mrs. DaVId Tammy Pitzer, Debbie
Hager and daughter, Juanita Heines and Debbie Davis;
Halley, Janet Heaton, Nell other volunteers were
Higgins, Harry Hill, Pearl members of the Young Wives
McClain, Charles Mullins, Club, IJla VanMeter, Norma
Emma Polsley, Mary Powell, Hawthorne, and Kathy Stone;
Beulah Roseberry, Paul Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Roush, Rick Saunder, Mary members Lillian Moore,
Sayre, Mary Short, Mary Norm·a Amsbary, Connie
Simpkins, Lester Thompson, Dodson,
Pat
Brogan,
Dale Walburn, Charlotte Charlotte Haning, Debbie
Wamsley.
Finlaw, Judy Crooks, Rita
Lewis and Cathy Doidge.
Births August I
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Retired Senior Volunteers.
Gibson, a son, Crown City; were Clarence .Struble, Mary
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keeton, . Buck, Dorothy Wllll, Erna
a daughter, Vinton; Mr. and Jesse, Eva Dessauer, Nan
Mrs. Homer Rhodes, a Moore, Beulah Strauss, Dick
daughter, Athens; Mr. and Karr, Helen Handley, Reva
Mrs. Steven Runyon, a son, Beach, . Ethel Hatfield,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs . . Thelma Dill, Carrie Kennedy,
James
Cummons,
a Early
Roush,
Marcia
daughter, Thurman.
Denison, Mary Shuler,
Margaret Parsons, Helen
Discharges August 7
Stefanle Arnott, Carl Slack, Marie Chapman,
Bishop, Mrs. Alex Bryan and Jestie Molden, Lillian
son, Janet Camden, Nona Demoskey, Mae Weber, Lula
Deitsch, Mrs. Woodford Hampton, Nettie Hayes, Cecil
Greene and daughter, Robert Bradbury, Hazel Thomson,
Harper, Mrs. Roger Lan- Mildred Hawley, Grace
drum and daughter, Stella Turner, Loretta Beegle,
Stephson, Hazel Willis.
Frances Roush, Dayton
Births Augut 7
McElroy, Margie Brewer,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Oliver, Alma Newton, Audrey Swett,
a son, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Gertrude Mitchell, Lucille
Va.; Mr. ·and Mrs. Henry Leifheit, Nelle Werner, Dora
Meadows, a daughter, Crown Crispin, Margaret Ella
City; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lewis, Margretta Wise, C. E.
Taylor, ' son, Syracuse.
and Daisy Blakeslee, Wlllls
aM Kathy Anthony, Robert
UNTIL TUESDAY
and Louise McElhinney, Paul
SYRACUSE
Ap- and Josephine Smith,' Kermit
plications to enter the and Ruth McElroy and
Syracuse slcrpiteh softball Wayne and Melva Turner.
tournament on the local field
Others who volunteered
~weekend will be accepted were Roberta Acree, Pearl
through Tuesday evening, Keyes, Bea Do\lglas, . Allee
officials said today.
. Wolfe, Margeret Brown and
Rev. William Middleswarth.
If any volunteer has been
missed, please call Allee
Wamsley, RSVP Director at
the Senior Citizens Center,
992-7884.
The health screening has
shown what can be accomplished when people
work together. There were no
funds available for the
j
IS
purpose except for a parttime Coordinator and living
expenses for the students.

---------------------------1 Saudis
! Area Deaths !
I

I

VERESWARTZ
Vere Swartz, 89, of Route 3,
Pomeroy, passed away at his
residence Saturday evening
following a long illness. Born
at Alfred, Ohio, he was the
son of the late Abraham
Lincoln and Marilla Carr
Swartz. He was a member of
the Alfred United Methodist
Church, the American
Legion, the Modern Wood·
men of America and had been
a farmer his entire life. He
served in the Army in France
and Germany during World
War I.
Survivors include his wife,
Nlrs. Grace Bentz Swartz ;
three sons , Millard and
Vernon, both of Coolville ;
1&lt;1cnard of Urbana ; two
brothers, Hobart of Coolville,
and Wade of Athens; 13
grandchildren and eight
great-grandchildren . He was
preceded in death by one
sister, Gladys.
Funeral services will be
Tuesday at 2 p. m. at the
. Alfred United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Richard
Thomas offi&lt;:iating. Burial
will follow in the Bentz
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the White Funeral Home in
Coolville after 3 p. m. today.

JOHN GILLAND
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. John Blaine Gilland, 61 , of
New Haven, died Sunday at
his residence. Born July 18,
1916, in Hartford, he was the
son of the late John M. and
Ella Gibbs Gilland.
He was an employe of the
New Haven Porcelain Co.,
worked as a miner, and for
the West VIrginia Department of Hlghways. A
member of the New Haven
United Methodist Church, he
was also a member of the
Labor Union Local No . .s.J of
Huntington.
Surviving are his wife,
Survl.lla Johnson Gilland; a
son, Larry Btalne Gilland,
New Haven ; one sister, Mrs,
.Fern Qulvey, Columbus, 0 .;
two brothers, Robert M.
Gilland, New Haven; Lewis
R. Gilland, Mason; and two
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at 1: 30 p. m. at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev. John Campbell
officiating. Burial will follow
in the Union Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 3 p. m.
today. In lieu of flowers, the
family asks that donations be
made to the Heart and Lung
Association.

Reedsville News Notes
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Virginia Walton and Susie
were Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Haidet of California, Jay and
Christopher Walton of
Columbus; Frank, Robert,
Gary and Scott Walton,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Landon and sons of
Celiila; Euia Mae Landon,
Coolville; Jim and Kathie
Landon, Tuppers Plains;
Mrs. Jim Adkins, Paula and
Jeff of New York and Mrs.
Mary Smith from Virginia.
A birthday party was
recently given for Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Bise at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery
Foster. The party was given
by their daughters, Mrs. Fred
Smith, Mrs. Eddie Bigley and
Mrs. Jeffery Foster. Guests
included George, Sarah,
Donna, Rodney and Pam Bise
of Seville,; Wilmer, Irene and
Danny Bise of The Plains;
Ruth and Denny 'Brown of
Lancaster; Anna Mae and
Franklin Washbourn,

Coolville; Ava Miller, Veia
Bise and Fred and Diane Bise
of Hockingport; Walter
Cunningham, Athens; Mary
Frances, Fred, P~y and
Pam of Hampton, Va.;
J aekle and Eddie l31gley,
Mabel Hetzer, Delores, Jeff,
Scott, Sibil and Sarah Foster,
Virginia Walton, Susie
Cowdery, Erika Boring,
Leona and Ernest Ruth ,and
Carl and Mamie Buckley.
Mrs. Opal Randolph visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Maurer at Massillon and with
Mary Schonhut at Salem. At
East Liverpool Mrs. Randolph phoned Thelma Kibble.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Smith
attended a Mall Carriers
Convention at
Canton
recently.
Calling on Mrs. Bess
Larkins this past week were
Mrs. Doris Marks and Mrs.
Helen Nelson, Chester.
Mrs. Opal Harris has been
a patient it Camden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.

(Conti.... , _ .... 1)
say, 'We recognize U.N.
reeolution JU in Ita entirety,
but we think the Palllflntalll
have addltlooal ltatul otber
than just refugees,' that
would suit us okay."
On &amp;mday. the President
went to two chW'Chea in
P!a1ns to pray for their
salvation.
Vance came to Saudi
Arabia from Jilrdan, where
he met King Hussein.
Hussein told reporters
accompanying Vance In
Jordan Sunday that there has
been progress "on most
points,.. but both he and
Vance stressed there Is a long
way to go.
Vance said one area of
growing consensus Is "the
nature of peace." That Is, he ·
said, what kind of relatlonllblp Israel and the Arab ·
states would have. after a
peace treaty Is signed.
Israel insists on more than
recognition and wants the
kind of economic and
diplomatic relationa that are
nonnal between states at
peace with one another. The
Arabs, In the words of one
American diplomat, "want
an end to the fighting and
then the mutual ignorance of
each other's existence."

Va.

Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. Kibble,
Parkersburg, W. Va., visited
Mrs. Hazel Barton and at the
Wllliamfi..Balderson home.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Tuttle
of Texas ·Road and Mrs.
Helen Archer attended the
wedding of Terry . Coleman
and Judy Smith at Columbus,
Saturday.
Capt. and Mrs. Fred Smith
and daughters, Penny and
Pam, Hampton, Va., spent
several days here with Mrs.
Smith's f81Jlily, Mr. and Mrs. ·
Frank Bise and Mrs. Mabel
Hetzer. The Smith family are
enroute to Germany. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin
and aona have moved to .the
property formerly owned by
the George Arnolds.

~~~~~~~----~

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· E-R UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called to CR 238 at 3:51
p.m. Saturday · for Clilrenee
Randolph, a medical patient,
who was taken' to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 9:13
p.m., tile squad removed
Thoma11 Sarver, Sr., from hla
Pomeroy residence, to
Veterana Memorial HOipltal
and at 4:25p.m. Sunday took
Tony Richards, Harrisonville, to Holzer Medical
Center.

IN HOSPITAL
Robert Eads, 10n of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Eads of
Rlltland, Ia a patient at the
Ohio Stat.e University
Hospital. Cards may be sent
to him at University Hospital,
Dodd Hall, Room 4118. The
addreu Is 472 W. lth Ave.,
Columbus, Ohio 43210.
(

Enclosed are package wrapper(s) from any 3 'Hanes men's or
boys' underwear items and 1ny store receipt. Please send me a
FREET-SHIRT in the size I have indicated.
Mall to: Hanes Free T·Shirt Offer
Box2495 .

Reidsville, N. C. 27320
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ELBERFELDS -IN POMEROY

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