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                  <text>10 mill School taxing question aired in Racine
BY JUDY OWEN

BOBBY ORO

RACINE - The junior high school gymnasiwn bleachers
were about half filled here Tuesday night with people who
came to hear the pros and cons on the propose&lt;! tax levy of 10
mills ftr operating the schools in Southern Local District. The
. special election will be on Aug. 16.
Billed as a "common sense" meeting, it was exactly that as
discussion was heard on these questions as posed by Howard
Nolan, retired Vocational- Agriculture instructor who resides
in Syracuse:
"Why are additional 10 mills needed for operating
expenses?"
"What is to happen should the levy not pass?"
"Will schools close? When?
"Are cutbackS in expenses being made? Where can they
be made?
·"What are operating expenses used for?"

Nolan opened the meeting with remarks on the proposed 10
mill increase and briefed the audience on the levy. Speaking
again&lt;:t the tax increase, Nolan emphasized that "Working
together is a better way," and that this is a "most unfortunate
time and taxpayers and the school district are facing economic
problems."
He also indicated that while all forms of taxes are on the
rise, Southern Local, at this time has the highest tax millage in
the county. He illustrated this with a chart of figures showing
Eastern with 23.5 mills, Meigs Local with 22.5 mills, and
Southern with a current 26 mills.
With the proposed 10 mill increase, Nolan said, that figure
would shoot up to 36 mills!
Nolan's argwnents prompted questions directed to
Superintendent Bobby Ord.
"Schools are funded by local support," Ord told the people,
"and the only way this school district will be able to continue

•

at y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, August 10. 1977

operating is to ask the people for more millage.''
He said the school is operating with 20 of the 26 mills Nolan
had said Southern worked with. Six of those mills go towards
bond and indebtedness construction.
Twenty mills is the minimwn required for participation in
the state aid program. That is, in order to qualify for state
foundation aid and support, a district must have at least 20
mills through local funding . The 20 mills are not sufficiently
covering the school's operating expenses, thus requiring the
hoard ttl issue its plea to the taxpayer.s for more millage.
Betty Wagner, of Racine, asked Ord for an itemized
budget which he presented along with comparative figures for
1974 and 1976.
Total expenses, according to Ord, in 1974 came to $787,296.
In 1976 expenditures. for the same operations amounted to •
$921,098. Total income from all sources in 1974 was $844,959.71
·
(Continued on page 12)

en tine

CORONATION - Last year's queen and king
presided at the coronation of the new queen and k~ for
the 1977 Meigs County Junior Fair at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport Tuesday n.ight. Left to right are

HOWARD NOLAN

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 82

Niese! Duvall, last year's queen places the crown on the
new queen Jeannie Boggs while Brian Windon, the new
king, receives a gift and congratulations from the 1976
king, Lester Jeffers.
:;:;:;:;:;:;;::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Jeannie Boggs of Albany
Meigs junior fair queen
KING, QUEEN NAMED - Royalty for the annual
Melp Col!llty Junior F'air to be held next week was named
at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport Tuesday . ·
night. Jeannie Boggs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Boggs, Albany, a 4-H club member for 10 years, and Brian
Windoo, son of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Windon, Route 3,
Pomeroy, a 4-H club member for eight years, both seated,
~~,~~:::~:;.~:;:!:~:~:!:!:~:~~~~8~~=!:~::::..~:....-:.-:::.~'-.::::::.....-::.~~-:..~~

were named queen and king. Standing from the left, Herb
E~. Racine, second runner-up to the king; Trudy Hall,
Middleport, second runner-up in t~ queen competition ;
Mary Mora, Route 2, Pomeroy, fll'st runner-up to the
queen and Marco Jeffers,. Carpenter, first runner-up to
the king.
•

Governor Mason
JNews •.• in Brief~
to speak Friday
By Uqited Press International
CINCINNATI - MOST NEW SCHOOlS OPENED in
Cincinnati during the past 40 years were intentionally planned
dents of a particular race, attorneys for the NAACP
charged. They made the accusation in an eight-page
ent filed in U. S. District Court Tuesday, specifying
alleged racially discriminatory actions and omi.ssions by the ·
Cincinnati school hoard. The statement was filed as part of the
group's school desegregation lawsuit.
Federal District Court Judge David S. Porter ordered the
NAACP to inform the school board of "every policy, practice,
procedure, or act, either of commission or omission," that was
being charged as an infringement on minority students' rights.
The civil rights organization also charged the city school board
used several other tactics to foster seg~:egation, including
altering school attendance. bourtdaries; . reassig~e~ts of
students after school closings; use of temporary buildmgs at
some schools while space was available nearby; granting
permlssioo for special transfers, and the now-abandoned
optional attendance zones.
WASHINGTON- LAETRILE NOT ONLY IS useless as a
cancer cure but may be a "dangerous and contaminated drug"
as well, the nation's top public health officer said Tuesday. Dr.
Julius Riclunood, assistant HEW secretary for health, said
"disturbing new information" has come to light about the
·
apricot kernel drug now legal in 11 states.
"Aa our experience with laetrile grows, we are finding that
It is not hannless," he said in a statemen~ prepared for a news
conference. Quite to the contrary, we ll!'e finding that laetrile
is a potentially dangerous substance, especially in its oral
form. Enzymes Jresent in the human digestive tract can break
down the drug to release deadly cyanide."
Richmond said a new adverse reaction report last month
from four doctors at Georgetown University sho;wed a Laetrile
patient suffered fever, skin rash and abdominal pain. He also
cited other reports, including one where an 11-year-old girl
died after ingesting five of.her father's laetrile pills.

Raymond E. Mason, Jr.,
governor of District 669 of
Rotary International, will
address the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club
Friday, Aug. 12 at a ladies'
night meeting following
dinner starting at 6 p.m. ·
Mason, a retired Major
General of the United States
Army, Is president of the
Columbus
Truck
and
Equipment Company in
Columbus, and .president of
REM Realty Company of
Colwnbus and the Bode-Finn
Company of Cincinnati. He is
chairman of the board of
Ford Brothers; Inc. of
Ironton, and is also a director
of BancOhio-Ohio National
Bank.
Mason, a former president
of the Colwnbus Rotary Club, .
is deeply involved in his industry, his community and
his country. Time Magazine
recognized Mr. Mason as the ·
"Truck Dealer of the Year''
in 1972 in recognition of his
work and service to the

Eiaht Jined in
~·

mayor

\

~'

GOVERNOR MASON
trucking industry.
He has long ser.ved the Boy
Scouts of America and has
been honored with two of Its
most prestigious awards, the
Silver Beaver and the Silver
(Continued on page 12)

·

'S COurt

Eight persons were · fined
Tuesday night by MiddlepOrt
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
They were James N.
Grueser, Middleport, $5 and
costs, allowing a &lt;tog to run
loose ; Don Lovett, Middleport, disorderly manner,
$25 and costs; Lee E. Ramey,
66, Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
disorderly manner, and $25
and costs, issuing false
statements; Howard Spencer, 32, Reedsville, $200 and
costs and three days in jail,
driving while intoxicated,
and $100 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while
under suspension ; Edward
Currence , Middleport, $25
and costs, disorderly manner, and $50 and costs,
fighting in p'ublic; Sue
Currence, Miqdleport , $25
and costs, disorderly manner, and $50 a11d costs,
fightihg in public ;· Freda M.
· Swan, Middleport, $10 and
costs, defective muffler, and
Bill Reeves, 51, Pomeroy, $50
and costs, defective muffler.

selected by the judges was
Brian Windon, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Virgil
Windon ,
Pomeroy, Route 3.
First runner-up to the
·

Mayor AndreWS
levies 3 fines
Three persons fined
Tuesday night by Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
were
Gary
Simpson,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs ,
operating a vehicle while
under suspension, and $34
and costs, leaving the scene
of an accident, and $350 and
costs and three days in jail,
driving while intoxicated,
and Dana Covert, Pomeroy,
$30 and costs, left of center.
Forfeiting bonds were Bill
Hayes, no address, $150,
reckless operation; Edward
Sigler, Rutland, $350 driving
while intoxicated : Alva Will,
Pomeroy, $30, failure to yield
the right of way ; John Byus,
Gallipolis, $50, operating a
vehicle
while
under
suspension,
and
$33,
speeding; Keith Petrie ,
Middleport; $31, speeding;
Timothy Thomas, Middleport, $33, speeding, and
Ishmael Thompson, Henderson, W. Va., $350, driving
while intoxic11ted.

MEETING POSTPONED
The monthly meeting of the
Gallia-Meigs Fraternal
Order of Police, Lodge 95, has
been postponed· until further
notice.

cash prizes will
pay up to $1000

queen was Mary Mora ,
Pome.roy ~ute 3, mell_lher of
the F1~e Po~t Star Stitchers
J . L. s, Wl~h the second
ru.nner-up hemg Tr.udy H~ll,
Middleport, of the Me1gs
VICA.
.
First runner-up to the kmg
was Marco Jeffe:s, Carpenter, of ~he Mixed Up
Hotshots, w~th the seco~d
r~er-up bemg Herb Ervm,
Racme, Southern F~ A.
Teresa Carr, chall'ffian of
the fashion revue committee,
extended the welcome.
Mandie Rose, summer 4-H
(Continued on page 8)

Five contests with prize
money totallng $1,000 wfll
be staged In the annual
tractor pulling contest of
the Meigs County Fair.
The tractor events will
begin at 12 noon on
Saturday, Aug. 20, the final
day of the fair with the five
events to Include: 5,000 out
of field, six places, $210
prize money; 7,000 out of
field, six places, $210 prize
money; 9,000 out of field,
six places, $%10 prize
money;. 7,000 powder puff
for women, five places,
$160 prize money, and 5,000
modified, six places, $210
prize money.
t:omptete rules for the
tractor contest are llsted In
the fair premium book.

lnfonnation
·on tax levy

iS offered
An informational meeting
for interested persons in
Eastern Local School District
will be held on Friday, Aug.
12 at 8 p.m. in the gymnasium
of the Eastern High School.
The purpose of the meeting
is to inform people about the
tax levy to be voted on August
25.
Everyone
havin g
questions, or wanting to know
more about this levy should
come to this meeting.
Qualified persons will
share information concerning
school problems. People who
will share this information
with you include Ron James,
George Collins; Howard
Frank: Robert Bowen, John
Riebel and members of the
Eastern School Board.

;:;:;:;: ; : ; :;: ;:; : ;: ;:;:;:;: ;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;: ; :;: ;:;:;:~

Theft suspects
charged, jailed
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reported today his department has arrested three persons on
charges of grand theft. They
were Delbert Putnam, 18, Rt.
I, Coolville ; Billy Nelson, Rt.
2, Coolville, and Robert
Nelson, 22, Rt.1, Reedsville.
The three have been charged with the theft of tools, batteries, gasoline, and other
items from the Marion Sloter
logging operation on Rainbow
Ridge that occurred late
Tuesday night. They are confined in Meigs County jail
·pending hearing.

House number project explained

· PISCATAWAY, N.J.-A MAN WHO DIED laSt weekend
·after being in a coma for 23 Y!!8rs was buried Tuesday in a
Meigs County's new - and
private funeral service. Aug~Jst Muscle, 57, died in the King in some areas hotly contested
James Nursing Home in Franklin Township Sunday. He had - rural house numbering
· been in a coma since he was injured on Dec. 22, 1954, when his project was explainea
car collided with a Jersey Central Railroad train.
Tuesday to the PomeroY
The death of Muscle, onl:e a star pitcher on the Highland Chamber of Commerce
Park baseball team, marked the end of along vigil.for his wife, following luncheon at the
Betty. Nursln&amp; home official.s said she v~ted her hus~d Meigs Inn.
almOst every· day, hoping that some day he would regam Discussing the project, now
consciousness.
well along toward corned pletion, was civil enl(ineer
PROVO, UTAH- SEVEN OF 10 SMALL CARS convert . James Page who ~·sold" the
to rm on hydrogen have been sold at a cost of S20,000 ea~h, idea to the county commainlY to custcmers coocemed over the energy crisis, missioners last year and who
according to Billings Energy Research Corp.
has been responsible for
Roger Billings, president of the ·company ~t also has conducting It to date.
built hydrogeni)OWel'ed buses now running regular routes
..,
.d h
around Utah said the cars, Datsun 82101, will be delivered in
.-age sal t e system,
J)ecember.
first units are expensive - tlO,OIIO for the car funded entirely by a federal
for the hydrolyzer which produce~ the fuel _ but grant obtained. tl_lrough the
000 __. ear when the company can convert more , County CommiSSIOners and
and $10'said
BilllnP
·~· Y •
th{ regional planning comvehicles, the cost will be halved.
mission, is the result of a
"
move by ~mmissioners late

The

Royalty for the Meigs
County Junior Fair, and style
revue, reserve and grand
champions were named
Tuesday night when the
annual ~yle show was held at
the Meigs Junior High School
in Middleport. .
Crowned queen was
Jeannie Boggs, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Boggs,
Albany, a member of Mixel
Up Hotshots 4-H Club. King
·

Tractor pulling

in f976 to establish a method
of Identifying rural structures. While the first and
immediate major impact of
the program, one similar to
that which 70 percent of
Ohio's counties have ·either
adopted or are planning,
would be total elimination of
the rural route system, Page
contended that among the
long-range benefits to the
county would be e&amp;Bier
location of the rural
residence by fire departments, emergency medical
services, and for delivery of
merchandise and mail.
With almost the entire
western half of the county
' numbered and residents
there now able to use their
new addresses, _rage said

Meigs County Is "my favorite
county (to work with) to date
as far as having the funding
available, and cooperation
from the community and
organizations such as the post
offices."
The fact that the program
is receiving 100 pet. federal
funding " allows for a
Cadillac job," he added.
The program is extensive,
affecting well over 20,000
individuals in 5,000 homes.
The first step toward
assigning the new addresses
is to draw up a permanent
mapping system of the rural
areas and . to nwnber each
house.
After
aerial
photographs of the roads are
taken and developed, an
age.,t travels each road, with

map
in
hand ,
and
corresponds residents '
names with their houses. .
Names are collected doo11 to
door or from the maiiboxes in
front, whichever is most
convenient.
The houses are thereu(ion
assigned numbers and the
numbers are ·super-imposed
over the photographic maps.
After each road is completed
that map is taken to the post
office for verification of
names and ultimately turned
over to the county to be used
for many varied purposes.
Residents are then contacted through the mails,
receiving a personalized
envelope containing their
new address and instructions
to start u~ng it Immediately.

The final step will be the
issuance of a rural address
directory available to the '
community fo r a small
charge . It will list,
alphabetically, each rural
resident and give his complete new mailing address.
Page estimated that the
project, which will see the use
of road names rather than
numbers, will take at least a
year to complete.
County Engineer Wesley
Buehl told the chamber
approximately 500 roads, between ~ in each of the
county's 12 townships, are
being officially named and
renamed.
In
other
business,
President Fred Crow asked
Mayor Clarence Andrews to

.

brtng the c~a~ber up to date
on the pamtmg of the old
water building. Andrews said
scraping of the structure ~as
been completed and paintmg
was to begin that day .
Members a greed that
Wednesday and Thursday of
next week would be set aside
as work dates for th.ose who
volunteer to help pamt.
Crow said a section of the
building (at a reasonable
level) would be assigned to
each volunteer to paint.
Chamber members volunteered their labor to the
painting project to show the
community that they are
interested and willing to work
for the betterment of
Pomeroy.
!Continued on pill 11)
~

�r
(

2- The Daily Sentinel , Mlddleport-Porne!'oy. 0 ., W&lt;dnesdoy, AQK. lO, 1977

3- The Dally Senlll'el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug . IO, l m

Carter lobbying new treaty
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
PLAINS, Ga. (UPI ) -

Powell said Tuesday that
U.S. negotiators Ellsworth
Windhtg up his sis-day Bunker and Sol Linowitz and
vacation at heme, President the Panamanians were close
Carter already is seeking · to agreement at a tr"''ty . He
congressional approval for a said it could be eipected
new Panama Cllnal treaty within two weeks. Sources at
which has not yet been the negotiations in Panama
signed.
still are saying tbey eipecl
Carter planned to ny back the pact to be initialed this
to
Washington
in week.
midaltemoon.
Powell said Cllrter and the
Press Secr etary Jody National Security Council

then will go over the new pact port and we hope that at least
"word for word, line for line" they keep an open mind," be
before sending it to Cmgress told reporters. ,
for ratification.
The treaty is expected to
Meanwtle, the President call for handing over tbe
sent te legrams to every canal and Canal Zme to
member of the House and • Panama by ?.OOO; provide new
Senate, "basically to let tbem annual payments to Panama
know
we 're
making in the meantime, and provide
progress" and asking them to a U.S.-Panamanian defense
keep an open mind, Powell role in the future.
Administ ration off icials
'
said.
" We'll be asking their sup- are aware they face a toQgh
fight in Congress to win
approval of the accord which
is' the result of 13 years of onagain, off-:a_gain negotiations
on a rew;ed treaty first
p~om1sed by Dwlgh,t D.
Ives' half-OOur Drtll!ram of 1977 Jamboree was history. EISenhower m the 1950 s .
songs and tales was preceded
Among the thousands of
Cllrter himself has had an
by more than a ball dozen scouts who traveled long action.fllled six days back
vocal and musical groups.
distances to the soulbwestem home at Plains, his longest
.~- · Ch-risty
Moller
of Pennsylvania park wa s
Jonesboro, Ark., America's Arthur Sadler, l!6, 1he W()l'ld 's
Junior Miss ; and Becky Reid longest serving Boy Scout,
of Dallas, Tex., Miss Teenage who took a three-day bus trip
America, presented awards from his Utah home to attend
to winners of scoutcrafl the Jamboree.
competitions
and
·a
Sadler, who in 1908 joined
handma de
patrol flag the first troop organized by
BadenPowell in Colchester,
coolest.
'
England, said he attended
The highlight of the show ROANOKE RAPIDS, N.C .
a pageant outlining the every day of the Jamboree. ( UPl ) - More than a decade
hisl()l'y of scouting since its . He said he was given the of internal labor turmoil in
founding in England )ly Lord " VIP treatment" at the Jam- this tiny mill town has been
Baden-P owell
was boree and "! visited with as exposed to tbe nation as a
.f ollowed by a 20-minute many scouts as I could."
result of a battle in
fireworks display and the
Washington to revise the
federal labor law.
The emotionally-charged
dispute within the community
was apparent Tuesday during
testimony at a House labor
subcommittee, which came
The proposal also recom· here "lo explore the tactics
pro c eedings
would
"hamstring and complicate" mends a ban on the naming of J .P . Stevens Co. has used to
the grand jury system, Bell unindicted co-eonspirators or thwart. labor organizing for
told the House of Delegates, · singling out individuals for the past 14 years.
forcing courts to appoint criticism without indicting
P ro-union workers told
legal co~e grand them. Under tbe ABA recom- stories of intimidation,
mendation, witnesses wOuld firings and wages lagging far
JUf()I'S.
" The
public
would have to he told they are below tbe national average.
probably decide to do away "investigative targets " and Other workers defended the
with the grand jury have their rights read to company and their right to
procedure," Bell said. 11 (t . them. Investigators would be resist union organizing -'escapes me why we need a told not to bring indictments even quoting the Bible to
multitude of lawyers in the against anyone if the suggest that unions are a
grand jury proceeding. H evidence is not good enough source of evil.
something 's not broken, don't for a trial .
C hairman
Frank
fix it."•
Thompson , D-N .J., insisted
Another
prov1s1on
that the hearings and the
ASK TOWED
approved by the ABA over
legislation were designed to
A marriage license was cure inequities suffered by
Bell's objections would give
issued to Kerry Leigh Hetzer, workers throughout the
"broad immunity" to grand
jury witnesses. Bell testified 24, Reedsville, Kathy Sue United States, ' not j\ISI in
at an ABA hearing against Barringer, 17, Rt. I, Reeds- Roanoke Rapids()!' the South .
ville.
four provisions of the
But he acknowledged this
proposal -two of which were
town had become a symbol
approved as part of the
for the nation.
.ACTIONS FILED
recommendation of
ABA .
''This probably is the mo~
Actions for divorce and dramatic single example in
another judgment in the the
United
States, "
amount of $500 have been fil- Thompson said.
ed in Meigs County Corrunon
While some 3,500 Stevens
Pleas Court. · Ruth Ann employes worked normal
Mlllhone, Tuppers Plains, is . schedules in seven textile
suing !or divorce from Larry mills around the iown, the
Edward Millhone, address subcommittee heard eight
unknown. Citizens National hours of testimony under the
E. Lamb, M.D.
Bank, Middleport, filed the glare of network television
judgment against Robert lights. Witnesses in clud.ed
.
Bush, Cheshire.

Ives ·headlhies show
BUTLER, Pa. (UPI ) Singer.&amp;oryteller Burl fves,
dresaed in a swruner Scout
uniform do wn to the tasseled
knee socks, headlined a giant
show Tues day nig ht to
conclude the rain-60aked 1977
Na tional
Boy
Scout
Jambocee.
The 28,000 Scouts, most of
whom ar e breaking camp
today at Moraine State Park
near here, Illuminated the
jamboree
arena
with
thousands of handheld
candles as lves joined Boy
Scouts ' President Downing
Jenks and Chief Scout ExeciJlive Harvey Price in
concluding ceremonies.

stay
since
becoming
President.
After losing two softball
games to the White Houoe
press C()l'ps and their pitcher
Billy Carter, the President
took thingsintohisown hands
Tuesday night )ly singling in
the tying run and scoring the
go-ahead run in a 19-17
victo&lt;y.
"Now we can go back to
Washington !" Carter sa id
exuberantly as be walked off
_ the diamond at Plains High
School.
During the week Carter
went fis hing, attended a
family wedding and a family
reunion, and spent a lot ,or
lime with his brother and
mother.

Labor tunnoil in
Carolina bared

Jt•ry changes opposed
-'fly RQBERT MACKAY.
ClllCAGO (UP! ) - The
American Bar Association
has endorsed additional
rights· for persons called to
testifY before grand juries,
delpite warnings by U.S.
Attorney General Griffin Bell
that the changes would lead
to the end ·of the grand jury
system.
.
The House of Delegates policy setting arm of the ABA
-gave its ap)K'oval Tuesday
to a 25-point proposal for
grand jury relorm that would
allow witnesses to have an
attorney present during
questioning. The proposal
also would reduce the
maximum sentence for
refusing to testify before a
grand jury from three years
to one year.
The presence of a lawyer in
federal
grand
jury

JP•

HEALTH
lawrence

J

union officials, community
leaders, clergymen and labor
scholars.
The crowd was generally
prounion 1 and Ste vens
executives declined to
a ppear . Most witnesses
agreed the new bill would
clamp down on antiunion
employers by hastening
un ion elections , awarding
double back pay to workers
fired for union activity and
depriving labor law violator s
·of federal contracts.
The biggest · disagreement
was among the Stevens
workers themselves, whose
employer has been dubbed by
labor as " the nation's No .1
labor Ia w violator. " With 85
plants in the South, Stevens is
America ~ s second largest
textile maker.
Louise Baily and Jerry
Davis said workers in tbeir
Stevens
plant
in
Montgomery , Ala., fear for .
their jobs since 20 were fired
at the start of a union .
organizin g campaign last
year.
But
other
workers ,
members of the J.P. Stevens
Education Association ,
insisted their wages were
satisfactory
and
the
ronditions good .
"I'm sorry I don't have a
sad tale to tell ," said Nora
Crouch of Roanoke Rapids.
1
'' I have
never been
mistreated."
Leonard Wilson, a $5.12-anhour loom fixer, said the
union subverts two biblical
tenets - that "money is the
root of all evil" and man
should have but "one
master."

Caffeine overstimulation
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - l drink
· from ~ to 24 cups of coffee
daily, take two aspirins daily
and drink cokes I eat cheese
and bologna sandwiches and
sometimes eggs.
My hands tremble and my
head shakes a bit, too. A docto.r diagnosed ,·t as essential
tremor and also said I had
some heart involvement. I
am 73 years old.
People tell me drinking
that much Coffee and ·not·
eating properly could be the
cause of the tremor. I do not
believe it. What do you say?
DEAR READER - Why not
find out by stopping the colfee ? I would think with the
price of coffee these days that
drinking~ or more cups a
~k~~uld give anyone the
Seriously, coffee c ontains
caffeine, which is a brain
• stimulant. It has actions
similar to " go pills" to prevent sleeping. That is why l
sometimes refer to it as a U·
q uid go pill. The amount of
caffeine you are consuming is
certainly ' enough to
overs limulate your nervous
systemandcausetheshakes.
Whether or not it does in your
case can e;~sily Ill' determined by stopping it.
·
.If you do decide to stop r
:would suggest that you ito so '.
gradually or you are apt to
have withdrawal symptoms,
including headaches. May I
suggest cutting down to four
cups a day, spread over tbe
day and then to two, .one, and
finally none, for the test. U
you must ha. ve th e Iasle of ·
coffee, switch to one of the
decaffeinated brands as a
substitute as they will not
have this effect on you. Cut
out the colas and any tea you
might be using ;Jiso.
Your brief descripti'on of
your diet is insufficient to say
whether or not you are eating
properly but H thlit Is all you
eat you need to have your
,;- you a balanced .
doctor e-•..,
die&amp;,. Small 8f!OUnts of

bologna and processed
cheese are all right if the rest
of your diet does not contain
much fat or cholesterol.
I am sending you The
,
Health Letter number 1·1,
Coffee, Tea, Cola~· 'Cocoa to
give you·more information on
caffeine containing drinks.
Others who want this information can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Please
tell me which oil has the least

Help certain for disabled
COLUMBUS (UP! ) _ Rep.
Leonard Camera, D-Lorain,
said Tuesday help is on the
way for disabled Ohio workes
ordered by the Bureau of

quired of low-income dissbled workers, said Camera.
Qureau officials remember
the meeting differently.
however, and are reviewing
Workers' Comensation to pay 13,400 cases of permanently
back thousands of dollars.
and totally dissbled workers
" I would advise the people who draw supplemental
to cool it for a while, and if it
checks frm the Disabled
takes new legislation, we can
Workers Relief Funp
..
ram it thor ugh
in (DWRF).
September," said Carriera. "I
The bureau suspects about
amount of cholesterol, soy . unders tand some . eager
30 per cent of them have been
bean, safflower, cottonseed, beaver at the Bureau of
overpaid during the past 18
peanut or com oil? I would Workers ' Comensation is
months.
The debt so far is
like to make my own mayancalculated
at $706,286 and risnaise as the ready-made ones · responsible for this intering.
have too much salt in them. I pretation."
'
Camera sponsored the 1975
The bureau says most of
have a tendency toward high law which the bureau now ..
the cases involve withheld or
blondpressure.whichisunder says
unfortunately
erroneous information on
co~~~~:~~~~~;::~educe . eliminates some low-income Social Security disability
as I weigh 102 pounds -not bad persons from supplemental payments, but the largest inbenefits.
for a 7(}-year old small !ramA Portsmouth woman com- dividual overpayments m11•t
ed lady of 5 feet!.
plained to House s-·"'er
DEAR READER - Not
......,
Vernal Riffe, D-New Boston,
had. I can't refrain from that she has been ordered to
reminding you though that
how much fat is under the pay back $4,472.88, the
largest amount confinned to
skin is what is Important, not date by the bureau.
VETE
hat
th
I
·
RANS MEMORIAL
w
e sea es · say m
There was an un
·. derstand·
Admitted
- Dessie Boring,
pounds ·
·
t 8 hi h-1 1
ling 0f
None of the oils you ·men- mg a
g eve mee
Albany; Ralph. McDaniel,
t .
state, business and labor of- Pomeroy ; Myrtle Wilson,
t 1. one d
con a 1n
anY ficials early this year that
cholesterol. Cholesterol is an
be
Vinton ; Harry Shain, Racine.
animal product· and iS not pay-back would not . reDischarged Phillip
found in vegetables. For what
Donovan, Mabel Wolfe ,
advantage it may have, saf. . r---:TH=E=-=-nA=IL=v=s=E-NTIN-:
.---:F.-L-.,...., Winifred Naas , Richard
nower oil contains the least
White.
saturated fat and the most
MEIGS-MASON AREA
polyunsaturated fat of the oils
CHESTER L TANNEHilL
HoiJer Medical Center
you list. I suspect you .could
ROnJ1.ii6tit.1CH
(Discbargea Aug. 9)
use any of these for your
CHr Edilor
Alan
Ashley, Ira Barcus
' '
Jf you wan t 1o avo1'd
dally e:t&lt;.oepl Saturday
recipe.
byPublished
The Ohio Valley Publishing c..m.
lll, Guy Burdette, Sylvia
cholesterol don't use egg
""Y· 111 Court st.., Pomeroy, Ohio
Burnette, Sandra Canter,
'
'Is
f100 y
45769. BU!iness OOke Phone OOZ.
lks
1
10
• ou
YO
prepara
2156. Editorial Phone992-2157.
Barbara Cline, Robcrt.a
might find a low salt preparaSeeood cia" ~"""'ge poid ' '
Cowan, Donald Douglass,
lion in the dietetic section of
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Jeffrey Gil!lln, John Massey,
Nation~! advertising represerryour grocery Store.
"'Uve Wonl . Grilrilh Company,
Kevin Nance, Mra. Roger
Because of the volume of
Inc., BottineiUand Glllagher Div.,
Oliver and aon, Anna Pollitt,
mail Dr. Lllmb cannot
r~~rinl Ave., New York, N.Y.
Glenna Ratcliff, Mrs. Homer
answer your letters personalSubocripUon rote" O.llver.d by
Rhodell and daughter, Mark
ly but he will answer
carrierwhe,..avaUable 7$ e&lt;n!Sper
Richards, Michael Stanley,
week. By Mutor Rou~ where canier
represe'ntat!Ye letters Of
llerviee "" available, One mll"th,
Vernon Stewart.
general interest in his col·
13.2$. By mail in Ohio and w. Va.,
(Birtba, AIC. 9)
One Yei r, IZUlO; Su, mooths,
umn. Write to him
· in care of
11 1. 50: Three month•. 17.00 ;
Mr. anci Mrs: David Dot·
this newspaper, P.O. Box
EJ.ewhm 126.00 year; Silt IYI&lt;IIllhl
aon, a daughter, Jacbon. Mr.
113 •50 ' Thr.. monlh•, 17 .50.
1561, Radio City Station, New
Su btc:..Ttplion price includes Sunday
and Mrs. Wllllam Stitt, a 110n,
York, N. Y..J0019.
Tl!n...Se.. unel. 11
•
Crown Clty.

Hospital News

be repaid by workers who
were at the lowest wage
levels at the time of injury.
According to Camera's bill,
persons are not entitled .to
more money in disability
checks than they made on the
job. The bureau, however,
finding the law confused, continued all supplemental
.OWRF payments until the
current review, said James
Rieder, deputy director for
operations.
Officials said innation is at
the heart of the problem.
I! young , low-income
workers were permanently
and totally dissbled in 1965,
and even if regular diSability
checks total 100 per cent of
their old wage, they ~Y not
cover the cost of mortgage
payments, utility bills,
clothing and food.
He came away from the
late-winter meeting convinced that everything was okay,
said Camera.
" The 0 best heads got
together and agreed ,the law
was written all right," he
'said, "so this (deniand for
repayments) comes as a surPril!!!tome."

Cubs' fan, age 12, learns of
terminal cancer on ·television

Capilla stops Dodger_s
r

·When Murcer delivered Scott'a lmne
By TIM0'111Y CODER
CHICAGO (UPI ) - Scott Crull, a 12- run Cubs' official Jim Davidovich PI I~
ye&amp;r-&lt;!ld Oticago Cubs fan, was elated as a n.;u, to Jackaon, who told the nationwide
his idol Bobby Murcer clobbered a home audience it was hit fer Scott Crull, • boy
ruit against the Pittsburgh Pirates on dying of cancer .
An ABC spokesman in New York called
na tionwide television Monday night.
the
incident " one of those terrible,
Murcer had telephoned Scott earlier in
unfortunate
things," but he blamed the
the day,saying be would lry to hit a homer
blunder on the Cubs.
for the bed-ridden youth.
He pointed out that because the note
Just a f ter the blast , ABC-TV
pasaed
to Jackson was ''from the Cubs and
sportscaster Keith Jackson announced the
the boy, it prohably never
did
identify
home run was hit for young Scott, who,
occurred to Keith that the boy did not
Jackson said, was dying of cancer.
This was the fir,st the boy had heard of know." .
· Davidovich who gave the note to
his condition.
Scott was placed under sedat ion in his Jackson, said he did not expect the
home in suburban Clllumet City. stumed broadcaster to read ~t's name on the
by the knowledge that he has had cancer air.
" You've got to be a little discreet about
for at least three years and has less than
it
" he said . " I assumed tbey wouldn't
two months to Iive.
r~d
that. I feel just awful ."
The boy has been bedriddel! all summer,
Murcer,
who. went on to hit a second
spending much of his lime watching the
homer
in
Monday night's game, was
Oricago Cubs develop from perennial
losers into National League pennant subdued. " It's a shame," he said Tueaday
night. ''I didn 't know that he djdn't know.
contenders.
The team was inf()l'ffied · of Scott's What am I going to do?"
But Scotl'sfather said, " I'm not blaming
condition by a Crull family friend and
anyone except the station. It should have
arranged for a phone call from Murcer
gotten out a dilf~rent way . It was a :em~le
.
before the Cubs-Pirates game.
misfortune that it got out on nationwtde
" It was wonderful entertainment f()l'
him," Scott's father, Dwigllt, said and told television. "
" We found out he had terminal cancer
Of the boy's devotion to tbe Cubs. "It was
three
years ago," Crull said. "You just
wonderful for him ( Murcer ) to call here.
But this (announcement) has been a bad
don't tell something like this. If be doesn 't
ask you, you don 't tell hi/n:.'
thing for Scott. We've all token it real
hard."

Sport Parade
B7 MILTON RICHMAN
UPJ Spol'll EdftGr

a

Police made

,,

•
'

38 arrests
during July
Thirty-eight arrests were
made by the Middleport
. Jul
P oli ce .Department 10
Y•
according to. the monthly
report of Police Chief J . J . ·
Cremeans. .
Largest smgle offense for
the month was disorderly
roamer With seven arrests
being made on that charge.
There are four arrests for

possession of marijuana,
three for driving while intoxicated and two for failing to
yield the right of way. There
was one each for speeding,
passing on a double yellow
line, squealing tires, assured
clear distance, hit-skip, indecent exposure, disturbing the
peace; petty theft, contributing to the delinquency
cl a minor, allowing a dog to
run loose and littering. Five
cases were transferred to
colinly court and two were
dismissed.
Th~
department investigated 10 traffic accidents and collected $990.50
in parking meter receipts and
$124 in merchant pollee collections. The police cruiser
was driven 5;106 miles during
themonth.
·

o=::i?J:IE

Plains, including the &amp;ntique
beer at Billy's station .
More and m()l'~, however , store, sells the souvenirs
the President 's ' brother is tourists want as proof of theit •
seeking privacy . He doesn't visit .
Much of tbe merchandise is
hang out at the station as_be
tied
to Billy rather th&amp;n hiB
once did. Signs at the Cllrter
brother,
the President . ·
warehouse tell the public " no
Empty
beer
cans, ranging in
admittance." He has moved
price ~om 25 cents to $1, •
his family out of town something he plaiUied before depending on the store, are
the election - to a spot away sold with a little white label '
that says "Plains, Ga."
from the glai'e of tourism .
Several merchants said the
Hugh Cllrter, however, said
the attempt to lure Billy more fastest selling Items are Billy
fully into Plains' eronomic beer mugs and shot glasses.
You can find the words
ificlndes dangling something
11
Carter" or "Plains" on
that pours through the family
blOodstream - politics.
· anything from T-llhirts to
"You know, a lot of people earrings, night lights to doorwould be grateful if Billy did mats , chattering teeth and
something like that, a lot of frisbees .
people. l wouldn't be a · bi.t
For $200 one shop aells a
surprised if he was elected toilet seat with $i8 worth of
may()!' if he did it," he said. coins and dollar bills sealed
"A lot of people would be in the clear plastic. .
And fer the "dirt cheap" •
supporting him then. "
The President's brother price of $2.95, a tourist can
has run for mayor of Plains buy what is hailed as "tbe gift
twice and lost both llnies by · of the year" - a pound of
" genuine original guaranteed
close margins.
Virtually every business In pure soil of Plains, Ga."

Friday is deadHne for
·entering open classes
Open class entries for the
114th annual Meigs County ·
Fair will be taken at the fair
board office at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday and
Friday.
Friday is the deadline for
· and ·~··
a 11 open c1ass entnes
'""'
rule will be strictly adhered
to . The horse and pony
pulling contests will not have
a closing tilpe and the horse
show entries will be accepted
until Wednesday Aug. 17.
'

Eshibitors must determine
for themselves In wlilch '
classes they will ~ke entries and exhibitors must
C\lmplete their own entry
blanks.
Entries are welcome. from
Meigs and adjoining counties
except in the junior fait
where exhibits are lirnlted to
Meigs County clubs and
flower .shows where exhibits
are limited to Meigs
residents.

New health center in business
The new Gallia - Jackson - Valley Plaza site are now
Meigs Community Mental being provided at the new
Health Center located at the site. The new Gallla
northeast corner of the telephone number iii 446-liSOO.
junction of routes 35 and 160 is
In addition to the new site,
open and operating.
mental health services are
All· clinical services for· also provided in Jacbon
merly delivered at the Spring county at the Allison Health
Center and in Meigs county at
266 West Second Street In
Pomeroy. Malcolm Orebaugh
TWO HOSPITAl nED
is administrator.
As a result of a traffic acci'
dent that occurred Monday
on SR 7 In Chester Township
DANCE NOTED
two persons have bee~
There will be a round and
hospitalized. Admitted to · sqliare dance at the Senior
Veterans Memorial Hospital Ci'tlzens Center Ftlday,
were Marilyn D. Wiener
August 12, frm 8:30 to 11:30.
Fairborn, Ohio, driver, and ~uslc will be by the StrlneInez POOler,
. . Reedsville 8 dusters. Admission ia •1 for
passenger m the Wiener vehi- each adult with chlldrep
cle, )loth to VMH by the under 12 admitted free. 'l'b!!
Pomeroy E-R unit.
dance Is open to the public.

.

Immunization changes - noted

Changes in immunization
requirements for school
children were noted today by
H. Dwight Goins, administrative assistant In the
Meigs Local School District..

for four doses of Trivalent
Oral Polio Vaccine (.TOPV)
for children who begih their
series prior to 15 mon~ of
age; a three dose series is
recommended for anyone
These are:
who begins the series at age
The American Academy of 15 months or older.
Pediatrics has chariged Its
A subltantlal number c1
recommended schedule for children are age 15 months
inmuniiation againlt polio, and older before they start
and tbe Ohio Department c1 their ll!rles. This has made It
Health has adopted this necessary for the Ohio
change.
Department cl Health to
In -nee, the new polio establish new minimum polio
immunization schedule calls

.. .

immunization requirements
for all school children. The
new minimum requirement is
three doees cl polio vaccine
as opposed to the previou.s requirement cl four dalles. The
new minimum requirement Is
effective Immediately.
Immunization
against
measle~ Ia still required of all

acbool children. lmmunlza.
lion against rubella II still required fer an ICbool children
a:cept femalell who have
reacbed puberty.

.,

Four

DTP
.

(diphtheria,

.

tetanus and pertussia) infections are still required for
most scl!ool children.
Children age six and above
who received their third DTP
prier to age
are c:a&amp;
dldates ·for a fourth (Td

m

Adult) . injecUon.

Howe:rv,

children ace m alld above
who received their 1blrd M'P
er Td Adult lnjecllon lifter
age lis are nat rwplldet.M for
further Td Adult lmme"tr.
tim ll!lti1 10 years f11Dow1-.&amp;
their lblrd lnjeetloD
~

y

NEW YORK (UP!) - Basically defined, dissension is a
disagreement in opinion.
With ball clubs like the Yankees and the Cllrdinala, a
seemingly insignificant matter as whether a . man wears a
beard or not provokes (ullblown disagreements, and now
comes a report of dissent on such a burning lss\le of the day as
sun tans, whether tbe Reds should or should not be allowed to
develop one playing tennis or gqlf or going swinuning.
With the Twins, i.l 's something else. A cootroversy has been
stirred up over
newspaper · photograph. One which was
merely talked about but never actually taken! II all began last
Friday in Bloomington, MiiUI., when Bob Fowler, who covers
the Twins for the Minneapolis Star, was asked to do a story on
Rod Cllrew, and Larry Hisle of the Twins for The Sporting
News.
·
1Cllrew leads the majors in hitting and has a good grip on his
shth American League batting title. Hisle, right around .300, is
ll)e league 's top man in runs batted in and Is up there in home
J:UJ1S also .
.
:Fowler told Cllrew The Sporting News had in mind a story on
tile American League's bes11-2 punch, was thinking of a cover
flt&gt;oto of both him and Hisle, and could he .be out at the park
~turday m()l'ning at 10 :30 for the photographer? Carew said
ol&lt;ay.
So far , so good, but when he came to the ballpark Saturday
Carew said he had changed his mind.
Fowler asked him why and Clirew said he had thought about
it and felt that four men, not merely two, should be included
because outfielder Lyman Bostock and catcher Butch
Wynegar were having good years with the bat also. Besides,
Cllrew added, be had been given more than enough publicity in
the past six weeks during which his picture was on the covers
of Tin~• magazine and Sports lllustrated.
"Why not u5e the four of us?" Carew said to Fowler.
But The Sporting News asked for a picture of only hiril and
Hisle, Fowler said.
." Then let Larry have the publicity by himseU," Carew said .
" He can use it, and be deserves it becallae he has been having a
great year."
The photo never was taken. Fowler then explained tbe whole
!bing to Hisle, who had beep ready to pose for the picture but
then took off his uniform following tbe delay so he could have
the Twins' trainer, Dick Marlin, work on his bruised foot.
After the ball game that day, an AP newsman went to Hisle
and asked him about his feelings In tbe matter.
, " He asked me how I felt about Rod not wanting to ta)ce a
picture with me," Hisle told me from Toronto Tuesday. " I
explained to him I really wasn't upset because a person has a
.i ghttodo whatever he wants in a case like this one, and if Rod
chose to do this, he had a perfect right. Then he said to me, 'But
aren't you really upset ?' I told him no and I was being honest
with him."
.
Cllrew was Upset, though! when his wife, Marilynn, showed
him the wire service story in Sunday's Minneapolis Tribune. ·
. " You won't want to 'read it," she said.
·
. The Twins' first baseman looked at the headline which read :

a

Billy gets new pressures
PLAINS, Ga. (UP! ) - The
tourism business in Plains
already is booming, but some
merchants are trying to persuade Billy Carter to help
promote keepsakes ranging
from T-shirts and beer mugs
to toilet seats and genuine
Georgia dirt.
"Let's face it, seven out of
10 people come here to see
Billy," said Hugh Cllrter Sr.,
a Georgia state senator and a
cousin of the President.
He also runs an antique
sliop in the tiny community's
small business district, which
has been transformed into a
row of souvenir shops aimed
at the thousands of tourists
who visit the President's
home town . .
" We're trying to talk Billy
into walking around through
the stores maybe three days
week:," Hugh said. "That
would be a tremendous draw,
The tourists would love it."
Billy has his own interest in
tourism. His now.famou.s gas
station, which has blllboaids
advertising it on the way Into
town, is packed with visitors
each day. Most of them make
sure they can say t!"'y had a

Sports transactions \

"Carew Wm't Pose With Hisle."
He was still upset when he spoke with me about it at
Cooperstown Monday.
" The article said I refused to share top billing with Larry,
which wasn't the case at all," he said. " Larry and I are
friends. We play temis a lot, visit each other's homes .and
things like that. I would never do anything to .hurt him.
Certainly I'm concerned about it. ! don't want La:rry to take it
in the wrong way because not posing for the picture with him
wasn' t my intention at all."
Larry Hisle, owner of one of the more noble, gentle natures
in all b~seball, understands perfectly.
.
•'Lyman Bostock came up to me Sunday 1111d told me he read
the story in the paper," said Hisle. "His locker is right by
Rod's, he heard everything Rod said to the reporter and he told
me, 'Larry , it wasn'tanything like it was in the paper.' Lyman
told me Rod said I was having a good year, Lyman was having
a good year and Wynegar was also having one arid he felt each
of us should be m the cover )ly himself.
" My feelings toward Rod are the same as they've always
been. He has always been a good friend and things haven't
changed at all. There's no reason for Rod to he upset. .And as
for my photograph not being on the cover, who knows, maybe
one day in the future it will be."

Gregg upset
with Browns .
KENT, Obi~ ­
Cleveland Browns coach
Forrest Gregg was livid after
his team swooned in the
closing seconds to lose 16-14
to the Washington Redskins
in Monday night's exhibition
opener.
. "Every area of our game
displeased me," Gregg said.
~1 didn't see anything good.
We had no offense, no
defense, no pass rush no
anything.
•'It was a minor miracle we
were ahead until those finals
~aeconds.' '

:. The Browns returned to
,areaded two-a-day drills
today becauoe of the debacle
·it Cleveland Stadium. ·Theoft81llell of at least nine players
~cut from the roster were to be
•announced as Cleveland'
'trimmed Ita 6!klian · squad.
"At least nine- will go,"

bench were saying they didn't
safe on a bang-bang play at base hit.
UPI Spurts Wriler
The
Cinci
nnati
win-before
thi nk he (CapUla) had that
.
first
base
with
two
out
in
tbe
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
a
sellout
crowd
of
53,385
at
good
of stuff. We had a lot of
seventh
inning.
For 6 2-3 innings, Doug
Dodger
Sta
d
i
u
m~u
t
the
balls
stroked well but they
Cey hit a one-hop smash off
Cllpilla was on the verge of
Dodgers'
lead
in
the
Na
tional
happened
to be r ight at
acCIWIIplishing something no Cllpilla 's glove that shortstop
League
West
to
lit;,
games
.
someo
ne."
other Cin cinnati Reds' Dave Concepcion fielded but
Cllpilla ma y be only a
Acquired for unsigned
pitcher had done for eight just missed getting in time to
rooki~
in
tenns
of
big
league
re
liever Raw ly Eastwic k
first
baseman
Dan
long seasons.
but
he
took
the
loss
of
service
from
the St. Louis Cllrdinals
Jim Maloney turned in tbe Driessen.
his
nohitter
like
a
veteran.
on the Jun e 15 tr a din g
"To me ," said shortstop
last Cincinnati no-hitter on
After
Cey's
hit
,
Cooce
pcion
deadline, Capilla evened his
Dave
Concepcion,
"
he
was
April 30, 1969.
record at 4-4 as a Red .
wildly
charged
umpire
Lee
out
all
the
way
.
But
I
am
not
A ~ear-&lt;~ld rookie 1~­
Anderson
lifted him in the
Weyer
a
nd
shouted,
"
How
.
mad.
I
am
sad.
I
wanted
him
hander from Hawaii with a
eighth
after
the' first two
can
you
call
him
safe?"
·to
get
a
nohitter
very
badly.''
dismal 5.74 ERA , Capllla
Capilla
grabbed
his
shortstop
Dodge
rs
got
aboard
on an
"
Some
day,"
Cap
ilia
added
didn 't
achieve
ins tant
error
and
a
walk.
.
and
.
pushed
him
from
the
.
with
a
.shrug,
"
the
Man
immortafity Tuesday night
· But Borblln came on to get
Upstairs' may let me pitch a scene.
but he came close.
the
final six outs and his lOth
"
It
was
a
very
cloSe
play,"
noh!tter. Today He wasn' t
Oh so close.
save.
The Dodgers had the
the
pitcher
noted.
"But
fi
rst
By the bat of an eyelash, willing.''
·
of
all
I
wanted
to
win
th
e
ba
ll
bases
loaded and none out in
The Reds, who rapped out
Ron Cey, the Dodger third
game
and
my
in
itial
reaCtion
the
eighth
but Bo~bon struck
baseman nicknamed "Tbe 10 hila and came away with a
out
pin
ch-hitter
Rick Monday
was
to
get
Davey
out
of
Penguin"
because
he 4-0 victory, got Cllpilla the
and
got
Davey
Lopes to hit
waddles when he runs, was only run he needed in tbe tllere."
into
a
double
play.
Dodger
Manager
Tom
fourth inning on singles by
"This," Cap.illa con cluded,
Ken Griffey, J oe Morgan and Lasorda watched his club
Johnny Bench. In tbe eighth, lose for the fifth time in six uwasn 't even my ~iggest
thrill. My biggest thrill was
they cha sed loser Doug Ra u, games .
"l don 't know what the hell th e day I be~ame a Ci ncinnati
12-3, as Pete Rose belted a
two-run single and Bench happened to our hitting," he Red."
delive red another nmscoring · remarked. "The RUYS on the

Twins fall two games
behind after 6-2 loss

MtiOr League Standings

By United Press International
National l,.;eague

East

Ph il a
Chicag o
P itlsbg h
St . Louis
Montrea l
New Yo rk

W.
64
6-4
63
62
52
A7

L
44
46
49
51
59
62

w
68.

L Pet . GS
44 .601

West

Los An g
Clnci

Pet .
.593
.582
.563
.549
.468
.A31

GB
1
3
41/J
131f2
17112

By BILL MADDEN
UPI s ports WrIter
Journeyman ,right-hander
Jesse
J eff erso n,
who
exas pera ted his for mer
manager, Paul Richards of
th Chi
. •
Whit So
'th
e
cago
e x, WI

56 •.55 .505 1 1'1•
52 6 1 1 .A60 161h
52 62 .456 17 , .

San Fran
Houston

San Diego

&lt;9 · 67 .&lt;22 21

A tianta
40 69 .367 261h
.
Tuesdayfs Results
San Fran -4, Houst on 3. tst
San Fran 5, Houston o. 2nd
Chicago •· P;ttsburgh 1
San Diego 8. Mont real J
New York A, st . Louis 1
Ciric innati -4, Los Ange les 0

~dness
~x-mates

his

last year, gave

a big lift when
he tamed their closest rivals,
the Minnesota Twins, on four
Todoy •s Probable Pllchers
hits Tu sda . hi
(All T imes EDT)
e Y mg .
St. Louis !Underwood 6-71 at . And while Jefferson and the

New York ( Swan 7-6L 2: 05p.m .
Montreal ( Roger s 12-10 and

Alca la

at· Ph iladelphia

3-6 )

{Christensen 9-5 and Lon bor g

Jl. 2. 5:35p .m .
ChiCago ( Bonham

Pittsburgh

s.

10-lO l a t

(J ones 2-41 , 7 : 35

p .m
.
l;tlanto
!Solomon 3-I and
C.!lpra 2-8) at San Di ego (Jon es

• ·8 and

Dwchlnko s -71, 2, 9 p.m .
.cinc innat i ·!Norman 9-91 at
~g,•30 ~-~e\es {Rhoden 12Houston !R icharo 10-91 al San
Fran cisco
(McGl othen
2-8 ),
t0 ; 35 p.m.

71 '

Thursday's Games
Montreal at Philadelphi a
New York at Pit tsburgh, nigh t
Cinc innati at Los Ang . nigh t
Atl anta a t San Di ego , n igh t
Houston at San Fran , nigh t
American League

East
W. L
-Boston
Salt imre

N~w Y ork

D·e troft
Mllw
Clevelnd
Toronto

64

Pel . G B

A3 .598

21/J
5
.m 151/2
,439 17 112
.4211 181h
.358 26

63 &lt;7 ",573
60 A9 .550

so

60

50 64

46 62
39 70
West
W- L

Pet. GB
Chi c;ilgo
65 44 .596
Minn
65 48 .575 2 .
Texas
62 47 .569 3
Kan Cit y
61 47 .565 311'2
Calif
54 SA .500 101!2
Seattle
-48 66 .-421 1911'2
Oakl and
A2 68 .382 2 3 1/~
.
Tues~ay ' s Results
Detroit 4, Milwaukee 2, 1st
Milwaukee 6,· Detroit 4, 2nd
Baltimore 3, Cleveland 1
Toronto 6, M innesota 2
Ch icago 13, Seattle 3
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTl
California (Tanana 13 -71 at
Boston (Ti ant 8-7l . 7:30p.m .
Seattle (Pole 7,71 at Bal t imore
12 -lO L 7:35p.m .
Oakland Blue 10-131 at New
York ( Guidry 8-6) , 8 p.m .
Milwaukee &lt;Augustine 10-13)
at Detroit (Morris-0-0), 8 p. m .
Cleveland (Garland 8-13) at
Chi(: ago (WOOd .5 -A), 8 :30p. m .
Kansas City (Leonard 11 -9) at
Texas (Perry 10-8) , 8:35p .m .
Thursday's Games
Olktand at New York, nigh'
. California at Boston. night
Seattle at ~altlmore, nivht
Cleveland at Chlcago, mght
Kansas Cily at Texas , ni ght
f Minnesota at Toronto, night

&lt;Mar

Gregg promised after the
defeat. ''This game makes it
(cutting players) much
easier. It solves a lot of
questions."
Gregg said Washington
quarterbacks Billy Kilmer
and Joe Tbelsmann looked
effective, particularly
•
·
passing over the middle, but
he was unwilling to attribute
Wllllhington 's success to skill.
"AnineptpJssrushandan
Righthander Jeff ,
inept pass defense, those McKinney tossed a no-hitter
were the real problems," he 'a gainst Mason County as the
said. "Even if we had won, it Rock Springs team downed
. still would have been a lousy Mason 5.0 In the West
game."
Virginia stan Musial TourCleveland's only serious' nament.
injury from the contest inMcKinney struck out eight
volved backup safety Billy . and walked only one whil~ hiB
Craven. He fractured his left teammates pounded out nine
flbula(lower leg) and will be hits. McKinney faced only
sidelined. ,!()!' at least tw9 .. three . batters over . the
months.
regulation 21. No runner got
farther than first . on the
Meigs High ·g raduate.
Eddie Young pounded out a
doullle and single to lead the
winners while Ronnie Clonch
got the only other extra base
hit, a double. Charlie Mar·
mall and R. Abbott each
edge llecause he·has hit more collected two singles . while
x-l'ing shots, a smaller circle Buck and Moon got the other
within the bullseye used to two hits, singles.
Losing pltcliel' Tatterson
break lies. He has hit tbe
turned
in an admirable
inner circle 233 limes out of
performance
as h' fanned 10
280 llhota while Slldworthy,
and
walked
only
three, but he
the defending national
gave
up
those
nine
hits. Rock
women's champion, has
Springs now goes against the
pierted It 223 tlmell.
'l'rallln8 the leaden by only loser of the Syracuse a s~rC~e point are Richard Whitten contest Thursday at
Larry of Pilllburlh and Mike the Field House at 8 p.m.
001 004 ~ 9 2
R
Eddy of Wuhtngton, Pa.

M CKinney
no hi.tS
Mason 9

R Oth remainS
•
·
t
..
OR on lR
I'
P'B'.....4 race
AKRON , Ohio (UP1 )
Despite passing up la s t
week's Waukegim (III.) Open,
Mark Roth , of Staten Island,
N.Y. , continues to lead the

Toronto Blu e Jays were
defeating the Twins , 6-2, the
White Sox' home run brigade
went on a rampage against
the AL's other expansion .
" baby, ' '
the
Seattle
Ma riners.
The Ch isox
slamm ed
six
homers
includ ing two by Eric
Soderl)olm
to pumme l
Seattle , 13-3, and increase
their American League West
lead to two g'!I"eS over
Minnesota.
"I' m really glad for them.''
said J efferson. "! hope the
White Sox win · it. (Chisox
President ) Bill Veeck is a
super guy. l don't have
anything against the White
Sox. I just didn' t get to pitch
over ther e."
. Jefferson has harnessed
some of last year 's wildness
and after his latest victory,
accomplished with the help of
homers from noy Howell and
Doug Ault, he's now 7-12.
Meanwhile, the White Sox,
who lost seven of eight last
week and had their division
lead sliced by five games,
apjlear to have regrouped at
e&gt;&lt;pense
of
the
the
Mariners .
· " We 're hot again guys,
we're hot ," said Soderholm,
who hit two-run homers in the
third a nd fifth innings for the
Chisox, his 16th and 17th this
year: " I think we're back on

profes s i o nal Bowler s
,. .,.
· ti
n,:)socaa
on . money m·nru'ng
race.
Roth , who has rolled in only
19 events this year, has
earned $78,096, good for .a
nearly · $5,000 lead ove r
runnerup Torruny Hudson , of
Akron , who has won $73,128.
Right behind those two and
moving up , however , is Earl
Anthony , bowler of the year
for the past two years.
Anthony, of Ta coma,
Wash ., notched his second
win of . the season at
Waukegan, pickin g up a track ."
$6,000 first place check which
Chet Lemon had a threeboosted his 1977 earnings to run homer in the first inning
$63,940. The victory was !be . while Oscar Gamble hit his
28th of Anthony's career, a 22nd and Jim Essian his
PBA high.
eighth in the third and Royle
Stillman added yet another in
SCIGTO RESULTS
the seventh .
In the only other AL games,
COLUMBUS ( UP! )
Hollys Cllndy led all the way Baltimore downed Cleveland,
from post position No . 4 to a 3-1, a nd Milwaukee topped
oneler.gti; victory over Ba ron Detroit, &amp;4 , after losing the
Paul in the featured $1,600 first game of their doupace at Scioto Downs bleheader, 4-2.
Orioles 3, Indians 1:
Tuesday night.
Elliott Maddox and Lee
Talisa showed.
May
singled home runs in the
The winner, driven in 2:05
eighth
inning to snap a 1-1 tie
2-5 )ly Marvin Mulligan, paid
as
the
second-place Orioles,
$19.40, $6.60 and $5.40 .
The 6-5 nightly double behind the four-hit pitching of
combination of Piper Pink Ross Grimsley , moved to
and Alex Pick was worth within 2., games of idle
Boston the AL E ast: The loss
$302.40.
was
Cleveland's sixth in a
Attendance was 4,663 and
roW.
the handle $274,333.

CIPfP'D8"

,.;

M

1100 000 G-O 0 3

Tuesdv

Pr o Football
Buffalo
W&lt;"ived veteran
w 1de recei ver
Eddie
Bell ,
veteran linebacker Mark Jol'1n
son and defensive lineman Ron
Pru ~ tl. Jimmy Dean and Jessie
Wolf , kic ker Jose V iclantl.
l inebacker Ralph Fisher and
tight end M ike Burncp , au
roo.k i es. Also placed rook 1e
wide r ece l v~r Thom Gossom on
1niured wa iver list.
Chicago Waived veteran
w i de recei ver Ron Shank.lln and
rook ies defensi ve end Dennis
Sreckner . guard Art Meadow
croft, 'PUnter
Tony Madav,
def ensi ve end Ed Smith and
w ide rece iver Scott Yelvington ;
Sig ned free a9ent runn ing back
Rod Wellington .
Oetroi1
Signed
wide
'receiver Ray Jarvis ;·· placed
kicker
Benny • Rica r do
on
injured reserve : Wll i ved offensive tack le Joe Harvey, wide
receiver Donni e Joe Morris and
defensive backs Bob Mitch and
Mel Daniels .
Miam i ~ Placed on i njured
waivers vet eran de f en s i v e
tackle Manny Fer nandez and
rookie defensive back Gary
B\Jrl of Arizona State .
M innesota ...- Acqu ired th ird
year center KJie Davis from
Dallas ; waive
11 rookies Ron Kullas, wide receiver ,
M innesota : Dan Beaver, Ki cker.
llllnois ; Mark Soc keloh, l i ne.
becker , Rice ; Rober t Glss ler ,
linebacker. South Dakota state ;
Ron Johnsen, safety, Nor th
Caro l ina ; J i m Kelleher , r unning bacK, Col or ado; Cour tn ey
Snyder , r un n!ng ba"ck ,· Ind iana ;
Clin t St r ozier. saf ety, South er n
Cal ;
Bobby
Thoma-s . wide
rece iver , Nebraska ;
Jornell
Wi lli am\, ru nn ing back, Misso ur i; and John Nessel. ta ckl e,
Penn Sta te.
New York Gi ant s ...,.. Released
vet eran quarterback Dennis
Shaw , f ree a gent k icker Dave
L awson ,
th i rd - year
ki cker

Sergio Alb ert , f1 r st year corner
back Sonny H icks, tree aoent
~et enslve l"nd Oonnv ThOm as,
tree agen r line backer Eddie
Shea ts, f ree agen t teck le Greg
Oubinetz. fi r st -yei!l r gua r d Tom
Kruyer. r ookie wide rece l ... er
Mike Jooes, rookie running
back Elmo Simmons, vetertn
~ t ens i vt bf Ck Charli e Ford.
second year tJght end Mike
Fuhrman, f i r st -yea r w ide re
ceiver Ron Gardnef'. free a g~t
running 1 bacl&lt; Nic k Giaquinto,
free agen t r unning bac k. Geor ge
Palmer ; placed on injur ed
wa i vers free agent linebacker
Mel McGowen, first -yea r def en
~ive tackle
Jerry Lawr ence,
rookie defensive end E sil Bfbbs
and
f irst -year
tackle
Jeff
Slaplet on ; placed on inlured
reserve t ree agent tackle M i ke
vaughan .
Philadel ph i a - Relea sed vet erans running b ack Arr Ma lone.
wide receiver Jam·es M c A lister
and k.ic ker Don Bltter fjch and
defensive · .back Sk ip Shar p . ·
fifth -round draft cho~ce f rom
Kansas.
San Diego - Plated holdou t
quar t er bac k Dan Fout s and
r unn ln g back Mer cur y Morr is
on reser ve list ; Wa ived Harold
Steele, l inebacker, So uther n
Cal ; Spencer Bur roughs, g uard ,
Nort hwestern Loui sian a ; Gene
Washington,
w ide
r eceiver,
Geo r gia; and John Teer linc k,
defensive t ackle. west ern Il li n ois.

MANKATO, Minn. (UP! )
- Minnesota Vikings' CoaCh
Bud Grant said Mon day
running
backs
Brent
McClanaha n and Chuck
Foreman will be ready to
play Saturday night in the
Vikings' home exhibit ion
opener against Cleveland .

Tigers 4-4, Brewers 2-li :
Steve Brye hit solo homers
in successive innings of the
ni ghtcap to give the Brewers
a split. Bill Travers, just back
from the disabled list , went
seven innings for his first win
since April 29. In the opener,
Tige\s' roo kie r ight-hander ·
Dave Rozema pitched a five
hitter. for his 12th victory .
Jason Thompson hit a solo
homer, his 20th, to key a
th r ee-r un Tige rs ' seventh

18

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RE

ACE
HARDWARE
•PWMBING
•ELECTRICAL
•LAWN &amp; GARDEN.
•HOUSEWARES
•SPORT!NG GOODS
•AUTO
•BUILDING MATERIALS
•PANELING
•PAINT

•STEREO
•TAPE RECORDS
•8 TRACK TAPES
•SMOKE ALARMS
•CB RADIOS
•SCANNERS
•SPEAKERS
•KNIVES
•WATCHES
,.

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S PLAZA)

•

ONLY AT SMITH NELSON MOTORS

'

BUllT TOUGH TO MAKE YOUR TRUCK'S
LIFE EASIER
Folks all over are i'nstalling LinecA-Beds in their
trucks 'because of their beauty and rugged
durability. Farmers, entertainers, city folks, all
want Line-A-Bed . It protects the entire truck .
bed , even the tailgate. It's made of the same
high impact materials that go into crash helmets
and fo·otball helmets.
You can install it in minutes: The result: your
truck looks good and stays good, just like the .·
fellow's at the left. Hey, isn 't that .. . ?

Battle at Perry
CAMP PERRY, Ohio
,(UP!) - John Chapman of
Fort Worth, Tex., and Pvt.
Mary Stldworthy, Prescott,
'Ariz., of the Anny National
Guard, coutlnue to baWe for
.fpp lndlyldual honors In the
National Smallbore Rifle
' Prone Champ!OIIIhlpe.
Mll!r sewn find matches
Tueld•y, they both have
tb.-et cl2,791 points out of a
poulble 2,8110.
holda a . allgbt

Sports Tr.an saction J
By Uni ted P ress Intern a t ional

NOW IN STOC

-M

�-

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug . 10, 1977

Tuesday's linescores

Rain delays keep Clay

M110r L~lgue Results

8 V Un1teG Preu lnlernational
Natianilll Leagu e( 1st game)

&lt;, . .

t ' ...

......
.•.

'

'

•
••

~

••

..
••
'

..
•

•

•
••

'

'

......
•
•'

.....

.... .
..

."

""...
,.

"' .

.

&amp;

••

~.

'•
{

'.

•

•

•

s-3.
John McEnroe, the 18-yearold hatter from Douglastron,
N. Y., who fought his way into
the Wimbledon semifinals.
won an opening match
against Tony Graham of Los
Angeles, &amp;-2, &amp;-2.
Connors will play Matt Mitchel of Los Angeles Wednesday. Mitchell stopped Bruce
Nichols of Phoenix. tH, &amp;-1.
The ouster of Newberry
along with Brigette Cuypers
cl. Southn Africa Tuesday left
just four of the top eight
ladies' seeds alive .
Newberry, of St. Petersburg,
lost to Hella Viragh of Denmark, &amp;-2, 6-3.
Cuypers, seeded fifth, was
upset by unseeded Wendy
Overton, Seven Lakes, N. C.,
&amp;-2, u ,8-2.
Third-seeded Laura DuPont, Matthes, N. C., needed
three sets to survive her
match as the top women's
player still alive. She beat
Zenda ~iss of Daytona
Beach, Fla., 2-li, 6-3, 6-0.
Three-tirtle champ Nancy
Richey, San Angelo, Tex.,
beat
Mary
Carillo,
Douglaston, in three sets, 8-7,
&amp;-4, 6-3.
Richey, who will cele~rate
her 35th birthday in two
weeks, lost a first-set tie, breaker but broke service in
the fifth game of the second
set and cruised past her 2().
.year~ld challenger.
In other men's play, lothseeded Zeljko Franulovic,
Yugoslavia beat Anand Armitraj, India, 6-4, &amp;-4; Balazs
Taroczy, Hungary, defeated
Charlie Fancutt, Austria, s-3,
s-3; Mike Cahill, Dayton,
Ohio beat Frey Waltke, Los
Angeles, 2-li, 6-3, 8-2; Terry
Moor, Monroe, La . .beat Bill
Lofgren, 3-6; 6-4, 7-5; John
Jones, Alistralia, beat No. 14
Hank P!ister, Bake~field,
Calif., 6-4, 6-3 ; Steve

Her r mann,

Fer guson ;

002 110 OOk- 4 n o
N ldro. Mc.Laughlln {1} and

Moffitt

Lavell~

(8) ,

H ill

W- Ferguson ,
N i et~.ro . J 4.

Barr ,

(8)

and

11 a.

L-

O nd gameJ
Milw
121
6
Dttf
100 100 OlG- 4 7 I
Tr avers, M cC l ur e (81 and
Ha ne v ; Sy kes, Gr illi (5~ , f.4 iller
(1), Tavtor (9 J and Adams . w
Travers. 4 5. L - Grilli. 1 1. HR s
- M il wa ukee,
Brye
2.
tn ;

ooo

zoo-

Krul evi tz ,
Baltim or e,
defeated Jun Kuki, Japan,
8-1, 6-0; Butch Seewag en,
Riversdale, N. J ., defeated
Cliff Letcher, Austria, &amp;-7,7-li,
&amp;-2; Andrew Pattison, Scottsdale, Ariz., beat Bruce Banson, Los Angeles, &amp;-3, 6-4 and
Di ck Crealy, Australia ,
defeated George Hardie,
Long Beach, Calif., &amp;-1. &amp;-4.
In women's play, Marcie
Louie, San Francisco, beat.
Unky Boshoff, Washington,
D.C., 6-4, &amp;-3 ; Iris Riedel,
Germany, defeated Lele
Forood, 6-3, 6-3 ; Heidi
Eisterlehner, Germany, beat
Bunny Bruning, LaJolle,
Calif., 6-3, 5-7, 6-3, and Kate
~tham, Palo Alto, Calif.,
beat Betty Ann Stuart, Los
Angeles, 7-li, 2-li, 6-3 in a
match that lasted over five
hours including the evening
rain delay.
The match between
Poland 's Wojtek Fihak, runnerup last year to Connors,
and Patrice Domingnez,
France, was suspended by
darkness. Fibak won the first
set &amp;-4 but trailed the second
4-3.

Burris, W. Hernandez {8) and

M iff erwald ; Reuss, Gossage ( 9)
and Otl W B
1 11 11 L
Reuss , 7- 11~ ~~r ~ ChiCagO,
Buckner (7 ) .

M

San Dgo
Mntral

--

Jeffer son

AShby.

ond

OJ, Ault (9L

·

shot the second . best
qualifying score of 73,
outplayed Nancy Aaronson of
El Paso, Tex., 2-and-1.
Fourteen-year old Laurie
Ann'Rinker of Port St. Lucie,
Fla ., nearly upset Mary
Hafeman of West Bend, Wis. ,
but lost on the second hole of
a playoff.
Phyllis Preuss of Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla., who has
represented America · in
Curtis Cup play against Great
Britain, also was extended to
the second hole &lt;if a playoff
before
edging
Denise
Hermida of Brandon, Fla. ·
Lawrence had been favored
tn beat Murphy after shooting
the only sub-par qualifying
round, a one-under 72.
Murphy qualified with a 79,
just two strokes better than
the cutoff' mark.
, "It brings out something
extra 'in you when you're
playing the medalist,"·smiled
Murphy after her big victnry.
·"Last week at the national
junior tourney I was medalist
and l knew all the girls were
gunning for me. I was beaten
.in u.'e second rOund."
Murphy wore tiny gOld
earrings in the shape of !be
number 11 1" on the COW'&amp;e
Tuesday.
She hopes tn be No. 1 at
·
week's end.

.

St .L
N .Y .
Denn y, Schul tz (6 ), Easlwick
( 7) and Simmon s; E spi nosa

and Stear ns. w - Esplno sa, 6.8.

L- Denny.

Seattle
200 001 oro- 3 11 1
Chi ego
.S0-4 020 20K- 13 12 0
W h e e I o c k, M on tague (1),
Lax ton ( 4), Seo ui (7}. Kek lch
CSJ and St inson ; Stone. LaGrow
(8) and E ssJ an . W - Stone, 12·7 .
L - Wheelock , 6·8. HRs- Seattl e,

dt

·

li

beginning Sept. 1, 1977;
Dale L .

Di I .

Ha·ney. Chief of the

V SlOD

Of

Wildlife ,

reminded Qhio hunters and

age
'
Residents of Ohio 65 years

(1 6), Gam ble (22}, Soderho lm 2
(17 ), E ssian (8), Still man (3).

7-4.

.
.
Viias arrives m

are Bjorn Borg and Jimmy
Connor·s ,
ge nerall y
considered to be the No. I and
2 tennis players in the world,
respectively.
Of the former, Vilas says,
"Bjorn and I play more or
less the same game, but he is

Dublin for event
DUBLIN, Ohio (UP!)- At
. 25, Guillermo Vilas., the
powerful
left-handed
Argentine, is on a clay court
win streak of 29, dating back
to the French Open of more
than two months ago.
Arriving
here
early
Tuesday afternoon after
rolling to
his fourth
consecutive · championship
Monday night over Roscoe
Tanner at South Orange,
N.J., Vilas looked a bit tired
in an informal press
conference which found him
unshaven, in Levis ·and
platform shoes, with a shirt
open to a deep V.
The ·shaggy-haired Vilas
said he beat Tanner Monday
by
"playin g
to
his
backhand."
"It is difficult to canpare

how I've played in the. 'past
with now," 'be admitted upon.
his return to the Columbusarea tournament lifter an
absence of several years.
That return was almost
guaranteed
after
the
tournament changed the
court surface to clay.
Vilas attributed his current
success to "working year
after year, day after day, I
get the energy going and now
I'm . almost
physically
perfect."
Traveling with his coach
and manager, !on Tiria,c of
Romania, himself a former
international circuit player,
Vilas credits his mentor with
"changing my techniques in
serve and tactics."
Their normal procedure is
tn practice one hour before a

Logan ·still
alive in Ohio
Legion meet
ATHENS, Utuo ( Ut'iJ
Four teams were eliminated
from the Ohio American
Legion Baseball Tournament
Tuesday l'i;.hile three of the 13
entrants maintained perfect
records.
Troy and Worthingtnn won
second-round contests to set
up a showdown in the
winner's
bracket
this
morning. The winner of that
game would meet Maynard,
the only other team with an
umblemished record.
Troy needed 10 innings to
dispose of Ashley 9~ .
Worthington
outslugged
Logan 11-8, and Maynard
downed Cincinnati 3-1.
In · other a£tion, Wickliffe
eliminated Chillicothe !:HI,
Logan, playing its second
game of the day, sent home
Maumee 10-8, Ashland
handed Bellefonlaine its
second loss, 3-2, and Euclid
eliminated Steubenville &amp;-4.
The staie champion is sche.duled to · be crowned
Saturday .
BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
(UP!) - Tom Pagani,
assiStant track coach at the
University of lllinois, has
been named assistant track
coach at Indiana University,
announced
the
scho.ol
Tuesday.
Pagani, 40, replaces
Aubrey Dooley who resigned
to become head track coach
at Louisiana Tech.

qualify 811 residents, nonresident
licenses
are
avalla ble for $30 piWI the 50cent writing fee.
A copy of the 1977 Ohio
Hunting and Trapping
Regulations will be iMued
with each license. The goide .
provides a digest of current
hunting and trapping laws, as
well as detailed hunting and
trapping infonnation.
M•jor Lel,ue Luders
BY United Pri!ss lnttrnttionAI

Betting

I bilsed on 300 at blh)
National League

•

G. AB . H. Pet.

Parker P it
Stennett Pi t
Tmpltn SLL
'Gri ffey C ln

111
10..
107
108
108

&lt;153 158 .349
....,_. 136 .337
ot39 143 .326
422 137 .325
Morales Ch i
391127 .325
Slmmns St .L
105 366 119 .325
Foster Cin
110 428 136 .318
Luz insKl Phil
98 371 118 .318
Robinson Pit
92 322 102 .317
Va lent in Mtl
10.2 418 no .311
Americln Le•oue
G. AB . H. Pet.
Carew Min
109 428 1M .383
108 426 145 .340
Bostock Min
Ri ce Bos
107 43-4 1•1 .325
Sl nglton Sa l
101 35.4 11... .322
Ri vers NV
94 382 122 .319
Ballor Tor
97 391 12-4 .311
Yount Mil
10li 42~ 13.4 .31 5
. Hargrve TeJ(
102 35~ 110 .311
Fisk 8os
103 360 111 .308
Cowens KC
108 423 130 .307
Home Runs
National league: Foster, Cin
38 ; B u r r o ugh s. Afl and
Schm idt, Phil 28 ; Luzlnski , Phil
27 ; Bench , Cin and Gar\ley , LA

Am'-'rican League : Rice, 8os
29 ; ScOtt, Bos and Bonds, ca·l
27 ; Nettles. NY 25: Hisle, Minn

. :;.{

23.

Runs BaHed In
Nitlonal League: .Foster, Cln
109 : Cey, t.A 90 ; Garvey . LA
88 ; Luz inski, Phil 86 ; Bur.
roughs, Atl and Bench , Cin 80 .
American
League ;
Hisle,
Minn· 87 ;
Bonds , Ca I 79 ;
Thompson , Oet and Munson,
NY 78 ; Hobson. Bos and Zisk,
Ch i 77.
Stolen Bues
National League: . Taveras,
Pitt 40 ; Cedeno , Hou 37; Lopes,
LA and Moreno, P itt 35 ;
Ri chards, SO 34 .
American League: Patek, KC
36; Remy , Cal 31 ; LeFlore, Oet
27 ,· Page , Oak 25 ; Bonds, Ca l

'...

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Pitching

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Most Victories
League: . Carlton,
Phd 16-6; R .Reuschel , Chi 15-4 ;
Forsch , St.L 14-5; Rau, LA 12·
3; John , LA 12-4; Rhoden, LA
12.7 ; Rogers , Mtl }2-10·.
American Leag_u e: Ryan, Cal
16· 10 ; Goltz, M fnn U -6 ; Tanana,
Cal 13·7; T .Johnson, Minn 12-3;
Rozema , Oet 12--4 ; Stone, Ch i
12-7 ; R .May and Palmer, Bait
and ColbOrn , KC 12 ·10 .
e .. rned Run Average
(based on 108 in nings pitched)
National Leaguu. Hooton, LA
2.48 t R.Reuschl!l , Chi 2.51 ;
R'ogers , Mtl 2 .67 ; John, LA
2.74 ; Candelaria, P itt 2.79 .
J:tar.l onal

;!
I

American League : Ryan, Cal

260 ; Tanana, Cal 169; Bly l ev~n ,
Te)( 150; Leonard , KC . US ;

Eckersley , Clev 140 .

.....

MR. AND Mrs. Charles R. Harris, owners, operators
of the produce business across the Ohio River from
~venswood . Their son, Jeff and . his wife, Debra, are

Ali will play

·. general in

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WE WIU CLOSE AT 12:00 NOON
THURSDAY ntE 11th

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SEE YOU AT THE FAIR

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·PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
HOURS :
Mon., Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8:00·5:30
Friday 8:00-8:00

N

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I

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1

5th &amp;Pearl

PH~ BE'

Racine, -0.
STORE

· Right Reserved To Limit Quantifies .
We Gladly Accept Fed. Fotid Stamps'
Monday thru Friday

.·

64 oz.
p:.:::.::~..::;.::..-~L.._

JIFf - Plain or Crunchy

PEANUT BurrER
DEBBIE
.

•.•

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CLOSED

22 oz.

49~

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OHIO

w

CARROTS
14.8. PKG.

L;:E

ATOES

10 IB. BAG

Dill PICKLES

~ro;ATO JUICE

Qt.

Ul.

29~

LB.

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Meigs
Property

~

,

CRISISLINE

CALL
992-5554·

pe.~s.
We open our market
around the Fourt~ of July and
remam open until around the

Transf~rs

c
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e
!'-

Mr. and Mrs. John Merrill
of Columbus, 0., spent the
weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Ledlie.
Mrs. Elvira Barr, Mrs.
Sharon Barr and Helen Bail
of Hamden, 0. went to
Lancaster Monday to the
funeral of their nephew, Ray
R. Phillips, age 80 years of
· Lancaster, O)lio. He was
married to. the former Eura
Hull of RUtland, who survives
him, also one son, Don and
wife and two grandchildren

"Free

of
Frost"

· Mrs.
Dena
Hoffman
retunied home after spending
several weeks in Florida with
her daughter-in-law and

~~iru:~~f~::.""n, ·steve

tJ,;,,.,,IPWStl/t
·

survive.
SINTilA

CORSAR

Guaranteed by Keepsake

for perfect clari ty, precise
cut , rine white color. Permanently registered .

The new

Energy Saving Refrigerator·.
Engineered to save money on your electric bills.

CAN SAVE

.tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiit.•illi..ii-

PRE-SCHOOL

BROKEN SIZES

I NO RETURNS

on

tit

Sale Prices From 9.99 to '14.99

YOU
WILL NOT
MEET
YOURSELF

•••
•
E

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

on Ro~t~ 2 in West Virginia .
Hams son and his wtfe,
Debra, live on the Portland
fannand Charles Harris and
hts wtfe, Juaruta, hv~ on the
!ann in West Vtrgm1a:
According to Harris, between the two farms this
year, they have 75,000 staked
tomato plants, had 15,000
cabbage plants, and have
15,000 bell pepper plants,
20,000 swe et corn·, 7,000
cantaloupe, 3,000 watermelon , 2,000 hot pepper
plants and 2,000 cubnella
pepper .Plants.
.
Harr.1ses stock ontons,
grapes, peaches, plums and
other frwts at their market
for the beneht of their
c~stome~s, ~h whOlesale
and retail. The1r mam Items,
however, are tomatoes, sweet
com, cucumbers and . pep-

08i'

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$}39

~~g~e~3_9~~- ~~g~~~~LDY_E~-ERD_
· ~~~~·-$~34~9~~~------~~·
•

Joe E . Graham, 49, 136
Meadowood
Drive,
Meadowood, Delaware,
former Middleport resident,
was one of four men killed in
a massive elt]llosion on Aug.1
at the Air Products and
Chemicals . Inc., plant near

·20 COUNT

CHEESE

Indian burial mound and a
monument to the famous
Battle of Buffington's Island,
the name "Charles R. Harris
and Son" is seen on tomato
baskets, for exa mple , in
Detroit, Cleveland, Akron ,
Cincinnati and Columbus.
While the Harris enterpris e
is strictly private, as compared to the old association,
this 1977 retail and wholesale
business once again is putting
Meigs County grown produce.
in metropolitan markets in
·significant quantities under a
recognizable labeL
"I have been in the produce
business here since 1948 or
•49. We now employ approximately 25 people during
harvest time. Ali of our
employees are local people,"
Harris says.
Harris and his son, Jeff,
are planning on expanding
their business this year to
include a hot house for
flowers at the rear of the
market.
At present, they grow their
produce on the 175 acre farm
at Portland, in addition to a
125 acre " farm just across
from the Big Bend of the Ohio
River. south of Rav•nswood
·

Mr. and Mrs. W. B. ~dlie
cause has not been deter· took their ·granddaughters
Delaware City.
Juli and Jody home Friday
Accounts of the tragedy say mined.
Mr. Graham had been plant after they had spent two
the blast destroyed the
loading dock and much of a ·manager in charge of aU Air weeks with their grandchemical parents. They are the
building housing · the plant's Products,
operations
at
Delaware
City daughters of Mr . . and Mrs.
new nitrous oxide unit. Sheet
~etteler.s
aluminum scraps and. debris the past 10 years. He was a Richard Ritter of Fort Knox,
Ky.
212 E, Main, Pomeroy
littered an area roughly the · .World War ll veteran.
Mr. Graham is survived by
Mrs. Clair Parkerson ' is
size of a football field·at the
rear of the plant property . his wife, the fonner Shirley . home after being a surgical
T•..~ •• w... k "' '•·
Nitrous oxide is a highly Johnson, New Haven, W. Va.; patient at Holzer Medical •nne• 1r0111 ,,oo 1o ,,o.ooo
a
son,
Steven,
at
home;
two
·
Cen\er
and
is
doing
nicely
.
unstable gas primarlly used
as a medical and dental daugoters, Lisa Graham and
anesthetic and is more likely Linda Graham, both at
to explode as it cools. The home; two sisters, Marilyn
and
Yvonne
nitrous oxide unit of the plant Bishop
had been in operation only Bareswilt, both of Midsince last March and the dleport; two ::.ieces, four
explosion victims were t)le nephews, two 1 great-nieces,
only Delaware City plant and a great-nephew.
employes familiar with its . Funeral services were held
Aug. 4 at the · Dohertyoperation.
Authorities said the blast Wickersham Funeral Home.
was heard at least five miles
from the scene. . The bodies
had to be · left lying whe~e
NOW IN PROGRESS
they were for several h(Jlll's
Final Clearance
because officials were afraid
WOMEN'S SHOES
Summer
any movement might trigger
1
Group
Oxfords- Wedgees
Items
another explosion.
Suede Ties- Earth Shoes
The explosion occurred
(!Jitcnt
Values To $22.99
about 10 minutes before the ·
1
workers were to have quit lor
~L'lttiqtte
the day. The explosion
205 North 2nd Ave.
leveled
the
30-by·50
ONE SPECIAL
Middleport, Ohio
prefabricated steel building
WOMEN$ WEDGEE TIE
housing the reactor unit. Its
Rubber Sole
•6.99
For Sale

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WIENERS

$119

SLICED ··:
BEEF LIVER

Smuckers Regular or Kosher

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Fatal explosion described

WNDON (UPI) -Heavyweight champion
Muhammad Ali, who recenUy
fmished · maldng a movie of
himself, said Tuesday his
next film role will portray
Hannibal,
the
ancient
Carthaginian .general,
All was in London to
publicize "The Greatest," an
autobiographical movie, but
was already lookinR ahead to
Joan Oliver, Robert L.
his next project.
Oliver,
Sandra ~e Freeman,
"After this picture I'm
Dale
Freeman,
Richard 0.
going to play Hannibal with
Sommer,
Kathleen
Sommer,
hundreds of elephants and
David
Raymond
Wymer ,
then I'm going to be a black
Egyptian warrior with 10,000 Karl J . Sommer, John F.
horses ,'' he told a crowded Sommer Jr., Joyce . E .'
Sommer, Janet E. Sommer to
luncheon.
·Doris
Jane Peitsmeyer, 7
·Ali said any movies he
·
acres,
Salem.
makes in the future ''will be
Meda
Jenkinson,
dec. to
wholesome movies with a
Allen
E.
Jenkinson,
Curtis
L.
message that can help
Jenkinson, Aff. for trans.,
mankind .
"They ain't going to have to Salisbury - Chester. ,
Chester Erwin, dec . to
put up posters announcing
Cla
rice Erwin, Cert. for
my name because everyone
trans.,
Middleport.
in the world knows my face
Darwyn
Enevoldsen,
by
"I'm the most recognized . Eleanore Enevoldsen to
face on God's good planet. Gregory L. Bailey, Jo L.
There ain't nobo.dy bigger Bailey, 5.013 acres, Olive. ·
Helen .B. O'Reilly to
than me.
J. O'Reilly, Naomi
Therrien
"And I didn't have one
I.
O'Reilly,
Lot 3, Pomeroy.
acting lesson," he sa\d.

now.

partners in the thriving retail, wholesale produce
business, located at Portland, Ohio, three miles north of
the ferry landing in the neighboring state of Ohio. - Photo
by Enos.

LONGHORN

1-:-DISH-:--D-=-ET_ER":-GEN_T~B:--ott-le~;..;

Saturdoy 6 to 9

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LB.

18 oz.
Jar

9 : 00to7 :00

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7g~

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FRENCH CITY

BY PIECE

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.....-.. next film
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AUGUST 9th thru 13th

SLAB BACON

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Gal.

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American league: . . Tanana ,
Cal .2.C7 : Blyle\len, Te~ 2.42 :
Ryan . Cal 2.58 ; T.Johnson ,
M inh 2.61 ; Rozema ,. Oet 2.7-i .
Strikeouts
National League: Niekro, Atl
111 ; Koosman·, NV 148 ; Roger~ ,
Mtl 147 ; Richard, Hou 139 ;
Sea\ler. Cin 132 .
·

PORTLAND
Approximately a generation
after the demise of the ~tart
Falls
Truck
Growers
Associaton , a cooperative
enterprise ol the 1950s,
Charles R. Harris and Son of
Portland are doing a thriving
seasonal retail and wholesale
produce business serving a
radius of 500 miles.
The old Association,
master-minded and guided
by the late political leader
Dan Hartinger; . among
others, broke up in the 50s
after approximately 10 years
serving produce growers
from Racine upriver to
Reedsville. In the interim
small combinations of farmers, and others acting independently have marketed
their own produce.
Too, with the changing
economy in the Letart Bot·
toms, there are far fewer
tomatoes and cabbages being
raised than 20 years ago. The
600 acres of choice farm land
bought by the Consolidated
Coal Company . in the · 50s,
leased hack to its owners for
fanning, now in large part is
the basis of a thriving sand
and gravel industry.' Field
after field that a gel\eration
ago produced tomato and
cabbages today produces
field com.
The C. R. Harris produce
market is no fly-by-night fruit
stand. Located in the heart of
this small, rural Meigs
County community near the
state park that features an

fir st or middle of September," said Harr is. '~We
are open seven days per week
from7a.m. until6p.m. We do
our seUlng by telephone to
wholesalers and deliver to
them in one of our two trucks.
In fact , we deliver au large
volume loads."
Even though Harri ses
offiCially close their produce
market early in September,
they are not idle. After
harvest season, the family
focuses their attention on the
cattle they own, and then Qn
Jan. 15 they begin getting
their hot Peds ready for seed.
- By Chester Tannehill ,
revised from an article in th e
Ravenswood News written by
Charlotte Enos, Au~ . 4, 1977.

Langsville

24,

faster than me."
"My serve and volley need
more work/' Vilas admitted,
but after this tournament and
perhaps one more he plans to
take a rest before the U.S.
Open at Forest Hills in early
September.
The U.S. Open will be his
best chance to replace Borg
or Connors at No. 1 or 2. That
tournament also is on clay .
In late evening matches
Tuesday, Ray Moore, South
Africa, defeated Alvaro
Fillol, Chile, 2-6, s-3, &amp;-1;
Ismail El Shafei, Egypt, won
over Dick Bohrnstedt,
Redlands, Calif., 7-li, 7-5;
. Billy Martin, Palos Verdes
Calif., beat Karl MeiJer, West
Germany, 6-3, 6-4, and fifthseeded Stan Smith, Sea
Pines, S.C., defeated Chile's
Hans Gildemeister · 7~. 6-1.

PEOPLE IN search of homegrown tomatoes, sweet
corn, watermelon, crisp, green bellpeppers and other

"

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produce items, will find an abundant supply at the Charles
R. Harris and Son produce market at Portland, Ohio. Photo by Enos.

26.

~139

SHASTAS POP

...-.

r

un mg_an
rappmg cense
· agents. The annual license ·
will be valid for one year,

of age or older may obtain a
permanent hunting and
Cincl
000 100 OJQ- 4 10 I
trapping
license for $4.50 at
L.A.
000 000 QOO- 0 I I
MANKATO, Minn. ( UP!)
Cap ill a,
Borbon
(8 )
and
The Minnesota Vikings the office of the common
Bench ;
Ra u,
Garman
(8L Rautzha n (9 ) and Yeager. wTuesday cut II players and pleas court clerk in the
Capilla . 4-4. L - Rau , 12-3 . HR county courthouse. Haney
added third·year center Kyle emphasized such licenses are
Cincinn ati ,. Rose (8 ).
·Davis from OklahOma.
Americ~n League
The Vikings sa.id Davis was · not available elsewhere.
(1st
game
)
· ed fr om Dalia s where They m~ he purchased at
Milw
ooo 100 1oo- 2 5 0 acqull'
Det
100 ooo Jox- • 7 o he had been a fifth-round the clerk's office.
Resident licenses are for
Sl alon. McCl ure !71 and · draft choice in 1975
M oo r e ; Rozem a and Woc ken ·
•
any person who has resided in
Ohio for the last six months
preceding application for a
license. The only hunters and
trappers not required to have
licenses are:
- members of the U. s.
Armed Forces on leave, who
must carry an identification
card or other evidence of
being on active military
duty
;
inCluding a home run, Francisco
swept
a
- landowners and their
Tuesday night and drove in doubleheader from Houston,
children
while hunting and
two runs to help the Cubs 4-3 and 5-0.
trapping
on
their own land;
defeat the
Pittsburgh Mets 4, Cardinals 1:
tenants
or managers of
Pirates, 4-1, and move tn
Nino Espinosa scattered
land
and
their
children while
within one game of first-pia ce eight hits and John Milner
hunting
and
trapping on
Philadelphia in the National drove in two runs with a
property
where
they reside,
League East.
single and a double to pace
alld
"I have to take five or six the Mets. The loss droppl'(l
aspirins before each game," the Cardinals 4'h games · _; a resident U. S. Armed
Buckner Said. "It hurts, but l behind first-place Phila- Forces veteran totally and
permanently disabled acplay because I'm trying to delphia in the NL East.
cording
to the Veterans
earn a living and I'd like to Padres 8, Expos 3:
help the team win a
Gene Tenace hit a pair of
pennant."
homers and drove in three
Buckner's two RBI and a runs to spark the Padres.
two-run double by Geor,ee Gary Carter hit two homers scheduled match. Tiriac,
Mitterwald helped Ray and Chris Speier had a solo• once a doubles partner of Die
Nastase; has been Vilas'
Burris even his reeord at 11- shot for Montreal.
manager
for a year.
11. Burris went 7 1-3 innings Glaots 4-5, Astros ~ :
Aaked if the heavy rain
with Willie Hernandez
Willie McCovey drove in
. holding the Pirates hitless the two runs and Jim Barr picked which has fallen here for the
past two days would affect his
last 1 2-3 innings.
, up his lith victnry as the play, Vilas said matter of
In other NL games, Cincin- Giants won the opener and
nati blanked Los Angeles, 4-0, Bob Knepper allowed only factly, ' 'Rain only slows tbe
New York defeated St. Louis, . four hits in the nightcap in surface 5 to 10 percent at
most."
4·1, San Diego downed helping San Francisco
Understandably, his two
Montreal , 8-3, and San complete the sweep.
toughest opponents on clay

2% MILK

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trappers they must have 8
ooo 010 ooo- 1 8 2
300 010 oox- 4 10 o Meyer ! lSI; Ch icago. Lemon license regardless of their

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
•
Despite severe pain in his
left ankle from off..eason
surgery that would force
many players to the sidelines,
Bill Buckner continues to
supply first-aid to the
Chicago .«:ubs.
·
, The left..handed hitting first
baseman, who is hitting at a
.30'1 clip, had three . hits.

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OOI 004 00 2_ 8 9 1 . Jefferson . 1-12. L - Thormods·
020 000 01 o-- 3 9 1 gard , 9 ·9. HRs- Toronto, Howel l

~ r eisle-ben , Fingers (81 and
Ten ace ; Tw itc h ell, Holdswor th
(6 ), Mc Enaney (6) , At kinJCtn
(8) and Carter . w - Frels leben
(5 -5). L - Tw itch el l U -81. HR sSa n Diego, Speier (5 ), Tenace 2
(13); Montrea l, c art er 2 (1 9 ).

Most stores that ' handle
hardware.and sporting goods
are resident and non-resident

Buckner bats Cubs
to _4-1 win over Bucs

VALLEY BEL-L

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Administration and n!ceiving
a pension from the Veterans
Administration . Disabled
veterans must have a per•
sonal. description and a
certification or disability
from the Veterans Ad·
ministration
in
their
possession while hunting and '
trapping . (Veterans who feel
they qualify should. contact
John Brink, Room 1081,
Veterans Administration
Regional 'Office, 1240 E. 9th
St., Cleveland, Ohio 44109 ).
Ohio annual resident
licenses cost $4 plus a Slkent
writing fee . Haney pointed
out that this is the loth con·
secutive year resident
licenses have been available
for the same $4 fee. The last
fee hike was in 1967.
For people who do not

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uo

M fnn
000 020
2 40
Tron to
031 200 00 x- 6 9 3
Thorm ()(lsg ard ,
Burg me ie r
(3), Schueler (... ) and Wvnegar ;

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Hunting, trapping pennits
available in stores now

hJSi. W Rozema. I1A1
L
Slaton, 8 11 . H ~5- Mii WltU k ~ ,
c ooper U'2 l: oerroit. ThOm pson

COLUMBUS
Oh 10
'
(2nd gam e)
hunting and trapping licenses
Houston
000 000 ()00- 0 tt 1 Detr oit, Fuentes (l), Adams for 1977 have been mailed to
Sa nFrn
221 000 oox- 5 11 o CO .
I'
th
Pentz, Forsch {5}, McLaugh .
1~5e agents 8CI"OS8
e
lin (71 iitnd Ferguson ; Knepper Cleve
ooo ooo lOD- 1 4 o state and should be available
and ,1\lexanoer . w - Knepper . s
Bttl t
000001 02x- 3 1D O this
k
rding 10 the
6. L - Penu. 3 2.
Fi t zmorris , Kern (8) and
wee I acco
Foss e; Grimsley an ~ Skaggs, Ohio Department of Natural
Chlcgo
001 200 001 - 4 10 o Ru ~olph . W- Grlmsley , 10·6· L , Resources' Division of Wild·
P tts~h
100 000 ooo- 1 6 1 - F 1tzmor ns, 3-7.
lif

17-year-old upsets Mary Lawrence
in opening round of women's AGC
CINCINNATI (UP!) - At
Murphy also has great
age 17, when a lot of people confidence, as pointed out by
are thinking about taking up her coach, Mike Podolski, a
golf, Mary Beth Murphy was former teammate of Jack
giving up the game.
Nicklaus at Ohio State
She had started at age 12, University . .
worked long and hard on her
Related · Podolski, who
game and became good walked every hole with his
enough to play in junior · student Tuesday, . "She told
tnurnaments.
me this morning, 'I'll beat
But after five years she felt that girl, Mr. Podolski, don't
burned out. ·
you worry." '
So, she put away her clubs
Murphy,
who
just
right after her 17th birthday graduated from high school
nearly a year ago and 'let two months ago and soon will
them CQllect dust for six start playing golf for
mbnths.
·
Southern
Methodist
But this spring she started University, topped a field of
. thinking about all the 32 women starting the tourtnurnaments nament's second round this
summertime
coming up and got the urge to afternoon.
go golfing again.
Match play at the hilly
And this week, Murphy is CinCinnati Country Club
glad she's back in the swing. course will continUe through
Still not yet 18, the Naples, Saturday, when America's
Fla., resident . on Tuesday top female amateur golfer
pulled off a big upset at the will be determined.
77th annual U.S. Women's
In other key first round
Amateur Golf Championship, matches Tuesday, 1975
beating medalist Mary Law- champion Beth Daniel of
rence,ofCanton,N.Y., 2-and-1 Charlesion, S.C., was nearly
in the opening round of match upset, but hung on to edge
play.
ll;!rbara Riedl of Piqua, Ohio,
"She's one of the best . 1-up.
young golfing prospects
"It was a bad day," sighed
around;' praised LaWI'ence, Daniel, 20, a senior at
21, a senior at the University Furman University
in
of Miami (Fla.). "She plays Greenville, S.C. "I was glad
very well for her age and to get this one over with."
shows great maturity for just
Pa'tty Sheehan of Reno,
being 17."
Nev., who along with Daniel

000 001 on- 3 IJ o

Produce business in
Portland is thriving

•

(20) .

Houston

S~i'nFrl')

directors in a frenzy
INDIANAPOLIS (UP[) Jimmy Connors and Manuel
Orantes scored victories in
oening matches of the
$160,000 Clay Courts Championships, but the Hoosier
weathennan was posting the
biggest upset with rain delays
that kept tournament directors in a frenzy.
Twice Tuesday, rain caused lengthy delays in the competition. A morning shower
delayed play about three
hours and a downpour and
drizzle halted play at night at
the spotligh!ed ce~ter court
for pver an hour before
Orantes, winner here in 1973
jllld 1975, took on German
Werner · Zirngibl, whom he
defeated 6-4,6-0.
Connors belted Henry
Bunis of Cincinnati, 6-3 6-3.
Unseeded players a~o continued to make a shambles of
the women's bracket when
Floridian Janet Newberry
lost in a first-round match.
Only four of the top eight
women seeds have survived
opening play.
.
The rain forced postponement until today of the match
between Eddie Dibbs of
Miami Beach and Arttonio
Munoz of Spain.
Connors, winner lat year
and also in 1974, registered a
strong first-set victory but
needed a service break in the
eighth game and two tries at
match point before conquering Bunis, who had been a
thorn in a couple previous
matches on Clay.
Also winning afternoon
first-round matches among
the men were Harold
Solomon, Pompano Beach,
Fla., and Buster Mottrom of
Engl;md. Solomon required
three sets to dispose of Dave
Schneider of South Africa,
6-3, 3-6, .8-2 while Mottrom
polished off Bernard Fritz of
France in straight sets, 6-4,

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday ,_Aug . 10, 1977

u,.y,,...

~=._.

I GROUP LITTLE GIRLS SHOES
Values To $9.99 ·

.Sale Prices From 12.99 to '6.99

THE

Sale Prices From 14.99 to 114.99

(Regularly 69.95)
When You Buy An

MEN'S SHOES
1 Group Values To $22.99

STREET

AT

Sale Prices From 14.99 to 113.99
YOUTHS &amp; LITTLE GENTS SHOES
1 Group Values To $15.99

Sale Prices From '4.99 . to 110.99

_.....

ESHOEBOX
'-'iddleport, Ohio

lllil.
Refrigerator

BOYS SHOES
I Group Values To $16.99

the Tin ..
Middleport

95

Sale Prices From 15.99

C_QMING
DOWN

GILLIAN'S
FASHION
CENTER
On
__C:::o:::me Ordn!

Only

MISSES AND CHILDREN'S SHOES
I Group School Oxfords
Wedges - Straps- Crepe Soles
Values To $15.99

Refrigerators Priced From $499

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd

Ave.

Middleport, 0.

992·2635

,,

�7- The D1lily lientl!lel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,

6- The Dooilv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, A~ . 10, 1977

Couple exchanges vows

.
,,
.

Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Derenberger

Picnic held for family
The Meigs County Men's
Fellowship, Meigs County
Churches of Christ, held a
family picnic at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assenibly
Camp grounds Sunday.
The group enjoyed softball,
horse shoe, and volley ball.
Following the picnic a
meeting was held with
Eugene Underwood, pastor of
the Tuppers Plains Church,
sh!Jwing slides of the Grundy
Mountain Mission School.
Mrs. Norma Russell of the
Women 's Fellowship announced that there will be a
booth at the fair.
Attending were William
Ashley, Charles C. Russell,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rife, Carla
and Becky, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Hatfield and Bradley, George

POMEROY - In a 5:30
p.m. double ring ceremony at
the Pomeroy First SOuthern
Baptist Church, Miss Debbie
Marie Campbell, daughter
and Mr. and Mrs. David D.
Campbell, Pomeoy Pomeroy,
and Jimn)y Lee Derenberger,
Route l, 'Albany, exchanged
w•dding vows.
The Rev. Paul White of·
ficiated at th~ wedding with
Mrs. Clara White providing
the music.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
in a gown or white lace over
satin fashioned with along
train, scoop neckline, long
full sleeves gathered at the
wrist with lace cuffs. A crown
decorated with lace motifs
held the noor length veil in
place. The bride wore a pearl
drop necklace and carried a
bouquet of rainbow carna·
lions with matching
streamers.
Miss Ann Nitz, Pomeroy
served ;~s maid of honor. She
was in a pale blue gown with
white carnations tinted in
blue. Miss Claudia Edwards,
niece of the bride, Cincinnati,
in a patchwork multi-colored
gown was flower girl. She
carried a miniature replica of
the bride's bouquet.
Everette Boring of Route 2;
Albany, was best man.

For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Campbell wore a
light blue gown with a scoop
·neckline, puffy ' sleeves, empire waist, made by her
daughter. Mrs. Derenberger
wore a two piece blue suit.
The reception was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Danny King, Pomeroy. A
centerpiece of daisies was used on the table along with a
heart-shaped cake featuring
the bride and groom with
wedding rings. Mrs. Sandra
Edwards, sister of the bride,
presided at the table.
Mr. and Mrs. Derenberger
reside at Route 4, Pomeroy.
The bride is a graduate of
Meigs High School, class of
1975. Mr. Derenberger attended the Meigs Local School
District and is employed at
Colony Body Shop.
Out of town guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Edward, Cincinnati;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sprague,
Columbus; · Mr. and Mrs.
David F. Campbell, Cleves;
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Boring, Mr. and
Mrs. James Derenberger,
Albany; Mrs. Lorraine !ieff,
Middleport; Miss Dessie Boring, Miss Lucille Jacks, Jane
Bailey, Rutland.

F. Pickens, Dexter Church;
Mr. and Mrs. Creston
Newland, Alice. Osborne, Mr.
and Mrs. John Brewer,
Reedsvill.e; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Osborne, Long Bottom, Norma Russell, Nora
Cambron, Bradford; Mr. and
Mrs: Richard Wilt, Pomeroy;
Thunnan and Jay Carsey,
Bradbury; Steve Pickens,
Bradford ; Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Underwood and
Virginia, Tuppers Plains,
Dennis Smith, Rutland ; John
Lowe, manager OVCA, L: D.
Hartinger, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kincaid, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Evans, MiddleP\)rt.
These Jealous Offspring
Communion was held and
Dear
Helen
:
•
for vespers Dennis Smith led
We
have
three
married
children,
aU
with
families.
Though
the singing and George
we try very hard to give love, attention and presents equally,
Pickens had the message.
one of our sons and his wife constantly feel neglected.
They compare our gifts and visits with the other children,
and imply we owe them more. Or else they pointedly refuse our
offers, then criticize the others for accepting, saying they
"don't want to impose." II puts us on edge, keeping the peace.
We enjoy ''doing for" the kids, taking care of
ently had been drinking be· grandchildren occasionally, etc., but not if we must keep books
cause of a lovers' quarrel he on who gets the ·next favor. How do loving parents prove
had with Miss Scheele, feU they're - FOREVER FAIR
from a train and was crushed
F.F.:
by a passing train at the same
Perhaps you should keep books for a couple of months.
station.
Motorman Michael Mos- Then you could prove beyond any argument that you treat all
kowitz, who drove the trains the children and grandchildren equally.
.that killed both lovers, said
·Don 't be afraid of a confrontation. Sometimes this is the
the only thing Miss ~bee1did only way to straighten out jealousy-twisted people,-'- H.
to ease her pain was to put
+++
her fingers in her ears just Dear H~len:
before the train hit her.
"John the Banished" whose forced retirement makes him
miserable - and broke - might be helped by the Federally
funded Senior Employment Program: In Redwood City, Calif:,
it's called the Senior Cortununity Services Project, and it
offers part-time on-the-job training for people over 55 at
. "poverty'level" incomes. Base wages are $2.55 an hour for a
prizes going to Mrs. Audrey 20-hour week. Not fantastic, but certainly a help for couples
Davenport, Miss Susan trying to subsist on less than 4,000 a year.- CAUFORNIAN
Lanning, and Mrs. Pam
Vaughan. Cake, punch, mints Dear Helen:
and nuts were served to those
Uke John the Banished, my husband retired and became
named and Mrs. Betty so depressed he !tied suicide.
Hutchison , Miss Joyce
I suggested we consider apartment managing. Now we
Hutchison , Miss Jayne have exactly what we want: a job managing a senior citizens
Hutchison, · Mrs. Cheryl complex.
Lemley, Mrs. Sara Owen,
It's been a miracle worker for my man. He was always
Miss Judy· Owen, Mrs. Jean handy with tools and likes people, so maintenance isn't hard
Cooke, Mrs. CoMie Pullins, for him.
·
Mrs. Leota Smith, Mrs . . · . Retirement bllildings are springing up everywhere. Most
Sylvia Midkiff, Mrs. Evelyn builders have training programs where they start people as
Lanning,
Mrs . . Vicki assistant managers and work them up to "in charge." Our
Williams, and Mrs. Reva owners alone are looking for three such beginners. So the field ·
Vaughan.
is wide open.
The pay isn't bad, and you get your apartment and utilities
free . Work is not hard, but it certainly keeps you busy. MARGARET
.
Earp. dean 's list

Things we .do for love. . ..
MASSAPEQUA . )'ARK,
N.Y. (UPI) - On Snnday
Lorraine Scheele, 22, a
marine biologist, stood on tbe
·eastbound tracks of the Long
Island Rail Road station,
opened her ~nns as if to
embrace an oncoming train,
made the sign of the cross
and let the train run her
dowll.
On July 30, her boyfriend,
Donald Byrne, 29, who appar-

near

Bridal shower hosted
Miss Julia fiutchison , ·
brid...,lect of .Andy Vaughan,
was honored recently with a
bridal shower at the Melgs
Inn banquet room. Hosting
the August 1 event were Miss
Mary Midkiff, Miss Counie
Lanning, and Mrs. Barbara
Karr.
Games were played with

Social
Calendar

.•

WEDNESDAY
WINDING Trail Garden
Club 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs . Jackie
Brickles. For roll call
members to display dried
materials. Program will be
on "Dough it Yourself" and
the arrangements are to be
"Sunrise and Sunset" featur·
ing red and yellow nowers.
ROSE Garden Club will
meet at the home of Mrs.
Leota Masser Wednesday at 8
p.m.

Students earning a perfect
4.0 grade average at Hocking
Technical College, Nelsonville, have been announced
for the first summer tenn.
These include Charlotte
Canter, Albany; Edward
Felts, Albany: Mark Davis,
Gallipolis; Karen Baitz,
Pomeroy. Students earaing a
3.0 or better included Sherri
Kauff, Middleport and Dwain
Helton, Reedsville.

THURSDAY
LAST DAY for seniOr citizens
to buy bus tuckets at $11.75 at
senior citizens center for
state fair Aug. 18.
FRIDAY
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
Trinity Church, 6 p.m. Friday
at the church with a covered
dish dinner.'
MARY SHRINE 'Sl, Order
of White Shrine of Je~usalem
will meet in regular session
at 8 p.m. Friday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Refreshments will be served.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Trustees will meet at 6:30
p.m. Friday at the town hall.

By
Uoited
Press
lntematlooal
Today is Wednesday, Aug.
10; the 222rd day of 1977 with
143 to follow.
The moon Is between its
iasl quarter and new phase .
The morning stars are
Venus, Mars and Jupiter. ·
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.· ··
Those born .on this day are
under the sign of Leo.
Herbert Hoover, 31st president of the United States, was
born' Aug.
10, 1874.
Performers Eddie Fisher and
Jane Wyatt were born on this
date - he in 1928 and she in
1913.
On this day in history:
In· 1776, a committee of
Benjamin Franklin, John
Adams
and
Thomas
Jeffer son suggested the
United States adopt "e
pluribus unum" as the motto
of its Great Seal.
rn 1833, Chicago was incorporated as a village with a
popo]ation of 200.
rn 1943, President Franklin
Roosevelt and British Prime
Minister Winston Cllurchill
met in ~bee for the sixth
conference of World War U.

DATE POSTPONED
A meeting of the Meigs
County Humane Council
IICheduled for Tuesday has
been poatponed a week. At
the Aug. 23 meeting. Steve
DalnOII will discus&amp; the
Cotmtil COII8titution. The
meeting will be ].Jeld at the
Meilf.sinn.

The Almauac

Rules for flower show stated

POLLY'S POINTERS

lvolin·

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD ........................~~-. gge

SUPERIOR JUMBO FRANKS.................~~·__sl.19

MILDRED.

SUPERIOR CASING BOLOGNA ...........~-~: .. ~1.09
Caprice

-

ATTENTION

MEIGS COUNTY SENIORS
We are now making appointments for senior
portraits. Traditional backgrounds and
outdoor portraiture used. Check our prices
and quality. Call 992-5292.

THE PHOTO PLACE
(Bob and Charlene Hoeflich I
109 High St., Pomeroy

...

NE

....

:::G~-~~~ 2/99~ 8m~E 2Le.29~
WNGHO~~..........~~·--~ }59 =CE ........... ~~~-~.39~
OHIO COLBY

lb. BOOTH BREADED FISH PORTION.S$1.

Dar k
Brown

32 oz.

ris and childi-en, and Jennifer
Arnold attending.

ACTS AS JUDGE
Mrs . .Rose Ginther served
as a quilt judge at the Mason
County Fair Tuesday. She
judged the approximately 50
quilts entered in the competi·
lion and then selected the
best of show and six of the
next best from the pieced
quilts il) the contest.

sneua

£:'

Ii. . Washington
I
R eporl
i
• e•

By Oarence

M~r

I

Lalli week I reported on
30me ol the tax provisions of
the President's Energy
Program and how his
pac:kage lacked the proper
-incentive to solve the current
energy Jhortage.
This past week a muhi-part
energy bill, including most of
what President Carter
wanted, was being railroaded
through the House with little
or no chance to vote on most
of
the · controversial
provisions. The House
Democratic leadership was
determined to send the bill to
the Senate virtually un·
changed,
To limit debate on the noor,
a rarely used, modified
closed rule was adopted
regulating exactly what
could, and could not, be of·
fered as an amendment to the
entire money package.
As a result, the House was
forced to vote lor or against
the total package with no up
or down vote aU 0wed on
specific items such as the :
-gas guzzler tax (going as
high as $3,856 per car by 1985)
- mandatory coal con·
version order
- oil and natural gas user
tax
·
- crude oil tax
- utility rate reform ... and
so on .
Of the z:; or so amendments
which were allowed to be
voted 'upon, Items like the
following were considered:
- whether the Department
of Transportaiion should
spend $800,000 to study the
energy
conservat ion
potential of bicycles.
- whether a study should
be made on the energy
conservation potential of off·
highway recreational
vehicles such as motor boats.
- whether the Federal
government should help state

Many other styles to
choose from . Priced
from $20 to SSO.

·HARnEY'S

SHOES, INC.
Middle of Upper Block
Pomoroy, Ollio
Open :
9 o.m. to s p.m.
Mon. thru Thun.
ta.m. to 1 p.m. Friday

Saturday 9 1.m. to S p.m.

ORANGE ·KOOL AID .......·...........................~.~ .. 7f
.s oz.
ARMOUR VIENNA 'SAUSAGE.................... 2/6.94
ARMOUR 15114. oz.
.·
·
.
CORN BEEF.HASH ........................................... 6f
7 oz.
.
MAC. AND CHEESE DINNER .................. J/69'
10 oz.
INSTANT NESCAFE COFFEE .................~~.~ .. $5.29
DEL MONTE 2o oz.
.
CHUNK PINEAPPLE .................................~~.. 5SC
IDAHO oz.
.
. ·
PKG 6fte
INSTANT POTATOES .......................... ,.... ,....:.. ;,·
38
CRISCO OIL .................................................:$1.89
4 ROLL CHARM IN TISSUE .......................... 89'
1/ 4

16

(11.

,

197'7

I

and local govemmenis im·
plement energy conservatio11
measures in municipal
bull dings.
Hardly what you would call
landmark, crucial Items.
Why the rush? Why were
votes only allowed on a select
group of narrow amend·
ments? The answer is sim·
pie' If adequate time ,md
·debate had been set aside to
look at the real impact this
bUI will have on our economy,
It would have been recom·
rnitted to the various com·
mittees for more work and
refinement.
It seems almost unbelievable that such a far·
reaching program could be
enacted in such a short period
of time. A new White House
Administration threw the
plan together in a mere 90
days. When the ;eo page bill
finally reached the noor,
Congress and the public
barely had three days to
analyze and digest the
complex program which
professes to solve our energy
problems for decades to
come.
By rushing to meet ar·
bitrary deadlines simply to
make the news headlines, ·
Congress sacrificed ·the
opportunity to consider a
sound and well-reasoned ·
energy program.
The political railroading
that took place on the House
floor last week does the
nation grave harm. Unless
the Senate examines this
energy bill in more detail and
changes it to emphasize
energy production, America
can
expect
more
bureaucracy, higher taxes,
artificially innated fuel bills, ·
growing trade deficits,
greater dependency on
foreign energy supplies and
worsening fuel shortages.

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm
'

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

.Prices Effective
Thru August 13th

GROUND BEEF••••••~·••• ·
WILSON'S
SAVORY BACON ••••• l:~.
GROUND CHUCK ••••l:~.
USDA CHOICE

.

ARM CHUCK ROAST-~~.

5

Garden club plans flower show ·
Plans for a home flower
show were made at a meeting
of the Wildwood Garden Club
held recently at the cabin of
Mrs. Carrie Grueser, Long
Bottom.
•
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon talked
about the show to be staged at
the regular August meeting
and gave each member a
class for exhibit on that nigh!.
Preceding the meeting a
picnic was ·held with 14
members and guests, Mrs.
Gary Moore. Mrs. Allan !far-

Mr. and Mrs. 01esler
Knight and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Matlack, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Knight, Bellair&lt;;
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight
and son, Steve, caledonia;
Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Ashworth of Kent, and Mrs.
Corrine Ruckman, childreo,
Barbara, Sharon, and Jimmy, Hamilton, were the
members of the Ashworth
family in St. Paris Saturday
for the wedding of Bill Dallas
and Toni Bodey at the St.
Paris Methodist Churcb. It
was the first gathering of the
family for several years.

treated materials. The ~~­ and half to llle other. This will
fects will be lwninescent, the also apply to craft-type
colors appearing to glow in educational exhibits. Only the
eut specimen flowers and the
the dark.
artistic
designs wiU he changIn order to create the dark
environment r~edJ Mrs. ed.
Girls and boys under l2 are
carpenter and Mrs. Bolin are
encouraged
to enter the
making a front for one of the
booths in the building. The shows. In both shows lllere
front will have naps cut for are classes for junior ex~
viewers to look through, pr&lt;&gt;- hibitors and as in previous
viding in effect a "peep years a Junior Gardener
show." The blacklight class Award will he presented at
in the first show will portray 'eaeh show on the basis of
the fair midway at night, points compiled for ribbons
while the second show class received.
Mrs. Carpenter emphasizes
will be interpretive of a night
thai
all jUnior entries are to
spot, The Meigs Inn.
be
the
work of the child, ·
SISTER VISITING
Tbere have also been some
either
a
pla:nt grown and
Visiting in the home of Mrs.
changes in show rules this
year with all potted plants cared for by the ~hild, or an Juanita Bachtel and Mr. and
and educational exhibits be- arrangement of the child's Mrs. Chester Tannehill, 315
ing placed for the entire week own design and construction. So. Fourth St., Middleport, Is
rather than for just one show . Children need not he a Mr. TaMehill's sister, Mrs.
rn previous years half have member of a junior garden Shirley Robinson of Lake
been brought to one show, club nor a 4-H club member Oswego, Oregon. . Mrs.
tO enter, but must be under 12 Robinson expects to ny home
and reside in the county.
Thursday.
The artistic arrangements
for the juniors are "Kiddy
Day", a design using bright second show is in error in the
colors, for the Wednesday premiwn book and should
show, and "Pools, Parks and read " The Coal Mines,
Playgrounds", a favorite Source of Problems and Prosperity", a modern design.
design for the Friday show.
Polly Cramer
Registration for entries In
Again this year a "best of
the
flower show classes will
show" and a " reserve best of
he
held
at the fairgrounds
w show" will be awarded at
Erase lead marks on blouse
Thursday
and Friday, with 4
each show for artistic arrangements in the adult divi- p.m. on Friday being the
DEAR POLLY ·· To sion, al ong WI'th a hor- deadline. Pre-registration is
POLLY'SPROBLEM
DEl\R POLLY- Please tell remove the decals from her ticulture sweepstakes award a requirement of the fair
me how to get lead pencil crib Debbie should buy decal at each show. Class 58 in the board.
marks off of a blouse.
remover. I bought some at
Also, I have seen a tote hag · the five and 10 cent store .and
made out of plastic milk car- it looks like blotter paper. Cut
tons and hope you or one of a piece the si.ze of the decal to
the readers can tell me how to be removed, wet it and place
make one.- A.K.
over the decal, press lightly
DEAR A.K.- I am sure one with the fingers and it will
of the readers will come forth stick. Leave on five or 10
with directions for making a minutes.- VEE.
Me bag such as you descrit&gt;DEAR POLLY- I have had
ed but I do not have the my green sofa for a long time
faintest idea bow one does so the cording around the sofa
this.
and cushions was faded. I
A soft eraser will remove bought a water base felt ti~
pencil marks from some ped magic marker and
fabrics. If that does not do it, painted aU the cording a
work detergent into the darker green and lt looks
marks, wash and rinse well. very attractive. In 'fact, r'
U marks still remain put a have had many compliments
few drops of ammonia on the ori it. -MARYS.
stain (if .agreeable to your
DEAR POLLY- With three
G£T YOUR CHOICE Of
fabric) and then repeat use of small children one seems to
5
QUARTS
OF Oil
the detergent and rinse well . always be sick and living in a
AND OIL fiLTER
Sponge sU!ins made with an two story house I have made
indelible pencil with alcohol. many trips downstairs for a
100 Oftlf •
21
Use two parts water and one spoon in llle middle of the
Plus. TP
of alcohol on acetate fabrics . night. Finally I adopted a
U stain remains rub in simple solution - a spoon is
detergent and wash and now kept right in the
rinse. -POLLY.
toothbrush holder, is washed
DEAR POLLY- One of my after each use and always
Pet Peeves is with the webb- handy but out of the way. This
ing they put on aluminum has ·saved· me many trips
. lawn chairs as..even when it is downswirs to the kitchen. kept out of the rain and hot MRS. P.L.
sun it lasts only one season of
average use. It seems they
could put much longer lasting
material on and I refuse to
throw away a good chair
frame or put my tim.e into installing more of that fragile
stuff.
I worked out 'a solution of
my own by making tubing the
same way I would make a
belt ·· fr om · leftover
upholstery material or even
play clothes - and put this on
instead of new webbing. I
have some in service that I
have used for three years. U
you do not have any suitable
scraps surely a friend has
some. Just ask around. Flowers shows at llle Me1gs
County Fair next week will
include several iMovations in
display as well as some
changes in rules of exhibit,
according to Mrs. James
Carpenter and Mrs. Joe
Bolin, c&lt;&gt;-ehairmen.
" Meigs County - Fairest
of 'em All" is the general
theme of the shows with the
Wednesday show spotlighting
the fair with examples of
what the Meigs County Fair
is, while the Friday ShOW will
highlight places and things
noteworthy in the county
itself.
..
A special lighting class has
been included in each show.
These will be staged in a
specially prepared booth in
the showroom which wiU be
darkened to permit maximum effect of the
blacklights on painted and

Dear Helen:
I think it's a terrible injustice, this enforced retirement
age 65. I'll be tossed on the garbage beap next year, and my
productiveness isn't nearly finished yet. They're throwing
away wise, well-trained elders to make way for youth, when
the country should be busy creating more jobs .0 that everyone
will have a place. Keep telling the threatened to write their
congressmen, Helen. It's the only way to. beat "agism." - 65
and FAD1NG
Dear Helen :
Jobs for elders: How about house. sitting; an airport taxi
service for your neighborhood; using your own car and being
available to pick up travelers up when they return? Of course,
there's always haby.;;itting . Modern kids need grandparents!
- BUSY 67.

Attend wedding

~;;::;:~=:=:::--!J\·::::::;-;:::::.::~;;:.:·:·;:.:·:::::~:z::*:~,.

USDA CHOICE
'"'··.-_.:~

•

e

LB.
CHUCK STEAK •••••••••••
USDA CHOICE. BONELESS
CHUCK ·ROAST••••••••L!~

!'

.l

'

·~

TERESA BUCXLEY

ATHENS- Teret!B LyDil
Buckley, daoghter of Mr.
aad Mn. Paul G. Buckley,
Rt. Z, Coolv11Ie, bas been
a warded ao Eleanor
Gilford . Memorial
Sdaolarobip at Ohio
Unlvenlty for tbe 1977·78
academic yeor. Miss
Bucllley at1ended Eastern
High School where she wu
a member of tbe Ali.State
Bicentelllllal Band, State
Fair Youth Choir, and
America's Youtb to ' Concert European Tour. She
piaDI to major· In eltber
vocal music or music
education at OU.
·

PVT. HUMPHREY
Pvt. Gene Humphrey,
son of Mr. and Mn. Gene
Humphrey, Sr., bas
completed basic training at ·
Fort Dlx, N. ' J., and bas
been assigned to the
· Uolted States Army
Ordnaoce School at
the
Aberdeen Prov·
lng Grouads, Md., for
tralolog in - welding
malntenaoce. He Is a 197'7
graduate · of Meigs Hllh
School. Attending bla
graduation at Fort Dlx
were Mrs. Myrtle Grover,
· Tony Venoy, Joe Humphrey and his parents. . ,

U. S. NO. 1 All PURPOSE

POTATOES •••••••••••••• ·

First quarter sales
-

HEAD

--

total $17,840,864

- COLUMBUS - Bob Evans
Fanns, Inc., the sauaage and
restaurant company
headquartered here, reJl\lrted
salesof$17,840,884 for its first
quarter ended July 29. This
compare.s to consolidated
sales of $15,821,823 for the
same period a year ago.
Daniel E . Evans, chairman
of the board, said net Income
was $1,151,861 or $.80 per
1lhare compared to $1,002,823
or $.53 per Jhare (adjusted
for March 18, 1977 stock

dltional units to the chain by
the end .of fiscal 197'7·78. The
new restaurants will be
located at Taylor, MadisOn
Heights and Southfield - all
In · suburban
Detroit,
Michigan - and at Cincinnati
and North Randall, Ohio plus
fudlanapolls, Indiana.
Bob Evans Farm Foods ·
currently operates
30
restaurants in four states. .
The parent company markets
15 varieties of BOb E~ans
Fanns Sauaage in 11 states
from nlinols to the East
llpllt).
The
company's
wholly
•
Coast.
1
' owned restaurant operation, '
•· Bob E~ana Farm Foods,
• · reported first quarter sales of
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) f8,957,000 compared with The Philadelphia Eagles
t$,141,000 a year ago. Net reli!aaed four players,
Income amounted to $544,000 Including veteran running
or
per share compared back Art Malone, from their
with fMe,OOO or $.241ul year. roster Tuesday, lowering to
EYalll aiel plana are belnl the 111811da~ NFL limit of
flyU... to upend SBUIBIIB eo plaJWS.
Allo cut tram the roster
clil&amp;rlbatlon Into cmtral and
were
third-year
wide
aoutbem Illlnoll and
receiver
JIDIIB
McAlister,
Loall, Mlllouri.
He added Bob Ev1118 Farm second-year kicli:tr Don
Foodl 1111 opened two new Bltterllcb and flfth-nlund
rtlta111'111P idnce the com- cnft pkt Sldp brp, the
, pl8laa "' Ita filcll y- April lint lliQer ~ ill the
plana to add llx ad- NFL clrah by the EllilV-

ua

s,.

GRADE A
DOZ.
MEDIUM EGGs .....

PRINGLES
·
TWIN· PACK ....~ ••••••.•••
'

DAWN-..~ -~:
2

I

COUPON

L___

.

I
--'

DOMINO

SUGAR
SLB. 79~W/C
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
13, 1977

• ?11111

•

..

BANQUET SUPPERS
,

L

.

COUPON

32

_j

I

C0LJf1flN __

.

KOOK-AID
REGULAR SIZE

12/$1

oz. .
..........

(EXCEPT BEEF)

••••••••••••
l_couroN

LETTUCE···~····

W/C

Limit 1 t'er Customer
Good Only At Powell's
offer Expires Aug_. 13, 1977

TIDE DETERGENT

. $199

5 LB. 4 OZ.

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
· Good Only At Powell's
1977

-

J

SHOWBOAT

PORK &amp; BEANS
40

oi2/$1

W/C

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only At Powell's

13, 1977

r

�t-111e O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., We&lt;Wsday, A~ . 10, tm
1-'lbe DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., We&lt;Wsday, Aug. 10, 1917

IN THE
COMMON PLE•u c6URT,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO -PRO.ATE DIVISION

t.OANS
BUSINESS. form , real
•state, consolodation . M r.
Skol•ky , (216) 1145-6666.

Mr~. Roy Fick of Colutn· speed up 8 study m the effect
bu
Mrs. Goerge W0If 0 f of
Rio Grande College Is
S,
high
temperature
receiving bids for !he ex - - Chester, Mrs. Maurice Reed, decomposition on waste

BRUCE HOUCK,

Addreu Unknown ;

THE UNKNOWN HI;IIIS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEE$ ,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS , IF ANY ,
OF BRUCK HOBACK ,
OECEA,SED,
Et II.,
Deflftdlnts.
NOTICE
SERVICE 8Y
PUBLICATION

cavatron and SToning ot a

Mrs Denver Weber and Mrs

College, RIO Grande, Ohio .
B•ds tor eJtcavatlon and

Lyle Balderson spent an
eve.ning with Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead. AU were fonner
schoolmates. Mrs. Whitehead
served cookies and punch
.·
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wtlson
viSited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Congrove of
Zanesville, Mrs. Linnie
Mille~ and daughter of Little
Hockmg and Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Wilson of Hockingport.
Ch
f
Melvin
aney o Hobart,
India~a.' visited·with Mrs. R.
E. Williams and farruly and
he attended the fune_r~I of his
uncle, Mr. R. E. Williams.
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Riddle
of Parkersburg, W. Va.,
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Buckley .
Mrs. Ruth Anne Balderson
and Kay and Mrs. Gladys
Williams visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Buckley at Belpre

parking lot

at R i o Grande

·

!~~~~~:,,,r;•~r t)~s su:m~~,~~
blnO!Ion . Spec lflcot lons mav
be p icked up at the Off ice of
Business Affairs and all bids

"re to be recei\o'ed at the

Off ice of BuSiness Affa irs by
12 noon, August 20, with bids
The Defendant , Bruce to be awarded on the 22nel of
Hoback Whose address is Auo•sl . A S25 relunable
unknown and whose la St !",:&gt;g•u lsp l~ekqu iredupbv lhL~~
Qlace of res idence or ' address
Is unknown and cannot With spoclfi&lt;al lons: Rio Grande
reasonable dil igence be' College reserves lhe right to
asc:ertelnep IS he.reby notified rtlect 'any and all b !ds . Work
that Plaintiff has brought this Is lo be compleled by sep .
action nam i ng each of you as tember 15, 1977. Rio Grande

one or tlie defendants in the
above -named court by til i ng
her ~omptalnt on July 2nd

1917.

The

~g~:~~~~Y ~m:l~ye~~ual

. 181

Obitct of

9,

op .

10, ltc

the compla int
Is that ttu~ real estate
hereinafter described be sold
In lts enllretv. and to pay the
debts of the decedent, tna
Hoback , deceased ; that the
rights, Interests and liens ot
atl ~artles may be tully
determIned , ad j usted end
protecteO 1 that plaintiff be
authorized and ordered to sell
said real estate accor.dlng to
the statutes ln such case
made and provided, afld tor
such other and further relief
as she may be entitled to ;
that sa ld real utate is
descr ibed as follows :
Attendance at all services
The follow ing described ·Sunday at the Free Methodist
real estate sltuate'd in the
State of Ohio, County of Church was 107. Choir
Meigs and Village of Racine, members present 12. Rev.
to -wit : All of Lot No . eighty one (81) In said Village of Shook and Larry Clark sang a
Racine, OhiO , except seven duet during morning service.
17) feet off the West end of
sa ld Lot. Said tot is bounded . Dennis Gilmore spent some
Myrtle Beach
on the East by Fifth Str·eet. time at
Reference Deed : Vol. 155, recently.
Po~tge •s,
Deed Records.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr
Meigs County, Ohio
You are required to answer Spent several days recently
the complaint with in twenty .
eight day$ after th·e last wlt.l) their son·ln·law and
publication ot this .notice, daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
which will be published once Bauer, Marion.
each week tor ·siX success ive
James Gilmore attended
weeks ,
and
the
last
publlcatiori will be made on the bean dinner at Vinton. ·
August 31st ., 1977 ,
Rev. Shook will be serving
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwi se respond
as Chaplain at Holzer
as permitted by the Oh io Medical Center this week.
Rules of Civil Procedure
within the time stated ,
Mr. and Mrs. Woods,
judgment bv default will be Colutnbus, visited recently
rendered aga inst you tor the
retlef dem,&amp;ndeQ in the with Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
com plalnt .
Roy Howell has been

Laurel Cliff.:
News Notes

'
RESERVE CHAMPIONS - These girls were reserve
champions In the junior fair style revue held last night In
preparation for next week 's junior fair. From the left are

SOME RESERVE CHAMPIONS - Some of the
reserve champions In the Meigs County Junior Fair style
revue held last night in preparation for the annual junior

fair next week a~e from the left, 'Sherry Arnold, clothing
top to toe; Pixie Eblin, joyful jwnper class; Barbara
Grueser, topping your outfit, and Jeannie Welsh, clothes
!or school.

•

Jeannie Boggs queen of fair
(Continued from page 1)
assistant introduced the
judges and the narrators,
Jennifer Butcher, Niese!
Duvall, and Jennifer Machir.
Modeling in the var,lous

categories of the .revue were

the

following

members :

~-H

club

Clothing from top to toe -

Sherry Arnold, Kim DeMoss,

Tammy Fetty, Lisa

Hen-

derson, Diana Jewell, Carrie
Karr, An. ~ela Myers, Trfcla

Sams,

Ktm

Schul,

Terrie

Stout and Debbie Wyatt.
Topping your outfit Tammy Calaway, Jamie
Chapman, Tamra Clark.
Karla DeMoss, Kim Eblin,

Lea Ann Gaul, Barbara
Grueser, Tara Guthrie,
Valerie
Jeffers,
Sheila
Koenig,
Megan
Long,

Edwards, April Parker,
Kathy Parker, Tammie
Starcher and Connie Stout.
Sport clothes - Teresa
Catr , Opal Dyer. Laura
Eichinger , Barbara Fetty,

Rhonda

Haning,

Gina

Johnson,

Tammy Johnson,
Sharon Karr, Patty Parker,

Beth Perrin, Judi Perry,
Becky Phillips, Beth Riebel,
Denise Whl te and Deborah
Woodyard.
Dress Up outfit - Brenda
Boyles, Mary Colwell, Sharon
Henderson, Marcia Holcomb,
Paula Hysell, Tammy Pitzer,
Terri Pullins, Beth Ritchie,
Darlene Thornton and April
Wise.
Coats and jackets Barbara Douglas. VIrginia
Jordan and Mary Mora.
Clothing complements Jeannie
Boggs,
April
Brickles, , Brenda

Calaway,

Melinda Mankin, Robyn Saray Goebel,
Charlotte
* Pitzer, Rhonda Riebel, An-· Lyons, Sherrie PattersOn and
drea Riggs, Lori Robinson, Raeleen Oliver .
Lena Sampson, Tracy Schul
Making up the style revue.
and Denise Turner .
committee were Miss Carr,
Joyful jumper - Lisa Virginia Jordan, Barbara
Collins, Shelly Corbitt, Dixie Douglas, Brenda Boyles,
Eblin, Becky E11hinger, Sonia Carr, . Jean Spencer,
Cheryl
Folmt!r,
Renee Denise Dean and Mandie
Kaldor, Lori · Louks, Roberta Rose . Room assistants were
Myers, Pam Riebe , Angle Dorothy Calaway, Joann
Spencer ', Vicki · W!'se and Calaway, Patty Calaway,
Tammy Black.
..,
Catherine Colwell, Judy
Clothes lor school -- Eichinger, Pal Holter, Fran
Carolyn Bowen, Robin Moxley , Joyce Ritchie,
H~rald, Judy Holliday. Paula Jackie Starcher, and Nan
L1fe, Pam Murphy, Sherrie · White.
Myers. Cindy Pitzer, Allee
Escorts for the participants
Ritchie, Velvet Thomas , were M.a reo Jeffers, Herb
Jeannie Welsh
Wise.

and

Sonya

·

Lounging Clothes - Becky

'

•

OTHER GRAND CHAMPIONS -These are some of
the grand champions in the style revue held at the Meigs
J.unior High School Tuesday night in preparation for next

week's junior fair. From the left are Terri Stout, top to
toe; Paula Life, school clothes; Deborah Woodyard,
sports clothes; Andrea Riggs, topping your outfit, and
·\1M Collins, joyful jumper.

your
diet
contained
significant amounts of these
animals, you might start to
worry."
The big questions now,
Koranda said, are where the
contamination came from
and how the birds manage to
stay alive with apparently
lethal concentrations of
contaminants in their
kidneys, their livers and
sometimes their brains.
It may take a Cooperative
Canadian-U.S. effort to find
· out, he said.

"The answer doesn't come
•

•

Birds
kept on
living
By EDWARD K. DeLONG

GRAND CHAMPIONS -Grand champions In their classes for the annual junior fair

style revue staged last night for judging before the junior fair next week were Mary Colwell,
drelll! up dreSs; Barbara Douglas, coats and jackets; CoiUlie Stout, lounging, and Jeannie
Boggs, clothing con:&gt;pleme~ts.

,

I

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Scientists working on a
geothermal 'energy project
have discovered that the
bodies of ducks and geese
shot In ·California's' Imperial
Valley · contain startling
levels of such elements as
, lead, arsenic, selenium and
cadmium.
In some cases, says
biologist John Koranda of the
Lawrence Livermore
La b o rat o r y ,
Ie a d
concentrations have been so
high that by all accepted
standards the birds should
have been dead before
hunters brought them .down.
Although the discovery
poses a scientific mystery,
Koranda said In a relephone
interview, at present tliere
appears to be little danger to
those who eat the birds.
11
lf you eat one, two, three
or even 10 ducks per year, it
probably wouldn't have much
significance," he said. ''H

just ·from Imperial Valley,"
Koranda said. "It comes
from ·the elements one finds
in the whole general region
inhabited
by
these
waterfowl."
Koranda and others found
the surprisingly high traceelement contamination while
working on an Energy
Research and Development
Administration project to
determine whether the hot
btlne from geothermal wells
may pose a pollution hazard
for wildlife.
The .sunny Imperial Valley
Is one of the,nation's largest
geothermal areas. ERDA
. plans to tap the hot brine
flowing deep beneath the
valley for .use as an energy
source.
But the valley also is the
winter home of some 100,000
waterfowl including Snow
Geese, Canada Geese, Pintail
Ducks, Ruddy Ducks, Green·
winged Teal and Shovelers.
Trace element contamination
from the brines, which
contain salts at\d dissolved
minerals, is a possible
adverse effect of geothermal
development.
Koranda and colleagues
from more than 30 public and
private
agencies
-and
universities have spent two
years eumining trace
elements present in the
valley's soil, water and
waterfowl before extensive
geothermal development.
Their lindings will be

Ervin, Brian
Paul Cross .

Raeleen Oliver, clothing complement's class; Teresa
Carr, sports; Mary Mora, coats and jackets; Tammie
Starcher, lounging clothes and Brenda Boyles, dress-up
dress.

Hearing set on safety rules
COLUMBUS
. The Rocky Fork lakes and Grand
Division of W•tercraft of the Lake St. Marys.
Ohio Departmeirt of ·Natural
- Prohibit use of airfoils,
Resources (ODNR) will balloons or similar handled
conduct a public hearing In devices used to becom-e
Columbus Aug. 22 on airborne over Lake MUton in
proposed rule changes Mahoning and Portage
governing the operation and counties.
safety requirements of
- · Adopt horsepower
watercraft In Ohio.
lbnltations, speed lbnlts and
The hearing wt11 begin at 10 zoning regulations for the
a.m. In the first fioor con· Muskingum Watershed
ference room of Building C at Conservancy District.
ODNR's Fountain Sq11are
Copies of the proposed
headquarters . Fountain rules may be obtained from
Square ill located in northeast the Division of Watercraft,
Columbus just east of North- Ohio Department of Natural
land Shopping Mall and south Resources, Fountain Square,
of Morse Road.
Columbus 43224.
The hearing provides the
public an opportunity to .
present their views con·
0
S
cernlng the proposed rules.
. Among the proposed rules
to be presented at the hearing
are ones to:
- Eliminate the anchor
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
requirement for "Fo~" Two psychiatrists were under
sailboats. "Laser" sailboats court orders to examine
and "Jet Ski" powercraft.
movie director Roman
· - Allow the use of air Polanski to determine if he
propelled powercraft and should be institutionalized as
hovercraft
on ~ Indian, .. "a mentally disordered sex
Buckeye, Mosquito and offender" for having in·
tercourse with . a 13-year~ld

p Ian ki could
be put away

girl.

Windon, and

more higher than the level
that would cause fatal lead
poisoning and cadmium
levels 10 times the lethal
level.
·
He said possible sources of
compared with similar the contamination include old
after lead shot eaten by the ·
samples
taken
development.
waterfowl, pesticides and·
To check the waterfowl, the fertilizers
used
in
scientists agreed to clean the agricuiture, pollution from
hunters' catch- a messy job auto exhausts and minerals
- in return for the livers, normally present in the
kidneys and other organs western soil.
"But we can't understand
taken from the birds. They
cleaned about 600 birds.
hOw a bird can fil' through the
Koranda said frqzen, highly air with so much lead in his
compressed samples taken body," Koranda said. "Some
from some birds showed lead of them must have been dying
concentrations. 1110 times
or as they flew."
' . . . -. --

Polanski, 43, pleaded gliUty
Monday to orie of the six
charges
against
him,
avoiding a trial scheduled to
begin today - the eiglith
anniversary of the murder of
his wife, actress Sharon Tate,
and four other persons by the
Charles Manson "family."
The results . of the
psychiatric examinations and
the sentence that follows will
help determine whether
Polanski,
director
of
" Rosemary's Baby,"
"Chinatown" and other
popular and critically ac·
claimed films, will be
deported as an undesirable
alien.

Manning o. Webster
Probate Judge
Meigs County, Oh io

(7)

PARTS FOR 1971 Galaxie _
Ford for
sola. Phone 992·58-58 .

CHEVROLET IMPALA, 1973, in Ex·
callent condition. Low Mileage.

Call 992-5348.

automatic , air conditioned,
·A .M. radio with stereo ta~
deck . Oorlt blue metallic w1th
light blue . landau Vinyl · top.
Phone 985-3356 after 6 pm .

1972 PONTIAC Catalina. P .S: ,
P. B., A .C.,
$800 .
Phone

'192-5301 .

1970 FORO truck. Also, boot . Contact
Colvin Imboden .
Welchtown Hill in Minersvi lle
or coli m_.29n or9A9 -2617 .

1972 DODGE Charger.

MoS!

op·

Hons available. 59 ,000 miles .

$1495. Coll'l92-5169 . .
1975 MONTE Carlo, 2-4 ,000 miles .

Mason. Phone (304) nJ.5274 .

ASTRO•GRAPH

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread.. ... .. .. ·
kiOGII

New

Hoven , W.Va., 20 x .C5 main
buslness corner. Phone -(6l-4)

SomeCine may arrange
something for this coming year
that appears small on · the sur·
face. Just keep in mind : Great ..
oaks from tinle acorns grew.

742-2255.
992-2625.
lWO BI:DROOM trailer, adults on·

ly. Coli 992-:1324.

cents for each and a long. self·
addressed stamped envelope to
Astra-Graph , l P.O. · Box 489,

TO

RENT. Riverside Apts. I
bedroom starting at $100 per
mo. :2 bedropms starting ot
$138 per mo. Equal. Housing

THE DAILY. SENTINEL
Phone 992·2156 For Advertisuig Service

Suitoble

for

one.

I

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Frencll'a Gmy

Mil

LIMIT' 'KGS. PLEASE

Fryer Parts............ :... Jb.
Frying Chicken
Breasts .,.. .. ... .. ..... . lb.
Serve 'N' Save
Lunch•on Meat ..... :::.~.
Ballard's
.
Nb
Pork. $ausage· ..........
l"kg:

HOLLY FAIMS, U.S.D.A, tNSPECTIO GRADE A

AU YAitiiTIU

(2-LI · lOLL ••• tl.77)

.
Lemons
or ~
10
• .......... EACH
L1mes

FlESH

3

Del Monte
Cut Green Beans
Embassy
_Salad Dressing ..... 3~:.··

most priceless assets. To.
dav someone JnBY try to use
some thing where you·re
blameless in an attempt \0
besmirctl it.·

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 11)·

49c
$
10 1

17.....
Can•

Kroger Caesar
Meal Bread .....

ttl

R~tease no work today unless
you can proudly sign it. It you
send out something shoddy It
could cause you serious embarrassment.

69c

Coca Cola or
Sprite

2

TAURUS (Aprli 20-Mey 20)
Flattery will mak~ you few points

GEMINI (Miy 21-June 20)

Utllilloo paid. Call 992·5738.
You 're a sensible spender when
NEAR DEXTER. 12" • 6/Y' mobile it comes to buying household
goods and commodities today .
homo. CGII992·5858 .
MOBtLE HOME . Adulls only. However . you could blow the
budget on a luKury Item. ·
Phone 992-2598.
THREE lED mobilo home. Call CANCER (June 21-.luly 22!'11
you·re dealing with a youngster 1
742-2692.
today . you must be able to sar
ONE EXTRA Iorge troller Ia! for "no.. II 1t's lor his or her OWf'l
r•t at 6tQ laurel Str~t. Phone good. It's tough , but necessary .
992-7148.
o~E~SI' .\N:H t:~ TI-:Ili'HISE AS.':\

Boneless Shoulder
Swiss Steak ............. :

5
$1
·
39
French Fnes....

cri~kle. Cut
•

guest leave before you wear out
vour welcome.

people

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Steak.. ............ Jb.

U.S. GOV'T GIAOIO CHOICE

to put.·your best lood

a sense ol

U.S. GOV'T GRADIO CHOta MU CHUCk

GOV'T GIAOIO CHOICE

·

forward socially today. If you 're a

duty today , do them from your

6$

~~~:~·

II'S

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll 11)

.

For

::!o:ra:
.
.
.
.
~ 89$
$1

100% WHOLI WHEAT, HGULAI
IYEOI

·

t

1-lli.
.•..•••••••.•.• : •.•• Pkg.

California
Nectarines ............. ..lb.

Oppot'lunlly. Call 992-6098.
FURNISHED TWO room effocioncy today. Be sincere. or don't speak
apt. Cooking facilities and up at all .
-shower.

...........

"".,.........

WITH COUPON

DelMonte
Drink ............ .

your

make

Whole
Smoked Picnics ....... :.. J~.

PINIAPI'LI GaAHfltiJtT 01
PINIAPI'lEOMNGE

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doo.
21) Your reputation is one ol

heart! - or you'll
uncomfortable.

SLICED ••• ll. n•

~;::·

quired .

on course .

~~lp~IF

•

ttems and start salting morw
money away.

from

Ground
Beef

kiOGII

Letter. Mall 50

Don't do things

1HE FABRIC SHOP

Admission '3.00 at Door. Children 6 to 12 11.00
Good seats and air-conditioned. See you there.

~~o...

Del Monte
Golden Corn .. :.. .. ..

pointment Is likely today it you
expect more than you·re entitled
to. Be satisfied with what yoU get.
e'.'en though It may seem like
small recompense. Find out
more of what ties ahead tor you
by sending for your coPy ol

important

TRAILER LOT for renl on Brownell
Ave .
Middleport.
Phone

AT THE EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL

WHOUKUNil

LEtl (July 23-Aug. 22) Disap-

PISCES (Fob•.2CJ.Morch 20)

FOR YOUR
BACK TO SCHOOL SEWING

....... .;...Do ••

Aug..t 11, 1177

Your mate may be difficult to
please today. mostly because he
pels . Phone 992-3874, Mid· or
she will be in a wishy-washy
dl~art.
mood. Put your loved one back

BUSINESS BUILDING in

FAI! FABRICS NOW AVAILABLE .·.

SATURDAY, SEPT. 3,
7:30P.M.

3 ·s·1
~~~E~gs..
69C
3 $1
::::;. . . . . . . . . 3 ~:;~· 51
~~~~~~-- .-. . . . . . 63~~~~- Sl
.. . 2

Bernice Bede Osol

AQUARIUS (Jen. 20·Fob.

20%.0FF

FROM NASHVILLE, TENN.

Do11 Not lnct.de Hinton &amp; White

FURNISHED APT. Adult$ only., no

Village Manor
Apartm•ntl- 1 bedroom fully
carpal*tf with kitchen . ap·
pllonces , furnished . Storting at
$1()41 per mont. Phone 992·n21.
Equal housing opportunity.

~

WITH COUPON

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) Y01

AVAILABLE ·ot

"GOSPEL Sl NGI NG
HEM PH ILLS"

OPEN24
HOURS

could 'meet someone today whC
you are attracted to. but it cou..
be a no-no thing. Don't ask fOf
bu ilt-in problems.

Large lots with concrete patios .
s idewolks. runners and off
street parking. Phone992-7479.

SEE THE

ro

1974 PLYMOUTH Gold Dusler.
Gas saver, low mileage. Radial Lfi!RA (Sopt. 23-0cl. 21
tires and AM-FM with tope Achievements are possible to
player. Very good condition .' dav . but the world isn 't going tl
Cal 985-35n.
make it easy for you jul
197.C Yomoha 360 MX. Excellent because you 're a nice persOfl
condilion. $550. (30-&lt;) 882·3297. Ambition and effort are also re

5434.

$29995

GOOD
SELECTION OF
SUMMER·JABRICS

ALL KROGER STORES

AM rodio with tope. deck . Radio . City Station , N.Y. 10019.
Creom puff. $3900. 992·7685.
Be sure to ~pecity • your birth
1972 CHEVY Nova. Phone sign.
_142-2648.
VI.RGO (Aug. 23·Sopl. 211
1973 CADILLAC Oe\iille, 4 door , Re..,iew tdday the· things you'rt
low mileage. exceHent plus spending your money on . VCM.
many 8)(fras . Don Foglesong , can trim small. nonessentll

3 AND 4 RM. furnist-led and un ·
furnished opts. Phone 992·

And Tum It Loose In

KIU)

reported on the sick list.

Astro. Graph

SALE

·

conditioning , good condition.
Phone 985 ·3541 .

1976 MONTE Carla. 350 V-8

REGUlAR 1359.95

~ERY

--==-----

recently.
- Mrs. Lyle Balderson

-·

PLYMOUTH , p .s., p.b ., oir

• $850. Col! 992-:1319.

I

scribed the research as
crucial to cotistructing "a
qufck response mechaniam to
environmental problems
created by hazardous
lndustr'•l
materials"
"'
·
The University of Dayton
researchers 1n on the project
include Don Duvall and
Wayne Ruby who have
worked on · the ·thermal
decomposition of pesticides,
including KPnone PCB 1S
carbon fibers ~d Polymers:
As a way of getting rid of
potent manufacturing
residues industries have
been lnc~easlngly turning to
Incineration .

WI . . . . . TMIIIGHT 10 UIIIT QUAHfmll: fiiCtM

882-2258
.
_r

33 , tan miles north of Pomeroy .

I

Richard Carnes an EPA
environmental sci~ntist, de·

MODEL NO. 774

Mr. arid Mrs. Ray Underwood and family of
Newark, Ohio
visited
recentiy with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Arnold.

COfi.DIII lm-M; ~ CO.ITIMI AND PliCa GOOD
........., of.UOW,TJ, ltrn,_.IA~'f AUGUIT 11, lmiN

1970 MONTE Carlo . gOod condi tion , $950. Phone (304)

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt.

Put A Business Service Ad In lt.

rna er1a •

For Thlf"-day, Aug. 11, 1177

1967 VAN with . C.B. installed.

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

·

1 · Is

'27 (81 3, 10, 17, 24, 31_, 6tc

rno

Miss Debbie Queen, brideelect of Rodney Carl.
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Frecker visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd King anlj

PUBLIC NOTICE

VI-

SINGER'S 126TH BllffiiDAY SALE

the

Ull E111111 of

In• Hob•ck. Otcened ,
Plolnlltf,

•

Kingsbury News Notes
U.S. Environmental
Reedsville The
Protection Agency has ·
1\ T
1\.T
granted
University of
A bridal shower was held famUy and also with Mr. and
lleWs llOtes Dayton
Research Institute a Saturday evening at the Mrs . Ralph CarL
two-year, $269,181 grant to Bedford Youth Center for

ftumteu Opportunitlet~

lETTY IIAICKLES,
Admlnistr1tor ol

WASTE STUDY
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI )

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak .... :........

·lb.

log

HiNu2%

LoWfat Milk

Tylenol
Tablets ........ ..

IIJO.Ct.

Btl.

11' Off LAIIl

Ivory
Liquid ..............
. 22.•tr......
11'0"1.."11.

Wisk
Detergent ..... . iZI·o•.
Ctn.
I

·-

SwiuCIIeeae........................... ..

.....,w
......
,_.....,
!MilS._

�10 7 1'bil DallvSentinei.Middle~~"!''Y·O., Wedtesday,Aug. 10, 1m

r:

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANTAn
CHARGES
I cloy
2daya

s...,..
Cdo)'ll

lSWI.JI"d:ii:wUnder .
Cub
Chart~to
l.OO
1.25
UiO
I 90
1.80
U:5
3.75
3 00

£.dl wonl

UYer Ule minimwn l.i

,wonb ill 4 CftiUJ per word ~r liM)'.
Adll rwulint!; oUrr lnan l'OIJSe(.'UUve
days. will bt clr.ar-gi!d ad the I da)'

.,.....

ln memory, Card of Thanks 11nd

Obituary : 6 \.~ ~r wurd,
muwnum. Cas~ mawfVMIK't' .

~ . 00

MobiW. Homt' llilett lrllkl Van.l ~les
are at..'(~pl.ed unly Wllh cash with
,order. ~ &lt;.'enl char~ fiH' ar.l.b: L'll~·
u~g Bus: Nwnbt!r 1n Gal'~ uf Tl~ St-n·
Unl'l.

Ttw PUOUSlaer re~tvt-!i u~ rljj:I U
lu Wit Qf' r"/t"l"l au)' &lt;~Wi ~n'll!"-.00.
jecuonal. T M!: Pubhmtr wtll nut bt! ·
respon.stble fur more lhcm ltte mror

rt"l1 i.u:seruoo.

Phoot99HI56

NOTICE

IF YOU hove o service to offer , COAL. limestone. and cdl.cium
chloride and calcium brine fOf"
wont to buy or sell somettllng ,
dust control and special mixing
ae looking for work .•. or
salt for formers , E. celsior Soh
whote .... er ... you 'll get results
Works, Main Street , Pomeroy,
fashtr with o S&amp;nhnel Want Ad .
Ohio ~phone 992· 3891 .
Coli 992·21_56_.___ -~PORCH SAlE, Mon .-Fri. Mork CAMPER . $600. Al'!io. horse
trailer, ~50 . Phone (614} 698Yoacham
residence ,
Yellowbush Rood , Roc:ine .
3~ .. ~~~~---~~~
YARD SALE , Aug. 12, 13, U at .t tle SPRING GARDEN Supplies . Cabbage , cauliflower , broccoli .
end of Bowman's Run on Co.
and head lettuce plants ,
Rd . 34 , coming in oft Rr. 124 , ot
vellow , white , ond red onion
the Harrison Smith res idence.
sets . onlol:' plants, Kennebec ,
Sterling at 9 am . Phone
cobbler, Katahdin, Red Pontiac
q·q-2154 ,
and Red lasodo seed potato"SS .
· TWO-FAMILY Garage Sole, ThursBulk garden seeds , potting soil ,
day and Friday , 9-5. June
peot moss . fruit trees and rose
Street , Rust ic Hills , svrocuse.
bushes . MidWay Market ,
Girl'• clothing .siz:es 6· 1-4, toy1 .
Pomeroy , Ohio , 992·2582 .
baby items, appliances, adult
Bob: s Market , Mason , W .Va .
clothing , winter coots, tools,
(304 } 773-S721.
glassware, books , records,
ster.o equipment, Hnens, cur· ECONOMY TRACTOR with all attachments . like new , asking
toins, art work, yard goods.
52250. P~one (6U}698· 3~.
Patterns.

WANT-AD
. ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MurKI.a_y
~~!)on ~lurti.Hy

Tulsday
Lhru Fritlay
fP .M.
lhe !.L.y \:M:!fof'!'! publicutJUn

s'"""'r

fP.M.
Friday aftenwon

FAMILY YARD Sole ,
Bedspread$ . clothing for men,
women and children : inlont
i tems ,
clothing .
Toys ,
household items. Gas logs at
Buck residence, 129 Mulberry
A... e .. F ~id ay and Soturdav . 9 •

5.

YARD SALE .297 Mill St ., Mid·

MANY , MANY Thanks from all of
us to all our friends and
neighbors who we know by ell
your kind words, cards, flowers
olid all the lo\lely fDOd given to
us ot the loss of my Mother,
Thanks! Joan Stewart and

MEIGS COUNTY Seniors. Moke
your cppointmei-lt for senior
portraits now . Troditioncl
backgrounds and outdoor por·
troiture used . Call for prices
and oppointmenr. The Ptloto
Place (Bob Hoeflith)992-5292 .
SELDOM REST CERAMICS will be
closed August 15 thru August
22. See our exhibit at the Meigs
Co . Fair .
Pauline Boker
SOUTHERN HIGH School Seniors
call SoUthern · High Sc~ool.
9-49-2600, to make , your op·
pointm8nt for your Senior pic ·
tures . Senior pidures will be
taken at tf1e High Schopl on Sat.
Aug . 27 ond .Mon. Aug. 29.
Make your appointment early I
MEIGS HIGH School Seniors. Coli
Meigs High School, 992·2158,
. between 1 and3pm ., Fri. , Aug.
12, Mon. , Aug. 15 or Tues .·,
Aug. 16 to make appointment
for Senior pictures to be taken .
Pictures will be taken at the
High School Mon. , Aug. 22nd
thru Fri. , Aug. 27th, hours 9to 5
each day .

ASHLEY STOVE Oeolers, Running
Spe&lt;lal s·ummer Sale. Large
C60, $300. Blowers . · $.40. Call
morning5 , (614 ) 698-7191.

dleport . Weds. &amp; Thursday, 9
tillS . Several dilferent items .
,.---":""------,
PAfiO SALE , 5n South Third
CASE
'
Street , 9 to 5, FrL and Sot. Rain
or Shine . Something for
8\/eryone. clothing , anti·
ques ,misc. Coil 992-2030 or

LO'T

CAN GOODS

992·2650.

IN MEMORY of Helena F. Boker
who passed cway two years
age today. "She lives with "us In
memory, Qnd will for1ver ·
more". Sadly missed by son ,
Lorry ond Family ..

JOHN DEERE 420 li\le power. 3
point hitch . John Deer No . 5
mower , 7 pt , cui . John Deer 2
row culti..,otor Ford · two 14 in.
bottom plow . Coii247 -219S .

f ARO SALE , Clifton, W.Va . Elsie
Jane Bennet residence. Weds .
ru Voturday . 2 houses from
Post Office towards bridge.
'
TWO FAMILY ,Yard Sole of the
crossroads on 12A. 1st house .on
the left. Thurs. end Fri.
LARGE YARD Sale , Thurs. and
Fri., 9 to 4 on New limo Rocid in
Rutland. lots of good clothing
ond odds and ends .
TWO FAMILY Yard Sole , Thurs .
Aug. 11th from 10 to 4 at the

LOGAN SEED Wheat. Barley for
co~r~er crop. Grown from cer tified seed. Paul W. Sayre,
Port lend , Ohio. Call 843·2286 .

James Rees , Jr. residence,
Racine, 0 . Such items cs CB.
rcdio,Waltan Jogger, motorcy - PIANO, ONE vr. old. bcellent
condition. Conso le model.
cle Goodv~~PDr tire 360-19,
Phone ~9 - 2425 or 949-2.426 .
Morse electric sewing machine ,
8-track tope player, 6 iced tea 1967 GMC School Bus , $ 400. Also ,
glosses, 40 yr. old dishes ,
Regency CB bose station, $100 .
books clothing, toys, furniture .
For more information call
ant iques ,
two
10-speed .._149·2202 .
bicycles , go·cart, Other items .
WORK .OR RIDING more and 2 .
GARAGE SALE 640 laurel St .
mules . P~one (61&lt;) 698 ·3 ~. ·
Wed .• through Sot. LQts ol all
sizes of clothing , men , women, THE LONG Rille Shop. 248 River·
view Ori\le, Pomeroy , is an·
children. and babies. Some
nounc ing the grand opening of
glassware and appliances.
the "Croft Nook ". Come in and
Refrigerator, apt. size. Also , a
see our ~ning special prices
19~ Ford 289 engine~ fOir conon Coats ond Clark Red Heart
dition.
yarn , needlepoint and crewel
GARAGE SALE.' first right after
embroidery kits, latchhook
you pou Five Points. Wed.,
- ~its , arid many other items.
Thurs. and Fri. fom 9 to 5 .
~lso , instruction in crocheting
and knitting. For more information, call 992-3090.

HOOF .HOLLOW. Buy, sell , trade

or train horses .. RUTH REEVES .
trainer. Phone (614) 698-3290.

AKC

SHETLAND

sheep dogs.

(Min .) Collies , 2 females , 7
weeks old . Shots end wormed.
Phone (614) 367-0292 or

367-7112.
MEIGS COUNtY Humane Society
Animal Coreline, 992-7680; or
cfter 6 P.- m., 992-S.i27.

N EED A WA TER
SOFTENER?
' Let· Pomeroy

Landmark

soften &amp; condition your '
water and a Co-op ...witter

i50ftener, Model UC-XVI .
Now Onlyt•279.95

1~Let us test
Free.

TWO FEMALE kittens to give
owoy . One , calico, and the
other is yellow and white. Coli

7&lt;2·3160.

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products . Top price for standing
.-..;.. sawtimber. Call 992-5965 or
.:_ Kelit Hanby, 1-4-46·8510.
TWO BEDROOM mobile home, 10'

1&lt;.:.· ~
... _..

,,

x 50'. Coil 992·5858.

pocket watches -- and chains , 1974 GREENBRIER 12 x 65 . 2
silver and gold . We need 196&lt;1 · bedrooms,. totcl " electrJc. un·
and older silver coins. Buy, sell ,
furnished in ~•'Y good condl·
or trade' Col I Roger WamJiey.
tion, Coll992-5771.
7.42-2331 .

-1 , ciLO FURNITURE , Ice boxes , brass
'
beds ,
etc ,
complete
·'
households. Write M . D. Miller,
..~~... Rt . 4, Pomerov. Ohio or call

992:_·n
~ro
=-.-~~~~~-­

· ~-

JOHN DEERE Crowler BOckhoe
endlooder ond dump trucK .
Phone 992-1479.

G:ASH !!. Junk cars, Fry's Truck &amp;
Auio , Rutlorld . Phane 742-2081 . LIVE CATFISH for sole to stock
_or 7-42-9575. C~sed MondayS.
lakes , ponds, etc. Phone
, &gt;NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too smoll . -!~
•2~·~
31~6~
7 ~o~
r9~•~9~-2~
~~5~·~---­
Will buy 1 piece or compl1tte ALLADDIN KEROSENE LAMI'S and
household. New, used , or anti·
heaters. Replacement ports ques . Martin 's Furniture, 20 N,
chimney[fo, mantles , wicks ,
2nd St .. Middleport. Phone
etc .. Stop in tor demonstration
and free catalog. Mountain
leather ond General stor~t ,
104-106 W. Union St. (614)

.. STARCRAFT lOth anniversary sole

592· ~78,

Athens .
TOMATOES ,
PEPPERS ,
--~

on mini.motors , trailers . and
cucumbers. Cleland Farms,
folddowns . TrtWelstar 25 ft .
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine
.$4.400.00; 20 ft . mini-motor
Cleland.
$10,850.00. We sell service and
quality. Camp Conley Starcraft ONE GOOD gat hot water heater .

Soles.

~t.

62 nortlt al Pt. Plea.

:,...._ $001.

Coii992-5S01 .
fiREWOOD DELIVERED. 520 . o

pickup
truddoad . Call
197.5 2 J V,
foot Cavalcade
992·6353, 992 ·6109, 9927130.
Camprr. for s.ole. Fully •elf.
cantainttd. 6 ft. gas-electric CANNING OR freezing torn, _.Oc a
refigerotor, thr" burner gas
doz. Pkk your awn , Jcne Hill
stove with oven, forced oir fur form , Racine. Call 2A7·2961 .
noc•, lots of sroroge tpoce,
sfMpt 6. RNSe Hitch and Broke TREE RIPENED orthard peaches .
Whitt or yellow starting Mon .,
Control
Included .
Phone
Aug~~~ Orchard .
985-3356 offer 6 pm.
T

~-·

.,

992-5•55.

6 8 E.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
LOW PRICE - · 2'h •tory
frame home, 4 Bdrms. ,
carpeting, remodeling, tn
good
repair .
ONLY

S6H25.00.
BUILDING SITES -

4

close to

m i nes,

Siw

us

~1w

s5o

1 Good Used Poulan Chain
1 Good Used Unico
Dryer
sao.oo
Electric Trim - All , cut'!i
with nylon
· .529 .95
II) Good R~lrigeri!IIOr S20D

Pomeroy landmark

9a _Jack
W . Carsey, Mgr.
Ail
· Phone
992·2181 . ·
PIGS. CALL 7•2·200&gt;.
CANNING TOMATOES . Also, 1968
Ford and ports for 1968
Yamoho . See : Wayne Rowe,
East letart . 1 st house pelS I Eost
Letart Church .

REFRIGERATOR (side·by·side) .
·$200, electric range {opt . sh;e) .
$100, reclining thair $75, couch
(bed type) • 5100, cooker-fryer
(new) · $12, TVanfenno$15 . AU
in excellent condition. l,nquire
at: 131
Ebenezer Sreet ,
Pomeroy, Ohio (lower Monkey
Run) .
NEW 19·1NCH color portable
tele\lision pla)led only O· few
tim•s with roll cbout stand.
Will sacrifice for $175.00. See ol
655 Svcomore, Middleport after
4 prn .
1974 35ft . 5th wheel ccmper. 12
h . fiberglaS$ baot. Also, ·
shallow well water system.

, SECLUDED 2 sfory older home on
'three·quortar acres, lots of
shade . fertile ground for
gord.en , 2 cor detached garage,
3 bedrooms . large living room
with brick w .b. fireplace,
carpeting, '!iunny kitchenette,
dining room , portiol basement
with forced air furnoce and
new hot water heater . located
on Marlin Or., Pomeroy . Priced
below market value, $17 ,500.
Phone 992-6328 or 985-3573 .
HOUSE FOR sole (cheap) 3
bedrooms . fireplace, 2 car
goroge, patio , fu lly carpeted
with I acre lot . Rutland. Call
7-42-2988.

mobile home in good
. ONE &amp; 1/ 1 acres with mobile home
condition, storage bldg .
on ri..,er ~n Pt. Pl~osont , W . Vo .
ONLY $8,000.00.
Phone 992-526-4 .

REMODELED -

Nice 1

floor plan, 2 Bdrms .• barn .. . FIVE ROOM hOuse. Al so antiques
and fu ll basement. 686·
small
business
bldg .,
Brownell A\le ., Middleport . Call
basement. 3\f:a acres. ALL

FOR 512.500.00 .
135 ACRES - Woodland .
100 acres has all minerals .

ASKING $20,000.00.
• Bdrm5.,
RANCH dining, nice kit., bar, full
basement , carpeting .
Newer home . S2l,SOO .OO.

FINANCING AVAILABLE
- Newer J Bdrm . ranch.
Over 3 acres.
many
features .
Call
today ,

$34,900.00.
LARGE -

Older home.

really nice, remodeled and.·
modernized, 4 Bdrms., 2
baths, large rec . room,
basement . A.C .. 2 car
garage . ·
excellent

neighborhood. $45.000.00 .
JUST LISTED - 48.5 acres
of the most desirable
building sites in the county.

Buy all or half . Call for
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE- A sure way to
help seli your hoine. We
have buyers for propertie$,
let us sell y~rs.

HENRY EOCLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Associates

992-2259-992-2568

STROOT
INCOFI~RATII.O ,

NO. .208- T,h is home needs
a new faml'ly , present
owner transferred out of
area. Has central A. C.. 3
bedrooms, ·family room
wit~

FIREPLACE, 2 car

heated
garage,
large
closets, formal ,dining
room,
large
k itchen ,
dishwasher , and eat- in
space.
Nice
country
atmosphere but still dose
to town (large swimming
and recreation area close

by} . Priced rlghlat$44,000.
NO. 206 - 3 BedrOQm , l lf2
baths, modern kitchen with
dishwasher,. built-in stove
and oven, carpeting and
hardwood
floors
In

Middleport . Priced $21.000.
NO.

214 -

43

THREE BEDROOM , 1 story lrame
home. Huge living room and
dining room . Built -in kitchen ,
utility room . Lorge garage with
storage oreo , metal building
end lots of shrubbery . Shade
and fruit trees . · 1 cere lot
IO&lt;ated behind car wash in Tup pers Plains . Call 992-7617 or
1/ ,

667,-3903.

Automatic
Transmission Servjce

Insulation Semces

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

lloww iotd WllsiAHico
S11JIIII
Wl-lDOORS
m~·EIIT

Young's (:grpeting

REASONABLE

M.UIIINUII
SIDIIIG-somtT

RATES

lfiiTTJ"KUrfiiJIGS

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 371-6250
5·27· TFC

'

acre•.

Harrisonvllle area. vacant
land . Price 512,000.
NO. 107 - 125 acres. nice 2
story home, carpeted,
bedroonns,gasfurnace, has
several qutbuildlngs, free
gas, about 10 acres of
timber, good area for
housing
develOpment .
Chesfer area . Price $7'1,000 .

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRA~T AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES .
CLASSES O~FERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS. ·
OPEN ' 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10 :00 to 5' 0D

Kingsbury Home Sales
li yuur aulhortr:ed dea~r 'fur Urban
awui,ngll and cal"p;;rtll. U y_oo wan1 a
'QUalitY. pr!Miuel wiUcb wru iocreallf
lhe value uf yoor home, or mobile
hom~ . oDI!-lhal will enhaocE ill. be•u-ly fur ran lu l'tlme, lllis will ~wt
your ut:ab. The Urbau Uo~ 18 1111

CRAFTY lADIES ~HANDICRAFT

idum.il.luin, ttl'.avy gauge, uodili:d
ruilingli nd pushl, plain or
dn:uralive. We b.ive au expcrteaced
crt!W lhal have created maaY of
lht1it' flu.: quallty l"'ninl!l and car·
ports lD \hiS area. M051 ul these p~
iluclll quaWy fur low i.nterell tWme
bnprovement loaDS at yoor IOCIII
blili. or S&amp;L. Call 992--7034 for a frtt
etiliflUI~ Of"

804 West Main Street,
Just Be low the Jones
Boys' in Pomeroy, Ohio

stop by 1100 E . Main St. ,

PomtTUf, 0.

Phone992·2298

7-2£i.l mu.

6· 15-1

Vinyl ~ Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation .
Call Profession;ot~

CARTER'S

60SH, IT'S TERRIFIC··
COMIN~ Al.l. THE. WAY OUT TO CALIFOl'!NIA
TO ~E&amp; II.Y INVENTION!

IT'!&gt; NOT
OUT OF THE
KiNDN£SS OF /fll
HEART-· r111 HEiR!!
FOR SELFISH
REASONS.
PAl.!

.

REA l TOR

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

Free Es.ti~ates

mo.

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions
Bob Hoeflich

2 baths,

FIINI lltt1

basement

and

NO. 215 -

26 acre5, with
rahch. has 9

room5. 3 baths. fully
equipped modern kitchen.
Ha• large ba5ement, 2
~ fireplaces ,

attached single
car garage, detached 2Ax30
brick 2 car garage with
workshop . . Large pa1io in
back, 24x36 equipment
shed under roof. if you
wanf fo live in the coui'11ry
with all the modern
conveniences this can be
yours. Price $85,000.

NO. 213 -

54'12

3 bedroom, 2 story
older home. gas furnace,
lots of woods. large pond ~
nic;e fish recorded. Price

$30,000.
NO. 216 -

3 Bedroom.

large kitchen, single car

attached
electric,

garage.

all

carpeted

throughout, large 100x400
lot, FHA approved. Price
$28.500. In Tuppers Plains
area.
804 W. Main

0.

ll~:r~~i~~efe
I~
and

I

I.JTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Sales
and
Supplies.

Rou t.fi

Pomeroy. Ohio45769
Kitchen Cabinets . Rooting
Concrete
Patios
Sidewalks
·New
Construcfion
&amp;
Remodeling .

SMITH NELSON

Ph . 992-7119 or 696·1055
Estimates applied tO jOb.
6·27-1 mo. pd .

MOTORS, INC•.
Pl !tZ.Zl74

Pllllltlll

privacy. water taps, septic
tank, electricity, and 2
bedroom mobile home.

$12,000.
MIDDLEPORT -

Owner
is
renovating
this
2
bedroom home. New bath,

new gas forced air furnace.
and is near schools. $12,000.

ENTERPRISE town

with

3

Out of

bedrooms,

bath. central heating and
garage . Jl/2 acres. Reduced

to 523.000 . .
NEW LISTING -

Large 4

bedroom
home,
full
basement, 1•12 baths. and
nice carpetlng . Convenient

location In Pom~roy .
WE HAVE TRAINED
SALESPEOPLE TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY.
Helen L. Teaford
Gordon B. Teo lord
•· Assotiates

.PIANO TUNING , L(Jf)e Dani~ls . 12 BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Comyears of service. Phone
plete ~rvke. Phone 949·2487
992-2082.
... or 949·2000 . R.acine, Ohio ,· Critt
Bradford .
WATER WELL drilling. Phone
William P. Grcnt ot 7-42-2879 ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ofter6p.m.
Sweepers , toasters, irons , oil
small cppliances. lawn mower,
PENNZOIL RUTLAND open doily
next to State Highway· Goroge
fill 10. Closed Mondays .
on Route 7 . Phone (614) 98!"·
wrecker ser\lice, tire repair .
3825.
Phone 742·9575 or 742 -2081 .
WILL DO macrame ! Plant REMODELING. Plumbing , heating
and aU types of general repair.
hangers , wall
hangings .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
jewelry. lamp shades , ham·
perience . Phone 992·2409 .
moc~s . etc. Caii98S-4114 ._
'EXCAVAl'ING , BACKHOE, dozer , SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser:iiqt, all mak~s . 992-2284 . The
trencher, Low Boy . dump huck
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
trucks , septic systems. Bill
Authorized Singer Sales. and
Pullins, phone 992-2478 day or
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
night .
WILL BABYSIT in ~y home. Phone EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work ; 4ump trucks
992 ·6309.
ond. lo-boys for hire : will haul
fill dirt , to soil , limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fers , doy phone 992·7009 ,
night pllone 992-3525 or m .

S232.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
EASTERN DISTRICT - · Here's what you've been
asking for. Beautlful6 yr. old, all carpeted home with 3
bedrooms, PAl baths, utility room , Nice kitchen with
dining area. Concrete porches. Nat. -gas F .A , furnace.
Nlte cOuntry setting wlth approJt. 334 acre land In
Ea5tern Di5trlct, 2 mi. off Rt . 7'. Aski"9 S29.Bq0.

KIDS IN , YOUR HAIR, ' LOOK

HERE -

Five

EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and ditther. Ctlorlas R. Hotfield , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.

WILL do roofing, construction,
. plumbing and hlklting. No jab
too Iorge or too smell. Phone

?42.-2348.
CA;RPENTER, flooring, ceiling,
pan•ling. Phone 992·2759.
MOBtlE Home Repoir, Elec. ,
plumbing end heating. Phone

992-5858.

bedrooms, nice l lf'2 story. house, large living room wifh
. shining oak flooring , large kifctien with dining area . 2

•

iii U 1 Ne• York N..•• Inc.
All Jlolhls Ro~u,...od

......----:----------------10

7-28-1 mo.

r:;~-----

AIJYTHit.lb, WHtOI&lt;

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT

"Rustoleum Pa.~nt . Producls
•We can ship parts dlrec11y
to your door by way of

1-----

U. P .S.
H~se

Phone 992.211T
Pomeroy, o..
8-7-1 mo . .

L---~==----~~~~~~~"'----~~~---z2ii2

HOWERY - ANI'J" MARTiN

Ex·

coveting, septic systems ,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone, · grovel , blacktop
paving, Rt. 143. Phone I (614)

wrap around porch. garage, large lot, all overlooking

the Ohio River. A5k'ing $16,500. · .
EASTERN DISTRICT - Ph ocre5 of levelland, nice
12x64 all carpeted mobile home with 2 BRs, living
room, kitchen and bath, 2 room• built on, nice family
room with fireplace, plenty of garden space, some fruit
trees. Largeworkshopand block cellar. Clfy water and
septic tank. Nice country 5etting on County Rd . 28 .
Price 515,900.
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedr&lt;iom hou•e with
bath . Two more small bedrooms could be finished
upstairs. Also garage, storage building, strawberry
patch and garden space. Driveway is electric heated.
Nice Ohio River view. Furniture can be boughf exfra.
Price for quick cale. House and lot, $12.600.

Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours ca 11992-7133
Contact: Louis Pauley

•••

'

=~
~fi
:~.

.. ... ......
.•..
.

:· =...,..
.

~

1• '

Coli Jimmy

uee"' At 949·2-

!!liL
~

ca n'dy Strip
Rubber Bock
Regular 16.95
Save S4;88 Sq . Yd.

ULABNER

NOCHOYOTE

12 and 15 lt. width carpet .
rubber back.

TODAY'm'

'4.88 sq. yd,,
Reg. 16.9S:n01 instollocl

f,

43 Lady's
neckwear

:oo-TomorrOw

7&lt;'""f-+--1 Defensive

3,4.

slip set up

NORTll .
4 K 10 8 6
¥A. I083
t A7 3
.8 4

· ;,

10

WEST

EAST

• J 53
• J 9 72

•Q 7 2

¥ KQ54
• 106
.6
• 9 53 2
SOUTH 101
4 A 94
¥6
• 9 52
• A K Q J 10 7
East-West vulnerable

name
39 Auction
action
40 Violin
maker
42 Overhead
44 Tribal
emblem
45 Rake
46 Wear away L---L-.L-...1...--IL---

tKQJSl

West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

JD rolls ol carpet in stock::
Good selection oil on sale.
Installed with Plddinv, no
extr~ to pay.

AXYDLBAAXR
I. ONGFELLOW

letter simply staQds for another. J.n this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two 0':;, f!tC. Single letters,
One

North East

Pass 1•
Pass
Pass 4 •
Pass
Pass
Opening lead - K •

1.

Soulh

1•

Pass

CRYPTOQUOTES

.A X

RUnAND

FURNITURE·

0

15 'YOUR ...ER ...

'HOUGEGU E(7T ff
STILL WITH YOL.i 1

Rutland

YEAH MOM,
JOEY;S 511LL

HERE.

DeAR, DO YOU 'TH INK 'THAT'8
WISE? I MEAN , LETTING'
HIM STAY ON
INDEFINIT5LY?

HE'S BROKE...
AND HAB NO-

J5l; ·tr.2fl!l[/

w~~~LSE.r.,. :-r-......,· . ~l!!JjjJo

J XS 0

YXAYONJ
OQWHPH,
FGOKO

J

GOSH ,
li'OM,WHAT

LWHDCWHO

N

XK
WP

K X y

JXAD
.WH

V N A

JXAD

FGOKO
IOWDA

WP
WP

JNYMWAD.

GOIXCYNCJL

Yeslerday's Cryploquote: AS WE ADVANCE IN UFE THE
CIRCLE OF OUR PAIN ENLARGES WHILE THAT OF OUR
PLEASURES CONTRACI'S. - ANNE SWETCHINE
() 197'7 KJna Features Syndicall'. Inc.

play West could have ruffed,
cashed two diamonds and set
the contract one trick since
East would be sure of a spade
trick . But West didn't know
about that solid club suit. He
discarded a diamond and now
South was in control.
He led a third club and West
ruffed small. Dummy
overrulfed and South played
king and ace· of trwnps. When
both opponents followed,
South just continued to play
clubs. The defense did collect
one trick with the queen of
spades and one diamond Irick
at the end , since South had
only one trump l_e ft in dummy
to ruff&gt; diamonds with . By
making five spades, South had
turned a disaster inlo a
triumph .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South was most unhappy

apostrophes, the lengHt nnd formation of the . words are all when North jumped to four
spades. He wished that he had
hints. Each day the code lelt e.rs are different

l:all742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE.
CARPET CONSU~ TANT

merely rebid two . or three
clubs after North's one-heart
response. but there was no use
crying over spill milk. He was
stuck in four spades and had
to· make the best of it. ,
He won the first Irick with
dummy's ace ' of diamonds.
no\ed that there were 10 easy
tricks at notrump and realized
thai since the ·game was
match points he had best try
to collect 11 tricks at spades .
He led a club to his ace at
trick two and continued with
the 10 spot. At'this stage of the

-An Illinois correspondent
says. "I dealt and picked up :
4KQx ¥KQx tQxx ~xxx .
I passed. Partner opened one
spade in third seal. What
should I respond?
We don't know . With U
high-card points our cor·
respondent should have opened the bidding with one 'Club.
Since he ele&lt;:led to pass. he
has trapped himself .

•
(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at

Bridge," clo this newspaper,
P.O 801489. Radio City Stalion.
Now York, N.Y. 10019)

AWl ~GOING
1'0 DO...

I::MHJS:IO

F_R_IDAY TJ.L .5

IT WA5 HER, THE
6EA6Lf OF Ml{ DREAM5!

.

Close Sat. At 5 r.M.

WE FELLIN LOVE, AND

--.-~---~

li

••

-.

" 1U.... ND'f

1• •••••••••••• ·····~·~~··"+
1'

27 Fonner
30 Petrol

Mao's

SAVE ON
CARPETING

_ Allfi!~LD qRATI!!'·

eDsilage

hatter
35 Angelo
or Jose
38 Part of

HARRISON 'S T.V. Repair. Service
Calls. 276 Syccmore, St ., Middleport Phone 9'92-2522 .

.: . RUTLAND FU_RNilUIE · . :
:• 742·2211

anew

1

1 :3()..-Mary Hartman 10.
2: 1()..-News 13.

34Mad ~

698·7331.

Mon.; tws., Wid..
.

Yeslerday's Answer
19 Scarlett's
33' Tragic king
' home
and Norman
21 Shield ·
35 Overfill
23 Foot-loose 36 Love (Sp. I
wayfarer
37 Defense
24 Shifty
org.
25 Constructed 41 Prepare

Kit 33. .
'
7:3()..-Hollywood quares 3,4; Ohio Stole Loffery 6;
• Price Is Right 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.33;
Wild Kinggdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
15 .
s,oo-Movle "Dinlan's Rainbow" 3,4,15; Welcom"")
'
Back, Kott~r 6, 13; Waltons 8,10; Arlo Guthrie &amp;
Pete ·seeger In Concert 20; Poldark 33.
8: 3()..-What' s Happen lng! ! 6,13.
9:0Q-Barney Miller 6'; Hawai i Flve-0 8; Movie
"Diamond Head" 10; Movie " The Benaal Tioer" "
13; Age of Uncertainty 20,33 .
9:3()..-Three's Company 6.
10:0()..-Westslde Medical 6: Barnaby Jones 8; News
20; At The Top 33.
.
11 :0()..-News 3.4.6.8.10,13, 15; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
33.
11 ; 3()..-Johhny Caroon 3,4,15; SWAT 6,13; Kolak 8;
Movie "This.Could Be the Night" )0; ABC News 33.
12:0()..-Janakl 33.
12:4()..-Monster Beach Party 6.13; Movie ''If He
Hollers, Let Hlm Go!" 8.

favorite

WENDY?~~~~~~.--~

••
•

2

.

COMPANY

lull baths. 2 bedrooms down and 3 upotalrs. Completely

MINERSVILLE -4 ·bedroom house, mo5tly carpeted.

"[X XX]"

My Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Consumer Survival

47 Second
ACROSS
·largest·
I Little
planet
Dorothy
4 Reinforce
(abbr. I
9 London
DOWN
section
I Legal paper
"You- to be
Exclamin pictures ... "
ation
11 Georgia city
3lceman's
12 Hunter
implement
~onstellatlon
4 Smuggle
13' "Down under" .5 Capek play
· bird
·6 Exc~ange
14 Mobster's :
preinium
weapon
7 Mince
16 WWII price
8 Lab heater
agency
9 District of
~ 17Cap
ancient
B-to 18 Sediment
Palesline
p..._;;.,;;._ 20 Corner
11 True grit
15 Objective
Scanty
Jargon; ·argot
Solemn
Breaking
bread
13 ~~:.""'131 Genesis

8 A.M. to 4:30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE

insulated with F.A. naf. gas furnace. large porches &amp;

garage . Loc. In Che•ter. Price $19,800.

Now arrange lhe circled leners k
form the surprise answer, as sug
gested by the abOve cartoon.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

or 992· 6263

742-2211

CAME FR'ON1,

.I

central heaflng, city water,

and garage. Fully carpeted
too. ·
PRIVACY - 53 acre• of

OIL~

AR.ii5T'S&gt;

·~

Phone 992-6282

H ydraullc

WHERE THE

~AI&gt;JDSCAPE

Print answer here:,..,...[__,.,J.,._,l~J

LOOK OUT.1

Pomeroy, Ohio

Custom
Making

3:0()..-Another World 3,4,15; All In the Family 8,10;
Antiques 20; What's Cooking? 33.
3:15-General Hospital 6.13 .
3:3()..-Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; College
tor Canine• 33.
·
4:0()..-Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4,15; New Mickey
Mou5e Club 6; Gilligan's Is . 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Movie " Big Parade of Comedy" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3()..-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes 15.
5:0Q-Big Valley 3: Brady Bunch 8; Emergency One
13; Mission : lmpo55lble 15.
5:3()..-Adam·12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
'
20.33.
6:0Q-News 3,4,6,8,10,31,51; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3()..-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Once Upon a Cla•slc 20,33.
7:0Q-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell ihe Truth 13;

(Answono tomorrow}
Jumbles: SUEDE FAVOR HEREBY CIRCUS
Yeslerd~y 1 ·Answer : The kind otftretllat might bring on end to the
ftghting "CEASE-FIRE
.

300 Main St.

I

(

ORPJIAII( ANNIE--NO moN CURTAIN

PLUMBiftG &amp;
HEATING INC.

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

liftoot

acre5,

fram~

WHARTT
·
.
'I J 1
V'J
..A
k_A

CARTER'S

DAVID BRICKLES

s r--------...,;---------------;~,

new brick

Ii Kll b I

992-5724

appointment. Ph. 742·2005 .
6-5·1 mo. Pd .

carport.

Only 520,oo0 .
POMEROY - Nice 6 room
house with 3 bedrooms. 1
full and 2 half baths,

I. FLOTY
I KJ

ALLEY ClOP.1

1

401! UJ.l'T '!HI}JK OF

bedrooms,

two--thirds acres and large
outbuilding . Peaceful area.

Middl~port,

Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by

6·22·1 mo.

in
Rutland
Township .
Farm home complefely
remodeled thaf has 5

full

CHANGE

HIS MIND,

Nobll Summit Road
Rt. 1

Alil!nment, wheel
balancing, tune-up,
brake . work, minor
repair.

992-5292

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
Service

NEW LISTING -72 acre5

CAN

Poor Sales

DUGAN'
I .S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

THE PHOTO PLACE

Turning Points 33.

ll:OG-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
French Chef 33.
11 :3Q--It's Anybody'• Guess 3,4,15: Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8,10; Making Things Grow 33.
11;55--CBS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10 .
12:0()..-New• 3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
.
12 :3()..-Chico &amp; lhe Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
l :oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6.13; News 8;
Young &amp; The Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Nova 33.
1&gt;3()..-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns .
8,10.
2:0Q-520.000 Pyramid 6, 13; Austin City Limits 33.
2:3()..-Doctors 3.4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.

... EVEN

... AND I OON'T
'THINK YOU

'THAT CliRTAIN ..
·- "DADDY"·-

CHESTER - 3 bedroom 2
story frame home on large
corner lot. Bath, natural
gas heating, and T . P . &amp;
Chester water . $14,000.

RACINE CA_RPET
SHOP6-16·1 mo.

Phone 992·6282

No Sunday c.;! I• Please

9:3()..-We Think You Should Know 3; Kalllkaks 4.15;
Baretta 6,13; Kir19ston : Conlldenflal6,15 .

18

8 A.M. to 4:30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6·23-1 mo. Pd .

for Everyone 33.

10 :0Q-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15: Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8,10;
Mike Dougla• 13; World War I 33.
10:3()..-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price 15 Right 8,10:

Phone 949-2814
9a.m. tos.lm.

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

Movie " Mvtlny" 8 ; Thealer in America 33 ; Movie
" Dillinger" 10; Documentary Showcase 20.

Continuous one piece
gutters. Wo hi1"9 It, or do II
yourself. Special prices to
builders.

Electrical it.
Refrigeration

Po~eroy

TEAFORD

GUTTIR SERVICE

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

BISSEll SIDING CO .

6·13 ·1

mo.

Urban League 10.

6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:5()..-Good ~ornlng, We5t
Virginia 13 ; 6:55-Good Morning, Trl State t3 . . .
7:0Q-Today 3,4,15: Good Morn ing America 6,13 : CBS
News 8: Chuck White Reports 10: 7:0s-Porky Pig
10.
7:3()..-Schooiles 10 .
8:QO-Howdy Doody ·6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. 33.
8:3()..-Big Valley ·6. ·
9:0()..-Cross·Wit• 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15; Andy
Griffith · 8: Mike Douglas 10; Mulligan Stew 33.
9 : )()..-A.M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8; Tennlo-

20: ln•lght 33.
7:3()..-Dolly 3; Redscene '77 4; Match Game PM 6;
· $25,000 Pyramid Hi MacNeil-Lehrer Repoort 20,33;
· The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
a,oo-Grizzly Adam5 34,4,15: Eight i5 Enough 6.13;
Good Times 8,1 0; Nova 20.33.
8: 3()..-Bustlng Loose 8.10.
9:oo-CPO Sharkey 3.4,15: Charlie's Angels 6, 13;

'IOU

I

Not The lmitl10fS 11
2-23-1 mo.

~10- 1m~

rh. !tl·lMJ

DAD PHON~P
1&gt;111 '{OU Wf!fe
0111 TH&amp; VIIIV!

CAPTAit.J EII~V .. 'T~IS
If&gt; MY F IANCE . WLAD~K
!o'NeDOWSI&lt;.V!

I'

''The Originators

LARRl~~~~DER

6:0G-Summer Semester 10 .

6: ~Docfors on Call " ' News 6; Summer Semester 8;

Truth 13; My Three Sons 15: Consumer Survival Kit

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

'

THURSDAY, AUGUST n , 1917
5,5()..-PTL Club 13.

6; Pop Goe5 the Country 8; New• 10: To Tell the

Route l , Pomeroy, 0.

.

WIIDOIIS .

l.JQ-MarY Hartma 10.

2: !~News 13.

7·00. --Trulh or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar' s Clut

.

.

log

11: 30-Rookies 6.13; Johnny Carson IS; Movie
" lieui~ant Schuster's Wife" I ; Movie "The
Galli"9 Gun" 10; ABC News 33 .
12 ·4()- Mystery ol the Week 6, 13.
l :OG-Tomorrow 31 1.

20,33.
6. 00· News 3,4,6.8,10.13,15: Zoom 20.33: ABC News 6.
6,3()..-NBC News3.4.15: ABC New513 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Vegetable Soup 20: Lil la• Yoga &amp;
You 33.

Superior
Steam Extraction

fNn&lt;io(l1llildlt

109 High St.

742·2574 .
.j. '

-·~----

992-V 94 .

$37,500.
NEW LISTING All
elecfric 3 bedroom home
just 5 years old. Has nice
partial basement, 1 and

New

l Good McCullough Chain

77_2·3227_,,

sole. One with 2 cor garage,
one with recreotion room . LH
Construct io n, 992-3454 or

Phone 992-2181

Co-Op water ~.Jf·
teners, model vc.svl.
Only 5279.95
Save no .oo on a new
Ho1poln1 Refrigerator..
1 New 20 cubic ft. Chest
Freezer
sn.oo Discount

_3102o~JO.I )

FREE~.- TES

•

WEDNESDAY . AUGUST 10,1977

2 NEW 3 BEDROOM Houses for

Y.:fome~ landmark

FOR SALE

~.

- - o -~,- - h

B I LEVEL 1i\le room ouse in Mld- ~
dleport with laundry· room , 11J1 VA -FHA, ,30 yr. financing. Ireland
baths , Slarm windows , furnace
Mortgage , 77 E. Stote, Athens ,
and Insulation . In 0 nic,e
hOne (614) 592-3051.
neig~borhood , out of high 2. STORY 3 bedroom frame
water. $18,500. Shown by aphouse , F.A . furnace, '!itorm win·
pointment. Phone992 ·3016.
dews , fireplace in Middleport .
Phone 992-3457.

SWAIN'S

10· JG- Baseball J,•; Fawlty Towers 10 .
11 ()()-News. 4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33 .

., 00 Big Valley J; fl.rady Bunch 6; Mister Roggers'
Neelgt'lborhood 20.33: Emergen( v One 13; Mission :
tmposs•ble IS
5·30-- Adam 12 4; New s 6; Family Affair 8: Eh!c . Co .

992·

3.7 A. 1n Rutlond , A bedroom
house w i th 2 car. garage and SMAll form for sole, 10•. down ,
owner l inonced . Monr~ Coun·
other ootbuildings . Iorge corport . 3 acres fen c&amp;d in with
fy . W. Vo. Phone (30&lt;1) 772·
small barn . $1-4 ,000 or be'!it of3102or(J04)772-3227 .
flu . Phone 742-3150.
COUNTRY farmland with sedudNICE THREE bedroom home in
ed woods , water and good oc Rustlc Hills, SyraCuse, OH .
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .
Phone9A9· 2559 .
$1 ,000 down , call (JO;} 772·

.:..Jack W. carsey, Mgr.

·r ..

•-

7•81.

yu~o~r warer

..

• -'COINS
, CURRENCY, token'li , old

close to Rutlarid . Phone

-

details.
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
lndoor·Outdoor runs, grooming
all breeds , del]n sontrory
facilities oe 367-7112. Cheshire.
Phone (6,14) 367-0'29"1.

3 bedroom house , '2 baths,

fteal&amp;late for SuJj,

trailer&gt; O. K. ASKING
54,600.00.
GOOD PRICE- 88x200 lot
on a good street, 1969

Belpr~!.phio

T~levision

oil alec., I ocre, Middleport.

Nol less than 1h case.

1210 Washington Blvd.

u:::: The DaUv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesday, Aug. 10, 1m
'DJ CK TRACY

Business Services

HOM£SITES lor sole . 1 acre and
up. Middleport neor Rutland.
Co11992-7481 .
: ~EW

acres ,

CHAR-MI BEAGLES presents AKC
Beagle
Stud
Ser\lice . 1974 TERRAMITE Bockhoe , $3000.
WOMAN NEEDED to stoy with me
Guaranteed. $25. HO\Ie litter ol
Phone (614} 446·7150.
in my hom•. Plwne 992-5798.
young pups now. $10 will book
you,rs. 20 years experience LOST : lARGE block male German
WE ARE ,naw taking applications
Polite dog on 25ft. chain near
breeding huhting Beagles.
for e\lening, nightlme and
Chester
area . AlsO, fox -like
Mike
Kinco;d
,
(614)
667·641&lt;
.
. weekend help. Apply only in
mutt . Call985-3580.
~·~ person , Thur'!i . 2 to 5 pm at the ALL BREED dog grooming . J. and
J
~lueandGreyRe~touront .
S. Kennels . Reasonable roles . SEliG STOM Designed sectional
solo, beige in color, 1 month
No
drugs used . Coli for ap~ 8ABYSinER ·NEEDED in Mornold. Reason for selling · too
pointment, 742·3162.
ingstar Hts. area near Racine
large for room. Origincl price
__. ~ for Kindergorden aged girl. BEAGLE PUPPIES for sale. Call
S2800 ,selling $1600 . Call
•· Half a day, 5 days a week .
7-42-3007 after 5 pm.
992·6633 or (61•1 367-0545 alter
Phone 4.46-7466, after S pm .
LOOKING FOR home for an cbon· _ 6 p:.m
0::.:..:::"c:---:-:c-~-~
doned female collie, 4 to 6 15 FT.BASS
Boat , fully equipped :
month.
Phone
daytime ,
Call after 5p.m. 247~ 2-401.
992-7680 or after 5, 992·5896.
8FT . CAB over camper, $700. 15
1r THERE Will be c five lamily yord
TO GIVE AWAY to good ~orne. 3
h . Sto~craft boot wi th SOh.p.
" sole Thurs ., Aug . 11 from q to 4_
kittens , one solid gray , 2 gray
motor, $600. for more informa·
Austin Wolfe's residen1=e .
w ith blotk stripe. Have been
tian , coii992-3BI7 .
•• Broodwcy Street, Racine. Mony
wormed . Phone 992-2090.
fine dean clothes ond misc . or;i.oo• tides .
·
TO GIVE AWAY . Collie , block
~-~--~----~-----with white feet. 8 mo. old
Female . Call773-54n.
CASH paid for oil makes ond
• models of mobile homes.
Phone creo code 61-4-423 -9531 .

FOUND FULL·BLOOOED Siamese
cot about 6 mo . old . Owner
plaese coll992 -7317.

Sfrickly whole5ale to all.

Miller Pl',9duce
&amp;
Garden Center

•

Rw Eamte for Sale

~·ound

Los1 81ld

.·

3

)

-.

t

NOW WE'RE GOlN6 TO

GET MARRIE"!

TATER JEST
THROWED A
SPELLIN' BLOCK
AT MEt AUNT
LOWEE'ZY

NOWHARH MI./ HAND
WUZ QUICKER'N THE''!"

�• 12-1be Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0~. Wednesday, Aug. 10, 19n

•

eg1n
By JIM ANDERSON
JERUSALEM {UPI) Prime Minister Menahem
Begin said that in five hours
of talks Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance applied "not one
W&lt;rd" of pressure on Israel to
accept participation of the
Palest ine
Liberation
Organization in Middle East

NO TIC£

peace efforts.
"I emerge from the
meetings in a good mood,"
Begin said after a 31.2 hour
morning session with Vance
and his aides and top Israeli
officials.
"Various problems were
raised, but there is no
confrontation, " he said.
"We're all optimistic. Jews
are optimistic by nature.''
Begin said it was dear the
United States had no ·

intention of working for a
change in U.N. Security
Council resolution 242, which
refers to the Palestinian
question only as a refugee
problem.
The Israel prime minister
said the next step toward a
peace agreement would be
parallel talks in New York in
September between Vance
and Dayan and between .
Vance and the Arab foreign
ministers.

Ballroom Dance
Cla§es

To

Resume Sept 7

Local notices, briefs
......

At The

ORCHID ROOM
Pomeroy
For more information ca II
992-2622 anytime.

"ll'

'

State Auditor Thomas'/E.
Ferguson
reported
the
August
distribution
of
$4,932,760.81 in local govern ment money to Ohio's 88
counties and 388 cities and
villages levying local income
taxes. Meigs County received
$12,500.

The Southeastern Ohio
Black Lung Assn . monthly
meeting will be held at 1 p.m.
Sunday at Forest Acres Park
near Rutland. M i ners on
strike are invited to attend .
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Office will be

Commerce

Governor
(Continued from page

1)

Handle Rocker-Recliner
Despite
its
stylish
· appearance, this chair is a
genuine rocker-recliner .
Rock away to your heart's
· content, then a mere touch of
the handle and you can
recline and relax ... at least
unti I some other member of
your family clamors for this
favorite chair. May we shOw
it to you today?

Antelope.
Mason has helped to foster
the growth of his corruriunity
through leadership of important committees in the
Greater Columbus Area of
the Chamber of Commerc~.
He is a trustee of Franklin
University and was honored
by Ohio State University with
the Centennial Medallion for
his work in ROTC. The
subject of Mason's talk will
be "Why Rotary." The club
meets in the social rooms of
the Heath United Methodist
Church. The annual official
visit of the governor
traditionally . is the club's
"loud shirt" night with prizes
offered
the
gaudiest
exhibitions. RotaryAnns will
be special guests for dinner
and the governor's address,
according to Club President
Carl Denison.
President Denison will
preside at a · club assembly
preceding dirtner attended by
Gov. Mason.

HOME
IMPROVEMENT
SPECIALS

SEWER &amp; DRAIN PIPE'
4''Xl0 FT.

$280

Joint
Solid or Perforated '

lATEX
PAINT
For Exterior or Interior
\

cl05ed until Friday, August
19.

Meigs High School sen iors
may call 992·2158 between 1
and 3 p.m . Friday, Aug . 12,
and Monday or Tuesday,
Aug . 15 and 16 to make ap.
pointments for their sen ior
pictures. Pictures will be
taken at the high school
Monday, Aug . 22 through
Friday , 27, from 9 a.m . to 5
p.m .

In the tast hal!-hour of the
meeting Vance, Begin and
Foreign Min iste r Moshe
Dayan talked alone.
Afterward, Vance said,
"We continued our talks this
morning over a wide variety
of subjects. They were good
talks."
Begin said news reports of
U.S. pressure were far from

reality. "
" Despite the stories, there
was not one word of pressure
that we agree on the
of
the
participation
organization of murderers
known as the PLO," Begin
said.
Begin
repeated
his
denunciation of the PLO as a
~azi-like gro up and said

Firemen watch as 15 buildings·burn
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI ) -At
least 15 buildings in this city
of 221,000 residents went up in
flames overnight while
striking firemen stood by and
did nothing. There were no

serious injuries.
Strikers, saying they must
be granted immunity from
prosecution before they
return to work, scheduled a
meeting for 2 p.m. today.

Tax issue

(Continued from page 1)
and although more money, $946,121.72 was brought in in 1976,
expenses in 1976 were $133,798.48 greater than in 1974. Revenue
in 1976was only $101,162.02 more than the 1974 total.
Wagner, backed by an enthusiastic crowd, also asked Ord
for
implementation
of cost cutting measures.
RACINE - Southern High
Ord
responded
by observing that there are certain
School seniors may call 9492600 to make appointments expenses over which the board has. no control. Specificallv.
for their senior pictures . these are State mandated salaries and fixed charges.
Senior pictures will be taken
In 1974, Ord said, the total payroll as mandated was
at the high school . Saturday,
$536.427.94.
In 1976 that figure was increased to $657,368.84.
Aug . 27 , and Monday, Aug . 29.
Fixed charges in 1974 amounting to $115,231.32 were $144,842.05
in 1976, or some $29,000 more. Combining those expenses,
which again the board has little or no control over, charges
were $139,000 greater in 1976 than in 1974.
There are areas in which the bOard is cutting back as much
as possible, Ord pointed out. Textbooks in 1974 came to
$4,655.96, but costs for replacement of worn out books in 1976
(Continued from page 1)
"We want to get everyone (no new texts were bought as a cost cutting measure ) came to
. in on the act," Crow said. He $4,626.56. Likewise, educational supplies such as paper, chalk,
urged them to come dressed etc. were reduced by some two thousand dollars in 1976.
as painters and not as Janitorial supplies and material for maintenance of grounds
and building · suffered a near $5,000 cut in 1976 while
businessmen.
educational
· equipment replacement costs (audio visual )
Local media, and possibly
record
players,
etc.) were down from $3,000 in 1974 to $500.
state level news outlets, will
In
addition,
utilities such as gas and electric, which the
be on hand to record the
board
generally
has
little control over, were reduced·as much
workers who will begin at 6
as
possible.
·
p.m. on the two scheduled
"Everyone
on·
our
board
and
staff
has
worked
to try and
nights.
save
money,"
Ord
said.
·
Also on the business agenda
He said the schools are not overstaffed and that, "We have
was a discussion of signs
urging the public to help as fine a staff as you'll find anywhere and I'm not against them
making the salaries mandated by the state.'1
stamp out littering.
He also said that with the exception of a.bout six teachers
Crow called on Ben
who
have masters degrees, the entire teaching staff is making
Philson, well-known for
ininimum
mandated.
the
creating catchy jingles, to
After
presenting
these figures to the people, Ord
"dream up" messages for
explained
:
unique · signs which would
"We realized when we gave the board the new budget in
appeal to, rather than
threaten, the public. Signs January that we had come to the place where we were going to
would be posted throughout . have to ask for more millage." He said that if they hadn't,
based on the above figures, the board would fine;! itself about
town.
Niesal Duvall, 1977 Regatta $130,000in the red at the end of the calendar year.
"We now want the people to make the decision," he said.
Queen, asked ·for expense
"We
have held off as long as possible on this levy. "
funds to attend festivals and
He
contended that if emergency measures are not taken
· parades during her reign as
now,
the
entire Southern Local School District would lose its
Meigs
County's
royal
charter.
representative. Bill Quickie
He then outlined the procedure taken by the board when
told Crow that the cost to the
chamber for each festival the decision was finally reached. A cash analysis was prepared
Miss Duvall attended would by the board clerk and sent to the state auditor. The state
be $10 regardless of the auditor will prepare a cash audit and determine whether the
distance she travelled. He district has enough funds to continue operating. This audit is
recommended that she attend sent to the State Superintendent of Public Instruction who then
. as many as time permits as tells the board if its schools must close, and if so, when.
The state auditor will mot make his report until the end of
she is "excellent public
relations" for Meigs County September but at this point Ord feels that, based on the
and the Big Bend Regatta. preliminary work and analysis of the current financial
Robert Miller asked that all situation the schools will close for an indefinite .period if the
.
those who attended the upcoming levy is defeated.
If
the
levy
passes,
the
auditor
will
not
have
to come in to do
chamber's last golf tourney
the
cash
audit
and
the
schools
will
stay
open.
Ord
stressed this
show up for Thursday's
is
an
emergency
levy
designed
especially
for
schools in
session. He will notify them
financial
trouble
and
would
only
be
in
effect
for
three
years.
as to T-off times.
"Attending were Crow, This would allow the board to reassess the situation at the end
Page, . Buehl, Mayor An- of that time and determine whether or not it would be able to
drews, Quickie, Miss Duvall, operate with the funds they have at that time.
· The 10 mills increase would allow the board to borrow
Miller, Philson, Dale Warner
· and guest, Paul· Casci, $110,000 to finish out the calendar year and, although it would
Vernon Weber,
Helen still fall $20,000 short of what is needed, taxes generated by the
Teaford, VIrgil Teaford, Bill new tax millage, the state would reimburse the district with
Mayor, Judy Owen, Beulah $170.
Ronnie Salser then commended Superintendent Ord and
Jones, John Anderson, Phil
Kelly, Chuck Blakeslee, the school board for the job it is doing in handling the situation.
"They're doing a good job," Salser told his fellow
Barney Compton, Fred
Morrow, Roger Davis, Walter taxpayers. We don't need to get on them, we need to get on our
Grueser, Theron Johnson, elected officials, (the state officials) who are telling us when
Stan Houdashelt, Paul Simon, our schools ·need to close.''
Ernest Wingett, retired school teacher, told this reporter,
Jim Frecker, Barb Chapman, .
Ferman Moore and Bill "Nobody at this meeting is against the schools or education.
The issue is why we need 10 mills. In fact, I can guarantee that
Grueser.
there isl't an anti-school person here."
According to Ord if the levy next week is not passed,
schools would most likely be closed until January at which
time local money would be avai)able 1 and allow the school to
re-open, but with the stipulation that days be made up to meet
the minimum required 180 days of instruction.
Alternatives to the situation which have been rumored are
mergers with other county schools. Ord, not 'confirming or
denying them, simply said they are rumors and a lot of rumors
INTEREST
have been circulated.
"There are even some I heard last night," he said by phone
this morning, "that I hadn't heard before and know nothing
· about."
· Another issue discussed was the resignation of two.
Southern Local School·Board members. When asked why they
resigned, Ord answered simply, "The truth of the matter is
Sl,()()()
that I don't really know. We received letters from both Mr.
Evans and Mr. Adams with one sentence statements to the
effect they "please accept my resignation.''

House

On Certificates
Of Deposit

Minimum

ONLY

1 Yr. Term

Ninety day interest penally
if
withdrawn
be.for
maturity date .

Meigs Co. Branch

4)

-f!!!Y

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

Mason, W. Va.

Th e A then~ County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
29 6 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

I!!!~
.

achievement," but he said It
had been decided not to
revl!fl it now.
Israeli newspapers said
today that Vance told Israeli
leaders there seems to be no
chance of any Middle East
peace
talks
without
participation by the PW.
Begin, however, said after
the first day of talk:s : " It feels
g1'eat. There's a terrific
abyss between newspaper
stories and reality."

going on. The next step will
be in September."
He said he thought the
Geneva peace conference
could be reconvened in
October or November "we'll see in the next stage."
Begin also repeated his
statement from a state dinner
Tuesday night that Vance had
accomplished a " great

Israel would have nothing to
do with it despite reports that
its leaders are thinking of
adopting a more moderate
position.
Begin said Vance brought
both American and Israeli
ideas to the Arab leaders.
"We have their replies and
now we'll meet again," Begin
said. "The momentum is

Weather

MASON DRIVE-IN

Lows tonight in the upper
60s. Cloudy, chance of
showers Thursday, highs to
upper . 80s. Probability of
precipitation 70 per cent
today, 80 ~r cent tonight, 40
per cent Thursday.

Now tbru Friday
THE FRONT PAGE
Jack Lemmon
WalterMattbau
PG
Also .
THEEIGER
SANCTION
CUnt Eastwood

In 1976, Hurricane Belle hit
R

1

New York state, causing
millions of dollars of damage
in thl! New York City
metropolitan area .
~

State Rep . Paul R.
Leonard, D-Dayton, said
today he would ask Ohio Gov.
James A. Rhodes to send in
the National Guard, "so we
don't have to go through
another night of terror."
Leonard advised citizens to
"stay awake" and "keep
their garden hoses handy."
Despite a Montgomery
County Common Pleas Court
injunction ordering their
return to work about 200
members of fue Fighters
· Local·
136
voted
overwhelmingly Tuesday
afternoon to remain off the
job.

Expendahle
funds st and
at $71,443
Middleport Village Council
had $71 ,442.71 in its expendable funds as of July 31, Middleport Village Cle rkTreasurer Gene Grate
reported to Council Monday
night.
Receipts, disbursements,
respectively, and the balance
of each fund as of July 31 include : general, $6,585.38,
$7,412 .21 , $36,617 . 71 ;
cemetery, $899.50; $1,049.43,
$813 ; fire equipment, $500,
$703.o7, $53.61; swimming
pool, $3,868.76, $2,994 .89,
$6,824.03 ; planning commission, no receipts, $14.90,
$173.09; street maintenancl!,
$7,613.04, $2,7~ . 56 . $11,541.12;
federal revenue shring,
$3,734, $250; $18,205.62; antirecesion assistance, $913, ·
$114.12, $1,214.53. Receipts into the expendable funds
amounted to $24,113.68 while
expenditures amounted . to
$15,244.28.
Obligated funds of the council as of July 31 stood at
$30,172.47 with $184.45 being
received and $11.07 being ex·
pended during the month.
Obligated funds of the
town's board of public affairs
as of . July 31 totaled
$190,516.28. Receipts 'and
disbursements, respectively,
and the balance of each fund
in this group as of July 31 include: sanitary sewer,
$4,353.50; $4,327.95, $34,330.88;
sanitary-sewer escrow, $825,
no
disbursements ,
$138,610.09; water, $7,842.53;
$7,142.24, $10,437.49; water
meter trusts, $225, $350.21,
$7,137 .02. Total receipts
amounted to $13,246.03 while
disbursements amounted to
$11,820.40.
The town's total bonded indebtedness ·amounts to
$1,340,049.75 of $466.27 per
capita.

Deputy sheriffs, who have
also had contract negotiation
problems, discussed the
possibility of a walkout
Tuesday night, but their
leader, Ed Stoner, said the
possibility of a strike has
been eliminated.
Stoner said his people voted
to back and assist Dayton's
Fraternal Order of Police,
however, which supports the
striking firemen. Two dozen
city officers called in sick
Tuesday. '
Firefighters, whose
contract talks with city
officials have broken off,
began circulating petitions
urging the mayor and city
manager to agree to binding
arbitration.
~e 370 firemen o;yent on
strike Monday mornmg, demanding a 6 per cent pay
raise and a reduction in
working hours from 52 to 48
per week.
During one blaze Tuesday,
several firefighters
reportedly went to the scene,
made sure no one was inside
the burning building, then
said - according · to one
witness - "Let it burn."
Firemen from WrightPatterson Air Force Base and
suburban ~ownship fire
departments did respond to
calls, but all eight structures
were, for the most part, total
losses.
The firemen's contract expired several weeks ago and
federal mediation efforts
failed to bring about a
settlement.

Man cited
by patrol
for speeding·
Jerry L. Waters, ZT, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, was charged with
speed for conditions following
a traffic accident at 4:40p.m.
on the Bidwell-Rodney Rd.
eight tenths of a mile north of
us 35.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Waters' car came upon a hillcrest and he attempted to
stop but was unable to do so.
He swerved with his car
going off the roadway
striking a tree. There was no
contact between his vehicle
and one operated by Wl1Ils
Johnson, 26, Rt. I, Ewington.
There was heavy damage to
his car.
A single car mishap occurred at 1:35 p.m. on Neigh·
borhood Rd. two tenths of. a
mile south of SR 141.
The patrol said Dana F .
VanSickle, 20, Rt. 1, Patriot,
lost control of his car in loose
gravel. The vehicle overturned onto its top. There was
heavy damage.
Afinal accident occurred at
9:50 p.m. on SR 7, one mile
north of Cheshire, where an
auto driven bY Henry S.
Mossman, 75, Rt: 3,
Gallipolis, swerved to miss
an object in the highway.
Diane J. McCormick, 28, Rt.
2, Gallipolis, swerved her car
to avoid a collision and struck
a guardrail.

Mrs. Ramsburg honored

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
chance of showers or
thundershowers each day
with highs from tbe upper
70s to mid 80s. Lows In tbe
60s Friday and upper 50s to
low 60s Saturday and
Sunday.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ONLY $800 MILLION
SACRAMENTO,
Calif.
(UPI) - California's No. 1
industry, a-griculture, will
"most likely" lose a total of
$800 million because of this
year's drought - well below
earlier projections.
NOW YOU KNOW
There is, in fact, no such
thing as the Congressional
Medal of Honor. However,
the . Medal of Honor is
presented "in the name of the
Congress of the United
States.''

ARE VISITING
Kimberly Grueser and
Paul Hackworth are spending
the week here with Mr. and ·
Mrs. Karl Grueser and son,
Larry. The Gruesers were In
McConnelsville Sunday and
the children returned with
them for a visit.

A bridal shower was held Blackston, Mrs. Buena
recently in honor of Mrs. Grueser,. Mrs. Vicki . HoffRobert Ramsburg (the . man, Sally Radford, Judy
former Christy Hysell ) at the Radford, Mrs. Jan • Eblin,
Rock
Springs
United Pam Evans, Mrs. Pauline
Methodist Church, Pomeroy. Hysell.
The color scheme of
Also presenting gifts were
orange, yellow and white was Mrs. Helen Partlow, · Mrs.
carried out on the refresh- Judy Humphreys, Mrs.
ment and gift table. Games Kathy Rice, Mrs. Jane Abwere played and prizes were bott, Mrs. Grace Abbott, Mrs.
awarded to the winners. Suzanne Richmond, Mrs.
Refreshments of cake, punch, Frances Goeglein, Mrs. Ann
nuts and mints· were served. Radford, Stephanie Rad,ford,
Attending were Mrs. Ann Mrs. VIrginia Wears, Mrs.
Evans, Mrs. Louise Radford, Sharon Darst, Mrs. Lottie
Mrs. Wilmetta Leifheit, ·Mrs. Leonard, Mrs. Betty Conkle,
Lenora Leifheit, Mrs. Karen Mrs. Reta Eblin, Christy
Sloan, Mrs. Genevieve Evans, Mrs. Hazel Ball and
Burdette, Mrs. Nancy Violet Hysell.
Radford,
Mrs.
Helen

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SAVE·$39

95

ADJUSTS TO DEEPCLEAN ANY CARPET
FROM THE LOWEST
NAP TO THE
THICKEST SHAG.
Reg. '89'1 UPRIGHT
Reg. sl915 ATTACHMENTS'

Total Value sl09"

95 ·

$

MooEL

. 1454

CLEANS
SHAGS!

Open Friday 9:30 to ap.m.
.
'
Other Week Days 9: 30 to 5 p.m.

.

Home Fumishinp 1st Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROl

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