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

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

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

Architect-engineer firms will bid

On

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

s1200 DISCOUNT
RIVERSIDE JEEP
Gallipolis, Ohio

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

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

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

HOUSEWARES • 1ST FLOOR

1 Only 45 pc. Set. Dinnerware.

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

-'

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

~~~~~--~~~~~~-·---S-A-Lf~----~--~

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

Hostess Tables.
• Pecan, Pine,
Finishes.

KROEHLER UVING ROOM SUITES

CHAIR SALE

AND SLEEP OR LOUNGES '

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

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

SALE .

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

SAVE FROM

$} 00

TO

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

2

FOR

WOMEN'S FALL &amp;
WINTER COATS

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

lclnd of easy banking.

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

A great new look
in young casuals!

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
UCINE

OHIO

1

•

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

Hartley's

S~oes,

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

S.tui1My 9 •.m. to 5 p.m.

Inc.

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

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

SCATTER RUGS

Special Two Day Sa_l.!!!

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

•569
SEE lHE NEW 1978 UNE

PANASONIC

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

• 2nd Floor

NO. 99

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1977

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

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

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

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

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

I. I •••••

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

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

EROY
~

••
•

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

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

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

.

.

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

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

Judlt" .

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

bus~

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

Cost analysis
be reviewed

Board and teachers on crash course

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

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

LBERFE

enttne

at
VOL. XXVIII

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

•

•

Stolen lumber
is located by
local lawmen

·.·•3••

~EG.

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

to strike

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

Music

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

No end
in strike

REGULAR '4.79

t919

AT THE .WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC ST.

17\Tews.
•
•
in
Brief~
:f "
~~

TRUNK SHOWING

CORONADO $1 29
PLACE MATS

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

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

~PRICE

MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS.

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

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and colors

Friday. Saturday Sale

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

'19900

One group of ouorted styles

$600

• •

Coal miners' pension fund made wel

UMBRELLA SALE

PLAYTEX SPECIALS .

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

any-time

Oak

SPECIAL

BOYS $595
FLANNEL SHIRTS
any- weather,

&amp;

SAI.f

SPECIAL SALEL

It's the worry-lree,

Maple

SAVE 10%

99~

-

Cherry,

SAVE 20%

,J

(

SPECIALS!

WOMEN'S BLOUSES

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

Gul cztzes sa e

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

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

-- ....
,..

•

~o~

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

Weather
F

I

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

'"

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

�•
2-The n.ilySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Friday,Sept. 2,1977

Unemployment at 7.1 o/t
WASHINGTON (UPI) Unemployment rose to 7.1 per
cent in August as the jobless
rate for blacks returned to a
post World War D hJgh set in
the ~ths of the recession
nearly two years ago, the
Labor Department reported
•
today.
Unemployment has been
hovering stubbornly a.roWld 7

per cent for the past five
months, re~~ching a May and
July low of 6.9 per cent.
August's deve lopments
were bad news f&lt;r President
Carter, who is beginning to
suffer
the
political
conseqences . of a stagnant
jobless rate . The report is
expected to fuel already
vocal &lt;riticism of blacks

Priest shocks mourners
EAST HADDAM, Conn. (UP! ) - The mourners were ·.
shocked:· Some even walked out or the church.
Now they're fliing complaints against a priest who
asked them to dooate mooey to a defense fund fi&gt;r the
man accused of killing the girl they mourned.
While presiding over Monday 's fWleral fer Valerie
Vickers, 16, of East Haddam, Rev. Earle Fox of St.
Stephen's Episcopal Church asked friends and
relatives of the dead girl to donate money to both the
victim's family and the legal defense of her accused
killer.
" It was very upsetting," the girl's mother, Mrs.
Frances Vickers, said Thursday. "And unforgivable."
She said she would write the church's board of vestry
to complain about Fox's sermon, but added, " I'm not
sure what good that will do ."
"People need to give up tbeir hostilities," Fox said
during the service fer Miss Vickers.
He asked the congregated mourners to express
sympathy for the family of Gary Stankowski, 19,
charged with the Aug. 25gunshotslayingofthegirl.
Fox asked fer a collection, which he said would be
divided equally to help pay for Miss Vickers' funeral
and Stankowski's defense.
After the priest's plea, several angry persons in
attendance stormed out of the church. Many have
written to the Episcopal bishop of the Diocese of
COnnecticut complaining about the priest's behavior.
· But Fox sl!id Thursday fie, thought at the time of the
funeral the collection would be a " lovely thing to do."

Rector laid off
COLUMBUS (uP!)- Rev.
G. Wayne Craig, rector of St.
Paul's Episcopal Church,
was suspended Thursday by
. Bishop John M. Krumm
because be had "deceived
and misled me."'
Bishop Krumm said he
. would hold an open discussion
of " this sad state of affairs
and the issues involved in it"
· between services Sunday
morning.
• The cooservative Father
Craig is leading a drive in his
parish to secede from the
. Episcopal Diocese. The
parish had voted against

seceding, and Father Craig
planned to hold another vote
Sunday but a Franklin
County Common Pleas Court
issued a restraining order
against it. ·
The bishop met briefly with
Father Craig Thursday ,
Father Craig said he is
opposed to changes made in
the Book of Common Prayer
and to the ordination of
women.
· The bishop said Craig wiU
remain under suspension
until the charges against
Father Craig are reviewed.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

A coated tongue
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. backward - out of the top of
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have the stomach into the lower
a coated tongue and I have to esophagus may cause " heartrub it off every morning and burn" and a coated tongue . I
night. I am now 55 yearS old.
am sending you The Health
· I have asked several doc- Letter, number 4-11, Hiatal
tors and nobody seems to Hernia, Esophageal Reflux,
'know what it is, but one old so you can learn more about
doctor told me once that there it. Others who want this in'is. nothing that I can do about formation can send 50 cents
it. Something like that is with a long, stamped, selfhereditary and I believe it addressed envelope for it to
because my mother is the P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Stasame way.
tion, New York, N.Y. 10019.
I am hoping you know what
Often the real cause of the
it is and have a remedy for it. common coated longue is not
DEAR READER - The found. If the person is othertongue is an indicator of wise healthy it can be
many diseases and of general disregarded. Cleansing the
health. Tbt' evaluation of the tongue after eating may help.
'tongue, sometimes called
Many people do not !&lt;now that
·glossology, was once conthey can simply brush the
sidered so important that
surface of the tongue with
some doctors thought various
their toothbrush. That will
parts of the tongue
represented different por- help clean off the back part of
tions of the abdominal the tongue. Try this after
organs. Such an idea today ivery meal and in the morn- .
'would he ridiculed - as it ing and you may not have a
·should be. It smacks of cur- heavy coating.
The tongue can be a souree
:rent quack ideas of relating
of
bad breath in some people.
.bumps on the head or area of
the foot to various bodily Many peopll! clean the teeth
religiously and never bother
'ailments and personality.
to
clean the decaying, foulNevertherless, the tongue
smelling
fond particles off the
may provide good evidence of
tastes better too
tongue.
Fond
a vitamin deficiency and its
if
your
tongue
is clean.
nature, various diseases,
Mouth
breathing
is
anemia and, of course, of
related disorders in . the sometimes associated with
mouth itself. The coaied obstruction of the siiluses.
. lOngue may !Je. caused by · This may be worse at night as
.many things. Often it is of lit- the lining of the nasal
tle or no importance medical- passages tend 'to become
ly as your doctors apparently swollen and boggy at night
'think in your case. Such sim- becauSe the head is at the
ple things as sleeping with the same level as the heart while ·
,mouth open can lead to furr- lyiilg down which promotes
ing or coating Of the tongue. It swelling in the face and head
is difficult to change this if tbere is any reason for
habit if you are a mouth swelling at all. It might be
breather.
worthwhile for you to consult
Digestive disturbances a specialist in ear, nose and
often cause the tongue to be throat disorders if you cannot
coated. One of lhese par- solve your problem yourself.
ticularly common in middle(Because of the volwne of
aged people is a hiatal hernia mail Dr. Lamb cannot
- a hernia of a SQI8II part of answer your letters personalthe stomach thnHIIIh the ly but he will answer
diaphragm. The telldllllcy of representative letters of
acid digestive juices ud par- general interest in· his coltially -diges~ food to leak un\n.)
'
'¥'
&lt;(
1

disappointed with Carter's
economic policies.
The 0.2 per cent increase in
unemployment in August was
concentrated among black
workers. Joblessness for
blacks rose to 14.5 per cent a postwar high established in
Septemebet, 1975.
Black teen-agers · suffered
an unemployment rate of 40.4
per cent in August, with
indications that all of the
newly created summer job$
went to young whites.
Unemployment was 11.$
. per cent for black men and

Proposal
'crazy'
to Smith
By ERIK VAN EES
SALISBURY, Rhodesia
(UP! ) .,.. Prime Minister Ian
Smith today blasted the latest
AngloAmerican proposals for
black rule in Rhodesia as

12.2 per cent for black
WOOlen.
White workers benefited
entirely by a 210,000 increase
in tota l employment during
August. Total employment
rose to 90.8 million after a
pause in July, but the
increase in total jobs was
wiped away by a larger
390,000 jump in the total labor
force.
. Unemployment rose by
180,000 to 6.9 million in
August, primarily beca11se so
many people lost their jobs.
The percentage or job losers
nation's
llmong
the
unemployed rose for the
second consecutive month to
47 per cent.
The disparity beteen black
and white unemployment
rates g rew in August.
Joblessness was 6.1 per cent
among whites, 4.5 per cent
among ·men, 6.3 per cent
among women and 14.7 per
cent among teen-agers.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept, 2, 1977

•
Smart Dummy wms

DRIED APPLE DOU.S -Twins, Freda Ueving and
Beulah Utterback, will be demonstrating the making of
these attractive dried apple dolls during the observance of
"Yesteryear" at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center from 11
a.m . to II p .m . on Sept. 17. Other craft demonstrations

and displays to be featured will include the making of
jewelry and dulcimers, herringbone, rush weaving, porch
weave sets, korn .kob kritters, clay modeling; tatting,
woven and hooked r~~gs, quilting, b~msUck and hair pin
lace making and handcrafted pottery.

"crazy" and "disastrous,"

P'/Jnamanian gives life in protest of treaty

but refused to slam the door
on the Western powers ' peace
initiative.
"We are being asked to
dissolve ourselves before
knowing
what
our
constitution wiU be," Smith
told. a news conference.

STOCKHOLM, Sweden
( uPI) -A Panamanian man
opposed to the new Panama
Canal treaty burned himself
to death in front of the U.S.
Embassy, moaning "They
must' not sign" as 'he was

"That's a crazy suggestion.'-:'
Smith's comments carne
one day after meeting with
U.N. Ambassador Andrew
Young and British Foreign
Secretary David Owen, and
after learning his Rhodesian
Front party had won all 50
white seats in parliamentary
elections. ·
The u .s.-Brilish pllon,
which
advocates
the
establishment of a black
goverrunent in 1978, calls for
the creation of a new army
that includes elements of both
guerrilla forces and the
present Rhodesian security
forces.
"lt seems as though the
terrorists are goil]g to. form
the basis of the army and
then condescend to bring in
some of our security forces ," .
Smith said. "That's a crazy,
illconceived and rushed
plan."
Smithalsosaidtheremoval
of racial discrimination
1
' COuld
be
disastrous ,
especially for the blacks ."
Smith rejected virtually
every point in the BritishAmerican proposals, but .
stressed he would not be
rqshed into saying the
Western peace initiative was
dead .
"We
are
absolutely
dedicated to solving our
problems ... and we'll discuss
them fully."

enveloped in a ball of fire.
Leopolda Aragon died
Thursday night at Karolinska
Hospital, where he had been
rushed with burns over 90 per
cen t of his body.
In
Springfield,
Va.,

Aragon 's wife. Rose Marie,
said she knew her husband
bad planned to do something
to show his oppooition to the
U.S.-Pa nama treaty, but
added, "I didn't think it

Cuba wants blockade en d e d
·

U. S. demands reparations
By JIM ANDERSON
Assistant Secretary of at about $1.8 billion.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
State Terence Todman said
Until the former Cuban
Cuba is demanding an end to
building · is
the United States has three Embassy
the economic blockade as a
conditions it wants fulfilled refurbished, the Cuban
precondition for diplomatic
before there can be full mission will work out of the
relations and the United
diplomatic relations:
Czech Embassy, which has
States is insisting on at least
- Improvement in the been taking care of Cuban
partial payment for U.S.
human rights situation in interests during the break in
property seized by the Castro
Cuba, particularly in the relations.
regime.
treatment of 20 American
But the Americans in Cuba
As the two countries set up prisoners, eight of whom are are - in the words of one of
missions in each others' capi- rega rded
as
politi ca l them - '.'halfway camping
tals
Thursday,
those
prisoners.
out" in a · run-down U.S.
conditions were laid out by
-A reduction of Cuban Embassy building, reopened
Cuban
and
American
troops in Africa . U.S. officials for the first time in nearly 17
officials.
do not consider it likely that years Thursday by U.S .
Partial diplomati c
Cuba will accept this officials who described it as a
relations resumed with · condition, and the United " time capsule" of Cold y.'ar
cocklail
parties
in States may have to accept remembrances.
Washington and in the dusty something less. than a .full- · : They found a dust-a&gt;vered
old U.S. Embassy in Havana , scale withdrawal. An es- portrait of then-president
still cluttered with mementos tirnated 14,000-19,000 Cubans Dwight Eisenhower atop a
of the day the Americans left are still in Angola. .
stack of lumber in the
in 1961.
-A
~e ttlement
of basement ; a Coke machine
Goodwill toasts . were outstanding financial claims that operates on nickels; a
drunk : rum concoctior.s in for U.S. properly seized by film caruster of the ·l961 Rose
Havana and highballs in Cuba since 1961. Assistant Bowl game; the head of a
Washington. And Cuba sent Secretary of State Terence metal U.S. eagle rescued
word it is relaxing some Todrnan puts the total claims from an angry Havana mob.
restrictions on emigres in a
gesture marking the first
exchange of envoys since
relations were ruptured.
Cuba's new man in
CLE;VE:LAND (UPI ) Washington, Ramon Sanchezround draft choice this year,
The Cleveland Browns said who suffered a back injury
Parodi, said as his mission
was opened: ''Our people and Thursday that veteran Bob Wednesday.
1
our
government
have Babich and Brian Sipe have
That brought Cleveland's
repeatedly stated the need to signed multi-year contracts . roster down to the prescribed
eliminate the economic and
General Manager Peter 52.
trade blockade that currently Haahozy also said that aU but
exists against Cuba as a step one of the 22 Browns regulars
prior to reestablishing and ·are now under contract for
normalizing official relations two or more years.
SIX TRIMMED
of all kinds between Cuba and
Coach Forrest Gregg said
SMITHFIELD, R.I. (UP!)
David Mayes will start at - The New England Patriots
the United States."
The United States broke quarterback and will play at trinuned six . players from
relations with Havana in least the first half against the their roster Thursday, inJanuary, 1961, wben Fidel Packers at Green .Bay cluding lineman Dave Tipton.
Castro ordered the U.S. Saturday night. Sipe wiU play Also cut were linebackers
Embassy cut back from 87 to the second half.
Mike McGraw and Jim
II staff members. The U.S.
The Browns also Thursday Jerome, quarterback Lynn
and
Cuban
" interests placed on the injured reserve Hieber, rwming back Dave
sections" have 10 members list center Leo Tierney of Preston and offensive guard
Georgia Tech, their 12th- Brad Benson.
eacl1.

Babich, Sipe ink contracts

THE DAn.Y SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
~OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHFSTERL. TANNEHILL

Exee.Ed.
ROBERT HOEFI.JCH
Ch)' Editor

Published dally except Saturday
by The Ql1io Valley Pul:tlishing Comany, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4S789. Business Office Phone 9922156. Editorial Phone 992-2157.
Second class postage paid a1.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Nalional advertising teprest!Dtative Ward - Griffith Company,
Inc., Bottinelli a nd Gl:lllilgher Div.

757 Third Ave., N"ew York, N.v::
10017.
Subicription rates: Delivued by
carrier where available ;; "&gt;fll.!i -per
week. By Motqr Route where carrier
service not avallabJe, One month,
$3.25. By mail in Ohio and W. Va.,
One Ye.u, $22.00; Sb: months,
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Eliewhere $26.00 year; Six months

$13.50; Three months, f1 .5Q.
SubsaiDUon price includes Sunday
Time~entinel.

'

"

.

would be so drastic."
A Swedish television
reporter said Aragon went to
the Swedish Broadcasting
Corp. 15 minutes before the
incident and said he was
going to kill himself.
" I am burning my~lf so
my people ... will have the
right to choose and decide
whether they accept or reject
'the canal treaty ... in a true
plebiscite, not in a Torrijos
fascist referendum," Aragoo
told the reporter .
The treaty is to be signed
Sept. 7 by President tarter
and Panama's Gen. Omar
Torrijos.
" He was cairn and . very
determined," the reporter
said. "He wanted us to film
the incident to get publicity
for his cause.... He did it
before we had the chance to
call the policy! ." The incident
was not fi~ed.
.
Witnesses said Aragon
poured a fluid over his body
from a white plastic bag then
lit a match and was
inunediately enveloped in a
ba II of flame.
" It all happened in about 10
to 12 minutes," said Marine
Sgt. Gary Montour!, 30, of
Dallas, who threw Aragon
down and smothered the ·
flames.
Montour! said he heard

Aragon moan, "They must
not sign."
_
Aragon left behind a
charred letter in Spanish
from
the
Panamanian
Liberation Command, a
previously unknown group in
Sweden opposed to Torrijos.
It was too charred to be read.
Mrs.' Aragon said her busband, a journalist who
covered Washington for 11
years for several Spanishlanguage newspapers, tried
to go to the United States to
protest the treaty.
But he was denied a visa
and instead sent Mrs .
Aragon, a Czechosiovakianhorn Argentine citizen, and
their
twin
18-year-ol&lt;!
daughters to . the United
States two weeks ago, she
said.
She accused Torrijos of
jailing and tOrturing political
opponents and spid her
~usband
was "brutally
tortured" during 15 months in
a Panamanian prison in 19721973.
Before her husband died,
she told reporters she was in
a "state of shock" after
bearing of her husband's
dramatic protest. ·
''I haven't digested this. He
has sacrificed so much, I
hope that some good can
come from this."

to quick action·
~

.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - An
Ohio Association of Farm and
Power Equipment Retailers
official today called for the
Ohio Generaly Assembly to
11
8Ct now " on product
liability reform legislatiol! .
" Product liability is like an
WlControlled cancer,'' said
Bill
Davidson,
the
association's executive
director. " Left alone, it will
spread and devastate our
Ohio economy, forcing
business closings and layoffs.
"The legislature must act
now," he said, " before we
have a serious problem like
the 1975 medical malpractice
situation which threatened
our health care delivery
system."
Davidson said farm and
power equipment retailers
are slowly being put in a
position where they are going
to have to increase their costs
to consumers because of

.

.

proliferating laws11its,
escalating claims and
massive awards which
resulted from a 1966 judicial
interpretation of product
liability law.
" In the end, as always,"
said Davidson, "it iso't the
manufacturer or retailer who
pays for the additional
business costs resulting from
increased legal suits and
huge awards to a few - it's
the consumer.'t
He said a House-passed biU
currently pending in the
Senate Judiciary Committee
"would .help keep consumer
prices from escalating more
rapidly.
"Without this legislatlon,
product liability problems
will continue to impact the
Ohio economy, forcing
upward the consumer prices
on many goods," Davidson
said .
·

!'3 .

that

New business
college opens

YOLl

Motnma?

MASH

Eaual
liDays

, Mothers

Ag_ainst

~-raying

mtlie

Horne

M011day N~ht

The Lone l?anger and Husband
New This Fall

Fearur~ng fhe

'',Ito my body. "delbnse.

Thomas C. Breech is an- courses at the college level in
nouncing the opening of a Accounting and ,Business
new, private busihess college Management,
Secretarial,
in the
Business
and and General Office.
Professional Bulfding at 414
Both day and evening
Second .·Avenue, Galllpolis. classes are scheduled to
Breech offers mere than 15 begin in mid-September. Day
years'
e1.perience
in classes will meet from I a .m.
Gallipolis
in
business to I p.m. dally Monday
education and placement of · through Friday. Evening
graduates with area em- classes wiU meet on "'ondays
ployers.
and Thursdays from 8 p.m. to
The Ohio State Board of 9:30p.m.
and
College
School
Those interested in InRegistration "Issued an ap- formation and enrollment
proval certificate for the should villi! or call the JJCbool
scbool oo August 30.
office between I a.m. and 4
The new school, to be . p.m., Monday through
known as Southern Hills Friday.
School of Business, will offer

IJ
•,

Indians. The action moved
the Red Sox to withi~ 3'&gt;
games of the idle Yankees in
the American League's
Eastern Division.
The Milwaukee Brewers
won. l.j), over the Detroit
Tigers in the only other game
in the majors. Oakland at
Minnesota was rained o~t.
1
' We had to win this game 1 ' '
Lee said. ''The Yankees were
idle and we just don' t want to
send them into a false sense
or security."
Doubles by Bernie Carbo
and Fred Lynn and a single
by Carl Yastrzemski gave the
Red Sox a :Hl lead in the first
inning and they scored !heir
third run in the eighth when
Yastrzemski doubled and
scored on Jim Rice's triple.
Yastrz.emski went 3-for-4 and
has driven in nine runs in the

Bo 'soxHarris
has
. .

Red Sox' last mne games.
The Indians scored their
run in the seventh on a
sacrifice fly by Rico Carty
and !A.'C departed in the
eighth with Jim Willoughby
and Reggie Cleveland and
up .
Dennis
finishing
Eckersley suffered his lith
loss against 13 wins for the

the Hangers In Texas while
New York plays the Twins in
Minnesota . The Orioles. four
~ames nut in third place,
meet the White Sox in
Chicago.
The Kansas City Royals.
leading the AL's Western
Division by 2"' games, face
the Brewers in a twi-night
doubleheader at Kansas City ..~
ln~ians .
The only r.emaining ctmJim Wohlford singled in the
tenders
in both divisions of
fourth inning and eventually
the
National
League play
scored on a double by Ed
each
other
over
the weekend
Kirkpatrick for the only run
with
the
Philadelphia
Phi !lies
of the Milwaukee-Detroit
at
home
to·
the
Cincinnati
game. Jerry Augustine
allowed five hits in 8 1-3 in- Reds and the Los Angeles
nings
with
Eduardo Dodgers hosting the PittsRodriguez coming on in the burgh Pirates.
The Philiies lead the
ninth to retire the . last two
Pirates
by five games in the
batters . Fernando Arroyo
NL
EAst
while the Dodgers
was the loser.
have
an
8\i-game
lead over
The Red Sox resume their
the
Reds
in
the
West.
....)
chase after the Yankees
Friday nighi when they face

revenge m

Miami upset would put
heat on Coach Crum

hard to be over .500."
" But Miami is eyeing the
By RICK VANSANT
Although
weather · dale with Dayton as an 1mOXFORJ), Oh10 iUPI)
The weather figures to be hot forecasters say temperatures portant tuneup for lhree
when Miami of Ohio and the should be in the mid-80s by ensuing road games against
Saturday's I :30 p.m. kickoff, some tough opposition In the wake of what might University of Dayton get an
have been his most satisfying early start on the 1977 football both Miami and Dayton are South Ca rolina, Indiana and
anxious to get going, no Yale.
win in pro football personally, season Saturday. but if
Even though one of
James Harris could have· Miami should be upset , matter ·how bubbly the
Miami's three wins last year
rubbed sa lt in the Los Redskins' coach Dick Crum thermometer.
Miami;
of
course,
has
been
was a 28-.8 decision over.
may
really
start
to
feel
the
Angeles Rams ' gaping
looking
forward
to
the
'77
Dayton.
Crum figures the
heat.
wounds · but - at least
season ever since the dismal Flyers will provide a good
's
once·powerful
Crurn
publicly - he chose to remain
team suffered its first losin g '76 campaign ended. After yardstick for mea suring
silent
seasoQ
in 34 years last season three straight' Mid-American Miami's team .
Shipped off to San Diego
"Dayton has J5 starters
June 14 after the Rams and some· observers of the Conference championships
and
three
consecutive
·
back
rrom last year, inacquired free agent Joe football minded school figure
Tangerine
Bowl
vidories,
the
eluding
their top quarterba ck
Namath, Harris returned to Crum could be fired if he
Redskins
suffe
red
a
who
was
injured and missed
the Los Angeles Coliseum comes up with a second
humiliating
3-8
record
last
our
game
last year ," noted
Thursday night and led the straight loser.
year.
Crum,
referring
to B. J .
Crum is trying to play it
Chargers to an exhilaroting
Dayton,
4-7
a
year
ago
and
Dailey.
cool. "As far as I'm .con·
26-25 exhibition victory.
Because Dayton is dropCerned
the thing we have to now in the process of dropHarrfs completed 16 of 30
ping
its
football
program
ping
from big-time to smalldo
with
this
football
team,
passes for 234 yards and fired
from
Oivision
I
to
Division
3
time
co llege
football ,
because
it
is
young;
is
that
we
three touchdown strikes, two
level, would love to whip Saturday will be the last time
be
competitive
and
have
to
to 197.2 Reisman Trophy
winner Johnny Rodgers, win more games than we Miami in one of its last swipes the Flyers visit Mfami ~'ield .
The series, which dates bark
while Austrian-born Toni lose," he says. ''How many at the big boys .
And,
the
Flyers
have
an
to 1921, will end with next
Fritsch beat the Rams with a more, well that's a thing that
enthusiastic
new
coach
who
year's game at Dayton.
22-yard field goal on the last takes care of itself as you go
34·
Miami leads the series 28·
might
inspire
success
down through the season.
play of the game.
yearoldRickCarter,
who
has
10-2
and has not lost to the
1
" For someone to say we
' No. this wa.sn 't revenge,"
" we think we've got people
prospects of his 1977 team:
have to have a 9-2 season, I been turning out winners at a Flyers in a decade.
" I think we have the who have improved, who are. Harris said after the
don't
think . anyone. can couple of small Indiana
makings of a good football better football playero right Chargers . dealt the Rams
predid !hat Willi the right colleges (E arlham and
team ... we think one of our now than they were last their third straight preseason
flanover ) the past few years.
loss. "But it was a sweet attitude and the right breaks.
strengths is our defensive year."
Nothing would suit Carter
we
.could
w,in
that
many.
But
line . Our secondary, we
Noll's prime. example was victory and I'd like to thank
better than to upset Miami in
if
we
have
some
things
go
think, has fine potential Larry Brown, who did so well my teanunates. "
his debut.
•
A year ago Harris lost his wrong we will have to work
when he was switched from
also."
The Steelers' top draft tight end to offensive tackle No. 'I 5\arting assignment to
chqice this year, Robin Cole that six.year veteran Gordon NFL rookie Pat Haden. He
Pomeroy
of New Mexico, stepped right Gravelle, a starter in the was booed frequently by
Flower
into the lineup at Russell's old Steeler' two Super Bowl vic- Coliseum crowds and took his
demotion
bitterly.
position when Russell's . tories, was traded to the New
Shop
There were no boos for
expected successor, Loren Vork Giants.
Toews, suffered a knee injury
Terry Bradshaw Was, in Harris Friday night. Only
Noll's opinion, displaying cheers. When he was in~
early in camp.
By GENE CADDES
that is significant."
A fifth-round choice, " great potential again as a traduced, the Coliseum crowd
UPI
Sports
Writer
.
Nicklaus, although he trails
Dennis "Dirt.. Winston of quarterback." Second-year of 55,946 greeted him with a
AKRON.
Ohio
(UP!
)
Tom
Watson, another World
Arkansas, ea rned Noll's man Mike Kruczek proved as strong ovation.
Jack Nicklaus ·looks at the • Series entrant, by some
praise lor his alternating play a rooki e he is a more than
World Series of Golf as a $25,000 in money winnings,
with veteran Marv Kellum at adequate backup by leading
chance to salvage what has must be considered the man
middle lin eba cker during the Steelers to six straight ·
Lambert 's holdout. And victo ries last yea r wh ile several other veterans also been a season of disap- to beat as the field of 20 goes
pointments.
after a purse of $300,000 and a
Wentford Gaines, a 1976 draft Bradshaw nursed a shoulder might become expe ndable
.., had a chance to win top prize of $100,000 starting
·when the Steelers made their
cho ice who missed last injury .
•
three
major tournaments this today.
season with a hamstring ·
With the arrival of tWo fi nal roster cuts.
year,"
the
Golden
Bear
said
Nobody
has
done better
The only question mark in
inj ury, . in1pressed Noll at flashy rookies, speedster
Thursday
following
a
over
the
7,180-yard,
par 70
Blount's corne~hack position Laverne Smitl! of Kansas and No ll 's mind wa s )low
practic.e
round
with
Tom
Firestone
layout
than
wHile Allen, the veteran Sidney "Thundering Bull" inexperience might hurt the
Weikopl
on
the
Firestone
Nicklaus,
who
has
won
over
Thornton of No rthwesern new players in game
backup, was injured.
Country
Club
South
Course.
$489,000
while
playing
"the
Lambert's decision to Louisiana, Jl!oll had more situations.
"
Having
not
won
after
monster."
" The biggest problem
return to the team just two than enough competent
playing some of the best golf
" Having not won since
and a ha If weeks before the backups to running backs every year is realizing your
of
my
·career,
I'd
very
much
May,"
laughed Nicklaus,
regular season started, Franco Harris and Rocky potential," Noll said. " It's
like to win this tournament. " I'm kind · of glad Firestone
therefore, was an unexpected Bleier so second-yea r man just a question of time, and I
" It would probably make rolled around again."
defensive bonus to Noll.
Mike Collier was waived. think we'll get better. Time is
me
the leading money winner
Last year's World Series
1
' 0ffensively,"
Noll said, There was a possibility on our side in that sense ." '
for the ninth time , as it did win was the fifth for
·. last year, and I enjoy that. · Nicklaus, having won it four
It's one of the things on the times under the old lour-man
·
tour that goes on your record format.
" I'm looking forward to the
World Series far more than I
used to," said NicklauS. " The
old one was nice to qualify
for, but it didn't seem like a
11's Sln'lple , economical ,
reliable . It's the exciting
competition. ·I'm surprised
new KZ200 from Kawasaki
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) how much I do look forward
FEATURES:
Meigs County yo ungsters youngsters and this year
Scoring is based on The Philadelphia Phillies try to it now."
to
increase
their
14-game
•
Dependable,
4-stroke,
Nicklaus, who has spent
will be " dusting off" thei r participation is expected to distance and accuracy with
SOHC
engine
home
winning
streak
tonight
footballs and loosening up top the 1,300,000 mark.
only 32 hours at his Florida
one point added for every foot
• Conven1enl .electnc starter
their throwing arms soon for , Participants
in
the the ball is punted, passed or in the first of a three-game home since the middle of
se·e it today at .
the 1977 punt, pass and kick program compete only kicked and a point subtracted series with the Cincinnati June, claims .he "let myself
J&amp;R SPQRT'SHOP
get tired for the first time"
competition.
.....against others their own age. fo r every foot it lands off a Reds.
748 E. Main St.
The series, which opens this summer.
This year the local level of Any youngster eight thr 0ugh center line.
'
Po1ner·oy, Ohio
t~e PP&amp;K will be . co13 years of age, accompanied
Twelve national finalists with Jim Lonborg and Mario
sponsored by the ' Mei gs by a parent or guardian, may will compete for the national Soto at the mound, could
Jaycees. Co -chairmen are reg iste r
to
compete. championsh ips in their age break the Phillies' weekend
Greag Gatrell and J. 1'. Rue. Registration will be held at gro up at Super Bowl XII in atte\l.dance mark.
Cincinnati, the team the
Nationally, PP&amp;K is Dan Thomas Ford and New Orleans on Jan 15, 1978.
celebrating its 17th an- Country Cousins from now Winn ers will have their · Phillies' lost to in the
niversary. It is sponsored by through Sept. 30. There is no names permanently in- National League playoffs last
the Ford Dealers of America entrance fee and no body scribed in the Pro Football year, swept a three-game
in cooperation with the contact during competition. Hall of Fame in Canton. Their series last weekend against
National Football League.
No special equipmer.t is trophies will be presented by Philadelphia.
It was Philadelphia's ninth
Since it was started in 1961 , needed and patticipation the National Football League
straight
loss in Cincinnati.
the program has attracted does not impair a youngster's Comr;nissioner Pete Rozelle.
.
\
'
If the Phillies win tonight, it
more than 14 milliofl amateur standing.
will be their 15th straight
.
victory at home,· breaking
their all-time club record set
in 1890.

Coliseum

Steelers loaded with talent

Assembly called.
.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Spom Writer
Bill Lee;, what is known in
baseball dugouts as a "smart
dummy." ·
. Nicltnam~ "Spaceman ..
by his Boston · Red Sox
teammates, Lee enjoys
. nothing more than needling
George Steinbrenner Billy
Martin and, for that ;,alter,
the whole New York Yankee
organization which he calls
the "deca ~ent establish ment."
But he abo has his serious
side, and Thursday was one
of those days when he knew it
was no time to fool around.
Keeping the ball away from
batters swinging for the
Fenway
Park
"Green
Monster" left-field wall, Lee
went 7 2-3 innings and for his
sixth win, for a Red Sox 3-1
victory over the Cleveland

~
~.or

By POHLA SMITH
UP! Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH (UPI )
For the first time in several
preseasons, there has been
little talk around town about
the Pittsburgh Steelers'
wirming this year's Super
Bowl.
The long, hot summer of
lawsuits
and
co ntract
disputes made such talk seem
premature. The chief concern
was whethe( the chaos and
uncertainty that clouded
training camp would destroy
from within th~ carefully
constructed organization that
emerged in the early~lls from
years of obscurity to become
a perennial AFC power.
But Head Coach Chuck Noll
and Cl~b President Dan
Rooney remained confident
th~oughout that their years of

work would not be undone.
While Rooney worked to
end the holdouts of All-Pro
cornerback Mel Blount and
middle , linebacker Jack
Lambert, Noll went about his
team preparations as if both
of them were as permanently
lost to the team as recently
re tired All-Pro Unebacker
Andy Russell.
His efforts were .helped by
the discovery that his
freshman class appeared to
be as talented as the one that
produ ced Lambert, Lynn
Swann, Jimmie Allen, Randy
Grossman, Marv Kellum ,
Reggie Harrison and Mike
Webster in 1974.
Therefore, even before
Lambert came to terms on
the last day of August, Noll
was able to say about the.

Big Ten roundup
By United Press International

Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler says the loss of senior
center Steve Nauta because of a leg fracture is a blow to the
Wolverines' kicking game.
Doctors said Thursday that Nauta, a 6-2, 234-pOund senior
center from Norristown , Pa., will miss at least half of the
season because of the cracked fibula above the right ankle
which was confirmed by XRays. Nauta sustained the injury ·
during Wedn~ay's practice.
Ttle backup center for the past two seasons, Nauta was the
best man available for snapping on punts and placements,
Schembechler said. He will be replaced in the lineup by George
Lilja, a sophomore from Palos Park , ID.
Nauta was the second Wolverine starter to break a leg this
week. The Wolverines also lost the services of All-Big Ten
offensive tackle BiU Dufek, who broke his left leg during
practice.
The Wolverines move into game week preparations next
week for the Sept. 10 opener at Illinois.
Dlinois Coach Gary Moeller, meanwhile, appears to have
settled on David Finzer, a freshman, from Chicago, to handle
the punts and placements this season.
Finzer will have to flU the vacancy left by kicker Dan Beaver
- the lllini's career scoring leader - and punter Phil
Vierneisel, both· of whom graduated.
·
Moeller also announced senior .cornerback Jim Kirwan had
to quit the tearp because of a schedule conflict.
After the Ohio State Buckeyes worked out Thursday in
preparation for their home opener Sept. 10 against the
University of Miami, Coach Woody Hayes said his starting
tailback and fullback may be alternated this season.
Hayes announced earlier that Jeff Logan would start at
fullback and Ron Springs would be in the tailback slot. Last
season both were tailbacks with Logan seeing most of the
0
action.
"Those guys are completely interchangeable," said Hayes.
"That's why they are in there, they both deserve to s~rt. "

Nicklaus wants
this tournament

'

PP&amp;K sponsored here by

Jaycees with Ford dealer

Phillies seek

15th home win

.

How hurt is hurt next big issue in tennis
By MARTIN LADER
UP! Sports Writer
FOREST HILLS, N.Y.
(UPI) -With the novelty of
transsexual Renee Richards
now relegated to history, the
next big issue in the world's
richest tennis tournament
a~ can be classified as a
medical nddlty.
In short, how hurt is
hurt?
Bjorn Borg, the No. I men's
seed, says his shoulder is so
sore that he can barely lift it
to
serve
properly.
Nevertheless, after gaining a
day'·s postponement, he
wiped out Trey Waltke of St.
Louis, 6-2, 6-I, in an opening
round rilalch of the U.S. Open
Tennis Championships
Thursday.
He then warned he might
. have io' default from the
tournament if there was no
improvement.
· Jinuny Connors, the No. 2
seed, withdrew from the U.S.
Pro Championships la~t
weekend ' because of an
aching back, and needs beat
and ultrasound treatmen~
every day . On Thursday, he
opened defense of his
championship by soundly
trouncing Ju Singh, 6-2, 6-

0. '

'

'

At least one skeptical voice
was raised to the daily listing
of medical reports as Vilas
Gerulaltls suggested that too
players simply are
looking for bullWrl excuaes in
tbe event of defeat.

.,.any '

"Tennis has become such a
big money game, everyone is
afraid to lose," the eighth
seeded New Yorker said after
handily disposing of France's
No. 2 player, Patrice Dominguez, 6-2, 6-0, in 44 minutes
Thursday nlght. " I'm sure
they're all hurt, butthey're
better off keeping it to
them s e I v e s. EverY
tournament COnnors has won
he's been hurt. He must be
the best hurt player in the
world."
The source of Borg's
ailment is a mystery. He said
it might have happened while
water skiing with Gerulaitis
on Sunday, but Vilas said this
couldn't be because his boat
broke doWn before his
Swedish friend had a chance
to ski.
1
'I'm sure he's hurt,''
Gerulaitis said, ''but I don't
know bow it happene&lt;j. He
called me. Tuesday and said
he'd come out and practice.
Then his coach called me and
said he hurt hin)oelf and
wouldn;t be over.""
Following his victory over
Waltke, Borg said, ' 'At the
moment there is no way I can
do it. Yesterday I couldn't lift
my arm .. .l'Jl1 pretty worried,
yes, if il doesn't get better, I
don't know what to do. Maybe
l have to default or
something."
.
After saying what he
needed was rest, ,, Borg
learned that lie would 1&gt;e put
back in action today against

John J~mes, an improving
Australian wh o
young
ordinarily would be nothing
more thana minor obstacle to
the world's top ranking
player. But Borg is more ·
concerned with his shoulder
than any opponent, arid he
said if the shoulder didn't feel
better, he would default
rather than risk further
injury .
,
"Even if it's the same, I'm
not going to hurt myself," he
said. " This is a very
important thing. I don't want
to default, but I may have to.
What can I do?"
Connors .gets but a few
hours more rest than Borg
befor.? returning to action
jonight again's! Bllb Lutz,, a
former winner of the U.S.
·Professional championship
andaveteranwhoknow$how
to take advantage of . an
.opening.
"I've had the hac\&lt; problem
for 10 years, it's nothing

FREE

CORN ROAST
Sunday,
Sept . 4.•
Afternoon S: evening.
Live music.

TAll TIMBER
NITE CLUB
Rt. 7

Pomeroy

new," c6nnors said. "lt 1s Anne Smith of Dallas.
sore, but good enougb to play
Other featured matches
r1ght now. They're going to among the men include No. 3
have to beat me to· take my seed Brian Gottfried against
title away. l'llplay as hard as Marty Riessen, No . 4
1 can."
Guillermo Vilas against Gene
Seventh seeded Romanian . Mayer, fifth sf!Med Manuel
Die Nastase, on his best Orantes against Fred Stolle,
behavior in an opening roWld ninth seeded Eddie Dibqs
victory, led off play on the against Fred McNair, No. 10
stadium court this morning seed pick Stockton against
against Corrado Barazzutti of John Alexander, and No. 12
Italy while nearby in the Harold Solomon against Paur
grandstand No. 14 seed Ken Gerken.
Rosewall was contending
Among the 20 seeded men
with hard-serving compatriot and women to play Thursday,
Phil Dent.
only one was beaten. Kristien .
Billie Jean King, a four- Shaw, the lith women 's seed
time U.S . Open champion and from New York, was
the only . ·seeded woman to eliminated by Romania's
receive a first round · bye, Florenta Mihai, 6-3, 6-2.
hegins play today against

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S-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., ~·naay,:.ep&lt;. ~. 1~11

Reedsville

••

••
••

••
•
•

••
••
•

•-

POMEROY -Miss Rebe&lt;.oca
Eliu.beth Roush and Lanny
Davtd Tyree exchanged wedding vows in an afternoon
ceremony on Aug. 14 at the
home of the bride's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush
Bailey RWl Road.
'
Mr. Dear! Porter officiated
at the double ring wedding at
3:30 perfonned beflll'e tall
standards of yellow blue and
pink
carnati~n
arrangements.
Given in marriage by her
parents, the bride was attired
in a floor length gown of sapphire blue polyester with an
overlay of blue and white
chiffon. The gown was
fashioned with long flowing
sleeves and a V-neckline, and
featured a softly gathered
white chiffon front panel
which extended from the
shoulder to the floor clinched
at the waist. She wore a white
picture hat lied wi th white
satin ribbon, and carried a
bouquet of miniature blue
and yellow carnations with
pink sweetheart roses and
greenery. The bouquet had
pink, blue ·and ye llow
streamers tied in lover's
knol.s.
The bride's only jewelry
was a two strand crystal bead
necklace belonging to the late
Mrs. Alta Miller, maternal
grandmother of the bride.
Miss Lisa Ann Prater of
Pomeroy was the bride's
maid of honor. She wore a
blue polyester gown in floral
design with white lace accent
trim. lt had a V-neckllne and
short sleeves. She ca rried a
bouquet of blue and yellow
miniature carnations and the
streamers in blue and yellow

On Certificates

Of Deposit
sl,OOO Minimum ·
1 Yr. Term

Meigs Co. Branch

.@

Gary at Valier, Montana .

RETURNING LETTERMEN - The Wahama High School football team has 22
returning lettennen this season. Shown,_front row, left to right: Kelvin Honaker, Phil
Hobbs, Rick Buzzard, David Elias, Tim Rawlings, David Roush, Rick Stafford and
Greg Blessing. Second row: Kevin Roush, Budd)' Rose, Kurt Sayre, Dwayne White,

Bobby Barnitz, Brei Holbrook, and Ted Swartz. Third row: Tim Rickard, Eric
Bumgardner, David Camp, Jack Smith, Ken Hankinson, Mike King and John Barton .
Shown in the back is Coaoh Marcus Rice.

-.,........

Wahama 's White Falcon football team.

'
.
. . ..

its tri-county neighbors when it .apens

'

.~,::..'
"" " '

her sister. Miss

gets a jump tonight of one week on

i

•..-.;....
.•.
........
.........
.·
'

.

;

.. t;
'
~

. at home in Mason ~·i•st
.

BEAUTIFUL DRIED

~.

'

. .

~ , .

~

..

in the action .-~ p~ It r'r&amp;-'ii ~:--·

... ,: .
::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:::;:::;:;~:;:;:;:;::: ;:;:;&lt;j.';~~:;:;:;:::;:;~::::::+:!;&lt;:-~-t.:• :.=.:=:=~:::::~=:
'
. '- . .
.

If ....

.

.. .

.

'

'

·'\

.j~:' :

Racine Social Events
Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. imd Mrs. Albert Hill were
Mr. and· Mrs. Billy Hill, Tim
and Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Hill, Mrs. Billy Hili Jr. and
· Brenda Lewis.
· Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill
spent a weekend in Columbus
with Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Foster.
Mr. · and Mrs . Steve
Badgley and Amy Jo of
Columbus came for the
weekend and Kelli' returned
with them after spending a
week with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badl,ey.
Mrs . Oma Hysell of ·
Syracuse spent Monday
· . afternoon· with Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
WEaver of Middletown spent
several days with his mother
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Johnson.
Dale Roush returned home
after spending several weeks
with his son and family, Mr.
and Mrs. David Roush in
Columbus.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hart and ·
Legina havemoved into their
home , the former Jed
Pickens farm. Mr. Hart
retired from the Navy June
29.
'
Weekend guests of REv.

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COACHES - Varsity football coaches at Wahama High School tHis season are left, Gordon
Spencer, and head coach, Marcus Rice. For Rice, thfs is his fourth year at the Falcon School.

for AUTUMN

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Naomi

School. Some fl{ ~. principel·~.

f. ' ''

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29 6 Second St .
Pomeroy , Oh1o

Wa,We High
. ..
..

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Th e Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan co .

Pickens at Portsmouth and

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They also visited in several
other western states.
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Jane and July,
spent several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Isaac Frydman of
Chicago, Ill.
Mrs. Walter Brown visited

·,,'.,, z'6J~, IJ
··(1It (~;: -.

and Mrs. Doo . WaJr.aor Nt
Mr. and Mrs. Johit WMliBI
and two children of Orville,
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Fitzwater and son of Glenville, W. Va., and Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Walker of Clay,
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Powell,
Mr. and Mrs. Austin Wolfe
and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Hill and family spent
several days at Marblehead,
Ohio, visiting Mrs. Powell's
brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Nelson. They

' :8" '! ·:; " .. , J( ..

'•''

Bri•g ""'
favorite container \ ,·
.~~
to Dudi!Y's. Our
ri · ~·,~':
experts will custom
design your arrangement.

visited many points Of in-

· 59 N. Second

St.

992·5560

•

t1/te It From Me,
SltJrl 'Em 1ounfl

•

were tied ill lover's knots.
Kenny Roush , brother of
the bride, was the best man
for the ~:room.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Roush wore a
street length dress in multi&lt;.'Oiored stripes and had a corsage of blue carnations. Miss
Deidre Tyree, sister of the
groom was in a white cotton
dress with embroidered
bodice and wore a white car·
nation corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was beld at the Roush
home immediately following
the wedding. The bride's
table featured a four tiered
wedding cake topped ·with the
traditional miniature bfide
and groom baked by an aunt
of the bride, Mrs. Garnet
Herdman of Leon, W. Va.
Blue, pink and yellow roses
trimmed the ca ke. The recepUon table decor also included
a vase of blue carnations with
two smaller side vases.
Presiding at the table were
Mrs. Judy Flowers, Columbus, sister of the bride, Mrs.
Janie Roush, sister-in-law of
lhe bride, Mrs. Herdman, and
Mrs. Gerry Kessi nger,
Pomeroy, sister of the bride.
They all wore corsages of
white carnations. All of the
flowers for the wedding were
designed by the bride's sister,
""'s. Kessinger.
Tbe couple now reside on

Batley Run Road, Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Tyree is a
graduate of Meigs High
&amp;:hool. Class of 1975. She is a
nlt!mber of Fti.:ncy-Bennell
Post 128, American I.egion
Auxiliary, and is employed at
Dudley Florists in Middleport.
The groom attended
Pomeroy schools and served
in the U. S. Air Force with a
tour of duty in Vietnam. He is
a member of Feeney~Benne.tt

Post 128, American l.egion,
and is employed in
theLeading Creek Conservaton District.
Guests at the wedding and
reception were Mrs. Gerry

Kessinger, Kim • and Lois
·Ann, Pomeroy; Kevin cmd
Christi Smith, Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Flowers, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
W. Roush and Doug, Grove
City; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Miller, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. John R. Miller,
Rosemary and John,
Newburgh, Ind.; Mrs. Garnet
Herdman, Leon, W. Va.; Mrs.
(1-!ildred Meade and Brian,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Miller and Melissa,
Leon, W. Va.; Deidre Tyree,
Middleport; Kathy, David
Lee and Heather Mitchell,
Middleport; Arnold Priddy,
Middleport ; Tammy and
Johnny Blake, Middleport,
and Mrs. Dear! Porter.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

!ltj("('~ ·

Social
Calendar

Choose from
an outstanding
selection of
1. dried materials.

"'"'llt~~
'"' "' ::;~~

terest and there and also
en route.

Miss Fultz weds

Coupk weds in afternoon ceremony

Mr and Mrs. Steve Cowdery
and son at Chillioothe.
Mrs. Harold Sauer of
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wtlson Mtddleport RD vi ited with
visited wtth Mr. and Mrs. Mn. Galdys Williams and
fanuly Tuesday evening.
Gail Sams at Kent, W. Va.
- Mrs. Lyle Balderson
Mrs. Dale Smith has been a
patient at University Hospital
in Columbus.
Recent vtsitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin Jr. and
sons were Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Martin Sr. and David and
Linda of Manakin-Sabot, Va.,
U. and Mrs. Michael Boring
of Syracuse, N. Y. and Mr.
INTEREST
and Mrs. Grant Boring .
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Reed and family
were Mr. and Mrs. •Roy
Coleman of Selina, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Henderson of Savannah, Tenn .,
Mrs. Gladys Meredith or
Bevly, Ohio, Mrs . Fay Sauer
of Middleport and Mrs. Grace
Weber of Reedsville visited
Ntnely day interest penally
with Mr. and Mrs. Earl it wtthdrawn
befor
. Henderson of Wheeling, W. matunfy date .
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Mauri ce Reed
and Brian visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Barnhart and

Yellowed floor could be wax

)
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;:;

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w

Mr. and Mrs. Lanny
w······ .. w···w.w"
....,~~.~.:~.~.:.~:.....:,.:.....:..........•»;

St. J"""ph O.thedral, , I;&lt;JI·
Grandmllthers and godumbus, was the settinl.( fur mothers presented flowers
the Saturday, Sept.l wedding were Mrs. Eddith Fultz,
of Mtss Patricia A. Fultz, Col- Athens, the bride's grandumbus, daughter of Mr. and mother; Mrs. Angeline
Mrs. l.eslie F. Fultz. UO High F'erberdino, AJ;htabula, the
St., Pomeroy, and Alfred J . groom's grandmother; and
F'erber4ino, Columbus, son of Mrs. Charles Guse, WilmMr. and Mrs. Alfred M. ington, 111., the groom's god·
Ferberdino, Ashtabula.
mother.
The Rev . Fr. George W.
A reception honoring the
Jooes officiated at the nuptial ·couple was held from 2 to 4
mass for the double ring p.m. at The Christopher Inn,
ceremony. Organist' was Columbus.
Gregory Luckhaupt, Col um·
The brde attended Ohio
bus.
Northern University, where
For her wedding, the bride she was affiliated wfth Alpha
chose an ivory stain empire Oelta Sorority . She
style gown with accents of graduated from the Akron
embroidered lace on the · General Hospital School of
yoke, c-ollar and sleeve edges. Cytotechnology and is curHer headpiece·consisted of an· : rently employed as a staff
ivory satin Juliet cap covered cytotechnologist at Brown
by a veil of embroidered lace. Laboratories, Columbus.
The gown was designed and
The groom attended Ohio
created by Mrs. Thomas H. State University and was
Becker of Johnstown, sister graduated from Kent State
of
the bride, and worn on her University in mechanical
Tyree
own wedding day. Mrs. engineering technology and
Becker was matron of honor 'industrial management. He is
5:.' ~-... for her sister, and wore an currently employed as

Helen Help

uS • • •

0

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By Helen Hottel

apricot
gown featuring
white Metal
mechanical
engineer
lace overlay
on the bodice
Forge Co.;
Columbus.at
and edging on the sleeves and
The couple is residing .at
ON VACATION
wide cummerbund.
1211-C Lake Shore Drive, ColMrs. C. E. Stout and Bonnie
. . Best man was Richard umbus, 43204. Mr. and Mrs. Allen spent a week with Dr.
Giancola, Elk Grove Village, · Fultz were in Columbus for P. D. Jagers and family in
::,: Ill. , cousin of the groom.
the wedding.
Florida.
.

'*

Job Brings Out Worst In 111m
Dear Helen :
Shortly after Evan and.I were married, he lost his job. ~or
the first two months, I was our sole support, but I didn't mind
because he was the best husband imaginable. He kept our
apartment clean, cooked, even brought me wann water for my
sore feet every night. .
Then he went job hunting, going from one to anotber. AI;
soon as I thought he was settled, he'dquit.
During this time he became very kingly and violent. He
insisted I should get up at 5 a .m., fix breakfast, get him up for
work, iron his clothes and style his hair.
Then I had to rush straight home from my office, do all the
\Jousework and be ready to jump at his command. He'd bruise
me up and break things if I protested. It got so I had to ask
permission Ill just kiss him good night. Said I made him feel
trapped .
He left me ten dsys ago in the middle of the night (after
nine months of marriage ). What should I do? - LONELY BUT
SORT OF REUEVED

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vincent Knight and daughter,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
·
Carolyn
Miller, Charles
ADMITTED Adam
Myers,
Nettie
Queen, Lance
Collins, Pomeroy ; Anton
Reese,
Mrs.
Martin
IU!ynolds
Liter, Long Bottom; Edna .
and
son,
Timothy
Staten.
Shields, Racine; Shrley
(Births Aug. 30)
Bishop, Rutland ; Lisa
Mr.
and Mrs. Fred CarJohnston, Ewington.
penter,
a son, Oak Hill; Mr .
DISCHARGED
Etta
Will , Elba Bing, Winnie and Mrs. James Cash, a
Dailey, Teresa Riffle, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and ·
Clarence Hughes, Bertha Mrs. Charles Van Meter, a
Zamorano, Mary Howell, daughter, Clifton; Mr. and
Roger Brauer, Sr., Eleln Mrs. Gerald Lanham, a
daughter, Jackson.
R JOHNS
Stewart.
IDischarges, Aug. 31)
'
CLASSIC.
John Brumfield, Kristin
PLEASANT VALLEY
Call, Mrs. Ray Chapman, and
THE PRIDE OF
DISCHARGED - Mrs. daughter, Andrea Cleland,
Wayne Gibson, Pl. Pleasant; · Bertha Craig, Karla Davis,
DIAMONDS AT
Nancy Bowen, Ashton ; Kathleen Davis, Sarah Elias, NO E.X TRA cos·T.
George Hunt, Pl. Pleasant; Rena Halley, Evelyn Jeffers,
Ella Henry, oak Hill, 0 .; Joyce Knotts, Mrs. Richard in a class by itself, rhi s boldl y
Mrs. Wendell Barker, West Kuhn and son, Doris Lillico, advanced design is made umq"ue! y
.Columbia ; Charles Redman, Gladys Myers, Peggy you1s by tht' se.lection of genuine
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Allen Reynolds, Geraldine Sch- dtamnnJ or gemstone of your &lt;:hoice
Yonker, Rodney, O.; Terry wanger, Pamela Smith, - wit hour t'Xt r d cost .
Bonecutter, Pt . Pleasant; Dennis Sorrell, Hobart Fashioned ui superla t ive whi te
Mrs. Franklin Thornton, Stanley, Mrs. Robert Stewart Va\a dium,. to be the rin~:: of a
Leon; Mrs. John Lambert, and daughter, Brent Tackett, .liferime .
Middleport; Mrs . Jack Mrs. Earl Thomas and If the rin~ standli out , it's an R. Johns.
Young, Clifton; Catherine daughter, Malanie Triplett,
Pierce, New Haven; Darrell Theresa Trlsch, Cozette
Black, Henderson.
Walker, Ruth Walker,
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs. William .Whealdon, Nina
Robert Casto, a son, Bidwell. Wolfor-d.
(Jllrtbs, Aug: 31)
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Allen, a daughter, Racine;
Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Van .
Holzer Medical Center
Meter,
a son, Mason, W. Va. - - - - - -- - - - -(Discharges Aug. 30)
Donna Callicoat, Fonna
Culleums, Lydia Davis,
Bruce Dray, Raymond
Frisby, Emma Hammond,
Donna Harless, Larry
Harmon, Don Hemsworth,
Mrs. James Jones and son,
Martha Kendrick, Mrs .

POLLY'SPROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have
DEAR POLLY - I would another answer for the other
like to know how to clean a Dorothy who wanted to know
velvet chair and also how to how to make zippers work
get yellow from a linoleum easier. A silicone spray that
floor. Thank you. -MRS. has numerous and varied Dear Lonely :
FRIDAY
G.W.
uses works very well on such
Give three rou:!lng cheers! - H.
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
DEAR MRS. G.W. - The zippers. -DOROTHY.
+++
at Rock Springs Grange hall.
yellow on your linoleum floor . . DEAR . POLLY -:- To keep Dear Helen:
Meigs will host the Gallia
may be ll wax buildup so I Zippers m ltp-top condtttOn
There's a new game in the lobby of one of our theatres. It's
County Pomona Grange
suggest that you remove the place a drop of sewing called "Death Race," and my question is, how depraved can
members who will present
wax to see if that is all it is machine oil on the top center we Americans get?
,
the program. National and
and then re-wax. A bit further of the zipper, slide it up and
You put in your quarter, then run down all the pedestrians
state contest.s will be held and
on you will read an answer down a few timesand you will
the subordinate granges are . concerning your chair. _ fmd 1t works easter and lasts you can hit with your ''car" for the next minute. Each time you
zap another one, there's a simulated shriek and a grave
reminded to take three pies,
POLLy.
longer. This is especially marker
appears on the screen.
two dozen sandwiches, and a
DEAR POLLY- My three- helpful with the zippers on
Little
kids love it. What next! - SIJOCKED
beverage.
year-old light blue velvet sofa heavy wmter Jackets .
and chair are soiled (no · -SARAH.
SATURDAY
Dear Shocked :
stains
or spots) and the cost
DEAR POLLY -There are ·
DAN IJA YMAN and the
This miserable game, I Wlderstand, is considered the
Country Hynintimers will be of a professional cleaning job only two people at our house greatest thing since popcorn by the amusement industry. It's a
at the Rutland Free Will is prohibitive, but all the who eat sweel.s so afte~ bak- top moneymaker, see.
Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m. upholstery cleaning products mg a cake and frostmg 1tl cut
The National Safety Collrtcil tenns it "insidious, morbid,"
Saturday for a' hymn sing. on the mari(et have the warn- the enhre cake m shces. Two · and "sick, sick, sick." So do I!
ing that they are not to be us- slices are held out for the day
The public is invited.
What next? Maybe a pleasant little electronic war game
ed
on velvet. Any sugges- the cake is baked and the rest using civilians as targets: players could eatn one point each
BASEMENT Sale Saturday tions?
- DORIS.
IS wrapped m packages for
time they zap an able-bodied man; two for killing elderly
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the
DEAR
DORIS
and
MRS.
freezing with two slices to the people; three for women, and four for children ; with a dollop of
auditorium at the Sacred
Heart Church. There will be a G.W. - Furniture covered package. That way we rape and pillage thrown in Ill liven up the screen .
variety of merchandise in- with velvet should be cleaned always have a variety and not
Yecht!- IJ.
+++
cluding houSehold items and professionally ·and in the a crumb is wasted. -MRS.
. Dear Helen :
cleaner's own workshop as L.Y.
clothing for children.
they use cleaning agents that . DEAR POLLY - At this
Those in favor of interracial dating imply prejudice if you
SUNI)AY
cannot
be safely · used at ltme of the year the ants prefer not to. Rather, it's a matter of personal choice.
HOMECOMING Sunday at .
Dating often leads to marriage, and such marriages are
Freedom Gospel Mission, home. Sorry but I have not begin to visit many of our
.been
able
to
get
any
enh?mes
but
it
is
real!~
very
usually
unhappy for everyone concerned.
Bald Knobs with all day
information
consunple
to
scatter
t~em.
I
fmd
couraging
.
The
desire to maintain and reinforce continuity with one's
services. Sunday School at
cerning
doing
this
at
home.
they
will
go
away
1f
the
peelhistorical, religious and ethn~ltural roots is not prejudice,
9:30 a.m. Basket dinner at POLLY.
mgs from a cucumber are so long as one does-not interfere with the rights of others to
noon. Afternoon' services at
DEAR POLLY - I would placed where you see the marry as they please. Prefer~nce is not prejudice.
1:30 p.m. Speaker will be 0.
like
to pass on my discovery ants. _I have tried ';hi• and ANOTHER VIEWPOINT
.
.
G. McKinney. There will be
RETURN HOME
that
might help others who know tt works. (Polly s notededication
of
new
Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Gilmore,
break
out
in
a
rash
whenever
I
have
left
the
cucumber
classrooms. Special singing.
they
wear
jewelry.
Coat
the rinds until they were quite
daughter,
Shannon, have
Public invited.
returned
to
their home at
back side of the ring dry.)-IVA '
OURS Family reunion bracelet , necklace 0 ;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Mullen ing, Joni Hoffman, Flo Lake Villa, Ill. after visiting
Polly y;m send you one of
Sunday at Rock Springs whatever with a thin layer of her signed thank-you hosted a social for the Sew- . Strickland, Martha Hoffman, here with their parents, Mr .
Fairgrounds; basket dinner clear fingernail polish. Do. newspaper coupon clippers tf RiteSewing Club at the home andEvelynGiimore.
and Mrs. Elza Gilmore and
at I p.in.
·
this every month or so and J she uses your favonte of Dr. and Mrs. R. R.
Mrs. Browning will be the Mr. and Mrs. Gardner
BLACK LUNG Association do not think that rash will Pointer, Peeve or Problem in Pickens.
Wehrung.
next hostess .
meeting I p.m. Sunday, bother you any more: - · her column. Write POLLYS
Held at pool,side, the group
Forest Acres .Park shetlered CVNTIJIA.
POINTERS -- in care of this enjoyed a. cookout and
3; opened to everyone. Trip to
newspaper.
potluck dinner before swimWashington,· D.C. being
ming. Attending were Mr.
planned.
and Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mr.
VICTOR C. Young, Jr.,
and Mrs. Edward Wells, Mr.
The 12th annual Bolen reu- 1978 reunion was set for ihe . and Mrs. Don Collfns, Mr.
rirst family reunion SWlday
at 742 E. Main St., Pomeroy nion was held recently at fourth SWlday of August at and Mrs. Larry Wehrung,
with a I p.m. buffet IWlcheon. Lake Alma. Attending were Lake Alma.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald BrownCANDIES and FOODS
•)
Youngs also will observe the d~scendants. of Ernest
and
Mary
Caster
Bolen.
their 29th wedding anAt the reunion were Mr.
PA.
niversary with a party given
by their children. Relatives and Mrs. Grover Stout, Mrs.
MT. HOLLY SPRINGS, PA. 170U
C. E. Stout, Mr. and Mrs.
and friends invited.
Jack Bolen, Greg Bolen, TimMONDAY
CHI.C KEN Barbecue my and Patty Casto, Bruce
Monday at Chester Fire · and Boyd Allen, Mr. and Mrs.
· House. Tractor pull at 10 Bernard Allen and Jill, Mr.
a.m., dinner at 11, parade at and Mrs. Keith Weaver and
I. Games will be played in Dee, Bonnie and Judy A)len,
Luke and Steve Brooks, Tamafternoon.
my
Beard, Rickey Bolen, Mr.
THE Southern Athletic
and
Mrs. Richard Brock and
Boosters will meet Thursday
Doug,
Mr. and Mrs. Max
at '7:30 p.m. at the high
Bolen,
Mr.
and Mrs. Jimior
school.
RACINE Chapter, Order of Wogan and Mark, Mrs. Linda
Eastern · Star, regular Dixon and Jeffand -Kory, Mr.
meeting 7:30 p.m. Monday. and Mrs. Austin Wogan. The
Initiation has been cancelled
and will be held at a special
meeting to be announced.

Mulk.ns host poolside social

A thought for the day:
American Gen . Douglas
MacArthur said, "II is fatal .
to enter any war without the
will to win it. "

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TESSIE BRADSHAW
CELEBRATING
Tessie Lynn Bradshaw, ·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur
Bradshaw
Pomeroy, will celebrate'
her third birthday Monday.
She is the grandchild ol Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Bradshaw, Porneroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Bernard Neutzl·
ing, Mason, w. Va.

CUfiO

ches[ .
.: .. -

~-.._.~(1;2 ~~-·. . . . . . _

Bolen family reunion held

~nsl)lvania..Amish
AMISH co.

"WORKS-IN-A-DRAWER"

.(&gt;
:
WAHAMA CAPTAINS - Captains of the 1977·78 Wahama High School football squad are, left to
nght, Dwayne Wh1te, Bret Holbrook, and Greg Blessmg. All three ca ptains are seniors.
·

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FOAM BOARD

r--

Available in 4 Sizes ·

,,
4 ,..................... ; '3.60

~

All in 4 x 8 sheets
DISCOUNTS AVAILABL6 FOR CASH
AND QUANTITY PURCHASES

BAUM ~RUE VALUE
·~

WlsheJ to Announce the

R~locatlo

.

2"........................ '9.60
1'' ...................... '4.80
1 %'.'................. , '7.20
... .

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
PODIATRIST
of ills OHice '

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE

.
RT.' 2:· NORTH
'"t

PARKERSBURG', WEST VIRGINIA
'

' '

HOURS 8Y, APP.OINTMENT

'

4

CHESTER, 0.

..-~'

'",A.....

PHONE (304) 4~

Give Calves The Head Start
Of A Good Nutrition Plan
Strong well-fed calves ha,•e a better
chance of becoming healthy milk-pro- ·
ducing adults. It is our privilege to
work ~ith and for· the dairymen by
supplying them with ()Uality feeds tp
meet all their needs. Wr owe them
our thanks for· a joh well done!

SUGAR RUN MILlS
180 MULBERRY AVl

~

POMEROY, yO.

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TUESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7:45 Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .

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THURSDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boollten '!bunday, 7:30p.m.
at high school.

REUNION SET
The annual reunion of the
descendants of Abraham
and Mary Will Bahr will be
held SWlday at the sht!lter
house at !he South Bethel
United Methodist Church
oo Silver Ridge. ·There will
be a basket dinner at noon.
Relatives and friends of the
family are invil,ed to at·
tend.

sit charmingly on three glass !'nclosed di splay
shelves. four center-guided drawers, handsomely
hardwared, provipe lots of storage space. Above,
a surprise! .6.n an tique-look drop-lid desk. Sure to
lend enchantment to livingroom, study or t)edroom.
In while finish with gold trim 35" x 16"x 44" high.

25" diagonal "Works In a Drawer" Color
TV. "Super lnsta -Matic" Color Tuning.
Matrix Plus Picture Tube. 'j Country Style"
cabinet design.
Instant Picture and Sound.

INGELS FURNITURE

You'll Find A Fine Selection of Candies AI

Middleport Book,Store
99 Mill St.

ft

The accent's Pn nostalgia. But, look again,
H's eyer so functional! While your curios ·

Middleport,

.

..

o.

106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport; 0.

�•

Women want big busts,

wear childish clothes
By ROSEMARY AJtMAO

COLUMBUS (UPI ) -Case
We s tern Reserve
communications

student

Judith Reisman has asked
about
400
supposedly
· liberated women if they read
Playboy
or
Hustler
magazines - and what size
bust they wish they had.
The "'frightening" results
said Ms.. Reisman, 43, who is
writing a dissertation on the
impact ·of the " Playboy
Genre" on the American
female image, have made her

a soldier in Mayor Ralph
Perk's city-wide anti-smut
campaign in Cleveland.
"Women want bigger busts
and smaller waists," said Ms.
Reisman in a telephone interview from her Cleveland
home. Regardless of age,
marital status , oocupation or

religion, that's how they want
to look. "Where in blazes do
they gel"such an idea?"
The mother of four
daughters
·says
this
American ideal of beauty is
corning from Playboy and

more than 20 soft core
pornographic magazines like
it. JUustrative issues and
slides fill her wbrk area at
home.
'"It 's really frightening .·
Look at the big fashion news
this winter. It's ankle socks
and patent leather shoes. An
adult in childish clothes. That
comes oul

or the new

emphasis
on
child
pornography in
these .
magazines . And stockings
are getting popular. Not
pa ntyhose ,
ll u t

stockings ... like in centerfolds. "
" Why ?," she asks again. H[

think it's because women
want men to love them. If
they think men want pure
little ladies with high button
shirts, fine. U they think men
want bunnies, fine too.
Women want to be adored."
Through interviews and

questionnaires handed out
earlier this summer at the
lnternatiolllil Women's Year
convention in Columbus, Ms.
Reisman has polled about 400

PAUPER'S OATH
WAHSINGTON (UP! )
Sl
Watergate burglar G. Gordon
Liddy ~ay have to take a
ffl
'
pauper s oath when he goes
,
before a U. S. magistrate
next Tuesday to clear the way
for his parole the next day. By DICK WEST
Liddy can be paroled only if
WASHJNGTON (UP!) he can make satisfactory ' Pundits are saying President
arrangements to handle the Carter will have to do a
$40,000 fine at a hearing in the tremendoUs "selling job" to
U. S. District Court at get the Panama Canal
Williamsport, Pa . Since treaty approved.
Liddy has served 33 months
If thst sounds familiar,
in prison and is believed to there's reason for it. Not very
owe hundreds of thousands of lorig ago they were saying the
dollars in legal fees, a same thing about Carter's
pauper's oath is considered energy program.
likely.
Since it's pretty hard to run
two selling fobs at onp!, I got
to thinking that maybe Carter
should combine the canal
issue with the energy crisis.
Certainly some of the argning Church of Christ.
ments and admonitions used
Friends and relatives are to
promote
energy
cordially invited to call dur- conservation could be applied
ing the open house hours. Mr. with equal force to the
and Mrs. Fortney request Panama issue.
callers not bring gifts.
Everyone agrees the main
thing wrong with the Panama
Canal is that it is located in a
foreign country. Critics of the
proposed treaty point out that
if the ·United States
relinquishes operating rights, ·
we will then he almost totally

A erzca
•
needs more ditches

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williamson of
Salem St.! Rutland, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marnage of their daughter Debra Joyce to
Duane Ke~eth McLaughlin, son of Mr . .:Oct Mrs. Kenn~th
Mc~ughlin, Chester Road, Pomeroy. The invitational
wedding will be an event of Oct. 15 at2 p.m. at the Rutland
Umted Methodist Church with a reception to be held in the
ct:'urch social room. Officiating will be the Rev. Wilbur
Hilt, Rutland, and the Rev .. W. H. Perrin, Pomeroy Trinity
Church. The bnde~lect IS a graduate of Meigs lftgh
School, class of 1977. Mr. McLaughlin is also a 1977
graduate of Meigs lfigh School and is serving in the u s
Navy.
· ·

Anniversary celebration planned
LITTLE HOCKJNG-Mr.

Wayne (Christine) Lyons,
Torch. They have 19 grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Fortney are
members of the Little Hock-

dependent on foreign canals. United States has a shortage
Oh, sure, we would still of canal sites are misleading.
have a token capacity - the It's more of a case of canal
New York State Barge Canal, . diggers holding back hoping
the Chicago Sanity and Ship for more favorable economic
Canal, etc. But even some of conditions.
our domestic canals, such as
Let Congress provide a few
those in the Great Lakes tax breaks or other incentives
area, involve Canadian and you can bet thsl plenty of
interests.
new canal sites would be
Should there be a foreign discovered and developed.
embargo, America would he
Maybe we don't have an
up the creek canal-wise. So · isthmus that compares with
Carter's course is clear.
Panama, but we do have a
His campaign to win perfectly good peninsula. And
approval of the Panama while digging a canal across
treaty should be coupled with F1orida might have certain
a drive to make the United geographical deficjencies,
States self-sufficient in symbolically it would show
canals.
thai.Carter was serious about
At one time, U.S. canal reducing our dependence on
production was booming . foreign canals.
Canal digging . in the eastern
Later, we could add a canal
part of the country was well across Wy!IT!ing, a canal
advanced and the diggers across Arkansas, and so on
were steadily pushing west. until one day ...
But then the railroads
Well, I don't know what the
came along, and canal- canal diggers' equivalent of a
digging went into a slump golden spike would be, but the
from .which it never 'east-west link-up truly would
recovered.Haditnotbeenfor be-a great day for America.
that, we surely would have
had .a coast-to-&lt;:oast canal
network by now. And the
OFFICER HACKETr
WEST SPRINGFIELD, · Panama Canal wouldn't have
Mass. (UP! ) - The man much mattered.
It's.not too late to revive the
answering complaint calls
transcontinental
canal
with West Springfield police
concept.
Reports
that
the
this week doesn't just look
like comedian Buddy Hackett
- he. is Hackett. The portly
comedian, a former Fort Lee,
N. J ., policeman. says he
visjls police departments as
his act takes him around the
country. He celebrated his
53rd birthday at t)le station
Wednesday night.

and Mrs. William J . Fortney
of Little Hocking will be
honored by their children and
their families with an open
house reception in observance of the couple's golden
wedding anniversary Sunday
from 2 to 5 p.m. at the home
of their. daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. B. L.
McKnight. .
The Mc;Knight home is
located on State Route 7,
about a mile south of U. S. 50
at Coolville. The Fortneys
were married on Sept. 10, 1927
at Munday, W. Va. by the ·
Rev. Ad Harruner of MacFacFarlan, W.Va.
-~She is ·the former Mae
. fl. .
Roberts, daughter of the late
Carrie and Albert G. Roberts
of Macfarlan, W. Va. Mr.
Fortney is the son of the late
Bessie .and Ross .J&gt;ortney of
Macfarlan and was employed
as an oil field worker, retiring
Mr. and Mrs. William Fortney
in 1969 from the Preston Oil
· Co. They are the parents oi
five children' Mrs: B. L.
(·Evajean) McKnight,
Coolville;
Robert ,
Now you know
Reedsville; Mrs. David (BetMrs. Dale Walburn, Robert G. Clarke, Jr., and . The oldest known surviving
ty ) · Ross, Middleport; daughter, Jill, and Becky son, Gregory, Columbus, theater ticket is a metal ·disc
Willard, Warsaw; and Mrs. Fultz accompanied MrS. Amy Ind.; Mrs. Mike ·Boggess, admitting one person to a
flumphreys
to Richmond, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. performance In Rome's
Fredericksb"urg, Va. for the Leigh Shephard and Clarke Colosseum in A.D. 90.
wedding and dinner-dance and Austin, Charleston, W.
reception of Marianne Teresa , Va.; Mrs. Alice Humphreys
Albers,
daughter of Dr. and and Mrs. J;'hylis Ashley, New
New
Mrs. Williani Albers, Alexan- Haven, w·. Va.
dria, Va. to William Clarke
A family breakfast was
_ Forbes, son of Mr. and Mrs. held on Sunday morning at. William Forbes, of tended by all of tt\e relatives
except the bride and groom.
Charleston, W.Va.
Other members of Mrs.
William Clarke Forbes is
Walburn's family reuniting the grandson of the late Mr.
P. 0. BOX 295
· BELPRE, OHIO 45714
for her nephew's wedding and Mrs. Robert G. Clarke,
were Attorney and Mrs. Sr.oftheNewHavenarea.
This new school is a ministry of

"'

HAVE A
PROBLEM?
CALl
CRISISUNE

Mrs. Walburn attends wedding

992-5554

club will

FREEDOM CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL

help orient

new foreigners

·RIO GRANDE - An
International Club" has
been formed at Rio Grande
College and Community
College to help 15 new foreign
students become involved in
college life on a southeastern
Ohio campus.
The students, from Iran,
Nigeria, Quwail and India,
will be attending Rio Grande
this fall and the International
Club says they're looking for
area families who would like
to help by acting as host
families for the students.
Those intere~ are invited to . a potluck dinner
Saturday, September 17, 6:30
p.m. in the campus dining
hall to find out more about the
program. Host families will
be asked to entertain students
during holidays, school
,vacation breaks and at other
•appropriate times.
11

!

" We're

seeking families

:w11c1 simply want to share
as
ltheir
experiences
:Americans as well as learn
- ;ttom the students,u one club

;member said.
.
, The International Club is
;aploring · several ways of
' helping the students adjust to
!campus life including of!fering a special class,
•"English as a Second
'
•Language,"
for all nonrEnglish speaking students,
1and providing upper-class
•students as escorts during the
week of school.
• People intereated in more
: information, or Jfho want to
·: serve u bost families, may
· caD Rio Grande CoUege at

:first

245-6311.

•

Southern band competing in

the First Baptist Church of Belpre.

NEfll
HALF

RIO

GRANDE
lieg!Jtratlon for tau quarter
at Rio Gr~ COtlege and
Community Collqe will be
held Tuesday, ~ember 6,
with cl··- . . to begin
September 7. A record
woUmenl of al leaat 1,100
ltudents Is expected. The
frelhman class of il2S will be
the Jargelt In the school's 101
year history according to the
Office of Admissions and

ROYAL CROWN
BOffiiNG COMPANY

aecoros.

College officials announced
a new registration proeedure
thla year to help students get
through the process quicker
and more efficiently. All
•f'e81stratlon a"'ivity will be m
;Lyne Center beginning at 9

'a.m.

~

Time for registration is
assiiUied accordin~ to the

A New Horse Wormer

~

RACINE - Southern lfigh
School's 88-member band,
under the direction of Jess W.
Browning, will compete Sept.
10 with six other · Class A
bands in Marietta, Ohio's 16th
aMual Band.Q..Rama.
The other Class A bands
will be the Shenandoah High
School Band from Sarahsville, Ohio, Deno Capello,
director; trimble Local High
School Band, Glouster,

00\:KER MIBSING

MEXICO CITY (UPI)
British rock star"Joe Cocker
has mysteriously disappeared ii\ Maict\ City after
U; 'S. Immigration officials
refused him entrance into the
'Unite\! , States ·Tuesday
because he did not have a
proper visa and shipped him
back to Mexico.

Clifford Rowe, director;
Waharrui lfigh School Band,
Mason, W.Va., Chuck Yeago,
director ; Paden City High ,
School Band, Paden City, W.
Va., R. E. Hood, director;
Fort Frye High School Band
from Beverly, Ohio, Greg
Ring, director, and the
Millersport High School
Band, Millersport, Ohio,
Marlowe Brainard, director.
Also registered in the BandD-Rama are 10 Class AA
bands (Including Point
Pleasant) and four open class
bands.

Q&amp;A

J.
Now you can worm even the most finicky horse In
30 seconds with new Equivet-Tz, or your money
back! ... Farnam guarantees It! Come In and see this
revolutionary new way to worm your horses faster ..-.

easier ... effectively! Buy new Equivet·Tz for your

horses ... Today!
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MODERN SUPPLY
399 West

Main Street
992-2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
The Slore Wilh "All Kinds of Sluff"
FOR PETS · STABLES . LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS. LAWNS . GARDENS.

Don Oakley
Smut crackdown is
actually backfiring
.,. , Doll OUief

"' Q8e of the least persuasive arguments some people have ad-

THE. DAILY SENTINEL

FOR ONLY ·

'17.50
ntEY WIU. RECEIVE
9 MONntS OF
ntE HOMETOWN

bring you

extra cash

tor
shoppina

sprus

United States

OFFER EXPIRES
SEPTEMBER 30, 1977

•

GASOLINE PAYOFF
August gasoline tall checks
totaling . $5,121,579 were
distributed by State Auditor
'lbomaa E. FergUBQn's office
to Ohio counties, townships,
• dtla and villages: Amounts
· received by Meigs County
ommunltles Include Mid-dleport, $2,180; Pomeroy,
~h,301;
Racine,
$800;
Ratland, $531, and Syracuse,
$781, a totil of. ~.293. ·

.

SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 3RD

UNTIL 4 PM

LABORERS UNION
LOCAL NO. 1353
CHARLESTON

Shows &amp; Fireworks- Sundi!y .i!nd Li!bor Oily

CAMDEN PARK

Sh•

ME Church and Patriot

Grange.
Funeral services will be

Ira

Zickefoose,

78,

Pomeroy , died Thursday in
Dayton. l-ie Is survived by his
wife, Louise . Funeral ser·

Otairpersons

be in Beech Grove Cemetery .

are appointed

R••·
officiating . Burial wilt

w~rth

Friends may call ~t anytime .

Four residents have been
named chairpersons il' the
Central Ohio Chapter of the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
Breath of Life campaign.
DEARBORN, Mich. ( UPI) indicated Ford was aware of
They are Beth Theiss,
- Heru-y Ford ll conceded the problem since 1972.
Racine; Mrs. Ruby Mar,
Ford announced June 3 it Hemlock Grove; Mrs .
Thursday his firm acted too
slowly in recalling 424,000 of would recall the 424,000 Howard Birchfield, Rutland,
its 1972-model cars after vehicles and replace the and Mrs. Donna Lavender,
learning they contained a engine cooling fans after an Middleport. The campaign is
serious safety hazard that investigation had been conducted in 40 counties In
caused at least one death.
launched by the NHTSA. central Ohio. Proceeds go to
The Ford Motor Co. Another 6 milliog cars in the research, care and education
chairman
said,
"It's 1972throughl976modelyears which benefits millions of
regrettable that we didn 't get could still be involved.
children who have lungon this sooner.
"We don't want any damaging dlseases.
"We just made a mistake products out there that are
and we just don't have any not properly built or properly

Ford too slow

excuses why it

wasn'~

done

.

ftlll

'

.

'I

~

"

1

.....1;1

'
'1
··········••~t••············~··············••'••i·•···········

.

('!r

• •r• ''''/" ,.,

AOOIIESS ...................................'............, .. . ,.... •:- ~ .... .r
. ·•.J· .:. :l
CITY .............................•..••••........•.•••..•
f:

.

•

~

.

state :.\UdltOt Thonlas E.
,, FeriUIIJII'I offlee bas an-

...

,,

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,~~·~··~

STAl'E •••••••••••.•..••••••·•••••••••••• ZIP CODE •••••••••••••••:
[l CHECI(...... ..... [liiOIEY

'

; no!lnced . September
. distribution of $35,483,332 in
·.:. ~ to DejJenil~ Children to
, •n ,na recipients ·In il
_,:&lt;:ouatiea.· (Jf the &amp;otill Meigs
,. County rec:elved f$7,204 for
Ill [IM'ttclplllltl In the

;.. Pl"OIJ'IID.
' , II

' •

drive planned

RI.DENOUR'S

N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

engineerd and if they're not

earlier," Ford told a national ' right we're going to do
news preview of the finn's

something to correct them,"

197S.modef cars.
The delay ultimately led to
one death and 11 injuries
from defective engine cooling
fan blades on 1?"/2 Ford ·
Torinos, Mercury Montegos
and Lincolns equipped with
air conditioning.
The Detroit Free Press
reported a check of
~overnment
records ·

the Ford chairman said. "In
a vehicle that has 15,000
separate pices, you are going
to find certam things that are
going to go wrong from time

FILM"COMING
SYRACUSE - A film,
"The Gospel Road" will be
shown at the Asbury United
Methodist Church at 2:30
p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 11.
The film is a blend of
scripture-based narrative,
specially written songs and a
series of in-&lt;lepth character
portrayals. The film depicts
the higlT!y charged emotional
impact of , the trial before
Pilate and the suffering of
Christ, played by Robert
Elfstron, during the physical
attack
preceding
the
crucifixion. Johnny Cash and
other nationally ·. known
musicians provide music.
The film is free and the public
is invited. A frel&gt;'will offering
will he accepted for the Billy
Graham Association.

DIVORCE ASKED
·In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Gary Lee
Cremeans, Rt. 1, Rutland,
has fUed suit for divorce from
.Janet Creme.ans, Rt. 1,
Rutland. A judgment asking
$869 was filed by Lawrence
Groggel., Rt. 1, Portland
from Charles McGraw, RD,
Racine, as the result of the
presence of a Black Angus
cow on the highway on SR 124
in Syracuse on Dec. 4, 1976
which plaintiff alleges caused
him to swerve to miss the
cow, and causing damage to
his vehucle.

to time.

"People are human and
mistakes are made. We're
never going to be perfect.
We're always going to make
mistakes.

•

Now Admiral gives you the exclusive new Era II Color System,
television's first 100% Modular Solid State System. With. a
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. ~t I~ .~rig~ test and richest with Color Master IT single-control,
, color tuning. "Equal Ease" tuning with your choice of lighted
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eDRMS TO SUITE YOUf IUDGn

. ,: GENERAL ACCOUNTING FUNDAMENTALS (5) An accounting
business activities including those of management,
,course . for non-business-non-accounting_ students. The . , ~arketi~~ andm accoMu~tding.
COIHSe inclUdes the baSIC fmanc1al recordmg and report10g ,.;: ~m~ . be
O ayS and Wednesdays, beginning :

9

2

r .,

process _and managerial accounUng with a decision making · Copt"e$~ r(ID)
Location : First National Bank .
emphas1s.
s·
Instructor: Bernard Goldstayn
Class Limit: 25
, Time : 6-8 :30 . p.m.. Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning
September 6
Cost: $65 (I D) _
Instructor: Daw1d

:• BASIC OILS (2) Introduction to the basic techniques of
'" working with oil paints as a medium.
Time : 7-9 p.m., Mondays, beginning September 12
Cost: $26 (lD) Lab Fee $5 location : Wellston High School
Instructor: Lilly Galdstayn
·class limit : 30
HATHA YOGA learning control of mind and body to achiewe
BASIC WATERCOLORS (2) Introduction to the · basic
physical and mental harmony and relaxation.
. . techniques of working with watercolors an warious textures.
Time : 7:30-9 p.m., Mondays, beginning September 12
' Time: 7-9 p.m., Wednesdays, beginning September 7
Cost: $15
Location: L~ne Center 103 , Cost: $26 (ID) Lab Fee $5 Location: Wellston High School
Instructor: Rebecca Stump
Class limit: 30
Instructor: Lilly Goldstayn
Class limit: 30

.

&gt;'
·
:
·

the loeailon not!'d, or you may reglsler al Lyne .Center on
6. All fees are payable at the time or.reglatratlon.
number In parentheses after a class title Indicates that the course carries credit hours. All other courses are In

' '

SALE:·.PR,,...(E5
-

JACKSON
GALUPOLIS
PRINCIPLES t5J: MARKETING (4) The functions and in·
FUNDAMENTALS OF DESIGN (4) Composition and design
stitutions inwolwed in the flow of goods and se!"'lices from · · using waried two and three dimensional media.
production to consumption. Special attention to the . Time : 6-8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning Sep·
functions and operations of wholesalers. merchants, Itemtoer 6.
· retailers and consumers.
Cost: $52 (I D) Lab Fee $5
location: French Art Colony .
Time: 7-9 p.m., Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning Sep- . Instructor: Lark Napier Jr.
Class Limit: 15
tember 6
Cost: $52 (I D)
Localion: Jackson High School
BASIC ACTING Basic theories and practice. for ,beginning .· ·.·
Instructor: Bernard Goldstayn ·
and amateur actors.
·., Time: Tuesdays, 7-10 p.m., beginning September 13
location : trench Art Colony
PRE-RETIREMENT PlANNING Informative sessions on how ,, w&gt;l. $30
Instructor:
Greg
Miller
'
Class Limit: 20
· to cope with retirement and alternatiwes to retirement
li11ng.
.·
FLOWER
ARRANGING
Basic
principles
and
elements
of
•
Time : 7- 9 p.m., Wednesdays, beginning September 7
in flower arranging.
Cost: $20
Location : Jackson High School
,
Time
:
7-9
p.m., Mondays beginning September 12
Instructor: John Allen and staff
Class Limit : 30
Cost: $15
location: French Arl Colony
Instructor: Vivian Kirkel
Class Limit:
. FLOWERiNG IDEAS. Creating seasonal home decorations
' '
· . using fresh , dried, and silk flowers.
Time : 7-9 · p.m. beginning September 13
FAMILY FINANCIAL PlANNING Learning to liwe within your :
Cost: $15 plus materials
location : Jackson High School
income, planning a family budget. influence of walues and
Instructor: Reba Mullins
Class Limit: 151:,:·IK"''" on money management, definition and u5e of fa111ily
resources, simple economics affecting the family budgetl
and using consumer credit lo your best adwantage.
BEGINNING CAKE DECORATING Basic cake decorating .
7·9 p.m., Thursdays beginning September 8
techniques including basic flowers, edging and design .
$15 Location : Ohio Valley Bank, Jackson Pike Branch
Time: 7-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays, b~ginning _ September 13
Instructor: Suzanne De Rita
· · Class Limit: 25
Cost: $22
Location: 56 High Street .
Instructor: Lee Miller
C.lass Limit: 15 · ' BEGINNING CROCHETING Principles, elements ol design
·
practice in crocheting for beginners.
. ADVANCED CAKE DECORATING Adwanced techniq~es of
7-9 p.m., Wednes&lt;lays beginning October 5
cake decorating using concepts of color flow and rolled ·
$22 Location: Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
fondant. Acomplete wedding cake will be constructed and
decorated.
·
Time: 7-9:30 p.m. Mondays beginning September 12
MII!DLEPORT .
$22 ·, .
· lacalian : .56 High Street
REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL (3) A study of haw 1eal estate is
Instructor: Lee Miller
Class Limit: 15
appraised, the methods and implications. Prerequisites:
Real Estate Principles and Practices and Real Estate Law.
Time: 7- 10 p.m., Thursday, beginning September 8
REAL ESTATE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES (3) An awerall . Cost: $39 (10)
Location : Meigs Jr. High ·
wiew of real estate practices.
instructor: Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Class Limit: 20
Time : 7-10 p.m., Tuesdays, beginning September 6
Cost: $39 (!D)
Location : Vinton High School
WELLSTON
Instructor: Art DeStephen
Class Limit: 25 .·
INTRODUCTION TO BUSINESS (4) Ageneral omall wiew of

WESTERN SQUARE DANCING IQslruction and experience in"
western square dancing forms and mowements.
Time: 7·1D p.m., Wednesdays, beginning September 7
Cost: $30 per" person
· · Location: Community Hall

'

.

•

CR 7. Offlctrs said an auto ol his car which ran off the
operated by David L. Bowers: right side of the roadway into
32, Albany, attempt~ to go a deep ditch. There was
around a parked vehicle moderate damage.
Anotber accident occurred
owned by Buster Barrett, 43,
Rutland. His car ran off the at 6 p.m. on Horse Creek Rd.
roadway striking an em- one mile west of SR 7 where,
bankment. There was· vehicles driven by Tony Ours,
16, Crown City, and Irene
moderate damage.
James M. O'Brien, 27, Davis, 24, Crown City,
Gallipolis, waa charged with collided headon on a curve.
failure to stop within the There was heavy damage.
assured clear distance
following an accident at 4:15
p.m. on US 30, east of SR 180.
The patrol said O'Brien's car
ror at I YCU.ir home
struck the rear of an auto
Entertainment and
Appliance Needs ·
operated by John P. Holley,
Mrs. B~rnice Molden, 49, Rodney. There was
representative of Southea!!l q~oderate damage.
DOXOL ·
Olilo Black Lui.g Association · John c. Johnson , ~3,
in Pomeroy, announced today Patriot,
was cited to
SERVICE
that the association will be Gallipolls Municipal Court
canvassing door to door for for excess speed for concontributions
to
~end ditions following a single
representatives to Wshington vehicle accident at 4:20 p.m.
TV &amp; Appliance
to lobby for the Black Lung Thursday on SR 554, east of
Gas Serv1ce
bill.
SR 325 • •
R-lcfne, Ohio
If the bill fails, according to
State troopers said Johnrhe-.1er ,..,~;..,
Mrs: Molden, black lung son, going west, lost control
pensions would .be discon:
tinued . President Jimmy
Carter will sign the bill if it
passes the Senate, Mrs.
Molden said. For additional
OPTOMETRIST
information residents may
OFFICE
HOURS:
9:30 to 12,2 to S (CLOSE
call Mrs. Molden at 992-7724
AT NOON ON THURS.&gt;- EAST COURT
or Hubert Stafford, president
ST., POMEROY.
at 992-2393.
'

to avoid Miss Smith, but
could not, ~nd then struck a
parked vehicle owned by
Paul W. Holsinger, 16,
Racine. There was minor
damage. No charges were
filed.
A single car accident occurred in Meigs County at
12:30 p.m. on TR 48 south of

Door-to-door

vlc•s will be held Salurday al
p.m. at Ewing C~apel with
!he
William Middles.
l

COLOR SYSTEM

,

The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769''
. ..,....... ·4N•uE.
'

"FAMILY ()UTING"

Drummond .

resided with her brothers and
sisters pr ior to going Into the
nursing home four years ago .
Survivors
Include
a
brother, Cyrus Drummond,
who operates the general
store In Mudsoc .
Two
brothers and three sisters
preceded her in death . She
was a member of the Wa lnut

Admiral

PARK RESERVED

of CONSTRUCTION&amp; GENERAL

Classified Ads

in the .

disciplined environment.

(614) 423-7480.

the late Monroe and Harriett

Wh ile

p riCe
• 0f pr0g reSS

NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

At Any College

Contact Pastor Knierim

Gall la Counly, doughier of

wo

thru 12. The school will he staffed

Curriculum will he used with

died early Thursd&amp;!;' n,orning
at the Hedrick Nursing Home
in Chesapeake . She was born
Nov . 6, 1903 In Walnut Twp,

vaneed In defeaae:Of poniO(l"aphy Is that the .legal censorship
Of lhil form of "uPreulon" could ultimately lead to erosion
!l( the COII!Itftutiaaal guarantee of a free press.
·· History plainly llhOws otherwise. Evert 'at the height of sex'
E-RCALLED
lial repreulve.-ln the Victorian era, this country's press
The Pomeroy Emergency
could only have been described as robust. 1n many respects, it
Squad was called to Condor
wu far more llellSational and far less self-&lt;lisciplined than It is
St., . Fr\day morning for Bill
oftea accued ol being today.
Grueser who w,as ill at his
Even that arch-foe of smut, Anthony Comstock, who was
home. He was taken to the
l'etlpOIIIIble for getting the Post Office involved in the business
Holzer
Medical Center.
of pardlng the public morality, never dreamed of inhibiting
·l)fdi.Dary political or literary e1presslon.
Buill tbe poMIOil"aphen can be accused of trying to wrap
lbe1111elve1 In the mantle of the First Amendment, there is
something UIISIVory about the tactics that have lately
.~adopted by professional smut-hunters. Ignoring as bad or from now the cou~ts will probably still be grappling wiih the
worse material that Is freely available almost everywhere perplexing issue of obscenity and how society should deal with
1l!i!ae days, they have been going after a few highly visible .it.
""rgets.
·
,
·
The trouble with the current trend in prosecutions' is not
An eumple was the conviction In Memphis last year of 11 . only that they are doing nothing to stem the · tide of porlM!ollle COIIDOCted with the · notorious porno . film ""Deep nography. It os that by usmg methods which would toe conthrOat" on charges of participating In a "national conspiracy sidered highly objectionable of the charge were anything other
to transport interstate an obscene motion picture." If the con- than obscenity, the smut-hunters are making martyrs out of
vlctlona are upheld, it will mean thst a jury anywhere can set people who certainly don't deserve the honor and are actually
Itself up as the moral monitor for everyone else in the nation . conferring a kind of respectability on the pornographer's
Facio( a similar "conspiracy" rap in Cincinnati is the · trade which it would not otherwise enjoy.
publilber of a magazine called Hustler, which goes well
Surely this is the opposite of what they hope to achieve.
b~yond the better-known Playboy or Penthouse in
rlltmchineu, but not as far as many other magazines that
crowd It for space In certain bookstores.
" Another case involves the New York publisher of a parUcularly lalteless pulp sheet, which is a mi1ture of hard-core
potnOJrapby and outrageous political commentary. The only · Cleveland's Cuyahoga River hasn"t been in the news since it
conaplracy here, however, seems to have been on the part of "caught fire" several years ago. Latest report is that the
the legal authorities, who arranged to have people send in sub- much-used and much-abused waterway is freezing over ·IICripilons to the publication - and then file complaints. , something that was thought impossible because of its heavy
Obviously, and many will say, sadly, there is a market for load of pollution.
porDOfll"apby. No one is forced to go see a film like '"Deep
The winter, of course, has been colder than normal but the
Throat" or buy a magazine like Hustler. Nor is there any niajo~ reason seems to he that the Cuyahoga is much. cleaner
.~dence (bat anyone has ever been harmed by the alleged than ot used to be, thanks to pollution-control efforts. The
~ty. 1n Memphis or Cincinnati or
else.
result Is that instead of a dirty river that is open to shipping
: · Evidently there was a market for
a hundred traffic the ~ear round, Cleveland now has a purer river but one
~n ago, when Comstock sent
things that that os subJect to the hazards of ice build-up.
would cause no raised
·~=~:::.:,•~hu~nd:;red~y~e:a~rs~~S~u;c;h~is;,.;;;th;e~p~ro;'c~e~of;.;;;pr~o;gr;es;•:·---------..

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

This Offer Good

believers. Bible centered. A. C. E.

Penoy Smith, ~. Racine, a
pedestrian,
suffered apheld al 2 p.m. Salurday from
parent
minor
Injuries in a
~:r~~~~~~:e~':ft~1 R~~~!o~ traffic accident at 3:15 p.m.
0 . Davis officiating . Burial Thursdll,l' on SR 124 near
will be In the Ne.al Cemetery
at Mudsoc. Calling hours will .. milepost 30 in Meigs County
where she was struck by a
be hefld al t he funeral home
from 7-9 p.m. tonighl.
motorcycle operated by
James H. Smith, 15, Racine.
· The State Patrol said Smith
swerved his cycle attempting
IRA ZICKEFOOSE
I

a~:~~!d!f ~t~"i~~~1;~~t

first letter of each person's
last name as follows :
9 : ~ : 45 a.m. - D, E.
9:45 - 10:30 a.m.- F, G, It.
10:30-11:15 - S, T.
11 :1S-noon, U thru Z.
Noon-12:45 p.m. - N, 0.
12:45-1 :30 - P, Q, R.
l :30-2:15 - A.
2:15-3:00- B, C.
2:00-3 :45 - I, J, K.
3:45-4 :30 - L, M.
Open registration will be
held from 6-9 p.m. for those
who are unable to be on
campus during the day or are .
registering for continuing
education classes.
Students are reminded that
payment of tuition and fees
must be made at the time of
registration. For more information, phone 245-5303.

Racine teenager hit by mo'cycle

I

GOLDIE DRUMMOND

START AGAIN
With the first of September and the beglnolng ·
, -A....,L,..;:M;:;A~N'i!i.AC~'S,_ of
the school year, the
Pomeroy Library will once
again be open In the
evenings. On five days a
week, Monday through
I. The largest state in area Friday, the library In
el!t of the Mi!Sissippi River Pomeroy will be open from
Is (a) Georgia (b) Penn- 10:30 In the morning unlil8
sylvania &lt;c) Illinois
at night. On· Saturdays the
2. Yulan Batar is (a I a Korean library will continue to be
revolutionary (b) a bone in the open from 'l0:30 to 5 and on
human body (c) the capital of Sundays from2 to 4:30. The
, Mongolia ·
,
Middleport Library will
3. " The Jazz Singer,' ' i~ 1927. continue to be open from
was the first motion picture 10:30 Ia 5 Monday through
with talking sequences. Whal
was the first all-talking mo- Saturday.
_li_on...:...pi_ct_u_re_?~----- ::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:,:::,:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::
WINDSOR FREED
ANSWERS
PHILADELPIDA (UPI ) SUI Veteran tight end Bob
,,'~JO.I, ""'N JO S)qSn aq.L, "E Windsor, 30, signed -by the
Pl ·z sanw aJenbs BtL'~~ PI Philadelphia Eagles this year
pue sanw aJenbs 996' .. ( q ) as a free agent, has been
SA IOI!W aJanbs ELO'QC; (e) "1 released on waivers.

Equivet-Tz

term beginning Sept. 6, grades K .

by trained and qualified hom again

I

THE
WORLD

E~rollment is still open for the fall

16th Marietta Band·A·Rama

!-----A~e;-Q--~~h~----!

Rio registration .
Set On .Tuesday

ATTENTION
HORSEMEN:

the lighler 'de

Debra Williamson

7-'111ec.Jlr&amp;.ntinel, MiM&amp;epon.Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 2, 1!1'17

w&lt;men, most of them young
and politically active, "not at
all Victorian" about the
"se xually ellpllcit "
maguines they see, their
reactions to them, their own
meuurements and their
i~al looks.
Preliminary ret11lts
showed they:
- OVerwhelmingly think
younger women, under 30,
are most attractive. "A
significant number said they
felt women could be
attractive at any age, but at
the same time th~y said they
felt men didn't feel ·the same
way ."
- Longed for bigger busts
and smaller waists.
- Were
variously
stimulated, angered and
disgusted by_ the magazine
models.

education department
'
VL

.

an~

offer no college credit.

after a listed tuition or fee Indicates !he amoun.t charged forresldents of Gall Ia. Jackson. Meigs and Vln!on Counlles
oulslde those counties would pay $17 per credit hour and out-of-state residents would pay $55.50 per
·

.v

Grande College and Community College reserves the riQht to ,cancel any class for lnaufflclenl enrollment. If
cellatl&lt;&gt;n of any clan Ia neceaeary, a full refund will be made to aludents reg loWed for that class.
G~a~e College and Communny College admna students of ar&gt;Y race. color and national or ethnic origin.
E!lu&lt;:aUon, 241-11353.

U.,s. 60 West-

...

•

�CHURCH
NEWS

TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H
P~ n pcntor Roy Mayw Sun
do'( school sup Chu ch Schoo
9 lSa m wo 1hp Je vee tO :XI
om Cho
eheorsa Tue5doy
730 pm unO. dec onofM s

Pau Nease
POMEROV CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Co ne Un on ond
Mulbe v ~ • ._ Clyde V Hende

son posto Sunday schoo 9 30
a "' Gfen McC ung S\IP mor"
ng wo sh p 10 30 a m even ng
'~'""" e 7 30 m d week serv &lt;.e
Wednesday 1 30 p m
GRACE EP SCOPIIL The Rev
Ho o d Oee h ec o Cl-tu ch Sf!
v ces 10 30 am Ho y commu
n10n t s.
Sunday of mon h

chu ch school

0 lO a m

fa

nu sery th ough 2
POMEI!O¥ CHURCH OF CHRIST
John MeA. hur pastor
B ble
t&lt;l-\oo 9 30 a m wo sl'l p 0 30

odul wo sh p se v c:e and
young peop e s met~ ng 7 30
p m Comb ned Bb • s udy and

THESE MESSAGES OF OUR RELIGIOUS HERITAGE ARE SPONSORED EACH WEEK BY 1HE FOUDWING
MEIGS nRE CENTER INC.
John F Fultz
Pft H:Z 2101
Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
WE Fill DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS
Pomeroy

9f2 2955

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE
(For a real auchon ull the Real
McCoy)
I

0

( ~c)

McCoy
985 3944

om

ROSEBERRrS PENNZOIL

proye meet ng Wednesdoy 7 30
pm
THE SAL VAT ON ARMY tlS
8u a nu Ave Pomeroy Envoy
and M s Roy Wn ng offce s n
cha ge

Middleport Oh o

RACINE FOOD MARKET

UNOA'S lADY FAIR
BEAUTY SALON
Call '49 1838 For Appo ntment
Rac1ne Oh o

EUIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Complete Automotive ~rv ce
LO&lt;ust &amp; Beech Sis
M1dd~porl
Ph 992 t921

We know a n a I ne p lol who used 10
make model planes Yes and we k.novo. a

BUILD
BEFORE
YOU
FLY

doctor who was f

sl

a d man

h s SL1lU t

troop And we know an enK neer who used
lo butld the best b dgcs ever bu It w th
damp sand a the seaslw e

a n goes up

Th ough ex per encc- JUSt as the en~ net.r I e docto and
the p l o acqu ed the feel g for the vQCal on they "ou d
one day pu sue

Copy .gh

977
K81slet" Ad ert s ng Servrce

The church a he co ner can 1 man fa clu e noble Cl s
t an souls But t can ~o a ong w~y towa d de ~lop ng n you
and me- and no r youngs e s-a sen e of the po ent al
w th wh ch God has endowed us

CODNER'S CAMPERS
Rolnbow Rodge long llottom
&lt;»&gt;io
SAlts Renlol SArvlct Suppllts
SWISS Colony ..- ~pit LHI
J•yco

BISSEU SIDING CO
V nyl &amp; Alumrnum Sfd1ng Slorm
W1ndowsand IMul1hon
Phone9C9 2101 or '49 2160
FREE ESTIM~TES

~H Mlac.cJ b'J
lw ""-nc.t~ Bible ~

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS
212 W ~'" Pomeroy 9f2 H62
510 N 2nd Muklleport 992 3451

P J PAULEY, AGENT
Nattonwtde Ins Cso ot
Columbus 0

Pomeroy

•~w ~•n

Ph 992 2318
MEIGS C::OUNTY BRANCH

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO

mee ng
a ous
speake s .and mus c: spec ols 7 30
THE STORE WITH A HEART
pm Tt-.u sday- Oom o2pm
R1c1ne
Ph 949 2626
lad es Home league o women
Pomeroy
296 W 2nd
nv ed 730pm paye mee ng
Ph H23163
ond B ble s udy
Bob Es ep
leode
Re\1
Noel Hermon
Fresh Product &amp; Plonts
leothe
BURL NGTON SOUTHERN BAP
2 CONVENIENT MARKETS
TIST CHAPEL Reule I Shode
Pomeroy
Pas o
Bobby Elk ns Sunday
Ph
992 2582
s hool 5 p m Sunday wo sh p
RICin&amp;
~son
5 45 p m Wednesday p aye ser
Ph 949 2000
Ph 949 2487
Ph 773 5721
v ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY WESTS DE CHURCH
OFCHR ST 200W MonS J• y
Pou m n sle pnone 992 7666
Conse vo ve non ns umen o
Sunday wo shp 0 am Bbe
sudy
I am woshp 6pm
THE FINEST IN MOBILE
Wednesday 8 ble sludy 7 p m
HOMES
OLD DEXTER B BLE CHR STIAN
Pomeroy
216 E Second
Pomtroy
CHURCH
~ev Rolph
Sm h
Ph 992 3325
1100
E
~tn
Ph
992
7034
pas o Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
M s Wo lev F one s supe n en
den P eochng sev es f s &amp;
th d Sundays to low ng Sunday
Sc:hoo
GRAHAM UN TED METHODIST
CARS &amp; TRUCKS
P each ng 9 30 o m I s and se
Thord 51
cond Sundays ol each man h
R1ctne
461 S 3rd
Moddleport
h d and fou h Sundays each
Ph 949 2812
Ph H2 2196
monh woshp sevce at 730
p m Wednesday even ngs a
7 30 P aye and B b e S udy
SEVE NTH DAY ADVENT ST
Mu be y He gh s Rood Pome oy
Paso Abe
D1es Sabboh
Sc.hool Supe n enden
Ca o
214 E ~In
POmeroy
For Tho Best In TV Viewing
Me n y e Sobbo h School So ur
Ph
992
5130
day of e noon o 2 00 w 1h Wor
Coli 992 2~05
shpServcefolowngo 315
RUTLAND F RST BAPT ST
CHURCH Drewy Go e
sup
Sunday School 9 30 o m mo n
GROCERIES&amp; GENERAL
ngwo shp I0-45o m
SALES SERVICE
Sunday
Monda;
do y
MERCHANDISE
THE H lAND CHAPE Geo ge
Ftre
Exttngurshen
Revelot on Re eloton
Deuteronomy
Costa pasta
Sunday Schoo
F
tre
Dept Equip
2
18
29
3
1
6
10
12
22
930am evenngwoshp 730
Ph 949 2550
Rutland
Ph 742 2771
Thu sdoy even ng p aye s&amp; v ce
7 30p m
POMEROY FIRST BIIPT ST
PHO~RAPHY
Dovd Mann mns e WI om
WoiSon Sundcy s hool sup Sun
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
Fe•turtng
day school 9 30 a m morn ng
For All Your Shoppmg Need~
BAKERS OF GOODBREAD
wo shp OJOom
Mtddleporl Ohto
Deep St. . m Exlractton
Ph 992 217B
234 E Maon
Huntington W Va
Aeroal Schools Weddongs
F RST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 2B2
Ph 992 2206
Ph H2 7630
Pomeroy
Chosltr
Ph 915 4155
Mulbe y Ave Pome oy Pqu J
Rt 3 Pamoroy
Wh te Pas or Go y Basham Sun
day scl'lool supt Sunday schoo
9 30 o m
mo n ng wo sh p
030 evenngwoshp 630pm
M dweek p aye se v ce 7 30
pm
Keepsake D amond Rtngs
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER
212
E
Matn
Pomeroy
Chester
Ractne
Syracuse
Ph 992 3978
De• e Rd longsv lie Ot-. o Rev
Vernon &amp; Ber1ha B ng
Mtddltport Ohoo
Ph
992
37B5
985
3307
949 2020
Clyde Fe rell Pasta
Sunday
Langsv lie
Ph 742 9~5
School
11
om
Sa u day
p eachng se vces 7 30 p m
Wednesday even ng B ble s udy
a 730pm
APPLE GROVE Sunday School am monngwoshp
am Sunday school 10 am M s
w h Don and Martha
son Supt Mo n ng Wo sh p 1 p m
am 7 30p m
FA TH TABERNACLE CHURCH
930am Woshp730pm s E en ng se
Sampson Ha I sup
LANGSVIL E
CHR STAN a m Young Peoples se v ce 7 Meadows eode s
es Tuesday and
Bo ey Run Rood Rev Emmett
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD and 3 d Sundays P aye mee ng F doy 7 30pm
WH TE S CHAPEL Coo v ll o RD
p m Even ng se v ce 7 30 p m
CHURCH Ted Jones paso Sun
Rowson pas o Handley Dunn
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fe owsh p
Rev James D Guynn pas o
lloo
9 30 a m
Roy Wednesday M d Week P aye
ReV" Roy Dee e pasta Sunday
BEARWA OW R DGE CHURCH day
sup Sunday schoo 0 a m Sun
Sunday school 10 a m Sunday suppe I s Sotu day 6 p m UMW OF CHRIST
mo n ng wo sh p
Se v te
7 30 p m
You h schoo 9 30 o m wo sh p se v ce
Ogug Seamon S gmon sup
day even ng se v ce 7 30 B ble wo sh p
o m Sunday even ng 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
0 30 Sunday e on ng se ce mee ng b 30 p m Even ng wo
030om Bbesudyondproye
m n s e
8 ble s udy 9 30 o m
ea h ng 7 30 p m Thu sdoy
EAST LET ART Ch u h Schoo mo n ng wo sh p
se ce 7 p m Wednesday wo
se \1 ce Wednesday 1 30 p m
0 30 o m 7 30 rrl d week se v e Wednes sh p730pm
DYESV LLE
COMMUNITY sh p !l.erv e 7 30 p m
Is 2nd 3rd Sundays 9 30 o m e en ns wo sh p
RUTLAND
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
7 30 p m day 730pm
CHURCH Roge C Tu ne poslo
HAZEL COMMUN TV CHURCH Fou h Sunday 10 30 a m Wo
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Rev He be t C a e
Wednesdoy B be s udy 7 30p m
Sunday school 9 30 a m Sunday Neo long Bo om Edsel Ho 1 shp 2nd Sunday 730 pm 4h
Denn s Sm h
pas o
F ank
KENO CHURCH OF CHR ST NAZARENE
Re
Dole Boss paso Worshp sa vee 11 am
mo n ng wo sh p 10 30 Sunday paso Sunday schoo 10 Q, m
Sunday 9 30 a m P aye mee ng Geo ge F ede k sup Sunday po o
Bob Moo e
Sunday and 7 30 p m Sunday
Sunday Young Sunday s hool sup Sun
even ng senr ce 7 30
Chu h
7 30 p m
p aye Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW s monngsevce 930am w h School su p
day school and commun on 9 30
Sunday schoo Schoo 9 30 o m R cho d Ba on
M DDLEPORT
Tuesday 7 30 p m
mee ng 7 30 p m Thu sdoy
o m Wo sh p ond comun on
sup P oyer mee ng Wednes
p eo h n" on f s and h d Sun c asses lo al ages 9 30 o m
MT MORIAH BAPT ST Co ne
WESLEYAN {Ra ne ) Sunday day o mon h by Geo ge P kens
0 45 o m
030o m
MIDDLEPOR T PENTECOSTIll
mo n n g wo sh p
doy730pm
Fou 11 and Mo n M, dd epa
Schoo 10 o m Wo sh p I am
Th dAve the Rev W I om Kn
RUTLAND
COMM UN TY
ST IVERSV l E COMMUN TY NYPS b 30 p m evonge s c se
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
Rev Hen y Key J pasta Sun
el pos o Rona d Dugol'l Sun J UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p m
CHURCH Sundoy School 9 30
e 7 30 p m P aye and las ng CHR ST Gab e Mz s poslo 8
CHURCH Sunday School se
e
day Schoo 930om M s E vn day Sct'lool Sup Classes fo al 8 ble S udy Thu sdoy 7 p m tho
0 o m
M dweek be SundayS hoo 9 30om mo
om woshpsevce 1om
0 o m P o~e mee ng Thu s Tuesdoy
Boumgo dne
sup
Mo n ng ages even ng se v ce 7 30 8 ble P octcelhu sdayl3pm
p aye se v e Wednesday 7 30 n ng hu ch 0 30 a m Sunday Wednesday p aye mee ng 7 30
day 7 p m Sunday even ng se
wo sh p 0 45 am
LETART FALLS Chu ch S hoo
p m you h se v ,., Sunda)l 7
s udy Wednesday 7 ~ p m
ce 7 p m
pm
mens p aye
mee ng even ng sa v ce
? 00 p m
M DDLEPORT CHURCH OF youhsevces F day 730pm
s 2 d 3 d Sundays 0 15 a m
p m Sunday n ght wonh p 7 30
mssonay Wednesday se v ce 7 30 p m
Z ON CHURCH OF CHR S Souday 7 pm
CHR ST N CHRIST AN UN ON
M DDLEPORT FREEW ll BAP A h S ndoy 9 5 o m Wo sh p Pome oy Ho sonv I e Rd
RUTLAND CHU~CH OF THE
Don mee ng
se and Wednesday
LAUREL CL FF FREE METHODIST
law ence Man ey pas o M s
T ST Co ne Ash and P um Nee ls 2nd 3 d Sundays 9 15 am
NAZARENE Rev l oyd D G mm
Kennedy pas :o
B I McEI oy 7 30p m
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook
Russe Young Sunday Scnoo
He man pas or Sotu day e en A h Sunday7 30p m
pas a SundO)I school 9 30
UN TED
FA TH
NON
Sunday schoo
sup
Sunday
pas o
L oyd Wr gh
Sunday J
Sup Sunday S hoof q 30 a m
MORN NG STAR Worsh p 9 JO s hool 9 30 o m mo n ng wo
ng se v ce 7 30 p m Sunday
DE NOM NAT ONA
Re
Robe
Schoo Supt
Mo n ng Wo sh p o m wo sh p s,erv ce 10 30 a m
Even ng worsh p 7 30 Wednes
o m Chu ch School 0 30 a m sh p and ommun on 0 30 o m Sm h pos o Sunday S hool 9 30 o m Sunday Schoo 10 20 B oadcas ve ove WMPO young
Sc.hool 0 30 o m
doyp aye mee ng 7 30p m
M d Week Se v ce Wednesday a Sundoy e en ng you h Ch s on 9 30 o m C ass eode
MEGS
peop e s
serv ce
6 45
eo H I a m Wednesday Proye and B
MT MOR IIH CHURCH OF GOD
pm
evonge stc sevce 730 pm
COOPERII TIVE PARISH
Endeo o 6 p m wo sh p se
wo hpse
e
030om
be S uQv 7 30 p m Sunday even
Roc ne Route 2 he Rev ames
MORSE CHAPEL Wo shp
METHOD ST CHURCH
P aye meet ng Wednesday 7 30
ng wo sh1p 7 30p m Cho P oc
e 7 p m Wednesday even ng hu h 7 30 p m
M Muncy pas o Sunday school
om Chu ch School9 30om
pm M ssonay meetng 730
Robe T Bumgo ne
EDEN UN TED BRETHREN N
p aye mee ng and B be s udy
ce Thu sdoy 7 p m
945 am monng woshp
PORTLAND Wo sh p 7 30 p m
p m f s Wedn'E'Jsdoy of man h
D ec o
7 30p m
CHR ST Eden R Blake paso
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHR ST
om
evenng woshp 730
Chu ch Schoo 9 30 am
MASON COUNT¥
POMEROY CLUSTER
S
m n ste
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday S hoc 0 o m Howe d Cha es Russel
P aye mee ng Tuesday 7 30
SUTTON Chu ch School 9 lO P ne G ave The Rev W om McCoy sup
Rev Robe I Hayden
MASON FIRST BIIPTIST Second
Mo n ng se man
R k Mocombe
supt Sunday
p m Young peop e s mee ng
am Woshp s and3dSundoys M dd eswo h Pes o
Rev James Co b
ond Pome oy Sis S on Cro g
Chu h
am Sunday n ght se ces school 9 30 a m wo sh p se
7 30p m Thu sdoy
030o m
pas o Sunday school 9 45 a m
CHESTER Wo sh p 9 15 om
7 30 p m
v e 1030om BbleSudy Tues
es 9 30 a m Sunday S hoo Ch s on Endeovo
se
M DO EPORT F RST BAPT ST
NORTHEAST C USTER
wo sh p se v ce 1 a m t a n ng
Chu ch Schoo 0 a m
Song se v ce 8 p m P eo h ng day 730pm
0 30om
Co ne S xth and Pol me he ~ev
Rev R cha d Thomas
POMEROY Wo sh p 10 30 am
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF 8 30 p m
M dweek P aye
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF unon 630 pm evenng wo
Pe e G ondal pas o Mann ng Chu ch Sct'lool 9 30 o m UMVF
Paso
CHR ST M Dona d Ra ey pas a
mee ng Wednesday 7 p m Roy JESUS CHRIST OF LIITIER DAY sh p se v ce 7 30 p m M d Week
Kloes supe n enden
Sunday 630pm
Ouone Sydenst ke
SA NTS Po and Rae ne Road p aye se ~ice Wednesday 7 30
Sunday s hoo 9 30 a m wo
Adam oy eode
Schoo WMPO Rod o p og am
John Douglas
ENTERPR SE Wo sh p q a m
CHURCH OF JESUS CHR ST W I om Roush
paso
Tom pm
sh p se v ce 10 30 am Sunday
7 45 o m Sunday Sctioo 9 5 Chu ch Schoo 10om
Asso a es
MASON CHURCII OF CHR 5T P
Sunday Schoo D eclo
se v ces 7 p m you h g oup Loco ed a Ru and on New l ma S abo
a m
Mo n ng Wo sh p
0 5
OPPA
Wo sh p
0 am
ROCK SPRINGS Wo sh p 0
Wednet.doy 7 p m
Read nex o Fo es Ac e Po k
Sunday School 9 30 a m Mo n 0 Ba)( 487 M ler S ,/Mason W
a m
Youth oc v es and a m Chu ch Schoo q So m Chu ch Schoo 9 a m
P aye
ng wo sh p 0 30 o m Sunday Vo Sunday 8 b a Study 0 o m
ANT QUITY BAPTIST Re Eo
Re
Roy Rouse pas o Robe
fel owsh p fo un o and sen o
Mee ng Wednesday a p m
Woshpl om and7pm 8be
UMYF b 30p m
Shu e
pas o
Sunday school Musse Sunday S.Choo sup Sun even ng se v ce 7 p m Wednes
h gh s uden s 6 p m Sunday
LONG BOTTOM Sunday schoo 930om Chu hse
FLATWOODS Wo sh p I am
e 7pm
day school 10 30 a m wo sh p day even ng p aye se v ces 1 30 S udy Wed.nesday 7 p m Voca
even ng worsh p 7 30 p m M d
mus c
o Cjl30om Woshpsev&lt;eso you h mee ng 6 p m Tuesday B 7 30 p m B ble S udy Wednes pm
Chu ch Schoo 0 o m
week P- aye se v c.es Wednes
7 30 p m 8 be s udy and You h bleS udy 7p m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Cor
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
BETHLEHEM 8APT ST Rev Eo
day 7 30 p m So urdoy n gh
doy 730pm
meet ng a
8 p m
on
Rev Robe Bumgo ne
Shuler pas o Wo th p se v ce ner of Second and Ande son
RACINE CHUR~H OF THE p aye se v e 7 JO p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Md
Wednesdays
HEMLOCK GROVE CHR STAN 9 30 am Sunday school 10 30 Mason Pas or Wo te Cloud
HEATH
Robe
Bumga ne
NAZARENE Rev Johr1 A Coli
dlepo 1 5 h and Mo n Geo ge Pas o
Sunda)l school 9 45 a m wo sh p
NORTH BETHEL Wo sh p
Wo sh p
0 30 o m
Wa son pas o
Jess e a m 8 ble S udy and p aye se
man pos o Sunday Schoo 9 30 Rage
Glole m n s e M ke Ga o h
sewce
I om and 730 pm
v ce Thursday 7 30 p m
Chu ch Schoo 9 30 a m UMYF 6 om Chu hSchao Oo m
o m Ge o d Wei s sup Mo n Wh e Sunday school sup Mo n
Te y Yankey
supe n en den
AJ.FRED Sunday S hoo 9 JO ng wo sh p 10 30 om Sunday ng wo 5hp 930 am
Sun
CARLETON CHURCH K ngsbu y Weak y 8 b • study Wednesday
pm
you h m n s e 8 ble schoo 9 30
om Wo sh p 10 AS o m P aye
0 30 o m
e en ng Rood Go y K ng .pasta Sunday 730pm
RUTlAND W bu 1-t t Pas o
even ng wo sh p 7 30 P aye days hoo
o m
mo n ng wo sh p 10 30 Wo sh p 0 30 a m Chu cb Schoo mee UlQ Wednesday 7 45 p m
MASON ASSEMBL V OF GOD
se v ce 7 30 Wednesday B b e school 9 30 o m even ng wo
meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
om
eenng woshp 730
UMW3 dTuesday8p m
sh p 7 30 p m Proye mH ng Oudd ng Lana Mason W Va
Study 7 30p m
9 30a m
RAC NE F RST BAPT ST Don
p aye serv ce 1 p m Wednes
REEDSVILLE Sunday Schoo19 30 Wa ke
Chester Tennant Pasta Sunday
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
MT UN ON BAPT ST Rev John Wednesdo)' 7 30 p m
Posta
Ronn e So se
day
om Woshp 730 pm Poye
Sunday schoo
LONG BOTIOM CHR ST AN Schoo
9 45 om
Ch ld ens
Rev Ho vey Koch J
Sunday schoo SIJP
Sunday Elsw k pas o
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
Tuesday
supe n enden Don W son Sun 8 uce Sm th posto
Wal oce Chu ch b 45 p m Young Peoples
ASBURY
Wo sl:t p 11 am Mee ng 7 30 p m
s hoof 9 30 o m mo n ng wo
NAZARENE Re\1 J m 8 oome
hoa 9 45 a m
even ng Oc:ifT'Owood Supt 8 b e School Se vice 6 45 p m Evangelist c
Chu h Schoo 9 50 o m UMW Vs olon730pm I s Thu sdoy
shp 040am Sundoye enng doy
pas o M s Mo y La hey Su"doy
S LVER RIDGE Wo sh p 0 om
7 30 P. m
P aye 930 om Peochng sevce Sevce 730 pm Womens Mis
f rs Tuesday B ble S udy Thu s
wo sh p 7 30 Wednesday even wo sh p
school sup Sunday school 9 30 7 30p m
Chu ch School9 am
sana y Counc I 10 am f sf and
045a m Noevenngse vee
mee ng 7 30 p m Wednesday
ngBbesudy 730
om
monng woshp
030
TUPPERS PLAINS Wo sh p Cjl
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST th d Tues&lt;lays P aye ond B ble
FOREST RUN Wo sh p 9 o m
DANV llE WESLEYAN Rev R
a m
Sunday
evor"fge s c Chu ch School I 0 a m
am Chu ch Schoo Oo m
0 8 own pos o Sunday Schoo CHURCH Eugene Unde wood CHURCH Rev He be A ng Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
meet ng
7 30 p m
P aye
KENO CHURCH OF CHR ST
HARTFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST
Howo d Co dwell J
pas o Sunday SChoo 9 30 a m
M NERSV LLE Worsh p 10 am
930 am
mo nng wo shp pas o
mee ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Geo ge f ede k sup Se ce
IN CHRIST AN UNION Tho Rov
030 am
Sunday S hoo Sup
Sunday Mo nng ~ero/ce
0 45 you ll se v e 6 45 p m
Chu ch Schoo 9 o m
UNITED
PRESBYTER AN
W I om Campbell pos~or Sundgy:
youth
se v ce
6 45 p m
Shoo 930om Monn~Se
SYRACUSE Chu ch Schoo 9 00 week y 9 30 a m on Sunday
evenng woshp
730 pm
MIN STRY OF ME GS COUNTY
P each ng f sl and h d Sundays p aye and p o se Wednesday mon 0 30 o m Sunday e&gt;Jen ng Evangel s c serv ce 7 30 p m School 9 30 a m James Hughei
om Wo shlpse vce7 30p m
Dw gh L Zov ft d tK o
of mon h by C flo d Sm h 9 30 730pm
P aye meet ng Thu sday 7 30 sup I even ng serv ce 1 30 p m
se
e 7p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
HIIRRISONV
LLE
om
Wednttdoy even ng p oyer
lETART
FALLS
Uti TED pm
S l VER RUN FREE BAPTIST
Rev T molhy Sm h
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev
E nest
HOBSON CHR ST AN UN ON
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISS ON a meal ng 7 30 p m Youth p oyer
M les T ou
pas o
Sunday BRETHREN Rev F ee and IIJo s
C use leode
Rev Ke h Ebl n pos o Sunday s hoo 0 a m S eve L e sup
St ckl n pasta Sunday chu ch
Re v
law en(e t.e vtee .ach Tundoy
pas o Floyd No s sup Sunday Bo d Knob
Rev S even W lton
9 30 a m
leona d E enng sevce 7 pm poye school 9 30 a m mo n ng se
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURC"
School
school 9 30 a m M s Home
G uesen amp Sr pastor Roger
Assac a e
lH sup
mo n ng wo sh p
man 10 30 om P aye se v ce W lfa d S SUnday 1thool •upl letart W Vo Rt I Rev Charles
mee ng Thu sdoy 7 p n
BETHANY {Do cos) Wo sh p G lmo e f sl e de e en ng se
Sunday school 9 30 a
Sunday Ho groves pottor Worthlp ...10 JO
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD Wed e day 7 30 p m
9 30 am Chu ch School 10 30 v c.e 7 30 p m Wednesday p aye
even
ng
meeng730pm
sa
v
c.e
7
p
m
P oy..,. "ces 9 30 o m Su~ Khool
MIDDLEPORT Sunday sd'loo
CHUR
CH
OF
GOO
OF
PRO
Rev
aobby
Po
e
pos
o
Sun
om
MT MOR AH CHURCH OF GOD
930 am R cho d Voughan sup
day choo 9 30 o m wo sh p PHECY 0 J Wh te Rood oH 160 n&gt;'\l'JirV , .J.'\oodoy 7 !10 p m 11 o m evening WOI"'hip 7 10
CARMEL Ch uc~ Schoo 9 30
Morn ngwo sh p 10 30
~ter:
clan t.o&lt;Jer p m T~ &lt;OilOgo l'f&lt;l'fet"
a m even ng se v e Rev Geo ge 9 oy e past~ Sun E, ntts
om Wo!&gt;hp 030om 2ndond Roc ne Rou e 2 The Rev CITo les se ce
Hand pas o Sundays hool 9 .45
SYRACUSE Mo n ng wo sh p 9 41h Sundays
30 you h se ce Wednesday day Sc/lool 0 o m A hu f Hen You h m~e( ng Wednesday 7 30 mMIIng (lnd Bible lludy 9 J0

BRADFORD AUCTION CO

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

KINGSBURY HOME SAL£S
&amp; SERVICE, INC

VIRGIL B TEAFORD SR
REALTOR

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEAnNG

DAN TltOMPSON FORD, INC.

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

POINlYIEW CABLE 1Y
SYSTEMS, INC.

BROWN'S FIRE &amp; SAFID
EQUIPMENT

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

KEN GROVER

RIDENOUR 1Y &amp;APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

._

!
""
"

"'

•

HEINER'S BAKERY

RACINE PLANmG MIU

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

BING'S MARKET
&amp;TEXACO SERVICE

MARK VSTORE

K&amp;C JEWELERS

-

YOUNG'S CARPETING

RALLS

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

W~Msdoy 7 36 p

m

THE PEOPLES CHURCH OF
POMEROY
Co ne Mo n .:Jnd
Cou
Ss
th d lloo
ave
l gtl house Reltou ant
Hen y
Cook pasta ~undoy .chool 10
am monngwoshp lam
even ng 18 v ce 7 30 W.,dnes
day even ng se vice 7 JO n
e d~tnom no one full gospel
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD
Pas o Denn s So es Sunday
!tc.hool 10 o m worsh p se v ce
30 o m and 7 30 p m Proye
mee ng Wednesday 7 JO p m
RUf.LAND APOSTOL C CHURCH
OF JESUS CHR Sl Thoma~ L
Holmes
pas or
8 ble study
So u day 7 30 p m Evangel I c
p m p aye mee ng Tuesday
730pm BbeSudy Thusdoy
730pm
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOL NESS
Ho sonv le Rood
Dewey K ng
pas o
Ed 1on
Weave ass stan Hen y Ebl n
J
Sunday schoo sup StJnday
schoo 9 30 o m mo n ng wo
sh p
o m Sunday even ng se
v ce 7 30 p aye mee ng Thu s
day730pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
GOD
No Penlecos ol Rev
Geoge 0 e
paso
Woshp
se v ce Sunday 9 -iS a m Sun
day school 1 a m wo sh p !I.e
e 7 30 p m Thu sday p aye
meeng730pm
MT HERMON Un ed 8 e h en
Chu ch Sunday Schoo 9 30 o m
Woshp seve
0"5 om
P each ng se v ces ave v Sunday
o e no ng w h C E Wednesday
p aye mee ng 7 30 p m Rev
James
eo h
pas o
Dov d
Hoi e ay eader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES
m e
eos of Ru land func on of Rou •
24 and Nob e Summ Rood (T
174 Sunday Bbe le u e 930
a
Wa ch owe
s udy 10 30
a m Tuesday B ble s udy 7 and
8 15 p m Thu sday theoc a c
s hoo
7 30 p m
se v ce
meeng830pm
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 G on S
M dd epo
Bobby E k ns pas o
Sunday Sc.hool 0 a m wo sh p
se vee 1 am even ng se vee
7 lO p m
Thu sdoy p aye
mee ng and 8 ble study 7 30
pm
RUTLAND F~EEW ll BAPTIST
Chu ch
leland He ey pas o
Sunday s hoc
0 o m even ng
se v ce
7 30 p m
P aye
mae ng Wednesday 7 lOp m
CHURCH OF GOO of P ophe y
oca ed on he 0 J Wh e Rood
off h ghway 60 Sunday School
10 o m Supe ntenden
John
Loveday F s Wednetdoy n gh
of man h CPMA se v es second
Wednesday WMB meet ng h d
h ough I f h youth se v ce
Geo ge C oy e paslo
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
G an S M dd epa 1 Rev Bobby
E k ns Sunday school 0 o m
1 even ng
mo n ng wo sh p
wo sh p 7 JO p m
Thu sday
even ng B ble s udy and p aye
meetng 730p m Aff a edw h
SBC
H YSELL
RUN
FREE
METHOOIS T- Rev He be
II I
ng paslo Sunday s hoof 9 JO
a m mo n ng wo sh p 10 15 o
lam Evonge s csevce 730
p m p aye mee ng 7 p m
Thu sdoy
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST Gab a M o
paso
Sunday s hoo 9 30 a m mo n
ng chu ch 10 30 am Juno
chu ch p og om unde d ec: on
ofKoenMoz fo chid en 210
du ng egu o chu ch hou
n
chu ch basement Sunday even
ng se ce 7 p m Wednesday
se v ce 7 30 p m
JUBILEE CHR STIIIN CENTER
Geo ge s C eek Rood Chu ch
schoo 930am monngwo
sh p 10 30 even ng se v ce 7 30
P oye mee ng Wednesday 7 30
pm
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Co ne of Sycamore and Second
S s Pome oy The Rev W II om
Pasta
Sunday
M dd eswo th
School a 9 AS a m and Chu ch
Se vtesllom
SACRED HEART Re\1 Fo he
Pgul D We ton pas o Phone
992 2825 So u day even ng Moss
7 30 Sunday Moss 8 and 10 o m
Confess on Sou day 7 7 30 p m

IS Wuf'dll ur Under

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190
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NEEDI::D PERSON w 1h a

east '1
yeo $ of college and had some
o 190S of ch d de\le opmen
Mus hove p oof Needed fo
day co e ope a on 992 7608

t\dzi nuumlg ulht!r U&amp;a wwec..-ut ve
tilly' w I bt&gt; ill ~t'd " t »!:! J d~e}

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NANTED REliABLE couple o
woman Ia cook and keep house
fo a e ed mon E e y h ng
onven en Paul 0
Long So
om Oh o -i5743

Canier Wanted

NOTICE
WANT AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

mFnday
&lt;PM

e day befo e pub a "

N MEMORY of ou

deo Folhe
Edwa d Young who passed
away 2 yea s ago Sep embe
2
A ways so t ue unseif s.h Ol)d
k nd
Few n h s wo d a e equal o
f nd
A beau fu I te ho come o on
end
He d ed as he
ed eve yone s
end Sod y m ssed by h s
ch ld en
N LOV NG memory of Eltobe h
R ebe who paned away 2
yeo s ego Sep I
We of en h nk of bygone doys
When we we e a I age he
The tom ly cho n s b oken now
Bu memo es I ve fo eve
To us she has no gone away
No has she oveled fa
us en e edGodse e nolhome
And ef-1 he doo OJO Sodly m ss
edbylom ly ~ _
IN MEMORY of Navada BeoVe
wtlo passed away Sep 2 967
We of en h nk of bygone days
whert we we e a I 1oge he
The fom y cha n s b oken now
bu memo es ve fo e e To
u ~ she has no
o eled to
shes ust en ered Godse e no I
home and leh the door o o
Sadly m ssed by Mathe M s
Sa e A son husband M
Hen y Beove 1 s. e Aud ey
To ence
doughte
B6nn e
sue ~on lowe I 8eo e and
lam ly b o he
Pau AI son
ondMo e

$150 00 REWARD f o e u n of no
ques ons asked or nto mo
on lead ng o tne e1u n of
wo mo e dogs oken f om R
33 nea Do w n Ju y 1 Please
ove and m ss my dogs ve y
mush 992 5848

RACINE VOLUNTEER F e Dep s
o e sponso ng o h cken ba b
que on Sun Sep 4 s or ng at
00 om a he F e Sta on
The Lad es Aux o e sell ng
home mode ce c eom
SEN IORS OF Me gs Coun y Tad
ono l and au doo set ngs fo
you po t a Is Cal The Pho o
P ace Bob Hoefl ch 992 5292

N LOV NG memo y of au belov
ed husband fa he and g ond
fothe Hen y Capeha
who
passed away n ne yeo s ago
Sep embe 3 1968 ~a h ng bu
memo es os we 10u ney on
long ng fo o sm le f om a oved
one gone None know he dep
hs of our deep eg e bu we
emembe when othe s fo ge
Sod •y m ssed by h s w fe Opal
ch ld1 en and g ondch~n

W ll CARE fa elde ly n ou
home T a ned and expe enc
ed 992 731&lt;

PIANO TUNING Lone Don els 12
yea s ol se v ce
Ph one
992 2082
PEN NZOIL RUTLAND open do ly
t
10
Closed Mondays
e
e epa
w ecke se
Phone 742 9575 o 742 2081
W ll DO babys I ng n my home
992 5301

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HPaJ !&lt;:stat&lt;

Sale

ne~otone
and ol um
a le I COA
ch o de old co '- um b ne lo
and fo d downs End of yeo
du~ con o and spe&lt; ol m x ng
•a e
Save $1 700 on
9/7
sa fo fa me s heels o So
a le s ~8 o le s n s ock
Wo ks Mo n S ee Pome oy
Used un s We se I se v e and
Oh a o phone 9V2 389
qua y Camp Con ~Y Sto c of
Soles R t1 2 no h of P Plea CAMPI; Ill
'$600
A so
ho se
!IOn
a e $ASO Phone (b " 698
J'J'IO
971 SELF CONT,A NED CAMPER
91 742 2566

-

977 APACHE FOLD UP
w ce $ 800 992 28-49

CASE LOT

Used

CAN GOODS

For Rent

Strtckly wholtsale to all.

Syracuse and
Middleport areas.
The Da1~ Sentinel

COUNTRY Mob le Home Po k R
33 en m es no h of Pomeroy
logelosw h on eepo os
' dewalks runne s and off
s ee pa k ng Phone 992 7.479

992 2156

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Po k
Rou e 33 no h ol Pome oy
La ge ols Cal 992 7 A79

Not less than ;, case

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center
1210 Washington Blvd
Btlpre Ohio

SMALL APARTMENT 2nd S ree n
M ddlepo
Su ob e lo I or 2
peop e 992 5262

S l VER QUEEN Swee Co n P k
you own Cheap Cia en e
P ofl
Po t and Oh o

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for Sal&lt;

1

STORY 3 bed oom f ome
house FA u noce so m w n
dow\ I ep ac.b n M ddlepo
Phone 992 3"57

DON T PAY he added expense of
o Real o Suy h s 3 bed oorn
'J.
bo h b le el
om he

own• ond so •
o g• on y
oomw llf eploe eo nk
chen w h doub e oven ange
ond d shwo• he fo mal d n ng
oom Jwo o go age cen r of
a
on a e lo N e d e o
powe
pan s ond m ne$
$43 ()()() 9'12 2492
59 ACRE FARM
m es f om
new Raven swood 8 dge
Mode n home has 3 bed ooms
I ngroomw hwoodb nng
f ep ace and beamed ce I ng
bo n ou bu d ngs and fenc
ng $43 500 949 2466

S X ROOM house a b 3 M II S
M dd epa Good cond on n
qu e o 439 L nc.o n S M d
~epa t

es on

Pomeroy landmark

eel en cond ton Gold hos e)C
as less han 000 m les
$2700 Co I 614)69B 3290
R S NG STAR Kennel Boo d ng APPALACH AN STOVE Co Sum
ndoo Ou doo runs g oom ng
me So e Ash ey C 60 Wood
a
b eeds
clean son to y
Heote s $340 comple e w th
foe
es oe 367 7112 Chesh e
blower Th u Sept 12 We o e
Phone(61 .t 367 0292
he only au he zed deale n
Mefgs Coun y
We e
n
AKC SHt"TLAND sheep dogs
Co penre off 1""3 698 719
{M n ) €OtUe11 2 tema es 7
weeks old Sho s and wo med T#O THREE QUARTER ton Dodge
Phone
614 ) 367 0292 o
Powe Wagon T ucks 196 ond
367 71 2
%4 Co q49 2770
ME GS COUNTY Human e Soc e y NEW HOLLAND
63 bushe
An mo Co e ne
7680 o
manu e sp eode
Exce len
af e 6 p m 99~27
cond on Col 949
All BREED dog groom ng J and 1975 MASSEY
FERGUSON dose
0 Kennels Reasonable a e:s
b5 360 h s s nee new e)( o
No d ugs used Co I fo op
w de
es
heavy
du y
po n men 7A2 3162
s
abolze
s
oux
hyd
oul
c
-f on we gh s I ke new Col
AKC REGISTERED Beagle pups PI
949 2770
P eoson
W
Va
(304)
6754154
KUBOTA TRACTOR 1 only Mode
Woods
L 185 w h 5 I
TO G VE away Ge men Sho I
Unders ung Mowe L s $.4405
ho ed Po n e Gen le needs
save $600 Grove y T ac o
p ace to un 949 2595
~----So es
Po me oy
Phone
9'12 2975

m

2no
---

-

---

1972 CHEVROLET p kup
u k
New t res good body ond uns
good 9'12 623
SHOT SHELLS h gh powe $3 93
22 LR 79 22 magnum $2 90
lots of used ond new guns
T ode fo onyth ng F te s S
3d Mddepo

·--'----·o---1973 PlYMOUTH SCAMP 30 000

8UIL T RITE PRAM Engl sh s y e
naVy good cond on $45
m es New ado
es AC
Ko as on 0 ental Ca pet 9 x
PS
6 cy
Lkenew Call
2 wool c anbe ry colo very
949 2770
good cond t on
$1a5
Call
992 753'1
1973 GMC
on p ck up 350
eng ne outomo c A so 197 PICK
YOUR own conn ng
Coma o
M Ia Hutch son
omo toes A so green beans
Ru and 742 2306
B ng con a ne And ew C oss
197 4 VW THING 49 800 m es
leto Fol s 2,~4.7:::.2::85::2::._._~ -"~ _
Ha d and soft lop $ 495 Col CANNING TOMATOES and swee
Sue 992 7605
corn fo f eez ng P ck you
Co
So bo a To bot
own
1974 PlYMOUTH GOLD Dus e
Po 1 and 843 4515
3 8 V 8 3 speed on the floor
AM FM s e eo Tope P aye
NEW IDEA No 7 Co np cker
35 000 m es A shocks Ex
Good cond on Ready o p ck
e len cond t on 9a5 3577
614 BO 2286
--967 CAD LLAC HEARSE $600 o NEW SBE Touch Com 40 C B
w II t ode fa onyth ng of equa
ad o 40 chonne Ten no e ec
vo ue (614 698_!290_
c el ac ng antenna anten
no mo he (SWR) 3 me e
96S
FORD FOUR DOOR
auomo c VB $45
968-- modulo on wat age and SWR
gouge all cables and hook up
Chev ole p kup
ton V 8
fitt ngs fo ad o and guoge AI
au omo c
powe
stee ng
egu pmen s fo mob le use
$&lt;t50 Cha es Ru ssel Boshon
Col 992 2448 of o Spm
949 2860

-------

-

----

965 CHEV BISCAVN Wagon 2B3
standard new es uns good
26 Eas Mo n S
Pome oy
Oh o

----

---

FOR THE f nes in wood heot ng
s aves cook15 oves and coo l
s aves Co Z on Huo Co 8
Putnam Dr ve Athens (bU
696 IB7o (614 5926079

976 Man e: CARLO w h full v nyl
POTATOES FOR w nle
Ken
oaf AM tape PS PB AC
nebec Cobb e and Super o
cru se con rol powe
doo
R 338 o Ravenswood fe y
locks ond mo e ext os h
m Cell 84~49 T~oy e
cellen cond on 992 6243
PIINASONIC
RANGER Aula Boot
FORD 4 door 6 cyl stan
AC Outdoo b ack and wh te
do d Good and t on $300
Co I
compact
e e son
9'12 2B49
992 244a after 5 00 pm

966

-~

975 CR 125 HONDA Els no e Ex
ce len cond on 949 ~10
MOTOROLA PORTAB E b a k ond
wh te elev s on Co I 992 2448
of o 5 QO pill
HAY FOR sole PICk up out of
held Col 9B5 3555

-___,- = - -='."~~~'' 23 000 8 T \J A R cond on ng
~
Good shope 9'12 77S5
SMRCRAFT 10fhltmn we so y so.. TH~EE FOURTH S mmenlal But
on nlinf-tnbtor.s tole s and
Coif {bl"' ) 843 2'53
folddowns Tro\lelsta 25 It TWO ARABI~N Ho ses Also a
'-""00 00 20 ft m nl moto
k
od
$10 850 00 Wo sellse vice and
~";~~s$:~;u9'12 v7"s19go con
qual ty Camp Conley Sto c of
Soles Rt 62 north of PI Pleo KENNEBEC POTATOES
John
sant
Pope 949 2273
FAR MONTH SPECIAL on en o
' llf&lt;k
them ol COONER S
CAMPERS on Ra nbow r dge
From ftl 7 toke Me gs 28 or 32
lo Boshom Open •lfW! ngs
too Owner Robert 'todne
lang Bottom Ohio

s-

~

\:QoT ALU"\IN~ ~ 6 h p
£V n ~de m~W': 1~~ h cob
c u se equ ~ YJ lh
v ng
foe It es and 90 h p ..~~ n ude
mota and Ira fer 1'?04 GMC
0 esel Trocto w lh lonem axle
n3 5:!38

n

HOOVER UPR GHT Sweepe s
977 model W I se fo $22 50
cosh o e m$ 992 5 4b
BEAUTY SHOP Equ pmen
4
Comb moun s a ons 2 Sham
poo so ens 6 Dyes Un
pe m AI let ove suppl es
992 7608
4 YEAR 0 0 eg s e ed Suffo k
Ram P oven s e Good heal h
and f ee 985 4295

HO 5 A C Doze 6 S Ions Good
ond on $.4 500 992 71347
SNARE DRUM w th case $50
Conn A. to Sa"ophone $275
9B5 42 2
CONN TRUMPET w h case P ced
o se 742 2667
OC UST POSTS and f ewood
Phone742 2359of e 6pm

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let

Pomeroy

Landmark

soften &amp; concht1on your
water

and

Co-op water

softener Model
Now Only

UC XVI

•279.95
Let us fest your

water

Free

Pomeroy landmark

9 ... ~Jack w caney

~

Mgr
Phone992 2181

NEW 3 bed oom hou se 2 bo hs
ol e ec I ac e M ddlepo
c ose o Ru ond Phone 992
748

SMALL fa m fo sale 0', down
owne f nonced Man oe Coun
y W Vo Phone (304 772
3 02 0 (3~)
~_

?I;2221:__

COUNTRV fo mlond w lh sedud
ed woods wo e and good ac
cess n Man oe Coun y W Va
$ 000 down co I (304 772
3 02 0 (304 772 3227

•

'-----------------------------------.....J
f-==

STORti
IIINDOIIS l 0001$

Weddtnp

IEPIACEIIEIIT

Port1a1ts

WNDOIIS

flobil S1mmif RRI!I

WMINUII

Rtl

Middlopatt. 0
9!12 sm
Complott Sales ... Smiu ""' Sttp.
pljn.

SIDIIIG-SOFFm
GIITTERUWN NGS

Spec11l

Bob Hoeftith

!1915292

3 1 ~1 mo

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

I

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

louto2

R"'lt l ,,.....,, 0
Carpet UphOlstery

K chen Cab nets Roof ng Cone ete

Phone M1ke Younr

m

p~

till .. • bate itl lluiltr " 1'1111 111 (111M, Ill
wil Mit,.. ....._ Tht Urhlllint 1t II lltlllllllllll.
111nJ Jllll'o MizH lili p IIIII ,.m, plliw •
Mttrlba " 1M Ill
ftW Ill -...
Cftf td Nil tf 11\tM fiM. ai tr IWIIIftiiS J1H1 til
ptitl II IIIII IlN. lid .r Ill• tlldllctS t Jlily •

,...!lUll

•p-

B1ssell S1d1ng Co.
~local

Restdenttal
and
commerc1al
Call far
es11ma1e 24 hour servtce
Anyday anytome
Phone 985 38~

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Box34

EASTERN DISTRICT - Heres whal you ve been
asking for Beaut ful6 yr old a I carpeted home with 3
bedrooms 1 2 baths uhl ty room N ce kitchen with
dining area Concrete p1rches Nat gas F A furnace
Nice country setting with approx 33/• acre land n
Eastern District 2 ml off Rt 7 Ask ng $29 800
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR LOOK HERE Five
bedrooms nice 1 2 story house large I v ng room w th
shining oak flooring large kitchen with d nlng area .2
full baths 2 bedrooms down and 3 upsta rs Completely
nsulaled w th F A nat gas furnace Large porches &amp;
garage Loc In Chester Price $19 800
MINERSVILLE -4 bedroom house most y carpeted
wrap around porch garage large lot a I overlook ng
the Ohio R ver Asking $16 500
EAST£RN DISTRICT- I ' acres of evel land n ce
12x64 all carpeted mob It home with 2 BRs living
room kitchen and bath 2 rooms bu It on nice family
room will! fireplace plenty of garden space some fru i t
trees Large workshop and bloci&lt; cellar C ly water and
septic tank Nice country seHing on County Rd 28
Price S15 900
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house w th
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 bought extra
Price for quick colo Houso and lot S12 600

C. II Jimmy Diem Atf49 ZHI

"

Continuous one ptete ptltlrs. We hint
~

01 do ~ fOIIfSI)I Spttwl Pl&lt;fS lo
buiden

Phone 949-2814

Chesttr Ohto
8 29 pd

RACINE CARPET
SHOP
£..611110

CARTER

P e REMODELING P umb ng heat ng

973 Go eno
2 x bO 2 bed
both A cond w lh unde
pnnng and u I y buldng
99'1 3702 of e 5 pm
2 x 64 THREE BEDROOM o le
fu ly lu n shed Be ng ons fe
ed IT\USI se
mmed a ely
992 7092

HOMES TES fo sole
at e and
up M ddlepo
nea Ru land
Co 992 74B

TEAFORDm
REA OR
VIRGIL B TEAFORD SR
REALTOR
216 E Second Street
Pomtroy Oh o 45769
Phone 992 3325
LARGE BRICK - Has 4
renfa s nea
stores and
community activit es
A
rea Investment for on y

$23 000
LIKE NEW - 4 bedrooms
natural gas F A furnace
n ce bath and tal In k I
chen Corner ot n Mid
d leporl $24 000
NEW
TRI LEVEL
Boashng 3 bedrooms 1 2
baths fam ly room off ce
and garage on one acre
LARGE Want one of
spec al
large
bedrooms, Ttl is s one and
3 other ones A good family
home with 2 baths and
natural
gas
fur nace
$27 500
INVESTMENT One 4
room apartment and a
studio apt Both wllh baths
Just S9600
105 ACRES Of nice
hunting land for S150 00 an
acre A good Investment
MIDDLEPORT
3
bedroom frame home with
bath
nat
gas heal
f replace In the living and
two car garage S1S 500
NEW
LISTING
Reasonable 5 room home 2
bedrooms
nice
balh
basement w lh new gas
furnace 2 porches garage
and carport Wont $17 000
BUILDING LOT Ci ty
water
and
eledr c
available Only $28QO
NEW LISTING 17S
acres free gas well 4
bedroom home oqulpped
birch kitchen with built In
cook and bake unll•
refrigerator bath gas F A
furnace and all minerals

those

$65 000

GUTTER
SERVICE
9am lo5pm

and ol ypes of gene o epa
Wo k guo an eed 20 yeo s ex
pe en e Phone 992 2409
SEW NG MACH N E Repo s
v ce ol makes 992 2284
Fob c Shop
Pome
Au ho zed S nge Sa es
Se
e We sho penS sso

~

AN APPRAISAL IS A
VALUE
IA'SED
ON
FACTS NOT AN OPINION
BY AIIYONE ONLY BY
OUALil'IED PEOPLE

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC

se
Tile
oy
and
s

300 M~n SL
Plll1ltlllf

Oh~

p..,..., 992-6212
or 992-6263
I A.M to 4:30 P M

E:XCAVAT NG doze oade and
backhoe wo k dump
u ks
and lo boys to h e w hau
I d
o so I mes one and
g o e Co Bob o Rage Jef
day phone 992 7089
fe s
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992
5232

SALES ANO SERVICE

7 28- mo

EXCAVAT NG doze
backhoe
and d t he Cha es R Ha1
f eld
Sa k Hoe Se v e
Ru land Oh o Phone 742 2008

BRADFORD Auc onee
Com
pie e Se ce Phone 949 2487
o 949 2000 Ro ne Oil o C
B odto d

W ll do ool ng. cons uc on
p umb ng and hea ng No ob
oo a ge o oo smo Phone
742 234B

ELWOOD SOWERS REPA R Sweepe s oos e s
ons a I
smo I opp onces lawn mowe
nex o S o e H ghwoy Go age
on Roue 7 Phone 614 985
3825

CARPENTER
f oo ng
e nq
pane ng Phone 99'1 2759
MOBILE Home Repo
Ele
plumb ng and hea ng Phone
992 5858
HOWERY AND MART N EK
cove t ng
sep
sys ems
doze
ba khoe dump u k
mes one
9 ave
block op
pov ng R 43 Phone I 614
69B 7331
HARRISON S T V Repa Se v ce
Co Is 276 Sy omo e S M d
d epa Phone 99~2522
BATHROOMS AND K chens
emode ed e om c e p um
a pen y and gene a
b ng
ma n en once
I J yeo s e)(
pe ence 992 ;;3;;
68~S~~~=~,c~

$41 000

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Free Estimatn
No Sundl! tails P~llt

Pomerv,

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Jllll b.al
baM Of s&amp;l CaN 992 OU t.1 t hM fltimal or

lfo911J 00 MIIJI S P011111.. 0

contraclor

Phone 949 2801
or 949 2860

.'.":'""

~

MOBILE HOME
2 x 60
$5 500 Co 992 5858

Vmyl &amp; Alummum S1dmg,
Storm Wmdows &amp; Insulalion
Call Professionals

....

992 2174

tr U!UIInn IIJUIHI Ut

... ell W'ill li111mt, Gil

,.,,""

__

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

"*11.1...• o •JOII~--1111nt~lldtltl
., •lit

' - nltill ham~!

"The Ill rnllo~
NotThe mitllots

617 mo pd

Kmgsbury Home Sales
en• tM

~· 992 7630
992 2206 or

Pat os Sdewa ks New Consl uct on
Remode ne
Ph
7119 ar 696-1005
Estlmlles llfpled 1o i"-

Coo

Ph 31U250

Is Jill 111ltltrilt. lllltf

&amp;

Pome.., Oh• 4S769

. . . . . 01'

517 TFC

,.tL

Young's
Carpetmg

Radiator
Service
, _ ...... ,..l

Au tom abc
lfansm1ss1on Se1'11ce

R-lleO

Supenor

Sleom Eltracllon

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

SWAIN

9'12 5502

,h !92 39!13

6-22 mo

'------------1

e

LARRY LAVENDER
sr oc...,oh.,

DAVID BRICKLES

•custom Hydraul c Hue
M~k ng
Phone 992 2176
Pomeroy 0
8 7 1 mo

TWO BEDROOM home s ua ed on
I oc
land Col 992 7294 o

GOT LOTS OF K I DS7
Here is your home 2
story frame .4 bedrooms
1 2 baths farge heated
enclosed porcn top ay In on
bad days 2 car garage &amp;
storage
corner
lot
$1120000
SUMMER OR WINTER
This home has a beaullful
v ew of the river 1 floor
p an has 3 bedrooms bath
basement
storage
building garden other
features $12 500 00
ABOUT 18 ACRES ready
for
subd vis on
and
development In t~e V llage
of Pomeroy JUST L'OOK
$28 500 00
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION Me gs
school dlstr cl Lovely 2
bedroom equ pped k t
chen
d n ng R
part
basement with garage
$16 500 00
SOUTHERN
STYLE
HOME - Has everyth ng
F rst lloor has lovely
equ pped k lchen (house
w fe s dream) d nlng R 2
bedrooms 2 modern balhs
upper floor l-Ias 2 rentals for
good ncome S24 000 00
OLDER OME - 1 2 story
frame for ess than ttle
pr ce of most new cars In
good
condition
3
bedrooms bath 6 rooms In
all 57 000 00
NEWER MODERN VA
approved
home
3
bedrooms lovely fam ly
room n ce kitchen car
pehng panel ng II e cold
room &amp; storage cen1ral
heat and a r cond 2 acre
$32 500 00
LOOK 4 LOTS - Space for
the kids to romp In qu el
area 6 rooms bath and
workshop In good con
d lion Meigs school area
$13 000 00
WHY
WAIT?
IN
TEREST RATES ARE
GOING UP- PROPERTY
PRICES CONTINUE TO
SOAR - BUY NOW
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank Kathy &amp; Ltona
Cleland
Associates
992 2259 992 2568 9BS 4112

l... ~tlooAqQbJe
-·
Finl~tttlll
81ownlnlo llols U11i&lt;s

p.,....,

ups

MAIN
POMEROY 0

llawn

109 Hich St

D. Bumgardner
p001Sa1es

Rustoleum PiltnT Products

HOUSE 4 ooms and bo h on a e
of land
n ludes fu n u e
$8 000 Ruby Bush 949 2052

FREE ESTIMATES

THE PHOTO PLACE I

•we c:~n sh1p parts d reclly
to your door by WilY of

FOR SALE

-

Business Services

VA FHA 30 y f one ng eland
Mo tgoge 77 £ S a e Alhens
phone 6 ot ) 592 305

CANN NG TOMATOfC ,. ng you
H
own conro ne s Robe
Roush Roc ne 247 2 90

5 FOOT BRUSH Hog w tn f s
CASH po d fo ol makes and AVA LABLE AT R ve s de Ap s I
$300 o
ode fo bode Co
models of mob e homes
bed oom $105 pe month $150
742 2427
Phone a eo code 61A 423 9531
secu y depos 992 6098
T&lt;:&gt;UCH AND Sew Does t AI Jus
TIMBER Pome oy Fo es Pro THREE ROOM lu n shed opt
I ke new So d fo $4"9 95
du s Top p ce for sand ng
992 6 6
Cleor ng OIJ stock Mus se I fo
sow mbe
Col 992 5965 o
$89 95
Cash
e ms
Kent Hanby -446 8570
992 5 46
CO NS CURRENCY okens ad
SCHOO
S NGER
Sew ng
pocket wa ches and cha ns
Mach nes Many feotu es On y
SPR
NG
GARDEN
Supples
Cob
s l e and god We need 1964
$31 50
cosh
o
te ms
bage
au I owe
b occo
ond older s ve co ns Buy sel
992 5 46
and
head
et
uoe
plan
s
o
ode Co I Roge Wamsley
742 2331
yel ow wh e ond eel on on ~--===-=,...,.-="'=---.,
se s on on p on s Kennebe&lt;
OLD FURNITURE e boxes b ass
obble Ko ohd n Red Pont a
New Co Op water ai'Jid
beds
e
ample e
ond Red osoda seed po o oes
softeners model VC SVI
househo ds W eM 0 M I e
Bulk go de, seeds po 1ngso I
Only $279 95
R 4 Pome oy Oh o o co I
pea
moss fru
ees and ose Save SSO 00 on a new
9'12 7760
bushes
M dwoy
Mo ke
Hotpoin1 Retrtgerator
CASH
Junk co s F y s T u k &amp;
Pomeroy
Oh o
992 25a2
1 New 20 cubic t1 Chest
Au o Rut and Phone 742 208
Bob s Ma ke Mason W Va
Freezer
304) 773 5721
o 742 9575 C osed Mondays
$25 00 DISCOUnt
~
1 Good McCullough Chatn
ECONOMV TRACTOR w th oil a
NO ITEM TOO La ge o oo small
Saw
S85 00
oc.hmen s l ke new ask ng
W I buy
p ece o comp ete
2 Good ustd XL2 Chatn
$2250 Phone 6 4) 698 3290
househo d New used o on
SAws
ques Mo n s Fu n u e 20 N
CANN NG TOMATOES PEPPERS
1- $100 00 1-$80 00
2nd St
M dd epo 1 Phone
u umbe s
Cle and Fa ms
Eloctrtc
Trtm All cuts with
992 6370
Ge a d ne
G eenho use
nylon
$29 95
CLEAN MO
:.:::
D::
ER;::N-;"-:H-come w h I0
C eland
(1) Good Refrigerator $200
oc es o moe Col {6 14) TREE RIPENED o cha d peaches
S57 3382
Wh e o yel ow $ o tng Mon
w.·..:;ack W Carsey Mgr
Aug
Mason Peo h Orcho d
.
. . . Phone992 2181
975 HARLEY DAV DSON ex

WATER HAULED 550 gallon s po
load
n Tuppe s p 0 I)S
Cool lie oreo
Co I
6U)
667 3675 alter ~ pm
Will DO babys tt ng n my home
9'12639'1
•

._....
.,....

,.,

I ARtR'AH MINI Mo o s

GARAGE FOR. Ren su able fo
boo slo age o o he lo age
Reasonable ren Col 992 2623

Tue.U.

l

tor

3 AND _. RM fu n shed and un
fu n shed op s Phone 992
5434

IN
•

.

(.:ampmg t:qutpmcnt

924 Go I po s Oh o

O.e n• uu ~~
fl '('Uti f)l.'t' WOf"ll!Jd' dM,y

E&lt;tlil W\lC"d

"onb; ~

H•lp \\an led
8"'BV1iiTH:R TO"li:e n

I :IS

110

w

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted· Hems Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

RACINE GUN Cub w I hod o
Ch ken Bo 8 Que Sun Sep
4 A I membe so e nv led

PUBLIC NOTICE
I RC 3313 .. ,
Separate sealed proposals
for Media Center Furniture &amp;
Equipment and Vocationa
Agr culture Tools Equ p
ment &amp; Furn ture will be
received at the off ce of the
c erk of the Board of
Educat on of Southern Loca
School
Oistr ct
Me gs
Counly Oh o unt I 12 00
o clock
noon
East tn
Day ghl
Savlnos Time
September 12 1977 and wil
be publicly opened and read
by the clerk mmed ately
thereafter at the usual place
of meeting of sa d board of
education tabulated and a
report thereof made by the
cl~rk to seld board at tt next
meeting
Cop es of the spec ficat ons
nstructlons to bidders and
proposal forms may be ob
telntd at the off ce of the
Clerk Treasurer
A certlf ed check payable
to the clerk treasurer of the
above bOard of educat on or a
ut afactory
b d
bond
execut~ by the bidder and a
surety companY
n an
amount equal to five percent
Of the b d shall be aubm tted
w th each b d
Said board of educ.,t on
res~rves the r ght to wa ve
ntormallt es to 1ccept or
reject any and a II or parts of
any and ell bids
The successful bidder w 11
b' required to furnish a
utiStactory perform1nce
bond.. tor one hundred percent
ot tht contract price
No bld1 may be w thdrewn
for 1t leut th rty (30) days
after the scheduled closing
time fOr rectlpt at bids
Bo1rd of Eduut on ot
SOuthern Loca Schoo
District
8y Robert K Sayre
P retldent
Linda J Spencer
erk
Ill 19 26 (9 2 9 .. c

,1.

9-TheDailySentinel Middl~Pomeroy o Fnday Sept 2,1m

...-v

Thee sn t any n po Ia t o le nl fethat
doosn t have o be rehearsed before !he cur

Now neveryfed therea me &lt;tnd"omenwhoseChns
tan characte :; adn red respected and el ed upon by al
\'ho know Ihem You can be sure th ey d dn t suddenly vake
l pone mo n ng w th that IJ d of personal nob I ty Where
then d d t come fro 1 How d d they acqu re t?

SasbugVgnJa

Sunday hoi ness

mee ng 10 am Sundov School
0 30 a m Sunday school eode
YPSM E o se Adams 7 p m

so vat on

Ph 949 9130

MEIGS PWA

0 m Wo 1h p !1.8f'f'K8 Wednes
day 730pm
CAL V!IRY B IILE CHURCH 20 N
Second
M ddlepo I ftCJSia
Chu th uhool
9 JO o m
pteoth ng
ces 10 30 om
and 7 30 p m Wednetdo'f' ev.n
nglblesudy 73Qpm
INDEPENDENT HOL NESS
CHURCH INC
Co ner Fou lh
ortd Lm.ofn S s Mtddlepott ltev
0 Del Manley pas o Sony Hud
!loOfl Sundo)' Sc.hool !iupef n en
den Sunday school 9 30 am
evenng wo shp 730 pm
p aye
and pose se ve e

NICE LOT n Pome oy w h bla k
op d vewoy Has a 65 x 12 2
bed oom ale To a elec c
when a o
and onng
and wood bu n ng F onk n
f ep oce Has ots o ex os
Co 1992 '1438
LOADI:D 972 12 x 60 Ba on
Mob e Home A I elec c en
o a ond heo unde p nned
and a I o g no fu n u e goes
w htale A eadyse upon
Ia ge o n Mason W Vo
Phone 3().4) 773 54313

~

••

-

-----

SAVE ON
CARPETING
Candy Slrtp
Rubber Back
Regular $6 95
SAve$4 88 Sq Yd
12 and 15 II Wtdth Carpet
rubber back

1488

sq yd

Reg .. 9S nottnstalled

30 rolls of carpet tn stock
Good seltcllon all on sale
Installed wtth paddtng no
extra to pay

Ca 11742 2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742 2211

Rultond

Convenient Shopping Hours

:•t

•• .,...•

+•

..

::
••

I

••

~·--·····
..~ ~~ !.•
Mlln , TYH , Wtd
800tll500
::.a.
l'llursday atJI,_.,
• •

• • FRIDAY TIL 5
...._ IDe Sat. At 5 PM.

.
I

•

•.••

:
:
t

RUTLANil FURNilUIII:

.,

:u

1

ARNOLD ORAl L"'&lt;

1
:

Ru~NDJ!

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

�I

tdltt9:*

Don't Miss Our ~

DAY SALE

Of BETTER USED CARS

&amp;TRUCKS

ustoclft

20 ft. HOUDAY RAMBlER TRAVEL TRAILER
Self-_conlained, roof air conditioner, roll-out
awn.n_g, CO!f1Piete with equalizer hitch and
electnc trasler brakes. Excellent condition.

AT

'1995
I ~ THE:

FLE:S.rt: ...
DO FORGI VE' ME
FOR RECE IVING
~OU

1111

CU ~ Lt;Ri&gt;~

YOU' VE NO IDE-A

HOW "~CITIN6 IT
WAif; TO

;; ~ OM

'7

GE'T A CALL

THAT PAil.IN6

A O V E'J.JT URE~-CAPTAIN EAoY ~

VO U FLATTER.

AND JUS.T

BY T~E WAY-·
DO YOU MIIJD IF

ME, CAPTA IN
EA.;Y!

THIIo) l{ .. NOW
VOU' Re A

NOW JU5T"

WHAT 15 IT

t TAKE OUT THES.E

VOUR COMPA~V
WI?HE$ TO
COt.i~ULT ME-

HAI R· CU~LE R~ ~

9U5-INE!?5

1976 CONTINENTAl: MARK IV, Loaded ••••. $AVE
1975 CHEV. CAMARO....................... 'l895
1974 FORD GALAX IE 4 OR ................ '2495
1973 FORD TORINO 4 DR WAGON........ '1995
1974 PLY. FURY Ill 4 DR ..•.••.••.•.•.••• '2295
1973 PONTIA~_LEMANS 2 DR ............ '2495
1974 MERC. MONTEGO MX 2 DR........ 12495
1974 FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR..........12495
1974 PLY. VALIANT 4 DR 6 CYL AUT0.• 1189!i
1973 MERC. MONTEREY 2 DR ........... 12295
1973 HORNET SPORTABOUT
4 DR. WAGON ........................ 11895
1972 PLY. DUSTER 2 DR.. ......... ....... 11295
1973 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR .............. 11895
1972 PONTIAC GRANVILLE 4 DR.......... 11295
1973 CHEV. LAGUNA CHEVELLE 4 DR SW 11695
1973 PLY. FURY I 4 DR ................... 11095
1972 MERC. COMET 6 CYL AUTO., 2 DR..sgg5
1970 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR ............... i)95

T'fC()ON:

ABO!JH

Y'KNOW, YOU NG FEUA , MESSE
YOU'RE RIGHT ! AH REC KON
SAHU NKA OUGHTA HAVE
"TI-l ' R IGHT "T 'CHOOSE HE'R
OWN MAN !

ntE STRANGE.R AND HIS

SEAS&gt; MADE A
OF ME. I

F~

SOON HE WILL LEARN

ntAT NO ONI! MAKES
A FOOL C/F' B IG ELAC !

... BUT SEFORE I CA.N SETTl-E wrr~
HIM 1 I MUST GET RID OF "THAT

PE.&gt; OF HIS .'

9-2.

I CO ULDN 'T KILL
YOU-- I DOll' T Pt A'(
THE 6 AME
- '' WC&lt;I'

TH AT WAY --

BUT YOU'RE A SMART GU'( AYEL-TH INK ! ·- YOU WANT TO Hf'LP
YOUR PEOPLE -- PL&lt;&gt;.Y WITH ME
AND WE'LL HELP THEM BEVOND
YOUR FONDEST DRE'AMS --

. COOPERATE WITH
YOU? BAH! HO
CHANCE!

HOW

AWAY-- BUT
THIS TIME MAKE SURE
HE DOCSN'T SLIP

TAKE

"TYPIC,:&gt;.L! EH,
PU~JA97

~IM

Hl6 COLLAR.--

~ES,

SilHIB -"THIS TIME HE

WILL NOT

ESCAPE ME --

IGiia!E HIM,
PUI'UAB --

BUT FOR THE
LOVE OF

&lt;&gt;.LI\IE --

CI&lt;OSS TI-lE GENES OF lJ.IE
POTAlV AND PINEA PPL-E' AN D .
CREATE A VE6ETABLE

~~~ts

W- 0 SA'J ANYTH I.'J0
A 'lOUT GC \ 3 A ~Cl\I E?
1\l r:AC~ :. ._;U5T
Mt (;~ TGO

\\='v:= SOT 1:)

. IY(}IIIJERFtiL/
MAYBE NOW HEG'\N

MOle CJT... AN;J
FIND A .''lAC:': OF

WITH

YOU.' r-~-:::2!

C._AI\;:SC WI-;...!
.1 T I

HISO\VN!

OH , ~ &lt;= 'S 'JOT IIA KIN0
THI/T I{IN D OF MON':':Y
H:: WORK :;. NIGHT&amp;,

e-o WE I&lt;E NOT IN

VOUR. 'LIV IN0

WHY NOT ?
IT WCRKE? OUT

PeRFECTLY.'

AIZRANGEMENT5q
WITH HIM?

EAO\mHEI25

WAY I

THEN YOU'R"- GOING
TOCONTINU'::

,_'__,... 1

I

,,

'

' I

/.
'•
!)

..

BRIDGE

It An interesting You put ·1ts thumb
fell from 11 doll, really!
in its mouth and
it

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

SIOI~bftjr:.§

· NORTH iD)
•Q 2
• A9 3
t A9 8 5
• Q9 32
WEST

S':AST
4 A 10 8 6 3

•J 108 5

• K2

• J 6 43
4K6

SOUTH
• J5
• Q76 4
t KZ

I ..

olo-AJ8 7 4

BORN LOSER

North-South vulnerable

All !lOUR! l-IS"f~N.
I'M

West North

HUI.Jb~!

2•

Pass

ltJ ABCUT A!J
HOUR ... RtW/
A. BOOK.
i!l HJ II\I NEAI'It. h~Aet !iS PJIOit

i CLASS!!
1

OUR LESSON '
, FER TODAY I
I

HOWTO

CONSARVE
ENERGY

~
q._';(.

Eail

South

1-lo
Pass

••
2.
Pass ~

3•

Pass ••

Pass
4•
Double Pass

BAR NEY

2

• K 974

• Q 10 7
4 10 5

Dl i.Jt-.1£;1{&lt; ~

72 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR ......... ~1795
6 cyl., auto . trans ., radio .

73 FORD PINTO WAGON.......... .!1895

IT'S CLEANUP -TIME AT
Open Evenings

PHONE 992·2126

Until 8 PM

Pass Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead - ••
By Oswald &amp; J.-.-m"e'"s-:J:-ac-o7b_y-J
The best that can be said
about the way North and
South bid to (our hearts is that
it was frightfuL West didn 't"
like the way they bid and
decided to double on general
principles. and his fou;
trumps . .
·
The defense . started with
two spade tricks and then
West shifted to the seven of
diamonds .
South took his king and led a
low trump. West was afraid
that South might· be leading
from the king-queen and
played his 10. South won the
dummy ' s ace . led a club.
linessed his jack and led a second trump toward dummy .
Now West was sure that Soulh ·
was under leading the king and
queer•. He played his jack only
to see his partner win the
trick with lhe king .
At t~is point. East could

stiU set the contract by
·1ead1ng a ~pade to force South
to trump m one hand or the
other and give his partner a
sure trick with the eight of
trumps. Or he ·could play his
king of clubs to South 's ace
and once more there would
have been no way to shut out
that eight of trumps, but East
was so upset by the way the
trump play had gone that he
led a diamond to dummy's
ace. South cashed the nine of
trumps! led a club to his ace
whole pockmg up the kmg and
10, drew the last trump and
was home.
.

'

.'

The Almanac
UuliedPresslnlematlonal
Today is Friday Sept 2
' . · '
the 245th day of 1977 With 120
to follow· .
.
. The moon IS movmg from
Its full phase to the last
quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus, Mars, Jupiter and

Saturn.

The evening star is
Mercury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Virgo.
American poet Eugene
Field was born Sept. 2 1850.
'

'
''
~

.
'

"HURRY IN FOR A GOOD DEAL"

.acy l ., auto . trans., ra'dio, sh arp with blue trim .

70 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR.........!1395
6 cyl.. 3 speed frans ., on column, rad io. Sharp.

74 CHEV. NOVA 4 DR ............... $1995
6 cyl.. auto. trans .• radio .

75 fORD GRANADA 4 DR...........$3295
302 V-8, P . steering, auto . tr:ans., A. C., radio, vi nyl roof ,
reclining bucket seats .

RIGGS USED CARS

See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Darrel Dodrill

place in the sun."
'

In an address to the West

• Virginia
Chamber
of
Commerce, convening this
' week at the Greenbrier Hotel,
BreMan said the ,strike has
brought to a head the conflict
between miners and the
industry.
' "1977 is a year that will
mark either a new IJeginning
of historic cooperation
between
labor
and
management In coal or it can
well mark the beginning of
the end of a national coal

labor agreemerit,'' he said.
Referring to the medical .
benefits cutbacks that
prompted the walkout,
BrelUlan said, " We are going
to have to establish a proper

76 FORD F-150 ... ~ ................... !3995
V-8, P. steering , 3 speed col. sh ift .l O,OOO miles.
'

V-8. J speed colvmn sh ift .

DAN THOMPSON FORD
For a Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle
Open evenings til7 : 00 except
Thursday and Saturday. Closed Sunday

Ray Riggs
992 -2196

•

Middleport, 0 .

Television log
FRIDAY,, SEPTEMB_ER 2,1977
5:QO- Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33: Emergency One 13; Mission :
Impossible 15.
5:3tl-Odd Couple4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33.
6:oo-News 3,4,8.10,13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3Q--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
New Movies 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Inner Tenn is 33 .
7: 3D-Porter Wagoner J ; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl 20,33; Andy Williams
10; Pop Goes lhe Country 15; Name That Tune 13.
8:QO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,15; NFL Football6,13; Baseball
4; Keane Brothers 8,10; Washlnglon Week in
Review 20,33.
8:3Q--Chlco &amp; the Man 3, 15;; Starland Vocal Band 8,10;
Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:0Q--Rockford Flies 3, 15; Movie" I Want lo Keep My
Baby I" 8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20;
Documentary Showcase 33 . .
9::10--'-Somethlng Personal 20.
I O:O~ulncy 3,15; News 20; Firing Line 33.
10:3Q--Redscene '77 4; Woman 20.
11 :oo-News 3.4,6,8, 10.13,15 ; Black Perspective on the
News 33.
11 :3Q--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Bar etta 6, 13; U.S. Open
Tennis Highlights 8; Movie " House on Green Apple
Road" 10; ABC News 33.
11 :45-Movle " The Private Navy of Sgt . O' farrell" 8.
12 :QO-Janakl 33.
12 :4Q--Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
1:00--Movie " Janis" 3,4,15.
1:4Q--News 13; 2:3Q--News 3; 3:QO-Movle
Announced 3.

To Be

ACROSS
DOWN
level of health and retirement 1 Tricks
I Cheese to
benefits
for
the 6 " Big Ben"
garnish
overwhelming majority of
of comics
spaghetti
our workers who are willing 10 Non - mentis 2 Manin blue
to be loyal to the integrity of 11 Opera
3Si!ed
the national agreement."
highlight
4 Dawn
He noted miners are lZ Customs duty
goddess
ignoring a contract that 13 - souci
5 Fast planes
remains in effect until Dec. 6,
(careless)
6 Nigel's film
and contended the walkout is 14 Fur
.partner
not a labor problem but a law 15 Small piano
7 New Jersey
17 Concerning
enforcement problem.
city
" !think in the early stages
(2 wds.)
8 Ancestral
of strike, they (Gov. · Jay 18 Aquatic
9 Savored
Rockefeller and the state
plants
10 Urban ;
police) were viewing this as a 19 Director,
public .
labor strike and were
Fred16 "C&lt;Jnunon
·reluctant to be · involved," 20 WWI! Asian
Sense"
Brennan said after his
theater
author
speech .
_
22 Ancient
"l think both the union and
times ·
the industry have prevailed 23 Vandal
on them to take the opposite 24 Butt
approach, and we are now
against
seeing state pollee patrolling . . 27 Summer
That's a good . sign," be
(Fr.)
added.
28 Actress
BreMan said he thought
·Grier
coal stockpiles at power 31 Circumvent b-+-+-plants would be adequate to · 33 - town
cope
with · electricity
(2 wds.)
demands this winter.
34 Types ·
"Forty-eight percent of na- ~ English
school
tional production is non-UMW
and even during this strike, 37 Indigo
plant
most UMW mines were working," he said.
~ Type of
leather
40
n Maxim
Manifest
· 42 - reckoning 1.,-,c+-l-+43 Italian

lF~~~!,Y_!B!H~S~IN!!ES~S~---!r.,~~B~o/~len~

~

FIL.L.

IER
UP, .
SIR'?
•

SATURDA'f, SEPTEMBEIU,1977
6:00-Summer Semester 8,10.
·
6:3Q--Maltersot Llle6; F;lm B; U.S. Farm Report 10;
Kentucky Afield 13.
7:oo-Saturday Report 3; Children's Theatre 4; Eddie
Saunders 6; Treehouse Club 8; Public Polley
Forums 10; Gilligan 13.
7:3Q--Bullwlnkle 3; World of Survival 4; Valley of the
Dinosaurs 6; Way Out Games 8; Short Story Special
13; Sesame St. 20.
8:oo-Woody Woodpecker 3.4, 15; Tom &amp; Jerry 6, 13;
Yesterday' s Aoswer
Sylvesler &amp; Tweety 8, 10.
8:3Q--Pink Panther 3,4,15; Jabberjaw 6,13; Clue Clup ·
20 Merriment 29 Right now
8, 10; Mister Rogers 20 . ..
21 "-Not for
(2 wds. )
Oynomutt 6,13; .Bugs Bunny 8,10;
9:QO-Scooby-Ooo,
Me"
· 30 Card game
. Sesame St. 20.
2• Contemplate 32 Crosse&lt;! out · 9:3Q-25 Wide . .
33 Find access IO:QO-Speed Buggy 3,4,15; Tarzan 8,10; Once Upon a
street
(2 wds.)
Classic 20.
26 Philippine 35 Imitated
10 ::!O--'-¥Onster Squad 3,4, 15; Kroflt Supershow 6, 13;
Batman 8.10; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
city
39 Fonner Mrs.
11 :QO-Space Ghosts, Frankenstein Jr. 3,4, 15; Shazam28 Mighty
Sinatra
lsls 8, 10; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
11 :3Q--Big John, Little John 3,4, 15; Superfrlends 13;
Big Blue Marble 6.
12 :QO-Land of the Lost 3,15; Movie "From Hell to
Texas" 4; Hoi Dog 6; Pro Soccer Play-Oil 8; U.S.
Open Tennis 10; Call It Macaroni 13.
12 :3Q--Ara's Sports World 3; American Bandstand 13;
Soul Train 6.
I :QO-Grealest Sports Legends 3; Wrestling 15; Nova
33.
.
.
I :3Q--Frank Ellwood: Football 3; Point of View 6;
Movie "Assignment to Kill'' 13.
2:QO-Grandstand 3,4,15; Bewtlched 6; U.S. Open
Tennis 8; Bill Moyers' Journal 33.
2: 15-Baseball 3,45,15 .
2:3Q--Movle "In Broad Daylight" 6 .
3:oo-u.s. Open Tennis 8,10; Movie "A Guide lor the
Married Man" 13; Commonwealth 33.
3:3Q--Book Beat 33.
4:Q0-1976 Soulheastern Conference Highlights 6;
Woman 33.
4: JQ--Wide World of Sports 6, 13; Montage 33 .
I -:-+~-+~-+~
s :oo-Star Trek 3,4; Golf 8,10; To Be Announced 15
1
"'
Catch-33 33.
5:3Q--Austln City Limits 33; 6:~News 3,4,10;
· Lawrence Welk 8; God Has the Answer 15.
poet
6:3Q--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; News 6; CBS
News 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; 'fou 33.
· 7:oo-Muslc Hall America 3; Lawrence Welk 4,15; Hee
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's ·how to work It~
Haw 6,8; In The Know IO; Let's Make a Deal 13;
AXVDLBAAXR
World War I 33.
7::10--'-Dolly 10; Tony · the Pony 13; Wodehouse
io LONGFELLOW
Playhouse 33 .
One letter simply stands for another. ln this sample A is 8:oo-Emergency 3,4, 15; Fish 6,\3; Mary Tyler Moore
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single letters,
8,10; People In Jazz 33.·
~po~(rophes, lhe length. and formalion of the words are all
8:Jo-Sugar Time 6,13; Bob Newhart 8, 10; SOmething
hints. Each day the c.ode.Ietters are 'dift'e.:ent.
Personal 33.
9:oo-Movle
"The Sugarland Expre5s" 3,4, 15; NFL
CRYPTOQUOTES
Foolball6,13; All In The Family 8,10; At The Top
33.
.
'
VEDW BWDHEKH, EK
ATW
CTESW,
9:3Q--AIIce 8,10.
GDW
TYVRYJJW!
RQ
RWSPWU- IO:oo-Swltch 8, 10; Shades of Greene 33.
11 :QO-News 3,4,8, 10, 15; Janak! 33.
PKJ
KEATPKJ
PK
ATGK
RQ II :i5-Take 15 with the Mountaineers 15.
11:3Q--Mary Hartman 3; Weekend 4,15'; U.S. Open
Tennis Highlights 8; Woody Hayes: Football 10.
RWSPWUPKJ
PK
AEE
V Y X T.

,.---.,........,.,,........,.,_,.,....

11 :45--Movle ''Rancho Notorlous'1 8.

B.

A.

RGDKYV

Yetlenlay's Cryploquote: NO MAN NEEDS A VACAT!ON SO
MUCH AS TifE MAN WHO HAS JUST HAD ONE.-ELBERT

HUBBARD
() 1977 Kin&amp; Fnluru Syndit-•tr, Inc.

'
C1 1,77 ~ Hf.A .Inc .. T M. Reg. U.S. Pit. 01!,

.

.

72 FORD PINTO 3 DR ............ }1795

73 FORD F-100....................... }2395

WHITE
SULPHUR
SPRINGS, W.Va . ( UPIJ The president of the .
Bitwninous C&lt;Jal Operators
Association today said his
organization was not trying to
weaken the United Mine
Workers union by prolonging
a Ill-week wildcat strike.
"We do not seek to weaken
our union. To the contrary,
our efforts
should serve to
.
strengthen it," said Joseph
BreMan. "We do not seek to
deprive clial miners of their

•

POMEROY MOTOR COMPANY

brown and tan .

6 cyl. , auto. t r ans.

983-4100

so we con make room for more.

4 cyl .. avto . trans . . P. stee ring , .-adio, lug . rack , tutone

will be determined ~!:f'!~

C- A\,,3.\'S ... A\?

IS

'

We're •lllng our Chevrolets for leu

l :30---Mary Hartman 10 .

',\OIZ!..:::e

· I'M ::;TNMiD ~ WH~N

4 cyl.. auto . trans.. P . steering , r ad io.

Coalfield relations

PORCUPINE!."-

I

74 CHEV. VEGA ESTATE WAGON 51995

"m05E ARE= TilE

1_;::::.--.=..__; 1-JARVARD c::;aN

I

4 cyl., auto. trans ., vinyl top . Rad io.

1974 CHEV. SUBURBAN C/20 4 DR...... '3295
1975 CHEV. SCOTTSDALE PKG. auto...... '3295
1973 CHEV. CUSTOM C/10................ 1 2695
1973 FORD CUSTOM F-100 AUTO......... 12695
1970 CHEV. C/20 LW.B., STD............. 11095
1969 DODGE ¥z TON W/RACKS ............ SS95

Reger Riebel
Located on 51. Rt. 7
'
Chesler. Ohio

• 1... . ' ' :: .,....:__ :;.

74 FORD PINTO 2 DR .............. 52295

74 FORD F-100 .................. ,..... $2895

TRUCKS

I.JTI'LE; QI{PHA t'&gt; "NNIE

DAN THOMPSON
FORD

t
t
f
t
t
t
t

D

I] :55-Mary

Hartman 3.
l2 :oo-Movle "Houseboat" 10.
12: 15-ABC News 6.
12 :20--Mary Hartman 3.
12 ,3Q--Movle "Mission to Morocco" 6; Movie "On the
Waterfront" 13.12:45-Mary Hartman 3.
I :oo-Movle "River of Mystery" 4.
1: IQ--Mary Hartman 3.
I :30- -News 3,
2:oo- "Sullivan's Empire" 3; lohman &amp; Barkley 6 • .,.
2:35-ABC News 13.
'
.
3::10--'-Movl~ "T"he Wise Guys " 3.
5:-o o-FBI 3.
·

•

the Sermonette
Ever

see

an

animal

parade?
There is much that is said
a bout man coming from
animal. We all came from a
one cell amoeba long, long
ago. Man is often referred to
as a ~igher fonn of animal.

We may have similarities,
but we· alSo have many
dissimilarities. Evolution
may happen within a species,
but It Is only a figment of
strange minds to say man

came from

an

animal,

probably an ape .
·
Take a serious look at the
animal kingdom. It would
need to be a wonder of
wonder.s
with
every
evolutionary period to get a
male and also
female of
each advance in the chain of
evolution. They would both
need to survive a full sexual
life to begin reproducing their
own kind. Again, both male
and female would be needed
to continue the strain. The
odds of this happening would
be astronomical. I just can
not accept it.

a

Ever

see

band, decorate that car,
truck and bicycle. Toot that
horn and feel good. Hooray,
it's
a holiday .
Let's
remember the past and not
forget - it's · a day o.f
remembering.
When did you ever see the
animals do sOmething like
that, have a parade? Do they
celebrate anything in the
animal world? I have never
seen nor read about a parade
in the animal world. I have
got to believe that man is a
special creation of God. That
man has a mind and attitudes
so different from the rest of
God's creation we lfve In, that
we could not be another
chance roll of the dice in a
theory called evolution .
Such a simple thing like an
· animal parade l)elps me to
know I am a special creation
of God and not an accident of
fate. No, man plans parades
to remember or to celebrate
and as I look at the world, I
see God as our creator and
man that special creation of

God.

an

animal , The next time you see a
parade? Labor Day is next parade, I pray you will
Monday, September 5th and
there will be many parades
and celebrations. We have
parades many times a year.
Memorial Day, 4th of July,
Labor Day, etc, When do the
animals or birds have a
parade or a party, a birthday
party or an anniversary
party? Only man, . that
creature created in God's
image will go out and set
aside one day to say I
remember, I remember, I do
not forget nor want to forget.
.Wave that Flag, strike up the

.1\~j~~=~~~"~~i§~ •;_
IF YOU have a service to offer.
.wont to bvy .or sell . something,
oe looking ·for wo'r k . . . or

whatever .. . you 'll get results
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .

Coll992-2156.

remember that this is · a
special event in the whole
world of cratures. Why not
join in the march. Paint your

wagOn, decorate your car or
bike and become a part of
that . Big Parade. - Rev.
William Middleswarth, St.
Paul Lutheran Church.

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of the Order of
Sale duly issued out of the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, In the case of
Augusta Birch Powell vs .
Ralph D. Birch. et al. , being
the ludgmenl entry render.ed
In Case No . 1.6,210, .1 will offer
at public sale at the door of
th'e Court House, Pomeroy,
Ohio , on the 20th day of
September , 1977, at 10:00
o'clock A. M. , the following

real estate :
"''
The surface· only of the
fo l lowing described real

estate situated In the County
YARD SALE, Mon thru Fri. 1 mile of Meigs , State of Oh io, and In
from langsville on CR 10. the Townshl_
p of Lebanon , and
Clothing
w omen's, sizes bounded and described as
10-16; little girls , sizes 4-7; follows :
Beginning at a stake en the
smoll household items . Phone
line between Sections 19 and
742-2008.
25 ; thence south 27 rods and
- -~--- - - --· --~- -·
YARD SALE, Se.pt . l , 2 , 3. 9:00 to fl . to a rock ; thence on an
4;00 . Men's. women 's, boy's ei!ISterly direction 27 rods to
and tittle girl's clothing. Odds the center of the Chester and
Buffington Island Road i
and ends. 500 Lincoln Hill.
thence on a f10rthwesterlv
-·-. YARD SALE, Middleport .HiiL Wed . direction with the mean throu·gh Sot. ,
10-5. Bloke derlngs of said road 34 rods to
the P.l ace of beg i nn i ng,
residence.
conta1n i ng 3 acres, more or
.
SIX FAMILY Basement Sole . Sept. tess . Being part of tract of
2 &amp; 3 , Fri. &amp; Sot ., 9 to 5. Conn land conveyed to Chris
Topller Powell by C. J . Dart
Trombone, pool table , fnople and
Mar'/ Dart, his wife, by
bunk beds , Kenmore go s drye r, deed dated ?n the Jrd day ot
oil paintings . bathroom util ity March , 1894, and recorded in
cabinet. record albums , lots of Deed Book 77, Pages 403-4·5 ,
nice children's clothes : winter and recorded March 9, 1894 .
Also
the
following
coots, dresses , jeans, &amp;tc ..
real estate, surface
sizes tl· lO teen, nice women's described
only , in Meigs County, State ·
clothing, sizes 10 - 24 1JJ, girl's 3 of Ohio. Lebanon Township ,
- speed bike , portable sewing being a part of a tract of land
machine . haby swing,lots of conveyed to Henry L. Tracy
other things . 156 S. Jrd by Qeed dated April 21 , 1887,
recorded. In Volume 46,
_ ~"en~': ~~~~ lel?~:&gt;r!.:._~~~~..: and
Page 598, Meigs County Oeed
GARAGE SA~E . Sept. 3, A, 5, 6. Recorcls. Beginning at a stone
lee Circle,
Rust·ic Hills , In the road northerly from .the
Syracuse. Glassware, clo thing, residence of J . G. · Lane ;
gas ronge , and olher misc. thence north 3 and l -40 chains
and 48 l inks to a stone from
items.
which a Wh ite Oak 5 inches In
FIVE FAMILY Yard Sale , Fri. and diameter bears south 22112
Sot .. 9.-s. 232 South Fourth St. , east 10 links , also a White Oak
8 inches In diameter bears
Middleport , OH .
south SO and 3-4 west 2011~
SEVEN FAMILY Yard Sole, Sat. on· links; thence south 86h east
ly , starting at q. bl39 N. Second , 17. chains and so l!nks ;.thence
Middleport , OH . ladles" Vl 333!.- east 35 links to a stone In
center of road ; thente along
center of ,road south 87lf.4 west
-sizes.
- jeans. c.o... ei',alls
,..
GARAGE SALE. 340 P.age Street , 2 chains 76 links; .thence
Middleport . Fri. and Saf. , 2 and south 53 west 2 chal_ns 49
llri~s: thence south 24lh west
. 3. ~m_~~i:'g for e\lerybody .
'2 chains 40 links; thence
HUGE YARD Sale , Sept . 5, b, 7, at south 18 and 1-.Hth chains 66
Hudson residence . 5th and links : thence south 53 west 4
chains and 53 links; thence
Pearl Streets. Racine , Ohio. north
60 west 4 chaIns 53
Tool s. collectables , clo thing, links ; thence north 351h west
and misc . Storts I 0 am eoch 4. chains ~17 links to place of
day. Rain cancels .
beginning , containing 17 and
87·100ths acres, more or less,
YARD SALE , Saturday . Ron Grate and being a part of Section 19,
residence ,
Main
Street , Town 3, Range 16, of the Ohio
Rutland .
Company •s Purchase , two
acres sold to Oak Milton by
PORCH SALE , Mon . and Tues .. Charlie A. Littleton . ·
9·5. Children 's and adult
Deed Reference : Volume
clothin'g, monv pieces of collec· 142, Page 374, Meigs County
tables, glassware ond dishes, Deed Records .
The real estate is appraised
c:ool miner and Jim fktam
deconlers. 660 High Street , at $5,666.00 and cannot be sold
for lass than two -thirds of the
Middleport, Ohio.
appraised value.
Term~ of Sale: Cash upon
PORCH SALE . Sept. 3-10 ot 620
locust Street , ·Middleport. delivery of deed .
James J. Proffitt
c;iolhing, A'I'On , T. V.'! , c.amero ,
Sheriff, MeigS Countv
bic.yde . Fomr 12-7 pm .
Pomeroy, Ohio
~

-·---,-.,...--~-~-

(8)

19. 26;

(9)

•

2,

)I

�12-'lbe o.ily SenUnel, Middleport-PomeroY,. 0 ., Friday, Sept. 2, 1917

Fuel economy important
to just about everybody
WASHINGTON, D.C. More than 93 percent of the
respondents in a recent
survey by the American
Autmnobile Association say
that fuel economy is important to them in purchasing
a new car according to John
P. Irwin, President of the
Automobile Club of Southern
Ohio. ·
Nearly half of the
respondents say that their
new car gas mileage results

are

close"

Hvery

or

" somewhat close" to the
government estimates appearing on new car window

MASON DRIVE IN
Wecbtesday lhru Moltday
Aug. 31· Sept. 5
ROCKY
PG

AU&lt;&gt;
" TilE MISSOURl

BREAKS"

•
stickers as required by the
Environmental
Protection
Agency (EPA ).
And nearly four-fifths of the
AAA respondents would
make no change in the threepart labeling of fuel economy
for city driving, highway
driving and a combination of
the two.
The AAA survey, states
Irwin, was undertaken at the
request of the EPA and was
conducted through the
publications · of
AAA·
affiliated auto dubs. There
were nearly 1,600 respon·
dents who chose to fill out and
return the questionnaire.
Questions and responses
(with percentages rounded
off) are as follows :
- How important Is fuel
economy in selecting a new
car? Very important, 66
percent: somewhat im·
portant, 27 percent ; not
important, 6 percent.
- How do the gas mileage
results you are getting with
your new vehicle compare
with
the
government
estimate? Very close, 14 pet.;

I.O'ITF.RY WINNERS

Tbls \H"ek's "inning Ohlu
Lutte-ry

numbets :

5.
Gold number White number - 58.
Blue number- 795.
ExtraCISh
89U78.
Lucky Buck
Three-digit number
757.
Siu-digit number
069914.

somewhat close, 33 pet.; not
at all close, 37 pet. ; do not
know, 11 pet.
- Did your new car dealer
have the 1977 gas mileage
guide available in the
showroom as reqtlired by ::::::::::;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;
law? Yes, 51 pet.; no, 79 pet.;
did not notice, 35 pet.
- How important is the
estimate of annual fuel cost to

you in selecting a new car?
Very helpful and important,
32 pet.; somewhat helpful and
·important, 34 pet.; not at aU
helpful ·or important, 31 pet.
- How important is the
classification of vehicles by
interior size? Very helpful
and important, 39 pet.;
somewhat helpful and im·
portant, 32 pet.; not at all
helpful or important, 26 pet.
- Are the fuel economy
labels, required to be affixed
at the factory to aU new cars,
helpful or confusing' Helpful,
58 pet. ; confusing, 19 pet.; no
opinion, 17 pet.
-The current labels list
MPG estimates for city
driving, highway driving and
a combination of both. What
changes would you like to
see? List city only, 3 pet .; list
highway only, 2 pet.; list
combination only, 7 pet. ;
retail aU three, 80 pet.
In addition, respondents
were asked to write in
suggestions for other fuel
economy related information
that the government might
provide. More than 44 percent
of the respondents took the
time to offer suggestions. The
suggestions were then
grouped
according
to
similarity. Although there
were nearly 20 different
suggestions in all, only four
were mentioned by at least
three percent of the
respondents. · These are as
follows:
-Tests should be more
realistic, with actual and
testing (17 pet .).
-List fuel economy gain or
loss by optional equipment (7

.....,. of the rtghU of 1111kln
organizers.''
Stevens' battle with the
Textile W&lt;rkers Union and II!
court fights dating baclt 10

Stevens &amp; Co •.rapped
with contempt charge

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

Carpenter
Personals

employes seeking union representation .
Noting that Stevens had
been cited for contempt in
1972 on similar grounds, the
court said : "The company
has flaunted its disobedience
of. our orders, undermining
respect for this court and for
the rights of employes
recognized in the National
l.abor Relations Law.
· The court said it was
considering a proposal In
the company $120,000 for each
future violation plus.a fine of

!me .

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
and granddaughter, Anna
Stanley visited Mr . and Mr$.
Reece Prather, Wester::-ville,
and Mrs. Manford Smith,
Carroll, and called to see
Manford Smith at Crites
Nur$ing Home in Lancaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Bragg
and daughter, Charleston, W.
Va., visited with the Dana
Bailey family and their
guests, the Richard Jeffers ·
from Illinois.
Edith Talbert, who lives in
Arizona but has been here
with relatives for several
weeks, called on Ida Denison I. The winner of the 1904
on Sunday afternoon . Mrs. World Series in baseball was
Denison accompanied her to (a) American League Boston
Salem Center to visit Mrs. (b) National League New
York (c) no team; there was
Talbert's sister, Alma Smith, no series in 1904 .
thentothehomeofMrs. Anna 2. The 1914 World Series in
Halliday and sons where she ~aseball was won by National
stayed until Wednesday.
League Boston over American
Columbia Grange No. 2435 League Philadelphia . What
held a joint meeting .with was the outcome of the 191S
Harrisonville Grange No. World Series?
1734. Plans were made to . 3. Han1t Aaron and Babe Ruth
exemplify ·the third degree bold the record for all-time
for Degree Day which will be home run leaders (755 and 714
held in September.
respectively) . What two
Mr. and Mrs. Murrell Bai- players rank third and fourth
ley announce _the birth of a . tn home runs?
daughter, Tonya Melissa,
ANSWERS:
born at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athens. Area
grandparents include Mr. 98'J 'U"'UJqOlfl(UB,Y pu1l 099
and Mrs. Dana . Bailey and ·s.&lt;ew amlNa ·t ·eJ11dlaP•Il'ld
Mary Erickson ..Helen Queen anJII!a&lt;J {euO!lt!N JOAO S3!JBS
p(JO,Y, ~I61 31f1 UO... U011108
is a great-grandmother.
anJIBO'( tn!OJ.I&lt;&gt;WV 'Z ( ::1) 'I

THE

WORLD
ALMANAC'S

$:&gt;,000 a day for each day the
violation continues.
"We are determined," the
coorl said, "that Stevens~
its supervisors shall comply
with the provisions of the
National Labor Relations Act
and that the decrees ol this
court ordering them to do so
shall be obeyed."
As one means of achieving
this goal, the court .directed
that the company develop a
program Hfor · the proper
education of J.P. Stevens
management personnel in the

School board
asks rn~eting

years, the court said, have
earned the CQmpany Its
reputation as the "most
oolllrious recidivist in the
field &lt;X labor law."
'"!'he evidence or anti-union
action is overwhelming in
some instances and nearer
the borderline in others," tbe
court said. ''There is the
~trong
possibility that
Stevens deliberately took
their chances in ignoring our
decrees because they thought
it profitable for them to do

GALLIPOLIS - Tom Hairston,
auperintendent of Gallla County Schools,
Saturday told the president of the Gallia
Local Teachers Assn. the district board's
negotlaling team "will be pleased to
meet" with the association's committee
early nexfweek, hoperuUy to "resolve 811Y
mhmnderst,ndings 11 concerning the:
board's final offer.
The letter was directed to Howard
Neekamp, president.
Earlier, th.e teachers' group -had announced it would meet the evenli.g of
Labor Day to decide · whether or not it
would strike.
The letter in full:
September 3, 1977
" The Board's negotlaling team will be
pleased to meet with you and the
Association's committee for further

so."
The contempt order spplied
to the company and 23 of II!
supervisors -at the s.ix
company planl! in Walla C.,
S.C., and at Roanoke Rapids
and Turnersburg, N.c.

-

VO. 12 NO. 31

CLOSED MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 - LABOR DAY

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

OPEN HOUSE -Lafayette Post 27, American Legion,
· Will obServe open house today ft:om lin 5 p.m. at its. new hall
on Bob McCormick Rd. off SR S81!.
Members of the post have been active since the organization
was chartered in 1920. Veterans of World War I, World War

'

.

6TH
BIG
WEEK

CARIA•E

•

MIDDLEPORT - The threat of a
strike by appro•imatel)' 100 non-&lt;!ertified
employes of the Meigs Local School
District has been averted.
Friday night the district 's board of
·education, meeting In special session,
approved a new two-year contract with the
employes. Earlier, members of Meigs
Local Chajller 17 of the Ohio Association of
Public Scbool Employes had approved the
agreement. The board had been at impasse with the non-&lt;!ertified employes
since May.
The new agreement gives all of the
employes a pay Increase of 29 cents an
hour effective Sept. I, 1977 WJth an additional 10 cent an hour adjustment for

LAFF - A - DAY

~$2J,

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

.

STILL HAS TOO MANY USED CARS ON --THEIR
LOTSO WE ARE CONTINUING
GREAT
USED CAR
--- OUR
---..
SALE FOR THE 6TH BIG WEEK TO BRING YOU

~ -" ·:·

76 CADIUAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

·~- · ·

!t•J. · - - - --- - - -

"So much for the area code."

Q make the clfference·

.· 75
COUPE DEVILLE
Full powe-" &amp; air.
Was ~800

Fullpower&amp;air.
WasS8900

. 75 PINTO

74 CADIUAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

SOLD

Full power &amp; alr.
Was 5550Q

WAGON

•

"INN PLACE''

SOLD

NOW 12995.

'1395

72 DELTA 88
CPE.

72 FORD

COUNTRY SQUIRE

Alr, automat ic.
Was $1695

Was S1095

NOW 1495

NOW '795

•1695

73 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 DR.

72 CHEVY IMPAlA
HT CPE.

. 70 CUTLASS CPE.

1

71 PONTIAC

'CHALET

CATALINA
4 dr .. .alr, vinyl root .
WasS895

5 PIECE GROUP
.FROM BELPRE, OHIO
.

•

Air.

.-

NOW 13400

75 CHEV.Y
MONTE CARLO
Power &amp; air.
Was $4695

. 74 P.IJ)S_88
ROYAL CPE.
Power &amp;air.
Wa&gt;$3595

74 CHEVY VEGA
GT CPE.
4speed
WaU199S

'

.NOW *3995

NOW '2995

NOW '1695

72 BUICK ELEC.
HT CPE.

73 CUTLASS
4 DR.

72 OLDS

WaU2295

Air .

SOLD

2 DR.

•

•'

•
•
•

'495

'1995

••
•

•

VISTA CRUISER

74 QtEVY
NOVA
4

dr ., V-8, auto., vlnyi roof.
Wal$2795

NOW '2495

73 OODGE

CHARGER

NOW '1995

THE MEIGS INJ\r
POMEROY
•

•

. 2 OR.

SOLD

membership by a three to one majority.

Dowler 'thanked the non-teaching
representatives for helping arrive at the
settlement.
Meantime, teachers of the district
remained on strike.
However, representatives of the Meigs
Local Teachers Association and the board
met Saturday evening to rurther discuss
the problems in an attempt to come up
with a solution to the strike which got
underway Tuesday When schqols were to
have opened for the new year. Schools
were "officially open" the first two days of
the strike, but few students and teachers
were on hand. The last ·two days of the
week schools. were officially closed.

Pomeroy

1

Labor unions · under new, heavy attacks

•

• SATELLITE

Was $2495

NOW •1995

•

NOW '2595

EXTRA SPECIAL SPECIALS AT I&lt;ARR &amp; VAN ZANDT'S

.

10 TIL 2

.72

1895

'

Was S1495

'4395

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY

1

maintfmance employes. The agreement
gives the empl_oyes an additional23 cents
an bour on Sept. 1, 1978. The board
unanimously approved the package,
According to the terms the board also
agrees to pay 100" percent of the Blue Cross
and Blue Shield insurance or employes.
Previously, employes had been paying a
part of the cost. There are also provisions
(or adjustment for extra bus trips, duties
and assignments.
Charles Dowler, superintendent, said
the agreement in a major breakthrough in .
collective bargaining between the board
and the employes. Dennis Whalen and
Dowler negotiated. the agreement ~h~ch
was ratified by the local assoctalton

6cy.
Was$2995

NOW 12795
):{~:~~~~:~)//)//i~~:n~:~:~:))J~~:~:~~~ I-.:;:N:;:O:;,:W~·:;8::,500:.::,._+-~N;,;:O~W~·~64~0~0~+-,.;,N;.,:O;_W;,;_'.;:,5.::2.::00.:;__+---------t--~~=-=~--t
72 CHEVY
73 BUICK REGAL
72 CHEVROLET
72 PONTIAC
73 CUTlASS
1
· HT CPE.
LeMANS
4 DR.
IMPAlA
IMPAlA 4 DR • H•T.
Vinyl roof.
Was $3495
Air.
Air .
APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE
w.. s279S
'1395

II the Korean Conflict arid Vietnam, all have an active role
in' the Legion today. Commander_ Glenn Baird was
instnunental in erecting the new building altls present Site.
The Legion had been meeting on the second floor of the city
building. The American Legion Auxiliary will serve
refreshments. The public is welcome.

Contract reached in• Meigs
·with -non-certified workers

OUR

DEMANI))

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Bridge will be closed
additional 2-3 weeks

'

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

OUR GREAT

---..

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1977

Take time to look around all over the store for new
merchandise arriving in every department - You'll
enjoy it.

(BY

~

GALLIPOLIS POINT PLEASANT

Our Two Day September Sale brings you big savings
on new Fall and Winter Merchandise.
.

Johnson, Charles Roberts, Glen Rizer, Bill Bird, Jack Lyons and Ken Hoffman
from the Middleport department. Others not present were Roy Dowell, Doug
Johnson, Sr., Robert Johnson, Jr., Mitch Nease, Randy Pyles, Chester Rose,
Charles Shain, Ralph Shain, RobertS. Shain, Gary Wolfe, and Danny Fink, from
Middleport.

tntint

tmts

'

- List octane and fuel
grade requirements (4 pet.).
-And,
inevitably,
Government shoUld get out of
Uti$ business (S pet.).

~GO

..-::r. • • .

+

OPEN
FRIDAY
NIGHT
TIL
8
Q&amp;A·

~~ ·

a ' a a•

INSTRUCTION TAKEN - Nineteen Racine firemen received certificates for
completing 36 hours of instrtJCtion in fire fighting and techniques at the close of the
last class period on June 23. Individual cards were presented to each m3l\
completing the training. A department certificate was presented to Chief Robert
Johnson by Pom•roy Chief Charles W. Legar, instructor. Shown are, 1-r, Gary

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

pet.).

Need money'&gt;
That's what we have it for!
If you didn 't make the difference;
do you think you'd be our boss 7

discussions concerning the teachers ·
contract on Tuesday, September 6, 1977 in
the Administration Building beginning at
7:00p.m.
" It Is our hope at .that time to resolve
any misunderstanding concerning our
final written offer to the teachers which
has been outstanding since Thursday
August 25, and to agree In full on a contract
during the evening of September 6:
Naturally, we will also be willing to listen
to anything else the Association wishes to
say at that lime.
"Until then, we strongly urge you and
the teachers to extend any deadlines the
Association may have set for itself for the
resolution of this contract.
"We have been most pleased with your
cooperatoin during the busy past week
Continued on Page 'A·2

t:4•..::o... - 11

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Labor
Day 1977 finds the American b'ade
union movement battling a
resurgence of wtti-uniOh sentiment,
both in lhe workplace and on Capitol
Hill.
Evidence of this exists in the high
number of labor law charges now
filed against employers, and the
recent focmation of a big new
coalition of business leaders to lobby
against lab..- bills.
"Anti-union feeling certainly is
stronger," an AFL-CIO official
remarked.
The backlash has developed at a
tlnle when ocganized labor has been
weakened by unemployment.
Economic pressures have caused a
drop in union membership In 19.4
mlllioq, only 20 per cent of the labor
force.
But labor has responded by
pressing harder for changes that
would gi_ve· unions a stronge~
position In the workplace including a revision of federal labor
law designed to get tnugh on
IIIISCI'1IJllllous employer~.
The· AF'IA:IO ' also has tried to
make an oblei:t lesSOn of one anti-

union employer, J.P. Stevens and
Co., which has resisted a union
organizing for IS years. Stevens now
is the target of an international
consumer boycott.
AFL-CIO President George
. Meany believes the nation's h1iqt
unemployment rate has fueled antiunion sentiment. "Union busting and
high unemployment have alw~ys
gone hand in hand," he said in a
Labor Day statement.
He claims employers can
intintldate workers with impunity
when jobs are scarce.
But UnitedAutoworkers President
Doug Fraser sees this as a result of
labor's image as a violent, corrupt
movement. The Labur Department
currently Is .investlgaling two union
elections and numerous other union
pension funds.
,
.
Fraser has called labor to 4Dprove
. its image by repudiating corruption
· within
its
ranks.
Unions
traditionally have been reluctant to
mention such things.
The extent of 81111-union sentiment
on Capitol Hill surprised labor
leaders earlier this year when
Congress defeated a cmttoveroiai

-. Unusual exhibit coming
POMEROY - The .Meigs County Since 1953 she has been living in Athens
Museum will be the scene of an unusual where she received a B.F.A. degree,
dlaplay from lin 5·p.m. on Sunday, Sept.
Mrs. Roberts aworda include the John
11. .
Marin Award for some of her drawings
The display will be a striking collec- and watercolors. The works to be shown
tion of aprlng wildflowers done in locally have been exhibited In several
watenotors. '"'- paintings were done states and some of her paintings are in the
from llvinl plantlin minute detail by June permanent collections of the Butler Art
C. Roberta. Some of the flowers deplete&lt;) Institute and the Huntington Galleries.
"" native North American wltlle others
All vialtnrs are welcome to attend the
have been imported into the country over lltowing and refreshments will be served.
the years.
. The paintings may also be seen d~ring
1be utili, reared in New England, regular museum hours throughout Sophal had an lntenH inlerelt in drawing and tember.
PII!Dtlnc outdoor nb)ectl lor many years.

The Silver Memorial Bridge will remain closed indefinitely
as a result of discovering additional defects on It, West
Virginia Department of Highways Conimissloner Joseph
"Speed11 Jones said this morning .
Besides keeping ll)e bridge closed indefinitely, the commissioner also said there is a strong possibility that a toll will
be charged on the n~w free ferry crossing lbe Ohio River here.
additional seven defectS
were discovered on the bridge,
Meanwhile, the comwhich now brings the total to
missioner
indicated that
IS. Conunissioner Jones said
providing
free
ferry service
that repair crews from the
here
may
have
been a
American Bridge Co. were
mistake.
working on the fifth and sixth
The ferry landings have
defected areas this week.
been
the scene of long lines of
''They are moving as fast ~s
can be expected," stated traffic ever since the service
Jones in reference to the started a couple of weeks ego.
Jones said he has rect!jved
progress being made to
several
complaints on the long
cOrrect the·span.
delays
in
molnrists being able
The comissioner did in·
get
across
the river and said
to
dicate It would he at least a
that
he
is
studying the
few more weeks and said it
poSsibility
of
charging
for the
will extend past the original
deadline of September 15 by at service in order to eliminate
vehicles that do not actually
least two to three weeks.
Fifteen may not even be the need to take the ferry.
The bridge has now been
total number of defects as the
closed
nine weeks due to these
bridge inspection Is still
cracks
and as of the present
continuing. However, Jones
time,
It
still has not been
said the inspecUon has moved
detennined
what cause the
from the upper pOrtions of the
cracks.
bridge to its underside.

An

Abuse program
gains funding
GALLIPOLIS The
Alternatives Program of the
Gailla-Jackson • Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center has been awarded two
grants (4119 and '410) through
the National Institute of Drug
Aboae and the Ohio Bureau of
Drug Abuse.
The lirst grant, 4119, was
granted In fund the Alternative's prevention senices
to hire a prevention-&lt;!ducatnr,
an
alternatives-recreation
services provider and an.
outreach worker.
The prevention educator is
responsible to provide
education, workshops and
training to all Interested
parties. 1'llio worker is also
responsible to go out in the
community and work with
various agencies In providing

preventative treatment to
developing substance aboae ·
problems.
·
An altematlveo-recreatlon
services provider is a novel
position in the prevention
field.
This worker Is responsible
for coordinating the com·
munity to try to open closed
recreational facilities as well
as &lt;.Teate new recreatiOnal
programs throughout the
Gallia'Jackson-Meigs . catchment area. 1'llio worker
will also provide coordination
and program development
for outings, over:Oight
camping trips, developing
workshops and continuing the
Alternatives Camp on a
yearly basis.
·
The first such camp was
· Continued on Page A·2

'

No winking Racine man facing
anymore
8 court charges
at violence

and Young were arrested ·following ~
scuffle
near the Greenwood Cemetery at
cortstruction industr)' pickeling bill
Racine.
Ciark was arrested on two counta
that was expected In pass.
of
resisting
arrest, one charge of in-.
Employers fought the bill with
terfering
with
the arrest of another, two
tons of anti-union material,
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!) cuunts
of
assault
on officers, and one
including slick pamphlets with
Labor Day weekend finds West Virginia's
Charge
of
disorderly
conduct. Both subgruesome pictures of union violence.
strife-tom coalfields slowly coming to life
jects are confined to the Meigs County
That campaign was so successful it
after a!O-week wildcat strike amid • stern
Jail.
·
is being revived to battle the labor
warning that Gov. Jay Rockefeller won't
Clark
will
also
be
held for the Adult
law bill.
be winking at any labor violence.
Parole
Authority
as
he
is on probation out
Business groups including the U.S.
Only 8,400 miners cuntinued to boycott
of Meigs County Common Pleas Court on a
Chamber of Commerce, the
the pits Friday in a walkout that flared :::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::;;:::~:::::;:::::::::::~;::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::: prior forgery charge.
National
Association
of
after the United Mine Workers union made
The Sheriff Department also inManufacturers and. the Business
HOLIDAY MONDAY
cuts In health care benefits.
vestigated two traffic accidents. The finlt
Roundtable also have formalized the
Employes of the Ohio Valley occurred Fridsy at 9:30p.m. on Royal Dak
From the Greenbrier in White Sulphur
lobbying coalition they put tngether
Springs Friday night came word that the Pllbliahlllg Co. wW be OD holiday
Park property. James Nixenbaugh, 4i, of
for the earlier fight.
Rockefeller administration wouldn't Monday, Sept. 5, Labor Day. There will New Plymouth, in parking, bicked his
In the workplace; one of the
hesitate to use state pollee to maintain be no publlcoUou thai day of The
auto into a utilitY pole. Then Loda F.
biggest anti-labor campaigns has
Galllpoll• Dally Tribune or the
"the common peace."
Turner, 33, of Point Pleasant, backed her
been waged by small businessmen
Meeting with the state Chamber of Pomeroy-Middleport Dolly Seutluel.
autn
into the front of Hixenbaugh's car.
against the health and safety
Commerce, the governor emphasized he Regulllr publlcotloa of bolh aeWllpapers
There
were no injuries and no citations.
standards. The National Labor
wasn't about to step into any labor- wm reiume Tlleoday.
The second accident occurred at 3:41
Relations Board's case load also has
oriented quartets.
· .
'•
' :::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;;:::::;::::::::::::::: a.m. Saturday on ' S. R. 124 west of
11
increased with worker complaints.
The law is very clear on the point/'
Syraewte.
Despite this b'end, labor still
he noted: "No officers of the state police
John West ol Racine told deputleo he
.enjoys a good relationship with
may aid or aSsist either party in labor
was
traveling east on 124 and fell asleep,
employers in heavily unionized
disputes.
causing
his truck to go off the ·highway.
lndusb'ies like steel and aulns. Wage
"Having said that, let me make this as
There
WI!$
slight damage to the truck, but
settlements in these leading
clear as I can.! will not tolerate violence in
~eavy damage to the topper whleh was on
industries have been averaging
the name of any cause. If it should become
his truck. The truck was owned by .Jack
increases of 10 per cent a year. with
necessary for the state to intervene in
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County CUmmins of Route 2 Racine. The driver
better job security guarantees.
order to protect lives, we will.
sheriff's deputies arrested three people was not injured and no citation was Issued.
." The law will be enforced - not as Saturday and charged them with aasault
· partofalabordlspute, whicbwe carlnotdo and battery and destruction of property.
- but as our responsibility to keep the
A man and his mother were beaten,
CHEAP DRINKING
common peace."
taken to Holter Medical Center, and
SACRAMENTO, Call!. (UP!) Rockefeller said 95 percent of the released. A house on SR 325 near Rio Members qf the Depar:tment of Alcoholic
miners preferred to work and that a few Grande was "tom up", Slteriff James Beverages Control reportedly have been
malcontents were trying to fan the flames Montgomery sald.
getting drunk in hotel bars -and the state
of dissent throughout the coalfields.
The injured man Is James Koontz, Rt. of California is picking up t1ie tab when
"Those who stand to gain the most 2, Bidwell, and his mother is Elsie Roush,
GA-LLIPOLIS - Game Protector from the nation's increased emphasis on sameaddress.JailedwereRoberUi Beach, they sleep it off. It was reported Friday
Kenneth Tomlinson Saturday morning coalarethosewhoarebelnghurtthemost 29, Coalton; Melvin E. Riffle, 30, Rt. 3, that the department Is aportOOring controlled drinking sessions for Its top omcen
arrested two Oak Hill men In Greenfield by a handful of dissidents," he said.
Wellston; and Harold W. Mattox, 40, ao that they can learn "to aenae for
Township on charges of hunting squirrel
U. S. Attorney General Griffin Bell Coalton.
,
themselves" the effecta of consuming too
out of season. Another Wildlife officer · who met with the Chamber and West1
An Instance of beer boWe vandaliam much alcohol.
orrested another member of the party on Virginia Bar Association atlheresort, said was reported Friday to tbe lheriff. John
the same charge, and neither officer nor the Justice Department could do little to Carroll, Jr., complained ·,that someone
alleged hunter was identified.
COFCTOMEET
end the strike.
threw a boer bottle throll8h biB two-ton
'lbe men Tomlinson arrested are
POMEROY -1be Pomeroy Qlambor
"Our sole coqtsct at the Justice pickup truck parked at home on SJt 518.
Donald Vititoe, 21, and Lonnie E. Simpson, Department has l&gt;een to send the FBI as The beer bottle btvke a window. Scene of 'of Conunerce will meet Tueoday It noon at
23. Hearing for the trtci Is docketed ' for observers," ilel~sald. "They're not taking the. incident was 210 mllea from the the Meip Inn. Goeot speaker will be AJ1c17
Sept. 12 in Gallipolis mun!clpal court.
Lyl~ who will apeak on.llluo n, trlpplna.
over the cases but they are obServers." . GaUipolls Public Square.
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt said Saturday J. F.
Young, 18, of Gallipolis, was arrested
Fridsy night on a warrant ehargiJ!g
criminal trespass resulting from his
driving an automobile across the front
lawn at Southern High School on July 25.
Young was also eharged 'with reolsting
arrest.
Charged with Young was David
Wesley Clark, 22, of Route 3, Racine. Clark

Three jtd}ed
after beating

Two arrested for
hm1ting squirrel

.,

•

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