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j

10-The Qaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept.J3, 1977

l

Senators getting ~ough on
gas guzzling automobiles

;

JSy WILLIAM E. CLAYl'ON

'

WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate has voted
de cia! vely to step up the
attack on " gasguzzler"
•automobiles.
Senalors, considering a
of
energy
package
conservation mea's ures
Monday, turned back two
attempts'to weaken proposals
to outlaw some heavy cars
outright and Iilake it much
more expensive to make
·
others.
President Carter wants
fuel-Inefficient cars t&amp;lled in
one law and penalized with
fines In another. But a Senate
coounittee added a third
blow: an outright prohibition
on any 1980 model that gets
fewer ihan 16 miles to the
galloo . The prohibition would
increase by one mile per
gallon each year · through
1Q85,

The Senale kept that approach alive in two votes
Monday.
Sen. Donald Riegle, DMich., tried to get the Senate
kill the prohlbitioo and rely
instead on existing law that
sets standards with fines for
violations. The Senate turned
· him back 55 to 'J:l. Then he
tried to have the law choose
between the prohibition and a
"gas-guzzler ta1" that is
being considered by a
committee. The Senate
turned that' down 52 to 28.
The conservation
legislation would have
utilities help homeowners
"weatherize" their homes,

set energy
efficiency
. standards
for
home
appliances, give local
governments money to plan
energy efficiency for their
buildings, and 'encourage use
of solar energy.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holser Jofedlcal Center
VETERANS MEMORIAL
(DIII"barges, Sepl U)
ADMITTED
John
Dale Adkins, Richard Baxter, Coolville; Vonderine
Baley, Dayton Briggs, Frank Williams, Minersville; Helen
Cleland, Sue Crawford, Joey Slack, Racine; Bessie Ellis,
Crouse, Carl Foster, Amy Pomeroy; Patricia Barrett,
Goldsberry, Mrs. Thomas Langsville; Wanda Imboden,
Helm and daughter, Paul Pomeroy; George Conde,
Malqne, Pamela Moore, Mae Syracuse; Robert DiVietro,
Nichols, Rebecca Oiler,. Pomeroy; Amy Eynon,
Mahlon· Radeker, Ann Syracuse.
Saunders, Crystal Smith,
DISCHARGED - Myron
Randall Smith , James Bailey, Elda Carsey, Charles
Snavely, Mrs. Allen Strait Eads, Jesse White, James
and son.
LeMaster, Evelyn Moore,
(Blrtbs, Sepl 1%l
F1oyd Bush; Roger Stearns.
Mr. and Mrs. William
White, a daughter, Middleport.

While
the
Senate
considered conservation
Mooday, the Senate Energy
Committee gave Carter an
initial victory In his attempt
to keep federal controls oo
the production price of
natural gas.
The committee lllrned back
a proposal by Sen, Clifford
Hansen, R-Wyo., for outright
deregulation, by giving il
ooly a tie vote 9-9. The
committee also rejected, 12-6,
a proposal by Sen. Dewey
Bartlett, R-Qkla. , for a
phaseout of controls.
Carter proposed to keep
federal controls on interstate
sales of natural gas, but
under a relaxed new ceiling
of apProximately $1.,1r per
thousand
cubic
feet,
Compared with the current
$1.45. He alsO would extend
controls to sales of gas within
the sanie state as production.

Dowler

(Continued bun pace 1)
meeting, Vharles Uowtile,
president of the teachers
association, made the
following comments:
"The Meigs Lccal Board of
Education on Monday
evening once again exhibited
their infmite wisdom Wld
concern for children by
meeting with the Meigs Lccal
Teachers negotiators and
repeating their offer of
Sunday night. This action was
taken after the Board had
been informed of the
unanimous rejection of this
offer by the teachers. The
Board also refused to open
::::;:;::::::::::::;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
tbe negotiations to publlc
scrutiny and in fact refused to
By KARl JONASSON
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
any . further
RE'(KJ AVIK,
Iceland schedule
Tbnrday tbrO'Dgb (UPI)
- Two Americans who meetings. The MLTA has one
Setorday, fair Tbtll8day failed In their attempt In be question to ask the Board of
and Setorday and a chance
first to cross the Atlantic Education: Are you seeking a
of 1bowen Friday. Hlgbs the
In a balloon say they solution or are you the
will be In 1he '108 ud lows encountered a "friendly " problem?
will range from tbe upper shark when they ditched theif
"The inJunction served to
t0s to 1he mid 50tt.
the
nine teachers of the Meigs
craft in the ocean off Iceland.
Ben Abruzzo, 47, and Maxie Local School District is a .
Anderson, 43, both of repulsive strike-breaking
Alburquerque, N. M., were technique by Superintendent
forced to abort their mission Dowler and the Board of
Monday 800 miles from the Education. Another Is the
MAsON - Mr. and Mrs. European cootinent because attempt · by the Bo.a rd and
Charlie Van Meter are an- of a storm that coated their Superlnten~ent to run the
nouncing the birth ·Of their balloon with heavy ice.
MLTA
by
contacting
first child, an eigbl pound
They arrived in Reykjavik members individually and
daughter, Sommer Dawn at aboard a U.S. Navy dlacu.ssing offers rather· thWl
Holzer Medical Center on helicopter Monday ewning, sitting dQwn at the
Aug. 30. Maternal grand- about three hours after bargaining table and trying
parenta are Mr. and Mrs. ditching their balloon named ' to rt!l!Dlve the Issues:
Homer Jeffers, Clifton, W. "Double Eagle" into the
"The
statement
by
Va., and paternal grand- Isafjardardjup, a So-mile- · Superintendent Dowler on
parents are Mrs. Helen lang inlet of the Denmark WMPO radio on Monday,
Phelps and Charles Van Strait, 17 miles fro!l!_sh~_!!.:.. Sept. 12, 1977, was a
Meter of West Colwnbla, W.
blasphemous state·ment
va. Great-grandparents are
meant to belittle and harass
ASK 'roWED
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Hill, New
A r,oarrlage license was teachers. This statement
Haven and Charles J offers, issued to Terry Lynn Lewis, concerned a 'false' balance at
Mason. Mrs. Mary Hill, 'J:l, and Ba.rbara Ann.&amp;lyder, the end of the year and is
Charleston; W.Va., is a great 24, both of West Columbia, w: simply a ploy to cover the
- great - grandmother.
fact that the Board will show
Va .
a positive balance. .
"Mr. Dennis Whalen, at the
negotiation meeting on
SundayevenlngSept.U,Im,
demanded a vote on the
Board's offer by secret ballot.
This Is another example of bla
attempts to cOntrol or break
the MLTA.
"Mr. Whalen, the Board's
attorney, was not avaDable
for negotiations on Monday
evening as he said be woUld .
be. We WJderstand that Mr.
Whal~ is also negotiating for
· the Board of Windham, 0.,
where teachers are also on
strike. Citizens of the school
district are asking why
teachers are on strike. Could
it he that the Board of
Education has hired a high
priced loser to do their
negotiationg?
The question asked
earlier remaiils. Whtl gains
by dragging out the strike 1 •
NEW OR LATE MODEL USED CARS
Could it be Mr. Whalen?':
We hne a plan for any kind of car!
our
low Rate Auto Loans.
. ·
·

Friendly shark

encountered .

.!

t

Daughter born

'SMALL
CAR?

BIG CAR?

AUTO LOANS

Use

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5 To 7 P.M:

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

LOVED DOUGHNUTS
EARLS
BARTON,
Ellllud (UPI) - Peter
Dowdflwell rlalmed a
world reeord for doolgha•l
eatlag Moaday, thea
.lnlrrted ta a h01ptlal with a
swullen stomach.
Dowdeswell, M, ate 113
doughuuls
Ia
elgbt
mlnures, 81 more thau the
previous record.

Patrol logs two mishaps

There will be a sonqfesl at 2
p.m . Sunday afte-rnoon , Sept.
25, at the Pomeroy Seventh.

No one was InJured or cited Leg, 311, Rt. I, BidwelL
in two minor traffic accldenta There
wu
modert14
_
invetltlgated Monday by the damage.
Gallla-Melgs Post State
A Meigs County mlobi!J
Highway Patrol.
occurred on SR 1 at Ho~
The flnt occurred at S:liO where an auto driven ~
p.m. on SR 554, sis tenths of a David E. Haubert, 2'1, Glial
mile ..at of SR 160. Troopers 10nburg, Ohio, backed Into t
said a horae owned by Franlr:- .,-rted veblcle owned bf
Un Beac:h ran into the path of Denver M. Depqe, 38, ~· 2,
a car operated by James W. Belpre.

Day Advenlisl Church. All
gospel singers and musicians
are invited to parllclpate.
The public Is In vi !ed.

-·-

ROCK SPRINt;~ - An Ice
cream social will be held at 6
p.m . Saturday at tho Rock
Springs United Methodist
Church .

Homemade Ice
cake. pie, coffee nd

creem,
pop will be available.

.Weather

p.m.. 11\o squad took Ma •
Hill, Jr., ROYle 2. RaciM,

injul'ed in e motorcycle accident, to Velerans Memorial
Hospital a'nd at 7o20 p .m .
Wayne Powell, Route 1, Port -

land. to Veterans ,.,.,moria!
~pilot.

Funeral services for Anton
Roule 1, long

Liter, 12,

Bottom. have been changed
fro"' 1 p.m. WedMsday to
2o30 p.m. Wednesday at I~
Ewing Funeral Home. The
Rev . Free-l~nd Norris will

and burial will be In
A hymn sing will be held at officiate
the
Rainbow
Ridge
lho Hazel Community Church
Saturday beginning at 7o30 Cemetery.
p.m. with the Gospel Echoes
Thomas W.
(Willie)
of Ash viii"" to be featured Autherson
, former I y of
singers . The public Is Invited. Bradbury, died Tuesday
The ,.,.,lgs Coontr Junior morning at the Sf . Luke

News •• in Briefs .

(Continuld frOm pqe 1)
hard-packed and loose snow. It has been te!!ted for ml¥'e tha
20 million miles in .all seasons.
And in Akron the possible end of the separate snow tire
was forecast Monday by Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. with u.,;
Convalesce-nt Center · In aru10uncement that it will market an all-year, polysteel radial
Pomona Grange wll meet at Columbus
tollowlng a tire In October. Its new tire is called the Tiempo will(
7: 30p.m . this evening at the lingering
!linen
. The
fair board building on the Rawlings - Coats Funeral
suggested retail prices ranging from $39 to f81.30, depending
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Home
is
making on size.
Election of officers will be arrangements .
held.
•
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO CROP REPORTING Service,
The annual homecoming of
said Monday the Buckeye State's 3,~,000 ctll1l acres are
the MI. Hermon Un ited
expected to produce 360 million bushels of grain. If realized,
(Continued from pl&amp;t 1)
Brethren Church In tne Texas
community will be held
Charles R. Harris, Waynita yields will be 96 bushels per acre, aecond onjy In last year's
couple of week.!.
Sunday with Sunday school at C. Harris to Col. Southern record yield of 101 bushela per acre.
Councilman
William 9: 30 a.m. and worship ser. Ohio Elec. Co., Parcels,
The service said Ohio soybean production is forecast at liM!
Walters reported that . vices at 10:-45 a.m. to be Lebanon.
million bushels, up 15 per cent fi'OIU 1976 and the largest on
motorists moving ooto Mill followed by a basket dinner at
noon In fellowship hall. An
James A. Cremeans, record. A very good yield of 32 bushels is expected from
St. in the wrong direction is afternoon service will beg in Bonnie M. Cremeans to Floyd 3,380,000 acres. Productioo of oats in the state Is down 17 per
increasing. Council man Carl al2 p.m. with the Rev. L. R. H. Martin, 1.5 A., Orange. · cent from last year to 22,960,000 bushels, said the service.
Horky reported that Eldon Mahoney of Parkersburg , W.
Scott Folmer, Frances
Walburn has been contacted Va .• as speaker . Singers will
NEW YORK
ROBERT WWELL, THE·
be the Gospellones . The Folmer to Scott Folmer,
as to pOinting up the brick public Is Invited .
ICONOCLASTIC
Pulitzer
prize
winner held by many crltlca In
Frances Folmer, .23 A.,
exterior village hall 'which
be
the
nation's
greatest
contemporary
poet, died of a beali
was sandblasted several
The annual Congo family Salisbury.
attack
in
a
New
York
taxicab
Wednesday
night at the age of 60.
Ruth Moore to Marion V.
months ago and that the work reunion will be held at the
An
oul$p0ken
social
activist,
he
was
sentenced
to a year and a.
Packard, 28 A., Olive.
will be done this month. He Portland Park Sunday.
day
in
prison
for
refUBing
the
draft
during
World
War II. He
Paul Packard, Frances
Harrison vi lle Senior Packard, Humphrey Keever, was stricken while riding from Kennedy Airport to the
reported also that he and
Councilman Horton are Citizens will hold a birthday Esther Welling, Park Manhattan aparbnent of~ former wife, Elizabeth Hardwick.
working on collecting in- and family supper Tuesday,
Lowell, a native of Bostoo, won the P\llltzer In 1947 for his
5ept. 20, at 6 p.m. at Fl. Welling, Marion V. Packard,
forma IIon on th e attitude of ,.,.,lgs. Persons are to bring Frank L..· Packard, Margaret volwne of poetry, "Lord 'jVeary's Castle," but his life wai'
residents outside of the own table service.·
M. Packard to John King, 28 marked as much by controversy and personal upheaval as by
corporation · limlts on anpraise for his wilrk.
•r
nexation. Both reported they
The ladles auxiliary of the A., Olive.
Big Bend CB Radio Club will
are getting favorable replies. meet Thursday, 5ept. 15, at For Wednnd•r. Sopl. 14, mr
Councilman Horton 7: 30 p.m. There will be
suggested that the village election of new officer..
(Colltlnuld frOm PIP 1)
Investigate securing the old
Rock Springs United
•
speclficattons.
raUroadstationonFirstSt. to Methodist Church will hold Berntce Bede Osol
"You doo't know the cause?" Brotherton Inquired.
be used as some sort of Rally Day Sunday. Sept. 18
"No, sir, not yet," said Jones, but added the U, S..
community building. One with a basket dinner at noon .
Department of Transportatioo is running testa to determine
resident
has
already At 1: 15 p.m. the Gospel Tones
the reason for the cracks.
will be featured . The Rev .
volunteered to paint the James Corbitt is the pastor.
Jones also said there Is no insurance on the bridge work.
structure, Horton said.
He agreed with Brotherton when the senator said, "If the
There will be a meeting of
Horton will make other
bridge felllnln the Ohio River, we'd have to buUd it ba~. "
contacts on the. ownership the Bricklayers and Masons,
S1pt. 14, 1177
Local 32, Thursday at 7 p.m . lmagmative projects could serve Brotherton tpld him to look into obtaining some 1101'! c(
and availability of the at the Meigs Inn&gt; .
·
'"'
to Increase your income · this il)surance.
building.
Jones
also
sald
the
ferry
in
operation
eost
$31,000
tO
yea( If you feel yoU're
Horton also brought up for
RACINE - The Southern coming
on to someth ing, get tt to those mobilize and $3,000 pet day to run. He advocated ita
discussion the former Band Boosters will meet ai who have p i pelines to the continuance, but with thought given In add a toll to discourage
7:30 this evening at the high
marketplace.
·
roadaide park now owned by · scnool In Racine.
"joyriders," who have been tying up the ferry. The ferry
the town's American Legion
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopt. 22) service is carrying 5,600 vehicles dally .
Post. Horton said he feels
RACINE - The Racl ne There's a possibility a dispute
ae estimated bridge repairs will cost $750,000 but said 70
that the park should be made Emergency Squad reports could arise with a pal today over per cen~ of that could come from federal funds.
two runs on Saturday . At 2 money or someth ing material.
Into a more attractive, serJones said a fivo:-mantb old Interstate ~ bridge in PittaFnends and l!nances mi~ like
viceable area since tbe other
water and oil. Find out more burgh, constructed of similar steel and using tbe sam~ type &lt;l
community park is quite a
about yourself by send ing for welds, has developed similar problema.
distance for smaller children
your copy of Astra-Graph Letter
He said he has ordered new designs for a new bridge.
by· mailing 50 cents lor each and linking ParkersbW"g with Belpre, Ohio, since the same steel
living In the upper part of the
a ion~ . self-addressed , stamped
community.
ATHENS - Visiting. Meigs envelope
and similar welds were planned for it.
to Astra-Graph , P.O.
Councilman Ke!ly reported dropped
a
154-189 Box 489 , Rad io C1ty Station , N. Y.
The new span at Point Pleaaant was built following the
that the American Legion Southeastern .Ohio League 10019. 8~ su re ro specify your collapse in 1967 of a bridge across the Ohio; ·
Post hall spent $5,000 in golf match to Athens Monday birth sign .
. He said .once the·Americall Bridge Co. couipletes repairs
lmptovementa to the former evening.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Don't the span .,'will no Ianger be dangerous."
roadside p_a rk and that
F0r the Bulldogs, Jim waste time and effort fight ing an
vandalism had been bad at Hensler shot a 37; Steve uphilt battle lor someth ing you
.the location . Horton ex- Hensler 39; Karl Fry 37, neither wa nt nor need . Evalu ate
pressed a desire for the Brian Lawson 41 and Mark your objectives . Throw out the
losers.
village and the Legion Post to Farley 46.
work closely together In
For Meigs, Chuck Follrod SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY.22) You
development
and im- shot a 41, Lance Oliver 38, could be difficult to get along '
with toda y because of your
provement of the park. Kelly Chuck Kennedy 53, Scott reluctance
to reveal what's really
will look into the matter with McKinney 57 and Rob Davis bugging you . Lay your cards on
the legion.
the table.
61. .
SAGITTARIUS (Noy.' 23-Doc.
. Rain likely tonight and
Wednesday. Lows tonight in
the lower 60s, high$ Wednesdays in tbe lower 70s.
Probability of precipitation
70 per cent today, tonight and
Wednesday.

Long d eIay

Transfers

ASJRO•GRAPH

.. .

RIO GRANDE - For the
first time in ita history, Rio
Grande College and Community College (RGC-CC)
will offer lt11dentla chance to.
earn a
degree in
economic education by going
to school evenings on the Rio
Grande campus.
·
Twelve graduate credit
botll8 towards an M.A. Will be
granted during the 1971-78
academic year by Ohio
URiversity. The program is
being planned cooperatively
by the two schools and
students who complete the
first year's sequence of
classes will be eUglble to
~X?ntinue in the program also
scheduled to be held at Rio
Grande during the !97(1.1980
academic years.
The economic education

m•••'•

TO
BAKER FURNITURE'S
25th ANNIVERSARYSALE

program

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. lt)

is aimed

at

teachers, supervisors and

atlminlstratnrs, kindergarten
through twelfth grade, even
those with little or no
background In economics.
The prograin will be limited
to 40 participants with
reglstratioM accepted on, a ,
first com.e, first served ~Sis.
Teachmg responsibility
will be shared by Dr. Krislma
Kool, cha.irperson, Depart-

Vou might IJOWi,tingly step into a
situation today where' the odds
are hopelessly stacked against
you. It could take all you 've go1 to
escape unscathed .

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
Serious Problems can be avoid- ·
ed today if you're not too critical;
and don't try to remake others In
your image. Look up to people

•

settle ror lower st~ndards .

ment of Business Ad- ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
ministration, RGC.CC, and Should you fail to cooperate to.

Dr.

Roman

Warmke

day wit!" one who rallied to your

Department 0f cause previousty,this person will
.
.
be extremely angry and the
Econonuc Education, Ohio relationship strained .
Uolversity.
TAURUl! {April 20-Mor 20)

cbaii'IVI&gt;rson
- ~""' .
'

All classes will be held

Someone you work l n close

Monday 7-10 p.m., beginning
September 19, In Allen Hall
on the Rio campus. Special
arrangements have made
possible tuition fees of $22.50
pier credit IIDur, half the usual'
$45 rate. Studenta plannlrlg to
f
register or the course Will be
BBked to pay $157.50 for fall
••7 50
I
qua rt er; ov •
W nter
quarter and $45 for spring
quarter. An additiooal $12.95
will be charged for booka at
the first class session.
Further Information about
the program Is avaUable .by
contacting either Kool (614246-63$3) or Wannke (614-$945641).

prox imity .to might lle both
careless and diHicull today. Be
ready to move quickly when he's
around.
GEMINI (Mar 21-Juno 20)'Don't
consider a wild gamble today In
an attempt lo recoup losses. It's
better to take your lumps and
walk quickly and quietly away.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) An
old , unresolved domestic
problem may rear Its head again
today. It you 're · edgy and
temperamental, you won't help
matters at all.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 221 11 you
have a chip on your shoulder today,lt INOn't be long till you'll find
someone willing to knock It otf.

Hang loose.

1"--EWSPAPERENTERPRISE ASSN .I

SCHOLARSHIP WINNER - Miss June Ann Wainsley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Wamsley, Union Ave., Pomeroy, who received the American Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster .Post 39, nursing scholarship, is presented a check by Mrs. Isabelle Couch,
scholarship chalnnan. Miss Wamsley, a 1977 graduate of Meigs High School, will attend
Ohio State University .
.

SfORE TO REOPEN - It will be approximately two
weeks before this almost new store buildin~ is reopened

•

ary
POMEROY-MIDDLEP~T, OHIO ·

by The Jones Boys in lower Pomeroy at West Main St. and
Uberty Ave., following the eod of an 86-day strike
Tuesday night.

en tine

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
'

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes today
directed C. Luther Heckman,
chairman of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio,
to investigate potential
Increased costs of natural gas
in Ohio this coming winter
. and report back to him by
Sept. 22.
Rhodes told Heckman in a
letter
that
recently
announced increases of $4
billion to $5 billion in
production costs for the Alcan
natural gas pipeline in Alaska
"pose very serious questions
for Ohio 's natural gas
'consu,rriers."
" I am very much
concerned
about
this
· development,
and
its
Implications for possibly increased natural gas prices,"
Rhodes wrote .

The governor asked
Heckman
and
the
commission to investigate:
- What effect an increase
in Alcan production costs will
have on gas supply costs for
Ohio utilities and for
conswner rates charged by
the utilities.
- What other additional
eosts might yet he incurred in
completion of the Alcan
project and their implications
oo natural gas rates.
- What are the costs of
emergency natural gas being
purchased by Ohio utilities in
preparation for winter, and
whether rate in~reases could
result.
- · What progress is being ,
ma&lt;je In encoW"aging drllting
for natural gas in Ohio to
reduce dependence on distant
supplies and their attendant
costs.

:m=:~~:=:~"''*'''''''''''*''»'!'''~''\..~':i..~,~~~'lo.~'~

lNews . . . ln Br1ef~ Garbage boxes may he

By Uolted Press Ioteroallooal
KANSAS CITY, MO.- THE DEADUEST FLOODwaters
in the city's history receded today leaving behind millions of
· dollars in damages in mangled aulnmobiles and mud-.smeared
homes and businesses. Authorities had found 19 bodies by late
Tuesday Wld poli&lt;;e feared more bodies might still be trapped
in several flooded underground parking lots.
The nineteen dead surpassed by one the fatality count of
the area's worst previous disaster, the bi!liono(Jollar 1951 flood .
City officials said a flash' flood of such magnitude probably
would happen in the area only once in 500 years, but
mathematical probabilities were of little consolation to the
victims of Monday night and Tuesday's flooding which sent
crests of water up to 20 feet high surging through residential

•

DETROIT- MAYOR COLEMAN A. YOUNG and Ernest
C. Browne Jr., victors in the primary for mayor of a city whose
eleclnrate Is evenly split aloog racial tines, today started
writing a new chapter in political history. Young, 59, the first
black mayor in Detroit'shlstory, and Browne, 51, a black city
councilman, handily defeated • two white candidates in
Tuesday's nonpartisan primary to begin a one-&lt;m-&lt;&gt;ne
confrontation for Detroit's top elected post.
The Nov. 8 general election will mark the first time two
blacks hav~ run against each other for mayor of a major city in
the United States. Young, elected just four years ago, ran well
ahead of the field of 11 candidates with better than 54 per cent
of the vote. Brown was a distant second wiih just over 21 per
cent, but his strong showing among whites who make up half
(Colltlnu~ on Pli• 12)

on way ·out in Meigs
G~ry Aspin, sanitarian,

Tuesday night handed the
Meigs County Board of
CoJlllllissloners new selvage
regulations covering Meigs
County.
The voluminous
· regulations, comprising more
than SO pages in all, and
reported to inClude changes
only of a minor nature, may
be studied at the offices of the
Meigs County Dept. of
Health.
·
Aspin also advised he board .
that the County Health Dept.
is. looking into tbe possibility
of obtaining grant money to
pay for another garbage
truck for the county.
However, the department
Is recommending
the
authorities that tbe county do
away with the garbage .
collection boxes and substitute door to door garbage
collectiOn by private haulers,
according to Asp lit.
Aspin said that It would be
the responsibility Qf the

township trustees, working
with the Health Department,
to set up a garbage pickup
system In rural areas of the
county.
It was reported that repairs
to the county packer truck
should be completed soon and
the truck will be back in
operation by ThW"sday Of this
week. The commissioners
ask people , to take their
garbage directly· to the
landfill instead of the boxes
for the next 10 days between
the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
free of charge, in order to
relieve the pileup at the
boxes.
James Jennings of Jennings Associates (consultantsl, Colwnbus, met the
board to present his proposal
for
the
environment
assessment survey required
on the Page Street proJect.
The board voted to contract
with Jennings to conduct the
necessary surveys at a CQst of
approximately $3,500,

0

The board adopted a .
resoluti9n t~ cooperate with
tbe director of transportation
for the reconstruction of Page
St., from its junction wit!\
Powell st., to Railroad St.,
and on to the entrance of the
Marina.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and
James
Roush ,
missioners,
and

comMary

Hobstette,r, clerk.

Weather
Lows tonight near 60, highs
Thursday to mid 70s.
Probability of precipitation
40 percent today, 30 percent
tonight, 50 percent Thursday.
ASKTOWED .
A marriage license was
Issued to Martin J. Chasteen,
· 22, Rt, I, Middleport, an.d
Deborah LYnn Jolmson, 21,
Wilkesville.
.

MRS. DOROTHY DOUGLAS HOLDS an "animal" potato from the garden of her niece
and nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Qorst of Tuppers Plains. The potato resembles a turtle, a
seal, or a walrus, depending on how it is held.

Airport board
is announced
GALLIPOLIS - Larry
Beebe, Lin Young, Eldon
wuerch and Ernest Thompson were appojnted .to oneyear terms on the GalllaMeigs Airport Authority
Tuesday by the Gallia County
Commissioners.
Meigs County members
named earlier by the Meigs
board of commissioners were
Franklin Rizer. William
Childs and Dr. R. R. Pickens.
NOW YOU KNOW
Of(iclally, there is no such
thing as ·a penny; the U. S.
Government and its mints,
legally call the coin a "cent."

Police make August report
Forty-six arrests were
made by the Mid41eport
Police Department during
August, according to the
monthly report of Police
Chief J. J. Cremeans.
Of the total eight arrests
were on disorderly manner
charges; seven for dri vlng
while intoxicated; four for
speeding; three for no
operator's license and two
each for assault and battery,
disturbing the peace and
spinning tires. There \Vas one
arrest each for following too
closely, defective exhaust,
running a red light, hit-skip,
permitting an unlicensed
driver to operate a motor
vehicle •. petty theft, allowing

. .

a dog to run loose, bad
check, ·fleeing from a pollee
officer, resisting arrest and
one case was transferred to
county court. Six cases were
dismissed.
The police cruiser was
driven 5,166 miles during the
month and parking meter
collections totaled $1,031.50.
SAYS NO AGAIN
WASHINGTON (UP!)
. SUpreme Co urt Justice
William Brennan Tuesday
night denied a renewed .
request to delay construction
of a gynmasiwn on the Kent
State campus near . where
four students were shot by
National Guardsmen in 1970.
.

Teachers say latest proposal scales down salary request by$~9,000annually
TONI TODD
Jacketdresslng today's way ·... 'easy. fluid.
marvelou$1y· unstructured. Toni Todd's
cowlneck, capsleeve dress of· Q'i ana(rl
nylon knit glides under a matching
elasticized-waist jacket of polyester suede.
Machine wash-dry. Mint, Coral or Blue. 816.

Bberfelds In
'

,

Preliminary damage estimates ranged from $4 million to
$?million solely for Kansas City, Mo., property. No one could
detail the extent of private property damage in the city Wld
suburban areas of both Missouri and Kansas.

not down to them.
·
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Abide by those Ideals you firmly
believe In·. Don't be pressured by
others today to abandon them or

•

Natural gas
probe asked·

areas.

Seve plenty during our bfl Slllo of Wo111111'1 c:-titute
Sport,._r, Entire stDck famous mak• llu DeVIIII Doutt.• Marc - Dotty Mlonn - Jane catlly.

D£Posns·INSURED TO $40,000

a

.

21) Be very careful of who you
extend your laith and wallet to
today·. If a shady .operator gets
hold of you , It cou ld cost yoU a ·
few bucks.

Rio announces
another first

YOU'RE INVITED

Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation .

JOnes Boys
strike ends

United Preaalntel'll.ltional
Teachers in the Plain Lccal
School diotricl in East Cantoo
returned lo work today and
teachers In the South · Coinciding with the end of store had been distributed to
Amherst School district the a&amp;-day strike at the two other Jones Boys store.
ratified a new contract, Galllpolli Jones Boys store, Now merchandise must be
averting a strike. Teacher President James . Stiffler taken back to Pomeroy.
strikes continued in the announced today that the
Jodie Ward. organizer and
Osn'a berg Local School Pomeroy Jones Boys store business agent of the Food
district In East canton and w.ould reopen within two Slore Employes' Union Local
Mei~s Lccal it\ Meigs County. week.!.
•.
347, (laid from Cliarleston, W.
Plliln Lccal School teachers
. Lccal 347 FO&lt;Id Store Va. this morning the union
reached agreement on the Employees Union AFL-CIO accepted a two-year contract
'implementation of
new in a meeting. held Tuesday that provides substantial pay
contr~ct Tuesday night.
night voted to return to work. inc reases and . upgraded
MoSt teachers in the OsMr. Stiffler- said most of the health and welfare benefits,
nabet11 Lccal School diStrict . Gallipolis store . employees including, · for example,
in ~ Cantoo r~m8JI)ed oft would be back on their jobs prescription· drugs.
the job today desptte an order ·Ibis weekend. Terms of the
He .called it a · "stan~rdn
by !/lark Cowity Common settlement were not revealed
contract In the food retailing
Pl=eaa Court Judge William but he called it "fair and . industry but he declined to
·
that they return In jUst." .
'
give specific figures on wage
•FIB ooms.
·
.
· Mr. Stiffler said that the increases.
Judge Ira .Turpin Tuesday merchandise in the Pomeroy
alsO ordered tho&gt; Plain Lccal
te ers to . return In work
but thaf order' was
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
~ d by Tuesday night's
Friday -tbrougb Sunday,
nego · ting session.
a chance of sbow.e n Friday
T chers in the districts
sod Saturday and fair
have been on strike because
Sunday. Hlgbs will be In the
pay aises provided for in
mid or upper 70s Friday,
· their present contract have
warming to the lower or
not been paid.
mid 80s by Sunday. Lows
The boards of education in
will raoge from tbe upper
the districts said the raises of
50s ta the lower 60s.
VOL XXVrl 1 NO. 106
$60 the first year and $85 the
(Continued on paae 12)

Meigs loses on
Athens course

f'"' ____..,.,____________4'Jl."

, OHIO

NeUJ contract
ratified in
one district

Extreme cold

We are now offering to you the best values
you' ve ever seen - on fine Furnishings and
Appliances.
.- Don't Miss This Event
Now In Progress-

'

Notices, local briefs

Charles· Downie, president of the Meigs Local School
District Teachers Assoclatlon, today released the latest
jroposals of the association toward s~ttlement of tbe tbreeweek-&lt;&gt;ld teachers strike in the district.
The proposals list other matters than salsry and i( agreed
upon, the proposala woUld provi&lt;je a two year working contract
between the board and the association. The proposals that
follow were presented to the negotiation team of the board of
education on Monday evening.
Downie said tbe new proposals call for expenditures for
salaries totaling about $89,000 less for the calendar year than
the ociginal request by the teachers.
'The proposals follow:
The following !!ix items are presented In a package form
for consideration and adoption of the Board of Education. They
are to be coosidered as a joint · offer to resolve these
negotiations. All other items not mentioned are to be
cmt!Uiered as agJ:eed to per tbe manner set forth in !he
1mpuae panel report.
·
.
FAIR DISMISSAL - The present lan_guage of House Bill
449 llha1l bec&lt;me part of the contract.
. 1
Beginning the 1977-1978 school year the ~ beginning
1181arylat9,200foc a Bachelor's Degree teacher. 'The Index will
remain at 1.70. Bel!inning the 197'-1979 school year the base
J

,J

beginning salary is"$9,600 for a Bachelor's Degree teacher and
the index will remain the same .
Either team may call for tbe assistance of the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Services at the expiration of the
agreed to negotiations period. The Federal Mediator shaU be
requested to consider and advise on all unresolved items. This
item In replace Roman Nwneral V, Paragraph H of the
present agreement).
·
·Stiiff Reductloos ·
Section A -'Teachers may be laid off only when their
positions are eliminated as a result of the following: a
substantial reduction in the funds available to the board
provided that such reduction cannot lie avoided by tbe exercis~
of the . bol!"d's t~g or other fiscal powers; !I substantial
reduction lD pupil eiU'ollment; discontinuance of a particular
type of teaching service, provided that such dlscootinuance lS
not for arbitrary or discriminatory reasons, or a bond fide
consolidation of the school district with one or more other
school districts.
Section B- If the board.is contemplating the layoff of any
teachers, It will so notify the Organi1.atlon at least 60 days
before the proposed effective date of thclayofi, except In cases
of emergency. Such notice will be In writing and will include
the specific positions to be affected, the proposed .time

schedUle, and the reasons for the ptoposed action.
Within five days after receiving the aforesaid notice, the
board will, lf requested to do so, enter into negotiations with
the Organization regarding the need for, manner of
lmplementatioo and impact of, and other aspects of the
contemplated layoffs and will in connection therewith make
available to the OrgWlization, at board expense, all relevant
daq,.
Any teacher who is laid off will be so notified in writing at
least 30 days before the effective date of the layoff, except in
cases of emergency. Such notice will include the proposed time
schedule and the reasons for tl\e proposed action.
Section C -A teacher who is notified that he-she is lo he
laid off will have the right to displace any less senior teacher
whose work he-5he is certified to perform. Written notice of
intent to exercise this right must be given to the
. &amp;lperlntendent, with a copy In the Organization,witbln 10 days
after a teacher is notified that he-she is In be laid off. Within
five days after he receives such notification, the
Superintendent will notify the less senior teacher that he is to
be displaced. ·
A teacher who displaces another teacher w.ill be
.placed on \toe proper step of the salary schedule for the new
~sition according to his-henixperienceand education and will

retain all of his-her benefits.
A teacher wl)o is to be displaced pursuant to this Section
will have the same displacement rights vis-a-vis less senior
teachers as a teacher who is to be laid off pursuant to Section A
above.
Section D - Seniority will he computed from a teacher's
most recent date of hire and will begin to accrue 8S of his-her
first day of actual service in a negotiating unit position.
Seniority will continue to accrue dtiring all paid leaves of
absence and lor a period of two years !rOil) the effective date of
a layoff. Seniority will not be broken by unpaid leaves of
absence or employment by the board in a position outside the
negotiating unit, but such time will not be counted in
computing seniority. When seniorijy Is equal, ability to
perform tbe work in question will be determinative.
The President of the Organization will be deemed In have ·
greater seniority than any other member of the negotiating
unit, and the President-Eiec! will be deemed to have seniority
second only to ·that of the President,
Section E - On or about Sept. 30 of each school year the
Superin~ndent will provide the Organization with a Jist
showing the seniority of each teacher employed by the board
and will, thereafter, promptly notify the Organization of any
(Continued on Plit 12)

'

�..·g··.....~~..

!illllllll!l~~
.... *"·~
--~*'~~·

Lance strikes
back at accusers

Masm County

!r

R. ;r·;:o!:%-X:~·.:.:f...

News Notes

By Alma MarshaU

I
f:·:

Mrs. JOhn (Jackie) Sisson directed the Rally Day
Program at Mason United Methodist O!urch last Sunday with
several youlbsgivlng recitations. The Junior Claaa sang, ·~
Can," directed by Mrs. Sisoon with Mrs. Cecilia Harris at the
plano. The adult choir directed by Mrs. Nolan Swackbamer
sang several selections acrompanied by Mrs. Ray Proffitt.
The-program was a part of the mol'llin8 worship SOI'VIce with
the Rev. Robert Maring bringing the message.
Members of the kindergarten giving redtatlorua were
Chris Thomas, Jackie Wolf, Emily Bumgardner, Sherry
Johnson and Sherry Hickman; first and second grades, Jeanne
Varian, Troy Tucker, Mary Alice Sisson, Robbie J~ and
·Samantha Pearson, Terry Wolf and Robin Bond; third and
fourth grades, Willis Bentley, Tommy Bumgardner, Valerie
Hickman, Marsha Sisson, John. Bond and Tena ·Johnson, and
fifth and sixth grades, Melanie Mossman, Bridgett Bentley
and Annette Johnson.

By JAMES HIWRE'111
any decision is made."
saw during Watergate, " he
WASHNGTON (UP!)
The Senate Governmental said.
Budget director Bert Lance Afla i r s Com m it t e e ,
Lance, talking to reporters
charged today calls for his meanwhile ,
resumed outside his house, said :
resignation are based on hearings
today
with
"One more time, let me tell
"allegations, innuendos and testimony' scheduled from you how I feel about that.
herosay, " . and warned such seven present and former Because I think this is what
calls before he can defend Jusllce Department and FBI this is all about.
himself might harm govern- officials.
" If you can take allegations
.ment's ability to attrac~ exIn · his brief televised ex- and innuendos and 'heresay
ecutives.
change with reporters as he and everything else ... and
"How do we get people to left for his office, Lance print them in the paper and
be williltg to serve?" Lance .denied that he was taking sliow them on televisiOn and
aSked reporters outside his direct a!m at Senaie then say 'tlalat's a fact ' - and
CLIFTON - Sheila Stewart, da.ughter of Mr. and Mrs.
home on the eve of his Democratic Leader Robert without having a chance to Billy Stewari, Clifton, wu honored recently with a birthday
·appearance before a Senate Byrd and several other refute that and have my own party at home on her eighth birthday.
1
committee
to
answer senators, who have said day in court - and then be
Sandwiches, ice cream, cake and beverages were served
allegations of improper Lance's effectiveness to run defaced with the charge that ttl her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Stewart, Cliftm, and
personal banking practices. the federal budget has because of that my Mrs. Mary Kearns, West Columbia; Hazel Hoschar, Mr. and
effectiveness has ~&gt;~!en Mrs. Daniel Killingsworth and son, Mark; Dawn Queen,
"Scrutiny, investigation - already been destroyed.
"I'm
not
saying
anything
damaged or crippled, then Melissa and Scott Kearns, Debbie and Darin Young, ail! the
all that's fine ," said
President Carter's longtime about anybody. l'm "talking we're in bad shape. in ' this honoree's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Stewart and brother;
personal friend , who has about the whole situation as it country."
Phillip. Sheila received many gifts.
President Carter and his
rejected
resignation relates to the future of our
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hysell and f~'lllly
beleaguered budget director of Rutland.
demands over charges system," said Lance.
involving big loans and overSen. Richard Schweiker, R- met in private for 30 minutes
Pa ., today added his name to Tuesday. Neither man would
drawn
checking
accounts
PT, PLEASANT - Two Greyhound busloads aC e
A COUNTRY STORE WILL BE a feature of the second annual "Yesteryear"
while he headed two Georgia the list of those calling for comment on what went on homemakers aod others will leave Pl. Pleasant Fri
on a
observance to be held Saturday from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. at·the Meigs Senior Citizens Center
banks.
Lance"s
resignation.
"If the during the meeting.
four-day tour which will take both ladies and gentle en to
in Pomeroy. The day which will feature entertainment, exhibits, demonstrations, contests
"But
when
you
ve
gone
Senate
knew
half
as
much
in
Whi
te
House
press
Washington , D. C.
and games. Features of the store will include produce, craft items, penny candy, canned
through it, you ought to be January as it knows now, he secretary Jody Powell said
On Saturday a guide from the guide service of Washington
goods and other Items. Staff members Susan Oliver, left, and leafy Chasteen are
never
able
to
present
your
side
of
would
have
been
later
he
would
be
''very
will
meet the group and the places they will see are the White
·assembling the invenll)ry. The staff will be wearing costumes similar to the dresses of Mrs.
Ule
case
in
a
sense
of
fairness
confirmed,"
said
Schweiker
surprised"
if
Carter
asked
for
House,
Washington Monument, FOrd's Theatre, Peterson
Oliver and Mrs. Chasteen, made especially for the observance.
Lance's resignation.
- and be heard out before in a statement.
House, Smithsonian Institute, Capitol, Ubrary of Congress,
"I sense the beginning of · Fr~sh and potentially Uncoln and Jefferson Memorlala, Arlington Cerrietery,
the same sort of confusion damaging evidence was Changing of the Guards, Kennedy Graves, Embasgy Row,
and preoccupation downtown introduced before the Senate National Cathedral, Shrine ; National Geographic, Mount
(at the White Housel as we committee on Tuesday.
Vernon, Alexandria and other sites as time permits. The tour
will continue on Sunday .
Eight-four registered tourists will return home on Monday.
Mts. Vicki Jeffer, extension agent, home demonstration,
and son, Brent, will accompany the group.
Malon aad Area Penooals
Recent guests of Mrs. Helen Stewart were Mrs. Maxine
Beasley and Mrs. Faye Gilpin of Sciotoville, Ohio.
for
their
share
of
the
c-osts
of
Tammy Kennedy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Kennedy
Beginning
Jan.
1,
the
Medicare dream of low-cost,
. ByCRAIGA.PALMER
hospital
beds,
nursing
care
of
Tuppers
Plains, 0. visited recently with bee grandparents,
WASHINGTON (UPI) - adequate medical care "a amount hospitalized
and
other
covered
services,
Mr. and Mrs. Andy VanMeter at Clifton.
More than 6 million elderly nightmare of escalating Medicare patients must pay
Mrs. Katheryn Sprouse of Arizona, Mrs. Pearl Roush of
and disabled hospital patients costs," comp la ined two toward their first 60 days of HEW said.
By HELEN THOMAS
"Although the President
This
represents
about
a
East
Uverpool and Peggy Cbambers all visited their mother,
organizations
of
elderly
hospitalization
will
increase
will have to pay nearly $150
UPI White HoUle Reporter
has no recollection of It,''
$150
million
increase
above
persons.
Mrs.
Mollie
Fox, who is recuperating at her home. Mrs. Fox
from
$124
to
$144,
Califano
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~ Powell said, Lance said he
· million more In out~f-pocket
the
current
costs.
had
been
a
patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
"Older
people
are
now
said.
Medlcare costs ..ext year
President Carter has not told Carter in the midCost
sharing
also
will
inMr.
and
Mrs.
Chester
Oliver spent a few days last week
paying
considerably
more
out
During
the
first
60
days,
a
because of rblng hospital
asked for the resignation of November conversations that
crease
for
the
smaller
group
with
her
sister
and
husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Harms at
Medicare
patient
is
expected
bills, the government says. of their pockets for health
Budget Director Bert Lance there had been loan loss
of
Medicare
patients
who
Toledo,
0
.
Each patient will pay $20 care than they paid prior to to pay the cost of an average
and "there is absolutely no problems atthe Calhoun bank
Mrs. Uoyd Williams will visit this weekend with her son
more for the first 60 days of a the creation of Medicare," day's hospital bills for a bed, stay in a hospital longer than process under way" to get owned by Lance and his In60
days
:
from
$31
to
136
a
day
and
daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Williams at Indian
hospital stay, and some will said Harriet Miller, executive nursing care and other
Lance to step down, ac- laws. Powell said Carter has
,
director of the National covered services. Medicare for the 61st through 90th day, cording to Carter 's chief no reason not to believe Head, Md.
have more than one stay.
and
from
$62
fo
$72
for
stays
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Russell
Capehart,
Ma!KJn,Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jack
Retired
Teachers
Association
picks
up
the
rest
of
the
bill
Health, Education and
spokesman.
Lance's account.
beyond
90
days.
Troy
and
chlldren
of
Lexington,
Ky.,
are
camping
at
Boonsand
the
American
from
funds
supported
by
pa
yWelfare Secretary Joseph
White
House
Press
"Neither the President nor
Califi!JlO said Tuesday he Association of Retired roll taxes.
Secretary Jody Powell told Mr. Lance felt the problems boro State Park, Ky:
However, hospital costs are
made the announcement Persons.
reporters, "I'm certainly not mentioned were a matter of
,MASON, Ohio (UP! ) Cost sharing for Medicare rising at so fast a pace - Jerry Pate, the 1976 U.S. aware of, nor do I have concern Inasmuch as they
"with great reluctance, and
only because the law gives patients, aged 65 and older or twice as fast as general cost Open and Canadian Open reason to believe and would had been cleared up,'' Powell
disabled, has more than of living increases - that the champion, has announced he certainly be surprised" if said.
me no choice."
tripled
from $40 when the patient's share of a Medicare will play in the $150,000 Ohio Lance resigned or was asked
"The problems that banks
For senior citizens -often
plan
took
effect
In
1966.
hospital
bill
lags
about
a
year
experienced during that
with only Social Security
Kings Island Open oext week. to resign.
" '
The average social security behind actual hospital costs.
benefits to live on - conThe President, who can- period were not just businessThe OKlO, scheduled to be
An estimated 6.1 million play~ at the par·70, 6,837- celed a news conference page news but In some cases
tinuing out-of-pocket in- benefit for persons 65 and
older
is
$215
a
month.
elderly
and
disabled yard Jack Nicklaus Golf planned for today, will ~n- front-page news in Atlanta,''
creases have made the
MISSION, Kan. (UPI) _ reach the 4,()()().yard plateau.
Medicare patients entering Center, will have at least 14 swer questions during a half- Powell said. "That general Terry Miller of Oklahoma
The only other collegiate ·
hospitals next year will pay PGA tournament winners hour telephone call Thursday problem · was
pretty State, one of the leading runners to gstn 4,000 yards in
near $1 billion out-&lt;JI-pocket competing.
·
afternoon from the Radio and familiar." ·
Candidates for the 1977 Heis- a career were Tony Dorsett of
Television
News
Directors
Powell
said
he
assembled
man Trophy, established a Pittsburgh, Archie Griffin of
'
Association meeting in San the chronology of what Carter lead in the NCAA Division I Ohio Slate and Ed Marinaro
Francisco.
learned - and when - in rushing department with 1119 of Cornell.
Powell told reporters that conversations earlier yards in his opening game
GlffordNlelaonofBrigham
Young took the initial NCAA
Carter knew only about Tuesday with the President last Saturday.
Lance's problem with and Lance.
Miller carried 25 times for passing lead with 27 compteLawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
campaign overdrafts at the
Based on others' accounts, the 1118 yards and a 7.6 lions in 45 attempts for 318
time he nominated him to Powell said, Carter assumed average to take a ~yard lead yards and two touchdowns
head the White House Office helearnedofthecontentsofa in rushing over Mike against Kansas State. If
of Management and Budget, press release - prepared but Williams of New Mexico. Nielaon can average 256.6
never issued - In a Dec. I Miller leads all active yards passing over the final
have kept him working until Powell Jaid Tuesday.
By PETER J. SHAW
BY Lawrence ,t;, Lamb, M.D. red on my elbows and knees.
"The
President
reaffll'llls
conversation
with Lance.
collegians in career rushing . 10gamesofhiscareer, hecan
LONDON (UP!) - Leopold he was 101.
DEAR DR. LAMB - After The doctor gave me a shot Stokowski had slender,
the
only
matter
which
stuck
"The
President
says
that
and
needs only 909 more break the alltime major
Born in London to Polishthe birth of my first child my and some pills and salve. graceful hands, a maoe of Irish parents, Stokowski went in his mind ... was the matter (Dec. 1) conversaton made yards In his last 10 games to college record of 7,549 yards
hair fell out. It didn't last Now I have it again. Should I white hair and a musical to the United States in 1908 as of 1974 gubernatorial cam- no chaiiJie in his Impression
set by John Reaves of
long. Three months after my go back to the doctor or just genius that made him one of a ch urch organist and paign overdrafts," Powell that there were no serious
florida .
second child it fell out in bun- get my pills refilled? Will I the
Other leaders were Paul
world 's
greatest became a U.S. citizen seven said. "At no time was he continuing problems relating
ches. This lasted almost a always get it now? Do nerves conductors.
aware, of course, of the to the campaign o;;: Jny other peak of the , pilgrimmage Proffitt of Drake In pass
years :ater.
year and a llalf. When I had have anything to do with it
season In about two months, receiving with 10; Doug WllHe led the Cincinnati existence of a Justice matter," Powell said.
When he died Tuesday at
my third child it grew faster because sometimes it does the age of 95, Stokowski was Orchestra from 190!1 to 1912. Department referral on this
That release, which Powell it could tum Into a repeat of · Iiams of Grambling in total
and thicker. However, right itch.
still active. Earlier this year, the Philadelphia Orchestra or any other matter. He gave reporters Tuesday, said the 11181 pandemic, which was offense with 362 yards; Ray
after he was born the same · DEAR READER- Eczema he marked 60 years as a from 1912 to 1938 and the cannot personally pinpoint the Galhoun bank had loan . spread around Europe and Crisp of Marshall In allthing happened again. What is a frustration for the patient recording artist when he Houston Symphony the exact time he became problems in 197S as a reault of North America by Moslems purpose rushing with 229
can be done ? I just cannot and the doctor. The first. pro- conducted the London Orchestra from 1955 to 1960. aware of the ·campaign a decline in the construction returning home from Mecca. yards and in punt returns
figure out why when I am· blem is to be certain of the Philharmonic in Brahm's
and
related
At least a million piJgrlmB witha45.5yardaverage; Joe·
In 1962 he founded the overdraft problems, but ... Industry
pregnant it grows so fast and diagnosis. The second is to Second Symphony.
American
Symphony assumes it was in his con- buslneaaes. It said questions areexpectedgotoMecca, the Steele of Washington In
treat it even if you have. the· Death came peacefully at Orchestra of New York and versation with Bert Lance in , were alao raiaed concerning holiest place In Islam, from kickoff returns with a 65.5
afterward this happens.
DEAR READER - Many right diagnosis.
Lance's overdrafts when he throughout the Arab world yard average; Craig Jooes of
noon in his country cottage in led it untill972. He formed it mid-November.
No one knows what really Hampshire following a heart to give talented youth, blacks
. women share your concern.
Powell said that In recent ran for Governor of Georgia and countries wlth Moslem VMl in field goala with five In
Your hair has a growth cycle causes eczema. It doesn't attack while recovering from and women a chance at weeks, since issuance of the in 1974.
populations such as In- five tries last week; and
from two to six years for each seem to be an infection and it a virus infection.
Comptroller of the Curren- · But it said "appropriate donesla, Pakistan and the Jerry Andrewlavage of
ilrcbestral careers.
hair. At any one time some of isn't even a good allergic
Colgate In punting with a 50.2
Stokowski made the Phila- Stokowskl's age failed to cy's report exonerating corrective measures" were Philippines.
the hair follicles will be response .
Even under normal con- average.
delphia Orchestra great and dampen his enthusiasm but it Lance of criminal wrong- instituted and no charges
Nervous or emotional fac- introduced generations of mellowed some of the doing, Carter has read were brought against the ditlons, such an Influx of
resting, not producing a shaft
Six players tied for the first
of hair. These follicles are not tors do seem to be important Americans - sometimes flamboyance of his early and portions of the FBI report on bank or its officers.
people can heavily tax Saudi week scoring !~ad with 18
dead, only sleeping. Normal- but a .susceptible person may aga inst their will - to most controversial years.
the budget director.
Arabia's meager 118DliaUon points and seven more tied
ly this represents about 20 per be born with the tendency to modern composers like
facilltlea.
for the Interception lead wtth
He . would have spotlights
. cent of your hair follicles.
break out in eczema.
Jordan has barred pllgrimB two.
Stravil)SkY and Prokofiev. play on his flowing white hair
During pregnancy a larger
Yt!s, you should go back to
from entering Ita cities and
His fatal illness struck as while keeping his musicians
· percentage of the hair your doctor to see about your he was about to record Rach- in relative darkness, and
set up "health stations" for
follicles are active. This medicines. Anyone who has maninoff's Symphooy No. 2 forced hissing audiences to
them on some desert routea to
causes more of them to reach eczema or thinks he or she under a six-year contract listen
Saudi Arabi•, but despite
to
avant-garde
the resting phase of the has eczema neeM careful with CBS records he signed compositions a second time.
such precautions the disease
cycles at the same time after professional care with follow last year. The contract would
spread
to Europe.
Later, he became one of the
pregnancy ,.00 the hair gets up examinations. Because
Britain reported two cases
world's best-loved musicians
thin. So, the thicker your hair treatment is very difficult
- an Iraqi man recently
who at the peak of his career
is during the second and third ,and sometimes impossible
returned from Baghdad and
earned $250,1100 a year from
mage to ll'lecca, Sauul an English woman who
THEDAILYSENTrNEL
By JANET CAWLEY
trimester of your pregnancy the doctor may need a lot of
guest
conduc~g,
~adio
aJ&gt;:
DEVOTED TO TilE
Arabia, could spread It vacationed In Turkey. Italy
Ulllted PreS11Dte11111Uoaal
the thinner it is apt to be for a time and patience in trying to
INTEREST OF
pearances, f1lms, record
WLUMBUS (UPI) - Old
around
the globe.
A
cholera
epidemic
has
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
help
his
patients.
while after your pregnancy.
had
one
case,
a
Turkish
royalities
and
an
occasional
Ganga
Mine, starting froin
CHESTER L. TANNEHilL
Ten countries have been woman tourist.
spread to Europe from the
Recurrent episodes of
Because the hair has a
opera performance.
Eset'. Ed .
post
po.ttion
No. I, led all the
Middle Ea.st, where It already struck and the outbreak could
ROBERT HOEFLI CH
: variable life cycle from two eczema is the rule and itching
West Germany said a truck way Tuesday night in
He
was
one
of
the
world's
City Edilor
to six years the length of time is one of the most distressing
foremost experts on acoustics struck more than 2,300 become the first cholera driver who waa In Iraq and def•ting Perfect Rich by one
Pubhshf d datly ~:u-ept Saturday
it takes to get back to a nor- parts of the disorder. This
Uy The Ohio Vall ey Pullll ~ hin g- Comand his careful placing of persons and killed 68, and palidemlc - an epidemic of Turkey last month had the and ooehalf lengths In the
any,
Ill
Court
Sl..
Pomeroy,
Ohio
may
lead
the
patient
to
mal ratio of 20 per cent
instruments in a concert ball health officiala fear It will world proportions - since .n-ae. Dutch offiCtala Pld a featured t$,000 eighth pace al
45769. Busut~ss ()((tee Phone 992scratch
and
further
irritate
resting and lkJ per cent active
2156 Ethturtal Phone 992-2157.
lent exceptional volume and spread stlll further, possibly 1910. At least eight cholera Turkish WOIIW! who had just Scioto DoWIII.
pandemics have occurred arrived from Ankara waa
St:cood
cl&lt;,jss
pw~Lage
pa1
d
&lt;1l
explains why you have had the skin lesions.
color to his music. Critics around the world.
Baron Brandt lhowed.
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
since
1917.
F!ve cases were reported
For infol')1lation on protecdifferences between your
hoapltallzed with cholera.
spoke of the "Stokowski
National ad vcrt uung represen'!be winner 1 driven In 2:03
Syria has been hardest hit
Tuesday In Europe - two
Liii.J ve War d - Onfftth Culil!Jllll)l,
flrat pregnancy and your tiog your skin send 50 cents
The
comma-.baped
cholera
sound."
4-6
by Ben White, returned
In&lt;.· .. Buttinel!i and Ga l la ~her Ot v,
the latest Infection, with bacteria Is uaually Ingested In
for The Health Letter nwnber 757
BUbsequent pregnancies.
He had a hide-anckeek peraons in Britain and one by
Tl urd Ave, New York , N.Y.
each In Italy, Welt Gennany Z,I21 cues and 118 deathl. contaminated food or water $7.1kl, $3 and t2,1kl.
10017
Never fear. This is not a 7-10, Your Skin: Sun, Aging,
romance
with
Greta
Garbo
The
li-I--1
trUeCta
Subiertpuon ta lt!!: Delivered by
sign a( impending baldness Spots and Cancer. Include a e.arr
and was married for 10 years and Holland, all reeently Jordan recouled 200 cue~, and lnfectl the llllall In- etmblnaUoo In the ninth race
ier where av01 ilable 75 c trll.S ~~­
and there is no medicine you long, stamped , selfWet'k By Mulur Houll .,.- ~re camer
to railroad· heiress Gloria- returned from tripll to either Lebanon 18, and Saudi testine. It hal a 40 to 80 per waa worth a whopping'
Arabia, Iran and the twaell- cent fllallty raw in untreated
scrvtcc
nut
aV
iJIIalll.:,
Onr!
rm.
n
llh,
should take for it. It is self- addressed envelope for mail- S3.2S. By mal l 111 Ohto and W. V11,, Vanderhilt, four decades his Iraq or Turkey.
occupled
West Bank of cues, tboach proper medical $7,2211.40 and the 1~ nllbUY
Health offlciala mounted an
ing. Send your letter to Dr. One Year ,· f!l.OO; SlX months, junior.
cot reeling.
double CQIIIbo ol Fair ~
DEAR DR. LAMB - Last Lamb in care of this $11 50; Tll rt•&lt;· months, $7 .fl0 ; , Stok ..wski had two sons emergency drive to stop the Jordan all reglJtered out- care reduces It to behr- 10 and Gold Star Scott paid
EL.;t! V. II\'1!' $ ~'6 00 ~l'ilr ; SIX rnunJhs
breaka.
year r g(Jt what the doctor newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, SI.LSO
and :1) per cent. Tbe II1II1P"
with Miss Vanderbilt, his infection but warned that
. Thu •t• lll • ll tth ,~;. S1.50.
Offlc!alll f•r if tbe out· tmna Include acute dlarrbea •uuo.
told me was eczema. I'm in Radio City Station, New SUIJ!H.:r lp!lHfl pJII'\! irli:)utic.!l .~111111&lt;1} thirrl wlfe. They divorced In Moalem falthfula returning
A crowd of
wapred
Tu nl:'s-.'S t'/111/ll'l
my early 50s. I hlld patches of York, NY 10019.
1955 and he never wed •!!"in. from their annual pilgrtm- break Ia not contained by the and vomlttnc.
f4,'11,178.
1

Six million elderly to pay
more for Medicare _n ext year

Powell denies
Lance leaving

Terry Miller takes lead
in rushing statistics

Stokowski made
musical history

Woman's hair loss

W()rid facing _:
cholera threat

Scioto results

s.-

I

l

Today'a

Sport Parade

Molor ~tiiUO LOUtrl
IATTI.,O .
( blltd on tao It liNt•)
NI\T ION,t.L LE,t.GUI

1"¥ Uni H Prill lfllf•rftllllnll

Yanks stop Red Sox

By BILL MADDEN
pitched a masterful 4-2 five· 'Thll kid iJ a lot t•ster thlm
UPl Sport• Writer
hitter over the aecond.place I ever WJI," salg FOI'd. " I
Nobody could blame the Boston Red So• wh ich worked with him in spring
New York Yankees for increased the Yankees' training, trying to get him to
lly flm.TON IIIOIMAN '
proclaiming Ron Guidry as American League East lead tum U1e ball over more, I also
UPI8pofttl ldltw
"tho lli!W Whitey Ford."
to 2\lo gamea. 1t was the tried to help him with hla
NEWPORT, R.I.( UP!) - One up over Aullralia already,
Almost 27 yeara to thi1 date lqurlh complete game victory other pitches besides the
Ted Turner and hiaCow-aBeouacrew look aalf they won't have -Sept, 16, I~ - Ford, then In a row for the 27-year old fastball.
"1 told him there would be
any trouble hol&lt;llng on to ,the America'• Q!p, I)'IJlbolic or the a cocky, 21-year old roolde, Guldry, · who struck out
days
he wouldn't have that
only race in th' WOI'Id people pay good money to '" although pitched the Yankee~ to a · nine, ·
good
fastb~1 ~!though he
there's no poul!&gt;le way they can.
.. .
.
crucial &amp;.! victory over the . "I . said liefore the game
sure
uses
it well - like
Thoyl8lldl came here for Tuel4ay'• openln&amp; race and they second-place Detroit Tlaera .. thpt If Guidry had,hta stuff, he
·tonight
when
he blew (Butch)
heard all a'bout how Turner andhllll-llian crew "never made for his .ieventh. 'alralghl wou.ld take the bai.a .right out
a single rnlltake" In beatlng'the.Auatrallans by a· minute and · vlcll!rydown.thutretcli after ·. ol.th~ir: han,ds," said Yankees · Holmon out of there on three
48 seconds on Rhode Wand Sound . ·
· ·,
'
being Clllled.up in mld.-ea~ · Manager Billy Martin. "He ·straight pltch,ea for the final
They heard abOut it, but few of.them ever 'actitaii)' 'PW it, .· to l)ol~r.the'ci4D'a front line · lalas,a lot of gute, which ls the out in the ninth."
Yan~ee coach Yogi Berr• ,
There was no way they could becaliH the cloiul they were J1l!chJns. ·Ttie Hall !lf·:Fome · ~a:rk of a gbod pit~er ." .
Ford, who watchoo the tor.d ''s · l.o n g' t lme
permitted to come to the two competln&amp; boats wauomawhere IOuthpaw wound up· 9-1 .that
between a quarter of a mjle and a holf mJie. And from that year with a 2.Jl earned run game from the broadcasting batteryrhate, cited Guidry's
distance, even with binoculars, there Ltn't much ·way to average an)l.ieven complete booth, laughed when asked If "cool" under lire.
"He's a lot like Ford in that
dlatlniullh between the Courageo\11 and the Aullralla or any games.
Guidry, a second-year man,
two (Jther 12-meter sloope.
So no wondu Guidry reminded him ol himself as a respect," llllid Berra. "They
both have a lot of poise in the
From that distance, one yacht looka the aame as another evoked memories of Ford rookie back In 1950.
clutch."
•
and most of the viaitors who came here for the biB race noi Tuesday night . ,W~~" ~e
even got that close.
·'
Those who come here to "watch" the races know enough to
bring money. Lots of it. They have to, otherwts. they haven't
got much ~~nee of getting on any kind of boat.
·
People go out on boata and pay anywhere from f30 to HOO a
day (one charter waa asking ,1,500 a day ) and 1till manage
ooly a gllmpae or so of the race.
U a spectator doesn't know the dtfilllllon of lacld"i (coming
CINCfNNATI (UP!) - Cedeno who fused the Astro
"Cincinnati has been
about), or the reason for it, he's batter aft going below deck Take It from Houaton'a Bob attack with hls ·second worrying about trying to
and listening to the radio, which many of them do .
WaiiOn, today's Cincinnati successive four -hit game . catch the (Los Angeles)
So111e of thoae who did· durin&amp; TuNdat• race , according to Reda are a far cry from the This time, Cedeno, battlll)g Dodgers, but forgot about
one local radio announcer, lost interellln trying to follow the Red a of old ,
back from a disastrous looking behind," Cedeno said.
Courageous and "ullralla and aought inatead to catch some
''They had lots of slump, collected hls 13th "Now we're only 2"h games
sight of the Red Sox playing the Yankees at Fenway Park opportunities.to score on us, homer, a triple and two out of second and we:re going
through their binoculars. _
' .
l;!ut they couldn't seem to &lt;1o it singles, scored four runs and . to b~ hard to ~top." ·
· Back on June 24 Cedeno,
They strucl! out there, too, becauaa the
were meeting moat of the time," .the &lt;Ytro b!lttfd In thr~. · .
.
at Yankee Stadium. What:a m6re, tbey~eran~t ~Ylng ,by day, slugger ~l4 Tu~ay .night'
Hla t~ly for th·e two-game wlio now has . a 1111!ame
but at night.
.
.,
after his team had routed the sweep that gave Houston a 13- hitting ·streak, was deep in
Naturally, there are those who come here to · aae the . Reds ior the second lltratght 5' margin in the season series the dolda'.ul]lll wiUi a .179
America's Qlp racea who are genuine yachting enihualaats , · night, this time by a 13-4 wu eight hits In 10 trips to the average but now he's up to
The vast majority aren't, though. They come here for the aame margin.
·
plate, including three homers .262, with hisaights set on .270
reason people travel untold dilllances to Loullville for the
"It used to be that when the and two triples, eight runs or .280.
"I'm real proud of myself,"
Kentucky Derby. Simply because they con~lder it some kind of Rada got you down, they scored and five RBI.
he
admitted, "I thought I
status symbol, so they can go back home and teU all their ·would ldck you " · Watson
Cedeno also had plenty of
friends, "I saw the racea at Newport."
went on. "But ltla different help from teammates Jose would come back but maybe
Saw wbat? ~o!hing.
now and that 'a wily we're Cruz and Watson, the former not quite thia strong. Now
I All of them buy the paper after the race to find out what Bolng to beat CinclntaaU out with three hits and as many perhaps I'll make this a good
happened.
for second (In the National RBI and the latter with two year after au ...
"Occasionally, we do get some tourllta 111 here who know League Weal) ."
The ron! fell in on the Reds
hils, one a three-run homer,
something about yachting and underlltand the terminology,"
Once again It was Ceaar and four RBI.
~nd rookie righthander Paul
said Jeffrey Kolb, who runa the grocery atore with hll younger
brother, Sheppard, acroaa the street from America 's Cup
headquarters.
"Even if they don't,'' Kolb laughed, "they pre~nd they do."
By no lllretch of the Imagination can the Anierlea's Qlp
racea ever be considered a partlcipiltor'a sport.
Who can pouibly afford In participate?
Tile Col!l'ageous and Allltralia coat dOH to •1 miWon apiece.
Thelr hulls alone go for somewhere between f3()(),000 and
ff()(),OOO and It costs In the neighborhood of $36,000 a week
simply to keep one of them In the water. That'• a pretty laney
posing Ust of cross-country the Vols triumphing, 17-14.
By Major Amoa B. Hoople
neighborhood .
meetings are Nebraska The Texas club has too much
Tbe Wlnrd of Odd1
Aa for the races the~lvea, the authorltal'ian N~w York
Egad, friends, If, Indeed, hosting Alabama; Duke for VIrginia and will prevall,
Yacht Club govern&amp; them the same Iron-fisted' way Woody
travel is broadenl!ag, as so vlaitlng Michigan ; Penn 28-12, and Stanford figures to
Rayea 111111 all his !ootball tetlllll.
often baa been said, tile St~te entertaining Houaton ; take Tulane, 22-18. Kansas
What the NYYC says here, gol!ll 1 and no queallons uked.
journey to the west coast
Trying to get any added Information about the racea, collegiate grlddera are In tor Bolton College journeying to long
wlll
go
for na~glat as UCLA
lnfortl)ation sail boat followers tnlgbtllke to know about, is llke some intoreatlng experiences Tenneasee to play the Vola; wins, 28-15.
trying to break though aome rock-hard conapiracy aC secrecy, · as lntenectlonal clashea the Texu Longhorna playing
Notre Dame's Iris~ will
hoat to VIrginia and Stanford
The ground rulea for any poat~ace queitiona by Ole preu dominate the schedule.
make
their firat appearance
Highly rated on the lm- playing at Tulane.
were clefii'IY laid down beforehand.
oq
Mississippi's
schedule a
In addition, there's Kanaas
winning
one
as
they
take K:en
taking on UCLA at Lns
Cooper's
Rebela,
28-7.
It will
Angeles, and ~otre Dame
be
a
big
day
for
Indiana
and Mlsslulppi getting
together In Jackson for their elevens as the Hoosiers
first-ever gridiron meeting. surprise l.SU to win, 24-21.
In the Midwest, Indiana will The Michigan State lads will
boat LSU, and Michigan pull another l)lrprise by
State's
Spartans
will edging Washington State, 16weiCQme W11shington St. Two 15,
The
Orangemen
of
pther Intersectional contests
Syracuse
have
loll
their
two
All area ~~tople are OflCe worthy of special note find
Th!Jx&gt;lnt valuea for each bird
By Gre&amp; BaOey
.
again Invited to help North Carolina State visiting previous meetings with North
·
The 1977 Ohio squirrel !a 11 follow•:
Carolina St. but will get ln the
Canvuback, 100; red celebrate National Hunting Syracuse and Oregon making victory column with •a 28~
season Is upon us. The
opening day waalalt Friday, headl, hen mallardl, black and Fishing Day (September the long trek to Tnas to meet win Saturday. Meeting on the
September 9, and the season dullt;, hooded merga111ara, 24) with the I11ak Walton TCU.
Getting back to the top ot Brldlron is a new experience
e&gt;:tends throuah Nov. 12 on and wood ducka, 70; drake League membln. ~8ain thla
lor the Oregon Ducks and
private lands and December ma)lardl and all other~ not y11r, the Ike1 are apon10rlng the list a bQve, here is how the TCU, but I'm 10rry to report
24 on public hunting areas. mentioned, Ill; mercanJerl a lllld day at Royal Oak Hoople System hH&amp; 'em lt will ba sad experience for
The bag llrnit Ia four per day (olher than hoo4ad), pintaU, Park, bll&amp;lnninl at a a.m. pegged for Saturday. We look the Horned Frogs as they go
and the poaaaaalon limit Ia gadwall, ahoveltr, acaup, Other localaportamen'• cluba for Bear Bryant's Alabama daW!l to a 30-17 ~efeat .
eight alter the first day. blue winged, cinnamon, and wlll lie helplni with con- boys to edge Nebraaka In a
or: Hannibal Wottaburp,
c)oae ball game, 21·14.
tributlona and aaalatance.
Hunting hours are one-half areon wln&amp;e4 toal, IQ.
our
correspondent from the
Although the 1..- field day Power!ul Michigan gets the
Goou atllaon Ia apllt,
hour belort eunrlae to . one"Show
alate called In
October IS to Dec.mber 10 II apooilored moltly for the Hoople nod over Dui&lt;e, 33-12, today toMe"
half ho~r @Iter aunetl\.
report
the Missouri
Durl'lg &amp;q\llrrel u~aon, and December n to youth of the county, pa~enta and Penn State, according to Tigers will avenge last year's
several lox are often lhot. December 31; The dlUy bJI and other ·adultl !Ire lnvlted our calculatlona - kaff-kaff hUmiliating 31~ qefeat at the
allo. Re1uatrat1on iJelllllat 9 - wUI win by • Jl).polnt
Hunt~ra aro reminded !hat limit In Alht~bU)a, Trumbull,
a.m. at the archery bulldlng margin, 31·21, over rugged · hands of flllnois by whipping
!\{arion,
Wyaqdot,
Lucu,
due to la)l', chai1Jie•leat year,
the Fighting Illlnl, 28-15.
fox an J)Ot legal g41me lllltll Ottawa, Erie, Sandualty, wlth actlvl\1~ to aet un· Houaton.
Looking forward to thelr
Tennesaee and Boston
Octobe~ .2I. The !ox hunting Mercer, , and
Auala"e derway at 9:30, Acttvltlea will
Continued on P~ge 4
.Countlea wm be live In· lncl~de &amp;un aafety, canoeing eollese will ba very even with
cludir)a not more than cine Md fllhln&amp;, doga, archery,
Ca1111dl 10011, two wblte trapping, reloadln1, trap
....._____
.
frontod • - · or ant of each. ahoottna. m~uloloader
· "allq!l extends throusll Feb. 111• di!Uy. 11J1 limit for the lhootln&amp;, and othe,.. Tltoae
~
lJ while the trapping aea10n remainder of thutate Ia !!ve, attendlnc wW be lnvltl!d to
participate
In
many
of
theae
ends on January 16.
but IUY nol Include more
All pr~llmlnary report• thantwoCanadllaeaeortwo actlvitlu. Fr11 lunch wlU be
~
Indicate that the IQUtrrel wl!lte frontod
or one of provided, and aaa!!l there
wiU be door prliea,
population 1.1 as good aa, II not each, ·
~
POMfROY,
0
.
The
Novs111~el.ectlon
'11
better .than, last uuon.
Shol&amp;lllll no lar1tr than 10
Many h4V8 been the report• 1111.. and capable of holdlnl letlintl clolll',
~' ·out
· ' "
PHONE
of going 1/lto the woodl for an no mor11 th'" thret lhelll there apd combitt 'thQaa antltrapptnc
forcea
.
Fall
!llhlni
hour and coming home wlth a may be uaed. Everyone
992-6~04
. J
idJi11n YQI't of 111 and older II plolo;lng up, 10 aet out there
limit of butllytaiiJ.
and
wet
a
line,
Wat~owl resutation• have huntlni ducQ, • - · and
-~ - ,.
..-.c been adopte_d, and there will meraanJera mUll have a
be two Mp&amp;rata 10nea, north . alped ll'ederal Duel! Stamp.
of I-70 and lOUth of l-70, In the Stampa al'lt 16,
North ~~e, duel\, coot, and
llealdea the openlnl of
meraaqsen aeaaop oRena IQuirrll aaa10q, thtrt •l't
October 13 and continuo other clltea of !nttrut on the
throuC)a November 211.
IIPortllllan'• calencllr. The
SATURDAY-SIPTIMIER 17t..
In t)le South Zone, the 11me oltne ovarlciakad ....,n for
aeaaona open November 17 ~dcoo~ opena iltpltillblr
UNTIL 6 PM
and continue throuah 10 and oontlnuN · !hrouJII
December 31. Thll 11'111 DtctmbJr J,
11
enable Ohio aumera to enjoy
'1'hrw lhlnM• lhollld be
their· aport more II they're potad for · October flrat.
wtUlilc to travel a little. JltiiUinl on lhlt clly, land•
SEMEl SOLVAY DIVISION
Huntlnl houra ere (lllt-hltlt owntr antt.rl. . ~lull
hour before aunrll« to aunaat, raqu1111 wlU be a
ICI, u
AI.L.IED CHEMICAL CORP.
Rem~ber, no Sunday will appllcatlopa or tilt
ASHLAND PLANT
hlll!llni of any wildlife Ia apeclll RJVIMI . daer IIUI
Open All Pay S1111d1y-11 A.M. TillO P. M.
permitted.
hunt. Both dtadlln•• art
Once acaln a point aystem Ocllobtr 11 ...\lao btllnllinll 011
l'IIJII!IliMCito cllttrlnlne th• tha llfll Qf Ocllo-' lrtl
bll llmlt lor waterfowl. The public aillllfllll dMr Ill'
llmll 1.1 . . . . . when the plloallonl lrill Ill antlable,
U.S, 60 Wet1- Hu11tlnglo11
point value of tht lut bifll but till deadline for •I'Pil'lnJ
laktnrtacllet or exceeda 100. If Oelober 11.
'1
• •

,,

. .

'

Paf klt PU
st..,nott Pit
Smm ns Sl

o . ....

~

~.1 .

US 51t t03 ,34S

· 11 6 413 lll .ll6
136 AJO IU

. ~f:J

Tm pltn St.L 136m 111 .32\
Guidry got all the 1upport AJl8ele&amp;18, San Oie8o 4 and Grlftov c;n
131 !27 Itt .m
a
Smith LA
1)6 ,,. " ' ,317
he need ed f rom MIck oy Sana Francilco 8, Atlanta
7. Follor Cln
1•215• 175 .311
Rivera , who trtuered a WJalte Sox 1, Twllll 1
Hendrc• so
m "ll u• .l"
Luzlnok
Phi
133
491 153 .309
th ree-run ,t'It"" Inn1Ill WJth a
Jim Euian hit hla lOth Ron c1n
146 590 110 .lOS
two-run homer to put the homer and Olear Gamble hl.t ' .
AMU ICAN LUOUI. .
Yankees ahead, then uved 29th fqr the Wblte Sox, who
·
· o . u . H '''·
1
Ole aa me w[lh a running, one- extended the Twin•' lonaest ~~~i~t~ BI
~~
lalanded catc~ In the nlntll to losing streak of the season to B..tock Mn
131537 Ill .331
rob Carlton Fisk of It leaat I all. Francisco Barrios, 13-1!, ~~~6~eN6'1
trlple with one on and none pitched hla ninth· complete Rico • ••
1&lt;Al77 ''' .322
•·
Bo
llor
Tor
108 '''
39 .320
0 Ut'
ight
in
hi
game, spac 8 ·e
~ Broil KC
12\
49• 1
1!4
.312
Elsewhere In the AL, three ol them to Rod Carew. Fisk Bo•
'' ' "' "' .Jio
Chicago ("nut aWIIY MIMeaota The win alao liacreued the Bumbry BlHamt 110
AS9 '" .307
Run•
6-1, California drub)!ed Texaa . White Sqx' second..plaee lead · N A r , o N A L LEAGUE .
12-7 and . Milwaukee ed&amp;ed over Teus In the AL Weal .to Fool or. Cln &lt;7 ; Burrougho, All
Seattle 4-S. O~k1•nd ·at· .,. .,..~·e· a . ·
·
37 ; Lutlnl kl, Ptlll 36 ; Schmidt ,
1
'"'
liVJ e~u
. Phil 34 ; Btnth, Cln Ctv and
Kansas Clty snd Detroit a~ Anaels 111, Ranlera 1
Gorvey , ~ An .
Cleveland were
both
rained
Dave
Kingman
belted·
his'
AME~I C AN LE... GU! l Rice,
,
·
,
,
Bos ~I ; Bondi , Cal tnel ~ettiH ,
out.·. ,
.
. . . firat . two. American ·League NY·J•; scoll . Boo 32 ; Gomble.
In ~sHUona ~ LeBgCiriue.81~~&lt;int't , hilm,rs and da'! o\le · In tour . · Chi 29 · R'una Bttlld 1n
it waa ouson
1 13•. a~~·• ·. rurt' tor . hb AnB~ls . ·NA TI ON AL LEAGUE :
4; Pltisbl!l'gh 2, Philadelphia C~llfornia overcame · a 7--4' , Foller, Cln Ill , LuJ!naki, Ph il
0·' St • Louis 9' Chica•o
! •' '"•
deficit with eight runs In the '1191
Burroughs, "-'' and Coy.
1!11
~
\.._A 1Q7 ; G• rvev •.LA 10.
eighth inning when Tony
AMER ICANJ..EAGUE : H.lalt,
Solalta and Kingman hit two- Minn 113; Bonds. Co l ond Riot.
,
Boa l OS ; Hobson , Bos 100;.
run homera. Rangers 38- Thompaon , Oet 99.
year-&lt;Jld starter Gaylord
NAT t O~~·~·~::~nE : Tave.
Parry struck OUt nine batters rn. Pitt 61 ; Cedeno, Hou 52 :
in seven Innings to move past Morgen , Ctn " ; Moreno. Pill
and Richards, so &lt;5.
Cy Young in to fourth paceon
I
AME~ICAN LEAGUE ·
the all-time strikeout list with Patek, ~ c " ' Remy, Cal and
Pega , O'ak 36 r Bonds , Cal 35 1
Moskau ln the first two 2,824·
Le Flore, Oet 33.
lnnlnas as Houaton tallied a Brewera •· Marlnero 3
Ptt&lt;tllnl
single run in the firat and
OonMoneyhltasolohomer
NATIO~~~ v~~:~~E : cart·
kayoed Moskau with six more in the top of the loth inning to 1on Phil 21 ·81 R.Reuschol, Chi-·
win the game lor Milwaukee 19·8: John. LA 18·5 ; Staver, Cln
in the second.
a~
andAMERICAN
Forsch , St.L
17-6.
Cedeno added hi~ homer in af ter Robin Yount era--~
!Kl\.1
LEAGUE , .Flvan,
the seventh and th~ .:\.11\rOI 2SeatUeleadlnthenlnthwlth C1) 19·1A; .GoltJ, .Minn 11·9:
Homer.· MQney's
. P•lmer , ·· B•J' ·16·11 ; R,Mov ,
'erup!ed for five.more runs in .a three-run
.
·
.
· Batt. , and Tor-rez , NV 16· 12 ;
the tunth.
.
. . homer Was hii 24th, Yount's Colborn', Kc ·l6·1!.
Earned R,un A\ltrllt
Ttle lone ll:rlght spot f~r the hiS third . .
f ba11d an 144 lnn1n11 pttchtd)
!teds, w~o open ll twp.game
NAT19NAL LEI\GUE ; John.
LA l.&lt;S ; Cilndetarla, Pit! 2 . ~1 ;
serlea aaainst·the Dodgers In
Hooton, . LA 2.641 R. ,A:tLJIChll,
Los An&amp;eles tonight, was
Ch i 2.75 : Carlton. Ptlll 2.78.
George Foster's so!o homer
II MER I CAN . lEAGUE •
Tanana , Cal 2.54 ; Ayan, Cal
in the fourth, his 4701 of the
2.66;
Blyleven , Tax 2.83 ;
year.
Gu ldi'y , NY 2.90; Roz:e.ma, Oef
3 01 .
Foater added another RBI
Strlkeauh
in Cincinnati's two-run ninth
NAT I 0 N A L LEAGUE !
Niakro , At I 237 J koo1m1n, NV
to give him 135 for the season.
181; Carlton , Phil and Rogers ,
Both totals pace the majors
Mti18D ; R l c~ard, HOY 178.
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Ryan.
by a wide margin.
Cal 326; Ton1na. Col 205;
, KC 20AJ f ckerattv .
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Leonard
Clev 176; Blyleven, Tex 175.
Cincinnati Beng•ls have
waived quarterback Tom
Dunl ven, running back Mike
volgljt and tight end · Jim
Corbett to reduce their roster
to 43 players for the start of
the regular season,
Corbett, 6-3 , 214-pounds ,
from the University of
Pittsburgh, cleared waivers
INTEREST
Tuesday and was added to the
Bengals taxl squad. Voight
and Ounlven were claimed
and awarded to Houston.
"We're very pleased that
we're able to keep Jim
Corbett," llllid paul Brown,
Bengals general manager.
"We're alao sorry to lose
Duniven and Voight. It's
eiiJleclally tough to develop a
quarterback (Dunlven)
through the training season
· and then lose hlrn, but that's
the Tule ."
"You might say we won one
out of three,' • Brown added.
Voight, 11-0, 210-pounds, Is
from North Carolina and was
the Bengals' third-round
draft choice. Duniven, who
Ttte Athens County
wu selected in the sixth
SIVhlfU &amp; lun Co .
296 Second St,
round, Ia &amp;-3, 2111--pounds, .
Pomeroy, Ohio
from Tel!&amp;&amp; Tech.
I!
The Bengal&amp; face the
Cleveland Browns here
_ _ . Sunday in their regular·
season opener.

!;l m:m

mm::: :m

1

Asirils rip Reds, 13-4

team.

Inters~ctional

Bengals
down to

43men

games top
full college pigskin sked

All you need to know
about hunting season

______

den talk

--- -

~

MEIGS INN
PIZZA SHACK

•eet•

;.i!f.

•

PARK RESERVID

FAMILY OUTING"

CAMDEN PARK
•

On Certificates
Of Depmit
'1.000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

Meigs Co. Branch

-f!)

l!o'
r1 otballt
rorccas

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�4-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. H. 1977

Pirates blank Phils, L
A magic number four
'

lly FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The ·Pittsburgh Pirates'
hopes of winning the National
league pennant are all but
mathematically
shattered
but their pride is intact. .
Playing out the "string
against virtually ilnpossible
odds, the Pirates Scored a 2-11
victory over the ilrst-place
Philadelphia Phillie s
Tuesday night and then both
game-hero Phil Gamer and
Manager Chuck Tanner
made it clear bow they felt
about the season .
The victory moved the
Pirates within eight games of
first place but the Phillies'
magic nllillber for clinching
the NL's Eastern title
remained at 10. Any

Meigs makes

round in the
fewest swings
Meigs High golfers of
Coach · Bob Oliver evened
their record at 2·2 Tuesday
night when they defeated
Southern 186 to 210. Sharing
medalist honors were Meigs'
Chuck Follrod and Lance
Oliver who ·both shot a 39.
other scores counting for
Meigs .were Chuck Kennedy
with a 48 and Scott McKinney
with a 60. other Meigs scores
were Rob Davis and Dave
Kennedy, both with a 56.
Dwight Hill led Southern
with a 48. First year man Jim
Powell had a 49, Tim Thoren
had a 59, and Chris WoUe shot
a 56. Meigs entertains Irontqn
and Jackson tonight at
Riverside GoU Course while
Thursday evening both Meigs
and Southern go to Oxbow to
match strokes with Warren.

combination of Philadelphia
victories and Pittsburgh
losses which total 10 will
clinch the title for the
Phillies.
" We're not out of it by any
stretch of the imagination
and we 're not in it by any
stretch of the imagination ,"
said Garner, who drove in
both Pittsburgh runs with an
infield out and a triple. ''You
can't say we lost it. The
Phillies just kept putting the
pressure on. It is a tribute to
us that we stayed as close as

we did . They've played
super."
"This ball club has had the
finest
attitude
and
professional manner of any
team I've ~ associated
with," said Tanner. "They
never
stopped
being
aggressive but under the
circumstances ~f the injuries
to Willie Stargell and Rennie
Stennett just couldn't win it.
" We can all say we 'would
have done better if we had
Stargell and Stennett,"
Tanner added . " But I don't
blame our situation on
anything . We win with 25
players and we lose with 25
players. n

Pruitt,
Jones are
said ready
BEREA, Ohio ( UPI ) Offensive star Greg Pruitt
and pass rusher Joe Jones
are expected to be ready for
the Cleveland Browns'
regularseason opener in
Cincinnati Sunday.
Pruitt was bothered by a
pulled hamstring muscle
most of the sununer and left
the final exhibition game
against Detroit early last
Friday with a badly bruised
thigh . He appeared ready,
however,
at
practice
Tuesday.
Jones, held out of the
Detroit game, was also
recovered from a leg injury.
Cleveland's big concern
.going into the Cincinnati
game remains its defensive
line because of a knee injury
suffered by All-Pro defensive
tackle Jerry Sherk.
Sherk, hurt in .a pileup
during the Sept. 3 exhibition
against the Green Bay
Packers, has progressed
faster than expected but is
still sidelined.

Michigan ·33, Duke 12
Mich. St. 18, Wash. St. 15
Notre Dame 28, Miss. 7
Navy 16, Conn. 14
Alabama.· 21, Nebraska 14
New Mex. st. 23, '1'\'lchlta St.
13
No. Carolina 35, Richmond 10
SMU 15, N. Tex. St. 12
Ohio St. 17, Mlnoesota 13
Oklahoma 34, Utah 8
So. Calif. 36, Oregon St. 18
Penn St. 31, Houston 21
CoraeU 14, Penn 7
Plttaburgh 32, Wm. &amp; Mary H
Ohio U. 21, Purdue 20
Holy Cross 36, Rhode Island
18
.Florida 35, Rice 7
Rutgers 27, Bucknell 10
So. Carolina 21, Miami (0.) 6
Syracuse 26, No. Carolina St
6
Temple 16, Drauke I
Tenn. 17, Boston College 14
Texas 28, VIrginia 12
Oregon 30, TCU 17
Texas Tech 24, New Mexlco 7
Washington 22, San Jose St.
11

Stanford 22, Tulane 16
Tulsa 20, N.E. La. 14
Wlsconslu 35, No. lli. 7
UCLA 28, Kansas 15
VUiailova 21, Ball St. 8
Teus A&amp;M 33, Va. Tech 17
Wake Forest 18, VanderbUt 7
Wyoming 38, UTEP 7
Yale 21, Brown 9

games.

Turner credits
crew in victory
By BART KJNCH
NEWPORT, R.I. (UP! )
Ted Turner credited his crew
fo• the victory of Courageous
over the Australia in the
battle to keep the America's
Cup on U.S. shores.
In the first of a best-ofseven series of races in
Rhode Island Sound .Dn
Tuesday, Courageous heat
the Australian challenger
across the finish line by 1
minute and 48 seconds .
The defeat left the Australians somewhat deflated and
Turner more optimistic about
the outcome of the 23rd
foreign challenge - and the
fifth by Australia - to wrest
the most coveted prize in
yachting from its borne at the
New York Vacht Club.
Shortly after Courageous'
crossed the finish line at the
end of the 24.3 mile Olympic
course, Noel Robins;skipper
of the Australia , ran up the
signal flag calling for a
layover day - a day off
between races.
Alan Bond, head of the
Australia's syndicate, said
the crew would use the day
off from racing to do some
work on her jibs.
" We think .we can c)o a little.
bit of work on olir jibs and ,
from what we learned today,

Major Hoople
Continued from Page 3
very Important Sept. 24
engagement, the Oklahoma
Sooners and the Ohio State
Buckeyes should have little
trouble getting by Utah and
Minnesota this week. We see
t!Je Sooners triumphing 34-8,
and the Bucks winning by a
closer 17·13 margin -'- bar·
rumph!
Now go on with my
forecast:
Appalachllm St. 25, TetmChat. 1%
Arizona 30, San Diego St. 20
Arizona St. 24, Northwestern
17
Oklahoma St. 35, Arkansas 20
Army 14, VMI 7
Auburn 22, So. Miss. 8
Kentucky 35, Baylor 1%.
Air Force 13, Callforala 10
Cal gate 17, Lafayette 7
Colorado 33, Kent St. 14
Harvard 30, Columbia 12 ·
Dartmouth 34, Princeton H
E. Carolina 38, Tex.·Arl. %1
Bowling Green 31, E. Mich. Z2
Georgia 28, Clemson 7
Georgia Tech 21, Miami
(Fla.) 14
Mluoarl 28, Dllnoill 15
Cent. Mich. 24, Dllnols St. 7
Indiana %4, LSU Z1
Iowa %1, Iowa St. 13
Florida St. %5, Kansas St. l8
LoulsvDie 17, Cincinnati 14
Maryland 28, West Va. 25
Mempbls St. 35, Utah St. 10

Garner drove in a run with
an infield out in the first
inning and tripled home a run
in the sixth as Jim Rooker
and Rich Gossage combined
in a livehitter for the Pirates.
Jim Kaat suffered his ninth
loss against six wins.
The Houston Astros routed
the Cincinnati Reds 13-4, the
St. Louis Cardinals defeated
the Chicago Cubs ~1. the
Montreal Expos beat the New
York Mets 8-5, the Los
Angeles Dodgers routed the
San Diego Padres 13-4 and the
San Francisco Giants scored
an 8-7 11-inning win over the
Atlanta Braves in other NL

it was very good competition
and hard competition," Bond
said. "This way you learn
most and we think the day
can best be spent on
improving our jib positions
and therefore hope to
improve our performance tc

windward. ' 1
It is generally conceded
that the yacht which can gain
ground on the windward leg
7 the course on which the
yachts are heading as closely
into the wind as they can has the advantage.
Turner said after the first
race that " we changed jibs
four times out there today.
We have a number of jibs of
di#erent weights that we use
for different wind strengths
and when the wind either
picks up or drops we

Seaver eyes

Big names included
•
m NFL cuts Tuesda·y

200th win
Thursday
CINCINNATI (UP!) Tom Seaver, who says he
eventually wants to win at
least 300 games, tries to
become only the fifth active
major league pitcher to win
200 when he starts for the
Cincinnati Reds against the
Dodgers in Los Angeles
Thursday night.
Calfish Hunter, Jim Kaat,
Gayi&lt;H'd Perry and Ferguson
Jenkins are the bnly active
pitchers to have reached the
200 mark.
" When you're just starling
out, you never really know
how successful your career is
going to be, so the round
numbers seem to take on
significance," said Seaver. "I
can remember going for my
50th, then my lOOth.
" It will be nice to get my
200th, whenever it comes.
Then I can starting thinking
about 300 victories. That wUJ
become my new goal.
" Back in spring training
this year, I remember saying
to myself that I wanted to
make sure I won at least 18
games so I could make it to
200 this season."
Seaver, 32, averaged 18
victories a season during his
](J..year career with the New
York Mets before being
traded to the Reds this
season.
Seaver, .who ha s 199 career
and 17 season victories going
into his Thursday night start
against the Dodgers, sti_ll has
a shot at a fifth 2l).v1ctory
season. He IS programmed
for three more starts after ·
the Dodgers game.

who starred at the University returned veteran kicker
of Florida, was waived by Errol Mann to the roster.
Miami.
The
Dolphins Pittsburgh put running back
Fuqua, · wide
preferred to use Don Strock Frenchy
as their backup ·to veteran receiver Thoo Bell, guard
Bob Griese, who finished Steve Courson and defensive
second to Spurrier in 1966 lineman Tom Beasley oo the
Reisman Trophy balloting injured reserve list.
while at Purdue.
Miami also waived Ellis,
,who played in two Pro Bowls
and started 84 straight games .
from 1970 to 1975 for Green
Bay, which traded him to
Ho~ston last year with
veteran quarterback Job~
Hadl and draft choices for
Mr. H. W. Mattingly
quarterback Lynn Dickey.
Will Be At
Sullivan, a f&lt;H'mer Auburn
standout, got the ax from the
Meigs Inn
San Francisco 49ers. The 1971
Pomeroy, Ohio
Reisman Trophy winner was
On
tainted with the accusation
Thursday, Sept. 15
that he edged Cornell running
From
back Ed Marinaro, recently
9 A. M. to 12 Noon
cut by the New York Jets,
To
repair and service
because of "bullet" votes
hearing aids.
cast by writers from the
South and Southwest in which
they named Sullivan as the
winner with no runnersup.
Atlanta waived six-year
Batteries
and
veteran defensive tackle Jeff
supplies
for
all
makes
Yeates, New Orleans cut
for sale.
fourth-year running back

NFL Rolllldup
By CHRIS TURKEL
UP!Sports Wrller
Tuesday's NFL cuts were"
the unkindest yet as several
former All-Pros and two
Heisman Trophy winners
were among those waived
when teams painfully pared
their rosters to the league' s
4~man, seasooopening limit.
·Defensive tackle Bob
Brown, safety Bill Bradley,
cornerback Ken Ellis and
wide receiver Marlin Briscoe
were the AIIPros and
quarterbacks Steve Spurrier
and Pat Sullivan the Heisman
Trophy winners.
Brown became expendable
when the Super Bowl
champion Oukland Raiders
acquired 271l'pound former
Notre Dame star Mike
McCoy from the Green Bay
Packers for
defensive
lineman Herb McMath and
two
undisclosed
draft
choices.
.
Bradley, who !~tiered at
Texas as a quarterback, wide
receiver and defensive back,
is the Philadelphia Eagles '
all-time interception leader
with 34. Acquired in the off.
season for a draft choice, the
three-time Pro Bowler had
missed only two games in his
eightyear career .
Briscoe, a ]().year veteran
from Nebraska, played for
six AFL and NFL teams
before
New
Eng land
acquired him last fall. In his
Pro Bowl year of 1970 he
caught a league-high · 57
passes for 1,036 yards while
with Buffalo . New England
also c ut veteran wide
receiver Randy Vataha.
Spurrier, a ]().year veteran

a

Alvin Maxson, San Francisco
waived running back Kermit
Johnson and tight end Jim
Obradovich and Seattle cut
30-year-old defensive end Bob
Lortsemac
·
In other de velopments,
Chic ago placed veteran
running back Mike Adatnle
and defensive bac k Len
Walterscheid on the club's
inactive roster and veteran
running
ba ck
Larry
Schreiber on the in jured reserve list.
Oakland also put top draft
pick Mike Davis, a defensive
back from Colorado, on
injured waivers, cut kicker
Rolf Beni1'schke and running .
bac k Ted McKnight and

Mr. Mattingly will be
glad to give you a free
hearing test with the
la test
Beitone
Electronic
equipment.

BELTONE
Hearing Aid Center
601 Sixth Ave .
Huntington, W. Va.
Phone 525-7221

THIS WEEK'S

I
I

10 LB.

49~

NO SALES
. TO DEALERS
QUANTITY -RIGHTS RESERVED

ARM ROAST•••••••••• ~~.
.

Mator League S1andings
By Uni1ed Press International
Amerlnn League
EIS1
W L Pet. GB
New York
89 56 .614 Boston
86 58 .597 21!2
ealt tmre
as sa .594 J
67 78 .462 22
, Oetroll
·c levelnd
66 79 .455 23
Mllw
61 81 .412 29'111
Toronto
AB 94 .JjiJ . 391f2
West
W 1.: Pel. GB
Kan Ci ty
87 54 .61 7
Chicago
81 63 .563 7112
Te)(aS
78 65 .545 10
M lnn
77 68 .531 12
Calif
69 13 .486 18112
Oakland
56 84 .400 l0 1h

CHUCK ROAST••••••••L!·.
FAMILY PACK

{Cleveland 9-7) at
( ~1oueroa 14-9l. 8 :00
ll111e ol l)loo Dleft¥1111tnl et lll$UI'intt . ~ruha~:t o1

(R ozemlll 15 -7 and
at Cleveland {Bibby
F ltz:morr ls 6·8), 2,

(;om~ I IIICt !he I~ISillltd . SiJPfrHittlldt~ ! . ol
I~IIU ~the !bit o1 Cho. ~ltbf certrhn u..t IIIUIII
. . . .l IIISIIIMC£ to. , OJ! ltn: ! ~M. bit of Wtsj
~IJIIIII. illrs CU11"4111fiiMI! I~ 11110'$ oi!IIIS 1111 ..CIIr~e
t~ It llllf IS M~oal! 0,1~ lbe ~lt!ll ~· ID ~~~ J ~
IPIIS •lit rts li!IOfOIIII.t IMi~~rss af lftil.fWI! h fi11111011

•••n-.•

Cllfllitron IS 11111111 bf 11S -...1
lallllllt M Drumwr 31 , 1916
U. 2~1 . 46Z . OO,

11 Z31,960J. Income . Soi .OOO.f&amp;l! 00. £n~t!IO!Iurtl
IJ,747.11HI)
.
1111 WITMSS WIO:f.Of. I tiM llttt\do wbwl!JI4 111J
llillll ft rJWif"' StJIIO !II .rflllt'~ il 0.~ Cilia.
rPII~., flld dllt Hal"!)' V b. S.. 11 lns..IVICI! o1 (JIIo
(Sui )Sg)
Olio, ~~""Ill tJ Uantt . ~~llrbtt o1
ComplrJIICI ...:..,.; The ulldfltrlntd. SiJJIIHrnttftdtnt ol
lnwrftl!: Ill till! 9:ttt ol CillO, htrel!f certrltu Ilui m liFE
IIISUIAICE CORP.. ol llup, !h!t ol· W.~ir"· has
(l)ltlpj1trj wUIIllle IMH d IIIi~ ~.htt lfPPI•tible 111 rt nlr f
IIIIIDINif
tilt a.t"ttllt ,. .. to lrJffiiQ m IIIII siJit ill

,.

lll~rt

II'P'QPII•t IJwsr~UtiiiRSIIala h fin.n!lil illtldi!J01111
~ by IIi antllll Sl.liltllll!llt 10 llfte bern 1$ foi l11111!; 011

l:tOi!mlll'r )1. 1'J7(i .,._,ltd 1Wil5. sm .5'll.032.1)),

American Le1gue
Detroit at Cleveland. postponed,
rain

9111 Gl i)IIB, O!cllrtment

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

PICKENS HARDWARE
W.Va.

. 773-5554

MATERIALS CO.
MASON,

w. Y&amp;

RED
GRAPES

PORK LOIN

ROAST
LB.

CENTER CUT

PORK CHOPS

'139
LB.

$}19

FRANKS
LB.

$}29

SLICED

.\

lnSinoet.

Cr!:rtJit~t

or

$1~tmtrt toft betn n tlll ll)lfl M DlumtoeJ ll: tg7fr

surJII~s. sun .m.oo: lntomf. SJ,.:m,Bt 9.00;
~lldlt 111 n. S2.947.ti&amp;oi.Ol .14t't uw~s, $1i,998,453,lll

!'.1prrai . IE«l.Cill.oo.

1,. WITNESS WfOt:Of, I tiM llmUII1o

Innings)
·
Mllwk
010 010 003 1- 6 11 0
010 121 000 o-- 5 9 0
S•• tl
Slaton , Beare (6), McClure
(10) and Moore , Hanev; Abbott ,
Fosse ·
Romo (101 an d Pas I,y,
W- Beare , 3·3. L-Abbott . 1\· 11.
HRS-Milwaukee , Yount (31,

(!11~

,

44ll

&amp;ara of riM! lll.llt al tJoio. he~tb, Cff!lfiu t~ MIIJ.

Plomnn: 111

u~s.

to., o1. t)nN. !hte or H!lrraW. 1w

WI [~ the 1M olt~ 9~t apphtJbll It II Jfld II
ulwJrireddunrc uwarlelllwe• rotr lllSitl.tnthlsil•e•ll

(lllllfll1trj

ttcembil' 31. 197'6 Arlrlrntd mtU, $1 ~.910.17100:
\j•htou. Sl2. ~!t. 464. 00; !Milius. SJ.JA,.Q.OO, lnmr:nt,

120.~1. 21100:

WHITE

flpt!lldi um, SI7.81U!JO.

'" wtrJtESS Wi0£CF I flflll! lltr~o Sl.t!scrll:~eli mw
lllflleandgl,lstdl!ll'snl ta blirih•d atOilllllbuS. I.h o.
11111 c~~y I"•JI!Mt f11rryv bnp, ~ 111 ln!D(s:!. ~~i

MtSSlH1i.IIH ~ied~l~tllei~WSQithi!9lltapplrqb!e
tort lfld 11 ~Mritt~ M~ tile current !'9' to trw.1d tn
1 ~ 1 its awoapr!Jtt IMillfu otrn$lJI.arrct . H1 !inP:~al

"at•

c:r.Mrlm ~~ shaw!~ by it1 n~uil ~JtemtHIIlo ~" bttn .11:1
lorto•n on Oe~mblr Jt. t9~ Admr ued U!oe15.

»9.989,918.00. Nt l Mleti, S l~.l£.1.~1.00. Cfpilil."

$3.115.IXO.OO.

111 wnMss wHERmf. • -~• ~~e•e..,.o ~·lied fill'
l'lltlll n1 ~ m, ~nr. to Itt lft11.td-. Colll!l"lbus, QMo.
rNs ~aMrllt e Hlrl'fV Unp. SJil llll~~~~ttoUba.
(Sut4119)

!hte 111 Olio O.:j)illt~~~~:lll til tnM.-o . C!!lrhtlte d
COrnpliante ..:... The lln6e•t•llllld. · Soi:'lf llftttndt•t of
lnsis.-u of H• ~bl:e d (bo, lltrtby teth!!U tlut
MTIOML Llfl UD ACtiDEIT ltiS. CO.,

OJ!

100 001 ()()()- 2 6 0
000 000 QOO- 0 S 0

l(llil•rM'e to n nl ~~ at.elu1 ~td dum-.: the. tlllrenl rnr lo
h111Yt1 '" ttn llllt 11s ~oprrll.t Dusrii!S-1. nllft511ara
111 Fii'IIIICIII Wllit•1111••....,. bJ
~ \\ ~tllltnt to
~ lift• • lollm on i»~r 31 1916: Mllllltd

•t• .....

l5~tb. S2.!t9l.5n.i'lill.OO: tnbttrltn, $2.tm.50t:OI&amp;.OO
Surplus. $481,(1i7lfrfi.DO, l"wmt , S~8.16U2700.
E•p_u~Jtu•n .

$tOI.l OJ.613 00 . Net mm.

IN WIINlSS Wl{ll[(i, I 11M lt!:~tlll1o :.ub5Cublid 11\J
CIUiedi!IY wil 10 be Jf\rltd II 011\Jflbm. ()Ho
thr~drttlll! dara . HanyV lu11111. Sua1 alkiS~J:iDCt&lt;ll tllru

1 ~a1 ~97)
o1 &lt;ho. o.e~""rrt v! ln&gt;utii!U . Ctnrllut t d
tomplitll(l! - 11tt t~~~4ttlllntd , Suptnnte lldt nt of

s 111

11 a.:~ti'IOiud Ollt~ lilt w-rtnl ~t• ta hilllwrtl +R lllll ""'
rls ~~~~~~ Mi•s~ olrtsu~IICf lis r1111110al alllllmon
11 5hJwn "r rl$ 1111'1~ llalelllllll t~ 11M betn u !oi!OOIS on
OKtntltr 31 191'6 AdrrJutd metJ. 168. 31~.3!17.1».

.

....... 0 ••• : ... '

BEEF
LIVER •.•••.•.•. ~·. 29~

=:J

'

(Sr:al fu.l)

!I¥N .... canr~d

""' •• t~ bt: llfh:lf - Cdlll"llbus, !;Jl!Q,

1

OOx- l 9 1 tllil!bor .,.. illlt ltt&lt;ry v .unp Sirpt lllln5111~~ ~1
S I
..
Burrtl. Lamp (7) and W · 111 111 ~o. 01..., 11111111 Gl ._... ~ rt1h~e d
'" !.her ; Fortch , F:alcon.e (·6) and CiiiJIIIl!..a _ n.. !l*r$1 1 ,.~. •~~~'''*'' o1
Simmons. W- Forsch. 17-6. L..,.. GithelllrtA!Jito, · ht~tbrctl'llliurllllwt:st
Burri&amp;,

Sn 0
Ll

.

- - - - . : ......,, ol

12 •15 ·
001 ·

000)0 350 OO•- 18 18 I .

.....
Shirley, sawy.r (2), G~lffln
.. ~~~ (3), Wthrmelster (5), Tomlin
"' (71 and
Oav!s; · Lewellyn,
Houaf\ tl} ar\cl Yeager, oates.
W-lew~llyn , 2-D. L - Shlrley, 9·
11. HR - LOS Angeles ~ Baker

'* COIIIJII'"

.....

S.t~.d . a.Y.~~~) . m 00 , lflcOIM , 111~~- ~ ..·
~••ao. Nil ..ts. -.DIP....u.
6filll,
l!.tll.i!!!....,
- ·.....
,. Wt1IIIS
.. _ ...._ l ... ., •....... a.f., •• ,. •
Cho.

·-.Oil=

.t~ldlt ... rille . ~IJ W
. ..,., " '· Ollawr~SIII ~)

'

I

_,.,It
'*

.~ ltrl..witll the. ,. . "' rlis
. . . . . " II .., ,, .-...; .. 6Jilll .. CWltll )IHIID
lllilllld Ullllril ... 1\1 . . . . lilsllllll Gfi!IWIIICit
M1 fi.-oll O!MII\111 is ...... "' lh IMII!I ...... (t
. . . ." I! lllt.s .. DKH*It 31. "~ .........
f1Mh 5iztUIODIOO lrltlllmu. $1U,U!I.51l ..
liD.

Cllllatfti•.

000 2to-- • 11 1

181f2

oz.

CAKE MIXES••••••••••••

C CHEESE SLICES ••• ~~G~
•.

$ 09

•••

tnwrlfQolttw:Sllltollha, htrebfcer1•1u$1htt QIAICl

103 000 001 - S S S 9~u 111 Lho: O.:Pill~nt .,t l~!!U"ifiCt. Cethl1att Ill
.M"onfrel
Q00 201 0SX - 8 13 0 Co/llphl!A(t - Tilt Ulldill!riMII, Sr.r~~tnnt elltltnl ol
• Jackson, Baldwin (6), Apoda - · lniUillfQ ot tht 911e o1 (JIIo. llr!~tlJrcert ! l •e~thar lllnD
k .. - . . (81 Siebert .wn tiS. co., o1 ~l is. :ille ol Ttus. Ills ~lfd

Ch leg

.

IIIUillll JIIE 11$.. CO. ,~ O..rq, Slllt ol ~Ill.
1Jis ~itd 11'11~ lilt latr1 rJ ltd Sl!tt Jpplrutilt 10 II Jlld

.

ooo- 1 • 0

oz.

12

DUNCAN HINES

SY.~S.07 l :~l ll). C.tal 17~.60J885. &lt;XI.

!Wille ancl

•
". Phila
·,p.
Rocket, Gossage (81 and Ulbrlltrt s, iJ5,77!dDI.OO Su•lll~•. Sll.l)91.050 00:
~· over;
Kaat, . Garber &lt;Bl, tfiCDTit , SI3,W.&amp;JJ.!». Eu~endrl"' "· S31.6lJ6;tt2.!»
I' McGraw (91 and Boone., wrN WJTPi(SS wii:REilf. I liM ~~e,,.wo subwlbild "''
.,
lliml n1 CMtd"" lfillo til ai!J1e(l • Oil~. &lt;Jn. ·
v. Rooker; 12·9. L-K~at, 6 -9.
1111 ~u,.,...a dlte Hii•J v b!lll ~ otlnSIIIiiiiCt"' ()Ito

St: L

KRAFT AMERICAN SiNGLE

NHIM11t .

111• d Ttmnsee, llas ~ltd • I~ Ihe l.w5 ol tills Sl111t

ca (7), LOC -.......... .
'
wlthlhtla.sOIIIIII~III:t Wrc.t.rltlort NIIII ~iiiiiiOIIfd
(8)
ancl
Stearns;
Rogers. '~lilt the cwlr!lll yr;, to l&lt;MISICI m lllri stilt li S
StanhouSe (9. and .Carter, '!lll'opi"UIIt bu~flt il Gt ri!WaN:f ks fillaiiOal Ul!lllll!oo"
~ors 16·13
~~-~ ~ ~.,~~~~~~~~~mtnr t o hMbftll elnl tt"JW&lt;;oo
(9) · W· - R ....
Mo
· ra Ies
•
· Dettrnb;r j J 19"· ~lied fWC\ 5. S60.l89.!J!JIOO.
L - Apodica , 3-8. -HR.s- ~ew u 1 ~ 1111 ts . · i4l.fl0. ~~.oo. s...pu~. m,HI.94lOO.
York Stearns ( 12), Maull! I lnrr.. $t9,o16,m oo. £Apeii6'Jurei, 13!1.6'13.~•~ oo. H!r
( 6) : Mont rea 1, Cromartie C5).
~~~o~ottl, 116,978.91300: r..p t,.. I I.JOO,lDl ~......_ .... ,
-IN WITU
WtUEOI", t hM htrtunln """"'"" my

SLICED
JOWL 2 LB $}39

. CAR ROTS •••••••••••••••
. l LB. BAG

$!29.641.11000: Ulbi h\lfi, $ll4.476,549.0l Surplus•.
. Sl2,Cll9,561.00. lnmme, N .OSI912.00; Eipef!llit111ts.

( 47) .

.

POTATOES.~'.~·••

!'bit ·ol Olio. Otptt\mtll Df lnSIIIM:".I!. Ctnitiute Ill
Comoli1nu - Tht ulldt r s.~ntd SIJpeuntendtnl Ql
I(ISII'IIU o1 11111 :bte ~!»&gt;a, hr~ebr certilin tNI
MTIOMlftDlLI11UKIIS.to.,tf ~s.noly. S:Meo4

TutJdly's aaseblll Results
Bu United Prest lnternatiOnll
'
L
N1tlon11 eague
Houstn
160 000 105- 13 1A 1
Cincln
000 100 102- 4 11 0
B.n"l.ler. Pent.z (7) and
Herrmann; Moskau. Murrav
(2). Sarmiento (AI , Torres (6),
Dumoulin (8) and Werner. WBBnnlster , 7-8 . L-Moskau~ 4-6.
HRs- Houston, Watson (11),
~eno (13) ; Clnclnnj!ti , Foster
C .....,

N Y

NO. 1

'llll'llP''"'Mr.udriiS!Ifjlll)! nsi1111110Jianlihon1s•
Vown b'/ tt"i 1111*11 $11.t~llllo 11M been in. !ottj;tJ"i on

·

Pitt .

my

911 t al Cbo. Deparul\l!ti rJ IIISU!iWICt. C!ltilitatt o1
(ompl, 11'1(t _
Tht ~lldtrlllllfd, ~unlell!lfnt ol

(29) .

(10

wloolb! ~

IJi:lllt! Jlld QUMd lfiJ se~ to be lfh od 11 OJiumM, IJII~.
lhiS ll.ly hi date !Wry~ lrnp. ~ - Ill lnSUIIIU o/ Lho

Calif
Texas
022 003 OOG- 7 1(1 0
Moore , Barlow
(6)
and
Humphrey ; Perry, Umbarger
171, Devine (7 ), Cuellar (7) and
Su ndberg . w :_earlow, 3-2. L Umbarger, 1·6. HR
. .s- T exas ,
Bevacciulll 2 (S), Horton (14) .
California , Kingman 2 (21,
SOla ita ( 13).

( 7 ).

::s. . . . .~~:. ~lzg

~

GROUND.CHUCK ••••• !~·.

Admnled JSMII 1'9 .870.810.00: lJ,Pillrr"i, S2.11Z,( Jl OOi

.., Money (2Al; Seattle , Stanton
(2.4) , Reynolds (3 ), Bernhardt

END OF

BUTT ROASTS •••••••••L!~

111 IMII"W2 11$ fi11111c:ul alllduroo 11 ~II, lli !11111111

002 200 Boo-- 12 13 3

Ava .liable now at

FRESH PORK

1111$ 9111t IPPh~t tn It MW:I II JrJholl.ltd liwtfli the
C..rllll '"' 10 lrJIISICI IK r~n illite rts ~OIIfriilt bust ~ s.s

001 000. ooo- 1 8 0

Esslan (10) , Gamble ,
Minnesota , Smalley (6).

Modo by lila Trewox
. proven by • - 2 mllll.o n

'I

IIIIIIMIIDhl. iae of h01111. Ill! ~rd 1111h the 11'11$ al

020 000 QOO- 2. 5 0
N .Y .
.
000 130 00.:- A 10 0
Pa)(tOn. Willoughby· (5) and .
Fisk ; Guidry and M unson . wGuidry, l.C·6. L .,....... Paxton, 9-5.
HR - New York, Rivers (11 ).
Boston

w - BArrios , 13-5. L- Tl"'ormods • • &amp;QO
gard , 11 -12. HRs - C ''IC
•

. use as a vacuum cleaner.

.•-.

CoonDh...ct - The ur.dtml&amp;lltd, Su~rrn\endttlll ot
Oakland at Kansas City, 2 1111a'tnet a1 r~~e S:llt 111 l)lio. nt rtb&lt;J' amtfiu r~
games ppd ., flooding cond it ions IIIEKIWITS """'" 111 to. Of IIIIWil, o1

Chic
120 001 20x'- 6 10 0
Thormodsgard , Shellenbl _
ck
(1),
T. Johnson
( 8)
and
Wynegar ; Barrios and ·Esslan .

Hydro-Mist ·lyl1em Iitts dirt,
stains,old •hempoo residue
and 90% of the moisture In jul1
oneetep. h'lthe Mme metllod
pralosalonelo use! Do-H· yoursett
and save. Juot 3¢ porsq. tt. lorlhe / . - - " '
average home. Setal As eaay to

POR.K STEAKS •••••••L~

(lj

duri,.

Ml.nn

1 WEEK ONLY

Tl\e " Up &amp; Oul"

to 11M ~en 15
Mmmtd Jnttl

l.JJOII!Uu. 14.019,f 1J 00, Surplus

I.Jib!lrl1 n . 1111,9li,Y.ot.OO. Sllr"u' . SU~l . 461. 00,
llmne, S96.0'Jfi.3S3 Ol bperQiurH, $6J.!XI9.12S 00 ~~
aum, sro~. '6TOO. r.r11 . S2.1m.OliOO
·
IN WITlfSS Wt£11f.tl I tJM llfl•trnn $11b5crbed my
- 11111 t~ute'"' iut rn t.lfl•~ed 11 Q;iJl"lbui lhB
trucQy nldlr•. Hlil'l v ._ !&amp;cJ: "'-~ ~jl

(21) • .

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Milwaukee (Augustine 12 · ·1 ~1
at SeBttle ·(Montague 7-11},

REG. '6.95

SJ29
J

CHUCK STEAKS •• ;..u!~.

57 90 .388 33
Tuesd111y,'s Results
New York A, Boston 2
Ch icago 6. M innesota 1
California 12, Texas 7
Milwaukee 6, Sea ttle, S, 10
inns
Oakland atKan City , ppd.
Detroit at Cleveland, ppd.
Today's Probable Pitchers
Baltlmoi"e (R . May 16-12 and
Flanagan 11 -101 at , Toronto
(Jefferson 8· 15 ·and Garvin 9-

· p.m.

.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Seattle

Boston
New YOrk
p .m .
Detroit
Sykes 4.5)
12-ll and

5 GALLON
CAN
ROOF COATING .

Prices Effective
Thru September lOth

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Tueaday•s Baseball A:esuttl

FRENCH CITY

3 LB.

POMEROY, 0.

8y United Press lnter,.ation~l

cCS~f!l. ~~~.. ::.e.~'!'..~tY.'!. ~~~.~~!!.~.~r.~~~.. ~?~. ~-~~. 4/'1.00

POTATOES

298 SECOND ST.

Linescores

TOILET TISSUE .'.~~.':':~.~-~?.~~ .................................. 4 FOR 79'
TIDE 10 ct•.......... ........ ... .... ..................... .. ..... ..... .... ..•1.29
LIBBYS
303 CAN 2/99•
FRUIT Co CKTAIL .•..•.. .. 't·•·········· ································
SMUCKERS WHOLE
QUART 89&lt;
DILL PICKLES. ....... ~································· -·· ·· ·· · · · ·· · ······~· ·
GRAPE JELLY. ...:~!~.~~!.~~, ...............n.9.~·.... '1.39

IDAHO

Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

N~Yort~;

lO: J.i p.m .

773-55&amp;3

Store Hours:

Montrea l

Mlnnesollll {Goltz 17 -9) At
Chicago (l(ravec 8-7) , 8 : 30p .m .
OaklAnd (Langford B-16 and
Torrealba .4-5 ) at Kansas City
(Leonard 16·11 and Splltlorft 14 61. 2. 6 p.m.
.
Californ ia , ( Brett 12· 11 1 at
Texas (Aie)(ander 13 -10) , 8 : 35

VIENNA SAUSAGE ....~~.'~.~~-~...................... !.?.~·--~~~.. 3/'1.00
.
. JA M .......•.......•..
SMUCKER$
32 oz . •, 39
STRAWBERRY
-.. ..... •.•....... ... . . .•......
•. •

PHi"'BE ' STORE.
Ji•ocici!S Effective Thursday 15th thru Saturaay 17th.
Right Reserved TO Limit Quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamp'
Monday thru Friday
9: 001il7 :00
Saturday 9 :00-9 : oo
, CLOSEO

Sl . Lours

Chicago

• 5:30p .m .

. fJit1/we~:fawifjli«t•!
Racine. o.

Plttsbrgl'l

151, 2. 5:30p. m . ·

PRICES EFFECTIVE
SEPT. 15 thru SEPT . 17

5th &amp;Pearl

at

Phi Ia

Hearing Aid
Service Center

syndicate members."
When asked to comment on
the weight of the jibs he used Australia's defeat to a poor
to defeat the Aussies , Turner chOice of sails.
said :
" Well, generally, I think' it
change."
" We used three . different was juSt the choice of sails,''
weights - 5, 7 and 9 ounce." , Robins .said, ' 1and , early in
Turner added that his crew
11
ln any p,articu1ar order?" the race and even in the last
.had worked out a system
11
Ves, we used five when its lap, we pill up a sail that
''where we don 't lose too
lighter,
seven for · medium wasn't ideally suited (but) we
much time changing jibs."
At a news conference after and nine for heavy. A guy didn' t make a ny tactical
the: first race, Turner · said, . from Cleveland, Ohio can bloops."
understand that."
"I'd just like to thank my
The series will resume
Robins
attributed Thursday.
crew which did an absolutely
superb job today. I "m just so
proud of them because I think
far too much emphasis is put
on the skipper in this thing
and it takes ll men tc sail one ·
of these boats and all our

against the Thundering Herd.
Davenport, who started se·
veral games for the Broncos
as a freshman only to lose the
starting r ole a year ago , had
10 solo stops Saturday, with
one of them causing a Gopher
fumble, as well as a pass
deflection.
Other offensive players
nominsted for the award
included
Ball
State
quarterback Dave Wilson,.
Bowling Greep sigQalcaller
Mark
Miller,
Central
Michigan running back Mike
Gray, Eastern Michigan full·
back Doug Crisan, Kent Slate
fullback Tom Roper and
Northern Illinois tackle Scott
Crooks.
Defensive nominees
included Bowling Green
strong safety Bob Cummins,
Ollio linebacker Jim Givens,
Northern Illinois tackle Jim
Hardwick , Kent State tackle
Mike Zele, Eastern Michigan
ta ckle· Kevin Wilkinson,
Central Michigan middle
guard Jerry Hodges and Ball
Slate linebacker Bill Pindras.

G•mes

BELTONE

OU's Vetter co-player of week
COLUMBUS ( UPI )
Veteran Ohio University
quarterback Andy Vetter and
·western Michigan safety
Morris Davenport have been
selected
MidAmerioan
Conference football Players
of the Week.
Vetter, a 5-11, 180-potmd
senior from Portsmouth, was
the unanimous pick in
balloting by a panel of new
media members for the
offensive
honors after
personally accounting for
four Bobcat touchdowns in
OU's 4~27 opening game
victory at Marshall last
Saturday.
Davenport, a 6-2, 204-pound
junior from Hesperian,
Mich., ·won the defensive
award for his 17-tackle effort
in Western Michigan's 1().7
loss to Minnesota last
weekend .
Vetter, three-time winner
of the weekly award,
connected on 11 of 15 passes
for 154 yards including a 12yard TD strike to complete
his three rurming touchdowns

Thursday~,

Oakland at Kansas Cit~. 'l.
twi-nlght
Boston at New Vork, night
Baltimore at Toronto, night
M innesota
Chicago. n!gnt
California at Te.:as. night-

MORTON FROZEN

13~ oz.

COLLEGE INN

POT PIES •••••••••••••

CHICKEN · BROTH.~ ••••
CO UPON

WAGONERS

ORANGE DRINK
54 OZ.

2/$1

W!C

Limit! Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 17, 1977

; ;;:; ~1 ;::; ::'!

8 oz.

COUPON

COUPON

KOOL AID

CRISCO

COUPON

REG. SIZE

12/$1

W!C

3 LB.

SHOWBOAT

•

$}49 W/C

Limi t i -Per Customer
Good Onlv At Powell 's
Offer Expires Sept. 17, i971

PORK &amp; BEANS
Wh

oz.

6/~$} -w;c

Lim it 1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's

�•

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .•

Wednesday. Sept. 14,1977

_

7-1be~Sentind Ulddl-•.p

l,~_,;"' ii~);;~H~~~~
P ~~ . Mrs. Grimm hosts UM
DAR pldns for
:
}
u
By Helen Hottel
S
Constitution Week
Thauk yw t'\Jillilmcrs uset.l
durmg the past y~r by
members uf the United
Methodist Wumen of the
r -• · ·~ F"l'"
""'w"
g., Church were
opened at a meeting held
recently at the home of Mrs.
Chlorus Grimtn.
Mrs. Grinun, president,
cooducted the m_eetin~ during
which tune 1t was decided to
raise the mission pledge for
the year. A letter frcm Compassion was read reporting
on Nicki Niligneictling . the Indian girl supported by the

:::

~
:i:'..

· ·

•

•· •

UMW,
A report was gtven by Mrs.
Gladys Shields of the
nommaling corr.mitlee and
the current
·
offkers were relilined for another year.
BeSides Mrs. Grimm, they
are Mary l.ooise Shuler, vice
pres ident ; Lois Bell ,
secretary, and Nora Cross,
treasurer. It was reported
thatl6 shutin calls have been
madeduringthepastmonth.
Plans were l)iade for a
miscellaneous Sale to be held
on Oct. 14 at the community
building . Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs.
Shields, and Mrs. Marjorie
Roush of the ways and means
committee, will have charge.
Mrs. Shuler will ""Jeri the

, .. .__....., omeroy,O., Wednesday,Sept. 14. 1977

book of the Bible to be studied
during the next few weeks.
Devotions by Mrs. Cross were
taken from Nehemiah with a
reading "Think o( Today."
She also bad the program using a story of a fern pr()truding from bare cracked
rock and emerging into a
thing of beauty, and likened it
to a life of accomplishinent
achieved amid poverty and
lackorstrongphysicalbody.
Taking part in the program
discussion were Mrs. Eula
Wolfe, Mrs. Marjorie Roush,
Mrs . E·rma .Hill • Mrs . Shi eIds •
Mrs. Bell, and Mrs. Grimm.
Refreshments were served
by the hoste$5.

' 'RAP' 'for youth to be
held at Christian Church

L&lt;osl 'ivulh Went Thalaway .. :
Plans for the aMual obser- local chapter.
Dear
Helen:
.
vance of Constitution Week,
Plans were made to revise
·
I've
read
several
letters
in
your colwnfi lrnm married
Sept. 17-23, were announced the by-laws with Miss Smith
wop1en
who
can't
stop
dreaming
of
a loog-lost love. My advice:
by Miss Lucille Smith, at a as cbainnan. The French Coltry
to recapture the past.
.
_
don'f
meeting of Return Jooathan ooy Chapter members will be
My high school sweetheart , alter 20 years, lelt her husband
Meigs Chapter of the guests at. the October meeting
and
looked me up.! really_hadn 't thought about her much ;Over
Daughters of the American of the chapter at the home of
the
years,
but she told me how·she used to daydream of me ,
Revolution held Friday at the Mrs. Eich. Mrs. Nelson Emespecially
when
Wlpleasant things happened in her life. She
home of Mrs. James B. brey, Southeast District even wrote poems
aliout ine .
O'Brien.
direct~r, will be the guest
.
Well,
I
was
caught
up in this. hero ,;.orship, and we got ~~::::::
Miss Smith noted that the speaker.
: w;e
r~·
The dass ring for
married.
The
match
was
doomed from the start: she was
' signing of the Constitution
The national defense report· looking lor what we had during our high school dayS. You don 't
took place 190 years ago on was given by Mrs. Emerson
all your tomorrows.
· ·
·
,.
Sept. 17 . She reminded Jones who reviewed an- arti- lind that in 46-year-&lt;&gt;lds..
I'm sad that our.one year or marriage .ended in divorce,
ln a J.ra mauc departure rrom the
members to fly their flags cle from the National
but
~ven sadder. when I think her first marriage. never had a
u~ual, chr GOLDEN OVALdesis n
and noted that literature will Defender which pointed out
chance,
probably
because
of·
me.
insct5 14K yellow go.ld and c:cnter:i 1 r
be distributed to the schools. the far-reaching effects of
sm k1ngl~· wnh a 5-pot nt d1 amond or
La&lt;jies, you can't relive something that is over. Spend your
Mrs. Paul Eich reported that Russia 's eaves dropping on
genmne bin h.srone - at no r:Mtr.ll
time
loving
the
man
you
have
:
Remember,
your
"lost
love"
patriotic floral arrangements telephone conversations of
cost w )OU - D1snnguishcd n ylui.g in
will be placed in the local the U. S. Govenunent. She puts his pants on thesame way your husband does - one leg at WEDNESDAY
durable Valadiu m .. , R. Johns
a time. - MARTIN
·
.
WHITE Rose Lodge, 1:30
banks.
perfect am wer to plaunum , and
·also discussed the Panama
Wednesday at the Social
+++
tun her enhanced by your!ptrsonal
u Yesteryear participation Canal treaty and the conten·
Room of the Columbus and
liymbols of achievemen t or mtercst.
·was discussed with the lion that it allows control by Dear Helen :
meeting.
Recently
there
has
been
a
rash
of
Stories
about
Southern
Ohio
Electric
Co.
A
plaque
in
tribute
to
Mrs.
chapter to have a display of communists.
Members welcomed Mrs.
RINGS
"frightening conditions" in convalescent hospitals. A group
P 0 M E- R 0 y • Ethel Williamson was
toys and dolls. Mrs. Dwight
Mrs. Eich read the presi- has formed in our town to close these hospitals down. Recently
NOWAVAILABLE
• presented by her daughter, ErnestineBurnell,amember
Milhoan and Mrs. Clinton dent general's message from
MIDDLEPORT
LIONS Mrs.MaryWilliamsonBiack, now residing in Charleston.
TO MEIGS
came to our house with a petition on the su~ject.
Fisher are C()-Cbairmen for the National DAR Magazine a teenager
CLUB, . noon Wednesday at and acknowledged at the Fri- The birthdays of.Mrs. Stella
EASTERN and
Why
don
't
such
perSDns
visit
these
hospitals
before
making
the display and members of urging the chapters to carry
the Me1gs Inn. All Lions urg- day night meeting of the Hap- KLoes, and Mrs. Neva
WAHAMA
blanket condemnations'
the chapter volunteered to out the work of the founders
ed
to
attend
.
py
Harvesters
Class
of
Trini·
Seyfried were noted.
I work in a fine convalescent facility and l'm proud to be a
STUDENTS.
.
work in the exhibit from ll of the country, and to keep
AMATEUR Garden Club ty Church.
member
of
a
great
staff
.
Our
hospital
is
clean,
well
equipped,
Reported
ill
were
Mrs
.
If
the
ring 1 tarub out, it"s an R. John, .
a.m. toll p:m. Saturday.
alive the vision which the
meeting Wednesday, 7:30
During the ·meeting con- Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Mabel
A district meeting to be forefathers bave. The budget offers the latest in physical therapy. Fond is gond, care p.m. at home of Bernice dueled by Miss Enna Smith Wolle, and Mrs. Seyfried.
beld Sept. 20 and 21 at Salt lor the year was presented by excellent. We have daily activities, dances, current events, Dum, Middleport, with Mrs. a rununage sale was set fo; Group singing or "God Be
Lake Fork, Cambridge, was Mrs. Pearl Mora. This in- movies, etc. Our patients are "family" and we love them. Arthur Strauss, co-hostess. Oct. 3, 4and 5' and plans were
With You" and the benedic·
announced . Mrs . Eich cludes aid to four DAR When one is lost , it isn 't through neglect or mistreatment. .
lion closed the meeting.
Too
often
folks
.assume
everything
is
awful
because
that
STATED
MEETING
of
made
to
cater
the
wedding
reported on several meetings schools as well as other prowhich makes the h~dlines is awful. Please let people know, Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM, rece ption
for
Alan
A dessert course was serv·
which she has attended dur· jects.
7:30p.m.
Wednesday;
stated
McLaughlin
on
Saturday.
ed
by Mrs. Eva Dessauer_and
Helen, that there are many excellent "homes for the aged." ing the swruner months.
Mrs. O'Brien and Mrs. A. 0 . J.
meeting of Bosworth Council, Fruit cakes will be ordered Mrs. Lily Hauck. The table 212 E . MAIN . POMEROY
Miss Eleanor Smith, a R. Knight served a salad
R&amp;SM, 8:15p.m. Wednesday. for sale by members of the was decorated in keeping
charter member of the course.
Contributing Dear 0 .:
with the fall motif.
INTERNATIONAL UNION class.
Manhattan Chapter in New hostesses were Mrs. Nancy
Will
do:
Good
convalescent
h&lt;ispit;lls
are
there
for
the
of
Operating
Engineers,
The
·
Lord's
Prayer
·
in
York City, was accepted as Reed and Mrs, Larry Wiley.
finding, and someof the best are a lSD the most reaSDna ble.
· Local18, monthly meeting at unison opened the meeting
an associate member of the
Families of the aged should shop around with as much Athens CoWlty Fairgrounds, with Mrs. Jolm Terrell giving
concern as they would give in hunting a new home -.for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
devotions. Scripture was
themselves. - H.
THURSDAY
taken from Matk I and the
Dear Helen :
+++
WESTERN SQUARE DAN- ~ugh! for the month was
CING at the Royal Oak Park
and Jesus moved With comSaturday, Sept . 17, the entered, many of varieties
These older people living in sin (with the excuse that they recreation building 7,30 to passwnputforth hla hand and
•
. . touched him." Members sang
can't afford marriage) should have their pensions cut off along
Stevenson Center, Ohio which are seldom seen by the
p.m.
Thursday
rught,
Unive rsity Campus at home gardner. The show will with their heads ! They're a disgrace to the hum&gt;m race, l0:30
with Cecil Sayre of New "Bless Be the T le" WI'th Mrs.
Chillicothe, will host the 1977 be open to the public, free of committing adultery, . breaking God's laws, demonstrating Haven as the caller. Spon- Freda Du{fy at the piano.
Buckeye District Convention charge, on Saturday, l :30 to 5 fornication to teenagers.
sored by the Belles and Beaus Mrs. Rose Gtn~er and Mrs.
and Rose Show of the p.m. and again on Sunday
This country will be taken over by Corrumunists because of Club. Dress is casual.
Ter~ll sang He Touched
25th ANNWERSARY SALE
from
I
to
4
p.m.
The
doings.
J.
W.
·
Me.
Prayer
and
group
such
American Rose Society.
BRICKLAYERS AND singing of ''How ' Firm a
This show Is considered to University campus is located
MASONS,
Local32, Thursday Foundation" opened the
at
571
W.
Fifth
St.,
·
in
Dear
J.:
be one of the top, Rose -8hows
We are now offering to you the best va lues
7
p.m.
at
Meigs
Inn.
Chillicothe,'
off
of
U.S.
Route
... And comes the Inquisition you',ll be up there shouting,
in tile country, and it is anyou've
ever seeri ·- on fine Furnishings and
REVIVAL
NOW
IN
"Off with their heads!"
ticipated that several 50.
Appliances.
P. S. I'll never understand why you rigid moralists always progress at Free Will Baptist
thousand blooms will be
- Don't Miss This ·Event
relate sex to communism . Didn't you know : communistic Church, Ash St., Middleport
through
Saturday
7:30
p.m.
Now In Progresst~~~=~~~ .. ....·.
countries are among the most avid "rnartiag~r-nothing "
followed by basket dinner at
nightly.
Rev.
Bpbby
Toler,
advocates. - H.
RUTLAND- The children
evangelist. Noel Hernnan, noon in fellowship hall. Afternoon services begin at 2
of Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
pastor.
.
with the Rev. L. R. Mahoney,
held a reunion at Forest
Parkersburg
, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Acres Park Sunday. At the
speaking
and
special singing
interested in going to Kings
Goeglein, Charlene, Mark noon dinner the birthday of
by the Gospel Tones,
and Mike, have returned Duane Barr was celebrated.
Charleston,
Va . Public
Attending were Mr. and
from a vacation at Virg~
invited.
J
992-:1760. Dea&lt;Uine is ThursBeach. They also visited Mrs. Duane Barr and son,
Sbawn,
Jackson;
Mr.
and
Project
work
was
discussed.
to
attend.
The
bulletin
anday.
historical
spots
at
Central
· Williamsbur g
and Mrs. Blair Cadwallder and during· a meeting of Meigs nounced a school of insturc- . DEMOCRAT
sons, Brian, Chris and Brent County Salon 710, Eight and lion to be held Oct. 15 at the Committee Thursday 7:30
Jamestown.
Mrs. Caryl Cook ·of the of Seaman; Mr. and Mrs. Forty, held Monday night at Hol·iday Inn, Columbus, p.m. at Episcopal Church.
LADIES Auxiliary of Big
Pomeroy First Baptist Larry Barr, David and the American Legion ball at beginning at II a.m.
Michelle
of
Rutland;
Mr.
and
IUlcine.
Mrs.
Marie
Boyd
talked
on
Bend
CB Club Th~rsday 7: 30
Church attended the Rio
Mrs.
Michael
Barr
of
A
potluck
supper
preceded
cystic
fibrosis
and
the
plight
p.m.
Election
of officers.
Grande Association meeting
Syracuse,
and
Mrs.
Elvira
the
meeting
presided
over
by
of
a
women
with
CF
children
SATURDAy
held Saturday at the Salem
Barr, Uingsville ; Mrs. Murl Chapeau Florence Richards. whose appeal for aid had
HYMN SING Saturday ,
Baptist Church.
Gallaway
of Albany; Mrs. Fund raising projects will in- gone unanswered by a CF 7:30 p.m. at Hazel ComMr. and Mrs. Claude Hunt
of Largo, Fla. were Monday Marie Dailey and Wilber elude the sale of candy, organizatiOn. Members were munity Church with Gospel
jewelry and knives, and dona- reminded to turn all publicity Echoes, Ashville, as featured'
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Dailey, Carpenter.
tions on a shotgun. Cbaimlen over to Mrs. Lula Hampton. singers; everyone welcome.
Hoeflich and Jayne.
for
these projects named Next meeting will be held at
ICE CREAM social at Rock
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Grimm
Thur., September 15 thru Sat., September· ~7
HOMECOMING
SET
were
Mary
Martin,
Iva
the
home
of
Mrs.
Richards
in
Springs
United Methodist
entertained · Sunday with a
Annuaf homecoming , Powell, and Pearl Knapp.
Middleport.
• '
Church starting 6 p.m.
·buffet dinner honoring their
Alfred
M. Church Sunday,
A letter was read from the
Attending the meeting Saturday ; homemade ice
granddaughter, Amy who is Sept. U.
18, with the usual .
PKG.
entering Bowling Green morning services . Ba'sket Departemenial Chapeau Bel· besides those named were cream, cake, pte, coffee and
·························~ ·
t y Ho rv ath , inviting Joni Sellers, Rick Sellers, soft drinks ..
University this fall. Attending were her parents, Mr. dinner at noon ; afternoon members to her reception to Adam Martin, Sherri Marprogram begins at I: 30 to be held Oct. 2, at Cleveland' shall, Ruby Marshall, Rhoda
SUNDAY
and Mrs. Robert Grimm, Col· feature
''The
United
HarCOUNTY-WIDE
Prayer
from 2 to 6 p.m. Several plan Hackett, Zuelelia Smith.
umbus, and her grand·
monizers " ·from Newport,
meeting Sunday 2 p.m. at
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dayton
Ohio
and
other
visiting,
RuUand
Community Church.
Phillips, Pomeroy.
Cluster
and
local
singers.
Glen
Bissell
clallS leader.
Mrs. Dorothy Wright of
Everyone
welcome
!
ANNUAL
HOMECOMING
Ashland has returned home ·
at Alfred United Methodist
WILKINS
..............
alter spending a week here
Mr.
and
Mrs.
AI
Tipton,
The
anriual
reunion
of
the
Church,
Sunday with usual
BOARD TO MEET
visiting Mrs. Enuna Ledlie.
ALFRED ~ An official family of Abra bam and Mary Holly, Hansel, Nancy, Ber- morning service, including
Jackie Handley, Jr. spent
nard, Karen and Kevin, Mrs. Sunday school at 9:30a.m.;
the weekend visiting hla board meeting is to be held at Will Bahr was held last SunEvelyn
Well and Brian, Mrs. worship at 10:45 with a basket
at
the
South
Bethel
day
grand mother , Dorotha the church here Friday
OHIO COLBY
( !:ly Pc.) 30 CO'UNT
Sparks and Teresa, dinner at noon. Program at
Harold
United Methodist Church.
BUNCH
Handley ,
Pomeroy . evening, Sept. 16 at 8p.m.
were
Jeanne
Mrs.
Lila
Van
Meter,
Alvina
Attending
I:
30
in
afternoon
with
the
Mrs. Hazel Wright of Point
Bahr · and Jeremy Blake, and V. J., Mr. and Mrs. Ber- United Harmonizers from
Pleasant visited in the
Roger and Jane Coates and tie Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. Newport, Ohio, Che.ster area
Uingsville community Sun'h 1~. TEEN QUEEN
BAG
Victor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Golden Bahr, Mr. and talent and other local singers
day calling on Mrs. Clair
Goeglein, Charlene, Mike and Clarence Neutzling, Mrs. Ada taking part. Publlc invited.
Parkerson and Mrs. Guy
Mark, Russell Well, Mr. and Van Meter, Effie Pyle, Cathy
ANNUAL HOMECOMING
Lynch.
BAG
Stone,
Martha
Pugh,
Linda
Mrs.
Victor
Bahr,
Vassell
at
Mt. Hermon United
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr,
Dillard, Kyle Bahr, Mr. and Bentz, Keith and Brenda, Brethren Church, Texas
David and Michelle, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Bahr, Terri, Jim- Flora Betzing, Anna Mae Cof- community, Sunday with
Mrs. Duane Barr and Shawn,
Recipients of Social my and IUlndy, Mr. and Mrs. fy, and Mr. and Mrs. Scott Sunday school, 9: 30 a.m.;
Jackson, called on Mrs.
morning worship, 10:45 a.m.
Barr's grandmother, Mrs. Security, Black Lung, or Norman aahr, Mr. and Mrs. Kerr.
Harold
Winter.
Harley Johnson of Pomeroy Supplemental Security 1n·
40
R. D., celebrating her 84th come who have had their
1
.
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
address changes are en·
birthday.
couraged to call the Athens
Social Security OffiCe ac·
DAUGHTER BORN
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and cording to manager Ed
Mrs. Harry James Roush, Peterson. "Most matters can
New Haven, the former be handled by telephoning
Sandy Simpson of Mid- our office," he said.
" You cari apply for
dleport, are amouncing the
Medicare,
Retirement, Black
birth of a seven pound, 13
Lung,
Widow's
benefits,
ounce daughter, Whitney
Dawn vn Sept. 10 at Holzer Disa blllty or to receive your
Medical Center. Grand- Social SecUrity_card by just
pal:enlll are Mr. and Mrs. J. telephoning our office ,"
·
E. Simpson, Middleport, and added Peterson.
'
''By
telephoning
our
office
··
Mr. and Mrs. William Roush,
we
can
tell
you
what
inNew Haven. Mrs. Mayme
4
Hartenbach of Kent is a formation we require and we
could
save
you
a
.needles.il
trip
(Stems &amp; PieceS:)
·
geat-grandmother.
to the office," said Peterson.
Some people feel that they
Don't forget you owe it to yourself to check with us before you buy
STOKELY
_
UMWTOMEET
have to come to our office in
any ca~, new or used. w, are the Friendly Dealer. See or call one of
ALFRED - Tbe U.M.W. person to conduct business,
the Fnendly Salesmen, Ceward Calvert, J. D. Story or Bill Nelson .
wiD hold its regular monthly but the easle.st way to traMmeetln« Tuesday evening, act business with Social
Sept. 20, at 8 p.m. at the home Security Is to call lint.
of Kate Rodehaver, with
The phone number to the
Thelma Henderut leading Athens Soda! Security Office
the "Pledge Se"lce." ill ~ but II you live In
500 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
174
Everyone welcome.
Meigs County dial 992-8822.
. \
'
•
•

•

•

r

R.JOHNS
GOLDEN OVAi..

Social
Calendar Happy Harvesters

Milt Copley and J oon Herrold will serve as directors
,for the RAP program to be held at the Gallipolis Christian
Church beginning Sept. 18 at 5:30 p.m.

Class has meeting

·YOU'RE INVITED

Rose Show to preview

TO

BAKER FURNITURE'S

i · Pomeroy
l\ Personal Notes

Reunion held

h
•
E

d

D

tg t an rorty
Plan proiect.S_ W_orks

v~;r~~~~~~!?~~:t:l

~~~~ t~~r~o;~ a;ep~~~a.~

w.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
Phone 742-2100

794
SUPERIOR WIENERS
................~~-~~: $1.49
VAC PAC BACON
HOME MADE HAM SALAD ... :.......... ;..... ~~:. 99e
FROZEN .FRYERS
CU!:~~
~?:. &amp;r

Reunion enjoyed

LONGHORN atEESE $}49 ~~~ CW:RY
YELLOW ONIONS

Social Security

~~Es

can be called
by telephone

2/49'

lOOi APPLES

4f
7f

11 OZ. MORTONS T.V. DINNERS 2/'1.29

MID WEE/( SPECIALS

1973 Mazda $1495
1974 Ford Pinto s2295
1974 M.G.
1971 Buick
Midi!t Conv. s2395
Sport Wagon s1695
1973 Buick CentUIJ
1973 Pontiac Catalina s1895
2 Dr. HT '2695
1974 Buick LeSabre s3395 1974 Buick Appolo $2395

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
m-2
.

L~. ~!I!M~J~UP
~ • ;~$1.09
PANCAKE FLOUR ••••••••••••••••••
794
.
HUNTS CATSUP •••~••••• •••••. ~.':"•• 65e
HOT DOG SAUCE .~:;·.c::~L.E:!:~~ ••• 2/4r
BORDENS CREMORA .......... • ~~.o;~ TEA
BAGS .. •••••. ••• •• •.. !a.~o~:! • • Sl19
oz.
•
MR . MUSHROOMS ••••••••••••••• 2/8f

ar

21''

APPLE SAUCE .~ ••••••••••••• .t!!
HUNTS TOMATOES • ,. ••••••••.•••• 2/99*

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

No grease for angel food

The Gallipolis Christian maMer.
Milt Copley and John
Church offers youth a new
experience In Christian Herrold will be the directors
Education in a course called of the program. Bonnie
"RAP" starting Sunday, Tawney, Edna Tawney and
Sept. 18 at 5:30 p.m. in the Carol Herrold will be their
assistants
during the
fellowship hall.
sessions.
The course is a new concept
The course will have nine
In religious education in
sessions
for a period of nine
spiritual centered min-iweeks
held
in the fellowship
courses based on spiritual
discovery, process learning, hall. The ninth session will
also be a banquet and cerand group dynamics.
The moment the youth tificates will be presented to
commits himself ·to the those who completed the
course he works individually, · course. There will also be
in a group, and then with tlie awards presented in each
, whole class in a series of weekly session.
The course is open to the
learning activities in wtlich
·public
(no fee required) by
great truths of the Christian
calling
446-1863
or 4&lt;16-7318 or
faith come alive in
by
coming
to
the
first session. ·
meaningful discovery of
himself and others.
The course is open to ages
-junior high through college
age. Control ofthe groups and
leadership are exercised by
the class itself. The director
acts as a resource person and
dlrecta the class in a spiritual

POU.Y'S PROBLEM
remover and use on patent
DEAR POLLY - I have leather shoes. l lind this
been told not to bake an angel works great and does not
fond cake in a pan that has harm the shoes. -VIRGINIA.
been greased and used for
DEAR V1RG1NIA AND
other cakes. Do you know if I OTHERS - 1 have found this
could use such a pan? 1 do not works very well on the patent
want to waste that many eggs finished shoes (white particularly) but do be careful
if it will not work.~1RETI'A.
. DEAR IRTIA- Deep tube and not make the mistake I
pans such as used for baking did. l had used this remedy on
angel fond cakes are seldom so many different shoes (the
used for other things and if it black marks were made
has been. thoroughly washed wtlile driving a car) that one
arter each use I see no reason day I thoughtlessly tried it on
why it cannot be used for an a pair of red leather shoes.
angel fond cake. Do not Off came the red. Use with
grease it for such a cake as care and always test. all recipes I can find say to POU.Y.
DEAR POLLY - I keep a
bake such a cake in a dry
ungreased pan. The trick is piece of dark colored card·
not to remove from the pan board and a piece of white
irrunediately after baking but cardboard in my sewing box.
invert pan with cake and let When sewing on white or light
"hang" until completely cool · colored fabrics I hold my neewhich will be an hour or dle against the dark piece so
more. Loosen at sides and it is easier to thread. The
around the tube with a nar- · white piece is used when sew·
row spatula, tum over and ing on dark things. 1 am 69
catch cake in the hands as it years old and my·eyes are not
falls from. the pan. Wbal do too gond, so this is a great
you lhinlt, readers? -POLLY. help. -MRS. C.G.W.
Polly's note - Such pieces
DEAR POLLY - 1 would
are
also great to use when
like to tell Blanche whose
threading
a sewing machine
synthetic yarn sweater has
an odor that when 1 washed needle.
DEAR POLLY - When I
such a sweater I added a
favorite cologne to the rinse boil corn oo lhe cob I add a
teaspoon of vinegar to the
water. lt worked.
Also, to use up 'Odds and water. 1 find the corn is more
ends of cologne I sprinkle a tender and keeps a better col.
bit 'into the bag on my or. -ESTHER.
Polly
will
send
you
one
of
vacuum cleaner and when it
is used it gives off a pleasant h1er signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
odor. -EVA.
DEAR POLLY - I have she uses your favorite
IOIUld an excellent way to Pointer; Peeve or Problem in
remove black marks on shoe her co!WIUJ. Write POLLY'S
heels that were caused by of- POINTERS in care of this
fice chairs. Wet a cotton ball newspaper.
with fingernail polish

Pierrot ma:kes good
By Ellie Grossman
NEW YORK (NEA)
Poor Pierro\. We're all
fastening his collar armmd
our necks and no one gives a
thought about how the man
got a collar named after him .
Well, the story isn't all that
clear.
" Pierro\ - double ruffie or
ruff collar derived from
costume of comedy character
in French pantomime called
Pierro!; especially the clown
in opera Pagliacci who wore
a Clown suit with the collar."
That's one dictiOnary's opinion.

But somewhere, somehow,
you've got to include the
Italian commedia dell'arte
which was very big in the 17th
century and which was what
everyone went to see because
there was noihing else to see.
· Actually, the corrumedia

phrey.

,n;;o
· '/ OJpvers
COUnct
l:ouncil officers were installed 111 the Monday ~light
meeting of Belhel.62, Internati-onal Order of Job's
DaughterS.
Installed · by Margaret
·Ehamn, assistimt ' deputy,
and past grand guardian of
the Gallipolis .Bethel, were
Kathy Johnson, guardian;
Bill Quickel, associate guardian; Lolli Pauley, guardian
secretary; Mary Jane Wise,
director of music; Carol
Sis8on, pi'OO)oter of sociabili-

·

tal'l-..1
wu

tnS

Bolll!ie Ta.wney, Edna Tawney and Carol Herrold,
director assistants, are pictured going over some of the
study material to be used in the RAP session to be
sponsored by the Gallipolis Christian Church.

Mr. atld Mrs. Hobert Sluon
entertained Tueaday with a
partJ In celebratlGn rl the
ellblb lirthday of tbelr - ·
Jolm.
Glftl were pr•1nted to
Jolm and cake, Ice cream,
PIIUto chlpe and Kooi·Ald
..ved to the 11U81Jl1.

-r

~re

played with
prlles being won by Lla
1'11ll1, Melllll Clay, Chrla
Hutton 8lld Kent 8lld Shawn
Eadl. Otber lltleltl were
Bllland Ktm Eblin, Scott
Geyer, Jim ·Stewart, and
Robbie and Mellaa ~n.
liama

205 Nprfh 2nd Ave.
Mlddlepo~t. Ohio

.Barbara Jordan

SEPTEMBER ..,.. .!.
STARiS
THURS.
MORN
10 A.M.

,

• MASON' • POINT PLEASANT
o SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

You'll Cheer
Jhese Value5r

PlASTIC OR METAL
HANGING
PLANTERS

aLANKETS
NEEDLE WOVEN SOLIDS OR
ROSE PRINTED DESIGN

REPEIITOFA
SELLOUT

S.n up to n .ss . Si1e
721184.- For

twin

fu ll

bed .

~luster ,

or

J"

All

binding , Green. pink,

rellow, blut, Perf"t
q1,11lity.

The Almanac
By
United
Press
International
Today is Wednesday, Sept.
14, the 257th day of 1977 with
108 to follow.
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Jupiter, Saturn, Mars,
MerCilry and Venus.
There is no evening star.
Those born on this date are ·
under the sign of Virgo.
Margaret
Sanger,
American pioneer leader· in
the birth control movement,
was born on Sept. 14, 1883.
On this day in history:
In 1847, Mexico City was
occupied by the Unjted
States' Army ,
In 1901, President William
McKinley died from WOWlds
inflicted by an assassin eight
days earlier.
lnl963, thefirstquintuplets
in u.s. history t.P survive
were born in Aberdeen, S:D.,
to Mrs. Andrew Fischer.
In 1975, Pope Paul VI
declared Mother Elizabeth
Ann Seton a saint, the first
· , American to be canonized .

plntl.::

10"

q~o~•ntih

~

,_.=.:...;..,/ REG. $5~9 and

a nd

planters. S. Inch metal,
gold or silver. While

wtth ny lon

lntl l

PLANTS NOT
INCLUDED

56.99

6 INCH

HOMECOMING HELD
ALFRED - The Orange
Chrillian Church beld Its
annual homecomtna SundaY, Aug. 11 with George Pickens
apeaklng, and four young
people from Kentucky
Christian Collejle singing.
with piano aCCOIIIIJilnlmenL
Due to another homecoming,
the attendance was not very
large, but a goo.d service was

992-5554 .

Will Close
All Day Thursday,
·.- Sept. 15, 1977

:tloufurut

. As
far
as
Texas
Congresswoman Barbara
Jordan is concerned, the civil
rights of Black Americans
have been a long time in
coming, but they've been ,
worth waiting for.
"My faith in the Constitution is whole, it is
complete, it is total," Ms.
Jordan avers in an interview
in Essence magaWie.
"I felt for many years that
somehow George Washington
and Alexander Hamilton just
left me out by mistake. But
through · the process · of.
amendment, interpretation
and court decision, 1 have
finally been included in ·we
the People' ... "

CALL
CRISISLINE

The Athens
County Savings

"GIFTS ANO
JEANS SHOP"
LOCAL HAND
CRAFTED GIFTS

Part of
the plan

HAVE A ·
PROBL£M?

......................

~t G!ttera

ty; and Audrey Wond, pr()moter of hospitality.
Obligation night was
observed. Plans were made
for the members to celebrate
Go To Church Sunday 00
Sept. 18 at Trinity Church
A thought for the day:
with Lori Wond, honored British author and Prime
queen. The girls will meet Minister Benjamin Disraeli
outside the church at 10:15.
said, "What we anticipate ·
lnspectioo was annoWJced seldom occurs ; what we least
for Sept. 29 with a potluck din- expect generally happens."
ner tQ precede the meeting. A
practice will be held at 2 p.m.
onSept. 25.

Birthday observed

'

SHOWER PLANNED
ALFRED - A bridal
shower has been announced
lor Sul!lln Henderson at tbe
Allred Church on Saturday
evening, Sept. 24, with Janice
Pullins and Ruth Brooks
hostesses.

and Loan Co.

Reedsvilk UMW gather
Plans were made to go to
R.EEDSVILLE •The
·
Fenton
Glass Co. in October
ReedsvWe U.M.w: held · its
and
visit
a nursing home in
September meeting in the
November.
A white elephant
church basement with Mrs.
will
be
held at the Ocsale
Dolly Reed as hostess.
' Devotionals were led by Mrs. tober meeting.
A Bible quiz was held wfth
Sandy Cowdery, her topic
prizes
awarded.
being, "How We Can Know
Refreslunents
were served
God's Wlll." A reading,
to
these
guests,
Mrs. Sue
"Looking AI Ourselves" was
Reed,
Mrs.
Virginia
Walton,
given by Sue Reed. She closed
and
Mrs.
Violet
Satterfield,
the .devotions with prayer.
The business meeting and members Mrs. Patty
conducted by .the president, Marin, Mrs. Sandy Cowdery,
Mrs. VIvian Humphrey, Mrs. Vivian Humphrey, Mr$.
opened witli treasurer and . Alberta Edwards, Mrs.
secretary reports and a Mamie Buckley, Mrs.
report of the sale held earlier l.orraine Wigal, and Mrs.
In the summer (which was a Lillian Pickens . .The next
success). Twenty.{our shut-in meeting will be with Mrs.
calls were reported and a Rose Thomas, Mrs. Edwards
missionary meeting was assisting. Mrs. Edwards was
announced by Mrs. Hum- given the door prize.

suit, wtlich alao had frills.
Somewhere along the line,
Plero became Pierro4 (Little
Peter) m France, and Clown
in England, but Harlequin,
llell'arte came to them. Little Columbine and Pantaloon
tro9ps of acrobats ; kept their names, which
mountebanks (literally those shows you how ineffectual
who gol up on benches to sell Pierrot was.
Not only that. He never got
things ) and singers who went
from hamlet to village hoping the girl.
In the final analysis, no one
to draw a crowd with their
sketches, tumbling and mime seems to know why a ruffled
collar is called Pierrot and
shows.
Afterwards, they hoped to not a Harlequin or a Henry II
interest the throng in a bottle of France, lor that fact, who
or lwo of sure-fire, is said to have invented ruffs
guaranteed to fight unre- to hide a bump on his neck.·
The thing to do, i.n this case,
quited love potions. But that
is
stopped after awhile. You can _ simply fasten your Pierro!
collar, forget that the
imagine why.
originator was never lucky in
1n any case, Pierro! known as Pedrolino or Piero love and a clutz who couldn't
in Italy - became one of the hold on to hla own name, and
characters the crowd liked to go about your business as if
watch. He always wore a we hadn't broughl it up at all.
white · gown, pompoms, a
black mask and a nat, ru!Oed
collar so's people would know
it was him.
And wbal he did was act the
lazy, bumbling servant who
worked for Pantaloon who
was either the .father, guardian or husband of Columbine, who was running
around with, or trying to, a
character named Harlequin
who wore, well, a Harlequin

CANNON

TERRY

BATH
··toWELS

WASH
CLOTHS

Plant s not Included

Pri nts and Solids

4 STRIPES

i

Reg .
69c

VACUUM

CLEANER
.BAGS
For
Dla t !amo~tli: ,
converti ble, c.~ nni S tft" J
s hort or 10 !111 quick
cons tell atio n~

broom ,

portab.. , tlim line 1ncl
otMn. l end ~ big

PICk Bill.

REG . .29c

LARGE
PLASTIC
PLANTERS
-

HOOVER BRAND

39e

TABLE
CLOTHS

GUnER
GUARD .

Si1e S2x70

36" Section

88~

No. I .
Seconds

ExciTiNG

NEW!
SNAP ON

Reg.

"'

42~

BOXED STATIONARY
OR AI! OCCASION,
GREETING
CARDS

SWEATERS

ON SALE FOR 4 DA YSI
HEAVY BULKY WRAPS-IIIODED. STYLES
COWL NECKS • TURn! NECKS

WE REAllY HAVE AHUGE SELECTION!
The most w1nted 1•11 swe1lert tre It
Stloppen Merl, now If bill t1vln11s. Not

just 1 hlnctful, but 1 col ..etian of every
lmpor1ent teshltn look . Come see, ~ou'll

w1nf uveraH

•

HANGING
PLANT
WATERER

REGUlAR AND
EXTRA LARGE SIZES

20%

18 !nell

OFF

L!ngth

fVERYDA Y PRICI

BBQ
GRILLS

ALL
PAINT

Y2
GAlLON SIZE

PLASTIC
DECANTER
REGUW '1.19

Y2

PRICE _

PRICI

WOMEN'S POLYESTER
EXTRA
WGE
SIZES, TOO

DURABI.f VINYL COATED

PAnT
/ALE
What •

s.ee•

POCKET

T·SHIRTS

$3~~

SIZES

.REGULAR '1.00 .

S2.19.if Perfect

Seyeral Colors!

$122
"

reporte&lt;l.

•

Eny to cut. 111~ hi clun . Use for drlll'llt"
lln1r1, llowltr ~MJI m1ts. table J)lldl, s"-H
llntn, stew. m1ts, r;ou nter r;ov.n, floor' mets,
pMcemts, rui!Mfl, Itt. Slzt lb27.

Site 5-M-L-X L

fhwf•n ,.......

111 f1nt ..l • ullcl co'-n.
Fllre tflt, ellsllc pull-on
waist. Rttullr alock. Valftl
to IS." .

8 to 18
l2 to 36

UTILITY
MATS

MEN'S

•

I.

3

FOR

$}00

�I -The DailvSentinel, MldrllPnort-Pomerov. O.. Wednesday. Sem. 1t. 1m

- Sponsored by: Gate-Way
or any nearby law enMarlr.l!l,
Middleport, courtesy
Iorcemmt agency.
NEVER try to go it a lone If of Pollee Chief . J . J.
Cremeans, Mlddlepor1.
heroin il the problem!

Parents:
HEROIN
What is heroin ' It is an
alkaloid derived from
morphine; diacetylmorphine.
usually a white, off-white or
brnwn crystalling powder.
For many years it has been
the top choice among addicts
of opiates, which are made
from the opium poppy.
Heroin is an illegal. potent,
highly addictive narcot ic
usually injected . On the
lltreet, it is called " H" 11

8ig H" -

"Smack'• HJunk," among other things.
The flow of heroin into the
U. S., and thus addiction, is
now threatening to become
worse than ever. To ·realize
the magnitude . of the
problem, consider ...
- The sales volume of
heroin in this country .is now
greater than 34 of the 50
"largest industrial companies
in the world !
- The sale of heroin on our
streets now exceeds the sales
of 489 of the 500 largest
corporations in America double Eastman Kodak sales,
triple Lockheed Aircraft ,
seven times Campbell Soup's.
- Profit from the sale of
heroin, in the U. S. alone, is
now at an . estimated $10
billion aMUally!
The growing of opium
poppies, for the purpose of
international drug .trafficking, is part of the accepted agricultural scene in
many parts of the world,
particularly certain areas of
Asia . It (las been going on for
many years, often with local
polltlcal approval. Pressure
from· the U: S, has only
·recently made a dent in th e
politic al .. protection
of
growers, and the progress
resulting toward slowing the
flow to world processors, has
been extremely costly to the
U. S. taxpayer, and very
limited when compared with

tbe need.
Most alanning is the fact
tbat the international underground - made up of
large and small distributors
of illicit drugs - is finding
new wa ys to make its activities more efficient. ' An
estimated 10 tons of pure
beroin come from Mexico
alone each year and, after '

'·cutting" and "recutting,"
(diluting), this provides 100
tons by the time it reaches the
street market. U. S. efforts to
cut the supply include
millions in aid to the Mexican
government, which help to
provide aircraft for use in
locating growers in t.he
mountainous wilds, and
ultimately destroying their
crops by spraying from the
air. While such measures
help, they have by no means
"cut off" the supply flow
across our borders.
In other areas of the
world,
we
provide
technology, dollars and drug
control personnel to aid in the
constant battle against drug
trafficking, but seemingly it
is a never-ending battle, due
to high profits, payoffs, and
much of the distribution
being handled by crime
families and secret societies,
some originating as far back
as the 1600s.
. While all of the statistics,
estimates ahd educated
guesses about the subject of
· heroin are of interest,_it is by
far more important to know
what leads a youngster into
heroin use· experimentally,
and ultimately into addiction.
Without such knowledge, and
the application of possible
deterrents, distribution will
no doubt continue to find its
way, so long as people continue to become hooked and
the street market remains.
What starts a youth toward
addiction? W(ly would anyone

kno~· ingly try herotn ' Based
on statements made by
thousands of youths who have
gone the route, the followmg
factors seem to stand out :
Amoo!f the very young :
- Encouragement by a
friend user to " just try it
on ce," usually by ·'skin
popping " which involves
injection of a small amount

Nothmg tn J1!e seemed to
hold mu ch m eaning any
more. so was searching for
"some kind of enjoyment."
- We had no direction,
nothing to look forward to
except being pushed around,
so didn't care what happened.
- Started on booze, jumped
to pills and booze, and finally
to the hard stuff. " Nothing
had value except the fun
things ."
- Didn 't give health a
thought, until the threat of
losing it became real as a
result of heroin use ... then it
was too late.

just under, the skin, as op-

posed to " mainlining it ,"
(direct injection into a vein ),
as practiced by addicts. The
beginner is given only 2-a
milligrams, while a real
addict may use as much as
{50 milligrams per day -a s the
body tolerance grows. When
told this, a youth tempted to
try it, feels he's perfectly safe
and can always stop.
-When traveling in social
circles that use drugs, refusal
to take part, or at least "try it
once," usually results in
rejection from the group and,
fearing he'll be left without
friends, he su!J!nits to experimentation lven though
his better judgment is against
the whole idea.
- The desire to overcome

THESE AND thousands of
other reasons given by youth
who have tried or become
hooked on heroin, add up to
one glaring social problem :
The creeping disintegration
of the American family - as
a prideful. autonomous unit
in the social structure - has
robbed us of our real values,
thereby rendering much of
our youth to the status of
independents, in what appears to them to be a dog-eatdog world.

~

_

•

Geerin, Athens, treasurer.
Posthumously honored was
the late Dr. Kenneth Upp, of
Athens. His widow, Carollne
Upp, accepted a plaque
recognizing Dr. Upp's services theough the agency to
the area .
Speaker of the evening was
Shirley
Everett-Clark,
Roxanne
Director of Education and
Training at Plarined Parenthood of Cincinnati. She spoke
on the need for recognition of
· the biological, psychological,
· and societal influences on
today's teenagers.

secretary, and

•.

Pomeroy Bowlin~ Lanes
Tuesday Triplicate
The balance of aU MidLeague
·d(eport Village Council's
Sept. 6, 1977
F
Stlndings
Pfs.
I!Xpendable fwids as of Aug. . Team
31, totaled $53,672 .79, ac- No . s
12
cording to the monthly report · No . 1
12
., of Clerk-Treasurer G.e ne Shamrock Motel
10
submitted to village ~~: ~
:
"' Grate
council Monday night.
No. 2
2
High · Individual game The receipts, expenditures
• and balance of each fund Betty Smith 184; Charlolte
Hanning, Pat Carson 171.
.
respectively , includes:
High series- Betty Smith
general, $4,426.34, $7,884.97, 477 ; Pat Carson 435.
$29,159 . 08 ; cemetery , · Team high game - No. 5
$1,030,50, $1,242.29, $701.2! ; ~eam high series - No. 5
·fire equipment, $350, $398.t5, 1327.
$5 .16; · swimming pool,
$1,2110.54, $2,034.{5, $6,080.12;
planning commission , no
• receipts, _$18.08, $155.01 ; in the board of public affairs
ltreet maintenance, $8,482.68, obligated funds as of Aug. ·31
$14,438.27, $4,584.53; fed_eral stood at $189,819.64. Receipts,
revenue sharing, no recetpts, disbursements and the
18',365,
Sl1,850.62;
an- balance of each fund,
tlreceaslon aaslstance, no respectively, for the month
receipts, S77.47, U,137 .oc;. include sanitary sewer,
Reeelpta for the month $6,318.43, $6,894.24, $33,755.07;
totaled, $14,510.06, while sanitary sewer escrow, $15,
disbursements,
dlaburaements
totaled no
$138,Bii5.09;
water, $1,551.14,
P2,J41.••
Wltb no apendltum or $7,710.17, $10,218.46; . water
recet)lU clartnl tbe DIODtb of meter trusts, $238, $274,
Auplt tbe twllan of tbe f/,101.02. The receipts for the
ral bopd reUreD)ent month totaled $14,182.57 while
expenditures
totaled
ltoOd 8t po,J7U7.
TIJe t.Janee of all wUoW) I ,14,878.41.

-

--==

50( OFF
WITH COUPON
. . . . I'IIIKUII .. -

4·1.1. C'TII.

Kroger
Peanut BuHer

Dott Not loeludt Hlotoo &amp;

....

W~ltt S.l,~ur

l.tJ.~·­
WtiCPM

Maxwell Houle
Coffee

77c
-~=tall 2 1l~:~- 77c

HiNu 2%

Ai:LAIIL

Lowfat Milk

OOgpa.,.l
.... ' Tube
. aL
·· ···· .

'

..

. . OHI..Uil

......
... s1· 11

All•

Dttt••··· .c.

•.

. u-••·

. ., .. . . . . . . ... ltl.

;.;r~'.,
·

$'

23( OFF

IIGUlAI 0« CHUI '"K

19'

·Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef ..... ,...lb.
SEIVI 'N' SAVE

Sliced Luncheon · l-Ib.
Meats .... :............rka.

MIIJGFRWIU.PAY'Wlll

20c
...

'

WITH COUPON
,o\111

c:;;.;tr;club · S499

3

Canned Ha111s ..

SPICE
TRADE·IN

OFFER!
•JIIct• •

All The OW Splcu
(Anr lnJIMil You Tum In
Whtn Yt~~ lilly T1ae S...
llullller Of lltw
'
Colflll~~en Of •••

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,,

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...,........_
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Window Cleal!tJ:

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can

·

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Meat Bologna ... ... Jb.

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Coffee

- ...

15• OFF

......' ·01...

WITH COUPON

KROGER
SPICES

Mr. Bullble

lo llolt, II
~
le11 lhlr ttrontllo IIIII .... flow.-. GotW.,
II r• .W, rNit a,ktl &amp; ......... th• ot lrepr ,._ ,,..., Ill ftft....t
....... s,lqo frM I I " " IH worttl. Got 20' Dff
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....., s,Jqa ,....,...., ftr .,..., ohl
of o,lc11 you ton lo.

Powder

""'COlli

.,•••, 6

-TYLIOI-.
tt-CT.-

U.S. OOV'T GIAOID CIIOICI .
-CIIUCI

llawlts ...

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

3

... nl PIIDYII.IIII
""' .... . NCI.IIII

79 C

Kroa1er Sliced

.lW.i.......
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........
WITH COUPON

110U1111 TOP
·
.,,,.,
20·01.
Wlllltelnad

Homoi~nlz~ or .
2%~~1t'~

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TOlll
SATISfACTION
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W.tt...wtlllll .........., lf
ot oil po••lblt. If, dut to COli•
dition.t Myond ovr c.ontrtt, •
rvn 01.11 9f on adnrtittl ~HC~.

lu,lfitult o tomtt~reblt .
bro{l d ot a 1imilor ICivlnt or
glvt yOl ' 0 UIN CHECK for ftw
edYertiitd Sl)!tclal ot tht l!*ltl

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CHAPMAN

11· 114-01 . Cftl

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:t7-0Z. rn.

Tang

89 C

Yalleydale
$149
•
l-Ib .
Sliced Bacon ...... .. rka.

CGNUIIIIII

14'.t.· oa:
Coot

. . . . . . ;..

..... TI

IIEGUI.AI

77C
4 .77c

Slllate

Gal.
Paper
Ctn.

-

Quarter
Pork Loin ........... .

KROGEI

.

--

Educators workshop .
to ·tie held in Ga11ia ·

Except Closed Sat Midli&amp;M r• 9 AM s-lay

_ Balance at

$53,673 in
Middleport

begin season of hard, hard work

ALL KROGER STORES

most will see Soap again

Pl.a nned Parenihood of
Southeast Ohio at its annual
memberShip meeting in Rio
Grande· Sept. II elected
David Norton of Athens
president of the board of
trustees and Stewart Kaiser,
Chesapeake, vice president ;
Betty Fultz, Middleport,

Cheerleader teams at Meigs High ,

John F. Fultz,
Manager
Phone 992-2107
Pomeroy, Ohio

OPEN24
HOURS

RICHMOND, . Va. (UP! ) - If viewers in
conservative Richmond prove the norm, ABC
Television can ·stop biting its corporate nails over the
controversial comedy "Soap," which made its TV
debut Tuesday night.
·A survey of Richmond viewers indicated only 2fi
per cent of those who watcbed the soap opera spoof touted in preseason publicity as a show beavy with
sexual innuendo- found it offensive. Seventy-four per
cent took no offense and half of those who were
offended said they will watch it again next week
anyway.
"Either they weren't truly offended, or they enjoy
being offended," said University of Richmond Prof. .
William Walker, one of three professors who ran the.
survey.
The poll - conducted by Walker, along with
English Prof. lrby Brown and Religion Prof. Robert
Alley- gave ABC a 60 per cent share of the viewers
when Soap premiered at 9:30p.m., EDT, leaving CBS
and NBC with a :ilh'iO split for tbe runnerup spot at 20
per cent each in competing time slots.

Congress just passed its the American taxpayer could
second and final budget end up losing nearly 45
resolution for fiscal year 1978 percent of his income to the
which begins October I. This government.
The formula of high federal
resolution determines how
much money the government taxes and high government
will spend, how 'much it will spending has never worked
receive in tax revenues, and and will only destroy the very
jobs and economic growth the
how big the deficit will be.
The resolution calls for administration is trying so
around $460 billion in ex- hard to create. In order f0r
penditures which is abopt $53 business to expand to create
MEIGS VARSITY CHEERLEADERS- Left to right; Paige Smith, Jane Sisson, Julie
billion more tl)an was spent more jobs and strengthen the
Kitchen, Judy Hall, Sam Hamilton, Jill Baity, Sberrie Osborne and Sheila Sargent. Jane
under
the 1977 budget. That is economy, it must have more
• ' White is advisor. ·
an increase of nearly 13 capital with whieh to invest.
percent in one year. The Higher taxes and more
deficit is up from $48 billion in government-produced in1977 to around $61 billion in flation eats away at this
1978.
needed money and will only
This budget demonstrates provide further disincentives
.
once again that the majority for our entrepreneurs.
You and I as private
party in Congress is determined to increase taxes and citizens , both as consumers
government spending. Since and producers, know far
this will only result in better how to utilize the fruits
economic stagnation and of our labor for our own
higher unemployfl)ent, I betterment. · Government
voted against the resolution . should not be taking more of
Basically, the budget hits our money in taxes. That is
the American taxpayer with why I voted againllt this
two barrels. On one side it budget resolution and urge
. raises the tax burden by . Congress and the . Adallowing the rate of inflation ministration to cut federal
to push milllons of Americans spending and enact a perinto higher tax brackets ; and manent- across-the-board tax
with the other, it imposes cut for the 90 million working
additional new taxes of $110 people of this country. Unless
billion over the next five we do, our country will never
see an end to the burdening
years.
President Carter has unemployment and inflation
pledged his administration to rates that now plague us.
balancing the budget by 1981.
• However, instead of balan·
cing the budget by cutting
spending, he intends to accomplish his goal by raising
·
taxes.
This budget requires one of
the greatest tax increases in
the history of the nation.
Under current tax law, inflation and real growth in the
economy,
will produce a
MEIGS FRESHMAN CHEERLEADERS - L-r, Lori Rupe, Kenda Braun, Unda
MEIGS JUNIOR VARSITY CHEERLEADERS- Front, Maria Legar; second row·, 1-r,
cumulative tax increase of
Kovalchik .
Terri Yeauger, Robin Southern and Dee Simms; back, Tina Conner.
$275 billion from 1978 tbrough
1982. The new taxes proposed
to meet the President's
energy program and finance
the growth in the .Social
Security program will
produce additional tax
receipts of $97 billion from
1978 through 1981.
Individual federal taxes for
COLUMBUS
Ohio Resources, Fountain Section, the past 22 years have
educators will be able to Ohio Department of Natural averaged 18.6 percent.
familiarize themselves with Resources, Fountain Square, Without some kind of tax cut,
Columbus .43224, telephone this budget will raise the tax
th~ techniques of using en·
vlronmental education in (614) t48--5884 or the Bob rate to around 22 percent ;
6303-Mr. Lightweight · claSsroom and field activities Evans Farm, Box 330, U. S. and that is a conservative
Senior
. by attending a workshop Oct. Route 35, Rio Grande 45674, figure . Combine thiS 22
New 8" utility boot lea lures
percent federal rate with
3-5 at Camp Francis Asbury telephone (614) 245-5305.
f ull grain Olive tanned
upper~~ super non - m~rkjng
what we now pay in all taxes
near Rio Grande.
neoprene
cre pe outsole
(federal, state, and local) and
Co-spon!M!red by the Ohio Pate to pla.y in
with no -trip heel plus
Department of Natural
.
genuine leather i nsole and
Resources and the Bob Evans Kings Open meet
arch lift. Al so features odor
Farm, topic~ to be covered at
.
and mlldew-reslstanl drill·
the Monday through WedMASON, Oh1o (UPI) lined vam p. Taslan lace.
nesday workshop include Jerry Pate, the _1976 U$.
POSTPONED
perception, process approach Open _and Canadian Open
CLEVELAND (UPI )
and values clarification . champton, has aMounced ~ The Cleveland IndiansSeveral field investigations will play m the $150,000 Ohio Detroit Tigers base ball game
also are scheduled, including Kings Island Open next week. scheduled for Tuesday
The OKlO, scheduled to be evenin'g was postponed
ATTEND- NATIONAL JAMBOREE - Many area Boy Scouts attended the National Scout Jamboree '77 at Moraine_ an introduction to a night
hik
played at the par-70, 6,837- because of rain.
State Park in Pennsylvania recently . Close to 300 Scouts and leaders from 22 countries attended. Shown, left to n ght , Ma_rk
~e three-day workshop, yard Ja~k Nicklaus Golf
The game was reschedul~
Filkins, Craig Wise, Danny Workman and Chuck Henson. Danny is from Gallipolis, 0 ., and the other boys are from Pomi·
may be taken for two quarter ~nter, Will have at l~ast 14
f~r tonight as part of ~ t:"'l·
Next to Elberfeld$
Pleasant.
·
hour college credits.
PGA t?urnament wmners
night doubleheader begmmng
in Pomeroy
A $20 registration fee competmg. . .
Main St.
Pomeroy, .J.
at 5:30p.m.
covers the cost of food,
Pate, who ftnished lOth on
lodging and materials.
th_e PGA money llst last ye~r
For more information and With $153,000,_ has fuushed m
a registration form, contact the top 10 m . seven other
the En vI ro .n menta 1 tournaqtents this year.
Education Section, Ohio
T~ur players will start
BYBOBMATI'HEWS
of Independence; President
Department of Natural arnvmg for the OKlO Satur·
M-G-M District Commlsslouer
George Washington and
day.
National Scout Jamboree '77 at Moraine State Park, Pa.
Daniel Boone and the Trek
August 2-10, became a 20th century gold strike campsite as
West; The gold strike ERA,
scouts by the thousands descended upon the majestic hills o!
logging camps, cattle drives,
that ·state's ,country side setting up their campsite by the
President Lincoin, the Civil .
quiet blue water of beautiful Lake Arthur.
War; founding _of the Boy ·
Just as scouting bridges the · hunting, fishing , .and con- Scouts of America in 1910; .
World I and II; the Great
.
gap of time it also bridges servatlon trait
Depression;
The Tenure of
world cultures. Scouting is a , Arena Highllghts tnciUI\ed :
F
.D.R.;
The
Atomic Age:• harmonious blend of people Authentic
costuming,
• from all over the world. Close _Revolutionary cannon, and modern America; which all
to 300 scouts and leaders from . muskets demonstrated on adds up to .a lot of talent for a
22countries on live continents the stage; between the really great show.
There Is no quicker. way to
YOU GET All THIS
joined the 28,000 United States Pilgrims and the space age; a
catch the scouting fever than
AND All COLOR
Scouts and 1,800 leaders.
parade
of sco~t-a_ctors
Pay $3 .00 when
to watch Scouts move forward
Among the activities were: represent~g the beg~nmg of
3-8XlO's
photographed
together in Arena Show at any
·Archery, · riflery obstacle, the Amencan Revolution ~nd
3-5X7's
jamboree.
and only $7.95
swimming, orientering, fox the signing of the Declaration
•
IS-WALLETS
when you pick up
BOB MATI'HEWS
M-G-M District Commissioner
your pockage'

Big Value

.

Norton of Athens elected to
Planned Parenthood office

MEIGS
TIRE CENTER
INC.

•...

Of those (feu;) offended,
.

What indiCators will tell
you there is a possibility your
&lt;.ilild·teen is trying heroin?
Small needle marks on the
body, usually on anns and-or
legs. Abscesses, (boils) near
tbese marks. A dreamlike
disposition, alternating with
peri~ of strong, aggressive,
sometimes violent behavior.
Pinpoint pupils and a pale
complexion .
Abrupt,
dramatic changes in interest
patterns, with leanings
toward following those things
which require the least
amount of physical effort or
mental involvement.
If there is reason to believe
a youngster 'in your family Is
taking heroin - or, for that
matter, any illicit drug Un&lt;nediate countermeasures
should be taken . You will
need professional medical
help at once, as withdrawal
"on your own" can be ex·
tremely dangerous . And, of
course, fmding the youth's
source of supply is a must
that cannot be avoided If you
hope for success. In the latter
effort, your first step should
be to contact this department

9---'1be DtiJY 5entinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 14, 1m

ftt4S......

SHOES

Scouts Attend Jamboree

e60"
COLTRA
SUEDE

Perk gets cherry pie in his face
CLEVELAND (UPI) Mayor Ralph Perk was
struck in the face with a
cherry pie Tuesday while
opening his downtown reelection
cantpaign
headquarters.
The ceremony, complete
with bands, balloons and
bumper stickers, marked the
official launching of his
campaign for a fourth twoyear term when a welldressed young woman took
the pte from a box and shoved
It Into Perk's face. .
Perk arrived at the
headquarters around middaY
with family and friends and
the Incident oceurred lhortly
afterward while a band
p!aye "Melody of Love," hil

«»mpalcn aong.

Police amated the girl
while the mayor wiped his

·'

.'

'•

face and glasies clean and
continued with his remarks.

A charge

of simple ·assault
was expected to be filed.

Books about gardening
RUTLAND - Gardening Smith showed that gardening
and flower hooks were as can be performed practically
plentiful as the flo_wers . anywhere. Popular crafts
themselves · at the Rutland deallng with flowers were
Garden Clu)l's Fall Flower presented in a number of
Show Saturday and Sunday, "how to" books Including
How to Dry Flowers the Easy
Sept. 10 and 11.
A special exhibit sponsored Way by Audrey Steiner
by the Meigs • Jackson • Bugbee and The Handbook
Vinton Counties Boolunoblle for Flower Arrangers by
pr-nted a variety of books Phyllis Pllge.
Of special interest to ·
of Interest to gardening en· organic gardeners wu My
thusiasts.
House Plants for FIve Garden Companion by Jamie
Esposures
by
George Jobb (who llved In Middleport until 13 years old), a
Taloumil~ Grow It Indoors by
Richard W. Langer; Patios, recent book arrival to the
Terraces, Deckll and Roof Meigs - JackllOJI - Vinton
Gardens by Allee Upham Counties Bookmobile. This

'

i:ompreh~pslve

guide
presents ·the hows and whyJ
of
growing
plants
organically. Designed for the
beginner, the handbook
presents the basic steps in
planting the ·garden, when to
plant, preparing soli, and how
to utilize what you've grown.
My Gardening Companion
also includes a helpful dictionary of garden terms and
information on ordering
catalogs, seeds, and other
gardening supplies.
Other books on display
Included Herb-Gardens of
Delight by Adela G. Sim·
mons; Gardening with
Water, . Plantlnga, and Stone
by Carrole Calkins; The
Gardeners Catalog by Tom
Parkl'r and Harvey Rottenberg : and Growing Odd and
Curious House Plants by
Vir,' inia and George
. .., Elbert.
,

I

e60" POLYESTER KNITS
eDENIMS
e POLVESTER A.EECE
eCORDUROY
e CORDID SUEDE
e QIANA NYLON

~

00

2QJ

0

w

$10.95
ONLY
TOTAL COST ~
YOU WILL PAY
MORE FOR ONE
ADDITIONAL
PICTURE
ELSEWHERE!
fHIS PACKAGE WOU~O

SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED
or DEPOSIT
REFUNDED

Photography
by

FRED
WELLMAN

NORMAllY SEll FOR OVER $3&lt; 00 •

Special Bonus Offer!
THREE COLOR PHOTO CHARMS
.FREE WITH EACH PACKAGE

ThUIS.1 Fri•• Sal,_~ 151 16L..l7

THE" FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy

W.2nd

..

- --

HftS. ll:Ob AM TO 4:30 rM

ABC KIDDIE SHOP · ..
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

�f

u-The Dally Saltine~ ~eport·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 14, !9'17

llh'lbl ~ SenUIIel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednelclay, Sept. It, !WI

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Ca~h

WANT AD
CHARGES
ti W~K'dio ~· Untkr
Gnh

am

t.:&amp;$

1.10

1.90
:u~

1111

1011

1.71

f4ch word over IJ\11 IIIUIIIHWII I&amp;
wvrdi u; I l'""'ILI! p.tr wurd p·r !laa.t

"A~ nliJnU}6t otl'li'r Y¥111 C:\II~'UUII\1

dl.ll.rte~

IIM)'a' will lao
......

tl~e

Ml

I da)

In lltellwr)', Card uf TbinU .and
Otul~&amp;~~ry . I t"'nta pllr wvrt!, ~i 00
IIWIUliUtn. Cuh llllllod\!IIIW."l'.

Mybill H~1~ ill lei MllrJ V•rda.~l~li

lllfll lll'i.~\!d 01'11) Wltjl ~' I&amp;IJh Wtlh

CH.·dl!r. 2:i tt;tnl ri\Mi'WII fur 11di c•:'T)·
in~ Bul Nwnber In C11r~ u1 Tlw St&gt;n·
Lint!l. .
·

Tlw P\IO~lt:r r~Ri'\'.,a. lhtl na~lit
IU t!f.ht.or l'l'}\'4-'14111)' Jd:ai d«-IIWd uiJ..
Jt!c\tonwi..'I:I'f PuUh11hl'l' 111.1~1 nul LJII
r,llilJbl\li!bll' for lllill'\1 t.J~iiil\ Ull~ UIL'UI'I '~.J. Ulkr'tlbn.

·

'

'

Phon\' 19:1·ill56

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
' DEADLINES
Monti¥)'

Noutl uu ~llll'lhty

Tueidwy

thruFmh~y

&lt;P .M.
till! d11y OO!m·e pubhcwt1uu

Swnlliy

I.

Wm tt!d lo Jh nl

Clwrjll'

LA.ItGE FOUR family Vord Sale,
Thurs . and Fri,, 1~11'1 ond
CAMPER , 1600. Also
horte
10 · ? lrond ~m• tchool Jo'or R ent
tra iler , S•SO. Phone (614) 61f8,
cloti1et. Including feant. led·
3290.
lftodl . drape., old canning ~ AND .. ~M. furnith.d and \,In·
jDr&amp;, M• n 1 ••tra lorg• cloth••·
furnished optt . PI-tone 992· SPRING GAIIOEN Suppl1e 1 , Cabboby clothes, lots of other mlu .
5-oi:U.
•
baQ•· cauliflower , broccoli,
Turn right at top ot Hartford
IP"d htod ltttuot planu ,
Hill . fint ~ouse on left , on top COUNTRY Mobile J.iome Pork ,
3l, te n mil•• north of Pomeroy.
yellow1 while, .and red onion
of hill . w_~tch ~r_ algn•.
L
1
1h
lilt . GAlan plants, Kennebec ,
arge ot• w I concr•1• potlot,
cobbltr, Ka ta hdin R•d Pontiac
THREE FAMILY Vord Solo . TV,
t ldtwollu. runner. and off
·
baby doth••. mater,nlty wor·
ttre•t parkin 'g . Phon'• 992·7479.
and R~ l o•oda ' " d pot(noe• .
Bulk ~o..-d•" tHd•. potting aoil.
drob• . Tupperware. 4th cmd
COUNT~'!' MOBILE HOme Pork .
ptot mott , fruit tre e• a nd ro••
Croo~ ~!r_!:~u!! ·
..
Ro1.1te ~3 . north of Por:nercy. -bu•h • • · MidWay Ma rker.
TWO FAII\Il Y Vcrd Solo ot 870
Lor@• Iota. Call 992·?•'9:.
Pomtroy, Ohio , 992-asn .
South 2nd St. Tue~ . 9 to 3. Good
AYAIL
AILE
AT
Rlversld•
Apts.
t
Bob
:• Market , Moton, W.Va .
m•rcha.ndlte and b~clothes .
b•droom , $105 per month . St50
(304]173·5711
VARD SALE, Thurt., Sopl. 15, 9·2.
tec~o~rl~y~ep~!!.!.:_" 2·~ ·
ECONOMY T"ACTOR w!th all at·
S.&amp;ldt Tt~eaco Station In
TWO BEDROO.¥ o pt ., unfurniah·
tochment1. Llkt new, askin g
S~ra ~.t•·
od. Coli beloro 8 oon, 99H2aa.
12~50 . Phon! (61 4) 698·3290.
- .-

16'"·

fit.

----·- ·-----REEVE 'S GARAGE Solo.

Thu'f. HOUSE FORRonI: ;;qulro
1
01796 S. CANNING TOMATOES , PEPPERS,
3rd in Middl• rt ,
cucumber. . Clt !and Fo rm&amp;,

and Fri. Turn on 306 at Alfred .
I mile . Clothing , ·turnlture,
mite ,

Gr ee ntlouu ,
G•r o ldint
QJiand.
.
- --.-- · .. -~
....
FOR THE flnett In wood - heat ing
,.O UII: ROOMS ond both. Adult•
llcve&amp; , cook•to... • • o nd cool
_ ?~-~~ pttt . 992· 5908.
stc.,.et, C:oll l ion H.at Co ., 8

SMALL TWO bedroom hou1e In
Rutland . 992-5MI.

YARD SALE. Fri. and Sat. Clifton,
W. Va, Jane lenn•tt 't house.
Two hou111 abo ... • Po1t Office
&amp;. low t he bridge . A ... on bqttl et ,
$EMI·F U~NI SAJO olf..:lonc, opt.
la.. w o re , milk con , tools.
Suftoblt for I pert o n. In Coo t• •
~--

VAllO AND Porch Sple , Wed .•
Thurs . and~ r l ., 5ept , 14, 15. 16.
3 ~ i. no rth of Fai r Groundt on

---~· -

FOUJII ROOM fu rn i•~ •d or un·
furnl thtd qpl . o .,.o iloble Sotur·

-

.-i •r· Sopt. 17. 997·36li8.

4 P.M.
11Jtenwon

Frl~IIY

RISING STAR Ken11el Boa rding ,
Indoor-Outdoor runt . grooming_ r roR s•
d
a ll breedt, clean tonltary r
~LE or fro e: Hou te ~nd lot
facllltl• • oe 367·711 2. Ch•s~lre .
P~one (6f 4) 367·029'2.

In Moton, W. Vo. 3 bedrpoma ,
bath , living fbom. kltct-ten. utili·
u lra large room for r.cr110·

----

A LETIU to Hea.,.tn . To my hut ·
band, to our fqther and grand- AKC SHETLAND t ~ oop dagt .
father , Wili !O'Y' F. Harrl• .
(MIn.l Co lilts . 2 fe'l'Q let , 7
wnka old. Shoh and wormed.
We ml•• you 10 tadly and we mit t
you to dear. We know you are
Phone (614) 367· 0292 or
happy and know you 11111 care . ....W.:_7 112~·~~~-~
With eocn patting moment ol
M~ICirS COUNTY. Human• Society
each ponir'!g yeOrc. We thll"'k ol
Anil"!"ol Co,e llne, 992·7680; or
you to dearly . We know ·vou
aft•r 6 p .m .. 992-5•27.
.
a re Ifill living, not With ut but
with f~ ,..alv Spirll . We knetw . A.KC REGISTERED Br ittanv Spqni e l
t ome d1aoon we will ~ witt-.
rups . Champion bloodll n• •· 4
you ar:t join the hopplne••
~ mo. old. 17S. (:J0.4 )67S· Il ia.
with in )IOU aa you do wltt'lin ou r
heart. Mined 10 much bv your TWO AKC Roglolorod male
apricot toy poodles . Shofl and
wife , l'hylllt , daughter• . Mocy ,
c li pped .
$65
eac h .
Pat, hck, ton , 1111 and grand·
1·61A·256·6098.
chiJ9ren.

'tr.·on or TV room . (30-4 ) nl-5227,

~o;;ft"'oi;;
r 5~
om
~.;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;==
iii:

bedroom trailer. 12150.
91U324.
m 7 65;--14 HOLLV P... RKMobile
Home. All electric, central air
10 x 50 2

~

----

·====.,...,-,.:.

qnd ~eot , dl1~ wether , 1tove,
refrigerator. wo• her ond dryer.
no furn iture Included. Under·
pinned and
up on lot with
goroge . &amp;09 South $econd A.vti. ,
Middlep or t , O hio . PI-to ne

••t

. _!?2.}63,-::
6·:.___ _ _ __

UNUSUAL HYBRID pupt . Rhode·
t lan Ridg• ·bock (African lion
Hound ) and coc,hound. She
mo. o ld . Mol•• and fema le• .
Short ha ired . Gopd dlapoai·
tlons 1 Will grow to good s ilt .

Putnam Drive, Athont . (61• )
696 ' 1 1 ~! ~-(61~!?:~79, _

lu lld ln ~ o11• r Dutton Dr\lgl . TWO A~AIIAN Hc1r1e1 . Al19 , a
_ Coll_~.apt , 16or 991 · ~ 1 .
1974 TS Suzuk i, .,..,.,. good cort·

old 1\!.~3 .

---

'

WANTED TO hnt · Two respon11

SALE r Wed, and Tht..ut ,,
10;00 On"', li:) 5.00 pm . Clot~"
cf all k ind• and mise o" St It
325, Dan.,.lll•. Ohio. 742-3076.

f)lr

Idea l opal far omoll loko,
tim ber,
city
wafer
av1llable, exc•llent hun·
tin~ .

CLOSE IN, OVER I
ACR U , !t~ctd. btrn,

chicken house, homt has
now kitchen, 2 bod roomo,

both, natural gat neat,
fruit lreeo, 115,000.00.
POMEROY- 6'1'• ACR ES.
3 acr11 ft nc~ , ho m e hll
ntw siding , 3 bldroomo,
both, torcod t lr hu t, small
bo rn, 117,200.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corntr
Lot with Iorge 2 otory
frame, . .t bedrooms, 1'12
bltht, 2 li ving rooms. lorgo
enclosed por ch lor rec.

room ,

2 car

len!

. . . IL

~~~inl .

,II. IN·I III •IM-11111

till

10. Cloted Monda ys ,
wreckt r terv lce, .tire repa ir,

. "Tho o.wotlot llie l•illlfll

IIHIIZ

S.22·1 m•

...

=1

3...

...

....
....

--.......

~

....3
...
.....

•
•

.•

....
,..,

•

... 34

SERVICE

m•

a••·

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

-==-=::-:-:--

---

''"IJ• '

'

.

''

,,,600:
Diem'""''·'*

1:30--0ays of our Li ves 3,.4, 15; A s The World Turns
8, 10.
2: ~20.000 Pyramid 6,13.
.
2:3()-Doctors 3,4, 1!: One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:DO-Ano!her Wor ld 3,4,1S: All In the Family 8,1 0;
Antiques 20 .
3:15-General Hospital 6,1 3.
3:30-Matcn Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;. You 20.
4:00-Mister-Cartoon 3; Lltlle Rascals ~ : Gong Snow
15; Merv Griffin 6: Gil ligan' s Is. 8: SesameS. 20,33:
Movie " The Court Jester" 10; Dinan 13.
4:15-Liflle Rascals 4.
4:30-MY Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8; Lltlle Rascals IS.
! :oo-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4: Gunsmake 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33: Emergency

I
KI J

I MAWPS

HOW THE FAE5RIC
MERCHANT GOT T HE
E5ETTER' OF H15
Fi:IVALS,

9 · 1"1

\

SLOWLY 0\IER. NEW

l-IJ. I 1M

T~~T~iJEY

•

MYDOBE~

One 13.

Now arTange the circled lettEtrs to
form the surprise answer, 'a s sug~
gesled by the above cartoon.

I I [1]

I I I XXI Y' THEM

Mswer. HE 11 (

(Answers tomorrow)

....

FREE ESTIMATES

Tro-PARTS • LABOR
Aulomltit

1111111
WINDOWS I OOOIU
UPLACEII!MT
WINDOWS
WJIIINUII

GUARANTEED
REASONABLE

"''&lt;!!!•

$1i)lfii.IOfFfTT

Plumbing,

LAR~Y LAVENDER

HMM ...

s,.oc..,Ohlt

I talfiSS

I

~ootlog

and all t~p•• of e•n• r ~l repa ir.
Work ;uarDntnd 20 ytar• tx·

perl•nce. Phone992·2AQ9 .

SEWING MACHINE Ropolrt , ter·
viet, oil mokot , 99~· ~~84 . Tho
Fab ri c .$hop , Po'meroy ,
"'ulhortzed Slngor Sal11 and

so.

EXCAVATING , doter , loader and
bockhoe wor~l dump trudu

and lc·bayt lor hire: wil l hau l
fill ~ l rt , to to ll, llmeston• and

MEIGS

r

EQUIPMENT

I
1

COMPANY

;
'

RustDitum Ptlnt Product'

!··~~~~~~:' Hyd r •ulic Han

arQvel. Col! lcb or Roae r Jeffert . day pi-tone 992-7089,

G:ramps, firl'lnrlnnl!' I brouqht 40u
somethinq'

ot"!d d l tc~,r. &lt;;hares ~ - Hot · 811AQFORO , Auction•er , Com ·
plete S•r.,.lce, pho'le 949-248)
flold , Jo~k Hoo Sorvlco ,
or 9~9 -2000 , Rac ln,, Ot'llo 1 Crltt
~utland , Ohio . P~one742 · 110011 .

_.~~l~- .~·--------~

do roofing 1 c-onstruction,
plumbing and ~eating . No lob

ELWOOD BOWERS

742-23~8 .

CARPENTER. flooring, coiling ,
ponollng. Phon' 992·2159.
MOilLE Home Ropolr . Elec ..
Ex·
•v•t•m• .

dozer, backhoe , dump truck ,
llrne&amp;tone, .gra~el , blacktop

st..

4.88

JG rollt ol c1rpe1 In ltock:·
Good ••ltctlon •II Ott Nit.
lntlalltcl wllll !~~Mint, nt
tllra Ia

AUCTION EI/E"V Fri., 7 P'll · Lqto

of f1tW and usld merchand ise
O~ia

Jtlv•r ~uc;flqn 1 Melgt
Middloport, Ohio. ~omo
'hcnt (1104)773-5471 .
PUILIC ll&gt;jVITED. O,oler't Auc ·
toon, Th~ro . Sopl· 1&amp;, II :00 am .
Tr~cklolldo of pli new merchqn ,
dlse 1ald the ¥~~holesa1• ou,tian

WO'I • ~y t!&gt;t piiiCe and quanti!'

o• Ohio Rlvlllr Auct1o11 ,
Molgo ~looa, MiddlofiOrt, Ohio,
to go •

Homo Phono (1104)773·6-47 I.

Ve&lt;:i Nlef'. R:lR A .

yd.

"7-·

1

RUTLAND
PURNITURI

••

RvHon6'

742-1211

Is

Cllll Sit. At 5 P.M.

tAKQ95 2
"'AQ 8 83

hints. Each

·...--.....

THANK '!OlJ 5UT
AFI&lt;'\ID I DON'T

d ~y

KNOI'I HOW TO DO
TH ~(; E

NEW
FANGLED
DANCES .

NOT' MAKING MUCH HEADWAY WITH WENDY. SHE SEEM&amp;
10 BE TQEA11NG ME LIKE
... LIKE A /(f[)

t!ROTHEJ?!

BKWJ

SKC

JLV

KTV

tJ 3
42

SOUTH
4 KJ2
• KQ8
14 .
"'K J 10 9 7 5
North·South ·vulnerable
West

the eode letters are different.

W\{BVJABVW

4 A Q 103
.AJ·8753

.10876

CRYPTOQUOTES

r :V.

EAST (DI .

44

apostrophe s, the length and formation of the words are all

. .. · . ·~.

FRIDAY TI.L 5

.9 '

t\XYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

·r '

14

NORTH
47

One leller simply stands !or another. In this sample A Is
used for lhe lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters.

E G P W

JLATZW

KTV

I.

North East

PaSs 4 N.T Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 2•

convention was. Four
nott;ump asked for aces . .
Responder replied . to show
how many he had and that was
that. He was also told that
Easley Blackwood was going
to be a kibitzer that !light.
Jacoby sat North 1111d
almost ·fell out of his chair
when his partner produced a
vulnerable two-club oyercall.
He also had no idea what ·to
bid and finally tried six .clubs.
West led a heart, East cashed
two aces and that was that.
Bidding in diagram shows how
well Blackwood would have
worked .
It also convinced young
Jacoby th~t he was going 1o
play Blackwood from \hen on.
Before anyone could say
anything, he turned 1o Easley

and said, " You've sure made
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald Jacoby was playing
rubber bridge in Indianapolis
back in 1934. Before the game
started there had been a dls·
cussion of four-notrilmp con·
venllons. Jacoby said that be
had tried the Culbertson one
and found it most unsatisfac·

tory.

Indianapolis hosts told ' him
that a young Hoosier in·
TKJLATZ . - surance man named Easley
S K C
zvJ w
Blackwood had Invented a
GXMVCJ VATWJVAT
convention that they all
Yesterday's Cryptoquate: NOBODY CAN BE A PROPHET played. Jacoby felt that he
really didn't need any conven·
IN AN INDUSTRY (FILMMAKING) WHICH IS ENTIRELY
lions to bid slams. He was lold
DEPENDENT ON THE PUBLIC WHIM .··BRYAN FORBES
how simple the Blackwood
(I 1177 Kinl FIIIUrtS Srndict\e, lne.

Mln·r..! ••• w.a.

'"" tlf.llll
11\u"--n. l !II ftMII

~......f---'4--if-+~ Jacoby sold on Blackwood

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

.• WINNIE

BRIDGE

WEST
498654
.10 42

.

C:.ll742-1111
'
TALKTO
:'
WINDILLGRATI
'
CARPITCONSULTANT

11:30-Pollce Story 6,13: Johnny Carson 15; Movie
"Cold Sweat" 8; ABC News 33 .
12:00-Janakl 33 .
12 :40-Late, Great 1968 6,13.
1:oo--Tomorrow 3,4.
1:3()-Mary Hartman 10; 2:10-News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P. M. - Gumball Rally
9 &amp; 11 P. M. - Sailor who Fell From Grace With the
Sea.
C..ble Channel 5 1 P. M. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:31)--{;oach's Carner
.
s:oo-Somelnlng Special
&amp;:3D-Cable Spotlight
9:3()-Biue Ridge Quartet
.10 :00-700 Club.

·Oswald and Jim Jacoby

• ' 27 PeriOd or
office
30 Cry
31 Place
32 Tennis
barrier
33 HabituaLed
35 Beehive
b-+.;_+--1--+--1State
36 - Creed
IA.D. 325 ) L.......L.....L.....J'--.1.-

Rog. " ·" ·1101lnstalltcl

_

Yesterday 's Answer
11 Shovel
24 Acquiesce
IS Baseball's
25 Musical
"Big Jawn"
study
18 ·'Two
28 Lasso
Women"
29 Anesthetic
star
31 Noted
19 Make butter
Quaker
22 Eur. country· 34 Caddoan
23 Podia·
Indian
35 Actress
trist's
concern
Hagen

tennis
!!!~~~~~ ~ o' ()~' 25 Architect
: ., , Saarinen
o ; , Z6 British gun

•

a sale."
A Wisconsin· reader wants 1o
know· how many points you
need for a jump shift

response.
We like 1o have at least 16
including 13 in high cards as
our minimum ; but in general
want l.8. Certain textbooks
require 19, but we don't hold
with -Utat.
:
lN E:WSPAPER ENTERPRISE " SSN.I

(For a copy or JACOBY
MODERN, sond $! lo: " Win af
Brldgo, " clo lhls now•paper,
P. 0. Box 489, Radio City Station,
New York, N.Y. 1DD19)

BARNEY

'

NO, 1 CAN'T SA'I
THAT I DO

HOW ABOUT A'l'r\ETER
AND A LITER?

,

11 :00--News 4,6,8,10,13,15. •

~

12 ond 1! H. wldfll Carptlt:.
·rvbbtr bock.
1
sq.

blniJ. c:or"n try, and generol
maintenance. 13 y•an eM ·

~looo ,

~

Cindy Strip
Rubbor lick
Rnulortus
Stvot~.ll Sq . Yd.

pavlrig, Rt , 143. Phon• I 1614)
691-7331 '
HARRiiON'5 T,\1 , ~opal r . Sorvl&lt;o
Callt, 276 Sycamore,
Mid·
dl,.ort. Phone ?92·2522. ·
IATHROOMS AND Kltchont
r•m(ldtled. ctram l~ ti le, phJm·

a1

'

.

5:30-0dd Couple 4: News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33;. Hogans
Heroes i!.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20.
·
6:30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr1ffltn·6;
CBS News 8,10: Once Upon a Classic 20 .
.
7:(10-Trutn or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4: Liars Club 6:
Gong Show 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My ·
Three Sons 15; Coping wl1h Kids 20 : Anyone for
Tennyson? 33 .
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; $100,000 Name Thai
Tune6; $25,000 Pyramid 8: MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33; That's Hollywood 10; Nashville on the R.oad
13; Marty Robbins Spotlight 15.
8:oo-Cnlps 3,4,15: Welcome. Back, Kotter 6,13; .
Wallons 8,10.
·9:00-Star Trek 3; Barney Miller 6,13; News·
Documentary 4; litock Music Awards 15; Hawaii
Flve-0 8,10; Including Me 20,33 .
9':3D-Carter Country 6, 13.
10 :00-News 3,4,20 ; Redd Foxx 6,13: Barnaby Jones
8,10; Including Me : A Fallow-Up 33 .
IO :J()-Baseball 3,4; Dickens of London 33.

i

SAVE ON
CARPITING

MARTIN

_ perlenco. ~2·3615 .

-

_.WJ . _

p!umblng and heating . Pt'lpne

.. pt lc

~EPA I R

SwNpers, tQo•tt r•, Iron &amp;, o il
t moll oppl lanctt , Lown mower,
next to 5tatt Highway Gorogt
on Rout• 7. Pt1on• (614 ) 98~-

too Iorge or too •~T~a l l . Pho11e

99H858.
IIQWERY AND

The one he was
left on

We

night phone 992·3S25 or 992·
523~·~·-------------EXCAVATING, doze\, backhoe

WIL~

37 Ca rry
ACROSS
38 Ca ptured
I
Rei.
denom
.
OP5RAIDR, H()JJ
39 Distant
5 Canine
IAJ I WA60UT
conunand
DOWN
(2 wds.)
I l a te jourDIAt..IW0
nalist, Lucius
10 King of
BRI'?BAf.JE',
Israel
Al&gt;7TRAl-IA,
2 Lane
II It•lian
3 Opposite of
author
DIRE:GTl
IgnaZio -took the
blame (3 wds.)
1% Otherwise
4 - Hague
13 Sitting ~
5 Begetter
(well off)
6 Endin g for
~-'
14 Egypt.
infant
7 For a consid·
eration (4 wds.)
15 Winnie ..,.
(Wiley Post's 8 "-Caesar
~ things
"
plane )
9
•·Place"
...---..,16 Faucet word
(Metalious'
Pop 17 Facial
Over fift4-six
novel
)
years aqo, Clovia! fitted "curtain"
in there 19 Whale
(prefix)
....--..., ·
20 Nap
21 Physicist
Otto 22 Raisond'- b - + - + 23Show
anger
, .' 24 .Arthur of

l_--~~~:_----------~====~~~~~~:_j ~ l.~~==~~==~====~----_:•·:~~------------J ~~asure

c•n shill p1rt1 directly
door by w1y of

Servict ,·Wt thorptn Sclttor~ .

covatlng ,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BORN LOSER

'"' tlz.ltfl

Buibu!u-s

Jumbles: LEECH DIRTY ATOMIC 08TUSE
Answer: How to biller your lot-DO A LOT BETTER

·~

~UTTUUWNIN&amp;S

RATES
..... 1111, 0.
~EMt;lOELINC),

I

""'"'"'
lfllilloll
llowo
lolt Willi
&amp;Altkt

Stf'IICI

.-

Yesterday's

,... ~lfoo Sot&gt;lc•

PomiiOJ Llndm1rk

·~

A1J.,EY OOP

rr-~,.....-:rYE-s---TH-EY-R-uN"'U"-"---1 .

MoSuoot.Jc.llt '"-

Bob
1:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp;. lne Reslless 10; Not tor Women Only 15.

[)

'"' ftlilolilt

no ttz.ll14

, 12: ~~nh'i,o t.:~:n ~:rn {~~~r~J!n~~1 ~ope 6,13;

byHenriArnoldand Bob l ee

Unsc.-amble these tour Jumbtes,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

Pllonel49·2101
or 941·ZUO

SWAIN

.A,..
. ,.TOi!l~

· Pomeroy Landmark

-

~ ~ ~~ ~~

Aloul ccintroctor

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

'••a•

"''·

'

Bissell Siding Co.

9 ...

'I'
ail.

Movie Channel 4 -

! &amp; 9 P.M. - Mars Attacks the World
~ 11 P.M. - Gator
'ftll~rul ID'ft \ !ll THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Vinyl l Aluminum Sldine,
Storm Windows I lnsul•
lion.
C1ll Profesalon11s

GUMR

SALI

..--

'

Cllulor, Ohio
8·29-pd.

IUIN.
.

.

12 oo-Janakl 33.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

HZ·ZZOI 01 HHUD

1

E A ~'&gt;&lt;;

12: 40--Mystery of the Week 6,1 3; 12:SQ--Movle
" Money to Burn·• 8; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:4G-Mary Hartman 10; 2: 10--News 13.

en d
Rtt l dtnlla l
commercial. Coli to r '
•timlte, 24 hour servi ce.
Anydty, onvtlmt•
PilOn• 9tMt06

AI

a nd luggogt rC!ck. bc•llill'!l t

oo:Jo-Book Beat 33.
ll ;OQ-News 3,.,6,13,15; MacNell.lehrer Report 33.
11:10-News s.10.
11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
ABC News 33.

mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Phontlllh Youn1

-

$18 300

3·1~1

sucrlor

g•r•g•.

Wlnd•h l•ld. erath b~r , sl11y bar

10 :0()-Country Corners 33; News 20.

t1 :.rto-Hawall Five-o ·s; Movie "Young Dillinger" 10;

Youn(s
Carpeting
.... \'ma.
C.rp~t
ph torr

6-1S.l

__

ON YOUiit HAIJD5,

Sltlt11 trKtiOtl

VIRGIL I . TEAFORD, Sll.
REALTOR
on our r,roperty . Ray and
.,......_
condit
ion. 9~9- 2575 .
216 1 . StcOt041 Street
____Goldi!ll Lttt • · IIU, 4 , flomeroy.
Phone 71HS7S or U2·2061,
TRASH COMP ... ~TO~ . loti than 1
Pomeroy, Ohio 4176f
--GUN S~QOT , Roc lno Gun Club -·~.:. 992-7189'
. J ••r old . 949·i41!0! r 985·3565.
Phone,t.sns
BATHROOMS
AND
Klrcho
nt
FR~E
COLLtE
puppln.
·
c
orner
of
• .,..,., Sun . afternoon . Factor
. -ctromlc
ti le, Plum·
remodeled,
South
3rd
and
Lin
coln
In
Mid·
Chock guns only. Anorted
IRICK VENEER - New 1
bing , Carpentry, o nd general ..--~'="'~"!"".,....,~---,
_!leport.
rQ!lms, 3 btdraomt, 2 full
fOR
~~:·"·~·--------------- PALOMINO GELDING. 7 yrt . old. m~ l ntononco . 13 · yoort o•·
booths, dl"lng aru , radlont
SELDOM REST Ceramiu an ....,eorlenco. •m·3685.
·
53 ln . high . Genllo, 992·59(&gt;8.
New Co-Op wottr ond
htal. cerpelod a·nd 2 peflot.
nouncet new winter ·noun:
PIANO TUNING and Rop&lt;!lr. Lono sofloners, model VC-SVI.
Asking 145,000.
Mon. 7-1 0 , Tuet. 9· 12. 1- ot , 7· 10, HOOF HOLlOW Horses . luy, tell
Oanltla, 992 -2082. 12 yeo r• &amp;tr·
Only
mus.
NEAR IASTI!RN - Brond
Wod. 7·10, Thurt. 1·4, 1·10. Coli
trCide o r train. New Clnd uaed
.,.Ice to Tr i,Countv. Rtf• renct: Save 110,00 an a new
new 3 bldroomo, 2 booths,
(614) 667 -325:J, for clotJet. let't
tadd l••· Hart• Shotil"'g. Ruth _l~rfol dt .
Hotpolnl Relrlgeralar:
nlco kllcnon with brukfnt
8et ttarted early on our RHVOI , Albany. (614)698·3290,
TRENCHING WORK dono . Call 1 New IG cublc 11. Chell
-Chrlitmos gifts. Men are
nook, dlnf"g room . sun·
9'12·3917 ar 992·S524. Froo FrHltr
welcome to clouet . Pauli ne
deck , 2 c~r garogo and
$2$.00 Discount
estimate•.
lerge lot , 134.000 tor ovtry·
1 G!&gt;od McCullough Choln
~
~~-------------­
,
HOMESIT£5 far salt, I ocr• gnd
thing
.
A8SOLUTEL Y NO HUNTJNG ON PARTS FOR l97f Gola xle Ford fo r
Slw
fU ,GO
up. Middleport, n•ar Ruiland,
NEW LISTING - Syrocuto
MRS. HOWARD CALDWELL, SA .
tole
.
Phone
992·5858.
I.VSTRI
'('170i\'
Eftc1rlc
Trim-All
cult
wltn
~
Cotl992.7•at
.
~ome
ol
3
bedroome.
bath,
_ FARM THE ~fiT OF YE ... R, 1977.
nylon ·
llf,tl
1972 DODGE CHARGER , A.C. and '. t&gt;n'!•t•rs f'lll[&gt;luyrd ~\' lmJ?I' lmrk
gat furnace , ~aliment ,
NEW 3 bodraom hi&gt;uu, ~ batho,
_..TTENTION lOW Huntort l· For a
&lt;1l Good Retrlger11or t~oo
many mar• op.tlofl s. $ 1 49~ . Cal l Hllf mmpa mt·.~ had awwaf at'f'r·
corner lot · ond garoo•·
oil oloc., I aero , Middleport,
· ~omplett line of Bow Hunflng
992·,169.
O}(C' t'amings ofahmrt
117.500,
close to lt1.1tland. ~hone 992·
IUpplltl! The low Hunter snap,
IIUnAND
Older
4
New Havep , W, Vd . PI-lone ffil- CHEYROLET KINGSWOOO
J!JJ. ,--:--:-~,...,­
1
bedroom home, both, dbl.
·..:;ock W. Coney, ~r.
(30&lt;1 882·2827 . Aok for Oavo
$lotion ·wogon . P .S., P.l .j A.C. w 1974 "a.tllilfJtPdby the US. l'li'/JI
SMALL farm for sal•, 10% down,
carport, nalurol gu, city
Ail, Phone 9r1·2111
owner fll"onced , Monroe Coun·
Good tlr... 60,600 mlt.et . nf Lahm; B~rwa11 of La~lf $/ali.~·
-~~~!~~-----------w1ter 1nd garden.
ty , W. 1/o . Phone (1104) 172·
S
1
•
095
:
992·3·f78.
tics.
hullf'fi11
Nr1.
IH7.1.
NO HUNTING en George
MIDDLEPORT Good
· 3102 or 130&lt;) 772·3227.
FrHiand's property.
1964. RAMilER . AUTOMATIC,
olcJor nom• with line oak
P5 ., P.8., good condition. $250. Dun'ljust be satisfied "ith aJOR
TOUCH AND Sew Oceo It All. Jutt
TO GIVE awat~ : Firewood from a
tln lth lnoldo . 10 rooms,
Phofle 742-3176, alter 5: 30.
-Plan NOW for a Pmfessinn11l
like now . So ld for S.•9.9S.
gara~e tern down , 992·:;1612 .
blth, hot water hoot, Iorge
Cleo,ing
out
t
tock.
Mu1t
11!1
f
o
~
PLVM~UTH VALIANT . • cyl. weerDrivin~a."Bi&amp; RiJ(Weare
1_.
wrap-•round porch l"d w
""
"'
a Pnv~te Tnunmg School and if
$89 .95 . Coe n o r ''""'' ·
Call H2-3090. ~
you meet our qualifications you
goroge 0r1 conter fat .
_
m.:.~4_6. -~------~ car
Ortly m.ooo,
ffi2 FORO PINTO Run ·o·boul. "'II be trained by Prt~e~sional
SCHOO L SINGER Sow ing
57 ACRES - Noor river ,
Good 'ond lflon. Call 949·3590, lnstructol'!i on rmdem equipment .
FOUND: YELLOW Tom Cot near
Machin•• · Many feo t uret . Only
anytime or 9"'9·2439, ,:.her • Trai nonaPartTimebasJs (Sat.&amp;
Good Gombrel root born
For~td llun Forett. Someone''
$31 . ~0 . coth or ltrmt ,
_ _pm .
·
Sun. t and Keep your job, ur at.
wtth
eltclrlc . concrete
Pet. fQr lnfor:.rnotlan write to
_ _!~UI~ 46.~-------­
floor and wat1;r , Corn cflb,
lend our 3 Week Full Time Resi·
lo• 148. Tuppers Plaint , Ohio 197~DoDGE tORONET . hcollo"t
'r
dent Traini n~.
HOOVER UPftiGHT Sweepor1, 3 car gerago and 6 rQ!lm
~578~ .
, condition . P,S.., P.B., A.C.
19n model. Will toll for $22.50, houte w.llh bath ond fur·
No. 21• Here'• your
15.000 miles. Tokt over R11K0 Trarto,..TI'di/lr TYOiniNt. lite.
FQUtfo"':-SM
_A
_L
_L_t-on""d-o-g-. 'M-IIo_ H
_ I_II
cotk or terr,1 . 992·!11•6.
·
chanct
tO
llvt
In lth
noco
.
129,000.
.
PARKERSBURG
II~ . Letart townsh ip, Coli I VI'l• J~IT'ontt . 985' 9567 ·
country wllh city con ·
POMEROY3
btdroomt,
Y
,I\M
...
HA
,
HANLEV·DAVID$0N
&amp;
...Jnit. 2~7· 267,,
1974 CHEI/ILL' M... LIIU , f.our doer
1·304·422·4080
vtn ltncn. 3 Bedrooma,
Can -AM Motorcycl11 . Complet•
b'th , no t urol g11. c ity
tedan . 15 000 m iles . One
LOn IN Car~nter ·Aibany area.
• altl and fanlattlc serv lc•l
wettr,
2
porch11
ond
largo
kitchen, ctrpt1td
ownor , Coil 949·~678, ofto'r 5
Hourt M· T, T 9-6; W·Fr 9-7: Sot,
Whlto with black and white
throughout , otlochod
gordon . Onl~ t7,ooo.
head and tm . blocll •pott all -.R!!!·
1}. 5. ~" The Motorcycle P110ple of
garoge, IOOK«&lt;I lol . Price
S PROPIRTIES IN I ovor. Oolphut Burke. (614)
$outhitottern Ohio'' Att,.ns
roduc.d Ia 126,.!00, FHA
Lorge II room houto with ~
JIJI.!.!4:::
4·_______
Sport Cycles , Inc . 20W . Stlmaan
opprovtd.
bathe ond c.ntrol hutlng .
SUPE~ TRAIVEL Pockago: 1976 21
Avt ., Athen• . Oh io, Phone
Alto 3 car goroge with 4
ft . Terry. 1977 GMC Heavy \It
· 16:::9::.2:...- - CALL Ul AND CHICK TO
STARCRAFT 1Oth onnl.,.trtory •ale
, ton t EKctll•nt co nd ition. Full y _ _(614 ) 59:~2..:.
room opertmonf and
Sll IP' WI . HAVI
on m lnl·moton , t railers, and
equ ipped . $10 ,200 , bol h.
tlotiOII etoro with 2 rest .
SOMITHINO
YOU
folddowna . Tra.,.el&amp;tar 25 h . _ .!fJ_:7.~066
~;..·--~-------roomo. ·5 loll In oil, "'•king
WAITRU$ AND kitchon holp . Ap·
NHOAWAifR
~400.
001
20
ft.
mlnlmator
::MIGHT
NUD.
just
120,0Cj0.
ply In penon , Crow 't Steak
110,150.00. Wotoll terv lceand HARLEV · OAVIOSON , 1976 .
HDUII , Pamtry.
SOFHNER'
quality . Camp Conley Starcraft
Electro -gli de. 1200 cc. Saf•tr
IHW. Maln
SALESMEN
SILL
Salot, Rt. 62 north of Pt. Ploc·
oqulpmont and Tour poe~ In· Lt1 l'omeroy Londlll•rk
CUTJERS. Skiddor and
fH·IIfl
Pomeroy
PIIOPUTY,
DO
.
YOU
eluded . 53350, Phone 98S·3912. IOfltn &amp; condlllan your
Ope r qtort 1 Cq ll ~..':....___________
Aller Hourt Cell
WANT
YOUI!I
SOLD?
IF
- :r,l ,OOO 8,T.U olr condllionlng . Wlltr 1nd Co-op wi11tr
HI·PI'I
50 CALL HI-Sill,
Good tho o. 992-7755.
1sottenor•· Modo I UC-l!Vt ,
CONTACT1
Ill LIN L. TIIAP'ORD
1?15 TIOGA DODGE mclor min i· Now Only
.
LOll I'IUltV
C.lflUCI TIAI'OIID
IN
THE
~omo
.
Ono
owner.
ID,600
'279,95
lranch Manager
CASH pold far oil makot and
ACC'OIICATII
COMMON ,LEAS COURT,
mil es . Call 742·2,.05 cr colt
modelt of mobile homes.
MilO$ COUNTY, OHIO .
992·2729,
Lot "' '"' vour wottr
Phcno oroa ccdo 61H2H531. ATHINS
COUNT, Y
Frn.
h
TWO IEDROOM ome an 1 acre
""
TIMlER , Pomeroy 'c'''' Pro- $AYINGI .
ducts. Top price for ttandlnfil AND LOAN COMP ... NY ,
"" """ . 992·5502 or 99nm.
PLAINT"'towllmbor. Cell 992·596S or
1914
\1'~ ton Che~rolet Suburban .
a ~J1clc W. C:.rsey, Mtlr.
Y$
Kent Hanby , 1 -~46-8570.
•oNALD D. THOMA$,
4~ onglne, ....c., P:S., P.8.,
PIIOno'n·2111
under 36,000 mi. With q r t.::==,_.;,;..;,;;.;..;.:.:...;=~_J
COINS, CURRENCY, rokon1 , old liT AL ,
DII~INDANH
w ithout ••lrOI. (6,1•) 985.3553 .
pocht watch•• and cholnt ,
NO. 16,U3i
t llvtr ond gold. Wt need 19~
IAJTIRN DIITIIICT - Htrt'l wilt! you' ve btln
WINCHESTER
mcdol UOO li go .
LIOAL NOTICI
and older silver CQint . luy , tell ,
liking tor . floavtlful6 yr. old; oil corpe1od homt wllh 3
Pursuant to an or der of
automat ic. like new. WI"·
cr trade' (QII Roger Wamsley , Stll luued l)y tht Common
bldroomo, )t;, bolht, utility room , Nlct kllchon with
chester modtil 61 22 c;oiJb•r
742.2331.
P l ~n Court of Meigs Countv ,
COUNT~Y farmland with teclud ·
e~_mp .
Goad
condl!lort.
frH · COtOcrttt porch~'· Not. got F.A. furnoce.
dlnllll
Oh iO; I wil l wor tor •• ,•••
ed ~aadt 1 wat•r and good ac·
Nice
counlry
ulll'19 with oppro• . 310 acre lind In
OLO FU"•UTURE, leo be'"'· bra" ~ubllc I!ICIIO ~ ori th' ~Itt _.11!1.:_~42 , __-'.- - - - - - - · cen
In 'Monrot County ; w. vo.
bedt , et c .,
c omp l 1 11 ·.dlv of UPttmbtr , l 977 a t 30 G"'lLON HOT Wotor Tonk wllh
Eettern
Dletrlc1.2
mi . o!l Rt . 7. Aoklnt 129,100.
$1 ,000 down, cqll 13~ ) m ;
ha1.,11tholds. Wr ite M. 0 . Miller , 10 :CO I ,m " It ttl I Court foiOUie
tub . Gat cook •lo.,.e. Wlndawt . 3102 or (30!1)·172-3227.
-'
li t, 4, Pom1roy , Ohl9 o r '-all oteps In the Vlllogo of
ICIDI lit ' YOUR HAIR, LOOK lllltl - Flvo
Pomeroy , County Of MtlQi r 1 . 5 · •p•ed loyt' bike , Call IIA·FHA , 30 ,r . flnanclng .. lrolond
bodroomt. nlct 11111tory hou-.. large living room with
99H7Rll·. . , - - - - - - State of Ohio, tHe tollow~ng
....W.J0
:-:
'8=-.
Mortgage, 77 £. State, ,-_t!'ltnt,
lhlnln'
ook flooring, taro• kllchon with dlnlnt or111 • .2
e:ASHI~ Junk cart, Fry'• Truck &amp; dttcrlbtd rtllllt•t• t !tulttcl 1967 16 FT. RINKER ·IUfLT boot _y hcno (61•15'12·3051 .
Ml bo hs, I bedrooms dclw" 1nd 3 upotolro . Camplololy
Auto, Rutland . Phone 742·2081 at 3S7 Nor th Second Avenue,
wllh 1!0 hp. motor . 9'/2·3-467 ,
Middleport. Oh io.
l~tulolod with F.A. 011. gulur~oco. L.lrgt porchM lo
~r 742·951, . Clottd Mcndoyt.
2. STO~V 3 bodro~m from•
Sl id rnl 11t1tt 11 l ituated -~!!•! 6pm .
t'louse,
F.A,
ft.~rflot• . tiDrm w in·
gartllf. Loc. ln Chttter, "''~ 1!9,100.
NO IT'JM TOO l arge or too ,,all . In the Vll logo Of Middlepor t, NINE ACRES mf•ed hay. C. 8.
dowo. tlroplaco In Middleport.
Will buy 1 pie(' Of complelt (aunty of M1 lg1 end State at
Shal-la" , Great lend .
·
Phcno 992·3.0S7 .
MllifiRIVILI.I -4 bodr110rn houst. mae11y cerpelod,
.
houtet-lold. New . ut.ct 1 or anti· Oh io:
w"~
tround porch, goroge, ltrge lot, oil 011orlookl'19
1
Lot
No
.
21
In
"
ld
Vllloge
400
KAWASAKI
MX
with
lou
than
DON'T PAV Ihe oddod upento of
q\#tl . Martln a Furn iture, 20 N .
lacattd
on
Stconct
Street
bt·
lht
Olio
River . Atklng 1".100.
200
mil••·
Owner
go~
nv
Ia
cola
Re~ltor
l
luv
thlt
3
bedroom
,
~nd $1.. Middloport. Phone twetn Rutt1nd and W.Jinut
_
1~42;~005
.
~
V.
bath
bilevel
!rom
the
992·61110;:.,~------- Stroot 0. Aloo oll)ho grontor• •
UIT•RN DISTRICT ...; lin terM ollovel lend, n!Ct
owner and IO'iltl Larg' fi3mlty
, tltlt end Interest In and WOOD I~OTHERi ccro picker,
HQOSf iN country , an land con.- tor ight
•II ctrpettlf 'lllobl!t ilM't with 2 IRa, living
11u4
room
with
llreplo&lt;o,
""'·In
kit·
tho
tf•
Inch
otrlp
Of
lend
1150. Mrt. ~oward Coldwoll.
trad, Con make down pay· and tht party w1l1 thtr• ln , oft
room. kllcht~ tnd both, ~ rooms buill Ott. nlco tamlly
~
h•"'
with
doublt·oven
Sr,
SR
7
I
mile
touth
of
Tuppert
1
rnenl 1 II r.oaonable . P~one of tht north t ide of L.ot 22 ,•
roam .wllh llrtploce, plonty ol ~ardon ~ce, aornolrurt
and dlthwa•h•r.· formal dining
tloo In told 1/llfogo ol Mid · _ Pla_l~ • · (614)66J·~..:....-~-...1.0.:.~'-:•:::.·__;____
rooni, two car'goroge, 'entrctl
tro11, LergtworkthCIIJan~ 11111~k c.111r. City wtter,tnd
d ltpor t , utc:l ttrlp of l'nd COOKIOOK. , Mere titan 130
t~l r , on qcre lot, Nl~• drl~ to
stpllc tl!llk. ~Ice country oiling on County Rd. 21.
aa rolrt lng and bt lng can moulh· waterlng r•ciJ*t, ar•
power plqnt1 a"d mlnet.
Prlco 115.900,
tlauauo to sold lot ltlo. ~1 .
leot~rod fn Mlrlol" I . Lac'• cal· ' ·~.000. 992·2!!L_. _ __
,.,,,r•net Dted Vol ume
lectlon of her lamily 'o favcrlto
UP'I'IR IYRACUII - Good 2 bodroom 11ouH wllh
IF YOU ~e a ser'fllce to offer. 256 J•&amp;e 313 Melg• Copnty
dlthes . lec:rpes are arga11l1ed IIX ~OOM hou10 at 613 Mfll St.,
Ott
Aecordt.
both. Two mon trnoll bodroom• could 1111 flnlahed
wQOI ta J:-uy ~r Hll aomettllng ,
Mlddlof10rl,
Good
ccndltlcm.
In·
Tormt of u1o: Cuh tor not
bv holldcly '""'" · '" addltiC!I ,
Ole Jaoktng lor work , , . or ltU lhl" fWO ·Ihirdl Of thl
upatll!lro. '"" v.rege, stor•.. bulldlnl, ttrtwllllrrv
you 'll opprecloto tho m'l"'
~r~r~' ~ ~lncol~~-~td:
petcllend tlrde, tplt». OriVIWIY II tfoclrlc htllod.
whatever ... you 'll Qrel rtlulfs lpprl lltd VIIUt. IUb ftct to
helpful cooking htntt Including
Nice Ohio Rlvlf' vltw. '""nlluro con 1111 boulhltxlro ,
foot"' with a ""'""•I Wont Ad. lltn far re1 1 ntatt t1•t1 for
rnea•urlng equlvole"cl.. o,d TWO CHOIC~ one acre building
l'rlct lor quick celo. HoliH and lot.
Calf992·2156.
•mero•ncy
substltullont
for
In·
I~
It
avoilololo
.
Coli
992-5869
or
---~raper : f
appralttd 1t
9P·3!9J,
MEIGS CljA,TIR OeMola, 11,500.00.
grodlenlt. Mok" a th,u~kl
---- ---· .,
gift.
5ond
13.110
ra
Cook
.
Jom"
J,
~ro:mr
MOlhero ''"" II i!lrllng a Yard
THREI &amp;IPI!O!)M an Malo lrreet
lhtr
l
1
ot
PO
Ia•
~52
,
,om.,oy
Ohio
,
1
Safe, WM. """ T~uro . at 611
Coil Jlm111y
In Rutland . 112.000. , Coif
Melvi County .
45769. Allow 3 IO 4 wHkt
hllth 2nd It,, MIMJ•port. 10·4.
Wo/
·623·
to . de~ v•ry.
c;ta.•"-.!i..dltlletc......~!:.!'.~ ·- (It 17, 14, 31 &lt;•&gt; 1, 14, ~1 on
. lfc
NO TRESPASSING or 81ko riding

O: Jo-Movie '' Relentless·· 8,10 .

LE?AKED W&lt;JJ&lt;D ._,......,
10 THE? i!&gt;OAiitD Ai!&gt;OUT THo?
PLANE YOLJ WAIJT TO i!&gt;ll•lO ...
I r~INK YOU'VE' GOT II Flf;HT
~OME;-0!.1&amp;

11.11... 4:10 •.• .

THE PHOTO PLACE

Miller Produce
&amp;
s.den center

liAPORD

D. Bumprdner
Pool Sales

SALES MD IUYtet
)., .. , mo.

fllior ... ""'" .....
'-11·11110. pd.

CAN GOODS

" Spider -Man" 8.10; Upstairs . Downstairs 20,33.

'-"'~Ill
.m..fll

Polin · Sidmlkl • H,.. Conllrucl~n '

Summer Semeste r 10. ·

6 :3o-Ooctors on Call.(i News 6; Summer Semester 8;
Urban League 10; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3: 6:50Good Morning, West VIrginia IJ; 6:55-Good
Morning, Trl State 13.
7:DO-Today 3,.,15; Good Morning America 6,13: . CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reporls 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10: 7:30 - Schoolles 10.
S:oo-&lt;:apl. Ka.ngaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:DO-Merv Griffin 3: Phil DonahU.. 4,13,1 5; New
Mic key Mouse Club 6: Family Affai r 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
9:30.:.E dge,of Nlgnt .6; Andy Gr iffith 8.
IO :oo-Sanford &amp;. Son 3.4, 1S; Dinan 6; Here' s Lucy 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13
10 :3()-Hollywood Squa res 3,•. 15: Price Is Right 8.10.
ll :DO-Wheel of For tune 3,1!; Happy Days 6,13;
Mar cus Welby, M.D. 4.
11 :30-ll's Anybody' s Guess 3, 1!: Family Feud 6,13:
Love of Li fe 8,10.
11 :!5-CBS News 8: Loving Free 10.
12 :00-News '3,4,6,10; Shoot for lne Stars IS; Divorce
Court 8: Midday 13.

9:oo-Charlle's Angels 6,13: Childhood 20,33.

·-.Oiolt

• , _, Ololoo 41111

THURSDAY, SEPTEMII Eit U, 1917
5:45-Farm Report 13: S:50-PTL Club 13; 6:00-

Judge 10; In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom 15,

PWMBING&amp;
HEATING INC.

Mclltn Clblnoll . Roofll\l . C&lt;li!CIIII

30. NBC"'ews3,4,1!: ABCNewS13 ; AndyGriffith6;
CBS News 8, 10; Edison The Old Man 20.

8.oo-Boxlng 3,.,15: Elgnl Is Enough 6,13: Movie

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

cAsE LOT

698-&amp;~
896
:!:....-c:-:--:----1975 SUZUKI Gf.550. mill mllot.

PENNZOIL RUTLAND 0 pon dail y

JUST LOOK - 1149.00

acre; 135 acres, rnlnerala,

s-

Paul Gaudino Family Fitness

7:3C - Ohio Unlvorslly at Marshall Football
9:3() - High Adventure
10:00- 700 Club.

SQns IS; Equal Justice Under Law 20; Big GrHn
Machine 33.
7 : 3~Dolly 3; Sha Na Na •; Match Game PM 6;
Tattletales 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Repart 20,33; The

CARTER

C~a nne l

7 p .m . -

7· 00-- Truth or Cons. 3; Cros$.Wtls 4; Liars Llub 6; Sha
Na Na 8; News 10; To Telllhe Truth 13; My Three

'

tlorage room . $1 1,250.00
El!CULENT LOCATION
di llon. IS25. 992.7559.
·-~ __ .. ~ ---- ---~ - ... LOVELY HOME Iorge 2 slory trame . ~
bodroomt, 2 blt no, Iorge
roc . room with a ir cond.
JOf)lrole hooting eyttem ,
ogu l pped
kl l ch e n,
basement, 2 car garage ,
51rlckly wiiOitJIIt Ia all.
next to tchool. 1:19,500.00.
Nol ltll Ilion V. cut.
NEW!Iill
HOMES
NEEDED - LET OUR
NEW PHOTO LISTING
SERVICE HELP $ELL
YOUR HOUSE.
HENRY IIi. C~ILAND
REALTOR
HANK,
KATHY IIIG Wathlnflon IIYd.
LEONA CLI!LIIND
.
aolpre, Ohio
.
ASSOCIATES
......_ _ _,.._ _ _""!~.
H2·1259
ONE VE"'R Poll ed Horoford lull.
O'Z·UM
Con bt r lttertd . 9-49-23611 ,
SUPER SCANNER C8 Of'ti,Mo with
cont ro l box and 60ft . of lead·in
w lr• . 992-51•7c:·- - - - - - - EXTRA NICE 't'orkthlre mol• hog ,
Could be reg istered. (61-4)

6

Business Services
DAVID &amp;RICKLES

C..blo

WEDN ES DAY, SE PTEMB ER 14, 1971
S:.iO- Odd C0&lt;1ple 4; Ele&lt;:. Co. 20,33: News 6; Hogan's
Heroes IS
6 OQ- News 3.4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.

. •'

r-----~~----------------~~~ :

• 'Real Eltatelor Sal.;

COAL , llm.. tone, vnd coiclum
chloride qnd taic;iym brl"• fof
ble work ing per&amp;ont looking to
do1t conlr()l and •~lal mixing
rent rural house or mobile
ta!f f~r formers , hctltlor Salt
homf, Con rnak• r-epc:~l n , etc.
Workt , Main StrHt , Pomeroy.
Coil Mlko , ..,rkdoys. 99l-2119,
Ot11o or phone 992· 3891 .

YA~O

TY Log for easy viewing

UH ··WHAT WOULD 'IE
SAY IF I l'OLD 'r'E MV
BROTHER i3UBBA WUZ
COMIN'TO
VISIT TODAY I
PAW? ..=- ~,..

SHUX··I
WOULDN'T
SA'INOTHI
MAW

GOODY~!
I'M PLUMB

TICKLED TO
HEAR l'HAT,
HONEY· POT··

I'LL LETOL: BETSY
DO MY TALKIN'

�;

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,

1r It
~c ~~ rrom
-cber

S.. 14, !977

i--------------------------,

chances m said Dill. Tbe Superinl.endent wiD at aU times have

PQolted in hla Office a current seniority list which will be

THOMAS W. AUTHERSON
Funeral services for
Thomas
W.
(Willie)
Aut her son, 84,
Iormor
Mlddlef.ort and Bradbury
reslden , who died T""day In
Columb&lt;Js, will be held at 2
p.m . Thursday at the
Rawlings Coats
Funeral

available fer lrupection during regular working hours by any
and-or the Organiuhon.
Section F - U there is a vacancy in 8 negotiating unil
poeiticm, laid off teachers who are certified to perform the
._
llrll"•ln question will be recalled in seniority order.
U a laid off teacber has displaced another teacher or has
been recalled U&gt; a position other than that which ~e held
immediately prior to his-her layoff, he-6he will remain eligible
recan In accordance with the provisions of &amp;lb
1

for

above.

Home.

·

s.~·.~~;.r:"'..;~~ l:"'iaf.

Section

··

Area Deaths

!

Pll' 11

Notice rJ. recall will be given by telegram or registered
mall U&gt;the lutaddress given In the board by a teacher. A copy
al th
.
e not1.ce of recall will be given In the Organiution. If a
teacher fails to respond within ten (10) days after receipt of the
above notice of recall, hMhe will be deemed u, have refused
the position offered.
·
·
. .
.
A teacher who is laid off will remain on the recall list for
tweSity.four (24) mooths after the effective date of his-her·
layoff unless be-olle: waives his-her recall rights in writing,
resigns; fails to accept recall .to the posi"on that ·he held
"
Immediately prior •·
w his-her layoff or •·
w a su'-tan"·Uy
...,
....,.
equivalent position; ·or fails to report to work in a position that
beo$behasacceptedwithintendaysafterreceiptofthenotice '
of recall Wlless such employee is siCk or injured .. If a teacher
hu secured tempor·ary employm·ent elsewhere. he -•- WJ'U be
• "'""
allowed a reasonable amOWit of additional lime before being
required U&gt; report for work .
While on layoff, a teacberwillhave the option to remain an
active participant in the state teacher retirement sy~em and·
or other fringe benefit programs. by contributing tl)ereU&gt; ·the
amount hHhe would . have been requiret;l ·u, contribute if
actively employed, the board will contribute. the $mount· thatit
would have been required to contribute it the teacher were
actively employed.
.
. .
.
Section G - AD benefits to whiCh a teacher was e~titled at
the time of hJ.s.her layoff, including unused accumulated sick
leave and credits toward sabbatical eligibility. Will be .resU&gt;red
to him-ller upon .his-her return U&gt; active employment, and he·
she will be placed oo the jiroper step of the salary schedl.ile for
his-her current position' according to h!S-ller experience and
education. A teacher will not receive increment credit for time
spent on layoff nor will such tin\e count U&gt;ward the fuUillment
of time requirements for aCquiring tenure.
Section H followed, of approximately 2,000 words, defining
th~ rules governing the filling ' of a vacancy in any negotiating
wut under the agrement. Its provisions will be published
Thursday. ·
·

Thomaund Jennie Reynolds
Aulherson . He was also
·preceded In death by his wife.
Teresa Gardner Aulher501i ~ a ·
son and a daughter ; two
sisters and 1 brother. ' ·
Mr. Auther5on. a veteran of
the, U. S. Army during World

~':,"d/;.,7;•Cah~~t:'~r ~:~~~

and a member · of Feeney.
Bennett Post 128. American
Legion,. He served as a clerk
for 39 ye•r• for theN~ York •
Central •Railroad. ·~
Surviving ore his son-In·
low and daughter, Paul and
Rowena Johnson. Columbus;
two grandchildren, Roger
Johnson and wife. Debbie, of
Grove City; Charles Johnson
of Columbu.s, and a greatgranddaug hler • Megan
Johnson. Grove City.
Offic iating at services will
be Rev . Donald Raley and
burtal will be In the Mid·
dleport HiII Cemetery:
Fr iends may call at the
luneral home at anytim.,.

New

I1

._

Town employs Mildred Zirkle

(Continued !ram pq1 I)
the dty 's elecU&gt;rate could spell trouble for YQUOK.

HARTFORD, W. Va. Mildred Zirkle was hired by
the Hartford Town Council at
ROBERT CUNNiNGHA~I
WASillNGTON - THE SENATE liAS VOTED to nudge a recent regular meeting to
Robert 0 . C"nnlngham of
St. Marys. W. Va., passed Americans Inward fuel-&lt;!l!icient homes, cars and offices, while answer phone can. and take
away Tue&gt;day night at 10 rejecllng any forced rationing of gasoline. By a 78-4 vole, the care of the mayor's office on
o'clock, Sept. 13 al Marietta Senate Tuesday approved the conservation segment of a regular bssiJ .
Memorial Hospital. He had
Tom Anderson asked
been Ill two years, ~rioos the President Carter's energy program, tbe third segment il has
acted oo . lt had previously passed bills for the Departmenl of COWICi!'s assistance In get·
pa&gt;l 42 days .
Mr. Cunningham r .. ided Energy and to hurry lndtLStrial conversion to coal.
ting Pointview Cable TV to
on Lower River Rd. for two
Within the next few weeks, the Senate plans to act on install ib system farther out
~:,~~- ~~5 '.~~
Ri~~~ r~ining portions of the program: energy taxes, utility rale West Point Road.
Collieries at Cheshire. He refonns, and natural gas pricing, all of which will then be
CoWicil asked pollee to
was ss years old.
compromised with the overall House energy bill. Carter~s plan remind all bicycle riders that
Surviving are ~Is wife, to expand federal cootrols on natural gas prices hit a snag they must have the proper
Anna · Mary
(Weekley)
Cunnirig~am; two daughters, Tuesday when the ~nate Energy Committee voted 15 U&gt; 2 to equipment for riding at night,
Shirley Cadle. Craigsville. W.' send his bill tn the floor without endor5ement. The Senate will which includes a head light on
·Va., and Susanna, at ~ome ; a consider the measure next week.
the front of the bike and a
son. Tlmolhy, at home; two
reflector on the back.
·. An or&lt;liilar\ce dealing with
~~~:r~~~·f:3'~~~'."&amp; :~~
Cunningham. Hooktowli, Pa .;
COLUMBUS - THE 58TH A1&gt;!NUAL CONFERENCE of dogs In town· limits was aP,.
one sisler, Grace Dawson, Ohio Health Conunissioners with the bhio · Department of proved ,requiring .aU loose
Georgetown , Pa .• and eight Health opened U&gt;day with a report of "good news and bad dogs be confined to . their
brothers· Denton C tis nd
ur a ; news" about Ohio's influenza immuni2ation prograin.
owners' proJ)erty. .
·
Harry. • East •Liverpool
William.
Harvey
and
"I have good news and bsd news about the program .. ·
Attending were. May'or
Clayton, Sf. Marys , and state Health Director John H. Ackerman said in reritarks · Charles Black, Recorder
James. of Miami. Fla .. and prepared lot delivery today. "The good news is that as of Aug. Peggy · Riley, and coun·
Arthur Cunningham. 125
Kineon Dr .• Gallfpoils.
1, we can no longer use the influenza va*ine· Tbe bad news is
Funeral arrangement• are that we have plenty of it on hand." Dr. Ackerman said his
Incomplete.
department is beginning an aggressive statewide
Immunization program.
'
'
" A much-needed infusion o( new federal dollars will help
us.U&gt; beef up our staff so that we may Increase olit assistance
WAREHOUSE ON
U&gt; local health departments," he said. " The increased funding
,IS part of the overall national initiative for more effective
lminunizatioo programs."
.

dJ:t;

1

Dissolution of
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marriage
asked

specify your birth sign .

CONSOLE STEREO

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SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No. •· 22l To p.m. at he Grace Ep iscopa l

The
Meigs
Retired
Teachers Association have
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob.18) Be cancelled their meeting on
philosophical today. Take thf{_ Sept. 17. The next meeting
long-range view if yO'U have will be on Nov . 19.

hand made embroidered
tops and a great selection

problems. Th ings usually have a
The annual homecoming of
way of work ing out. They will for
Morris
Chapel
United
you .

of party jeans. They 'II

~1-Aprlt 18) It's

TAURUS (Aprii20-Moy 20) You

with
3-speed automatic
record changer, 8-track tape player.
Allegro 1000 speakers. Simulated
wood In Walnut fini sh.

may be . con~emplating refur. bishing your environment today.
You'd be wi se to choose app01ntment s of high quality.

100% SOLID·STATE

CANCER (Juno 21-.luly 22) Be

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alert today that something you

numbers p lus Slee p
Swi t ch , Radio and
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Choice of Wheat or
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INGLES FURNITURE

106 N. 2nd Ave.

•

Middleport~

Complete Selection
of Boots- Priced
s2o.oo to sso.oo

Hartley's Shoes, In
Middle of Uprer Block
Pomeroy. O~io
Open:

Po.m.top.m.
Mon. lh,.., Thurs.
· 9o.m.tolp.m. Fridoy
\

0.

RUDD GIVES UP
NEW YORK (UPI) -Mark
Rudd, who silent the !list
seven years in hiding, today
SUn'endered to New York
authorities to·answer charges
stemining from his role as a
leader of the militant
Weather Underground in the
turbulent 1960s.

"

Fa:J Semester.

••

PUBLIC NOTICE '

The Meigs County Board of

Health at their September
1977 meet ing adopted the
following resolution ;
"NOTICE OF
,

-~tlirct.yt.-. m ·~~r

....

""...\""

Stop In and Look. •
You'll Like What ·
You See. At the New
Store in Middkport.
On the T.

DELIVERY OF"

Any sewage disposaJ tank
or vault delivered to any
IOClllidn w,l lhln Meigs County
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) tn S§rious shall be made known to Me igs
County sanitarian w ithi n
situations today, don 't let your se
ven (1) days of delivery .
humor desert you. It's OK to· be
Further. upon delivery no
firm. but make an attempt to tank or vault shall be put in a
hole without first seeing the
·maintain your perspective.
sewage permit issued by
I NEWSPAPER t-:NTt;RPRJSE ...SSN.l
Me igs
County
Health

t
...
...

.....
.."'.
~

Oe_p artment .

( 1t InningS!
All
300 101 011 oo-?16 0
Sn Fr
1011AO 000 01 - 8 10 2
· Mah ter-, . Capra (4 L Ol!vey
(5}, Leo11 (6), Campbell f8 ) and
Murphv; Barr, Lavelle (6), .
Moffitt (9) and Hi!L Sadek. wMoflill , c.a. L-:-Campbell, 0·6,
S11n Francisco, Thomlls
1 H.Rs"
Cll. Clark 1131.

The Notice to Me igs County
Hea lth Department must
InClude :
Homeowner 's name · with
complete address end ~:~hone
numbl&gt;r.
Installer ' s name and acf .
dress .

GILLIAN'S
FASHION
CENTER
.
ON THE T IN
MIDD~EPORT

COME ON IN!

(9) 14, 21 ; 2tc

.

•

.

•

.~

l~

~~~;.~~~-~·~~:~:~~&amp;:e~:~ Roush, Middleport, left, Wednesday at the noon
of the

Lions Club held at the Meigs I!Ul received his check for
made during the recent bole-in-()ne tournament
sponsored by the club. Presenllng the check is Bruce Teaford, president. Roush's feat was
more remar kable because this is the second straight year a golfer overcame 111onstrous
odds against putting a little white baD into a hole from a tee with one club stroke. The first
hole-in-one in the seven-year history of the tournament was .c arded last year by Ron Toler.

$200 and a trophy for his

JNe;~~Roush rewarded
By Uolted Presslnteruatlooal
AMMAN, JORDAN-JORDAN has reported 28 new
· cholera caseo, but says it is " on its way" to containing the
epidemic that has struck more than 2,400 persons in at least 10
countries in the Middle East and Europe.
Both France and Mexico put precautionary measure's into
effect Wednesday, tholl8h no cases of the highly infectious
disease have been reported in either country. Health officials
In Jordan Wednesday reported 28 new cholera cases in the past
24 hours- about half the 47 cases It reported in tbe previous 24
hours- but added they were moving io .control the epidemic.
"Jordan is on ita way to controUing tbe cholera epidemic,"
Health Minister Ahdulrauf Rawabdeh told reporters. J.otdan
h8s now reported a total of 289 cholera cases.

I

~·

"'...•
•
:::.

...••
~
~

..

I

dlacovered

I

that aometime Iaiit Friday he
blld litolen from the work llite
a M ft. alumlnwn extenaion
ladder. Both lncldenta are •
E-RCALLED
under Investigation.
The
Middleport
Sheriff Proffitt again Ia
EmergeSicy
Squad was called
arglna area motorists to

mlnlnl

last achool Iones. Ohio law
Sunday.
provldel apead limit Ia 20
. Dm4 Grlndllaff, Rt.
mUes per hour in the acbool
Raelnt, reported he waa 10nea when Ughta are

a,

wltnl 011 thl Roy Prullltt llallblnc.
I!'\IINIIY at Old Ton lllld
·

Association representative
that they were not helping the
strike by their appearance as
pickets in support of the
board. She said the parents
want to help settle the strike
and that the parents from the
Harrisonville School are
" behind he board of

edqcation''.
Mrs. Cline said it Is the
group's opinion that the
board was elected by the
people and have children and
grandchildren to be educated
and consequently members
are interested in the teacher
strike being settled.

Study underway
on SR 7 project .

Theft reports are ·received

Old us 33 twtnty oak boarda s
ft. kiJ&amp;, 3 lnc:bes thlcll,,lllld a
to It lnebel 'IIIIM. It wu drive wWl caution tbrotllh

A group ol12 Harrisonville
area parents expressed
support of the Meigs local
Board of Education and Supt.
Charles Dowler In the
district's three week old
teacher strike when the board.
. met In special session at the
Meigs Junior High School
Wednesday night.
Mrs. Phyllis Cline, one of
the parents, said earlier ·In
the day the group bad
picketed at the Harrisonville
School were teachers were
also picketing.
. She said the parents were
told by an Ohio Education

Walter Roush of Mid· frecjuent winner as he came
dleport , only the second in inside the top three on live
golfer to hit a bole-in-one In of the siJI nights.
the Pomeroy -Middleport - Other than the hole in one
Lions Club Hole·ln·One by Roush, the next shot
Contest, received his $200 closest ·to the pin W{IS Bub
prize and trophy Wednesday Stivers. Once he came
foUowing the noon IWicheon within I'll", again within
of the club at the Meigs Inn. 1'10". Other daily winners
Roushgothishole-in-one on were Nesselroad and Chad
Wedn~sday at 5:45 p.m. His Humphrey, who came within
was the llth.,liau off the tee, · 4'5" and 2'3", respectively.
on the three-par hole.
Mrs, Mary Follmer was the
. Chris Wolfe was the closest lady to try her luck as
youngest winner when he got she came to within 10'4" of
within 3'3" of the pin on the cqp.
.
Monday night and received
All the Lions extend their
golf haUa and a trophy. Mike thanks to aU those who at·
Nesselroad was the most tended their amual charity
event.

Studies are underway that
will lead to relocate and
improve State Ro.ute 7 from
the Rock Springs interchange
to the Five Points area.
In accord with Ohio ·
Department of Trans·
portatlon (ODOT) guidelines
for project development,
Glenn A. Smith, · ODOT
Dl3trict 10 Deputy Director,
said study exteSida easterly
from the recently constructed
WASHINGTO&gt;:&gt;I-BRANDING CHIW pornography one of interchange at the jWiction of
the IIlOSt vile forms of child abuse, the Seante Judiciary· State Route 7 and U.S. 33
Cmunlttee approved legislation to make it a federal crime U&gt; north of Pomeroy to an area
produce, sell or dl!lribute pornographic material featuring just east of an area known
children.
·
locaDy as Five Points near
The legislation, approved WIBnimously Wednesday and the junction of County Roads
sent to the Seante floor, !leta harsh fines and prison terms for 26 and 53 and State Route 7.
panderers of child pornograpby, making the activity a new
The study will develop
federal crime under obecenlty 81atutes. The measure modifies social, economic and en·
the Ma!Ul Act which now outlaws the transportation of minor vironrnental data and in·
females acro.u slate lines for Immoral plll'jlOfles to include formation such as cost
children of both sexes under age 18. SpoiiBOrB said the change estimates and effects upon
Ia designed to cradt down on the use of young boys lor land and people for
prostitution.
evaluating the various
solutions. Once tentative
solutions are sufficiimtly
developed, a public meeting
Helena Howett, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, 1w reported to the
Departmept of Sberlff J811les
J. Proffitt, that Jtbe 1w bad
ltolen from ber property on

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1977

Board supported
by parent group
of Harrisonville

NEW YORK - THE CONTROVERSIAL television
comedy "Soap" cleaned up in the ratings . Tuesday night,
despite beavy advance protest from religious and homosexual
groups.
The early rating figures from the A. C. Nielten Co., gave
ABC's "Soap" a heavy advanlage over its NBC and CBS
competition, in the lhree cities polled, New York, Chicago and
Los Angeles. A spokes for ABC said Wednesday that lelephone
protests to the network after the show.were light, ranging from
192 protest caiiBin New York and 511n favor of the·show to 35
protests in San Francisco ( 5calls In its favor) .

all through the

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GEMINI (Moy 21.Juno 20) You
know the right things to say toclaY. . .and people instinctively
know your word Is like blue chip
stocks. If you say it. you'll do it.

\_

girl should own! Beautiful' '

POMEROY-MIODL-EPORT, OHIO

wno

OOLUMBUS- THE PUBUC UTn.ITIES Commission of
· Ohio has modified the authority of Columbia Gas to charge an
curtailed customers for any of the utility's emergency gas
purcbaseo and ordered that self-help customers who use only
their own gas be exempted. The PUOO Wednesday also
ordered that the coat of any emergency gas purchased by
Columbia be aUocaled over the five-month winter hearing
seailon, not over the whole year.
The modificatins are the result of a motion for rehearing
filed by the Ohio Manufacturers' Association and Whirlpool
Corp. They will affect a PUOO order of .J uly 22 that authorized
Columbia to buy emergency supplies without a specific
( contract in advance from each perspective user and to allocate
the coS among all users in a curtailment class.

Campus collectables ·every

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. 18) formally establishing the
It 's a good day to call in markers department on that date as
Where your work or career' is the first new Cabinet-level
concerned. If you feel you've agency in 11 yea-.. ·

not good to Show partiality, but
today you have to . If so. favor
persons with whom you ha'tle
long and lasting attachments .

Tuner ~Amplifier

r~\

the

Church, Pomeroy.
achieve_ your g~als today, put a
. __
. _
governor on your driVes .
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Moderation· is the key tQ moving With Oct . 1 set as the start·up
ahead. Make haste slowly.
day fer the new Energy
Department, Secretary
· SAGiTTARIUS (Nov. U·ooc. James
Schlesinger pledges ·
21) Keep in touch with those imhis
agency
will "keep the skY,
portant to yoUr material welfare,
blue and the grass green '
even though they may be distant.
wh !le . maintaining energy
Qorl't make it "out of sight, ou1 of
suppli.es. Carter signed an
mind ." ·
executive order Tuesday

ARIES (Mirch

with Phono and Tape
G587 - Solid-state
AM /FM/S tereo FM

3

of

do very well with new prefects at ltlvJry Caldwell, treasurer .
this 1ime , but don ' l fee l
traditional methods won 't apply
The.re will be a Democra t .
just because the applications are Central Comni lttee · meeting
new.
· Thursda!J• Sept. 15, at 7 : 30

you're Invited to part icipate in an
endeavor. do give It a fang, hard
look .

Allegro Sound System

··1~ 9

Me i gs · Chapter

Methodist Church will be held
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 201 Sunday. Sept. 18 at 1: 30 p.m .
Joint ventures are a particularly Sunday School will be held at
promising area for you today. If 10 a .m. All singers and

Black
&amp;

"My friends, there are powerful and ruthless forces
In this land
do not want a bslanced budget, who do
not want the federal government reorganized," Miller
said. " To say Bert Lance has dooe something wrong
does not make it so. We know better," he said.
The rally was organized by several local residents,
milS of whom have known Lance and his wife LaBeUe
for years.
" We wanted to go to WashingU&gt;n to support him, but
this was the next best thing," said Sue Bone, a member
of the 'organizing committee. "He's had so much bad
publicity that we wanted to create some good
(publicity) for him," she said.
&amp;lpporters carried an assortment of placard$ some
of which read "Hang in there Bert," and ''We'd eat dirt
for Bert."
The hlgh school marching band played "I i&gt;id It My
Way," as the crowd yelled, clapped and gave a football
cheer for Lance inside the stifling auditori1,1111 .
Calhoun Mayor Bill)' Burdette called Lance "ooe of ·
the great men of our day," and said, "U Bert Lance
tells me he has done nothing wrong that would justify
such an attack by the national media - I believe him."

enttne

at y
VOL XXVIII . NO. 107

mittee," he said.
"Certain persons have publicly, in effect, brought in a
verdict of 'guilty' before I have been given the opportunity to
present my side of the case. It has been a saddening and
disillusioning e:~perience ."
Lance said, "I am secure and comfortable knowing that my
cooscience is clear and that the people 's verdict will be a fair
and just one."
Carter's long-time personal friend traced his history from
the boyhood days In rural Georgia to his arrival in Waahington
in January as perhaps the President's most imporlant pdblic
figure in government.
Lance recalled he delivered papers as a boy U&gt; supplement
his family income, worked his way through college, but left
·
before earning a degree U&gt;support his wife and baby son.
Lance said he Has always believed the American system
rewarded those who worked long and hard hours.
(Continued on J)alt I)

•

•

"ruthless fcr(.'es."

Notices, short briefs

earned a raise, buttonhole the
boss. ·

H901P-Mediterranean design in simulated woad .w ith Pecan
finish. Solid-s!ale AM / FM / Stereo FM Tuner-Amplifier plus
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CALHOUN, Ga. (UPI) -More than 1,000 residents
of Bert Lance 's hometown held a booster raDy for the
budget direcU&gt;r Wednesday night on the eve of his
scheduled appearance bef&lt;re a Senate committee
investigating his personal finances.
"Bert Lance can come home if he can go nowhere
else," the Rev. Eugene Ward told a packed auditorium
gathered at Lance's alma mater, CalhoWI High School.
Ward, pastor of the Friendship Baptist Church and
cme of the few blacks in the group, delivered the
Invocation.
Miller, who was christened in the same ceremony as
Lance In nearby YoWig · Harris, said the budget
director was the victim of distorted press CQverage and

MECHANIC STREET

American Cancer Society
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 231 You 'll lola led SS28, according to

the attention of the pu bile."
He said that while he was president and chairman of the
Calhoun bank its deposits increased from $11 million to $49
million and its assels rose from $11.9 million to $M.l million.
When ·he took over as head of the Atlanta-based NBG, "the
results were even more dramatic."
He said in 1975 and 1976, NBG's deposits increased SO per
cent and its assets increased from $254 million tn $404 million .
" Because of the volume of unfavorable publicity these past
weeks," he said, "il may come as a surprise when I say that no
deposiler in either (hank) ever lost.a cent :while I was with
those banks."
_
Lance said his experience over the past weeks " has been one
of· profound shock and disappointment. The rights that I
thought I bad as an American have been treated in the most
irresponsible and destructive manner."
"The basic American principle of justice and fair play has
been pointedly ignored by certain members of this com·

Lance at big rally

SALE! GENERAL ELECTRIC

COLUMBUS, OillO- BLOOD TESTS ON 110 construction
workers at Riverside Methodist Hospital have produced only
ooe possible case of Legiomaires disease, apparently ruling
out a construction site as the source of the illness in Columbus.
The Ohio Department of Health Tuesday reported the results
of the tests, performed at the U.S. Center for Disease Control
in Atlanta.
The tests had been made to determine if the outbreak of
the poeumonia-like aliment caine from an excavation for a
three-story wing now under construction at the !Jospital. Jon
O!ristensen, a department spokesman, said the one worker
whose blood showed positive signs of the disease had no
physical sympU&gt;ms and evidently was unaware he had ever
contracted it.
Christensen said the finQ!ngs apparently eliminated the
theory that. the excavation yielded bacteria causing the
disease, now confirmed in six cases in the Columbus area.

Lance has ignored resignation demands from several
lawmakers in the controversy involving $6 million in personal
bank loans and $450,000 in checking overdraft.. by Lance, his
wife LaBelle and other family members while he headed two
Georgia banks.
During two weeks of hearings leading up to this day, th&lt;!
oommittee heard aUegatlons Lance may have personally tried
U&gt; whitewash his SI)Uons as bank executive in order to get
approval of the budget dir~tor 's nomination.
Lance told the conunittee, whose two leaders, Abraham
Ribicoff,D-CoM.,and Charles Percy, R-Ill., have suggested to
Carter that Lance should resign, that he has read "many
critical stories devoted to family loans and overdrafts ."
" I want you to know and understand that every overdraft
has been paid in full," Lance said.
Lance U&gt;ld the committee he wanted to "recite some facts"
about his leadership of the Calhoun First National Bank and
the National Bank of Georgia "which have not been brought U&gt;

Hometown supports

ELBERFELDS 'IN ·POMEROY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

UNIT CALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was caned
to 206 Beech St. at 9:50 a.m.
Tuesday for Jerry Ward, 77.
who ·was having difficulty
breathing. He was taken to·
Holzer Medical Center.

WASHINGTON (UPl) - Fl8htlng for his public life, Bert
Lance today Mid his "COiliCience II clear" and he will rebut
every aCCII&amp;Itian of impnlpriety In his personal banking
lffaln before becoming President Carter's budget director.
"I did not ask fer this fight, but now that I am in it, 1 am
flghtlnc n&lt;t only far my!lelf but also for 0\11' syStem " Lance
said in his statement prepared· for the Senate Govei-runental
Affairs Cmunlttee.
"I am proud of the job I hl!ve done (in the White House
budget office) , but Ia It part of our AmeriCNl system .that a
man 'CIIn be drumnied out of government by a series of false
charges, half-truths, mlllrepresentations, iMuendos and the
Uke?''
Lance appeared under bright television lights in the jammed
Senale AppropHations hearing room opened especiaUy for his
appeJrance. More than 700 periiOIUihad showed up In the early
morning hours U&gt; get a seat for Lance's 90-minute defense in
his loog.awalted "day in court."

FINED $51, COSTS
Wl!Uam Reeves, Pomeroy,
was fined~ and collt.!l, in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor
C!Jirence Andrew• Tuesday
nlghl on lntoxtcation charges.
Forfeiting bonds were John
Workman, Mason , $33,
. speeding, · David Smith,
Syracuse, · $24, speeding;
Robin Phalln, Pomeroy, $33
speeding; Roger Roush,
Syracuse, 530, assured clear
distance; Henry Thompson,
Gallipolis, .$25, speeding; ·
David ·Roush, Racine, $50,
squealing. lites, arid Robert
Will, Harrlaonville, running a
red light. $30.

(Continued from PIP 11
second were included in tbe
contracts last June oo tbe
assumption of receiving state
and federal fund which have
not yet been received.
Teachers In the Plain Local
district agreed to raises
beginning in January.
In the South Amherst
school district, teachers
U&gt;day voted U&gt; approve a new
contract.
..
The
ass o c'i at ion •.
representing
the system's 46
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
·PLEASANT VAIJ.EY
teachers,
earlier
had agreed .
Admitted - Ruth Gosney,
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
a
new
contract
which
·to
Thomas Robinson and Middlep(,rt; Dora · Stevehs,
called
for
a
$425
raise
in
base
dall8hter, Gallipolis; Mrs. Shade; Elizabeth Bartoe,
pay
.
But
the
board
of
Stephen Shuler and son, long Bottom; Eric Hart,
A' dinner party for mem .
·. F~ Thurodoy, Sopl. 15, 1877 bers of Drew Webster Post 39, musicians a re ll')vited to
.
education
rejected
tbe
pa~t
Edna
· Radne; Mrs. Ray Dawson, Pbmeroy;
participate. The public is
Amer:Jcan
Legion,
who l~vlled .
Mason; Th()mas Miller, Blumeriaue r, Pomeroy; Monday, rebuffing · its own
parked cars during the f~ir
negotiating ·team.
Leon; Mrs.
Leycester. Harold Circle, Racine .
will be given at 1 p.m. Sunday
Rally Day will be held at
The
.
teachers
have
been
Discharged - Dorothy
Colllter, Leon; Carl Garrison,
at the pOst home .
.
lhe
Rock Springs United
Warner, . Clarence ' Cooper, working without a cOntract
Buffalo; Elbert Murray
Methodist Churc~ Sunday,
.
·
The Meigs High School Sept. 18 with basket dinner at
Middleport; Mrs. Joh~ Lee Cadle, Ethel Collins, since Aug: 31.
cheerl~aders will hold a car noon .Afternoon services will
The
South
Amllerst
sy~em
· Lyons, Point Pleasant ; Stacy Eileen Swan, Peggy White,
. wash . Satur.day· .!lit the Sugar be lield at 1: 15 featuring the
has 900 students at its twoPatterson; Gallipolis Ferry ; Sharon Brown.
Run Ashland Servlc~ Stallon . Gospel Tones . The Rev . ·
school campus.
from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m . Cost James Corbitt is the pastor.
Edgar Russell, Jr., . Leon;
Only minor chariges were
· will be $2 tor the outside only.
Emest Morrow,
Leon ;
Residents ma y take their
reported
in
the
new
pact.
Hemlock Grange will meel
Robert McDaniel, · Point
Sept. 15, 1817 . ·
vehicles to the station .
· at 7:30 p.m. Saturday al the
MODEL DOC 0580N
TO HOLZER
About
140 .' teacher~ Financial ptospects are very.enPlea~nt ; Mrs. Gary Hupp,
hall. Dues of members are
• Three heat 111ect1ons ~Heavy-duty heating coll1
Th p
E
remained on strike . in the 9ouraging for you this com ing · The .Morse Chapel Church
Patriot, 0 . ; Mrs. Leonard
e omeroy mergency · Meigs LoCal School district in yea r . Oddly enough . old a) Old Town Flats will hold its now payable. .
Normal, Delicate, and No· • Electronlca/ly ·tested de·
Cornell, Point P.leasant, and Squad took Penny Smith
.
situations may yield more fruit homecom ing Sunday at 2
Heat FluH
pendabllltY
The
Meigs
County
ChurMechanic
St
t
H
'
Meigs
County
where
schools
Goldie Ingels, Masan.
1~er are closed.
than new Ones
p.m. All si ngers are invited. ches
0
Qf
Christ . Men 1 s
·•
o
•
Two
cycle
selections
BIRTH- .A son to Mr. and Medical Center at 8 p.m.
The Senior Citizens Chorus
Fellowship will meel al 7: ~0
The two-week old strike bas VIRGO ( Aug . 23 ·Sopl. 22 l Will
present several numbers. p.m. Monday at lhe Mid'
· ·separate 1t1rt switch
Mrs, _James Smith, Ashton. Tuesday night.
the · summer . Material condil ion·s are very The public is invited.
extended
dleport Churc~ of Chrlsl ..
• Commercial cycle lndlcotor
beneficial to you today , .but thi s
vacation for about 3,000
lightmay not be readily apparent.
There will be a county-wide
CARPENTER - There will
students.
. ·
Your g.allis will come through a prayer meeti ng Sunday , Sept. be ·a Gideon speaker at the
• Large u!&gt;'lrontllnl trap NOW
A judge has issued a · source you d idn 't expect. Having 18 at 2 p .m . at the Rutland
MI.
Union
Baptisl
Church
• Porcelai!Hinamel drum ONLY
restraining order in an trouble selecting a career? Send Community Church . Glen near Carpenter on . Sunday.
for
your
copy
of
Astro·-Graph
Bissell
·
is
the
class
leader.
attempi U&gt; end the strike but
He will speak im.medialely
Leiter by mailing 50 cen ts for
alter Sunday School which
it has been ignored by
each and along . sell-addressed,
Proceeds from a Rock A
starts at 9:45a.m . The publi c
teachers.
stamped envelope to Astra· Thon held recently by the is invited.
Graph, P.O . Box 489 , Rad io City Meigs
County . Junior
Stat&gt;on, N.Y. 10019. Be sure Io Leadersh ip Club lor the

HOSPITAL.NEWS

Bert Lance opens fight for his political life

cilmen, Don • Fields, Fred
Fields, Hullng Green, Kenny •
Green, and Vernon Grin·
llt.. d. Abo present were
William Kimes and lUndy
Colegroves, town policemen.

••-••lil•••llilli••••••••••

Sharon Steele, Middleport,
and Frank 0. Steele,
Charlotte, N. C., filed for
dissolution of marrisge in
Meigs CoWity Common Pleas
Court. Barbara KeaU&gt;n was
granted a divorce from
Douglas Keaton .
The following marriages
. were dissolved : Jirruny R.
Lee and Nora E. Lee;
Ladonna J. Taylor and
Russell L. Taylor; James and
Elizabeth Neal; Charles E.
Williams and Maxine S . ·
Williams; Everett i.. Crow,
Jr .. and Nancy Crow. Appointed depl!ty sheriffs were
Elizabeth Mohler and Randy
Forbes.

CODu act

News •• in Briefs

to vlllage baD at 10:50 a .m.
Wedne&amp;dfly for VIvian
Hurlow, Kanauga, Wbo had a
neck Injury. She was taken to
Veter811tl Memorial Hospital
by the ~~quad lllld was admitted to the holpltal.

wiD be scheduled to deter·
SUPPORT BOARD - Harrisonville parents supporting the position of tile Meigs Local
mine public response.
Board of Educatioo In its current stalemate with teachers of the district spoke up at a
For further lnlonnation or
meeting of the board Wednesday evening, and were on steps of the courthouse in Pomeroy
clarification contact Glenn A.
this morning when depositions were scheduled by members of the board of education. The
Smith, Ohio Department of
parents were forbidden U&gt; carry signs or placards by Pomeroy authorities.
Transportation District
Deputy Director, Marietta,
Ohio 45750. Phone 614-373- ::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::
0212.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, fair Saturday and
a chance of ohowers
Sunday and Monday. Highs
Saturday and Sunday will
be Ill lbe upper 70s or the
mid 80s and lows will be Ill
the lOs. Highs Monday wm
be in the 70s and lows will
be in lbe 50s.
BACK IN OPERATION
Both ferry boats were
reported In operation early
this morning
between
Kanaugti and.Henderson. The
llH:ar ferry was shUt down
Wednesday for repairs after
breaking down Tuesday
night. The eight car ferry
remained in operation
Wednesday . .

RALLY DAY SET
Rock Springs United
Methodist Church Rally Day
Sunday, Sept. 18 at noon .
. Afternoon services will be at
I: 15. The Gospel Tones wi!l
be fea!ured .

Private haulers
should attend
Tuesday meeting
The Meigs County llealtb
Department In cooperation ·
with lbe Meigs County
Commlastoners, Ia drawing
up plans to initiate countywide solid waste plck·up
service by private haulers .
Anyone Interested In
providing solid waste
service within Meigs
County Is urged to attend a
meeUng scheduled for 7:30
p.m. Sept. 28, at the Health
Department Offices, 110
Meebanlc Street, Pomeroy.
Those who Cllunot attend,
but are Interested, should
co11tact the Meigs County
Heallb Department before
tbe meeUng.

Weather
Lows tonight to mid 60s,
Decreasing
cloudiness
Friday, occasional showers.
Highs in the upper 70s.
PrQbabUity of precipitation
80 percent today and tonight,
60 percent Friday .

EC135 explosion
claims 20 lives

ALBUQUERQUE,
N.M.
( UPI) - An Air Force
" flyin g command post'~
loaded with electronic
equipment and carrying 20
persons exploded in flames
oo the side of the Manzano
Mountains Wednesday night,
apparently killing aU aboard.
A witness said the four·
engine EC135, based at
Seymour Johnson ·Air Force ·
Base in North Carolina,
exploded "like a small
atomic bomb" after it hi\ the
side of the mountain,
southeast of Albuquerque, at
about 8 500-feet elevation.
Tbepianehadjusttaken off
from Kirtland Air Force Base
after refueling on a cross·
country flight to Nellis Air
Force Base in Nevada. II was
headed to a joint Air ForceArmy exercise .
The Air Force said the
plane, a military version of
the Boeing 707 passenger jet,
was attached to the 8th
Tactical Deployment Control
Squadron at
Seymour
~

She said that the Ohio
Education Assn . . representative - whom she identified
as a "Mr. Westfall" - had
referred to the board of
education members earlier in
the day at HarrisOnville in.
a derogatory manner.
" We are angry because our
kids aren't In school," .Mrs.
Cline remarked, pointing out
that she felt she has a rlgbt to
express herself. She opined
that many other parents not
coming out to express
themselves· have similar

views.
"I can't believe that the
board is not trying to work
out a solution," Mrs . . Cline
etated.
Charles Downie, president
· of the Meigs Local Teachers
· .:\SSOclation, responded. He
said the ieachers would like
to sit down with the board of
education and work out a
so1nlion.
Mary Lou Hawkins , a
custodian in the district, said
janitors who work 12 months
a year are being hurt by the
teachers' strike because they
have no money Coming in.
She said that she hoped a
settlement can be reached
Meigs County Common
Pleas Jndge John C.
Bacon, citing jurisdiction
ln tbe COIDDIOn law of Ohio,
today . approved
a
prellmlaary Injunction
against lbe Meigs County
Teacher&amp; Auoclation
(MLTA) and ita officers.
Sitting In the bearing on
Ills temporary Injunction of
.last Thursday, Judge
Bacon beard testimony
taken by one wllness,
Superintendent of Schools
C'barlea Dowler.
Questioning Dowler were
tbe school board's attorney, Dennis Whalen,
assloted by prosecuting
attorney Rick Crow, and
lor
the
defenda11ta,
(MLTA) Atty Mark Foley.
The elements of tbe
temporary order a week
ago are the basic clauses of
the court order approved
·today, 11ame!y, that the
teachers are ordered to
return to tbelr jobs, not Ia
continue their strfke, and .
not to picket buDdtngs.
Judge "Bacon based hla
rulings oa what be called
these cooslderatloaa, that
2,900 studenltl have loti 14
days of their Uvea, parenu
also bave lost these days,
and be doubted If they ever
can be replioced.

Johnson, an arm of the
Tactical Air Command .
Of the 20 military personnel
on the plane, 13 were from the
North Carolina 'base and the
others were from elsewhere.
Names
were withheld
pending notification of next of
kin.
Rescuers, using light from
flares dropped from the air,
searched on the ground and In
helicopters ·for suryivors.
"No survivors have been
found," Capt. Ben Orren, quickly. She pointed out that
bsse information officer, said she helped negotiate for non·
at midmorning. He said certified employes and 88ld
rescuers found several bodies that at one time the group
In the wreckage, which '!as worked for 13 consecutive
scattered by the explosion hours In ironing out
across the pinon pine-covered problems.
"You
can't
satisfy
mountain.
"It looked like a small everyone In a group. I want to
atomic
bomb-with
a go back to my job," Mrs.
mushroom that lighted up tbe Hawkins said.
Supt. Charles Dowler Hid
sky. If anybody got out 1t
he
Is sympathetic toward the
would be a chance in a
culltodians
wbo are beln&amp;
million ," said Cliff Arbogast,
a retired commercial pilot, hurt by the strike and have no
who watched the jet crash way to make up the Jail later
(Contlnlltd Gil PIP I)
(Continued on PIP I)

\

14

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