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•

Jl.I-TbeSUnday 'l'imes&amp;nUnei,Swlday, Sept.IS, I977

VETERAN MEMORIAL
Admitted
Carrie
Osborne , Reedsv ll le ;
Margaret Mako, Vinton ;
Raymond Baker , Mid·
dlep.ort ; Clarence Norris ,
Racme ; Angela Jones,
Racine:. Gilbert Wilson, The
Plains ; Hazel Ferrell
Rodney ; Roscoe Cozart:
Ra cine ; Betty Ferguson,
Middleport.
Discharged - Thelma
Grueser, Ellen Thompson,
Helen Slack, Patricia Barnett, Roberta Maidens, Anna
Hartenbac h, Elizabe th
Bartoe, Iva Upton, Franklin
Lish, Wilma Osborne.

We1ahted
Pupil
Plan
works
Redistricting
---e·
bUl wUI be
By Patrltla M.Conoack
upf edueatloa Edltor
UPI Educalitlll Editor

lrouble, you might say.
The demands on her time
may go beyond any
possibility of doing justice to
all the pupils.
Educators these days are
looking at Denver's Weighted
Pupil Plan as one way of
solving the class size
problem. The Denver Plan
has been in operation since
January.
Here's how it works :
- Students are "weighted''
according to theiT degree of
"instructional difficulty."
- A normal student, for
example, equal$ 1.0; a gifted
one, 1.5; a bilingual one, 1.5;
learning disabled one, 2.0;
hyperactive or emotions lly
disturbed one, 2.5.
Say the stated class size is
25 pupils per teacher. Each
teacher gets the nwnber of
pupils whose points add up to
25. H they're 25 nonnal ones,
she gets 25 .
H they're ten gifted, that's
the equivalent of 15 normal.
She gets 10 normal also.
Twenty pupils, 25 points. H
they're ten hyperactive or
emotionally disturbed, the
teacher's load will be2.!j by 10
- getting her up to the 25
level with just ten students.
The experimental class size
formula is part of the
contract between the school

TV•• Jn Review

~all,

winter
sessions begin

The federal taw to he fully
MIDDLEPORT - Fall and
implemented by 1978, says
winter
sessions of the Area
that any handicapped child Volunteer
Fire
and
Some teachers have more
blind, deaf, mentally
By LEE LEONARD
Emergency
Assn.
will
start
than a falr share of pupils
retarded, crippled - has a
liP I Stalebouoe Reporter
at .7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
~ reaming
lor
extra
righttoequaleducationinhis
COLUMBUS (UPI)
attention .
local public srhool. No need Somo!'changes wil!have to he Middleport Flre Department
These students range from
to go to a special school for made in a Democrati&lt;Kirawn quarters.
Each department Is asked
super bright to the learning
the
handicapped.
An congressional redistricting
to
come prepared to host a
disabled. In between are the
"education prescription" will bill if it 1$ to get through the
meeting
at a future date. The
hyperactives - the boys and
be written lor each Ohio House, according to
October
meeting
will be held
girl$ who seem to have ants in
handicapped child.
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
in
Syracuse.
The
association
their pants.
The prototype of Denver's D-New Boston.
is
attempting
to make
This being so, there has
And those changes, Riffe
class size formula was a
arrangements
with
a
developed in sthool$ across
contract negotiated by the said Friday, would be to limit
of
the
county·
representative
America "tbe class size probLodi, Calif., Education the boundary changes to
lem.''
Association several years Franklin and Hamilton wide rural house numbering
ENDING MARRIAGE
ago.
counties and the Dayton- project to explain the system
School boards dictate a
POMEROY - Filing for certain number of pupils per
to the association at the
It has worked well there. Springfield area .
dissolution of marriage in class. But a teacher with a Jot
In fact, Lodi teachers,
The Speaker said there is Middleport meeting on
Meigs County Common Pleas of students in her class
backed by the community, too much Democratic op- Tuesday.
Court were Christy Rose, Rt. requiring twice as much
Members with ideas on
convinced the board to cancel position in the House to the
I, Racine, and Ralph Rose, attention as the ayerage has a
an $800,000 swimming pool to Senate-passed version, which futu~ programs and ways to
Sr., Rt. 1, Racine.
bigger teaching job. Double
enable it to continue putting would give Democrats a good improve the association are
$100,000 into class-size relief. chance at gaining lour extra urged to make their ideas
But the idea hasn't been congressional seats in the known to Charles Legar,
• • • • t • • • • • • • • • • • •
picked up elsewhere in election next year and Pomeroy Fire Chief, or to
Bob E. Byers, Middleport,
California.
perhaps .a fifth .
!I
•
1
who
is association ·president,
Bob Stahl, assistant
But i~ would also shake up
e
so
that
they may attempt to
director of the California districts in Starli County and
•
Teachers Association, says other eastern counties up and have suggestions carried out.
"You don't write it (the down the state. Riffe in'!;11-e:
weighted pupil program) into dicated plans to carve out a
(I •
a contract and say - let it new Democratic district in
e
.work."
. the Stark County area and
"It takes a lot .of work on change the lith District in
•
By
•
•
· Willi$ T. ~eadingham •
the part of the teachers' northeastern Ohio would
•
Realtor ·
•
associationandmanyofthem have to be·ahandoned for the
aren't prepared for it."
bill to pass.
But in Denver, teachers,
•
•
CHESHJRE - Mrs. Connie
e
You can make a up a lot higher than • board and the Denver board and administrators
Bradbury
of Cheshire will
e million mistakes trying to originally anf lcipated. You • Classroom Teachers seem pleased.
instruct
the
Basic Clothing
e sell your own home. And may end up with a faster : Association.
That, despite the fact that
Con!11ruction
Class through
• one of them is making the sale and less inconvenience •
The National Education the teachers have a clear
the
Adult
Education
Program
• wrong
improvements . if you lower the selling • Association
says
the choice - either a five per ·
• Many times, an expensive price
an
equivalent • weighted class size formula cent salary increase or a lour
at Buckeye Hills Career
• addition or repair can be amount.
_
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Center. The program will be
Instead of gllesslng as to • may "revolutionize teacher per cent raise plus class size
Angry members of a public held each Tuesday evening
• the kind of thing tha t'll cost
relief.
·
• you tar more than you get ho w muc h, 1'f any , repair • contracts."
employees union struck
Last year 110 of the Orient State Institute for the from 6:30 until9 p.m. in room
work to undertake, see a •
The fonnula iS seen as ooe
8 back.
•
True, the house should Realtor. He can tell you • way lor sthools to meet !llme district's 120 schools got some Mentally Retarded at mid- 18 at' Kyger Creek High
School near Cheshire.
• present a favo rable what to do to ma ke your • of the problems expected relief, so you see the teachers
night
Friday
to
protest
lack
of
The starting date fs Oc• appearance - moWed . home more salable and • from "mainstreaming" of have been opting lor the lour
staff
and
inhumane
contober
4 and ending date will
• lawn, trimmed shrubs, and What not to do .so you won'l • handicapped students. .
per cent..plus "relief" from
ditions
at
the
2,000-bed
be November 22. It is 20 hours
• no obvious indications of lose money.
•
Since passage of the numbers they can't handle.
·facility.
in length. The cost is $17.
• neglect, bul it' s rare when If there is anything we • Education
for
All
Dr. Timothy Mortiz,
• a
larg"
financia l can do to help you In the • Handicapped Children's act,
For the begiming seamdirector of the Ohio Depart- stress, course content in~
• ·undertaking will bring field of real estate please • a federal law, teachers have
more than Its cost in the phone or drop in It e
ment of Mental Health and eludes choosing pattern' and
• final sell ing price.
LEADINGHAM REAL ·e complained they don't have
Mental
Retardation, called material. following pattern
•
fhere Is alwa ys the ESTATI?, 512 Second Ave., e the training or extra
the
strike
''an atrocious act" instructions, demonstrations
Continued
from
ll"ge
IH
• financial
risk
of Gai}IPohs. Phone 446-7699. e resources to deal with many
which
places
"the lives and . op clothing techniques that
• miscalculation too. Home Wert here to help I
e handicapped boys and girl$ in better to reach agreement
of
residents in include inserting zippers,
welfare
with a strong union than to
• repair costs frequently end
1 their classrooms.
jeopardy."
,
suffer the mutual losses of
applying lacings, attaching
~·--~·····················
Members of the American waistbands, and many
dealing with a weak or
Federation of State, County others. Students will purdivided union ."
and
Municipal Employees chase their own supplies.
Leisenring said there are
union
voted 31~ to strike,
Interested individuals ·
two possibilities this fall Cor
to Uoyd Damer, should register by coming to
according
the coal industry.
The ftrst is passage of a leader of Local 1873.
the . Adult Education office
Senate amendment to make
during the week of September
roving pickets from other
'26 from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. or
loeals answerable in federal
on Monday and Tuesday
courts. The second action
evenings, September 26 and
must be a good coal contract.
'l:l from 6:30 to 8:30
"New · and improved
·benefits in this contract must ' ST. LOUIS (UPl)
be ~ed to steady working Conservative Episcopalians,
THE BEST VALUES YOU'VE EVER SEEN
times and low absenteeism," unhappy with liberalized
he said.
doctrines, ·have chosen the
West V'trginia mines suffer first bishop of · a splinter
an absenteeism rate of 5 church to be called the
percent to 25 percent daily, Anglican Church in North
Leisenring said . Western . America.
deep mines, union.ftee, have
The Rev . Canon James 0.
•BASSffi
•FLEXSTEEL
a rate of less than 2 percent Mote, rector of St. Mary's
and dig three to four times Church in l)enver, was
•PROVINCEToWN
•RIVERSIDE
more coal.
chosen . to head the non•ADMIRAL
•FRIGIDAIRE
geographical. Diocese of the
•HOOVER
Holy Trinity,. one of two
E-R CAlLED OliT
•CALORIC
newly formed dioceses of
ER1~CON,,ENIENTTEIIMS-L,AR(;E
MIDDLEPORT - The Episcopalians angered by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad was called at9 :43 p.m. approval of the ordination of
Friday to the LaSalle Hotel women and revisions in the
for its manager, Betty 1928 Book of Common
Ferguson, who was taken to Prayer.
Leaders of the three-day
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Congress
of Concerned
where she was ·admitted. At
Churchmen
received ap10:48 p.m., the squad was
.
proval
from
the
.nearly 1,800
called to 680 S. Sej:ond for
delegates of a statement
Madolyn Woodard.
urging reestablishment of
traditional beliefs.

•
•••
•••
•

e1
a

S a
T 0 day •

:•

•

IMPROVEMENT CAN BE COSTlY

NEW YORK (UP!)- The Nlellen ratings for tile first week
of the new television se&amp;llln are Uke the Scriptures -they can
be quoted to support opposing points of view.
n&gt;e first question in network circles ill always - who's on
first? ABCremainsinfirsl place, with an 18.3rating and a 31.6
aha~ of the audience. NBC is oecond, with 1 17.5 rating and a
30.6 share lor a respectable showing. CBS was In third place
with a 15.6 raling and a 'l:l.t Share.
Its third place~ might make CBS rethink ita currtnt
policy of trying to stick to regular series instead of heavy
involvement in special programing. The network's best
showing was a fifth place tie spot for lts ''MI.!s America
Pageant," and its only other ranking In the top ten was tenth
place f&lt;r Ute movie, uLoRan's Run."
Almost as much an industry preoccupation was how "Washington: Behind Closed Doors" would stand up in the ratings.
Would the silt-part drama take off like "Roots," or sink
beneath a sea of special programing by the other networks'
Would television audiences sit still for two hours at a stretch,
on silt consecutive nights! The answer is maybe.
No episode of "W:BCD" took first place. That honor went to
the NBC Monday movie, "James at 15," which might be turned
into a series after that excellent showing. "James,"
incidentally, starred LeVar Burton of "Roots" fame.
Second place went to NBC's "Laugh-In," which will be an
irregularly scheduled show - but possibly broadcast with
more regularity than planned in view of its large audience
attraction.
In third and fourth place -and in eighth, 16th, 17th and 25th
place - were episodes of "W:BCD."
H you listen to ABC, you will learn that the show won a 20.8
over-allraling and a 34 share, quite respectable and a big help
in keeping ABC No. I.
H you listen to the opposition, they will· mention that ABC
boped "W:BCD" would be another "Roots," with at least a 45
share of the audience, and that in lour of its silt nights it rated a
smaller share of the total audience than did its leadin shows.
In fact, the $7.5 miltlon sh.ow did not do as well in the ratings
as ABC hoped, but it forced its opponents to program around
ABC, and it did help deliver the first week of the new season to
ABC.
In the important are of share of the viewing audience, it won
out oo its opening episode on Tuesday, narrowly defeating
"Logan's Run," was beaten in its Wednesday second episode
by NBC's "Us Against the World" and "Elvis on Tour," won
handily on Thursday and Friday, was sunk on Saturday by
Miss America, "Bimic Woman" and "Dirty Harry," and won
on Sunday.
One of the peculiarities of those figures is that Saturday
night traditionally has been a disaster for ABC, and sure
enough that was the one night when "W:BCD" sank below the
magic 30 share mark that separates the winners from the
outright losers.
ABC reportedly planned - if ihe ralings were high - to
produce a "Washington : Behind Closed Doors : Book 2," as the
network did with "Rich Man, Poor Man" and will do with
"Roots." It's too early, however, for such decisions.
Aside from its big production, ABC also was helped in
keeping its first place spot by the high ratings on two regular
series, "Si.J&lt; Million Dollar Man," the premiere of which
ranked seventh, and "What's Happening!!," which ranked No.

slimmed down

•

•
.
t
•

Mrs. Bradbury
will teach

clothing cJass

Staff strikes

Orient facility

•,

Local right

Episcopalians

select name

9.

.

The two new CBS shows that premiered did not open with
promising ratings- "The Fitzpatricks" ranked in 24th place
and "Rafferty" in 30th; but the numbers won't be significant
until they eoo1pete with normal programing.
While NBC's "B I o n i c Woman" with Max, the bionic dog,
ranked 18th in tbe listing that is &lt;leceiving because the show
actually won Its time period by a considerable margin. But
Saturday night iii the loneliest night In the week for television
shows - the night with the smallest audiences.
ABC was happy to brag that its premiere of the "Hardy
Boys-Nancy Drew" show handily dispatched NBC's "Disney,''
but the adults in the audience will be happier to know that CBS'
"60 Minutes" beat both to win in its time period.

IN POMEROY

FAMOUS NAME BRANDS OF 25th 25th 25th 25th

FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES

•FLEX

00

MEXICAN FOOD IS HERE!

GET TICKETS NOW
MIDDLEPORT - Tickets
for a mother-daughter
banquet to be held on Thursday, 5epl. 22, at 6;30 p.m. by
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star, at the Middleport Masonic Temple,
should be secured by Wednesday. Tickets are available
from Bessie King, Euvette
Bechtle, Betty Van Meter,
Ann Thomas or Naomi King.
Besides the banquet there
will he entertainment.

TACOS - BURRITOS - ENCHIUDAS
TASTADOS - FRIJOLES

EAT IN or CARRY.OUT
'

Our New Hot Dog Menu Also Available!
Plain Meat Sauce Ameritan Dog ·
German Dog Cheese Dog Mexitan Dog

*

*

*

*

*

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REGULAR SIZE OR FOOT LONG

r--------------,
z ·
EXPIRES rOCTOBER 7, 1977
~FREE Soft Service Ice Cream Cone (lOc Size)
Nifh Purchase of Any Mexican Food or Hot [)og

aulfems .

A.

Vanilla

Chocolate , Double Twist

CARRY-OUT or DRIVE-IN SERVICE ONLY
Offer Good Mondays lhru Fridays

n
,...

;;

MEETING SET
POMEROY- The business
meeting of the Meigs Area
Holiness Association will be
held in the annex of the
Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene Monday, Sept. 19,
at 7:30 p.m.

BOARD T() MEET
RACINE - A special
meeting of the Southern
Local School District Board
of Education will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday In the high
school cafeteria. On Thursday at 7:30 p.m. the board
will meet In special session in
the cafeteria.
PTOTOMEET

RACINE - The Southern
Junior Hlllh School PTO will
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
at the school.

•

TWIN SIZE
COMPLETE
FULL SIZE
.COMPLETE

FAMOUS SERTA QUALITY
Box Sprinp and Mattress ncks do
not match •

Quilt Top Matbesses You really save by buying the set.

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT-3RD noGR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
t

By Bob BoefUeh
The 13-day old teacbers strike in the Meigs Local School
District ended Swlday afternoon after a weekend of meelings
by negotiating teamaand the district'sboard of education.
Announcing the end of the strike, with schools opening
today, were Charles L. Dowler, superintendent of the district,
and Charles Downie, prestdent of the Meigs Local Teachers
Associ.Jition.
School$ had been scheduled to open for the new school year
on Tuesday, AUg . 30, Dut did not due to the strike. On the
following weekend, schools would have been closed for Labor
Day. Schools were closed all of last week, the first five day
week that would have taken place had \hey been opened.
Negotiators trom the teacilers association and the board of
education met Saturday afternoon and the board of education

met following that session. The two teams met again Sunday
afternoon.
Agreements were reached and later Sunday the teachers
association approved them and the board of education met
again in speciiil session and also ratified the agreements.
. News of the settlement was welcomed In the four corners
of the district since the setuement brought to an end the
conflict between the teachers and the board of education.
That conflict had ended up in the common pleas court
which issued a temporary restraining order and then a .
preliminary injunction, both of which ordered teachers back to
their jobs and forbid them striking and picketing. Teachers
continued their picketing following the temporary restraining

orde.r and vowed that they would continue their picketing
today in spite of the preliminary injunction.
The board of education, on the other hand vowed tliroug~
Supt. Dowler that schools would reopen today and had passed
several resolutions Friday night which included provision that
security officers would he at the sthool$ of the district when
they reopened on Monday.
The settlement amouncernent llrought undoubtedly a sigh
of relief to confused parents who faced today's prospects with
doubt.
Supt. Dowler issued the following statement following the
settlement of the strike.
"The two ·week teacher strike has been concluded with a

•

at
POMEROY-MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

V.OL. XXVIII NO. 109

two year settlement. There is no reopening clause in the
agreement and, therefore, there wlll be no more negotiations
Cor two years. The recent OAPSE agreement also is for a two
year period.
"The board of education and administration sincerely
regret the many problems and inconveniences which the
teachers stfike caused the parents and children of our school
district. We will do everything in our power to get school back
to normal and continue the education of our children .
"The adjustments to the school calendar lor the remainder
of the school year will be announced in the near future.
"There will be no makeup days for the days school was
(CGntinued on pqe 10)

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1977

"

Couple attacked
near .Reedsville
'

FIElD COMMANDER AND HEAD MAJORETTE Lori Guinther, left, 1$ the field conunander for the
Southern High School Marching band alld Cindy
Patter!lln, is head majorette and featured majorette. .

hr:::.¥::. ·'*~"=;m-:;:o:;s,..~&lt;:;:,~.:;..~,.:;..,~.,. .. "1!. e..... : or t

f.Llews • • •in Brief~
By Uofted Press International
KENT, OIUO- A TRACfOR with a scoop shovel today
began uprooting trees at the construction site for a proposed
gymnasium annex at Kent State University near where lour
~nts were shoUo del!th during an antl-wac.demonstration.
The beavy equipment was brought to the site on a tractortrailer escorted by six KSU campus police cars.
·
Two girl$ protesting conslrucUon of the gym cried when
the trees were uprooted and screamed, "you will have to
answer for thl$ later." One. demonstrator, who identified
himself as a member of the May •th Coalition which is
opposing construction of the $6 miltlon faclllty, stepped.in front
of the lruck but was moved aside l)y KSU security police.
Security Pollee also forced about 25 demonstrators away from
the entrance.
.
Opponents of the gymnasium, including the Coalition,
have just about exhausted every legal means to stopping
construction but still have requests to stop construction pending before U. S. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, the 6th
U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincini!ati and U.S. District
Court in Cleveland.

Gunfire was exchanged in
the Reedsville area early
Sunday through the door of a
residence but no one was
injured·.
One man is in custody of the
Sheriff ·James J. Proffitt's
department awaiting hearing
in county court on a charge of
DWI and felonious assault.
The sheriff's department has
pieced the following story
together :
Sunday morning at 12:39
a.m. the department received
a call from Harvey Bartlmus,
Rt. 1, Reedsville (Indian Run
Hill) that a Foster Rood had
just shot through his front
door and thl!t he returned
fire.
Hollon
Deputy .Ron
responded to the call and at
1:22 a.m. took Rood, 40, Rt. 1,
Reedsville into custody .
Hollon located Rooll driving
his auto upriver on SR 124
near Sugar Camp north of
Reedsv!Ue,.
.
- 'I'" .
According to Bartlmus, he
and his wife were asleep at
their residence overlooking
Indian Run when they were
awakened aroWtd midnight
by someone pounding on the
front door. Rood was cursing,
threatening to blow off
Harvey's head if ·he came
outside. After refusing to
open the door, Rood fired a
shotgun blast in\o the lower
right corner of the wooden
door. The shot passed
through the door into ·tlie

floor .
Rutland, told deputies she
Bartimus said his legs were stays with Mrs. Hal French at
stung with wooden splinters Harrison ville and that
and at the time he thought Monday morning when she
that he had been shot.
got up she noticed the hood of
He grabbed his shotgun aQd French's 1975 Plymouth was
fired one blast ihrough the raised. Apparently someone ·
door which went through the had tried to steal the battery.
top part of the window in the
Charles Wolfe, Rt. 2,
door, the pellets striking the Racine (Fairview Ridge)
underside of the porch roof. Letart Township, told
Rood then ran around deputies that around 1:45
behind the house and at- p.m. Sunday three persons in
tempted' to get in the back a green colored pickup truck
door, pounded on the door, traveling south on CR 28
and fired another shot. threw eggs against his house.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Bartimus
Donald Bartimus, Rt. I,
refused to' let her husband go Reedsville; reported that
outside.
either last Sunday or Monday
After a period of time Rood night he had a Homelite chain
left in his vehicle. After saw stolen from his residence
waiting a lew minutes Mr. on 681 west of Tuppers Plains.
and Mrs. Bartimtis left to call the saw had· been borrowed
PiiEi;Er;rfE:D 50 YEAR PIN - Mrs. Norma Goodwin, seated, was honored Saturday
the sheriff's office.
from Homer Cole of Tuppers
afternoon when she was presented a 50-year pin from Pomeroy Chapter ·186, Order of
In other weekend activity Plains. A case of oil was also
Eastern Star. Mrs. Marie Curd, secretazy, standing at the left of Mrs. Goodman, made the
of the department:
taken from the outbuilding.
presentation. Mrs. Curd, on behalf of the chapter, in presenting the pin thanked Mrs.
Deputies took a report
A water pump and tank
Goodwin lor the kindnesses she has given go people. "'{ou sowed seeds of kindness like
Sunday that a Rt. I Rutland reported stolen earlier this
flowers," Mrs. Curd said. "You ani the fairest flower of all and I am happy to be the one to .·
· man. had been broU&amp;\Jt.!Q .lhe .. month !,tom. '{_.incept ..!!"wk, .. .Jl!i.v,e t/le honor ~o Jl.in. t/le.,pin on you," sh~ said. Shown alSo are, back, 1-r, t;dna SChoenleb,
emergency room &amp;~Veterans Rt. 1, Reedsvtlle, abil been
Charlotte Dillard, worthy matron,'Mabei'Moore, and Mabel Go&lt;glein.
·
Memorial Hospital that had recovered and returned to
been involved in a fight and Hawk.
Deputies inveStigated one Sunday m a..eoanon ·rwp. ou
required a large number of
Saturday was the first' the information and serial
stitches to the face and head. chance that Hawk had to nwnbers, he was able to pick trafuc accident over me CR 35, James Christy, 23,
weekend. At 12:30 a.m. Shippingport, Pa. , was
Apparently the subject had contact the Sl)erlff's office to up his pump. ·
traveling east on CR 35, feU
been involved in a fight it) a furnish the Information
Sheriff Proffitt said his
parking lot of a night club and regarding the theft. The office is still getting comCloudy, a chance of asleep, and went off the road .
had been cut by a broken pump and tank had been plaints of m~torcycles_ being
showers tonight, lows in the on the right and struck a
bottle. The subject refused to found on Saturday evening, operated ~tthout license mid 50s. Cloudy Tuesday fence owned by Roger
identify the assailant or give Sept. 3, by Mrs. Dorothy . plate~ or wtthout operators morning, clea,ring by af- Adams, Racine. There was
further Information on the Brown, Rt. I Mmersville, m a weanng helmets and eye ternoon . Highs to 75. slight damage to the vehicle,
incident. He advised that he field along CR 25 in Chester protection. The sheriff asks Probability of precipitation a 1975 Pontiac Firebiard. The
dill not want to !Ue charges. Township. When Hawk came public cooperation in this 60 per cent today, 50 per cent driver was not injured. No
Mrs. Denna Welsh, RD, in Saturday afternoon with matter,
tonight; 20 per cent Tuesday. citation was Issued.

WASJUNGTON - THE 21 TOP OIL companies made more
1977 than in the entire year of
1972, says the consumer group Energy Action.
James Flug, director of Energy Action, said figures
published by the leading companies show their profits
increlised from $2.82 billion in the first half of 1972 to $5.74
billion in the first half of 1977 in current dollars.
See page 7 today lor pic"In fact," the group said, "the reported profits for the first
six months of 1977 exceeded the profits reported for all of 1972 tures taken by Bob Hoeflich
at "yesteryear" observance
by $30.3 mi!Uon."
.
The group said while oil company profits were rising by Saturday.
103 per cent since 1973 - the last year before the Arab oil
embar~o - earnings of the average AmericWI worker
What better way to sum up
increased by only 38.5 )lercent and increases of energy prices the second annual ob· ranged from T/.4 percent for gasoline to 140.4 percent for fuel servance of uvesteryear"
Saturday at the Meigs County
oil.
Senior Citizens in Pomeroy
VALPARAISO, IND. - A WOMAN WHOSE DOCTOR put· than with a Hyesteryear.,
her on a rice and fruit diet during her last two months of expression, "A good time ws
pregnancy haS' won $50,000 in damages · on behalf of her had by all?"
mentally retarded daughter. A Porter County Superior Court
Hundreds of residents
jury awarded the damages in the name of Nora Smith, tbe joined by :visitors from
daughter of Cora Staniger, 52, Gary, who ftled the sult. Mrs. Akron, South Charleston,
Staniger accuse&lt;\ her obstetrician, Dr. Joseph Kopcha, of' Vienna, Wooster, Cuyahoga
· placing her on the protein deficient diet whim she was carrying Falls, Athens, Columbus,
Vinton, Gallipolis and other
Nora In 1954.
Dr. Benjamin Pasamanlck, a research psychiatrist who villages and cities thronged
testified for Mrs. Staniger, Sa.id deflcient diets of pregnant
women present a threat to the unborn. "This is a major public
health problem and the biggest problem lies with tbe woman
PROTEST NOW
on welfare. A protein rich diet is expensive," he said.
Jim Smllh of Tuppers
RAYNE, LA.- COMPLETE WITH A CRISP white linen · PlaiDs, Metss COUDty, Ohio
arge11 foolbitU fB!II wbo
table cloth and fine silverware, a formal frog legs eating
wollld ralhu watch Ohio .
(CGIIIIINed on Pill' 1•1
Slate play O~lahoma
Salarday btstead of Pean
State play Maryland (oa
chaaoel 13) lo call lbe
otalloa .and-or lhe Federal
The Pomeroy · ~mergency
There were heavy damages
Commualcatloao Comand a driver was charged in a Squad put in a busy weekend
mllol~n in Wasb1Dgto11, D . .
one-car accident on West transporting Paul Burns, C. to regloter tbelr
Main St. at 1:30 a.m. Sunday, Monkey Run, to Veterans
protests.
Memorial Hospital at 12:29
Pollloll'UY Pollee said.
Namben 1o call are:
Pollee said a car driven by p.m. Saturday and at 2:30
FCC,
!OZ-UZ-7048.
Eusene Morrison, Jr., a.m. Sunday went to the
Cbalulel 13, BUDiiDcloa
Middleport, headed west, Reino Und home on Condor
(ABC) belo~ 5 p.m., 104went left of center, crossed st. where Mrs. Lind had
51!5-7111; after 5 p.m., 303the 11net and Jumped a curb; fallen, losing conacioilsness.
5!Z-4581.
lltllklall a llllllU traller. The She was treated on the scene.
Cable patroao may
At 10:38 p.m. Saturday
trailer bit a larger one which
receive the Ohio Slate
broke off a uttllty pole, firemen · were called to
game oa Chaaael I,
Ft:aacla Florilt on a falle
caulng a power CJutale.
Cohmlbal. However, Cable
Tile trallen are owned by alarm, and at 11:50 p.m.
TV II aot available Ia IIWIY
the ICaiT Conltrtaetlon Co. Sunday the E-R ~q~~ad went to
raral eommultlea of lbe
Marrt.. ..... not .llijured bul Naylor's ·RUD for Betty Ar· ' trl-coaaty area ( aloo
II ebltpd with driving while mentrout •wbo waa tran&amp;outside It).
ported to Veter11111 Memorial
latodelltecl.
Hospital.
money in the first six months of

Driver charged·

1

Weather

1

Good ·time was had by all
onto the grounda Saturday to
enjoy b&lt;an soup cooked in a
big kettle over an open fire,
gallons and gallons of ice
cream, watermelon, corn-

bread, apple butter, also
made in. the wide open
spaces; hamburgs, hotdogs,
turkey and what-have-you.
Many of those ·attending
appeared
in
costume
reflecting the "yesteryear"
theme.
.
Capable Alice Nease and ·
lively Bill Childs kept entertainment going throughout
the late morning and af·
ternoon hours before a
receptive audience as they
performed as emcees.
Equally effective in ~arrying

hats, were everywhere doing
their thing as the events
unfolded. A surrey "with the
commercial exhilJits, a fringe on top" owned by
country store featuring a Wayne Turner was on the go
penny candy, dill pickles, every moment.
.
craft items to mention only a
Merchants had cooperated
part of the stock; a memory · beautifully for this second
corner where antiques were annual observance providing
featured and one could even · funds for trophies and prizes
buy a pie on the auction block as well as merchandise used
with Dan Smith the auc- lor &lt;joor prizes awarded on
tioneer.
the hour. Probably the best
The pies were those entered feature of the obServance was
in a pie haking contest where that admission was free of
competition was keen.
charge.
Staff members of the
Cash prizes went to the
center
were
pushed champion pie bakers who
throughout the day trying to were : two crust, Anna Fitch,
keep up with it all and judges, Thora Blackwood and Erna
wearing official plastic straw Jessie, first through ·third,
out contests were Joan

Stewart and Dan Smith.
There were displays and

respectively ; one crust, Larry Well was first atul
Bertha Johnson, Sue Burke, Roger Black was second in
Anna Fitch, first through the longest category; Clifford
third, respectively, and Hayes was first and Jim
Richard Grueser, Norma Warner, second in the
Curtis and Myrtle Harrison, thickest mustache category;
first through third, respec- and Owen Smith was first and
tively, 'in the cream pies. · Kermit · McElroy, second in
Contests extended all the the "scraggliest" judging.
Other winners with prizes
way to hog calling and
sometimes
being trophies,
mustache growing. Marth~
sometimes
cash
and
Ward of Bidwell was first in
the women's hog calling sometimes m~rchandise
competition with Maxine coupons were : sack .race,
Dyer placing
second, under 12, Jenny Burke, Sherr!
Upriver's Bill McKelvey, a Fox, Ala n,a · Lyons , first
fanner from way hack, was through third; over 12,' Billy
first in the men's division Dyer, J elf Burke and Kentra
with John Smith placing Ward, first through third;
cracker eating, Patty Dyer,
second.
In the mustache contest,
(Contilmal 011 .... 10)

Blame spread around for 164 deaths

Supper·club ·owners, a·u thorities rapped
FT . MiTCHELL, Ky.
(UPI) - The Beverly Hills
Supper Ciub was jammed to
twice its capacity and was
replete with fire safety code
violatlons ~ night a fire
killed 164 persons, entucky
fire inves:tlgators have found'.
State Police officials, in a
voluminous report released
late Sunday, blamed the
nightclub's owners, the state
lire · marshal and local
authorities for actions which
directly contributed to May
28 fire disaster.
As the intensive 31'..-month
inquiry concluded, Kentucky
Gov.
Julian
Carroll
suspended Fire Marsha.!
Warren Southworth for
"ineffective enfotcemt!! " of
fire laws.

But in the report, mvestigators pointed the main
accusing linger at owner
Richard · Schilling, for
allowing, at times knowingly,
deviations from fire safety
codes which ''were manifold

and extreme. 1'
The report listed the major
violations as : "Locks on

doors, absence of sprinklers
and proper firewalls,
hazardous . w i rl n g,
overcrowding,
inadequate
exits
and
improper
coostruction."

"The evidence of these
violations
was
overwhelming,''· the repori
concluded.
The probers also said
Southwortt.'s office and
similarly empowered

Southgate,
Ky .,
fire
inspection authorities falled
to properly examine the huge
nightclub.
~ 'The picture that emerges
is that the fire marshal's
office knew of fire hazard
problems at Beverly Hills,"
they
determined.
"Inspections were not
complete or thorough. The
frequent suggestion in the
st~tements that it was
someone else 's task to
remedy the situation does not
reduce the overall obligation
of the fire marshal's office."
The report lraced a history
of inadequate fire safety
enforcement a\ the club.
"Beverly liiUs &lt;;ontinued to
operate although many of
these code violations were
~

knowtt oy the insurer, the least 1till of tne 164 victims

operators and owners, and
were noted as a matter of
record in the fire marshal's
office,'' it said.
. The danger inherent in the
condition of the building
becam~ accute when overcrowding was considered, the
probers indicated. They accused state and local fire
officials of "virtually no enforcement of Ute cOOes" con-

cerning limitations on room
capacity.
The proper "occupant
load" of the Cabaret Room
the
club's
main
entertainment area, was 536,

investigators figured, but
about 1,360 persons were
jammed into the room that
night. The report noted at

\

died in the Cabaret Room,
where singer John Davidson
was to perform.
lfi addition, the nightclub in
general was overcrowded,
they declared, Based on the
number of exitS provided, tbe
total capacity of ' the entire
club "should have · been
limited to 1,511 people." but
employes indicated between
3,000 and 3,400 patrons were
there that night.
·
With tables and chalr.s
jamming routes oi ~sea~,.
chaos and panic prevailed in.
the Cabaret Room. The
report said statements from
patrons indicated that 110me
did not take the warning
seriously ; some climbed 0\'el'
(CclntbiUed Gil JIIP 10)

....

.

�2-The Dai11SenUnel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0, Monday,Sepl 19,1977

3-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Sept 19, 1977

Ribicoff, Percy still want Lance to resign job
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Two weeks ago today, the two
tDp members of the Senate
Govern mental
Affatrs
Commtttee saw President

u.rter at the Whtte liouse,
then told reporters they
belteved Budget Dtrector
Bert La nee should res~gn
Since then they have held

Mondale visit
poorly timed

two weeks of heanng offtctals
mvolved m Lance s fmanctal
achvtltes, mcludmg three
long day• of ques homng
Lance on live televiSion, have
spen t
hours
studymg
documents and statements,
and been deluged wtth mail
Chatrman Abraham
Rtbt coff
D Conn
and
rankmg GOP member
Charles Percy of Illinms sttll
beheve Lance should r~JStgn
Meanwhtle Lance was
headed to his offtce, the
commtttee heanngs were
contmumg wtth testimony
from staff mvestigators, and
Prest dent Carter presumably
was pondermg the whole

affair Bot he wasn t tallting
Percy satd this ts what he
expected
m
today's
conm1ittee heartng
We'll put the same
questions (w the conuru ttee
staff) that I put to Mr Lance
(on what he told the
comrmttee tn January) I do
know on at least one pomt
they will certify - swear
under oath - that the
statement he made wtth
respect to advtSmg them or
the voluntary cease and
destsl agreement - the staff
will certify tomorrow that at
no tmne did he ever notify the
comnuttee of that '
That's a very matertal

fact, he saJd
litUe likelihood," of Lance's
Rtbicoff and Percy both bemg conftrmed, Percy s~ud
S81d tn telephone mterv1ews
"The corollary would be, I
Sunday they have not think, tl's best under the
reb eated from the stance ctrcumstances for him to step
they took at the White House as1de so the natton can get on
on Labor Day
With Its bUSineSS "
• I haven't changed the
Percy noted that while the
opmton that I expressed Senate has no power to
before," satd Ribicoff I'm remove Lance from ol'!tce,
not gotng to make any Prestdent Carter
has
addthonal comment My indtcated he will make a
poSition has not changed deciSion on whether wretam
smce then "
hts budget dtrector and
Percy satd he ts convtneed tongtune frtend after hearmg
'more than ever" that Lance Capttol Hill opmtons
should step down
' We are now gtvmg our
I think if the name were advtce • Percy satd
sent fcrward Wday as a new
Most members of the 17
nommation, there would be man Governmental Affa~rs
Commttlee have not yet

gubernatorial nommation m
1978, tncludmg Lt, Gov
Richard F Celeste, Attorney
General William J Brown
and House Speaker Vernal G
Riffe Jr Senate Prestdent
Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek,
also a potenttal candtdate,
was absent
Fr Kenneth Grtmes,.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Proponents of would award beneftts wall mmers with 30
chaplam of the Ohto House,
reforms m black lung beneftts were or more years employment tn under
recetved applause for his
prepared today to accept weakemng ground mtnes prior to July, 1973, whether
mvocatton m whtch he prayed
amendments to meet objections and wm or not they were shown to have the disease
for success of election day
passage of the bill
For anthractte (hard coal) mmers only 25
voter regtstratton and party
After months of delay the measure was years of serv1ce would be reqUired for
umty next year
scheduled for fmal House actton today It automatic beneftts
"Let not the competition
The administration, while endorstng
IS expected to mclude a major change m
and dtvtSJon among family
many of the generill promtons of the
the comnutteeapproved btll
members lead us to defeat, '
Durmg general floor debate on the bill tegtslatton, has been opposed from the
he prayed
JUst before the August congresstonal outset to both of the major ttems that
State Rep C J McLin, !).
recess, Chatrman Cart Perkins of the would be elumnated under the Thompson
Dayton, recetved the 'Demo
House Education and Labor Comnuttee proposal
erato! the Year' award from
Repubhcans led by Rep John
oold the House he would accept a
the party's state committee
comprormse to a votd defeat or a posstble Erlenborn, R-Ill, have contended the
lrl a reversal of form, the
program was becommg a federally funded
veto by Prestdent Carter
program preceded dmner "so
retirement program for mmers that could
The amendment, authored by Rep
you won't slumber through
Frank Thompson, O.N J , would eliminate become a precedent for other mdustrtes
•t '
The Congresstonal Budget Office
Then he gave them a pep the speeches,' Gtlligan told
promtons catlmg for automatic beneftts to
talk for relammg the electton the guests who were stppmg
veteran mmers, and would deny the esttmates 50,000 mmers and survtvors
day registration law enacted Ohto wme
government the nght to appeal adverse would beneftt from the btU Wtthout the
Mondale
satd
Amenca
has
rulmgs on black lung damns
Thompson amendment, tt was proJected to
by the Ohto General
been
made
stronger
through
Assembly last May
Black lung ts the conunoo name for coal cost $358 nullion m FtSCal 1978 The
Former Gov John J votmg reforms allowmg
mtner s pneumocoruoSJs, a lung disease amendment wou)d cut $120 million of that
Gilligan was m htgh sptrtts m mtnorlties to parttctpate m
caused by inhalalton of coal dust The figure
makmg his ftrst appearance their government
The btU would also establish a trust fund
ongmal black lung program was passed m
"But every time we have
1969
supported by coal operators to take over
at a maJor state party event
smce losmg the governorshtp expanded the nght to vote,
A Senate btU not formally passed but m payment of damns ftled after July 1, 1973,
we have been met by the
tn 1974
final fonn awatting House action does not and make the program pennanent It
He joked that he thought hiS same ttred old argument that
mclude the automatic beneftts, but does currently would exptre m 1981 Federal
tt
would
lead
to
fraud,"
mtroduction made by Sen
tnclude the X-Ray revtew ban on favorable responSibility for clauns ftled before July
Mondale
told
the
cheermg
1973 would continue
Howard M Metzenbaum had
clamns to mmers
crowd
been meant for fonner Gov
The automatic entttlement provtston
"Now, there lS one more
Michael V DiSalle, also on
administrative barner that
.the daiS
prevents
hundreds of
And Gilligan, now direclor
of the U S Agency for thousands of people from
lltternational Development, registermg and votmg,' satd
referred to speculation that the vtce prestdent, referrmg
he nught be plannmg a wa requirement that a voter
comeback m Ohio politics 'l must be registered 30 days
had no tdea my ftrst ahead of time
"They (opponents of
campatgn rally would be like
election
day registration) are
1
thiS ' he satd
not
warned
about fraud
Gilhgan found htmself
FT MITCHELL, Ky club contained only half as many people m the Cabaret
They
re
womed
about people
arrud a flock or potential
(UP!)
- Kentucky Gov many extts as reqwred" m Room as the law allowed "
asp1rants for the Democratic sljoWIDg up w vote "
,Juhan Carroll satd today the ftre codes and S81d electrtcal
Aside from Beverly Hills,
state tnvestigalton mto the wtrmg was tn
' total Carroll srud the suspenston of
Beverly Hills mghtclub fire Vlolatton' of the codes The Southworth and two lower
showed 'shocking and total stale mvesttgation concluded government tnspectors
and complete dlSI'egard for the cause of the ftre was bad resulted from ' meffecttve
human ltfe by the owners of electrical w1rtng
enforcement generally of the
the club '
Ovid Lewts, spectal counsel law " Although suspended,
Carrot! also srud some state to the governor who assisted Carroll satd the three still are
and
local government m the mvesttgatton, called on the payroll
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
offtctals ' fa tied to make the w~rmg 'an electrlctan's
Carroll also Stngled out
mspections as reqwred by mghtmare' and satd there fonner state Fire MarShal
law • and announced the were a
myr1ad
of John Calvert for crttictSm,
suspenston of state Ftre vtolaltons" of the National saymg that m 1971 Calvert
MarShal Warren Southworth Electrtcal Code
"partictpated m a probable
The governor further satd
The governor also noted illegal act" by vouching for
he "would not he at aU there was 'overcrowding" Beverly Htlls remodehng
surprtsed
lf crunmal
mght of the ftre, saymg plan corrections whtch were
By Lawrenee E. Lamb, M D cents wtth a long, stamped, tndtctments are returned the
there were • at least twice as never really made
DEAR DR LAMB - self-addressed envelope for tt agamst • certam ClVIIians '
Penmt me to ask about hatr to F 0 Box 1551, Radio Ctty but added, "I haven't found
loss from too much vttamtn Station, New York, N Y , any crmnmal conduct on the
A ls tt progressive or should 10019
part of government of
the hatr return when the DEAR DR LAMB - My ftctals '
Vtlamtn A IS stopped? Could family got t1red of gomg to
Carroll personally released
this be the reason for the the store and buymg the same the masstve report of the
progresstve hair loss m our blah, tasteless cereals So state police tnvesttgation into
son's case' He was given now we have reverted to the thef~rethat killed 164 persons
masstve doses of vttamm A gram bm, llS111g hard wheat
at the pluSh mghtclub last
for acne m his high school Drwn wheat, rye millet, Memortal Day weekend
called to clarify postltons and
WASHINGTON (UP!) years and about then he flax, soybeans and com We
I am appalled, I am Begmnmg a busy week, gt ve Carter a chance to plead
started losing his hair Our wash and clean the grams shocked, I am dtsturbed at Prestdent Carter was hts case dtrectly once
family ts a hairy bunch for and store them m Jars till we the clear tmpltcahons tt embarkmg on cructal talks again
generations back to the are ready to use them Then shows of the disregard for seekmg peace m the Mtddle
Several proposals have
Revolutionary War so this ts we run the amount of gram human ltf e • declared East, making a new plea for been suggested m dealing
not inherited
we need through a mill to Carroll
'There was a hts energy program and wtth mandatory retirement,
Time goes on and year make etther flour or cereal
shocking amount or complete tackltng the tssue of and Carter ordered several
after year he keeps losmg hiS
Cereals are sweetened with and total disregard by the mandatory retirement
agency heads and top
hatr He ts a happy person honey and a little molasses
owners of Beverly Hills for
The Prestdent planned advtsers to wetgh what
and looks fme despite his Breads are made usmg one the safety of patrons "
talks wtth Israeli Foretgn moves the admtntstrabon
baldness but hts sons are part home grams and two
The governor noted that Mtntster Moshe Dayan today should take
approachtng the Ilene age and parts store bought flour
' posstbly as milch as 20 on the issues of the Palesttne
The meetmg was called "to
if vitamid A IS the culpnt we
Is this a good healthy diet mmutes exptred from the Liberation Organtzatin s role formulate poltcy toward
should know Is that type of for us' What do you think of discovery of the ftre until m Middle East peace talks mandatory ret~rement, whtch
hair loss permanent and usmg natural grams• We patrons of the Cabaret Room and Israeli settlements on the has several optioos available
progresstve'
have just about given up (loca lion of most of the West bank of the Jordan at thiS poml," a White House
DEAR READER- As soon those flat tasteless cereals VIctims) were notified, and Rtver
spokesman said
as !lie vitamln A Is stopped smce we have been en]oymg then not at the direction of the
One posstbility would be to
He meets m commg days
the trend should start whole gram cereals
owners "
wtth Arab leaders 1n a SliDllar outlaw forced retirement
reverstng Itself and even
DEAR READER - - The
Carroll ftgured that proper effort to find mutual grounds before 70 Many ftmlS now
tllally stop If your grandsons natural grains are just fme action by the owners "could for a posstble settlement
reqwre rettrement when an
develop acne they should not and they provtde a good well have avotded any loss of
U N Secretary General employe turns 65
be treated wtth VItamtn A amount of bulk that you may life •
White House offtC18ls have
Kurt Waldhetrn satd Sunday
capsules or ptlts as that does also need If you ltke the
Carroll also complamed the Ute talkil tn commg days will S81d the meeting wih Dayan
no good at all
taste, from a nutrttton pomt
be cructal, because the IS certatn to mclude the PW
Vttamm A aetd is used on of view there is no reason why
sttuatton m the Mtddle East ISSue and the question of
THE DAILY SENTINEL
the surface of the skin to you should not use them
DEVOTED TO THE
wtll
detertorate whether settlements m
INTEREST OF
encourage skm peelmg and
I would add only one
'dramatically"
next year, m occupted terrttory should be
MEIGS-MASON AREA
improve the skin but this Is cautton Be sure the grains
CHFSTER L. TANNEHILL
the absence or some new expanded Carter has asked
Elee Ed
not
the same thing as you use are for food purposes
breakthrough toward peace that Israel present a formal
ROBERT HOEFLICH
vttamln A and must be and not for seeds Some seed
He satd the SoVIet Umon peace proposal, something
City EdUor
PubliShed d&lt;uly ~xt:ept Sa.Lurday
prescrtbed by a phystctan grams have been treated wtth
the Israeli leader carried
shares hiS pessum.sm
by The Ohao Valley Publishing Cum·
Vttamm A was once chenucats pesttctdes and the any
with
htm to Washington
Meanwhile, much of the
Ill Court SL Pumtroy Ohio
thought to be useful m like If you happen to use seed 45769 Business Offlt:e Phone 992Next week, Egyptian
Prestdent's proposed energy
Ed1tunal Pl'lone 992 2157
treating acne but we know grams for food you could 2156
Foretgn
Mtntster Ismail
mto
sbff
plan
has
run
Sec(.ll1d class ~t.Cigt! pa1d at
now that it doesn't help at aU fatally potson yourself So Pomeroy OtUo
oppoSition since he ftrst trted Fahml will present an Arab
Natiorn:l.l
I am aruuo1111 that young always be sure what kmd of
to muster support for It back proposal for peace to Carter
l.itUve Ward
people realize this so they will whole gram you are buying
m May
ln..: Buttmelb ··-;,~-·,
Tlunl Ave
not pop large amounts of
The gra!!ls you mentton 757
Today's energy meeting
In 1960, Cuban Premier
vttanun A on their own Such belong to one of the four baste 10017
wtth several key senators Fidel Castro and his staff
Su~npt10n r11les Delivered by
a practtce ts not only useless food groups cereals and t:otrner where .&lt;~va !able 75 cenl!l per
~as the outgrowth of the
were oUBI.ed from a New York
wt!i!k By Mot II' Route ~ hert carrU!t
but it can be hannful
bread You sttll need a proper scrvace
sesston
Carter
had
laat
week
City
hotel beca'llle they had
not &lt;:~v~ulable Orn! month
I am sending you the amount of the fruit and $.1 ~ By mad m Ohio tmd W Ya
wtth 13 GOP members been discovered plucklnl
One Year $22 00 SIX months
Health Letter nwnber 8-2, vegetable group, the milk and 'II
lllCluding M1110nty Leader chickens for cooking In their
Ml Thre~ naunths $7 00
Acne Can Be Trt&gt;.ated, so 11 datry products group and the El'iew~re f2ti 00 year S1~ monUlli
Howard Baker, on a wtde rooms The Conununlat
will be avaUable for your meat group for a good $13 SO Thret mouth!o! 57 So
range of subjects
delet~atlm wu in New York
&amp;lb!Krtpllon J1t {.t lnclu&lt;ks Su lll&lt;Jy
grandsons others who want balanced diet
Arcording to White House to attend &amp; United Natinlis
Tuues-Se llmcl
lhts mformation can send 50
a•d•"' tile latest meeting was meeting
COLUMBUS (UPI) - It
was the wrong weekend for
Vtce PreSident Walter F
Mondale to vtstt Ohto,
espectally Columbus
Mondale, from Minnel!Ota,
re&lt;.-eived a lot or good-natured
needhng at an Ohto
Democratic party fundr81S!Dg dmner Saturday night
for Ohto State s lopstded 3&amp;-7
football vtctory over the
Urnverstty of Mtnnesota
earlier m the day
"1 asked (Mmnesota
football coach) Cal Stoll if I
should go to the game, and he
told me he nught not go
himself, joked Mondale
The VIce prestdent was a
perfect guest He told hiS
audtence of about 1,000 at the
$125-a-plate dinner that they
were responstble for electing
him and Prestdent Carter
"and you ought to be proud of

Black lung benefits come down

K ent u ck y governor shocked

hy supper club probe facts

HEALTH

Vitamin can
cause harm

President begins
critical talks

.

"

Oswald
wanted to
kill Nixon
NEW YORK (UP!) - Lee
Harvey Oswald s RusStan
born wtdow, Marma, says she
locked htm tn a bathroom and
persuaded htm to give up
plans to kill Richard NIXon
seven months before he
assassmated President John
F Kennedy
The
quotalton
was
contamed in a copyrighted,
pre-publtcatton excerpt
camed by the Ladles Home
Journal from a book entitled
' Martna and Lee,' wrttten
by
Patncta
Johnson
McMtllan Ms McMtl1an
based her book on mtervtews
wtth Marma Oswald Porter,
Oswald's wtdow
Manna satd Oswald
dect~ed to make an attempt
oo NtXoo'sllfe after reading a
news story on hiS demands
that the Russtans be forced
out of Olha
ThroWIDg down the April
21, 1963, edttion of the Dallas
Mormng News, Oswald
tucked hiS gun m his belt and
wid his wtfe Manna he was
gomg to "have a look" at
NIXon who was commg w
town "
The fonner Mrs Oswald
satd she dtd what she had
done before to ward off
beatmgs by her husband she tricked him mto gomg w
the bathroom and then
braced herself at the door
Crymg, Manna pleaded
through the door ' How can
you he to me after you gave
me your word• You promised
me you'd never shoot anyone
else and here you are startmg
m aU over agam

expressed an opmton on
Lance's
:ZO.hours
of
testmnony
But two who have are Sen
Thomas Eagleton O.Mo •
and Sen Wtlliam Rlth, R
Del , on oppoSite stdes of the
ISSue Both satd Sunday on
CSS.TV's Face the Naltoo
they thought Ulnce would
keep hiS JOb
Eagletoo satd he most
certainly" assumes that
Lance wilt remam m his job
and hopes the conuruttee
hearmgs wtll end soon
because they have become 'a
three-rmg CirCUS '
Roth also satd the current
mtent of the Prestdenl" appears to be to retain Lance

Bot he satd Itt still hu
sertous questions about the
former Georgta banker's
ethtcs
At the prestdenlial retreat
at Camp David Sunday,
Carter declined comment on
the issue and on the
msistence of Ribicolf and
Percy that Lance should go
Lance has given 11o
indication he will resign
He and his wife, LaBelle,
attended the National
Church
in
Methodtst
Washtngton Sunday and
afterward he told reporters
the hearmgs "went well "
Then be said, ' I've done
about all the talkmg I'm
gomg to do for awhile "

Fireplaces can
be money saver
COLUMBUS - Ohtoans
With woodbummg ftreplaces
can save money on heating
btlls agatn this year by
purchastng firewood at
bargam prtces during the
Ohto Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR) 'cut·
your-own" ftrewood sales
'To meet the mcreastng
demand for ftrewood, we
have expanded our ftrewood
sales program this year to
mclude etght state forests, in
adclltton to extendtng the
hours of operatton and
makmg ttrnber available on a
year round basts " satd
Ernest Gebhart, Chief of
ODNR's Division of Forestry
Ftrewood may be pur
chased from 9 a m to 4 p m
Monday through Fnday at
the followtng state forests
- Shawnee State Forest,
located west of Portsmouth
on State Route 52, phone
(614) 858-4201
- Setoto Trail State Forest,
located south of Chtlltcothe on
State Route 23 phone (614)
663-2523

- Tar Hollow State Forest,
located east of Chilllcothe
near Tucson, phone (614) 887·
3879
- Ptke State Forest,
located west of Waverly off
State Route 124, phone (614)
493-2441
- Zaleskt State Forest
located west of Athens near
Zaleski on State Route 278,
phone (614) 5!16-5781
Ftrewood may also be
purchased at Blue Rock State

Forest located south of
Zanesville near Duncan Falls
from 8 a m to 5 p m Monday
through Frtday
Pre-cut
firewood
ts
available on a limited baSIS at
Maumee and Hocking state
forests for $22 a nck and $66 a
cord Interested buyers
should call the state forest
office in advance to ensure
there Is wood available
Maumee State Forest Is west
of Toledo near Whitehouse,
phOne (419) 822-3052 Hocking
State Forest ts south of
Lancaster on State Route 374,
phone (614) 385-4462
Dead, dymg and defonned
timber IS cut and hauled to
the location of the sale
Buyers must bnng their own
cham saw and a sharp axe to
cut the ttrnber tnto ftrewood
lengths
Stgns wtll be posted to help
direct customers to all the
sales areas '
Cost of the ftrewood which
must be cut ts $5 a nck and
$15 a cord with a limit of one
cord per customer A cord
measures four feet high,
e1ght feet wtde and four feet
deep A rtck IS about onethird as much wood as a cord
More tnformaUon con·
cernmg the f~rewood sales
and maps of each of the eight
state forest Jocaltons ts
avatla ble wtlhout charge
from the Dtvtsion of
Forestry, Ohio Department
of Natural Resources,
Fountam Square, Columbua
43224 or phone (614) 466-7842

Ohio looks good in autumn
from the back of a horse
COLUMBUS - One of the
best ways to enjoy the
changmg fall colors m Ohio s
abundant and dtverse
wilderness areas ts on horseback
'Horseback ndmg ts a
great way to enJOY the out
doors whether you are six or
60 years old," satd Ohio
Department of Nat ural
Resources (ODNR) Director
Robert W Teater • The
fragrances, c,olors and
sounds of the out-of-doors
come alive m the faD "
Over 340 miles of brtdle
trails crisscross Ohio's state
parks and forests
The scenic trails gwde you
along some of Ohio s ftrst dirt
roads traveled by the set
tiers, past old graveyards
and homesteads and on old
stagecoach roads You can
nde through heavily wooded
areas, deep ravmes and f1elds
or along scemc ndges and
abandoned !ann ponds
ODNR's DiVISlons of Parks
and Recreation and Forestry
administer these state-owned
Ianda
Ten Ohio state parks and 14
state forests have bridle
trails where you can bnng
your horse and enjoy
a ride tn a natur·
al setting Horses can
be rented from con·
ce8Blonaires located near a
few of the areas, mcludlng
Hueston Woods, Salt Fork
and Mohtcan
In Central Park there are
bridle trails at Alum Creek
State Park Ill Southern Ohio,
trails are located at Pike,
Scioto Trail, Shawnee and
Tar Hollow state forests
Southeastern Ohio offers
riding trails at Burr Oak
State Park in addition to
Zaleakl, Blue Rock, Hocking
and Shade River ltlte foreats
and the PIJ'Y Reclamation

western Ohto equestrtans and
Mohtcan State Park and
Forest and Beaver Creek and
West Branch state parks
offer trails m the northeast
In Eastern Ohio, there are
trails at Salt Fork and Bark
camp state parks, Hamson
Reclamalton Area and Fern
wood State Forest
"The state park and forest
bndle trails are destgned to
accommodate beginners as
well as expertenced rtders,''
said Ralph Vanzant, Chief of
ODNR's Dlviston of Parks
and Recreation
For instance, the trails at
Tar Hollow and Alwn Creek
state parks offer expertenced
nders the challenge of steep
slopes and rugged tralla,
whtle the scemc bndle paths
at Caesar Creek, East Fork
and Mohican state parks and
Shawnee State Forest offer
more gradual slopes and can
be enjoyed by aU horsemen
' Rtders should make sure
their horses are in sound
physical conditton before
rtding the more dlfftcult
trails and before takmg aU
day rtdes,'' Vanzant added
Rtders who want to camp
out and bnng thetr horses
along can do so at the
SPeCially destgned horsemen
camps located m Beaver
Creek State Park In
Columbtana County and
Hueston Woods State Park tn
Butler and Preble counties
In addition, there are horsemen camps at Hocking State
Forest ln Hocking County,
Shawnee State Forest In
Scioto County, Tar Hollow
State Forest in Ro111 County
and Zaleski State Forest in
Vinton County
The horsemen campe can
accommodate between mand
60 people per site and provide
water trougbs for the ho.-and fire rlnp for the campers Shawnee and Tar
Area
Hollow
ltlte foreata provide
Caesar Creek, Eut Fori!
lltaU.
for
the horaee while Ueand Hueston Woodl lltate
up
areu
are located at the
pa t'ka 8CI;111Jllll0011te ISoullt-

,

Today's

remammg camps
The rema1n1ng parks are
open for unltmtted day-use
rt&lt;ling
When rtdmg on state-owned
lands, rtders must remam on
the destgnated brtdle patlts
Horses Should not be tied to
trees along the trails, and
riders are prohibited from
startmg ftres or littering on
the paths
ODNR will hold three
spectal weekend events this
fall for horseback ndmg
buffs
The Dtvtslon of Parks and
Recreation will hold tis annual Autumn Wanderings
Weekend events October 22
and 23 at Alum Creek and
Caesar Creek state parks
Rtders partietpate in an all·
day trail nde on Saturday
with square dancmg m the
everung Parttctpants camp
at the parks' horsemen
camps Saturday evening
There wUI also be a trail ride
on Sunday
More infonnation about the
Autumn Wanderings
Weekend or horseback riding
trails in Ohto may be oiltamed from the Dtvision of
Parks and Rec:reatioo, Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, Fountain Square,
Columbus 43224
The third amual Honemen
Campout will be held at
Shawnee State Forest October 1 and 2
Conducted by the Dlvliion
of Forestry, the two·day
event mcludea a 20-mile trail
nde on Saturday, a hayride
Saturday evening and concludes with a lktlle ride
Sunday morning
Par·
Uclpant.a camp at the fontlt'a
horaemen camp Riden mllllt
bring their OWII horaee
For more information
about the Horaem.. Ca"'pp''t
Weekend at Sba- state
Forest, contact Foreat
Manager Stan Rk:bardl, Box
I, Friendlblp 411130

t

Sport Parade
II)' llm.:I.'(J( JUCHMAN
UPI Sporll Edl1or

I
I

Dodgers assured of
at least a tie for title

Ohio college
grid schedule
Saturdays

Ma1or League Stilndtn;s

Oh10 College
By Untted Press lnternat1onill
Football Schedule
National Leiigue
Untted Press 1ntt!rnat1onal
East
W L
Pet Glil Ol&lt;lahoma ol Oh1o Sf
i3 56 .,..
Phtla
Ball Sf at Ke~~t Sf
PtltSbgh
86 6~ 570 B)
Iowa Sf at Bowling Green
Chicago
78 72 S20
Sl LouiS
78 72 520 ;~ 1 ~ Central M ichigan a1 Oh•o
69 80 463 24 l Unl~
Monfreal
M 1am1 at Indiana
New York
60 91 391 :u
Toledo at Marshall
West
W L Pet GB Heidelberg •t Ashland (nl
LOS Ang
91 59 607
Akron at Northern M ichigan

to WID his 18th game Lou
them the pennant here "
By FRED DOWN
Brock went ~for.:i and Garry
Jeff
Burroughs,
Wtlhe
UPI Sports Writer
Templeton
had four htls and
SPECIAL
NOTCE
Bnan
Montanez
and
The Los Angeles Dodgers
NEW YORK (UP!) - For my money, Earl Weaver is the
four
RBI
m
the Cardinals' 18There
will
be
a
general
Asselstine
drove
m
two
runs
have only one regret they
best manager In baseball today, wtn, lose or forfett
\
meeting
of
the
Meigs
htt
attack
The Phtlltes
each
for
the
Braves,
who
didn't clinch the National
Name me anyone better
magtc
number
for clinching
Countlans
for
Wildlife
League s Western Divlston dealt reliever Mtke Garman
Wben tt comes nght down to getting the absolute most oot of
the
NL
Eastern
tttle ts five Cine.•
Conservation
tonight
at
tlie
80 71 530 II '
J elf
Eastern Ill vs Central Sf (at
a ballplayer, which, after all is what managtng IS all about,
title at home when they had hts fourth loss
Houston
75 74 5D3 15 '
fairgrounds
to
update
the
Pirates
7,
Expos
5
Dayton )
Burroughs htt hts 40th homer
Earl Weaver stands by himself at the top and leaves
the chance
San Fran
69 82 .4S7 22 '
Western \II et Youngstown
Phil Garner trtpled home San Otego
fight on the antl·trappblg
65 86 430 26 '
The good news was up there for the Braves whtle Garvey,
everybody else behind
State
93 380 )A
Issue Slate Representative on the scoreboard - the Dusty Baker and Ron Cey Frank Taveras wtth the lte AtlantaSaturday57s Re~utts
Forget that since he took over the Baltimore Ortoles 8'h
NE LouiSiana at CinclnnOJft
Ron James wut be the Cincmnati Reds had lost to homered for the Dodgers breakmg run and scored on a
New York 5 Ctl cago 4 1st
(nl
years ago, they ve won five Eastern DiviSion lttles, three
Ch1cago 4 New York 3 2nd
wt!d
pttch
m
a
three-run
guest
speaker
to
give
his
Dayton
at VIllanova
Buzz
Capra
won
his
fifth
the
San
Franctsco
Gtants,
3-2,
Amencan League pennants and one world champtonship
Ph1ladelph1a 8 St Louis 4
M vsklngvm at Baldwin
mnth,
whtch
enabled
the
stand
on
the
upcomiDB
game
for
the
Braves
Sunday
and
aU
the
Dodgers
I say forget tl because of the tremendous preoccupation wtth
C nc l 8 San Fran 6 10 Inns
Wallace (nl
Ptttsburgh 6 Montreal 3
Willie McCovey, gtven a Pirates to beat the Expos
unmediacy tn our soctety and the prevailing tendency to gloss November ballot Issue
needed to mathematically
Cap1fal at Den1&lt;;an
Houston
11
San
Diego
0
Meeting time ts 7 30 and
at
Georgetown
I Ky )
clinch the title was a vtctory day m his honor at San Kent Tekulve ratsed hts
over a man's past record and ask what has he done lately? By
Los Angeles 1 Atlanta 3
record
to
lll-1
whtle
Steve
Marietta
(n)
all
local
sportsmen
and
Franctsco,
htt
a
tw&lt;&gt;-out
Sundays
R
esults
lately, I mean the present season, and if you take a took at the
over the Atlanta Braves The
Chicago 6 New York 3 l~ t
Kalamazoo (M ICh I at Mt
Amencan League East standings you ll see what Earl Weaver Interested parties are
champagne was watting but Stngle tn the nmth w dnve tn Rogers fell to 16-14 Gary
New Yor k 6 Chtcago 0 2nd
Umon
Carter
htt
two
homers
for
the
Invited
the
wmnmg
run
for
the
Gtants
Pittsburg h 7 Mont real 5
the Dodgers were wanting
has done
Oh1o Wes leyan at Ohio
St Louis 12 Ph Ia 5
Northern ( n)
and they bowed to the and all but end the Reds Expos
He has taken a ball club, whtch was given virtually no
Atlanta 9 Los Angeles 8
Otterbetrl at Adnan
pennant hopes Bob Knepper Cubs 6-il, Mets U
CODSlderation before the season started, one which, for one
Braves, 9-8
San Fran 3 Cmcmnat 2
W&lt;ffenberg at Bvtler
Chicago's R1ck Reuschel
Mondays G.ames
And so the Dodgers, who went the distance for his lOth
reason or another, was forced to gtve up such established stars
Kenyon at Wooster
(No games scheduled )
allowed
four
htts
m
stx
as Reggte Jackson, Bobby Grtch, Mike Torrez, Don Baylor,
are assured of a tte, almost victory against etght losses
Tuesdays Games
Htram at Oberlin
mnmgs m the opener to boost
St Louis at Montreal mght
Blvffton at Fmdlay (n)
ceriamly will clinch the title fOI' the Gtants
Wayne Garland and Ken Holtzman, and proJected tl squarely
P ttsbgh at New York n ght
his
record
to
20-8
and
become
Def
ance at Earlham (lnd)
In
other
NL
games,
St
durmg
a
ftv~ame
road
trtp
mto the thtck of the fight! or the dtmton title
ChiCago at Ph Ia n ght
Manchester
( lnd I
at
the
maJor
leagues'
second
20U&gt;uiS
defeated
Philadetphw,
startmg
Tuesday
mght
and
Los
Ang
at
San
Fran
n
ght
ThiS was a title everybody automattcally deeded over wthe
W1
l
m
tngton
Atlilnta at Houston n ght
Pttlsburgh
beat game wmner Reuschel also
end the Reds' tw&lt;&gt;-year retgn 12·5,
Yankess after they spent $5 millton for Jackson and Don
Crrneg1e Mellon ( Pa l at
Cine at San D1ego ntght
drove
m
three
runs
wtth
a
Montreal,
7-:i,
and
New
York
as world champtons
Case Western
Gullett and then ptcked up Bucky Dent Last year, the Yanks
Amertcan League
w &amp; J ( Pa 1 at John Carroll
• lt s too bad we couldn't scored a 6-il Wtn after losmg double and a trtple Steve
won by lO'h games Wtth the kind of talent added, they ftgured
East
n - denotes n1ght game
Henderson's
tworun
tnple
Pet
GB
W
L
6-3,
to
Chicago
WID tt here and share tt wtth
to WID by maybe 20 this time, and if by some enttrely
93
57
620
York
New
was the btg blow for the Mets
the fans," said Dodger Cardinals 12, Pblllles 5
unforeseen circumstance they dtdn't, why, then certainly the
89 60 597 3 1&gt;
Balftmre
m
the
second
game
as
Cratg
88
61 591
'
Ketth
Hernandez's
grand
Boston
Manager
Tom
Lasorda
By
BILL
MADDEN
Red Sox would
69 81 460 24
DetrOit
' These are the greatest fans slam homer capped a ntne· Swan and Bob Myrtck Cteve
TheOnoles? Forget them Nobody gave them a chance
UP! Sports Writer
26
61 83
lnd
63 89 Al4 31
While Dave Kingman was m the world and tl would have run second mnmg, whtch combmed m a four-tntter
Mlw
Prevention IS
Well tt ha&amp;l 't turned out that way at all Here tl ts almost
51
91 345 41
Toronto
paved
the
way
for
Bob
Forsch
been
a
thrill
to
have
brought
hittmg
a
two
run
homer
to
October, and the Yankees sttll haven't been able to shake the
the best poltcy
West
second-place Or10les, who lost to the Red Sox Sunday, 104, but help the AL East-leading
W l
Pet GB
Kan c ty
93 55 628
Yankees defeat the Detrott
still could do tl, bemg 3'h games back With 13 more to play
Texas
83 66 557 10 h
"Everybody gave the pennant to the Yankees before the Tigers, fl.5, Sunday young
Ch cago
83 67 553 11
M nn
SO 71 530 14 ; ,
season started.' says Weaver I dtdn't gtve tt to them My Ted Cox was spothng
Ca lif
71 77 480 22
Young men and women
'Thanks, Brooks Robmson
ballplayers didn't etther "
Oa.c.land
58 89 395 34 1h
often ask why they have to
united
Presslllternatlona1
Dayton
downed
South
Dakota
1
quarter
seattle
sa 93 38.4 36 h pay more for the •r
Now there are some saymg Weaver pOSSibly may have gtven Day ' m Balttrnore by tymg a
Saturdays Resull s
Etghleenth-ranked South State 28 14 as Sylvester
Mtd·Amerlcan Conference
the Yankees the pennant eventually by forfettmg last maJor league record wtth
automob1le Insurance
Cleve 6 Toront o 3 1st
Thursday mght s game at Toronto W1th the Blue Jays leading four htts m his ftrst btg league teams ventured outstde the Carolma unleased a stable of Monroe scored twtce for the
Toronto 6 Cleve 5 2nd
Dnvers tn thefr teens and
New York 9 Detro t 4
the Ortoles, 4-0, and commg to bat m the fifth, Weaver pulled game - three smgles and a conference Saturday and runntng hacks as the Game· Flyers
earlier twen1tes cause far
Cal torn1a 4 Chicago 3
cocks ranked up the1r th1rd
Games mvolvmg Ohto
more than thetr share of
his players off the fteld after th1rd base umpire Marty double that spearheaded the found the going rough
Batt more 11 Boston 2
wm
of
the
young
season
Colorado
pounded
Kent
Conference
teams
saw
tr
aff i c acctden ts Reports
Texas
5
M
nn
4
17
Inns
Boston
Red
Sox
to
a
lo.4
romp
gprmgstead refused to order a tarpaulin removed The tarp,
M I waukee 8 Oakland 1
After
Mlanu
tied
the
score
at
the
Nat1onal
Safety
State
42-0,
Purdue
romped
BaldwmWallace
down
Lehigh
covermg the Blue Jays' ptlchmg mound m thetr bullpen, was over the Ortoles
Ka nsas Ctty 7 Seattle 5
CounCil
21
8
percent
of all
7·7
m
the
second
pertod,
South
over
an
inJury-rtddle
Ohio
28
16,
Valparatso
(Ind
)
We had to have thts
Sundays Results
located 12 feet outside the bullpen and Weaver felt tt
motortsts
are
24.
years
of
Ch cago 6 California 3 1st
game," satd the 2:1-year old Umverstty 44·7, South Carolma broke loose and was blanked Demson 42 0,
constituted a hazard to hts players
Ch
cage
7
Cal
forn
a
3
2nd
age
or
under
yet
tl'lese
There was the obVIous risk m forfetting the game but there Cox, who also scored three Carolina stomped Mtarru of never threatened as ftve Muskmgum beat Martella 27·
Texas 5 Mmnesota 4 1st
youthful operators are
Texas 10 M.nnesota 8 2nd
was one fringe benefit which the canny Baltimore manager dtd runs and drove m another Ohto ~:1-19 and East Carolina different running backs hit 14, Albton (Mlch ) got by
1nvolved as drtvers In 38 6
New York. 6 Detro1t 5
the scormg colwnn
Mount Umon 3-0 Otterbemg
not overlook He felt his players nught get so fired up, so "It s certainly a thrill for me trounced Toledo 22-9
per cent of all aCCidents
Boston 10 Balttmore 4
East Carolma remamed edged Kenyon 14-7, Capttal
BQwllng Green who met
Toronto 7 Cleveland 4
determmed to wm if that game wtth the Blue Jays was taken to be able to contribute so
and 37 3 per cent of all fatal
Oakland 3 M !waukee 1
mtshaps
away from them they might become a team on some kind of qutckly, but if we don l win Eastern Mtchigan m a MAC undefeated by breaking the shutout Wtlmmgton 21·0,
Ka nsas CttY B Seattle 3
game
open
m
the
thtrd
penod
game,
tasted
defeat
also,
16Georgetown
(Ky
)
edged
A great many young
every
game
from
here
on
out,
Today s Probable Pttchers
crusade the rest of the way m
people
are
skilled
CAll
T1mes
EDT)
Toledo
tis
second
and
handed
Hetdelberg
15·14,
Albion
6
tl
will
be
awfully
tough
w
Bastcally, tt's an old ploy but you'd be amazed at how often
Toronto
(Garv n 9 16) at
responsible
dr
vers
stt)tight
wm
Kent
State
lost
tis
starting
(Mtch
)
defeated
Ohto
catch up '
Balttmore (R May 17 12) 7 30
tt works
Olmovsly thovgh quite a
Elsewhere
among
Ohto
col·
quarterback
Mike
Whalen
in
Northern
20
14,
Wooster
pm
Cox scored after a walk m
Last Saturday, Lee MacPhatl, the Amertcan League
few are not
New York (F1gueroa 15 9) at
prestdent, offtctally backed up umptre Marty Sprmgstead With the third, smgled and scored the hrst pertod wtth a leges Ohio State surpnsed stopped DePauw (Ind ) 3Hl Boston (Cleveland 9 8) 7 30
There s no subst1tute for
tn the fifth and doubled to concussion The Flashes were Mmnesota 38-7 wtth some and Centre (Ky ) beat
pm
regard to the Ortoles forfett
development competence
Cleveland (6 bby 12 12 ) at
On Sunday whtch was Brooks Robmson Day m Baltimore, trtgger a four run rally m the never able to generate any passmg, mcluding two touch· Oberlin 28-6
and the r ight att1tudes
Detro t (Wtlco:x 6 1) 8 p m
downs
through
the
atr
In other games Bluffton
1ncludmg
a
posit ve
Oakland
(Blue
l4 17)
at
MacPhail w~ on hand to make a presentation to the Ortoles' mnth Reliever Bob Stanley offense as the 11th ranked
Ctncmnatt
and
Loutsvtlle
Ch
cago
(Kravec
8
8)
8
30
p
m
edged
Manchester
(Ind
)
!J.'7,
Buffaloes
passed
for
a
school
approach
to
defens
ve
held
the
Ortoles
scoreless
for
popular fanner third baseman Before MacPhail went out to
Texas (Alexander 15 10} at
battled
to
a
17-17
he
as
Steve
Fmdlay
and
Defiance
ba
Wed
drtvmg
recore
27~
yarda
five
mnmgs,
while
the
Red
make the presensation, Weaver knew he would he booed
Cal tforn a (Ryzln 19 14) 10 30
Our agency prov1des
Purdue took the openmg Schultz kicked a 4~yard fteld to a J.3 tie, Case Western shut
pm
Sox gradually rallied hack
unmercifuly for the deciSlon he made Saturday
Tuesday s Games
f1nanclal protectton and
goal
wtUt
two
seconds
left
for
out
Allegheny
(Pa)
3-0
and
kickoff
down
the
fteld
for
a
'I JUst want you to know we'd understand if you don't want to from a 4-2 deftctt and Bill
Texas at Catttornta ntght
serv1ce m case of acc1dents
Mtnn at Kan City ntght
Campbell ftntshed up to score and kept piling up the Cmcmnatt, Akron beat Hiram blanked John Carroll
go out there,' Weaversatd toMacPhatl and he meant tt
tnvolvmg young dnvers
Oakland at Ct11cago n ght
MacPhail dtd go out The boomg he took was even more then preserve the wm wtth htS 27th lead, aUowmg the Bobcats a Kentucky 24-3, Ashland edged 17~
but
many
of
these
Seattle
at
Milw
nfght
touchdown late m the first Central State 24·23 and
save
Cleve at Detroit n ght
you d expect
acc1dents
can
be
Toronto at Balt rught
The front-runmng New
Weaver walked over to the nucrophone and trted to qutel the
prevented That s why we
New York at Boston ntght
say prevent1on IS the
Yorker completed thetr
crowd
best
policy
sweep
of
a
three-game
sertes
'Let hun talk, 'he urged theangryOrtolefans
,
Earl Weaver doesn 't nuss a trtck He plays on your wttli Detrott by stakmg
strengths, your weaknesses, your emotions He manages the wmner Ron Gwdry, 15-0, to a
992 2143
6-il lead before choking off a
same way and there IS no one any better at what he does
as
my
frtends
from
the
west
1D2 W Mam
Pomeroy
Then a launch wtth the
desperate five-run rally by
We want booze' ' went up
NEWPORT, R I (UPI) of Australta '
the Tigers tn the mnth
Thousands crowded the crew of the Australta on
Cannons sounded, horns
Once agam tt was Reggte blared, women screamed, shorelme Some perched on board pulled alongstde and
Jackson, who btl hts fifth men cheered and captams Ute rooftops or shtpyards, the dunktng ceremony
homer m ftve games, and were tossed overboard
restaurants and martnas resumed
Alan Bond, head of the
Kingman who htt hiS second
Coltrageous Sunday made Anywhere, for a vantage
Auslraltan
syndtcate, was
m two days, supplymg the tt 4-0 m the 23rd successful pomt to see the man, who
tossed
overboard
and was
Yankee ftrepower
defense of the Amenca's Qlp, earlier had been referred to
qutckly
followed
by
the
rest of
Elsewhere m the AL, the Holy Grail of yachting as the "Mouth of the South"
Kansas Ctty downed Seattle,
The "auld mug" was safe but now was accepted as a his crew
The Coast Guard tned
8-3
Chtcago
swept
Californta,
any
and
they
dtd
(three
lost
m tis hallowed mche at the great skipper, Ted Turner
BY JOE CARN1CEW
valiantly
to keep some sem
6-3
and
7-3,
Texas
outlasted
Shortly
after
the
New York Yacht Club, at
UP! Executive Sports Editor fumbles) '
blance
of
order
m the harbor,
Mmnesotlt,
5-4
and
10-8,
'Thetr defense handled
least for another three years Courageous was berthed at
There has been qutte a btl
but
tt
was
a
fruttlesS
effort
Toronto
put
away
Cleveland,
satd
Bengals'
Wtth skipper Ted Turner at its pier at Banruster's Wharf,
of talk about the Los Angeles us,'
wtth
the
wall
to
wall
boats
Rams and the Cincinnatt quarterback Ken Anderson, 7-4 and Oakland topped the helm, Courageous and Turner had consumed the
At a news conference m the
tifeezed across the finish line captam •s share of the
Bengals facmg each other in of the Browns 'We dtdn't Milwaukee J.1
Newport
Armory after the
Royals
8,
Mar
biers
3
·
2rrunutes 25 seconds ahead of champagne that flowed
the Super Bowl next January, play very well today and that
Bond
srud lt was a good
race,
Rookie Clint Hurdle drtlled the challenger Austraha, freely, he was bearhugged by
but both clubs were upset m about swns tt up •
a 42f&gt;.foot homer m his second ending a lopstded test of one of his crew and then the senes and that the
thetr season openers Sunday Giants 20, Redskins 17
maJor
teague at-bat and John boats, saila and me"
Australians would be hack m
Joe
Danelo's
30.yard
fteld
two went over the Stde
At Atlanta, tt was supposed
Mayberry
added
a
three-run
1980
In mmutes the waters
Wben the two sleek lZ.
to be a bnght start for an ex- goal wtth three seconds left
•r think that all those who
Shot
to
stake
Denrus
Leonard
hfted
the
Gtants
over
around
the Courageous was
meter
yachts
entered
the
Alabama quarterback but no
w
his
18th
victory
watched
the races can
crowded harbor after the hUed wtth crewmen and
one
expected
that Washtngton and handed
how hard we
apprectate
Wbite
Sox
~7,
Angels
8-3
fourth and ftnal race, bystanders, mostly women,
quarterback to be Scott Redskins Coach George Allen
trted
We
didn't
qutte have
Oscar
Gamble
htl
hts
31st
Hunter tnstead of Joe his ftrst-ever opentng day homer and Jun Spencer hts pandemontum retgned m as one after another was enough boat speed and all the
tossed mto the water
Namath Hunter, playmg loss Danelo's ktck clmnaxed 18th to gtve Franctsco statd old Newport
honor goes to the wmner, Ted
a
lO.pomt
rally
In
the
closmg
The cry "We want booze'
because Steve Bartkowski
Barrios hts 14th WID m the
Turner
mmutes
that
won
the
game
has a knee tnJury, completed
opener Wayne Nordhagen
Noel Robtns, the affable
10-of·l7 passes and went over Raiders 241 Chargers 0
capped
a
four-run
ChlSOX
Australian
skipper, thought
Oakland, showtng tt has
for the game-chnchmg
th1rd
mnmg
m
the
rughtcap
Turner
was
"formidable and
touchdown to lead the lost little since tts Super Bowl wtth a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer
if
Ted
wasn't
available, I
Cey (30) U:arvev t31} Baker
Major League Results
Falcons to a 17.0 upset of the VIctory m January, combmed Rangers 5-10, Twins 4-8·
(28)
Smolh
(30)
think
we
nught
have won "
By Un1ted Press International
two TO passes from Ken
Rams
Sometimes 11 does, though Each year a mtlhon
N1t1onal League
The
second-place
Rangers
Turner,
elated
by
hts fourth
Clncl
000 000 no- 2 5 1
Hunter d~rected a 76-yard Stabler wtth a strong kept one percentage point C1st game)
ch1ldren feel the pam of chtld abuse And
002 300 001- 6 10 1 SanFrn
000 000 021-3 11 0 stratght vtctory over the
drtve early tn the thtrd defensive effort m shutting ahead or Chtcago m the AL Ch1cgo
Ny
000 000 Joo- 3 9 2
Moskau Murray (8) Borbon Australia, satd
we
can do somethmg about tt Below are a few
R: Reuschel P Reuschel (7) (9) and Werner Knepper and
quarter, capped by hiS own 1 out San Otego Cowboys 16, West as Toby Harrah htt hiS
suggestions Commtl yourself to one and
• I JUst wish that my good
Hernandez (7) Sutter (9) and Hlll
W-Knepper
10 8 Lyard plunge to gtve the Vikings 10
Mltterwald
Todd
Siebert
(5)
Borbon
10
5
HR-Cincinnatl
25th
homer
in
the
opener
and
frtends
from
Australta
played
help stop the hurt
Quarterback Roger
Falcons thetr second score
Baldwm
(7)
Apodaca
(9) Werner (l)
baseball
drove
m
a
patr
of
runs
m
tbe
like
the
Los
Angeles
Myrick (9) and Stearns W-R
Mmerlcan League
The Rams, favored by two Stauhach ran 4 yards for a
Dodgers But I want to say
Reuschel 20 8 L-Todd 3 5
(1st oame)
ru~~ap
score
mtdw
ay
through
I want to stop the hurt.
1
touchdowns, got thetr only
Calif
ooo
010 002- 3 8 1 while I'm here at the nucro· 1
Chlcgo
020 200 20x- 6 11 0
(2nd game)
pomts m the ftrst quarter sudden-death overtime to lift Kw
Nolan Barlow (4) Mtller (7) phone - which won't last
Chtcgo
000 000 ooo- 0 4 2
I'll show my ch1ld some love.
when Namath makmg hts Dallas over Minnesota
and H u m J:1 h r e y
Barrios long - that I've never raced
NY
00100050x-612l
offtctal debut m a Los Staubach's run climaxed a 47·
Krukow Broberg {7) G ustt LaGrow f9&gt; and Oowmng w1
(Sometimes I forget.)
Barrlos 14 5 L-Nolan 0 3 agamst such good sportsmen
(7) M«Jre (7) and Swtsher
Angeles unifonn, threw a 'r1 yard drtVe Hetsman Trophy
Swan Myrick (7) and Hodges HRs-Chicago Gamble (31)
All I know about ch1ld abuse
yard TO pass to Harold wmner Tony Dorsett carrted
Spencer (18) Cal forn•a Boncls
W-Swan, 9 9 L- Krukow 8 13
four
times
for
11 yards m hts
135i
Jackson
1
is hearsay. Io hke some facts.
( 11 tnntngs)
Gravely Tractors
Meanwhtle, m Cincmnati NFL debut
(2nd
game)
Ptttsburgh
mail in th1s coupon.
002 001 QOO- 3 8 3
102 100 000 03- 7 1~ 0 Cal I
Larry Poole ran 12 yards for Broncos 7, Cardlnahi 0
Rto
Grande
College
placed
t Kubota Tractors
Chicgo
OOA 102 OOx- 7 1 0
OtiS
Armstrong
churned
Montreal
a score and Don Cockroft
10 runners m the first 23
I have a problem. I'm gomg to
Moore Canelra (6) MIter
2011010 100 01- 5 111
(6)
and
Hampton
Frost
• Snapper Mowers
kicked field goals of 41 and 25 around end for 10 yards and durmg Saturday's Bobcat
Rooker Tekulve {8) and Ott
start talkmg about lt.
McEnaney (11) and Hamilton (8) Carroll (9} and
yards to send the Cleveland the game's only score and Invttattonal
at
Ohto • Rogers
Naharodny W- Frost 1 0 LCarter W-Tekulve 10 1 LDenver
s
defense
made
tt
1
Woodburmng
Browns to a 13-3 upset over
Chicago
Rogers 16 1.4 HRs- Pittsburgh Moore 0 1 HRs I'd like to start helping nght
stand up agamst St Louis Universtty m Athens
01 ver ( 17)
Robinson (26) Nordhagen (A) Naharodny {1)
the punchless Bengals
The
cross-country
event
Stoves
now. Here's my donation.
Highly favored Cincmnatt, pressure as the Broncos beat attracted four squads and Montreal Carter 2 (29)
(1st g1mel
the
Cardtnals
star
kicker
001 010 02o- 4 12 2
OliO 020 03Q- 5 12 1 Mlnn
lolling the first home opener
several mdependent runners Phi Ia
Name ___________________________
211 010 oox- s 8 0
St L
091 020 OOX-12 18 0 Texas
in the club's 10.year history, Jim Bakken nussed two held
Rto's
Archte
Murphy
Tnormodsgard
St1eltenback
Kaat
Brusstar
(21
Seoane
I
could manage only a :!f&gt;.yard goal attempts and had two plated f1rst m the men's open (3) Warthen (61 McGraw (8) W Holly (6i and wvnegar
more
blocked
I
Boone Forsch Schultz t6) Perry Moret (61 Devine (9)
Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - -field goal by Chrts Bahr
diVISion of the 10,000 meters and
Eastwlck (9) and Simmons W and Sundberg W-Perry 13 12
I
The Falcons did not have a Colts zt, Seahawks It
(6 2 miles) race wtth a time of -For~ch , 18 6 ~ . . . . . Kaat 6 10 L-ThormOdsgard 11 13 HRPomeroy,O
Condor St
Ctty
_
_
__
_
_
State.
____
Ztp
Bert
Jones'
21
yard
TO
Texas
Harrah
(251
I
HRs-St
Louis
Hernandez
fumble or an interception and
31 minutes and 55 seconda (lSi Philadelphia Boone (lli
pass
to
Roger
Carr
w1th
less
I
were able to cash tn on Rams' than six mmutes left to play
Plactng third was Rio's
Atlanta
000 021 •20- 9 15 1
mistakes
Dave
Parlin
in
32
•2
Ron
pre;teld
11
101120111- 8152
"The key was the boosted Baltmnore out of Dunfee, also of Rio, was LA
............ CN., . . _
Mahler
Hannah
(51
Capra
Natiol\ll Com11- to. P r - o ! Chid Abuoo
I
turnovers," said Falcons' Seaatle's reach The TO pass fourth in 33 30
(51 campbell (7) and Murphy,
OPTOMETRIST
Hooton
Garman
(7) Rautzhan
Coach Leeman Bennett, who came after Seattle cut the
Rto's Mark Fox wa• (7i Sosa 111 Hough (81
OFFICE HOURS 9 30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
1
took (1lffll' at AUanta this year IICore to 22-14 when safety seventh 1rt 34 27 Ill ninth Castillo
(9) and Yeager Grote
AT NOON ON THURS l-- EAST COURT
A Public Ssrv ce of Th1s Newspaper
after serving as a Ranta' Autry Beamon returned a place was Rio's Ben Junk In W- Capra s 11 L-German A
&amp; The Adverbsmg Counc I ~~
ST.
POMEROY.
blocked
Colt
punt
17
yards
for
A HR:s- Atlanta Asselstine (3)
assistant "We didn't make
34 41
Burrouohs
(40)
Los
Angeles
a TO

Kingman
homer is

key blow

,.

'"

FOR YOUNG

Mid-Am clubs treated badly

DRIVERS

Courageous retains America's Cup

Atlanta shocks
Rams, 17 to 6

DALE C. WARNER

II

Sunday line scores

runners
take part in
OU session

r-----------------------,
I 0
I
I 0

l•

l'll

0
D

Gravely Tractor

Sales

N. W. COMPTOrt 0.0.

d Dd abuse.

L-----------------------J
lr.lfl

r-

•

\

�4-TbeDlilySentinel, Mi4dleport·Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Sepll9,19'n

College score

Browns to Bengals: Time for funning is over
CINCINNATI (UP I) Take a memo.
From : The Cleveland
Browns.
Cincinnati
To : · The
~ngals .

· Message : " The regular
season has started."
·The Bengals, who ripped
NFL opponents to shreds in
the preseason, received that
personally-delivered memo
from the Browns Sunday.
Cleveland couldn't care
that Cilley led all teams in
scoring in the preseason,
averaging nearly 30 points a
game.
In the regular season
opener, the Browns held the
heavilyfavored Bengals to a
lonefieldgoalandpulled off a

13-3 upset.

F'orrest
Gregg.
" For
tBengals'
coach
Bill )
Johnson, it probably was a
little bit hard to keep them
from being overconfident."
Bengals offensive tackle
Rufus Mayes' thooghts about
the preseason after the -first
regular season shellacking?
" That just shows you the
preseason doesn 't mean any·
thing at all," he shrugged.
" Everybody yippy-hooed
about us in preseason, but it·
didn 't mean a thing ."
The Ben gals were able to
drive into Cleveland territory
several times Sunday.· But
there were no touchdowns .
Only fizzles.
Where was that offensive
ponch ?
~&lt;That 1 S

Were
the
Bengals
overconfident because of
their successful preseason?·
"I think that would have
been part of it," answered
jubilant Browns' coach

a good question,"

said ve teran guard John
Shinners in the subdued Ben·
gals' dressing room. "You hit
it right on the head . Maybe it
was out fishing on the Ol)io
River today."

MAKES IT BOUNCE RIGHT
CINCINNATI (UPI) -Maybe It belongs ln Ripley's, but
believe It or oot, Greg Coleman thinks be ean control the way
a )lWlted football will bounce when It bits the ground.
Although It may strain the Imagination, Coleman, the
Cleveland Browns )lWlter claimed that's jnst what be did on a
crucial fourtiMJuarter play ln the Browns' J3.3 upset of the
Clnclnuatl Bengals Suoday.
Coleman, a secood-year player out of Florida A &amp; M,
blasted a 52-yard punt which looked to be going Into the eud
zone for a touchback. But It bounced baclrward, just sbort of
the goal line aud was dowued ou the six. The pout put tbe
Beugals ln a deep bole when they could least afford it,
tralllug by 10 points late In the game.
''The key is the position of the ball when yon l&lt;lclt It," be
said. "I can ruake It go rtgbt or left or bounce flat, too."
Fordham 44 Keane 3

Frank&amp;Marsh 21 Gettysbg 0

Grambling 35 Morgan St. 19
Harvard 21 Columbia 7
Hobart 28 Rochstr Tech 0

lnd tana Pa . 23 Wilkes 19

Ithaca 17 St . Lawrnce 14
K ings Pt . 31 NY Tech 13

Figured veteran center Bob C&lt;OltroUed the game. It was 60
Johnson , u Anytime any minutes of struggle. My team
professional football team worked hard and never quit."
Br o wns ~
defensive
scores only three points, it
coordinator
Dick
certainly doesn't deserve to
Modzelewski
explained
that
win. So, you've got to put it all
1
his unit shut off the 1Jengals'
on ow- offense. '
The Browns, of course, feared passing attack with
knew they pulled off the pressure, not blitzes.
11
lt's not how many sacks
shocker with defense.
"Our defense was not to be you get, it's the pressure you
denied," said Gregg. " They put on the quarterback ," said

Mo. " We ooly blitzed three
times. This was one of the
best defensive efforts in the
time I've been with the

Browns.11
Feeling that pressure was
Ken Anderson, the usually
high percentage thrower who
hit only 16 of 34 and had one
intercepted.
" Their defense handled
us," decided Anderson. uwe

Defeat stuns .B~ngals
CINCINI:IATl (UPI) What went wrong?
.
Upset 13-3 by the Cleveland
Browns
Sunday,
the
Cincinnati Bengals searched
Ior answers to that queStion.
Head coach Bill Johnson :
"Frankly, I thought we were
ready to play. We had a good
week of work, but sometimes
you just flatten out like that. I
don't know the answer.
" We couldn't dent them
offensively . Not too many
teams run on them, but we
thought we could pass against
them. I still maintain that we
are a good football team. "
Veteran
center
Bob
Johnson: " You can put it on
our offense. We just didn't do
it. We had a couple of drives,
but just didn't begin to put it
in.

" We dropped passes. and
we didn't run the ball at all.
And, Cleveland had a clever
defense ." ,
Defensive back Ken Riley :
"We were nat. Before the
game, everybody seemed
ready, but as the game went
on we just didn 't jell.
Cleveland's got a good club."
Tight end Bob Trumpy:
"They got rolling and there
was nothing we dould do
about it. Their defense was
running all kinds of slants.
They guessed right a couple
of times early and it gave
them confidence."
Wide receiver Isaac Curtis :
" We didn't execute as well as
we have been. ll was just one
of those days . Everybody has
them and it got us IQday. I

just hope we've gotten it all
out of our system for the

year.''
Guard John Sliinners : " I
didn't think they could defeat
us that easily. The place
where we got· beat was the
line of scrimmage. But, this
was ooly the first game of the
season and we've still got a
fine team . Now we're going to
find out how good a team we
really have."
Offensive tackle Rufus
Mayes : "Simply put, we went
head-to-head and they
prevatled . They got the job
done and we didn't."
General manager (and
retired coach ) Paul Brown :
" I don't know what went
wrong. I don't deal with the

X's and O's anymore."

l}idn 't play very well today
and that about sums it up."
The Bengals managed only
a 25-yard field goal by Otris
Bahr, who missed attempts of
38 and 47 yards.
While the Browns' offense
certainly wasn 't that flashy ,
they got all the points they
needed from Larry Poole's
12-yard touchdown run and
Don Cockroft 's 41 and 25-yard
field goals.
Cleveland quarterback
Brian Sipe was impressive in
directing his team's attack completing 15 of 22 passes for
198 yards and coonecting on
several key third down
. aerials.
.
Still, Sipe knew. where the
credit shoold go.
uThe defense won the
game," he quickly pointed
out after the contest.
For Cleveland, it was the
first victory in Cincinnati
since 1972 and for Cincinnati
it was the first home opener
defeat in the club 's tO year
history. ·
·
"They came down here to
do a job on us," Bengals' boss
Bill Johnson said of the
Browns, "and damn it, they
did it."
But Johnson now figures to
see what his team is made of.
"The true test of a good
football team is how you
react in times of adversity/'
he said, " and this sure as hell
is a time of adversity for us ."

Ashland 24 Ctnl St 23
Cap•tal '1 Wilmington 0
Cent M ich 28 Ill St 7
Centre 28 Oberlin 6
Chicago 55 Lor as 11

winning

run

'in

San

Francisco's 3-2 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds.
McCovey received a fiveminute ovation from the
crowd of 27,043 before

NFL Standings

By United Press International
Amencan Conference
Easl

W. L. T. Pet.
1 0 0 1.000

Baltimore
M 1ami
New England

1 0 0 1.000
1 0 0 1.000

Buffalo
NY Jets

0 1 0 .000
0 1 0 .000

Houston
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
Cinc innat i

Central

W. L. T. Pet.
1 0 0 1.000
1 0 0 l.OOO
0 0 0 .000
0 1 0 .000

West
W. L. T. Pc1.
Oakland

1 0 0 1.000
1 0 0 1.000

Denver
Kansas City
0 1 0 .000
Seattje
0 1 0 .000
San Diego
o 1 o 000
National Conference
Easl
W. L. T. Pet.
1 0 0 1.000
Philadelph ia
1 0 0 1.000
Dallas
. 1 0 0 1.000
NY Giants
0 1 0 .000
Washington
St LOL ,.:i
0 1 0 .000
Central
W. L. T. Pet.
Chicago
1 0 0 1.000
1001000
Green Bay
0 1 0 .000
M innesota
0 1 0 .000
Detro it
0 1 0 .000
Tampa Bay

Sunday's game and then a
second outburst when Darrel
Thomas, Bill Madlock and
McCovey ripped singles to
produce the winning marker
and give young Bob Knepper
his loth win against eight
setbacks.
After the game, McCovey,
veteran of 19 seasons, started
for the dressing room, but
had to come back to get more
ovations from the crowd.
"It was the greatest day
I've ever had in baseball,"
McCovey said later. " I can
never recall 81Jytime in my
career I've been called back
to the field by the fans. I was
halfway up the tunnel to the
clubhouse when I heard them
call me."
McCovey had been retired
four times earlier before he
delivered his game-winning
hit and knocked in his 81st run
of the season.
"I was trying too hard," he
said. "I didn't feel nervous,
but I was obviously pressing.
"To have a day given to me
and nice things said about me
and nice gifts and then to cap
it off with a game-winning
hit- what else is there?"
MCCovey hit a .foul ball
over the fence prior to
fanning in the first inning.
"It would have been nice tO
hit a three-run homer and
then drift the rest of the day,"

West

W. L. T. Pel.

Atlanta
1 o. o 1.000
San Franc lsco
0 0 0 .000
New Orleans
0 1 0 .000
Los Angeles
0 1 0 .000
Sunday's Results
Cleve 13 , Cincinnati 3
New Eng 21, Kan City 17
Atlanta 17 , Los Angeles 6
Miami 13, Buffalo 0
Phila 13. Tampa Bay J
NY Giants 20, Wash 17
Chicago 30, Detro it 20
Green Bay 24, New Orlns 20
Baltimore 29, Seattle l4
Dallas 16, Minn 10, of
Houston 20, NY Jets 0
Denver 7, St . LOUIS 0
Oakland 2_. , San Diego 0
Monday's Game
San Fran a't Pittsbgh , night

he said.
He said manager Joe
Altobelli told him that he was
trying to "gang up" on the
ball and he remembered that
in the ninth.
Knepper went the distance
on a five-hitter and lowered
his earned run mark to 2.96.
" I was pulling out of my
pitches too early and I had a
tough time collecting myself
all day," he said. " But I
would have been willing to
giive up a thousand hits in
order to see McCovey win the
game like be did."
Rookie Don Werner broke a
scoreless tie for Cincinnati in
the seventh with his first
major league home run . The
Reds made it U in the eighth
oo walks to Ken Griffey and
George Foster and a single by
Ray Knight.
The Giants scored twice in
the bottom of the eighth.
Gary Thomasson led off with
a double to left and went to
third on a single by Madlock,
who had three hits. McCovey
fouled out but Darrell Evans
singled to right to drive in
Thomasson and, after George
Foster and Dave Concepcion
collided and dropped Terry
Whitfield's pop up, Marc
Hill's sacrifice fly ·to center
tied it up .
Prior to the game,
McCovey was given many

"1\Qnl t 2_. N Oak Sl 17
8 Or~. Tech 0
No Ar r 1S M-on.•ana 2•
~'\ont 1

Nrrt-rn C-Qio 11 s Oak 10

Nev .,_ v 3! Tro-,. 'SI 18

Dayton 18 S D. St . 1A
Oak St 7 Wayne St 6
Oeftance J Findlay J

O&lt;:r .derUI ?8 v\le:.t Inti 2l
Ore coli 4J Pac Ore 13
Pac.I•C 1 ldcthO ~1
S 0 St ,_, Ar lOOI 1.4.
s F' st '' C.al Poly Pom 18
5ta Clara Jl' Sacto St ~
UCLA l1 Kaosas 7
U5C 11 Ort&gt;QOP S1 10

Geotown 15 HeldetbQ 14

Hillsdale 20 9UIIN 7
Hope 20 Wabash 11!1
Ill. 11 M ISSOUri 7
It I Coli 47 St Ambrose 0
Ill Ws tyn 7 Elmh ur st 0

Nash 2-' -;.!In Jo!.e St. 3

Web~r 51 AO p.- f trld St. '22
Wyo 27 Tc..: El Paso l7

Indiana 24 LSU 21

Wash . 51. 23 M ld L Sl 21
Wayn e St . 13 Nort hwood 0

Wheaton 5_. Nortt'l Par k 8
Wts 14 No Illinois 3
.
Southwest
Ab Chris .&lt;~6 W. N.M 13
Angelo 11 E N.M 0
Arkansas 28 Okla . st . 6
Ark . Tech 26 NE Okla 7
Baylor 21 Kentu cky 6
E. Texas .t3 G. Adlphus 10
Florida 48 Rice 3
Harding 10 NW Okla 7
Jcksn St . 27 Prar ie Vw A&amp;M

EJSf
Adnan f' Grove C• 1Y 12
Albf1QI'1f 16- LYCiln"llllP ~
Am Inti }5 Cortlod Sf 23

.Army 11 VM1 f4
Calif Pa 35 Manslld 16
ea r n Mellon JO S'i'tt"!any 7
Case wsn. J Al!eQheny. O
Cel'll Com 12 Sprngfld 10
Cheynev \f Gene"a 6
ClM·O!'I ~~ 8 Del St 3
CMSI Guard '19 RPI 15
Colg"t~ 38 1.. a'.:tyeHe 12
Oar1mll l Pf'mcetn l1
0t•1 17 w h('c.1r St 15

N.M . St . 2..d Wi chi ta St. 12
North Te'XttS 24 SM U 11
NW La 30 Ark . St 7

Oklahoma 62 Utan 24
Oregon 29 TCU 24
SE La . 20 Sam Hou~ 0
SW La , 10 Lamar 6
SW Ok.la lA Cent Ok. 13
Tar ltn 17 Tr inity Te x 13
Texas 68 Vi rg 1n1a 0
Tex Tech .49 New MEr( JJ
Tulsa 37 NE La 35

HAVE "
PROBLEM?
CAU.
CRISISLINE

West

992-5554

Ariz . St. 35 Nrthwstrn 3

DENTURES

DR . RONALD F. RIVIER E
OR A. J STAEHLI

\

.

j

•

-,H-i

...\.~. \ .. , ll

One or two day full denture
servi ce. partial den tures,
relines, repa irs
DA RIVIERE

RIVIER E CENtER
E. Livingst on Ave., Columbus
Weekda ys 8:30 A.M. to 6 30 P M.

SYRACUSE - Mr. -and
Mrs. Robert Knapp of
Syracuse entertained with a
birthday dinner party on
Sept. 11 honoring her son,
Anthony Wilson.
Following the dinner, a
birthday cake was served and
gifts were presented to An·
thony. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Ush and
daughter, Lisa, Mr. and Mrs.
La rry Noble and sons, Jeff
and Chris, Eddie Lish and
son, Frankie, Cheryl Haning,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith,

Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. Marty
Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ross and son and daughter,
Shawn and Amy, all of
Mason, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs.
L. E. Piersall, Point
Pleasant, W. Va .; Mrs.
Gertrude Mitchell, Patty
Roush and daughter, Mandy,
Pomeroy.
Sending gifts were Mrs:
Imogene Knapp, Syracuse,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Knapp,
daughters, Brenda and Trish,
Westerville. ·

CHESTER
Brill
Breckenridge of the Gallia •
Meigs · Jackson Mental
Health Center, Gallipolis, will
speak at tonight's meeting of
the Chester PTA to be held at
7:30 p.m . at the Chester
Elementary School.
,
Breckenridge holds a
bachelor of science degree in

Bernice Bede Osol

AllJrmm

THE DAILY SENTINEL

and

~GJnwllictlmiJ
Sept. 20 , tiT7
You will m il( with tnl luenual per·
sons this commg y~ar and you
should cultivate them . But httle
people in key places w1ll do
much. more for you than the
b1gw1gs

psychology from the Missouri
Western State College, and a
master's degree in clinical
psychology from Central
Missouri State College,
Warrensburg ,
Mo. .He
completed his internship in
the Southeastern Jackson
Mental Health Center at
Kansas City, Mo.' and has had
two years experien·ce at the
Penny Royal Mental Health
Center, Greensville, Ky. Most
of his work has been in
working with children who
have learning disabilities.
Breckenridge and his wife,
Rita, reside in Gallipolis.
An invitation to the public
has ·been extended by the
PTA which ,??Ids the
philosophy that ttm~ is .one
of the greatest contnbut1ons
a .pa;ent can mak~, to hts
chtld s development.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22)

SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

'17.50
lHEY WILL RECEIVE
9 MONlHS OF
lHE HOMETOWN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL
This Offer Good

Halls meet

Fr iends are likely to oppose your
v 1ews loday. U the Issues aren 't
to o important. 1t's better to go
along with them rather than to
make waves. Fmd out to whom
you're romant ically su1ted by
se ndmg lor you copy of AstraGraph Letter Matt 50 cents for
each and a long . sell-addressed .
stamped envelope to As traGraph P 0 Box 489. Rad10 Ctty
Stat1on N. Y. 10019. Be sure to
spec1 !y your btrth s1gn.

The annual Hall reunion
was held Sept. 5 at the Mme
of Mr. and Mrs. Truman Hall
of Middleport.
Attending were Trudy ,
Rick and Randy Hall, Mr.
and Mrs. B. P . Hall,
Belleville, Mich.; Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Cline and son,
Chris, Sabrina; Larry Cline,
Luberton ; Mr. and Mrs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) R&lt;sks Robert Hall, Huron River,
that are well -calculated can wor k Mich.; Mrs. Daphane Jane
out lor you today Don't get
Sheetz, Romulus, Mich.; Mr.
c arried away : howe..,.er . Yo u
c ould qu 1ckly d1ss1pate what and Mrs. Dale Church and
daughter, Tammy Lynn,
you 've gamed .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be Jamestown; Mrs. Opal Hall
satisfied today as long as you re and Tom, Belleville, Mich. ;
making progress with your Mr. and Mrs. Ballard Easton
aspirations. II you push too hard . of Tampa, Fla.; Danny
you could grind to a halt.
Easton, Gallipolis; Mary
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. Fetty, Pomeroy, aM Darcie
21) Either yoU or your mate and Denise Hysell, Pomeroy.
could be a li tt le too extravagant
today Each should check on the
other so the budget doesn 't suf ·
rer.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19)

At Any College
in the

Thtnk for your sglf today . even
though people you truly respect
ma y try to tell you olherwlM.
Youf insig ht IS probably t ar
better.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Feb. 19) II
at all possible . don't associate
w 1th sh1rkers today Align
yourself w1th those who have a
zest for the j ob aod you'll please
the boss

United States

,

\.

~.

~T..

~

...

Jackson; Vicki Humphreys , Pt. Pleasant,
E hret , Columbus; Penny Dauglieiiy, Belpre;
Coffey, Ray ; Helen Huffman, Chillicothe; Deana
Portsmouth ; Sheila Lanier, Bidwell. (Third tow, left
right) - Carla Graves, Chillicothe ; Katherine Dukas,
Belpre; Twila Thompson, Coal Grove ; Colette Lejcar,
Gallipolis; Hope Jago, Lucasville; Cheryl Bruce, Ironton ;
Darlene Rose,•Ravenswood, W. Va.; Kathryn Thornton ,
Leon, W. Va.; Charissa Parsons, Westerville; Paula
Hughes, lrontoo ; Deborah McDonie, Ironton ; Grace
Burnheimer, Minford; Belly Jean Spray, Sciotoville;
Thomasina Gales, Keyser, W. Va. Missing - Cheryl
Roszell, Ironton, and Jayne Smith, Pomeroy.

Knapps entertain

ASTRO•GRAPH

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

l

row, left to nght) - Tina Wilcoxen Point
Pleasan.t, W. Va.; Jan Elick, Lancaster; Dawn 'Mootz,
Kitts ~; Debra NoiTJs, South Point; Becky James,
Sciotovllle; Renee Ko_eker, Athens; Lisa WIUielm,
Sandusky ; Mary Ma!ldix, Ashland, Ky.· Beth Taylor
Circleville; Doris Harrison, Jackson ; Cheryl Huber:
Mason, W. Va .; Kathie Lyons, Hilliard ; Kathryn Grose,
Ravenswood, W. Va.; ·Rebecca Holland, Point Pleasant,
W. Va. (Second row, left to right ) ;- Jane Kerr , Gallipolis ;
Conrue Lyon, Portsmouth ; Chrtsty Smith Chesterhill ·
IU'ista Smith, Point .Pleasant, W.Va .; ~verly Akens',
Rtpley, W. Va.; IU'istal Hash, Btdwell;. Trish Terrv.

Breckenridge to speak
at Che~ter PTA meeting

OR G ~ STl·M;:,.:.UGtt

OR C vy SEAl

gifts, includmg a !978
Cadillac, and listened to
dozens of telegrams and
proclamations in his honor .
Golden State Warriors
owner Franklin Mieuli, who
also owns a chunk of the San
Francisco 49ers, is a longtiroe friend. He said that " I
should be with the 49ers on
the way to Pittsburggh or at
the Warriors opening of
practice in San Jose, or with
my boat in Pago Pago. But
there was only one place for
me today - right here with
Stretch.

Connie

NP\1 '-if'f10 '1~ IdahO 51. 0

E . M tctl 16 SWing Grn 6
Fla . St 18 Kan S1 10
Frankln 7S Evansvl 22

tnd Cen t 36 Rase Hlmn 0
lnd . St . 1.4 So Ill 9
Iowa 12 Iowa St 10
Lake Forest 21 Mar(lutfe 0
M ich igan 21 Duke 9
Net&gt;raska 31 Alabama 24
OhtO St. 38 Mlnn~ta 7
Purd\Je 44 OhiO U 7
Tex .· Arl 17 W . Mtch. 10
vatpara lso 4? Den 1son 0

Studies begin again at
Holzer nursing school ,

Ci!M 'JAArr IForcr 1.4
Ch!(O )1 6 W11!amHe 0
(')•oraOG 41l&lt;.~nt S1 0
Ui\I"'O ~~ 41 Ro1-;.e St l

Midwtll
Akron 24 Wo;n Kentucky 3
Alma 20 OhtO NorthPrn 1;

Me Covey hero in Giants' win
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) Willie McCovey, his arm
around his mother, acknowJ.
edged the
cheers of
Candlestick Park on his
day--and then knocked in the

Sorority gathers

~'(111! DallY Sentinel, Middleport•Pomeroy, 0., M"!1day, Sept. t9, 1m

•

Fall quarter at the l;lolzer
Medical Center School of
Nursing in Gallipolis. opened
on Monday, Sept. 12. Forty·
four Freshman students were
accepted to start their three
year program of nursing
education.
Freshman students came
in a few days early so that
they could take part in a twoday orien tation program
preceding the opening of the
new quarter. This provided
the new students with the
opportunity to be come
acquainted with the school's
pro gram of studies and
policies, the faculty, each
other and the community,
prior to their first class

sessions.

POLLY.$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer ·

First aid for table top
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Wet
glasses left water marks on
the maple top on my table. I
would like some suggestions
to remove them, so I do not
have to refinish the table. MRS. J.H.W.
DEAR MRS. J .H.W. - For
years I have been removing
such rings by dipping a cloth
in a paste made with butter
and cold cigarette ashes. Rub
with the grain of the wood,
remove with a damp cloth
when spot has disappeared
and rewax or polish as usuaL
The deeper the ring, the
harder one must rub. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the present size
of sheets. I do not like fitted
sheets and the flat is ·inches
shorter than previously .
There is barely enough to·
tuck under the mattress. '
Those who tint their hair
and have no plastic protector
such as they use in beauty
parlors can use a large
plastic garbage bag as it
works just as . well . MARIE.
DEAR POLLY - To make
.her cloudy glass tumblers
shine, my mother used to fill
each one half full of cut up
. newspaper and then add
enough warm water to fill the
glass. Shake and if necessary
repeat and then · find the
results surprising. - BEA.
DEAR POLLY- I keep a
container of those pre·
moisteined towelettes by the
chair I sit in while knitting or
doing embroidery work. That
way I wipe my hands before
starting any such work so I
am always sure they are
clean. - JOYCE .

WHEN
AMPLIFICATION
1~ NECESSARY

DEAR POLLY - During
these days of high utility bills,
an energy crisis, etc., I
remove all wash and wear
garments from the washing
machine and put them on
plastic hangers to dry. With
our cooler turned on·, they dry
quickly and I save on elec·
tricity and gas (I have a gas
dryer) . Plus, \ess heat is
generated in the utility room.
- CATHY .
DEAR POLLY - Why lug a
vacuum cleaner all around
when an empty, clean and
dry detergent bottle wtll do
. just as well? Prior to painting
those inside and outside
windows, clean dust out of the
corners by squeezing such a
bottle. The air will brush
away dust particles and you
are ready to paint or varnish.
- MRS. E. K.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you news·
paper coupon clippers if she
uses your favorite· Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

The opening week was lull
of activities for all of the
nursing students. Monday
afternoon, Sept. 12, the
traditional " Striping and
Chevron" ceremony was held
in the Main Lounge of Davis
Hall, the home of the School
of Nursing. This is a special
recognition of the . student's
entry into th~ Junior and
Senior Classes. Women
received a navy blue band for
their nursing cap and the men
a blue chevron for the sleeve
of their nursing uniform,
each of these years.
The Junior Class hosted a
softball game for their Fresh·
man ' ' Little Sisters'' on
Fortification Hill Tuesday
evening, Sept. 13. The
traditional "Walk Around the
Hospital" during the first two
weeks of school will be
scheduled this coming week.
Members of the Junior and
Freshman classes par·
ticipate annually in this walk,
wearing their uniforms and
carrying lighted candles as
they walk single fil_e com·
pletely around the hospital,
hoping that their candle

flames continue to burn, terv1ews, discussion with
members
and
predicting the successful faculty
conclusion of their nursing students, plus information on
the School of Nursing will be
education.
In the Freshman Class, 33 available. High school juniors
students are from Ohio, 10 and seniors from the
from West Virginia and one surrounding counties in the
from Kentucky. Four of the ·Tri-State area who are in·
students are married. Two terested in preparing lor a
are sisters of former Holzer nursing career, and their
Medical Center School of parents, are cordially invited
Nursing graduates, and two to attend.
are daughters of graduates .
One Freshman is a practical till~
nurse and one was a teacher.
The next special event at
the Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing will be the
Fail Tea for prospective
students on Sunday af·
ternoon, Oct. 2 from 2 o'clock
until 4 o'clock in the Main
Lounge at Davis Hall, 514
First Avenue in Gallipolis.
Tours of the dormitory and
the school, personal in·

Uodson

was

selected as the valentme girl
for the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at
a meeting held Tuesday night.
al the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
During the meeting it was
voted to participate in a
Halloween party with a
haunted house. Mrs. Sheila
Reeves reported on plans for
a rush to be held Thursday,
Sept. 29, with a Barnum and
Bailey Circus theme, at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., 6:30p.m.
Kathy Cumings noted that
again· this year the chapter
received a three star rating
from International. Rating is
given on
· activities.

HAS BEEN MOVED
Mrs. Nellie Eblin who has
been living with her
daughter, Maxine Dugan on
Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy has
been transferred from the
Wellston Nursing Home to
Pine Crest Care Center,
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

111'••••-Mike Swiger
992-7155
149 5. Third 51.
Middleport, 0 .

35' ROLL

"Call me for
life insurance."
""" ru"'

NOW AVAILABLE AT:
HARDWARE

Like a good neighbor,
State Fann is there.
Stale

F~rm ltle fnsurance :omp1ny
Home OfftCI BIQQIJlU'IJ1on lllt~Q s

71 N. 2nd Ave .

992-3831

· Middleport, Ohio

5 FAMILY Garage Sate . 848
Logan St., Middleport.
Sept. 19th, 20th, 21st , 9 -S,
good cloth1ng of all kinds ,
dishes, drapes , bedspreads,
some furn iture and lots
mor~ misc. Will be signs.

Tuday is Monday, Sept. 19,
the 262nd day of 1977 and 103
to follow.
The moon is approaching
its first quarter.
The morning -s tars are
Saturn, Jupiter , Mercury,
Venus and Mars.
There are no evening stars.
Those born 011 this dat~ sre
under the sign of Virgo.
·

BUY NON and receive this custom-designed
stand (a:139"' value') for only 11915
•t.1antJ1acturer 1 lllggiiS1.-d ltol

~nee

PISCES (Feb. 20·Merch 20) Try
to be with a small group of close
tnend s today. rather than w1th a
large gathertng of mostly
strangers Ypu'll be much more
comfo rtab le with intimates

OFFER EXPIRES
SEPTEMBER 30, 1977

'

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ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Sup·
press an urge to gamble on
career matter s today. Substitute
a log 1cal approach for any •nclination to take a flyer .
.

Model HS96W • Features
solid~state Allegro Series
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TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

The

Dai~

Sentinel, Court Sl, Pomeroy, 0. 45769

NAME .••••.••••.•• ~~~············· --···········~ ·············· ·····:
ADDRESS ••••.••••••••••••••••••••••..•.•••••.•..•.•••.•...••••• .
CITY ••.....•...••••••••••••.•• ••••••.•••••••••..•.....••••••..• •.••
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0
16 West Washington
Athens

CHECK .......... , Q MONEY ORDER .••••••. AMT, ••••• ,

SORRY NO RffUND

You 're a good story teller today
But stick to the fa cts They re
·good enough Wllt10UI trying to
embellish them

GEMINI (Moy 21-June . 20)

Someone you·re . in~olved . with
may conveniently leave thetr
checkbook 8t home Unless you
think quickly. you'll _have to underwrite the eKJ)en~s.

CANCER (Juno 21-.luly 22) lm·
pulslveness and ovt!rgeneroslty
could be the . trouble spots in
your life to&lt;'BY- This is espectally_
true if you're trying to put a deal
together.
LEO (July 23·Aug.· 22) You have
a tttndency to procrastinate today 11 you gel caughl up I ~ your
own web . you'll try to rationallze
your aclions .

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Medical
and
oudiotoglcat reternt.

Ff
• :

The quality goos in
before the name goes on~

.

.

INGELS FURNITURE
Middleport, O.

106 N. 2nd Ave.

The heat pump is a device that heats
and cools your home. .
When 'it cools, it works like any
air coMitioner.
Rnt when it heats, it works more
efficiently than any other electric heating
system around.
·
It captures the heat that exists in
outside air, even on cold days.
As a result, you can heat your home
using up to one-third less electricity

than other electric hP.ating systems.
This more·for·your·monef. energy·
saving feature has made the heat pump
very popular with a lot of people.
Including the federal government,
whose energy agencies recommend it over
other types of electric heat.
.
Actually, we don't sell Mat pumps.
But,, the way we figure; it, every bit of
electric energy that can be saved the!"'
days helps all of us.

Ohio
Power'-"~
Working together js the only way.
\

~

�6-The Daily Smtin~ , Middleport-P~y, 0 ., Monday, SepL 19, 1977

Barbara Keaton to wed Carl family holds reunion

~~~"~-~-''"'"*'·"""=-:::,;:::&lt;&lt;-"'~:=

-

Helen Help·

I.Joyd F. Hoffman, 1626
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, is
£ aMounclng the engagement
By Helen Bottel !:: and approaching marriage of
~ Barbara Tobin Keaton to his
son. Kenneth Uoyd.
The bride-elect Is the
When Marriage Becomes Jail !
daughter of Bess Tobin,
D&lt;!ar Helen:
Middleport, and the late
rm 38, have ht&gt;en married l8 years, am the lather or
&amp;bert R. Tobin, Sr. She
four, and want out! 111&gt; wife and I work in professional , graduated
from
the
capacities. At that pomt our common interests end.
Columbus West High School
It would be pomUess to list all the things wrong with
in 1973 and is employed by
our relationship. l.ove is dead on both sides. We no longer
Co untry Cousins Cook
sleep together. Our •·•lues and goals are worlds apart. She
Shoppe, Pomeroy.
openly admits she doesn't mind if I "screw around" as
Son of the late Winona
long as she keeps the house. It's a known fact she has
Pickens Hoffman, the groom
other men.
elect is employed at French's
Though it's always both males' faults, those who know
Sunoco Station in Pomeroy.
her understand the hell she has put the children and me
He is a 1975 graduate of Meigs
through, a state I have excused for years.
High School.
I have asked for a divorce, have offered to take all the
The wedding will be an
children, sell all we have and divide the money (though
event of Oct". 7 at 7:30p.m. at
she is now earning more than I am). She refuses
the· Middleport Church of
threatening to put every obstacle in my way, w ruin my
Christ, with the music to
reputation any way she can. She would not hesitate w lie.
begin at 7 p.m. The gracious
Her excuse is "the children," but she rarely sees
them, and constantly yells at them to leave her alone.
I'm wld that a husband and father takes a financial
(and community..attitude) beating when he files for
dlvorce. Why would a woman hang on when we'd all be
happier apart? - WHAT TO 00?
,

Us .•.

D&lt;!ar What:
Why do mates cling to failed marriages? Creature
co~orts, perhaps; spite; pride (it's rough admitting
fa1lure) ; fear of the unknown- or of making it on their
own; worry over children (they may bore a mother, but
could she face mass disapproval if she turned them over
w her husband - and if she didn't she'd be stuck with
them full time); habit; hope that things will somehow get
better ...
·
I'd guess your wife feels comfortable in a loveless
marriage where she can more or less do as she wishes.
Your only out is a good lawyer: I doubt you'll be taken for
as much as you fear - and you can thank Woman's
Liberation for that! -H. · .
·
P.S. Now, could we hear the wife's version, please?

+++

D&lt;!ar Helen:
. My friend is messing up her life. She married a weak,
clinging, shiftless, handsome burn.
Two years ago she told me she'd leave him except
she'd feel wa guilty. He depends on her : his ex-wife gave
him a rottendealand "how t'Ould !hurt him when he loves
me so?" (I suspect the ex had good reason! )
Since then she's put on 50 pounds and gets fatter by
the week. This once-beauUful girl seems not to care any
more how she looks. She's miserably unhappy, but insists
she can't walk out.
.
. What's with a woman who just gives up? WANTING TO HELP

11arbara }(eaton
cuStom of open church will be
observed. The Rev. George
Glaze will officiate . A
reception will be held in the
church social rooms.

Fireman's picnic slated
by Racine Auxiliary

RACINE - A family picnic
for the firemen and the
Auxiliary members was
planned during a meeting of
the Racine Firemen's
Auxiliary held at the hall.
The Labor Day barbecue
was discussed with the
Auxiliary extending a vote or
thanks to those who donated.
Also discussed at the meeting
was the annual Christmas
party.
The birthday of Emma
Lyons was celebrated with
refreshments being served to
Beulah Autherson, Mae

Cleland, Gene Lyons and
Alana, Emma Lyons, Cressa
Shain, Mary Sloter and Tina,
Jean Johnson, Wanda Lyons,
Judy Bird and Sonny, and
Ruth Shain.
It was noted that the
building is not for rent to the
public in the future due to the
Head Start program being
conducted there.
The
Auxiliary has zip code books
for sale at $2.95 . Next
meeting will be Oct. 11 with
the birthdays of Lou Delong
and Ruth Shain to be
celebrated.

The aMual Carl lamily
reunion was held Sept. 11 on
the Kingsbury Road property
of Dale Harrison.
Attending from out of town
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Lohrer, Sheri and Mike,
Troy; Mr. and Mrs. Gordy
Gibson , Jodi, Sean and Dale,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Brickles, Gloucester; Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Ohlinger,
Jay, Jon and Josh, Duncan
Falls ; Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Harsh, Columbus; Mrs.
Donna Wilson, Jasper; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Cool, Piketon.
Local residents attending
were Mr, and Mrs. Ronald
Riffle, Matt and Tina, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Riffle, Mr.

i-lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 19. 1977

.., Gill '""

SIDI GUNCIS

•

l.r;,,~:,,:,~::::::::;::::::::m:::;;.::::,,::::;::::::::::::;::::::.:'::;:;:;::::::.:-:&gt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:,;.;;:::::::::::::::::::::::':'\i~

and Mrs. Bud WilBon, Mrs.
Faye Pratt, Mr. and Mrs.
Olen Harrison, Mr. and Mn.
O!uck Riffle, Cheryl, Cindy
and Ann, Ottie Scholl, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Harrison,
Scott and Jodi, l,frs. lona
Brlckles, Bruce and D&lt;!nise,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brickles,
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Carl,
Ivan, Ron , Jeff and Kelly,
Mr. and Mrs. VirgO Carl,
Brett, Randy, Danny and
Melodl, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Frecker, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Carl, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip
Harrison, Rodney and
Trevor, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Carl, Mr. and Mrs. I.Joyd
King, Brian, Brill and Phil.

l was full of

.Ill

Ii entertainment1: :
Pictures by Bob Hoeflich

Homecoming enjoyed at Moores
A
CHESHIRE homecoming was held on
Sept. 11 at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Freddie Moore,
Cheshire.
Attending from out of town
were Robert Craigo, Moundsville, W.Va.; Edward Craigo,
Bancroft , W. Va .; Mrs.
Pauline Miller and Louawana
Miller; Melody Neimeyer,
Denise Russell, Poca , W.
Va . ;
Kenny
Russell ,
Marietta; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard McCartney and
Marty and Tinuny, Waverly ;
Mrs. Della DeVault, Mr. and
Mrs. Keith DeVault, Mr. and
Mrs. William DeVault, Mrs.
Nita Merry and Jackie, Miss
Janet DeVault, Mrs. Carolyn
Rose and daughter, Mrs.
Woodrow DeVault and
grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Kerwood, Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Kerwood,

Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Wolfe and children,
'M r. and Mrs. John Hager,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hager and
daughter, Bidwell ; Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Hager, Jackson
Pike; Mr. and Mrs. Freddie
Moore, David, Jeff and Scott,
Cheshire.

LAFF- A- DAY

--:.
·~\
.... . ~. -~
G G&gt;

THE CROWD LIKED the stringed music and vocals of Doug Circle, left, and his Ranch Hands, during the
Saturday observance of "Yesteryear."
"Well, we gave up coffee. Now, the question THIS
winter is: How do we give up fu~ l?"

Daughter bom to AF couple
Mascher, Bremerton, Wash.
and Mrs. Lottie Bradford,
Racine. The Wellers have
another daughter, Jennifer
Lynn, three.

'

f::l &lt;:Af

G&gt;ir:;,J j": ,

I

'

~

I~

Run off

A thought for the day:
German poet Frederich WUheim Nietzsche said: "In
revenge and in love, woman
Is more barbarous than

i~

•
vote m

man."

New York
HENRY TURNER of Rutland wasat the reins of "The
Surrey With the Fringe on Top" which was kept busy
.during the se&lt;:Pnd annual observance of "Yesteryear."

The horse pulling the vehicle belongs to Bobby Porter of
Rutland, and the surrey belongs to Wayne Turner ·
Rutland.
'

·,

D&lt;!ar WTH:
Is this "giving up" or passive persistence~ Your
friend may be letting herself go in the (half ) subconscious
wish that her husband will become so disgusted he'll be
the one to split.
Suggest some self-analysis here. Show hot a guilt-free
. "out" isn't worth risking her health; a "miserably
unhappy" marriage can't be all that great for the
partner; and her conscience (when she leaves) will
survive - as will he. - H.

TOYS OF YESTERYEAR were featured in the display of the Return Jonathan Meigs
Cha~ter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Members of the Chapter on hand to
dlstnbute literature on Constitution Week, Sept. 17-23, included Mrs. J. Edward Foster and
Miss Lucille Smith, past regents. .
·
1

~~·:::·;~;~cc;m.wS!C&amp;·

~

I

· Social ·
Calendar

MONDAY
MEIGS County Churches of
· Christ Men's "Fellowship
meeting 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Middleport Church of Christ.
followed by basket dinner at
noon in fellowship hall. Af·
ternoon services begin at 2
with the Rev. L. R. Mahoney,
Parkersburg, W. Va. ,
speaking and special singing
by the Gospel Tones,
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Monday 7:30p.m. at
high school.
MIDDLEPORT Bllsiness
and Professional" Women's
Club, MOndaY night at the
Meigs County Infirmary.
RACINE .Elementary PTO
meeting 7:30 p.m. Monday.
Introduction ol parents and
' tea chers; refreshments .will
be served. All parents invited.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine Chapter 134, OES,
7:30 p.m. Monday. Initiation
for two candidates; dues for
1978 are payable .
. MEIGS COUNTIANS for
Wildlife Conservation will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
the coonhunters building on
the
Rock.
Springs
Fairgrounds.
BUSINESS MEETING of
the Meigs Area Holiness
Association Monday in amex
of Pomeroy Church of the
NaMrene at 7:30p.m .
CHESTER PTA Monday
7:30 p.m. at Chester
Elementary .
Bil l
Breckenridge will be guest
speaker."
THE MEIGS Band Booster
Association will meet tonight
in the band room at the high
school at 7:30.
TUESDAY
MEIGS Muzzleloaders
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Tewksbary's Barber Shop.
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
American Legion, meeting
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at post home
\lith Vietnam veterans night
to be observed, All veterans
of Vietnamese war whether
mem bers of the post or not,
invited to attend.
POMEROY Chamber of
Conunerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. ·
HARRISONVILLE Senior
CitiZens birthday and family
t
~

JEROME ffiOK, left,
and Dean Blackwood,
senior citizens were
unbothered
by
Saturday 's
warm
temperatures as they
kepi stirring the apple
butter, cooked over an
open fire, in the big black
pot at "Yesteryear."

u.s.I'lL 011

-.

supper Tuesday, Sept. 20 at 6
p.m. at Ft. Meigs. Bring own
table service.
GROUP 2 of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church, 7:30 Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Dwight Zavitz.
Mrs. Helen Shuler, cohostess. Mrs. Harley Brown
to have devotions. Program
will be "Risk Evangelism"
and the thank offering boxes
will be collected.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
Tuesday' Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Guest speaker, Andy Lyle,
game warden. Cultural
report IJY" Jennifer Anderson
and Sharon Bailey. Kathy
JOhnson and Debbi Buck,
hostesses,
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN Junior High
School PTO, 7:30 ·p.m.
Wednesday at school.
SECURE TICKETS no
later than Wedoesday for
Evangeline Chapter, · OES,
Mother-Daughter Banquet
[Sept. 22, 6:30 p.m.) from
Bessie King,
Euvetta
Bechtel, Betty Van Meter,
Ann Thomas, Naomi King.
THURSDAY .
WOMEN'S Association,
6:30 potluck dinner .
Hostesses to be members of
Group 2 with everyone to take
a covered dish. There will he
a film. Mrs. Richard
Vaughan will have devotions.

Former area
.resident dies
Friends here have received
word oi the .recent death of
Ola Amanda Wade Taylor,
known as Madge. Mrs. Taylor
was born and reared in Meigs
County and after moving to
Huntington Park, Califprnia
during the 1930s, returned
every few years to visit. Since
having a stroke earlier this
year, she has been residin.g
with her daughter, Mrs.
Charles Barker in Denver;
Colo. Mrs. Taylor died on
Aug. 24. For many years she
kept up on Meigs County
news through The Daily
Sentinel, according to Mrs.
Herald Osborne .

'

NEW YORK (UPI) - A
fiveterm congressman from
Manhattan's affluent East
Side and the personal choice
of Gov. Hugh ·L. Carey
squared off today in a runoff
election for the D&lt;!mocratic
Party's mayoral nomination.
Rep. Edward Koch and
New York Secretary of State
Mario Cuomo were the two
survivors of a cramped
seven-way Sept. 8 prim;!ry
field. That preliminary
election ended the political
ca reer
of
em battled
incumbent Mayor Abraham
Beame and stalled the
political comeback of former
Rep. Bella Abzug.
The runoff was required
because neither of the top two
finishers - Cuomo and Koch
- received 40 per cent of the
vote.

THE KENNETH WARD Family with dulcimers and a piano entertained during the
''Yesteryear'' obsei"Vance.

MARTHA WARD OF BIDWELL was the women's
winner in the hog calling contest of "yesteryear" and is
pictured at the stage where she received her cash award
and the recognition of the crowd.

h wos editor ot
ermon, e
. , ....... , 05 o newSfiOP
f _.., 0 subscriber,
rk '{wcnn s .,..,
. eel 0 letter rv...
eel
ouring h\o
drJY he rece,v
r and oslc.
•
. ...,per. One
'der in hiS pope '
,_
smoll h\issoun ,.hod foUnd o sP'
d or bad \uc....
. .... mat he
en of goo .
stat"•"'
if this was an om
er is lleither
.
ifler in your pclP
.
lied: ''finding asp .
oking over our pe.per
'two1n reP
•der W03 merely lo
.
hat he could
.
luck. The spt
dverdsing sot
.
d
hant 1(l(l8 not o
.
h ~or, and leo
good nor bad
. · b acrots t fl
· · d"
hich mere
pin his we
fterUl(lr •
10 see w .
to that star• ..,
bed peace llver fl
go
.a life of"undistur
. .

0

.

·· ·

'fhe

ider away
tVill keep the sp

••

:Berrys World
CG Academy

for '82 class

ADUL"t

800t&lt;S

front your

.

I

••'

'••

VI'D~O

•

"SOAP"

••

••

•

11\n:

OF

r

..
C 1177byNEA ....

\

Am erican League : Palek , KC
.49 ; Bonds and Remy , Cal 38;
LeFlore, Det and Page, Oak 37.
Pitching
Most Victories
National League : . carlton,
PMil 21 -9; R.F~euschel. Chi 20 -8;
Seaver, Cin , Joh n , LA and
ForscM, St. L 18-6.
A mer ican League: Ryan , Cal
l9 14i Go l tz, Minn 18-10; Leo .
nard , KC 18 -ll ; Palmer, Bait
17 -11 ;
R .May,
Ball
17-12,Colborn, KC 17-13.
Earned Run Average
( based on 144 innings pitched)
National League : Candela r ia
Pitr 2.55 ; R.ReuscMel, Chi 2.68.:
Hooton, LA an d Car lton, Phi l
2.70; John , LA 2.72.
American League : . Tanana ,
Cal_ 2.54;
Ryan,
Cal
2.66;
Gu,dry, NY 2.82; Blyleven , Tex
2.83 ; Rozema , Oet 3.01.

yJhat are all those tellers doitJ~ dowt1
In tne East Ballroom? What new
surprise do ya'l/ ha.ve .for me ThiS trme,Bert'?

is taking bids ·

· el

DailY Sentlll ..roo,

BILL McKELVEY of Portland, long a Meigs farmer,
was first place winner of the men's division in · the
Yesteryear hog calling contest. Bill is pictured in his
calling act.

Brett KC
128 525 163 .310
Major League L eaders
Fisk eos
140 .o~ae 151 .309
By United Press Interna t ional
Page Oak
133 .454 140 . 306
Batting
Home Runs
(based on 400 at bafsJ
National Leagu e : Foster, Cin
National League
. G. AB. H. Pcf . 48 ; Burroughs , A11 40 ; Luzinski
Parker P i t
150 609 208 .342 and Sc h midt, Phil 36i Garvey,
LA 31.
.
. "
Stenn ett Pit
11~ 453 152 .336
American League: Rice, Bos
Tmpltn Sq..
141 572 184 .322
Gr iffey C!n
143 547 176 .3 22 38 ; Bonds, Cal and Nett les, NY
Simmn s St .L
140 48J 156 .322 35 ; Scott, Bos 32; Gamble, Chi
Foster Cin
147 574 183 .31 9 31.
Run s Batted In
Smith LA
141 469 147 .3 13
National League : Foster , Cin
Hendrick SO
141 503 156 .3 10
Rose Cin
151 61.4 190 .309 UO ; Luzi nsk i, Phi l 122 ; Bur
Luznski Phil
138 512 158 .309 roughs , Atl 11 2: Ga r vey, LA
111 ; Cey, LA llO ,
Amer ica n League
American
L eague:
Hisle,
G. AB. H. Pet.
Carew Min
146 584 225 .385 M inn 11 3; Bonds ; Ca l 109; Rice,
Singl ton Bal
140 490 164 .335 Bos 105 ; Hobson, Bos and
Bostock Min
144 556 184 .331 Thompson, Oet 101.
Stolen Bases
LeF lore Det
143 605 196 .324
National League : . Taveras,
Rivers NY
129 531 172 .324
Cedeno , Hou 52;
Rice Bos
149 597 193 .323 Pitt 64 ;
Bailor Tor
109 440 141 .320 Richards, SO &lt;~8 ; Mor gan&gt; Cln
47; Moreno. Pitt &lt;~6 .

WASHINGTON cOngr.essman
Clarence
Miller has announced that the
United states Coast Guard
Academy from now until
D&lt;!cember 15 is accepting
applications from both men
and women for the Class of
1982.
Since appointments are
offered solely on the basis of a
nationwide competition with
no congressional appoint·
ments or geographical
quotas, applications must be
submitted to the Director of
Admissions, U. S. Coast
Guard Academy.
Applications and additional
information may be obtained
by writing to: Director of
A~missiona, U. S. Coast
Guard Academy, New
London, ConneCticut 00320.

Beame , the 73-year-old
Brooklyn Democratic
clubhouse regular who
presided over New York's
flirtations with baokruptcy,
ran third in the Sept . 8
primary, missing a spot in
the runoff election by fewer
than 13,000 votes.·
Cuomo, the hand-picked
candidate of Gov. Hugh
Carey , will be in the
November general election
whatever the outcome of
Wday's vote, because he has
been nominated by the
Liberal party .
Repqb licans
have
nominated State Sen. Roy
Goodman
and
radio
personality Barry Farber,
who lost the GOP prim;!ry to
Goodman, will be on the
Conservative line.
Board of Elections officials
estimated that 800,"000 of the
city's 2 million eligible
Democrats will turn out for
Wday's runoff.
During the past 10 days of
campaigning, Koch and
Cuomo have scrambled for
endorsements from public
officials and traded charges
during debates.
Koch picked up support
from Bcilme and two other
primary losers - Rep .
Herman Badlllo and Joel
Harnett.
Former Rep. Bella Abzug,
who finished fourth in that
race, threw her support w
Cuomo on Saturday. Cuomo
also has received strong
union support.

\

SALZBURG,Austria (UP!)
- Alfa cars t()Qk the first
three places in the last race of
the Sports Car World
Championship
at
the
Salzburgring on SWlday with
Formula One pilot Vitwrio
Brambilla of . Italy at the
steering wheel of the winning

Nattonal Bank
oP Georgia

I

car.
Brambilla covered the 70
laps of 184.6 miles in one
hour, 27 . minutes, 26.79
seconds. Countryman Arturo
Merzario was one lap behind
with another
Italian,
Spartaco Dini, third by two
·laps.
\

'

·,

�li-The DailY Sentinel, Mlddleoort-Pomeroy,

WANT AD
CHARGES

1

o., Monday,Sept. lt,lm

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

I~ Won:isut U~·

WANTED

c.sJ\

100

ISO

'"'

3.00

Each word O\'t"t tht: mmunw11 IS
wunJs

IS 4 l't!llls

per wurrJ !,lei' da)

AW. nu111ing QWer Ulan t'Ul\loa'UlL\'r

daytr. ...n be charged 11t thr 1 d~iY
TO"'

ln memory, C.rd ri. rtwmk.s and

Otul t.uu l " 6 t"eelts per wurd, J3 00
nunimwn. Cash,,.. ~tdvll!K'~

M001ie Honle galt'St~rkJ Y•mlsalt1&gt;
art' m:'et·.-~ pn~v w1th t:ash With
or~r- %tt.•eut ch.Hrgt- for lldlil'1Ul) ·

utg Box Nwnbo:r In Care of The Sen·
tmd.
Tl)t!. Publtsllf'r 1l'st!l'\'t'lS lh1:• riJ.(h~

w ecilt ur re}t!t.'t any 01U... ~urd 00.
J~t:llot'lll

Tht• Pubh:;lwr w11J not be
f'eSiliXL!Hble fur llll!re .l/101;11 011e m&lt;.'Urra1 u u;erhop

·

Phvnt992 ·21~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MonthQNoon Ull Saturda:r

Tutsdfl)

lhru FndaJ
~ r M.
the day befiJrt" pu [)lu:aliUII

Sunday
-I P.M.

Thanks to our many
friends, relatives &amp;
neighbors in Meigs
County.
You "good people"
wi II never know how
much your kindness
meant to the family of
James
E.
(Bug e)
Ingram at our time of
need. The folks for
the
many
cards,
prayers and visits
during
his illness
were really great .
Also Ewing Funeral
Home ,
the
pallbearers
(TEAM
of
'33 &amp; Coach
Charles
Hayman) ,
ihe
flowers,
contributions
to
Cancer Clinic , folks
who brouglll food and
served us - you were
all wonderful

Evelyn Ingram
&amp; Family

Friday aflenll)OI'• .

'

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed b ids w il l be rece tved
in the office of the Vi ll age
Clerk, Pameroy , Oh io, unl il
12 o'c lock noon on September
30". 1977 on a·ny · of the
follow ing proposals
1. For the purchase by t he
V i lla~e of P,om~rov of a new
197 8 four door fn-'e passenger
sedan with the follow ing
added eqt~lpment
400 Cub1c men engme 4
barrel carburetor , M in. VB
Power steer rng and Power
Brakes
5 black tires
Foam rubber front seat
Spotlight on left hand St de
Heavy duty oil filter
Heavy duty battery 80 AMP
Atr Cond itioner &amp; 61 AMP
Alternator
Posit ive traction rear axle
Automatic
trl!lnsm ission
Vinyl upholstery
Roof Drip Moldings
116 Wh-eelbase
Calibra ted
Speedometer
Pollee Body Package
Transfer' Poli ce Radio ,
Siren , FlaSiiing L1ghts , F ire
E x t ingu isher and ~rotect lv e
snleld from preserit ca-r to
new ca r
2. For sale by the Village of
Pomeroy its 1976 Chevrolet
Impala four door , 8 cylinder ,
w ithout radio equip men t, fire
ex tiogursher , Stren, flashing
stgn.!!tls o!lnd profectrve shield
The bidder may state erther
what he w ill g i ve for the 1976
Chevrolet or what amount he
w!li attow as a trad e- in for the
new pol1ce cruiser described
above..
Each b idder may b1d for
either · the purchase of the
1976. Chevrolet ·or for the sa le
to the Village of Pomeroy of a
new police-. cruiser described
above or bOth . Each btd mus t
cantafn the. full name of every
person orcorhpany interested
in the same, and the bid must
be ace,ompa nied by a check
or bond in the sum Of S100 00
to the sattsfactton of the
Vtllage Counql as a guaranty
that if fhe bid is · accepted ,.
contract wHr _be· en"tered into
an.d Its per:_formanc~ property.
secu red .
These &lt;ihec~s ot Mnds w r_ll
be re!l:JrneC1 at Once to all
except the sucG:essh,tl bidder .·
His. cb.ircks or bond will b.e ·
hefd unJ il ttte ·cotitract or bid i"s .proPerly ex;f"{Uted by h jm .
. Ttie. right 1S reserVed to
· rele-et a_ny anC! al l Olds . 90-daV
de H ~ery ftom dafe Of . ac .c;_eptlln ~.e . ·
·
Jane Watton,
Clerk
V·tLLAGE OF
POMEROY

NO TRESPASSING or B1ke ndtng
on our property. Roy ond
Goldie little , Rt. " · fomeroy.
GU N SHOOT. Racine Gun Club
every Sun . oftt;trnoon Foetor
Ckock guns on ly. AsSorted
meats.

WE WISH to •Mtend our hearfjeh

thanks: ond OPPf.Ciation fOf" the
octs ol k indness dunng the u.
lness ond ot the time pi deoth
of our husband and fot~r Ed·
ward Bowen We ore Hpeciolly
grateful to Or . Telle the
nurses. ond. the staff of
V•teren"s MemorKJI Hospttol,
Ewing Funeral Home, The
Enterprise Church, and the
fnends. of that oreo lor , tl'le
food , those who sent the
beautiful floral offerin'gs, cards
and vl•iffl . Our sincere thanks
10 x 50 2 bedroom 1roiler. $2150
to the Rev. Menzel Smith for
992 -3324.
shoring hts ktnd 'o'(ords of .comfort. "Moy God Bless eqch and TWO BEDROOM trotler . Real ntte
every ane of you . Wife, Ma r,
992 -332..
10r1 e and Fdmily ..

--

IF YOU have a s&amp;rvice Jo offer .
wont to ~uv or sell something, · COAL, limestont, and colclum
oe looking tor ~ark · r • or
chloride ood coklum brine tor
whotev~r · · · you II gel results
dust control anQ spec1ol m"ixmg
fosl~er wltho Senllnel Won t Ad
soft 'or formers , Ellcelsior Soh
Co 992 · 2 !56.
Works , Main . Street , Pomeroy ,
Onto or phone 992· 3891 .
CAMPER, $600 Also ,. i"torse
troiler , $"50. Phone (~ 1") 69B ·
RISING STAR Kennel 8oardmg ,
3290.
lndoor·Ou ldoor runs , grooming
all breeds , dean 5oonitary SPRING GARDEN Supplies . Cob ·
. boge, coulitlow•r , broccoli ,
focil 1ties oe 367-7112 Cheshire
ond head lelluoe
plonfsJ
Phone (6 14) 367-0292.
yellow, white: and red 01110n
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs
s ets , oniOn plants, KennePec .
cobbler , Katahdin , Red.Pontioc
(Min .} Coll ies ; 2 fei'T'Ioles , 7
weeks old. Shots and wormed .
and Red Losodo seed potatoes .
Phone (61" ) 367-0292 or
Bulk garden seed1 potting so il,
367-7112.
pea t moss, fru 1t lrMI!s ond rose
bush'es . M1dwoy Morket ,
MEIGS "COUNTY Humane Soqety
Pomeroy , Ohio . 992-2587 ,
An1mol Careline, 992 7b80; or
Bob·s Market , MoJon , W.Va .
alter 6 p m., 992-5427 .
!3041 n3-572I.
TWO AKC Reg istered male ECONOMY TRACTOR with all atopncol toy poodles Shots ond
tochments . like new oskmg ·
cl1pped
$65
each .
$2250 Phone (61 ,.)698:3190.
1·614 ·256·6098.
CANNING TOMATOES, PEPPERS,
PALOMINO GELOING 7 Y" · old.
cucumbers
Cleland" Forml
53 in . high. Gentle. 992-S9tKJ
Green h oute , Geroldin~
Cleland.
HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy,-sell
trade or trc 1n. New and used
FOR
TH ~ f1 nesl lrl wood - heating
saddles . 'Horse Shoetng, Ruth
stoves . Cookatoves ond cool
Reeves , Albany (61.4.) 698·3290.
s toves , Call Z1on Heat Co . 8
Putnam Onve, Athen s (61-4)
10 WEEK OLD while kttten to give
away 991 -6134 ,
696-1187 or (6 t".. ) 592-6079

TIMBER CUTIERS. Skidder ond
Dozer
Operators . . Call
992-3861.
.
AUCTION .EVERY .Fri , 7 pm . Lots
of new and used merc11ond ise
ot · Ohio River · Auction , Me1gs
Plaza . MiddlepOrt , Ohto Home
Phone (304) 773.-5.471 .

A CAREER with a future for a mon
or woman wno wonts the best
tn hfe. A pay check every
week, fontosf tc fringe beneftfs,
all )oc,ol work Gtve U!i a call at
. 992·2480- or write, Western
ADVERTISEMENT
Southern L1fe Insurance , 218 lf1
FOR BIOS
E..MoiJ'!., Pomeroy , Oh10, for 1n ~
Federel Land ·and Water
formot1on
.
'
Conservation
Fun-d • Act .
Pro ject ND. 39-00431 and HUO
Wli.L 00: bobysitfing' in ~y .home
Comm "un lt y Oeve ~ opment
. 742·2833 . . .
BIOc.k Grant Project ~o . B -75 DN -39-0022..
·
.

for

Municipal Park~ ViUage . of .
.
INSTR/i('TION
.
Sy racuse , Oh io.
Bids w ill lje rece ived until . ','Dm'frs ('ntp lt')"Pd by lmgr tnu-k
t-2 :00 . r.~oQn on Monct_ay, . · ~~~~- fMIIfXmtes hnd amnwl ull.·r
·sepfember 26, 1977 , for the
al(f' f tmu"gs of about .
canstr:uction of Tenn is Courts
fo·r Municipal Pafk, Vil ll!lge
of ~ SyracUse , Qhio, at which
m 1974"as_ql«ilrd/n•lhP li.S: Dept
time the bids shall be opened
by the Clerk· of the Village . of Loboi. Bun•au Oj Lahm ~ta tz.s
tir,i blllll'tmN(I 1R75.
and publi cly read b"y her at
.
'
the VH iage HalL State .Rout'e
124, · Village of Syrac: u$e ,
Don'tjust l:)e satisfied ~1th a-JOB
Ohio.
·
·
- Pian NOW lor a Professional
. Bids mi!ty ·b e mailed to tne
career Drivi n~ a "Big Rig"We are
Vil lage df Syratuse, Oh lo,
a Pnvate Tratning School and if
"5779, Attention : Mr. Herma n· you meet Dl;lr qualthcauons you
. Lonljorij Mayor . · . · .
"'111 be trained· by Professtonal
(9} 12 . l9 . 2ic
Information . for b idders ,
form of contr6Ct, p la ns ,
Instructors on roodem eqlltpment.
specif icat ionS, ·and forms ·of
:ramon·a Part Ttnlf' basts&lt;Sat. &amp;
bid l:tond.' performi!nce and · iun ) and Keep your job. or. at:
. . AOVERT i S!!M'ENT
payment bond', antt o-tt1er . end our 3 Week Full Time Rest·
f:OR . · EUDS .
SRaled bids W!ll'be reCe1vecl · · docu"ments. msy -be exam ined
dent Tratnnlg.
and· are obta inab le at. the
b.y 'the V]UCIQe · of ~vrac:us e,
Village.
Hal
l.
Syrac
'
u
se
,
·
Ohio~
Ot110 , Meigs Q&gt;unt.y , at th~
Rt" !~ 1racfo,TratkrTrqrn ing, b!c ."
"'{'on ttle -c ·a.ynient of the s um
M&amp;~or"1 S Onice f)J the Ylllage
·o
.$10
.0
,
.
Yihlch
Is.
not
PARKERSBURG
Ha11 ,. ·T hfrd, Street , 1.,1nfit 12
. .
.
noon Se-pt-emr»er 26, 1971~ for . rerundil~le
1-304-422-4080
· All bids · must be In pla ln
!l'l~ -to t l ow ing~ . •. . .
· . sea
led envetbpe's marked ·on
2.5v. ton,s, .mor_e pr leU', 4~4
the outsi~t " B i d tor Tennis
. stat,·SP.~t:' flca_t•Qn . ~spt-talli C · Co\Jrts fOr Mun jclpal Park,
Goncrete ·tn 'P.lace a':'d r~tted .
Vilt~ge- of .Syracus,e, · Ohio"
T.h,e Y iUa_gl! ·reserves the
e ach biCfder musf have on the
r'lgl'lt to r=elect any or au b1ds
outside of the bid .envelope his
STARCRAFT IOfh onn tll'ersory sole
name and address , and each
on min i-motors . tra ilers , and
Mary A. Chancey ,
bond must be accompanied
folddowns. Trovelstor 25 ft .
by a bid bond or certified
CLERK
$4400 00; 20 ft . mini motor
check In the amount of 10
$10.850.00. We sell service and
(91 12, 19, 2tc
percent of the total bid . The
quality . Comp Conley Storcraft
bid bond shall be cond itioned
that if th e bid is accepted a
Soles , Rt 62 north of Pt Pleocontra ct w ill be entered into
sont.
and itsJ'.erlormance proper ly
secure .
It the bid embraces both
l abor and mater ial such
items snall be separate ly
WANTED TO Rent · Two responsistl!lted wi th the pr ic e thereof
ble working persons looking to
No bidder may withdraw
rent rural house or mobile
his bid for a per iod of sixty
days from the date ot btd
home. Con make repa1rs . etc ,
.
Call M1ke , workdays , 992-2119.
COLUMBUS ( UP! ) - Two opening
This pro ject is federally
Wiidentified men fired two
au lsted . contracts to be
Jwarded under this Inv itation
shots at a Conrail freight
tor btds w ill be subj~ct to
train
Frida y,
slightly
Presidential Executive.. Order
No . 112"6 requiring af - 3 AND " RM . furmstled and unwowxling a brakeman , and
furnished opts Phone 99'2·
firmative action for equal
escaped in a car, Colwnbus
employment opportun ity .
543&lt;
Police said.
Contractors are fur ther
advised that, the January 27 , COU NTRY Mob1le Home Park . Rt.
G .D. E veritt was grazed by
JJ , ten mites norttl of Pomeroy.
1972 E~:~uat Emp loym ent
one of the bullets in the upper
Opportunity Execut ive Order
Lorge lots with concrete patios ,
of the Governor of Ohio is also
lip. The sniper attack
s1dewal ks, runners and off
applicable to tl'1is. b id in stree t porking . Phone 992-7,.79
occurred near Columbus'
vitation .
The owner reserves the COUNTRY MOBilE Home Park .
Veteran 's
Mem orial
rignt to waive Informa lit ies
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy
Auditoriwn.
or to re lect any and all b1CIS
Lorge lots. Coll992-7479.
P.oHce said witnesses
SuccusfUI bidder must
comply with the Oh io Work· AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apts . 1
·siipp!ied the license number
men's Compen sation Laws
bedroom , $105 per month . .$150
· of.theautomobile in whic h tbe
and ,also comply with all
security deposit . 992·6090 .
other sta te , federal and local
two snipers
1led. .
.
taxes and taws .
WALL TWO bedroom house in
Successful b idder must
Rutlond . 992-5850 .
SENATE VoTE ·
proceed with the work within
weeks of the signing of FOUR ROOMS and both. Adults
WASH1NGTON . ( UPJ) - · two
the contract and the project
only . No pets . 992-5908.
liens. · Howard Metzenbauin
muSt be fvlly c omp iele d
FOUR
ROOM furni shed or unand John Glenrt Friday joined · w it ':lln 30 ~ork ing "days
furnished opl. .ovatlable Soturthe re.(lfter el&lt;ce.Qtrng only
. 33 Democrats in tabling by a
dQy, Sept 17, 991-3658,
su ch delays as may be oc44-41 vote a motion to exclude cas ioned by strikes, un - TWO BEDROOM Mobile Hom~ ,
weather or a cts of
abortiOns except ro save the seasonable
Lorge country tot. Unfurnished .
God .
No ch1ldren and no pets.
mother's' life fi;Olll tbe health
VILLAGE
OF
Deposll
required . 7"2·3122.
and disabilitY coverage manSYRACUSE, OHIO
TWO
BEDROOM
house . Carpeted
dated for pregnant workers if
By Herman London,
livmg
room
.
All new paint.
MAYOR
other employe ailments are
9'12·30'10.
covered.
(9) 12, 19, 2tc

. $18,300

Train snipers
wound
brakeman

.

I

••
r----------------------------------------------------------------------, 1:

WALNUTS
Bring Your Walnuts to
Excelsior S.lt Works, Inc.,
Pomero¥ , OH.
Paying Top Price
W•lnuts Art C•sh
Starting October 1, 1977
'

EQUIPMENT
OOMPANY

mode l ~

of mobile homes .
Phoneoreocod&amp;6U A23 -9531 .

•we can ship part, dlr~ctly
to your door· by way of
U. P.S.

ducft . Top price fo"r , standing
sowt irilber . Call 992-5%5 or

_,;:~:::•:::
nte,:H:::o:::n:::b:-.rc.·lcc·:::
":::6:::·8:::5~
7"
0 .'---

TRASH COMPACTOR, less thon 1
year old . ~49·2400or 985·3565.
TOUCH AND Sew Does It All. Jvs t
l1ke new. So ld for $o41-"9.95,
Clearing out stock. Must sell for
$89 .95. CoSh or
terms·.
9'12- 514~6:.:.. ...,..-~-'-~-~
SC HOOL
SINGER · Sew1ng
Moch1nes Many 18otures On ly
$31. 50, ' . cosh or
terms
992-5)•6,HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers ,
1971 model. Will sell for $22.50,
cosh or te rms. 992-51&lt;16 .
TWO STOKERMAJIC coal s toves. 1

coo1 s:tove bri_cklined, like new
1967 Cheyrolet .Truck. 283
engine, ,$300. .12 cub1t · ft
refrtgerotor . Call U2 -2n3.
1975 BLAZ£:R 4·WHEEL Drive,
5"500. IB(X) watt power plant
with built -in bclttery chOrger,
$300. 985-3875.

Let

Pomeroy

soften &amp; co~dition your,
watP.r and Co-op water
;oftener, Maaet UC·XVl.
Now Only

'279.95
Let us test
Free.

your water

Pomeroy landmark

9 ... ~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
lllil. Phone992-21Bl
ALADDIN KEROSINE lamp orld
heaters replacement
ports .
Chimney 1 mantels , widu etc.
Stop m for demonslratiol' and
free catalogue . Mountain
leather and General Store,
10" · 106 W. Union St., Athens,
. 01-tio. S92 -5ool78.

. . . . SL
, _, Ofolo
, _ 9ll-4i21Z
.m..lll

Remodolinc

Honie

·-·-Iii
-

FREE ESTIMATES

r

~--·

REFRIGERATOR 28 x 50 , or
s"moller. Coli 992-7513 or

7-211-1 mo.

·ean Pfotessicinals
.Bissell Siding Co.

~~~. AWIIINUII

.

SIOfJIC.JOfmT
I;UT1US.\liiiiii5S

, .. "THEN 'IOU-ALL
ARIE"TH'~~

· LARRY LAVENDER

ON!! ,.,

- ~Ofolo

. Pl. HZ.Jftl

4-11-1~

GUTTER

SWAIN

SERVICE

Aulnatic

MIDDLE PORT
3
bedro&lt;im . renovated 11ome
with 2 baths. Little upkeep
and walk lo the stores .
$17,000.
MINERSVILLE ...:_ Nice 3
bedrooms, bath; natural

gas furnace, large garage
and large lot with view of
river . .
·
'
SWIMMING ' POOL 3
nice bedrooms, 2 blths,
Jarge family room with
fireplace, bookshelves &amp; ·
sliding gi.ass · doors . Full
basement, garage and ·
slanted shrubs and plries ln
a 'nice loci:lle .
POMEROY - S bedrooms,
111:z beths, central heating
·and · out of High .water.
$24 .000 · unfurnlslled
$28,000 fully furnished
.
.

.

.

S YRS. OLD - Nice all
electrlc '3 bedroom home
with fenced level lot . Quiet
street
In
good
neighborhood. Just SIS.SOO .
50•100 LOT - Near store,
cJty water , and a 2
bedroom air conditioned
trailer. Only 56,000.
CORNER
LOT
4
bedroom brick. large living
wllh fireplace.
large
dining, basement and wrap
around front porch . Want
S22 ,SOO.
WANT IT SOLD, CALL US
AT 992-3325.

SALESMEN
SELL
PROPERTY, 00 YOU
WANT YOURS SOLO? IF
SO CALL "2·3325.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
ACCOSlCATES

GREENBEANS. Pick your own. Br· COUNTRY formlonCI with 5eelud·
ed w09ds. water ond good acing c.ontolner . Arnold Hupp
cess 1n Monroe County, W. Vo.
form , Letart Falls . 2"7·2623.
$! ,000 down , call (304) 7721974 HONDA Cl 200. E)(cellerit
3102 or (J0.1)772-3227 .
condition . "600 miles . With
helmet. Must sell for best offer. VA·FHA, 30 'I' . financing . Ireland
Mortgage, n E. State , Athena,
{304) 882-2529.
phone (614) 592-3051.
PORTABLE "GE Pot Scrubber"
Dishwosker. Top·loadlng. in 2. STORY 3 bedroom frame
house. F.A. furnace , storm wingood condition . $125. 992-3844
dows, fireplace in Middleport.
NEW "HONDA Z·SS mini-bike.
Phone 992-3-157 .
992-25 U .
SIX ROOM house ot 613 Mill St.,
APPLES . fiTZPATRICK Orchards.
Middleport . Gaocl condition. In·
State ROut• 68~
Phone , quire at •-?9 Lincoln St ., Mid·
Wilkesville, 669-3785.

~~~:....

,

,,

T111•iai1n Serrice

C.tio- 001 pooco cvtt•n. Wt hloi
~ • do H yoo11111. Spocial IHk• to
boidn
· ·

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

RACINE CARPET ·
. SHOP

I I

GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
'RATES

•-.o.

Plt. 37U2W

1-21-IFC
l___ _ _ _.:.::;..;.:..:..J

&amp;-1&amp;-1 mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Superior

THE PHOTO PLACE

Slum Ellradion

I

·Young's

Carpeting
Clrpel Up

Pasports

tery

'

"Till Orici1111111S

&amp;-22-1 mo

.

llot"" "·-

!:

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

At
992-2206 or 992-7630
Hl-5292

•1'

and ·•·
comrilerci•l. . Call for ~~
estimate, 24 hour Service. •
Anyda y, anytime.
· Phone 985-3106

Phone Mike Tounr

Anniversaries
Special Ott~ISiolts

'
•

Residential

......,P=O.

, Weddinp
Port11its

B. . 34

~

Chester, Ohio
8-29-pd.

2-U ! ~~a

"P 001411 0: 100$€
~'10\l'U.~

~ TOI!i'A~tee ~

l..l.D'I.

BRADFORD, Auchoneer, Complete Service. Phone 9A9·2o487
or 9A9 -2000. Ro ci.ne, Ohio, Cnft
Bradfo rd.

HOMESITES f
;w so Ie , 1 acre on d
, 4P- M•ddleport, neor Rutland . . _,:...::=--=-'--:--~~--Coll992-7481.
ELWOOD · BOWERS · REPAIR Sw&amp;epers, toasters , irons , all
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 bolhs ,
small appliances low~ mower",
all elec ., 1 acre . Middleport .
next to State H1ghwoy Garoge
close to ~~tlond . Phone 992 on ROute 7, Phone (61A ) ~85 7481 .
.
3825.
WALl form for sole, 10 % down , REMODELING. PlumlMng , heQting
owner finan ced . Monroe Coun ·
and oll - ty~s of general repair.
. ty . . W. Vo . Phone (304) 7n
Work: guoro,teed iO years ·ex ~
3102 or {304) 772-'3227.
perience. PI-lone 992 ·2..o9

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

GASOIJNE ALlEY

1972 OODGE CHARGER. A.C. ond
many more options, $1A95, Call
9'12-5169 . .

'o'IAIN
POMEROY, 0.
NEW LISTING - 6 acres
.close ln. Newly remodeled
home .has 3 bedrooms,
bath , dlnl~g . Rec. R . ,
modern
kitchen ,
full·
basement, · roofed plillo In

front,

trailer

"hookup.

. $29,800.00.
•
NEW
LlSTtNG
Excellent 2 stor'y- frame, 1
rooms,3·4 bedrooms, bath,
modern. kllchen , utility ,
nat. ga• hoi w&amp;ter heat.
Thl~ home you must see.
$31,915.00.
.
LOW UTiliTl ES In this
sr:nall home,-..4 rooMs, bath ,
porches , nat. gas heat ,- clty
water &amp; sewer . $5,400.00.
LARGE LOT - 88&gt;C200 with

nice

Mobile · Hom.e,

2

bedrooms, bath , large
living R ., B.G. lorced alr
furnace, equipped kitchen
with dlnlng area, workshop
In the reer. $8,000.00.
2LOTSOVERLOOKSTHE
RIVER - 2 story frame
home, 3 B.R .. bath, 2
fireplaces. own water
system.
porches ,
basement. 7 rooms ln all .
$6.800 .00 .
CLOSE IN -1 Acre. nice
two bedroom home with
living &amp; dining room,
knotty pine paneling, builtin kit. Garage, part
basement. $16,.500.00.
COUNTRY- 2 Acres, near

mines, 2 story frame, up to
4 Bdrms., 111• baths, garage
block
storage
bldg .
$10,.500.00.
NEWER DOUBLE WIDE
Acres, garage, storage
chicken
haute,
CHEAP AT
H4YE BUYERS FOR
ALL TYPES OF HOMES,
NEW HOMES, FARMS,
ACREAGE. FOR GOOD
RESULTS LIST WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, .... T •• Y ..

LEONA~~:~J,.fiES

•

SEWING MACHINE Rop01rs , ser · :
v1ce, all makes , 99.2-2284 . Tho ,
Fobi-1c Shop . Pom ero y .
Author ized Singer Soles and ,
Service . Wft sharpen. Scissors . f
EXCAVATING , dozer, loade-r and
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo -boyt for hire : will haul
fill d1rt, to soli . limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fers·, doy phone 992· 7089, nigh t

26 First-rate
27 Stock-

You're not tellinQ
Slim about the
doorstep basket?J_;;~

holder's air
breviation
'"'"''

Y"tr,-,,.,..-:

1972 FORD PINTO Ruh·o-bout.
Good condition. Coli 949-2590
anytime or 949·2"39 , offe r 4
pm .
19n OlDS CUTLASS S, 2dr., hord."
top· 992-2-«Sor 992·3381 ,
1970 CHEV~OLET BISCAYNf. New _p&lt;::h.:.:on=•c.:992
=·3:::5:::25::,::o&lt;~992~·~5~2:::32~.­
lires.
Good con dition . EXCAVATING , dozer, bockhoo
992-5()8..4.
arid ditcher. Charles R. Hot f ield , Bo~k Hoe Scrv1ce ,
1973 NOVA 350.. V-B. Ve'Y good -,:R:.:uo::tl:::
onC:d",_.O:::h:::;o::.:_
P:::
ho:::n::;e~7_:42~·~2000"':"'.&gt;.
condition . $1600. 985·3833.
::
~ '
WILL d~ rOofii-ag, . construction , ;,
197~ GREEN PONTIAC Fire 8ird
plumbmg on~ healing . No jo.
1972 350 Hondo , SASO. 7A2-2211
t?O la~ge or too small. Phont+: ·
or 742 -2287, after 5.
7"2·23-48. ·
4

~~~~~~~----- :~~==--~-------·

Marcus w•··"':;.... M,D. .t.

0

J

1:...+--f-+-.,.,.-+-+-t-+--+---~4

"- Big
Girl

NT bid shows strength
19
NORTH

.A64

29 Godless one

•AJ7
t K J 10 3
4QJ 8

woman
Charge
Quadruped
Acror

·1~9 8
• 8 64 3
• Q84 •
+975
... 9 72
oloA6 3
SOUTH IDI
•K Q7
.K QlO
t A6 2
oloK.l054
.
Both vulnerable .

Second (peer·

less 1

. 2 wds.)
Natalie
or Nat
French legislature

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
It

how

I

Wes1

Nortb Eaai

to work It:

Pass

4 N.T. Pass

Pass

Pass

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES
XG

MIZ

AWHD

GWZFDN,

...
I·

FIJ K

SXQ.

DKFF

M I Z,

LIUKLD

F.

p I

DI

w

EKLNIH'N

as a strong bid in notrump."
Jim : · 'A conspicuous exam·

AXFF

HID

pie is the raise of a notrump
opening bid to four notrump.
Your partner opens one
no trump. You have fifteen or
sixteen points and a balanced
hand. If your partner has a
minimum notrump four will
be safe, but you don ' t want to
be in six . If he has a max-

DSK M

OHIA . -

NDKJKHNIH

c
·:

imum you want to be in six, so
expert Blackwood users all
play that an immediate raise
of partner's notrump oPening
Is not Blackwood. "
Oswald : " Today•$ hand
shows this bid at work. North

raiseS to. ·rour wiih ·sixteen

po1hls . South might well pass
.with seventeen; but decides to
bid six on ·account of his two
tehs and because be has confidence m his play." .
Jim : " South knocks out ·the
ace of clubs arid counts eleven ·
easy tricks . ije wifl need
diamond finesse for .the ·
twelfth one and will have .to
guess which way ro take it. If
his confidence in his own pl.ily
IS 'justified he will take · it the

a

righ~ w~y ."

An Ohio reader wants to
knbw iJ it is good policy to
play that the queen will be in
back of the jack
•
Today ' s hand shows the
queen in front of the jack, so
that a declarer who followed
that theory would Jose his
slam. We have never seen any
evidence that her ladyship
knows where the jack is.
Hence , it is equally likely to
be .on either side.
(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN , send S1 to: " Win at
Bndge." cto thiS newspaper,
P.O. Box 489, Radio City Sratlon,
New Yorl&lt;. N. Y 10019)

tNt-;W:ii'APER ENTERPRISE ASSN t

.FRIDAY_TIL 5

:•

Close Sat. At

5 P.M.

REAOIN6 A BOOK

II

It

=
· '
tieaa.••.• .JL-,Ufl "'llQ.•.:••••,
.
_.,,•2·22..!!__

_A_RN~~-I'·IIIATir •

,

IN5TEAO OF IIIATCHIN6
TV "l(()U 51101.\D 8E

. Ru~t.~

INSTEAD OF WATCHING
TV 1.{0\J COULD 6E
STAAI~TENING VP

!lOUR ROOM!

INSTEAD OF WATCHING

NOW THAR'S
A SAD
MAILBOX IF
1. EVER

PLAir'ING OUTSIDE !

SEEN ONE

TV 'iOU COliLD EVEN BE

.

~~~~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald: "In its s1mplest'
form any four-notrump bid is
played as Blackwood. This is
simple, but it is also rather in·
effective since it makes it im·
possible to use four notrump

AS I

Yesterday's CrypUHJuote: WHEN TWO MEN IN A BUSINESS
ALWAYS AGREE, ONE OF TIIEM IS UNNECESSARY.WILUAM WRIGLEY, JR.

••

Pass

D SINK

DSKM
UZD

South
1 N.t.
6N.T.

Opening lead - 10..

One letter simply slands lor another. In !his sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ore oil
hints Eaeh day the &lt;O&lt;!e letters are different.

WINNIE

EAST
... J 53 2
• 9 52

WEST

ll:ti'tif.L)U..:).b"--"Ji.- O'Neal

·-,

••

11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Happy Days 6,1 3;

33 Fashionable

.'!

:,.••

TUESDAY, S~PTEMBER 20,1977
s :•s-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5 :55Sunrlse Semester 10; 6 :25--Concerns &amp; Commants
10; 6 :»-Focus on Columbus •: News 6; Sunrl"'
Semester 8; 6 : ~s-Mornlng Report 3.
6 :50-Good .Mornlng , Trl Sate 13; 7 :00-Today 3 .~.15 ;
Good Morning America 6,1 3; ~BS ,.,. ~ 8;
Buliwlnk le 10; 7:»-Schoolles 10.
·
8 :00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33. 9 :1l0-Merv
Grllfln3; Phil Donahue~. 13.15; New Mickey Mo..e
Club 6: Family Affair 8; Mike Douglas 10.
9 : »-Edge of Night 6; Andy~rlfflth 8; 10:00-Sanford
&amp; Son 3.~. 15; Dl~ah 6 ; Here's Lucy 8, 10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 : 3()-Hollywood Squares 3,. ,15; Price .ls Right 8,10.

Now''
(2 wds.)

.

\973 FORO TRUCK , Custom F· lQO CARPEN.TER, flooring,· toiling~. l
302 P.S:, automatic, topper ,
pon•lmg . Phone992 -2759. ·
1,
good tires , exc~llent conditton.
992•34TOor 992·2595
MOBilE . HOme ReP.Jir, Elec .
:::::-=-=-:;;;-:;;-.:..:.:'7c:.::'--,---,.
.
plumbin.s ahd hea ting Phone ' •
1976 C·20 Chev"rolet Truck with
9'92-58$8:
campe r top, $3800. firm . 197"
c'
Dodge truck , lf, ' ton , with HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex· '
camper · top, "$1800 . Coli
cov?ling , septt C ~y stems , :
7"2·2316,
dozer, bockhoe, durnp truck. ~
· llm&amp;sfone ," gr:over, blockt~
~'
'1969 tMPALA. • .dr. Fine condipov1ng , At. 1•3. Phone 1 (61
t1on . New paint . job. 350
698- ~331.
-engine . 7"2·2359.
'
• ;
HARRISON 'S t.V. Repa1r. Service 1
Calls ; 2"16 Syc;omore, ·St . , Mid· 1
· dlepoft . Phone992-2522. •
~
.
BATHROOMS AND Kitchens 1
r~mod!t_led ., ce~omip t1le , plurn·...!
FOR SALE or Trode: House and lot
bmg, carpentry , end general
tn Mason , W. Vo 3 bedrooms ,
maintenance. ·13 year$ ex bath , living room , kitchen, utili·
perience. 997-3685 . ·
•w
ty , extra lar~ room for recreation or TV room. (30") 77!1-5227, EXCAVATING, BACKHOE, do-offer 5 pm
trencher, low boy, d~
lrucks,
••ptic systems . ani :
FOR SALE or Trade GEESE. "
PuJIIn t, phone 992-2-478 day 01' ' •
young Bore hog5 . Call evennight .
'
·,
ingt . 949-2115 .
•

7 :00P .M . - Pau l Gaudino Family Fitness
7 :30 P .M. - PPHS -Galllpolis Football
10:00- 700 Club .

11:3()-(t's Anybody's Guess 3,15; Farnl(y Feud 6, 13;
Love of Lile 8 8, 10; Sesame S. 20.
11 :5s-tBS News 8; Loving Free 10; 12:00-News
3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce Courl 8i
Midday 13.
12 :»-Chlci&gt; &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Bob
Braun 4; Sea"i-ch for Tomorrow a ~ 10.
1 :00-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6. 13; l:lews 8;
Y,oung &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Lives M,15; ' As The World Turns :
8,10.
.
0H, YEAH? ~AT'S W,HAT
'&lt;OU THINK ... PCIP.
2:00-$ $20,000 Pyram id 6,13; 2:3()-0octors. 3,4,1 5;
One Life lo Live 6, 13; Guiding UgH! 8, 10.
3 :00-Another World 3,• . IS; All In The Family 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
3:1 5-General Hospital 6. 13 .; . 3 : 3~atch Game 8,10;
Lilias . Yoga &amp; You 20.
.
4:1l0-Mister Cartoon 3; Lillie Rascals-Our Gang 4;
Gong ·Sh.ow ' 15 ; Mer~ Griffin 6; Gilligan's Is. 8;
1- 11
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10;· Dlna'h 13.
4 :3o-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4i Brady
Bunch 8; Brady Bunch 10; Lillie Rascals 15.
5 :1l0-Bonanta 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan' s
1
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13.
.5 :3()-{)dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 15.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 :3()-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6·;
CjlS News 8, 10; In Pursuit of Liberty 20.
7 :00-Truth or Cons, 3; Cross-Wits A; Liars Club 6; Pop
Goeslhe Country B; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
My Three Sons 15; Malorelle Festival 33 .
(Answll&lt;ll tomorrow)
7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Wolfman Jack 6;
Jumbles: BATHE FORTY HOPPER PERSON
Country Carnival 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20:
Saturoay's l
Price is Right 10; That's Hollywood 13; Muslc City
Answer: Could be a1881forthepalate-"TASTE"
IS.
6 :1l0-R ichard Pryor 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Flit·
patrlcks B, 10; Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
8: 3()-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13
9:1l0-Movle "The Girl In the Empty Grave" 3,4,15; ·
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Three's Company 6,13i Mash B,Jor In Petformance
41
Neighbor
at Wolf Trap 20 .
}CROSS
of Czech .
9' 3o-Soap 6 ; Mary Tyler Moore 13; 10:1l0-Famlly
ll'ulsate
DOWN
6,13; Lou Grant 8,10; 10 :3().5 One's home
11 :00-News 3,4,6.8,1 0,13,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
1 Cap
10 otherwise
33.
.
.
11 Former
2 Choice
11 :3o-:.Johnny Carson 3,4, 1S; Movie " The Thief Who
~EO DID 'bJ L~
Mrs .
3 Colorado
Came lo Dinner " 6, 13; Kojak B; Movie "Divorce
Al-L- Ill~ Ro'TTE;~
. Mason
resort
American Style" 10; ABC News 33; 12 :00-Janakl
13
Mature
4
Duffer's
33.
.
'!Bif.l0S I'M OOT
need
12 : 4o-Movle "The Alpha Caper" 8; 1 :oo-Tomnorrow
14 Single out
1D
5 Dismay
Yesterday' s Allswer
3,4; 1 :3()-Mary Hartman 10; News 13.
15 Swruner
6 Ma 'I
Movie Channel 4 - :
(Fr. )
ru ow or 23 Col!Sins of 29 Turkish
5 &amp; &amp; P.M . - Gator
16Show up
Newman
dice
city
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Mars Attacks the World.
17 With appre7 Hebrew
24 Consecu·
30 " - Knew
. Cable Channel 5 hension
measure
tively
Susie" (2 wds. ) 7:00 P.M. - Paul Gaudino Family Flfness
20 Soprano
8 Explained
( 3 wds. )
7:30- Special Edition
31 Zoo
Merriman
9 Hmst
LBJ' V
8 :30 - Celebrity
25
12 Sports
s p
favorites
9 :30- Consulfaatlon
21 Tool for
.
26
Work
to32
Belief
10 :00- 700 Club .
shoemakers
se tt mg
ward
18 Equivalent
34 Egyptian
22 Prefix for
19 Sheep
(2 wds.)
god
physical
23 J .D. Rock22 Bog
27 Surgical
37 Big busiefeller
down
instrument
ness initials
handout
~~-:------..,. •• Pelt

TOOCLa

PARTS • LABOR

91.m. lo 5 p.m. ·

VIRGIL B. TEAFOitO, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. 5econol Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

•·

.·

. Phone 949-2814'

RE~tlOll

MeS~ACiE'~ _...,~ ... ,

•

1,

Sl1lltll
IIINOOJIS IDOOU
Rt:PUUIIEIIT

r··t "' ' 1:"

COUL D I TAKE A

VinJI &amp; Aluminum Sidin&amp; .•
Storm WindowS &amp; lnsull- ••
tion.

. . . 1....... , _

qii:'J.

...TH EV ' ~e ~HOOTIIJ&lt;S
OUT ON THE OESIOP,T,
AIVO PRO&amp;ABt.¥ WON'T
SE BACK Ut.ITIL LATE ...

1:::.0~~~£

lttiiNtoo IWiH ....
.
6'21-.1 mo. pd.

t:,'!lf
J:" •

HOUSE IN -country , on land contract. Con make down pay·
ment, if reasonable Phone
742·3074

•

Ph. HZ·71lhr5.JR$

· 1· 7·1 mo ,
COINS . CURRENCY , tokens , old ._..;___________..:,..,J
pocket worche~ and chains ,
511ver and gdld . We need 1964
KintsbuiJ
Slles
ond older silll'er&lt;:Oins . Buy , sell ,
or trade' Call ROger Wamsley ,
h rou• authorized . . I« ltrbJ~nnints aH- u1~ II 10lJ ·W1111 _7:_:4~2,:,·2:::3,_
31:.:·-~--~-­
ffOdlltiW k:h W-,rt UICIUSt ltlt
OLD FURNITURE 1 ke boxes , brou
o ,.., h&lt;mt. or mobile hom~
ooe that will tnhlnce its be.IVty_fa1
beds , etc . , · complete
households Wnfe M 0 . Miller ,
Clf1M. this will suit JO&amp;II nte4s.
e Urban !tnt is 1U 1hmlinu11, hufr
Rt . " Pomeroy , Otuo "or coli
pa_&amp;e, anodiztd rJlllf. alld pom,
..
992-7760
p(lm or iet01atilt. t hN 1n tll· ·
CASH! ! Jun ~ cars, Fry '~ Truck &amp; · peuencetl cr• lhat hat cre~ted lfti"JJ
of these fif!e
l!lfRiall an• tarAu to, Rutland Phone 7-42-2081
ports m Uus 1rN. ast ol tMM proor 7"2·9575. Cloled Mondoys .
diiCts qu.alit;"or low inltrut hOMe im- ·
NO ITEM TOO large or tOO small .
1
1oc11atimoto
""" "
L toll Ul-7034 olrtt
• W1tl buy 1 piece .or complete
~slop
by
1100
E.
Moio
St.)
p..,.,~··
household. New , used, or onft·
0.
-20-1 rno..
ques Martin's Ful'n1ture , 20 N
2nd St ., Middleport. Phone
992-6370.

TEAFORD

ONE YEAR Poll8d Hereford Buil.
Con be r&amp;gts:tereQ. 949-236ll
1975 SUZUKI GT -550. -4700 miles.
Windshie_ld crosh bor, sissy .bc"r
ond luggage rock h :cel lent
condttion . ~49 -2575
·

"-!

Ph~n•
' 92•21o 7'
Pomeroy,
.

FOR SALE

• .., _Jack W, Carsey, Ni;r.
1LAJI.
Phone992-2181

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

P -. Ofolo 4S7H
Koltilen C.binels • RooiJOt : Concrete
Potioo • Sidewolks · New Construction'

•Custom Hydraulic Hon
Pomerpy F.orest Pro- M.aking

TWO CHOICE one oue build ing
lots ovoilabie: Coli 992-5869 or
985-3595.
1967 16 FT RINKER·BUILT boot
with 80 hp mp tor 992-3467 , THREE BEDROOM on Main Street
after 6pm.
m Rutland
$12 ,000
Call
9'12-6238
COOKBOOK. Mo.;e thon 130
mouth -wotenng r&amp;&lt;ipe$ are MUST SELL this 3 bedroom , 2 1/ ,
featured i" Mir 1om B. loo 's colboth , spl1t -foye r with olltheextrosl .Pr iced for be low actual
IMtion of her famtly's fovonte
real estate ll'alue for quick
dtshes Reci!les o~e orgonited
by holida y seosop . In addition,
sole! Nice dnve to power
plants $.4.. ,000. 992-2492
you'll appreciate the ffiony
·helpfUl cook1ng hmts including
meosuru1g equlvoltindes and NEW. HOME wtth 3 bedrooms ,
emergency substitutions for tn·
both,· full basement , . Iorge
gredients Makes 0 thoughriul
gorage fully carpeted-, Iorge
g1ft. Send. $3.50 to Cookbook,
deck on bock . Leading Creek
PO 8oJII "52, Pomemy , Ohio, _:cRc=ooc.d:::·-:.P'Ob.:.o:.:.
n•:..:.99:.:2:..·7:c0::5.:
4:..
. --.45769 Allow 3 to · " weeks IN POMER.OV : Lorg11, roomy lour
bedroom ·2 story home Fully
delill'ery. ·
equipped k1t chen, I v, baths ,
basement . Coli for oppo 1nl·
m&amp;nt between 10 om and 2 pm ,
992·3277 . $&lt;0,000 . .
New Co -Op · waler •nd
LOTS FOR sale near Metgs Mtne 1.
softeners, model VC-SVI.
742-2746.
Only 12'79.95
Save sso.oo on a new
FIVE ROOM house and both
Hotpoint Refrioeralor
992-5871 '
1 Now 20 cubic fl. Chest
TWO BEDROOM house . tn
Freezitr.
Syracuse. 2 patches , . storm ,"
S2S.OO Dlscount
aluminum bu1lding. 992 -5395
1 GoOd McCullough ·Chaln ·
Saw
S95.1)(\
· Electric Trim-All cuts with
nylon
S29.95
(1) GoOd Refrigtrolor $200

Pomeioy Lindmark

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Rustolevm Paint PrDductt
CASH po1d for "all mok•s and

••

CARTER

Cable Channel 5 -

Mister Roger&amp;' Neighborhood 20.33; Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13.
5:3()-()dd Couple • : News 6; Elec. Co . 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes IS .
6 :oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6:»-NBC News ),4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Pests, Pesticides &amp; Safety 20.
7:00-Trulh or Cons. 3; Cross-WIIs ~~ Liars Club 6;
Marty RObbins Spotlight 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Ohio Writers 20; Know
Your Schools 33.
·
7:»-That Nashville Muslc 3; New Truth or Cons. 4 ;
Muppet Show 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeilLehrer Reporl 20.33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid
Camera 13 ; Nashville on lhe Road 1~ ..
8 .00-Litlle House on lhe Prairie 3,4,15; Son Pedro
Beach Bums 13; Emergency One 6; Young Don ' I
Boone 8, 10; Upstairs, Downslalrs 20,33 .
9 :GO-Movie " Goble &amp; Lombar~" 3,4,15; NFL Football
6, 13; Belly White 8, 10; Age of Uncertainty 2~,33 .
9:»-Maude 8,1 0; 10:00-Rafferty 8,10; News 20;
Austin City Limits 33 .
11 :00-News 8, lO;uCountry Corners 33; 11 : 3()-News
3,4,15; Movie " The Girl Who Came Gill-wrapped"
8; Movlo!'TermofTrlal " 10; ABC Nws33 .
12 :00-Johnliy Carson 3,4,15; News 6, 13; Janak! 33.
12 :3()-lronslde 13; 1:» -Tnmn-ro., 3.4; Mary Hari.
man 10: News 13. Movie Channel• -

••

DAVID BRICKI.ES

S &amp; 9 P .M. - Jack &amp; the Beanslalk
1 &amp; 11 P .M. - Ali the PrHident' s Men.

S:DO-Bonanza 3: My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8i

~------. .

MEIGS

I

MONDAY , SEPTeMBER 19, 1tn

•

Business Services

BLACK

TIMB~R .

BEE LINE Fash1ons Walk-In Sllow.
Sept. 20 10om 8 pm. 949•2766
Jo nmne Petrel ; Ro c1ne
A N N 0 .u N c· I N G FOUNO . ABANOONEO lo&lt;ge
young mole dog. Blondish -red
NEW store lo-r Radi o S~ock, Ace
color, Friendly K1ngsbury Rd .
Hardware ond Meigs Plot:o now
area 992-5629, after 4
open Monday tl-rrough Saturday
9.00 to 9.00, Stmday 12 00 to FOUND: FEMAL~ Collte . Owner
6:00
call and describe. 992-3113.
REDUCE SAFE ond fast with
GoBese Tablets ond E-Vop .
"water pdls:' Nelson Drug

Courts

-

-----

ATTENTION BOW Hunt~rs! Foro
c.omplete line of Sow Hunting
suppltes The Bow Hunter Shop,
New Hoven W Vo. Phone TWO ENGLISH Spnnger Spomel
(3Q.i ) 882-7827 Ask for Dove
pups . 1 mole , 1 female 11
Richards,
weeks old, Hun ting or pet.
Phone 992 -7313.
Will SHARE home. with worlf:ing
person , wtdowed or older lady. FIVE BEAGLE mix puppies to give
Tllelmo Moore. 742·30b5. Rt. I ,
owoy . 7 wee~s old . 992-776.4
Rutland , Oll1o.

TenMs

PENNZOil RUTlAND open da1ly
till 10. Closed Mondays,
wrecl.:•r service, tire repolr,
Phone 742·9575 or 742 · 2081 .
PIANO TUNING ond Repo ir. lone
Ooniels. 992·2082 12 yeoruerv,ce fO Tri ·County. Reference
Elberfelds .

TV -Log for easy viewing

FOUR LETTERS ON THE
OUTSIDE AN' NO LETTERS
ON THE INSIDE

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

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

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

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

Good times

'j

SPECIAL
SEPT. 18
thru SEPT. 24th

(Ooallnued fnm .... 1)

.

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

l

News •• in Briefs

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

wite, Emma Jean Jenkins

Lewis.

Oak

Hill.

daughters survive :

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

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

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

Two teams tugged

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

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

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

William Oak Hill : W•lt•r

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

p.m. Monday.

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

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

son of the late

fl(~Dody ·

Judy Dunlap Turley.

and

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

1939.

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

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

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

Six grandchildren survive.
Two brothers survive :

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

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

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

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

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

I

survive .

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

Mrs .

Ray

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

Mr. Beard was a member

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

Lodge, Knights of Pythlas.
Mr. Beard was

also a

member of the Gallipolis Golf

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

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

College in Columbus in 1929.

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

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

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

Sixteen girls
nm car wash
at Barton's

burg, F Ia. Ten grandchildren

Six death.

Mrs .

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

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

. •
l Sextuplets m

Area Deaths

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

death .

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

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

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

service board.

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

on Feb .. 10. 1948 as ass istant

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

secretary of the C&amp;S board.

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

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

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

Beard

was

also

secretary and treasurer of

the Gallia County Jun ior
Fairboard for a number of

years.
Funera l services will

be

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

Home wlth

Rev .

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

and 7-9 p.m .

.

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

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

Savings Bank, Gallipolis.
Pallbearers will be Paul
Richard

Turner ,

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

GARDEN

Charles Holzer, Atly. Bill

Cherr ington and Pat Patrick.

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

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

FROM

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

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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

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

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

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

Famous Name' Brands
of Furniture &amp; Appliances

79~

•RIVERSIDE

dairy isl~ .(
~cust

Street

MuiCI!epOrt.

•PROVINCETOWN

•FRIGIDAIRE

•ADMIRAL

•HOOVER

•SPEED QUEEN

•CALORIC

- FREE DELIVER-CONVENIENT TERMS
-LARGE SELECTION$-

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
-- -

M ir:ldle &gt;ort Ot1io

NO.

no

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Shooting cans
not so funny

•

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

•

ea~h.

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

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

Cars selling
like hot cakes

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

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

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

Conservation group hears
Rep. James oppose Issue 2

vaccination

e

requirem n s
eed h king

n

c ec

Patrol report
said in error

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

VOL XXVIII

'

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

New truck bought for $12,235

to the Gallia County Heart

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

.

•
good condI•tIOn

In lieu of flowers. the
famil y requests contributions

Di.lvies,

.
enttne

.

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

•

CJ

Weather

League sponsors

'outdoors' day

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

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

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

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

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

•

·

•

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

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

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