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10- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Tuesday ,Sept. 20, 1971

Evacuation called off
.

MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- A fire and several
explosions destroyed the
Mansfield Plating Co . here
early today. An evacuation of
the area was 5\arted when
police believed cyanide gas
containers had exploded.
Police said it was flfsl
thought ibe eiplosions had
released cyanide gas into the
area: The evacuation was
started and the area sealed
off.

However, ·the evacuation
was stopped after it was
determined the cyanide
containers

were ·

riot

destroyed.
The cyanide, along with
acid used in a plating

proetlSS, was stored in

a
basement security room at
the plating firm.
Police
Sgt.
Edwin

VETERANS MEMORIAL
. Admitted . - F1Qyd Bush .
Letart, w. Va. ; Don Hooll"r.
Shade ; Brian
Shuler,
Pomeroy ; Ahlx Fraser,
MiQdleport ; John FrY, New
Haven; . Grce .Gloeckner,
Pom~y ; James steele, New
Haven.
Discharged - Allison Lee,
Susan Burns, Goldie Roberts,
Archie !Ufe, Alma Young .

struck by an auto at 10:11
p.m. on SR 160, three tenths
of a mile west of Gallipolis.
The animal ran into the path
of a car operated by Diane L.
Goldsberry, 16, Gallipolis.
There was minor damage.
Nelda G. Yockey, 52, Rt. I,
Racine, was cited to driving
left of the center following an
accident at 12 :50 p.m.
Monday on 125, four and six
tenths miles east of SR 1 in
Meigs CoWlty. The patrol
said the Yockey car went left
o! the center striking a
~~~~~~~~~~ vehicle driven by Gene D.
Wolfe, 56, Portland. There
was moderate damage.

BOOTS
14.00 to 112.00
Ladies Golf Shoes

16.95
MANY
PREID GIFTS
99' to 119.95
1

Use Our
Layaway Now
For Christmas

Waverly edged
in golf match
Meigs · High School's golf
team posted a close SEOAL
victory over Waverly Mon•
day afternoon at the
·Riverside Golf Course in
Mason. The final score was
Meigs 198 Waverly 201. The
win pushed Meigs' season
record to 3-1, 2-3 in the
SEQAL.
Scores were as follows :
Waverly - Troy Bante, 48 ;
Tom Depugh, 49; Harvey
Gillespie, 51 ; Rod Brower, 53
and Greg Sturgell, 53.
For Meigs, Chuck Follrod
shot a 40 ; Lance Oliver abd a
43; Chuck Kennedy , 54 ;
David Kennedy, 61 and Scott
McKinney, 69. . ·
Last ·week, Jackson
defeated Ironton and Meigs in
a three team meet. Meigs is
at Belpre tonight and at
Jackson Wednesday.
'

Bernice D. Prince, 74 , of .q81

Ella Mae Capehart, 90. New

Havenr d ied monday at the
Dalton Nursing Home in

Mochoskay said " a very

Ironton.

Born here April IS, 1887 sh&amp;

was the daughter of the late
John and Sarah

Grinst~ad

Ord. Her husband, Thomas
E. Capehart, died In 1966. She
was also pre&lt;:eded In death by
a son , Thom,as P ., and a
daught~r .

Mrs .

Ella

Rot~ .

·

.

Capehart was a
member of the New Haven

United Methodist Church .

Surviv l'ng
are
four
daughters. Mrs . 0 . J .
(Agnes}
Howatd ,
New
Haven :
Mrs .
Eugene

IEIIzabethl

co·ttle ,

· Chesapeake, y~ .: Mrs .
James A. (Ve"Ya) Hussell ,
i\1\oorehaven, Fla ., and Mrs.

Holzer Medical Center
ley, Cecil Queen, Ruth Roush,
(Discharges, Sept. If) .
Gertrude Smith. Violet
Roberta Batey , Norma Smith, !loy Taylor II, Willard
Beatty, Grace Correll, Taylor, Jr.
Thomas Cremeens, Floyd
(Blrtbs, Sept.l7)
Drummond, Goldie · Mr. and Mrs . Thoma s
Freeman, Reed Gandee, Mrs. Mayes, a son, of Mason, W.
Patrick
Harbour
and Va .
(Discharges, Sept.l8)
daughter, Cheryl Houck,
Winifred Hurst, Ives King,
Mrs. Joseph Coyan and son,
Thelma Lester. Bonita Darla Dunfee, Leida Frost,
Manley, Robin Moore, Laura · Mrs. Gary Jones and
Poling, Emma Reed, Eph daughter, Sally Lambert,
Ross, Randy Rothgeb, Chad Edna Lavender, Estella
Smith. Mrs. John Wamsley Layne, Elton Lykins, Mrs.
and son and Marie Wentzell. Martin McKelvey and son,
(Birlbs, Sept.16)
Darrell Nickels, Jr., Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Carl Reigel and son, Irene
Hayes, a daughter, Pomeroy ; Rus,ell, Mrs. Mark Siders
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Shelton. and son, Charlotte Wright.
a son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
(Discharges, Sept.191
Benny Wolfe, a daughter, . Virginia Chapman, Sharon
Rutland ; and Mr. and Mrs. Drummond, Fern Gussler,
Gregory Fife, a son, Juanita Halley, Shelia
Gallipolis.
'
Lanham, Allen Martin, NUa
(DIBcbargea, Sept.l71
Milliken, Martha Phillips,
Charles Akers, Clarence David Singleton. James
Anderson, Loren Blanken- Singleton, Emma Swon,
ship, Pauline Buck, Cleo Mary Van Meter, Teresa
Caudill, Willard Clagg, Ada Warrens, Edison Weaver,
Clary, Mary Cornell, Mrs. Rick Whobrey, Mrs. Betty
Carl Cox and daughter, Mrs. Wolfe and daughter.
Ronald Davis and daughter;·
(Births,Sept,l9)
Brian Donley,
.Goldie
Mr. and Mrs. David
Durham, Daniel Garthee, Wright, a son, Rutland. Mr.
Ryan Johnson, Goldie and Mrs. 'James Large, a
Lambert·, Mary Lanning, daughter , Langsville . Mr.
Mrs. Rn Milhlbach and and Mrs. William Wells, a
son, Robert Musser, Thelma daughter, Northup. Mr. and
Nibert, Charles Pinkerman, Mrs. Kenneth Reynolds, a
Catherine Price, Marie Purs- daughter, Mason, W. Va.

News •• in Briefs
(Conitnued from PBI!e I)
than normal b~t not as bad as last ..&amp;.ter's record ireeze.
Based on ''very pr~liminary" and "tentative" forecasts,
·the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said the
Northeast will be colder than normal and the Southwest mild. ·
II couldn't yet predict the weather for the Northwest lind
Southeast. " It is unlikely this winter will be as severe as last
winter," said Donald Gilman, chief long-range forecast for the
National Weather Service.

Michael 1Edna) Elias, South

Point . Ohio ; four sons, J .
Alden Capehart, Louisville,

Ky .; Jack G. Capehart ,

Kenova ; Roy M. Capehart ,
Brookneal , Va ., and D!ln B.
Capehart, Gainesville, Fla .:
23 grandchildren, 31 great grandchildren. anc;i three
great-great-grandch ildren.
Funeral services will be

held

at

!he

Foglesong

Funeral Home Thursday at 2
p.m . with the Re:v . John
C~mpbell

officiating. Burial

will follow in the Graham
Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral home after 3
p.m . Wednesday .

Walford St.. Columbus, a

former
Long
Bottom
resident , died
Tuesday
morning at
University
Hospital
in
Columbus
following an illness.
N!rs. Prince was a member
ol the long Bottom United
Nlethodlst Church . She Is
survived by her husband,
Wayne R. ; tnree daughters.
Mrs . Clarence ( Katbleen)

a~insi

the Southern ()hlo

Cool Company In the amount

of S750,000 for person1f irt·
iuries while working In
constructiOf"! at Meigs M ine
number one has been settled
out of ·c ourt. The amount of
settlement was not d isclosed .

CARL HYSELL, juvenile

No motive for the shooting
was apparent immediately
but a spokesman for the
Montgomery County
coroner's office said robbery

broken . The pale was
damaged by a trailer but was
not broken . Driver of a car

Involved In the accident wu
Eugene Morrl..,. A trailer
struck the pole In the chain of
events In the acc ident.

PARIS (U Pil - PABLO
tronsporled o 15 year old boy
. to Moh)can Youth Camp at . Plcas$0'S heirs have ended
Loudenville
for
ap · .C'h years of squabbling over
prow:l'mately five tO six the S2SO million Htafe feft by
Dean, Mrs. Barney (Betty months tor violation of the Spanish artist, the largest
on record tor any artist.
Lh1Fl) Burton and Mrs . probation artd delinquent
Plcas$0 left no will wh~n he
Donald I Bertie Lou) Polley, acts .
died In Aprll1973 at the age of
all of Columbus ; a sister ,
Mr'$. Dorset Riebel, Belpre ;
COOLVILLE-The Rev. J. 91 , .and shortly before had
pred icted the battle among
seven grandchildren, thr.ee Paul Hilt ol Pendleton, S. ·C..
great - gr~ndchlldren,
a will be evangelist for a fall his heirs for lhefr share of his

nephew and two nieces.
Preceding her in death
were a son. Millard Wayne,
killed in WW II and a
daughter, Imogene.
Private funeral services for

the family will be held at 1: JO
p.m. Friday at the Wh ite
Funeral Home In Coolville
with the Rev . -George Frank·
lin Pickens officiating. Bur ial

will

be

in

Reedsville

revival to be held Tuesday

through Sunday at White's
Chapel Wesleyan Church,
Reule 2, Coolville, at 7:30

Columbus.

WINCHESTER, Eng-land
( UPI)
Victor,
the spread-eagled giraffe who
fell live days ago and couldn't
get back up, died today as
T H E
A N N U A L Royal Navy ~xperts hoisted him to his feet In a gia nfsllng. ,
homecoming at the Eagle
Vl cfor's owner , A\)rwell
Ridge Community Church
will be held Sunday with . Park Zoo chief John Knowles ,
Sunday school at 10 a.m . had warned that the lift

CHESTER COU NCIL 323,

Daughters of America, will
meet at 8 this ev_enlng. Inspection will be held and

birthdays

ob-

served. Potluck refreshments
will be served . Those attending are asked to wear

had been ruled out.
The spokesman said
another sister opened the
back door when a man cwne
ro the door. The man fired at
her but missed and the bullet
ricocheted off the wall. Sister
DOnna came down the back
stairs when she heard the
noise and was shot once in

Cllicago, was a member of

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Boswn Red Sox have claimed
Cincinnati Reds oulfielder
Bob Bailey on waivers, the
Rf\ls announced.

operation could be risky
because g iraffes are delicate
animals .

AMONG THE enterfalner.s
at Yesteryear held Seturday
at the Senior Citizens Center
was the Francis Andrew

Band. Mak ing up the group
bes ides the leader were Mary.
Wippel , Bill Thurston, Betty
Osborn , Br ian Collins, Teresa
Coll i ns, Paul Andrew and

Olive Weber.
CUNDIFF DEPWYED
MASON, W. Va. - Staff
Sergeant Gary L. CWldiff, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Elmo L.
Cundiff of 12 Front St., has
deployed with his Little Rock .
AFB, Ark.. unit for temporary duty at Mlldenhall
RAF Station, England. He is
an
aircraft
propeller
technician with the 314th
Tactical Airlift
Wing,
operating C-130 Hercules
transports. The sergeant is a
1972 graduate of Wahama
High School.

chest, the coroner 's office
said .
Sister Donna, a native of
the Sister's of Notre Dame de
Namur. She had a been a
math teacher at Dayton
ChaminadeJulienne High
School since 1973. Before'that
she taught at St. Agnes School
which is now the middle
school.

fortune would be " worse than
anything you can Imagine."

each evening . There will be
special vocal music each
evening .

Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to fol lowed by a basket dinner at
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday . noon . Featured singers In the
In lieu of flowers residents afternoon Will be Dan
may ~ cont ribut e
to the - Hayman's Hymntlmers. The
Leukemia Foundation of public is invited.
America, 22 Et~Jist Gay St ..

Nun shot·to death

today .

A REPORT on an acctdtnt
in Pome&lt;oy · - the weekend
slated lha a util ity pole wu

and probalion officer , today

quarter ly

DAYTON, Ohio ( UP!) - A
nun at St . Agnes Convent on
the city's west side was shot
to death late Monday night
inside
the
convent,
authorities said .
She was identified as Sister
Donna Jean Blaul, 34.
Police, who refused to give
details of the shooting, were
called In convent which is
part of St. Agnes Olurch and
Dayton Catholic Middle
School complex about 6:30
p.m. and found the nun 's body
lying on a step near a rear
door.
An un identified male
suspect, who was walking
from the area , was arrested
shortly after th e incident , a
police spokesman said. He
was expected to be charged .

white.

LANGSVILLE - Airman Clair C. Reed, aou of
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP! ) Mrs. Mildred L CoUrW of
Rookie Rance Mulliniks,
Rt. 1 bas. been aelecled for
technical training at California's regular shortstop
Sheppard AFB, Tex., In the since Bobby Grieb was lost
Air Force aircraft mabi· · for the season with a bad
tenance field. He bas back in June, will miss the
completedbaatc training at last two weeks of the season
Lackland AFB, Tex. He Is a because of tendonitis in his
1917 graduate of Caldwell, left index ling~ , the AI!gels
reported Monday night.
Obio Higb Scbool.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
PLAYTEX~

Something.for
Every

·

NO

PLACE
LIKE
HOME ·

COLUMBUS- A PROJEGrED YEAR-END CASH deficit
of more than $29,198 iio the Frontier Local School District of
Washington CoWlty has been certified to state education
officials.
State Auditor Thomas A. Ferguson's office reported
Monday that a financial analysis requested by the Frontier
school board showed the district would have In close for about
seven days on or about Dec. 12 in order to offset the deficit. The
auditors' report said that should the schools close, the dJstrict
would still have In pay $35,862 for unemployment costs.
For about $162 a day, the report noted, a skeletnn staff
could maintain the schools.
·

for your valuables to be stolen or destroyed. Keeping impoftant papers, heirloom effects and jewelry at home is really
taking a chance. For only pennies a day
you can rent a safe deposit box and have
the security of knowing where they are.
Safe from fire or theft and possible
misplacement.
.,

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS STo 7 P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

WASIUNGTON - THE VETERAN CONGRESSMAN
stood wheezing in front of his House colleagues . Rep. Daniel J .
Flood, a colorful Democrat from Pennsylvania's hard coal
regi9n, was not ill. He just wanted In give the congressmen a
sense of what it is like In have black lung disease.
·
The House Monday passed reforms to a !!-year-old law that
gives govenunenl benefits In miners with the disease. The vote
was 2113-100. BefQre voting, however, the House bowed In the
wishes of the Carter administration and eliminated sev~al of
the most controversial provisions of the legislation, including
one that would have awarded automatic benefits In veteran
miners.

25th .Anniversary Sale
The Best V;~lues You've Ever Seen

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of Furniture &amp;Appliances
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•BASSETT

•PROVINCETOWN
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•

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•FRIGIDAIRE
•HOOVER

•SPEED QUEEN

•CAlORIC

Member Federal Deposit lnsuran·ce
Corporation

- FREE DELIVER-CONVENIENT TERMS
-t.ARGE SELECTIONs-.
.
.
. .

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

RAJ&lt;ER FURNITURE
r 1 •ddi•!Jllltl. Oht&lt;&gt;

'

Consumer prices show
•
•
·0.3% rise In August
B, SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON .&lt;UPI)
Consumer prices rose 0.3 per
cent in August - the smallest
increase in nine months reflecting moderate food

Surcharge pass-on
cut by committee

price ln cr eases and the

year's first drop in mortgage
rates, the Labor Department
reported tnday.
The monthly increase,
which translates inroa 3.4 per
cent annual rate , compared
with increases averaging an
annual rate of 9.4 per cent
during the first half of 1977.
Following a 0.4 per cent
increase in July, August
brought the smallest monthly
rise in conswne.r prices since
November, 1976. This cool\,g
irend was good news for
President Carter, who bas
promised inflation wiil not
exceed 6.5 per cent in 1977.
The recent moderation of
inflation has produced an
annual inflation rate ot
slightly more than 5 per cent
over the past three months about ha If the rate set in the
first quarter of the year.
Although August's 0.3 per

COLUMBUS (UP!)- The Ohio House Energy and
Environment Committee has taken a step to reduce the
cost surcharge electric companies may pass on to
coosum~s for procuring out-of-&lt;!late coal.
The committee Tuesday inserted an· amendment in
legislation encouraging the use of high-eulfur Ohio coal
shortly before sending it to the House Ways and Means
Committee for further study.
The standing energy panel voted 7-5 for an
amendment forbidding utilities to pass on the cost of
fuel transportation and delivery charges In its
customers. This would encourage utilities to minimize
such costs, and thus purchase as much Ohio coal as
possible.
.
Utility lobbyists were di•t,·essed with . the
development and said the consumer would end up
-paying more anyway or they would be out of business.
The Ways and Means committee was assigned to
study the taxation. implications of the Senate'!"'ssed
bill sponsored by Sen. Kinsey Milleson, DFreeport.
The bill offers lax incentives to utilities and
companies installing air pollution control equipment.
It proposes credits against excise and fran chise
taxes for using equipment necessary to burn Obio coal.
The credits would result in a revenue loss of about $14
million a year ro the state.
The measure also requires Ollio's air emission
standards to be relaxed ro allow the burning of Ohio
coal, and requires utilities In make an effort to buy
Ohio-mined coal and In justify the purchase of out-ofstate ·coal.

cent increase in food prices
exceeded a Q.l per cent

increase in July, it was a
moderate rise in comparision
In monthly increases as big

Money will run
out in Eastern
A financial cash analysis of
the Eastern Local School
District of Meigs County
revealed a potential year-end
cash deficit of $21 ,741.64 and
could result in district schools
being closed nine days , State
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson's office reported
today.
The analysis, requested by
Eastern. l..ocal School Board
of Education, certi.fied a
December 8 closing date to
State Superintenent of Public
Instruction Franklin B.
Walter, who has sole
authority in permitting a
school district to close for

I
I

I'

I

f;.:·

;__.--·'

.I

I.'·

UPTO$JOO

(Sole ends
Oc:tQber 8, 1977)

\ ._
'

\

· ~

$1oooFF Anlnstead~oras

new beige styles

including .

$1 SOOfF when you buy 2 •

CrossYour Heort~sott Sider oras

* of some sryle

$1000fF when you buy 2*

CrossYour Heortconon oras
.$2oooFF Free Spirit"Pantsnners
$~00Qff Free Spirit .Dody Driefers
in new beige
·

• of some sryle

LINGERIE DEPARTMENT-2ND FLOOR

ELBERFELD ..IN:.P MEROY

agree that the key reason for
this coo ling trend - a
moderation of food prices -

the t'Ost of servioes. Service

eent in August, reversing a

is ''WlSUstainable" in the

months ahead.
Prices of food sold on
grocery shelves rose 0.2 per

prices rose 0.5 per cent in
August, the sma llest lncrease
in eight months.
The Conswner Price Index
stood at 183.3 in August,

decline registered in the
previous month. Although
there was a decline for pork,
poultry , eggs, sugar and
coffee, prices turned up
meaning goods and services suddenly for fresh fruits and
costing $100 a decade ago now vegetables.
cost $183.30. This reflected an
A dramatic 2.4 per cent
increase of 6.6 per cent over decline in used car prices
last year.
he lped to offset increases for
The August incTease, com- apparel, fuel oil, coal.
bined with a decline in gasoline ilkld motor oil. It was
average weekly ea rnin gs, the fourth consecutive large
nonetheless managed. to monthly decline in used car
furth er erode the buying prices.
power of the average
Although service costs
American worker . Real moderated with the help of a
spendable earnings declined decline in mortgage interest
0.6 per ce nt in August .
rates, the increases remained
Although
Ca r ter's substantial.
Gas
and
economic advisers have electricity costs jumped I per
predicted inf lation will not cent. Transportation services
exceed the 6.5 per cent range were up 0.5 per cent and
this year, it compares to an medica l ca re rose 0.6 per
annual rate of about 4,6 per cent.
cent at the end of 1976.
Economic forecaser
The current trend could Donald Ratajcza k had
produce a lower inflation rate predicted the August CPI
than Carter has predicted, would show little difference
but economists generally from July.

OLD SOLDIERS NEVER DIE, THEY JUST FADE AWAY, it is said, butthls is not true
of the Civil War Soldiers' Monwnentthat stands next to the court house in Pomeroy. Manual
Gheen of Gheen's Painting, Racine, is sandblasting the monument. Additional sandblasting
will be done to other stone in front and alongside of the building and the court house will
receove a new coat of paint. The county conunissioners have contracted the work being done
on the court house.

financial reasons.
The examiner noted that if
Eastern Local did close
schools to student instruction
on December6, it would incur
an additional $1,539 in costs of
skeletal staff required during
the period of closing.
Schools would be required
to resume classroom instruction in January, 1976,
when new year funding
becomes available. Eastern
Local Schoo) District has
some 1,042 students with 46
teachers and '!I school employes . Two millage issues
w~re rejected by voters this
yea r.

en tine

at
VOL. XXVIII NO. lll

New

fNews • • •tn BriefsJ
I

as 2 per c~n tearlier this year.
Other Cf)mmod.ilies also rose
0.3 per cent.
Mortgage interest rates declined for the first time in
1977, which helped to ease the
recent inflationary trend in

•

·::!~~":-.~~-:.~m..~~~::~;:;~:;~:!:!:!:&amp;~:~i!!»:.:&amp;t~··:::~~::::::::..--=::::.~*'~1

COLUMBUS, OlflO - FRANK FONTAINE, WHOSE
cock~yed grin and crumpled hat endeared him to millions of
fans of the ·old "Jackie Gleason Show" as "Crazy
Guggenheim," was reported in critical condition today, under
treatment for a heart attack.
Fontaine, 57, suffered the attack :;;tmday while awaiting a
plane Sunday at Port Columbus International. Airport after
finishing a nightclub engagement here Saturday night,
according to a Bp(&gt;kestnan at Mount Cannel East Hospital.

THERE'S

f\6

BERNICE 0 . PRINCE
LONG BOTTOM - Mrs.

ELLA MAE CAPEHART
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . -

HOSPITAL NEWS

Yancy D. Halley, 17, Rt. 1,
GalliJ)olis, was cited to Galli&amp;
County JunvenUe Court for
failure to yield the right of
way following an accident at
8:06 a.m. Monday on SR 7 at
GEorges Creek Rd.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
the Halley car pulled from
Georges Creek into the path
of an auto operated !Jy
Stanley Abrams, 46, R.t. I,
Gallipolis. There
was
moderate damage.
A deer was killed when

.

"We started an evacuation
of
the residential area and an
small number if any"
adjacent
manufacturing area
residents of the area w~e
when
we
felt there was a
ev,..,uated.
possibility of cyanide
fumes," he said. "'lbey did
have cyanide store&lt;! there
and we thought the cyanide
may have went up also but
fortunately .it didn ~ . There
PLEASANT VAlLEY
. DISCHARGES - .Kenneth were either explosions but
Ashworth, Ash.lon ; Leslie th.ey didn't get intn the area
Patsons, Crown City, 0 .; where . the cyanide was
Mrs. Sam Holley , Ashton: stored."
Mrs. Danny Missen, Point
Pleasant; Angela Perry,
Glenwood; Mabel Young.
Ashton; Mrs. Harry King,
HAVE GUESTS
Bancroft ; Ralph· Morse , Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith of
Point Pleasant; Sharon Lancaster were Thursday
Wood, Point Pleasant; · Tina guest£ of his aunts, Mi5s ErPlatzer, Point Pleasant and ma Smith and Mrs .
Maude Byus, Point Pleasant. Genevieve Meinhart.
Birth - A son to Mr . and
Mrs .
David
Gibson ,
Gallipolis.

THE SUIT OF Lowell Jack
1 Strickland,
Minford, 01\lo,

I

.

Minor mishaps reported

Boys
DRESS SHOES ·
13.00 to 112.00

---------------------------. Notices, news briefs
!·· Area· Deaths !

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1977

PRICE FIFrEEN CENTS

pollution control plan ·ready
New charge
faces Lance

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency has completed an alternative sulfur dioxide control
plan and will release it next week, according to state officials.
The plan, due out Sept. 28, would be an alternative In a U.S.
EPA sulfur dioxide pollution abateJTient program announced
Aug . 27, 1976.
.
In November 1976, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ordered a stay to enforcement of the proposed federal regula- .
tionsand ordered the.U$. EPA to reopen hearings on the plan.
Those hearings were completed last January in Colwnbus
and consisted mainly of electric ·utility, industry and United
Mine Workers Union officials arguing that implementation of
the fed~ a\ plan would tuin Ohio's high-sulfur coal industry.
The Ohio EPA then drafted its alternate plan, whiCh will be
subject In public hearings later this year before it can be
submitted In the U.S. EPA regional office in Chicago.
The U.S. EPA could then approve the alternative Ohio plan
•
or enforce its original 1976 plan.
Ohio is the only state which does not have an EPA-approved

By United Presa Interuatlooal
YOUNGSTOWN , OHIO - THE ANNOUNCEMENT this
week that Youngsrown Sheet and Tube will close most of its :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::·::::: ::::~
EXTENDED OUTWOK
operation here has shocked suburban Campbell and Struthers.
Friday through Sunday,
, These two small conununities along the Mahoning River
fair
Friday and Saturday
1 Valley depend on steel mills and factnries for much of their
and
a
chaore of showers
. employment, and the bulk of the 5,000 workers ro be laid off
Sunday.
Highs will be In the
live in these cities.
70s
or
low
80a Friday and
'
So, come January when the giant steel company shuts
Saturday
and
in the upper
;down, the bulk of its area operations, the citizens of Campbell
60s
or
lower
70s Sunday.
and Struthers may very well find themselves laying off
Ballots will be mailed to
Lowa
will
range
from
the
paid up members of the
policemen, firemen, cutting back on services, and who knows
mid 50s to the lower 60s.
what will happen to their schools. School officials are already
Pomeroy
Chamber of
predicting some tnugh times ahead. They estimate that
Commerce before the next
regular meeting to vote for
Campbell schools will lose $1.7 million in tax revenue with the
THREE FINED
plant closing . Schools in Youngsrown will lose about $903,000,
Fined In the court of six members of the board of
and Struthers about $650,000.
ldiddleport Mayor Fred dire ctors , president, vice ~ '
Hoffman '1'uesday night were president, and secretary, it
MOREHEAD, KY. - ABOUT 25 HORSES valued at Ronald L. Denney, 30, was announced when the
$175,000 were killed early today in a fire that broke out in a Newcomerstown,. $200 and Pomeroy
Chamber of
horse barn at the Morehead State University farm, a costs and three days in jail on Commerce met Tuesday at
university spokesman said.
a charge of driving while noon at the Meigs Inn.
About 10 horses escaped injury from the fire, which was intoxicated; Richard D.
Directors whose term
discovered about 5 a.m. (EDT). Damage estimates on the barn Helton, 24, San Mateo, Calif., . expires are Jack Carsey, Bill
were placed at about $175,000, the spokesman said. There were $50 and costs on a hit-skip Grueser , Ralph Graves,
no injuries to farm attendants or firemen, he added.
charge and $50 and costs on a Ferman Moore, Virgil
reckless operation charge, Teaford and Wendell Hoover.
Holdover directors are
WASiflNGTON - WITH THE DIFFICULTIES more and Edward Currence,
clearly defined than ever, U.S. and Israeli officials say they Middleport, $25 and costs, Fred Crow, Ted Reed, John
Musser, John Kerr, John
are confident there can be a Geneva peace conference by the intoxication.
Anderson , Dale Warner and
end of the year. The series of negotiations moved into a second
Fred Morrow.
CALL ANSWERED
phase today with the Egyptian foreign minister, Ismael
Crow , president , anThe Pomeroy Emergency
Fahmi, schedule.d to see President Carter at the. White House
.
nounced
that plans for the
and later Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and other officials at Squad answered a call to the
Christmas
promotion should
a working lunch at the State Department.
Armentrout residence in
get
underway.
John Anderson
A State Department spokesman said the United States still Naylors Run at 12:15 a.m.
bopes th~e will be a conference this year. Israeli Foreign Wednesday for Kenneth and Ed Kennedy were named
Minister Moshe Dayan expressed confidence Tuesday there While. He was advised to see co-chairmen of the annual
a doctor.
(Continued on page 14)

sulfur dioxide control plan and is uriique among coal-prod~cing
states because of the high sulfur content of coal mined and '
burned in the state.
Ohio has been battling the federal government over sulfur
dioxide since 1967 when Congress passed the Clean Air Act.
The alternative Ohio plan which has been completed is the
·'
fifth sulfur dioxide plan prepared for the state. When Ohio's
plan was rejected by a federal court in 1975, the U.S. EPA
decided to draft its own plan.
In August, 1976, Ohio Energy Resource and Development
Agency Direcwr Robert' Ryan said the proposed U.S. EPA
plan would "greatly affect" Ohio's coal industry.
"If the (federal) standards are imposed, they will phase out
the (coal) industry in my distr ict," said Sen. Ketmeth R. Cox, By JAMES lflLDRETH
WASHINGTON (UP!)
D-Barberton, during the U.S. EPA hearings last January.
C. Luther Heckman, chairman of the Public Utilities Budget director Bert Lance,
Commission of Ohio, predicted that the fe d~ral plan would facing new charges about his
personal fiMnces that
boost the average residential electric bill by $2.80 a month .
conflict with his sworn Senate
testimony,
met
with
President Carter early tnday.
.White House spokesman
Jody Powell also said he
"believed" Carter met last
night with Senate Majority
Leader Robert Byrd, who

according ro the Washington
Post. told the president he
has not changed his position
that Lance should resign.
Of today 's Carter-Lance
meeting, the press secretary
said, "! don't know what they
·said," but when asked if
Lance had offered to resign,
Powell said "not t11at I know
of."
Lance was an early visiror
at the White House,
apparently meeting with
;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::;:;:·
Carter before the President
had breskfast with Senate
Mayer suggested a pine
Republicans.
tree, live, is needed to be
Carter was sure to face
pl•nted at the tipple site. It
questions on Lance at his
afternoon news conference.
would be decorated during
the Christmas season.
The latest charges contend
MEXICO CITY (UPI) Crow disclosed that the
Lance attempted ro clear up
Pulido C1'112, !6,
C&amp;O • Railroad is not in- Gloria
some past banking )ll'oblems .
underwent surgery ·in a
terested in running a
12 days
before
his
private clinic and paid
passenger train to Pomeroy.
appointment
as
budget
$1,118 for lbe operation. Six
It was announced tbat
director .
Barbara Chapman, secretary weeks later, she com·
The information made
plaiDed of aharp abdo~inal
for the chamber, will be
public
Tuesday was the
working 21'• days for an out- pains and bad an
newest
in
a series of apparent
examination In another
of-town newspaper and 2'h
contradictions
of Lance's
hospital.
days for the chamber .
sworn
te~limony before a
Doctors diacovered two
Attending were Crow, Mrs.
Senate committee.
sets
of forcepa, each eight
Chapman, Paul Simon, vice
Inches long, which bad
president ; Phil Ke!iy, Wesley
been forgotten by the first
Buehl , Scott Lucas, Leo
team
of surgeons. The two
Vaughan, Bill Quickel, Bill
doctors
were arrested.
Mayer, Dale Warner and a
guest, Hank C!eland, John ;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::!:~:::::::=:::::::.:::: ::;::;;:;:_::;:;: :;:::::::=:
Koebel , Vernon Weber, Jim
Bessie Pullins, 72, MidFrecker, Joe Young, Bill
dleport,
was charged with
Grueser, John Anderson,
failure
to
yield the right of
Stan Houdashelt and Thereon
way
following
a traffic acJohnson.
from efght departments cident at 2 p.m. Tuesday on
attended a meeting of the SR336 at the jWlction to Main
Area Volunteer Fire and St. in Racine.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
Emergency Association at
the Middleport Fire Station State Highway Patrol S.id
the Pullins car pulled from
Tuesday night.
Jim Page, Marysville; wbo Main St. into the left side of
is with the firm doing bouse an outo operated by Nancy E.
numbering in the rural areas Aeiker, 25, Racine. Following
of Meigs County, outlined the tbe impact, the . Pullins car
.
.
procedures and \the bene!its continued on, striking a house
county garbage collection for firemen and emergency owned by F re~1it: Joe
boxes be done away with and units ito locating homes to Stobart . The Aelker car
waste collections throughout wbere they are called. He struck a utility pole. There
the county be done by private
was moderate damage.
maps.
haulers lor a monthly fee to distributed
The October meeting of the
be paid by customers wishing association will be on~ 18th
door to door pickup. The ir Syracuse when a Columbia
'
commissioners asked that the Gas Co. representative will
Health Dc~artmcnt an d
haulers submit a plan to the sp~k .
Clear tonight, lows to the
boafd.
ASK TOWED
lower
5Qs. Cloudy Thursday,
Attending were Henry
A marriage license was
Welis, Richard Jones and issued to Jerry Lee Saylor, highs in the lower 70s.
James ' Roush,
com- 25, Rt. I, GuysvUie and Probability of precipitation
missioners and Mary Hob- Connie Corlene Putman, 19, 10 percent today, near zero
tonight, 20 percent Thursday ..
stetter, clerk.
Rt. 2, Coolville.

Chamber to elect officers,
6 new directors this ·week

Convinced death was coming
RIPLEY, W.Va. (UP!) Mrs . Charles A. Marion
looked at her son as he
prepared to leave home for a
brief camping trip and said
she would see him in a day or
so.
'•No u came the hushed
' an!) James Marion
response,
drove off.
Within 24 hours, the gifted,
three-sport athlete and
exceptional high school
student was dead. He slipped
frmn an inflated raft and
drowned in 90 feet of water at
Sutton Lake. ,
His uncanny "no" last
month was something the
Marions had come to expect.
From pn&gt;&lt;!Chool days, he

·~

knew his .life would be
·short.
"It broke our hearts, but it
was like the pieces of a puzzle
falling into place," Mrs .
Marion said.
As a youngster, James
often lugged the huge family
Bible about and begge4 his
parents to read the
scriptures, and In tell him
about heaven and hell.
- "From the lime he was five
or six, he said he wouldn't
reach 30," the mother said.
"He said that God had
revealed it In him and we
believed him."
After his death, . Mrs.
;Marlon learned that her son
had been named a NaUnnal

•

Merit
Schola rs hip
semifinalist, the only student
at Ripley High ro earn that
distinction .
He was a member of the
National Honor Sociei~ . Nu
Alpha Theta math honiorary,
and student council, while
lettering in track, football
and basketbalL
"It was almost as if be
knew something would
happen/' Mrs. Marion says,
recalling
the
last
conversation with her son.
"Ill the last two months, it
seemed he grew closer l&lt;o
G&lt;Jd.
"Jim was a Clu-istian, and
he was ready

tn go."

Christmas lighting project
and Jim Frecker as parade
chairman . A parade date will
be announced.
Crow reported that the
courthouse will be getting a
new coat of paint as will
several other commercial
buildings
and , homes .
"Pomeroy is important,' and
there is a gradual interest
being shown in its cleanup
and paint-up," Crow said.
June 23, 24, 25, 1976 was
tentatively set for next year's
Big Bend Regatta . It was
announced that the Gallipolis
Ski show wants to be booked
into the Rega tta next year.
Bill Mayer discussed his
plan to beautify the old coal
tipple a.r ea on Pomeroy's
East Main Street. He
suggested a waterfall with
colored lights which the
chamber thought was an
excellent idea and told Ma yer
to go •.head with the project.

Doctors leave

tools at site

Driver cited
after mishap

Area firemen

~~~~~i~~~!~t~Jves

Commission ready for
topographical survey
Details, down to room ~ize ,
in the proposed multi-purpose
building were reviewed
Tuesday when Ron Keske,
architect, met wiih the ivieigs
County Board of Commissioners .
The commissioners and

Keske thoroughly examined
the plims whiCh also gave
electrical, plumbing, heating
and cooling requirements.
Keske indicated the project
is progressing as " rapidly as
possihle ." The next step is to
hire an' engineer to do a

topographical survey ol the
building site, he said.
··
Keske was instructed by
the board to proceed with the
necessary requirements for
the survey. subject to the
approval of the county
engineer, Wesley Buehl.
Also meeting with the
commissioners were Gary
Aspin, Co unty sanitarian;
Mrs . Gene Lyons, administrative assistant in the

Health Department. and a
group of rrivate garbage
haulers. Aspin proposeti the

Weather

�J-Tbd:l.lly Sentinel. Middleport·Porne'I'Oy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 21, I m

-.

Tariffs on foreign steel would make
more big problems in U. S. economy
By JOHN T. KADY
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Imposing tariffs on loreign
1teel is not the answer to the
problem facing the United
Slates lteel industry and
would only create more
problems lor manufacturers
of steel products, an
economist at Ohio State
University said today .
"The steel industry in the
United Slates has to wake up
1111d spend a lot of money to
improve their capital facili·
Ues,"
said
Wilford
L' Esperance . " The steel
industry in the United States
has just not been innovative
in steel production .
''The steel industry put its
capital into place in the 1931ls,
1940s and 1950s," said L' Es·

perance , a researcher and
author with the Center of
Business and Economic Research at OSU. "The

Japanese came into steel
production late and are using
the latest steel making
facilities. In fact some steel
companies _ are starting to
import Japanese wchnology
for making steel.
" These technological
changes have to take place in
Ohio and the United states to
make
steel
making
competitive and vital," he
said. "The U.S. is a laggard
in innovation in making steel
and that's the reason foreign
imports are making such an
impact .
" Otherwise. · Washington
will start imposing quotas
and price tariffs on steel and
that is going to make it even
more
expensive
for
manufacturers to compete in
the world market, '' said
L'Esperance.
" Manufacturers want
lower priced steel and if thev

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Wants to walk at 75

c

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am 75
and have walked all my life. I
still walk every day only I am
having trouble with my leg. I
can only walk a few blocks
and have to slop while the
pain leaves. I do not have
high blood pressure and all
my tests come out okay.
My doctor gave me
Roniacol time span tablets,
one a day, and I've taken
them for more than a yea r. I
just cannot tell the dif·
terence. W.1a~ do you think of
this drug?
.
I just feel awful when I do
not gat my walk. I would hate
to give it up. It 's the best part
of my life physically.
Is there an)1hing you could
suggest to me 1 I would try
anything. I do not take any
other. kih&lt;l of medicines. I'm
not heavy, 5 feet 6 and 117
pounds.
.
DEAR READER- Helping
you depends upon what you
really have. Yout doctor
must think the pain is caused
by poor circulation as
Roniacol is used to increase
circulation. Your description
of developing a pain with
walking that goes away with
resting suggests that may be
the case.
Other possible causes include arthritic changes which
might involve the hip or knee.
You might ask your doctor to
arrange for a consultation
with an orthopedic specialist
and see if he can provideany
help.
You might also get some
help from simple aspirin.
Why? Because it is a good
pain reliever and it seems to
have some anti-clotting action that might be helpful. Its
"blood thinning" action
might help your circulation if
that is the problem. So
whether you have pain from
arthritis or poor circulation it
could be tried.
Talk to yolir doctor about it
first as s0me people do not
tolerate aspirin well but most
do. A few people are inclined

to develop a bleeding tcnden·
cy with it. It should he taken
with meals or at least with a
cup of mille I am sending you
the health Letter nwnher 8-8,
Aspi r in and Related
Medicines, for you to study. It
will give you information on
how to take aspirin safely.
Others who want this in·
formation can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for it to
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Sta·
lion, New York. N.Y., 10019.
Aspirin wil) not interfere with
!he act.ion of the Roniacol that
you are already taking.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am a
woman of 49 years. I took the
pill for eight years and have
been off it for a year now. I
have not had a period since I
came off the pill. Does this
mean l have gone through the
change a nd there isn't any
possibility of my becoming
pregnant at this age?
DEAR READER - Women
who naturally have completed the menopause and
)lave not ha d a period for over
a year are not likely to get
pregnant - some authorities
say two years. BUT in the
case of the woman who has
been on the pill as in your
case, you should be very
careful about deciding that
you h.ave gone through the
menopause .
The pill may result in a
temporary suppression of t he
normal ovulation process and
you might still ovulate. I
think under these cir·
cums tances you should
definitely have your doctor
examine you. He can advise
you if you have or have not
completed the menopause
and are no longer likely to get
pregnant before you throw
caution to the wind.
( Dr . Lamb answers
representative letters of
general interest in his col·
urnn·. Write to him in care of
this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019.

Berry's World

can ~:et it from foreign
producers at 10 to 2U per cent
less than from U.S. producers
Uten they will have to do that
to .be competitive," he said.
L'Esperanre
said
a
proposed U.S. Steel plant in
the Conneaut area is
expected to be one of the most
modern in the United States.
"This may help arrest the
foreign imports because steel
will be made much more
cheaply at the Conneaut

Panamanians Wlder any cir·

••

-...

plant," he said.
!.'Esperance said it was no
surpise that Youngstown
Steel and TUbe Co. decided to
shut down part of its facilities
in Mahoning County, Idling
5,000 workers.
Lykes Corp., the parent
firm of Youngstown Sheet·
and TUbe, said the shutdown
was made necessary because
of foreign imports and

-·--.......

lations.
" The
situation
in
. Yolll18stown i.s that these
lacilles are very old and
come on line when the
demand for steel increases "
said L'Esperance. "The raie
of return on these plants Is
pretty small and when you
impose on them the added
capital costs to please the
EPA, Ut.e rate of return Is
expensive Environmental even smaller."
Protection Allt~"nry re~u-

•

•
• ••
••
·•
•
~

...
.(

-

gives him some breathing scored. a Jot of points
room - is that he has not cam paigning against the
made a decision .
treaties last year when he
He said recenUy , " I have battled President Gerald
decided not to decide on that Ford for the nomination.
issue for the moment because
H Baker splits with the
it is too important to make a Reagan right, he can almost
snap judgment."
surely forget about their
Baker said he would support in 19&amp;l or thereafter.
decide, either during the And as the conservatives
course of the Foreign proved last year, they know
Relations Co mmittee how to get delegates to the
hearings which start near the convention .
end of the month, or when the
The alternative involves
debate begins next year.
splitting with Ford who now
Once that decision is made represents the moderate
however, Baker plans to ~ wing of the party . Ford
more than just cast his vote • QUICkly endorsed the treaties
and try and ride out whatever but
declined
Carter's
backlash may occur . He suggestion to go campaigning
plans to be out in front.
lor them .
"When I make up my mind
The Ford wing and the
-when l do that - I will do more liberal segments of the
my best to make my view party are not as rigid as the
prevail."
·
conservatives and would not,
And right about then, as the conservatives almost
Baker's real problems will certamly would, wnte Baker
begin. The conservatives are off on the basis of one vote.
already all over him.
But there are other hazards
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N .C,, a there for Baker.
leading opponent of the trea·
A vote for the treaties
ties
told the Florida would probably put Baker at
Con~ervative Union that odds with a majority of the
Baker is "squirming like a Republican . colleagues w~
worm on a hot brick" over the elected h1m leader m
issue.
January and conceivably
Rep. Philip M. Crane, R· could make his rf-&lt;!lection
Ill. , chairman of the chances more difficult . The
American Conservative mail from Te!Ulessee is very,
Union, told the same group very heavy against the
"Howard has been kind of treaties.
teetering on the brink. We
There is one saving factor
want to make sure Howard in all this for Baker. Seeing
gets religion too ."
there is no way for him to win
And , of course , tile titular politically on the issue, he can
leader of the anti-treaties concentrate purely on the
forces is Ronald Reagan: He .merits of the treaties.

Business offered stimulus
in tax reform package
CINCINN ATI (UP!) -The
Carter administration's tax
reform package will contain
"substantial stimulus" for
the
nation 's
business
comm unity, Treasury
Secretary Michael
Blumenthal said Tuesday.
"Our tax reform package
will contain strong incentives
fo r business to invest, to
retain profits and to increase
productivity,"
Blumenthal
said.
He said that when the tax
package is sent to Congress
early next month, "you'll see
a significant net reduction of
business taxes. ' t
Blumenthal also confirmed
that administration taxiJian·
ners are considering a
•major change" in the tax
treatment of capital gains,.
''In order to meet our goals of
· improved
equity
and
simplification ."
However, he said that any
reduction in capital gains
preferences for individuals
and corporations "will be
more than offset by .Xher

tneasures."
Among those measures,
Blumenthal said, are lower
tax rates "to reduce the tax
bias against savings and
investment - both my
in dividuals
and

niE DAlLY SENTINEL
OE\Im'ED'roTHE!

INTEREST OF
MEIGS..MASON AREA
CHF..sTER L. TANNEHIU.

Enc.Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH

(;It)' F..dJtor
. Published U&lt;41ly exc't!pt Saturd&lt;~ Y
lJy Thu 0111" VaUey Pubhsllin" Cum· ·
1my , 111 (.'oufl SL, Pomeroy, Ohill
45769. Busines.'i Offk~ Phone 99'22l!i6. Editorial rlhtne992·21~7.
S~ond

clas.~

puslHge paW ut

Pomeruy, Ohw.
NatiOna l &lt;idverlisinjj; repre~n- .
l.aUve WMrd · Griffith Com!)&lt;lny,
lnl'., Bottint:lli and Go~~IIH~her Div ..

"Do you have any scents that will discourage
dogs from thasing a togger? "

~----.­

Sen. Baker on griddle

cumstances and in any year
is wrong .
Even the smattering of
liberals who have endorsed
the treaties and pledged their
support to President Carter
!mow they are bucking public
sentiment as of now.
Baker, however, iS in a
singular position among his
colleagues .
He
harbors
barely
disguised ambitions for the
1980 presidential nomination
and, as the Senate's GOP
leader, could hold the key in a
close showdown when the
vote comes in January or
February.
Baker's position at the
moment - . which at least

757 Third Ave ., New York, N.Y.
10017.
SuUscripl ilNI r.a!.l!s: Delivered by
..:arn~ r where &lt;;VI:Iil&lt;ible 75 t:ent.s per
'11-'t"t'k . By MillOr Roult! Nherc carrier
."K!tvJee nol av1.ulai.Hc , One munth,
Sl .~. By mall il l Ohw and W. Va .,
One Ve.ar, 172.00: Six months, ·
111. $0; Thrc~ mt.lll l hs, $7. 00 ;
El&gt;.c-.·hcrt· $26.00 \'uar; Si:t mont!UI
$!;! .50; Three , 'momhs , $i.SO.
Su b~~·ripuun Jll' Jl'&lt;' inciJ.!dt•s SwuiOJ)'
1'11 11t'.'~.Sc ntind

corporations."
He listed " relief" from socalled double taxation of
corporate profits by reducing
taxes on dividend income and
and expansion of the investment tax credit.
'&gt;
In a speech to the American
Institute of Certified Public
Accountants in Cincinnati
Tuesday
afternoon,
Blumenthal said "you should
feal confident that the
package will include a
substantial stimulus for
prodoctivlty and investment
- and that, while there will

be tradeoffs, the net effect
will be favorable toward
business.''
"The tax coi:le needs
repair," Blwnenthal said. He
listed the three main
problems with the present
system as too much
complexity, unfairness and
the discouragment of private
Investment.
Blwnenthal also said that
the administration will step
up efforts to encourage
exports and reduce the
nation's trade deficit.

•

Church hit by tornado
Uulted PresaiDternatlonal
Tornadoes paid another
afternoon visit to Penn·
sylvanla Monday and leveled
a church under construction
in Michigan. Heavy rains
brought relief to California.
Plash flood watches were ln
effect today in northwest
Pennsylvania , where tor·
nado.es struck for a second
afternoon in a row. By
evening, the storms bad
subsided and only the water
remained . Flash flood
warnings were posted In
northwest Pennsylvania and
parts of New York.
Torandoes leveled a church
under
construction
at
Hemlock, Mich., and knocked
down an 80· foot silo at
Merrill, Mich. Flooding rains
forced schools to close and
literally chased the police
chief of Saginaw, Mich., out
of his office.
Dense
fog
grought
travelers advisories to north·
ern Louisiana today, and
near zero visibilities also
were expected In north·
eastern Texas and southwestern Arkansas. A tornado
was reported near Lake
Charles, La., Monday. Up to
four inches of rain brought
· flash flood threats to north·
east Texas.
Rain llnally poured down
on
parched
northern

Dodgers end Reds reign
in N1.1ti~nal League est

""

Washington window
· By STEVE GERSfEL
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The heat is on Senate
Republican Leader Howard
Baker and the coming winter
will bring him no relief.
Baker, an adroit politician,
will need all his acumen and
mora than a little backwoods
luck to escape the fight over
the Panama Canal treaties
without some scars.
In fact, the Tennessean
may be in a no-win situation .
Having to take a position
and villing on the twin
treaties is not a joyous
prospect for most senators. It
_is a political torment for
many.
The exceptions are the
conservatives- Republicans
and Democrats - to whom
ceding the Panama Canal to

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., WednMday, Sept. :it, 1m

California, bringing more
than a month's worth of
precipitation to San Fran·

cisco.
California usually relies on
winter stonns to bring raln
and snow it needs to keep up
its water supply. But for the
last two winters, high
pressure areas have held off
Pacific stonns.

Magazines and
'
hooks needed
If magazines and paper·
back books are taking over
your home , Miss Jean
Shaver, a member of the
Meigs Higb School faculty,
says they can be put to good

use.
Miss Shaver asks residents
having accumulations of
these or residenta who nor·
· mally dispose of them to save
them for uae by her language
arts students, especially
freshmen, at Meigs High
School.
Residents having
magazines and paperbacks to
contribute may take them to
the high school office or if
unable to deliver thtim, leave
a message for Miss Shaver at
the high school office. MillS.
Shaver said paperbacks and
magazine• ..C all grade levels
will be 'lfepted. '

.,,,,.

. " WAIT TD.. NEXT YEAR" Is the cry of all good
Cincinnati Reds' fans, as it is of Louise G.ilmore, Union
Ave., Pomeroy who entertains passersby each spring,
~r and early fall With appropo observations on the
Reds fortunes, good or bad. Above is her latest and
perhaps the last of 1977.

~ •-A
N

,.,.

··-

., ~

.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN

BASeBALL

UP! Sporl&amp; Editor

Ma jor league Standings
By United Pl"ess. lnlernational

."
"'
"'

"Full speed ahead!

..

Spurlock No. 2 plant gets
past blocking try in court

"

injunction that would have purchasing power from other
kept the U.S. government utilities is not a feasible
from granting permits and alternative to construction of
approving
federally- Spurlock No. 2."
While also noting that,
guaranteed loans for con·
"There
has been M trial of
. struction of
the 500
megawatt , ooal.fired steam the merits of the case in the
district court, and the issues
electric generating unit.
yet
to
be
The same request had been· remain
turned down earlier this year determined," the appellate · •
judges added:
by a lower court.
"We are of the opinion that
The medical associatlon 's
the
plaintiffs (the medical
main contention in requesting
association)
have not demon ·
the prelimiriary injunction
strated
to
us
that there is a
was that an environmental
or
substantial
impact s tatement on the strong
plant was
insufficient likelihood or probability of
because it alle gedly "fails to success. on the merits with
adequately discuss 'or ra gard to the alleged
seriously consider th e deficiel\cies in the treatment
alternative
(to
East in the environmental impact
Three centers of . higher Kentucky
Power statementof the alternatives ·
education - one in Africa and Cooperative, Inc .'s building to the proposed action .
two In Europe - will benefit the plant ) of purchasing
" Nor · have plaintiffs "
from an offering to be taken winter peak power" from demonstrated a probability of .,
this week at the Pomeroy already established, nearby success on the merits with
Sevanth·day Adventist .''summerpeaking'' utilities. regard to the other alleged
Church. Cla ra Mcintyre,
But the appellate court deficiencies in t_he statement, . &gt;
Sabbath School superin· judges said their e:mminalion such as the alleged failure to
tendent at the church, said of the more than 1,000-page address the 'cumulative and ,
the collection is one of four impact statement "reveals synergistic impact ' which "
taken up each year. "This that the alternati ve of Spurlock No. 2 will haye in • ,
offering , .c alled the '13th purchased power
was ·co mbination with other
Sabbath Special Project discussed."
existing and proposed power
Offering,' comes every three
. The judges noted that such plants in the Ohio River months," she tS a Id. "On materials · in the statement Valley on the air quality of ,
September 24, our attention Is · "essentially stale that that region."
turned to the Euro·Africa
Division, one of 10 world
sections of the church. Ad·
'"
ventist churches across
North America are par·
ticipating.,
By JOAN HANAUER
The offering will provide
UP!
Television Writer
money for a new chapel at the
NEW
YORK
(UP!)
- To cast Alan Aida as a · convicted
Marienhohe Seminary at
rapist
at
first
glance
seems
as offbeat as having Mary Tyler
Darmstadt, West Gennany ;
Moore
play
Typhoid
Annie
or
t\lrning Lassie Into an attack ·
a library for the Collonges
dog.
Seminary in eastern France,
On second thought, and after seeing Aida as Caryl Qlessand new housing at the
man,
California's "Red Ught Bandit," the casting appears ·
Nanga-Eboko Seminary in
inspired
and Aida is totally convincing in ihe role.
'
cameroon; Africa.
The
drama
will
be
aired
Sept.
25
on
NBC,
9-11
p.m.
Eastern
·
" The 13th Sabbath offering
time,
co-starring
Talia
Shire
as
Rosalie
Asher,
the
Ja~er
who
goes toward mission ac·
Uvitles worldwide," notes helped O!es:man elude the gas chamber from his conviction in
Mrs. Mclntyre. "When the 1948 until he finally was executed in 1960. The real Miss Asher ..
goal for each offering has served as technical consultant on the show.
Aida at first seems barely recognizable, thanks to makeup
been reached, tl&gt;e sucplus
that
gives him a hooked nose, topheavy curly hairdo and .
goes toward the special
drooping
eyelids that marked the real Chessman.
.:
projects, such as those listed
Chessman
was
a
petty
criminal
who
held
little
in
respect,"
.
here. Adventists have given
certainly
not
authority
a
smart-cracking
wiseguy
with
a
millions of dollars In
benevolence to missions since high IQ who insisted on acting as his owti attorney when put on
the
first
Adventist trial as a robber and rapist, despite the death penalty that
missionary, J. N. Andrews, could accompany a guilty verdict.
After his conviction, Chessman b!lgins the jailhouse legal
sailed from America to
studies
that won him eight stays of execution and 12 years of
Switzerland in 1874."
life.
He
also drives prison authorities up the wall, if that's the
Mrs. Mcintyre invites all
phrase,
by writing hooks and sneaking them out of San
interested guests to hear a
Quentin's
death row.
report on Adventist mission
And
slowly,
someliow, he becomes more likable more '
work in Eureope and Africa
human,
until
the
end when he appears almost gallant death.'
at the September 24 meeting,
The script does oot a~empt to shed light on Chessman's gull~
at 2 p.m. at the church on
or
mnocence. Its pomt 18 that be did not receive a fair trial and
Mulberry Heights Road.
more importanUy, a fair chance at appeal,
'
The big question centers on the Chessman trial transcript:
Why did Judge Fricke (Barnard Hughes, who was "Doc" on
TAX LEVY
OBS),
refuse Olessman a dally trial transcript, a defense.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
request
ll'dinarily roUtinely granted?
,
Counties who find themselves
ThiB
highly
'effective
docudrama,
as
the~~e
dramatized
in financial ·problems could
events are being called, highllghta a,
authorize a !lpecial tax levy versions of real
referendum to fund the police problem inherent in the form. "Kill Me If You Can" bas beeq
and fire fighters' disability told from the viewpoint of a man who may not have received
and pension fund under terms due processs as guaranteed by the Coostitution. As such he is
of a bill returned to the Ohio sympathetic. He also may have been a rapiat, which is not
sympathetic, but U.t aspect of the case is downplayed for
Houae TUesday.
dramaUc
effect.
Sen. Harry Mesbel, D·
The 10 top netw&lt;rk programs for the week ending Sept. 1~
Yolll18stown, said some coun,
ties ·w ere finding it more according to the A.C. Nlelaen Co., were:
1:
Cllarlle's
Angell;
2:
"Happy
Daya";
3:
"Three's
difficult to pay their share
into the fund and could Cclnpany"; 4: "Soap";· 5: "Welcome Back, Kotter,i I ;
finance their contributlo!IB "Young Joe, the Forgotten K~" (ABC Sunday movie); 7·
through adoption of a !lpecial ''Betty White''; 8: "AD In The FamUy"; 9: "Bamey Miller''~
10: "Eight Is Enough.''
tax levy.

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
federal appeals court has
refused to tempor aril ~ block
construction of a power plant
known as ' 'Spurlock No. 2"
along the Ohio River near
Maysville, Ky .
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals on TUesday turned
down a request by the Mason·
County
( Ky .)
Medical
Association for a preliminary

..

Offering to
aid schools in
Europe, Africa

TV•••in Review

U:

!He

l

i

How sweet 1t IS, saul
Manag~rT?m l.aSorda, amid
the ]Ubilau~~ at the Dodger
clubhouse. You guys are a
~eat bunch of players and
I m . ~rateful to have, been
chosen your man;1ger.
John blanked_ the G1ants on
four hlls until the mnth
ummg , when they _pushed
across a run on a tr1ple by
Jack Clark, a walk and a twoout pinch-single by Gary
Alexander. Rautzhan then
took over and struck out Gary
Thomasson for ine final out
with two runners on base .
The victory was John 's 19th
of the season against only six
losses.

By FRED MtMANE
UPI Sports Write_r
_Alter, hvo year~. ~~ the
wmne.r s Circle, .the B1g Red
Machine" has f1_nally conked
out and the Nat10nal League
West pennant has gone Hollywnod agam.
The Los Angeles Dodgers,
who led the NL We st race
from opemng day, clmched
their first NL West title since
1974 Tuesday night when
southpaw Tommy John and
rookie Lance Rautzhan
combined to stop the San
Francisco Giants, 3-1.

·
By United Preas .mter'Dad?Da~
· me MJCrugan-Navy game Saturday ts billed a~ a battle of
the !lnbeatens bill the slmilarity ends there.
Michigan is currently No. 1 and making its IIMual bid for the
elusive national championship while Navy, to no one's
surprise Is nowhere in sight in the national rankings.
But O,.ch Bo Schembechler, anxious to pump up his
mercurial Wolverines , is ,talking hard hard about Navy this
week.
"Navy Is a good hustling defensive football tea~," he ~id
Tuesday. •'Offensively, they have a good balance of runrung
and throwing the football.''
·
The Michigan offense has recorded 762 yards so far behind
the quarterbacking of Hick Leach.
"I'm oot exacUy pleased with the offense," Schernbech)er .
said "eilpeclally last week against Duke. We only achieved
one~four offensive objectives and that was wiMingthe game.
: Wisconsin Coach John Jardine, who witnessed a sluggish
Badger performance against outgunned Northern lllinois last
week ran his troops through a tough two-ho,ur workout Tues·
day ~ preparation Ill' Saturday'•·.game at Oregon.
,
Coach John Jardine said it was a "good learning day ' for
both the offense and defense.
Mike Morgan who· scored two touchdowns against NIU,
worked out at
number one fullback spot. Fullback Tim
HaJ1er111, who started against the Huskies, worked with the
second ~earn .
·
d •
Notre Dame's defense will provide a tough lest for Pur ue s
potent pallllng attack - ranked No. 3 in the country, Co.~ch
Jbn Young told his BoUennaken.
"They have a great defense, possible the best we'll face ~II
...-n;" he expl•lned while drilling his team for two hours m
prl$8raUon for the Irish on Saturday.
~

the

the VIctory was Rick
Monday, who lut a two-run
homer '" U1e second mrung
after Dusty . Baker doubled
ho~1e the f1:st. run of the
ummg. Mondays homer , h1s
14Ut, camed. mto the upper
deck I~ nght f1eld at
Candlestick Park and was
one o£ the longest shots ever
witnessed there.
In other Nl. games, Cincinnati blanked San Diego, 4-ll,
Philadelphia topped O!icago,
4-2, Pittsburgh downed New
York, 4-2, and Houston
defeated Atlanta , &amp;-J. St.
Louis at Montreal was rained
out.
m

Two SVAC tilts
on tap Friday

BOSTON (UP! )- Dave Kingman has never read "The Man
National League
East
Without a Country," but he doesn 't have to . He gets the general
W. L Pet. GB
idea from the tiUe .
Phiti!l
94 56 .627
The central figure in Edward Everett Hale's classic novel is Pittsbgh
87 65 .sn 8
Two
league
games
St . Louis
78 72 .520 16
Philip Nolan, a U.S. naval officer, who, in a moment of Ch
highlight action this week in
78 73 .517 16 1t 'l
icago
bursting-point anger , says he never wants to hear the name of Montreal
69 80 463 24'' 1 the Southern Valley Athletic
New York
60 92 195 35
his country again.
Conference.
Wnt
His wish Is granted aod for 55 years he is tranferred !rom
W. L Pet. GB
Friday night, the. improved
92 59 .609
vessel t.o vassel at sea without being allowed to land or hear :. -LosAng
Hannan
Trace Wildcats visit
81 7) .5JJ 111:.2
anything about his country from other people, ~looks or Cinci
Houston
76 74 .507 15 112 Kyger Creek and SouthSan F ran
69 B3 .454 23' '2
newspapers.
western travels to North
San
Diego
65 87 ..428 17 1h
Kingman, playing with his fourth club this season, is still a Atlanta
Gallia in the league
57 94 .377 35
free agent, drifting aimlessly like Philip Nolan, so to speak.
x- cliched divison title
encounters. Three non-league
Tuesday 's Results
He started the year with the Mets, was traded to the Padres
games find
Alexander
St. Louis at Mt l, ppd . • rain
in mid.June , then dealt to the Angels a few weeks ago and now
Philadelphia 4, Chicago 2
visiting Eastern ; Waterford
Pittsburgh 4 , New Y.ork 2
is with the Yankees.
at Southern and Chesapeake
Houston 6, Atll!lnta J
When Tuesday night's Yankees-Red Sox game was washed
Ci ncinnati 4, San Diego 0
going to Symmes Valley.
out by rain, I asked Kingman whether he feels like a man
Los Angeles 3, San Fran 1
Coach Larr y Cremeens'
Today •s Probable Pitchers
without a country and he said, "Very much so.
Hannan
Trace Wildcats will
I All Times EDT)
"It's been very unsettling ," he offered. "That all comes with
S't. Louis iUrrea 7·4 and
seek their second straight
Rasmussen 10 -16 ) at Montreal
playing out your option. It 's tough to do the job that way."
victory against the SV AC
(Twi t chell 5-10 and Dues l .Q), 2,
Tough as it is, Kingman has heen doing it so spectacularly 6,05 p.m.
defending champion Bobcats.
Ch icago
(L amp
Q. l)
at
for the Yankees since they claimed him on waivers a week ago,
HT is fresh off a 6-0 win
Ph i lad~lph ia (!.. erch 9-5). 7: 35
he may be earning a berth with them filr next year. Then p .m .
over Waterford while Kyger
Pittsburgh ( KlsOn 8 -9) at New
again, he may oot be, depending upon whether the Yanks have
Creek, also J, J this season,
(Koosman 8-19). 8:05p.m .
any more luck signing him than the Mets, Padres and Angels York
defeated Huntington of Ross,
Atlanta
(Solomon 5-bl at
Houston ( Andujar 11 -6 l. 8:'35 . 45-7 .last Friday.
did.
Kingman hasn 'I played a single inning in the field for the p :m .
Dennis Green, a freshman,
Cincinnati (Nor man 14 -llJ at
Yankees yet. As a designated hitter and pinch-hitter, he has San Diego ' Jones, 6· 12) , 10 p.m . scored Hannan Trace ' s
Los Angeles { Rau 13·8) at
come to bat 10 times, producing three homers and a double.
winning TD on a 75 yard pass
San Fra ncisco ( M inton 0-ll.
TWo of his homers came against the Tigers and the other one 10 : 35 p.m .
interception return. Kyger
Thursday:s Games
against the Red Sox. He also has struck out five times , which
Creek's
offense was led by
Ci ncinnati at San D iego
means he hasn't changed his style of hitting much since the
Mike Casey, 140 lb. senior
Chicago at Ph i la , twilight
last time ·you saw him.
St . Louis at Montreal. ni ght
fullback-tailback who
Atla nta at Houston, night
Some Fenway Park fans, seldom . inhibited with their
collected 174 yards and three
opinions, gave Kingman a pretty good going -over before
touchdowns.
American Leagut
Monday night's game.
The Bobcats ' defense
East
"Hey, Kingman, they didn't want you with the Mets, the
played
exceptionally well.
W L Pet. GB
Padres or the Angels and they're not gonna want you here N e w York ·
9~ 58 .1516
The only TO came on a
90 61 .596 ~
either," one box-seat patron bellowed at the big right-handed Baltimore
Bost on
89 61 .593 3 11? blocked punt.
slugger as he waited to take his turn in the cage for batting Detroit
71 81 .467 22 11-~
At Vinton, Coach Bob
Cleve land
67 as .441 26 111
pracljte. ·
·
Ashley's
Highlanders and
Milw
64 89 .418 JO
"You're still a free agent, Kingman, and you'll always be Toronto
52 98 .347 AO V1 Coach John Blake's Pirates
West
one," the fan kept it up .
W l Pet. GB will seek their first wins of
Kingman heard him but pretended he didn't .
the season . Southwestern lost
Kan Ci ty
94 55 .631
" I don~ pay any attention to that, " he said later, "I ignore Chic ago
95 67 .559 lO 'h 32-li to Southern last Friday
Te"as
84 67 .556 11
everybody in the stands.''
while the Pirates battled to a
M inn
80 72 .526 15·h
IDstead of talking about the Red Sox' 6-3 victory the night Calif
72 78 .480 22'h tH; tie with Zane Trace. .
· 58 91 . 389 36
before on Tuesday, everyone buzzed about how easy Kingman Oakland
Southwestern got its only
114 . 382 37 112
had made it look with his pinch home run off the light tower Se all leTuesday's58Results
sixiJOinler of the night on a
N .Y . at Boston , ppd .. rain
beyond the left field wall.
12-yard pass from Gene
.
Balt imore 5, Tor-onto 2
"He'd hit 60 bomers in one season if he were playing for u~." Detroit
Layton
to Larry Carter.
5 , Cleve 4, 10 inns .
said one localite having breakfast in a downtown coffee shop. Kansas City .4. M i nnesota ·'2
North Gallia scored its tying
Chicago 8. Oakland 2
"He might do a little damage in this ballpark," commented Milwaukee
touchdown on a five-yard
S, Seattle l
Carl Yastrzemski, wryly.
California 5, T'exas 2
pass from senior quarterback
Today's Probable Pitchers
Counting all four clubs he has been with this sununer, King·
Calvin · Minnis to Marty
I All Times EDT)
man has 25 home runs. He declines to speculate how many
Toronto (Byrd 2-ll l at
homers he'd hit playing regularly in Fenway Park with its Ba ltimore { Grirhsley 13 &gt;9 ).
7 : 30p .m .
short left field wall.
Minnesota ( 0 . Johnson 2-41
"I never make any predictions," he said.
at Kansas City (Colborn 17·
13). 8 : 30 p .m .
Nor can he say for sure whom he'll be with next season.
Oakland (Torrealba S-Sl at
"I do not know," he said. "I'm taking the same attitude with Ch iCIIQO (Knapp 11 -7) , 8 : 30
the Yankees as! did with San Diego, the Angels and Ute Mets." p.m .
seattle &lt;Medich 11 -6) at
Kingman started the season asking for more than $2 million Milwaukee
(Augustine 12-16),
over five years from the Mets. They offered him $200,000 a 8 : 30p . m . ·
Texas
(Ellis
9.-12)
at
year for anywhere from two years to six years and he turned it California
(Hartzell 8 -10) ,
10 :30. p.m.
·
down.
.
.
New York (Torrez 16 -12 } at
Before leaving the Padres, they offered him $90,000 a year
Boston (Tiant ll -8L 7:30p.m .
and naturally, he rejected that . So now he is playing for $76,000
Thursday'sGames
a year. If he stops and figures it out, he'll see where he has lost Toronto at Bait , nigtlt
Boston at Detroit, night
$124,000 this season by not accepting the Mets' final offer, Chicago
at Seattle, night
Texas at Calif , night
which is the best ooe he has received.
Oue thing , though . Kingman has been getting a lot of.moving
expenses. A lot of traveling time, too, just like Philip Nolan.

Big 10 roundu

An&lt;~hcr major contnbutor

.

Glassburn.
At Racine, Coach John
Dudding's young Tornadoes
seek their third straight
victory against tha Waterford
Wildcats. Southern owns
victories over Federal
Hocking and Southwestern.
Waterford, after an opening
victory over North Gallia,
lost 6-0 last Friday at Hannan
Trace.
Southern's Mike Warner
collected 121 yards and
scored two touchdowns in
pacing the attack against
Southwestern . Senior
quarterback
Kelly
Winebrenner added another
TI;l whi\e llalfback Bill Harris
· got the other points. Eastern, following an
opening loss to Caldwell,
rebounded with a 32-6 SV AC
win over Symmes Valley.
Coach Joe Mitchum's
Eagles were Jed by Brian
Bisell's two touchdowns while
senior Joe Kuhn rushed for
116 yards and scored one TD.
Dan Spencer and Jack
Parker had the other scores.
Symmes Valley's offense was
held to minus 18 yards on the
ground and 43 via the air.
SVAC
STANDINGS
(GALL GAMES)
.
Team
W L T P DP

Soulhern
K. Creek

2 0 0 40

12
I I 0 55 · 20

Han . Trace
Eastern

1 1 28
1 1 0 38

N. Gall Ia
Southwest.
S. Valley

o 1 1 6 26

o

2

1
1
Eastern
Kyger Creek . 0
0
North Gall i•
0
Hannan Tr ace
0
Southwestern
Symmes \/alley 0
2
Totals

SAN DIEGO ( UP!) While Tom Seaver pitched his
second two-hittar of the
season for the Cincinnati
Reds Tuesday night, Buzzie
Ba vasi upstaged him by
quitting as Padres' president
and the l.os Angeles Dodgers
stole the whole show 500 miles
up the coast in San Francisco.
Seaver's H shutout victory
over San Diego came
moments before the Dodgers
clinched the National League
West title with a 3-1 win over
the Giants.
Seaver's sh utout was his
sixth this season and 44th
lifetime. The veteran righthander now has 201 career
victories against 113 losses.
George Foster smashed his
major league-leading 49th
homer with two out in the
first inning and Ken Griffey
aboard with a walk. The blast
ti ed the Cincinnati club
record set by Ted Kluszewski
in 1954. The RBI raised
Foster's total for the year w
142, six short of the team
mark 8et in 1970 by Johnny
Bench.
Rookie .Don Werner also hit
a homer with two out in the
fourth and the bai;es empty to
boost th e Reds' lead to 4-ll.
Cincinnati scored once in the
second on a walk to Dan
Driessen and a single by
Seaver.
But the interest in the
Padres locker room was with
Tuesday ' s
s urprise
announcement that Padres
President E.J. ': Buzzie "
Bavasi was retiring, even
though the decision was
understandable to most.
Jolin Mattei, the Padres'
trainer, said Bavasi found it

difficult to adapt w the
changes in baseball.
"From a health standpoint,
maybe he just had to get
out," Mattei said. "The game
has gotten very diffi cull
because of all the new things
~ free agents, player agents.
playing out your option.·
" For baseball, it's no
longer on~n-one . You sit
down and talk contract and
it's
lawyers,
agents,

everything . Maybe it got to
him . All I !mow is I saw
Walter Alston in Los Angeles
last week and he looks 10
years younger now than he
did when he had the pressure
of the Dodgers on ·him."
Unlike Alston's excellent
record with the Dodgers,
however , Bavasi never saw
the Padres reach higher than
fourth place in the National
League West.

Follrod's par
in overtime
wins for Meigs

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

The Meigs High School
golfe rs won a triangular
match Tuesday afte rnoon
when Chuck Follrod parred
the first hole in a sudden
death playoff and gave his
team the win over Belpre and
Southern. Belpre and Meigs
had ended regulation play
tied at 184 strokes while
Southern fini shed at 210.
Belpre's Jim Goodwin took a
seven on that extra hole.
Follrod was medalist with a
· 40. Other Meigs scores were
Lance Oliver, 44; Rodolfo
Diaz, 46 ; Chuck Kennedy , 52,
and Scott McKinney, 69.
-Goodwin led his team with
a 42, Steve Higgins had a 47 as
did John Turrill, Bryan
Pohlman shot a 46, and Rick
Laney got a 49.
Dwight Hill led Southern
with a 43. Jim Powell and
Seth Hill shot a 55 each, Paul
Holsinger had a 57, and Jack
Lyons got a 72.

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of ·
Deposit.
$1.000.00 ·
Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.
A subs t ant ial penalty is
i nvoked en all certificate
accoun ts w ithdrawn prior
to the date of maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch

..@
The Ath en s County
Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 SeCond · 51 .
PomerGy, Ohio

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Seaver (ho-hum) pitches his
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over the Braves. Joe Niekro
went the distance to gain his
13th victory while Cesar
Cedeno had three hils and
equaled a dub record by
hilling in his 21st game.
Willie Montanez hit his 19th
homer for the Braves.

o 12 62

NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE ON THESE
1972 MODELS WE HAVE IN STOCK

IM~.

Howe each drove in two runs
to pace the Astros to victory

26
52

1972 MODEL SALE

1972 CHEV.

Steve Carlton pitched a
4-hitter for his 22nd victory
and
batterymatc
Tim
McCarver drove in three run&lt;
witb a two-run homer and a
sacnf1ce fly a s the Ph1lhes
reduced their mab'ic number
for clinchin~ U1eir second
straight NL title to four .
Carlton's route.go in g per·

Ed Herrmann and Art

fnrmance was his 16th of the
ye ar.
Pirates 4, Mets 2:
Bill Robinson singled home
the tie-breaking run in a tworun eighth inning that gave
the Pirates a victory over the
Mets and helped John
Can delaria to his 16th
triumph .
A~lrus 6 Braves 3·
'
·

0 2 0 6 38

0

SVACDNLY
WL

Team
Southern

Pbillies 4, Cubs 2:

POMEROY, QHIO

ACE
HARDWARE

(Formerly Big Jim's Plaza)

409 Pearl Street
Middleport, Ohio

�._Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 21, 1977

den talk

Football spotlight shines on

Big or•tdoor event
is Saturday here

Ohio State-Oklahoma classic
By Major Amoo B. Hoople ·
GridWIJard
Egad, friends, Columbus,
Ohio, often called the zaniest
football town in America, w11l
be zanier than ever this
Satunlay as the hometown
Ohio State Buckeyes host the
vaunted Oklahoma Sooners.
Never before have the Bucks,
the pride of the Big Ten, and
the Sooners, perenmal Big
Eight titleholders, met on the
gridiron. Supporters of both
dubs have waited years lor
this confrontation.
Confrontation? Heh - heh,
,will be more of a Holy
Crusade with each club
seeking to reinforce its
position in the national
standings and to win the Big
One for the honor of their
respective conferences.
After having digested all
pertinent information,
scrutinized the scouting
reports and checked the
computer analysis, your
perspicacious prognosticator
casts a cautious vote for the
Sooners - kaff - kaff!
(Editor's Note : All of the
above probably means
Hoople flipped a coin.)
Our nod goes to the Sooners
In the belief sensational
sophomore
quarterback
Tommy Lott will shake off
the early season physicla
miseries and get the explosive Oklahoma offense
moving the way it should. Be
assured that Woody Hayes
and his Buckeyes will not
give up easily. Beating Ohio

State is never easy and
beating them at home is
almost impossible, but that's
whatisinthecards. We make
it Oklahoma 28, Ohio State 21
in a classic showdonw- harrumph!
· While most of the nation's
football filberts will be
watching or listening to the
proceedings at Columbus,
there are some other very
important meetings
scheduled elsewhere. Games
like: Texas Tech - Texas
A&amp;M;
Penn
State
Maryland; East Carolina Virginia Military; Florida

Sooners
have good
•
practice
NORMAN, Okla. (UPI ) The Oklahoma Sooners,
preparing for the Ohio State
game Saturday, had a good
practice Tuesday with the
offense working hard, coach
Barry Switzer said.
He caUed the practice "the
best one we've had " and said
quarterback Thomas Loti
"looked tbe best he has
looked in three weeks. "
"He is still not at 100 per
cent, but he is getting close,"
Switzer said.
Center Jody Farthing practiced, but Switzer said he
would not go to Columbus.
Farthing was injured in the
opening game again st
Vanderbilt.
Junior Paul Tabor will
again handle the snapping
chores for the Sooners
against Ohio State.
Injured nose guard Reggie
Kinlaw practiced Tuesday
and is "doing okay", Switzer
said. The Sopners will work
on the kicking . game
Wednesday, he said.

State - Miami; Georgia South carolina and Kentucky
- West Virginia. And how
about the trio in the potent
Southeastern Conference:
Alabama
Vanderbilt,
Tennessee - Auburn and
Florida - Mississippi State.
The Texas Tech - Texas
A&amp;M shootout should go a
long way in deciding who will
uhmately press Houston for
the Southwest loop crown.
The hunch here is that Steve
Sloan's Red Raiders will
prevail over the A!l&lt;M lads by
a 24-18 score.
East Carolina, one of the
surprises of the young
season, figures to keep rolling
in h1gh gear against VMI
winning 23 - 12. Did you
notice, dear readers, that it
was Hoople - and Hoople
alone - who gave you Pat
Dye's East Carolina Pirates
to whip both North Carolina
State and Duke m their first

two games? Yas,

your

Map

Hoople's

Michigan :IC, Navy 20
Mich. St. Zll, Wyomln&amp; IS
Mlnnesola 14, UCLA 13
Miss. 40, So. Miss. 18
Florida 33, Miss. Sl. 22
Missouri 27, Calif. 1%
Nebraska 22, Baylor 17
N.C. State 21, Wake Forest 17
(Nl
No. Tex. St. 16, W. Tex. St. 10
(N)

Ne. Carolina 18, North
western 14
Ohio U. 3S, Cenl. Mlch 27
Oklahoma 28, Ohio Sl. 21
Okla. St. 42, UTEP 12
Wisconsin %1, Oregon 18 (N)
Penn. St. 30, Maryland 20
Rutgers 15, Princeton 13
Noire Oame %4, Purdue 14
Appalachian Sl. 31, Richmond 12
San Jose St. 34, Fullerton Sl. 7
(Nj
So. Carolina 24, Georgia 21
(Nl
So. Calif. 44, TCU 14
Colgate 28, Cornell 14
Tulane 35, SMU %7 ( N'
Dartmouth 3S, Holy Cross 6 Stanford 28, Dllnols 21
E. Carolina 23, VMI 12
Syracuse 20, Washington 13
Miami (Fla. l 25, Florida Sl. Pitt 27, Temple 7
%2 (Nj
Auburn 24, Tenn. 20
Georgia Tech IS, Clemson II
Harvard 22, Mass. 15
Tex. Tech 24, Tex. A&amp;M 18
Indiana 35, Miami (0.) 21
Houston 23, Ulah 6 (N)
Iowa 27, Arizona 20
Utah St. 28, Brigham Young
Wash. St. 19, Kansas 10
26
Ball St. 32, Kent St. 28
Alabama 28, Vanderbllt 23
Kentucky 18, West Va. 14
VIllanova 21, Dayton 20
Penn. 10, Lehigh 7
Duke 17, VIrginia 8
·
LSU 15, Rice 6 (N)
Kansas St. 28, Wichita St. 12
Louisville 28, Wm. &amp; Mary 13 (N)
iN I
Yale 32, Conn. 20
Memphis St. 33, Va. Tech 22 ((Nl Night game
INl

Football
Forecast

correspondent is entiUed to a
modest bow - um-kumph !
The Penn State - Maryland
joust is another with national
ranking at stake. The Nittany
Lions appear to this observer
to have more guns than
Maryland's Terps and should
come out ahead 30-20. The
Florida state · Miami intrastate donnybrook is
always a grudge 'battle and
this year will be no different.
The clubs are very evenly
matched with both showing
flashes of brillance. We see it
Miami 25, Florida St., 22.
The Hoople System sees
Jim Carlen's South Carolina
team surprising the Georgia
Bulldogs , 24-21 and The
Kentucky Wildcats downing a
line
West
Virginia
aggregation, 18-14. .
In
the
Southeastern
By GENE GADDES
meetings-, surprising VanUPI Sports Writer
derbilt will give the Alabama
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!)
Crimson Tide a run lor their - Buck Norris tells it like it
money tlut will finally sue- is.
" I thtnk Governor ~ipper
cumb , 28·23; resurgent
Auburn will upend Ten- · is the fastest colt out, sa1d
nessee 24-20, and Florida's Norris, trainer of the favored
Gator~ will prevail ove( Governor in Thursday's 32nd
Mississippi State, 33-22 running of the Little Brown
har-rmph !
Jug.
" Pick any sophomore m the
Now go on with my
forecast:
country and set up a match
Saturday Sept. Z4
race with him - on even
Air Force 24 Pacific 14
terms - and I think we would
'
Arizona Sl. 21, Oregan St. 12 win."
Thursday's $100,000 Jug ,
(Nl
the
second jewell in 3-yearArkansas 35, TUlsa 8
old
pacing's triple crown,
Army 30, Boston Col 17
Iowa St. 32, Bowling Green 21 isn 't exactly a match race
Ciociooall17, NE I.a. 10 (N) with a field of 12 going, but
Colorado 26, New Mexico 7 Governor Skipper goes to the
gate on at least even terms Colo. St. 40, No. Colo. 13
or
better.
Columbia 18, Lafayette 10

Skipper fastest
colt Norris

'!'he Meadow Skipper colt,
owned by Ivanhoe Stables of
Ch1cago and driven by John
Chapman, drew jhe No. 2 post
position for the ftrst heat,
along side lightly regarded
Candid Camera.
That means all of the
Governor's chief challengers
will be starting outside of him
on the lightning last half mile
track of the Delaware County
Fairgrounds.
"We've pointed the horse
for the Jug," said Norris,
"and he should be even better
this week. "
The main competition lor
Governor Sk1~r, who has 11
wins, 5 seconds and 3 thirds in
21 starts this year, ligures to
come from Billy . Haughton 's
Crash and three entries
trained Jack Kopas - Jade
Prince , Nat Lobell and Super
Clint.
"Crash is real good, " said
Norris. " He beat us the other
night (the Geers Stake at
Hazel Parkj , You have to be
afraid of hlffi and with Billy
Haughton driving, you have
carolina A&amp;T State, 52-0.
to rate hun on top. "
New Hampshire (2-0) is
01 the three Kopas horses,
third, and !976 Division II Norris fears Jade Prince the
runnerup Akron (2-Q.l l ranks most.
fourth.
" Jade
Prince
could
Wittenberg ( 1-1)) tops the surprise ail of us," he said.
Diviston III poll following a
"He hasn't raced lately, but
17-14 win over Division II Kopas might have the colt
Eastern Kentucky.
right for the Jug.
Baldwin-Wallace (1-1)) beat
"Nat Lobell," Norris
Lehigh, another Division II added, "is a good, game colt.
team, 28-16, ·and was voted He went step for step with us
into second place. Third- at The Adios and we just
rated Dayton (2-ll has an happened to be lucky enough
impressive start with wins to beat him."
against Division II opponents
As for Super Clint, Norris
Butler ( 45-131 and South
said, "! never thought Super
Dakota State (28-14 ). The
Clint was quite as good, but'
Flyers' only loss came
lately he looks as good as any.
against Division I member · He went a super mile at
Miami (Ohio), 26-23.
Scioto Downs (1 :56.1 Sept. 8

Montana State, Wittenberg
ranked No . .1 in grid polls
-

'

MISSION, Kan. (UPJ) Montana
State
and
Wittenberg were rated No. I
Tuesday in the National
Co lle g iate
Athletic
Association's first weekly
Division II and Division III
football rankings.
Montana State ( 2-0)
appears as powerful this
season as it was in 1976 when
the Bobcats won the National
Collegiate Division II tiUe
with a 12-1 record. Coach
SoMy Holland's squad has
defeated North Dakota State
(24-17) and North Dakota (217).
South carolina State (2-0)
earned its second-place
ranking by routing Delaware
State, 21-0. and North

PRICES EFFECTIVE
SEPT. 22 thru SEPT. 24

uy Greg Bailey
The big event this week is the celebration of National
HWlting and Fishing Day, Saturday, September 24. The
President has issued a proclamation designating Saturday as
such, and so have the mayors of each of our towns. The sportsmen of Meigs CoWlty, led by the Izaak Walton League, Ken
Amsbary Olapter, are inviting all loca l residents, old and
young, to their celebration at Royal oak Park.
Festivities will begin at 9 a.m. when registration gets
Wlderway. At 9:30, actiVIties will begin, featuring archery, all
types of shooting, dogs, fishing and other things. Those
attending will be invited to participate in a lot of the51'
activities, free lWlch will be served, and door prizes will be
awarded. Everything is absolutely free!
FALL FISlDNG IS OFTEN overlooked by anglers as they
hang np their rods in e1change for a gun. But !all fiShing is just
as productive as the spring anglmg, and the weather is just
beautiful. The way the ran wind seems to sweep away your
troubles and the characteristic smell of the autumn air make
you not even care if lbe fish are biting. And if yo u like to
squirrel hunt, why not take a float trip and combine the fishing
and hWlting'
LANDOWNER'S ANTLERLESS deer permits are
available from official checking stations and your local game
protector. Applications for anilerless deer permits are
attached to your 1977 deer tag, and these applications must be
turned in by October 21.
ON THE ANTI-TRAPPING front, Representative Ron
James was the featured speaker Monday evening at the
meeting of the Meigs Countians for Wildlife Conservation .
James assured all us sportsmen that he'd do everything he
could to help us defeat Issue 2 in November.
The League of Women Voters still hasn't Iaken a stand on
this controversial issue. The Ohio Department of Health and
the Veterinarians' Association are both taking a stand to help
keep the leg-hold trap because its abolition would create widespread disease in the animal kingdom.
'
For those of you who still haven 't made your minds up as
to how you'll vote on the issue, let me ask you this. Now who in
the world would be narrow-minded enough to ignore and
discoiUlt the advice of knowledgeable people like those or the
Department of Health and the veterinarians? If they believe
that strongly m the leg-hold trap, who are the experts- tbem
or the anti-people?
One last point. A clause in the proposed amendment would
allow anyone- I repeat, anyone- to take a suspected violator
- again I repeat, suspected - to court. And the accused,
whether guilty or not , will have to pay the court costs. That
means if I don'tlike you, I'll accuse you of trapping and you'll
be out some dough . Ridiculous, isn 't it? Vote no on Issue Two
and keep the leg-hold trap.

Southern loses golf matches
Host Warren Local won a
triangular golf match
Monday over Trimble and
Southern at Oxbow Golf
Course.
Warren ended with 177,
Trimble shot a 1!!6, an~
Southern had a 205. Medalist
honors went to Warren 1 s
Steve Dolak with a 41. other
Warren scores were : Dan
Turner and Phil Spindler, 43;
Mark Kmg , oo; Dave lane,
61.
Trimble golfers were Todd
Trace, 42; Bill Foughty, 49;
Mike Jones, 00; Doug Davis,
55 ; Karl Echstenkamper, 58.
in the Jug Preview )."
Super Clint starts from the
third position , Nat Lobell the
fourth, Crash the sixth and
Jade Prince the eighth, all in
the ftrst tier.
Norris looks for a quick
pace.
"With the right weather
and a gocd track, " he said, '~]
wouldn 't be surprised to see
these colts go in 1:55."
Other entries and their post
positions include Jazzy Spark
(51, Jonquil Hanover (7),
New Deal (9), Thorpe
Hanover (10), another one of
the favorites, Barr's Robert
D (Ill and Jambogger (12).
The winner of the Jug will
be decided by the first horse
to win two heats. If, after two
heats, the _Jug has not been
decided, aU 12 will come back
again for a third heat.
If a winner has still not
been decided, the three
winners then meet in a
raceoff. Tbe first two heats
are scheduled for 2:00 and 4

Southern scorers were
Dwight Hill, 46; Seth Hill, 51 ;
Paul Holsinger, 52 ; Jim
Powell, 56 ; Tim Thoren, &amp;1.

f:!P•rices Ell&lt;!ctive Thursdoy, 22nd thru Saturday 24th
Right Reserved To limit Quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPil
- The Cleveland Cavahers
began their 1977 training
cam p Tuesday without
veteran
center
Nate
Thurmond, who' announced
his retirement, and veteran
play-making guard Jimmy
Cleamons, Who played out his
option last season.
Thurmond , 36, who helped
the Cavaliers make the
playoffs the past two seasons
with inspired defensive play,
apparently saw little chance
to make the squad this season
because of an injury and the
proposed league change to an

Bengals view

CINCINNATI (UP!l - It
was horror show lime for the
Cincinnati Bengals Tuesday,
as they sat down to watch
their mistakes of two days
earher in films of their 13-3
loss to the Cleveland Browns.
After the films, the Bengals
turned their attention to next
Sunday's contest against the
Seattle Seahawks.
Reflecting on the upset loss
at the hands of the Browns,
Cincinnati head coach Bill
Johnson said he thought the
"biggest thing" contributing
to his club's lack of success
"was the inability of our
offense to move the football."
Cominenling on his the
attitude of his ' players going
into last Sunday's battle,
Johnson
commented,
" There's
no
question
Cleveland wanted it more
than we did ."

11-man roster.
Cavaliers coach and
gener.al manager Bill Fitch
had &gt;~ready said he would
only keep two 'centers should
the National Basketball
Association decide to discard
the 12-man 'limit. Thurmond
missed part of last season
with a knee injury that
required surgery and had
trouble getting back in shape.
Jim Chones and Elmore
Smith, with youth and health
on their side, figured to be
Filch's two centers for the
new campaign.
Thurmond, a graduate of
Bowling Green State Univer-

PEARS

APPLES

LB. BAG

3 LB.

~79~

19'

$JOO

Reservations needed Friday
John C. Rice , County
Extension Agent, reminds
beef farmers and others in
the beef industry that
reservations for the area beef
outlook meeting on Sept. 28
should be made by Friday,
Sept. 23. Send reservations
directly to the Area Extension Center , P. 0. Box 32,
Jackson, Ohio, or can 614-2862177.
The outlook meeting will be

Eastern Jr.
•
High 8-6 winner ·
The Easiern High 8th grade
football team defeated
HaMan Trace 8th grade last
Thursday at Hannan Trace 86.
Playing a good defensive
game for Eastern were David
Gaul, David Wolfe, James
Reed and Greg Cole. The
offense for the Eagles scored
in the first quarter on a 47
yard drive with rWtS by Brian
Well, Mike Bissell, and John
Reibel. John Reibel scored
the touchdown and extra
points. The next game will ~
Sept. 23 at Waterford..

010 ooo 12o-- 4 1 J
010 IQO ooo- 2 6 0
Cande tar• a and Ott ; Espinosa . Lockwood
{B)
and
Stearns W- Candelaria, 18·5. L
HR - P1ItS·
' - Espinosa, B-13
burgh, Ott (6}.

N. Y

Atl anta
012 000 ooo- J 9 1
Houstn
021 001 02x- 6 9 1
Ruthven and Murphy ; J .
Niekro and Herrmann . wN iekr o, 13-7 L- Ruthven . 7.11 .
HR -A tlanta , Montanez (19 ).
Cinci
'210 100 ooo- 4 5 0
000 000 ooo- o 2 2
San Ogo
Seaver and Werner ; Owch i n.
ko, Tomfin ( 7) , Sp•l!ner ( ~ J and
Roberts. W- Seaver, 9 6. LOw chinko, 8-11 . HRs- Cincin natl , Foster (49), Werner (2)

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
The Baltimore Orioles ,
behind Jim Palmer's pitching
and the hitting of Ken
Singleton, Eddie Murray and
Rich Dauer, Tuesday moved
back into second place in the
American League East with a
!'&gt;-2 victory over the Toronto
Blue Jays.
In hurling a seven-hitter,
Palmer ran his record to 18-11
and put him in range of his
sixth 20-Win season. Such an
accomplishment would
surely give Palmer an edge
toward winning the Cy YoWlg
Awa~d for the fourth time.
"I'm not worried about the
Cy Young Award," said
Pabner. " I'd just like to win

20 games.''
Meanwhile, Murray, who
has taken over the slugging
slack left by the defection of
Reggie Jackson to the
Yankees, and Dauer, who has
at last reached expectations
•s
Bobby
Grieb's

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Pro Football
Buffalo - Traded wing Brian
Spencer
to
Pittsburgh for
center Ron Schock
Tampa Obta ined placeKicker Allan Leavitt on wa ivers
from Atlanta, signed running
back Stan Winfrey .!nd placed
reserve t:enter-guard Howard
Fest on injured reserve fist
Pro Buketball
New York - Signed forward
Phil Jackson .
Boston - Signed center Jim
Ard .
1 e v e 1 a n d - Announced
retirement of center
Nate
Thurmond.
Houston Hired
Lllrrv
Costella as chief scout .
Kanus City - Cut ruM ing
back Pat McNeil and defensive
back Chris Golub.
Hockey
Buffalo Traded forward
Brian Spencer 'to• Pittsburgh lor
vet,ran center Ron Schock.

c

atEESE

$J49

-Report
Cong ress

is

currently

Scott's world

Doyle's job no real bother

By Oarence
Miller
because it actually produces

work." he said.
By VERNON SCOTI'
"They
are
fellow
HOLLYWOOD (UPil
David Doyle, who stars with performers, just as a group of
the three beauties of men would be. It makes the
"Cltarlie's Angels," says, 11 ff scenery prettier, of course,
I lived the fantasies of male and the jokes cleaner."
Doyle is a comitted Roman
viewers I'd be dead in 14
Catholic
and deliriously
weeks."
happy
1n
his
marriage. Still,
If Doyle chuckles and
he's
a
youthful
47 and not
laughs a great deal, it's
because he fully appreciates altogether inattentive to the
holding down television 's constant exposure to full
bosoms and well-turned legs.
most joyful job.
01 his day-to~ay proximity
H1s costars are Jaclyn
Smith, Kate Jackson and to his costars Doyle says,
Ulery! Ladd - all young , "It's ~ catalyst to the
concupiscence that we are all
gorgeous and nubile.
In the show's premiere born with. Figure that out.
"Ninety.five per cent ol the
season his cup almost ran
over. Last year Farrah time our contact is restricted
Fawcett, America 's darling , to working &lt;:Onditions, so I
rarely think of the girls on a
was part of the cast.
Doyle maintains his good personal level.
"Oh, I appreciate their
humor no matter how often
he's asked his reaction to fem ininity all right. I'm as
being
surrounded
by aware of their charms as any
television's most attractive bealthy male would be. I
trio. He replies that he goes wake up every morning
home to another wonderful delighted by the prospect of
pair, wife Anne and daughter going to work."
He doesn't consider himself
Leah, 16.
a
father
image on the show,
But when he gets down to
much
less
a paternal figure to
cases - and he earned a law
the
girls
when
the cameras
degree - Doyle says acting IS
stop
turning.
He
thinks of his
work whetber it's with three
pretty girls or three dirty old Bosley role as more
avuncular than anythmg else.
men.
Only one cloud shadows
"The fact that I'm mvolved
professionally every day with Doyle's blue-6ky approach to
three charming and beautiful his job. In a recent magazine
women doesn't make that story he was asked whether
muc h difference in my "Charlie 's Angels" would
personal attitude toward survive Farrah's highly
publicized departure from

( 10 innings&gt;
Cle
100 001 100 1- 4 8 1
Def
Oil 000 001 2- 5 11 1
Hood . Waits (10) and Ken dall ; Glynn , Tay lor (6), Fou.
cault ( 10) and Parr ish. wFoucault. 7·5. L- Waits. 8-7. HR
- Oetro1t, Thompson ('29)
Minn
.
001 010 000- 2 7 1
Kan City
000 120 01x- 4 9 0
Zahn, T. Johnson . (8) and
Wvnegar . S p f 1 f for f i and
Wi! fha n. W- Spl1 ttor ff, 15 6. LZahn, 12-13. HRs- M1nnesota,
Wvnegar {1 0)
Kansas C1ty,
Brett 2 (21), McR ae (19).
Oaklnd
000 020 000- 2 9 7
Ch icgo
100 05 1 lO&gt;c- 8 10 1
Langford , Lacey (5J, Mitchell
(7 ) and Sangutllen. Newman
(7); Stone, Ha m11ton (7) and
Essian W-Stone, 15 11
LLangford, 8· 18. HRs- Oakland ,
Gross ( 19) Chicago, H Cruz
121.

funding lhe Clinch River uses. In light of ou r current
Breeder Reactor Project energy crisis, utilizing the
near Oak Ridge, Tennessee. breeder concept makes a
President
Carter
ha s great deal of sense because it
requested that construction can extend our present
of the facility be terminated. uranium resources from
Nuclear power plants have decades to centuries, perhaps
been producing electricity for up to a thousand· years.
years, but the breeder
There are several good
reactor is hailC\1 as a major reasons why the U. S. should
energy breakthrough contmue the Clinch River
project and expand our
breeder technology :
( l.l No single energy
source can provide for the
M:.jor l eague Leaders
total energy requirement of
By Untted Press International
Batting
our country , so all possible
1ba sed on 400 at bat s}
options should be explored
Nat1onal League
G. AB. H. Pet. and developed, including :
Parker Pi t
151 613 209 .3-41 breeder reactors, solar,
Stennett Pit
116 453 152 336
Tmpltn St.L
141 572 184 .322 fusion, coa l gasifi cation ,
Simm ns St L
140 484 156 322 hydro, geothermal, and wind.
Griffey Cln
144 549 176 321
One thing is certain, our
Foster Cin
148 577 184 .319
Sm1 lh LA
142 473147 .311 supplies of oil, natural gas,
Rose Cin
152 618 191 ,309
Hendr ic k SO
142 505 156 ,309 and coal will not last forever
L\J Znskl Phil
139 516 158 .306 and are becoming harder and
American League
more expensive to find. It is
G. AS . H Pet .
Carew M in
146 584 225 .385 too early to assess the real
S1ng1ton Bal
142 497 167 .336 application of some of our
Bostock M in
145 559 184 .329
Rivers NY
129 531 172 324 emerging energy sources like
LeFlore Det
l4.S 613 198 323 solar and fusion power. With
Rice Bos
150 601 194 32J
Bailor Tor
111 448 141 315 this knowledge in mind,
Brett KC
129 529 165 .312 Congress has a responsibility
Fisk Bos
141492153 311 to continue development of
Page Oak
135 460 143 .311
breeder technology . To
Home Runs
Nat1onal League : Foster, Cin abandon such a promising
49. BUrroughs, Atl .40 ; Luzinski
and Schmid t , Ph il 36; Ga rv ey, source of power at this time
LA 31 .
would be irresponsible and
American League: Rice. Bos
shortsighted.
38, Bonds , Ca l 36 , Nett les, NY
35 : Scott, Bas 32 ; Gamble. Chi (2.1 Building the Clinch
Jl
River facility is simply a
Runs Batted In
National League: Foster , Cin research and development
142; Luzmski, Phd 122, Bur - demonstration project testing
rotJghs. Atl 112. Garvey. LA
the feasibility of commercial
111 ; Cey, LA 110
American
League :
Hisle. reactors. We may or may not
Spurts Briefs
Minn 113; Bonds, Ca l 111 ; Rice,
need
commercial
breeders
by
United Press Intemalional ,
Bas 105. Thompson, Det 102 .
HoDson. Bas 101.
the year 2000 - if we do, we
Stol en Bases
need to keep our options open
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) National league : T!l veras ,
developing breeder Larry Burton, a world class
Pitt 64, Cedeno, Hou 5&lt;1, by
Richards , SD .48 ; Morgan, Cm technology
today . In sprinter trying for three
47 , Moreno. P 1tt 46 .
abandoning
the
breeder, the years to become the New
Americanl eitgui·- Patek. KC
49', Bonds, Cal 39 , Remy, Cal U. S. will lose millions of Orleans Saints' No. 1 wide
38 ; LeF lore , Del and Page. Oak dollaJ'!' alteady invested in receiver, could make his first
J7
the program. The Clmch start of the 1977 season
Pi1ctting
Most V•ctories
River project is a joint effort - against Detroit Sunday.
National League : . Carlton,
among
the Federal governThe Saints Tuesday said
Phil 22 -9; R RetJschel. Chi 20 -8,
Seaver , Cin anct John , LA 19 6,· menL
753 .. independent Burton had recovered enough
Candelan a. Pitt 18 -S. For sch, electr~cal uhhltes and the from a hamstring pull to be
St L 18.6
•
American League : Ryan, Cal Tenness~e Valley Authonty. listed as probable for the
19 . 15, Goltz . Minn 18 . 10. The uhhhes alone have game at Pontiac, Mich.
Pa lmer , Ball and Leonard, KC
Also listed as probable for
18 -11; R May, Salt and Colborn, already spent about $130
KC 11· 13
m1lhon_on the proJect- far the Lions' game were
Earned Run A\lerage
exceedmg any other of their defensive tackle Mike Fultz
(based on 144 innings pitched&gt;
National League · Candelaria , research and development and starting running back
Pitt 2 48 , John, LA and Carlton , mvestments. The demon- Chuck Muncie.
Phil 2 67 : R Reuschel, Chi 2 68 ;
stration facility is necessary
HOQfon, LA 2 70
American League: . Tanana , t 0 test the engineering exCa l 2 SA ; Ryan,
Cal 2 73 ,

Leaders

Orioles back in second

Join the Fun!

pkg.

Washington

Seatt le
000 000 100-- 1 8 1
Milw
100 040 OOx ~ 5 8 0
Montague , Bur.ke (6) ar'ld
Stinson. Slaton and Haney . wGuidry, NY 2 82 , Blvleven , Te-x
Siaton, 10 14. L -Montagu~ . 7 2 83 ; Pa lmer, Bait and Rozema,
12
Det 3 01
Strikeouts
Texas
100 000 100- 2 8 1
National League: Niekro, At)
Cal1f
001 220 OOx - 5 10 2 '242 , Carlton , Ph!l 190 ; Richard ,
Lindblad . Cuellar (6) and HotJ 188, Rogers, Mtl 187 ,
Sundberg, Brett and Hum - Seaver, Cin 186.
phrey
W- Brett, 13 12
LAmerican League : Rya.n, Cal
American League
Undblad, .c-5. HRs- Callfornia , 330 ; Leonard . KC 212 ; Tanana.
N .Y at Boston, ppd , ra in
Chalk (JJ. Ja ckson (7), Bonds Cal 205; Palmer , Bait 185 ,
Eckerslev, Clev 179.
001 000 1()()-- 2 7 0 IJ6l.
Tronto

SUNDAY
11 A.M. Unti19 P.M.

20 cl

Bait
010 110 20X- 5 8 l
Clancy, Murphy (7) and
Ashby, Palmer and Skaggs. W
--. Pa lmer , 18-11. L- Cianc y, -4 -7
HRs-Baltimore, Murray ('23),
Dauer (4)

L .A
030 000 ()00-,- 3 7 0
Sa n F rn
000 000 001- 1 6 1
John ,
Rautzhan
(9)
and
Yeager , Hal ic ki, Hea'\l erlo (91
and Hill. W - Joho. 19·6. LHaticki , 1.4 -12 HR- Los An geles, Mondav (l.C).

•

KELLOGGS

Major League Results
By United Press International
National League
St. Louis at Montreal , ppd ,
ra 1n

Pttsbgh

sity, played 14 years in the
NBA beginning with San
Francisco in the 1963-64
season. He averaged about 15
points per game and had
more than 14,000 career
rebounds, taking fourth place
on the league's alltime list in
that category.
The S.ll, 230-poWld native
of Akron was named to the
NBA all-&amp;ar team seven
times.
Cleamons, the cav•s leader
in assists, has not contacted
the club. Fitch said "nothing
happened" in his last
conversation with Larry
F1eisher, Cleamons' agent.

held at the Area Extension
Center located on Ohio Route
93, two miles south of
Jackson . Program features
include a 4:30 p.m. tour of the
Jackson Research Farm, a
steak dinner (cost $3.75 per
person I at 6:30p.m. with the
outlook session scheduled lor
7:45 p.m. Dr. Wally Barr,
Ohio State University Extension economist, will be
guest speaker.

Wednesday line scores
Chicgo
001 001 ooo-- 2 &lt;1 o
Phil a
110 200 oox- 4 9 o
Bonha m , P . Reuschel (8) and
M 1 t t e r w a I d , Carlton and
McCarver . W ~ Carlton, 22 -9. L
- Bonham , Hl-1'2 . HR- Philadel phla, McCarver (6l.

RIDE All RIDES-ALL DAY

APPLE SAUCE ....................... ~~·-~?~.~~-"..41'1.00
CARROTS

The Meigs Local Teachers' Association thanks everyone in
the community who helped us in any way during a very trying
time in the Meigs Local School District.
The contract worked out between the Meigs Local Board of
Educalion and the MLTA is a workable one with which both
parties should be very happy.
Everyone had his own thoughts about the work stoppage
and many made them known, and now that school ts once
again in session, we hope that everyone involved will pull
together and put his energy into the job of educating the young
people in our district. - Olarles A. Downie, President, MLTA.

As of Monday night, some
30,000 tickets remained for
th e game and a club
representative said it was not
expected to sell out by Friday
evening, meaning il would
not be locally televised .

GREER

Golden
Delivious

Dear Sir:

"APPRECIATION DAYS"

FOR LESS!

:::l

Trying time is ended

ANNUAL

om

lI f,~:
I
I
I
I
I

1
I
I
I

CAMDEN PARK'S

SATURDAY
Noon Until10 P.M.

I :;?.
!

count him out."

horror show

I
I i
I :~

t

1 debating whether to continue ("breeds") more fuel than it

SEPTEMBER 24TH &amp; 25TH

Assorted Varities

•

leu lllu 1111t wonllloac (or be •ubject ta redllctl• by
llle edllorl aad IDI!It be alcaed willa tbe •!pee'• ldlftq, Namea liLly be wllllbtld upoa l"lblk:ation.
However, oa MjUtlt, aam01 will be dllcloted. Letten
llllould be Ia &amp;ood Iaiit, addreaiiD&amp; laluet, not perMUIIIIeo.

attention and all the playen
are aware~ this."
Although Kansas City
scared New England Sunday
before the Pats pulled out a
21-17 victory, Gregg wun't
worried that his team would
dare take Monday 's foe
lighUy after New England
went li.J last year.
"The Patriots are a very
explosive team. They have a
lot of speed and talent. We 'll
have our hands full, " he
declared.
Defensive tackle Jerry
Slerk, still recovering from a
knee ligament injury in the
preseason, was definitely out
for the game but Gregg said
there was a chance premier
wide receiver Paul Warfield
would recover from a muscle
pull and be able to play.
Offensive .tackle Doug
Dieken received a severely
bruised are in the Cincinnati
game but Gregg said,
"Dieken is a quick healer
usually. He also is a guy who
can play with pain. Don't

YELLOW POPCORN ............................ 21'1.09

PRODUCE SPECIALS

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SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

SALTINE CRACKERS ............................'-~~·.. 4f
2 lb.

. 9:001117 :00

Saturday 9 :Oo.t :00
CLOSED

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) Cleveland Browns Coach
Forrest Gregg is glad his
team has an added day to
prepare for its home ofl!!ner
against the New England
Patriots Monday night.
"I'm pleased that we have
the extra day to get ready.
We'll have lime to heal and
gel our feet back on the
ground," Gregg said after his
team's stuMing 13-3 defeat of
Cincinnati last Sunday.
" I don't anticipate any
letdown . It's no problem
getting up for a game on
national television . The .
football players have wanted
this.
"The pay in pro football is
good and it's fun to play tbe •
game, but everyone likes to
have recognition. This is one
quick way to get national 1

- --------------------------I
~.«ten ol oplaloa are weleomed. They 1bould be
1 z:

Cavs without two veterans

FIRESIDE
PHEBE STORE

Don't anticipate
letdown-Gregg

S-Tbe DallySenUnel, t.Uddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 21,11177

replacement at second base,
each hit home runs to help the
Orioles close to within three
games of the first-place New
York Yankees, who were
rained out in Boston.
Elsewhere in the American
League, Chicago drubbed
Oakland, 8-2, Kansas City put
away
Minnesota ,
4~2,
california topped Texas, !'&gt;-2,
Detroit edged Cleveland, 5-4,
and Milwaukee downed
SeatUe, !'&gt;-!.
Royals 4, Twins 2:
Hal McRae belted a twofiDl homer, his 19th, and
George Brett added a pair of
solo shots, his 20th and 21st, to
spearhead the Royals' 19th
victory in the last 20 games.
Paul Splittorff, 1~. went aU
the way on a seven-hitter.
The Royals' magic nwnber
for clinching the American
League West is now lwo.
White Sox 8, A's 2:
Late-season picknp Henry
Cruz belted a two-rWl homer
and the White Sox benefitted
SANFRANCisco&lt;liPI)The San Francisco . Giants
announced Tuesday Manager
Joe Altobelli and his coaching
staff have been rehtred for
the 1978 National League
season.
Returning With Altobelli
next year will be coaches Jim
Davenport, Tom Haller and
Herm Starrette. Giants' coowner Bob Lurie said one
other coach will be hirad to
fill out the staff.

HOUSTON (UP!) - The
Houston Rockets Tuesday
hired former Milwaukee
Bucks' Coach Larry Costello
to be the Rockets chief scout.
His hiring reunited him
with Rockets' Coach Tom
Niasalke and President Ray
BestHII
Patterson, with. whom he
San Francisco Rehired
Manaoer Joe Altobelli and worked in leading the Bucks
coacheS Jim Davenport. Tom to an NBA title in the 11170-71
Hal• end Herm Starrette tor
season.
tJ
the lt71 season.

from three of Oakland's
seven errors in the game to
score five fifth-inning runs.
Steve Stone, 1!'&gt;-11, was the
winner for the White Sox, who
look over second place in the
AL West.
Tigers 5, Indians 4:
Pinch-hitter
John
Wocken!uss singled home
Lance Parrish with the
winning run after Jason
Thompson had tied the score
in thh bottom of the lOth
inning for Detroit with his
;!9th homer.
Brewers S, Mariners 1:
Only 3,004 showed up to see
Jim Slaton, 1~14, hurl his
first complete game for
Milwaukee since July 30. Sal
Bando hit a two-run double to
key a fourrWl fifth inning.
Angels 5, Rangers 2:
Bobby Bonds and Ron
Jackson ripped two-run
homers and Dave Chalk
collected three hits in leading
the Angels, behind Ken
Brett's pitching, to victory.
Brett, 13-12, signed a threeyear contract prior to the
game.

pertise ,

remark,"

Doyle

said,

respect a111\'flg us .
"Equal iinport is giving ail
three actresses in each
episode. I don't know of a
show that has three equal
leads.
"So it gets harder and
harder to add a fourth
element of equality - me. I'd
like to see Bosley do more oo
the series. I requested that he
not be made to look like a
dumbbell . I see him as a
Robert Benchley type, in tune
with the younger generation
but not necessarily in
agreement.
"Maybe someday Bosley
will have his own show. It's
something to thmk Alvmt "

displaying a rare frown.
" I wouldn't hurt that
wonderful girl's feelings for
the world. I'm terribly fond of
her. What I meant to say was
that we had four months
more to work 0n scripts and
the producers were better
prepared this season.
"Alter all,l'd never say the
opposite - that the show
probably would be as good
but not better. I wouldn't say
that about any project I was
connected with.
"And I know damned well
KEEPSAKE ~
Farrah would like to see the
show keep improving and get
higher ratings. She is a sweet,
Wlselfish girl.
"last year the girls were
honored on 'The People's
Choice Awards .' As they
made their way to the stage,
Farrah insisted I join them . I
wouldn't have been a part of
it all without Farrah 's
thoughtfulness. 01 course I
miss her ."
Doyle was the first to make
Cheryl feel at home when she
joined the cast. Cheryl, like
Jaclyn and Kate , are high in
praise of him as an actor and
chwn.
·
" I'm friendlier with the
girls than any group of
performers I've ever worked
with on stage or television,"
he said. " I was deeply
touched not long ago when I
missed a day at work because
of the flu.
" It was the first time I'd
not been able to report
A brea1h1aking array of
because of illness. Each of
Keepsa ke's mosl enchantmg
diamond engagement nng
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) them, individually, checked
sty le s
duets, trios ana
in
on
the
phone
to
see
how.
I
- The chairman of the
so l i 1a~res to del1ght you . .
and every engagement dialegislative committee was getting along. You can't'
beat
that
kind
of
friendship
mond ts guaranteed perfect
investigating the Beverly
anywhere."
Hills Supper Club fir e
)"riendship aside, there is
disaster says the 1978 session
the
ever-present perU that
of the General Assembly
Doyle
could be lost in the
should take the state Fire
of the show. The
shuffie
Marshal's office ·out of
scripts
are
written to display
politics.
of
the ladies as
as
much
State Rep. Bob Benson , Dpossible.
Louisville, whose Interim
"You have to be a good
Committee on Cities is
actor
to hold your own with
conducting an inquiry into the
fire where 164 ~rsons died, three 11 beautiful girls," he
said Tuesday he expected his said. But there is genuine
and
panel to urge that the Fire rapport, affection
Marshal be transferred from
the Insurance Department to
a new proposed Department
of Building and Housing.
~5th
Benson satd his committee
' .
The Best Values You've Ever Seen
would spend lwo days in
October
to
discuss
exclusively the findings of
different investigations of the
Beverly Hills fire, including
the just-released report of the
state investigation authorized
•FLEXSTEEL
•LANE
by Gov. Julian M. CarrolL
The combination of the
•BASSETT
•RIVERSIDE
findmgs s hould help the
legislature · take whatever
measures · are deemed
•PROVINCETOWN
•FRIGIDAIRE
necessary to lighten ftre
safety procedures and
•HOOVER
•ADMIRAL
enforcement, he said.
" The overwhe lm ing
concl usion is that the
•SPEED QUEEN
•CALORIC
problem was one of
enforcement rather than the
lack of adequate legislation,"
-F REE OELIVER-CONVENIENTTERMS
Benson said of the state's
-LARGE SELECTIONSreport, which strongly
criticized the Fire Marshal's
office for its fire safety codes
enforcement policy.
Middleport, Ohio

NEW .•. from

DIAMOND RING

Fire marshal's
job should he
politics free ·

manufacturing

capability, maintenance and
operating procedures, and
environmental impact of
breeders if we ever do need
them.
(3.) Stopping our breeder
effort will have little impact
on the spread of nuclear
weapons. There is no in·
dication that any of the five
nations presently developing
breeder rcac1ors plan to slow
its program in any significant
way; regardless of how much
the U. S. cuts back on its
program. A breeder reactor
1s not needed to make the
plutonium for an atomic
bomb. There are easier ways
to accomplish th~t task
already available.
We ail are concerned over
the potential spread of
nuclear weapons and the
need to safeguard ' nuclear
materials. However, it seems
Iarmore prudent for the U.S.
to continue breeder develo!&gt;'
ment and work towards
reduction
of
nuclear
proliferation
as
a
knowledgeable partner,
rather than from a position of
retreat and isolation.
France, En~land, and
Russia have had breeder
plants operating for three to
five years, which puts the U.
S. about 10 years behind
already. To delay any longer
only wiU enable these nations
to sell their expertise and
service around the world
without American competition and influence.
Let us get on with the job of

the detective series.
Ooyle opined that the
second season would be as
good or better than ever.
"It's come back to me that
Farrah was hurt by my

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
National Hockey League
Tuesday announced the
addition of four new officials
to its 3&amp;-man officialing staff
for the 1977-78 season.
The four new members are
referee John McCutcheon,
Owen Sound, Ontario;
linesmen Kevin Collins,
Springfield, Massachusetts
and Don Koharski of
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, and
referee-linesman Mike Foy of
Willingboro, N.J.

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)San Francisco Giants'
shortstop Tim Foli began a
four-game suspension
Tuesday night.
Foli had been suspended
for four games by National
League president Charles S.
Feeney
following
an
altercation with Atlanta
pitcher Dick Ruthven on
Sept . 5 in AUanta.

Anniversary Sale

Famous Name Brands
of Furniture &amp; Appliances

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE

solving .the energy crtsts.
Conservation alone will not
solve our problem. The
breeder could play an important role in making
energy
selfAmerica
sufficient,' and building the
Clinch River facility today
will enable us to keep our ..
options open for tomorrow.

Sept 21st
While Quantities Last
Quantity Rights Reserved
We are not responsible for typagr•phlcal errors: Sorry, No Dealers.

BUY ONE NEW 40 OUNCE IMPERIAL SIZE
AND GET A$1.00 SAVINGS BY MAIL FROM SCOPE
A 50' CASH REFUND PLUS
A 50' COUPON

(Good on next 40 ounce purchase
or two any other size.)

$

See our display for required
certifica.t e and complete details.
Mail in by December 10, 1977. Limit
one refund per name or address.

LIM IT 1 PLEASE

·

.79

Nelson's Rag. •2.74

Relax a minute •..
in luxurious Deerslayer comfort!
Deerslayers are crafted from soft, supple leather with lullcushion insoles and plantation crepe outsoles. They're
124.95 to 139.95
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HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open: 9 a.m. to s p.m. Mon . thru Thurs. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday. Saturday 9 a.m. to S ·
p.m.

r

�I

'-The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Wednesday, Sept 21.1m

Capital construction bill passes House

R. E. SCATTERDAY

Scatterday

is COVIC
speaker
Robert E . Scatterda y,
president of Campbell Barge
Une, Inc., since 1972 and
president of the Waterways
Association of Pittsburgh
during 1976-77, will he guest
speaker during Thursday
night's Central Ohio Valley
Industnal Councll meetmg at
Oscar's in Gallipolis.
The dinner session is
scheduled to begin at 6: 15
p.m. Ticketsare$10,andmay
bepurchasedattheGallipolis
Area Chamber of Commerce
office; or at the door.
Mr. Scatterday has been
associated with the river
industry for the past 25 years.
He served in the U. S. Navy
and attended Ohio State
University. He has been
employed
by
Sperry
Gyroscope Company,
General Motors Corporation,
and Lorain Electronics
Corpor~tion
in Marine
oriented positions.
Campbell Barge Line
operates towing vessels and
barges as a water contract
carrier on the Upper Ohio,
Monongahela and Allegheny
Rivers.

By LEE LEONARD
UPl Stat.ebOUSI' Repurter
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Disposing or ooe major item
on the agenda of its
September session, the Ohio
House has passed and sent to
the Senate a $517 million
app ropriation fo r · s tate
capital construction projects
for the next two years.
Action came shortly after
the House had reconvened in
fu ll voting session Tuesday.
However. final resolution of
the measure may be put off
·until
October .
Se nate
President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron has
already announced plans to
trim some money as
co nsiderati on pr oceeds in
that chamber.
Ocasek said Tuesdai there
are some projects in the bill
for which no operating money
is available during the nelrt
tw o years , so fuil -scale
construction appropriations
w 0 u 1 d be unwise.
Major allocations . in the
outlay are $211 for mental
health facilities, $202 million
for higher education facilities
and $67 mllhon for the

JUSt hal£

.•

a WOman

Carroll
raked by
owners

Wlprofessional," complains a

owners.
"His (the governor's ) remarks were not only
unwarranted, but were also
defamatory,
scurrilous,
irresponsible and
unprofessional," responded
Osborne : " We feel that
irreparable damage has
clearly been done, in that a
fair trial is now practically
impossible."
·
The report that prompted
Carroll's statements blamed
the club owners for actions
and inactions contributing to
the fire, but said Osborne,
"We do not accept the report
as factual nor as final." ,
The comments were the
·f1rst public statements from
the Schilling family since the
May 28 fire.
Osborne , flanked
by
Richard Schilling and his
three sons, made his
statements at a ao-calied
"news conference" Tuesday
afternoon. However, Osborne
. and the Schillings refused to
.answer questions from
reporters.
"It would be a manifest
!Mlderstatenient to say that
we were shocked at the
comments of the governor at
• his nellfl! conference with the
press prior to the release of
.the ••port an.. by his

before an amendment was

inserted
making
businesswome11 eligible for
special treatment in the
awarding
of
state
construction cootracts.
MOst of the debate centered
around a section calling for
agencies to contract at least
10 per cent
of
t hei r
construction work ·wi th
" mi nority
b u si n ess
enterprises."
A minority business enterprise is defined in the bill as a
business in which blacks,
Spanish-speaking
persons,
orientals or American
Indians have at least 50 per
cent interest.
Rep.
William
G.
Batchelder , R-Medina , tried
to remove what he called "a
quota s ystem on state
co nstruct io n," saying it
would take projects out of the
arena
of
competitive

woman DOW Senators

NASHVILLE , Tenn. (UP! )
- Contending she 's been left
"half woman and half man "
by Vanderbilt Hospital's
refusal to complete a sexchange operation, Pat Lepley
has filed suit seeking $500,000
damages.
The suit, which alleges
Miss Lepley underwent a
hysterectomy
and
a
mastectomy as steps tow~rd
a complete sex change,
claims ·hospital officials
refused further treatment
because they felt it would not ·
be covered by Medicare or
Medicaid.
But Dr. David G. Bowers, a
Vanderbilt plastic surgeoo
named in the suit, said the
hospital decided MisS Lepley
should not go through with
the operation because of
" psychological problems."
"My understanding," he
said, "is that she didn't end
up being a good candidate for
completing tbe · procedure.."
The suit claims hospital
officials first gave - then
withdrew - approval for
further slirgery, and charges
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Miss Lepley "exists at this
Kentucky
Gov. Julian time as half woman and half
Carroll's condemnation of man, all to her detriment,
Beverly Hills nightclub socially, physically and
owners is Hdefamatory , psychologically."
. scurrilous, irresponsible and
lawyer for the owners.
James Osborne, attorney
for the Richard Schilling
family ,' also says Carron is
playing "judge and jury" and
says a "fair trial is now
practically impossible " in
cases stemming from the
deaths of 164 persons at the
club on Memorial Day
weekend .
Osborne's statements came
in a stinging reply Tuesday to
Carroll' s comments on
Monday to congressional
subcommittee ·members and
news reporters.
em-oil had said that a
Kentucky State Police investigative report into the fire
indicated a " conspiracy" by
club owners to circumvent
the law and added that a
grand jury " cOuld well return
indictments for criminal
misconduct" against the

of Natural
Resources , Including
$2,750,000 for West Branch
State Park.
The Qill received 81·12 approval in the Hnuse, but noi
Depart ment

subsequent testimony ·at the
congressional subcommittee
nearing ," said Os.borne . .
41

The goVernor h~s used

this report as the stage for
po liti cally motivated
remarks serving his own
political end. He has led· the
public to believe that the
creation of this 'investigating
team ' was for the primary
purpose of making an
unbiased investigation.
"One need only read the
text of ·the governor ' s
remarks in both his release to
the press and in his testimony'
before the subcommittee to
conclude that the governor
intentionally set out to blast
the Schilling family, to laud
his appointees and his report
and to offer the state fire
marshal, ·Mr . (Warren )
Southworth as a sacrificial
lamb."
Carroll has suspended
Southworth, with pay, for
' 'ineffective enforcement'' of

f1re laws.
"'llle governor gave Mr.
Southworth a vacation with
pay and implied that he will
still remain as a state
employe," said Osborne.
" Incredibly and without
precedent, Gov·. Carroll has
assumed the role of special
prosecutor for Campbell
County (Ky., where a grand·
jury is expecte&lt;j to consider
the fire case) judge and jury.
Osborne said he and other
attorneys
have
been
investigating the fire since it
occurred and "offered the
services of our experts" to
state officials but were
"flatly refused."
Among other things, the
report condemned the club
owners for "locks on doors,
absence of sprinklers and
proper firewalls, hazardous
wiring , overcrowding, inadequate exits and improper

construction.''
Osborne said further public
comment from the Schillings,
who are named as codefendants in more than $1
billion worth of lawsuits filed
by relatives of fire victims,
will be "re.Wicted in the

future."

•

h 0 ld up
Laetrile

bidding .
He failed, but Rep. Donna
Pope, R-Parma, came up
with an amendment maj&lt;lrity
Democrats cou ldn't turn
do wn, adding "'women" to the
de finition of minorities.
'"! don't believe in quota
systems," she told her cotleagues, "but by golly, if
we're going to have tbem,
women should be included."
Mrs. Pope observed that
women are not necessarily a
minori ty,
but
women
business owners are. Tbe
amendment passed,, 68-25.
Mrs. Pope later said she
does not know how many

women contractors th ere are
in Ohio. She agreed there are
not many.
.
Prio r to Mrs . Pope's
amendment, Batchelder took
issue with the entire concept
of special consideration for
minority groups.
'"! have a brother who
tea ches Spanish ," s aid
Batchelder facetiously. "He's
going to be very pleased to
find out he 's included· for
special treatment under this
bill."
Batchelder said awa rding
contracts to special groups
co uld result in faulty
construction. "I'd hate to be
standing in one of these

buildings when a strong w; .d

C'ame along." he said.
The
Medina
County
la\mlaker added that delays
would result from searching
for minority contrac tors.
driving up project costs.
"The object is to get the
!&lt;&gt;west and besi bid for the
people of the state of Ohio,
and this won 't do it," he said.
"This is not giving equal
opportunity. This is giving
privilege to a few."
Rep. C. J . McLin, D·
Dayton, pr esident of the
Black Elected Democrats of
Ohio, offered rebuttal.
He said the co ntract
requirement could be waived
by the Minority Business
Development Office if no
qua l i f ied m i n o r ity

contra&lt;1ors were • vailable.
"This will not lessen the
quality of work," said McLin.
" This
will
give
an
opportunity for hundreds of
minority jobs.''
Batchelder 's motion was
tabled on a 51~2 vote.
All 12oppmentson the final

~ . 3 million awroPfiatlon for
school aid for districts with
high
numbers
of
disadvantaged pupils. That
money was lei o )( the
budget enacted last June.
Another $i.4 milllon Is
included for the Depar1ment
of
Rehabilitation
and
Co rrectlona to refur,blsh
prisons.
Both the House and Senate
were to reconvene at 1:30,
p.m. today.

roll call were Republicans.
Rep. Mack Pembertoo, R·
Columbus, sai d he vo ted
against the measure becan:.&lt;'
it sh ortchanged w cation&amp;i
education and "there were a
lot of tittle things wrong with
it."
· The bill inc!udes $500,00;;
for planning for separate
state office buildings in
Akro n,
Da yton
a nd
Cincinnati.
U also includes a special

7-'lbeo.JJ)'SIIatlnel, Mlc!c!leport..Pomeroy, O., Wednellday,Sept. 21,1977

·Reduced-price meals, free
milk rules are announced
Meigs and Gallia County
Schools, including the
Galllpolll City ll)'stem, have
&amp;MQunced their policy for
free and reduced-price meals
and free milk for children
unable to pay the full price of

meals and milk served under
the National School Lunch ,
School Breakfast, and Special
Milk Programs.
The Special Milk Program
makes it possible to make
available an extra one-half

f" AMlLY ·SI ZE INCOME SCALE FOR Fl1 EE MCALS A NO Flll~E J\UJ.K
AND REDUCED-PHICE MEALS

Sept 21st

Effective July 1, 1?7 7 fo r

While Quantities Last
Quantity Rights Reserved

A

We are not responsible for typographica I errors : Sorry, No Dealers.

Family

Su~e :

!t Others

DEODORANT SOAP

HAVE A
PROBLEM?

Round The Clock Protection

CALL
CRISISLINE
992-5554

LIM IT 1 PLEASE

Nelson's Reg. 37•

Ee~ch

Y j:a.r

c

Jnc.ome Scale
F o r F re e Meal s
And F ree Milk

P arenti, Children

DIAL SOAP

1 '17?~78 Sch ~~o l

B

lnc on-..e Sca le

Fo •

$ 3, 9 30

$ 6. 120

2

s. 160

8,0 50

3

6, 390

9, 970

4

7. 6 10

II , 880

5

a. Ho

13. 630

6

9 . 86o

15, 380

7

10,890

8

1 1. 9 10

18, 580

9

12.8 40

20,030

10

13, 760

2 1,4 70

ll

14,680

22 . !90

ll

15, 59 0

24, 3 10

9 10

I, 42.0

E a ch Addi tio nal

AMIIE HST, Ohio l UP ! 1

Tead .()t'S in U1e A.rnh~rst
sdwol district went i 1n stri ke

hoday after the Amherst
Board of Education rejected
a contract the teachers had
approved.
Picket lines were set up at
the three elementa ry schoo ls,

the IIIIC juninr hig:h sdKtnl und
nile high schunl. There were

no buses runnin~ . &lt;llld there
will be uu t'afcteria service
since 1\0il-tectt'hing employes
are hnnnring Ulose picket

lines.
However , sehoul officials
:;aid classes would be held as

SAVE

.

Children from families and correct. Applications are
whose income is at or below being made in connection
the levels shown are eligible with the receipt of federal
for free or reduced-price funds. School officials may,
meals or free milk. An extra for cause, verify the in·
one-half pint of free milk is formation in the application.
available to those who are Deliberate misrepresentation
eligible for free meals. In of information may subject
addition,
families
not the applicant to prosecution
meeting these criteria but under applicable state and
with other unusual expenses criminal statutes.
du~ to unusually high medical
· In certain cases foster
expenses, shelter costs in children are also eligible for
excess of 30 percent of in· these benefits. If a famiiy has
come, special education foster children living with
expenses due to the mental or them and wishes to apply for
physical condition of a child, such meals and milk for
disaster or casualty losses them, It should contact the
school. ·
lire urged to apply.
Application forms have
Under the provisions of the
been sent to all homes in a policy building principals will
letter to parents. Additional review applications and
copies are available at the determine eligibility. If a
principal's office in each parent is dissatisfied with the
school. The information ruling of the official, he may
provided ~n the application Is wish to discuss the decision
coqfldential and wiU be used with .the determining official
only for the purpose of on an informal basis.
determining eligibility.
If he wishes to make a
Applications may be sub- formal appeal, he may make
mitted at any time during the a request either orally or. in
year.
writing to the following in the
To
discourage
the school districts indicated for
possibility of misrepresen· a hearing and date for formal
tation, the application forms appeal.
Meigs Local - H. Dwight
contain a statement above
the space for signature Goins,
Administrative
certifying that all in· Assistant, South Third Ave.,
formation furnished is true Middleport, Ohio, phone 992·

24~

ONE SUPER BURGER
ground
CoupOn
beet
all the fixir-S on ·
75~ With
Expires: 10-1-77
a sesame seed Dun.
l/ 4

pound pure
with

1

SAVE

24~

ONE BIG FISH
v4 pound

fish Filler with

tangy tartar sauce on
a sesan:ae seed bun,

75~

With CoupOn
Expires: 10-1 -77

JUST FOR COMING
INI

16 ,980

IN OUR DINING ROOM
OR USE THE DRIVE THRU WINDOW
Don 'f miss ouf on our

·-

-.

FRISBiE MEAL DEAL ~~~ ,
Buv a

~uper Burger or Big Fish, French Fries

~ ~-

and any drink at regular price and take home

a Free Frisbee.

- ·

SAVE 35•

BIG BEEF PLATTER

A one-third lb. 100 PeT." pure chopped beef steak with
fries or baked potato, hot bread and all you can eat
sa lad bar.
.
t140
With
Expires: 10·1·77
Coupon

~

LUCASVILLE The
Scioto Valley Baptist Assn.
will hold Its annual meeting
Sept. 23 and 24 at Cook Road
Baptist Church here.
Rev . Robert E. , Hall,
Director of Missions for
Northern Ohio and Lakeland
Baptist Associations will
bring the missions message.
Rev. Hall was missionary
for Scioto Valley 14 years
before going to his present
position. He came to Scioto
Valley in 1958. Most of the
Southern Baptist Churches in
southeastern Ohio trace their
origin to this man who for
many years was called the
"Shepherd of the Hills."
Others on the pro~ram are

Healt~
SAVE 35•

FISH FILLET PLATTER

2 deep fried fish fillets with fries or baked potato, hot
bread and cole slaw or all you can eat salad bar.
Expires 10+77

40

With CaupOo&gt;

NEAR THE
POMIIOY-MASON
I RIDGE
OPEl 'TIL 9:15 PJA.

SUN. tin THURS.
llltll '11111:15 p...
Fri. &amp; s.t.

Rev. Bobby ElklllS, pastor,
Hope Baptist Chapel, Middleport, who will preach the
armual sermon; Rev. Philip
Jones, pastor, · Burlington
Baptist Church of South
Point, who will give the
doctrinal sermon; Rev. John
Burris, Pastor, First Baptist
Church, Logan, who will
bring the inspirational .ser·
mon, and Rev. Lamar
O'dryant, pastor, Sharon
Baptist Church, Ironton, who
will present the moderator's
address. ·
The meeting will be at·
tended
by
elected
ROBERT E. HALL
messengers and guests from
churches in a 10 county area
of southern Ohio and West Virginia.

group to

_hear
humorist
.
Community leaders in
health affairs of seven
)ioutheastem Oblo ·counties
cWill be entertained by

-nationally known hwnorlst
Dr. Lawrence HaU at the

POMEROY

2153.
Gallipolis City Schools Donald Staggs , Superin ·
tendent, Second and Locust
Sts., K of P Bldg. , Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 , phone 446-3211.
Southern Local District Robert E. Bowen, Superin·
tendent, Meigs County
Schools, Box 664, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, phone 992-:i592.
Gallia County Schools
including Buckeye Career
Center - Denise Shockley,
220 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631, phone 446-7919..
If a family member
becomes unemployed or if
family size changes, the
family should contact the
school to file a new application. Such changes may
make the children of the
family eligible for reduced·
price meals, or for additional
benefits such as free meals
and milk if the family income
falls at or below the levels
shown above.
In the operation of child
feeding programs, no child
will be discriminated agains!
because ·of race, color, or
national origin.
Each school and the office
Administrative
. of the
Assistant has a copy of the
complete policy which may
be reviewed by any in·
!~rested party.

Baptist group to hear
missions director Hall

ENJOY YOUR FOOD

llinth amual meeting of the
Ohio Valley Health Services
FouncY!tlon bt Athena Thurs·a.y, Sept. 22.

Bom of a famoUI ~ncHah
family, Dr. Hail II
nationally ratad 111110111 tlie
top ten lfter-d!Mer ipelken
bt the nat1an mill frequently
billed u the "clerical Bob
~~op~:" He II a Ufe-tlme
~trieal

Canon of tha Bplacopal
Qlurdl and allo • llllo)'W"

appears around the nation as
featured speaker at national
conventions of business and
professional groups, fann,
church, labor and civic
organization, and univer·
sltlet.
He has been an active civic
leader in cities where he has
held church assignments,
Including
New
York,
Cleveland, Cincinnati and
Toledo. Weaving personal
esperlences Into his ad·
dresses led "Program
Mapllne" to dascrlbe Dr.
HaU u ''one of the fumiest
humorists on the lecture
platform, an Incomparable
gem of an after-dinner

member of the lnt..nall-1
,.
Bratberbood of MaiJdiDI. ~p~~k'er.''
The
H-member
Foundation
A T.V. 111110-'llty bt the
of ellqymlb, lnmlorlat · wW have 111110111 Its R\11111

rol.

at the Minnesota :AFL-CIO
convention with a can for
action and a warning not to
co unt him out for a while yet.
·'In politics you should he
lik e a soldier on the battlefield," be said. He added, " In
politics, it i,'i better to live 50
years as a tiger than one year
as a chicken ."

INGELS
FURNITURE

FREE

114 m•llldan, he replarly severe! cabinet mem~ of

CANOGA PARK, Calif.
(UP!)
Former
Indianapolis 500 winner
Parnelli Jopes will not be
permitted to drive in SCORE
International off-road races
for the remainder of 1977
under terms of a penalty
assessed against him for
alleged misconduct, it was
announced Tuesday.
Governor James A. Rhodes.
Included will be the first Ohio
Representative to the Appal~chlan Regional Com·
mission, Albert G. Giles,
Administrator of the Bureau
of Employment Services, and
instrumental in the formation
or the Foundation in 1968; the
present
Ohio
ARC
Representative,
Deputy
Director Bennett J. Cooper,
of the Department of
tconomic and Community
Development; and Director
John H. Ackerman, of the
Ohio Department of Heal!h.
The meeting will be at the
Ohio University Inn, with a
social hour beginning at 6
p.m.

HURRY I HURRY I HURRY TO THE FINAL
DAYS OF INGELS FURNITURE FALL
CLOSE OUT PRICES ON ALL CARPET IN
STOCK. UNBELIEVABLE PRICES ON ALL
OUR FAMOUS BRAND CARPET

6 CRYSTALITE COASTERS
WllH STAND FOR
THE FIRST 50
PEOPLE.
' .--,.

TRY OUR NEW. SUPER BURGER
OR BIG FISH AND SAVE
WITH THE COUPONS BELOW

HAPPY WARRIOR
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UP!) scheduled for the 4,000 in the
Sen. Hubert Humphrey is
system.
ba ck, shrugging off his
The B"ard of Educatioo
cancer
and ready to conquer
and the Amherst Teachers
new
challenges.
Association were to meet
The Democrats' " Happy
later today to di scuss the
came roaring back
W
arrior"
wa lkout , triggered by a
from
his
sickbed Monday,
dispute Qver salary a nd
stirring
1,000
union members
binding arbitration.

Rcd uced-Pru: e Mea l s

I

M • nhu

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
House-passed bill legalizing
Laetrile for treating cancer
has begun its trip through the
Ohio Senate, meeting with
strong committee resistance
at its first hearing .
The Senate Education and
Health Committee began
hearing proponent witnesses
Tuesday night, and me111bers
complained they were being
asked to intervene in a
matter properly the business
of the medical profession.
Dr. Helen Calvin of South
Bend, Ind., said this was only
because the profession has
refused to conduct scientific
tests of the effects of the
controversial substance oo
humans.
" The medical profession
won't look at the cases, " said
Dr. Calvin. " We haven 't conducted scientific tests with
humans .because we haven~t
had the lt'eedom ."
A chemical derived from
apricot and peach pits,
Laetrile has been legalized in
12 states although tbe U.S.
Food
and
!;&gt;rug
Ad·
ministration
and
the
medical profession have declared it has no proven
medicinal value .
Dr. Calvin said Indiana has
permia ed the use of Laetrile
for four months. "Thus far , I
know of no harmful effects."
she said.
She was submitted to intensive
questioning
by
committee members who
asked her repeatedly to
document the effectiveness of
the substance through
scientific testing conducted
by independent laboratories,
but she was unable to answer
to their satisfaction.
"Well-recognized medical
authorities and cancer
associations have been
dealing with this disease for
years a:nd years," said Sen.
M. Morris . Jackson, D·
Cleveland, "and none of them
say Laetrile does any good."
Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, RDefiance, said the legislature
is being asked to legalize. a
substance without proper
professional background.
"We are being asked to make
a medical decision ... perhaps
a life-and-death decision ...
that we are not qualified to
make," he said.
"You're not being asked to
make
a
life-or-death
decision," Dr. Calvin replied.
" You're being asked . to
protect the rights of cancer
patients."
A northeastern Ohio couple
who asked not to be identified
in the news media testified
that their son developed
acute leukemia last year and
had complete remission 12
weeks after·starting Laetrile
treatments as a last resort.
The son, now 3, also
appeared · before
the
committee . He has been
taking t.:~etril~ for five
months .
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers Jr.,
D-Dayton, complained that
the legislature was being
asked to put a ''stamp of
approval" oo Laetrile.
The boy 's father replied
that legaliiation would
reduce the cost ard improve
the quality . of th~ drug. He
also said it would encourage
doctors who believe in
Laetrile to get involved
instead nf secretly dispensing .
prescriptions.
•

pint of free milk, in addition
to that with meals, to children
who are eligi ble for free
meals.
School offi cials have
adopted the following fa mily
size Incom e cr ite ria for
determining eligibility:

Teachers in Amherst go on strike

.'
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Middleport, 0.

•

'6'5

�I-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 21, 1&amp;'17

Syracuse PTO names Committees
POLLY.$ POINTERS new officers at meeting announced
New offkcrs were install..d

Polly Cramer

and rOom mothers for the

year named at the recent
meeting ollheSyracuse PTO.
Installed were Mrs .

Dry clean crayon stains
POlLY'S PROBLEM

DEAR POLLY - After'l.ak·
ing the clothes from the
dryer, I discovered some
yellow stains on a dress shirt
belonging to my husband.
Before I finished my folding I
folllld the source of the trou·
ble was . a yellow-orange
crayon my little daughter had
left in the pock~t of a sun
dress. I have tried using
many washing products that
should remove stains but with
no luck. I would appreciate
some help. -MRS. W.K.
DEAR MRS. W.K. - Heat
from the dryer and a piece of
a crayon can certainly play
havoc with a. load of clothes.
You could try loosening the
stain with kitchen shortening,
apply a detergent and work
all into the stain. Then
laWlder as usual. U you wish
to repeat the process pretreat
with a liquid household
cleaner. The American Institute of Laundering sug·

Social
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN Junior High
School PTO, 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday at school.
SECURE TICKETS no
later than Wednesday 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.
SPECIAL MEETING ,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday with
work in EA degree ; all
Master Masons invited.
PAST PRESIDENT
PARLEY, Drew Webster
Unit 39, Wednesday 7:30p.m.
home of Faye Wildermuth.
Ellen Couch in charge of
devotions.
TRUSTEES of Meigs
County Pioneer Historical
Society Wednesday 8 p.m_. at
musewn.
ROSE Garden Club, TUppers Plains, 8 p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Carl
Barnhill. New.officers will be
installed.
muRSDAY
MEIGS CoWlty Women's
Fellowship of the Churches of
Christ, 7:30 Thursday night at
the Bradbury Church. Program will be the observance
ol talent night with all women
and their families of the
Churches of Christ to invited
to attend and present their
talent.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes,
home of Mrs. Jean Moore,
7:30 p.m. Thursday . Plans
will be made for a visit of the
high priestess of Thea Court
oroOct.IB. ,
WOMEN'S Association,
6:30 potluck dinner .
Hcstesses to be members of
Group 2 with everyone to take
a covered dish. There will be
a film . Mrs. Richard
Vaughan will have devotions.
FRIDAY
DANCE AT SOUTHERN
HIGH School following
foot hall game Friday from 10
Wllil midnight. Music by Jay
Hill. Admission is $1.25.
Sponsored by senior class.
SATURDAY
CAR WASH Saturday at
Eller's Gulf in Racine from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. Price is $2 for
outside and $3 for inside and
out . Sponsored by · senior
class at Southern High
School.
SQUARE: DANCE Satur·
day, 9 p.m. to 12 midnight at
Shade School. Music by Frog
Stack and The Greenhorns.
Sponsored by Shade PTO;
four door prizes.
BAKE SALE, Saturday, at
Racine Post Office Jot,
beginning at 9 a.m. by Racine
Chapter Order of Eastern
Star ..
MEIGS COUNTY Girl and
Boy Scouts invited to
celebrate National Hunting
and FiShing Day, Royal Oak
Park
Saturday
under
IIPOfi!IOC!Ihip of lzaak Walton
League. Registration, 9 a.m.
followed by activities, gun
safety, canoeing, fishing,
reloedlng and trapshooting.
Free lunch. Scouts to wear
Wliforms. Girl Scouts in
Meigs Local School District,
contact leaders for information on attending. Door
prius to bi! awarded.
OHIO VALLEY Junior
Grange meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Ohio Valley
Grarte Hall In IA.tart Falls.

Carolyn Ml'Coy, president;

gests tha l such clothes be
taken to the dry cleaner for
safe removal of crayon
stains. Always check pockets
before doing the laundry. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is the practice in
papers and magazines of not
nwnbering every page, and
the newspapers leaving the
dates out of dilferent articles
they print. l do not know why
they do this but it certainly
does not help readers.
My Pointer concerns a way
to make a small Christmas
tree. I like to create new
things with throw-away
things. I save pretty buttons,
tiny perfume bottles, empty
lipstick cases, small spools,
beads, etc. and find these and
other such trinkets make
pretty decorations for a small
tree that is painted and
sprinkled with glitter while
still wet. When dry I spray
with a clear plastic spray.
With a bit of imagination and
practically no money one can
have the prettiest and most
original tree in town. -ROSE.
DEAR POLLY - I like to
have fresh parsley to use
throughout the winter, but
then it is so costly. So I grow
my own in the summer. I cut
the parsley in my garden and
by so doing get three crops a
summer. I wash it, put in boil·
ing water, boil for two
minutes, drain well, place on
a dry towel, press out the
moisture, place in a plastic
bag and freeze. It chops up
better when NOT defrosted
and retains its green color if
well Wrapped for the freezer .
-Ol.G

DE~ POLLy_ Thank you

for the Pointer concerning using white vinegar for erasing
hem marks in clothes.
1 enjoy drying my clothes
out of doors in the good old
sunshine. As I take them off
the line I look for any loose or
missing buttons, or any tears
to be mended, and I snap a
clothes pin on the bottom of
each artice needing attention.
I know just which things to
put in my ' 'mending pile"
when I take the clothes in·
side. -EDIE.
·
Polly will send you one of
her sig ned thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peve or Problem in
her column. Write PDLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING AT Eagle
Ridge Co!nmunity ·.Church,
Sunday. Sunday school, 10
a.m. followed by basket
dinner at noon . Dan
Hayman's
Hymntimers
featured singers for the af'
ternoon.
POMEROY SEVENTH·
Day Adventist Church will
host
songfest
Sunday
beginning at 2 p.m.; All
gospel singers and musicians
-invited to participate and
public invited io attend.
Social hOur in church
basement will follow.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
picnic at tire club Sunday,
serving at 4 p.m. ; refreshments free. Members and
families invited.

Donna Aleshire, vice presi·
dent; Mrs. Marilyn Deerner,
seCretary, and Mrs. Joyce
Sisson, treasurer.

The room mothers named
were as follows ;
First grade : Nancy Patter-

sun, Pat Phrlson, Janice IJ·
sic, Angie Harden, Judy
Pape, and Hrlda Weaver.
Secood grade: Marcia Ar·
oold, Carolyn McCoy, and
Doruur Aleshire.
Third grade : Carol Adams,
Marilyn Deemer, Sandy
Cobb, and Janet Peavely
Fourth grade: Louise
Frank,

Glenna

Hardens return from Germany

Commrllet-s for the 1977-78
year were announced at the

TUesday meeting of the
American LeguNl Auxil )ary
ol Lewis Manley Post 263,
Middleport.
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. Minnie Washington in
Gallipolis, Mrs. Lula Hami&gt;"
ton preSided at the meeting
which open in ritualistic
form. Conunittee cturinnen
named were Mrs. Campbell

Rummel,

Shirley Landers, Joyce
Thoren, Mary Chancey, Susie
Grueser, and Joyce Sisson.
Fifth Grade: Jo Bllen
Roush, Jonetta Davis, and
Sally Ebershach.
Sixth Grade : Martha
Recka McGuire and Diana McPhail, Terri Michael, and
King recently hosted a Dorothy Amberger.
layette shower for Susie AbIt was noted during the
bott at the home of Miss King. business meeting that
A teddy bear cake, mat· blacktopping of the basket·
ching the invitations, was ball court will be completed
baked by Mrs. Bunny Kohl _ before cold weather. A popfor the shower. Games were corn machine will be pur·
played with prizes going to chased for the fall carnival,
Mrs. Mary Porter, Susie the date to be announced
Soulsby, Jenny Smith, with later. Committees appointed
the door prize going to Mrs. to solocit were Terri Micturel,
Addie Norris.
Janice Lisle, Sally Ebersbach
Others attending the and Judy Pape, Pomeroy;
shower were Sharon Smith, Carolyn McCoy and Judy
Becky .Frye, Denise Mar· Williams, Syracuse and
shall, Jean and Alan Crisp, Minersville; Marilyn Deemer
Julie Hamm, Lynne Arms and Joyce Sisson, Mid·
and Jeanie, Bettie McGuire , dleport; and Susie Grueser
Vicki Hoffman, Grace Ab- and Jonetta Davis, Racine.
bott, Susie .Fischer Jeannie
Guest speaker for the
Nease, and Charlene meeting was Andy Lyle,
Thomas. Sending gifts were game warden, who showed
Cindy Soulsby, Mrs. Arlee slides and spoke on trapping.
Abbott, Jean Werry, Joanne
At the conclusion of the
Williams, Qottie Musser, meeting refreshments were
Susie Karr, Evelyn Lanning served by the officers. The
and Connie Lannjng.
room attendance award was
won by the fourth grade.

Harper, Americanism ; Mrs .

Ruth Brown, veterans affairs

Shower held

and

rehabilitation;

Mrs .

Naomi Bentley, children and
youth; Mrs . Lucille
Saunders, community servide; Mrs. Zuelelia Smith,
poppy chairman; Mrs .

Mr. and Mrs. Robt:rt
Harden of Syracuse returned
F'riday from a three week
.visit in Ansbach, Germany
with !herr daughter and sonin-law, SP :; and Mrs. Paul
Sechrest, the forn&gt;er Debbie
Harden.
Mr. and Mrs. Harden flew
from Columbus to Chicago
where they took a non-stop
cha.rter flight to Franklort,
Germany. The Sechrests met
them there. During their stay
in Germany, they toured
Wurtzburg,
Heidelburg,
Rotenburg, &amp;nd Nurnberg.
They visited four lead crystal
factories purchasing several
small pieces, and a large
crystal cake plate which Mrs.

were impresse&lt;: · ,,., the
beauty of the flowers and the
friendliness of the people. It
was a first flight for both rl
them lakin~ 9 hours from
G'hicago to Jl'ranklort.
Sp 5 and Mrs. Sechrest
have been in Germany since
January 1976 and wiU be there
unti11979.

Harden will use in her cake
baking hobby.
The couple a~'Ctllllpanied by
their daughter and son·in-law
visited ancient churches and
Heidelburg Castle and Col·
nberg Castle along with the
palace of Anshach which has
489 rooms with 28 included on
the tour. The Syracuse couple

Beautiful
Wood
Paneling

Return home

HAVE GUESTS
Mrs
.
Bertha Canaday
Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee returned Friday entertained Sunday with a
after a three week tour of dinner party at her Lincoln
several European countries. Hill residence. Her guests
The couple celebrated their were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
40th wedding anniversary Canaday of Rutland ; Mr. and
with a dinner party at the Mrs. Marshall Canaday' Rio
Restauratn Le Bapeau, a Grande; Mr. and Mrs. Har·
floaf.ilrg restaurant on Lake ryBailey, Mrs. Florence
Geneva in Switzerland . On Canaday and Blanche Cana·
Sept. 3 Mrs. Blakeslee day, Gallipolis; and Mrs.
celebrated her birthday an- Paul Chapman and daughter,
niversary at Villach, Austria. Anna Margaret, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee in·
eluded in their trip a Rhine
River Cruise on the Motorship Austria. They visited
· places of · interest in Italy,
'Germany
and
the
Netherlands.

Decorative wood paneling gives a new
look to any room of the house. Many
colors and finishes available from traditional dark woods to textured rustic
finishes .
·

This Week's

SPECIAL

SPRING OAK
PANELING
Mill Seconds

ONLY

~t QI.ehra
PICNIC SLATED
The Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Club and the Western
Hoots Citizens Band Radio
Club will have a picni c SWlday at the American Legion
Fann .near Rutland. Dinner
will be at l2:30 p.m.

:tfoutUnt.e

.

MASON, W. VA.

773-5554

CELEBRATe· WITH US-I.TS OUR

WILL HAVE SALE
The Auxiliary of Racine
Post 602, American Legion,
will have a sale table and

COLORS ARE:

serve refreshments at the
flea l)larket to be held at the
Legion hall Saturday and
Sunday . The Auxiliary
members are asked to· take
items for the sale table.

I." TO

3 DAYS ONLY
r .. V~LfiU • .O.fiO~Al
~~L

RUST

,.l.U ~1 .. .0.L

SUNDAY
THERE WILL be a
songfest SWldaY afternoon ,
Sept. 25 at the Pomeroy
Seventh-day · Adventist
Churc, beginning at 2 p.m.
· The sing is open to all
gospel
singers
and
musicians, and the public
is invited to. attend.

,.,.,__

- ~ -

BEAUIIRIL

~,

:':;;...;"-""

~~~~ fAll

SPORfSWEAR

__

~-.,..
•No
_ _ , , . , . , .,

I

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

Helen Help·

:l US • • •
~

By Helen Bottel

IIO:wS~.~~~~.

decled

i l&lt;~dies Auxiliary of the
•••

~
·

LET'S TRACE A'RECENT SURVEY'
Oldquotesneverdie - nor do theyfadeaway!
A correspondent wrote to my column last month : "I read
that a recent psychological survey says fathers on an average
give only 71'• minutes per week of listening time to their
t'hildren."
I answered, "Don't believe everything you read !''
Dr. Richard K. Kerckhoff, professor of Family Development, Purdue University, agrees ; and he has facts to prove it.
Hls interest in the quote dates from May, 1971, when he
read in "Today's Child,'' "A recent survey (!lhowed) the
average time per week father~ spend with their 5th grade sons
was 7¥, minutes," (says Dr. Betty Sigel of the University of
Florida).
Dr. Kerckhoff presented his research on the subject as "A
Tragedy in Seven Acts." Forthwith:
Art 1: "Because I was startled by the finding ," he writes,
"I asked Dr. Sigel for more details. She replied she had come
across the study in 'The Father's Book' by Ted Klein, but
(correction) they were 7th and 8th grade boys ... " (The book
was published in !968.)
Act 2: "Now on to Mr. Klein with my questions, 'Who says
the boys spend 71'• minutes per week with their fathers, and
how does he (she) know?'
Art3: "Klein reported there were300such boys wbo kept a
diary, and they were indeed 'alone with' their fathers 71'•
minutes per week on an average. He discovered ihese data in a
speech made by a well-known psychologist, Dr. Daniel G.
Brown, and printed in 'Vital Speeches of the Day,' September
1, 1961. I contacted the doctor, a HEW consultant in mental
IM&gt;alth.
Act 4: " Dr . Brown's letter told me that although he had not
done the research ('average time' changes here to 71'1
minutes) he got it from a good man, Philip Wylie, who had
written it in an article entitled, 'American Men are LQving
Fathers.'
Act 5: " Philip Wylie's article, found at the library, turned
out to be 'American Men are Lousy Fathers.' It appeared in
the March, !956 Reader's Digest, condensed from the
American Weekly, a now extinct Sunday newspaper
supplement.
·
"However, my examination of the Reader's Digest reprint
showed that the report of the 300 boys wasn't even part of the
Wylie piece. It was a sortofboous the editors had thrown in for
readers: a box insert quoting an earlier Christian Herald
article by Rev. Gordon H. Schroeder, Baptist minister.
Act 6: "I wrote to the publisher of the Christian Herald,
and received a copy of Schroeder's story, 'Parents Should
Behave Too.' It was dated September, 19:i5 (which begins to
make 'recent survey' a bit exaggerated). There, amid heartrending tales of deserted children and evil parents, is a
reference to our damn 300 boys and th.eir bloody 71'1 minutes
per week with good old Dad.
"But who did the survey and why? Let's ask the Rev•rend:
Act 7: "Alas for tbose who like happy endings - or any
endings at all: Rev. Schroeder does not remember where he
first heard about the infamous 300 boys. He says he read it in
an article some place."-RlCHARD K. KERCKHOFF, Ph. D.
NOTE: I'm indebted to author Norman Lobsenz who passed
Dr. Kerckhoff'sSevenAcfTragedy onto me. Yes, you guessed
It : he too dropped the weU-traveled 71'1 minutes in to one of his
magazine articles, "ASecond Chance at Fatherhood"; but this
"recent survey" mentioned "several hWldred 8th grade boys
and girls who kept track for a month of how much time they
had alone with their fathers."
· Where did Norm find the quote? Oh come on. We could
make this the longest 71'1 (7¥•) minutesinhJ.siory! - H.

a n..._·ent meetmg uf the
Big
Bend Crlizens Band Radio
Club held in the former
Children's Home buildinl(.
The new officers are Mrs.
Ellen Jolmson, President;
Mrs. Barbara Pratt, vit.'e
presidenlj Mrs. Marhme
Wilson, secretary: and Mrs.
Dottie Nelson, treasurer.
Mrs. Linda Jell conducted
the mL..,ting attended by 17
members. The distribution of
clothing accumulated over
the summer was discussed
and arrangements were
made to get the clothing to
needy families.
The club picnic to be held
Sunday at the American
Legion farm near Rutland
was discussed along with the

Ht

" jail" operated at the Senior

Citizens Yesteryear ..
Mrs. Jett and Mrs. Marlene
Wilson served a salad course.
Hostesses for the next
meeting will be Mrs. Nelson
and Marie Thomas.

•
mcrease
by 700%
Crisisline . the 24·hour
telephone counseling service

received between tO p.m. and
The youngest

midni~ht .

of the tommunity Mental ca ller, so rar, was 6 years old
Health Center, in operation and the oldest 80.
since March of this year, Will'
The age group of people
roughly 700 per cent busier in making the most calls is in,
Aug~st than in its first month . the 31-J:i year old bracket.
Donna Roth, Crisisline Female callers outnumber
coordinator the past two male railers rour to one.
months, said Monday there
Crlsisline offers free.
were42 calls in March and an confidentia l and completely
average of over 300 per anonymous counseling to any
month during the summer caller in the Gallia. Jackson
months. Calls the first 12 days or Meigs Counties. Any time
in September totaled 179.
of the day or night one needs
Statistics indicate that the help with a problem call 992concern most frequently 5554 in Meigs, 446-5554 in
called about is interpersonal Gallia County.
in nature : for example ,
Crisisline
is Seeking
relationships of any kind , volunteers interested in
famil y
or
marriage helping others. Beginning in
problems. Monthly ca ll mid-October, the second
distribution shows that the volunteer training program
heaviest flow of calls is will begin and run for ap-

.....

- - - ·----

.. . _ . .

DONNA ROTH
proximately

weeks.

problems. depression, suicide

Training will consist or two

prevention, alcohol and drug
related problems and sexual
topics. The classes are
provided free of charge by
the staff of the Community
Mental Health Center. All one
needs to apply is an attitude

Saturday morning for the six
weeks of the class.
Actual training will cover
such topics as interpersonal

relationships,

~

oW IN
SINGLE

COIHIIiOL

CONTROl.
00

'1911 '22

MENS
lliREE PIECE

VESTED
SUITS

25%
OFF

DIAifO.M

HOUSE SLIPPERS

ReJ. 'UO
I

G n~at

awtment

0"" Group Alan o,...n

Df double •Juts,

SPORTSWEAR

texturlled potresJ:e,
and to~durO¥. Solids.

%OFF
1--JUST MRIVED

and pin st1ipes.

s;,., Ja 1o 46.

ENTIRE
STOCK

BOYS. MENS AND LADIES

THROW
PIU.OWS

COATS
20%

UM . . I V8CUJm C......

MtdellylheT-u

p; ou•n by O'MI' 2 mJIUoll

DON'T
WAIT 'TIL
WINTER

OFF
lnelt.nt

Selection

ofU..anrl

ltylea

Regulars and len~

BOYS
FMIOUS IWIE

SCRU8IIED DENIM

JEANS
lf.J OFF
MEIIS

sum
SHIRTS

tJliiG
SPOif 01 DI£SS

' $499 .

Mr. and Mrs. David Grate
are announcing the birth of
their second child, a
daughter, Tracey Diane.
Born Sept. 2 at the Holzer
Medical Center, the baby
weighed seven poWlds and
eight ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
Grate have a son, Anthony,
WERE VISITING
Roy R. McCourt of
Rochester, Pa. was a recent
houseguest ol Mr. and Mrs.
Otis Otis K. Casto. Visiting
over the weekend with the
Castos were Mr. and Mrs.
Milford · Frederick of
Minersville and Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Brannan and !amily of
Reedsville.

ETHICS CHAIRMAN
COLUMBUS (UP!)
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D -New Boston,
Tuesday
named
Rep .
Francine Panehal, DCleveland, as chairman of the
House Ethics Committee for
the remainder of the session.
Mrs. Panehal, now in her
second tenn, succeeds Rep.
Arthur JL Wilkowski, DToledo, who resigned last
month after the committee
completed an investigation
into the abuse of state long
... ance telephone lines.

age 3. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bissell, Long Bottom, and the
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Grate,
Rutland.
HERE VISITING
Cincinnati was, the guest of
the Rev. and Mrs. Harold
Deeth Monday evening. He
mel in a special meeting with
the Episcopal Church Vestry
at the Parish House of Grace
Episcopal Church.

12

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

--••••ram.ui"'JIIII'IIm.a24
11n
lllmT rt II'PUUiliiU'III tJCil TAW
'

20' OFF

COP'JitOHT Jtn-TMI llOGU CO. ITIMI AND I'IKU
GOOD SUNDAY HrTIMIIII II. ltn IHIIU ~ATUitOA¥
a.T~MN• 24 . 1t171N

.........

WlaHIYI THIIIGMT TO liMIT QUAifrlnU. NONIIOt.D TO

WITH COUPON
.,. ... NIOIAJI 01'

"" J,.. .ol . I'IQ .

THE KROGER TRIM MEANS
BETTER VALUE IN OUR MEATS ·.

Alii N PUICIWI Ofl1-i.l. CM UC HI
•

Excess tat . bone ond waste are removed
according to rigid Kroger slandords before
each cui i~ weighed and priced . No wonder
you get more meat.for your money C!t I( roger .

2 Sl
7 3·oz. s1
6 $1

Hawaiian
Punch
•
•.
Fru1t Drmks ..

3 20·oz.Sl

Kroger
Gelatin .........

LVI,

Shasta
Diet
•

Dr1nks ... .. ... .

U.S. GOV1 GRADED CHOICE,
IUfCHUCk

$

U.S. GOV~ GIIADED CHOICE , BEEF CHUCK

::::!:':oil.. .... . lb.

46·0.1

c•• ,·

Pkgt.

WITH COUPON

..TW: .......

Of
fiOUIIJ-01 . JI.CIIi.

Jello
Gelatin

12·oz.

can•

29

1

29

Avondale
French Fries

French
Onion Dip ...................lb.

Kroger
Instant Pudding

10W40

:~~:~~~~

U.S.D.A.INSP'ICTID FllOIEN

... ........... Qt.

Ragu
SpagheHi Sauce

,. Baking
Hens ............... ... Jb.

DELMONICO

Thin
SpagheHI• ......

Serve
'N' Save
•
W1eners .......... 12-oz.
Pkg.

59 c

32-oz,$109
Jar

2 . age

.tMD Till I'IIICIWil Of 0111
1·11. CAM

Crisco
Shortening

l·lb.

Pkgs.

WITH COUPON
BlOWN &amp; SERVE

suao INTO CHOPS

Kroger
Rolls ........ ..

Rib Half
Pork Loin .......... .
Meat
Bologna

Maxwell House
Coffee

Homogenized
Milk

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Steak ........lb .
IHOULDD POTIOAST

French's Sciuce
&amp; Gravy Mixes

Coca Cola
or Sprite

3 IJ.~ $109

• • ntl JIUKIIAI( Of HI. mi.

••

Pkgo.

INDIVIDUALLY WR APPED SLICES

SHILLED NUT SPICTACULAI

Shelled
Almonds .............. ..

69
tb.$1

IHIUIO NUT IPICTACULAR

Kroger
Cheese Food .....

5l 99

Shelled English
Walnuts ................ . lb.
California
Ntctarinll

3 $1
bo.

TOTAL S,A.TISFACTION GUARANTEE
W. .... wMt wt elweftiM, if of 11!! fiOISiblt, If,
ctl!t to cgndltlonsbt~ond our ~ntrol wt run out
of gn arh&lt;trliHd .,.ciol, w1 1ubrr''ru" a com.

!Mroblt brond ol • similor IO'I'in;l gr gin yeu 11
lAIN CftECK lor liM od¥tr1istd 1ptelal ot fht
~ci•l Pfict tny tlmt Within 30 dGWI· Wt ...-.
..... wllet !"' ... If ygu art IWtr diqtlorlltd
witlt 0 Krogtr purchast, wt will r•piGct ygur
htm or ref11nd ytur montr .

...........
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WITH COUPON

~

Stove Top
Stiffing

16·01.

Pkg.

$135

•'

'&gt;'

UIIT IIAI WITII COUPON AND Sl.SO
ADDIIIOMAt PURCHASE (IICIBIHNG THIS ITEM)

INTHif'IIQ

ABUSE FEARED
The framers of the Constitution of the United States
feared abuse of power by
political parties as much as
they did abuses by kings. Our
Constitution, the cornerstone
of our freedoms, was written
to protect every American
from such abuses. Without
the determination to restrain
each succeeding generation
of Americans from the
tempting excesses of political
power, our Republic will
perl!lh. The Daughters of the
American Revolution urge
that we study the value of
public service during Con·
stitutlon Week. Our situation
today caDs for the hlgheot
character of leadership .

,

Jar

Daughter born to couple

S ING L E

plication to Box 292, Com·
munity Mental Health
of carlng and concern for Center, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . .

$
10-oz.

_ ;,

oouat.£

Center, or write ror an ap-

Kroger
Instant Coffee

RME
BETTE MEAT

·.

in helping others. Call Donna
Roth at 446·5556 for information or your local
Community Mental Health •'

COST CUTTU COUPON

· •·-~ ,. -~.._ g,_

EIITIRE STOCI(

2 io.$900/

scripture from Ecel. 2, lith
verse, and prayer. Th~ love
gift dedication was by Mrs.
Kloes whose topic was
"Overflowing with Love"
with scripture from Col. 2 and
prayer.
Plans were made to
remember one of the
residents of the Meigs County
Infirmary on his birthday.
Following prayer by Mrs.
Davis, Mrs. Hughes $erved a
dessert course to those nam·
ed and Mrs. Bernice Baker, ·
Mrs. Sarah Fowler, Mrs.
Loera Sigman, and Mrs.
Elizabeth Gardner.

family

people and a genuine interest

_____________

Love joy Circle
researches Haiti
Introduction to the study
book, " LJght on Haiti", was
given. by Mrs. June Kloes at
the TUesday night meeting of
the Love Joy Circle of the B.
H. Sanborn Missionary Society of . the Middleport First
Baptist Church held at the
borne of Mrs. Allen Hughes.
Mrs. Kloes, following her
intro ductory remarks,
reviewed the chapter, " Hope
for Haiti".
Mrs. Louise Davis presided
at the meeting opening it with
a reading, "Church Steeple" .
Mrs. Frant-es Smart had
devotions using a meditation,

six

sessions per week, one weekday evening and one

'··- ••"I
.....,..,_..........
..................
.., ..
'I"' .,...,.,,.

lADIES

PAJAMAS

PICKENS HARDWARE

;--·"~

~·~ .... .....

Rea, 15.00 Vtllle

""•liable now 11

. ._..,,...,

.,..

SLEEPWEAR

ptcfiiiiCll'luUI
- ..... Juat 3J ""M(.
IOitiDihome. -1/ta-yiO

-.

-

NY\011

:

;,.

""'~""'""""'_

KA!l

Sires S·MHL

_,_

&gt;C'Io " '" ~ . ,. .... ~ ....

SLACKS, Regular '14.00
SKIRTS, Regular '13.00
'-~'' JACKETS, Regular '27.00
118.00

lor

.....

....._u,.
_.,..... .....,..,
_,., .,.,.. ....... ,....

SPORTSWEAR SALE

2 $goo

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

..'"""",_ ......... ..... ...

Jr

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

_ _ ., , .
...,.. 1,3000FF

)Ziutomatic '131anket

PRICE ~ I

..

-.......

loto_..,io91o

__ ,..
__ ,,.. *-"""""'..
51500Ff . .
·--""
.,. __ ,... _,......,., .
.... .
__ ,... .......__ ,........
_..,.,...
__ ,. . ....

OV£11 1000
PIECES OF'

.

.. ··- .. ,.

" ,

.~
.......... ''l""Off
-~-- -·&gt;1000Ff
&gt;:ZOOOFf
.... _..... llfloov ... "'}'
-lplrlr ·

BROWN

TUESDAY
AUXJUARY OF Racine
American Legion Post 602,
7:30Tuesday at the hall. Dues
are now payable.
·

lf

Crisisline calls

GREEN
lot•lv!lt:t.-

-___

$)220fF

BLACK

~ED

____ ......
...

. SHEET

MATERIALS CO.

205 North ~na Ave.

Midd leport, Ohio

'2''

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

"GIFTS AND
JEANS SHOP"
LOCAL HAND
CRAFTED GIFTS

'
e/e cted
0'JJU;ers

+++

Washington, nalional securi·

ty; Mrs. Ernest Bowles,
legislative; Mrs. Florence
The monitors at Riverby
Richards, foreign relations.
for Ibis weekend will be
The treasurer's report was Mrs. Ruby Jenkins and
read and a' discussion held on Miss Maythome Keeler for
UJC funds of the Auxiliary. the 1 to 3 p.rn. duty on
Three members paid their Saturday and Mrs. Chester
dues and it was decided to Tannehill aod Mrs. Robert
send in the 17 paid to Depart· Moore for the late duty. Oo
ment. A corrununication was Sunday the early duty will
read from the Department be shared by Mrs. Robert
membership chairman, Mrs. Daolel and Mrs. Richard
Ruth Roush.
Cornett; the 3 to 5 p.rn.
The Eighth District con· duty by Mrs. Herman Koby
ference to be held at Junction and
Mrs.
Charles
City on Oct. 6 was announced. Cnroellus.
It was decided that the Aux·
iliary will furnish slaw for the
roundup of the American
Legion to be held at Racine,
Nov. l3.
Mrs. Richards was 81&gt;"
IS RECOVERING
pointed to purchase a past
Mrs. Harold Will is
president's pin for Mrs. recuperating from her recent
Smith, along with some new illness and was in Athens
jewelry which the unit will TUesday to consult an eye
sell.
specialist about her visual
The prayer for peace was problems.
given by Mrs. Washington.
Refreshments were served.

9-The Daily SeoUnel, Middlepm.Pomeroy,O., Wfldnetlday,Sept. 21 1m
11 "0:• . ...... ·-~v-w~·~·
_.,.,,=»~w&gt;:•o•&gt;:•. $
.... :: .::: .. :Kf:eo:. :····· ,. )/i;,_

,~p

Swlaawich

Freezer Plnzer
6·ct., 15·01. F"'•~••
Strawberry Yogurt
Sandwiches
BUYONEAT
REGULAR PRICE
OF 99'

Get One Pkg.

'FREE
WITH COUPON

..:r.:.::.r-~.:,.eg.

�---

10-The Daily Sentinel, Muldleport·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday. Sept. 21. I9n

••
••

Construction hiring at
Piketon hegins in '' i 8

Rah, Rah Rah!
for our team

PIKETON - Recruitment
of construction workers to
build the Energy Research
and
Development Ad·
ministration (ERDA)
uranium enrichment plant
here will not develop
momentum for at least
another year.
"Some small construction
contracts will start in the
next few months but they will
requir~ minimal manpower,''
James L. Abercrombie,
ERDA Area Manager, said
recently. "Hiring for con·
struction is not scheduled to
.begin until late 1978 or early
1979," he added.
"ERDA will not hire
construction workers,"
Abercrombie
emphasized.
"this will be done by the
individual contractors.''
Construction job seekers
should contact those con·
struction £irms who are
awarded contracts for work
on the project. Contract
awards will be announced in
the area news media.
The on·site ERDA Ports·
mouth Area Office is
responsible for overall
construction
management
and will operate with a small
staff of federal civil service
employees. ERDA may fill a

. RESERVE CHEERLEADERS at Southern High
School. First row , bottom to top, Sonja Hill, Kim Dugan,
Della Johnson ; second row , Amy Souder, Beth Huffman
and Rebet-ca Dempsey .

Cancer
•
patient
better

rew vacancies in 1978 for ' '
clerical personnel, engineers,

accountanes
and
ad·
ministrative specialists.
Those interested in federal
employment with ERDA
should contact the U. S. Civil .'
Service Commission on their
toll-free number, 1100-762·2135.
According to present •
ERDA projects, a total or
about 4,000 construction
workers at peak will be
needed to build the new plant.
This peak will occur in 1983 or • •
1984.
When !he $4.5 billion
project is finished some 2,300
workers will be required to
operate the plant. Completion
i( now scheduled for 1988.

..

FREE CLOTHING
The Gallla-Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency will
hold its free clothing day for
area low income persons
Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The agency's clothing bank is •
located in the old high school '"
building in Cheshire.
"

...

SOUTHERN VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - Front
to back. Cheryl Wilson, Carla TeOrord, Debbie Brown,
Janis Carnahan and Sheila Crouch.

"'

,.

"This morning when I

or .,

in

the

issue

reluctantly at Walker 's
urging, said he still docs not
believe in Laetrile , . but
admitted
his
patient's
improvement has been

remarkable.
Even Walker said he
doesn.'l know if the drug .- an
extract of apricot pits banned
by the Food and Drug
Administration - works.
11

I

chemical

Laetrile

1 believe something · is

helping me," said Walker. "!
believe something is helping
me tremendously . I don't
know whether it's Laetrile,
whether it 's
physical,
psychological, or faith in the
doctors or in the good Lord ."
1
' •••
or Harry · Walker ,"

Cohen added.
Whatever ls causing it,
Walker of Rossville 1 Kan .,

feels better. Wearing street
clothes and sitting at a desk,
Walker shook slightly from
nervousness . He said .he had
less pain, was using fewer

pain killers, and was sleeping
better . He said he did not
expect to be fully cured by the
controversial drug , but only
hoped to keep his condition
from beeoming worse .
" You take one hurdle at a
time, and it is a hurdle, not a

brick wall, " he said turning
his nowaunused cig arette

lighter over in his fingers.
" Work on the hurdles one at a
time and when you get to the
end, there won "t be a brick
wall. tt

Cohen
said
the
improvement in Walker 's
condition has caused him to
change his predicti on that
Walker had only two weeks to
live.
·
" I didn 't think it was
possible, " the doctor said. " !
don't want to try to get
·specific, but I think we can
erase
that
two-week
figure ."

S22,4:59.30J .OO

Liablllties
16,902,987.00
surptu.s
4.116,499 .00
Income
11,526.633 .00
Expenditures
13,054,720.00
NetAssets
5,556,316.00
capital
1.~39,817 . 00
IN WITNESS WHEREOF ,
1 nave hereunto subscribed
my name ancl ceused my seal
to be affixed at Columbus,
Otlio, this day and date .

Sept. 71

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 22202
Esta te or Jam es Wilter
Archer Decened .
Notice Is hereby given that
Letha Morris of Route 2.
Racine, Oh io, has been dUly
appointed Executrix of the
Estate of James Walter
Archer, deceased , late of
Racine, Meigs County, Ohio .
creditors are required to
file ttlelr claims with said
t i duclarv
within
three
mon ths .
Dated this 17th day of
Sep tember 1977 .
Manning 0 . Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
Probate Divis.ion
(9J 21, 28 , {10) 5, Jtc

came into the hospital - at
quarter to seven - he came
down the hall, trotting.'" said
Dr . Sidney Cohen. " He
scared me to death."
Last week Walkl!'l", 43, was
confined to a wheelchair
when he met with reporters.
He and Cohen said he could
not walk. The giant tumor on
the front of his right shoulder
had · not responded to
radiation

STAT.OFOHIO
OEI'AitTMIEWTOF
INSURANCE
CIRTIPICAT• OF
COMPLIANCE
The
under s. i g ned ,
sUPERINTENDENT
OF
INSURANCE
OF
THE
sTATE OF OHIO, hereby
certifies tnat
THOMAS
JEFFERSON LIFE lNS . CO.
OF AMERICA Of CHAM PAIGN , State ol ILliNOIS
haS complied with the laws of
thiS State applicable to It and
iS authorized .d uring the
current yeer to transact In
ttlil state 11s ftPPropriate
busineSS of insurance.
THIS
CERTIFICATE
MUST BE PUBLISHED IN A
N E W S P ~ P E R
0 F
GENERAL. CIRCULATION
IN GALLI A COUNTY ANO
FILEO IN THE OFFICE OF
THE RECORDER OF SAID
coUNTY.
Its Financial condition is
stlown
by
Its
annual
stattment to have been u
follows on December 31. 1976 :
Adm lfted Asseh

Henry V. Jump
Superintendent of
Insurance of Oh io

,,

By JOHN C. BRADEN
TOPEKA, Kan . (UP!)
Harry Walker, who had been
confined to a wheelchair with
terminal lung cancer, walked
unaided Tuesday to the
surprise of his physician who
had reluctantly consented to
Walker 's wish to try Laetrile
treatment .

therapy.
Since then he has received
five shots of the controversial
cancer drug Laetiile, one
each day since Friday.
Cohen, who became involved

u-'J11eDIIJySenllllel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,W~Ineaday,,SeJ:•~21~,1:m~--------------------------~~---'!!!!!!'l••. .~!!!:·~: .i:.-'!ll•••••

MAJORETTES AT SOUTilERN High School in Racine are, 1-r, Car.ol Morris. Crista
Beegle, Carrie Guinther and Cindy Warden.

"MEIGS

•

CONFEREES NAMED
COLUMBUS ( UPI )
Reps. Thomas J. Carney , IJ..
Boardman; Robert J. Boggs,
DJefferson; and Harry E.
Turner, R-Mt. Vernon, were
named Tuesday to a
conference committee on
legislation extending the ban
oo gas and oit drilling under
Lake Erie through June 30,
191)0.
The bill beearne stalemated ,

when · the House v'oted to
change the original intent.
which called for three test
wells tQ see if commercial

Five mayors , Senators

voters, adding " frqm

a

John Glenn and Howard citizens' standpoint, that's all
Metzen baum. several to the good. Representative
clergymen, and leaders of ten government works best when
statewide organizations are the maximum number of
among the charter members people p3.rticipat_e in it."
of the bOard of sponsors.
O'Leary asserted that for
. In her opening statement the first time in -history, all
0 1 LCary promised a vigorous the barriers to open elections
grass roo ts campaign to are down and that nearly 7~
defeat State Issue I and million Ohio citizens are
immediately chaltenged the eligible to vote in the
opposition committee to a November 8th election. She
series of face-to-face debates noted that if Issue I passed
to clarify the issue.
the next day, nea rty three
She charged that the million would lose the right to
make the decision on whether
or not to vote on Election Day
in 1978.
She charged the opposition
with misrepresenting the
issue in six ways:
" 1. They call themselves
'Ohioans for the Preservation
of Honest Elections' but their

Nutritionist

will speak on

diet problems

1

INC.
John F. Fultz ..
Manager
Phone 992· 2107
Pomeroy, Ohio

paigns.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

vs

Phone 742-2100 ·
Thur., September 22 thru Sat., September 24

SMOKE CALLIE

failed to tell the half-million
eligible voters in Ohio's 22
'non-registration'
counties
that under Issue I citizens in

STATEHOUSE RALLY
COLUMBUS (UP!)
these counties would lose · Some 200 members of the
their right to vote without Ohio Civil Service Employes
advance registration.
Association (OCSEA) held a
"5. They have failed to noon rally on the Statehouse
explain that their amend· lawn Tuesday and heard
ment would make second legislative leaders promise to
class citizens of all stripped try to help them.
The OCSEA members
of the fran chise. They would
no longer be electors, called for passage of a
deprived of their right to collective bargaining bill for
employes,
job
vote, sign petitions, run for public
office or be appointed to any security, and a pay raise .
Senate President Pro Tern·
governmental positions.
pore
Oliver Ocasek; D·Akron,
"6. They have failed to
point out that Senate Bill 125 said he hoped a state
(portions of w,hich they would employes' pay raise could
revoke) actually strengthens accompany a judges' pay
the protections against illegal raise if the money becomes

HAMS:.t~.:~~~~v.e:~~~••••:~~. 69'

HOME MADE HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••

SUPERIOR BOILED HAM ••••••••••

PARKAY

LB.

MARGARINE·••••••••

59~

KRAFT 2 LB .

~ivE~~~ ...... ~:..~229

~~~. 99~

..V:.~~~. sl.29

Ls. 39~

PEARS••••••••••••••

~

FREESTONE

PEACHES .....

2 69
l.B.

avaHable next year .

voting."

ORANGE DRINK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3c OFF
.

Sept. 21st

~

JUMBO BOUNTY TOWELS •••••••• ....

10

While Quantities Last
Quantity Rights Reserved

oz.

NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE ••••••
3 OZ. REG.
.
·

We are not responsible for typographical errors: Sorry, No Dealers.

BAYER
ASPIRIN

c

'

~~~ •• 97~ :

2Rous . 99~' .

~.~~t.~~: •• s499

assorted .............................3/69*
KOOL
AID ••••••••••.• ~ ••••••••• ~ •••••••••••.• 4/39c
6'1•
JELLO,
10 OZ. REG.

OZ. LIGHT

STAR KIST TUNA •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
' IS OZ. SWEEPSTAKE

~/sl''

JACK MACKEREL. ......................... 2/97c
JO OZ. TEEN QUEEN

PORK &amp; BEANS •••••••••••••••.••••••••••• ~::•. 4ge
28 OZ. JIFF CREAMY

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

lOG's

DELIVERY OF"
Any sewage disposal tank
or vault delivered to any
iocatlon within Meigs County
.shall be m.ade known to Meigs
County Santt·arian w i th in
seven (7) days of delivery .
Further, upon delivery no
tank or vault shall be put in a
hole without first seeing, the
sewage permit issued by
Meigs
county
Health
Depa r tment.
•
The Not ice to Meigs County
Hea lth Department rnust
Inc lude :
·
Homeowner's name with
complete address and phone
number:
Installer's name end ed ·
dress .

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT r
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
ATHENS
COUNTY
SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF

FRENCH CITY

hig power machine brokers.'
11
4. Issue l's sponsors have

"NOTICE OF

(9) lA~ · 21, 21c

several Ohio issue cam-

related to chronic diseases.

DATA PROCESSING
COLUMBUS IUP! ) - Two
new members would be
added to county automatic
data processing boards under
terms of a bill pussed by the tension Center ncar Jackson,
Ohio Senate ar1d l"eturned to Ohio from 10 a.m. to 2:30p.m.
on Thursday. Oct. 13.
·
the House Tuesday.
Details on the entire
The legislation, which was
program
and information on
passed 3HI, woqld expand the
making
rescrvaiions arc
boa1·ds to include representaavailable
from the Meil(s
tives of the county reeorcler
County
Extension
Office,
and clerk of the court of
telephone
992·3895.
cortt'non pleas. lr
~

AUlOS

Senate conferees will be
~ns . Arthony J. Calabrese,
DCieveland, the original
sponsor; Neal F. Zimmers
Jr., D·Dayton, and Paul E.
Gilimor, R·Port Clinton.

The Citizens to Save the
Right to Vote (SAVE) has
opened campaign offices at 81
South Fourth Street in
do·wntown Co lumbus. The
executive secretary is
Charles Baker, a veteran of

JACKSON- Diet is closely
Many people have poo.blems
understanding these diets.
Sue Cable Ktingelhafer,
nutritionist with the S. E.
District
Office ,
Ohio
Department of Health, will
speak on this subject at the
Jackson District Health
Conference on October 13.
Mrs. Klingelhafer will also
be available to answer individual questions fotlowing
her presentation.
District
Health
The
Meeting . in the Jackson
EXtension Area will be !JdU
at the Jackson Area Ex·

TIRE CENTER

gas exploration is warranted .

Battle line formed on Issue I
COLUMBUS- The fight to sponsors of the proposed
preserve Ohio's new Election Constitutional Amendment real objective is. to preserve
Day Registration taw will be " are trying to frighten us into obstacles to the full exercise
of the right to vote.
carried on by a newly forrhed effectively disenfranchising
"2. They claim to be
Committee, Citizens t() $ave the nearly three million Ohio
.
bipartisan
but their roots are
the Right to Vote.
citizens who are not in the right wing of the
The chairperson is Regina registered, or who have not
O'Leary, ~~Cho headed the voted in recent elections.". Republican Party.
" 3.
Their
campaig n ·
Voting Rights Committee of
She claimed the real reaSon literature is an emotional.
the League of Women Voters for puling Issue I on the ballot inaccurate, distorted tirade
of Ohio.
was their fear of a surge of against ' big city bOsses' and

v•

PUBLIC NOTin
The Meigs County Board of
Health at their September
1977 meeting adopted the
following resolution :

PEANUT BUllER ..................... ~.~:~. s1.59

RONALD D . THOMAS .
ET AL ,
DEFENDANTS
NO. 16.363
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to an order of
Salt issued by the Common
Plus Court of Meigs County,
Ohio; 1 will offer for sale at
public auction on the 21st
day of Septem·ber . 1977 at
l O:OOa .m .. atth~ Court House
steps In ttle v Jlla ge of
Pomeroy , County Of Me igs,•
State of Ohio, the follow ing
described real estate situated
at 337 North Second Avenue,
M !ddleport , Ohio .
Said real estate Is situated
in the VIllage of M iddleport ,
county ot Meigs ~nd State of
Ohio:
Lot No . 21 in said Village
located on Second Street be ·
tween Rutland and Walnut
Streets. Also all the grantors •
right, title and Interest in and
to the six lncl'l .str i p Of land
and the party wall therein, ott
ot the norttl side of Lot 22,
also In said V i llage of Mid·
dleport, said strip of land
adjoining and be ing · con .
tlguous to said lot No . 21.
Reference Deed Volume
256 page 383 Meigs County
Deed Records.
Terms of sate: Cash tor not
leu than two -thi rds of the
appraised value, sub[ect to
Hen for real estate taxes for
1977.
Proper ; ,
appraised at
$1,500 .00.
James J . Proffitt ·
Stlerlff of
Meigs County,
Oh io
· ('l 11 . 24, 31 (9) 7, 14, 21, 6tc

COUNTY: MEIGS
PUIILIC NOTICE
The lollowlno documenls

were received or prepered by
The Ohio Environment•!
Protectoin Agency during the
J»"evlous week . The effective
date of each final action Is
stated . Ttle issuance date of
U&lt;-h proposed action is
stated . Anyone aggrieved 0 ,..
adv~rnty affected by a llnal
action to issue, deny, modify,
revoke, or renew a J)ermlt,
license. or variance; or to
approve or disapprove plans
and !ipe~ifications, mav file
an appeal wilh The Env iron mental Board of Review.
Suite 305, 395 E . Broad St.,
Columbus, Ohio ~3216, within
thirty (30) days of the ef .
tectlve date, pursuant to Ohio
Revised Code Section 3745.07,
unless such final ~etlan was
Pri'Ceded by 1hl' same or
substantially
the
same
proposed ~ction. All such
final actions are so identified .
Such persons may r•quesJ an
adjudication hearing before
The Ohio EPA on a proposed
action to i:nue. deny, mOCiify ,
revot&lt;e, or renew a pll!'rmit,
license, or variance; or to
approve or dlsaflprove plans
and specilicalions. within
thirty (JO&gt; davs of the
issuance date . ORC 3745 .07
does not provide for ad
[Udlcatlon hear ing requests
or appeals on orders , verified
complaints, or enfor~ement
compllanc• Schedule letters.
Wilt~ in 30 days of publication
in a newspaper In the affected
county. any person may also :
(1) submit written comments
relating to actions. proposed
actions, verified c·o mplalnts,
or en forcert~ent compliance
Schedule letters; (2) request
a public meeting regarding
proposed actions ; and·or (3)
request notice o f further
actions or proceed ings . All
requests for adludicatlon
hearings
i!lnd
public
meetings, and other com.
municatiqns
concerning
public meetings, adiudl~atlon
hearings,
verilied com plaints, and regulations ,
should be addressed to The
Legal Records Section, Ohio
EPA , P. 0 . Box Box 1049,
Columbus, OHio 43216, (614 )
466 · 6G37 . Unless otherwise
Slated in particular notices ,
all other communications
including
comments on
proposed act ions. should be
a·ddressed either to The Air
Perm its and Com pllance
Monitoring
Division
or
Perm it and Approva l Sec tion ,
Whichever is appropriate, at
The Ohio EPA , P . 0 . Box
1049, Columbus. Ohio 43216 .
Issuance of notice of
registrat ion
Kelty Manufactur ing Co.
938 Logan
Middlepor t, Ohio , Effect i ve
date 09. 16· 77
Application
No (sl

Ot too small.
WiH buy 1 piece or complete
houtehold . New , us~ . or anti·
qu• . Martin's Furniture , 20 N.
2nd So ., Middleport. Phone

992-6370.
'luYING OlD picture pootcordt

beforo 1950 of M(ddl-t.
• - o r. Rullanol , Gonipolls
- · 25' - h. All othe...
tuo o .....,od. Call 992·3602.

otty4:30.

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

NO SALE~ ro DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective
Thru September 24th

GROUND BEEf. •••••••L!·.
BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST••••••••l:·.
WILSONS SAVORY

BACON •••••••••••••••••L:·••

0653000005 POOl P002
(9l 21, ltc

For Thursday, Sepl. 22, 1977

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A\10rm

CENTER CUT

~mom~

Sept. 22, 1A77
Situations that you will personally control develop as you want
them to th1s coming year. Under
no conditions should you leave
linportant deCISions to subordinates
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) This
cou ld be a red letter day for you
materially Everything is keyed to
something you're presently
working 1or. not a new venture.
HBivlng trouble · select ing a
career? Send for your copy of
Astro ~Graph Letter by m·alling 50
cen ts lor each and a long. selfaddressed , stamped envelope to
Astra-Graph , P .O . BOK 4.89 ,
Radio City Station, N.V. ~00 19 .
Be sure to specify your birth
sign .

$ 49

.

RIB PORK CHOPS •••••'e8.
. . ·.

CENTER CUT ·

$

59

LOIN PORK CHOPS ••• ~s~
HOMEMADE COUNTRY STYLE .
'

SAU AGE.......

LB.

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-Dcl. 23) The
attention is centered on you
soc1ally today . It's not that you'll
try 1o dominate the seen!!. bul
others will push you in to the
limelight
SCORPIO (Oct. 2C· Nov. 22) Try
to oear in mind today that you
carry a l1tfle more weight than

-.our opponen ts

There·s

no

Ioree stronger than the power

RED

RADISHES.~ •••••• !~!·.

GREEN

PEPPERS OR

w!lhm that mali;es you a winner .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.

21) Today. revitalize a fr iendship
tha i can stand you in good stead
for your own per-sonal gratification . This is where your treasure
li es.

CUCUMBERS •••••••••• ~ ••~~.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon . 19)
Today you will function best in
situations fr om which you can
gain . This doesn't imply you're
being selfish. It's only logical.
AQUARIUS (ion . 19·Fib. 1A)
Look at life philosophically today
and you'll be a winner wilh very
liltle effort; il not. I'd be apprehensive about the f i nal
resui!S.

PISCES (Fob. 20-.Morch 201
Others want lo do favors for you
today and accomplish things to
make you happy . Don 't be
CASH paid for all makes and patrontzmg This would .Inhibit
models of mobile homes . the1r efforts .
Phone area code 61.t·.C23-9531 .
TIMBER, Pomeroy· For•st Pro· ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll19) II al
ducts . Top prica for standing all · poss1ble loday, get togethP r
towtimber, Coli 992· 5965 or w1th those with whom you'd like
to firm up a business
, Kenl Honby. 1·•A&lt;&gt;·B570.
relai!Onship . Muc h can be acG;OINS. CURRENCY, tokens . old complished.
pocket watches and chaint,
silver and gold . We need 1964 TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20)
and older tllv...-coins. Buy , sell, Condit1ons tavor talking Ia peo~
or t;ode' Coli Roger Wamsley, pte today who can do th ln9s lor
your work or career Deal direct7'2 ·2331.
ly
w1tl1 them Good !hlngs wilt
OLD FURNITURE, ice bo"es , bran
happen
bad, , elc ., complete
households . Wr~te M. D. Miller, GEMINI (Mor 21·Juno 20)
Itt . .c, Pomeroy , . Ohio or Colt Follow yQur nobler instincts and
99'J..n61J.
\
q1"e unsllntingly ol your ttme and
CASH! I. Junk con . Fry·s Truck &amp; subs tance to others today
Auto, Rutland. Phone 742-2081 Returns will be far greater than
or 742-9575. Closed Mondoyt.
the outlay.
NO ITEM TOO Lorge

Store Hours:

CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22)
Something important in your life
is presently undergoing a radical
transformation . Don't be fretful.
It will pro~e to be lor the better.
LEO CJulr :lli·Aug. 22) Wherever
you go today, you br1ng sunshine
and. harmonv . You are the
moderating innuence that brings
others 10 the negotiating table .
1NY.WSI1A.fll-:ft Jo:Nn-:tWKr5t: "SSN

I\.

BANQUET FROZEN

$ 99

.

FRIED CHICKEN •••••3:.o;.•

.,
FLAVORITE

32

0~

PINTO BEANS •••• ~A~
MACARONI .
7.25 oz.
&amp; CHEESE •••••••••••••
.••

FLAVORITE

KRAFT

COUPON

1
L~
." . .---1·
.. ·,, ·h~~.,~~;;~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good o.ily At Po~ell's
res Sept. 24, 1977

140Z.

4/$1

l

COUPON

CO_~:JPON

JIF

ELF

CATSUP

SUGAR

69¢

COUPON

STOKLEY

FLAVORITE GRANULATED

5 LB.

MARGARINE •.••••••• ~s~.

.W!C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 24, 1977

~!l!

DOG
25 lB.

PEANUT BUTTER

FOOD

$299

W/C

Limit1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 24, 1977

28 OZ.

$}19

W!C

Limi·t 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 24, 1977

�•

11-Tben.tlvSenliDel, Mldd~·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.21 ,19'17

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Ca~h

WANT AD
CHARGES

..

Cui•
1.00
1.50
1.10
3.00

, ,.
'"""'
3da~

Ctwr~ee

"'
"'

1.10

3.15

VARO

5AlE.

Clothet , dishe1
lin•n~ . pols , pons. Thurs ., Fri. :
Sa1 ., 9·4. 957 8roodwoy , Mid·
dlepon . Turn right ot the pool.

TWO FAMILY Yard Saht , 378 s.,
cond St. Ctothing . Christmas
decorations and misc. articles .
Fri. and Sot. , 9-6.
Iz1 lllt'.tnur)'. Card d Thomb 111d
Obituary : 6 eenu: per word, $:1.0l
liWIUllWil . Cufl Ul lllh•am.&gt;e .

11r~ IK.'\.'epte&lt;l

i.llllY wtth -.:uh With

for ads Clil'l'\'· •
in11 Box Nwn~r In Care of Ttll! ~j.,.
t.'~nll·hargt!

tmet
TIM! Publilher resuves lht• nKht •
W l"'lll or ft'ja'lany ltd1 d«nwd Ubjectiorutl. The Publisher ~onllm.lt be
rt&gt;sponSIWt' £uc tntJrt! U~n un.: lll('ul'-

ffl-1 insenwu.
Phtlllt' 992-21516

Syracuse fire

station.

Route

124.

Mobile HOI~Ii.ll~ and Yillrd s.al.es

unkr. Z

VARO SALE starting ocrou from

·

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADI.JNES

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sale at Rt . ..
Union Ave. lots of misc . Items ,
clothing, toys ond games ,
Storts Thurs ., Fr i. , and Sot. ,
Sept . 72 , 23, and 74th.

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
lndoor~Outdoor runs, grooming
oil breeds , clean sanitary
facilities oe 367-7112. Cheshire.

Tu~l:i)'

thru Frida)'
-I P.M .

Phone (61•)367.0~2 .

the day Ot:f\lre publlcllllon

SHETLAND sheep dogs .
(Min .) Collies , 2 females , 7
weeks old. Shots and wormed.

AKC

Sw1Wiy
&lt;!P.M.
Fr~ay i:lfttmoon

$35. 20' 6" endless belt , $20.

Elberfelds .

985-.4137 .

Will TAKE core of elderly in our
home. If interested , phone 60,000 B.T.U AUTOMATIC gos
heater-. Excellent condition.
992·7314 .

in

$150. (614)378-6233.

my home.

son and 8rown in Moson .

Monday
Nuun 011 Satl,!~j'

•·

Ooniels , 992· 2082. 12 y.ars ser""ice to Tri·Counry . Reference: HAMMEA.Mill , good condition ,

BIG FOUR family Yard Sale, Sept . Wlll DO babysitting
22, 9-4. 5th St . between Ander·
742 ·2833 .

GARAGE SAlE, 4 family . Sept. 73
and 24 , Fri . 9 om - 6 pm . Sot 9
am· noon . From 248 in Chester ,
turn N . on Co Rd . 91 , I mile ,
Marilyn Spencer. Mattress , 2
bed sp~ings, lawn choirs , end
toble, utility carl, metal table , 2
room size carpets, antique
cream con , toys , clothing , odds
and ends.

NOTICE

PENNZOil RUTlAND ope-n doily
till 10. Clos.d Mondays. TWO Mi:OITERN.AN~AN end tables
wrecker service. fir• repair ,
and 1 coffee toble, V«'f good
Phone U2-957S or 742-2081 ,
shape . $90. Coli 991·6114, afterPIANO TUNING and Repair . lone

Phone

(b14 )

367-0292

1,\'STR! 'C170N
../hin•J:; 1'111('/uyn/ h,\' ltirf!l,' tnu·k·
tiiJl rom/XImf!' had omrual m~''

Oj.!1 ' r •omtl~t{ohou/

$18,300

in 19f.l ''rm!1fuh ·d~· thr {~ S. /M·pt

a/ Loh.11. /Jmrau

ATIENTION BOW Hunters I For c
compl~te line ol Bow Hunting
supplies : Tht Bow Hunter Shop ,
New Ho"en . W. Vo . Phone
(lOA) 882-2827 . Ask for Dove

Richards .

ANNOUNCING
NEW stare for Radio Shock , Ace
Hardware and Meigs Plaza now
open Monday through Soturdoy
9:00 to 9 :00, Sunday 12:00 to

6:00.
SHOOTING MATCH at the Sport-

fil'j.. h111Jj liiJ .\'r1. 18i.i,

Don't JUSt bP s.1tisfit"d l'.ith a JOB
- Plan NOW for a Professlonal
carper Dnvin~ a ''Big Rig7 Wt&gt;are
a Private Traming School and if.
you nwt our Qualifications you
will be trained by Prufessiunal

lnstll)(_10f'Son nudem equipment.
Trai1wn a Part TilllE'baslsfSat. &amp;
Sun.} and Keep your job, or at ·
tend our 3 \\o'eek full time Rt&gt;Si ·
dent Trainin~ .
Rti'&lt;O Trarfot&lt; Tra ilrr Trainrnx. lrrr

PARKERSBURG

1·304·422·4080

sman Club starting ot 1 pm .
Sunday . Foctory ,~choked guns
o nly. Shot and slug match.

~~~~~======.

PUBLIC AlJC110N

1972 DODGE CHARGER .. A.C. and
A CAREER with a future foro man
or woman who wonts the best
, in life. A pcrjl check every
w . .k. fo~tostic fringe benefits .

aU local work. Give us a calf. at
992·2.. 80 or write, Western
Southe~:ri Lite Insurance, 218 1h
E. Main . Pomeroy , Ohio, for in·
formation .
WILL DO babysllting in my home .
7.42-2833 .

silfer for a five year old,
preferably in Tuppers Plciins
area. Will drop off on way to

A BABY

work around 7: 10 om . 992-7288
or see Yvonne Garten , 2 nii . off
Rt.7 on Sucess Rd., green
trailer on left.

ADDRESSE·RS

WANTED

lm ·

mediately! Work at home -· no
experience necessary .. ex cellent pay . Write American
Service, 8350 Park Lane, Suite
269 , Dallas , TX 75231 .

A FUTURE
·TO COUNT ON
For 17 to 31 year olds.
. Training with full pay and
benefits PLUS travel &amp;
adventure in the U .S.
Navy. Call or see : 221
Columbus Rd ., Athens,
Ohio. Phone (collocll S93·
3S".

r'nony more options. $1495. Coli

992·5169.
19770lDSCUTlASSS, 2dr., hardtop. 992-2.. 48 or 992..3381 .
1970 CHEVROlET BISCAYNE . New

tires .

Good

condition .

992·508• .
1973 NOVA 350, V·8. Ve•y good
condition. $1600 . 985-3833 .
197.4 GREEN PONTIAC Fire Bird .
1972 .350 Honda , $450. 742· 2211
1973 FORD TRUCK , Custom F-100,

302. P.S ., automatic, topper,

good tires, eiC'cellent condition. COAl ; limesto.n e , ond calcium
chloride and calcium brine lor
1976 ( .20 Chevrolet Truck with
dust con trol and special mixing
camper top , $3800, firm. 197--4
salt for farmers , Excelsior Salt
Dodge truck, · ~ ton . with
Works , Main Street. Pomeroy.
camper top , 51 ~ 00 . Coli
Ohioo r phone992- 3891.
992 -3410 or 992-2595 .

C:74;:2c_·2~3;:1::6·'-:,.,-,----- CAMPER . $600. Also, horse
El CAMINO . Phone
trailer, S-450. Phone (61 .. ) 698·
3m.
· 992 ·7001.
1::9C:7'1:'-'-"C:'H"'E:cVc:Rc:OC"Lc:Ec::T-S_T_A_T-10
~.N· SI'RING. GARDEN SuppUes. Cab·
WAGON . Best off,r . P.S,, P.B.,
boge , caul iflower , broccoli ,
A c
and heod le ttuce plants ,

) 972

'.; Distributing 7·UP &amp; Pepsi
Products. Applications will
• be accepted 9 : 00· 12 : 00
Thurs., Sept. 22 at Cheshire
Warehouse, Rt. 7.

.'

n1

1 .;;~
1

,,

YOU hove o ser11ice to olfer .
wont to buy or sell something ,
ae looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll eet results
faster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .

FOR THE finest in wood . heating

stoves, cookstoves and cool
stoves , Coli Zion Heat Co., 8
Pu tnam . Drive, Athens . (61 .. )

696·1187 ., (614) 592·6079.

TWO STOKERMATIC cool stoves. 1
cool stove br-ick lined , like new.
3 AND 4 RM. lurnished and un 1967 CheY'rolet Truck . 283
furnished opts , Phone m .
engine, $300. 12 cubit fl .
5434 .
·
refr igerator. Coll742-2n3 .
COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rt . 1975 BlAZER 4-WHEEL Drive
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
$4500. 1800 wall power plani·
large lots with concrete patios ,
wi th bulh·i n battery charger,
sidewalks, runners ond off -:o'$300
=:::.:·::,98::5:.,·3
::8::7='
5"'::::cc:-c----:
street parking . Phorle 992-7479. AlADDIN KEROSINE lamp ond

COUN TRY MOBILE Home Pork.
Route 33, north of Porneroy.
Latgelots . Coli 992-7479.

AVAILABlf AT Riverside Apts . I
bedroom-, $105 per month . $150
sec urity deposit. 99:2 -6098 .

heohJ!rS

rep lacement .ports .

Chimney , mantels , wicks etc.

Stop In for demonstration and
free catalogue . Mountain
leotl'!er. ond General Stor-e,
10.·106 W. Union St ., Athens ,
Ohio. 592-5-478.

SMAll TWO bedroom house in GREENBEANS. Pick your own . Br·
Rutlond. 992 -58S8 .
ing container. Arnold Hupp
FOUR ROOMS and both. Adults
form , letOrt Foils . 2.. 7-2623.

I&lt; Call 992·21 56.

= o":n'!ly'c.O:
No:-=,~=::I.:.S·:-9:..:.:,.::·5::,
92 '108
=·--- 1974 HONDA Cl 200. Excellent

S FAMILY Garage Sale, SA8Logan
St .. Mi.ddlepor t, Sept . l~h .
( .. 20th , 21st , 9-5. GOod clothing of
all kinds , dishes, drapes ,
~~
bedspreads. iome furniture
and lots more misc. Will be
signs .

FOUR ROOM furnished or un·
furnished apt . ava ilable Sotur·

condi tion. 4600 miles . With
helmet . Must sell for best offer .

day, Sepl. 17. 992·3656.

(304 ) 882·2529.
TWO BEDROOM Mobile Home. NEW HONDA Z·58 mini -bike .
992 ·2514 .
Lorge (Ountry lot. unfurnished.
No

children

and

no

pets.

Depos it requi re-d.742·3122.

THREE FAMILY Yo•d Sole , Wed .
ond Thurs., 21 and 22. 9 · ? at
Mrs . Mike Evans , Portland , on
Co. Rd. 31 . Cancel if rains . ·

THREE FAMILY Yard Sole. 6th and
Vine St ., Rocin•. Ohio. Toys ,
baby items. , Children 's clotMs ,
dish.s , etc. Wed ., Thurs ., and
Fri. til/ .. :45 pfn .

BACKYARD SALE, Tues. . Wed ., 10
fill ? lincoln St., Middleport .
Clothing , dishis. albums, tapes
and many other misc. items .
YARD SALE. Margaret Marshall
retldenc•. House behind Bowl ·
lng Alley in Mason . Thur~~o . and
Fri .• 10to3.
GARAGE SALE . Thurs ., Fri . and
Sot., Sept . 22 to 2.. th . 1635 lin ·

coin Heigh,. , Pomeroy.

AVE FAMILY Yard Sale . Rustic
Hilf , Syracuse.* Wed. and
Thurs .

Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. ~jack W. Carsey, Mg r.
1M. Phone9t2-2181
1972
ARISTOCRAT TRAVEl
Troller . 18 ft . Self-contained.
Excellent Condition . Colt
992-2-427 , daytime , or 992-3580,
after 4 pm .
FIVE 16" General Motor Trudo:
Wheels ' with 6 ply tires and
tubes . S hole rims . Colt
992·2427 or 992-3580 after ~

FOR SALE or Trade: House ond lot
ln Mason, W. Vo. 3 bedrooms
both , living room . kitchen , utili:
ty , extra lor¥ room for recreo.
tion or TV room . (.104) 773 -5227,

ofler5pm.
FOR SALE or Trod(!&lt;: GEESE . -4
young Bore hogs . Call evenings . 9.. 9- 2115~
FOR SALE or rent: Nice 2bedroom
Mobile Home, unfurnished , ·
rent deposit required . Possible '
tor buyer to l.ave mobi'- home
~n lot in a ~uliful country setting. 742·3 f22 .

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS
Strickly wholesale to all.
Not less than liz cau.

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

121o· walhlngion e~vc~.
Belpr•.~lo

3102•• (304)772·3227 .
VA·FHA , 30 yr. financing . Ireland
2. STORY 3 bedroom frame
house , F.A . furnace, storm win·
dow$ , 1'ireploce in Middleport .
Phone 992·3457 .
SIX ROOM house at 613 Mill St .,
Middleport. Good condition. Inquire at ~39 Lincoln St ., Mid·
dleport.

garage. fuMy ·&lt;:orpeted , Iorge
deck on bock. leading Cre•k

Rood. Phone 992·7054 .
IN POMEROY~ Large . roomy four
bedroom ·2 story home . Fullv ·
equipped kitchen , l y, baths,

'ales ond fantastic service!
Hours M -T, T 9-6 ; W-F, 9-7.; Sot ,

9·5. "The Motorcycle People~ of
Southeaste rn Ohio" Athens
Sport Cvdes , hie.. 20 W. SfirT!$.0n
Ave., Athen15 , Ohio. PhoJ1e

(61. )592· 1692.

FIVE ROOM house end bath.
992·5871 .

tall Professionals

Bissell Siding Co.
Alou! COIIIraclor
Fmr.tiololn
llo s-a, Call -

Pomeroy Landmark
• •._Jack W. Carsey, Mg;.
. . . . Phone 9'12·2181

TH£ PROPERTY of th e late John l.

and Viola Jeffers located on ·us
RT . 7 Bypass by USR t. 143.
House. property , 29 acres ,
more or less, mineral rig hts,
s-9me tim ber . A real borgoin .
Must sell. $8500. Coli Jot-!n A .
Jeffers , Jr ., ofter5pm .·

WOOQEO I ACfi:E lots near Meigs

'

ONE ACRE lots . 100ft. Rt. 7. Frort·
toge. Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

667·334• .
APP. 200 ACRES of ground , no
buildings. Tuppers PIOins ,
Ohio. 667-3349 .
NEW THREE bedroo;, !louse. full)'

corpeted 1
room ,

fireplace,

carport.

dining
1 acre lot .

TEAFORD
·R'A,L10R
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR .
REALTOR
· 216 E. SecoiMI Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
Phone 992·332S

SITES !

,....., llllltt
I'LHZ.ml

GUTI'ER

.IF 1 DON'T HEAI't.
F!lOM W~PEK SOON, t'LL
HAVe YOUR TINY. L.ITTL.e HEAD

SERVICE

ON A PL ATTE~!

c.t/1- - plrce llftltl. Wt 1111«
II, " lit HJOIIWII. S,.Ciol ,.;ca to

ALLEYOOP

• /ldlll.

Pholt 949-2114
9a.m. to 5 p.m.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

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

COME ON, WE'lL 60
"TO "THE Vi. ~AfE: $0
Y'AlL CAN
IN•
iO 'IOU!it \WDDIN'
OUTFIT!

THUI .. llitiDtCIK.OUS!! 'lOUR
~ POI!:6N'T WO.NTA
MAR!lY.MII ANY MORI&lt;'N J
WANTA MARRY H~!

,_. hl-2174

r----------,

SWAIN

THE PHOTO PLACE

Superior
Slum Elltrbacactillionlft

Aulolnltic

1ot~SL

Young's.

THREE BEDROOM roncll mosonary
construction. 15(X) sq. ft . ~t of·
town . 992 ·3684 , 9 til 5. $16,900 .

T11111111iaioll Seltke

PARTS - LABOR
REASONABLE

RATES
llldl:ilte. 0.

~-

I WONNK
K:1 I

Carpeting

Weddinp

Portrails
PIS$f10fls

.... 3,

Un'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Pltone Mi•• Yaun1

At

Specillll«asiOII$

1HI5 S WAMP 15 NOT
TOO DEEP · · II= WE CAN
JUST GET ACROSS TO

992·2206 ar 992·7630
!IU·Inl
6-22·1 mo.

~11.37UISO
~21-IFC

l I I

'!"'!1"'1·.o.-

Carpet aU~

Anni'fllsarits

NEW LISTING - 6 acres
close in. Newly remodeled
home has 3 bedrooms.
bath , din ing , Rec. R.,
modern kitchen ~ full
basement, roofed patio in
front , trailer hookup .
$29,800.00.
NEW
LISTING
E~~:cellent 2 story frame, 7
rooms! J._. bedrooms, bath,
modern kitchen , · uti lit y,
nat. gas ~ot water heat .
Th is home you must see.
S31 ,91S.OO,
.
LOW UTILITIES In this
small horne, 4 rooms, bath,
porches, not. gas heal, city
water &amp; sewer . S5,..SOO.OO.
LARGE LOT - 88x200 with
nice Mobile Home, 2
bedrooms. bath , large
living R., B.G. forced air
furnace , equlp~d kllchen
with din ing area, workshop
in the rear. sa.ooo.oo.
2LOTSOVERLOOKSTHE
RIVER - 2 story lrame
home, 3 B. R.. bath, 2
fi r:e places, own water
system ,
porches,
basement, 7 rooms In all.
$6,800.00 .
.CLOSE IN - I Acre. nice
two bedroom home with
living . &amp; din ing room.
knotty pine paneling, buill·
in kit
Garage, part
basement. $16,500.00.
COUNTRY -2 Acres, near
mines, 2 story frame, up to
.4 Bdrms., l lf~ baths, garage
block
storage
bldg .
$10,.500.00.
NEWER DOUBLE WIDE
6 Acres, garage, storage
bldg ., chicken house,
garden space. CHEAP AT
$17,000.00.
WE HAV.E BUYERS FDR
ALL TYPES OF HOMES,
NEW HOMES, FARMS,
ACREAGE. FOR GOOD
R ESU LT5 LIST WITH US.

\WANI!&gt;
A'"'"' A HIS t:'R"EAIIII

\ PUCHIC

TliAT MAIN HIGHWAY··
Hi· I

!!II.

Now arrange the cirQed letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by lhe above cartooo.

Print answer here:

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Residential
and
commercial. Call for
estimate, 24 hour urvice.
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 98S·3806

I

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

op.

acre and

M i9dlepod , neOr Rutland.

Call992·7481.
N~W 3 bedroom !louse, 2 bofhs,
o il elec. , 1 acre , Middleport,
close to Mutla nd . Phone 992·
7481 .

SMALL form lor sole , 10~. down ,
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
ty, W. Vo. Phone
772·
3102 or

ACROSS

c·ustom Hydrtullc Hose
M.aking

'

BRADFORD , Au_ctioneer, Com·
p lete Service . Phone 949-2,.87
or 9.49-2000. Racine, Oh io, Crill
Brodtord .

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

DAVID BRICK.LES
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

~

Sweepers , ' toaster$ , irOn$ , all
small appl ia nces. lawn mower,
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985-

-~ 4S71t
1-,llllltt
Kitthen C.binets · Raafinc . Concrelt
Patm • Sidewalks- New Construction •
REMODELING, Plumbing , heat ing . Remodeline.
and all types ol general repair .
~II. 9!1·1llhr &amp;"-1005
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·~-to ..
perience. Phone 992·2409 . .
.
6-21·1 mo. pd.
SEWING MACHINE Repol". sor·

Sli m~

MIDDLEPORT
3
bedroom renovate(i home
with 2 baths . Lillie upkeep
804W. Main
and walk to the slores. ·
992·2298
PomerOY
$17 ,000.
HENRY E. CLELAND
Alter Hours Call
REALTOR
MINERSVILLE - Nice 3
m .7133
HANK,
KATHY &amp;
CONTACT:
bedrooms, bath , natural
LEONA ASSOCIATES
Lois Pouley
gas furnace, large garage
ffl·22S9
Branch Managor
and large lot with view of
ffl·2548
river.
,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,....,
SWIMMING POOL - 3
nice bedrooms •. 2 ·baths,
large family room with
llreplace, bookShelves &amp;
sliding glass doors. Full
basement, garage and ·
FREE GAS - W~y worry about the high cost of
neating your home. outside lights, healing your water,
slanted shrubs and pines In
drying your clothes, etc. We ' ll sell yoo your own gas
a nice locale.
well. Not only thai we' ll throw In • good 1'12 story House
POMEROY - 5 bedrooms,
with 3 bedrooms and bath. new dining room and lull
1'12 baths, central healing
basement , also over 50 acres of land with a large
and out of high water,
beautiful pOnd stocked with fish . Call for appointment.
$24,000 unfurnished
Priced for aulck sale at $37,500.00.
$28,000 fully furnished .
Five
KIDS IM YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE S YRS. OLD - Nice . all
bedrooms. nice l'h story house. large living room with
electric 3 bedroom home
shin ing oal&lt; flooring, large kitchen with dining area;..:!
lull baths. 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs . Completely
with fenced level lot. Qu iet
Insulated with F.A. nat. gas furnace. Large porches &amp;
street
In
good
neighborhood. Just $18,500.
garage. Loc. in Chesler. !'rice $19,800. ·
50x100 LOT - Near store,
MINERSVILL.E - 4 bedroom house, mostlY carpeted,
city wafer. and a · 2
wrap
around porch , garage, large lot, all overlooking
bedroom air conditioned
the Ohio River .. Asking Sl6,500.
troller. Only $6,000.
4
CORNER
LOT
· EASTERN DISTRICT - ·1112 acres of level land, nice
bedroom. brick , large living
12x64 all carpeted mobile home with 2 BRs, living
with
fireplace , large
room. kllchen and bath, 2 rooms buill on, nice family
dining , basement and wrap
room with I! replace, plenty of garden space, some lrult
around front porch. Want
trees . Large workshop and block cellar. City water and
$22,500.
septic lank. Nice coontry setting on County Rd. 28.
Pr ice $1S,900 .
WANT IT SOLD, CALL US
AT 9'12·332S.
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
bath . Two more small bedrooms could be finished
upstairs. Also garage. storage building, strawberry
patch and garden space . Driveway is electric healed.
SALESMEN'
SELL
Nice Ohio River view. Furniture can be bought extra .
PROPERTY, DO YOU
Price far quick cale. House and lot, $12.600.
·
WA .. T YOURS SOLD? IF
50 CALL "2·3325.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
CalfJ1mniy Deem AtJ49:2311
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
ACrOSICATES

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

I

'

Candy Strip
·Rubber Back

flooring ,

ceiling,
pa.n eling. Phonerwl-2759.

R-..lo~$6.95

Sove SUI Sq. Yd.

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec .,
plumbing and heating . Phone
992 ·5858.

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

Ex·

HARRISON 'S T.V. Repair . Service
Calls. 'D6 Sycamore , St ., Middleport . Phone992·2522.

BATHROOMS AND Kllchons
remodeled , ceramic tile, plum · '
bing , carpentry , and general
maintenance . 13 years ex perience. 992·
3685. _ __
=.::o=

EXCAVATING, BACKHOE , doze, ,
trencher, low boy, dump
trucks , septic systems . BHI
Pull in•. phone m -2478, doy or
nighl.

BlOWN INSULATION . Get three
estimates. Coli 667 -6479 for
free estimale .

1

c---""'----Ca 11742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

EAST
•QI
¥Q l0913
• 105
•H52
SOUTH (D)
• A63

¥K7
• J 813
.A KQ 10
Both vulnerable

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

X I

NE X C P

YCKWXCH

ZXCK

EOZXAL

liuttand

~ PGXTNH

N

XSOK ~

EOWAD

TNPPOKH

MAXFJOLDO

MOTVWH

Yesterday's Cryploquote: WHAT PEOPLE COMMONLY
CALL FATE IS MOSTLY THEIR OWN STUPIDITIES .~
ARTHURSCHOPENHAUER
() 1917 Kine F•aturu

S~ndteatr,

tne.

All 'lORE PAPERS ARE
PLUMB SLOPPY, JUGHAID!!

FRIDAY .Ttl 5
Close Sat. At 5 p.M.

WHAT IF IT
KICKS ME SACK

?

We1t

North East

Pass
Pass

U

Pass
4 N.T. Pass

'
reall!

i

•H

•

·,

The play was
obscure, but
found it. He
played 'the eight of hea~
from dummy and covered
East's nine with the king.
Then he cashed dummy'•
ace and king of diamonds and
noted that the 10 dropped from
East. He assumed that wal
East's last diamond . Four
rounds of clubs came next.
West chucked a heart, Dum;·
my discarded a spade and the
queen of diamonds.
Now South led ace and a
small spade . . West could l!Qt
afford to rise with the kin,.
That play would drop Eaat;s
queen so West played the \il
spot. East was in with the
queen and had to lead away
from his queen of hearts up to
the ace-jack in dummy.

he

NORTH
• J 752
¥A J 8
.AKQ9

One Iefier simply stands for another. In thio •ample A Ia
used for the lhrec I.'s, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters.
aposlrophes, the length ant\ forma lion of the words are all
hinLs. Each day the code letlers are different.

~ .··

-

' I
I

end play pulls alx

II

RUnAND
FURNITURE
742-22ii

u

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

30 rolls of corpot In stocl0
Good Mloc:tlon Ill Oil .....
lnstollld with podding, no
extro to Pll:

.'

BRIDGE

I

Reg. sus.notlnstolled

...'

(2 wds. )
35 Regret
.
36 Part of
oAS (abbr.) _ _ _...:O:..:s:.:wa=ld=..::a::.:n=d-=Ji~·m::.:..:J:.:a:::c.:.oby~---

23 Lettuce
24 Slender
Drilled

39 Adjust
anew

'U8 sa. yd.

698·7331.

22 Bell part

'

' '
' ''
'

Wednesday, September 21

mecca

12 ond 15 ft. width Corpet •
rubber bock.

ca.,aling , septic systems ,
dozer , backhoe , dump truck,
limestone. grovel , blacktop
po'lllng , Rt. U3. Phone I (6U)

4 Shoe width
5 Get-together
&amp;Jeanne d' 7 Salesman 's
specialty
(2 wds . )
8 Having a
wavy
margin
9 Empowered

Yesterday's Answer
II !\ole for
Z8 Editor's
Beatrice
mark
Arthur
29 Queen
IS Nucleus
(Sp.)
18 Invited
3D Fell like a
21 Candy
- bric ks

neighbor
(abbr. )
3Z Between
Mo. and La.
33 Old car
34 Curie or
Renoir
38 Germanic
deity
31 Came to
pass
38 Gamblers'

SAVE
ON
- ..
CARPOING

7•2·23.8.
CARPENTER ,

wds.)

Rica's

and ditcher . Charlet R. Hot ·

WILL do roofing. construction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too large or too small. Phone

(2

27 French
friend
:!8 Bend out
of shape
31 Costa

EXCAVATING . doze•. backhoe
field , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutlond, Ohio, Phone 742-2008.

3 Shenani·
gans

·the door!"

qlad ·

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and 1973 All ELECTRIC Mobile Home 2
bockJ'loe work ; dump trucks
bedroom , 1 '12 both, undarpinn·
ond lo-boys for hire ; will haul
ed with 10 x 10 utility building .
fill d irt, to soil. llmettone and
992· 3702, after 5 pm.
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef ·
fers . dav phone 992·7089, night MOBILE HOME, 8 x 52 . 3 saddles .
992·2307 .
phone 992·3S25 o• 992· 5232.

.

26 " Don't -

I'm

Service. We sharpen Sciuars .

CALL US AND CHECK lO
SEE
IF WE
HAVE
·SOMETHING
YOU
MIGHT NEED.

20 Uncover
21 Tiny bit
~--~ 22 Unrefined
24 Bordered
25 Misplace

GASOUNE ALLEY

Shop ,
Pofl'leroy .
Authori zed Singer Soles and

.43 acreS of
vacant land close to mines.
Price $6,100.

for ''lad ''

•

3825.

Fobr i·c

No. 212 -

40Gennan
count
DOWN
I Brazilian
dance
2 " Back in
My Anns

10 Malarial
fever
11 Balsam or
Gabel
12 Horse's -hair
13 Mysterious ·
knowledge
14 Storage box
15 Percentage
16 Gist
·
17 " Has ~ Here
Seen Kelly ?"
19 Mirror word

Pomeroy, O.
8-7·1 mo .

'lliqt, oil mqkes , 992 ·2284. The

No. 216 - Here' s your
chance to live In t~e
country with convehlences.
3 Bedrooms, large kitchen,
carpeted lhroughout.
attached garage, 100x400
lot. Price reduced to
$26,.500. FHA approved.

1 Protected
5 Outdated

Phone tt2.-2176

J.l4-l mo.

(Answers tomooow)
Jumbles: BEFOG CHICK INFANT l'jF.ARLY
Answer: What aha wu cor 108111181ing on whe!l her
boyfriend wu fighiii!IJ-THE RING

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BORN LOSER

U .P.S .

8· 2'1· pd .

LIXIJCD

~Hftll~t.af

COMPANY

to your door DV w.ay of

Chester. Ohio

HOMESITES for sale , ' 1

Yesterday's

·Ruttolntn P.aint Pr~ucts
We can ship put' directly

Jack's Septic:
Tank SeMce
Box34

·I

·MEIGS
EQUIPMENT

. '•'

Heroes 15 .

6:0C&gt;-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6:3Q-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6:
CBS News 8,10; Once Upon A Classic 20.
7:0C&gt;-Trulh or Cons. 3: Americanization ol Elias 4;
Liars Club 6; Gong Show 8: News 10; To Tell the
T rulh 13; My Three Sons 15 : Coping with Kids 20:
Anyone for Tennyson 33.
7:3o-Hollywood Squares 3,A; $100,000 Name That
Tune 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
20,33; That's Hollywood 10; Nashville on the Road
13: Marty Robbins Spotlight 15.
8:oo-&lt;:hlps 3,A,I5; Welcome Back Koller 6,13; .Waltons
8,10; Upstairs. Downstairs 20,33.
8:3Q-Whal's Happening 6,13.
9:oo-Man from Atlantis 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13;
Hawaii Flve·O 8,10; Group Portrait 20,33.
9:3o-carter Country 6,13.
•
10:0C&gt;-Roselll &amp; Ryan 3,4,15 : Redd Foxx 6,13; Bar·
na!&gt;y Jones 8,10; News 20: Dickens of London 33.
11 :OC&gt;-News ],4, ~.8,10.13. 1S ; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6.13; .Movie
" When the Legends Die" 8; Movie "Operation
Amsterdam" 10; ABC News 33.
12:0C&gt;-Janakl 33; 12 :3Q-Perry Mason 10; 12 :4QUnofficlal Miss Las Vegas Showglrl Pageant 6, 13;
1:0Q-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:3o-Mary Hartman 10; 2:1o-News 13.
.
Movie Channel 4 5&amp; 7p.m. - W. C. Flelds&amp;Me.
9. &amp; 11 p.m. - The Next Ma~ .
Cable Channel 5 7 P .M. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:3o ·....... Coach's Corner
8:00 - Cable Journal
9:00 - Home DigostiO :OO - 700 Club .

iO C.OME TR'UE
5HOUL0 DO.

AXEL IS STILL LOOKIN'
FOR US BACK ALONCi
lHE RAILROAD TRACK··
WE'. HAVEN 'T AMY TIME
TO WASTE --

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER22, 1t77
S:45-Farm Report 13: 5: 50-PTL Cldb 13: 5:S5Sunrise Semester 10.
6:25-Urblln League 10.
6:3o-Doctors on Call•; News 6; SunriM Semett.r I;
6:45-Mornlng Report J; 6:50-Good Morning,
west VIrginia 13; 6:5s-Chuck White Reports 10;
Good Morning, Trl Stale 13.
7:0C&gt;-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8: Bullwlnkle 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8 :0C&gt;-C~pl . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33 .
~ : oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Allalr 8; Mike
Douglas 10.
9:30-Edge of Night 6: Andy Griffith B.
10:0C&gt;-Sanford&amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3 3,4,15; Price Is Rlghta,IO.
II:OC&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3,1S; Happy Days 6,13;
Marcus Welby , M.D. 4.
II :3o-ll's Anybody's Guess 3,1S; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Llle 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :Ss-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:0C&gt;-News 34,6,1 0; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13.
.
12 :3Q-Chico &amp; lhe Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8110.
l :oo--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women Only IS .
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As the World Turns
8,10 .
2:0C&gt;-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; 2:30-0octors 3,•,1S; One
Life to Live 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
3:0C&gt;-Another World 3,A,I5: All In The Family 8.10;
Antiques 20.
3:15-General Hospllal6,13: 3:3o-Match Game 8,10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:0C&gt;-Misfer Cartoon 3; Gong Show 15; Little Rascals
4; Gilligan' s Is . 8: Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah
13.
4:30-My Three Sons 3; ; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8: Lillie Rascals 15.
S:OC&gt;-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8:
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33: · Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13.
S:3!f-Odd Couple 4: News b: Elec. Co .. 20.33; Hogan's

~~~~mo.

i-11-tllllll

GUARANTEED

New co.Op water and
softeners, model VC.SVI .
Only $279.95
Save sso.oo on 1 new
Hotpoint Refrigerator
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
Freexer
S2S.OO Discount
I Good McCullough q,ain
Sow
$95.00
Electric Trim·AII cuts with
nylon
$29.95
(1) Good Refrigerator $200

PHONED T~!leE TIMeS,
M/S.S ADAill·· £!oUT
THE.Y' RE 5TIL.L OUT
IIJSPEc!:TINS PLANT

LARRY LAVENDER

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Phone 949-2101
ar949-2160

TWO BEDROOM 11ouse in
Syracuse. 2 porches , storm,
o(uminum building , 992-5395.

FOR SALE

High School. 992-5523 .

IUIIIIIIIII

tion.

LOTS FOR sole near Meigs Mine I .

l R:EALIZIS '!'OU'VIO

CO~Ii 51'lTII&lt;/,g OU~

OLD TllAC.TOR PLANT
MIGHT CUT TOOL.I.N S
cOSTS , 'fiL.ADEI'!

~
~IllS

VinJI &amp; Aluminum Sidina.
Storm Windows &amp; Insula-

992·32•7. 540.000.

SMU

11£NCUIUT

U .ll.
~.II .
SAW Mil SliiYlC£
!.28-1 mo.

basement. Call for appoint·
ment. between 10 am ond 2 pm.

If

-~~~~-·-WIIOIIIS I DOIIIS

..,z.-m
to •:30

bedroon1 , 2'/J

NEW HOME with 3 bedrooms ,
both , lull basement, large

I

3110 llaio Sl
,_,llllltt
~-"z.-m

985·3595.
both , split-foyer- w ith all the e)( ·
fras! Priced for below actual
reol estate value for quick
sole! Nice drive to power
plants . $.44,000. 992·2•92.

r-._..

PWMBING&amp;
HEATING INC.

TWO CHOICE one oc:re building
lots o""oiloble. Coli 992 ·5869 or

-·-

FREE ESTIMATtS

CARTER

M.orlgog:e, 77 E. State , Ath.,s,
phone (61•) 592·3051 .

7•2·27•6.

(304)773·5721.

Open For
Route

Free.

yellow, white , and red on ion
667·3349.
sets, onion plants , Kennebec.; THREE lOTS with 7 room house
cobbler,. Katahdin ; Red Pontia&lt;
a long the river in Syracuse .
130&lt;) 273-4763 .
and Red Losada seed pototoe~ .
Bulk garden seeds , potting .soi
REAl
EST ATE fQr Sole. ~ acres
peat moss , fruit trees and rosl
witi'l SO ft. trailer overlooking
bushes . Midway Morli.et ,
the river . (304) 273·.. 763 .
Pomeroy , Ohio , 992·2582 .
Bob :s Marke t, Mason , W.Va .

STARCAAFT lOth annive rsary sole
on mini-motors. troilen , and ECONOMY TRACTOR with all attachments . Like new , asking
folddowns . Tro ve/star 25 ft .
$2250. Phone (614) 698·3290.
$4400.00; 20 ft . mini-motor
$10.850.00. We sell service and CANNING TOMATOES . PEPPER S.
qual ity . Camp Conley Starcraft
cucumbers . Cle lan~ Forms ,
Sales , At. 62 north of Pt. Plea ·
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine
sant.
Cleland .

Route Position
Company Operated

Foglesong Rd ., Mason , W.
Va .
Furniture, hou.sehold
goods, tools/ new doors,
Leathercraft tools &amp;
leather, enamel kiln &amp;
glaze,
iewelry.making
tools &amp; materials, other
craft materials, wood
-extension ladders, deep
well pump &amp; pipe, plus
dishes, glassware .-nd
hundreds of other items .
Not
responsible
for
accidents. Virginil Dotson
Barrett, owner. Howard
Beasley, Auctioneer. Home
Phone 304.773·5471.

or 742-2287, after 5.

' · Gene Mitch . 9'9:2-.3HS .
1976 (:ATAliNA . $A.400 or best of ·
fer . 985·3981 .
1955 INTERNATIONAL PICKUP
Truck . R·l OO. v1 ton. 992 _7.. 92
or 992-3716.
-

test your water

Let us

ed woods, water and good occeS5 in Monroe County , W. Va.
$1 ,000 down, coli (304) 777-

MUST SELL this 3

YAMAHA, HARLEY·DAVIDSON &amp;
Con-AM Motorcycles. Compl•t•

MEIGS COUNTY tiumone Society
Animal Coreline, 992-7680: or AUCTION EVERY Fri. , 7 pm. lots
aher6 p.m .. 992-5-427.
of ne~ an? used m.archo11dise
at Oh1o R•ver Auct•on Meigs
TVVO AKC Regis·tered mole Plaza , Middleport , Ohi~ . Home
apricot toy poodles . Sllo1s and Phone (304) 773·5.471
cl i pped .
$65
each .
·
1-61.4-256-6098.
AUCTION, TUES. nigh t, 7pm . lots
of used misc . and new merHOOF HOllOW Horses. Buy ; Sell
chand ise ot Ohio River Auction,
tr ade or train ,. New ond used Meigs Plozo . Middleport, Ohio.
saddles. Horse Shoeing. Ruth Home phone (304) 773 -S-471.
Reeves, Albany . -{61•) 698 ·3290.
TO GIVE away : 7 mo. old Irish r
Setter female pups. 3 kittens , 4
mo. old, one block one , yellow
and wt-! ile, one grey striped . 6
HOUSEHOLD SALE
weeks old , yellow and orange
Sept. 2• , 1 P .M. AI
!ong hair kitten. Port GermaN
She phe rd
female
pup . W. A. Dotson Property on

PART.S F.OR 1971 Go/ax le Ford for
sole . Phone 992-5858.

•279.95

pm .

or

742·3162 .

Let Pomoroy Londmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and CcHip water
.softener, Model UC -XVI,..
No'w Only
.

of Lafttw slafl.i·

367-71 t2.

GUN SHOOT. Racin~ Gun Club
every Sun . afternoon. Facto(
Chock guns only . Assorted
meats .

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Business Services

COUNfRY fotmlond with teclud ·

••

91. II p.m . - Sailor who Feli from Grace with the Sea
Coble Ch.lnnel S ·
·
7 p.m. - Paul Gaudino Family Fllneso
7:30 - Marshall Football
10:00 - 701).CI"b.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, lf77
5:01&gt;-BQOanza 3; My Three Sons •: Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13.
S:JO-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20.33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6;0()-News 3,A,&amp;,J0,13,15; Zoom 20; ABC News 6
6: 30-NBCNews3,A,15; ABC Newsl3; CBS News8,10;
Pests, Pesllcldes &amp; Safely 20.
7:01&gt;-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross· Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Sha
No No 8; News 10; To Tell the Trulh 13: My Three
Sons IS; Equal Justice Under Law 20; Big Green
Machine 33.
7:30-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na A; Match Go me PM 6;
Family Feud B; MacNeil . Lehrer Report20,33; The
JudgeiO; In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom IS.
8:GO-Oregon Troll 3,A,IS; E ight is Enough 6,13; Good
Times 8.10; Upotalrs, Downstairs 20.33.
9:oo-&lt;:harile's Angels 6,13; Movie "A Killing Affair"
8, 10.
IO:OC&gt;-Big Hawaii 3,4, IS; Art In Public Places 33.
10: 3o-Book Beat 33.
II :OC&gt;-News 3,U,8,10,13.15; MacNeil · Lehrer Report
33.
11 :3Q-Johnny Carson 3.4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Hawaii Five·O B; Movie "ISland In the Sun" 10;
ABC News 33.
12:0C&gt;-Janakl 33; 12 :4Q-Myslery of the Week 6,13;
Movie "The Astronaut" 8.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3, ...
1:30-Mary Hortman 10: 2:1Q-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 p.m . - GumqAJ.I Rallv
1tlf~N}ID1t ~THATSCRAIIBLEDWORDGAME
~ ~ ~~ ~
byHenrtAtnoldandBobLee

lS Wonts tK UN~d'

!loy

=-~ IF

TV Log for easy viewing

'

Soulb
I N.T.

2+

6N.T.

Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 2¥
Jacoby
North ~ s two-club bid was
Stayman. his four notrump
just a strong raise in notrump
the way he and his partner
were · using Blackwood .
South' s jump to the. slam was
a mild overbid , but the slam
was a good one. There were 11
top tricks and a heart finesse
for 12.
·
South looked at Lhe heart
lead and decided that East
would surely hold the queen .
West was not the sort ol
player who would lead from a
queen against six notrump. So
South looked around to 'find a
way to make his slam even
though Lhe heart finesse was
off.

Was the late George Reith
the first coniract expert to use
point count?
He was the first writer to

use one. His count was A • 8;
K = 4; Q =3: J • 2 aild 10 •
I.

We owe George a greal
debt. Back in t929 he asked
young, unknown Oswald
Jacoby to play as his partne1
in the first contract pair tour·
nament. They won and Jacob)
was started on his bridgE

career.
(F o r a copy of JACOBI
MODERN, sand Sf to: "Win a·.

Bridge." clo this news,.per.
P.O. 8ox489, Radio City Station.
Naw York. N.Y. 10019}
r NEWSP,\PER ENrERPRISE ASSN . I

--AN' 'lORE
AIRPLANE!!

�14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 21, tm

In 1792, tts royal family
deposed, France became a
republic.

HOSPITAL NEWS
\ 'ETr &lt;\'liS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Okey Pullins,
Coolville: Bradley Pooler,
Pomeroy ; Roger Manley, Sr.,
Middleport ; Ralph Martin,
Beaver.
Discharged - Sara Diddle,
Betty
Ferguson , Anna
MrHaffie , Bessie Stitt ,
Gilbert Wilson.
0

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Sept. Z8)
Janet Arms, Sharon Bailey,
John
Brunton ,
Donald
Byerly , Avonelle Cobb, Myra
Daniels, Doris Dixon, Ken·
neth Gillenwater, Bradford
Grant, Susan Hall, Cristi
Halley, Mrs. Edward Hayes
and daughter, Margaret
House, Valorie Kisor, Ruth
Kuhn, Harry Levis, Karen
Lyons, Mrs. Thomas Mayes
and son , Samuel Miller ,
Millard Plymale, Lillie
Rivers,
Jane
Rucker,
Nina belle Saylor, Hazel
Sayre, John Simpkins, Mary
Simpkins, Nellie Six, Robert
Spangler, Ivan Taylor. ·
( ),llrths, Sept. 20)
Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Thornton, a son, Jackson. Mr.
and Mrs. William Adkins, a
daughter, Oak Hill. Mr. and
Mrs. John Dickens, a son ,
Oak Hill.
BLOODY PASSION
ATLANTA (UPI ) - Bert
Lance probably will be able
to stay on as budget director
and do a good job, according
to Sen. Howard Baker, R·
Tenn.
" Barring
other
cir·
cumstances that might yet
develop, I think Bert Lance is
strong enough to be a good
director ,"
the
Senate
minority leader said Monday.

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Next to Elberfelds
in Pomeroy
Main St .
Pomeroy, 0 .

COLTRA
SUEDE

•swEATER KNITS
SINGER SPECIAL
OF THE WEEK
Model 534 '199"

The Ohio Public Defender
Commission will hold a public
hearing on Oct. 21 at 10 a.m.
in hearing room No. 2, Ohio
Departments Building, 65
South Front St., Columbus to
adopt its rules.
Rules
will
cover
declaration of policy, public
notice rules, standards of
indigency, hiring of outside
counsel, contracts with law
schools, legal aid societies
and non-profit organizations,
facilities for public defender
office, caseload standards,
workload,
budget
and
logistics of the public
defender office; procedures
for
assessments
and
collections of fees, contracts
with municipal corporations.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity to be
heard.

PRODUCT LIABU..ITY
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio
Public
Interest
Research Group Tuesday
listed Ralph Nader' as among
its allies in opposing a
product liability bill which
has passed the House and is
under consideration in the
Senate.
-...........
The bill limits the liability
' - - of
manufacturers
of
dangerous or f11ulty products
·more than 10 years old.
" H manufacturers do not

,r

THE FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy

W.2nd

Hearing set on
working rules

TWO DRAW FINES
Two defendants were fined
and two others forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night. Fined were
William Reeves, Pomeroy,
$SO and . costs, intoxication,
and Mary M. Harris, Mason,
W. Va. , $350 and costs and
. three days in jail, driving
while intoxicated. Forfeiting
were William J . Strong,
Wilkesville, $25, posted on a
speeding charge, and Eugene
S. Morrison, Rutland, $350,
posted on a driving while
intoxicated charge.

e60''

e 60" POLYESTER KNITS
e DENIMS
e POLYESTER A.EECE
eCORDUROY
e CORDID SUEDE
e QIANA NYLON

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Thoma
Roush, Hartford ; Mrs .
Bryce! Donohue, Evans ;
,Mary Anderson. Apple
Grove ; David Pierce, Jr.,
Pomeroy ; Henry Elliott, Jr.,
Point Pleasant ; David
Sullivan, Leon ; Anna Click,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Craig
Barnes
and
daughter ,
Gallipolis; Laura Pearson,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs. Jack
Young, Clifton ; James Poore,
West Columbia; Mrs. Bert
Stover, Point Pleasant ;
James Copeland, Newark, N.
J .; and Eunice Beller, Point
Pleasant.
BIRTH - A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. Sammie Jef·
fers, Glenwood.

!
I

W. T. ITOMl GUTHRIE
Walter Thomas (Tom)
Guthrie, 71 , died Tuesday at
his home on Rl. 2, Bidwell at
12 noon .
He was born July 7, 1906, in
Gall Ia County, son of the late
Lee and Missour i Terry
Guthrie.
Two brothers survive ,
Lawrence Guthrie, Columbus
and G. Terry Guthrie, also of
Columbus ; four sisters, Mrs.
William ( Lullie) Miller ,
Columbus ;
Mis$- Celia
Guthr ie, Columbus ; Mrs.
Cassie Mayo, Cincinnati and
Mrs . Lenora Sm ith , Rt . 2,
Bidwell. Two brothers
preceded him in death .
He attended the Buck
Ridge schools.
Mr . Guthrie was a farmer
his entire llffl.
Five sons survive : William ,
at
home ;
Maynard ,
Columbus ; Raymond , Fl .
Leonard Wood, /lAo.; Eddy,
Ft. Carson, Colo., and Larry,
of Alaska . Four grand children survive.
He was a member of the
Providence Baptist Church .
Funeral services will be
held at the church at 2 p.m. on
Friday . The bOdy will lie in
slate at the church one hour
prior to the services. Rev .
John King will officiate.
Burial will be in the
Providence Cemetery under
the d irecti on of Mi Iter's
Home for Funerals.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 1 until 9
p.m. Thursday .

$70,000 asked
in action at
Meigs oourt
A civil action demanding
$70,000 has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Macilyn J. and
George W. Miller, Middleport
against Woodrow W. Call, Jr. ,
Pomeroy.
The suit charges that on the
26th day of Sept. 1975 at 8:08
p.m . on a public highway
called North Second Ave.,
Middleport, the defendant,
Woodrow W. Call, Jr .,
negligently drove a motor
vehicle into the motQr vehicle
owned by the plaintiff,
George W. Miller, . operated
by Marilyn J . Miller.
As a result of the accident
Marilyn suffered . injuries of
the neck, back, head and
shoulders and other parts of
her body causing pain and
permanent damage. The suit
is also for hospital and doctor
expenses and damage to the
plaintiff's car.
t·
In other court business, the
marriage of Alma Jean
Pooler and William Pooler
was dissolved and Cynthia L.
Smith was granted a divorce
from Thomas E . Smith.

The Senior Ci.tlzens Choir of
Meigs County will hold a bake
sale next Tuesday at the
center in Pomeroy beginning
at 10 a.m . Proceeds wi11 go on
the expense of a new piano
purchased recently .
The Lead ing and Shade
Creeks' Subcomlttee, a part
of the 208 Citizen. Technical

the mood
offall ...
•

STOP IN AND
LOOK,
YOU'LL LIKE
WHAT YOU SEE,
AT THE NEW
STORE .IN
MIDDLEPORT,
ON THE T. ·

GILLIAN'S
FASHION CENTER

EVt:LPAIDOFF

!

Area Deaths

HOLLYWOOD t UPI) Universal Studios wtll pay
I f: ~ el Knievel $9,5811 to repair
his
Stutz
automobile ,
PAUL ELVIN STEWAR":'
damaged when it was stolen
Paul Elvtn Stewart , 48, Rl .
during filming of a "Bionic
2, Crown City (Teens Run
Road) , died at 1 a . m. Woman" episode last month.
Tuesday at his res idence . He
The white car, valued at
was a farm worker .
more than $100,000, was taken
Born Jan . 28, 1929, in Mason
County, W. Va ., to the late by man who told Knievel he .
Delmar and Stella Sanders had been asked to move the ·
Stewart , the decedent Is car because it was blocking
survived by his wife , the traffic. Knievel gave him the
former Anna Mae Johnson , keys, a spokesman said, and
and two children, Terry and
the man tried to drive the car
Kenny , both at home .
One brother preceded him away.
in dath , but four brothers and
The suspect reportedly
two sisters survive : Herschel
panicked
when stopped by a
and Kenneth of Export , Pa .;
studio
security
guard, and
Franklin, Gall ipol is; Harold,
Cincinnati ; Mrs . Paul ine crashed the car into a' gate.
Hornsby , Eureka Star Route,
and Mrs . Hazel Bush ,
Gallipolis.
ANTIQUE BOATS
He attended Bailey Chapel
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Church in his earlier years.
Legislation
has been offered
Funeral serv ices will be
in
the
Ohio
Senate
providing
held at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Waugh -Halley -Wood Funeral for special license plates for
Home, the Rev . Alfred Holley antique boats more than 30
officiating and burial will be years old.
·
in the old Mercerv ille
It
is
similar
to a bill
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the enacted several years ago
funeral home between 7 and 9 offering special plates for
this evening .
historical and antique cars.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
would be .a Geneva conference by the end of the year "although we are aware of the wide gaps that exist." He told a
news conference that Egypt remains the key to peace.
ISRAEL HAS WARNED SYRIA to stay out of south
Lebanon but offered to act as a peacemaker in the fighting be·
tween Palestinian guerrillas and. Israeli-backed Lebanese
rightists witnesses said was "worsening by the hour ."
Israeli warjets swooped over the area Tuesday and the
rightists, backed by Israeli artillery fire, fought to cut off a
main supply route to a strategic Palestinian hill stronghold
near the border, reporters in the area said.
"Any escalation in the situation in the south will be Israel's
fault," Syria's official press said.

Advisory Committee for the
Southeastern Ohio River
Tributaries, will meet at 8
o'clock tonight in the second
floor conference room of the
Farmers' Bank Building . The
pbullc is Invited.

Ord lnation~fce for the
office of Deacon was held
Sunday at the new Slivers·
ville Community Church,
Portland, for Jack Cornell. In
charge of the service was
evangelist James Clark, Jr .,
pastor of the church .
Services each Sunday are
. Sunday School at 9: 45,
worship service at 10:30,
evangelistic service 7: 30
p .m., Wednesday prayer
meeting at 7;30 p.m.
There will be a dance
Friday following the Southern -Waterford football game.
Music will be by OJ, Jay Hill.
Admission Is $1.25 a !the door .
The dance will be held from
10 until midnight. The event
Is bel ng sponsored by the
senior class at Southern High
School In Racine .

NEW OWNER - Sandy Ohlinger Miller, Middleport,
standing, is the new owner of the Chateau Beauty ·Salon
that she purchased from Kay Proffitt. Mrs. Miller took
over operation of the shop which is located on Pomeroy's
East Second Street on Sept. 13. There will be three
operators including Mrs. Miller, Kay Proffitt and Janice
Grimm. The shop will be open Tuesday through Friday
from 9 to 5 and evenings by appointment. On Saturday the
shop will be open from 9 am . until late afternoon.
The Almall8c
United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Sept.
21, the 266th day of 1977 with
101 to follow .
The moon is between its
first quarter and full phases.
The morning stars are
Saturn, Jupiter, Mercury,
Mars and Venus.
There are no evening stars.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Virgo .
English
author
and
historian H.G. Wells was born
on Sept. 21, 1886.

CHICAGO -FARM LEADERS FROM 21 states have
recommended the American Farm Bureau seek an immediate
meeting to discuss the grain market with President Carter and
Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland.
During an "emergency " American Farm Bureau
Federation grain conference at the O'Hare Hilton Hotel
Tuesday, the farm leaders listed more than 20 topics to be
discussed at the proposed meeting between Carter, Bergland
and AFBF President Allan Grant. The leaders asked Grant to
On this day in history:
request that a more positive attitude be placed on expanding
In 1893, the first successful
grain exports, that action be taken to open new export
gasoline·
markets, and recommended expansion of the Food for Peace American-made,
program.

operated motor car appeared
on the streets of Springfield,
Mass. It was designed and
built by Charles and Frank
Duryea.
In 1938, an estimated 600
persons were killed by a
hurricane which battered the
coast of New England.
In 1976, former Chilean
Foreign Minister Orlando
Letelier was killed when a
bomb exploded in his car as
he drove along a street in
Washington, D.C.
A thought for the day :
British author H.G. Wells
said:
" Human history
becomes more and more a
race between education and
catastrophe."

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SPECIAL SALE

have to worry about claims
after 10 years, a major
incentive for them to build
safe, durable goods will be
lost ," the group quoted Nader
as saying. " This would be a
gross injustice to the people
of Ohio."

Notices, local briefs

·DRESSES

01 the Tin
Middleport
Come 01 In!

---------------------------1

Non-Slip
MULTI-U.SE
URATHANE
FOAM BACK

MACHINE
WASHABLE
•
NO IRONING
NEEDED
•
FRINGED
ALL AROUND
•
PROTECTS YOUR
FURNITURE

A car wash will be held
Saturday, Sept. 24 at Eber's
Gulf Station In Racine from 9
a .m. to 2 p.m . Price is $2 for
outside and $3 for Inside and
out. Sponsored by the senior
class .
Preceptor Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet
at 8 p.m. Thursday at the
Meigs Museum with Mrs. W.
P. Lochary to present the
program and with Mrs. Pearl
Welker and Mrs. Clarice
Krautter as hostesses.
A special meeting of the
Racine Emergency Squad
has been c;alled for 2 p.m.
Sunday at the station by
Randall Roberts, chief. All
EMT' s are asked to be
present.
Lucille Smith, Mrs. Gene
Yost and Mrs. Paul Eich
returned Tuesdat following a
three day workshop at Salt
Lake Fork, Cambridge,
repruenting
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Daughters of American
Revolution.

'Size 60x70

Special

Size 70x120
Special
Values to 511.99 •••••••••••••
Size 70xl40
Special

•9•
o•

Values to ss.94 •••••••••• '3 81
Size 70x90
Spec Ia I
Values to sg.99 •• -. ••••••• '781 Values to Sl3.99 ••••••••••• f 1
HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT.-1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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