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W1nners m

D-8 - The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Stmday, June 19. 1977

Scenes from
regatta parade

frog events
Wlmera of frog events held
at the Big Bend Regatta were
announced today by Bill
Young, chairman of the
eventa ..
Winning top prize of $300 In
the aenlor dlvtaion ·of the
jumps wu John Young of
Racine with hill frog "Judge"
with a jump of 12 feet 51&gt;
inehel. Second place went to
William Bryant, Portland,
who won $100 with "David
A." which jumped 12 feet four
Inches. Third place went to
Bob Painter, PQmeroy,
whose frog "Shade River
Lunger" jumped 12 feet, 21!.
Inches to win $50.
Junior jumping winners

PAST BIG BEND REGATTA Queens on their float.

MERRI AULT, right, has served as Big Bend
·Regatta Queen for the past year and was hostess to
visiting queens here for this year's event. Affiong her
guests was Donna Sees, queen of the Canal Festival at
Coshoctnn.

IRE proves -killing reporter
was big mistake by gangsters

eliminating things and
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe keeping those that were
,_
head of an investigative symptomatic of what was
i
reporting group which wrong in Arizona, '' said
Wlcovered organized crime Greene.
'
and political corruption in
The investigative team
Arizona said Saturday the 26- spent $72,000 in working day
'
part newspaper series served and night from Sept. 24, 1975
I'
{,
notice that killing a reporter until Mar. I, 1976. At the end,
'
will not stop the disclosure of they had $5,000 worth of bills
. due an~ only $1,000 in the
wrongdoing.
but
voluntary
Robert Greene, senior bank,
editor of Newsday and contributions kept them
president of Investigative going.
Greene said the group ocReporters and Editors, Inc.
(IRE), directed a panel of cupied the 19th floor of the
newsmen affiliated with the Adams Hotel in Phoenix and
so-ealled "Phoenix Project" took turns guarding ·their
-a six-month effort by three- office by sleeping there.
dozen reporters following up
"There was always the
the murder of Don Bolles of chilling feeling that when you
the Ariwna Republic.
went to the hotal garage to
"We decided we were not start your car that you did not
going to work on the murder know what was going to
of Bolles," said Greene, "but happen," said Greene.
that we were going to carry
Greene said the team
on his project as a tribute In discovered that there was a
"major
invasion"
of
him.
"We wanted to show that organized crime in Arizona
killing a reporter would not ana that while law
be a reasonable way to stop enforcement was basically
him, and that anyhody who good, prosecutors and judges
thought about it would see could be bought off.
that 10 or 20 reporters would
"There were pockets of
show up. In c~ry on his work; poltical corrpution," said
that killing a reporter would Greene·, "and organized
TWO OF THE STAFF REPRESENTATIVES of Sen.
cause more problems than it crime was made In feel'
Howard M. Metzenbaum arrived In a mobile unit which
comfortable. In short, the
would solve."
was located on the upper parking lot to confer with
The panel at Ohio State state was run like. a country
'constituents on any problems. Tbe two, Steve Witt, left,
Uruversity was part of the club.
and Steve Friedman, right, confer with a visitQr Joe
second annual national
"We were fully convinced
Crandol, Columbus, center, who was in town operating·
meeting of IRE, attended by of the fact that we were
special t-shirt marking equipment at the New York
more than 600 print and representing American
broad.c ast reporters. The , journalism,·• said Greene.
Clothing House.
otganization has continued as "We felt we were blazing a
a non-profit trade association pathway . We created a
to "improve the news solidarity among the AmeriFOUR .APPOINTED
WANTS NO HELP
profession
through a mutual can media. We feel we made
WASHINGTON (UP! )
MADRID, Spain (UP!)
exchange
of ideas and our point and magnified the
Premier Adolfo Suarez, the Four Stark County youths information among work of Don Bolles."
first democratic premier of have been appointed to reporters."
Joe Murray, editnr of the
post-&lt;lictatorship Spain, will service academies. U. S.
Greene
said
conditions
in
Lufkin,
Tex., News, which
form a government without Rep. Ralph Regula, R.Qhio, Arizona
presented
a
won
a
Puliizer Prize for
seeking help from either the announced Saturday. They "smOrgasbord" Of material . stories on the fatal beating of
left .or right, political sources are: Eric P. Steiner of Canton for his group, which began a retarded recruit in a
said Saturday. With vote to West Point; Daniel Webb with six reporters and Marine boot camp, urged
tabulation from WednesdiJy's of East Canton to West Point; produced 100,000 words used · reporters never to stop
election nearly completed, Todd Tassell of Navarre to by 24 newspapers and asking questions . .
Suarez's Union of the the Air Force Academy and broadcast stations across the
"There are no stupid quesDemocratic Center held 165' James E. Bender of Canton to COl!ntry.
tions,"
said Murray, 11 only
seats in the 350-seat Congress the Naval Academy.
was stupid answers. We may be
problem
''The
of Deputies - II short of a
majority. The Socialist
Workers party ran second
with 118 seats.
~

MOBILE OFFICE

•'

MILDRED WITHEE (left) and Margaret Eskew
aboard the "Dakota Caboose" pulled by Pomeroy Mayo;
Clarence Andrews.

HEALTH .
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

Spotting harm to liver
her. She also had a
temperature off and on, often
DEAR DR. LAMB - My up to 103 degrees .
She had large amounts of
husband is a heavy drinker
and I say it will eventually af· red blood cells in her urine
feet his liver. Could his liver and her strep count was up to
be affected now even though 2,500. The doctor decided she
he has no pain? What kinds of had sub-acute nephritis.
He said it was caused from
tests are there to check liver1
the
strep in her system. He
.DEAR READER- Yes, his
has
been treating her with
liver can already be undergopenicillin.
She has a pale look
ing changes .. It seeiTlS to be
all
over
and
at times sheetvery hard for people to grasp ·
white
hands,
anns
and face.
that their body may be
·
The
doctor
doesn't
seem
conundergoing serious changes
cerned
about
this
white
look.
Umt they ca nnot see or feel.
That is why we have special She has to urinate frequently
tests. His liver could be and drinks lots of water, and
developing fatty deposits in• juices.
Is there any special diet
side it and there would be no
pain at all. Incidentally cir- that she should be on' Her
rhosis of the liver is the fourth glands are ·still swollen but
leading cause of death in men the doctor says it takes time,
between the ages of 35 and 54 maybe months or up to .two
and 60 per cent of these are years for the disease to go
caused by alcohol -a preven- away. What else can we do'/
DEAR READER - Your
table disease. ·
story
is typical for a case of
Chemical tests are done to
test the liver function when sub-acute glomerulonephritis
indicated. And when the and I'm certain your doctor
situation warrants it the dOt' has made the right diagnosis.
tor can take a small biopsy of The strep count (ASO titer) is
the liver with a special needle very high and proves that she
and look at a small sliver of has had a streptococcal infection. The swollen glands are
tissue under a microscope.
There are also some part of the picture. The
physical signs of liver kidney involvement begins
da1nage the doctor can find within about 10 days to two
that may not be so obvious to weeks after the streptococcal
the untrained individual. To infection.
The kidneys react to the ingive you more information I
am sending you The Health fection similar to the way the
Letter number H, Living heart does when rheumatic
With Your Liver. Others who fever follows in the wake of
want this issue can send 50 strep throat.
The best treatment is to ert"ents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for radicate the infection and
mailing. Send your request to penicillin is indicated. A good
me in care of this newspaper, normal diet is best. The only
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Sta- thing I would advise would be
to avoid salt. You do not mention, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Two tion swelling but if your
months ago our 9-year-old daughter was accwnulating
daugl1ter became ill. Her fluid this would be even more
glands became so enlargep important.
The pale appearance is
they were tender and hurt
conunon with this disease. An
anemia may also be an
associated factor. It sounds to
me like your daughter has
properly diagnosed and
K. SNOWDEN isbeenbeing
properly treated.
24 Stott Strnt
You
will
have
to wait for time
-~·4290
and nature to do the rest.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

CAROU.

U.S.SENATOR

rrPMETZENBAUM
HOWARD M.

ignorant but not stupid. We
are looking for information."
Murray said that great
stories are often the result of
"being in the right place at
the right time, " adding that
young reporters can best
prepare by "making every
stnry you ·write a good one."
"Write about tbe things
people like to read about, and
they are going to like your
newspaper," he said. "Then
when they have something
they want fixed in the world,
they're going to go to the
newspaper they like."
Murray said the tip on tbe
story of Lynn McClure, the
beaten Marine, literally

"See me for car
home, life, health
and business
insurance~
,1111 ......

Lille aawoclleiPbor,
State Nl'll is Ibm.
St.1!t fa~ PI! lntwrl~lt COII!Nn tt
IU II'O ~

~ ~Iotti I IOCI~&lt;IItfOII

p 7601

INSULT REMAINS
LOS ANGELES ( U~I)
·until there Is no social
pressure against lesbians,
"no woman who is strong and
independent can be free,"
feminist Gloria Steinem said
Friday at the California
International Women's Year
Convention.
· Women who are aggressive
and Independent, even
thought
they
are
heterosexuals, often are
called lesbians, she said, and
so until the distinction
becomes respectable, the
insult will remain.
RHODESIA QUIET
SAUSBURY, Rhodesia
(UPI)- Rhodesia denied
Saturday that any Qf Its
IM!CIIrity forces were now
operating in Mozamblqule,
blit defended Its past "hot
pursuit" incursions by citing
U. S. forays Into Cambodia
during the Ipdochlna War.

•

HJ.S FIRST TRIP
MOSCOW (UP!) - Leonid
L. Brezhnev flies to France
Monday on his first state visit
as president of the Soviet
Union. Brezhnev, 70, has
capped a dozen years as
Communist party general
secretary and the most
powerful man in the Kremlin
by taking over the nation's
presidency as well.

.

SENIOR JUMPER - Ronnie Hubbard, Middleport, tried hard Ill get his frog to make
the big'jump at the aruiual frog jwnp held Saturday at Meig:s Stadium in Pomeroy.
was Tall Timbers Nile Club
with "Midnight" who jumped
seven feet, eight Inches.
Winners in the derby races
were
Rod
Harrison,

Pomeroy, first, a $50 prize ;
Mathew King , Pomeroy,
second, and Bill King,
Pomeroy, third, who received
recognition only.

Continued from page D-1
Conservation Corps for 35,000
youngsters 16 through 23 to
TEMBO'S TEMPER
work in national parks and
LANCASTER, Calif. (UP!) forests.
- Actress Tippi Hedren
A
community
became the second woman to improvement program for
be hurt by a bull elephant this 20,000 youths 16 through 19 to
week while filming the movie work on neighborhood
uRoar"· on a wild animal rehabilitation projects.
ranch.
-Grants In state and local
Miss· Hedren, who starred governments for jobs and
In the Hitchcock films training and counseling pro11
Marnie" and "The Birds" in grams for low income youngthe 1960s, was reported in sters. This is tbe largest part
good condition Friday at of the bill, costing $600
Antelope Valley Hospital, million.
where she was being treated
The bill contains two
for a broken leg and cuts innova.tive programs
doctors said may require skin combining
wqrk
and
grafts.
education:
Tembo,
an
African
One, a pilot program to be
elephant weighing almost tried in several parts of the five toils, grabbed her ankle country, guarantees part
in his trunk Wednesday and Pn!e work during the school
slammed her to the ground. year and full time work in
Only two days earlier tbe summer to economically
same elephant picked up a disadvantaged youngsters 16
woman animal handler, through 19 who agree to
Patricia Barbeau, 46, and return In school or stay in
slammed ber into a tree, school to earn a high school
breaking her shoulder.
diploma.
Another innovation in the
bill,
proposed by Sens.
GIRL KILLED
Hubert
Humphrey, D-1\!:inn.,
COLUMBIA STATION,
and
Jacob
Javits, R-N.Y.,
Ohio (UP!) - A six-year old
requires
that
15 per cent of
Elyria girl, Ida Hough!, was
the
state
and
local
grants be
accidentally shot to death
set
aside
for
workstudy
and
Friday night when a .22other
programs
for
lowcalibre rifle in the hands of
nine-year old, Paul Scraggs, income youngsters who are in
school.
discharged.

,,

X ·~

__

•

Fifteen Cents

Vol. 28, No. 46

,P

OUTBOARD
RACING. CJJY
.;;....::::·:~ ~
•

. F'XRST PLACE WINNER$ -.-; Regatta· Queen Niese!
Duvall poses with first place winners of Sunday
afternoon's power boat races which proved to be a inajor
event at the 13th annual Big Bend Regatta. Recipients of

the $110 first place cash awards were, 1-r, Dean Reynolds,,
Mansfield; Jm Hopkins; Bruce Allen, Mansfield; John
Cachet, Rocky River; and Bill Brown, Akron . The drivers
competed in six boat classes and Reynolds won the top
prize in two of them. ·
.

.

World's ,mark missed by four
Thirty entrants In the Big
Bend Regatta's firsl ever
hamburger eat-a-thon set out
to beat the world's record of
17 'burgers In half an·hour at
Country Cousins Cookshoppe
Saturday afternoon.
While
the
closest
challenger, Steve Roberts,
feU short of the mark by four
burgers, another contender,
Art Tpb!n, gave It a good try
by eating 12 hamburgers.
Tobin, who had rounded up
over 50 sponsors lor
donations totaling $6.95 a
burger, won the adult
division. Roberts won first
place in the youth division.

C01Jler and the Meigs County
Jaycees and the hamburgers
were donated by Country
Cousins. Gregg Gatrell,
Cookshoppe manager,
conducted the Eat-a·thon.

ON YOUR MARK, GET SET, GO! That's how the hamburger races started Saturday at

this and otber tables.

Department today is Investigating thefts, acts of
vandallml, attempted entry
Into a home and a car accident.
These Include:
The theft of a battery from
the auto of Bill Radford on
County Road 20 (old US Rt.
33),
taken
sometime
Saturday night or early
Sunday morning.
Bill Folmer has reported
his auto was entered during
the night and that someone
tried to take his battery. The
battery brackets were
brolun. Folmer IIIIo Uvea on
eo. Rd. 20. Someone apparently ac1red off the

thieves.

ELBERFELD$ ·I N POMEROY

.

,.,

\

Values from '638.00 to s789.00.

liUQp.

damper

\,.\\\'1AJ..v

Proceeds from the · evenf

.00

-

CHECKING
OUT - Carl Schrader, Citizens Journal; Atty . Fred Crow,
founder of the frog jumps, and Bill Young, secretary-treasurer, of the Ohio Society of the
Promotion of the Bull Frog,lnc., are shown going over the lists of entries at Saturday's frog

enttne

went to the Senior Citizens

SALE

There were well over 300
frogs entered In the Saturday
and Sunday events . The
derby was scheduled for
Continued on pap 7

Derby

I

or Contemporary Styles. Nylon or Herculon Cow~

Maude"

jumped 12 feet, II inches.
Third place, $25, was Jennifer
Leachman, Hockingport,
whose frog "Fatso" jumped
12 feet, I inches.
Special event jump winner
was Stroh's Brewing Co. with
"Fireball," eight and onehalf feet, to win a certificate
of recognition. Second place
in special event jumping went
to Stroh's also with the froa
"Willie Jwnp," I feet, 2
inches; third place winner

Congress

LIVING ROOM SUITES

Large Group of Kroehler 2 Piece Suites in Ear~ American

11

Rain is

·sPECIAL JUNE ·SALE

GO TO WASHINGTON
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)The girl elected governor of
the 31st Girl's Stale and her
opponent will represent Ohio
at Girl's Nation next month in
Washington. The two are
Gov. Michelle Dorsett of
Whitehall and her rival Julie
. Dittman of Huron. The announcement wsa made at this
year's final Girls' State
assembly Saturday.

frog

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 20, 1977

The Meigs CountySheriff's

.

whose

•

walked into his office, when
be was called in on his day
off'. "I didn't do anything but
sit in my office for seven
years waiting for this story,"
be joked.
" We just stumbled along,"
said Murray, noting his newspaper.'s
series
was
overlooked for first place
awards by two Texas
organizations. "We feel like
we won an Emmy for being
on the Gong Show."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

CHOLERA SPREADS
TOKYO (UP!) - Japan's
first major outbreak · of
cholera in :W years spread to
Tokyo's suburbs Saturday
and health officials worked to
contain the epidemic in
western Japan with mass
inspections and disinfections.
Fifty people in Arida, a city
250 miles southwest of Tokyo,
have been identified as
confirmed or suspected
victims of the disease. One
elderly patient died Thursday
and health authorities have
declared the city of 35,000 a
cholera infested area.

were Kim Akers, Chillicothe,
$100 prize, with "Digem"
with a 13 feet, one Inch jump.
Second place was Robbie
Hatfield , Middleport, $50,

Mary Pierce, Long Bottom,
reported aomeone tried to get
In her residence on the
morning of the 16th. There
were pry marks on the
window. A neighbor told her
he heard a· noise around 2
a.m. and hAd gotten up to
.check, and apparently when

I'

..

he turned on the lights the
person left. A small car was
seen leaving the area.
Ralph Wigal, Reedsville,
said Saturday evening ·
someone had destroyed his
garden. The person or persons poured salt on all the
plants In the, garden, apparently put on late Wednesday evening or early
Thursday morning. The
plants were about gone
Saturday. Wigal told deputies
that he had had trouble with a
neighbor over a dog.
A complaint was !Ued by
Harold Will, Rt. 2, Racine,
that his residence located on
the Douglas Farm at East
Letart had been entered
10metime after 5 p.m. Friday
and that his TV set had be'en
shot with a .22 Cal. weapon.
Nothing else was disturbed.
Saturday evening Deputies
David Wollard and Robert
Beegle Investigated a
disturbance at the Richard
Smith residence on . the
NJ1111ber 9 Road near R~~-

ville, and also a fight at the
Morgan residence at Rt. 2
Albany, near SnowvU!e.
At 1 p.m. Sunday the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
was notified by Charles
Goegleln, · President of the
Pomeroy Gun Club that the
club's building had been

entered during the night.
Entry was gained by kicking
in a panel on the side door.
Four six packs of beer ~as
taken .
An accident report was
made Sunday from Lee E.
Ramey, 1616 Lincoln · Hts.,
Pomeroy. Mr. Ramey said
that he was traveling on

BY KATIE CROW
II was a beautiful day
Saturday and the frog races
were well under way. II was
time for the initiation of the
grand croakers when the
clouds blackened, the sky lit
up like a burst of fireworks,
and rain poured down, sending a crowd of approximately 500 people In
every direction . .
The 13th annual frog jump
was termed one of the most
successful. Old hands
(Croakers) believed i the
largest crowd ever was in
attendance. A frog in the
junior division took the
honors.
The frog derby did not get
off the ground Saturday
evening but was held Sunday
afternoon.
Winners of the frog jump in
the senior division, first,
second and third respectively
· were :
John C. Young, RD,
Racine, with his frog
"Judge," a jump· of 12' and
51&gt;"; Bill Bryant, Po.rtland,
"David .A.," 12' and 4", Bob
GRADUATION DAY
LOS ANGElES (UP!)
Former White House Chief of
Staff H.R. Haldeman and his
wife
attended
commencement ceremonies
Sunday afternoon, watching
their daughter receive her
diploma from the UCLA Law
School.
Susan llaldeman was one of
8,000 students who received
bachelor and graduate
degrees from the University
which is Haldeman's alma
mater.
Haldeman enters federal
prison at Lompoc, Calif.,
Wednesday, to begin serving
a 30-month.Jo-eight-year
sentence lor his role In
Watergate.

Cherry Ridge Road in Bedlord Townohlp around 7:30
a.m. and lost control of his
1977 Chevrolet in loose
gravel. The vehicle went off
the road on the left and struck
a tree. Ramey said there
were no Injuries but heavy
damage to his auto. There
was no citation.

I

Cost of driving tripled
DETROIT (UP!) - The
average American car
traveled 9,015miles last year,
about the same u in 1950. But
lhe cost of keeping It on the
road nearly tripled.
·
In the past four years
alone,
passenger
car
operating costs jwnped 63 per
cent over pre-oil embargo
levels and total c081s for .aU
types of vehicle climbed
twice as fast as the country's
overall . inflation rate,
according to a new study
released by the Hertz Corp.
The greatest part of the

increase covered the higher
costs of fuel, insurance,
licensing and other fees, the
vehicle leasing and renting
company said. The cost of
fuel alone jumped from 26.8
c-ents a gallon in 1950 to 61
cents a gallon last year.
While the average car traveled 9,032 miles in 1950 at a
cost of 8 cents a mile, the
typical 1976 model put 9,015
miles on the odometer at a
cost of 20.1 cents a mile. In
1972, the average was just
12.1 cents a mile.
Her!z estimates that

Americans spent almost $325
billion to own and operate
m .3 million cars and trucks
last year, 10me $37 billloo
more than in 1975 when there
were 133.7 million vehicles.
In 1950, the cost was juat
$40.6 billion to own and
operate 49.2 million vehicles.
The difference In the
amount of fuel they used Is
significant - 107.5 billion
gallons last year, compared
with 99.5 billion •gallons in
1972 and just 35.5 billloo
gallons in 1950.
-?&gt;ntinued on page 7

WINNER OF DERBY- Jack Ambro&amp;e, center, was the wiMer of the Frog Derby. He
received a plaque and a check for $200. Shown with Ambrose are left, Bill Downie, grand
croaker, and Bill Young, right, secretary-treasurer of the Ohio Society for the Promotion of
the Bull Frog.
Painter, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
"Shade River Lunger,·~ 12''
2".

In the junior division: Kim
Akers, Chillicothe, "Digum''
13' I"; Robbie Hatfield ,
.. Maude," 12' 11" Jennifer
Leachman, Hockingport,
"Fatso," 12' 8".

In the team jumps Stroh's
took first and second with
"Fireball/' 81h' and " Willie
Jwnp, " 8' 2"; Tall Timbers,
"Midnight" 7' 8".

In straight racing, first,
second and third respectively
w·ent to Rod Harrison,
Matthew King and Bill King.

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Chester
at 7:50 a. m. Sunday for
Willoughby Hill who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 12:50 p. m. Sunday
the squad took Tim Nitz to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

;;;:~

IN TilE SENIOR AND JUNIOR
DIVISION JUMPS -John Young tnok first place in th.e
frog jwnp, senior division and received a plaque and
check in the amount of $300. Kimberly Akers, Chillicothe,
took first place in the junior division and received a check
for $100.

Amin target
NAIROBI, Kenya (UP!) - Friday. There are a lot of assassination attempt, which
Gunmen tried to assassinate Muslim troops outside the took place at 10 a .m ,
Ugandan President Idi Amin state house, and Christians Saturday at the Bayitabire
during the weekend, the inside.' '
trading center on the
newspaper The Nation said
He would not clarify his outskirts of Entebbe.
today.
remarks.
"Following the sporadic
Quoting ''reports reaching
Radio Uganda, which shooting
and
Amin 's
Kenya," . The Nation said broadcast normal news subsequent
eacape,
Uganda's military dictator programs, reported duririg thousands of troopa were sent
has been missing since the weekend that Amin had to co mb the area," the
Saturday's assassination been presented with a huge account said.
attempt, and the army and Nile perch fish Saturday
They set up roadblocks and
pollee were moblllted to try evening. The radio said Amin searched hundreds of homes,
to find him.
might attend a public beating many civilians in tbe
There was no inunediil te ceremony in western Uganda process, the paper said. Solindependent confirmation .of today.
diers later killed a number of
the newspaper story. Reports
The diplomati c sources ·people of the Baganda tribe in
from the Ugandan capital of said there were "a few more retribution for the ~ttack, alid
Kampala were confused and troops" around the Ministry hundreds fled in panic, tbe
imprecise.
of Information in Klllllpala report added.
A diplomat reached by today, but the city was ·
telephone said there had been otherwise calm.
a "shooUng incident"
Reports routinely sweep
EXTENDED OUTUIOK
Saturday morning on the East Africa of fresh coup
Wednesday througb
outskirts of Entebbe, near the attempts against Amin, who
Friday, lair Weduesday
capital, but it was unclear if it has survived about a dozen through Friday. Cool with
involved Amin. 'The area documented attempts on his
hlgbs in the 70s and low 80s.
mentioned is notorious for life since be seized power six
Lows will be In the 50s and
gqnflghts between rowdy years ago.
low 60s.
army troops and civilians.
In its banner story, The
" II wasn't the quietest Nation quoted Vice President
weekend in Kampala," Mustafa Adrisi as saying
another diplomatic source Amin had disappeared . The
w~ather
said, but he gave no otber army was put on lull alert to
Cloudy tonight, lows to 65.
· Information .
search for the ~ound, 6-.
Cooler,
less humid Tuesday,
An official at . Amin's foot-6
president ,
the
cloudy
skies.
Highs near 80.
Entebbe state hOuse said by newspaper said .
Probability
of
precipitation
The Nation said two
telephone, "We do not kllOW
30
per
cent
today,
20 per cent
where the president is. I gunmen riddled Amin's car
haven ' t seen · him since with
bullets
in
the tonight and Tuesday.

,..,

,,

�.1-l'III....UY!:ilflunel, !\Uoweport-Yomeroy,IJ., Monday,June:!0,1977
2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 20, 1977

Oil starts long flow

'Marietta

across Alaskan slopes
PRUDHOE BAY, Alaska
(UPI ) -The "black gold" of
Alaska's North Slope begins
Its long-awa1ted trip to the
Amer~can consumer today.
With momtors watching
every inch of the IIOQ.mile
pipeline that took nine yea rs
and $9.9 billion w construct,
oil was w begin floWing
toward the Ice-free port of
Valdez today at the mitial
rate of 300,000 barrels a day.
It will take 30-40 days for
the oil, oozmg southward at
1.1 miles per hour, to reach
Valdez on Alaska's south
coast, from where it will be
shipped by tankers to West
Coast refmeries.
Within the year, officials of
the controversial proJect
expect 1 2 million barrels a
day to be flowmg through the
pipeline, supplymg about 15
per cent of America's
domestic
crude
oil

reqwrements

At exactly 9 am (2 p m.
EDT), an e1ght-foot long
meta) 11pig," Slmilar m shape

to a huge bar bell, will be
pushed into the main pipelme
ms1de pump station No I on
the Arctic shore of the North
Slope.
The " pig" w1ll follow
mtrogen already in the
pipeline and be pushed along
by oil let m behmd.
The ml flow will be
activated from the Alyeska
operations control center in
Valdez, 799 m1les away.
Off1c1al government go·
ahead was granted to the
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co .
consortium Sunday by the
InteriOr Department
The government said,
however. 1t was prepared to
halt operations il Its
momtormg teaills find a

danger " to human life,
natural resources or the
enVIronmenl.11
"By approvmg startup, we
are not s1gnifymg that we
believe
this
enUre
transportatiOn system p1pehne , termmal , and
marme tanker routes - ts
absolutely
perfect,"
Undersecretary James
Joseph sa1d in Washmgton.
~~we do believe, however
that the national need for 011
from arct1c Alaska far out·
we1ghs the unportance of any
remaining potential
problems. A careful analys1s
of matters sill! unresolved
has convinced me that th1s ml
transport system is capable
of operating safely and w1th
mmunum adverse effects on
the environment "
An unpretentious s1gn had
been attached to the tail end
1

of the ·•ptg" Sunday, when
reporters
saw
a
demonstration of the start-up
process It said :
11
The start:
"Trans-Alaska
pipeline.
"Aiyeska Pipeline Service
Co"
The oil flows from a total of
about 140 wells, half
controlled by Atlantic
R1ch!leld Co. and half by
British Petroleum of Alaska
and Soh10 into the long lme
that a peak force of more
than 20,000 workers etched
across the tundra to the
tanker port of Valdez
between April 1974 and May
1977
Men were stalloned along
the pipeline to momtor radio
s1gnals emitted by the "pig"
as It was bemg pushed by the
oil to the Valdez storage
tanks.

UMW folk, hospitalized, pay $250
CHARLESTON,

W.Va.

(UP!)- Beneficiaries of the

Uruted Mine Workers Health
and Retirement Funds will be
required after July I to pay
the initial $250 of any
hospitalizatiOn costs
mcurred,
the
funds
announced today.
In addition, beneficiaries
will be required to share costs
for
co-insurance
for
professional care on a 60-40
basis, the funds said
There \Vill be a $500 annual
maxunum on the amount a
benellciar'y has to pay for
health care, the funds sa1d.
UMW Secretary Treasurer
Harry Patrick warned just
prior to the UMW election
that a plan was bemg
developed
to
cutback
services under the funds plan
begm
chargmg
and
beneficiaries for some health
services. The funds at that
time sa1d no declSlon had
been reached in the matter.
Barbara Moldauer, spokes·
woman lor the funds, said m a
telephone mterview from
Washington the final decision
was made Friday, after the

three trustees reJected a plan form , the funds said, the 1950
to elirmnate maJor categones trust would mcur a cash-How
of benefits because they felt deficit of $14 milliOn by
the cost-shanng
plan December; and the 1974 plan
"assures that no individual would be more than $10.2
will have to pay too large a million in the red.
MISS Moldauer sa1d all
share of medical bills."
benefic1ar1es
were warned in
Affected by the plan are
March
that
a
decision by the
224,000 beneficiaries under
on
the
funds was
trustees
one of the four fund plans
liiUJllilent.
"The
letter sa1d
!mown as the 1950 henef1t
unless
coal
production
and
trust
and
597,000
bench
fund
income
mcreased
benef1cianes under the 1974
substantially, the funds
benefit trust.
MISS Moldauer said the trustees would have no
UMW asked last Thursday choice, but to cutback health
that money under one of the benefits and eliminate some
two pension plans be re· entirely.
"Coal productwn has not
allocated to buoy to two
trusts, but the Bituminous mcreased smce the writing of
Coal Operators Assoc1at10n that letter. In fact, 11 has
rejected the 1dea, "saying fallen even further below
both sides agreed not to re- projected levels," said the
allocate a gam (it was done funds.
Under the new plan,
twice before), which is true."
"Changes under the funds beneficiaries will ba ve to pay
health benefits program were 40 per cent of the1r
necessitated
by
the professional care, and have
precarious fmancial situation an addihonal $250 deductible
of both the 1950 benefit trust
and the 1974 benefit trust,"
said the trustees. Were the
health benefits program
maintain"!~ in their current

for in-patient ca re at a
hospital or nursmg home.
Any patient who is
admitted to a health care
facility more than once many
30-day penod w11l be
considered as having a single
confinement, said the funds,
and w11l be reqwred to pay
only one deductible.
Any fanuly "who IS defined
as a holder of health serVIces
card
and
ehg1ble
dependents," the funds satd,
"will be required to pay no
more than $500 durmg any
one fiscal year." The funds
will reimburse beneficiaries
directly for anything paid m
excess of $500, the funds sa1d.
1\ecently plagued by
fmancial problems because
of Wildcat stnkes, the funds
have had to close seven
satelhte offices m the
coalfields and reportedly
have been fallmg far behind
m payment of medical bills.

Eight .w eekend
mishaps probed

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Heart attack facts
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. these people never make 1t to
the hospital They mther drop
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am dead w1th the onset of the at·
still a nervous wreck after tack or have a fatal lr·
losmg my husband three regulanty of the heart before
months ago. He was only 49 they can get any adequate
years old and seemed to be m treatment About one-fourth
good health. He never com· of all deaths m the Umted
plained about a thing.
States are caused by heart at·
We were watching the late tacks
moVIe on TV when he started
ObviOusly 1f everyone knew
havmg some pam under his what to do 10 the presence of
breast bone He went to the such an emergency many
bathroom, collapsed and was lives could be saved You are
lhinkmg of the pubhc proWlCOflSClOUS
I called the emergency am· gram m Seattle, Washington.
bulance as I didn't know what Smce so many people there
else to do. They came about know how to apply chest com·
10' mmutes later and un· pression the death rate from
mediately started trymg to heart attacks of that sort has
get his heart to beat again dropped to half of what it us·
With chest pressure. They ed to IJe.
contmued this and moved
Yes, 11 IS possible that you
him to the hospital but 1t was could have helped your hus·
too late and he was dead band If you had known how
when he got to the hospital
to apply heart compr.esswn
Since then I have had a through the chest and provtde
thousand questions. He artificial c1rculatwn and
wasn't really fat but he had resp1ra lion you rmght have
picked up some weight smce kept hun m good conditiOn un·
he was in hts early 30s He til the emergency ambulance
didn't do much exerciSe and arnved.
I am sending you The
he did smoke. Shouldn't there
have been some warning if Health Letter number 7-4,
his heart was really that bad • Save a Life: Heart and Lung
The other thing that really Arrest so you can read about
bothers me IS the naggmg the emergency method you
feeling that I rmght have been could have used Others who
able to do something while I want this mformatwn can
was wa1ting for the am· send 50 cents w1th a long,
bulance. Could f have saved stamped, self·addressed
hts life? If so please sayso It envelope for 1\. Just send
might help some other wife your request to me m care of
and spare her the angwsh thiS newspaper, P.O. Box
and tonnent I have had smce 1551, Radio C1ly Station, New
then. Do you have any m· York, NY 10019.
While you can read and
formation on what a person
can do when something like understand about the method
m thiS 1ssue I would also
that 'happens•
I thought I read some place recommend that you contact
that in a city somewhere in your local chapter of the
the United States all the peo- American Heart Assocmtwn
ple !mow how to prov1de first and see tf you can take a
aid to a heart attack victun L-ourse 10 saving lives this
and the number of people's way. Because of the frequen·
lives that were saved was cy of heart attack deaths m
our country I really think
'C» •s qwte remarkable.
i
AR READER - To everyone should learn how to
emergency
IJegm with in most cases of provide
heart attacks the first symp- assistance, and I urge all my
tom of anything bemg wrong readers to make the effort to
the heart attack 1tself Un- learn how.
fortUI)IItely ahoul, half of
•

No one was mjured m eight
traffic accidents investigated
over the weekend by the
Gallia·Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 8:50
a.m. Saturday on SR 7, seven
tenths of a mile north of
Gallipohs where an auto
dr1ven by Lewis V. Mueller,
82, Point Pleasant, backed
into a veh1cle operated by
George L. Sheets, 62,
Gallipolis.
There was
moderate damage.
Mueller was cited to
Municipal Court for unproper
back mg.
Lawrence A. Mitchell, 78,
Galhpohs, was cited for
failure to yield following an
acc1dent at 9:37 a.m.
Saturday on SR 7, in Clay
Twp.

Officers said the Mitchell
car made a left turn mto the
path of a car operated by
Eddie A. Belville, 31, Rt. I,
Crown City.
David R. Altizer, 28,
Thunnan, was charged With
unproper backing following
an accident at 9:40 a.m. on
SR 325, f1ve tenths of a mile
north of CR 6.
The patrol sa1d the Alt1zer
vehicle struc~ a car operated
by Charles E. Dailey, 24,
Patriot.
No one was injured or c1ted
m a collision between two
pick-up trucks at 9:15 p.m.
Saturday on SR 141, two miles
north olthe Lawrence County
line.
State Troopers sa1d a
cutting bar on a mower on the
bed of a truck operated by
Buel T. Worley, 64, Pedro,
struck the s1de of a truck
operated by Ansel B. Cross,
31, Middleport. There was
mmor damage.
A single car accident oc·
curred at 11 p.m Saturday on
CR 31 in Meigs County where
Debra M. Flemming, 20,
Long Bottom, swerved her
car to avo1d striking an
animal in the roadway. Her
car ran off the roadway into a
tree There was moderate
damage.
A deer was killed in an
acmdent at 7:45a.m. Sunday
on SR 7, two tenths of a mile
from CR lo in Ohio Twp.
The patrol said the animal
ran into the path of a car
dr1ven bY Patsy R. Bennett,
38, Ga Uipolis. There wsa

t

moderate damage.
An unusual acc1dent oc·
curred at 9:48am. Sunday on
SR 160, five te~ths of a mile
north ol US 30 where the
muffler came off a car dr1ven
by Samuel R. Long, Jr , 22,
Gallipolis, striking the gas
tank and rupturing It.
John J
Blake, 48,
Pomeroy, was charged with
failure to stop within the
assured clear distance
following an accident at noon
Sunday on US 33, south of SR
7 in Meigs County.
The patrol reported the
Blake car struck the rear end
of an auto operated by
George C. Holter, 60, Rt. 1,
Mmersv11le.

Regatta weekend
action pictures .

cops
SEOGA
tournament
Marietta captured 1ts 19th
Southeastern Ohto Golf
Assoc1at1on Tournament over
the weekend at Cambridge
and Cambridge's Wilbur
Jerles claimed medalist
honors with a 73-73- 146.
Ten teams took part m the
53rd annual event. Gallipolis
finished fifth this year With a
950 team total.
Durmg pro-am play on
Friday, Hocking Hills duo
Rick Engle and Gene
Charney captured top honors
with a 68.
Following the two·day
team tournament Sunday,
Steve Blowers, Gallipolis,
won closest to the pin ( 11" )
honors. Ironton's John Gaga1
captured longest drive hmlors
with a 185-yard shot.
Athens' Dale Bandy, OU
basketball coach, shot a
11
hole-in-one" on the No. 8
hole Sunday.
Here's Galhpolis' m·
dividual scores and fmall977
team standings:
GALLIPOLIS SCORES
Blowers
7~1 -15-1
Conley
77-79-156
Pope
78-81-159
Ellis
82· 79-161
Matthews
83-79-162
Valentme
114-78-162
Clarke
87-88--175
Hager
87.$- 176
Fenderbosch
96-93-189
TEAM STANDINGS
TEAM
SCORE
Marietta
907
Cambridge
917
Pwkaway
929
Chillicothe
946
Gallipolis
950
Ironton
967
Athens
969
Hocking Hills
971
Lancaster
1023
Fa1rgreens
1027

Pitching, defense name BASEBALL
of game--Jeff Torborg
Jeff

Torbor1,
named
ol the Cleveland
lndlmla after Frank Robinson

manaeer

was fired Sunday, the name
of the game ts pitching and
defense,
"I was born and raised in

Martin is
washed up
'

/

NEW YORK (UP!) -Billy dugout wiih Martin haVll11! o.o
Martin ts all ftnimed with the be restrained from going
Yankees.
after Jackson by Berra and
They'Rrnake it official with fellow coach Elston Howard.
a formal announcement in
The episode didn't sit well
another dlly or 80 at which with either Steinbrenner or
time Yotli Berra wW be Paul. And three straight
!limed the Yankees' new losses to the Red Sox, capped
by Sunday's 11·1 nose·
manager.
It will be tile second Ume rubbing, only made matters
around for him, having led worse.
Martin becomes the fifth
tbe Yanb to a pennant the
maj&lt;r
league manager to be
only year he hlndled them Jn
fired
this year, joining
19M.
Johnny
McNamara, Joe
Martin hu been skatinl! on
thin Ice for the past five Frazier, Jack McKeon and
weeka when owner George Frank Robi!L'Ion, all let go
Steinbrenner came close to within a period of less than
firing him over differences four weeks.
Martin has now managed
with the front office. Gabe
four
different clubs - Min·
Paul, the Yankees' pt'esident,
nesota,
Detroit, Texas and
saved Marlin's job roc him
the
Yankees
and
then, but even Paul couldn't
difficulties
with
the
front
help him this time.
The final straw was the office cost him his job each
blowup in Boston between time.
Nobody questions his
Martin and slugger Reggie
Jacklon Saturday during a managerial ability, but
ballprne at Fenway Park everybody questions his
seen by millions on national ability to get along with those
TV. The two men nearly who pay his salary, hiS
came to blOwll in the Yankee bosses.

THESE ARE THE BIG BEND REGATTA Majorette Queens ui the younger age groups
selected at the annual regatta baton tw1rling contest Sunday. From the left are Arnie
Bariow Stocker, PariS, Ky., o.&lt;; years; Melissa Carpenter, Rt. 5, Parkersburg, 7-ll and Mona
lilllUllons, Sutton, W. Va . 9-10.

New manager
congratulated
CLEVELAND (UP!) Jeff T&lt;rborg got a pbone call
Immediately after his
success(ul managerial debut
Sunday. It was from Frank
Roblneon.
"Frank jllll called, con·
gratulated me and said nice
going," laid Tocborg, who
took over as manager of the
Cleveland Indians when
Roblnaon was fired Sunday.
He went on to guide the Tribe
to 1 4-2 and 4-0 doubleheader
sweep over the Detroit

LARGE TROPHIES PRESENTED- Mrs Judy Riggs, left, director of the annual B1g
Bend Regatta Baton Twirling Contest, presents large trophies to the four high point girls m
the day long compehtion.Rece1vmg the awards from Mrs. R1ggs from the left are Lisa
Bradshaw, West Portsmouth, 15-20 years; Lori Mitchell, 11-14, West Portsmouth; M1ssy
Carpenter, Parkersburg, 7-10, and Jennifer Martin, Woodsfield, 0-&lt;i years.

Tigers.
"I was really excited and

the boys really put out," said
Tocborg. "We did everything
right.

"The thought of belqg
manager hasn't hit me yet
and I didn't realize how a
manager 'lf88 involved in
every pitch," added Torborg.
Wayne Garland went aU the
way to notch his third victory
in 10 deciJioos In the opener
and Jim Bibby tossed a
e&lt;mplete game and shu~ut
in the nightcap, despite
giving up nine walks and only
four hfts. ·
·"Bibby
was
really
struggling. I think he threw
166 pitches but I am going to
stay with my pitchers as long
as I can," said Torborg.
"I look at a pitcher like a
catcher does and I want to
give
that
pitcher
cmfldence," added Tocborg,
wbo made two trips to the
mowid1o talk to Bibby during
the game.

I

TRAVELING FARTHEST -Winning a trophy lor traveling the most distance to take
According to unofficial
part m the Big Bend Regatta Baton Twirling Contest were, I to r , George Koczon, Diana
reports, the union employees
11.oczon, Mrs. Judy Riggs, contest director who presented them an award, and Momca
are seeking an mcrease in
Koczon. The Koczons traveled 417 miles fonn Cheektowago, N.Y., to the local contest
wages, vacations and a better
ASK TOWED
procedure regarding over·
A marriage hcense was tune hours.
1ssued to Robert Ray RamsThe Federal Mogul plant
burg, 22, Rt. 1, Middleport, manufactures gears for
and Christy Day Hysell, 19, hydraulic transmissiOns.
Rt. 2, Pomeroy
Company off1cials could not
he reached for comment this
BAND TO MEET
morning.
RACINE - Southern Band
Plant
Manager
Ed
Boosters Will meet Tuesday McGovern and Personnel
at 7:30 p.m m the home Manager Maggie Hirner
econom1cs room at the high were both in conference.
school.
Meanwhile, a p1cket line
also went up this morning at
Jones Boys Country Store
located on Pme St. m
BAILEYS NOTED
Gallipolis and Pomeroy's
Ted Bailey, 37, Route 1, West Main St.
Gallipolis, who was charged
With DWI following an ac·
Mr.
James
Stiffler,
cident in Gallia County last president. told this news·
week, is not Ted Ba1ley, 31, paper this morning he had no
Cadmus, son of Otis Bailey of statement other than that the
Me~gs County.
Tones Boys Country stores
are open lor business and the
TilE Do\ILV SENTINEL
public is welcome. The
DEVOTED T0111.E
Gallipolis
strike involves 36
INTERFSTOF
union employees, all mem·
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHIU..
hers
of Local 347, AFI.rCIO,
El.tt. Ed .
Food Store Employees Union.
ROBERT HOEFUCH
City Editor
The union was organized at
?ubli.shed dally except Saturday
Jones Boys m March, 1977.
by The Otuo Vlllley Publishing Com·
any, Jll Court St, Pomeroy, Oh1o
According to a un1on
45769 Busmess Of!tce Phone 992:
spokesman,
the membership
2156 Ed1tonal Phone991-2157
$e(:onr.l chtss porstawe pond 11.L
set a deadline for the com·
Pomeroy, Ohio
pany to come to an
National advertising repn=senagreement on a master
Uitive W11.rd Griffith Cmnpany
Inc, 8otUnelli and GuJW~~r DIY,
contract
but no such
1:11 Th1rd Ave , New York NY.
CASI'ING DERBY WINNERS- Salllrday morning the Ohio Department of Natural
been reached.
agreement
has
UI017
Resources,
DiviSion of Wildlife, conducted a casting derby on the Pomeroy tennis court. The
Subrn:npUon rates. Delivered by
The membership IS seeking
carrier where availilble ~ &lt;.:eni.S per .
)Vinners m the up-to-10 category, pictured front row, were J~y McDaniel, Route 4,
an mcrease in pay, holidays,
week By Motor Ruut.e where camf:lr
Pomeroy, f1rst; Jack Norman, Pomeroy, second, and Kelly Gmther, P!lllleroy, third.
servlt'e not avaUable, One month,
and hospitalization in·
$3.25 By \NUl Ln Ohio 11.nd W Va ,
Winners in the 10 and over category,l-r, center, were Bryan Betzing, Pomeroy, first; Jeff
surance. Another clause in
One Year, $2200 Sax months,
Roush, Letart, W. Va., second, and Joe Powell, Middleport, third. Conducting the derbY
the new contract involves the
Jll :;.o, Three months , 17 00 ,
were,l-r,
Andy E. Lyles, Meigs County game protector; Jon Yates, education otrlcer from
Ebewhere $26 00 year , S1s munlh5
elimmation of lie detector
$13 50, Three months. 17 .~0
Xenia,
and
Ted Dean, educallonal officer from the Athens office. All of the 37 boyK and girls
tests. Jack Brooks is the
SuhstTipUon ttriCc mclulkS Sunday
taking
part
in the derby were given packets offishing equipment.
•
1 unt!i.SC::;"'":;':;'':__ _ _ _-..J union pres1dent.
v
~
~

Bibby, now 64 for the
season was happy with
Torborg's decision. "I was a
bit tired but when Torborg
left me in he installed a lot of
confidence in me and I like
that," he said.
Andre Thornton and
Larvell Blanks supplied the
offensive punch in the opener
while Ray Fosse's run·
scoring double triggered a
four-run fifth inning that gave
Bibby all the nins he needed
tn tile finale.
Thornton, who drove in two
runs and has sent 10 runs
across the plate since being
inserted in the starting line·
up last Tuesday, hit his
seventh homer with one out m
the fourth and' Blanks sent a
John Hiller last ball into the
left field seats one out later.
Paul Dad singled home
Frank Duffy in the f1fth and
Thornton's infield single
scored Dade with the final
Cleveland rlUI m the seventh
that gave Hiller his seventh
loss in 11 decisions.
The victory was the fourth
straight lor the Indians after
losing four and moved the
Tribe into fourth place of the
American League East for
the first time since April 23.
Tocborg said at a Sunday
morning news conference,
"Now maybe we will see how
dumb I am. Also, it will be
pitching and defense that will
win for us."
Today, Torborg is still a
smart man.

Indians react with
relief, some sorrow

"

CLEVELAND (UPI) Cleveland Indians reacted
with relief and 10me sorrow
Sunday after I~ that
manager Frank Robinson
had gotleli the ax.
Utility Infielder Larvell
Blanks, a thorn in Robinson's
side the entire season,
admitted the problem wasn't
Robinlon - but himself.
"I realize now that my
problem was npt Frank
Rob inion," said Blanks, who
has seen limited action. "I
just felt I wasn't playing
enough because there are
t*taiD lt!JIIIlations In my
contract that if I don't
accm~pllm them I don't get
what'a comlnc lo me.
"I felt I wun't playing
l!llllllllh. But with Frank. gone
now, 1 feel like I have a new
leue Cllllle.l probably could
have aettled my problems by
go~ 111ralght to (VIce Pres!·
dent~•al Manager) Phil

firing would create "a new
atmosphere here."
Second baseman Duane
Kupier was surprised by
Robinson's ouster and said
"our loyalty now 1s to
Tor borg.
.1
"Frank bad a meeting wi\11
us," Kupier sa1d. "He shook
everybody's hand and left

1

,,

Tuppers Plains
T -ball team wins
TUPP.ERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains T-Ball team
defeated Coolville T-Hall
June 14 by a score of 26 to 13.
Home runs were hit by J .
Caldwell, B. Durst, L.
Spencer, C. Jones and M.
Weber. Others hitting safely
were J. Myers, A. Tnpp, C
Spencer, C. Smclair. A.
Connolly, E. Sams, E. Bailey,
S. Fitch, S. Bennett, M.
Halley .

Natlon•l Lugue
Eul
W L Pet. GB
Chicago
39 22 639
34 28 s•e 5' •
Ph1la
Sl LOUIS
3' 2'1 .540 6
P11tsbgt1
32 2'1 525
27 3-4 .1143 12
Montreal
28 36 m 121 ,
N~w York

conb'ol,led up to the decision
that Phil and I made to
replace him."
The Indians, 26-31 this
season going into Sunday's
twin-bill against the Detro1t
Tigers, finished fourth the
hrst two years Robinson
managed the club. They were
eight games out of first place
in the American League East
prior to the double-l!eader
against the T1gers.
Torborg, the 29th manager
of the Cleveland franchise,
happy about his new job
noted, however that he didn't
like the idea of getting it at
Robinson's expense.
"You know how I feel about
Frank," said Torborg. "It's
good to be a manager, but I
would have hoped that it
would have happened under
better circumstances
"Frank has helped me a lot
the past three seasons and we
have gotten along well. I hate
to see him leave the club this
way. It's a good opportunity
for me, but I didn't want it to
be at Frank's expense."
Torborg caught two nohitters With the Dodgers and
one with the Ang~ls. putting
him one short of the major
league record - the four
games caught by Ray Schalk.

~;..~·~
~'t

Sport Parade

,,..
~

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporl8 Editor

M
'~··~

'

West
W. L

Los Ang
Ci ne•
San Fran
San Drego
Houston
Atlanta

43
34
31
31
27
23

22
28

35
Jll
39
43

Pet. GB
661
548
.470
.449
.409
348

7' '"

12 11
14
16 1• l
20 1 ~

Saturday's Ruuns
C1nc1nnat1 6, Montreal 0
Houston 4, New York. 3
San Fran 7, Plttsbgh 5, 12 Inns
Ph ila 8, Atlanta 5, 12 Inns
Los Angeles 2, Chicago 1
San Diego 41 St LOUIS 1
Sund1y's Results
Montreal 8, C1ncmnat• 4
New York 8, Houston 2
Ph•ladelphia 4, Atlanta 2
Los Angeles 3, Ch lcaoo I
San Diego 6, Sf LOUIS 2
San Fran 8, Pittsburgh 0. 1st
San Fran 8, Pittsburg !"I 6, 2nd
Today's Probable P1tchers
(All T1mes EDT)
Houston ( R!chard S 6) at
Montreat (Brown 4-4) , 7 35 p m
Atlanta (Leon 2~ 2 1 at New
York (Matla ck 3 7). 8 05 p m
Crncmnati (Norman 7 21 at
Philadelph ia tKaat 1 51. 8 40
pm
Ch1cago (!!I urns 8 6) at s an
Franc•sco {Barr e Sl. 8 40 p m
Pittsburgh (Jones 2 2) at San
Diego {Shirley 6 6), 10 p m
St LOUIS (Falcone 2 5) at los
Angeles ( Rhoden 9-J l. 10 30
pm
Tuesday's Games
Houston at Montreal, n1ghl
Atlanta at New York. n•ght
C•ncmnat1 at Phil a, n rght
St LOUIS at LOS Ang, n1ght
P1ttsburgh at San D rego, n 1ght
Chicago at San Franc•sco , n1ght
Am~rican

Boston
Balt•mre
New York
Clevelnd
Milw
Detro it
Toronto

Linescores
Ma1or League Results
By United Press International
National League
Cinci
000 12() 001 - 4 7 0
Mntral
001 700 OOx - 8 10 0
Fryman, Hume (4), Capdla
(5). Murray f7l and Bench ,
Twitchell, Stanhouse (6l and
Carter w- TWitchell. 1 5 L Fryman, 2 5 HRs- Montreal,
Carter
( 11 J,
OBiWSOn
( 6),
Valent ine (11).

League
East
W L. Pet. GB
37 25 597
35 28 556
2 11~
36 19 55.4
21h
28 31 475
7112
31 35 470 8
27 35 .435
91h
2.4 37 393 12'12

West

W . L Pet .
Chicago
35 27 565
Mlnn
36 28 563
Calrf
31 30 508
Kan Crly
Jl 31 500
Texas
JO 30 500
Oakland
28 311 452
Seattle
JO 39 435
Saturday•s Results
Clevelan d 5, Detro1t 4
Boston 10, New York A
Ch rcago 2, Oakla nd 0
Balt1more .4, Toronto 2
Milwaukee 4 , Cat1forn•a 1
Kansas Crty 2, Mlnnesola 1

Houston
001 000 100-- 2 6 3
NY
01301030x- 8141
Andujar , Larson (6), Samb•to
(1), McLaughlm (8) and Herr
mann, swan and Stearn s w ~
Swan, 4-5 l - Andu[ar, 8 4 HRs
- New
York, Boisclair (3),
Stearn s (8)

GB
3'h
4

4
7

av.

Seattle 6, TelCas 1, 10 rnns

(6)

Sunday'5 Results
Cleveland .4, Oetro1t 2. lsl
Cleveland .4, Oetro rt 0, 2nd
Chicago 2, Oakland 1 1S t
Chicago 5, Oakland 1 2nd
Boston 11 , New York 1
Toronto 7, Ball•more 1
Calrforn1a 7, Milwaukee 0
Kansas C1ty 8. Mmnesota 7
Seattle 2. Texas 1
Todav's Probable P•lchers
(All Times eon
Cleveland (F•tzmorr1s 2 .4) at
Toronto (.By rd 0 0), 7 30 p m
Boston (Wrse 3 2) at Ba l
t rmore (R May 9-5) , 7 30 p m
New York (Gullett 6 2) at
Oetrort (F•drych 3 2), 8 p m
seat11e (Wheelock 3-6) at
Kansas City {Leonard .4 7), 8 30
pm
Texas
(Marshall
1 2)
at
Minnesota (Thormodsgard 4 31,
8 30 p m
Oakland (Langford 4 5&gt; at
Chrcago (Knapp 5 31 , 8 30 p m
Tuesday's Games
Seatt le atKan C1ty, nrght
TeKas at Mmnesota . n1ght
Oakland~~ Ch •cego, n1ght
New York at Oetro•t. n•ght
Cleveland at Toronto. n1ght
Boston at Ba!trmore. n1ght
Oakland at Milwaukee, nfght

(2nd game)
Ptsbgh
002 002 200- 6 12 1
San Frn
500 000 21K- a 11 0
Demery , Forster ( 1 ,, Tekulve
(6), Jackson (7)
and Ott .
Williams , Heaverlo (6), Moffrtt
( 8 ) and Sadek W- Heaverlo, 2
o
L - Jackson.
o 1
HRsPittSburgh , Ott (3), Parker
(1 0) San Franc1sco, Evans (6).
Sa dek (1)

International League
United Press International
W. L. Pel. GB
Pawtucket
40 21 .656
Cha rleslon
35 28 556 6
Rochesler
33 30 .524 8
R&gt;ehmond
30 28 517 8'12
Tidewater
29 28 .50? 9

Atlanta
000 000 011- 2 6 l
Phlla
121 QOO oox- 4 10 o
Hargan. Collrns {3), Capra
C6J , Campbell (BJ and Correll.
Carlton and McCarver
wCarlton, 9 3 l-Hargan, 0 1
Chrcgo
010 000 00()---c 1 .4 0
Los Ang
100 011 oox- a 6 o
R Reuschel, Hernandez (3),
P Reuschel (7) and M rtter
wald, Sw•sher (3), Sutton and
Oates
W- Sutton,
82
LHernandez, 3 2 H R- Los An
geles, Lacy (3), Cey (16)

St L
001 000 001- 2 5 0
San Ogo
501 000 OOx - 6 7 2
Forsch', Metzger (5), Hra
bosky
(8)
and
S1mmons ,
Owchinko, Sprllner
(9) and
Davis W-Qwch mko. 2 1 L Forsch, 8 4 HR-San Drego,
W.nf1eld CUJ
llst game)
Ptsbg h
San Frn

000 000 ooo- o 5 1
101 031 llx - 8 12 0
Rooker and Dyer . Knepper
and Alexander . W-Knepper. 1
1 L - Rooker. 55
HRs- San
Francrsco. Thomas (l ), Clark

Amer.can League

Syracuse

(1st Game)

Det
000 000 02o-- 2 8 0
Cleve
000 210 10)( - 4 9 1
H1ller , Gnlfl (ll) and May ,
Garland and
Kendall
w......
Garland, 3 7 L- H IIIer, 4 7
HRs- Cieveland, Thornton ( 7),
Blanks (3) Oetrort , Staub (6)
(2nd game)
Det
000 000 ooo- 0 4 0
Cleve
000 0.40 OOK - 4 6 0
Arroyo, Crawford and Wack
enfuss. B1bby and Fosse wBibby, 6-4 L-Arroyo, 54
&lt;1st game)
Oaklnd
000 010 ooo- 1 52
Chicgo
010 010 OOx - 2 3 3
Norris. Lacey (6 ) and San .
gu•llen , wood, LaGrow (9) and
Ess•an. w - wood,
11
LNorr 1S, 2 2. H Rs -Ch icago, L
Johnson 2 (51

Toledo

28 38 467 11•12

27 38 415 15
Columbus
21 38 356 18
Sunday's Results
Tidewater 8 Columbus 7, 10
mnings
Syracuse 3, Richmond 2. 10
mmngs
Pawluckel 4, Charleston 2
Toledo

·a2

::?.~

*' ' ~

I:m
·::::\

v

ooo ooo-

have ever seen."

Green listened quietly as Tatum spoke
He looked as 11 he wished he could forget the whole thing
Jones and 15 other members of the Tulsa pollee force had
brought him to the press tent and they were w1th h1m when he
left to escort him to the clubhouse.
While he had little to say over the way he actually felt about
the threat on hiS life, the J().year-&lt;Jld Alabaman held nothing
back about h1s leelmgs commg to the 18th with a two-strol\e
lead over Graham, already in the clubhouse.
"I thought I had 1t all wrapped up ," he smd. "I smd don't hit
it in the left bunker, don 't play tt m the right bunker Bogey 1s
all you need, that's all. I h1t a real good dr1ve and after my
second shot went into the rough, I sa1d to myself, don't knock
the bali into the left bunker. So you know where I hll 11 ?"
Into the left bunker.
He carne out qu1ckly, too quickly it seemed and while h1s shot
landed on the green, 1t still was 30 feet from the hole. That's
where he putted short and lefth1mself fourfeetaway.
''I wa$n't Cool Hand Luke out there," Green laughed.
Green told hunself to make sure he took his putter bac·k
slowly as he stood over that 4-footer on the 18th He stroked the
ball smartly and it went into the cup.
Nonetheless he admitted "chokmg."
" I did choke," hesa1d. "!bogeyed the la•t hole."
Hubie Green shouldn 't have apologized for that.
He didn 't have to

27

SPECIAL NOTE
There will he a special
meeting of the Meigs
Countians for Wildlife
Conservation tonight at
7: 30 at the new Coonhun·
ters' clubhouse at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
Everyone interested ln
preserving "lldllfe and
combatting anti-hunters
and anti-trappers is urged
to attend.

52
14 0
and
and
L-

Mmn
000 010 402- 7 9 2
Kan C1ty
210 012 101- 8 15 0
Goltz, Burgmeier (7),
T
Johnson (1), 0
Johnson (8)
and Borgmann , Wynegar , Has
ster, Mlngori (?), l•ttell {7),
Gur;a (9) a lid Porter , Mart1nez
W- Gura , 4 3 L- 0 Johnson. 1
1

\

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WED., JUNE22
6 &amp;8 P.M .
FAIRGROUNDS

"Frogs Are Knee Deep In Falls City"

Calft
700 000 000- 7 9 I
M 1l w
000 000 00()--&lt;- 0 6 0
Tanana and H u m J) h r e y .
Haas. Rodr1guez (1), Ca ldwell
(5 ), H1nds (7) , McClure (9) and
Moore w- Tanana , 11 .3 L Haas , 4· 4

{ 14)

Ca l 1 81. Blyleven , Tex 2 IJ
Gurdry, N Y 2 51 , Ryan , Cal
2 63 , Slaton, M il 2 64
Str i keouts
NaUonal League Rogers, Mtl
96 , N1 ekro. A1! 94 ; Koo sman ,
NY 85 ~eaver , Crn and Hal 1tk1,
SF 80
Amencan League Ryan , Ca l
167 , Tanana, Cal 117 , Palmer ,
Bait and Blylev en, Te~t 93 ,
Eckersley, Clev and Leonard .
KC 77

10, Rochester 6

o

Seattle
000 001 001- 2 7 0
TelCas
000 001 000- 1 50
Segu1, Ramo (6) af1d Stmson ,
Perry , Lmdblad {9) and S1.,1nth
berg W- Romo, 4 .4 L- Perry ,
6 6 HR - Seattle. Ru
Jones

Mil tor LPilgue Leaders
By Un1ted Press lnternatlonil l
8i11111n9
(based on lSO at balsl
Nat 1onat League
G AB H Pel
Tr1IIO (h i
60 '212 19 373
Parke-r P•t
61 '2.48 91 367
LUllnSkl PP'lll
S4 207 10 338
Tcmpltn St L
58 2A8 81 331
Valntn~. MU
551.27 74 316
Stennett P1t
58 221 7') 316
S•mmoos St L
57 210 68 324
Gr,tfey Cm
62 257 83 323
Rose C•n
62 245 78 318
Morales Ch1
sa 211 67 318
Amencan L ea gue
G AB H Pet
Carew M l'1
62 255 97 .380
Frsk Bos
60 212 74 349
Bostock, M•n
60 225 78 3.41
Single-ton Bal
54 1~1 66 )46
B.:ulor Tor
.49 1(16 61 328
Yas Bos
S9' 222 11
R•vers NY
58 229 74 313
Poauet KC
45 161 5/ 323
Burleson Bos
57 240 77 311
A Woods Tor
43 153 49 320

A thought for the day lnsh
novelist George Moore sa1d,
"Alter all, there is but one
race - humamty."

N
oto
1 3
Boston
001 411 lJlC- 11 14 1
Figueroa , Clay (5), T1drow
(7) and Munson, Jenkins and
Frsk
W- J enklns, 6 5
LFigueroa, 7 6
HRs- Boston,
Doyle (1), Carbo (6}, R1ce (16).
Yastrzemski (13), Scolt (l8J

000 100 000- I
001 022 20x- 7
, Drago (6)
e m a n c zy k
:~~~:ga~ -:- L emanczyk , 516

Leaders

TULSA, Okla. (UPI) - Of all the counUess thousands of
putts he has sunk in his seven years as a professiOnal, none
ever gave Hubert Green the degree of satiSfaction th1s one d1d
- or more of an empty feelmg
Here he was the new U.S. Open Champion, w1th his first
maJor title ever, the one every golfer dreams of, and he wasn't
n•
even able to enjoy it.
He had just knocked m a diffiCult 4-footer on the final hole ,
one of those character-builders, which separate the hon·
hearted from the chickenhearted, and he was a l-&lt;;troke wmner
over Lou Graham as well as being $45,000 ncher, only he didn't
Home Runt
Nattonat League Burroughs,
look that way at aU.
anQ Fos ter , Cln 1(1, Cey, 16,
Green stood a foot or so from where h1s ball shlllay m the AH
Sm1th, LA . L u z 1 n s k r and
cup after he holed tt out, and from the tight, almost sad Schm1dl, Ph1l 15
L!:!ague : Scott, Bos
expression on his face, you'd have thought he was a loser 18 American
. R rce, Bos, Zlsk , Chi and
instead of the winner.
Hrsle, Mrnn 16, Gross, Oak 15
Runs Batted In
Awoman's telephone call m1ght have had a lot to do w1th the
League . Burrough s,
way Green felt although he did everythmg he could later to AtlNa56t.onal
, Foster. Cin and Cey. LA
55, Garvey , LA 53. Winfteld.
brush 1t off.
51
"I'd rather not go into 1t, if you don't mind," he said later. SDAmer1can
Lugue
HtSie,
"There was nothing I could do about it. It was out of my Mmn 60 , RUdl, Cal 53 ,
Yastrzemskl, Bos 47 ; Munson ,
hands."
NY and Ru Jones, Sea .4.4
What happened was that a clerk m the Oklahoma City office
of the FBI had received a call from a woman who did not
Stolen Bases
identify herself while Green was playmg the loth hole during
National League
Taveras.
Sunday's final round at Southern Hills here .
Prtt 28 , Morgan, Cin, Cabell
She told the FBI clerk she had three men friends who were in a nd Cedeno, Hou 23. Royster,
Atl and Rt ch ards, SO 21
trouble, and the reason she was calling was because she
American League · Remy , Cal
wanted to save them from further trouble They were on their 22 . Patek, KC 19 Norr is, Clev
17 , Bonds , Cal IS, LeFlore , Det
way to Tulsa to shoot Hub1e Green on the 15th green
and R1vers. NY 14
All this was revealed after Green had won , not by Green
himself, but by Sandy Tatum, v1ce president of the USGA and
Pitch ing
chairman of its champiOnship committee.
Most Victones
Nallonal League R Reusche l,
Tatum S8ld hiS people were mformed of the threat on
Ch1 9 2.
Rhoden, LA and
Green's life by Lt Charles Jones of the Tulsa police, and they Carlton.
Phil 9 3. Sutton, LA 8
were faced with Ule diff1cult deciston - "Hobson 's chmce," 2. Billingham and Seaver. Crn
8 3, Andu Jar , Hou and Forsch ,
Tatum called 1t - of whether to tell Green about it or not.
Stl 8 .4 , Rogers. Mtl and Barr ,
"We decided Hub1e ought to !mow what we knew," sa1d SF 8 5 Burr 1$, Ch1 8 6
Amer1can League
Tanana .
Tatum.
11 3. R May , Bait 9. 5,
Green was informed betore teeing off on the 15th hole, which Cal
Ryan , Cal 9.6 , Palmer , Batt 8
6, n.ne p1tcher s Ir ed with seven
he parred.
"Hub1e was something else," sa1d Tatum, talking about the VICfOr feS
way Green accepted the news. '·There wasn 't a flicker except
Earned Run A\lerage
for that marvelous sense of humor he has There was no
on 63 mnings p1lch ed)
hesitation on Hubie Green 's part whatsoever He simply went (based
Nallonal League · Cand elan a,
over and hit a drive on the 15th and when he carne to the loth Pill 2 06 , Rogers, Mtl 2 46
green, he hit an absolutely perfect putt. I think tt was one of the Frngers. SO 2 51. R Reuschel ,
Ch1 2 57 , Sutton. LA 2 58
most remarkable exhibitions of grace under pressure that I
Amencan League
Tanana ,

&lt;2nd game)
Oaklnd
000 100 ODO- 1 7 0
ChiCQO
000 400 10K- 5 9 0
Med•ch , Torrealba (4), Cote .
man (8) and Newman , Barnas
and oowmng W- Barr los, 6 3
L - Med•ch , 5·3 HR - Ch rcago,
Orta (7 )

Bait
Tronto
Flanagan,
Dempsey , L

!Ike a pure man."

Buddy Bell, who recently
left the club lor a game
because of the turn\o1l in the
clubhouse, said ''it has been a
tough season so far.
"Sometimes, changes have
to be made," said the all-star
third baseman. "It's too bad
that the manager always has
to be in the middle."
Designated-hitter Andre
-rlK.iiiton, who alao doubles
as a utiUty infielder, now has
played foc SIX managers in
4'h years.
"I kind of feel sorry for a
guy that has to be fired like
that," he said. "It's a tough
SesJII."
Rico cart.J, fined f!,OOO by job. I feel that since I've been
Roblneon lor lnlubordlnaUon In Cleveland I've been
recently, aald Robinson's b'eated fairly."
I

the Dodger organiulllon and
they lived and died bY it and I believe in it," said
Torborg, whose first priority
will be to "get the pitching
staff straightened out "
"We just haven't gotten
any consistency out of the
pitchmg staff," said Torborg,
at 35 now the youngest
manager in the majors. "We
felt going into the season we
had as good a pitching staff
as there was m the league."
But lousy throwing, along
with ineffective hitting, has
been the downfall of the club
and of Robinson, who when
hired in 1974 to pUot the Tribe
became major league
baseball first black manager.
Today he is the first and
only black manager to be
fired.
Former bullpen coach Tor·
borg, picked to manage the
Tr1be through the 1978
season, says he will "try to do
my own thing.'
"I'll just do what I feel,"
SBld the former catcher who
spent 10 seasons m the
majors, seven w1th Los
Angels and three with the
California Angels.
Robmson, n, seemed
relaxed after being told of his
doom.
"The hardest thing about
managing is walking away
from it," he said, adding that
when he took the job he knew
he could be f1red, "but not
this soon.
"It just wasn't to be," said
Robinson. "I have no regrets.
I can look m the mirror at
myself and !mow that I did
the best I could."
The decision to unload
Robinson, according to
Indians' President Ted Bonda
and VIce President-General
Manager Phil Seghi - who
has been at odds with
Robinson for more than a
year - was promted by a
number of things, primarily
recent "uneasiness and
unrest" amongst the players.
"The Cleveland Indians
have decided, for what we
consider the best mterests of
the team, to replace Frank
Robinson · as manager and
Jeff Tor borg has been named
manager of the team," Bonda
said.
Seghi sa1d the move would
"maintain the climate of our
ballclub," adding that
Torborg is "the type of man I
wanted down there (on the
held because he) probably is
closer to the ballplayers than
anybody I can think of."
"The feeling behmd it was
that Jeff has been with our
hallclub and we thmk he's a
very knowledgable man,"
added Seghi.
He declined to reveal the
contenders also considered as
replacements.
"I don't feel like I have
fa1led," sa1d Robinson , who is
hopmg to latch on with
another team in any pos11lon
- even des1gated hitter . "I
don'tfeel sorry. The team has
not failed and ne1ther have I.
I'm not a loser.''
The timing of h1s dismiSSal
surprised RoblllSOn, who said
he expecteed It after the
Tribe lost three games
recently to the Texas
Rangers. The club is
currently riding a tw"i!ame
win streak.
Robinson
even sa1d
Torborg, a personal friend
and a member of Robinson's
original staff since 1975,
would do a good job. "I wish
Jeff well," Robmson said. "I
wish the ballclub well, also ."
Bond a, who brought
Robinson back this season for
$80,000 just to manage after
he spent 1975 and 1976 as a
player-manager, S8ld some
of the players seemed to
resent Robinson.
"I had an intense desire lor
Frank to be suceessful,"
Bonda said. "I tho,ught he did
a good job as manager. But
conditions, some beyond his

M
~~~

··~

Malor LtltVt Stana1ngs

CLEVELAND (UP!) - To

:::::~

W~:~
•oday's
.;

By United Pren lntern•tion•l

Strikes
begin
A Gallipolis industrial !1nn
and the Jones Boys Stores in
Pomeroy and Gallipolis were
hit by strikes this morning
At 6 p m. Sunday, 200 union
employees of the Federal
Mogul Plant on Eastern Ave.
placed pwkets at hoth the
entrance and exists of the
plant.
The strikmg employees are
members of Local 1685
United Auto Workers Umon
of America. According to
some of the strikers, the
company's contract with the
union expired Fnday night
A tentallve agreement was
reached between the com·
pany and the union's
negotiating team but the
membership voted Sunday
not to accept the agreement.
The vote was said to have
been 99-64.

:t~~:~®;:f.~S;::&lt;JW.~-&amp;~~~f~@~~lliiW~i~~=~=~~:igf®.

:~ 'T'

Dtslributed by Marchi Dtstnbutmg. Inc ., Gallipolis,. 0 45631

'··

�~ - The

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, JWJe 20, 1977

complete
I Yankee sweep
homers in the opener as the ·
By BILL MADDEN
Indians presented new
UP! Sports Writer
In the American League Manager Jeff Torborg with a
the Boston Red Sox double success in his debut.
are proving to Billy Jim Bibby tossed a fourMartin they have a much hitter for the nightcap
while
Wayne
mightier weapon to otr- shutout
set their lack of pitching, Garland, now 3-7, won the
while the Chicago White Sox opener.
" Junkyard Gang" keeps Angels 7, Brewers 0:
Frank Tanana fired a sixwinning with "reclamation
hit shutout for his 11th victory
projects."
The Red Sox completed a and was helped by a seventhree-game sweep Sunday run first inning. Tanana, now
with an 11·1 rout of the 11-3, struck out eight and
Yankees, highlighted by walked three. Bobby Bonds,
home runs from Denny who was 6-for-10 in the three·
Doyle, Bernie Carbo, Carl game series, keyed the big
Yastrzemski, Jim Rice and · first irming with a bases·
loaded double .
George Scott.
And, oh yes, about that lack Royals 8, Twins 7:
John Mayberry's double .
of Soston pitching . Ferguson
with
none out in the ninth
Jenkins, the recipient of the
five homers, stopped the ' inning scored George Brett
Yankees on three hits in with the winning r\111, which
going the distance for his fifth
win.

I
I

"I still don't ihink they are
ever going to win the championship with a guy like (Bill)
Lee in the regular rotation,"
said Martin.
The five home runs gave
Boston a record 21 homers in
the , past five games,
suprassing the previous mark
set by the 19&gt;4 Giants and the
1963 Twins.
Meanwhile, the White Sox,
who simply refuse to bow to
their much-predicted demise,
swept a 2-1, 5-1 doubleheader
from the Oakland A's to take
a .002 percentage lead over
Minnesota in the AL West.
Kevin Be 11 hit a twwun
single and Jorge Orta belled
his seventh home run to key a
4-run, fourth inning in the
rughtcap forchicago, wh1le1n
the opener, Wilbur Wood, who
has been slowly making a
cO!neback from knee injury,
, gained his first victory since
May 9, 1976. Lamar Johnson
belted two solo homers and
Lerron LaGrow registered
his 11th save to support Wood.
"I was real happy with the
way the ball was moving for
me today," said Wood. ~~ rf I .
can go out there the next
couple of times and pitch this
way,l would say lam back."
Elsewhere in the American
League, Cleveland swept a 4·o, 4-2 doubleheader from
Detroit; California blanked
Milwaukee, 7~; KBilllas City
overhauled Minnesota, 8-7 ;
and -Seattle-ed_ged
- Texas, 2-1.
Indlano 4, 4 Tlgen, 2, 0:
- Ray Fosse's run-scoring
double triggered a four-run
fifth inning in the nightcap
and Andre Thornton and
Larvell Blanks slammed solo

Rocky
faces .·
decision

I

dropped the Twins out of first
place in the AL West .
Minnesota had !led the score
with two runs in the top of the
ninth 011 lUI RBI single by Rod
Carew and a sacrifice fly by
Larry Hisle.
Blue Jays 7, Oriole• 1:
John Scott had three hits,
including a tie-breaking
single in the third inning, to
help Toronto snap a six-game
losing
streak ,
Dave
Lemanczyk went the distance
lor his fifth victory.
Mariners 2, Rangers 1:
Ruppert Jones' two-&lt;&gt;ut,
9th-inning solo home run off
losing pitcher Gaylord Perry
lifted Seattle over ·the
Rangers. Enrique Romo, 4-4,
picked up the win in relief of
33-year-old Diego S&lt;!gui, who
went the first 5 1-3 innings for
Seattle.

Ellswlck was the winning
pitcher as he and reliever
Chinn fanned two and walked
live. Baird farmed fiv e a
walked just one , but that big
first inning was too much.
Terry Wall was th'e big stick
lor Meigs as he got two
singles, and Hamilton, Swain,
Winebrenner, Chuck Ken·
nedy, and Baird got the other
Meigs hits, all singles.
The second game of the
scheduled was called after
three innings due to rain, with
Meigs behind 4~ .
A
400 011 0---li 9 2
M
010 001 0- 2 7 2
Ellswick (WP), Chinn (7)
and Rose. Baird and Wall.
Meigs travelled to
Wellston Sunday to gain a
split, losing the first game 8-4
arid taking the second in
extra innings, 7-li. In that first
contest, again, the one big
inning was too much to
overcome as the hosts plated
five tuns in the second to give
pitcher Maerker the win.
Wellston got the five runs on

Only myself to blame--Rob by
Tribe still is in contention in per cent," he said. "Without
CLEVELAND (UP!) Frank Robinson, fired as the American League East, their effort, this could have
manager of the Cleveland Robinson said: "Who knows been a disaster."
Robinson said his successor
Indians, says he has only what's fair.''
·
"It
tOOk
me
a
little
off
and
he "have gone through a
himself to blame.
guard,"
Robinson
said
about
lot
together"
and he wishes
"I wouldn't do anything
being
WJioaded.
Torborg
nothing
but the
differently," Robinson said
He would have expected it best.
·
Sunday after he was replaced
"He did a tremendous job
by bullpen coach Jeff after the Indians lost three
Tor borg. "A long time ago I games recently to the Texas for nle," Robinson said, "He
said I wanted to do it my way. Rangers, but not after they helped a lot of players. He
Then if I got fired, then the dumped Detroit ,lor a two- was vei-y loyal."
About his future in
ooly person I could blame game winning streak moving
into Sunday's doubleheader baseball, Robinson said he
was my~lf ."
. would like to "catch on with
Robinson-, the major against tbe Tigel'!l.
Robinson also had nothing · another club" as soon as
leagues' first black manager,
possible in any capacity1
had indeed become the first but praise for his players.
"I appreciate their effort- adding that "it will ~ my
black manager to be fired .
Asked whether be felt the that they played; tried as choice if, and when, 1 want
dismissal justified since the hard as they could, gave 100 to ."

Steve Hargan lost In his first
appearance for Atlanta.
Giants 8-8, Pirates IHI:
Bob Knepper pitched a
fivehitter and Derrel Thomas
and Jack Cl~rk hit homers in
the first game lor the Giants,
who dealt Pittsburgh's Jim
Rooker his fifth setback. The
Giants completed the sweep
when Darrell Evans' twwun
homer in the seventh gave
them the lead and Randy
Moffitt protected it lor lhe

ADMIRAL
Takes the dampness out of
your basement or other
high moi stur e areas fOr
only penn ies a day In
operating cast. Shuts off
automatical ly.

final I 1-3 innings. Grant
Jackson was the loser.
Padres 6, Cards 2:
Rookie Bob Owchinko ,
aided by Dan SpiUner's ninthinning relief, allowed four
hits in 8 1-3 innings. The
Padres sent him off to a 5-0
lead in the first irming with
the key blow a two--tun triple
by Mike Champion. Bob
Forsch suffered his fourth
loss against eight victories
for the Cardinals.

Sports briefs.

Meanwhile, he can sit back,
relax and spend the $80,000
Vice President -General
Manager Phil Seghi's paying
Robinson for this season.
And while he does .
Robinson can think about the
tro~bles he 'd had with Seghl.
''I know Phil wasn't overly
joyed with me being here,"
Robinson related. "We tried
to work things out as best as
possible, but it didn't
work.''

DEHUMIDIFIERS

Dodgers stop Cubs 3~1,
increase lead over Reds
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Tom is teriific and
Cincinnati is a nice place, but
Don Sutton likes Los Angeles,
thank you.
That sums up the reaction
of star pitcher Don Suttort of
the Dodgers to the presence
or the former four-time rogame winner of the Mets,
Tom Seaver, on the two-time
world champioo Reds.
"We're 71'. games in front
and that's a nice place to be,"
said Sutton Sunday after
pitching a four-hitter that
gave the Dodgers a 3-1
triumph over the Chicago
Cubs and raised his record to
8-2. "I still say we're good
enough to win."
Sutton struck out four and
walked two. He yielded the
Cubs' run in tlie secood inning
on a walk to Bobby Murcer,
Jerry Morales' single, Marmy
Trillo's sacrifice and Steve
Ontiveros' groundout.
Lee Lacy knocked in two
runs for the Dodgers with a
homer and a double and Roo
Cey accounted for their other
run with his 16th homer of tbe
year.
The game was marred by a
bench-clearing third~nning
fight which started after Rick
Reuschel hit Reggie Smith
with a pitch. Smith limped to
the mound and hit Reuschel
with an overhand right
where.upon both benches
emptied. Reuschel, Manager
Herman Franks and catcber
George Mitterwald of the
Cubs and Smith were ejected
from the game.
'\he Montreal Expos
defeated the Reds, 8-4, the
Mets · beat the Houston
Astros, 8-2, the Philadelphia
Phillies topped the · AUanta
Braves, 4·2, the San
Francisco Giants swept the
Pittsburgh Pirates, S-0 and 86, and the San Diego Padres
scored a 6-2 triumph over the
St. Louis Cardinals, in other
National League games,

~ Regatta

weekend
•
•
action pictures

Legion is 1-2 over weekend
By Greg Bailey
Playing without six
regulars ,
the
Meigs
American Legion team won
one and lost two over the
weekend, losing on Saturday
to Ashland , Ky, 5-2. A big first
inning proved fatal to the
Meigs crew.
The visitors plated four
runs in that first frame after
one was out. Williams singled
an,d advanced when Wamsley
was sale on an error. Both
came home when Miller
doubled, and he scored on a
double by Martin. Martin
scored the fourth run on a
groWJd out.
Meigs got one run back in
the bottom of the second
when Kelly Winebrenner led
off with a single and ad-,
vanced on a John Sayre
sacrifice. Rick Johnson drew
a walk, and losing pitcher
Steve Baird singled in
Winebrenner. Meigs got its
final run in the Sillth when
Brian Hamilton led off with a
single and scored on Gary
Swain's single.

•

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio ~ Oscar Dishman, Jr., trainer
of Silver Series, couldn't have asked for a better Father's Day
ptesent;
·
The horse, winner of the Hawthorne Derby, romped to a
four and one half length victoryf;WJday in the 43rd running of
the $15fi,OOO Open Derby at Thistledown, beating out favored
Cormorant. Pruneplum showed.
Silver Series, the 9-5 second choice, returned $5.80, $2.40
and $2.80; Cormorant, $2.40 and $2.20; and Pruneplum, $5.60.
The winner, with Larry Snyder in the irons, picked up $90,000
for the victory in covering the mile and on~ighth in 1:491-li.

Humidisteel controls .
pint capacity .

15

'12C)OD
Bal&lt;er
Furniture
Middleport, 0.

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, JWJe20, 1977

live hits, twoor them doubles. grounded out and let Cannen Gilliand.
Meigs is now 7·9 and travels
They got only two hits the rest score.
to
Athens Tuesday. On
Sayre
led
the
hitting
with
of the game.
Wednesday
they go to
Meigs got one run back in three singles and Davenport
Parkersburg
North.
the top of the third when and Baird had two each. M
003 002 02- 7 II 2
Hamilton ,
Brian Hamilton socked his Carmen ,
w
212 000 00'---li 3 6
fourth home run of the Winebrenner and Kermedy
Folgestrom,
Baird (e, WP)
ca mpaign, a shot over the had one single each. Baird
and
Hamilton
, Ebersbach
rightfield fen ce . In the got the win, and Montgomery
seventh, Meigs had a rally took the toss, Ianning three (3). Gilland, Montgomery (6,
going before reliever Mont· and walking lour with LP) and Parsons.
gomery came in to put out the
lire.
With one away, Rick
Johnson drew a walk before
Tim Hood flew out. Then with
two gone, Chuck Kennedy
drew a free pass, Bruce
Carmen doubled Johnson
home, and Hamilton followed
with a two-run single before
the lire was snuffed.
Hamilton ted the hitting
with his homer and two
singles, and Carmen had a
single and double. Mick
Davenport had a double and
Sayre a single. Mike Triplett
took the loss as .he and
reliever Tim Ebersbach
farmed two and walked lour.
001 000 3-4 7 2
M
W
050 120 x-8 7 1
Triplett (LP), Ebersbach
(5) and R. Johnson, Hamilton
(5) . Maerker (WP), Montgomery (7) and Parsons.
MEIGS WINS ONE
Meigs gained a split by
coming back alter being
down by two runs in the third
innlng. Baird came on in
relief in the third! nning and
gave up two more tallies, but
then settled down and pitched
no-hit ball until his team
caught up and won the game
by plating two runs in the
eighth inning. Baird and
starter Art Folgestrom
fanned six and walked six.
After letting the hosts score
twice in the first and once in
the second, Meigs tied it by
scoring three times in the
third. Sayre led off with a
single and stole second, and
Cannen reached on an error
and they pulled off a double
steal. Hamilton singled them
·both home; and he later
scored , on a squeeze bunt
single by Davenport.
• Cbooee from differeat badgroundll
After giving Wellston back
and cuatom poseR
the lead 5-3 in the bottom of
• Limit: otae per subject, two per family
that frame, the locals came . • Additiona1 portraiUI available iD aU
back to tie it in the sixth.
aUet at rell80nahle pricee
Ebershach walked, Homer
• Groups SL25 each additional aubjed
• Pereona under 18 must be .crom·
Smith sacrificed, and Sayre
panied by patent or guardian
singled in a run. Baird
• Finiehed pOrtraite delinred at atore
. singled in Sayre, and after
Hamilton drew an intentional
TUES., WED., THURS., FRI., .&amp; SAT.
pass to load the bases,
l,)avenport drew a walk to
. ·,JUNE 21·22·23-24-25
,
.
force in a run.
The winning runs came in
the eighth when Sayre led off
with his third straight hit.
Baird singled, and Carmen
was safe on a fielder's choice.
BONUS OFFER : "FREE" PORTRAIT of GRANDPARENTS
Hamilton's fielder's choice
Photo Hours: Dally 10-1 2-5 6-8 • Sat. 1D-1 2-4:30
scored Sayre, and Davenport

•

I
I

--

AT
ALL GREAT
STORES

. ...

\

'

I

I
· ~

€"- '~

I

THORA-BLACKWOOD FOUND many Heritage Day
visitors interested in ber clay animal creations.

MRS. NORMA CURTIS was just one of many Heritage Sunday visitors finding the
antique doll and toy display of Mrs. Shirley Huston a great attraction.
YOUTH DIVISION WINNERS -Steve Roberts, left, shows off his first place a_ward for
eating 13 hamburgers, more than any other participant in the event could down, while Jen~y
Meadows, winner of the highest sponsor award, and Don Snyder, second place wmn~~ w1th
11 burgers, display their prizes. Jenny brought in $16 for the Jaycees and Senior C1t1zens.

SxlO

PORTRAIT

IN
LIYI~(j '~LlJ~
BABIES
CHILDREN
ADULTS

·~l~(
-'- -.

\lf.; t&lt;'i .

PLUS
FAMILY GROUP
PORTRAITS

__ ~,_,,

"WHIMPY" .WINNERS - Prize ·winners in the adult division of Country Cousins
. hamburger eat-a-thon show off their prizes. Lyrm Weppler, left, a visiting Jaycee from
· Marietta, came in secood by downing 11 hamburgers and Art Tobin &lt;;llptured first place and
· the high sponsor award by putting away 12 burgers at $6.9~each.

PT. PLEASANT, RIPLEY, ATHENS,
BELPRE

Heritage Sunday program
is well-received Sunday
The -Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society got it
ali together Sunday to
present another successful
Heritage Sunday program at
the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy for
Regatta
Weekend.
Visitors poured in and out
of the museum to see the
interesting displays which
covered a wide range of
subject matter and sat in the
open under large shade trees
to ~njoy the blue grass music
of the Ohio Valley Music Co.
A 1930's movie of Meigs
County which had ·been
remade recently by the
society was featured in the
Julia Bean mini-theater,
packed throughout the afternoon. There was a special
display of Meigs women
featured photos, accounts of
their accomplishments,
clothing they wore and other
aspects of their lives. Mike
Gerlach and Margaret
Parker prepared the exhibit.
Women included were the
late Bess Sanborn, Mollie
Holter, Mary Parker, Edna
Carleton, Sarah Calderwood,
Reed, Bertha Rathburn,

Elizabeth .Mees and Katie
Elberfeld. Senior citizens
were on hand demonstrating
quilting, crewel embroidery
by Irene Busch, broomstick
lace and Swedish weaving by
Rose Ginther; bread dough
flowers by Beulah Utterbach
and Frieda Lieving, clay
animals by Thora Blackwood
besides knitting and tatting
demonstrations. Work by the
art students of Trica Adleta
taking up a room in the
museum was well received.
The library of old books,
records and pictures was
open for the day and a new

Meigs locator unit which
depicts Meigs County .scenes
at the press of a button was on
display for the first time. The
dolls and toy collection of
Shirley Huston and the an·
tique bank collection of
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., were
among other outstanding
attractions of another successful Heritage Sunday.
There were demonstrations
on silk screening with a
unique print of Pomeroy
about 1870 and batik work.
Tools used in crafts of
yesteryear helped round out
the observance.

.....'·
BATIK EXPLAINED -Batik, a new technique for
museum visitors, was demonstrated by Steve Koch, of
near Harrisonville, at the Meigs Museum Sunday.

Put one ofour
finest minds

to work for you.
OFF AND RUNNING '\ The only Frog Derby to be

SAN JOSE, CALIF. -Three pel'llOns were named into the
Wheelchair Sports Hall of Fame this weekend during the 21st
National Wheelchair Olympics.
They were Jim Mathis, Twinsburg, Ohio; Darlene
Quinlan, Uvooia, Mich., and Bill Fairbanks, Villa Park, Calif.
Twenty-njne handicapped athletes were picked to attend
the International Wheelchair games in Stoke-MandeviU, England, July 24,

CLEVELAND (UP!) With the firing of Frank
Robinson, Rocky Colavito,
first base coach for tbe
Clevela.nd Indians, now must
decide whether to remain a
coach or a television
LONDON -Out of the pages of a glorious past, they will
sportscaster.
once
again tread across that most valuable piece of sporting
"I am recommending, and
real
estate
- the Wimbledon center court. ·
I am going to tell Rocky, that
A
center
court parade Monday of more than 40 former
be is going to have to make a
singles champions provides a nostalgic curtain..-aiser to
choice of being a coach or a
Wimbledon's Centennial championship.
1V sportscaster," Indians'
The parade will be led by Jean Borotra, 78, and Mrs. Kitty
President Ted Bonda said.
McKane Godfree, 80, who each stood on the same center court
"My guess is he'll continue as
54 years' ago to receive their prizes.
a coach~"
Cleveland's WJKW-TV
CINCINNATI- Tooy Tubbs of Cincinnati learned to fight
made Colavito a color man
from his o~~~;_e-retired fighter uncle Roy Dale.
for Tribe broadcasts .this
Tubbs showed what he learned Saturday night when be
season. He · had been
was judged the best boxer in competition in the U. S. Amateur
. switching between coaching
Heavyweight Boxing ChampionshiJl! sponsored by the
duties and stints behind the
Amateur Athletic Union at Riverfront Coliseum.
microphone, But with
He decisioned All Coffin of tbe Marine Corpe in the main
Robinson gone, it's a
event,
winning by one point in each of the three rounds. Tubbs
different situation.
outweighed Coffin by five pounds.
~~ He has no choice,., Banda
said. "Sure, he has a choice,
ANDERSTORP, Sweden - Jacques Laffite o( France
but I'm pretty sure Rocky Meta 8, Aslros 2:
Sunday
won the Swedish Grand Prix - his first Formula One
would like to be a coach Bruce Boisclair and John
victorybut it was a heartbreaking day lor Marlo Andretti,
especially now tliat we only Steams hit three-run homers
who
ran
out
of fuel two laps from victory and had to settle for
have two otber coaches."
and Craig Swan pitched a sixBefore the Indians' double- hitter for the Mets, who dealt sixth.
Laffite, driving a Llgier-Matra, completed the 72-lap,
header SU!lday against the yoWlg Astro smoke-thrower
Detroit Tigers, Colavito said . Joaquin Andujar his fourth 179.76 mile course-in 1:46:555 for an average spe_ed of 100.87
be would have to think over loss against eight wins. Swan miles per hour.
Bonda's request before struck out three and walked
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia - The International Olympic
making up his mind.
three in raising his record to
A suggested successor to &lt;h'i and pitching his first Committee has introduced a new rule under which
Colavito in the TV booth complete game of tbe season. competitors, teams or delegations who withdraw once final
entries had been made wtlllace sanctions.
might be Jim Mueller,
Lord Killanin, president of the IOC, said Sunday at the
WJKW·TV's sports director. PhtlUea f, llrllvea Z:
Steve Carlton raised his conclusioo of the 79th meeting of the organization, that no
But when cootacted by
UP!, Mueller said he didn't record to 9-3 and won his retroactive measures would be taken against the African
want the Indians' job since it tOOth game in a Philadelphia nations who walked out of the Montreal Olympics because of
would coofllct with his being uniform when he pitched a New Zealand's particlpatloo.
National Olympic Committees of the host country also will
a color man for Cleveland six-l!itter embellished by nine
suffer
penalties if the organizing committee falls to fulfill tbe
Browns' broadcasts on WHK- strikeouts and alSo singled .in
conditions
under which the games are aUOCllted.
a
run
against
the
Braves.
AM, Cleveland .

f

I

held in the U. S. was held Sunday afternoon at Meigs
Football Field in Pomeroy.

Rightist
FROG ART wiNNERS- Among the frog art winners
in the annual Regatta competition were, seated, left to
right, Deanna Wolfe, Long Bottom,third ; Pat Thoma,

Pomeroy, third; Stephie Houchins, Middleport, third, and
standing, Scott Hysell, Pomeroy, fourth; Lois Peters,
Clifton, second, and Terre Wood, Long Bottom, fil'llt.

Prizes awarded for 'frog' art
Cash prizes were awarded Suzan Thoma, PomeroY; town, and Eddie Baer, in a special category for
entries not showing frogs
in the annual frog art contest Patti Wood, Long Bottom; Middleport.
Prizes were also .awarded with first . going to Tamie
staged Saturday as a feature Rebecca Roberts, UnionStevens, New Haven, and
of Regatta weekend.
Sherrie Williams, second.
The prizes were $10 for
Miss Stevens and Miss
first, $5 for second, and $3 lor
Williams
had a total of six
third in three categories.
entries,
Lois
Peters had four
Fourth places received
entries,
and
all others
ribbons.
exhibited
only
one entry.
In the adult division the
While more than one entry
winners were Mrs. M. Jane
WASHING'OON (UPI) - Untapped reserves of
could
he exhibited only one
Davis, Middleport, first; Lois
natural gas and geothermal energy more than two
could
place in the com·
Peters, Clifton, W. Va .,
miles beneath a Louisiana bayou have been discovered
petition.
.Pat
Thoma,
second;
by a research team seeking a new double-duty energy
Bill Mpyer assisted by Mrs.
Pomeroy, and Deanna Wolfe,
source.
Pat
Holter, headed the
Racthe, tle for third; and
It is not yet known whether the gas and heat can be
·
contest
and also did the
Kathy Roberts, Uniontown
developed. But the _discovery raised cautious hope
judging.
The
entries arc still
fourth. other exhibitors were
aniong goveirunent experts that Gulf Coast reservoirs
on
exhibit
at
the Pomeroy
Becky Pooler, Route 3,
could hold major reserves which might double supplies
Library.
Pomeroy; Randy Batey ,
of natural gas, with geothermal en,rgy as a bonus.
Long Bottom; Cathie Wood,
Researcher~ reopened an ab&amp;ndoned gas well 25
'
Long Bottom ; and Kelly
miles south of Lafayette, La ,, May 22 to check the
MAN DROWNED
potential for getting energy from high-pressure
Thoma, Pomeroy.
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
In the junior divillion, the
subterranean pockets called "geopressured zones."
(UP! )- Lee Ivy, 25, Dayton,
Preliminary analysis showed a two-week test at a
winners were Terre Wood,
Ohio, drowned Saturday
Long Bottom, first ; Alana
depth of 12,900feet produced between 200,000 cubic feet
while swimming with friends
Lyons, Racine, second ;
and 1.5 million cubic feet of gas a day ;plus up to 10,300
and relatives in the New
Stephie Houchins, third; and
barrels a day of water at a temperature of 240 degrees
River in Fayette County, W,
Scott Hysell, Pomeroy,
fahrenheit.
Va., police sai~.
fourth. other exhi~itors were

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JERUSALEM (UP! )
Prime Minister-{(esignate
Menahem Begin called on
President Ephraim Katzir
toda y to report he has
successfully formed a
cabinet, the first right-wing
government in Israel's
history.
Begin, 63, met with Katzir
exactly two weeks after being
named to set up the first
cabinet. in Israel's 29 years of
statehood that excludes the
Labor
party.
His
government, in coalition with
two small orthodox religious
parties, will have a slim
three-vote majority in tbe
120-member
Knesset
(parliament) .
"I have ir)formed the president that I fulfilled the task
and will present the
government to parliament
according to law later in the
day," Begin told reporters,
He said he was keeping
three posts open for tbe
Democratic Movement for
Change to join at a later
stage.

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OLDER QUEENS - Big Bend Regatta Majorette Queens in the older ag~ groups .
selected at the baton twirling contest St¥'daY are from the left, Donna Sail, Vienna; W. Va .,
11·12years; Susie Dray, Paris, Ky., l$-14, and Lisa Bradshaw, West Portsmouth, 17-20.

�7-The Daill-:Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0 ., June zo, 1977

Trinity church
stages quilt show

l

DEAR HELEN :
The recent letter fr(lll a retiree who couldn't marry his love
because she would lose her small widow's pension inspires my
plea :
I am also widow on a "surviving spouse pension," and I'm
interested in contacting others who would lose their stipends U
they remarry; and particularly those who have already lost
their pensions by having remarried.
I would like to file a class action suit enveloping the various
states and the Federal government concerning ~uch pension
lQSS. I have already retained a lawyer with a well-known firm
(they 've won class action suits before), and he will ·pursue
such a suit in a diligent manner.
Our United States courts have upheld the "right to marry"
as absolute. Yet there are restrictions in most public pension
plans. Righting this wrong will not bankrupt the government but it will certainly help those lonely people who need companionship and feel it isn't "moral" to live together sans marriage.
Won't you please, Helen, ask persons who have suffered· or
msy suffer· this inequity to send me their stories' Their letters could make a better future for many. Write to : Right to
Marry, c o Evelyn DeVerter, 6037 Casa Alegre, Carmichael,
Calif., 95608. - E.V.
DEAR E.:
Be glad to!
I feel the remarriage clause in the ''surviving spouse pen·
sion" is not only unfair but tremendously damaging to elders
who deserve all the happiness they can get in the time they
have left.
· May your project prosper!· H.

Ribbons were awarded in
six categories of quilts ·new
applique, old applique, new
pieced, old pieced, new
miscellaneous and old
miscellaneous - at a show
staged over the weekend in
the Trinity Church social

room.
Mrs. Dorothy Toler of
Bidwell, a former home
economics teacher, and Mrs.
Ruth Bumgarner. local sewing teacher, judged the quilts
and awarded the ribbons.
The winners were as
follows:
New Applique: Blue, Mrs.
Delmar Quickel , Cheshire, no

·winners in
frog. events

red, and wltite to Effie
Pickens, Middleport.
Old Applique: Both blue
and red to Mrs. Wibna Ter·
retl, Pomeroy, and white to
Mrs. Thora Blackwood.
Pomeroy.
New Pieced : Blue to Rose
Ginther, Pomeroy ; red w
Mary Cobner, Pomeroy; and
white to Mrs. Ginther.
Old Pieced : Blue to Arma
Hart of Darwin.
' New Miscellaneous: Blue
to Mrs. Ella Smith, Pomeroy.
Old Miscellaneous: Red to
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart.

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(Continued from page 1)
Grand derby winners were
· Saturday night bot was post· the Kroger Co., first, with U.
paned to Sunday due to a S. Choice jockeyed by Jack
~vere atorm which hit
Ambrose of Pomeroy. The
s.turday night. The frog prize was $200. Second place,
aienta were apoMOI'ed by the with a trophy as prize went to
llilelga County Jaycees. the Athens County Savings
t:roceeds _!1'W ..J..o into com· and Loan with Brian Terrell
I!I,Uon of the inlnl-park In as jockey.

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PREVENTION

IS lHE

~meroy.

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for their quilts were, left to right, Mrs. Rose Ginther, Mrs.
Wilma Terrell, and Mrs. Ella Smith.
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Polly Cramer

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the professional
do-it-yourself
carpet cleaning • •
system

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Hope for broken appliances

tlf!!:.

soups, stews or anylhtng that
might be Improved by tbe
flavor of celery.- Mrs. J. H.
DEAR POLLY - In order
to conserve both energy and
water I leave my teakettle
over the pilot tight on the
stove so there is always
warm water to start
something cooking, to wash
my face or hands, etc. When
only a small amount of warm
water Is needed it is aU ready
and I do not have to keep
running water fl"()m the tap
until it is warm. - Mrs.
C.R.C.
DEAR POLLY - I use
those sure grip plastic
barrettes that little girls wear
in their hair to secure plastic
bags of macaroni, popcorn,
etc. after they are opened.
They are great and save time .

LARRY SPENCER, clerk of courts, and Jim Carnahan, 1-r, had their hands full at the
annual frog jump as they got things in readiness for the frog jumps.

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"-/~fiFfA
ptiJrPJ.

DEAR HELEN :
You probably won't print this, but I must stand up for what
the Bible says.
You didn't condemn senior " live-togethers," saying instead,
"Blame pension boards who force many elders into nonmarriages these days." How shameful!
How can you condone an irrunoral act and print it for your
young people to read? Someday you will answer for your sin!
HALF DAY
BE'ITY
Mon.
DEARBEITY:
,
thru
Thurs.
.Our young people know more about live-together than you or
I could ever teach them. While respecting your view, Betty, I
Rlfoi$ENVAC
still stand on my words, "What's so wrong about seeking comcleans the way
panionship (often nonsexual ) in a way that allows a couple to
DEAR T~RIFTY - I
prolesslonats do,
live above the extreme poverty level]"- H.
suggest lbat you eaU tbe
at a fraction
Goodwffi,SatvallonArmy,SI.
ottha cost
DEARHELEN:
Vllleeat de Paul Soelely or
You mentioned the Foster Grandparents Program as a way some olber orgaolzalloo that
for retirees to earn money and feel wanted. How do we get in likes lo have such Items for
®
touch? HARRY
their worken, perhaps the
L
~
· ~lson's
DEAR HARRY :
handleapped, to repair. Then
Check your local telephone directory . There's a Foster they are sold or given away,
JUDGES - Mrs, Ruth Bumgarner, MlddlePwt, and Mra, Dorothy Toler, Bidwell, a
Grandparents Program in abnost every medium-sized city
41
these days.
Three stipulations: You must be over 60, establish financial POLLY.
the traditional twist ties.
it
need and, most important of all love children. - H.
These barrettes can be line garment covers to go paper. coupon clippers If she
~M
Got aproblem] An.adult subject for discussion] You can talk
DEAR POLLY- Recently . openedwithonehandandare over men's suits, overcoats USes your favorite Pointer,
1
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it over in her column if you write to Helen Bottel, care of this someone at a hostessing more secure as well as and ladies' clothes, loo. _ Peeve or Problem In her
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0 OMETRIST
ne'!'spaper.
group meeting mentioned wea.ring much longer than BEITY.
column. Write POLLY'S
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
that It is always so hard to ties. ·;_ MARGIE.
Polly will send you one of POINTERS In care of this
AT NOON ON THURS.!- EAST COURT
remove the first piece of
DEAR POLLY - !find the . her signed thank-you news;
ST; POMEROY.
anything made in a square or large plastic trash bags make
pewspaper.
rectangular pan . They
seemed quite happy with my
suggestion which was to
remove the second piece
first. It really works like a
charm and I hope the other
A surprise party was held rysville; Mr. and Mrs. Paul readers like it, too. - A. P.
WHILE
WHILE
recently at Royal Oak Park .Grinstead, Lori, Paula, and
DEAR POLLY ;_ I want to
THEY
honoring Mr. and Mrs. 'Amy Jo. of Belpre; Mr. and tell Vonnie what I did with a
THEY
·Robert Ritchie, Minersville; IMro. Mike Kestner and lot of marbles. I filled a large
LAST I
LAST I
on their 25th wedding an- 'Charles Ritchie, Mr. and glass kerosene container and
niversary. Mr. and Mrs. Rit- Mrs. Bill Grueser and an old two-quart canning jar
chie were married on May 30, 1Dawna, Mrs. Diana Karr, with my marbles and made
'Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. them into lamps by using
1952.
A potluck dinner was serv- 'Carl Ritchie and Angie Bur- lamp kits such as one can buy
ed at noon. In the afternoon :ris, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rit- at hardware stores. The
the honored couple opened lchie, Alice and Amy, lampa are very heavy 5o ideal
their gifts and served a three 'Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs. for porches, dens, etc. and
tiered wedding cake baked by ·Hugh Bearhs and Ronald,, quite colorful, too. I also use
Mrs.
Nancy Roush, Mr, and Mrs. Danny Grueser marbles as a 11 COVer-up''
and Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. Fred around spiked flower holders
Reedsville.
,4.ttending were Mr. ;md . Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil when making low based
Mrs. Darrell P. Chevalier Windon, Brian and Blair, Mr. arrangements. - ELSIE . .
and Denise, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Alvin Tripp, Rodney
Darrell L. Chevalier and Mat- and Todd, Jason and Kenny
DEAR POLLY- As celery
thew, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Riggs, all of Pomeroy.
Ia
aow so expeulve I take tbe
Barber, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
leaves and very top stems
Wargo and Jon, Mr. and Mrs.
.on this day In history: and
cook them Ill water DDUI I
Oris McCloud, Oris, Jr. and
In 1898, the U.S. Navy
aU lhe substance aad
feel
. Carrie, Mrs. Jeanie McCloud seized Guam, largest of the
ftavor
are extracted then
and Becky, all of Pataskala; Marianas Is lands in the
strala
lhe
liquid IIIIo lee cube
Mr. and Mrs.· Jerald Keller, PacUic, during the SpanishMr. and Mrs. Adrian Roberts, 'American war. The people of trays aad freeze. Whea frozen
Randy, Robin and Renee, G111m were granted U.S. the cubes are put Ill freezer
bags aad are ready to use In
Columbus; Rita Hart, Per- .citizenship In 1950.

(Continued from page I )

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LOOKS ON- Jay Humphreys, Rock Springs, just had
:,.,•• a good time Saturday looking on at ihe annual frog jump.

IT'S JUST A RACE -Eight month old Anna Deluca,
Millfield, was not the least big interested. She decided just
to have a bite to eat. between races. "Who cares"!," she
says.

:."h~!:;~:a~;~!"ci f:e=~~ :!JI';!.~%~e nf~~;s u~:; ~~e;r~:O~~~~:~~~:.~~~~:.~== ~~~q~':~l;qu;U:t~ah;.ow;·~~~--~·!-~~~1'1~~·;··~;:~;•;·~·~.

W

PJON 0 0 .

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Surprise party given
for the Ritchies

-S&amp;E TWO WAY- --RADIOS
FACTORY TRUCKLOAD SALE

3 DAYS ONLY

, THUR.-FRI~·SAT~

JUNE 23-24-25

Your next picnic
could cost you $50,000.

• With exclusive built-in 2-WIIy inter-com

WAS 1119.96

NOW •59~95

Sometimes when people roast hot dogs. they get careless. And
they roast the forest too. If you ever get that careless. you're liable
for the damages. You could end up paying them. Every payday
for the rest of your life.

ROBYN SX-007 PACKAGE
Includes:
1
1
1

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.

$21.95 value trunk or roof mount antenna
$ 9.95 value 6" weather proof speaker
A// necesury hardware and cable for
complete mobile installation.

.

WV23P SIMILM 10 ABOVE COMPLETE KIT BUT ·
~
WI"I'IDJT 2 WAY INnRQJME
FEA'IURE .•••••...•.•..•.•.•.••....••.
SAVE ON OTHII U A ..0 CHANNIL UNITS
.,A ..S ONI.Y

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I ••••••••••••••••••

3

S&amp;E TWO WAY RADIO
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

GAWPOUS, OHIO

The
improving
fuel
economy of the newer-model
, automobiles showed up in
1976. Even though totat
mileage for cars climbed
from 956 billion miles in 1975
to 989 billion miles last year,
fuel consumption dropped
from 681 gallons per car to 678
per car.
Even if costs have risen so
much in the past quartercentury, Hertz claims Americans aren't spending much
tnore of their personal
income for those cars.
"Today, tllere is about one
car for every two people in
the United States, while in
1950 it was only one for every
four persons," Hertz said .
~~Thus, on a per~apita basis,
Americans
today
are
speriding about the same
percentage of their income on
cars as they did a quartercentury ago - 14.5 per cent
now and just under 13 per
cent then."

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When

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results

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As
an
Independent
ln.surance agency , cu.primary fun ction is. to
provide policies which
afford
financ i al
protection in case of loss.

encourage care. caution
and safety ... preventive
measures which .can keep
that car accident fr om
happen ihg, that bu ild ing
fire tram starting, that
home burglary from
being committed.
Prevention saves l ife ,
limb and property ... and
helps con trol insurance
costs and premiums.

When losses do occur, our
policy holders can count
on p.rotectlon and service
in time ot oeCd. But we
. still say ........ prevention is
th e best pol icy .

.. give au r classified department a
call! if you want to turn your unwanted
items into cash, we'll help you write an
adthat will get fast results! Whatever
you want to buy or sell, you'll get action

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

with a Want Ad!

THE DAILY SENTINEL
PHONE 992-2156

992-2 143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

a powerP.lantis a lot like
.
flying a 747. ·
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:: GRAND CROAKERS for the year 1977, no! in order,
"Were Jimmy Higgins, WUliam Leachman, Herb Schul,
' Jbn Frecker, Bill Quickel, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Simon,
~lyn Osborne, Unda Guinther, Dan Devol, Jinlmy

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Social
, Calendar

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MONDAY
Order of
Bagles Aerie 2171 Monday 8
p':'m. All members urged to
il&amp;end.
.
.
;J&gt;AILY VACATION Bible
st)Jool will be held at the Middleport First United
~esbyterian Church, Mon•
day through Friday, June 24
a'l: the church. Classes will be
~ 9 to 11:30 a.m. TUES.
~fRATERNI\L

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:GROUP 2, Middleport First
llnited Presbyterian Church, ·
't!Jesday, 7:30 at the church.
Mrs.· Frances · Anderson,
dOvotions. Thank offering to ·
be taken, Biblehostesses,
1\irs. Robert Woodward and
¥rs. Carl Horky. WEDNES&amp;AY .
· ;.AMERICAN LEGION
li.JXILIJ\,RY,
Feeney~nnetl Post 128, Middleport,
t30 Wednesday at the hall.
&gt;•AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
lliddleport, 7:30 Wednesday
~ening at the hall.

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; VACATION Bible School at
~gham Baptist Church
IJI)wthro\lgh Friday 9:30a.m.
till noon: Helpers from First
j&amp;pt~at Church at Eynon.
• VACATION Bible School at
~lock Grove Christian
fll!urch now through Friday
liVm 8:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
jielcome to attend.
:,.'VACATION Bible School
Q]mvffie Wesleyan Church·
Q,wlhrougb Friday 9:30a.m.
• 11:30 a.m. Mary Meyers,
llrector. All are welcome.
::
TUESADY
""RUTLAND Women's
fi!Wllary Tuesday 7:30p.m..
meeting until SepMmber. All members urged
attend.
:SPECIAL meeting of
Jiclne Lodge No. 481 F&amp;AM
Tuelday. Work in the EA

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degree.
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Gl"()ve, Sam Silverstein, John Anderson, Kuth Ballerni,
John Hackenthorn, John Amorine, Randy Fisher, Lynn
Weppler, Sid Breckenridge and Greg Gatrell.

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.Farm hill battle seen
WASHINGTON (UP!) .,..
Congress was beginning
another busy wee~ today with
fights looming over defense
and foreign 'aid appriatlons bills, whether
to enact a federal subsidy for
sugar farmers, and mine
safety legislation.
The first order of business
in the House was a $14.4
billion measure for the
Agriculture
Department,
which among other things
would bnplement plam lor a
$240 million sugar subsidy.
The House also plans
debate and votes on foreign
assistance and defense
appropriations bills later in
the week.
The Senate was starting the
week
with
a
bill
appl"()priating funds for the
Treasury Department, and
later scheduled a federal
mine safety bill. transferring
federal
enforcement
activities from the Interior
Department to the Labor
Department.
That bill also would bring
hard rock mines under the

coal mine health and safety feed children and the elderly.
law.
Reps. Robert Michel and
On energy, lhe House Ways Piml Fii&gt;dley, both Illinois
and. Means Committee Republicans, were expected
expects to deCide on to try and thwart an effort by
President Carter's proposed Agriculture Secretary Bob
rebates · of industrial fuel Bergland to set up a $240
taxes, then turn to incentives million direct subsidy for
for developing geothermal sugar growers. .
energy sources and increased
After work on the Treasury
drilling for oil and gas.
appropriations and mine
The issues are the last in safety bills, the Senate also
· the committee's first round of may consider an omnibus
consideration on the tax parts rivers and harbors bill,
of Carter's energy program. intelligence agency
The second round will authorization and an urban
take another week or more. mass transit bill.
The House Commerce subThe House also has ready
committee on energy is for floor consideration a bill
considering requirements for to compensate victims of
industrial conversion to coal crime.
and is expected to complete
nontax portions of Carter's
program this week.
The agriculture approprialions bill for fiscal 1978
proposes $14.4 billion in
spending authority for farm,
food and related programs,
down $705 million from the
current amount and $563
million below administration
proposals.
The biggest item is $7.8
billion for food, including $5.5
·- -. billion for food stemps and
WOMEN'S Auxiliary, the remAinder for helping
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
7:30 Tuesday in the hospital
cafeteria.
11 ~DENTURES • DENTISTRY
WEDNESDAY
Ti,l DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
POMEROY
MIDOR. A. J. STAEHLI- DR. 1(, H. CHUNG DLEPORT Lions Club,
DR. VICTOR Y. LIANG -OR. Q. J. STOMB"UOH
Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
One or two day
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knights Temfull denture service ,
pler, 7:30p.m. for the expre!IS
partial dentures
purpose of electing and lnstaUing officers and uther
FOR Pf.ltCES CALLI- -I
regular business. Officers to
OHIO TOLL FREE
take rituals.
OR . RIVIE RE
1·800·282·6411
THURSDAY
HEATH United Methodist
Church Women will have a
picnic at 6 p.m. Thursday on
the parsonage lawn. Tbose
attending are to take their
own table service. The meat
RIVIERE CENTER 949 E. Livingston Ave ., Columbus
and beverage will be furWeekdays 8 :30A .M. to6 :30 P.M.
nished. Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle
'You 'U Smlle·Tomorrm• If l"uLI T,.l&lt; ,• l ' ,,. 0 / Ynur 1 t·f•lh / oduV'
Is the hostess chairman.

Have A
Problem?

CAU.
CRISIS LINE
992-5554

It takes a lot of experience.
Ar)d just like pilots who have been flying
for years, power plant operators must keep
on learning and training so they can continue
to perform quickly and efficiently in any
emergency.
.
That's why we have a control room
simulator in our power plant training cente r
that works much like a pilot's flight simula tor.
It helps our people sharpen their skills by
simulating totally realistic equipment failures
that, if not handled quickly, could "ind up
being power failures . .
Why do wego to this extreme?
,
Because keeping the power coming is a
complex and demanding responsibility.
It takes hundreds of experienced, speciaUytrained, highly-skilled people throughout our
company.
Engineers, technicians, power plant
personne~ line crews, dispatchers,.compute r
ext&gt;erts, people who man the consoles at the

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But, we also have a vital
interest in loss protect ion ,
as should our clients . We

Cost of

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BEST POLICY

POLLY·s POINTERS

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BESS HOSPITALIZED
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) tady Bess rMunan may he
- Hosp1tal officials have no going home.
word yet on when former first

~

BLUE RIBBONS - Among the blue ribbon winners

DEAR POLLY - I Mve a
number of small appliances
such as toaster, percolators,
waffle irons, etc. that have
been replaced by new ones as
they did not work. I hate to
throw them away and would
like to glvem to some electrician who would repair and
make use of them but I do not
know how to locate one.
Others must have the same
problem so what can we do
with them? - THRIFTY.

PLAN OPEN HOU E ·
The Bureau of Vocat10na I
Rehabilitation, 132 Second
St., Wellston, is planing an
open house June 23 fl"()m 1:30
p.m. to 3:30 p.m. The office
serves Jackson, Gallia and
Vinton Counties. The office is
managed by Jean Creech and
counselors are Lynn Starkey
and Janet Creamer . The
secretarial staff is composed
of Ha&lt;el Medley, RIJOnda
Tripp and Christine Siders.
All interested individuals are
cordially invited to attend.

control centers... everybody plays a critical role
in making sure the power keeps flowing to our
homes and facto ries.
But, while we're doing everything we can
to maintain dependable service and electric
supply, there's one thing we can't do.
· i\.lake sure none of t hat electricity we
m ake is wasted.
That's your job.
Turning off unused lights and appliances,
making sure refrigerator and freezer doors
aren't left open, and washing only full loads of
clothes and dishes will not only conserve
electricity, it q m help you keep your bills in
line.
Properly insulating your borne and
energy-saving devices like an electric heat pump
can help even more.
Working together. It's the best way we
know to see that you continue to get the power
\.Jc n•·&lt;·J. wlH'n you need it. And the most
out of it when you get it.

Ohio Power Company
Working together is the only way.

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8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , June 20, 1977

t~The~nall~ySe:ntine~I,Meiddl~epo~rt-P~omer~ov~.o~Mon~dav~.Jun~ei~·~~~~~~~~Television logJ+or
easy viewing
•

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Unwanted Items Into Cash
Heip Wanted

WANT AD
CHARGES
Ca:.h

Potential dealings with the pub lic

I dl:i)

~ave

2 d;,;s

favorab le aspects lor you

thts year. If you have something
In this vein i n mind, It might be
well worth a try.
C ANCER (June 21-July 22J Your

first thoughts are not necessarily
your best ones today. The longer
you mull things over, the better
the solutto ns you'll come up wl1h .

HavJng trouble finding a career?
Send for· you r copy of AstraGraph letter. Mall 50 cen ts for

each and a tong, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Astra-

Graph, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Statton, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify your birth sign .

' (July 23-Aug, 22) Your InLEO
sights and hunches today are
war1hy ol serious consideration .

Ll~r~t!

..1.2-J.,

1.00
1.50
1.&amp;1

:ltjuys

2.25
3.15

:too

6t.!uys

Ead1 ~~o unl U\'t!r the mu umwn 15
wurds 1~ ~ ~·~ut.:; l)t:r wur!.l ~r day.
Ad!i I'UillllllJ! ul!ICt" tJa;.•JI I;UIJJ&gt;«UliVt.'
du n• Will be l"IUSrl{l-d &lt;1! lht: I dit)'
r·tllc
lu mcmuJ)', C~rd of TIW11lc:! and
OI.Juw.u·y· 6 l't't!l s pt•r wor•d, $3.00
ll llllllll Um. Cas IIIII advall('t•.

u.IM Box Numl.&gt;ct In Care uf Tlw Sell·
lillt'.l.

~aln r~ognltron and prestige through 11 cireer In
~onstJmerfmance. Consumer finance Is an Integral and

•mportant rorce In our country's economic growth and
progress .

A position. here will give you economic security. The
consu"!'er finance business Is steady - even during

recess1ons.

You ca n win prom ol lon rapidl y. You will be paid a
benefits,

There are Branch Representative positions open

for high school graduates, Must have auto.

Phone 99'.!·2 156

CAPITAL FINANCE SERVICES
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
AN EQL!_AL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

----- - - --

overlooked logically.

whose fr iendship You've long
sough t is not easily won Ol!ler . If
you wort&lt; on this person today,

~=

WANT-AD ·
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

you can finally gain his con-

fidenc e.

LIBRA (Sopl, 23-0ct. 23) In
areas where you'd like to attrac t
attention, you'll gain more by un-

Mvndl:ly
Nuo11 un Sa lunt.~:~y

derplaying what you do. Then,
ot hers will trumpet your ac -

FOUND · FEMALE B&amp;ogle. block ,
ton and white wearing block
coll ar . Phone 992·37&lt;116. Fisher
St., Middleport.

Tutsday
tlu·u Frtday

complishments.

4 P.M .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It
you to
be

SWJday
4P.M.

abou t toda y's oc-

c urrences. Keep t hem In
perspective and you'l! see that

Fmluy aftl..'l"lltJtm

things actually h$ppen for the
besl.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. '
21 ) Your ambitions may best be
s erved by somethi ng that
ha ppens late r In the day .

Regardless of the time, contact
people per11nent to your plans.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 11)
Important agreements should
not be entered Into hastily today .
Take ttme to explore all the comp lexities

be~ore

you sign .

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Someone who needs your ex-

PIANO LESSONS , childrens and
adu l ts . Mrs. Harvey Van
Vronken . 992·2270.

PISCES (fob. 20-Morch 20) You
have

a

gift for managing others
today because an Image of
fairness emanates from you .
People sense you live by the
Gold en Rule.

ARIES
(Morch 21-Aprll 18)
Something benefic ial lhat you
can do for the family may present itself today. ,It could come
about toward evening . Get on It
promptly.

NEW SUMMER Hours for Seldom
Rest Cercmics, Tuppers Pic ins .
Clc ss es on Tuesday 9till12, 1-4
and 7-10. Weds . 7- 10. Will
resume regular hours in the
fall.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 22136
Estate of Viola M . Jeffers.
Deceased .
Not i ce i s hereby given that
John A. Jeffers, of Route l ,
M i ners.v i lle , .Oh i o, has been
duty appoin ted A dm inistra tor
of the Estate of V iola M .
Jeffers, deceased , l ate of
M eigs County , Ohio .
Creditors are requ ir ed to
file t he i r claims with said
fid ucia ry
wi thi n
three
months .
Date d th is 15th day of June
1977 .
.

Manning· D . Webster

Judg e

Co mmon Pl eas Co urt ,
Probate Division

{ 6)

20,

Meigs County, Ohio
27 {7) .5 , 3tc

GEMINI (MIY 21-.luno 20) In
NOTICE OF

situa tions today where
something Is at stake, don't toss

APPOINTMENT
case No . 22134
in the towel early. Your position Estate of EDITH
CALVERT
grows stronger with passage of aka EDYTHE D. CALVERT
time.
· Deceased .
N·ot i ce Is hereby g iv en t h at

Harrisonville
Society News
Mrs. Vincent Gheen, Julia,
Carl, Blain and Bruce, attended the graduation Sun·day of her niece, Donna
Francis at otterbein College
in Westerville.
Mrs. Eleanor Updegraff of
Binn ingham, Ala., spent a
week with her mother, Ava
Gilkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Chapman of Rockville, Md.,
spent a week at the home Of
Mrs. Stella Atkins, Ruby
Diehl and Mrs . Mary DiehL
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Alkire .
visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gibson, Columbus, Sunday to
ce lebrate
their granddaughter, Robin's, 4th birthday.
Mrs. Gloria Riggs, Mrs.
Sharon Jewell, Mrs. Pauline
Atkins and Ruby Diehl attended a party Friday at

992·2062 .

Ra !ph C . Calvert of Pomeroy ,
Ohio , has been duly appointed
Administrator of t he E sta te

of Edith Calvert aka ' Edythe
D : Calvert, deceased , late of
M eigs County, Ohio .
Creditor s are required to
fil e thei r c laims wit h said
fidu ci ary
within
three

months. .
Dated this 1st day of J une
1977 .
Mann ing 0 . Webster
,
judge
Comm on Pleas Co urt,
Probate D i v is ion ,
Me.igs Co unty , Ohio

NEW COMPANY · Big Bend
Developers. Finest in remodel ·
ing, pointing and concrete
work. Interio r and · ex te rior.
Fr.ee
es t i mates . Ph one

992 ·3573,
EXCAVATiON · COMPLETE septic
. sys tems. Springs developed.
All work Is guaran teed . Bred
~ewis , phone 742·2-451.

University Inn, Athens, given
in honor of Mrs. Stella Atkins
who is retiring from her work
there .

Barbara Sleple of Illinois
spent a few days with Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Young recently.

ECONOMY TRACTOR with all at·
tachmenfs . Like new, asking
__E250. Phone (6 lA) 698-3290.
GOOD RICH Top soil. Charles R.
Hatfield Ba ckho e Service .
..,!hone 7.42 -2008 .

COAL AND Wood cookstove; red·
t ick hound , I year old. Bir·
dhouses . Picnic ta ble s. Phone
985-4124.
14 -FT . ALUMINUM Boss boot with
trail or . 14 11orse·power Sears ·
engine and one two· speed
trolling motor. $550. Phone
742· 2315 .

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Lei

Pomeroy

soften

condition your

&amp;

water ahd a Co-op water
!softener, Model UC- XVI.

.Now Only&lt;.,
, L et us
Free.

IF YOU hove a service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell somethi ng ,
ae look ing for work ... or
whatever ... you 'll get resu lts
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .

Landmark

279 .95

lesl your water

· ~Pomeroy

Landmark

• ' Jack W. CarSey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Call992·2156,.

MARANTZ MODEL 4060 two and
four cha nn81 amP. Also ,
YARD "'"S'Al.E , 829 S. Third A ve ..
Marantz Madel 60100 turn table
Middleport. 20th,
21 , 22 .
wi th Stanton Cartridge. Two
Clothing . dishes , cotfeem ok er ,
Bose 301 Speakers , $500 fo r
. gossip bench , drapes , Ond lots
system . Al so, 1'975 Bul toco 250
more .
Pursang just been rebuilt ,
manv new ports now . $650.
Phone 992 -2307.

742-2656,
Pilon• (61•) 36J.Om.
AMX. new ti re s. cus tom
BABY PLAYPEN , Phone '192·577a HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, sell , trade 1q73
whe~ls . ve Good cOndition.
or 985-4196 .
or troin horses. RUTH REEVES
Coll7•2·2930.

OLD RAILROAD lanterns , TNOC
Hocking Volley K I M and
others. Also, al l kinds of steel
traps. Pt,one (614) 367·7.433 or
write ~chn Veith , Cheshira,

Ohio 45620.

trainer . Phone (614) 698 -3290. '

AKC SHETLAND sheeP dogs .
OIIAI~I:
(Min .) Collies , 2 females , 7
weeks old. Shots ond wormed. 1 New .c-o - Op water ~ol ­
teners, model VC -SVL
Phone (614) 367· 0292 or

FOR

367·7112,

Save

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Animal Con~line. 992-7680; or
after 6 p.m ., 9q2.5427 .
1971 REBEL MOBILE Home , 12 K
6?, centro! air, partially fur,
mshed, set up In Mobile Home
Pork. Phone 992·5590.
2 BEDROOM Tra i ler, unfurnished .
I OC)IC 50 corn er lot, I block from
SyrocuS!!t" Recreation Park .
$7.500 lot and trailer.· Phone
1q70 MONTEREY Mobile Home, 12
x 60, 2 bedroom plus utility
room and 150ft. fence . Under·
p inn ing and tires included
$3800 . Phone 992·5001.
'
1971 CAMMERON 3 bedroom. ful ly carpeted. 10 K 30 owning,
back porch, 10 K 10 building
furnished . Second tro ller o~
right in Country Mobile Home
Park . fhone 992-6161 .

By Roger Bollen

FOR ADOPTION , abonded 3
week old male Spaniel puppy,
needs special care . HumanE
Societv, 992·7680.
'
MOTHER CAT ond
Phone 992·3090 .

5

kittens .

FEMALE PART German Shepherd
to give owoy to good home,
around 18 months old. Block
and ton . Phone 992-3361 .
REG . TREEING Walker famale
coondog, 81 yrs . old. Phone
992 -3061!.

SSO .OO

Only 5279.95

on

a

new

Hotpolnt Refrigerator .

1 New 20 cubic ft.
Chest Freezer
$319.95
Now In stock, complete line
of bulk garden seeds .
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
$65
1 Good Used Poulan Chain

saw

1 Good Used U n leo
.oryer

sso

no.oo

1_GOC?d Used G . e ; Dryer $85
1 Good Used Ho t poin.tFrost -Free
Coppertone
Freezer -Refrigerator
combination . A real steal

·at 5250,

. Pomeroy Land~nm· 1

6 FREE KITTENS. Phone 7·2-3063.
DOGGIE BEAUTY Parlor, ol.l
breeds styled the way you like.
No drugs used . Coli for ap·
pointment , 7.42-3162 .
GIVE-A -Way one female kitten.
Gray and ton in col or. Phone

992-2A2B .'
furn ished

5A34 .

SEE

f. . Tt-IEREIS

I

PLeNTY OF
L.E&lt;a ROOM/

oph: Phone 9Cil2-

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt.
33, ten miles north of Pomer oy .
L~Jrge lots with concrete patios,
u dewalks , runners and off
street parking. Phone992-7.479.
FURNISHED APT . Adu lts only , no
pets . Ph on e 992·3874 , Mi'ddleport.

2 BEDROOM MOBILE home in
.........Racine oreo .. C~l l992- 585~ .
AVAILABLE AT Rlver~ ide Apart.
men ts, one bedroom , $105 per
month , 2 bedroom , $138 per
month . Phone 992·6098 . Equal
Hous_ing Opportunity.
2 BEDROOM unfurnished house.

Coii992·5A34 or'/92·3129.
3 ROOM NICELY furnished aport·
ment . Air
conditioner
reasonable. Con be seen by ap:
pointmant , 992-2053 .

FT . LEISURE TIME Camper
se lf -contained, excellenf
c ondi t ion . Phon.e 992 -23 86.

COLLIE PUPS . To give away .
Phone 94q "2632 .

NORWEGIAN Elkhound and
German Shepherd with 4 male
pujjs . 7 weeks . Richard
Caruthers, Bunker Hill.

GIVE·A· WA. Y 6 week old puppies , YtGerman
Shepherd .
Phone m ·3640.

KAWASAKI 175 · dirt bike. $400;
Suzuki 72 · street bike. $750.
Call q49 -2463 , evenings after 6
p.m .
.

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23
CB Mobi l e TrinsCe l.ver
complete with weather
proal PA speaker, 2 way
base loaded CB ant enna,
for rOof top or trunk mount .
Power cord. coax, antenna
cab le and all hardware
i nc luded .

ONLY
569.95

9 WEEK old pigs, $25 each . Phone

949-2a57.
HANGING BASKETS, rols , and

geraniums .
C eland ' s
Greenhou:se ,
Geraldine
Cleland. Rocine, Ohio .

PET CLIPPERS, $10, Boss fishing
rod , $15. Phone742·2050 .

Pomeroy Landmark
1:.1

~-::::::;;:::=-------_.J
HEAVY Ttr-t: nens tor sole . Phone

TWO A.NTIQ~E Key wind pocke t

---

Cl1 971 by NtA. Irlc . l .M. Reg U.~ Pi!. 9ff.

7A2·3122.

'

TWO MACH bi:J- G6c,.. 1.c tire;- two
Moch 70 F70-14, four Crogar

wheol•. $250.
667-3737.

Phono

(61A)

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding ,
Storm
W i ndows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

GUMR SERVICE
Continuous

one

piect

gutters. We liang II, or dolt
yoursell. Special prices to
builders.

BISSEll SIDING 00

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m. to 5 p.m .

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

RACINE CARPET

.
M~ND~ UNE 20. 1977
~.
5,oo--B1g VaUey 3: Brady Bunch 8; Mister Roger,•
Neighborhood 20.33; Emergency One 13; Mission :

SAVEO A LIFE,

6,13; Kolak B; Hary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12:0()--Movle "Key Largo" 10; Janak! 33.
12:40--Toma 6,13 ; Movie "The Della Factor" 8.
l;~Tomorrow 3,-t .

5 :30--Adam-12 • • News 6: Family Affair 8; Elec. Co .
20,33.
'
6 &lt;0()--News 3 .~.8. 10.13,1 5: ABC News 6; Zoom 20;

SHOP6· 16-lmo.

Route l, Pomeroy/ 0 .

CAPTAIN EASY

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

•=
•

" The Originetors
Not The lmit•tors"

2·23· 1 mo.

:a.

\

M:»-Form D.... ~.
11 :• News 3,4,41,lt,13.15 ; Monty Python's Flying
Circus 20; B!Ktt Jouurnal 33.
11 :30--Johnny
3.~. 15 ; Streets of Son Francisco

earft~rul ID" fill TMAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ \!il ~~·
by Henri Arno&amp;d and Bob Lee

•

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
Ali1!nment,
wheel
balancing, tune-up,
brake work, minor
repair.

C!WTY LADIES
HANDICRAFT
104 West Main Street

Just Below 1he Jones

Behind Rutland Grado
School. Evening work by
appointment. Ph. 742-2005.
6-5-1 mo. Pd .

Boys' in Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone 992·2298
6·15· 1 mo.

--lt-SQY. . . -

u
Nobil Summit ROIId
Rl , 1 Middl~port, 0 .
1'112·5724
!Complete
Sales
and
"Service and SUpplies.

Automatic;
Sl!_rvic:e

5232.

~=-~~~ ---

EXCAVA.TING, dozer , backhoe
and di tcher . ChOrles R. Haf·
f i eld , Bock Hae Se rvice ,
Rutland . Ohio. Phone 742·2008.

o,-•.

SMALL form lor sole , l
down
owner financed . Monroe Coun:

ly, W. Vo . Phone (304) 772·
3102 or (304) 772-3227,

WILL do roofing . construcfion,
p lumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
7.42 -23.48.

--.--·--- -

OEA LTOR
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD:" SR.
REALTOR
216 E. ~cond Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 991-3325

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec.,
plumbing ond heat ing . Phone

'

e.-

cavating ,. ~e ptic systems ,
dozer, backhoe , dump truck
limestone , grovel , blacktoP
paving, R,. 14~ . Phone I (61_. )

RENOVATED

tibone Super 8 Cary Lift: Pren·
lice G -RMT ~-342 bypass grap·
pi•: Contocl O.nnis Smurr,

(61&lt;) B3a 53A5 ,

city

shopping $,17,000.
NEW
, LISTING
Carthage
Hills,

I

~••I

bath,

NEW 3 bedroom house, built: in
k itchen, both and y, , Phone
742-2306 or contact MilO B. Hutchison. Rutland , Ohio.

~

10 Winp
11 Oil well
12 De baucM
P Duds
•• Wooden ccn
II a-me or
Bllrrows
- -ene
Dille. e .g.
(lllltr.)

BORN LOSER

Coii992·7Aal ,
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,

ce11tral heating. Up to 5
bedrooms and l lf2 baths .
Full basement and large

VA -FHA, 30 yr. financin g. Ireland
Mortgage , 77 E. Stole , Athens,

phone (614) 592-3051 ,

lol. $24,000,
57 ACRES- Good gambrel

New house for sole, 3 bedroom , 1
1 1J:~
both , rec . room and
garoga. lee Construction
phone 992-3&lt;154 or 446-95b8. '

roof barn w i th water,
electric and concrete
floors. 3 bedroom house
wit~

bath and FA turnace.
LARGE 4 bedrOOfTl

2 BEDROOM HOUSE, lcrg~ livi ng
room , modern full size basement , bullt·i n ggroge on
1 1/,acres , city water, gas, high
ground , good neighbors . Phone

frame home, 2 baths •.
natural
gas
central
heating , famlly room ,
garage and large lawn.
2 BUILDINGS - for the
price of one on Slate Route ..
Only $B ,500,
2 BEDROOMS - In fown
on quiet street. Modern
bath, dining room and level
lot.
NEW LISTING Just
outside ol town Is this fully
furnished 3 bedroom home
with city water, natural
gas, partial basement and
large bach yard . Just
$7,000,
WITH GOOD CREDIT
AND A FEW HUNDRED
DOLLARS YOU CAN
HAVE A HOME OF YOUR
OWN.
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Associ1tes

'

NEW HOUSE for sole 3 bedroom
1'/, bath , ~ec. · room , arld
garage. lee Cons tru ction.
Phone 992 -3 454 or {614 )
1975 SHULTZ 12 x 60 Mobile home
with cement porch and owning.
Ti le block garage , ce llar
buildi ng wifh util ity room
o11erheod on 21ft acres of land.
located near
Lang~~o~ille ,
$1-4 ,000. Phone C)C)2 -5589 .
5 ROOM HOUSE , 1 both , 2 porches . one sCreened , garage
and carport , gas furnace. Watk.
ing distance to town and to
school. Coli after 5, 992-3.488 .
HOUSE FOR sole, one thlrd acre
ground in Boshon area . Phone

9•9-2.32 .
HOUSE FOR Sole in Bradbury,
Oh io. Close to W.M .P. 0 . Radio
station, 5 rooms , both wit~ .
shower. Two enclosed porches,
·floor furnace, air conditioner,
carpeted , corner lot. 2 cor
garage, patio, washhouse with
showflr, all utilities , also o
well . For further in form ation
co11992-53.41 .

...

_
· '

....l••.
.• \.•

4- '

: *·
e_,

n·

We ain't

MAIN
PO~-!IEROY,

no wher'!

0.

..

stuc k!

{Mswers tomorrow)

IEG01' MSY MARTYR . FACADE
- -. . 11-,...,llonoi...,..ggler didn't
_._
...... tn-"CUSTOMS"

Pi

My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20;
Lowell Thomas Remem ers 33.

DOWN
I Corday'a
victim
t San Antonio
landmark
I Recollect
tllnd of shirt
ll'iar-shaped

lll*ument
• r • aer
II • 11m
711 J •

7:30--Hollywood Squares 3; Baseball 4; Lei's Deal
· With It 6; Malc/1 Game PM 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20.33; $25,000 Pyramid 10; Wild Kingdom
13: Music City 15.
a :oo--Baa Baa Blac k Sheep 3,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Family Holvak a, 10; James Michener's World
20133 .

Central· air. 1 acre. $31,000.

MIDDLEPORT- Close to
- 4 BR. 2 baths •.
equipped kitchen. large
sc~ool

rec. rOC?m, air cond., FA
heat, bar, storage and
other features, 2 car

w~WI'
""Tiy--,...,,r.
(LIL::AH~NE=::R=T~~~'."A'":W~-r:Y"Wf~r\fwe~~iiU~\l'BllT,"~~=-;v;:;y:a:/Fff.n:Jr:=J=~·
FaL-LON
STUPID."- .
"' SAl,..,
v. A MA"
N
H"'

""

I
._._.

'-U

1 &lt;.A.J '

!&gt;OGSN'r APPRE'CIA1E CLOTHES

t-LJN:__T_Il--HE'-r%7tJ'f HAV6 ~Co~PLGf€ WHER~R
'&gt;bU L.EAl1 ~~~~~~~
6URU!'-

Yslenlay's Answer

IS Helper

VIE':t&lt;'E" ON 7b

News 33.

12 :oo--Movle " The Delphi Bureau" 10; Janak! 33.
1:oo--Tomorrow 3,4.
1:30--News 13.

BRIDGE

27 Ending for
gang or

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Bidder becomes overachiever
• 763

+A K 10 5 3
• K 83

37 condition
Barometer b--1--+38 Dark and
39 He tested
Job
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work

It:

L 0 N G F E !. L 0 W

Mon., Tues., Wlid.
· 8:00 tiiS:OO
Thursday 8'til Noon

HTAMHR

UTVUW T

TO 6E '&lt;OUR CADDY ...

MY ~RIEND, MARCIE,WILL
CAOD'f' FOR MR5.BARTLE'I'

GV H

EAST
• J 10 2
• Q 10 5

Weu North East
Pass
Pass

2+
3•

Soutb

1.

Pass 2•
Pass . I•

Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - I •
By Oswald &amp; James J acoby

the r e was a reasonable play
for game."
Oswald: " His first concern
was with the trump suit. He
wanted to lose just one trump
trick and there was a chance
he could work it out He led a
trump to dummy's queen. It
held . He led back a trump.
East played lhe jack and
Soulh ducked . This play is
called the compulsory finesse .
He couldn ' \ ~ain by covering .
He dod gatn by ducking
because West had to play the

ace."
Jim : "After this nice result
South was home . Hearts were
continued . South ruffed the
third heart , drew lh e las t
trump and went after
diamonds . The s uil failed to
break , but South still had his
contract."

~~Q~~

Oswa ld : " Bridge players

A Winnipeg reader wants to

have lots of allergies . South 's

know what it means to finesse

V HRTH was lha t he was allergic to
slopping one tri,ck short of
game. So he looked al his. sixlh
GWN
.
YKMY
ETYE
ST
G HTT
YV
spade and decided that he had
logo to game a fter his partner
MFRHTBE
CO WLT
invited it " .
Jim : " Maybe that sixth
Saturday's Cryploquole : A MAN IS NOT OLD UNTIL trump was sufficient reason.
REGRETS TAKE THE PLACE OF DREAMS. - JOHN In a ny event when Sout h lookBARRYMORE
ed at dummy , he saw t ha t

against your partner.
The finesse against partner
is ·a third-hand play. It is a
deliberale play of a low card.
It is seldom c orrect.

ST ,

LY

M

ME

ILUWLFT
LE

M

WILL BE TICKLED
WHEN TATER
LEARNS HOW
TO COUNT

IKVHT .

PLFR

I BET MAW SHORE
I{ES, Mt1.AM, I'M GOING

RLE-

WEST
• AI
• KJ 842

+Q9
+ J 872
.J964
.Q105
SOUTH ID )
.K97 653
.A9
+61
.A 7 2
East-West vulnerable

Middle

E V ST.

20

NORTH
•Qa

CRYPTOQUOTES

~

\I

33.

11 &lt;30--Johnny Carson 3,• .,15: Movie " The Stoolie"
6,13; McMillan &amp; Wife 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC

One )pt tcr simply sta'nds f or :mother. In thi s sample A is
used for the th ree I.'s, X fo r th e two O's, cl r . Si ngle letters.
apostrophes, the len gth :md fornwti on of the words are all
hint s. Et1th day the ~ode letters arC different.

!l1RDIE16 ~U &amp;MND
TUiU WA~ LOST IN
A PLANE C/01\SH ...

•

IO :oo--Pollce Story 3,15; Hollywood Squares 4 ; Kolak
a,10; News 20; At The Top 33.
10:30--Amerlcan Lifestyle 4; Black Perspective onthe
News 20.
·
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,8, 10.13,15; MacNeii·Leh,rer Report

i!----T.:""Tl'-r.-"'!0'"'1

Is

Associ•tes

--"'~NOLD GRATa&gt;:

20,33,

18 Woodland

A X Y D I. B A A X R

9P2-2259 or 915-4112

_FRIDAY Tit 5

8&lt;30--.Lave(ne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9:oo--Pollce Woman 3,15; Rich Man, Poor Man 6.13;
MASH 8,10; Mark Russell 20,33,
9:3()--0ne Day At A Time 8,10; Best of Ernie Kovacs

young
28 Outright
\ 31 Kind of
arl
32 Ralph
· Kramden'st:r.--+-+--tvehicle
33 Ruby \ 34 Bec harm
36 Molten
rock

small deck, large living R.

•
,• '' -,... ·~····-·· ~·-~-:.·-· ·
J.4~:!&gt;'-!.'

m

modern kitchen, dinette,

garage. S4S.OOO.
POMEROY- Lovely view
of the river, 3 BR. bath,
equipped k lichen, garden
space. storage bldg, Part
basement. S12.500.
JUST LISTED
3
bedrooms,bafh, carpeting,
nat. gas heat, carpeting.
large Iof , $18,000 .
POMEROY Peacock
Ave.. 31!-4 acres, water,
sewer avaUable, Could be
developed . $5,800.
CLOSE TO MINES - 4
acres has several building
lois, Township Rd. · 344,
Asking just $4,600.
CLOSE TO FORKED RUN
LAKE - 6 acres. almost
new double wide, 2 j!R.
bat~. dining R., .g arage and
2 by(ld(ngs. S17 ,000.
AVOID THE PITFALLS IN
SE.LLING YOUR OWN
HOME - LET US SELL IT
FOR YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kith &amp; Leoho
Cleland

cartoon.

I'se ' u l'rlfled
fine' zs Pale with .
Jes' 2, ";1~e- b--++---+-

JUST LISTED - About 2
· yrs . old, 3 bedrooms,
Master ~as own full bath,

••

,

·

. blllloNtire

••a • • Ill·'

••

gntod by

24 Bugle call
26 Town
'
deity
29 Even oul
11
awce,
~:ina
19
"In
My30 Beer
as 1111 II*
(4 well.)
Hacienda"
ingredient
19 Mine 1 an:e 8 She's much
22
Cigarettes,
32
German city
20 Satiate
admired
in
Blighty
35
Mamma -!
21 Co~ 9 Built
23
Iron
Curtain
36
Gr
esham 's
citizen
11 Arlene
country
Z2 Late ·
Francis -

all elec ., 1 acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland. Phone 992-

rural

good buy at $16,000,
POMEROY- Large older
home with natural gas

N

·1.......

3

bedroom frame home.
Bath,
birch
kitchen ,
disposal and level lot. A

•

the-

NOW arrange thl circled letters to
1o1m the surpriW answer. as sug·

lty THOMAS JOSEPH
.K.ol8
40 Black-andblue spot

near

bath, front porch and. large
lot. 511.000.
5 YEARS , YOUNG - 4

J

,.,.= ( I I :1 C1 I I J

I!::

5I I

HOMESITES for sole, I acre and .
up. Middleport, near Rutland.

frame with 2 bedrooms,

Commercial property opprox. 17
acres, level land, located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio. Route
.....?.:!hone (bl-4) 667 -630.4 .

SWISS COLONY travel trailers
custom mode; MAPLE LEAF
tandems 16' up; CRICKET lruck
campers special .at COONER's
CAMPERS , Rainbow Ridge .
Open e~o~enlngs. Talc• Meigs 28
or 32 to Boshon . Owner , Robert
Codne(", Long Bot~~~

·•
,.

I
(

Search for Tomorrow 8;10.

1 :oo--Gong Show 3: All My C~lldren 61 ,3; News B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women Only 15;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
1&lt;30--Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8, 10,
2;0()--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13: Leonard Bernstein Conducts 33.
2:30--Docfors 3, ~.15; One Life to Live 6, 1j; Gu iding
Light 8, 10.
3 :0()--Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20 ; Bit with Knit 33.
3: 1$--General Hospital 6, 13.
3:30--Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Antiques 33.
4:oo--Mister Cartoon 3: Gong Show 4,15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Gilligan's lslland 8; SesameS . 20,33;
Movie "Song ol Bernadette" 10; Dinah 13,
4 &lt;30--My Three Sons 3; Sfar Trek 4: Emergency One
6; Andy Griffith B; Hogan's Heroes 15
5:0()--Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch B; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission :
Impossible 15.
5:30--Adam.12 4; News 6; Family Alfalr B; Elec. Co .
20,33 .
6:0()--News 3.4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; Zoo
33.
6 :30--NBC News 3.4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News a ,10; Vt!Qetable Soyp 20 .
7&lt;oo--Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4: Liar's Club
· 6; Country Carnival B; News 10; To Tell t~e Truth

·~

·'

ll!HAT'S ~IS 'F' CN ~OQR
Rero!&lt;f CARD-.

water, electric ~eating and
nice lot. $16,500.
RUTLAND 4 room

$1 ,000 , down , coli (30A) 772·
3102 or (304) 772-3227,

Phone 992-332•.

REMODELING , Plumbing, heating
and all types of general repair .
Work guorante~d 20 years ex·
perie~ce . Phone 992·2409.

IIIIGH1V
ICI!A-

3

water,

bedrooms.

TWO BEDRQ9M trailer , Brown'•
Trailer Court . Aduhs only .

BOWERS REPAIR -

1

SLIC~

baths, natural gas furnace
and

COUNTRY formlond with seclud ed woods, water and go.od oc·
cess in Monroe County , W. Va.

949.2635 .

BRADFORD , Auctioneer; Com·
ple te Ser11ic•. Phone q49·2487
or 949·2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford. ·
Sweeper&amp; , toasters , .Irons all
smcill appliances. lawn mo~er,
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985 3825.
.

Saturday'o

TREE OMS A

bedroom frame home, 2

HARRISON'S T.V. Repai r . Service
Calls . 276 Sycamore, St., Mid·
dleport. Phone 992-2522.

1

t

,.,..,. a

7461.

69a·7331.

B r aun~ ;

L-_J,-.l--l--l--~.a

BUT PUTT1H IT
lfi5U&gt;E THIS
.OLD HOLlOW

TE.FORD[g

CARPENTER , flooring , ceil ing,
po(leli ng. Phone992 -2759.

J

OX,OlUCK!
1

4-10-1

E~WOOD

,

L I 'I' 'I' L II: ORPHAif

LAR'Ri~PER
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vice , all makes, 992 -2284. The
Fabric
Shop ,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Ser~o~ice . We sharpen Scissors.

\•reeo

IJ'ITLE OftPHAN ANNIF.

SIDI5SIIffm

Reedsville, 0 . Ph. 378-4250
5·27·TFC

.MARTIN

.

1£1'\MUEIIT
III..S
AIIMIMUII

RAltS

992·5858,
HOWERY AND

N£1K'AX

S11IO
IIIIIDOIIS I DOOfiS

EXCAVATING. dozer, loader end
back hoe work ; dump tru cks
and lo· boys for hire: wi ll haul
fi ll dirt, to soi l , limestone and
. gra11el. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
fers , day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992·3525 or 992·

•» wards.

I

f-ioclllowolfllf • • &amp; Al\iel

REASONABlE

11 :JO--lt' s Anybody' s Guess 3,., 15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10.
11 :45--0Yr Living Language 33.
11 :5s--cBS News 8; Ms. FIKit 10.
12 :0()--News 3,4,6,10; Shoot lor the Stars 15; Midday
13 ; Forsyte Saga 33.
12 :30--Chlco &amp; the Man 3, 15; Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Bob

. rr 1 I

lnwlllioll Slnices

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEED

Community of Llvlng Things 33.
11 : 30--Exploratlons In Shakespeare 33 .

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

lllOim

Transll)js_~~on

Jean Shepherd' s America 33.
11 :oo--Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15: · Happy Days 6,13;

~~~9;~4 ~wifr===';;\

at ._.lour ..........

four M

SWAIN'S

6 :oo--Summer Semester 10.
6 &lt;1s--Farm Report 13.
6 : 20--Not For Women On! y 13,
6 &lt;30--Focus on Columbus • : News 6; SYmmer
Semester 8; Concerns and Comments 10.
6 &lt; ~&gt;--Mornlng Report 3.
6 :.50--Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 :Ss--Good Morning, Trl Slate 13,
7;0()--Today 3,.,15; Good Morning America 6,13: CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
·
7 :0s--Porky Pig 10.
7: 30--Sc~oolles 10.
8:0()--Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,1 0; ~same
St. 33.
S:Jo--Big Valley 6.
9 :oo--cross·WIIs 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15; Mi ke
Douglas 10: Biography 33.
9 &lt;30--A .M. 3: Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8;
CanterbYry Tales 33.
10:oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Here's LYcy a, 10;
Mike Douglas 13: Studio See 33 .
10 &lt;30--Hollywood Squares 3.4.15: Price Is Right 8.10;

-"'I•

DUGAN'S

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES,
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS ,
OPEl&lt; 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10 :00 to 5: 00

TUESDAY , JUNE 2t,l977

American Odyssey 33.

Young's tarpeting

6-13. 1 mo .

1

1:.50--News 13.

6 :30--NBC News 3,. , 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, ID ; Vegetalble S011p 20.
7:0()--Truth or Cons. 3; To Telllhe Truth 4: Ller' s Club
6; Buck0wens8; News 10; ToTelltlleTrulh 13; My
Three Sons 15; Amer icana 20;
33.
7:30--Tho Good Ole Nas~vll le Music 3; In ~arch of • :
Muppef Show 6; Gong Show a: MlcNeii-Lehrer
Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10; CandldCamera 13;
Nashville on the Road 15.
l : ~vle " Mulligan's Stew" 3,~ , 15; Pllol 6,13;
Jeffenons 8,10; Tell Me If Anything Ever Was
Done 20; Once Upon a Classlc .J:l. ,
1 :-lnebell 6.13; Shields &amp; Varnell · 8,10; Jean
stepiMord's America Jj ,
t :OO MMHII 1.10: Palllsers 20,33 .
liMn from Atl•ntls 3,4,15; All's Fair 8,10.
M:-Sonny I. Cher 1,10; News 20; Austin City Limits

Superior
Steam Extraction

Free Es11!!!•1es
No Sunday calls Please

ack W. Clrsey, Mor.
Phone "2~2111

992·252A .
watches, very old . Belt offer KAW,.,SAKI 100 0~ ond Off R&lt;XId
CAMPING SITES along the Ohio
7A2· 2050.
·
'
Motorcycle, " like new" with
River for rent on State Rt. 338.
3 , __,.
See Robert lewis or call KRAUT CABBAGE , $1 bushel, Cut ~·~mol, Coli (61&lt;) 667 ·33::3::::.:.,
your
own
.
James
Hill
Form
1q73 HONDA XL250, ·runs · good.
BA3·2A32.
'
,$300. Coll992 -74!3 after 5 p.m .
3 BEDROOM MOBilE Home 2Y·h . METAL Display Gonddos
Swisher
and
Lohse
Pharmocy'
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT,
located in cou~ t ry near Har·
. '
rison~o~ille
on St .. Rt . 1-43. ~2_·~55 ,
John Deere 540 Skidder: Pet·
Beautiful location with Iorge
yard ond gorden . o.posit required. Phone 742·3186 or

TAKE THE GUN TOO. MR.
TRACY,
THE
ONLYITTJME
IT WAS
FIRED

Business Services

446-95611 .

PA~T

3 AND 4 RM . furnisked ond un·

FOR YOUR
WE'LL
TAI&lt;E PROTECTION
THESE DUDS..

--·-~---

va

992·7134 .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
visited her aunt, Ava Lutz in
Lancaster Sunday,

WANTED TIMBER cutter s, skidder
and dozer operators. Pttone
992 -5397 or 992·3861 after 7
p.m . Tri· Stot e Chi pping, Inc.

SPRING GARDEN Svpplles, Cob·
boge, cauliflower , broccoli ,
and 118Cid lettuoe plan ts,
yellow. wh ite, and rOO onion
sets. onion plant ~. Kennebec,
cobbler , Ka'tahd in, Red Pontiac
and Red Losodo seed pota toes.
Bulk garden seeds . potting soil,
p8C11 moss, fruit trees ond rose
bu shes . Midwa y Market ,
Pomeroy, Ohio , 992-2582,
Bob: s Market , Meson, W .Va.
(~)7~21_
. 1--4 2 in. cost iron k itc hensink , 1
ba sin and 1 drain board , hong
on wall type, white , 1·3 burner
gas , hot plate . Pl1one992 -571A.

1976 FORD F:250, 4 wheel dri11e. ·10. FOOT STEEL truck bed , $75 .
1969 Chevy thr ee-quarter ton
Phone 742 -2590.
.
pickup, 8 foot plumber's bed ,
CASH pa id for oil makes and
eKcellent, 8 ply tire s. new
models of mob ile homes. 1q76 F- 100 PICKUP V-8, air , p.s.,
p.b.. Range r interior , topper ,
poin t. Also , 1965 Jeep Pickup
Php ne area code 61.4 -423 -9531 .
automatic, 10,000 miles . Phon e
with 1'973 360
engi ne , fou r
TIMBER. Pomeroy Fores t Pro 742·2050.
speed , four
wheel
drive,
ducts . Top price for sta nding '
lockout hub~. New Firestone
1972
BUICK
Skylark
,
air
co
ndition·
sa wt imber. Call 992-5%5 or
mud and snow re&lt;aps. Also ,
ing . Low mileage, p.s ., Cal l
Kent Hanby , 1-4.46-8570.
1951 -GMC Truck tandem dri~o~e ,
9q2 -3;222 after .4 : 30 p.m .
very good running condition .
COINS, CURRENCY: tokens old
weekdays.
needs brake work . Phone 1
pocket watches and chains,
6q8.5.411 .
silver and, gold . We need 196A 1970 FORD PICKUP truck , ·S800.
Phone 992 -5301 .
and older sllv~r coi ns. Buy . selL
S H.P. RIDING Lawn mower , $35 .
or trade' Call Roger Womslev , . 1q75 GMC VAN "Good Times "
Caii94Cjl· 27.47 olt~tr 5 p.m .
742-2331.
automatic, carpeted . com plete
Jq?:J
GREMLIN , factory air, auto
with sink , icebox , bed and
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes , brou
loon
v alue, $1000. 1972 Hondo
table. has Coptoln's Seats. Rea l
beds ,
etc .,
co mplete
350 Elect . start , excellent con sharp,
$4900.
Call742-2217
.
household ~.. Write M . D. Miller ,
dition. One 30 gallon and one 5
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio or call 1976 HONDA CIVIC CVCC , good
gallon ocquorium and ace. ,
992-776tJ.
cond1flon . Good gas mi leage,
both $50. See all at 620 Laurel
Phone (614) 696·1 084 anytime.
St., Middleport.
·
WANTED · CHIPWOOD Poles
Max . diameter, 10 inches o~
14FT . JOHN BOAT , 5 h.p . motor ·
largest end, $8 per ton ; bundl ·
ond oors, $325; 19611 Dodge,
ed slabs , S6 per ton . Delivered
new t i res , $300; 85 ,000 BTU
to Ohio Pallet Company , Rt. 2.
Master Spoce Heater , $175 .
STAR
Kennel
Boarding,
RISING
Pomeroy ,
Ohio .
Phone
Ca117•2-2352 .
Indoor-Outdoor runs , grooming
992-21&gt;89.
all .. ~reeds, clean sanitary 100 WEST LINEAR fo r sole , $95.
250 or 300 AMP Welder. Phone
focJ I1t1es oe 367·7112. Cheshire.
Coii742·21B4.

(6) 6 , 13, 20, 2t c

FUNNY BUSINESS

LI CENSED PILOT for harbo ur
work . Apply In person at TriState Materials Corp. Applegrove, Ohio on St . Rt. 338.

---~-

992·2244 ,

, TAURUS (April 20•MIJ 20) The
e arly part of the day may be alittie rough for you, so ta~e a
pleasure break tonight., Dlhlng
out co uld recharge your
bstte"rles.

PIANO TUNING , lone Dcniels. 12
years of service . Phone

CONCRETE WORK . Patios , steps,
walks , and driveways . Phone

pertise today might try to grind
you on yo ur price. Stand fast:
· Ch ances are he's bl uffing .

LOCAL INSURANCE agency needs
someone to represent them on
on established terr itory . Good
wages , excellent ben ifits . It
vo_u con meet people don't poss
th 1s up . No experience re·
quired , only the will to work .
Send resume to Box 672
Pomeroy , Oh. -45769.

JOB OPENING . Portttime RN for
orea Health Agencv . Must hove 1
own transportation. General
knowledge of area . Hour s 8-4.
Call 992 -5912 between 8 and 4 .
Equal Opportunity Employer .

tlt c dlly Ocforc pubhcal tun

behooves

philo~oph i cal

---

NOTICE

VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sopl. 22) One

now

Phone Mr . Snodgrass Ieda y for a confidential
personal Interview. Call 992·211 t.
'

1 1!SJ&gt;I III ~J lJJ c fur· IULJI"C thilllllnl' llll'UI'·
i"Ct"l UISCJ11Uil .

You may be able to derive Intuitively ' somet h ing you 'v e

CAMPER, $600. Also , horse
troller, $450, Phone {61.4 ) 6qa .

3290.

Tht' Pub!J.'iht•r· reserves Uk! ~ht
tu t..'dll ur r·cjl:!l'L 1111}" ads dct'll ll.'d ul&gt;
JCI.'tJU!Iill. Til~ Publlsill"J' l.l.'l !ln{ll. bt!

YOU'LL. NEED NEl'V SHELLS

Impossible 15 .

COAL. limestone. and ca lcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dus t controf and spec tal m l~ ing
soh tor former~ , Excelsior Salt
Works , Main Street , Pomeroy,
Ohto or phone 992· 38q1 .

good starting sa lary and receive exceptional employee

Mub&amp;lc Hum!! ~X~k~ ilmJ Yard s.alcs
ill'C &lt;U..'t:t'vtt"\1 Ulli} Wl\h l'itSh With
ur tl~r . ~ ~cui dlHr~t· for on.l.s ~CUT)' ·

.•

For Sale

Help Wanted

ACAREER JOB IN
CONSUMER FINANCE

15 WvnL' v 1 Untlcr·

June 21 , 1177

20 19 77

VG

FORW~ TWO,

FORTY-THREE ,
FORW·FOLJR

r·For a copy of JACO BY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridgs," c/ o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 489, Radio City Srarion,

New York, N. Y 1Q019)

�'10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday_,_June 20 , 1977

Human rights policy stays

Local Bowling
Tuesday Morning Women ·
June 7, 1977
~son Bow ling Lanes

W. L.
J2 8

Team~

Greeo Ghost
Cll"" Coostructloo
Team I

32
28
18
16
14
10
10

Erw in Construction

8
12
22
2~

Team 6
26
Quality Print Shop
30
Headquarters
30
High Individual series Shirley Mitchell, Phyll is
Cll"" -4112; Patti Williams 46-j ;
Barbara Whlttlngtoo «5.
Hioh indlvldu31 oame -

Shirley Mitchell 200; Patti
Williams 172; Phyllis Cline
170.

High team game - Team ~
739; Cline Construction 726 ;
Green Ghost 702.
Team high series - Team 4
CANOE RACE WINNERS - Taking first place in the canoe race were Bryan arXJ '
Nathan Yonker of Rt. 3, Pomeroy. They took a purse of $30 for the event. Shown I~ are,
Bryan, Regatta Queen Niese! Duvall and Nathan.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAl.
Saturday Admissions David Ebershach, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges Ada Whited, Margaret
Rudolph, Edna Stiles, Wilma
Wells, Esta Daylong.
Sunday Admissions - Fred
Holcomb, Point Pleasant
Timothy Eynon, Reedsville;
Kay Warden, Racine ; Ruth
Dailey , Portland ; Bobby
Winebrenner , West.
Columbia ; l.inda Hawley,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges Antone Uter, Chester Fouty,
Melody Redmond, John
Hinkle.
PLEASANT VAl.LEY
Discharges - Glen Sayre,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Edith
Byer, l.eon ; Roy Smith,
Apple Grove; Mrs. Marjorie
Shaver, &lt;;lallipolls; Mrs .
Anna Belle McDermitt, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Johnnie
Russell and daughter, Bid·
well ; Kevin Bonecutter ,
Point Pleasant; Pamela
Glassburn, Sidw~ll ; Willard
Jeffers, Glenwood; Eugene
. Staats, Sr., Palatka, Fla.;
Mrs. Risden Miller, l.akin;
Mark (Tony) Garduer, Po~
Pleasant; Mrs. Robert l.yle,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. John

Craig, Buffalo; Mrs. Charles
Rayburn, South Liberty, 0.,
and Mrs. Ida Whitt, Point
Pleasant.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discbarges, June 17)
Jo Ann Allen, Josephine
Baldwin, Sandra Brumfield,
Joanne Byers, Thelma
Carter, Gerald Chambers,
John ·Gray, Halley Howell,
Mrs. Dailas Janey and
daughter, James Kunath, Jcr
Anne l.yons, Russell M~­
Daniel, James Milstead,
Mary Morgan, Myrtle
Morgan; Phyllis Newland,
Betty Proffelt, Ronnie
Rainey , James Roberts,
Mary Roberts, Kelly Rose,
Mrs . Samuel Rushn and
daughter, Virginia Roush,
Shelia Saunders, Danny
Saxon , Bobbie Schmidt,
l.eona
Spires,
Karen
Stapleton, Thomas Stephens,
Mrs. Roger Taylor and
daughter, Delphia Tribby,
Dana Williams Jr ., Mrs.
l..arry Wiseman and son.
(Births, June 17)
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Shelton,
a sort, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs:
Jerry Roese, a son, Rio
Grande.
(Discharges, June 18)
Larry Bailey, Jewel
Brumfield, Janet Bryant,

rN;=;;~·:: : : ;:::;: ,: ::;i:;:·&lt;:·Jj;i';j;tl

Judy Chapman, Mark Cline,
Vickie Coon, Richard Dow,
l.ucille
Fisher,
Rosa
Holschuh, Paul Kerns, Anna
l.ambert, Carolyn Lorbach,
Claren ce Mahle, Mariano
Merri ck, Teresa Miller,
Deborsh Ousley , Edgar
Payne, Marcella Phillips,
Mrs. Charles Price and son,
Harrison Robinson, Ullina
Rotzenburg, Clyde Shamblin,
l.uther Smith, Jr., John
Thompson, Mrs. Thomas
Vanco and daughter, Preston
Webb, Bradley White, Cloyd
Wiggins, Earl Winters, Lee
Wood Sr.
(Births, Jone 18)
Mr. and Mrs. Rickey Goff,
a son, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Jones, a daugh~r.
Langsville. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jones, a daughter, Crown
City. Mr. and Mrs. John
Wellington, a son, Bidwell.
Mr. and Mrs. l.arry Weil, a
daughter, Middleport. Mr.
and Mrs. Donnie Adkins, a
son, Proctorville. Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Hall, a son,
Pomeroy.
(Discharges, Jone 19)
Judy Canter, Ora Crabtree,
Mrs . Max Grueser and
daughter , Walter Morris,
Mary Pullins, Taylor Roush,
Janet Stebbins, Iva Whaley,
James Wonts.
(Births, June 19)
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey
Ketley, a son, Oak IDil.

2092 ; Cline Construction 2058;
Green Ghost 2014.

COLUMBUS, OlllO - GOSSIP, NOT HARD-HITTING
exposes have filled newspapers and broadcast reports since
the days of Watergate says Carl Bernstein, the . fJ)!'IIler
Washington Post reporter, who helped uncover the political
scandal. "Despite tjie self-congratulations that followed
Watergate lite real significant trend in our profession is nol
toward Investigative reporting but toward gossip or celebrity
journalism," Bernstein told 350 persons Sunday at the closing
luncheon of the natibnal Investigative Reporters and Editors
coovention here.
Post reporters Bernstein and Bob Woodward won the
Pulitzer Prize for their investigation of the Watergate scandal.
Bernstein said he did not know the reasons for the popularity of
gossip journalism but did note, "it is cheap and requires no
conunltment of resources."
·
"It puts our profession on the level of pandering. Thai is, to
give the public what we think they want inslel!d of the truth,"
he said.
ATHENS, OlllO - THE 1,380 DELEGATES to the 40th
annual BUckeye Boys State will be voting in elections lor their
mock week-long government program today, ualng !he
computerized system used in regular elections in Athens
County.
The delegates Sunday picked their party candidates in
primary elections conducted on paper ballots.
WASifiNGTON - COMMISSIONER DONAlD Kennedy
says his Food and Drug Administration's plan to han the use of
saccharin may be delayed "possibly a couple of months" by
· the new study linking the sweetener to bladder cancer in men.
The FDA had hoped to impose the ban in August, but
Kennedy said a delay probably will he necessary so scientists
and the public have a chance to study and comment on the new
lnfcrmation, and possibly broaden the ban. Meanwhile, .he
said, "If a male member of my familiwere drinking diet soft
drinks (which contain saccharin) I'd sure work hard to get him
to stop."
GEORGETOWN,. OlfiO - POUCE CHIEF OONAl.D
McElroy and investigators say arsonists possibly armed with
an incendiary device were behind the fire Saturday that
heavily damaged the historic Brown County Courthouse. The
$400,000 blaze broke out in a wooden stairwell about 4 a.m. It
destroyed the dome and the second floor area, where the
Brown County Commoo Pleas Court was located. A four-yeat
, remodeling project had been finished a month prior to the
blaze.
Many records in the 1851-built courthouse, a National
Historic Monument, were soved. Residents got out of bed and
forn1ed a human chain at tbe town square , to pass books,
manuacrlpts and other recorda away from the fire scene.
"'lbere ill a 100 per cent chance of arson," fire chief Donald
McElroy said.

be the first or regular
moothly meetings helween
the two.
On Thursday nlgbt the
President files to New York
City for a Democratic Party
fund raiser. His appearance,
in part, luimed at im)l'ovlng
relatioos with leaders or the
party.
Carter and his f!lmlly

HAROLD' PRICE

AJ , a
resident of Xenia, died at his
home ot 6: 15 a.m. Sunday.
Harold Keith Price ,

Mr . Pri ce was a selfemployed ca rpenter , borri In

Gallipolis on Aug.

13, 1935,
son of Cecil E . and Genevieve

(Jonesl Price.

He Is survived by hi S wife,

Clara Johnson Price and his
pa re nts,

who

reside

in

Gallipolis; three daughters.
Judith Ann and Rhonda Kay
Price and Allsha Johnsoo. all
at home t four sons: : Brian
Brian Keith, at home ; Eric,
with the U. S. Army In

Loan and

Arizona ; Terry, San Antonio,
Texa s and Bruce Allen ,

Xenia.

Four sisters survive: Mrs.

Phrllls

Pa rlc ia

Frances

Plymale,

Mullins,
Rlfe and

Mrs .

Mrs .
Mrs .

Alberta Ely , all of Gallipolis;
four brothers.

Jack and

William , both of Gall ipolis;
Ray, Marion and Carroll,
Columbus.
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday

READY TO WEAR
DEPARTMENT 2ND FLOOR
Classic
Doubleknit Pants
in your size

'

approved

She married Clarence
Gilmore of Cheshire In 1917.
They had two ~ns , Norman
Dale of Lowell. Ohio and
Paul, who was killed In an .

•

'1400

\

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, June 2I, 1977

coming from the front of the structure as ht! drove south on
SecoodAve. about 5:10p.m. Before getting to the traffic tight,
Skinner said there was a loud expl06ion. The front doors blew
open, and flames shot oot of the church hall-way across Secood
Ave., barely missing another passing motorist.
No cause has been determined ot this time, aceordlog to lire
and pollee authorities.
After fighting the lire nearly two hours, it appeared firemen
had it under control shortly after 7 p.m. However, it broke out
again on the roof. Huge black clouds of smoke covered that
area as the lire continued out of control until around 8:20 p.m.
when it began raining.
Hundreds of onlookers were on the scene as the structure
cootinued burning.
Some church members, with the assistance of bystanders,
began moving furniture out of the new section tv the rear, but
after the fire was brought under control, the items were
returned inside.
Earlier In the day, a lire in the outside trash bin was
extinguished by a church official. The blaze was reported by

three teen agers.
It was reported this morning by a church spokesman that the
!~year old pews which were reconditioned two years ago
suffered damage, but only five or 10 were destroyed (by falling
beams).
, The original chandelier was not damaged, and most of the
priceless stained gl&amp;ss windows escaped damage. Several
historic church gilts, however, were lost.
There was only smoke and water damage to the fellowship
room.
·
·
The churcb celebrated its centeoo.lal anniversary last year.
Considered one of the largest United Methodist Churth
structures In southeastern Ohio, Grace United has 1,050
members with a weekly average altendance of 400.
District Supt. Wesley Clark, Athens, was on the scene . It was
reported he was trying to contact Bishop l.ooden for possible
future help.
Tentative arrangements call for services to be held in the
church parking lot this Sunday.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 47

Dowler given contract
for three more years

These Dotty Mann pullon pants are of
doubleknit 100 pet. polyester with stretch
waistband for super fit. Well tailored 22·
inch flares in a good selection of solid colors
and plaids . Sized 8 to 18.

The contract of Charles L. Dowler
as superintendent of the Meigs Local
School District was renewed for a three
year period when the district's board of
education met in lengthy session
Monday night at the Meigs Junior lngh
School in Middleport.
Before voting unanimously to renew
the contract of Dowler, effective Aug. I,
1978, when his present contract expires,
the board held a short execl\tive
session. He was rehired at his present
salary.
A wide range of business was
carried out by the board during the
meeting including actions to purchase
new bleachers for the Meigs Footb8ll
Stadium in Pomeroy and refinishing of
the Meigs High School gym floor.
Upon the- recommendation of
Dwight Goins, director of noncertificated personnel, the board voted
to purchase seven sets of aluminum
bleachers lor Meigs Stadium from
Branstrator, Fort Wayne, .Ind. , for
$3,612 with delivery to he made in time
lor the fall football season.
The bleachers will seat some 350
persons and will' be used with present
bleachers which are still satisfactory
on the visitors' side oi the field. The
board agreed to accept the low bid of

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Home with the Rev . George

Oiler officiating . Burial will
be In the Gravel Hill

Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends

may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m.
Tuesday .

'100
I
Home
is no place. for
your valuables ...

~~ ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;1; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;~4-~CY~C~lE' Al ~. FAB Ic
Ill

A

ELECTRIC DRYER

COME SEE

ALL THE

It's after midnight. Do you know
where your valuables are? Chances
are they're safe and sound right
where you put them , but when
you 're talking about important papers, jewelry and other irreplacallles .. . why chance it? By keepin!l
your valuables in a Safe Deposit
Box, you'll have the security of
knowing they're protected from
theft, misplacement or damage ...
for just pennies a day!

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• 5 llll"'f»&gt;'lture •nlngc ~

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e In hii'IHT: IIQtd,I¥0CtdO,
copptrtoM, white.

.INGELS FURNITURE

Tonight and Tues.
June 20-21

3 DAYS OF
TME CONDOR

·Farmers Bank
POMEROY , OHIO
t

0

¢ ¢ d

$40.000 M8limum Insurance F'" Each
Member Federal

Oe~X"it

Oepos~tor

106 N. 2nd

~ve.

llilldleport, 0.

Be Sure To Stop In and Shop Our New Jewelly Dep'.

Insurance Corporation

"R"
I

taken by Keith Wilson on Secortd Ave.,. next to the old
Holzer Hospital facing north .

Council balks at
•
health mcrease

00

MASON DRIVE-IN

I

at

AND

MONDAY evening's fire at Grace United Methodist
Church was at its peak shortly after 1 o'clock. Photo was

William E. Swatzel, Teresa
C. Swatzel to Michael G.
Bendine!li, Patricia l.ynn
Bendlnelli, Lot 8, Fairview
Heights, Chester . .
Anna M. Ryther, .Com.,
Charles C. Foster, dec: to
Edna Lena Foster, Lot 13,
Bums Add., Letart.
Freda Ferguson, Roy
Proffitt, Ullian . Proffitt to
William W. Russell, Sharon
C. Russell , 2 acres, l.ehanon.
William Carter, Mildred
Carter to Her~rt Barker,
Betty Lou Barker, I&gt; acre,
Chester.
Leonard A. Fry, Bernice E.
Fry tv Joseph Reiser, Edith
Reiser, 1.21 acres, 160 acre •
lot, Pomeroy.

UPSTICK

According to Fire Chief Jim Northup's report this morning ,
the first alarm was turned in by Bill Williams in person at 5:10
p.m. Twenty-eight Gallipolis Volunteer Firemen, five trucks
Including the aerial ladder, were rushed to the scene at the
corner of Second Ave. and tedar St.
Firemen battled the bla2e until miduight. A skeleton crew
remained on duty throughout the night in case the lire broke
out again.
Firemen fr.om Pt. Pleasant, Middleport, and the Gallipolis
state Institute assisted local firemen in the seven-hour battle
to save the structures. No injuries were reported.
Approximately 200,000 gallons of water Wa$ required to
bring the fire under control.
Church personnel usually leave the business office by 4:30
p.m. Apparently the lire started shortly thereafter. According
to Northup, the blaze originated on ti\e first floor (front) near
llllllcl118ey.
the stairway. It spread to the first and second floors of the old
1be kitchen and dining room suffered smoke and water section.
damage. The educational wing was not damaged. Firemen
One passing motorist, Tom Skinner, a member of the Daily
said a lire wall protected that area.
Tribune's advertising department, said he noticed smoke

the Huntington Products Co. for
She was told that the board plans to hire
refinishing the gym floor at Meigs
an additional person in art, in the
High. The price will run between $3,400
elementary field, this fall to meet
and $3,600 and work will begin in July.
requirements of the new legislation and
Goins also reported on the conditions
that the board will have .to review the
situation for the 1978-79 school year.
of roofs on buildings of the district and
The board accepted resignations or
it was agreed to proceed with a com·
plete repair job at the junior high
retirement letters from Eric Hart, as
building and to have patching done at .Principal of the Rutland Elementary
two grade school buUdings. Additional
School who will continue teaching in the
work is also needed at the high school . district, however; Grace Drake as
but the finn making repairs is still
secretary at the high school, retiring ;
under bond and has been contacted to
Dorothy Woodard, retirin g as a '
do the work. The finn of George
teacher; Mildred Long, retiring as a
cook. Janis E. Schmoll, a former
. Hackett, Jr. was hired to do the ad·
teacher In the district, was granted
ditional repair work al a cost of about
another year on her leave of absen~e to
$4,200.
Present was Glenn Enslen
continue work at Indiana University. A
letter from Phyllis Ha ckett was
representing the Meigs Jaycees. Enacknowledged. The ietter from Mrs.
slen thanked the board for use of the
Pomeroy Stadium lor the Big Bend Hackett, who has been on leave of abRegatta frog jumps and said the sence, also indicated that she has accepted employment in Licking County
Jaycees will leave the field in better
this fall.
,
shape than they found it. He asked
In accordance with. board policy,
b(lard members to contact him if there
the board grant~\~! severance pay to
are any problems over the use of the
Bernice Carpenter, Martha Husted,
field. He ·also volunteered the labor of
Jaycees for helping with establishment ·Dorothy Woo!lard, Annette Knight,
of the new track area at the high school. · Mildred Long and Grace Drake. The'
Mrs. Jeanne Slawter addressed the
total pay will amount to about $8,051. it
hoard on new legislation which requires was reported.
additional education service personnel.
(Continued on page 12)

Law catches up
with gun thief

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Plus

State Fire Marshal Frank Eisnaugle, Jackson, today began
a probe Into Mooday evening's lire which gutted the sanctuary
of Grace United Methodist Church.
Estimated damage to the 101 year-old portion of Gallipolis'
largest church building is between· three-quarters of a million
and tt million according to Rev. James V. Frazier, pastor.
It was the second major fire in the old French City within
live months. The old Queen Bee Hotel was destroyed by fire on
Feb. 20.
One church official said it will take approximately $1 ¥..
m!Won to replace thai part of the edifice damaged Monday
evening. The structure was insured for $1.3 million by the
Wiseman Agency.
.lull two yean ago an exteoslve $%%5,000 remodell!lg project
was completed on the front portion of the church which housed
the bulloess office, parlor, chapel, conference room and

'1200

Announcement was made
todoy by Congressman
Clarence E. Miller and the
Fanners
Home
Ad·
ministration that approval
has been given for a $268,000
loon and a $150,000 grant to
the Gallia County Rural
Water Association.
1be new loan and grant will_
be used for an extension of
tlie existing rural water
system, ren9vatton of the
plant, installation of 42 new
miles of water lines and
construction of a new well.
The extension will allow for .
an additional 248 customers
increasing the system to 2,800
customers.
The loan will run 40 years
at 5 pet. per year according to
Association President Ish·
mae! Gillespie.

"R"

Church fire loss may top $1 million

Bulavllle Christian Church
near Gallipolis. Burial will be
Mrs. SUsan Marie Potts , 59,
In Rlie Cern etery .
Friends may call from 2·4 Route I, Scottown , Ohio,
and 7·9 p.m. Tuesday at the formerly of Syracuse, died
McColough Funeral Home, Sunday evening at Holzer
Xenia and from noon Wed· Medical Center .
Mrs. Potts was born June 2,
nesday until the hour of . the
services at the church.
. 1918 In Middleport, the
daughter of the iate Mr . and
Mrs. 'Charles Lambert. She
was alsorr~ceded in death by
MINA AMOS
her firs husband, Melvin
Mlna Leona Amos, 77. a Lee.
resident of Rodney, died at 4
Surviving are 11er husband ,
p.m. Saturday In Shelby Clarence
Potts, Jr .. and three
Hospital, Marle.tta.
stepchildren .
She was born March 23,
Funeral services will be
1900, In Cheshire, daughter of held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at
the late Asburg and Elizabeth the Ra'wllngs.Coats
Funeral
Winegar Hood.

grant are .

.

attended a private religious
eervlce at Camp David, aloog
with aome 30 stalfent at t.he
mountain retreat Sunday, a
spokesman said.
Mrs .
Carter,
after
returning lo WashlnJlton,
then flew to Phoenix, Arb.
and the start of a weeldong
trip that includes stops ln San
Francilco and Hmolulu.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

---------------------------,
! . Area Deaths · !

~

I
By United Press lnteruatlonal
LOCUST GROVE, OKl.A. - IN T!!E WEEK since three
Girls ScOuts were sexually molested and murdered, officers
have interviewed more than 100 persons, administered a hall·
dozen polygraph tests- and searched the murder· site with
trained dogs.
· ·
·
They have made no arrests, but one of the men in charge of
the investigation · says the officers are getting closer to
determining a suspect. "Every day that we proceed we are
getting closer. There has never been a period that it hasn't
been more productive as we go along," District Attorney Sid
Wise said Sunday. "Every day we are discovering new lhlngs
to look at and analyze and interpret."

strength "is obviously a
WASHINGTON (UPI) Declaring that his hwnan matter that has no relatim at
rights policy " will not be all to the human r ights
changed," President Carter commitment," and asked :
has responded sharply to a "How does it serve the cause
chorge in the Soviet of human rights for the
new!lpllper Pravda that his Soviets to be attributing
campaign is designed to motives like this to us ?"
cover a new· U.s . arms
The Communist party
newspaper said in its weekly
buildup.
Hill camp~~ign, Carter said , international review that
is im embarrosament to the "many
reports
from
Soviet Union "and to ather Washington" concern new
countries with totalitarian weapons programs, which it
saw as evidence the United
goverrunents."
"Our commitment to States is " preparing the
human rights Is independent ground for another dangerous
of other motives and wtll not spiral of the arms race ."
"Apparently the noisy
be changed," said Carter oo
. arrival at the White House campaign around human
from a weekend at Camp rights is called upon to cover
up quite different designs
David, Md., late Sunday.
He said U.S. military than defense of those rights,"
Pravda said.
Carter said the human
rights campaign "dramatizes
the issue and has aroused the
awareness of the human
I · rights question by all national
auto accident near Cheshire leaders."
In 1950. Her first ·husband
Carter scheduled a series of
died In 1940.
meetings this week to lay the
The marrJed Everette
groundwork for converting
Amos In 19~3 . He preceded the government to zero-based
her in death In 1966.
Spe spent most of her life in budgeting.
After relaxipg with his
the Cheshire community . She
was a cook in the Cheshire family at Camp David during
schools for more than 10
the Father's Day weekend,
years.
Carter
will participate during
Mrs. Amos was active in
the week in a series of budget
the senior citizens and was a
member of the Rodn ey meetings designed to. help
Methodl•t Church. She had familiarize him with some of
been In Lowell the past two
months. Alter bacomlng Ill the specific needs of the
various government
last Wednesday , she was
hosp italized. ·
departments and agencies.
Funeral services wlll be 2
The sessions, in the long
p.m. Tuesday at Miller's run will help Carter plan the
Home for Funerals with Rev.
'
strategy necessary m
Dameron Stapleton
of ficiating. Burial will be In convertin~ the government to
·Gravel
Hill
Cemetery .
zero-based budgeting.
Friends may call at the
Carter has a late afternoon
funeral home after 4 p.m.
meeting
today
with
today and up until the hour of
Democratic Party Leader
the services.
Kenneth Curti s. A White
House spokesman said it wUI
SUSAN MARIE POTTS

•

Pomeroy 'Council Monday
night took no action on a
request from Howard. Frank,
county auditor, to appropriate additional money to
the Meigs County Health
Department.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
said the money would be used
for salary increases.
The mayor further stated
· · that ot the present ttme the
village is doing work that is
the responsibility of the ·
health department.
Mayor Andr ews asked
councilman Dr. Harold
Brown and Phil Globokar to
meet with Frank, discuss the
problem and get more infonnotion as why the request
was made.
Money for • tjle health
department is outomatically
taken from the semi·annual
apportionments sent to
villages and townships.
Mayor Andrews pointed oat
that In 1978 Pomeroy's share
to the health department was
$5,182.78, in 1975 it was
$5,008.52, and in 1974 it was
$3,11$7.
Harry Davis reported that
the rear end was out of the
International truck. It was
noted that $1,069 was spent on
the vehicle since the latter
part of l9'1fl. Davis is to check
to see if there was a warranty
oo the lm repair of the truck
if not have it repaired by
atikher company.
The signs at th e in·

tersection of Nye Ave., and
East Main Street were again
discussed . Brown asked if
those who have signs in tfie
area have been approached
adding that they are on public
property . Brown is to make
contact in regard to the signs.
Lou Osborne reported that
a lens was out of a flashing
light at Nye Ave., and thatthe
Air Pollution Control Agency
in Charleston; will attend a
meeting at Wahama High
School on June 28, at 7 p.m. in
regard to the coal tipple being
erected on the West Virginia
side across from Middleport.

Flags and s1on_
"'f!&gt;~

still missing
An American Flag and an
Ohio State Flag used by two
pick-up boats during the boat
races, and a magnetic sign
with the words, "Merri Ault,
last year's regatta queen,"
have not been returned to the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Com merce office.
Bill Quickel asks that the
fla gs be returned to the
Chamber office or to the
office of the Western &amp; Southem Life Insurance Co. at
once . Anyone havin g in·
formation about the sign
plea se call th e Chal\l.ber
offic~ .a 992-5505.

Osborne also reported that
he has asked Ernest C. Neal
of the Ohio EPA for federa l
ass istance in completing
Pomeroy's sewer system. He
is to be advised by Neal If
money is available.
It was reported that three
parking meters and posts had
been taken from Sycamore
Street.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Ralph Werry,
Osborne who opened th e
meeting with prayer, Davis,
Globokar, l.arry Powell, Dr.
Brown, co uricilmen, Jane
Walton, cle rk , Chief Jed
Webster, and Jack Krautter.
Council's next meeting falls
on July 4. Due to the holiday
they will not meet. 1be ne~t
meeting wiU be on July 18
unless the Mayor calls for a
special meeting.

PHRASER DIES
CARMEl., Calif. (UP! ) Fairfax Mastick Cone, the
advertising executive
credited with the phrase
· "Lucky Strike means fine
toabcco," died at his home
Monda y after a long illness.
· He was 74.
Cone, founder and, former
board chairman of Foote,
Cone and Belding - one of
the 10 largest international
advertising agencies
worked in the industry for 48
ye~ rs.

President

of hoard
•

resigD.s
EAST MEIGS - The
resignation
of
board
president David Smith was
accepted by the Eastern
l.ocal School District Board
of Education in recessed
session Monday night. No
cause for Smith's action was
made.
The board has 30 days to
name a replacement for
Smith and if action does not
· take place by then, the BJ&gt;'
pointment will be made by
· the. co unt y board . Doug
.Bissell, vice president; will
not serve as president.
The ·board interviewed
three applicants for the high
school principal's post being
vacated by the retirement of
Chester Gooding. The board
employed J . Clark l.ees, 60,
who has 10 years experience
in administration in the Clea r
Fork District in Bellville.
l.ees will start on Aug. 8.
The board agreed to place a
new II ve mill operating levy
before voters of the district
with Aug. 25 set as the target
-date. The levy would be in
effect for three years. Voters
of the district turned the levy
down at a special election on·
June 7.
Mrs. Eloise Boston, clerk,
was authorized to make
transfer within the approprialions and to request
an advance draw to meet the
June payroll.
The board purchased two
new 66·passenger buses from
the Meigs Equip1/)ent Co.,
(Continued on page 12)

ficer.
When Smith failed to aP'
pear to be sentenced, a bench
warrant was issued . for his
arrest.
.
Smith was transported late
by
Monday
afternoon
Deputies Mike Zirkle and
Dana Aldridge to begin his
term. Also transported to the
Ohio Correctional Medical
and Reception Center at
Columbus were Terry
Brewer, 31 , Portland and
Robert Joe Stewart, 19, Rt. I,
KELLEE BURDETTE
l.angsville.
The sheriff's department
reported the return Monday
evening from the Fairfield
School for Boys, Lancaster,
18-year-old Raymond E.
Brown, Coal Grove, who is
Kellee Jo Burdette, Paula
charged with the March 27
June
Eichinger and June Ann
::;:·:::::::·:·:::::::·:·:·:;:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:::::::·:::;:·:::;:;:::;: theft of a 1971 Mustang owned
W
amsley
are recipients of the
by John Tillis, Rt. 1, Reeds·
SQUAD CAl.LED
1977
Health
Caree rs
ville.
The .Middleport E·R
Scholarships
awarded
by the
Brown and a juvenile ,
Squad was called MondJ!y
Meigs
County
March
of
escapees from the Fairfield
at 10:44 a.m. to the office of
School for Boys at the time, Dimes.
Dr. J. J. Davis for Hazel · allegedly brought a stolen car · Each of these young women
Stone who was taken to
from Enterprise (Hocking will receive $300 during their
Holzer Medical Center. · · County) and abandoned it a first year of training lor a
profession in the health field.
:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::·::: . short distance south of the
These
sc holarships are
Tillsi residence on SR 7 north
awarded
by the local March
SQUAD CAl.l.ED
of Eastern High School.
of
Dimes
organization to
The Middleport E·R Squad
The Tillis auto was
was called Monday at 10:44 recovered several days later encourage young people in
a.m. to the office of Dr. J . J. in Clark County as the careers that will give them a
Davis for Hazel stone who juveniel was driving; chance to help prevent birth
was taken to Holzer Medical however, Brown fled officers defects.
During the past months
Center. At 12:15 p.m. Leah on loot. Brown is scheduled
applications· for this award
Weddle, Harrisonville, who for court Friday morning.
have been collected and the
had stopped at town hall was
taken to Holzer Medical
final decision was made this
Center. At 5:23 p.m. the :·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;.;·:·:·:·:::::·:::::·:·:·:·~·:·:.:.;.;.:::: :::::· month by members of the
tanker truck was called to
March of Dimes board.
SECOND MEETING
assist with a fire on the Grace
All three of the scholarship
Middleport Mayor recipients hav e been acMehtodist Churc.h comer of
Hoffman was Informed cepted at universities and
Second and Cedar Streets,
today by lhe Air Pollution will begin classes this SeP'
Gallipolis.
Control Commission of tember. June Wamsley and
West Virginia another (the Kellee Jo Burdette plan to
second) public meeting to earn bachelor of science
bear vtews on the proposed degrees in nursing at Ohio
Zuspan coal barge facility State University . Paula
Clear tonight, lows in the
at
Clifton, W. Va., wfil be Eichinger will attend Capital
upper 50s. Cloudier, wanner
held
ln the Wahama Hlgb University where she hopes
Wednesday, highs In the mid
School
gymnasium to ea rn a B.S. and become a
80s.
Probability
of
Tuesday,
June
28 beginning nurse anesthetist.
precipitation near zero per
at 7 p.m.f
cent today and tonight, 20 per
All three wqmen were
cent Wednesday.
·:·:·:::::::::·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::;.;:::;.;:;.;.;.;::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:• members of tll'e National
A rural Meigs County man,
released last year pending a
pre-sentencing investigation
after conviction of stealing a
gun, has been sentenced to
one to 10 years in a co.rec·
tiona! Institution by Common
Pleas Court Judge John C.
Bacon according to Sherilf
James J. Proffitt.
Jackie Lee Smith, 24, Rt. I,
Albany, was picked up in
Athens County last Saturday
night and returned to Meigs
County where he went before
Judge Bacon to be sentenced.
Smith had been charged
last year with theft of a gun,
had entered a guilty plea, and
was released pending his presentence investigation by a
State Parole-Probation Of.

Weathe~

'

't ·
PAULA EICHINGER

March of Dimes scholarships
awarded to three Meigs women

JUNE WAMSLEY
Honor Society during high
school and showed ability in
biology and physical science
courses.
·
II an y of them are
prevented from using their
scholarship funds the unused
portion may pass to an
alternate candidate who has
been chosen . She is Brenda
Sue Lawrence of Portland a
graduate of Southern High,
who aiSO&gt;t. plans to eWn a
degree In nursing .

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