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                  <text>12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-l'orneroy. 0 .• Wednesday. Jww 22. 1!177

Family will
. hielc

make Pu
Ike letters

.

Hospital News

Restraining order granted

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Ga!lia Count y Common
Admit!···' - Linda Stewart , Pleas Court Judge Ronald R.
Pro l' t o r vi ll e; Mariam Calhoun thi s
mornin g
Walter, Gallipolis; Dora granted a motion by The
Smith, Pomero y; Patsy Jones Boys, Inc., Gallipolis,
Sllires, Cheshire ; Le_ona for a temporary restraining
Wtse , Pomeroy ; Wtlham order in the three day old
Middleswart. Portland ; Ellen strike at the Jones Boys Store
Rought, Pomeroy ; Audrey on Pine St.
McFarland, Athens.
The order bars Food Store
Discharged - GLoria Employees Union Local 347,
Kapteina, Rachel Cundiff, Amalgamated Meat Cutters
George Conde, Wanda Faulk. and Butche r Workers of
America, AF!rCIO, its of·
Holzer Medical Center
fleers, coordinators an d
(Discharges June 21 1
representatives together with
Anita Anderson , Lau ra all persons acting in concert
Blakely, John Booth, Mary therewith, from Individually
Bradb~ry , Lurena Broyers, and collectively blocking the
Genevieve Burdette, Ruby entrance to the plaintiff's
Carey, Billy Church, Amanda store.
Dennison, Della Tltty ,
It also limits the number of
Katherine Edwards, Alma pickets to six at each enFrazier, Mrs. Ricky Goff and trance and exit, and prohibits
son , Reba Hanse n, Roy the striking employees from
Jo n~s, LuAnn Layne, John
interferin g with trucks
Lew1~, Rosemary McClosky,
delivering produce and fresh
Pauline Moyer , Goldie vegetables and restrains the
Northup, Virginia Rainey,' union and its officers and
Phyllis Ridge, Mrs, Jerry agents from engaging in
Ro ese and son , Donald unlawful ,
diso rd e rl y
Russell, Bonnie Simms, Judy picketing, ha rassment and
Slone, Roy Snowden, Charles trespassing.
Steph ens, Ha rry Swartz
Judge Ca lhoun re cessed
Daniel Thomas, Bett; this morning's hear ing on the
Twyman, Roy Ward.
temporary and permanent
I Births June 21)
injunction until Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Howa rd
Members of Local 347 went
Bless_ing, a son, Leon, W. Va. on strike at the store Monda y

mornin g. A union spokesman
said the action wa s taken

~·aster ,

individually and as
business .representative of
Local 347, Food Store Employees Union; Judy Brogan ,
Route 1, Minersville; Michael
W. Campbell, Route 1, Bidwell ; Judy C. Fuller, Kerr;
Paul E. flollingshead, Route
2, Vinton; Neal Craig Sager,
Eureka Star Route, Gallipolis
and Ricky Stobart , Middleport, a nd all persons
acting In concert therewith,
defendants.

since no master contract has
been agreed upon. The employees voted the union in last
March.
Named as defendants in the
complaint for a temporary
restraining order, temporary
and perma nent injunction
were :
Food Store Employees
Local
347,
Union
Amalgamated Meat Cutters
and Butcher Workmen of
North America, AF!rCIO;
According to the complaint,
Jack L. Brooks, Individually the defendants have blocked
and as president of Local347, the entrance Ill plaintiff's
Food Store Em ployees store, refusing pennission ·for
Union ; J ames Burkhart , ingress and egress; that the
indiv idually and as vice pickets have been in excess of
president of tcJCill-347, Food two, with as many as 18 or
Store Employees Union; more from time to time and·
Jodie Ward, individually and by virtue of the conduct,
as business representa tive of plaintiff is being hindered
Local 347, Food Store . Em· and jeopardized in the
ployees Union ; Claude operation of Its facilities.

Mrs. Ray Proffitt, direclllr of a group &lt;i tMIJDIIIIIty
singers each Thursday, bas announced that they will meet ate
p.m. at the fanner Le'fris property on Brown st. lnste8d of 7
p.m.
The group enjoys singing for fun, and Ia striving to
participate in Mason's Fourth of July Parade. Came join In the
fun Thursday at 6 p.m.

THE SUNSHINE CLASS of Muon United Metb()dilt
Church entertained with a Father and Son banquet Sundlty
evening at the church. The Rev, liDbert Maring preaented the
program.
Small wheelbarrows with real flowers centered the dlnln8
tables. Favors of small wheelbarrows with goodies were.made
by Mrs. Clarence Baier and Mrs. LucUie Schwan.
The containers with flowers were given as door prizes to
Fred Spencer, Gene Thamu and Tom BUJilllllrdner.
Fathers, sons and grandA001 Included Roy Haileu, RDd
Bumgardner, Tom B1111111ardner, Jeff Bumgardner, Ray
Redman , Ray Redrn!ln, Jr., Mike Fry, Bob OUver, Landon
Smith, Gene Thomas, Ouia Thomal, Larry Bumprdner,
Fred Spencer, William Zerkle, Ray Proffitt, Robbie McBride,
Greg McBride, Rusaell Barton, Rev. Robert Maring , Cecil
Smith, Dennis Harris, Alan R. Peulee, Billy Peulee.
L!ldies serving were Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Rusaell
Barton, Mrs. Cecil S.mlth, Mrs. Murl Megee, Mrs. Roy Harless,
Mrs . William Fry and Mrs. George Carson.

mersby romance and which·
portrays the Eisenhowers'
marriage as dead before he
left the United States, the
Times said.
The family plans to publish
a collection of 319 of the love
letters early next year under
the title "Letters to Mamie, "
said Eisenhower's son, John
Eisenhower.
They are mostly short and
filled with endear ments,
protestations of ·love, and
what appear to be replies Ill
ques tions or accusa tions
from Mrs, Eisenhower about
Council approves
SCO'IT CADLE , SON of Mr. and Mrs. DeDas Cadle,
Lt. Surrunersby.
Mason, will Wldergo surgery on Tuesday morning at
" You're mine, and all I
University Hospital, Morganlllwn, for faciallnjurlea IIUffered
have,'' Eisenhower wrote at
in a motorcycle accident at Glenville on June 13. Hla room ls
new cable rates
.
one point. At another, "I love
6402.
(Contmued from page I) "fou, there is no one else with
Scott, a student at Glenville, was rldln8 his cycle In a field
transportabon agreements whom I'd ever want Ill be in
An amended rate that was di scount , will pay $4 .50. with friends when he reportedly hit a hole ca~ the mllhap.
that normally would not be love - ever ." The letters are
filed by Polntview Cable TV, These rates are similar to
Several of his friends visited him on Sunday. Hla parents
allowed.
filled with terms like "my
will become effective Augllllt othe r areas served by visited him over the weekend, and wW be with him on
The agency said it expects sweetheart," and constantly
1 as approved by the Mason PointView.
.
Tueaday.
to report about mid-August stress that Eisenhower then
Mayor Fred Taylor read a
Damage · to
Tuesday letter from the West Virginia
on the projected _impact to over 50, wants to spe~d the
CLIFTON - Fifty-eight children attended vacaUm Bible
homes and factories of gas rest of his life with Mamie
·
Under the new rat e State Highway Department school here at the United Metbo.dlst Cllurch with Mrs. Denwr
suppliers for 29 pipelines that after the war.
guldellnes, all regular cable that the areas of Pomeroy , Blake, program leader. Twen»"~en adults allilsted with the
ma r . have
difficu lty
"Don't worry your pretty
customers will pay $6 per Horton and Front streets, school which closed with a program on SundaY ev~~nlng , The
mamtammg serv1ce next head about WACs taking care S e t a t
'
month, and senior citizens owned by the state, will be theme was, "Lord Jesus, Teach Me." On Saturday evening a
winter.
of my house " Eisenhower
and disabled persons who will turned over to the tol\'11.
family picnic was held at Mason's Park.
Although Ill tal curtailments wrote in 1943, and in other
Loss has been estimated at Ney, Ft. Thomas, Ky., who receive a 25 per ce nt
CIJFI'ON PERSONAUI
_
were projected to increase, letters
m~ ntions · Lt. $780,000 in the fire Monday participated in the Beverly - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - Mrs.
Lloyd
Williams
and
Mrs.
Ethel
Rayburn
visited
Mro.
1
the agency said _curtailments Sumrnersby several times,
1
Wffilams'
son
and
daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom
evening
at
the
Grace
United
Hills,
Ky.,
Club
fire
in·
D
Ill customers With contracts trying Ill convince his wife
Methodi st Church, Second vestigation in May , and
rea
e a t h s l Willlanls, Cindy and Jeff at Indian Head, Md. While there they
~llow ing
!las
supply that she is just a minor Av
e. and Ceda r St . in Shawn Hill are Interviewing
attended the graduation of Jeff, at Lacky High School.
mterruptlon m event of a member of -his personal staff Gallipolis.
individuals on various leads
Mrs. Thelma Henry attended the graduation of ber
shortage are exJlllcted Ill whose role was exaggerated
Fire Chief J ames A. in connection with the blaie.
CHARLES SLATER SR.
2· 4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Funeral granddaughter, Klm Quisenberry of S. Charleston, Ohio. Kim
decline next &gt;:ear.
by reporters,
Northup and other fire in·
Some samples have been
JACK SONVILLE
servi ces will be held 1 p.m.
''C urtatlm e nt o f
In
1944
ap_p arently vestigators Tuesday placed , taken and official£ must now Charles Edgar Slaler, Sr, Friday at the Van Fossen graduated as an LPN from the Clark Technical College at
·
lEd ), 74 , Th ird St.. Funeral Hom e in Glouster . . Springfield, Ohio.
interuptables during the replying to ' a particularly damages at $700,000 to the awa1·t on reports of· th ose Jac
ksonville, Ohi o, died
Mrs.
Henry
was
accompanied
home by her daughter &amp;nd
heating season next year will harsh letter from Mamie 101-year-old structure and samples.
Monday evenlng ·at O' Bieness
son-In-law,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Don
Quisenberry
and Linda, to ber
HENRY A. SMITH
reach, 80.12 per cent, down Eisenhower writes ' "pleas~ $80,000 to its contents.
Fire Chief Northup said Memorial Hosp ilal.
Fune ra l serviceS Will be home at Clifton on Sunday.
fr_om ~.1. 9 per c e~t last try to see me in something
Cause of the lire, w
' hich toda
_ y, "There is suspicion the
Born
In Nelsorwllle, he was
Valerie Blake, granddaughter of Mrs. Wlhna Blake, spent
son of the late Fred and conducted at 1 p.m. Thursday
wmter, !he FPC satd.
besides a despicable light - partially destroyed the older fore started by means other the
at McCoy-Moore 'with the last week with her grandmother and attended Bible School at
Eli zabeth Hayden Slater .
Rev. John Bryant offi ciating .
The agency satd 20 at least let me be certain of section of th e church than natural origin,"
He is survived by his wile, Burial
·
at V i nton Memoria l Clifton United Methodist Church.
pipelines
project
no my welcome home when this remained unknown lllday. '
Meanwhil_e, the chur~h Clara Kirkendall Slater ; lwo Par k. Friends may call toda y
curtailments during the mess is finished. I truly love
State Fire Marshal Frank board of directors met m sans
, Cha'rles
J r. (EdL f rom 7 to 9 p.m .
AI hens,
and Bill,, Middleport;
coming year.
you and I know that when you Eisnaugle , Jackson, with specia I sessi~n Tuesday one
LETART, W. Va. -The vacatim Bible school of the Oak
daughter, lla Darnell,
It said the most severe blow off steam you don't Chief Northup and two in- mght. Dr. Ke1th Sheets IS Pomeroy
Grove
church near here held Its program Saturday at 7 p.m.
; six grandchildren,
curtailments are expected Ill really think of me as such a surance adjusters Marshall board chairman,
follow!!d by a wiener roast.
eight greal·grandchlldren,
be on the system's of United black-hearted creature as
The children marched inlll the sanctuary Ill the song,
'
Directors learned that the and a brother, John Canon sGas Pipe Line Co. , you language implies."
"Onward
Christian Soldiers," played \JY the accompanist,
area damaged by fire bu~~- was preceded In death
The Times said the family \..dl
Transcontinental Gas · Line
Steila Krebs. There were devotions, pledges Ill the flags,
Monday "is repairable," and by two brothers and a sister .
Corp., Arunsas Louisiana reply was prepared by John
pledge to the Bible and prayer. The theme was "Lord Jesus,
now, m~mbers must decide ~
In lieu of flower s, donat ions
(Continued !rom page [)
Fhied in the court of Teach Me."
Gas Co,, which are expected Eisenhower supported by the
whether or not. to
repair
the
should
be
made
to
the
.
. Amencan Cancer Soci ety . Pomeroy ·Mayor Clarence
Ill have curtailments ranging former pre'sident's brother that parents should get a da maged structure
The director,. Martha Friend, and Sue Icenhower led the
or
tear
1t
Calling hours are Wed- Andrews Tuesday night were
fro.m almost 43 per cent Ill Milton and John 's son social security number for down and build a new one.
children fu several songs they bad learned.
nesday7-9p.m.
and
Thu
rsday
Ed i..audermilt, Pomeroy, $50
aver 50 per cent.
David,' husband of Juli~ their children as soon as they
The teachers were in charge of their class for the program.
are
born
.
He
spoke
of
and
costs, disorderly con- Each teacher gave out several perfect attendance and a few
Nixon.
duct; William Reeves, fa ithful attendance certificates.
It comes a year after Mrs. Medicare, Part B, noting that
beginning
next
month
it
will
Pomeroy, intoxication, $50
Sumrnersby, told she was
Classes, teachers, assistants, helpers and children were:
cost
$7.70
per
month.
and
costs; James Milliron,
dying of cancer, wrote her
Recent donors to the Rock . After paying for the flag,
Middle4 class · teacher, Sue Icenhower, asst., Sharon
"Part At'' he said, " is free. Springs Cemetery nag fund pole, and labor there was a Racine, intoxication, $25 and Gibbs; children, Nol'IIUIII Friend, Sarah Grimm, JOBM Rousb,
own versioo of the affair,
"Past Forgetting: My Love As for medicaid, it is a and planter are Mrs. Pearl balance of $62, which will·be costs, and Chuck Clark, of SUzie King, Teresa Diehl and David Ohlinger.
Affair with Dwight · D. weUare program."
Junior class, teacher, Pat Friend; asst., Carolyn Blake;
Jacobs, Mrs. Clarence deposited in a bank in a nag near Pomeroy, disorderly
Paster
reported
that
in
1974
Eisenhower," published in
children, Marty Diehl, Raymond Friend, Annette Grinun,
Thomas, Mrs. Robert Smith, fund to help pay for a planter conduct , $50 and costs,
Social Security took over old Edith Baron , Mr. and Mrs. to be erected around the base
Forfeiting bonds were Shawn Grimm, Christine Lively, Connie Lively, Ronnie Uvely
1976, after she died.
Miss Swnmersby was an age pensions as Sup· Dale Keterson , Mrs. Lucille ofthe nag pole and to pay lor Roger Dillard, Jr., $50, and Tanuny Suyder.
·
·
posted ·on an open flask
attractive, chestnut haired plemental Security Income. Leifheit; Mr. and Mrs . flags as needed.
The refreshment committee of Hazel Friend and Louise
former model and divorcee, He also explained a bout William Seyfried, Leroy
Donations ar.e still being charge; Keith Petrie and Adkins served cookies and Kool-Aid each evening. Steila Krebs
the Irish-born daughter of a Security ·benefits to the . Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs. accepted. Anyone having any John Jenkins, both Of was In charge of records. Average attendance was 48.
7 Pet. per year on a 4
'
disebled
for
which
one
can
Pomeroy,
$50
each,
posted
for
British
Aliny
officer;
8ome
20
BegiMerli' class teacher, Martha Friend; assistant, Clara
Charles Sayre, Mrs. Dorothy suggestions how to improve
year certificate of
years
younger
than qualify after having worked Clark, Mrs. Faye Will, Mr·. the cemetery are to contact disorderly conduct ; John Neal; helpers, Ercell Adkins and Florence Cullen; children,
deposit.
five years prior to the and Mrs. Gene Bass, Mrs. Mrs. George Folmer at 992- Workman, Mason, squealing Amy Icenhower, Bruce Friend, Michael Friend, r.,lcbele Neal,
Eisenhower.
$1,000.00
mm1mum
disability.
Serving
in
a
lmiformed
Agnes Dixon, Mrs. Agnes 3584 'or Carl Jennings. Mrs. tires, $50 ; Keith Bradford, Frances Neal, Stacie Kreha, Albert Grimm, Sarah Knapp,
deposit, interest paid
Mrs. Glenna Crisp presided Weeks, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Folmer extends thanks to Racine, $30, running a red' Burl Diehl, Larry Snyder, Annette Glbbe, Nlckki Roush,
c ivilian Br i tish
quarterly.
transportation Wlit, she was at the meeting. She thanked Jennings, Mr. and Mrs. those who donated money light ; Franklin Giles, Jenifer Neal, Larry Oldham and David Oldham.
A substanli 3 1 pen a ltv Is
assigned to Eisenhower as a Mandie Rose , Suzy Samuels, George Folmer, Sr. and Max lllward the fund. Donations Pomeroy, $50, littering, and
Primary class, teacher, Lucy Cullen; assistant, Nellie
in&gt;Joked on all cert ific a te
and
Denise
Dean
for
Robert
Davis,
Syracuse,
$30,
driver
early
in
the
war
and
Adkins;
helper, Imogene Snyder; children, Mark Friend,
Folmer,
may
be
sent
to
Mrs.
Folmer.
accounts withd r •wn pr i or
assured clear distance.
to the date of matu ri ty .
rose Ill become his secretary preparing the service
David King, Brent McGinnis, Allen Icenhower, Karen Grinun,
and one of his closest aides. directories at the Meigs
Leah McGinnis and Stephanie Gibbe.
By the end of the war County Extension Service
DONA~ PIANOS
Eisenhower succeeded in get- office. Vernon Nease wsa
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Atklna·,and Mr. and Mrs. ,Clarence
ting her an officer's commis- installed as chairman of the
Adkins purchase&lt;\ and donated a piano to the,,OIIk Grove UM
bars Ohio from paying Church
sion in the U.S. Women's Council for the next three
which in turn donated its plano Ill the 4-H and extension
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The unidentified Welfare that
for elective abortions went office (it had been donated Ill the church by the late Arch
Department
spokesman
who
Army Corps, although she months.
Ohio Welfare Department
Attending the meeting were will continue to pay for said the state would continue into effect. However, a suit Roush In memory of his sister, Althy Roush) .
was not then a U.S. citizen.
The Athens County
was filed that year and the
In her book, she said they Robert Morris and Dan E. abortions
Sa vings &amp; Loan Co .
The church has had several donations on the
until
final to make the payments.
department
has been paying improvements
2:'96 Second St .
The U. S. Supreme Court
fell into a romantic, almost Morris, Meigs Local Schools, disposition is made of a suit
of installing light fixtures, Insulating ~~~e,.,
Pameroy , Ohio
domestic,
living adminiStrators ; Margaret challenging an Ohio law that Tuesday ruled that states for abortions,
church
and
pain
Wig the Interior.
The spokesman says Ohio
Lewis,
Council prohibits payment for bave the right to decide
arrangement in London and Ella
The
church
thanks all who have donated toward the
on the wartime tripa through secretary; Dorothy Will, elective abortions, it was whether they want to (und pays a " couple million Improvements. Other improvements or projects the
elective or voluntary abor- dollars a year for about 10,000 congregation is working toward Include sanding and
Europe on which she retired senior volunteer reported today.
abortions, not all of which are varnishing the floor and insta!Ung a new carpet.
program; Gene I,yons, Gary
tions.
accompanied him.
Scripps-Howard
elective.''
Aspln,
Meigs
County
Health
In
September
1974,
the
law
But she said the affair was
newspapers quoted an
unconsummated, despite Department , Kathleen
Bureau
of
•
several attempts, because Sawyer ,
Eisenhower was impotent, vocational Rehabilitation,
which she quoted Eisenhower Athens; Nancy Raming,
(Continued from page 11
_
Helen E. Bailey, John E.
as blaming on years of sexual Brammer,
Nan Mykel, David Hlstadrug Wlion federation, a loss that could spell trouble for
estrangement from Mamie .
Krasner,
Jim
Lawford, Mary Begin's tw&lt;H!ay-old government.
The Eisenhower family has SkiMer, Community
Mental
Projected results of the nationwide Hlstadrug elections
seen a script for the television Health; the Rev. William H. -late Tuesday showed the opposition Labor party would retain
series, the Times said, and Middlesworth, ministerial control of the umbrella organization that covers Israel's major
was "infuriated " by the association; Phyllis llearhs, . trade Wlions, with Lilrud a distant second. The victory would
script's opening scene, in Planned parenthood ; Jan leave Labor - beaten by the hawkish Likud bloc in the May 17
which Eisenhowe r , before Shoots, Meigs County Council Knesset parliament elections - holding tbe reins of power of
receiving his assignment to on Aging; Eleanor Thomas, an organization that could severely undermine Begin's new
London, assures his wife he
economic programs.
will be ouy, that "generals Meigs County Council on
Begin Tuesday exchanged messages with President
die In bed."
Aging; Sandy Brown, Gallia- Carter through diplomatic channels about ' his trip Ill
See all the new merchandise arriving daily - Gift
Meigs Head Start; Leafy
Chasteen Senior Citizens, Washingllln now slated for July 18. He said Carter's note was
items
~ electrical appliances
cooking utensils .
"very wann."
TWO OPENINGS
Information and . Referral;
glassware . canning supplies - knick knacks • planters •
WASHINGTON - UNDER HEAVY PRESSURE from
The Gallia-Melgs Head Vernon Nease, Red Cross;
chains and brackets for hanging plants - plant food .
Start Child Development and Glenna Crisp," Leading saccharin-loving constituents, the Hause has voled Ill block for
at least a year the Food and Drug Administration's proposed
Program ·has openings for Creek Conservancy
cleaning supplies
silverware and many other
ban on the artificial sweetener. Opponents called the action
Rani a BLUE w smEshampooer
two home teschers In the
interesting and useful .items.
hasty and unwise because of new Canadian tests indicatiilg
10 gel lhe scrubbing aclion yoo
Meigs County Combination
LODGE TO MEET
need to loosen and lin out
'SIIccharln
may
cause
bladder
cancer
in
twnans.
Previous
Home Based-Center Based
A special meeting of
ground-In dirt oni'J grime. And use
tests, also from Canada, that led the FDA to propose its ban on
You'll like the famous brands you'll see such as
Head start Program. Ap- Middleport Lodge 363, saccharin,
BLUE WSTRE Shampoo 10 gel
linked
the
sweetener
only
to
cancer
in
rats.
I&lt;'U' carpels brig hl, clean and
pllcants must be residents of F&amp;AM, will be held at 7:30
Corning - General Electric - Sunbeam • West Bend ·
On a standing vote Tuesday, the House added the propluSh'
Meigs County and have a high p.m. Thuraday with work to saccharin
to a $12.7 billion measure funding the
Revere - Farberware.
school dlplom~. Some ~alleg e be in the Master Mason Agricultureamendment
Department
and
related
agencies
for
fiscal
1978.
IIIMT eAiy suo per doy
So take time to brouse around in the housewares
and-or expertence w1th an degree.
The
bill
now
goes
Ill
the
Senate.
The
amendment,
by
Reps.
early childhood program is ,
department- See what's new' and buy what you need.
Harold Volkmer, [).Mo., and Jamie Whitten, [).Miss.,
desirable. If interested please
SUPPER PLANNED
contact Christopher Zimmer, The Harrisonvllle Senior prohibits the FDA !rom 118ing any money in the act Ill
Head start Director, at 367· Citizens Club WUI hold a promulgate or enforce regulations banning saccharin from the ,
7344.
birthday and pOtluck supper market through Sept. 30, 1978.
Head Start Ia a program of Tuesday, June 28 at 8 p.m. at
the Gallla-Meigo Community Fort Meigo in Rutland .
Board will meet Thursday at
BOARD TO MEET
Action Agency which is an Games and music will be
••
7:30
p .~ at the high school.
The Southern Local School
equal o~l'!unlty employer. enjoyed by aU. '

LOS ANGELES (UP! ) The Los Angeles Times lllday
published it selection of
Dwight Eisenhower's love
letters to his wife during
World War II in rebuttal to
the story of Lt. Kay
Summersby 's wartime
romance with the general.
The letters were made
available Ill the newspaper by
the Eisenhower family,
reportedly ou traged at
repor ts tha t ABC-TV is
prepahng
a
two-part
program based on the Sum-

Natural gas

church !~;~ng.Council

000
.
$780

1

A

1

Four fined m·
mayor's court

Donors listed to flag fund

Meigs Co. Branch

-@

Ohio will pay for abortions for while yet

-------FSIIC

News •• in Briefs

By PETER P. SPUDICH

AKRON, Ohio (UPI ) - A
ser ies
of
explosions,
apparently triggered by 3,000
gallons of a highly volatile
liquid dumped by vandals at
a strikebound rubber plant
roared through part of the
city's sewer system lllday.
The explosio ns blew up
streets and broke open cryptS
at a cemetery.
There were no immediate
reports of injuries although a
.. section of the west side of this
northern Ohio city of 2'12,000,
which is part commercial and
part
reSidential , was
evacuated as a precautionary
measure,
said
Poli ce
Dispatcher Sgt.
Hugh
Bennett.
U . Robert E. Lord of the
Akron Fire Department said
,the liquid- naptha- was
traced to the Patch Rubber
Co. where employes are on
strike.
"The owner called us this
morning and said three thousand gallons of naptha, which
is highly volatile, bad ' been

exp losions caused

dumped by vandals," said
Lord. "They tied off the
valves and it went inlll the
city sewer system .
" Anything could have
touched it off, a spark, a
cigarette, any thin g," siid
Lord,
"I saw a crater 80 Ill 90 feet
across right after the explosion," said Police Capt .
David E. Whitmire. ''The
major thrust of the blast was
in the area by Glendale
Cemetery.
" There are some crypts
that have been broken open
by the blasts and I would say
that area of the city is hardest
hit," said Whitmire. "We
didn 't go all the way into the
cemetery ,but there definitely
bave been some things turned
over by the blast."
Whitmire
said
the
explosion also broke a large
water main and a gas main in
the area. He said the sewers
were nushed with water to
clean them out.
Another fire department
spokesman I said
th e

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

major thunder.''

"What I thought was that
the world was coming Ill an
end, " she said. "I thought to
myself, 'Oh Lord the world is
coming to an end."'
"There
we re
three
different portions of the
streets, three intersections
that were blown up," said
"They
(the
Bennett.
explosions) made hales in the
streets of considerable size.
Manhole covers for miles
aroWld there were popped
off.
"We bad one cruiser sitting
(Continued on page 2)

•

en tine

at y

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 49

programs of assisting children with crippling injuries or
illnesses. More than l()ll organizations entered units in the
parade. Jim Frecker was chairman.

IMPRESSIVE FLOAT -The Southeast (Ohio) Shrine
Club entered this noat in the Regatta Parade last Friday
evening . While it failed to win a blue ribbon or a "first"
prize, it told the story of the Shriners' dedication to their

;.;.;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;.; ;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.;:::::::::::::::;.;:;.;

Outstanding Americans.i·I~~~ Barge user fees
•.,ven .JeiJje•"'on
,
d
.eUJ.
W'.or
A "
levied in·Senate
• ..,
·

" cow chip"
hurling
eompetltlon at the South·

ern California _Exposition
SWednesday with a toss of

~~~:~~~~f!~~~:i :·a~~:!

majority leader.
Cleland, rece ntly appointed by
President Carter to head the VA, was
recognized "lor his personal courage in
overcoming severe physical ~ndicaps,
which serves as an inspiration to all of
us; and lor fighting for,the rights of the
handicapped and the .rights of
veterans."
'
Buchwald was honored "for pointing
out our foibles, for making us laugh and
for showing the way Ill a better
America ."
Rusk was acclaimed far being "the
fath er
of
modern
physical
rehabilitation -therapy" through his
iMovatlve work in the field.
Also honored were :
- Father Alfred Baedde'Kker, San
• Francisco, who faWlded St. Anthony's
Dining Room "which serves 1,200
meals a day to the poor and hungry; 12
mUiion meals since its inception in 1950
in the Bay area.' '

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Former
Senate Majority Leader Mike
Mansfield, 74, and wheelchair-bound
Veterans Administrator Max Cleland
·today were among nine . persons
honored with 1977 Jefferson Awards for
their outstanding public service.
Others receiving awards from the
American Institute for Public Service
In ceremonies at tile United states
Supreme Court Building include
syndicated hwnor colwnnist Art Buchwald; Dr. Howard Rusk , director of the
New York University Institute of
Rehabillation Medicine, and five local
community leaders from across the
na~on . ,
Manstield, 74, now the U.S.
' amballl!lldor Ill .Japan, was honored
' ''for his integrity as a public servant
and for his quiet lead~tship spanning 34
years as a congressman, a senator and
as majority leader ." He served for 24
years in the senate, the last ' 15 as

·~r:::~::=:::::::::=:::::::::::::::==========~=:=:=~=:=~=:=:=:=:=:=~=:=::========:=:=:=====·=====================:==========::=:=========~~

!!News. • .ln ·Brle/S\\
.::·

·=··

By Uulted Press Iuternatlonal

lnternallooal cow ehip
throwlog contest next
WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Jean Cbaudhuri of Tucson, Ariz,,
moolh
in
Great
Falls
,
The
Senate has voted to begin
who founded the Traditional Indian
charging
user fees for barge
Mont.
Alliance, which offers educational and
Jackson
said
he
warmed
operalllrs
using inland watercommunit y ser vice as sis tanc e to
up . earlier this year by ways.
.
Indians.
winning
tbe
Iowa
state
The
71'
20
vote
Wedileaday
- Dr. Leondard Cobb, director of
contest at a fair In Keota, came on an amendment by
·cardiology, Harbor vlew Medical
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M.,
Iowa, throwing 156 feet.
Center in Seattle, Wash ., "for creating
;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;. to begin the charges in 1980.
Medic I , a mobile intensiVe coronary
President Carter backed the
carE!IImit saving the lives of hWldreds of
amendment.
heart attack victims in Seattle,"
The measure is likely Ill
-Olga Mele, Hartford, Conn., a
encounter
stiff oppPsition in
family counselor lor the CommWliiY
the
House.
Renewal Team "for helping the poor Sen. Russell Long, [).La.,
black, white and Hispanic ."
warned
before the vote that
- Marjory Taylor, Southboro, Mass.,
the
House
might send it back.
the P,.incipal founding member of the
,
as
an
unconstitutional
first Marlborough-Westborough Mental
invasion of that body's rig ht
Heaitp Association which brings
revenue
to
originate
conu:nunity mental health services to a
measures.
five-town area in Massachusetts.
An effo rt in th e la st
Each winn er receives a proo( ·
.
Congr
ess to impose- user
medallion gold on silver and $5 000 · MARIETIA, Ohio (UP!) '
'
' · The FBI hss been cailed Ill charges was defeated by the
assist local police in the Senate 71 to 17.
investigation of $15,600 stolen

FBI called

to help in
. k het"st
han

.National committee·is

chaired by OJ.amhers

Eric Chambers , MidSAN DIEGO - IU..ITERACY AMONG yoWlg Americans
has become so widespread that the Navy is having tro.uble dleport, has been. appointed
finding recruits who can read well enough Ill function, National Chairman of the
according to Vice Adm; James Watkins, the chief of naval constitution committee for
the National Police· Self
personnel.
One illiterate sailer did $250,000 worth of damage to an De fense Instru , tor
engine because he couldn't read instructions, Watkins said Association.
He will be responsible for
Wednesday, and the Navy is increasingly obliged Ill teach
recruits Ill read - sometimes up to a sixth-grade level so they writin g a National Concan read urgent warnings. A recent study of 23,000 recruits at stitution . He was also apthe naval base here showed that 37 per cent of them could not pointed Region I coordinator
read at the lOth-f!rade level, Watkins told the Chamber of for the Ohio Peace Officers
Commerce. Of those, 70 per cent could not r'ead well enough to Assn. in charge ol program
development and regional
complete boot camp, he said.
communicatien with local
NAIROBI, KENYA - UGANDAN SECURITY forces law enforcement training
seeking vengeance for an assassination attempt against officers.
The purpose of the s~minar
_President Idi Amin have killed up to 300 persons, including
fatnilles &lt;!tagged from th.eir homes and beheaded, refugees was to exchange and update
say. Refugees neeing into neighboring Kenya Wednesday said tactics and techniques in the
the kiJllngs began after the Saturday attack on Amin, who field of police officer self
survived but bas not yet surfaced from a private residence on defense .
appointment
Chambers'
the outskirts of Kamplala where Ugandan sources say he is
came while he and Sgt. C. W.
hiding.
The refugees said between 200 and 300 army troops and Manley, chief of security at
members of the Baganda tribe bave been killed in the purge of the Gallipolis State Institute,
security forces. They also described a random series of attended !rom June 14-19 the
killings seemingly WJcon~ with the assassination National Police Self Defense
Instructor Seminar and U. S.
attempt.
/
American journalist Audrey JWle Taylor said she spoke Ill
Amin by telephone and "he was very amused by the entire
episode," claiming he bad been on a delayed honeymoon with
his wife and asking, "so what's the big fuss about ?"

p.

MONTGOMERY, ALA. - FORMER U.S. Attorney
General John Mitchell is now inmate No. 24171-157 in Maxwell
Prison Camp.1M his reception indicates that treating him like
just every other inmate wW not be easy. Superintendent
Robert Grunsu promises that Mitchell, the highest law
enforcement officer ever sent to prison in the United States,
will not get any special treatment ,
"He ain't nothing but another convict with a number now,"
(Continued on page 2)

VISIT THE HOUSEWARES DEPT.
ON THE FIRST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

11

damage" to the streets,
damaged a chdrch and blew
manhole covers in to the air.
''Some of the streets looked
like a bomb was dropped on
them," said the spokesman.
"We have some sidewalks
that are three feet above
"Street level.
"We are in the basement of
city hall and we heard one of
the explosions down there,' '
he said. "Manhole covers are
blown all over the place."
One of those evacuated ,
Brindley Ferguson , 19, said
the explosions "soWlded like

11

1

r&lt;Li}dhood

Explosions rip
Akron streets

TAKEN TO LANCASTER
A juvenile was taken to
Fairfield School for Boys in
· Lancaster Wednesday for
breaking and entering and
violation of probation according to Carl Hysell,
pro~tion officer.
TO MEET MONDAY
There
will · be
an
organizational meeting of the
Jubilee Christian Center at
the old Georges Creek
· Grange Hall Monday, JUQe TT
at 7:30 p. m. All Interested
persona are Uivited.

'

.

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

NOTE TO WINNERS
Winners of the Frog Art
Contest are reminded to pick
up pri re money and posters at
the Pomeroy Library.
•

•

Bank President Richard L,
Metz says he has no idea
when the theft occurred but
the money was discovered
missing Tuesday afternoon.
Marietta Police Chief P . K.
Gramkow said the robbery
was the largest &lt;;ash theft in
Marietta in recent memory.
The money, mostly in $10
bills, was taken from a strong
box which had been ca rr ied
by two bank employes from a
drive-in window of the bank
to the bank's main office.
Metz sa id toda y bank
officials have made no
decision on whether to off er a
reward for recovery of the
money .

Karate Assn . National
Championships at
the
Marriott Inn, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Chambers received his BS
degree in education at Rio
Grande and is certified in
secondary and elementary
education. He attended Ohio
Tech College, police science
at Nelsonville and attended
Ohio
Peace
Officers
Academy in advanced self
defens e. He r eceived his
master degree from Ohio
University In public ad·
ministration . He is also
certified as a developmental'
disability specialist.
Chambers is In the
vocational rehabilitation
program at Gallipolis State
Institute tea ching classes in
therapeutic handlin g of
aggressive residents.
His appointment was by
Kevin Parsons , director of
The June State School
law enforcement , lia ison Foundation subsidy payment
division of USKA.
of $78,245 ,458.61 to Ohio's 613
city, exempted village and
local school districts and 67
county boards of education
was report ed by State
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson.
Of the total, Meigs County's
three local school districts
received $193,338.93 alt er
deductions for empiayes and
teachers retirement. Of the
total received locally, the
E astern Distri ct rece ived
$44,877.13; the Meigs Local
District, $109,m .84, and the
Southern Loca l Dist rict,
$39,006.96.
In addit io n, the Meigs
"County Board of Edu cation
ON
received a direct allotment of
$13,706.61.

June subsidy

to schools
is received

SBOYS

lOH~S

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, a chance of
showers or thunde~sbowers
each day. Highs mostly wiD
be in tbe 80s and lows will
be in the 60s.

;';'~t:,:~~t~:~i:~~~ the

STRIKE

_,;;.•··~ mD STORE IMPLOH£S
~

""F-:

· '

.. '
.,..~

UMIQN

LOCAL l4i

m-ew

RAYBON WALLAcE is picketing at the Pomeroy
store of The Jones Bays, Inc . of Gallipolis. The strike bas
been underway three days after failure W agree with
management on a master contract. The store employes
voted the WJion in last March. The store is open for
business.,

ASK TOWED
Marr ia ge li censes were

issued to Randy Paul Snider,
21, Pomeroy, and Delores
Ann Elliott, 17, Pomeroy;
Mark Broderick Willl~ms. 23,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and Trudy
Maria Roach, 18, Pomeroy;
Paul Ray Durst, 21, Pt .
Pleasant , and Ca rol Ann
L~ wis, 20, PomCroy.

Domenici said the barge
industry was being unfairly
" s ubsidized"
by
the
taxpayers, who pay for
construction of locks , dams
and other works and also lor
their
operation
and
maintenance.
The barge . operators,
Domenici said, were getting
"a free ride'' on a •:gravy
train," while railroads and
oth er
tra ns p or ta ti on
industries were put at a
competitive disadvantage .
Opponents, such as Sen.
Russell Long, D-La.,, cha rged
the user fees would help
, "monopQiistic " railroads at
the expense of independent
barge operalllrs ·who have
traditionally had free use of
the waterways.
"The Mississippi River was

th ere, free for anyone to use,
when Columbus diSC(lvered
America," Long said.
The Louisiana Democrat
contended the railroads had
b~en given " fpr greater
subsidies" than water
carriers had. He charged that
the railroad industry was
behind the effort to impose a
toll on the barges .
Sen. Mike Gravel, D·
Alaska, said the proposed
fees would not start until l980,
when they would llltal 2Q per
cent of llltal operating and
maintenance costs for locks
and navigation aids on the
waterways. The tees would
then be increased annually
until lOll per cent of such costs
would be met in 1985 - ·when
capital'costs would also start
being picked up through fees.

Worn wedding pictures
may be clue to murder
LOCUST GROVE, Okla.
(UP! J - The wedding. photos
are worn and tattered - so
faded the participants were
almost unrecognizable, but
authorities still hope they
may lead to a killer.
The pictures were found
near the camp where three
Girl Scouts were sexually
assaulted and murdered. The
thr ee wom en in the
photographs were identified
Wednesday, and authorities
said none of them were
involved with the slayings.
But investi gators were
trying to determine how the
photographs , wh ich were
several years old, found their
way 300 miles across the state
Ill th e scene of the murder.
Mora,

"We want to know how the
pictures taken at a wedding
far away from Locust Grove
got where we fo und them,
how th is weirdo, psychotic if it was - bad these piciures
out there," said Jeff Laird,
director of the Oklahoma
State
Bureau
of
Investigation.
. The photographs are part
of the investigation in to the
June 13 sex slayings at Camp
Scott of Lori Lee Farmer, 8,
and Doris Denise Milner, 1D,
both of Tulsa , and Michelle
Guse, 9, of Broken Arrow ,
Laird said authorities know
the identity of the three
women in the pictures and the
identity of the photographe r,
although the names were not

Jeffers

Citizenship

released for the protection of
those involved.
UP! determin ed the
identity of the women, but
decided against releasing the
information. All o! the women
are from s outhw estern
Oklahoma and the fa ther-in•
law of one of them was a long·
time employe of the Granite
State Refo rmatory.

will

'77

all ," said Laird .

(Continued on page 2)

attend

programs

Two Meigs County 4-H was the 1976 Meigs County
members .will join nearly 200 Girls 4-H Achievement
Ohio teenaged 4-H members Award Winner, the highest
to participate in "Citizenship award available on the
'77 " , . lea dership
and county level.
Lester is the son of Mr. and
citizenship programs at the
Mrs.
Gene J effers of Albany,
National 4-H Ce nt er in
Wa shin gton , D. C. this Ohio. He has been a member
of the Mixed Up !jot Shot&amp; 4-H
summer.
Five groups of Ohioans will Clu b for il years . Hi s
attend the th e week-long projects have included
living exper ience . Attending ga rde nin g, welding, smali
from Meigs County the week engine projects and woodof J uly 10-16 will be Mary working. He has served as a
counselor at 4-H Camp for
Mora and Lester Jeffers.
five
years. He is a!Srl a
Mary is the daughter of Mr.
member
of the Meigs County
a nd Mrs. Donald Mo ra ,
4-H
Advisory
Committee. In
Route 3, Pomeroy. She has
1976
he
was
the
Meigs County
been a 4-H member for nine
Junior
~'air
King.
years, Her projects have
The program is designed to
ranged fro m food and
clothing to dairy cattle and help yo ung people, ages 14 to
conservation. She has served 19, understand the structure
as a camp counselor at 4-H and function of our g overn~
Camp, held. various offices in ment, our country's heritage,
· ller local club, and is a and the part individuals of all
member of the Meigs County ages will pla y in our nation's
4-H Advisory Committee. She future.

·!\I

Two of th e women wer e

contactedand said they were
shocked to see their pictures
in the newspape r . Neither
had any idea how the ·
photographs got to the crime
scene. _
"The people in the pictures
are not involved in any way at

Using the nation's ca pita l
"classroom " , t he
program includes a day on
Capitol HI! to meet members
of Congress and see governmentin action ; and field triP.S
to histori cal and cultural
sites, incl ud ing th e Kennedy
Center, Arlington Cemetery,
the National Cathedral, the
Belt sv ill e Agri cultural
Resea rch Station, the Mall
area, the White House, Mt.
Vern on and Alexandria,
Virg inia . In seminar sessions
at the National 4-H Center.
the 4-H' ers wil l discuss
elements of citizenship and
· ways to apply their skill£ and
knowled ge to 4-H programs
at home.
Sponsors for the trip for the
Meigs County delegates are
the
Mei gs
County
Agricultural Society and the
Meigs County 4-H Advisory
Committee.
as a

�3-The Daily Sent mel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thu rsday, Jw1e 23, I9i 1
2-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 , Thursday. June 23. 1977
------------- -- - - --~ - ---- - - ,

Senate spenders hope
to satisfy President
WASIUNGTON (UP I) The Senate Appropriations
Committee extended an olive
branch to President Carter
by agreeing to lsill 9 of the 17
water projects he sought to
eli minate. But the compromise may not go fa r
enough to avert a veto.
With out
debate
the
committee Wednesd~y accepted the recommendation
of a suboommittee headed by

Sen. John Stenms, D-Miss., m
hopes 11 would head off a
Ca rter veto and a ma jor
showdown between the White
House and Congress . .
The vote on the projects m
the House md1cated 11 would
be unllkely a veto could be
overridden. And as debate on
the full bill continued, it was
clear some members fear th e
Pr~s id ent . may not be
sat1sf1ed With half a loaf.

l

Area Deaths

I

MICHAEL HENRY

Michael Eugene Henry , 26,
a resident of Columbus and
former Brdwell resident, d ied
tn St Anthony Hospttal in
Columbus around 5 p m

Wednesday
He was bor n Mar ch 12,
1951 , in Columbu s, son of
William and Luel la Evans

Henry , who survive
res ide In Bidwell
One so n, M i chael
Columbus , survives
br ot her , Wlllt am Henr y

an ~

Jr ,
One

Jr.,
Co lumbus. a lso su r vtves
along wi th tour stster s: M rs
Jane t H ugh es , Colu mb us .
Mr s
Gwen
Smit h ,

Groveport ; Sandra Henry
and Trudy Henr y. both of
B1dwell One sister preceded
h1m in death .
Mr. Henry was manager of
a Columbus fillin g sta t ion and
a V1et na m War ve teran ,
havmg served In t he U. S.
Army .
Funera l serv 1ces will be

hel d 2 p.m . Sa turda y a t the

M cCoy -M oore Funeral Home
with Elder Calvin Freeman
off icia ting Buria l w1ll be in
N.orga n-Bethel
Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the
funeral hom e from 7 until 9

P-llJ · F rida y .

News(Contmued
•• infromBriefs
page
I)

yelled an inmate, after Mitchell walked into the mmimwn
security prison here Wedn esday , becommg the 25th and last
person to go to prison for Watergate-related crimes. But
Mitchell's arr1val and greeting at the prison was anytl!ing but
routine. He flew into Montgomery in a chartered private jet
plane, then was whisked from the airport in the Cadillac
belongmg to the U.S. marshal who met him .
COLUMBUS - A BU..L LEGAUZJNG the manufacture,
distnbution and sale of Laetrile m Ohio has won narrow
approval in a House committee but faces an uncertain future
m the floor . The measure, sponsored by Rep. Patrick A.
Sweeney , [).{;leveland, was cleared by tl!e House Health and
Retirement Committee oo a 7-li vote Wednesday and sent to the
Rules Committee, wh1ch ass1gns bills to the floor .
It perrnits over~he-eounter sales of Laetrile in capsule
form but requires prescriptions for the substance in vials for
injection . It also protects physicians and hospitals from
disciplinary action f&lt;r prescribing Laetrile w1th mformed
consent of tl!e patient and bars rules which would !orbit the
manufacture of sale of the product in Ohio.
COLUMBUS - A BILL ALLOWING TERMINALLY 1ll
patients to sign a "living will" directing that life..support
systems be disconnected was defeated ~ Wednesday in the
Ohio House Health Committee. The bill, drafted by Rep.
Michael P. Stinziano, [).{;olwnbus, would have allowed a
person to sign a document instructmg his attending physician
to "pull the plug'' on life-&lt;!upport equipment that was the sole
hfe-sUBlaining force.
Four wintesses testified against the bill before the vote.
Two from the "Right 1D Ufe Society" in Cleveland argued that
the bill was the "first step" to euthanasia - mercy killing.
Another witness from the Catholic Conference of Ohio opposed
the legislation because of its similarity to legalized abortion.
COLUMBUS - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES has tapped a
veteran ex-member of the Ohio General Assembly with broad
experience in the welfare arena for the monumental and often
thankless job of running the Ohio Department of Public
Welfare.
Kenneth B. Creasy, 44, a member of the Ohio House from
1959-72, and a member of its Public Welfare Committee for 14
years, four of them as chairman, was named to the cabinet
position Wednesday, replacing the retiring Kwegyir Aggrey
July 16. Aggrey, 68, told tl!e governor in a letter he was retiring
''while I can still enjoy it."
Crl!8sy, executive assistant to the director and legislative
::wsoj~~~~s ~·~~~~:~.~since August, 1975, ?escribed his
"It will be tough," he acknowledged, "and fraDkly, I'm a

little scared, but we'll give it a good try."

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D-

blowout danger
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
an inflated place in the aorta.
One doctor's advice IS to
operate. Two others don't
encourage it yet. What are
the dangers?
I feel some discomfort on
the inside of the left. leg. I
have been careful about
pressing on the inflated
aorta. It looks like by being
careful I could manage if
there wouldo't be anotl!er
reason to operate. I would
appreciate your comment.
DEAR READER - You
are talkmg about an
aneurysm of the large artery
that goes down the middle of
the bndy near the spine and
supplies blood to most of the
body. The dllitation is caused
by a weakening of the elastic
tissue that normally exists in
this tube like structure. A
good way to thmk of it-as if 1t
were an inner tube. ·
That stretched, diseased
aorta is about as safe as a
stretched, weakened ioner
tube and the danger in both
cases is that it will have a
blow out. Unfortunately,
rather than just having a flat
tire if your aorta blows you
are likely to hemorrhage to
dealh tielore you can get
adequate medical help. This
risk is so great and so unpredictable that most doctors
today think that if there is no
contra-indication that it IS
better to do the surgery.
Incid~ntally, in skilled hands
the surgery is fairly simple if
the aneurysm is in the atr
domen, as I presume from
your letter yours is . .
DEAR DR . LAMB Haven't heard much about
hair transplants for some
time. How successful have
they been? Can they be dooe
wben the man's hair Is just
thlmlng at the temples? Is
the head bandaged after the
transplant? Does the hair line
look natural afterwards? Can
one continue his daily work
while this is doing done?
DEAR READER - ~y
are being done fairly
regularly now. Most hair

.

~

'

transplant procedures are the
punch biopsy type. A small
clump of hair follicles are
removed from the side of the
head where hair is abundant
and transplanted or seeded in
the bald areas where a new
hair line is to be established.
Another procedure
·piOneered by Dr. Jose Juri in
Buenos Aires is being done by
a limited number of doclors
m the United States. It is a
three stage operation. A skm
flap with hair is raised from
the back side of the scalp. The
flap is about one and a half
inches wide and eight or nine
mches long. The technique Is
similar to the skm graft
techniques worked out in
treating burn patients. The
flap is raised, rotated and
sewed into place along the
new hair line In three· stages.
You must walt a week between each phase of the
operation . It produces a
thicker growth of hair than
the punch biopsies. It is also
more complicated.
You should expect to have
bandages
with
either
procedure.
The
exact
management will vary with
your surgeon. You could
probably get the punch
biopsy method done by any
number of plastic surgeons in
your area.
If you don't mind being
seen with a bandaged head
you could certainly go about
your work with most of these
procedures except the third·
stage of the flap transplant.
That stage requires general
anesthesia and it might be a
number of days before you
would want to be back at
work.
Your skin has a lot to do
with your appearance, for
information about it send 50
cents for The Health Letter 710, Your Skin : Sun, Aging,
Spots and Cancer. Send a
long,
stamped,
selfaddressed envelope for
mailing with your request to
Dr. Lamb in care of this
new11p11per, P. 0. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, N. V. 10019.

'

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - Would
you please find out for me
how to take coffee stains out
of cups and saucers that have
stood overnight without being
washed. Sometimes it Is late
when guests leave after a
bridge party and I stack the
dishes to be washed the next
morning
My Pet Peeve is that when
a death notice is printed it
should all be in One column so
1! anyone m the family or
friends wish to chp the notice
to save it they do not have to
tape it together.
I love the Pointers and do a
lot of needlework so I
especially liked a recent
Pointer about covering wire
coat hangers. One does not
have to guess how to do it for
1! you can read you can do it.
-AGGIE.
DEAR AGGIE - Harsh
cleaners should never be used
on decorated china so many
cleansers are thus rulled out.
A mixture of salt and soda on
a damp cloth should remove
the coffee stains from your
cups but rmsing them before
stackmg would save you a lot
of trouble -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - We
recently rented a house
where the rugs had been
repeatedly "wet down" by a
dog and small child. After
being professionally cleaned
and deodorized the rug looked
beautiful but smelled awfuL
In desperation we sprinkled a
box of baking soda over the
dry rug, let it stay for a
couple of days and then
vacuumed it-up. The regular

Stanky
• •
qmttmg
Rangers

foot traffic did not hurt
anythmg and when it was
vacuumed the odor was gone.
I found th1s also works on
furniture.

My girl lriend had exceptional blisters from
gardening and my husband
had raw fingertip s from
waxmg the car so It was
necessary for me to come up
with quite an antidote for
pain. My last attempt was to
wash, then put on baby oil
and coat w1lh cornstarch. I
put an old clean white sock
over each hand and after 30
mmutes one patient was
happily playing tennis and
the other was at h1s work
bench. Cornstarch IS also
great to use for itching and
baby's diaper rash. Do hope
this saves others from many
hours of discomfort as 11 has
us. - MRS. L.K.
DEAR POLLY - Mine is a
Pomter for ice cakes to go m
punch Freeze the punch or
fruit juice m regular s1ze
styrofoam cups w1th fruit
added for garnish. These
cups can fit in small spaces in
the freezer and do melt faster
than a large cake, thus
providmg fruit for the punch.
I am sure you will like the
way several of them look
floating and moving around
while the punch is being
served. - MRS. E. J. D.
DEAR POLLY - To get r1d
of that aonoying static cling
of synthetic knit skirts arid
pants I rub a she~t of that new
fabric softener lightly on the
UNDERSIDE of'the sk1rt or
pants leg and the gannent is
cling free after a few touches.
- S.M.
Polly will send you one of
her
signed '· thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses ybur favorite
Pointer, Peeve·11r Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Dr.
Mel Lucas, athletic director
at South Alabama University
in Mobile, told UPI by
telephone today he had been
informed by Eddie Stanky's
wife that Stanky would leave
the Texas Rangers and
return to South Alabama as
baseball coach.
The Rangers, who hll'ed
Stanky Wednesday to replace
manager Frank Lucchesi,
called an II a.m. press
conference at Minneapolis.
The Rangers are to play the
Minnesota Twins tonight at
Bloomington, Minn.
Mac Gordon, sports editor
of the Meridian, Miss., Star,
told UPI he had talked by
phone with infielder Toby
Harrah of the Rangers and
that Harrah !Did him Stanky
already had checked out of
his hotel in Minneapolis to
return to Mobile.
"I understand I've just
hired another maJoc league
manager," Lucas said in
Mobile, referring to Stanky's
expected return on a plnae
schedule to arrive at 2:40
p.m. EDT. "I haven't talked
to Eddie in 36 hours but Mrs.
Stlinky called me this
morning and said he was
coming back here."

HOSPITAL NEWS

SST welcome
I is considered
l

MAN SHOT, ROBBED
BRIDGEPORT, Ohio
(UP!) - Joseph George Jr.,
Bridgeport, was beaten and
shot to death late Wednesday
night at h1s home here,
authorities said. The Beimonl
County Sheriff's office said
the home was ransacked.

Holzer Medica I Center
VETERANS MEMORIAL
IDischarge• June !2)
Cy nth ia
Admitt ed
Mrs.
Donn ie Atkins and
Hazelton, Pomeroy; Daniel
son,
Mi
chael Avis, Mrs.
Hughes, Pomeroy ; Eric
Rlllph
Barcus
and son, Hazel
Miller , Pomeroy; Betty
Baxter, .William Bowman,
Persons, Long Bottom.
Discharged
Da vi d Carol Cantrell, Iria Cantrell,
Ebersbach, Paul Houdashelt, Russell Carter, Thomas
Bobby Winebrenner, Timothy Crow, Rufus Dupre, Usa
Frederick, Bessie Barnhart, Ellis, Gweneth Engle, Lannis
Ca rl Stewart , Mildred Gilbert Jr., Mrs. Joseph Hall
Ba rnitz, Louis Frederick, and son, Gladys Johnson ,
Lyd ia Ebersbach, Dana Mrs. Carl Jones and
daughter, Mrs. Roy Jones
Covert.
and dau ghter,
Bambi
Kiesling, Harold Martin,
Lillie Mays, Eutha McDaruel,
Rosetta Mmniss, Alma
Pastor , Patricia Pletcher,
Julia
Qualls,
Leslie
Rowma nd , Karen Spencer,
Johnny Turner , Evelyn
The Meigs County Fish and Williams, Vickie Wills,
Game Association will hold a Donna Young.
children 's catfish derby
Saturday from 8 a . m. to 4 p.
m. at the association's lake.
The age hmit for the event
IS 15 and younger and the
event is open to both boys and
g1rls. Children must furnish
their own bait which is to he
fish worms only.
(Continued from page I)
The lake is located two
m1Ies west of Route 7 on almost on tnp of one that blew
Shade River Road. It can be and it blew them about a foot
reached by taking county in the air.'' satd Bennett.
road 82 west of Route 7 and
"The Church of God, was
following the signs reading damaged but we doo 't know
"Fish and Game". County the extent of the damage
road 82 is one mile north of there yet, either," he said.
Chester on Route 7. The
Beonett said a~out 75 residerby will be held rain or dents of the area were taken
shine.
to a National Guard Arlnory.
"We sent some buses in
there to move them out and
they loaded the buses up,"
said
Bennett. "Those that had
RIG WRECKED
A Meigs County traffic cars drove out of there and
acCident reported by the some others walked out."
"This occurred probably
State Patrol occurred at 12:45
p. m. on SR 7, two and three six blocks from the downtown
tenths miles north of US 33. area/' he said. "It was chaos
Officers said a car pulling a as it was and if it would have
trailer driven by Robert T. happened later it would have
Metzger, 22, Cmclnnat1, was got evei} worse.
Robert Voss, an assistant
attempting to pass an
fire
chief, said the explosion
unknown veh1cle when he was
was
of "great magnitude,
forced to cut back in where
greater
than I could ever
the four lane highway endod.
have
imagined.
He braked suddenly, causing
"It blew up the sewer line
the trailer to jackknife. A
right
through the cemetery,"
boat on the trailer came off,
said
Voss.
striking the highway.

TOLEDO, Ohio !UP! ) Members of the Toledo-Lucas
County Port Autbonty are
toy mg with th e idea of
mv1ting Concorile Supersonic
Transports to land at Toledo
Express Airport.
At a board meeting
Wednesday, Port Authority
Vice Chairman W.W. Knight
cas uall y brought up th e
oth er
suggestion
and
members thought 1t worth
pursuing.

They approved start of a
fe asibility study on how
Toledo would handle the craft
and how the Port Authority
would go about inviting
British Airways and Air
France to look to Toledo as a
landing spot.
One board member said
such a move would surely
show that Toledo was
progressive and added that
SST landmgs m the city would
open up Ameri ca 's mid
continent for air travel.
Board member expect a
report on the idea in the near
future.

Racine
Social
Events

Catfish
derby set

Explosions

•

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. Marjorie Gnmm and
Mrs. Mary K. Yost attended
the Baptist Women's Con·
ference at Granville.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Beegle, Tommy and Vera
Bee~le VIsited Mr. and Mrs.
James (Buge) Ingram m
Columbus Sunday.
Mrs. Peggy Nixon of New
Straitsville spent a weekend
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Webb.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Sunpson
of Seymour, Ind . spent
overnight Sunday and
Monday with his mother,
Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle
and their guest, Melvin Riffle
of Columbus spent Friday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Bill -McKenzie at Gallipolis
after they had enJoyed dinner
at Bob Evans.
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch
visited Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Powell at Torch Sunday.
Baptismal service was held
Sunday evening 1in the F.1rst ·, RIO -GRANDE - John
Baptist Church when thirty- Hiils : nationally known
seven- were baptized by the physical fitness consultant,
pastor, Rev. Den Walker.
will lead a one day training
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill program for those who work
spent the weekend in with the elderly, Thursday,
Columbus with their son-m- June 30,11 a.m. to 3:30p.m.
law and daughter, Mr. and at the Amencan Legion
Mrs. W~id Foster and family. Wavely.
'
They went especially to atSponsored by Area Agency
tend the graduat10n . from on Agmg District 7 and the
high school of their grand- Ohio Commission on Aging,
daughter, Cheryl Foster the program, "Physical WellFriday evening, June IO. Being Through Exercise," is
Others from here, joimng designed to instruct leaders
them on Saturday for a· in the safe use of exerc1se for
cookout
honoring
the older adults. Hills will assist
graduate, were Mr. and Mrs. leaders and volunteers in the
Robert Hill and Mr. and Mrs. design and implementation of
Billy HilL _ _
physical fitness programs.
Mrs. Nola Spaun was
Best known for his frequent
honored . with a layett_e appearances on television's
shower g1ven by Mrs. Davuj "Today" show, Hills will
Shain at her home in An- demonstrate the desirability
tiquity.

ask divorces
Three suits for divorce and
an action for money have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Filing for · divorce were
Bernice Cofffey, Middleport,
from Stephen W. Coffey, Ft.
Myers, Fla.; Jack K. Spires,
Rt. I, Langsville, from
Carolyn
Gene Spires ,
Williamsport, and Janealle
Johnson , Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
from William Cecil Johnson,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
Patricia Imboden, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, asks judgment of
$815.08 against Gary Harris,
McArthur, and Peck Truck
Co., McArthur for damages
as a result of an accident on
Dec. 14, 1976 on SR 7 in Meigs
County.
Rosemary Hysell's divorce
from Lawrence Hysell was
made final In another court
entry.

Worn wedding
(Continued from page I)
The black and white photngraphs, which were restored
bY OSBI technicians and
distributed tn the news media
during an Oklahoma City
news conference Tuesday,
were identified Wednesday
by the man who was the
groom at the wedding in
which the pictures were
taken.
La~rd said the pictures
were "torn and worn and the
women
almost
were
unrecognizable" when they
were fo101d.
"They were in bad shape,"
he said. ''They had been
carried aro101d a lot. They
were several years old."
Bes1des the photographs,
other evidence reportedly
found
during
the
investigation includes a
bloody bootprint, a flashlight,
glasses belonging tn one of
the camp's counselors, a
glasses case, recently opened
canned goods and tape.

Physical fitness consultant
to lead program on June 30

---------------------------1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be 1
less than 300 words long 1or be subject Ill reduction by
the editor) and m111t be signed with tbe signee's address, . Names may be withheld upon pubUcatloo.
However, on request, nami'S wiU be disclosed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personalltles.

for older adults to exercise
and maintain physical vigor.
Area Agency officials said
that persons interested m or
involved with leadership m
aging centers, nutrition sites,
recreation departments,
nursing home programs and
others who prov1de service to
older adults, both staff and
volunteers, are encouraged to
attend.
During the training
program, Hills will discuss
the various purposes of
exercise programs for older
people and will perform
actual exercises, including
some which may be done to
music. Aquestion and answer
perwd will follow the
demonstration.
Hills, who was director of
physical education at the
Columbus Athletic Club, has

set up exercise systems for
elderly people including the
· blind at the New York
Ughthouse. He has a broad
background in aquatics and
has both taught and officiated
wrestling, boxing, handball,
volleyball and weightlifting.
His exercise programs on
televiswn
have
been
sponsored by several companies.
A registration fee of $3.50,
wh1ch includes a noon meal,
will be charged for the
training event. Registration
fees must be mailed by June
28, to the Area Agency on
Aging District 7, P. 0. Box
978, Rio Grande College and
Community College, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674. Further
information is available from
the Area Agency Office at
614-245-li353.

Phillies outslug defending champions, 15-9
.•.•••,.;o;,x;v;ox.~;:.-~·».:;;$;:=.:::=:;-.::;(.;.....-_.;.;_-w•:•:o:-:•:&lt;·»:··.-,•,v~y.ti'-&lt;:;::··Y··-:~
f.;~::;;:;:::;::~~:::::-::::::::':'~=9.=::::::::::~:-::::~:::::::::::=::::=:::::;;:::~~::;:::;::t:~:::r::::::::~:;:-~~:::::::~..: ~

..
.;.;-:-:

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Wave
back
those
~»"'
......, outfielders, here comes
Larry Bnwa !
Prmr to this season, Bowa
had hit just four majoc league
borne runs in seven ~sons.
~
~
~ l}ut in 61 games thus far this
yea r, he's already matched
that totaL The latest Bowa
homer,
however,
will
probably go down as his most
NEW-YORK {UP!) - Eddie Stanky was manag ing the Mets. dramatic.
That's no misprint, it's a fa ct, because these were their
With the Philadelphia
young farm hands and that's the name tl!ey went by in the Phill1es locked in a see-saw
Flonda InstructiOnal League, the Mels.
slugfest with the Cincinnati
It was in the fall of 1965, and Stanky, who IS the Texas Reds Wednesday night, Bowa
Rangers' new manager now, wa s drrector of player develop- capped a five~url seventh
ment for tl!e Mets then He was staymg active, as he always
likes to do, by handlmg one of tl!eir clubs for them.
The Reds were the opposition. They were made up of a
number of Cincinnati's goodlooking kids like Johnny Bench
and Bernie Carbo, boll! only 17. Still another 17-year-o1d, Jim
Spencer, wa s playing f1rst base for the Reds . ife ·actually
belonged to the Angels, but they didn't have any other place to
put him. Some of tl!e baseball men who go to Florida and Arizona to
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) manage tl!ese instructional teams regard tl!e job a vacation or The first thing Larry Bowa
an opportumty to have some fun m the sun, but Eddie Stanky thought of after smashing his
was managing the only way he knows how, as if every game first career grand slam
was the World Series.
homer was to call his father
In this particular contest, one of his hitters had singled to in California.
shallow right center with men on first and second, and now as
"I have to call him," Bowa
the runner on second carne barreling around third heading for said after the Phila&lt;lflphia
home,ll became obvious to StankY he was going to be thrown Phillies' crunching 15-9
out by 20 feet.
victory over the Cincinnati
Stanky darted down the line to where Spencer had stationed Reds Wednesday night. "If he
himself for U!e relay from the outfield. He krww this was kid reads U!e boxscore he'll think
first baseman 's first year out m pro ball and that he figured to it's a misprint."
be highly impressionable, so he cupped his hands around his
Bow a's
grand
slam
mouth and hollered athtm, commandmgly, ''Cut 1t! '' ''Cut 1t! '' sparked a flve-rWl seventh
Rattled ,and not realizing where the order was coming from , . inoing that powered the Phils
Spencer cut the ball off and the runner scored eas1ly .
to the victory.
In the dugout later, Dave Bristol, the present Atlanta
" It was my greatest thrill
mana~ter who was running the Reds in that ball game, next to making the big
patiently talked to Spencer about the pi trails of listening to a
rival coach, espec!ally one like Eddie StankY, whose lifelong
philosophy has always been everything is fair in love, war or
baseball
The late Branch Rickey, who had StankY as h1s second
baseman with the Brooklyn Dodgers, described him best
when, in a single sentence, he cited all his baseball faults as
well as his greatest virtue .
"He can't hit, he can't run , he can't field, and he can't
U!row ," sa1d Rickey of StankY. "All he can do is beat you."
In Pony League action,
They called Stanky "The Brat" because of the way he had of Middleport raised its record
upsettmg the other club. He was the type ballplayer who'd to 6-0 by downing host Racine
always get in your hair doing something . Ask Phil Ruzuto, who +2 as wmning pitcher Britt
still hasn 't forgiven him for kickmg the ball out of his hands in Dodson and reliever Billy
the third game of the 1951 World Series between the Giants ana Elkms teamed to toss a fourYankees.
hitter. They fanned 10 and
With Stanky on first and Alvin Dark up, the Giants put on the _ walked just four. Loser John
hit-&lt;U~d~un, but Yogi Berra, catching for the Yanks, called for
Pape and teammate Kent
apitchoutand made a perfect throw to second. R1zzuto had the Wolfe also tossed a fine
ball and was waiting for SlankY, who k1cked it out of his hands, game, a four-hitter , while
then scrambled to his feel and made 11 to third from where he fanning six and walking six.
scored on Dark's single. The Giants registered five runs m that
For the winoers, Dodson,
uming, wmning easily, and it was Stanky's "drop kick" wh1ch Elkms, Terry Gardner, and
turned the game around.
Chr1s Judge each got a single.
As manager of the St. Louis Cardinals from 1952 until 1955 For the hosts, Wolfe socked 'a
and the Chicago Wh1te Sox from 1966 until 1968, he always triple, and Seth Hill and Paul
would be thinking at least an innmg ahead of the other guy, Cardone each got one single.
something he had learned playing for his mentor, Leo Mid'port
210 000 1-4 4
Durocher.
Racine
200 000 x~2 3
·Stanky \vas as demanding on himself as he was on his
players and had absolutely no use for any one who dogged 11
Mason
downed
host
because that was something he never had done hunself.
Syracuse 9-7 with Don Russell
"If you wanna drown, that's okay with me, but don't drag me picking up the win in relief in
with you,' ' he'd say.
the 10-inning contest. Shawn
For the past nme years, Stanky has been baseball coach at Fields sta.rted and together
the University of South Alabama where he turned out a they fanned 17 and walked
numper of outstanding ballplayers.
six. Jack Duffy was tagged
If 1 had a son, I'd do everything I could to have him play lor with the loss in relief of Chris
Eddie Stanky m college or in the big leagues. One thing I'm Hupp. They struck· out
sure. He'd learo a lot of thmgs he never knew before - abo11t nineteen and walked eight.
life as well as baseball.
Tim Kelly led all hitters for

:f&amp;

@ Today's
~

'

~~

@

%

Snort Parade

~~~~~~~N~:~AN

liB

l~ ~

1
I
I
I

I
I

Lack of concern is sad

r----,------···

""''"8' "'""

.

1

~

73 NOVA

6 CYliNDER

76 OLDSMOBILE
CUTI.ASS 'S'
Uke New

Auto., P. S., 6 cyl. "Be - V-top, radials, P. S.,
Conscious"
Energy
P.B., road wheels,
AM tape, AC.

•2295
76 MONTE CARLO, Loaded
76 JEEP
75 MALl BU. AC, ·Tilt
75 MATADOR-AC, Auto.
74 MUST soLO II, 4 spd.
74 DUSTER, auto., PS
74 SATELLITE, AC, PS
73 AMB/sOLI:!DOR, AC, PS
73 IMPALA, AC, PS, PB.
73 DART, V-top, AC, auto.
73 DUSTER, AC, sunroof
73 GALAX IE 500, AC, v-top
73 REGAL, tape, AC, tilt.
73 AMBA~soL.!?OR,
AM-FM, AC, Cruise

soLi&gt;

•4795
54,995
su95
$3,695
2,795
$1,995
$2,595
$2.495
$1,695
$2,695
U,395
$2,395
$2,695
52,995
51,695

first homer I've ever hit that I
knew was gone the moment it
left the bat. I can't describe
the feeling."
The win completed a threegame series leaving the
Philhes m front 2-1. " This series has been like
two heavyweights slugging
each other all over the ring,"
Bowa said. "Our offense is
awesome r1ght now, but so is
the Reds."

The Phillies also were
paced by Mike Schmidt who
belted two home runs and
drove in four runs.
W1th the score tiel! at 9-9,

the Phillies took the lead
when relief pitcher Joe
Hoerner U!rew a wild pitch
with bases loaded.
Ted
S1zemore
was
intentionally walked to reload
the bases before Bowa hit his
fourth homer of the year; a
record which matched
Bowa's career total pr1or to

74 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

Mason as he stroked a double
and two singles. liupp had
two singles to lead Syracuse
·Eastern got back on the
winoing track •by thumping
host Rutland 9-1 on a twohitter by Dan Spencer and .
Mark Norton. Together they
struck out 12 and walked only
one. Spencer also led the
hitting with a home run,
double, and single wjule
Brian Bissell had two triples
and a double.
Matt Weaver and Guy
Shuler took the loss, striking
out three and walking five
while )'Ieiding ten hits. Troy
Brooks socked a double and
John Ward a single to account
for the Rutland hitting.
Eastern
400 112 1-9,10
Rutland
001 000 0-1 2
The Pomeroy Royals kept
pace with Middleport as they
downed the visiting Pomeroy
A's 8-7 Reliever Tom Owens
got the win as he and Cliff
Kennedy fanned eight and
walked five. Steve Ohlinger
led the hitting w1th a tnple
and double, and Chris Woods,
Ricky Smith and Brian Swan
each had a single.
Harvey Whitlatch took the
loss in relief of starter Ricky
Allen. Clifford Murray had a
double and Ray Stewart two
smgles to lead the losers'
hitting.
Porn. A's
100 060 0-7 610
Pom. Royals, 132 110 x---3 5 3
Meigs-Mason Pony League
Standings
WL
Middleport
6 0
Pomeroy Royals
5 I
4 2
Eastern
Mason
3 2
Racine •
3 3
Syracuse
2 3
1 5
Rutland
Pomeroy A's
0 6

WIMBLEDON, England
(UPI) - Tucked away on
Court No. 7, the Wimbledon
newcomer attracted the kind
of large crowd usually drawn
by the top seeds.
The people had come to
watch the young American

Fishing test is
Aug. 12-14
at Pymatuning
COLUMBUS
Pymatuning
Lake
in
northeastern Ohio will be the
site of the seventh annual
Ohio Huskie ll;luskie Fishing
Contest August 13 and 14.
The contest 1s sponsored by
the Ohio Huskie Muskie Club
in cooperat10n with the
Division of Wildlife of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
Entry blanks are available
from club members and from
sporting goods stores,
mannas, and ball and tackle
shops throughout the stale.
The contest is open to the
public. There is an entry fee
of $5 which also makes the
angler eligible for several
prizes to be given away . The
grand prize is a Ranger II
muskie boat and trailer. A
Johnson outboard motor and
four remote controlled
trolling motors are among
the other prizes.
F1rst, second and third
place trophies will be
awarded on a point system to
anglers catchmg muskies
meeting the mmimum 30-mch
size lumt.
Headquarters
and
registration for the two-day
contest
will
be
at
Pymaturung's Andover Bach.
Additional infonnat10n and
entry forms can be obtained
by wntlng to the Oh1o Huskie
Muskie Club, 4088 Owsley St ,
Columbus, Ohio,- 43207.

VISil uUR WT DISPLAY AND SEE
THE VAWES NOW AVAILABLE

A.C., V-top, cruise,
AM-FM tape, road
wheels, bucket seats.

'3795

73 NOVA, 6 cyl.
72 CHARGER, 340 magnum
72 BUICK SKYLARK, AC
72 CH EV. IMP.,-4 door
72 MONTE'sal.DAX, AC
72 CHARGERJ1B, AC
72 FORD F100 Truck
72 NOVA 350, AC
72 CUTLASS su-PREME
72 SUPESOLDJG AC
71 FORD TORINO
70 VW BEETLE·
6BJEEPWAGONEER
68 FORD GALAX IE
66 V W 8 E ISOIJI,Z

Cubs 4, Giants 2:
Stllo homers by Larry Buttner in the first and Jerry
Morales m tl!e fourth staked
Bill Bonha m to his seventl!
win and enabled the Cubs to
mamtain their 61.&gt;-game lead
m the NL East. Bruce Sutter
hurled 2 2-3 innings of no-hit
relief to gain his 18th save.
Pirates 3, Padres I :
Jerry Reuss and Rich Gossage combined on a sevenhitter as the P~rates swept
the three-game sen es with
Sa n D1ego and kept pace with
tl!e Cubs and Phillles m the
East. W1llle Stargell bad a
pair of doubles, scored once

and drove in another for
Pittsburgh . Gossage struck
out ail fo ur batters he faced
for h1s 12th save.
Braves 4, M~ts I :
B1ff Pocoroba belte&lt;:l a tworun homer in the second
inn ing and Phil N1ekro
sca ttered II hils in helpmg
th e Braves Sllap a five-game
losi ng streak . Rowla nd
Office. making his first start
since injuring his shouldr
May 15, singled twice to start
two rallies and scored once.
Asl ros 7, Expos 0:
J1m Fuller hit his f1 rst two
homers as an Astro to back

the four-hit pilching of rookie
Floyd Banmster . Fuller,
recalled from the minors last
week , hit two-run homers in
the seco nd and eighth
mnm gs Bannister, 3-6 ,
struck out eight m hurling his
hrst major league shutout.
Dodgers 12, Cardinals 1:
Steve Garvey belted the
fi rst grand slam of his career,
h1s eighth homer in U!e last 15
games, to highlight a six~un
fourth inning Ron Cey also
drove in fo ur runs for the
Dodgers who increased the
NL West lead to 81&gt; games
over Cincinna U

$2,295
$1,695
$2,195
$1,995
$1,495
$1,995
$1,795
$1,995
$1,995

Watch for the arrival of our new
Skyline Cathedral ceiling mode.l,
featuring 4" lap siding. This hom~ IS
the latest in manufactured hous1ng
by the world's largest builder;..

$1,59~

$1,295
$795
$1,595
$395
$595

Sl»e ~yow c •: Sl•e..., yow saft1gS
at yaw FORD DEALBl
•ea .. d on ma nu ta c t~ r er ·s s~ggoat9d reta1ll)r lce

1977.
Rose doubled and came home
Schmidt h1t his 17th home on Dan Driessen's smgle. The
run m the fifth with two on Ph1ll1es scored one in the
and then added another m the second on Rich Hebner's
eighth with the bases eighth homer and tied the
empty.
game at 4-4 in the third on a
George Foster h1t a three - three~un homer by Bake
run homer , his 20th, to g1ve McBride .
tl!e Reds the lead in the f1rst.
But the Reds went ahead 7The Reds added another 4 m the fifth when Johnny
run m the second when Pete

Be nch hit his 14th homer, a
three-run shot Ken Griffey
also homered for U!e Reds.

liEARUP

FUR THE
TOUGH
wrnl

.
h
AGRAVF:tY.
14 year-o ld d emo l zs es
&lt;~'
~ ~~ Wimbledon opponent Wheny~~~

gets past Racine, 4-2

(

I

couldn't help 11. I'll have to
call my faU!er in Callform a
~ •ni g ht because when he sees
the box score tnmorrow, he 'll
thank it's a misprint. "
The Phillies also got a pa ir
of homers from M;ke
Schmidt. George Foster had
a two-run homer for the Reds
and J ohnny Bench a threerun shot
Elsewhere in the National
League, Chicago downed San
Francisco, 4-2; Atlanta put
away New York, 4-1 ; Houston
blanked Montreal, 7-0; Pittsburgh topped San Diego, 3-1,
and Los Angeles drubbed St.
LouiS, 12-1.

leagues," he said . "It was the

Middleport barely

AMC-JEEP-V.W.

1

inning Willi the fi rst gran&lt;lslam homer of his career.
which led to U!e eventual 15-9
Philadelphia victory.
The stage was set for
Bowa 's slam when, with the
score tied 9-9, U!e Phillles
loaded the bases and took the
lead on a Wild pilch by Joe
Hoerner. Ted Sizemoce was
then intentionally walked m
order to get to Bowa .
''This was my greatest
thrill next 1D making the big
leagues," said the elated
Bowa. ~&lt; Joe Hoerner is a
friend of mine and I didn't
want to show him up by
jumping up and down, but I

Grand slam greatest thrill--Bowa

RIVERSIDE

1
I
I
:

Dear Sir:
I would like to make a few comments about the recent
defeat of the Mentally Reiarded levy in Meigs County.
.
It is a sad thing this utter lack of concern and compassiOn
for the mentally ret~ded and other handicapped people in our
county.
[ have a retarded sister who is 63 years of age, due to the
fact th~t she had polio early in childhood ~nd it affected ~r
learrung capacity so she couldn't read or wr1te. In sp1te of thiS,
she has more compassion and conunon horse sense about ber
THE DAlLY SENTINEL
than some of these educated fools we have running things
OEVOTEDTOTHE
INTEREST OF
today. She had the misfortune of falling and bre aking both ~f
MElG&amp;MASON AREA
her hips around the first of the year, and even though she IS
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
covered by the social security laws, plus Medicare A and B,
-~
. ROBERTHOEFUCH
she was shunted off to the northern part of the state, a hdred
un
Publ~hod CJ!i1~c:;p\ Salunloy
&amp;!d fifty miles from what is left of our family and the friends
by The Oh•• v.u,y l'llbUshms Comshe had accumulated over til!' years. There she was dying not
any. Ill Court St , Pom"uy, OhiO
SO much from a broken hip but a broken heart. Due to the
45769. Business Office Phone 9921 h p
1
"" E•lllonal Phon• !1!12-2157
untiring effocts of Mary Skinner, who is bead o t e ersona
s.cond ''""
al
Advocacy Program of the Community Mental Health Center in
'Pomeroy,
NauonatOhwadvert!smg .,.,,,..,_
Pomeroy and the rest of t he peop1e th ere, they succeeded in
~auve W"'d • Grilf11h Company.
helping ~e to get her transferred to Wellston, which is clbse
Inc, Boutnem •"" Galt.sher D•v .
enough that lean gettosee her and comfort her all I can.
'/57 TtunJ Ave , New York , NY
111011
Again 1 want to thank the Personal Advocacy Program, of
Sul&gt;lcrtption r•""- O.hverod by
the Menial Health Center for what they have done. There is one
c06 rr1er where awaa~bte 76 cenb per
I(_
lh
ho
• .,, ByMu\urRou!ewhe"carri"
thing I would like 1D say 1D you people out ere w are so
,.rvlco not ovoililbt,, One month.
callous in your feelings about the mentally retarded and
~ ~ By mall In Oh•o and w Va ,
handicapped people:
One Year, $22 00, Slx months,
in that
$11 ~o , Three month11. $7 oo .
"When you see one of them, just remember one th g,
Ell&lt;ewhere $26.00 ''"" s.x moollw
but (or the grace of God, it could have been you instead of
fl :J. ~{I, Tllret' months , S1 50
Snh'li...-IJitwn ~rlt;e md utlc!l Sunday
them .' '
···~unc:;-&amp;1&gt;c':...iu'-d~--r---.J
-Jim Adams, P .0. Box 311 RuUand,Ohio

-

Three couples

Kingsbury Home
Sales, Inc.
"For The Finest In Manufactured Housing" ·
1100 E. Main Street
997-7034
Pom"

phenomenon, Tracy Austin,
and in less than an hour they
saw the 14-year-oid schoolgirl
from Rolling Hills, Calif ..
become the youngest player
ever to win a match at
WIIIIbledon.
Barely able to see over the.
net, the 5-foot Cahforruan,
with her hair m br&amp;ds and
braces on her teeth,
demolished Elly Vess1es
Appel of the Netherlands, 6-J,
6-3 . The victory earned
Austin a probably third round
match
against
defending Wimbledon
champion Chris Evert, whose
second- round match against
Wmnie Wooldridge of Britain
is scheduled for Friday.
"I treated this JUS( hke any
other tournament," Austin
said. " I did not get exc1ted
until! won my last point. But
f will get excited when I meet
Chris Evert.~ '
The self-assured Austin
said she did not suffered from
nervousness, which wasn 't
the case for s1x-time
Wimbledon champion Bilhe
Jean !Gng.
The 33-year-old King
opened her comeback
campa1gn w1th a 6-3, 8-0, 6-3
victory over 17-year-old Anne
Smlth from Dallas.
"I'm so reheved to get
through my first match,"
sa1.d !Gng, bidding for a
record 20th Wimbledon title.
" .. .I am so nervous here
every year. I am a wreck two
or three months before
Wimbledon and finally zero
hour arrives and I never

think I am going to make it."
King, who Thursday faced
Maria Bueno in the tl!ird
round, is one of the players
Austm admires most. "I like
Chris Evert's ground strokes
and Bilhe Jean 's net play,"
she said.
The
men 's
singles
Wednesday provided two
upsets - Br1an Gpttfried and
Adriano Panatta - and
problems for top-seeded
J1mmy Connors, defending
champion Bjorn Borg and
sixtbseeded llie Nastase.
Gottlried, the No. 5 seed,
fell to South African Byron
Bertram, 6-2, ~.IH, 6-3, and
Sandy Mayer downed claycourt specialist Panatta of
Italy , the No. !Oseed, 8-9, 6-0,
6-2, !H.
Connors had to go four
tiring sets before beating
fellow American Mart y
Riessen, IH, 8-9, 6-1, ~­
Connors was to meet met
feilow left-bander Cliff
Drysdale of South Africa
TI1ursday.
Borg rallied after losing the
first two sets and defeated
Australian
Mark
Edmondson, 4~ , 7-9, 6-2, IH,
6-1. Nastasefought back from
the same deficit to edge
RhodeSian Andrew Pattison,
7-9, 3-6, 7-5, 8--6, 6-3.

In 1973, the United States
and Russia signed an
agreement 1D expand airlme
service between the two
countries.

have real work lo do, pu t
our- e&gt;clus1ve 8-speed. allgear transm15510n on your
s1de W1th no bells to sl1p.
come loose or break And
pos1t1ve power stra1ght 1nto
the mower attachment
W1th a cho1ce of 40- or 50lOCh cen ter mount. Or 40·
1nch, front-mount mowers.
You 'll cu i a Wide. smooth
swath And Gravely has
attachments for
compost1ng. haul1ng. leaf
removal-a whole lot more
Those are some of the
•easons why Gravely IS the
"cho1ce of the pros " Con1e
1n and see for yourself

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SAliS
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-2975
OPEN
9-5 Mon. - Fri .
9til Noon Sat.

~ Choice of the Pa"US.

1elhaeK

ASSOCIATE STORE

ACE
HARDWARE
•STEREO
•TAPE RECORDS
•8 TRACK TAPES
•SMOKE ALARMS .
•CB RADIOS
•SCANNERS
•SPEAKERS
•KNIVES
•WATCHES

•ELECTRICAL
•LAWN &amp;GARDEN
•HOUSEWARES
•SPORTING GOODS
•AUTO
•BUILDING MATERIALS
•PANELING
•PAINT

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S PLAZA)

•

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursd~y. Jw1e 23, 19'••

$-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pol"(leroy, 0., Thursday, June23, 1977

Rangers edge Twins by 10-8 count&gt;
M;ajor- League StAndings

Bv UniTed Press lnternation"'l
Nat ional league

EAU

Chicago
Ph il a
Pi ftSbgh
St. Lou is
New York
Montreal

W. L

Pet. G8

42 22 .t.56

36
JS
J.S
7.9

29 .55.:1

61
7
B
14

19 . 547
31 .5J()
37 .439

1

28 36 .438 14

west
w. L

Pet . GB

LOS Ang
Cinc1

San Fran

45 23 .662
35 30 .538 8 1 7
31 38 ..u9 \ 4' 7

San Diego

31 41

Houston
Atlanta

.431

16

29 40 .47.0 16' ~
24 4.4 .353 21

Wednes day 's Results
Chicago 4, San Francisco 1
Houston 7, Montreal 0
Philadelphi a 15, Cincinnati 9
Atlanta \1. New York 1
P i lfSburgh J, San Diego 1
Los Angeles 12, St . Lc'u is 1

Todavs Probabl e P itche r

( No games scheduled )
Fr lda't •s Games
New York at C h iu~o
Montrea t at Pit tsburgh, nigh t
Phil a at St. Louis . night
San Diego at Atlan ta , night
Los Ang€1es at Cinci, night
·
San Francisco at Houston , night

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Un i teel Pre u lnternati anal
WLP c t . GB
Pawtucket
.40 2.4 . 625
Charles ton
Je 28 .576 3
Ri ch mond
33 '.19 ..532 6
Tidewa l er
31 30 .508 71 2
Rochester
33 33 .50 0 9
Syracu se
30 34 ..469 10
Toledo
30 38 .441 12
CQi ornbus
22 41 .3.49 17 h
. Weelnesday '!i R esulls
T1dewater 4, Sy ra cuse 2
Ric hmond 8, Co l umbus 1
Toledo 'l , Pawtucket 0
Rochester at Ct1artes t on
ppd ., ra in
•

A merican League
East
W. L
Pet. GB
110 2S .615
Boston
37 ll .54-t 41 '1
New York
)5 'll
C)(l
5I 1
Ballimre
Clevelnd
Jl 31 soo
71.,
Milw
JJ 35 .485 81 1
Detroit
29 36 . 446 11
'.14 40 . 375 lS ll-,
Toronto
Wes t
W. L Pet. GB
ChiC~SJO
37 28 .569
Minn
37 30 . 552 1
Te&gt;Cas
32 31 .508 4
Kan City
33 32 .508
4
C"li t
31 32 . 492
5
Oakland
'.19 36 . 446 a
Sea tile
J l 41 .431 911
. Wednesday 's Results
Kansu Cify 4, Se!&amp;ltle 3
Texas 10, Minnesota 8
Chicago 6, Ca l ifornia 1
NeW York 11 , Detroi t 11
Cleve 7, Toronto, 5, 12 Inns .
Boston 7, Ball imore 4
M i lwaukee s, Oakland 1
Today 's Probable -Pitcher s
( All Times EOTl
Se&lt;'Jttle CJones t-41 a t Kansas
City ( Hassler 3-2), 8: 30p .m .
Tex&lt;'Js {B r iles J."JJ at M in·
nesota CGoilz6-.4 ), 1:15 p .m .
Ca l ifor nia
( Nolan 0-1) at
Ch icago (Barri os 6-3}, 2: 15 p.m .
Clev eland (Gar land 3-7 l at
,. Toronto (Je fferson 3-6), 7:30
p.m .
(Jenk ins
6-5)
at
Boston
Ba ltimore (Grimsley 6-JJ. 7: 30
p.m .
Friday 's Games
Kan City at Oakland, night
Texas at Californ ia. n ig ht
Chicago at Minnesota , n ight
Seattle at M ilwaukee . n ig ht
Cleveland at Detroit , n ight
Toronto at B!lltimore. ni gnt
Boston at New Yo r k , n ight

By FRED DOWN
UP! Spurts Writer
Eddie
Stanky,
who
replaced Frank Lucchesi as
manager Wednesday night
and has frequently been

accused of over-managing,
made a confession after his

debut with the Texas
Rangers, who came up with a
10·8 triumph over the
Mirmesota Twins.
"I
didn't do
any
managing," said Stanky, who
last piloted a major league
team in 1968. "Sid Hudson
handled the pitchers and
Co nnie Ryan called the
signals. I just sat on the
bench and almost !ell

TROY, N.Y. (U P! ) Brown University basketball
player Chuck Mack is
recovering from three
operations for severe leg
injuries suffered In a hit"'!lld· asleep. ''
The Twins had a 4-1 lead
run accident while jogging
when the Rangers rallied lor
last week.
Mack, a 6-foot-4 forward four ruM in the seventh
who averaged 13.9 points per irming and added five In the
game for Brown last year as eighth. John Ellis' two-run
a sophomore, was hit by a car single was the big blow of the
while jogging near his home. seventh inning and Cllludell
A reward bas been ofrered lor Washington's three-run
information leading to the homer capped the five-run
eighth.
arrest of the driver.
Darold Knowles received
Mack was expected to
remain
in
Samaritan credit for his second win
Hospital for two more weeks. while Tom Burgme ier
Officials said no bones were suffered the loss. Larry Hisle
broken, but internal bleeding, singled in two runs, while Rod
which cut off circuLation in Carew had four hits.
The Boston Red Sox
his left leg, required three
whipped
the Baltimore
operations.

Magazine Baseball summaries
In Little League action the triple.
Troy Dudding and Steve
firm buys downed host Portland 8-2 on a Lyons
shared the pitching
nifty one-hitter by wirming duties for the Rangers.
Melanie Weese who is Donnie VanMeter socked two.
Cincy Suds hurler
now
She had retired the singles and George Zuspan

Orioles. 7-4, the Kansas City
Royals shaded the Sea ttl•
Mariners, 4-3, the New York
Yankees outsluggell the
Detroit Tigers, 12-11, the
Milwaukee Brewers defeated
the oakland A's, 5-l, the
Chicago White Sox beat the
California Angels, 6-2, and

Graig Nettles had tied the
score at IG-10 with a three-run
homer. Sparky Lyle won his
third game for the Yankees
while Steve Foucault was the
loser. Jason Thompson, Steve
Kemp, Phil Mankowski and
John Wockenfuss homered
for the Tigers.

the Cleveland Indians scored

Brewers 5, A's I :

a 7-!i, 12-inning triumph over
the Toronto Blue Jays in ·
other AL games.
Red Sox 7, Orioles 4:
TwiH'un homers by Carlton
Fisk and Butch Hobson
enabled the Red Sox to score
four runs off Jim Palmer in
the ninth inning and run their
wirming streak to six games.
Mike Paxton was the winner.
Royals 4, Mariners 3:
George Brett singled for his
third hit of the· game, stole
second bsse and scored on AI
Cowens' single in the eighth
irming giving the Royals their ·
victory. Doug Bird won his
third game with the relief
help of Larry Gura and Mark
Littell while Dick Pole was
the loser.
Yallkees IZ, Tigers 11
The Yankees snapped their
five-game losing strea k with
a live-rW) salvo In the eighth
irming, capped by Reggie
JacksOn 's two-run double .

wiru~. Robin Yount and D&lt;rl
Money
suppo rted
the
Brewers' nine-hit attack with
two hils each.
White Sox 6, Angels 2 •
Jorge Orta and Wayne
NordN!gen drove in rwo runs
ea~h for the White Sox as
Bart Johnson won his foll)"th
game and Ken Brett was
tagged with his lifth loss
against six wins. Chet Lemon
scored two runs tor the White
So x while Dave Chalk, Bobtiy
Bonds and Mike Guerrero
had two hits each for the

Angels.
India.us 7, Jays 5:
Jim Norris' sacrifice fly
drove in Frank Duffy with the
tie-breaking run in the 12th
and reliever Tom Bruno
walked in another run •s the
Indians remained unbeaten
under new Manager Jeff
Torborg. Duffy singled home
a run that gave the Indians a
temporary 5-I lead In the top
ol the ninth but the Blue Jays
tied the score In their haU on
a rW1-scoring single by AI

Senators favor reforming of
license plate, sticker sales
By J .R. KJMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
more
efficient
and
accountable system or selling
license plates and renewal ·
stickers in Ohio was
overwhehningly approved by
the Ohio Senate Wednesday.
The House must still agree
to minor Senate amendments
before the legislation is sent
to Gov. James A. Rhodes for
his signature.
The Senate . 31-2 passage
came after about an hour's
debate. The House passed
Columbus Democratic Rep.
James L. Baumann's original
draft by a wide ll181'gin 1n
ApriL
The propose&lt;! change would
require that owners of ihe
state's 8 million motor
vehicles get new license

Jim WohUord had thr·ee
singl"l! and drove in two runs
and Jerry Augustine pitched
an ~ig ht-hitt er for the
Brewers, who dealt Vida Blue
Woods.
his ninth defeat against four
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, JUNE 25t.h

EMPLOYEES OUnNG .
OF
KENTUCKY WEST VIRGINIA GAS CO.
AND
KENTUCKY HYDROCARBON CO.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

ITCHY,
BURNING TOES!
lASE FIERY PAIN

CAMDEN PARK
U. S. Route 60 West- Huntington
Closed Every Monday Except Holidays

IN ONE H OUR or your 79c back
Apply qui ck-dryinl' T-4-L 1 tron~
(U":Jiclde. t o quiet itch , 'burn in
MINUTES. Al•o llne f or aweaty
adaroua fut. Try Jt for hai!UY

re:

liell NOW at
NELSON ORUG STORE .

pLates on a staggered, !:!month syi!lem from one of 228
permanent deputy registrars
instead of during the curreqt
two-month period from any of
about 600 deputy registrars,
hall of which are part-time.
Drivers could also register
their vehicles by mail for an
additional $1.50. The basic
cost of motor vehicle
registration would incre.....
50 cents per license plate or
renewal sticker.
The proposed syi!lem would
be lully operational by
January 1979, but firs!-of-the·
alphahet drivers would begin
registration re1!fwal in April
1978 to phase in the new
system.
Baumann's biU would also
give the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles ( BMV) a better
method to keep accurate
records of the m.illions or
dollars of motor vehicle
registration fees each year.
Registration would be
administered through a 63:1terrrun
' al COmpu te r net WOrk
USing the 5affie equipment
;
·
dr' '
now m
use to renew
lver s
licenses. Driver'S licenses
COUld stiU be renewed at

visiting Racine Ca'rdinals

ANAHEIM (UP I) - The
Calilornia Angels Wednesday
signed right-handed pitcher
Gary Johnson, 1~. who caught
. the eye ol scout Walter
Youse, when he played lor a
high school in Chesapeake,
Va .
Johnson was selected on
the second round ol the
swruner free-agent draft and
will report immediately to
Idaho Falls of the Pioneer
League.
SportS Transactions
By United Prus tnte r fll)tlonal
Wednesday
,Baseball
Tex as - Fi r ed Frank L uc.
chesi as manager and replaced
him with Eddie Stanky ,
California Signed r ig ht handed pitcher Ga r y Johnson ,
second . round pic k in free agent
draft .
Pro Football
New York Jets - Claimed
def ensive back Maurice Tyler
from Detroit .

LEGHOLDso TRAPS

4-1.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
city's new pro softball team,
the Cincinnati Suds, has been
sold.
Formerly owned by a local
group headed by Art Price,
the Suds now are owned by
publishers of a Cincinnatibased pro softball magazine.
The Suds' new officers are
Robert D. Miller, board
chairman; William P.
.Moomaw, , president ; H ~
Glenn Reed, executive vice
president and general
manager , and Beverly
Spurgeon,

secre tary-

treasurer.
The Suds currently are in
first place in the American
Prolessional Slo-Pitch
League's central division.

OROTHO
COMPLETE
PEST
CONTROL

first 12 batters to face her
before a fielding error in the
fifth , and ended up fanning 10
and walking just one. Kevin
Curfman and John Porter led
the hitting with two- doubles
each. Dave Talbott took the
loss and Steve Souders got the
only Portland hit, a double.
Racine
310 31-813
000 .02- 2 1
Portland

.

The New Haven Cubs beat
the host Pomeroy Tigers 6-S
with Weaver and Gilland
getting the win, laMing nine
and walking two. Gilland and
Humphreys each had a
double to lead the hitting .
John Smith was tagged
with the loss, laMing nine
and walking nine . Cliff
Icenhower socked two
doubles and Jackie Welker
had a triple to lead the Tiger
hitters.
N.H,Cubs
020~. 5
Porn. Tigers
100 103-5 5
The Pomeroy Yankees
raised their record to 11)-1 by
coming from behind to beat
the h~st Mason Rangers 9.a
as Roger Kovalchik faMed 16
and walked- just one.
Kovalchik also led the hitters
with a triple and two singles
while J. R. Wamsley had two
singles and Scott Harrison a

'

got a homer to lead the hitting.
P. Yankees
301 302-9 11
Mason
006 Oli-a 6

"Of timid things, of tortured things, that take

Todd Fife tossed a twohitter as the Pomeroy Pirates
downed the host New Haven
Reds 9-3. Fife faMed 12 and
walked six, and helped his
own cause by socking a
homer and triple . Rod
Manley got three singles.
Ken Barker took the loss,
striking out eleven and
walking six·. Ralph Thompson
socked a homer and Rob
Edwards got a single to ac.count for the Reds hitting.
P. Pir1ltes 201 042&amp;-9 12 2
N.H. Reds
'210 000-3 2 0

:- ....

....

ISOTOX

UQUID SEVIN

INSECT SPRAY

Japanese Beetles and
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DUST FOR VEGETABLES, FRUITS
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and Yea Qer." W- Hooton , S-3. L
- Underwood, 3-3.
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CAR CARE PRODUCTS

Entry blanks available at our ZEREX display

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144 West Second Street

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Route 33
Mason, West Virginia

Bost
OlD 000 20•- 7 7 1
BaIt '\
102 oo 1 ()()()-.-, " 8 o
Cleveland , Pa xton {6) , Camp .
bell (9 ) and Fisk ; Palmer and
Oempsey . W- Puton , 2-2. LPal mer , 8-7. HRs- Boston, Scott
(20) , R ice fl8 l. Hobson {10),
Fisk , '.! (15) . Baltimore, Demp .
sey (2) .
Oaklnd
000 100 000- 1
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lind
end
L-

SUNDAY
4: 00-11 :00

to request
• •
a pet1flon

PHONE 992-6304

•

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LEGAL NOTICE
sion of Ohio has set for public hearing Case No .
76-534-EL·FAC, Subtile A, 1o
review the operatlon of Ohio
Power Company's luel cost
ad1ustmeot clause. and tts
luel procurement practices
and policies, on Monday, ·
June 27. 1977. at 10:30
A.M , a1 .the offices of the
Commission, 180 East Broad
Stre et. · Columbus. Ohio
43215. All lnlerested persons
will be given an opportunity
1o be heard. Further inlonna·
tlon may be obt.aln!MI by con·
tacting the Public Utilities
Commission -of
,- Ohio.
111E PUBLIC UTILmES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By Randall G. Ap~ega1e,

Secret.ar'(

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(37 signatures fill a petition - partially filled acceptable - every signature counts)

.

ROOF PAINT

'''
•'

•'

For longer lasting
Paint Jobs Use Our

In Ohio the greate st majority of trCipping is done for a little extro pocket money or for
weekend sport. The fur industry reop_s the fa bu lous profi t.

Ohio law requlrea traps be checked only every 30 hours -but even that law Is not enforceabl•·
YOung children con and do purchase leg-hold traps ~ set them and more than often - forget them . Traps are genera ll y placed il) remote rural areas a nd t heir locat ion need not
be reported to state o tficiol s. Severe w eather co ndition s can pre ve nt a trap pe r from vis it ing his
lines for days. All too dften on Onim ol l i es in a gony i,; o leghold trap unt il it d ies of ex posure to
the weather, hunger or thi rst be f ore t he trapper arrives to shoot or beat it to death.

'•

"SUPER
QUALITY"

Testimony of a trapper finding a wild ermine dead in a leghold trop: " There are signs of a
tenific struggle: from experience I know the ennlne lived 3 o r 4 days and then died from
hunger ond pain. The foot is lacemted, swollen and covered with blood. The stump of the leg
above the trop is swollen four times its noturnl size and frozen. The shoulder too is all
swollen. When we skin it, we will find that all that area wil/ be a mass of blood colored,
sickly, geletln-like substance, indicating the tenib/e sufferin~ it has gone through before
death released it. But it will make so me lady a lovely fur piece.'

•RED
•GREEN
•ALUMINUM

Sometimes mother animal s will attempt to ret ur n to their bobi·es by gnawing off the imprisoned foot. M ost of t hem d ie a slOw , agon izi ng death fr o m loss of b l0;od o r infection and/ or
gangreen

GALVA-GUARD PAINTS

This is the kind o f treatmen1 we al low Ohio's wildli fe fo be subjec1ed fo year oiler year. (Fox,
beaver, raccoon, squirrel, woodchuck. skunk. weasel. mink. robbit, opossum, and
muskrat.)lt is probab le that no i nst rument was ever invented t hat has caused as much suffering

Extremely durable pure. alkyd paints
formulated
for
maximum
gloss
retention and weather res-I stan ce .
Excellent fo r metal roofs, build.l ngs,
wood trim , shutters. lawn furniture,
and equipment. Prime new galvanized
s urfaces with SP -136 1 vrnvi -Zinc
Chromate Metal Conditioner ; bad ly
rus ted surfa ces w ith No . 84 -A Red Lead
Primer .

·.

as the common steelleghold tra p. It s continued use is o blot o n todays civilized society . It has
been aboli shed in 19 oth e r nofiC!ns . But the fur indust r y still unblushing ly conti nues to support its
u se in the United States .
'
j
_,

If traPflint _,, lie - •d if there Dre those "Ito must we11r wildlife furs for the sah of

vanitr - tht11 aH we 1rslr is that de~th come quiclrly to tile !fild creatures wllose torture now
pays tor this Y•ity. PLEASf HElP/

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------.- --------- ----------------------I live in lhe counly of;

P.O. Box 9611-HT, Cleveland, Ohio 44140
Send me
petit i ons .
My phone number is :

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Pl-se request your petitions from:
International Fund for Animal Welfare

THIS.MESSAGE WAS PAID FOR
BY THE INTERNATIONAL FUND
,OR ANIMAL WELFARE, BRIAN
DAVIES, DIRECTOR.

'--------':-"'----jlioo.w·&amp;-~·,..,-

NAME ~------""'~~~~------~
[PlE ... ~£ ~ I NT

I

' ADDRESS

CITY
STATE

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ZIP

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=---------------------~~
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Spread rate appro &gt;C i mately 500 square
feet pe t galloi'J , depend i ng on surface
cond i tion .

.

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SHOP OUR COMPLm PAINT DEPARTMENT

I

!.

A"

drivers would buy 1979 plates.
Therefore~ " A.. drivers
would pay only eight-tweUths
of the total charge, because
their 1978 plates wollid be
valid only eight months. In
January 1979, "A" drivers
would buy 1979 plates valid
WitH January 1980 and pay
the full charge.
•
Dri.vers with last names
beginning with "X" or "Z"
would buy 1978-1979 plates In
May 1978, and the plates
would be valid until
November 1979.
However, those end-of-thealphabet drivers would have
to pay me and one.haU times
the normal cost of the plates,
because they would be valid
for 18 months instead of 12.
The BMV also plans a
concentrated public relations
campaign to explain the new
system before it goes Into
effect.

L urkin·g
·

Meigs COWity

little league,
album: 1977

Korean CIA bankrolled payoff plan
By RICHARD E. LERNER

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - A
C.0p former
chief of South Korea 's

.

REEDSVILLE ImLE LEAGUE ROCKETS No. TWO - Front, 1-r, Billy Smith, Mike
Lance, Mike Putman, Brian Collins, Dee Dalley, Sc~tt Foster, Jimmy Randolph Scott
Hauber, Keith Harris; back, Jinuny WeiiB, David Durst, Glen Putman, Mark Holte~ John
Connolly, Carl Swain, Jimmy Carter, Jerry Larkins, David Ballard, Larry Cowdery,' back
Bill Durst, Larry Harris, and Hugh Martin, coaches.
'

KCIA director from 1963-69
and the first public wibless to
appear in any of the
investigations Into th e
alleged scandal, Kim said
Park showed him a list of "15 ·
to 20" congressmen in 1971
and told him the KCIA had
instructed him "to do favors"
for those lawmakers.
As a result, Kim said he got
Park $200,000 but then burned
the list and did not recall the
names on it.
Earller, Kim said Park told
him "two close friends" in
Congress had agreed "to help
in modernizing the Korean
armed forces " if Seoul's
government would assist
them in sales of U.S. rice
overseas. He said that was
arranged, but he refused to
name the congressmen
publicly.
In a closed session later,
congressional sour~s said,
Kim told the panel he .was
referring to Gallagher: a
close friend of Park's who
headed a subcommittee on
Asian affairs, and Haona, a
partner In business with Park

CIA says the agency helped
bankroll
a
" briberyoperation" to influence
congressmen, and sources
said he revealed that former
Reps. Cornelius Gallagher,
D-N.J., and Richard HaMa,
D-Calif., were involved.
During seven hours of
COLuMBUS (UP!) - The public · testimony hefore a
policeman ltirking over the H o u s e I n t e rna t i o n a I
hill with a radar trap would Relations subcommittee
be a thing of the past i1 a bill Wednesday, Kim Hyung
approved Wednesday by the Wook said "dictatorial"
Ohio House ~mes. iaw.
President Park Chung Hee
Despite objecUons 11 would ordered the secret activities
be t?o "sporting" for to get more U.S. military aid
speedmg motorists, the and the key man in
House sent to the Senate on a Washington was Tongsun
56-3? .. vote the proposal Park , once a socially
r"'!wrmg law enforcement prominent
businessman
officers . u~ng ~adar to be . here.
VISible m. 1denUfiable cars.
Kim , speaking Korean with
Malott sard he was tir.ed of an interpreter at . his side,
~~~ e~forcement. officers sidestepped crucial questions
hiding .m rural areas to nab and said he thought Tongsun
motorists exceeding the Park "pocketed" lJIUCh ol the
speed liinit by 3 m.p.h. so money he was s~pposed to
they could turn in a quota and spend on bribes, gifts or other
earn ."thousands of dollars" benefits for congressmen.
in fines.
"We're trying to help the
small people that are beil'lg
harassed," said Malott.
The bill would require any
law enforcement officer
.,.
··"
using radar or another timing
device to be "fully visible to
approaching motorists" In a
car equipped with either a
dome light or front and rear
By LEE LEONARD
dents Tuesday defeated a 7.S..
flashers.
1
niill school operating levy for
The liglils need not be UP! Statehouse ' Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Re- . the fourth straight time .
turned on at the time, but the
sponding
to the fourth
Wilkowski has said si~e he
police officer's car would
0
have to have at least two
wheels on tile right-of-way of
public schools, a state need to be encouraged to
the highway.
·
legislative
committee has support schools and he feelS
The measure also would
placed
in
position
for a floor that residents would be more
void as evidence any court
vote
a
bill
allowihg
school attracted to income taxes If
testimony resulting from a
districts
to
ask
voters
lor a they thought their real estate
radar checked not performed
on taxes would be lowered.
flat-rate
income
tax
within the gui~ellnes .
individuals
and
corporations.
"The big city schools are in
Rep. Alan E. Norris, R·
The bill, sponsor~d by Rep. bad trouble," said Wilkowski
Westerville, complained the
bill would allow "more Arthur R. WilkoWski, D- after the Wednesday night
motorists to speed with Toledo, clel!l'ed the House vote.
Economic Affairs Committee
The Toledo levy was
impWiity.
•'This is the sporting theory Wednesday night,10to 1, and defeated by a margin olmore
or' law enforcement," said now goes to the Rules than 3-2 with less than 40 per
Norris. " lt isn't a matter of Committee for assignment to cent ol eligible voters
participating. School officials
just enforcing the law, but the noor.
Wilkowski
said
he
said
the 56,00Q:.!;Iudent
now you've got to be a
anticipates
a
vote
in
about
system
- fourth largest in
gentleman
about
it.
two
weeks
despite
the
.
f
act
the
state
- would have to
Everybody knows what the
that
through
a
highly
unusual
shut
down
som eli me in
speed limit is."
maneuver,
he
bypassed
a
November
without
the $12.4
But Rep. Irene B. Smart,
standing
committee
which
million
a
year
the
levy
would
0-Canton, and other House
had
blocked
the
measure
and
have
brought
in
for
schools.
members said the mere preUnder Wilkowski's plan,
sence of a visible law revived it in another
committee
of
which
he
is
a
the
·income tax would he
enforcement officer would
prominent member.
levied on individuals living in
reduce speeds.
The bill would permit the district and corporations ·
"What do we want, fines? "
.she asked. "Or do we want school districts tO place on doing business there .
·The tax would be levied in
people to slow down? We the ballot an Income tax to
want people to slow down." supply additional operating the amount stated on the
funds for schools or replace ballot, with no maximum but
the same amount of existing a minimum of 1,.. per cent
property tax.
required to avoid a loss in
It was expedited by the state aid. It could be repealed
COilU1littee after Toledo ~esl- by the voters at any time and
FLY STAYS GROUNDED
NEW YORK (UP!) George Willig, the 27-year-old
daredevil who earned the title
11
human fly " when he scaled
the lG-story World Trade
Center Last month, told a New
York City judge his unor·
thodox climbing days are

may he put
•
m
the past

Floo~; vo~~

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
.

•

\

110 W. MAIN

'

PH. 992·2111
POMEROY

and member of banking shington.
·subcommittees.
Kim, a political foe of
Gallagher got out of prison President Park who fled to
In late 1974 after serving less the United States in 1973,
than two years lor income tax testified Wider extraordinary
evasion. Hanna has said he security because of reported
received more than $60,000 threats on his life. He
over three years as a silent repeatedly denoW1ced Park
partner with Park In an as a tyrant and said he should
import-export venture.
resign immediately .
Park earned millions of
At the start of the jamdollars in commissions as a packed hearing, Kim said
special broker for Korean President Park "attempted
rice imports and allegedly to gain leverage and
used that money to win help influence (in Congress)
on Capitol Hill during the through the Tongsun Park
Nixon
and
· Ford bribery operation.' '
administrations.
In describing the KCIA's
,.
Involvement, Kim said the
intelligence agency:
-Arranged for deposit of $3
Blumentbals Separate
mlliion in a U.S. bank so
Tongsun Park could borrow
money to open a club in
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Washington 's. Georgetown Treasury Secretary W.
section where he later Michael Blumenthal and his ·
entertained congressmen and · wife have decided to separate
administration officials.
after 211, years of marriage,
-Helped Park get $300,000 according to hi ~ chief
from Korea and provided for spokesman.
·
secret delivery of the money
Joseph La itin , assistant
through the embassy in Wa- secretary of treasury for
public affairs, Wednesday .
conlirmed repofts that
. Blumentl)al and his wife,
Eileen, were splitting up.
The decision was reached
by mutual consent and after
long and searching thought, "
Laitin said. "They consider
the decision a private matter
.,
and know thei r fri ends will
''
replaced by property taxes. treat it as such. There will be
'
'
The mooey could be used to no further comment. "
'
supplant real estate taxes,
· provide more operating
money for schools, finance
capital improvements or any •
combination thereof.
Th'plan was stymied In the
Strickly wholesa le to all .
House Ways and M~ans ComNot less 'han 1(3 case.
mittee until Wilkowski
rewrote it into a biU In the
Economic Alfairs
Conunittee.
The Toledo lawmaker said
he had assurances from .
House Speaker Vernal G.
1210 Washington Blvd .
Riffe Jr, DNew Boston, that
Belpre, Ohio
the measure would be
submitted for a floor

.

coming o;n hill
allowing school income.tax
~~~~~~~ ~~""lor ~ole: ~t~od~~fm~Jo~il~~~e!r~~:

t)

,.
'•

Thouaando of Ohioans have worked hard to bring this Issue before Ohio voters.
If you care - don't let our Ohio wildlife down. AT THIS POINT 81 ~. OF THE
REQUIRED SIGNATURES HAVE liEEN ACQUIRED. PLEASE PICK UP YOUR PHONE NOW
AND REQUEST YOUR PETITION. SIMPLE INSTRUCTIONS AND ALL INFORMATION YOU
WILL NEED REGARDING THIS ISSUE WILL BE SENT TO YOU. (Call toll free 1-IDD-362·
0690, Cleveland ar- 781-DOBO) If lines are busy, you may fill In the coupon below
and mall to the address on th e coupon , PLEASE DON'T DELAY.

000 030 011 002- 7 " · 0

000 220 DOl 000- S 12 2
Eckersley, Kern (9) , Monge
(12) and Fosse ; VuCkovi ch,
Willis (9 ), Johnson (12 ), Bruno
(1 2) and Ashby . W- Kern , 3-3.
L -Johnson , 2-3 . HR - Cieve .
land , Dade (1) .

Friday and Saturday
4:0o-1:00

(24 hr. se~vice)
Cleveland Area 781.0080
HELP PUT THIS ISSUE ON OHIO'S NOVEMBER BALLOT

Clevelend

LIMITED TIME OFFER

Ohio

ooo-

San 6go
001 000
1 7 1
Reuss , Gossage (8) and Ott ;
(?rift in , . Splllper (6). Fingers.
(8 1 a·n d Robe't'ts. W- Reuss, 3 -7
L- Grllfin , 5·5.

( 11 innings)

SUMMER COOLANT
ANTI-FREEZE

,., o.o-:-11 :oo -

-800-362-0690

Ohio Voters
Your signatute s :
are needed to
Ban Leghold Traps

N.Y.
300 220050-1213 2
Det
100 105 301-ll 17 1
Holtzman, Tidrow {61 , Lyl e
(7 ), Clay (9) and Munson ;
Roberts , Gr il!i {4 }, Hi ller (7),
Foucault 18) , Sykes (8) and
May , Wockenfuss ( 6 ). W-Lyle .
3-'.1 , L - Foucault, J .4. HR sDetrolt , ltlompson &lt;12) , Kemp
(8 ). Mankowsk i (2). Wo cken .
fuss (4 ). New York, Johnson
(1 ), Nettles (14 ),

STARTING WHEN YOU
IPFIOTECT YOUR CAR AGAINST
SUMMER BOIL-OVER WITH

· Tuesday-Wednesday- Thursday

Call toll free

020 OlO 020- 7 11 0
Mntr.c~l
000 000 ooo- o 4 o
Bannister
and
Ferguson ;
Alcala , e·a hnsen (5) , Wa l ker
(6), McEnl!lney (8) and Carter ,
American League
W- Bannister , 3-6 . L - Aicala , 2- Seattle
ooo 120 ooo- 3 8 1
5. HRs- Houston , Fuller 2 (2 ).
Ka n City
111 000 010- 4 9 0
Pole anQ Jutze ; Spti ttor ff ,
Af!anta
020 001 001- 4 9 0 Bird {6), Gura {9 ), Littell ( 9 )
N.Y.
00000001o-11 11 and F&gt;orter . W- Bi rd , 3-1. LPNiekro and Pocoroba ; Es. Pole , 5·2.
plnosa , Baldwin (7), Todd (9)
and Grote. Stearns {3). wTexas
001 000 450- 10 12 2
Niekro, 5 .9, L - Esplnosl!l , 4-5. Mlnn
400 000 103- 8 14 4
HR - Attanta , Pocoroba (5 l.
6 I v I ev en , De\line (4) ,
Knowl es (7.1, Marshall (9 ) and
Cinci
310 032 ooo-- 9 14 1 Sundberg ; Butler , D. Johnson
Phila
01 3 0&lt;11 51x-l5 14 o (11 . Burg meier (7). Schueler
8 I I I i n g h a m , Murray (SJ. (9 ), Holly (9) and WyneQar . w
Hu m e '(7). Horner (7), Cl!lpl l ll - Knowles, 2-0. L - Burgmeier,
(8) and Bench ; Christenson , 5-3.
HR - Texas, Washington
Reed (6), McGraw (71 and (4 ).
Foote . W- McGri!lw, 2.0. L Hume, 0 -3. HRs- Ci nclnnatJ , Calif
001 000 01o-·. 2 10 0
Foster ( 20) , Bench (14 L Griffey Ch lcgo
020 101 DOx- 6 10 1
(5 }; Philadelphia , Hebner {8 ),
Brett ,
Hartzell
(6 )
and
McBride (5), St;hmldt 2 (18.) , Humphrey ; Kravec, B. Johnson
Bowa ( 4 ).
( 3) lind Ess ian . W - B. John son ,
•·l . L - 8rett, 6-5. HRs- Chlca Pttsbqh
010 on ooo- 3 a 1 gc:i. Orta (8 l.. California , Hum phrey {2.) . .
Houston

u

would get new license plates
each January; drivers with
last names beginning with
11
8" would register in
February, etc.
In counties which have
adopted the $5 local option
fee, the cost of a mailed plate
under the pro[l&lt;!Sed system
would Cost $17.50.
The new system would
reduce the n~ber of deputy
registrars from. the current
600 to 228, but each of the new
deputies . would
offer
registration for passenger
cars, boats, motorcycles, recreational vehicle, trailers or
any other type of vehicle.
The State Auditor would be
empowered to audit each of
the 228 deputy registrars
each two years under tenns
Of the legislation .
The Senate also amended
its coffimittee version of the
bill to begin charging the 50cent extra fee next year,
when the phase-in would
start.
To get the new system in
operation, the BMV has a
seemingly complex plan
where some drivers would
but license plates that would
be valid up to 18 months.
For example, drivers with
last . names beginning with
"A" would buy 1978 license
plates In April 1978.. The
· plates would be valid lor
eight months. -until January
1979 - the ffionth when " A"

.he Public Utilities Commis·

Host Reedsville No. 1
doiV!led Chester N.o. 2 17-1 on
a one-hitter by J .Lar~liu; and
M. Holter. Holter led the
hitting with a homer, triple,
and double whiJe L. Cowdery
got two doubles.
T. Crow and Jim Newell did
the pitching for Chester and
struck out sev~n and walked
six while givlpg up 23 hits.
Newell got the only hit, a
"
single.
Chester
010 o- 1 1
7155 x-?:1 23
Reeddsville

Results, line sc«:}res
'
By United PreSs International
National League
Chi cgo
110 100 DIQ- 4 8 I
San Fran
000 000 200-- 2 4 0
Bonharn .' Sutter
(7)
and
Swisher ,: Hali cki, W illiams (7),
Moffi tt (8 ) and Hill. Sadek (8}.
W- Bonham , 7 -6. L - Ha licki, 66. HR:s- Chlcago, B l ittner (J);
Morales (5) .

names beginning with

•

'•

OROTHO
COPPER DRAGON
BUG AND BLIGHT DUST

long to die".

deputy registrars.
Sen. Anthony J . Celebrezze,
Jr., D-Cieveland, called the
current method a '·'horrible,
archaic system that is in dire
need or change." Complaints
about the system ranged
from theft and fraud by
deputy registrars to long
lines and frayed tempers at
the end of April and May each
year.
· Under the proposed
system, drivers with last

SEE US
'FOR THE BEST

over.
''Laws are laws and they're
not to be violated," Criminal
Court Judge Milton Williams
- who dropp'ed charges
against the toy designer
Wednesday - told Willig
sternly. "I trust you won't be
· climing any more tall
buildings."
Willig smiled and said,
" No, sir,"
Willig was arrested and
slapped with a '250,000
lawsuit by the city after he
climbed the world's second
tallest building on May 26.
The next day , Mayor
Abraham Beame settled with
Willig lor a $1.10 fine; one
penny pe• floor.
\.

'.

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS

. Miller Produce
&amp;

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..

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building materials

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NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
PHONE: 992-7161

I

'23 S. Jrd Ave .
Middleport, 0 .
9?2-2709 or 992 -6611
Open : 7: 00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri .
7:00to~ : OO Saturday

•

•'
•

�6-The DatlySenUnel. M"ldleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Jum• Zl. Wi7
............. ................... .
•
.·.··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-=:.::::::::..;;~;~;:;::;:.::.:;:.:::-:-:·:&gt;:::~:::::.-::~:.':!?..:•!.:O:-:.:·:·:::.~:·:·:·:·:::-:-:·.....•••••··..... ·.········:·:.

Heart attack toptc for
Women 's Auxiliary

A fibn on heart attacks· was there and tulmncmt•J on the
presented by Larry BakN·. speakers.
Hrst aid instructor, ~t the
A rl'purt was g1v~n un thl'
Tuesday ni~ht mechng of the rwmnage and Ui!kc salt'
Women's Aux lltary of which showed a 1&gt;rofit of
Veterans Memorial Hos pital. $:H4.88. Left-&lt;Jver rwrunagc
Baker, introduced by Mrs was se nt tu the Grundy Mi.sJanice Daniels, who has ltad Siu/1 in Grundy, Va.
· e-xtenslv'e trairung leading to
Paula Eichjngcr was the
a paramedic status, diseu,ss- I'CCi ptent o[ the llUrsing
ed for the group the actio11 to st:holarship. It was nOted that
follow in the event a member Jucm Blevins, another reciof the household suffers a11 at- pient of tl1e scholarship will
wck. He ('Otrunented Oil how graduate this year fr·om the
to know a heart attack· (;lrtd School of Nurslllg a r the
when to call the emer·gency Holzer MediL'al Center·.
squad as well as what to do
Mrs Etta Will was apbefore the squad arrives. Too pointed leg islative chairman,
much delay can cause loss of and named to the nominating
the vtctim, and Baker· sa id (:Ununittee whic h will report
that squads prefer to llletke an in August were Emogene
wmecessa ry run rather than Simms, Nettie Hayes, Betty
to arrive too late.
Christopherson,
Alma
In the question and answer Newton, Heva Sinun.s, and
period, he noted that Joy Wh ite. The August
emergency squ~d members meeting will be a picnic at the
and those on the Emergency southbound park on Route 33,
Medical Sei'Vlte ambulances 6 p.m. There will be nu
receive sirmliar training. He meeting in Julx.
also noted that four Meigs
Mrs. Wrll reported on purCountians are in trmning cllasing homemade items lor
leading to the paramedic resale, and Mrs. Carrie Kenstatus.
nedy dtsc ussed several
Mrs. Jessie White presided money making projects. It
at the meeting dunng which was decided to order 60 bottime it was noted that a thank tles of vanilla and 20 boxes of
you note was being sent to the pepper from Watkins ProChester United Methodist ducts for re-sale.
Church for toys contnbuted
New members welcomed
to the pediatric department were Mrs. Dottie Will, Sonia
of ·the hospital. A thank you Justice, and Ray anna Cole. .
note was read from the
The door prize donated by
therapy department thanktng Emogene Sinuns was won by
the auxiliary for the new Mrs . Ethel Grues er.
wheel chair.
Hostesses serving a dessert
Mrs. Nellie Hayes, Mrs. t:ourse and crackers wtth cofIna Massar, Mrs. Jestie fee and tea were Mrs. KenMolden, and Mrs. White at- nedy, Mrs. Ethel Hatfield,
tended a meeting at Grady Mrs. Mac Hearld and Mrs.
Memorial Hospital at Hayes. Mrs. Massar was a
Delaware, June 6. They contributmg hostess .
discussed the auxiliary work

SANDALS
AND .

CANVAS FOOTWEAR
FOR

ALL THE fAMILY ·

THE SHOEBOX
MIDDLEPORT, D.

SPRING'S
A-POPPIN'

1l.. ... Generation Rap
\~1

jjjj

Fitch reunion held
IJus: Helen Smith, Portland ;
was held Sunda)' at the f'atty Booth, Newark. Guest.&lt;;
PortbtrHJ Park With Cl rm:nu.: wt·re Mrs . Cla r ence
'J'he annual f-'lh 11 rL•IlllluiJ

By Hden and S:ue Uottt•l

![ij

Lawrence ,
Brl!nda
Offiloers dectc'&lt;.l for the I..awrcnct&gt; . u ud Bryan
Grand ma Cramps Her Style!
eomiug year were AI bcrt.a l.awrt!nL'e, Portland.
RAP:
.
My grandmother has been living with us since February . Gluc.scm:amp ami UumJil
Will:; Lest~r Biro111, St.
She .drives me crazy.
.
,...,
She cauSed my boyfriend and me to break up, and now she's Metrys, W. Va . is thc imstarted on my new gUy. She never approves anything I do or litet!iate past prestdent.
Hccoguizcd and prc::;cnlcd
anyone I know.
·
'f
R
ct F't•l
1 l' 1,
She's not well and guess who gets stuck Grandma-sitting ? g 1 ls were ayrnon
Mom works and 'is never home when I need her.
l~lt! oldest and Heather MetrhUH; II itl/IUUII.

Grandma shares my room and is always there when 1. try to . trn, U1~ younges.t..
. .
Attendrng were Mrs. Uiah
St ,dy so my urades are slippmg. lf !flunk out I swear Ill qurt
• • I have• no privacy any more.
Swall,
·
Mr. and Mrs · 0 scar
school'
.
THURSDAy
Plea~esolvemy problem! -NERVOUS, PARANOID 16
Batx:ock, Tuprrs ~lams ;
HEATH United Methodist
DEAR N.P.l6:
Mr. and Mrs . ..ester rrom, Church Women will have a
I know thl·s sounds like a copoul, but the only possible solu- St. Marys, W. Va .; M~ . a.nd
troll ·,s - an wtders'"nding talk wrth your parents. They have Mrs. Ross Btrom, It' ndsye ptcnic at 6 p.m. Thursday on
•ttc the parsonage lawn. Those
problems too ... and~don'trorget your grandmother may be just Lyons III and Lyru~e.
. attending are to take their
as unhappy as you are with a situation no one likes.
Lyons, Parhrsburg, W. Va., own table service. The m... t
So choose compromise: Set up a system of duttes and .rules !'lr. ~nd Mrs. G.eorge Lrttle and beverage will he furfor all. You shouldn't "Grandma-sit" constantly, and you need and famrly , Ctrcleviiie,_ Mr. nished. Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle
privacy. On the other hand, Grandma needs hwnan kmdness : and Mrs. Lest~r Ltttle, is the hostess chainnan.
don'l close her out or resent her rigid ways. Try smiling away Coolvrlle; Mr .. ~ndf· ~; s.
her criticisms switching the subj ect rather than feelmg Herbert Ater an
amt y,
SPECIAL MEETING ,
batted If you can't change her at least you may "sweeten her Genevreve Ater,_ Jea mne Middleport Lodge 363,
up" a .bit 1 think she' ll respo'nd when she realizes she isn't Ater, Lrttle Hockmg; Dave F&amp;AM, 7:30 p. m. Thursday ;
· ted HELEN
Litter, Lakewood, Louise Lit- work in Master Mason
t 0 tall
Y resen · tle, Georgia Shaler, Mrs. Degree.
+++
.
d
NOTE TO N.P.'S PARENTS : Your mother is your respon- Shirley Foreman an
ALL PERSONS interested
slbtli ty, not yow- daughter's. If you want three-generation ckughter, Belpre; Mr. and in any athletic program of
peace in your household (and that's always hard to get). then Mrs. Raymond Fitch, Long Meigs Local School District
give her mofe free time away from Grandma! -SUE
Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs. Harold attend a meeting of Meigs
+++
LeMay, Toronto; Dorothy Athletic Boosters at 7:30p.m.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Thomas Sp ra ggs, Pa .: Thursday at high school;
I'm a 2()-year-old guy living at home. Every tune I sfart talk· Donald Heath, Judrth Heatlt, officers to be elected.
ing to Mom and Dad, they scream. First th ey say I don •t grve
·
Tracy Heath, Vienna, W.Va .;
MEIGS Chrlstr'an Women 's
Wilma Tillis, Tarruny Fitch, Fellowship in Pomeroy
them enough money, sol gave them $199 in two weeks.
Then they yell 1 go out too much. I work about 68 hours a Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs. Ed- Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
week on two jobs. Is that "going out"? It's conslllnt aggrava- die Price, Mr. and Mrs. Marc Thursday. There will be a tea
tion.
Guthrie , Jason Guthnc, honoring ministers, wives
I'm not making enough money to move into an apartment. Hea th ; · Mr. a nd Mrs. and girls who attended a
Suggest something please. - BEHIND BARS B.B. :
· .
Lawrence Pratt, Mr. and Bible college. .
MIDDLEPORT . Masonic
Even at minimum wage, 68 hours or work a week could get Mrs. Willard Price, Mr. and
you out' on your own. You may not be as comfortable or cared· Mrs. Richard Wills, Mr. and Lodge 363 Thursday 7 p.m.
for, butatleastyou'llbefree. -HELEN
Mrs. Jerry Pratt, Mrs. Tom Master Mason degree con+++
Armstrong, Mr. and Mrs. ferred on one candidate.
B.B. :
.
McDANIEL TRIO of the
Garry Martm , Mr. and Mrs.
In other words, i! you don't like the treatment, get out of Douglas Pnce, Ketth Wills, Country Hymntimers singing
Mom's kitchen (or stop bitchin' ).- SUE
DeAnna Wills, Keely Price, at Church or Christ in
SheW Pratt, Brian Pratt, Christian Union Camp,
+++
RAP :
Heather Martin , Autumn Hartford Thursday 7:30p.m.
FRIDAY
I'm 21, and just divoreed my husband. (I married him at 18.) Price, Chip Pnce, Newark ;
We love each other, but he is irresponsible. We aren't any good Mr. and Mrs. Carmel Oiler,
THE' CHRISTIAN • AIRES
at marriage, but we want to date. My parents think this is ter- Sam Oiler, Utica .. Mr. and of Country Hymntimers
rible. They can't understand how you can love someone and Mrs. Bud Gluesencamp, Sun- smging at Church of Christ in
not want to be his wife. Can you?- W.K . DEAR W.:
bury, Mrs .. Dan Oberlin, Mr . . Christian Union Camp,
Yes, we understand tbat love and marriage don't always go and Mrs. Harold Pnce, Dusty .Hartford, Friday, 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
Price, Shannon Pnce, Colwntogether.
.
'·
It's your life. Live it as you wish, even though your parents
DAN HAYMAN and the
wish you wouldn't. · HELEN AND SUE
County
Hymntimers will
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion, two- Daughter born
have hymn sing at Poplar
generation style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen
Ridge Church Saturday 7:30
Bottel - or both, if you want a combination mother-daughter to Dursts family
p.m. The church is locate&lt;\ off
answer - in care of this newspaper.) Copyright, 1977, by King
SR 554 at Cheshire.
Features Syndicate, Inc.
OLD
FASHIONED
· Mr. and Mrs. Willis Durst;
outdoor
hymn
sing, Saturday,
Cave St., Pomeroy, are anhome
Of Patty and
6:30p.m.
nouncing the birth or a
Harold
Russell,
Vinton-Eno
daughter, Amy Renee, on
Road,
Morgan
Center.
All
June 6 at Holzer Medical
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dale; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Center.
singers welcome. Take lawn
Neece were honored, recently Haggy and dau~hter, Deanna
.Ilk and Mrs. Durst also chairs.
with a surprise party 111 Faye; Mr and Mrs. Charles have another child, Shawn
SPECIAL MEETING,
observance or their 70th bir- Neece, Jr., Diana and Rhon- Allen, 4.
Shade River Lodge 453,
thdays at their Middleport, da Norman Neece and son,
Maternal grandparents are F&amp;AM Chester, will be held
Route I, home.
no'uglas, Mr. and Mrs. Christ May Mayle, Pomeroy, and at 7 p. m. Saturday with work
Cake and ice cream were Neece, all of Pomeroy. Albert Balch, Cleveland . in the Master Mason degree;
served and the couple was Unable to attend but exten- Paternal grandparents are all Master Masons welcome.
presented with gifts. Atten- ding best wishes were Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Willard G.
SUNDAY
ding were Mr. and Mrs. Ed· and Mrs. Neece's grand- Durst,
Sr. ,
Pomeroy.
ANNUAL Hill Reunion
ward Neece and daughters, daughter, Deena Louise
Paternal great-grandmother
Darlene and Janis Lynette; Neece and grandson, Charlie is I;'auline Newton, Hartford, Sunday, Portland Park.
'
.
Potluck dinner at noon . All
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Neece Neece.
W.Va.
and sons, Buster and Gary

· Doubk birthday cekbratid

Daughters·of America
hold ~meeting at Chester

Photo

Specta

REG. $9.95
Bring in your slide or print (no
negatives, pleasej. The picture
will be reproduced in 8x1 0"
size, in full COLOR on the front
of the shirt. Be sure to indicate
size: Men's, S-M-L, or Children's
S·M-L. Keep that special someone close to vour heart!

VILLAGE PHARMACY
Middleport, 0 .

271 N. 2nd
992-5759

"

Styling follows the pattern
of other apparel - the big
and bulky look. There are the
hoods to· 'COver head or !old
back on the shoulders, boxy
shapes, blazer furs, back side
pleats, hall belts at the back,
slits up the back lor a
sportscOat look, and a lot of
the combined treatments
such as raccoon with leather
SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
June 18, 1977
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 29
to 37, 300 to 400 lbs. 30.5C to
38.50, 400 to 500 lbs. 30 to 38,
500 to 600 lbs. 29.50 to 36, 600 to
700 lbs. 28 to 35, 700 lbs. ~nd
over 27.75 to 34.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
300 lbs . 24 to 30, 300 to 400 lbs.
23.75 to 29.50, 400 to 500 lbs. 24
to 29, 500 to 600 lbs. 23 to 28.5C,
600 to 700 lbs. 25.25 to 30, 700
lbs. and over 24 to 30.5C.
STOCK COWS &amp; 'BULI..'l
(By the Head) - Stock Cows
120 to 230, Stock Cows and
Cavies 150 to 265, Stock Bulls
170 to 270, Baby Calves 5 to
38 ; (By the Pound) Canners &amp;
Cutters Cows 15 to 19. 75,
Holstein Cows 20 to 25.85,
Commercial Bulls 26 to 31
(1,000 lbs. and over).
PIGS - 7 to 29.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
Ills. to 250 41.50 to 44.50,
Medium 200 lbs. lo 300 32 to
41, Culls 31 down.
SOWS - :150 lbs. up 33 to 36.

trim, dark ranch mink with
gray squirrel, ranch rabbit
jacket which reverses to
corduroy, furs combined with
knits, trench coats lined with
fur .
I,engths run the gamut, .
from waist to mid-thigh to the
more elaborate minks and
sables whiCh are 10 to 12
incbes from the floor.
The American !urriers
reported a retail sale · of
garments and trim of $065
million last year, with
exports another $143 million,
up a total or $58 million from
197li.
The industry does not use
endangered species,

•

,,

PRESENTED BmLES
White Bibles wer e
presented to Brenda Hysell
and Kathy Manley, Meigs
High SChool graduates, at the
Church of Christ in Christian
Union. Mrs. Wesley Young,
Sunday school superintendent, presented the Bibles.

41.

Thank you note was read
from Mrs. Maude Betz. Mrs.
Hughes dedicated the love
gift with prayer. Mrs.

,,
/ \\·.-

".'\ ..
' \:.

Just north of Silver Bridge

Unletler your teet with Ms.
The serw:e shoe that's so
com fortabl e, it leels beaut rfu l lrom the lrrst step. For
the ind1vidual rst. Who
happens to be in uniform .

Shopping Plaza, Ka•naO•ga,
Pike
Gall

432

MASON FURNITURE

STORE HOURS

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE

•
•
_,..:

&amp;'fatq~

heritage house oF sHoEs

I'
•

.
OPEN
Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30 to 5
Friday9:30to8
·
N.2nd Ave.
MIDDLEPORT, O.

I

Herman Grate

QNui~•

M-S-W

'

l•

.

• • BY

Sizes 5-10

..,

Mon., Tues .• Wed. &amp; S;jt.- 8: :tO til 5:00 .
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

PULLSTRAP ADJUSTMENt'!

·j

OVER
60 ROLLS ·

l
,.

STOCK

')

$795 ·.
.
Rtcht

DAVIS
INSURANCE
SERVICE

Enjoy new fr~edom to run,
dance. Work, play,
~Jeep: even hat'he wearing
your RUPTURE-EASER. Soft.
fbt ~troin pad holds reduclbte

The latest vogue? Antiques!
Architectural antiques.
Once the world was lull or
them and they were swept
away by bulldozers and the
wrecker's ball. Modern was

hoom ol t11e 19th century.
Although space and
materials roreed modification of the grander eastern
styles, Georgetown boasts
some 200 Victorian structures. The architectural
styles . range !rom Gothic .
Revival, Georgian, Italianate
and French Mansard to
Queen Anne in a distinctly
Western architecture known

" in.' ' Who wanted dust cat-

FATHERS HONORED
SYRACUSE Fathers
were honored at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene during the Sunday school on
Father's Day. Gifts were
presented to Carson Hayes,
the oldest father present;
Ralph Lavender, the
youngest, and Claude Cunningham, the father w1th the
most children present. Lapel
pins were given to each
father present.
A thought for the day: Irish
poet James Stephens said,
1
'Women are wiser than men
because they know less and
understand more.''

chers such as fretwork and
ornate crown molding'! Why
keep walnut and mahogany ·
when it could be exchanged
for chrome, steel and glass?
All of that has changed and
contractors and builders, as "Bonanza Victorian."
homeowners and collectors · Another mining town which
all are seeking examples of is rich in architect\ll'al styles
architectural details to in- is Galena, Ill. Townspeople
corporate in new .•tructures.
call it " the town tbat time
Businesses are being built !orgot." Tbe town was found·
on supplying contractors with ed in the 1820s as a lead mine
architectural
antiques. camp and has more than 300
Buyers scout the country pre-1855 buildings and
from coast to coast for line several historical museums.
old buildings about to be
This small corrununity was
demolished.
the post-civil war home of
As you travel this swruner, General U.S. Grant. The
keep an eye open and you will Grant house is maintained by
see the result.&lt;; of this trend in the state of Illinois and is
posh hotels, restaurants, open to the public for viewspecialty shops and even ing.
&lt;
night clubs.
Tbe Heritage Society of
Wanton destruction of Austin, Tex ., a lively
historic and architecturally organization dedicated to
significant structures closed historic preservation, has
the ranks or the preserva- spent some 400,000 in restorationists and today the interest tron and preservation or
·in preserving these examples historic structures in their cihas invaded even the ty. One of t.heir recent pr&lt;r
smallest of communities. jects was tbe preservation of
Wherever you vacation this the historic Driskell Hotel
yea r, you will have an OJ&gt;- which has now ' been reportunity to see and perhaps opened. This hotel has been
tour many beautiful old host to several United Slates
homes and historic struc- presidents and many Texas
tures.
statesmen.
One or these corrununities
As you journey, take the
is Georgetown, Colo., located time to absorb the architecless than an hour's travel tural flavor of the small comwest of Denver. Georgetown. munities throughqut our land.
IS situated in the Rocky
Leave time for al) impromptu
Mountains and had its begin- side trip. Your vacation will
ning in the gold and silver be richer for having done so.

$9. 95

TWINS BORN

SALEM CENTER - Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Caton of Salem
Center are announcing the
birth of twin grandsons,
Kenneth Eugene Flowers,
Jr., and Paul Michael
Flowers on June 16, to their
daughter, Pennie Flowers of
Columbus.

CIVIL SERVICE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe
Ohio House Wednesday
passed, 84 to 10, and returned
to the Senate legislation
r~uiring the state to keep
provisional civil service
employes who have served
out their probationary period
and pass an examination,
even if they do not rank high
in their score.
The House attached an
emergency clause, which
must be rati!ied by the
Senate.
Rep. Robert McEwen, RHillsboro, floor manager of
the bill, said the state has "an
investment of time and
money" in the provisional
employes, and it should not
be wasted:

·

(Back View)

Across the street from Meigs County
Court House. Ask about our Farm
and Mobile Home rates. Insure now,
pay in 6 months.

'-

Pharmacy
Ken 1191h McCullough, R. Ph . Charles RiHie, R. Ph.
Mon. lhru S.t. I:OOo .m. lo9 p.m.
Sundoy 10:30 to 12_:30 ond 51o 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH.992.2955

_______ __ -- .
Friendly Service

.

mE. MAIN • Open Nlghtsl!l9

POMEROY:O.

r

Men

SQ. YD.

KITCHEN
PRINTS
COMMERCIAL
RUBBER BACK

3RD STREET

For The

$350

$45Q

949-2814

REPAIR OF

PARkiNG LOT

FOR

MEIGSLOCAL
SCHOOL OISTA·IC T
Sealed proposats will be
rece i ved by the Board of
Educc'lfion of t~e M eigs Locat
SchOol Distr ic t ot M•ddleport ,
Or~io at t he C lerk 's oft fee untll
12 ·00 Noon on June 2.t, 1977
and at that t1ml!' opened and
read tlv the Clerk immediat('tv
rt"~ere•fte r. tabulated anCI a
report ther e&lt;l f made by th~
Clerk to said board at its next
meetmg .
Desc.- i plion of improvement
located at Meigs High Sctloot ,
Pomeroy , Ohm
Specificatio n s
are
as
follow s :
1 -- To patch and seal
p11r klng areas at the Meigs
H igh School - approx 1mately
16,00(1 sq vds
2 - To pa tt h bad ly broken
ueas with 404 ·aSphattic
co nc rete .
3 - To ch ipandseatparking
areas with RS 3 and No . 8
l i mestone cht ps .
A certified c hec k payable to
tMe cte rk . fr e asvr er o f the
above board of education o r a
sa 11stactory bid bond eJtecuted
by the b idder and the su r ety
com pany , in an amoun t equal
to five percent of the bid sha ll
be su bmitted w ith each bid
Sa id board of education
re serves t he right to wa ive
info rma lities, to accept or
r eject any and a l l , or parts of
any and all bids
No bids may be w ithdra wn
tor at leds t thirty (30) days
after ttle sc heduled closing
t ime tor r eceipt of bids .

Board o f Edu cat ion
of Meigs Loca l
School Distnct
Jane Wagner ,
Clerk -Treasurer
So uth Th ird A11enu e
M1ddleport , Ohio .t5760

n.

(6) 6, 9 , 16,

TRUNKS

OWNER :
CITY
OF
SYRACUSE
BidSw1tl b~ publiClY OJ)ened
and r ead atoud ilr 12 noon
time on June 30. 1976 for tMe
Sv ril cuse
Tennh Cou rt s
13roiect . Bic:l open.ng w•ll oe .n
the Syracuse Ci ty Buitdin~.
Syra'cuse, Oh•o B1ds mily be
mailed to t.he atteot1on ot
Mayor Her man London.
Sy ra cuse City
Building,
Sy ra cuse . Ohio
Pla ns and speci f ications
are i'111a ilab le at l'•e City
Building , SIO 00 dt'posit, non
refundabl e to
H1e non
success f ul l;11dders All bids
must be In a plain seated
envelope marked BID FOR
SYRACUSE
TEN N IS
COURTS . Ea cr, bidder must
have the name of h1S com
pany on the outs i de of th e bid
envelos:oe . Eac:tl bid must be
ace om panted with a
10
percent bid bond or cert if ted
check for 10 per cen t of ttle
tota l bid . The success ful
b1dder w 111 be requ1red to
obtain a performance bond
tor 100 percen t o f the total
con t ract
No bidder sh all
' w ithdraw his b id for a per iod
of 30 days f rom th e b 1d
open i ng da le .
Part icu l ar i;1tlention is
not ed
to
th e
Federal
Prevailing
Wage
Scale,
Which must be followed on
th1S project .
Th e success f ul bi dder mus t
pro ceed w ith tMe wort&lt;. within
two wee ks Of stgning
a
con tra c t with t he city and be
comple l ed in th tr ty 130)
working days . exceptions
being strikes, w ea ther , or
ac t s of God .
The suc c ess fu l bi dder mus t
obtain Oh i o Workers Com ·
pensatlon and pay a ll other
st ate, Federa l and local taxes
requ i red by la w

The Almanac
United Preas lnlernatloul
Today Is 'Jbursday. June
23, the !74th day of 11m with
191 to !ollow.
The moon ts between its
last quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Jupiter.
The evening star is Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
The duke of Windsor, Britain 's King Edward VIII, was
born June 23, 1894.
On this day In history :
In 1845, the Congress of
Texas agreed to the
territory's aMexation by tbe
United States.
In 1947, the U.S, Congress
enacted the Taft-Hartley
Labor Act over the veto or
President Truman.

MASON DRIVE·IN
June 22-23-24

POM POM GIRLS
"R"
Plus

SUPER CHICK
,, R"

He rman H Londo n
Mayor

(6) 16, 23, 2t c

fJ
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant to Rul e 37.45· .t7. J2 of
th e Ohio Administrative
Code .
t he
Oh io
En .
vironmental
Protect i o n
Agency w i l l conduct ~ publtc
meeting to consi der com .
ments , ei ther wr 1tte n or oral ,
from any person , on th e
Coal co Min ing Corporat ion,
536 Jackson Pike, Box 83 B,
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1.

HALTERS

FASHION

STRIPES AND

Kws

SOU OS

Th1s publ ic meeting will be
condu c ted at 10 : 30
a .m on
Tuesday , July 76, 1977 in th e
Meigs
Jr
High
Sc hool
AudJiorium , M eigs Coun ty ,
Middleport , Ohio .
( 6) 23 , ltc

For Frtdoy, Juno 24, 1877

ASTROoGRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

STRETCH TUBE
Tank Style with
Selection.

Shoulders.

Tie

Good

.

June 24, 1877

A departure from the norm that
would bring about changes In
your basic lifestyle is likely this
year. The things you BlfTI tor wl! l
provide you with m6re tun and
greater enjoyment.

Open Friday and Saturday till 8:00.

50 cen ts tor each and a long ,
self-addressed , stamped
envelope to Astra-Graph, P.O.
Box 489, Radio City Station, NY.
. 10019. Be sure to specify your
birth sign .

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Today
may not go as well as It could .
The reason is you 'll do things to

Impress another, re.Jher than
follow the dictates of your conscience.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·1Hpt. 22) Stay
away from the high rollers today .
You could spend beyond your
mean&amp; to keep up with the
crowd .

LIBRA (&amp;opt. 23-0ct. 23)
Challenges tend to Intimidate
you today. You may back oH out
of fear. If you get Into the action.
you'll tlnd they are only paper
tigers.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) One
who expounds his Ideas boldly
and dramatically may give you
an Inferiority complex today .
Analyzing hls words will debunk
the tlluslon .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·DIC.
21) It would be unwlso today to

PORTRAIT

Unless the roles are equal , don't
play
·

CAPRICORN

(Doc. 22-Jon. 18)
Underestimating your opposition
today could lead to undesirable
results Recogn i ze the true
caliber of those you joust with

tor anything else but their own
survival

AAIEB (Mirth 21·Aprll 18)

For The Ladies
SWIMWEAR
by

JANTZEN &amp; CATALINA •

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, 0.

'

8xl0

enter a Joint venture where
you 're In the minority position .

Business matters should be
treated realistically today. Don't
feel that others are looking out

SQ. YD.

N. 2nd Ave. ·

AT
ALL GREAT
STORES

Unless you tactfully handle those
under your wing today, you'll get
results opposite from what you
hoped tor They can be guided,
but not bullied . To find out more
about Yourself send for your
copy at Astra-Graph Letter. Mall

IN
LIVI~(j '~L~~
BABIES
CHILDREN
ADULTS

ter
PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)

BRENT WOOD

RACINE, 0.

PUBLIC NOTICE
PROJECT :
SYRACUSE
TENNIS COURTS

4t c

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fib. 18)
It's vitally Important to mainta in a
positive attitude t oward your
work today. It you Inflate the size
of the task, your ln111atlve will sut-

BY

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

Ron•ld Hlinning, R. Ph .

...

1•

For men, women, .children.
Give measure around lowest t.
part of abdomen, state right !
or left side or double.

SWISHER LOHSE

Davis Insurance Service
.P·

Simple pullstrap adjustment.

SWIMSUITS

TURF

inguinal hemill without steel .';"
or leather bandS. No laces. '

NOTICE' TO BIDDER S

CANCER (Juno 21-Juty 22)

SMAshiNG,

ARTIFICIAL

swim

or ltft

Double

Pomeroy,

mer flower planttn~s at the
Tuppers Plains Elemenl.llry
Sehoul have been curnplet&lt;.-d.
Tile door prize was won by
Mrs. Carl Barnhill . The
travelmg prize was won by
Mrs. M""-""r. The club sur·
prised Mrs. Stout with a cake,
ice cream and gilts in
l'Cicbration or her birthday.
Altending were Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Stout, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Barnhill, Mrs.
Rubal Caldwell. Mrs. Jinuny
Caldwell, Jinuny, Jeff and
Jodi, Mrs. Robert Dorst and
Tim, Mrs. Maude Gray, Mrs.
Leota Massar , Harold
Massar, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Stout and Keith, and Mr. and
Mrs. James Stout, Connie and
Terri .

SplAsJiNq

SEE

114 Court St.

1'UPPt:t(.S PLAINS - An·
nual family piclll&lt;' uf the Rose
Garden Club of Tuppers
Plains was held recently at
the home or Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Stout.
.
Following a picnic supper ,
Mrs. Glen Stout conducted a
business ' meeting opening
with the Lord's Prayer. For
roll call members answered
by naming their ravorite wild
flower. The verse of the
month was read by Mrs. Carl
Barnhill, and the program
" Cutting and Care or Plant
Materials" was given by Mrs.
Frederick Goebel. Mrs.
Harold Massar had the
special arrangements.
Hints for the month were
given by Mrs. Grace Stout. It
was reported that thr sum-

IN

For The Best Policy
and Low Rates

992-5120

Rose Garden Club has picnic

VISITS FATHER
CHESTER - Father's Day
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Burke of Cbester were
Mr. and Mrs . W. B.
SChultheiss and Amy of South
Bloomingville, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Burke, Lisa and
Tricia, SUIIU1er Road. A
barbecued chicken dinner
was enjoyed.

Mason, W.Va.

NUW IMPROVED! iNSTANT

Clara

Je·nni!er
Barnhart
celebrated her second birthday at the home of h~r
parents, June 6.
A Mickey Mouse theme was
carried out in the decorations
by Jennifer's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Barnhart.
Others attending were her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Barnhart, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Patton and James,
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hayes,
William Barnhart, Elaine
Barnhart, and Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Gorby, Mike and Chris.
Sending gifts were · Miss
Nancy Greenlee, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Grueser, Christy
Baer, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Martin, Miss Sue Becker, and
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Gorby.

·\ .
'\•

..

TUESDAY
SOUTHERN
Band
BooSters Tuesday 7:30 p.m.
in home economics room at
high school.

Mrs.

has second birthday

'''
I

ASK
TO
EMEMBER
IRTHDAYS

Winebrenner,

Belle Riley, Mrs. Freda Ed·
wards.

jennifer Barnhart

'I''

MONDAY .
RUTLAND Garden Club,
7:30 Monday evening at the
home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Turner wtth Mrs. Chris Diehl,
co-hostess.
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary, Racine Post 602, Monday, 7:30p.m. atthe hall.

" My Datly lllc-ssing" and
scrrpture from Psabns and
Pruvcrbs . Mrs. Mary
Brewer's program was titlt-'U
" Mee t Three Intelligent
Fools."
Mrs. Metzger assisted by
her daughter, Krtty Darst,
served refreshments. Others
attending were Mrs. Eva
Hartl ey, Mrs . Helen
Bodimer. Mrs . Lillian
Demoskey, Mrs. Isabelle

JENIFER BARNHART

·i

relatives and !riends or the
late Albert and Liza Hill are
welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363 observe annual go
to church Sunday at 9:45a.m.
at Mason United Methodist
Church, Mason.

773-5592

Alwilda Werner presented
the program on Latin
America. Haiti, and El
Salvador. She also read about
the
prodigal
son .
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Sigman to those namrd and Mrs. Katie Anthony,
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner,
Mrs. Bernice Baker, and
Mrs. Sarah Fowler.
At a meeting of the Dorcas
Circle held at the home of
MrS. Kathryn Metzger, a pen
sketch on tbe special interest
mission, . Dr. William Mac·
pherson, was given. Dr. Macpherson is at the hospital, M.
M. Wema BP i69, Kinshasa I,
Republic or Zaire. He bas five
children, two of whom will be
remembered with gifts of
money on their birthdays In
July.
.
Mrs. Sarah Dawn Owen
opened the meeting by
reading "A Utile Town".
Mrs. Metzger had devotions
including a poem entitled
" High Places" taken from
Ideal magazine. Sh\l also
read "God Is My Best
Friend" from the magazine,

':1

'"'·
'

Projects were planned and
special interest mlssionaries
assigned at the Tuesday night
meetings of the circles of the
B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society of the Middleport
First Baptist Church.
Meeting at the · home or
Mrs. Leora Sigman, the Love
Joy Circle members decided
as a special project to
remember each of the
residents or the Meigs County
Infirmary on his or her birthday. The Rev. Robert Coats
and his ramily, foreign mi£.
·sionaries, and Mary Tillord,
Ohio Baptisl Scholarship student, will be remembered
with gifts during the year.
Mrs. Louise Davis presided
at the mee'ting opening it with
scripture from 1 Cor. Ui. Mrs.
Oeida Chase prepared the
devotions which were read by
Mrs. Mary Hughes entitled
"We Have to Wait Too" with
scripture !rom Isaiah 40 and

Mrs. Jean Johnson presid- ....
ed with the group making ar- ' '
rangements to meet on June ' '
29 and June 30 to make ice
cream lor the celebration. Ingredients are to be in ·the. day
before and anyone wi~hing to
donate is asked to telephone , _
949-2121.
l~
' . '
The birthdays of \Beverly ;~
Dowell, Grace Ro,Wjh and,;
Mary Sloter were ci\1ebrated. '
with a washcloth shower by •
the members. Refreshments
were served to Mae ®eland, ~i­
Jean Johnson, Lou DtLong,.,.;.;;
Kelly DeLong, Jeff ~nd Robbie DeLong, Kay Roberts,
1
Beverly Dowell, Beulah
Autherson, Jean Cleland,
i
Maxine Rose, and Mary
i
Sloter.
1
Next meeting will be on Ju'
ly 12 with the birthdays of
!
Mae Cleland and Gene Lyons
!
to be celebrated.
.:

RACINE - Plans for the
July 4 celebration were made
when the Racine Firemen's
Auxiliary !llet recently at the
fire house.

spokesmen said, and one

wholesaler of sable who did
not wish his name used said
there are no endangered
species now anyway, only
"threatened."
He added that the industry
works with the goverrnnent to
assure " management" of
wildli!e- "we furriers don't
want to lose our supply." The
lynx cat and the bobcat are
among the " threatened"
species, be said. But 30
nations, including the United
States and tbe Soviet Union,
now have a convention, or
agreement, exchanging
knowledge or supply and
conservation practices.

Sanborn Missionary Society
meets at Mrs. Sigman 's home

..u

july 4 cekbration planned

I

for a Russian sable coat, with
scores of other price ranges
in between,.,
"Mink remaiils a major
item always in style," said
the industry's spokesman.
"But style t.oday has dictated
that mink be more than just
that. Usini today's skills and
design tec)lniques, mink has
more det;ill and versatility

)

It was reported that several t;
members had atteoded-lhe • '
39th annual rally of District I
at Cmcinnati on June II. G&lt;r
mg from Chester Council , •·
were Dorothy Ritchie, . ,
Charlotte Grant, Helen ., .•
Wolfe Mary K. Holter.
''
The' district deputy club's .,
picnic was announced for ) ;;
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Wilson
Park, Route 50. All members ·•r
are welcome to attend.
•1.
Mrs. Helen Wolfe was .•
pianist for the meetmg. ..&lt;
Reported ill was Cha rlotte , ·;
Grant, a patient at Holzer, . 1,
Room334.
Attending the meeting •·•
besides those listed above
were Ada Neutzling, borothy · ,
Lawson, Ada Morris, Ada .' ,,
Bissell, Elizabeth Hayes, Bet- "
ty Roush, Zelda Weber, Julie
Rose, Duris Grueser, Thelma
White, Jea~ Frederick,
Mabel Van Meter, Laura Mae t,
Nice, Eileen Martin, Mae . ,
Spencer, and Marcia Keller. , (

CHF.STER - Quarterly
birthdays were observed a.t
the Tuesday night meeUn~ of
Che s ter Co un cil 323 ,
Daughters of Americco, held
at the hall.
In the honored gn·up were
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mrs. Enna
Cleland, Mrs . Goldie
Frederick, Mrs. Letha Wood,
and Joe Bissell. Members
san~ " Happy Birthday" to
them .
For
potlu c k
refreshments th ey were
seated at a speCial table. The
decorated cake was made by
Mrs. Margaret Tuttle and a
1,'ift was presen ted to each
one. Grace was given by Mrs.
Leona Hensley.
Mrs. Mae McPeek had
charge of the meeting with
the flag bearers escorting J oe
Bissell to the altar which he
was presented a girt by Mrs.
McPeek in observance of his
birthday and Father's Day.
She also read a poem entitled
"The No.3 Tub."

Mink has met:its match--almost
By GAY PAULEY
UP! Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) .- The
American fur industry still
thinks mink, but its
crartsmen pull not only mink
from the classic mold but
glamorize less costly furs
such as raccoon, lynx, ranchbred rabbit, fox and skunk.
Yes, skunk.
Skunk showed up as a big
cape with big muff and the
name of Zorina fur at the
industry's annual rashion
roundup Wednesday at the
Piaza Hotel. The show was
part of the total look the
apparel industry gives each
season for visiting fashion
reporters.
The black and white or the
skunk coloring remained, but
was worked into a curved and
vertical pattern.
You would need to read the
label to know that rox went
into a bulky, hooded coat
dyed in brown and camel and
sewn so that the whole
garment was in bold chevron
pattern .
Raccoon was treated to
look like tweed, and lynx and
rabbit wete 1 in dozens of
patterns.
Fur prices ran from $200
for a rabbit vest up to $25,000

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 23, 1977

Make It 8 point to support your
mate In front of others today,
even though you don't agree. It'll
save yOu from an .rgum.nllaler.

• Cbi.'IOSe fTo~r~ differ ent b•ckgru1u,d•
1111d ~ufltom poM;A
• Limit: ooe per 11ubjed , two per family
• Addidonal portrait• available i.a .U
sizes at re&amp;ll(loable

LAST 3 DAYS

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

TUURS
fRI '' SAT·
tn
.,

Rather than try to Impose your

Ideas on coworkers today , hear
them our . They may have

JUNE 23·24-25

thoughts that complement

yours.
O!MINI (Miy 21-Juno 20) Your

purse could suffer today
because you think only of

gretll)'lng immediate whlma. It
you SJ&gt;l'nd toollshly, you'll later
have
buyer's .remorse.
INEWSPAPER
ENTERPRJ!E ASSN l

priu•

• Groupe SL 25 each additiooahubJed
• Per.orua u.nder 18 mu•t be •CCGIJI ·
panied by partal .,r Ku•rdia.n
• Finitlhed portraiu detlvf!red at ••ore

PLUS
FAMILY GROUP
PORTRAITS

1

PT. PLEASANT, RIPLEY, AJHENS,
BELPRE

BO.NUS OFFER : "I'REE " PORTRAIT of GRANDPARENT
Photo Hours : Daily liJ.1 2-5 6-8 • Sal. 10.1 2-4:30

S

~~-~i;i;;;;;;;;;ii;;;oiiiiii;i;;;iiiii;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;iiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:l
•

�"-"niPOollvSentlnel. Middleonrt·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June23,1'.117

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

.WANT AD
CHARGES
IO.y

..
1.10

2Gay•

~.

3days
I days

Owr¥t!
1.25

' 3.00

...,
215

PIANO lESSONS, childrens and
odults
Mrs
Harvey
Vronken . 992 -2270,

Von

NEW IARCAINLANO now

o~n .

d ishe~.

pons.

......

New glouware,

small opplionce5, radios , gifl
ltemt, toys , b8'Dch. camping

~

and sporting supplies, dolhlng,

lu memury, Cllrtl o( Thanks and
Oblutary · S ~'m"" per word, SJ.OO
mlnilmun. Cuh in MdvMJK-'t'.
MubJ!e Humeule1Mnd Y•rd Alts

IU't! »e&lt;-'epled ooi)' wilh Cll~h _.ll h
\lrl.kr . 2:i l't'ntt•hMr&amp;t fur 11tb c~ury­

l.ng Bux Nwnbt!r In Ciirll! ul TIM!' Sentinel

Thi! Publilher rt!»&gt;!rvn Ute lkJU.
~~ ur rdel10111)' 6tdli deemt·d u~
~tillfwl. Tf~ Publisher will uul lle
n-sponJJtiJie rur more U"''l one inc(JI'·
rt\'\ utstnwtt.
tu

Plltllle 192·2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

YARD SALE . 7. sals pony
harnesses and freezer , One
mile off 12" on Happy Hollow
Iii d. Phone 7ol 2·2991 ,
ol FAMilY Yard Sole. Start 22
through 2.. . 9 til 5. logon St ,
Middleport.

1971 CAMMERON 3 bedroom . ful · USEO WHIRLPOOL washer. Phon"
ly carpeted , )0 I( JO owning,
742-1754.
back porch, 10 x 10 building.
furnished . Second troiler on SPARKLERS . PARTY poPpers ,
sno~es .
other Ju ly 4th
right in Country Mobile Home
no.,e lt ies .
Advlts
only .
Park . Phone 992 -6161 .
Oeftnitely no fire cra ckers .
197 .( 12x60 ALL elecrm 3
Fife's, S. Jrd , Middlepor t.
bedroom mobile home , furn i1h,
DOG ,
house
ed, will toke smeller 12 wide, on PEEK ·A-POO
broken. Phone 992-707ol or
trade . Phone (3CMIBB2·2.4166 .
992·3465.
1970 MONTEREY mobile . home .
12-:60. 2 bedroom. S3600 Colt
992-5001 .

some new and used furniture GARAGE SALE - Mason Alley
across from Laundromat . 9·5.
end much more in Meigs Plaza,
Fri ., Sal . &amp; Sun. Clouware,
.o~09 ,earl St . Middleport . Open
clothing,
etc_. __ -.
doily 10 a .m to 5·30 p.m . •• ·
capt Thursday and Sundot_
YARD SALE at Milo Hutchison
res idence. Autlond . Thurs . &amp;
MEIGS COUNTY Coon Hunters
_Fri.:_ Quolity~r_:.~n dise ._
'
ouociotlon will hove a meeting
Friday June 2.fth ol 7 .30 p .m . on BASEM ENT SALE ot Bu rtha Mobile Home..:!or:Rent
Snowball Hill. Election of nev
Runells at Wolfpen Rood .
officers w1U be held and
Thursday, Friday , Saturday &amp; TWO BEDROOM trailer . Brown 's
Troiler Court. Adults only,
refreshments will be served .
_ S~ndov, :·.:.9.;
· 5.:.
. __
Phone 992-3324 .
2 KITTENS FOR giveaway . One MOVING SALE - 16-45 Lmcoln
long haired block and white,
He1ghts, 9 a .m. · 7 p.m. Fur·
one fl ge r stri ped . Phone
nihJre . wigs , dot hes. coins,
~2-3361 anytime or 992-7791
much more.
=-"':,.--~'--,--~.
after 4 p.m.
1
YARD SALE. Thu rs ., Fri . &amp; Sot. , 3 BEDROOM house with 1 / t bath,
fireplace.
beouflful
location
1n
TO GIVEAWAY , I yr. old mole
June 23, 24, 25. Starting ot 9
Middleport $16 ,900. Phone
short haired pointer. Great
a.m . ot 778 Oliver St., Mid·
992-3457 .
watchdog and great w1th kids.
dleport. Otnatte set, range , ell ·
Phone 7.(2-3162.
lro kitchen cha irs , toys, bicycle,
gloss wore, g1rls and wome n's
clothing , lots more .

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23

.

Mond•y

JONES BOYS

Noon 011 &amp;.lJ!.I.:~
'lw..W.y
lhru Frid.a)'

NEW STORE HOURS

&lt;P.l\1.
Ottdety befortpullllc.atiOtl

9 a .m til 7 p.m. Dally

Swlda)'
4P.M

Frida )' t~ftenwon

Closed Sunday

FRIENDLY SERVICE!
SUPER SAVINGS!

TWO SEALPOINT Siamese cats.
Mole &amp; lemale neutered. Affec·
tionate, need good home, 3
yean old. can 992-2928 .
SEW 'n SEW outlet Store, Main St.
Rocine, Oh . (farmer Post Office
FOR GIVEAWAY · .41 port miniture
building) Fabric Sole All fabric
&amp; 4 part Beagle puppies. 7 wks .
in store only $1.98 vd. .
ald. Free lo anyone. Phone
polyester, double knits · open
992-7085.
~ -.41 Mon , thru Sot .
TO GIVEAWAY - Abandoned pup·
py 8 wks . old. Small Chiwawo
type, good with ch1ldren , needs
good home . Phone 992-224.41 or
99'.2-5207 .
2 WHITE kittens to g tve away .
Phone."CJ92 .. 2817 .
-:- AD~~:~:t~~ENT
Federal Land and Water
Conservation
Fund
Act
ProJect No . 39 -P0508.
Munic ipal Perk . Tennis;
Courts, VIllage of Middleport,
Ot'llo .
Bids will be received until
12 100
Noon
D.S .T . or\
July 11 , 1977 for tne con struction of Municipal Tenn is
Courts for the Vlltaoe of
Middleport , Ohio , at wh ich
time the bids shall be opened
by the Clerk of the Village
on~ eubllcly read by him at
the
lllage Hall, 237 Race
Street. VIllage of Middleport,
Ohio .
Bids may be malted to tt'le
Mayor's Office, V lllage of
Middleport, Ohio, .415760,
Attention : Mr , Fred Hoff .
man, Mayor . .
lnformltlon for bidders.
form Of contrtct, plans,
specifications , and forms of '
bid bond. performance and
payment bond, and other LICENSED PILOT for harbour
work. Apply In perton at Trl·
documents may be e:.a.,lned
1nd are obtainable at the
State Materials Corp. Ap·
VIllage Hall , Middleport ,
pl'lgrove, Ohio on St. Rt. 338.
OhiO, upon the payment of the
sum of S10 .00, whlcn Is not JOB OPENING. Partllime RN for
ar.a Health Agency . Must hove
r.efundabte.
All bids must be In ptatn
own transportation. General
ttalld envelopfS marke&lt;t on
knowledge of or.a. Hours 8-4.
tht outside,
" JIId
tor
Call
992·5.912 between 8 and 4.
Municipal
Park
Tennis
Equal Opportunity Employer.
Courts, VIllage of Middleport ,
Ohio ." Each bidder must W~,NTEO TIMBER cutters, skidder
have on the outside of the bid
and .dozer operators. Phone
ennlope his name and ad 991-5397
pr 992-!1861 aftar 7
drtn, and e~ch bid must be
p.m. Tri-State Chipping, Inc.
eccompanled by a bid bond or
certified ch.ck In the amount MIDDLE AGED woman to cora for
Of 10 ptrctnt of the tot11 bid .
elderly couple. Live in . If inThe bid bond shall be con teisted coll882-2973 . ·
ditioned that If the bid Is
1ccepted a contract will be
tnttred Into and Its per formince properly secured .
If ttte bfd embraces both
labor end material such
Items shall be separatell NEW COMPANY .. Big Bend
Developers. Finest in remodel·
staled with the price thereto
No bidder may withdraw
lng. painting and concrete
hll bid for a period of sixty
work. Interior and e)(terlor,
da y1 from the date of b ld
Free estimates. Phone
opening .
992-3573.
The project IS federally
IO~N----c~o~M-P_l_E_T~~••- P-,-;,
lllllf'lod . Contracts to be ExcAvA. ~T~
awarded under this Invitation
systems. Springs developed .
for bids will bt subject to
All work is guaranteed. Brad
Presidential Executive Order
Lewis
, phone 7.412·2"51 ,
No . 112.416, as amended ,
requiring lfflrmltivt action EXCAVATING , BACKHOE , dozer ,
for equal employment op.
trencher, low Boy , dump truck
portunlty . Contractors are
trucks, septic systems. Bill
further advlaed that ,the
Pullins, phone 992-2.4178 day or
J1r\uerv 27, 1912 Equal
Employment Opportunity
· ·~~~~~~~~~
Executive Order of the -~~~h~
liovtrnor of Ohio Is also SPECIAliZE AlliS -CHAlMERS
farm
equipment
and
applicable to this bid ln automotive .repir. Also lawn
vltlllon .
Tht owner rtltrves the
and garden tractor (A.C) .
right to waive Informalities
Raosonoble rate&amp; . Call (614)
or to rtlect env and all bids .
661-6253.
Succustul bidder must
comply w ltll the Ohio work .
men's Compensation laws
and also comp ly wl ~h 111
other state , federal and total
CASH patd lor all makes and
taxes and laws.
succeurul bidder mu$1
models of mobile homes.
proceed wl1h the work within
Phone area code 614-.4123.q531 ,
two weeks of the sl~nlng of
the contract and the proJect TIMBER , Pomeroy Fare•l Pro·
must be fully completed
ducts. Top price for standin~
Within 30 working dtys
sawtimber . Call m -5965 or
thereafter eKteptlng only
Kent Hanby, 1--4.416-8570.
such delays as may be oc COINS,
CURRENCY , tokens , old
casioned by str ikes , un seasonable weather or ach of
pocket watch" and chains,
Go~ .
silver and gold. We need 1964
and o lder silver coins. Buy , sell,
VILLAGE OF
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley,
MIDOLEPORT.OHIO
7~2· 2331.
By Fred Hoffman ,
MAYOR
OLb FURNITURE, ice boxes, brou
beds , etc. ; complete
(~J 23. 30 - 11C
households. Write M. D. Miller,
Rt. -4 , Pomeroy , Ohio or call

Have A

Problem?

CALL
CRISIS UNE
992·5554

992-nw.

WANTED .. CHIPWOOD Poles,
Max . diameter, 10 inches on
largest end, $8 per ton , bundled slobs, $6 per ton, Oelivered
to Ohio Pallet Company , Rt. 2,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Phone
992-268'1.

LI!GAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC
HEAR lNG on the Columbia OLD RAILROAD lanterns, TNOC
Townthlp TruttHI budget
Hocking Volley K I M and
1nd revenue sharing funds .
others. Also, all kinds of steel
Notice II h.rtby given that
traps . Phone (614) 367-743.3 or
on the 7th
of July , 1917 , et
write
John v.,uh, Cheshire,
tp .m . lpubl chelrlngwlll be
Ohio .415620
htld on the budget end
revenue
&amp;hiring
funds
prepared by thl Columbia
Township Truatees of Meigs
County , OhiO for tht next
fiiCII year ending Dec . 31, IF YOU ho~o~e o service to offer,
1911. Such hearing will be
wont to byy or $ell something,
htld at the office . of the ·
oe looking lor work , .. or
township trustees.
whotaver ... you'll gel results
Gloria HuHon, Clerk of
fast•r with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
Columbia Township Trustees
(6J 23, lie
Coll992·2156.

ct•r,

-----

·-

---

C B Mobile

Transceiver
complete with weath~r
proof F'A speaker , 2 way
base toad eel C B llntenna .
for roof top or trunk mount .
Power cord, cOat)( , antenna
cable and all hl!rdware
Included .
·

Business ·Services
CARTER'S

Superior
Steam Extraction

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Young's carpeting
Routt 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Electrical &amp; .
Refrigeration

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

300 Main St.
Pomervy, Ohio

Phone 992-6282
IA. M.Io4 :30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6·23-1 mo. Pd .

" The Originators
Not The Imitators"
2-23·1 mo.

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

~omeroy

l.andmarll

9 ...
6'ill.

,.',.
'

CAPTAIN EASY

CR¥"(Y LADIES

YOLJ Fl&lt;lLI~D THEiY"D PLAIJT
A 15fEPef2. ON EASY'S CAR-· WELL.

HANDICRAFT

YOU WERE WRONe! THE FUZZ.
PULLED A FAST OIJE!

104 Wolf MaIn SlrHt

Just Below!,. Jon"
l!oys' In Pomoroy, Ohio
Pllonofft·:mt
6-15-1 mo .

••
••
•••
••'

'\

~

••

Automatic
Transmission Servic_@.

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

.•'

(I

PARTS • LABOR

GARAGE SALE - June 7..41 &amp; 25 Rt. COAL, limestone, and ca lcium
_Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
"'
7, 2.2 mi. north of Chester.
Phont 992 - 2181
chloride a nd calc1um brine for
Desk , choi rs, old bed, toys ,
dust control and spec1al ml)(1ng
Alignment,
wheel
games , all sizes clothing,
salt for forme rs . hcelsior· solt
balancing,
lune:
up,
glassware.
Summit RQ,ld
Works, Moln Street, Pomeroy , FOR SALE ~ One white com·
brake
work.
minor
Rt. 1
Ohio or phone 992· 3891 .
mode. wash bostn . and shower
3 FAMILY YARD sole. Thurs .. Fn ..
Middl&amp;port, 0 .
stall , like new . One fou r
and Sol ., June 23 , 2.41 , &amp; 251rom CAMPER , $600 . Also , horse
repair.
cylinder
header .
Phone
992-5724
9:30 to b p.m. 2 miles from
tra1ler , $450. Phone (61.41 ) 698·
Behln~ Rutland Grode
langs ville on Rl. 325 - I '/, miles
I :~~r~;~~l•ete
Sales
and
3290.
.!1~~55_()1;:_.-~School . Evening work by
RHdnille, 0 . PI! . 3714250
up.
Jand Supplies.
FERGUSON
FARM
tractor
and
appointment.
Ph
.
742·2005.
5-17-TFC
SPRING
GARDEN
Supplles,
Cab·
YARD "sA
-:c-:
lE: · '"'Ju_ n_e- :2-c
&lt;-:&amp;
-:
25::-.-:,-.,0
equipment lor so le . Call
6-5·1 mo. Pd.
boge, cauliflower , broccoli,
a .m. to 5 p.m. 1 block lrom
949-227'1.
ond head lettuce plants.
pool , 617 H1gh St .. Middleport .
yellow, white, ond red onion 28-:-trock ste reo with AM·FM
Toys, swing-set, lounge chair ,
sets. onion plants , Kenne bec,
radio , record praye r and
hou$8hold ite ms .
cobbler, Katahdin , Red Ponttoc
records, high cha 1r , telephone
end Red losoda seed potatoes.
stand , boby walker, other
lnsulalian Senices
Bulk gorden seeds, potting soil,
Continuous one piece
items . Phone 742· 2:.:0::.7::.
B:..
· ~-ftlt0ll&lt;i'lpeat moss , fruit trees ond ro:&gt;e
gutters. Wo ,.ng 11, or do II
81owo !Old Wah Unics
bushes . Midway Morket ,
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
yourself. Spoclol ·prlcH to
Pomeroy , Ohio, 992-2582,
5101111
Indoor -Outdoor runs, grooming
builders.
Bob :s Market, Mason , W.Va.
WIIIIJOWSIDOOIS
all breeds , clean sanitary
New
Co-Op
water
sof·
(304) 773·572].
Phone 949-2814
facilit ies oe 367-7112. Cheshire.
1£~11100
teners , model VC -SVI.
Phone (61&lt; ) 367-0292.
Only S279 .95
WI1-ol2 m . cost 1ron kitchens1nk , I
9 a.m. to p.m.
Save UO .Oj on a new
~IINUII
bastn and 1 dram board , hong
HOOF HOLLOW . Buy, sell. trade
Hotpoint Re rlgerator .
·
on
wal
l
type
,
'white
,
1·3
burner
S/01/IG-SOIJITT
or train horses. RUTH REEVES,
1 New 20 cubic ft .
gas . hot plate. Phone 992 ·571-t .
trainer . Phone (61") 698-3290.
CheS1 Freezer
Ul?.,S
Now In stock , complete line
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs. ECONOMY TRACTOR with all at.
of bulk garden seeds.
tochments. Lik~ new , ask ing
(Mln .) Collies , 2 females . 7
1 Good McCullough Chain
6-16-1 mo.
$2250.
Phone
(614
)
698-3290.
,._ !1!2·2174
weeks old . Shots and wormed.
Saw
us
Phone (614 ) 367-0292 o• GOOO RICH Top soil Charles R
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
Saw
uo
367·1112.
Hatf ield 8ockhoe Servic e
1 Good Used Un lco
Phone 742·2008 .
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soctely
.Dryer
S80.0D
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
An ima l Coral ine , 992-7680; or HANGING BASKETS, pots , and
1 Good Used G .E . Drver S8.$ 1
Siding,
Storm
· after6p.m., 992-5427 .
1
Guod USt!U notpo in t
geraniums .
C l~ tond ' s
Windows
&amp;
109 High St.
Gerojdine I Frost -F ree Coppertone
OOGGI~
BEAUTY Parlor, ell . Greenhouse ,
Freezer -Refrigerator
NEW 3 bedroom house. 2 baths ,
Pomeroy
Cleland , Racine , Ohio.
lnsu
lation
.
··
brtHi ds styled the way you like.
combinat10n A real steal
all alec. , 1 acre, Middleport ,
No drugs used . Call for ap·
at S2SO
Ca II Professiona Is
close to Rutland. Phone 992·
Weddings
pointmenl , 7,.2·3162.
NEED
A
WATER
7481.
--,.-·---~Portra'ils
REG AKC DOBERMAN Pinchet
SMALl farm for sale, 10% down ,
pup. Champion blood line.
.•
Jack W. Clrsev, Mgoo'
Passports
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
SOFTENER?
Phone 992·2181
Phone 843·23.411 .
A
local
contractor
Anniversaries
ty , W Vo. Phone (304) 772·
Phone 949-2801
3102 o• (30&lt;) 772-3227 .
Special Occasions
Let PomeroY Landmark
or 949-2860
soften &amp; cOndition your
STARCRAFT lOth anniversary sale COUNTRY farmland with seclud·
water and a Co-op water
ed woods , water and good oc·
- Golollie fold down with
F.ree Estil!!ales
fft -S292
l!ob Hoefilch
1970 FORD PICKUP truck , $800
isoftener, Model UC-XVI.
cess in Monroe County , W . Vo .
shower . $2700; Galaxie , $2375 ,
No Sunday Callis Please
Phone 992-5301 ,
S
I
,000
down
,
cal
l
(30.41)
772·
Stormoster , S2015: Starflight
6-13-1 mo .
6-22·1 mo.
Now Only' •279,95
3102 or (30.4) 772-3227 .
$775 11 ft . SC tro1ler . $3999
1976 .HONDA CIVIC CVCC, good
mini motors, $10,850. Compare Commercial property approx . 17
condition. Good gas mileage. • 1 Let us fest your water
pnce .and quality'. Open 'til 9
Phone {61") 696· 1()8.4 anytime.
~ree .
o.r:res , level fond , located at
p m . Comp Conlev Slorcroft
Tu'ppers Plo lns on Ohio, Route
197.41 FORD Goloxle .41 door. 26 .000
Soles, Rt. 6'1, north of Pt. PleaHOMESITES for sole , I acre and BRADFORD, Auct1oneei- , ComPom~~
l.andmark
7, Phone (61.41 ) 667.-630.( ,
actual miles New Glass Beltek
plete Service . Phone 949-2487
sant.
up. M1dd lepor1 , near Rutland.
Y.;lJack W. Carsey, Mgr.
tires · excellent condition
or 9.419-2000. Racine , Ohio, Crltt
NEW 3 bedroom house, built-in
Col\992 ·7481 .
• Heavy duty rear end . Phone
-~-_:__;P:.;ho:::;:;n:;e,:.9.:.;92~-2:.1:::B.:,1_ _. ~RAUT CABBAGE, $1 bu•he l. Cut
kitchen, both and '/,, Phone
Bradford .
. your own . James Hill Forrn .
992-2860.
742-2306 or contact MilO 8. Hut·
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR chison, Rutland , Ohio.
CORVETTE · 75. Must sell lm · MARANTZ MODEL 4060 two and 1970 TOYOTA $700 . Phone
Sweepers, toasters , irons, all
maculate. like new, oil e)(tras,
four chonnel omp . Also,
985·3:.:8::3:3·c,-.,--,--,--;-~:-small appliances . Le~wn mower,
VA-FHA. 30 yr. financing . Ireland
Marontz Modal 60100 turntable
13,000 miles . Best offer. Phone
ned to State Highway Garage
Mortgage,
77
E.
State
,
Athens
,
Wllh Stanton Cartridge . Two 1970 FORD '/, ton flatbed pick up .
1·4&lt;6·BS02 .
on Route 7. Phone (61.41) 985·
phone (6 14) 592-3051.
Bose 301 Speakers, S500 for
6 cyl. 300 cubic inch engine .
3825.
Con be seen on S. 3rd. St. in
1969 FORD. Good 390 engine &amp;
New house for sole, 3 bedroom , 1
system. Also, 1975 Bultoco 250
Cheshire or call367-0157.
transmission . $75. Phone
REMODELING,
Plumbing, heating
1'h both , rec. room ond
Pur1ong just been rebu ilt,
992·2192 between 9.30 and 5:30
and oil types of general repair ,
goroge . lee Construction,
many new pprts now $650.
and osk for Cheryl or may be
Work guaranteed 20 years e)(·
phone 992 -3454 or 44b-9568
Phone 992-2307 .
seen ot 6SS Sycamore St. in
periance. Phone 992-2..(09,
NEW HOUSE for sole 3 bedroom,
USED FOREST~Y EQU IPMENT.
Middleport .
MAIN
SEWING
MACHINE Repairs, ser1'.1 both , rec. room, and
John Deere S..O Sku:!der; Pet1976 FORD F2SO .41 wheal dnve,
vice, all makes , 992·2284 . The
goroge . lee Construction.
POMEROY, 0.
tibone SuperB Cory lift ; Pren · ,
$3900. Call 742-2590.
Fabric Shop \ Pomeroy .
Phone 992-345" or (61.41)
tice G·RMT w.!3.42 bypass grapJUST LISTED - About 2
Authorized Singer Soles and
44~- 9568
ple; Contact Dennis Smurr,
yrs . old, 3 bedrooms,
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
(61 ~I B3B-5345.
Master has own full bath,
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader and
2 LOTS tOr sole - 112)(50 each . On
modern kitchen, dlneHe,
bockhoe work; dump trucks
corner of Sycamore &amp; Ash Sts .
SWISS COlONY tra'lel trailers
small deck. large living R.
ond lo-boys tor hire; will houl
Middleport. lt1qulre ot 291
custom mode; MAPLE LEAF
Central air . 1 acre. S31,000.
fill dirt , 1o soil, limestone and
Sycamore St.
tandem• 16' up: CRICKET truck
MIDDLEPORT - Close to
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jel ·
campers special at COONER's 1975 HARLEY Dav idson Sporlser
school - 4 B R. 2 baths.
fers , day phone 992-7089 ,
REf'L TO!(
CAMPERS , Rainbow R1dge.
1000cc Chopped ·- lots of Ex ·
equipped kitchen. !orge
night phone 99'1·3525 or 992Open a¥enings. Taka Meigs 28
VIRGIL 8. TEAFORD, SR.
tros. EKcellont Condition, less
rec . room, air cond .,· FA
or 32 to Boshon . Ow11er , Robert
lhon 1200 actual miles. Contac t
REA,LTOR
_2~~·~=-~~--~~­
heat, bar, storage and
Codner, long Bottom , Ohio .
Keith Curtis, 992·5073 .
EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
216 E . Second Street
other features, 2 car
ond dltcher Charles R. Hat·
18FT. LEISURE TIME Camper , self- HAY FOR sole. Call949-2870.
Pomeroy,Ohio 45769 ,
. garage, $45,000.
field , Bock Hoe Service,
contained, excellent condition.
Phone 91'2-3325
, ' POMEROY- Lovely view
19 in. BLACK and White Philco .
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 742·2008.
Phone 992·2386.
of the river, 3 BR, bath,
hcellent condition. Priced
WILL do roof ing , construction,
Will SACRIFICE, j977 2B' •elf·
equipped kitchen. garden
RENOVATED
3
reasonably . Colt 992-2276.
plumbing and heating . No job
contoi11ed travel trailer, factory
space,
storage
bldg.
Port
bedroom frame home, 2
too large or too small. Phone
air. Tandem wheels . Carpet, 1967 BARRACUDA 3 speed. stan·
basement.
S12,SOO.
baths, natural gas furnace
lots of extras. See anytime.
do,d . 273 V·B. Phone992-Sl97 .
7~2·2348.
JUST
LISTEO
3
and
city water. near
Shady Wotan Campground, 10 1-2 year old $Dven ·eights
·bedrooms.bath, carpatlng,
CARPENTER , floor ing , ceiling,
shopping $17,000.
mi. south of Pt. Pleasant on Rt.
nat . gas heat, carpeting,
Chorolots end one-e ight h
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
NEW
LISTING
2. Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va,
Brown Swiss Bull , all white ,
large
lot.
$1B,ooo
.
Carfhage
Hills,
3
RM
·
~99
MOBILE Home Repair , Elec .•
good disposition . Approx . 1200
POMEROY Peacock
100 A~ ........... ~·u
bedrooms , bath , rural
plumbing and heating. Phone
lbs. Contact Kenneth Hager ,
Ave., 31/.- acres. water,
water. electric heating and
992-5858 .
Coolville. Ohio .415723.
sewer available, Could be
nice lot. $16,500.
A ..........
HOWERY AND MARTIN Exdeveloped. $5,eoo.
3 AND .41 RM. furnished and un- NINE 10 week old pigs, S25 eoch
RUTLAND 4 room
co~o~ating ,
septic sys1ems ,
furn ished opts . Phone 992CLOSE TO MINES 4
for enflre lot or S30 eoc
frame with 2 bedrooms,
dozer,
backhoe,
dump truck,
5&lt;34.
..........
acres has several building
sepera tely. Phone 742-2545
bath . front porch and large
limestone,
'grovel.
blacktop
lots. Township Rd . 344.
lot. $11,000 .
COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rt.
paving, Rt . 1.413. Phone 1 (61.41)
Asking just $.4,600.
s YEARS YOUNG 4
33. te n miles north of Pomeroy.
698-7331 .
A ..........
CLOSE TO FORKED RUN
Large lots with concrete patios ,
bedroom frame home .
HARRISON'S
T.V. Repair. Service
LAKE - 6 acres, almost
sidewalks, runners and otf
Both,
birch
kitchen,
Become
A
Winner!
Sycamore
, St. , Mid·
Calls
.
276
new
double
wide
,
2
,BR,
street porktng. Phone 992· 7479.
disposal and level lot. A
dleport. Phone992-2522.
bath,
dining
R
.,
garage
and
good buy at $16 ,000 .
FURNISHED APT. Adults only . no
2 buildings. $17,000 .
Will DO elec1rical work residenPOMEROY - Large older
pets. Phone 992·387.. . Mid·
AVOID THE PITFALLS IN
tial and commercial
Coli
"Gravely Model 524 tract.;.
home with natural gas
dleport.
SELLING
YOUR
OWN
992·5126.
central healing . Up to s
with dual wheels and 3G
2 BEDROOM MOBILE home in
HOME- LET US SELL IT
bedrooms and l'h baths.
Inch rotary mower. Usad
140 Co!umbus Rd., Athens
Rocme area. Call W2-5858 .
FOR YOU.
Full
basement
and
large
about ' hours.
Come ( n I Let us show you
HENRY E. CLELAND
AVAILABLE AT Ri~o~erside Apartlot
.
$24,000.
why A.S.C.Is your Best Bet
PIANO TUNING , lane Daniels . 12
REALTOR
ments, one bedroom, $105 per
57
ACRESGood
gambrel
List Price $1510
in Motorcycling.
years of ser¥ice. Phone
mo11th , 2 bedroom, $138 per
Hank,
Kath
&amp;
Leoha
roof barn wJth water.
992
-2082.
month, Phone 992·6098 . Equol
Cleland
e~ectric and concrete
Housing Opportunity .
Assocl•tas
WILL
BABYSIT
in my hom•, 5 days
floors. 3 bedroom house
Sale
Price
a
week·
ony
shift, Rutland . Coli
992-2259
or
985-4112
·
with
bath
and
FA
furnac:e.
2 BEDROOM· unfUrnished house.
7&lt;2·2&lt;&lt;5.
LARGE
4
bedroom
Coli 992·5434 o• 992·3129.
new tractor warranty .
HOUSE FOR sole, one third acre .
frame home , 2 baths ,
CAMPING SllES along the Ohio
ground in Boshon oreo . Phone
nabral
gas
central
River for rent on Stole Rt. 338 .
heating,
famllv
room ,
9•9-2432
·--:-:~-:----See Robert LewiS or coli
Snapper B HP "High
garage and large lawn.
8&lt;3·2~32.
6 ROOMS w1th bath on "' acres,
Vacuum" riding mower
2 BUILDINGS - for lhe
Phone 992·5907 ,
3 BEDROOM MOBILE Home
w;th 30 bushel Bag - N-·--·--·-~~
price of one on State Route.
located in country nttar Hor·
HOME &amp; BUSINESS location in
W•gon grus catcher.
Only $8,.100 ..
risonville on St. Rt . 143.
Pomeroy . large tot , 115· fronThe Meigs Co. Fish &amp; Game Assn. will hold
List price $1070
2 BEDROOMS - In town
Beautiful location with large
tage on E. Main St, and 208'
a
catfislfderby Saturday, June 25, A.M. to
on
quiet
streel.
Modern
yat~ ond gorc:J.n . Deposit re·
depth to Coodor Sf. Modern 6
bath,
dining
room
and
level
4
P.M.
qu ired. Phone 7.412-3186 or
room homt&gt; with firepla ce &amp;
lot.
carport,
A-frame
business
7&lt;2-3122
:.:::..
· ---...,.--~
NEW LISTING Just
building Wtth paved parking
HOUSE FOR RENT- 2,14 Walnut
Used about 5 hours. New
outSide or town is this fully
orPo.
2000
sq
.
ft
.
storage
bldg.
Sl ., 7 rooms ond 2 baths. Con·
Warranty .
furnished 3 bedroom home
fronts on Condor St. $75,000.
tact Roymnd Barnett , Rt. 1, Box
with city water , natural
Shown
by
appointment
only.
The age limit is 15 years end younger boys or girls.
8S Letart , W, Vo. Phone
gas,
partial
basement
and
Children must turnllh tllelr own boll - "fish worms
-"ho~~l_&lt;·
'19
_
2~J2
:.:
1
cc
.
-:---::
8B2-31&lt;9.
•
large bach yard . Just
·- ·-·only". This event will bt held 11 tho Fllh &amp; Gtmo Lake
18
ACRES
land
on
Kingsbury
Rd.
3
AVAILABLE at Village Manor
$7 .000.
which Is locoltd 2 miiH Mil of Rl. 7 on Shotle River
miles tram Harrsanville . Hos
Aportmenfs- 1 bedroom fully
•WITH GOOD CREDIT
Road. Take county rood 12 -off Rt. 7. Follow tho
completely
furnished
12x60
carpeted with kitchen ap·
AND A FEW HUNDRED
signs "Fish &amp; O.mo". County Rood 121sono milt north
mobile
hoi'TWt
Including
washer
plionces , furnishe-d . S1orting at
DOLLARS YOU
CAN
of
ter on Route 7.
'
end
dryer , ond air SHM per mont . Phone 992-7721,
HAVE A HOME OF YOUR
conditioning.
Lorge
pond,
sprThis
oven!
will
be
,.ld
"Rein
or
Shine"
;
Equol housing opportunity
.
---_ " _ _ ..._fi
OWN.
111~, and well, newly buih 20~e36
Pomeroy, Ohio 614-"2-2975
garage, and Ud8 concrete
UNFURNISHEO. UPSTAIRS Apt.
G. Bruce Tulord
Open Mon.- Fri. 9 to 5
fl oor 1hed. Price at $15,000 .
facing Ohio River . Inquire 300
Helen L. Tulord ·
Sat. 9 to noon
l' hone after 5 p.m. 997.-526.41
Main St . Call992-6282 .
Associates

.

GUARAIITEED

REASONABLE

ALLEYOOP

'\1\li}'\Ml fii)'\1

FOR

SALE~

Radiator ,.......-...,_
Service

.....

V.l.P.
35 Merry

BRIDGE

•'

(Fr.)

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriAmoldandBoblee

Unscrambte these lour Jumbles ,
one tetter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

I

GUTIER SERVICE

tJ

KI

.! ..... , .. , ...... .. -

......,, , _ _

I DAUGY

s

WINE CARPET

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC. ·

SHOP

p_..,.

--

1

DIE PHOlO PlACE

Pomerov l.andm.k·

l] (

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ' ANNIE-BAR IINI.TER
LOOK.! YOU

BUT I ONlY

CAN11 COME

WISH TO
CALL UPON

IN HfRE -DIS IS A

PRIVATE

OOCIOR

ELDEEN-

i ANITARJUM -·

MiA'T'S UP,
MAC? Ott'
THIS
'PLACE. IS

PRIVATE

PRoPERTY-

DO I llfEN
UN/J£1!5TAN0.
OR. ELO£/!N,
TltAT WHA1 I

vou
FIGURE
IT OUT--

Now arrange the cirCled teners to
torm the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

,JUST'GO

RfPRf5EHT IS
~DPE"fWnHIN

AWAY~ THAT 1S
All,. --

YOUR GATE?

THE
Yesterdav 5

L.ISTBf.l , M~

i&lt;lbHT 6Yti
IS JVSTAS OLD AS /.f&gt;IJ.
~6FT Af.!D lT 'S PfRF8C.T.

W!;L.(_ , 40\i'!&lt;e

IT'S l#l LoFT 8'i8,
V&lt;X .. .IT'&gt; l&lt;al8

NOTAf(.ID

All~

1'\A'iWI:.:~:.:.·..,....&lt;&gt;&lt; ~

I Ginza drmk

IW.)l&lt;O""

5 Marsh
II Helm
position

12 Gone a lOll
13 Security on
property

14' Moses'

GASOUNE AI .T .EY

Fu'si; thin' is
t' make Rufus
comfable!

ZC Chick and

b--f---11--+-

30
UL ABNF.R

31

Answer

26 Felt
28 Chip;
sliver

TO SHOOT A

rHE CHANCE
TI-IATSOMEONE

LI/L
POOL,ISALL-

1----~r COULD - HNI-(Ar

GIT HlJRTr

~~~.,I

36 Scant

WTNNIE

AND I'LL BE RGI-IT OUT• WE1LL MOVE THIN65 A~O\JND1
6E:T A DEBK AND PHONE-1
AND YOU' LL I;E IN

S IDe YOUR DOOR •••
JUST LIKE~E:GOOD
OLD DAYS!

OH, ~NNIE, I 1HINK ~IS · JOB
1&amp; GOING 10 BE ~E: BEl&gt;T
·~-- ~EI&lt;A PY l COULD
1'0551BLY 6ET I

15U5iNE551 151RDIE!

-·-

I HOPE SO,
Bl RD IE ..... ~

I?EALLY HOPE
SO!

.

,-l-l-l-1-l--l

23

NORTH (D)

• KJ 6
¥AK53
+64
• A K72
WEST,
6802
"10 6
tQI097 3
•10 3

EAST
65
¥QJ742
+J5
.QJ985

SOIJTH
.AQI097
• 98
+A K 82

• 64
North-South vulnerable

34 Attacks
3&amp; Word iO
Gridley
11 Twine

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

around

CRYPTO(}UOTE- Here's how to work
AXVDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFEI.LOW

it:

,.

North East

I•

2W
4•
5•
6a
Pass

Soutb

Pus

3.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

4 N. T.
5 N. T.

7.

trumps and suddenly found
that the hand had collapsed
• because West had stArted with
fo ur trumps.
A httle extra lhought at an
early sUige of the play would
have saved the grand slam.

WE'RE REAL CADDIES,
AND WE'RE OUT IN THE
FRE5H AIR AND WE'RE
EARNING MONE'I. ..

I CAN'T
60 ON;
SIR ...

.,"••'

.,..
•
•',
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.
,,..
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•,

j:

,.
,.,.I '
'

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,,
.
'•

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'

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•

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'·

MAW --

'
'·
'

~

type hand is to cash your side-

suit winners before you start
your cross ruff.
Correct technique would be
for South to cash ali the ace'kings as tricks two lo seven .
After I hat he could have cross
ruffed losers in any order . At
some stage of the proceedings
West would have been forced
to slarl using his trumps to
ruff but South would simply
overruff . West would never be
able to score with one of
them .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

'
•.
•'

A Maryland reader wants to '
know th e best way to play 9 8 7
6 opposite 1\ K 10 4 to win four
tncks .
The answer is to lead the
nine and let it ride if not

covered. If it is covered, win,
go back to dummy, lead the
eight and let it ride unless it's
covered . This wins when both
queen and jack are to the right
of the ace-king .
(FOI a copy ol JACO B Y
MODERN, send $1 ro. " Win at
Bridge ," c/o this newspaper,
P.O BoJt 48'9 , Radio City Station.
New Yolk, N.Y. 10019)

1177 KJn1 FeaLures Sy nd lult', lne.

'IE CAN BLAME IT
I uEST
ON THEM DADBURN
'
.
HAD ME A
CORN · SQUEEZIN 5! 1
TERRIBLE
NIGHTMARE,

::

The essence of any cross ruff-

I&gt;'I.RNEY-

ISN'T
T!-115 GREAT,
MARCIE?

••

Opening lead - 2 •

One te ller simply s tands for another. In this sample A is .~u'S. won the tr~mp ~~~
used for the three L's, X fo r the two 0 ':-;, d e. Singl e le tte r s, w~
e seven an ~ou~
apostrophes , the length and formation of I he words are all Winners . There were SIX Sidehints·. Each day the code l('ttcrs arc different.
suit winners and if he could
lake seven trump tricks he
CRYPTOQUOTES
would have his grand slam . It
looked easy lo him as long as
J B
OYEEYD
BRDBR
J D B H J D 0 H . he could ruff two diamonds in
'
dummy .
yp
L
R
D
J
X
B
So he cashed the a c e and
RDYXLA
JH
J B
king of diamonds , ruffed a dia·
mond. cashed dummy's ace
LRYQLR
SRQDWQT
BAWG
and king of hearts. ruffed a
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: 1 AM A GREAT BELIEVER IN heart , ruffedhi~lastdiamond,
LUCK, AND I FIND THE HARDER I WORK, THE MORE 1 ruffed dummy s last heart ,
HAVE OF IT . _ STEPHEN LEACOCK
slarled lo r un his last three

0

a

••••

Trump split proves ruff

2jjl-3'til 38 Spirit
lamp

.ATHENS SPORT
CENTER_

..

metal

33 College

job
Anagram
of era
Bullet
Distress
call
Feminine

DAILY

,.,.•

29 Coat with

~===:::7TH8RE5f~~~~~~~~3Ui~·~~~~~~~~Tl~\N.~~~~~~~l
1I WA5 &lt;JUST GOING
32 s~fix
Espoused

~l199

a...

t:;-:+--11-+-

28

5th ANNUAL CHILDREN FISH DERBY

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SA'ES

"time
DOWN
I Altic 2· Police
. blotter
name
3 Be unsociable
Yesterday's
(3 wds.)
4 Suffix with 10 Pilfalls
velvet
16 Lawsuit
5 ,Oceanic
19 Husk
6 Mountain · 22 Repast
nymph ·
23 Joan of
7 Free
Arc, e.g.
8 Fraternize
24 Soccer
(2 wds.)
great
9 Distaff
25 Accumu·
Ia ted·
prophet

parting
(2 wds.)
15 Faucet
16 Hush-hush
org.
17 Hockey
great
18 Beach
20 Bee
follower
21 French
river
22 Not
make it
Z3 Whetstone

'n

~1199

SJ295

39 Challenged
40 Name the

usher's

from the word Go/

DEMONSTRATOR
SALE

=

green
25 Set right
26 Do an

It's Suzuki

~~

Jumbles : PARCH SWISH VACUUM WISDOM
Answet". What the auto Insurance salesman
promised-CASH FOR A SMASH

ACROSS

BORN LOSER

TEAFORDfiJ

~~B

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

1

..S849

1 I I 111 )" ( 1 I I ]

~

~

~~

(

(Answers tomorrow)

BISSEll SIDING CO

New'76 &amp;'77 RM's
PRICED TO GO!

11

•••
.,.,'·

..•.,

~ ~ ~~ ®

RATES

FRIDAY, JUNE 24,1t77

6 :GO--Summer Semester 10.
6 : 15--Farm Report 13.
6 : 2G-Nof For Women Only 13.
6 ::»---Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
8; Overseas Mission 10.
6 : •s--Mornlf19 Reporl 3.
6 : 50-Good Morning, Wesl VIrginia 13 .
6 : 55--Good M orning, Trl State 13.
7: 00-Today 3••• 15: Good Morning America 6,1 3: CBS
News 8; Chuck White Repocts 10.
7: 05-PQrkY P ig 10.
7 : ~Schoolles 10.
8 : 00-Howdy Doody 6; Capl . Kangaroo 8,1 0: Sese,..,..
St . 33.
8 : ~Big Valley 6.
9 :DO--Cross-WIIs 3: Phil. Donohue 4,13,15 ; Andy
Grllfllh 8: M!ke Douglas 10: Biography 33.
9 :3D-A .M . 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration B: Canterbury Tales 33 .
10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,,, 15; Olnah 6; Mere's Lucy 8,10 ;
Mike Douglas 13: Oas is In Space 33.
10: 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,&lt;, 15; Price Is Righi B, 10;
Studio See 33.
·
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Communl1y of Living
Things 33.
t 1 · 2o-E xploratlons In Shakespeare 33 .
11 :3D-!I's Anybody"s Guess 3,4,15: Family Feud 6, 13:
Lave of Life 8, 10.
11 :45-0ur Living Language 33 .
11 :55--CBS News B: Ms . Flxlt 10.
12 :00-News 3.4.6.10; Shoof for lhe Slors 15; Divorce
Courl B; Midday 13; Forsyle Sago 33.
12 :3o-Chico &amp; lhe Man 3, 15: Ryan's Hope 6.13 : Bob
Braun 4 ; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1: 00-Gong Show 3: All My Children 6.13; News B:
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Documentary Showcase 33.
1:30--0ays of our Lives 3,4, 1S; At the World Turns. 8, 10.
2:00-S20,000 Pyramid 6,1 3: Women's Conference 33.
2:3D-Doclors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13 : Guiding
Light B,10.
3:00-Another World 3. ~.15: All In The Family B,10:
Crockett's Victory Garden 20: Bit With Knit 33.
3: 1s--General Hospital 6, 13.
J :Jo-Match Game 8,10: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 ; M .D.
33 .
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3: Gong Show 4.15 : New Mickey
Mouse Club 6: Gilligan' s Is . B: Sesame St. 20,33:
Movie " Son of a Gunfighter" 10: Dinah 13.
4:3D-My Three Sons 3; Slar Trek 4; Emergency One
6: Andy Grllllth 8 : Hogan' s Heroes 15.
5:00-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8: Mlsler Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33 ; Emergency On' 13; Mission :
Impossible 15 .5 · ~Adam - 12 4; News 6: Family
Affair B; Elec. Co . 20,33.
6:CIO-News 3,4,8,1 0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3D-NBC News 3,4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 10; Vegetable Soup 20; Villa Alegre :13.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell lhe Truth 4: Liar's Club
6; $12B,OOO Question 8: News 10: To Tell the Trulh
13: My Three Sons 15: Look At Me 20; Black
Journal 33.
7·3o-Porler Wagoner 3: Gong Show 4: Candid
Camera 6; Treasure Hunt 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Reporl 20,33: Andy Williams 10: Pop Goes the
Country 15; Name That Tune 13.
&amp;: DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Movie "The Brai n" 6,13;
Movie " West Side Story" B,10; Washington Week In
' Review 20,33.
&amp;:3D-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:0C}-Lowell Thomas Remembers 20; Documentary
Showcase 33.
9:3().--.Qulncy 31'4,15; Movie "Hands of the Ripper"
6,13 : Oasis In Space 20.
lO :OD-News 20; Firing Line 33 .
10 :3D-Woman 20 .
11 :DO- News 3,4,6,B,10,)3,15: Monty Pythons Flying
Circus 20; Ba lck Perspective on the News 33.
11 : JD-J ohnny Carson 3,4,15; Baretta 6, 13; Movie " The
Couple Takes a Wife" B: Mary Hartman 10: ABC
News 33 .
12:0D-Movle "The Shultered Room" 10; Janakl 33.
12: 4D-Mod Squad 6; Ironsi de 13
1 :00-Midnlght Special 3.4.15.
1:4D-News 13; 2: 30---News 3; 3 :00---Movie ' 'The Mark
of Zorro" 3.
4 .3D-Movle "It Could Happen to You" 3; ~ : 00-FBI 3.
Movie Channel-5ond9p.m.- From Noon Til Three ;.
7 ond 11 p.m . - Inside Out.
Coble ChannelS- 6: Jo-Tesllmony T!mo; 7:110-;Poul
Gaudino; 7:3D-Wreslling; I : OD-Sports-Travel
World ; 9:0D-Daytlme; lO:OD-700 Club ; 11 : 3DPaul Gaudino.

THURSDAY,JUNE23, m1
8 :00-Movle "' The Million Dollar Ripoff"' 3,&lt;,15;
Welcome Back. Kotte,- 6, 13; Wal tons 8,10; Tribal
Eye 20 ; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
B: 3D-Whaf' s Happening 6,13.
9 :00-Barney M iller 6: Howe ll F!ve-0 8: Movie " Up in
Arms" 10; Movie "LI!9end of Cougar Canyon" 13;
Age of Uncert ainty 20,33.
9 :3D-Movle " Panic In Echo Park" 3.~.15; Fish 6.
lO : ~StrHts of San Francisco 6; Barnaby Jones 8;
News 20; AI The Top l3
11 :00-News 3 ••• 6.8.10,13,15: MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33.
11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,. , 15; SWAT 6, 13: Ko/ak 8 :
Mary Hartman 10: ABC News 33.
12 :00-Movle "The Mounfain" 10; Janakl 33.
12 : •o-Getllng Married 6,13 ; Movie "Necromancy'" B.
1 : 0()-- Tomorrow 3,-4.
1 : 1G-News 13 .
Movie Chonnel 5 and 9 p .m . - Star is Born !original )
7 and 11 p.m . - Duchess. and Dlrtwater Fox
Cable TV ChanMI 5 6 : 3D-Testlmony Time
7 :00-Paul Gaudino
7: 30-Cable Journal
B : ~Home Digest
9 : 3o-Biue Ridge Quarlet
1.0 :00-700 Club
11 : 3D-Poul Gaudino

•

SWAIN'S

DUGAN'S

'I

.••
'
••
••
•••
.-·

ONLV

$6t .95

I T~:;:gN I

LET
HIMSELF BE SEEN

•
'''
•.

',,,,

··;;:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·: ·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-··:;~:

DICK TRACY

Mobile Homes for Sale For Sale

. NOOceo _~

3.75

Elt.il word Q'ifr u)l! miltimwn 15
wun.l.ll lr 4 l'Yilb pt:r wurd per U.y .
Adli rwuting other t.han t.'Ofuocutive
daya will bt dllrt~ed 111 Olt.! 1 d11y

--

.

IS Wurdal ur Undr1·

c..h
100

!I-The Dajly Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 23, 1m

I GOT A
GOOD NOTION
TO POUR EVER'
LAST JUG IN
TH' '-"'-'-'

THATWUZ TH'
NIGHTMARE!!

�r

1~ The Daily Sentinel,

'

•

MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 23, 197/

Coal field strikes spreading
CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UP! )- Hoping to shore up
dwindling
health
and
retirement funds, 'district
leaders of the United Mine
Workers union planned to try
lo meet with UMWofficials in
Washington today in an
attempt to end a Spreading
protest strike which has idled

Reminder made

thousands of soft coal miners.
An estimated 31,000 miners
w..-e of! the job in West
Virginia, Kentucky, PeMsylvania, and Ohio to protest
cutbacks in the UMW Health
and Retirement Funds.
"We're going to do aU we
can," said Jack Perry, tresi·
dent of District 17 in southern
West Virginia, where 20,000
miners were m strik.e.

Nurse contract
averts strike

of reception
for Pikkoja

UMW President Arnold
Miller has blamed coal
opera!Drs for the cui in
benefits while fund trustees
and coal producers say the
funds have sagged because of
wildcat strikes.
Miners apparently were in
no mood 1o return to their
jobs until they get some
relief.
" It probably would take
some kind of action by the
trustees of the fund at this
point," Perry said. 11Thal
seems to be what il would

take.
They
(miners)
certainly want something
done."
"We want to ascertain just
what our position is, and ID
explore what any avenues of
relief there may be," Perry
said. " We'll use all the
resources we have.''
The cutbacks in funds have
forced miners ID pay 40 per
cent of their doctors' biUs
along with the initial $250 of
• hoSpitalization' costs, up ID a
yearly $500.
Ben Lusk, president of the
West Virginia Surface Mining
and Reclamation
Association, said the fault lies
with Miller ''more than
anybody else."
"He is trying to blame the
coal companies for the strike
and thai is tntally absurd,"
Lusk said. "He's passing the
buck. He h8S11'1 yet controlled
the miners. He can 't keep the
miners working."
E;lch day that miners stay
out, the health . and

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UPI) A
threatened
strike
Twelve years of travelling
Wednesday
by
the
Ohio
Meigs County on the book·
Nurses
Association
against
mobile has made Vilma
Pikkoja a well-known person Defiance Hospit~i was
averted when a new contract
to area residents.
After her retirement this was reached for about 65
month she will reside in registered nurses at the hosGallipolis but will keep in pital.
The new two.year contract,
touch with friends in both
agreed
upon Tuesday night,
counties.
is
retroactive
to June 12,
The Pomeroy-Middleport
when
the
nurses'
previous
Library trustees expect that
two-year
contract
expired :
as many people as possible
Kent
Williams,
assistant
will want to say "goodbye"to
Mrs. Pikkoja at a pubUc director of the ONA's
reception this Sunday. It wlli Economic and General
be a chance to wish her a Welfare Program, said that
happy
and . pleasant under the new agreement aU
nurses will receive
retirement. The recetion wUl aregistered
50
cent
per
hour increase in
be at St. Paul's Lutheran
the
first
year
of the contract
Church on Sunday, june 26,
and
a
similar
increase in the
from 2 to 5 p. m.
second
year.
The starting
Refreshments will be
salary
of
a
registered
nurse
served and there wfil be a
will
increase
from
$4.65
per
cbance to see photographs
hour
tD $5.15 in the first year.
and slides of Mrs. Pikkoja 's
retirement funds lose an
work in Meigs County. "Mr.
Eddy Educator", as the hardworking bookmobile is
known, wiD be on display.
Highlights of Mrs. Pikkoja's

additional $320,000 in
royalties that operators pay ,
according to a spokesman for
the West Virginia Coal
Association.
" It's going

to get worse,u

Lusk predicted.

Columbia Gas
likes prospect
next winter

interesting career in the

United States
presented,

will

be

the century.
Columbia issued the
statement following a reoort
from the Federal Power
Commission that natural gas
shortages may he worse this
coming winter than they were
la~i winter.
"Each natural gas company's supply situation is
different because each
company has different
suppliers," said Columbia in
a statement.
"In Columbia Gas of Ohio's
case, we believe our supply
situation will be as good If not
better than it was last year,"
the utility said.
"Therefore we feel our
situation does not fit the
general pattern as analyzed
by the •Federal Power
Commission, ' '

Columbia

said,

Corrie film ,
· , S 1mda. y
comrng
;t~iddl
rl •
to lr~,
. e/)0
"Cor~ie Behind the
Scenes with the Hiding
Place", a new run length
color relea!le from World
Wide Pictures, wUl be shown
at the Middleport First
Baptist Church at 7:30 p. m.
Sunday. Details of the fUm
have been published locally
prior to showing In other local
churches.

COLUMBUS (llPI) - The
Ohio Ethics Corilmission has
extended for two weeks the
deadline for some I,OOOpubllc
o!filllals and candidates who
fl!lfed lo file financial disclosure statements by the
statutory deadline.
Commission Executive
Director Richard G. Terapak
said letters would he sent
next week to 495 city and no
county elected officialS wbo
did not !Ue by the AprU 15
deadline for officials or the
May 9 deadline for J~~J~C
primary candidates.
He said complaints wiU be
flied against those "·ho &lt;lon'l
submit reports by . the
extended deadline of July 11.

·.
"

_Why do as a man

Meigs 4-H Club News

The
Willow
Creek
Roadrunners met twice
recently. On June 9 they met
atthehomeofRitaEblin with
fiye members and two ad·
visors present, when project
books were handed out,
members worked OQ their
projects, a demonstration
was 'given by Dixie Eblin on
completing a sewing box, and
refreshments served by
Barbara . Grueser and Kim
Eblin.
On June 16 they mill at the
borne of Valerie Jeffers with
seven members and two
advlsors present . A skating
party was discussed and the
riiemDers worked on their
1000 ami clothing projecis.
For recreation, T.V. Tag was
played. ·Refreshments were
served by Kim Eblin and
Debbie Wyatt. The next
meeting was set for June 21 at
the home &lt;l:o Fran Moxley
·with a picnic plaMed with
foodl"'m the prujeci books.
..,.Dfxle Eblin.

demonstration was given by
Davi&lt;l Thornton on the
. proper tools used for showing .
pigs at the fair. Horseshoes
and ball were played.
Refreshments were served
by the Dunldes. - Linda
Smith.

The Melga · County Dairy
Club met Jun~ 14 at the home
of Stephanie Radford with six
members and one advisor
present. Sweepstakes money
was collected and making
money in dairy farming was
'
•discussed. "' demonstration
The Fine Swine Club met on was given by Albert Holman
June? at the home of Mr. and on weighi~g a calf with a tape
Mrs. Dunkle with 11 mem· measure. Stephanie Radford
bers and one advisor present. gave a report on "Pink Eye".
State Fair entry forms, 4-H ·Refreshments were served
Tag Day and scrap iron by Stephanie Radford.- Bob
drives were discussed. A Lee.

TV•••in Review

He. 10¥.1 ~

He Jowr•• money;

poys bills by mail.

olimioaloa coarly
bill-paying trip•.

He ltoa recorda;

Htl hos r.ceipt1;

for

in tho form of

effici~~nl

conceited checks.

·FOR AS LlffiE AS ·

5fr PER MONTH

A Home Bank
For
Meigs County
People

(j)l

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RACINE

OHIO

NEW YORK (UP!) - "Do you watch 'The Partridge
Family1"' "Yeah, every day. I hate it." •·
Now what's a concerned parents...,.,.,.OO to make out of that
exchange?
. .
Some parents have an easy time. Their kids want to watch
bloodshed aDd sex, which everyone knows ts bad for them. The
virtuous, over-protective parent can censor the screen with
easy self....,.urance.
"
In Canada the Ontario Royal Commission on Violence In the
Communlcalions Industries came down hard on imported
American television violence and among other things sugge•ed special tuning and locking devices on sets so parents
could pre-program what their kids watch.
For parents whoae offspring think blood is groovier than
whimsy, declaions are simple. Other parents find themselves
in a gray area, uncomfortable with the qUality of what the kids
watch but unsure whether they should act, react or just leave
the room.
"I Love Lucy" is totally unobjeciionable - except for the
way it pictures men, women, marriage und the Englisb
language,
The kids watch "The Brady Bunch" and what do they think?
Does everyone 11ve like the Bradys, in a spacious house with
plenty of room for six happy children lind a good...atured,livein housekeeper to help M&lt;mmj with the chores?
Or does the pioneer slrnpticlty of "Utile House on the
Prairie" balance things out?
Not: only is the Brady home nothing like the less glamorous
dwellings of most Americans, but bow many kids live in a
family where mother and father never (not alm061 never)
never argue 1
,
"The Odd Cotiple" is being stripped now - that is, llhown
five days a week. What does a 9-year-old girl who adores the
program ma!&lt;e of those two?
_
How can the same chlld watch "The Partridge Family"
(which llhe says she hates) and ~g to stay up beyond her
bedtime to catch the latest epiaode ol "Upstairs, Downstairs?"
And, except for admiring Susan Hampshire's charm, to which
all humans are susceptible, what could a third grader make of
"The Pa!Usera" to keep her glued to the set?
It's not that the children will watCh anythlng that moves on
the screen. Some of the nobler efforts of network programming
for children gel the go-by, but "Gone With The Wind'' received
the same rapt attention as the armual "Wizard of Oz" rerun.
Protecting chlldrEII from .the excesses of television is not as
simple as the morallsta make it sound.
What worries IIOllle parenta is not tl'le effect of individual
shows, because objectionable programs can be forbidden and
taboos can be enforced.
But what is the overall effect on children of watchin!l televl·
sion 1 Wlu!t view do they get of life, what values do they learn,
what roles do they identify with?
There is so II~ poetry on television, but so much tele'lislon.

•

FRIDAY, JUNE 24th • SATURDAY, JUNE 25th__
9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

MEN'S SHORT
SlEEVE SHIRTS

MEN'S DRESS
SLACKS

· This s~fal sale Includes - our

men' s dress shirts. sport shirts
and

Solid colors and patterns.
sizes 29 to 42 waist. Select
your proper length.

knit

shirts.

Excellent

selections. The savings ai'l

rl.d---"'f""l

~.J..--

MEN'S 110.95 Dress Slacks '8.20
Men's 111.95 Dress Slacks •. '8,90
Men's 112.95 Dress Slacks •.19.70
Men's 114.95 Dress Slacks 111.20
115.95 Dress Slacks 111.90
/

lerrlfLc.

Men's S5.95
Shirts
Men's $7.95
Shirts
Men's $9.95
Shirts
Men's $11.95
Shirts
Men's $12.95
Shirts
Men's $14.95
Shirts

Sale $4.4~
Sale $6.00
Sale $7.50
Sale $8.95

.MEN'S AND BOYS DEPARTMENT

Sale

«

Regular-118.99 Twin Size .. :............... 115.00
. Regular 'Z2.49 Full Size................... '18.00
Regular 133.99 Queen Size ..... , .... ,..... 127.00

NAlROBI, KENYA - PRESIDENT ID! Amin has
resumed his officlal duties, ending a week of speculation he
was killed or badly wounded in an assassination attempt by
dissident soldiers, Radio Uganda says. The government radio
Thursday 'denounced reports of an assassination attempt as
"malicious propaganda" spread by the British and warned
them lo stop interfering in Ugandan affairs.
In his first official function since he dropped out of sight
and sparked rumors of a coup attempt, the radio said Amin
111et Finance Minister Moses Ali Thursday. Vice President
Gen. Mustafa Adrlsi said in a separate announcement Amin
·was "very much alive and very fit~~" and was· ~~ resting and
planning for the future development of the country."
·

•3••

GIRLS
DRESSES

- Solids and prints .
- Sleeveless or short
sleeve styles.
-· Sizes S-M·L and extra •
.sizes.

- Sizes 12 mos.· 24 mos .
and 2 to 14.
- Entire stock Included .
•

Reg. 13.50....... Sale ~2.59

Reg. 17.00-'9.00
Sale •5.30 .

Reg. 14.50....... Sale

3J9
Reg. '5.50 ....... Sale 54.19

Reg. 110.00-113.00
Sale '7.49
Reg. 114.00-116.00
Sale '10.49

Reg.

Reg. 117.00-120.00
Sale '12.79

5

59.79 '

Reg. 119.00 .... Sale 514.29

'79.95

WOMEN'S UN·IfORMS
-SELECTED GROUP
- MISSY AND HALF SIZES

UPRIGHT SWEEPER
SALE '5995

Reg.

1

YOU SAYE '20.00

Reg. 113.00 to 115.00 ............... Sale '7.88

6 position cleaning height,' .heavy duty bag ,
edge cleaner, attractive tu-tone color .

Reg. 116.00 to 118.00 ............... Sale '8.88

1 21.9~

GIRLS' TOPS

PANASONIC FM-AM PORTABLE

-SIZES 2-14
-ENTIRE STOCK INCLUDED
REG. •3.50 ..................... SALE '2.89
REG. '4:so..................... SALE •3.69
REG. •S.SO ..................... SALE 14A9
REG.
. '7.00:.............. ,. ... SALE '5.69REG. •11.00... . .............. SALE '8.99

RADIO

- TELESCO~IC ANTE_NNA
-EARPHONE JACK
-CARKYING HANDLE

SPECIAL '11 18

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR

WOMEN'S DRESSES
large group of missy
and half sizes.

ENTIRE STOCK INCLUDED

Reg. SZO.OO to 124.00

REG. 3.75.... SALE •2:59
1

SALE· '14.49
Reg. 126.00 to 130.00
. SALE .1 18.79
Reg. 136.00 to 138.00
. SALE '25.99

REG. '6.00 .... SALE '4.19
REG. '8.00 ... SALE '5.59

Reg. 142.00 to 144.00
SALE •30.29

REG. 110.00 ••• SALE '6.99

Reg. '52.00 to '54.00

REG. '13.00 .. SALE '9.G9

SALE '37.49

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
I
- nL
' .

~

ELBERF

I

.POMEROY
•.

.. .

-

~

. .. . . .

WASIDNGTON - AT LEASf FOUR children have choked By
United
Press
to death on baby rattles, and the Consumer Product Safety International
Commission ma;r. order a ban on some types.
A meeting in Washington
The commiSsion directed its staff to look into the between 13 miners from West
possibility of a ban, especially on rattles shaped like telephone • Virginia and Pennsylvania
receivers. It said there have been at least 14 cases of children and trustees of the United
with rattles lodged in Ufeir throat who narrowly escaped death, Mine Workers Health and
according to the agency's staff report. The deaths apparently Retirement Funds has had
occutred when the infants roiled over onto the rattles, pushing little effect in stopping a
them into their mouths, causing suffocati.on.
strike by thousands of miners
.
in several states.
COLUMBUS - DEMOCRATIC LEGISLATIVE leaders
The Bituminous Coal
have reassessed their position arx! decided to insert non- Operators Associations
controversial spending language in the $13 billion general estimated there were 3ii,OOO
appropriations bill to send illo Gov. James A. Rhodes with miners out in ·five states
emergency status early next week. The more contr~versial Thursday protesting cuts
language, including the state school subsidy formula, will planned next month in health
· remain behind for more careful consideration and 9&lt;klay and retirement benefits.
status, House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said
West Virginia and PennsylThursday.
vania were the states hardest
Any extra money specilied in the S&lt;H:aUed "language" hit by the strike, which also
budget bill, including school funds, would be aUocateli
retroactively when the measure takes 'effect, Riffe said. Thllplan was agreed upon during a meeting among Riffe and
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, [).Akron ; Sen.
Harry Meshel, [).Youngstown, chainnan of the Senate
Finance Committee; and Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, D-Bourne·
ville, chairman of the House F;inance Committee.
.

'9.00 to 11.00 ................ Sale '5.88

•

Driver forced Cash prizes
off hill road
oHered in
in Middleport Rutland on 4th
he driver of a car going up
Middleport Hill, allegedly
forced to leave the road to
avoid a collision with another
vehicle, received a severe,lip
laceration at 2:01p.m. Thursday.
Middleport Police said
Timothy Mark Spires, 22,
Rutland, drove into a ditch
rather than collide with an
unidentified oncoming car
which was left of center.
Medium datnages were
caused to the car and Spires
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad.
The Middleport squad was
called at II :07 p.m. to the
New Lima Road near
RuUand for Charles Beller, a
medical patient, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 5:09 a.m. Friday
the squad went to 581 S.
Fourth Ave. lor Tammy
Tvree who was taken to
t'iealsant Valley Hospital.

'

I

•

l
\.

said. "He's related by blood
to a bout half the county. He
has a lot of relatives in this
area and some of them might
have hidden him in the past."
Hart was serving 40..140
years for rape, two counts

~

~I

backpa cker ,
a
real
backwoodsman type," he

! ,1'

\.

4" ~

BILL DISCUSSED - Sen. Oakley Collins and Mrs.
Maida Mora, Meigs rarm Bureau President, discussed
House Blll536 during a meeting in Columbus Wednesda y.
Mrs. Mora and her husband, Donald, right, of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau with other Ohio Farm Bureau
leaders hosted Ohio's senators toa luncheon to discuss the
bill strongly supoorted by the Ohio Farm BQreau. Tbe bill
bas passed the House. The bill proposes that growers and
processors of fruits and vegetables bargain in good faith
for terms and conditions in growers ' contracts.

or

kidnaping and four counts of
first-&lt;legree burglary at the
time he escaped after he was
(Continued on page 10)

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-~'

the

en tine
FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1977

WASHINGTON (UP!) - led four other justices to file judge federal court in ColumThe Supreme Court ruled their own views disagreeing . bus, which upheld the law's
!Dday a state may funnel with part of it.
numerous provisions, the
funds to church-related
The Ohio legislature passed American Civil Liberties
public schools for textbooks the law in 1975 after Supreme Union called the latest round
and for health and certain Court decisions indicated a "an end run" around the high
other services, but not for similar, earlier statute then court's earlier decisions.
instructional materials and under attack would be struck
Under these decisions, any
field trips.
law assisting parochial
down. Later it was.
The opinion in the Ohio case
In an appeal from the latest schools must have a secular
bY Justice Harry Blackmun decision of a .special three- purpose_, must have · a

Truck damages rural fence
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department investigated a
minor accident Wednesday
evening on CR 49 near
Snowville.'
Thurman R. Haning, 22,
told deputies he was driving a
truck south at about 10:40
p.m. when he lost control
goirlg into a curve· upon
hitting deep bumps on the
roadway. The truck went off

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

hit Ohio, Kentu cky and
Virginia.
Pennsylvania miners voted
Thursday tD return tD the
pits, but roving pickets
seemed determined to keep
alive the walkout-protest.
Pickets stopped miners
employed in at least four
mines from going to work
later in the day.
The 13 miners from West
Virginia and southwestern
Pennsylvania met Thursday
with two trustees of the
United Mine Workers Health
and Retirement funds.
" It
' was
not
a
confrontation," ' a union
spokeswoman said of the
. meeting. "They just hashed it
(the issue of the cutbacks )

out some more."
After the meeting the
miners said they would send
a telegram to the BCOA
demanding a re-allocation of
assets that would avert
health benefit cutbacks
scheduled to begin July 1.
The cutbacks will force
miners to pay 40 per cent of
thei r doctor bills as well as
the
first
$250
of
hospitalization costs, up ID
$500 per year. They now pay
nothing in either case.
UMW President Arnold
Miller and Harry Huge, one
of three funds trustees, said a
reallocation by the industry
from other funds could have
averted the cutbacks.
But BCOA President

fa ceted test.
He also found costitutionai ·
a · tes tin g and scoring

an excessive gove rnment

program whose content and

entanglement with religion.
Blackmun
said
the
textbook loan program

results are not controlled by
the nonpublic school.
Blackmun's opinion gave

11

bears

a

striking

approval

to

money indicates that schools
' may have to he closed . The
analysis determines if
schools must be closed for
financial ,reasons and sets the
closing date.
The board has placed a 10
mill new tax levy before
voters at a special election on
Aug. lti.
The board accepted the
resignation oi Marilyn

Joseph Brennan blamed the
trouble on wildcat strikes
that cut off money normally
contributed by management.
· Wildcat strikes in recent
years-cost UMW Health and
Retirement Funds more than
$110 million in royalties paid
by coal companies on the
basis of coal mined and hpurs
worked .
A BCOA official said there
is little chance management
will change its stand against
reallocation. '
Howard Greene, a UMW
field representative in West
Virginia, said the industry is
balking purposely to eXhaust
stockpiled coal to raise prices
later this year.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through ·
Tuesday, mostly fair
Sunday and a chance of
thundershoWers Monday
and Tuesday. Highs will be
io the low or mid 80s and
lows will be In th e low or
mid 60s.

Weather
Variable cloudiness today

and toni ght, with showers
likely. Lows tonight in the
upper 60s. Chance of showers
Saturday . " Hi ghs to 85 .
Probability of precipitation
70 per cent today, 60 per cent
tonight. 50 per cent Saturday.

Powell, long tlme high school
office secretary and chirk·
custodian of the di strict
activity funds . Applications
will be taken for the position
until noon July 5 and are to he ·
sent to Supt. Bobby Ord. The
board will meet in special
session on July Sto review the
applications.
Employed· Thursday riight
were Janice Deem . as first
and second grade teacher at
Portland, Nancy Cross as
home economics instructor at

th e high ·school , Jess
Browning as majorette ad·
visor on a su ppleme ntal ·
contract, and Ray Proffitt,
who had resigned as a bus
driver, as bus mechanic.

The board approved the
clerk's financial statement

and bi lls and authorized
Clerk Linda Spencer to pay
the July and August teachers'
retirement by July 15 out of
the general fund as required
with the general fund to he
reimbursed when teachers

are paid. The board passed a
resolution staling that it will
not discriminate against the
handicapped in employing
personnel.
Board members present
were Robert Sayre, Jack
Bostick, Roger Adams and
Dallas Hill.

Parade

.

said noting that although in
many ways she is a typical
housewife, she finds time for
the host of other.challenging
and fulfilling activities.
An ' hour spent with her
revealed a young woman
whose secret seems to be in
her enthusiasm for life and
for the Cookeville Com·
munity.
"This is all a little em·
barrassing," Pat said, and
added that she hoped the
story would not draw at·
te~otion to herself as much as
it would be a challenge to
other women who feel they
are too busy lo be involved in
their community.
She is, in herself , a
cha llen ging woman, ·mother ,

wife, teacher, athlete, pilot,
bus

driver,

community

worker. She is a woman who
makes time lor the things she
considers important.
And the activity she is most
proud of and feels most
important is not really visihle
on her list of clubs and
organizations - · h ~

.,..

entnes
needed

a mother and wife, ·she says.
" My family is first ," she
stressed. " We do as much

RACINE - Pete Simpson,
cha innan of the 4th of July
pa rade here today asked
par~

together as time permits,"

persons intending to ·

Her . husband, Dr. Charles
Jorgan, is chief of staff at
Coo keville General Hospital

ticipate in the parade to call
him.

and an ear, nose and throat

are wanted and needed .
The nag raisi ng will he. at
the Raci ne .Junior High at
10:15 a.m. and the parade will
follo w a t 10 :30 . " In·
dependence Day" is th e
theme.
Trophies will be awa rded
fi rst and second place win·
ners in Best of Them.e and
Co mm ercia l. Third place

Simpson said noat entries

specialist. He is often busy
himself, but he shares a good
part of the credit for the
award given her, Pat said.
14
I've . had much en·
couragement from him, in

everything I've ever con·
sidered doing," Pat said. Her
enthusiasm for sports is a
drop in the bucket to his, Pat
says and both are active in
that area.
Patreferees intercollegiate
women's basketball games,
was a varsity athlete in
women's basketball herself
at Ohio State University and

winn ers

wil l

receive

a

She is currently treasurer of
the Coo keville
Tennis

savings bond . Trophies alS\)
will be given to first , second
and third place winners in a
best decorated bikes division.
Barbecue chicken will be
sold at noon at the fire·
station; there will he ga mes
in
the afternoon and a
fireworks display in the

Association.

.evening.

also is an avid tennis player.

Her official Is an official
for high school football
work as
(Continued on page 10)

'

diagnostic

resemblance" to similar sys- · speech,
hearing
and
terns approved by the court in psvcholo~ical services and
the past and pssses the three(Continued on page 10)

:·:·:::·:;:·:::::::::::::::::::::::·:;:::::·:::·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

T enn
. e s s eean s 1•ik
·e
Pat Pric-e Jordan

BY KATIE ' CROW
Meigs County has produced
RUTLAND - Atalent show many fine people and Pat
with cash prizes to the win· Price Jordan Is one of them.
Pat is the daughter of Mr.
ners will he a highlight of the
and
Mrs. Clarence Price of
annual July 4th celebration to
he held under sponsorship of Portland.
Pat and her husband Dr.
the Rutland Fire J:tepart·
ment. Talented groups and Charles Jordan and two
individuals wishing to take children Kelly, age 6 and
part in the competition with Jodi, 3, reside in Cookeville,
prizes of $40, $20 and $10 to be Tenn.
Each year the Cookeville
offered the winners, are
asked to call Vernon Weber at Jaycettes sponsor a contest
742·2143; Jerry Black at 742· seeking the Outstanding
Young Woman of Putnam
2688 or the fire station.
The celebration, a day-long County. This year's wiMer
event, will be held at the park was Pat Price Jorda·n,
area nea r the Rutland selected by a panel of out-of·
gymnasium and will. feature town judges. Entered then in
also an ox roast, games, food· regional competition, she was
stands and a fireworks selected the most outstanding
djsplay.
young woman in the 11 county
region. She is now in state
competition.
TO MEET MONDAY
The Herald Citizen at
The Gallla-Meigs Com· Cookeville had this to say
munily Action Agency Board about Pat:
of Direciors will hold its
Women can limit themmonthly meeting on Monday, selves too much, the recently
June 27, at 8 p.m. in the vote "outstandin g Young
central ffice.
Woman of Putnam County"

primary effect that neither
advances nor · inhibits
religion, and must not foster

Board. asks cash study

the road on the right
- Meeting in
damaging a fence owned by regRACINE
ular session Thursday
Charles E. Trader, Rt. 2, night the Southern Local
Albany.
School District Board of
There were no injuries and
Education voted to request
no arrest.
the State Auditor's office to
The department is also do a financial cash analysis in
investigating the theft of a case
schools of the district
battery taken from a car have to he closed for financial
owned by Jim Riffle , reasons.
Syracuse, tliat was parked at · The ac\ion is required in
the Intersection of SR 7· and any district where the lack of
124.

Coal fields in turmoil

'9.00 ....... Sale '6.79

Reg:Suoo ...... Sale

Money needed
to send ,b oys
to Arrowhead

"Send a boy to camP" Js
the suggestion of Bob
Arms, Scoutmaster of
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop
249.
Arms said help is needed
to send several members of
the troop to . Camp
Arrowhead July 111·17. All ·
donatloos to that fund wlll
be welc ome. Cost for each
JOHANNESBURG, sol.JTH AFRICA - POLICE killed i
boy is $35. Iodlvlduals,
black teenager and a runaway horse trampled two
organlzalioos or bus loesses
children tn ·death in mass demonstrations that ~rupted· Thurs- . who cao help are to contact
day in the blackghe.tto of Soweto and downtnwn Johannesburg. • Pa,t Wood, 992-2281 any
Fourteen black youths were injured and 176 arrested, police · time or Arms at 992·5487
said.
aoy time after Wednellday.
· Police, wbo were being "yiolentiy attacked by a large
mob" near Soweto's Orlando H1gh School, opened fire and hit ::::::·:::·:::·:·:·:-:::·:-:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:::-:·:·:·:-:·:·.
Tharnl Bunge,_a 16-year-old high school student, Police Maj .
Gen. Dawid Kriel said. Bunge died hours later in a blacks-only
hospital. Several thousand students threw stnnes, burned four
commuter buses and looted and plundered stores in the worst
violence this year to rock the dusty, sprawling gheltn of 1.2
million blacks .

.WOMEN'S TOPS

over

Court okays aid to church schools

the House made sure the manufacturers, retailers and

100 per cent dacron polyester. non skid
back, size 24x40 inches in oval and
rectangular shapes.
.
Big selection of solid colors and wh1te.
\

VOL. XXVIII NO. 50

employers had legal recourse against one another and that the
practice of law would not suffer. Both the House and Senate
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·;. :·:::::::::::::::::~:
have adjourned for the weekend.
The product liability measure, sponsored by Rep. Vernon
F . Cook, D-Cuyahoga Falls, outlaws claims against
manufacturers for injuries or damages sustained from
defective products which are more than 10years old.

4.79 SCATTER RUGS

all

•

By United Press Interoadonal
COLUMBUS
LEGISLATION
OFFERING
manufacturers, retailers and employers limited proteciion
against lawsuits arising from defective products has cleared
the Ohio House and is on Its way to the Senate.
Before approving the measure Thursday 85-7, at!Drneys in

5

Quilted style. contempo design, multi color
patterns. Limited quantity for this Sj)ecial
sale .

.

relatives

county.''
An investigator who asked
not to he identified said
authorities beUeved Hart had
been hiding in the region
since his 1973 escape.
''He is an accomplished

•

e

i!VVews. • .zn Brzefsi\l

Special Purchase and Sale

BEDSPREADS

terrain, using the headlights from their tent. Two of the
of their cars ID illuminate the girls had been beaten to death
perimeter .
and the third strangled .
But officers feared a man Authorities said all three had
seen fleeing from a cave been sexually assaulted.
Thursday might have
A few hours after the
escaped through a gap.
charges were filed , searchers
Gene Leroy Hart, 33, a flushed a man out of a cave in
convicted
rapist
and Lhe rugged area and a
kidnaper who escapeq_ from manhunt was organized .
jail four years ago, was DOgs were brought in and
charg_ed Thursday with the handlers said they found the
murder of Lori Lee Farmer, scent at least twice, but lost it
8, Doris Denise Milner, 10, again.
both of Tulsa, and Michelle
Authorities were unable to
Guse, 9, of Broken Arrow.
identify the man who fled the
The area beipg searched is cave but said Ulere was a
about a mile from where the strong possibility it was Hart,
girls' bodies were found at who was described by police
dawn June 13 inside zipped as Han Indian and an expert
sleeping bags about 150 yards ba c kwoodsman with

Jr:::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::;;::;:::::::;~:;;;:::::;=~=:=~=~=~=~::::::=~=~=:=~=:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=========:=:=:=====::::::::::=======l~

Send two wrappers any men's Hanes briefs.
T·shirts, A shirts or athletic shorts to Hanes
and they will send you a check for $2 .00.
Save $1.50 on two packages pf boys Hanes
underwear. ·
Offer
June 30.

Special Salel

REGULAR

,,

1.25

MEN'S HANES UNDERWEAR

Special Sale Prices On
,.. Entire stock ·of boys short sleeve shirts and
knit shirts.
•Men's and boys' lightweight jackets.
&gt;1- Men's sport coats and suits
*'All of our boys blue jeans and fashion jeans.
lf- Men's broadcloth pajamas, regular length
and shorties.

VANDA!JZED- One of several signs that have been
placed through county by REACf has been painted
over with black paint. The signs were erected to assist
molorists in trouble by advising them to call REACT over
CB chaMels 9, 11 or 19. This sign located on SR 143 will be
moved and another one painted and placed in a different ·
location.

· Sale $9.75

.SAVE '2.00
When You BUJ 2 Packages

Big Savings This Weekend

SALE!

By GEORGE BOOSEY
LOCUST GROVE, Okla.
(UP!) - Police and an
unarmed posse using 40
lrained tracking dogs today
swarmed the brushy hill
country
of Northeasl
Oklahoma in an attempt tD
corner an escaped convict
charged in the sex slayings ol
three girl scouts.
"This has changed from a
search for evidence to the
search for a kiUer," said
Highway Patrol Capt. Don
Mentzer.
During the night an
unanned posse of more than
400 volunteers formed a
human cordoo around fivesquare-miles or the rough

SALE PRICESI

SALE I

The Chester Farm Boys
met June 7 111 the home of
· Charles Frecker with three
members and one advisor
present. Election of officers
was held and selection of
projeci books wa&amp; discussed.
For recreation, the members
~:burned ice cream and
refreshmentsl)Vere served by
Mr. and Mrs. Frecker. -Ed
Holter.

·WRITE A CHECK?

Because: -

TWO DAY SALE

COLUMBUS (UP! )
Columbia Gas of Ohio said
today it believes its gas
supply "wlli be as good if not
better than It was last year"
'during the severest winter of

Posse hunting suspect
in Girl Scout killings

•

9:30 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

Deadline moved
off two weeks

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY .

PAT PRICE JORDAN

•

Simpson may be 'reached at
949·2118 after 5 p.m. or write
to him at Racine.
~

.

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