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..

.-

's -The Daily Sentinel: Midrlleport-Pw.eroy, 0., MQilday, July 11 , 1977 '

Budget reduced
Gallia County 's Local
Board of Eduoation Saturday
night approved its 1977-78
fiscal
budget
totaiing
$5,708,099.83, a decrease of
$61~,13U4 from the 1977
budget. The major difference
was reflected in the disti'ict's
General Fund where the 1976TI budget total was $5,698,427
and the 1977-78 budget
$S ,255,069.83.
.
The budget was developed
by Supt. of Schoot.. Thomas
Hairston , Assistant Supt.
David Campbell; clerk, Mrs.
Naomi Beman and members
of the board of education.
It reflects increases in
JJOme areas of the school
operations and decreases in
others. The budget, based
upon \be need of \be district,
was projected because the
board does not know \be
exact amount of money to
CQme from taxes assessed for

the new budget year.
The system operates on 16.5
mills. Since July I, the
district no longer receives
state foundation due to its low .
tax rate. ,
The budget now goes before
the County Budget Com· ·
mission . composed · of
Prosecutmg Attorney Joseph
L. Cain, Auditor Dorothy
~dee~ Treastirer Frank
M1Us; Jr.
According to Board Clerk,
Mrs. Naomi Beman, 19'18
budget receipts will include
real estate taxes totaling
$4,604,028; personal property
taxes, $60,000; miscellaneous
student
funds , $7,000;
miscellaneous otber funds,
$50,000; Title Funds, $8,500;
interest, $25,000 and sale of
notes, $300,000.
The Bond Fund totals
$33,790 while . Lunchroom
receipts were placed at

:-----A-re-a -De--t-h-----a S
I
1

.

EMILY ROPETER
Emily Elizabeth Ropeter
died Saturday at Mercy
Hospital In Portsmouth at

9:20p. m,

Born Sept. 25, 1884, she .. .JS

Kathryn Diefz, Belpre ; Mrs .
Warrl!n !Lillian) Pickens and
Mrs. Ly le (Ruth Anne )
Ba.lderson. both of Reed ·

svllle i one son, Dr . Bill R.

Williams and daughter -in -

one of live children born to law, Wilma, of Athens. Ga.;
!he late John and Mary Huron two grandchildren, Bill Dle!z
Tope. She married George
Rope!er on March 16, 1906.
and resld~ in Gallipolis in
later years. Three ch ildren
were born to tt,is union , Paul,
of Piketon ; Mrs. Herbert
(Lois) Hard, of Bellaire, Fla.,

and Mrs. Charles (Marie)
Bernier of Buffalo, N. Y. She
was a member of the Thur·
man Melhodis! Church and

of

Columbus

and

Kay

Balderson, Reedsville, and

several nieces and nephews.

He was

prec~ed

in

~eath

by a daughter, CarOlyn, and
several brothers and sisters .
Funeral services will be
Tuesday at 1 p.m . a! !he

White Funeral Home In
Coolv ille. The Rev. Elden
Blake will officiate. Burial

secretary of the Cadmus
Grange.
v
She has four grandchildren
and
several
greatgrandchildren. The funeral

will
be
in
Reed:;ville
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home today
from 2 to 4and 1 to9 p.m.

will be al 2 p.m. Tuesday at
the Miller Heme for Funerals
with !he Rev. James Frazier

BENJAMIN F. BARNHART
STEWART - ·Benjamin
Franklin Barnhart, 90, of
Stewart died Sundar at St.
Joseph Hosplla I in Parkers·
burg following a brlellllness .

officiating. Burial will be In

Mound Hill ceme!ery. Calling

hours are 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p·. m .

Monday.

Mr . Barnhart was born

'
ABNER
J. PLEASANTS JR.
Abner · Jerden Pleasants'
Jr .. 73. of 618 Fifth Ave ..
Gallipolis. who died al3 p.m .
Sunday at the Holzer Medical
Center, was the son,of the late
Abner Jerdon Pleasants Sr.
and
Henrietta
Hart
Pleasants . He had been in

failing ~eallh !he lasl six
years.
Born Sept. 17, 1903, a!
Fredericks 'Hall. Virginia. he
Is survived by his wife, Lena .
Evans .Pie.asan·ts; to whom he
wa..s married April 13, 1930 in
ToleciOi one brother and one
sister, A. H, Pleasants ,
FredericksbUrg, .Va ., and

Mrs. James. (Judith) Buck,

Mineral, Va ., and · four
nephews . Three brothers

preceded him in death.

·

Mr- Pleasants was a retired

electrician. He was with the
Roach and Pleasants Electric
Contractors in Gallipolis. He
was a member of Elk Creek

Church. Fredericks Hall.

Funeral serVices will be at
1 p.m. Wednesday at· the
Willis Funeral Home with

Rev. John Ut!erback of .
ficiating. Burial wlli fallow at
Mound

1

Hill

cemetery.

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

. EMORY N. JOHNSON
WILKESVILLE - Emory
N. Johnsen. 82. Route 1
• Dexter. died Sunday morning

~n

Meigs Caun!y, the son of !he
late Loyal . and Jennie
Cramlet Barnhart. He was

also preceded In dea!h by his

wife, Leota Belle Johnson
Barnhart, In 1946 and nine
brothers and two sisters.
He was a member of lhe

Holiness Church and had
been a resid~nt of the Stewart
area for the last 30 year:s .
He is survived by five sons,
Earl ahd Paul, Stewart;
Amos, Guysville ; James,
Ravennai· and Benny Jr .. of

Athens; six daughfers, Mrs.
Marie Christy, Guysvill¢;
Mrs .

Jessie

Russell ,

Willoughby; Mrs. E!hel Cole,
A!hens; Mrs. Mayme UePew ,

Groveport;

Mrs.

Pauline

Chambers, Sl.. Petersburg,
Fla., and Mrs. Belly Lou
Graham of Columbus; !wo
sisters, Mrs. Meadie Linton
of Perrysburg and Mrs.
Nettle Kallies of Brice ; 29
grandchildren and 35 great.
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be

Wednesday a! 2 p.m. at !he
White

Funeral

Home

in

Coolville wiih Rev. David
Lyons. Burial will be in
Car!hage Cemetery. Friends

may call at the funeral home
after 2 p.m . Tu~sday .

Threat

(Continued 'rom page 1)
have said \bey would not
permit tl&gt;e plane to land.
at the Arcadia Nursing Home
Cigarettes and drinks were
In Coolville following a long delivered to .\be plane twice
Illness. He was born Feb. 9,
1895, in Chester, a son of the today and accepted by one of
late Benjamin C. and the hijackers.
Ellzabelh Whealon JaMson.
The women and children
Besides his paren!s he · was were taken by airport buses
preceded In death by !we
Wives, Bettie and Anna and a to a bomb shelter at the
airport which was being used
brother and sister. ·
"'~
Mr. Johnsen, a veteron of aa headquarters by the
World War I. served in !he
Army . A self.emplayed government ministers.
Po ·lice
pushed
livestock
trucker ,
he
photographers
away
from \be
belonged to American Le9ion
Post 416 at Wilkesville and buses, but brief glimpses of
the
Disabled American the passengers indicated they
Veterans.
Survi vi ng are iJ daughter , were well.
Addie Eliz&lt;!belh, of Albany,
Ohio; a brother, Charles F ..
of Warren: a sister, Wilma E .
Johnson, Wilkesville ; several

half.brothers and a half.
sister; two nieces:. three
nephews and several cousins .

Funeral services will be a! 1
p. m. Wednesday at tne
Chester United MelhodiS!
· Church with the Rev . Rober!
Hayden officiating. Burial
will be in the Kennedy
Cemetery . Frlends may carl

at !he Rulland Ghapel of the

Walker Funeral Home after 2
p.r"rl . Tuesaday and until J1
a.m . Wednesday whe:n the

body will. ·be !akeh !a. !he
church . The family will

receive friends· from 2 to 4

and 7 !o 9 p.m. on Tueoday.
ROBEY E. WILLIAMS
REI;:DSVILLJ: - Robey

E . Williams, 86, Reedsville

died Soturday a! Camd~
Clark Menior•al Hospital in
Parkeroburg following an
extended Illness.
Mr. Williams was born
here, the son of !he tate
Lemmon and Ellen Chevalier
Williams. He was a member
of the Modern Woodmen of
America
and
NaiiMal
Association of Rellred
Fltderal Employees. He loved
to fish and hunt. He was anemployee of
U. S. COrps
.of E119l!'"rs for 30 years
before ret'lrament, then was a
· true~ farmer.
He Is su..Vlved by his wife,
Gl. . . Pldterl~ Williams ;
lhre\ dauQhlef'l. Mrs.

tne

\

$419,244l.
Brokon down \be General
.
ning". The kidneys · do not a loog time to pin thilJ down."
Fund total Is $5,255,069.83. · MADISON, WIS. (UPI) these findings are
and the waste
function
Bond $53,790 and Lunch,' Scienl,ists · are investigating
he
said,
"lt woUid"bec«ne a
products
are
retained
in
the
$419,244) for a grand total of tile possibiljty that prolonged
cmtpletely
preventable form
$5,708,099.83.
exposure to petroleum body.
of
kidney
disease."
Drs . Gregory Beirne,
Here is \be 1978 budget with products such as paint
Zimmerman has received a
Middleton
Memorial
the 1977 budget beside it:
thinner to
anda fuel
be
. linked
ki....oils
-. may
-"--uOft
$36,000
lbree-year grant from
Veterans Hospital, and
Administration (5142,847.55
~~, w.M:~ Stephen Zimmerman, the National Institutes of
($185,916.84) .
known as g!omerulmephritis.
Health to produce \be disease
$2,364,032.93
The possible llhk showed up U!Uversity Hospitals, found
Instruction,
in
rats lbrough exposure to
\bat
211
patients
wbo
hlld
($2·,308,348.74. ).
in a study by researchers at
sus~ted chemicals.
eilber
proven
or
s
u
s
p
e
c
t
e
Transportation, $585, 047.93 the University of Wiscoosin·
($694,557.68) .
Madison Center fer Health d glomerulonephritis had
'.'.We want to give the
Playgrounds, $1.8,952 Scthaientces alwhichti discots'
afflivectreded been ' exposed" to P.Otroleum
products
five
hours
per
week
animals
low doses over a long
($29,952).
sever pa en
for
five
years.
Cases
often
· period of time to see if
Instruction,
$2,1)55,218.93 wilb1 theeddiseaset htad haithd
included
skin
eootact.
g!omerulonephritil results,"
1$2,631,030.74).
pro ong
con ac
w
·
"We
originaUy
discovered
Zimmerman said. ~'Now
Coordinate
Activities, products
made
from
lhillin
afewpatients,"
Beirne
there is no cause-andeffect
$27,000 ($43,000).
W\rolewn.
"Then
we
interviewed
said.
data
olber than by inference
Libraries,
n 7, 208 . 14 'Glomerulonephritis is aU our patients wilb endand
.suspicion.
We want to
($90,1108.14).
·
char a c .t e r i z.e d
by
stage
kidney
disease.
We
prove
theae
things
cause endOperation of School Plant, inf~tion and e~en~l
asked
them
what
kinds
ol.
stage
kidney
4lsease
and
$576,001.20 ($642,095. 86 ).
, destruction , of the kid!'ey s
chemicals
they
worked
wilb.
~?omerulonephrltis
.''
Other Auxiliary, $586,893.55 filtenng uzuts. It Is be~eved
Bdme· said mere work
($560,006) .
that as many as me lttird to
must be done to find the exact
Beirne said the link
Maintenance, $189,230.53 ~~ thirdsk'dnof aU :!entshWith
type
and between the· petroleum
($298 434 60)
uuOlliC I ey
ase ave substances,
duration of contact, and how products ~nd the kidn~y
lbe&amp;e products affect the disease m humans IS
($f.;8ii)l. Outlay, $71,670
.
preliminary at lhill time beDebt Service, $315,000 resu!tmwhat':"rt!fe'!ed tom organ. "It's probably going to take cause his eiperiment was
($215 ,000).
lay terms as 'uremic po!SO·
done with a "relatively smaU
Contingent, $100,000
group.''
($100,000).
Total General Fund only,
., 255 069 83 (•• 698 • ., 86)
He said he knows of no
.,.,, ' ·
""' ·~·· ·
other scientists in this nation
who are researching the
Subject, but similar results
were obtained in a study .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
conducted
by Prof. G.
Saturday Admissions LaG~ in Creteil, France
Iris Morris, New Haven;
and published in Lancet, a
Kimberly Harbrecht, New
British medical journal.
Haven; . David
Leach,
Pomeroy; Arnold Priddy,
Rutland.
All products named by the
Saturday Discharges patients in the Madi!&lt;m study
Roy Nelson, Bernice Fry,
ranging from paint
Phillip LaComb, Robert
thinners,
degreasing
Chaney, Ernestine Fischer,
aolv~ts, airplane fuels, and
Robert Baker.
cleamog solvents - are
Sunday Admissions widely used in industry. Some
Linda Cunningham, Letart,
also are available to
W.Va.; Henry Beaver, Long
conswners.
Bottom.
All are now . cmsidered
Sunday Discharges dangerous; Beirne said, but
Audrey Arnold, Florence
better safeguards for their
Hellman, Archie Marl&lt;in.
use could be developed if a
causal relationship is proved.
"There is little danger for
the average hobbyist since
.~ of the cases we found
were the result of prolonged
contact. However
\be
possibility ol. acute re'actions
to short exposW'es requires
that people be careful io
avOid skin contact when using
plilnf lhlimer and cleaning
fluids ,. and . to provide
adequate ventilation if

u

made,

Detoured rigs may damage Middleport streets

11le evening ltarnre Mercury and Saturn.

The morning stars are
Vema, Mars and Jupiter.

Paint thinner , fuel oils
.
may he ·one cause of

.

ELBERFELD$
Hanes
A·Shirt &amp; Boxer
'

I~

. Closing the Silver Bricjge in the Point PleaJIIIIlt area is
creating problema for.Middleport according two members
Marvm Kelly and
King who voiced
COOIUp ta.at a Monday nigbt session ol. council. .
· Ke Y and
reporting to the Monday niglll session of
cooncll, said cloemg the bridge il bringing heavy·truck traffic
Mlddl-+ . . lati' of
.
.
•u.._,
...,... • rn v1o on street weight regulations.
that the heavy
traffic will damage
eport streets and no help is given by tbe state in
maintaining town streets.
.
•
Mayor Fred
potnted.
that once the large
trucks start into Muldleport, It is diffiCUlt to get \hem turned
:?und and sent aroWld.on the Rt. 7 bypass. Offending truclf.
IVers are subject to fmes up to
. Mayor Hoffman said he had disCussed the problem w1\b
Meigs
Wesley Buehl who said that he will
place the we.lgbt iiwit StW!S on.t!le_twq !;JlUnty ro;Kis leading
,
·
..

~ ~·

Allen~

th-·""
~ddlcontended

true;~&lt;

~.

®

~offman

~t

~lJIO·

CouptrEn~r.

A-SHIRT
3 tor '4.59 .

.

into Middleport. It was suggested a)so that Mayor Hoffman
CO!!fer "'!ith Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews to ask that a
we1ght limit s1gn governing Middleport truck traffic'be placed
at the end of the Pomeroy-Mason bridge so that drivers will be
adequately warned \bat they are in violation by traveling
through Middleport

.

It was suggested that \be ordinance fining offen4ers be
enforced. Mayor Hoffman repOrted that police are also
working 00 the problem.
.
At last night's meeting council also accepted the bid of the
Shelly Co. for resurfacing materials for \be town streets. The
company'• bid, Ute low one was lor asphalt at $19 80 a ton and
tack at $1 a ton. There wer'e lhree bidding fll'lllS but one was
not
because 11 d1d nor gtve a ton cost breakdown.
The vtllage IS expecting to purchase about 850 tons of
resurfacing material, but Ute amount may be reduced if
· mortey is nQt available. ·· .
.. · •
·~ ·

c~Sidered

f~om'

~easet!'"

repai~ed

~wunnung

com:.~
Hoffma~

ordu~ance

pr1~es

~offma~
~unctlman

sh~wi~g

~

Horky~

ln~unctlma~J!orkyreporte~

~"'"""ded

Eld~

meeting.w~e

'

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, July 12_. I977

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 61

Ohio to the front

hat,!':.:~~~~!iually

Kyger

GRIPPER
..
BOXER
3 for '5.99

. I

H
. ospital News

workiny· indoors."

~nder emer~rer.~les,

The re-pair project will cos\ approximately $17 000 derived
·
·
from the town's 1\2 mill street levy which wiU' roduce an . . Council passed,
an
to
estimated $6 000 revenue sharing funds of aboutp$5 000 and
wage pa1d to lhe swunnung wtructor from $2.50
the balance
the general fund. Streets to be
'were
. an. ur retroachve to June I . Mayor Hoffma.n said that
announced earlier. .
course
were Increased to prov1de for the
. Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate """"'ed the
. .
f
mcrea:"' wh1ch was bemg made at the request of \be recreation
r&lt;"""•
recetvrng o a OOIIlllliSSlon
check for $913 in anti recession assistance funds brio · the
·
·
·
·
total in such funds received this year to $1 197
to
M=
appomted an annexation corrumttee
onlyatotalol.$6?2receivedforlbeentireye,.;ofl976
compo
o
Carl
.Dewey Horton. and
Council approved \be report of Mayor
for June Marvtn Kelly which wtll study tt&gt;e posalbllities of anne_xation of
showing receipts of $2,580 in fines and fees and $114 in properttes adjacent to the VIllage and whtch will make
merchant police collections for a total of $2 694
recommendations Wlthtn the next several months .
C&lt;&gt;uncit approved the budget for 1978
estimated
that
Walburn will begin
rece1ptsand balances at $561,911.14 and estimated expenses at
g up VI ge hall, which was sandblasted several
$373,890. Grate pointed out that the recei ts and balances
onths ago, about Aug .. I.
figure includes some 1150,000 in the saniJ..y sewer escrow
d Pr
Cesentfor the
Mayor Hoffman , Clerk Grate
fund which cannot be
.
.
an
ounc1lmen Kelly, Wilham Walters, King, Horky and
...,....
·
Horton.

•

'•

:Iii,.,

-f

\
'

)

Piketon plant is
•
•
•
zrst zn natzon

The gaseous centrifuge en- completed before Carter can
reverse \be first blow - the
WASHINGTON (UP!) cancellation of a nuclear richment process was deve- carry out his pledge to
President Carter has decided breeder reactor program at loped at Oak Ridge. Carter provide fuel lor new atomic
pledged during his election plants the world over.
to buil&lt;Nhe nation's only ad- Oak Ridge, Tenn.
The
government 1 s
vanced
atomic
fuel
Before the site selection campaign, however, to put at
enrichment plant in Ohio, announcement by the Energy least part of any new enrich- enrichment order books have
dealing a new blow to t~. . Research and Development ment plant at Portsmoulb. been closed since 1974 lor
Oak Ridge , Portsmouth lack of adequate enrichment
Tennessee nuclear complex A 'dmlnistratlon, both Oak
ERDA
said
. that developed the process Ridge and the Portsmoulb and a third complex at capacity.
construction
of
the
new
plant
Paducah,
Ky.,
ali
are
sites
of
the plant wilL use.
federal nuclear complex at
Carter's decision to put the Piketon had been considered .· enrichment plants· using the and upgrading of the three
$4.5
billion
gaseous in the running lor gaseous gaseous diffusion process older ones will more than
the
nation ' s
developed during World War double
Ute Sentinel that pay checks distributed two weeks ago. . centrif!Jlle . enrichment plant centrifuge plants.
NO PAY, NO WORK- Carpenters at tbe building site
capacity.
' ERDA said work on the .11 . The new centrifuge
were returned marked insufficient funds. Another union . at Ptketon, Ohio, was
of Pomero')' Cliffs Ap'ariments on Union Ave. went on
Baker · disagreed with the
announced Monday as Sen. , new Ohio plant is · schfduied technique requires only about
strike Monday morning as the result of alleged failure on
member claimed that strikers would continue to picket
pre\licting building
decision,
4 per cent as much energy as
. until they received their paychecks. With George are
Howard Baker, R'l'enn ., to start late next year.
the part of Paul Eaton, sub-contractqr for Prim~ Builders,
Ute
plant
in
Ohio would result
worked in the Senate to
Although both the breeder the diffusion process. '
io pay employees last Friday. Gary George; center,
Larry Vance, left, and Marc Lawhon, right.
11
in
Significant
excessive
An ERDA spokesman said
'!lid Ute new enrichment plant
spokesman for \be Carpenters Union Local 650, also told
over
the
would make reactor fuel Portsmoulb was picked as costs"
administration's
estimates
of
using new techniques, they the sole centrifuge site
$4.2
billion
to
$4.5
billion.
despite a slightly higher
are vastly different.
The breeder is itself a · projected pricetag because
reactor, which prpduces much of the groundwork,
plutonium fuel
as a including preparation of an
i!Jlpact
byproduct, while enrichment environmental
increases
·
the
.
statement,
had
been
simply
. By United Presslaternatlonal
completed
and
it
could
go
into
concent.-atlon
of
the
uranium
TOKYO - JAPAN'S RVLING UB(;:RAL Democratic
operation
months
earlier
isotope U-235 from th·e
party lost its majority in \be upper house of parliament today
for the first time in 22 years but picked up support from three
conservation .needs, soil naturally occurring seven- than a Tennessee plant.
SCS
locally
says
about
12
The spokesman said the
independents to retain control of the legislative body.
Meigs Coun\y is part of the
erosion, prime farmland, tenths ol.,r cent to the 2-4
In a ·sttow of strength \bat confounded computers and National Erosion Inventory representative areas in the potential cropland, flood· per cen ' eeded ,to fuel a new centrifuge plant must be
experts, \be conservative, business-oriented LOP won 63 of the currently being Wldertaken county will be sampled, on prone areas, and wetlands in reactor
126 seats at stake In elections Sunday for the 252-Beat House of by the U. S. Department of site. Each area Includes a 180 Ohio.
POINT PLEASANT, W.
Councllors. The results, a victory for Prime Minister Takeo Agriculture's · Soil Con- acre tract of land.
. Fieldwork in the county
The
study
will
provide
Va-:'
(UPI) - Federal and
Fukuda, were interpreted as a sign Japan's conservative" servallon Service.
will begin on July 18 and wlll .
•
reliable
up-to-date
instate
officials were expected
voters do not want any immediate drastic political changes.
Boyd Ruth, District Con·
he completed by Aug·ust 31
'
servationist, who liea\15 ~P formation~ on land use,
to meet with contractors
says Ruth. Some local land·
today to discuss repair of a
PALERMO, SICILY - ARCHEOLOGISTS HAVE conservation . programs for
owners may be contacted to
crack in a welded section of
discovered on Mount Pellegrino \be remains of a Carthaginian
the Memorial Bridge over the
ooilding that probably dates from the 3rd century B.C.
·
Ohio River here.
. Archeologist Vittorio Giustollsi said Monday be found the
State highway officials said
remains of the building on \be mountain ·near the grotto
· common types of soil erosion
·
Monday
the crack could be
dedicated to Palenno's patron saint, Saint Rosalia. Mount
affecting !annland will be
repaired,
but they were
.The Pomeroy National~ asked · to send their
Pellegrino overlooks Palermo. Ancient money and other
studied. The erosion inunable
to
say
how long the
artifacts were discovered in \be same area in 1958.
ventory includes all non· Sq~ad, serving its area since donations to P. 0. Box 247, bridge will remain closed.
Roole defeated the Carlbaglnians and expelled them from
federal land in \be 50 states, July I, 1951, today kicked off PomeroY, Ohio. · Squad Speculation centered on two
·
"The
best
Region
8
meeting
in
the
development
of
the
a public $13,500 fund drive to members are stressing that
Sicily in the first Punic war between 264and 241 B.C.
ever held," were among the Meigs County Museum . Puerto Rico and the Virgin purchase a new emergency no contribution is too small. to four weeks.
Islands.
The span was closed to all
·"The vehicle will serve the
COLUMBUS FRESHMAN
MICHAEL comments following · the Margaret , Parker gave a
A swnmary of this data for vehicle replacing \be present
Saturday
Region
8
meeting
of
summary
of
the
research
traffic
last Wednesday after a
public and we want everyone
Schwarzwalder, 0-Columbus, introduced legislation Monday
Ohio will be available in May six-year-old ambulance.
the
Ohio
Association
of
which
had
gone
into
\be
4-inch
crack,
about I 'k inches
The new vehiCle will be · a to feel that the new unit
· to require that Ohio corporations give at least two years
·or
1978 says Ruth.
at
the
bicentennial
project.
Michael
Historical
Societies
was
discovered
during
deep,
modern van type unit which belongs to them," a spokesadvance notice if \bey plan to close·or move.
the
Meigs
Gerlach
provided
interesting
Meigs
Inn
and
a routine inspection.
will con!onn to new state man of the unit said.
Schwarzwalder said \be legislation was needed to protect
highlights in writing the
"We have determined that
\be workers and cooununities left be bind when companies shut Co~nty Museum.
specifications. Residents,
the
weld crack can be
The
The
Meigs
f;:oWliY
Pioneer
Meigs
County
History
o
Pomeroy
squad
is
down er move a substantial amount · of \heir production
organizations and 'businesses
repaired
ilnd
Historical
Society
was
Curriculum.
Rev.
William
.
and we hllve under
composed
·
of
27
members,
elsewhere. The bill also would require that workers who lose
are being asked to contribute
host
for
the
group.
Harford
Middleswarth
gave
the
indiscussion
several alterhave
severa
l
of
whom
their jobs because &lt;if reduced industrial operation receive
to t.he fund drive for the ·
Renick,
area
chainnan
from
vocation
for
\be
luncheon.
native
ways
of
doing it," said
co
mpleted
state
vehicle and names ·of those
severance pay equal to one week's wages for every year
Deputy
Highways
Com·
requirements
as
emergency
Following lunch t~e group
11
Circleville, presided at the
w~ked.
·
giving will be listMI in The
. meeting.
· .
. visited the F·armers' Bank
missioner
Dean_
Blake.
Dally Sentinel. The drive is medical service technicians.
Reports were given from where Theodore Reed, Jr.,
CINCINNATI- SEVERE ARTHRITIS in the hands will
similar to one held by Mid- Present officers of the unit "We're hoping wecan correci
\be
Belpre
Historical
Society,
president,
gave
the
story
of
end the surgical career of \be man who performed tbe world's
dleport a couple of years ago are Don Mayer, chief; Joe it in a short time."
The Memorial Bridge
the
Sciota_
County
Historical
the
Mutchler
mural
and
when the public contributed Struble, captain; Chuck
first beart transplant. Dr. Chrlstiaan Barnard said Monday the
the Silver Bridge,
replaced
Society,
Hocking
County
outlined
the
renovation
Bartels,
·
lieutenant,
and
arlbritia will ferce him to give up practicing surgery ~llbin tbe
funds for a new vehicle for
which
collapsed
in 1967, ·'
Historical
Society,
Pickaway
proposal
for
downtown
Charles
Legar,
secretary
nen two years.
.
.
the squad of that town. ,
killing
County
Historical
Society,
Pomeroy.
Despite
inflation,
mem·
46
persons.
·
"I have serious problems in my bands now with arlbritis "
Those wishing to contribute treasurer·:
and
South
Central
Ohio
The
group
then
spe111'.
\be
'bership
tickets
for
the
1977
Barnard admitted. "There are days when I find it lrnposalbie
to do ~ati(llls, or to finish them after I've started." But \be Preservation Society. Mrs. rest of the afternoon visiting · Meigs County Fair will
Soulb African heart surgeon Is not embittered about phasing Elizabeth Hilferty, director, · the Meigs County Museum remain at· $4 each, Wallace
lair
board
out his a~ve practice of SW'gery. "IIbink that I am giving up gave the re,POrt for the local and . observing the Meigs Bradford ,
society.
.
·
County
Locator,
the
History
president,
announces.
SW"gery m \be next year or two for several reasons besides the
Registering the gt~ests Wall, \be Huston doll exhibit,
A membership ticket enartltritil."
.
.
'
were
·
M
rs.
Lucille
Leifheit
the
display
on
Meigs
County
titles
the purchaser to free
\
"I have reached \be top. By that I mean I can't do any
gate
admission
and
free
and
Mrs.
Frances
Goeglein
in
women,
the
mini-theatre
the
more or any better \ban what I'm doing now," he said. "!
believe it is wrong to hold onto \be reins wholn you have "Old time Costumes." Mrs. library and other historical parking for the entire live .
.
day fair. Those purchasing
Daisy Blakeslee provided \be displays.
youngsters who can take over!or you," he added.
·
Dower arrangemimts fpr the . Meigs CountY' was h®ored membership tickets are also
program and we needed it contact tl'ieir ccrunty welfaretables and was in charge of by having Charles Blakeslee entitled to vote or file for
COLUMBUS-Gov. James several months ago. But we offices.
·
\be lunch~n arrangements. namedtothe\bree·yearterm election to the fair board.
A.
Rhodes
announced only received $13.3 million.'
The program is ainied at
Others serving as hosts were as chainnan of Region 8 of
Tickets lor this .year's fair, Mond\IY applications are We will do the best we can helping elderly and low·
.EXTENDED.QUTWoK
June Ashley,' Gerald Powell the Ohio Association of · Aug. 16-20, may be purchased being taken now through Aug. with it and share it as far as it income families which have
Tl!.,uUday · through· and Leland Parker.
Historical Societies and from any lair board members 12 for assistanc.e to lolA'· will go to help the ejderly and been unabl~ to keep up with
Saturday, ·fair Tbunclay
Charles
Blakeslee,
MuseumS.
or at Spencer's Market, income families in the low-income groups which high utility bills and
Mostly · cloudy and warrri aad Saturday aad a cliaoce
president
of
the
local
society,
The
local
society
extends
Middleport; New V:ork payment of fuel bills incurred were hit so hard by the currently owe back payments
tonight, thunderstorms of tlluadento111111 Friday.
guests
to
Meigs
its
thanks
to
all
who
helped
in
Clothing
House, Pomeroy; during last winter's severe energy crisis last winter." for any part of the period be· ·
welcomed
the
likely. Lows .ro-75. Sunny, Hlghl wW be In tile 80s and
County. Gerry an~ Liz making this meeting such a Green Lantern, Pomeroy; cold.'
oontlnued hot and 'humid Iowa wBI be In the lOs.
County welfare depart· tween last October and the
Hli!erty,
.
A
Couple
of
success.
sports
department
of
Mid·
Ohio
bas
been
allocated
Wedneaday. Chance of
ments will accept and present, as well as to help
Designers,
outlined
the
steps
tJ
,
dleport
Department
Store;
$13.3
million
of
a
total
of
$200
\bose who have paid their
thwtdersbowers. Highs to \be
Miller Brothers Grocery, million · appropriated ~y process applications for utility bills but currently are .
lower 9011.
Rutland; Waid Cross Sons, . Congress for the Special assistance. Persons who suffering financial hardship
TESTS SCHEDULED .
Racine; Baum Lumber Co., . Crisis Intervention Program. think they are eligible for as a result of payin g the bills.
Water flow tests in
·Chester; Sugar Run Flour The program is .being h\ln· help under the program are
For those with delinquent
Pomeroy in relation to in·
Mill, Pomeroy; Five Points died in Ohio by the Depart· urged to go to their own accounts, the program will
Meigs
County
Auditor
Fiscal
Assistance
program.
surance coverage will be
county weUare departments
The ARFA program . was Grill, Pomeroy; Swisher· ments of Economic and for information and help in pay up to $250 on the account,
conducted Tueaday beginning Howard E. Frank has
Lohse Pharmacy, Pomeroy;· Community Development
wilb payment going directly
· BEEF VOTE
at 8:30 a.m. and may go on received \be second of tl!l-ee authorized originally by the Pat's Market, Syracuse; l'&lt;ita and Public Welfare.
making application.
general
revenue
sharing
of
Title
II
of
tlie
provisions
Claren~ Price, Cltainnllrl \broughout \be day. It was
Part icigation is on a to the utility or fuel supplier.
rA Melga County ASC Com· noted that \be tests conducted payments for entitlement Public Works Act or 1976. All Jean Ritchie, Tuppers . ,"This is . an ina.dequate voluntary basis for utilities Companies will arrange with
legal forms pertaining to the Pia ins ; Gloeckner's amount and 1t is gettmg here and fuel suppliers. Those who customers lor deferred
mlttee
today informed at \be fire hydrants may period totaling $23,639.
much too late," Gov. Rhodes
Melga
County
also
receive~
Antirecession P~ogram in Restaurant in Pomeroy.
ellalble producers that cause dirty water in \be lines
payment of the balance of
Memb~rshlp
tickets
are
comment~. "We told the wish to take advantage of the bills over $250. If utilities
FrldiJ, July 15, Is \be last at bome but it was reported $5,783 ·for the calendar Meigs County were prepared
program on behalf of their
cllly to vote • ill the beef tltllt the water will clear the quarter beginning July I, 1977 . by County Auditor Howard E. sold only to individualS, not to· federal government that Ohio customers are ur~ed to
(Continued on Jl81le 12)
companies or. organizations. needed ~ million for Ibis
under the Antlreces"~ion Frank in the rea\J976. .
lines.
'
·' ·
~
By EDWARD

t;,;;;;iiijr;J HANES .

tailor lor comlort .
The difference is in the weanng
because HANES underwear is
made ·with you in mind!
Gripper boxer:
Now. labulous no-bind comfort.
Combination boxer-top with
lly front in white, patterns,
colors. Gripper snap fasteners
· ... heal-resistant. shrinkresistant, covered elastK:
wai.stbijnd. Rei~lorced fly.
Perma-white alhietK: shirt;
·Super-quality Swis.s ribbing
with smooth narrow reinforced
shoulder strap. Traditional allseason performer!
·
• , From the HANES fam ily of
fine underwear
We carry I complete Hlection of men's and boys'
Hanes UnderwHr. All sizes. Stop In and pick out your

f

favorit• StYle in YOUI'7J!:Oper size.

ELBERFEi.DS IN POMEROY

Hanel It 11 regitterllr6' vademark of

~anea Corpa~alion . w;n,~•·Solam , ,ff. c:

K. DeWNG

inventory to begin

n •

I

,.

in .Meigs County July 18th

E R unit .asks
~egional meeting ~r~~ ~:~;~;:~ont::r~:: new amh ulan ce

.Proved

Crack
under
study \

~success'

s.-.

p nee h 0 ld. 8

on· tJ•ckets

to fair

Applications being taken

for fuel hill assistance

Weather

-·

Second payment is in

"'r'clum.

•

•

..

&lt;

•

"

�•

2 - Tbt Daily Sentinel. Mtddlevnrt-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesda} , July It, 1977

3-TheDaUySentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Tuesday.Julyl2.1977

Neutron bombs favored
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Whit~ House Reporter
WASHINGTON {UP!) President Carter will urge
Coogress to provide money
for the ·controversial neutroo
warhead that kills by atomic
radiatioo, although he has
reserved the right to change
his mind, his spokesman said
today.
''The President will send a

direct appeal to Congress,"
said While Hotise Press
Secretary Jody Powell,
adding that Carter will teU
the Senate Armed Seryices
Committee he supp&lt;rts funds
lor the neutron warhead
hidden in the 1978 public
works appropriations bill.
Today's Washington Post
quoted informed sources as

..

Petitions filed
Opposing the anti-smut
COSHOCTON. Ohio (UP!)
drive
was George Hartley
- Petitions opposing a
who
brought
to council the
churchbacked
antifree
choice
petitions.
pornography drive were
·
circulated
in
factories
and
presented to city council here
local
theaters.
Monday night.
"If 1 have to go down and
Over 275 signatures were
watch
Walt Disney , I woo 't go
on petitions opposing a ban on
R and X.;ated movies and and tax reveflues will drop , ''
erotic hooks which has been he said.
The Rev. Gene Hutton,
proposed
. by
local
pastor
of Viciory Baptist
fundamentalist ministers
Church,
told council he
who presented petitions
rejected
the
argument that
Ia voring the ban at the l"l't
pornography
couldn't be
council meeting.
banned
without
infringing on
Council's
ordinance
a
persons
constitutional
committee will meet with the
.
city solicitor next Monday to righ~ .
He
said
if
that
is
the
case,
view the city's obscenity laws
apd consider drawing up traffic signs also infringe on
individual rights .
additional legislation.

•

saying P,.oduction of ne]ltron
artiUery shells and warheads
lor the surface-to-surface
Lance missile could cost
about $650 million ..
Carter met with his
national security advisers on
the subject early today, and
was expecting questions on
the subject in an afternoon
news conference.
The weapon is designed for
lighting in Western Europe,
where U.S. allies particulary West Qermany are reluctant to approve the
use of nuclear weapons whic)l
would -destroy much of the
nation's territory. A neutron
warhead kills people by
radiation, with much less
property-destroying heat and
blast that usually comes With

nuclear weaoons.

,

Morgan le8ds Reds in all star votes

U.S.
'f orces
are
outnwnbered by non-nuclear
Communist forces in Europe.
Some congressional sources
say the Russian-led tanks
could
overwhelm
the
defenses so quickly that the
West would be required
almost immediately to use
nuclear weapons.
Carter reportedly made'\i-'
decision on the basis of a .
Defense Department analysis
which considers the weapon
more usable on the battlefield
than the present ones. ·
Powell said use of the
weapon could come only on
· Carter's personal direction,
and that the President was
expecting a report in Ia te
August or early September ttl
all aspects of the new
weapon.

NEW YORK (UP! ) ~ Tw&lt;&gt;-

starting lineup will be
announced late today.
Morgan was joined in the
starting lineup by teammates
Johnny Bench .at cat.cher,
Dave Concepcion at shortstop
and George Foster in the
outfield. All the players, with
the exception of Parker, were
repeaters from the 1976
National League stars.
Garvey led th e overall
voting with 4,277,7;!5 votes
followe'd by Morgan at
3,309, 754,
Bench
with
3,262,680, Cey with '3,102,186'
and
Concepcion
with
3,098,750.
Bench is the only player
elected as a starter in each of

ttme MVP Joe Morgan led a

'

:I

contingent of four worl&lt;l
champion Cincinnati Reds,
and Steve Garvey and Ron
Cey of the Los Angeles
Dodgers also were named
Monday to the National
League team for the 48th AllStar Game, July 19 at Yankee
Stadium.
The only representatives
from . the National League's
Division who won

Eastern

•,_ starting

.,·:
•

roles

were

outfielders Greg Luzinskl of
the Philadelphia Phillies and
Dave
Parker
of
the
Pit~burgh Pirates.
The American League ' s

the eight years in which the
faDI! have been voting . He
· easily out-&lt;listanced Ted Sim·
mons of the St . Louis
Cat'dinals, who led the NL in
batting during most or the
·voting.
The National League 's
pitchers will be· announced
late Wednesday and reserves
early Friday , American
League pitchers will be
announced early Thursday
with the reserves disclosed
later that day. Both pitchers
and reserves are chosen by
Managers Sparky Anderson
of the Reds and Billy Martin
of the New York Yankees .
The latest American

".,,
'-

New kid on the block

animals reject

~

final

balloti ng

for

the

Sport Parade

Diet soda lovers
achieve .reprieve

-

R epuhliCaJlS will qwz

Carter on equal time

New

261.~4 .

Bench,

3,309,754;

Cincinnati,
Manny Trillo ,

Chicago,

2,312,153;

Cincinnati~

3,262,680 ;

Ted Simmons , St . Loui s,.
2,096,524; Steve Yeager, Los
' Anqeles ,

1.866 , 154;

SECOND
Morgan ,
Sizemor e.

BASE

-

Dt:~vey

Lopes, Los
Rennie

J,34J,A96 ;

S!ennel!, Pillsburgh , 982,658 ;
Dave

Cash,

Montreal ,

680,970 ; Mike Tyson. St.
Louis. 492,1 85; Fel ix Millan.
New York , 262,1 02.
THIRD BASE - Ron Cey,
Los Angeles, 3, 102, 186; Pete
Rose, Cincinnati , 2,523,723;

:t,

s

--·

James w~uld arm park "
•
rangers aga1nst
· •
•

Am:ri~:.:-•ague

Joe
Ted

Philad elphia.

San Francisco1 762,879 ; Ken
Reitz, St. Louis, 589,724; Enos

Ivan

DeJesus ,

Chris Speier.
3.49,396.

HEALTH

Medicine for gout

VALUE
RATED

Montreal,

OUTFIELD

Greg

USED CARS

Luzlnski ,

Philadelph i a ,
'2.657.722. Dave Parker, Pitts .
burgh , 2.'286,714 ; George
Foster; Cincinnati. 2,161,668 ;
Reggie Smith, l os Angeles,
1.962,267 ; Bobby Murcer,

1,631,621;

Monday ,

Los

1.603.835;

Ken

72 OLDS

VISTA CRUISER
WAGON

Rick

Angeles,

Griffey,

Cabell. Houston , 400,5SI.
SHORTSTOP
Dave
Concepcion, Cincinnat i,
3.098,750; Larry Bowa .
Philadelphia , 2,449,944 ; Bil l

Cincrnnati. 1.602,862 ; · Garry
MaQdox ,
Philadelphia,
1,561,177; Leu Brock, St.
Louis ,
1, 499 ,622 ;
Cesar
Gernnlmo ,
Cincinnati,

Russell,
· Los
Angeles ,
1,529,445; Garry Templeton,
St. Louis, l , l92,717 ; Frank
Taveras,
Pittsburgh ,

Johnstone ,

Full

1.387,897 ; Jeff Burroughs.
Atlanta, 1,229,292; Jay
1.212,287.

po1',10 r,

air

and

l\Jggage rack

'1895
Karr &amp; VanZandt

Philadelphia ~

• Bob

You'll like Our Quality
Way ot Doing Business

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings '1H 6 : 00
TitS p.m . SaL

- Fired pitching coac h showing so far .
Billy Muffett.
"I didn't expect this, even .
-Named player-coach alter five losses in a row. In . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Andy Etchebarren as his the back of my mind, I was
interim successor and worried what might happen if
announced that someone else we lost four or live more at
has been offered the job on a home.
full-time basis.
"Now I'm just going to
- Hired Frank Robinson, relax. Harry offered me a iob
baseball 's
first
black with the Angel organization
manager, as the club's first hut I wasn 't paying much
batting instructor . Robinson attention alter he started the
had hired Garcia as his third conversation off . by firing
base coach last season at me.'~
Garcia, 56, Said Dalton
Cleveland.
Meigs County's
Sherry exited with a two- called him to his office
.
season record of 76-71, the Monday morning. ·
Oldest and Largest Agency
best
percentage
ever
"He offered me the j oil and
compiled by an Angel I took it," he rpcalled.
"It's hard t}j explain my .
manager.
His statistics this year were feelings
because
I' m
less impressive. After i~ fifth replacing a guy I really like.
straight loss Sunday, the club But I wouldn't be honest if I
favored by most observers to didn't admit I wanted tbe
win the American League
opportunity."
West was 39-42, 9¥, games
Garcia sa id he didn't know
behind · the Chicago White yet what he could do to tum
Sox. ·
the Angels' season around .
~~r was really shocked/ '
" If I knew, I would have
Sherry satd in a telephone sugges ted it earlier," he
conversation lroni his home explained.
in nearby Mission Viejo ,
"i hope I will he able to lind
suggesting that injuries tp out. I'm looking forward to
key Angel players were more trying. We've_got the players
responsibl e than anything here. It's just been a
else for their disappointing combination of tllings."

Astros reverse trend
i tm ,i; _h eat Reds, Dodgers

Berry's World

1.123,271 ;

Chicago, 375,389 ; Roger
Melzger, HO\Jston, 369,205;

Mike Schmidt, Ph il adelphia,
2.254,166; Phil Garner. Pills·
burgh, 602,558 ; Bill Madlock, , Chicago,

York,

National League All -Star
team :
· CATCHER
Johnny

ANAHEIM, Calii. (UP! ) implanted in a defenseless , derived from apricot pi~.
illegal, eleven s~a~es .~ave ~etr•~e
~~~e ~~~n tu~or implan~.
~
The
combina lion 7-11 is a
110
1
breed of mice.
The Laetrile debate was passed .la~s legalizmg ·
. was tested in
""'
lucky
one in some g•mes,
but
The govemment-5p0nsored scheduled to . move to
Tbt,Slgnificance of the new
Th~n :~with an enz e
THE DAILY SENTINEL
';A
Major league Standings
hi
·
'y
United
Press
International
it
doesn't
mean
a
t
ng
m
experiments were the latest Congresst.odayWJthl9~ple experunen~, conducted .a\ ~!;"~glucasidasew\:ch
DEVOTEDroTIIE
~
National League
baseball.
B)' MILTON RlaDIAN
"
pieces of evidence in the set to tes!lly for and against the . Ba~telle Mem~~a
ca
cyanide from the ·
ME~',!.';.EA
·'~
1
Eut
At least not as far las
UPl 81101'11 Edl1or
W. L
Pet. GB
continuing controversy over the drug ~~ a Senate health Institute m Colwnb~,
i~ d':-~sLae trile advocate s
CHESTER!.. TANNEHILL
Chicago
52
31
.627
former
California Ange s'
NEW YORK (UPI)-Vince Lombardi had his own way of Phil a
the value of the substance subcom~ttee he_armg.
was that they de t w d
I .g. the cyanide kill s
. ROBE'i;ii~cn
!~ l~ :;~ ~ Manager Norm Sherry is
.
The witness list mcluded human cancers - breast an
c a 1m
.
.
Ctty Edltor
assessing any player. Size and ability were important, Pittsbgh
0
• A6 40 .535 11J2 concerned.
the heads of the Food and colon tumors - implanted ca~er ceUs .. Agam, Ov~J~ra
Pubtw..&lt;~ daily ucept Satunlo)
•• naturaUy, but what he looked for first was desire, a kid who St . Louis
Montrea l
39 4S .464 n•;,
Sherry, hired by the Angels
Drug Administration. and an
. d growing in mice. Laetrile SSid n~ anticancer activity
by The Ohio Valley PubU..hingCom
would keep playing with what Lombardi called "his little New York
19
393
51
0
w!~,
·
'~' to repla.ce Dick Williams on
·
National Cancer Inst1 tute , m Ute past has been tr1ed was ev1de~t.
.
~~'s.ll~= Stoofc~np~~
hurts ."
w.
L
Pet.
GB July 23, 1976, was fired on the
which · believe Laetrile is against cancers native to lab . Cooventionai anticancer
51i.Editona1Phono!l92-2157.
The
late
Green
Bay
coach
would
have
loved
a
guy
like
21
Los Ang
56 . 30 .651
eleventh day of the seventh
worthless, and Laetrile animals.
dru.gs were. tr1ed m other
&amp;:&lt;:ond ,....,. p&lt;JStoijje paid at
Thurman Munson, even though he'£ a basebaU player, not a C1nci
46 37 .55 4 81!2
similar
tumors
to
Pomeroy,
Ohio
San Fran
.40 48 .455 17
IDOOtll of 1977,
developer Ernst Krebs, who
Dr. Artenni Oveje~a, 8 nuce Wlth
Natiorutl advertising represen.
'
lootbaU player.
·
"
Houston"
39 48 .448 17lf2 • General Manager Harry
Battelle researcher, satd two bt sure the cancers WOUld
caUve \l'anl • GrUi•th Comf"'!'Y.
say it helps fight cancer.
Last year, the rugged Yankees ' catcher was MVP; this year san Oiego
38 52 422 20
db
h
WASHINGTON CUP!) :.... Governments, with
·
d.to such therapy · The
lnc Bottinelli and Galla~her D1v .,
30 55 :a53 25•;, Dalton hired thir ase coac
Atlanta
(\ It hough
interstate
types
of
tests
were
respon
,.,··Th~d
Ave.. New v....k, N.Y.
,
he's
in
the
running
lor
MBP
the
most
banged
up
player
President Carter faced ques- representatives of 15 states shipment of Laetrile is conducted. One involved conventional drugs produ~ed
Mondav 's Results
.Dave Garcia as the club's
maybe in both leagues ~ and still all he wan~ to do is keep .
11,017 .
tioning today from aU sides. on hand, July 21.
Montreal
4, Pittsburgh 2
seventh manager and gave
complete
or
part1al
Sub9cripUoo nr.les: Delivered bl
playing.
.
.
.
.
Houston 2, Cincinnati o
By STEWART POWELL
Commerce Committee.
Powell
said
"other
of
the
cancers.
earner
where
available~
ceniJJ
pe1
ression
The President has been
reg
him a contract extending
For the better part of a week now, Munson has·been playmg San Francisco 5, San Diego 1
wet!k. By Motor Route where earner
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
Ghosts of the crippling holding wide-ranging Southern states" are on the
Today's Probable Pitchers
through
1978. Garcia'S debut
The experiments w~e conservice not available, One month,
with seven stitches in his right pinky. Before Sunday's ball
(All Times EDT}
rebuff for President Carter internal strife that earlier question and answer sessions itinerary lor the two-day trip ,
dueled in an expensive breed
13.25 By mail '" Ohio and W. Va .•
Pittsburgh ( Kison 6·41 at was a pleasant one as the.
game with the Orioles, he was bloodied up when struck above
Ole Year, $22.00; Su monlhs,
and a preliminary victory for marked the House Assassina- with
Demo c ratic which he described as "an
Montreal (Twi tchell 2·5t:r' '35 Angels rallied for a 6-5 win
caUed
"nude"
mice,
which
$II.SO ; Three month~. $7.oo;
his
left
eye
by
one
of
the
iron
poles
that
makes
up
the
hatting
lo~ers
of
diet
soda tions Committee surfaced congressmen and senators. attempt to keep from being
"have defective immune
ELsewhere 126.00 year , SLX months
p.~hicago 1R. Reuschel 12 2) at over the Minnesota Twins in
~· cage.
highlighted
action
as within the panel investigating Today he was giving equal isolated in the White House ."
w
human
SI J.~O; Three ~unth s, S7.SO.
allo
that
Systems
SUbscripUon price ~ncludes SWlday
He shook it off and caught anyway . Then he was hit flush in New York (Matla ck 3· 10), 8 10 inD.ings.
Congress went to work after a South Korean favors to con- lime to the Republicans.
" I might also say the
tumors to grow in them . The
Times.S.mUnel.
" We feel the team is
the mask by two foul balls, one of which made his head spin p.';,. Louis (o 1erk.er 2 . 51 at
!I)-day Fourth of July recess. 'gressmen.
He was submitting to ques- President and certain
bodv defenses of other
Philadelphia
(Leech
5·21,
7·35
definitely
a contending club
and throb. Finally, when his head ached so much that he was
In other developmen~ on
Sources
said
the tions of more than 60 GOP members of his staff look
P
m
and
has
the capability to
getting too nauseous to bend up and down anymore, he left the
Los Angeles {Rau 9 ll at
Capitol Hill, the pace of the committee's chief coun~el members of Congress this forward to a return to 6ur Houston
c
Fotsch
4.71,
8,
35
p
m
move
into
the middle of the
game in the sixth inning.
House Ethics Committee privately. · complained to momuig , with a nationaUy home," he said:
.Atl.anta . ( Niekro 8·10) at ' pennant race in the second
Years from now when he's aU finished playing and retired
inquiry into South Korean panel
members
that televised and broadcast news . Carter, however , has no
on
a farm maybe s'ome place in Ohio, Thurman Munson would ~.·~c. •nn a t• ~Capllla 2·01. 8:05 half of ' the season," Dalton
influence buying sparked Chairman John Flynt, D-Ga., conference set lor after plans to return to Plains, Ga.,
San Francisco ( Barr 8·6) at said.
.
like to have them remember him for only one tliing.
dissension . · And Congress was delaying progress. The lunch .
during his Southern swing.
san Diego IOwch inko 2·41. 10
'' And we felt that these
" All I would like people to sa)l" about me is that I did
readied a look into the counsel is Philip Lacovara, a
The President also has
Carter, who has stayed
changes would help US
everything I could to win every ball game," says the Yankees' p.m . Wednesday's Games
Laetrile controversy.
cnm~
(ormer ·assistant Watergate close to Washington since his been reviewing options on a
Pittsburgh at Montreal , n1ght
accomplish
this."
hard-driving receiver and captain.
Carter's campaign io limit prosecutor.
Ch icago at New York. night
Memorial Day weekend trip plan to reorganize the Office
In related moves, the
Ease up on the GOP
"I'd like them to say I was a good clutch hitter and that I st . Louis af Phil a, night
the production of weapons'
Congress, meanwhile, pre- to, Georgia and Florida, will of the President, and expec~
COLUMBUS - A bill has Resources would be required
Los
Angeles
at
Houston
.
night
Angels
also:
busted my butt to play."
grade plutonium worldwide pared today to
hear head South again July 21 and to submit it to Coogress Dear Sir:
Atlanta at Cinc innat i, ntght
been introduced by Rep. Ron to pass the courses at the ,,,
_
.
Ohio Peace Officer Training
Thurman Munson doesn't have to wait until he's all through San Fran at San Diego, night
suffered a chilling "no" at conflicting testimony on the 22. Press secretary Jody Friday. The plan reportedly
1 wish to disagree with our honorable editor, Mr. James (D-Proctorville) Academy. This training , 1
for
everyone to say that. They say it already now . And those
home. The Senate, on a 49-38 cancet""curing qualities of Powell said Carter will recommends a 30 per cent cut
TaMehill, lor his chastisement of the nine G.O.P. members lor which would designate would make these employees o
who have kept track of some of the inner conflict among the
vote, killed the White House Laetrile,
a
substance address
certain employees of the
the
Southern in White House personnel and
as equally qualified as other , {
Yankees since the season started abo say that if there is any
request for just enough extracted from apricot pits. Legislative Conference of the a transfer of several agencies their stand ttl the utility credit measure.
Department
of
Natural
If we pass a law to help pay utility bills we will, have the
· W. t
Pet. GB
law
enlorc~ment
officer~
of
'"'
one
player wlio can get all of them to puU together, it's Boston
money to phase out a planned
Latest government- Council
of
State tv other federal departments. ·same situation as when the law was passed to help the poor and Resources as peace officers.
.48 35 .578
. , • ·'
Balfifllre
Thurman Munson .
plutonium producing reactor sponsored experiments show
House Bi11809, according to the state.
the needy pay their food bills- cheaters. When we pay fot tbe
New York
-.,,
That
was
one
of
th'll[easons
Billy
Martin
had
for
making
at Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Laetrile ineffective against
Clevelnd
uninsured motorist we are in effect paying some guys auto James, would aUow park
okayed a compromise · $7o human cancers implanted in
Munson captain last ~ar.
·
Milw
rangers
in
the
Department
of
insurance·too It looks like if he can llflord a car and alford to
When Reggie Jackson was signed for $3 million this past Detroi t
million authorization to mice, but w.ttents "cured"
buy gas and 'oil he could alford some insurance if the law Natural Resources to carry NO REGRETS
31 53 .369 l7lh
"winter
there were many who felt his personality was such that Toronto
preserve the projecl .
by the substance have
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Dr. •
West
firearms. Current law
makers
thought
so
.
·
..
'
hewou'ld automatically become the leader of the club. It hasn't
Backers of the program pleaded lor legalization .
w. L Pet . GB By GARY TAYLOR
Maybe some democra~ had m~ivings about the ut!lity prohibits anyone except a Christiaan Barnard, who re- ,.;
50 33 .602
worked out that way, though . Munson refused to play a Chicago
hoped to avert a Carter veto
,Congress Monday also was
cently
announced
that
a
1
peace
officer
from
carrying
a
Mtnn
&lt;7 39 .547 ••;, UP! .Sports Wr1ter
measure. The idea is not to point the fmger at e1ther pa~ b~t
subordinate
role,
to
Jackson
or
anyone
else,
and,
he's
still
the
by approving hall the $l:i0 urged to take actjpn m ~her "
growing
arthritis
problem
"·
Kan
City
45 38 .542 5
HOUSTON
(UP!)
to put America first; we .are sinkin&amp;_ m!o ~ socialistic firearm.
player
all
million sought for the project areas.
!he
rest
look
to
whenever
any
crisis
develops
or
the
Texas
42
.41
.
506
8
M
Biil
y·
d
will
soon
force
him
to
give
up
;.~
A peace officer is defined
catu
40 42 488 9'/,
anager.
11' on does not
quagmire and more power to those who res1st 11. Nowadays
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
by the Energy Research and
heat
gets
a
little
too
hot
in
the
kitchen
.
Truth in Lending laws
surgery,
says
he
has
no
.,.
Oakland
36 48 . 429 w ;, know how to explain his
anyone who pays his bills is too darn r1ch and needs to he taxed as a deputy sheriff, marshall,
Munson realizes the . general attitude among the Yankee seartle
Development Adrninstration. adopted eight years ago to
second thoughts about a
37 52 416 16
Houston Astros' "reversed"
or
member
of
an
organized
a little more.
· ·
.
's Results
players isn't what it was 15 or 20 years ag~, or what either Boston Monday
Sen. Spark Matsunaga, D- speU out the costs of credit
controversial
animal-to- ·~
police
department
whose
2.
Cl~veland
1
season,
but he knows he is
There are enough agencies and bureaucra~ to fmd and
owner George Steinbrenner or Martin would like tt to he, and 1t Oet r oit 9, Toronto 7
Hawaii, was upset by the showered consumers with too
human
transplant
he
")
enjoying
it.
primary
duties
are
to
adrr.inister to the needy and to those who need help on their
move. ~ ·If we don 't (end much information, a Senate
bothers him as much as it does them.
Chicago .t , Kansas City 2
"
We've
reversed what we
.;
preserve the peace,. protect performed last month.
Baltimore 4, New York 3
· tl if the life and property, and
utility bills.
.
proliferation) we'U have to subconunittee was told. A
When you ask him whether he feels ·tbe team can achieve Oakland 8, Sea ttle t
In
the
operation,
a
baboon's
did
last
year when we
Maybe the utility co)npanies could cut their rates a lit e
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am get that anyway because of
abandon this planet 11,nd seek Federal Reserve task force
that
all-important
degree
of
togetherness
before
the
season
Is
heart
was
placed
in
a
:!&amp;-year'.
Calif
6,
Minnesota
5,
10
inns
couldn't
beat
Cincinnati and
enforce the laws of the state.
Todav•s Probab1e Pitchers
writing to you in regards to the gout. I'm sure that since they were not the scapegoa~ of the commissions, !Jur;-JI~akers James feels that since park ' old woman. Tbt patient died ,..
other planets,'' he said.
suggested simplified forms to
over he thinks about the question awhile before answering it.
·
&lt;All Times EDT)
Los Angeles/' Virdon said.
Zyloprim, used to treat gout. your friend has been taking and the press. A lot of their money goes, to the years they have rangers already have these after the operation.
~ Legislation approved , by rrlore clearly detail needed
"I' think we '11 come together ·as one on the field, but as
Boston (Cleveland 7-'4) at "Onl this
't •- t
Clevel and { Eckersley ·a.n . 7:30
Y
year we can uca
Would you comment on the this medicine eight years, ap- to litigate rate matters, when the question should be answe_red duties, they, too·, shou!d be
the House Health and information.
"At
least
we
were
able
to
.•
personalities, never," h~ says. .
.
p.m .
ihe other teams in our
Environment subcommittee
side effects of this drug and parently without trouble, that promptly. Just the interest on the refunds would help.cut bills. designated as peace oll1ce~s. give her five and a hall extra
And three Republican conIf
there is any personality confhct between hun and Jackson,
Toronto
(Jefferson
5·8
)
at
division.
"
what it actually does lor the he is not likely to have any Also Utility companies are subject to all the.cos~ of inflation ;
would block for 18 months gressmen added fresh fuel to
IFidrych
6-4)
,
8
'p
,m.
Putt
·ng
• · it is not apparent in their .every day relationship. Earlier this Detroil
hours
of
life,"
Barnard
said,
·•
James
added
that
the
m·
1
1·t p,os1·tively·,
Kansas City (Leonard 7 ·91 at
increased fuel , labor, interest and materials costs. A lot ?I
body? In addition, does tak- difficulties with it.
any government ban on the
controversy
over
., year, Jackson said the Yanks would have to .look to him for Chicago !Stone 9-6), 8:30P .m
Houston has won4 ol8 games
retired people and people on fixed incom~ are stockholders m creased vandalism at ·parks at the College of Mount st.
New York (Gullett 7-3) at
1
ing it a prolonged time have
saccharin unless new ev1· deregulation of natural gas
II he sto~s taking the
~
their
leadership,
not
to
Munson,
and
he
may
still
feel
that
way,
Joseph.
.
throughout the state has
Milwaukee (Haas 55) , a:Jo against runaway
eague
utility
companies
because
these
compames
pay
a
good
return
any harmful effect? A friend medicine his body cells will
.dence proves it causes prices. The trio , representing
but he doesn't go around saying it .
He said he will turn his
pm
leader Los Angeles and 7 of 11
and
have
larger
pay-ou~ than most coq~ration~. Why n.ot ~ increased the need lor
of mine has been on this start producing excess uric
districts in Texas, Michigan
cancer.
Outwardly there is no visible breach between Munson and
Baltimore (R. May 10·81 at ·
· t Ci ·
t' Against
rangers to carry firearms. energies to writing and to
Texas !Ale xander 8·5), 8:35 agams
ncmna 1.
" A political decision," and Ohio, released studies medicine for eight years. His acid again in about two weeks kind word for the utility companies once m a while? - Gayle
Jackson.
~y
talk
to
each
other
and
are
friendly
now
in
improving
heart
disease
-'
.
If designated a peace of·
p.m.
the three other West Division
physician states the gout and eventually jle will be ex- Price, Portland, Ohio.
charged
Rep.
An~dy est imating
President
contrast to their relationship a month or so ago when they
Seattle (Wheelock 4 ·6) at teams, however, Houston is a
ficer, the employee of the treatment facilities in under- . ·
Oak land I Blue 6·11 1, 10 o35 p.m. paltry • _
Maguire, D-N ·~ ., challengmg Carter's plan to · expand' crystals take a long tune to posing himself to the comstudiously ignored one another.
·•
1;,- 17
Minnesota (Thormodsgard 6.
Dialogue with Mr. Price is welcomed. First,' to clarify : Department of Natural developed nations.
congressional mterveqtion m federal price controls would
form and therefore a long plications of gout.
.
Without
singling
out
IUIYbody
on.
the
club,
Munson
says
5)
at
California
(Ryan
11
.a).
"I
don't
know why ," says
time to disappear.
a ban planned by the Food cost consumers billions o(
DEAR DR. LAMB- Please the nine GOP did not use a technicality in parliamentary law
''we're
gonna
have
to
improve
our
attitude.
For
as
much
talent
~O:JO ~~dnesday•s Games
Bob Watson. " I think when
DEAR READER
and Drug Admir)istration.
don't recommend Motrin. My to block the Democrat majority from "helping" the poor and
dollars.
Ill! we have, it's a shame we haven't done a whole lot better." Seattle at Oakland, night
you
play a good hall dub your
needy.
They
blocked
it,
rather
from
easinj:
the
suffering
of
the
1
The measure, similar tv
Zyloprim is the trade name lather and a dose friend both
Measures to expand or
"lburman Munson comes from the old school. Simply by hard Minnesota al Callt. night
best
talents come out."
oldanddisabledwhowere
needy.
There
is
a
difference
.
Detroit a t Kan City, night
1
for allopurinol. Gout, gouty developed ulcers from taking
legislation beiilg considered phase out federal price
viock,
he
made
himseU
into
one
of
the
best
catchers
there
is
in
New
York
at
Milwaukee,
night
The
Astros definite Y
The
argument
about
wet'fare
goes
hack
to
1930
when
Mr.
by the Senate, now laces controls remain before the
arthritis and kidney stones t for arthritis. They are both
baseball today.
.
.
Toronlo at Chicago. night
pfayed superb baseball
Hoover lost an argument that there was ample help lor
action by
the .House H o use
caused by gout (not other on Tylenol now.
Commerce
,
"My
father
was
a
truck
driver
lor
35yearsandhe
told
me
if
I
Boston
at
Clevela
nd,
night
Monday
n1·ght to defeat the
Baltimore at Texas , night
Interstate and Foreign Conunittee .
types of kidney stones ) are all
DEAR READER - I am in· millions of worthy, capable and anxious..to-work people with
e)'er was goons do anything, I should do it right," be says. "In
Reds ~ behind the five-hit
. .,
caused by an overproduction eluding your comment in my families gt&gt;ing hungry through no fault of their own.
Canton Ohio where we lived, he'd always throw me ground
pithing of James Rodney
Nor
is
it
lair
to
say
"government
m~
up
our
alf~1rs
of uric acid by your own body column to remind people that
b811s·u{ the street.-ence in awhile, a hall would hit me in the
Richard.
Motrin is not 100 per cent because who are the government, if we aren t? We are soc1ety.
cells.
mouth,
but he'd keep on throwing 'em at me. 'You're all right,'
Watson's double in the sixth
It
is
our
government.
In
our
system
goverrunent_d?""
what
the
By decreasing an in· sale. No medjcine is. Aspirin
lntern1fional League
he'd
say
tome
.
And
I'd
go
after
the
next
ball."
inning
drove in the only two
United Press International
dividual 's tendency to form may also'cause irritation and majority says to do. Or it is ~upposed to. Often 11 !S. betrayed.
That
was
when
Thurman
Munson
was
only
a
kid.
·
runs
and
both Wa~n and
W L Pel. GB
excessive amoWlts
uric even bleeding from the Society prefers to see that i~ weakest members, 1~ eldedy
He's
a
luU
grown
adult
now
and
~till goes after every ball. All
Pawtucket
.
SO
35
.588
acid, the kidneys are often stomaoh. Some people cannot and disabled are not dwnped helpless onto a callous family,
be wants to do is keep playing.
·
Charleslon
46 38 .548 3'h '
able to gradually clear and tolerate Tylenol for different neighborhood or community. Societ&gt;:, through our welfare
43 39 .524 5'h
Tidewater
laws (which can be cleaned up to get rid of cheaters) proposes
Richmond
42 40 .512 6'h
keep the body cleared of uric reasons.
wan~ to be' with his family Rochester
42 ~2 .500 •7,'h
acid salts. This prevents
The doctor needs Co decide to help those who need help by ' distributing the cost onto
Syracuse
41 '43 .488 8"'
everybody
according
to
their
ability
to
help.
and see his children grow
acute gout attacks and gouty what is best lor each patient's
• 5P.or1l Transactions .
Toledo
·
,39
47 .453 ll'h
When
Me . Price says we have enough· government and
up."
Bv Umted Press lnternaltonal
arthritis. l am sending you condition. In many arthritics
33
51
.388
17
Columbus
Monday
Frymon, acquired by the
Monday's Results
The Health Letter rtumber ordinary aspirin is as safe private agencies to take care of the needy, old and disabled he
Pro
Football
Reds in the winter deal which
Tidewater 2, Ri chmond I
Signed
New York Jels 2-3&gt; ·(Gout, Uric Acid) to give and as good a medicine as ·is saying "Let tho!ie who want to help pay. I don't want to be
Toledo 2, Charleston 1 ~ . ___ cor_nerback Anthony Kni_g ht of
bothered:
Nor
should
my
taxes
go
to
help
out
anybody."
I
don't
sent
Tony
Perez
to
-the
- you a more ComElete discus· ol!ier, - more expensive pain
Columbus 6, Rochester 4 Norfolk State as a tree agent .
believe Mr. Price means that. - C. T.
Montreal Expos, has a 5-5
San Diego - Signed quar~er ·
sion of gout. Others who want relievers.
1
P.awtucket II , _Syracuse 9 back
James Harris to a f tve·
record
this
~ason
.
•
Incidentally
I
noted
·a
prin·
this information can send 50
year contract and linebacker
Don Goode, quarterback Clint
cen~ with a long, stamped, ling error in my column as it
Longley , safety Dannv Colber t.
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
self-addressed envelope lor it was reproduced in your
tight
end Pat curran and satetv
WILL NOT INTERFERE
Clarence Duren to a series of
to P.O. Box 1051, Radio City newspaper. Tylenol is useful
HOUSTON
(UP!)
WITH
PRESENT
EMPLOYMENT
one -year contracts .
Massachusetts health .
Station, New York, N.Y. to relieve pain but it is ·TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) -:Veteran pitcher Woodie
NO SELLING REQUIRED .
Ph iladelph ia - Signed defen .
officials
have
advised
useless, NOT useful in reliev· Owens Illinois Inc. said
10019.
sive backs John Outlaw and
Fryman has left the
Tommy Campbell , w ide re ce iv'·
We are selecting distributors for last moving
Zyloprim is not used to ing inflammation. Larger Monday it plans to sue the parents to keep children
Cincinnati Reds with the
ers Charles Smith and James
a"ay
from
t'le
49-&lt;:ent
doses
of
aspirin
,
prescribed
state
or
Massachusetts
products
in
Pomeroy
and
surrounding
counties.
These
relieve the acute attack of
apparent Intention of retiring
McAlister and .defensive end
products published In newspaper, T.V., magazine~,
Will Wvnn , all veterans, to two ,
gout. It is used,after the ucute under a doctors supervision, because it has ordered glasses, which have a red; .
lrom
baseball.
etc.
one .year contracts. and veteran
white
and
yellow
picture
of
will
relieve
Inflammation
.
I
glasses
Owens
makes
lor
attack is over to prevent
Manager Sparky ~nderson
Twenty year old company will P!•ce products in
another one. I ·am happy to · hasten to add that some McDonalds off the market. "Ronald McDonald" or other
the two-time world
grocery,
department. drug stores, !uper markeh. gilt
Mas·sachusetts health cartoon characters on the
say it is a fairly safe popular commercials abo':lt
shop$, etc. Dlstribulors )Will service these retail outlets
·· •-·~-mpiona confirmed
monthly, requiring a!z"roximately 20 hours spare l ime
medicine. Almost all aspirin relieving inflaiJIII)3bo officials ordered the fait food outside.
N1111dlty night that Fryman
Owens
said
the
state
is
per
month.
are
mi~leading.
Aspirin
does
chain
to
stop
Its
"GlaMes
To
. medicines do have some side
left tbe club )list Saturday.
C.P.A.
reports $99.00 and up pooslbte profit per.
discriminating.
by
not
not
have
this
effect,
Go"
advertising
campaign
effec~. I don't know a single
Allderaon
said Fryman, who
day!
Figure
the Income you desire p..- month. Eac~
one that doesn't. Zyloprim regardless of what your TV last . Friday alter U.S. banning simillar glasses, and
lliea
In ·Ewing, Ky ., was
location
requires$212.00
investment. You may have 24,
Protection it disputed the validity of the
may cause a skin rash and if says, unless it is taken m Environmental
36 or 4 locations. Company secures location and
''ltoml!lidt"
and
told
him
he
done
by
the
tests
1howed tests
it does the doctor must be larger doses than usually Agency
Installs products lor yO\J.
_.d IIIIJIOIItlce his deCision
govenunent.
This is a bona fide offer and II you are not sincere
seen at once. Rarely it causes recommended lor the simple ~macceptable amounts r#.lead
whether to retire or not
O!vens said it has not set a
_
., 1
about ownihg your own business, ~ do not meet the .
•
in painted pictures on tbenl.
digestive upsets. Doctors like relief of pain.
today.
above financial requirements, let s not waste each
But, a spokesman for dateforfilingsuitandhaanot
Lam b answers
SUPER HOG ia Clt!Y~· .PJamber· Slim. Gn111'1
D
to monitor the blood count to
"He's been off and on about
other's lime.
r
.
~id'"'II
be sure there is no adverse representative !etters ut . ""'"'• 88 u~•. !10 way decided on an am~. The
name for his ~ cutomlled /IDCJtOI'CYde. '116'1 bem "'
all yeor," said
For personal 'c0!111dentlal Interview call Mr.
"''d say he 's eirher angry at long memos or the
response there. Everyone on • general interest m hiS col· the lead can get mto the drink company, BOld •111 ~~!~ ,~
William
Alexander, Parkersburg, 304·•22·i«ll today
working mit Iince 18'11 and ~~J~Ibe IIU --enUred • ~•
ndl!noll· "I toa1i: him out of
President hBs •mproved his speed reading' "
thru
Friday
9 a.m . to 9 p.m.
this medicine needs l(ood wnn . Write to him in care of and there is no health hazard the glas- to "c""'""""· · ~ ···~w\iitliout laklng ~· • . ~.
llartlng
rotatlm
to
•give
• ..
''
S.E.I~ummlng,G&lt;t .
I
from u.ylasaes.
wsupervision but ~hey should this newspaper.
•J
.
~ . ....,.\•• ••~ .... "'
to tblnk it over .
·
(~t.,.
•tlant~)
-'
II Just a farm boy and
By AL ROSSITER JR.
UPI Science Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Scientists taking a fresh approach tv testing Laetrile
have found it ineffective
againsl human cancers

John Milner,

1,538,392 ;
Angeles,

Angels .d ismiss Sherry

*

N

Battelle tests show· laetrile .usele~-~.:l:':i!'!
in ~i~~

League leaders, announced Boone ,
Philadelphia ,
July 4, were Boston's catcher 1,657,152; Gene Tenace, San
Diego, 650,313; Joe Ferguson.
Carlton Fisk, shortstop Rick Houston,
- 562.193 ;
Gary
Burleson and outfielders Carl Carter, Montreal. 329,187;
Yastrzemski and Fred Lynn; Jerry Grote , New York ,
Minnesota's Rod Carew at 257,858.
FIRST BA·SE - Steve
first base, New York's Willie Garvey
,
Los
Angeles.
Randolph at second; George 4,277,735; Willie SlargeiL
Brett of Kansas City at third Pittsburgh , U38.693; Tony
and outfielder Richie Zisk of Perez. Monlreal. 1,384 ,971 ;
Bill
Buckner,
Chicago,
the White Sox.
1,0'20,671; Will ie Mon1an~z .
The National League leads Atlanta, 791,111 ; . Bob W,;.tson ~
the series, 28-18.
· Houston,· 571,5.48;
Dan
NEW YORK IUPI) - The Dnessen, Oncinnati , .508.8.41;

We Write All Forms
of Insurance

,

Cesar Cedeno made brilliant single, Gonzalez' sing le and
defensive plays to preserve · an intentional walk to Cedeno
preceeded Watson's double .
the victory.
" It was super tonight,"
Richard said after recording
his first shutout of the season
and eighth win against six
loss~s. " It was like the whole
team was in rhythm with me.
The plays behind me made
me want to give them more."
The Reds' Joe Morgan,
always a tough out for
Richara, got one hit in three
officia l alba~ . Twice he fiew
out.
" Joe hits me prettY hard,"
Richard sa id. "He's about the
only one on their team who
does. I think I'm too careful
with him. Tonight my slider
was moving into him and
gave him trouble."
Irl the victory, Richard
struck out five , a low nine
inning total lor him. But the 6foot~ righthander, who often
has trouble witli his conq:ol;
only walked two batters.
Cincinnati's s tarting
pitcher Fred Norman retired
the first 14 hatters. Jose Cruz'
single in the filth with two out
was the first Astros' hit. And
in the sixth inning, Richard's

DOWN lNG CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Middleport. O.

Q92-2342

'

-~

' .

or

Sports tra~u~~~~'!~on

Fryman

0

leaves~

Corporation will sue

.champs

.

.,

10 a
, one .year contract.
Pi-o Basketball
New YOrh~ Knicks - Signed
forward guard G!en Gondrezick
of
Nevada · Las Vegas and
forwa rd Toby KniQht ol Notre
Dame, both second ·round draft
choices.
Baseba 11
Cali forn ia Fir ed Norm
Sherry as manager and re·
.Pl aced him with third base
coach Dave Garc ia; also fired
pitching coach Billy Muffet1
and hired Frank Robinson as a
coact) .
.. Phi ladelph ia Announced
that Cal Emery has resigned as
manager of their Oklahoma
C1 ty farm ctub ,and will be
r eplaced bY former Phill ies'
catcher M lke Ryan .

Cook uP.
a -new kitchen

·at City Loan.
a

When you need money for new kitchen, other home improvement~,
or for any good reason, call us. We'll handl_e your loan qmckly ~nd w1th
consideration. Amounts up to $15,000 avallable.
We find ways to help:

CITY LOAN
COMPANY
t::J 1::\. ·' ' "'·"";..'·'' )t'l ....... (lt

\::lr!/ t_I.)N!ft,l.)(

•

'

I

•

="

DAM C.QRJ'OR..A.T!ON

125 E. Main Street 992-2171
IJJ

�'I

t

.
4 - The Daily Sl&gt;ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Julv 12 1977

.

!

•

-

: Richards 'knockers' off·Reds 2-0
•

• UPl Spurts Writer
. Richard is just a big
• ol rtJ.HC'Ountry
pitcher - oldlime players called •e m
"Apple Knockers" _ ,.·ho the
llouston Astros think has
Wllilllited potential.
'·It's hard to ra te a whole
lengue 's pilche rs,'' said

catcher J oe Ferguson
Mon&lt;l.1y night, after Richard
piteh&amp;l a fivehi\ter that gave
U1e Astros a 2-Q victory over
tl1e Cincinnati Reds. " But I'd

have to rate hirn among tlle
top five . in the National
I.e0 gue.
.
Hicbard, · who struck out
five and walked t\vo, wos

locked in a scoreless duel
with Fred Norman until the
sixth, when the Astros seored
both their rWls on singles by
Richard and Julio Gonzalez
and Bob Watson's double.';
" I 'm co~tent with the
Astros flOW," said Richard.
''A few years ago , the club
was in chaos and I wanted to
pitch anywhere else. But now
-'! 'm sa tisfied with being
here.''
The loss was the fourth

against nine victories for
Norman ·and dropped the
Reds 8''2 games behind the
idle Los Angeles Dodgers .
In the only other S&lt;'hP&lt;'Iulert

NI.
games,
Montreal
defeated Pitt.burgh , 4-2, and
San Francisco beat San
Diego, !&gt;-1.
American League seores
were : Bostoo 2, Cleveland I ;
Chicago 4, KalL'las City 2;
Detroit' 9, Toronto 7;
Baltimore 4, New York 3;
Oakland 8, Seattle 1, and
California 6, Minnesota 5.
Expus 4, Pirates 2:
Chris Speier scored the tiebreaking run on an error by
Bill Robinson during a threerun firth inning, which lifted
the Expos to their triumph.
Stan Bahnsen allowed 11 hits ·
but went the distance and

Insulation

PICNIC PLEASERS.- PRICED TO- PLEASE!

•

lly FREID DOWN

raised his !'«'ord to 4-2. Willie
Stargell, AI Oliver, Rennie
Stennett and Ed Ott had two
hits each for the Pirates.
Giants 5, Padres 1:
. Marc Hill drove in two runs
with a single and a double ami
Handy Moffitt pitched 2 2-3
innings or shutout relief for
his seventh save as the Giants
ran their winning streak to
sjx games. Moffitt took over
from Bob Knepper with the
bases filled and one out in the
seventh and got Dave
Winfield to hit into an inningending double play , Bob
Shirley suffered his lOth loss
for San Diego.

).Mexican stars keep Chisox winning
was Pn a scouting mission in

Mexieo in 1972 and .on the
ZaeatC&lt;'as team was a righthander namt!d Francisco
Barrios who caught his eye.
Two years l"ter the Sox
signed tum.
Monday night Barrios
struck out 10 batters for his
• sixth straight win and Jorge
Orta, who was signed from
the same Mexican dub in
1972, doubled home a pair of
fi rst-inning runs to give the
Am erican League Western

Division-le11ding White Sox a
4·2 victory ove~· the Kansas

City Royals. Barrios yielded downed Cleveland, 2-1;
only six his in hurling his fifth Detroit outlasted Toronto, !)complete game and running 7; Oakland ~t away 'Seattle,
his record to 9-3.
8-l, and Minnesota edged
"He pitched like hell, didn't California, 6-5, in 11 innings.
he ?" said White Sox Ma.ager
In National League action,
it was Houston 2, Cincinnati
BOb Lemon .
The joyousChisox crowd of 0; Montreal 4, Pittsburgh 2;
22,320 gave their heroes what and San Francisco 4, San
has become a customary Diego l.
standing ovation after the Orioles 4, Yankees. 3:
victory, but Barrios refused
Rookie Eddie Murray 's
to be singled out.
basesloaded single with one
"The ovation was not for out in the ninth inning scored
"¥'· but for my buddies in the ·pinch runner Tom Shopay
field," he said. ''I'm no Mark with the winning run in the
Fidrych - elien here."
'nationally televised game to
Elsewhere in the American give Orioles' southpaw Mike
League, Baltimore upended Flanagan his fourth straight
New York, 4-3; Boston win. Murray's fifth _game-

winning hit against . the
Yankees this year came after
AI Bumbry opened the inning
with a'n opposite field bloop
triple. Flanagan scattered II
hits including Graig Nettles'
19th and 20th homers.
Red Sox 2, 1ndiaos 1:
Rookie right-hander Bob
Stanley, making his second
start since June 3, pitched a
five-hitter enabling the Red
Sox to maintain a half-game
lead over Baltimore and a
Ph -game bulge over the
Yankees in the AL East .
Denny\ Doyle and George
Scott singled home runs in .the
second
and
fourth
respectively. Stanley is now

NO WASTE

MINUTE
STEAK

LB:

1

•·.

By DICK WEST
no vacancies occur, the cost
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - drops to $5,000.
Now that the Supreme Court
To you and me, confused
has upheld the right of la'ymen that we are, it might
lawyers to advertise their · seem the same result could
rees and services, we can look be obtained by selling the
forward to the day when the other 50 beds. Or even giving
same ruling will be applied to them away . 1'Julapparently it
the medical profession.
doeSil 't work that way.
I don't mean just cut-rate
ln practice, apparently, a
neurosu r geons offering · IIXI-bed hospital with only 50
bargain basement beds still spends $500,000. So
lobotomies. I'm talking a bout the only way to reduce the
the entire range of health pee-patient cost is to fill up
car·e. l
··
the rest of the beds.
Hospitalization rates, as
ln other words, if more of
everyone with even so much us got sick, the average
as a hangnail is aware, have medical bill would drop
been rising far faster than proportionat~ly .
inffalion. One reason, we areOr, putting it another way,
told , is that hospitals have too what this country needs to
many vacant beds.
combat rising health care
! read the other day that the cos\j! is a good, old-fashioned
hospital bed s.urplus is epidemic.
costing us injury-prone,
In
our
sanitized,
dise~se-ridden citizens more · immunized society, however,
than $1 billion a year.
~idemicsare unlikely . Ergo,
Snatching fi gures QUI of the we must approach th ethin, antiseptic-scented air, problem from another
let us say it takes $500,il00 a direction. ·
'dny to operate a 100-bed
This is where advertising
hospital. If only 50 of those come~ in.
bed&gt; are occupied, the cost
Advertising, in its more .
per patient is , $10,000. But if

advanced torms, can create
demands for goods and
services
that
didn 't
previously exist . In some
cases, the demands didn't
exist; in some cases, the
goods and services didn't
exist; in some.cases, both. To
Madison. Avenue,
ali the
same.

it's

I{ Madison

Avenue: can

create a market for , say, selfpropelled swizzle sticks and it can - surely it could
create a wider demand for
hospital beds.
We have in this country, for
example, thousands of closet
hypochOndriacs. They have
all sorts of imaginary
illnesses but suffer in silence
because of soci;ll stigmas
attached to psychosomatic
complaints.
Encouraged by a wellplanned advertising
campaign, many would, I'm
sure , start c.hecking into
hospitals for placebo relief.
' As the beds fill up, health
care costs for the genuinely
infirm drop. And everyone is
happy.

FRE:SH AND LEAN

GROUND CHUCK LB...

09

'
••

' By-WILLIAM
~

:

••

••
'

~
~

,
.,

~

E

i

1

•
•

;

.•
•..

STRACENER
.COLUMBIA , S.C. (UPI)R.G. Wilson has become a
millionaire
peddling
barbeque machines to
everyone from supermarket
owners to Marshal Tito o{
Yugoslavia.
Wilson, who began his
B.qrbecue Kin g, Inc., with a
$5,000investment in 1954, now
dire cts a co mpany that
grossed more than $5 million
in sales last year on business
in 70 foreign countries. Plants
in England and the
Nethe rl an ds
also
manufacture his products.
"He is the ta's t of the oldtime medicine mer\/ ' said P.

Bradley Morrah Jr. of
Grc'enville, his attorney and
long-time
friend
and
ro,nfidant.
"He can sell it to anyone,

anywhere."

Wilsort, 65, was a friend of
1 Pres ident Eis~nhower,
• · cooking at the White House
i · for hin• several tirnes. Two of
i his machines were inst;dled
·· • at tile White House, and. he
gave Ike a hqme version for
his farm at Gettysburg, i'a.
••I He is well known to officials
at the U.S. State and Agriculture departments and was
~ regularly invited to former
;' Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger's yearly business
conferences for the nation 's
top executives.
Wilson surprised virtually
• everyone
when he sold an
intrigued
Tito
22 machines at
{
n
foreign
trade
products fair
••
in Yugoslavia · in the 1960s
after being told by authorities
t.o stand at attention aod not
lry to speak to him when be
came. by the exhibit.
His hot food equipment line
or some 48 items no,.·extends
beyond bllrbeque cookers. It
incllldes donut r.,.,rs; baking
ovens for pies, cakes and

:

•'

••

a secret to the candidntes
themselves."
He iS a member of the state
Democratic party ' s
Committee of 100, which
includes persons who give at
least $500 a year to the party,.
He also has provided
college scholarships for 35 to
40 youths, four of whom will
he receiving doctoral degrees

HAM SALAD

WIENERS

79e

&amp;9e

LB.

pair of runs during a six-run

AU. WEEK PRICEI ·

RC

DR. PEPPER
16 oz. bots.

16 oz.

8 PAK

bots.

79e

8 PAK
ALL WEEK
PRICE

THURS. ONLY

DIET RITE COLA
16 OZ. BOTS.

Major League Results
Pres.s International
National League
Pttsbgh
020 ooo ooo ~ 2 11 1 .
Mn tral
001 OJO oox- 4 7 0
Jones , Forster (71 and Ott ;
and_ Carter .
w· Bahnsen
. Bahnsen , 11·. 2. L- )ones, 2_
..4 ,
By

Unil ~d

ooo

'119

o- so

Cinc i
000 000Houstn
000 002 OOx - 2 5 0
Nor.man . Bi ll ingham (8) and
Plummer ; Ric h ard and Fer guson . W- Richard , 8·6. L Norman , q_; _

8 PAK

San Fran
San Dgo .

021 001 010- 5 12 0
000 000 100- 1 9 1
Knepper, Moffitt {7l and Hill ;
Shirley , Sa wyer (81. Tomli n (8)
and Tenace ._W- Knepper , J -3. L
· - Shi rley , 6-fO .
'

Tronto
Del

500 020 000-

8-16 oz.
bottles

99~
·

7 82

140 000 31x- 9 10 2

'Pms. 1"'·

'PEPSI COLA

COKE

010 100 000- 2 7 0
000 010 000- ·1 S 1
Cleve
Stanley &amp;nd F isk ; Bibby and
Fosse . W- Stanley, 6·3. L'Bibby , . 8-6. HR Cleveland,
Thorn.ton ( 11 l .
Bo ston

breads; pressure fryers,and
Willis. DeBarr (2), Vuckov ich
(7) am:! Ashby; Roberts, Grilli
food warmers. The plant at
(T) and Wo c kentuss . W- Gr illi.
Mauldin, about five miles
1-0. L - OeBarr ." 0·1. HRs from Greenville, employs 100
Detroit , Staub (Il l. Toronto,
Rader IB L - to 110 .persons.
Kan Ci ty
010 010 ooo- 2 6 3
"He's the Cadillac of the
. Chicgo
300 001 OOx- 4 8 0
Gura , Bird (6) and Porter ;
trade," ~~id ~Orrah .
Barrios
and
E Ssi an .
WWilson decided to try to
Barrios. 9-3. L - Gura , 5·4.
make it on his own after
N.Y .
110 100 QOO- 3 11 0
working
for
anQther
Balr
100 000 201- 4 9 2
barbeque machine maker as
Torrez·, Lyle {9 ), Tidrow 19)
and Munson ; F lanagan afl d
a traveling salesman. He soon. ·,
Skaggs . W- Fianagan , 6-8- L ---designed a revolving metal
Torrez , 8-8. HR s- New York ,
Nettles '1 (20) .
, RAINEDOUT
oven to cook chickens and
Heavy rains foreed
hams in supermarkets.
Seattle ,
000 000 lOG- 1 5 '1
poslponement of Monday's ' Oaklnd
His previous employer's
010 601 oox- e 7 0
House, Montague (4 ). Se9ui
schedule action on the 19th
product was charcoal-fired
(7)
and Stinson ; Coleman ,
annual Kyger Creek Little
and the smoke limited its use
Lacey {7) and Newman . WColeman, 1-0. L - House, 2-3.
League Tournament .
to driveins, he said. His
HR s--oak !and. McKinney- (6) ;
Play resumes this
model was electric .
Seattle , Stanton ( 11 J.
evening wltb the Bidwell
He opened a small
( 10 innings)
· barbeque restaurant in 1954
Pirates meeting Mason Min
031 000 001 0- 5 11 1
to test his inventions ' and
County losuraoce , Ca !
000 000 221 1- 6 10 o
Redfern , · T . Johnson
(7) ,
realized a profit each year,
Pomeroy Pirates battling Burgme
ier (8) , Schueler (91 ,
Hannan
Trace
and
the
turning the money back into
Butler (9) 0 . Johnson (9) anCI
Rutiand Dodgers meeting Wynegar ; Tanana , Mrller (6) ,
the business.
LaRoche (8) and Humphrey . w
Wilson attributes his
the Gallipolis Tigers.
~LaRoche, 6-2. L -- 0 , Johnson ,
l_- 3. HR - Minnesota , Kusick (7) .
~uccess to j'honesty, fairness
:::::;::-:·:::::~::::::::: : :::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::
-,-;- ,. and treating your fellow man
right."
. " I still believe in God, and I
believe God has let me rruike
this money and put it in my
hands to distribute."
He donated a revolving
Mr. John G. Long_ thr. firld rdilor of a well-known New York
restaur.ant atop a dormitory
:llbsidy puhli:~llin ~ firm will be interviewing local authors jn 1 quest
at the University of sOuth
Carolina campus in Columbia for rinlsht"d manu.~ripts suilabk for book publication. AU subjecl8
will 1M' con ~ idrrcd , inclurlin~ riction _ and non. fiction, poetry,
to the school, financed
completion of the American juvrniJr~o;. rt'ligiuw books, rtc.
He will be in Ironton in late August.
Red Cross building which
If you .have complt:trd a book-l.mgth manuscript (or nurly 50) on
bears his name in Greenville,
any !iuLj('ct .,Jfld wouM like a professional appraiNI (withou~ cost or
gave his $150,000 house to the
oblif.!alion).
pl l!~!jl" writr immediately and dt:~cribr: your work. Stair
Boys Home of the South and
whrthrr
yoU
would prt'frr a mom'n~ aflemoofl. or Henin«
paid for two giant murals in
appoinlinrnl
,
and
kindly mt'nlion ~our phorM' numbrr. You will
the state capitol depicting tAe
r'lcr.i't'l' a confinnation by mail for a dffinilc tinw and plact·.
RevolutiOAary War battles of
Authors with completed manlii!CripU unable to appear may eend'l
Cowpens
and
Kings
them
directly lo Us for • frre re~~ and ~faiUition.. We will abo be
Mountain.
glad
to
hear from l.ho!;r who~ literary worklare still in progrtM.
Wilson considers himself a
political conservative and •
Mr . John G. Long
has contributed to both major
(nrlr~"'
parties.
84 Fifth Avenue. New York, N.Y. 10011
" I'm
a
backdoor
.Jlolitician 1 ~~ he said. ''I am 1------~-!'!.v&gt; .. (~! 21243-8800
involv_ed in it, but it's more of

,

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By J .R. KIMMINs
' aJLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate Monday night
passed and sent to the House
legislati011 requiring utilities
to tell theif customers where
they can buy materials to
insulate ·their homes and
where they can obtain
financing to pay for it.
.
lf utilities fail to comply
with _the bill, they would be
required to make the loans
themselves under
an
amendment adopted on tbe
floor. before the final
unarumous Senate passage.
The Senate also sent to
Gov. James A. Rhndes two
bills for signing. One would
require
operators
of
motoriz£&lt;:1 bicycles to he at
lea~t 14 years old, have valid
Ohio motorcycle driver 's
licenses and require that the
vehicles be licensed by the
state by April I, 1978.
The other prohibits loca l
governments
from
!?"Ohibiting the establishmeqt
of residential mental health
care !acUities through zoning
ordinances.
Sen .
Michael
Schwarzwalder, DColumbllS, said his home
insulation bill was a "first
step" toward a solutioo of the
· - state's energy crisis.
He said two-thirds or aU
homes
were
either
n· oninsulated
or
underinsulated, . and that
window caulking, weather
stripping o.r Qther forms of
insulation would reduce the
slate's energy consumption
and save homeowners money
•. on their utility bills.
H the bUt becomes law,
each utility in Ohio would be
required to send to its
residential custom·ers each
May and September a list of
approved home contractors
who could do the insulation
work. Homeowners would
aslso receive a list of banks
and lending institutions _
willing to ·make loans to
finance the work.
An added amendment requires that utilities make the
small loans themselves if
banks do not set up the loan
program themselves.
• Any losses through default
oo the loans could be added to
.a utility's rate base and
passed on to all customers,
said Schwarzwalder.
Schwarwalder's bill also
requires that the Board of
• Building Standards adopt
federal rules for insulating
one, two and thr~e-family
• homes.
Sen .
J.
Timothy
McCormack, D-Eu-clid, said
the Senate's 27-1 approval of
• House amendments to send
his residential mental health
facility bill to the governor
was the " greatest step the
people of Ohio could take in
away · from
moving
warehousing our mentally retarded citizens in large, cruel
state institutions."
McCormack agreed in each
of the House changes to his
bill, which was de!ligned to
end the practice of some local
, governments which enact
zoning ordinances to lieep
• such facilities out of
residential neighborhoods.
•
Only 12 of the state's 930
communities currently allow
the location of supervised
family and group homes in
residential areas. '
The Senate also passed and
sent to the Senate legislation
extending until Dec. 31, 1980,
' the authority of the Joint.
Underwriting Association, an
ocganization created by the
legislatw-e in 1975 to make
medical malpractice
~ insurance
available - to
dol!tors and hospitals.
The !Jill also repeals the
~ $150 limit on fees an a~ent
~ can charge fo~ securing·
:. insurance for doctors and
• hospitals. The association r
~ provides primary and excess
"' malpr aetlce insurance to
• " 7,1100 of the state's 14,000
. doctors and !56 of Ohio's 244
•• hospitals and clinics. .
;: Before adjourning until,
:. 1:30 p.m. today, the Senate
: also sent to the House a bill
:: designating 1-00 from the
,. ~nnsylvania border to its
:. intersection with the Ohio
:; Turnpike ia Lorain Count.y as

.

GROUND BEEF

Marty Perez and Jeff
Newman each singled home a
fourth-inning and Rich
McKinney stroked a solo
homer in the second for the
A's. Joe Coleman gained the
victory in first 19n start, but
needed three innings of
hitless relief,help from rookie
Bob Lacey.
Angels 6,' Twins 5:
Pitcher Dave Johnson fell
off the mound and uncorked a
bases-loaded wild pitch with
one out in the loth inning to
bring home Dave Chalk With
the winning run, and make
Dave Garcia 's debut ~s
Angels' manager a success,
Chalk singled and tripled to
drive home two earlier
Angels' runs ~

'

Jo House

.6-3. A's 8, Mariners 1:

,AII
ey
Message from Bedpan

.

bill go_e s

FRESH AND LEAN

By BILL MADDEN
UPI S port~ Writer
Chi~ago White Sox' Vice
President Roland Hemond

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o. , Tuesday, July )2, 1977

•

.

14 oz.
Jar

ALL BRANDS

Carton

CHEWING fOBACCO
SUPER
MARKET
OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10

SUNDAY
10 10 10
CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
~
We Accept Federal Food Stamps

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·

We Resene the Hiaht To Jmit Qulntlties

:;

STORE HOURS
MON. lHRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY
..
. 11 AM TO 6 'PM

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S)

LOCUST _&amp; PEARL STS. -ON THE . CO~NER -MIDDLEPORT
CARRYOUT SERVICE ·
'

U.S.O.A. CHOICE .

MEATS a

liE
I•'
~

\J.S .D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

RUMP ROAST

Pound

NEW HAVEN - A chicken
barbecue
will be held.•
•
Saturday beg1nnlng at U a.m.--

•
,.,
:.
:
:

at the New Haven city
buDding by the New Haven
Fire Department and Ita
auxiliary. The pibllc is Invlted.

..

=y

VANILLA 12
WAFERS ..... ""

M

UE8LER

Pound

BEEF CUBE STEAK .........1........ : .. . ' '""' $JS 9
BONELESS BEEF STEW .............. ''""'

•

1

5 n

KAHNS OR ECKRICH .
OR BEEF FRANKS

~

CARDINAL

10•

s

PEPPERONI PEPKIII .... '.i:'; 79• ''""'
· ·1
CACKLE BIRD ~~u;S;ERS .. .... ,~ ... 79'
691
SWIFT SLICED PEPPERONI ...... i::;
..... · · ... ,.......
•"'"'""'"
•
·
. 69• ~~.~U~SCHWIEGER
'"
BEEF FRinERS .............................
•~"' s1tt
BOSTON BUTI

·

09 DIIIIIERBELL BOLOGIIA ... ,., .....Poo.,. l J i t

$

' .

PORK ROAST .......................... '•""' 1 ,.. ,,.,,.,
·
FER SLICED MEATS
WA

)

PORK I TEAK $1 1'

&gt;·M.

49

1

$

CH&lt;Cm """

POlK FRinERS ..........................,...
umEOO'"'"'

SALE DATES

JU~Y 13

12 p~~- st~

It

1

rru;iii;~~iiri~::.~~:::~rtr~~r·
~
.
'I"
+••-••••••••••••••••••••••+

Pound

CHOCALAT£ CH" OF VAN. WAFU

COOKIE CRISP
CEREALS · ':;~·

79&lt;

THIU JULY· 16, 1977

QUANTITY R'IGtiTS RESERVED

Cre•mv or Crunchy

PE

BLACKI£RRY OR STRAWBERRY

lAMA PRESERVES .................... .'~:.· 89•

'

BAM.tt GRAPE JAM OR

28-oz.
Jar

PEACH PRESERVES ..................... '~:.· 79•

BETTY CROCKER FROSTING MIX ·14-o•
. Butter Br;ckle, Creomy Wh;le or Chocolalo Fudgo
SALAD DRESSING ....................... '~:.· 69'
7 1h oz. Fluffy White or Fluffy Chocolate
..
RI'CHEliEU

13 oz. Milk Cf10c::ofate

limit one with ·c oupo"

I
SQU~EZE MUSTARD ...... : ..... :;:~~ 39'

··~~9;
Box.,
BANQUET
f[JDO slORt s

~·=~:::.~·~~:
o........ c •

POT-PIES

Xl)(elll t;l•l: 1

MAGIC SI~IICi

~

5

ASPIRIN

8 -oz.

100 ct . Sox

Pkgs.

st~~BANQUET,DINNERS •;;~ 43c BANQUET"ioiL N BAGS~;;
:c,~ 1~...
~·••• ·IJMit. VMIJEI••••••·••••• ..~···••·•·••••·••·•·•..•••••••·••

'

J&amp; HREMEIIISE. ';;,"

1

1"

1

1"

,.ouotNr

POWDER .................. ":;~

......

QO· I·-0&amp; ~

CAfl01 NA l ' \\

~'*u sroR~s ~ t a.AOINA LIOOOSTORES

"'

BLEACH

~·. -~~~1t!!J.~·
""

c

a... CDol-

- ,....,

Bo:~~

JII(.JI]:flel:l

&amp;WEET MILIC 0~ BUTTERMILK

HOME MAID BISCUITS ...... .2 ,~:, 29•

GRAPEFJWI T OA ciRANGE

TROPICAIIIA JUICE ..... .. .:;:.~ 99'
CIUM .......... ~:.;. 49'

~

your choice

$149

IOPEEP AMMOIIA , '!:.•·

"•

51_0 iiOL .,..................':;:"

~

'%o srO~ rs

LIQUID

69'

IVORY

79c

COUNTRY· FRESH ~
New U.S. No. 1 Long White Cllilomia

~\l ~!O lli S

t,
••
:,

59&lt;
~¥rcVs.: . . :;~:· 69&lt;
NABISCO

SLICED BEEF LIVER .................... ''""' 59&lt;

U.S.O.A. CHOICE SIRLOIN TIP

PITI

~

BARBECUE ,l'LANNED .

.·

STEAK OR ROAST ...:...... .,.,.,.,.,., Poo"' S 1"
•
SWIFT SIZZLEAN ........................ ·;;:~ 1119

•

:

WE GlADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

•

"Amvets Highway."

.....

FIIEIIDUEST SIIYIItl

•a'
z

• tA~O!NAL t00DST011£S

Crisp 'hndtr Large Californl• Pllrc•l

t,.I--III.L..l,.

~

CEURY
.................................. .... 39c
Fnsh Home Grown

(:A88AGE .................. ,....~~:. 12•

•

~

larfll 72 Site C.lifornia

l'-

...~~osroR£S • CAIIDINU FOoos TOIIfS

.

LOI'IO Stender Sweet ·Cal!forni•

CARROTS
............ ]
F•nc:y. SwMt

iro·or:alfi
·
. . ., s

~

~·-~_

81tl

Fla~ond

W.shington StAll! Red or Golden Delicious

ORANGE$ ... 12• E~C,.H 10Fo8 '1 00 APPLE$ ................

\)

1-Lb.

•

Xll(el1J:tft 1 ]:1

•

6 ... 89c

139~

:0· 01 ,

"'.....'IM!77.
c..-

o.oot·.r-~·

.

...........
I:

'

i

•

00·1 ....

�•
6- The'Oailt Sentinel. Middleport-Poml'I'Oy, o., Tuesday, .July 12. 1m

'Fairest of 'em All' theme for fair
" Meigs County -Fairest of
'em All" is the theme of the
Meigs County' Fair flower
shows to be staged on
Wednesday and Friday of
Fair week, Aug. l&amp;-20, at the
Rock Springs tairgrounds.
The Wednesday show topic
is ,;The Meigs County Fair
ls: •· with the artistic a r·
rangement dass titles teUing
the story of everything from
the fair queen selection to the
cliffs of the fairgrounds.
Topic of the Friday show is
" Meigs County Is: " and dea ls
with the river,the coal mines,
and the country chapels.
Both shows will feature
h orticult ure
s pecimen
classes, a junior division for
those under l2 with both ar·
tistic design and specimens,
and educational exltibits.
Mrs. James Carpenter and
Mrs. Joe Bolin are cochairmen for the flower
shows which are being staged
cooperatively by the Meigs
County Fait' Board and the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
Association. ·
As in previous years there
will be four lop awards at
each show - best of show,
reserve best of show, horticultural sweepstakes, and
junior gardener. Ribbons and
premiums will be awarded in
all classes with $1.25 being
paid for blue ribbons, $1 for
red, and 75 cents for white.
Judging will be done by an ·
Ojlt·of-county accr edited
. judge of the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs.
Entry fee is a membership
ticket. Boys and girls under l2
may, enter classes of the
junior diVision without a
membership ticket.

une.

Exhibitors must make theor
entries in the shows with the
fair board secretary no later
than 4 p.m. on Aug. 12. They
can be made by mail but no
telephone entries will be ac·
cepted.
. In the Wednesday show the
classes of the artistic arrangements division open to
residents of Meigs County
and' Meigs County. Ga rden
Club members are:
"The F lower Show"- a
traditional mass design (invitation, · which means both
residents and non-residents
of Meigs County may ex·
hibil ). .

or more than one varu~ty, and
any hanging PQtted flowerong
plant.
In tbe educational exhibit
for the first show of the fair,
tbe class calls for an educational display showing two or
more methods of plant .propagation . There is also a
class for handcrafter items
but these must include some
plant material and instruc•
lions for making the item.

Marigold-large type, one.
Potted Plant - one type,
either roliage or blooming
variety. '
H~ndcrarted item-must include some plant material.
The rules specify that the potted plants and the handcrafted ilems are to remain
on display throughout the
week.
I n t he
hortic ult ure
'
specimen division, the
!8'•'
"
classes are
"
;
C 3J '
Roses: hybrid tea (red,
pink or blends of these, and ·
yellow, orange or blends of
these) floribunda,' and gran·
diflora.
Gladiolus: aod col· "The Fair Queen"- a
or
tra ditional desig n using
Zinnias: dahlia flowered or
roses.
"The 4-H J unior Fair"- a cactus flowered.
TUESDAY
Dahlia: decorative one
small traditional design not
ORGANIZATIONAL
meetbloom ; cactus type, one
to exceed nine inches.
ing
of
the
Meigs
County
"The Grange Bootbs"- A bloom.
Marigold : large type, one Pomona Junior Grange 7: 30
traditional design featuring
p.m. Tuesday in th~ Meigs
disbudded.
fruit and or vegetables.
Fair
Board building on Rock
Uly : true genus lili wn, one
"The Midway at Nighl"Springs Fairgrounds. All
modern design featuring stalk
Meigs County youngsters, 5The
potted
plant
division
special lighting effects to be
14
years are eligible. Parents
has
classes
for
cacti
and
or
staged . in darkened booth .
of
children need not be
succulents
with
one
or
more
with biacklighting used.
grange
members. Children
"The Animal Auctions"- variety per pot ; ferns which
will
be
charter
men!bers.
traditional design featuring includes true ferns, as well as
MEIGS
COUNTY
Better
as pa r a g us,
spren ger i ,
foliages.
Uv~stock
Dairy
4-H
Club
'.' The Horse Races"- plumosa, but only one variety
meeting,
8:30
p.m.
Tuesda
y
modern design showing mo- per pot; any other foliage
at
home
of
Bill
Kautz.
plant, hanging potted foliage
tion.
PUBLIC ME E TING ,
" The Cliffs at Rock plant with either one variety
Tuesday,
7: 30 p.m. at Mt.
Springs "- a design in•
Union
Baptist
Church at
corporating rocks.
which
health
team
members
The junior division bn
will
speak
on
multiphasic
Wednesday has J he following
screening clinic to be held
classes:
July 18-21 at Meigs Junior
"Kiddy Day"- a design usHigh, Middleport.
ing bright colors.
The Klein family reunion
RACINE LODGE meeting
Zinnia- · dahlia flowered was held recently at the
at
7:30 Tuesday for stated
one.
Route 33 roadside park. A meeting with work in the
Zinnia- cactus flowered covered dish dinner was servthird degree .
ed and the afternoon was
WOMEN of St. Paul and St.
spent visiting and playing Lut ,leran Church, annual
..
games. Celebrated during the picnic Tuesda y at the
day was the birthday of roadside park on route 33, left
Margie Kiein and gifts and hand side. Bring a covered
cards along with a biithday dish and your own table
cake were presented to her.
~~
service. For infotrru!tion call
Helen and Sue Hottel
Attending were Mr. and Margaret Blaettnar, 992-2412.
~
Mrs. C. H. Klein, Sr., Katie
WINDING Trail Garden
Klein,
Tommy Klein~ Kenny
Suicide Is Not The Answer!
Cl ub, aunual picnic Tuesday
Klein,
Paul
Klein,
David
Dear Helen and Sue:
I've had a lot of experience with things that made me think Klein, Hannah Klein, Margie evening at the home of Mrs.
suicide was the best answer, but I discovered , like "Still Klein , Edith Welch, Wayne Alice Thompson with Mrs.
Klein, Tammy Klein , Mr. and Addalou Lewis, c&lt;~hostess.
Here," that I want to Jive .
·
Last year my girlfriend died aller a hit~nd-run incident. Mrs. Fred Pullins, Shelia Plant auction to be held.
She had cancer and there were only a few months left, but she Pullins, Shelly Pullins, Con- Plans for the Meigs County
hie Kiein, Myrtle Klein, Dxon Fair fl ower show to be made.
wanted all of them.
Donna
Klein, Tammy S.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53,
Being a male I should have acted the stereotype of
Klein,
Peggy
Caton, Mike Disabled American VeteranS
American meh. Instead I cried - hard ,-and I was in tOtal
Caton, Hqward Jeffers, tom will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesshqck for months. True friends pulled me through.
Sarver,
Florence Heilman, day at the Butternut Ave.
My problems 'didn't stop there. I got a reputation of being
gay (''Real men don't cry," and, besides, I signed up for a Lawrence Klein. .
WEDNESDAY
Patricia Kiei.n, Robert
woinen'sllberation and a child care class; because that's how I
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I :30
feel about thi:ng5.) Even my parents can't accept the way I am, .Klein, Mary Klein, Todd .Wednesday at the Columbus
Klein, Larry Klein, Rodney and Soutliern Ohio Electric
which is probably blselnial.
Well, I want to tell you, disapproving people don't bug. me Klein, Kimberly Klein, Co. social room.
any more. I feel good, and that's what is right, right! ,- STILL Angelas Klein, Penny Klein;
TllURSDAY
Kevin Klein, Betty Lane,
HERE NO. 2 and FINALLY HAPPY (AGE 15)
ROCK
Springs Grange, 8
Christopher Lane; Tommy
Lane, Crystal Lane, Irene p.m. Thursday at the hall.
Dear Still Here:
Klein, Grover Klein, Cindy First and second degree work
Right!
•
to be carried out.
You've discovered . .great truth : when you accept Klein, Keith Klein, Gene
SATIJRDAY
yourself, others soon learn to accept you. And we hope that Kelin, Aunda Klein, Michelle
HEMLOCK
Grove Grange,
Klein, Gene Klein, Jr., Edna
someday it goes for your parents too. -HELEN AND SUE
7:45
p.m. with
Saturday,
Klein, Henry R. Klein,
.
+++
Rock
Springs
Grange
visiting
. NOTE . FROM SUE : About those maseuline-femtnlne Treand K. Klein, David L: and presenting the program.
stereotypes : Wbo SliiYS. guys can't cry ... or take child care Klein, · C)oarles Klein, ·Jr., The multiphasic health
classes ... or relate to the women's movement . .. or be Vickie Klein, Drema Klein, screen program to be
Charlie Klein, Sr., Jerry
sensitive, caring human people?
i.
presented.
Klein,
and Richie Stone.
That's as dumb as saying women must always be soft,
weak, dainty "followers." Let's hope our generation puts an
,,
end to this sort of labeling!

F'::::
~

Dinner pqrty held
Mrs. J:&lt;a.)'nJUmJ I Dt1ns 1
Hensler WMS honort.td ret't'ully
~th a donner ))llrly held at
the home of her son, Da111d
Hensley. Racine.
I&lt;-~ cream and cake wt"re
served by ber daugliter-inlaw, Becky Hensler. Attending were Raymund Hensler.
Mr. and MM!. David Hensler
and daughter, Rachaci , Mr.
and Mrs. Daniel Hensler and
sons, Jamey and Kelly .

.

u: .....

SOcial·
Calendar

HOLIDA Y ENJ OYED
Mrs .. Martha Searls and L.
D.' Hartinger spent several
days last week visiting a
friend, Mrs. E. A. Butler of
New Canton, Va , While there
they called on Mrs. Earl
Hamner, Sr., whose son,
Earl, J r . is the author of The
Wa ltons, story of the Hamner
family: They also met Jim
Bob who recently quit his job
at a bank in Richmond and is
now back in the family home.

Schulers Riven .
surprise part,y
A surPrise birthday party
was given Sunday hononng
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
St'huler, Middleport, Route I.
Mrs. Schiller's birthday was
June 22 and Mr. Schuler's bir·
thday will be July 20.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. James Schuler, Jason,
Aiiispn, Jamie, Amy,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
SchuJer, Coiwnbus; Jean McComan and Billie Jean, New
Straitsville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Eblin, Harley, Brian,
Stacey, Pomeroy ; Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Van · Meter,
Michael, John, Toni of Middleport : Mr. and Mrs. James
Schuler, Tina , Kimberly ,
Barbara. Pamela, Colwn·
bus; Mr. and Mrs. John
Schuler, Paul, Guy ,
Christine, Alicia, Bridget,
and James Council, Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Schuler and
Lisa, · Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Dailey, Middle port ; Mary Dayton,
Stephanie, Jack Shawn, Glen-

dale, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sehuler, Davod,
Rose, Mary, Nunnaio, Ran·
doli: Pollyanna and 1'amatha
uf St. Clairsville; Mr.· and

e· ••••••••

. .

·~

BANANAS

s

LB.

.......

"The Insurance Store "

ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

PRICES GOOD THRU
SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1977

Pul your auto, home, healt~

and life insurance into O ~E policy. Save money and
have one premium due date for all yo'Jr !nsurance.

PORK

NO DEALERS PLEASE!

Some Of Our Other Ser vices :
Copy Service - Notary Sll!rvict · Ca r Leasing Ser vice

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICL ·

EXTRA

STEAK

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TOt P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

unae I nsurance Store ..

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

USDA

CHOICE

SLICED PORK SHOULDER ...........~: ..&amp;

.

LEAN
LB.

.

.

LEAN

CUBED PORK STEAK.......... ~~~~~- ..~~·.. ~ 1.29

SUPERIORS BACON ... . -----------~~-~-~~·99$
.

~

SLICED CALlA

·· ~

'

HAMS

VITAFLUFF
8 oz . Normal.

Oily ,

¢

'?ry . Blonde

F.I.P. Price ...

WIENERS ............~~~:......

BOLOGNA·

LB.

65~.

TONY'S HOME MADE

CHUNK

HAM SALAD

lb.

lb.39'

Collander, Dustpan
Funnel Set, Mixing Bowl

Shampoo Liquid

12 oz.

FRENCH CITY

PICNIC

.

•

"from The Plclc of the Porkers"

Va luables
9. Business ffa ckag e
Po li cies
10. L iiJbility Insurance
11. Farm Insurance

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
PACKAGE POLICY -

•

~-

1. Motorcvcles
8. Jewelr y ~nd Othe r

l . Auto insurance
2. Home Insurance
J . Mobile Homes · ·
4. HeaHh . lnsurance
S. life Insura nce
6. Boa t lnsurince

'1 00

GOLDEtf RIPE

"•

·Generation Rap
By

Produce Buy

REUTER-BROGAN

a

Kleins .hold
family reunion

PORK PRICES ·ARE DOWN!

Mrs. Ronald Yoho, Elizabeth,
Glendale, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Haley, Glendale, W. Va:; and J oe
Schuler, Cheshore.

99~

Your Choice

79 ·

j $1 .00 Value
. F.I.P. Price..

2/ $1

.

AMPHIBIOUS
Carrier

$~9

Value

F .I.P. Price •...

$1
~
. . , ." ·I FOSTER .GRANT
· ·" .: 71·04 Sunglasres

(

'

a

ULtRA BRITE
Toothpaste
4.3 oz .

+++

Rap :

'

hom~uala~!i:!:~~- ~~ fe~t:.~nJ: ~y : ;

&lt;'~$&gt;

$1 .14 Value

Diamonds
to match your mood
... _and your budget

· friends, know my position. I played football in grade and high
'' ·.
school. 1'!11 not "effeminate." Girls think I'm j~ood-looking and
I'd have no trouble finding one iii were inclined.
. ·
dl
I know of gay teachers, policemen, firemen, politicians,
~l/
lll)d some very famous singers and actors. We don'twant ,pity ,·, '.,',.·'.•1,11.1
•
or s~ial privileges, we just want to be accepted as one part of
··"·''
. socieiy. Wearen'tout to attack boys or ''convert" people to our i!
lifestyle. Percentagewise, more h~lerosexuals attack young ·!
girls than gays molest young guys.
f
H a few homosemals "flaunt it," well, look at the macbo !
men who brawl in public here. I wish everyone were like "I'
" Trying to Understand,'' the mother of three who reaUy .does :• .•
understand how ga}'ll feel. Thanks for printing her letter, and
thanks to her for seeing our only "difference" is something . !
that shouldn'tmatter to thinking people. -L. Y. G.
'

[f

F.I.P. Price

.

With

15

7
F.I.P. ;,:i~=l~.~
"

activities ... at a particular

tim•·" -

.Rutland ~ardeners meet
RUTLAND - Members of
, the Rutland Friendly
GardenerS" met recently at
the home of Mrs. Dick Fetty
lor a workshop on making
. macrame plant hangers.
Instructor for the workshop
was Mrs. Bob Bishop who
demonstrated how to make
various designs, the knots used, and the necessary
materials to . make dilferent
types of hangers for plants.
These will be sold by the club
members at the Sept. ,;!9
Gardeners Day Out to be held
on Sept. 29 at Marietta ..
A second WOfkshop ' was
planned for AugUIII at which
time l!llOre macrame and
other items will be made for
the s¥es tables . . ,t.ttending

39¢

I
:

Gi ve her this sparkling diamond brid81p ai r
.. .. an d there'll be a spark le in her e·yes now
and for many years lo come. These beautiful
dimond rings were especially c reated to give
tne maximum quality and style at the most

FLUSHING SET

•,

·-

3 lb. can

., ••

Bonus Box ··
BQs

Maxwell House Coffee

Plastic

$1.34 Value

49¢

NO. 355

OWEN'S

A FAMil~ OF INDEPENDENT PHARMACIES... ALWAY$ READY TO SERVE YOU
. WITH VALUES liKE THESE WHICH ARE GOOD. UNTil JUlY 17.

W/C

Coupon Expires July 16, 1977
'fWIIII CITY GATEWAY

CANNING LIDS
12 CT.

3

'1

PKG.

3

12 oz.
.CANS

NO.l05
9 OZ. CAN -.

89~

W!C

eo 11pon Expires July 16, 1977
IN CITY GATEWAY

$}39

64 OZ. BTl,

39c

2 ROll
W/C

PKG.

KEEBLER

BLUE BONNET

79C

·w;c

cOupon Expires July 16., 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

10 OZ. BOX

W!C

COUPON

COLJPON

FUDGE STRIPES

49~

NO. 85
W!C

COUPON

. No. 105 .
1211.! OZ. PKG.

CHEERIOS

Coupon Expires July 16, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

MARGARINE

· 49~

W/C

LB. PKG•.

-~ \,

Coupon Expires July 16, in7 '
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

__

.... _.._.

f'/I

., ••

COUPON

TOILET TISSUE

FABRIC SOFTENER

\

SPRAY COATING

'--&gt;:;

I

ORANGE JUICE

AURORA ASST.

NU SOFT

Coupon Expires July 16, 1977
TWiN CITY GATEWAY

_.PAM

POMEROY

I

· FROZEN

•'

NO. 405

POUND~N .

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE

'

GOLDEN ISLE

coyPON

COUPON

COURT ST.

CRISCO ·

~.

favorable price .

~.,:;~.

Hydrants in the village of
Middleport will be flushed
beginning at 10 p.m. this
"
evening.

SET

.

------------~~--

SHORTENING

Coupon Expires July 16, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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

'

..

CURAD

F.I.P. Price •.•

i

,

of

+

were Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mrs.
Robert Snowden, Mrs. Jack
Walker, Mrs. Howard Bir·
c hfield, Mrs. James ;
carpenter, and Mrs. Larry
Edwards.
'

RETURNS HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ellis
and daughter, ·Teresa, have
returned from a vacation in
the Getty~burg, Pa. area, and
a week at the Ohio Power
Ponds near Zanesville.

$865
diamonds

1 carat

READER

~

'

89~wtc

JAR
-

"Lesbian." HhomoSes.ual," and
"Jieterosexual" should be used Ill! adjectives, not nllUIIS :
people are not properly described as (such] but rather than

..

. -... -.~. . -.~:;
.. .

PEANUT BUnER
18 oz.

Cups

Dea~ Helen and Sue :

COUPON

PLANTE.RS

Kitchen
Dispenser
&lt;

To "Desperate " who thought he was gay and wanted ;
.desperately' to change : I quote from the " Hite Report," a &lt;'i'
current best~ller: "It is ir!'portant to note that (sexual) ~
preferences can change durmg a lifetime, or can change {

c-;A...

DIXIE .

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

several tiiJ)es .. ,

. . . . . .».

. ~--..-

--....

--

1

-:t.
.. r
: ·t'

BIRDSEYE

AWAKE ORANGE JUICE

- 'I

-:t

: -i

NO. 365

3

120Z.$100
, CANS

W/C ·

'eoupon Expires ~uly 16, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

\

,

�8-The Daily Sentinel 111iddl~port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 12. 1977

.

.

Airjackers give up to police in Helsinki

POLLY
s
POINTERS
.
Polly Cramer
-

the escape of their lasL three
hostages from a Soviet
Aeroflot jetliner th&lt;ly forced
to land in Helsinki.

HELSINKI, Finland (UPI)
Two Russian-speaking
hijackers surrendered early
today after sleeping through

VineKar smoothes creases

·
.

'
,
·
.

•

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My husband was given about 20 pairs
of nearly new wash and wear
slacks but they are about two
inches too short for him.
'There is plenty of nJaterial to
let the .hems down to make
them long enough but I do not
know how to remove the
crease that ls left when they
are lengthened. Steam pressing did not help so I hope you
have some ideas. - MRS.
W,E.
DEAR POLLY - When the
hem of a gannent is let down,
the crease line can be very
..fficult to remove. I turn
such a garment to the wrong
side and slip over the ironing
board. I then mix two teaspoons of white vinegar and a
teaspoon of water and
saturate a cloth with this mixlure. I dot it along two or
three inches of the crease at a
time and then press with a
mediumhotiron.-GLADYS .
DEAR MRS . W.E. -Gladys' method has never
failed to work for me. I do
find it easier to make a bit
more of the mixture and wring a cloth out of it and use as
a pressing cloth over the
crease. I have even used full
strength WIDTE vinegar on
stubborn creases but test on a
hidden spot first.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell Mrs. A. how we solved the
problem of mold continually
returning to the walls of our
house. Painting or scouring
did not remove this permanently as we learned it
came from dead air between
the walls of the house. We
made some holes in the e]!:terior walls and put air vents
in so the air ·could circulate
between the walls and that
stopped the mold: - MRS.
C.K.

.

•'

ptr•~s

Miners continue vacation

:~a~::'to~~~~\~'::

Otw or the au·
left
the atrplane and ga\'~ up at
about 5:30a.m. (11:,30 p.m.
EDT Monday) _ 2\-:o hours
after the last of their 68

hOstagt:_S escaped. The otb&lt;lr hustled home Mooday night
gave up at about 7 a.m .•. a aboard a speeial Aeronot undisclosed location, but
government spokesman satd. ' jetliner.
· when it was brought in the
The spokesman refused to
The air pirates, apparently gunmen refused to leave the
prOVIde further details, aware that a FlnnislJ.Soviet "'!liner and the smaUer craft
including whether the two treaty requires both nations •· t to return captured hijackers, wasThetaken two
away. hijackers
young men were sov1e
citizens a'nd w\ly they had threatened to blow up the commandeered the Soviet
hijacked the twin-jet Tupolev jet unless they were flown .to jetliner on a 37 5-mile
134 Sunday on a 37:Hnile another ·country.
domestl'c
flight
from
The deadline for blowing up
domestl·c fll'ght
¥ias tn · satls f~t ct or y ~ ondition
to
The end to the· tense ~our the airplane came and went Petrovsl.oye, about 100 miles
toda y a t a n Ind ianapolis standoff - Finland's first without incident as Finnish north of Moscow •
" t.-;
be
he the offl.cl' als and a translator L.eningrad on the Soviethospi tal wttl• a .22-e~liber IUJac.,ng
gan w n
Finnish border, and ordered
bullet wound in the bacli. She- last three hostages dashed stood by the craft's gangway it flown to Sweden.
was the second perS&lt;/n hit by. out the plane's door as: the and talked to tbe gunmen by
But the pilot told them he
'gunfife ne'er . the plant in weary hijack¢rs dozed .off, shouting up ·to the fuselage did not have enough! gasoline
recent days.·
said!. f he t
dooArF
. 'tnru'sh official said the to make it to Sweden and the
Union members charged &lt;&gt;?.~official
· "'" escape e t t
wo
aircraft -landed in Helsinki.
th e shot was fired by security hijackers alone in the craft, hijackers requested a small
guards at the plant, although its air stale after sitting idle
th ey ad-m itted they, too , had on the tarmac for a day and a
fired some shots.
half, and ringed by police and
" if you ask me , it accom- troops
armed
with
plish ed what the company antiaircraft cannons.
wa nted ,"
said
striker
The hijackers, said to have
Richard J ones of Elwood. ' 'It been armed with hand
Whipped Cream.
brought in th e state police ." grenades
and
other
St a t e
P o lice explosives,
broke
off
Supe rint enden t John T . negotill_~ons with Finnish auShettle said his men would thorities and shut ihe
remain at the pia n t "as long jetliner's door late Monday.
. ~~ ES ,ty"'
qs necessary ·II
They freed the jet's sevenf&lt;.i.
~- - - - - - - - - .man crew shortly after
0:
Gl
landing in Helsinki at 8 p.m.
IN HOSPITAL
RA CINE - Garnet Ervine, Sunday, then released all 22
Cherry St., Racine, is a women and children aboard
medical patient at the early MOnday, 19 men iater,
Camden -C lark Hospital in and another 18 late Monday.
had
escaped
in
HRS.: 10 :00 A.M. _tilll :00 P.M. Sun.'- Thurs. 1
Parkersb_urg, W. Va . Cards Six
ttl 12 :00 P.M._Fnday and Satu rday .
midafternoon.
may be sent to Room 417
All but the last three were
See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge
North .

By LEROY ADAMS
Monday.
ELWOOD, Ind. (U PI )
State Pollee Capt. Robert
Riottrained state troopers Davis, commander of the
enforced an uneasy truce · troopers, inspected the plant;
today around an auto parts which produces such plash~
factory ttuit has been riddled . auto parts as distributor caps
by bullets during a thr_ee- and electrical connector s,
month labor war and where a and said it had been hit by
woman· picket 'was shot " about 300" bullets.
Monday .
The governor ' s a ct ion
More than a dozen Indiana prompted negotiators for the
State Police officers guarded company and union to agree
the Essex International Corp. to r esume talks Frida y
plant through the night, while morning in Anderson.
a handful of United Auto
Five cars jammed with
Workers union members management
personn el ,
manned .picket lines outside security
guards
and
the gates.
strikebreakers drove out of
Union officials said they _ the plant after the troopers
feared the company would arrived and the entrance was
take advantage of the cleared of rocks , tree limbs
troopers' presence to resume and other debris .
plant operations on the · Some of the Essex
morning shift with 88 non- employes had been inside for
union workers hited a month several days, receiving rood
ago .
,
and other supplies by
Gov. Otis R. Bowen dis- helicopter . FBI agents
patched 60 troopers to the questioned strikers about
plant, 40 miles northeast of · charges they had shot at the
Indianapolis, following the helicopters.
shooting of the woman
Carol Frye, 25, Elwood,

MEMBERS OF THE CHESTER PEE WEE TEAM, finishing t he season with a ii-1 record ,
are: front row, 1-r, John Miller, David McLaughlin, Melissa Barker, Kim Dent, Danny
Leonard, Russell. Keller , Jeff Mays , Todd Clay and Huey Eason; back r ow, Rex Justis,
Jimmy Wilson , Mike Sims, Jeff Roush , Brian Beeler, Brent Norton, Lee Keney, Mike Gra nt,
and Matt HarriS. Coaches for the 1977 season were )\lax Eichinger , John Mille r, liarol.d
Norton and Bill Sims.

4. JQiles Boys empqees have had Blue Cross/Blue Shield hospitalization insurance-the best available including Major Medical; they have paid vacations; our empqees
have security with income protection insurance which pays their wages if the
emp~ee is sick or hurt on or off the job; Jones Boys ~mployees . have had life
. insurance equal to 1 years pay and liberal sick leave benefits-any unused sick
leave is paid at the end of the year; ·~ey have liberal j)aid excused absences up
' to three days due to death in the fami~.

les?
,.

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•
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•.·

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.

If you're compafing health care
plans for your company, you should
be aware that although two plans
may look alike, they cari still be
quite different. Make sure you're
comparing exactly the same cover:
ages ... dollarfor dollar ... benefit
for benefit. , . service for service.

PLAYERS ON THE Chester Uttle League Team II were fr ont, l tor, Victor Gaul.
Nat han Boatright, Ray Maxson , B. J. Randolph , Randy Bahr, Timmy Crow, Danny
Leonard, manager ; back, Eddie Cr ow, coach; Aa ron Parker, Todd Tripp, David Gaul,
Rodney Tripp, Jim newell and Nick Leonard , coach.

C OLUMt!US &lt;U P I&gt;- Here
Am . SB 299,
.
a glance at acti vit y Mon- O'Shaughnessy . Extends th e
day high! in the Ohio Senate : life of the Joint Underwriting
Bills Introduced
As soc i ati on for providing
SB 332, Cox. Permits a ma lpra cti ce i nsurance t o
dealer to sell a repossessed Dec. 31. 1980 and removes
house trai le r on behalf of a li mit on agent .f ees. 28-l.
secu r ed party wit hout a
SB
320,
Gillmor.
I~

'

apples to appLes, it's awfully
tough for anybody to beat a Blue Cross
and Blue Shield plan.

comparing apples. to oranges.
Another comparison you should
look at is the balance between
benefits and·cost ... what you need
versus what you can afford. And,
it's especially important to make
sure you and your employees are
adequately protected from gaps
in your coverage that could· wipe
out a life's savings.

.

.'

certi fication of title.

•
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BlueCtoss
Blue Shield
in Central Ohio

Designated 1-90 as Am vets

SB 333 , Zimmers-Garne y. Highway . 28-0.
Ex empt ~ fro m the payment
Am . Sub. HB 295, Lehman.

..

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of . redu ced auto l icense fees
pers'bns
in
the
Ma y
r eg i st r at ion pe ri od w ho
reg ister cars w ith t em por ar y
t ags issued dur ing Mar ch or

April.
.
SB 3 34,
Zim me r s ·
Celeb rezze . Extends periods
within wh ich pub lic offices
wl\ich have been dosed to th e
publi c may perfor m · dulles
required-by law.
SB 335. Zimmers. Provides
for refund of stat e ga s taxes

~~~ hased to operate a sc hool

SB 336. Va liquette. Permits
the derk of the common pleas
court to serve as cler k of the

judge of juvenile court .
SB 337, Sc hwarzwalder.
Requires prio r noti ce of

WANT AD WAY

'bustness closing

Hannifin Corporation of
Eaton has paid the DiviSion of
Wildlife of the Ohio Departrnent of Natural Resources
(OD N~)
$6,271.14
for
damages to wildlife caused
by pollution in a Preble
County stream.
Over 16,000 fish were killed
when plating wastes from the
compa n y's plant ent ered
Seven-Mile Creek in October,

or reductions of o

company spent about $9,000
over the last several months
installing "pollution
· abatement fa cilities and
•
changing pr ocedu r es to
!
guard against a similar incident occurring in the
•
:
future .
Haney commended Parker
- Hannifin.officials for setting
1976.
an ~xamplef for other cumDale Hlney, Chief ~ the parues to ollow, and for
Division of Wildlife, 111d he meeting their responsibility
• ha s been · informed the to the people of Ohio.

Pr ov ides for res.olv inCI a

deadl ock among corporate
di re ctors or trus·tees b y
appo inting a prov i si ona l
director or tru stee. 29-0.

Fran k Giro,la m i, Karen L
Giro lami to Thomas G.
McClung , Lots, Pom eroy.
Thon) as G. McCJ·ung . ·
Madeline
McClung
to
Thom as
G.
Mc Cl ung ,
Made lin e Mc Clung , Lots ,
Pome roy.
Ma r ie Millir ons to James
Allen Nelson , Maggie Leona

Nelson/ Lot 38, Boswo~rlh 's
Add .. Middleport. '
James A. Nelson, Maggie
, Nelson to Cornelius Ph illips.
Barbara K. Ph illips, Fra . 17,
Rulland .
Elaine Wine brenne r to
James E. Wfriebr enner , lf2
int. 61 1·3 acres. Scipio.

lions
and payments to disch ged
employes and the c m mun llles affected by shutdowns .

Families tour Carolinas

Creates

man (Kenda Russell ) and
daughters, Shelley . and,
Kimberly, Pittsburgh, Pa.
have returned from a vaca-

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.

N. C. Lt. f(.ussell is a com-

a

separate

'Registered M~rk s Blue Cross Ass.,ctalinn

'.'Registered Servie&lt; Marks of The National Assooiation of Blue Shield Plcli

•

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\

28-0.

Am . Sub. SB 71, Me ·
Cormack. Expands licensing
program for IOClltlng homes
for developmentally disabled
persons. 27-2.
Bills Passed
Sub. SB 127, Schwarz,
welder. Requl,. lltllltl• to
vi-Information on wllere
obleln home Insulation and
to obtain Joana and sets
u~ lnllllelfon st.,.rdl.
, 30.0.

assigJIIT!ent t his f~ll. H1s Wife
ls 1the forme r I.Jnda Sm1th,
t~~~ughterof Mr. and Mrs. Roy
0. Smith of Pomeroy·
lion.
The ·family spent a day at
The farnill~s toured Myrtle Beach dining at the
Winston Salem, N. C. where Cal a bash
Sea
Food
they visited Old Salem found- Restaurant. They returned
ed by a religious sect. They home via the Ocracoke Ferry
were IPBb of the Russell's at North Carolina. toured
10n, Marine u .and Mrs. Karl Nags ~ead, Kitty Ha_wk
Ruuell and children Melissa Wright BroUlers Memonal,
and Kenny at CaiiiJI ie)eune , and Williamsburg, Va .

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4. The Jones Boys department managers and c&amp;fied positions have been offered in
excess of 30% increa in wages and benefits.

5. Our employees have already _kst more than t.hey can expect to gain during the life
of the proposed contract. Why do the Union officials demand this strike continue?
.
Do they care?

Property · Transfers :

ocations

classification for motorized
bicyCles In the traffic code.

3. The Jones Boys .has offered to conti~ue present wages and benefits. and to make
additions which will increase the value of wages and benefits to the empkrjees
by at least 84' per hour for each empqee.

.

TRAINING TAKEN
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Technical Sgt . . David· L.
Weav~r, son of Mrs. Wilda
Brinker of New Haven has
graduated from the Strategic
Ai r
Command
Nonc ommi s sioned Officer
Academy at Barksdale AFB,
La. He is a 1961 graduate of
Wahama High School. His
father, Chester M. Weaver,
lives in New Haven. Sgt.
Wea ve r Is a n a ircraft
h y draul ic
syst ems
technician.

_:_ Concurs in House Kenneth Russell, Racine, a nd . pan~ commander and has
Amendments
,
Sub. SB 100. Carney . Mr. and Mrs. Floyd T. Chap- rece1ved an ~verseas · d~ty

!• '
•

2. The Jones Boys CountJy .Store in Pomeroy, Ohio, has been closed_.

Assembly at a glance

\

'

1. The Jones Boys, Incorporated, has suffered severe ecomomic losses.

If you're comparing plans, sit down
and talk with a Blue Cross and
Blue Shield representative. See
how your health care program
can be strengthened to better
meet your group's specific needs.
It will' be worth the time .. . because

·Otherwise, it 's like

-.-'

!.

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-

: • NBC refused to discuss Chancellor's salary or the length of
: his ''long term" contract, except to say that it was "longer
• · than three years." And presumably shorter than a bread box.

;. 16,000 fish
l COLUMBUS Parker

5. During the last 6 yeais Jones S. hourty emp~ees have had 12 pay increases:
Where Do We Stand Now?

v

Shops the

•

'

John Chancellor, ro.anchor with David Brinkley of the NBC
' Evening News, has cane to terms with the network after a
; brief flirtation with CBS, which apparently . made advances
•. toward bin\ to succeed retiring Eric Sevareid as the network's

'

.,

. 3. The average
full time hourty emp~ee at. the Jones Boys made $6,279.00 during
.
1976. This average does not include department managers and supervisors.

i·

•

Mason; W. Va.

2. Three of those seven employees made approximately $12,000.

Susan ls that rare bird on .television - a feminist who iS
ambitious but has difficulty being sufficienUy aggressive, ~ho
is womanly but determined, and who above all is not shrill.
The basic problem with "Susan and Sam" as presented it
, that it is obviously meant as the first episode of a ser ies. By the
'. end of the half-hour, the title characters are just starting out as
' a reportorial team.
.
• When Sam objects to their boss that teamwork would be
:: difficult since Susan and Sam's kissing days ar e done, the boss
points out that Woodward never kissed Bernstein. But
• • probably Sam would have kissed Susan.
~ · . The shOW is not loaded with one-liners in the style of much of
today's situation comedy, beca use real people don't talk like
that. NBC obviously questioned whether today's audience
would Sit still for real people in comedy.
.
· Aida is no amateur in the script-writing department - he
writes many of the "M-A.S-H" scripts and they are good. But
"M-A-S-H" can afford to get serious, since its characters and
acceptance already are well established. The audience cares
what happens to Hawkeye and B.J ., Klinger and Radar , Col.
Potter and Margaret.

·EVEJYBODY

Herman Grat e

77J -S592 ·

1/ Seven of the. picketing employees made over $10,000 'last year.

· NEW YORK (UPI)- Alan Aida, father of three daughter s,
lsa serious feminiSt, which is probably why he wrote a comedy
about it.
The show iS "Susan and Sam," a pilot that didn't rruike it as a
series for NBC, where it will be a one-shot "Comedy Time"
presentation ·July 13, 9:3H O p.m., Eastern tiine.
The "Susan" of the title, played by ChriStine Belford, has
. been girlfriend, 'secretary a nd researcher for " Sa'm," an
investigative repor ter for a magazine, played by Robert
· Foxworth .
• As the play opens, their romance is faltering because he
exploits her a nd then tries to bring her around with sweet talk
· and a pat on the derrier e.
She not only has doubts abgut'their personal relationship but,
more threatening to him, she a lso wants to quitfor a better job.
She ls talked out of it by the offer of a reporter's job and a
raise, made by Lee Ber gere the magazine's stone-fa ced editor
with a heart to match. His t:edeeming feature ls his prejudice
against adjectives.
·
There are contretemps a long the way, a nd a few more office
character s added- the office gossip, the office rat (shades of
· Frank Burns}, and a photographer described as a "sexual

Penalty paid
for killing

MASON FURNITURE

The public has been told that all Jones Eqs empqees are making minimum
wage ($2.30) per hour. But here are the facts:

lly JOAN HANAUER
UPI Television Writer

: : commentator.

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

We wish to set the record straight - - -

TV.•.in Review

piranha."

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat .-8:301il5:00 ·
THUR SDAY TIL 12 NOON

THE JONES BOYS ARE FED UP WITH LIES,
RUMORS, AND HALF TRUTHS!!!

CHESTER LITI'LE LEAGUE TEAM 1 - Members are, front, I tot, Clinton .Bailey,
Keith Bentz , Tim Ball, Terry Wood, Scott Trussell, David Hawthorne; second row, Mitchell
HoUey, Jr ., Keith Brogan, Roger Bissell, Paul HarriS and Bill Call . At the back 1s Coach
James Bailey. Not present for the picture was )!:ddie Werry. Uniforms a re provided by
Russell Bailey o! Rodney, Ohio and Florida.

D4IIY
FOODS

DAIRY VALLEY

STORE HOURS

HAVE YOU BEEN MISLEAD????

~
ADOLPH'S

MASON FURNITURE

ooo· ·

Try Our Delicious Strawbeny
Shortcake, with or without

Association said late Mooday
it had received no word of any
strike activity in the northern
part Of the state.

group to destroy this union,"
Miller said.
The West Virginia Coal

CHARLE.STON,
W.Va. end the wildcat took special support for the 'men who want
(UPI) About 8,300 measures to ensure they to
work,
until
the
vacationing miners did not would be able return to work. disagreement over health
show up for work a t mines in
At UMW Local 2325 near benefits is resolved," Laws
southern West Virginia Beckley,
workers
at said.
However, in other areas,
Monday, although their two- Stanaford No. 2minevotedto
week vacations officially return to work with Monday's the walkout continued despite
ended at !2:01a.m. that day. 4 p.m. shirt.
UMW President Arnold
The
miners
were · l.JJcal 2325 vice president Miller's directive 13st week
apparently resuming a strike Jack Laws said his local sent that aU miners return to the
that began · last month in between 30 and 40 men to the pits on schedule.
protest of cutbacks in mine entrance to discourage
The newly re-elected UMW
mediCjll benefits from the · pickets and other threats to · president said the only way·to
United Mine Workers Health men who wanted to work . He reinstate medical benefits
and Retirement F unds. said no trouble had been was at the bargaining table
with the coal industry, and he
Before the a nnual vacation encountered.
. period beg~~ n about 35
·"Members of t he local will blamed the strike on a small
West Virginia' and Kentu~ky · be stationed at the entrance · group of· "trouble!J18kers."
miners were oo strike.
of the Stanaford No. 2 mine to
"I have urged the member. Some miners who voted to protect and offer moral . ship not to allow this minority

Peace enforced by troopers

DEAR POLLY- Now thai
many will be taking small
children on vacation trips 1
would like to pass on some of
the things that have helped us
and our three small ones. In a
tote bag I always carry s
hand can opener and plastic
spqons, knives , etc., and one
of those inexpensive coil
devices for heating soup, corlee or whatever. We soon
learn.!d that the cost of ea ling
three meals a day in
restaurants was prohibitive
so picnics and snacks in the
room can save our budget.
I also pack crayons, pencils, tablets, small sock puppets, etc.. in a bag so the
children have something to
do when they are not wat-·.
ching TV .in the moteL I take
along a small box of
detergent and wash out m!l'rcy
small things at night and they
are dry in the morning and .
not so much soiled clothing
•ccumulates. I also carry
safety pins and have learned
that hand towels can be pioned on to make exc-ellent bibs.
-MARILYN.
DEAR POLLY - It is
aiways difficult to mend
gloves, especially the ones for
the right hand, so I put an old
fashioned round wood
clothespin in the finger to be
mended and it is a big help. MRS. R.D.
DEAR POLLY - Cut off
your damaged panty hose
below the knees and have a
foundation to wear under
slacks that will help control
those bumps. - M.V.S.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses yo ur favorite
Pointer; Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY 'S
PO!NTE:EtS in care of this
newspaper.

/

'

.

.
6. The. Union has told us that they will.not even talk until we agree with theit Union

-~

&gt;

•

-

.

•.

'

-

~

-

' stH)p cOnditions. Because of the . attitUde of the Union's offici31s, nlooks as if they
are willing to let our emP!alees g0 forever without a paydl~ for the privilege of
-jOining the Union and paying dues. Jooes Boys ~mployees are honest enough to join .
the Union and .pay dues without being forced, if the Union is doing ~ good.job for ·
·them. ·

Signed: _THE JONES BOY~

�'

11- The Il8Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. July 12, 1977

10-Tho Daily Senlinei,Middl!port-P;meroy, 0 ., Tuesday . July 12, 1977

,_ .,

Eat_'h '*'ord o,ver the 1m.nimum I)
words is t c..-ents per word J)t'r di.y.

n.uu•mg other tnan l'UilSCCUUVe
will bt! dllrl(t'd at t1w I d.ly

elM~

rote
ln memory, Card rl Till:l!WI ~ nd
Obdwary: &amp; t.'ftllS Jlli!l wurd, f3 DO
nwmn wn Cash m idYIUK.'i!.

MOOUe H~ A 'Wsarkl Ylllrd.¥~1H
OI.I"Y 4H.'L~ fmly With CM!&gt;h With
order~

25 cent L:~rgt! for iKLii c..-.erry·
Boa Nwilt.:-r In C...re oi 11le Sm-

'""''Ttw P\lbhsht:r re~rvet~~ the righl
to e&lt;ht ur te)el1. amy 11&lt;b tkeutN ub)'!\.'IJunal. Till! Putilislll'l' will nut
respt~ClStble for
l" l:!l-"1. il lt~t:rtlun

i.r

more Uwn one UIC..'Or·
·

Phune 992-21:£

..,..

Noon llfl Sat.urd!:ly

Tultsdoy
lhru FntlHy
4P.M. •
the day before pubhcatlou

THAT WOULD-BE

•

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

IS

DI'IU LUCK SURE RUNS •
IN THAT FAMilY~"

ANOTHER

,

Sons

-

---------

-- - -

fREE ESTIMaTES

ond

• Daughters w•~h to thank the
Racine Emergency Squad and
F.re Dept .. neighbors for their

courageous effort, and to thank
our fnends of the Morn1ng Star
and Carmel area, the Bissell
Brothers , the Rev . Steve
Wilson , Ew•ng Funeral Home ,
and many ather who helped in
any way during the tragedy of
Pearl P. Deem who died June
EXPERIENCED STORE Manager
30, 1977.
•
liCk W . Carsey, Mgl'
needed in local business. Must
Thank you all, The-Deem Fom1ly.
Phone 992-2111 ·
~ave exp.rience in merchan·
dis1ng and all depa._rtments of
IN THE
BOAT, 16FT. Run ·A·Bout .40 h p.
management. Wnte Box 7'29 C.
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
motor . trailer . electm start . all
MEIGS COUNTYNOHIO
c-o The Daily Sentinel Pomeroy ,
o . 14,44t
controls Or trade lor smaller
Onio&lt;5769.
LAVADP, WHEELER ,
boot , Gravely tractor or
NURSE. RN LPN, PARAMEDIC OR RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
·Route 3, Box 3,
anything equal value Phone
QUALIFIFED
QUALIFIED
AUCTION , EVERY Frldoy . 7 p.m.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45"'·
Indoor-Outdoor runs , grooming
992-7.49.- .
Plaintiff,
MEDICAl ASSISTANT to, provide
New and used merckondise.
H-;A:-:Y-'-.-,-l-to-n-,:
G-M~C-tr-uc-:k-.-,"'
cr-e-ene-d7all breeds, dean samtpry :-:
•YS•
Ohio River Auction in Meigs
Insurance Componiei with
UNKNOWN
HEIRS ,
focilities oe 367-7112. Cheshire .
In parch for housetroller. Aslo
Plozo .409 Poearl St , Mtddleport ,
medical data on thei~ apDEVISEES , LEGATEES ,.
Phone {614) 367-0292.
290 go lion tqnk mounted on
Ohto. Phone (30-1:) 773-5471.
Local
work,
flexible
plicants.
DISTRIBUTEES .
AD ·
---tro1ler. Phone843·2353 .
hours , • port t1me 1 Lifedate HOOF HOlLOW . Buy , sell. trodoe
MINISTRATORS,
AND
Medical SeNices 801 So.
EXECUTORS, IF ANY, OF '
or train horses . RUTH REE VES , QNE B' K 8' x 7' walk ·m cooler
THE ESTATES OF JAMES
Gelnstone Spfd. MO. 65802 1
trainer. Phone (614}698-3290.
wllh compressor, $100 Manual
DAVIDSON ,
DECEASED ;
(&lt;17) 869-2966 .
AKC
SHETLAND
sheep
dogs.
push
mower, $10· Philco
MARY ANNA DAVIDSON,
(Min .) Collies .. 2 females , 7
re-frigerator. $15: Formica kit· DISTRIBUTORSHIP WILL not in·
EXPERIENCED DOMESTIC Cor
DECEASED:
DANIEL
terfere with present employ·
weeks old Shott ond wormed.
chen table , SIO . Oin1ng room
DAVIDSON ,
DECEASED ;
mechomc wanted Contact Mr.
menl No sellmg requ tred.
Phone (614) 367-0292 or
tobfe ond chairs , $15, clannet,
CORA
CUNNINGHAM,
Sang at Rivers ide Amc-Jeep
DECEASED;
DAVID
$50, Coronet trumpet , $25 :
Twenty yeor old company See
367-7112.
and Volkswagen, Gallipolis.
DAVIDSON.
DECEASED ;
Monuol adding machine , $20; 8
our ad on the sport5 poge to·
Apply in penon, no phone
SADIE
BELL
DAVIS,
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
m.m . movie projector, $35, 3
doy! .
lls
.
ca
DECEASED ;
FLORENCE
An imal Careline , 992&gt;7660; or
bottle c;oole.rs with compressor,
HOWELL
DAVIDSON EARN MONEY for your Chnstmos
sodo lountoin complete with
offer 6 P m. , 992.·.~77 ·
McKAY, aka FLORENCE
enJoyment.
Demon strate DOGGIE BEAUTY Parlor . aU
dispensors and com com·
HOWELL
DAVIDSON,
guaranteed toy.s and gifts for
breeds styled the woy you like.
pressor, $50; 2 steam ta_bles ,
DECEASED,
Friendly Home Parties.. no col·
Addresses Unknown,
No drugs used. Colt for ap- $40 each ; 6ft. candy case $50: 1974 SCHUlTZ Closs1c 14 K 70, 3
lectlng or delive rtng. Coli
pointment , 7AI2-3162.
peddle sewing machine . $20.
bedroom$ , 7 ~ 10.ft . e.:pondo 1n
DAVID WAYNE DAVIDSON ;
949-2803 or 992-2703. Also .
portable record player . $10
living room , Rock ·A; Boy win whose last , known addreu
booking parties .
AKC REG. COihe puppies , 6
stereo record ployer. $15 139
dow in bedroom . unfurnished
w1s Pomeroy, Ohio, Address
weeks otd . Phone 742 2292 . ·
and 141 Butternut Avenue
except stove and refngerotor.
FRIENDLY TOY Parties has open·
Now Unknown,
y:..
. __ - - - - Been lived in 2 yrs ., underpinningt for manogert ond FREE KlnENS , contoct Freddie __P_o:._m_e:_r.;.o'Houdo.shelt after 6 p m Phone
·u N K N o w N H e 1 R s , demonstrators. Demonstrate
ing , onc~oring , ond porch. Ex·
DEVISEES , LEGATEES ,
.992-2520.
t:IJ ACRES OF hardwood limber for
ceHent condition, $11 ,000. Coli
guronteed toys and gifts . No
DISTRIBUTE· ES,
AD ·
sate . Call985-.4295 .
247·3791
cosh investment · no collecting
MINISTRATORS,
AND
197-4 YAMAH~A-:3--:60::--cM
--:::
X-,_n_e_v-er 1975 HILLCREST 12 x 502 bedroom
or deltver•ng . no service
EXECUTORS, IF ANY, OF
cha rge . Car &amp; telephone
been raced , ridden very little ,
THE ESTATE OF DAVID
total electric . excellent condinecessary . Call collect to Carol
WAYNE
DAVIDSON ,
$600. Coli Roger Korr at
tion . Con be seen At Kingsbury
1973
MONTE
CARLO
Landau
\1:·8,
DECEASED ,
Address
Day (5.18) 489-8395 or write
985-3909.
Home
Soles, 1100 E. Mom ,
power steering . power brakes,
Unknown,
Friendly Toy Parties , 20
_Pom~;~roy , Oh .
APPLES,
FITZPA
TR
IC:-:
K-'---::
0rc
,n
~
ar
d
:-.
a1r
conditioning,
stereo
B
track
Defendants . .
Roilrood Av,e., Albany, N.Y
-SERVICE BY
and om rod10 Phone 985-4123.
St. Rt. 689
Phone (614 ) 1975 ALLEN 12 K S5 2 bedroom,
12205.
PUBLICATION 669-37B5 .
factory 1nstolred woodburning
197.t CHEVROLET Suburban 9
fireplace in ltving room . Can be
passenger, under 3.t,OCXJ miles 26 INCH Boy 's bike, Channel
l~oJEII=A~nENDANTS
seen•ot Kingsbury Home Sales ,
Moster pollee rod ro; high choir
with extras. Phone985·355J .
1100 E. Ma1n , Pomeroy , OH .
You are hereby notified
baby stroller ; telephone.
1970 AMC Hornet, 6 cylinder
that. you have been named
bench , curtains, ond other
automatic, good condition,
de-fendants in a legal actlon
1tems. Coll7..t2-2078
entl.tled :
''LAVACA
$550. Coli alter 5 p .m.
WHEELER vs. MELVIN.O.
TRUCK BED , 1976 Chevrolet Fleet·
992-2"7
DAVIDSON , etal" fn lhe
s1de, as new will trade for 1969 HOMESITES for sale, 1 acre ond
1968
CAMARO
327
oufomat~e
,
Common Pleas Court of
to Jlil72 Chevrolet Bed rn good
up M•ddleport , near Rutland.
best ofler Coli ofler 6 p m.
Meigs County . Ohio, Case No .
condition or w1U pay cosh for
Caii992·7.C81 .
16,.t·U . The oblect of the
247-2541.
bed. Co11992-7494 .
Com plaint being to •partitlon
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths.
1971 VOLKSWAGON , Good conthe following descr ibed real
18
cu
ft
.
REFRIGERATOR.
all elec., 1 acre, Middleport ,
dition . Coll9.t9·2728 .
estate, to.wit ·
lrostfree. Top freezer , avocado
close to Rutland Phone 992Situate In the Township of
Dai~
1977 CHEVROLET three quarter
green $200 Phone992-74'9~
7.481.
Salisbury , in the County of
ton p1ckup, power steering , .
Meigs and State of Ohio ,
SMALLiarm for sale , 10% down.
power brolc.es . 10.000 miles
sutiated in Section Eight ( 8) ,
owner financed . Monroe CounNEED A WATER
Town Two (2) and Range
with topper. Phone 992-2628.
ty , W. Va . Phone (304 ) 772Thirteen (13) '" the Ohio
1972 GRAN TORINO, best olfer.
Company's Purchase. and
3102 or (304) 772-3227 .
SOFTENER?
Phone 742-2746.
bounded and described as
COUNTRY farmland w1th secludfollows , to-wit : Beginning at
let Pomeroy landmark
EXCAVATION - COMPLETE septic 191b-4 CHEVROlEt, runs good.
ed woods, wafer and gbod acthe corner of John Folmer's
Phone 992-3625.
heirs property~ near the
systams. Springs developed.
cess in Monroe County . W. Vo .
soften &amp; c~ndttion your
corporation line of the Village
All work Is guaranteed . Brad
$1 ,000 down. coli (304) 772water and a eo .op water
of Pomeroy, and on the
Lewis, phone 742-2.t51 .
3102or (J04) 772-3227.
softener, Model UC-XVI.
Pomeroy and Chester Road;
thence West along the north
EXCAVATING , BACKHOE, dozer.
VA -FHA, 30 yr financing . Ireland
'Now Only'•279.9S
line of John Folmer's heirs
trencher. Low Boy , dump t n.~ck STAACRAFT lOth onntve rsory sale
Mortgage , 77 E. Stote. Athens ~
1
property to the east line 01
Vucks , septic systems. B1ll
Let us test your water '
phone (614) 592-3051.
on
mtni·motor,,
trailers
,
ond
Clara M . Dow propert y ;
Pullins , phone 992-2.478 day or
Free.
lolddowns. Trovelstar 25 ft .
thence along said east line of
5 ROOM HOUSE . both , 2 porches .
$.l-400.00; 20 ft . m1m-motor
said Clara M. Dow property
one screened in , garage and
510,850.00. We sell servicoe and
north u degrees west about
carport . Wolkmg distance to
three hundred forty -eight
quohty, Camp Conley Starcroft
Jack W. C.rs&amp;y, Mgr.
Elementary School and town.
(1"8) feet ; thence north 82
Soles, Rt . b2 north of Pt . Plea· -~
Phonem-2181
Forced air furnace. located ot
degrees east one hundred
30.4
Wetzgall St., Pomeroy . coli
CASH
paid
for
oil
makes
and
~•
:
:
•
;:"
;
'
:
·:--:-:-:-:~:-:::-:-;.ninety -five 1195} teet to tne
models of mobile homes. -:otter
5, 992-3488.
Pomeroy and Chester road ;
Phone area code 61.4·423-9531 . J A VCO CAMPING Trailers , USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
thence
In a
southerly
custom made SWISS COLONY ,
'r1mberjock Skidder 208GS, 4 BEDROOM 2 story brick home.
direction along said road to
TIMBER , Pomeroy For&amp;5t Pro·
small tandems Maple Leaf ,
Forced air furnace , Middleport.
Fronkline 132 AXL Detroit
the place of beglnnmo,
ducts. Top price for s.tondirig
CODNER'S CAMPERS, Soles ,
Phone 992-3-457.
·
containing one and forty
Diesel
Engine;
Morbork
636
Rtntol. Service , Supplies.
t awtimber . Call 992-5965 or
hundredths ( 1. .401 acres,
Debarker
w-20'
infeed
ond
20'
HOUSE FOR sole , 3 bedrooms ,
Kent Hanby , 1·.4.46-8570.
Meigs 28 or 32 to Bashon
more or less .
outfeed table; Contact Dennis
wall-to-wall corpet, full baseSave a n.d except the coat
COINS, CURRENCY , tokent, old
Owner Robert Codner, long
Smurr, phone (61.4) 8.38-53.45.
ment,
garage on 2 acres land . .C
Bottom,
Ohio
.
and other minerals unpocket watches and chains, - '= =;:_:_;;_c:.;__ _ _ _ __
derlying the above described
TWO OFFICE Desks. $25 eo&lt;:h, ~yn. old, Beautiful ~ouse ond o
silver ond gold W• need 196-A LIKE NEW. 1972 26 It Carriage.
good location . 1,11 mile from
.prem rses , and the right to
Coll949· 2537.
ond older silver coins. Buy . setl ,
air cond itioned . tub · and
mine and remove the same,
Tuppers Plains on St. Rl . 7, A$k·
or t~ode' Coli Roger Wamsley,
shower, ownmg , forced otr ASHLEY STOVE Dealers , Running
without unnecessary fn,jury to
ing S28.000. Phone (61~)
the surface .
._
7-42-2331. ~ 1
heat plus !liect. heat. many
Spectol Summer , Sole. Lorge
667-3644.
Al$0 tbe rjght !or a dratn or
features. Con be s. .n at
C60 , $300 . Blowers, $.40. Coli
d-itch to the road from the old
5 ROOM HOUSE In country, also
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes, brass
Hickorv Lakes Campground,
I
(614) 69a 7191
beds , etc . , complete
'
h
mornngs ,
"'~
·
bank mooth in front of the
furn iture . Phone992·5871 .
11
10
0
Tupper Plains,
or co
WALNUT lOGS . Jock Spries
households. Wnte M.D. M1ller,
· ~olmer Home .
·- ·
4
6
1
66
7
9
ONE
~CRE to 5 acres, bu1lding
R•terence Deed : vol. 236,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Ohio or coli _ ,( :.c.clc: .::
·33&lt;
= c:·,--,-:-:c-c-c--:restdence·, Danville, OH .
lots
. Call 992-5869 or 985·3595
p'age . 867 and vol. 236. page
992 -77W.
1976 "HOLIDAY RAMBLER" 32 If. -=-'c::='::-:':"'==c=:'= ="-::'--::;:-:
. 869.
-_(5 OOOSenes) lull size both with TWO GRAVELY tractors. One 1968
HOUSE ond one·fourth a cre with
CASH! L Junk cors. Frfj's Truck &amp;
•
dlt' .
modEtl CoU 985·3880.
1•.'
'and thi! demand of the
Auto , Rutland . Phone 742-2081
snower, a•r con •omng , awn· ---'--·--f------more land available. WilHam
Complelnt I!. to sell Defen .
ings , loaded with eldros. like ·
·
A. Clonch , Bradbury, just post
dahts ' tnterest in the above
or 742·9575 . Closed Mondays .
new. James Ingels , Mason ,
~
)NMPO.
descr•.bed prem lses. ·
..':_"'!_::!_o . Pnonel~)773- 5161 __
. _.
CB SPECIAL
V.ou ar.e notifl~ that you
SYRACUSE . WITH view of rl\ler. a
ere · reQuired to l'nswer the
ROBYN
WV-23
neat 3 bedroom house with 2
complaint within twenty .
cor goroge on 6 1/t acres . Fronts
Sole , 8:00. 13th,
eight days after the last HUGE
dn botl'l Stot19 Rt. 124 ond
pubfl~etlon, which will be
Uth , lSth on Rt. S5.t. 1 V
t m1les
CB Mob ile TranSceive-r
publ shed once each week for
complete with weather
Snowball Hill. Acreage would
lrom Cheshire at Luther Col· 18 F'T . ARROWCRAFT Boot, 75 h p.
$lx ~ consecutive WNkt. The
proof PA speaker, 2 way
make a beautiful sub-division.
eman 's residence
Oropet ,
motor, $900. Call949-2498 .
last pubt1~1tion will be made
ban loaded CB an tenna ,
Starkey Realty , call Ron
bed1preods,
clothing
,
ontiqu•
---"' on 'tn·e 26 dev of July; 1977.
for roof fOP or trunk mount.
McDade, (61oC) 592·2.419 or Vic
di,hn , d•pression glasa , tome
',
In ceH of your failure tb
Po.,.er ~ord. coax, antenna
Wolfe, 949-2286.
furniture
,
lots
more
.
Everything
' .1nswer or otherwise rnpond
c:able 1nd all hardware
r~tonoble.
as ~rmlltecl lr( the Oh io
included .
l 'h STORY FRAME house in
Ruin of Clvll Procecture •-----~----ONLY '
FAMILY YARD Solo, Weclnet- BUSINESS BUILDING in New
Rutland. 3 bedrooms. both.
within the . tfmt st•ted.
forced olr furnace, new
day, 13th and Thursday, 1&lt;4tl'l
Hoven, W Va. , -20 x .45 moin
judgment bV default will be
fireplace, roil lence. Shwon by
from 9:00 AM to 3:00 'PM Boby
business cOm~ ~ Phone (6 1.C)
rendered against you for the
Items, small children clothing.
742-2255 .
oppl0 _o ~ly . 142;~ -- -· __ ,_
relief demanded In the
Complaint .
,.,. m.,.. and women's Clothing, niPPeRs
OH·-N.-w .. 2
2 STORY FRAME Hou•• wiln 3
boolls, and ofhet itemt too.
bedroom , furmshed or un ·
bedrooma. Also , garage with 3
~trry E. s.-tcer,
Tur~
right
by
~•v•
Point
Got
furnished
opqrtment.
$170
un
·
bed•oom opo&lt;lrnenl ) behind
Clerk of CO..rfl
1
9a.J1Ck Carny , Mgr .
Stohon ~ 1 / 1 m•tes out on · fur., S190 fur . plult}~lectric, no
house. BWlind fir• siot!on ln
&lt; 1\11191 COUf"Y. Ohio ..
~ .Phone ff2 -2 111
Flotwoodo load. watch lor
1'9'• Phone (614) 6t'1-33A9.
Middlepoh. Coli (JO&lt;J 675-4:105 .
(6l 21, 21 ' (1) S, 12, If, H . . .
~
.

Pomeroy Landmark-

BISSEll SIDING CO
Phone 949·2801
or 949-2860
Free Estimates
No Sunday c.ills Please
6-13-1 mo.

104 West Main Sl,...t

Ju$lllelow the Jones
Boys' in Pvmeroy, Ohio

SHOP

Sentinel

992-2156

- Pomenlf landmark

iff.:~

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

=

,.,.u

-PLAiNS,

P•IRIJ Landmark

w:

"""'·

.

-

Young's &amp;atpeting

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Not The lmlt11tors"
1

rn

Behind Rullond Gr•de
School . Evening work by
•ppolntment. Ph. 742·2005.
6·5-1 mo. Pd.

...
•

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
LITTLE

ORPHAN

•

Will be sold and partially
financed to reliable party
or parties. Only interested
people should 1 nquire .
Books shown on request.

CAll 99~-2259

APPROX. 1 Acre close In
Lovely
equipped
kitchen. 2 bedrooms. bath,
carpeting,
paneling,
formal dining , garage,
basement. A low $16,500.00.
ALMOST NEW 3
bedrooms,
2
bat~s.
carpeted, lovely kitchen,
formal dining, 1 acre of
ground, carport . VERY
NICE $30,000.00.
COUNTRY LIVING About 2 atres, 1112 baths,
fon.,al dining , 4 bedrooms,
some carpeting, storage
bldg . 2 car garage. close to
mine
area .
ONLY
$10,500.00.
VERY LOYELY BRICK Has everYthing Including 5
acres of ground. N.odern
equlpi&gt;&lt;i&lt;f' kitchen, 3 large
bedrooms, large rec. room
with stone fireplace, 2
baths . ALMOST NEW

$45,200.00.
LOOK ABOUT 'It ACRE Storage
bulfd i ng ,
2
bedroom mob i le home,
bath. carpeting, excellent
neighborhood , Immediate
possess ion. Asking just
58,000.00.
'
RETIRE HERE - Very
little yard to cut. 3 nice
bedrooms ,
bath.
full
basement, newer home,
hardwood floors
and
carpeting . SEE T ~~ ~:.
TODAY - $18,QOO.OO.
POMEROY 2 story
frame, 4 bedrooms. beth ,
porches, some carpeting
lind paneling, N.G . heat.
$6,725-00.
MANY OTHER GOOD
BUYS TO SEE FOR
YOUR NEEDS IN ltEAL
ESTATE SEE OR ' CALL

I CINFAG
wr:~~Ll
K] KJ
wn

•

R\61'1 TGO--

•.,

US,
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
tUnk, hilly &amp; leona
Cteln
AIIOCIItn

300 Main St.

Pom et'OY', Ohio

-

Phone 992-6282
I A.M . to 4:30 P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6-23-1 mo. Pd.

L-:-!m~-225~'!::"'!!!~4:!_11~2:__j

Answer hera:

~R .

GOOD CONSTRUCTION Glass stucco outside finish.
Equipped kitchen, dining,
basement with fireplace. 2
car garage on corner lot.

- Corner lot old B room
house,
metal
roof,
electricity, T.P. water
available $5,000.
IN TOWN - 4 bedroom
large Qlder home on. corner
lot. Beautiful woOdwork . 2car garage and double fot.
Walk to the stores. Just
SJS.OOO.
COUNTRY ACRE - New
one year old ranch. 3
bedroom - nome with 2
baths, equipped kitchen.
dining and utility roams.
BRICK - 4 bedrooms, 1'12
balhs, fireplace in the
' living room, carpeting,
natural gas furnace, all
utilities on corner lot .
$24,000.
MIDDLEPORT- large 5
bedroom brick nome an
spacious lot. 3'1• baths and
2 wood-burning fireplaces .
Gameroom with built-In
bar . Central heating and
tully carpeted:
COUNTRY HOME 3
bedrooms, full basement,
~utomatlc
furnace.
carport-garage, and 2
acres of land. $25,000.
FLEA
MARKET
Suitable building In Dexter.
Will sell on land contract.
MIDDLE PORT
2
bedrooms, large living, and
small lot to mow. All
utilities. Only S\1,000.
. STOP AND THINK, WILl
THESE
BE
HIGHER
NEXT YEAR?
Holen L Tulord
G. Bruco Tulord

Yesterda,.·..

"K I I I X1" t I I I I ]

I Jumbles
I Answer

ANNOY KINKY OBJECT FUMBLE
A book to study before going on a big
trip- THE BANKBOOK ·

~ ••I(Hd'

s,odllot--'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

P-

Plti2-Zl74

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS . 43 Cross out
I Dock ·
44 Insect stage
by

BORN LOSER

7 Weari.ng

1 OOtJ'T l&lt;l.oi.J...I
~'TREALL'-IIUD
~

II

lf.l5URAIIC.E'.

13
It

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ~
Sweepers, toasters, irons, all
small appliances. lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone {61.c) 9853825.
REMODELING, Plumbing, heatin g
and all types at general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years experience. Phone 992-2409.

15
16

18
19
_ 20

GASOLINE ALLEY

He's a Iittle
nervous! ft---..

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , service, oil m~es. 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy .'
Au tho rized S.nger Soles and
Serv•ce. We sharpen Scinon .
EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work : dump trucks
and to-boys for hire, will haul
fill dirt, fo soil, limestone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jef· 1
lers , day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992·3525 or 9925232.
,.
·'"

•

.

. . . ..

-"

.....

f't lll oo T.,. C" o&lt; I!: Ot.,....,
~. ~~.

,•,

·::::-:!
. ;~ff~~; '''" .._
. 1 ~:-

' '' •

IT'-

BOI KIDS ALL ovGR

CARP.ENTER , llcoring, cei ling,
. paneling. Phone 992.2759,

THf"WORLD
UIJDERSTANP

MOBILE Home Repair, El a c.,
plumbing and heating. Phone ..

F08DICK '!"!'-

992-5858.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Excovot•ng, septiC systems.
dozer , backhoe. dump truck ,
limestone, gravel , blacktop
paving, Rt. 1.43. Phone I (614)
69B-7331.
HARRISON'S T.V Repair. Servfce ,
Calls. "'76 Sycamore. St., M1d·
dleport. Phonem·2522.

PIANO TUNI~G, Lane Danie ls. 12
years of service. Phone
9.92·2082.

eALLYSq!

WATER WELL drilling. Phone
W11liam P. Grant at 7.t2-2879
alter 6 p.m.
PENNZOIL RUTLAND open daily '
till 10. Closed Mondays .
w,.cker service. tlr• repair.
Phone 742-9575 or ?42·2081.

~

.·······~·····················.

~·

Yesterday's Answer

25 Emulated
Cicero
26 Holiday
highlight
27 Dental
substance
29 Advice to
hotheads
(2 wds.)

30 Where Luan. da is

31 Bed
• canopy

12 :- o v l e s "Brainstorm" 10; Janak/ 33.
12:4&lt;&gt;--Mystery 'of the Week 6,13.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4 .
2: 1D-News 13.
Movies Channel-s and 9 p.m.- Bile the Bullet; 7 •nd
11 p.m. - Lifeguard.
Poinlview Cable channel s - 6 :30p.m. - Testimony
Time; 7:00- Paul Gaudino Family Fitness. 7 :30Priscilla's Workshop. 8:00- Something Speci•l 8:30-Movie : Mad Bomber-10:00-7DOCtub.

33 Miss Dunne
34 Musical
signs

38 Moldings

40 1110 yrs.

BRIDGE
and Jim ..lacoby .

Mind reading fair tactic
12

NORTH
.10876 2

(

lb--1--J.---1--1-

z

p_o

"'

.'

\
0

'·

33.

2.

10 PICK UP ~E ~INGE&gt;
I NEED AT 'AUNT

·.

11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil-lehrer Report
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,) 5; Rookies 6,13; Columbo 8;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.

,__,__..___._....__._rll

eE51DEf7,I'LLI!&gt;E A~LE:

I

DOWN

shoes
I Glum
First in
2 Primate
a series
3 Quit
Tortoise's 4 Foolish
race rival 5 Love set's
Soprano
barrier
Tebaldi
6 Ancient
Currier
Syria
and 7 Luster
Presage
8 Home of
Supervise
fine cigars
Sapient
g Western state
Hacienda 10 Forsake
gentleman 17 Composers'
Compass
Org,
reading
21 Sports
Kind of
setting
history
22 No deal'
(abbr.)
Anagram
of tan
Estuary
Unclose
Fast train
(abbr.)
Siamese or

''

So, after mature cogitation
East played his ace of hearts
Manx
and then gave his partner tile
32 Made a
diamond ruff.
.QJ8
East was a good young
tKJ
hasty
call
2 wds.)
California player, but unfor•KQ 10
34 Volcanic
tunately South was Jobn Rau,
WEST
EAST
sbape
who had just retired and mov.4
•QJ3
ed to California from N~w
35 Biblical
-+-1--1.97543
.A6
York.
mountain
tl
tAI097632
John qllit tournament
:r7 Fire fodcler
..-+---+-t-~ I • 8 7 6 5 42
• J
bridge
40 years ago after hav38 Anagram
SOUTH IDI
ing won a couple of national
of meat
.A K\15
championships, but he is lak·
39 Tiger cat
• K 10 2
ing it up as a retiree.
• Q85
41 "Easl
He looked 'over at East,
.A93
of-"
decided
that East knew what
Norlh...SOuth vulnerable
42 Classify ·
he was doing when he cashed
anew
Well North East Soulh
the heart ace, worked out
what had gone through East's ,
IN T
mind and proceeded to take · ·
DAILY _CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: Pass
the double finesse in trumps in
Pass
4•
Pass
Pall
AXYDLBAAXR
spite
of East' s try and was
Pass
II LONGFELLOW
~ewarded
wi lh a very nice
Opening lead - 4+
match-point
score.
One letler simply slands for another. In this sample A Is ' - -- ' - - : -J::---,J,---,b- -'
u sed for the three L's. X fo r the two O's, etc. Si n gle lctlers. By Oswald &amp; arne~ a co Y
apostrophes, the length nnd formati on of the words are all • East was really on the horns ;;....;;,;,;-.-.;-...;;;."":';;,;;;,;;;
hints. Eaoh day the code leiters are dllferenl
of a dilemma . He knew that
A Vermont reader wants to
his partner had opened a know who invented the suit
CRYPTOQUOTES
singleton diamond. He could preference signal.
H lead back his 10 of diamonds
Several people have claim·
E
PE H
YW
CTHCT
PEQ
KT
to ask for a heart relurn and edit as their brain child , but it .
his ace of heartS would be the is generally attributed to the '·
IECRT,
KMR ·G EH
HTATF
KT
Z H lhird defensive trick. Then he late Hy Lavinthal of Trenton,
would lead another diamond . New Jersey _
.
E
IMFFQ. - •• , DYFL
GITCRTFWZTDLWestwouldnotbeabletoruff
(For a copy of JACOBY
Yesterday's Cryploquote: AS PEACE IS THE END OF WAR, and declarer would promptly MODERN. sond $! 10 . "Win 11
SO TO BE IDLE IS THE ULTIMATE PURPOSE OF THE double finesse trumps and Brrdgo." cto this newspaper,
BUSY. - SAMUEL JOHNSON
pick up that nice guarded
Bo• 469. Radio City Stoffon,
C&gt; 19'11 Klns Fealt.uc' Synd icllie, lnc.
queen -j a~k.
New York.. NY 10019}

'-'··••

WILL do roof1ng, construction,
plumbing and heating. No jab
too Iorge or too small. Phone
7&lt;2-2:1&lt;8.

9

21

23

EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe ~
and ditcher. Charles R. Hat· •
f1eld , Bock Hoe Service, ~
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742-2008. •

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: • BUY. SEU OR TRADE? ·: i
•
••
LISTEN TO THI
••
•
·•
••
SWAP SHdP
•
••
•
•
:1 PM- WMPO •.92] FM
••
•••
92 in the Counby
:
•
'

Now arrange the crrcled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

(Answers tomorrow)

BRADFORD, Auctioneer , Com· . .
plete Service. Phone 949·2-'87
or 9.49· 2000. Rocil:'le, Ohio, Critt
Bradford.

REALTOR
216 E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone m-3325

(

II

l

12

-

1...\..o'Vr•-

IN INDIA .

'!tl&lt;I'RESIILL

Servl~

Electrica I &amp;
Refrigeration

AIIDCiltH

A

HAS 1'0 DO 'TO
6AIN POPULAR:IIY

F•tllollqlll

S3S,OOO. '
RT. 7 TUPPER$ PLAINS

MAIN
POMEROY. 0 .

tJ

I KJ

ANNIE.....: PAPER PROPHET

•I

_...........
--

PWMBING &amp;.
HEATING INC.

.1

TREVIN

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,.......a~

CARTER'S

byHennArno!dandBobl&amp;e

,,.,..,.,.,c_ ,_ ... .....,-....

Ali!lnment,
wl\eel
balancing, tune-up,
brake work. minor
repair.
.

"•The Origin1tors

A-1 BUSINESS . TEAFORD
and BUILDING'
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD,

For The

The

DUGAN'S

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

I PRUCOb
I rr
YAIRN

Superior
Steam Extraction
0.

\9 ~~~ ®

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

Relil Estatelor Sale

CARRIERS
NEEDED

MASON, W. VA.
AREA

-~1 6-1 mo.

REASONABLE

1}j11f1.\,{} ~'if ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

Routo2
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
Kitchen Cabinets - Roofing
Concrete
ratios
Sidewalks
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodel Ing .
Ph. 992-7119or 696-1055
Estimalesopplied to joti.
6-27· 1 mo. pd.

RACINE CARPET

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

Ph. 378-4250
5-27- TFC

d

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Phone 949-2814
9 a .m. to 5 p•.m.

2-23-1 mo.

EMPL OYee~!

·-..

DAVID &amp;RICKLES

Continuous ont pltce
gutters. We hong II, or do II
yourself. Speclol prices to
builders.

33.
11 :JG-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " Crossfire" 6,13;
McCloud Bi Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
1·2 :110-Movle "The Long Duel" 10; Janak/ 33 .
1:0G-Tomorrow 3.4.
1: IG-News 13.
Movie Cllannel - 5 and 9 p .m . - Baby Blu Marine; 7
and 11 p .m ; - The Shootisl
Cable Channel Five - 6 :30p.m. - Testimony Time ; 7
p .m . - Poul Gaudino Family Fitness ; 7:30 p.m .
Spociol Edition ; B:30 p .m . Daytime ; 91~0 p .m .
Consultation; 10 :00 p .m . 700-Ciub.

.. PREVENT&amp;D
FROM WORKING
'IOURSE:LF INTO
APOPLECTIC !&lt;:AGES
&amp;Y &amp;IJLLVING YOUR

.'
'.

6-22· 1 mo.

GUTTER SERVICE

Route 3, Pomeroy,

'

WEDNESDAY. JULY 13, 1'77
6 :01)-PTL Clu~ B; Summer Semesler 10.
6 : 1.S- Farm Report 13,
6 :2D-Not For Women Only 13.
6 : 30 AG-USA 4; News 6; Cnrlslopher Closevp 10.
6 :45--Mornlna Reoort 3.
6 : ~Good Mornln9, West VIrginia.
6 : S5-Good Morning. Trl Stale.
7:110-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05--Porky Pig 10.
7:3G-Schoo/les 10.
8:110-Howdy Doody6; Captain Kangaroo B,10; Sesame
· S1reel 33.
8:3D-Big Valley 6.
9 :00--Cross-W/Is 3; PhU Donahue 4. 15, 13; Andy
· Griffith 8; Mike Douglas 10; Biography 33.
9 :30-A.M. 3; Edge ol Night 6; Concentrallon 8;
American Herlhige 33.
.
10 ·110-Sanford and Son 3,4,15; Dinah! 6; Here' s lucy
8, 10, Mike Oou~las 13; lowell Thomas Remem bers 33
10:3D-Hollywaod Squtres 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10;
\ Walsh' s Animals 33.
11 :DO-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Community of Living Things 33.
11 :20-Biography 33.
11 :3D-It's Anybady's Guess 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8,10 .
11 : 4~ur Living Language 33.
-11 :55-CBS News 8,; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 :00-News 3,4,6, 10; Shoot tar the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12:3D-Chicoand th~ Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1 :DO-Gong Snow 3; All My Children 6, IJ;' News B;
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15; Opera Theater 33.
I :3G-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; As the World Turns
8, 10.
2:110-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2:3G-Doctors 3.4,1 5; One Lite Ia live 6, 13; Guiding
Light B, 10.
3:00-Anotner World . ~.4.15; All In The Family B,10;
M.D. 20; Romagnoli's Table 33 .
3 : 15--General Hospllal 6,13.
J :JG-Match Game B,IO; Lilias, Yoga and You 20;
Erica J3:
4:DO-Misler Cartoon 3; Gong Snow 4, i! lew Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Gilligan's Island 8; Sesame Street
20,33; Movie "The Catered Affair" 10; Dinah! 13.
4 ·3G-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4: Emergency One I
6; Andy Grlffllh 6; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
5 :00-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One! 13; Mission :
Impossible 15.
S:3D-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric
Company 20,33.
6:110-News 3.4.B.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :3D-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News\3 ; Andy Griffith 6 ;
ACBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7:110-Trutn or Consequences 3; To Tell the Truth 4;
.,Liar 's Club 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To
Tell The Truth 13; My Three Sons IS; Consumer
Survival K/1 20; People and Places 33.
7:3D-Dolly 3; Minor League Baseball 4; Match Game
PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
2033; Break The Bank 13; The Judge 10.
8 .110-Grlzzly Adams 3,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13: Good
Times 8,10; Nova 20.33.
8 ·30-Marllyn McCoa &amp; Billy Davis Jr. 8. 10.
9 :110-CPO Sharkey 3,15; Baretta 6; Movies " Hiller
The last Ten Oayso 8; Great Performances 33;
Movie " Made lor Each Other" 10; Documentary
Showcase 20.
.
9:3D-We Think Yov Snow Know 3; Pilot : " Susan and
Sam" 15.
10:110-Kingston : Confidential 3,4,15; Charlie's Angels
6, 13; News 20.
IO:JD-Internatlonal Animation Fesllval20: Book Seat

6 Jo-- -Net New ' J,4, 1S, Atj( News 13 ; Ardy Grllfll~ 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Sovp 20.
7:1)1)-Truth or Cons. J ; To Tell I he Truth 4; Liar's Club
6: Country Carnivel8; News 10; To Tell the Truth
13; My Three Sons IS; Anyone for Tennyson? 20 ;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
7 :30-Hollywoad Squares J ; Music' City IS; Hollywood
Squares 4; Let' s Deal With II 6; Match Game PM 8;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ; .125,000 Pyramid 10;
Wild Kingdom 13.
8 :110-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13;
Pilat " Royce.. 8, 10; In Performance At Wolf Trap
20.33.
8 :3D-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9 : QO-Pollce Woman . 3(4, 15; Movie '.' SiweperH 6, 1:1;
Play of the Month 20; Opera Theater 33 .
9· 3Ch--Qne Day al a Time 8,10.
10 oo-Pollte Story 3,4,15 ; Kojak B, lO; News 20 .
11 ;GO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; MacNeil -Lehrer Report

'IOLI'VE SEEN FORCED TO REFRA~I
FROM 60~GING ON RICH FOOD~ ...
FOF!CiiD TO GIH PROPfR REST AND
E)(ERCISE, AND ABOVE ALL--

,,

992-52f2

Phofte992-2291
6-15-1ma.

Automatic ·
Transmission Service

Reedsville. 0 .

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

CRAFTY LADIES
HMDICRAFT

SWAIN'S

RATES

lot High 51.
Pomeroy

•

TUESDAY , JULY t2.1977

lHE Pt«lll PlACE

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

LARRY LAVF!WDER

Fnday afkmwn

W1fe ,

Television log'

•

Business
·services
.
r

LOST - FEMAlE IRISH S~nER in IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer, 3 AND 4 RM. furnished a nd un. COAL, limestone , and calcium
wont to buy or sell something,
~icinlty of Cherry Ridge. Phone
chtoride and calcium brine for
lu rnished opts. Phone 992·
ae look ing for work . . . or
dust control and Spe&lt;:IOI mixing
992·6093 !venings_it lou~ .
5&lt;3.4 .
whatever ... ~ou · ll get resulls
soh lor fo r mers. , h ce lsior Salt
LOST FEMALE Siomen cot wear·
foster with o Sentinel Want Ad. COUNTRY Mobil e Home Pork. Rt ,
Works. Main Street, Pomeroy,
inQ white collar in Pom•roy
33 . ten mile ' no rth ol Pomeroy .
Coli 992-215&lt;&gt;
Oh10 or phone 991· 389L
_viciruly_ Coll992· 3'2 ~4 .
l orgelols w ilh concrete potio5,
3 FAMILY YARD Sole, good se iK ·
CAMPER
, $600. Also, horse
sidewalks. runners and oft
FOUND-YOUNG mole black ond
lion of clolh1ng, mise:. 1tems,
trailer. $450. Phone (614 ) 698·
_
street
porktng.
Phone
992
·7ol79.
tan dog near long Bottom a rea .
July 12, 13. l.t 9 a .m. till4 p m
32'10.
Phon• 985-.4244
Darr,ll Dugan , 8roodwoy . FURNISHED APT. Adults onl)' . no
pets , Phon~;t 992·3S74, Mid- SPRING GARDEN Supp lies, CobRacine, Ohio.
LOST , BILLFOLD ot Royal Oo~
boge. cauliflower, broccoli,
dl~port
.
Park . owned bv Kelty Hayman , S FAMILY Y.O.RD Sale, Monday .
and head lettua. plonu .
Roctne. Just return billfold ond
Tues., Weds &lt;;lothlng t Joys., AVAILABLE ot Village Manor
yellow , white , and red on ion
important Morine papers, no
Apartments- ! bedroom fu Tly
miS J: . Robert Rou~h Residence,
set ~ . on ion plants , Kennebec,
questions, asked . Ret~rn to
c;orpeled whh klldten llp·
Racine.
·
cobb let , Katahd in, Red Pontiac
P.omeroy Police Dept or Do ily
·pliOncet , furn ished . Starting at
and Red Losodo seed potatoes .
YARD
SAlE,
July
I.C,
IS,
16,
829
Sentinel otHce. 9-49-2875.
$104permont Phone-992-7721 ;
Nobll Summit
·-'-'.;.._Bulk garden teeds , potting t oiL
Poge St Middleport. Entire
E_q~ol h ~i njl oppor tun~ ty_
. _
Rt, 1
peot moss, fruit trees and rose
' collection of Avon bottles,
Middleport,
o.
bushes
Midway
Market
.
ether old bottle&amp;, glassware, TRAILER SPACE for f&amp;nt. 5 miles
992-5724
Pomeroy , Oh1o , 992-2582,
from Pomeroy and Middleport.
clothing , some antiques, etc .
Bob:s Morkoet . Mason . W Vo.
Comalote
Soles
and
Phone 992-5858.
WILL CARE for elderly women in YARD SALE, rainorsh1ne, 68l WI
(J04) 773-5721. - - - - - (·S.orvice and Supplies.
home. Co11992-73U.
mile. 10 • 15 . 16 Lots of small TRAILER SPACE for r•n t, complete
3· 1•HAVE VACANCY for man or .clothes
hook-up near Me1gs Mines on , .... 2 1n. cast iron k1tchoenslnk. 1
basin
and
1
droin
boord,
hong
r--.==:-:-::::T....,=:---,
_:.;
A:;;R:..
D-"S-A-LE- on-C
: :n:-u-,""'
,n:--S::-t- in . S.R. 124 . Caii7A2:c
-2:166
,-- ,---woman ir1 m~ home. locor Y
on woll type, wh•to, 1-3 burnor
references . Phon• Sh1rley · Syracuse at John Bentley 2 BEDROOM TRAILER , Adults on
gos . hot plate . Phone 9'9'15714.
.sr::::..n''
Jones , {61.t) 667·3402.
residence, Weds . July 13 to Frily. Phone 992·332.4 .
EcONOMY TRACTOR wllh. all atDIVW
day , July IS , 9:00 till 5:00P .M. SEMI-FU !SHED Efficiency aporttoc hm~tnts like new , asking
Insulation Serwices
ment, su1toble for one adult
Very mce girls' dresses , Jeans ,
IN5TJffiC710N
$'2250. Phone (614) 698-Jm.
fiuncitlAniiUM
located tn the Coate.s Building
cut-offs. and tops. sizes 6-10
llowtlntoWIIh &amp; Atticl
Ladies dretse$, shorts . blouses , aver Ou_tton's Drug ~tore. Coli HANGING BASKETS, pots, and
gerontums .
Cleland ' s
STORM
and &amp;lacks , sizes 8 · 12. Some
992-36"1 or Inquire at Apt. 16
maternlt~
clothes , stze 12 ,
G reenhouse ,
Gera ldine
WltmOWSI DOOIS
men 's suites and slacks , pic- FOR RENT OR SALE · 1972 Model l
Cleland, Racine, Oh1o .
IIEPI,AIC(..EJfT
•M'
tures , clocks . baby olning pot·
bedroom mob•I• home , 12 K 45
WIIDOII$
ty , corseot , bock pack , electric See at 493 Broadway St M1d
.. . - - , , dl• u.s IJ.pl. qf U~Jrw.
AUIIIINUM
warm ing
dtsh ,
walker . dlepo,r_t__ _~·----. .'ft. uft..hrJt.mtQ ...... •1615.
SIOIIIC-SOifln
Bedspreods: drapes , poho um·
New Co -Op water sof"'.ITltiU!IIIIIIGS
brello , b icycles . d ishes ,
teners, model VC-SVI.
Oon'l jus&lt; be with •
typewriters, books, electric
Only 1279 .95
JOB -Pion NOW 1..- a f&gt;ro.
deep fryer , electric razor. stop
s"tr~tat, lJiii
Save UD.QO on il new
feaional ca.-- Driving a " Big
by on your woy to the pool . I .
Hotpofnt Refrigerator
Ph. !tt-llt3 1-10-1 mo.
Rtg." We are 1 Private Training
I New 20 r;ublt: f~.
YARD SALE , Saturday , July 16 , 8 COAL NUMBER 6. STOKER OR
Chest Freezer
School and if you meet OtN'
till 5. Robert Hawk , Hemlock
$25 .00 Discount
LUMP DELIVERED Call (614 )
qualfficarions. you will be trainGrove . Oh.
Now In stock , complete line
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
384-2814
ed by Ptof ·&gt;nat lnstrucof bulk garden seeds .
PORCH
SALE.
Mark
Yoochom
Siding ,
Storm
tOI!I on modem equipment.
1 Good McCullou~h Ctlain
residence.
Yellow
Bush
Rood
,
Saw
$65
Train on I Part Tme basis (Sat.
Windows
&amp;
Rae• ne . School clothes ond
1 Good Used Poulan Cha'"
&amp; Sun.l and K0111 IOU' job, or
Insulation
.
misc . Tuesday thru Saturday_. _
Saw
550
attend our 3 Week Full nne
1 Goad used Unico
Ca II Professiona Is
Dryer
uo.oo·
Fles"de4 1t Training.
1
Good
Used
G
.
E.
Dryer
S8S
I Rt- TNttw Trrtikr r,.;.-..1,":.
PARKERSBURG
{2)
Good
Used
Refrtgerators, 5200 each .
422-4
A local contractor

FOR SALE

Swlday

THE

For Rent

$18,300 lf1;

Monday

WE

.

YantSale

m.-

NOTICE
WANT-AD _
-ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

4P.M .

DICK TRAL'Y

. .

I) Wonii'IIH' Under
Cull
Cwr(i\t'
lOll
Lll
I SO '
110
til
1.011
3.75

.11\g

..

\

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

Ads

_

FETCH ME
ANOTHER
MUG OF
COFFEE,
WOMAN!!

THINGS HAVE COME TO
A PURTV PASS WHEN
A FELLER GITS
MUGGED UNDER
1-\15 OWN ROOFTOP--

�r
12 - The Daily Sentinei, Middlepor·t-Pomeroy, 0 .. 'l'uesda~ . July

P~lice,

IZ, &lt;~TI

armed with clubs, carry, drag away Kent protestors
.

.

By DAVID HARDING
students were shot.
KENT, Ohio (UP[)
About 1,000 persons who
Pollee .armlld with clubs watched the ari1SIS moved
Lnday dragglld and carried onto the campys commons
away 192 . singing and and held a rally to protest the
chanting demon5trators from removal oft he
the Kent State University demoostrators.
cam pus. area where four
The first two persons
students were killed by arrested were Mr. and Mrs.
Natiooal Guard troops seven Martin
Scheuer
of
years ago.
Boardman, parents of Sandra
The demonstrators have Scheuer, ooe of the four
camplld out oo the site for the students shot to death by
past twl&gt; months In protest of . . Natiooal Guardsmen during
a proposed gynamisum to he
an anti-war demonstratilrn
built near the area where the .-;.;;:.._;;,.;197
;,;.;.0..,.,.,;;,,.. ..

Also arrested were Arthur

Krause, Pittsburgh, father of
Allison Krause, who also was
killed in the shootings and the
parents of Abfn Canfora, woo
was wounded in the
shootings. Canfora was ooe of
the demoostrators and also
was arrested.
About 30 campus police,
.backed up by Portage County
sheriff's deputies and Kent
City police and wearing rJot
gear and armed only with
clubs; moved into ''Tent
City" and began taking the

Two demonstrators in
demoostrators to four buses.
The demonstrators were whe'elchairs were inside the
booked at the scene and tbe circle. One was identifilld as
buseo were to take them In Ron Kovic, a crippled
the Portage County jail at Vietnam veteran who wrote
the anti-war book "Born on
nearby Ravenna ..
Singing, "We Shall Over- the Fourth of July."
The demonstratprs voted
come" and chanting " We
shalr win," the dem- earlier today JD defy a court
onstrators locked arms order, which was issued
'and legs and formed a circle. Mooday, to leave the site of
Police had to pull them apart the proposed $6 million
and csrry them ooe-byone to gynamisum complex. .
Several ~ . thousand
the buses.

TIJERINA TO CUBA
ALBUQUERQUE,
N.M.
(UP!) - Land grant activlsi
Reies lopez Tijerina Monday
announced he plans to visit
Cuba and said he may try to
visit Ru~a . The activlsi said
he will meet later this week
with officials of Ute Cuban
and RusSian embassies in
Mexico City.
Tijerina said Ute purpose of
the trip is "to get the true
story of Chicanos out of the
United Slates."
"We will tell them Lh~ true
story about the stealing of our
property, the rape of our
culture and the general discrimination of our people,"
he said.

(CaDtblutd rram PIP t)

TEMPLE SUES TURNERS
LOS ANGELES (UP!) The husband and wife singing
act of Ike and Tina Turner
were sued by Temple
University Monday.
The Philadelphia
PEDAL POWER is the secret of thiS entry in
university brought an action
in Superior Court asking
.~~~~ Annual Hamblin Raft Race on the Chattahoochee
'&lt;
near Atlanta. The event attracted paddlers and
$108,700
in
damages,
charging
the
Turners
splashers from across the country.
''suddenly and unilaterally"
CLASSIC of modern dance features David Hatch
canceled a contracted
concert just two days before
Walker as the preacher in Public Broadcasting Service's
JAPANESE TOUR
performance
of "Appalachian Spring," by the Martha
Lhey
were
to
appear
at
the
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
TOitiGHT THRU
university's
swruner
tousie
Graham
Dance
Company. The program is in the Great
group
of
Japanese
Performance
series.
festival
last
August.
TUESDAY
businessmen are touring Ohio
this
week, evaluating
JULYlO- 11-12
E-RCALLED
industrial sites for possible
development.
The Pomeroy E-R Squad
CAR\YMIH
The 2Q-member group,
was called Monday ai 9:35
PG
which visited .the Cincinnati
p.m. to the Willard Hines
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ·
Sows - 350 lbs. up 34.50 to residence ,on old Rt. 33 for
area
during
the
weekend,
THE HINDENBURG
38.
July 9,1977
included presidents and
Audrey Woode, a heart
Sales'.Report of
Pigs - 12 to 35.
chairmen of 17 Japanese auto
.PG
patient, who was taken to
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
parts
manufacturing
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
STOCKER CATTLE companies. The tour also STEERS250 to 300 lbs. 28
. Athem Live•tockSales,
WED.-THU.-FRI.
included a trip to Kings
to34.50; 300to400lbs.27.50to
Feed SIDe,
Ju~ U-14-15
Island amusement park.
36; 400 to 500 lbs. 29 to 37; 500
er teers 400-liOO lbs.
ASK TOWED
The
businessmen,
600
lbs
Choice
32-36; Good 25.75Double Feature
A
marriage
license was
. 297.525tto3536.507;006001bto 31.75.
members of the Japanese t7o00 lbs 28
issued
to
Richard
. Wayne
0
•
•
;
s.
Feed
" """"""
·~ ·~ lbs
Program
Auto Parts Manufacturers and. Over
28 to 35.50.
. er Hel'fers
. Thomas, 26, Tuppers Plains,
Association, have been in the
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to Chmce 28-31.50; Good 23:25- and Bonnie Lou Welsh, 20,
. TWO _MINUTE
United States since last 300 lbs. 24 to 30; 300 to 400 lbs. · 27 ·75 ·
.
Tuppers .Plains. '
Wednesday . They toured 24.50 to 31; 400 to 500 lbs. 25 to
WARNING
Feeder Bulls~ 400-liOO lbs.
industrial sites in Michigan 31.25; 500 to 600 lbs. .50 to Cho1ce 30.50-33 .50; Good
SWASHBUCKLER
last week and are going 30.50; 600 to 700 lbs. 23
24.75 to 2,4.00-30.25.
through Ohio this week before · 32; 700 lbs. and Over 25 to 34.
R PG
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
traveling In Canada.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS lbs.J 29·35-34·90·
(By The Head) _ Stoek Cows Slaughter Cows: Utility 25115 to 220; stock Cows and 28.50; Canner and Cutter
Calves 175 to 280; Stock Bulls 21.110-24 .90. .
.
160 to 255 ; Baby Calves 8 to
Veals (Cholc~Prune) 30.
In Pony league action
.44; (By The Pound) - 41.75 ·
Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 18 to
Babr Calves (By the head ) Middieport kept its record
clean by downing the visiting .
22.75 ; Holstein. Cows 23 to !IMS·
'26.90 ; Commercial Bulls
laughter Lambs 47-49.75. Pomeroy · A's 13-2. Winner
Dave Demoskey teamed with
(1,000 lbs. and Over) 28 to 33. F:~e~Lambs 46-48.50 ..
Veal calveo-'rops 220 lbs. . ij g · ( · o. I, Barrows.G1lts, Britt Dodson to lead the win.
to25034.50to40; Mlldium200 200-230 lbs.) 47.75-48.10.
·, Billy Elkins socked a double
1
and Mike Miller, Terry
lbs. to 300 27 to 34; • Culls 26.50 ~:s -::_~~50-38
• · °·
down
rs ""· .,.. · ·
Gardner, Dodson, and Jeff
·
Pigs (by the head) 13.50-32. Wayland each had a single.
Harvey Whitlatch and Rick
Allen pitched for Pomeroy.
Chris Allen, John Beaver,
Ray Stewart, Allen an,d Jeff
Sopher each had one bit.
Middleport raiSed its record
to 1HI by taking a forfeit
from Syracuse over the
.weekend.
p
000 010 ) - .2.5
M
171 .103 x- 13 5

Market Report

a.--------.1

team is .undefeated

7 26 85

Vacations Without Care
By

making deposits in a savings
account regularly, this family's
vacation fund is ready whe n they
are! Start a ·savings account now!

WALK-UP TEu.ER WINDOW AND
AUTO-TEu.ER WINDOW OPEN~·
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.

Name Brand
Appliances
REFRIGERATORS, RANGES,
FREEZERS, WASHER(DRYERS,
DISHWASHERS, MICROWAVE OVENS,
AIR CONDITIONERS, DEHUMIDIFIERS,
COLOR -TV AND STEREO SETS

. The Pomeroy Royals bad
an easy time with visiting
Syracuse, 12-4, with Steve
Ohlinger getting the win.
Ohlinger teamed with Tom
Owens to fan ten and walk
IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT,

PROBATE DIVISION

MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO

IN THE MATTER Of
SETTLEMENT
OF
AC COUNTS . PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,

OHIO

Accounts _and vouchers ot
following
named
fiduciaries ha¥e been flied in

the
the

Probate

Courl. Me igs
approval

Oh iO · tor

Co~nty,

and settlement :
·
CASE NO . 2146• Second
Current Account of Wallace
Bradford , Executor of the
Estate of Leah B. Schaeffer,

"THE

Deceased

CASE NO . 21964 t: !rst and

FRIENDLY BANK"

Final Account of Clifford H .
Bauer. Executor of the
Estate of Amelia M . Sauer ,
Deceased ·

C,ASE NO . 21955 First
Accoount of Rachel Sheridan,
Executrix or the Estate of

Rozena

Deceased .

(GAS

r MfDDLEPORT, OHIO
--·~ Member

have been cut off, they are to
be reconnected.
For those woo have paid
th~ir utility bills but are
suffering hardship as a
result, the program provides
f 0r a direct payment of up to
$50. In addition, the difference between the direct
payment and the allowable
$250 fer family may be aP..
plied as a credit toward
future utility or fuel
deliveries.
Varioua state agencies are
cooperating to achieve
maximum participation In
the program by aU eligible
persons . The Ohio Commission on Aging is working
through regional and local
agencies serving the elderly.
The Ohio Department of
Economic and Conununity
Development is working
thraugh local Community
Action Agencies. The Ohio
Department of Public
Welfare is sending notices
abolrt the program to all
persons on its Aid to
Dependent Children and
Medicaid mailing lists.
Applicants will need copies
of unpaid fuel biDs, shut-off
notice,., ipcome verification
or other records to show
evidence of finariclal need.
Applications for lissl.stance
. under the program will be
accepted at county welfare
offices only through Aug.
12. No actual payment will be
made until after Aug. 31.
Applicants are urglld to
apply at their earliest ·opportunity, since funds are
limited. County ·allocations
have been made according to
the f11&lt;1eral fonnula which
was us.ed to determine
allotments to states.

Middleport's pony

One Man's Family

~"-6

.

pplications

Mason DIM-In

·.

-

spectalnrs were at the site Olds said. "I do not eJqleCI
during the arrests.
trouble."
" It is essential that we
PQrtage County Conun«t
behave ourselves and Pleas Court Judge J111eph
conduct ourselves in the Kalnartl, IICLing on a requ~
manner we said we would do from the university, Monday
all along,'' one demonstrator Issued en injunction to 32
shouted through a bull horn individuals and 200 "John
shortly before the arrests Does"
ordering
the
began.
protesters to leave the
" I fully expect that the campus by a a.m. today •
students will remain peaceful
However, Kainard also oras they hsve expressecl this dered the university to halt
Intent from the beginning," plans to build the gym unlil a
Kent State . President Glen preliminsry hearing for the

llederal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

DfPOSIJS INSURED TO $40.000

BAKER FURNITURE

B,

Genheimer ,

Unleu u:c:ept lons are filed
thereto, said a·ccounts wilt be
for hearing before said Court
on the lOth day of August,
1971 , at wh ich time sa id
accounts will be considered
and continued from day to
day until finally disposed of.
p..ny person int~rested may
tile written exceptions to sa id
a cc ounts or to matters
pertaining to the execulion of
fhe. trust . not less th&amp;n five
days prior to the date set for
hearing .
· s · M"ennlno 0 , Webster

I &lt;n 12.

"7

JUOGI;

eight. ·Ohlinger and Brian
Swann each hal three hits to
lead the attack, and Owens
and Chris Taylor each had
two. Mike Whitlatch, Cliff
Kennedy, Randy Murray,
Brian King ·and Ron CuUums
each bad one safety.
Chris Hupp was the laser,
fanning four and walking two.
Joe Bob Hemsley had a
double, and Jack Duffy and
Mike Nance each had a single
for the only hits.
S
030 010 p- 4 3
P
431 211 x- 12 16

DIVORCES GRANTED
Five divarees were granted
and another dissolved in
Meigs County Cc!mmon Pleas
Court. Granted divorced
were James E. Winebrenner
from Elaine P. Winebrenner,
Kimberly Dowell from
Benjamin Dowell, Nina D.
Yates from Salem A. Yates,
Kathy Cremeans from
Marvin Cremeans and
Sussana Grueser from
Templeton Grueser. The
marriage of Ray Haning and
Mary Alva Haning was
dissolved.

victory.,.

''The judge recognized our
position that there slloold be
no conslruction unlil we have
the opportunity to give our
argumenLs," said Whlttake.r.
stephen Parisi, an allomey
for the wliverSity, said the •
order will give the university ·
"the opportunity Lo reswne •
normal activities, aUow stu- ·
denls to 11et back to school ~
and allow leachers to Leach."

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions - Timothy
Lucas, . Cheshire; Carr C.
Moddlapaugh, Middleport; .
Woodrow Zwilling, Syracuse;·
Marjorie Hunt, Racine; '
Audrey Woode, Pomeroy.
Discharges
Velma
Imboden, Nellie Hanson, .
Kimberly Harbrecht, Janet
Carroll, Pricey Tacketi and
Mabel Rambaugh.

Reopening of bridge could
be pushed beyond 3 weeks
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP! )- Motorists wanting to use the
Memorial Bridge over the Ohio River at Point Pleasant will
have to wait at least another two to three weeks, according to
West Virginia highway officials.
Deputy stat&lt;: Highway Cqmmissioner [lean Blake said it will
take at least that long to repair a crack in a welded area of the
bridge. And any delays in approving a contract to repair the
bridge or in obtaining equipment could delay the reopening
even longer, Blake said.
\ The estimale was made during a meeting in Charleston of
federal and state highway officials, plus representatives of the
American Bridge Co., a division of U.S. Steel.
Blake said Ute officials agreed to use "splice plates" to
repair the 4-inch crack, which was discovered last week during
a routine inspection.
American Bridge was asked to present a cost estimate for

I

Cheshire, he was the son of

Surviving are two brothers,

Homer and Nora Mulford
Kennedy.

Oenzll Cleland, Chesler. and
Carrell Cleland, Columbus ;

Mlddleparl

Chesler, and Doris David and
Phyllis Rowan, Tuppers

He was a member of the

First

Presbyterian Church where
he served as an elder and
trustee ·for several years and
was a member of Masonic

ladge 363 F&amp;M, Middleport.

three nieces, Clarice Allen,

Plains. and two nephews,

Ross Cleland, Chesler. and
John Benson, Columbus.

Funeral services will be at

She was manager of the

1 p.m. Wednesday at the .

and park tor several years.
Svrvlving are his wife,
Farie Erlewlne Kennedy; a

West Broad St., Columbus .
w)th burial .In the .Sunerest
Cemetery. The Kimes had
moved to Columbus a number

. Mlddleporl swimming pool

doughier, Mrs. Patrlela
(Pafly) Slaver&gt; of Gallipolis ;
a son, leo Kennedy of Tup.
pers

Pla.lnS;

a

three

and two aunts.
Garnet Folden In

grands~ms

Mrs .

Home. ~

of years ago.

brother . ·

Dayton, of Marlta; lhree

granddaughters ,

Jerry Spears Funeral

Flor ida and Mrs . Jacob

Schuler, Pomeroy.

· Funeral ser'vlces will be at

2 p.m. Thursday at the
Rawlings-Coats
F.uneral

ARGEL M. KIRKHART
Argel M. iPefel Kirkhart.
61, farmerly af Meigs County ,
now of Marion, Ind., pas.sed
away July Jrd after an extended illness.
Born March 30, 1916 to Zeri

Luther and Allie Belle
Home with Rev. Dwight Kirkhart, he was preceded In
Zavltz and !he Rev. Robert death by his parents and one
Bumgarner officiating . brother . '
Survl•lng are' his wife,.
Burial will be In Gravel Hill
Cemetery In . Cheshire. AQnus; one son, Roger, of
Friends may call at the Tlllen ; two daughters, Mrs.
Spencer of
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 Virgil (Barbara)
1
lo9p.m. Wednesday and until Somerset, and /ll\rs. Ralph
time of services Thursday . (Jean) Trussel, Bashan; a
Masonic riles will be at the step.daughter, Mrs. Ran 1
funeral home at '7:30 p.m. (Belly) Ownes. Marion, Ind.;
a sister, Audrea McCune,
Woonesday.
Kent; several grandchildren,
.~nd one great.grandchlld.
Complying with Mr .
Kirkhart's request .to be
MRS. ELLEN KIMES
CHESTER - Mrs. Ellen cremated and his ashes
Kimes. former resident of returned to Meigs County,
Chester · who observed her burial services will be held
lOOih birthday .almost two Wednesday, July tl, In the
years ago, died Monday at a Success Cemetery at 2 p.m .
Friends who wish Ia
nursing home in Wellston.
·/W's, Kimes was born Oct. remember Mr. Kirkhart may
30, 1875in Chesler Township a donate In hi~ name to the
daughler of the late David American Cancer Society
and Hannah Cleland. She with afflces at 169 S. Third
married Charles Kimes on St.. In Middleport.

Mason downed visiting
Rutlaiid 11=4behind the threehit pitching of Don Russell.
Russell struck out twelve and
walked just three. Grant
Hysell had two triples and
Bodie Davis two doubles to
lead the bitting. John Bond
and George Zuspan each had
a double, Shawn Fields two
singles, and Russell and
David Burton had a single.
GQy ·Schuler and Marty
Spangler ·shared pitching
chores for Rutland, fanning
seven and walking four. Ma)t
Weaver stroked a double and
Paul MIChaels and Craig '
Nicinsky got a single each for
the only Rutland hits.
R
0000220-43
M
233 102 x-11 10 .
SCHEDULE
July IZ
'
Middleport at ENtern
Pomeroy A's at 'Rutland
Muoo at P0111eror Royals
Racine at SyraCUIII!

that "it shakes.11

lnwers lOOfeet above tbe s!.rface of the span. Using the splice
plates involves drilling hundreds of holes to repair the
weakened beam, which developed a crack at om' of ils weldoo
sections.
Blake said a careful inspection showed no additional defects
on the 1't\\ll of the· bridge, which was bltilt afler .the old ~ilver
Bridge collapsed in 1967, killing 46 persons.

Smith said there was a major traffic problem on
SR 7 north of Addison, however, where highway repair

crews began working on the riverbank slippage
problem long • !Jefore the West . Virginia Road
Cc!mmission closed Ute Silver.Memorial Bridge . Some
area residents have been using the old route
(Hooeysuckle Dr.) to by-pass the road repair work.

Since the crack was discovered, motorists have been re.

routed 16 miles north to the Pomeroy-Mason bridge.

•

en tine

at
NO. 62

' Ohio· Department of
Glenn Smith, Division 10,
Transportation said this morn'ing at his Marietta
office, "there is no truth to rumors that the Pomeroy·
Mason span may close."
•
He said the bridge is structurally sound and would
continue to be I!Sed, ootwithstanding motorists' reports

· POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

WEDNESDAY, JULY 13,. 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Coal operators reject
hid to reopen contract

! · Area Deaths !
Oej. · 30, 1896 and was
LEO . KENNEDY
Leo C. Kennedy Sr., 10, a preceded In death by her
Middleport elementary parents, her husband, a son,
school teacher and ~lnclpal Cell; twa sisters , Car a·
for many years, died Monday Benson ~nd lela Mclane.
evening at Holzer Medical and three ' bralhers, Max,
Center. Barn July 11, 1906 In Wayne and Vern Cleland .

repairs by the end of this week. If state Highways
Commissioner Joseph Speed Jones approves the contract,
work may begin as early as this weekend, depending on the
availability of the company's supplies, Blake said.
. .
"At this time'we're.a litUe unsure exactly how long 1t will
take," said Blake. "It depends on the equipment available In ,
him (the cootractor). We're hoping to have Ute work
completed in two to three weeks."
.
Blake said the section in need of repair is on one of the bndge

VOL XXVIII

,--~-----------------------1

any . kind other than our earlier refusal to reallocate benefits in order to maintain
. WASHINGTON (UP! ) The
Situminous
Coal willingness to meet."
benefits within Ute funds, the financial stability of the
'j
Operators today rejected a
" We must reject the which would have preventro funds.''
request by the United Mine contention Ul.at the current a cutback in UMW benefits as
The BCOA has conLended
Workers
to
reopen problem with the Health and of July 1 that forces that the funds ' financial'
Funds beneficiaries to pay up to $500 difficulties were cai!Sed by
negotiations on the 1974 con- Retirement
tract over cutbacks in the constitutes a problem which annually in medical benefits. numberous, which have
union's
Health
and is national in character
"We take strong issue with severely depleted industry
within the meaning of the 1974 Ute statement that the BCOA contributions to the funds.
Retirement Funds.
\
The BCOA denied UMW agreement," the BCOA said has violaled its contractural Under terms of Ute 1974
President Arnold Miller's in a twoilage statement.
pledge of full cooperation to contract with the union, the
"We also reject Ute conten- develop working agreements industry pays royalties to the
contention that the financial
problems with the Funds are tion that the 1914 agreement · necessary for the effective funds based on man hours
national
in character. BCOA can be Uhilaterally reopened Opet:Stion of the trusts/' the worked and coal mined .
.C. C. LEWIS, JR., describes what's going on oo his
o(fi~alS said they will gladly for the purpose of negotiating BCOA said.
The BCOA issued industryOldtown farm for Southeastern Ohio's dairy field day in
a
reallocation
of
Ute
funds."
meet
with
Miller
next
week
to
"When
we
agreed
to
reallo-.
wide
figures for the first six
West Virginia. Holding the remainder of the equipment
The BCOA announcement cate funds in October, '1976, it , months of 1976 showing that
hear
his
Side
of
the
Issue,
but
for le~ is Meigs County Extension Agent John Rice.
''we make 119 commitment of . came at a time when wildcat was expressly staled in a man days lost amount to
. About 200 Ohioans were guests on Ute farm.
strikeS that erupted over memorandum
of 1,047,500, an increase of
DR. JAMES CONDE
benefit
cutbacks
announclld
understanding
between
the
almost 100 per cent over the
§~::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;::::::::::::::.;:;::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::_:::::::::::::::::::::%::;:;:::~\~~
.
by Ute funds were· winding BCOA and the UMW that it S81J1e period last year.
down. The ootal number of might be necessary in the
miners in West Virginia on future for the trustees' to cut
strike today dwindled to
about 1,000, down from the
By United PresslnlernaUonal
6,800 Tuesday and 8,300
Dr. James ·P. Conde has Reedsville. ·
&lt;;ompletoo his training at the
SAN SALVADOR, EL SALVADOR - TWO gunmen
.
returned to his native Mei~s
A
~968 graduate of MidKirksville
College
of
Tuesday assassiril\ted former President Osmin Aguirre
County and he's deligl!ted to dleport High School where he Osteopathic Medicine in 1976,
lialdnas, ooce a feared, hard-fisted dictator who had spent the
be bac~ home. · . ·
played varsity football and Kirksville,
College
of
past 20 years of his life in quiet retirem~nt.
.
'
Dr.
Conde,
who
completed
basketball,
Dr. Conde Osteopathic·Medicine in 1976,
Pulice said the assassins ..puinped two .45-&lt;Jaliber bullets
his metlical training on June received his bachelor of Kirksville, Mo ., and did . a
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
into his chest from close range as the 82-year.old .Aguirre
Th·e Meigs Coupty Com·
Forty-four arrests 'were 30, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. science degree at Ohio State rotating internship at Doc·
Friday through Sunday,
stepplld out of his house for h)s usual afternoon stroll. The miSsioners in a regulat
made by the Middleport Eugene Conde, ' Route 1, University in 1972. He tor's Hospital in ·Erie, Pa.,
gunmen fired several warning shots into the air, then fled · session Tuesday night hot and humid with a
Police Department during
, completing that training on
down the street a few blocks from downtown San Salvador and proposed the budget for the chance of showers Friday
.
June,
according
to
the
June 30 this year.
hopplld into a waiting car Utat sped off, police said.
1978 fiscal year which will be and Saturday and fair and
report
of
Police
monthly
•
Dr. and Mrs. Conde are
released by Commissioner cooler Sunday. Hlgbs · will
Chief
J.
J.
Cremeans.
residing at Route 2, Pomeroy,
SAN QUENTIN; CAUF.- RACIAL VIOLENCE erupted Richard Jones within a week he in the upper IIOs or lower
Of
the
total
arrests,
six
90s
Friday
and
Saturday
at San Quentin Prison Tuesday and three convicts were killed and presentoo in a · public
Cloudy, warm tonight, lows with their one-year-old son,
were
on
disorderly
maMer
and 1n the upper 80s or
and Lhree bsdly hurt in a chain of black-white fights. The hearing Tuesday, July 19.
near 70. Sunny and warm but Ryan. Dr. Conde has become
charges
and
five
for
prison's 2,320 inmates immediately were placed under general
a little less humid Thursday. associated with Dr. .~ohn
In other business Ted lower IIOs Sunday. Lows
disturbing
the
peace.
There
lockdown, which spokesman Mike Luxford ·said "was formal Turner of the Southeastern will be near 7~ Friday and
Highs to upper 80s . Ridgway at the Meigs
were
four
arrests
each
for
Building
on
pr~e for inci.dents of this magnitude."
. Probabillty of precipitation Medical
v
•
Ohio Emergency Medical In the lower 60s Sunday.·
driving
while
intoxicated;
Mulberry
Heights,
Pomeroy,
Mr. and, Mrs. John Fultz, 50 percent today, 20 per cent
A black prisoner died in a morning attack and two white Service presented a contract
.
ex.ecssive speed; wrong way Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs, tonight and Tuesday . .
and has been accepted as a
convicts were killed In a wild afternoon battle involving .knives . for 1977 to be signed oy the :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·
, .. .. .. .... ......... ... .. ...... ...... . on a one-way street and
staff .member . at Veterans
Harold . Jones, Minersville,
and clubs. While stressing the incidepts were still under conunissloners for SEOEMS
·
allowing
dogs
to
run
loose.
Memorial Hospital. Mrs .
had
a
ride
on
the
Goodyear
investigation, Luxford said that Ute motive for Ute killing of the services in Meigs County. ·
bo
, X
Three
were
arrested
for
Conde
is a licensed practical
Blimp, " America" from
two whites "seems to have been revenge" for the earlier The commissioners forrunning
a
rffi
light
snd
two
nurse
and will be working
Lawrence County airport last
killing. of the black.
warded the contract to the
each for spinning tires, petty Sunday: The ride lasted an
TWO ARE FINED
., part-time in the offices of Dr.
County Prosecutor for
VaJldaliSm
th.eft and possession of hour and a half going over
Fined. in the court of Ridgwar. and Dr. Conde.
WASillNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER'S appeal for examination.
marijuana.
There
was
one
Middleport
Mayor Fred
Second of the children of
money to produce tactical neutron artillery shells and
David Vaughan, director of Sheriff James -J . Proffitt arrest each for running a stop Huntington and up river Hoffman Tuesday night were Mr. and Mrs. Conde, Dr.
about eight. mile~.
warheads fell on fertile ground today in the Senate. Most AORTA, also advised by reported today vandalism
sign;
reckless
operation
;
While in a restaurant there E. R. Yost, Middleport, $10 Conde bad two sisters, Cindy
Senate observers believed the members were prepared to vote letter that the AORTA Bus and theft of property
the money anyway, unless Carter had decided to reject 'system will begin serving belonging to Wesley Wise of passing at intersection; no they saw anti-gay activist and costs, failure to yield the West of Des Moines, !a., and
outrlght the weapons which emit lethal radiation but inflict Meigs County on or about Salem Township in Meigs license tags ; no operator's Anita Bryant who was a guest right of way, and David Kathy Hubbard of Salem
license; running over fire at the First Baptist 'Church in Mitchell, no address recor- Center, and two brothers,
little blast damage.
July 25.
·
· CQunty.
hose, parking on a sidewalk. Proctorville. .
ded, indecent exposure, $50 Brian, doing studies in
A jjecret amount of money for the neutron weapons is
Wise's
mailbox
was
There
was
one
case
and
costs. Forfeiting bonds in paramedic work at Hocking
Rides are available to the
containffi in a $10.4 billion public works bill although it ts so
on
July
11
and
two.
damaged
tlie
court of $100 ·each on ' Technical
dismissed.
College
in
public from November
well camouflaged it went through the House virtually
cartons of cigarettes and 2
charges
of
poS$esslon
of
Nelsonville
and
Bruce,
a
The
department
inthrough April at the
TRACTOR PULL SET
unnoticed. In a last-ditch effort, Sen. Mark Hatfield, R~e.,
quarts of oil stolen from an vestigated eight traffic ac- Mayflowers' winter base in marijuana were ·Jeffrey A. junior at Eastern High
hoplld to rally other liberals against the "pebple killer"
A non-sanctioned tractor outbuilding nearby. The ·
weapons he believes endanger peace by making it easier to pull governed by the 1975 incident is under h1- cidents during the month and Miami, Fla.ll.eservatlons are Koehler, Wilbur H. Leifheit, School.
Dr. Conde, whose hobbies
parking meter collections made on a day-to-&lt;iay basis, Jr., and Brian K. French, all
slide from conventional to nuclear warfare in Europe.
· OSTPA and NTPA rules, will
vestigatlon.
totaled $763.75. The police Tuesdays through Sundays. of Middleport. Richard Rath· include fishing, hunting and
be held Saturday, July 1~. at
Arnold Grate of Rutland
WASIDNGTON -.FOOD AND DRUG A
ratton the
Meig~
County bas reported the breaking cruiser was driven 3, 728 Rates for a half-hour flight bum, Middleport, forfeited a tennis, says he has ahVays
are $7.50 for adults and $5 for $50 bond posted on a dlsor· looked forward to returning
tests have tUI'ned up no evidence ol a health hazard rom lead Fairgrounds at Rock Springs · and entering of an out- miles during the month.
to Meigs County.
derly manner charge.
children through age 12.
on cartoon~haracLer glasses distributed at McOonald's fast The seven classes to ~ building near his home.
Because of the heavy
food restaurants.
.
featuroo are ihe 5 000 7 000 Approximately $1,500 worth
demand for flights when the
The agency said Tuesday that even though red, while and 9 000 and 12 000 lbs Ou't of of"
saddles and equipment
airships Americ~, Columbia,
yellow decals on Ute glasses' exterior contain lead, there is "no Field Stock~· the 500 lb. were •tolen. Entry was
Mayflower and Europa
evidence the lead can contarninate 'the liquid inside." FDA Four-wheel · drive· ihe 24" gained by breaking the ·~Iected
conduct their sununer tours,
said lead In .Ute painted decals could be leaked out when Drawbar· and th; 5 000 lbs padlock on the building.
May through October, they
exposed for extendoo periods to various chemicals. llut it Modulated, The eve~t is ~ . Sheriff's deputies are
are
limited to conducting
Absentee ballots for special will be Aug. 16 In the Southern
poses no health hazard with normal use.
get underway at 4 p.m.
checking aU leads.
,,
rides
for
members
of
the
elections
to he held in two Local School District. It is a
· Three students of high
press,
rad.
i
o
and
television,
local
school
districts in 10 mill levy for three years.
DELAWARE, OIDO -AN OFFICIAL OF THE Glass
schools in Meigs Cc!unty have
·- - (Continued .on page 12)
been named to the 300-voice and a few special guests of August are available at the The deadline for absentee
Meigs County Board of voting is noon on Aug. 13.
All-Ohio State Fair Youth GOOdyear by invitation only. · Elections
office, Mulberry
The second special election
Choir· which performs at
NOW YOU KNOW
Ave., p on'l eroy.
will
be Aug. 25 in the Eastern
some 65 events from Aug. 16
Florida averages about 120 . The office is open from 1 to j:.ocal School District. It .is a
through Aug. 28.
thunderstorms a year, while 4 p.m. , Monday through
The choir will rehearse for the Lus Angeles area gets Friday, for the conv~nience five mill levy for three years.
the first time prior to the about four, according to of residents who wish to vote Deadline for absentee votes
Forty contribuilons have lin, Chucli Bartels, Moore's
to be cast in that election is
Oliio State Fair. under the National Oceanic and At- absentee ballots. .
been donated to the clean up Store, Russ Brown, Ruby
.
noon on Aug. 22.
alleges,
A
suit
seeking
satisfaction
direction _ of · Glenville mospheric Administration
project for the village of Guinther, Home &amp; Auto,
The
first
special
election
Also
filed
in
Meigs
Cc!unty
Thomas.. Next sununer the records.
Pomeroy.
Evelyn Clark, Gene's · Body of jud,gment has been filed in
·
Donation$ for the cleanup Shop, Graveiy Tractor Sales Meigs,County Common Pleas Common Pleas Court was a group will tour seven counare stU! being acceptlld and &amp; Service,, Smith-Nelson Court by Beasley and judgment in the amount of tries In Europe.
Named to the choir from
may be sent to the office of Motors Inc., Nancy Reed, Mathews, Inc., Athens, $$44.59 by the Grange Mutual
the Pomeroy Chamber of Sybil Ebersbach, Lee Cc!n- against Bernard Gilkey, Casualty Co., Columbus, Meigs County are J elf L.
against Tllddy A. Runyon, Thornton, son of Mrs. · The Gallia - Meigs Com·
Cc!mmerce. Paul Simon is struction, Ewing Funeral Middleport.
opportunities be provided by the agency.
The plaintiff, Beasley and Radcliff, Ohio.
Florence L. Thornton, Route munity Action Agency an- dunngthe summer months of Individuals wishing to
heading th~&lt; project.
Home, Sugar Run Flour Mill,
Robert Rupe ~ppealed the 2, Racine, a bass from nounces the approval of the 1977, ~e progra~c~n- . participate should conta ct
Latest contributors are: Powell's Super Valu, Fabric Mathews, on Dec. 20, 1973,
suspension
of his driver's Southern High School; summer
youth
and ducted m conjunction wtth any of the following GalliaFanners Bank, Pomeroy Shop, Mullen Insurance recovered judg01ent in
license,
,
license
plates
and
Athens
County
Court
of
Kimberly A. Batey, daughter recreational program funded the swnmer youth program Meigs C.A.A. offices i Gallia
Natlooal Bank, Crow, Crow &amp; Agency, Inc., Grow's Steak
Porter, Fred Crow, Jr., Li~ House, V. 0. Edwards, BiU Cominon Pleas against · the registration by the Bureau of of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew E. by the Ohio · Department of admm1stere,d by the · U. S. County Cc!urthouse, 446-461 2,
Cutler (Mrs. R. R·. ), Charles Swatze~Auto Parts, Warner's defendant Bernard Gilkey in Motor Vehicles. Suspension Batey, Route 1, Long Bottom, Ecpnomic and Community Departn:rent of Labor.
ext. 7·2; Meigs County CourtBlakeslee, Dale Warner, Mr. Barber Shop, Senior Citizens the sum of '18,699.~8 plus was receivlld July 11. Jua~.ita a soprano from Eastern High Development.
AcUv.rt•es sUch as . in- .house, 992-5605; Qr th e
This program will provide format1o~al t?urs . and Cheshire Office, 367:7341 .
and Mrs. Gerard Hllf~y, (Quilt), Bernard V. Fultz, Dr. interest at the rate of six Wells, Lljng Bottom, and School, and Pamela J. Riffle,
Mr. and Mrs. P1lil ·Eich, Bill and Mrs. lewis Telle, Mr. percent per annliDI together Stanley Gordon Wells, Long daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy · economically disadvantaglld cultural. field tnps will he ,Applications must be comMayer, J • R Sparta Shop, and Mrs. Thereon Johnson with court Coats. None of thia Bottom filed for dissolution of F. Riffle, Route I, Reedsville, youth between tbe.ages of 6-14 ~ffered to each qualified . pleted and returned no later
a soprano from Eastern High with
educational
and appll~ant . . And, trans- than July 211.
Heater-Brogan Insurance, and Swisher &amp; Luhse Drug. judgment, lntet'elt and costs lila rriage.
~
suit
bas
been
paid,
the
portation to these events will
·
School.
Cltjfnd Really, Ben Frank~
~
1\

l1:News. . .zn Brzefsl\1 Budget

Dr. Conde hegins practice

prepared · M~~~eoAalsostoodbyits

Police make
44 arrests

Me~ coupies

· Weather

ride in'-Liimp
the 'Goodyear'

.

Mail

hit

by

ELBERFELD$

Eastern rolled over host
Racine 12-1 .as Steve Little
socked a homer and double.
Winner .Danny Spencer and ,
Mark Norton combinro to fan
thirteen and walk nine .
Norton had a double, Spencer
and Brian Bissell each had
two singles, and Gene Cole
had one hit.
Kent Wolfe took the loss as
he and John Pape fanned
three and walked eight. WoHe
had two singles, Pape a
triple, and Dale Teaford a
single for tM four Racine
bits.
E
000 504 :1-12 8
it
000 220 0- 44

ra..,..,.,

prolesterll to present their
"""" ls held July 21.
William Whittaker, an
attorney
for
the
demonstrators, called the
restrainiug order against
conatructkln of the gym "a

Pomeroy-Mason bridge
is structurally sound
says Division director

Kordovin·
by joanna
Beauty...

Strength

./"

· .

=.

6

Contributors listed

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.

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Three students

for
·Ohio's choir

Absentee ballots available

Satisfdction of
judgtnent asked

Surtuner' youth program set
recre,~~ional

in Ga11ia, Meigs

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