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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

Smart and distinctive ... the textural
.embpssing of Kordoviil will delight
your eye ... las,tingly. For this is no
fragile beauty, but a translucent allvinyl, plastic shade that hangs well,
won't fade or dry out, or harden with
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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

�)'II ' •

•

2- 'Mie Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesdav Julv u 1crn

Senate 26-6 for teacher· tenure bill

May 4 Coalition vows to continue fiRiat
PETER P. SPUDial Jr.
KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Members of Kent

By

3- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon1eroy, 0., widnesday, July 13, 1977

educational system ," proceures, said Celebreue . . ___stl!te University 's "May 4 Coalition" vow Canfora, a protest leader who waa
concluded Celebrezze. " It Of those, less than a quarter
wounded in the campus confrontatiflll.
they will continue their struggle to halt
goes without saying that base . their contract renewal
"The land is sacred," Canfora said. "I
construction of a " millioo gymnasium on
some teachers are unqua~­ policies on the evaluations.
think
it's a hisloric piece of land in thia
the spot whert'lour students were killed by
Should the bill become hiw,
fied to teach."
counb'y
and it should be preserved."
Ohio National Guard troops seven years
Two attempts to Jllllend the any teacher not rehired lor
The
·demonstrators
were found in
ago.
the 1978-79 school year would
biD failed.
court
and
released
in $25 bond
contempt
of
Suite troopers and campus police
One
would
have have to be notified in writing
issued
Monday
for
violating
an
injunction
Tuesday dragged IM demonstrators from
appropriated an unspecified by April 30, 1978, and would
by
Portage
County
Court
of
Common
Pleas
"Blanket Hill," the site they wahl
amount of money to be given a chance to respond
Judge Joseph Kainrad, ordering them to
dedicated as a memorial to the lour
implement the bill. That to the decision but not appeal
end the oecupatioo by 8 a.m. EDT
students
killed
and
nine
others
wounded
in
it.
amendment failed 12-19.
Tuesday.
an antiwar demonstration May 4, 1970.
Starting July 1, 1978,
The, 'leCOnd amendment, of·
However, Kaiorad also directed the
"The university hopes these busts will
fered by Sen . Stanley teachers would be given a
school
to hold off construction of the gym
deal a death blow to the struggle, which
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati , would "due process" hearing in any
~¥~til
opposi~Jg
views could be aired at a
has been wag~ this sjJring and summer,
have based "gross inunoral dismissal. Tenured· teachers
hearing
'July
21
.
but they have another think coming," the
conduct" on "prevailing could appeal their dismissal
About
1
000
protest sympathizers..
coalition said in a statement released after
community standards." II to a third-party referee lor an
marched
to
'the
KSU
Commons and hoild a
the mass arrests . "We are united and will
advisory opinion. Either the
failed on a party-line vote.
to
protest
the
arrests.
Fifty of them
rally
not be defeated ."
.
l...ess than half of Ohio's 617 school board or the teacher
then marched to nearby Ravenna, where
The demonstrators were pried apart,
school districts currently could further challenge the
they picketed the county jail.
dragged
and
carried
off
to
jail
endiog
have teacher evaluation referee's finding in court.
A trial date lor those charged was not
their two-month sit-in at the site.
ult's a sanctuary foc us,u said Martin
set.
ds 'd
University President Glenn A. OJ sal
Scheuer
of
Boardman,
Ohio,
whose
•
the sports COO!plex would be built once the
· daughter, simdra, was one of the students
university gets court approval. He added,
killed in 1970. "We want it preserved the
"There are no plans to change the site
way it was ...."
whatsoever."
'
Scheuer and his wife were the first two
1976 harvest and 9 per cent to a nearrecord 2.044 billion acreage reduction programs
By BERNARD BRENNER
"The
university
has never made an
people arrested as KSU police and Portage
for 1978 grains loomed
above the then-record 1975 bushels. ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) effort
to
cover
up,
desecrate
or diminish
County' sheriff's, deputies, attired in riot
The wheat estimate was because surpluses of both
American farmers appear to crop.
the historic or hwnan significance of May
gear but armed only with long wooden
Experts
cautioned, down 5 per cent from last wheat and corn are already
be heading for a third
4 or the site," said Olds.
clubs,
'moved
in
and
removed
the
singing
straight record corn harvest however, that the actual size year, -but it was the third mounting, and the 1977
and chanliog demonstrators .
I' '"'·
which could help dampen of the corn harvest depends biggest crop in history and production forecasts appear
likely
to
·add
further
to
~--------------------------~------.
on
timely
rainfall
heavily
the
third
consecutive
2
billion
food inflation and raise the
stockpiles.
prospect of production during the critical weeks of bushel'fllus-harvest .
Complicating the surplus
restraints on next year's late July Wld early August .
Agriculture Secretary Bob
conduct."
situation
is the fact lha t the
".
crop.
,
.
Dry weather in this period Bergland, who earlier Sllid he
First-year teachers would
Soviet
Union,
which
io
the
be evaluated twice according
cut
back
the will probably have to activate
The
Agriculture could
an acreage retirement plan past has been an oecasional
to standards to he adopted by Department's crop reporting prospective harvest .
CHARLESTON,
W.Va. Coal Co. reporting only 230
benificiaries to pay up to $500 : ...
The department's first esti· for the 1978 wheat crop if safety valve for big American ( UP!) - As a wildcat strike mioers still striking at one
school boards no later than board, on the basis of July I
a
year for hospital and other ;,
March I, 1978.
conditions, issued its .first mate of the fuU 1917 wheat global production prospects stocks, this year is expecting continued
to
weaken Wyoming County mine.
medical
needs.
,
Second and third-year 1977 corn estimate and crop -including both winter don't change soon, added a second consecutive record Tuesday, a United Mine Eastern Associated Coal
The
walkout,
which
had
teachers would be evaluated forecast the crop at 6.331 wheat and the spring wheal after the crop report that he grain harvest and is unlikely Workers
International Corp. reported 1,200 miners spread to some 35,000 miners ,
each year. After three years, billion bushels - up 2 per which was forecast lor the may also have to consider a to push purchases much Executive Board member off in live mines, compared to
in West Virginia and · ,,
tenured teachers would be cent from the previous record first time Tuesday - pointed cutback program for corn beyond minimum levels recommended pressure Monday's figure of 2,1100.
Kentucky, was interrupted by ,.,1,
required under a ·Sovietnext year.
·
tactics to persuade militant
But
while
miners
in
most
the annual two-week vacation ~ ,
Much depends on the American trade agreement. right to strike .committee counties were returning to
period
for most miners. The ' The crop report estimated
weather and how the
members
to
return
to
work.
their
jobs,
more
Logan
vacation
officially ended "
Agriculture
Deparbnent's the winter wheat harvest at
"We've got to put pressure County miners walked out, a
Monday.
~.
important August crop 1.539 billion bushels, up on these agitators," said coal association spokesman
The
coal
operators,
who
·
estimates a month from now slightly from last month but 2 Vernon Massey of UMW said. Pickets appeared at
pay
royalties
for
health
care
assess the outlook, Bergland per cent below last year. The District 17. "We can't let some Logan County mines
based on coal mined and
season's first durum wheat
By CARL A. VINES
from Interstate 40 on 'tavorable winds Tuesday Sllid in an interview:
but
them
control
the
district.
in
some
cases,
the
miners
hqurs
worked,
blame ,
The 6.3 billion bushel corn forecast put that crop at 87 Some Qf these fellows are simply failed to report lor depletion of the union 's ,,.
ROCKWOOD, Tenn. (UP!) Roosevelt Mountain one mile prevented "a major disaster
- National Guard troops above the city. If the tanker in the Rockwood area" when crop foreseen on the basis of million bushels, down 36 per going to have to be busted." 'work.
Health and Retirement
"is cent from last year .
conducted a door-to-&lt;loor should·rupture, another cloud the truck wrecked, sending current conditions
The
West
Virginia
Coal
walkout
was
The
Funds and the consequent ·
Production of other spring
evacuation of all 5,200 of poison gas could roll down an orange cloud of deadly probably bigger than we can
Association
~d about 6,1100 concentrated in the southern
benefit cutbacks on wildcat '&gt; ••
,,_
residents of this coal mining the mountain and blanket the fumes down the mountain. use" and may depreSs prices, wheat was ·put at 418 J]'li]ion mioers were off their jobs West Virginia ooalfields with strikes.
bushels, down 6 per cent from
'town early today while town in mioules. ·
The wile of truck driver ·Bergland said.
Tuesday, compared with operations , in the nort)lern
However, some miners "'r
Corn plays a key role in 1976.
experts
prepared
to
About half the 1,800 gallons Robert Thompson, 42, of
areas of the state apparently
8,300
mjners
on
Monday,
all
blame
coal operators lor the
Other production forecasts
neutralize a "very lethal" of liquid bromioe remained in longview, Tex., was killed shaping future retail food
the
southern
part
of
the
in
unaffected.
cutbacks,
because they have
chemical that spilled from a the leaking tanker_ Officials when the tanker suddenly price prospects because it is compared with last year state.
The strike is apparently a
refused
to
reallocate mooey "i.J
included:
the
most
important
livestock
wrecked tanker, sending planned to lilt the tanker onto swer'[ed ioto a guardrail,
Miners reported back to continuation of a walkout that froni other funds to bolster , ~
Oats - 71Jl million bushels,
deadly fumes over the town. a special truck bed for. then struck an embankment. feed lor producing meat, milk'
work
in several West Virginia began last month in protest of the Health and ·Retirement
up 26 per cent from last year;
"We ' have to evacuate removal to a remote area Interstate 40 remained closed and eggs.
counties, with Coosolidation health benefit cutbacks. Tlie Funds.
"
The big crops of corn and barley - 396 milli"'! bushels,
everybody for their own before
draining
lhe to traffic, with motorists
cutbacks
would
force
' .
safety," Sllid Col. Russell A. rem!'ining liquid, which turns routed on a 30-mile detour wheat, which is basically a up 5 per cent from last year;
bread grain but is also fed to llue-eured tobacco - 1.152
Newman.
to a deadly gas when exposed through the mountains.
He said an attempt would to air.
Thompson , two vol'unteer livestock when its price is low billion pounds, down 12 per
cenf from last year; and
he made shortly after dawn to
.Newman
said
only firemen who rescued him and - as it currently is ,remove the twisted tanker
about 40 others were treated indicated that average 1977 apples - 6.8 billion pounds,
'
lor burns and other problems retail food prices will be held up 7 per cent from last year's
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Tbe
·chief
cause
of
'widespread
used
in
reclamation.
.
"
created by the liquid · to or possibly sli'ghtly-below a freeze-&lt;lamaged cr9p.
About $4 million a year will ·
Officials estimated orange Ohio General Assembly has water pollution cau~ by
'bromine, a Dow Chemical Co. previously predicted 6 per
senttoGov
..
James
A.
Rhodes
acid
mine
drainage
from
coal
be
available lor such
production at a record 247.6
product. Thompson , was in cent gain over 1976.
legislation
to
implement
a
seams mined and left projects. The remaining '";
That is about double last million boxes, but said
serious condition at a
1974 study which called for exposed
before
strict severance tax collections are
production
of
frozen
orange
Knoxville hospital and the year's food inflation rate, but
$290
million to reclaim some reclamation standards earmarked for the plugging ··~
be
down
concentrate
would
firemen were in satisfactory 60 per cent of this year's ,gain
•
370,000 acres of abandooed became law seven years of abandoned oil and gas " '
has · been attributed to because lreeze-&lt;lamaged
condition.
E. Lamb, M.D;
strip-mined land which ago.
wells.
:~
Within minutes . of the imported foods like coffee . fruit is yieldiog less juice per defaced the landscape and
The
bill
would
allow
the
The
improvement
projects
than
last
year.
box
The prospect of possible
wreck, a misty cloud began
greatly contributed to water state to contract and pay for · would come under the '
forming over the twisted
ooUution.
the
full
amount
of supervision of the chief of the
tanker and a northerly wind
The Ohio Hou.le gave final reclamation work on . some division of reclamation in the .•
began rolling the deadly fog
legislative approval to the projects, or to underwrite 75 department of natural , "
down the mountain to the
measure Tuesday.
per cent of the cost of a resources.
\
city.
Rep .- Arthur R. Bowers, f). private landowners's
The program is also '"
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. · also iocrease your risk of a
"It is a very lethal gas,"
Steubenville, author of the performing the work himself. expected to encourage strip
DEAR DR. LAMB- Rarely heart attack and it is Dow spokesman Gordon
legislation implementing the
Private landowners would mioers to remine abandoned ""
does one hear of the ca115e reflected io the high heart ' Sear:s said.
"Land Reborn" study, have to reimburse the $tale land to 'extract ava.iJable
and effect of a " high pulse rates.
"! heard the truck roll over
predicted Rhodes would sign lor any substantial increase mioerals before restoring the ~
The Middleport
Fire assist in the Methodist
rate." This is my problem.
I am sending you The oo the mountain," said Hazel
the
bill - hopefully at a in the property's valus if the tracts to existing reclamation ..,
My occupation involves office Health Letter nwnber 9..!1 Wright. "[ was standing in Department answered a total Church lire.
ceremooy
in Noble County. state's severance taxes are standards.
Total
manhours
for
work and some tension and Your Heart Rate: \vhat It my kitchen. I kept tryiog to of 40 caDs, 30 of which were
The
bill
would enable the
pressure are to be expected. I Means. Others who want this use my telephone and it kept emergency • medical runs, em~rgency runs only totaled state to use mineral
• have gained excess weight information can send 50 cents oo stinking. I didn't know duriog the month of June, 16~.:; with 625.8 miles heiog
severance taxes to reclaim
from not being as active as,I with a long, stamped self· what the smell was, but it according to the monthly driven and total manhours both public and private land
report of C. Robert Fisher, for fire only amounted to
was in my previous occupa· addressed envelope for it. smeUed like chlorine."
12.'1.5 with an average of nine strip mined and ahandooed
tion. Every time I get over- Send your request to me in
"I was standing in my yard chief.
prior to the April 10, 1972
Of the 30 emergency runs, men answeriog each fire call.
anxious or make a trip to my care of this newspaper, P.O. when the gas floated down
effective
date of Ohio's
Aecording to the report of
'
doctor I get all nervous and Box 326, San Antonio, Tex. from above about 3 o'clock," 20 were in town and 10 out of
omnibus
strip-mine
rec·
my heart seems to beat more 78292. As it explains, your fireman Raymond Collins town with two being motor Chief Fisher, the lire lamation act.
heart rate js a rough index of said. "It was so strong it vehicle accident scenes. Of department answered a total
rapidly.
The Board of Unreclaimed
. ·Recently I had a physical your level of physicallitnes:s. knocked you down. I went to the iO fire calls two were for of 278 caDs for the first .six Strip Mine Lands, which
minimum wage workers even
.. which was necessary to
Many people have an in· tlie hospital and they gave me major fires which iocluded months of 1977. The caDs authored the "Land Reborn" ·By SARA FRITZ
UPI
Labor
Reporter
with the poverty level by 1983. ,
· secure life iosurance. My creased heart rate from anx· oxygen, some drops for my the Neal residence on S. inCluded 40 lire cans, one study three , years ago,
WASHINGTON
(UP!)
Carter initially offered to ,
doctor explained to me that iety or apprehension as eyes and then released me." Second and the Oiler · false alann, six mutual aid already has drawn up a
•,.this condition might be nor· seems to be your case. This
Gov.
Ray
Blanton residence on Laurel' St. Also lire caDs, 10 miscellaneous priority list of projects to be President Carter, mending increase the current $2.30
mal for me but the iosurance can happen even though that activitated a National Guard the department made a calls and 221 emergency initially funded by the his fences with organized minimum wage to $2.50 - a
labor, has agreed to proposal Meany rejected as "
' company didn't like it. II this person normally has a . slow unit to help local authorities · mutual aid run to Gallipolis to medical runs. Total fire program.
compromise
legislatioo that "shameful." The AFL-CIO '"
losses for the six months of
:condition was cause for any resting heart rate. The truth prevent
looting
and
Bowers,
after
the
House
would
raise
the minimum bad been demanding $3 and . ~
197i totaled $29,340 including
·great concern, or indicated is that your heart rates in tlle vandalism .
unanimously agreed in minor wage by 35 cents to $2.65 an House leaders had proposed
$19,375 to structures, $8,000 to
:some serious impending il- doctor's office are not resting
State troopers, local
Senate changes to the bill to
·
. :mess, why !lldn't my doctor heart rates.
authorities and Guardsmen
Linda
K.
Stewart, contents, and ,1,965 io auto- send the measure to Rhodes, hour on Jan. I and provide for $2.85.
future
automatic
increases.
The
President
told
a news
·i ·prescribe sQme medical
A resting heart ra\e that is manned roadblocks on all Pomeroy, made a perfect truck fires. Of the total said be was trying to get
The compromise was an· conference Tuesday be had ' .
persistently last, in a person roads into the area, keeping lour p6int grade average lor -emergency caDs, 151 were in Rhodes to sign the bill into
' .treatment?
nounced
Tuesday, just one agreed to the COO!promise, , i
town
and
70
were
out
of
town.
• My insurance company in· who does not smoke, drink residents from re-entering the spriog quarter at Hocking
Jaw in Noble County where day alter Carter also agreed which was put together by ~-~
Total
mileage
for
emergency
• formed me that I have a coffee, and is not anxious, the danger zone once they Technical
College
at
the first such project iS to support the AFL-CIO's Labor
Secretary
Ray ·•
r'uns only for the six months
physical problem and that either means he Is out of had left . .
Nelsonville:
expected to begin this fall.
proposal
lor
a
sweeping
Marshall.
But
Carter
insisted
: .my premium would cost shape or has some underlying
A
Dow
"emergency
Other named to the dean!s amounted to 4,530.91!\i.les.
The abandoned Jan~ is the revisioo of federal labor law. it would not be "an '"
more than a well or normal disease.
reaction team" arrived at the list with a three point or
•
Both
measures
are administration bill."
'"
• . person. Needless to say this
You could do tw&lt;t things crash site about _dark__and better average from the
1
expected
to
produce
a·
fierce
The
iniUal ~ $2.6~ wage ~
· bas disturbed me and I would that would help your in· took charge of the cleanup county were: William R.
battle in Coogress between provided in the compromise · ~
' like to understand more d.ividual case. You could have and neutralization process. Amberger, Louise A. Newell,
big labor and big business. amounts to ~I per cent of the '"
; about the nature of this cond.i- your heart rate monitored for
Chester; Desmond Jeffers,
The minimum wage agree- average tactory · wage. It , •
' lion.
24-hour periods.- There are
WASHINGTON (UPI)
designed to hasten peace with
Sherri Kaull, Debra 'L.
ment
culminated weeks of caDs for an increase in 1979 :':
DEAR ReADER - In· smjlll portable tape recorders
McGuffin, Krista L. Morri~, President Carter's news Israel.
negotiations
between AFL- amounting to 52 per cent of
THE
DAILY
SENTINEL
at-a.glance:
- He Is sallsfled with the
•. surinfe , companies write , lor this purpose which you
all of Middleport; David L. conference
DEVOTED TO 111E
He
believes
he
needs
the
nation's
eConomic
trends,
CIO
President
George the average factorY wage, :·•
'policies Oil. the basis of canwearalldayjustasifyou
1NTERESTOF
Cole, Janice S. Evans, 9ption to deploy the neutron especially a 1 per cent drop In Meany, the administratioo, Wld all subaequent incre- " I
MEIGS-MASON AREA
statistics rather than io- were carryiog a handbag. 4
Pamela Kautz, Cheryl A. bomb and is asking Congress unemployment In the she:: and congressional leaders. equivalent tD 53 per cent.
CHESTERL TANNEHilL
,;J
dividuals. The truth is that as ' The rate on that will prove
Exee. Ed.
Reuter, all of Pomeroy; to approve funds for the months since he took office.
Rep. Ph~p Burton, D- .J
weapon.
- The administration is Sources said AFL-CIO
ROBERT HOEFLICH
a group, individuals with a. that at rest you don't have a
Connie Smith, Racine;
Cky Eclltor
,
He
feels
no
need
to
_
backing
legislation
that
Is
leaders
were
pleased
by
tbe
Calif.,
acting head Of the :
resting heart rate higher than high rate.
Regina Kimes; Reedsville; apologize for raising Issues, expected to Increase the
Pubh.shed dai1y ext'ept Saturday
subcommittee
where the biD , •
tcom
ou
e.
~ beats ·per minute have
the other thing you could by The Ohio Volley Publishing Con;&gt;:' · Rebecca Ord and James M. which have chilled relations minimum wage by 35 cents to
Chalnnan
Carl
Perkins,
f). wu being drafted, indicated -,
any,
111
Coul1
St.
,
Pomeruy,
Ohio
several times the likelihood do would be to have a max· 4$769. BusmesS Office Phone 992- ' Titus. both of Syracuse.
with the Soviet Union , and he 52.65 an hour .
c 0 n s 1 de r s per s 0 n a 1
His relations with the Ky., of the House Labor it would be sent to the full
having a heart attack or imuo stress test, as on a 21:;13. Editorial Phone 992·2157.
sta~ments
by
the
Russians
DemocratiC
. Cong~~ss have Committee, IBid the compro- committee be(ore next ,.)
Set..-ond class pos~ge paid ~t
dropping dead as do people treadmill. The high heart
a~inst him to be "erroneous Improved because Congress mise calla for an increelll! to
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Tuesday.
Committee .l
with a resting heart rate rate and the exercise would ' NMUonal advertising represenand Ill-advised."
• now understands much more
$2.85
next
Jan.
1
with
RepubUcans
were
espected l
tative
War&lt;!
•
Griffith
Company,
- Adequate steps have clearly what I am, what I
below 70.
balance out into the exercise
REUNION PLANNED
Inc .• Bottinelli and Gallagher Oiv ,
estimated
increaleS
to
$2.11
to
balk.
,.,
been
iaken
to
prevent
thr
sta,nd
for,
what
,\"'oposals
- The reasons though are effort and you should have a 757 Third Ave , New Vurk, N.Y.
The annual James and
Soviet
Un
ion
and
othi!J
we
v•
pUt
forward.
io
1979
and
$3.15
in
19110.
He
·
Burton
Aid
there
wu
no
.
that a lot of those people with good result. These two Ul017.
Virginia Holter reunioo will embassies In Washirigl~h
- He may look outside the predicted it would Jll88 Ute agreement bet ween labor and •,
Subscription r~ws· Delivem:J by
higher resting heart rates • measures should establish to carrier
he
held
this
Sll/lday,
July
17,
.
from
Intercepting
top
·
live
candidates selected by HOUle in August.
where avaiblble 75 t-enl!: fi!B
· the acknlnlllralloa on tile ;~
have thein from smoking any reasonable msu~ance week. By Motor Rwte when£arTier
at the
of Jim and Karen security White House and '\ his search committee In
The current $2.30 u hour iaiue of wltetber 'WIIrken wbo 1
· ettes which can io- company that you sunply arvtct! noc available, One month,
Holter Werty . near Morning Pentagon telephone con - 'picking a new FBI director.
13.25. By moll in Ohio and W Vo.,
versatfons
- He still opposes federally minimum wage provides an · receive tipa lhould be
1... .: e ~rate .JO to 20 beats have apprenension about an ~ Year, $22.00; SiJ monl.hs, Star, Courity 'Road 30 to
- Egypt's President An. financed abortiOns except to
per minute, drinlling coffee examination. II it doesn't Y':"' lll.S.O; Three months, 11 .00: Township road '125. The war Sadal has promised to termlnete pregnenclll$ which income abo• 80 cents below corered by lhe full minimum ,,,
Ebewhert f2' 00 ytar; Sax months
the ol!lclal poverty level. •1111•- He lndlc:ac.d t1t11 . _ \ ,
or bei~cal con- should be deabng w1th a dif- SJJ
potluck dinner will he served withdraw "extra troops" result from rape or Incest, or
5-0; Thret months, $i.50 .
Economists
eatlmate the would be aettled IIY CGa...... ,. •
Sntl\t;ripUotl .,rk~ mdudc" 'Sirnday
dition.
.nd obesity ferent insurance.
at I p.m. All relatives and from the Sinal Peninsula and · threaten the 11ff of the exmake
other
friendlv
qestures
pectant
mother.r
o
~~~~plan would.brine
-rur..,....,..:..:llil::...:•_d_
. - - . , , - - - - - ' frie~·invited.
'
with
pb)'IIT fitnessI
~,
CoLUMBUS (UP!) - All
21 Ohio Senate l&gt;ettlocrats
and five of the chamber's
Republicans Tuesday
endorsed
legi&amp;lation
requiring school boards to
evaluate their teachers and
base hiring and firing policies
on those evaluations.
The bill, sponsored by Rep .
Michael
Stinziano,
DColumbus, and strongly
endorsed by the 80,000
membe'r Ohio Education
Association, was returned to
the . House
26-6
lor
concurrence io amendments.
Stinziano said alter the
Senate vote he would urge the
lower chamber to agree to the
changes and send the
measure to Gov. James A.
Rhodes. Rhodes suecessluUy
vetoed a similar bill from the
last session of the General
Asseipbly.
The legislation created live
types of teacher contracts.
' After three years and alter
, having completed 18 college
hours of work, a teacher
could receive a "continuing"
contract and could be fired
only for "just cause," failure
to fulfill the terms of a
contract or "gross immoral

evalu'lled every other year.
Sen. Michael Malooey, R·
Cincinnati, Sllid during an
open GOP caucus prior to tlle
9Ckninute floor debate on tlle
bill, he had talked with
Thomas Moyer, legislati"'!
aide to Rhodes, and been
informed that Rhodes "hasn't
made up ' his mind" on tlle
bill .
" He (Moyer) said the
governor didn't like the bill
but he (Rhodes) d.idn, know
what he was going to do with
it," Sllid Maloney. Senate
GOP leader.
-·
Sen . Ben Gaeth, RDefiance, led GOP opposition
to the bill after Sen. Anthony
J . Celebrezze Jr., D·
Cleveland, opened debate·

with a 15-minuteoutlineolthe
major provions of the
controversial measure.
~aeth said the bill, which
passo!ll the House 59-&lt;19 June
16, would take away local
control of the schools an~ was
"special interest legislation"
for teachers who had been ,
"singled out" lor "Spcial
rights and privileges."
Celebrnze and other
Senate defenders of the bill
said the bill would protect
good teachers from arbitrary.
dl'smissal · by
school
administrators and would
reward good teachers with
some measure of job
security .
"I think it will go a long
way toward improving our

•

Third record crop commg

Coalfield strike weakened ·

....

Tennessee town evacuated

Reclamation act to Rhodes ":

HULTH
Lawrence

Insurance rates hiked

Aide squad on

Carew tops all-time voting for All Star game

A1J0 among the firlll to be handcuffed
and taken away were Ute parents « Alan

30 . c~s

in·Middleport in June

.."'.•

Compromise set
on mmnnum pay

..

NEW YORK (UP!)- Rod New York 's Reggie Jackson, balloting by nearly · two
ho h bee h ·tr
;:~:~==::~~=:-:::::mm~;:::::.:.::.::m:;:::x;~::::~=::~:?"r.::r:.~::~~m;§;-~ . Carew. w
as
n 1 mg Boston's Carl Yastrzemski · million votes.
This will mark the first All·
~~~
'"" more than .400 much of the , and Chicago's Richie Zisk in
Star starting appearances for
season for the Minnesota the outfield .
~~:::..
0
~:?). Twins, became the top voteThe National League Randolph, Burleson and Zisk.
!;~~l
'=:~$ getter of all time ·in fan starters, announced Monday, Burleson, with 2,221,349
are catcher Johnny Bench, votes, edged out New York's
second baseman Joe Morgan, Bucky Dent by only 3,426 in
shortstop Dave Concepcion the closest race since 1972
at Yankee
and outfielder George Foster, when Don Kessinger of the
~=~
.~;::::? Carew received .f,292,740 all of Cincinnati; first Chicago .Cubs defeated the
baseman Garvey, who was New York Mets' Bud
'O;O;;:j votes as the starting first
~.;.=.l'.:~
By ~ILTO~ RICHMAN·
:m~ baseman · lor the American the first to reach loUi'·miUion . HarrelsOn by 3,000 voles 'as
....... League. Carew's total sur- votes and third baseman Ron the National League's shortUPI Sports Editor
passed his National League Cey of Los Angeles; and stop.
outfielders Greg l...uzinski of
Randolph, with 2,846,479
NEWYORK (UP!) - A young fellow fresh out 9' college was counterpart Steve Garvey ~'y
Philadelphia and Dave votes , outdista n ced
a
narrow
15,005-vote
marg1p.
U!lling me the other day how hard it was for him to lind work
Milwaukee's Don Money by
Joining Carew in the Parker of Pittsburgh .
· because of the limited job opportunties around and because he
Carew, whose battiog aver- some 800,000 votes.
American
League's
starting
was black, and when I asked him if he ever heard of Terry
Zisk fmished second to
lineup are catcher Carlton age dropped to .398 Monday ,
Miller, he said no .
has been an All.Star starter Yastrzemski in the outfield
Fisk
of
Boston;
New
York's
uwoo is he?" was his first question .
Willie Randolph at second; in each of his 11 major league voting, with the veteran from
"A banker," I told him.
Boston's
Rick Burleson at seasons. He beat out Chris Boston elected to start lor the
No reaction there.
shortstop; Kansas City's · Chambliss of the Yankees in first time since 1972.
"He plays a little football, too," I said.
the
American
League Yastrzemski will be making
"Oh, you mean that cat at Oklahoma State who everybody ' George Brett at \bird: and
···3!!!~'lllw.,_mm.:wi*:*"'&lt;=»'-.,.,.,.-w.,.,..,.,"'..,.,'~.x::w,·&gt;~;,:-=&lt;l~

!m

T day's

Wl

~l fi S rt
® po

'a
rara e
D

f~ ~~ott!m~.r ~~'::!~s n~~
®1 ~~~~. night

q

his !4th AllStar appearance
and sixth sU!rt.
The biggest surprise was a
late surge for Jackson, who
moved into the No. 3 spot
aheado[Boston'sFredl...ynn .
l...yllll had been among the top
three outfielders during the
first five weeks of the voting.
Jackson wiU be making his
sixth start.
Fisk
recaptured
the
starting job he lost to Ne.w
York's Thunnan Munson m
1975 and 1976, edging him by
113,851 votes alter leading by
almost 425,000 last week.
Brett joined Carew as the
only repeating American
League starters. New York's
Graig Nettles, who was
selected in 1975, finished
second to Brett .
A record 12,562,476 ballots
were. tabulated and five

American League players
topped the three •million
mark, until this year a
milestone reached by only
three players. In addition to
Carew, Fisk (3,476,028),
Munson (who lost with
3,362,177), Yastrzemski
(3,297,854)
and
Brett
{3,058,453) broke the three
million barrier.

Pant Rutherford

says is going to win the Reisman Trophy this year?"
~~That's

him."

.

"You know bow it is with all those football players," my
college friend passed off the whoie thing, "he must have had
some puU."
Terry Miller, who also is black, had no "pull" at all when he
got out of high school. All be had was some self dnve and an
excellent sense of direction, and one day he packaged them
altogetl!er and went to see a man by the name of Clarence
Wright.
President of the Yukon National" Bank in Yukon, Okla .,
Wright was a halfback for Oklahoma A&amp;M, in the !ate '40s. One
of his sons, Randy, was Okl&amp;homa 's high school basketball
player or the year last year, but even so, Wright tells you "my
general opioion of athletes is not too high."
When Terry Miner first came to Oklahoma State as a
freshman from Colorado Springs, Colo., he didn't know a soul.
What's more ·he needed a job and ·since he said he liked
banking, t:;J~ence Wright was the man it was suggested he
look up.
·
"So you want to work for a bank?" Wright asked, surveying
him up and down.
·
"No, sir," replied Jllliller. "!want to own one."
Wright wasn't sure he heard correctly. .
.
"Are you prejudiced?'.' Miller startled htm agam.
"Hell, yes, I'm prejudiced," Wright came back with.

HAren't you'?"

.

"! guess I am ... somewhat," Miner laughed ..
With each man being bone honest like that, the 1ce between
them was broken right there.
. Miller got the job. He started in the collections deparbnent
and worked his way up to instaUment lo!IJ!S.
.
.
Miller Is regarded the outstanding college runmng back m
the country by most professional football people, who say n~t
only is he the short odds favorite to be the HelSIDan wmner thiS
year but alSo the most likely to be the No. I draft pick among
them next May.
·
,
He picked up some more publicity when it was discovered he
wore pantyhose under his uniform to avoid pulled muscles.
"Now the gnysa~ call me 'Super Girdle,"' he laughs.
.
Undouptedly the strongest in!Juence on Miller has been hlS
mother, Bonaie, who works as a beautician lll Colorado
Springs.
.,
"She's tougher on him than gangbusters,' ~&amp;ys'OIIrence
Wright. "One word from her, and he jumps."
Miller confirms that.
.
"There is no way J-ean ever describe how much she has done
for me," he says. "She's absolutely tremendous." ·
As well as he has done on the football field, Miller has done
even better workiog at the bank and adapting himself to living
io Yukon an otherwise allwhite community outside of
Oklahoma' City where he is the only black resident among a
populatioo of some ,18,000.
"It's not tough," he says. "It's easy·, really."
.
At the bank, Miller now handles ma~y of the loan
applications from major construction compames. He approved
ooe for more than a million dolla,rs last week .
.
Nobody is prouder of him than Clarence Wnght, who
actually has two sons but refers to Miller as "my third one.''
Wright says Miller handles his job at the bank about the
same way he plays football.
,
,
"He's always in sha~, does his job and keeps hlS da~
mouth shut. He's not a popoff. He came to me one morrung,
told rpe he needed an assistant and wanted to ioterview some·.
one lor the job. 'What the hell do you need an ~ssistant for?
You got two girl secretaries out there,' I ~d to h101. He !ooked
at me and said 'I want to bring someone m so the headlines m
the paper will ~Y "'Black Banker employs White Boy."'

Richest· race

Pitchers and reserves lor
both teams will he selected
later this week by Managers
Billy Martin of the Yankees
and Sparky Anderson of the
Reds.
. .- - - - - - - -...

Reds fall 9- !2 behin.d
1

that easy."
CINCINNATI ( UP!) pinch~1itter Tom Paciorek
Bristol, "Niekro threw with a
·
Niekro admitted that' when threequarter overhand
Doug Capilla, . the Cincinnat; sent home Pocoroba with the
Reds' 25-year;&lt;&gt;ld rookie left- wiMing run with a sacrifice you're his age and with a six· motion. At the beginning of
figure salary an 0-7 record the season he was coming
bander, turned in one or the fly to right.
club's better
pitching
The Braves victory went to can be "a little scary."
straight overhand. As the baD
" !wasn't able to determine went to the plate it was
performances this season Niekro whose now 9-10 Less
1
than tWo months ago thiS what I was doing wrong, but saying hit me and batters
Tuesday night.
However, it wasn't quite same Niekro had an . 0-7 Dave Bristol was," said did ."
Niekro. "But," he added, "it
good enough as the Reds record.
It was after Niekro dropped
took
him a little while to
"!made the mistake of not
wound op dropping a . 4-3 .
to a three-quarter overhand
verdict to the Atlanta Braves working on my knuckler convince me."
delivery that his knuckler
Bristol · remembered the
in the opener of a three-game during the spring training,''
began performing the tricks
Niekro
who used to beat the
said Niekro . "! thought after
series.
that has baffled hitters over
The loss, coupled with the throwing it lor 18 years I Reds with monotonous the years.
Los Angeles Dodgers' victory could reach into my hip regularity when he was
He's happy and so is
at Houston, left the Reds .9'h pocket and pull it out. It's not managed the club.
Bristol.
"In those davs." said
games out of first place in the
National League's western
division.
l...ittle mistakes cost the
Reds a victory Tuesday
night.
With the score tied 1-1, the
Braves capitalized on a
couple of these mistakes in
the top of the seventh inning
to go ahead 3-l.
Junior Moore Jed off the
Hannan Trace was the only
winning pitcher, threw a fourinning with a single and stole one of three Gallia County winning hurler while E.
inning no-hitter .
second 1 evading the tag of teams to post a victory Russell took the loss.
In tonight's action, the
A 12·RUN SECOND inning
Dave Concepcion even Tliesday night in the 19th
Syracuse
Indians meet the
gave the Rutland Dodgers an
though catcher Johnny annual Kyger Creek Little
Gallipolis
Padres, New
easy 18-2 win over the
Bench's throw beat him to the League Tournament.
Gallipolis Tigers. Edwards, Haven's Cubs will play Letart
bag . Bill Pocoroba then
The Wildcats defeated the Gardner,' and Wise had hits and Racine will battle Point
bunted, but CapiUa trying lor Pomeroy Pirates, 8-5 . In
Pleasant City Ice and Fuel.
a play at third, threw too high other action, Mason County lor the wiMers. Gardner, the
lor Pete Rose to make a tag Insurance topped Bidwell, 17-'
on MDlfe s~ing into the hag . 6 and the Rutland Dodgers
. ~. .
1\VIo . - IMe&lt;' Roland ~ice­ liOmbed the Gallipolis Tigers
sir\gled and the Brav.S had ltJ.-2.
their 3-1lead.
Mike Cox had three singles
The Reds got one of the to pace HaMan Trace to its 8·
runs back in the bottom of the 5 win. ~ick Barnes, Mike
seventh
when
Champ Beaver, and Danny Bays had
Summers homered off Phil the other hits.
Niekro, the Braves' ~year·
Todd Fife Jed the Pirates
old knuckleballer. In the with two singles, Ken Me·
bottom off the eighth Joe Cullough had two singles
Morgan, who had homered in · while Ray Justice and Bryan
the filth, doubled, went to Betzlng singled once.
third on an infield out and ·
TWO BIG INNINGS were
scored on George Foster's the difference in the Bidwell
sacrifice fly to tie the game at Mason County Insurance
three-all.
game. Mason County scored
A walk issued to Pocoroba seven runs in the second
hi persOn at the
by reliever Joe Henderson led inning and nine in the sixth
·to the Braves' winniog run in frame.
the ninth. Henderson balkect
Leading the attack was
Pocorob3 ta second when the
Robbie Albright with a home
ball hung up in hiS glove and run, double and single. Bryan
slipped to the ground as he Thompson had two singles
attempted to make a pickoff and Rod GleaSon slammed
Come on, Kids, you're all invited! Meet
throw to first. A subsequent two hits. Leading Bidwell's
good
old Burger Chef and his little pal. Jeff.
single by Darrel Chaney offense was Pickens with two
Shake hands with them. And bring your
moved Pdcoroba to third.
singles and S. Shariden with a
Then alter lefty Joe Hoerner
camera.
Take your picture with them ,
double. ·
replaced Henderson
They're the friendliest characters you'll
Kevin Smith was the

Hannan Trace remains
alive in tournament

has earIy }ead
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP!)
Pam Rutherford of
Oroville, Calif., rolled a 235 in
her final game Tuesday night
to take the lead lllrough the
first six games of match play
in the Professional Women's
Bowlers Association's $25,000
Metroplex Open.
Rutherford, who already
has won one PWBA title this
year, rolled her 235 against
the early leadeP Edith ·
Burroughs of Akr"'!, Ohio.
Burroughs could manage
only a 169 and fell to third
place
behind
Vesma
Grinfelds of San Francisco.
Rutherford has a total
pinlall of 1,431. Grinlelds has
a total of 1,382 while
Burroughs has 1,373.
Patty Costello of Scranton,
Pa., is fourth with 1,357 and
Linda Sherwood of Kansas
City, Mo., is fifth with 1,335.

Pet. per year on a

7

year certificate of
deposit.
$1,000 .00
mm1mum
deposit, interest paid
quarterly .
A

Sl.lbstan t ia l penalty

Meigs Co. Branch

--@
The Atheru CGunty
sav1nqs &amp; Loan Ca .
296 Second St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

-FSIJC

---------

DISTRIBUTORSHIP·
WILL NOT INTERFERE
WITH PRESENT EMPLOYMENT
NO SELLING REQUIRED
We are selecting distributors for fast moving
products in Pomeroy and surrotmding counties. These

products published in newspaper, T.V ., magazines,

etc.

Twenty year old company will place products

r

(

~ ·~-­ ~·

.

. . ...

~

il.

•

shops, etc. Distributors will service these retail_out~ets
monthly, requiring appro&gt;elmately 20 hours sparet1me

per month,
C.P.A. reports $99.00 and up possible profit per
day! Figure the income you desire per morth . Each
location requires $212 .00 investment . You may have 24,

36 or 48 locations. Compa,y secures location and

Installs prgduct~ tor '"''
This
lklo.bf~W ani11f you are not sincere

It"•......,

about owning your own business, or do not meet the

above financial requirements, let's not waste each
other'$ time .

For~
' li\!"al · (()flfldentlal Interview call Mr.
William· .
' , Pilrkersburg. 304-422·5401 today
thru Fr y t'i.nf. to 9 .
~- · Cu1mm1ina. Ga.
, .

'(,

Fun I Prizes! Surprise!

"
•U

•

newly remodeled

GALLIPOLIS BURGER CHEF

at 1503 Eastern Ave. 1-4 P.M., Saturday, July 16
ever meet. There's fun for all when Burger
Chef and Jeff visit a
Burger Chef
restaurant. so don't miss it.

CHECK BfLOW FOR
THE DAY AND TIME
WE'lL BE APPEARING!

L.OOK If'S

BURGfR CJ.IU
AND J£FF.'

...

Meet

SUMMIR TUNI UP SPICIAL

Our Big
Meal
Just 99• with

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Get your car tuned up at Smith Nelson and have it•in
good Shape tor the summer •.head. You gel the
following work tor the very low pro co of $29.95. Regular
price 543. 95.
New
New
·New
New

this coupon
Includes: Bit Sltef, small fries,
lltd smll drink

piU9s
points
cond.
fuel filter

Tills price also includes lobar, 6 cylinder ch..pter. HaYe your work
done by a certified ,mechlontc. This offer goad throU9h oil of July.
Iring this coupon with yound .., • lrH wash job.

Good onl, •• per!lc•p•tlng Burgl'.lf Chtl
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or retlri(lld by IIW LOU! en(l 5UIIt IIX
payable bY beertr
(C~ 1971 Bvreer Cl1et Sy1ttm1 , tnc
Otttr t~&lt;plrt1 Jul, 16, ltH

You

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maie 1D • It lkqar Chef

..

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1n

grocery, department, drug stores. super markets, gift

News conference highlights

hom'

is

1nvokect on all certificate
accounts withdrawn pnor
to the date of maturity.

On Dean s List

«

4

..
I

'I

at

Burger Chef, 15D:rl Eastern Ave..
Saturday, July 16, from 1-4 P.M.
Each Burger Chef &amp; Jeff visitor will
receive a Free Funme1l Certificate.

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday ,Jul• tJ . 1977
Tho&gt; Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poo1eruy. 0., Wednesday. Jul)' 13, 1977

HendersOn's
third blast
tops Cubs

Lerch hangs on .to win
Ky t' KED DOWN
Ul'l Spuns Writer
Rookie pitcher Ranlly
Lerch , who has had 10
slrai'lht " no decisions" in a

'

row. thought he was a
"goner" again Tuesday night
when he yielded a two-run
ninth~nniJ)g homer by Mike
Tyson that produced a 4-4 tie.

Fregosi hits big one
MONTREAL (UP!) Pittsburgh· Manager Chuck
Tanner is happy he now has a
former teanunate playing for
him.
·
Ta nner's newly acquired
Jim Fregosi homered in the
12th ining Tuesday night to
break up a 4-4 game and give
the Pirates a 5-4 victory over
th e Montreal Expos in a
contest which included a 5().
minute rain delay.
"Fregosi and I were teammates when we played
ll!gether on the California
Angels," said Tanner. "He
sure is a handy guy to have
around and that· was a key
hit. "
Fregosi was acquired fr"m
•
the Texas Rangers in a June
15 trade for Ed Kirkpatrick.
Ta~mer was also quick to
praise several other players
o!l his squad.
•
" We had great efforts from
, PI_Jil Garner, Willie Stargell,
R1c h Gossage, .and Ed Ott,"
• he said ''It was a real team

• effort.'' ,
Del Unser doubled home
, two Montreal rurls in the
• fcurth to give the Expos an
ea r ly lead.
The Expos had a 3-1 edge in
the eighth inning but Garner
hit a two-run homer to tie the
score. In the bottom o[ the
eighth J'!5e Morales doubled

International League
United PresS International

W L Pel. GB
,

Pawtucket
Charleston

, Tidewater ..
•

~

Richmond
Rochester

" Syracuse
\
'

SO 36 .561
47 38 .553 2'1'
43 39 .524 5
42 40 .512 , 6
42 43 .494

7112

42 43 ,494 7'12

Toledo
39 48 •.4.48 11 1!:2
Columbus
34 52 .395 16
Tuesday's Results
Charleston 6, Toledo 4
Columbus 6, Rochester 3,
61, 1 innings, rain

Syra cuse 8, Pawtucket 1
Tidewater at Richmond.
ppd . , rain

home a run when he came in
to pinch hit lor Expos starter
Wayne
Twitchell
and
Montreal grabbed a 4-3 lead ,
The Pirates tied the sepre
once more in the ninth on
singles by Al Oliver and
Stargell and Renie Stennett's
lielder's choice.
Gossage, with 15 saves to
his credit, ran his record to ~
5 with lour innings ol relief .
"! wasn't as strong as I
thought I would be but
fortunately I had enough left
to finish the game. I don't
know _h?w- - much longer r
would ~lasted," Gossage
said.
'
Bill Atkinson, who gave up
the home run to Fregosi,
dropped his second game in
six decisions.

THOUSAND OAKS; Calif .
(UP! ) - The scrimmage
performances of two running
backs highlighted the Dallas
CowbOys first lull day of
training camp Tuesday .
Ablt\ Joe , a free agent
rookie from Cheyney State,
and John Smith, a first-year
player from Boise State, who
spent the 1976 season on the
injured list, showed bursts ol
good running ability during a
3().minute scrimmage.

But Phillies' Manager
Danny OLark stayed with him
and the Phillies tallied in the
ninth for a~ victory over the
St. Louis Cardinals.
" Things just kept getting
worse during those 10
straight no decisions," said
the slender left-bander from
Sacramento, Cal., who now
has a 6-2 reeord.
''I appreciate Danny
leaving me in and · also lor
keeping me in the rotation
when things were going had ,"
Lerch added . " ... It was a big
game lor me and the club.
·The bullpen really needed
some relief !rom the dally
grind."
The victory moved Philadelphia to within lour games
of the Chicago Cubs in the
National League's Eastern
Divisiol,l, when right-fielder
Roger Freed dropped Ted
Sizemore's two-&lt;lut fly in the
ninth enabling Richie Hebner
to score the winning run.
Mike Schmidt's 26th homer
with Larry Bowa aboard
gave the Phillies a 2-llead in
thefourthand they added two
more in the filth on singles by
Boone, Sizemore and Lerch
and
Ba~e
McBride 's
forceout.
In other NL games,' New
York defeated Chicago, 4-2,
Los
Angeles
blanked
Houston , ~. Atlanta shaded
Cincinnati, 4-3, Pittsburgh
beat Montreal , 5-4, and San
Diego downed San Francisco,
. 7-3.
Mets 4, Cubs 2:
Rookie Steve Henderson 's
two-run eighth-inning horner

ANAHEIM (UP! ) - First
baseman Rod Carew of Minneapolis, the all-time No. I
vote getter in fan balloting for
the major league All.Star
Game, with 4,292,740 votes,
broke into a broad grin
Tuesday night when his [eat
was mentioned before the ·
Twins' game with the
California Angels.

"Four million votes," he
exclaimed while waiting his
turn at the batting cage. "It's
great to get four million

votes."

off relief are Broce Sutter
enabled Jon Matlack to snap
his personal seven-game ·
losing streak and raise his
record to · 4-10 lur the Mets.
Matlack went 8 1-3 innings
with Skip Lockwood finishing
up . Rick Reuschel suffered
his third' loss against 12
victories.
·
Dodgers 8, Astros 0:
· Doug Rau pitched a lourhitter and boo~ed his recor,jl
to 1().1 behind a 13-M Los
Angeles attack , which
included three hits each by
Ted Martinez and Bill
RUS!;ell. The victory lifted the
Dodgers' lead in the NL West
to 9\&lt;:! games. Joe Sambito
.suffered his third loss against
four wins lor the Aslros .
~es

5, ExJMJs 4:

Jlffi Fregosi led off the top
of the 12th with a bonier
which enabled the Pirates'
Rich Gossage, who pitched
lour innings ol shutout hall, to
win his eighth game against
live losses. The Pirates had
tied the score, 4-4, in the ninth
when the Expos failed to
execute a potential gameending double play. Bill
Atkinson was Montreal's
loser.
Padres 7, Giants 3:
The Padres snapped the
Giants ' six-game winning
streak as Jerry Turner drove
in three runs , two with his
sixth hornet ol the year
during a tiebreaking, fourrun rally in the lilth. Bob
Owchinko went five innings
lor his third win with Dan
Spillner finishing . Jim Barr
was the loser.

Noll stands on remarks
about criminal element ·.

NEW YORK ( UPI)
Rookie lelt fielder Steve
Henderson has hit three home
runs since coming to the New
York
Mets !rom the
Cincinnati !arm system in the
trade for Tom Seaver a
month ago . Two of them
ended games and the other
tied one which the Mets went
on to win.
' ·
Henderson drilled a tworun game-winner off relief
ace Bruce Sutter in the eighth
inning Tuesday night to help
Jon Matlack end a personal
seven-game losing streak in a
4-2 victory by the Mets over
the Chicago Cubs .
With the score tied 2-2,
Lenny. Randle led off the
eighth with a single. Sutter
then replaced Chicago starter
and loser Rick Reuschel, 12-3,
and following a sacrifice,
Henderson belted a 2-0
delivery far beyond the leftcenter field fence.
"That was the first time I
ever faced a fork ball

pitcher," Henderson said.
"(Mets' Manager Joe) Torre
told me to wait for the ball in
my zone."
Henderson 's first major
league league home run was
an lith inning three-run shot
which gave the Mets a 5-2
victory over Atlanta June 21.
Last Saturday Hender!lln 's
home run in the lith inning
against MOI)treal tied the
score &amp;-5 in a game the Mets
finally won 7-5 in 17 innings.

Sports transactions

SARATOGA SPRINGS,
N.Y. (UP! ) - The delegates
to the firth
biennial
International
Trotting
Cooference meeting Tuesday
voted to consider a universal
passport · for harness horses ·
similar to the one issued to
IJ;otters traveling between
countries in Europe.
Some groups - including
the United States Trotting
Association - will have to
receive approval from their
directors before adopting the
universal horse passport.

Bv United Press lnte-rn"tional
bac~ Terry Irv in of Jackson
Tuesday
State . A'lso signed two tree
Pro Football
agen t linebackers , Ga ry camp
St . Lou is Signed free b ~i! ll of Colorado and Don Joyce
agents TerrY McCabe, a line- of Tulan~
backer_ from Aust in Peay , and
At lanta ....,... Si gned offensive
detens1ve back Rollen Smith · tackle Warren Bryant , their No .
from ArKansas .
. l draft choice from Kentucky
. Ch i cag_o- Si.g ned seven draft
New York Jets -'-- Sig n"ed
p1cks , f 1rst -ro und ·cn.o ice Ted guard Randy Ra~mus.sen to
Alb:ech~ ,
guard -tackle
from three one -year contracts. Also
Ca_ltfor-n 1a ; cornerback Mike cleare-d waivers on running
Spwey or_ Colorado ; runn ing back Steve Dav is, who now
ba c k Robm E~r-1 of Washi ng . becomes a tree agent.
ton ;
wide receiver
GE&gt;rald
Tampa
Bay
Acquired
~utler
of
Nicholls . State; qu_
a rterback Mike Boryla from
l m~backer N ic k Buonam iti of
Ph i ladelphia in exchange for a
Oh10 S1ate ; center -g_uar"d Connie f uture draft choice ..
Zelencik of Purdue .· and corn er -

••

SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI) - Pittsburgh Steelers Coach
Omck Noll, defendant in a $2
million slander suit, stands
by his comment about a
"crinninal element" in pro
football, his attorney told a
federal court jury Tuesday.
James Macinnls said
during the Ubel-shinder trial
brought by Oakland Raiders
defensive back George
Atkinson that Noll's remarks
needed to be understood in
the context that followed a
September, 1976 National
Football League game when
Pittsburgh wide receiver
Lynn Swann suffered a
concussion after Atkinson hit
him in the head.
Two days after that game,
Noll said: "You have a
criminal element in every
society and apparently we
have it in the NFL, too.
George Atkinson's hit oo
Lynn ~ann was with intent
to maim and not with football
in mind. I'd like to see those

Broadhere,
85~ sets record
HOJNTON, England (UP!)
Bob Broadbere has
replace\~ Archie MacFarlane
as th.e the world's oldest
parachutist.
MacFarlane was a mere 76
when he entered the Guiness
Book ol Records with a leap
in August 1974. Broadbere is
85 and he made his jump
Monday !rom 1,700 feet.
"! just )Mit my head hack
and watched the great yellow
parachute open above me,"
he said later. "It was a
fantastic experienre."
Broadbere plans to make
his first jump his last, uniess
someone older hails out to
.beat his record , Then, he
said, "if I am still fit enough I
might even jump at 90."

. Scioto Dmms
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Sun·
shine Rena turned on ihe
speed in the stretch to
overtake Steady Yankee and
win the featured eighth race
Tuesday night at Scioto
Downs.
•
The winner, drivet:~ by Russ

.. Tanana, Fidrych scratched from game~~i:n2·~~!80~:~~

quarters of a length over

:
•

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
The beteagured Anierican
Leaguers, who have lost live
· h All
-Star Games to
st r·a1Ng t
U1e ational League, got a
doubleb~rreled jolt Tuesday
• · when Frank Tanana and
Mark Fidrych, who figured to

•
•

•
'

,
•

,

•

hurlthe first six inning&amp; of the
July 19 classic, were
.scra tchc'&lt;.l with arm injuries.
"I'd love ·t o g 0 and pitch
and I feel I had a chance to
start," said Tanana, the
California Ang~ls' ace lefthander who, along with
te a mmate Nolan Ryan ,
shares the AL lead in
victories with 12. " But I'm
not going into the game
subpar .... "
Tanana suffered an inllamrnation to the triceps tendon
in his pitching elbow Monday
night against the Minnesota
Twins and was forced to
leave the g~e in the sixth
iru•ing. He's expected to miss
only one start for the Angels ,
who; behind Ryan's fotlrhitter, won ,their second
straight gai'ne under new
Manager
Dave Garcia
Tuesday night, a 3-0 decision
over the Twins.

Fidrych came up with a
sore shoulder, described as a
slight muscle pull, in the first
inning of the Detroit Tigers'
2-1 · to
th
Bl VIC ry over e Toronto
. ue Jays Tuesday night and
Jun Crawford came on to
hurl 8 1-3 innings of four-hit
ball.

game which dropped his
average to .393.
·
Elsewhere in the American
League, New York downed
M1
i waukee, :&gt;-2; Texas edged
Ba 1tirnore, 4-3; Kansas City
put away Chicago, 8·3;
Cleveland drubbed .Boston, 7I, and Oakland shaded

Indians 7, Red Sox I:

A's 3, Mariners %:
Charlie Spikes hit his first
·Jim Tyrone heat out an
home run since July 22• 1976 • infield hit with two out in the
a two-run shot that capped a bottom of the lOth inning
lour-run, fourth inning, and
•
Buddy Bell added a solo allowing Marty Perez to race
homer to power the Indians. home with the A's' winning
Bell banged out four hits and run. Vida Blue went the
scored . four runs. Dennis distance on a seven-hitter lor

"It only hurtS when I Seattle, 3-2.
.
throw,"said Fidrych. " ... It's Yankees 5, Brewers 2:
a disappointment 'not to be
The Yankees, apparently
going to the All.Star Game rejuvenated by the sudd.en
again , but it's oilly one game arrival of their disappointed
and a season is 162 games. owner, George Steinbrenner,
What's more important? the snapped a three..oame losing
"
All.Star Game or this club?" streak when Willie Randolph
, Crawford struck out six and rapped out three hits ,
got all the support he needed including a two-run homer .
in the first, when the Tigers Don Gullett and Dick Tidrow
scored two runs on an RBI- combined on a lour-hitter.
single by Rusty Staub and The win moved the Yankees
Jason Thompson's sacrifice into a second-place tie with
fly .
the Orioles, · a half-game
Ryan,
12-8,
equaled behind the Red Sol&lt; in the AL
Tanana's league-leading · East.
victory total, striking out Rangers 4, Orioles 3:
eight to run his season's total
Toby Harrah drilled a twoto 222 whlle walking only out single in the bottom ol the
three . He benefited from a
loth inning to drive in . Bert
pair of unearned runs in the Campaneris from third base
first inning, both ol which with the winning run, which
scored when Rod Carew gave the Rangers their sixth
fumbled Tony Solaita's straight
victory.
Ken
grounder to first lor a error.. Singleton had a three-run
Carew was Mor-4 in the homer for the Orioles.

Ec~ersley,

9_7, was the .

winner.
Royals 8, White Sox 3,·,
· Amos Otis batted in five
runs with a two-run homer

Farm lan.d s will be

•

Steady Yankee . Ocean
Mistress was third.
The 1-3-5 ninth race trifecta
combination was worth
$223.:/ll and the -~ nightly
double combo of Nerjod and
Carolina Cougar returned
$12.60.
A crowd oi 4,803 wagered

guys thrown out of the league. loothall ~·is legal combat
They put a guy's whOle which television shows to 60
to 80 million Americans" and
career in jeopardy."
he
would produce players
Atkinson 's attorneys then
who
would testily they !lave
filed a $2 million slander sult
been
damaged by blows
against Noll and the Steelers
inflicted
by Steeler players in
;p&gt;d also asked $1 millioo
damages from the Oakland a fashion similar to that
Tribune , in which a columnist Atkinson inflicted on Swann:
Last month, the. Steelers
said Atkinson could have
filed
a $1 million co.unte.rsuit
been facing a murder charge .'
against
AtkillSOn, charging
In the second day of the
he
was
part
.ol a conspiracy
trial in U.S. District Court,
"to
disable
and intimidate
Macinnis told the jury
Lynn
Swann."
Tuesday that Atkinson
violated at least two league
rules in the SwaM incident
and had performed an
" illegal act" and it was in this
context Noll made his
remarks.
Macinnis said Atkinson had
a reputation for violence and
the furor over the incident
''would have ensued If Mr.
Noll had made no remarks at
all." Macinnis said Noll
spoke the truth and feels no
need to apologize .
Macinnis also disclosed
Swann would not play in 1977
"as the consequence of the
course of conduct emanating
!rom Atkinson," adding
Swann ·sustained a "serious
psychological overlay"
because of the concussion.
The jury also saw Oakland
Raider films of the play in
which Swann was decked by
. Atkinson. Later, attorneys
lor the Steelers showed
pictures of the same play as
portrayed in the official NFL
lilms from the ollice ol the
league commissioner.
Prior to watching the dual
versions ol the disputed play,
the jury saw several other
and they love it!
clashes
between
pass
catchers and defensive backs
by~ e
that appeared to show the
Three cheers lor ltle man
defenders, moStly members
who's taken on a whole
new lash ion look! A touch
of the Steelers, committing
or
chain lor a fresh and
fouls.
~ee feeling ... at heine in
Atkinson's attorney, , Calileisure or more formal
fornia assemblyman Willie
limes. Styles in 12 Korol
GOI.d Filled or Slerllng
Brown, told the jury "George
Siwer priced tom$11.95to
Atkinson will indicate to you
$50.00. By sweet!
that he is no angel and no
saint, but also that be is not a
criminal element out to
maim. He is hurt and
embarrassed ~ Noll's
statement almost on a daily

MEN'S
JEWELRY IS
NOW01LLED
CH41N!

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN:
9 a .m. to 5 p. m. Mon. thru Thurs.
9 a .m. to 8 p.m . Friday
Saturday 9 a.m. to 5p .m.

~rutique
205 North 2nd Ave. 1

Middleport, Ohio

; But he was scheduled to start
,, the Reds' series opener at
: home Tuesday night against
· Atlanta.
·
, , "I took him out of the
starting rotation to give him
time to think it over,"
Anderson.
But Fryman, obtained from
Montreal in the Tony Perez
deal (the Reds also got Dale
· • Murray and gave up Will
McEnaney), said he wanted
, to pitch for the Reds all
season · long , and made a
request to be traded because
he had been sent to the
bullpen.
"I pitched well again once I

:

YOU WON'T IEUEVEI

~

:"

INGELS FURNITURE
o.

:

.
..•

Amer-ican League
East
W . .L
Pel . GB
48 36 .571
Boston
49 38 .563
112'
Baltimre
49 38 .563
If;!
New York
40 42 .488
7
Clevelnd
39 46 .459 9lf:l.
MHw
39 46 .459 9 1h
Detroit
31 54 .365 17112
Toronto
West

••

!
-

W. L Pet . .GB
50 34 .595 -

DOMINO

•

Sib.

-SUGAR

•

.•

5th &amp; Pearl

R~jnP.;

0.

PHEBE' STORE
Right Reserved To Limit Q·uanlilies
We Glodly Accept Fed. Food Stamps!
Monday lhru Friday
?: 001o7 : 0(! ·
S.turd• y ' to 7

•

LEMONAID
...... ,

CREMORA

16 oz.- $}19

JO so-Chicken-Beef or

ONIONS

PLUMS

3 ....

LB.

WAU DISNEY

49~

COLOR IN&lt;) BOOKS-COMIC BOOK\
TOYS AND GAMES

69~

'129

COUNTRY Tl

Size
Cans

•

ggc

PIE RUING

2112

•

BOlOGNA

WI LDERN ESS-CH ER RY

~·

CLOSED

•
••

•

JaCkson

.•

•

Pet. GB

San Francisco (Halicki 7.9) at
San Oiegp . (Q,riffin 5-7), I() p.m.
Thur-s day's Games
Chicago at N ew York
St. Louis at Phila, night
Los Angeles at Houston, night
Atlanta at Cincinnati 1 night

r

Middleport,

2

8:os p.m.

"
"'

•

•
•

W. L

.400 18

!

AIR CONDITIONER BUYS

•

••
•

DOG FOOD

39• to •1.00

WIENERS

.,39

20 ct.
pkg.

LIVER PUDDING

'1"

lb.

LB.

BOILED
$ 99
HAM. . :..................~: . . .

Chicago
Kan City
46 38 .548 4
Minn
47 40 .540 4\;,
Texas
43 41 .5 12 7
Calif
41 42 .494 81h
. .,. 37 -48 .435" lJV2
· Oakland
Seattle
37 53 .4 11 16
Tuesday's Results
Cleveland 7, Boston 1
Oetrolt 2, Toronto 1
Kansas City 8, Chicago 3
New York
Milwaukee 2
TeKas 4, Baltimore 3
Oaklnd 3, Seatt le 2, 10 inns.
California 3, Minnesota ('I
Today 4 s Prob8ble Pitchers
(All Times EDTl
Toronto (Lemanczyk 7-7 and
tt vuckovlch
4-71
at Chicago
-4 (Knapp 7-4 and Kucek 0-0), 2,

LA 22 ; Burroughs, All and
Winf ield , SD 21 .
American League : Scott, Bas
25 ; Rice, Bos 21 ; Nettles, NY
20 ; Zisk , Chi and Hisle, M inn
19 .
Runs Batted 1n
National Lea·gue: Foster, Cin
81 ; Garvey, LA 80 ; Cey, LA 74 ;
W infield, so· 69; Bench, Cin 66".
Amer~can
League:
His!~.
Minn 74; Munson, NY 66 ; Zisk,
Ch,i 61: HobsOn and Yastrzem ski, Bos, Thompson, Del and
Nettles . NY sa.
Stolen Bases
National League: . Taveras,
Pitt 33 ; Richards, SO 29 ;
Morgan , Cln and Cedeno, Hou
28 ; Moreno, Pitt 27.
American L eilg ue : Remy. Cat
28 ; Patek , KC 26; Bonds. Cel
22; Page, Oak 21 ; LeFlore, Det
and Rivers , NY 18.
Pitching
Most Victories
Nalional League: R.Reuschel,
Chi 12-3: Carlton, Phil and
Forsch, St.L ll ·A; Rau, LA 101; Sutton. LA 10·3; Rhoden, LA
10.5.
American League: . Tananp,
Cal 12-6;
Ryan. Cal
12-8;
T..J ohnson, Mil'ln 10-3; R .May
and Palmer , Bait I0 -8~ Colborn ,
KC ·and Augustine, Mil 10-9.
Earned Run Average
Cbased on 81 innin.gs pltctled)
National League : R .Reuschelr
Chi - 2.17 ; Sutton, LA 2.47 ;
Rogers. Mtl 2.75; Richard, Hou
2.79; Hooton , LA 2.80 .
American League : . Tanana,
Cal 2.16; Campbell, Bos 2.49 ;
·Rylln, Cat 2.57; Rozema, Oet t•----~~~
and Sly Ieven, Tex 2.59.
Strikeouts
National League: Niekro, Atl
131; Rogers, Mtl 113 ; R ich·a rd,
Hou 112; Seaver, Cin l06';
Koosman, NY 102.
Al]'lerican Lenue : Ryan·, cal
McCall's,
222; · t~nana, Cal. 152 ; Leonard, ~-~~
KC 128; ECkersley, Ciev 113i
palmer , Bait 108 .

l • 0

Chi&lt;OO
000 000 200-2 6 0
N .Y .
000 010 J:lx- • 7 0
R. ~eusehel, Sutter (8) and
Muterwald ; Matlack, LOckwood
(9) an1 Stearns . W- Matlack.. • 10. L - R. Reuschel , 12-3. HAs .
Chicago, Mitterwat~ (6) , New .
York. Henderson f 3L
·
.
St.L
000 101 007- 4 9 1
PhilO
000220001- 5 PO
Rasrnuntm , Metzg'r
(IJ.
, f;astwlck (91 and Slm,..,ons ;
Lerch and Boone. W-Ltrcf'l, 62. L - Eastw ick, 3-5. HRt,.....
Phllldtlphla , Schmidt (26-). St.
Loull . Tyson (Sl.
L.A.
101 510 ooo- 8 13 1
Houstn
000 000 ooo- 0 • 2
Rau and Yeager ; S'!mbito,
Niekro C4J. Mclaughlin 8) and
Ferguson . W- Rau, 10-1. LSamblto. -4-3. HR-Los Angele5,
Hale (2) .

LATEX

o

night and his average
dropped
to .393.
Kan City
020 204 ooo- 8 · 9 2
Chicgo
000 100 002- J B 0
No major leaguer has hit
~eonard and Parler ; Stone,
.400 during a season since Ted
Kirkwood U•l and Essien . wLeonard, B-9. L - Stone. 9-7. Williams batted .406 lor the
HRs -Kar\SII City 1 Otis (9), Boston Red Sox in 1941.
Mityberry {141 ; Chlacgo, Soder-

'

For Exterior or Interior..
..

holm (9).

N.Y .
111000020- .5110
Mi1w
100 100 000--- 7 4 o
Gvll,ft. Tldrow
C71
and
Munson; Haas. Caldwell (JJ.
McChll't t•J and Moore. wGullet, 8-l . 1..-Haas, S-6, HRNew York, Randolph (-4 ).

Pomeroy Pastry

( 10 innings)
BaIt
300 000 000
3 60
Tex
010 010 001 1- 4 7 0
R. May, ~go (10) and ,
Skaggs; Alexander and Sund berg . W-AI!-xander , 9-S. L Or ago.
2-2 -~
R
Balfmore,
Singleton {Ill .

o--

99

'

GALLON

~
Closed For Vacation

IE..() PEN

Atlanta
ooo 001 201- A 7 1
Ci(\cl
ooo 010 11o- 3 6 o t 10 i"nintsl
N t e k r o, Camp (9) 11nd · Sea
000 Oll 000
2 71
Pocorobe ; Capjlla . Henderson Oak
000 020· 000 l - 3 7 2
(8), Hoerner , (9), Murr1y (9)
Wheelock, R~mo · (10) and
and Bench . W- Niekr.o, 9-1Q, 1..
-Henderson , 0-2. HRs-Ci ncinnaf i, Morgan &lt; 121. Summers

JULY 31st

o-

•

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

JULY 17th

773-5554

MASON, W.VA.

(3).

2nd WEEK OF OUR
PRICE BREAKING CLEARANCE
Save Now On
Summer And School Needs
SAVE CASH!

San Fran
001 ()20 ooo- 3 11 1
Son Opo
210 040 0(!•-7 13 o
. S,.rr , Heaverlo (5). Curtis (6J
anc:l Hill; Owchinko, Splllner (6)
and Roberts . W- Owchinko,
L - Barr , B-7. HR- San Diego,
Turner (6) ,

J-•-

.DISPOSABLE

Entire Stock Reduced

BUTANE
LIGHTERS

MENS DRESS
SHOES

Buy Several At

This Low Price

Values To 120.00

2~$100 $70oJgooJ}2oo
FLOWERS
Now

COSTUME JEWELRY

se. 12e

101 Rowers

191 Flowers

Every Piece In
The Store On Sale!

Now

lf2PR~

"'

BACON

89~
........

-p.-

20%

SEW
YOUR OWn
THIS

OUT THEY GOI

• HALTERS
• PANTS
DRASTICALLY
.REDUCED!
•.

OFF

.
~ENs
sinRrs
.~:rt
.

Shirts, dress
~ve. Values to S7.~.·~~

$388 AWD

New fall
Fabric Arriving

sum

THE FABRIC SHOP

While Quantities Last
· Quantity Rights Reserved
We are not responsible •for typographical
errors.

s~irts.

Short

;4;;

GIRLS
•SHORTS

· • TOPS
• SETS
• SWIM SUITS

CLEARANCE
PRICED!

FOAM FILLED
STYROFOAM

Kwick-Sew, Simplicity Patterns
lSW. Second

Price$ Good July 13th~
· thril Ju~ 17th, 1977

\

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BED
PILLOWS

40 .QUART .
COOLER .
CHEST

$239·-·.

Regular 12.79

- Each

TERRY
TOWEL
.
'

. ThiJ AI Go!

.

Detroit
&lt;Arroyo. 5.7)
at
Kansas City &lt;ColbOrn 10-9). 8:30
p.m.
.
.
New York (Hunter 5-3) at
Milwaukee (Sla ton 6-8), 8:30
p.m .
Baltimore CPafmer 10-8) at '
TelCaS (Ellis 5-7J. 8:35p.m .
Seattle (Abbott 4-7l at Oakland (Langford. 7-7), 10: 30 p .m.
Minnesota
(Gotfl 9.6) ' at
California (Hartzell 3-6), 10 : 30
p .m .
Thursday'' Games
New Yof-k al Milwaukee
Toronto at Chicago
S~attle at Calf.fornia, night
• Detroit at Kansas City, rilght
BoSton at Cleveland , nhJtlt

• thoultnds of
l~ht·

• ..tju•teb&amp;r

.,.r;.&amp;Ic

• du•ol&gt;!.
elutl wiftdow

•.--.. rat

Neilan's R~&amp;- '1.19
Lim it 1 Please

a.ttlmoreat Texas, nlghl

I

• SHELLS
• TANK TOPS

SEWING MACHINES

$299

Values
To 14.49

• SHORTS.

ALL SINGER

SAVE!

TENNIS SHOES

WOMENS

DISCOUNT

Boston
(Jenkins 7-6)
at
Cleveland (Gari"Od 6·9l. 7:30

p.m.

Boys and Mens ·

20%

6:30p .m. ·

i

STIREWIDE

SUMMER
FABRICS

SUMMER
FABRICS

s,

SAVORY SLICED

LB.

ooo-

SUTTON, Mass. (UPI) All golfers are created equal
when they tee off on the
tricky Pleasant Valley
Country Club course.
And because no player has
ever won more than once in 10
previous PGA tournaments
on the long and sometimes
bushy course, there is no
favorite in the $250,000

57 30 .655
; Cincl
46 38 .548 9 11.,
San Fran
40 .49 .4.49 18
il Houston
39 49 .443 18'h
39 52 .429 20
• San DiegO
: , Atlanta .
31 55 .360 25•h
• .
Tuesday ' s Results
• Pittsbgh 5, Montreat 4, 12 inns.
: New York 4, Chi·c ago 2
"" Philadelphia 5, St. ·Louis 4 .
~ Los Angeles· 8, Houston o
• Atlanta 4, Cinc innati 3
• San Diego 7, San Francisco 3
Today's Pro bable Pitchers
:
"
CA IITimesEDT) .
Pi ttsburgh (Candelaria 8-JJ at
"
: Montreal (Rogers 9-7l". 7: 35
• p.m .
•
Chicago ( Burris 9-8) at New
• York (Koosm an 6- toL 8:05p.m.
•
St. Louis {Underwood S-4) at
: Philadelph ia
&lt;Carlton
Jl -4),
• 7: 35p .m .
'
Los Angeles (Hooton 8·3) at
Houston (Lemongetlo l -11), 8: 35
• p.m .
•
Atlanta
{Colnns
1-8)
at
w Cincinnati (Billingham 8-4),

•
'

•

34 51
West

•

-

•
'•

PAINTING SPECIAL!

o •2

o

....,

Jr1 los Ang

106 N. 2nd Ave.

R~sulfs

Pl~asant Valley Classic ·that week. "It all boils down to one
gets under way Thursday. ·
man, Nicklaus, just jud&amp;in&amp;
The leading money earner from the calls we've been
at Pleasant Valley, Lee getting."
Elder, has never won the
While Nicklaus, Watson,
· tournament, although he has Gary Player, Lee Trevino,
finished second twice and Hubert Green and Ben
third once.
Crenshaw will be the crowd
The · 7,100-yard, par 71 favorites, they still must
course features thick grass contend with defending
just of! the !airways and champion Bud Allin, who shot
around the rough. The long a 7-urider-par 'J:/7 lllllt year.
·. hitters have had . as much
Allin broke out of a 12.
Major .Lea·gUe: Leaders
trouble
conquering
the
course
player
scramble . on the last
By United Press International
as
the
short-ball
hitters.
lour
boles
to edge Crenshaw
Batting
(based on 200 at bats)
Jack
Nicklaus,
lor and Elder.
National League
"I'm not a long hitter. I'm
'G . AB . H. Pet. example, second by one
Gr itfey Cin
83 336 113 .336 stroke to Tom Watson in the
probably the shortest on the
Simmons St. L
Ill 280 94 .335
Parker Pit
86 352118 .335 British Open last week, fared · tour," said the 5-foot-9, 136Morales Chi
81 295 98 .332 poorly on the Pleasant Valley
JMiund Allin. "But this golf
Valent ine Mtt
77 J~l 101 .325 course 12 years ago in the
course
is not a long hitter's
Stennett P i t
81 320 103 .322.
\
Carling
World
Open
and
has
course
and it's not a oneHernndz
St.L
84
295
95
.322
I
Rob inson P it
66 217 69 .31 8. not been back since. He is golfer course."
Morgan Cili
82 281 89 .317
Allin and the other pros will
Luzlnski Phil
74 281 89 .317 playing this year only
American League
because the toqrnarnent is find the course a evtn
G. AB. H. Pel.
tougher to complete lhls
Carew Min
83 326 128 .393 oneo!the designated slopS on
· year, since Pleasant V1lJ;y
Singleton Sal
78 276 93 .337 the PGA circuit.
Bostock Min
82 Jll 104 .JlA
The lure of Nicklaus and Offici1ls have redeslghed the
:
Major League Standings
Dade Cle
73 231 17 .333
par ~.18th hole. The.flnishine ·
'1 8'( United Press International
Bailor Tor •
73 292 97 .332 Watson has created ·a tickei
:
National League
Fisk Bos
80 279 89 .319 demand unmatched since
hole again will be 560 yards
..
E~st
Bannister Chi
82 334 106 .317 1965.
.
long, but will start from an
•.
W. L Pet. GB Munson NY
ao 314 99 .315
.. Chicag·o
52 32 .619
Fa irly Tor
75 260 81 .312
" We're $55,000 ahead of last elevated tee that leaves the
! Phila
-48 36 .571 4
RiVers NY
75 296 92 .311 year
in ticket sales," golfer a smaller landing area
• Pittsbgh
41 39 .541 6
Home Run~
1
7
2
.Pleasant
Valley's Cuz for his first shot.
.. St . Louis
46 41 .529
National . League: . Schmidt,
..-· Mon treaJ
39 46 .459 13 1"2 Ptl il 26 ; Foster , Cin 24 ; Garvey, Mingolla said early this
1
fll·

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.

Summer Clothing
l;it Clletcm

11

;_ New York

WE'VE GOT' SOME

ON ALL

000 000 000
lOO OOJ oo..

Golfers listed equal

because he was homesick."

Ta OtiR..~roRJi". ··~

SPRING &amp; SUMMER SHOES

Clearance Sale

Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson explained Fryman
;, left the club las! saturday

\l\(!)\l~'t/ ~\'!}~

. MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

NOW IN PROGRESS

harvest..n

M1nn

(allt

A mtrlun Le•gut
Thormoelsg~rd and Wynegar ;
OC'IO 000 100 1 8
av United Press tnternetlon•l Boston
Ryan and Humphrey W Ryan,
CIEtve
010
•Ol
Otx
113
0
N•liDn•l -l e•guiP
12 8. L Thormo~sgard , 6 6.
Ctevelano, Murph)! ( 6 1 and
( U 1nnin9s)
F
isk
;
Eckersley,
We
its
(7)
and
Pitl!.bufQ~
000 100 011 001- S I 3 Kendall . W Eckerlsev , 9 7. l
Clevel•nd. 7 5. HRs- Cleveland,
Montreal
000 ~10 010 ooo- • 15 0 Bell C8 1. Spikes CIL Boston .
Ki son, Teku t ve {8). Gossage Hobson Cl5)
ANAHEU&gt;f, C.lif. (UPI) (9~ and Of1 ; Twitch~ll, McE
Rod
Carew went Mor-4 in the
Tronto
100
000
1
•
naney
(9 ).
t&lt;errigan
(9),
200 000 oox - 1 a 1 Mimesota Twins' 3-0 loss to
Atkin$01\ ( 11 ) and Carter. w- Det
Jetfet"son and AShby; Fi
Gonag~ . 8-S. L - Atkinson, 4 1 .
Nolan ' Ryan and the
MAs-Pittsburgh , Garn.,- (12), drvch, Cr1wforc:l Ol •nd Klmm .
M•v "( 2) . W- Crawfard, 3 2 L
California Angels Tuesday
FreQOSI !3 l.·
Jetrer50n-, .S 9.
'

Major League

got back in and ¢en I missed major change is if the
a ~ouple o[ turns," Fryamn Dodgers have a loog losing
sa1d. "But I was sitting streak," Fryman said. "A lot
around for 33 days and not ol people say the Rea don't
doing more than a few· reliel have good pitching, but I
appearances this year."
disagree, lt's just. that the
Fryman added he didn't hitting gets all the publicity.''
But the veteran pitcher,
harbor any "ill feelings"
toward Reds' management or who formerly played with the
. any player.
Pirates, Phillies and Tigers
Fryman said h~ didn't and had a 11().124' mark
mind the occasional jeerjng including a 5-5 record this
he received from Reds' fans ilea .On, said he didn't plan to
after he made his request to follow the Reds that closely
be traded.
'
the rest ol the year.
"No, I will follow 'the
"I can understand how the
fans felt, especially after baseball scores, for baseball
trading away such a popular has been in my blood, but as
player like Perez and after 1 far as following the Reds the
didn't do well on a given rest of the year, well, I'll be
evening,'' Fryman said. 41 But busy getting back to lull time
I don't have any bad personal farming and all and I will be
feeling !rom all ofthis. I have busy," Fryman said.
Will he have any trouble
some friends on the ballclub,
and I hOpe they continue to getting reaccustomed to the
!arm routine?
win."
"! have had an alarm clock
But Fryman would not say
whether the Reds, who inside for some time," he
currently trail the lirst place noted. "I'd get up early in the
Los Angeles Dodgers by 8\; road out ol habit. Now I'll be
games, could overtake the getting up here, but the
division leaders, especially difference is that my wife and
now that they have lOst two children will be here for
me to spend ,the &lt;Jay with."
another starting pitcher.
" I see the only way of any
.

line scores

BASEBALL

,

New Fall Shoes Arriving Daily

Ewing farm. "My mind is

• made up, and there are some
'. things I just have to get done
around this farm for the

Brown said professional

Continued Clearance

and a bases-filled triple and
John Mayberry added a solo
blast lor Kansas City. Dennis .
Leonard, 8•9 , worked his
ninth complete game and
struck out nine.

:~· his

•

fields for Woody

By RANDY MINKOFF
FRANKFORT, Ky. (UP!)
- Woodie Fryman says the
ooly lields he will be working
in lor the rest of the season
will be around his Kentucky
!arm and not around the ones
in Cincinnati and other·
National League cities.
The 37-year old lefthander
formally requi!S)ed his name
be placed on the voluntary
retirement liSt Tuesday and
insisted his retirement from
baseball was permanent,
despite efforts by Cincinnati
Reds' management to change
his mind .
.
He said he wrote Reds
General Manager Dick
·, Wagner about his retirement
, ' on Tuesday. Wanger . said
when Fryman's request
becomes official, the pitcher
will have to slay retired for a
minimum of 60 days.
: "It's permanent, finaJ arid
•• there's no· chance-I'll change
: my mind,' : Fryman insisted
: in a telephone interview !rom

basis."

~hi~·s=se=ve:n:th=vt=·c=to~ry~..~~~~$284!!!!,!!!444!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~·....
ON

~~ly

Results,

Cox · Blue and Sant,~u•IIM W
Htue . 1 II L Romo, 5 b HR
Seattle, Sh~·~rt 191

,,

OISPOSAIII.E
IUTI)!&gt;IE
LIGHTER ·

ENTIRE STOCK ON SAL£!

SUN

WOMENS

GLASSES

SANDALS

Viniuard
QualitJ

1h

PRICE

$38BAND
.

REMNANTS.
Manj Bi&amp;
Sizes
Very Thii:k

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$199

•

•

�6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, July 13, 1977

B_e rgland will -' propose improved farm disaster
program
.
..

By BERNARD BRENNER

UPI rarm Editur

program,

baked': system of livestock ,
feed subsidies offered by the
government
in
areas
designated as disaster zones
because of floods, droughts or
other calamities.
Existing programs have
been criticized on grounds
they can provide substantial
.payments to farmers in some
cases , but often provide
ridiculously · low levels of
assistance to growers whose

Bergland explained, would
WASHINGTON ( UPII - replace a system under which
Administratioo farm officials farmers produciQg wheat,
hope to be ready to go to feed grains, cotton and rice
Coogress by September with get special disaster payments
a proposal for an expanded, if yields are below normal
nationwide crop insurance because of weather disasters.
program to replace existing
Also, the, proposed new
disaster relief subsidies for program would replace what
farm e rs. Agr ic ulture Bergland termed a "halfSecretary Bob Bergland
says.
"Our disaster programs
are 1n and of themsel v.S a
disaster, " Bergland iold
farm broadcasters at a
conference Tuesday.
.
"We .are in the process of
constructing a new insurance
program," he added.
The · proposed
new .

news

Exp·endahle

.,
CHIEF FffiEO
ASHLAND, Ohio (UPI ) Police Chief L.J. Gilbert was
hred Monday by Mayor
Dooald Ritchie for alleged
irregularities in the payment
of &lt;&gt;vertime to seven police
officers.
'
Richland County
Prosecutor Willlam McKees,
on assignment in Ashland
County as a special
prosecutor in the case,
conducted a seven-month
investigation into the charges
and found that Gilbert had
authorized more than 200
hours of illegal overtime in
1975 and 1976. The dismissal
was effective July 9. Lt.
Pennis Sackett will serve as
acting chief.

funds at

$62,573
IN THE HOSPITAL
)towena Gaye Garten, fiveyear-old daughter of Yvonna
and Richard Garten, former
Racine
residents,
is
recuperating from open heart
surgery at the Children's
Hospital in Columbus.
would
enjoy
Rowena
receiving cards from friends.
Get well wishes may be sent
to Room 427, 17th St. and
Livingston Park, Columbus,
Ohio 43215.

Middleport
Village
Council's expendable funds
totaled $62,573.31 as of June
30, the monthly report of
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
states.
Receipts, disbursements
and the balance, respectively,attheendofJunefrom
each of the expendable funds
include: gener.al, $4,978.40, ·
$6,326 .53, $33,444.54;
cemetery, $~46 . 60 , $74i.99,
$963.03; fire equipment, $300,
$150.60, $256.68 ; swimming
pool, $4,520. 76, $2,138.02, · FO&lt; Th&amp;lrodll J I 14 1117
$o,950.i6; planning com·
'· ur •
MEETING OFF
mission,. no receip.ts, $97.42,
The Ohio Valley Grange $187.99; street mamtenance,
2612 has canceled its Thurs- $2,903.3o, $2,765.79, $6,633.64; Beml·ce Bede Osol
day meeting due to the lack of federal revenue sharing,
electricity )n the Letart Falls $1,690', $728.55; $14,721.62;
anti .. recession assistance, no
Commuriily Hall.
receipts, $100.99, $415.65.
Receipts for the month
totaled Sl5,239.06 while
disbursements totaled
Julr 14, 11n
$13,059.89.
A
lot
of
things
in store for you
The total of all village this coming are
year. esPecially
council obligated funds as of socially. However, be pareful
June 30 amounted to . about entering into speculative
$29,999.09 with. $1100 being ventures with people you meet.
expended during the month. CANCER · !Juno ' 21-Julr 22)
The June 30 balance of the Wh'i ie you're certainly nQI a loner
obligated funds of the board today. you shoUld choose your
of• public affairs totaled company carefully. A pal prone
IQ. be silly could do something
$189,089.85. Receipts, . you'll
have to pay for. ~avlng
disbursements during the trouble selecting a career? Send
monlh and the month-end for your copy of Astra-Graph
balance of each lund making Letler. Mall 50 cents for each
up the obligated moneys and a long , self-addressed,

crops have been wiped out.
Deputy Agriculture
Secretary John White said he
ran across one case in which
drought destroyed a Georgia

STOP

ROOF LEAKS

stamped envelope to AstraGraph , P.0 . Bo); 489, Radio City
Station. N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify your birth sign.

· include: sanitary sewer,

' $6,474.65,$8,326.35: $34,305.33;

Repair holes aroUnd ch im neys, flashinas. guttrrs, rotc .
with Rutland No 4 Roof Cemem A ready -to -us!' , ht"avy
mixturt" of grn1.11nr asphalt
oand as~stos Easy tn apply
wath tro~~o·tl or kntfr •

~ewer

escrow,

$1,155, no disbursement,
$137,785.09; water $7,520.89,
$7,166.38, $9,737.20: water
meter trusts, .$350, $413.04,'
$7 ,262,23. Receipts totaled
u:;;:;oo.54 whlle disbursements totaled $15,905.77.
Total bonded indebtedness
of the town stands at
$1,345,126.25, or $483.16 per
capita.

LEO IJulr 13-Aug. 22) 1n family
situations fdday you're bener off
to ~o along with what the m.aJorlty wants to do .. let compassion
overrul~ your logic.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-SOpL 22) Keep .
an air of mystery about you if you
meet someone new today . If you
let her know a lltt1e bit. she'll be
eager to learn more.

SCORPIO IOcL 24-Nov.22)
Where others may fail: you have
the knack today for adding a lit·
tie toUch to what you po. u·could
be the f~ctor that spells success.

SEMI-ANNUAL

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc.
21) You 're better oH not asking
people tor ravors today. Your
needs are already known they'd rather act of their own
volition .

CLEARANCE
SALE

But because the fanner 's
planted acreage was far
above a planting allotment
fixed for his farm on the basis
of decades-old records, he
was eligible for a disaster
payme"t of only $300.
' " The whole program
system has got to be
changed," White said. "Why,
we ~~ve cases in which entire

AQUARIUS (Jon. 2D·F.... 11) An
unambitious associate or one
whose Ideas clash with yours
could m~r your chaiices for
· success today.
PISCES !Fob. 2D·IIIierch 201
Praise goes a long way with
tflose working for you today. A
few encouraging words will do
more· good than a bonus.

1 Group Ladies
•s.oo pr.
Dress Sandals '

ARIES IMorch 21-Aprlt 11) The
end results could be less than
satisfactory to yOu today. You
could well make fas t·minute
changes and foul up the detaiL

40% OFF

Pickens
·Hardware

Handbags.... : .lh P~ce
Tennis Keds- ...•1411 pr.

MA$0N, W. VA .

,

HOURS :

• ,
Mon .. Thurs., &amp; Sat.
8:00-5:30
\

CHAI»MAN
SHOES .

992-2815 ·

Friday 8:00-8 : 00

Pomeroy

Bergland said he did not yet the long run under normal
have administration loss conditions. The extra
clearance on all details or the cost of paying ~ties
~ance program. But he ba~ oo "calaniity" farm
said he hoped to get a White losses would he met by
House go-ahead for the plan Jederai appropriations, offiby the end of July, aUowing cials say.
The pending· farm bill In·
him to take recomeludes
a sectioo extending the
mendaljons to .capitol Hill
existing
disaster payment
after Congress ends its
fO&lt;' grains, cotton
programs
scheduled August recess
and
rice.
However, the
after Labor Day.
administration
is expected to
, Officials who have been
recommend
that
these be
working on the plan say crop
insurance premiums would ellminated after a ·new
be scaled to make the insurance program is' made
program sejf supporting in available to farmers.

.\

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) For
some jne~e pllcable reason, you
may say something that rattles
your mate today. The antidote: A
ntce. unexpected gesture.

' GEMINI

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

1NEWSPAPER t:NTE{I~RISE ASSN . •

SATURDAY-JULY 1,6th
FOR

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
OF

wage ($2.30) per hour. But here are the'facts:
1. Seven of the picketing employees made over $10,000 'last year.

'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

·Prices Effective
~hru July 16th

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTilY RIGHTS RESERVED

'

.

•

3. The average full time ·hourty em.P~ at the Jones Boys made $6,279,00 -during
1976. This average does not include department managers and supeMsors.

4. Jones Eqs empkJtees have had Blue Cross/Blue Shield hospitaliDtion insurancethe ·~ available iric:luding Major Medical; they have paid ~; our. employees
have security with income protection insurance which pays their wages if the
employee is sick or hurt on or off the job; Jones Boys .employees have had life
insurance equal to 1 years pay an~ liberal sick 1eave berlefits-any unused sick
leave is paid at the end of the year; they have libe!3l paid excused absences up
to three days due to death in the family.
.

TURKEYS •••••••••••••• ~8~
GROUN'O BEEF••••••.••L!~ .

Babcock reunion enjoyed
9~

J'-1

~

r

The annual l:labCOCk reu-

.

I

..
)

&gt;

~o;: ......... ~ •
i~~~z "ili ~

',

u

'li'

..,.

farthest. .
.
A yard sale was held during
the day with many handmade
items from some of the
guests. Children rode on a
horse and wagon owned by
Bill Pullins. Garnes were
played and in the afternoon
watermelon and homemade
. ice ·cream were served .

nion was held recently with
Mrs. Ruby Burke of Alfred as
the host. A potluck diMer
was served at noon and gifts
were presented to the oldest,
Eva Babcock of otsegQ Ohio;
the yonngest, inf!Uit of Bobby
BabcQck, also of otsego, and
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Coleman of
Fostoria, who traveled .the

'

'

,·M...WA"':;&lt;;.;to;••••'•'•'-'-'·!o~·····:o!~•=•:-:•:'"~!_,lo&gt;.'_&gt;'&lt;'it~M'*'~~~~W'ffi
w,.....,W~.o.•.•~•-•.•.•T.•.v.•.•••v.-. ••
·······~

•:-&gt;.o.... . , ... ,..

! Helert Help
~~~: ·

n US • • •

By Helen Bottel

l
·:·:

visiting times,

Barney likes his beer but I thought be had. it under control
untll I went to the hoapltal for major surgery. Most of the time
while I was away he spent drlnklng, only visiting me a half
hour each day. &lt;me morning he didn't get homeuntll8a.m.
He apologized profusely, but now he's started going out
with the guys on Friday nights. (I know there isn't another

Where Do We Stand Now?

1. The Jones lqs, Incorporated, has suffered severe ecomomic

mses.

'

.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

·
.
.
ARM ROAST.............

LB

I ·U.S.D.A. CHOICE ·

'.All For Love' Tttru Sotu'
Dear Helen;
I'm not JX:Oud of the fact that my husband and I broke up
both our txxnes and got dlvorceaso we could marry; we were
very mucb in kwe. He haa five children who live with their. ·
mother. I have two who live with us. We are blessed becaUBe
all the kids like us and all get along great together, during

'

GROUND CHUCK ••••• ~8~.

~

::::

• ::::. 11'

5. During the last &amp;_years Jones Boys hoorty employees have had 12 pay increases.

.

woman~)

ENGLISH '.ROAST•• ~ ••••~~
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BoNELESS

CHUCK ROAST••••••••••~·.

.

I get so upset I beglntoshakeand scream. He hasa kidney

problem and is risking his health- and maybe our marriage.
Wbat can I do? - E. B.

-

2. The Jones Boys Counby Store in Pomeroy, Ohio, has been timed.

Dear E.:
The WO&lt;'st thing you can do is "get so upset you shake and
scream." ,
·
The best thing ,you can do is: discuss the situation
ratlooally with Barney; then compromise. Give him his
Friday nights out, but ask that he cut down beer consumptiiHI
through the week. And get reinforcement from his doctor.
Since your life together seems !IBPPY and relatively
· uncomplicated (except fO&lt;' lingering guilt), I think he'll listen
to rea:!IOn. - H.

.

.

Dear Helen: .
.
·
·
Inst!!ad l't~~ -usual •:seven year itch" my Jrusband of six
years bas taken up photography. The catcb Is, lie wants to take
nUde pictures. I feel his motive is not the aesthetic one he
Insists it ls, as he doesn't want professional models, but rather
willing amateurs who will pose for him.
I am not beautiful and he is handsome. Now that we've had
two children, my body doesn't compare to the gO&lt;'geous nude
00 an emJl!,Y. ~ '--·wbioh he 1111)'8 is aU for art. I feel even
more insectie becai.e' Oilr' tharriage has alwayii been shaky,
ltloughoursexllfe Is great. Also, he'sa warm, loving attentive
father, but l'!e .~:t 111J&gt;w l!&gt;vtJ or JW • •
,
Another thing, ~e wants me l1i ge\ liteast Implants, as he s
very turned on by women's curves. The fact that I have a .fine
lllind and am a successful career person seems unimportant to

4. The Jones Boys department managers and classified positions have been offered in
excess uf 30% inCrease in wages and benefits.
'
"
~

•t J.

I

:

.

"'

5. Our emJlloyees have already lost more

tt~an

they can expect to gain

du~ng ~

' '

life .

of the propmed contract. 'Why do the Union officials demand ·~"~·~strike c:OnHnt!e?'
'
Do they care?
..
'

Jili"St.ould I give up this marriage or try to bui~ myself up to

-

'

tu

-~-

6. The Union has told. us. that they will not even, talk until we agree with their Union
shop conditions. Because of the attifude ·of the Union's officials, ~ lOoks as if .they
are willing to let oor employees go forever without a paycheck for ~:fie privilege af ·.
.. joining the Union and paying daH!s. Jones Boys employees are honest enough to jcin
the Union and pay dues without being forced, if the Union is doing a good ,job for
them.
.

'lis Image of :vromen? And ifthe lattet} would thiS cure him of
"nudie" craze? -G. G.

,

s.l We've ,tried counseling .. Our therapist says I'm
.. f•irmnature."
!

'

P.

' G.:
bear

: I'll bet your therapist was a man!
r Your hllSband evidently sees women as objects, to be
, ' joyed, and perhaps ulll!d, whereas you want him to kn~ you
a whole, weU..-oWlded person ·(even though you aren t, by

. ~ourth Q{ July picnic enjoyed
l

Signed: THE JONES BOYS

A Fourth of July picnic was
ldatlhebcmeofLawrence
Jean Van Meter Thelss,
1nton, Roale I. The group
·went 1o the parade and
,
lllld In (;allipoli•
' ' Alleodlnl
the Rev.
11111
Mn:
'Cawrence
Glaa1en
1
Nicki VIII Miler,

-e

Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

'

POTATOES •••••••• .1.0•'!; •...
RED OR WHITE

GRAPES •••••• •••••••• ~ .L!.••
VALLEY BELL

TID~

'c:Bf'•

Portland; Robert , Wilson,
Chester, W. Va.; Paul D.
Evans, Jr., Portland; Robert
Profflll, Belpre; Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Bailey and
daughter, Racine, Kenneth
Koehler, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Bailey and family,

Patriot.

-

.

49 oz.

FLOUR ••••••••••••• ~ ••• .~:
5

l_

COUPON

-

'

DOMINO SUGAR
5 LB.

79~

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires July 16, 1977

!:

·.!!~;;:;!!

$ 29

$ 19 2% MILK •••••••••••••••••

DETERGENT····•·······•···•··
GOLD MEDAL

mea81ll'tmellts) .
·
y~ can't save your marriage by adding breast implants.

ther he llhould add another dililension to his character; and
ere's ~here: If he's a ''warm, loving, attentive father"
can leam'to be the same kind of Jrusbind -with a lot of help
om hls wife. -H.

$ 29

. . U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET

+++

.

.

'

GOLD BAND
10-14 lb.

2. Three of those seven employees made al}Proximately $12,000.

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P. M.

U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

Store Hours:
JJ!on.-Sat 8 am-10 pm
10 am-10 pm
.Sunday
.

Mrs. Thelma Grueser and and Sheila, Mt. Vernon; Mrs.
Melanie Kay entertained/jYio.h Charlotte Emory, Kimberly,
a cookout at their home, 105 Barbara, Bruce, Ricky, and
Plum St., Pomeroy, during Ricky Jr., Joy Ward, Robert
the holiday weekend.
McKenzie, and Albert ColTheir guests were Mr. and atruglio of New Castle, Pa.
Mrs. Larry Hudson and Lori,
Following the cookout the
Glen Grueser, Mistee and group went to the home of Mr.
Rodney Grueser, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Hu_dson, Five
Mr. and Mrs. Robert HaUey Points, where homemade ice
and Amy-, Cheshire; Mr. and cream was served.
Mrs. Jacjt Grueser, Brian

• The public has been tcild that all Jones lqs emp~ are making minimum

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.

CAMDEN PARK

Mr. and Mrs. Rich Noblett,
Debbie, Ricky, ·and Rene
Swrunit, N. J.; Pam Noblett:
student at a Michigan college; Tim Noblett, student at
Charlotte, N. C. college, and
Bruce McKelvey.
Fri~nds joining the family
group were Mr. and Mrs.
Thereon ' Johnson, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Konicek,
Nancy and Cheryl, Pama
Heignts·, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
HaUey, Rhorida and Renee,
Mr. and Mrs. Norm Legetl
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Bossell ·and family,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Mitch Hopkins and daughter
of near Akron; Mr. and Mrs.
Ron Browning and sons,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Mary Pitton,
Ravenswood, w. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Pitton and
daughter,
Susan, ·
Parlq!rsburg, W. Va.; and
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Oliver,
Rljeleen and Ryan, Pomeroy.

Cookout hosted at Gruesers

We wish to set the record straight - - •

.

IMor 21.June 20)Xou
might ha'Ye an Idea- for a do·lt·
yourself project today. Study 11
before beginning. lor .you could
come up with a rnoney-s~wing
method .

PARK RESERVED

•

Family get-together
enjoyed near ,..,nr.tltln
PORTLAND - A family
get-together was held over
the weekend at the McKelvey
Camp near Portland.
Attending were Bill
McKelvey and sons, Mark
and Nate, and Julie Spinale,
, Duxbury, Mass. who have
spent the past week here with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William McKelvey, Mr. and
. Mrs. Marvin McKelvey and
son; Michael, an~ Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Johnson, and
sons, Brian and Bruce. Mrs.
Bill McKelvey and Julie
Spinale's mother are vacationing in Japao.
other relatives attending
besides the families mentioned were Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Allen McKelvey, Jeff, Timmy, Robbie and Carissa,
Barlow; Mrs. EUa Mae West
and Delores, Parkersburg;
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Collins,
Becky, Steve, Jimmy and
Jeff, Parkersburg; W. Va.;

HAVE YOU BEEN MISLEAD????

CAPRICORN 10ec. 22..1en. 11)
A good •friend wants to act in
your behell today. but don't .seek
her advice. unless she's an expert
in the field . She could unwittingly
steer you wrong.

Now In Progress

How To Applr:
Rutland Aluminum Roo
Coating (with fibre) can
be applied with brush or
pray. During applica.on material should be
tirred frequently to inure even distribution o
luminum flakes.

'all basic tTOps and many nonas disaster areas when they basics for
l979 and
are going to raise the largest thereafter '"
crops in history."
Legislation to establish the
Bergland
said
the expanded program is already
insurance plan his aides ~e pending in hoth the House and
designing would offer Senate, where farm leaders
farmers a chan ce to are awaiting a firm
voluntarily buy policies administTation policy
covering major crops against statement before pr9ceeding
all natural risks.
.
with hearings on the issue.
The agriculture secretary Also, congressional aides
said the plan would expand ooted that farm bloc leaders
tlle government's existjng, want to complete action on a
limited Federal Crop . pending onmibus farm bill
Insurance Corp. program, before tackling the crop
anrl "hopefully we can cover
insurance matter.

LIBRA ISopl. 23-0c1. 23)
Friends may think an idea of
yours is a hare-brained scheme.
If you feel strongly about il, go
ahead -you could ha¥e the last
laugh!

CHAPMAN
SHOES

ALUMINUM
ASPHALT ·
·coATING ·

states have been designated

fanner 's $9,000 corn crop.

ASTRO•GRAP.H

sanitary

'

'

\...._

insurance

I

PLASTIC GAL

.

'

MORTON .

C rv· DINN.ERS ••••••••
. 11 oz.
L

COUPON
--

·ELF VINEGAR
PLASTIC
09
GAL .
W/C

120Z.

10/$1
•

W/C

Limit t Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires July 16, 1977

\

-

-

COU PO N
--

JIFF

ELF POP

$1

·Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Olier Expires July 16, 1977

l

C O UPON

: ·(1

PEANUT . BUTTER :. ·I'J
Reg. or Crunchy $}19 ::\
28 OZ. JAR
W!C : .
Limit 1 Per Customer
~
Good Only at Powell's
~·

Offer Expires July 16, W77 :.f.t

�1- 'I'be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;meroy, o ., Wednesday, July 13, tm

~':&lt;:&lt;·»~~

~

Getting into the swim of.things
The f1rst session of swimming lessons at the Middleport
Pool was completed Monda
with over 75 children alon~
with IS mother assistants participating.
Progress reports on each of
the children have been
prepared by Mary Jane
Deeley and anyone interested
in obtaining a report on their
child may pick it up at the
pool anytime after July !3.
The booklet " Teach in
JohMy to Swim" is aiS::
available from Miss Deeley
or Cherole 1ffinlette pool
manager.
'
Second session of swimm·

,
.•
11 begm
A~~~;:,.,
on J ~ly • \1} proylde bas1c safely m18; va~l&lt; . gin~er and m- f~l1llat1Uit to famili.,; and in1
. e 1ll~~te skills, 8.00 to 8:45 divlduals engaged in water
~~ 1;':;;0 . if:,n'.'l'r, 8 and ?P· 8:45 recr~all?n. The fee is $2.
in~

1

_ - · ~~ner,7years~ld,
a~~ to IO. ~ 5 • ~gmner, five
years 0 d, lO:l5 to ll
~
gmner, two, th~ and
0~ f~%olds_. 11 t~ 11 · 30 a .m.
.
swunrn~ng sesswn
11
~ be . ~f~ed 1~ulAugust.
mi~re WI
an a t sw1m·
tee g class for adults and
andna~ers ~giMmg July 25
c~n;mumg thr~ugh July
29-'th6
~-~· eac evemng
WI a ee 0 •
. ·
• .
w ~lso to~ offered IS a basic
a er sa e Y course, Au~. I
and 2 w1th the purpose bemg
9

nd::

1

r

A bils1c rescue ami water
safety course will be offered,
Aug .. 1 through Aug. 5. T"
Q~lify to enroll, an in·
div1dual must have comp1eted the bas1c water safety
course, be at least II years of
age, in sound physical condi·
lion, ablotoperfonn standing
front dive in reasonably good
fonn; swim 250 yards continuously using a ·Crawl
·stroke, a side stroke, ,and a
~troke on the back usmg an
mverted scissors kick and
breast stroke kick, and tread

Mrs. Murray observes 97th birthday
Mrs.
James
( Lulu )
Murray, 97 on July 9, observed her birthday with
numerous celebrations at her
Middleport home this past
weekend.
A visit from he.r son,
Saturday
William,
on
hightlighted the afternoon

along with a visit from
Beulah White, Pearl Hoff..
man, Gwinnie White and
Texanna'Wells and daughter,
members of the Electa
Missionary Circle from The
First Baptist Church of
Middleport where Mrs.

Family returns from holiday
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Weese of Syracuse
Ohio recently returned from'
a six thousand mile vacation
which took them through the
following states: Kentucky,
Tennessee, Arkansas, Texas,

Murray is a member.
Ladies from the church;s
Busy Bee Sunday School
bosted a party in her honor
Saturday .evening where
refreshments were enjoyed
and gifts presented to Mrs.
Murray by Roma Hawkins,
Nora Jordon, Ethel Hughes,
Rhoda Hall, Freda Edwards,
Leora Sigman, Doris Carder,
Eva Hartley, and Isabel
Winebrenner. Faye Sauer
sent flowers .
On Sunday a family dinner
was held in honor of the birth·
days of Mrs. Murray, and her
great-granddaughter,
Tammy Giles, 9.

l

wat.,1· fur unt!-half minuto..
The fee will be $7.50.
Completing the first swimming session we;e the followingchildren:
Advant-ed beginner: Laura
McCullough, Ken MeCullough, Nick Riggs, Eric
Gryszska, Brian Zirkle, Amy
Louks, Aaron Parker, April
Parker, Rob Denton, Billi Ju
Gordon, Lori Luults, Alan Ar·
nott, Steve Bunce, Don
Bunce, Zandra Vaughan,
Lynn Epple, Laura Horsley,
Misty Whited,
Alan
Spaul&lt;!'ng. ··
Begmner, 5, 6 •nd 7: Leslie
Carr, Lisa Frymyer, Shannon
Coats, Joan Simpson, Missy
Clay, Lori Redman, Tammi
Kauff, Carla Kauff, Shawna
Johnson, Deanna Henderson,
Becky Carter, Trisha Carter,
Brent Zirkle. Kevin King,
Eric Daniels, Leah Daniels,
Kim Eblin, Chuck Pullins,
Kristen King, Susie Pullins,
Scott Hanning , Duane
Johnson, Luke Burdette. and
JeaMie Spaulding.
Beginner, 8 and up: Tom
Watkins, Jim Hicks, Donald
Stein, Patty Ward, Wendy
Barker.. ?. J . Harris, Brenda
May, Beverly Ka uff, Mike
Tromm, Ray Redman, Judi
Mees, Jody Miller, Kim
Deem, Bradley Young,
Valerie Simpson, Billy Eblin,
Charles Denton, Greg Rager.
Beginner, 2, 3 and 4: J . J .
Johnson, Philip Swisher, Joe
Northup Mary Beth Stein,
Jody Smith, Todd Smith,
Tracy Ellis, Beth Dowler,
Carri Swisher, Thomas
Hunter, April Hudson, Frank
Blake, ·Mindy Harris,
Timothy Deem, Randy
MOore, and Patrick Gryszka ..

Awards presented in Toledo

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

Bnan and H1·ure Johnson

.

'

children of the Don~ld
Johnsons, spent the past
week visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Ken Konicek, Nancy and
Cheryl, at Panna Heights.
While there they visited
Niagara Falls ~nd Prest•ott
Beach, Pa .
·
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Melvin Circle
and children, Marianne and
Mark, of Columbus, have
been here visiting with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E .
Blakeslee , and other
relatives...
Fourth of .July weekend
guests of Mrs . Thelma
Grueser, 105 Plum St.
Pomeroy, were Mrs :
Charlotte Emory, Bruce
Kimberly, Barbllra, Rick/
and Ricky , Jr., Albert Col:
atruglio, Joy Ward, Robert
1\lcKenzie, ~II of New Castle,
Pa.; and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Brueser, Brian and Sheila of
Mt. Vernon.
Paige, Parish and Jill Curnutt of lrvirJ,Ky. children of
Mr. - ~n&lt;J Mrs. Bill Curnutt
are here visi\ing their grand:
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Melvin
Bonecutter, High SL

Awards in recogn(tion of
""I'Vit'e to American Legion
.AuXIliary units were
presented to s.veral area individua Is at the Department
of Ohio convention held over
the weekend at the
Conunodore-Perry Hotel beld
in Toledo.
Lucille Saunders, Ruth
Brown, and Lula Hampton of
Lewis Manley Auxiliary 263
each received 500 hour bllrs
in recognition of their work in
veterans affairs and
rehabilitation. Miss Enna
Smith of Pomeroy Unit· 39
ri."Ceived a token of appreciiltion in _corrununity service
work, while Gallipolis was
the unit receivingthe aw~rd
for the best community service report in Ohio, with Lancaster taking second place.
For junior attivilies; the
Pomeroy unit received a
monetary award and a certificate · while Mrs. Bill
Mohler, Junction City.,
received a citation as an
outstanding leader in junior
activities.
Middleport's Unit 263
received ·a citation for the
best all .around program in
veterans aff&lt;lifs in Class 1
with Oak Hill taking th~
award for the best foreign
relations program, and
Jackson receiving a citation
for the book of prayers.
Members of the Pomeroy
unit receiving membership
awards were Frankie Hunnet, Carrie Neulzling, Gladys
Qunings, Faye Wildennuth,
Pearl K,.app, Grace Pratt,· .
Veda Davis, and Marjorie
Reuter. Merit citations for
membership went to Racine
002, Pomeroy 39, and Middleport 263, with national
citations. for rnembership goIng to Middleport 263, Racine
602, Pomeroy 39 and Vinton
161. Mabel Brown of Gallipolis
received a citation for scrapbook and also for her narrative report on foreign rela·
lions. ·
Mrs. Arnold Richards
retiring Eighth District presi:

dent,
participated 1n the lleuten.ant governor of
n'!'Tlerous meetings at the Buckeye Girls" State were
twvention. She was a guest among the guest speakers.
Mrs. Richards participated
at the dinner for retiring
in
the memorial service neld
members of the executive
Sunday
morning at whicb
board, and was in the procesthne
special
recognition was
siUit of officers ~~ the Friday
given
to
two
deceased
ritualiStic opening of the coomembers
of
the
Eighth
v~ntion. On Friday evening
she was also ooe of the District, Mrs. Mrytie Walker
dislillguisbed guests at the ol Ra,cine, second member of
testimonial dinner in honor of the junior activities commitMiss Ann Eschebnan who is tee of Department, and Mrs.
retiring as secretary of Esther Tipple, past Eighth
Department. Saturday she at- District president. Singing at
tended' the past presidents' the memorial service was a
choir of 50 children ages three
luncheon.
.
Represertting the Eight!\ through six frorn the St. John
District at pre-convention t..utheran Church at Oak Harmeetings were Marjorie bor.
At the installation
Goett,
Pomeroy,
Americanism; Mrs. Mabel ceremony, Mrs. Alec Blair,
Brown, Gallipolis, children Welll;ton, was installed as the
and youth; Mrs. Marine new Eighth District presiBurns, Lancaster, communi- dent. A plaque was presented
ty service; Mrs. Gaynelle to Jane Balzhiser, past
McKinstry, Athens, constitu- Department president for her
tion and by-laws; Mrs. Grace work during the bicentennial
Pratt, Middleport, junior ac- year.
Attending the convention
tivities; Mrs. Mary M~.
here were Mrs.
from
Junction City, resolutions:
Richards,
Mrs. Lula HampMrs. ·Catherine Welsh,
ton,
Mf!!.
Zuelelia · Smith,
veterans affairs
and
rehabilitation; Mrs. Lula Lewis Manley Unit 263; Mrs.
Hampton, Unit 263, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs. Catherirfe
Lenora Atkins, Crooksville, Welsh,. Miss Enna Smith,
Rhoda Hackett, Mrs.
and Miss Erma Smith,
Mary
Martin, Mrs. Pearl
Pomeroy, unit activities.
KnapP'
and · Mrs. Marge
Mrs. Kenneth Ray, Central
Unit 39.
Goett,
Pomeroy
Division vice president, ~p~d

Mrs.

Fame, While sands National
Monument, Saguaro National
Monument, Sonora Desert
Museum, Arkansas
Territorial Restoration, The
Grand Canyon, Four Comers,
Mesa Verde National Park,
Five generations were
New Mexico, Arizona, Great Sand Dunes , National
represented
at the party
Colorado, Kansas, Missouri Monument, Dodge City and
attended
by
Mr.
and Mrs. R.
illinois and Indiana.
' Boot Hill. .
·
E.
Ward,
Ravenswood,
W.
Some 110ints of interest
While in Sun City, Arizona · Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
visited included President they visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln's birthplace Ernest E. Jones, cousins of Ward, Ricky, Mike and Cheri,
President L. B. Johnson'~ Mrs. Weese. They were ac- Evergreen: W. Va. ; Mr. and
TRISHARICE
ranch and burial place, The companied by Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. William Dow, Ravenswood;
Mrs.
Kathy
Comer,
Alarm, Carlsbad Caverns Jack Weese and two children
Kandy and Chad, RavensIntc•national Space Hall
of Berea.
wood ; Mr. and Mrs. David
Harpold and Tracy, St .
Albans, W.Va.; and Mr, and
Mrs. Dwane Giles, Tammy,
Three year old Trisha LyM
Angie and David, Ravens·
Rice, daughter of Mr.· and
wood.
Mrs . David Rice, South
Another birthday surprjse
Webster, celebrated her July
WEDNESDAY
was among the first cards
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I :30 12 birthday Sunday afternoon
Polly Cramer
received by Mrs. Murray for
with a party at the home of
her 97th year - a note from Wednesday at the .Columbus · her grandparents, Mr. and ·
LET'S DANCE _
well-wishers, President and and Southern Ohio F;lectric Mrs . Charles Gerard of
Co.
social
room.
- The Southern
RACINE
Mrs. Jimmy Carter.
Middleport.
Band
Boosters
wiU sponsor a
TiruRSDAY .
Attending besides the dance Friday, July 15 from 9
· ROCK Springs Grange, 8 honored guest's parents and
POLLY'S PROBLEM
each of your gasoline credit
p.m. until midnight at Royal
p.m.
Thursday at the halL grandparents were her aunt
DEAR POLLY - When my cards and print on them your
Oak
Park
tecreation
First and second degree work an&lt;! uncles, Linda, David and
grandson was here for a visit license plate nwnber. This
building. Admission is $2 per
he wet the mattress and I saves the embarrassment of
RACINE - The Southern to be carried out.
Paul Gerard ..
person. " Uncle Dougger" of
have not been able to get rid having to admit .you do not Band Boosters will hold a
Trish is also the grand- WXIL radio will provide the
FRIDAY
of the odor. Is there anything remember it and also saves paper drive Friday and
DANCE FRIDAY at Royal daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .music. The dance, open to the
that will remove this smell? the service station attendant . Saturday, July 29 and 30 in Oak Park recreation building Harold Rice; Rutland. ·
public.. is the last for the
It is getting me down and I the trouble and ~ it takes Syracuse, Racine, Letart and begiMing at 9 p.m. Xd·
summer.·
certainly do not ~ant to buy a to go and look. If you go over Portland.
· missiiJ!l $2 per person. Open
new mattress. -E.T.
the surface of 't he card with
Residents wishing to · to the public: Sponsored by
DEAR E.T.- Mrs. C.F.R an eraser and use a pencil it contribute may stack papers Southern Band Boosters.
has a very similar problem so stays on better and is easily on porches or steps under Uncle Dougger of WXIL will
.
perhaps the same answer will changed should that become roof for pickup, or call Kay provid~ the music. Proceeds
help both of you. I do hope so. necessary. I have had several Warden at 949-2728 or Leanna to be used for purchase of
Have you tried baking soda? attendants tell me they wish- Beegle at 9-19-2008.
1
percussion instrwnents for
f.
A paste could be made with ed everyone would lake the
Proceeds will be used for the band.
.tOr
the sOda and water and put on time to dothis.·P.R.F.
the purchase of new petSATURDAY
the spols and · be left to dry
DEAR POLLY - When we cussion instruments for the
HEMLOCK Grove Grange,
The
Meigs
Retired
and then be removed with the pack boxes for a move, even - school. All donations, large or Saturday~ 7:45 p.m. with Teachers' mid-summer
vacuwn. A more drastic if it is just across. town, we small, will be greatly ap- Ruck Spnngs Grange visiting meeting will be held Satur·
remedy might be to wash the put a nwnber on each box and preciated.
~nd presentil)g the progr~m . , day July 16 at the upper
top with a cloth soaked in a then in a notebook put the
The multiphasic health · sheiter hous'e south-bound
Thur ., July 13th thru
salt water solution and then a nilln~r and then list the
screen program to · be lanes, along US Route 33,
weak· ammonia water solu- things that are .in that box.
presented. ·· .
south of Darwin hill. Meeting
.tion. Blot up excess moisture We use a large marker and
SUNDAY
will assemble at 5:30 with a
as you go along so as not to put the nwnber on each side
EDDIE BUFFINGTON potluck dinner following.
penetrate tljrough the filling. of each .box so it can be seen
guest speaker Sunday at There ·will also be a short
Leave uncovered until dry no matter how they are stackSUPERIOR
Forest
United Methodist business session following the
comin~ Church Run
and dry as quickly as possi- ed. A letter could be put on
. Services. at 9 a.m . diruocr. Members are urged
ble. An electric fan blowing each box to signify the room
Public invited to attend.
to attend .
Another of the free film
on it would speed up the pro- the box was to be put in. showlogs for kldo wm start
cess.- POLLY.
CHERYL.
at 3 p.m. at the Middleport
DEAR POLLY - When
Polly will send you one of
Library on Friday, July 15.
grass grows between my her signed thank·you
As well as several short
sidewalk I ·find borax sprinkl- newspaper coupon clippers if
fllms
a special movie will
ed on generously and then she uses your favorite
be
sbo.
wn, wbich any eblld
watered down kills the un' Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
who love• hones will eowanted grass. It works well her column. Write POLLY'S
joy. It Is a Disney movie
for me and some even sav it POINTERS in tare of this
"Hang Your Hat On
called
should last for three years. - newspaper.
the
Wind."
ROSELYN
II
is
aboui
a Navajo boy
DEAR POLLY - A good
who
captures
an escaped
Scottish friend told me that
DANCE
PLANNED
race
horse
and
tries
1o keep
adding one or two copper penA
round
and
square
dance
him
for
his
own.
8eautllu1
nies to a vase of tl!lips will
photography shows the
keep the tulips from droop- will be held at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy
lovely bone and tbe
ing.
scenery
of
Arizona.
Also I find a mouth wash is from 8:30 to II :30 p .m .
Elementary
school-age
to
the
.
public,
Friday.
Open
perfect for removing odor'
children are welcome to
from the hands after peeling the dance will feature music
by
the
Stringdusters
and
these free fllms.
28 oz. JIF
onions or handling fish. Also a
cakewalks
throughout
the
mouth wash used between the
toes after a hath eliminates evening. Admission will be •1
foot odors. Rinse and dry bet· for adults with children under
46 oz. CLARION
ween the toes thoroughly 12 admitted free of charge.
afterusing.- M.G.
·
Ju~
MEETING PLANNED
DEAR POLLY - Alihough
The next Regional Ad·
most of your Pointers are by
32 oz. HIIIIES
visory
Council on Agjng
and for women I like to read
While Quantities Last
them and have used ~ lot of meeting will be held. at 10
Quantity Rights Reserved
Ju~
Pointers and agree with a lot · a.m. Wednesday at the Meigs
We are ·not responsible for typographical
County
Senior
Citizens
18 oz. SMUCKERS BLACKBERRY
of the Peeves.
errors.
:enter.
My own Pointer is to take

of

Social
Calendar

POLLY'S POINTERS

'Trisha Rice
has birthday

9- The Daily Senlinrl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , July

SAlE CONTINUES

and

GOODYEAR

TIRES
.'
"'

Meigs Tire Center, Inc.

Paper drive on

John F_ Fultz, Mgf.

700 E. Mam

Pomeroy, 0.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

'Retired teachers to
k
meet
pot1UC

Venatillty is the key to
Robert. Van den Berg's
'":'cceumhi\li!Ortrayal ofthe
~bollca~y fierce Shawnee
..Prophet • ~~skwatawa,
Tecumseh. ' Americas
mOIIt popular outdoor drama.
Tecumseh leaves his
younger brotl\er, Tenskwata
as acting Chief while he
travela among the Indian
nations forming a con·
federation of 50,~ warriors
to confront the whl\es.
Known as. the Prophet b~
his people, Tenskwatawa
me~ely voices Tecumseh's
clairvoyant predictions. This
power overcomes Ten·
sJ:twatawa and he begins to
v1ew himself as a true
prophet and the real Shawnee

!"

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY,OHIOPROBATE DIVISION
BETTY BRICKLE5,
Administratrix ot the

VS-

BRUCE HOBACK,
Addreu Unknown,
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
OI$TRIBUTEED,
~DMINISTRATORS, ·
EXECUTORS, 1F ANY,
OF BRUCK HOBACK,
DECEASED j

No. 21,131
NOTICE
SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
Plaintiff has brought this
~ctlon naming each of you as
one of the defendants in the
above-named court by fll!no
her cOmplaint on July 2nd,
1977.
The object of the complaint
Is that the real .estate
here Inaner described be sold
In Its entirety, and to pay the
debts of the decedent, Ina
Hoback., deceased ; that the
rightS , interests and liens of
all parties may be fu1ty
determined. actiusted and
protected : that plaintiff be.
authorized and ordered to sell
said real estate according to
the statutes !n such case
made ·a nd proyided, and tor
such other and further relief
aS she may l;)e entitled to ;
that said reB~ I estate Is
described as follows :
The following descr ibed
real estate situated in the
State of 9hio, County of
Mel~s and Village of Racine ,
to-W•t: All of Lot No. E ighty one (11) in said Village of
Racine, Ohio. except seven
(7) feet off the west end of
said Lot. Said lot is bounded
on the East bY Flflh Street.
Refetence Deed ; VOl. 155,
page ~5. Deed Records , Meigs
County, Onio .
You are required to answer
the co"'plalot wllhln twenty.
eight da·y s after 'the 11$1
publication of _this notice ,
which will .be published once
each week for $iX suc::cessive
l weeks.
and ·· the
last
·~ __,publication w ill be made Oh
August lOth, 1977.
In cad Of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as permitted by the Oh io
Rules ot Civil Procedure
within
the time stated
illdQment by default will be
rendered against you lor the
relief demanded in the
complaint.

Valley Bell

BUTTERMILK
~gallon

!+f~t!~

COLGATE

ROYAL CROWN' COLA

.......................
~.'1.39
. .
'

LODI APPLES
CElERY.. ~.~.~~~~......... ?.~~.~~.. 39'

TOOTHPASTE

8

With MFP Auoride

16 oz.

Family' Size

7 Ounces

Umit 1 Please

Nelson 's Reg. 9Qc

TOMATO JUICE ......................... .'..................~. 59
K'EG OF CATSUP. .........'....................;.........·....... 99~
JELLY OR JAM ........................................,.........89e
14'12 oz. JENOS
CHEESE P_IZZA ....................................................69~
17

While Quantities Last
Quantity Rights Reserved
W~ are not, responsible for Jypographica I
erro·rs.

·

The one-eyed Shawnee Prophet Tenskwatawa
Tecumseh:• younger brother, portrayed by Robert Va~
den Berg m the Outdoor Drama "Tecumseh!".

I"

Prices Good Ju~ 13
thru
Ju~ 17th, 1977

89~

l

'

wOO know how to Jearn."

For Color Prints
· 20 Exposures

CALL
•

A thought for the day: U.S
historian llenry . Brooks
Adams said , " What ont:
knows is, in youth, of little
moment; they know enough

KODACOLOR 11·
C126-20

CRISISLINE

'

areas .

992·5554

Limit 1 Please

Nelson's Reg. '1.55

CGiiiiOJn ~tr7-MIUIOOa CO. fQII5 ANO PltCaS
0000 lUNDAY U.Y II .1m n . l IANIOA.V IULY 16,

•m"'

........

WI~ tMI IIGMt 10 UMfl QUANTtnU . NONIIOU»

20%
PUBLIC NOTI~E
A hearirig on t_
he Olive
Township Budget will be held
at 7:30 P .M . July 18, 1977 ~t
the office of the Trustees.
Reedsv ille .
Ada B isse i I ,
Twp . Clark

~Boneless Top

Sirloin Steak

{7) 13. \tc

.. $229
EXCAVATION ·COMPLETE septic
1ystems. Springs developed .
AU work Is guoront~d. Brcid
lewi~ . phone 742 -24Sl.
EXCAVATING. BACKHOE, do'e' .
trencher , low Boy. d1.,1mp truck
trucks . sepJ ic sys1ems. Bill
Pullins, phone 992 ·2478 day or
night.

AUCTION. EVERY F,;doy. 7 p.m .
New and used merchandise.
Ohio River Auction in Meigs
Plaza 409 Pearl St., Middleport ,
Oi"llo . Phone (30.4) 773 -5471 .

GOUNTY: MEI.GS .
PUB.LIC NOTI·CE
IF YOU hOve a ~ervice to offer,
The following documents
wont to buy or sell something,
were received or prepared by
ae looking for work ... or
The Ohio Environmental
whatever, .. you'll get results
Protection Agency during the
foster with o Sentinel Worlt Ad.
previous weelc: . The effective
Call 992-2 156.
date of each final action is
stated . Anyone aggrieved or
YARD SALE, July 14, )5. 16, 829
adversely affected by a f inal
Page. St . Middleport . Entire
.action to issue. deny , mod ify ,
collection ~ of Avon bottles,
revoke , or renew a permit ,
th
ld b 1
1
0
o. license. or variance ; or to
er 0
ott es. 9 ossware,
,. approve or disapprove plans
~lathing, some antiques, etc .
and speclfic _
a tlo"s , may f ile · YARp . SAlE on Church St. in
, an appeal wlftt Ttie En -"
Syracuse at John Bentley
Board
·
.,. vlronrnental
Review, Suite 305
, 395 of
resi d ence, Wed s. J u1y l 3 to· FriBroad St. , · Colum.bus, Ohio
dDy , July IS, '9 :00 ti115:00. P.M .
43216, within thirty qo) d-'!VS
Vf~ry .nice girls' dresses. ieans,
of the effective Date. purcut.offs. and tops ; sizes 6· 10.
Lodie1dresses, shofls, blouses ,
:suant to Ohio Revised Code
and slacks , sizes a . 12. Some
Section 3745.07. Unless such
.. final action .was preceded by
maternity clothes , size 12,
the same or substantially the
men's suites and . slacks. pic·
some proposed a_U.lon, all
tures , clo.ck•, babu oininP, polsuch final actiorls ~
r
" idenlif.!ed. Such persons may
ty , corseat, bock pack, e· ectrlc
request an adJudicat ion
. wo.rming
dish ,
walker .
• hearing before The OhiO EPA
Bedspreads , drapes , patio urn on a proposed action to issue ,
brella .
bicycles , dishes ,
deny, modify, revoke, or ·
typewriters, books , electric
renew a permit, license, or
dee'p fryer. electr-Ic razor , stop
by on your way to the pool.! .
' variance; or to approve or
disapprove
J:dans
and
_,_____...._____ .-----~
~~
specifications, within thirty
YARD SALE, Saturday, July 16, B .
(30) days of the issuance
till s. Robert Hawk , Hemlock
~ date . ORC 37~5 . 07 does not
Oh
.., provide for adjudication
G:.:;'0~'~
"·:.=:.:c·.---,-• hearlnQ requests or appeals
PORCH , SALE , Mark Yoocha'!'
• on orders , verified com residence, Yellow Bu~h Rood,.
f plaints,
or enforcement
Roci.ne . School clothes and
-. compliance · schedule' letters.
d
L
d
.... Wfthlfl 30 days of publication
~~--!ues_~~!?tu r . ~Lin a newspaper in the affected
HUGE -YARD '·Sole , 8;00, . 13th,
cour'ity, any person may also : .
1-4th, 15th on Rt. 554. 1'/, miles
(1) submit written comments _
from Cheshire at luther (QI·
relating to ac·tions, proposed
.-. actions, verified complaints ,
emon 's residence.
DrOpes,
bedspr8ods, clothing, antique
• or enfot'"cement compliance
schedule letters; (2) reQuest
dishes , depression gloss, sbrTte
a public meeting regarding
furniture , lots more . Everything
proposed actions ; and -or {3)
reasonable .
ret~uest notice of further ·
- ~-- _,_ ------~-- actions or proceedings. All
~ FAMILY YARD Sole. Wednes "' ret~uests for adjudication
doy , 13th and Thursday , Uth
hearings . and
public
from 9:00AM to 3:00PM Baby
"' meetings, . anf ottler com·
itemti. small children clothing,
~ munlcatlons
concerning
men and women's clothing,
public meetin~s. adjudication
books, and other items too.
J. tlearlngs,
verified com·
·
·
plaints;· and regulitlons,
Turn right by Five Point Gas
should be Jddressed to The
Station about 1 y, .miles out on
Legal Records Section, Ohio
Flatwoods Road, watch fo·r
...: EPA, P . 0. BOX 10~9,
signs
-.. Columbus. Ohio A3216, (614)
~ · · ·..
- ---" · 466-6037. Unless 9therwise
YARD SALE ~ Julv 16. H. l .
t steted In particular notices,
Milhoons , 1'11 mile west 681
1 all othet communications
from Corwin, 26 in. bike, 3 '" Including
comments on
wheel bike, tools. 1975 Go·
.. proposed actions. should be
Cart, B a w T.V .. clock : dishes,
addressed either to The Air
1 h
·
Perm its and Compliance
.. ' . 01 log, m•sc._
.
Monitor-Ing
Division
or
GARAGE SALE, Tues.thru Friday,
·,· wPohrlcmh~v"e~d.,A P Pprpo;:plr~=~~~ 0 ~f
10:00 till A~OO. large and small
The OhiO S:PA, p. o. Box
drenes, plenty of clothing,
11
lOAf, columbus, OhiO ~3216.
couch. Old Enterprise buildtng
lssuanc• of notice of
on Rt. 33.
..
registration
YARD SALE, Weds ., Thursday, fri·
,,
POiheroy Jr , H1gh Bldo.
cloy. Old Rl. 33 beo-n
..
Ellt Main Street
Sowmill and Chlhp'er Mill . Real
Pomeroy, . Qhlo. etfectlve
__. b
dolo 07 -0.-77.
..-:-"' uyo. Watc 1or s;gns ,
.:~c. I lo n ' N I ' I Y.UO SALE.• Thundoy ill Fr;cloy .
I IDOL
338 William St. , Middleport .

20-oz.
W,hite Bread

K~oger

e..

C~EAMY PEANUT BUTTER ....................... s1.49

Prices Good
13th
thru
17th, 1977

1.o riots in New York City, in country."
In 1878, the Russo-Turkish
which mnre than 1,000
war ended.
persons were killed.
In t975, Jsraellaunched two
In 1865, Horace Greeley
air
raids on a big Palestinian
wrote an editorial in the New
refugee
camp in Lehanon and
York tribune in which he
Palestin.ian
guerrillas replied
said " Go west, young man, go
with
rOI'ket
attaCk$ in border
west and ~,&gt;row up with tbe

c

When asked about his role,
Van den Berg says he is very
• pleased to be playing a true
Indian, written from the
Indian standpoint. Bob said,
"I hope YOll will all come see
4
'Tecumseh!'' this summer.
You will love the show and, I
hope, hate me.''
HTecumseh!" is now
playing Tuesday through
Sunday at 8:30 p.m. through
September t. The overture
starts at 7:55 p.m. and a
reservations-only buffet is
availableafter5:45 p.m. each
night. For information arid
reaervations, write P.O. Box
73, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601.
Locilly call 7'1~ or call
toll free from any point in
Ohio 800-282-2015.

Manning 0 . Webster
Probate Judge
Meigs CoUnty, Ohio
(71 6, 13, 20, 27 (81 3. 10, 61c

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD..........................~~:.99~ .
·
BOLOGNA ......... ~.~ .~~~.. ~!~.~~ .. ~~·. 99~ ......~~i~-~.. ~~:.$1.09
POLISH SAUSAGE ...........:............................~.~: 79~

The morning stars are
Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury aod Saturn .
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
American actor Sidney
Blackmer and American
educator Mary Emma
. Wooley were born oo July 13
. - she in 1873 and he in 1895.
·· On this day to history :
In 1863, opposition to the
Federal Conscription Act led

The Deadly Hero",

"Network"·.

Plaintiff,

Sat., July 16th

11

Unit.t&gt;d (&gt;rc!ifii lnh·r,.uti,mol
Today is ·wednesday, July
13, tho• !94th day of 1977 with
171 to follow.
The moon is moving from
its last quarter ll)ward a new

moon.

"Taxi Driver" and the
Academy Award winning

Est•te of lnl Hoback.
Dtce•sed,

Phone 742-2100

Free film for
children

Chief. In direct violation of
Tecumseh's orders, he leads
the
Shawnees
in
a
. dlsastroll$ly premature at·
tack on General -William
Henry Harrison at Tip·
pecanoe.
Van den Berg is a partlcularly versatile actor
tracing Tenskwatawa's
growth from a young impetuous
buck
eagerly
awaiting his first tribal
conference, to a cold
calculating chief, obsessed
with power
A member of Actors'
Equity Association, Van den
Berg's credits include sucb
off-Broadway · shows as
"Caligula", " Easy Outs" and
"Macbeth". His film credits
include "Pink Panther
Strikes Again", "The Next

Man'\

Defendants.

ROAD KING

BakinK soda .for bed odor

Van den Berg brings new
dimension to Tecumseh

et· ~1.,

ON

aht• Atmu•u~t·

4

oz.

STOKLEYS
APPLESAUCE ........................... 2/75~ .·
14 12 oz. LUCKS ..
CHICKEN &amp;DUM PUNS ............................... 6f
ARMOUR
TREET.
.........
:
........
:
..
;
..........................
99'
7q oz. TEEN QUEEN
CUT GREEN
· 2/7f
I
BEANS....................................
1

12 oz.

·.

o,

51

°

t7l 13, IIC

• •. 'f1ll PIIIOIAII. ..

AliT illl POWDIIIIJt

Hawaiian Punch
Dri1tk Mix
IEGULAI OR CHUI

79C
89

Any Size Pk,.
Ground Bee ....
Serve 'N' Save
·Luncheon Meats.~~::
.lb.

ALL V A.IIETIES SliCED

VAC

Kroger
Coffee ........... ..

,lb •

WITH COUPON

Can
LIMIT 1 CA~ WITH l7.$0 ADDitiONAL PURCHASE

C

$1

$1

KrogerWiener or3·.
Sandwich Buns .... :;.~~-.

li"'IE'iiE" . ..,E ·" '"'·:tlllljjl

•rv
, Club •;,.
Count
I (
ce ream ... :....Gal
c... :

89 c;
;

Party Mix or
Stick Prettels
I rtlloVTUU-f&amp;fll,l171

I'D 8IIKT "API'\JtMU mit ' t-. filii

~~~~~~~~:~~:.".'!~:~:c~:"
CMJAIANTU
Wt

Jt.~

tol~ht ,

wfMtt

H

tl

,..... ,.., , H. lllv•

...
t.

•O."Iilltlo"' ~oey,...; '"~
CO"'rol. Wf fll" M .f

"l)~dde~t. SpedaU

California
Cantloupes

Shell
No Pest Strip

~~~::;. . . . . . .31:;~ - $1
::~~;~.~- . .~-- ~4 1~ : · $11 -;.:~~~ Jl
KROGER

NO CINrll SLICilHMOVED

Full Shank Half ·
Smoked Ham .
Freestone
Fresh

1-lb.

....o~~ ....,................
·~·lllllltf

...

AYiiiMie II Stwa Witlt.hi Dt,lrtlllllb

:i~h~.~~-~~~w~= $399
Russer's
Meat Bologna
.'•

Homogenized
Milk ·
Gal.
P•per
Ctn.

29

•

~&lt;1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

''"'"''
,,..J ..,-....... .
•AIN CHIC:k fer .tit
-~·"''"

'"'.,

..

tM I,.Citll
' ' ' ' ' '""
tl..,.
wllh1~
We

JOn, •.

, ...,.nt.. ....... "'
otll. It ytw ' ' ' , ...

llhttllthH
l(r....

will

wl"'

,...........

t

...

l.,IM,
,., htl"
..-.,....-y.

• •• .t ...

�•

...-------·· Television log

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , JIAiy 13, 1977

••

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

WEDNESDAY, JULY
)

C~h

hbn
~;·a~

\ 1 "1'):1'

· ·~
! &amp;t

I :!&lt;.I

l.:iO

ldau:

4ida;.

1 .~

!~

.u:;

:1. 00

Eonil ~1111 1 u\l'l' tlw.· uumn·w u lo1
wunls lS 4 t'o.'Ut :t ~r ~Aurd ~·r lia} ,
t\d~ rwnmq.: u t h ••r 1110•11 l'lllllol.'l'Uint•
du~ ::. "''ali btt t:ha •· ~,-. 1 .Itt t ilt.' J iltt)

r .Ut•
11 1CUWJI) , Carll nf Th.ank ~ anu
Obit WI I) : 6 t:cn t:; P"r '!''urd. IJ;Itlit
Ul ltlllllUIIJ C~u;h lllll.d\'IU\t'l '.

In

M••l.lile Home ~~ IUkl Yard l;OI It~
iU'l' iil' t 't'pl.t•d Of1 ] ~ \111\ h 1 '&lt;1~ 1 'oll\ h
nm~­

..

, ••1'\kt. :!:5 rent thar)W f,u· il\tUI
Ull&gt;: Bux Nwnlx•r h 1 Can·
lurt•l

••f Tlw· :W.·n-

Tht• Pubh sfk'r r t•:.t&gt;rt'l '.!i lilt' t 1~111 ·
tu t'l.lll ••r r~Jt't'l iU I~ cu t-. d.~·nwtJ tO.
Jl't'\JtluaL Till' Publt:.ht•t V.l ll IIIII ill'
rt'Spo~ l ~lbk f1•t 1\kl \t' H ~&lt;tl l
UISl'l'l U\II

m,..

••11\' llll'ur-

Pillllk' 9!tl-tl5ti

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Car 3 ANO 4 RM. furn ished and 'unturntshed opts . Phone 9'92
mechomc wanted Contact Mr ,

EXPERIENCED

end Volkswogon , Gollipolit. COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rr.
Apply in person . no phone
33 len miles north of Pom~roy
calls .

Oomonsfrate

enaoyment .

guaranteed toys qnd gilts

~or

FURNISHED APl . Adults only , no
p"ts . Phone 99,2--3874 . Mid·
Coli
dleport .

Friendly Home Parties , no col -

lectihg

deH~~tering .

or

9-49-2800

or

992 -2703 . Also,

booking parties .
FRIENDLY TOY Parties has open-

ings

lor

managers

and .

demonstrators .
Demonstrate
gurontelld toys and gifts . No

cosh irwestment · no collecting
or

delivering,

no

Swimming
Instructor Needed

COAL . limestone , and calctum
chlonde and calcium brine f(lr
dust control and spedol mia:1ng
salt for farmers , Excels1or Salt
Works, Moin Street , Pomeroy ,
Ohio or ptlone992· 3891 .

Ca II l 304) 882-2634
and (304l 882-2245

CAMPER , S600. Af.so , horse
trailer, $450. Phone (614 ) 698-

e r~~~~~~J~~~j­

Risl~ -s~;; ~.:e~~;=&amp;oordin~~

IN LOVING Memory of my hut•
Indoor-Outdoor runs, grooming
band and father, Ike Baker who
all bread$, t dean sanitary
paned away July 13, 1976.
facilities oe 367-7112 . Cheshire .
Although you are gone .
_P_~n.!_
(6
36~_:03.92c.~--­
You 're forever in our thoughts,
H00f
HOLLOW
. Buy, sell, trade
As your spirit will always be with
or train horses . RUTH REEVES ,
us.
trainer. Phon~ {614) b9B -3290 .
Oh , what we would give to sit ,
·----And talk wi th you awl-tile,
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs .
And see your greet smile.
(Min .} Collies . 2 females, 7
Baker ,
Mrs.
Eloise
Edna
weeks old . Shots and wormed .
Willbarger and family, Mr and
PI-tone (614 ) 367 -0292 or
Mrs . James (Maxine) Spires &amp;
367-7112.
family , Mr . and Mrs. Douglas
(Shirley) Lambert , Miss Sharon MEIGS COUNTY Humol'le Society
An imal Careline, 992-7660. or
Boker .
after6p .m., 992-5427.

'!I

-~~-----

....

-~--

BEAUTY Parlor . all
breeds styled the way you like
No drugs used ' Call for appointment, 7-42-316:2 .

DOGGIE

f

AKC

REG . COllie pu;pies . - 6
weeks old. Phone 742-2292 .

FR~E

KITTENS, contact Freddie
Houdashe!t after 6 p.m. Phone

992-2520.
. ,§~
5:

1973 MONTE CARLO Landau V-B.
power steering , power brakes,
air conditioni!lg, stereo 8 track
and om radio. Phone 985 -4123 .

1974 CHEVROLET Suburban 9
' postenger. under 34 ,000 miles
HAVE VACANC_
Y lor man or
w1thextros . Phone985-3553 .
woman , in · my home . Local ·
,
Phone Shi rley 1970 AM~ Hornet , 6 cyhnder
references
Jones, (61.tl)667-3402.
outomohc , good condition ,
$550 . Call after 5 p.m.

THE SEW N" SEW Outlel Store
992· 2747 .
located in the former Post Of. ------·- - -·

fice building in Racine llas 1968 CAMARO 327 automatic,
polyest~r double- knits , $1.95
best offer. Call otter b p.m
_
and $2 .98 yard . These fabrics _ 2.tl7· 25-t1 ·
are high quality m illends, 1971 VOLKSWAGON, Good con·
regular pnced from $-4 to S6 per
dihon . Call949-2728.
yard. Open Monday thru Saturday , 9 till 4. Owned and 1964 CHEVROLET, runs good.
Phone 992-)1;25 . __:_ _ _ ____:.
operated by Denise Snodgron.
1970 FORD ECONOUNE Von , 6
cyl. automatic Radio , delux
/NSJ'RUCTION
tnm . Phone days , 992 -6298,
~ 'DI'it&gt;tn tMp/ej'H.,. lfJ'#' uwd,;,J ~ ­
evenings , 992 -323~
.
~Ud '114 .,.,.,, ~ ,.,.~q6 f11.

,.,.. rtt..~ ,,.,.,a ••u~"" •uns.

318, V-B o-m, fm rod to ond tape
piQyer , 34 ,000 miles . Steel
belted rocliol tires . Phone

985-3577.

ReaicV:tt Training .

.... -----

SPRING GARDEN Supplies , Cabbage , cauliflower
broccolt
and head lettuce pla nts,
yellow, white, and red onion
sets , anton plont1, Kennebec .
cobbler, Katahdin , Red Ponttoc
and Red Losada seed potatoes .
Bulk garden seeds , pottmg soil .
peat moss , fru1t trees and rose
bushes . M1d woy Market .
Pomeroy , Oh1o , 992 2582 ,
Bob:s Market, Mason, W.Va .

(30-4 I 773-5721.

1-42 in, cost iron kitchensmk , 1
basin and 1 drain board, hang
on wall type, wh1te , l-3 burner
' gas, hotP.Iate. Phone992·5714
-·---

-

\.--

o~

----

ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil attachments . Ltke new, asking

$2250. Phone (61A) 698 ·3290
-- --"-· ... --- ------ ~-·

HANGING BASK ~TS , pots , and
geran i ums .
Cleland ' s
Greenhouse ,
Gera l d in e

-

~&lt;:!~lond, ~~dne :_~hio .

LOST FEMALE Siamese cat wearing whi te colklr in Pomeroy
vicinity . Coll992-321-4 .

New

__

- ---

S415
~50

Good
Used
Refrigerators. S200 each .

(2)

Pomeroy Landmark

~'l"'··~~ack W. CarSey, Mgr
~

YELLOW FREESTONE canning
peoches now 1n season .
~ Available at any quan 1 tie~ .
Pleose bring containers.. Midway Mkt . PomeroJ. 992 ·2582 or
Bob's Market , Mason . 773 5721 .
·---- ----~~----

1975 CR125 Hondo
phone949-2410 .

Phone 992-2181

YAMAHA , HARLE'Y-OAVIDSON &amp;
Can-Am Motorcycles Complete
soles and fartla stic service
Hours M-T, T 9-6. W-F 9-7. Sot.
9-5. "The Motorcycle Poeple of
Sout heastern Ohta ·· Athens
Sport Cycles Inc. 20 W St1mson
A ve .. Athens, Oh Phone (614)
16FT. A LUM Run-A-Bout, 60 k.p.
Johnson motor and troller at
$895 . Phone 992 -3835 or
992-2351.
.

~hone992-6138 .

JOHN DEERE Crawler Backhoe
endlooder and dump truck.
Phone 992-7479.

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS

Strickly wholesale to all.
Not less than 112 case.
~

MiUer Produce
&amp;

STARCRAFT 10th anniversary sale
or\ mini-motors, trailers . and
folddowns . Trovelstar 25 ff.
$4~ . 00 : 20 ft. mini· motor
$10,850.00. We sell service and
qoolity . Camp Conley Starcraft
Soles , Rt. 62 north of Pt Plea·
san I.

Garden Center
1210, Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Otlib

"''ddlepml. Coli (304) 675-~20~ .•

JAYCO CAMPING Trailer s.
cust om mode SWISS COLONY .
small tandems Maple Leaf ,
Rental , Service . Supplies ;
Meigs 28 or 32 to 8oshon .
Owne~ Robert Codner, Long
Bottom , Ohio.

· MAIN
POMERoy, 0 .

·

985-390'1.

LIKE NEW. 1972 28 ft . Carriage ,
air con ditioned , tub ond
shower, awning, forced air
1-teot plus elect. heat, many
fttatures . Con be seen ot
Hickory Lakes Campground,
Tupper Pla ins, Ohio or call
(61-4 ) 667 33-49
-~~
.:..-----..----~·
1976 "HOLIDAY RAMBLER '' 32 n.
(5,000 Serie~ ) full size bath w1th
shower. air condttioning, ownings, looded w•th ' extras . Like
nevt_. Jomes _ Ingels, Mason ,
_ W.V_!! _P_ho~!J~)773-5161

= '------ -

1

doy! -·
'

~.~ior::..r., '; "~'

(bU)

---Boy's bike ,

b69-37B5.
26

--·
INCH

Channel
Moster pollee radio , high choir
baby stroller; telephone ,
bench, curtains; and othe(
items Coll742 -2078..

------TRUCK BED. 197b CheVrolet Fleet~----

side . os new will trade for 1969
lo 1972 Chevrolet Sed m good
cond•hon or will pay cash for
bed Coll992-7494
·
~

---

--

---

REfRIGERATOR .

IB

ou.

ft.

fros tfree. Top fr&lt;eezer, ovpcodo
_gr~en . $200. Phone9q2-7_49.4 .

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-2-3
C B Mob ile Transceiver
comp le te with weather
_proof PA speaker, 2 way
base- loaded CB antenna,
for roof top or trunk mount .
Power corCI , coaK, antenna
cal;lle ~nd all hardware ,
included .

ONLY
U9.95

IB FT. ARROWCRAFT Boat. 75 h.p.
motor. $900. Call949-2498.

F-;Rent
FOil RENT OR SALE · !972 Modell
bedroom mobile kome. 12 • 45 .

Pomeroy landmark

9.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Ail.
Phone 992-2181

s..

at 493 Broadwoy St . Mid· USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
dleport .
Timberjock Skidder 208GS;
Fronkline
132 AXL Detroit
BUSINESS BUILDING in New
Diesel Engine ~ Morbork 636
Hoven . W.Va .. 20 x 45 main
Deborker w -20· tn feed and '10'
busi ness' earner. Phone (614 )
outl&amp;ed table; Contoct Dennis
742· 2255.
Smurr , phone (6 I -4 ) 838 -5345.

TUPPERS PLAINS. OH New 2

bedroom , furnished or un - TWO OFFICE Desks. S25 · eoch.
Coli9A9-2537
furnished opartment, $170 un ·
fur., $190 fur. 'plus electric. no ASI-ILEY STOVE Dealers;, fh,tnnlng
~~~ . Phone (I") 667·J3.49 . .
Special Summer Sr\ife,. Large
COO , $300. Blowers , $40 Call
• RM . AND BATH furmshed oport morntngs, (614)698 7191
. ment for rant. Phone 992-5908.

ALMOST

NEW

3

bedrooms ,
2
baths,
carpeted, lovely k i tchen,
for mal din ing, 1 acre of
ground, ca rport . VE RY

NICE S30,000.00 .
COUNTRY LIVING About 2 acres, 1112 baths ,
formal dining, 4 bedrooms.
some carpeting. storage
bldg . 2 car garage, close to
m i ne
area .
ONLY

W. Main

Pomeroy
After Hours

992·2298

Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT ,

Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

CMpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone M•ke Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

Ali"gnment, . wheel
balancing, lune-up,
brake work, minor
repair .

' 'The Originators
Not The Imitators ..

Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by
appointment. Ph. 741-2005.
6·5·1 mo. Pd ..

2-23-1 mo.

TE~FORD(B
- .

R[ AllOR

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
992- ~325

$35,000.
COUNTRY ACRE -

Phone 992-6282
SALES AND SERVICE
6·23 ·1 mo. Pd .

HOMESIT~S

for sale, I acre and
. up. Middleport, near Rutland

Coii99,·74B;_
1' - - - NEW 3 bedroom house. 2 boths,
all elec. , 1 acre, Middleport,
dose to Rutland . Phone 992-

New
3

SMALL form lor sole , 10~, down,
-owner financed . Monroe Count,-, W Va . Phone (30-4 ) 772.]1~ (J0.&lt;)772·322_7c.
. ---,.
COUNTRY farmland w1th secl ud. ed wOods , water and good access in Monroe County , W. Va.
$1 .000 down, coli (304) 772-

2

baths, equipped kilChen,
din ing and \.ltility rooms.
BRICK - A bedrooms, llh
baths, fireplace i n the
l1v ing roo m ; ~arpet ing ,
na,tural gas furnace,
utilities on co rner l ot

an

-~~.E.?il 772~ 3227 .

with

;.......c .

VA-FHA , 30 yr . ftnancing . Ireland
Mortgage , 77 E. State, Athen s,

phone (614) 592-3051 .
5 ROOM HOUSE. bolh. 2 porches.

Large 5

one scr eened in , garage and
carpor t. Wolkmg d1stance lo
Elementary School and town.
Forced air furnace. Located ot
304 Wettgall St. , Pomeroy call
0!!: ~~~_!8 . _~~-

built-In
3

full basement,
au tomat ic
f urnace.
car port- garage , and 2
acres of land. $25,000.

FLEA

MARKET .

A-1 BUSINESS

.

a·nd BUILDING

Su i table building in Dexter .
Will sell on land con trac t .

MIDDI.EPORT

2

bedrooms, large living, and
small lot to mow. All
uti liti es. Only $11 ,000.

STOP AND THINK, WILL
THESE BE
HIGHER
NEXT YEAR?
Helen L. Tnfard
G. Bruce Teaford
Associates

or parties. Only interested
people should inquire .

Books shown on request.

CAU. 99~-2~9

bedrooms. Pl:z baths , utility room . Nice Kitchen with
dining area . Concrete porches. Nat. gas F .A . furnace.
Nice country setting with approx.. 3:14 acr, land in
Easlern Dlstri cl, 2 mi.o.ff Rt. 7 'Ask i ng$~,BOO.

garage . Lac . In Chester. Price $19.800.

KIDS

IN

YOUR HAIR, LOOK

wrap around porch, garage, large lot. all overlooking

EASTERN DISTRICT -

HENRY E. CLELANO
R!;ALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
• Clel•nd
Associ•tes
'1'12·2259- HS 411?'

URPPE
"""''"' ~ ....

1

Automatic
Transmission Service

WHERE. DECISIONS
IN CA!S&gt;ESOF

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

. TO e;E MADE,

IN.JUI&lt;:Y AR'!" APT

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE .

REASONABLE

-

RATES

LI~~LE

RITAUN
ORPHAN

ANNIE-BURIED

WEll , IF HE
010, WE' ll 6fT
11 8ACKEASIL.'1

HE PI\UST t1AVE
At..L HE
CO\Il.D CAJI:RY
TA~H

Reedsville, 0. Ph. 371-4250
5-27-TFC

BAGS- AND JUST

MA~

THAT R)RMULA OF
"l,d,NE'Y's·.'

WHAl IS THAT SOUND?

YeS!erd• .,
V

I

1112 acres at levelland, nke

12&lt;64 all carpeted mobile nome with 2 BRs, living
room, kitchen and bath. 2 rooms built on. nice family
room with fireplace , plenty of garden space, some fruit
trees. Large workshop and block cellar . City water and

septic taok . Nice counlry seHing on County Rd . 28 .
Price 515.'100.
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
bath. Two more . small bedrooms could be finished
upstairs. Also garage, storage building, strawberry
patch and gardd'n space . Driveway is &amp;lectrlc heated .
Nice Ohio River view . Furniture can be boUght extca~
Price for quick cale. House and tot, $12,600. ~

Clll Jimmy Doem At 949-2381

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles , CROUP RAINY

Rl . 1
M.iddleport, Q.
992-5724

AIJD 'iOV KOOW (q~AT'~

Complete .
hies
and
' Service and Supplies.

SO

f:lXX&gt;

;..60.\T. IT

laJR FIR-ST P~(;IJT 1&lt;5~'T
DVE: ~ 90 OAL/S!

BRADFORD. Auctioneer, Complete Service . Pttone 9419-2487
or 949-2000 . Racine , Ohio; Critt
Bradford .

5 Frank ad·
mission
II Bard's river
12 Girl 's name
13 Locatipn
H ~ · tung
15 Asian river

meaning
somewhat
21 Subdued
22 Before
· room
or date
23 BE!"rt a nd
namesakes
25 Social
rank
26 Mind
· 27 Movie
sleuth
Presidential title
( abbr.)
29 Bodies and
cities, e.g.
~~,32Dixie
state
(abbr.)

3825 .

coveting , septic sys~ems ,
dozer . backhoe. dump 1ruck.
limestone , gravel." bfocktop
paving , Rl . 143':' Phone 1 (614)

SEWING MACHINE Repair$ , ser·
vice , aU makes , 992·2284. The ·
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sa les and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

HOWER~Y~-:-Ac:N=D-M,-:-:A-:R:cTI,.-N-E:c•-·

20 Suffix

Sweepers . toasters, Irons: all
small appliance•. Lawn mower .
next to Stote Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61-4} 985-

992.585B .

MOBILE Home Repair, Elec .,
plumbing and heating. Phone

house

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

REMODELING , Plumbing. healing •.
Qnd all types of general repa1r .
Work guaranteed 20' years ex pertence. Phone992 -2•09.

GASOUNEAU.EY

698·7331 . -----~- EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
HARRISON'S T.V. Repair. Service
Colis . 276 Sycamore, St .. Middleport . Phone 992-2522
~-

backhoe work ; dump trucks
ond lo-boys for hire ; will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
gravel . Call Bob or Roger Jeffers , day phane 992-7089,
mghl phone '192-3525 or 992-

5232.
1974 SCHULTZ Classic 14 x 70. 3
bedrooms , 7 x 10 h . expondo in
living room , Rock -A -Boy win . dow in bedroom , unfurnished
ea:cept stove and refrigerotor.Seen ltved in 1 yrs ., underpinn·
ing, anchoring, and porch . Ex cellent condition, Sll ,000. Coli
247-3791 .

SAVE ON
CARPETING

1975 HILLCREST 12 x 502 bedroom
total electric, excellent condi·
lion. Con be seen At Kingsbury
Home SOles . 1100 E. Main,
__P~meroy ._Oh-:-.- ::--::-:-c:-1975 ALLEN 12 x 55 2 bedroom ,
factory installed woodburning
fireplace in living room. C::gn be
seen a t Kingsbury Home Soles,
~E. Ma~. Porrl!roy, OH.

12 ond 15 ft. width Carpet •
robber INtck.

bROOM &amp; BATH Trailer for sole;
Pl-lone247-2252,

Good St!KIIon Ill

PIANO TUNING, lane Daniels. 1..2
years of service. Phone

. 992-2082.
WATER WELL drilling . Phone
Wiltiam P. Grant at 742-2879
. __o!ter~~·-f.!l· _ --.---~--­

PENNZPIL RUnAND open daily
ti ll 10. Clo&amp;ed Mondays ,
wrecker service, tire repair .
Phone 742-9575 or 742-2081 .

·- -- -- . --

11 Uncertain

DOWN
1 Essential

2 Spanish
province
3 Unlikely
( 4 wds. )

4 He1m

Yesterday's Answer
. direction .
16 Jewels
7:1 Wine
19 Not one, 29 Utah city
. 5 R~te high
6 Like a calf
. nf
ll 30 " That'
1 orma Y
sa 7 LeMon's mate
22 Winglike
baloney!"
8 Closely
23 Hit upon
(2 wds.)
4
&lt; wds . )
24 Texas
31 Full of rocks
9. Box-score
city
"36 Sunder
entries
25 Engine
!17 Va. mill!.
tO Parasites
sound
sch.

L

YOU SAID, QJRLY "!AIR
WARM5fl?, BUT B01H G0C:p

IN !HE

nation

1-:-::-+-+-+-+--+-

One letler oimply stands for another. In lhla aample A It

on sa it.

C Rl'PTOQUOTES
MSDJD

tall742-2211
TALK TO
WENDEI.L GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

ISDA

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

I S DA

............ •.'• .:
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~ i_ FRIDAY TIL 5, ~
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Cbe Sal At 5 P.r.t

• r•2-2211

All ......o

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.

aU"aAN

· ················~··~·····

FA

U~7'7

,

SGKD;

D P ·D J C

VGLAH

BGPD

Kl.nl Fe'lur~s Syndiute, Inc.

•

•'

RUTLAND
..::..·. PU•nu•

ZGC

NM

BGPD

MSDJD'V

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1 : oo--Tomorrow 3,4 .

2: 1Q-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 - Sand 9 p. m. And Then There Were
None; ; and 11 p.m. Silent Movie.
Coble Channel s - 6: 30. p.m . Testimony Time ; 7:00
Paul Gaudino Family Fitness; 7:30 Home Digest;
8:30 Cable Spotlight; 9:30 Consultatio•y 10 ,00 700·
Club.

,,

13

NM

·",.
"

given you the rufl and-discard ~
youhoped for . He also hasn't .
led a low diamond . The lead of ,:
the queen or jack would have . :'

been automatic for most

·~

,players with just one diamond
honor while the lead of the
. q~een would be automatic lor
any expert who had ~n dealt
queen plus some small
diamonds .
If you think that West is an
expert you should go up w1tli

:.

.WEST
EAST "'
• 93
• 5
¥J 951
9i086 "·
+Q 88
+JH2 •
4KQI08
4 97543 ,
•
SOUTH ID)
•,
.AKQJ4
..:
::
., Q '13
dummy's
ace and finesse '·
t K 53
against Ea~t for the jack •.
olo A"J
•
b~cause from queen-x•x he :
Both vulnerable
had to lead the queen while ~
from queen-jack he might •,
West North Ea!lt South
well have led the jack If you :;
1.
don't
think he is an expert let..;•
Pass 3•
Pass !NT
the
trick
come around to your
5N.T.
Pass 5•
Pass
king and play West !pr the
Pass 6•
PasS 6.
Pass Pass Pass
jack. Or . better yet , take a ~
Opemng lead - K4
peek at the East-West cards
and see what to do.
By Oswald &amp;r James Jacoby
You are playing in a tourna·
men! and fmd yourself in a
A New York reader wants to
very normal six-spade contract. You are a little disap- know what he should rebid
pointed w1th the dummy . It with .
has a mirror of your o·wn dis- •KJxx¥ x tKxx•AKxxx.
tribution .· so you must lose a He has responded one spade to
club and may have. to lose a partner's one he~rt_ opening,
and partner has rebid two
diamond .
hearts.
&lt;'\
In any event you win the
There
is
no
correct
rebid .
club lead , draw trumps . play
He
should
have
responded
two
out the ace , king and queen of
clubs
to
start
with
whereupon
hearts and lead your jack of
he could bid spades next . ·
clubs . ·
West wins with the queen
(For a co~y ol JACOBY
and plays th e queen of MODERN. send $1 to: " Win •I
di'amonds 1
Brtdge." alo fhts newspaper,
He has stayed out of the P o. Box 489. Radio City Sial/on..
heart and club traps and not New York. N Y. ?Q019)

"

•

.e
•
• •
·• •
~

Mon., Tues., Wed .
8:00 til5:00 ,
Thursday 8 til Noon

F V

NJGLAH

SGKD . VGLJED
LARAI)GIA
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: A MAN OF SENSE MAY BE IN
HASTE, BUT CAN NEVER BE IN A HURRY . - LORD
CHESTERFIELD

742-2211

Convenient Shopping Hours

NBB

FV · QDNLMC

MSDJD'V

MSDJ D

,.

8, 10; Play of lhe Month 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
8:3o-What's Happening 6,13 .
9:oo:- Barney Miller 6; Hawall Flve -0 8; Bravo, Julie!
10; Movie "Wilderness Journey" '1 3: Age of Uncertalnty 20,33.
.
9: 3o-Movie " Slalk the Wild Child" 3,A,15; Fish 6.
IO :OD---Westslde Medical 6; CBS Reports 8,1 0; News
20; AI The Top 33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
11:30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; SWAT 6,13; Kojak I;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
·
12 :0o-Movie " The Day the Fish Came Out" 10; Janak I
33.
.
.
12:4!f.--Davld Frost Presenls the Besl6,13; Movie "The
Decks Ran Red" B.

9AK 2
t A 10 9
• 62

used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmts. Each day the 'roc;le letters are different.

30 rolls af carpel In stock.

,.•'

8,10 .

2:oo-s20,000 Pyram id 6,13; Austin City Limits 33.
2:3o-Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Llghl 8, 10.
3;0G-Another World 3, ~ , 1S ; All In The Family 8,10;
Antiques 20 ; What's Cooking? 33.
3:15-General Hospital 6,13.
3,3o-Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; College
tor Canines 33.
•.
A": oo-Mister Carloon J · Gong Show 4, 1 ~ New Mickey
Mouse Club.6; Glll lg'a n's Is. 8; Se$ame St. 20,33;
Movie " Honeymoon wllh a Stranger" lO ; Dinah J3.
• ' :»-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's •Heroes 15.
5:oo-81g Valley 3; ·Brady Bunch B; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission :
Impossible 15.
5: 30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co .
20,33.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:31&gt;- NBC News 3,A,I5; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B, 10; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.
7:0&lt;1--'Truth or Cons. 3; To Telllhe Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13;

NORTH
.108762

II LONGFELLOW

Reg. S6.95-notlnsta1Md

,•'

Last line of defense-peek

A"Xl'DLBAAXR

4.88 sq. yd.

'·'

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

37 Vote down
RUBL.PS,SIR- 3S Salad
SOWHY
• · ed" t
COMPLAIN ~
mgr •en
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

1

,.

BRIDGE

31 Tent item
35 Conster-

~:::=:;:=~');Qlj"S;;;JC;:&lt;ijF~~~ r.:-::--;-7::::-.;::--::;::=-::-f.-;~~-;:;:;::;::;::-'J;1T:;::-pt3RO;;;;:;;;:UG:;H~I;:) ·

Cindy Strip
Rubber Bock
Regular S6.9S
S.ve S4.18 Sq. Yd.

,.

B:QO--Movie "The Loneliest Runner" 3,-4,15; Waltons

"12th

UL ABNER

..
.....
..

Kit 33.
7:3o-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Ohlo Stale Lottery 6;
Price Is Righi 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild K·1n9dom 10 ; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
15.

Street"

·-

'

My Three Sons 15 ; Almanac 20; Consumer Survival

33 " Tiger" or

I

·e

FACING

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 "June" rhymer
l Scourge
10 Tyrant

742-234B .

.••

INVERT

Answer. What a cook has to do togatn popularity

~

-----~

•·:•

l __ _
"~-~xrn"

In lndia-··cuRAY '" FAVOR

CARPENTER . flooring, ceiling,
paneting. Phone 992-2759 .

---~-

Now arrange the c1rcled leners to
form the surpnse answer, as suggested by the above canoon.

~

Printanswerhere :

IN. THE WORL0· DY1NG ~ BU~IEP AUVE: ..

DOLLAR$ IN ruRRENC'f!

ENOvGH, I
GUESS-

..._ IN ll10SE

lHE RICHEST

TJIAPI'EV 1 A MILUON

-I

K) I

TREASURE

lOOK AT ALL
Hl LfFT··

Will do rooting, construction,
plumbing and heating . No tob
too large or too small Pkone

--

.

TONJI

'

'. '

1

~· ·

rJ

••
••'
' '

1 :oo-Gong. Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15 ;
Nova 33.
1:3o-Days of Our Lives 3.~, 15 ; As The World Turns

I I -··
I - ...·--

1-

EXCAVATING, dozer . backhoe
ond di tcher. Charles R. Hatf ield , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2008.

F ive

, MINERSVILLE - • bedroom house, mostly carpeted,

carpeting . SEE THIS
TODAY - SIB,OOO.OO .
POMEROY 2 story
frame, 4 bedroom s. bath,

us.

HERE -

insula ted w l th F .A .. nat . gas furnace . Large porches &amp;

the 011io River . Asking S16,SOO.

and paneling , N.G . heat.
$6,725.00.
MANY OTHER GOOD
BUYS TO SEE - FOR
YOUR NEEDS IN REAL
ESTATE SEE DR CALL

,h.HH174·

full baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs. Completely

basement , newer home ,
hardwood
floors
and

carpeting

·1

&lt;'

Braun 4; Search for Tomorr ow 8,10.

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one letter 'to each square, 10 form
lour ord1nary words.

SWAIN'S

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

S!I.OOO.OO.
RETIRE .HERE -

porches, , $0me

•••

ln•ltlled wlltl padding, no
extn fa pay.

bedrooms. n ice 1111 story house, large living room with
shining oak flooring, large kitchen with dining area . 2

full

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

6-13-1 mo.

.. .::.::.:c:::..::..:~~--c--

Will be sold and partially
financed to reliable party

Storage
building ,
2
bedroom mobile home,
bath, carpeii ng, e)(cellent
neig hborhood . immediate
possession. Ask in g just

bath ,

~.

;:(

:~ Pa~~~

EASTERN DISTRICT - Here 's what you've ~n
bedrooms, large,re c. r-OOm - ~ -~asking~or _Beaufiful6 yr. old, all carpeted home with 3

bedrooms,

..

~·

16 "- Bias"

equippea kitchen, 3 large

litile yard to cut, 3 nice

12 •o-Mystery ol lhe Week 6, 13.
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,4.

."

No Sunday Cllls Please

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

I A.M. 104 :30 P. M.

Turning Polni$ 33 .

11 :0&lt;1--'Wheel ol Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Community of Living Things 33; 11 ,2Q-Biography
33.
11 :Jo-lt's Anybody's Guess 3.4,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8,1 0; 11:A5-0ur Living Language 33;
11 · 55-C BS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 :0&lt;1--'News 3,4,6.10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyle Saga 33.
12 : 31l-'-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob

12 : oo--Mov\es " Brainstorm" 10; Janaki 33.

L...-

7481.

one year old ranch.
bedroom home with

in c luding 5
acres of g round. AAodern

Very

•,

4-10·1 mo.

300Main St.

- Corner lof old 8 room
house,·
metal
roOf ,
elec tri city, T. P . water
available $5,000.
IN TOWN - A bedroom
large older home on corner
loJ. Beautiful woodwork . 2car garage and double lot.
Walk to the- stores. Just

HciS everYthing

balhs . ALMOST NEW
$.45,200.00.
LOOK ABOUT 'll ACRE -

_

Free Esti,.,atu

Pomeroy, Ohio .

Glass stucco outside finish .
Equipped k i tchen, dining,
basement w i th fireplace. 2
car garage on cor ner lot.

33; Monly Python's Flying Circus 20.

Mike Douglas 13; World War I 33.
10:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15 ; Price Is Right 8,10;

11 : 3D--Johnny Carson 3.-4.15; Rookies 6,13; Columbo 8;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

'216 E. Second Street

33.

American Heritage 33.
lO :oo---Sanford &amp; Son 3 ;~. 15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8, 10;

11 : 0Q-News 3,-4,6,8,10,13,15: MacNeil-Lehrer Report

EXPERIENCED
Radiator r--""'1-....,
Service

CARTER'S

VIRGIL B. TI;_AFORO, SR .
REALTpR·

·s1o.soo .oo .
VERY LOVELY BRICK -

with stone fireplace, 2

.,•..

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Young's tarpeting

~drooms.

APPROX . 1 Acre close in
equ i pped
- • Lo vely
kiic~en , 2 bedrooms, bath .
carpe t i ng ,
pafleling,
formal dining , garage,
basement . A low $16,500.00.

6, 13; News 28 .
tO : Jo-lnternat lonal Animallon Festival 20; Book Beat

BISSEll SIDING 00

Remodeling.
Ph. 992-7119 or 696-10SS
Estimates appliect to job.
6·27-1 mo. pd .

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .
804

lull y carpeted.
COUNTRY HOME -

6 8 E.

Sam " 15
.
10 :0&lt;1--'Kingslon : Conf idential 3,4, 1S: Charlie's"Angels

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
lnsu lation .
Ca II · Professiona Is

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Superior
Steam Extraction

bar. Central heating. and

water

Phone

SHOP6-16-l mo.

home.
w -free
gas.
carpeted, mod. k i tcl)en ,
several good outbuildings .
Land
lays
good
for
development .

Gameroom

1974 YAMAHA 360 MX. never
been raced, rtdden very little,
$600. Call Roger Korr at

689 .

RACINE CARPET

'

LARRT,,,W~DER

DAVID &amp;RICKLES

6:30-- Doctors on Call4; News6 ; Urban LeagueiO .
6 : ~5-Morning Report 3; 6 : ~Good Morning, West
.l Virginia 13; 6:55-Good Morning, Trl Slate 13.
7:00-Today 3.4,15; Good" Morning Amerlca 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
7 :05-Porky P ig 10; 7' Jo-Schoolles 10.
8:oo-Howdy Doody 6; Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St. 33.
8:3Q-Big Valley 6.
9 .oo-Cross-Wits 3; Phil Donahue A,13, )5; . Andy
Griffith 8; Mike Douglas 10; Biography 33.
9::»--A.M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8;

Showcase 20 .
9:30-...-We Think You Show Kn(!w 3; Plloi : ~'Sus an and

_ji/TT(JI$..111111~

,h.tt2-lttl

6 :20---Not For Women Only 13 .

9:oo-CPIO Sharkey 3, 15 ; Baretta 6; Movies '"Hiller
The ast i en Oay5" 8; Great Performances 33;
Movie " Made for Each Other" 10; Documentary

No. 207- 125 a. farm. 5 BR

MIDDLEPORT -

'279,95

Phone 992-2181

Rt.

home,
cent. a ir , cen . vTc. system.
lNtchen complf"tely fur .,
firepla ce. large bedrooms
w -walk - in c lo sets, 2 1h
baths ,
with
ot her
outbuildings. Want Ia live
in quiet country setllng?
Th is is for you .

'

AWIIIIUM
SIOIK-SIIIJm

'6 -22-1 mo.

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Kitchen Cabinets • Roof ing
Concrete
Patios
NeW
Si dewalks
Construction
&amp;

'

WlfiDOIIS

992-5292

Bob Hoeflich

piece

Phone 949·2*14
9 a .m. to S p.m .

stlle

bedroom brick home on
spacious lot . 3112 baths and
2 wood-burning fireplaces.

i,IJack W. Carsey, Mgr.

St.

~- ranch

one

yourself. Special prices to
builders.

$24,000

Pomeroy Landmark
.

Continuous

$35,000.
RT. 7 TUPPERS PLAINS

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co -op water

your

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

guHers. We hang II, or do it

GOOD CONSTRUCTION -

NEED A WATER

test

GUTTER SERVICE

No. 211-50 a ., M or L, with

Phone

80AT, 16FT. Run -A -Bout 40 h p
motor , tratler . electric start. all Heal t:statc for Sale
co!ltrols or trade for smaller
boat , Gravely tractor o~ I '!, STORY FRAME house in
anything equal volue Phone
Rutlond , 3 bedrooms , balk,
992-7494 .
forced air furna ce . new
fireplace , rail fence . Shwon by
bO ACRE S OF 1-tordwood limber for
appt . on ly, 7~2-2089 .
salt:t. Call985-4295.
·----~2 STORY F~AME House with 3
bedrooms . Also, garage wt tn 3
bedroom opor tm'ent behmd
house. Behind fire stat1on • in

Let us
Free.

No. 208 I acre bi·level
home. 7 rooms, 21h baths,
large family room with
fireplace, 2 car garage,
central air con ditioning,
lots of closet space . Owner
transferred out of area .
Price- S44,000.

BROWNING MARK Ill SSB w1th , - - - -- - - - - - - -- - - .
siltroni~e Model 90 VFO , 57~0 .
Otker equipment for sole.

1974 SUZUK I 400. Phone........____
2-47 2542.

SOFTENER?

Pomeroy

THURSDAY , JULY 14,1977
&amp;-&lt;10- PTL Club 8; Summer Semester 10.
6. 15- ·Farm Report 13.

A QO- ·Griuly Adams 3,15; ·Dormy_, 8o Marie 6,13; Good
limes 8,10; Nova 20,31
B:3Q-Marllyn McCoo &amp; Billy Davis Jr . 8,10.

~

TES

I

1~, 1977

2033: Break The Bank 13; The Judge 10

'

Blawn
ln1111Jtioll Slnices
f~•t AroiiH!t
1 - iniD 111111 UntCS
5101111
lliiiiJOIIS I IIOOIS
WEI'\AC(Iil£11

1119 High St.

6-15-1 mo.

592-1692.

Elsinore.

__________

Phone 992·2291

sof ·

Dryer
580 .00
1 Good Used G . E . Dryer US

__

JOHN DEERE 410 l1ve power, 3
point hitch . John Deer Na 5
mower. 7 pt. cut. John Deer 2
row cultivator Ford · two 14 in.
___bottom plo~~all2-47-2l~5. __ ~~

FREE

THE PH010 PLACE

CRAFTY LADIES
HANDICRAFT
Boys' in Pomeroy, Ohio

tene-rs. model VC- SVI.
Only $279.95
Save 550.00 on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator.
I New 10 ruhir: H .
Chest Freeter
$25 .00 Discount
Now in stack , complete line
of bulk garden seeds .
1 Good McCullough Chain

COA\ NUMBER 6. STOKER OR ·
LUMP DELIVERED . Coli (614)
38-0·28 .. . .....
---

_Now Only

LOST ~ BILLFOLD at Royal Oak
, Pork , owned by' Kelly Hayman,
• Ractne. Just return billfold and
importoni •.Morine papers , no
questions osk.ed . Return 10
Pomeroy Pollee Dept . or Do ily
Sentinel office , 949-2875 .
...,..,. -......-- - " - - - - - --.-·
TWO DOGS LOST on Rt . 33 naor
' Darwin One Garmon Shorthair
Pointe'r, block and white - -- - - - · · --- -sp-.ckled . other _ Other part j.~~--.: gj.~~~ -!f~
'• She-pherd . Both we-aring fleo
~ collars .
REWARQ .
Phol'18 DISTRIBUTORSHIP WILL not in·
992·5848.
, ' terfere wlfh pres.ent employment. No selling required .
LOST - LARGE Grey cat on County
Twen year old compony . See
Rood 25 n&amp;Or Chester , Answers
fo the name of Egypt or
our o on the sports page to·
• ~":'ok.~r..: £!~985-3875 .

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPI,IES.
Cl.ASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10 ,00 to S:OO
.

Just Below the Jones

r---~-------.,

CODNER"S CAMPERS . Sales. APPLE S. FITZPATRICK Orchard,

PARKERSBURG
422-4010

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

804 West Main Slr"l

FOR
SALE
Co -Op water

'
••

1...----------------------------------.. . l

STROUT

softener, Model UC-XVI.

Don't just bo satisfied with •

Rig ." We are a Private Training
School .-ld if you meet our
qualifiCitlions, you will bo train·
ed by Professional, Instructors on modern equipment.
' Train on a Pan Tme ba&amp;is ISal.
&amp; Sun.) and Keep your job, or
attend our 3 Week Full Time

. 3290.

!974 PLYMOUTH GOLD DUSTER •

JOB - Plan NOW for o Pro- .
,.....,.,.. "-"- Driving a " Big

lots. Cot1992-58b9or985·35CJ5 .
SYRACUSE , WITH view of river. o
neat 3 bedroom house with 2
cor goroga on b ' t OC(eS . Fronts
ONE HORSE btr compressor runs
on bo1h State R,t . 124 and
on 110 volt$ , only 3 months old.
Snowball Hill . Acreage would
Will sell reosonobi'J' . t~e~ellehl
moke a beautiful sub-div•sion .
conditio!l W1tl operate '2 spray
Starkey Realty , coli Ron
guns of same hme PhoneMcDade, (6-14 ) 592-2419 or VIC.
992 -3714 .
Wolfe . 949-2286.
HALF RUNNSER Beans, 4 bushel.
P1ck your own James Hdl
forms

Saw
1 Good Us.ed Unico

Swimming Pool

·----~--

ON!: ACRE IO 5 ocre• . bu1ld~ng

~

Business Services

4 tiEOJ(OOM 'J s lory bm:k home
Forced a1r furnocet. M1ddleport
Phope 992·3457.

CANNING TOMA fOES , Bn ng fOur
own contoiner Harry H1ll form.
Phone 247 -2l 42 .'

I Goad Used Poulan Chain

New HMn

Fnday afh.'rnt"•lt

u t - H bJ W U.S thpf. of Ldar.

lWO GRAVELY troclar\ . One 1%8
model. Co11985 3800 .

saw

At

-I PM.

~p11es

service TRAILER SPACE tor rent. 5' miles

charge . Cor &amp; tele phone
nee•ssory. Colt collect to Carol
Ooy (518) 489-8395 or write 2 BEDROOM TRAILER , Adults onFriendly Toy Parties . 20
ly . Pko.rte992 3324.
Railroad Ave., Albany , N.Y
SEMI-FU ISHED Effic1ency aport ·
12205.
ment. suitable for one adult.
lcxoted in the Coates Bu1lding
over Dutton 's Drug Store. Call
992-36&lt;11 or_inqutre at Apt . ~6 :..

Swulity

.~. $18,300 ,:·

AVAILABLE at Village- Manor
Aportments - 1 bQdroom fully
carpeted w1th k1tchen appltances. fu rnished Starting at
$104 per mont , Phone 992-7721
Equal housing opponunity .

WALNUT LOG~
Jock
res1dence. Oon V1IIe OH.

from Pomero,- and M1ddleport .
Phone 9q2 5858

Tut!sda}

THE FAMILY of Coda M . Slawter
would like to express our most
s.ncere appreciation to oil
friends an neighbors who sent
flowers , food and cords Qf'ld
helped us in any way and
shored our loss w ith us , July I ,
1977. We wish to thank the
Rutland Emergency Squad, C.C.
U, of Holzer Medtcol Center for
all thtir kindness and
thoughtfulness. •
Coda M . Slawter Fomtly

large Lots w1th concrete patios ,
Stdewotks . runners ond off
street parking. Phone 992 -7-419.

EARN MONE V for your Christmas

Nuuu 1.111 Satur~~

-I P.M.
1h~ tbly !)ffort' j)ijiJltntttlltl

5434 .

SOng at River'iide ,A.mc-Jeep

Monday

ttU'UFrtt.ICiy

DOMES.TIC

'/

..J

f "or S•lt•

t 'or HPnt

Help Wanted

Movies Channel - s""'" p.m . - Bilollw Bullet; 7 Inti
11 p .m . - Lilqoard .
Potntview Cable cNnnel S - • :30 p.m . - Tnti mony
Time ; 7,oo ..._ P,ul Gaudino Family Fllntss. 7:30 Prlscillo's Workshop. 1: 00 - SOmething Speclol 1:30 - Movie: Mad Bomber - 10 ,00 - 700 Club.

7·00... 'Truth or ConsequenCeS' 3; To Tell the Truth A;
LiAr's Clvb6; Pop Goes the Country Br Ni•ws 10; To
Tell The Truth 13, My Three Sons l~ ; Consumer
, Survival Kit '20; People and Places 33.
1 JO Dolly 3; M 1nor League 8ttseball 4: Match Game
PM 6; S1:S,OOO Pyramid 8. MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl

'' l'

&lt;

ISW"1\b ut Uudt•t

2 · 10-- News 13

THAT'S ALL IH' I
STAPLES 1 NEED

THE MOONS Of SATURN
GOT IN M'1 E'fE5!

••

I TAKE IT BACK ...

I'D ~AG 'EM UP -- BUT I'M SLAP OUT
FER '1E, SNUFFV··
OF PAPER SACKS

FER TODAV, Sl LAS

THAT WA5N'i A
BAD EXCUSE ...

•"~
••

j" ..,"'"'

,¥'

....

,

.

. '

•.

�•

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., WPdnesday, July 13, l!m

Area
Millionaire is still
Death anti -establishntentist

Lewis far111 has 200 visitors

MRS. FAYE WILLIS
WELLSTON - Mrs. Fa ye
Willis, 80, formerly of Pine
Street , Gall ipo li s,
d ted
suddenly Tuesday wh ile on
vacation in Tennessee . She
had been a resident of
Wellston in recent years .
Survivors include a daughter,
Mrs . Carl (·Selma) Zim merman, a son , Dale Willis.
of P-ortsmouth ;· one sister .
Mrs. Myrtle Van Fossen of
Pensville, Ohio ; six grand children and si x grei!tgrandchildren.
Funeral services w ill be
Fri da y at 2 p.m . at the
Blower Funeral Home in
Wellston . Burial will be in the
Ridgewood Cemetery .
Friends may call from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m . at the funeral
home Thursday .

By VERNON SCOTI
cascade of gold.
emotions yd manages to
HOLLYWOOD ! UP! )
Despite his wealth, Peter hang loose when he is among
lt's no easything for a man to continues to assail the estab- friends . His alert mind seizes
be a miUionaire and continue lishment on screen and off. on ideas quickly . His business
to be anti-establishment.
He does not see any conflict acumen is almost as highly
The situation might be between being a capitalist developed as his artistic
likened to Billy Graham while railing against the endowment.
falling heir to a bordello or shortcomings of capitalism.
" Dad once told me I made
George Meany being elected
Fonda fils, unlike most more money from 'Easy
president of General Motors. other millionaire actors, does Rider' than he did in all 125
The spirit is wi!Ung ~utthe not have a . B~verly Hills pictures he's made in his
circumstances· are com- ·mansion, impressive offices car!)er . But I wear different
promiSing.
and a coterie 'of flunkies .
hats than Dad does, and he's
Such is the case with Peter
He does own a $2 million not as interested in the
Fonda . Since childhood 'he yacht anchored in Hawaii and business end of things as I
and sister Jane have been his garage houses a Cadillac &lt;Jm :
rebels without a pause. They El Dorado. But he bought the
''As for the establishment,
come by their social yacht as a home, " a safe it hasn't shown me much
consciousness naturally . place for my children to originality in breaking the
Father Henry Fonda has breathe good air and know patterns of life either.
spent a lifetime prodding the .the sea ." The Cadillac is an professionally or personally.
establishment.
investment because El So I go my own way .
But among this enormously Dorados are no longer made .
. "I came into show b~iness
talented clan, only Peter is an . His permanent home is a • VIa the womb. I ~ind no
out-and-out
millionaire, 1872 homestead in Montana mystique in glamor. I'm
July
thanks largely to " Easy where he grows apples, hay , more interested in showing
Rider ,"
his
invention, clover barley and runs 40 people what I can do than
production and starring head ~f cattle on a US-acre what I've got. My thrill in life
vehicle.
spread without assistance . is a~ti ng, doin~ the work, not ·
Additional millions gushed He and his second wife
talking about 1t.
forth from " Dirty Mary, Portia, do the irrigating and. . ".B~t I am in fayor of
Crazy .Larry" and "Race fence mending. They also mdlvJdual accountet!llity and
With The Devil." His newest grow their own vegetables. re~ponsibility
without
film,
" Outlaw Blues, "
Home is a log house 52 by 48 rehance on the gover:nment.
promises to perpetuate the feet one of 14 buildings on the Or does that sound like the
proPerty.
establishment?"
Peter has offices in a
rundown,
fly-blown
BONDS GIVEN UP
Hollywood bungalow outside
Four
defendants forfeited
which he flies the American
bonds
in
the court of Pomeroy
fla g.
The tall (6-foot-2), slender Mayor Clarence Andrews
Fonda spends as little time as Tuesday night. They are
possible
in ,_ Sputhern ' Diana Lawson , Syracuse, $30;
California. When Peter is in posted on an improper
town he visits with his father backing charge; Bobby
and sister and his children by Rupe, Route l, Dexter, $30,
his first marriage, Justin, 11, speeding ; Edward Stark,
Pomeroy, $50, disturbing the
and Bridgit, 13.
peace,
and Stephen Scott,
In " Outlaw Blues" Peter
once again portrays an anti- Route 1, Minersville, $30,
establishmentarian,
a speeding. Paying costs only
jailbird who becomes a on a charge of failing to yield
country-western
singer- at an intersection was James
composer' out . this time Neal, Gallipolis.
lightly and with dashes of
comedy .
Not since his first movie ,
" Tan1my and The Doctor" in
1962, has Peter played an
establishm.ent figure in
necktie and jacket.
•
" It's not something I designed," said Peter on a short
visit to Hollywood. "They
were films that came my
COLUMBUS .- Making its
way , the guy on the outside
world debut at The Ohio State
. looking in.
"Maybe the roles reflect Fair this year is the world's
my
own lifestyle but I'rrt now greatest thrill extravaganza
~ @]sPEED OUEENI Example: ~
singing all the way to the to date - Ringling Bros. and
Barnum &amp; Bailey Thrill
bank." ·
Circus,
the thrill-a-minute,
Fonda is literally singing.
He did his own vocals for breath-taking, heart-stopping
"OUtlaw Blues," fulfilling a Greatest Thrill Show On
Earth.
lifelong ambition.
Headliners at this un·
"I've always loved music
and dreamed of recording an paralleled spectacle include
album one day," he said, ·the two Living Legends of the
grinning. "Every time Dad High Wire: special guest star
got a role playing a musical Philippe Petit, the fearless
instrument I'd practice right Frenchman who astounded
Wuher 1nd Dryer '
the world · when he walked a
along with him.
i~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~
"I learned to noodle around cable between New York's
on the trumpet when he · World Trade Center towers,
played one in_'On Our Merry and the world famous Karl
Way .' And I played the bass Wallenda and family- again
when he did ·'The Wrong Man ' presenting their famous wirefor Alfred Hitchcock. Now
I'm singing and lOving every
minute of it."
Peter is a man of intense

Mason DIM-In

WED.-THU.fRI.
13-14-15
Double Feature
Program
TWO. MINUTE
WARNING
SWASHBUCKLER
R PG

Name Brand
Appliances

REFRIGERATORS, RANGES,
FREEZERS, WASHERS, DRYERS,
DISHWASHERS, MICROWAVE OVENS,

r.__.._. . . . . . . . . . . ___,_... . . . ._. ____.,
~..,...

I

~EG. ,89

•

0

~~~.,
...
I

'•

$SALE

I

I
I

482 ~
(GAS

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT

Market Report

ASSOCIATE STORE

A
CE
HARDWARE
•STEREO
•TAPE RECORDS
•8 TRACK TAPES
-•SMOKE AlARMS
•CB RADIOS
•SCANNERS
•SPEAKERS
•KNIVES
.WATCHEs·

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

••

A HALF DOZEN OF TilE 200 folk who attended
Southe~ern Ohio dairy field day on West Virginia's C. C.

Lewis, Jr., farm are shown in this Mindy Kearns newsphoto. They are looking at some of the Holstein cows in a
301k:ow herd, and thev are in a free-6tall barn.
··

P'Joto).

I

of circus

.Hospital News

Wn..L A1TEND WEDDING
Richard Chambers, Mid·
- dleport, will accompany his
sister and brother-in-law, Mr .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
and Mrs. Willis Aleshire,
Admitted - Victoria· Klein,
Dayton, to Montgomeroy,
Pomeroy; Goldie Lawson,
Ala. where they will attend Minersville;
Thelma
the wedding of their niece,
Gruesei', Pomeroy; Randy
Bareda's
eight
male
African
walk pyrami~
Sally Chambers to Charles
Randolph, Pomeroy; George
Other wor
famous Lions .
Jordan.
Miss
Chambers
is
the
Conde,
Syracuse: Terry
Ringling Bros. and Barnum
featured acts inc ude : The
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
OrDerenberger,
Pomeroy.
Human Cannonballs Ed· · &amp; Bailey Thrill Circus will ville Chambers, Mon•
Di~charged
"- Leona
mondo and Hugo Sacchirti;· headline the second colossal tgomeroy. The wedding will
Hubbard,
Ruth
Dye,
Bernard
Seven Sw,aypole artists week of the greatest fair in be at 7p.m. Saturday.
Miller.
performing simultaneously the nation , presenting 16
stellar
one-and-a-half
hour
85 feet high with heart·
performances from Monday ,
stopping mid-air exchanges;
Holzer Medical Center
the
world's
foremost August 22 thru Sunday,
AUTO
RECOVERED
(Discharges, July 11)
helicopter-trapeze sensation, August 28 - two shows weekPomeroy
Police
recovered
Raymond
Broyles,
Michele and Michael ; The days, three on Saturday and
cal
stolen
in
Mason
County
a
Donavan · Clagg, Shirley
Pirates of the Sky, The Sunday . .
at
the
Dairy
Valley
parking
Hubbard, Lester Lewis Sr.,
Ringling
Bros.
and
Barnum
Reynoso Brothers ; the high·
area
at
5:22
a
.m.
today.
The
Jerald
Matney, Eutha Mc&amp;
Bailey
Thrill
Circus
is
wire motorcycle madness of
vehicle
was
apparently
Daniel,
Ethel Sayre, Wilam
produced
and
dir.ected
by
Sheila, Karl, and Hans Winn ;
driven
to
Pomeroy
where
Terrell,
Arron
Thacker, Mrs.
the death dive of Geronimo. Irvin Feld and Kenneth Feld.
1t
parked
at
the
police
noticed
Billy
Unrow
and
son.
The Ohio State Fair dates
Also : the sky-to-earth
dairy
store
at
4:52a.m.
It
was
(Discharges
July
12)
are Tuesday, August 18 thru
plummet of the Jordana~
later
found
to
have
been
Lawrence Boyd, Leonard
Sunday, August 28. Gates
The Great La'l'oria, hanging
by one arm 65 feet in the air open at 6 a.rrt. and close at stolen. It was taken to the Calvin, Donald Chaney,
midnight. Admiss!M! is $3 for Pomeroy Motor Co. pending Gordon Faught, Julia Grim,
and flingng her body round
Jerry Harrison, l\levauna
adults
and $1 for children 12 investigation.
and round up to 100 times
Harvey,
Gladys
Hemand
under.
Children
are
each show.
mington,
Mrs.
John
Kerrison
admitted free on weekdays
herds of
Also four
and daughter, Luverna
until noon . All grandstand
re11.:.wned performing
Reynolds, Jennifer Roberts,
entertainment, including the
elephants - The Cristianis,
POTLUCK PLANNED
Mrs. James Shafer and
Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp;
The Dianos, The King
The Middleport Business daughter, Susan Smith,
Bailey Thrill Circus, is in·
Troupe, and The Murray Hill
eluded in the admission price. and Professional Women's Shirley Spiers, Bertha
elephants; The Rix Bears Club will hold a family Stanley, Ruie Stewart, Goldie
four polar bears and six
potluck dinner Monday, July Terry, Alice Thompson,
brown bears, and George
18, at 6:30 p.m. at the west James Walker.
side roadside park on U. S. 33
(Births, July 1%)
north of Pomeroy. All
MADE20RUNS
Mr. and Mrs. · Lawrence
The Racine Emergency members are to bring their Rosenberger, a daughter,
Squad during June, made 20 own table service, food and Jackson. Mr. and Mrs.
runs, covered 832.1 miles, beverage. For additional Johnny Kulm, a daughter,
WHEAT CROP UP
using 153.5 man hours. or information call Wanda Eblin Bidwell. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The those 20 emergency runs at 992-2272.
McCarty, a son, Wellston.
Ohio 1977 tlinter wheat crop seven were in Sutton townhas been forecast at shiP., six in Racine ; four In
67,760,000 bushels, or 3 per Lebanon township, two in
cent more than the prior Letart, and one in Olive
year's output. .
township.
(Continued from page 1)
The Ohio Crop Reporting
Service said Tuesday Ohio's
&amp;ttle Blowers Association says the union will try to halt a
major food grain went
_possible effort by the Johns-Manville Corp. to bring in out-ofUNIT CALLED.
through the dry May in good
The Pomeroy E-R squad town workers at its three strikebound plants he~e.
shape, with the 44 bushel has opened- a public fund . "If they (Johns-Manville) bring in strike breakers, we
yield being the. highest since drive to raise $13,500 for the mtend to take appropriate action. We'!Hight fire with fire"
1972.
purchase of a new emergency said Robert Mellars at union headquarters in. St.
Ohio's corn harvest was vehicle. Residents served .by Tuesday. ·
.
estimated at 3,750,000 acres the Pomeroy unit may send
."We're going to abide by the law. We hope the citizens of
with a yield of 85 bushels, contributions toP. 0 . Box 247, ~ance can !lllderstand that. Strike breakers are Oy by
both below last year's record Pomeroy.
rughts. We don't think the COilllJlunity wants those types of
'highs.
people llroWld there:'-'
Oats
production
of
21,320,000 was down 22 per
cent from the 27,500,000
bushels in
1976. The
estimated yield at 52 bushels
per acre will be harested
•
from 410,000 acres, the
smallest acreage since 1972.

at 1977 Ohio State Fair

COLOR TV AND STEREO SETS

-~

Southeastern Ohio dairy field day. (Mindy Keams news

world .debut

AIR CONDITIONERS, DEHUMIDIFIERS,

i .

WAGONS SUCH AS TIIESE transported the 200
visitors over the C. C. Lewis, Jr., farm Tuesday for

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S PLAZA)

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Livestock auction:
Compared to last week:
Slaughter steers .5~1 lower,
slaughter heifers steady,
slaughter cows 2-2.50 lower,
slaughter bulls steady on an
unattractive supply, feeder
cattle not enough for a price
test. Supply 35 per cent
slaughter steers, 11 per cent
slaughter heifers, 40 per cent
slaughter cows, 4 per cent
slaughter bulls, 10 per cent
feeder cattle.
Slaughter steers: Choice
and prime 2-3 900-1125 4041.25; choice 2-3 900-1200 ~
40; good and choice 2-3 92$.
1175 37. 75-39; good 2-3 900-1300
34.50-37.75.
Slaughter heifers : Choice 23 750-1050 38-40; good few
choice 2-3 800-1150 32-35.75.
Slaughter cows: Utility and
commercial 2-4 950-1500 2427.75; ciltter 1-2 87~1300 2225.75; canner 700.1075 18-22.
Slaughter bulls: l's 12001600 34.1~.20; 2's 1000-1525
31-33.50.
Vealers: Choice and prime
160-235 45-55; choice and
prime 85-145 31--56; good 17~
260 33-42.
.
Hogs: Barrows and gilts
2. 75-3 lower, sows 5 lower,
feeder pigs steady to 7 higher.
Supply 75 per cent barrows
and gilts, 3 per cent sows, 22
per cent feeder pigs. Barrows
and gilts 1-3 21~230 45.50-46;
sows 1-3 34~550 31-33.25;
individual 36.
Feeder pigs: 1--3 20-40 24-32;
e-.50 4o-44.50; lot 1-2 55 56; lot
1-2 110 48 per cwt.
g.eep: Slaughter SP,I'ing
3-4 lower. Choice and
pr~ spring slaughter l11mbs
45-35 44-49.

lambs

&lt;

News •• in Briefs

r...ouia

ELBERFELDS JULY CLEARANCE SALE

·WOMENS LINGERIE

Large group of women's short and long gowns, long and
-s hort robes, waltz length gowns, shorties.
CALL ANSWERED
. The
Middleport
Emergency Squad aJ1.Swered
a call to the R. C. Bottling Co.
at 9;47 p.m. Tuesday for Jim
Reynolds who had a hand
injury. · He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Y2 PRICE
•

Lingerie Department, 2nd FLoor

E_LBERFELDS IN POMEROY
,

'

b~

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