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8

'

Adams

new

M~jor address is schetL.ted

hints
asaJreadyK i s s i n g e r d e n i e s
Cincinnati Reds announced one wxier the player limit
•
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pmldeal Cllr1er will
SIIID up
U.ll.&amp; viel relallou Ill 8 majGI'
today
they
had
called
up
due
to
the retirement of s e c r e t p r o m i s e s
pitchers Mario Solo and Woodie Fryman.
·
.
sharing system
address to tile Soalllenl f4lllaUve Coaf&lt;ftllte Ia
Mamy Sarmiento from their
Soto is 11~ this year with a
CJuu-les!OD, S. C., Tbunday, wlminfet,nU.. alftclall
By HERBERT SPARROW where we are going we have
Indlanapo,Jis !ann club.
3.01 earned run average while
said today.
By STEWART POWELL
failure of the air-launched
HAZARD, Ky. (UPI ) - to be certain that we can ship
~ Reds optaioned Joe Sanniento, a relief pitcher, is
WASWNGTON (UPI) - cruise missile.
Officials said Carter wiU (lw u "apclate Oil U. S. •
u.S. Transportation what you have into the
Hender!IQn to Indianapolis to 3-1 with five saves.
Legislation to bankroll
Soviet
relatioas " wllll no llftl' IDIUaUve1 bul ratller a
House-Senate negotiators Secretary Brock Adams various parts of the country
make room for the new pit·
"sammillg
liP.•~ plll&lt;inl ~ penpediw ol wbere we
everything frnm weapons to now
must
resolve began.a first-hand look at the
federal programs in cities disagreements on funding for problems of transporting C0$1 and make it work,',' Adams
are."
.
told
the
crowd.
Carter's'
policy tow..d !be Sovlellls a ''mixture of
cleared branches of Congress the 81 bomber and on House in mountainous Appalachia
ASK TO WED
"We're
not
coming
down
cuoperat1011
aod
.,.mpeiWoa," olflclall laid, add(JII
and a practioner of secret language barring use of Tuesday and indicated his
A marriage license was
here
to
teJJ
you
how
to
move
that
is
tbe
"most
reallslle approach to detnte."
diplomacy discussed secret fede.ra.l funds to plot trip is not just for show.
is.oued Tuesday in Meigs
people
we're
going
U.
provide
Tbe Presldellt's apeecb In Soatb Carollaa Is part of
promises of assistance to assassinations of foreign
"We are not here on a the money and you leU us
County to Marty Gene Wyant;t Three defendants were Vietnam.
·
a·
two-day
trip to the Deep South. He allo will appear
fined
and
four
others
forleaders during peacetime. theorectical trip," Adams how," Adams said, adding
18, and Carron Helen
before a citbens forum In Yazoo City, MW., Tlm'lday
"I believe they have broken
The House, meanwhile, U.Jd a dinner Tuesday night of that the problem of rural ·
Crowley, 16, both of Albany. feited bonds in Pomeroy th~ agreement and we owe
night
and will visit an oil rig off New Orleans caut
Mayor Clarence Andrews'
passed and sent to the Senate local residents and officials, transportation must also be
F'liday
morning before returDing U. Wasllfnlloll.
them
nothing,"
Henry
Court Tuesday night. Fined
JegislaUon providing $69 "We're trying to set up a considered.
The
Southern Legislative Collfereoce.ls made up of
Kissinger
told
a
House
were William Reeves, $50 and
billion for a number of system tqflow money back so ·"The upgrading and
the
regional
govemon aDd their represeatatlvea, and
subcommittee
_
Tuesday.
cOsts, intoxication; Don·
agencies and programs in· you can use it." __.../'
costs
c~used by
maintenance
Wed. -Thur.: Fri.
Is
not
the
usual
ioram for a presidential forelgD policy
rejecting
claims
.by
Hanoi
Stobart, $50 and costs, in·
eluding exploration of
Adams told the dinner, coal truck traffic have
speech.
that
President
Nixon's
toxication; Thomas Roush ,
Jupiter.
· hosted by Kentucky Julian placed, and will continue to
July 20-21 -22
promise of $4.75 billion in post
MinersviJJe,
$30
and
costs,
The money bill for the Carroll, that he considers a place a heavy burden on our
Doubte Feature
war aid w... binding.
assured clear distance.
system
of
department of Housing and reliab le
Clint E utwood
Nixon's secret written offer Urban Development, the transportation vital if the coal producing states,'~ he
Forfeiting bonds were Eli
THE OUTLAW
said.
JOSEY WALES
Bush, Point Pleasant, $3D, left of assistance was "not un- Veterans Administration and nation is U. meet F)esident
West' Virginia Gov. Jay
PG
of center ; Robert Rickard, conditional," the former the National Aeronautics and Carter's plan u. increase coal Roc~~eller also stressed that
Race With the
Clifton, $350, driving while secretary qf state said.
Space Admlnistratlon would production by 65 per cent. by any program of improving
Devil
"It
was
a
baU
park
figure
to
intoxicated
;
Timothy
Ellis,
ban Gf benefits for Vietnam 1985.
Peter Fonda
coa I haul roads must also
Holzer Medleal Center
Middleport, $50, intoXication, be neg 0tiated," and North era veterans with less than
"The expanded use of coal take inU. account the people Veterans Memorial Hespltal
Warren Oats
(Dlsebarcet July 1P)
G
and Jack McPeek, Bidwell, Vietnam knew Congress honorable discharges.
r a is es
s i g n i fi c a n I who live in the area.
Admissions Freda
would ·have to approve tile
Tammy
Barlow, Grand·
$30, running stop sign.
And it would withhold iransportation questions,"
"What we need to do is to Grueser, MinersviJJe; Alban
assistance.
federal housing assistance to Adams noted. ''We are look at ways of production Taylor, Racine; Misty King, ville .Blanton, Martha
While Kissinger talked of homosexua ls.
talking about a Jot of money that include the wishes and Pomeroy; J oyce Klein, Brewer, Michael Bucci,
past wars, tlle Senate took
The Ho use investigation - at least a billion dollars." lifestyle pf the people we look Langsville; Velva Newell, David Carlise, Naomi
preca utions against future into aneged South Korean
Adams flew to eastern U. to produce that coal - the Reedsville; Kathryn Lam- Chovane c, Mrs. Michael
conflicts.
influence buying rema ined in Kentucky Tuesday afternoon
bert
Rutland ; Christi Coleman and daughter,
It okayed a $109.6 billion abeyance as House Speaker to join ,an 18-member coal coal min'"','' Rockefeller said Brwdield, Rutland; Millard Hayes Dee!, Della Ditty, Mrs.
defense measure containing Thomas O'NeiJJ Jr. sought a transportation task force for prior to Adams speech. "We Ban, Long Bottom; Franklin Mu Drenner and son,
KIDS &amp; LADIES
no money for production of new chief investigator. the final day of a three-day can't look at the miner Molden, Rutland ; Kathryn Wesley Ely, Doldle Ewing,
looking
at
the Bl bomber, but including Sources said. O'Neill offered field trip to four coa l- without
Gindlespergh, Middleport. David Fields, Mere! Foley,
transportation
and
the
roads
research and devlopment ttie job to former Watergate P,.oducing states.
Discharges - Sandra Imogene Henry, Wl\nda
he goes to work over every
money as insurance against Prosecutor Leon Jaworski
The task force of top day."
Sheets, Lee Green, Goldie Henry, Barbara Kemper,
who was thinking it over.
transportation department
Tennessee Gov, Ray Lawson, Douglas Becker, Eines Kingery, Samuel
The House Ethics Com· officials is viewing various Blanton also attended the John Hinkle, Grace Roush, Lewis, Mary Malezewskl ,
Florence McLauablln ,
mittee lnvestigatlon be8Jln to segments
of
th e · dinner Tuesday night at the Ronald Grady.
Marianlto Montero, Laura
unravel Friday with the . transportation industry as it LaCitadelle resort motel.
Pack, Mrs. Robert Phillips
resignation, of chief counsel relates to coal in Kentucky,
Adams said that while rail
(Continued from Pill' 1)
PLEASANT VALLEY
and daughter, Bittle Provens,
Philip Lacovara. O'Neill . West Virginia, Pennsylvania and barge transportation are
responsibility and liability to since has been looking fo r a and Ohio and will try to
DISCHARGES - Arnett Edythe Reibel, Mary Stanley,
maintain all track crossings, lawyer of "national stature'' identify priority areas that important the major concern Roush, Point PJ~asant; Mrs. Hazel Taylor, Alwida Warin eastern Kentucky is
Buehl said.
apparently to undercut need inunediate attention. naturally the highways over Keith Herd man, Grimms ner, JoLynn WUes, Nancy
Buehl also reported that the demands by Republicans and
Landing; Bruce Bush, Williamson, Evelyn Winter,
Adams and Carroll were
bridge on CR 29 over Bashan some freshmen Democrats scheduled to join the task which much of tile coal in the Gallipolis Ferry; Rebecca Mary Wolford.
nation 's
largest
coal
Run has been completed and for
(Births July 1t)
an
independ ent force today on a U.ur of one of producing state ,is shipped to Shamblin , Henderson;
is open to traffic.
Patri cia Thomas , Letart ;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
prosecutor.
Kentuc'ky's largest strip mine market.
James
Durbin ,
West
Economic issues won some operations at the Falcon Coal
Adams said that his depart- Columbia; Ronald Holley, Williamson Jr. , a daughter,
VInton. Mr. and Mrs. James'
attention, too. The House Co. mine in Breathitt County ment is looking into the
Mi ddlep o rt ; Br e nda Thomas,
a
daughter,
gave final approval to near Jackson.
feasibility of centralizing coal
legislation to create 200,000 · Adams told the dinner preparation and storage Thevenln, West Columbia; Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. James
State,No. 223X
jobs and tra ining op- Tuesday nig ht that he facilities U. help serve the Ronnie Henry, Gallipolis . Jones, a da!Jghter, Gallipolis.
CONSOUDATEDREPORTOFCOND~ON
portunlties for youth.
believes the states should small mine · operators in Ferry; Harvey Rainey,
Gallipolis Ferry ; .Edward
,,
And the House Education have a major say in how the Appalachi~.
Reese, Cheshire ; Andrew
and Labor Committee ap- federal transportation money
Earlier Tuesday, federal Burton, Mason ; Mrs. Vernon
DEMOCRATS TO MEET
proved legislation to hike the is spent ln their areas.
Hig hway Ad min istrator Bing, Gallipolis; Mrs.
The
Meigs County Central
federal minimum wage from
" If we are going to shift William Cox, a member of the
$2.341 to $2.65 in January.
from where we have been to task force, also said the Thomas Beckner , Point Democrat committee will
Pleasant; Sha ron Syden- meet Thursday at .7:30 p.m.
The Congressional Budget
government is considering a stricker; · Leon ; George at the Episcopal Church in
Office today forecast con·
, large annual expenditure to Wag ner, Bidwell ; David Pomeroy. Voter registration
tinned
economic
imhe lp states produce coal. _
Powell, Ashton ; Belinda ln Meigs County . will be
provement, but at a slow pace
He
said
a
proposal
is
being
discussed. The public ill Inr
Potts, Henderson.
loT the next year or more.
co nsider ed t o tie federal
vited ..
of Pomeroy, Ohio aod Foreign aod Domestic Subsidiaries, at tbe close of
The assessment differed
hi ghway do llars to coal
buslnes.s June 30, 1977, a stale banking Institution organized aod operating
somewhat witll that given the
(Continued from page 1)
output as a means of getting
under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
House and Senate Budget fo r t hat coal has been greater amoimts of coal to the
System. Published in accordance with a caU made by tbe State Banking
Committ ees Tuesda y by reduced by changes in the air market~Jace . .
Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
. administration offi cials.
quality standards which were
White House economic promulgated last August.
ASSETS
.
adviser Charles Schultze
Ross listed several reasons
Cash and due from banks . ....... ........... ... , : . ............. 2,178,000.00
predict ed an econom ic why the company cannot DEAT!I SENTENCE
MILLE RSBURG, Ohio
U.S. Treasury securities ............................ , . . .. ... .. 4,7511000.00
growth rate around 5 per cent entirely abandon its lowObligations of U.S. Government
'
this year and next, a decline sulfur ·coal program, other (UP! ) - Paul McNeeley of
agencies and corporations ..... .. ... ..... . ...... ......... .... . 114,000.00
in unemployment from 7 per tllan contract ual restraints. Coshocton is scheduled to die
Malcolm B. Orebaugh, wishing to eall the Mental
Obligations of Sta tes and political subdivisions .... ...... . ... .. . , . 2,139,000.00
cent to 6.6 per cent and First, the coal is needed at in the electric chair . at the
Southein
Ohio
Correctional
of the Gallia· Itealth Center or the GalliaAdministrator
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ...............••....... 24,000.00
declining inflation.
tile Gavin Plant until long- Facility Nov. 28 for the July Jackson-Meigs Community Jackson-Meigs Conunu.olty
.Federal funds S())d and securities purchased under
term arrangem e~ts can be 19, 1976, shotgun slaymg of a Mental Health Center, an- Mental Health and Mental
agreements to reseU in domestic offices.... .. . . . ... ..... ... ...... ~.000.00
made for a sati sfacto~y Coshocton police offi cer .
nounced today that the center Retardation "648" Board,
a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) .. . . ... . .. . 9,400,000.00
MRS.
WERNER
HOME
supply of higher sulfur local
Judge Robert Estell set the is in the process of iro- should phone 446-S.5QO. ·
b. Less : Reserve for jlossible loan losses ... .... .... . ....... 90,000.00
A! wilda Werner, Mid- · coal. Second, . the western -d ate Tuesday in Holmes plementing its new telephone
Additional new listlngs that"
c: Loans, net. ....... ...... .......... .. ......... . , ............. 9,310,000,00
.
d
leport,
is home from the coal could be needed to County Common Ple;tS Cow-l, system In order to bring will aid Individuals ln obBank premises, furniture and fixtureS, and
.
hospital and is improving but assure continuous plant where the trial was held after faster and more efficient taining faster service wiU be
otller assets representing bank premises ... ... . : . ........ , : . . . .. 428,000.00
no visi!S or phone calls can be operation in the event an it was deci~ed an impartial service to the residents ·of the announced on Aug. 1. .
Other assets ............... , , ... ...... .. ... , ... , .... .. . ...... .. . . 4,000.00
received
at present on her anticipated nationwide coal jury could not be empaneled
TOTAL ASSETS .... ........ . ... . ..... ... .. ... .. . ......... . . 19,898.000.00
doctor's
order.
cont~act bargaining strike by ln Coshocton County Common
LIABILITIES
persons . ::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::&lt;:::::::::::::::;:;::::::::;;
union
miners materializes Pleas Cow-l.
Demand deposits of individuals,
later this year. Third, the ' McNeeley had
been
partnerships and corporations . .. , , ........... ... . .. , ... , .... 5,015,000.00
EXTENDED OuTLooK
western
coal
co
uld
be
blended
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
convicted in tile shooting of
F'liday throagb Sallday,
with local coal at the police officer Sanford Stanley
partnerships, and corporations ..... ......... ....... .. ....... 12,917,000.00
Cloudy tonight and Thurs- fair Friday aad Salaulay
Muskingum
River
Plant
to
at the Coshoc ton police da y, chance of thunDeposits ofUnited States Government. . ... ... ... . . . . . ........ ... . .. 38,000.00
meet air quality standards. station. He had been held at dershowers. Lows tonight to aod a cbaace of llnmDeposits .of Sta tes and political subdivisions ........ . , .. . .. , .. ..... 446,000.00
Fourth, future tightening of Coshocton County Jail since 75, highs Thursday between dershowen Suda7. llfiU
Deposits of conunercial banks ............................... , ..... 2,000.00
air
quality standards could his indictment a little less
wiU be ID lbe Ills or lew •
Certified and officers' checks .... . .... ... , ...................... 141i,OOO.OO
85
and
90.
Probability
of
and
low1 Wm be Ia tbe lOs.
force ·AEP to increase its than a yea r ago and sentimce precipitation is 20 per cent
Total Deposits In Domestic Offices . , ........ . . . •..... 18,5641!00,0Q
·
burning of low-sulfur coal. . was pronounced exactly one today, 30 per cent tonight and
a. Total demand deposits ............... , . .. . ... ...•. , 5 51!? OOQ,OO
Hoover presented a graphic year after the killing.
b! Total timeand savings deposits ........ . .. ....... . . 12.982.QOO.OO
40 per cent Thursday.
iJJustration
to PUCO of Ohio
Total Deposits in Domestic and Foreign Offices .... .... , ....... . 18,5§4.00!),00
Power' s fuel adjustment
Other liabilities ....... ... .......... ................. .... .... ,. !OLOOQ,OQ
clause
charg,es, which
TOTALUABIUTIES ..................... .'................. 18,665,000.00
genera
lly
have been far
EQUITY CAP!TAL
below those of the state's
other electric companies. The
Common stock:
fuel clause graph showed
a. No. shares authorized 12,000
Ohio Power's · fuel clause
b. No. shares outstanding 12,000 ... . .. ..... , .. , , (par value)
300,000.Wl
charges
to customers to be
Surplus ... .. .... , .: , . . .. . . , ... ............ .. .. ... , ............... 500,000.00
the
lowest
among the state's
Undivided profits .. , , , , . ...... : . . ....... .... .......... . , ...... , 433 1000.00
seven
largest
electric utilities
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ...... . .. .... .. . • .. , ..... .... , .. , .. 1,233,000.00
99 per ceot nylon - five excellent decorator colors - reversible in six of the eight months, to
TOTALLIABIUTIESAND .
easy
to clean .
·
·
be second-lowest in one other
EQUITY CAPITAL ........... .. " .................. , .. . . .. 19,898,000.00
month, and to be third-lowest
ME MORANDA 'in
the remaining month.
Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date :
In
regard to ·tile western
a. Cash and due from banks ....... , ........ , ............. .. .... 1,934 ,000.00
coal
purchases,
Hoover told
b. Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
the
PUCO
that
tile
cost of the
agreementto resell ... .. .. : .. , . . ........ .......... . ..... ..... 668,000.00
highest-priced
westem.coalis
c. TotaJJ\lilns ............................ : ... ........ ...... .. 9,410,000.00
not passed through to the
e. Total deposits in domestic and foreign offices ... .. , ............ 18,128,000.00
•
company's retail customers,
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
but ·" ts recovered through the
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
incrementally
priced sales
. U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,·
for
"
resate,"
or
!roln thole
express yourself
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities .... , ....... , . ... .. . 1189,956.70
sales
to
non-AEP
System
TOTAL ...... : .':, ...... . ...... , ............................... 1189,956.70
in
beautiful chain
companies
made
whenever
'
'
the Gavin Plant has a
by '~ " ·
I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declsre
capacity to ., generate , more
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Whal delight! A chain for
pOwer than is th,en needed-by
fNeiV mood ... EMifYOUtftt!
·
Roger W. Hysell
the
AEP System. Such ssles,
Eleganttv crafted chain tl\1
Sweet 1n u Karat Gold, 12
currently :IS per cent of
Karat Gold Filled or SterGavin's total production,
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correclness.&lt;!f this report of condiling s,__Mote than 128
bring the
Ohio Power
Reg. S98.99 Size B'-5"x11'~4~'.............. . ...................... S.It$79.19
tion and declsre that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
c hainS In neck, 'Mist and
extra
revenues
Company
ankle 1e1 ogtm , .. me nnest
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Reg. $53.99 Size S' ·6"XI'·6". . ... . .... . ........................... .S.Ie $43.19
selectb • tn town ! Priced
while they aUow the Gavin
Leslie F. Fultz
Reg . S22. 99 Size 3'-6ux5'-6':••• , ............ • .............. , ••••••• SaleS 11.39
from $4.00
Plant to operate more efFennan E. Moore- Directors
Reg
. s 11 .99 Size JO"x50" .... . . . .............. . ................. Sale S 9.59
ficiently.
C. Wayne Swisher
Reg. s 7.49 Size 22 "x48"...................... '"!' ••••••••••••••••• Sale$ 5.99
Gavin, which began fun
Reg. s 4.-99 Size 20"xlo~: ........................................ SaleS 3."
commercial operation in mldState ol Ohio COWJty of Meigs, ss:
,
Home Furnishi119s-1st Floor
19'1$,
ia
the
newest
and
largest
Sworn u. and subscribed before me this 15th day Ill July, lt77.
Olllo Powet plant, at 2.8
Dorothy L. MIISIIet, Notary Public
My Commission Expires August 17, 1981.

·..,.....,.!

Mayor Andrews
takes 4 bonds ·

r,1ASON DR. IN

Cost
•

BJ LIXJNARD WRRY
·
. May. eon.umer priceS rose at a 10 per cent annual rate as poultry and eggs. Ground coffee prices rose 5.2 per cent and . The gains for conawner..-eadv foods ran counter to the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - GaaoUne price cull and a alower recently as April.
pork prices went up 0.3 per cent, but the rate,.... much slower experience of fanners who are recelviJIIIIower pricel for raw
rile lD the 001t of food beld the June lncreue ln the ccst ol
The Cmunerce Department was ezpected to release an than earlier mooths.
goods, although theae lower farm prices wiD eventuaUy show
biDe to 0.1 per cent for the eecood atralght month, the Labor overall yardstick today that's expected to show the U.S. The coffee prtoe gain was the lowest Ill the. year and up oo the grocers' shelves.
O.,.lmaJt llllld today.
economy in good shape. The Gross Nation! _Product Is expected combined with lower prices for green coffee, actual price cuts
'lbe department said lower income tax withholding rates
a - . worller bad a bit more cull, the department 'to riae about 7 per cent. The rate fqr the first three months of are expected in supermarkets by late swnmer.
increased the average worker's spendable income U per cent,
uld, beca-lower lnc&lt;me tax wi tbholding rates increaaed 19'17was 8.9perC(!IIt, thefastest ln ayear.
·
The food report was mixed, h\lWever . Although the weraU ·the largest gain in two years.
Cootributlng to the lllqwdown in conswner price Increases food price gains of 0.8per cent ln June were below the 2 and 1.5
lbe ._.... wcrker'a lfPendable Income by 3.4 per cent, .the
In gross terms, workers earned les8 111011ey in June beca1111e
18rl'll pln In two yean.
was an actual cut In gasoline prices - a result of record stoc!t' per cent jumps In February and April, food pushed the CPI up. of reduced overtime working hwra. Worken ended up with
Llbor Dep1rtment ofl!clals said the Conlumer Price Inda:, of gaao1ine and tbe beginning of what some analysts predict Other factors were rises In health care, mortgage Interest · niore mooey in their pockets becauae of lower federal lases.
wbleb m uu• average 1J1iCe cbapgesln goods and aervices will be a tlreeyear oU "glut."
rates and home maintenance cosla.
'
The Tax Reduction Act of 19'17 took effect June 1. The gain in
for an .-ban fll!llly, wu at 181,8 in Jwle, with a 1987 base of
In addition, used car prices dropped for the second straight
A large part of the food price gain resulted from proce!ISed ·spendable earnings was the biggest the U per cent Increase cl
110. That meua CGIIIUIIlerS needed f18.18 to buy goods worth montll.
t said p-ices were cut for beef, foods such as dairy produrts, canned and frozen fruits and May, 1975 that resulted from the anti..-ecesaloo las cut ol that
lfi!l decade ago. -_
In food, the departmen
•
year. .J·- ·
vegetables, sugar .and ~eels, cereal and bakery prodUfts.
.
.
The 11.1 per ~ pin for June was high by traditional stan-

:n;;

~

ilarda. but It matcbed the previous low lncreues ln March and

SUMMER CLEARANCE

SANDALs ·

Crossing

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company

Ohio P ower

New-phone system
being
announced
.

th~e~t~~';!~:.reai
·Weather

-ELBERFELDS ,IN POMEROY
· Salel Oval Braided Rugs

THE

Cl-l41N
St4TION

~~:~~~~:~ ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
ill!!____
projected power demands.

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lllli_ _

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HOSPITAL NEWS

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._Tbe Daily Sentinel. MuldlePvrt-Pomeruy, 0 ., Wednes&lt;Jay, July 20, l!Ti7

VOL XXVIII NO. 68

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

entine

THURSO
AY, JULY 21. 1977
.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

(

DonationS in .

dead in shootino
e
•
.d
M.ddl
.
rt
b
rnsr . e l
epo
ar

-=====:s ; ; ;; ; ==: ; ; ;:==' _r r h r a e
Moaday, fair Salllrday and
j
Sunday
and
a.
chance
of
'l'wenty-one donations have
been received toward the
purchase of a new emergency
vehicle for Pomeroy Village.
Latest contributors are
Alfred and Margaret G8J1S;
•
. .
.
.
Edward · Lowen, Gerald mid 80s Salllrday aod In lbe
Hoffner, Mr. and Mrs. Albert upper 80s or 908· Sunday
By KATIE CROW
shOts at the bllrtender, all determine, Hewitt used the removed to Ewing Funeral
Hoffner, Stella Kloes, Edna
Three persons are dead as lllissing.
·-·
same hlmse
.22 caUlibretherevohlvedr to Home, whdlnere arrangementa
Styles, Mr. and Mrs. James and Mollday.
a
result
of
a
wild
shooting
.
People
m
'the
bar
asked
shoot
m
ea ·
· are pen g.
Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Roy :::~;:;:=~&lt;,;~::::~::::::;;:;::::::;&lt;::::::::::&lt;=;:::::&lt;=:=:::: Incident Wednesday' at Hewitt to stop shooting 1n
PoUce arri• ed at the scene
Hennan·Henry of the BCI
Mayer, Mr. and Mrs. P. E.
Headquarters Bar in Mid- order to get .the womeit and at 6:34 p. m. and swnmoned arrived at the scene at 8:10 P·
Stanley, Mr. and Mrs, lbor
dleport
at approximately 8:20 children outside. One mother the Middleport and Pomeroy m. to being processing
Carsey, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
managed to escape with her Emergency Squads. A evidence on tbe scene. Also
Fetty, Faye Will, Mr. and
Chance of thundershowers _P. ~dare Harry Hewitt, 2ti; small child.
. customer managed ·to take present were Sheriff James
SERVICE TO MtiJTARY FAMILIES IS ALIVE Mrs. Clarence Spurrier,
Mrs. Wilma Sargent, director of the American Red
this
evening,
clearing
late
his
wife,
Linda
Hewitt,
28,
Rt.
Linda
Hewitt,
28,
wife
of
Hewitt baby ~ safff!ety. J . ProkCrffltl and his deptlnguti":i
Chester Knight, Eloise
60 !, Long Bottom, and Marjorie Harry Hewitt, was forced the
Croll's Sentce to Mllltary Famllies program, told
tonight
with
lows
between
Ca~~llysell,
juv~e 0 cer, Ric ow, prosecu
•
Adams, R. L. Miller, Loretta and 65. Pleasant Friday, Wyatt, 44, HyseJJ Run, away from tile bar to a booth. tooP'charge of
memben of the Humans Resource Council that tbe
tile
Infant.
torney ; Gar:y Wolfe, MidBeegle, Meigs County
80 and · 85· mother-in-law of Harry She was · shqt ln the head
Is alive and workin&amp; in Meigs County. The
highs between
All victims we_re taken to · dleport policeman, and other
Jaycees
,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
meeting was held following lunch at the Meigs Inn on
while boldlng her nine month Veterans Memonal Hospital. local enforcement officers.
Probability of precipitation is Hewitt.
Harold Dqc!r,vorth, Mr. and 7Dpercenttoday, 40percent . According to Middl\li)Ort old child in ·her arms, wit· LindaHewittwasbei,ngtaken Dr. R. R. Pickens, county
l'Uesday.
Mrs .. Tom Parker and Bertha tonight and near zero per cent Chief of . Police J . J. nesses said,
to St. Joseph .Hospital, coroner arrived at 8:13p.m.
Parker.
Friday.
Cremeans, this ill what ocMarjorie Wyatt, '4-1, the Parkersburg, when .she died
Chief Cremeans extended
curred:
mother-in-law, was also enroute. Harry Hewitt and his thanks to all officers for
At approximately 6:20 p. forced from the bar and shot Marjorie Wyatt died at their Instant asalstance in tbe
m. Hewitt entered the front ln the back of the head'. At Veterans Memorial Hospital. tragedy. No motive has been
door of Headquarters Bar thlstlme,asfaraspolicecan AJJ · three bodies were determined{orUi_eshootings.
after being put out three
Servl ~e
to
MIIltary that he or she chooses the
In closing Mrs Sargent Often donate In times of fimes
dy CJ
ch On
ter'
by the
bartender,
•
' appreciation
·
emergencies but most
. Hewitt
en told
mg
Families, a diviaon of Red aerviceman ill given a hand· expressed her
.... of the San
the third on
lime,
"--and vital link between booL hich
talns an entire and that of the local Red needed funds m~. come
State
.....,.
....
~ a · and the hom•
h • t.w r con
n Service to Cross organization to .the from bus 1ness e s and In • Clorich he was going U. shoot
worldrig b;
Fdes ahd ill told county's police force, doc- dividual donatibns . AP· him, and he_ fired three wild
Meigll
, bat mtJbe not to contact Red Cros, tors, funeral homes, .and parently the weal community .
he n......
_.. to . rea ch other outlets f or the1r is
juSt not
showing
enough
forThat
long.
,
Interest
in the
Red Crpss
to ·
's on tbe
word .of Red Lwhenever
&lt;. family or have a leave cooperation In identification
.
·
keep It alive. "We don't w11nt
Croai worker Wilma Sargent, ..,.
home arranged. "It gives the and ·verification pf9Cesses.
featured
speaker
at aerviceman and bill famlly a
Vernon Nease, chalnnan of to let our servicemen down,"
doctor
Tuiaday'a .meetlnl! of the great sense of security," aald the Human Resolirce CouncU, said Nease, "lbey expect and
The U. S. Energy,Research
Mel11 County Human Mrs. Sargent, ''to know tnat and director of the Red CrOss deserve our help," he added.
and
Development ·Ad·
COLUMBUS - The In·
Resolln.'ell Council foUowing he can get home within a blood prograri\ underlined
Pleas fqr an Individual who
mini~ratiQn,
through
its
dustrial
Commlasloo of Ohio
· lwicheon al the Meigs Inn, matter of ooun ln the face of his remarks - ~- Sargent's would be wllllng to chair a
in
Portsmouth,
will
office
Tuesday
rued auJt agalrilt a
and of Vernon Ne88e, 8 family crillis or emergency concept that Red Cross is · fund drive program and for
invite
bids
for
relocation
of
West
VIrginia
chiropractor
specified
to beissued
used
cblllrman of the rt110urce . (such as tennlnal lUness or needed, even ln peacetiroe, dooatlons
In Meigs County
were
warehouses at Portsmouth
that
he
~ubmltled
charging
group and director of the death of a close family and asked the audience ~ by Nease and those Interested
Two citations were Issued Gaseous Diffusion Plant,
~ .843 worth of fraudulent
county
Red
Cross member.)
remember last weeks . giving th ir time or money in a three-vehicle collialon at Pike County, near Piketon.
blUs to the eommllialon.
lll'ganlzatloa.
The Red Cross will also Korean Incident.
m
eCro Servi t
12:20
·
p.~
;
Wednesday
on
The
notice
said
the
work
The commission, in Its suit
55
0
Mrs. Sargent said the !II!CIII'e information about the
"But right now " sald to the Red
ce
Ingles
Rd.
at
Baker's
.
L
an·
consists
of
site
preparation,
filed
In Franklin County
Mllltary
Famill
TRACY
FIFE
Famllles
program
Servi£e to
·
es aervlceman's salety or weU• . Nease, .. we are fina'lly em- M!Htaryked
to phone
Mrs. ·ding in Oama County.
·
includlq
earthwork
and
Conunon
Pleas Court against
Meigs Conaty's only .
prosram Ia a "alieni helper" being In tlle event of some barrassed. We ,will have to are . as
The
Gallla·Melgs
Post
concrete
foundations
and
Dr.
Randall
A. Taylor, of
BlceaWJDI•l baby, Utile
lnpaacetlmeanddurlngwar. 110rt of dl.!aster where he is come up with funding from Sargent at 992-2680 Or Mr.
State
Highway
Patrol
said
floor
slabs
to
relocate
rigid
Point
Pleas11nt,
W. Va.,
Tracy Lor.alae Fife,
"Very few people · even located. If a famUy calls Red local people soon or we will be Nease at 949-2588.
charged
that
the
accident
occurred
where
fra01e
Butler
buildings;
Taylor
sub_,_._ In Melgs Cross, Mrs. Sargen
.
t ex- forced to ...
.L
busln~
celebrate4 her lint blrtbrea111e . It c.....,
ut our doors. " If
· In ather rt
the Nease
Blood
an auto driven by Gary A. relocation of four buildings . day oa. lilt Foarlb af July mitted fraudulent biUs for
County," she said, "but wllen plained, Red Cross can then, that should happen, Mrs. gave a repo on
wilb 1ler pareallr, Mr. and work be did not perform on
a mllltB.ry family l'lll1&amp; into a through
a
base
In Sargent Indicated that local Bank program a)ld gave a Blankenship, 16, Gallipolis, 5110 feet long. lind 100 feet
south
rounded
a
wide;
one
building
380
feet
traveling
Mn.
·Gary Fife, and - eight pei'SOIII.
cr1l1l or emergency tlley Washington, D.C., contact military famllies would have briefhiatocyoftlle Red Cross
blind
curve
and
swerved
to
long
and
100
feet
wide
and
one
All had been Injured and
lraD'dparulo,
Mr. aad
Immediately know It's other Red Cross stations to go through an agency in OFganizatlon.
.
avoid
a
parked
auto
owned
by
building
300
feet
long
and
50
were
awarded workers'
Mrs. Richard DeMou, all
WOIIdug."
throughout the world.
Cohunbua and the process , Attending were Nease,
William
B.
Muheimer,
46,
feet
wide.
compensation
benefits. An
of 5 ' Liberty Ave.,
Cltill8 a few of the· more
Of course, as Mrs. Sargent would take almost twice as · Mrs. Sargent, Lee Norman,
North
Lawrence,
Ohio.
His
Estimated
cost
range
Is
b&amp;assistant
Ohio
attorney
Pomeroy. A cake featartog
than • Cases tbe program' s stressed, each time Red long
representing OBES ;
car
then
struck
a
vehicle
tween
$1,000,000
and
u American flag aod tbe general said the . injured .
· ,Cross rece1ves no Socl
Margaret
Ella
Red
.
Do Lewis,
tby BCancer
Will driven by Melvin R. Halley, $1,500,000. Time of com·
volunteers have band)e d Cross receives a can from a
laserlptioll
"Happy Blrtb- 'persons probably didn't know
during ·the. put two Je&amp;n, serviceman or family, the federal funding and in. the RSV~~; H ro BaUey and !18, GaJJipolis. There was pletion Is 385 calendar days. .
clay
Ttaey,"
..... oerved to tbe biUs were sent to the
1
Mn. Saraent llluattated the lnfonnation given to them case of a local fund drive .lbe
• e en
moderate
damage.
Security
clearances
will
not
1
Karen,
Kim,
Richard, coJIUOIMion.
1s oluervke such as MUST be verified. ·
Meigs CouDty Chapter would ·'Mary ~klnner, Per~ong
Blankenship
was
cited
for
be
required.
. All of Ill~ Injured per80111
Marty,
and
Karla
DeMou;
Red Crou:
·
"There are some people be allowed to keep only 50 per Advocacy; Jim Lang or •
excessive
·
speed
while
·
Bids
w1U
be
opened
on
or
hlld
been patients'llf Taylor's ·
Scoit and Debbie Fife;
•--"R8to ..~ ~-rgent ..... will g to. any extreme to cent of the money raised· the special programs; Steve
.......,.~.., ...... ""
' """
o .
.
• th
Darrow and Gem Lyons of Maxbeimer was booked for about Sept. 15.
at
one
time or another, an
Steven and Stephoale See,
Melp County has a rather get their son borne," she said, remained goes to
• the Community Mental parking on the roadway.
assistant
For additional lnfonnation
attorney general
See, aod Cbrio and
hilh enlistment and many and often the Red Cross wiU National Red Cross Health Department; Glenna A second mishap occurred contact the U. S. Energy Sherry
said.
Brenda Fry.
who 10 brto the aervlce get false reports ot deaths or organization.
Crisp and Leafy Chasteen. a .• :30 p.m. on SR 7, on Research and Development
Tile
commloslon
lo
t
l:boose to· make It a career. Wness. " Ju.M a few p!wme
Other Red Cross chapters
County Rd. 3 where Randy Administration, Portsmouth
demanding a ludgmenl
ypoa entering tbe branch calls will okay things.;;McDaniel, 21, Cheshire, Area Office, PO Bos 700,
against Taylor of $100,1100 for
attempting to stop fur a car Piketon, Ohio, 45861, At·
_punitive damages and the
which slowed to-make a left tentloo: Jesse L. England,
t5,843ln biUs submitted to tbe
tQ
tum, could not stop his Chief,
Contract
&amp;
commission between ~984 and
tractor traner rig. The truck Procurement Branch, or
1972.
lllid
off
the
right
side
of
the
phone
614-289-2331,
Extension
UaHed Praa Ialet'llatloaal
l:hulidershowera In northern
'
BJ Ulllted l'ral Ialet'llatloaal
5018.
Cooler
air
Is
beaded
toward
Olllo
today and showers and highway Into a guardllall.
:: OOLUMBUS -THE OHIO HOUSE ENERGY Committee
thundershowers are likely by
. COLUMBUS (UPI) - Closing maybe
·. Weilnelday ~~mt to tbe Rules Committee leglalatlon creating Oblo.
Alarge IIUIIIIl ol cool air has
Ohio's unemployed ilo longer
an Ohio~ Ill Energy partially funded wilb an sclse bunt up over central Canada, afternoon in the central and
southern
portioll8
of
tbe
state.
wiU he ellglble for an eXtra 13 untU Saturday
",~ on c:oallllld in Ohio. The propoRCI cabinei..Ievel state
the
Northern
PlaiM
and
the
.
lli8bs
today
will
be
ilroWid
weeks
of benefits after '
~ Wlluld bave overall authority to manage the state's upper Great Lakes. 'lbe froot 110 along Lake Erie to near 90
· County road ~~ !rom the SR
Saturday.
'
• flllei1Y re.urcel, admlnlaler atalewlde energy curtailment edge of tbe cool aJr will move
the Ohio River. Sllies ·
'lbe U. S. Department of 7 bypass to CR 3 was cloaed
."JIIaM 8lld fund energy conwrslon and pollution abatement Into northern Oblo today and along
wUl clear tonight and
Labor Wednesday notified yesterday - Wednesday 'fltct!Hiee.
'
should
reach
the
Ohio
River
temperatures
should
drop
the
state Bureau of Em· and will remain closed
· 'l'lle\ JII'IIPOIIed oow tu, almost all cl whicb · would
by tonl&amp;ht.
into
the
5011
and
lew
808.
• ployment Services, which possibly untU Saturday to
-tualb' fall oo nlillty COIIInlners, would generate between There is a chance of
Friday
should
be
pleall8nt
administers the unem· perinlt a Penn · Central
nmiilloil and fl3 mJ11ian a year. The tax would be on coal sales
.
with
cooler
•drier
air.
ployment Ins~ program raUroad crew out of ComJnc
ol iDare tban 10 Ionia year 1 and would l'8JII8 between 40 cents
Temperatui\11 eerly today .
In Ohio, that. the federal to repair the croasln&amp;. '1\:affief
and 11 eema • -loa, _dependiJII oo the 'sulfur content of the coal. · ·Live snakes
were
in
the
miiii8Y
70s
and
government's estended from Middleport to CR 7 -may
Tbe lillber the IIUiflr CCII~nt, the lower 'Would be the tax. .
_
radar Indicaled showers were
benefits
program
for uae a short detour over CR 3.beginning
to
develop
in
north·
All truCk and through traffic
wmnp1oyment
eoinpen&amp;atlon
WASHINGTON - PRIME ~ Menahem Begin will be in
west
Ohio.
should
contlnu.e to uae the
would
be
phased
out
this
_,. ba IJiiPICtl tbe UDited States to live a positive reply nen
bypass
and US 33, county
week111d.
111 Jlnel'a jxopcul to cojlladlllll! Fl8flgbbn and otmr
Uve mat• wiU be the
engineer
Wesley .Buebl inOBES Administrator
'.mOtte, ...... bit 1111 fabn or a· MJdd!e Eut 11tt1emeqt main attraction at tlle
dicated.
Albert G. GUel said- the
FILEACTlON
,..,..... doubt. Jle&amp;ln liociiJ ... wlnclnc up bill ml.lsil!' to · dllldrell's IJI'08I'IIII at the
Flllag
for
dlllolutioo
of
trtggeriJII
off ol extended
" " l p bJwnfaiiiC ~ uhl!ted members of Congrees Middleport Library on
IIIII II • • tlll1 ~ In prtqte Ufe.
' Friday, July Zl at 3 p.m. A marriage In Melga County
benefltl woulCI affect about
AtTION DEl-Uti&gt;
We'
hi atptbualdat 1 recepUoo far friendl of r.~! member of the Park Service Common P1Na Court Wed15,000 jobless Ohioans.
It was reported that the
End of the program came
.
. AREA VISll'ORs, A LONG WAY FROM HOME I tiJat 1111 lllllfl wllb l'l ldent Carltr ..... "a rare II!ICCIII,
wtU be IJriucinl along live nesday were Tlmcthy ~
when
tbe
national
rate
cl
Melp
County .Commilllonen
. Yki Pr t I Willi .. •ale kid .t bl a Jbled crowd, "''ltff• to be a part ol a spr., Rlltland and Anna Mri. Ole..Jorgon (K.atb,y) Gilbo and her 11011, Tor Erik, of
lnanred
unemployment
adopted
road namu for
Loutae Spires, Galllpolla
Ncnray vlllted recently~- and Mrs. E. o. RaU, Maaon ,
bltW t 1 b Uilftld 8lat8 and l'lrae1 have nefti' JII'OII'UD oo lllalres.
droppeJI below U per cent, , ~rd, Chater, Le~
nsidenb and OWII&amp;i of Rall'l Ben Frar*Jin In
There wtU lllo be a fl1m
·the
t~el at which extended Ollw, Orange, Salem
Mb:ldlepclrt.
Kathy
and
Erik
have
been
In
the
U.
S.
foc
eaJMd,
"Glut
Callltrieton"
.u bll · - llllllf•ence Wedr&gt;elday, Begin .aald be
BOARD
TO
MEET
'
beneflll
are no Jon1er •Scipio T~_,!!. ~
three weeta vllltlng ber parents In Cleveland.
with
" **d
Unt'*' 1tata1 In tbl ......,q dQI to relpOIICI about larp baa eollltrlc:tors
payable.
The
Ohio average ol .meetlntl
Y._... were
'lbe
replar
meeting
cl
the
.
them was ber daug~Pr, Chrllllne, 4. Her huaband, Ole,
11:. ¢ .. in JIIM'I aI I .. In C4'i h•• b aapblo!tt:etel aroand tbe world. Tbls
lnaured
unemployment
In
,...
Incorrect.
'lbey
I
. . . . . . 11 llllln"rlduforltl P'OIP'am contlnuee the · SouU!ern Local School Board lllayed In Ncnray this year to backpack In Norway's
J..,
wea
u
par
coet.
wblle
·
presented
propond
road
''gentle" mountalna. 'lbey met at Kent Stata University
Qii1ta&amp; IIIJt, ud
Cillle' CUii dniih• llllrary'a 'l'lllldiJ and Friday will be beld tonlabt at 7:30
00
the national rate for total Dimeo but will not act the
• , . ,, %, _ tbl
fl. hrael'a peace afternoon fQii abowlqs . p .m. In · the hl&amp;h nhool · and were friends of Tom Rail, aU stadenlll at KSU in Jlle
0
mid-a.
employment wu 7.1 par cent. iaaue wtll tbeJ meet JIIIJ • ·
cafetena.
1
Apln, It II free to lhe public.
01•"1 rd oe Pqt

~

on new vehicle

:~·~!':a:~~=!-=
E?:~dilb~:;

~

Weather

Prvllf8lll

.
,
~ - .•
d
., .
e· xp 81 ne
Red Cross P rogram~

;" :::n~:;

~~

Bid m·VI•ted

T WO
· Cite
• d

tO relocate

•
sumg

warehouses ·

following
collision

Rocking chair
money stop.
after 13 weeks

0

.(N;;;·:-: .i;''B;i;f~ Mercury·· falling ·

.

library

·"'*

.......
''r•" •

I

'*

a.

.aa:W ;f: ·,

-c.:'

lo

I

o,)

~

1\t .

,_

�•
•

2-The DaUySentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. Julyll,I!ITI

Middlt~IOI'l··Porner&lt;•Y, 0., Thursday. July 21.1977

House committee passes hargainingright bill
ByJ.R.IUMMINS
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - The
Ohio House Commerce and
l..abor Committee late
Wednesday approved top
Democratic priority legIS lation
giving
Ohio's
500 000 pubUc employes the·
right to collec.lively bargain
for wages and fringe benefits
after July I, !979.
The bill was sent to the
!louse Rules Committee on a
pa rty~ine vote - the fifth
partisan vote on the bill since
it was introduced Aprill9-and
passed the Senate June 8.
Similar legislation was
'-et.oed by Gov. James A.

Rhodes in 197~. 'flus seSSion,
Democrats have enough of·a
majority to override a
gubernatorial veto.
No major amendments
were adopted by either the
subcommittee or the full
con;unittee in the House.
One amendment late
Wednesday. sponsored by
' Rep . Sherrod Brown, DEucUd, and seconded by R.,P.
Dennis Ecka rt, D-Mansfield,
wou ld have limited the
flexibility of an arbitrator in
negotiating a labor dispute. It
was adopted 8-7.
But soon after the surprise
,vote on the amendment,

Eckart was called Ill the the comments '·in jest."
The bill would repeal Ohio's
hallway to meet privately
with How;e Speaker Pro Tem 30-year old ban on strikes by
public employes and would
Barney Quilter, 0-Toledo.
Eckart roturned to the allow public employes to
committee room five minutes form collective bargaining
later and told the committee Wlits.
A State Employment Relahe "had later information"
and would like to change his tions Board (SERB) would
vote.
administer the act.
The amendment was then
Any inipasse in a labor
defeated , a move which dispute would be referred to
prompted Brown to charge the board . for mediation ,
that the committee was being conciliation, fact-finding and
run like the· " Soviet nonbinding arbitration when •
Politburo " where "somebody ·agreed upon by both labor
·
makes the decisions and we and management.
ratify them."
Strikes, even by police and
Brown later said he made firemen, would be permitted
as a last resort.
But employers could
submit a labor impasse with
public safety forces to
binding arbitration , resulting
in a setfiemenl which could
not be appealed to a court.
if an employer felt a strike
Irons of a bar called Jerry's' jeopardiiiid the public health
Tavern· in the community of and safety, he could obtain a
Franklin were drowned.
60-day
"cooling
off"
Chief Mock and another injunction from a court of
officer were out riding on common pleas ordering the
Route 12 in a new $12,000 employes back to work and
cruiser.
requiring daily . "good faith "
" We were coming arowld a negotiations.
curve when the water swept
All major cba~es sought
down on us," Mock said. "We
bailed out through the
windows and watched the
cruiser disapp.e ar in the

HorrOrs recalled
1 couldn't bold ooto my J ohnstown 's Lee Hospital
rootber - she drowned :.. "
By KAREN smtrHWICK
JOHNS'I:OWN, Pa . ( UP!)
- Theysearchedfirstforthe
living, remembering how it
was the last time a wall of
water came down the
Conemaugh Valley. The dead
will be dealt with later.
Ralph Turner ·had seen it
all before, in 1936.
"This was worse than that
was," he said.
When the deluge came this
time, Turner found himself
watching in horror as unsuspeeling drivers tumbled with
their cars into a crevice that
Mce was part of a four-lane
highway .
" A 1976 van went right
down into a hole in the road,"
said
Turner,
now
a
supervisor of Richland
Township. " It was lost. It was
just sitting down there with a
bunch of other cars.
" Some of the drivers
jumpedout,butfourorfiveof
them stayed in their cars. .
They haven't been found
ye t."
It was the Johnstown flood
ali over again - a town 's
' tragic legacy suddenly a
· living nightmare.
The big flood, on· May 31,
1889, killed 2,209 persons
when a dam broke. The'
torrent came again in 1936,
dealing more death.
Then the rains rode in
again late Tuesday night on a
thunderstorm of unsilrpassed
fury, . dumping 8.5 . inches in
seven hours on the same
cluster of steel and coal
, mining communities 50 miles
east of Pittsb11rgh.
A wall of water some
judged 12 feet high swept at
least 32 persons to their
deaths and left hundreds
injured. It shredded roads,
twisted railroad tracks and
wbisk.e d away houses,
automobil.e s and railroad
cars like match boxes under a
garden hose.
Four others died of
apparent natural causes at

.....

where two floors were flooded
and the power was knocked
out.
T~en came th~ fires,
touched off by ligh1ning, and
the looters, taking advantage
of the chaos . The lucky ones
scrambled to rooftops to be
plucked to safety by
helicopters .
Gov. Milton Shapp, who
estimated the damage at
more than $100 million, said
be will go to Washington
today to ask President Carter
for disaster relief funds . He
sent in 200 state patrolmen to
help restore order. Ali 8 p.m.
curfew was imposed to hold
down looting.
As the Conemaugh River
began to rf!C"de, the stack of
bodies grew at temporary
morgues set up at East Hills
Elementary School and · where.
"We are going after the
living first and then the dead
will come later," said
Richland Township .Police
Chief James Mock.
The fate of many simply
was not known.
There had been the old
folks at Jobnsto\VII'S Solomon
Ho!lles housing project who
barricaded themselves in and
refused to leave.
" They thought if they left,
theirhomeswouldbelooted,"
said Marine Sgt. Harvey
Freville, aboard one of the
rescue helicopters: "The
back side of the .house might
he gone, but they'd still
barricade themselves behind
the door. "
An entire trailer park was
washed into the river at
Seward.
Laurel Run Dam, a small
earthen structure. on the outskirts of Johnstown, broke
when a 12-foot wall of water
surged down the creek in the
early morning.
"Thirty to 40 houses aren't
there anymore," ·said Craig
Beltz, a steelworker · from
West Taylor Township.
One policeman said 12 pa-

...

~

water."
For Randy Teeter, a 22year-old National" Guardsman from West Taylor, it
was a oight of tragedy. His
mother, Dorothy Ann, 50, was
snatched from his grasp in
the 12-foot tide.
"I grabbed hold of some
debris and was swept along in'
the darkness," he said. I
couldn't hold onto my
mother. She drowned ."

SHIELD LAW
COLuMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio House Wednesday ap·
proved a change in the state's
"shield law" by adding noncommercial, educational
broadcasters to the definition
·of reporters and editors
whose sources of information
are protected from grand
jury or trial inquiries.
The bill cleared the House
84-4.

By HELEN THOMA!!
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) . President Carter, victorious
in the latest showdowns with
Congress, looked homeward
today as he readied a major
speech to begin a two-day
swing through his native
South.
He also planned a Town
Hall meeting in Yazoo City,
Miss., tonight and a visit
Friday to an oil rig off the
'

.

Animals also suffering the heat
Jly VIC WATIA

United Press loteruallooal
The nation's searing heal and dwindling
water supplies
causing concern not
only for human life but 'the welfare of
animals.
Where there has been rain, it has come
too fast, and cooling relief- under way in
the Northern and Midwest states - has
come too slow.
The death toll in .both hwnan and animal
life from heat and drownings mounted
Wednesday.
In Johnstown, Pa., a !().foot waU of
water burst without warning though a
mountain valley, sweeping away roads,
cars, homes and entire families . State
police said at least 25 persons were kiUed,
aU but one drowned. Officials said $100
million in property was lo~t in the disaster.
The area ab:eady signifies flood tragedy
in American history. In 1889 a flood killed
2,209 persons in Johnstown .
Nea&lt; Loveland, Colo. .,.. where 139
persons were killed almost a year ago heavy rains Wednesday prompted
warnings in the Big Thompson Canyon.
John Hanely ·of Glen Haven, Colo., said,
" It made us think of about a year ogo.

are

or pay a uservice fee" and
bar the use of ~~service fees''
for j&gt;Qiitical purposes.
" The bill is and will not be
designed to throw the balance
to either side," said
committee cbainnan Rep. J .
Leonard Camera, D-Lorain.
" I feel that the vehicle for
collective bargaining is long
overdue.
" Hopefully, when we finish
(with the bill), the vehicle
will be there. It is our attempt
to draft a bill that is fair to
both sides."
Camera
chaire11
the'
committee two years ago
which recommended the bill
eventually vetoed by Rhodes.
'· Last week, Camera said the
bill, · because of its major
importance and far-reaching
effect on state and local
governments, was "the most
difficult thing " he bad ever
worked on.

L!!ndau top, power windows, tape
player·
$4995
76 Olds Cutlass S, A. C., P.S., P,B., Vtop, road wheels, radials
$4795

76 Chevelle Malibu, A.C., tilt wheel,

$3395
P.S., P.B., radials
76 Pacer, 6 cylinder, auto., P.S.,
A. C., V-top, roof rack .
$3695 .
76 Pinto ·Runabout, 4 cyl., auto.,
P.S., P.B.,-woodgrain
$3295
'

76

$2495
FM
7S Datsun B-210, hatchback
$2695
74 Plymouth Satellit·e Custom,. a.c.,
auto., 318 V-8, P.S., P.B., V-top $2495
74 Mustang !J, 4 cyl., 4 spd, Vtop
$2495
, auto, P.S. 2295
73
72 Charger, 318

v.,, A. C., auto., P.S.,

P.B., 54,000 miles
72 Nova, 6 cyl., auto.
72 Charger, 340 magnum
71 Torino, auto., P.S., P.B.
71 V.W. Squareback, 4 spd.,
low miles.

$1995
$1695
$16t5

$1295

A.C.,
$1695

some scientists call ''some
sort of dinosaur" in the
Pacific off New Zealand,

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Causes of
enlarged heart

Thundershowers left 3 to 4 inches of
water in the Colorado Rockies in 15
minutes Wednesday , resulting in the flash
flood warnings for Big Thompson Canyon
and other areas.
.
· HQ! weather also iS acCC)I!nting for its
share of the death tolL At least 11 deaths
have been blamed on the heat in the St.
Louis area, and three persons dro,wned in
Wisconsin trying to escape the ~at.
The American Hwnane Society said
Wednesday that animals also have been
bard hit. A spokesman said the heat wave
and drought so far bave killed 80,000
chickens in Eastern states, forced
volunteers to rescue ducks from dried up
ponds in San Francisco and driven ;wildlife
out of the Colorado Rockies.
.
The beat seemed unbelievable. Forty-siJ;
states registered teinperatures in the 90s
Wednesday. The high of the day was at .
florence, S.C.- 103. The cit)' was among
11 in the country equaling or setting record
highs for the date .

.

.

spokesmen for the ship's
owner say .
The Taiyo Fishery Co.
spokesmen said Wednesday
the trawler, the 2,4oo.ton
Zl\iy_omaril, picked up the
b~ of the mysterious
creature while it was sailing
in the Pacific Ocean about 30
mUes off CJu1stchurch, New
Zealand in late April.
· The creature had a long
neck and . batlike wings
measured
33-feet
and
weighed
2 tons ,
the
company's spokesman said.
The half -&lt;~&lt;!composed body
was pulled up by the
trawler's nets from a depth of
about I ,000 feet, the company
said.
The crew lifted the
creature on deck and · took
pictures but threw it back
into the sea because it
smelled "v~ry bad."
. ManY. · Japanese scientists·
and archaeologists withheld

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. the heart muscle, from fattyDEAR DR. LAMB- I am a ·. choiesterqi deposits, may
64-year,old ll!idow and live cause difflllje damage of the
alone. The doctor says I have heart muscle and eventually
an enlarged heart and he is failure.
What does failure mean?
giving me Hygroton for
water.
The muscle fibers are like
For Friday, July 22, 1877
What causes an enlarge(! long springs and when they
heart? Is there any pain? are overstretched the !wart
How large does it get com- fails. rt is not as effective in
pared to. normal size? Can pumping blood as it was. This
you ever 'feel it when it gets may lead to the accumulation Bernice Bede Osol
enlarged? What is the best of fluid . That may be why you
way to care for an enlarged are taking· a medicine to.
heart? Is l t serious'ODoes it eliminate fluid from your
caU.se rheumatic fev.er? Can body.
it be inherited? Does it ever . Enlarged hearts do not
cause heart attacks?
cause heart ' attacks. The
July 22, 1877
DEAR READER - A nor- disease of the arteries that It w1ll not be without li mitations .
mal person who is a vigorous causes the enlarged heart but the coming year will be a
athlete may develop a heart •nay. Also a heart attack that satisfying one tor yo u. You'll es·
that is somewhat larger than weakens the heart muscle tablish mbre meaningful t ies and
less active people. Why? may result in (ailure with bonds w i th friends and
associates and they will have an
Because the heart is a heart enlargement.
enduring quality.
Nor does an enlarged heart
storage organ and must store
(Juno 21-July 22) Is
blood inside its chambers cause rheumatic feveF. But CANCER
th·ere something you ''Ye wanteel
before it beats to pump blood damage of heart valves from for your home. but couldn't afwith each heart beat. The rheumatic heart disease may ford? Check your sources1oday .
heart enlarges to ac- overwork the heart and lead There's a good chance you can
obtain it with ease. Find out to
commodate more blood so it to heart enlargement.
•whom you 're romantically ·suited
can fWJction better in these
An enlarged heart is not iflby sentl lng for, your copy . of
, individuals. In that case it is a ·herited as you can see from As t ro-G~aph Leiter . Mall 50
sign of health, not disease.
the list of things I have men- cents lor each and a long . self·
In other instances, and I tioned that can cause this addresSed. stamped envelope to
am certain this is true of your l'Ondition. And surgery is nol Astro -Graph , P.O. Box 489 ,
City Station . N.Y . 10019.
case, the heart enlarges needed for an enlarged heart Radio
Be sure to specify your birth
because there is some itself, but if the enlargement sig n.
underlying disease. There , is associated with a defective
are four chambers to the valve then in selected cases it LEO (July 23·A.uv. 22) There is
heart and any one or all can iS wise to replace the valve by
be enlarged. If the valve in- surgery. This sometimes prcr
THEDAILYSENTINEL
side the heart between the up- duces remarkable results for
DEVO'IllJT0111E
per and !Qwer left chambers .years apd may extend life . ..
INTERESTOF
•
MEIGS-MASON AREA
is faulty the upper chamber
The most common clluse of
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
(left atriwn) may get as death is a heart attack.
Euc.Ed.
ROBEirMIOEFLICH
large as a wash-tub and may . Everone should learn what !Q
Cky Edllor
.
fill a major portion of· the do If a person has sudden
Publiahed dally exc.-epl S.turdli
· stoppage of tbe heart. The
chest.
by The Ohio Valley Publishing Com-:
any, U1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
The lower left cbamber Arrterican Heart .Assn. iii
ll'l$9. B......, Offke Phone m.
(left ventricle) is the many areas offen courses to
2151.Editorial PIM!neJ11.21$7'
Second clau pr.alqe paid at
chamber most often involved teach you the method. To
Pomeroy, Ohio.
,
in disease. This is the learn about the 111etbod and
Natiunal advert.1slng repc•nchamber thai does all of the bow it works send 50 toents for
tative Ward - Grlfith Cotnp!llly,
Inc., BottinetU and Gallagher Olv.,·
heavy pumping of blood to T),e Health Letter niunber
7$7 Third Ave., Ntw YoR, N.Y.
your body and is responsible 7-4, ,save a Life : Heart and
IWU1.
for your measurable blood Lung Arrest. Include a loog,
Sublcriptjon '"''" Dellvered bf,
caoier where avlillble 7$ c.IJ per
self-addressed . "eek. By Mo&amp;or RauSt wheR canier
pressure in your ann. It can stamped,
oeivlct 1101 ovlillble, Ono month.
enlarge because of high blood envelope with your request to
lfi3.25. 8)" mail in Oh1o .nd W. Va.,
pressure -causing it to over- Dr. Lamb, in care of this
One Yeor p:!.DO; Six OlOIIIJ1o,
JIUO; Thrft montho, 17.011;
work- or from a defecl in the newspaper, P .O. Box 1561,
.-.oo r•r: Six """"""
valve at the outlet of the Radio City Stalit•'· New . F.bowhmr
tl :1.50; Three munths. 17 .$8.
heart.
York, N.Y. 10019.
Sal~:rip&amp;lon ~ict! ~'lades Sunday
·~anc.-:ionlmel
Disease of the arLe1ies to
li

making
any
clear
identification of the creature
but one said it might be
"some sort of dinosaur or
Loch Ness-type monster. "
• Michihiko Yano, 30, a crewman aboard the Zuiyo Maru,
took · four color photographs
and made sketches of the
animal and showed them to ·
professors at the Tokyo
University of Fisheries and
Yokohama University.
Prof. Fujiro Yasuda of the '
Tokyo University of Fisheries
said it was not a fish species
and that he had never seen an
animal like it before.
He said the creature had
some resemblance to a car. tilaginous soft-boned shark
but its neck was too long for .a
shark. He also said it had
back·flipper~. which be said
sharks do not have.
The
Taiyo
Fishery ,'
swamped with inquisitive
phone calls, said Wednesday

~110m
~ ITJOlflillrflurv .

'

'

their homes ..,

Senate-House conferees .
. bave friends there."
Louisiana coast.
Carter apparently was vicIn
Yazoo
City,
there
was
"
a
·
Carter was to leave shortly
torious
in persuading the
after noon for. Charleston, Christmas in July" spirit as
Congt.,..
to kill funds for 9
S.C., where he planned an the folks awaited the
water
projects
and reduce
address on U .S.-Soviet presidential visit. The
funding
for
several
others of
relations to the Southern audience for the to!l'll haU
question and answer session the 18 projects he wanted to
Legislative Conference.
bait.
.
As he made the roWids of was chosen by lottery.
The
House
and
Senate
have
The
President
smiled
congressional friends at a
picnic on the White House broadly at the picnic after not yet voted on the final
south lawn Wednesday , talking to Sen. John Stennis, version , but the conference
Carter said he chose Yazoo D-Miss., about the water committe~ Wednesday
City for a visit "becauS&lt;' we projects bill agree.•by the tailored the bill to most of his

ASTRO•GRAPH

76 Monte .Carlo, A.C., P.S., P.B.,

" We were right in the !"'iddle of ii then. I ·
was right here in my ca~in and had 12
other people in here who had evacuated

Mystery .creature .pulled from sea
TOKYO (UP! )
A
Japanese
trawler
has
discovered the body of what

Sport Parade

.------------------'----'--------l

Tax on gasolilie may raise four cents

HEALTH

.

by Republicansinthetwoand .
one-half hour committee
meeting were defeated.
including ' attempts
to
absolutely prohibit strikes,
Umit negotiable areas, delete
language which
would
require aU public employes to
either he a member of a union

it may dispatch a hauling
ship to try to retrieve the
creature and keep it for
scientific study.
Taiyo officials said,
however, the chances were
slim that they could relocate
the remains of the creature.
New Zealand is located just
east of the ·Tonga Trench,
which like the hetter-l!nown
Mariana' Trench further
north, reach~ depths that
have never been explored by
man. The Tonga Trench is
5,950 feet deep at its deepest
point.

BOND SALES NOTED
June 1977 sales Of Series E
&amp; H United States Savings
Bonds in Ohio were · $41.2
. million. At the end _pf JU/le,
the State attained 47.4 per
&lt;;ent of its 1977 Sales ·Goal.
Theodore T. Reed Jr., Meigs
County Volunteer Savings
Bonds Chairman, reported
June
sales of Saving~ Bonds
far more power m your word s toin
the
county were $24,499.
day than you may realize .
Choose wisely what you say to The county received 4.15 per
others or how you advise the.
cent of its aMual sales goal
VIRGO (A119. 23-Sopt. 22) You June 30.

wishes.

on

Wednesday the
House energy committee
proposed
a
two-stage
increase,
totaling
an
additional 4 cents a gallon, on
the present 4 cent federal tax
on gasoline.
It was only slightly smaller
than his proposal earlier in
the day for a onHhot 5 cent
increase, and the White
House aMounced promptly
that the congressional
version " is acceptable."
Congress had killed his
proposal for an annual
contingent increase to
discourage consumption.
The White House also announced Wednesday that
Carter has broadened his
search for a new FBI director
to include a sixth candidate,
FBI chief counsel John Mintz,
a Georgian.
House·
Press
White
Secretary. Jody Powell
cautioned that the decision to
look at the credentials of a
sixth candidate "should not
he taken as an indication that
any or all of the original five
candidates have
been
eliminated for fur.t her
consideration for the post."
Also on Wednesday, Carter
sent a memo !Q govenuilent
heads calling for strict ·
enforcement of the Civil
Rights . law
barring
discrimination in federal
programs bel!ause of race,
color or national origin.
The White How.e explained
that Carter moved for
tougher enforcement because
lri the last five years there
have been only six or seven
actions under the antidiscrimil\ation provision of
the act outside the area of
school funding.

Also

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Editor

•

Reds open with
Pirates tonight

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0ct, 23) Nol .

~

much c~n catch ¥0U otf-ba t a:nc~
today. New situations are conq'uered on the basis ot your past
similar experience.

•;
,.'·

~'

bnilding materials

Continue to tunctron as the
power behind the throne today.
Make your presence felt. bul in
ways obvious to only a few lnsid_e rs.

SAGITTARIUS

•
(Nov.

23-Doc.

21) Don 't l~t important contacts
go by the bp ards today just
because they're at a distance.
Drop them a Une or . better yet ,
phone them.

CAPRICORN (D... 22-Jan, 11)
In career situations today. use all
the weapons al your disposal. It
you take advantage of your ad·
vantages. you'll score.

~
:

'

2''X4''X8'

'
;
&lt;

P.RECUTS

8 HP Elect. start rider.

Lisl $870

Sale '700
8 HP Hand s1arl rider.

Lis1 $750

Sale •600
s HP hand s1art rider
· List S600

Cash&amp;
Carry Price

PISCES (Fob. 2o-Morch 20).You
will begin today a change affec-

Sale '500

ting your basic lifestyle, but don't
expect miracles overnight .
Aesults will eventtJaily be aa yotJ
anticipated .

s HP 21" self-propelled
commercial mower.
List uro

ARIE&amp; (Morch 21·1lptll 11) In

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

evaluating situations and making
decisions I()day. you are virtually
without a peer. In addition, you
fit well into the role ol a
peacemaker .

TAUIII,II (April 20-Mo, 20)
Financial aspects are especially
proi'T'iising tor you today primari-

au

Middleport
pony team has
Snapper Clearance 13-0 record
EXTRA CHARGE
FOR DELIVERY

JUST

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fot;. 11)

ly where you c·an tie up

jnto tonight 's game five
. PITISBURGH (UP[) 'Jlle Pittsburgh Pirates, a games back of the Chicago
giant killer at bome and a Cubs in the National League
joke on the road, open a East. The Reds, defending
three.game series with the World Champions, are 91',
Cincinnati Reds tonight at game~ back of the Los
Angeles Dodgers in the NL
Three Rivers Stadium.
On their last home stay, the West.
Jerry Reuss ( 4-10) will
Pirates won. seven of eight
games against the St. Louis oppose the Reds' . Fred
Cardinals and Philadelphia Norman (9-5) in the opener.
Phillies. Then they went on . Tom Seaver will pitch
the road an!l ~plit eight againat the Pirates Friday
games with the lowly night or Saturday.
Montreal Expos and New
York Mets, .giving them a
road record of 21).28.
The thirdiJlace Pirates go

(Economy Grade).

Today, you have the knack ot
putting every.one completely at
ease. You show no favoritism yet
all go away reeling they got
special anention .

the

loose ends.

923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Moll. thru Fri.
7:00to3:00 Saturday

GEMINI (Mo' 21-June 10)
liM you intrlgUif111 today

Olhet'o

and want to communk:at• with
you. This may frigger a phone

call or a letter from lof111·1Jient

lrlendo.

!NF!WSPAP~NTEilPILJ¥ ASIN . I

I

.., ·

catcher's throw went i.nto
right field and Wall wound up
on third. Alter Kelly
Winebrenner grounded out,
Mike Wayland laid down a
perfect squeeze bunt, the
pitcher forced to throw him
out at first while Wall scored.
The visitors were checked
until the sixth when speedster
Harold Peppers beal out an
infiel&lt;l hit and took second on
an overthrow. McDaniel also
'got an infield hit and took
second on an overthrow with
Peppers scoring. On a wild ·
pitch, McDaniel wound Up ·
on third with no outs. But
Wall took control and got the
next two batters tn ~ro und out

and fanned the third to~·~ nut
of the jam wiih only one run
scored.
Mei~s won it in the ninth
when Wa II drew a lead-&lt;lff
walk. He took second on a
balk and went to third on a
grQund out. It was a perfect
squeeze play situation, but
losing pitcher Myers tried a
pick off at third and Wall
dashed for home. The .third
baseman took too much time
with his throw at the plate
and the speedy Wall slid
around the tag and the game

was over.

Wall, Wtnebrenner, and John Saturday's contest.
o00 001 000-1 5 2
Sayre. Peppers led the Logan L
010 000 001 -2 4 3
squad w1th two singles and a M
double while McDaniel and
Hawk each had a single.
Meigs wound up its season
at 1&gt;-19 'and will go into
tournament action Saturday
at 3 p.m. against highly·
touted Lancaster on the
Athens High School field .
In regular season action,
Lancaster downed the locals
twice, J-2 and 1H. Kyger
Creek's Steve Baird or Wall
will get the starting nod from
Coach Charlie Hamilton in

Sale '300

.
~

,,•
•
•••

3'12 HP self-propelled elect.
start. 21" mower.
List $350

Sale •290
31(, HP 21" self-propellod.

Lis1 $290.

Sale •240

•

'•

••'
•'
'•

In P0ny League · action
Middleport remained undefeated at 13-G by downing
the visiting Pomeroy Royals
!l-0 on a two-hitter by Billy
Elkins.
Elkins faMed eleven and
walked just four while
socking a homer, triple and
oouble to 1\elp his cau8e. Britt
Dodson also homered, Terry
Gardener doubled, and Terry
Wayland singled to finish the
hitting .
Tom Owens took the loos as
he turned In an admirable
performance, striking out
·eleven and walking ju.st five
while yielding si.I hits. Chris
Taylor and Ricky Smith got
the only hits; both singlea.
P. Royals 000 000 0-0 2 3
Middlpoert 203 400 x-9 6 2

-GDA"ELY
RftW

I.AKE FOREST, Ill. (UP!)
..,. Six-year Chicago Bears
'I'DAMnD l'lll=$
veteran Jim Osb&lt;rne has
olN
ended holdout and will be in
20f Candor 51.
uniform for today's practice,
Coach Jack Pardee . said
Pomeroy
.____m_.m_s__. -· Wednesday.

I"""'""

'

Smith, Myers (8, LP ) and
!l'lcDaniel. Wall (WP ) and B.
Johnson .

Meigs_got only four hits, all
singles by Brian Hamilton.

Johnson's Market, Mason
Insurance in semifinals

·
~:

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

The Meigs Aroerican
Legion team capped off their
season last night at Syracuse
by dowoing visiting Logan 2.-1
· in a thrilling pitchers' duel.
Winning pitcher Terry Wall
tossed one of his best games
of the season and scored both
of Meigs' runs as he went
the distance to pick up the
win .
The
Gallipolis
righthander faMed qine and
issued· just two walks while
' yielding just five hits, three of
them Infield singles.
· Meigs took a 1-0 lead in the
bottom of the second when
WaU started the inning with a
single. On a stealattPmJll . th..

NEW YORK ( UPI) - Enos "Country" Slaughl&lt;'r has noth·
ing to do and can't stand it.
He's accustomed to doing something .all the time and now at
61, when most other men a restarting to read all the literature
they can about Social Security and retirement, 01' Country
isn't bothering his head with any of that because be's all !ired
up and read)' to-go. ·
'
But where , and do what? That's what's got him all hot and
bothered.
"They said I retired back to my farm in Roxboro, N.C.," he
says, with some irritation .
' Who's· "they ?"
''The people at Duke University," says Slaughter . " It came
from them, not from me, They retired me about a month ago
saying I was a part-time coach and they wanted a full-time one
for the baseball !&lt;'am."
Slaughter put in 19 seasons.with the Cardinals, Yankees, A's
and Braves and even without a scorecard, you never had any
trouble telling who he was. because he was the guy who was
always running. Same as Pete Rose does.
The story which has been told at least a thousand times is
bow Slaughter once made the mistake of walking into the
dugout from his right field position during his second year in
pro ball with Columbus, Ga., of the Sally. League. The late
Eddie Dyer was his manager then and when Slaughter got to
the dugout, Dyer said to him, "Son, if you're tired, I'll get you
some help out there ."
" Oh , man, did that put a firecracker in me," says Slaughter.
" I never walked again therestofmy career."
Slaughter hit .300 or better eight different seasons and wound
up with a lifetime batting average of .300 right on the nose. He
had 2,383 hi(!; and drove in 1,304 runs, yet each time the
balloting for Baseball's Hall of Fame rolls around he polls a lot
of votes but never quite makes it. That circumstance has him
down.
"It's getting a little late and time is running out," he says. " I
don't know what I can do to help my chances. Some of these
new young wr~ters never saw me play. ''
With me, Slaughter is one of those borderline cases. Looking
around at the general caliber of players today, I'd have to say
that on the basis of what he accomplished, Slaughter deserves
to be in the Hall of Fame.
He's looking around, too, and when he compares present
salaries with his best of $25,000 from the Cardinals in 1949,
Slaughter says it's difficult for him to put into words the way
he feels.
"I don 't begrudge them the money," he says of today's
players. " This is a different era. from the ones I played in
during the '30s, '40s and 'SOs. U the owners keep paying out all
this money, I do.n '!blame the players for taking it.
" What I do think is baseball is going to have to make a
turning point someplace. Either that or a Iotta clubs are gorina
fold up . A few are on the verge right now.
"One thing I can'tsee is all this 'renegotiation' of contracts. I ·
feel that when a player signs a contract, he ought to honor it for
as long as it runs anyway . With the kind of money the players
are getting today, they should go out and show a little more
desire. For the fans, I'm talking about. To me, the fans are the
ones who make the player."
Enos Slaughter never said anything truer in his life. The fans
do make the player, only some players don't recognize that.
Slaughter can tell you his basebaU salary year-by-year.
His first year with Martinsville, Va. , he got $75 a m'\"th. His
second year he was paid $100'a month with Columbus, Ga ., and
$150 his third year with Columbus, Ohio, in the American
Association where he batted .382 with 245 bits and drove in 122
runs batting second in the lineup.
Naturally, he felt entitled to more, so he set up a meeting
with Branch Rickey, ruming the Cardinals' farm clubs at the
time, and Burt Shottong, his manager with Columbus:
"'How about a bonus?' I asked them," Slaughter
remembers. "Both of •em jumped down my throat . 'Those
older fellas been talking to you,' they said. I didn ' t get one
penny more."

may have thought you've sown
your seeds to the wind, but it's
not true . The sprouts now
appear and they' ll soon yield a
bountiful harvest.

and

Logan Legion defeated by Meigs

Today's

YOU

BEST

Pt. P.ieasan'ts Johnson' s County Insurance bombed NAPA will battle the '
Market erupted with six big the Pomeroy Tigers, 23-11. Pomeroy Yankees at 8:30 p.
Last night's wlni\ers will m.
runs in the eighth inning
In Wednesday's opener,
Wednesday night to edge clash at 7 Friday evening in
Mullins and CbiJ&gt;man hurled
Tuppers Plains, 11·6, in semifinal play.
In tonight's other quar- for the winners. Riddle,
quarterfinal play of the 19th
annual Kyger Creek Uttle terfinal game, Harman Trace Probert and Well shared
League baseball tournament. will take on New Haven' s mound duties for the losers.
Wickline had a double and
In the nightcap, Mason Cubs at 7 and Pt. Pleasant
two singles for the winners.
Oliver had two sing les,
Mullins two s in gles and
Wamsley three singles.
For the losers, Probert had
a triple, and Gaddis a single
t'l\ .. .
,,.• .. i ,•. .:._
and double.'
:• .. '
.
By Greg Bailey
In the nightcap, Mason
....' .~-...... :'·:
., . '...:.
As the Meigs County Fair approaches, I think it's time to County Insurance exploded
I ·~,·~'t• ~ : 'J._
• ~ : r,'
li.
~ ·.,.·•:.- ' .;.·"
.f'
get back to the anti-trapping issue. At the fair, the Meigs with 10 runs in the final inning
.j~.o:·
'
r.
Countians for Wildlife Cooservation will have a booth that will · to eliminate the Pomeroy
:,;:.
: ·' ~.' ··::..
. ,,
'·
., I •
,.
"" ,
.;,: ~~ ''
I"
.. '.
,inform you, the public, the actual facts about this heated issue, Tigers.
·~~
• ·f.
. • i.· • · I
and not the emotional, misleading propaganda that the anti
R. Smith and R. Gleason
i f I~ . I · 7,• "::=it!::' .I ,',. , •' ' .,• I
people are feeding you.
hurled for the winners. T.
• 1. •, . ,: I
,
'·
·-. .•·
~-...
.....
.
I rather bate to do it, but I guess it's time that I took a Gilkey, J. Smith and R.
·:r'~ -.
r.
stand to set you, Mr. or Mrs. or Ms. J. Q. Public, strai~t on Denny hurled for the losers.
. ';.~··.·~; '·.~·.
. .
.. ~~ .j ~
thehoodwinking that the Meigs County Humane Society is
For the winners , R.
. f'l~ •.
throwing at you. And, Humane Society, listen good, because
,·'
...',' ::,;:I '
thiswillreflectthefeelingofmost Meigs Countians,although 1 Gleason had two singles, K.
· . ~ :l · .,•
..
·.' .;~:·f~~
ONLY
..•. : . .
.' I
assure everyone this does not necessarily reflect the official Smith two singles and a
.. ' '' :~ I
'
'
'
'
". j • . ;
. double, B. Thompson three
feeling of this newspaper.
..
i tried to set the unknowing P!lblic siraight on the picture singles and R. ·Albright a
. ·~':~l
Jacket diam eter '20'h", height fro m floor
of the poor little cat with three legs.. But the Humane Society is triple, double and single. For
'
•
I
~·
includes nipples 32" , ri i ppl e si ze 314 ", betw ee n
. ..~,!...
the losers, T. Gilkey hd two
nipples 8", he ight of electric outlet 24 1fa",
-~· .
trying to get away with it again, so once again here are the singles, J . Smith a double, B.
"
immersion type 4500 watt lower and upper
·
facts.
twin elements. Capacity 52 gal. . well insulated white enameled outer jacke t . 5-.Y EAR
' ·First, don 't you think it was rather gross, and ironically · Will a double.
OUTRIGHT, WARRANTY .
"inhumane", to make a cat have its picture taken with that leg
beside it? Wow, why wasn 't that time spent trying to make the
animal suffer as little as possible? Why wasn't it being rushed
WS ANGELES (UP! ) _
to the vet, or wt out of its misery? Humane?
•
Secondly, let's look at the facts and not the emotional J ohn Marshall, an assistant
· ·
tha will be
th ball 0 t 10
· coach at Oregon for the past
appeal. The anti.trappmg ISSue
t
on e
eight years, h8S" joined the
November will pass only if the unsuspecting public closes its .
•
eyes and ~ns only to the false, mislea\ling emotional appeal University of Southern Cali·
and not the facts. Do you want to feel like someone has played fornia· football coaching staff,
it
was
announced
you for a sucker? Back to the cat.
Phone 992-2811 .
We sportsmen and people who suwort trapping do not Wednesday ·
condone inhumane and cruel treatment of animals, whether . Marstiall, 31, will work with
Pomeroy, 0 .
110 W. Main
domestic or wild. The job that the Humane Society does with . outside linebackers.
the placement and caring for the domestic animals is
commended by sportsmen, and we certainly would like to see
anyone, trapper or Qtherwise, who breaks the law or causes
unneeded suffering to be punished by the law.
Here's a real stopper that should make you think : when
that cat was "maimed," would you believe that the Humane
Society never bothered to contact any law enforcement agency
so that· the proper penalties could be carried out? But the
concerned sportsmen an.d the wildlife agent took it upon
themselves (after being made aware .of it only by the
appearance of the picture) to investigate and try to punish the
offender. And, would you believe that no one, not even the
Society people, could show these enforcement agents a trap or
even one shred of proof tbat a trap caused that animal to lose
its leg?'
If it were true, something could have been done.
The alleged "crime" was to have taken place in town, in
the summer, both against the law. Wouldn't you think that the
Humane people would've wanted the wrongdoer punished?
Rather fishy, doo't you think? And why publish that picture
again, unless they wanted it for emotional appeal.
. When you go to the fair, stop by the wildlife booth and find
recision ground tip
• · .,. fil , . . ,
out the facts, and baseyout judgment and vote on them. Watch
for my column more often now because I'm receiving some
High Alloy hea1 1reated s1eel.
/
facts and 'figures that will show you why trapping with the leg~
..-Will not roll when dropped
'
hold trap is valuable to the .conservation and health of our
Variety . .
/.
wildlife.
_.-51 eel ferrule
of Shapey
Until then, I'll leave you with this:
&amp; Sizes
We concerned sportsmen and other ordinary citizens are
Blade passes completely
1hrough h·andle
concerned with the welfare of our wild animals an.d their
shape
Shop
conservation, and our stand is based on reality. The word
Route
-steel cap rivited
"conservation" (look It up in the dictionary) means "the wise
Polish
Drill
use of something." Trapping is a means by which we can use
to handle &amp; blade
Cut
our wildlife wisely and keep them healthy.
Hand tes are big
Grind
Nei&lt;t time 1'11 give you facts and figures (incidentaUy, I
comfortable and deep
\
101
can back them all up) that should convince you we need to keep
flu.1ed for extra gripping . - - ""' Steel pin 1hrough
Uses
p0wer &amp; less fa1igue . __..trapping legal. Please he sure to watch this newspaper for
blade
Wherever Precision Work
those facts.
.
is
a
Must.
Watch it, Hwnane Society, or you'lllose a lot of hackers
that think you're doing a good jobwjth the domestic animals.
Let's deal with facts !

BUY

DEN talk

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�•

·._The Dally Sent.mel,

tddleport-Pomeroy. o.. Thursday. July 1t,J977

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., t:h~y. JUly 21, 1977

TV•• .in Review

0

Rozelle saw Atkinson .

Underdogs lead everywhere at 2nd half start
By' FRED DOWN
. Ul'l Sports Writor
Part 11 of the majcr league
ba&gt;eball season stal'IS tonight
Wlth undrrdngs leading all
four divisions and two
players bidding to achie•"'
spectacular goals.
With official projections
placlllg overall atter)danre
for the season at about 34
nullion, 1911 promises to be
bolh a financial and an
artistic success. Should
current trends cooililue, even
that projection could be low.

The outlook f« ext' ltement
durin~ the Sl!&lt;'md half of the
seasoo is virtually limitless.
Here 's a division by
division look at tile races:
Natl011.0l Leag"" East
The Cubs oold a tw01(ame
lead over lhe Philadelphia
Phillies and a five-game lead
over the Pittsburgh Pira~s .
Splendid performances by
starting
pitcher
Rick
Reuschel, reliever Bruce
Sutter. infielders Manny
Trillo and Larry BUttner and
ou tiielder Jerry Moniles

tsave t'f •\lnbut~ l11 Uw ttSl' uf

llt 1dJ;!t'l :-.

lht• Cubs . The def~ndmg
dlalllpi•., Phillies are within

olrl:'

adnurabh

•oquoppro ~· pMt"&lt;:t their boil

t..•ad uver th~ Reds . The Rl'ds
easy ran~r. hnwever, an&lt;:l are Ct.untinK un Ult&gt;lr waU-luwith Mike Schmidt and Greg wall stars and Uoe Jun&lt;&gt; Ia
Luzlnski have £ar more a.:quisitinn of Tom Seaver to
firepc&gt;wer. The Pirates alsn l(t'nerate a strong se&lt;.'Ond-lialf
nut-gun the Cub.• and the rally. II os a fact. hnwever ,
Cardinals must still be rated that the Dodgers' lead has
a cm~nder inasmuch as they il'l&lt;:reased by 21'0! games sinc.-e
are eight games out of first· the Reds made their big deal
place.
fur Seaver. The other rour
teams - · Houston, San
Nati•&gt;nal League West
With a 9...,-game lead, solid f'rancisco, San Diego and
'offense and defense and out- Atianta -:- seem 'hopelessly
standing pit ching,
the out of the running.

Bengals to ·contend--Johnson
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Bengals will be an
NFL "cootender" again in
1977, confidently predicts
second-year head coach Bill
Jolulsoil.
" l ' prediclt.-' last season's
team would be a contender
and I sure as hell wouldn't
want to fee l we'Ye gone
downhill this year." the
burly , snow-white haired
International League

United Press lnternationil
W L Pet. GB
Pawtucket
54 39 .581
Tidewater
49 .t 1 .SAA 31h
Charleston

Richmond
Syracuse
Roc~&gt;ester

Toledo
Columblls

50 .t2 :543
46 43 .517

48 45 .516
45 47 .589
40 55 .421
37 57 .394

Jlh

6
6
8'1&gt;
15
17'/'

Wednesd ay ' s Re.su lts
Rochester 10, Tidewater 7
Richmond 10, Toledo 2
Syracu~ 4,

Charleston 2

Pawtucket 5, Columblls 1

Major League Stand ings
By Un ited Press Int erna tional
Nationa l L eague
East
w. L PeT.- G 8
53 35 .602
Ch icago
52 38 .s1e
Ph il a
50 .47 ..543
Pittsbgh
47 45 .511
St . Louis
.17 .11 .472
Monlrea l
37 54 .407
N.ew York
west
W. L Pet. GB
LOS Ang
5'? 33 .6il:1
Cin ci
~8 .41 .539
9' 2
Hou5ton
43 50 .462 llt" 2
San Fran
.13 51 .457 17
San Diego
· 40 55 .421 20' 1
Atlanta
34 5) . ~74 241',

.

Wedn e$da y's Gam e-S

( No games scheduled )
Toda y' s Pr obabl e Pit chers
{ All T i m es .EDT.
.
Cincinnati { Norman 9 -S) at
Pi ttsburgh (Reuss 4-10), 7 :35
p.m .
Houston ( Rich ard 9-6) at St.
Lou is f Forsch 11 -.1 ), 8:35p .m .
Montreal &lt;R ogers 9-8 1 at Los
Angeles ( Hooton 8-31, lD : JO

p.m .

.

Philadelph i a ( Lonborg l -3) at
San Franci sco ( Ha lic k i 8-BI .
lO : JS p.m .
Arlanta &lt;Ru thven 3~ 5 1 a1
Chicago ( Bonha m ~ - 9 L 2 :30

p .m.

New York. ( Za·ct\ry a-10 ) at

Sao DieQo (Griffin 5-8), 10 p .m .
Fr iday' s Gam es
Cinci at Pitlsburgh, n ight
Atlanta ·at Ch ic ago
Houston a t St . Louis, night
Mon.treal at Los Angele-s, n ight
New York at San Diego , night
Pt,ila at San Franci!.cO, night

A rrieric an Lea gue
W. L
Pet .
53 39 .576

Balt i mre

eo.oon

New York
Clevelnd

Milw
Detroit
Toronto
Chicago
Kan City
Minn

GB

51 38 .573
50 -42 .543
41
41

112

3
47 .466 10
49 A56 1.l

.n so

.A5 1

11 h

. JA 58 .370 19
Wes l
w. L Pet. GB

54 36 .600
51 38 573

2 1 '~

50 .:12 .543

5

Texu
46 44 .511
8
Calif
42 46 .477 ll
Oakland
39 51 .433 15
Seattle
-41 54 .432 15' '~
. Wednesday's Results
( No·games scheduled)
Todily's Proba ble Pitchers
CAll Tim es EDT)
Californ ia ( Ryan 13 -BJ at
Minnt"SOta (Goltz 10-6) , 8: 30

p.m.

Kansas City (Splirtorff 7 -5 ) at
Detroi.t (Rozema 8 - ~). 8 p.m .
Oakland
(Medich 5 -A ) at
sea ttle (Abbott 5-71... JQ ; J5 p .m .
M i Iwaukee (S laton 7-8 and
August ine 10-10) at New Vork
! Hur:~ter S-4 and Figueroa 9-7 ),

\1rl.ury 10 a sea51"m that
slrc\doc"' frnm Aprol thrniJilh
Septen !her
t\mnican .l..fague West
noe White Sox lead the
Kansas City Royals by 2'z
games, the Twins by love and
the Texas Rangers by eight.
Manager Bob Lemon has
dnne a tremendous job
poecing the While Sox
lllgether from the wreckage
· ~ 1976 but the odds are
dearlv againsi them . Odds
don't win division r·~ces,

·n.c

hc:ivt.&gt; Ou! pnwer lo carry a
ri&lt;·kety pitching staff. The
stur y in this divtsiun ,
however, .,uwo1ves the
Yank res and their inability Ill
111 get str•lllR Pitching from
several of tl-.,ir highly paid
stars aod (21 Uo develop a
team
co nce pt u stta lly
C"onsider&lt;&gt;&lt;l
esseoti~l for
.

.

Nicklaus lij{ed

Coshocton's
Beach winner
in Ohio Jrs.

I .

frequent water hazards.
Greens are large and
extensively contoured .
The course is billed as a
spectatOr's paradise - described by Nicklaus as "the
best spectator course in the
world. "
Besides the many naturally
oc&lt;:urring viewpoints, along
the sptit.level, 350-acre site,
spectator mounds were built
into the course at strategic
points, ustng soil excavated
in creating four man-made
lakes.
The location is a former
Jesuit retreat, and what once
was a mooastery is now a golf
museJIDl.

American Lea gue batting
champion , Carew's highest
average for a compl ete
season was .364 in 1974 .

one, it

,$9.20, $5.•60. $4.80.
.
The 11 -5 da-i ly doubl e .of
Beach Pad and Camargo Miss
was worth $58 .00.
Tne · 4,094 racing fan:; bet
$483,194 .

In the daily double i t was
Everett's Lady (31 and Tower
Gold. (Bl tor $104 .80 .
Attendance was 4,411 , and the
hand le came to $.436,2A9 .,

was~ Ecamarow (4). Mt .
(7) and La rr y ' s Martini (8) for SS09. 10. The other of
t he first two and Doc' s Promise
[9) pa rd $98 .'4o.

Epicore

Sports transactions
By United Press Inte rn a tional
Wednesday

Ba seba ll
Cincinnati
Called
up
p itch ers Mario Soto and Manny
Sarmiento from Indianapolis
and optioned Joe Henders-on to
lndian &lt;~ polis .

Milwaukee - Optioned utility
infielder Bob Sheldon ·to Spoka ·

n•.

Football

Cleveland - AcQuired guard
6ob Kowalkowski from Detroit
2, UO p. m .
for a future dr.,ft· choice,
Cleveland ( F itzmorris 2-5 an~
Miami - Acquired defens i ve
Bi bby s-n at Boston (Stanley 6· tackle Carl
Barisi ch
from
4 and T iant 5.7), 2. 2 P'.m . and Seattle
for an undisclosed
7: 30p.m ,
futu r e consideration and r ·ein ·
Friday's Gilri'les
stated offensiv e t ackle Darryl
Carlton .
Oakland at Seattle, night
San Franc isco · Wa iv'ed
Calif at Minnesota, night
middle . , i n· e b a c k e r Fr ank
K-ansas City ar Detroit , n i ght
Chicago at Toronto , night
Nunley .
.
Ph iladelphJa - Signed gu&lt;~rd
Texas at Balti more, night
Milwaukee at New Vorl., night
Jerry Sisemore to a ser ter. of
Clev~lt'md &lt;~1 Boston , night
f iiJe one-year contracts and

dropped ve teran de 1 ens i v e

Colle ge
.
Named Terry
Slater , co&lt;~ch of Cinci nnati of
the WHA. as head hockey
coach .
JOhn MarLos Angel es Shall. a s s i s tan 1 coach at
Oregon , n&lt;~med assistant foot.
ball coach at Univers.i t y of
Southern Cali fornia .
Colgate

•

~

35 ~;,~~f6 ~r:::~~Y

I·-------·---.. ;. . . :

involved."
" I think he's an outstanding
defensive back. A number of
clubs wo uld be ve ry
interested to have Atkinson
on their football club," the
commissioner said.
But be said he considered
the foul during tbe RaidersSteelers game a - 11 hlatant"
ooe.
Atkinson 's blow gave
Swa nn a concussion and Noll
then complained about "a
criminal element" in the
NFL, triggering the lawsuit .

NEED \NS~~:;~
ON '{OUR"

CHICAGO (UP! ) - The
Chicago Cubs' ace relief
pitcher, Bruce Sutter, will be
out of the lineup for an
estima~ 10 days because of
a
hemorrhaging
back
muscle , the Cubs said
Wednesday.
Sutter, who was forced to
skip tl)e All-Star game
because of the ~ilment , was ·
examined Wednesday by
team physcian Dr; Jacob
Suker, who advised Su~r not
to throw until at least · next
Monday .

Blount

.
first. we offer
cnec\1. wlt_h usunts for carespecial disco srnokers,
tul drivers. non- nd multigood student~sa We'll be
car househo e you a tree
haPPY to giV

•
•
·IS
Sumg
·

Noll n 0 W

quote.

NEW ORLEANS (UPl) P i t t s bu_r g h Steelers
cornerback Mel Blount said
Wednesday he would file a $5
million lawsuit against Chuck
Noll because, Blount said,
Noll slandered him by calling
him a part of professional
sports' ':criminal element."
Blount, who lives in south
Lo ui siana
during
the
off season .
sa id
Noll ' s
statements da maged his
reputation. He said the suit
would be filed in federal
court.
N&lt;ill made the statement
dur ing testimony given last
week in another damage suit
.in Califc.-nia. In that case,
Noll is accused of slandering .
Geor ge Atkinson of the
Oakland Raiders by saying
the cornerback intended to
hurt Pittsburgh's Lynn
SwaM during a play in a 1976
Steelers-RAiders game.
·
During cross examinatioo
last week , Noll said he
considered .s everal other
players part of a "criminal

Davis Insurance
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992-5120
114 Co urt St.

PomeroY • 0 .

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SATURDAY, JULY23

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... element" in pro sports,
including Blount.
" A criminal element what does that mean?"
Blowtl said after Noll made
the statement. " None of us is
out there on the football field
carrying
weapons.
A
criminal to me is a guy woo
kills or steals."

SATURDAY, JULY 23rd AT 1 PM

BOULDE R, Colo. (UP! ) Thr ee foo tba ll players
eXpected to play foc Colorado
University this fall have been
declared. inel igible f or
scholast,ic
rea sons,
a
spokesman for the Big Eight
·Conference school announced
Wednesday.
They are defensive tackle
Jeff Fox, guard Art Dale
Johnson and defensive back
Vincent Ma lone.

tackle M i tch Sutton of Kans as
and rookies Gibson !very . a
wide receiver from Widener ,
Ed Sczerba, an off ens i ve tackle
from
Vi llanova.
and
John
Wi llison , a linebaCker ·from
VMI.
Basketball
san Antonio - Signed center
Jeff Wilk i ns , their top draft
choice. from "Il linois
Slate .

University .

I PH.

WE'RE HAVING AHAY DAY!

set up two trifedii payoffs . In

m the 'featured ninth allowance
race at River Downs Wednes .
day . Condado was third .
Harvey Kech , timed in 1: 10 25 l or the six furlongs. returned

By DONALD THACKERY · Former
Pittsbur~h behind the head."
SAN FRANCISOO (UPI) linebacker Andy Russell, oow
Pittsburgh quarterback
NFL Commissioner Pete Ro- · retired, also condemned the Terry Bradshaw said he felt
zelle considers George play made by Atkinson.
Atkinson "deliberately
Atkinson an "outstanding"
Russell testified he had clobbered" Swann on the
defensive back, but he also watched the action from the play , but conceded he had not
feels
that
Atkinson 's sidelines and " it was my seen Swann while the play
controversial
hit
of definite impression at that was in progress nor' had he
Pittsburgh Steelers' wide re- time
that
Atkinson seen Atkinson.
ceiver Lynn Swann was a intentionally struck Lynn
Dr. David Huber, internal
"blatant" foul. .
Swann from behind with his ' medical ·consultant for the
Rwelle, calling himself a . foreatm with the intention of St~lers, also testified and
neutral witness, testified intimidating and hurting called Swann's injury a
Wednesday at the $2 million him."
"cerebral concussion.'~
sla nd er s.u it brought by .. Russell noted Swann had
The steelers have filed a
Atkinson
against
the slowed down and said countersuit against Atkinson ,
Pittsburgh steelers and their "receivers who slow down alleging he was part of a
coach, Chuck Noll.
and are jogging are not going conspiracy "to disable and
"!feel that the basic appeal lo receive the foot ball and I intimidate Lynn Swann ."
of football · is action, but don't go up arid drill them
controlled action," said
Rwelle, "If the action is
uncontrolled, it is a sad
sit uation for everyone

l

p
1
1

a

over Yolas Boy

hit as .b latant foul

I
I

0

Dowler, Mike McCor!V'Ick defense will make the
and Charley Winner ) and Bengals a good pass rushing
although I had known them, team "because the other
OAKVILLE, Ont. (UPI ) I'd never been on a staff with team isn 't sure w\ere a blitz
Prior tD today's start of the
them.
will come from ."
68th Canadian Open, the
" We've had some good
" We're going to find out in designer of the golf course
sessions in the off-Season, I training camp· and in prehad only shot a 3-over-par 75
think we'ye upgraded in season games about the '34'
on
it.
places and this has got to be a defenSe, t • he added. 11 We'll
Yet as official play complus for us this year. I have a play it a goodly portion.
mences m the $4 million Glen
much be~r feeling this year, Perhaps I'm overly enthused
twice.''
Abbey course, Jack Nicklaus
Taking over a year ago for more comfcrtable."
about it, but I like the is the favorite to caRture tl)e
The S().year old Johnson prospects of it."
the legendary Paul Brown,
• $45,000 top prize from a total
Johnson's first Bengals' leam was an All-Pro center for the
Johnson admit~ he was $225,000 in prize money.
did turn out to be a contender, San Francisco 49ers and then "disappointed" in rookie fullCommissioned four years .
posting a 111-4 record but just an assistant coach in the pros back Pe~ Johnson of Ohio
ago,
Nicklaus designed and
barely missing the playoffs. for many years, but last State at a rookie camp in
helped
supervise
"Possibly we didn't do as season was his first head May, but oow feels "much
construction
of
the 7,129-yard
·good last year as we should · coaching assignment.
better " about him after course, which becomes the
have. " Johnson conceded .
Johnson's main concern watching him workout at this
permanent home of the
'' Looking back, we bad three going into the 1977 season is week ' s
rookie
camp . Canadian Open this year.
new assistant coaches (Boyd shoring up .the defenSive line However, the , fullback
Runnerup in · successive
and he said he's confident reported to rookie camp
weeks at the British Open and
about succeeding for two · heavy and coaches want him
last week 's Pleasant Valley
reasons - two new players to drop from 249 to 2.'19
Classic, Nicklaus has finished
and a new defensive pounds.
second four times in the
PICNIC, PARTY SET
alignment.
In tile past, the Benga Is Canadian Open but has yet to
The Middl eport Youth
The Bengals' to.p two have been concerned about
win it.
Baseball League will hold a choices in the college draft
the attitude of veteran
He's competing against a
pimic and pool party Friday, · were defensive linemen
fullback Boobie Clark, but fie ld of 155 other oopefuls
J uly 22, at Middleport Park. Eddie Edwards of the
Paul Brown figured the including Arnold Palmer,
Swimming will be from 5 to 7 University of Miami and
presence of good competition Tom Weiskopf, Gary Player ,
p.m. and the pimic from 7 to Wilson Whitley of the like Johnson will bring out the
Billy Casper, Lee Trevino,
9. Everyone is asked to please University of Houston.
best in Clark .
Gay Brewer, defending
. bring·a container of Kool Aid.
" We fell there were
champion Jerry Pate and
defensive linemen available
Pleasant Valley victor Ray
in lhe draft woo could step in
Floyd.
right away and per haps
, Pa~ shares the unofficial
dominate the line of
course · rec!l'd of · 70 with
HAYWORTH GOLFS
scrimmage," said Johnson,
David Graham.
HOLLYWOOD ( UPI)
referring to Edwards and
The winner of the world's
Whitley.
fourth
oldest national chamRita Hayworth, :;a, went the
Johnson also said that for
pionship
automatically wUl
traditional movie star route
TIFFIN, Ohio (UP! ) - Ed
when she was invited to the the first time in the Bengals'
qualify for the $300,000 World
Tiffany Theater lo receive an tO-year history' the club will Beach, who competed in the Series of Golf in Akron, Ohio,
award fo r her ~ntributi'on to concentrate on trying .the SO· state high school golf tour- in September,
'"
called " 34" defense, with· nament all four years he was
The par-72 Glen Abbey
motion pictures.
three down linemen and four af Coshocton High ·School .layout contains 88 traps and
. Wearing a black sequined linebackers.
including 1976 when his team
dress, she arrived at the
·
theat er in
limousine · " We have extreme speed in walked off with the state
down1inemen with EdWards, championship, won the· 36Wednesda y night, a nd Whitley, Coy Bacon and Gary hole Oh io Junior Golf
SC I OTO DOWNS
seemed pleasetl to find a · Burley. When we put three of Tournament cr own WedCOLUMBUS
( UP I I - FUn
crowd or applaucing fans. these men on the fie ld at the nesday.
F \ite coasted lo a lour -length
When an · admir er com- same time, we have great
The 18-year-&lt;Old, who plans v ictory over Allison ' s Beau
Wedi1esdav night ih the fea plimented ber looks, .she said chase men.
to attend F unnan University tured
eighth race at Sc ioto
"I've been playing golf to
" But our strength in the '34' and play golf there, carded Downs .
keep trim."
Ttle winner . dri ven bY Oet
defense really ties in four his second consecutive 1M il ler , covered the mile in 2 :02
linebackers - Jim LeClair, under-par 71 to ca pture the 2-5 and returned $8, $.A.?Q a"n d
Glenn Cameron, Reggie Wil- title with a two-stroke lead in 53.80. Pentar Hanover was
liams and Bo Harris."
the 16-18 division over Ken th ird.
The 4-5 n igh41y double combi Johnson figured the "34" George of ·Canfield, who nation of Pri de of Cleone ;,nd
I}AME IS FRIDAY
Drip Dry was worth S-46.60 and
posted pis second straight 72. the
Mason softbaU team will be
9- 2-J n i nth race tr i tecta
J eff Koozer of Mansfield, combo paid $3 15.30.
·
playing West Portsmouth at
A crowd of ·.J,863 WB~gered
the Tuesd ay c,o-leader,
Jackson Frida y, July 22 at 7
$254.654.
TH ISTLE rfOWN
slipped . to a 146, including
'p.m .
NORTH
RANDALL ,
Ohio
( UP I ) .:..... Gr and Julie , w inner of Wednesday's 7~ round. }'ied
he·r · only start rece-ntlv , r olled at 146 were t im Walton ,
to her second stra ight victory
in the featured allowance pur se Middletown, who posted ' a
at
Th istted o.wn
Wednesday , final 70 ; Brent Bonney ,
runn i ng the six fu r longs in 1: 12
RIVER DOWNS
Shelby, who had a 71, and
and paying SJ.60 to win .
CINCINNATI
CU PI ) .
A (:lea d heat for third in the Julian Taylor, Youngstown, a
Harvey Keck, w ith Richard t rifect a between Larry ' s Mar 72.
Mor gan up , raced to a four - tini
f8) and Doc ' s Pr om ise {9 )

t••wever and ol is u~ In tile
~nyals. Twins and Rangers
tu makE." strong mt~ves. The
A~~els appear out of it
despite
theo~
brilliant
pitching combination of
Nulan Ryan and . Frank
Tanana.
And what about Rod Carew
and Nolan Ryan ?
Carew built his average tD
.411 before encountering a 10day "slump " during which he
b3tted more than .300 but saw ,---·-----;:-._..,
his average dip Ill lis current
Your "Extra Touch
~
.:194. The odds are against any
Florist Since 1957
modern bitter b;o.tting .400 but
teammates and nvals agree
·
that Carew has a chance to '
/t __,..;~ .
achieve his lofty goaL Carew
~
himself descnbes July and
August as " the months in
F LOR I ST
which we separate the men

1

in 'Canadian'

Johnson declared Wednesday
at • pre-iraining camp news
b.-iefing.
" Yes, we'll be a contender
this year," he snapped.
" We'll be a good team , a fun
~m. But we're in a difficult
diYision . It's a snootful when
you have to play Pittsburgh,
Houston and Cleveland

~ength victory

E iiSI

Auwru·an IA·aglll.• t-:as1
Qrlt•b :m:~ one nf the
bi~ surpnSI!s uf the ~ason
and tho: S&lt;-''-'"'d-pla&lt;'&lt;' llt'd
S:•x. unly a half-J!anle bPlund ,

Ityan, who holds the
mooem major leaflUe record
,.; 3&amp;'1 stnkeouts, may ha"" a
better chonc-e at his goal than
Carew. The California
fireballer is on a course that
would carry him well beyond
400 ~trik eouls for the season.
He wcrks every fourth day
and his arm seems strong
enough tc pitch the nec=ary
numb&lt;'r of innings.

We want to ,introduce you to FAHR
Hay Equipment:
Turbo Mower
Centipede Tedder .
Helipede Rotary Windrower.

Pomeroy Pastry
Shop

COME TO OTIS KNO·PP'S FARM

Closed For Vacation

JULY 17th
RE-OPEN
JULY 31st

.

.RACINE, OHIO

FOLLOW ROUTE 124 APPROXIMATELY 3 MILES EAST OF RACINE TO COUNTY ROAD 35. ,
TURN LEFT ON CR 35 ABOUT lf2 MILE. ,
'·

-

-·

CINCINNATI (UP!) Paul
Campbell , ·
the
Cincinnati Reds' traveling
secretary· since 1964, is
retiring as of Jan. 1, 1978,
club officials announced
Wednesday.
He will be replaced next
season by Doug Bw-eman, a
member of the Reds' staff tOO
past five years.
Campbell has been in baseball 42 years as a .player,
coach, manager, g.~neral
manager, club president,
scout and front " office
executive.
He started as a minor
league player in the Bos1111
Red
organizatloo in 1936

Sox

CONTINUES
on many

Mary Perdas has birthday
Miss Mary Janeth Per&lt;!as,
who along with her parenta,
Mr. and Mrs. John -Perdas,
Chambersburg, Pa., visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal,
Kingsburg, was honored on
her sixth birthday with a
party by the grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal.
The guests attending
Mary's party were Mr. and
Mrs. Roger · Young, Wesley
and Yvette, Mr. and Mrs.

Area couple weds
Mary Thompson lind Max
Folmer we~e united in
malTiage on July .18 at the
Mt. Oli ve Church, Long
Bottom. The Rev . Lawrence
Bush officiated at the
ceremony.
Guests attending were Mrs.
Folmer's daughter, Kelly Lea
Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Hoffman , Mr. and Mrs.
Gene WestfaU, Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Bartoe, Miss Betty
~ggeit, Mrs. VIolet Bush,
Mrs. Charlene Althouse and
children, Melinda, Pam,
Johnny and Tony and Linda
Pierce. A reception was given
by Mrs. Gene Westfall.

317

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0 .

Recent visitors of Mrs.
Hazel Arnold were Mrs.
Pearl Clark, Burdell Brafford
of Columbus, Mrs. Ann Masll
of Laurel Cliff. Other callers
were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Mc Nally and family of
Athens.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Kauff and family
were her brother, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph OWens and son,
Kelly.
Mr~- Eli2abeth Murray !iad
as recent visitors Mr. and
Mrs. William Murray and son
of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carl
and Randy, Brett, Melodl and
Jollimy attended the Knotts
reunion recently.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
joined Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Markins, Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Reid,
Pataskala, who spent the

Property
Transfers

weekend at Beverly at The
Ohio
Power
Company
camping ground there.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brickles
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil · Brickles and
family at Groveport.
.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
had as recent visitors Mr. and
Mrs . Clair Waggoner of
Harrisonville, Mr. and Mrs.
Garold Gilkey, Ta mmy,
Cindy of Athens, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Markins,
Racine.

NEW YORK (UP! ) Muhammad Ali will defend
his world heavyweight
championship 11gainst filthHoward B. Caldwell, Sr.,
ranked Earnie Shavers Sept. dec. to Rubal W. Caldwell,
29 at Madison Square cett . for trans., Orange,
Garden,
the
Garden Olive.
anno\)IICed Wednesday.
Arthur E. Hood, .Donna J .
Ali, 35, will receive more Hood to Arthur E. Hood,
than $3 million for the fight, Donna J . Hood , parcels,
which will be nationally tele-_ Salisbury.
vised by NBC. Shavers ,
Catherine R. Angeletti, aka
whose record or 54-5-1 Katherine Angeletti by atty in
includes 52 knockouts, will . fact Olga R. Mathews, Rose
receive $310,000.
A. Sisson, Leland E. Sisson to
Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order
of Eagles, parcels, Pomeroy,
Mahlon G. Eblen, Mary E .
Eblen to Richard E. Jones,
parcels, Salisbury.
Ide M. Buzzard to Donald
and came to the major become National League Anthony Osborne, Janie~~ K.
leagues in 1941 as a first Rookie of the Year for the Osborne, Jack Osborne,
baseman with the Red Sox. Reds.
Loretta Osborne, 11812 acres,
After three years of
Campbell anp his wife,. Columbia.
military service, he returnedwcl..illlan, will retire to Fairfield
and helped Boston win the
lade, TeM.
American League pennant .
Bureman, 30, a native or ATHLITE'S FOOT
TO TIEAT IT1946. CampbeU finished ·his Springfield, Ohio, has been 1HOW
Ap.:!p qllfck~ d,.Yin• 1".... ~L. F ..l
major league_ career with with the Reds since earning a I! 1MIN~Id to check Itch. lturnh•r
ES. In 3 to 5 dan in
Detroit in 1950. He had a master's degree from Ohio ( ec:.t.d . •llin
• louah• alf. w'atch
lifetime .255 batting )lverage. U n i v e r sit y ' s
sports 1~1A~l HY tldn replace It! If n ot
h It t ...4 IN ON£ HOUR. your 79c
He was a minor league administration program. He .•dl • 1 ""Y dr u• c:. .. ullt&lt;er. NOW at
manager in the Southern has· had a variety of front . Netso11 Drug Store .
League at Little Rock and offire duties with the Reds.

•

'

•
'Filling your doctor 's
pres~riptions

is our job.

Just like him, we want
lo see you in top health
always .

CLUB TO MEET
Bend of the River Garden
Club family pienic will be
held at the Shrine P ark in
Racine Monday, July ~ at
6: 30 p.m. Flower show to be
held at the Meigs County Fa ir
wiU be discussed during the
prQgram.

Cal/ Us Anytime

992-5759

VILLAGE PHARMACY
271 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport; 0 .

UNlNlE

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Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9 :30 to 5
Friday 9 : ~0to8

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HEAR OFFICIAL, UP-TO-MINUTE
WEATHER FACTS - ANYTIME!
THE ORIGINAL REALISTIC®
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storms in time to move to safety! Just touch
the playbar for Officia.l National Weather
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kitchen. With 9 volt battery. Know what to
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heritage house OF SHOES

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Controls on top for easy tuning. Only 3x2';.2 xl t,!l . With 9
volt battery and carry strap. You can' t change the
weather but you can hear about it at Radio Shack!

Office Hours:
.

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FULTON-THOMPSON TRAC,TOR SALES
SPRING AVE.

.•

10-12; 2-4; 7-9on Mondays, Wednesdays·,
Fridays
10-12 &amp; 2·4on Tuesdays
10-12 Noon on S.turdays

POMEROY, ,OHIO

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' Pharmacy

'

Dr•.John H. Ridgway at the Meigs Medical

.,•

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VILLAGE

:. ·:: . ·. ·. .. .

Building, Mulbeny Hei&amp;hls, Pomeroy.

_Ohio Valley 'Music Co.

SHRINE 109
SYDNEY, Australia (UPI)
- Michael Kennedy, 19-yearold nephew of the. late
President John F . Kennedy,
is in Sydney to help locate the
wreckage of his uncle 's
famous World War II PT109
patrol boat.
Australian newspapers
said Michael, son . or
assassinated Sen. Robert
Kennedy, arrived Tuesday to
represent his family in a
se.an;h for the vessel, surik by
a Japanese destroyer in. 1943
near the Solomon Islands.
The young Kennedy said he
wollld Uke to .take the boat' s
remains to the United states
"to fonn a national shrine for

. SCRIPPS NAMED
LOS ANGELES (UPI )
Edward W. Scripps n,· an
owner and director of the E .
W. Scripps Co., Wednesday
was named chainnan of the
board of directors of Expo 81,
which is planning a world fair
to b&lt;' held in 1981 at Ontario,
Calif., about 45 nines e!lst of
Los Angeles.
Scripps succeeds Gen.
James H. Doolittle, wbo led
the famous 1942 bombing raid
on Tokyo in World War II,
Richard M. Pittenger,
president of Expo 81, said.

The association of Dr. James P. Conde with
'

Chevalier of Kingsbury was
honored with a baby shower
at the home of Mrs. John
Waller Dean, who along with
Mrs . Richard Houdashelt
were hostesses.
Pink, white and blue were
carried out in the color
scheme. Gifts were placed in
a playpen with blue and pink
streamers extending from
the ceiling. Each table where
the guests were seated was
decorated in white with pink
and blue flowers in center.
Games were played and
prizes awarded to Mrs. Linda
Well, Mrs. Kevin .Wolfe, ~rs.
Marlene Harrison.
After the honored guest had
openM her many gifts,
refreshments of sandwiches,
salad, ice tea, coffee,
lemonade and c'ake with each
piece centered by a miniature
storck were served to these
attending: Mrs. Neva King,
Mrs. Alpha Bailey, Mrs.
Janeth Beal, Mrs. Delores
King, Mrs. Virginia Dean,

Kingsbury News Notes

my uncle."

was general manager of the
Louisvllle Colonels. Before
becooling the Reds' traveling
secretary, Campbell was a
scout and signed Tonuny
Helms, who · went on to

Houdashelt, Mrs. Anita Dean,
the
honored guest, · Mrs.
Carl, Mrs. Elizabeth Murray,
Karla
Chevalier. Also M11ry
Mrs. Sadie Cor!, Mrs. Denise
Perdas,
Lisa Perdas, Tammy
Wolfe, Mrs. Betty Chevalier,
Gilkey,
Jodi
Harrison , Yvette
Mrs. Linda Well, Mrs. Sandra
Young
and
Jeremy Dean.
Perdas, Mrs . Marlene
Others
presentins
gifts to
Harrison, Mrs. Mary Perdas,
Karla
were
.Mrs.
Mabel
.Mrs. Louise Harrison, Mrs.
Brickles,
Miss
Lula
Toban
Yvonne Young, Mrs. Paulette
and
Mrs.
Lori
Perdas.
Harrison, Mrs. Mary Lou

Mrs. Kirk (Karla Beal) Mrs. Eva King, Mrs. Judy

NBC Research estimates that 48 million persons watched its
telecast of the AU-Star Game July 19, which is in line with
audience levels in other years.

Announcing

MUSIC CO .
Would like us to tell you thatthey are now open
daily at 10:00 A. NI·Handling a complete line of instruments and
accessories. Also lessons by appointment.

Kirk Chevalier of Chester,
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Wolfe of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Well of Chester. Other
visitors were Mrs . Mary
Perdas of Chambersburg,
Pa., Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Perdas and Scott of
Wheeler s burg,
Mary's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Perdas. and Lisa, Mary's
sister.

'

OHIO VALLEY

rn~~~

Mr. and Mrs. John Walter · Mrs. Bill Spaun and Shannon
Dean,
Kin gsburg,
en· of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
tertained on Jeremy's third J ohn Dean , locaL Othe ~
birthday Wednesday night callers were Mr. and Mrs.
with ice cream and cake Walter Terrell of Pataskala,
which was served after Mr. and Mrs, Garold Gilkey
and family of Athens, Mr. and
Jeremy opened his gifts.
Those a~nding were Miss Mrs. Paul Paynter of CarTammy Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs. penter.
Kenneth Markins. Racine,

Campbell retiring as secretary

.

MARGUERITE'S SUMMER

jeremy Dean tums three

B.y JU AN HANAUKR
UPI T•levilltKI Writer
NEW YORK I UP11 - TillS corms has only' one rinK, the
audlenl'e claps in"cadent"e and all U1e performers whn are at
risk wear safety wires - that's Ute Moscow circus and it's
marvelous.
· CBS is bringing "The World Famous Moscow Cirl11S" into
American homes in a two-part special to be broadcast July 22
and July 29, 8-9 p .m ., Eastern lime.
William _Conrad, looking like one of the circus bears but
without that beautiful silky coat, is oost for~ first flour and
Shirley Jones, wearing a fur coat any bear would envy, is
oostess for part two.
As Conrad points out, the Russian circus is a more intima~
presentation than the gaudy Ringling Bros ., Barnum and
Bailey extravaganza.
While the per!Qrmers dress up - one equestrienne wore an
incredibly tiered sky blue gown while mounted on a dancing
oorse whose could outmp Arthur Murray - t~ ctone is
quieter, the aciion less frenzied and more concentrated. Performers don't com pete with each other for the attention of the
crowd , as in a three-ring performance, a nd the clowns don't
even wear makeup .
. As de lightful as it is to walch the performing bears - and
let's hear it foc the brave horses who carry the dangerous
beasts around the r ing - there also is a fascination with the
audience.
The shows were taped at the Moscow Circus in the U.S.S.R. ,
and every so often the camera pans around the. a udience,
showing here a rapt child, there a family who would look right
at home in an American suburb, and over there a solid-faced
old peasant woman who could be Mother Russia herself.
The three bears are bound to be a particular hit, despite the
absence of Goldilocks. They take about eight years to find and
train. They perfor m most or their act on horseback, like furry
Cossacks.
Sl;rious circus aficionados probably would count as their
fa vorite acts either the aerial acrobatics of the Arnautov
gymnasts or the high-flying high-wii'e work of !he Volzhanskis.
These are thrilling, particularly the Volzhanskis, who "walk
in space" amid a whirling glitter of stars and spotlights.
For those who take their circuses with a grain of salt, or
anyway a big bag of popcorn, there is an adorable shaggy
white dog who comes out dressed in a jacket, with a curvedstem pipe in its mouth. While a human member of the circus
blows " Auld Lang Syne" on a horn, the shaggy dog howls an
accom~niment that's at least the equal of many rock ~roup.s .

Baby shower held for Mrs. Chevalier

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIOOLEPORT, 0.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
'

•

�.

..

\

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort·Porneroy,

4-TheDaily Sentinel, Middloport·Pumeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 21, 1977

current trends continue, eveil
that Rrojection could be low,

The nutlunk for exe1ten1ent
durin~ the Sf('(lfld half of t h&lt;l

scasm is virtuaUy lin1iUess.
Here's a division by
division look at the races:
National League East
The Cubs h&lt;&gt;ld a two-game
lead over the !'hiladelphia
Phillies and a fivf1lame lead
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Splendid performances by
starting
pitcher
Rick
Reuschel , reliever Bruce
Sutter, infielders . Manny
Trillo and Larry Biittn.er and
outfielder Jerry Morales

havel'IJI'llnbUl\-"lt LA• UH:' I'ISt' ~·f

{)o d~'· r·~

iii'C

Atut'rwan l.t•ag•· t;ast

adiiUI'(tbl\

toquipp&lt;.~l to pn~ect tlw i1· bi~
lead 11ver U1e Hed:i. The Rl'&lt;ls

Natiunal 'League West

With a 9..,-game lead. solid
offense and defense anq· out.
standing · pit ch ing,
the

In a season that
srrt'lches friJill April through
St.•!)l~ruber .
·
Atn('rit•au 1.eague Wt•sL'
The White St&gt;x lead the
Kansas City Royals by 2•-,
g"mes, the Twins by five and
the Texas Rangers' by eight.
Mauager Bob Lemon has .
done a tremendous job
piecing the White Sox
together from the wreckage
of 1976 but the rodds are
dearly against them . Odds

dnn't win -divisior races.

Nicklaus liked

Bengals to contend--Johnson
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Bengals will be an
NFL "contender" again in
1977, confidently predicts
second·year head coach Bill
Johnson. ·
"I predictr.• last season's
team would be a contender
and I sure as hell wouldn't
want to feel we've gone
downhill this year." the
burly', snow-white.· haired

Th~

Ori,•lt&gt;s ilrt' urtt• uf lltt!
big surpri::;es "f lhe S('asun
art' ('tiUn ting un Utrir wall-tna and too sl'&lt;.mdiJiaee Hl'&lt;i
wall stars and U1e June 15 S.IX, only a half-1•amc beh111d,
acquisition nf Tom Seaver to have U1e power to carry a
rickety pitching staff. The
~enerate a strong set'Ond.!Jalf
stc1ry
in thi~ division,
rally. H is a fact , however,
however
, invulves the
that the Dodgers' lead has
Yankees
and
th&lt;lir inability to
1
increased by 2 '.! games sinee
11)
get
&gt;'Iron~
pitching from
the Reds made their big deal
of
their
highly paid
several
for Seaver. The other lour
teams Houst on , San stars and ( 2) In devell&gt;p a
concept
usually
Francisco, San Diego and .team
Atlanta. - seem hopelessly C'on~i(ler('rl (•ssential for
out of the ruMing.

th&lt;· C'ubs . The defemhng
champion Phillies are within
easy ran~e . however. and
wiU1 Mike Schmidt and Greg
Luzfnski have far more
firepower . The Pira~s also
out-gun the Cubs and the
Cardina ls must still he rated
a contender inasmuch as they
are eight games out of first
place .
•

vi(·~·ry

in 'Canadian'

Johnson declared Wednesday
at a pre.tnlining camp news
briefing.
" Yes, we'll be a contender
this year," he snapped.
"We'll be a good team, a fun
team. But we're in a difficult
division . It's a snootful when
you have to play Pittsburgh,
Houston and Cleveland
twice,''
Taking over~ year ago for
the legendary Paul Brown,
Johnson 'sfirst Bengals' team
did turn out to he a contender,
posting a HH record but just
barely missing the playoffs.
" Possibly we didn't do as
good last year as we should
have," Johnson conceded ,
"Looking back, we had three
new assistant coaches (Boyd

Dowler, Mike McCormack defense will make the
and Cbarley Winner) and Bengals a good pass rushing
although I had known them, team "because the other
OAKVILLE, Ont (UPI ) frequent water hazards.
I'd never been on a staff with team isn't sure where a blitz
Prior to today's· start of the · Greens. are large ·and
them.
will c-ome from.' '
68th Canadian Open, the extensively contoured.
, " We've had some good
"We're going to find out in designer of the golf course
The course is billed as· a
sessions in the off.season, I training camp and in pre3-&lt;&gt;veriJar
75
had
only
shot
a
spectator's
paradise - de·
think we've upgraded .in season games about the '34'
00 it.
scribed
by
NicklaiiS
as "the
places and this has got to be a defense," he added . "We'll
Yet
as
official
play
com·
best.
spectator
course
'in the
plus for us this year. I haveii play I t a goodly portion .
mences oo the $4 miUion Glen ·world." ·
much better feeling this year, Perhaps I'm overly enthused
Abbey course, Jack Nicklaus
Besides the many naturally
more comf~r b.le."
about it, but I like the is the favorite to capture the occurring viewpoints along
The Sl).y r old Johnson prospects of it."
• $45,000 top prize from a total the split.level, 35().acre site,
was an Alf o center for the
Johnson admitted he was $225,000 in prize money.
spectator mounds were built
San FranciSco 49ers and therr· "disappointed" in rookie full·
International League
Commissioned four years . into the course at strategic
an assistantcoach in the pros back Pete Johnson of Ohio
United Press In terna tional
ago, Nicklaus designed and points, using soil excavated
W L Pet . . GB
for many years, but last State at a rookie camp in
helped
supervise in creating four man-made
Pawtucket
54 39 .581
season was his first head May, but now feels "much
Tidewater
49 41 .544 3112
construction of the 7,129-yard lakes.
coaching assignment.
· better" about him after
Charleston
50 42 .543 . 3'12
course, which becomes the
The location· is a former
Johnson's main concern watching JVm workout at this
Richmond
46 43 .517 6
Permanent
home
of
the
Jesuit
retreat, and what once
Syracuse
48 45 .516 6
going into the 1977 season is .week 's
rookie
camp. Canadian Open this year.
Rochester
45 47 .589 811'2
was
a
monastery
is now a golf
shoring up the defensive line However, th~ ful:bac k·
Toledo
40 55 .421 15
Runnfrup
in
successive
musewn.
and he said he's confident reported to rookie camp
Columbus
37 57 .394 171/:z
weeks at the British Open and
Wednesday's Resu lts
about succeeding for two heavy and coaches want him
last week's P leaSant Valley
Rochester 10. Tidewater 7
•.
reasons - two new players to drop from 249 to 239
Oassic,
Nicklaus has finished
Richmond 10. Toledo 2
and a new defensive pounds.
Syracuse -4. Charleston 2
second
four times in the
PICNIC, PARTY SET
alignment.
CHICAGO ( U,PI) - The
In the past, the Bengals Canadian Open but has yet to
Pawtucket 5, Columbus I
Th e Middleport Youth
The Bengals' top two have been concerned about
Cubs' ace relief
Chicago
win it.
Baseball League will hold a choices in the college draft
pitcher,
Bruce
Sutter, will be
the attitude of veteran
He's competing against a
picnic a nd pool party F riday, were defensive linemen
out
of
the
lineup
for an
fullback Boobie Clark, but field of 155 other hopefuls
July 22, at Middleport Park. E ddie Edwards of the
estin'tated 10 days because of
Paul Brown figured the
Swimming will be from 5 to 7 University of Miami and presence of good competition inc luding Arnold Palmer, a
h·e mor rhaging
back
p.m. and the picnic from 7 to Wi lson Whitley of the like Johnsen will br ing out the Tom Weiskopf, Gary Player, muscle, the Cubs said
Billy Casper, Lee Trevino,
9. Everyone is asked to please · University of,.Houston.
best in Clark.
Gay
Brewer, defending Wednesday .
bring a container of Kool Aid. · "We fell there were
Sutter, who was forced to
champion Jerry Pate and
defensive linemen available
skip
the All-Star game
Pleasant Valley victor 1'\ay
in t he draft who could step in
because
of the · ailment, was
Floyd .
right away and per haps ·
·examined
'Wednesday by
. Pate shares the unofficia l
M ajor L eague St andi ngs
dominate the
line · of
Dr. Jacob
team
physcian
course record of · 70 with
By Un ited Press ·Inter national
scrimmage,''
said
Johnson,
Suker,
who
advised
Sutter not
Natio nal League
David Gra ham .
HAYWORTH GOLFS
referring
to
Edwards
and
to
t
hrow
until
at
least
next
East
The winner of the world's
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Pet . .G B
W.· L
Whitley.
fourth oldest national cham· Monday.
Ch i cago
53 35 .602
Rita Hayworth, 58, w~nt the
Johnsen also said that for
Phil a
52 38 .578
traditional movie star route the first time in the Bengals'
TIFF IN, Ohio (UPI ) -Ed pionship automatica lly will
Pittsbgh
50 02 .543
47 45 .511
when she was invited to the !().year history, the club will Beach, who competed in the qualify for the $300,000 World
St , LOU1S
42 47 .472
Montrea l
Tiffany Theater to receive an concentrate on trying the so· state high school golf tour· Series of Golf in Akron, Ohio,
37 54 .407
New York
award for her contribution to called "34" defense, with nament a Ufour yea rs he was in September .
West
W. l
P et. G 8 motion pictures.
. The par·72 Glen Abbey
three down linemen and four at Coshocton High School
Los Ang
59 33 .64 1
layout
contains 88 traps and
Wea
ring
a
black
sequined
Cinc l
.48 41 .539 9Vz
including 1976 when his team
linebackers.
Houston
43 50 . ~62 16112 dress, she arrived at the
"We have extreme speed in walked off with the stat~
San Fran
. 43 51 .457 17
limousine · down linemen with Edwards, championship, won t he J6. .
Sa11 Diego
40 55 .421 '201fz theat er in
night, ·and Whitley, Coy Bacon and Gary hole . Qhio Junior Golf
Atlanta
34 57 .374 2411, Wednesday
W ednesday's Ganies
seemed
pleaSed
to find a Burley. When we put three of Tour nament crown Wed· ·
,SCIOTO DOWN S
(No games schedu led)
COLUM BU S ( UPI ) - Fun
crcwd of appla ucing fans. these men on the field at the nesday.
Tod a.y's Proba bl e Pitch er s
F l ite coasted to a four -lengt h
( All Ti mes EDT.
Whe n a n a dmi rer com· same time , we have great
The 18-yea r-old, who pla ns victor y over A ll ison' s Beau
Cinci nnati ( Norman 9-5) at
nigh t in the tea P ittsburgh {Reuss 4-101 , 7:35 plimented her looks, she ssid chase men.
to a ttend Funnan University Wednesday
tured · eighth race a t Scioto
p.m ,
"I've been playing golf to
" But our strength in the '34' and play golf there, carded Downs.
.
Houston ( R ichard 9-6) at St . keep trim. ri
The w i nner, driven by Del
Louis (Forsch 11 -4L 8 :35p .m.
defense r eally lies in four his second consecutive 1·
Miller, covered the mile in 2:02
Montrea l (Rogers 9-8) at Los
linebackers - Jim LeClair , under-par 71 to capture the 2-S and returned sa, S4 .20 and
Angeles !Hooton B-3), 10 : 30
Glenn Cameron, Reggie Wil· title with a t wo-stroke lead in S3 .80. Pentar Hanover was
p.m .
rd.
Philadelphia {Lonborg 3-31 at
th~ 16-18 division over Ken ttliThe
Iiams and Bo Ha rris."
A-.5 n ightly double combi San Francisco (Halicki a.BJ,
George
Johnson
figured
the
"34"
of
·Ca
nfield
,
who
nation
of Pride of Cleone and
10 :35 p .m.
GAME IS FRIDAY
Drip Dry w as worth $46.60 and
·Atlanta (Ruthven 3-51 at
posted
)lis
second
straight
72.
·
Ma son softba ll team will be
the 9-2 -3 n i nth r(\Ce tri f ecta
Chicago . (Bonham 9-9 l. 2 :30
J eff Koozer of Ma nsfield, combo paid $3 15.30.
p . m ~ . "'
playing West Portsmouth at
A cr owd of 3.863 wagereCI
the Tuesday co· leader,
New Yor k (Zachry 4-101 at Jackson F riday, July 22 at 7
$~54, 654 .
T H ISTLEDOWN
san Diego (Griffin S-8), 10 p.rri.
NORTH
RAN DALL, Ohio Slipped to a 146, including
p.m.
Fri da y's Games
·
.
(UP
I
JGrand
Julie, winner of Wetlnesday's 75 round . Tied
c tn'c i a t Pi tt sburgh, night
her only start recen tl y. r ol led at 146 were Tim Waiton,
A·tlanta at ' Chicago
to her second straight YictorY
Houston a t St . Louis. n ight
in tt1e fea t ur ed a l lowance purse Middletown, who posted a
Montr~a! a t Los Ange les, night
at
Th istledown
Wednesday, fina l 70; · Brent Bonn ey,
New York at San Diego, night
RIVER OOWNS
runn ing the six furlohgs in 1 :12 Shelby, who had a 71, and
Phila at San Francisco, nigh t
CINCINNATI
(UP I)
_
and paying $3 .60 to win,
Harvey Keck. with Richard
A dead heat for third in the Julian Taylor , Youngstown , a
Morgan up, raced to a four - tri l ec;ta · between L arry's Mar - 72.
.

IK•wevcr, atld it is up to the
R..yals, ·twins and Rangers
tu mltke sLrong mnves. The
AnRels appear out of it
despite
their
brilliant
pitching combination of
N"lan .Ryan and Frank
Tanana.
And what about Rod Carew
and Nolan Ryan '
Carew built his average to
.411 before encountering a 11).
day "slump" during which he
batted more than ,300 but saw
his average dip to its current
.394. The odds are against any
modern hi,\ter batting 400 but
teammates and nvals agree
that Carew has a chance to
achieve his lofty goaL Carew
himself describes July and
August as "the months in
which we separate the men
from the boys ." A five-time
American League bh~tthing
champion, Carew's 1g es
average for _a__ complete
season waS' .3&amp;1 in 1974.

1

Coshocton's
Beach· winner
in Ohio Jrs. ·

L~ague

East
W. L

Baltimre
Boston
New York
Cl~velnd

Milw
Detro i1
Toronto

Pet . G B

53 39 .576
51
50
.41
41
41
34
West
W.
S.t
51
50
46
42

38
42
.47
49
50
58

.573
.543
.466
.456
.451
.370

lj~

3
10
11
1 Jlh
19

length victory over Yolas Soy
in the fea t ured ninth allowance
race at River Downs Wednes day. Condado waS third.
Harvev Kech, t i med i n 1 : 10 2.
5 for the six furlongs, returned .
S9.20, S5 .60, $.4 .80.
·.
The 11 -5 dally double of
Beach Pad and camargo Miss
was worth sss .oo.
The .4,094 racing fans bet .
$483,29.4.

tini (8) and Doc's Promise {91
set UJ' two trifecta payoffs . tn
one, it was Ecamarow (.4), Mr.
E.picor e (7) and Larry's M~ tini (8 ) for SS09 .10. The. other of
the first two and Doc'S Promise
{9) pa id $98.40 .
In the dai l y double It was
Everett's L ady (3) and Tower
Gold (8) for S104 .80.
Atte:ndance was 4,411 , and the
handle ca me t o $436,249 .

L
Pet . GB
36 ·.600
38 .S7J 2112
42 .543 5
44 .511
8
46 .477 1l
Oa~land
39 51 .433 15
Seattle
41 54 .432 15 1f~
By Un i ted Press Internationa l
dropped veteran de fens i v e
. Wednesday's R esults
, Wednesday
tackle M i tch Surton of Kansas
( No games scheduled )
and rookies Gi bson Ivery , a
· Basebilill
Today's Proba ble P itchers
Cinc innati
Called
up wide rece i ver f r om W idener ,
( All Ti m es EDT)
Californ i a ( Ryan 13 -8) at pitchers Mari o Soto and Manny Ed Sczerba, ari Offensive tack l e
Villanova,
and
John
Minnesota { Goltz 10-6). 8 :'30 Sarmiento from Indianapolis from
and optioned Joe Henderson to Willison , a linebacker from
p .m .
VMI.
Kansas City (Spl i ttorff 7-51 at Ind ianapolis .
Milwaukee - Optioned utitft'JI
.
Basketball
Detroit (Rozema 8-.tL 8 p.m .
San Antonio - S1gned center
Oak land
(Medich 5-•0 at infielder Bob She ldon to Spoka - .
rie .
· Jeff W il k1ns, their _top draft
Seattle (Abbott 5.7), 10:35 p.m .
FQotball
choice
from
lll in01s
State
Milwaukee (Slaton 7-8 · and
Cleveland - Acquired guard University .
Augustine 10-IOl at New York
(Hunter 5-4 and Flgu·eroa 9-ll, Bob Kowalkowski from De troit
Coll eg e
tor a future draf t choice .
Colgate Named Terry
2, 5 :30p .m.
_
.
M iami - ACQuired defensive Slater, coach of Cincinna ti of
Cleveland (Fitzmorris 2-5 and
Carl
Barisich from the WHA , as head hockey
· Bibby 8-7) at Boston· ,{S tan l ey 6- tackle
for
an
undisc losed coach .
4 and T iant 5-1}, 2, 2 p .m . and Seattle
future consideration and rein Los Angeles John Mar .
7:30p. m .
stated offens ive ta ckle Darr'Jil shalt , a s s i s t an t coa,ch at
Friday's Ga m es
Carlton .
Or egon, named assistant footOakland at Seattle, night
San ~rancisco Waived ball coach at Un i versi ty 91
Calif at Minnesota , night
Kansas City at O~troit , night
midrjle
Nunley . l i n e backer Frank
Chicago at Toronto , n ight "'
Philadelphia - Signea g·uard
Texas at Baltimore . n ight
Jerry Sisemore to a seri es of
Milwaukee at New Vorl., night
five one -year contracts and
Clev,.eland at Boston , night
Chicago
Kan Ci ty
M inn
Texas
Calif

Sports

transactio~s

p

I . Florist Since 1957

I

1

I
I

.

Former
Pittsburgh
linebacker Andy Russell, now
retired, also condemned the
play made by Atkinson .
RusseU testified he had
watched the actloo from the
sidelines and " it was my
definite impression at !hat
time
that
t\tkinson
intentionally struck Lynn
"blatant" foul.
,
Swann from behind with his
Rozelle, calling hiln.sell a forearm with the intention of
neutral witness, testified intii?,idating and hurting
Wednesday at the $2 million him.
slander suit brought by
Russell noted Swann had
Atkinson
against
the ~.lowed - down and said
Pittsburgh Steelers 'and their
rece1ve_rs ~ho slow down
coach, Chuck Noll.
and are JOggmg are not gomg
' '1 feel that the basic appeal to receive the football and I
of football is action, but . don' t go up and drill them
controlled action," said
Rozelle. "U the action is
uncontrolled, it is a ssd
situation
for everyone

I

_.._.._.._..,_._.__.l

1 Your " Extra Touch"

1

By DONALD THACKERY
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) NFL Commissiooer Pete Ro·
zelle considers George
Atkinson an "outstanding"
defensive back, but he also
feels
that
Atkinson 's
controversial
hit
of
Pittsburgh Steelers' wide receiver Lynn Swann was a

- .4. _ _ , ,•~ .

•

/~

FLO R I ST

PH. 99 2-2644

II
I
I

I
____.__

._

I 35_._.._..._,
\-~~~fo~r:.';!~t·.v

NEEO \NSUN.'U':~~
oN yoUR
.
iirst. We offer
Checl&lt;. with usunts ior care·

speci~l dlsc~n-srno\&lt;.e,rs,

iul dnvers, n
d rnulti·'
good student~d:n w e'll be
car househo e you a free
haPPY to gtV
· qu&lt;;M·

Davis Insurance Service
992· 5120
Pomeroy , 0 .

11 4 Cou rt St.

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, J0LY23

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;
K. V . COMPUTING DEPT.
OF
UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P. M.

CAMDEN PARK
U. S. 60 WEST -

HUNTINGTON

Closed Every Monday Except La~or Day

Blount
•
•
Is
sumg
Noll now
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Pitts bur g h St e e l e r s
cornerback Mel Blount said
Wednesday he would file a. $5
million lawsuit against Chuck
, Noll because, Blount said,
'' "Ntllt slander ed him by calling
him a part of professional
sports1 "criminal element."
Blount, who lives in south
th e
Louisiana · duri ng
offseason,
said
Noll 's
state~e nts damaged his
r eputation. He said th~ suit
would be fi led in federal
court.
Noli made the statement
dur ing testimooy given last
week in another damage suit
in California. In that case ,
Noll is accused of .slandering
George Atkinson of the
Oakland Raiders by · saying
the cornerback intended to
hurt Pittsburgh's Lynn
Swann during a play in a 1976
steeler...RAiders game.
During cross eXamination
las t week , Noll said he
consider ed several other .
players part of a "criminal

scholastic

reasons,

a

spokesman for the Big Eight
Conference school announced
Wednesday .
They are defensive tackle
J eff Fox, · guard Art Dale
Johnsen and defensive back
Vincent Malone.

Pomeroy Pamy
Shop
Closed For Vacat ion

- JULY 17t.h

RE-OPEN
Jl,JLY 31st

SATURDAY, JULY 23rd AT 1 PM
We want to introduce you to FAHR
·Hay Equipment:
Turbo Mower
Centipede Tedder
..
Helipede Rotary Windrower.
RACINE, OHIO

Mary Thompson and Max
Folmer we re united in
marriage on July 18 at the
Mt. Olive Church, Long
Bottom . The Rev. Lawrence
Bush offi ciated a t t he
ceremony.
Guests attending were Mrs.
Folmer's daughter , Kelly Lea
Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Westfall, Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Bartoe, Miss Betty
Piggett, Mrs. VIolet Bush,
Mrs. Charlene Althouse and
children , Melinda , Pam,
Johnny and Tony and Unda
Pierce. A reception was given
by Mrs. Gene Westfall.

Kirk Chevalier of Chester,
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Wolfe of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Well of Chester . Other
visitors were · Mrs. Mary
P erda s of Chambersburg,
Pa., Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Perdas
and· Scott of
Wheelersbur g,
Mar y's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J ohn
Perdas a nd Lisa, Mary's
sister.

$CRIPPS NAMED
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Edward W. Scripps n~ an
owner and director of the E.
W. Scripps Co., Wednesday
was named chairman of the
hoard of directors of Expo 81,
which Is planning a vrorld fair
to be held in 198.1 at Ontario,
Calif., about 4.'i miles east of
Los Angeles. ' •
Scripps succeeds Gen.
James H. Doolittle, who led
the famous 1942 bombing raid
on TokYo in World War II,
Richa r d M. Pittenger,
president of Expo 81, said.

name. Wand shoes.

Handling a complete line o'f instruments and
acces sories. Also lessons by appointment.

Ohio Valley Music Co~

,

CONTINUES
MANY SHOES 40% TO 75% OFF.

herit·a ge house OF SHOES
OPEN
Mondaythru Thursday &amp; 5aturday9 :30to5
Friday 9:30 to a

N. 2ND AVE.

Get advance warning of hail. tornados, violent
storms in time to move to safety! Just touch
. the playbar for Official Nationai Weather
Service VHF broailcasts from Caldwell - · 24
hours a day . Perfect for desk. bedside,
kitchen. With 9 volt battery . Know what to
expect ....4 rain or shine!
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FULTON-THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES

10-12 ; 2·4;7.9on Mondays, Wednesdays,
Fridays

10.12 &amp; 2-4 on Tuesdays
10.12 Noon on Saturdays

OHIO

~21l

weekend at Beverly at The
Power
Company
Ohio
camping ground there.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brickles
visited reCently with Mr. a nd
Mrs. Cecil Brickles a nd
family at Groveport.
Mr. and Mrs. Johii Dean
had as recent visitors Mr. a nd
Mrs , Clair Waggoner of
Harrisonville, Mr. and Mrs .
Garold Gilkey , Tammy,
Cindy of Athens, Mr. and
Mr s . Kenneth Markin s,
Racine.

Property
Transfers

Announcing

Would like us to tell yo11 that they are now open
daily at 10 : 00 A.M ..

317 N. 2nd Av~.

Kingsbury News Notes

NEW YORK (UPI )
Muhammad Ali will defend
his world heavyweight
championship against fifth ·
ranked Eamie Shavers Sept.
29 at Madison Square
Garden,
the
Garden
announced Wednesday.
Ali, 35, will receive more
than $3 million for the fight ,
which will he nationally tele·
vised by NBC. Shavers ,
whose r ecord of 54-5· 1
include.S 52 knockouts, will
receive $310,000.

The association of Dr, James P. Con!le with

. 99~

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o.

NBC Reilear ch estimates that 48million persons watched its
.teJecast of the All.star Game J uly .19, which is in line with
audience levels in other years.

Recent visitors of Mrs.
Hazel Arnold wer e Mrs.
Pearl Oark, Burdell Brofford
of Columbus, Mrs. Ann Mash
of Laurel Cliff. Other callers
were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
McNally and family of
SHRINE 109
SYDNEY, Australia (UP! ) Athens.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
- Michael Kennedy, 19·year·
Mrs.
C~rl Kauff and family
old ne phe w of the late
were
her brother, Mr. and
President John F. Kennedy,
Mrs.
Joseph
Owens and son,
Is In Sydney to help locate the
Kelly.
wrec kage of hi s un cle's
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray had
famous World War II 1':1'109
as
recent visitors Mr. and
patrol boat.
AUst r a lian ne wspapers Mrs. William Murray and son
sa id Micha el, son of of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carl
assassinat ed Sen. Robert
and
Randy, Brett, Melodl and
Kennedy, arrived Tuesday to
JQ!timY
attended the Knotts
represent his family in a
reunion
recently.
search for the vessel, sunk by
Mr. and Mrs. 'John Dean
a Japanese destroyer in 1943
joined Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
near the Solomon Islands.
Markiils,
Racine, and Mr.
The young Kennedy said he
would llke to take the boat's .and ·Mrs. Robert Reid,
· remains to the United States Pataskala, who spent the
''to form a national shrine for
my uncle."

Dr. John H. Ridgway at the Meip Medical

Drastic redUctions on many

VILLAGE PHARMACY

"IT'S TRUE. •

·MARGUERITE'S SUMMER

CONTINUES

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10 COUNTY ROAD 35.

~:ou~t:he:r:n~C~a~lit~o~rn~;~a.1111~.=~~~====:i;iii:===

A rea couple weds

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0:.

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Middleport , 0.

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Pharmacy

UNlNlE

Mary _Perdas has birthday

•

VILLAGE

Campbell··retiring as secretary

COME TO OTIS KNOPP'S FARM
FOLLOW ROUTE 124 APPROXIMATELY 3 MILES EAST OF RACINE
TURN LEFT ON CR 35 ABOUT % MILE.

concussion."

Mrs. Bill Spaun and ShaMon
of Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
John D ean, . local. Othe r
csllers were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter T errell of Pataskala,
Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey
and family of Athens, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Paynter of Carpenter.

Mills Mary Janeth Perdas, ·
who along with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John P erdas,
Chambersburg, Pa., visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal,
Kingsburg, was honored on
her sixth birthday with a
party by the grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal.
Th e g uests attendin g
Mary's part'y wer e Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Young, Wesley
~nd Yvette, Mr. and Mrs.

Houdashelt, Mrs. Anita Dean,
Mrs. Kirk (Karla Beal) Mrs. Eva King, Mrs. Judy
the honored guest, Mrs.
&lt;llevalier of Kingsbury was Carl, Mrs. Elizabeth Murray,
Karla Chevalier. Also Mary
honored with a baby shower Mrs. Sadie Carl, Mrs. Denise
Perdas, Lisa Perdas, Tammy
at the home of Mrs. John Wolfe, Mrs. Betty Chevalier,
Gilkey,
Jodi Harrison, Yvette
Walter Dean, who along with Mrs. Linda Well, Mrs. Sandra
Yo.ung
and Jeremy Dean .
Mrs . Richard Houdashelt Perdas, · Mrs. Marlene
Others
presenting gifts to
marvelous .
Harrison, Mrs. Mary Perdas,
were hostesses.
Karla
were
Mrs. Mabel
CBS is bringing ' 'The World Famous Moscow Circus" into
Pink. white and blue were Mrs. Louise Harrison, Mrs.
Brickles,
Miss
Lola Toban
American h&lt;IYies in a tw01lllrt special to be broadcast July 22 carried out in the color 'Yvonne Young, Mrs. Pa9lette
and Mrs. Lori Perdas.
and July 29, 8-9 p.m., Eastern time.
scheme. Gifts were placed in Harrison, Mrs. Mary Lou
William Conrad, looking like one of the circus bears but a playpen with blue and pink
without that beautiful silkY coat, is host for the first hour and streamers extending from
Shirley Jooes, wearing a fur coat any bear would envy, is the ceiling. Each table where
hostess for part two.
the' guests were seated was
As Conrad points out, the Russian circus is a more intimate decorated in white with pink
presentation than the gaudy Ringling Bros., Baroum and and blue flowers in center.
Bailey extravaganza.
Games were played and
While the performers dress up - one equestrienne wore an prizes awarded to Mrs. Unda
incredibly tiered s!Cy blue gown while mounted on a dancing Well, Mrs. Kevin Wolfe, Mrs .
horse whooe could outstep Arthur Murray - the tone is Marlene Harrison.
quieter, the action less frenzied a nd more concentrated. Per.
Affer)he honored guest had
formers don't compete with each other for the a ttention of the opened - her many gifts,
crowd, as in a three-ring performance, and the clowns don't refreshmentS' of sandwiches,
even wear makeup.
salad, ice tea, coffee,
As delightful as it is to watch the performing bears - and lemonade a nd cake with each
let's hear it foc the brave horses who carry the dangerous piece centered by a miniature
Fi lli ng your doctor's
beasts around the ring - there also is a fascihation with the storck were served to these
prescriptions is our job.
audience.
attending: Mrs. Nev~ King,
The shows were taped at the Moscow Circus in the U.S.S.R., Mrs. Alpha Bailey, Mrs.
Just like him , we want
and every so often the camera pans around the audience, Janeth Beal, Mrs. Delores
showing here a r apt child, there a family who would look right King, Mrs. Virginia Dean,
Ia see you in top health
at home in an American suburb, and over there a solid.faced
always.
old peasant woman who could be Mother Russia herself.
The three bears are bounlf to be a particular hit, despite the
CLUB TO MEET
absence of Goldilocks. They take about eight years to find and
Bend
of the River Ga rden
train. They perform most of their act on horseback, like furry
Ca ll Us Anyllm•
wUl
be
Club
family
picnic
Cossacks.
992-5759
Serious circus aficiooados probably would count as their held a t the Shrine Park in
Racine
Monday,
July
25
at
fa vorite acts either the aerial acrobatics of ijJe Arnautov
gymnasts or the high-flying high·wire work of the Volzhanskis. 6::W p.m . F lower show to he
These are thrilling, particularly the Volzhanskis, who "walk held at the Meigs County Fair
will be discussed during the
• in space" amid a whirling glitter of stars and spotlights,
Middle por t ,
271 N . 2nd Ave.
For those who tske their circuses· with a grain of salt, or program.
8(lyway a big bag of popcorn, there is a n adora ble shaggy
white dog who comes out dressed in a jacket, with a curved·
stem pipe in its mouth . While a human member of the circus
blows "Auld Lang Syne" on a horn, the shaggy dog howls a n
accompaniment that's at least the equal of many rock ~rouPS .

Howard B. Caldwell, Sr.,
dec. to Rubal W. Caldwell,
element" .in pro sportS·,
cert. for trans ., Orange,
including Blount.
Olive.
" A criminal element Arthur E . Hood, Donna J .
what does t hat m ean ?"
Hood to Arthur E. Hood,
Blount said after Noll made
Donna J . Hood, parcels,
the statement. "None of us is
Salisbury.
out there on the football field
Catherine R. Angeletti, aka
carrying
weapons.
A
Katherine Angeletti by atty in
criminal to me is a guy who
fact Olga R . Mathews, Rose
kills or steals."
~o. Sisson, Leland E. Sisson to
•I
Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order
.of Eagles, parcels, Pomeroy.
:Mahlon G. Eblen , Mary E.
Eblen to Richard E. Jones,
parcels, Salisbury.
lcie M. Buizard to Donald ·
CINCINNATI (UPI ) a nd c ame to the major become National League Anthony ~borne, J anlce K.
Paul
Campbell,
the leagues in 1941 ·as a first Rookie of the Year for the Osborne, Jack Osborne,
Cincinnati Reds' traveling baseman with" the Red Sox. Reds.
Loretta ~borne, 1181,!, acres,
Campbell
and
his
wife,
secretary· since 1964, is
After three years . of
Columbia.
retiring as of Jan. 1, 1978, military service, he returned . Wlian, will retire to Fairfield
club officials announced · and helped Boston win the Glade, Tenn.
Bureman, :W, a native of ATHLETE·s FOOT
Wednesday .
American League pennant in
HOW TO TltEAT ITHe will be replaced next 1946. Campbell finished his Springfield, Ohio, has been It ::.::ylto,Wc~· dryln• 1'-4· L Fael
season by' Doug Bureman, a majoc league career 10th with the Reds since earning a ba MINUTls tolncbeck Itch , buro ln.3 to II dar!l. J11•
off. Watch
member oflhe Reds' staff the Detroit in 1950. He had a master's degree from Ohio fecled _• kin • alouahs
HE~LlHY
•
ld
n
npl•c:•
ltl If
t
sports
past live rears .
lifetilqe .255 batting a verage. University ' s
~h•hh! ~ IN Ol'oi E HOUR., rour ~:c
Campbell has been in base·
He was a minor league · administration program. He _ao11 k • t '' nl' d ru a 11 1.1UIItflr . NOW al
Nelson Drug Store.
ball 42 years as a player, . manager in the Southern hils had a variety of front
coach , manager , g.e neral League at Little Rock and olfice duties with the Reds.
manager , club president , was ge_n eral manager of the
scout and front office . Louisville Colonels. Before
executive.
becoming the Reds' traveling
•
He started as a minor secretary, Campbell was a
league player in the Boston scout . and signed Tommy
Red Sox organizatloo in 1936 Helms , who went on to
'·

WE'RE HAVING AHAY DAY!

BOULDER, Colo. ( UPI ) ·_
Three foot ~a ll player s
expected to play for Colorado
University this fall have been
declared ineligible for

~'blatant"

one.
Atkinson 's blow gave
Swann a concussion and Noll
then complained about "a
criminal element" in the
NFL, triggering the lawsuit.

•

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The Steelers have filed a
countersuit against Atkinson,
alleging he was part of a
coospiracy "to disable and
intimidate Lynn SwaM."

Mr. and Mrs. John Walte.r
!Ung sburg,
en·
Dean,
tertained on J eremy's third
birthday Wednesday night .
with ice cream and ca ke
which was served after
Jeremy opened his gifts.
Those attending were Miss
Tammy Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Ma rkins . . Racine,

shower held for Mr-r. Chevalkr

By JOAN HANAUJ::R
UP! Televlalun Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI) - ThiS Clr&lt;.'IIS hilS only ooe ring, the
audienc'&lt;' claps In cadence and all U1e performers who are at
risk wear safety wires - that's U1e Moscow circus and it's

behind the head. "
Piltsburgh quarterback
Terry Bradshaw said he felt ·
Atkinson "deliberalely
clobbered" Swann on the
play, but conceded he had not
seen Swann while the play
was in progress nor had he
seen Atkinson .
Dr. David Huber internal
· medical consultant for the
. Steclers also · testified and
called 'swann's · injury a
~~cerebral

Ba~y

TV•••in Review

jeremy Dean turns three

involved."

Steelers game a

a

A m erican

hit as blatant foul

o:

"I think he's an outstanding
defensive back. A nwnber of
clubs would be very
interested to have Atkinson
on their football club," the
commissioner said.
But he said he considered
the foul during the Raiders-

,.

BASEBALl

Ryan, who holds the
modern major teague record
38.1 strikeouts, may have a
better chance at his goal than
Carew. The CaliJornia
firebaHer is on a course that
would carry him well beyond
400 strikeouts for the season.
He works every fourth day
and his ann seems strong
enough to pitch the necessary
num her of innings.
t_

.

Rozelle saw Atkinson

Underdogs lead everywhere at 2nd half start
By FRED 00)\'N
UPI Sports Writer
Part II ollhe maj&lt;.r league
baseball season starts tonight
with underdogs leading all
four divisions and two
players bidding to achieve
spectacular goals.
With official projections
plaring o\oeraU attendan&lt;;l"
for the season at about 34
million , 1977 promises to he
both a financial and an
artistic success. Should

o.. Thlp'lday ,July 21, 1977

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
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1-Tbe Dllilv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 21,19T1

---------------------------.

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MARY ESTER WAI.LACE
Mn. Mary Ester Wail~&gt;ce,
66, who died at her residence
on South Third Avo. In
I
I MJcldleporl, Wed..-y, WBI
bom April 21, 1910 at Couch.
EDWARD BOWEN
Addle Davis Jackson; seven w. Va., the daughter of the
Edward Bowen, 126 But- sons, Ronald of Akron , late William H. and Nettle
ternut Ave .• Pomeroy, died Robtrl, Roscoe. Roy, Randel Mae Taylor Wood.
She was preceded In death
Wednesday evening at the · and Gary, all of Coolville, and
.
by
hor second husband.
e of 12 at Veteran's
Jerry of Guysville ; four
~ I I H 11 1
daughters, Mrs. ~ry Coe, William E. Wallace; thrH
T'h:.;. ot'1~ raie Charles Coolville ; Mrs. Richard brothers IJnd three slsltf's.
She Is survived by her
and Anna Kasper Bowen, he (Margl"l
Shrodes
of
was r,ec""ed In death by Coolville; Mrs. · Ernest daug,ter and son-in-l aw ,
,~
d 1t
d (Karen l Harris, Mentor llfld James· Eugene and Nita
eight rothersan s s ers an
Mrs. Steve (Velda) Farney, Condo of Chester and her first
a grandson.
husband, Paul E . Casto, of
He Is survived by his wife. Pataskala ; three brothers,
Marjorie Bentz Bowen ot Lafeand Jonn, both of Akron ; Columbus; two brothers,
Pomeroy; three sons, Ed- and Corlyn ot Mineral Wells. John Robert Wood, Colum.
ward R. and Ernest L., both W. Va.; three sisters, Mrs. bus, and William A. Wood of
ot Columbus, and Michael of Nellie Davis, ·Mrs. Lonle Xenia; three grandsons, Dr .
James P. Conde, Pomeroy,
Pomeroy ; five grandsons and Schi!lng and Mrs ; Nora
several nieces. and nephews. Nutter, all of Parker$burg, 24· and Brian and Bruce of
two
grand A member of the En- grandchildren, and 12 greal- Chester;
daughters,
Mrs
.
Cynthia
terprlse United Methodist grandchlldr~.
.
Church he was an employee
Born ln. Bra~ton Cpunty, W. Wesl. Des Moines, I. ; Mrs.
tathy Hubbard, Dexter, and
of P.ark'ersburg Rig and Reef ' Va. , Mr. Jackson was a steel
se•ieral ·nleces and nephews.·
for ' over 20 years and an worker who retired from
Mrs.· Walla ce was a
employee of Midwest Steel Movntaln Stole Steel In
member of the Galllpolls
until his retirement.
Parkersburg and has bee~ an
Funeral services will. be Ohio resident the past 22 Baptist Church. Memodal
Saturday at J.p. m. at Ewing years. Funeral services will
Chap!!l. Burial will follow In be Salurda.Y at I p. m. at

I ·· Area Deaths

Clifton delegation asks
'

for mtinicipal
•BY NEIL FRIEDER
The first legal ·steps
towards creating another
lnCOl'J)Orated municipality in
Ma1011 County were taken
Tuesday evening during the
regular session of the Mason
County Commlssion.
A delegation of approzlmately 24 people from
Cllfton presented the three
commlsslone.rs wltb a
petltioo of 108. signatures, a
survey and a map of the area,.
wbich it seeks to incorporate.
The pres""tation of the
petition, survey and map.
were In accordance with the
West Virginia Code in
compliance with the for·
mationofamunlcipality, Roy
. Elmer, who headed the
: delegation, told the Com·
· mission.
; To fur\her comply with .t)le
' law, the Commission set u\&gt; a
hearing date for August 17 at
· 7 p:m. at which time people
will have the opportunity to
· present to the Commission
. evidence for and against tire
posed ·
ti
pro
mcorpora on.

corpor~t~o.n

Other dbcu.sslon at the 110111ewhere.
meeting centered around ~
While no decision was
purchase of a water tank and · made, the' C9riuriisslon will
pump for the New Haven
stuey the matter_~er. _
Volunteer Fire Depalt(nent
Among - the
other
and paying for an ambulan!:e delegatl.ons : appealing was
for the Valley Volunteer Fire one from the Letart area
Departm~ .
which came. to dbcbss the
New Haven Fire Chief CecU . possible purchase of ap-.
Duncan appeared to discuss prosima!ely %70 acres of land
wtth the Commission the to· be turned mto a park.
pcissibi!lty oi purcbasin.li a
While SQme members of
tank and pwnp on a flfty.flfty· that delegation accused the ·
matching basts.
Commislllon, of 'd ragging its
Apparently, Commission feet In acquiring the
Presid""t Bob Powers was property, whi'Ch belongs to
under the Impression thai the . the Sa~;re €grp·., Com·
fire Department already had missionet BID Rardin told
ausabletankandonly needed them that tl;le Commission is
a chassis to bold it, which the applying to: the . B':"'eau of
Commission at a prevous Outdoor 1tecreat1on for
meeting agreed to eventually , matcbirig funds to purchase
purchase.
•
the property. . , .
also.. . "':•
""J'lted
However, Duncan sat'd ·t he . Butcher
.
. out
tank they have is unusable. tha~ tlie. Comrili8s1on 1.9 n?t
In respqnse to the request, obligated ~ purchase this '
Powers noted that the particular piece' of property,
, Conunission so far Ulis year and th~ only obligation is ,tp
· is spending approximately purchase a piece•of prope[ty.
$ll6,000 already on fire and , "I have ·.never ~ed
rescue squad equipment for myself or the CoiiUDlSSion to
the county and further noted purchase 'the ·' P,r.o pert
_ y,"
ed
that the spending has to slop Butcher stat : · ·
.

:Jaworski takes on HOSRITAL
NEWS .

Korean probe
By ){ICHARD E. LERNER

WAsHINGTON (UPI) Leon Jaworski, a Watergate
· special prosecutor three
years ago, is coming back to
nm the main congressional
probe of South Korean
influence,buying on Capilli!
Hi!!, with top DemocratS
hoping he can restore 1ts
' credibility.
.
' Only formal approval by
· the House Ethics Committee
was neOded today to install
Jaworski, a . Democrat, as
new special counsel and give
, the 71-year-oid Houston
: attorney a .written gi.Iarantee
.. ·o f " full and COJTiplete
• lndependence' l .to cmduct the
• inquiry - as promised cby
· panel Olairman John Flynt,
, D-Ga. '
.
• ReSponding to pleas from
Speaker Thomas O'Neill-and..
· House Democratic Leader
• J'un Wright, Jaworski agreed
; Wednesday to fill the void
: created five ·· days earlier
when Philip Lacovara, once
, an assistant Watergate
~ prosecutor,, quit after a fight
with Flynt over the pace of
: the Investigation.
Flynt sai,d Jaworski told
• him he would start work full
, time in mid-August. But he
' insisted he would take the job
: mly if the committee let him
• serve without pay, assured.

..

; Court upholds
'

searching of
: coal offices

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CINCINNATI (UPI) odaA
federal appe8Js court I Y
ap(il'oved a dlsptited U. S.
government search of coal
mine com~y offices and,
citing ·the safety of miners,
said that mine operators
can't expect as much privacy
as other businesses.
The 6th U. S . .Circuit Court
of Appeals ruled that a lower
court was wrong · in suppressing evidence seized by
federal inspectors. at SIX
offices of the Consolidation
Coal Co.
That eVidence can be used
In~ aiif upcoming court
proceedings against the coal
company, th~ appeUate court
decided.
The disputed · evidence
included paperwork . and
materiaiB used in oompany
monitoring of dust con·

him wide freedom .to operate,
and let Peter White, a senior
partner in his law fii-m, be his
deputy. Flynt said.
Under heavy pressure to
speed up the much-criticized
inquiry, Flynt promptly
. acceded to all the demands
and even promised · to
recommend changes in
Conimittee rules if Jaworski
felt it necessary.
" You'll receive every
cooperation, .. . F lynt told
Jaworski on the telephone
while reporters listened.

"I'm a very easy person to
get along with .... I'm looking
forward to a very meaningful
and successful . operation
together."
) The conunittee has' been .
trying to deteimine whether
South Korea's government or
agents gave members of
C«&lt;gress cash, lavish gifts
and a variety of "favors" in
the 1970s in a campaign to
influence U.s .. economic and ·
lllilltaJ'y pqlicy.
Scattered applause, mostly
from DemocratS, broke out
on the House floor after Flynt
interrupted
debate
to
announce
Jaworski's
decision.
GOP Leader John Rhodes
said, ''I'm personally pleased
with ,lhe selectloo."

'sAVINGS ORDERED
WASHINGTON (UPI)

~

President Carter today
ordered tbe eUmiDalloa of

·qga1

guzzling " .

automobiles
Ia
the
govemmeat'o fleet of cars
aad f5 per cent reductiou
ID the amout of eaergy
~t federal baOdl•go uae.

•
centrations in· mines. High
levels of dust can lead to
Black Lung .disease and the
federal govenunent requires
periodic air checks to make

sure mine operators are
keeping dust down.

Voterau Memotlal Hospital
ADMISSIONS . ..., Emma
Douglas, Pomeroy; Beverly
Thompson, ·Guysville; Virgil
Yarbrough, Rutiiilid ; Mabel
_Wolfe, r.}iddleport ; Effie
Shockey, Shede, Joan Sellers,
Racine ;
Betty
Eynon,
Racine ; Harry Glenn, Reeds,
ville; Jeffrey I,ewis, New
Haven.
·
DISCHARGES · ~ Paul
Bl!ffis, G~i'ge Harris, Helen
Kimes, Leona ~. Joyce
Klein, . Gladys Cuckler,
Russell Cullums, Evelyn ·
Landers; Shirley .Hayman,
Barbara ·Jame~. p larence
fiapper, Rasalee; satterfield;
Patricia Clelaild.

•
•

'

. ~

SHOP NOW FOR SUMMER SPECIALS

•

•

tax refonn goals

not been clet.-mlned. .
•'Tbe IJIIIenJ principles Ia
Ill ~ will .be tu:ed and
an ~nem~e will be ~ed
alike," he uld.

Sl£EPWEAR •. .'

SWIMMAR

PAUL DECKER DIES
Funeral services will be
llllll()unced for Paul Decker,
Pomeroy, who died at
Veterans Memorial Holpital
1ut night. Ewings Is In
cbarge.
•

ASK TOWED

A marriage license was
Issued In Meigs County
Wednesday !o ~ark WUllam
&amp;wtand, 23, Athens, and
Melinda Jean A,msbary, ~1.
Pomeroy.

NUW IMPROVED! INSTANT

be
tn
a
ParkersburH
Cemetery . Friends may ca

PULLSTRAP ADJUSTMENT!

at the funeral home all day
Friday. The family requests

that In tleu of flowers con -

,z~

tributions be made to the
Heart Fund.

HELENA 0 . NELSOI'JI
Mrs. Helena 0 . Nelson of
Route 1. Middleport, died

Rut" 1 u tc:t.:
-EASER
r.

P1&gt;'fR

B~AC£

HIU\'i

kes Life Worth Living

Thursday morning at the age

of 85 In the Wellston Nursing
Home.

!'Sews•• in Briefs
(Cclnlll!ued frlm Pllt 1)
propqsals remained

Born Nov. 27, 1891 In Meigs
County, she was the daughter
of the late Sheridan and

I"ATitNTitD

uncertain.

UNITED .NATIONS - THE SECliRITY Council has
unanimously approved Vietnam's admission to the United
Nations in what American officials said was an attempt "to put
the Vietnam war behind us."
U. S. Ambassador Dollald F. McHenry strode up Ill
Vietnamese representative Dinh Bl Thi and shook his hand
following the vote Wednesday, which came after two days of
deliberatipns and speeche~~ from 33 countires. Acceding to an
American request; the couflcil voted by consensus rather than
fonnal ballot, which would have required the United States to
record its vote. ·
"This decision representS an effort .on the part of the
administration Ill put the Vietnam war behind us ," McHenry
.
said.

born, and her second , Dave
NelSon ; one son, Clarence.
and two brothers and two

Enjoy new fr-lom to run,

~wim, ·dance. Work, play,
_ ~Jeep, even hatbe wearing

sisters.
She

is

sUrv ived

by

a

Pomeroy ; a sister, Mrs .

Bertha Rife of Middleport,
and one brother, · Harold
Evans of Middleport ; four

grandchildren and four greet.
grandchildren and several

nieces and nephews:
Funeral services for Mrs.
Nelson. a member of the

.

. Double $ 9 • 95

your RUPTURE-EASER.~ ·
flat groin pad holdsreduclbiB
inguinal hernia without steel
or leather baud.,
~··
Simple pullstrap · acljustment.
For men, won1en, .children.
Give measure around lowest

(Back View)

part of abdomen, state right
or left side or double. .

It1·&amp;htor I• ft

.w

Middleport Church of Christ,
will be at 2 p.m. Saturllay et
the Rawling.Coals Funeral
Home with the Rev . Charles
Russell of Athens officiating.
Burl•l will follow In the
Cheshire · Gravel
Hill
Cemetery. Friends may ·call

!'Jo

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

at the funeral home from 2 to
A •nd 7 to 9 ory Friday . .

Kenneth McCull'lugh, R. Ph. Charles RiHie, R. Pll.
Rooald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon.lhru sat. 8:00a.m. to'9 p.m.
Sunday 10:30.to 12:3G and 5 to 9 p.m,
PRESCRIPTIONS
. PH. 992-2955
Friendly Service
' mE . MAII'JI
OpenNightsli., . POMEROY; o,

MELISSA SHEARER
Melissa Elmira Shearer,
former resident of Meigs
· County, died Wednesday In
Fort Worth, Texas at the age

of ·95. Graveside services will
be Saturday at 3 p. m. at the
Gilmore Cemetery. There

.,

9:JO to 1:00
Friday

.2nd St.

By Helen and Sue Uottd

'l'lM: IJorca~ Cu'de of the thly VISII.alwn program fur
MitldiCJ!"rt First Bapllst ohut-ins and during the Iii'!&gt;'\
Churd&gt;'s B.H. Sl!nborn Mls· WC't!k in AIJ!lUSI will call un
SIIJnary Society, held their Mrs. Viclur Y.oWig who cares
regular monthly meeting for elderly persons and pre-· TuesOay evening at the hnrnt: "'"'t fier witb a tray or fruit.
ll was al010 decided · (o
uf Mrs. Eva Ha11ley.
remember
the birthday of
Sara Daunc Owen upened
J
e
anne
MacPherson,
II"' meeting with a reading
daughter
of
their special infrom the Salvation Army
terest
missionary,
with a gi(t
M.agazm~ and devotions on
of
money
and
will
remember
lhe topic of " The Puwer to
Irene
Cross
and
Florenc-e
Care'' were given by Mary
Hanney,
shut·ins,
with
a gift
Brewer.
~
and
visit
from
CirCle
Jn regular business the circle voted to conduct a &gt;nun· members.
Mrs. Clara !liley presented
the featured program on
'·S.ume ~ Minor Minority."
Refreshments · were served
Love joys f!at er·
Tlie Lave Joy Circle of th_e by Mrs. Hartley at the close
First Baptist Olurch, Mid· of the meeting to Clara Riley,
dJeport, met Tuesday evening Martha Klein, Elizabeth
at the home of Mrs. Bernice Slavin, Freda Edwards,
Lillian Demoskey, Isabelle
Baker.
'
Winebrenner,
Sara Owen,
Devotions were let! by Mrs.
Kathryn
Metzger;
Helen
Leora Sigman who used the
'Bodimer,
and
Mary
Brewer.
topic "'When You Pray". She
also closed with prayer.
Chairman Lo uise Davis
opened the meeting with a
scripture reading of John 146. Lave gift dedicated with
prayer by Katie Anthony. A
round rabin card was sent to
Alwilda Werner. Mrs. Iva
Turner, 8 shut-in will
celebrate her birthday in
August.
A . program on India was
presented by Mrs. Mary
Hughes. The meeting was
closed with prayer by Mrs.
'-Sigman.
We
offer
the
Refreshments were served
affordable
to those named above and
alternative to sky
Lillie Hubbard, sarah Fowler
rocketing building
and guest, Elizabeth Searles.

Plants seem to have almost human
sultt,
tlley
are
stuhborn,
they
are
shy,
and
they
are
aggressive
.
They
IX&gt;ur Hap:
.
stww detenninutinn and cooperation. And like choldren they
When I fitst moved to Ulis luwn, I got to be super good
respood to tender,lovmg care by growing beautiful, strong,
U!rrificfriend:t with a neighb9r who was my age.
and
sturey' Wh¢n you tend a plant, and wakh it grow from _a
Now, two years later,she ignores rneor puts me down. She
rooted
cutting or a tiny specimen, each new branch 'l"d leaf IS
talks about me behind my back and has mntle me lose other
a
primary
interest. The plant seems like an old and dear
.fi'iends. She also told my Mom when she Sllw me smokin~,:. But
friend
.
I never told m her, and she !!IIlol&lt;es too.
SELECTION OF PLANTS : Let's suppose that you want to
Can you figi.Ire her out? - H. P.
buy one or more plants for your home . You will have · several
categories
from which ID chfM&gt;se. There are flowering plants,
Dear H.:
.
.
green
foliage
plants, colored or variegated foliage plants or
I wouldn't waste my time trying to figure out a snobbish
vines
and
b'ai!irig
pll!nts.
·
.
13tiletale. Maybe you've both outgrown each other, so move on
to
ask
yourself
is
not "Which
The
most
important
question
l"ne" frineds and stup worrying aiJ&lt;•ut what's uver.- SUE
ooe
dl&gt;
I
like?"
but
rather
"
How
much
light
CJllll
give
il •". All
h
+++
plants
need
lightio
provide
energy
tor
growti&gt;,
but
some
.need
Do.&gt;ar H.:
· more than others. If a plant needs light and doesn't have It, no
A friend usually d001sn 't become an enemy without good
amount of plant food or conscientious care will make it .live.
reason. Did you two have a. fight'! If not, perhaps she
There are three divisons of light requirement - SWibght,
misinterpreted something you said and took offense. Or maybe
D.
light, and semi.:shade Ill shade.
·.
·
.
jealous girls fed her some wrong information.
Danville
celebrated
their
29th
weddiilg
anniversary
·
Window
-your
plants
may
gel
as
much
as
five
or
South
Before you scratch her off your list for good, iry once
yesterday,
July
20.
The
parents
of
five
chiidi-en,
both Dr.
more
hours
of
sun
a
day
sunlight.
East
Window
gets
an
more to determine what happened. And ll••t means asking her
and Mrs. Brown are pastors of the Danville Wesleyan .
hour olr two of sun in the morning,or a West Window that gets it
... whi&lt;h takL'S courage, but it's better than not knowing, right '
Olurch
and
have
eacb
had
:i6
years
in
Gospel
work,
in the afternooo, plants near them would .be growin~ un~er
- HELEN
light. North Window - wit,h no direct sunlight or the mtenor
~++
corner of a room would provide conditions of semi-shade Ill
Hnp :
·- --11lis story appeored in our loca I paper, and I thonght your
shade.
·
After you have decided which plants you can grow in Y'":'r
readers would enjoy it as much as we did:
.
room , you might ask yourself "How do I waqt to use plants. m
A welfare recipient secretly borrowed (stole) a c,ouniry
the room?" Single plants for tables, window gardens, diSh
ham from the form where he had a part-lime job.
gardens, tall corners, floor gardens and hanging baskets. ·
He went inl&lt;! town mid rold the ham to a grU(_-ery for $27.
When you go to a florist shop to choose a plant, take the
Then-he used $20 of the $27to buy $80 worth of food strunps for
·Polly
Cramer
opportunity
to look around and get acquainted with_all the
whit-h he was eligible Ulrongh welfare.
kinds.
But here is a word of caution. Don't think that
different
~The man then bought $51 worth of grU(_-eries and b~ught Ihe
because
a
certain
plant Is used In a beautiful room pictured In
l•1m for $29 worth of food stamps.
a
magazine
that
you
can necessarily have it in your own room
He retumed the ham to the fanner's smokehouse.
Ant jelly kills red ants
in
the
same
location.
Remember that the plant only had to be
111e grocer made a profit.
in
the
room
long
enough
to have the picture taken . Describe to
'll&gt;e fanner got his ham back.
. POLLY'S PROBLEM
of
foil
and
place
on
the
shelf
your
florist
where
you
intend
to put the plant, and abide by hiS
The welfare got his ham back.
DEAR POLLY - 1 wonder near a crack. The ants will advice.
·
TI&gt;e welfare recipien t wow1d up with fi cash aod $51 worth if you or any of the readers
come
to
gel
it
and
everi
carry
For
a
window
garden,
you
group
plants
on
the
sill
and
of groeeries.
_
!&lt;now -of a spray or solution
It 's ahnost humoruus until you ask: Who paid for tbe food. that could be put in the cracks some back to the nest. It is around the window Ill make a picture. u the view from the
important to kill the queen window isn't particularli pleasing, you can buy glass shelves
stamP'' - COURIER ~EADER
of the cupboard shelves to and the young so what is 1o put across the window w hold pi_ants. I have a wmdow
+++
lcos1 s. Manufact11red
prevent those little red taken back will work· on ~arden by placing a rot iron three slielve stand on the wmdow
Hap: ·
.
homes by the
grease ants from 'laking over. them, . too. If there are seat in my dining room . To frame a wmdow, staple string or
,
Boy, it wsa sure easier hYing back in my f~lks' young I am plagued with them chi! oren around put some )ei· wire up each side and across the top, and train climbing plants
companies in
day s ' Nobody ever l&gt;ad sex before U1ey were mamed. What a every· year. I have had this Jyjn a bottle cap and then lup around it. An ideal way" to insure that the plants have enough
industry.
DAUGHTER BORN
relil'l not to fight off guys, and then turn around and pretend I&lt;! trouble in every house I have with another cap and put a humidity is to put them in a metal tray filled.'with pebbles.
Mr. and Mrs. Milford
the girl• that you are really experienced. It's a"ful being ever lived in and two were tack through to hold them
A floor garden is made in much the same way ~s the
ashamed to say you're a \irgin, yet wanting to stay that way. newly · built homes . I guess together. These little red ants window garden. A large tray perhaps m free form design, or · Frederick Jr. are announcing
the birth of their daughter,
- CIN'fHY
an't s fOllow me wherever l go. are the easiest ones to bait. planned to fill a corner, is made to go right on the floor . I tis
Sherri
Ann, June 30, at the
-HELEN.
POLLY.
also filled with pebbles. Plants are selected and arranged so Holzer Medical Center.
De:•r Cinthy:
DEAR HELEN - I discussDEAR POLLY - I have a that smaller plants in front hide the pots of the taller plants m
Sherri Ann weighed 7 pqunds,
· Why be ashamed? It's your body and your life. And only ed your pmblem with a pro- few sugge~!!ons for prospec· 'back.
·
8'f.. ounces. She · was
you know when you're not ye t ;eady for sex. ~ay it honestly fessional exterminator and live puppy owners. A child's
"For the Finest
To make a dish garden, suitable for a dining table or ~n
and you may discover more ki ds than you think agree wtth was told that the best thing to old playpen is an ideal plac-e occasional living room table use a shallow na.t contamer. Fill welcomed home by two
In Manufactured
brothers, Scott 13, Tony ]9,
yoll. -:- SUE
Housing" ·
use·is an ant jelly that comes to keep puppy whim you first the bottom 'with coarse gravel, stones or pieces of broken
and a sister, Juanita 8.
1100 E . Main Street
in a lube. If there are no peis- bring him. home' because you . flowerpot . Place the plants, and fill with soil to within half an
DeurCinthy: .
..
. Grandparents are . Mr. and
or children iii .the house, always know where he is. inch of tlie top, pressing it dawn firmly .
·992-7034
Mrs. Milford Frederick Sr., .
U your parents are honest too, they'll admit tb3t "back &amp;queeze some o~t ~n a· piece This is also a great help when
Hanging baskets might be. of wire, lined with sphagnum
Pomeroy,
Ohio
then '' kids did and said they· didn' t. (Whereas, nowadays,
house breaking the little dog moss filled with soil, .with plants.
·
. Minersville, and Mrs. Lizzi~
Wood, Racine . .
. n1any,likeyou,don't and say U&gt;ey
. do. )- HELEN
as he is confined to one area.
very attractive way to diVide a room is w.ith plant boxes
We have found that a on legs.
·
·
.C·::···~~·Y.$$~".:».~@"n'
mediwn siz.e plastic dish pun
Plants need much of the same care that we do . They must
.·. also makes a very salisfac·. have food, water and fresh air. They need to be bathed and
tory bed for a small puppy. · 'groomed. They like rest periods, and they seem to respond to
Place an .old towel or baby affectionate care. In order to care for a plant intelligently, it is
blanket in it as the pad and he · necessary to ·know how it grows.
.
.
·
. .
MASON. - The Faith will be very comfortable.
FOOD: A plant gets its food from the rur surtoundmg 11,
Baptist Church 'will hold a
·When one is not really and from the soil which it lives. To make sure ll)at the plant
back yard vacation Bible prepared for puppy's arrival gets a balanced diet, and to replenish food already taken from
school beglnning Monday , and does noL have a dish for the soil, you should give a plant additional food at regular
TIIUI\SD,\Y
July 25 through ·Friday, July his food, · .the large size intervals. .
MAGNOLIA CLUB aMual 29 from 9 a.m. to ll a .m . .for margarine containers make
WATER: There is no set· rule as to how often Ill water a
picnic Th ursday 6 p.m .. at pre-sch~ol' children and ideal dishes . .One can be used plant. It depeods on . the type of plant, the atmospheric
·
.
.
'for .food and another . for conditions of its surroundingS, or where the plants are placed . .
roadside park .on right gomg teenagers.
north on U.S. 355. Bring ,table
It wlll ·be held in the yard of ·water. -MRS. E. J.
You can either warer'from the top or from the bottom.
servic-e and covered dish ,
Mrs. Dixie McCaulley, corner
DEAR POLLY- The other
TEMPERATURE : Maximum of 65 degrees. They like a
DEMOC~AT C.:Omlllittee of Center and Third Ave. The day I laundered three full
drop of ten degreesor so in the house night.
· Thursday ot Episcopal theme will be "Lard Jesus length sets of sheer curtains
FRESH AIR: A-plant needs fresh air not a draft. Open a
\
Church 7:30 p.m. Voter Teach Me". All children are for my wile. ! ' filled the laun- window or door in an adjoining room.
\
dry tub with cold water and
· Keep your plant well groomed ..
registration to be discussed. invited . to attend.
,. '
Attendance at Sunday that liquid for washing
PESTS: Mealy bug- These look like tiny tufts or white
Public invited.
·school on July 17 was 55. The woolens, soaked them for five cotton remove with Q-Tip. Red Spider - very tiny and hard to
F'RIDAY
church schedule is worship minutes, squeezed out the ex· ~-Thorough washing and isOlate them. Mites- Tiny as to be
MEIGS County
Humane
service
at 9:45 a .m., Sunday cess water and .hung them on almost mVisible make leaves curl and flower buds drop.
6 30
CEI.EBiiAT ES BIRTH.·
Society picnic, ' p.m. Fri· school ·at ~0: 30, Sunday the clothesline. I rinsed the Discard. Scale -look like brawn speck under leaves . Pick off
DAY - · Mrs. Chafles
day at the home of Ret. Major evening services at 7:30p.m. curtains on the line, on both and wash the plant with soap and water.
·
'
American Airlines package vacation for two to French
•. (Nelli•)
Eblin,
Jr.,
JoyceMillerandMissMai'ion and Bible study on Wed· sides, with the garden hose . CAUSES OF UNHEALTilY APPEARANCE:
Isle's or Martinique or Ac:apulco and Mexico City or Los
celebralt.-d her 72ud birth·
Crawfonl at Athena Acres. nesday at 7:30 11 .m. Supply and let them dry. This was
Yellow Foliage- this may be too frequent watering, need
Angeles,_ San Francis,:o plus s~oo.oo cash and ·
day Wednesday, July 13, at
Plmmed
and
Th much easier tban rinsing · offert'"Izer,
toostrongllght,orthepresenceofinsects.
.
accommodations for two far 2. weeks.
Ul
I "'Ifor members
8 !lending to pastor is Ivan ca.rd~ell, . e
..
the Wellston Nursblng
gues s, ' lose
. Plains. The .public IS mv1ted lllem inside the house and the
Spotted Foliage: This may be from overwatermg,
Home. visiting her on her
take a covered dish, dessert to all services.
biodegradable s~p is · ex- scorching or burning from the SWI.
.
. ,
·
•
birthday we1·e l'aRI11r and
or salad and their awn table
c-ellent for the lawn. Dropped Leave$: This may be from gas pmsorung or a
"' · Mro. George· Casto, of the
service. Beverages and !neat
T H 0 M A S
sudden change in temperature.
.
.
lllghland c: burch, her
. WI:ST· INDIES , CRUISE
to be furnished.
•
DEAR
POLLY
Soft Stems and PaleP,Ioring: This maybe from too warm
daughter, Maxine Dugun,
SATURDAY
HAS BIRTilDAY
Dishwashing · detergent is a temperature or from overfeeding.
.
for One week including round fare from home to part of
svn, Wendell Eblin aad
GARDE~ Tractor . Pull , . Terri Tobin was honored QOw so expensive. When the
Slow Growth: This ·may be caused by sour soil from
departure.
::
grauddoughters, , Lori Satu~day • 6:30 .p.m. at with a birthday pariy recent- container seems to be,empt~. overwateting or may be that the plant is resting.
Faulk and Robin Dugan . . Chester Fire StatiOn sp~~- . ly at the home of Mr. and do not throw- it away but
· Complete' Collapse : This may be from watering neglect.
;. Mrs. Eblin was presented sor~d by Southeast· Ohio Mrs. Harold E . Smith. Terri remove the cap and put in a The plant needs a complete soaking. It may be from gas
::. gHts and a cake that was Garden Tractor Pullers received a nice gift and cake little tap water. Shake the poisoning.
•
·
··
..
~
baked by Mrs. Sybil Ward,
Association.
and ice cream was served to . boUle and pour some of this
REST AND REPOTTING - Grow year to year need a
:'.;' ' a close friend. The cake ·
SUNl)AY
Ricky, Debbie, Cindy, Tina, into your dish water and lind period of rest. During this lime,less food and water. This time
$1,000.00 IN CASH
•
was In the fona of a Bible
A-NNUAL NEJ.sON reunion and Kelly Smith, all of Mid· you have enough for several in summer put outside. Christmas cactus.
·
!. and was btscrlbed " Many Sunday at Forest' A~res Park dleport.
more washes. -MRS. C.S.
Do's and Don'ts in decorating your home with house .
! ·· llappy RetnrliB of U1e Day number two shelter house.
Polly will send you one of plants :. Do ·use them to add charm and distinction to yo~r
:
and Many More Happy Lunch at noon. Everyone to
her signed thank-you decoration scheme. Don't hang onl&lt;l plants that are past their
. t, Birthdays". Mrs. Eblin bring covered dish. . .
MONDAY
newspaper coupon clippers if prime - sickly.
•
would appreciate bearing
ANNUAL HOMECOMING
BEND of the River Gatden · she uses your favorite .;.---'!"-------~~-----:,
frvm her ftlellds In Meigs South
Bethel l'hurch; Silver
M da 1 Pot'nter, P=ve or Problem in
$500.00 IN CASH
''
d
Club
family picnic on Y a
•
Conoly. Cards nnd letters Ridge, Sunday. Sun ay Shrine
Park in Racine 6 ,30 her column. Write POLLY'S
:'
may he sent to her lu care school 9, worship services at p.,m . Flower show at fair will POINTERS in care of this
:
of the nursing home, 405 10 basket dinner at noon at
newspaper:
church shelter. Afternoon be.dlscussed.
Park Ave., Wellston, 0 .
services at 1:30 p.m. · There
t ,
will be special singing. Public
HAS GUESTS .
· invited .
••
MONDAY
• Mr. and Mrs. Russell
IN CASH
' II' Mawhirter of Dalas, Tex.
POMEROY Youth basebaU
were recent visitors of Mr. league wiener roast and
•Halters
and Mrs. Elmer Bailey of swimming party July 25
• Darwin. Also cuiling was . (Monday) at Royal Oak Park
Mrs. Mabel Taylor of Millers- 6 to 9
Hotdogs and drink
• port .
Wbcn Good Friend• Cool ...

POLLY.$ POINTERS

Kingsbucy
Home

Sales,·Inc.

·r -.. Social· ·

A

Backyard ·.
VBS slated

ATTENTION
AMATEUR
PHOTOGRAPHERS

Calendar

will be no calling hours.

keeps you rolling

WIN EXCITING
CASH AND ..
TRAVEL PRIZES
FOR WINNING

a\

PHOTOGRAPHS
Three First Prizes

~

Polynter Cord
• Full4 Ply
• Broad
7 Rib
.
•Treed Weer
Indicators
• friction
Siped Tre!lld

Three Second Prizes

..

'

Three Third Prizes

Three Fourth Prizes

Biack Wall Plus
$1.12 F. E. T.

19" DIAGONAL
RTABLE MODEL C2925HWA

Three Fifth Prizes

•

1-'HIILl;U

..
••
...

Philco BOSS'" 200 chassis ... 100%
solid-state
Philcomatic'" . .. automatic tuning
Phil&lt;;:o. Black Matrix In-Line color pictu
tub,e
·
Stands available as optiomd extra
(TB67W and TB101 P.- unassembled)
Plug-1 n transistors and IC's for service
ease
·
Cabinet of Wainut grain finish on
high-impact plastic

$250.00

•Sh011s

••

•..
•

i·'

SUMMER SALE
~~--~~~~--·~·~

ALSO
•. SEE OUR NEW FALL SHOES

MloOLEPORT, ote0
(

T
·~

1. Only amateur photographers art e.llglblo.
. .
2 Only pictures taken after May 15th, 1977are ellgoble.
3: Entries must be po~tmarked no later th~n Oc_t. ,31,

Spi~ci.al savings for the ladies. for the men.
now with reductions of .. •

•Straw Hats
•Roll Hats

1977 .

\

•Visor Caps

-1·~~
_.,~...t... ·~·· ..... ~

.

•

BAHR CL01HIERS
'

'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

4. Only one prize to each household.

s. Photo
a)

[·,
;

categoties are .

.Human interest

b) Sports
c) Travel

Open Friday and Saturday tiii,B:OO_.

·

As a Pti"rt of the promotion, you will •.,..;,.• • looJr.&lt;ookor
stuffer and official entry form in
For additional information

20% to 40% off .

lHAT HAVE ARRIVED

SHQPPE
·
.
·
Poni!!roy, o.

RULES

•Beach •Bags

SALE TABUS OVER

SHOE BOX

$100;00 IN CASH

•Swim Suits

COME IN . AND LOOK OUR

·I ii

Sixty Sixth Prizes

•Tank Tops .
•Swim Tninks
•Beach Towels

CONTINUES

Hourt.:
9:30 to 5: oo
Mon. lhru sat.

i

From OUR
GARDEN •••

•

+++

SALE PRICED
AT ONLY·

40%0Ff'_(

Generation Rap

Dorcas Circle meets

.....,:

Louise Ohlinger Evans. She

daughter , Mrs . Clifford
(Norma
Jean )
South,

~~
.~

Home In

' PULL PLANNED
There oilll 'be a garden
tractor pull satui-day. July
23, at 6:30&gt;p.m. at the Chester
Fire Station. The ev;ent is
being sponsored. · by Southeastern Ohio Garden Tiactor
Pullers Asso'c.

MOST

CLEVELANO (UPI)
Treasury Secretary · W.
Mlchl!el Blumenthal said
· Wednesday the goal!! of the
Carter Aclminl8tration on tax
refonn will be" "simplicity,
equlty llld Incentives to eflldency and Investment."
BIIIIQIII!bal, In an address
to tbe City Club, said,
homer, the .euct form of.
the t.u: refonD package has

Funeral

Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Deeter In charge. Burial will

.

·• ·. Blumenthal sets
•

Wh~te

I

was preceded In death by her
llrst husband, Oscar San-

. MIAMI - AN UNEMPLOYED BllJ.. collector and a West
Getman facing bigh treason charjes in his homeland were .
Holzer Medlclil Center
arresied Wednesday by FBI ~ent, and accused of trying to
. D.lllcqrg~ July 211
buy parts from the Navy's Tomahawk cruise missile for the
linda Preston, Ev~ Allison, Soviet Union. The FBI Identified tile men as Carl John Heiser
Keith Suiter, Mildred Haffelt, nr, 32, of Highland Beach, Fla., and Carl Lutz Weischenherg,
Clar~nce Johnson, · Eygia 33 a West Gennan who has been living at Freeport, Bahamas.
Wil)iams; Donald Phillips,
' . An FBI affidavit filed in federal court said "a friendly
Ruby ·Snyder, .. Mrs. . DaVid ioreign service" identified Weischenberg as among 12 persons
Baker arid son, Tamara · · facing trial in west Germany on chai'ges of high treason. It
Palmer, Linda Perkins: Doris said those charges stemmed from unauthoriZed export to the
Porter, Frank Baumgard.- Soviet bloc of West Gennan data processing material. U; S.
Karen Tackett, Eliza beth Magistrate Peter Palermo ordered the two held without bond '
Johnson, Rebecca Bi'oderick, on a technical charge of falling to register as foreign agents. A
Mrs. John · Oiler and bond hearing· was set for Friday morning.
daughter, Helen Van Meter,
Alvin
Mooney, . Myrtle
COLUMBUS FORMER STATE
SCHOOL
Murphy, Helen Fife, Wayne Superintendent Martin Essex Wednesday received the Ohio
Ferguson ,'. francis White , Newspaper AsSociatiQll'S distb!guished public service award
Macelene' Wilson, Ruth
frolil ONA president Harry Horvitz. The presentation was
Hatten, Garfield . Stapleton, made at Wednesday's opening luncheon session of the capital
-Keith Baker, Coleman Baker, University Reading Conference· for Ohio school
Helen Jones; Carolyn Can- administrators, teachers and reading specialists.
terbury, Mary ·Miller, Mrs.
_TIJe. award cited Essex for his record of educalioo
Carroll · Hickman
and leadership and achiewment, his open education-press
daughter, Thomas Davis, relationship, .his concern with better reading and citizenship
Anita Stev.enson. and ·JOlll!ph for all students and his pioneering In developing the only
Rose .
junior-6enior high school course on " Underst.anding·the News
Media" in the nation. Essex also encouraged development In
Oliio of the first state-'wide Newspaper-ln-Edu"'!tion seminar
Z,JOfiDLED
program, now in Its 14th year, lo assist teachers-in how to use
LORDSTOWN, Ohio· (UP!) ne~pers . as "living textbooks" In .aJl ·types of classrooms.
- The•, General Motors
Assembly plap.t bel(an a onemonth shutdown today to·
allow · for. retooling for the
1978 mod.el car year. The
shutdown ' will ..i!lle 2,300
workers.
"

SUMMER .ClEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES
..

•

DR. EICKElJ!ERG
RIO GRANDE - Dr.
Elmer Eickelberg, director
of foundation relations at Rio
Grande College-Canununity
College is retiring . The Beech Grove Cemetery .
Jackson ~!dent - former Officiating will be Rev .
Menzel Smith. 'Friends may
Chun ' King manager call at Ewing Funeral Home
served in the position far the at any .t ime.
last four years. His future
plans include serving as
DAVID JACKSON
manager .of the Jackson Route
David
R. Jackson,
75 ,
2, Coolville,
died earlr
Cbam?er of Co~erc_e and Thursdav morn in&lt;~ at s .
spending more tune With his Joseph's
Hospital . In
hobbies
of
fishing, - Parkersburg following an
photography and travel.
ex{.r.~ ll~?e~~e Iale Shenl
and Agnes Byrd Jackson. he
Now you know
was preceded In death by five
Camel's hair brushes are daughters , Mar ie Naylor
never made of camel's hair. &lt;burled yesterday), Sandra,
Susie, Maime and Nora Lee
Most consist of hair from the Ja ckson.
tails of squirrels.
He is survived by his wife,

7-· TI1e Uaily St&gt;nt!ncl, Middlepoo1-l'onx•o'tly, U., Thun;da)•. July 21.19T1
t.f&lt;:.&lt;:.t::."i-~~nf.:;~.:·x!~~·~ s• ;;.-s::u:.o:tt m~:;:.:-;«-~·&gt;.!!'
.,

services will be held Sunday
at 2 p.m. •t the Flrol Baptist
Church In Middleport wlth
the Rev . . KirbY Dllor o1
Wellston officiating.

�._Tilt Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday,

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

•

II wura. ..- U'l&lt;l&lt;f

c...

...

l do)

100

tdo_v,

150

elM)~
i(lH)S

l

fo:..•h

lilt•

11\UillnWl\

lfl

Wunb bl i l't_'fiU per u. vrd PM' d.y
Ads rwmmg olher u.an '-~u.~.:\111\.t'
~ lo • ·•II br d)ltr~t'IJ ill' llw 1 da,)

.....

In meuluf} , C...rQ .J. Thank.!! emu
Obth.wry· i t't"l'lts pt:r \l.urd, sa 00
nun unum Cli.Sh Ul ath'luke
Mubt~ Home ~lt&gt;li~nu Y1m.l sale~

art'

!ll'\'qllt'd m!ly \IOith ~.,as h wnh
t~~~'lkr 2!lo l't.'nt dUtr~ for ads cart}·

U\~ Sv.: ~wni.M.·r
\UH:-1.

w

Iu Care ~.tf11"" &amp;n·

T!Jt' PubiL'illt.'l n.•st'l'Vl'» 1he ri»ln ·

Lodit m• r·ejt'i,'t KIIY ad:s tlt't'lllt"&lt;.l u().
~nona! Tfw PuiJl!~l&lt;t:t "'Ill 111A Oc

rt:"!tpollhi0Jt.&gt;

fut

JIIUll'

th&lt;lu Hill' !1\lUI •

rt'd lll:ll'I11UII

Phmte 991-tHiii

(Ani o r Thanks

l'ct s ror SaJe

'~E

KITH:N~. medivtl'l

.

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monilit}
Noon on Saturday
r ,..&gt;&lt;~ay

thru Fntlay

&lt;PM
1ht&gt;day before publlt'HI!Oil
SwuJay
lPM
F'mJay aften10on

GAIU)~N )1,/pphes, tab
COAL lunestone, and cotc•um
boge. caut1llower
1:\roccofl,
chlonde ond cok•um bnne for
and head leltuoa plonls ,
du5t cont10l and spectol m i• ing
yellow, wh1te, and red oruon
uts , oruon plant5, f(~nebe&lt; .
salt
tor, Mot)l
formers
Excels•or
Salt
Works
Srtreet
Pomerov.

:.PtciNt;

tundness dvrtng the loss of our 3 FEMALE and rnother k.tttotns to
loved one. Wdllom ·Cio,rton
be g1van lo good home- Phone
Mfddleswort. ESJ)&amp;( IOlly ,
the
'1'12·61b!l
American Legion at Racine- ond.
cobbler, Kotohdin , Red Pon11oc
MALE SPITZ puppies 7 weeks old_
cemetery help
and Red La soda seed potoroes .
Contact Ross Roush, (3().4)
Daughter, Pamlo M. Price ,
Buill 9orden seeds, potting soil
773·5-&lt;1&lt;
Mother,
Nell
Mtddles'ti'Yart ,
peat moss, fruit ln~es and rose
Sister . Groce M Allen , ~EGISTEREO MAlE lnsh $etter,
bushes . Mtdway
Markel .
Brothers James E ortd Allen F.
1•, yn . old . Phone992 7751 .
Pomeroy. Ohio. 992-2582 .
Middles wort
Bob ·s M.orket, Mason, W.Vo .
STUD SERVICE , mole toy
{3a.) 773-5721.
Chthuahuo , IS month old , lawn
color. Phone 992-7339 lor in· ECONOMY TRACTOR with all at ·
tochments Like new, oskeng
format ton .
Nutices
$2250 Phone (61~)698·3290
REGISTERED Female Beagle pops _
HAVE ROOM m nke country
Call 992-7030.
_ HANGING BASKETS , pots , and
geronlvms .
Cleland ' s
home tor elderly lady Con toke
Greenhouse .
Geroldtne
bed pot rent, -tocal references
Phone (6T4 ) 1&gt;67·3305.
Cleland , Racine. 0 h io
Auto Sales

COAL NUMBER 6, STOKER OR

LEARN TO SEW Profenronal look· Jq70 VOLKSWAGON , $600. 405
mg garmen ts wrth new t&amp;&lt;:hn r·
Spring
A venue ,
phone
ques E-l Sew Cfassll'S 10 knrts
'1'125091.
to begrn soom al the Se'-"~ N'
Sew Fabric Outlet Store m 196-4 GMC 1 ton truck..,. witt-1 ta nk ,
fully
e q utpped .
Phot~e
Roc.ne Come in and talk to
9-49 -2821
Denrse or cell 992·7400 or

992-3039.

LUMP DELIVERED. Coli (614)

FREESTONE ca nnmg
peaches
now
In
season .
Avo1loble at any q1.1onitres
Please bnng containers M id way Mk t . Pomeroy, 992-2582 or
Bob's Markel Mason 773 5721

mornrngs: , (61 4} b'98-7191
JOHN DEERE Crawler Backhoe
endlooi:ler and dump truck
Phone Wl. - 7~79 .
BACt&lt;:HOE DUMP truck ond trailer
for sole . Phone 742 74 51

-

-----

-~:_ ~~~~~~-

(7) 19, 20, 2·1, 22, 24, Stc

------

-

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
FLEET INSURA!"CE
STUDENT ACCIDENT
INSUJ!ANCE

T he board of edu c ation of
lh e M e1gs Loca l S chool
O ist r lct des i res to rece1ve
s e aled b i ds for fleet i n surance and s tuden t ac cident
i n suran ce
I n order t o be considered ,
a ll seal ed b i ds shall be
rec ei ved 1n t he off ice of the
superi ntendent , Sou-th Third
Ave nue , Middleport , Ohio on
or be for e 12 00 noon on

Au g ust 15, 1977
,
A ll b1dS subm itted shall be
v a tid for a per10d of at lea s I

days from the da t e of
b ld openings _ The only
alleFat•ons whi ch shall be
all o wed i n a b id after the bid
op en i ngs are changes made
in f he pub lished rates after
t he b ids are open ed
Th e board of education
r e s e r ves the r ight to accep t
or re je c t an y or all b1ds
S tx t y

Ja ne Wagner
Cler k Tr easurer
M ergs Local
School D rstr ic t
So u th Third Avenue
M l ddlep,S:lrt, Oh 10

(7) 21, 21

( 9) • ·

11. 3tc

·- .
NOTICE TO

....

BIDDERS

The board of educat 1on of
" '' r he Meigs Local Schoo l
(II ' D ist ri c t des i res to receive
sea led b ids for t he f ollow ing :
1 M1IJo: and Da rry Prod uc ts
2 . B re ad a nd B ake r y
~ w Pro du cts
" .. J . Gasoli ne , O il, and An ~- ·- t 1t reeze
• • 4 Fuel O il
l)t'''- 5 . Coa l - Ana l ys i s requrred
-. ,. l! . Tt res and T ubes
~.~
7. P rodu c e, Dry Goods
8
Me~t wh1ch
rnc ludes
,,.,. t,,~ mburger, h a mburger
patt i es , hot d ogs,
ba c on .
rolled lunch m eat, cheese
, .. , In orde r to be co n sid e r ed ,
•1·1 .a1 1 sealed bi d s sh a l l be
re cei ved 1n the o ff 1c e of t he
Clerk . South T hi rd A ven ue,
.., . M •d dlepod, Ohio on or befo r e
- . 12 · 00 noel'! on Au gust 15, 1977
.:; ~ The board of ed uc ation
•1
reserves the right t o acc ept
or reject any or a ll brds .
rl

at Wes t End
Mom
S t ..
July '17 , 1 2
Srl ng lis t of
work
e x-

_p~nce ~~----,-~

1

Jane wagner
.,, , Clerk Tr easurer
~ · Meigs Loc a l
J •
Sch ool Distr• ct
:. • Soutl'l Thi rd A venue
o1, Middleport. OhiO

•d H ) 21 , 28 (8) 4, 11, .ttc

Uf.95

-----

_..,.
COINS . CURRENCY. tokens , old

one screened 1n. goroge ond
carport. Wa lkrng d1stonce to
Elementary Sc hool and to w n
Forc ed c 1r furnace . Loca ted at
304 W etzgo ll St., Pomeroy . ca ll
after 5, 992 3488
ONE ACRE to 5 acres. bu1ldmg
lo ts Coll992 ·5869 or 985·3595.

towards

..

GOOD USED couch and deep
f reezer. CoiJ 985·3884 .
l ENNOX 140.000 BTU fuel oil f ur
noce and 275 galion· ton k for
sol e
If Interes ted
ca ll

949-2346

-----

,·

.

l. STORV 3 bedroom frame
f hollse FA furnace , storm window s, fir,ploce tn Middl e p or t
Phone 992·3457.

TUPPERS . PLA INS, Oh

Nearly

completed 3 bedroom hou se,
larg e
l r v i t~g
roo m
v.; 1th
f trep lace, large corner lot, 8\Jy
now and choose yo u own colors
of carpel, etc $36 ,000 Phone

24 IN. BOYS 81ke, 2b rn boys
LARGE 3 BEDROOM home, 4 yrs .
b1ka . 2 kttche n tables. a ll
otd. Fom1 ly rOo m hos stone
k inds of baby dothmg. bt rd
ftrep loce. hvin g room t-- •th Bow
both Phone 742-2078
w .ndow, fvlly equtpped k if.
-An gu~s-.bu~ - 2 chen . corpell ng , 2'/, ba ths,
yrs old, $600, 8 ft. l r uck topcentro ! 0.1r . 2 co r ga rog e , r t 7
per, $90. See Paul o r John
N of Pome roy. Shown by op
poin tment, 992· 2996.
Thomas, Leodmg Creek R~ad .

REGiSTEl'EDaLAcK

--~~tilt-

Ph. "2-2174 '

"The Ortginllors
Not The Imitators"

,_

2-23·1 mo.

Continuous one pie ~e
gutters. We hang it, or do it
yourself. Special prices to

PARTS , LABOR
'

GUARANTEED

builders.

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

REASONABlf
Reedsville, 0 . Ph . l78-6250
5-27-TFC

L------..,..-----'
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals_ •

IF VOU ho\le a ser v•ce to oHe..-.
won t to buy or s~l l some th i ng ,
ae lo okrng for work
_ or
who tever . , yo u'H ge t res u lts
fo ste r w 1th a Sentmel Want Ad .

Ho"Ven , W Vo., 20 x 45 moin
bu siness corner . Phone (614)
7o4112 -2255

TUPPERS PLAINS . OH New 2
bedroom, furn 1shed or un
f urni shed apartment 5170 un
fu r , $ 190 fu r. plus electr iC, no

Coll 992 -2156 .

- - - - - - -3b6
CARPORT SALE, t rarlfJ:r ,

pets . Phone (61 4 ) 61&gt;!.:_~4_9 . __

Locust St. , Mtddreport, Oh 1o 0 RM S. BATH , Baseme nt , one
nea r Dotr y Isle
Lorge s1 ze
ch tl d accepted , no pets or
d resses , 20 1/~ ,
Menswear , drums Deposit Als o, furni sh large s1zes,
misc e ll a n eou ~
ed opt 3 rooms , bath. 1 or 2
assort ment.

adults no pets. Deposr t . John
-- -----Sh eets 31ft m 1le south M i d·
YARD SALE, 3 FA Ml LY, 9 a m 11 11
die port, At 7
4 .30 , Th ursday . Fnday ,
234 - ~ - - -------M ul berry
A ve , Wome n s , 3 BEDROOM HOUSE rn Pomeroy.
childr en .
clot h tn g,
t oys
Phone992-3708.

mts':_e~on~~s-

_ __ ___
3 FAMILY YARD Sole on Coll ege

WE LOT
CAN GOODS

sUstNEs-s -BUiiDiNG__m._ ~N;w t

FIVE~ ROo
'.::.:M::.::::;A:..p~r--bo
--tt-1

m

Pomeroy. Phone 992 ·5621 o r
____ _
a nd locust St , Ru t land Th ur5 - _ 99~:._~ 3_0~
day Fnday ond Saturday .

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED- About 3'1&gt;

Strickly wholesale to all.
Not less than 112 case.

acres , n ice 1 story frame
with
basement ,
just

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

remodeled, 2 bedrooms ,
bath, porch, st,.-age bldg ,
$12,500.00.
NEW HOME- I master 2
regular bedrooms w ith 2
baths, double closets ,

1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

lovely kilchen with dining
bar, formal dining. very
large liv1ng, utility, full

PIGS. TOP Qual tty. 30 to .tO lb ,
wo rmed , castrated , S30. Bvy
no w for w1nter butchering .

-- ---- ---5~:~~~:~Y~~~f~~~s?~~~ru~~ ~~~=~~=~~1~~~~ -195CC __,SU2UKI·- --, 992·2429.
and
speed e lectric s tart.
f

Phone (b14 ) 378-6311 .
-- -- SINGLE BED wtth mattress,
choirs. Phone
_

--~ ~

4 FAMILY -IfARD Sole, Thurs day
and Friday fro m 8 trtl 4 Also.
Stanley Produ ct s 1JI reduced
pnces Cla ir M1ght res1dence on
Leadrn1_Creek Ro od. _
_
YARD SALE , Friday, July '2"2 , 9
.o m 11 11 3p m . Gold ho use
behmd Cou ntry Co u!lnS Span
sored by So hs bu ry G1rl's Soft
ball Team.

BEANS.

$4 00

bustle! Bring contoiners . p•ck '

your own Delbert law~on .
Por tland, OHto. Pr tce Form
Stop at Cl-rarle s Hams Produce
for 1nform_o•10n
_
.
TH E BEST in wood ond coal burn·
in g
sto ves.
range s and
frre plocu-stoves ZION HEAT
COMPANY .,t NC
Shade
OH
45776 (614) 696-1187, 593 -6894 .
LIVE CATFISH f o r sole to stock
lakes,
ponds. etc.
Phone
7,.2-3167 or 949·2545 .

sr ~~:
~

trai l

rood-

bike I 0
St ill under wa rranty, $550 Coli

992 -5601.
Phone 985·3693
ALLADDIN KEROSENE LAMPS and
heotefs RePlacement ports .
chtmne.ys, mantles , w1 ck s,
etc .Stop rn l or dem.onstrot ron
ond t ree -ca talog Mount01n
Leather and G e nera l store ,

104-106 W. Unoon St

(6U)

592· 547 8, Atbens
4 NICE , WELl tra1ned horses, and

one Reg . Quar ter Horse. Al so,
ponies Phone (614) b'98-3290

-

'

NEED A WA
SOFTENER?
·Let Pomeroy Landmartc
soften &amp; condition your

water and a

Co..op

water

softener, Model UC-XVI.
~Now Only'•279.95
'let

us

basement , central air and
heat, double garage and

workshop JUST $31,000.00
WIFE'S PRIDE KITCHEN
-This one has everything,
just see it. Southern style
home, 2 modern baths and
2 bedrooms on first floor,
formal

test

your

water

FreP

-~P'stt lliJ. Landmark

w.

• · Jaco
C..rHy, Mgr.
PlloM992-2lll

lovely

dining,

carpeting, full width tront
porch,

ONE 12 x 25 s hog , yellow tweed
carpet wtth poddrng $100

-

-- --

other

features.

$24,000.00.
EXACTLY what you have
been looking for, 12 acres
close in , brick home 4

r..:

-

~

-~

Colf992 -7481

· -~--~----

- - -t

~1

BUSINESS
and BUILDING

-

nice,

just $4.600.00
SMALL HOUSE - small
yard, small prtce. just see
fh1s one, 4 rooms, bath,
storage bldg. 55,400.00
ALMO!iT NEW - double
wide,

6 acres

ground ,

garage, building, selling
due to ill health . 2
bedrooms , bath 1 dining,
very
nice
kitchen .
1
$17 1000 00

ALL CASH FOR YOUR
HOME- LET US SELL IT
FOR YOU.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank,•Ka"'y &amp; Leona
Cleland
Assoct1tes
992-2259-915-4112

Remodeling .
Ph. 992-7119 or 696-1055
EStimates applied to job.
6-27-1 mo. pd.

U'M'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Witt be sold and partially
financed to reliable party

or parties. Only interest",!'
people should "inquire.
Books shown on requast.

CALL 99Z·2Z59 ..
:

1H~

TEAFORD[B
REAl lOR
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Secon~ Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo45169
Phone 992-3325
~·

NEW LISTING - 5 room
frame house with block
garage and level lot 1

NEW LISTING-s•;, acres

of land in Athens County , 4
room house and trailer

hookup.·
NEW LISTINGon Rt . 33 in Athens
Newly fenced
bedroom trailer.
H'• ACRES -

l acres'
County_

and

. ,,\' ,\\,1-:;,_
.
.
\

2

near stores .

INCOME- 4 room house,

bath , gas turn , city water,
2 car block garage and

space.

NEW LISTING
3
bedrooms, bath, natural

city water and e-:tra lot .

HOUSE • -

Big

bedroom and 3 others .

'&gt;OM~OO!i ~ SE~DI~ w;

'JU~K Ml\l~ J

and cltyl
!3 ItaUa's
capital
~ ExpWige
ZB Famed
pllysicist

New and used mer chandise .
Ohio Rrver Auct eon m Meigs
- Plaxo 409 Pearl St , Middleport
. Ohio Phone (304) 773-5471

L~==~===~==--..J 30
29 Lack
Garten

GASOj:.f.NE ALLEY
BRADFORD. Auctroneer, Cp m
plate Ser\l•ce. Pho'ne 949·248 7
or 9-19·2000. Ra(tn8, Ohto ,' Cr ltt
Bradford
'
_._ _

It's a

deal!

10.

Closed

Mondays,

siqn!
I is on m~

Proud to have 40u
w·tth

Sweeper5 tOasters, •rons , all
small appl iances . lown mowe• ,
nex t to Stole Htgl-rway Goroge
on Route 1. Ptlone (b14) 985- ·

_ : s_2s '-,,-::--::--:- _ _ _ _

Let qoof

m4 hancl!

and all types of general repa 1r.
Work guoron#eed 20 years e )C ·

IF FULL-TIME . Permanent employ Authonzed Singer SOles and
Seorvite . We 1horpen Sc1nors .
ment wrth good wages end
benefits Interests you . if you EXCAVATING , doier, loader Qnd
ore good with figures . and It
backhoe work , dump trucks
you think you have manage·
and lo·boys for hire. will . haul
ment ability . Apply in person ,
fill dirt. to so1l , IJmettone ond
10om - 11 o.m Tuesday , Ju ly
grovel Call Bob or Roger .ktf·
27 at the Pennzoil Stohon on W.
,.ers ; day phone 992-7089,
Ma1n St. , No coils . Bnng
n1ght phone 992:3525 or 992resume of - work experience
5232
and list of references . An Equal

~~~:i=:::::_;

)

""'
U)..ABNER

NON T01RAIIJ MY 0UN ON
Tl--i!&gt;IT MANIACAL TULIP
5TRAN6LER r-

i1
!I

-=----

.~s~e______
2 bedroom tra1ler ~~~
AND MARTIN

on•IOO x SO lot , one block from HOWERY

Syracuse Recreation Pork ,
$7500 ' Phone 992 -7134 or

992-3495.

·- - -

Ex·

cavat1ng , septrc systems,
dozer. backhoe. dump truck,
limestone. grovel, blackto p
poving Rt . 143, Phone 1 (614)

1974 MOBILE Home, 2 bedroom ,
b96-7331.
12 x 65 Greenbrier . total elec.,
unfurnished, ln excellent condi- HARRISON'S T.V . Repotr . Service
Calls 276 Sycamore, Sl , Mtd hon . Asking price , $6500
dleport . Phone m -2522.
Phone qq?-5771 .

---- --------- ...

garage

furnace ; city

Owner

bedrooms , bath, city
water. natural gas and
large garden .
NEW LISTING
4
bedroom modern home
with lots ot closet space,
Large eat ~ in kitchen,
gas

furnace,

Boat"
composer
32 Historic
battleship
33 Metric

captain

tl A Caesar
42 Horses
de
combat

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

t:.--+-+-1--+:-of.'!

slam below game
•KQ2
• A K 765

tA874

.3

" Disabled

t5 Famed

.J 87

Union
general
46 "Ay,- lnchl4ot-t-f.f,

t9Z

DOWN
1 Peter

.AKZ
Both vuioerable

Benchley
best seller

WHl
work

on

corner lot.
IF YOU HAVE TRIED
SELLING IT YOURSELF
THEN TRY US.
Gorden B. 1nd
Helen L. TNford,

It:

AX .Y DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

LET ME 6UE5S I

YOU 'RE: A lDCKSMIIti?

RV

RJ

ROSKRISVRAI

s

0 S I

PSQZ

XFJV

B LA 0

VDSV

Pall · :...
Pall It

Pa11
Pass
Pus

Pass

Pass

Pass

mal one-heart response
whereupon South shows his
great strength by jumping to
two spades.
North rebids to thro, clubs
to show his club support and
now the convention comes ·
Into use
South s1mpiy jumps to five
clubs. This bid says,
"Partner, I have two diamond
. losers. If you have first·round
diamond control please bid
five diamonds to show it; II
you have second-round control
please bid six clubs."
:
North is looking at two
quick diamond losers and
passes.

A Florida reader asks if
there Is a convention known as
"The big diamond."
By Oswald &amp; Jameo Jacoby
There are several bidding
One of the hardest type systems that use both onehands to bid is the one that club and one-diamond
belongs in five of a minor suit. openings as artificial forcing
Somehow or other no one likes bids They are extremei:y
to try for an 11-trick game in complicated and none have
preference to one in notrump been given any acceptance e•or a major suit, so when a pair cept by the inventor .
gets to five of a minor there is
(Do you hove a question for
a strong tendency to go on to the experts? Wflte "Aak the
Jecobys" cere of thle
six and hope for the best .
Today's hand illustrates a newspaper The JacobY' will
really old convention that answer Individual questions If
' llff-oddrnud
makes It easy to stop at a slampad,
envelopes are enclosed. The
minor-stlit game.
most interesting qu11tion' will
Soutll bas almost enough for be uaed In this column and will
a forcing opening, but just receive copies of JACOBY
bids one club. North has a nor· MOOE/lll)

Openlnc lead -Qt

CRYPTOQUOTES

DON'T TELl.. ME.,

North Eosl

t•

apootrophes, the lensth and formation of lhe words are oli
hints. Each day the code letters are different

'lEAH I. fiNALLY MADE rr!
OH L~y 111E: WAY ..•. YOU
SHuuLD DO SOMETHING- I
, _ _. AI30\JT )OUR LOCKS.
IHEY'RE NOT VERY
SAFE!

t K 10-85
•Qt0965t

.. 832

a king"

ABVNI
\OUR IIOTHER AND
P.Or-m.l''k' al\iD I &amp;HOULD
LOOK
UP IF I
lOVER GOT10
NEWYQRK ...

.. JIO 9,

SOUTH
.AJ964

One letter ·aim ply stands for another. In this sample A io
used for the three L"s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

WINNIE

·-

EAST

tQJ3

Ia

--

21

NORTH (0)

AB

ZNN. GJ

. JFBBNLRIK

TNLM
OFQD.OSLQNP
GLAFJV
YHtenlay'o CrJploqllote: HISTORY IS THE BED CARVED
BY THE RIVER OF UFE. - FRIEDRICH IUBBEL
.

e un ~ ............adloole, lac.

MASON FURNITURE

water arid

wants to leave the state. 2

~ural

Boat"

and

large )of . Natural gas F.A.
shop.
QUICK SALE -

30 ''Show

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to

'

fully WILL do roofing, construction .
plumb ing and heating. No to b
carpeted mob1le home in ex-

UNFURNISHED

Mrs.
26 "l..ondon
derry -"
28 Use
trickery

WEST
.108 75 3
•QI

~1

bedroom

too Iorge or too small Phone
ce-llent condehon. Underpinntng
7&lt;2-2346
and 10 x 20 carpeted front
porch . S1tuoted on level 'h acre CARPENTER , floor rng, cetling,
lot . 2 cor garage, nice
~_.paneling Phon!-~?_:~759_
. _
workshop
ond 2 water
sys,ems Priced to sell . Phone MOBILE Home Repair, Elec •
plumb1ng and heatrng. Phone
(61&lt; ) 378-6322.
'

33 Deutschland
(abbr.)
36 Sky Altar
:r1 Karlsbad
is one
40 Eve's
parental
task
(2 wds.)
U Patty

H

Bock Hoe Service,
llutland,
Ohio Phone 742-2008. ·
____.c_~~~~_cc
'l

:U Alleviate
35 Actress
Tushlngham
:n Identical
38 Waterfront
sight
39 "Show

2t Calif. fo.t
25 Parisian

I

field ,

AREA ,

time
!2 Jacob's son

Yesterday's ADBwer

Duke -

~ ~p~ r!~!!.!!'Pioyer . ---~ EXCAVATING . dozer , backhoe
ond ditcher. Charles R. Hot·

T.P

American
Indian
7 Late
tycoon's
nickname
8 Mere
memory
9 Big birds
10 Jabbers
U What the
walls have
18 Savor
19 Tendency
20 Stitch
21 Geologic

text

wa4 t'fame
an· fortune!

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

per.lc•::_n::&lt;::
• ·c:P.._:h:c;o~·992~C!!:..._...,
SEWfNG MAOiiNE Reporrs , ser ·
vl ce , all make~ . 992-2284 . Tfl e
Fabnc
Shop ,
Pomeroy.

O'Hare

, 6 North

31 Revise a

PENNlOIL fi:UTLAND ppen doily ·REMODELING, Plumbing, heotm g

trll

old name

10·01)-San!O&lt;d &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Solar Energy 33.
10 JG-Hollywood Squares 3,&lt;,15: Price Is Right 8,10;
Sludlo See 33.
11 :oo-Wheel of FO&lt;tune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13;
Community of Living Things 33.; II :20--Biography
33.
11 :31)-tt's Anybody'• Guess 3, ~,15 ; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8, 10; 11: ~5--Measuremetrlc 33; 1155-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12·ro-News 3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce ·
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12 :-.Chlco &amp; !he Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1:oo-Gong Show 3; All Mv Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Rstless 10; Not For Women Only 1S;
Documentary Showcase 33
1:31)-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10,
2:00--c$20,000 t;'yramtd 6, 13; Een Festival 33.
2: 30--Doctors 34,15; Guiding Light 8,10.
3:01)-Another WO&lt;Id 3,4, 15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crockett's VIctory Garden ~; Romagnoli's Table
33.
3;15-&lt;;enerai Hospital 6, 13.
3·»---Moleh Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; M.D.
33.
~ ; oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4, 15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6: Gilligan's Is. 8: Sesame St. 20,33;
Dinah 13; Movie "Arizona Bushwhackers" 10.
4 ;31)--My Three Sons 3; Star ·Trek ~: Emergency One
6: Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes 1S.
5;0Q-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers•
Neighborhood ~.33; Mission: Impossible 15;
Emergency One 13.
s:-.Adam-12 4: News 6; Family Altair 8; Etec. Co.
20.33.
6 ;01)-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom
20,33.6' 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy
Griffith 6; CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup ~/ 7:()()-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; $128,000 Question 8; News 10; To Tell the Tru"'
13; My Three Sons 15; Look at Me! 20; Black
Journal 33.
7:-.Porter Wagoner 3: Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6; Tn1asure Hunt 8; MacNeil-Lehrer .Report 20,33;
Andy Williams 10; Pop Goes the Country 15; Name
That Tune 13.
S:OD-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,~,15; Movie "The Night That
Panicked America" 6,13; Werld Famous Moscow
Circus 8,10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
8:30--Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15: Walt Street Week 20,33 .
9;0Q-Rocklord Files 3,~,15; Movie "The Other" 8,10;
L....,ll Thomas Remembers ~; Documentary
Showcase 33.
9:30-Movle "Katherine" 6,13: Something Personal~10·oo--Qutncy 3,4, 15; News 20; Firing Line 33.
Hi·31)-Woman 20.
n ·oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15;; Monty Python's Flying
Circus ~; Black Perspective on the News 33.
11 :JG-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Baretta 6,13: Movie
"Quackser Fortune Has a Cousin In the Bronx" 8;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12:()0.-&gt;.Movie "The Hauntlog" 10; Janak! 33.
12 :40-MOd Squad 6; Ironside 13.
1:OD-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15; 1 :4()-.-News 13; 2:30-News 3.
J :OQ-Movle "The Milkman" 3; ~ : »-Movie "Million
Dollar Legs" 3; 6: DO-Movie "Meet the Chump" 3.

goers

'Family room, 2 lull baths,
'basement,

1Z Re~lence
13 Hacrra ball
(3 wds.)
15 Thesaurus
wd.
II Youth
17 Feminine
suffix
18 Gypsy's
card deck
20 Car, chair

OOW,

INFIRM

5 Alight at

ploy

&lt;50MMI~Re- Rlbi-IT

GIBBET

t Tokyo's

governor
•.

PIOUS

Underwear for a lawyer-BRIEFS

by TtiOMAS J.OSEPH
ACROSS
2 Clnereous
I Worn-out
3 "Winter's
6 New York's
Tale" lord
11 Playwright's

A~D Balh' lurn..shed apartment , all ut1lltl es pa1d. 356 N
_.....~?~th St :• M1dd lep6rt, _ _

_wrecker serv•ce, t1re repair ,
Phone 742 -9575 or742 ·2081 .

Answer

~elltM-.,~,1

·..

Plant. P.honem.nso.

In the

bath and 2 outbuildings.
RIGHT
NEAT
3
bedrooms, 2 baths, natural
gas, city water, good shape

BIG

'

RM

Wilham P. Groot at 742·2879
aher6p. m .

I

Jumbles FORCE

Yesterdays

IT WO'RI&lt;S ...

~=-=_;,;;,;:;.-----=.--.....:::-.;;:;::..--=..

country. 4 room house with

trailer

BE

YEP!lEl

' ERGO ·

lMPORTAKT
I"'itff IS
1&gt;iA"f . YOU
' SHAll l&lt;NOW

-

-~~~
·--~~---~-­
WATER WELL drrlling. Phone

I I I J[IJ
(Answers tomorrow)

Nobll Sumf11il Road
.Rt. 1
Middleport, o.
' 992-5724
I';C•orrtplete
Sates
and
-s.,rviJ:e and Supplies.

PIANO TUNING , Lone Daniels : 12
yeors of serviCe . Phone

Now arrange the circled lettet:s to
form the surpnse answer. as sog·
gested by the above canoon

TOr

Print answer here:

5 ROOM Hou;e w1 th ga rage, outbutlding . acre land Fo rrest
Run, 1 m•le from Astl land Bulk
•
3

II

&amp;

--

510,000.00 - 4 room trame
house. bath, natural gas,

real

New

Construct i on

WHAT THE
FIRE . CHIEF
At7V16E:I7 Hl6 MEN.

IGINCHAj

Pat1os

....
AUCTION . E\IERY Frodoy . 7 p.m.

basemenf1 fruit
trees, buildings. $24,000. 00.

neighborhood,

Route2
Pomervy, Ohio 45749
Kitchen Cabinets · Roofing

HOMESITES for sol e I ocr11 and
up Mtddleport. nea r RUt land

bedrooms, bath, utility,
CHEAPIE- 2 remodeled
bedrooms, bath, 2 )ots, nice

tour ordinary WOfds.

itm:~ =·

gas F .A . furnace, wrap
around porch~ basement,
garage and l/• acre.

J)(lrches,

one letter to each square, to form

.-

Bob Hoeflich

No Sunday c.itts Please
6· 13-1 mo.

~LH

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
Concrete

. Weddings
Portraits ·• ·
Passports
Anri iversaries
Special Occasions

- Free Esti~ates

33 .

Unscramble these four Jumbles.

109 High St.
Pomeroy

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949·2860

8; Movie " Wi ll Penny" 10; Movie " Treasure

Galleon" 13: Age ot Uncertainty 20,33.
9;30---Pilo1 " A E S. Hudson St ." 6.
10:()0-Hollywood S qt~ares 3; ABC News Closeup 6 ; To
Be Announced 4. Barnaby Jones 8: llt,ews20; At The
Top 33.

~~~~ ~

•

lHE PH010 PlACE

BISSEll SIDING CO

o

DAVID BRICKLES

S)dewalks

RACINE CARPET
SHOP6-16-1 mo.

DA'JES

1\ft

~

-- --

GUTTER SERVICE

Transmission Service

8·3()-.-What's Happening 6, 1"3, Hollywood High 15.
9 oo-Barney Miller 6i Movie " Eric" 15, Hawaii Five·

Ali1jnment,
wheel
balancing,
tune-up,
brake work, minor
repair .
Behind Rutland Grade
Sc:lloot. Evening work by
appointment. Ph . 742-2005.
6-5-1 mo. Pd.

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

FRIDAY, JULY22, 1977
6;C»-PTL Club 8; Summer Semester 10.
6: 15--Farm Report 13; 6 :20--Not For Women Only 13.
6 :30--Columbus Today~ ; News 6; Orerseas Mlsslon
10; 6 : ~5--MO&lt;n l ng Rep,.-t 3: 6:50-Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13; 6 : 5~ Morning, Tr l State 13.
7:01)-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning Americ a 6,1 3: CBS
News 8; Chuck White RepO&lt;I! 10, 7:05--PO&lt;ky Pig
10
7;30-- Schoolles 10; 8:0D-Howdy Doody 6; Capt.
Kangaroo 8. 10; Sesame St. JJ .
8:30--Big Valley. 6.
9 · ~ross -Wits 3; Phil Donahll'l 4,T.l,15; Mike
Douglas 10; Andy Griffith 8; Biography 33.
9:3()-.-A.M. 3; Edge of Night 6; American Heritage 33.

l}jlj}l.\.ft ~~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

ALIGNMENT·

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

992- &gt;1104
.... -- .. ·- -- - 2 NEW 3'-pEORQQM -Ho~ses tor r·-- . : . . . . . - - - - - - - - - ,
1973 KAWASAKI 100, $350 7ClJ · sol,. , One w 11h 2 cor gbroge .

-~

-

.,'

Young's tarpeting

tilt """' . Hoi'"!

r...

DUGAN'S
FRONT END

Superior
Steam Extraction

"'The Man wi th a Cloak " 8.

1 :oo- To morrow 3,-t; 2 : lG-News 13.

Theatre 33 .

IN "**IRT, McKEE--WITH TME:
FIRAA IIDOMIN~ UNDf-11: CAPTAIN
EASY-· W&amp;'RE WDNDER\Ne IFYOIJ l!Jnt.IO TO ROCK
THE &amp;OATl _ _,.....,

THAT •QUIIJTZ QUEEPER' T~EV
WE'RE BA~~VHOO)NCI 15 A COMPUrErl·' FOR AUT0MATtloJ6 HOU51!WORI&lt;~

Just Be tow tho Jonn
Bovs' in Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-2291
6-15-1 mo .

-r--

-------- --

•

Phone

(61• ) 667-3349.

-

'"'"."
B e tf ord amed b y th e
·~ Cauncrl of th e Viii-' Qe of
~ .. ~ •• Mi ddl eport , as fol lows
ll•l""
Se c. 1. Th at t he wage fat
the Sw i m m ing Instructor be ,
1 ...
and the sa m e Is hereby f rxed
-- --at 13.00 per ho u r
ONE ORGANTONE Adopt or , hke
Sec II That the rate shall
new Ong1nolly $225 for $75 ,
be retroacrfve to June 1, 1977,
Sec . I I I - That th iS Or .
141 Butternut A ve , Pomeroy ,
• dina nee Is hereby determined
OH .
\
, to be an emergenc y measure RISING STAR Kennel Boord•ng.
~·-ONE 275 GAL fu e l oil tank $35.
I' nec essarr f or the Immed iate
lndoo r·Outdoor r uns groom ing
, Preserva fon of the pea c e,
One set of matt r ess tpnngs for
oH breed s, d ean $0nitory
r.ea lth , safety and genera l
do ubi• bed . $5 Resrouront
(
focill
tles
oe367
-71
12
C
hesh
i
re.
welfa-r e of t he inhab i tants of
dtshes , pots . pons , water and
Phone (614 ) 367-0292
; the Village and f or the reason
glasses , 141 Butternut.
~ that it rs not nec essary t hat
-' beer
Po
meroy,
OH .
HOOF
HOLLOW
Buy
sell
,
tr
ade
th is legislat ion become 1m ·
o r tra in horse s. RU TH REEVES
medi a t e ly eff ect1 Ye .
CONTROL HUNGER ond lose
tromer Phone (6 14) 698.3290
Sec
rv Thrs Ord i nance
we 1ght with New Shope d1et
s h a ll fake effec t and be in
Pio
n and .Hydrex Water Pills. at
AKC
SHETLAND
-!heep
dogs
for c e fr om and after Ma y 11,
Dutton Drug, Mtddleport.
(M in ) Co llres. 2 .emoles , 7
1977 .
week s old Shot s o1 .d wormed 4 If 8 pool table, like new a ft.
'
Passed the llfh day of June
Phone (614 ) 361 ,0292
or
·-- ~•npodded bar with 4 stools, new 2
367 7112.
'-ptec:e
living room surtes a.s law
NL l Kelly
MEJGS COUNTY Humone Socoety as $179.95. Morttn 's Furn1ture .
Presidef1t of
'20 N . 2nd St. , Middleport , Oh .
,&amp;. rumo! Coreline , 992 1680. or
Council
Ph o ne 992 b370
~.. ( 7) 11, 2,, 71c
cl fer 6 p.m .. 992· 542Z.

.,

Rut land

742·2174

9'a _Jactc W Carsey , Mgr ,
~ Phone 992-2181

4-10 I mo

EXPERIENCED
Radiator
Service

5 ROOM HO USE , bath, 1 po rches ,

pocket wotctles and cha ins, 3 AND 4 RM . furn rshed end un
miles , like new Coll992 -721b
one with iecreotion room _ lee
sliver and gold We need 1 %4
fu rn •shed opts Ph one 992Con
slructton
992 ·34S4
or
and o lder silver cotns Buy. s~ll ,
SWEET CORN, Conta ct Delber t
54"34 .
992- 5&lt;55
or trade ' Con Roge r Wam s ley .
Petterson Grea ! Be nd , Ohro I
""-~- -.-COUNTRY Mobile Home Po rk. At.
742-2331.
mrle be lo w Ravensw ood Ferry SECLUDED 2 story older hom e o n
33 , ten miles no rth of Po meroy .
three-quarte r ocres. lots of
on Sta re Route 338 .
OlD FURNITURE, tce boxes, b-ross
Lor ge lots w1 t h concrete patios.
~
----'-~-shade , fertile ground
for
b e ds,
etc .
comp l et e
USED
FORESTRY
EQUIPMENT
Mot·
s rdewolk s ru nneis and oft
garden, 2 cor detached garage,
households. Wnt e M D Mi ller .
bork. lt ve Deck w-s top and
_sr -:!_e1 pa r~ng Phone 99~!47J:
3 bedrooms. Iorge ltwng room
Rt 4 , Pomeroy , O hro or call
lo a ders: John Dee re 350
w i.th. bric'k w b
fireplace .
FURNISHED APL Ad ults onlv. no
992-77ClJ.
Crawl er Loader, Toylor 581 -V
carpeting sunny k ttchenette,
pets . Phone 992 3874 , M td - Detroit Ot&amp;sel Engme. Con tact
CASH ! I . Junk cars . Frys Troc k&amp;
d i ntng room , partrc l bmement
De nnrs Smurr. ptlone (b1 4)
-~d!!.P..?~--Auto, Rutland Phone 74 2 -2081
with fo rced air furnace ond
838-5345
AVAILABLE ot Vrllage Manor
_ or}_~2 ~S~· ~Io ~ -~~day s
new ho t water heoter Located
~---L
Apartment $- 1 bedroom fv ll y 25 FT PON TOON boot Mak e on
on Morttn Dr .. Pomeroy . Pnced
NO ITEM TOO Lor.ge or too s mall
carpeted with k1tchen apbelow morket va lue, $17, 500 .
off er, ~Of more tnformclr on,
Will buy I piece or comp. lete
ph a n ce s. furn rshed. Sterling ot
coll 992-7024
Phone 992-b328 or 985-3573.,
hous ehold NeW , used or anti
S l ().4 per mont. Phone 992 77 21.
...
qu es . Morltn 's Furn iture, 20 N
CANNING
TOMATOE S.
Equal hovs• ng opportun 1ty
2nd Sf , M iddleporl Phone -1-.~-..... --- - - - cucumb e rs, mangoes . re al
TflAILER SPACE for rent 5 rhile s
992-6370
cheap. Bn ng conlarner. Bar
fro m Pomeroy ond M iddlepor t.
bora Ta lbo11, next butld rng to
SMAll DATSUN Pickup. A lso Ph one 992-5858
Portland
Park ,
w ont dry sto rage s pace fo r r!'! n t
or sole Phone 9'12 5370
2 8EDROOM
TRAILER. Adu lt• on ~---~------'t
---ly . Pflo ne Wl -3321
1

1~ -L--.....,........ - - - - - - -

ORDINANCE NO . 1057·77

,h. "l·l"l

Actam i2 ~ . N Pw~ tt, F.ilmdy Aff ai r H; f:::lec Co:

10,33
6 00 News ),4.8, 10 .13.1~. ABC News 6; Zoom ~,33
6 30 NBC News 3.4, IS; ABC Ne ws 13; Andy Grllf ith 6;
CBS News 8.1 0, Once Upon a Classic ~,33.
7 oo- Trulh or Cons . 3. To Te ll lhe Tr uth •• Lia r's C)ub
6; Muppel Show 8; News 10; To Tell lhe Truth 13;
My Three Sons 15: A)ma na c ~ - Consumer Sur viva l
Kit 33
7:-.Baseba l\ 3,4; Ohio Slate Lottery 6; Pr ice is Right
6; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10;
Nashville on the Road 13: Dolly 15.
a 00 Welcome Back, Kotter 6, 13 ; Hollywood High IS;
Wa ltons 8. 10; Play of 1he Month 20 i Mas terpiece

&amp;11&lt;1 West Main Street

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

lARRl,!!~eoER

• 30

CRAFTY lADIES
HANDICRAFT

Phone 992-6282

SWA. IN'$

7

Pomeroy.Landmark

~

RESIDENCE. Old Rt. 33 6 a .m. HALF -RUNNER

,,., An Ordinance to FIX THE
.~·... SALARY OF THE SWIM ·
, 1 ":'. MING INSTRUCTOR

$101~
~IS.li!IIIIIGS

SMALL form for sOle, 10% down , . - - - . . . . . , , - - , . - - - - - - ,
owner financed Monroe County W Vo Ph one {304) 772·
3102 o' (304) 112 3227
Automatic

4 RM . HOUSE on Rt. l24 Just off Rt

------CASH po ld for oil makes o nd
1977 TRAVEL Troll er , self . ,
models of mobile ho mes
con ta ined, 28 ft . a1 r con dlh onPhone area code 614 -423.i'~53 1 .
Hlg ,
many · ex tra s.
Shady
TIMBER, Pome ro y Forest ProWa ters comp 1 fl:t . 2, 10 m• les
ducts Top pnce for standing
sou th ofPo1n1 P leasa nt W.Va .
sawtimber. Coli 992 5965 •or
Kent Hanby , l -44b-8570

11 11? Betwee n Co. Road 18 ond

-··

c o m p let e with we ath er
proof P A spea ke r , 2 way
ba se loaded C B ant enna ,
fo r roof top or t ru n k mount.
Power cord. co ax. an tenna
ca ble and . a ll haq:twar e
in cl ude d
ONLY

1973 TERRY 23 fh ft. gos and elec
re fr i gerator. forced c tr fu r
noce , rear bath w 1tl-r tuiS. A m.Fm tope Qeck bUil t-i n, cr ank up
T. V an tenna , spring lo a ded
awnmg , roof air condi tio nrng,
re ol good cond1flon . Pho ne

742· 2025 or 742-2211 ,

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths ,
a ll elec., 1 acre, M1ddlepor1 .
close to Rutl and Phone 992·
7481

-wtlll*IJIUII

phono(61 4)592-3051.

_1~!.· ~ 667·3~_:1__ --- - --·

'

1::------ ----.J

- -

··'I"

uJ

employees. App ly
Pen nzotl,
W.
Pome roy Tuesdoy
p .m Must be neot
ref er ences on d

ltk W . Carsty, Mgll
Phone 992. 2111

llfiJillillll

VA-FHA , 30 yr fi nancing ireland
M ortgage 77 E. State , Athe ns ,

CB Mo bi l e Tran sce 1Yer

shower awnmg forced orr
hi'Wt plus e le&lt;:t hea l, many
fe at J res Ccn be s~n of
H1 c k o ry Lak es. Campground.
Tupper Ploms , Oh1o or coli

---------NOW HIRING full and part -tt me

e ach .

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
lOO Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

oo-

17
M o..,ie "The Wheeler Oeaters" 10: Janak l J3.
12 ' 40- Gregory P eck : A L1ving Biogra p h)~ 6,13, Mo v1e

THUtiSOAY , JULY 21 . 1911

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10 :011 to 5:00

PLUMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

·-~~~~-'~""'
..
WIIIIIOIIS l

3102 or 1304) m-3227.

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23

liKE NEW. 1972 28 ft Carriage ,
a i r co nd rt ionad , tu b and

9•9·277&lt;

Us e d

Pomeroy Landmark.
•

CARTER'S

-

Ne w C:o·Op water sof-

SO LB. BAG Num . 2 pototoes .
$3 00
Delber t lawson or
Delbert POtterson . Grea t COUNTRY formlcl nd Wltl-r secluded woods, water and good ac ·
Bend,Oh1o
ceu m M onroe Coun ty, W Vo .
$ 1.000 down , coli (304 ) 772

EXCAVATING , BACK HOE, dozer , BLACK &amp; TAN Beegle , mole w eo rrng o co llar on M idd!epo.rt Hrll
tr €tflcher , low So y , dump truck
Phone q92 .3361 .
truc ks septic sys tems
Bil l
STARCRAFT l Oth a nnive rsary sole
Pullins, pl-rone 992-2478 day or
on minr-mo tors , trollers . a nd
_ nrght___
__
.....,...
fo lddowns, Trovels tor 25 h .
$4400 00 20 It mini- motor
S 10 ,850.00. We sell serv1ce o nd
FRI ENDL Y TOY Pa rti es hos openqua l1ty. Ca mp Conle y Storcroft
m gs f o r mana ge rs
Qnd
Sa le s. Rt. b2 north of Pt Plea
demonstrators
Demonstrat e
NOTICE TO BIDDERS :
son
I
B i ds w ill be a ccepted by
guaran teed toys and 91ffs . No --- -Pom ero y Fr ater n a l Orde r of
cosh Inves tment - no collectmg JA Y CO CAMPING
Tro tte r s
E ag les, M er g s Aerie 2171
o r deli \leri ng · no se rvtee
cu s tom mode SWISS CO LONY ,
Un til Su nday , J u l y 24 , 1977 fo r
charge, cor ond telephone
s mol l ta nde ms Maple Leaf
re m od eli n g
of
proper ty
necessary
Call
collect
to
Caro
l
CODNER'S
CAMPERS. Soles
l oc ated at 222 E . Ma rn St.,
Coy (5 18) 489-8395 or w-rrte
Rental . Servic e , Su pplie-s
P ome ro y, Oh io
Conta ct
Fne nd ly Toy
Pc rlres,
20
Me•g s 28 or 32 to Boshon
t r ustee s at 99 2 9976 . W e
res erv e t he r rght t o a ccep t or
Ro1lrood Ave. Albany, N .Y.
Owner Rober t Cod ner , l ong
r e1ec t all b1 dS .
12205.
Bottom , Ohra

Tl
s
......
.
,_,..._

FRE

111181atian SeniciS

teners , model YC -SVI .
Only Un.p.s
Sa ve UO .OO on a new
Holpo int Atfrl gtr~tor . ·
I Ntw 70 c nhif' •t.
Chest Freezer
.
US .O(I Discount
Now in $lock , complete line
of bulk garden setds.
·
I Good McCullough Cftai n
Saw
US
I Good Used Poullln Ch11in
Saw
150
1 Good Used Un ico
Dryer
$80.00
1 Got'~ Used G .E: . Drve r S85

AS THE AIR!

Business
Services
l------------------ ---;------------...___.

o-""--:F"'O=-=R:- ~
•LE

ASH LEY STOVE Dealers, Running
Spec1ol Summer Sole Lorge
C60, $300 Blowers, $40 Co li

-

~

$600. Abo
hone
tro•ler , $.450. Phone (614) b98
3290.

CAMPER.

YELLOW

19b-4 FORD Vt ton pick up , good
5 RINGS MISSING from restdence ,
tire5 end motor Con tact Elden
one pearl and 4 opal s A nyone
Walbu rn , 390 S Jtmd , M idwrth rnformotion concernmg
~d l ep o~f.:,. OH P~one 992 · 2805
any of them, please phone
1972
DODGE Charger, oir ond
992-3489 Reword offered
m an y ather opho ns , 58 ,000
5200 REWARD for Information
mt les, $ 1b50 Phone992 3372 or
leodmg to re turn of two male
'1'12-5169.
dogs taken from Rt 33 near
PRICED FOR qUi ck sale 19 75 Rally
Darwin One German st-lort
Sport Cornaro . outomu t 1c ,
hair pomter. black ond whtte
powe r steermg shorp 1 Cal!
speckled wt th white spot on
'1'12-mo.
bock One pori Sheppard mutt,
block w1 th brown feet P hone: 1977 FOR04 x 4 Phone949 2673
992 5848

DEPENDABLE l (\DY for ~ nero !
h ovsework, 'l mormng s
o
week $2 per hour Pho ne

Oh•o or phone 992 3891 .

384·281.4
JOHN DEERE 420 ltve power 3
point tutch John Deer No S
mower , 7 pt. cut. Jqhn Deer 2
C2)
Good
row cultrvator Ford - two 1.4 tn , R e fr ig erators, $200
bottom plow. Coll2417 -2195 .

1%6 FORO M ustang 289 engine.
body rn good cond ition , $AOO
Phone 992-5624 or 99 2-3923

Lost and£-d

8E BE.. IND BARS A t..ONG T IME,
BUT YOUR IN\ACiiNATtON- WIL.l. BE

~REE

10;30- Dolly 3; Ho llywood Squares J
II. DO- News 3,&lt;,6.8.1 0.13.15, Mac Neil Lehrer Report
33.
ll :JG- ·Jol\nny Carson 3,~. 15 ; SWAT 6,13. Kojak 8;
Mary HMi man 10; ABC News 33

Television log ·

DADE,

t'orSale

to lot~g hoir , to
geve away Phone 997-6362

WISH to thank all
our
ne1gtlbors and fnends for theu

JOQ
M'Ul\1 .Wt!r'

.lu.ly21, 1977

STORE HOURS
l\llon.,

PAW'S STAI/ED HOME
WIF ME THREE NIGHJ5

Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. -8:lOti15:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

OI&lt;/JII... I THINK'
t{OO'RE CRAZ'(, SliT

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

IF 't'OU INSIST...

MASON FURNITURE
•

,I

773-5592
Herm1n ~1t1
Milson, W. Y1. ,
~--~A~s~so~ci~•~te~R~ea~t~tor~s--__. ~~~--~~~~~~~~~~--~~--~~~~~!

I-IOI.D STILL , AND I'LL
61VE 'f'OU A SQUIRT
OF 5HAVIN6 CltEAM ...

IN A AOW, ELVINEV

WON'T
WONDERS
NEVER
CEASE!!

I'M DRETFUL SORRY
TO. HEAR ABOUT '{ORE
BROKE LAIG, SNUFFY

�to- The Daily Sentinel, M iddlet&gt;Orl-Pom~roy , 0 ., 'I1\ursday, July 21, 197'1

Bureaucracy .rebuked

.ELBERFELDS I.N POMEROY
FINAL CLEARANCE .SALE
SUMMER CL.OTHING

•

POINT PLEASANT - The atso hired as an instructor,
E c on o m ic ~ eve l opment Randy Clark, 23. is a
Authority (EDA ) came under graduate
of Marshall
rebuke from the Mason University, where he lettered
County Board of Educa lion in basebaU fo ur years. He is
Tuesda y evening for the atso a graduate of Wa hama
methods it em ploys in High School , where he played
detennining which agencies football. basketbaU. basebaU
receive grant funds.
and ran track.
The board atso employed
other discussion at the long
Randy Joe Cla rk. New meeting centered around a
Haven, as the head .football presentation by SEM Part·
and assistan t basketball ners, Parkersburg, an arcoach at Hannan High School. chit ectural . firm wh ich
:rhe board vented its anger specializes ·in buildin g
against EDA when Calvin schools. Partners gave a
Smith , re present ing the presentation in correlation
Mason County Public Service with the propOsed Mason
District, a ppeared in an Co un ty Com pre hen sive
attempt to get the board to Educa tional Plan which deals
take action to endorse the with the proposed renovation
county's rural water project, or existing school buildings
which apparently has the and construction of new
chance of receiving $865,000 school buildings.
from federal agency.
Among the other motions
Apparently, the problem passed were :
arises because EDA wants
- Adopted.a policy for free
the County Commission and and reduced price meals and
the Mason County Board of
Education to agree on what
they consider to be the
county's top priority.
The board believes the
county's top priority is the
construction of a Special
Education building foo· which
it had sought funding at .a
previous time but was not
approved.
Unless Congress overturns
It was apparent last
a
recent government order,
Tuesday night that the
American
automobile owners
general consensus of the
could
be
forced
to ~pend over
board is thatit was elected to
$20
billion
on
what
could be an
work only for education and
that it would not be right to unproven safety device.
aid the County Commission in Transportation Secretary
Brock Adams ha~ instruc!Ofl
getting its water project.
It was atso apparent that U. S. · carmakers to begin
the board was disturbed that Installing mandatory air bags
it was being by-passed again on 1982 big cars and aU new
from receiving federal funds. models by 1984.
Air bags are designed to
"We are now by-passed on
cushion
front seat occupants
two rounds because we do not
have a politician working for by inflating in a frac!ion of a
us," stated board member second in a crash of 12 miles
per hour or greater.
Robert Adkins.
Since the Secretary 's
In response to some of the
decision
appears to be unboard's Comments, Smith
necessary-,
I have .&lt;:o·
told them that they do not
sponsored
a
resolution to
stand a chance of receiving
cancel
·the
order
and have
any funds at this time
because they ·do not have a urged my colleagues in the
project filed with EDA that House to join the legislation
. would pass the standards for several good reasons :
I. ) There is no solid
necessary to rec-eive the
evidence
airbags would save·
money.
more
lives
than the present
For the time being the
safety
belt
system. It is
board decided to refrain from
known
that
the
system is
either taking positive or
useless
in
side
collisions.
One
negative action and instead
dire.cted Superintendent serious problem is how to
Loweli Cook to put together a create an air bag system that
presentation of clarification works · everytime
of the board's position to especially many. years after
it was installed. With a
·present to the public.
defective
bag, the occupant
The new coach who was
would be unprotected.
2.) The air bag order is· a
multi-billion order gamble
with. consumer's money .
Estimates run anywhere
Wed. -Thur .. Fri .
from $100 · $300 per car with
July 20-21 -22
nothing being said about the
Double Feature
cost. of replacement if they
Clint Eastwood
·inflate. Chrysler Corporation
TliEOUTLAW
estimated it could be as much
JOSEY WALES
as $600.
.
PG
· 3.) Safety beltS work better.
R.aca With the
Devil
Agency research shows that
Peter Fonda
the seat belt, if used properly,
Warren Oat$
· will save 50 per cent more
G
lives than air bags .

MASON DR. IN

· ~------------~

VACATIO
•

CAsH? .

free milk for Mason fo untv
Schools.
·
- A~ r eed to the request by
Ralph Sayre, principal at
Point Pleasa nt Hi~h School.
to construct a con&lt;Tete block
wall dividing the dressing
room into two separate rooms
at a cost of $5011.
- A cce pted
the
Jarvis, a teacher at Wahama
High School and Richard S.
Jarvis, a teacher at Point
Pleasant High Sebool.
- Approved installation of
the fire alarms at Mt. Olive
E.C.E., Broad Run E.C.E.,
Beale, Letart, Beech Hill and
West Columbia elementary
schools. ·
Present were Superin·
tendent Cook, Finance
Director Reba Fox, Board
members Harry Siders, Bill
Brady, Donna Thompson,

Paul Watkins and Robert
Adkins.

Legislature
at ·aglance
.. HOUSE ..

.
Bills Introduced
H B 830. Maddux . Withholds
state subs idies to any school

bOard or driver training school
that dOes not require 30 hours
of classroom instruction ror a

student completing a course.
HB 831, Nixoo . Creates the
1'2th District Court of Appeals.
covering Clermont , Butler,
Warren and (:linton counties.
HB 83'2, Brooks. · ~equires
certa in f inancial agreements in
the independent . placement of
ch ildren tor adoption .
HB 833, Wilkow6ki . Creates
speci al type of teach ing certlfl·
CCI!te in area of bilingual
mu lti cultural education.
HB 834 , Maddux . Expands
adm inistrative duties of clerical
schOQI
persoflnel . to allow
alte-rnate funding of bus ing ·
pupils .
HB 835, Hartley. Provides.
remedies and procedures in
cases of abuse . of adults and
ch ildren by 1 person who
re_}!dn with them ~
Concurs in Senate Amendments
Am . HB 458. Ball . Reqoires
scen ic rai iWIVS and abutting
landowners to shar'e the- cost of .
constructing and repairing
fences along the railway's right
of way. 89· 1.
.
Am . Sub . HB 1. Lehman .
corrects errors in the re,.lsed
code. 93 -ll .
Am . HB 267, Lehman . Limits
jurY· duty exemptions to phySI ·
clans . dentists , attorneys ,
pUbl ic officials , persons over
age 70 and members of certain
religious orders . 94-1.
Bills. Passed
Am . Sub . SB 251 , Mahoney .
Perm its municipalities and
coun ties to set up community
reinvestment areas and to
gran! tax, exemptions in these
areas. 85·11 .
Am .

HB

438,

..

..•..
'I
...

Pope.

Lets

school distr icts hold up to three
elections per year on tempo ·
rarv emergency tcuc levies. 118-8.
Am . Sub . HB 467, Carne;' .
Provides tax exemptions for
energv cOnversion facilities,
.SOlid waste energy conversion
fac ilities and thermal efficiency
. improvemer'lt facilities . 98-7.
Sub. HB 636 ,

Specia I Sate Prices

FINAL CLEARANCE

Men's Dress Shirts
Neck sizes 141h to 17112. Short
sleeves, solid colors and patterns.
Save 1h .
-

Men's 7.95 Dress Shirts ........... 3.98
•Men's '9.95 Dress Shirts............. '4.48
Men's 116.95 Dress Shirts ............ SS:48
Men's 114.00 to 115.00 Dress Shirts '7.50
1

1

Reg. '6.00 tO 110.00 .......... Sale 13.00
Reg. 111.00 to 118.00 ......... Sale '5.00
Reg. 120.00 to 128.00 ........ Sale '7.00
Reg. 138.00 to 140.00 ........ Sale '9.00

GIRLS' TOPS
SIZE 4 TO 6X
7 TO 14

REG. 13.50 TO 14.75 .......... SALE 11.50

FINAL CLEARANCE!

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS
S, M, L. and extra large sizes .
Includes entire stock . Save SO per
cent.
Men's $5.95 Knit Shirts.~ ......... $2 .98
Men's $7.95 .Knit ShirtS......... :. $3.98
Men's $9.95 Knit Shirts .......... $4.98
Men's $10.95 Knit Shirts ......... $5.48
Men's $12.95 Knit Shirts ......... S6.48

MEN'S DRESSES
Regular &amp; half sizes.

REG· 112.00 ...... :............. SALE 17.79
REG. 115.00 ......... ;.......... SALE '9.69
REG; 126.00 ............... , ... SALE '16.89
REG.
'38.00
................... SALE '24.69
'
.
REG. 146.00 ....................SALE '29.89
REG. SSS.OO ....................SALE 137.69
MEN'S LIGHTWEIGHT

SUMMER JACKETS

Meigs County

cense tees. 85-3.

Am . 58 106. Gillmor. Extends .
shield
taw to noncommercial
educolionol broodcosoers . B4·4.
8111 Oefuted
HB 758, McLin . . Requires

indopondenlcandidaleswho run

.

RACINE
HOME NAOONAL .

BANK
RACINE

OHIO

Boys Blue Denim Jeans
Knit Shirts

Sizes 28 to 42 waist. lengths 30 to 36.
Good selecti.on of styles. Stock up
now and save.

SALE PRICES
WOMEN'S
SHORTS

.

.

SEN~TE .

.

.

REG. '4.50 10 '8.00 .. ;. SALE '2.00

49.95 SPORT COATS ............. '24.98
145.00 SPORT COATS ............. '22.50
'41.95 SPORT COATS. ............ '20.98
139.95 SPORT COATS ... •........ '19.98

1

WOMEN'S JUMPSUITS
AND LONG DRESSES
Reg. '20.00 to '24.00 ........... Sale '8.00
Reg. '30.00 to 136.00 ......... Sale 110.00

lf2PRICE

Reg. 138.00 to 144.00 ......... Sale 112.00

'

WOMEN'S &amp;
PRE-TEEN

LITTLE BOYS' SUITS
SIZES 3 TO 6

SWIM WEAR
lf2 PRICE

REG. '14.00 10 117.00 $ALE '5.00
REG. '21.00 10 129.00 SAL£ ?.00

FINAL CLEARANCE

MEN'S
SPORT SHIRTS

GIRLS' JUMPSUITS

Small (14-14'12), medium (15-15 112),
large (16-16V2), extra large (17- ·
171/2 ) . Short sleeve .styles. lull cut
and tapered styles, solids and
patterns . Regular prices $5.95 to
$16 .00.

lh PRICE·

WOMEN~$

WOMEN'S
BLOUSES.,

SIZES 5 TO .14

BOYS' '9.95 JDETS ..... ..'4.98

Sizes 36 to 46. Regulars and longs,
selected from our regular stock.

PRE-TEEN GAUCHOS

.

GIRLS'
-~SlACKS &amp;JEANS
. .
-

Am . sa 23•.
Requires nursing

Cafllt&lt;... :
homes to

make Inspection -reports avella .

b·le to prospective patients. 33·0.

-

Rea. '5.00 to '6.50 ............. Sale '2.00
Reg. 17.00 to '9.00 ............. Sale '3:00
Reg. 110.00 to 114.00.......... Sale '4.00

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
Boys• &amp; Girls' Sizes
9 mos. to 24 mos.
.2 fob
7to 1~

Reg..13.7S to '6.50............. Sale 11.50
13.00
Rae. 17.00 to '9.00. .............Sale
.
Rae. 110.00 to 1J3.00. ......... Sale '4.50
'

....,_~t-~---"~"~--'!':!'~~---.-:~-~

WOMEN'S

. lOPS

SUMMER STYLES AND COLORS

,lf2·PRICE

REG. '15.00 TO '23.00 SAL£ 17.00

SIZES 2 TO 6X AND 7 TO 14

SIZES 32 TO 46

.........._.__

REG. '9.00 10 •14.00 SALE '4.00

. ·-

. 1f2PRICE

Y2 PRICE

SIZES 7 TO 14

GIRLS DRESSES
SIZES 6 MOS. TO 24 MOS.
2 TO GX

7 TO 14
Rei, '7.00 to 110.00............Sale '3.00

concurs In Hot.~s.e: A!11c.ndm1nts
Am . Sub. SB 84, Bowen.
...
Provides for lhe expungement
of military discharge and
separation program nurnbfors
from countv records. 30-2.
R"efuse~ to concur in Houu 1-------------------~L.-·-·-·---·-·,..·-------.._
Am•rtdments.
Am .
SJR
3,
Roberto.
· Proposed constitutional amend·
ment to rovkfe for a fleKibfe
debt llmi . O·ll .
Bilfl PasHCf

REG. '9.00 TO '12.00 .. SALE '4.00

•

Men's Sport Coats·

One group of misses and half sizes.

GIRLS'
' s· &amp; SKIRTS
GAUCHO

fNews. . . in Briefs!

BOYS' '7.95 JM:KETS....... '198

'

Men's '8.95 .ladlets ..........!4.48
Men's 111.!. lackets. ........ '5.98
Men's sl6.95 Jackets......... '8.48

REG. 13.00 TO '16.00 SALE '5.00

SUMMER JACKETS
Unti ned, sizes 8 to 18. Buy for wear
now and early fall . Savings are SO
per cent.

11.00. 114.QO,......... Sale '5.GO
.... '15.00 .. '20.00 .......... s. '7.80

Enactment of the bUI was a major objective of the BO,OIJO. lunds to stay npen tor the requored number of days.
palid....
member Ohio Education Association.
Stinziano's bill would burden school districts with more
U a school ooard wished to dismiss a teacher, a series of
Rhodes said the bill "further continues the practice of expense, said Rhodes, addin~ that the legislature's goal ' "due process" hearings would have to be held. Tenured
mandating new COlliS upon local school districts . without "should be to keep S&lt;:hools open and to leave control or loeal teachers could appeal tbetr dismissal to a third-party referee
providing the necei!SIIry funds for Implementation."
schools in the hands of the people."
for binding arbitration .
.
The bill would create five types of public school teacher
Enactmentofthe bill would probably lead to higher property
"This bill's requirement foc binding arbitration is an affront
contracts beginning next year.
.taxes, predicted Rhodes.
. to every yoter and school board member in Ohio," said Rhodes
After three years experience and having completed 18But Rhodes' strongest criticisms in his fivO-page veto in his veto message. "In mandating binding arbitration
college hOurs of extra work beyond a degree, a teacher could message were saved foc the Ohio Education Association.
decisions, and thus stripping school board members of their
receive a "continuing" contract and could he fired only for
" It is a deplorable condition when the leadership of a single legitimate authority, the bill effectively says that a locally"just cawoe," failure to fulfiU the terms of a contract, bad teacher lobby can impOse its se.lf-interest upon the General elected and policy-making board of education is incapable of
evaluations or " gross immoral conduct."
Assembly .. .withoot helping Ohio's school children," be said. respon siblity in managing a school system."
'
First-year teachers would be evaluated twice. Second.,.nd
Sponsors of the bill said it would help weed out unqualified
The bill was not needed, concluded Rhodes, because ,"at a
third-year tea,chers would be evaluated annuaUy. Third·year teachers and reward qualified teachers with some measure of time when so many school districts are faced with serious
teachers would be evaluated every other year.
job security.
.
.
fiscal crises," the legislation would "create even greater
Rhodes noted that even before school opens, 14 sehool
Less than half of the state's school districts now evaluate problems for school boards , administrators teachers, studistricts have indicated they might not have enoul!h operating . their teachers, and less than a quarter of those who do have dents and paren~. "
'
evaluation procedures use therri as a basis for hiring and firing

Jf::s:to;::;:::::;:;:;:;$";;;:::::::-::::::;::::::.:·:·:::::::::::·:::::·::::.::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::i~

FINAL CLEARANCE

Men's Pre-Washed
Blue Denim ·Jeans

1
nom ic
and
Community
Development to purchase capi·
tal stock and encourage the
purchue of capital stock · Jn
minor ity -owned banks . 54·38.
HB 82'2, 1. . Thomp.son . Clarl ·
ties that I')Otaries public do not
need a new Scel!ll under the
statewide licensing taw. 90·0.
•·-·;.. •.;...-·-·-~-"-::-------·--·"t------.-_.
Am . S8 25S, Jactlson. Rev ises
"'
licensing and inspect ion requirement&amp; for food service
operations and Increases li -

· for partisan offlce.s to qualify in
a primary election . 35·56.
·

,People

Boys F~ion. Jeans
Boys Shorl Slerie Sport Shirts

DRESSES

REG. S17.00 TO '20.00 SALE $7.00

A Home Bank
For ·

BOYS' WEAR

Sizes 36 to 4!\, unlined, sale prices on
entire stock . Save 112.

REG. '8.00 TO '12.00 SALE '3.00

elementary and lleCOndary education from the public and from
their elected representativ.,.," said Rhoiles.

BOYS LIGHTWEIGHT

Buy what you need during this sale
for back -to-school wear . Good
selections now.

JtEG. '5.00 TO '6.75 ........... SALE 12.00 ·
REG. 17.00 TO 111.00 .......... SALE 13.00

Let'lman. Per·

' mils the Department of Eco-

· .........
Sa ve for the fun things!
Open your account at

OPEN F.R IDA Y NIGHT TIL 8

Jumpsuits , lops, bib overalls.
blouses, vests. slacks and skirts .

Thtrefore, the order will
force Ameri&lt;;_ans to pay triple
the cost for a second-best
safety system.
4.) Mandatory air bags ate
unfair to the estimated 40
million people who do use
their safety belts.
5.) The air bag directive
chips away at individual
freedom with the idea the
" government knows best"
and must order us to take
proper safety measures.
We are aU for safety; there
is no argument here.
However, if there was con·
elusive evidence proving air
bags save more lives thim
seat belts and are worth the
enormous cost, then I would
enthusiastically support. the
system. No such evidence
presently exists, so we will
continue to support the
consumers' right to choose
the best safety system he
wants.

the legieJat1lre.
The bill would requlie aU 617 public .Cbool districlll in Ohio to
aet liP t.dler evaluatioo procedures. Balled on the
evabal\lona, a tsnsred teacher could only he fired after a
lleriee ol "due process" hearings.
The bill, PIJihed through the legislature by Rep. Michael
Stinzlano, D·Cobinbua, was "another attempt by the
leadenhlp of a atate teachers' organization to wrest control of

SALE PRICES LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND.

Pre-Teen Sportswear

By Clarence
Miller

Gov. James A. Rhodes told the
Ohio
was
"deplorable" and that a bill strongly bldled by the group went
too far In erodlnlllocakontrol over public lchools.
In hla fourib veto ol aD or pl!rl &lt;l 'a bill from lhlo! seseion of
the I rlleJature, Rlloclel aald leg illation requiring public school
t.t.ct. evabaltiono was yet another mooeyless mandate by
COLUMBUS (UP!) -

Dauoc...t~trolled Ohio Gener.J 'l'lluraday that tile
EducatiOft ~elation's leaullative inOuence

BEGINS FRIDAY JULY 22 AT 9:30 A.M.

r esig nations of Dixie L.

.

Education -bill 'deplorable'··Rhodes

•

1

________________

By Ualted Prelsbllenlatilllllll
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER Thursday
eiprellled "!harp disappointment" over a decision by U. S.
Steel Corp., the nation's largest producer, to hike prices on
some products In September. ·
Chatles Schultze, chairman of ·carter's Council of
EcooOOilc Advisers, told a news conferencetbeadministration
realizes "that there have been significant cost increases for
steel produclll rot we think the climulative impact of steel
price decisions is inconsistent with reasonable efforts to
control lnOation." U. S. Steel amounced Thursday in Pittsburgh that it plans to raise prices of structural steel shapes by
6 per cent and tin mill products by 7 per cent, effective Sept. 4.

CAIRO, EGYPT-·EGYPT AND UBYA fought an eighthour desert battle with tanks and jets Thursday in the first out.t reai of open warfare between the former allies. Libya said
J;:SYptian troops were oo ita soil and threatened "retalilltlon in
force."
Egypt said Its troops !hot dnwn two Libyan wiirplanes,
destroyed 40 tanks and 30 other vehicles and captured 42
110ldiers and "saboteurs" In the fighting . It said the clash was
started by a Libyan armored force advancing from Masa 'id
tmder a barrage of artillery fire to the' Egyptlan border town of
Salum. The Egyptians hit back, routing the Libyan force and
chasing It to Masa'id and even further to the west, a military
spokesman said.
COLUMBUS - STATE ENERGY AND RESOURCE
Development Agency Director Robert Ryan has assured Gov.
James A. Rhodes there's little chance of a blackout In Ohio like
last week's New York City electrical failure · as "Ohio is
fortunate lli have a...dequate generating capacity."
· "I have reviewed the electric supp.ly. capability of Ohio
utilities as requested," Ryan re(Xirted to the governor Thurscjay. "I have found that Qhlo Is fortunate to have adequate
generating capacity. Therefore, there is little likeliliood of a
blackout or even a. brownout similar to those recently
occurring in New Yock."
A COLD AIR MASS SENT HIGH TEMPERATURES
plunging in the East, but accompanying storms caused
flooding and power blackouts IIi several states. In Boston,
where a record high 102 was recorded Thunsday afternoon, the
temperature plunged :Ill degrees in one hour.

In Coocord, N. H., where the mercury climbed to a record
·-· 101 degrees, coollolr pushed the temperature·down into the 70s
Thursday nigllt. The high temperatures during the day set
records foc electric denwxi in New England. Along with lower
· temperatures, rains poured over much of the East Thursday.
More than 5,000 persons in West Springfield, Mass., WOI'e
without power when high winds toppled trees and power lines. ,
Similar blackouts were reported in Melrose, Mass., and in
Lewiston and Auburn, Maine.

e
VOL · XXVIII

NO •'69

,.,..ted nsw•1

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1977

Mother, children ·die in fire
spending the night with tbe
family.
The father, Fred Beaudoin,
was- at his job at the Pratt and
Whitney Co. plant in North
Haven. State police said he
was notified at 5:30 a.m.
Police declined to say how
many of the children were
bound and gagged and the
bodies were sent to the
University of Connecticut
Medical
Center
at
Farmington
for
autopsies.
was
a
cousin
who
was
ROGER OSBORNE
The bodies were found
inside the ranch-type home in
this Waterbury suburb after
firemen fought the blaze for
half an hour. They said the
doors and windows were
locked.
Roger is a· graduate of
Roger Osborne, son of Mr.
State police declined to
and Mrs. Herald R: Eastern High School and of comment on the possibility of
Osborne, Rt. 2, Long Bottom, Ohio University where ·he
has been notified by the State received his Bachelor of
Board of Registration for Science Degree in Civil
Professional Engineers and Engineering: Roger, his wife,
Surveyors, that he has passed Lym, and two sons, Todd and
the final State E~mination Steven, presently live outside
which is required to become. but near Marietta. Roger is
registered as a professional employed with the District 10
surveyor . He now is Design Department of the
registered as both a Ohio- Department .of Trl!JlS::
professlor al engineer and a portation at Marietta.
professional surveyor.
By ANDREW NIBLEY
PROSPECT, Conn. (UP! )
- A mother and eight
childrer., some of them bound
and gagged, were found dead
.early today after a fire
believed to have been set
destroyed their home. ·
Police said the dead
included
Mrs.
Cheryl
Beaudoin, 29, and seven of
ber children, ranging in age
from 4 to 12. The other victim

Edward Leonard was on
hand.
Neighbors said they
smelled smoke about 4 a.m.
rot said because Beaudoin
was in the habit of burning
rubbish, they first thought it
might be just that. · ·
Screams from the lf&gt;.year·
old hillside house, however,
alerted neighbors who
phoned authorities. A
neighbor, Mrs. Joseph
Paolino, repOrted the fire to
the state police barracks at
Bethany at 4;13 a.m.
The Prospect Fire Departold cousin, Jenifer Santoro. ment rushed to the scene
The
victims
were along · with several state
pronounced dead at the scene troopers. Bethany firemen
by Connecticut Chief Medical were also sununoned.
A neighbor, Frank Bainer,
· Examiner Dr. Elliott GroS$.
State · P9lice Commissioner . was asleep when . his wife

homicide and arson and
would issue no statement
pending an investigation .
Authorities indicaied tbe
blaze was set and firemen
said the secluded, six rQOm,
red clapboard home-hidden
·by tali pine trees - was
engulfed in names when they
arrived.
The Beaudoin children
were identified as Fred Jr.,
12, who was to begin a
newspaper route today;
Sharon, 10; Debbie, 9; Paul,

Osbome certified as
engineer and surveyor

:; ~·d~~~~·~~::v.~~

woke him up, saying she
smelled smoke.
" It was blowing through
the ' bedroom window and at
first I thought it was our
house on fire, " Bainer said.
Referring .to firefighters,
Bainer said the blaze had too
much headway for them to do
mnch about it. "They just
couldn't do anything. There
was too much smoke."
The couple lived at the
home for 11 years and were
· well liked by neighbors. The
Beaudoin children were
described·as very popular in
the nelghbor.hood. "They .
were aU good kids," Bainer
said.
.
The father bought some of
the younger kids a small pool ·
(Continued on page 10)

Utility crews
went on alert

Drug arrest made

ana

en tine

y

------------~~---------,-----------------------------'---~------

COLUMBUS·- THE OHIO GENERAL Assembly Thur;._
day moved toward authorizing a November vote on a •'flexible
debt limit" amendment to the Ohio Constitution. The Ohio
Senate, before adjourning until 7 p.m. Monday, adopted a
conference I!OOlffilttee report 25-to-li to S&lt;:hedule a November
River Division crewmen. of
vote repealing the alate's $750,000 limit m general obligation Columbllll &amp; Southern Ohio
bonded iQdebtedness.
.
· · · Electric Co. were on standby
. The H~~ Is expected to .act on the matter as one of its alert In the utility firm's
first priontiea after convemng at 10 a-!ll. Tuesday. Tbe · garages until 6.:30 p.m.
proposed amendment would ailow the leg\s)ature to authorize·. Th rsda and ther crewmen
up to $640 million in bonds over the next two years without ma~ne/ are: su)lstations
voter approval.
"
" until 10 p.m. following a
WASHINGTON - DESPITE CERTIFICATION of his storm-related incident
defeat iii the race to be president of the United Mine Workers earlier in the day.
According to John Weeks,
Union, Lee RoY.Patter10n is readying another election appeal.
division
office manager, the
Pattenon said Thunlday he would inunediately appeal to the
company's
main generating
abor Department the results of the June 14 election won by
station was knocked out by a
incumbent Arnold Miller.
The amouncement came just after the UMW's executive bolt reduction in some areas
board, rejecting bribery allegations, affirmed Miller as the for several hours. The
winner 011 an 8Uo 55 vote. Patterson failed by aboQ16,000 votes generatitig lltl\tlon is located
to capture the presidency of the 270,IJOO.memher union, which in Conesville in southern
!a 011 the brink of contract negotiations and facing a $30 million Coshocton eounty.
Weeks said local crewmen
pension liability.
.who were on alert .would have
been ready for duty In case of
a
serious emergency,
FORM NEEDED
According
to the UP! wirr
Lee Nonnan, director of
PRACTICES SET
service,
as
thunderstorms
All Eastern High School Meigs County's Employment rolled across the state,
band members including office, advises the public that lightning struck the C&amp;SOE's ·
majorettes and Dag corps those who have lin ap- Conesville generating station
memben are reminded that plication filed in the Gatlia
near Coshocton, call$ing a
thereare rebeanala Monday, County oHice and wish to fire that brought about the
Jaly 2$, ra.day, Jaly :II and have" one in Meigs County
loss of the faclllty's
'lblll'lllay, July 28 from 7 to 9 mull stop by the 10'7 generating capacity.
p.m. at the blgb school. Tbete Sycamore St. office and fill
Bob . Jones, C&amp;SOE's
.r ebearUII are for baild camp out a form. The office ~ open
spokesman, said a blackout
lad are 911'Y .Important. All five days a w~k from 8 a.m. was averted and no
ltudenta allo are reminded to S p.m. for unemployment customers lost service
that their flqal payment is claims as well · as . em· because the company, used
ployment.
due at thiB time.
power from the rest of its

County Sheriff Jlllll!l J.
In other actions two
Pallflllt lAid todl7 that his Huntington, W.Va. men were
~ teed' a ute loclced In county , jaB for
8didt jlliole IUIIIorlty officer ldlJing a raccoon. AndJ I,yleot,
. In • iiiMIIIC a drvl arrelt Melgl Cowty State Game
'lbuilday at approzlmately Prutector charged the men
u :20 p.m. In Middleport.
with taking a wildlife out of
Au uted 011 111 order to nason. Cbarles Anderson
bold far &amp;be Adult f'llrole IIIICI 8asTy Brown will allo
Alllbuilt)t wulludy Lee, 20, have a hearing In Melp
Middleport. Arrested was County Cowt Friday.
•
YldiJ IM, lt, Middleport, on · David Holter, of Shaw I&lt;
cbarplof pam 11 lr of more Holter Co., Lancaster,
111a 10
r1 marljaalla. contractors doing bridge
' ..........h.... fur • repair wwk on &amp;be llrtdJe• on
1 J)%1wi.,JIIIflll~lllolp S&amp;tlt• Roate 7 aonll· of
tolltJ Cowt FrldaJ If· at ••·
llllwn.w-.
tluat aomettma during the
nllbt trlftlc aipQ were

•

damaged at the work site. He
said one of the traffic slgnala
at the bridge be41r Chester
had been stolen.'
~ light unit replacement
value was let by Holter at
f40Q. · He said It would take
approslmately $1$0 to
replace lena and bullos that
had been damaged.
Ray
Proffitt,
head
medlanlc of Southern Local
School Dlltrlct said a fire
atla&amp;uilber IJld flnl aid kit
wu llolen frllm • ip8re bus

atlliellll..,....,....'me
Jut maatl!. Bat1l lllddents
are under invelltf8atl011.

system and it bought power
from neighboring utilities.
Several communities
reported minor flooding and
some roads were closed for a
short time.
Meanwhile, Weeks said
during the heat wave the past
two to three weeks, con·
sumptlnn of C&amp;SOE power in
this area was at an aU-time
high.

Progress

lacking ·

.

ADVOCATES OF GOOD HEALTH COP PRIZES · Lisa Marie Frymyer, daughter of Don anil Jane Frymyer,
Middleport, and Megan cale, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Meigs
funded
•

'
Nu progress is reported In
the month old strike at the
Jones Boys Store on Pine St.
II' GaUipalis.
...1:- ~
According to Jack Brooks,
Y rea~~
president of Local 347, Food·
Store Employees Union
· Charl""'
COLUMBUS - School
.,,on, w,. . Va.,
..,.. m
ba ·-'
the union is "anxioua to get districts in Meigs and Scioto
negotiations started again counties were among 143 to
but .the company has been be granted ajlout $1.5 million
reluctant to do so."
·. to Implement the "AdapBrooks said he an!\ a union tatinn Grants Program". in
. attorney 111et with Jones Boys Ohio.
officials Thursday regarding
Fr~n!&lt;lin B. Walter, O~o
the July 5 closing of the ~upermtendent of pubhc
Pomeroy stor~ and offered to mstruet10n,.said the p~gram
start negotiations then but • allo'Ys school districts to
. the company' said it was not receove grants to pay for
prepared to negotiate.
projects
that
provide
Brooks said the federal . teache~s with instructional
mediation and conciliation ma~ero~~s f~r ?"":year
bolird 1ril1 be called in to get periods ~ufflc1ent m ~ze to
negotiations underway.
pay for mserYice traming,
The un!Oft employees went' profect curricUlum materials
on strike June :Ill after efforts and equipment neceasary to
failed to reach an agreement provide ~ruction."
on a master contra&lt;;~. The
. The ,Me~gs Local scJ!ool
store waa unionized In March. distric! s project is to lm·
The union members are prove the prerea~ing skills of
seeking 8, pay increase, first-grade students.
holidays and hospitalization
Insurance.·
The store In Pomeroy has
E-RCALLED
been c!OII!d, a sign, "For sale
The Pomeroy E·R Squad
or Jeaie•c polled on Its front was summoned Thursday at
wbidows.
7:31 p.m. to Rock St. for
.
The oampolla store con- Wayne Hubbard, 30, who was
tinues oper. ior bua\pess with · taken to ·Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted . .
supervisory help.

Kenneth CBle, Middleport, show the po'sters .that won .
them first place prizes in a "Good Health" poster contest.
Lisa won in the 6-3 year old division and Megan in the 9-12
year old.

Poster winners named

to i.nlprove

Winners of the " Good
Health" poster contest
conducted in connection with
the multi-phasic health
screening program held
through last week at the
Meigs Junior High School In
Middleport were announced
yesterday by Marly Dyer.
Placing first in the 6-3 age
group and 9-12 age group
respectively were Lisa
Frymyer, Middleport, with a
poster on dental care, and
Megan Cale, Middleport.
Megan received a prize of
five silver dollars donated by
the Farmers Bank in

earI

~·

CD .

·

.;fYQ vote was
Me..,.,u
David Fox, executive
director of the Meigs County
Agricultural
and
Stabilization Committee,
today announced results of
the recent national Beef
Referendum in Meigs
County.
Of 35 producers who
registered, 22 voted in fa110r
of the checkoff of proceeds
for. research and promotion
and three opposed it.
Pox-alated that nationwide,
50 percent of those w~o
regiltered m.ust vote or the
proposal Is automatically

,,

Pomeroy while Lisa won a Saunders, Pomeroy, won a
:lll,OOO Leagues Under the Sea Happy Days puzzle donated
game donated by Elberfelds by the Ben Franklin Store in
Store in Pomeroy.
Pomeroy:
Second place wjnners were
The contest, open to ali
Melanie VanMeter, Racine, Meigs County children 12
In the 6-3 age group, of a $3 yean of age and under, got
gift certi!icate from The off to a slow start but gained
. Fabric Shop, and Frances entries as tl\e deadline. grew
Hoffman, Middleport , nearer and · a total of 10
receiving $5 from the pOsters was rec.eived .from
Pomeroy National J.lank for young people between the
placing in the 9-12 age group. ages of six and twelve.'
Misty Whited of Middleport . All posters focused on ~he
copped third prize In the 6-3 .. omportance of good eating
year old division, a $2 cash habits, continual dental care,
award from the New York ezerci~ and physic~! fitness,
Clothing House while Lisa . and preventing public child·
. ·
hood diseases through lm·
~or
munlzation,andhavebeenon
l.l
public display in the entrance
way of the MiddlepOrt School
defeated.' Assuming more building. Winn·ers were
than 50 percent of those chosen on the basis of
registered voted, it 'Will take a. creativity and neatness in
two-thirds vote of those expression of ideas.
casting ballots· for the
measure to pass.
TWO RUNS·MADE
·
Tlie
Middleport E-R squad
According to UP! today,
the leader of a group which made two runs Thursday .
pu!hed for approval of a evening, at 9:20 p.m. for
national checkoff program to Madelyn Woodyard, 59,
raise millions of 'dollars lA&gt; Railroad St., who was taken
promote beef said Thursday to Veterans Memorial .
the meaaure fa lied because of Hospital, and at 9:21 for
apathy and misinfonnation. Tracy Pope, 13, Laurel St., ·
lt got 55 pet. and needed 66 who was taken to Holzer ·
Medical Center.
pet.

checkoffs

\\t .

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