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                  <text>11-TheO.UySentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., Tuesday,July 26,1977

Scioto district is
short of cash
COLUMBUS (UPI ) -State
. Auditor ThOOills Ferguson
reported today that Scioto
Valley Local School District
in Pike County should not
begin classroom instruction
until Oct. Zlthis year because
or a financial deficiL
A financial cash analysis
provided
the 1 Sta~
Superintendent of Publtc
Instruction by Ferguson 's
office revealed the school
district had a Sl84,036 deficit
as of June 30, 1977 and, if no
action is taken, a deficit of
$260,715 by Dec. 31, 1977.
Ferguson pointed out that
under state law no school
district can end the calEllldar
year with a deficit in any
fund . Yet, according to the
financial cash analysis, and
the last regular audit, Scioto
Valley Local School district
has ·shown year-&lt;!!ld general
fund deficits since Dec. 31,
1974.
'
" Because Scioto Valley
Local School District has
been running a deficit in its
General Fund, 1 had no
alternative but to certify that
the school distriCt would have

1o delay its opening day for

students until Oct. 21," said
Ferguson .
The fllJ8ncial cash analysis
shows that if the state
Department of Education
allows Scioto Valley schools
1o delay opening Wltil Oct. 21,
and all spending in the
district is reduced to
essentials, the district will
have eliminated its deficit by
Dec. 31, 1977, Ferguson said.
Ferguson lilso reiterated
that Scioto Valley is one of 16
~c hool districts to seek
fmancial cash analyses from
his office as a preliminary
move toward eventual
curtailment of the educatimal programs.
"The financial condition or
a sizeable number of school
districts is
serious,"
Ferguson said. "They are
faced with a 'nO"'win' situation
of rising costs and lower than
anticipated income.
"Unless school district
voters are willing to approve
operating levies, il appears
the' mly solution remaining
for the schools in Ohio is to
drastically redu ce
expenditures," he said.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admissions - Christina
Barber, Langsville; James
Meadows, Long Bottom ;
Martha Searls, Middleport ;·
RaYjDQnd Reitmire; West ·
Columbia; Melanie Grueser,
Pomeroy; Erma Bales ,
Cheshire; Edna !tunnel,
Pomeroy; Phyllis McWllan,
Racine ; Helen Smith,
Pomeroy ; Diane Milliron,
Middleport; Sonya Wtse,
Rutland.
Discharges Robert
Graham, Arnold Johnson,
Emma Douglas, Charles
Eads, Joan Sellers, Beverly
Thompson, Misty King,
George Niclnisky, Maude
Collliolly.
Holzer Medkal Center
(Dlsebarge&amp;, Jaly%5~
Elizabeth Adkins, Jeff
Anderson, Mrs. Greg Bailey
and
daughter,
Hazel
Capehart, Rachel Fox,
Lowell Halfhill, Jr., Mrs.
David Hart and daughter,
Kimberly HW, Mrs. Richard
Schwab and son, Eulah

Williams.
(Birtba, .JalyZ5)
Mr. and Mrs. John
Spaulding, a son, Vinton: Mr.
and Mrs. William Adkins, a
daughter, Albany.

Syracuse ·needs

yard sale goods
SYRACUSE - The Syrcuse
E-R unit and fire department
will hold a yard sale Friday
and Saturday, Aug. 12 and 13,
at the fire station. donations
toward the sale are n!!eded.
Those wishing to contribute
something are asked to call
any of the following nurn·
hers: 992-7181, 992-5888, 9923125, 992-2239. Proceeds will
be used to pay on the new
emergency truck.
On Aug. 13 and 14 the
department will sell barbecued chicken. These
proceeds also will be used lor
the new emergency vehicle.

for .ALL your banking needs

TV•••in Review
NEW YORK (UPil -The Dulelwlescended Afrikaner rules
South Africa. inspired by the Bible am the gun, and living In
lear that his treasured way of life wiU be overthrown by what
he sin&lt;'erely believes to be inferior people.
When Afrikaner fanner Busbie Meiring tells NBC
t-or respondent Garrick Utley, "The black man is not up to the
stamard of the white man.... He Cl!Jlnol be equal in
competition with the white man," the outside observer can't
make a dent by pointing out the way apartheid operates makes
it impossible fu- a black to succeed.
This is the picture NBC News presents July 'rl, I(). II p.m.,
Eastern time, in a special "NBC Reports : Africa's Defiant
White Tribe."
UUie that the viewer sees in the show is really new - South
Africa for some reason is a popular subject for docwnentaries.
But repetition does help pound home .the point - that the
minority white population of South African holds·a privileged
position, believes he deserves it, and intends to retain it.
What makes the repetition valuable is that Americans, with
their own trand of racial COns&lt;;ience, may practice discrimination but seldom preach it. Equality for aU remains
essential to the American dream. For the Afrikaner, the white
man is superior to the man of color, particularly.the black.
The frightening aspect of South Africa's situation is the
potential for violence. Galsha Buthelezi, chief minister of the
Zulus, the largest tribe in South Africa, spoke out at a political
affair, pointing his remarks toward a South African cabinet
minister who was presiding :
" U the present political lunacy of hard liners within your
regime triumphs, as seems to be the case, we black and white
South Africans may at this very moment by poised for a
holocaust whose dimensions have not yet been witnessed by
the world witbin living memory."
The Afrikaner way now, as presented by Utley, is to offer
tribes "homelands," which sounds better on paper than in fact
because the blacks take title to undeveloped land in coutnries
that are small, fragmented and dependent on South Africa.
That means the tribespeople still must work in South :Africa,
but as foreign laborers posing little threat to Afrikaner power.
Utley sums Jlll..!!!e show by saying :
" It is sad to'hote ·that one thing blacks and whites can agree
upon is that South Africa's race problem probably will not be
solved peaceably. Many blacks and whites have told us they
are prepared to ~fie for their cause. Many may have to."

Most Americans can't figure
income tax forms s~ey says
WASHINGTON (UP!) Three out of four American
taxpayers were so confused
by federal income tax forms
that they reliedj on someone
else to prepare their 1976
returns, a survey showed
today.
Interviews conducted by
the Roper Ot:ganization Inc.
· for a professional tax
preparation service .found
widesp!"ead suspicion about
the fairness of the tax
. system, ·an appetite for tax
reform and opposition In tax
increases.
While confused by the

Andreotti and
Carter meeting ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter meetS today
with Italian Prime Minister
Giulio Andreottion a note of
cordiality generated by the
visitor's success in stabilizing
Italy's political situation
without c ommun ist
in
the
participation
government.
U.S. officials said they
don 't expect anything
dramatic to emerge from the
two days of talks, since there
are no urgent problem1 !lOw
between the two countries.
Andreotti's visit Is seen
instead as another in a series
of calls on the new President
by leaders of the United
states' major allies.
But the officials described
the visit as timely because it
will allow the Carter
administration to express its
pleasure
at
recent
improvements in the, Italian
economy and what . the
officials described as
Andreo.tti's " remarkable
performance" in bringing
needed stability to Italian
politics.
In Rome, Italian officials
said before Andreotti 's

Action filed for judgment
A suit for money and a plea interest and costs against the
for dissolution of m,arrlage Grange Mutural Casualty
were filed in Meigs County Co., Columbus.
Common Pleas Court Mqnday.
AID SUPPLEMENTED
Filing for dissolution were
A supplemental Aid to
Sandra Honaker Rice, Long Dependent Children
Bottom, and Herbert Edward distribution for July totaUng
Rice, Ill, Novelty, Ohio. $1,817,808 was sent to 524,665
Ronald L. Miller, Jr., Racine, recipients in Ohio's 88
filed a suit seeking judgment counties, State Auditor
in the amount of S6,6;17 plus Thomas E. Ferguson ·s· office
said Friday. The increase in
ADC payments were a result
of the recent passage of
House Bill 191, which
determined the state's
general appropriations for
the biennium beginning July
I, i977. Coming to Meigs
ADA MACK
County was $2,873 for 846
Ada Roena Grover Mack, persons.
83, a former resident of Gatlia
County and Bucyrus, Ohio,
died Mooday at the Ohio
Pythlan Home In Springfield.

Area
Death.

She was born In Chesh ire

forms, the taxpayers polled
gave a low priority to
simplification.
Only one in four said
ol lax forms
simplification
.
should be a top priority of
government, while 47 per
cent labeled unemployment
the chief problem.
"A majority olthe public
(60per cent) said they have a
'not too good' or •very little'
understanding of how to fill
out the federal tax return,"
said
the
survey
commissioned by H&amp;R Block
Inc. "Even among the college

de~rtureMonday.lhatoneor

Carter's main interests was
likely to be how the ruling
Christian Democrats are
holding on against pressures
from the Communist party.
They predicted Carter
would be particularly
interested in bearing about
the political accord that
pennits the Communists to
vote with the majority on key
parliamentary issues.
Andreotti, who arrived in
Wa~ington Monday night,
had . dates 10 confer with
Carter today and Wednesday
while Foreign Minister
Arnalda Forlani talked with
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance.
Andreotti is on record
favoring Carter's open
human rights crusade. In this
· aspect, he differs from his
French
and
German
!leagues who prefer a more
quiet approach.
·
·
Other issues in the
AndreottiCarter talks include
expansion ·of cultural
exchange; economic,
financial and investment
· relations ; NATO ; the Middle
· East, and Africa.

eo

Another coal mining strike begins

Twp., graduated from the old
Cheshire High School . and
attended Ohio University and
·Marietta College.
She taughtseveral rears In
the rural schools o Gallia
County. She was charter

· Unrest blamed on cutbacks summer vacation ending July
in union medical benefits has 11, the strike swelled to 35,000
spawned another wildcat coal idle miners in Eastern
mining strike in southern Kentucky and West Virginia.
West Virginia and Eastern Since then, the walkout has
member and SO year member Kentucky and no letup is in fluctuated in terms of
and first Worthy Matron of . sight.
numbers.
the Cheshire Chapter of the
A wildcat mine strike that
The · Bituminous Coal
order of Eastern Star, past
chief and 50 year member of frrst erupted in prole~ of Operators Association, which
the Cyrus Temple of Bucyrus cutbacks in health benefits of finances the funds through
and a "'ember of the United Miner Workers mem- royillties on coal tonnage,
Woodlawn United Methodist
Church at Bucyrus . · . bers gained strength Monday refused to reallocate mmey
Surviving are a daughter, with an estimated 22,300 · to make the health fund
Miss E. Eileen Mack of rnlne.r s bOycotting work in solvent.
COlumbus and two brothers, West Virginia. An additional
Ivan A. anQ Raymond W.
10,000 miners were out in
Grover, both of Cheshire.
and
an
Funeral services will be Kentucky,
COLUMBUS (UPI) held at 10 a.m. Thursday undetennined number were
from the Schoedinger Hilltop off the job in western Uvestock auction:
Chapel, 3030 West Broad St.,
Compared with last week :
Columbus with Pastor Pennsylvania due to recent Slaughter steers firm to I
Norman Nilsen officiating. flooding. No miners were out
lower, slaughter heifers 2-3
Graveside services will be in Ohio.
.
held at I p.m. Thur-sday at
higher,
slaughter cows 1-3.50
A delegatiOn from UMW
Oakwood
Cemetery . ~t
higher, slaughter bulls 2-3
Bucyrus.
. District 30 in Eastern higher, bullock&amp; 1-3 higher,
In lieu of flowers, con - Kentucky planhed to g!l . to
tributions may be made to Washington today to confer vealers ~ lower on a light
Zion Lulheran Church , 1500 with the three trustees of tbe supply, too few feeder cattle
to establish market trend.
Broadway. Springfield.
UMW Health and Retirement Crestmlivestock auction was
Fund . about announced not reported last week.
ASK TO WED
reducUons in fund payments. &amp;!pply 50 per cent slaughter
Issued a license to wed in.
" It's the same thing, the
Meigs County Monday were benefits cuthack," said Dan stee!'Si.20 per cent slaughter
Coy Bly Starcher, Jr., 19, and Fields, an official of the West heifers, 18 per cent slaughl!lJ'y
Gilberta Jean Harper, 19, Virginia Coal Association. cows, 3 per cent slaugh~r
both of Pomeroy, and Ronald "Some ·mines have pickets, bulls 7 per cent feeder cattle.
'
Lee Hoffman, 21, Middleport, some mines don't. Many of
Slaughter steers : Choice
and Donna Colleen Taylor, 17, the miners went out on tbe
and
prilne :t-4 950-1300 38Pomeroy.
midnight shift."
40.85;
few 41-41.25; choice 2-3
Miners went back to work
950-1400
38.50-38.80; 2-3 ~
last .wr;ek, but Friday . the
walkout ballooned again, put- 900 35.50-38; good 2-3 950-1475
July 26
ting as many as 14,000 miners 33.60-36.50; high dressing "1738.75.
off the job.
Double Future
Slaughter heifers: OuJice
The wildcat strike began
Pr119ram
few
prime 2-3 lf5G.ll00 37Clint EISIWood
nearly a month ago, shortly
38.25;
string high choice 2-3
THE
after the UMW disclosed that
98&amp;-100
38-39.60; choice 1-2
ENFORCER
its. independently-nm Health
R
and Retirement Funds would · 870.000 "17.25-39.50; choice 2-3
Elliott Gould
cut · its benefits, forcing 7110-825 30.00-34; choice ~
Diane Keaton ·
miners to pay as much as SSOO 1!5G-1030 33-35.50; lot chQice
I WILL,
4's 1000 35; good and choice 2each year.
I WILJ,.
3
765-850 32.96-34.25; good 2-3
Just before miners began
R
FOR NOW
8J5.S85
33-36.
their annual two-week

In the controversy, the
BCOA has maintained that
reallocation would, in effect,.
sanction wildcat strikes
which operators say is the
real cause for the financial
plight.
Members of the UMW's
policy-making International
Executive Board called m
strikers to return to their
jobs, saying the union will
negotiate the situation with
coal owners.

Market Report

MAIL

Think Of A .Mailbox As
A ~eighborhood Branch
Savings, checking, loan pay~
ment transactions can be made
via the mails. Remember our
night depository for after banking hours. Convenient.
• Bill.flaying Loans •

~Money Orders • Christmas Clubs •
• Savillt$ Accounts • Certificate• • ·

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND ·
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVE"NINGS5To.7P.M.

MASON DR. IN

.

"THE
FRIENDLY BA.NK"

TIJ Our Delicious sm.wbeny
.
..
Shortcake, with or without
Whipped

Cream.

~ADOLPH'S
.MIDDL£PORT, OHIO .
Member Feoerat Deposn Insurance
Corporalion

DEPOSits INSURED TO $40.000

v DAIRY VAU.EY

~ESA..

'&lt;/?i~'7~

It

Ulat\ Gl

PDIDS j

~

HRS.: 10:00 A.M. Iiiii :00 P.M. Sun . Thurs. 10:00
tilll :WP.M. l'riday
wturday.
See
The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

,nc1

..'

·"':.

Slaughter cows: UUlity and
commercial M 1151&gt;-1540 2329,50; few high yielding
utility 1-2 l!ro-1500 29.1().
30.25; cutter 1-2 640-1290 26- .
25.25.
Slaughter bulla: l'a l&lt;m:11100 ~; 2'1 m-2120 29.6033.75.
BuUocu: Good 1·2 lf30.1285
34-36.25.
Vealers: Choice and prime
160-235 41.5G-44; choice 90-130
'll-40; Individual choice 200
41; good 1~260 34.-39.
Calves returned to farms:
Medium frame 6$-85 lf&gt;-21

cwt.
Feeder cattle : Few choice
llleel'll. di3WI·IDtcholce
llleera 868 •.'ll; ~bulla
435-QO 30.1Nt.50; good .4$1)-

'----------------..J·
u, ''

570 32-33; heifers choice 450-

62:i 'r/.~. 50.

LO))GE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
will meet Wednesday, July 'll
at 7:30 p.m. Work Will be in
the EA degree. All master
masons are invited.
TAKENTOVMH
The Pometoy E-R squad
went Monday at 9:34 a.m. to
Dexter for C. E. Jordon who

was _ taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
. CLOTIUNG OFFEREJ&gt; .
Free clothing day' will be
held at the Salvation Ai'my
Thursday, July 28 from 10
a.m. until noon. All area
residents in need of clothing ·
are welcome.
DANCE PLANNED
A square dance will be held
at the Senior Cltizell8 Center
on Friday, JUly 29, !rom 1:30
to 11:30 p.m. with music by
the Stringdusters. Cake
walks and round dancing will
be featured throughout the
evening. Admission is $1 per
adult. Children under 12 will
be admitted fl"ee with their
parents.

educated, almost half (47 per
cent)
report
poor
understanding of how to com·
plete .the form."
The em elusions were based
on in-penllll! interviews of
2,003 per8011S over 18 in a
survey cooducted ilt May,
1977.
The. survey showed do-ityourself tax preparation was
limited. f1 those questioned,
only 23 per cent said they
prepared their own returns,
while · 54 per cent turned ·to
outside professionals. The remainder said a friend or
spouse filled out their return.
Despite admitted confusion
about tu fonns and reliance
on others to prepare returns,
the majoclty of persons were
confident they paid the
proper amount or tu.
The average taxpayer
spent 2 hours 38 mirwtes
preparing the 1976 return
which covered the tax year
197$ and was due April 15,
1976.
.
In addition to being
confused by tax formS, the
majority of those surveyed 64 per cent -condemned the
system as unfair Iii most
people.
Tax loopholes to most
people ''mean some obscure
tax rules known only to the
most sophisticated financial
wizards, certainly not those
familiar deductions and
allowances on the tu return
fonns the average taxpayer
is familiar with," the report
said.

But augg~stions that tu
loopholes be cloeed were
resisted when the specillc
exemption.~ deduct.loo was
mentioned.
Tax reform was popil•r in
general, tbe survey found,
Wltil specifics were detailed.

Instant•••
.

.
as 1,335 persons, including 54
instant voters, defeated a 7mill additional iax levy July·
19.
There were no "instant .
voters" in the Clermont
County community of Wayne
Township whel) 179 persons
approved two tax levies July
19. There were IIve instant ·
voters aniong the 61 persons
who balloted on a lax issue in
Newtonsville Village, also in
Clermont County, ·which was
defeated by 17 votes.
The reports also showed :
- &amp;'I instant voters among
2,738 wbo' voted July 19 in
Field Local School District in
Portage County: The bond
issue was defeated.
- 71 instant voters among
2,214 persons who voted July ·
19 in the Paulding Exempted
Village School District.
Voters defeated two i.!sues.
- Eight - instant voters
among the 181 Clearcreek •
Township (Fairfield County)
r e si de n t s
w h o.•
overwhelmingly approved a ·
tax levy July 14.
•

•

Author Jobb
(Continued frclm,...

•
1)

stepped into educational_ ~b~ and worked . on •
textbook classroom materials. These included a series or films •
designed to teach reading, and a multi-media math project.My employer was tbe Amazing Life Games Company or. ·
Sausalito, Calif.
'
"Also at ALG I worked on two hooks that were not for
classrooms. I was just a contributor on th~ books -; ''did
Glory" published by Warner.· Paperback Library and . 'GOod
Cents" published by Houghton Mifflin. "Old Glory" was a do·.
it-yourself historical preservation book. "Good Cents" was
about various ways kids could make money.
·
.
''This spring I became the author ~ my own ~k, •;;-tY
Garden Companion - a Complete Gwde for Begumers. It
was part of a series of books for young readers and was
published by Scribners Sierra Club. This fall, my second bo&lt;!k
will be .published by Little, Brown or Boston. It is titled "Tbe
NigbtSky Book" andispartof 11 series called the Brown Paper
School. The book cmcerns astronomy and navigatim."
Young Jobb, the son of Mr. and Mrs. James T. Jobb,
Miami continued:
·
"My CWTent project is a booll (untitled as yet) about
community gardens in America. It will be based on our current
cross-country tour and will be published next year by WUI!am
Morrow of New York. I am photographing as well as writing
this one."
The Jobbs and their two young children will be returning
shortly to California.

Unions favored
WASHINGTON .(UPI)
prior to tbe first roUective
Labor
Secretary
Ray bargajning agreement. And
Marshall has endorsed he ·supported a requirement
. legislation to strengthen tbe that the NLRB seek
hand of unions organizing immediate reinstatement of
anti-union plants, warning the worker through feder&amp;l
existing safeguards are cOurts.
"woefully inadequate."
"The
delays
and
' 'Our proposal Is intended weaknesses of the NLRB's
to remove tbe obstac;les !bat enforcement powers bave, in
now stand in the way of effect, denied these rights to
achieving the collective thousands of American
bargaining rights already workers," Marshall said.
guaranteed In our labor
Maraball said he is "deeply
laws," MarsbaU IBid Monday . cmcemed" over unlawful fl.
before
the
House rings, which he caUed tl)e
subcommittee on labor most common .abuse in
management relations.
current labor law.
'
The proposal, which makes
' 'The drive by employes for
changes in the operations of union representation may be
the National Labor Relations crushed through illegal
Board, ill one of organized actims in the early stages of
labor's
pet
projects. an ~rganizational campaign
President Carter was elected with no real sanctions being
with substantial imposed"Marshallsald.
organizational and financial
~u·s strong ellkneassistance from IIJI\OIUI and ment of the leRlalatiCIII wu
last week IIIIIIOUIICed IIIJIIIlOrl. countered by Rep. Jolm Albfor the propoul.
brook R.Ohio who attacked
Emling rigbts to "llrganize it f~t faili;..g "to limit
were won by unions in the questionable practices by
1930s.
unions.
Calling present remedies of
"All your bcrror stories are
back pay and reinJtttement addressed against business,
"woefully inade(J!Iatll" Mar- and there are many on the
shall endcrsed double back other side," Albbrook ·said.
pay if a charge of anti-union "It does ileem to be· a onediacrlminaUon occurred traclr. approach."

HOUSIWARIS DIPT.

Com.ing_ Ware Special
Buy a 10 inch

~

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
(UPI) -A runaway tnsh
fire, believed to be ''man
&lt;!Bused," today deva.stated a
wealthy suburb overlooking
the Pacific and drove a wall
of flame a half mile wide
toward the heart of the city.
Tbe blaze destroyed 200
houses and damaged 40 more,
Mayor David Shiffman said,
Hundreds of refugees Hed
as whole neighborhoods went
up in flames, but there were
no repol'ts or serious injuries.
Shiffman told reporters the
blaze destroyed 100 homes

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and receive .a 9 inch pie plate FREE!
OR
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'

business district as a focce or
500 firefighters fought to keep

pace. Reinforcements were
·sent from as far away as Los
Angeles, 100 miles to the
::..t•ll lh .

'

Winili! were grad ua lly
shifting from the ~ast to the
south , raising hopes the
blaze, about one mile from
the oceanside downtown
area, wuuid U.. driven back
into the hills before laying
. waste the businesa district.
. "The nwnber of homes
. destroy~Us going to increase
for sure," saiil U.S. Forest

Service spoke•man Ed
Waldapfel. "The fire is a mile
long and half mile wide and
·t's •going so fast we , can't
keep up with what's
happening. ·JI's unreal."
"We're evacuating like
crazy. It's a madhouse out
there," said police Sgt. Jim
Rochester' as the fury of the
blaze surprised residents in
the!light.
A comma~d post set up by
city and JX&gt;unty fire departmerits was driven ·from its
first localion at Westmont
C',ollege by the encircling

names which scorched tbe
athletic field bef~re changing
direction.
"We have terrific down
canyon winds and the fire is
pushing deep inln the city,"
said Fire lnformatiOlJ Officer
Debbie Gold.
PQiicc said fire damage to
major power lines caused
intermittent blackouts
throughout the city . An
observer on a hiUtop said
"The entire city just .flickers
out every now and then and
remains dark I or a few
seconds or a .minute before

the lights return."
A Southern California
Edison spokesman confirmed
some power losses due to
burned circuits, but said
there appeared to be no
' danger of a general blackout
an d hospitals were well
equipped with emergency
generat~rs .

The Fire Department said
the blaze was first reporled at
7:42 p.m., burning down out
of the brush covered hills,
·
whippedbythe
"sWldowner," a hot wind

from the northeast gusting to

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 27, 1977

45 miles an hour.
The blaze was burning in
many directions, but the
southern flank turned west ,
pushed by the winds IDto the •
sycamore canyon area of
(Continued on 1111e 121

Weather
Clear tonight, lows near 60.
Partly sunny, breezy and
warmer Thursday, highS to
85 .
Probability
of
precipitation neanero today,
10 per cent tonight, 80' per
cent Thursday.
·

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 72

·Ratph BreWer's .death
r

hot under probe
The deatb by palbot of a make tbat he had seen Victim to VeteranS Memorial
57-yeat'-Oid Portland .lli,8JI l,s eaJiler;·After his luiving been · Hospital, Brewer c;lied there a
under 19'Mtlptlon todll)' by .gone (or lOUie time, Mrs. lllort time later.
the Mllp
Sberltf's Brewer wmt to find him for
Deputies said that Mr;
cleparQblnL
lUnd! but was . not able to Brewer was found lying on
Shetlft IPIII J." Proftltt locllte blm.
the ground at the edge of a
said that at 1:5• p.m.
Altbattlmeabe notified the wooded area behind his home
Tueldlly dlllpatles uriv~ at lllerllf's office along with her and bad suffered • a head
the Ral&amp;lh Brewer · m~dellce brother-In-law, Arthur Allen, · wound. He had in his
near StttetfiWe after belag of Newark,
"l!'ho
is poaw"oo at the time his
advised b)' Mrs. Ba ewa; that vacatiolllng in Meigs County. body wa.s discovered, a .22
her huhand 111'11 mtatnc.
B1'6111'er WM foand by Allen caliber revolver.
Mrs. Brewer told deputies lbortly before deputies
The body is at Ewing
her bubllnd •ld. he wu arrived and the Racine Funeral Home In Pomeroy.
going illto the woeded area l!lmergency Squad , was
In other action Tuesday
near their bollle to sl)oot a SUmmoned to transport the afternoon the Sheriff's

COuntr

, 1

department . investigated a
train deraliment on Conran
tracks near County Road 10
about three mUes north of SR
143.
Several loaded coal cars
jumped the tracks and one of
the cars tore up a section of
the county road, resulting in
it being closed temporarily.
The Meigs County Highway
Department was called in to
repair the damage. There
were no injuries.
··
Two Tuppers Plains JunvenUes have been charged in
the Meigs County Juvenile

College services '"c(~::::~inof
.
ounty
" o ffered Pomeroy 19 studY
•
. '

Services -of Rio ·· Grande
Colleg~ and .Rio Grande
Community College were
offered to Pomeroy at a
regular meeting of the
pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn,
Bemie Murphy, coordinator of Continuing
Education told chamber
mernben that be is eager to
team what the public wants
in their respective communitles and how the college
can help.
"Let us know wh!lt· Rio
Grande Commlllllty, College
can do for you," Murphy said.
The enrollment at Rio
Grande last. year was 1,0112
and next year enrollment Is
expected to reach 1,100.
In the past people have
participated in (adult)
continuing edueatlon claaes
such as "parent effectiveness
training," household ancl
family · mana gem~. chalr
caning
and
furniture
·reflnlsbtng. Classes like these
were taught in Jackson,
-- ·-

-

r- -

McArthur, Middleport and
Gallipolis.
The school · is planning
similar classes next fall, and
the school would like to know
what classes people might
take if offered locally.
The college would appreclate knowing what people
are interested in.
Fred Crow, president of the
chamb!!r, suggested that an
expert be available to assist
villages in applying for
federal grant money. Murphy
thou8ht the suggestion a good
one .
ln other businesS Crow told
chamber members that he
had written to Cong. Clarence
Miller in regard to Pomeroy
on weekenda having an ex·
curslon train. Crow also
reported that James Pag~ of
Fleming, Page and Stolte'wfll
be at the next meeting of the
chamber to explain lhe
naming. of roads in the
county. .
. Crow also stated to
chamber plans to paint the

·--

~~~~~~~
. . . .~·
.
- ..

,?C",..'O,."

ews. • . i.,; Brief~
: ' oe; . .

IIJUidted~lilla'au-1

ouour

'

NEW YOJIX- ARCHBI8HOP FULTON J. SHEEN, the
wllt1 leimlloa jkweher w!MM ''Life Ia Wortb Living" seriea
lntD rnl11!cn of American bomee in the 181501,
.... wart open bear! 11111181')' earner this nmth: Dr. Michael
Brw1o, 1be lilllrecl Cltbollc prelate's pa~•l pbysiclan, IBid
TlleldiQ' sa-t•smeration WM perfonned July 15 at .Lenox
Hill Hqapital as a ·r'1Mtter of UJ'IeDt net lty."
·
BraDo l&amp;ld SbetiiW.. "daUII well," but was ''rult out of
diPIF ."
·
.

- *med

notice

former waterworks building
located on Pomeroy's East . · ·
Main Street. Crow added that
The Meigs County Comthe Board of Public Affatrs missioners in a regular
has offered to purchase the .aesalon Tuesday night met
paint, and Mayor Clarence with County Engineer Wesley
Andrews
has
offered Buehl to hear a letter read
volunteer labor, wire from
the
American
brushes, and his ·personal FederaUon of State, County,
services. Crow also volun- and Municipal Employees
leered as did Phil Kelley, Ted Dl!trlct Council 78 advising
Reed, Walter Grueser and that a majority of the highLarry Powell. ·
way department's employees
Kelley is also working on have voted to authorize
signs, a take off on the Burma AFSCME
· as
theit
Shave Idea, in regard to representative in aU matters
relailng to their conditions of
·littering.
Crow announced that a lmployrnent.
.
"gong show" will be
Bllehl was instructed to
presented sometime this fall. c11acuss the matter with the
The chamber is looking for county prosecutor.
talent.
Also meeting with the
Crow, noting that the commission was Ronald
Pomeroy Golf Course is Whittington, trustee of
under new management, Columbia Township, wlio
suggested a chamber tour- di.lcussed a road fenced off in
nament to help the new DyesviJie by some residents
owners get established. He there.
He was told 10 have the
suggested th.llt members,
even though they hilven't : prolecuting attqrneY.. attend
playedinyearsorhavenever the next regular meeting of
played, to participate.
the Trustees which Mrs.
Statements for l)lem- Ronald Estep is to attend.
bersblp dues for .1977-78 are
In other business Jeff Burt
now being mailed Barbara of the Buckeye Hills, Hocking
Chapman, secretary Valley Regional Developreported.
ment District presented a
Attending were Crow, copy
of
"Practices,
Kelley, Mrs . . Chapman, Programs, and Policies of
Mayor Andrews, John An- Land Use in Rural
derson, Dale Warner, But Southeastern Ohio" for
Quickie, N. W. Compton, review by the general public.
John Koebel, Dan Jindra,
Mrs. Nora Rice, Mid·
Stanley Houdashelt, Jack dleport, was appointed by the
Carsey, Vi~g!l Teaford, Leo cornmlaslon to the . Mental
Vaughan, Jim Freck.er, But Retardation 169 Board for the
Grueser, Roger Davis arid term ending Dec. 31, 1981. AU
Joe Young.
members were pres;ent.
~
'·

STREET IMPROVEMENTS - Visible around
Middleport this week are road improvement machines
owned and operated by the Shelley Corporation. This
roller came along after a resurfacer in the alley between
Race and, Coal Sis. Tuesday afternoon as other crews
were resurfacing · parts of Ash, Hamilton, Main. and

Beallo n]med two otblr . . - . "Tbe Life of
and "QaD V8dll, Alllllil'lca" wblcb aired Ill lbe 11i101. For 25
a11o WMIIJIICIII1lll0i with lbe Citholk: Hom: nidlll
An estbna 30,000rniners
biMdiiP.
1
.
"in the Appalachia coalfie!ds
...._,__ u--1 ··... , , . __ _, _ and
still idled by rovmg
.Be aatt.ed eo - · -.one· '"'""""'-"
were
•
01•1* lei ,. of tbe Welt" In 1MB, "'lbrw ta Get Married" In pickets today . a~ Umted
llll,'"l'bei'OWwoflme''lnliNMand"TbeQuolableFultonJ. MlneW11fkers6ffiC18lsfaced
R rn" In 111'1.
CllfaMNATI-TBEAMERJCANFINANCIALCoribl!s,
All .._ Melp ..._.
bJ • Jtl _... rtrlbe -.d q11111er and ftrat Ulf of wen diWa WI morwtq
1
hi •
Ill ...._
""" ...-.. for lbale c111 .. ......,.....,:;. at eeell
Jlr7 . . . lbeprrt
- '" i•'V • -~
.--· ....,
-rlall
liiiUI.
Clrt a. Un+•, dlllrmlll of lbe board and pr8lldent of
"1 dt) or w11en IIIey
--•.... mOII.cm Ill tbe wen rr.n W ..t 11eett
/#C, ... Tir drr • - - . : ; : - . 01011
· lbl of 11'1'1 • • 1
,1&amp;
f . . . . tiU mO!!!II In tbe
' wu r-oted. - c
............... llld • .amiJI!onfGrlbellllllperiocl
......
lllll ;... ' '*IPPII'Iillln . . . tl.llln 11111 ar.t Dlllltha
oflllll,-,apl•PII'-tfllllll 11'11.
::~=:,~';:'C:
' TAIPII TAIWAN .,. TIIOUSANDI or SOLDIERS, in UMW medlcal benefits.
alii 5 . . . , , . . . • sHII Ia TllwP ~ Local preliftllta and mine
.... • - ......_ .. ' oa wllllliadllaf.._ Wlndl callled -mmltt.ee membera of
I ••-e.
w
(Ca $' ; Jt 18 Pill" 11)
District 17, th4!i UMW'i

,_..be

•w.--.. .

.==. .

*

~

largest district, in southern
West
Virginia,
voted
overwhebningly Tuesday to
continue the walkout and
~~lngt;.. march on
· officia1s reporte dl y
The
planned to ask surrounding
regions to Join or support
them In both tbe strike and
the march.
- "All the men from the
committees voted just to stay
out,"oneminer·said,"We're
!!Oint! ta have a big rally
march on Washington _
( UMW President) Arnold
Mlller, the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association, the
worts. The date is not set.
We'D know whm It is by
Frida"."
· '
·
l

Williams St.; N. 4th Ave., Bryan Place, the old cemetery
road and entrance, the alley between Main and Mill Sts.
and several other intersections in town. The $17,000
project was to he completed today. This work is in the
alley between Coal and Race Sts. after the resurfacer
nas &lt;lone its job.·

ATRJGHT-'These meo,
employed· by tbe Shelley
Corporation mast have
bl-ed tbe cooler . temperatures Tuesday as they
worked on the im·
provement of atreeta,
alltiya and lnteneetlona
througboat Middleport.
The project, beg1111 Monday, was to be completed
today. The men are
flnlsblng worll; on the Coal
St. entrance to the aftey between Coal aad Race Sts•.

;l;m~m;m:~;i~~;;;~~~;~;~~~t~;;;~;~1i~mt~j;i~~~r~~1~1~i~;~~j.

Boy reSCUed by

ER. from pon
· ··d
E R Sq d
TIJe Pomeroy •
ua
. Tuesday at 2;40 p.m. rescued
unharmed Steve Musser,
Pomeroy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John M~ser who had fallen
over a cliff into a pond near
the Catholic Cemetery.
~e ·squad was called at
11.23 p.m. for Pennie Smith,
, 19, Welshtown Hut, who bad
fallen. She w~ taken. to
Veterans MemoriBI Hosp1t:'l.
At 2:05 a.m.. today Allee
Amolc!, Rose Hill, was ta~en
to _Veterans Memorial
· Hosp1tal.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday thrOugh Sunday,

·a chanee of shawers Friday
and Sun.day aad fair
Saturday, HIKIU wm be In
·tbe upper '701 or the mid.80s
and 'lows wm range from
tbe upper 50s to tile mid
80s.

.-u:~~-~·r:.::..:.=b=~=::~~r!
g. pt·ckets ··die mines
u,_._
CI..Jst" Ro·~-.

4

".

outside the city limits, and
destroyed 100 and damaged
40 in the city. He appealed to
Gov. Edmum G. Brown Jr.,
10 declare the city a disaster
area and send emergency fire
and police reinforcements.
&amp; gusty winds whipped
cinders and ash through the
area, hundreds or residents
Hed, loading cars with
furniture and valuables .
Some, still in their
underwear, were ·-'- seen
galloping away on hQrses
from their private stables.
The fire flamed toward the

I .
The · Coal Assoc a lion
reported that at least 20,000
West Virginia miners were
out Tuesday, with most strike
activity centered in the
remote and mountainous
southern counti
· es or Mingo,
Logan and McDowell . .
As pickets appeared dW'ing
shift changes Tuesday and
turned miners away as they
· k 10000
reported for wor ,
,
miners were reported out in
Kentucky and 2,100 more
were idled In western
Pennsylvania in mine
closings related . to the
J&lt;&gt;hnstown flOOd.,
West Virginia's total
· Tuesday was about 2,000 less
than it had been 24 hours
(CoaUnlltd on Jill' 12)

Commission reverses
decision on land gift
No action was taken on a··
In other commission
request
by · Mike Swisher,
developments, District
Gallla
County Disaster
Engineer Glenn Smith, high·
way design engineer Howard Services Director, for an
Gifford,_ and ~ C-'...... Roger emergency o~.e!"!ltiolls
.
Barron, Ji:mrtly Allen, Frank center.
Approval was given for a
Mills and Frank Blair met
with : the commission · to grant application for the
review a proposed change in. Crime Alert Prevention
SR 160 and its interchange program and "$8,000 was
with US 35 for the four lane appropriated in supplies and
highway proj~. :!'he high- repair services for the Gallia
way committee officials County Sheriff's Department.
In final action, Joe Allen ·
agreed they could".not ~oresee
was
authorized to attend a
any hanllful effects with the
Water Conference Sept.
Clear
proposal. Barron, Mills, and
7
in
Columbus
and the Aug. 2
Aflen were.appointed several
months ago along with Clyde meeting dllte was changed to
Ramsay and Morris Haskins Monday, Aug. 1.
to represent the eonunlssion
on highway matters.
AIDMElll CALLED
A motion was approved to
The Middleport E·R squad
cooperate with the State was called to the office of Dr.
Department of · Trans- Davis Tuesday at 9 : ~3 a.m.
portation closing Cherrington for Thomas Epperly, who l"!ad
Rd. in Raccoon Twp. when a baclt injury. The squad
the project begins. A motion . transported him to Holzer
was adopted directing County Medical Center. At I: 18 a.m.
timethatnolocaltaxreven•~e Engineer · James .Baird to today the squad' took Jerry
will be involved in the initial resurface 2.6 mUes of Cargo Ward to Veterans Metnorlal
operations.
. · Rd. in Clay Twp.
Hospital.
·
.
·~
~
(;,

In s surpr~ move, GaUls
County ·commissioners
Tuesday rescinded a motion
made at their July 19 meeting
that deeded 2'f.! acres of land
. to the ·Gallla-Meigs.Jackson
Mental Health Board for a·
spacious ranch-type home for
mentally disturbed children.
Commission President
John Belville vacated the
chair to make the motion to
rescind. The other commissioners, Jim Saunders
and Paul Dean Niday were in
agreement. No reason for the
di!clsion was written in the
minutes. .
Last week, Malcolm
Orebaugh, administrator for
the comrnuntty mental health
center, said the horne would
be a residential treatment
facility for children funded
through state. monies
allocated when the Nelsonville Children·s Center
closed. He emphasized at that

(;.

�~·

3-The Dally Sen line!, Midd{eJ&gt;Qrt·Pomeroy, 0., Wl!dm'Sday, July '!1, 1m

advocates'

LaRI(Uill(e h11s few speakers, fewer

"

Esperantists pursue global dream

"Call headquarters. The neutrons didn't stop them but the saccharin did."

ODT will open
bids Aag. 16
COLUMBUS - Bids on a Program funds under
GaUia County, "spot safety" provisions of the 1973
improvement project to Federal-Aid Highway Act.
Plans call for constructing
eliminate the hazardous,
slanted Little Kyger Rd. (CR a new, right-angle, Little
20 ) junction with Ohio7, south Kyger Rd. connection to Ohio
of &lt;l!eshire in Addison Twp., 7, appromnately 250 feet
will he opened here, Aug. 16, north of the existing Slanted
by the Obio Department of junctloo.
Project also includes
TransPQrtation.
Programmed estimate for signing, pavement marking
construction engineering and and shoulder delineators.
Traffic will be maintained
construction costs is $54,000.
construction
Project is 90 percent during
Estimated
completion
date is
federally • funded with High
Hazard Location Elimination Oct. 31.

BIG SPENDERS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
firm's chief Columbus area
Preliminary financial reports representative, Joseph "
indicate
that
utility Jester, spent $2,827. The
companies spend more Dayton Power &amp; Light Co.'s
mmey trying to influence James M. stuart Jr. parted
state legislators than any with $3,444.
other lobbying group in Ohio.
William H. O'Neill of the
According to reports filed Cleveland Electric
with Ohto Senate Clerk ffiuminating Co. spent $2,462
William &lt;l!avanna, Columbia oo lobbying efforts, Daniel P.
Gas of Ohio, Inc., lobbyists Zeno of the Ohio Edison Co.
Anthmy A. castellucci and $591, Thomas J. Kuczynski of
Thomas C. Green laid out the East Ohio Gas Co. $2954
$1,653 during the first half of and Frederick Huntsman of
this year.
the United Telephone Co. of
Seven Ohio BeU Telephone Ohio $1,163.
Co. lobbyists, including the

HULTH
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Blood sugar confusion
By Lawrence E. Lamb; M.D.

formation can send 50 cents
Wl!h a long, stamped self·
addressed envelope for it to
P.O. Box 1551, Radio Uty Sta·
lion, New York, N.Y. 10019.
This issue will also' give you
more detailed information ori
a proper diet lor those who
really need a diet for that pur·
pose.
Headaches can be caused
by a list of things as long as
your ann. I would not think it
was caused by hypoglycemia
unless there were some other
symptoms of hYPQgiycernia
at the time of low blood s~ar
levels. And I would '1{81\1 a
level below 50.
And I doo't agree With
eliminating ali your car·
bohydrates or m06t of them.
You might do better to
eliminate
concentrated
sweets and I'm sure that is
what your doctor meant. Car·
bohydrates include all your
cereal group of basic foods,
your fruits and vegetables.
These are all important.
sources of vitamins and
minerals in your diet. Milk
also is a major source of carbohydrate. You should be
able to eat all the leafy salad
vegetables and could eat raw
fruits and vegetables. Eating
a 333-gram raw apple which
contains 50 grlllllll of glucose
will not alter the blood
glucose level. Why? Because
it is absorbed slowly. I think
at a minimum you should try
·to get 100 grams of carbohydrates a day.
It is true that some people
eat too many carbohydrates
for breakfast. Switching the
evening meal to morning and
vice versa may belp. You
should avoid coffee, alcohol
and cigarettes. You may need
to taper off on coffee if you
usa a lot or you may bave
withdrawal headaches.
Becauae of the volume of
mail Dr. Lamb cannot
IIIISwer your letters personally but he will . answer
repreeentative letters of
general interest In his l'Ul-

DEAR DI!. LAMB - My
doctor has suggested that I
limit desSI'rts and carbohydrates and have some
protein mid-morning and
mid-afternoon. A blood s_ugar
test two hours after breakfast
was 60, normal being 60 to
' 110.
How many grap15 of carbohydrates per day should I
have to consider that a lowcarbohydrate diet • Also, how
much protein should l have
per day?
Is there any way to detect
the difference between a
headache caused by
hypoglycemia and all the
other reasons for having a
headache?
DEAR READER - Let me
point out at once that the
definition of the normal range
for blood glucose IS wrong.
A large number of normal
people have values below 60.
In an excellent article in the
New England Journal of
Medicine (Volume 291, page
905, 1974), doctors found 23
per cent or a normal popula·
lion had values below 50.
Many healthy people with no
symptoms had vallle5 as low
as i!S. A similar result was
found by Fttzsimons Army
Medical Center (Journal of
American · Medical Assoc.
September 22, 1975). This is
important because too many
people get a diagnosiS of
hypoglycemia because a low
blood glucose level is found
Qll • blood test.
The only way a diagn06is.of
hypoglycemia ' low blood
sugar) can be justifted is by
observing both the low blood
sugar level and the SYffil&gt;"
toms occurring together. The
symplools · attributed to low
blood sugar can be e&amp;used by
many things and the low
blood levels can oc~'lll' in
perfedly normal people. For
l1ll)tt informatioo I am sending you The Health Letter
number 3-8, Low Blood
Sugar: Hypoglycemia.
who ~ . this Ill- umn.

0t1tef

SHOWBEAT
Dick Kleiner

Exploring a
century-old coverup
HOLLYWOOD - (NEA) There is a climate of suspi·
cion abroad in the land. People, or many of them, keep
looking for conspiracies, keep
trying to find out who else
was involved in the
assassinations of the Kennedy Brothers, of Martin
Luther King- and, as it turns
out, e\·en of Abraham Lincoln.
There is a movie coming
out called "The Lincoln Conspiracy, " which pui'JJ!!rts_)o
shed new and startlingugbt
on the murder of President
Lincoln. That tragic event occurred, as you all know, more
than a i:entury ago. How,
then, can there be new
evidence, after all these
years?
David W. Balsiger was the
prime mover in the research
for the upcoming Sunn
Classic fibn. His research.
credentials are only
moderately impressive - be
was an investigative reporter
011 a suburl;lan Los Angeles
newspaper and he researched
and wrote nine books, m·
eluding a couple· on the
possibility that Noah's Ark
exists.
Still, Balsiger seems to
have approached the subject
from an intelligent premise.
He reasoned that most
histor18ns base their work on
what previous historians
have written.
" My premise, based on
what we aU learned from

Watergate," he says, "was

111EDAILYSENTINEL

OEVOI'EDTOTIIE

INTEIIJ!ITOF

Ch~~":"'IU.
Exe&lt;. Ed.

JW~ :.::;uca
Publiilled daily ..'""'Saturday

eum~{119n~~ hi,~rl:~ C::
by The Ohio Voller Publlahillg
8

%ll6.Edllonoll'lloneWl-lll7.

~

C:::::

...,~age pold • 1
Nau.nit adY.nll•ng ,.,......,.
'"""' W~·· · Griffilll ~Y.

Inc., BotUnelli •nd Gol- [l;v.,
7$1 Thil'd Ave., New Y'orll. N Y.
1 ~,;,.. · ·
.
by

o."""""

coiT~er~i::'.=ble~,...
...... sr MuWr R'"'te whelt coiTlft'

_.,~, ""' ··~•I•""'· One ....,u.,
13.25. By mt~il U1 Ollio and W. Va.,
One y.,.,, 12200: s;, ....111 ~. Tl"••
Eb&lt;..t~"

monlhs. 17.00;
Pt.
.,..,.,
s;, montt~
Three '"~•nth". t7 .5tl.

•u~.;,t'"" pnce
$0;

u1mel

in&lt;"'*' 8.,,...,

'

Meigs

Congress will soon vote oo the "instant-voter registration"
bill. In an attempt to increase voter participatioo in our
elections, the President wants an elechon reform (I&lt;ICkage that
would eventually require all fifty states to set up registration
and voting oo the same day.
On the surface, this legislation bas the appearance of being
a very useful reform. Everyone is for curbing voter apathy and
Ernest E. Quillen to Kennit getting a higher turn-out on election day. Our form of governmP.nt can ooerate onlv if citizens willinclv oarticinate
A. McElroy • Ruth H.
However, the "instant regtstration" coocel?t is based on
McElroy, Lola 10 and 11 . the mistaken idea that our present voter Jaws create
Bridgeman's Add., Syracuse. unreasonable barriers to voter participation. Hather than
'Larry V. Parsons, Sonia E. attacking the main cause of voter apathy, its supporters are
Parsons to Danny W· treating its symptoms with medicine having side effects far
Robinson, Rebecca Sue worse than the disease itself.
Robinson, Parcels, Rutland.
If there is a low voter turnout, it is not because registration
Sarah Sue Fisher, formerly procedures are too complicated; rather, it is that many
Sarah Sue White, John Fish~r citizens 1~1 alienated from the PQiitic!ll process. Existing
Jr. to Larry L. Baker, Phyllis evidence simply does not indicate that pr...-egistration
L. Baker: Harold Stzemore, requirements keep people from voting.
.J~ I.,. S!Z_"!!l.Qre, 9.7~ J!!:I'M~- There are several serious problems with Federally
Chester.
.
.
mandated election-day registration.
Jerry W. ~rtd,enstme,
1. "Instant registration" will invite more fraod at the
Theresa M.. Fndenstme to polls. Under this system, voter fraud could not be prevented,
Northern Ltght L. S. C. only detected after it was too late to take effective actioo.
C.hurch, ~arcels, Pomeroy· Ballots would he counted and tbe election over belere proper
West Ohio Annual Conf. of investigation could even begin.
Umted Meth. &lt;l!urch to A. H.
The functioo of pre-registration is to give local officials time
Burbndge, Lot, Sclpto.
to verify the records for possible error. By e&lt;mparing the
Fred
S.
Blaettnar, s~tures at the votu.t booth with those used al p:-eMargaret E. Blaettnar to registration, PQlential vote stealing is greally minimized.
Fred S. Biaettnar, Margaret
2.1n addition, it will he very difficult to check instantly'on
E. Bi11ettnar, . Lot, Pomeroy. the validity of the voter when be registers al the poll. False
Uoyd J. Sp1res, Bea~JC L. ID's-anything from a birthcert;[icate to a driver's licenseSpll'es to Randall Q. Gtbbs, are easy to obtain.
- Shirl~y F. Gtbbs, ' Lot . I,
A recent example of thJ.s fact is the famous Chicago
Crows Steakbouse Sub Dtv., "Welfare ~een" who cheated · the government out d
€hester.
.
thousands of dollars by using 250 ~ names, 31 different
Joseph W. Nelson to addresses, 3 separate soctal security llllDbers, and ''records"
Kathryn Inez Nelson, 17 of a deceased hl.shands and the New Jersey engineer who
acres, Columbia.
created :m phony ID's ;.hich be uaed to obtain 1,000 credit
James J. Proffitt, Shff., cards and $660,000 in false loans.
George McCave to Frances
3. Election-day registratim could encourage Jut milatte
Adams, Charles Wesley political smear campaigns to 'stampede emotionally
Adams, 20 acres, . Lebenoo. motivated, yet unregistered, voters .to the polls. Tlis could
James J. Proffitt, Shff., cause miiJiOOll of previoualy unregistered voters !~CrOll the
Arizona Hettesimer, dec. to nation to cast their baUota on the buill of insQfficienl and
I · William Dennis Grimm, 411 distorted Information.
acres, Rutland.
4. Tradlliwaliy and constitutionally, voter. laws and
Lavern W. Jordan, Mary K. election supervision bave been under lite juri8dictlon d the
Jordan to F. Dorsey Jordan, states. 1bis iegi&amp;atioo further erodes our fedes'al concept d
Parcels, Columbia.
government and il another step tonrd IIIOft Wuhiagtlta
do · ti ol
U
IDID8 on 011' vea.
:
Tbe f
G af
5.
Same
day
registnltim
could
create
IIWillive CGJfutdon
amous r Zeppe1in and delays at the polls. This in itself coulddillcourage even the
became the only ainhlp to fly , moat highly motivated voter fnm gllinj[ to cast '*ballot.
aroand the world when it
Voting Ia not m1y 8 privilege, bul alon 8 ....... , _ who
ct'rc(ed the __ _.~· m· !""" m· 21
~ -T·
~w•
"""•
trulycareaboutoursyllemofgovl!ltttoentwlll tllkethetlme
days, I boura. An airlhip ill a tor...,laler ahead of time inform thtmlelfea of 1be facta and
lighter-than-air craft with
~ •-mft
'
'
d
vote m~entl)r.
1
1
propu s on an
steering
What we ._r Is informed, thoagblful pertlclpatiOn Ia
systems.
electioos not lim(!l)' IIIOI'e voles.

that maybe what the government said originally back m
18d9 wasn't true. Maybe there
was a cover-up then, and all
the historians from then on
have been repeating the same
cover-up story."
So he went· to riginal
sources, or as original as you
can get 100 years later. He
started with a genealogical
seal'\!h, finding descendants
ol people mvoived, going
through · thetr attics and
documents. He went to collectors of Americana. He foUnd
some documents in the files
of the Secret Service - it was
called National Detective
Police in Lincoln's li!'.t::.~!
were still in
He had
them deciphered.
And he has come up with
five PQints he says he can
document, and which are genuinely startling:
1. There were four groups
interested in eliminating Lincoln. John Wilkes Booth
belonged to all four.
2. Secretary of War Edwin
M. Stantoo actively "assisted
the coup a)ong."
3. Tbe cover·up was "or·
chestrated in Stanton's_ office."

coae:

4. Some vttal ev1dence was
suppressed, notably 18 pages
of Booth's diary.
5. "The most shocking", according to Balsiger - the
government shot the wrong
man. A Booth lookaiike was
killed while Booth himself
was never apprehended. " We
think he lived 40 years
more."
Balsiger worked on the project 13 months, then wrote a
treatment on which the
screenplay of the movte is
based. He ~ now wnting a
book based on his findings,
and the book, too, will be call' ed ''The Lincoln Conspir·
acy.''
, He believes that Booth was
the trigger man, although his
original intention, and the
origmal intention d the consptracy, was sunply to kidnap
the prestdent. But it is !he
size of the conspiracy, and
the ensuing cover-up, that
Balsiger believes is the crux
&lt;If his research.
He is now planning to ask
for a Congressional investigation, based on his research.
But he is not planning to do
any diggmg mto any of the
more recent controversial
assassmations.
" I thought about digging ifr.
to the Kennedy cases now,"
• he says. "But I seriously
doubt that I will - I think I'd
rather stay alive."

By Tum Tiede
WASHINGTON - I NEAl - The trouble began when man
tried tu btUid a tower to Heaven. Acrording to GenesiS ll. the
Lord cTUShed this enlerpnse by dividing tbe tongues so the
engineers tQuld not understand ooe another ... And therefore
the name thereof was c-alled Babel. because the language of
!he whole earth wast'Oilfounded."
The curse has t'Oiltmued through lhe ages, and the
pandemoniwn of tarli,'Uages has complicated the human ex·
peneuce as no other invenlioo. Before Babel, ~oesis says,
"the earth was of one speech; " now there are 2,700 major and
unrelated vernaculars, and considerably mere than a stairway
to the stars hils been baffled by God's wrath.
This mooth several dozen North Americans are conve~ in
Washington for an annual lamentation of the dilemma of
tongues. They are champions of and lobbytsts for the mterna·
tiona! language of Esperanto. Their belief IS that poor com·
munications foster hostilities, and their goal is to return in part
to the days before Babel.
Esperantists advocate their speech as a secoodlanguage lor
the world, one that would supplement but not supplant existing
ethnic tongues. At present several ethnic languages are used
for this purpose, none satisfactorily; Russia IS loathe to use
French, and visa-versa. Thus Esoeranto is conceived as a nonaligned alternative.
The idea of international speech is not new. Some 700 common languages have been proposed for the world community.
Even Jesus, in a bit of a rap against the.Oi Testament, left instructions lor his survtving disciples to spread the word of
&lt;l!ristianity through use of an W!Specified tongue "that every
man hears in his own language.''
Yet though the dream of univerSal speech is ancient, only
Esperanto has survived with possibilities. Slim PQSSibilities,
as it happens. At most, Esperantists say no more than ooe
million people speak the language; thiS is roughly the same
nwnber who speak Welsh or less than one ouarter of ooe per
cent of the 4 billion citizens of earth.
Not that Esperanto hasn't had time to attract more
adherents. The language was formed 90 years ago by L.L.
Zamenhol, a Polish physictan and son of a university level
philologist. Struck by the confusion of eltisting iongues,
Zamenhof invented Esperanto (meaning "one who hopes") by
blending the grammar and roots of six major languages.
The idea was : simplicity. Zamenhof's Esperanto was ouUitted with a scant 16 grammatical rules and fewer than 1,000root
words. Even so, the language is said to be able to handle the
most complex tenninoiogy. Best of all, perhaps, IS that afi·
ciandos msist Esperanto is 5 to len times easier to learn than
any ethnic tongue.
Zamenhof's creation has always enjoyed wide currency
amoog mtellectuals. Last century the French Academy of
Sctences called Esperanto "a masterpiece of logic and
sunplictly," No such favors have accompanied the short lives
of other tnlernationat languages; even the workable speech of
' ·Intertlngua" expired for want of support.
Still, in 90 years, Esperanto has hardly swept over the globe.
Brazil once seriously considered its formal use, and today the
&lt;l!inese publish a magazine m the language; otherwise the
speech IS obscure. Catherine Schulze, fonner vice president of
the Esperanto League of North America, says the patd up U.S.
membership IS only 800,
Some other nations do better by the language. Europe, with
its polyglot problems, is the capital of Esperanto (the world
headquarters is in Rotterdam). Aiso, a comparatively large
number of Japanese subscribe to the speech. But the hard
facts remain discouraging : as Esperanto bas grown older its
popularity has diminished.
One reason for the shrinkage dates Ill before World War I.
Esperanto was at a peak then, and was even spreading in
Amenca. But when Germany began printing propaganda in
Esperanto, suspicion was the result. Periodicals of the time
angrily denounced Es(ieranto as a tool of the Kaiser, and
though the speech did not die it was badly wounded.
In the years stnce, Esperanto haS suffered from other

Property
Transfers

'•

'

'

GE ' ESIT I: 1-3
1. In the beginning God created the heaven
and the earth.
2. And the earth was without form, and
void; and darkness was upon the face of the
deep. And the spirit of God moved upon the
race or the waters.
3. And God said. Let there be light: and
·
there was light ...
ESPERANTO
1. En el principio creo Dios los cielos y J.•
tierra
2. Y Ia tierra establa desordenada y vacia ,
y las tinieblas estaban sobre Ia haz del
abismo. Y el Espirtu de Dios se movia sobre Ja
haz de las aguas.
3. Y dijo Dios, Se Ia luz ; y fue Ia Juz .. .

PQlitical whispers. Capltalists believe it is a Corrununist plot
(because Joseph Stalin onae studied it); on the other hand,
~unists believe it's a capitalist plot (because it would
foster internationalism). Also, L.L. Zamenhol was a Jew, thus
Esperanto bas somehow been linked with Zionism.
Besides this, Esperantists had to bu9t the force of nationalism. Esperantists insist they are not latter-day colonialists Wishing to impose
c imperialism on the
world, but nations continue to flU' t if everyone knows a second language there would be no
for a first; therefore
traditional tongues would be in jeopardy.
So it is that the obstacles have been fonnidable Despite
them, North American Esperantists are meeting this month
with at least a few things going for the cause. Statistics, for example : Esperanto is SPQken in more than 80 nations, is in use
in an estimated 100 magazines, and is said to have in excess of
10,000 titles in its growing bibliography.
.
Tbe bottom line for Esperanto is that no nation, much less
the world, is considering Its adoption. Yet the language lives, if
it doesn 'I thrive, and Catherine Schulze says that one day God
Bl)d man may yet change their minds abuut Babel; "Se Ia luz,"
(" Let there be light,',) and the language of the whole earth will
no longer confound.

llllgi'

Still asking the
$6 million questions
By Diet Klelller
DEAR DICK: Are Farrah
Fawcett-Majors and her hus..
band, Lee, returning to their
TV shows - &lt;l!arlie's Angels
and The Su: Million Dollar
Man? KARLEEN SCHill.A,
Dickinson, N.D.
You' have asked the Six
Million Dollar ouestion. Plus
some change. As this is being
written, the situation is this:
for charlie's Angels, they
have, signed another girl
(Cheryl Ladd) to either
replace Farrah or, if Farrah
eventually decides to return,
to ·become a fourth angeL
They figure she is not indispensable, and they'll get
along without her if they have
to. Lee bas agreed to a new
contract with Universal TV,
which includes projects for
his company, FawcettMajors Productions. He also
received an undisclosed pay
hike.

DEAR DICK : My brother
and I hope you can settle a
·slight disagreement. He says
that Jerry Le Lewis was the
Big Hopper. I say it was someone else. Who's right?
C.B. V., Hagerstown, Md.
You are. II was sollleone
else. His name was J.P.
Richardson, and he was one
d those killed 10 that tragic
lW' crash in 1959 which also
cost the lives of Buddy Holly
and Richie Valens.
DEAR DICK: I recently
read in a magazine that
Lucille Ball was starting
another TV series. Is this
true? H so, when will it start.
LEWIS TAYLOR, Tucson,
Arix.

No. At least the last time I
saw Lucy, she said she
doubled she'd ever do a series
again. She figw'es that her
kind of show is out of style
now, and she won't do the socalled sopi)isticated stuff Maude, All In the Family,
etc. -so PQpular today.
DEAR DICK: Isn't Bob
Hope's wife the fotmer
Delores Del Rio? And isn't
she a former actress?
MIIDRED RAY, Joplin, Mo.
Bob's wife is named
Delores, all right, and she
was an actress years ago. But
she wasn't Delores Del Rio.
That was a great beauty, a
Mexican actress who wu
very big in the '20sand '30s.
DEAR DICK: Wby doesn't
CBS bring back The Family
Holvak more often? II Julie

Adam·12,_ now looks exactly
like Martin Milner, who
played on Route 66 several
years ago. Are they the same
person, or father and son?
WALTER DIVALAY, Tuc-

son,Ariz.
They sure. are the same
person. Milner bas just grown
up some since th06e old
carefree Route 66 days, that's
all. Don'l tell
PU think
be coul&lt;tJ:le-·plli ·
· own
son.JV wouldn 'I a
· te
that.
'
DEAR DICK: I'd like to
know if you give addresses of
movie stars. If you do, I'd like
the address of Sylvester
Stallone. BETH SUUJVAN,
&lt;l!eyenne, Wyo.
No. I figure if you want to
write to somebody hadly
enough, write to them at their
movie studio or TV studio or
record company. H I knew a
celebrity's home . address, I
sure wouldn't print it in the
paper. Or send it to somebody
in the mail, somebody I don't ·
know, who could be a kook.
These people deserve some
privacy and some protection.
DEAR DICK: Could you
tell us why any station would
put Lawrence Weill and flee.
Haw on at the same tiine on
TV on tbe same night? E.M.
CRAWFORD, Vintondale,
Pa.
I presume you mean the
two shows are on opposite
sta\ions at the same tinie,
and you'd like to watch theiri
both but can't. The reason is
simple. The stations are
evidently trying to beat each
other in the ratings, and
throw in hig~rated shows
against each other. It's like
two shoe stures having sales
at the same time.
DEAR DICK: Help! What
is the meaning of the letters
F.A.C.S. after the names d
the doctors on Emergency?
We've nut out d guesses.
D.L.
HAYWOOD,
Kalamazoo, Mich.
They stand for Fellow,
American College of
Surgeons -and that's a real
medical body, not something
fictitious.
·

$"'

CANDIDATE Wll'IIDI\AWS
CLEVELAND (UPI) Walter B. Waetjen, president
of
Cleveland
State
University, says he has
withchwn u a Candidate for
the presidency of · the
Unlvendty of Alulla.
Ilarris the same woman who ' "The declllm lhll bued
wu In • "The Soand of entll'ely upon penoaal
Music?" VIRGIL JONES, conllderatlona," Waetjen
said Tuelday. "In 1111
Ogden, Utah.
Tbey abut ooe brief JeaiOII Jticllll41t, lbe Unleallt) of
11m,
of Holvak, but It didn't caldt Ah. . Ia a IDe
and
I
1'
1
1el
honared
a
uw
on, Tbey l'M8II d the
been
eonaldered
u
a
epiJJode1 this summer,
caacllclate
for
lu
without much fire, either. It
jlllt wasn't~ selling. No, pr ddeney.''
The UA baa tbrM
Jlllie 1111rrta wasn't In "'lbe
ud
11
Sotuld of lllllllc." Ylll'rt unlftrlltlu
eommllllltJ coD.... lllat
lllll*lna of Julie Andrewa.

''*'"

DEAR DICK: Martin

MIIAer,

•

who

pl1y1

1111

....

..u-.u.n .......
~

Reuschel ~eat · in 3-0
Shutout of Cincinnati
CHICAGO ( UP! ) - The
omens were right lor Rick
Reuschel: wind blowing in, a
cool 72. degrees. Except he
was pitching for the Chicago
Cubs against the ancinnati
Reds, a team that had beaten
htm seven · times in 11
dectsions
Reuschel, in liis sixth year
with the Cubs, rriade do with
the omens and did in the
Reds.
He pitched his second con- ·
secutive shutout, his third m
the last five games, and
equalled his highest v1ctory
total ever in the major
leagues. He became the first
Nat10nal League pitcher with
14 wins in a ~ decision over
the
defending
world
champions.
"This was the topper on
eve rything he's done, "
catcher George Mitterwald
said. "He had outstanding

more CQ.ncerned about
moving the hall around.
" If I doo 't give up any runs,
it's easier Ill win. But I don't
think I've ever had two
shutouts in a row before."
The Cubs, holding first
place in the National
League's east division by a
whisker, won . lor only the
second time in the last five
games. But they extended
ancinnati 's losing streak to
eight gam~$.
Jose Cardenal . accounted
for two of . the Cub runs,
opening the game with a
double and ·scoring on Larry
Biitlner's triple and then
hitting his secood homer in
the fifth inning. The final run
came when Jerry Morales
doubled m the sixth,
advanced on a sacrifice, and
scored on Mitterwaid 's
single.
Dodgers 5-l, Phillie&amp; 1-5: •
Rick Rhoden, with relief
from Mtke Garman, won his
lith game when Glenn Burke
In other NL games, Los
Angeles and Philadelphia
split 5-l decisions in a twinighler, Pittsburgh shaded
Houston, 3-2, St. Louis
defeated Atlanta, 4-2, New
York beat San Francisco, 8-3,
and Montreal topped San
Cincinnati ."
Otego, 5-2, in 15 innmgs, after
"I didn't want to walk a 4-3 opening-game loss .
anybody," Reuschel said. "I
just wanted to get it over and
make them beat me. I was
La Scala, short lor Teatro
throwing curves to a couple of
alia
Scala, the great opera
guys , Bench and (Dave)
of Milan, Italy, is so
house
Concepcion, and going with
the last ball to the left called because it was erected
m 1778 at the site of the
banders.
"I was getting up wtth my church of Santa Maria alia
pttches, a little higher all day, Scala - St. Mary's by the
but I wasn't worrted . I was Stairs.

even greater. I think it may
be the first time I pitched a
complete game against
them."
Reuschel paid tribute to the
wind, 12 miles per hour
blowing in, because 1•1a couple
they hit would have been out,
ex~pt for the wind.'' And he
liked the temperature
because "I prefer Ill pitcb in '
that weather .''
·
But wind, temperature pr
opPQne nt, Reuscbel was in
charge in winning his nmth of
his last 10 decisions. .
"The first couple of innings
he was high," Mitterwald
Sllld. "But the last seven
innings, everything was knee
high and seldom over. They
were
aggressive
and
swinging the bat, but he was
very seldom down the
middle.
"He got (Johnny) Bench to
strike at a fast bail away and
then he threw him three
breaking pitches in a ·row.
Two of them were strikes and
the third one, he fished at.
"He was mixing up his
pitches. He threw a lot of
good fast balls, but his curve
was setting up the fast ball,
and he used tl. You don't want
to come in with a fast ball
against a team like

Pomer.~y

Yankees
capture· LL· tourne·y··
.

'

MaJor l,Pague ;tand.ngl
Amer1can League
BY Un1ted Prus l t'lterl'lationill

eut

'

'

The Pomeroy Yankees
captured the 1977 Kyger
Creek Uttle l.eague baseball
tournament Tuesday evemng
with a convincing ll· t
triumph over Mason County
Insurance.
Roger Kovakhick was
credited With the victory.
Kevin Smith was charged
with, the lQss.

~

.

'

Scott Hamson led ' the
champs with three singles in
three trips. Rhett Milhoan
had a single, Kovalchlck a
double and home run, Steve
Gilmore and John Derron
each a single, Brett Carl a
single, Bill King a single and
John Ae1ker two singles.
The losers had only two

Juts, • second lnning single by
Davtd Powers and a third
mmng single by Kevin Smith .
tn the 'consolation game,
Hannan Trace downed Pl.
Pleasant Johnson 's Market,
7-3 for third place honors.
Kelly Petrie was credited
with the win. Tim Mullins
was charged wllh the loss.
Alan Bailey, Danny Bays,
and Mike Beaver each had
singles for the winners. John
Oliver had two smgles and
Lon me \VIckline three singles
lor the losers. Tim Mullms
had a double. ·

doubled home the tic·
Pet. G6
W L
~ 6 42
577
breakmg run in the soeventl1 Ball im r e
S4 42 S6.3 1
aoston
mning and the Dodgers added New Yor k
54 44 54 6 ~
43 51 457 11
two more runs on a wild pitch Clevelnd
4.4 53 .454 11 1 ~
Detroit
and a passed ball. Steve M
43 55 439 13
1IW
Carlton suffered his sixth Joss Toronto
3.4 63 .351 111 :l
west
against 13 wins, Greg
W L
Pet . GB
Lozinski and Bake McBride (h i C(lQO
59 36 621 Kan C1 t y
53 40 570 5
hit homers and Jim Lonbor~ Minn
55 44 556 6
pitched a two-httler fo~ the · Texas
51 44 531 8
46 49 484 13
Phillies in the second game . Callt
seattle
44 sa 431 18 1 ~
Pirates 3, Astros 2:
OakJand
41 56 .423 19
Tuesday's Results
John Candelaria and Rich
14, Toronto, 0
Gossage combmed on a four- · Texas
Boston ~ M t! wauk ee 3
. hitter and Ed Ott hit his fifth New York 5, Ball 4. 10 inn s
' Major League Results
Amen can L,eoigue
bomer as the Pirates won Ch icago 8, Detr01t 3
By Untied P(~U lnterna ttonal
Texas
· 231 302 0;10- 14 17 1
2, Ca lifornia 1
Na1ional League
.
Tront o •
000 000 OOQ- 0 A 2
their sixth straight. It was Oakland
Sea tile 9, M1nnesota 7
C 1st gam e)
•
B!y!even ar1d S undb e r~ . Eil tS
Today 's Probable Pitchers
Candelaria's lith victory
Ph1 la
000 000 100- I 6 l (7 ); Clancy , Johnson
(21.
(All Trm es EDT I
LA
000 1003l x - 55 0 De Barr (2), V uckovich ( 4 ),
,agalllSt three losses while J.
M i lwaukee ( Ca ldwel l 2 3) a t
Carlton, Reed (7) , Garber ( 8} Hartenste i n ( 8) and Ash by wOur Interest Js
R. Richard fell to his eighth Basion {Wtse 7 4), 7 · 30 p m
and M c C a r v c r ; Rhoden , Biylev en , 10 9 L ~ C ian cy, 0 1.
Bat11more
(
Palmer
11
8 ) at Garman ( 8 ) and Y eag er , WGreater
For You
defeat lor Houston. Cesar New York ( Hunter 6 4), 8 p m
HR - Texas, Bevacqua (1)
RhOden
,
11
7.
L
Car
l
lon
.
l3
6
Cedeno homered for the
Detro 1t
( Arroyo
59 )
at HR - Los Ang el es, G arvey 0 3). M l w
000 030 Ooo- 3 9 I
Ch1cago ( Wood 5 2) , 8. 30 p m
Astros.
Boston
003 000 lOx- 4 9 2
Cl eve l and { F1tzmorr1S 2 6 ) at (2nd game I
Sor enson and Haney , ActS e
Cards 4, Braves 2:
Kansas C•tv (Leonard 9 .q ), B 30 Ph !Ia
-000 120 002 - 5 9 o and F ts k w --Aase , 1 0 L ......
Ketth Hernandez knocked pm
000100000 1 2 0 Sorenson , '2 4 HR - Boslon . R1ce
C'a tiforn l a
(Brett
7 8)
at LA
Lonborg and Boon e; Hoo1on , 1161 ,
in two runs with an mside· Oakland
On 90-Day
( Norn s 2 7), 10 30 Sosa {7) Hough (9 ) and Date\&gt;
the-park hom er in the first p,m
W ~Lonborg , 53 L - HOoton , BMmnesota ( Red1 ern J . S) at S HRs- Philadelph ia . Lv zinsk l (10 mnmgs)
stuff."
inning as Bob Forsch picked Seattle
Ba i t
103 000 ooo 0- 4 9 o
Certificates
(Hou se 3 4 ), 10 35 p m .
(22 ), M c Br1de (] ) , Harmvn (21 .
NY ,
000 1001021 5 111
Reuschel, a fann boy from
.up his 13th victory against
Thur sday's Games
Gr tms l ey , T Martm ez (9 ) ,
Camp Point, Ill., struck out
jour losses. Dick Ruthven Balt1more at New York
(lst game)
Drago {9 ), McGregor ( 10 ) and
M• lwaukee at Boston
5.75 per cent paid on
Mntral
003000000- 3 8 0 Skaggs , F tgueroa , Lyl e (9 ) and
SIX and walked none enroute
was the loser for the Braves. M1nnesota at Seatl\e
JOO 000 001 - 4 10 o Munson
San Dgo
W- Lyle, 8 3
L90 day Cer tificates of
to slashing his earned run
Willie Montanez htt h1s 14th Texas at Toronto, night
Brown,
Kerrtgan 19) and McGregor, I 2. HRs Bal .
Cleveland
atKan
C1ty
,
night
Deposit.
Sl ,000 .00 '
Carter ; Fre isleben and Ro
average to 2.15, best of the NL
homer for Atlanta.
t 1more, Singleton (13 ). New
California at Oakland . n tght
berts
WFr1esleben
,
3
5
L
York
,
Dent
(6
),
Johnson
(
5
),
Minimum
.
Interest
pitchers who have worked
Mels 8, Giants 3:
Kerrrgan, 1 3 HR- Montreal , Jackson ( 17)
Payable
Quarterly.
N attonal Leagu e
enough mnmgs to ,count
Lenny Randle and Felix
Spe1er ( 4 )
East
Del
200 000 mo- 3 $ 0
among the contenders for the
Millan each had three hits
W L Pet. GB (2 nd game, IS mmngs )
Chicgo
103 ~00 20x - 8 . 9 0
and scored two runs to lead Chicago
57 38 600 •'league championship. He also
Montreal
A fj.; bs tant1 .a l penalty i s
Robert s, Morr 1s (;t) , Grill i ( 8)
I
57 40 588
Phtla
000 010 000 000 004 ~ 5 10
invoked on all cer tificate
and W 0 c k e n f u s s, Knapp,
the Mets. Pat Zachry went 7 Pitt
hung up all kinds of Wrigley
1
2 l
sbgh
56 42 571
San Dl~go
acco unts w1tt1drawn pnor
Hamilton ( 8) and Downmg W 2-3 innings for his filth win St . LOUIS
Field records.
52 46 531 61 7
100 000 000 000 00 1- 2 13
to th e dat e of m arun1y
Kna pp, 9-4 L- Roberts, 4 10
47 50 .485 11
Alca la , Atkrnsan (8 )', Stan - HRs with the rebel help of Bob Montreal
The shutout extended his
Oetro1t. Staub (12 )
40 57 412 18
house { 13 J, Kerrigan ( 15 ) and Chi c ago , Z1Sk (20) , Lemon (11 )
Apodaca. Willie McCovey New York Wes
string of scoreless innings in
t
Blackwell , Morales (8 ) Weli.r Bran~h
W L
Pet GB mel&lt;;ter. Cr1tfm ( IOL Tomltn Cslt f
homered for the Giants.
Wrigley Field tq 34 2-3, his
ooo 100 ooo- 1 4 o
LOS
Ang
61
38
.616
!12J.
Splllner
(
13)
and
Ti'nace,
'
Oaklnd
000
000
02x2
4
0
Padres 4-2, Expos 3-5:
strmg of innjngs without an
CinCI '
48 47 505 11
Roberts (9 ) W- Stanhouse, 6 8
Tan ana and Humphrey , Blue
Dave Fre!Sleben pitched an Housto.,
earned run to 50, and his
46 54 460 15 1 2 L- Spillner. 52
and Newman W- Biue, 10.11 L
San
Fran
46
55
455
16
e1ght·hitler for on ly the
- Tanana, 12 -7
victory skein to 10.
000 000 000- 0 5 0
Diego
44 58 431 18 1 2 , Cine 1
second complete game for San
" I feel ' better about this
Atl anta
35 62 361 25
Chtcgo
100 011 OOx- 3 9 1 · Mlnn
020 031 010- 7 10 o
Tuesday 's Results
Norman, Borbon (8) . and Seattle
330 102 OO&gt;t - 9 11 I
San Diego this season,
than most oflhem," Reuschel
The Athe n s County
Los Ang 5, Philadelphta 1, ls1
Bench. R Reusche l and Mttler
ThOrmodsgard .
Burgme1er
Savmgs
&amp; Loan Co
winning
the
opener
when
said. "Uncinnati has given
Philadelph i a 5, Los Ang 1, 2nd
wald WT" R Reuschel (14: 3) . L
(I) , carnthers (51, D. Johnson ·
196 Se cond S"t
rookie
Gene
Richards
singled
San Otego 4, Montreal 3, lsi
(6)
and Wynegar ,
Abbott,
- Norm vn (9 7l HR- Ch1cago,
me a lot of problems tn the
Pom eroy , Ohto
5, San 0 1ego '2. 2nd , 15 inns Cardenal (2) ~
Ke k1ch (6l. Romo (8). Laxton
in the decisive run in the Mtt
past and it's great to beat
Chicago 3, Cmcinnah D
\81, Segu1 (9) and Cox wninth inning. Rtchards went Pittsburgh 3, Houston 2
Houston
000 100 010- 2 ~ 0 Abbott, 7 7 L- Thor'modsgard.
them; but to shut them out is
001 010 l Ox - 3 7 2 7 8. HR s- Seattle, Meyer (14) ,
Pttsbg t1
6-for-7 m the marathon Sl LOU IS 4, Atlanta~
RICha r d, Samb1to (8) and M1nnesota, Cubbage (4) , Carew
New York. a, San Franc rs co 3
second game but the ExPQs
Ferguson, Candelaria, Gossage IB I
'
Today's Probabl e PHcher s
'
( 8) and Ott W - Canda lar1a, 11
{All Tim es EOT )
won it in the 1:ith when they
H RS(So to
0 0 and 3. . L - R.icha r d, · 9 8
Cmc1nnatt
scored four runs to snap a 1·1 Seaver
10 51 at Ch tc ag.o Houstol'} , Cedeno (5 ) P(fts
tie wh1ch had existed since (Krukow 7 -7 and Burris 9 10), 2, burgh, Ott (5)
m
the fifth inning .. Tony Perez 1 pNew
000 001 100- 2 9 o
York (Matlack 5 12 ) at Allanta
doubled in the tie-breaking San Franc rsco (K n epper 4 41 , st L
300 100 oox- 4 5 2
a
triple
and
&lt;l!et
Lemon
Martm
was
almost
as
By FRED McMANE
Ruthven , campbell (7 ], Colli ns
run and Ellis Valentine 4 05 p m
Houston tlemongello 3 ll l at (81 and Nolan ~ For sch, Carroll
excited by the ovation be added a two-run homer . capped the four-run r~lly
UPl Sports Writer ·
Pittsburgh (Rooker 8 5) , 7 35 (6 ), Schultz ( 7) and S1mmons
Manager Billy Martin, who received as he was by the Rusty Staub hit a tworun wtth a two-run single.
W- Forsch , 13 4 L - Ruthven , J .
P m·
.
homer for Detroit.
has been warned to produce, victory,
A tlant a (Solomon 1-ll at St . 1 HRs- St Louis , Hernandez
Louis ( l)nderwood 56 ). 8 15 (9 ), Atlan ta . Montanez (14) " It just gives you chills. I Rangers 14, Blue Jays 0:
or else, was greeted by a
pm
Bert Biyleven tossed a
002002202- 8142
standing ovation by .the never had an ovation like that
Montreal (Bahn sen 6-21 at NY
000 200 OlD--- 3 11 1
San D 1ego (Wehrmetster 1-2 or SanFrn
Yankee Stadium crowd when when I played," said Martin. four-hitter and had an easy
Zachry , Apodaca (8 )' and
Saw yer 5-5) , 10 p m
he walked up to home plate "I appreciate it. It makes you time in notching his fourth
Ma1or League L ea d er s
Philadelphia (Ch r istenson 9 5) Stearns , Montefusco , Lavelle
By Un1fed Press International
at Los Ange les (Sutfon 10-5 ), OJ. Cu rti s (8) and Hil l. wwith the lineup cards feel real good that the fans shutout as the Rangers
Batting
Zachry, 5 10 L - Montefusc o, 3
10 30 p m
~upported him with 17 hits in
Tuesday night. But it Jove you that much.''
(based on ~50 at bats)
9 HR San
F r ancisco,
Thursday 's Gt~me s
In other AL games, Boston PQsting their fifth straight'
National League
McCovey (1 6)
appeared for eight innings
Clnonnah at Ch t c~go
G AS H Pet. Montreal at Sa n 0 1ego
this might mdeed be his last nipped ·Milwaukee, 4-3, triumph. Willie Horton had Parker P1t
97 399 135 338 Philade l phia at Los Angelf?S
week as Yankee manager, &lt;l!icago defeated Detroit, lkl, three doubles and a single Morales Ch i
93 jJ2 110 331
Houston at Pittsburgh, n1ght
s St L
91 321 106 330
Allanta ar Pittsburgh, ntght
· The Baltimore Orioles, the Minnesota crushed Toronto, while Kurt Bevacqua drove in S1mmon
Stennett P 1t
92 359 118 329
Oakland
edged three runs.
American League East 14-0,
LUZ inS ki Phil
87 329 1()7 325
Griffey Cin
93 367 11 8 322
Division leaders, led, 4-2, Califorma, 2-1, and Seattle A's 2, Angels I:
Templtn St.L
92 383 122 .31 9
outslugged
Minnesota.
9-7.
In
a
claSsic
duel
between
behmd Ross Grimsley
95 384 120 313
Ro se C1n
two of baseball's best Va lenti ne Mtl
88 359 112 ,312
entering the ninth When Cliff Red Sox 4, Brewers 3:
By Un1ted Press Internationa l and fr ee agent defens i ve back
Rand
le
NY
77 285 89 .312
Tuesday
Wtl li e Jenk 1ns on waivers.
Johnson came .to· \he rescue .
The Red Sox were sorely in lefthanders, Vida Blue
American L e ague
Football
Ch1cago Released defen ·
Grimsle:( was replaced by need of a well-pitched game outpitched Frank Tanana.
G AB H Pet.
WaSh i ngton - Runnmg back s1ve back M 1ke And rus . safety
Carew
M
i
n
95
373
144
J386
Larry Brown announced h1s Terry Egerdahl, l inebacker Bob
Tippy Martinez after walking and they got it from rookie Both pitchers allowed only Bostock Mm
94 363 125 344
r ettrement and took a tOb tn the Gregclu nas
and
l 1ght
end
leadoff batter Roy While in 0011 Aase, who was recalled four hits, but Larry Murray's Bailor Tor
85 3.43 110 321
club's publ iC r etat1ons depart Leannell Jones, all roOkieS
89 31 4 100 .318
the ninth, and after Martinez from the minors earUer in the tw&lt;H'IIJI triple in the eighth Smgleton Bal
ment.
College
R 1Ce 80S
96 392 124 316
Phil a delphia Signed run .
Fr anklin Colleg_e Nam ed
inning
provided
Oakland
with
retired Gf&amp;ig l';jetti~s on a pop day. Aase struck out II and
Dade Cle
80 253 80 316
n1ng ba c k Tom Sull1van an d Robert Lovell as head basket,
Blue
raised
his
the
victory.
Cowens KC
93 361 112 310 defensive end Manny S1stru n k ball coach
out, Johnson unio~ded a two- scattered nine hits in his
Yount M1l
90 35 9 111 309
I
Ba ske tball
to two on e-year con t ra cts an d
run hom~r to tie , the scor~. major league debut. Jim Rice recdrd to 10-11 while Tanana Page
Oak
86 307 9:; 309
released
defensive
Iackie
Ric;k
Bos
ton
S1gn ed guard Bill
FiSk 80S
92 322 99 301
One inninjl ~~~~r, Reggie helped with his league- fell to 12-7.
G1bney, a f ree agent from Langloh , the1r fifth rou nd draft
Home
Runs
Geor gia Tech
cho1ce f rom Virgtnra
Jackson stroked a leadoff leading 26th homer in the first Mariners 9, Twins 7:
League Fos ter, C1n
St Louis - Acquired rook1e
Baseball
Dan Meyer drove in five Jl National
homer to glve the Yankees a innmg and ~ick Miller
; Sch midt, Fih i l 27, Garvey , offens1ve tackl e Dave Conr ad
Atlanta Called up r 1ght .
A 23. Burroughs, Atl. Bench ,
5-4 triumph
Panded p1tch er Preston Hanna
singled ~orne the lie-breaking runs, three of them coming oo LCin
Pomeroy, 0.
500 E. Main
and Luzmsk1. Phil 22.
f rom
Savannah
and
gave
his 14th homer, to highlight
" It 's a big mqm'¥lt for me, nut in the seventh.
American League : R ice, Bas
p1tcher Steve K lme his uncond 1
the Mariners' victory over 26 , Scott. Bas 25. H 1sle, Minn
mostly because ot the game White Sox 8, Tigers 3:
tiona! release
, Nettles, NY 22. Bonds . Ca l
and beca u&amp;e ,. \t ,is very
The White Sox, the scourge the Twins. Rod Carew hit a 23
21
ior
homer
importaqt that we be;lt the of AL pitchers, ran their three-run
Runs Batted In
League . Fos ter, Cm
Orioles right now," said wmning streak to six games Minnesota while teammate 93 Nat1onal
; darvey, LA 82; Cey, LA 80 .
Jackson.
· "
as Richie Zisk drove in five Lyman Bostock rapped out Luz.nski, Phi l 75 , Winfield , SO
73
nuts with his 20th homer and four hits .

Results, line scores

5.75%

Meigs·Co. .

. ..@

.

Martin's job safe one day

·--

LAST BIG WEEK

Leaders

GREAT SAVINGS ON
ALL NEW AND
CARS AND TRUCKS

Sports· transactions

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

Migratory

.
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1; I '

Brown
may·
have
problem
'
.
.·

'

m~g · ·B engal ·grid

team

WILMINGTON, Ohio
( UPI ) - He may be a little
heavy (apparently over 300
PQunds).. . ,
Maybe a little forgetful too
(" I've never reported t9
training camp early before"
- he's already five days
late) ...
And possibly even slightly
overconfident (the Bengals
say he may have "serious
problems" making ' the

The Bengals don't have general manager Mike
Brown, "II he comes to camp
anything to worry about."
But the Bengal.s say Brown well over 300 pounds, he's
might have something to going to . have serious
worry about - like, making problems making the team.''
the team.
Asked over the telephone if
Brown is notorious for he weighed 285, Brown said,
weight problems, was told to "I doubt it. I haven't weighed
report to camp at 285 PQunds. " myself in five months. I'm
Earlier this year he topped heavy. Yeah, I've got a little
300 PQunds.
weight problem, but I'm notSaid Bengals' assistant worried about it."

~~{'~~ethete~,
Big Bob
Brown says he's fmally on hiS

Tm"y

way to the Cincinnati ·
Bengals' training camp.
Brown, the hefty defensive
lineman and veteran of 13
NFL seasons, was the only
AWOL wben the Bengals
opened camp last Friday.
As camp droned on, he was
not heard from, b~l now come
rep&lt;ll'ts from Brown himself
• in his hometown of. West
Memphis, Ark.
"I can't understand what
all the fuss is about," said
Brown. "I've never reported
to training camp early
before.
"Personal reasons kept me
here. I'll com'e either
Thursday or Friday and talk
with management before · I
stll{! camp, but I'll be there.

Cali~orman"
1.
1

top

• thJr
• d ronnd
see· ded ),11
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - Diminutive Tracy
Austin, a Californian who
recently
made
her
Wimbled9n .debut, faced her
third round today as the No. 1
seed in the Natlooal Girls 16
Tennis Tournament.
Austin, a 14-year-&lt;lld wbo
stands but 5-1 and weighs 9Q
pounds, polished off Patti
Schiff, Columbus, Ohio, Tues&gt;
day tn straight sets, 6-1, 6-l.
The tournament )las been
extended by one day, since
torrential rains Monday pollpaned the championship
matches. The finale is ~t for

••

SUnday.
With 11011 spectators taking
in
the
action
at
Watt Powell · Pari annex, Charleston's Annie ,
White, seeded ninth, defeated her o~nent, also in
straight sets. She defeated
Debbie Robb, Salt Lake City,
Utah, S-0, 6-1.
Charleston has hosted the
event since 1970, the year pro
·Qlris Evert won it.
In another Tuesday match,
third-seeded Caroline Stoll,
Livingston, ~.J., defeated
Amy Dougherty, Louisville,
Ky., S-0. 6-1.

American
League :
Hisl ~ ,
Mlnn 86 ; Z1sk , Chi 71 , Hobson ,
Bos and Thompson. Oet 70.
Munson, NY 68
Stolen Bases
Nalional League : Ta\ler as.
P tll 35; Richards, SD 33,
Cedeno , Hou 32 ; Lopes, LA 31.·
Morgan , Cl and Cabell. H ou 30.
American League : Remy, Cal
31 ; Patek, 'KC 30 ; Page, Oak
2.4. Bonds , Cal..23. LeF lore, Oet
and R1vers, NY 19
·
Pitching
Most V1ctor.es
National League : R Reuschel ,
C1i 14-3,· Forsch , St L 13 4,
Carlton. Ph il 13 6 , Rau , LA 11 2;
Candelana ,
Pttt
11 - 3.
RhOden , LA 11 -1, Rogers, Mil

11 ·8
American League : Ryan. Ca l
1.4 -9 ; Goltz, Minn 12-6 ; Tanana .
Cal 12-7. T.Johnson, M l nn 11 -3 ;
AleJC.ander , Tex 11 5 , R May
and Palmer , Bait 11 -8; Colborn,
KC 11 9.
Earhed Run Average
(based on 90 innings pitched)
National League : R Reu schel,
Chi 2 15 ; Candelaria, P 1tt 2. 62;
Rogers, Mil 2.67 ; Hooton, LA
2.71. Richard , HOU 2.84
Amencan League .. Tanana ,
Cal 2.25 ; Bly leven, Tex ~ , 3 9 .
Ryan. Cal and Rozema, Oet
2 64 ; T Johnson , M inn 2.90
Strikeouts
National League: N lekro, All
148 . R 1chard , Hou , Rogers, Mil
and Koosman. NY 1~. Seaver ,
Cin 115.
Amer:ican League : Ryan , Ca l
252. Tanana , Ca l 156 . Leonard ,
KC 135 , Blyle ven , Mrnn 130 .
Eckersley , Clev 125.

bird dates
announced

· COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Wildlife Council has set
the followin g dates as the 1977
hunting
seasons
for
migratory birds.
In each case the hunting
period is from sunrise to
sunset.
Gallinule-Sept. 2 through
Nov. 10 with a daily bag limit
of 15 and a possession limit
after the flrst day of 30.
Sora and Virg!Dia RailSept. 2 through Nov, 10 with a
daily bag and possession
limit of 25.
Teal-Sept: 2-10 with a
daily bag limit of four and a
po'&gt;5ession limit after the first
day of eight.
Wilson's Snipe - Sept. 2
thfough Dec. 17 with a daily
bag lurut of eight and a
po~ssion limit alter the first
day of 16.
Woodcock -Sept. 30
through Dec. 3 with a daily
bag limit of five and a
possession limit after the
first day of 10.

1elh

ASSOCIATE STORE

~~~~HI

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

•STEREO
•TAPE RECORDS
•8 TRACK TAPES
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•KNIVES
•WATCHES

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S PLAZA)

•

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\

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\'

�4--

f&gt;- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July '!7, !977

n.e Daily Sentanel. Maddkport-Pumt•ro)'. u .. Wt&lt;lla~»d.t) . Ju l~ '!7. 11177

Hood's .lnd~pendence
taken twice in trials
"July means oothing. lt's abbreviated finish nearly two
August that counts," stressed minutes ahead.
"The wind was shifting
Malin Burnham, upwind
back
and forth a lot, but at
helmsman
aboard
sort
of
averages out," said
Enterprise.
the
winning skipper.
North
;
"It's a day for them to get
''We
,
haven't
done anything
overconfident, and not us,"
said Hood. "There are 15 different . " We 're just
shifts (in the wind) in a day learning how to sail the
and 13 go wrong and JOaybe boat."
two go_ right,"· he said, . Hood and . North · raised
protest nags at the beginning
shrugging his shoulders.
Today's racing, scheduled of .secood race when !bellbetween 1974 ,cup defender boats tapped lightly . just
Courageoi.as and Enterprise, before crossing the starting ·
en~ the s.econd phase' of
line
' skippers had just
The
irials to pick a cup defender.
wind.
The final trials begin Aug. turned to the right' and were
But in brisk, northerly 16. Foreign trials between heading up to the line. North
winds ranging from 18 to 20. yachts from Australia, was in the windward position ,
knots and choppy seas off France and Sweden open sailing closer to the wiri~.
Newport,
Enterprise Aug. 4 ·in a series to pick a
N!l'th said he would send a
·registered wins by margins of fmalist in the 23rd challenge protest to the• New York
Yacht Club Race Committee
1':03
and
1 :59
over series dating back to 1851.
· Ind~dence .
In Tuesday's first race, charging Hood was too close
Enterprise took advantage of as he was trYing to pass on
spinnaker trouble, which cost the inside. But Hood said
Independence a minute at the later he was well within his
first mark. As it rowaded the rights in the downwind
buoy, the huge parachute- position .
shaped sail caught in the
TOO-LONG STREAK
rigging, had to be hauled
. CINCINNATI ( UPI )
down and' r~laced .
Tuesday's 3-D loss to the
The contest lasted the full
trial distance of six legs Chicago Cubs extended the
totaling 15 miles. Race two, Cincinnati Reds ' losing
streak to eight games - the
sailed with protest nags
club's longest in 11 years,
flying after the sta.r t, was
Red~'
official s glumly
call~ after three legs.
reported.
Independence had a 19- .
The last time the Reds
second lead across the
dropped eight straight was in
starting line but lost it in a
1!166, and the team went on lo
fir st-leg
tacking
duel.
loS"- 11 in a row during that
Enterprise crossed the
dry &amp;!retch .
NEWPORT, R.I. (( UPI) Ted Hood said it was a day for
the other guy to get overconfident.
Hood, ~kipper of the
Independence, was beaten
twice by West Coast yacht
Enterprise Tuesday in the
Amerca 's Cup observation
tri~ls.
. ..· .
. .
The · wins represented a
turnabout for Enterprise and.
its skipper,.sailrnaker Lowell ·
North. The t2-meter bo~t had
jreviollily recoi'ded its best
resu)ts in light wind )"hile
having ptolllems in strong

'

acCMlplishrnent enough. Particularly in craft of the class that took to the water for the
reg~tta at Boca Ci~a High S&lt;;hool, St. Petersburg, Fia. Paper boats created as class
!ISS!gnrnents were tned out by anstructors David Halle, left, and Robert Orlopp, with the
result below.

Suspect

•

in theft

.
comes ·m '
.

.

.

.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!)
William McCandless,
wanted in connection with the
theft of a Thoroughbred
believed in foal to former
Triple
Crown
winner
Secretariat, gave ltimself up
to FBI agents and state police
Tuesday.
McCandless, 30, named last
week in warrants issued by a
federal magistrate and local
authorities, was accused of
steaUng Franfreluthe, a Claiborne Farm mare for whom a
$25,000 reward had ·been offered. Farm owner Seth Hancock of Paris, Ky., has valued
tbe mare ai about $500,000.
An FBI spokesman said he
had no infirmation 111 the
location of the 10-year-&lt;&gt;ld
brood mare, whose owner i5
J. L. Levesque of Canada.
Franfreluche was di8covered
missing from Claiborne June
25.
Th~
spokesman . said ·
McCandless, a
former
resident of Paducah whose
current address was 'listed as
Grand Island, Neb.,. phooed
the FBI Louisville office last
week
to arrange his
surrender to authorities.
" He said something to the
effect that'be would contact
1\iS attorney and arrange to
turn himself in," the
spokesman said. " He didn't
say where · he was calling
from and didn't ask for
anything ."
McCandless was taken to
Paris where be .will face theft ·
charges bef ore Bourbon
County authorities , the
spokesman said. A federal
warrant issued last week
charging McCandleo;s with
unlawfully fleeing KenbJcky
to avoid prosecution was not
served, he added .
Doo Major of Louisville,
attorney for McCandless,
said his client would enter a
plea of innocent at a
preliminary hearing Friday
before the Bourbon County
court.
Franfreluche was believed
to be in foal to Secretariat,
tbe super horse who woo
racing's Triple Crown in 1973.

AS WE WERESAVT;~b::n~::~~the trick is just staying afloat. The wanner still drv

and moving, .sort of, is Robert

Nets

'

·

and Knicks settle up

WASIUNGTON (UPI) The White Houae says
President Carter wants to
make hill semiweekly news
conferences aVllilable to the
people through broadcast,
but not at the I!IpeiUie of
knocking their fav~rite soap
operas off the air.
carter will hold the 12th
formal news conference of his
presldeni;Y Thursday, 1\lld,
like the . others, it will be
available f~r television and
lroadcast. Almost without
exception. the three maJor
networka have shown ,each
news cooference live.
White House . Special
Assistant Barl-y Jagoda,
Carter's television adviser,
· said in an interview some

LONDON (UP!) - A !3-year~ld boy from
Scarborough, England, has become the youngest •
swimmer of the English channel, knocking more than
an hour - and three weeks - off the previous record .
David Morgan cornplelell the swim from Dover to
Wissant, France, in 11 hours and 5 minutes Tuesday.
He was three weeks younger than Abta Khairl, a 13year-&lt;&gt;ld Egyptian girl wbo made the crossing in 1!174 in •
12 hours, 20 minutes.
In the Girls 12 division, I~
's eeded Evelyn Lucido,
Pointe,
Mich.,
Gr osse
def eated Priscilla De La
Rosa of Puerto Rico 6-0, 6-1.
Sec ond - seeded Renee
Krickstein , also of Grosse
Pvinte ousted Patty Hannoo
of Shaker Heights 6-0 6-1. .
Play continues through
friday .

GffiLS' TENNIS .
,
DAYTON, Ohio iUPI ) TWo Dayton entries pulled off
upsets TueSday in the Girls 14
division of the We stern
Tennis Championships.
Ninth -seeded Beth Her r
ousted fifth-seeded Gigi Fernandez of Puerto Rico IH 2~.
7-5 and Kathy Broad , seeded
. No. 12, was a 6-4, 6-4 wiimer
over Julie Frasier of
Torra nce, Calif. , the seventh
seed .
Top,seeded Beltine Bungs
Q.f Wma , Peru, was a G-1, 6-1

MATCHING
WEDDING
RINGS

CRISISUNE

winner over Mamie Beere of
CHeltenham . Pa ..
and
second-seeded Amy Olmedo,
Encino, Calif. , eliminated
Raechel Krickstein of Grosse
Pointe, Mich., 6-1 , 6-2.
There was also an upset in
Girls 12 play as tenth-seeded
Jill Ba rr of Miami, Fla., was
a 6-0, 6-0 victor over Kelly
Boyse of Zanesville.

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NEW TEAM SIGNS
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Former
Ohio
State
quarterback ' Cornelius
Greene and 15 other one-time
Buckeyes, along with several ·
former professional players,
are listed on the roster of the
new Columbus , Stingers
minor league football team .
Former OSU gridders on
the roster include tackle Scott
Dannelley, linebacker Pat
Curto, running back Woody
Roach and guard Bill Lukens.
The Stingers open their 13garne schedule against · the
PittSburgh lronmen at Otterbein College ,Aug. 6. Other
home games will be played at .
Franklin County Stadium.

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WASIDNGTON (UPI) - level of understanding" that
Secretary of State Cyrus Israel and American officials
Vance was bluntly critical of were tandng about last week .
Israel for creating "an durmg Begin's visit. · Dinitz
obstacle lo peace" by said,
·"A
level
of
establishing three settle- understanding doesn't mean
ments in the occupied- you solve all disagreements."
territory that could l&gt;ecome a
Vance told reporters tbe
Palestinian homeland.
!ettlements
had · been
The
unus11111
direct dlscusaed during the Qp-tercriticlsm was voiced by a Begin meetings, but said the
department spokesman and prime minister had made no
later by Vance TUesday.
promises.
The secretary apparently . The actioo means, in effect,
was surprlaed and angered that the Israeli government
by the .announcement that gives the continued eilstence
Prime Minister Menahem of the three seWerneilts in ocBegin's government had cupled territory Its full
.
authorized the settlements In backing and authority.
·the Jordan territory occupied
An unwillingness of the
by Israel since the 1987 war. settlers to withdraw would be ·
. TalldngtD reporters, Vanee Clle tnll'e complicating factor
said, "We are deeply in any agreement involving
disappointed. We have removal of Israeli autbority
conaiatently stated - and we from the occupied territory of
reiterated that during our the West Bank.
recent discussions - that in ' The State Department said
our opinion the · 11lacing of the action is contrary to the
these settlements Is contrary Fourth Geneva Convention of
I'D internaliooal law and has , the United Nations, which
presented an obstacle I'D pro- · forbids the permanent
grel8 toward peace."
• annexation or seWernent of ·
National Security Affairs territories taken as the result
adviser Zblgiliew Brzezlnakl of anned conflict .
mirrored · the sentiments .
voiced by Vance. "We're ~
disappointed . We don't- ·
approve," 'Brzezinski told ·

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AMAziNG SINGER
WASffiNGTON (UP!)
Black opera singer Shirley
Verett interrupted her .
program in the White House
East Room TUesday night to
say she was' going to sing one
of President Carter's favorite

songs, "Amazing Grace."
When she finished , the
gowned women and the
tuxedoclad men instantly
stood 1o give her a standing
ovation. Carter himself told
the audience he had "never
heard a more exciting

performance."

1'1e' black soprano sang at
the state dimer in honor of
DiDIII .... uRd bow the Italian Ptlme Minister Giulio
diagnlement over tile aettJe.
Andreotti.
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But ~ cautiooed
that the U.S. IIWl hold8 out
hope of progr m for peace.
Vance
met
Tuesday
-evening
wlth
Inaell
Amballlldtr Slml:ba Dlnltz;
who had been acheduled to
tsllt with him about Vuce's
forthcmllng Middle East trip
wbich beglill Sunday.
"111e State De(lartment's
·statement wu reauertlng
American policy on the
matter," Dlnltz uid. ''Our
action ••• according to
Israeli policy." .
Albd If there - a new
·rift between the two countries
becawe ol the dllljp'eement,
Dlnltz replied, "Not that I

from tax-exempt revenue writers call on to describe th•
bonds bought by the pipeline entire Trans-Alaska pipeline
companies to finance the project.
terminal. ·
The enormously complex
Like the Swiss Alps, the facility includes the world's
massive C'hugach peaks at largest floating tanker berth,
Valdez dwarf all human pro- three 430,IJOO.barrel tauks and
jects. The wilderness lover is a pump facility that comprioe
surprised to .find that even the " the largest ballast water
1,000-acre tanker terminal trea tmeht facility of its
terraced
into
the ltind ," a sophisticated po;.ver
mountainside across from the . generation system, a marvel
town is rather inconspicuous , ol computer technology
particularly when it's cloudy , · which keeps the pulse of tbe
. entire 609-mile pipeline
as it often is in Valdez.
These days, a reduced ' operation, aqd 30 turbineconstruction . for ce
is type meters to regulate the
completing work on .tanker flow of oil as it descends from
berths and storage tanks that Thompson Pass and goes
will be needed later, when the through the terminal.
initial oil flow is increased.
Almost all components had
Many work for Fluor Alaska , to be specially designed fnr
Inc., largest single contractor seismic and temperat4.re
on the entire pipeline project conditions and ·performance
with 150 subcontractors.
requirements of the Valdez
The
Valdez
Marine port. Qften, the means to
Terminal contributes heavily transport them also had to be
to
litany of superlatives _ designed and builL

MENS
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Criticism heaped
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~-

5 QUARTS OF OIL

peraons have written the
VALDEZ, Alaska ( UPI) White House to protest that
c;ight hundred miles down
the news conferences have
the Alaska pipeline from flat,
forced orr the air their
brown Prudhoe Bay rise the
favorite soap opera or game
snow-capped Chugach Mounshow . .
tains that cradle tiny Valdez
All of Carter's neWll conferand the $1.1 billion tanker
ences have been in midterminal that the !Qwn sees as
morning or mid..Uternoon.
its passport to permanent
Thunday's will be at 10:30
prosperity.
a .m . EDT.
On rriday. tlae first oil from
"The President doesn 't
the Alaskan North Slope is
want to 'dominate · the
_expected to arrive after nine
airwaves," Jagoda told UP!.
years of pl~nnin g and
"He particularly doesn't
construction
, and a cost of $9
Opie, _left, and Triton
want to d~rive people of
billion.
what they want to see."
The
Valdez
Marine
Jagoda
proposed · a
Terminal and the town face
technique used by the
each other across two and a
networks during the 1973
half miles of shimmering,
Senate Watergate hearings
glacier-fed bay, called Port
when the networks took turns
Valdez by the Alyeska
lroadcastlng the hearings.
Pipeline Service Co., but'
" It certainly seems like
known locally as the Valdez·
good puL!Ic pulley for anyone
Arm.
•
to see the news conference
By the end of this week,
that wants to anc! hopefully
By Marton C. Crawford
sister took the dogs swim- her she didn't need to offer a when the first big tanker
one of the networks would
Humane Society
ming (as they do most every rew~rd, that if anyone _knew swings in to collect tl\e first
·broadcast it," Jagoda said.
This Story could not wait day) so wasn't concerned the whe.reabouts of the ' arriving Arctic slope oil,
"l think it would be a good until the regular Sunday until Ann carne home about 6 animals they would help her. there isn't ~ny)&gt;ody who won't.
idea to rotate but it's their publication date, so wrot~ it p.m. without the dogs. The
Let's all put forth some be celebrating, says Mayor
decision, not ours. We would up in hopes of getting it two sisters immediately went effort to show her that the Lynn Chrystal.
be highly reluctant to published early in the week. with friends in separate good people of Meigs Co unty
"Everybody's pretty happy
interfere in the news Perhapa some of you have directions to look for the do care. Let's all get our about it. It' s been a long wait
judgment process."
noticed the piece In the animals. They looked every- heads together and help Jan for the people who have been
Carter ptamed to meet classified section about' the where they could think of and get her pets ba ck.
here through the whole
today with four Cabinet two dogs missing from the get to, but with no luck. After
If someone has taken ttaem thing," he said.
members
Health, Darwin Area offering a $200 a sleepless night Jan called thinking they would have
No.w that the three-year
Education and Welfare reward. Here is the story:
some
hunting
dogs,
they
are
construction
flurry has
the sheriff, the Sentinel,
Secretary Joseph Califano
sadly
mistaken.
These
dogs
subsided and the population
Miss Jan Shroy (992-6848) Messenger, Dog Catcher, and
and Housing Secretary w!lo ts just about to receive the Humane Society Careline. have not only not b~en of this old gold rush town,
Patricia Harris on routine her' degree from Ohio None of us had heard of trained as hunting dogs, but which ballooned from 1,100 Ul
business, and Attorney University, came to Darwin anyone finding such animals. ·. they aren't even outdoors almost 10,000, has settled
General Griffin Beli and to Hho~ sit" for her sister,
The accompanying picture dogs. They have been rais~d back to around 6,000, grocery
Labor
Secretary
Ray who is .a teacher at Southern ;,, of 'the two, taken a few' indoors.
shelves are again well
Marshall on proposed legisla- Local while she was on months ago . Left is Opie, a
If there is anyone who stocked and the tourists are
tion dealing with lllegal vacation. The landlord of her German Short-Hair Pointer might know anything about · coming back.
aliens.
The town 's budget went
sister' s home said that she who is white with a lot of these two missing pets please
On other matters, Deputy could not keep the dogs in the brown , but a prominent call Jan Shroy 992-5848, the from $500,000 in 1971 to $4.2
Press Secretary Rex Granum house where they were ac- brown spot on back and cut on sheriff of Meigs County, or · million in 1974 and $11.4
said Tuesday:
customed to staying, so she his right shoulder which Jan the Humane Society at 992- million in 1976. The Alyeska
-The Soviet Union has bad dog houses built for them has been doctoring . He is just 5427 (after 6 p.m. please). terminal now pays about 90
made no response about and put them on about 20 foot over a year old. The other Jan leaves soon for a new per cent of all the to)VD 's
Carter's
speech
in ch~ins.
rrijssing dog is Triton , a four position out of . state. Let's taxes, and taxes went down
Charleston,
S.C.,
lrist
On the lith of July she left year old part shepherd with · send her on her way with her for local residents for the first
Thursday
on
Soviet to go to classes at Ohio U. at four brown legs who is aP.. two P,Cts, bqth of which she time this year. The town also
relations.
noon . At 3 p.m. her sister Ann proximately the same size as · loves ~nd misses very much. , expec\S to collect $12 million
-Carter, wbo interviewed left the house ; the dogs were Opie.
·
FBI general counsel John where they were supposed to
Jan has received about 20
Min~ Tuesday as the siXth
calls from different people
be.
nominee f&lt;ir FBI director, Is
At 4 p.m. Jan returned inquiring about the missing
not certain whether he will home and the dogs were gone, dogs, some thinking that
bold more interviews.
their chains were there, as perhaps they had found one,
-"1 don't think there is any were their collars, both up in but so far nothing has brought
question but lhlit he (Garter)
front of their dog houses. It the beloved pets of Jan back
is pleased" that a Senate
appeared that someone to her . She is a college
committee gave Budget
wanted it to look as though student, folks, Who isn't from
Director Bert Lance a clean
they bad slipped their collars, this area, she doesn't have
bill of health in the $3.4
Every Pair Reduced!
but if that had been the case, much money, but was willing
million loan he obtained last
the chains would have been at to Stick.·out her ne~k and will
January from the First
their maximum length · and get a loan to pay someOhe to
Natiooal Bank of Chicago.
find her dogs for her. I told
.not up ·at the dog houses.
Jan at first thought that her

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I

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federal furids for the
i\rnerican city selected as the
1984 games host.
The remaining $75 million,
Carey said, would be put up
by the state "assuming we
get the $150 million federal
grant. 11
"The dividends we will
receive in tourism and backup jobs related to the games
will make it a bargain, " the
governor said.
i.os Angeles is conside red
the front-runner in the
competition to win the 1984
Olympics. Other potential
sites are New Orleans,
Chicago, and Boston. No
foreign cities have yet
applied
to
host
the
quadrennial event.

When the Work ·
Gets Tough

359.95

w: Second

in f~ur innings but good
BY LARRY FISHER
The Pomeroy·All-star little fielding kept Vienna from
league team is participating scoring. Pomeroy tied the
in a double elimination score in the third on a home
tournament at Belpre with IS run by Ra~dy Stewart with
two runners on. Other hitters
other area teams.
Last weekend on Saturday for Porner0 y were Harrison,
Pomeroy was defeated 1.0 by J. R. Wamsley , Roger
Parkersburg Tri-Co. in an . Kovalchik, Cliff Eisenhower,
extra inning contest. Roger each with singles, and
Kovalchik pitched the first Stewart, double.
Pomeroy's next game is
six innings for Pomeroy
allowing no runs and only two Saturday, July 30, at 1 p.m.
against Belpre.
·
·
hlts . Todd File relieved in the
V
031 000--4 9 I
~venth and gave up one run
013 01 -5 7 I
on two hits . Qetting the only P
hit for Pomeroy was Scott
HarriSon, a single,
On Sunday Pomeroy
defeated
Vienna
5·4.
Pomer6y scored one run in
the fifth on a pinch hit single
by Bill Holcomb to break a 4-4
tie. Todd Fife, starting pitcher, allowed four runs on
four hits and was relieved by
Scott Harrison in the third.
. Harrison allo":ed five hits

New York wants Olympics ·

fi- ~

15

channel swim record

All stars wm
•
m LLtourney

SINGER'S 126TM BIR'JlU)AY SALE

992-2284

•

•

NEW YO):U( (UP! ) 7 New They will move to the best deal we' could - we are
York's two professional Meadowlands, seven miles happy. It is a satisfactory
basketball · teams decided from the Garden, when a arrangement."
Tuesday to choose a peace of new, 20,000-seat stadium is
Details of the agreement
their own making rather than ·constructed . · Nassau are scheduled to be disclosed
.a piece of Judge Robert L. Coliseum is 30 miles from the today at a news cooference at
·
Garden.
Carter's mind.
the Meadowlands . Judge
With _each side making
" He had our feet in the Carter, who presided at a
concessions and dropping fire," ·said Knicks.' President two-&lt;lay trial of the terrilorial
their lawsuits, the Nets Michael Burke of District dispute between the two
agreed tO give the Knicks Court Judge Car\er. "He was National Basketball
financial
and
other not keen ·on making a Association clubs, directed
considerations in return for decision , so he forced us to go that the agreement be sealed
approval to move to New ahead.
until then at the request of the
Jersey from the Nassau Coli" We would have preferred parties.
seum in Uniondale, N.Y.
that this didn 't happen at all,
The agreement between the
The move brings the Nets that the Nets stayed in two clubs was worked o~t at a
closer to the Knicks' home Nassau and we stay in the meeting
in
NBA
court and makes them the Garden , but we unfortunately Com missioner
Larry
fourth professional team. to have to deal. with the real O'Brien's ofrices early
Given
the · Tuesday after a 13-hour
join the New York-to-New world .
Jersey exodus.
circumstances, we made meeting.
Previously , the football what we consider to be the
Giants and the Cosmos of the
North American Soccer
League lefi New' York City
for the Meadowlands Sports
Complex in East Rutherford,
estimated the games would
NEW YORK (UPI) N.J., and the football Jets will
Mayor Abraham Beame says generate 35,000 temporary
be allowed to play two
exhibitions and one regular New York City will apply this jobs and attract up to 1.5
week to host the 1984 Summer million visitors.
season game there this year.
"New York City has
Garnes . with the
Olympic
However , Nassau County
demonstr-ated
in the past that
''firm
belief"
that
a
projected
Executive Ralph Caso said
it
bas
the
capacity
to be tbe
$225
million
gap
between
the county wo'uld file suit
most
gr
acious
host
in the
costs
and
revenues
in
hosting
Wednesdsy in State Supreme
world,"
Beame
said.
the games will he made up by
Court in Mineola , N.Y., in an
Hosting the Summer Olym•
state and private
federal,
effort to bar the Nets' qiove ,
·.
pies,
at various locations
financing .
The Nets plan to play their
Beame said Tuesday he througho~t the city, would
borne games this year at
will
submit the application cost New York an estimated
Rutgers University's new,
Friday
to the U.S. Olympic $450 million , but promotional,
8,500-seat gymnasium in
and
vending
licensing
Committee .
Piscataway, N.J., about 25
to
revenues
would
amount
"
Bringing
the
Olympic
miles from the Knicks' home
about
$225
million,
Carey
flame to New York City
in Madison Square Garden.
would be a tremendous boost said.
He said Rep. Fred Rooney,
for the Big Apple in both
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • peychological and economic U-Pa., has indicated he will
submit a congressional bill to
terms/' Beame said.
Gov . Hugh Carey said he provide
.
. $150 rn illion in
supported the city's bid and
added: "lt's well within the
capacity of the state's and
MODEL NO. 774
.,.,_,.,....
city 's resources to handle this
'
kind of project."
5
REGULAR
A study by former state
Urban Development Corp;--:
Chairman Richard Ravitch

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TilE_ RACE isn't always just to the swift, sometimes just finishing at all is

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6-The Daily Senunel, Muldleport-P'"'"'ruy. 0 ., Wt·tluesday. July 'll , 1m

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pOLLY'S POINTERS

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Members of Cub Scout
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A Not So Unusual Queotlon
Scout .Pack 242, Syracuse,
families and guests had a
Dear Helen :
I'm 24 years old and afraid of having sex. I fear the pain. I party at London Swinlllling
POPI Saturday, July 23.
almost feel tllat ill do, it will kill me.
POLLY'SPROBLEM
Attending from Racine
I've met a nice guy and he may ask me to marry him, but
DEAR POLLY -I have too
were Earl, Jean , Jim and niany white sweaters and
tllough I 'm sure I love hi!n,l'm- SCARED
Marty Cleland. Kevin and would like to learn how to dye
P.S. Am 1a freak, ordoesa nyoneelse feel thi.s way?
Richard Dugan, Brian a white sweater dark blue. Warden, Ann. Kenny and E.M.Il.
Dear Scared :
No, you aren't a freak - .rear rl sex is a more common Karen Layne, Goldie, Pam
DEAR E.M.H. - Some
and Eric Milliron, Marshall, polyesters and acrylics will
phobia than most people realize.
.
· You 're eitller a victim of Victorian. prudery (parents' Debbie . and Joey Roush, not ~bsorb dye as ·well as
scare-stories designed to keep you " pure" ) or rJf ·pre-teen William, Beverly,. Scott and others so it is necessary to
prurience (those wild tales kids circulate because they don't Kyle Wickline, Bob, ,Libby, test a small swa tch. This i.s
Ralph and Damon Fisher, sometimes hard with a
know the truth).
.
The cure? If fear is deeply ingrained, you may need a few Daniel, Patty and Jamey sweater as there are no wide
sessions with a tllerapist. But more likely, the love of a gentle, Hensler, Keith , Cindy and seams or hems to cut away
understanding, patient man will bring you around- especiaily Chris Allen, Linda, Timmy but do find some place even if
if you learn the real facts first from a book your doctor will and Richard Gilbridge, Bill, you have to sacrifice a
Diann, Matt and Chris pocket. Follow directions exrecommend. - H. .
Jewell,
Leah and Charlie plicitly and those in the dye
+++
I am a widow of 46. I go to singles dances, but every time I Brown.
box will give ali the
Attending from Syracuse necessary inforln~tion. Do be
meet a guy, the first thing he wants Is to go to bed with me.
were Darlene, Bobby and sure the-sweater is clean and
What happened to waiting until we get to know each otller? Sherry
Ritchie, Wanda, DAMP (not even one small
NOT THAT LONELY
Deroo and Andy Stafford, dry spot ) or it will show up
Greg Michael, Jeanette, differently after tlle dyeing.
~rNTL : .
.
·
... The same thing that happened to kissing goodnight David and Eddie Duffy, Do be careful not to overbefore a woman puts her key in the lock.
Bonnie, Brian and ·Gary cruwd garments in e vessel
Men bave come to expect instant gratification because so Freeman, Jeff and John being used for the dyeing. many females imply thai they want it too : It's their Rx for Frank, Pete, Joyce, Tim, POLLY.
Julie and Eric Thoren, Jody
loneliness. •
DEAR POLLY- While doDon't blame the guy for trying, but be firm witll the "Not Grueser , Richard and ing my spring house cleaning
yets." If he's really interested, he'U wait. If not, sex won'tkeep Michelle Davis, Lori and I noticed my plastic pail was
him around long. -H.
Dougie Stewart, Jim, Carol, leaking and when I held it up
Todd and Kim Adams, Larry, to the light a couple of small
+++
Dear Helen :
Sally, David and Chris holes or cracks were visible. I
This i.s to yo~ng people who insist in "visitors' wa~gs ." Ebersbach.
wanted to gel on with the job
Once it was the custom when family members or fr1ends
so I squeezed a small amount
visited to regard advance notice as tantamount to ordering the
t of bathtub sealer on the out.red carpet treatment: big dinner, children gathered in to meet,
t~Uren
1'fl
side of the pail, over and into
etc:
.
.
the cracks, and then smoothIf someone dropped in unalliKJunced, then it was. potluck or
ed it out with a moistened
a quick cup of coffee. We in the older generation saw this as
finger. That was several
evidence of close friendship, proof you came only to see us, not
weeks ago and I am stiU using
to be fed and entertained; that you cared not about a clean.
the pail. -MRS. J.M.D.
house or fine food but simply wanted to ~re your life with us
DEAR POLLY -I used to
for a brief time.
·
First the children studied a have so much trouble keeping
It was regarded as a compliment to be dropped-i!Hln thus. diagram of a hwnan heart, my floors free of leaves that
Few people nowadays are as close as families and friends then they carefully examined were tracked in, particularly
.once were. They're so busy with their own activities that ~ey the heart of a chicken, and in the TV room that has an
resent intrusion. Sometimes families know one another so little finally they were asked to outside door. It seemed I was
that they need . appOintments. A pity! - GRANNY WHO create a model heart out of constantly sweeping up
. TRIES TO ADAPT
clay.
.
.
things that had been tracked
It was all part of one day's (&gt;11 so I put a rug outside the
science class held this door but that did not help un·
summer at Rio Grande til I sprayed it With hair spray
College . Community College and now all I have to do is to
for thirty-two grade school sweep the rug off in the yard.
age children.
Everything clings to the rug.
The teacher was Sally ' I even had some flowers arHollz,
an
elementary ranged in
hom that kept
education major
from shedding sol sprayed them,
The Practical Nursing supervision of the in- Wellston, one of the students too . -PAT.
in Joan Loeffler's natural
School of Buckeye Hills structors.
Upon satisfactory com- science methods class. The
Career Center is now accepting applications for the pletion of the program, the children were aU from the While children in one room
1977-78 school year. The one graduate of the program will four county area.
were learning bow the heart
year full time program . is be eligible to take the State
According to Mrs. Loeffler, functions, in another room a
desig.ned to prepare t~e Board Test Pool Examination assistant
pro(essor of group of children were
student to apply nursing to · become a Licensed • education at Rio Grande, the learning math from Chris
principles in the care of tl]e Practical Nurse.
class serves two purposes: It Garst, Cheshire. She was
Admission . requirements helps colleg.e students im- taking an elementary math
ill, prevention of illness, and
the rehabilitative process include: a high school prove their teaching skillS, methods course.
under the supervision of the diploma or a score of 45 on the and it creates ways of further
Before' the swruner term
physician
and-or
the GED equivalency, ac- chaUenging the grade school was over, each of the student
registered nurse.
The ceptable score on the participants.
teachers would have had a
A total of 18 Rio Grande chance to teach the children
program consists of nurslng Practical Nurse Entrance
principles based upon subject Examination, personal in- students were involved in one in a group several times, as
matter and supervised terview, normal physical and of two . summer sessions. well as work with each of
mental health and references
clinical experience.
Along with specific cour- from at . least three persons
ses, the practical nursing who are not family members.
Interested
individuals ·
student .will receive clinical
should
contact
the
school at
experience under the direct
614-245-li334, extension 205.

I

Test sweater before

C'h ·u /ea a
Rio 's summer
school session

Buckeye Htlls Center
accepting applications

a

Son bom to
the Russells
Mr." and -Mrs. Ronald

ON VACATION
W. ·
SYRACUSE
- Mrs. Sadie
Russell , Lorain, are announcing the birth of a son, Thuener, Syracuse, and
Ronald W. Russell, Jr., on daughter, Mrs . William
June26. The9 and one-half lb. Lehew and sons Ted and
baby boy is welcomed home Billy, Pomeroy, recently· ·
· by two sisters, Melissa Faye, spent a few days in Sandusky
and Canada.
7, and Renee, 3. ·
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. · John Bryan, Mid·
IN HOSPITAL
dleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
RACINE
- Paul Burton,
Lawrence Russell, West
Racine,
was
admitted . as a
Columbia, W. Va., and greatmedical
patient
at Hun·
grazidparents are Mr. and
tington
VA
Hospital,
second
Mrs.
Norman
Bryan,
floor, Huntington, W. Va.
Bellaire, Mich.

7-TheDililySentinei,Middleport-Ponwroy,O.,Wednesday,July:!7i~l977
IN THE
I :__ _r=:!IJI!I•••••••••••••••••••••••IIii••••~~----~~----~~~~~III!~---

';~ .Gallia Country ' '
The final three per·
formances
of
" Gallia
Country" will be presented
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
eveninjl, July 29-31, in the
am(&gt;hitheatre on Bob Evans
Farms, Rio Grande, Ohio.
Curtain time is 9 p.m.
Performances this year
have attracted people from
many · distant points, as in
previoas years. The guest
register shows such states
represented as Michigan ,
Indiana, G.Orgia, Maryland,
Kentucky, West Virginia,
Illinois as well as many .a reas
of Ohio, including the
Cleveland-Akron · Toledo
areas.
One
couple,
vacationing through Ohio
from C,.lifornia, noticed the
"Gallia Country" sign at Rio

dyein~:

DEAR POLLY - When
opening a new jar of instant
tea or c'Offee 1 unscrew the
metal lid but instead of learing off the pHper seal ins1de I
slit it in half with a pHring
knife and only remove onehalf of the label. This leaves
the other halt to u.Se as a
leveler for measuring out a
teaspoon or tablespoon. This
... keeps one from getting out
too much or too little. VIVIAN.
DEAR POLLY - I am 90
years old and have made jelly
for many many years but still
!learned a new and easy way
of skimming hot jelly from
my daughter. Use a tea
strainer to gently remove the
skim that stays in the
strainer while the hot jelly
runs right through the mesh
of the strainer. When the
. strainer is full it is easy to
empty, washout and lhen use
again. JeUy making time is
all)1ost here so I hope this will . PARIS (UP! ) - The
lessen the work for some . Schiaparelli house of high
others. -ULUAN.
fashion has taken to the
Polly will send you one of streets of Paris to show off its
her signed thank-you fall collection of evening
newspaper coupon clippers if wear based on astonishingly
she . uses y 0 ur favorite beautiful 6th -century
Pointer, Peeve or Poblem in Byzantine mosaics.
her column. Write POLLY'S
After walking past internaPOINTE !IS in care of this tiona I buyers and reporters in
newspaper.
tlle salon Monday, the models
walked down a three-story
staircase bullt especially in
THANKS EXTENDED
front of the building to the
The Katharos Christian delight of several hundred
Youth extend their thanks to Parisians and tourists
Eber of Eller's Gulf in Racine . wandering over from the
for the use of his station for Hotel Ritz next door .
the car wash held recently
Flaming torches on the
that was very successful. staircase added to the drama
Proceeds from the car wash but one set the stage afire
will be used to send persons to briefly . The stony-faced
camp.
models moved through the
billowing smoke without
missing a step.
LODGE TO MEET
Designer Serge Lepage's
The Shade River Lodge 453 evening gowns were right out
of Chester will .m eet Satur· of Central Asia, made of
day, July 30, at 7:30p.m. This costly gold brocades and silk
wiU be a specia i meeting with damask
printed
and
work in the Master Mason embroidered with hunting
Degree. AU Master Masons leopards, lions, peacocks and
are welcome.
geometric design$.
Stiff lame evening coats
had
enormously
wide
them ;,;dividuaUy.
armholes edged with sable.
Children participate in !,he The most incredible coats.
classes free of charge and are were nlade of clipped
selected , from Meigs, GaUia, feathers dyed to form
JacksOn and Vinton Counties iiltrkate patterns of lions and
by application on a first
come, first served hasis.
Mrs. Loeffler explained
that the experience provides
a unique, oPPOrtunity for the
· children as well as a chance
for college student to become
Robert T. Hennesy of the
profesSional teachers.
Commercial and Savings
Bank, Gallipolis, was one of
the 120 students who
grad uated from . the 14th
annual session of the Ohio
School of Consumer Credit.
Graduation ceremonies wete
held the afternoon of Friday,
Jqly 15, at Kent State
University; Kent.
The specialized school,
sponsored by . the Ohio
Bankers
Association
headquartered in Columbus,

Grande, and remained
overnight in order to attend
the production as well as to
tour the many interesting
points in southeastern Ohio.
Tickets may be purchased
·in advance in area Chamber
of Commerce offices, from
any cast member, the Shake
Shoppe in Jackson, Fanner's
Bank in Pomerpy, Milton
Bank of Wellston , or at the
gate on performance nights.
Children under &amp;'years of age
are admitted free , and
spj!Cial rates are avallable
for groups of 2S or more.
Transportation is provided
from the parking lot to the
theatre site via farm wagons
furnished by Bob Evans
Farm. Light wraps are
recommended.

Back to the Byzantine
mosaic look for Fall

Hennesy completes

a

v. m.

,

POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club
Wednesday at noon at Meigs

Inn. •
THURSDAY
THE
ROCK
Springs
Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. when th~ Hemlock
Grove Grange will visit and
there will be work in the third
and fourth degrees.
MEIGS Christian Women's
Fellowship Thursday at the
Rutland Church of Christ,
7:30p.m. Program on ''Blood
FRIDAY

SHERIFF'S SALE
Racine _Hom' Nillianal Bank
Pla in tift

curriculum

summer session of orte week,
commencing on Sunday
afternoon and concluding the
following Friday afternoon.
The entire session consists of
approximately thirty
classroom hours and four
group seminar hours.

vs.

Rudolph T . &amp; '
Erma J . Riffle
Defendants

COURT OF
CO/olMON P~EAS
MEIGS COUNTY
CASE NO . 16373

tn punua11ce of an Alia
E1e. ecution

Cler!&lt;.'s

Issued

Offl~;e

frDm

the

of the Court of

Common . Flleas of

Me igs

County , Ohio, on the 21st day

of

July

l917 ,

and

to

me

in the case above .
named, 1 will eKpose to Sale
at Public Auchon, on the
d i r~cted

rront steps of the Courthouse

of Meigs County, P.omerov ,
Oh io , on Saturday the 6th day
of Augu~t , 1977, at 10 : 00 .
o'clock A .M . the follow ing
goods ..and ' Chattels, to -wit ;
1969 Ford Fairtane 2 dr .
VIN 9HJOFV0~68
.
May be seen at Codner's

p-

Texaco, SyracuSe, Ohio .

•

Terms of

Sale ~

Cash

in

han~ .

Taken as the property of
J. &amp; ERMA J . ·
1
.,..
TO sati sfy an execution In
favor of the Racine Home
National Bank . '
·
RUOO~P. ft.
~ , Jf\F.LE ~"

~AMESJ.PROFFITT

SHERIFF.
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10

!I) 117 , 28, ~! l•l 1, 2, Stc

- -...,..--,------ - - -

$1

LONGHORN
~
CHEESE.............. .
.

.

.PUFFS FACIAL TISSUES ................ ~~~.~~-.. 55*

· CHUCK
..

All Varieti.s

HAMBURGER HELPER DINNERS........... 59'
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR................ :..5 lb. 79'

5th &amp; Pearl
PH-EBE' STORE
Right Reserved To Limit Quantities ·
We Gladly Accept Fed . Food Stomps

Monday thru F'ridoy
9:00to 7:00
S..t~~-~~-y-ff_!to 7

·

ASI RO·GRAPH MElfA\.

MAchos openings for Par·
ty Plan Supervisors and
Demonstrators in your area .
Highest
commission , . no
dellver ing
or
collecting.
Demonstrate top quality t.o ys
end gith . Call collect to Ann
Baxter , (319) 556· 8881 or write
MER'RI ·MAC , 801
Jackson.
Dubuque, lowo 52001 .
s;;;:v ice station attendant. Applv
in person after 4 p.m. French$
JUly 21, 1177
M iddleport Sunoco . No phone
Frieo~s In a position. to help
move thingS your way ·where ._S.alls . ·-~----:---"--:
your work or career Is conce.r n· DEPENDA.sLE LADY lor general
housework 2 mornings a. week ,
ed this coming year . Yod must
$2 per hour . Phone 9.49-2774 .
be willing to take the initiative
and fol1ow~up on their leads.

Bernice Bede Osol

A~
w~

LEO (JYiy 23-A"'· 22) There's a
possibility you may tackle a doSTARCRAFT lOth anniversary sole
it-yourself project around home
on mini ·motors , trailers , ond
that 'gets ·you In water over your
folddowns . Trovelstar 25 ft .
head . Best you call I n
$4400.00; :20 ft . mini-motor
professionals. F.ihd out more
$10,850 .00. We sell r.ervice and
about yourselt by sending for
quality . Camp Conley Storcraft
your copy qf Astro~Graph Letter.
Soles , Rt . ~2 north of. Pt. Plea·
Mail 50 cents for each and a
son~t~---~--:-~~~--long, s~f-addres$ftd : stamped
en'lelope to Astro-Graph , P.O: JAVCO CAMPING Trailers,
custom mode SWISS COLONY ;
Box 489. Radio City Slallon . N.Y.
sm011 tandems Maple leaf .
11)019. Be sure to specify your
CODNER'S CAMPERS, Soles,
birth sign.
Rental , Service , Supplies :
Meigs 28 or 32 to Boshon .
VIRGO (AUQ. 23-tiijit. 22) lm·
Owner Robert Codner, long
pulses to.. get mtQd. up ,in risky
Bottom , Ohio.
'IEmtures should be kept In check
today. If you fall on your face, 1'975 26FT . ARGOSY Motor Home,
regrets will be long-tasting .
3,600 actual miles , roof air .
motor air, built- in AM·FM, tope
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) VQu're
de&lt;k , forced air turn~ce, , gas
generous with those You love toand electric rehigerotor,
day, but you attach conditions'?
generator plont. Zeb ond Dee
your gifts. If the recipients won I
Awning, crank -up TV antenna.
agree to comptr. you'JI withdraw
Phone 742-2211 doy, 742-2246
·y our offer.
ev~ings.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Act
In accord with your impulses &amp;\'1d
Intuitions today. Th~ longer yqu
mull things over, the more you're
likely to travel In a ci~c~ .

CHOCOLATE MILK
QiJARTs 89~

2

CELERY..............~~~~.~. 39c

SAOtnARIU8 (N...,. 23·Dec.
21) An opportunity . may be

offered to you today in con-

l9lsCA&lt;VALCADE 21 v, CAMPER .
fully self-contained , 6' gas·
electric refrigerator , 3 burner
you're sitting on:
stove, with oven , forced air, fur ·
nace, sleeps six. Phone
'cAPRICORN CO.C. 22...-n. 11)
Though you are quite ingenious
985-3356.
today, timing is al~-important. It STAiCRAFf END of VeOr Sole on
you try to Implement plane
mlni·troilers and fold-downs.
prematurely, they'll ftute.
Lowest prices ever . offered,
fold -downs , $1825 up; 2 uS~
AQUARIUS (J"",
18)
Storcrofl trailers in stock . We
You're an expert at getting your
sell service ond quality , Camp
lool In the door today, but then
Conley Starcrdft Soles, Rt. 62 N.
what? Have your game plan
!~t-~P~Ie~o~so~n~•~
· ~--------c
worked out belore you ring the
doorbell. •
·
·

zo.......

zo...-

20) It's

trucks , septic systemS . Bill
Pullins , phone 992·2478 day or

- ~~~h~
l.

____________

day. However. another may tn~

tertere lrt an attempt to block
AUCTION , EVERY Friday , 7 p~. iT'!.
you.
and ysed merchand•se.
'rAURUI (April ...... It) W New
Ohio River Auction In Meigs
you have coworkers on 1, proe
,c()ll Pearl St .. Middleport 1
ject, don'l atlempt lo make Plaza
Ohio . Pllone (304) 773-5471.
Chanveo without advtalng .!118m.
-·--··------~-·'
An oftront like I hal would be very

-·

QIIIINI (liar 21-Juna II)
You're lndualriOUI today. bul
only up lo I poin1. Hraoulls do~1
coma quickly enough . yo~ II
probably .., ulde whal you re
•doing.
' CAIICIIII (,_ 11..,., II)

BOLOGNA

CABBAGE ............ ~~·. loc
POTATOES ...... ~-~~-~~-.~1 39

2 LB."TRAY
SLICED
f'

In the oxpreasion "Holy
Toledo," Toledo refers to
Toledo, Spain, one of the
, IIJ'Nt centers of Cbrlltlan

c:tlltare lfter Ita liberation
fronl the Moon In 11Cl6 lnd
today the - t of the Cardinal
• Aotaid balnl """"' -tvelo a
' oeraon one . you're tond of Arcllllillllol' of Spain.

$139

_ , like. Yout IICIIonl IMl'

v

10 be lllte o 11'11 In tile Ieee
to him.
l.

• I

CRISPY. SERVE
BACON.••••••••••••••••• ~B~
GROUND
.
·
.
.
'
LB.
CHUCK •••••••••••••••••••
.

'

•

'

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST••••••••L!·.
CHICKEN
BREASTS •••••••·••••••••~~.
CHICKEN
DRUMSTICKS ••• ~ •.~ ••• ~·.
CHICKEN
THIGHS...
LB.

FRESH
CORN ................~~-

-·

NECTAR·INES
·oR PLUMS •••••••••••~••

fidence. To reVeal its nature
would be like sawing ott the limb

ARIEl .CMarch 21-Aprll 11)

TASTE~

Prices Effective
Thru July 30

CAMPER. 28 ft . flexsteel
sofa bed, 2 gaucho beds , 2 door
refrigerator ,. furnace , woler
heater , root air, Am -FM Tf?pe
d~k. crank up T.V. antenna(
C.B. antenna , rollup owning ,
doal tanks , spare tire. Phone
742-2954.

irrl1atlitg .

VALLEY BELL

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

· POMEROY, 0•.

IDS

Something unusull wtll happen
from which you could profll. to-

IENERS '1 39

'

---

earth - or lha oppoolle.

20 cr.

298 SECOND ST.

5

debted to peOple you don't know El(CAVATING. BACKHOE, dozer,
· well. They could be lhe satt ot tha · trencher, Low Boy, dump truck

LB.79e

PALMOLIVE SOAP Bath
SWEET PICKLES......... ~~.~~~~~~:.~~:'. 89'

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

and

not wise today to become In~

ROAST

.
Size.............~~. 25'

word Gnff1th who was laid lo
ra$t the 25th of July , 1976. How
I m iss him, but the most lov•ng
rnemoriat was when he visited
me two or threE&gt; times 0 week
and I hod the privllege'of being
with him in Columhus Hos.pllal
on Friday night befoi-a he left
u.. . But cur God knows best .
But hts tbvii"\Q memories will
never be forgotten by his good
friend he knew he hod .
Sylvie Ca'pent4tr

BRUCE HOIACK.
Address Unknown ;
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES.
DISTRIBUTEE$.
ADMINISTRATORS ,
El(ECUTORS , IF ANY ,
OF BRUCK HOBACK .
DECEASED.
Et al.,
Defendants
NOTICE
SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
LEARN TO SEW Profas"tionollook ·
The Def~ndJnf,
Bru ce
ing garments with new techni ·
_ Hoback whose addreu is
ques . E·Z Sew Classes in knits
y nknown and whose last
to begin sopm at the Sew N'
place of resl~ence or .addresS; ,
Sew Fabric Outl&amp;l Store -in
is unknown and cannot Wllh
reasonable dlljgence be
Racine. Come in ond talk to
ascertalf1ed Is h''reby notified
Oenlte or coli 992-7400 or
that Plain lift has brought th is
_
992-3039.'. '--...,-,-;t~ction naming each ot you a.s
one of the defendants In t he
WILL CARE for the • lderly in my
above-named court by fil in g
home. Trained Ol'ld &amp;ICperienc·
her complaint on July 2nd . _ • eeL Phone992·7314.
1977 .
·D &amp; is HOUSE of::.f"o:.:
br::.ic- c"'teo
-·ronce
The obj~ct of the complaint
is that the real estate
Sole, Now lhru August 3, f .
nereinatter descr i bed be so l d
Shirt knits, reg . $1.98 vord ,
in its en tir!ty, and to pay lhe
now 89 1 • T-Shirl Kn its Reg.
debts of the decedent , Ina
$2.49 now , $1.69 yrd . All our
Hoba'ck , deceased ; that the
1st Quality poly . knits reduced
rights, interests and liens of
price: one · table ·poly kn its ,
all parties mav be fully
$1.00 JOrd , 0 &amp; J 's Fabric, 1
determined , adiusted and
protected ; that p.laintiff be
mile south of Middleport on
authorized and ordered to sell
State Rt . 7.
-'
said real estate, according to
·
1
WOULD
Hke
to
work
with
retard·
the statutes i h such case
made and provlde,d , and lor
ed children in any way. not post
such other and further relief
age · 1A. Experienced. Phone
as she may be ~ntjtled to ;
992-7513.
that said real eState Is
MEtGS=:C:.:O::.U_N=TY-:-::f::-i,::h·
G~~.
described as foUows :
The following ,described
Assn : will hove o dinner for
rea 1 estate situated in the
members only , July 29 at the
State of Ohio, County of
Shade · River Road Club
Meigs anCI VIllage of Racine,
~nds, s.o ciol .hour71o8p.m .
to -w i t : All of Lot No. eig hty .
one ( 81 ) In said Village of
RINGS mlsslng from residence ,
Racine, Ohio, except seven
one pearl and 5 opals . Anyone
(7) teet off the West end of
with information concerning
said Lot. Said lot Is bounded
any of them , please phone
on the east by Fifth Street.
992-3489. Reward ofhtred.
Reference Deed : Vol . 155.
Page H , Deed Records,
Meigs County , Ch i ~ -~ -_,
You are requi r ed to ·a nswer
the complaint w it hin twenty .
ei ght dav~ after the last FOUND , MALE nound dog . Block
publication of th is· notice,
with ton markihgs. Well man·
which will "be published once.
nered. Phon\&amp; 985-424.. .
each week for six succes$lve
weeks.
and
the . last fOuND • MEDIUM Sized Wire
publication will be made on
hoir.ct terrier type, young mole
August 31st. , 1977.
dog. Blonde and white . Call
In case of vour failure to
answer or otherwise respon'd ~~~~~25~·---------as permitted by the Ohio
Rules of Ci'vtl Procedure.
w i thin the time stated,
judgment by defaul t w i ll be
rendered .agalnst you .for the FRIENDLY TOY Parties has open ·
rellel demanded •n · the
lngs for
managers and
complaint.
demonstrators . Demonstrate
guaranteed toys and gihs . No
Manning D. Webs fer
cosh i nvestment . no colleCting
Probate Judge
or delivering · no service
'
Meigs Count.y , Ohio
{7 ) 27 . 18) J , 10 , 11·, 24 ,· Jt , 6tc
charge. co.- and telephone
necessary. Call collect to Coral
Day (518) ~89· 839$ or write
Friendly'. Toy Parties , 20
Roil rood Ave .. Albany, N.Y.
12205.

PISCII (Feb.

.

DOMINO SUGAR ........ :.......... 5 lb. bag 99'

IN LOVING Memory of Rev . Ed.

•••

Pressure."

INVENTION PROMOTERS
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The '
invention development and
promotion bus(n~. worth
about $100 million a year
across the nation. would be
regulated in Ohio under
legislation
adopted
unanimously by the state
Senate Tuesday .and referred
to the House.
The bill, sponsored by Sen,
Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr.,
Cieveland; is designed to
protect inventors from
getting nothing in return for
fees of $i,ooo to $1,600 they
pay to firms to promote their
discoveries.
Celebrette said inventor5;
whom he described as " babes
in the woods" in the business
world, stand only one chanee
in 10,000 of getting back the
value of the premium they
pay
for invention
development services.

lo MPmo11

BETTY lltltKLES,
Administrator of
the Estaft of
tn• Hoback, Dtceased ,
Pllintltf,

MEETING for all boys
interested in playing varsity
football far Meigs High
School Friday, 6:30 p.m. at
the high school.
Medieval warriors.
SQUARE DANCE at the
. Everything )lad wide
Senior
Citizens Center Friday
kimono sleeves and the
from
8:30-11:30
p.m. Music
mannequins walked slowly to
by
Stringdusters.
Cake walks
Central Asian . music witll
their anns stretched out. and round dancing . Ad·
Their hair was braided witll missioo $1 per adult; children
gold fabric and topped with under 12 admitted free with
golden tiaras or stiff, crown· parents.
· like hats. Huge gold coin-ljke
'
SATURDAY
earrings and pendants and
MEETING of tile Shade
coin-trinuned shoes added to River Lodge No. 4li3 F &amp;AM of
tlle glitter.
Chester, Saturday, 7:30p.m.
On the · everyday fashion Work in Master Masoos
front, designer · Pierre degree.
Balmain also showed Mongol _ OUTDOOR Hymn Sing
evening gowns.
Saturday 7:30p.m. at Forest
Purple has become the big Acres Park (Ft. Meigs). All
winter color in Paris and singers welcome. Bring lawn
Balmain's show included a chairs. In case of rain it will
purple velvet hooded coat be cancelled.
lined with purple ostrich
SUNDAY
feathers, over a purple . CHESTER High School
chiffon blouse matched with a Class of 1931 annual reunion
short, bouffant velvet s!rlri. Sunday at Chester Firehou:.e.
Purple and violet also were Basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.
the main colors in the All members of the class,
Christian Dior collection, teachers and schoolmates
right down to burgundy wine·
welcome.
colored boots.
MONDAY
The Dior show designed by
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Marc Bohan, his best in Club Monday 7:30 p.m. in
years, w,$ pegged on the Gig! garden at home of Mrs. M. J.
look - black bows in the hair Fry, Cheshir.e. Members are
and at necklines, round Peter
invited til bring guests.
Pan collars on littie short
THE MIDDLEPORT
jackets, sliort bouffant skirts,
Garden
Club will meet
black stockings and ankle.
Monday,
Aug.
I, at 7:30p.m.
boots.
in the garden of Mrs. M. J. '
Fry, Cheshire. Members are
invited to bring. guests.

designed to - expose the
students to all phases in the
specific area of consumer
lending.
The course of instruction
. co nsists of one resident

• Sally Holtz, Rio Grande CoUege-Communily College student from Wellston , works wifJJ
area grade· school children during a natural science teaching metllods course on tlle
campos.

COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO PROIIATE DIVISION

WEDNESDAY
POMEROV , Lodge 164
F&amp;AM Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Work in EA degree. All
master masons invited. '
CE RVICAL CANCER
Clinic Trinity Churdl Wednesday 10 to 12 and I to 6.
Appointments may be made
by calling 992-M32 after S:30

bankinR school

presents

Social
Calendar

'

· . ·. $

~ CHEPS DELIGHT

JOY liQUID

, CH.EESE s·PREA_
D•.•~-~~ ••
BANQUET ·
$

-DETERGENT•••••••••2!.~~
ELF
. . . .' PLASTIC $ 09
1
TV DlNNER •••••~ -~-CIDER· VINEGAR ••• ~~•••
1

COUPON

--

L

1

GERBER STRAINED

BABY FOOD

or10/$1w;c
Umit I Per &lt;;ustomer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires July 30, 1977

49

DETERGENT
490Z.

99$
-

W/C

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires July 30, 1977

I

COUPO!'j

SHOWBOAT

STOKELY

PORK &amp; BEANS

CATSUP

400Z. .

2/$1

limit 1 P8r Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires July 30, 1977

'liM

14

oz. '4/$1

Limit I Per Customer
·Good Only at Powell's
Offer
July 30, 1977

�I -The llailySentiMI,Middleport·Pomeruy, 0 .. Wednesday , July 27, 1977

~'Mte Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July,~27
::.:.:.:
, 1:.:.9::..:
;7_ _.....:.._ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

Safer, mileag.~ savbig tke unveiled
UTICA, Mich. (UP! ) Tire engineers have known

.'

l
Dannecker, Jr., representative of Westfield
Com panies, Sharon Karr and Duane Plymale, Area Extension Agent, 4-H, 1-r, represented
·
·
Meigs County In cootest.
~

J

Miss Karr· spoke in Jackson
•

Pike and Scioto Counties
pa-rticipated in the eontest.
Miss Karr, as well as each
contestant, was present ed a
trophy and certificate by
Arthu r Dannecker, Jr.,
representative of Westfield
Companies.
The first place girl winner,
Cathy Glenn from Scioto
.
1
Cqunty, and t he Itrst pace
boy winner, Brad Benner

Assembly points
to Friday recess

samemanner than steel·
belled tires were Introduced
In the early '7011..
The
Department
of
Tronoportalion must approve
the lire before it can be buill.
Because the tire requires a
specially buill wheel, Pilliod
said it was doubtful it would
be oll'end In large numbers
in the replacement market
until 'Iter it becomes
standard equipnent 111 many
new cars.

In another lellt to demm·
strate that rolllnlll'tliiUince
wu improved, the drivers
of three Ford Granada•
travellnll 25 m.p.h. shilled
into neutral and then CON\ed.
The car equipped with biasbelled tires rolled to a stop In
!,Ill feet. The Granada !!lied
with steel-belled radlala lr&amp;V·
eled 1,194 while the new
Goodyear tire-equipped car
covered 1,600 feel before
stopping.

from Scioto County, will now
represent the Jackson Area
attheStatecontesttobeheld
on ~ugust 22 at the Ohio State
Fair.
A club member for eight
years, Sharon now serves as
secretary of the Busy
Beavers 4-H Club. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Karr of Route I ,
Middleport.
. Sharon was accompanied
to the dinner and contest by ,
her mother , Mrs. Delma
Karr, April Wise, and Denise

(loodyear Chairman J .
Pilliod Jr. said the new tire,
which
resembles
conventional radials except
that it is a little more squatty,
could help automakers
achieve government fuel
economy standards · of 27.5
miles per gallon by 198S.
Instead of the current 24 to
26 pounds air pressure
recommended for today 's
steel-belted radials, with
their characteristic
underinflated
Goodyear
said
its new look,
tire should
be
inflated to 34 pounds.
In one demonstralioo, the
new lire - tabbed the
"Arriva" by its design&lt;;rs increased fuel economy 7.6
per cent over .s conventional
steel-belled radial which .is

now standsrd equipment on
about 70 per cent of new cars.
· Compared to the older biasbelled tire, fuel economy was
increased 16.2 per cent. The
Dean, sununer assistant at bias-belted tires still accunt
the Meigs County Extension
Office. The evening's activities were sponsored by
Westfield Companies of
Westfield Center, Ohio, who
has sponsored the Safety
Speaking Contest for the last
30 years.
•

THE DAILY SENTINEL
through it we purchased
... our car
.. .furnished our
-first home
... clothed and
fed our family

11

loss of ]·obs

:

1:

a

fantastic depth. team needs

conference game on the ro~;~d
fur the first time s ince 1971,
winning the fi rst back-to·

Ry l.F.E CORSO
Indiana F• t~~llhall C•1a r h
Wrillt'll £ur UPI

BLOOM ING TON,
Ind .
1 Ul'll - As any student of
U1e sport can tell you, football
is not a very pre&lt;licta ble
sport . 1 ne&lt;!!l to remind
myself of that since I am a
so
rt or e nthu siastic rand
!'~ONPUBLIC AID
•
.
op
timisti c person, and I .
COLUMBUS (UP I) ~ The
wouldn
't be doing our
Ohio House passed and sent
program, on which my sl:!ff
to the Senate Tuesday a bill and I ha ve placed a Jot of
adjusting how state aid to
nonpublic schools shall be blood, sweat and tears, much
good if I let myself get
spent.
carried away.
The bill wa s required
We feel our program has
because of a June decision by ·
made substantial progress.
the U.S. Supreme Court
We think it began to show in
voiding the use of public some tang ible ways last fall .
funds for certain types of
Winning
fiv e
games,
non public aid.
breaking even in the Big Ten
Ohio distributes $44.4
and finishing a third place tie,
million over two years to
returning the Old Oaken
nonpublic mostly parochial,
Bucket to LU. with the first
schools. The bill shifts around , victory at West Lafayette in
about $5.6 million of that 14 years andjust the second
total.
since 1946, wirining a

to get along in this league.

We' re better nlf than we
were, but we could be hurt by
a run of injuri~ at almost
any position.
Our problem is, as it was
last year, mainly one of
defense .
t :ve
a lw ays
m a int a in e d
th at
championships are won by
defense and the kicking game
and the thrust of our effor ts
have been in that direction.
How important is it?
Llllst year we limited opJlO·
nents t o two. or less
touchdowns in five games.
We won all five of them.
Defense is the key to winning
football.
'
Offensively we could be a
rea l good clu.b. We lost just
on e sta rter and the backfield
returns intact. That includes
Mike Harkrader, who had
such a sensational fres)unan
season as the Big_Ten's No . 2
running back last fall . Ric

back league games sim:e

197.1- a ll
these
were
ach i evements whi c h

represented mi lestones tA1 us
in building the type of footba ll
program ·the university seeks
'- and deserves.
TheSe
accomplishments
have · had a very positive
effect on our program . We
could see this in the spring.
Our player s know they can
compete on this level, that the
things we are doing are right
a nd if pursued with
dedication and self sacrifice,
will bring us to our goal.
We still have a ways to go,
but I am convinced this is a
better team than any of ourfirst three years at Indianamore
ability ,
more
competitive - both within
itself and within-. th~--­
conference.
We're still short ·of the

Enis has been a starter for
tllree seasons and is one or
the qu icker fullbacks around .
By going to Scott Arnett as
a sophomore
last year we
'
now have a big sl ron ~
r un ning quarterback with

some exiX!rience. We woo
fo ur of seven conference
games after we went to him.
We experime nted some
with our offense this spring,
trying to utiltze som e other
good running backs in the
same lineup with Harhader.
We felt we needed to get ~uch
threats as Da rricl\ Burnett
and Tony Suggs into · the
lineup with Mike·. But since
they were hurt most of the
spr ing, we discovered
a noth er player , Ma r kus
Hardy, a young man who
started for two seasons at
West Point, who transferred
to Indiana last fall.

All Star

Game; ·12: ''Charlie'S Angels"; ~: "Barna:by

1

:: Jones''; 4: ~~Husbands and Wives"; ,5: "Laverne and Shirley";
1
"
6· (tie) "Barney Miller" arid "Bridge at Remagen" (ABC
:: ~nday movie); 8.; "_All's Fair"; 9: "Wbat's Happening!!" ;

:: 10:

~-'Fish . "

••

.

..,

cor wI aliT

'"NMI 111100a

••••••
••

••

W I _ , . 1N1 _..,.TO UIIIT QUAIIIINI. NOM IOt.D

~! to ~ win ·nothing

::

••
:.
::
:'
:,
•
~:
•,

l;

4:·
~.
~:

:
•

~

:

~

'

'

.•..'.''4. .:

~-

,

~­

·7

:•
:
•

;J

... .
' ...........
-'

I

;.~·

-

1.116 AUG77

~'

::,

AND NOW ENJOY ....

~:
~:
~!

'

••
:
.~

SENIOR CITIZEN $_
HOPPING
A good Newspaper attracts loyal
readers who respond vigorously
to the advertising con'tent.

~,

resumed were O'Neill's

::·
••
: -:
:;
:·
:;
••
.:
:;

But the label stuck. Tbe ideas. They became O'Neill's
Speaker is involved.
orders to Flynt and the rest of
Under the circ~ces, the Democrats.
0 'N elll decided not to
It was odd, in light' of tbe
Interfere with the ethics above, that some have
committee's investigation for conclu~ that Flynt only
fear of leaving the iritpression 'acted alter a gun was put to
he was using his power and 1Jls head. It can be assumed
influence to bog it down or.· · the same observers _would
frustrate it out of self- have concluded six ·months
•• .protection,
ago, when the inquiry got
••
Then the Phil Lacovara under way, that if the speaker ·
:: thing broke. The chief had put himself in the middle
: : counsel of the jn'l,!!stigatioo of the inquiry at the start he
:; said he col!f!Ui't work would have been accused ·of
:; anymore with . Jack Flynt, trying to manipulate a
•• ethics chainruii\. Lacovara coverup.
:' came to the inquiry with a
There may be a coverup
: ' Mr. Clean reputation for his going on. O'Neill may be_
:: aggressivejobasanassistant heavily involved' In . t~e
• • Watergate prosecutor.
scandal, but so far there IS
[
RIB departure under fire lack of evidence on either
~
raised questions of whether score and there are the
~:: the committee was really denials, for what : they're
• •, sincere aJ&gt;out lnvestigating · wortp·.

"'; :;·

fellow Democrats.

~~. Firemen, police~~~

-~.

• 1ll'

In the race· .for retail sales, the
proven ·medium is newspaper
advertising.

MR. RETAI.LER

.,.

I

.O OGIII

Kroger 20~oz.
White Breacl

'

Grade A
Large Eggs ........... ,..Do••
U.S. GOV~. GIAD£0 CHOICE

Country Club
Ice Cream ........ :...V.-Gal.
ctn.
Punch·
.
-49·01.
Detergent.... .. .. .. .. aox
1•% WHOLEWHEAT.

irii~~caesar

-·

Boneless loin
Strip Steak .... ........... lb.
U.S GOV1. GIADED CHOICE

a!!
•••
• ••

walk from jobs

::•

'

CANTON, Ohio (Ul'l) :; Safety f!rces walked off the
• • job late Tuellday night alter
~: ' city oouncll -refuaed to place
:l;: on the beUot a city ltiC&lt;me tax
~:: whlc:b would h&amp;Ve,)lrovided
::: fundi fiX' hlgber salaries.
••
Mayor stanley Clnldl was
:: expeeled to go to court ~

'

You can't afford to 'ignore such a
loyal audience!
,
·

: : eeeldnlan lnJtlllCliCIIIIPinll
... the waaout, whidl Idled ~
~ but u ol the city's 1911 pollee
• ' offlc:era and all UIO fire
••

•. fl.,.,...
Polb olfklli-a aet

THE DAILY SENTINEL

::.
::

992~156 .

••

up picket
llneeat 10:111 p.m. when the
lltiCdlll lblft e1de4 .and fire
left their jobu Jew

:: fl.,...,. later.
••

~ m!rstr
A IJIOke•man for lhe
atrlJdnl polke olflcen aald

'

they were prepared to stay

off work In the northeastern
Ohio city of abol!t 110,000
residents "until we get the
job done."
Cmlch 118id he would not
tolerate the walkout and told
the city solicitor "to prepate
the proper paper&amp; and docu·
menta !AI omjoin the strike
qalnlt the citizens of Canton
by the pollee 8nd !lremen."
He IBid he hoped to get a
quid! dedtdoiJ fiUII a Stark
County Commcm Pleas Court
judge early today.
"We will not under any
circumstances tolerate
atrtt•• nllardless of the
..... that may be pendlnc,':

said Qnlch.

.
I, .

Boneless Top
Round Roast............. lb.

2.,....... sac

MeaI Bread .. .. ..
L••·
Fullntoon Longhom,•.· o•.
Co lby Cheese...... Pkg.
.

1 -ALL CLIMATE

Valvoline
Motor Oil.. .........

U.S. GOV7. GIADED CHOICE. IEEF CHUCK
· SHOULDII .-aT IOAST

3
Sl ~m:~onions......... ... lb.19c

55 c t::.:.~~~. . . . . 5 . 1
lbo.

California
Red Plunts ................. lb.
Eastern Grown
Fresh Peaches ..... .

:i

Our Newspaper audience is th~
overwhelming tl1ajority ·at all"··
adu.,ts in our market area. Such
coverage is unmatched by radio
for all stations combined~ and
even a combination of best primetime shows.

•

wASFiiNGTON (UP!) .:..
In th!lt light, younger memSpeaker Thomas O'Neill has hers of the House swarmed
gotten into a no-win situation over O'Neill, demanding
in his handling of the South Flynt's head, or a shakeup of
Korean influence peddling the
ethics
committee
investigation.
membership, or set up a
O'Neill's problem started select committee and take
whe'n his name popped up in the inquiry away from ethics.
some records obtained by the
One sophomore, Rep.
press which showed he Berkley Bedcll, !).Iowa., said
attended · parties thrown by what a lot of others . were
Tongsun Park, the South thinking. "Mr.Speaker, What
Korean businessman who is about allegations of your
alledged io ha've bribed a invOlvement in the scandal?"
number of congressmen. so Again the denlal.
they would look favorably on
O'Neill was reetlng at his
his home govenunent.
beloved Cape Cod sununer
One party in particular was retreat when the Lacovaril
to observe his birthday and resignation broke over the
he was given a set of golf weekend. He knew fuU well
clubs.
the firestorm of protest that
"I didn't even know the awaited him back in the
invitation came from Park Capitol and he determined
Wllil I g_ot there. I understood then to take personal
some of my colleagues were command of the inquiry.
thro-wing the party," said
The closed-door leadership
O'Neill at the time. ·.
meetings "that led to Leon
"I woutpn't know Park if he · Jawor~ki's hiring to succeed
willked into this room. I never Lacovara and a setting up a
got anything from him and I direct line betWeen the new
neveraskedforanything," be chief investigator and the
told
'a ~ recent
news speaker as . the inquiry

~ oonfe~" ~ ~

I•

~ AND I'IKII

to-.

O'Neill stands·

'"
••
••

••

co.

OOODIIUNDAY • .U.Y:t.l, tm...UJUI.YM,If77 ..

::•• Commentary

,.

Char les Frecker with one
advisor and three members
attending.
Th e membe rs discussed
project books and Ed Holler
and Blair Windon gave a
report on th? last Juni or
Leader meetm g. Refreshments were served by Mr.
and Mrs. Ch~rles . Frecker .
The next me_etmg Will be Aug.
6 at the fairgrounds for 1n·
terviews and discussion of
fair booth . - Ed Holter.

-

lic

. arned
SteeI bl

The
Willow
Cre ek
Roadrunners have held two
recent meetings, tb~ first on
June 29 at the home of Karla
and Kim DeMoss with two
advisors and seven members
present . A fund raising
committee was set up.
Members will brlng bottle
caps for the club treasury.
Projects were worked ' on by
Barbara Grueser Karla
DeMoss and Kim Eblin. A
game of , tag was the
recreation and refreshments
were se·r ved by Dixie Eblin,
Shelly Corbitt, and Kim and
Karla DeMoss.
The second me.:ting at !he
home of Reta Eblin IJn July 8 ·
was attended by six . club
members and two adv1sots .
Judging and the food fair was
discussed. Details were given
onprojectlessonsbyBarbara
Grueser, and Kim and Karla
DeMbss. The next meeting
was set for July 18 at the
Eblin 'home where clothing
projects and books will he
worked on. - Dixie Eblin.
The Chester farm Boys met
on July 12 at the home of

·corso feels grid program at
Indiana is showing progress
. .

• talk to a 'lew~
•
.
: "There llleo 'were a lot of people who wanted to sign up for
: our no frilla bolpilll plan. W• don't operate until we have two
! or three ll'tinJU with appendicitis. The surg~ry is perfofiiled
• by medical lltudents who are in closed ctrcwt televJSwn
: contact with an actual doctor at his golf course. It's so
: depressing for·~rs to be around sick people all the time ." ·
.
~ ~
:. ' The.IOtopnetworlotelevislon progrm iot the week ending
•· July 24 accordingtothe A.C.NielsenCo., were:

'

Weirdo
creature
•
IS scary

COLUMBUS (UP!} - The tllree years unless expressly
Ohio General Assembly extended by the legislature.
Tuesday continued its
Orlett noted tllat heroin
countdown toward a six-week · was only one of 100 drug
recess planned to begin substitutes which could be
Friday, acting on bills used in a "detoxification
dealing with pornography · program.
and bootlegged cigarettes.
The Senate gave ~0-.12 DUNU&gt;P'S JOB
Today, the ,Ohio House approval and sent to the
BOSTeN (UP!) -Former
TAVERNIER, Fla. (UP! )
scheduled action on the House legislation authorizing
Democrats' top priority - a qualified anesthesiologists' U.S. Secretary of Labor John - It's a huge, hairy thing
will
help with bright, colorless eyes public employe collective assistants to administer Dunlop
bargaining bill - and a anesthetics under direct Massachusetts develop a $2 and it slinks.
Charles Stoeckman, a VIet;
conference committee was supervision of a licensed million program to expand
physician.
·career
opportunities
for
state
nam
. veteran and former
scheduled to finish work an a
policeman
says he isn 't easily
Sponsors
said
the
measure
employes.
compromise
budget
frightened.
But something
would help rural county
AI a meeting of state and
"language bill."
Should the House pass the hOspitals which are short of union officials in Gov . . lurking in the mangroves
public employes collective anaestheslologists, and would Michael Dukakis' office behind his Florida Keys home
bargaining bill in its. present give · students at Case Tuesday, Dunlop called the has him "scared to death ."
Stoeckman doesn 'I •!aim
form, Sen. IJarry Meshel, !). Western Reserve .University, program a good example of
Youngstown, said he would one of only . two training . "how collective bargaining is · th8t thing is the legendary
send the bill. to a conference gr OWids in the country in supposed to work in the "skunk ape" - Florida's
. equivalent of such soughtcommittee.
anesthesia, a future · in pub' sesector."
·
The
program
is
part
of
a
Meshel, · who is also medicme.
h
t after creatures as the
"When
1
enter
the
l
ree-year
agreemen
Himalayas' yeti and the
chaim)an of the six-member
House-senate conference operating room, 1 don't want recently reached between the NorUtwest's 1 'bigfoot. "
' But Stoeckman, a self·
committee on the budget anyooe less than the most state and the Alliance, which
''language" bill, said the qualified person giving me represents some 42,000 employed cabinetmaker who
live$ only 90 feet off U.S.
panel would hold its second . anesthesia, knowing that the workers.
Dwllop, now a Harvard Route 1 on Key Largo, says
and final meeting today after least little mistake could be a
the I :30 ' p.m. Senate floor matter of life or.death," said professor, and Dr. Charles the creature's presence is ''a
Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, R· Myers of the Massachusetts nightmare that has seriously
session .
Institute of Technology will- changed my family's life ."
In floor action Tuesday, the Defiance.
But Sen. Anthony J. Cele· work with a llknember comStoeckman I!BYS he Is
House unanimously passed a
:. . bill outlawing and setting brezze Jr., o-Cleveland, mitlee .made unlbn and state considering moving his wife
·,
strict penalties for the argued that "the choice may officials to design new Leslie and their son Charlie,
production· or distribution of, come down to having traiiling programs .for ·state 13, elsewhere.
Monroe CoWity Sheriff's
allegedly oh!cene material someone available or not employes to increase their
having the operation at aU." skilis and respoosibilities.
Sgt. Rondall Chinn says he
involving minors.
hasn't
found
tangible ·
The "kiddie porn" bill,
evidence
of
any
.
strange
which unanimously cleared
the Senate , in May, was
0'
creature living In the
~
mangroves
near
the
returned to the upper
Stoeckman home. But he said
chamber for concurrence in
minor amendments.
~or
"There
is definitely
''It is most unf&lt;rtunate that
aTuesday,
problem
there.
These
people are tr:uly scared to
pornography involving
children
is
becoming · CIUCAGO (UP!) -Recent backsat Gary, alreadY begun death."
·
rampant,'' said Rep, William steel industry price hikes and in smallnwnbers, could "rise
Stoeckman said his first
J. Healy, 0-Canton, House not a sharp Increase in significantly 1!1 the next few sighlirig of the mysterious
floor manager of the bill foreign imp&lt;rts are the "real days. 1 think layoffs and figure was on July 14 while he
sponsored by Sen. Anthony 0. reason" behind cutbacks reduced work weeks are and his son were walking in
•
CalabreBBe, l).(Jleveland.
affecting thousands of imminent." He said a 'the three-acre mangrove
"'
The legislation would workers, the union leader of timetable for cutbacks is thi~.
require that conviction on the Chicago area steel mills has being drawn up.
'
I startled it," he
first offense would carry a charged . .
Over 19,000 persons are sai "II was way ahead ~ a
•
prison term of up to five
"It is the steel industry's employed at Gary, Larsen dark, hilll'y patch. It sort of
_years and a _fine of not more economic policies causing 118id.
stayed there, like aifdtseer ddoes
than $2,500.
Lal'!en
said
the
normal
when the wind sh
an 1t
these layoffs" and not "that
Subsequent convictions old bogeyman, foreign seasonal downturn in . sales catches your scent.
could bring a prison term of imports," James Balanoff, "has been aggravated by
"But It stunk awful, like a
~ . up to 10 years and a fine not to · director of the
115,000 high levels of import&amp; this dog that hasn't been bathed in
exceed $5,000.
steelworkers in the union's year." Steel import levels in · a year and suddenly gets
Also in the House, the lower District 31, charged Tuesday. the Chicago area reached rained on," Stoeckman said.
chamber
passed
and
Mrs. Stoeckman said she
A spokesman at United 259,000 tons in May, a.
•
returned to the Senate States Steel Corporation's spokesman said. That Was awakened about 3 a.m.
. legislation making it illegal to South Works said earlier in comparect to 43 000 tons In Friday by the sound of
'
. ' something thrashing through
transpOrt or seU untaxed the day about 2,000 worlrers May, 1976.
cigarettes in Ohio.
Ferry
Sllid
about
250
a brush pile In th~ yard.
.
have been laid off or their
"Bootlegged" cigarettes 'working hours shortene!l . workers have -been laid off at
"Through a gap in the
· cost the state between $22 because of a sharp increase the South Wcrks plant sihce jalousie window, from where
July 10 and another 1 750 I was lying in bed, I saw these
million and $30 million . a in foreign steel imports.
year, explained Rep. Dennis
Bill Ferry, USS public have been put on shorte~ed bright, colorless eyes," she
Eckart, 0-Euclid, sponsor of affairs representative, aald work wedts. He said more of ~d. "They must have been
the bill which passed 94-lo-ll. slmllar cutbaclrs may be the plant's 8,500 workers reflecting the back yard light,
And in a third House Door necessary at the firm's ~ry · could be affected unleSII the Uke a oat's would. They were
•
vote, the lower chamber sent Works where generally market picks up.
evU..startng. I could see the
''The mill only runs · when silhouette of its huge shoulder
to the senaie a bill .to a.Qow cheaper imports have hurt
the state to create a pUot salea of dcmeftil: sted-uled in · we've got orders," Ferry and head above an el8ht.foot
·
bush, 30 feet f~om the
heroin treatment program In COIIIIIIIler durahi2JprllWcts said.
two unspecified counties. -such as appliances and cars.
South W&lt;rks spokesman bedroom window. .
"I got hysterical," said
Under terms of the mJI, which
Balanolf, a cloee ally of Jerry Cornell said the
company
baa
no
immediate
Mrs.
Stoeckman.
P' 1d 7&amp;-to-16, heroin ltaelf union
rebel
Edward
Cllllld be used in the program. Sadlowski and his SUCtleiiOr plana for an end to the TO AUSTRAUA
"Heroin Is a problem . aa diltrict director, hotly cutbacks. "It is a very
LONDON (UPI) - The
·GJvtnc people .IIKI'e does not diaputed that cootentlon.
aerioua situation Ia about ali I Australian government has
IOlve die problem," argued
invited Prince Charles for a
'"!bey are out to really can say," ·he IIBid.
Rep. . La
Brown, D· gorge
"!Mid
another
sears
visit, Nov. I-ll.
themselves
on
Colgmbnt
tower
and
we're
In
Buckingham Palace anmaximU{II profit&amp;,'' he IIBid of
nounced Tuesday the prince
But Rep. Edward J. Orlett, the steel illdllllry, ''whatever busln~ " CorneU said.
E:recuUv• at aeverlll dther will make the visit primarily
D-Daytoa, !ipC)IID' of the bill, Uie American pubUc will
Olicago &amp;tell ~el companies as part of the Queen's Silver
noted 111M ..,.,...,. were stand fer."
. built IniAl tile JII'OCI'Illl,
Gary Works spokesman sald.imwt mer- have Jubilee .: /lppeal for Young
lnclad"'l Ita llrlnln.liGn In Wl)'lll! Lllreen said the cut. not affected 1helr bualneu, · Australians.

Bi

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televtsloa Writer
NEW YORK \ UPI ) _ Martin Mull wrote a romedy album
called " I'm Everyone I Ever Loved," which just about sums
up the character henowplaystn "Fernwood Z.Nighl."
Mull , who had cut records and worked the night club circuit
for.seven years , suddenly became a.familiar television face in
millions of homes when he played the late wife-beater Garth
Glmble 011 the late "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" show.
Norman Lear, who followed up his "MH, MH" soap opera
spoof with this summer's " Fernwood 2-Night" take-&lt;&gt;ff on talk ·
shows, dedded to bring Mull back' as Garth'!' identical twin
brother Barth Glmble, and make him hMI of the show, using
the sarde kind of tacky furniture on stage that Mull used in his
llight club act.
.
.
.
• The show is set to run through October, a lllaller of. 65
: chapters, which is equal to five years of an ordinary half-hour_
• situation comedy that gets time 'off for reruns, summer
• replacements and pre-emptions.
• "Barth Gimble is a character who almost totally lacks
: reflection, sensitivitY, inner thought," Mull said, summing up
; the vastly egocentric character he plays. :·He's also very
avaricious. But he has that same redeenung quality that
• almost everyone. has- given his limited supply of sensitivity
: and talent, his goal is to better his life without really meaning
• to hurt anybody."
• Mull, who was raised In North Olmstead, Ohio, says that the
show ·h as gotten oo great response from that state. There was
~ an incident, however. On the premiere program they
introduc\!(1 a character who was stopped for speeding in
• )i'ernwood and asked 1o be on the program because he was
: Jewish, to give the folks in Fern~ood what for some would be
• their first chance "to talk to a Jew."
"We used a '555' telephone exchange," Mull said. "Appar: ently that exchange. is uaed by a Cincinnati hot line of some
: sort. They)ritt~edwjth calis from people who wanted to

·tires.

REPRESEN ~ MEIGS :.... Arthur

Sharon
Karr
Miss
represented Meigs County on
Monday evening at the 4-H
Area Safety Speaking Contest
at the Jackson Area Center in
Jackson. Miss Karr's tolk,
uHorne Safe Home," con~
cemed safety in and around
the home.
Six girl contestants and two boy contestants from Galli a,
Hocking, Jackson , Meigs ,

for years that overinflated
tires provide better fuel
oconomy.
They've also kno"'ll that
the extra air reduced lire life,
gave a less-comfortable ride
and caused a loss in handling
control.
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Co. executives Tuesday
Wlveiled a new lire they
claim overcomes those
problems and provides a 4 to
10 per cent fuel econ&lt;my
improvement, over current
steel-belted radials - which
were vast Improvements
over the older ·bias-belled

for about one-Ulird of all galioo Improvement in ali
replllcement tires.
cars would be worth a billioo
Using an A.MC Matador dollars,"
Pilliod · told
with a 304 cubic inch V~ newsmen at test track buill
lroveUng at 50 miles per more than half a century aao
hour, the new lire provided . by the PacbrdMotorCarCo.
18.86 mUes per 11anon. Fuel at atlmt when fuel econ&lt;my
economy using a regular waa of little concenm.
steel-belled tire dropped lo
Piillod said GQodyear has
17.52 m .p.g. and fell even begun showing the new tire to
further - 16.2 m .p.g. - with Detroit's aulllmak.-s with
a standard )lias-belled lire. the hope they would mate It
" It's been estimated that a an original equipment optloo
three-tenths of mile per by the lmmodel year In the

[Meigs 4-H Club. News

TV. • .in Review

5

sgc

3 lbo; 51

Boneless Boston
Roll Roast ................ tb.
U.S. GOV'T. GIADIE,D CHOICE

Boneless Top
.
Round Staall............. tb.
U.S.D.A.INSPECr£0
Mixed Fryer

2 S·o·. Sl
..
2"~·· Sl
3
,
.
.
.
Sl
Catiap.......... :...... .••'•·
i:dwich
3. Sl
Kroger
, .
TOIIIGto Juice.......

Pkg.

can•

MIJ-11 .• 1. .

DeiHllido
Bowl Cleaner

LIMIT4

GOY~. GIACJm CHOIC£

Boneles~ Top

Sirloin Steak

$ 99

•

Red Ripe
Watennelons ............. tb.

USDA

CHOICE
5-7 Ll. AVG. (SUaD Ll. 79&lt;)

KIOGII

Hi Nu 2%

Lowfat Mill«

19;

Kroger · . .

or .
.
WleHr Buu.. ..... .... ...

..,.,....

Parts:
.. ·'·.................. Jb.
PKGS.

WHOLI MELONS ••• EACH S 1.19

DanDee
.
Com Twistee ..... ,..

WITH COUPON

HoLLY FA-.

CUT INTO HALVES OR QUAIIT£15
I

.

Whole
·
Sntoked Picnics .......... lb.
5·1-LI. AVEIAGI U.S.D.A.INSPICTID

Frozin . .
Baking Hans,.......... :... lb.
AU VAiti.£TIUSUaD

.

-Kroger
.12-oz.
BoIogna....................... Pkg.

I~J:.IU&amp;:

Swlsswich Frozen
Strawberry Yogurt

69c F

Pkgo.

YACPACI(

Kroger
Coffee

$

AT99'
GET ONE

39,c~lilA-89 c

TOTAL SAIISJlCTIOII
SUAIAIITEE

We .......... wt .. ;aft;;:,
If ol. oil poulb~. H. duf 1o
conditions .beyond our ca.
trol, wt run out of an Hvti1iwd
wt . substl· 1vto o tomporab~ brand at •

-lal.

Ftti$H ASSOITID, v. CINTliS
'It FIIITCUTSIYCOUNT

•-ct.

COUld PKG.

-PUIDO

Pork .
Chops........................... lb.
~i~=Y --'!)dte4tl44e, SfltdaU ~
••.U•* l•lilm l1tll w 11w1rilts

a similar saving or glvt yow

·• RAIN CHECK for tho ady,..

tisod spotiol at lho special

prko any limo whblll . 30
days. Wt:; Will wltltd' ~
HI. If you art tYtr iuat..
f1od whb o KrOgor putthau,
wt wm rtploct ,_ ittm or
refund your manly.

$249
Cooked Ham............... ·

-tiLDIOIFm

. •.

- Donuts ....... Dot. $119 ·
Glazed
IUSSIIl

Meat Bologna ............
.

Bam-0-Chlcken. .... -

$139
Kroger Wtlco••

$449

y..,,...,..
FoCMI Sla191.

'

1

I

�.·

•

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
l~ Wunlfn:ll'

l don

1.811

J_OtJ

lida~ ·

~~dt-h

..,.,If'\!

'''"'-"~'

.

,
,,.
l;!.;t

J.'i$

tlw uunmlwn IIi

"'•~lb b ~ r't·ut.:. ~r· ..., ~,. · 1) ~ dl:t~

Alb. rwm1•J¥ vll_.r

u~.~u

f.'tl!lll&gt;l-"-1lll\ t '

Wi} S ¥.-Jil bto lilllf).!~ at tht I d;i,\

·nut&gt;
In

U Wilklf~,

4 YEAR OLD small horse mare
marked pretty . gentle. gqpd for
advanced youth. Coli 949-2593.
19"'6 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLH
1200. Block in color wilh CK c.essones includ~ng tour pock .
One owner, 3000 mi les . $3600.
Phon&lt;t 'I&amp;S-3912

CKrtl tof Thlmk!. aHtt

OOtl&amp;kH) , 6 '--'\"111:.

~r

v.wd, $:100

nwtm1wn . C,o1.~h m ac.l '&gt;'IUit't-

Mttlde l ltlliW! ~It'S auJ Vi;~rd S&lt;ilet.
an.' IK't't'pll&gt;d on)~ 'lll' lth ~1-\sh with
un.lt•r ~ &lt;.;1:!11 ~ l'llilr!l:l.' for &lt;~dli t'itlt r~·
Ul)\ &amp;x Numbi.•t .lll t'Cit 't• vl 1'ht•

· ·

un~t

t 'or Sal..

C1w~1·

'"'
'"'

t&lt;i4\~&lt;&gt;
JW.~~

*'t-

l:..et

·Pomeroy Landmark
~f.len &amp;
condition your
water and a Co-op water
soflener . Model UC-XVI.
:Now Onlv:.

279•95

Let us test

r..' t1 UII-Cl11H!1

.Phuni'!f:l'!-21_56 . ·

. NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

ALLADOIN Ki:MOSl:NE: LAMPS and COAl NUM6ER 0 , SlOk.EH Oil COAL . l1meston-e. and colctum
LUMP DELIVERED. Coli (6H )
chlor•de uf'ld cotciurn brine for
"eaters . Replacement ports
384-7814 .
dust conirol and specmf mil(ln9
c h1mne~1 . · fTlOntles .
wteks ,
-salt tor tarmen ExcelsiOr Salt
etc. Stop i-n for demonstrotton JOHN DEERE 420 hve power , 3
poifit hitch. John Deer No . 5
Works , Mom Street . Pomeroy .
and fre~ cotolog Mountom
mower , :J pt . cut. John Oeer 2
Ohtoor phone992 . 3891.
leather and General store,.10-4 -1()() W. Union SL (bl")
row cuhivotor Ford · two 14 in, ,CAMPER. SbQO , Also . horse
592-S-478, Athens .
bottom plow . Cnii2•? ·21 QI\
trader, $450. Pj,one (tllol ) 698·
3290..
I

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER ?

Tlk· Publlbl~r n•St&gt;t'\'l&lt;S tht• n~tw. ·
to t'tlit 1W rl'Jt'd Otll) ""b dt~'llJt•d •-~&gt;­
)l&gt;&lt;•IJIMU:II Tht.• P'ubll:.lwr ""1!1111"" lA·
f t'!rtJXJ'l !oiiJit' foil' ltk)!'C liYdtl unt• Jll(\ll'-

y~ur

wale,·

CB SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23
Tn:H'Is ceiver
c.o m plete With weitth·er
proof PA speaker. 2 wav
base loaded CB antenna ,
tor roof top or tr-unk mount.
Power cord , coax , antenna
cable and all h·a rdware
includ ed .
:•
ONLY

·

.r.~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
~

Phone 992-2181

1972 SUZUKI S50, $750. Phone
949-2.463 .
1971 20 H.P. Outboard mQtor with
controls . $250. Phone (614 )
667·6227.
'

Slrickly wholesa·le to all . .
Not less than 112 case.

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

sn.n

romeroy Landmar11

FOR SALE

CAN GOODS

CB Mob ile

,fre-:-.

·.

cAsE LOT

1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

Pomeroy Landmar11

9.
_:J.ac~ W . Carsey , Mgr .
l6il.._
Ph~ne 992 -2 181

D·• CATERPILLAR End loader with

ASHLEY STOVE Dealers , Ru nnmg
Special Summer Sole. Lorge
C60, S300. Blo'w en, $40. Coli
mornings
(614)698 -7191.
-- ,,__
JOHN .DEERE Crawler BaCkhoe
endlooder and dump truck.
Phone992 -7.,.79.
~
~

CONTROL HUNGER ond lose
weigl'lt with New Shope diet
Plan and Hydrel( Water Pills . At
Dutton Drug Middleporl.

-

Co.· OP water sof tener$ . i'nodei 'VC· SVI.
New

.
Only 12'19.95
"Silve SSO . OO on il new
Hotpoint Refrigerilfor .
1 New 20 c~bic U . Chest
F rel!zer
t2S .OO Distounf ·
Now in stock, complete llne
of bulle garden seeds.
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
165
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
Saw
uo
1 Good Used Unico
Dryer
110 .00
Electric Trim-All , cuts
with nylon
nt .9S
( 1) Good Refrigeratoc $200

Pomeroy Landmar11
9
.. _Ja:ckPhone
w. Carsey . Mgr .
Ail
992 -2111

----

--

---.~---~

--

IS :.&gt; Efi'\ING AN 0RlGJt , -."
DI:-SIGN ~OR rH ~
i&lt;:&lt;·rA7·&lt;o:; ANNIVER5AK&gt; """~ - 1

ON

Superior
Steam Extraction

STROUT

__

~~~;R~ ~s ~H~~ ':v~

L-------:11------------'------'
•

~~!~:.,r;~ ~1te,

I h. H2·lHl

Free Eslil"ates
No Sunday Calls Plene
6-13 -1 mo.

tHE, PHOTO PLACE
109 High 51.

Pomeroy
Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Oc;casions

Bob Hoellich .

992-5292
6- ~2 - 1

4- 10-1 mo.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , service, all ma.kes. 992'-2284 . The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Sil')ger ·Soles . ond
Service. We shorpe.n Scissors.
EXCAVATING , dozer . loader and
backhoe work ; dumP trucks
and lo·boys ·for hire ; will- hau l
fill dirt , to soi l. limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
fen , day phor;'le 992 -7089 ,
night phone 99:2-35:25 or 9925232.
EXCAVATING . dozer , backhoe
tlnd ditcher. Chorle$ R. .'Hat·
field . Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7-42-2008 .
WILL do - roofing , constructi.on ,
plumbing ond heOting~ No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
742· 2348.
'
CARPENTER , flOoring , . ceiling ,
paneling. Phone '992·2759.
MOBilE Home Repair , Elec.,
plumbing and heating . Phone
992-:;BSB.
HOWERY AND MARTIN . Ex·
cavating . septic systems .
dozer, backhoe, dump trur;:k,
limestone, grovel , blacktop
paving , Rt . 143. Phone 1 (6 U )
.J2_8 -73,:3.:.;
1.C-~~~

HARRISON'S T.V. Repo-i,r . Service
Calls . 27~ Sycamore, St ., Mid·
dleport , Phone ~2-2522 .

'iffl~Ntl~1J ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

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

CAll 99~·U59

GUZ .ltNfJ ~·

WIZl!R CERTAINLY

HAVI!! BEEN

TALKIN&amp;~~

A I..ONI9 TIME.

tDYFLAG±

f .... .lllf .......
bdilllllo liM IIUIOIIKIIII

.J
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. ·
,_

SOTHn'-'1

ACCEPT Y'OU IN

THE ARM'!',
E-H, CHUCK?'

SWAtH'S

NO· - TttEY

YOU'-VE 1-4AP

100 BADL'f

SOME
VALUABLE

CLAI~ I'M 51 ILL ,

SMASHED UP

•

•

e ....

•
•
•• . .

SAHIB-

ACCIOENT-

Yesterday's

Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS ·lABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE

L---=A::•:;;-~1...,:::::....--.J '.• •f •

'Jumble
. s: OCTET ENEMY
Answer: h ca1a for aomethlng extra trom a
portormar-"ENCOREI"

I

38 Kiln
39 Japanese
wild dog
blows
40 Vereen and
5 Fit for
others
tillage
DOWN
11 Roman
I Garbed
emperor
2 Be- with
12- inind
(concur)
(2. wds.)
(2 wds.)
13 Seethe
Yesterday's Answer
It Pacific garb 3Wm.
24 Rummy
9 Streaked
PeM,
15 Photo lab
with
e.g.
abbr.
25 Least
lines
4 British
1~ Sign of
adorned
10 Hire
lawyw
approval
26
Traveling
16 Neither
(abbr.)
17 Anagram
masc. nor
bag
5 Sponge up
lot
of eat
·
28 Rental sign
fern .
6 Rarin'
~ 18 Clerical
· (2 wds.)
21
to go
!91Joss
residence ·
29 Refuge
Tw~d' s
7 Swiss
20 Crone·
30 Unfurls
nemesis
river
21 Splash paint
35Bartok
22
Resound
8 "City of - "
22 Musical
36
Toss
23
Thin
plate
(2 wds.)
Fountain
23 For ·fear

RNLOSER

Ph. 378-42SO
5-27-TFC

SI;LT! I'V!i ~
~Ub Mll.l'l.E'~
roR ~E'Af?S AllD /A\j

KingsbuJY Home Sales

TOMATOE'S N?&amp;

15 your_autbvrlzed dealer 'rvr Urban
awnings and carpqrtl. If y_ou want a

~1-ICIOt.JS!

quality produd which wru infrease
c.be vaJue of your hume1 ur mobUe
home, f.IGe lhlt will eahance tiS bea~t­
W for yean lQ eome, this will suJt
)'our needs. The Urban liae Ill aU .
alumiowu. htlvy ga"f!:e, aaodized

rallhags and posls,

term ·

plain or

dt!conlive. We have au &lt;eJ:perie..ced

i

crew that have crealed mauy of
these I~ quality awninp and car-

••

purls In thli area. Mosl of lhese pre-

It

dUds quaUf~ for low i.n&amp;eresl home
hnprove.meni ioiiDJ at__your lucal
beDJc or S&amp;:L. Call 992-7034 fora free

~--~~~~~!~~~~~--~

tslimale or stup by 11111 E . MaiD St.,
Pumtroy, 0 .
·
7-20-1 mo.

L--~=~:::~----_:'~-~

GASOUNE AJ .t -"V

ewton

BRADFORD, Auctione9 f, Com·"'
plete Service . PhOne 949·2487 ~
· or q49·2000. Recine , Ohi9. Cr ilt1
Bradford .
ELWOOD BOWE~S REPAIR -'-.
Sweepers , t6aster.s·, irons. all
small applio"rtces . lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage ·
on Route 7. Phone (bl-4) 985 ·.
- 3825:'-'
· - -- - - - -

is due to

bat next!

We'll see
i-f th'
rascal

kin

that .

hit~
~,.........,

(Fr.)
Z5 Lithuanian
26 Meat on
the menu
27 Electric

31

000

lFHE.
U¥55 ~ hls1L
GEIU5E'D 7bTHE:

A

, ,...,

New lead sets thll 3 .NT.

WEST
•97532
• AQJ
t 82

Alkali

•9&amp;a

writer's
subject

3'7 "Roots11

DAILy CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's .how
AXVDLBAAXR
Is

Wesl

Nortll Eau

Pass
Pass

:JN .T. Pass

'L

RUnAND .
FURNITURE

...a~~-r--~ ~----'----~~----~----~~----~~_.------------~.I ... l
NO
I

• 'lWINK5 FOR 1]-IE DINNEIZ
AND CONVERSATION 1
e.uT XD e&gt;ETTER GET
GOIN~ ••.

RJillnd

HAVE
IDEA, OOT I'LL
FIND OOME- ·
1HJNG!

SUREL
HAVE .:&gt;OME

POUGH!

I

.,:

•.
ef

~:
c

By Olwald • Jamea Jacoby

~

/ '·lf
. ·· . !
•
:
:
'•

1·%

t!.••••••~ •~ • ~ •!~ • ~! , • .-• •
,iiU"jMNo

•

NOW MUCH? AND
DON'T TRY 10 CON
. ME1 JOEY DI::LL!

aposLrophes, the length ond formati~n of the words are all three-notrump contract?. If
hints. Each day the code leuers are different. you know what East holds you
CRVPfOQUOTES

canlead .thequHnofhearu,
continue with the ace and jack
T G J N .c v
i. G W
0 K C y and coiled six quick tricks.
If you haven't had that look
M V
R K Tv
WL v
·F c y G J v
attheEasthandyou are likely
' ·
to open a spade. If you make
the normal lead of the three
RK
J K
ZVTANW
A 1 · · - spot your partner will either
play the quHn (an advanced
VBVCWKT
OGXRK
play) or the ace followed by
Ytsltrday's Cryploquolt: I NEVE~ EXPECTED TO SEE the queen (a normal play) .
In the 'first c-.e declarer
THE DAY WHEN GIRLS WOULD GET SUNBURNED IN
THE PLACES THEY DO NOW . -WILL ROGERS

w

~~OR

111:

j

7•

work It:

L 0 N G F E L I. 0 W

.

Your partner will win with
the ace, not,e the fall of the
eight from declarer, study the
hand a wbile, see .that you
have ~ndoubtedly led the lop
of nothing or second best of
nothing, shift to the lour of
hearts and wind up with . the
same six defensive tricks a
heart lead from yout band ·
would have produced. ·

A Mississippi reader wants
to know if yje could list the
play of all 11 tricks in each
hand in our .column .
We wish we could but space
limilations make It irnpossi·
ble to do so. We also lind that
!!lOSt readers enjoy workiilg
the ·play out.
· ·

(Do you hovo a queoffo/1 ·lor

th&amp; o.~rts?· Write "Ask the
Jacobys" care . ot rhis ·
newspaper. Tht JacObys will
answttr individual queetions If

stomped,

1011-addroo .. d

envelopes oro onclo11d. The
most lntere.sting quurlona wllf
be used In this column and wilt
tocolvo copies ol JACOBY

MODERN.}

Clt91T Kinl f'taHU't'S $)' ndicale, Inc.

~

1NI1UB

to

SOu'b
I N.T.
Pass

One leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
What do you lead from the
used for lhe lhrec L's, X for the two O's, et&gt;. Single letters. West 'hand against South's

· ~~~~~~--

-

seven.

U4

t A Q ti
•AQJ4
North-South vulnerable 1

36 Song·

l.iXlKS!'r-

EAST
•AQ6
• K 10 612

.752
SOUTH !DI
• K 10.8

Opening lead -

-

r·

.975 .

subjecu

• • . , • • ,• • . _ • · - .
M
T
..,eel
•
on., ues., ••. •
. .....
8:00ti15:00
•
Thursda~ &amp;'til Noon

will ratUe off 11 triCks; in the
second case, he will make 12.
Either way you will be most · ·
. unhappy about the . whole
thing. • · . .
,
.
If you are playing that you
lead second · best ( nof fourth
b&lt;ost) from a long suit not
headed by one ·of the four top .
·honors you will . open the

'l7

• 8 3. '
• K J 10 7 53
• K 108

song
(2 wds.)

LOvr;;;

WAY SHE -ucmr-

tall742-2211
TAL.KTO
WENDELL GRATE
CAR PET CONSULTANT

-

Oswald and Jim Jacoby .

NORTH

Reg, $6. 95-not I nsta lied

..RNill,rfiin.r'·

·BRIDGE

baby
,;-:=::---:"&lt;:,....-,.,..,.,,.L-::D~I3C--.~------.:-:- 34 Jewish

ULABNER ·

'4.88 SQ. yd.

a. Sal-At 5.P.M.

Wednesdey, July _
27

•H

32 Venerable
33 Seat for

•

(:andy Strip
Rubber Back
Rogular~ .95
Save 54.88 Sq. Yd.

1 .~ .

8 :00-PIIol "Instant Family" 3,4,15; Welcome Back,
Koller 6,13; Wallons 8,10; Play ol the Month 20;
Masterpiece
33.
. ..-- ·- · r ·--- Theatre
.
8:30--Pilot "Bay· City Amusement Co." 3,4,15; Whal's
Happening!! 6,13.
.
9 :00-Movle "Sight on the Lam" 3,4, lSi Barney Miller·
6; Hawaii Flve-0 8i Movie "Woman of the Year"
10; Movie "The Life and Tim~s of Grlzzly.Adams"
13; Age .of Uncertainty 20,33.9:3Q-Fish 6.
10:oo-Bartiara Walters Speclal 6; Barnaby Jones 8;
. News 2Q,'1- At The Top J3.
ll :GO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15i MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
'
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; SWAT 6, 13; . Kojak ·a;
Mary Hariman· 10; ABC News 33.
,
12 :GO-Movie "The Harvey Girls" 10; Janak! 33.

unit

'

~

6:3G-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grifllth
6; CBS News 8,10 ; Once Upon a Classlc20,33 .
1:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
. .6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Mv. Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Consumer Sur~r•!val. Klt 33.
7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3;.4; Ohio Stale Lottery 6;
Price Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Reporl 20,n;
Wild. Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly

'=--+--ll--+--

yell

SAVE ON
CARPETING

THURSDAY, JULY 21.1977
6 :GO-Summer Semester 1'0; 6: 1s--Farm Report 13;
6: 2().-Nol tar Women Only 13; 6:30--0octors on
Call•; News 6: Summer Semester 8; Urban Loaguo
10; 6:-IS-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5t).....Good Morning. We•t VIrginia 13: 6 :5s--Good
Morning Trl State 13.
7:00-Today 3.4.15; Good Morning America 6,13: CBS
News B; Chuck White Reports 10; 7:05-Parky Pig
10.
1 :3Q-Schoolles ·10.
8 :QO-..Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroos, 10; Sesame
St. 33.
8 :3Q-Big Valley 6; 9:oo-cross-WIIs 3; Phil Donahue4,13.15; Andy
Griffith 8; Mlko Douglas 10;
Biography 33.
·
9 :3o-A.M. 3; Edge of Nlghl6; Concentration 8; Unto
lhe Hills 33.
IO:GO-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dlnoh6; Here's Lucy 8.10;
Mike Douglas 13; World War I 33 .
10 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10;
Turning Points 33.
11 : 0Q--Wheel of Fortune 3.~.15 ; Happy Days 6,13;
Community of Living Things 33: 11 : 2~Biography
33.
11 :Jo-lt's Anybody's Guess 3.4, IS; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10; 11 :4s--Measuremetrlc 33.
11 : 5s--CBS News 8; Ms. Fl•lt 10,
12:QO-News 3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12 : Jo-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15: Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun -4i Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1 :00-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; tlie Reslless 10; Nol For Women Only 15;
Nova 33.
I : Jo-Oays of Our Lives 3.~.15; As The World Turns
8, 10. _
2:()0-..$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Austin City Llmlls 33.
2:30--Baseball 3,4; One Life to Live 6.13; Doctors 15;
Guiding Light 8,10.
3 :00-Another World 15; All In The Family 8,10; Antiques 20; What's Cooking? 33.
3: 1s--General Hospital 6,13 .
3:Jo-Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; College
.
for Canines 33.
.
4: 00-Gong Show 15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6i
Gilligan's Is. 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "Roman
Scandals" 10; Dinah 13.
·
4 :Jo-Emergency One 6; Andy Grllfllh 8; Hogan's
Heroes 15. "
5:QO-..Big Valley 3; Slar Trek 4; Brady Bunch 8; Mister
Rogers' NeighbOrhood 20.33; Emergency One 13;
Mission : Impossible 15.
5 :3Q-Adam -12 4: News 6: Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33.
6:00-News J.U.10,13,1S; Zoom 20.33; ABC News 6.

24 Mother

28 Huntsman's

742-2211

RUTLAND
42 •1211

. (Answers tomorrow)
FROZEN AVENUE

ACROSS

RATES

• ••
---·
•
•
....
~

1e

Ct I I XI I J( I I J

I Knuckle

FRIDAY TIL 5

•

lorm lhe surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

HOW MUCH DO I OWt 1./t
fER TH' MILK, LOWE Ell/?

~

.:· .••.•

Now arrange the circled leners to

~t.e~~t/

-..

.•

Mswer. ~:!

PROFESSOR
PIJHJA8 AH
ABLE

MODERN MAYHEM

FROM lt1AT OLD

I

J [J

&amp;OOD!
lOU'll fiHD

11 SHALL 8E M'f
Pt.EA5URf: TO
INSTRUC1 I"IM IN

r J

1

tSENFUI

AJIINIE-SEI'IU~PRO

LITTLE ORPHAN

- - ....

:

tiJ

KJ I

•

,.•.7

',,, _, ,.. c-..··- ... .__...

NOFEL

••

•

four ordinary words.

Radiator
Service

!

. .

byHenriArnoldandBoqLee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,

30 rolls of carpet In srock:
Good selection all on sele.
lnstollod with padding, no
extra lo pay.

A-1 BUSINESS
and BUILDING

".9 ~~ ®

One letter io each square, to form

ALLEYOOP

12 ond 15 fl. width Carpet rubb&lt;or bock.
·
HOMESITES for sale , 1 ocre and
up . Middleport , near Rutland.
Call992·7481.

OL' BUDDY\

EXPE.IENGD

Reedsville, 0 .

·

9:30--We Think You Should Know 3: Pilot "Look Out
World" 4,15.
10:QO-..NBC Reports 3,4,15; Charlie' s Angels 6 13 ·
News 20.
' '

Just Below the Janes
Boys' in Pomeroy , Ohio
Phone 992-2298
6· 15-1 mo.

, ... 992-2174

·

dO.,; lS..

· SOMETIMES AN HOM!!&gt;RE H/1? TO
·61fT IIJ THERe AND NIANUFACTURE
THE- &amp;REAl&lt;?· · IF 'IOU FOLlOW Me•

I

&amp;04 Wesl MAin Street

mo.

REMODELING , Plumbing , heating
and all types of general repoir.
Work guar-anteed 20 years ex·
perienc.e. Phone 992-2409.

~;~~{~~hE~h~?. ;:~

~0 ~i.-~~f~{~~

L.ARR},.!~Y~fi:IER

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

-- .

:e~~!~~- ~~:~: home~

.'

SIOIIfC.SOil'ITT
GtfiTEIS-AWIIIIGS

BISSEll SIDING 00

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

':=====================~

ALUMI~UM

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
W i .n d ow s
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

SHOP

-

WOTTA !&gt;REAK~
1,\&lt;KISI" GeTS. CAlLft&gt;
OFF T1 WAo;HIIJGTON··
LeAVIIol' YOU AIJD MJ:T' eo ON RUNIVIN'
THIS COio\PA!JY!

.

CRAFTY LADIES
HANDICRAFT

RACINE CARPET

'

WINDOW$

Aliljnment,
wheel
balancing, . tune-up.
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by
appointment. Ph . 742-21105.
,__ _ _ _ _=.6·,::5..;
·1..;m.:.::::o:..
· P..;d::;'. J

·GUTTER.SERVICE

- . . .,- _

CAPI'AIN EASY

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Route l, Pomeroy, 0 .

TEAFORD

RU~o~Q:MEIT

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS .
OPEN 6 ·DAYS A WEEK ,
10:0G to S:OO

Young's tarpeting

-

SlOn

8A .M.Io4 :30 P.M .
SALES AND SERVICE
~-23- 1 mo. Pd.

,:

VIEWING
an

WIIIIIOWS I DOORS

Phone 992-6282

:·:

6 :01)- News l.4.8,10, 13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6 :3Q-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grfffllh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
.
7:QO-.. Truth or Cons . 3; Probe 4; Liar's Club 6 · Pop
Goes the Country 8; News 10: To Tell the Truth 13:
My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit- 20;
People &amp; Place$ 33.
7:Jo-Dolly 3; Redscene ' 77 4: Malch Game PM 6;
$25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Reporl 20 JJ·
The J .u dge 10; Breakthe Bank 13; Wild King
~ : 0(}.. -Tul : .The Boy King 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13;
Good T1mes 8, 10; Nova 20.33 .
8 :3o-Bustlng Loose 8,10.
9 :00- CPO Sharkey 3 . ~.15 ; Barella 6; Movie
::Rhubarb· ' 8: Theater in America 33: Movie
When the Legends Die" 10: Focus On 13 ·
Documentary Showcase 20.
'

Filunctq Awaillble

Porn eray, Ohio ·

, ,.

••77 ·

Blow• illt. IJtalb &amp; Atlia

· Electrical&amp;
Refrigeration
3110 MAin ·st:

Route2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Kitchen Cab!Jlels . Roofing
Concrete
Patios
Sidewalks
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling .
Ph. 992-7119 or 696-1055
Estimates applied to jOb.
6-27-1 mo . pd.

, , TELEVISION

10 :30- lnt&amp;rnallanal Anlmallon Fesllval 20
11.QO-..News 3,~.6.8.10.13, 15; MacNoii- Lehr~ Roporl
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :30--JohnnyCar50n 3,4, 15; Roolcles6,13; Movie "The
Prisoner pf zenda" 8; Mary Hortman 10; ABC
News n .
12 :QO-..Movle "Pork Chop Hill'' 10; Janakl 33.
12:-IQ-Myslery of the Week 6,13; 1:GO-Tomorrow J.~;
2 : 1Q-News 13.
Movie Chonnel 4- S.nd' P.M. - Ob~&amp;ssfon
7 and 11 P.M. - The Front.
·

WEDNESDAY. JULY 27
5:00-- Big Vllittey 3: BradY Bunch 8: Mister Rogers'
N,..1ghborhood 20.33 ; EmPrgency One 13; ·Misslon ·
Impossible IS
·
·
5: »--Adam 12 A; News 6: F•mlly Affair 8; Elec Co

- llilwn
ln141.,ti011 Semen

PLUMBING &amp;
..,. HEAnNG INC.

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

----

-

'

FTER' HE DREAMS uP

FREE ESTIMATES

CARTER'S

·DAVID BRICKLES

~-

---

'

7

Business Services

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Dozer blade end remo¥oble log
loading
forks
.
1968
Ford
F-750
Phone Mike Young
Noun onSmurU!J.Y
BACKHOE DUMP truck and !ra iler
Cob-Over Heavy duty truck
for sole. Phone 742-2451 .
At
Tw .stia\w ilh 22 ft . bed , both tor $7 ,000.
__,...,... ..__
- . ·- lht'U Fmiay
992-2206
or
992-7630
LIVE
CATFISH
for
sole
to
stock
Call 1 (304) 852-3205 oc 1 1304)
IP.,., .
Jokes , ponds , etc, Phone ECONOMY TRACTOR with all at·
882-2990
.
"The Originators
·sWEET CORN~60c d.;;en . Pick
tht&gt;Ut~y ~run• pullhrattun
74,2-3167 or 949 -25•5 .
tochrnents, Like new, asking
Not The Imitators''
)'QUr own , Coli 949-2231 .
. TRiUMPH (hopPer , good condi$2250. Phone (6U) 698 -3290.
SW1dl:l~·
tion . See Dwight Carl. 152 But· 18SCC SUZUKI. trail and road·
Sll VER QUEEN sweet corn, 70 1
fP.M.
bike , 10 speed electric start. HANGING BASKETS , pots . and j__ _ _ _ _ _2·
23· 1 mo. 1
:..;.:.;..::.;;:;...J
ternut Ave., Pomeroy .
dozef'l . Phone 985-391 .. .
Fru.la) aftnnoon
Still under warranty, $550 . Coli
geranium s.
Cleland ' s
992·5601.
YAMAHA. HARLEY-DAVIDSON &amp;
Greenhouse ,
Gerald i ne
Con -Am Molorcycles, Complete
Cleland , Racine, Ohio . _ _~
-_______.. """
.
soles and . fan tast ic service.
Real EHI:atriilr SaleHours M-T. T 9-6: W-F, 9-7. Sot.
3 AND 4 RM. furnished ond un·
9-5. "The Motorcycle People of
Continuous one piece
furnished opts , Phone 99:2Southeastern Ohio" Athen·s 2 STORY FRAME house. 3 HOL)SE FOR sole , 6 rooms ond Real Estate (or Sale
gunen.
We hang II, or do It
J 434
Sport Cycles , Inc. , 20 W. Stirn·
bedroom. garage with 3 room
both , 1/t ocre, lot fruit trees ,
yourself.
Special prices to
·
·
son A•e. Athens , Ohio. Phone
apt . in Middleport , Phone (304)
shrubbery. 3 bedrooms . buih"in
builders.
5
ROOM
HOU
SE
,
both
,
2
porches,
couNTRY Mobile H~me Pork , Rt .. _ 1614 } 592 ·1b92 .
615-4:205 before noon.
~ri ck .c abinets in kitchen . ut ility
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy.
·
-. ---,__,.,..
one screened in , garage and
room with storage, woll-to-wo!l
Phone 949-2814
Lorge lots with concrete patiosr $140 BEELINE FAS.HIONS for $35 or JJA FARM , free gas. good Water
carport. Walking distance to
carpet in liv ing room. Carport .
sidewalks, runners and oft
SBO fashion~ f,or $20. Call Jonand fences . Nice Mobile home ,
9
a.m, to 5 p'.m.
Elementary School and town.
About 15 yrs . old . We ll kept ,
street parking. Phone 992·7•79.
nine Petrel , 9-49-2786.
also 2 1f~ A 3 miles south of
Fo r.ced air furnace . located ot
good condition , good loc;alion .
~lbony on 681 . Ed Holley , 681
j()4 Wetzga!l St., Pomeroy. call
Close to school. Coli for op·
FURNISHED APT. Adults only , nq TOMATOES ,
PEPPERS ,
South of Albany to Snowville
offer 5. 992-3488 .
•
~2
387 4, M"d
cucumbers. Cleland · Farms,
pointment , 992 ·32~.: - _ _
pets . P110ne
n
·
1 •
Store. Toke Grovel rood , 1/ t
Greenhouse
.
Geraldine
·
dleport.
mUe . Phone (614) 698·725_5.
IN SVRACUSE , 4 rooms end both , 2. STORY 3 bedroom frame
Cleland.
house, F.A. furnace , storm win·
firepla ce , natura l gas heat .
. AVAILABLE· at Village Manor
BEAT THE Cost of o Realtor! 3
6-16·1 mo.
dews
. fireploce in Middlepon.
Partially
furn
ished,
3
roorns
· APorfments:___l bedroom fully GENERAL ELECTRIC, chest type
be-droom 2Y, bi -level with all
Phone
9'12
-3457.
remodeled. Needs~ome work .
, · ·. cofpe.l~ vvith kitthen opfreezer. Contact Veva Searles ,
extras on acre lot. Ni ce dr ive lo
Appro•imotely 2 acres . Phone 2 NEW 3 BEDROOM Houses for
.. plionc.e~ . furnished . .Storting ol
New limo Rood , oher 4 p.m .
Power Plant , $.43,000. Phone
992-S39S.
'
sole . One with 2 cor garage,
$1 04.per mOnt. Phone 992-n2L TWO HORSES for sole, stallion
(614) 992-2492.
'
, one with recreation room . lee
· Equal houSing opportunity .
and gelding. Phone 992 -5858.
COnstru ction , 992 -3454 or
tRAILER SPACE for rent . 5 miles MINOLTA SRT-100 35 mm camera , - - - - - - - . . . . . , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
992-5&lt;155 .
.
.lrOm Pomeroy and Middleport.
includes 50 mm , 135 "'"" · 28
SEClUDED 2 story older home On
Phonem.S858.
mm , ortd 90·210 zoom .lens ,
thr~e · quorter acres ,
lots of
,.BusiNE~s BUILDING in New cases included, $200. Coli
shDde,
fE!rtile
ground
for
. Hoven . W.Va .; :zo x 45 main ·
992-6298doily.
·
garden , 2 c;or detached go rage,
: buSihesS corner·.. PhOne . (6~4 ) · PIGS . YORKSHIRE and Hampshire
EASTERN DISTRICT - Here's what you've been
3 bedro(_)ms , large living room
. 742-~55 ..
crosSed, Phone 992-7058 ..
asking for . Beauliful6 yr . old. all carpeted home with 3
with brick w,b. fireplace,
Nobil Summit Road
carpeting. sunny kitchenette,
Rt
. FIVE RciOM Apt. beth in
bedrooms . l'h baths, utiiit_y room . Nice kitchen with
SPRING
GARDEN
Supplies
.
Cob·
Pomeroy . Phone 992-5621 or
d ining room, portio! basement
Middlepo.'rt. 0 .
dining area . Concrete porches . Nat. gas F .A. furna ce.
boge, cauliflower . broccoli ,
with forced air furnace and
992-2205.
Ni ce country setting with approx . JJ4 acre land in
end head lettUce plants ,
new hot water heater . Located
992-5724
Eastern District, 2 mi. off Rt. 7. Asklng$29,800 .
3 RM. AND Both furnished oportyellow, white, and red onion
on Morf in Dr ., Pomeroy. Priced
Complete
Sales
and
mfmt, all utilities paid . 356 N.
sets , on ion plants , Kennebec,
below market value , $.17,SOO "'p ' Service and Supplies.
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR . LOOK HERE Five
Fourth St,, Middleport.
cobbler, Kotohdin ,' Red Pontiac
Phone 992-6328 or 985 -3573, _' L _ _ _ _ _ _.;:3-~1.::;4·:.!1:.!m!.!o~·c..l
bedrooms, nice 1112 stor-y house. large living room with
and
Red
Losada
seed
potctoe5.
TRAILER LOT for rent on Brownell
shining oak flooring, large kitchen with dining area . 2
ONE Vt STORY frome house in
Bulk garden seeds , potting soi l,
Ave .
Middleport .
Phone
lih~t land . 3 bedrooms, both ,
full baths. 2 bedrooms down and J upstairs, Co'mpletely
peat
moss
,
truit
trees
and
rose
992-2625.
forced oir . furnace . new
-insulated with F .A. nat. gas furnace. Large porches &amp;
bushes . Midway Market ,
firep lace. roil fence , Ph,ene NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
UPSTAIRS APT. vnfurnisned, $100
Pomeroy . Ohio , 992-7582 ,
. garage . Loc . in -Chester. Price 519,800.
742-2089 .
per month. 300 Main St ..
Bob :s Market, Meson, W.Va.
all e /ec .~ . I ode. Middleport ,
Pomeroy. Phon.e992-6280.
close tO Rutland . Phone· 992 ·
(304 )n3-S7~1.
"
MINERSVILLE - 4 bedroom house. mostly carpeted ,
·74Bl.
wrap around ·porch , garage, .larQe lot. all overloOking
2 BEDROOM Mobile -·-home for
·---,...--"""'~
rent , ., mile from Rcicine. Phone
lhe Qhio River . Asking $16 ,500.
SMALL form for sole , 10 ~. down ,
992-5858.
owner financed . Monroe Coun ·
EASTERN DISTRICT- 1·' 1; acres ol levelland. nice
ty . W . Va. Phone (304) 772·
HOUSE CLOSE to Meigs Mines on RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
12•64
all
carpeted
mobile
home
with
z
BRs,
living
lndoor·Outdoor
runs
,
grooming
3102or
1304) 772-3227 ,
S.R. 124 , married cOuple only .
room, kitchen and bath , 2 rooms built on, nice family
oil breeds . clean son·itory
Col1742 -21b6.
facilities oe367-7112 . Cheshire .
room with fireplace . plenty of garden space. some fru1t
FURNISHED 5· room and bath
Phone lb14) 367-0292 ,
trees. Large workshop and block cellar. City water and
apartment. Call qas-3350.
septic tank . Ni ce country setting on County Rd . 28 .
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , sell . trade
MAIN
Pr ice 515.900.
or train horses, RUTH REEVES ,
POMEROY, O.
trainer. Phone (61.f) 698-3290.
UPP-ER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
REALTOR
JUST LISTED - Th is 2
AKC SHETLAND . sheep dogs .
bath . Two more small bedrooms could be finished
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD. SR.
1964 FORD 'It · ton pickup, good
(Mi n.) Collies : 2 females . 7
story home has 1'h baths, 4
upstairs. Also garage, storage building~ strawberry
weeks old. Shots and wormed.
tires and motor. Contact Elden
REALTOR
Bdrms.,
lar9e
living
room.
patch and garden space·. Driveway is electric heaJed .
Phone (614) 367·0292 or
Walburn , 390 S. ff,ird , Mid 216
E.
Second Slreet
dining
room
.
10x30
Nlce Ohio River vlew . Furniture can be bought e)(fra.
dleport, 0H:· Phone992-2805.
367-7 112.
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
silting porch and
Price for quick cale:. HouSe and Jot. $12,600.
Phone
992-332S
.1977 FORO 4 x 4. Phone 9419-2673.
M~IGS COUNTY Humane Society .
&gt;o!~!!t:»".I on a
Animal Careline, 992-7680; or
corner I t ·
a good
1972 GRI\N TORINO Sport. 5&lt;1,000
BI.G - 5 bedroom home
cher6p .m .. 992-5.,.27.
·
neighbOrhoo
.
A
STEAL
Call Jimmy Deem At949-2,8B
miles. $950. Pj,one 742·2746 .
· with
Jlh
baths,
full
AT 511.250
TO GIVE Aw,oy . Yt Collie, 1/1 Gerbasement.
llrid
central
1973 VEGA HATCHBACK , S900 .
man Shepard puppies. Also,
PRICE R OUCED - On
heating . Furnished or
Phone 8.43-2524 .
this 2 Bdrm. frame home .
unfurnished. City wllter
twins
.
I
year
old
grey
striped
cots . Grey striped kitten . 4 T
1966 FORD CUSTOM, 500, 6 cyi.
Dining
roo ,
F.A.
and large lot .
months old. Phone 7-42·3162 .
standard . Good condition ,
Furnace. carpetmg , 1 floor
NEW LISTING - 53 acres
S37S. Phone 992·2849.
TWO FEMALE puppies, port
plan .
NOW
ONLY
of clean fenced pasture.
Beagle , 3 months old, short
1972 A OR . BUICK laSabre , 1967 2
$13,800.00.
Nice home site: barn ·and 2
dr. Chev . Impala . Phpne
hair , give to good home. Phone
MIDDLEPORT Good
'prings.
All minerals .
985-3839.
992·7085.
older 2 story home, large
LIKE NEW- All electric 3
lot, garage, up lo4 Bdrms ..
1976 CHEVY LAGUNA 3SO BEAGLE PUPS , 9 weeks old, 3
bedroom ranch style home
moles , 2 females , $10 each.
automatic, p.s ., p.b. , air condiporches. A good buy .
on quiet street. Fenced
Phone 949·2590.
tioned. am radio tope player .
$13.B50 .00 .
back yard and only 5 years
Reol sharp. Excellent condition. AKC REGISTERED Old English
BACK ON THE MARKET
old
. $18,500.
·
~one 992-2386:c
· ~~-~Sheep dog. papers , Champion
- 1 acre. modern kitchen,
LANDOn
old
Route
33.
INC.ORPORATED
blood line, shot~ and wormed.
1977 Dodge Van, customized.
knotty pine paneling.
Buy
1
to
41!2
acres.
Trailers
Call daytimes ,' 992·2696 or
H&amp;dders , side pipes , stri pes
carpeting, 2 Bdrm ., dining
O.K.
evenings' 992-7262.
and scene , Call 773-5909.
room , part basement .
NEWLISTING - 10Sacres
1968 lmpallo 9 possenger station W111 give away 5 parl Collie pup·
516.500.00.
-lays well, surrounded by
p ies . Phone 992-3491 or
wagon , 8 cyl. 3:27 motor, 20
CLOSE TO TOWN - 6'1o
Southern Ohio Coal. Will
miles to gall. Don t use oil . air
acres. 3 Bdrms., gr-eat for
992· 20:.:.12:::·~sell for less than 5150 per
conditioner, heater, new tires .
kids, 3 acres fenced , pole
acre.
Call 949·2144 .
barn .
NOW
ONLY
LUXURIOUS
4
·PARTS FOR 1971 GaialCie Ford for
$17 ,200.00.
bedrooms , large dining ,
sole . Phone 99f56S8.
· BRICK &amp; FRAME - VA
CASH poid for oil mokes and
modern kitchen, family
--:~~~~~~--models of mobile home5.
approved, 112 acre ground,
1969 DODGE , air conditioned, -4
r-oom with fireplace and
Phone oreo code bU-423-9531 . ...
abOul S yrs. old ranch type .
new tires , $30CL 1967 ihreepool table. 23!.. llcres.
quorter 'ton heavy duty Ford TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
Up to 4 Bdrms ., bar ,
REASONABLE
3
truck , 4 new tires , 4 speed
carpeting. storage bldg .
ducts . Top price lor standing
bedrQOms.
bath,
fireplace,
transmission, good condi-tion ,'
$28,500.00 .
sawtimber. Coli 992--5965 or
utility rqom. basemen!,
$B50. Phone 985·4290.
Kent Honby, 1-4-46,8570.
PRIVATE- O..er 3 acres
and 2 car garage. $17,500.
nice laying ground, about
NO. 208 - This home needs a new family. presenl
COINS , CURRENCY, .tokens , .Old
NEW LISTING- Country
10 yrs. old ranch type
owner
transferred
out
of
area
.
Has
central
A.C.,
3
pocket wolch~s and chains,
estate of 145 acres. Has a 7
home. 3 Bdrms ., dining
si lver and gold . We need 1964
bedrooms, family room wllh FIREPLACE , 2 car
room housel!ind large barn .
and older silver coins . Buy , sell ,
room , 22x23 living room.
heat~
garage,
large
closets,
formal
dining
room
,
IF YOU ·hava a ser~ice to offer ,
Some tractor "land and ·
a"..- trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
large kit., carpeting.
large kitchen. dishwasher. and eat-in space. Nice
want to buy or sell something ,
some
fenced for cattle
H2·2331 .
Garage, insulated cold
country. atmosphere but still close to town (large
qe looi'!ing for work . ... or
grazing .
whotev&amp;r ·.·. , )'ou'll get results Oi:OfURNITURE , ice boxes , bross
storage btdg . 2 olher barns,
swimming and recrealion areo dose by) . Priced right
BROWNELL . Nicely·
faster .with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
beds , 'etc. , ~ comp18te
at $44,000 .
.. ·
many o1her features. Raise
located
A bedroom hom'e
Call992-2156.
households . Write M. 0 . Miller.
kids and animals here.
NO. 206- 3 Bedroom. l'h baths. modern kitchen wilh
with natural gas. city
Rt . 4, Pomeroy . Ohio or coil
ASKING $34,900.00.
d i.sh.,...,asher , bullf·in . stove and oven, carpeting and
YARD SALE Tuesday, Weds., and
water, and garage . Owner
9'12· 77,:_/IJ~·:...----~-.,.--c
NOW
FEATURING
Thursday, corner 5th and Main,
hardwood floors In Middleport. Priced 521,000.
will sell on Land Contract .
Middleport .
le'Sn
girl ' s CASH! !. Junk cars , Fry's Truck &amp;
PHOTO
LISTING
NO. 214 - 43 acres, Harrisonville area, vacant land .
$1,550 down. balance In
~ clothing , games, hc;.me fur·
Auto , Rutland . Phone 7~2·2081
Price S12,000 .
SERVICEf! I LET US
monthly payments .
or 742-9575. Closed Monday~ .
· nishing~9o . m . tillS p.m.
TECL YOU HOW THIS
NO. 20i - 125 acres, nice· 2 story · home, carpeted. 5
SERVICE CAN HELP_
bedrooms , gas furnace, has several outbuildings, free
S FAMILY Garage Sale, Children'S NO ITEM TOO Lorge or toO small.
Will buy 1 piece or complete ·
SELL YOUR PROERTY.
clothi"'g, sewingmachines ,
gas, about 10 acres of timber. good area for housing
Bath, full basement, city
household . New , U:!iiied. or antibicycles. mite . 129 lincoln Hill,
IF ' YOU REALLY WANT
development. Ch~ter area. Price $71,000. '
water and natural ' gas.
ques. Martin 's Furnitur•. 20 N.
'_ July 291h, 91ill5 .
TO SELL, CALL TODAY.
NO. 215 - 26 acres, with new brick ranch, has 9 rooms.
Garage and plenty of
2nd St ., Middleport. Phone
WE NEED PROPERTIES.
3 baths. fully equipped modern kitchen. Has large
YARD SALE , new ond used toys
gar&lt;k!n space. Now Sl7.500.
992-6370.
HENRY E. CLELAND
· ond gomM, .. oribus other - basement, 2 fireplaces, attached single car garage,
--.
---rS
POINTS - Nice ne-r
it..-ns. July 29 ond 30th. Al-4 S. SMALL DATSUN Pickup. · Also
REALTOR
delached 24x30 brick 2 car gar- with work•hop.
home
on 1 acre, has J
wont dry sto"roge spQce for r.ent
Sidh Ave.
., Middleport,
.
Hlonk, Kothy &amp; lAona
Large patio In back, 2~&gt;&lt;36 equipment shed under roof,
or sole . Phone m-5370.
Clollnd
if you want to live in the country with all ttle modern
Assocl.tH
conveniences this can be yours. Price $85,000.
992-225'-"2-2S611
NO. 21l - 541•h acres, frame 3 bedroom, 2 story older
915-4112
home. gas furnac'e, lots of woods, lm-ge pond, nice fish
PIANO
lUNING
,
Lone
Daniels
.
12
$32,000.
197• MOellf. - · ·2 t..dmoni,
recor-ded( Price 110,000.
years of servite'. Phone
12 • 65 c;.-_.brier , totalelec.,
COUl'HIIY formland w;th oedud·
ALL
NEED
AT
A
992-2082.
unfurnlahed, in excellent condi~
Pomeroy
804
W.
Main
lion . As.ki~ pric. . . $6500. • WATER we'Ll- -drilling . Phone
ed woodo, water and good OC·
REASONABLE
PRICE.
cess in Monroe County. W. Va . CALL .,1 _3325 _ SMALL
992-2298
~hooe9'n-5{7~·
William P. Gront at 7-42·2879
51 ,000 down , call (304) 772·
oher6p.m ,
2 8EDIIOOM MOINLf home. oere
After· Hours Call m-7133
3102or(~lm- 32v.
oow=.:~tM:_:~
'
~
Y, of ground, goroge, out·
PENNZOIL RUTLAND · open daily
Contact: Lois Pauley
VA-FHA,
30
yr.
finoncing.
Ireland
c. Bnoce T•lard
building. city Wafer and uplk
till 10. Clo1~ Mondo,.s.
Branch
~nager
.
taJ'lk . Long Bottom, Ohio. 'rk•
wreck•r service, tire repair.
Athens.
ed $5500 . Phone 985-4290.
Phone 7•2;9575 or 742·201ll .
Mom.l;;~ ,y

TrlE uovt-""l'ir.JR !: -mFEl

DUMMY.

Urnitor

Cibh

r·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:;-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;!·:·:·:·!·!·!·:·:·:·:·:-:-:::·:·:·:r

11-The Daily Sentinei,Middleport-P..neruy, 0 ., Wednesday, July '!1, 1977
DIC¥ TRAI..'Y

111-:The DailrSeotinel,_Mt@eport-Pomeroy, o., Woonesday, July '!l,lm

HI5HOOPi...

I APPReCIATE
'(0\ll COMING

OVEL

Wlo!AT'5 THE !-IOCKEI(
·STICK FOR? ~OU CAN'T

GUARD OUR HOUSE WITH
A lo!OCKE'f STICK ...

I SHOULD SAY

''ON TH' BARN.,

�12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July '!1, 1m

News •• in Briefs
(Oijll!nuld lnlm pap!)

the lllancl'l wwli. dtwster Iince WCII"Id War II . All but I per
cent rl. the ara moved down bf Typhoon Thelma in its 90mblle dub .en. tbe bland Monday remained without
po_. and officials estimated It may take up.ID six 111&lt;111ths ID
cc:mpldely reston. the system.
Officials 88id 28 persons were killed, more than 3,1100 were
lnj\lftd and about 5,1100 left homeless in the stricken area ~
abou.t me quarter of tile island centered around the important
port rl. Xacbalung. Olficlal sources wid the total damage may
-n rach fl billlon- including destroyed buildings, damage
to the power systeni and nearly 6,1100 outage -making Thelma
the ww8t dtaaoter to hit Taiwan Iince the destruction caWied
by Wcrld War II.
TOKYO - DEFENSE SECRETARY HAROLD BROWN

888UI"ed Japan'alee.derstoday the United States will remain a

majcr Asian mllltary power and protect nearby South Korea
from Communist aggression.
Brown, who was returning ID !be United Slates later in the
day, also said he believes Congress will approve $2 billion in
military aid to the Seoul regime. despite charges !!Offie of its
members accepted favCII"S from Soutb Korean lobbyists. The ·
American ~tary stopped over in Tokyo to brief Prime
Minister Takeo Fukuda and other cabinet officials m his two
days of defense consultations with the South Koreans before
returning 1D Washingtm.
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO - A 7.8 MILL SCHOOL levy was
approved Tuesday by voters in Jackson-Milton School District,
ending a string of se11en unsuccessful atlempt.s for passage of
simllar levies over the past 2\lo years.
Voters in the western Mahoning County district, who saw
tbeir schools closed fCII" ahouta month in December, 1976, after
they turned down a lt.milllevy, approved the levy by a 1,17&amp;620 margin. School officials had said schools probably would
have closed again this fall if the levy failed again.

Notices, .local briefs
The outdoor hymn sing to
be held Saturday at Forest
Acres Park will be at' 6: 30
Instead of 7:30 as was

reported.

'

the Methodist Cburch Sunday, July 31. Basket dinner at
noon, program and special
Is
singing·. Everyone
welcome to attend.

Singers to be featured are
In Meigs County Common
Good "News Trio, The
· Chapman Family, Joyful Pleas Court Tuesday Western
Tones and Midway Trio.
Auto Store of Middleport flied
suit for judgment in tbe
UMWA Supporters Club amount of $1,851.28 plua costs
· will meet Friday at 10 a.m. at and Interest against Donald
tbe park on Plwn Street ·next Fowler, Letart, W. Va. and
to the swimming pool in SaUy L. Ball flied suit for
Middleport. There will be an divorce against Benjamin W.
election of officers . All Ball, both of Albany.
UMWA
members · are

'Bru.sb. £ire

welcome.
There will be a general
meeting of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association on
. ' Thursday, July 28 at 7:30
p.m. In the meeting room at
tbe Meigs Inn.
The annual Long
Homecoming will be

(Contliiued 1,1._ PI,. I) :
nm

ov

homes in the. $100,1100 ID
$200,000 range. It burned
along the edge, but did npt
heavily
damage·,
the
Montecito
district
of
Bottom millionaires' estate~! .
•
held at. SCHOOL'S OUT
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~
Sununer school is over for
Amy Carter, and, come
Friday, !lhe'll be heading
home to Plsins, Ga.,. fCII" a
vacation · with her two
grandmothers.
White House spokeswoman
: Mary Hoyt said Tuesday the
PG
Prl!'lident's . 9-year-old
dlnighter completed her
special summer course for
gifted chilch:en at George
PG .
Washington University last
Friday.

MASON DR. IN
Wed.-Thur.- Frl.
July27·21-29
Double Feature
-Proeram

Burt Reynolds
GATOR

Hospital News

Brewer
(Continued !ram .... 1)
the coin machines at Hickory
Lake Camping Area at
Tupper. Plains. They were
released to their parents
pending a hearing later in
Meigs County Junvenile
Court. ·The money was
recovered and the bon have
admitted tbe theft.
Thomas 0 . McKay, Jr., Rt.
I, Rac.ln~ was arrested
Tuesday afternoon In
Pomeroy after ualmost"
colliding headon with the
Sheriffs cruiser.
McKay was charged with
DWI, recltleu operation,
driving under suspension,
and disorderly conduct. He io
scheduled for hearing Frtday
in Meigs County Court.
Dale ' Queen, 25, Albany,
was apprehended late
Tuesday evening by the
Albany Marshal for tbe local
sheriff's department on a
bench warrant that alleges he
faDed to comply with court
orders In a prior case in·
volv!ng a wildlife violation.
He also will appear before
Judge Rotiert Buck Frtday
morning.

Veteno11 Memorial Hup'lal
ADMISSIONS - Mary
Searla, Chelhire; Florence
Heilman, Pomeroy; Minnie
Johnson, Athens ; Jennie
Wolfe, Racine; Sherry
Tackett, Rut11nd ; Keith
Petrie, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Herbert
Shl~lds, Jolm Mayes, Ina
Massar, Shirley Gregory,
Cluistir!ia Barber.

Utilities spent $10 milllon'
-for a~vertising during 1.9 76
CULU MBUS (UPll Ohio's 13 largest gas, eleciric

and telephooe companies
spent more lhan $10 million
for advertising in 1976 and 11
of the 13 contributed $3
million Ill charity, all of
which can be (l8li5ed oo ID !be
consumer, the office of the
state's Consumers' Counsel
repcrled ~y .
The report was prepared by
Phil Miller head of the
office's technical division,
and was P"esented ID the .
Governing Board of the Ohio ·
Office of Consumers'
Counsel.
The report showed that
Ohio Bell Telephone Co. spent
the most for advertising with
a lola! of $4.9 million while
the next largest amounts
were $1.1 million by
Cleveian\1 · Electric

Holler Medical Center
,( DIIcur~es, Jllly :tl)
"Nina Burgess, Lillian
Burns, Viola Dixon, Ben
Eblin, Elm!l Epple, Teresa.
· Gibbs, Rosa Griffiths;
Carolyn Hall, Sandra Herdman, Paul Higginbotham,
Mrs. Denver Hill and
daughter, Jiuon Kopack,
Rose Mary lloyd, Ralph
McConnell,
Samuel
McKinney, Joey Miller, Ford
Morrow, Virginia Roll!lh, Roy
Shoemaker, Mrs. Jack
Stegall and son, Hayden
Swingle, !"au! Wolverton,
'Gordon Wright, Vickie
Wright, Waher Wright.
(Blrtba, July %1)
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Knapp, a son, Pomeroy. Mr.
arid Mrs. Ronnie Mullins, a
· VALVE LOCATED
Ralph W. Brewer, 57, Port- daugllter, Jackson.
CLEVELAND (UP11 East Ohio Gas Co. said
land, was born January 26,
PLEASANT VALLEY
today vandals shut off a
1920. He was preceded in
DISCHARGES - · Mrs.
valve
that provided service
death by his parents. Ben and Homer Blessing, West
to the Wayne County
Ona Tinunins Brewer; a Colum bia ; . Mrs. Russell
commllllltles of Wooster,
brother, Daniel; three Young, West Columbia;
Orville,
, Smltbv.l!le ,
sisters, Sylvia Brewer, Maude
Mallet,
Point
Goldie Taylor and Inez Pleasant; Samuel Leanza, Marshallville, Shreve,
lioriey; one step-grandson, New Jersey; Vernon Chaney, Loudonvme, DanvWe and
Gregory Middleswartll..
Point Pleasant ; William Brlakhave11.
However, a spokesman
He was a veteran of World Gardnef, Pol~t Pleasant;
War II. He is survived by his · James Jeffers, Southside; said the sbuleff of a lz-lnch
wife, VIolet; a daughter, Mrs. Ernest Casey, Apple traaamissloo line was
Viola Fitch, Portland; three Grove ; Albert Boston, found early today aod
reopened before the
sons, Terry, Long Bottom ; Letart; Edna Anderson,
Roger, of Florida, and Billy Point Pleasant; Jeremy ut1Uty'sl3,500 customers lD
Joe of Portland; two stei&gt;" Halley, Henderson; Teresa lbe communities lost any
service.
aaugnters, Freda Mlddles- Deweese, Point Pleasant;
warth, Portland, and Donna Gwendolyn Meg, Ripley;
Fitch, Long Bottom, and a Lisa Thorn, Point Pleasant;
brother, Donald, of Reeds- Lester Isaac, Michigan ;
ville.
Charles Riggs, New Haven;
Graveside services will be Rosa CottrUI, Leon; Michael
held Friday at 11 a.m. at the Hall, Henderson ; Cecil Hall,
Stiversville Cemetery with Puint Pleasant; Lester Hall,
the
Rev .
Lawrence Apple Gtove; Sebrina CarGluesencamp officiating.
.periter, Vinton; Mrs. Douglas
Friends may call at the Robie and daughter, Mason
Ewing Funeral Home after 2 and Leota Wamsley, Point
COLiJMBUS'!UPII - Here
p.m. today.
Pleasant ; Teresa Gibbs, Is a glance at activity
Letart; Carolyn Hall, Point Tuesday In the Ohio General
.
..J Pleasant and Mrs. Denver Assembly:
HOUSJ;
Hill and daughter, Leon.
Bill lnltod~ced
HB 844, Shoemaker.
~·

lures included, General Telephme, $485,1100; U n i t e d
Telephone.
$121,000;
Colwnbia Gas of. Ohio, not
available; East Ohio Gas Co.,
$183,0110; Cincinnati Gas lc
Eiectic, '-'124,000; Colwobus 1c
Southern Ohio Electric · Co.,
$122,000; Dayton Power &amp;
Ugh!, $224,1100.; Ohio Edison,
f/94,1100; Ohio Power Co.,
$721\,1100 and Toledo Edison,
$2,000.
Other
charitable
contributio ns included,
Cincinnati Bell, $127,000;
General Telephone, not
available; United Telephone,
not available; Columbia Gas
of Ohio, $224,1100; East Ohio
Gas, $309,1100; Cincinnati Gas
&amp;
Electric,
U12,000;
Cleveland Electric
Illuminating, $602,000;
Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric, $168,000; Dayton
Puwer &amp; Ught, $149,000; Ohio
Edison, $186,1100; Ohio Power,
$40,1100 and Toledo Edison,

Roving·

(Continued from Pill• I)
earlier, but it was not an
optimistic sign lor the state
Coal Association.
"I've heard comments that
many of the men who would
like to go back are afraid to,"
said Dan Fields, an
association spokesman. "I
don't know if .anybody bas
gone hack, because the totals
are roughly the same."
Administrators of two
dozen Appalachia outpatient
clinics met in Washlngtm
Tuesday with financially
troubled mine workers health
fund trustees to discuss
alternatives to a reim bursement system that took
effect July I.
The trustees told the
adminstrators that it was pot
their intention to eliminate
the clinics and that they will
try ID reach a solution bY the
end of the week.
UMW vice presidenH!lect
1lam Church '!'lid the uniop's
Executive
International
Board sent more than 800
telegrams last week to local
and district officials, urging
that miners retlirn ID work
Provides for the term ination
while
union officers try ID
of state agencies.
negotiate the benefits issue
Bills Passed
Am . HB 709, Oriel!. witb coal operatCII"S.
A\Jthorlzes exper imental
Wildcat strikes have been
drug ma lntenance treatment
sweeping
the coamelds for
programs.
.
about
a
month since the
HB 783, Healy. Aulhorlzri
" successor employer'' independently operated
clauses In prlvale collecllve UMW Health and Retirement
bargaining agreemenls. 64· ·
Funds announced cutbacks
28.
Sub. HB 297, Lehman . that will fcrce miners to pay
Increases secretary of state's up to $500 per year for
fees. 91-1.
medical benefits.
Am. Sub. SB W , Bulls,
The Bituminous Coal
Eslobilshes the offense of
Opera
!Drs Association, which
lrafflcklng In clgarelles with
lnlenl lo defraud. 94-0.
supports the Funds through
Sub. SB 243, Calabrese.
based
on
Establishes pandering ob- royalties
P"CJIIuction,
has
refused
ID
scenity Involving a m inor as a
reaUocate money to prop up
crime. 9~·0.
Am . SB 265, Celebrezze. the sagging health fund,
Allows lax commissioner to which would have forestalled
furnish certain Information to
the cutbacks.
municipal income tax of.
'The Industry contends that
flclals. 91·3.
Am . HB 804, Begala . teaUocation would, in effect,
Empowers the governor to sanction wildcat strikes
creole agencies required for which coal operators blame
slaie partlclpallon In federal
lor the Funds' financial woes.
programs. 79-1".
AB 113-4, Maddux. Expands
admlnlslrallve dulles of
clerical school personnel to
allow allernale fund ing of
busing pupils. 94-1.
SENATE

.

·

•••••••••••••••••••••

Jewelry heist

solved with

woman's anest

Et Cetera &amp;utiqrie

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Frigidaire eavy
Duty Washer
and matching
big-capacitY Dryer.

SpraUey aakl. the

cent.

' .

Other returns .on equity
Included, Cincinnall Bell,
10.51 per cent; General
Telepbme, 14.32 per cr.nt;
Ohio Bell; 9.46 per cent;
United Telephme, ll.M per
cent; East Ohio Gas, 13.74 per.
cent and Qncinnatl Gaa &amp;
Electric, 10.02.
Also, Cleveland Eleclr1c Dlum!nating, 13.77 per cent;
Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric, 14.17 per cent;
Day!Dn Power &amp; Light, 11.$8
per cent; Ohio Edison, 13.611!:
per cent; Ohio Power, 16.25 ~
per cent and Toledo Edison,:
13.01 per ''cent.
~
1\" .•
..

.

and Mason Fourth of July Tournament. The Yankees'
season record was 18-1. Front, t... , are John Perrin,
Jinuny Barker, Johnny Aeiker, Scott Harrison, Kelly
Whitlatch, Eddie Dill, Brill King; back, Ray Tayl?r,
coach Rhett Milhoan Mike Hawk, Roger Kovalchik,
Shawn Gilmore, Breit Carl and Roger Kovalchik,
manager.

CHAMPION TEAM - The Pomeroy Yankees Utile
League Baseball team has completed a "dream season"
by owning three championships. Tuesday night the team .
defeated the Mason County Insurance team ll·lfor .the
Kyger Creek ToUrnament championship, proving Itself
better than 31 of the finest area teams that entered, and
esrHer winnlng the Big Bend tittle League championship

ALICE J . ARNOLD/

son, Harley Jr.,'an Infant son.
two slsters,..and fiv• brothers. ~
Hill, Pomeroy, died Wed·
Her parents were a pioneer .

nesday morning at Veteran' fa"l) ly JJf lhe BuOI&lt;er Hill •
Memor ial Hospllal. Born area. .
-1.Nov. 13, 1907, she was the
S~ was a so.y,e ar member ;
daughler of lhe lale Anlhol1y '1f the Royal .Neighbors ol :;
and Mary Benlz Venoy. She America, a member of the
wa~alsopr~&gt;Ceded In death by
Harrisonville Chapter of I he;
her husband, Carl Arnold. Order Qf Easter'n Star and of .•
She was a member of the the Seventh O,.y Adventist :
Enlerprise Unlled Melhodlsl Church;
•
Church. · Surviving is a
Sho Is, survived by lhree daughter, Mrs. Albert !Elsie) daughters, Mrs. Gwendolyn
Marlin, Belpre, and lwo Roach, Ar/1!)91on, r ...; Mrs. ,
~randc;:hlldren , Jeffrey and
Branche !MidOiyn) Fleming ·:
Janet Marlin of Belpre.
of Fori Lauderdale. Fla., and ,
Funeral services will be Mrs. A. L. (Evelyn I Scolt of •
Friday al 3 p.m. al Ewing Colorado Springs, Colo.; lwo ;
Chapel wllh the Rev. Roberl sons, Charles, of Donia, Fla.. ·.
officiating.
Burial will be In Beech Grove

and Robert of Darwin; one ...

brother, VIctor Diehl of :
Mlddleporl; 15 gropdchlldren and 14 great-granchlldretr.•
Funeral services will be .
DOLLIE MAE PICKETT
Setu~y al'l p.m. al Ewing ·
Mrs. Dollie Mae Pickell, 93, Chapel wllh paslor Albert ·
Fori Lauderdale, Fla ., a Dlltes officiating. Burial will .
former
Meigs
County be In Wells Cemetery.
.
residenl, .died Tuesday al
Friends may call or the
Bennelt Memorial Hospllal, funeral home from 2 to o4 ancl7 :
Planlatlon. Fla.
lo 9 p.m. Frldar. Eastern .
She was preceded In death Star services wll be al the
by her parents, Henry and funeral home. Friday al 8
Dollie Slevens · Diehl ; her p.m. by the Harrisonville .
husband. Harlev Pickell; one Chapter.
·
Cemetery. Friends may call
Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Young adult class·met ·
The Young Adult Clsas of
the · Laurel Cliff Free
Metbod!Jit Cburch met Th111'&amp;'
day olght at tbe county infonnaty witb Mrs. Doria
Shook offering tbe prayer of
Invocation and Mrs. MOdred
Jacqbs, teacher, beginning a
study on the book of Genesill.
Business was conducted bY
Mrs. Sharon Wdght. Mrs.
Daria Hiwle;'was named to
arrange if poaslble a hayride

.

In August. Refre.!lhmilnta .
were se"ed by · Sharon
Folmer, 'Unda Foti.er and
calhy Scarberry. Attdlng
were Mr. and Mn. Clifford
Jacoba, Rev. and Mn. Floyd
Shook, Mr. And Mn. Randy
Hllwley, Mr. and Mn. Mike
Wright, Mr, anc! Mn. Bobby
FOjlter, Mr and .Mra. Dick
Folmer, Mrs. Brenda Hqgy,
Mrs. C.tby ~~,, and
Mrs. Leona Martin.

A/fred UMW met at
home of Mrs. Follroi
'

&lt;

ALFRED - The Alfred
Osle Mae FoUrod accepted
U .M.W. beld Its regular the ·prayer calendar for
t_1
t •
meeting Tuesday evening, . Augua.
July 19 at tbe home of Osle
Nellie Parker had the
Mae Follrod witb an at- Pi 08' lhii, "I'm Talklnc lo
tendance of 11 members and Myself - Wh'ii Am I
vi..'"'"
t•
four visitors.
.
sa,....,
.
.
FIVE FORFEIT
The meeting, in char&amp;e of
Attending besides tboae
One defjmdant was fined Nellie Parker, president, was above w~re: •N iu &amp;billion,
and five others forfeited opened witb prayer by J • Clara ' F~llrpd, Thelma
bonds in Pomeroy · Mayor • Moore. The hymn Wled was, Henderion, Kate' RodebaVllf i
Clarence Andre'!''s court "Take Tbne to Be Holy." ,
Janice Pullins, Wanda Glfflil,
Tuesday night. Fined was
Routine business waa Marjerle .Gutbde, Sarab
William Reeves, Pomeroy, conducted
and
th,~
Caldwerl. 'f.llllll steaml;
$50 and costs, using oboci!ne nominating committee Florence spencer and Edltb
language. Forfeiting bonds alerted to have a llat of of- Harper:- - - ·,
'
were Allan Gadmesky, fleers to submit at the SepThe hostess and her
Cincinnatl, $25, speeding; tember meeting.
daugllter', · Kathy, ae"td
Roger Manuel, Racine, $350,
Twenty-three sick and shut- delicious refreshments,
driving while Intoxicated, In calls wete reported. ~ A PM Red by otben during U..
and Steve West, Moraine, missions report waa given by IOCial hour.
Ohio· Kenneth Byer, Mid- Nellie Parker, aJid Helen
Tbe ne1t meeting will be
cD~rt. and Jolm Jeff~ Woode gave lhE1 name . of beld on Tuelday evening,
Pomeroy, $30 bond each, 1Archie 1.; Coleman of Naah- Aug. 11, at the home of Nellle
speeding.
ville, T~. as mlaslonary for Parker.
the montb.

-·1 '

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SAVE '5000 ·
ON ANY REFRIGERATOR
'
IN STOCK

lHURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC. ST.
Open Thursday 9:30 to 5 P.M. ...:_ Fdday· ~:30 to 8 P.M.Saturday 9:30 to 5 P.M.
·
.·
l1rive to our Mechanic Street Warehou-.. Malee your
selections. Save $50.00 during this End of the Month Sale.

VOL XXVIII . NO. 73

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•.·

'&lt;

Bridge opening date

enttne

at y

t~

88id. "We'Donly have one day .I want ID make sure everybody
knows what changes have been made."
Moving IDward the swiuner recess, a conference committee
was expected to make a report IDday on a cCII"Dpromise on the
"language" portion of the state budget for 1973-79.
Wednesday, tbe House placed on the Nov~mber ballot a
constitutional amendment eliminating lhe state's f750,000 debt
limit and authotlzlng a Jlexible celling for · borrowing for ·
construction projects according to state income.
And the Senate handily passed House-approved legislation
banning the sale of aerosol P"oducts using nuorocarbons as
P"opellants.
The collective bargaining measure cleared the House by a
61-37 margin - solid enough to override any future veto by
Gov. James A. Rhodes. The governor vetoed similar leglsla· tion In 1975 but tbe House Democrats were unable I!&gt; override.
Three Democrats crossed over to oppose the m~sure while
two Republicans joined in support. Democrats stghed wttll
relief as the magic 6&amp;-vote total for overriding a veto was
exceeded.
.
.
The bill, sought by public employe groups m Ohio for a
decade; repeal,s the state's 3().year old Ferguson Act. That
Continued on Page 8

•

•

Allee J . Arnold, 12, Rose

Bumgarner

OOLUMBUS (UP! I -A collective bargainlDg bill lor Ohio's
500,000public employes, viewed by Its supporters as " the envy
of the other states in this Wlion,"ls on its way IDa joint SenateHouse cmference Committee following House approval.
However, no quick settlement is anticipated and the controversial measure Is expected to be left behind when the
legislature recesses Friday lor the balance of the swnmer.
House Democrats, Ignoring Republican complaints that it
would be "the most costly bill ever enacted by this legislature," Wednesday aproved the Senate-passed P"Oposal setting up bargaining mechanisms and pennlttlng Umited strikes
as a last resort,
But Sen. Harry Meshel, DYoungsiDwn, prime sponsor of the
original verl!!on, said he felt . House amendments were
weighted!Domuchinfavorofthepubllcemployera.
"1 think the House has taken some things away from the
public employes," said Meshel, referring wchanges In selecting bargaining agents and Umiting binding arbitration.
Meshel said he would ask for a conference committee today
or Friday, that the committee would work during the six-week
legislative recess and have a report ready when tbe lawrnakers reconvene Sept. 19.
"I doubt we're going ID have anything ready this week," be

flcurel,

which are
commonly
accepted indicators of a
company's flnancial well
being, show Coi\UIIIia a.,
with the highest return, 19 per

I

at a .glance

Community
will
.•.
•
supervise center·

hits conference snags

$102,1100.
The reportalao cited ~tau.
Ucs concerning reiiUn on
equity fer the 13 IIUlltla,

---------------------------·=
! Area Deatlis ~~

Legislation

The Bend Area Medical from GeorRe Washln~ton
Center, Board of Directors High School in Philadelphis. ·
Memoers of tbe fiunlly
Tuesday evening decided the
Richard Harris
supervision of the Center excels . in the fine .arts,
THE
would be a community ceramics and needlework.
RETURN ·
Other family hobbies include
project.
.
.
It was announced that after camping and rock collecting.
The Medical Center Board
a few minor details are
"officially"
welcomed Dr.
worked out Dr. Esther
Larson
and
her
family to the
Larson will open her office
lor general practice at the community and Medical
ETCETERA
Medical Center Bailding In Center at the meeting.
.
'
New Haven.
BOUTIQUE
. Dr . Larson, with her
husband, Gene, and daughter
Diane, ill presently residing
GIFTS &amp; JEANS
In the Medical Center
apartments.
Prior to moving
is opening a new room
to tbe Bend Area, Dr. Larson
featuring back to school denim
was in private general
jeans and jumpsuits, sweaters,
practice' in Seattle, Wa!ih.
vests, shirts and novelty tops.
five years.
·
She graduated from the
Concur in
Also arriving daily are
Philadelphia College of
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
House Amendmenls
Osteopathic M~dicine, (UP!) - A Proctorville, Ohio
polyester slacks and jumpsuits
Am . SB 106, Galllmor .
completed pre-medical woman's arrest has led to a Exlends shield law lo non·
in sizes 5-6 thru 20.
.at
Syracuse breakthrough in tbe theft of commercial educational
training
29.0.
Univerl!!ty in New York, and $150,1100 in jewelry {rom a broadcaslers.
Stop in during August and sign for our
Am. Sub. SB 251. Mahoney.
back ro school drawing for S25.00 free
Creighton University, suite . at tbe downtown Permlls mu.nlclpalltles and
merchandise of your choice. Drawing is
Omau, Neb.
Holiday ·lnn, says in· counlles to sel up communllr
closing time Aug . 31 .
·
reinvestment area and to
She completed one year of vestigators.
gran! lax exempllons ln lhese
psychiatric residency in
Janney Lou Spears, 1.'1, areas. 28..0.
Pblladelphla. She ill certified remains in custody under
Bills Passed
in hypnoanalysio through the $2!&gt;,1100 bond, charged with
Am. Sub. HB 209. Transfers
. Alllerican Institute of Hyp- receiving and possessing regulallon. of phyolcal
lheraplsts to an Occupational
noaJs, Df. Larson's hus~d
Therapy and Physical Boord.
Middleporf, 0. Is a radio announcer and their stolen property.
205 N. 2nd Ave.
All stolen jewelry has been 30-1.
. daughter graduated this year recovered, and police are . Am. SB 296 . Celebrezze .
fraudulenl prac·
investigating the posaibUity ·Prevenls
llces , In lhe offering of In·
that other individuals were venllon development services
involved. The jewels were lo lhe public. 31·0.
Am. Sub. HB 383, Rogala.
stolen Saturday from the loth
Provides
par.
Door suite of a Nicholas and tlclp.allon forFh counly
developing
Virginia
Camicla
of programs under Tille XX.
Gr!!!nwich, Conn.
32.0.
Sub. HB 159, Mclin .
A
woman
who
~llegedly
~
Requires
the Board of
tried to peddle-some of the Building Slondards
lo adopl
property at the Ace Trading slonda rcls for energy con·
To help deliver dependable per•
Post in Huntington .provided servaflon. 31-1.
formance, thisFrigidaire Heavy
palice with their first solid · Am . HB · 717, Locker.
Duty Washer has a heavy duty ·
Confirms ogreemenls by lhe
clue.
motor and other components used
Lake Lands Admlnlslrator al
Buckeye Lake. 31.0.
in Frigidaire Commercial WashAm . SB 130, Jackson,
ers. It keeps the shape and stretch
Authorizes
the
ad·
ministration of anaesthetics
FOUR FINED
in knits longer with the gentle
by qualified peroons under
Four defendants were fined the
wash action of the Frigidaire
direction of a llc:enHd •
and another forfeited bond in physician. 20-12.
Knits cycle, helps keep wrinkles
Middleport Mayor' Fred
·-lllllon OHtrtd
out of permanent press items with
SJ R 26, Oca!lek. R-ls
Hoffman's court Tqesday
3 Permanent Press Wash cycles.
Llbr1ry Board to call a
night. Fined were Roy F. State
White Houle Conference on
Team it up with the big-load dryBosgs, • 43, Middleport; Library and lnformollon
ing capacity'o fthe Frigidaire
Geroge McDaniel, 50, Mld- Services .
Dryer: It lets you dry as much as
cDeport, and Sue· Cufl'eDCt!,
an 18-lb.load all at once, and proMiddleport, $» and costs
each, dtJorderly manDer, aird
vides tender t:are for everything
Frank C. Clark,41, Chrleston,
from dellcates to denims.
ASITOWED
W. va., $D and COltS, three
A marriage Jlcenae has
days ~. driving been granted in Meigs County
while tnt,.,......., Forfeiting
1D Dale Lee l)vmoly, M, 8l1d
bond - SlaunY L. tittle, Donna Lou Cennoll7' as, bGtb
It, Middleport, $21, uaured of Long Bctttcm.
clear distance.

WE
'569

Dluminating and $1 million
by Cincinnsti BeD.
Ohio Bell also led the list of
charitable ·contributions with
$1 million, the report shOwed.
Consumers' Counsel
William A. SpraUey noted
that under existing state
regulations,
uUiity
companies are allowed lo
pass on ID their cus!Drners the
cost of both advertising and
charitable contributions.
tline of the 13 utility
companies reported political
contributions of $1.9 million
In 1976 which are not allowed
to be passed on ID the
consumer.
The largest political
contribution amounted to
$544,000 and was reported by
Cleveland Electric
Dlum!nating.
Other advertising expendi-

Public employes' bill

THURSOAY, JULY_28. 1977

definitely indefinite

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

rJV;;;;,,:, , ,:, ,.,:,,i ;,,,,Ii;i;j;J SEOEMS contract reached
:::·

::~

.

By Ulllted l'nlU IDtemadoaal

.

VALDEZ ALASKA- THE FIRST FLOW of North Slope
Cf)lde oil was 'stopped again fllday, less than 20 miles from the
end of the Trans-Alaska pipeline while workers repaired one
more flsw in the troubled $9 billion P"Oject.
"'The oil was shut down about 3 p.m. Wednesday pending
repairs to a faulty weld in the termlrial," SS!d Beverly Ward,
spokeswoman for Alyeska Pipeline Service Co., Inc. m
Anchorage. ".We don't know when it will be restarted, b~t I'm
still hoping It's going to be sometime Thw'sday .''

All the seven counties involved in the one-time federal
demonstration project for
emergency medical services
(E MS) have now contracted
the locally-controlled
regional Ufe Squad Service
as Meigs County last week
signed a one-year agreement
"with the southeast Ohib
Emergency Medical Services

.

(SEOEMS).
ended last Jan. I, calls for
The
action
firmly payment annually of not
established the "harvest" of more than $13,000 in Western
the three-year, $5 million Meigs from the Rutland
"seed-money" grant which station, in two townshipa of
created SEOEMS, according ·eastern Meigs county out of
to James McLain, president tbe Coolville station, and
of the board of trustees of the county-wide transfer service.
life squad service.
SpeciflcaDy, under terms of
'The agreement, essentially the contract, the payment by
a renewal of a contract thai the county WUI be derived by

h
l
·
·
d
Coal.· Oh 1-0 's 0 e c· ar

WASHINGTON- THE BUSINESS OF THE SENATE
remains at a standstill because of a Republican lllibuater. but
the House is pressing forward in a variety of areas.
The House Wednesday matched earli~ Senate action and
pasoed President Carter's proposal 1D provi~ free food
staJ:nps·ID f!ualifled poor instead ofrequriing partial payment.
By RICK VAN SANT ·
'Final House actiOn could come today on combination Ualted Press IDternatlonal
legislation affecting the $5.6 billion federal food subsidy
Ohioans will be better off
program as well as fann crop..stgiiiOI'. The ctalrmen of the · than most Americans for
Senate and House Budget' Committees told Congress the future electrical service and
American taxpayer spends !Do much lor assistance to farmers price because nearly all the
and suggested cutbacks. Republicans . in the Senate, stale•s el~ctricity stems from
1 Obio ut!UtY exec·
meanwhlle COil!tlnued ID deadloc'"
"action with a fUi'buster over coa,
. u11ves
White H~-backed legislation ID publicly finance Senate said.
Coal-oriented Ohio utilities
elections starting next year. Democrats hope to break the
talkathm witb a vote Friday.
will not have as many
P"Obl.emsor as much expense
EGYPT ACCUSED UBY~ TODAY of escalating border delivering electricity in the
ten.slcin bf calling up reservists and recruiting mercenaries future as will utilities now
and delayed the anoouncement of a ''peace plan" cairo had relying on oil and gas, a UP!
worked out wltb two Arab medlalCII"S.
.
Despite the verbal tunnoll, a shaky cease-fire held lor the
fourth straight day along the 650-mlle desert bCII"der following
six days of tank, artillery and air batUes. The plsn, described
as ''measures for stabllzlng tlle~cease.f!re," was negotiated by
Egypt wilh Palestinian leader Vasser Arafa.t and Kuwait
Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Abmed, and was to have
Marcia Dillard, daughter of
been announced Wednesday.
Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Dillard
But It remained under wraps early today, raising
of
Pomeroy
and Mikki
speculation the annotmCement was delayed because Egypt
Conley,
daughter
of Mr. and
insisted on its prior acceptance by Libyan leader Col
Mrs.
Ronald
Conley
of
Moemmar Khadafy.
Coolville have been selected
PARK RIDGE, IlL. - THE AMERICAN Farm Bureau by judge AI Weygandt to
~s President Carter's ·proposals to amend the National represent Meigs County In
Labor Relations Act ''tUt the act too far in the direction of the 4-H Horse Show at the
Ohio State Fair.
lalxr." '
The' AFBF annoWlced its opposition Wednesday In a
statement of tbe House 'subcommittee on tabor-management
relations considering amendments to the NLRA. ''The growing
economic ~ polltical power of labor unions has ~Je&lt;;n
experienced directly by fanners through the embargo of gram
exports at port facilities, !ntemrption of vital transportation
services and strikes at food processing plants tl]at have .
resulted in neecDess !oases to growers," the statement 88id.

sur,vey of lhe Buckeye Stale's
utility officials indiates.
The main reasons: coal is
plentiful , Ohio utilities
already have the facilities for
burning lots of it, and the
federal · government is
pu-~m·
.. , g f·or 1·ts future us·e
above oil and gas, .which are
becoming scarce and
· expensive.
However, there is one controverslal element that could
negate some of Ohio's coal
advantage - air pollution

Misses Dillard, Conley will

be in state fair horse show
'

The qualifying !ihow was
held this year on July 21 at
the
Meigs
County
Fairgrounds. Trophies were
presented to the winners by
Young's Market and Rutland
'Furniture. They wlll also
receive horse blankets
spoosored by Cole Stables.

OOLUMBUS- KLUROCARBON, a chemical once widely
used aa an aerosol propellant, was tabled an envlronmenlal
hazard Wednesday bY the Ohio Senate aa the upper chamber
passl!d and returned ID the House legislation harming the 88ie
ofproducts!Wng the chemical after Aprl114,1978.
Sen. Michael Schwamralder, o.&lt;:olumbua, said the
chemical,' which IS still In use as a propellant fCII" dedorant, hair
sprays, aome paint and other bou8ehold products, eventually
eaded up In the upper atmosphere and destroyed the lhleldlng
~e layer. Tile Senate pa•aed the bill »to-4 and returned the
measure to the House for concurrence in minor amendments.
In May, tbree federal agencies amowiced that a similar
P"Ohlbltion would go lnto effect nationwide oo the same date aa
the Ohio ban.

Meigs Mines

e

are closed by
roving pickets

OOL~US- THE

OHIO GENERAL ASSEMBLY gaoe
ita approval Wednesday and authorized a November vote on a
proposed constitutional ilmelldment repeel!ng Ohio's fl50,000
limit 011 general obllgatim bmded lndebteclneaa. Final
legislative acUon came after the Ohio House ldopted a
cmlerence committee report 87-to-30. The Senate adoPted the
rep«! last week.
~
In place of the 125-year~ld limit, the pr
constltuUmal change would allo!r the General Auembly,
without approval by the electorate but after .a two-th1rda
majCII"lty llpjitoval r1. the leRillature, wautbcrize the iaauance
ci bmdll in a nerlble lliDOUDI Ued to the state's average
revenue~ 1nd ability to retire the debt.
.

Swick n~med to honors dub
- COLUMBUs - The Ohio
laltlhte of TechnoloiY' one
I( the Bell • Howell ICbooll.
.... uiiOUill*l that Mike
1w1ck .. Rt. 1, Mkldleport.
.., 11een appol"ld to the
Prealdent'• Club. Only
lbdHI who bllve attained I

t

u or · better

grade polnl
average are acco~ded
memberahlp · to
the
Pnllclent'a Club.
Mike 1raduated !~
Mlilt Hlah.llrhgol ln ....,,
1tll IIIII llllll'elled In the
t.ubilld• PNII am at Obin

Tecb.

calculating the difference between what it coats to operate
the system and what it brings
· in as revenue, not to exceed
$13,000 annually·. The figure
has been estimated at $10,654
per year.
Other areas of the county
are served by existing
community volunteer units.
Meanwhile, a spokesman
lor tbe Meigs County board of
county commissioners · said
Thursday no date has been
agreed upon lor a meeting of
the commission, , representatives of the county's
cmtrol standards.
. d voiun.teer units, and of
still, Ohio electricity an SEOEMS. Proposals to work
· coal remain synonymous.
out
a
coop~rative
"Right now, better !han 95 arrangement between both·
per cent of the electricity in services will be reviewed at
Ohio is generated by coal," the meeting.
said Bill Botkin of the Ohio
.Commenting on the Meigs
Electric Utilities Institute in Count)'
col)tract,
t he
Columbus. "That's an SEOEMS President said:
unusuaUy high percentage
"Although it often seemed
and it bodes well for Ohloansbl. a slow process, by responding
"It's goin·g to mear sta e to local needs and desires we
supplies of electrica l!llergy have satisfied tbe EMS needs
in the future and hopefully of the seven rounty region in
the cost will stay right in line. a way that no •other rural
There's no quemton In my
mind that Ohio electrical region of tbe nation has
conswners are better off in equalled."
the long haul because of our
"The most important
factors that contributed to
reliance 00 coal."
lnmitute President John this success are local
White, also president of Ohio operational an.d medical
Edison at Akron, echoed controls," McLain noted,
Botkin's . sentiments, but referring to the board of '
raised a critical point trustees (made up of three
1m t trustees from ea.ch county)
by
a os that oversees the activity of
mentione d
everyooe cmtacted in the
survey _ the. cost of the SEOEMS organization,
envlrorunental protection. and the Advanced Life
"We've tradi\iorially relieol Support Committee made up
very heavily m coal in Ohio Qf local physicians.
and so cCII"Dpared with states
"Complete dedication to a
where a lot of o11 ill burned, professional attitude in all
we're better off," said White. aspects of the SEOEMS
"At the present, coal ill less system," McLain added, .
expensive tha~ oil,
"will always be a vital part of
"And In the future, the the success.
'
government is very 11\tent on - "Of ·course We still have
forcing companies burning much work to do," McLain
oi.l and gas to convert to coal. said, adding, "To assure tbe
It's no aecret that supplies of continued day-to-day high
oil and gas are harder to get quality of the serVIce will be a
and are continuing ID become never-ending Job."
more expensive.
"Qut, meeting the environmental restrictions on
burning coal Is going &gt;to be
v~ry
expensive,
too.
However, I dm't think the
total cost of coal Is going to
catch ~ with what oil will go
to. And, the govemtnent Isn't
going ID let us · burn oll
Roving pickets, apparently
anyway, IIC! her~ in Olili&gt; we
protesting
a cut in their
wm'thave the btg cmverslon
medical
benefits,
shut down
-cost that some utilities will
seven
mines
ln
Eastern
Obin
have.
·today
idling
2,
700
mlners,.and
"Another good point for ·us
Is that· Investment firms are tbe three Metis Mines near
tending to look' more ' Salem Center; keeping
favorably on those who are anOther estimated 1500 off
joba.
relying m coal now."
HThi•
won't
solve
White also pointed out that
general economic cmdiUms anything," said John Guz8k,
for Ohio utllities are president of United Mine
improving over the early Workers Union Dlatrict 6 in
19708.
.
Bellaire. "There's not a
; "Earnlnlis of Ohio utjlldes · damned thing to be gained bY
have been delll H d the past it. "If they continue to do
four cr five years and we had tb1a there probably will be
to
stretch
out
our another cutlrllclt In the (UMW
construction pro1rams, health and ntlnment) fund
wblch ui.de aome of our again bacauae there II no
outlooks a little sldnny," be money ~lng Into It," he aald.
"If they continue to shutdown
sald.
"Earnings wa-e cle111 eaaed tlae llllnU, llld there Ia
liecauae of brflatlm, becallle another cutback, then they
of tbe slowness of the are reaDy going to be ralllnc
cmrmtnon (Public UtiiiUea hell.
CotnmilliOD of Oblo) to
"The ml!ll want to work if
appco!e r~t.e ~_and tb- pickets would just leave
them alone," said GUll\.
. Coa&amp;l-.d on P11e I

MRs. DOLIJE M~ PICKEn', 92, Ft. l.auderdale,
Fla., a former resident rl. Meigs County, died Tuesday.
Funeral aenlces will be held Saturday at I p.m. at Ewing
Olapel with pastor Albert Dlttea olflciaw.i. Burial wi~ be
In Welll Cemetery. Frtenda may C:.U at the fwwal himle
lnlm 2 tn 4 8l1d 7 w9 Friday. Her ........ the late Hemy
81111 Oollle S&amp;evena Diehl, were a plone« family of the
Bunker Hill area.

.,,

A spokesman from the West Virginia Depariment
of Highways in Charleston today called reports that tbe
Silver Me111orial Bridge here would reopen Sunday or
Tuesday as strictly rumor&amp;.
"This is merely ialk heard on the bridge," said a
spokesman in the public Information department.
The spokesman refused to fix a specific date as to
when the bridge, which now has been closed more than
three weeks, would reopen.
The spokesman emphasised that the department of
highways expects to reopen the bridge when It is
"Mally safe and at the earliest possible time."
On Monday of tills week, Dean Blake, Deputy
Commissioner of the Department of Highways, said
the bridge would reopen within a week to 10 days.
Blake was out of town and unavailable lor comment
today.
If Blake's Monday predict!Qn holds up, the bridge
will reopen between Monday and Wednesday next
week.

Six killed as
m execution
•

&gt;

&gt;

&gt;

•

underheavypoliceguardata
local hospital this morning.
eompany Inspectors talked
Lawley said police have no
their way into a suburban Idea of·the motive. "It could
home Wednesday night, · he personal vengeance, drug
bound and gagged tiH\ eight dealing or even robbery," he
occupants, shot them all In · said.
the head "execution style"
The otber survivor, Johnnie
and left them for dead. Six Hall, 45, was listed In serioua
men died.
condition with a bullet wound
A man and · a woman in the back of the head,
survived the mass slaughter nursing supervisor Joyce
of the men in their mid-206, Campbell said early this
the worst irt Dade County's morning.
histCII"y, leaving police ID
'The scene inside tbe twotheorize it was not the work of bedroom, concrete-block
professional hit men who . home was described as
must confirm !h.eir kills. . "grisly" by one detective,
Margaret Wooden, 24, who said five of the bodies
hospitalized in good coodition were In me bedroom and one
,witb a bullet graze behind her in the seemd.
ear, told detectives three
blsck males came to tbe door
posing as Florida Power &amp;
tight Co. Inspectors looking
for an electrical !ihort cirCJllt
Inside the house.
One detective said the evidence indicated the gunmen
entered the house and
Two suites for divorce and
subdued some of the an action for fllOney were
oceupants and then waited in fUed in Meigs Cpunty Comambush for the others.
mon Pleas Court Wednesday.
Afier the shootings, Miss Asking divorces were Everett
Wooden said tbe men fled In a L. Crow, Jr., Reedaville,
Ford Tlunder!U'd rented by from Nancy Crow, RavensLivingston Stocker., lh.e wood, w. va. and Luella
owner of tbe home In the King,
Pomeroy'
from
quiet, rac1ally mixed Carol Franklin King, Jr., RavensCity neighborhood nCII"thwest
of Miami.
wood.
.
Judgment In a!ftount of
Pollee searched throughout $16,499.73 was asked by tbe
the night for the car and the Athens County Savings and
tbree suspects.
Loan Company, and Ohio
The young woman, who Corporation, Athens, against
lived only a lew doors from Lee Combs, Peggy Combs,
tbe
shooting
scene, .and ·Milo Hutchison, all of
apparently feigned death · Rutland, and George Collins,
waiting for the slayers to Meigs County Treasurer.
leave the house, then ran next
door seekillg aid.
·
Detective Sgt. Tom Lawley
S
said Mila Wooden could not
the suspects and said
Wednesday was the first time
she had seen them. She was
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - A
motion was approved by the
New Haven Town CouncD
Tuesday evening' to Invite
bids lor a new pollee cruiser
Cloudy tonight, chance ol ~ as specified by Chief Tommy ·
thundershowers, lows ln the Parsons. Bids are to be
mid 60s. Cloudy Friday, submitted by August 1.'1.
llhowers likely. Highs in tbe
Counc!J alao agreed to aet a
mid lOs. Probability of fine of S50 as of Aug. I for
pnclpitation II 10 pex. ~nt people who begin any
today, 40 per cent tonight ind building In town limits
70 per cent Friday.
without a pennlt. .
Present were .Mayor
Charles Roush, Recorder
TEACIIERS TO MEET
Wendy Divers and eounc1J
There will be a general members Hllrold McWey, Bm
meeting of the Me!ga Local Bird and Dol)ald Kay. A1ao
Telchers Association this attending were Cbuck
evening at 7:30 p.m. 11 tbe Allenslrortb, RayUftlaro lllll
1tielga Inn meeting room.
Davt~ R111110!1.
MIAMI (uPl) - Three
gunman posing as power

Three actions

filed in oourt

d

Cruiser hi ·

name

&gt;

are invited

Weather

"

'

'It

·~.

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