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                  <text>28 - The Sunda)' T1mes - Senlinci,S!Ulday, May 9, 1976

yvur lime because !here may

Everyone must he involved
in growing youth problems
By Mauril'e M. Thomas
GALLIPOLIS
Our

an analysi:s is iu order lo see

never be ~nolher time.
Arc the youth any different
from the adults, no just
smaller models havin~ on
unlrained mind but a very
observant one. They will 'act
as others act about them , if
lhey sec some thin~ that is not
besl for society, we may have
a repeater, unless wi train or
.remove the cause. I not, we
will have a chain of same acts
from one ro some other

- _-_fPONY

-'

'.
'

.

'

'

lesson did John or Mary get,
whal, if anything, ta n be or lear n from
thi s,
newspapers arc brin ging dune.
"Ch ildren's Function'?" Will
attenlion to the public conTruaney is the basic fa ct lhey grow up feeling it was
cern ing the way many people for lt.~w -brcaking or· · foun- right to ge t adult help, or will
are living . Many n"mes could dation for what is to come. they feel they are less im- person.
~-·
be applied to these acts, bul
Webster ·sta les briefly, portant than a lew eggs, or
It is cheaper to train or
lhe one I am concerned wilh ·'truancy is railing to be at will they develop the attitude, educate than to prosecute.
,.
--,4---+is the Ia wlessness of our busi ness or absence from "gel mine any way, but get
Society
must
become
inyouths.
place of duty''
,
,/
it."
volved and try to find ~
HDwcver, lht:n: are uther
Af ter re sea rch some
The above are the thoughts solution using the youlh as
figW"es arc given such as names that are given which !hat came to me after reading
the center or hub of solution.
250,000 in prison, 35,542 I~ws ·seem less harsh but have an lhe " Letter to the Editors" in 1\fler all, the youth is the
in effect, when the original un savory side, that en- April 23 issue.
prime fa ctor or segmenl of
PONY KEG TO GET NEW FACEUF1'- I.cuie Bush,
"Ten Ru les fdr Living ," ·courages children to cheat,
through services, new and larger cooler storage facilities
On the front page was an society we are trying to free;
owner
of the Pony Keg on Eastern Ave. in Ga1Upclls,
would have been sufficient to under lhe guise or aiding intriguing discourse in the
and
more merchandise. The face lift was professionally
others that must enter into
announced Saturday that he will expand his business and
live by.
I he m when their efforts were same "Tribune", that gave
designed
by Bill Walker of the W.L. W. Building and
this are parents, teachers,
that a new facelifting job is scheduled for the finn . Bush
Vel U1e crime rate is in- to be rewarded .
Design Co., Gallipolis. W.L.W. Building and Design Co.,
an insight in actions and ministers, and recreation
said new featureS will provide customer in-car driven
creasing . Laws are not the
The Easter Egg lmnt was reactions to law and ord er; leaders . There is no person so
will also be the general contractor. Bush said the firm .will
remain open during construction .
cure, it has been proven, so explained this year: What people, rear, public in general unimportant lhat must be by1 ! 1 - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -_,. and self appraisal. To wh om passed in our planning. All
can I ta ke my problems' Who mu st become involved
has.my well-being at stake ; If beca use these young people
Gallipolis State Institute.
I must tell, to whom' If I are our future citizens.
Dr. LaiTy Jaggeman, Ohio
must keep still, why ? If I fail
University
faculty member,
What are they going to give
ATHENS - Mrs. Barbara
to tell will I be the victim us, law and order or riots , Armbruster, a junior high at Baker Center and Mc- developed teaching materials was presented a special
Cracken Hall.
and creativity, and showed citation from the student
agaw, or a sta tistic ' Howcan chaos and ·trouble?
special education teacher at
The
student
coucnll
for
devotion to studenll;, loyalty chapter for directing the
I decide? I need help and
!l's later than you think . Southwestern , Friday was
exceptional
children
sponto her sc hool system, and volunteer services at GSI
now .
Start action now, not next named winner of the lOth
l~v llob llm:flich
sored
the
event
which
was
courage
and dignity befitting from the university and for
Wliich segment of soc1ety week. There will be youth in Annual Amy Allan Award,
preceded
by
a
banquet.
the
teaching
professiona .
other ac tivi ties connected
will come to my aid , in time actwn ; is it Law and Good presented to the outstanding
The
award
is
presented
to
Two
other
individuals
from with the chapter.
tf
need'?
Parents
should
be
Citizens
hip
,
or
Vandalism
special education teacher in the teacher who has con- Gallipolis · received awards
· POMEROY - l'he Meigs Coun ty Council on Aging is
The two-day conference
hoping for a big turnout for its "ca ndidate night" to be held on firsI ; will they take time to and Destruction; You are not southeastern Ohio.
tributed leadership ability, during Friday's banquet. wa s held in connection with
listen
to
these
problems
of
too
busy
to
get
involved.
May 18 at the Senior Citizens Center on East Main St.
The annual conference on
The next truant may be learning disabilities was held instruc tional techniques , They were Mrs. Jane Ann Exceptional Children 's Week.
A jitney supper will be held ' from 5 to 7 p.m. w1 th a mino and counsel me. It may
Denney and Shirley Dailey, Noted educators from all
program starting at 7. Each candidate will be given three U!ke only a few minutes of yours.
who were awarded honorary over the United States were
minutes to express himself onany issue or his candidacy and a
memberships in
Ohio in charge of various section
social hour will follow the program in order to give candidates
University's Chapter of CEC meelings which were held in
a chance to ming le with those attending. Invitations have b€en
(Council' of Exceptional connectio n with the consent to loca l candidates as well as district and stale and
Children ) for directin g ference .
several acknowledgements have already been received.
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio ceptance ot th e Buckeye Shoe Repair, Thomas Dan Thomas &amp; Son .
volunteer activities for Ohio A number of teachers and
Commi ss ion on Agi ng Golden Card by retail Clothiers, carl's Shoe Store,
·
Griffin will contact all Universi ty studenll; who help individuals from Ga llia
WOMEN AT THE FABRIC SHOP in Pomeroy, are in the rece nlly ann ounced th e· ·facilities offerin g senior . Jack &amp; Jill's, The Bastile.
with resident activities at the County attended.
process of making bicentennial gowns which they will wea r appoin tment of John . T. citi zen discount programs, Wendy 's , Thaler Ford Sales, merchanll;, businesses and
while at their duties over holiday periods for the rest. of the Gnffin , 6!6 Second Ave., as lransit authorities off,;ing Mitchell Office Supply, organizations to invite
th'em
to
join
the
year.
business liaison fo 1 the reduced fares, the Ohio Amy's Style Center, The Hub, program . Those wishing
Golden Buckeye Program 111 Hi storical Society, bankinR Clark Jewelry, The Goodie to contact · him may
THE A'l.I'ITUDE OF TH" ME IGS County Humane soulheastern Ohio.
facilitie s and any other Shop, Knight's Dept. Store,
Society in reference to the disposition of animals is reflected 'in
The Golden Buckeye Card busi ness or organiza tion Tri-C ounty Community do so by calling 446-1853. This
program Is an attempt to
the follow ing statement issued IJy tile society:
Carrol K. Snowden
progl'am is for seni or citizens interested in lhe program. Conce r ts, Tom's Shell provide
senior citizens of
HOur busi ness is kindn,css to ani111a ls. Sadly, tile kindest enlilling them to d1scoun t.s at
Griffin is in charge of Area Station, Rocch i's Restaurant,
24
State St., Gallipolis
Ohio wi th a number of
thing we can do for most hom clrss animals is to put lhen. to state recreation fa cilities, Se ven of th e program
Phone 446-4290
benefill; in recognition of
death humanely. We try to find ho111cs for all hea lthy anima ls and at private retail and covering a 10 county area
Home 446-4518
their special place in our
turned over to us, but there simply aren't enough homes to go service establishments . The includin g Ga llia, Jac kson,
society.
aroWld. And we don't want to pu t an anlnwl in just any home . cards are being iss ued under Vint on, Lawrence, Scioto,
BARBECUE SET
It must be a home wiU1 people willing lo fulfill the animal 's slate superv ision to resident.s, Pike, Ross, Adams and
RACINE - The Racine
needs and care for it for its lifetime. If the animal receives 65 years old· or older, af- Brown coun ties.
Fire Department will sponsor
anything less, il is merely learning to cxpecl lovc and care that fordmg them with special
To date lhe program is a chicken barbecue on
will not be permanent.
benefi ls from both private being
received
en- Memorial Day at the fire
OFFICE CWSING
"Please understand we don 't like killing animals. But and public agencies.
thusiatically . Thus far station. Serving will begin at
POMEROY - Farmers
ITATI JAUI
irresponsible pet dealers and amateur br·eeders have put dugs
Griffin , 55, who is to handle locally, the following mer- noon. The menu will include Home Administrat,ion county·
Like a good neighbor,
Sll• Ftnn Flit
and cats in the hands of people who don 'l rea lly want them or negotiati ons to gain ac- chants are participating in chicken, slaw, applesauce , office . in Pomeroy will be
anct C..ltt eomPifl,
Slile
Fann
is
there.
HGmt Olb . Bioomtrlllli;ln; llllrolt
are unwilling to give them the care and attention they need. If
the program: Price 's Drn•• rolls, ice cream and closed Wednesday, May 12
p 7572
INIUUttCI
every person who took a cal or n rlog into his or her home were
Foun tai n of Youth , B&amp;E beverages.
due to an out of town meeting.
a responsible pet owner, our services wouldn 't be needed."

~·

Mns. Armbruster honored

Beat ...

Recovery rate slower

•

L

Of the

WASHINGTON (UP!) Most economic Indicators
show the nation still
recovering
from
the
recession, but there were
some stgns that the earlier
acceleration may be slowed.
The Gross National
Product figures showed
strength,
but- higher
wholesale prices mean some
more inflation may be
coming. More Americans
than ever are working, but ,
the rate of unemployment Is
stubbornly steady. Business
indicators fell slightly last
month.
A summary of the latest
figures:
UNEMPLOYMENT : Still
at 7.5 per cent, although the
number
of
working
Americans set a record In
, April, the third straight
record month, Jobs were at
87.4 million , . an unprecedented me of 3.3
milion over the past 13

.

·A

Oifton's

FIRST TO ANNOUNCE Memorial Day services is the Conlinued from page 22
Burlingham Community. The Woodman Lodge will parade
with the firing squad from Feeney-Bennett Post 1211, American out of d oor~." Which means
Legion , leading the parade. The speaker will be Rev. Clifford to be a serious artist, Roy_felt
Coleman . The services will be ill 1: 30 p.m. on Monday , May 31, h had to leave New Orleans.
In speaking in beha lf of
at the Burlingham Church and cemetery.
living in Cli fton, he said , ''the
JUNE 5 SHOULD BE QUITE an occasion in Meigs County subjects I am painting right
when a segment of the National Wagon Tra in arrives. Abarge now are wi thin walking
c&lt;:rr)ing some 22 slate wagons will be docked in Pomeroy and disU!nce. Since there are four
a para de with three mul e-pulled sta te wagons will form at the ~eas ons he1·e, the sam e
Middl eport Community Park and move to Pomeroy, Local subject matter changes with
units are be ing asked to join the state wagon trains for the the seasons."
Roy is employmg"' strictly
parade . Incidentally , the committee planning the visit is also
wa
ler colors in his paintings
asking everyone attending the June 5 event to ' wear oldnow .
fashioned costuming. C. E. Blakeslee of the committee is
jjke a camera which can
planning on a bib overa ll outfit if l&lt;'red Goeglein comes forth
foc
us in on a particular
with the overalls, tha t is. A professiona l type musica l
subject
while blurring out the
program, built around the bicentennia l theme, will be
foreground
and background,
presented on the upper parking lot in Pomero)' at 11 a.m. by
Roy's
pai
ntings
have a very
Penn State students.
similar
effect.
The barge on which the stale wagons will be on display, by
the way, is "ofrlirnils." You ca n view from a distance but you Sombre tones of gray blue
and black make up many a
cannot get on the barge.
surrealistic background
APOLOGIES TO MR. AND MRS. ELMICR VAN METER, while a realistic tone is
Rock Springs Road. Their vehicle stalled while leaving the placed on the subject which
ferry the other evening and was pushed to the side until they may be a riverboat or men
could get it going. A photo of the van being pushed to the side working at the locks and
and published in the newspaper was in no way intended to dams .
In definin g himself as an
embarrass Mr. and Mrs. Van Meter. A "stall " ca n - and does
artist,
Roy sa id, "For me
- happen to everyone now and aga in - even me . So, again,
pa
inting
is closely related to
sincere apclogies to th e Van Meters.
life, to .caring, to love .
Responding to life, I try to
say somethin g about th e
things I ca re aboul. I try to
say something about the
bea uty and mea ning of life."
The display at Ci tizens
Nati onal Bank run s through
Salurday.
MONDAY NIGHT
His pa intings have been on
display in the Whitney
Museum of American Art in
New York Ci ty; lhe Corcoran
Gallery of Art in Washington,
D. C.; Wilmington Society or
Fine Art, Wilmington, Del. ;
and the Kramnert Museum,
at the University of Illinois.
While man y of his
paintings have been sold all
over the country, Roy sa ys
lhal curren tly he is selling
many paintings in Mason
Coun ty which have a price
· ranging from $700 to $1,000
each.
·
Aw ards an d honors
Vi si t Our Sa lad Bar
received in clude: nine
Meat Loa f
awa rds from the French
Scalloped Pota to
Quarler t\rtists Society; the
5
Baked Beans
A.D.D.A. medal; three first
Hot Roll s
place prizes from the Houston
pl us tax
Walcr Color Socie ly; two first
Coffee, Tea or Mi lk
prizes from lhe Atlanta Art
Guild : as well as a couple of
The fri -Counly's Most
firs !· place winnings in last
Exciting Night Spot
year's Mason County Fair.
Roy was born in Union City,
Tenn . He studied ·painting
and design at Vanderbilt
University and art and art
Phone 992 -3629
history
al Tulane J.lniversily.
Pomeroy, Ohio
He has traveled extensively
in the United States, Europe,
Asi:1, Mexi co, Central and ·

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.INews. • •in BriefsJ
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
PHILADELPHIA - VICE PRESIDENT Nelson
RQckefeller today called on the nations of the free world to
block any further expansion of Soviet communism. "Whether
we like it or not, a continuing attempt is underway to organize
the world into a new empire in which the Soviet sun never
sets," Rockefeller told about 245 journalists from around the
world at the opening session of tile International Press
Institute's annual convention.
"This new form of imper.ialism," he said, "involves
ideological, diplomatic, economic, financial, political and
military structures and relationships impcrtantly dominated
by and difected from Moscow." The vice president said "a
positive and far closer partnership of the independent nations
of the world" .would be needed to oppose "the Soviet's
expansionist thrust."
·

TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - ISRAELI GOVERNMENT
officials started work today on a compromise to defuse the
explosive question of Jewish settlement in the occupied West
Bank of Jordan. Foreign Minister Yigal Allon, asked if
Sunday's long-awaited cabinet debate averted what loomed as
the major pclltical crisis .of Prime Minister Yilzhak Rabin's
two-year-old government, said : "It is early to say but I hope
so."
The !tl-?lour debate at Rabin's Jerusalem office focused on .
a group of nationaUst Jews who defied the goverrunent last
December to set up a settlement at the West Bank town of
Sebastla near Nablus. The 3D families linked with the rightist
Gush Emmin (Band of Believers) movement moved to nearby
Kadum army. base in January, oot the cabinet Sunday
declared, "No settlement shall be eslablished at Kadwn."

Save Up To $28500 On National~
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Weather
Cloudy tonight, a chance of
showers. I.cw in the 50s.
aoudy, chance of showers
Tuesday morning. High in the
upper 60s and lower 70s.
Probability of rain 20 per cent
today and 40 per cent tonight
and Tuesday. · '

BASSffi • BROYHIU
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FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, THIRD FLOOR

ELBERFE.LDS fiN POMERO·Y

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,.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS ·

killed on tracks
LEON , W. Va.- A19-yearold youth apparently sleeping
across railroad tracks near
this Mason t ounty co mmunity was ltilled Sunday
afternoon when. a ConRail
train struck him .
West Virginia State Police
identified the victim as
Randall B. Boles of lOS South
First St., Mason, W. Va.
The youth and several
friends reportedly were
fishing at 10 Mile Creek the
night before and had gone
near the tracks to wail for a
ride, Trooper J. L. · Searls
said.
The others left and the

LONDON - SLEEPING TOO LONG CAN SHORTEN your
life a British doctor said today. "Men in their 50s who sleep
nin~ hours a night suffer double the death rate from stroke,
heart attacks or aneurysms than those sleeping seven hours or
less," Dr. JOI!n Gomez wrote. "Those who sleep 10 hours run
four Urnes the risk," she said.
Dr. Gomez, a psychiatrist, said in a book called "How Not
to Die Young" that seven hours' sleep Is enough for any
woman, and lDminutes more than is enough for any man. Sex
keeps you yoWl(!, Dr. Gomez said, and can lengthen a woman's
life, though not a man's.
·
· She said sex is like a brisk five-mile walk in terms of
exercise, acts as a tranquilizer and stimulates glands which
keep women youthful, though they do not have the same effect
on men.

CABLE CARS, BUSES AND TROLLEYS WERE MOVING
again in San Francisco, but major labor disputes across the
nation continued to idle more than 100,000 workers. Passengers
carrying bottles of champagne hopped on San Francisco cable
cars Sunday to celebrate the end of a city workers strike which
shut down mass transit and other city services for 39 days. An
agreement was reached Saturday. ·
A co~Je of members of the city's board of supervisors
saluted San Franciscans for their patience during the strike by
3,800workers which stranded about250,000 dally transit riders.
City· officials said a tough stand against the walkout helped
avoid a financial crisis. However, Mayor George Moscone
warned that sudden "anti-unionism" could lead to San
FranciscO becoming "like New York was, a series of.warring
camps."

During Our May Furniture Sale

...

Young Leon ·mart

~

«

· LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature In
downtown ·Pomeroy at II
a .m. Monday was 68 degrees
under sunny skies.

youth fell asleep apparently
lying on the tracks, Searls
said. The engineer of the two
engine train of 59 coal cars
told Searls he applied the
brakes and sounded the
· whistle after spotting the
youth about 100 feet away,
Searls said.
The accident occurred near
W. Va. 62 at approximately 4
p.m. Boles was dead on
arrival at Holzer Medical
Center .
He was born In Point
·Pleasant' April 5, 1957. ~ut;
vivors Include his father ,
James E. Boles , Leon ;

mother, Mrs . Gevetl.a Smith
Bush , New Haven; a sister,
Mrs. Mary Pierson , Mason;
three brothers, ·John , of
I.crain, Ohio ; Hennan , of
Elkins, W. Va ., and Daniel,
Point Pleasant, and his
grandmothers, Mrs. Stella
Smith, Letart, and Mrs. Lona
Boles, Rutland .
Funeral 'services will be
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m. at
Wilcoxen Funeral Home with
the Rev . James L. Bunn
assisted by· the Rev . Howard
Killingsworth officiating .
Burial will be In Forest Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 6
p.m. tOday.

\
CROWNED KING AND QUEEJN - Debbie Bailey and
Mlck Davenpcrt were crowned queen and kina at, Meigs (
High School Junior-Senior Prom Saturday night. Debbie Is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bailey, Pomeroy, and
Mlck is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl S. Davenport,
Middleport.

I"Ch;:~h"';;:;u;~]Fire apparatus funded

strike

at Columbia

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Headboard. Nigh! Stand

~

en tine

MONDAY, MAY 10, 1976

Teachers end

BIDAOOM INCLUDEia

- ~--

NIGHT TO REMEMBER - Amid an attractive star-11tudded setting carrying out the
theme " A Night to Remember", Jan Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Wilson,
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Don Eichinger, son of Mrs. Opal Eichinger, Chester, were crownr,d
queen and king of the Eastern High School Prom Saturday night. Crowning Miss Wilson Is
Robin Elkins, president of the Junior class. 'fhc queen and king were selected by tbc senior
class.

·:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::;:::;:;::;:;;;;~::;.;::.:·:·:·:·:::.:!:~:::·:~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::~:::::~·

WASHINGTON - MOST STATE education agencies have
failed to comply with Ute 1972 law guaranteeing equal
opport(lnity for female students in schools, a women's rights
group charged today. During the first year of federal
regulations implementing the law, 41 state agencies are
violating at least one of five basic requirements, said PEER, a
foundation-11uppcrted "Project on Equal Education Rights" of
the National Organization for Women.
Four states - Georgia, Indiana, South Dakota and
Vennont - are violating all five requirements imposed by .
rules issued last July 21 by the Department of Heal\h,
Education and Welfare, PEER said. The requirements
include setting up a formal process for resolving sex bias 1()-day
charges, appointing a Title IX coordinator, and making an
internal "seH-evalualion" of agency pclicies and practlces to
see if they comply with the law, the group said.

SPECIAL

THE MEIGS INN

NO. 16

mixed for continued
acceleration from recession

STILL BUILDING
momentum with primary
victories,
Democratic
presidential frontrunner
Jimmy Carter says he Is
shifting goals to emphasize
. reuniting the party.

THE INN PLACE

2.95

VOL XXVIII

months. Orders for all goods,
S~s
uicluding nondurables, grew
al slower rate of 3.5 per cent
to $93.4 billion.
INDICATORS : Index of
leading business indicators lOth per cent rate. Personal After taxes in last quarter of
fell 0.4 per cent in March, but income represents wages, 1975, rose 1.4 per cent, third
economists said this did not salaries and payments straight quarter of higher
necessarily mean the without tax deductions. Rose profits.
GNP: Rose 7.5 per cent in
recovery was faltering. The $5.6 billion in February, $4.2
first quarter of 1976 for
drop was the largest since billion in March.
CORPORA-TE PROFITS: greatest show of -strength
last October's 0.5 per cent.
This index charts the future ::::·:::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::· since recession ended last
spring. Gross National
direction of ll)e economy, and
Product measures all goods
had risen for four consecutive
and services; estimated at
months before March's fall.
WILLIAMSBURG, Va., $1.616 trillion before adjust·
INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT :
May
10 - An Augusla ment for inflation, up ll.S per
Production rose in March,
County
committee en- cent from $1.573 trUIIon rate
but at slowest rate mfive
dorsed
In
a pelltlon to the in the previous qu81'ter.
monll!s. Output from nation's
colonial
legislature
the
fa ctories, mines and utilities
need
for
making
the
conrose 0.6 per cent last month.
CYCLIST KILI,ED
federation of colonies "the
Increases signal gains in
PORT CLINTON (UPI )most
perfet!t,
Independent
employment for factory
and lasting and of framing Harold Swalley, 53, of Parworkers.
an equal, free and liberal ma, Ohio, was killed Sunday
PERSONAL INCOME :
government that may hear night when the motorcycle he
Tapered in March, second
the test of all future ages," was driving struck a docked
month in row. Climbed at
boat ori a pier at Gem Beach
annual rate of $7.6 billion, 6in Port Clinton .

•

e

Griffin to represent Golden Buckeye plan

"See me for Homeowners Insurance
from State FarmNthe world\ largest."

mcinths, but 7 million still
were unemployed.
INFLATION: AI 3.7 per
cent, compared to 6.8 in the
last quarter of 1975. The
Consumer Price Index rose
only 0.2 per cent in March
after a 0.1 per cent increase
in February. Prices have
risen at an annual rate of 2.9
per cent fo r past three
months.
WHOLESALE PRICES :
Rose in March and even more
in · April. The Labor
Department reported that a
one-yeat record rise In farm
and food prices . drove
wholesale prices up 0.8 per '
cent, portending more
inflation. The Wholesale
Price Index stood at 181.3 in
April, up from ·March's 179.8
in March , and 5,3 higher than
a vear a~o .
Manufacturers Goods :
Orders lor durable goods
rose 6.7 per cenr in
March, the biggest gain in 11

COLUMBIA STATION,
Ohio (UP!)'- The Columbia
Local Education Association
today accepted a contract
offer from the school board,
ending a Ill-day strike by
most of the system's 115
teachers , Ed Spiezio of the
Ohio Teachers' Association
announced.
It includes a provision for
binding arbitration whenever
future Impasses occur,
·Spiezio said, and a reduction·
in-force provision based upon
seniority and certification,
plus a two-day personal leave
allowance.
The basic starting salary
becomes $8,325 retroactive to
Jan. I 911d $8,858 next Sept. I
with a two per cent increase
for all teachers next Jan, I
provided an operating levy is
passed; with a wage reopener
in February, 1977, for a new
salary schedule effective the
following Sept. I.
On Friday, a COlplllon pleas
judge had ordered the
teachers to be back at their
desks today.

HILOTEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, wu 92
NOW YOU KNOW
degrees at Palm Springs,
Englishman
James
Calif. TQday's low was 30
Smithson
left
Am
eric~
the
degrees at Bradford, Pa.
money to found the
Smithsonian Institution , and
it 1ook all of John Quincy
Adams' eloquence to persuade a dubious Congress
that the Constitution permitted acceptance of ihe girt .

·_:!_: more JFK probei.·_J.I mr:s~o~~~gs~~~unzor~~~~ tll:nTr~~o:tyb~~:~.s
:;;:

::;:
far as his first primary
LINCOLN, Neb. I UP! )
Idaho Sen. Frank Church, election Is concerned, "I feel
stepping briefly back into his · a real surge" of support. He
role as head of the Senate said that feeling was ba&amp;!ld on
Intelligence Committee, said the "growing size of the
today a report will be crowds and the enthusiasm cJ.
released soon that may the last few days."
prompt another look at the
Church, who in the
Warren Commission report Nebraska primary Tuesday
on the assassination of John faces the .Democratic
F. Kennedy.
frontrunner Jimmy carter,
"I believe there will be a has been endorsed by Lt.
new call for a further look at Gov. Gerald Whelan and a top
ihe Warren Commission · Nebraska-Iowa labor leader
work," Church said during a who says he can't ·Support
news conference on the final Carter because he has "never
day of his Democratic staled where he stands."
presidential primary
campaign in Nebraska. It Is
the senator's first outing as a
presidential candidate.
CARDINAL COMMENTS
Church said his committee . CRACOW, Poland IUPI) is at work on a new study, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski,
which grew out of its the Roman Catholic Jl'imate
investigations into the FBI of
Poland,
told
a
and CIA.
congregation at Skalka
Church said the probe into Church Sunday many Poles
the incident came about in an keep their faith secret' despite
inditect manner. He said the constitutional guarantees of
committee was interested freedom of religion.
primarily in finding out the
"Despite the fact that the
extent to which federal agen- constitution guarantees
cies disclosed information on freedom of religion, there are
the assassination.
sonie situations when a inan
The report, he said, will be is afraid to admit he is a
released "sometime soon" member of the Church, make
and right now the committee a sign of the cross or
staff is "following some new participate
in church
leads." Church declined to celebrations because It might
comment further .
harm his job," Wyszynski
The Idaho senator said as said.

agreed to give $3,000 to the
Middleport Fire Dept. for
safety equipment that will be
used by the Tri-County Fire
Dept. in return for fire
protection to county buildings
outside Middleport.
It was stressed that the
equipment will be available
for use by all departments in

::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;,;:;:;:::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, fair Weduesday,
Chance of showers or
thundershowers Thursday
and Friday. Highs In the
upper 50s and lower 80s
Wednesday and in the 7~s
thursday and Friday.
Lows In the 40s Wednesday
and In the 50s Friday.
:;:;:;:::::::;.;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; ;:;:

VORSTER ON BOMB
NEW YORK (UPI)
Prime Minister John Vorster
of South Mrica says his
country has the "capability"
to produce nuclear weapons,
Newsweek magazine reports.
Vorster was quoted by
Newsweek Sunday as saying
"we are only interested in the
peaceful applications of
nuclear power. But we can
enrich uranium and we have
the capability ."
South Mrlca, he said, did
not sign the nuclear
nonproliferation treaty.

School guidelines needed
COLUMBUS CUPI ) - The public education throUgh an
state Board of Education educational assessment
today is scheduled to hold program.
final hearings on standards
Neither process can begin
on statewide· educational · until standards are adopted
assessment and guidelines by the slate- ·Board of
for school ooildlng progress Education. .
reports.
. · The standards on the two
The guidelines will affect procedure! are based on the
each of the more than •.ooo findings of an advisory
school buildings and 6!7 dis- committP.e · which held
tricts in Ohio.
regional and other hearings
State law requires the Ohio during January , February
Department ~f Education set and March to determine the
up methods of 1etermining educational areas of greatest
academic achievement in

,,

'

citizen concern and the kind
of informatlom desired about
the learning patterns of
school children.
In other business the state
board
will
consider
scheduling regional hearings
for a state plan for special
education , adopting due
process standards for special
edu&lt;la tion , transferring
school district territory,
revising the state plan for
vocational education and allocating work-study funds.

the
comm issio n tabled
a
resolution that It accept a
proposal for the Syracuse Racine Regional Sewer .
District to make application
for Step II and eventually
Step Ill In wastewater
faciliti es construction grant

funds from the Environmental Protection Agency.
The resignation of Shirley
Sayre as an employe of CETA
was accepted.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Warden Ours and
Bernard Gilkey, commissloners; Wesley Buehl,
engineer, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

No fatalities in
three accidents
One accident was Investigated by the Me igs
County Sheriff's Dept.
Saturday and two on Sunday.
At 11:15 p,m, Saturday In
Chester Twp. on SR 7 Samuel
Ray Karr, Chester, and
Malcolm Miller, I.cgan, were
both traveling north on SR 7
when a third vehicle suddenly
·turned off to the right,
causing Miller's car to hit the
Karr vehicle In the rear.
There
was
modera t~
damage . There were no injuries and no citation ls.!!Ued.
Sunday at I :25 a.m. in Olive
Twp. on CR 46, George
MarioM GIIIilan, Chester,
traveling west, h~d a lire
blow out. The car went off the
road to the left but flipped

ROLLTOP
DE-sKS
SOLD ON VERY
FIRST CAW
Mr. Gail Miller received
call after call when he
adverl l$ed 2 roltlop desks
In the Sentinel Want Ads .
Th e desks went to the first
caller.
·,
You, tool will get
quick action when
you adv11rtise in the

Sentinel Want Ads,
Call 992-2156 .

over on ils top In the middle of
the road.
·
Gillilan was taken to Holzer
Medical Ce nter by the
Pomeroy ER squad where he
was treated and released .
There was hea,vy damase to
tbc car.
Sunday at , 9:30 a.m. in
Orange Twp. on SR 681 near
Tuppers Plains, a deer was
killed when ll ran Into the
path of a car driven by
W!ger L. Hawk , Rt. I, Reedsville.
CRANSTON ON Bl
LOS ANGELES &lt;UP!)
Sen. Alan Cranston says BI
bombers would be safer for
Americans than missiles in
case of war ,
The california democrat,
meeting with ~o persons
occupying his field offi~
during the weekend to JI'Otest
his support of the Bl, said the
bomber ma'y-be the nation 's
last chance to · develop a
military weapon that could he
recalled.
BLACK POWER
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
California U. Gov. Mervyn
Dymally says pclitlcs has
replaced marches and sitins
as the. main weapon of t.he
fight for civil rights.
"The black agenda today Is
to make pcliti&lt;;s the cutting
edge of the civil rights
movement ," Dymally told
the Western Conference of
Black Elected Officials
during the weekend.

,

'1

�J - The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday May 10 1~ /n

2- The DaUy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday May 10 1976

TOM TIEDE

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
Tyranny strange fascination
Amer cans who I ve tn the oldest ma1or
democracy n the world and one of the last
few sllllln working order have always been
strangely lase nated by tyranny Maybe tt s
because tyrannies are so
well ef
flclent
In the 1930s Charles lindbergh who
should have known somethmg about the
indomttableness of the human sp1r1l ad
VIsed Br1ta nand France that they could not
hope to wm a war agamst resurgent Ger
many under the NaZIS
A decade ea rl er JOurnalist and soc a!
reformer lincoln Steffens had vlstted the
Soviet Union and returned saying I have
seen the future and t works
Now another American has returned
from another budd ng tyranny that of In
d an Pnme M n sler Ind ra Gandhi and
reports that he has seen the present and t s
working In India
except for a few n
tellecluals newspape ed tors oppos 1on
politicians and other dtssenters .. ho have
borne the brunt of her emergency crack
down
Even though fore gn critics have called
Mrs Gandhi a dtctator there Is little doubt
ijtat the concept of the emergency has
gamed pub! c acceptance m India says
Francis R Valeo Astan affairs expert and
secretary of the U S Senate who traveled
recently on a fact f nd ng nusston to Ind a
Pakistan and Bangladesh at the request of
Senate MajOrity Leader Mtke Mansfield
Foretgn observers n India are
unan mous he says n holding that Mrs

Gandhi would w n a vote of confidence If
elections were held at th s hme But of
course electiOns are not gomg to be held at
th1s tmne or at any other lime in the
foreseeable future
What has Mrs Gandhi done for Ind a
lately? Accordmg to Valeo
Inflation has been halted Hoarders
and speculators are disgorgtng the r
holdings and corruptiOn has been curbed
Civil servants have become more attenhve
wpublic needs Industry and labor seem to
be respondmg to the government s pleadmg
or pressure for ncreased output Similarly
lile ratlroads are prov1d ng better serv ce
Shades of 11 Duce who made Italy s
trains run on time
Unquestionably lh ngs wer~terr ble
shape m India and called for Urastic
measures just as they were and d d 10
Russia n the 1920s and Germany Italy and
Spam m the 1930s and China Vtetnam
Korea Cuba and etc etc etc tn he 1950
and 1960s
Each of these new borne tyrann es
mcludmg the etceteras has or had at one
time 1ts own lobby of champ ons In lh1s
country
The 20th century s casually hsl of
peoples who have tned democracy and later
abandoned tlfor tyranny or who never tned
democracy al all does not make for
comforting read ng Why any Amencan
should be the sltgh~st btl enthustast c that
yet one more country has taken the
aulocralic route to solv ng •ts problems IS
difficult to understnad

Stop on red, go on green••• usually
In Cal forma 1t s okay for a dnver to
turn n ghl at a red slop I ghl but 3 000 m les
to the east m New York t s not In be
tween the same maneuver may be legal or
1llegal dependmg on what state you re n
Half penn1l1l half don l
The r1ght turn-on red confusiOn 1s only
ooe ex amp e of the lack of un form ty n
sl&lt;lle trafftc regulat ons notes newsman Sy
Ranlsey wnt ng n Snail World a
agaz 1e pub I shed for Volkswagen
lWne s
Even worse s he confuswn abou wl at
a yellow ltghl s supposed to mean In some
st..tes a motoriSt may proceed through an
m~rsect10n on yellow
n ott ers he must
stop mmed1ately
Everyone knows that slower mov ng
traffic must keep r ght nght Well not
qwle In Alaban a South Dakota and
I ou slana there are except ons to lh1s rule
Laws perlammg to pedestnans also
vary " dely In Oklahoma for example a
pedes trian may cross a street on a yellow
light unless specifiCally prohlbtted But n
parts of Massachusetts a bhnklng green
I ghl1s a s gnal for pedestr ans o cross
Accident stat shes suggest that raff c
law confus on s something more than
erely a nu sance Accord ng o National

Safety Coone I stat st cs SIX per cent of the
drivers mvolved 10 all coli stons are not
residents of the 1mmedtate area and 13 per
cent mvolved n fatal aCCident. are non
residents The latter f gure goes to a h1gh of
35 per cent n Wyom ng
Leadmg the f1 glt fo na t onw de
standard zalton of traffic laws IS he
Natwnal Comm1ttee on Umform Traff c
Laws a nongovernmenta adv sory agency
n Wash ngton D C wh ch has long been
try ng to get the sta es to adopt 1ts Rules n
the Road
Unfortunately says the committees
cxecuhve dtrector Eaward F Kearney
the lawmakers are always busy they meet
only a few months every year they have no
off ce staff and they respond lo c hzen
complamts not o organ zallons ltke ours
1n o he wo ds there doesn seem to be
any real pub c clamor for standard zal on
of raffle laws desptte he facl that more
Amer cans han ever w 11 be dr v ng
throughou the country h1s year Bu as one
newspaper has edltonahzed 1 s 10 e to
ns st on un form ly n traff c regula! on so
that a motonsl schooled tn the aws of one
state can dnve mto another w1thou feel ng
I e IS m a fore gn land
I would be a worthwh le B1centenmal
prOJect

DR. LAMB

lhem to relax Some people
henef I from self hypnosis
others m1gh bene! t from
med tat on as you ave f 1n
lhe process they learn to be
able to mduce relaxalion
S II others benef1l from a
shor IIJ.Io 15 1 nule nap
One of the thmgs that
helps remove tension ts a
change n personal hab '-'
Th1 s meludes elimmat ng
caffeme wh1ch IS a cerebral
shmulanl and has the op
pos lc effect of tranqwilzers
~
The main sources of
~
caffe ne are coffee tea and
:
colas Those who want more
'
nformat on abOut these
j
hevcrages can send 50 cents
l
for The Health Letter
l
number I 1 Coffee Tea
,
Cola Cocoa Send a long
•
stamped
self addressed
: ; - - - - - - - - - - - , envelope for ma11tng Ad
. dress your letter to me m
Tht Da1~ Sentinel care of th s newspaper P 0
Box Hilil RadiO City Statwn
DEVOTED TO THE
NTEREST OF
New York NY t0019 Many
MEIGS MASON AREA
10dlv1duals
who mgest ex
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
cess1ve amount. of caffeme
Exec Ed
•
ROBERT HOEFLICH
lhroughoul the day Will f nd
•
CtyEdto
...
Pub shed da y excep
that they won t need to
•
sa urda~ by Th e Ohio
develop new methods for
Valley
ub sh ng Com
If
pany
Cou
S
relaxa 10n If they ll ellmmate
liP
Pomeroy
Oh o .o 69
he caffeine
•
Business Off ce Phon e 992
!t 22 56
Ed or a Phone 992
DEAR DR LAMB - We all
l7
know
that venereal disease
Second c ass po"a ge
P• d a Pomeroy OhJo
can
destroy
bran cells and
Na one
adver s lg
even
ktll
I
have
heard that
rtpresenta ve
War"U
Griffith Company
nc
lhe
correc
diagnosis
and
Bo tlnel &amp; Gallaghe o v
grealmen of hese and other
151 T,lrd Ave New o)"o k
NY 007
'"
hornble d1seascs
are
Subsc p on
afles
De lvered by carr e whe e
dependen upon whether or
ava lab e 75 cents 1111
no he patient Is socially or
week
By Mo or Rou e
w~ere cerr e ~~~~ ce no
poht cally cooperalive II at
' " ' lab e
One mon h
s I suspect hal here s a
n ll Bv me I In Oh o and
W Va One Yea
$22 00
consc1ous policy of the
:; • months s lO Th ee
Amencan Medical Assn to
months S7 00 Elsewhere
• S26
00 year 5 x months
control bchav or by g1v ng
Sll so hroe rricn hs $7 so
w1tll oldm1 needed real
• Subscr pt on p c:e nc ucres
sunday T mes Sen net
nl 1 e l •lon Wll
f1 I s WII you even

=

....
" ...
6......
•
•

t.......
...

t

NGTON
We
should have lis tened o
Nelson Rockefeller
ie told us for years that he
was never cut out to be No 2
mater a!
Now after 18
months as the v1cc president
11 s clear he 11as correct n
fact 1f not n grammer He
has served tn the office w1th a
lack of commitment that can
only add to the negat ve lore
of this most abused and
neglected federal posltton
G ven the nature of the v ce
presidency l IS admittedly
difficult to tell when one of
lhe occupan ts s awake much
less effect ve Humor1sl
F nle) Peter Dunne sa d the
post 1s so obscure that newly
elected holders are not fted of
the1r dulles through the
personal colwnns v th pa
apers And such are 1ls
respons b I hes that durmg
one care ess period from
1841 to 1857 the seat was
vacant for more than 10
years w lh hardly anyone n
the nahan gtv ng a care
And
yet 1n
those
measurable ways a vtce
president can be of worth to
h s coun lr) Rockefeller has
fail ed For nstance the
smgular consl tut onal duly
of the off1ce IS for 1ts oc
cupant to pres1de over the
Senate Yet the cu rent v ce
prestdenl has been seen 10
lilat chamber abou as often
an I w th as much ap
prec1ahon) as sw ne flu
He did reportlo the Htll for
lra n g early n s tenure
but fa led to get the hang of
the JOb-bang ng the gavel
and all After some clwnsy
and ussed par 1amentary
endeavors (he once had to
apolog1ze to a senator for h s
undemocrat c procedural
conduct) he gave up and has
smce avotded he lawmaking
body as 1f l were a
Democratlr d10ner It IS not
known exactly how much
Roc kefe ler avo ds Senate
dulles h1 s staff says h1s work
record 1s not ava1 abe for
pubhc scrut ny
It IS true that most of

Coal production
1

will he pressed

WASHINGTON (UP!) Delays m explmt ng federal
coal resources must end
Inter or Secretary Thomas S
Kleppe sa d today He
pred cted the government
will start 1ssumg competitive
coal leases around nud 1977
Prtvate ndustry can reach
President Ford s goal of
m mng 1 b II on tons of coal a
year by 1985 and still protect
the enVIronment he said but
there w1ll have to be
compromises on both s1des
Kleppe s remarks were
prepared for dehvery to the
p n lh1s eller
Amencan Mmmg Congress m
DEAR READER
I am Detro t The text was
pr ntmg t so many of your released m Wash ngton
fellow c t1zens can see what
It s not a queshon of
kind uf w id deas are ram
trading m the environment
pan l n some segments of our for stnpmmed coal
the
soc ely As d vers1f ed and mter1or secretary satd It IS
geograph cally Widespread however a questiOn of
as he med cal profess on 1s reahzmg that coal 1s
n t1at ng and carrymg out lmperallve for thts country s
such a pohcy would be otally economtc health and mterna
mposs ble
tional standmg
Earlter n lh1s century
It wlll be far eamer to
before penlc !lin
one reclaim the enwonment as
research study was ca red we remove coal from the
oul m a southern st..te where surface than to reclaim our
some indiVIduals were not Independence from for:etgn
li"ea ed for syph I s That 01! a decade from now he
study s the only such S8ld
example or non treatment
'The t1me for delay has
ha l know of A s m1Iar ended
study was done m Oslo
Kleppe recenUy lifted a
Norway for lhe same reason morat1&gt;r1um m effect smce
he sc enhf c zeal of fin
1971 on leasmg coal reserves
d ng out how effect ve loca ted on government
trea men was compared to owned land He said hts
not prov dmg treatment I department will complete by
cer a nly feel that lh s would m d June new regulations to
be m1sgutded oday m the govern compellt ve leases
1ghl of the availab e sue
It plans to ask industry
cessful treatment for state governments and the
venereal disease
pubhc next month to
Knowmg ho11 cantankerous nommate federal m nmg
and d ff1cult some of my own tracts wh1ch should or should
colleagues are and how they not be leased he smd
d sagree so v olenUy wtth
These nomtnations will
each o I er I am sure I at tell us where the demand IS
here would be one real f ght for coal leases he said Thts
n ry ng u get very many will be followed by
d lurs lo agree on what was environmental 1mpact
s J&lt;; all) acceplable and what statements and other
I d I I e p I h ca~ planmng stages with a lead
c'" perat ve I h nk you ve lime of up to 10 months so
got our country con we don t expect to be leasmg
fused w•th some oth
coal on a competitive bas1s
rr c untr es of the until m d 1977
w til
We
ave ou
Priority wtll be g1ven to
pr IMms but we still ento) applicants for leases which
the greatesl amount of show the best potential for
freedom and mcldentally prompt development he satd
II e hes 1ed cal serv1ce to m light of the nation s energy
he pubhc f any pe ~pie If t1 e crunch
world
New standard., will reqmre

Meditation can
help relax
8) Lawrence E Lamb M 0
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
been gomg o medllalion
classes and would hke your
opm10n as to how benefic a!
you lhmk medltat on IS m
help ng to rei eve headaches
~ns10n etc
I feel res~d and refreshed
after med mt on for about 15
mmules My husband s a
very tense and restless
person and he suffers from
severe I eadaches I w sh he
would try med ta~10n and let
go of son e of l1s ens ons
DEAR READER - There
are a number of unpleasant
symptoms that people have
wh ch are related to lens on I
am certamly m favor of
whalever methods people
learn o use that enables

This No. 2 isn't
trying harder
Rockefeller s predecessors
neglected their Senate
respons1biht es also In the
f rst half of 1973 before fate
called h m to other en
terpnses gplro Agnew spent
only 146 mmutes wtth a
Senate that was n sess on for
667 hours Hubert Humphrey
passed by w th the regularity
ci. Kohoulek comet
And 11 s remembered that
when John Nance Garner was
10 off ce he s mply hved m
Texas for most of the end of
h1s lenn Ahout the only
eager beaver actually was
l evt Morton 22nd v1ce
prestdenl who was such a
fussy old woman as ob
servers put 1l he refused to
eat lunches for fear of
nuss ng a moment as the
Senates chtef off1c~r
But 1f Rockefeller be only
equally as apathehc as the
champiOns who preceded
hm1 tt ts small comfort to a
nahon reqwred to foot the
btll Accordmg to 1noffic al
records kept In tt c Senate
press gallery the v1ce
prestdent has made about
seven appearances 10 the
Sena e lh1s year fror a total
ci. ahoul s1x hours work At
this pay th1s comes out to
$10 000 an hour - Rockefeller
wages mdeed
And beyo nd the v1ce
presidents salary we note
there are other economtc
cons1derahons The lethargic
Rockefeller has a staff of 73
people loca ed n off ces all
over town who are pa1d
nearly $1 &gt;m1l!ton annually
Then there s another quarter
m1Ihon
dollars
for
operatiOnal expenses for
his Executive Off ce Bwldmg
achv ty And how ahout the
ltmousmes the airplanes the
secret service Observers
bel eve t costs the nallon
more than $!i mtllton a year to
keep 1ls crown prmce ac
t vely do ng nolh ng what
soever at all
Well wa t - perhaps we ve
gone oo far The 41st and
unelected vtce president has
had some accompl shments
His w1fe spent $315 000 to

companies wh1ch now hold
leases for 16 b II on tons of
coal to get productiOn under
way m a timely manner or
lose thetr federal leases
Our rougb estlllllltes show
that for environmental and
economic reasons only about
10 billion tons (from current
leases) can be mm~d
Kleppe satd
The admmistration mean
while continues to oppose
legtslatwn to bar use of much
of the low-sulfur coal on tbe
govenunent s western lands
he said And tt IS concerned
wtth a decline m the rate of
underground coal production
whtch can be parhally
atlrtbuted to the cost of
meetmg health and safety
standarlk

Casualty rate
high among
3,300 cyclists
COLUMBUS Ohio (UP!)After pedalmg 210 miles over
narrow roads from the State
Cap tol to Portsmouth and
back agam many of the
btcyllsts
who
had
participated 1n the 15th
annual Tour of the Scioto
Valley seemed happy to
surrender Sunday to relatives
wa1tmg m cars with btke
racks
The cycltsts 3 300 from 32
states and Canada had reg1s
tered for the nation s b1ggest
weekend of bike tourmg
were greeted back from their
trek by cheers and the
chckmg of instamatics
Cold weather and ttred
hmb! however kept many of
the riders who ranged from
young
chtldren
to
oldsters from makmg the
whole trip They camped all
along the road to Portsmouth
Saturday night then rejomed
the group for the north
pedaling Sunday
The course along narrow
roads para!le!mg U S 23
combmed levelland and hilly
btking through a scenic C\)un
tryside
The cyclists who did make
It to the overnight stop on the
Ohto Rtver were ro)ally wei
corned Wllh housmg food
music and Portsmouth s
annual Trout Derby
j

redecorate " newly acquired
VICe-president a! mansion
and never m nd that the
happy couple seldom chooses
to stay there
Also
Rockefeller was mstrwnental
m bnng ng f nal v ctory to the
long stuggle to estabbsh an
off c1al V P seal flag and
groan - coa of arms
Yet these tr wnphs not
w thstandlng t says here
that as vtce president
Nelson Kockefelier has made
a good m11l ona re In the
words of humonst Dunne h s
busmess has largely been to
call at th Wh te House an
mqwre after h pr s1dml s
bea! th and then when told
th prls1dmt was nlver better
he gives three cheers an
departs w th a heavy heart
His dtstmctwn In short
has been to contribute

A Chrontclc of Amcrati
May 10 1776
John Paul Jones receives his lint command- the 12-aun
sloop Providence- !rom Commodore Esek Hopkins anll
Is &amp;~ven the tempOrary rank or captain On the 19th Jones
writes to his patron and frlend Joseph Hewes -a North
Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress The let
ter contains the statement
memorized by generations or
midshipmen regardln&amp; the
qualltiesofanavalofflcer I
may be wrong butln my opln
lon a captain of the Navy
ought to be a man of strong
and well connected se~~~e
with a tolerable education a
gentleman as well 81 a
seaman both In theory and
practice- for want of learn
lng and rude ungentle man
ners are by no means the
characteristic of an ofllcer
On August 21 the Providence
departs the Delaware Capes
John Paul Jones on Jones first independent
cruise

'-------------------.....1

generously
the low
m which theto office
IS esteem
held -

German underground
loses fiery leader
STUTTGART
West
Germany UPI) - Ulrtke
Meinhof died as she lived
vtolently
She spent two frantic years
as a leader of West
Germany s urban guerrillas
abandonmg her.
twin
daughters and a career as a
wrtter to go underground
Resistance is my making
certam that something which
does not swt me no longer
occurs she wrote m Jail
Naturally shootmg ts
permitted
The 41 year old
pipesmoklng pehte brunette
hanged herself With a towel
early Sunday m her cell m
Stuttgart s Stammhelm
pnson
She and three other
members of the Red Army
Faction - as they called
themselves - had been on
trial for nearly a year on
charges they staged a
terronst campa1gn of
bombings
and
bank
robbenes
Four Amencan sold1ers

were kU!ed and 13 others
injured m two 1972 bombmgs
at U S Army headquarters In
West Gennany The Red
Army Faction claimed
responmbtlity for the blasts
The reason for her SUICide
was unknown
Justice
Ministry offlctals said no note
was found
Acquamtances satd Mrs
Melnhof may have killed
herself
because
she
despaired of achtevmg her
goal of overthrowmg what
she called the repress ve
capttalist bourgeots system
Her lawyer Prof Axel
Azzola smd 'The authorities
are respons ble for her death
There Is no such thmg as
swc1de There are only the
pursuers and the pursued
Justice authorttles sa1d
they feared her death nught
lead to retaliatory terror
attacks
tIn Parts branch offices of
two German firms near the
Avenue Champs Elysees
were gutted by f1rehombs
Sunday mght Another homb

senously damaged the
German Cultural center m
Toulouse No Injuries were
reported m any of the
mcidents
(Parts pollee chief Pierre
Somveille lmkmg the attacks
m lhe cap1tal to the death of
Mrs Meinhof said There is
little doubt that the bombmgs
were related to what Just
happened m Germany We
are certam the explomons
were not acctdental )
Mrs Memhof began her
guerrilla career May 14 1970
m a ra1d on a West Berlin jaU
that freed Andreas Baader a
3~ year old
one lime
sociology student 101pnooned
for seltmg ftre to a
department store m a
Vietnam war protest
She then became the
Ideological leader of the
Baaden Memhof gang as the
band was called
More than two years after
her mttlal stnke she was
arrested and sentenced to
etght years Imprisonment for
her part m freemg Baader

Hints to hidden character
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Taciturn to the very end
Calvm Coolidge diedleavmg a
wUI of a smgle sentence
Warren G Harding With
scandallappmg at his reputa
uon wrote h s will SIX weeks
before hts death - a mysten
ous event which has been
rumored as a swctde or
hom1c1de espec ally since his
wtdow refused to authoriZe an
autopsy
Woodrow Wilson like so
many testators affirmed that
he was feelmg fine and
thmklng clearly when he
wrote h1s will
I Woodrow Wilson be ng
of sound and dlsposmg mmd
and m every respect In full
vtgour of mmd and body do
declare the following to be
my last wUI and testament
he wrote
But tt turns out such fancy
language serves no purpose
11 has no bearmg if the wU!ts
contested on the grounds tts
author
was
mentally
mcompetent to wrtte It
These observations about
how pres1dents disposed of
their estates come from a
new $19 95 book Wills of the
U.S Pres dents the first
exummation by scholars of
presidential wills and what
they might reveal of
preStdenhal character
It Is publtshed by
Commumcations Channels
Inc whose mlerest IS natural
smce It also publishes Trusts
and Estates magazine
The authors are Herbert R
Collins the Smtth.soman
lnstituhon s expert on
premdents and David B
Weaver an expert on wills
from George Washmgton
Umvers1ty s law faculty
They
conclude
that
preSidents act as ordmary
spec101ens In death drafting
their Wills to mlnmm:e taxes
on their estates
They seem no more ready
to number governments
among their heirs If Utey can
belp tt writes Weaver
Coolidge was famous for
saving words His one
sentence will sata
Not wu mdful of my son
John I gl\e all my estate
bo h real and persmal to my

Reds back in first after romp

We Hold Thc:s..: Truths

WJfe Grace Coolidge m fee
simple
home at
Washmgton D1slnct of
Columbia thiS twenheth day
December A D nmeteen
hundred and twenty SIX
The phrase about John
served the purpose of
precluding a swt by John
alle8\llg h1s father had simply
overlooked him
Lmcoln Grant Andrew
Johnson and Garfield left no
wUls Pres1denllal pay was
$25 000 a year m Lincoln s
day his estate was worth
$110 974
Last testaments apparently
have
become
more
complicated m the 20th
Century The wills of the last
several pres dents to dte
cover 20 or more typewrttten
pages and were drafted by
experts mlegal language that
precludes personal touches
and covers almost every
sequence of events that could
occur however IJIIprobable
Comment ng on the drafts
man s touches m Chester A

Arthur s will the book says
No layman would mdulge m
verbal overkill such as to
ass1gn traliSfer convey pay
over and deliver or I
nommate constitute and appomt
Washmgton s will was a
pamstaklng document He
wrote tt by hand on both mdes
of 15 sheets of paper and he
went to the trouble of making
1t aesthetically pleasmg m
appearance - spacmg each
lme evenly and usmg dashes
or wavy strokes or divuling
words unconvenhonally to fill
out a line
But he was 111 and weary
when he wrote 11 He made
two or three uncharacteristic
spelhng
errors
and
unnecessanly repeated a
phrase m a long sentence He
left hts slaves to his WidoW to
be freed upon her death With
the executors of his estate
charged With caring for Utose
needmg care

under seven runs
By FRED MeMANE
UPI Sports Wr11er
Anderson could be r•ght
l'he Cm mnat Reds and Tl e Reds compleled a three
Wr gle) Field form the game weekend sweep tn
sweetest comb nauon s nee Wrlj:ley F cld Sunday by
Qaskm met Robb ns
thrash ng the Ch1cago Cuhs
U we played 81 games m If 2 behind a 21-h t attack
Wn~le) Field
says Reds tha featured a grand slam
manager Sparky Anderson homer by Ken Griffey a pair
'wed probably break the aU of solo blasts by Tony Perez
t me scormg record 1 don t a wo run shot by Dan
thmk anybody could hod us Dr essen and solo homers by

Wood injured, may
be lost for season
BY NEIL HERSH BERG
UPI Sports Writer
Paul R•chards probably
wtshes he was shU m re tre
ment
R chards who left h s
ranch m Waxahachte Texas
to asswne the rems of the
Ch1cago Whtte Sox h s
season learned Sunday eft
handed ace W!bur Wood
probably w ll be lost to the
club for the remamder of the
season
Wood suffered a left
kneecap nJury 1n the s x h
mnmg of Sunda) s 4 2 v1ctory
over the Detro t Tigers by a
hne dnve off the bat of Ron
LeFlore
X rays
ater
revealed that he had suffered
a fractured kneecap
It was only a few mon hs
ago that Rtchards 67 was n
rehrement relax ng on h1s
ranch and thinkmg about h1s
baseball past But when
showman B 11 Veeck bought
the a lmg White SoK franchise
n the off season he
unmedtately called h s old
frtend Richards and asked
him to assume control of the
club

Wha Rtchards has gotten
so far s a club that has lost
rune of 1ls last 11 games a
team wnh a shaky pttching
staff and b Ue punch at the
pate
The loss of Wood a four
lime 2~ame wmner leaves
Richards w th a gap ng hole
n h s rotat on a staff alreadv
weakened by the trade of
veteran J m Kaat to
Phlladelph a prior to he
season s start
In other games Oakland
edged New York 4-3 m 12
llllmgs Texas mpped Boston
6 5 California topped
Cleveland 3-2 Kansas Ctty
rtpped Bal1more 7-4 and
Mmnesota beat M !waukee 6-

l

Rangers to score two runs
and hand Boston tts nmth
stra ght loss
Angels 3 Indians Z
Rus y Torres tw o out
tr1ple drove m two runs m the
e1ghlh mnmgs as the Angels
scored their third straight
come frombeh nd v ctorv
over he Indians
Royals 7 Orioles 4
Bob Stmson doubled home
two runs and Frank Whtte
added a two-run smgle dur10g
a ftve-run third mmng rout of
Jun Palmer that carried the
Rovals past Baltimore
Palmer who p1tched a two
hit shutout m hts last start
was tagged for seven hits and
four earned runs m 2 2 3
llllmgs
Twins 6 Brewers 4
Mmnesota scored two runs
n the e1ghth mmng when
ca tcher Darrell Porter
committed a passed ball and
a throwmg error to edge the
Brewers Porter s passed ball
allowed Ws negar to score
and Ford to go to second
Ford hen stole third and
scored when Porter threw the
bail wildly mto left field

e wmmng streak broker
bv Ph•larlelphla Satur lay
n gil ~ere beaten agam by
the Ph ll es 10-3
In other Nl action P1tts
burgh handed AUanta Its 13th
stra•ght loss 5-2 San D1ego
blanked New York 1 0
Houston whipped St I OUIS
10 ~ and San FranUisco
downed Montreal 4 2 then
lost IHl
PhUlles 10 Dodgers 3
Jtm l on borg p1lched
perfect ball for 6 1-3 mmngs
then combmed w th Ron Reed
on a s x-lutter as the PI II es
~an

OSU DEFENSE SOUND
COLUMBUS (UPI) Af~r
20 sessiOns of sprmg practice
Ohto State coach Woody
Hayes has concluded lilat hts
defense 1s sound but the
offense s st1ll questionable
The defense s m good
shape and the offense looked
real good m the first half
Hayes sad after Saturday s
Parent s Day SCI unmage
Fullback Pete Johnson
scored hree touchdowns and
sop homore tatlba ck Jeff
Logan and quarterback J1m
Pacen a one each
Freshman s goal caller
Rod Gerald earned a pretty
good from Hayes by h tt ng
three lil1rd-down passes 10
one scormg drtve

PAC TITLE SHARED
BETHANY W Va UP!
4
llraggmg r ghts go out to
A s 4 Yankees 3
hoth Allegheny Pa ) and
Sal Banda raced home from
Case Western Reserve as th s
thtrd base on Bert
year s tenn1s king n the
Campanem 12th nnmg
Pres dents Athlettc
sac rif ce fly to g1ve the A s a
Conference
VIctory over New York and
Fm shmg with dent1cal 19ex teammate Jun Hunter
po nt to als Case Western
Rangers 6 Red Sox 5
last year s champ on and
Denny Doyle s wtld throw
Allegheny wound up sharmg
on Len Randle s potential
the title
double play ground ball m the
Af er the hrst day of
e1ghth mnmg enabled the
compet1t on Allegheny led
the Cleveland ba sed
defend ng champwn 13 12
Plac ng th rd m the two-da&gt;
Standmgs
tournament was Carnegie
Mellon w th 12 po nts Host
Averages
Bethany came m fourth w th
Results
s1x
Others
ncluded
Wash
nglon
&amp;
Jefferson
and
Ma or League Stand ng
Arne can League
HR San
By Un t ed Press nte nat on~
John Carroll lied for f1fth
ab
h pet
Nat onal League
Lyn n 6os
6 59 0 25 424 wtth three pomts Hiram one
East
LeF o e 0
4 57 15 22 386
6
2
3
w L Pet GB
po nl and Th el scoreless
Chamb ss NY
Ph ad e ph a
5
682
2
92
J
35
380
New Yo k
8 0 643
Pa ek K C
8 54
9 20 J 0
p sbu gh
5 9 625
B ck Mnn 8 63
9 2J 365
s l ou s
2 4 62 5
Ho on De
9
70 5 25 35 FIVE LENGTII WIN
Cl'1 cago
6 0 6
Bonds Ca
60 2 1 350
NORTH RANDALL Oh10
Mon ea
5 35
S aub De
66 9 2J 348
Ca y C e
8 4 28 346 UP!) Lloyd s Ch01ce ram
Pet GB
Youn M
60 9 2~ 3J J bled home by ftve lengths m
C nc nna
600
hmpsn D
45
5
3JJ the
featured
$10 200
Los Ange es
57
Home Runs
Hous on
4 500 2
Na ona League
K ngman
Allo"ance
purse
at
San D e90
J 500 2
NY and S hm d
Ph
2
Th
slledown
Sunday
Sa11 Fanso
7 346 6
Monday Ch
Cedeno Hou
covermg the s x furlongs m
and Ma hews SF 6
Arne can L.eague
Ho on
I 13 3-5 and paymg $!i 40 to
De 6 Hend ck C ev Bu
oughs and G
le x 5 wm
Fo d M nn Ban do and Rud
1 ommy Meyers was n the
oa•
Irons
Just Plam Tuff came m
Runs Batted In
0 22
Na ona League K ngma n
second wht!e Lord Adams
8 20
NY 30
Monday
Ch
6
w
followed next
G f ey C n and Schm d Ph
An 8-1 dall) double of S lky
24 Pa ke P 22
Amc can League Rud Oak Nmse and T V Fro! c pa d
2 Ho on De 2
Chamb ss
and Munson NY 9 Boch "" $43 40 A3.6-5 trifecta of Ch ef
Hous on
0 2 OJ 02
0 3
and Me on Ca Hend ck C ev White Eagle Mongo Maid
s Lou s
0000003
5
D e ke
Fo sch
9
and and R vers NY 6
and D1amond W nk patd
Solen Bases
ohnson Denny Wa ace 5
$3
036 90 to 20 wmnmg ticket
Nat
onal
L.eague
Mo
gan
P ov 6
F se a
8 and
Cn
Cedeno
Hou
0
S mmons WP D e ke
43
holders
G f cy C n 9 Cabe
Hou 7
'2
HR H ous on
LP Denny
A crowd of 5 673 bet
Bu kne
A 6
ohnson 4
Amer can League
R vc s $ml2 669

the SCOREBOARD

•

beat he !lodgers for the
second stra Rhl da~
Pirates S Braves Z
Jerry Reuss tossed a s1x
h1 ter for h s fourth wm m
ptlch ng the Pirates to their
f ft11 victor) m a row Renme
Stennett doubled home two
runs to 11ghllght a four-run
fourth mnmg wh1ch tagged
0 ck Ruth\en wtlh the loss
Padres t Mets 0
Brent Strom tossed a two
h ter and Dave Wmf eld h1t a
twQ-I"un homer to spark the
Padres to VIctory over Tom
Seaver Strom I eld the Mels
hitless until Joe Torre smgled
w th one out m the seventh

A mer

can

NY
and
No h
Oak
2
Rando ph NY j O Remy Ca
and Pa ek KC 9
P lctl ng
Most V cto es
Nat ona
League
R cha d
5
Jone s
SO
S2
Hou
4 0 Rau LA
Lonbo g Ph
Seave NY and Mon etusco SF
4
Reuss P
.t 2 0 erke
Hou 4 3
S a on
Arne can League
M
and Campbe
M nn 4
Wood Ch and To ez Oak 4 3
Pa m e Ba
4
Earned Run A e age
based on 8 nn ngs p tched)
Na ona
League
Me zge
SD 0 00
Lave e SF 0 33

l~ague

Ee~st

Texas
Kansas C y
M nn eso a
Oak and
Ch cago

w
5
0
0
0
9
6
Wes
w
5
0
2

L

6

Pc

GB

588 3
526
2 455 5
3 409 6
4 300 8
9

GB

L
6
8

Gu e

c n 0 8 Mu

&lt;1 2 Zach

Ame

0
J

Ba

5
6

v

av

C n 55
can League Ga
42 Ha ze
Ca

Co bo n M

67

J Kern C ev 96
S r kCO\IfS

Bd

M
and
57
KC

United Press International
t1 an)one can uoderstand
why the Phoenix Suns are
threaten ng
to
upset
defendmg NBA champiOn
Golden State in the Western
Con ference playoff fmals tl s
Wamors coach AI AtUes
We should have had t
won both n regula 10n and
the f1rst overhme but they
never gave up Attles sa1d

Nat ona League Seaver NY
46 Mon e usco SF 38 N ek o
A 3 Roge S M 33 LO Ch
and Ma a k NY 3
Arne can league Ryan Ca
53 Tanana Ca ~8 Wood Ch
J
B v ev en M nn 30 B ue

Oak

29

(12 nn ngs

k 000 OOJ 000 000 J J
Oak and 0001000 00 HO
New Yo

Hun e
3 4 and Munson
To ez
L ndb ad
6
and
Han ey Hosey 9
WP L nd
20
H R Oak and w
b ad
ams '2

Ma""1~0- :L-c-a-gu7'e-:l-e-ad.,-er
By un ed P ess n e nat ona
Lead ng Batte s
(be~ sed on lS at bat s
N~t ona League
g ab
h pet
343
2488

25

SanD eg o

New York

s

00

100 002 000 ~
000 000 oou 0
and

Keno

07
62
54
96

27 45 "
02JJ
92030
4 JS 365
52
8 9 365
' J 4035
80 8 28 350
83
93
\13

22 79 349
6 J 344
7 37 34

Word Hockey Assoc at on
Sem f na s- Best o Seven
w nn peg beat Calgary 4
Ap
23 w nn peg 6 Ca ga y
Ap
25 W nn peg J Ca ga y 2
Ap
28 W nn peg 6 Ca ga v 3
Ap
30 Ce ga y 7 w nn peg 3
May 2 W nn peg Ca ga y 0

Can you th nk of any form
of mo or transportatton for
w ch you don t need an
operators
cense
Automob les rucks a1r
planes and JUst about anY,
mode of lranspm tat10n does
reqwre such a hcense for
lhe~r operat on
Yet the
water raft aws of Oluo do
not reqwre an opeuator s
license or perm t for the
opera 1on of any watercraft
under s x y f1ve 65) fee n
!eng h on OhiO wa ers
Ho\l)ever boat operators st1I
have many resp ns b I bes o
shoulder m he course of
operating thetr craf
Ch ldren unde 12 years of
age must be under the direct
v1sual and audible super
vts on of a person over
the age of 16
All
watercraft must be operated
at a reasonable speed for
g1ven condlltons and ctr
cumstances and must be
under the on pie e control of
the operator at all limes No
person who s under the n
n ence of alcol ol or drugs

New Eng and ea ds Hous on 2 1
May 5 New Eng and 4 Hous on
May Hou!l on S New Enq and

r.. ay

9 New Eng and

Ironton at

Meigs

may operate a watercra ft or
engage 1 water skimg on
Oh10 waters
Boat operators are legally
responsible for damage
caused by thmr boats wake
Watercraft passing close to
sw mmmg areas to moored
hoats boats engaged n
f sh ng or to buoys and
n ar kers should reduce their
speed o prevent dan age or
LUJne essary mconvenlences

to occupants of the area or to
other craft Speed which IS
ex esslVe for g ven clr
cumstances and wh1cl en
dangers
persons and
property IS a form of
reckless operation wh1eh s
proh b ted by law
I oca l co nd1l ons may
warranl the 1mpos hon of
deflmte hm lations on the
speed of watercraft but the
only general speed ltmltation
IS that whtch IS Implied 10
safe watercraft operat on If
pera 10g m a state park
check w1th the park office fo
local regulatiOns For further
10for nat on contact the Ohw
D v swn of Watercraft 1300
Clark St Cambndge Ohio
43725

and Keith Erickson) No 1e
would be considered for All
NBA but w1tl determination
and luck the Suns can run
with anyone in uny game
Enckson play ng for his
fourth team in liU1 seuoon
has always had a fine outside
shot but has never averaged
15 points In the second
overtime Sunday he poured
n eight points and virtually
whipped the Warners by
himself
En ckson set the stage for
h1s hermes by hitting a 2().fool
Jumper with two seconds left
m regulation to tie the score
112 112 That shot cume after
D1ckey missed one of two free
throws with eight seconds
left blowing a chanL'C to give
the Warriors a three-point
margin
When we got up by SIK
__pomts l bega n feel ng
conf dent we could w n said
Ertckson who had a team
high of 28 points They were
gettmg kind of raggedy and
we were playmg under
control at that tlme
The ser es shifts back to
Oakland for the fifth game
Wednesday night

Boston took a 2-&lt;l lead over
C.1evclal d n the Eastern
Conference fmals with a 94~
triumph Sunday !'he next
two games are scheduled for
the Cavaliers home court
l'uesday and Friday night
Jo Jo White led Boston with
24 points will John llavilcek
added 20 Dave CoweliS had
elgl t of his 15 points In t1 e
final period
Cleveland led 11-68 after
three periods but the Celtlcs
broke u.e game open with
their fast break attack In the
last quarter The Cavs were
hurt when center Nate
n urn ond fouled out with
7 36 to play

Good Selection
Of Women s

WHITE DRESS

SHOES
20% Discount
to All Grads

heritage house
Middleport 0

BILL FLETCHER
1258 Powell 51
Middlepo I 0
PH9927SS

"State Farm's the world\ ~t

car insurer. Ask me why•••"

Like a good neighbol:
Sllite F11111ltS there

A pzece of the energy puzzle

Oh

a has set o

The Lady
is big~ beautiful
and expensive.

the Comm ss on

May 6 New Yo k
2

2
May
a Den e
"' Ma y :1 a N ew Yo k
x Ma
a Den e

c ssav

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
by Randa I G Applegate
Secreta y

•••I.!I!!•I!'!J!!IIIII!~"'~~

So lv g he n 1tural ~ ~ short gc s b ~ 1ob l 1 fro n
ove sea w I he p It wo t be chc p b~t t I l 1 I t b
''pens V&lt; lh d ~ w tho t

Hou s on

N w Enq and
May 3
Hous on
x May
a N ew Enq nd
x Mav 6 a Hous o
f ne essa y

May

The Pub c Ut t es Com

pub! c hea ng Case No
76163EL FACto revew
22
the ope at on of he fuel
May 2 Go den S a e 28 Phoen x
ad ust menl clause and the
OJ
May 5 Phoen x 08 Go den S a e
ue p ocu ement prac
0
ces and po c es of he
May Go den s a e 99 Phoen x
Columbus &amp; 5outhe n
9
May 9 Phoen x 33 Go den S a e Oh o E ect c Company
29 '2o s
on May 17 1976 at 9 30
May 2 a Go den 5 a e
May 4 a Phoen x
A M at the off ces of the
x May 6 :t Go den S a e a
Comm ss on 111 No th
H gh St eet Columbus
Oh o A I nte ested pe
ABA P arDff Sctledu e
( F na r- Best of Seven)
sons w II be 9 ven an op
N ew Yo k eads Denver J 1
po tun ty to be heard
May
New Yo k 20 Dcnvc
8
Fu ther nfo mat on may
May 4 Denve
be obta ned by contact ng
1

)(

M•y w -

St ct umall ~ ustt&gt;rn at /\lex mder tSectlonaiJ
Kygt r (ll'ck at southe1n
lul'Sday 1\1 ty II - Southern lteserves at
\V 11 n n Meigs ul W tverly
Wt~lnesd ty May I - 1'r tck Meigs (.iris at
I All{an (a nd \\Ia vt&gt;rlyJ Baseball J acksonnll\1t'll(s
t m tke up J
I htu sd ty M ty II - N01 th Galli a at Southern
II I 11 I tstern 11 ack Southern Girls ut Kygtr
t • cek
l'rlday Mny 1~ - Suuthwt stern at J&lt;nstrrn
SOuthc1n 11 Ky)lm ( 1rt k We llston ut Moi)ls
S 11111 da) M ty I - Mt igs lluys Sectional
II 1ck Meet
smully M1y lh - Mtigs !land In IUvm front
Sluhnm

LEGAL NOTICE

Weste n

May 8 New Yo k

after the Suns defeated the
Warriors 133-129 m double
overt me Sunday to tie the
best of seven ser es at 2 2
Phoemx Is a team
composed of a couple of
promtsmg rookies (Alvan
Adams and Ricky Sobers)
and several SQhd and scrappy
veterans Dtck Van Arsdale
Gar Heard Paul Westphal

Operating regulations

m ss on of
Con erence F na sBes of Seven
Go den State t ed w h Phoen x

wl le ll e only other Mel h t
wa s a smgle by llud
llarrelson m the runth
Astr IS 10 C&amp;rdlnals 5
Cl ff Johnson drove m three
runs wtth a horner double
and two smgles to power the
Aslros to victory over the
Cardinals
Giants ._. E¥pos z..tl
John Montefusco won h s
fourth gwne and (iary Mat
thews hit his stxth horner as
the Giants snapped a s x
game losmg streak n the
opener But the Expos cume
back to apture the rughtcap
behmd lhe two-h1t p1tch ng of
Steve Rogers

ODNR tips

INTRASQUAO CLASH
CINCINNATI UPI)
In
cumbent Umverstty of
C ncmnatt quarterba ck
Henry Mtller and a Kansas
State transfer Art Bailey
squared off m a contest for
the starling post 10n during a
sprmg mtrasquad clash
Saturday
Led by Jumor runn ng back
Curtis W11l ams who had 128
yards rushmg for three
touchdowns the Red team
B g Ten ~asebal
heat the Whtte team 31 7
Stand ngs
And Miller who played the
U n ted P ess Intern at on a
f rst half w1th the Reds and
W L Pet
M ch gan
7 2
8 helped bold a 24-7 haHtime
ow a
6 4 600 advantage was counted the
M nneso a
6 4 600
M ch gan s a e
6 • 600 wmner m the duel aga1nst
Oh o s a e
5 5 500 Baley
W scons n
6 7 462
nd ana
Millers fmal statistics
4 5
444
Pu due
4 5
44
were 10 completions for 21
No hwes ern
'J a7 JJJ
nos
JOO passes no mterceptions and
204 yards rushmg Batley was
NBA Payoff Schedu e
10 for 23 w th 193 yards
Easle n Conference F na srush ng
and
four
Bes of Seven
Bos on uds C evetand 2 0
mtercept10ns
May 6 Boson
C eve and 99
May 9 Boson 9cl C eve and 89
May
a C eve and
May 4 a C eve and
x May 6 11 Bos on
x May a a C eve and
x May 2 a Bos on
x
necessa y

Munday

~NOAH

Suns edge Warriors

••

Both chutes fail
Akron sky diver
XENIA Ohio (UPI) - The the Greene County morgue
Greene County Sports Para
A 25 year-old Cmclnnali
chute Center had Its second man d1ed m a parachute
JUmp death m a year when jump near the center a year
Roger W Varner 20 Akron ago
was killed Saturday
It was reported that Varner
His main and reserve para had driven here with several
chutes failed to open m a other chutists Saturday to
jump near the center
jump m a competition
The slteriff s of!1ce said
Varner and three other men KREMER TO APPEAR
CEUNA Ohio (UPI)
jumped from an airplane at
7 500 feet and went mto a John Kremer 21 Marla
star formation m which all Stem Will enter pleas to
charges resulting fr»Dl hts
tolned hands
The four broke the car killing eight teenagers at
formahon at about 3 000 feel a Mercer County mtersecbon
and pulled Ute1r chute cords March 7 when he appears m
Witnesses said Varner s court Tuesday
Kremer was charged
mam chute malfunctioned
Friday
by the Highway
and he Uten pulled Ute cord of
Patrol
with vehicular
his reserve chute which also
homicide falling to halt at a
failed to open
He fell into a field off Foust stop sign and not keeping an
Road near the center s head 818ured clear distance ahead
quarters on Mooroe Siding
The patJ;ol said Kremer s
road In Xenia Township and car lopped a hill went
was pronounced dead at the Utrougb a stop sign and hit
scene The body was taken to the youths

George Fos ter a nd Pete
Rose
It was the second 14-run
game for the Red.• mas many
days at Wr g!ey F eld and m
the three-game senes ancm
nall collected 44 h1ts
The Reds v1ctorv moved
them ahead one-half gwne
of f1rst place Los Angeles m
the National League West
The Dodgers who had a 12-

Sl'IIHTStAI

OFFICE. Hou~~
30 to 12 2 to 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS )-EAST COURT

ROY

------------c6wM.IAGA8

�J - The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday May 10 1~ /n

2- The DaUy Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday May 10 1976

TOM TIEDE

Editorial comment,
opinion, features
Tyranny strange fascination
Amer cans who I ve tn the oldest ma1or
democracy n the world and one of the last
few sllllln working order have always been
strangely lase nated by tyranny Maybe tt s
because tyrannies are so
well ef
flclent
In the 1930s Charles lindbergh who
should have known somethmg about the
indomttableness of the human sp1r1l ad
VIsed Br1ta nand France that they could not
hope to wm a war agamst resurgent Ger
many under the NaZIS
A decade ea rl er JOurnalist and soc a!
reformer lincoln Steffens had vlstted the
Soviet Union and returned saying I have
seen the future and t works
Now another American has returned
from another budd ng tyranny that of In
d an Pnme M n sler Ind ra Gandhi and
reports that he has seen the present and t s
working In India
except for a few n
tellecluals newspape ed tors oppos 1on
politicians and other dtssenters .. ho have
borne the brunt of her emergency crack
down
Even though fore gn critics have called
Mrs Gandhi a dtctator there Is little doubt
ijtat the concept of the emergency has
gamed pub! c acceptance m India says
Francis R Valeo Astan affairs expert and
secretary of the U S Senate who traveled
recently on a fact f nd ng nusston to Ind a
Pakistan and Bangladesh at the request of
Senate MajOrity Leader Mtke Mansfield
Foretgn observers n India are
unan mous he says n holding that Mrs

Gandhi would w n a vote of confidence If
elections were held at th s hme But of
course electiOns are not gomg to be held at
th1s tmne or at any other lime in the
foreseeable future
What has Mrs Gandhi done for Ind a
lately? Accordmg to Valeo
Inflation has been halted Hoarders
and speculators are disgorgtng the r
holdings and corruptiOn has been curbed
Civil servants have become more attenhve
wpublic needs Industry and labor seem to
be respondmg to the government s pleadmg
or pressure for ncreased output Similarly
lile ratlroads are prov1d ng better serv ce
Shades of 11 Duce who made Italy s
trains run on time
Unquestionably lh ngs wer~terr ble
shape m India and called for Urastic
measures just as they were and d d 10
Russia n the 1920s and Germany Italy and
Spam m the 1930s and China Vtetnam
Korea Cuba and etc etc etc tn he 1950
and 1960s
Each of these new borne tyrann es
mcludmg the etceteras has or had at one
time 1ts own lobby of champ ons In lh1s
country
The 20th century s casually hsl of
peoples who have tned democracy and later
abandoned tlfor tyranny or who never tned
democracy al all does not make for
comforting read ng Why any Amencan
should be the sltgh~st btl enthustast c that
yet one more country has taken the
aulocralic route to solv ng •ts problems IS
difficult to understnad

Stop on red, go on green••• usually
In Cal forma 1t s okay for a dnver to
turn n ghl at a red slop I ghl but 3 000 m les
to the east m New York t s not In be
tween the same maneuver may be legal or
1llegal dependmg on what state you re n
Half penn1l1l half don l
The r1ght turn-on red confusiOn 1s only
ooe ex amp e of the lack of un form ty n
sl&lt;lle trafftc regulat ons notes newsman Sy
Ranlsey wnt ng n Snail World a
agaz 1e pub I shed for Volkswagen
lWne s
Even worse s he confuswn abou wl at
a yellow ltghl s supposed to mean In some
st..tes a motoriSt may proceed through an
m~rsect10n on yellow
n ott ers he must
stop mmed1ately
Everyone knows that slower mov ng
traffic must keep r ght nght Well not
qwle In Alaban a South Dakota and
I ou slana there are except ons to lh1s rule
Laws perlammg to pedestnans also
vary " dely In Oklahoma for example a
pedes trian may cross a street on a yellow
light unless specifiCally prohlbtted But n
parts of Massachusetts a bhnklng green
I ghl1s a s gnal for pedestr ans o cross
Accident stat shes suggest that raff c
law confus on s something more than
erely a nu sance Accord ng o National

Safety Coone I stat st cs SIX per cent of the
drivers mvolved 10 all coli stons are not
residents of the 1mmedtate area and 13 per
cent mvolved n fatal aCCident. are non
residents The latter f gure goes to a h1gh of
35 per cent n Wyom ng
Leadmg the f1 glt fo na t onw de
standard zalton of traffic laws IS he
Natwnal Comm1ttee on Umform Traff c
Laws a nongovernmenta adv sory agency
n Wash ngton D C wh ch has long been
try ng to get the sta es to adopt 1ts Rules n
the Road
Unfortunately says the committees
cxecuhve dtrector Eaward F Kearney
the lawmakers are always busy they meet
only a few months every year they have no
off ce staff and they respond lo c hzen
complamts not o organ zallons ltke ours
1n o he wo ds there doesn seem to be
any real pub c clamor for standard zal on
of raffle laws desptte he facl that more
Amer cans han ever w 11 be dr v ng
throughou the country h1s year Bu as one
newspaper has edltonahzed 1 s 10 e to
ns st on un form ly n traff c regula! on so
that a motonsl schooled tn the aws of one
state can dnve mto another w1thou feel ng
I e IS m a fore gn land
I would be a worthwh le B1centenmal
prOJect

DR. LAMB

lhem to relax Some people
henef I from self hypnosis
others m1gh bene! t from
med tat on as you ave f 1n
lhe process they learn to be
able to mduce relaxalion
S II others benef1l from a
shor IIJ.Io 15 1 nule nap
One of the thmgs that
helps remove tension ts a
change n personal hab '-'
Th1 s meludes elimmat ng
caffeme wh1ch IS a cerebral
shmulanl and has the op
pos lc effect of tranqwilzers
~
The main sources of
~
caffe ne are coffee tea and
:
colas Those who want more
'
nformat on abOut these
j
hevcrages can send 50 cents
l
for The Health Letter
l
number I 1 Coffee Tea
,
Cola Cocoa Send a long
•
stamped
self addressed
: ; - - - - - - - - - - - , envelope for ma11tng Ad
. dress your letter to me m
Tht Da1~ Sentinel care of th s newspaper P 0
Box Hilil RadiO City Statwn
DEVOTED TO THE
NTEREST OF
New York NY t0019 Many
MEIGS MASON AREA
10dlv1duals
who mgest ex
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
cess1ve amount. of caffeme
Exec Ed
•
ROBERT HOEFLICH
lhroughoul the day Will f nd
•
CtyEdto
...
Pub shed da y excep
that they won t need to
•
sa urda~ by Th e Ohio
develop new methods for
Valley
ub sh ng Com
If
pany
Cou
S
relaxa 10n If they ll ellmmate
liP
Pomeroy
Oh o .o 69
he caffeine
•
Business Off ce Phon e 992
!t 22 56
Ed or a Phone 992
DEAR DR LAMB - We all
l7
know
that venereal disease
Second c ass po"a ge
P• d a Pomeroy OhJo
can
destroy
bran cells and
Na one
adver s lg
even
ktll
I
have
heard that
rtpresenta ve
War"U
Griffith Company
nc
lhe
correc
diagnosis
and
Bo tlnel &amp; Gallaghe o v
grealmen of hese and other
151 T,lrd Ave New o)"o k
NY 007
'"
hornble d1seascs
are
Subsc p on
afles
De lvered by carr e whe e
dependen upon whether or
ava lab e 75 cents 1111
no he patient Is socially or
week
By Mo or Rou e
w~ere cerr e ~~~~ ce no
poht cally cooperalive II at
' " ' lab e
One mon h
s I suspect hal here s a
n ll Bv me I In Oh o and
W Va One Yea
$22 00
consc1ous policy of the
:; • months s lO Th ee
Amencan Medical Assn to
months S7 00 Elsewhere
• S26
00 year 5 x months
control bchav or by g1v ng
Sll so hroe rricn hs $7 so
w1tll oldm1 needed real
• Subscr pt on p c:e nc ucres
sunday T mes Sen net
nl 1 e l •lon Wll
f1 I s WII you even

=

....
" ...
6......
•
•

t.......
...

t

NGTON
We
should have lis tened o
Nelson Rockefeller
ie told us for years that he
was never cut out to be No 2
mater a!
Now after 18
months as the v1cc president
11 s clear he 11as correct n
fact 1f not n grammer He
has served tn the office w1th a
lack of commitment that can
only add to the negat ve lore
of this most abused and
neglected federal posltton
G ven the nature of the v ce
presidency l IS admittedly
difficult to tell when one of
lhe occupan ts s awake much
less effect ve Humor1sl
F nle) Peter Dunne sa d the
post 1s so obscure that newly
elected holders are not fted of
the1r dulles through the
personal colwnns v th pa
apers And such are 1ls
respons b I hes that durmg
one care ess period from
1841 to 1857 the seat was
vacant for more than 10
years w lh hardly anyone n
the nahan gtv ng a care
And
yet 1n
those
measurable ways a vtce
president can be of worth to
h s coun lr) Rockefeller has
fail ed For nstance the
smgular consl tut onal duly
of the off1ce IS for 1ts oc
cupant to pres1de over the
Senate Yet the cu rent v ce
prestdenl has been seen 10
lilat chamber abou as often
an I w th as much ap
prec1ahon) as sw ne flu
He did reportlo the Htll for
lra n g early n s tenure
but fa led to get the hang of
the JOb-bang ng the gavel
and all After some clwnsy
and ussed par 1amentary
endeavors (he once had to
apolog1ze to a senator for h s
undemocrat c procedural
conduct) he gave up and has
smce avotded he lawmaking
body as 1f l were a
Democratlr d10ner It IS not
known exactly how much
Roc kefe ler avo ds Senate
dulles h1 s staff says h1s work
record 1s not ava1 abe for
pubhc scrut ny
It IS true that most of

Coal production
1

will he pressed

WASHINGTON (UP!) Delays m explmt ng federal
coal resources must end
Inter or Secretary Thomas S
Kleppe sa d today He
pred cted the government
will start 1ssumg competitive
coal leases around nud 1977
Prtvate ndustry can reach
President Ford s goal of
m mng 1 b II on tons of coal a
year by 1985 and still protect
the enVIronment he said but
there w1ll have to be
compromises on both s1des
Kleppe s remarks were
prepared for dehvery to the
p n lh1s eller
Amencan Mmmg Congress m
DEAR READER
I am Detro t The text was
pr ntmg t so many of your released m Wash ngton
fellow c t1zens can see what
It s not a queshon of
kind uf w id deas are ram
trading m the environment
pan l n some segments of our for stnpmmed coal
the
soc ely As d vers1f ed and mter1or secretary satd It IS
geograph cally Widespread however a questiOn of
as he med cal profess on 1s reahzmg that coal 1s
n t1at ng and carrymg out lmperallve for thts country s
such a pohcy would be otally economtc health and mterna
mposs ble
tional standmg
Earlter n lh1s century
It wlll be far eamer to
before penlc !lin
one reclaim the enwonment as
research study was ca red we remove coal from the
oul m a southern st..te where surface than to reclaim our
some indiVIduals were not Independence from for:etgn
li"ea ed for syph I s That 01! a decade from now he
study s the only such S8ld
example or non treatment
'The t1me for delay has
ha l know of A s m1Iar ended
study was done m Oslo
Kleppe recenUy lifted a
Norway for lhe same reason morat1&gt;r1um m effect smce
he sc enhf c zeal of fin
1971 on leasmg coal reserves
d ng out how effect ve loca ted on government
trea men was compared to owned land He said hts
not prov dmg treatment I department will complete by
cer a nly feel that lh s would m d June new regulations to
be m1sgutded oday m the govern compellt ve leases
1ghl of the availab e sue
It plans to ask industry
cessful treatment for state governments and the
venereal disease
pubhc next month to
Knowmg ho11 cantankerous nommate federal m nmg
and d ff1cult some of my own tracts wh1ch should or should
colleagues are and how they not be leased he smd
d sagree so v olenUy wtth
These nomtnations will
each o I er I am sure I at tell us where the demand IS
here would be one real f ght for coal leases he said Thts
n ry ng u get very many will be followed by
d lurs lo agree on what was environmental 1mpact
s J&lt;; all) acceplable and what statements and other
I d I I e p I h ca~ planmng stages with a lead
c'" perat ve I h nk you ve lime of up to 10 months so
got our country con we don t expect to be leasmg
fused w•th some oth
coal on a competitive bas1s
rr c untr es of the until m d 1977
w til
We
ave ou
Priority wtll be g1ven to
pr IMms but we still ento) applicants for leases which
the greatesl amount of show the best potential for
freedom and mcldentally prompt development he satd
II e hes 1ed cal serv1ce to m light of the nation s energy
he pubhc f any pe ~pie If t1 e crunch
world
New standard., will reqmre

Meditation can
help relax
8) Lawrence E Lamb M 0
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
been gomg o medllalion
classes and would hke your
opm10n as to how benefic a!
you lhmk medltat on IS m
help ng to rei eve headaches
~ns10n etc
I feel res~d and refreshed
after med mt on for about 15
mmules My husband s a
very tense and restless
person and he suffers from
severe I eadaches I w sh he
would try med ta~10n and let
go of son e of l1s ens ons
DEAR READER - There
are a number of unpleasant
symptoms that people have
wh ch are related to lens on I
am certamly m favor of
whalever methods people
learn o use that enables

This No. 2 isn't
trying harder
Rockefeller s predecessors
neglected their Senate
respons1biht es also In the
f rst half of 1973 before fate
called h m to other en
terpnses gplro Agnew spent
only 146 mmutes wtth a
Senate that was n sess on for
667 hours Hubert Humphrey
passed by w th the regularity
ci. Kohoulek comet
And 11 s remembered that
when John Nance Garner was
10 off ce he s mply hved m
Texas for most of the end of
h1s lenn Ahout the only
eager beaver actually was
l evt Morton 22nd v1ce
prestdenl who was such a
fussy old woman as ob
servers put 1l he refused to
eat lunches for fear of
nuss ng a moment as the
Senates chtef off1c~r
But 1f Rockefeller be only
equally as apathehc as the
champiOns who preceded
hm1 tt ts small comfort to a
nahon reqwred to foot the
btll Accordmg to 1noffic al
records kept In tt c Senate
press gallery the v1ce
prestdent has made about
seven appearances 10 the
Sena e lh1s year fror a total
ci. ahoul s1x hours work At
this pay th1s comes out to
$10 000 an hour - Rockefeller
wages mdeed
And beyo nd the v1ce
presidents salary we note
there are other economtc
cons1derahons The lethargic
Rockefeller has a staff of 73
people loca ed n off ces all
over town who are pa1d
nearly $1 &gt;m1l!ton annually
Then there s another quarter
m1Ihon
dollars
for
operatiOnal expenses for
his Executive Off ce Bwldmg
achv ty And how ahout the
ltmousmes the airplanes the
secret service Observers
bel eve t costs the nallon
more than $!i mtllton a year to
keep 1ls crown prmce ac
t vely do ng nolh ng what
soever at all
Well wa t - perhaps we ve
gone oo far The 41st and
unelected vtce president has
had some accompl shments
His w1fe spent $315 000 to

companies wh1ch now hold
leases for 16 b II on tons of
coal to get productiOn under
way m a timely manner or
lose thetr federal leases
Our rougb estlllllltes show
that for environmental and
economic reasons only about
10 billion tons (from current
leases) can be mm~d
Kleppe satd
The admmistration mean
while continues to oppose
legtslatwn to bar use of much
of the low-sulfur coal on tbe
govenunent s western lands
he said And tt IS concerned
wtth a decline m the rate of
underground coal production
whtch can be parhally
atlrtbuted to the cost of
meetmg health and safety
standarlk

Casualty rate
high among
3,300 cyclists
COLUMBUS Ohio (UP!)After pedalmg 210 miles over
narrow roads from the State
Cap tol to Portsmouth and
back agam many of the
btcyllsts
who
had
participated 1n the 15th
annual Tour of the Scioto
Valley seemed happy to
surrender Sunday to relatives
wa1tmg m cars with btke
racks
The cycltsts 3 300 from 32
states and Canada had reg1s
tered for the nation s b1ggest
weekend of bike tourmg
were greeted back from their
trek by cheers and the
chckmg of instamatics
Cold weather and ttred
hmb! however kept many of
the riders who ranged from
young
chtldren
to
oldsters from makmg the
whole trip They camped all
along the road to Portsmouth
Saturday night then rejomed
the group for the north
pedaling Sunday
The course along narrow
roads para!le!mg U S 23
combmed levelland and hilly
btking through a scenic C\)un
tryside
The cyclists who did make
It to the overnight stop on the
Ohto Rtver were ro)ally wei
corned Wllh housmg food
music and Portsmouth s
annual Trout Derby
j

redecorate " newly acquired
VICe-president a! mansion
and never m nd that the
happy couple seldom chooses
to stay there
Also
Rockefeller was mstrwnental
m bnng ng f nal v ctory to the
long stuggle to estabbsh an
off c1al V P seal flag and
groan - coa of arms
Yet these tr wnphs not
w thstandlng t says here
that as vtce president
Nelson Kockefelier has made
a good m11l ona re In the
words of humonst Dunne h s
busmess has largely been to
call at th Wh te House an
mqwre after h pr s1dml s
bea! th and then when told
th prls1dmt was nlver better
he gives three cheers an
departs w th a heavy heart
His dtstmctwn In short
has been to contribute

A Chrontclc of Amcrati
May 10 1776
John Paul Jones receives his lint command- the 12-aun
sloop Providence- !rom Commodore Esek Hopkins anll
Is &amp;~ven the tempOrary rank or captain On the 19th Jones
writes to his patron and frlend Joseph Hewes -a North
Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress The let
ter contains the statement
memorized by generations or
midshipmen regardln&amp; the
qualltiesofanavalofflcer I
may be wrong butln my opln
lon a captain of the Navy
ought to be a man of strong
and well connected se~~~e
with a tolerable education a
gentleman as well 81 a
seaman both In theory and
practice- for want of learn
lng and rude ungentle man
ners are by no means the
characteristic of an ofllcer
On August 21 the Providence
departs the Delaware Capes
John Paul Jones on Jones first independent
cruise

'-------------------.....1

generously
the low
m which theto office
IS esteem
held -

German underground
loses fiery leader
STUTTGART
West
Germany UPI) - Ulrtke
Meinhof died as she lived
vtolently
She spent two frantic years
as a leader of West
Germany s urban guerrillas
abandonmg her.
twin
daughters and a career as a
wrtter to go underground
Resistance is my making
certam that something which
does not swt me no longer
occurs she wrote m Jail
Naturally shootmg ts
permitted
The 41 year old
pipesmoklng pehte brunette
hanged herself With a towel
early Sunday m her cell m
Stuttgart s Stammhelm
pnson
She and three other
members of the Red Army
Faction - as they called
themselves - had been on
trial for nearly a year on
charges they staged a
terronst campa1gn of
bombings
and
bank
robbenes
Four Amencan sold1ers

were kU!ed and 13 others
injured m two 1972 bombmgs
at U S Army headquarters In
West Gennany The Red
Army Faction claimed
responmbtlity for the blasts
The reason for her SUICide
was unknown
Justice
Ministry offlctals said no note
was found
Acquamtances satd Mrs
Melnhof may have killed
herself
because
she
despaired of achtevmg her
goal of overthrowmg what
she called the repress ve
capttalist bourgeots system
Her lawyer Prof Axel
Azzola smd 'The authorities
are respons ble for her death
There Is no such thmg as
swc1de There are only the
pursuers and the pursued
Justice authorttles sa1d
they feared her death nught
lead to retaliatory terror
attacks
tIn Parts branch offices of
two German firms near the
Avenue Champs Elysees
were gutted by f1rehombs
Sunday mght Another homb

senously damaged the
German Cultural center m
Toulouse No Injuries were
reported m any of the
mcidents
(Parts pollee chief Pierre
Somveille lmkmg the attacks
m lhe cap1tal to the death of
Mrs Meinhof said There is
little doubt that the bombmgs
were related to what Just
happened m Germany We
are certam the explomons
were not acctdental )
Mrs Memhof began her
guerrilla career May 14 1970
m a ra1d on a West Berlin jaU
that freed Andreas Baader a
3~ year old
one lime
sociology student 101pnooned
for seltmg ftre to a
department store m a
Vietnam war protest
She then became the
Ideological leader of the
Baaden Memhof gang as the
band was called
More than two years after
her mttlal stnke she was
arrested and sentenced to
etght years Imprisonment for
her part m freemg Baader

Hints to hidden character
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Taciturn to the very end
Calvm Coolidge diedleavmg a
wUI of a smgle sentence
Warren G Harding With
scandallappmg at his reputa
uon wrote h s will SIX weeks
before hts death - a mysten
ous event which has been
rumored as a swctde or
hom1c1de espec ally since his
wtdow refused to authoriZe an
autopsy
Woodrow Wilson like so
many testators affirmed that
he was feelmg fine and
thmklng clearly when he
wrote h1s will
I Woodrow Wilson be ng
of sound and dlsposmg mmd
and m every respect In full
vtgour of mmd and body do
declare the following to be
my last wUI and testament
he wrote
But tt turns out such fancy
language serves no purpose
11 has no bearmg if the wU!ts
contested on the grounds tts
author
was
mentally
mcompetent to wrtte It
These observations about
how pres1dents disposed of
their estates come from a
new $19 95 book Wills of the
U.S Pres dents the first
exummation by scholars of
presidential wills and what
they might reveal of
preStdenhal character
It Is publtshed by
Commumcations Channels
Inc whose mlerest IS natural
smce It also publishes Trusts
and Estates magazine
The authors are Herbert R
Collins the Smtth.soman
lnstituhon s expert on
premdents and David B
Weaver an expert on wills
from George Washmgton
Umvers1ty s law faculty
They
conclude
that
preSidents act as ordmary
spec101ens In death drafting
their Wills to mlnmm:e taxes
on their estates
They seem no more ready
to number governments
among their heirs If Utey can
belp tt writes Weaver
Coolidge was famous for
saving words His one
sentence will sata
Not wu mdful of my son
John I gl\e all my estate
bo h real and persmal to my

Reds back in first after romp

We Hold Thc:s..: Truths

WJfe Grace Coolidge m fee
simple
home at
Washmgton D1slnct of
Columbia thiS twenheth day
December A D nmeteen
hundred and twenty SIX
The phrase about John
served the purpose of
precluding a swt by John
alle8\llg h1s father had simply
overlooked him
Lmcoln Grant Andrew
Johnson and Garfield left no
wUls Pres1denllal pay was
$25 000 a year m Lincoln s
day his estate was worth
$110 974
Last testaments apparently
have
become
more
complicated m the 20th
Century The wills of the last
several pres dents to dte
cover 20 or more typewrttten
pages and were drafted by
experts mlegal language that
precludes personal touches
and covers almost every
sequence of events that could
occur however IJIIprobable
Comment ng on the drafts
man s touches m Chester A

Arthur s will the book says
No layman would mdulge m
verbal overkill such as to
ass1gn traliSfer convey pay
over and deliver or I
nommate constitute and appomt
Washmgton s will was a
pamstaklng document He
wrote tt by hand on both mdes
of 15 sheets of paper and he
went to the trouble of making
1t aesthetically pleasmg m
appearance - spacmg each
lme evenly and usmg dashes
or wavy strokes or divuling
words unconvenhonally to fill
out a line
But he was 111 and weary
when he wrote 11 He made
two or three uncharacteristic
spelhng
errors
and
unnecessanly repeated a
phrase m a long sentence He
left hts slaves to his WidoW to
be freed upon her death With
the executors of his estate
charged With caring for Utose
needmg care

under seven runs
By FRED MeMANE
UPI Sports Wr11er
Anderson could be r•ght
l'he Cm mnat Reds and Tl e Reds compleled a three
Wr gle) Field form the game weekend sweep tn
sweetest comb nauon s nee Wrlj:ley F cld Sunday by
Qaskm met Robb ns
thrash ng the Ch1cago Cuhs
U we played 81 games m If 2 behind a 21-h t attack
Wn~le) Field
says Reds tha featured a grand slam
manager Sparky Anderson homer by Ken Griffey a pair
'wed probably break the aU of solo blasts by Tony Perez
t me scormg record 1 don t a wo run shot by Dan
thmk anybody could hod us Dr essen and solo homers by

Wood injured, may
be lost for season
BY NEIL HERSH BERG
UPI Sports Writer
Paul R•chards probably
wtshes he was shU m re tre
ment
R chards who left h s
ranch m Waxahachte Texas
to asswne the rems of the
Ch1cago Whtte Sox h s
season learned Sunday eft
handed ace W!bur Wood
probably w ll be lost to the
club for the remamder of the
season
Wood suffered a left
kneecap nJury 1n the s x h
mnmg of Sunda) s 4 2 v1ctory
over the Detro t Tigers by a
hne dnve off the bat of Ron
LeFlore
X rays
ater
revealed that he had suffered
a fractured kneecap
It was only a few mon hs
ago that Rtchards 67 was n
rehrement relax ng on h1s
ranch and thinkmg about h1s
baseball past But when
showman B 11 Veeck bought
the a lmg White SoK franchise
n the off season he
unmedtately called h s old
frtend Richards and asked
him to assume control of the
club

Wha Rtchards has gotten
so far s a club that has lost
rune of 1ls last 11 games a
team wnh a shaky pttching
staff and b Ue punch at the
pate
The loss of Wood a four
lime 2~ame wmner leaves
Richards w th a gap ng hole
n h s rotat on a staff alreadv
weakened by the trade of
veteran J m Kaat to
Phlladelph a prior to he
season s start
In other games Oakland
edged New York 4-3 m 12
llllmgs Texas mpped Boston
6 5 California topped
Cleveland 3-2 Kansas Ctty
rtpped Bal1more 7-4 and
Mmnesota beat M !waukee 6-

l

Rangers to score two runs
and hand Boston tts nmth
stra ght loss
Angels 3 Indians Z
Rus y Torres tw o out
tr1ple drove m two runs m the
e1ghlh mnmgs as the Angels
scored their third straight
come frombeh nd v ctorv
over he Indians
Royals 7 Orioles 4
Bob Stmson doubled home
two runs and Frank Whtte
added a two-run smgle dur10g
a ftve-run third mmng rout of
Jun Palmer that carried the
Rovals past Baltimore
Palmer who p1tched a two
hit shutout m hts last start
was tagged for seven hits and
four earned runs m 2 2 3
llllmgs
Twins 6 Brewers 4
Mmnesota scored two runs
n the e1ghth mmng when
ca tcher Darrell Porter
committed a passed ball and
a throwmg error to edge the
Brewers Porter s passed ball
allowed Ws negar to score
and Ford to go to second
Ford hen stole third and
scored when Porter threw the
bail wildly mto left field

e wmmng streak broker
bv Ph•larlelphla Satur lay
n gil ~ere beaten agam by
the Ph ll es 10-3
In other Nl action P1tts
burgh handed AUanta Its 13th
stra•ght loss 5-2 San D1ego
blanked New York 1 0
Houston whipped St I OUIS
10 ~ and San FranUisco
downed Montreal 4 2 then
lost IHl
PhUlles 10 Dodgers 3
Jtm l on borg p1lched
perfect ball for 6 1-3 mmngs
then combmed w th Ron Reed
on a s x-lutter as the PI II es
~an

OSU DEFENSE SOUND
COLUMBUS (UPI) Af~r
20 sessiOns of sprmg practice
Ohto State coach Woody
Hayes has concluded lilat hts
defense 1s sound but the
offense s st1ll questionable
The defense s m good
shape and the offense looked
real good m the first half
Hayes sad after Saturday s
Parent s Day SCI unmage
Fullback Pete Johnson
scored hree touchdowns and
sop homore tatlba ck Jeff
Logan and quarterback J1m
Pacen a one each
Freshman s goal caller
Rod Gerald earned a pretty
good from Hayes by h tt ng
three lil1rd-down passes 10
one scormg drtve

PAC TITLE SHARED
BETHANY W Va UP!
4
llraggmg r ghts go out to
A s 4 Yankees 3
hoth Allegheny Pa ) and
Sal Banda raced home from
Case Western Reserve as th s
thtrd base on Bert
year s tenn1s king n the
Campanem 12th nnmg
Pres dents Athlettc
sac rif ce fly to g1ve the A s a
Conference
VIctory over New York and
Fm shmg with dent1cal 19ex teammate Jun Hunter
po nt to als Case Western
Rangers 6 Red Sox 5
last year s champ on and
Denny Doyle s wtld throw
Allegheny wound up sharmg
on Len Randle s potential
the title
double play ground ball m the
Af er the hrst day of
e1ghth mnmg enabled the
compet1t on Allegheny led
the Cleveland ba sed
defend ng champwn 13 12
Plac ng th rd m the two-da&gt;
Standmgs
tournament was Carnegie
Mellon w th 12 po nts Host
Averages
Bethany came m fourth w th
Results
s1x
Others
ncluded
Wash
nglon
&amp;
Jefferson
and
Ma or League Stand ng
Arne can League
HR San
By Un t ed Press nte nat on~
John Carroll lied for f1fth
ab
h pet
Nat onal League
Lyn n 6os
6 59 0 25 424 wtth three pomts Hiram one
East
LeF o e 0
4 57 15 22 386
6
2
3
w L Pet GB
po nl and Th el scoreless
Chamb ss NY
Ph ad e ph a
5
682
2
92
J
35
380
New Yo k
8 0 643
Pa ek K C
8 54
9 20 J 0
p sbu gh
5 9 625
B ck Mnn 8 63
9 2J 365
s l ou s
2 4 62 5
Ho on De
9
70 5 25 35 FIVE LENGTII WIN
Cl'1 cago
6 0 6
Bonds Ca
60 2 1 350
NORTH RANDALL Oh10
Mon ea
5 35
S aub De
66 9 2J 348
Ca y C e
8 4 28 346 UP!) Lloyd s Ch01ce ram
Pet GB
Youn M
60 9 2~ 3J J bled home by ftve lengths m
C nc nna
600
hmpsn D
45
5
3JJ the
featured
$10 200
Los Ange es
57
Home Runs
Hous on
4 500 2
Na ona League
K ngman
Allo"ance
purse
at
San D e90
J 500 2
NY and S hm d
Ph
2
Th
slledown
Sunday
Sa11 Fanso
7 346 6
Monday Ch
Cedeno Hou
covermg the s x furlongs m
and Ma hews SF 6
Arne can L.eague
Ho on
I 13 3-5 and paymg $!i 40 to
De 6 Hend ck C ev Bu
oughs and G
le x 5 wm
Fo d M nn Ban do and Rud
1 ommy Meyers was n the
oa•
Irons
Just Plam Tuff came m
Runs Batted In
0 22
Na ona League K ngma n
second wht!e Lord Adams
8 20
NY 30
Monday
Ch
6
w
followed next
G f ey C n and Schm d Ph
An 8-1 dall) double of S lky
24 Pa ke P 22
Amc can League Rud Oak Nmse and T V Fro! c pa d
2 Ho on De 2
Chamb ss
and Munson NY 9 Boch "" $43 40 A3.6-5 trifecta of Ch ef
Hous on
0 2 OJ 02
0 3
and Me on Ca Hend ck C ev White Eagle Mongo Maid
s Lou s
0000003
5
D e ke
Fo sch
9
and and R vers NY 6
and D1amond W nk patd
Solen Bases
ohnson Denny Wa ace 5
$3
036 90 to 20 wmnmg ticket
Nat
onal
L.eague
Mo
gan
P ov 6
F se a
8 and
Cn
Cedeno
Hou
0
S mmons WP D e ke
43
holders
G f cy C n 9 Cabe
Hou 7
'2
HR H ous on
LP Denny
A crowd of 5 673 bet
Bu kne
A 6
ohnson 4
Amer can League
R vc s $ml2 669

the SCOREBOARD

•

beat he !lodgers for the
second stra Rhl da~
Pirates S Braves Z
Jerry Reuss tossed a s1x
h1 ter for h s fourth wm m
ptlch ng the Pirates to their
f ft11 victor) m a row Renme
Stennett doubled home two
runs to 11ghllght a four-run
fourth mnmg wh1ch tagged
0 ck Ruth\en wtlh the loss
Padres t Mets 0
Brent Strom tossed a two
h ter and Dave Wmf eld h1t a
twQ-I"un homer to spark the
Padres to VIctory over Tom
Seaver Strom I eld the Mels
hitless until Joe Torre smgled
w th one out m the seventh

A mer

can

NY
and
No h
Oak
2
Rando ph NY j O Remy Ca
and Pa ek KC 9
P lctl ng
Most V cto es
Nat ona
League
R cha d
5
Jone s
SO
S2
Hou
4 0 Rau LA
Lonbo g Ph
Seave NY and Mon etusco SF
4
Reuss P
.t 2 0 erke
Hou 4 3
S a on
Arne can League
M
and Campbe
M nn 4
Wood Ch and To ez Oak 4 3
Pa m e Ba
4
Earned Run A e age
based on 8 nn ngs p tched)
Na ona
League
Me zge
SD 0 00
Lave e SF 0 33

l~ague

Ee~st

Texas
Kansas C y
M nn eso a
Oak and
Ch cago

w
5
0
0
0
9
6
Wes
w
5
0
2

L

6

Pc

GB

588 3
526
2 455 5
3 409 6
4 300 8
9

GB

L
6
8

Gu e

c n 0 8 Mu

&lt;1 2 Zach

Ame

0
J

Ba

5
6

v

av

C n 55
can League Ga
42 Ha ze
Ca

Co bo n M

67

J Kern C ev 96
S r kCO\IfS

Bd

M
and
57
KC

United Press International
t1 an)one can uoderstand
why the Phoenix Suns are
threaten ng
to
upset
defendmg NBA champiOn
Golden State in the Western
Con ference playoff fmals tl s
Wamors coach AI AtUes
We should have had t
won both n regula 10n and
the f1rst overhme but they
never gave up Attles sa1d

Nat ona League Seaver NY
46 Mon e usco SF 38 N ek o
A 3 Roge S M 33 LO Ch
and Ma a k NY 3
Arne can league Ryan Ca
53 Tanana Ca ~8 Wood Ch
J
B v ev en M nn 30 B ue

Oak

29

(12 nn ngs

k 000 OOJ 000 000 J J
Oak and 0001000 00 HO
New Yo

Hun e
3 4 and Munson
To ez
L ndb ad
6
and
Han ey Hosey 9
WP L nd
20
H R Oak and w
b ad
ams '2

Ma""1~0- :L-c-a-gu7'e-:l-e-ad.,-er
By un ed P ess n e nat ona
Lead ng Batte s
(be~ sed on lS at bat s
N~t ona League
g ab
h pet
343
2488

25

SanD eg o

New York

s

00

100 002 000 ~
000 000 oou 0
and

Keno

07
62
54
96

27 45 "
02JJ
92030
4 JS 365
52
8 9 365
' J 4035
80 8 28 350
83
93
\13

22 79 349
6 J 344
7 37 34

Word Hockey Assoc at on
Sem f na s- Best o Seven
w nn peg beat Calgary 4
Ap
23 w nn peg 6 Ca ga y
Ap
25 W nn peg J Ca ga y 2
Ap
28 W nn peg 6 Ca ga v 3
Ap
30 Ce ga y 7 w nn peg 3
May 2 W nn peg Ca ga y 0

Can you th nk of any form
of mo or transportatton for
w ch you don t need an
operators
cense
Automob les rucks a1r
planes and JUst about anY,
mode of lranspm tat10n does
reqwre such a hcense for
lhe~r operat on
Yet the
water raft aws of Oluo do
not reqwre an opeuator s
license or perm t for the
opera 1on of any watercraft
under s x y f1ve 65) fee n
!eng h on OhiO wa ers
Ho\l)ever boat operators st1I
have many resp ns b I bes o
shoulder m he course of
operating thetr craf
Ch ldren unde 12 years of
age must be under the direct
v1sual and audible super
vts on of a person over
the age of 16
All
watercraft must be operated
at a reasonable speed for
g1ven condlltons and ctr
cumstances and must be
under the on pie e control of
the operator at all limes No
person who s under the n
n ence of alcol ol or drugs

New Eng and ea ds Hous on 2 1
May 5 New Eng and 4 Hous on
May Hou!l on S New Enq and

r.. ay

9 New Eng and

Ironton at

Meigs

may operate a watercra ft or
engage 1 water skimg on
Oh10 waters
Boat operators are legally
responsible for damage
caused by thmr boats wake
Watercraft passing close to
sw mmmg areas to moored
hoats boats engaged n
f sh ng or to buoys and
n ar kers should reduce their
speed o prevent dan age or
LUJne essary mconvenlences

to occupants of the area or to
other craft Speed which IS
ex esslVe for g ven clr
cumstances and wh1cl en
dangers
persons and
property IS a form of
reckless operation wh1eh s
proh b ted by law
I oca l co nd1l ons may
warranl the 1mpos hon of
deflmte hm lations on the
speed of watercraft but the
only general speed ltmltation
IS that whtch IS Implied 10
safe watercraft operat on If
pera 10g m a state park
check w1th the park office fo
local regulatiOns For further
10for nat on contact the Ohw
D v swn of Watercraft 1300
Clark St Cambndge Ohio
43725

and Keith Erickson) No 1e
would be considered for All
NBA but w1tl determination
and luck the Suns can run
with anyone in uny game
Enckson play ng for his
fourth team in liU1 seuoon
has always had a fine outside
shot but has never averaged
15 points In the second
overtime Sunday he poured
n eight points and virtually
whipped the Warners by
himself
En ckson set the stage for
h1s hermes by hitting a 2().fool
Jumper with two seconds left
m regulation to tie the score
112 112 That shot cume after
D1ckey missed one of two free
throws with eight seconds
left blowing a chanL'C to give
the Warriors a three-point
margin
When we got up by SIK
__pomts l bega n feel ng
conf dent we could w n said
Ertckson who had a team
high of 28 points They were
gettmg kind of raggedy and
we were playmg under
control at that tlme
The ser es shifts back to
Oakland for the fifth game
Wednesday night

Boston took a 2-&lt;l lead over
C.1evclal d n the Eastern
Conference fmals with a 94~
triumph Sunday !'he next
two games are scheduled for
the Cavaliers home court
l'uesday and Friday night
Jo Jo White led Boston with
24 points will John llavilcek
added 20 Dave CoweliS had
elgl t of his 15 points In t1 e
final period
Cleveland led 11-68 after
three periods but the Celtlcs
broke u.e game open with
their fast break attack In the
last quarter The Cavs were
hurt when center Nate
n urn ond fouled out with
7 36 to play

Good Selection
Of Women s

WHITE DRESS

SHOES
20% Discount
to All Grads

heritage house
Middleport 0

BILL FLETCHER
1258 Powell 51
Middlepo I 0
PH9927SS

"State Farm's the world\ ~t

car insurer. Ask me why•••"

Like a good neighbol:
Sllite F11111ltS there

A pzece of the energy puzzle

Oh

a has set o

The Lady
is big~ beautiful
and expensive.

the Comm ss on

May 6 New Yo k
2

2
May
a Den e
"' Ma y :1 a N ew Yo k
x Ma
a Den e

c ssav

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
by Randa I G Applegate
Secreta y

•••I.!I!!•I!'!J!!IIIII!~"'~~

So lv g he n 1tural ~ ~ short gc s b ~ 1ob l 1 fro n
ove sea w I he p It wo t be chc p b~t t I l 1 I t b
''pens V&lt; lh d ~ w tho t

Hou s on

N w Enq and
May 3
Hous on
x May
a N ew Enq nd
x Mav 6 a Hous o
f ne essa y

May

The Pub c Ut t es Com

pub! c hea ng Case No
76163EL FACto revew
22
the ope at on of he fuel
May 2 Go den S a e 28 Phoen x
ad ust menl clause and the
OJ
May 5 Phoen x 08 Go den S a e
ue p ocu ement prac
0
ces and po c es of he
May Go den s a e 99 Phoen x
Columbus &amp; 5outhe n
9
May 9 Phoen x 33 Go den S a e Oh o E ect c Company
29 '2o s
on May 17 1976 at 9 30
May 2 a Go den 5 a e
May 4 a Phoen x
A M at the off ces of the
x May 6 :t Go den S a e a
Comm ss on 111 No th
H gh St eet Columbus
Oh o A I nte ested pe
ABA P arDff Sctledu e
( F na r- Best of Seven)
sons w II be 9 ven an op
N ew Yo k eads Denver J 1
po tun ty to be heard
May
New Yo k 20 Dcnvc
8
Fu ther nfo mat on may
May 4 Denve
be obta ned by contact ng
1

)(

M•y w -

St ct umall ~ ustt&gt;rn at /\lex mder tSectlonaiJ
Kygt r (ll'ck at southe1n
lul'Sday 1\1 ty II - Southern lteserves at
\V 11 n n Meigs ul W tverly
Wt~lnesd ty May I - 1'r tck Meigs (.iris at
I All{an (a nd \\Ia vt&gt;rlyJ Baseball J acksonnll\1t'll(s
t m tke up J
I htu sd ty M ty II - N01 th Galli a at Southern
II I 11 I tstern 11 ack Southern Girls ut Kygtr
t • cek
l'rlday Mny 1~ - Suuthwt stern at J&lt;nstrrn
SOuthc1n 11 Ky)lm ( 1rt k We llston ut Moi)ls
S 11111 da) M ty I - Mt igs lluys Sectional
II 1ck Meet
smully M1y lh - Mtigs !land In IUvm front
Sluhnm

LEGAL NOTICE

Weste n

May 8 New Yo k

after the Suns defeated the
Warriors 133-129 m double
overt me Sunday to tie the
best of seven ser es at 2 2
Phoemx Is a team
composed of a couple of
promtsmg rookies (Alvan
Adams and Ricky Sobers)
and several SQhd and scrappy
veterans Dtck Van Arsdale
Gar Heard Paul Westphal

Operating regulations

m ss on of
Con erence F na sBes of Seven
Go den State t ed w h Phoen x

wl le ll e only other Mel h t
wa s a smgle by llud
llarrelson m the runth
Astr IS 10 C&amp;rdlnals 5
Cl ff Johnson drove m three
runs wtth a horner double
and two smgles to power the
Aslros to victory over the
Cardinals
Giants ._. E¥pos z..tl
John Montefusco won h s
fourth gwne and (iary Mat
thews hit his stxth horner as
the Giants snapped a s x
game losmg streak n the
opener But the Expos cume
back to apture the rughtcap
behmd lhe two-h1t p1tch ng of
Steve Rogers

ODNR tips

INTRASQUAO CLASH
CINCINNATI UPI)
In
cumbent Umverstty of
C ncmnatt quarterba ck
Henry Mtller and a Kansas
State transfer Art Bailey
squared off m a contest for
the starling post 10n during a
sprmg mtrasquad clash
Saturday
Led by Jumor runn ng back
Curtis W11l ams who had 128
yards rushmg for three
touchdowns the Red team
B g Ten ~asebal
heat the Whtte team 31 7
Stand ngs
And Miller who played the
U n ted P ess Intern at on a
f rst half w1th the Reds and
W L Pet
M ch gan
7 2
8 helped bold a 24-7 haHtime
ow a
6 4 600 advantage was counted the
M nneso a
6 4 600
M ch gan s a e
6 • 600 wmner m the duel aga1nst
Oh o s a e
5 5 500 Baley
W scons n
6 7 462
nd ana
Millers fmal statistics
4 5
444
Pu due
4 5
44
were 10 completions for 21
No hwes ern
'J a7 JJJ
nos
JOO passes no mterceptions and
204 yards rushmg Batley was
NBA Payoff Schedu e
10 for 23 w th 193 yards
Easle n Conference F na srush ng
and
four
Bes of Seven
Bos on uds C evetand 2 0
mtercept10ns
May 6 Boson
C eve and 99
May 9 Boson 9cl C eve and 89
May
a C eve and
May 4 a C eve and
x May 6 11 Bos on
x May a a C eve and
x May 2 a Bos on
x
necessa y

Munday

~NOAH

Suns edge Warriors

••

Both chutes fail
Akron sky diver
XENIA Ohio (UPI) - The the Greene County morgue
Greene County Sports Para
A 25 year-old Cmclnnali
chute Center had Its second man d1ed m a parachute
JUmp death m a year when jump near the center a year
Roger W Varner 20 Akron ago
was killed Saturday
It was reported that Varner
His main and reserve para had driven here with several
chutes failed to open m a other chutists Saturday to
jump near the center
jump m a competition
The slteriff s of!1ce said
Varner and three other men KREMER TO APPEAR
CEUNA Ohio (UPI)
jumped from an airplane at
7 500 feet and went mto a John Kremer 21 Marla
star formation m which all Stem Will enter pleas to
charges resulting fr»Dl hts
tolned hands
The four broke the car killing eight teenagers at
formahon at about 3 000 feel a Mercer County mtersecbon
and pulled Ute1r chute cords March 7 when he appears m
Witnesses said Varner s court Tuesday
Kremer was charged
mam chute malfunctioned
Friday
by the Highway
and he Uten pulled Ute cord of
Patrol
with vehicular
his reserve chute which also
homicide falling to halt at a
failed to open
He fell into a field off Foust stop sign and not keeping an
Road near the center s head 818ured clear distance ahead
quarters on Mooroe Siding
The patJ;ol said Kremer s
road In Xenia Township and car lopped a hill went
was pronounced dead at the Utrougb a stop sign and hit
scene The body was taken to the youths

George Fos ter a nd Pete
Rose
It was the second 14-run
game for the Red.• mas many
days at Wr g!ey F eld and m
the three-game senes ancm
nall collected 44 h1ts
The Reds v1ctorv moved
them ahead one-half gwne
of f1rst place Los Angeles m
the National League West
The Dodgers who had a 12-

Sl'IIHTStAI

OFFICE. Hou~~
30 to 12 2 to 5 !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS )-EAST COURT

ROY

------------c6wM.IAGA8

�..........

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 10, 197~

Celtics win
second tilt

a- '!be O.Uy Sentlllel, MiddleJX&gt;rt-Pomerov. 0 .. Mtxulll\' , Mav to.~~'"

Fellowship day held Saturday

Stiversville

Th e 27th annual youth
day of the Ohiu
BaJ&gt;tist Guilds uf Pruvideuce
ilistrk t Assudt~tion was held
Saturday "' lhe Mount
Moriah Bapti st Church in
Middleport ,

fclluw~h ip

News Notes

Victor ·Durst, 501)11 SccJ4t
and Jason of The Plains, Tom
Durst of. Athens, Randy
BOSTON (UP!) - The 61-52, and instructed his
Warner of Columbus, Randy
Cleveland offense cracked players to use a full-eourt
Forbes, Pomeroy, Mrs.
under pressure Sunday., press. From that juncture,
Mildred Circle, Minersville,
giving the Bostoo Celtics the Boston outscored Cleveland
Maxine Powell, Long Bottom,
break they needed to take a 2- 42-28, with the Celtics
Mrs. Mike Evans and R~
0 lead in their NBA Eastern capitalizing on f~st-break op.
and Mrs. Merle Evans, local,
Conference championship portunities and the Cavs
were caners at the hmme ·of
unable to move inside for
series.
, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst, .
With Charlie Scott applying good shots.
last week.
the defensive tourniquet in
The Celtics, behind since
Clint Birch and daugh~r.
the secood half and Dave early in the second period,
Leota, visited Mr. and Mni.
Cowens, John Havliceli and went ahead, 74-73, on a John
Lawrence Lipps and famlly
Jo Jo White operating the fast 'Havlicek basket. Charlie
at Lillie Hocking on Sunday..
break, the Celtics caught the Scott chipped in two steals
Legar commended the men and women lor their Interest In the training
Mr . and Mrs. Tim
RECEIVE CERTIFICATES. - Ten Syracuse and two Pomeroy
Cavaliers, 94-89 1, in the and to halt the Cavs' offense
and for the cooperation he received. He had special praise lor the wives of
WilkinsOn, Slu!wn and Kevill;
firemen received certificates for completing 36 hours of instruction in
nationally televised contest. lor the next minute before
two of 'the men who also completed the course. Legar feels that the
Columbus were weekend
firefighting skUls and techniques at the close of the last period, March 23.
The Celtics play the Cavs Cleveland suffered its worst
two
women, in the event the men are not readily available can handle
guests of her parents, Mr.
Individual cards were presented to each firefighter completing the
Tuesday night at Cleveland in blow of the contest.
most sitliations until other help arrives. Firefighters who qualified and
and Mrs. Ruda Durst.
,
training. A department certificate was presented the Syracuse Fire
the third game.
With 7:36 remaining, Cavs
received certificates were, front row,l-r, Charles Legar, Rollle Stewart,
Chief, RoUie Stewart, by the instructor Charles W. Legar, Sr., Pomeroy.
Mrs. Sharon Roush, ~
"Our club didn't go at center Nate Thurmond fouled
Mary Pickens, Mary Lavender, Clyde Triplett; back row, Eddie Hayes,
Liverpool, Marshall Bryant,
The certificates, cards and instructions were authorized and ma~e
people when they should have out on "the best block I maJe
Pomeroy; Eber Pickens, Rudy Stewart, Mike Smith and David Smith.
. Charleston, W. Va., Mr. and
available by Trade and Industrial Vocational Education Service of the
in the first half, so we made all game .." He was charged
Absent were Raph Lavender, Mick Ash, Syracuse, and Gary Ellis,
Mrs. David Bryant, Dunbar,
State Department of Education in Cooperation with Southern Local
some adjustments," said with bumping Dave Cowens,
Pomeroy.
·
W. VIi., Mrs. Violet Ritch\~.
School District. Legar praised the membrs of the class for their
coach Tom Heinsohn . who converted one of two free
Alicia and Cindy Evan~,
communuy spll'lt m improving their efficiency in fighting fires. Chief
"Cleveland is a pattern clqb throws to widen the lead to 75David Talbott, Mrs, Bill
and they'U shoot the basket 73.
Mlddleswart and Gary Van
I
Cowens, also playing with
out if you let them."
Meter, local, visited Mr ..and
Alter Cleveland opened a five fouls, scored two more
Mrs. Bill Bryant and familY,.
nine-point lead in the third inside baskets and fed
recently,
period, Heinsohn chose not to Havlicek for another as
Members of the Portland
let the Cavs get any more Boston opened the advantage
Ladies Softball Team held ,a
to 81-73. Cleveland closed to By ELIZABETII WHI\RTON
open shots.
The second day in Michigan uncommitted, thus blocking (CBS-TV's Face the Nation)
Reagan widened his lead bake sale at Racine o.n
The Boston coach called a ~1. but Boston countered United Press International
reportedly came at th·e Carter from winning the the race is still wide open and over Ford in weekend Saturday morning.
.
time out 5:11 inw the third with six straight points,
Mrs.
Fannie
Durst,
Mrs.
expense
of
Arkansas,
but
that
he
hopes
In
win
the
Maryland
majority his support ers
A worrie«! President Ford,
delegate selection in six
period, with the Cavs leading including the final two of Jo facing prospects of losing had not been a firm date.
primary May 18. He picked states, gaining 28 new . Lucille Adams, and Mrs.
predicted .
Jo White's 24.
Meanwhile, the Yankee
" crucial" primaries to
Carter spent Sunday at his . up his first delegate Saturday delegates In Ford's 18. The • Ruby Bryant visited r,IJ:~.
John Havlicek finished with !Wnald Reagan in Nebraska state of Maine, which gave home in Plains, Ga., while in Wyoming.
new totals show Reagan with Nell Mlddleswart one day !JISt
20 points and Scott t6 while Tuesday and in his home southerner Jimmy Carter one Udall and Henry Jackson
"Some people think the 397 to Ford's 336, with 298 week.
Cowens got eight of his 15 state of Michigan May 18, of his early boosts for the cainpaigned in Connecticut in campaign is locked up," said uncommitted. It takes 1,130 to
Mrs.
Elva
Dailey,
after Thurmond had fouled swnmoned political aides to Democratic nomination by hopes of upsetting the former Brown. "!think it's wide open nominate·at the GOP conven- · Syracuse, visited her
out.
talk strategy and revise his favoring him in district Georgia governor there.
· ... I think the chemistry of tion in Kansas City in August. parents, Mr. and Mrs. C;!l:l
delegate maneuvering before
campaign schedule.
Jackson took himself out of this campaign can change in
In Democratic delegate Autherson . on Wednesday
The President returned New Hampshire, now may the active campaign after Maryland. And as we spread selections, 39 were chosen afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLuz
Saturday from a two-day have given him a rare - if losing the Pennsylvania pri· across the country, you're over the weekend but most of
swing through Nebraska, and minor - setback.
mary last month, but said he going to see some real them were uncommitted. visited in Parkersburg on a
Carter won nine of the would
called ill campaign aides
fulfill
his surprises."
Carter picked up 13 to bring recent Monday.
sta
te 's 20 delegates in commitments in Connecticut
Brown said he is 8eeking his total to 574. The
Fifth and Sixth Grade
Sunday, where it was decided
students
In add a second day in Maine 's Democratic state and on Sunday spoke of a uncommitted delegates Democratic nominee needs
of Portland
DALLAS (UP!) - Mark
But
the possible miracle there to across the country, and will 1,505 delegates at his conven- Elementary School spent
Michigan
this
week . convention.
Hayes and Don Bies each
campaign in New Jersey, tion in New York City's Saturday at Camden Park.ln
Additional senior aides , convention unexpe ctedly reestablish his candidacy.
talked about the same subject
including campaign manager elected five delegates for
California Gov. Edmund G. Nevada, and his home state Madison Square Garden in Huntington. W.Va.
Sunday, delicately, and from
!Wgers Morton, were to meet Morris Udall and left six Brown Jr. said on television of California.
July.
Local CBers attended ·a
a different approach.
club
meeting at Racine on
with
him
late
today.
EAST LANSING, Mich.
Hayes was the first to use
Wednesday
evening,
Originally
scheduled
to
1UP!) - Michigan State
tne word - Hchoke."
Loretta
Middleswart,
campaign
in
Michigan
"I think I had more catcher Rick Seid rapped out Wednesday , and in Kentucky,
Cincinnati,
spent
a recent
pressure on me Saturday," three hits and scored two Tennessee and possibly
weekend
with
her
parents,
said Hayes, whose steady runs SUnday afternoon as the Arkansas later in the week,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jim
two-under-par 69 Sunday SpartanS swept a Big Ten Ford has rescheduled a
Middleswart
and
Janice.
·.
gave him a two-stroke victory baseball doubleheader with second trip to Michigan - to
Charles
Hilton
has
returned
over Bies in the $200,000 Ohio State 4-2 and 4-3.
home from a , recent
BELLEVILLE, Pa. I UP II inge_nuity and research to do before he realized thai there the birds.
Spartan starting pitcher the tulip festival in Holland
Byron Nelson Golf Classic. It
"I
got
to
the
point
where
I
'
and
to
his
home
toWn
of
what
everyone
else
thought
hospitalization at VMH.
was an open market if he
- Buck Metz's poultry farm
was Hayes' first win during a Larry Pashnick held the Grand Rapids - Saturday. looks like any other in this was impossible.
could
tell
you
20,000
ways
not
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Mr. and
could
produce
enough
birds
Buckeyes to four hits before
2% year pro career.
to
do
it
but
I
couldn't
find
the
Metz
said
he
did
not
start
to
Mrs.
R. R. Durst, Mrs. Ml!ry
at
a
reasonable
price.
central Pennsylvania valley
"You choke when you tiring in the seventh inning of
one
right
way,"
he
said.
Greer,
Bill McKelvey, Mr.
fish
for
trout
and
tie
flies
until
"When
I
decided
to
go
where Amish farmers still go
aren't hitting the ball well the second game. But he had
Last
year
Metz,
whose
and
Mrs.
Louis DeLU2, S. W.
about
six
or
seven
years
ago.
commercial
practically
to
market
in
horse
drawn
and I wasn't hitting it well already been provided with
poultry
farm
is
the
second
"Uke
other
fl)~iers, I was
Durst,
Mrs.
Tim Wilkinson
everone
told
me
that
you
buggies
and
work
fields
with
yesterday. I was hitting it enough help from Seid's bat
largest
in
Pennsylvania,
looking
hither,
thither
and
and
Kevin;
Rudy Durst,
couldn't
possibly
produce
mule
teams.
well today.," said Hayes, who to get the win.
grew
10,000
birds
but
the
Hayes
McMurray,
Paul G.:
yon
for
quality
hackles
quality
hackles
unless
the
But
Metz
raises
chickens
Ohio State finaly was able .
finished dead last in the 1975
necks
from
less
than
50
per
)l'lcMurray,
Donald
Brewer
I
feathers
from
the
neck
of
a
birds
were
at
least
three
for
their
feathers
instead
of.
to get on the scoreboard on
Nelson.
cent
were
top
quality.
This
and
Tim,
Vicwr
DurSt,
Scott
rooster
)
and
wasn't
satisfied
years
old,"
he
said.
meat
and
eggs.
It
's
a
The fact Hayes was a non- the seventh when Jerry
year,
he
has
tried
a
new
and
Jason,
Tom
Durs
t,
Mr.
with
the
ones
imported
from
"'That
posed
the
biggest
business,
not
~
hobby,
and
winner brought up the subject Mahon wa lked with bases
method
of
housing
the
birds
and
Mrs.
Gene
Lemley,
Paul
India,
China
and
the
problem
because
if
I
had
to
there's
a
good·
chance
he
'II
of pressure. Bies indicated he loaded to force in the first
Philippines," he said.
feed a bird for three years the and hopes that 80 per cent will Dean Evans, Theodore
COLUMBUS (UP!) make a lot of money.
hatl believed Hayes would not Buckeye run. Ohio State then Saying Jimmy Carter has the
"And
then
I
thought,
'why
Willford, Chuck Craig, Mrs.
neck would sell for $120 be top quality.
For example, chicken sells
picked up a pair of runs on a
play boldly.
Metz
said
he
has
also
found
Vicki Proffitt, LeQta Birch,
should
I
buy
necks
when
I
instead
of
$40
or
$50."
Democratic )IOmination in supermarkets today for a
''I thought if I could shoot a fielders choice and a locked up, Sen. -John Glenn maximum of 50 cents a have hundreds of thousands
a
potential
market
.
for
the
Mrs
. Mildred ' Cir£le,
Metz
,
who
majored
in
68 or 69, that I would win," throwing error before being Jr., D.Ohio, has indicated he JX&gt;und. The feathers from one of chickens and can grow my agricultural economics at birds' tail feathers and is Raymond Proffitt and Mts.
said Bies, who st~rted the day retired.
In the first game, Ohio would be available as a of Metz's roosters retail for own.' That brought out the Cornell and has a masters in trying to use the meat from Roy Donohew were recent
three strokes behind Hayes
, Pennsylvania Dutch in me business administration, said the roosters to produce a visitors ofMrs.lva Carpenter
presidential running mate for up to $50.
and shot his 68. "I really State took a brief 2-1 lead in the former Georgia governor.
and daughter,
and I decided to do it."
it took him three or four years chicken feed additive.
That
makes
them
even
didn't think Mark would the fourth inning on a pair of
"We're
trying
to'
use
everyMetz
said
he
grew
birds
for
to
develop
the
right
The
former
astronaut
more
valuable
than
mink
unearned runs after two
break par."
Michigan
.State errors. But Saturday said he will not, skins, which go for only $7 a himself and a few friends combination of genetics, thing but the crow," he TOLEDOAN ELECTED ' ,
During the night, Haytes
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!jfeeding and management of ·said.
the Spartans came back in however, run for the vice- pelt.
didn't either.
Frank
Stanton, chairman of
presidential
nomination.
Metz
's
rooster
feathers,
"I want to come from the bottom of the fourth to
the
American
Red Cross,
"It's
a
matter
(Carter's
however,
aren't
used
to
make
behind the next time to win," score three times on a running mate) for other anything as glamorous as
Monday
announced
the
he said: "1 -couldl).'t sleep, I fielders choice, a balk and people to decide," said Glenn, mink coats.
election
of
five
new
at-large
couldn't eat. Maybe the next shortstop Rodger Bastien's who added that he would have
members
of
his
Trout fishermen use them
run.,&lt;;eoring double.
one will be easier."
WASHINGTON (UP!) - It of various means for handling mcluded shooting radioactive organization's Board of
to
assess
the
situation
when
to
make
artifical
flies
The pair of wins for
But his difficulties, he said,
appears likely that deadly and storing atomic power debris to the sun aboard Governors.
Michigan
State pushes its Big and if he gets the call from imitations of the insects on radioactive ,garbage may be plant wastes:
went beyond the physical. He
rockets, or sealing atomic
which the fish feed.
Elected were Hobart D.
Carter.
had said he was not swinging Ten record to 6-4 and its
garba'ge
in concrete pillars Lewis, Pleasantville, N.Y.;
ERDA
says
a
plan
will
be
disposed
of
,forever
by
burial
Glenn
said
Carter
is
clearly
The
story
of
how
Metz
well Saturday and that season record to 14-20-1. Ohio the frontrunner in the Ohio captured a wide open market far beneath the ground.
announced ''in the near that would stand, guarded Lucy
Wilson Benson,
carried over to the practice State evened its conference primary election June 8 and is another example of how
The government has future" by the Energy forever, in the desert.
Amherst,
Mass.; William
tee Sunday morning.
. mark at 5-5 and is now 11-14 for that his "ship Is already in." businessmen have used launched an effort to solve Resources Council and public
Now, ERDA officials Wade Boeschenstein, Toledc,
·
"I was kind of desperate," the year.
believe the most promising Ohio; Mrs. John Finucane,
the problem of ·permanent comment will be invited.
he said. "I was searching
Others have tried - and method appears to be the Los Angeles; and William M.
nuclear waste disposal by
around for something that
1985, and the Energy failed - to find acceptable solidification of wastes into Ellinghaus, New York.
would work. Then Larry
Research and Development solutions to the problem of insoluble ceramic blocks that
The new members join
Nelson wid me to slow my
Administration sends Con· atomic disposal for more would be buried in seven
other at-large
swing down; slow everything
underground salt domes or members on the· OOrnember
gress this week a five- than three decades.
down."
Past proposals have abandoned salt mines.
imiNE, Italy (UP!) - many remaining unsearched
(In
Washington ,
a volume, 1,500-page analysis
Red Cross Board.
"I really needed for him to Rescue workers slogging heaps of rubble.
spokesman for the U.S.
tell me that. I started through heavy rains today
Doctors gave 60,000 typhoid Agency for International
swinging slow and I started appealed for tents to shelter shots Sunday and scheduled Development said the United
hitting them. Out on the the thousands left homeless another 40,000 for today. States had sent about $473,000 .
course, I was trying to walk by northeast Italy's killer Hospitals provided medical worth of aid to the
as slow as Don January and I earthquake. Another sharp teams with snake bite serum earthquake victims, includdid."
tremor jolted the area because the earthquakes and ing tents, food and medical
Though Bies cut Hayes' Sunday but no deaths were unusually hot weather awak- supplies. )
·
lead to two strokes at the end, reported.
ened many hibernating
Officials estimated the
the only real competition on
National police officials vipers.
quake destroyed 15,000 homes
the final holes was for second said 797 bodies had been
Officials said 25,000 over a 42-square-mile area.
place between Bies and recovered aud 522 had been homeless were already being They said damage to
Masters' champion Ray identified. Rescue and search sheltered in tents, more than factories left about 4,:ioo
Floyd.
coordinators said the final 1,200 of which came from the workers jobless.
Both had made the turn at toll might wp 1,000. Police U.S. Camp Darby base at
"All the main centers hit by
seven under and picked up an said about 1,300 persons were Uvorno.
the quake have by now been
early second nine birdie. But injured.
Tents for another 10,000 reached by relief teams but
then Floyd fell apart.
Another sharp earthquake victims were going up, they some isolated cottages are
He bogeyed Nos. 13 and 14 jolted northeastern Italy Sun- said, but an additional 15,11110 still cut off," Interior
while Bles birdied No. 15 and daY morning, about G3 hours still required shelter, Minister Francesco Cossiga
that contest was over.
after Thursday's major especially in the hardhit told reporters in Rome after
Floyd finished two back at tremor devastated 24 Friuli towns of Buia and Tarcento. returning from the disllster
seven under.
region towns. The new quake
scene.
Hale Irwin took fourth sent panicky thousands
Cossiga said there was .
place at six under with a final fleeing Into streets in CHAPTER RECOGNIZED
enough food, medicine and
round 68, and Texas favorite nightclothes but claimed no
COLUMBUS I UPI) - The shelter available or en route
Ben Crenshaw held filth more lives.
Henry Giessenbier Division to meet survivor needs and no
place with a final round 69 at
Heavy rain Sunday night Award for the best program e~idemk~ wpre foreseen.
five under.
pelted the stricken area was given the HamiltonNext at four under were adjoining the Austrian and Franklin chapter from north
Larry Nelson and Dave Yugoslav frontiers and of Cincinnati at the Ohio
Stockton. . ,
rescue officials appealed for Jaycees annual banquet
Jack Nicklaus, who said his · additional thousands of tents. Saturday nlghi.
·
I
three.under position Saturday
Other chapters winning
The rain, following two
In 1871, the Treaty 'of
was within reach of Hayes, days of hot, 80-degree division awards for best Frankfort ended the Francowho at !hat time was nine weather that hastened chapter and community Prussian War.
1•1'1 ·
under, could never gain · decomposition of human and programs were Collimbus,
In 1940, Nazi Ge~many
"
DROUGHT is bad news for growers in broad sections
control of his round.
animal corpses, eased the Newark, West Jefferson, Invaded the LowlandsKans., as a result of the dry spell which started last::~;·
of the U.S. wheat belt. A handful of parched earth may be
He eagled No. 15, but ·threat of epidemics. But it London
Correctional Belgium, Luxembourg and
summer and lasted through the winter. Damage ·.. "
about all this field will yield lor Merle Stoops, of Hugoton,
bogeyed 17 and finished at slowed down the race to find Institution, Canal ·Fulton, I the Netherl"nds - with 89
estimates currently run as high as 10 per cent of the 1978,,.
three under.
possible survivors amid the · North Canton and Olmstead . army &lt;livisions.
U. S. wheat crop.
·

Theme of the meeling was

"Going Baek to God, Arise
and Move Forward" wiU&gt;
Mrs. Zuclclia Smit h, district
supervisor, presiding. The
morning session ppen ed with

OE5 presents pins at Thursday meeting
Twcnty,flve year pins were
presented al the Thw·sday
night mccling of Evan~el i n e
Chapter Jn, Order of the

Association; Mrs. Ann Angel, Middleport, first guild eirl
to attend Lan'caster retreat; Miss Opal Griffin,
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Barbara Scott, GalliJX&gt;lis, first ~ice
supervisor for the Providence Association. Pictured with
the guild group are the Rev. Henry L. Key, moderator of
the Procidence Missionary Baptist Association, and the
Rev. Douglas C. Carter, second vice moderator of the
Association.

OHIO BAPTIST GUILD OFFICERS and members
present for the 27th annual Youth Fellowship Day of the
Providence District Association at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Ch1ll'ch Saturday included, 1-r, Mrs. Aggie
Randolph, Columbus, state .supervisor of Guilds; Miss
Reba Griffin, Gallipolis; Mrs. Ada Payne, Bidwell, guild
organizer, Gallia sub-district; Mrs. Zuelelia Sm)th,
Pomeroy, district supervisor of Guilds. Providence

Ford in weekend huddle with aides

Hayes is

Nelson
Spartans
champion
sweep two
with

I .

osu

for a better mousetrap

Chickens raised for feathers

Glenn says

he is available
to Democrats

Burial .way down deep seen best

Appeals made for te1jlls

.•'
'

I

(,

..

Cummerl'c Monday

e~t

noon

at Meigs Inn .
MEIGS MUZZLEI.OADER
range open Monday at 6:30
p.m. Public is welcome.
HARRISONVILLE
OES
Chapter pra cti ce, 7 p.m:
Monday at hall All officers
urged to attend .
UNITED
Methodi st
Women, Heath Church, 7:30
_ Monday, with Mrs. Harry
Chesher lo have devotions
and Mrs. James Euler to
review Billy Graham's latest
book . Hostesses will be Mrs .
M. L. F'rcnch , Mrs. · John
Kincaid , Mrs. Everett Davis
and Mrs .•lames Jividen.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for
Retarded Citizens will meet
7::!0 p.m. Monda'y at the
Mei~ s Communi ty Heal th
Center.
RA CINE VOLUNTEER
Fire Department and
Emergenc y Squad and
families will hold a potluck
sup~er Monday, 6:30p.m: at
Eber 's frog house, Racme·
Bashan Road .
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
Monday , 7:30 p.m. at club

I
t... J
Dorothy Thomas, Bidwell, president of Providence
District; Mrs. Lula Hampton, Pomeroy, second vice
president, Providence District; Mrs. Florence Richards,
Middleport, secretary, Providence District; Mrs. Eleanor
Wells, Oak Hill, subdistrict pre~ident, Gallia District.
Seated front is Mrs. Zuelelia Smith, supervisor of the Girls
Guilds of the Providence Association.

OFFICERS OF THE PROVIDENCE Association sub- ·
districts particiPating in the Fellowship Day at Mount
Moriah Baptist Church Saturday were, left to right, Mrs.
June Carter, Burlington, pianist; Mrs. Helen Harper,
Pomeroy, president of Hocking sub-dist.; Mrs. Dorothy
Mills, Ironton, president Ironton sub-district; Mrs.
r~.:::e:::.-:::.~=:::=:::::=:=:::~':"'''~=::;:::::,:,:,,,,,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,,,,,,,:,:;:,::=:=:=:=::::::::,,,,,,,:,~~-

~I
~

l~j

Helen Help

US. • •

I

By Helen Bottel

housing for Grund Chnptcr t.o
be held Oct. :W-28 at Hiwrf1·ont in Cincinnuli, while
Mrs. Wilcox wilt hundlc prere~istration .

' Sun sh ine pugc fill' the
wa s Gencvce
Ghesher. The wort hy mutron
reminded members of inspection practice al 7 p.m. on
M!iv 19. Rcfl·c~hmcn ts were
se r.ved by Paul and lla

c venin~

Darnell .

·

.....,.....

illoUII!I fAClW fOil.

Mutual
Investing
Foul\d&amp;tlon'a

••o•••nua

"bi.I.r.'Z'
~" O t ~Oy!llft! ( Oj)J Wllf'lllO

.Q tl loQ •ho n c anll(l tht
IOC I I I.Ditstnl lh¥. 01

HERITAGE

DEGIIEE CONH:HRF.D
The fifth degree was
conferi'C d on four cnndldates.
IJy the Meigs Counl y degree
team at th e Springfield
Grunge hall m Gulliu County.
App1·oxima tely 511 perso ns
from Meigs Counl y nttcnd od.
Potluck refreshments wct·o
served.

a•c UIUTI.a, !NO.
~ ~~

....

~·

te l~ ... ~ ... o~ . ~

S•

•u t,,o&lt;~~~
••'•'!
• ""
~ ~ lr, , t •• t ..

... 1 ., .. .,M

"• .,,,

G" · ~

C ol~"'~ , .

('.~

,,, ,

tflptu•n"d bv

P. J. PAULEY

eo• W. MAIN

Pomeroy,O.

PH.tn-2311

Whdll pay you the

best intc1-cst
on your savings?

Try a Little Tenderness .. .

DEAR HELEN:
When I read these articles on sex for older people, I think
the authors don't know much. What we elders want is just plain
kindness, with maybe a little petting added.
I wish my wife-would use the same tone to me that she uses
over the telephone to friends.! wish she would laugh with me. I
wish she would say "Please" and "Thank you," instead of
bossing and expectin~.
I don't drink, smoke, swear or yell at her_but she still acts
like she conslders me the world's worst. I don't play golf,
poker, or cliaSil women, The worst thing I do is go to c)mr~h.
I'm considerate and try to be loving, but after 50 years, l m
about to give up. Other women smile at me. Not her! ·
What is it about marriage'lhat makes a partner stop being
kind! - THE OLD MAN (on one of his worse days)
DEAR MAN:
.
Marriage all we often is a losing battle between the
dQminant and the submissive. You evidently gave your wife
the reins years ago and she's whipped you with them ever
since. I'm not sure whether you can change her at this late date
but you might try by, I. Telling her how much you need her
love and approval.' 2. Showing her you will no longer jump
when she yells "Giddap!" 'and 3. Smiling back when those
other women notice you. - H.

'.

+++

DEAR HELEN:
Try bartending if you want to see it like It is. I have !
The girl gets marrif!i to Prince Charming to get away
from her domineering parents, or such.
After a couple of kids, she starts looking for .anyone who
will be nice In her, finally finding a new Prince Charming. This
cycle of seeking a compliment and BELIEVING it, continues
ad lnfinitilm from Prince to Prince. And that's why there are
so many Ion; females in bars. That's why we in the trade call
them dumb broads. - ANOTHER M.C.P. (Male Chauvinist,
etc.)

POMEHOY PTA, 7:30p .m.
Monday at the school. New
officers will be mstalled and
the fifth and sixth g,rade band
under the direction of David
Bowen will perform.
TUESDAY
EASTEBN BAND Boosters
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. in band
room . Everyone urged lo
alte~d .

LEWIS MANLEY
American Legion Auxiliary, 2
p.m. Wedn esday at the home
DEAR M.C.P.:
The cycle of seeking a compliment and believing it doesn' t of Mrs. Florence Richards.
apply only to "dumb broads. " Qllite a number of M.C.P:s
frequent bars, you know, when they should be home w1th the1r
wives. - H.

\j\j DEAR HELEN:

+++

.
My wife leaves the kids with me to baby-sit and goes
"shopping" at'night. But she always gets home after midnight.
Stores stay open that late?
The other evening she got a telephone call. I distinctly
heard a man's voice, but she said, "I'll call you later, Joan, I'm
fixing dinner for my husband."
. .
We have intercourse about six times a year. She 1mpbes
it's my fault,_but she's really perfected ways of putti!lg the
blame on me when she wants to avoid it.
What's gone out of our marriage'! - PUZZLED
DEAR PUZ:
Your wife.
Whether you can bring her .back or not - or whether she's
worth it - is up to you. - H.
of Mrs. Everett Taylor, S.
:k~:::::~:::~:::~::::::~::~:::::::~-=:::::;:;o~~::::::».:~·
Third Ave ., Middleport,
Wednesday, 8 p.m . Mrs.
Joseph Bolin· will have the
program .
POMEROY
MiDIN
DLEPORT Lions Club,
regular meeting, noo~
TUESDAY
W
ednesday, Meigs Inn.
HACINE MASONIC Lodge
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
461, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
Royal
Arch Masons, stated
temple. All master masons
concla've,
Wednesday, 7:30 at
invited.
Pomeroy
Mason Temple .
WINDING 'TRAIL Garden
Bosworth
Council
46 Royal
Club, 7 p.m. Tuesday, home
and
Select
M~sters
at 8:30
of Mrs. Wilma Terrell, with
p.m.
nature tour to precede
meeting. Mrs. Dollie Hayes
will give guide to wild
flower s, and Mrs. Pat Thoma
will present ecology tips.
REVIVAL, Tuesday thru
May 16, 7:30 each evening at
GOOD
Portland United Methodist
Church with Howard Maynes,
Albany, as evangelist;
special singing each-evening;
public invited.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LIT·
ERARY Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, at the Mi&lt;l·
d£oport
First
United
Presbyterian Church. Mrs.
Faye Wallace will be hostess
for this last meeting of the
calendar year. Keith Circle,
Bicentennial minuteman, will
be the speaker. Members are
to respond with a commen t on
the bicentennial.
WHLTE ROSE LODGE,
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
American Le gion hall.
Middleport ,
AMATEUR GARDEN
CLUB will meet at the home

2 HR.

DRY
CLEANING

(ON REQUESn

I

I

Social ·.
Calendar

•
1 DAY

SERVICE ON

SHIRT
FINISHING
BY 10 · OUT BY 5

Dll.

Robinson's
DRY CLEANING
&amp; LAUNDRY
POMEROY

ANOTHIR

BUY

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BUDGET SHOP

A. J, STAfHll DR. flf!M,\N IIW.TZ
FOR PRICES CALl. COLLECT

CAREA COD! (614:-J

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ONLY $}598-

252·3181

One or Two Day Full Denture
·

Service, Partials, Extractions,
X-Rays, Cleaning

49 E.LIVINGSTC
COLUMBUS, ailO 43205
'II Smile Tomorrow If You Ta./ce Care OJ Yuur l't crh 1'o do1'

MQN)AY THROUGH
8::.1 A.M. TO

FRID~Y

P.M.

•

no matter what youit looking
for in savings or investment
·certificates...
'
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3·MONTH CERTIFICATE

5~ . 5:~~?%

s~~.%

5~~.%

• Com,tunld D1 1ly1

• PIVJb l, Olilottl ly

t

M1ft1111um ~ I IIUU OU

t I'I YI~II

DWIIIII t fll l~l m~lll l i.IOO 00

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

2-YEAR CERTIFI CATE

3· YEAA CERTIFICATE

6~.

6~.

6~~.%

Ulf

~ATf

From

'I

..... ,

MONDAY
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
of ·Pomeroy Chamber of

Eastern Star, at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mr s. Marie Hawkin s
presented pins to Nora and
Denver Rice, Freda Hood.
and Olive Satterfield, and
Mrs. Emma K. Ch1tworlhy
presented one to he1· hu sband,
James Clalworthy.
MI·~. Sue Floyd, wm·thy
matron, and Paul Damell ,
worthy patron, presided at
the mee tin g wi th Mrs .
Hawkins as chaplam, Mrs.
Maryln WilcO&lt;, or~anist, and
Hm-ry Chesher , senline! pru
tem.
Communications were I'U ml
including a. lett.el' from Gaile
Dew, district pres ident,
O.E.S. Hospital Circle, and
Grm1d Chapter on housing
and pr e-reg ist1·ation . Mrs.
·Hawkin s will handle th e

house.

'"" '

I,

a smgspirutiun by the (;uild pastor .,f Moun I Moriuh and
Girls. Lhc Guild song and moderator of the Providence
Baptist
pledg e and a roll ca ll. Mlssionury
Devotions from I Peter 5, I tu Assocint ion, He also sang
5 were ~lven by the Guild " Hi s 8ycs are On the
girls and there was a solo, Sparrow " with Mrs. Cmllp·
"King Jesus Will Roll All My bell Harper us his uc Burdens Away" by Lori t'.oittpanist . Mrs. June Ct~rtcr
ol Btu-lin~ tun was pianist for
Jumes,
Bidwell ,
!1(.;
companied by her mulh~r . llw day.
Followin~ a lun cheon In the
Mrs. Joan Bass.
The morriin~ sermun wus church dinin ~ room, the
by the Rev . Henry Key, aflernoon pl' og rum began

wtth hymns or praise and
wurds of Inspiration from
Mrs. Dorothy Thomas, The
Ironton Guild Girls gave
devotions and .Mrs. Aggie
Randolph , state supervisor or
guilds , · and Mrs . Smith,
Providcr]('e District super·
visor of ~ullds; gave reports
und showed films of the
lluptist Wo1·Id Alliance held
in Stockholm, Sweden. Mrs.
J.uclll c Pauley, state
president of the Wom.en,'s
Auxiliur·y, unable to attend,
&gt;.ssistcd in preparing the
matcrinl presented at the
.meeting ,

• hw11111 llut!lllly • M1n1mum

$1 ,110~

DO

t

Pl,lble !I U Pit lly • M •~"'I Um \I 000 00

4· YEAR CERTIFICATE

6-YEAR CE RTIF ICATE

' 7~6.%
~All

7~~.%

• Plytblt D~trlllly 1 Minimum l\.000 Dtl

' Ptytble Qwltll ) 1 MlftiiiiW/11 l I,QVO 00

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t Pl~lhlt

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And tn addtllon In all lhl t • , . fMAihiW cr
IIUII \tll~ lncomt , , , ~I'd 0~ Ml, two, lhtlt,
lour ~~ tl• ynr tttllf,ealu. lnterttl pa~ ·
lbifl monthly tl you dulrt on tttU!Ittlu
¥~ 1 111 ta ct trnounl ol

15,000.00 or mn11

Ftdml Regulai 'O~I IIQ~Irl I IUIIIIIA!III
p~nlllv tor prtmtlurt wiiMrtwtl of Ctr11ftt i l&amp; tund1

you'll lind it at

OhioValley Bank
Wh y ~e t llu for lt:s• l han 1he best?
When it wmes to your ~avin gs, you
wan I a [nit· return. the hi ghesl lc•
gai ly possible, with " guaruntce of
sa fet y for you r funds, and at·

A

cess ibility lo th ese funds

•

on rensonn bl e notice of withdrawaL
This i~ exadl y what Ohio Valley
Bank wants and promises their depositors. No wonder savings deposits continue to be at an
all-time hi gh.

OhioValley Bank
Gallipolis Ch lo

M•mbtt FDIC

The leading savings plans are at ' the leading saving&amp; bank.

•

�..........

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 10, 197~

Celtics win
second tilt

a- '!be O.Uy Sentlllel, MiddleJX&gt;rt-Pomerov. 0 .. Mtxulll\' , Mav to.~~'"

Fellowship day held Saturday

Stiversville

Th e 27th annual youth
day of the Ohiu
BaJ&gt;tist Guilds uf Pruvideuce
ilistrk t Assudt~tion was held
Saturday "' lhe Mount
Moriah Bapti st Church in
Middleport ,

fclluw~h ip

News Notes

Victor ·Durst, 501)11 SccJ4t
and Jason of The Plains, Tom
Durst of. Athens, Randy
BOSTON (UP!) - The 61-52, and instructed his
Warner of Columbus, Randy
Cleveland offense cracked players to use a full-eourt
Forbes, Pomeroy, Mrs.
under pressure Sunday., press. From that juncture,
Mildred Circle, Minersville,
giving the Bostoo Celtics the Boston outscored Cleveland
Maxine Powell, Long Bottom,
break they needed to take a 2- 42-28, with the Celtics
Mrs. Mike Evans and R~
0 lead in their NBA Eastern capitalizing on f~st-break op.
and Mrs. Merle Evans, local,
Conference championship portunities and the Cavs
were caners at the hmme ·of
unable to move inside for
series.
, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst, .
With Charlie Scott applying good shots.
last week.
the defensive tourniquet in
The Celtics, behind since
Clint Birch and daugh~r.
the secood half and Dave early in the second period,
Leota, visited Mr. and Mni.
Cowens, John Havliceli and went ahead, 74-73, on a John
Lawrence Lipps and famlly
Jo Jo White operating the fast 'Havlicek basket. Charlie
at Lillie Hocking on Sunday..
break, the Celtics caught the Scott chipped in two steals
Legar commended the men and women lor their Interest In the training
Mr . and Mrs. Tim
RECEIVE CERTIFICATES. - Ten Syracuse and two Pomeroy
Cavaliers, 94-89 1, in the and to halt the Cavs' offense
and for the cooperation he received. He had special praise lor the wives of
WilkinsOn, Slu!wn and Kevill;
firemen received certificates for completing 36 hours of instruction in
nationally televised contest. lor the next minute before
two of 'the men who also completed the course. Legar feels that the
Columbus were weekend
firefighting skUls and techniques at the close of the last period, March 23.
The Celtics play the Cavs Cleveland suffered its worst
two
women, in the event the men are not readily available can handle
guests of her parents, Mr.
Individual cards were presented to each firefighter completing the
Tuesday night at Cleveland in blow of the contest.
most sitliations until other help arrives. Firefighters who qualified and
and Mrs. Ruda Durst.
,
training. A department certificate was presented the Syracuse Fire
the third game.
With 7:36 remaining, Cavs
received certificates were, front row,l-r, Charles Legar, Rollle Stewart,
Chief, RoUie Stewart, by the instructor Charles W. Legar, Sr., Pomeroy.
Mrs. Sharon Roush, ~
"Our club didn't go at center Nate Thurmond fouled
Mary Pickens, Mary Lavender, Clyde Triplett; back row, Eddie Hayes,
Liverpool, Marshall Bryant,
The certificates, cards and instructions were authorized and ma~e
people when they should have out on "the best block I maJe
Pomeroy; Eber Pickens, Rudy Stewart, Mike Smith and David Smith.
. Charleston, W. Va., Mr. and
available by Trade and Industrial Vocational Education Service of the
in the first half, so we made all game .." He was charged
Absent were Raph Lavender, Mick Ash, Syracuse, and Gary Ellis,
Mrs. David Bryant, Dunbar,
State Department of Education in Cooperation with Southern Local
some adjustments," said with bumping Dave Cowens,
Pomeroy.
·
W. VIi., Mrs. Violet Ritch\~.
School District. Legar praised the membrs of the class for their
coach Tom Heinsohn . who converted one of two free
Alicia and Cindy Evan~,
communuy spll'lt m improving their efficiency in fighting fires. Chief
"Cleveland is a pattern clqb throws to widen the lead to 75David Talbott, Mrs, Bill
and they'U shoot the basket 73.
Mlddleswart and Gary Van
I
Cowens, also playing with
out if you let them."
Meter, local, visited Mr ..and
Alter Cleveland opened a five fouls, scored two more
Mrs. Bill Bryant and familY,.
nine-point lead in the third inside baskets and fed
recently,
period, Heinsohn chose not to Havlicek for another as
Members of the Portland
let the Cavs get any more Boston opened the advantage
Ladies Softball Team held ,a
to 81-73. Cleveland closed to By ELIZABETII WHI\RTON
open shots.
The second day in Michigan uncommitted, thus blocking (CBS-TV's Face the Nation)
Reagan widened his lead bake sale at Racine o.n
The Boston coach called a ~1. but Boston countered United Press International
reportedly came at th·e Carter from winning the the race is still wide open and over Ford in weekend Saturday morning.
.
time out 5:11 inw the third with six straight points,
Mrs.
Fannie
Durst,
Mrs.
expense
of
Arkansas,
but
that
he
hopes
In
win
the
Maryland
majority his support ers
A worrie«! President Ford,
delegate selection in six
period, with the Cavs leading including the final two of Jo facing prospects of losing had not been a firm date.
primary May 18. He picked states, gaining 28 new . Lucille Adams, and Mrs.
predicted .
Jo White's 24.
Meanwhile, the Yankee
" crucial" primaries to
Carter spent Sunday at his . up his first delegate Saturday delegates In Ford's 18. The • Ruby Bryant visited r,IJ:~.
John Havlicek finished with !Wnald Reagan in Nebraska state of Maine, which gave home in Plains, Ga., while in Wyoming.
new totals show Reagan with Nell Mlddleswart one day !JISt
20 points and Scott t6 while Tuesday and in his home southerner Jimmy Carter one Udall and Henry Jackson
"Some people think the 397 to Ford's 336, with 298 week.
Cowens got eight of his 15 state of Michigan May 18, of his early boosts for the cainpaigned in Connecticut in campaign is locked up," said uncommitted. It takes 1,130 to
Mrs.
Elva
Dailey,
after Thurmond had fouled swnmoned political aides to Democratic nomination by hopes of upsetting the former Brown. "!think it's wide open nominate·at the GOP conven- · Syracuse, visited her
out.
talk strategy and revise his favoring him in district Georgia governor there.
· ... I think the chemistry of tion in Kansas City in August. parents, Mr. and Mrs. C;!l:l
delegate maneuvering before
campaign schedule.
Jackson took himself out of this campaign can change in
In Democratic delegate Autherson . on Wednesday
The President returned New Hampshire, now may the active campaign after Maryland. And as we spread selections, 39 were chosen afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLuz
Saturday from a two-day have given him a rare - if losing the Pennsylvania pri· across the country, you're over the weekend but most of
swing through Nebraska, and minor - setback.
mary last month, but said he going to see some real them were uncommitted. visited in Parkersburg on a
Carter won nine of the would
called ill campaign aides
fulfill
his surprises."
Carter picked up 13 to bring recent Monday.
sta
te 's 20 delegates in commitments in Connecticut
Brown said he is 8eeking his total to 574. The
Fifth and Sixth Grade
Sunday, where it was decided
students
In add a second day in Maine 's Democratic state and on Sunday spoke of a uncommitted delegates Democratic nominee needs
of Portland
DALLAS (UP!) - Mark
But
the possible miracle there to across the country, and will 1,505 delegates at his conven- Elementary School spent
Michigan
this
week . convention.
Hayes and Don Bies each
campaign in New Jersey, tion in New York City's Saturday at Camden Park.ln
Additional senior aides , convention unexpe ctedly reestablish his candidacy.
talked about the same subject
including campaign manager elected five delegates for
California Gov. Edmund G. Nevada, and his home state Madison Square Garden in Huntington. W.Va.
Sunday, delicately, and from
!Wgers Morton, were to meet Morris Udall and left six Brown Jr. said on television of California.
July.
Local CBers attended ·a
a different approach.
club
meeting at Racine on
with
him
late
today.
EAST LANSING, Mich.
Hayes was the first to use
Wednesday
evening,
Originally
scheduled
to
1UP!) - Michigan State
tne word - Hchoke."
Loretta
Middleswart,
campaign
in
Michigan
"I think I had more catcher Rick Seid rapped out Wednesday , and in Kentucky,
Cincinnati,
spent
a recent
pressure on me Saturday," three hits and scored two Tennessee and possibly
weekend
with
her
parents,
said Hayes, whose steady runs SUnday afternoon as the Arkansas later in the week,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jim
two-under-par 69 Sunday SpartanS swept a Big Ten Ford has rescheduled a
Middleswart
and
Janice.
·.
gave him a two-stroke victory baseball doubleheader with second trip to Michigan - to
Charles
Hilton
has
returned
over Bies in the $200,000 Ohio State 4-2 and 4-3.
home from a , recent
BELLEVILLE, Pa. I UP II inge_nuity and research to do before he realized thai there the birds.
Spartan starting pitcher the tulip festival in Holland
Byron Nelson Golf Classic. It
"I
got
to
the
point
where
I
'
and
to
his
home
toWn
of
what
everyone
else
thought
hospitalization at VMH.
was an open market if he
- Buck Metz's poultry farm
was Hayes' first win during a Larry Pashnick held the Grand Rapids - Saturday. looks like any other in this was impossible.
could
tell
you
20,000
ways
not
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Mr. and
could
produce
enough
birds
Buckeyes to four hits before
2% year pro career.
to
do
it
but
I
couldn't
find
the
Metz
said
he
did
not
start
to
Mrs.
R. R. Durst, Mrs. Ml!ry
at
a
reasonable
price.
central Pennsylvania valley
"You choke when you tiring in the seventh inning of
one
right
way,"
he
said.
Greer,
Bill McKelvey, Mr.
fish
for
trout
and
tie
flies
until
"When
I
decided
to
go
where Amish farmers still go
aren't hitting the ball well the second game. But he had
Last
year
Metz,
whose
and
Mrs.
Louis DeLU2, S. W.
about
six
or
seven
years
ago.
commercial
practically
to
market
in
horse
drawn
and I wasn't hitting it well already been provided with
poultry
farm
is
the
second
"Uke
other
fl)~iers, I was
Durst,
Mrs.
Tim Wilkinson
everone
told
me
that
you
buggies
and
work
fields
with
yesterday. I was hitting it enough help from Seid's bat
largest
in
Pennsylvania,
looking
hither,
thither
and
and
Kevin;
Rudy Durst,
couldn't
possibly
produce
mule
teams.
well today.," said Hayes, who to get the win.
grew
10,000
birds
but
the
Hayes
McMurray,
Paul G.:
yon
for
quality
hackles
quality
hackles
unless
the
But
Metz
raises
chickens
Ohio State finaly was able .
finished dead last in the 1975
necks
from
less
than
50
per
)l'lcMurray,
Donald
Brewer
I
feathers
from
the
neck
of
a
birds
were
at
least
three
for
their
feathers
instead
of.
to get on the scoreboard on
Nelson.
cent
were
top
quality.
This
and
Tim,
Vicwr
DurSt,
Scott
rooster
)
and
wasn't
satisfied
years
old,"
he
said.
meat
and
eggs.
It
's
a
The fact Hayes was a non- the seventh when Jerry
year,
he
has
tried
a
new
and
Jason,
Tom
Durs
t,
Mr.
with
the
ones
imported
from
"'That
posed
the
biggest
business,
not
~
hobby,
and
winner brought up the subject Mahon wa lked with bases
method
of
housing
the
birds
and
Mrs.
Gene
Lemley,
Paul
India,
China
and
the
problem
because
if
I
had
to
there's
a
good·
chance
he
'II
of pressure. Bies indicated he loaded to force in the first
Philippines," he said.
feed a bird for three years the and hopes that 80 per cent will Dean Evans, Theodore
COLUMBUS (UP!) make a lot of money.
hatl believed Hayes would not Buckeye run. Ohio State then Saying Jimmy Carter has the
"And
then
I
thought,
'why
Willford, Chuck Craig, Mrs.
neck would sell for $120 be top quality.
For example, chicken sells
picked up a pair of runs on a
play boldly.
Metz
said
he
has
also
found
Vicki Proffitt, LeQta Birch,
should
I
buy
necks
when
I
instead
of
$40
or
$50."
Democratic )IOmination in supermarkets today for a
''I thought if I could shoot a fielders choice and a locked up, Sen. -John Glenn maximum of 50 cents a have hundreds of thousands
a
potential
market
.
for
the
Mrs
. Mildred ' Cir£le,
Metz
,
who
majored
in
68 or 69, that I would win," throwing error before being Jr., D.Ohio, has indicated he JX&gt;und. The feathers from one of chickens and can grow my agricultural economics at birds' tail feathers and is Raymond Proffitt and Mts.
said Bies, who st~rted the day retired.
In the first game, Ohio would be available as a of Metz's roosters retail for own.' That brought out the Cornell and has a masters in trying to use the meat from Roy Donohew were recent
three strokes behind Hayes
, Pennsylvania Dutch in me business administration, said the roosters to produce a visitors ofMrs.lva Carpenter
presidential running mate for up to $50.
and shot his 68. "I really State took a brief 2-1 lead in the former Georgia governor.
and daughter,
and I decided to do it."
it took him three or four years chicken feed additive.
That
makes
them
even
didn't think Mark would the fourth inning on a pair of
"We're
trying
to'
use
everyMetz
said
he
grew
birds
for
to
develop
the
right
The
former
astronaut
more
valuable
than
mink
unearned runs after two
break par."
Michigan
.State errors. But Saturday said he will not, skins, which go for only $7 a himself and a few friends combination of genetics, thing but the crow," he TOLEDOAN ELECTED ' ,
During the night, Haytes
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!jfeeding and management of ·said.
the Spartans came back in however, run for the vice- pelt.
didn't either.
Frank
Stanton, chairman of
presidential
nomination.
Metz
's
rooster
feathers,
"I want to come from the bottom of the fourth to
the
American
Red Cross,
"It's
a
matter
(Carter's
however,
aren't
used
to
make
behind the next time to win," score three times on a running mate) for other anything as glamorous as
Monday
announced
the
he said: "1 -couldl).'t sleep, I fielders choice, a balk and people to decide," said Glenn, mink coats.
election
of
five
new
at-large
couldn't eat. Maybe the next shortstop Rodger Bastien's who added that he would have
members
of
his
Trout fishermen use them
run.,&lt;;eoring double.
one will be easier."
WASHINGTON (UP!) - It of various means for handling mcluded shooting radioactive organization's Board of
to
assess
the
situation
when
to
make
artifical
flies
The pair of wins for
But his difficulties, he said,
appears likely that deadly and storing atomic power debris to the sun aboard Governors.
Michigan
State pushes its Big and if he gets the call from imitations of the insects on radioactive ,garbage may be plant wastes:
went beyond the physical. He
rockets, or sealing atomic
which the fish feed.
Elected were Hobart D.
Carter.
had said he was not swinging Ten record to 6-4 and its
garba'ge
in concrete pillars Lewis, Pleasantville, N.Y.;
ERDA
says
a
plan
will
be
disposed
of
,forever
by
burial
Glenn
said
Carter
is
clearly
The
story
of
how
Metz
well Saturday and that season record to 14-20-1. Ohio the frontrunner in the Ohio captured a wide open market far beneath the ground.
announced ''in the near that would stand, guarded Lucy
Wilson Benson,
carried over to the practice State evened its conference primary election June 8 and is another example of how
The government has future" by the Energy forever, in the desert.
Amherst,
Mass.; William
tee Sunday morning.
. mark at 5-5 and is now 11-14 for that his "ship Is already in." businessmen have used launched an effort to solve Resources Council and public
Now, ERDA officials Wade Boeschenstein, Toledc,
·
"I was kind of desperate," the year.
believe the most promising Ohio; Mrs. John Finucane,
the problem of ·permanent comment will be invited.
he said. "I was searching
Others have tried - and method appears to be the Los Angeles; and William M.
nuclear waste disposal by
around for something that
1985, and the Energy failed - to find acceptable solidification of wastes into Ellinghaus, New York.
would work. Then Larry
Research and Development solutions to the problem of insoluble ceramic blocks that
The new members join
Nelson wid me to slow my
Administration sends Con· atomic disposal for more would be buried in seven
other at-large
swing down; slow everything
underground salt domes or members on the· OOrnember
gress this week a five- than three decades.
down."
Past proposals have abandoned salt mines.
imiNE, Italy (UP!) - many remaining unsearched
(In
Washington ,
a volume, 1,500-page analysis
Red Cross Board.
"I really needed for him to Rescue workers slogging heaps of rubble.
spokesman for the U.S.
tell me that. I started through heavy rains today
Doctors gave 60,000 typhoid Agency for International
swinging slow and I started appealed for tents to shelter shots Sunday and scheduled Development said the United
hitting them. Out on the the thousands left homeless another 40,000 for today. States had sent about $473,000 .
course, I was trying to walk by northeast Italy's killer Hospitals provided medical worth of aid to the
as slow as Don January and I earthquake. Another sharp teams with snake bite serum earthquake victims, includdid."
tremor jolted the area because the earthquakes and ing tents, food and medical
Though Bies cut Hayes' Sunday but no deaths were unusually hot weather awak- supplies. )
·
lead to two strokes at the end, reported.
ened many hibernating
Officials estimated the
the only real competition on
National police officials vipers.
quake destroyed 15,000 homes
the final holes was for second said 797 bodies had been
Officials said 25,000 over a 42-square-mile area.
place between Bies and recovered aud 522 had been homeless were already being They said damage to
Masters' champion Ray identified. Rescue and search sheltered in tents, more than factories left about 4,:ioo
Floyd.
coordinators said the final 1,200 of which came from the workers jobless.
Both had made the turn at toll might wp 1,000. Police U.S. Camp Darby base at
"All the main centers hit by
seven under and picked up an said about 1,300 persons were Uvorno.
the quake have by now been
early second nine birdie. But injured.
Tents for another 10,000 reached by relief teams but
then Floyd fell apart.
Another sharp earthquake victims were going up, they some isolated cottages are
He bogeyed Nos. 13 and 14 jolted northeastern Italy Sun- said, but an additional 15,11110 still cut off," Interior
while Bles birdied No. 15 and daY morning, about G3 hours still required shelter, Minister Francesco Cossiga
that contest was over.
after Thursday's major especially in the hardhit told reporters in Rome after
Floyd finished two back at tremor devastated 24 Friuli towns of Buia and Tarcento. returning from the disllster
seven under.
region towns. The new quake
scene.
Hale Irwin took fourth sent panicky thousands
Cossiga said there was .
place at six under with a final fleeing Into streets in CHAPTER RECOGNIZED
enough food, medicine and
round 68, and Texas favorite nightclothes but claimed no
COLUMBUS I UPI) - The shelter available or en route
Ben Crenshaw held filth more lives.
Henry Giessenbier Division to meet survivor needs and no
place with a final round 69 at
Heavy rain Sunday night Award for the best program e~idemk~ wpre foreseen.
five under.
pelted the stricken area was given the HamiltonNext at four under were adjoining the Austrian and Franklin chapter from north
Larry Nelson and Dave Yugoslav frontiers and of Cincinnati at the Ohio
Stockton. . ,
rescue officials appealed for Jaycees annual banquet
Jack Nicklaus, who said his · additional thousands of tents. Saturday nlghi.
·
I
three.under position Saturday
Other chapters winning
The rain, following two
In 1871, the Treaty 'of
was within reach of Hayes, days of hot, 80-degree division awards for best Frankfort ended the Francowho at !hat time was nine weather that hastened chapter and community Prussian War.
1•1'1 ·
under, could never gain · decomposition of human and programs were Collimbus,
In 1940, Nazi Ge~many
"
DROUGHT is bad news for growers in broad sections
control of his round.
animal corpses, eased the Newark, West Jefferson, Invaded the LowlandsKans., as a result of the dry spell which started last::~;·
of the U.S. wheat belt. A handful of parched earth may be
He eagled No. 15, but ·threat of epidemics. But it London
Correctional Belgium, Luxembourg and
summer and lasted through the winter. Damage ·.. "
about all this field will yield lor Merle Stoops, of Hugoton,
bogeyed 17 and finished at slowed down the race to find Institution, Canal ·Fulton, I the Netherl"nds - with 89
estimates currently run as high as 10 per cent of the 1978,,.
three under.
possible survivors amid the · North Canton and Olmstead . army &lt;livisions.
U. S. wheat crop.
·

Theme of the meeling was

"Going Baek to God, Arise
and Move Forward" wiU&gt;
Mrs. Zuclclia Smit h, district
supervisor, presiding. The
morning session ppen ed with

OE5 presents pins at Thursday meeting
Twcnty,flve year pins were
presented al the Thw·sday
night mccling of Evan~el i n e
Chapter Jn, Order of the

Association; Mrs. Ann Angel, Middleport, first guild eirl
to attend Lan'caster retreat; Miss Opal Griffin,
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Barbara Scott, GalliJX&gt;lis, first ~ice
supervisor for the Providence Association. Pictured with
the guild group are the Rev. Henry L. Key, moderator of
the Procidence Missionary Baptist Association, and the
Rev. Douglas C. Carter, second vice moderator of the
Association.

OHIO BAPTIST GUILD OFFICERS and members
present for the 27th annual Youth Fellowship Day of the
Providence District Association at the Mount Moriah
Baptist Ch1ll'ch Saturday included, 1-r, Mrs. Aggie
Randolph, Columbus, state .supervisor of Guilds; Miss
Reba Griffin, Gallipolis; Mrs. Ada Payne, Bidwell, guild
organizer, Gallia sub-district; Mrs. Zuelelia Sm)th,
Pomeroy, district supervisor of Guilds. Providence

Ford in weekend huddle with aides

Hayes is

Nelson
Spartans
champion
sweep two
with

I .

osu

for a better mousetrap

Chickens raised for feathers

Glenn says

he is available
to Democrats

Burial .way down deep seen best

Appeals made for te1jlls

.•'
'

I

(,

..

Cummerl'c Monday

e~t

noon

at Meigs Inn .
MEIGS MUZZLEI.OADER
range open Monday at 6:30
p.m. Public is welcome.
HARRISONVILLE
OES
Chapter pra cti ce, 7 p.m:
Monday at hall All officers
urged to attend .
UNITED
Methodi st
Women, Heath Church, 7:30
_ Monday, with Mrs. Harry
Chesher lo have devotions
and Mrs. James Euler to
review Billy Graham's latest
book . Hostesses will be Mrs .
M. L. F'rcnch , Mrs. · John
Kincaid , Mrs. Everett Davis
and Mrs .•lames Jividen.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for
Retarded Citizens will meet
7::!0 p.m. Monda'y at the
Mei~ s Communi ty Heal th
Center.
RA CINE VOLUNTEER
Fire Department and
Emergenc y Squad and
families will hold a potluck
sup~er Monday, 6:30p.m: at
Eber 's frog house, Racme·
Bashan Road .
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
Monday , 7:30 p.m. at club

I
t... J
Dorothy Thomas, Bidwell, president of Providence
District; Mrs. Lula Hampton, Pomeroy, second vice
president, Providence District; Mrs. Florence Richards,
Middleport, secretary, Providence District; Mrs. Eleanor
Wells, Oak Hill, subdistrict pre~ident, Gallia District.
Seated front is Mrs. Zuelelia Smith, supervisor of the Girls
Guilds of the Providence Association.

OFFICERS OF THE PROVIDENCE Association sub- ·
districts particiPating in the Fellowship Day at Mount
Moriah Baptist Church Saturday were, left to right, Mrs.
June Carter, Burlington, pianist; Mrs. Helen Harper,
Pomeroy, president of Hocking sub-dist.; Mrs. Dorothy
Mills, Ironton, president Ironton sub-district; Mrs.
r~.:::e:::.-:::.~=:::=:::::=:=:::~':"'''~=::;:::::,:,:,,,,,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,,,,,,,:,:;:,::=:=:=:=::::::::,,,,,,,:,~~-

~I
~

l~j

Helen Help

US. • •

I

By Helen Bottel

housing for Grund Chnptcr t.o
be held Oct. :W-28 at Hiwrf1·ont in Cincinnuli, while
Mrs. Wilcox wilt hundlc prere~istration .

' Sun sh ine pugc fill' the
wa s Gencvce
Ghesher. The wort hy mutron
reminded members of inspection practice al 7 p.m. on
M!iv 19. Rcfl·c~hmcn ts were
se r.ved by Paul and lla

c venin~

Darnell .

·

.....,.....

illoUII!I fAClW fOil.

Mutual
Investing
Foul\d&amp;tlon'a

••o•••nua

"bi.I.r.'Z'
~" O t ~Oy!llft! ( Oj)J Wllf'lllO

.Q tl loQ •ho n c anll(l tht
IOC I I I.Ditstnl lh¥. 01

HERITAGE

DEGIIEE CONH:HRF.D
The fifth degree was
conferi'C d on four cnndldates.
IJy the Meigs Counl y degree
team at th e Springfield
Grunge hall m Gulliu County.
App1·oxima tely 511 perso ns
from Meigs Counl y nttcnd od.
Potluck refreshments wct·o
served.

a•c UIUTI.a, !NO.
~ ~~

....

~·

te l~ ... ~ ... o~ . ~

S•

•u t,,o&lt;~~~
••'•'!
• ""
~ ~ lr, , t •• t ..

... 1 ., .. .,M

"• .,,,

G" · ~

C ol~"'~ , .

('.~

,,, ,

tflptu•n"d bv

P. J. PAULEY

eo• W. MAIN

Pomeroy,O.

PH.tn-2311

Whdll pay you the

best intc1-cst
on your savings?

Try a Little Tenderness .. .

DEAR HELEN:
When I read these articles on sex for older people, I think
the authors don't know much. What we elders want is just plain
kindness, with maybe a little petting added.
I wish my wife-would use the same tone to me that she uses
over the telephone to friends.! wish she would laugh with me. I
wish she would say "Please" and "Thank you," instead of
bossing and expectin~.
I don't drink, smoke, swear or yell at her_but she still acts
like she conslders me the world's worst. I don't play golf,
poker, or cliaSil women, The worst thing I do is go to c)mr~h.
I'm considerate and try to be loving, but after 50 years, l m
about to give up. Other women smile at me. Not her! ·
What is it about marriage'lhat makes a partner stop being
kind! - THE OLD MAN (on one of his worse days)
DEAR MAN:
.
Marriage all we often is a losing battle between the
dQminant and the submissive. You evidently gave your wife
the reins years ago and she's whipped you with them ever
since. I'm not sure whether you can change her at this late date
but you might try by, I. Telling her how much you need her
love and approval.' 2. Showing her you will no longer jump
when she yells "Giddap!" 'and 3. Smiling back when those
other women notice you. - H.

'.

+++

DEAR HELEN:
Try bartending if you want to see it like It is. I have !
The girl gets marrif!i to Prince Charming to get away
from her domineering parents, or such.
After a couple of kids, she starts looking for .anyone who
will be nice In her, finally finding a new Prince Charming. This
cycle of seeking a compliment and BELIEVING it, continues
ad lnfinitilm from Prince to Prince. And that's why there are
so many Ion; females in bars. That's why we in the trade call
them dumb broads. - ANOTHER M.C.P. (Male Chauvinist,
etc.)

POMEHOY PTA, 7:30p .m.
Monday at the school. New
officers will be mstalled and
the fifth and sixth g,rade band
under the direction of David
Bowen will perform.
TUESDAY
EASTEBN BAND Boosters
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. in band
room . Everyone urged lo
alte~d .

LEWIS MANLEY
American Legion Auxiliary, 2
p.m. Wedn esday at the home
DEAR M.C.P.:
The cycle of seeking a compliment and believing it doesn' t of Mrs. Florence Richards.
apply only to "dumb broads. " Qllite a number of M.C.P:s
frequent bars, you know, when they should be home w1th the1r
wives. - H.

\j\j DEAR HELEN:

+++

.
My wife leaves the kids with me to baby-sit and goes
"shopping" at'night. But she always gets home after midnight.
Stores stay open that late?
The other evening she got a telephone call. I distinctly
heard a man's voice, but she said, "I'll call you later, Joan, I'm
fixing dinner for my husband."
. .
We have intercourse about six times a year. She 1mpbes
it's my fault,_but she's really perfected ways of putti!lg the
blame on me when she wants to avoid it.
What's gone out of our marriage'! - PUZZLED
DEAR PUZ:
Your wife.
Whether you can bring her .back or not - or whether she's
worth it - is up to you. - H.
of Mrs. Everett Taylor, S.
:k~:::::~:::~:::~::::::~::~:::::::~-=:::::;:;o~~::::::».:~·
Third Ave ., Middleport,
Wednesday, 8 p.m . Mrs.
Joseph Bolin· will have the
program .
POMEROY
MiDIN
DLEPORT Lions Club,
regular meeting, noo~
TUESDAY
W
ednesday, Meigs Inn.
HACINE MASONIC Lodge
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
461, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
Royal
Arch Masons, stated
temple. All master masons
concla've,
Wednesday, 7:30 at
invited.
Pomeroy
Mason Temple .
WINDING 'TRAIL Garden
Bosworth
Council
46 Royal
Club, 7 p.m. Tuesday, home
and
Select
M~sters
at 8:30
of Mrs. Wilma Terrell, with
p.m.
nature tour to precede
meeting. Mrs. Dollie Hayes
will give guide to wild
flower s, and Mrs. Pat Thoma
will present ecology tips.
REVIVAL, Tuesday thru
May 16, 7:30 each evening at
GOOD
Portland United Methodist
Church with Howard Maynes,
Albany, as evangelist;
special singing each-evening;
public invited.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LIT·
ERARY Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday, at the Mi&lt;l·
d£oport
First
United
Presbyterian Church. Mrs.
Faye Wallace will be hostess
for this last meeting of the
calendar year. Keith Circle,
Bicentennial minuteman, will
be the speaker. Members are
to respond with a commen t on
the bicentennial.
WHLTE ROSE LODGE,
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
American Le gion hall.
Middleport ,
AMATEUR GARDEN
CLUB will meet at the home

2 HR.

DRY
CLEANING

(ON REQUESn

I

I

Social ·.
Calendar

•
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SERVICE ON

SHIRT
FINISHING
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ANOTHIR

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BUDGET SHOP

A. J, STAfHll DR. flf!M,\N IIW.TZ
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CAREA COD! (614:-J

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ONLY $}598-

252·3181

One or Two Day Full Denture
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49 E.LIVINGSTC
COLUMBUS, ailO 43205
'II Smile Tomorrow If You Ta./ce Care OJ Yuur l't crh 1'o do1'

MQN)AY THROUGH
8::.1 A.M. TO

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P.M.

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no matter what youit looking
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From

'I

..... ,

MONDAY
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
of ·Pomeroy Chamber of

Eastern Star, at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mr s. Marie Hawkin s
presented pins to Nora and
Denver Rice, Freda Hood.
and Olive Satterfield, and
Mrs. Emma K. Ch1tworlhy
presented one to he1· hu sband,
James Clalworthy.
MI·~. Sue Floyd, wm·thy
matron, and Paul Damell ,
worthy patron, presided at
the mee tin g wi th Mrs .
Hawkins as chaplam, Mrs.
Maryln WilcO&lt;, or~anist, and
Hm-ry Chesher , senline! pru
tem.
Communications were I'U ml
including a. lett.el' from Gaile
Dew, district pres ident,
O.E.S. Hospital Circle, and
Grm1d Chapter on housing
and pr e-reg ist1·ation . Mrs.
·Hawkin s will handle th e

house.

'"" '

I,

a smgspirutiun by the (;uild pastor .,f Moun I Moriuh and
Girls. Lhc Guild song and moderator of the Providence
Baptist
pledg e and a roll ca ll. Mlssionury
Devotions from I Peter 5, I tu Assocint ion, He also sang
5 were ~lven by the Guild " Hi s 8ycs are On the
girls and there was a solo, Sparrow " with Mrs. Cmllp·
"King Jesus Will Roll All My bell Harper us his uc Burdens Away" by Lori t'.oittpanist . Mrs. June Ct~rtcr
ol Btu-lin~ tun was pianist for
Jumes,
Bidwell ,
!1(.;
companied by her mulh~r . llw day.
Followin~ a lun cheon In the
Mrs. Joan Bass.
The morriin~ sermun wus church dinin ~ room, the
by the Rev . Henry Key, aflernoon pl' og rum began

wtth hymns or praise and
wurds of Inspiration from
Mrs. Dorothy Thomas, The
Ironton Guild Girls gave
devotions and .Mrs. Aggie
Randolph , state supervisor or
guilds , · and Mrs . Smith,
Providcr]('e District super·
visor of ~ullds; gave reports
und showed films of the
lluptist Wo1·Id Alliance held
in Stockholm, Sweden. Mrs.
J.uclll c Pauley, state
president of the Wom.en,'s
Auxiliur·y, unable to attend,
&gt;.ssistcd in preparing the
matcrinl presented at the
.meeting ,

• hw11111 llut!lllly • M1n1mum

$1 ,110~

DO

t

Pl,lble !I U Pit lly • M •~"'I Um \I 000 00

4· YEAR CERTIFICATE

6-YEAR CE RTIF ICATE

' 7~6.%
~All

7~~.%

• Plytblt D~trlllly 1 Minimum l\.000 Dtl

' Ptytble Qwltll ) 1 MlftiiiiW/11 l I,QVO 00

'

t Pl~lhlt

Ou l fll !ly I

MI~ I I!IUIII

1\ ,1101100

And tn addtllon In all lhl t • , . fMAihiW cr
IIUII \tll~ lncomt , , , ~I'd 0~ Ml, two, lhtlt,
lour ~~ tl• ynr tttllf,ealu. lnterttl pa~ ·
lbifl monthly tl you dulrt on tttU!Ittlu
¥~ 1 111 ta ct trnounl ol

15,000.00 or mn11

Ftdml Regulai 'O~I IIQ~Irl I IUIIIIIA!III
p~nlllv tor prtmtlurt wiiMrtwtl of Ctr11ftt i l&amp; tund1

you'll lind it at

OhioValley Bank
Wh y ~e t llu for lt:s• l han 1he best?
When it wmes to your ~avin gs, you
wan I a [nit· return. the hi ghesl lc•
gai ly possible, with " guaruntce of
sa fet y for you r funds, and at·

A

cess ibility lo th ese funds

•

on rensonn bl e notice of withdrawaL
This i~ exadl y what Ohio Valley
Bank wants and promises their depositors. No wonder savings deposits continue to be at an
all-time hi gh.

OhioValley Bank
Gallipolis Ch lo

M•mbtt FDIC

The leading savings plans are at ' the leading saving&amp; bank.

•

�- The Daily Sentinel Middleuort Pomerov 0 MoodiV May IU I» •

6-llle Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday May 10 1976
otlnt p ocedure u.aed A any e ee
tJon In wh h a candidate 1 PartY
det tna ion appean on the ballot.
the nam~: or delltnl ton of each
und da e 1 party U any aha I be
prtn ed under or af e.r ncb cand
da e a name n eN prominent tYP:t
faee han hat in wh ch the candl·
da e 1 name 1 pr1nted An e ecto
may o e for cand da e1 other han
cand da t:s to e ~to!'ll ot Pre• dent
a d VJ e P es dent ot he Unl eel
S at.et and other than cand idate~
fo Governor and L eu enan Gov
emor on y and tn no othe way
than by ndtca ng h 1 vo e f o e11ch
cand da e aepa ate y from he n
d ca on of hla vote for any o her
cand da e

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATIONS AND
RESOLUTIONS FOR AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE PRIMARY ELECTION JUNE 8 1976

1

PROPOSED CONST TUT ONAL
AMENDMENT

To amend Article UI Section 3
and Art! e V Sect on 1a o adoAt
Art c e I I Sectiona 11 and b and
to repea Art c: e II Sec: ton lfJ

EFFECTIVE DATE Aim RI:PEAL
U ado.p ed by a majo t y of the
e ec vrs o ng on th R amendment

he amendment aha
ake tmmed
a e e"ec and exll nt sect on 3
of Art e lJ and aec on 2a of
Art e V sha be repealed from
such ef!ec e date

Ohto ContUtuUon

TO UQUIJ\E THE
LIEVTEKAlfT QOVEIUfOII TO
BE ELECTED JOINTLY WlTH
THE GOVERNOR AND TO
1\EQUIRE THE &lt;&gt;EN£1\AL
AIIEMBLY TO PROVIDE BY
LAW THE METHOD or
KOMINATINQ CANDIDATES

FOR GOVERNOR AND
LIEUTENANT QOVEitNOR.
2 TO RELIEVE THE
LIEUTENANT GOVEIINOR 01
THE DUTY OF PRE BID INC
OVER tHE STATE SENATE
AND TO PROVIDE THAT HJS
DUTIES SHALL BE THOSE
ASSIGNED TO H M BY THE
GOVERNOR AlfD THOSE
PJ\ESCRIII!D BY LAW

SCHEDULE AND REPEAL
hctlon b of ArH • III a ulhorlJ:lng
tbt fOVtmor J:o aulp duUn n lh•

1••

execu
d•pa tment to lh•
Ut\l tnant vonrnor and the npaal
of l•ct on ll of Ar lc • III ahaU not

take etftcl un!U he ..c:ond Mondar

In January 1171

P poedb n ou nor
C e a Assemb y of Oh o

t!

nOPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL

4

7

AMENDMENT

To amc d sec o a 4 a d 9 o
c e XI Oh o Con
uUon

AME.NDMENf

A

To a nend sec ons and 4 and
to repea ec ons 3 and ~ o A:r e
V Oh o Colt!l l,lUon
TO CONFORM THE OHIO
COHSTITUT ON TO THE
UN TED STATES
CONSTITUTION 1\ND TO
FEDERAL COURT DEC S OMS
BY LOWERING THE VOTING
AOE TO E GHTI:EN AND
ELIM MATING THE S X
MONTHS RESIDENCY
REQUIREMENT
1. TO PERMIT THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY BY LAW TO
DENY PERSONS CONVICTED
OF A FELONY THE
PRIVILEGE OF VOTING OR
BEING EL GIBLE rOR
PUBL C OrFICE
3 TO REPEAL PROVISIONS
GRANTING VOTERS
PRIVILEGE fROM ARREST
AND REPEAL THE SECT ON
W H CH PROH 8 TS ftfiUT ARY
PERSONlfEL FROM VOTING
F'ROM A RES DENCE ON A
MILITARY INSTALLAT ON
W TH N THIS STA'l'E

PROPOSED CON'STI1 UTIONAL

TO REQUIIl.E A RETURN OF

l

NOT LESS THAN 50 PERCENT
01 THE ESTATE TAXES TO
POL T CAL SUBD VIS ONS
IN WHI CH THEY ORIGINATE
AS MAY BE PROVIDED BY
LAW
TO REQUIRE THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO RA SE
SUFriC ENT REVENUE
ANNUALLY TO PAY THE
PRINCIPAL AS WELL AS
INTEREST ON THE STATE
DEBT Afi T BECOMES DUE

SCHEDULE
The Sa a a y of Sla o aha au gn
IICI on 9 f on he cHecl ve da e of
the amendmen 1e t on 6 • a ready
all gned

ISSUE t

Amendfd S.n.ate Joint a.oJu ion
No. 11
JOINT RESOLUTION

Propoobatr t o . - - 1 ... '
of Art!ele V aa4 So n,..a .oio.D.a S aad I of Adlele "'f of U.
Col'altU•tloa of tile ltue oC OWo

11!1" to a.~ of

• ecton to NIIIO.. 1UII:OIIIItNtloa.al D4 ..._MIUT laap...
Be I reoolved by the a- a1 N.Rmbly of the State of Ohto h ee
fl.fUu ot the memben e ected 1o
ea h houtt eonC!\Irrtng therein that
there ahall be aubm tted to the e ee
ton of the state Jn the manner pr.
tcr1bc!d by law at he ~ 11 elee
t on to be held on the nrrt Tueadal
after the ftnrt Monday n 1une 197
a p oposal to amend the Con!t tu
n of he State ot Oh o by amend
nr Sec ons
and 4 of Art c e V
and repea ng sec Jons 3 and 5 ot
A

eVa.~oows

lilliE 7
(Amended Houte Joint ReiOlu Jon
No 1&lt;1

JOmT RESOLDTION
P101 nl•1 to ....... MCtio• t ud.
I Of Anlcde lOI of tiM C...attulllo • - ol Ollie to
elul.trol................
-p b = ' n n t i n . . . . . . . Ja laiii'UP
Be I """"ved by ~ Genoral ItA
aembly of the State ot Oblo thnl
8tt.lu of the members elected to
each. boute concurr1.n.a th.eretn 1bat
then lbaU be tubm tted. to the e ec
ton ot the Jtate in the manner~==
scribed by law at a 1pectal
t on to be he d on the Arrt t-u.41y
after the ftnt llonda:f in June 1t'l'fl.
a propoqJ to amen the Conltltu
t1on of the S ate ot Ohio by amend
lnr aectlou 4 ancl 9 ot ArUcle XD
thereof u follow1
ARTICLEXO

Section 4 The General Altemb})"
alUll provide tor r•llinl "vtnve1
illtll.clent to defray the e:rpen111 m
the atate tor each year and allo
a 1utne ent aum to pay principal
and. intereJt u triey becOme due
on the lt.ate debt
Section s Not ... thaD. ft.tty per
cent of the income estate and tn.
heritance taxet that may be col
ected. by the atate •hal be returned to the county 1choo cfil..
trtet ~tty vlli•te or towruhlp Jn
which Nld income estate or tn
her1tanee tax ortrtnate1 or to any
of the .tame u may be provided by

SCHEDULE AND REPEAL

Sec on lb of Art e e III au tho
ng the Go erno o us gn dut H
he execu e department o he
L eu eMn Governor and he e
pea t sec on 16 ot A t.!c e I 111ha
no ake eff'c t unt the eecond
Monday n Januru•y 1079
SSUE 2
Amended

BW

f adop ed by a rna o

y of the

e to s vot ng there n h s amend
men sha take mmed ate effect
and ex st ng secUona 1 and 4 and
ec ons 3 and ~ of Art cle V ahall
be
epealed t om 1uch effective
d• e

EFFI!CTIVE DATE AND IIEPI!AL

If adopted by a majori y of the

e ecton vottnr on th.U amendmen !
the amendmen and IChedule lha
take tm.medlate effect and exllttnr
Mcttona 4 and 9 of Artie e XJI ahall
be repealed. :from aueh effective

date

ISSUE 5

Am nded Sena e Joint Reso u on
No 9
OINT RESOLUT ON

P opo

Ge

SCHEDULE

It on the etrecUve date of 1htJ

amep.dment sect on number s ll
a ready aaaigned to a ~ect on ln
Art cle XII of he Constitution of
Ohio the Secretary o1 Sta e ahall
au rn eect: on number 0 'to the eec
ton 1n Article Xn tha WOU d be
amended by thll amendment to In
c ude a renumbering of the section
from MCtton 9 to section 6 and aucli.
nwnber llhaJ..l be the oflle aJ nwnber
ot such eeetion and shall be 10
publtshed ln any publication of tho
COJ'Uiititut on and shal l be cited. and
referred to by JUch number
IIIUE I

Amended Hou.ae Joint Reso uuon
No 15
JOINT RESOLUTION
Propo~lDg

to euc:t ..ctloD t o1
Arlld•
xu
7 I 10 aad"""
11 lo
of npHI
ArtieJ•- XU 01
llltli Coulllu1lon of the liala of

Ohio to eoa.ol..ldale bdo oae ..,..

lion pro'rialou fol' lmpwUloD of
tax• ud. to c1uUy Ja.apap ..

audl pro'l"'llou.
Be t reso ved by the General M

sembly of the State or Oh o three
fifths of he members eleeted to
each house Con urrlng therein that
there shall be sub,m ltted *o the elec
to s of the sta e 1n the manner prescri~ d by law at a special elec
t on to be he d on the 6rst Tues day
after he fl st Monday 1n June 91'8.
a p oposal to amend the Con.stltu
Uon at the S a e of Ohio by enact
ing sec on 3 of Artie e XII and re-.
p ea tng Ref ons 7 8 lOloand 12 of
Artie e XII 1hereot as
Uow1
ARTICLE XU
Sec on 3 Laws may be pa.aed
podiil.gto
a The taxat on of d~edentl'
estates or of the right to rece ve or
succeed to sueh estate~ and the
rates of 8ll h axatJon may be unt
tonn o may be graduated baaed
on the alue ol the estate nhert
ta.nce or au eeas on Such tax may
also be evted at d fferent ratee
upon co late al and dl ect Jnherl
tances and a port on ot each estate
may be exempt from such taxatton
as prov ded by law
b The axat on of incomes and
tbe rates of !nteh ta:xatlon may be
eJ he un!fonn or graduated and
may be app ted to such incomes
and w h such exemptions aa may
be provided by law
c Excise and franchlee taxee and
fo the lrnpos ton of taxes upon the
product on ot coa oll gas and
o her mine als except that no ex
c e tax shal be levied or co eeted
upon the sale or purchase of food
to human cot1Btll1lptlon otr the
premlset where sold

TO AUTHOR ZE THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO
PROV DE 8 Y LAW FOR THE
AMOUNT Or AN EST ATE
WH Cll S EXEMPT F ROM
TAXAT ON
2 TO CONSOLIDATE TAX NG
POWERS WH CH ARE IN
f'OUR SECT ONS NTO ONE
SECTION

2

PRO OSEO CONS'T' TU
AMENDME:Nf

ONAL

v
TO AUTHORIZE THE STATE
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS AND
REG ONAL TRANSPORT AT O N
AUTHORITIES TO LEND THE R
AID AND CREDIT TO FEDERAL
CORPORATIONS SUCH AS
AMTRAK AND CONRAIL AND TO
AN AGENCY OF THE STATE TO
PROVIDE RAIL
TRAHSPORTA'l'ION SERVICE
WITHIN THE STATE
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY IS
AUTHORIZED TO PROV DE
PROPERTY TAX REDUCT ONS
FOR PROPERTY USED TO
PROVIDE RAIL
TRANSPORTATION SERVICE
AND TO REIMBURSE LOCAL
GOVERNMENTS F OR THE
REVE!IUE LOST AS A RESULT
OF SUCH TAX REDUCT ONS

0 REQU RE MUN C PAL
AND COUNTY CHI\RTERS TO
PROV DE FOR TERMS OF
EVEN NUMBERED YEARS
FOR ELE CTED OFF I CE RS
2 TO REQU RE V/\ CANC ES N
At{Y ELECT VE STATE
OFF CE CREA TE D BY
ART CLES I AND I I AND
BY OR PURSUANT TO
ART CLE IV TO BE f LLED
ONLY AS PROV OED IN
S CHART C ES VACANC ES
IN ELECT VE STATE Of'r CES
NOT SO CREATED SHALL BE
F LLED D Y TH E GOVERNOR
UNT L A SUCCESSOR CAN
BE ELECTED FOR THE
UNCXP RED TEBM
3 THE PROV S ON
AUTHOR Z NG THE
GOVERNOR TO F LL A
VAC ANCY N THE 0 F CE
or L tUTENANT GOVERNOR
IS REPEALED

TAX MONEYS MAY NOT BE

0 NT RESOLU1 ON

FULL TEXT OF THE
RESOLUTIONS PROPOSING
EACH AMENDMENT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE 011' OHIO
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE
I TED W BROWN Secre ary of
S a e do hereby certify that the
to ego ng s a true copy ot
Amended Senate Joint Reso utlon
No 4 Amended House Jo nt Reso
u ion No 85 Amended Senat e .Joint
Reso u on No 39 Amended Senate
Joint Reso u ton No HI Amended
Sena e Jo n Resolution No 19
Amended House Join Reso ut on
No 0 Amended House Jo nt Resou ton No 4 and Amended Houae
J oint Reso u on No 15 proposing
to amend he Constttu on of Oh o
ogether w h the bal ot language
and e:xplana on for each ee UAed
o me by the Oho Ba lo Boa d
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF I
h a e hereunto subscribed my name
and a ffi xed my omo al seal at Co
umbus this ll5th day ot Aprll 978
TEDW BROWN
Secretary of State

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE NO 1

Storys Run
To

sc

may
the
ob

hese

3

PROPOSED CONST TUTIONAL
AMENDMENT

To anent! sec on 3 o Art
Oh o Cons u on

e V

TO l!ICLUDE ENERGY
F AC LITIES ..\MOHG THE
PURPOSES FOR f.IHICH PUBLIC
INDUSTRJAL DEVELOPMENT
BONDS MAY BE ISSUED AND
LOAN CUARANTEE PROCRAMB
U!IDEI\T AKEN WITHOUT
OBLICATINQ OR PLEDGING
MONEYS RAISED BY TAXATION
PROVIDED THAT SUCH
OBLlCATlONS SHALL NOT BE
MADE FOil F ACIUTIES OWNED
OR LEASED BY PUBLIC
VTILITIES

YES
NO

SHALL TH~
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED

o

p sc

of
Co

on7n
A
e

o epea
Oh o

xu

TO MAKE PROV SION FOR
RET REMENT OF GENE RAL
OBLIGAT ON BONDS AND
NOTES OF POLITICAL
SUBDIVISIONS FROM
LEGALLY AVAILABLE
SOUR CES NOT L MJTED TO
PROP ERTY TAXES AND FOR
LIM TATIONS BY THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY ON
THE AMOUNTS Or SUCH
BONDS AND NOTES SSUED
BY POLITICAL
SUBDIVISIONS
:t. TO J\EOU .ftE THE TIMELY
PAYMENT OF PR NC PJ\L
AND INTEREST OF GENERAL
OBLIGAT ON DEBT
INCURRED BY A POLITICAL

SUBDIVISION

3 TO REPEAL CONST TUT OHAL
PROVISIONS OP E RAT NG TO
IND RtCTL Y L M T T E
AMOUNT OF DEBT THAT
MAY BE INCURflED 8Y A
POLIT CAL SUBD VIS ON
WITHOUT A VOTE Or THE
ELECTORATE
I TO REPEAL REQUIREMENTS
T HAT POL i CAL
SUBDIVISIONS CREATE A
SINK NG FUlfD FOR THE
AEPJ\YMENT OF DEBT AT
MATUR TY
SCHEDULE
Th• Sec • •• f o Sh. e aha l ullga
see ion
f on he effective dale of
lhe amendm•n tectlon 1 ll already
an !filed

I
I

YF. S

EXPLAKATION OF ISSUE KO 3

The 1tated purpose of the reso u
tton 11 to enable 1111 e revenue bond
and. loan aaaJJtance o nd ull t al
and oommerclaJ ftm s that under
take .e f help el'l'ol'UI to p Oduce
na ur11 ra• oU o o her to ms ot
enerey £or their own use
To aecom.Pl sh h R the p oposed
amendment wo u d author ze tln11n

NO

EXPLANATION

or

ISSUE NO I

TAURUS (Apr 120 May 201 Be
ca e u
oday even w h
am a asks n you has e
you cou d do some h ng o
cause you a p ob em
GEMINI (May 21 Juno 20) You
cou d have emo se ate aday
yo spend mpu s ve y Be
su e wha you pu chase s
some h ng you ea y need o
wan

Jf on he eifec tve date ol this
amendmen
sec on numbe 7 1s
a eady ass gned to a sec on in
Art c e X I of the Cons u on of
Oh o he Secre a y of Sta e •ha ll
a gn ect.lon numbe 11 o the aec
on n Art c e XII enacted by thla
amendmcn a nd uch numbe Bha
be the orne
numbe of 1 ch sec
on and aha 1 be pub iahed n any
pub a ton of he Consti uUon a nd
sha be c1 ed and eferred o by
su h number

By Glenna Shuler
Rev and Mrs Lester
Taylor and Unda of Beave
Dam Mr and Mrs Amos
Leonard Rock Spr ngs
called on Mr and Mrs James
Conkle a recent evemng
Mr and Mrs Joe Leach
called on Mr and Mrs
Adolph Sm th m Jackson
recently
Mr and Mrs Denny Spires
Demse Jul e and Stephen
called on Mrs Florence
Caldwel Johnny and Uzz e
at Gall pohs
Mrs VIrgm a Wallis Penni
and H C Southside IN Va
Mrs Debbte Cheesebrew and
D edre Ann Southside W
Va Mrs Ruth Lambert Rt
I Pomeroy v sited recently
w th Mr and Mrs Robert
Conkle and C ndy
Rev and Mrs Oils
Chapman attended a songfest
at the Baptist Church m
Athens on Sunday
Mr and Mrs Marvm Petty
Clilumbus called Qn the John
Veith fam ly a day recently
Mrs Petty s spendmg th s
week with her grandmother
Mrs Sus1e Veith In M1d
die port
M ss Kim Oxyer spent a
day recently w1th Miss Cindy
Clinkle
Joey Leach near Rodney
called on Mr and Mrs Joe
Leach and Arthur a day
recently
Mrs R1ta Wh1te Kyger
called on Mr and Mrs Denny
Spires and children a day

\I

MRS EON A RUSSELL center coordinator of the
home health serv ce confers with Mrs Mary Jean

CANCER (June 21 July 22)
A hough l:OU may ee s o
he own good don ean oo
he a yon hose n you cha ge
oday S e n tac cs w
p od ce undes ab e effec 5

•Harr ron

left RN home health nurse and Mrs Isabelle
Cliuch nght secretary Mrs Elizabeth Sm th RN also
serves as a home health nurse

Continuity

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Today
someone w th u e o mot ves
may y o p essu e you n o
dong some h ng you know you
shou dn Don e he get o

you

LIBRA (Sopl 23 Oct 23)
Goa s mpo an o you oday
w no be handed o you on a
s e p a e They have o be
ea ned he ha d way
SCORPIO (Ocl
You
tle you
enemy o day
some h ng au o
e a g dge ga
hand

24 Nov 22)
own wo s
yo u d O'
sp e Don
n he uppe

ERMA SMITH r ght s superv sor of the Laundry Department and Margare Wh e
Other employees m the department are Dorothy Reeves and Roland Durst

P SCES (Fob 20 March 20)
Look g ho ses n he mou h
ada espec a y n co mme
c a nego a ons he e may be
some bu s ucked be ne a h he
sadd e

Your
Birthday
May 11 1976

recently
The children of Rev and
Mrs Raymond F le gathered
at the r parents home on
SWlday to help their mother
celebrate her b rthday
Present lor the happy oc
cas on were Mr and Mrs
James Keefer and Paula of
Leon W Va Mr and Mrs
George Keefer Gary and
JWJie Leon Mr and Mrs
Joe Keefer Larry and
Debb e Leon Mr and Mrs
Jack R1ggs Michael Teresa
and Pam of Letart W Va
Mr and Mrs Buddy F1fe
Brenda and Unda Turkey
RWl Mr and Mrs Roscoe E
F1fe Eno A most enJoyable
day was spent All Wishing
their mother many more
happy birthdays
Mr and Mrs Denny Spires
and lam ly called on Harold
Hill a Patnot a day recently
A bll'thday dmner hononng
several of Mr and Mrs Pearl
Edwards family was held at
their home on SWlday Apnl
25 All the r ch1ldren and
grandchildren were present
for the occasion They were
Buddy Unda Becky John
Dav1d and Mary Edwards of
Chester James Elsa and
Cheryl Folmer of Chester
Mr and Mrs Ralph Ed
wards Troy and Stacy Rt 1
Middleport Freddie JWJe
Sherr e and Lor Thomas Rt
I Cheshire Joe Betty Jane
and Joey Edwards Rt 1
Chesh re A most enjoble day
was spent
Mr and Mrs James Conkle
spent a recent evemng with
Mr and Mrs Harold
Blackston at Pomeroy
Mr and Mrs Charles
Leach Chad and Chris Rt 1
V nton called on Mr and
Mrs Joe Leach and Arthur
recently
Mr and Mrs Denny Spires
Denise Julie and Stephen
called on Muriel Spires and
lrma Bales also Mr and
Mrs Jr White were there
Mr and Mrs John Veith
called on Mrs Susie Veith In
Middleport a day recently
Hershell Gilkey and wife
Mrs Joan Fife and Melissa
called on Mr and Mrs Paul
Searls a day recently

of care is

Skilled people perfonn many

provided

tasks providing sern.ces at

MltS MAXINE HOBSIEIIER R N U I zntion
Hon e Health Serv ce s
Coo1
dmato wo ks w t1 ti e Ulli za Jo 1 Re cw
de s1gned
to
mcrease
Cli
1
mlttee
wl ch cons sts of two pi ys1 a s on the stuff
Ve erans Memonal Hosp tal
A wide rauge of skills and activities Is required to
All
pat
en
s
t nt a e ad lt L~l
de Me I I or
mvolvement n the provts on
provide the mlllly services at Veteran• Memorial Hospital
Med1care
ore
revtewcd
b)
I
er
n
I
ass1~~ ed
le ~ U of
of CommWJ ty Health Ser
where N.tlooal Hospital Week Is beinl obl!erved Mav 9 15
stay
according
othe
r
diagnoses
A
tl
e
end
of
t1
c length
v1ces and provide conUnu! y These photos emphasize thlo variety Other photographs of
of
stay
ll
e
chm
tIs
a~am
rev
ewed
and
(
n
cxte
so 1s
of care for lhe patient as he
activities at the hospital will be featured during th e week
this
may
be
granted
b)
t1
e
U
R
Con
1 ttce oftm
needed
returns from the hosp tal to
Bob HoeHich
consultation w lh the app op u e phys c nn IJ son w th
hts hom e al hough a pat enl
U
e dtschlll'ge pluMmg section s an unpo1tunt fen rc of
need not have been a he
the U R coord n tor
hospital to rece1ve serv ce
Tlie serv ce prov des sk I ed
nur s ng care
phys cal
therapy and home hea th a de
serv ce to home bound
pahents on an mterm ttent
bas s
can be made on request of
Hom e Heal h Se rv ce IS pa ent family or nterested
~':'- able o all perso ns person but for fur her care
res1d ng \lith n a reasonable pat ent must have a
d stance
of
Veterans phys can s order
Memor al Hosp tal regar~ersonnel 1n thts depart
less of age race rellgwn o men are
socto-econom c ~talus who e
Mrs Edna Russell R N
co nd1 t on nd1 cates hat coord nator
serv ce would be bene! ctal
Mrs El zabeth Sn th
and needed If pat en I ves R N Home Hea lh Nurse
outs de th s radius proper
Mrs Mary Jean Harr son
referrals w1l be made
R N Home Hea th Nurse
Home care s prov1ded only
Mrs Isa belle Couch
under orders !rom he Sec e ary
pa ent s phys c an and n ust
Our ng the year of 1975
be des1red by pahent and tllere were 918 nurs ng 9
fmmly Home care s ap phys cal therapy 87 home
propr ate fo patents whose health a de nd 15 evaluatiOn
cond bon does not reqUire v s1ls made for a olal of 2 029
mtenstve professwnal care v s ts Personnel traveled
and a responsible person 24 035 miles for an average of
must be available to provide 11 8 miles per v s There
necessa ry care between were 91 new admiSSIOns and
MARJORIE SMITH SUPERVISOR of housekeeping
v s1 s One eval uat on v1s t 74 d scharges
finds there is plenty of work to keep her staff busv aro nrl
the clock at the local hosp tal

Soc1al
Calendar

SAG TTARIUS (Nov 23 Dtc
211 A o d ga he ngs whe e
11 e e s key o be someone
he e you e no oo fond o
Th s pe son cou d ea y ge
unde you sk n oday

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fob 19)
You cou d be d cu o wo k
o oday as yo u may ask
o he s o do h ng s you wou d
ne e h nk of dong you se f

CONSTANT MAINTENANCE Is requ red at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Here Thomas McGrath repamts a
doorway

Veterans Memorial Hospital

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Be
ca e u oday n dea ng w h
e ds whe e money s an
ssue The e cou d be a se ous
m su de s an d ng
s no
handed p ope y

the amendment shal take lmmec!t
a e et!'ect and sec toM 7 8 0 and
12 of Art c e xn ot the Cons t utlon
ot Oh o lllhaU be repea ed from rueh
effect e date

I SSUE 6
A
ctedHoue m R ou on
No 10

he

ARIES (March 21 April 11)
Avo d a compan on w h a
knack fo c ea ng p ob ems at
he sma est p ovocat on She
coud n oveyou nsomehng
nas y oday

EfFECTIVE DATE AND REPI:AL
t adopted by a m ajori y of the
e ec ton voting on hJs amendment

USED FOR THE REPA'Y'MENT OF
ANY DEBT INCURRED FOR
THESE PURP OSES

P oposed by Re!lo u on o
Geru; al A semb of Oh

For Tutlday May 11 117f

Black
bag jobs
common
WASHINGTON (UP!) The FBI conducted more
than 200 llegal black bag
job
break ns agamst
domes! c groups between
1948 and 1966 without tellmg
the Just ce Department a
Senate committee staff
report sa1d today
The report latest m a
senes released by the Senate
Intell gence Climm1ttee sa1d
former FBI Director J
Edgar Hoover outlawed the
practice for use agamst
domestic argets in 1966 for
und sclosed reasons
It quoted from a 1966 staff
memo by former ass stan!
FBI director W1lham C
Sullivan
saymg
the
techmque was
clearly
and
that
Illega l
author zatton was not sought
outs1de the FBI because t
would be unposs ble to obtam
any egal sanction for It
The comm1ttee satd the
FBI continues today to use
clandestme entry techmques
Without warrants to gather
ev dence on foreign agents
wtth the penmss on of the
Justice Department II
recommended that warrants
be requ red
Other committee reports
ssued durmg the past week
have told of 40 years of FBI
bugg ng and tappmg of
telephones m noncriminal
cases and traced the
development of domestic
spy ng actl v t es that
included the me tement of
VIolence between nval
lac ons of diss1dent groups
The reporls prompted an
unprecedent ed publi c
apology from FBI director
Clarence J Kelley who sa1d
In a speech at Westm nster
College m Fulton Mo
Saturday
We are truly
sorry we were responsible lor
Instances wh ch now are
subJect to such cr he sm He
sa1d they must not be
repeated
Th e latest report sa1d
black bag entr es agamst
a least 15 targets were apart
from 1 000 other breaklns
made to nstall h dden
microphones or Wiretaps
It srud the FBI reported at
least 239 entr es between 1942
and 1966 more than 200 of
them n the post World War II
years and some of them
mvolvmg repeated entries
agamst the same targets
Desp1te Hoover s ban the
report sa ld there was

RAY CROMLEY

Short changing
crime control
GARY WHARTON mhalat!on therapist at Veterans
Memorial Hospital gtves respiratory treatments to
pahents m the hospttal and to outpahents for astlnna
emphysema or general congestion m their lungs He IS
also respons ble for admm stermg oxygen to patients who
have difficulty m breathmg He is m the hospital Monday
through Friday 8 a m to 4 30 p m
ev dence one Illegal breakm
was made aga nst a
domestic
subvers ve
target between 1966 and
1968
Targets mcluded the Ku
Klux Klan the Social st
Workers Party and ts
aff1hates and an unidentified
white hate group
The report sa1d m most
cases the FBI was able to
obtam keys for the bi'eakins
from cooperative landlords
or neighbors but 1f this was
IIDpoSSlble agents spectally
tramed m lock studies
were available to open doors
and safes

One SWP affiliate was such
a frequent target the FBI
even had wr tten mstruct ons
to burglarize its offices the
report sa1d The FBI
carefully avo ded menhon of
breakms for any purpose to
higher offiCials the report
smd
It quoted one FBI official
who bnefed former attorney
general Robert F KelUiedy
on bugging operat ons as
saymg be was purposely
vague and that KeMedy
may not have been aware
breakms were used to plant
the bugs

Greer of Mason received

Arts Degree on Saturday
MASON
WII Iam Lee
Greer a res dent of Mason
received a Master of Arts
degree from the West
V1rgln1a College of Graduate
Studies Saturday
SCIOTO Vlt"rOR

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Sovere gn Wamor dnven by
Ralph Lunsford led all the
way to a neck VIC ory over
Cloverleaf J1m m the
featured $8 000 n nth race at
Sc oto Downs Saturday n ght
Elmes Pacesetter was
third
The wmner was timed at
2 01 2-5 and re urned $3 40
$2110 and $2 20
Zolo and Ready Qu1ck com
b ned for a 7 I dally double
worth $68 00
Attendanc1 was 8 437 and
the handle $42fi 756

His degree was n Spe1cal
Educat on
Greer IS currently a
teacher at the Mason County
Vocal onal Technical
Center He IS presently
servmg as an officer of the
MCEA Federal Credit Umon
Greer IS marr ed to the
former Betty Roush of Letart
and they have one son Jeff
They are members of the
Bellemead Umted Methochst
Church
Attend ng from out of town
were h1s parenls Mr and
Mrs James Lee Greer of
Cherry H II New Jersey
In 1973 former Attorney
General John M tchell and
former Commerce Secretary
Maunce Stans were nchcted
on per)ury charges ~Y a
federa l grand JUry

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON A muldle-aged fr end m my home towr
m Califorma s hesitant about gomg out on the streets m broad
daylight m a qu1et middle class remdenllal neighborhood
There are few of us whether we live in suburbs or c ties
East West North or South who haven thad a fr end mugged
Not m the slums but n the tree lmed avenues or modern
bus ness distr cts once considered safe
Alady I know In her 70s hvmg mone of the above-average
neighborhoods n the outskirts of Washington has like many
of her fr1ends bought a gun for protection
In my own subdivls on m the suburbs poPillated by PhDs
and pubhc offlCIBls w ves and daughters have been advised
not to open the door when strangers knock or rmg the bell
Increasrngly the v cttms seem to be women and elderly and of all races
The statistics have unpelled one congressman to mtroduce
a b ll callmg for strong penalties for anyone convteted of an
assault on anyone over 60
The pity IS that we should think In terms of new laws For
the present laws are not workmg And though we spend b Uons
the federal government alone Will spend $3 billion this year
on actiVIt es a1m1ng at the reduction of crime - we take very
httle mterest mfinding out why what were domg doesn t work
And s nee we don t know what we re domg the spending of
add1honal b lhons on priSOns pollee and the like can be largely
wasted There is evidence m fact that In a ser es of target
CJbes wherespec1al funds were spent and spec al efforts made
to reduce crune the results have been negligible
As we all know great strides In mdustry m agrteulture
and m health have resulted from pourmg biii!ons mto
research The federal budget puts out $2 bUl!on a year on
medical and health research alone And the states add close to
$100 million more
But not for research on the control of criiDe Out of thell'
quarter b!lhon a year total research and development budgets
the 50 states spend a mere $4 6 million or I 7 per cent on
research m crime prevent on and control
The federal government does no better Though accurate
f gures are not available President Ford and h1s predecessors
have spent a mere pittance out of their overall $20 b1U1on to $24
blll on a year research and development budgets on true
research on the control of criiDe
True research that Is as distinct from the mere gathermg
of stat!sbcs though that is Important too as a start
This neglect 1s all the more criminal because careful
studies during the past two decades and more mdicate that the
meager data ava1lable gives little or no support to any of the
current theories on crune control and prevention
We do not know what todo w1th the men and women we put
m )ali or how long to keep them there or when they are ready
for parole or how tight a leash should be kept on them during
parole We don t know how to cut back on the rec dlviSm the
repeat~rs who apparently account for such a high proport on of
our crone

We can t account for the fact that so few criJDes are solved
or that so few alleged crumnals caught are convicted We
know that there 1s oomethmg wrong when so many conun1t
criJDes when they are on parole or out on bond awa1tlng tr1al
We all have our tlieor1es But we fall to reach agreement
because we don t have hard evidence
Why we don t spend the money necessary to produce the
research wh ch could bnng us closer to the answer s puzzling
mdeed

Polly's Pomters
Cook and freeze
1
your sale roasts
By Polly Cramer
INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY
careful y watch he news
papers for the bes buys n
roasls and all meats II ave a
large roast ng pan so when I
see a good buy on a roast I
buy !11 o and cook bo h al the
same me ln he san e
roas t ng pan I only eave
them n he oven long enough
to ge ea ly hot and seasoned
all lhe way through Th en I
pre hea my s ow cooker and
f n sh cookmg both roasts
together When cooked hey
are put n fo1 lined pans or
carlons and frozen for later
use rh s saves t me and fuel
and e na n part of tw o
dmners s cooked 1n one af
ternoon
MRS E D
DEAR POLLY I used to
buy a bu Ia of d shwasl ng
detergent every wo weeks
but with 1 y new method a
boUle asts a mon h I pul he
detergent n an emply c ean
spra y bo lie This really
makes it go much farther
Please try th s and you w II
f n I you eal y save n oney
PEARL
DEAR POLlY - When
shopp ng for tea bags he
other lay I was appalled at
he pncc so I bough bulk
lea I r ed mak ng tea m mv
dr p coffee maker and t
w ked beaul fully I put one
tablespoon of loose ca m he
f1 ter paper nstead of coffee
and th s made lour to s x cups
of I nc ca I hope this dea
w II he p other tea dr nkers
MJ I
DEAR POLLY
We are
an e onomy m nded fa n ly
and have a good Po nler for
sav ng on he cost of
deodo ani Wen ake our own
Two casp ns of bak ng
wo
teaspoons
soda
pet roleun elly and wo
easpo ns alcorn powder are
p t n he
p f a double
holler an I e ed JUSt enougl
ake 1as e Pu n a
~h f t g

ld If l c p scsee sa l t
ck I add
l t lc col i
c em rh1s really w rk
SHIRl EY
DEAR POl I Y
o
longer I ave to buy coppe
cleaner I save p cklc JU c~
ha woull be disca dec an t
f I
s a g eat and
cconom al clea ner I stram
nto an en pty squ t
abel l Coppc
Cleanc and keep t I an ly
by I e k tch n nk Po ly s
n tc
I r und U 1s w rked
greal on I e OJll er bot 01 If
a pa
but I wou I n
me hately r sc t ff \\ell
w I hot wa er and then r b to
a sh nc) - CLAHA
DEAR POll Y- 1 would
l kc u p
u
parakeet ow e
I c 11ay I
save money on I e lotlc.l
rhcy a ways ale c op la yc
f fo &gt;d but lef the bo tom
In s cad of throw ng lh s
away I save t n a ar When
1run u of cc I I ~ke these
If v
uts de an I pour ll e
seeds and I ulls Iron one
conl&lt;llner o uno her so the
w nd b ows he hulls away It
s surpr s ng how m ny seeds
rcma n I ook e years to
real ze 1 was actuall y
hrow ng away alf he b d
see I was buy ng - WII MA

s

You 1111! receive a rl liar if
P lly uses your fa vo rite
hom emaking td clt Pet
Peeve Polly s Pr bl m or
solution to a problem Write
Polly in care of thls newspaper

NEW.ARK MAN SOUGHT
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Pollee are searchmg for Jack
Keith Mmser 45 Newark for
aggravaled robbery of the
Tremont
Cleane rs In
Cohun bus
Mmser IS accused of a $74
holdup la st Tuesday

Hanisonville
Society News
Allee B II and son of 1ole lo
spent everal lays wlU Mr
and Mrs Eugene YoiU g
Ca I Sa psori wrecked lls
car wl en hiS brakes failed
Mrs San 1SOI s a surgiCal
pat ent at Holzer Medical
Center M nn e McGrath ~
passe gm ln tl e car escaped
11 u
few I u scs Mr
Sampson was no I urt
Mr and Mrs Ro be~l
G bson and daughter Robin
of Co u nbus were din qr
guests of tlle Robert Alklros
Sunday
Mr and Mrs Dale Wha cy
of Ga ll po IS ca led on the
Robert A kires
Mr and Mrs Larry Clark
and daugh ters
far ra
Penny and Wend y were
supper guests of the Robert
Cla rks on Saturday
Rev and Mrs Ernest
S n cklen of Athens ca lled on
Ava G lkey Sa turday
Waldo Nea l and Murl
Douglas arc med cal patlenls
at Veterans Memor al
Hosp al
Mr and Mrs F 0 Whaley
of Columbus were weekend
gues s of Ava Gilkey Mr and
Mrs Chnton Gilkey of Albany
and Karen Gilkey of Athens
called on Sunday evening
Recent Su nd ay d nner
gues s of Elda Carsey were
Mr and Mrs Carl Knicely
Kate Mrs Beryl Wya t
and Mr and Mrs Junior Ash
a I of Dayton Mr and Mrs
Thor Carsey of PmmeroY,
Mr and Mrs Bill Chapma9
and two sons and Mr and
Mrs Joe Carsey local
Mrs Bess e Graham has
e urned home after a vis ~
With her son Jack Sampson
n Flonda
Mrs Russel Eshelmen ancl
son Buddy spent a weeken4
m Clilll/llbUs w1th her slster1
Mr and Mrs Darola
Graham and three Children ol
Newark spent a weekend w t1l
Besse Graham and Joe
Carseys
WON BY FORFEIT
The
Middleport
In
depend ent Baseball 1eam
won a 9-1l forfe a Tuppers
Plams Sunday afternoon
when Tuppers Pia ns did not
furn sh wnp1res A prac Ice
game was p ayed Instead
M ddlcpori s now 2-1l

�- The Daily Sentinel Middleuort Pomerov 0 MoodiV May IU I» •

6-llle Dally Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday May 10 1976
otlnt p ocedure u.aed A any e ee
tJon In wh h a candidate 1 PartY
det tna ion appean on the ballot.
the nam~: or delltnl ton of each
und da e 1 party U any aha I be
prtn ed under or af e.r ncb cand
da e a name n eN prominent tYP:t
faee han hat in wh ch the candl·
da e 1 name 1 pr1nted An e ecto
may o e for cand da e1 other han
cand da t:s to e ~to!'ll ot Pre• dent
a d VJ e P es dent ot he Unl eel
S at.et and other than cand idate~
fo Governor and L eu enan Gov
emor on y and tn no othe way
than by ndtca ng h 1 vo e f o e11ch
cand da e aepa ate y from he n
d ca on of hla vote for any o her
cand da e

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATIONS AND
RESOLUTIONS FOR AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE PRIMARY ELECTION JUNE 8 1976

1

PROPOSED CONST TUT ONAL
AMENDMENT

To amend Article UI Section 3
and Art! e V Sect on 1a o adoAt
Art c e I I Sectiona 11 and b and
to repea Art c: e II Sec: ton lfJ

EFFECTIVE DATE Aim RI:PEAL
U ado.p ed by a majo t y of the
e ec vrs o ng on th R amendment

he amendment aha
ake tmmed
a e e"ec and exll nt sect on 3
of Art e lJ and aec on 2a of
Art e V sha be repealed from
such ef!ec e date

Ohto ContUtuUon

TO UQUIJ\E THE
LIEVTEKAlfT QOVEIUfOII TO
BE ELECTED JOINTLY WlTH
THE GOVERNOR AND TO
1\EQUIRE THE &lt;&gt;EN£1\AL
AIIEMBLY TO PROVIDE BY
LAW THE METHOD or
KOMINATINQ CANDIDATES

FOR GOVERNOR AND
LIEUTENANT QOVEitNOR.
2 TO RELIEVE THE
LIEUTENANT GOVEIINOR 01
THE DUTY OF PRE BID INC
OVER tHE STATE SENATE
AND TO PROVIDE THAT HJS
DUTIES SHALL BE THOSE
ASSIGNED TO H M BY THE
GOVERNOR AlfD THOSE
PJ\ESCRIII!D BY LAW

SCHEDULE AND REPEAL
hctlon b of ArH • III a ulhorlJ:lng
tbt fOVtmor J:o aulp duUn n lh•

1••

execu
d•pa tment to lh•
Ut\l tnant vonrnor and the npaal
of l•ct on ll of Ar lc • III ahaU not

take etftcl un!U he ..c:ond Mondar

In January 1171

P poedb n ou nor
C e a Assemb y of Oh o

t!

nOPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL

4

7

AMENDMENT

To amc d sec o a 4 a d 9 o
c e XI Oh o Con
uUon

AME.NDMENf

A

To a nend sec ons and 4 and
to repea ec ons 3 and ~ o A:r e
V Oh o Colt!l l,lUon
TO CONFORM THE OHIO
COHSTITUT ON TO THE
UN TED STATES
CONSTITUTION 1\ND TO
FEDERAL COURT DEC S OMS
BY LOWERING THE VOTING
AOE TO E GHTI:EN AND
ELIM MATING THE S X
MONTHS RESIDENCY
REQUIREMENT
1. TO PERMIT THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY BY LAW TO
DENY PERSONS CONVICTED
OF A FELONY THE
PRIVILEGE OF VOTING OR
BEING EL GIBLE rOR
PUBL C OrFICE
3 TO REPEAL PROVISIONS
GRANTING VOTERS
PRIVILEGE fROM ARREST
AND REPEAL THE SECT ON
W H CH PROH 8 TS ftfiUT ARY
PERSONlfEL FROM VOTING
F'ROM A RES DENCE ON A
MILITARY INSTALLAT ON
W TH N THIS STA'l'E

PROPOSED CON'STI1 UTIONAL

TO REQUIIl.E A RETURN OF

l

NOT LESS THAN 50 PERCENT
01 THE ESTATE TAXES TO
POL T CAL SUBD VIS ONS
IN WHI CH THEY ORIGINATE
AS MAY BE PROVIDED BY
LAW
TO REQUIRE THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO RA SE
SUFriC ENT REVENUE
ANNUALLY TO PAY THE
PRINCIPAL AS WELL AS
INTEREST ON THE STATE
DEBT Afi T BECOMES DUE

SCHEDULE
The Sa a a y of Sla o aha au gn
IICI on 9 f on he cHecl ve da e of
the amendmen 1e t on 6 • a ready
all gned

ISSUE t

Amendfd S.n.ate Joint a.oJu ion
No. 11
JOINT RESOLUTION

Propoobatr t o . - - 1 ... '
of Art!ele V aa4 So n,..a .oio.D.a S aad I of Adlele "'f of U.
Col'altU•tloa of tile ltue oC OWo

11!1" to a.~ of

• ecton to NIIIO.. 1UII:OIIIItNtloa.al D4 ..._MIUT laap...
Be I reoolved by the a- a1 N.Rmbly of the State of Ohto h ee
fl.fUu ot the memben e ected 1o
ea h houtt eonC!\Irrtng therein that
there ahall be aubm tted to the e ee
ton of the state Jn the manner pr.
tcr1bc!d by law at he ~ 11 elee
t on to be held on the nrrt Tueadal
after the ftnrt Monday n 1une 197
a p oposal to amend the Con!t tu
n of he State ot Oh o by amend
nr Sec ons
and 4 of Art c e V
and repea ng sec Jons 3 and 5 ot
A

eVa.~oows

lilliE 7
(Amended Houte Joint ReiOlu Jon
No 1&lt;1

JOmT RESOLDTION
P101 nl•1 to ....... MCtio• t ud.
I Of Anlcde lOI of tiM C...attulllo • - ol Ollie to
elul.trol................
-p b = ' n n t i n . . . . . . . Ja laiii'UP
Be I """"ved by ~ Genoral ItA
aembly of the State ot Oblo thnl
8tt.lu of the members elected to
each. boute concurr1.n.a th.eretn 1bat
then lbaU be tubm tted. to the e ec
ton ot the Jtate in the manner~==
scribed by law at a 1pectal
t on to be he d on the Arrt t-u.41y
after the ftnt llonda:f in June 1t'l'fl.
a propoqJ to amen the Conltltu
t1on of the S ate ot Ohio by amend
lnr aectlou 4 ancl 9 ot ArUcle XD
thereof u follow1
ARTICLEXO

Section 4 The General Altemb})"
alUll provide tor r•llinl "vtnve1
illtll.clent to defray the e:rpen111 m
the atate tor each year and allo
a 1utne ent aum to pay principal
and. intereJt u triey becOme due
on the lt.ate debt
Section s Not ... thaD. ft.tty per
cent of the income estate and tn.
heritance taxet that may be col
ected. by the atate •hal be returned to the county 1choo cfil..
trtet ~tty vlli•te or towruhlp Jn
which Nld income estate or tn
her1tanee tax ortrtnate1 or to any
of the .tame u may be provided by

SCHEDULE AND REPEAL

Sec on lb of Art e e III au tho
ng the Go erno o us gn dut H
he execu e department o he
L eu eMn Governor and he e
pea t sec on 16 ot A t.!c e I 111ha
no ake eff'c t unt the eecond
Monday n Januru•y 1079
SSUE 2
Amended

BW

f adop ed by a rna o

y of the

e to s vot ng there n h s amend
men sha take mmed ate effect
and ex st ng secUona 1 and 4 and
ec ons 3 and ~ of Art cle V ahall
be
epealed t om 1uch effective
d• e

EFFI!CTIVE DATE AND IIEPI!AL

If adopted by a majori y of the

e ecton vottnr on th.U amendmen !
the amendmen and IChedule lha
take tm.medlate effect and exllttnr
Mcttona 4 and 9 of Artie e XJI ahall
be repealed. :from aueh effective

date

ISSUE 5

Am nded Sena e Joint Reso u on
No 9
OINT RESOLUT ON

P opo

Ge

SCHEDULE

It on the etrecUve date of 1htJ

amep.dment sect on number s ll
a ready aaaigned to a ~ect on ln
Art cle XII of he Constitution of
Ohio the Secretary o1 Sta e ahall
au rn eect: on number 0 'to the eec
ton 1n Article Xn tha WOU d be
amended by thll amendment to In
c ude a renumbering of the section
from MCtton 9 to section 6 and aucli.
nwnber llhaJ..l be the oflle aJ nwnber
ot such eeetion and shall be 10
publtshed ln any publication of tho
COJ'Uiititut on and shal l be cited. and
referred to by JUch number
IIIUE I

Amended Hou.ae Joint Reso uuon
No 15
JOINT RESOLUTION
Propo~lDg

to euc:t ..ctloD t o1
Arlld•
xu
7 I 10 aad"""
11 lo
of npHI
ArtieJ•- XU 01
llltli Coulllu1lon of the liala of

Ohio to eoa.ol..ldale bdo oae ..,..

lion pro'rialou fol' lmpwUloD of
tax• ud. to c1uUy Ja.apap ..

audl pro'l"'llou.
Be t reso ved by the General M

sembly of the State or Oh o three
fifths of he members eleeted to
each house Con urrlng therein that
there shall be sub,m ltted *o the elec
to s of the sta e 1n the manner prescri~ d by law at a special elec
t on to be he d on the 6rst Tues day
after he fl st Monday 1n June 91'8.
a p oposal to amend the Con.stltu
Uon at the S a e of Ohio by enact
ing sec on 3 of Artie e XII and re-.
p ea tng Ref ons 7 8 lOloand 12 of
Artie e XII 1hereot as
Uow1
ARTICLE XU
Sec on 3 Laws may be pa.aed
podiil.gto
a The taxat on of d~edentl'
estates or of the right to rece ve or
succeed to sueh estate~ and the
rates of 8ll h axatJon may be unt
tonn o may be graduated baaed
on the alue ol the estate nhert
ta.nce or au eeas on Such tax may
also be evted at d fferent ratee
upon co late al and dl ect Jnherl
tances and a port on ot each estate
may be exempt from such taxatton
as prov ded by law
b The axat on of incomes and
tbe rates of !nteh ta:xatlon may be
eJ he un!fonn or graduated and
may be app ted to such incomes
and w h such exemptions aa may
be provided by law
c Excise and franchlee taxee and
fo the lrnpos ton of taxes upon the
product on ot coa oll gas and
o her mine als except that no ex
c e tax shal be levied or co eeted
upon the sale or purchase of food
to human cot1Btll1lptlon otr the
premlset where sold

TO AUTHOR ZE THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO
PROV DE 8 Y LAW FOR THE
AMOUNT Or AN EST ATE
WH Cll S EXEMPT F ROM
TAXAT ON
2 TO CONSOLIDATE TAX NG
POWERS WH CH ARE IN
f'OUR SECT ONS NTO ONE
SECTION

2

PRO OSEO CONS'T' TU
AMENDME:Nf

ONAL

v
TO AUTHORIZE THE STATE
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS AND
REG ONAL TRANSPORT AT O N
AUTHORITIES TO LEND THE R
AID AND CREDIT TO FEDERAL
CORPORATIONS SUCH AS
AMTRAK AND CONRAIL AND TO
AN AGENCY OF THE STATE TO
PROVIDE RAIL
TRAHSPORTA'l'ION SERVICE
WITHIN THE STATE
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY IS
AUTHORIZED TO PROV DE
PROPERTY TAX REDUCT ONS
FOR PROPERTY USED TO
PROVIDE RAIL
TRANSPORTATION SERVICE
AND TO REIMBURSE LOCAL
GOVERNMENTS F OR THE
REVE!IUE LOST AS A RESULT
OF SUCH TAX REDUCT ONS

0 REQU RE MUN C PAL
AND COUNTY CHI\RTERS TO
PROV DE FOR TERMS OF
EVEN NUMBERED YEARS
FOR ELE CTED OFF I CE RS
2 TO REQU RE V/\ CANC ES N
At{Y ELECT VE STATE
OFF CE CREA TE D BY
ART CLES I AND I I AND
BY OR PURSUANT TO
ART CLE IV TO BE f LLED
ONLY AS PROV OED IN
S CHART C ES VACANC ES
IN ELECT VE STATE Of'r CES
NOT SO CREATED SHALL BE
F LLED D Y TH E GOVERNOR
UNT L A SUCCESSOR CAN
BE ELECTED FOR THE
UNCXP RED TEBM
3 THE PROV S ON
AUTHOR Z NG THE
GOVERNOR TO F LL A
VAC ANCY N THE 0 F CE
or L tUTENANT GOVERNOR
IS REPEALED

TAX MONEYS MAY NOT BE

0 NT RESOLU1 ON

FULL TEXT OF THE
RESOLUTIONS PROPOSING
EACH AMENDMENT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE 011' OHIO
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE
I TED W BROWN Secre ary of
S a e do hereby certify that the
to ego ng s a true copy ot
Amended Senate Joint Reso utlon
No 4 Amended House Jo nt Reso
u ion No 85 Amended Senat e .Joint
Reso u on No 39 Amended Senate
Joint Reso u ton No HI Amended
Sena e Jo n Resolution No 19
Amended House Join Reso ut on
No 0 Amended House Jo nt Resou ton No 4 and Amended Houae
J oint Reso u on No 15 proposing
to amend he Constttu on of Oh o
ogether w h the bal ot language
and e:xplana on for each ee UAed
o me by the Oho Ba lo Boa d
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF I
h a e hereunto subscribed my name
and a ffi xed my omo al seal at Co
umbus this ll5th day ot Aprll 978
TEDW BROWN
Secretary of State

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE NO 1

Storys Run
To

sc

may
the
ob

hese

3

PROPOSED CONST TUTIONAL
AMENDMENT

To anent! sec on 3 o Art
Oh o Cons u on

e V

TO l!ICLUDE ENERGY
F AC LITIES ..\MOHG THE
PURPOSES FOR f.IHICH PUBLIC
INDUSTRJAL DEVELOPMENT
BONDS MAY BE ISSUED AND
LOAN CUARANTEE PROCRAMB
U!IDEI\T AKEN WITHOUT
OBLICATINQ OR PLEDGING
MONEYS RAISED BY TAXATION
PROVIDED THAT SUCH
OBLlCATlONS SHALL NOT BE
MADE FOil F ACIUTIES OWNED
OR LEASED BY PUBLIC
VTILITIES

YES
NO

SHALL TH~
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED

o

p sc

of
Co

on7n
A
e

o epea
Oh o

xu

TO MAKE PROV SION FOR
RET REMENT OF GENE RAL
OBLIGAT ON BONDS AND
NOTES OF POLITICAL
SUBDIVISIONS FROM
LEGALLY AVAILABLE
SOUR CES NOT L MJTED TO
PROP ERTY TAXES AND FOR
LIM TATIONS BY THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY ON
THE AMOUNTS Or SUCH
BONDS AND NOTES SSUED
BY POLITICAL
SUBDIVISIONS
:t. TO J\EOU .ftE THE TIMELY
PAYMENT OF PR NC PJ\L
AND INTEREST OF GENERAL
OBLIGAT ON DEBT
INCURRED BY A POLITICAL

SUBDIVISION

3 TO REPEAL CONST TUT OHAL
PROVISIONS OP E RAT NG TO
IND RtCTL Y L M T T E
AMOUNT OF DEBT THAT
MAY BE INCURflED 8Y A
POLIT CAL SUBD VIS ON
WITHOUT A VOTE Or THE
ELECTORATE
I TO REPEAL REQUIREMENTS
T HAT POL i CAL
SUBDIVISIONS CREATE A
SINK NG FUlfD FOR THE
AEPJ\YMENT OF DEBT AT
MATUR TY
SCHEDULE
Th• Sec • •• f o Sh. e aha l ullga
see ion
f on he effective dale of
lhe amendm•n tectlon 1 ll already
an !filed

I
I

YF. S

EXPLAKATION OF ISSUE KO 3

The 1tated purpose of the reso u
tton 11 to enable 1111 e revenue bond
and. loan aaaJJtance o nd ull t al
and oommerclaJ ftm s that under
take .e f help el'l'ol'UI to p Oduce
na ur11 ra• oU o o her to ms ot
enerey £or their own use
To aecom.Pl sh h R the p oposed
amendment wo u d author ze tln11n

NO

EXPLANATION

or

ISSUE NO I

TAURUS (Apr 120 May 201 Be
ca e u
oday even w h
am a asks n you has e
you cou d do some h ng o
cause you a p ob em
GEMINI (May 21 Juno 20) You
cou d have emo se ate aday
yo spend mpu s ve y Be
su e wha you pu chase s
some h ng you ea y need o
wan

Jf on he eifec tve date ol this
amendmen
sec on numbe 7 1s
a eady ass gned to a sec on in
Art c e X I of the Cons u on of
Oh o he Secre a y of Sta e •ha ll
a gn ect.lon numbe 11 o the aec
on n Art c e XII enacted by thla
amendmcn a nd uch numbe Bha
be the orne
numbe of 1 ch sec
on and aha 1 be pub iahed n any
pub a ton of he Consti uUon a nd
sha be c1 ed and eferred o by
su h number

By Glenna Shuler
Rev and Mrs Lester
Taylor and Unda of Beave
Dam Mr and Mrs Amos
Leonard Rock Spr ngs
called on Mr and Mrs James
Conkle a recent evemng
Mr and Mrs Joe Leach
called on Mr and Mrs
Adolph Sm th m Jackson
recently
Mr and Mrs Denny Spires
Demse Jul e and Stephen
called on Mrs Florence
Caldwel Johnny and Uzz e
at Gall pohs
Mrs VIrgm a Wallis Penni
and H C Southside IN Va
Mrs Debbte Cheesebrew and
D edre Ann Southside W
Va Mrs Ruth Lambert Rt
I Pomeroy v sited recently
w th Mr and Mrs Robert
Conkle and C ndy
Rev and Mrs Oils
Chapman attended a songfest
at the Baptist Church m
Athens on Sunday
Mr and Mrs Marvm Petty
Clilumbus called Qn the John
Veith fam ly a day recently
Mrs Petty s spendmg th s
week with her grandmother
Mrs Sus1e Veith In M1d
die port
M ss Kim Oxyer spent a
day recently w1th Miss Cindy
Clinkle
Joey Leach near Rodney
called on Mr and Mrs Joe
Leach and Arthur a day
recently
Mrs R1ta Wh1te Kyger
called on Mr and Mrs Denny
Spires and children a day

\I

MRS EON A RUSSELL center coordinator of the
home health serv ce confers with Mrs Mary Jean

CANCER (June 21 July 22)
A hough l:OU may ee s o
he own good don ean oo
he a yon hose n you cha ge
oday S e n tac cs w
p od ce undes ab e effec 5

•Harr ron

left RN home health nurse and Mrs Isabelle
Cliuch nght secretary Mrs Elizabeth Sm th RN also
serves as a home health nurse

Continuity

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Today
someone w th u e o mot ves
may y o p essu e you n o
dong some h ng you know you
shou dn Don e he get o

you

LIBRA (Sopl 23 Oct 23)
Goa s mpo an o you oday
w no be handed o you on a
s e p a e They have o be
ea ned he ha d way
SCORPIO (Ocl
You
tle you
enemy o day
some h ng au o
e a g dge ga
hand

24 Nov 22)
own wo s
yo u d O'
sp e Don
n he uppe

ERMA SMITH r ght s superv sor of the Laundry Department and Margare Wh e
Other employees m the department are Dorothy Reeves and Roland Durst

P SCES (Fob 20 March 20)
Look g ho ses n he mou h
ada espec a y n co mme
c a nego a ons he e may be
some bu s ucked be ne a h he
sadd e

Your
Birthday
May 11 1976

recently
The children of Rev and
Mrs Raymond F le gathered
at the r parents home on
SWlday to help their mother
celebrate her b rthday
Present lor the happy oc
cas on were Mr and Mrs
James Keefer and Paula of
Leon W Va Mr and Mrs
George Keefer Gary and
JWJie Leon Mr and Mrs
Joe Keefer Larry and
Debb e Leon Mr and Mrs
Jack R1ggs Michael Teresa
and Pam of Letart W Va
Mr and Mrs Buddy F1fe
Brenda and Unda Turkey
RWl Mr and Mrs Roscoe E
F1fe Eno A most enJoyable
day was spent All Wishing
their mother many more
happy birthdays
Mr and Mrs Denny Spires
and lam ly called on Harold
Hill a Patnot a day recently
A bll'thday dmner hononng
several of Mr and Mrs Pearl
Edwards family was held at
their home on SWlday Apnl
25 All the r ch1ldren and
grandchildren were present
for the occasion They were
Buddy Unda Becky John
Dav1d and Mary Edwards of
Chester James Elsa and
Cheryl Folmer of Chester
Mr and Mrs Ralph Ed
wards Troy and Stacy Rt 1
Middleport Freddie JWJe
Sherr e and Lor Thomas Rt
I Cheshire Joe Betty Jane
and Joey Edwards Rt 1
Chesh re A most enjoble day
was spent
Mr and Mrs James Conkle
spent a recent evemng with
Mr and Mrs Harold
Blackston at Pomeroy
Mr and Mrs Charles
Leach Chad and Chris Rt 1
V nton called on Mr and
Mrs Joe Leach and Arthur
recently
Mr and Mrs Denny Spires
Denise Julie and Stephen
called on Muriel Spires and
lrma Bales also Mr and
Mrs Jr White were there
Mr and Mrs John Veith
called on Mrs Susie Veith In
Middleport a day recently
Hershell Gilkey and wife
Mrs Joan Fife and Melissa
called on Mr and Mrs Paul
Searls a day recently

of care is

Skilled people perfonn many

provided

tasks providing sern.ces at

MltS MAXINE HOBSIEIIER R N U I zntion
Hon e Health Serv ce s
Coo1
dmato wo ks w t1 ti e Ulli za Jo 1 Re cw
de s1gned
to
mcrease
Cli
1
mlttee
wl ch cons sts of two pi ys1 a s on the stuff
Ve erans Memonal Hosp tal
A wide rauge of skills and activities Is required to
All
pat
en
s
t nt a e ad lt L~l
de Me I I or
mvolvement n the provts on
provide the mlllly services at Veteran• Memorial Hospital
Med1care
ore
revtewcd
b)
I
er
n
I
ass1~~ ed
le ~ U of
of CommWJ ty Health Ser
where N.tlooal Hospital Week Is beinl obl!erved Mav 9 15
stay
according
othe
r
diagnoses
A
tl
e
end
of
t1
c length
v1ces and provide conUnu! y These photos emphasize thlo variety Other photographs of
of
stay
ll
e
chm
tIs
a~am
rev
ewed
and
(
n
cxte
so 1s
of care for lhe patient as he
activities at the hospital will be featured during th e week
this
may
be
granted
b)
t1
e
U
R
Con
1 ttce oftm
needed
returns from the hosp tal to
Bob HoeHich
consultation w lh the app op u e phys c nn IJ son w th
hts hom e al hough a pat enl
U
e dtschlll'ge pluMmg section s an unpo1tunt fen rc of
need not have been a he
the U R coord n tor
hospital to rece1ve serv ce
Tlie serv ce prov des sk I ed
nur s ng care
phys cal
therapy and home hea th a de
serv ce to home bound
pahents on an mterm ttent
bas s
can be made on request of
Hom e Heal h Se rv ce IS pa ent family or nterested
~':'- able o all perso ns person but for fur her care
res1d ng \lith n a reasonable pat ent must have a
d stance
of
Veterans phys can s order
Memor al Hosp tal regar~ersonnel 1n thts depart
less of age race rellgwn o men are
socto-econom c ~talus who e
Mrs Edna Russell R N
co nd1 t on nd1 cates hat coord nator
serv ce would be bene! ctal
Mrs El zabeth Sn th
and needed If pat en I ves R N Home Hea lh Nurse
outs de th s radius proper
Mrs Mary Jean Harr son
referrals w1l be made
R N Home Hea th Nurse
Home care s prov1ded only
Mrs Isa belle Couch
under orders !rom he Sec e ary
pa ent s phys c an and n ust
Our ng the year of 1975
be des1red by pahent and tllere were 918 nurs ng 9
fmmly Home care s ap phys cal therapy 87 home
propr ate fo patents whose health a de nd 15 evaluatiOn
cond bon does not reqUire v s1ls made for a olal of 2 029
mtenstve professwnal care v s ts Personnel traveled
and a responsible person 24 035 miles for an average of
must be available to provide 11 8 miles per v s There
necessa ry care between were 91 new admiSSIOns and
MARJORIE SMITH SUPERVISOR of housekeeping
v s1 s One eval uat on v1s t 74 d scharges
finds there is plenty of work to keep her staff busv aro nrl
the clock at the local hosp tal

Soc1al
Calendar

SAG TTARIUS (Nov 23 Dtc
211 A o d ga he ngs whe e
11 e e s key o be someone
he e you e no oo fond o
Th s pe son cou d ea y ge
unde you sk n oday

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fob 19)
You cou d be d cu o wo k
o oday as yo u may ask
o he s o do h ng s you wou d
ne e h nk of dong you se f

CONSTANT MAINTENANCE Is requ red at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Here Thomas McGrath repamts a
doorway

Veterans Memorial Hospital

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Be
ca e u oday n dea ng w h
e ds whe e money s an
ssue The e cou d be a se ous
m su de s an d ng
s no
handed p ope y

the amendment shal take lmmec!t
a e et!'ect and sec toM 7 8 0 and
12 of Art c e xn ot the Cons t utlon
ot Oh o lllhaU be repea ed from rueh
effect e date

I SSUE 6
A
ctedHoue m R ou on
No 10

he

ARIES (March 21 April 11)
Avo d a compan on w h a
knack fo c ea ng p ob ems at
he sma est p ovocat on She
coud n oveyou nsomehng
nas y oday

EfFECTIVE DATE AND REPI:AL
t adopted by a m ajori y of the
e ec ton voting on hJs amendment

USED FOR THE REPA'Y'MENT OF
ANY DEBT INCURRED FOR
THESE PURP OSES

P oposed by Re!lo u on o
Geru; al A semb of Oh

For Tutlday May 11 117f

Black
bag jobs
common
WASHINGTON (UP!) The FBI conducted more
than 200 llegal black bag
job
break ns agamst
domes! c groups between
1948 and 1966 without tellmg
the Just ce Department a
Senate committee staff
report sa1d today
The report latest m a
senes released by the Senate
Intell gence Climm1ttee sa1d
former FBI Director J
Edgar Hoover outlawed the
practice for use agamst
domestic argets in 1966 for
und sclosed reasons
It quoted from a 1966 staff
memo by former ass stan!
FBI director W1lham C
Sullivan
saymg
the
techmque was
clearly
and
that
Illega l
author zatton was not sought
outs1de the FBI because t
would be unposs ble to obtam
any egal sanction for It
The comm1ttee satd the
FBI continues today to use
clandestme entry techmques
Without warrants to gather
ev dence on foreign agents
wtth the penmss on of the
Justice Department II
recommended that warrants
be requ red
Other committee reports
ssued durmg the past week
have told of 40 years of FBI
bugg ng and tappmg of
telephones m noncriminal
cases and traced the
development of domestic
spy ng actl v t es that
included the me tement of
VIolence between nval
lac ons of diss1dent groups
The reporls prompted an
unprecedent ed publi c
apology from FBI director
Clarence J Kelley who sa1d
In a speech at Westm nster
College m Fulton Mo
Saturday
We are truly
sorry we were responsible lor
Instances wh ch now are
subJect to such cr he sm He
sa1d they must not be
repeated
Th e latest report sa1d
black bag entr es agamst
a least 15 targets were apart
from 1 000 other breaklns
made to nstall h dden
microphones or Wiretaps
It srud the FBI reported at
least 239 entr es between 1942
and 1966 more than 200 of
them n the post World War II
years and some of them
mvolvmg repeated entries
agamst the same targets
Desp1te Hoover s ban the
report sa ld there was

RAY CROMLEY

Short changing
crime control
GARY WHARTON mhalat!on therapist at Veterans
Memorial Hospital gtves respiratory treatments to
pahents m the hospttal and to outpahents for astlnna
emphysema or general congestion m their lungs He IS
also respons ble for admm stermg oxygen to patients who
have difficulty m breathmg He is m the hospital Monday
through Friday 8 a m to 4 30 p m
ev dence one Illegal breakm
was made aga nst a
domestic
subvers ve
target between 1966 and
1968
Targets mcluded the Ku
Klux Klan the Social st
Workers Party and ts
aff1hates and an unidentified
white hate group
The report sa1d m most
cases the FBI was able to
obtam keys for the bi'eakins
from cooperative landlords
or neighbors but 1f this was
IIDpoSSlble agents spectally
tramed m lock studies
were available to open doors
and safes

One SWP affiliate was such
a frequent target the FBI
even had wr tten mstruct ons
to burglarize its offices the
report sa1d The FBI
carefully avo ded menhon of
breakms for any purpose to
higher offiCials the report
smd
It quoted one FBI official
who bnefed former attorney
general Robert F KelUiedy
on bugging operat ons as
saymg be was purposely
vague and that KeMedy
may not have been aware
breakms were used to plant
the bugs

Greer of Mason received

Arts Degree on Saturday
MASON
WII Iam Lee
Greer a res dent of Mason
received a Master of Arts
degree from the West
V1rgln1a College of Graduate
Studies Saturday
SCIOTO Vlt"rOR

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Sovere gn Wamor dnven by
Ralph Lunsford led all the
way to a neck VIC ory over
Cloverleaf J1m m the
featured $8 000 n nth race at
Sc oto Downs Saturday n ght
Elmes Pacesetter was
third
The wmner was timed at
2 01 2-5 and re urned $3 40
$2110 and $2 20
Zolo and Ready Qu1ck com
b ned for a 7 I dally double
worth $68 00
Attendanc1 was 8 437 and
the handle $42fi 756

His degree was n Spe1cal
Educat on
Greer IS currently a
teacher at the Mason County
Vocal onal Technical
Center He IS presently
servmg as an officer of the
MCEA Federal Credit Umon
Greer IS marr ed to the
former Betty Roush of Letart
and they have one son Jeff
They are members of the
Bellemead Umted Methochst
Church
Attend ng from out of town
were h1s parenls Mr and
Mrs James Lee Greer of
Cherry H II New Jersey
In 1973 former Attorney
General John M tchell and
former Commerce Secretary
Maunce Stans were nchcted
on per)ury charges ~Y a
federa l grand JUry

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON A muldle-aged fr end m my home towr
m Califorma s hesitant about gomg out on the streets m broad
daylight m a qu1et middle class remdenllal neighborhood
There are few of us whether we live in suburbs or c ties
East West North or South who haven thad a fr end mugged
Not m the slums but n the tree lmed avenues or modern
bus ness distr cts once considered safe
Alady I know In her 70s hvmg mone of the above-average
neighborhoods n the outskirts of Washington has like many
of her fr1ends bought a gun for protection
In my own subdivls on m the suburbs poPillated by PhDs
and pubhc offlCIBls w ves and daughters have been advised
not to open the door when strangers knock or rmg the bell
Increasrngly the v cttms seem to be women and elderly and of all races
The statistics have unpelled one congressman to mtroduce
a b ll callmg for strong penalties for anyone convteted of an
assault on anyone over 60
The pity IS that we should think In terms of new laws For
the present laws are not workmg And though we spend b Uons
the federal government alone Will spend $3 billion this year
on actiVIt es a1m1ng at the reduction of crime - we take very
httle mterest mfinding out why what were domg doesn t work
And s nee we don t know what we re domg the spending of
add1honal b lhons on priSOns pollee and the like can be largely
wasted There is evidence m fact that In a ser es of target
CJbes wherespec1al funds were spent and spec al efforts made
to reduce crune the results have been negligible
As we all know great strides In mdustry m agrteulture
and m health have resulted from pourmg biii!ons mto
research The federal budget puts out $2 bUl!on a year on
medical and health research alone And the states add close to
$100 million more
But not for research on the control of criiDe Out of thell'
quarter b!lhon a year total research and development budgets
the 50 states spend a mere $4 6 million or I 7 per cent on
research m crime prevent on and control
The federal government does no better Though accurate
f gures are not available President Ford and h1s predecessors
have spent a mere pittance out of their overall $20 b1U1on to $24
blll on a year research and development budgets on true
research on the control of criiDe
True research that Is as distinct from the mere gathermg
of stat!sbcs though that is Important too as a start
This neglect 1s all the more criminal because careful
studies during the past two decades and more mdicate that the
meager data ava1lable gives little or no support to any of the
current theories on crune control and prevention
We do not know what todo w1th the men and women we put
m )ali or how long to keep them there or when they are ready
for parole or how tight a leash should be kept on them during
parole We don t know how to cut back on the rec dlviSm the
repeat~rs who apparently account for such a high proport on of
our crone

We can t account for the fact that so few criJDes are solved
or that so few alleged crumnals caught are convicted We
know that there 1s oomethmg wrong when so many conun1t
criJDes when they are on parole or out on bond awa1tlng tr1al
We all have our tlieor1es But we fall to reach agreement
because we don t have hard evidence
Why we don t spend the money necessary to produce the
research wh ch could bnng us closer to the answer s puzzling
mdeed

Polly's Pomters
Cook and freeze
1
your sale roasts
By Polly Cramer
INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY
careful y watch he news
papers for the bes buys n
roasls and all meats II ave a
large roast ng pan so when I
see a good buy on a roast I
buy !11 o and cook bo h al the
same me ln he san e
roas t ng pan I only eave
them n he oven long enough
to ge ea ly hot and seasoned
all lhe way through Th en I
pre hea my s ow cooker and
f n sh cookmg both roasts
together When cooked hey
are put n fo1 lined pans or
carlons and frozen for later
use rh s saves t me and fuel
and e na n part of tw o
dmners s cooked 1n one af
ternoon
MRS E D
DEAR POLLY I used to
buy a bu Ia of d shwasl ng
detergent every wo weeks
but with 1 y new method a
boUle asts a mon h I pul he
detergent n an emply c ean
spra y bo lie This really
makes it go much farther
Please try th s and you w II
f n I you eal y save n oney
PEARL
DEAR POLlY - When
shopp ng for tea bags he
other lay I was appalled at
he pncc so I bough bulk
lea I r ed mak ng tea m mv
dr p coffee maker and t
w ked beaul fully I put one
tablespoon of loose ca m he
f1 ter paper nstead of coffee
and th s made lour to s x cups
of I nc ca I hope this dea
w II he p other tea dr nkers
MJ I
DEAR POLLY
We are
an e onomy m nded fa n ly
and have a good Po nler for
sav ng on he cost of
deodo ani Wen ake our own
Two casp ns of bak ng
wo
teaspoons
soda
pet roleun elly and wo
easpo ns alcorn powder are
p t n he
p f a double
holler an I e ed JUSt enougl
ake 1as e Pu n a
~h f t g

ld If l c p scsee sa l t
ck I add
l t lc col i
c em rh1s really w rk
SHIRl EY
DEAR POl I Y
o
longer I ave to buy coppe
cleaner I save p cklc JU c~
ha woull be disca dec an t
f I
s a g eat and
cconom al clea ner I stram
nto an en pty squ t
abel l Coppc
Cleanc and keep t I an ly
by I e k tch n nk Po ly s
n tc
I r und U 1s w rked
greal on I e OJll er bot 01 If
a pa
but I wou I n
me hately r sc t ff \\ell
w I hot wa er and then r b to
a sh nc) - CLAHA
DEAR POll Y- 1 would
l kc u p
u
parakeet ow e
I c 11ay I
save money on I e lotlc.l
rhcy a ways ale c op la yc
f fo &gt;d but lef the bo tom
In s cad of throw ng lh s
away I save t n a ar When
1run u of cc I I ~ke these
If v
uts de an I pour ll e
seeds and I ulls Iron one
conl&lt;llner o uno her so the
w nd b ows he hulls away It
s surpr s ng how m ny seeds
rcma n I ook e years to
real ze 1 was actuall y
hrow ng away alf he b d
see I was buy ng - WII MA

s

You 1111! receive a rl liar if
P lly uses your fa vo rite
hom emaking td clt Pet
Peeve Polly s Pr bl m or
solution to a problem Write
Polly in care of thls newspaper

NEW.ARK MAN SOUGHT
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Pollee are searchmg for Jack
Keith Mmser 45 Newark for
aggravaled robbery of the
Tremont
Cleane rs In
Cohun bus
Mmser IS accused of a $74
holdup la st Tuesday

Hanisonville
Society News
Allee B II and son of 1ole lo
spent everal lays wlU Mr
and Mrs Eugene YoiU g
Ca I Sa psori wrecked lls
car wl en hiS brakes failed
Mrs San 1SOI s a surgiCal
pat ent at Holzer Medical
Center M nn e McGrath ~
passe gm ln tl e car escaped
11 u
few I u scs Mr
Sampson was no I urt
Mr and Mrs Ro be~l
G bson and daughter Robin
of Co u nbus were din qr
guests of tlle Robert Alklros
Sunday
Mr and Mrs Dale Wha cy
of Ga ll po IS ca led on the
Robert A kires
Mr and Mrs Larry Clark
and daugh ters
far ra
Penny and Wend y were
supper guests of the Robert
Cla rks on Saturday
Rev and Mrs Ernest
S n cklen of Athens ca lled on
Ava G lkey Sa turday
Waldo Nea l and Murl
Douglas arc med cal patlenls
at Veterans Memor al
Hosp al
Mr and Mrs F 0 Whaley
of Columbus were weekend
gues s of Ava Gilkey Mr and
Mrs Chnton Gilkey of Albany
and Karen Gilkey of Athens
called on Sunday evening
Recent Su nd ay d nner
gues s of Elda Carsey were
Mr and Mrs Carl Knicely
Kate Mrs Beryl Wya t
and Mr and Mrs Junior Ash
a I of Dayton Mr and Mrs
Thor Carsey of PmmeroY,
Mr and Mrs Bill Chapma9
and two sons and Mr and
Mrs Joe Carsey local
Mrs Bess e Graham has
e urned home after a vis ~
With her son Jack Sampson
n Flonda
Mrs Russel Eshelmen ancl
son Buddy spent a weeken4
m Clilll/llbUs w1th her slster1
Mr and Mrs Darola
Graham and three Children ol
Newark spent a weekend w t1l
Besse Graham and Joe
Carseys
WON BY FORFEIT
The
Middleport
In
depend ent Baseball 1eam
won a 9-1l forfe a Tuppers
Plams Sunday afternoon
when Tuppers Pia ns did not
furn sh wnp1res A prac Ice
game was p ayed Instead
M ddlcpori s now 2-1l

�8 - The Dally Senllnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mondlly , May 10, 1976

Carpenter
Personals

Df'a CIIrnt'

V

, , rl l

Cu n t t' i l iltton

Mr and Mrs Walter Swell
visited with Clemma Vale at
Cardmgton , Ohi o on Sw1day
Mrs. Wanda Turner spent a
few day s here wtth her
parents, Mr . and Mrs Dale
Stan sbury
and
oth er
relMives.
Robert Cordr ay and son-rnlaw, John Pam sh of
Westervtlle vtstled Ins mther,
Beulah Cordra y and brotherin-law ancf sister , Mr ami
Mrs . Redd Jeffers
Guests of Mr . and Mrs
Clay Jordan from a dtslan cc
who came for tho weddmg of
thetr daughter, Barbara Ann
to Tom Cassell, Ada, Ohio,
wt!re their son and daughteim-law , Mr e:tnd Mrs. Dale
J ordan and Kahe, her
brother and fanu ly. Mr . and
Mrs . Johnnte Dwelley and
children, all of An ruston ,
Alabama , and Mr and Mrs.
rrank Sclnmdl' CoiLmlbus
Mrs J ordan's brother-rnlaw and sister , Mr and Mt·s.
Granvtlle Stout and George
and nephews and fan uly, Mr
and Mrs . .Jimrm e Stout and
daughter , along wtth l11 s
nephew and fmm ly, Mr and
Mrs! Waller J ordan and son ,
also called at the .Jordan
home to ,bc wtlll'relaltves .
Mr and Mrs Dale Stan sbury and Mr and Mrs . Jerry
Stan sbury and family were
guests of Mr and Mrs
Warren r.
Turner 1n
Co lumbu s recen tl y Oth er
relattves JOllled them fur a
family gathenng
Mrs Carl Greenlees and
g r a nd da ug ht er, ll t!l a
Rhoades al'compt.m ied h ~ r
daug hter, Hose Hopper and
da ug hters. Athens. to Be lpre
where they called on Mrs
Greenlees bro lhe r-m -l~w and
stsler , Mr . and Mrs . Donald
Sm ith (\lrs Srnt lh had
surgery recently The)
retu rn ed by Barlow and
stopp ed a t the cemete r y
where Carl Greenlees was
burted recently.
Eltzabctl1 Jordan, Metgs
Cuunty Jumo1 Gnwgc
Matron . WfiS guest at a
moth er-dau ghter
dt nn er
planned by the lec turer , Mrs.
John Colwell , at Star Grange
on Monday evemng. A speeial

program and dinner were
enjoyed by the group
Mrs Vidor Perry, local,
an d Mrs Georgta Wri es ,
Wellston, were guests of their
brother-In -Ial\ and stster, Mr
and Mrs. Bob Jones and
famil y tn Dayton and were at
· the hosptlal to see Mrs . Wtles'
so n, Phillip Wil es, who
recently -underw en t ba ck
surgery
The benefi t auclton whtch
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Dolphus Burke on
Sat urday afternoon for Mrs
Car l Greenl ees was we ll
attended . Those m charge
expressed their apprectalton
for the support given to make
tl successful
Mr . and Mrs Larry
Stansbur y
and
so ns,
Reynoldsburg, Mr and Mrs
Clair D. Stansbur y and
family, Grov eport , and the
Jerr y Stansbury fanuly,
local, spent Sunday wt th their
parents, Mr and Mrs. Dale
Stansbury
Vtr gini a Townsend or
Colwnbus is spendtng a week
with l1cr uncle, Paul Peck
Her other uncle, Wtlham C
Peck, is still confined to
Holzer Hosptlal.

Rt\cine
.). ~ ·

By•*!'· Francis MorriS

Cor recr,on s wil l bf.' at
((&gt;pft: d vn t il Y t1 ., ,
r1(ty Ol P ub l,calt On

lor

REGULATION S

1 he P ub l 'S h n

r e scr v t' S

fh r rtq h t ro e&gt; d1l o r r ctc c l
'c1 t) y il d S d f' (' m(• d
ob

tCCIJOnal Thr pu b lt'.ii hc r
Ndl not be r cs pon srbl c tor
n1or c th an on r 'n corr cc,t
tn S(' r t,on

CAROOF TH ANKS

&amp; OBIT U ARY
'l&gt;~ O(J
t or
',U
w o rd
m tn m 1um
Ea c h c1 dd tl •o n al w or d J

foi'

~

Auto Sales

2s~~Ns Por~eroy

Mo·
~·or_Co.
QUALITY._
_
~

1971 CHEVELLE&lt; DOOR
6 c y l , au to ma t ic ,

P.

11895

sf e€ ring , ra d io , 1 owner, \6 ,000

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 OR .
302 V 8, a utomalt c tran s
rnt enor , b!ue fint sh

I

11895

1972 AMC HORNET

11995

a

All Yard Sa l es , Rummag e,
Por ch and Basem ent Po r ch
and Bas_emenf Sa l es, etc
mu st be pa id m advanc ~ :
Get your tn tn ear l v by
s tQ.pptn g by our olftce al
Th e Dally Sent inel. 111
Court Sl or wnttng Box
729 , Pom eroy , Oh to 45 769
Wtlh your r e mt!lan ce

Wanted to Buy
OLD fu rntlur e , tee bO )( CS , bra ss

1971 Dodge Charger 318 two
bed s old wal l telephone: s gp.d-- dOOJ:...'dov-l'top outomo tJ C, foe·
patl :s or complete h ou~ds
tory otr "?i~r brakes, mag
Wrt te M 0 Mill er , Rt 2
whee ls $1 ,725 , Phone (304)
Pome roy , Ohto Ca lf 992 7760
675·2651

liMBE ~

top prr ce for standrn g
limber Ca ll (614 ) 446 8570

1967 Couga r 289 engme . Call
onyltme 992·7768

CASH pard tor oil make5 and
models of mobt le homes
Phone area code 6 14 ·423 9531

1970 T B1rd . needs some body
work , p s
and p.b ., $450.
Phone 992 7258

Notice!

S5Cosh$$$ tor junked auto Frye 's
Truck Auto Ports , Rutland
Phone 742· 2081

}970 Chevelle SS 396 4 ::; peed e x ·
cellent cond rtton l ots of ex ·
Ires Co il off er 5 p.m CXI2

RACINE Ftr c Dcporlmcn t w•ll
hove a gu n 5hoot Saturday at
6 30 p m a t thet r nP.w buddmg
otf Bo shan Rood
'

USED car tn g ood runn tng condt
!ton Not more rhon 10 years
old Coll742 ·2581

For Memortol Day , beoutdul
selec l ton fl owe rs
baskets ,
spray s, loose fl ower s, vases
Faye s G tlt Shop, North '2nd Sl ,
Mtddlepbrt Open dot ly 9 am
ttl8 p m
LETART Fall s Cemete ry lot core
fee 15 payable now Cost ts
$7 50 per lot far one year
Money rs to be sent to Clorer1cg
I Nom s Route 2, Bo)( 114 ,
Roc me

wanted to Rent
WANTED TO RENT sma ll hou se or
trotler pr eferably 111 the cou ntry
and near Pomeroy Etther fur ·
ntshed or no ! Phone 949·2480
or (614) 985·4248
J bedrm hou se tn th e coun t ry
For reasonable rent Phone

Situations Wanted
WILL core lor el derly pe rson rn my
home Ph one 1 (6 14 \ 985·3849
or 992·34 10

Services Offere:d
CARPENTER w tl l do stdtng roof ·
1ng remodeling room addt ·
!tons
Also garages
Free
Esttmates Col l 992 2659

NOTI CE OF

A PPOINTMENT
C.ncNo 21796
E stil t c
of
H ARO LD
F
ER L EW IN E, De cea sed
Nol tcc tS her eby g tvc n tha t
Charlott e M ac Erl cwrn c of R
IJ D e)(t er , Oht O, ha s bee n duly
appotnted Adrntnt stra tr tx of
th e Estat e o t H aro tct r
E rl c wtn c, dece a se d , laic of
Mctg S County Ohro
Credttor s &lt;lr e r equ tr ed to
hi e lhetr c latm S w tth sat d
f tduc tary Wt l h rn thr ee month s
Dat ed lht s Sth dc1 Y of May
I Q] 6
Mann tn g Webst er
Judg e
( 5\ 10 17, :n Jtc

Lost and Found
LOS T- {t5hrn g tackle bo11 , loco·
tton Tonn er's Run , reward
Cal l 247 ·220 1
LO ST Eo5 1 of Metg5 Htgh School
on Coun ly Rd 25 blond and
'!N hrt e fe male Cocker Spantel
w tlh redd tsh freckl es on nose
Reword for return or tnformo
!ton leadtng to r etu rn Phon e

992-2264
LOST Thursday tn Rocme, f emale
Ba linese [(] t long hatred betge
w1 th dark g ra)' sea l potnt mark
tngs , oran ge color
wtl h
rhmestone Webb Atr Force
Bo se
va c e~no tton
l og
Ch tldren's pet Reward Phone
949 2375 or 949 2883

Help Wanted DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGER S IN OUR AREA.
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTMENT NO COllECTING OR
DEliVERINGS CAll COLLECT
CAROl DAY (SIBI 489-8395 o:
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE.,
AlBA NY. N Y 12205

NOT I CE OF
AP POINTMENT
ca s ~ N o 21798
GRill Cook and wot l ress wonted
Es t ilte a t V IR G INI A F
Apply rn person , Crows Stea k
H AWK Decea se d
House , Pomeroy
No tt ce tS h er eb y q tv cn thar
Les ter M
Ha wk o f Rt
'1 , BABYSITTER needed , 5 days per
Coo l vr llc, Oht o , h as l&gt;ecn du ly
wee k , 2 ch 1ldren , preferably stl
appotnt ed 1\ drnrn tstr &lt;t tor of
m my home Co ll247· 282 1
th e es tat e of Vt r qrn,u F
Hawk , de ce a se d , lai c of M ctg s PART TIME bar mmd 98 N Se·
County , Ohro
con d , M.(Njd l epor t ,
O h1 o
L r c&lt;Jrt or s ar c r cqu tr ea 10
Fhcnd ly Tavern
f tl ~
tll e tr c l a tm s wt!l1 satd
ftdu c rary wrlhtn to ur month s
Dat ed th ts 29th da y ot 11 prt1
1Y ! 6
RESPONSIBLE PERSON
MA NNIN G D WCI)S IC' r
Wanted to own and ope rat e
J uctge
ca ndy &amp; confe ct ton vendmg
15 1 ] , 10 17, ] I C
route
Pomeroy
a nd
surroundtng area . Plea sa nt
bu smess. Htgh proftt 1tem s
PUBLIC NOTICE
To be sold at Publ tc Auc l tO n
Call start part -tim e Age or
at C h e~t cr . Oh to . by Tru stee s
e)( pert ence not tmportant ,
o f C hc ~ tcr Twp , M e t ~s Co
Req ut res car and S960 cash
Mdy 11ncl al 10 o 'c loc k A M
tnv es tmcnt . For detatl s
Two Ford Dumo Tr uc ks a~
~~ w i th T d lcs
wnte &amp; me lude your phon e
On e 1961 Sert a l No F60 CH
SAl ,
20073 1
1012 San Jose Avenu e
On e 196/J Se r ta l No f- 61 C E
Burbank , Ca hfornia 91501
91177 18
One Horne Lrt e Rtdtng
Mow er .
') L awn P us h Mowers
All sat es wtll be c a sh
Cl erk . C he ~ t c r Tw p
F rcd ertck M Tut!l e

Sale

1967 VW, $400 Phon e 992·7727
1966 Ponlto c Co tcltn a, p .s , and
p b good work cor Also 1964
VW good condl tJOn, no rust

Coll 992 3884

992 5175
WILL DO odd tabs , rooting , potn
ltng, houltng , treework , and
mowtng Ph one 992.7409

5737

Yard.Sale

IF YO U have a serv rce to offer
won t to buy or sell some thtn g
ore look mg for wor k
or
whatever . . you 'll get re$ults
fasler wtlh a Sen!mel Wo nt Ad

1968 Ca mara 327 aulom al tc, new
E·T w hee ls Daytona IJres ,
sharp , $795 FJrsl come ftr st
s~rve Phone 949 2~60
1973 Dodge Poloro 4 dr hardt op ,
o c., power , $1390 Phone 843·

20'15

;:;
FURN ISH ED opt. , co uple only , oil
ultlr ll es pe 1d $130 per month ,
Phone 992·3975 or 992 ·2571
FURNI SH ED, 2 bedrm apartment,
adu l ts on ly, tn Mtddleport
Ph one 992 3874

3 AND 4 RM furntshed and un·
furn tshed opt s Ph one 992·

543•
COUNTR Y Mobtle Home Pork , Rt
33, l en mtles north of Pomeroy
large lots w1th concr et pottos
stdewalk s runners and off
stree t porktng Phone 992 H79

3 ROOM furm5hed opt
N

ultltt1es
Fourth , Mtd

2 bedrm !railer , a c , one mtle
from Hornsonv1lle on New l tmo
Rood Call bef ore noon and
alte r 6 p m 742 2997
TRAILER lo t Co Rd 17 Harmon
'.'t il e Phone 742 2577
2 bedrm trade r , real mce Phone

992-3324
ONE bedrm futm shed apartment
wtth washer ond dryer , adul ts
only Phone 992-3129 or 992·
5434

COAL, limestone and calc Ju m
chl onde and calc tutn bnne fo r
dus l con trol and all types of
sa lt E)(cel sto r Salt Works East
Mo1n Stree t , Pomeroy , O h1 o,
1953 Ford Jubrlee tractor (e)( celle nt ), $1 650, Ford 9N troc·
tor overhau led S1 000. New 5
fl 3 pi rota ry mower (slump
1umper) , $385, Four used ndmg
lawn mowers, 7 and 8 h.p $200
to $230. Lu ckett Form Equtp·
men t, West Woshtngton St ,

Albany Phone (6 14) 69B-3031
o:698 7881
BEAN POSTS Coll147-3077
MAKE spnng ·cleontng proft tobl e,
turn unwanted items into cos h.
Adverltse tn the Wont Ads
7 1·750 Norton (amanda. Con see
at Rutland Pennzo1l or coli 742·

6 It tru ck camper. Phone 992·
5983 offer 5 p m

spltt

-

GE pot scr ubber dt5 hwasher, par·
table Phone949-2890

1969 12x60 mobtle home , custom
Sc hult Good condJIJon . Call

742-3018

-

1972 Elcono mobr le home , un
furni shed, w 1th llp ·out, stove,
refrt geral or, dimng room se t
slays 3 bedrooms 1 'l l baths .
Phone992·7768.
1974 Htllcrest 60x12 lop of the
hne mode l, tota l el ec , ful ly lur·
ntshed , carpeted throughout ,
eye level O\len, surf ace uml ,
boy wmdow , one·f ourth old
world burch panel tng , front
dtmng room , 3 door model,
home •s ltke new Also 1975
Skyl ine 52x 12 total elec , all
new
fur n 1ture , co rpeled
lhroughoul , total
wrapped
Fom·Cor, fron t kitchen model.
We sold th1 s home new and ts
st tll m lt ke new condthon Can
be seen at Ktngsbury Mobt le
Hom e Sales. 1100 E. Matn ,
Pomeroy, 992 · 7~~ ~ _____ _
1969 Topper mobile home, ex·
ce llent cond Jti on . 12x60. In ·
qutre offer 5 p m (6 14) 985.

(61A) 985 42A8

5737
TWO femal e purebred German
Shep herd pups 7 weeks o ld
Call992 !379of~er 4 P·!!'__ .

1970 4 dr Mercury Morqua , good
runnmg co nd1tton , atr condi
honing, power brakes , power
steenng , stereo rod1o. Cal l

992 3850.

2201

STE REO ·radi o, modern destg n,
om -t m rodto , 8 track tape com·
bt natton . Balance $101 20 or
term s Co ll992·3q65
1971 Kowosok1 No. 175, $350 00
good
con d tl to n .
Phon e
1·614·985 4197
BEAU TY Shop equ tpmenl, one
new sha mpoo unrt , one
hydraulic chOJr
dryer and
chotr , one 27x8 ft
house
trotler Ph one 992·7669
702 Wheelhorse tractor

992 77A9

Phone

19b4 Ford 4000, selec tomolt c
shdt
fou r blade mower
FOUR Fom tl y Garage Sole, May 6,
undernea th
19b I lnterno 7 and 8 at 810 W. Mom St
lt onol, 340 uhl tty, all angle ,
Ne)(t to Shuler's
Pomeroy
hydrauli c cycle bar mower
Market from 9 a m . ttll 5 p m
Howard Say re 992 2560 or see
'Toys , formals , clo thmg end e tc
or Texaco Se-rviCe Station ,
ODDS and Ends So le start s 5.7.76
Syracuse Ohto,
to 5· 14·76. Log Cabm Twp Rd
FISHING
boat 50 h p Evmrude
261 between Keno and long
mo tor , troller Ph one 992 6154,
Bollom fol lo w signs off 248 ot
Keno or l ong Bottom Waches FOUR G 78· 14 Kelly Sprrngft eld
1ewelr y , purses
cl o th es ,
aufornobtle ltres hcell en t can .
d1shes . C-B rodto , f tshmg
dtlton Call 742 2301 after 4·30
tack le , Fou r 700x 16 8 ply hres ,
p m.
four 750)(16 ttres , one three
fourth 1968 Jeep truck , 36 tn, ONE Hereford cow wt th colt (half
Mu r ray .Grey ) one polled
caP bunks stove a ir horns . CB
hereford hetler to f reshen 1n
roche, ful ly equ1pped for tra iler
Sepfember . Phone (61 4) 985·
towtng
4248 in evenmgs or on
YARD SALE and ba sement 5ale.
weekends
Tuesday th roug h Thursday , 6
rn1les east of Chester on Rl 8 N tractor , brush hog, plow
S1400 00 See or ca lf R T.
2.4 8. Ho usehold furnrlu re ,
Stewart , 992 7894
glas sware
clo thmg , us ed
doo r s ond m1sc
Ron a l d TRUCKLOAD used window otr
Osborne,
con d t !t one r s,
lor
sole .
~

Guarant eed $50 and up. Phone

(614) 593-3595 AI hens .

120 locus t pos ts Ph one 742 2359.
YARD Sale, M onday , May 10 8 H.P. RIDING lawn mower . Elecrhrqugh 13th, 829 Sou th Third
lrlc start $125.00. Phone 94q.
Avenue , Middleport
2801 , G len Btssel'

saws,

Fmancmg Ava 1la bl e
Blown tnto Wall s &amp; Attics

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

17 Cole Str.. l
Pomeroy, Ohro 45769
Telephone (6141 992-3768
We Deliver

4-25-1 mo.

WAY!&gt; l'l'f'5WINI'l.fD

YCJJ 1!-LINDI

yourself man.
All pool supplies available,

t9 5
•QJ 7$
BORN LOSER

bCXXIH'll ~'-/ I
~s

~e; {00..[) Hk~ ,

(:(W! L~J.l.

TOO... MUHAMMAD
Al-l \IJA.? Olll.~
'7i:V(;IJ 'IEAAS OW.

2&amp;; '-JfM!6 /&gt;1:1:) ...

CONSTRUCTION

'

992 -2726 4-30-1 mo .

4-13· 1 mo .

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, GutteiS,
Paintilg and Repair

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
. METAL
DETECTORS

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

'

Rutland
742-2328
All Work Guaranteed

742-2331
Roger Wamsley

Free Estimates

5 6_: I

5-5-1 mo

LOVElY 2 story o lder · ho me m
Roctne 11x24 hvtng rm ., dming
room , new built· tn kt tc hen with
cherry cobme ts, den , bedrm
ond one·hall balh down w1th
oak hardwood fl oors. 3 bedr·
ms New full both , uttl1ty room
upslotrs ful l bas emen t, la rge
fron t and rear po rches, unat .
tached garage, 2 storage
buildings , all set upon large lot
wtth oddtlt onal lot O\loilabla
Must socnhce t or $21 ,OCO Cell

Congratulations
Graduates
Let DON ELLt 'S make 1he
pizza

--"----ROOMY 7 yr o ld one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
located be lween Coo lvtlf e and
Tuppers Pla in$ , One acre lo t,
two cor garage, ct ty water, gas
h eat ,
hardw ood
floors ,
carpeted
livtng room , ntce
vrew $21 ,000. Phone (614 )

for

your

after

graduation party. Call us at
992-6167 and we wilt make
your party something 1o
remember .
party rates.

Check

our

Donelll's Pizza
Middleport, Ohio
Open 4 p.m. darly ,
Closed all day Mondays

949-2883

BRADFORD, Au sttoneer. Com·
plete Service. Phone 949·2487
or 949·2000. Racine , Oh to , Crrtt

-~~~~~~---- -------~­

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers toasters, 1rons, all
sm all appliances . Lawn mower,
nex t to Slate Highway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·

3815

1976 JEEP
sso.oo

cash in hand if we
can not beat any deal you

brrng us on jeep or AMC
cars .

TEAFORD

441 4th Ave.
523-9407
Hun1inglon ; Vi-Va.

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
Phone 992-3325
POMEROY - 3 Brs , l'll
bath s, hoi water heat,
garage and high location
RT. 124 WEST - New
home. 3 Brs ., 2 life baths,

kitchen &amp; 2 lot s. $25.000
POMEROY - 4 acres.
Renovated , 2 BR home,
cen tra l air &amp; heat , J112

ba th s, S31,000
CHESHfqE Brs., 11 '

Modern 3

baths , ch a rmtng

kitchen.
patio.
full
basement , dbl garage and
3 lois 546.500 . This week .
RT. 33 - Arr. land and
ha ppinPSS , 70

acres

All

minerals . $16,500.
FOR INFORMATION ON
SE-LLING, BUYING AND
RESULTS CALL 992 -ll25.

SOUTH

•QI0874
• 82
t KJ 6

SUT WE'LL.

NEI'D SOME 01'

328\mo.

~IS

STUFF

on

IUYER$ DON'T
JUSt lUlGI IN

a lit _ , . 1'11 011 .,. •&lt;&gt;U•r ,.,
to -~ ,_ h..,,.. .1.~ 111 !ftftum•1ab!.
pf~ ,.... ,..• •
lie '"
1 IOltl

I

·••ttd
woitiCI• rouclr•" '-• +t....,.,"

It

1o IM'IIf Mll..nl thlll ""' y.•t of u
pe!ltro&lt;t. ~ .. ,_, (W . _ . . .
~ ,....., ~Ill. y.., -.!1 Nlll1 VI • I .,_

•!boW wlln ' " ha"H •

""'M !" lilt.

-L IST TODAYA CABIN OF YOUR OWN
- Forked Run Lake, 3
room s, 1 por ch es a nd

a

pa1h No utlli1ie s. Needs
some r epair 52,800 00

PRIVATE - 1'll Hilly
acres (grea1 lor . ba by
farm I. Close to Meigs H1. 5
BR, bath, own water wsol1ener. N.G hot water

NEW home for sale, 3 bed rms .,
sew tng room , 2 ceram1c baths,
persono lrz ed kitch en bui lt for
the hom@!!'aker Plenty of
garden space on th1s one , acre
lot . Appro)( , 2 one fourth miles
from Rt 7 on S.R. 1:2 4. Toward
Rutland on south side of rood.
Watch for &amp;tgn Al TROMM,

BUILDER, Rullond . Phone 742·
2328.
3 bedrm . hou se near Eastern H1gh
School , 2 baths, family room ,
laundry room , 2 cor gomge, f ull
basement on Iorge lot Phone

{6141985 3867. _,_

- -

--~-

-- -· --·

Ea~t

South

Pass

Pass

Pass

1•

Pass

3•

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

car·.

•petrng and insta llation .
We'll bring samples 1o your
H rome wtlh no obtiga1io•.
See how you can reallv .
save.
Mike Young , Manager r

-~~~~~~~h~~~~~~~~~-- D&amp;D TREE Trimmmg , 20 years expe r i ence .
Insured ,free
esttmc tes. Cal l 992-2384 or

- ~-'-~~~!~~-~~''.")'__ ____ _
SEWING MACHINE Repotrs , ser·
vice oil makes , 992·2284 The
Fabri c.
Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Stnger Soles and
_ Se~vice. ~~ ~~~e~~~~~~ - ­
E.XCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo -boys for htre ;, will haul
fill dirt , top so1l , It me&amp; tone and
gro .... el. Call Bob or Roger Jeff ers
day phone 992·7089 ,
night phone 992-3525 or 992-

5232.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonitat ton. 992-3954 or 992-

5968.

WILL do roofmg , construction ,
plumbing and healing. No fOb
too Iorge or too sma ll Phone

DOWN
I Tiff
%Pervading

5 Lamb
8 Knltling

3 Revealing
lapsus

linguae ·
( 2 wds.)
4 Old-time
note
5 Fled
to wed
6 Sponged
7 Exude
10 Confess;
reveal
I"
(3 wds.J
21 Languislled 11 Never
22 City on the
ending
Rhine
t% Have
23 Ship's
mercy
hoist
24 Original
Mr. Chips
Z5 Rockfish
26 List of
jurors
27 Onager

Tel
LJOUr

mama
lam
here
to
move
into

the

loft.
bo4!
LIL ABNER

-IF I

HAVE THE
BEALJTIRJL 61RLI'LLT.AJ&lt;E r&lt;.- ·rT'f'J

EXCAVATING, dozer , bockhoo
end d1tcher Chorle&amp; R. Hot ·
fteld , Bee~ Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohio Phone 742-2008.
WILL trtm or cui trees and shrub -

bery . Phone 949-2545 or 742·
3167
WILL DO e&gt;e terror pomtmg ,
hou ses and roofs . Phone 992·
5684 or 992.3374

WELL, Mt:&gt;eJON
ACCOMPUe HED!
nME FOR ME: 10
BE HEADING BACK!

GREG S CB SALES, located at Er ·
win 's Gulf Service, Mid dleport , Ohto. Phone 992-

2•38
EXCAVATING . BACKHOES AND
OOZER, LARGE AND SMAll,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . Sill
PULLINS, PHONE 9'12-2478. DAV
OR NIGHT.

r::-----~-----:---

(Do you hava a question
for the e•perts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care of this
nawspaper The Jacobys will
answer lndlvlduel questions
II stamped, self- addr~ssed
envelopes are anclosed The
most lnteresllng questions
w111 be used in this column
and will rece rve copies of
JACOBY MODERN J

.....

..
t

Y01terdlly'a Alllwer
18 King of
Siam's
friend
It Caddoan
Indian
Zl Jump to
conclUBions
22 Hubbard
cupboard
quest

Z3 Yearned lor
Z4 Pigeon pea
%6 Eaater
highlight
Z8 Defile
30 Merriment

.

:I!Otloae
33 Athletic
squad
:liOrlentallel

Uno&lt;romble the.. fourJumbleo,

form lour ordl narf wordo .

standard

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFELLOW

One lellrr simply stands lor enother. In this sample ,\ 11
u"'d for the three l's, X for the two O's, clr. Single letters.
lpoltrophel, the length and formotion of the words arc all
hints. Each day the code letters ore dlllerenl.
CRYPTOQUOTE

(; V Ll S 0

J UST ASKING $15,000.
A HONEY FOR THE
MONEY - 135acresat just
5123 oo per acre . Mos1

J

SHJXAHO

BALLS
O'FIRE!!

mine ra ls . Some ti mber .

Ideal lor spor1sman. CA LL
TODAY
STARTING OUT? OR
SLOWING DOWN? - (in

THAT'S

JEST

either case your needs are

limited 1 2 BR . balh . a ir

WHAT

cond , ow n &amp; c tt y water 11 1
acres .
Very
private .

I BEEN
LOOKIN'
'FER

$8.300 00
HENRY E. CLELANO,
" ~OKER

992-71\9 or 992-2568

...

;

MAW!! GUESS WHAT
I GOT FER 'IE !!

B X FHA 0
YV

'"

..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'R how to work II :

he at , storm s all over , small
ba sem ent , sto·rage bldgs

~I

..

ont lttler to tac:h square, to

tUX~'AQ

...

'.

r»WJ~~;~

YXHJY

"'

I

..

We keep getting questions
about whether or no1 It is
necessary to play a club openmg bid as forcing merely
because you may open a
three-card suit.
The answer to that one is
that every expert will open a
three-card club suit wl th a
hand he considers ap propriate, . but pracllcally no
expert plays the bid as forcing. It Is no tragedy to play
one club undoubted with a
three-card suit on the rare occasions when everyone does
pass.

31 Hold office
34 !ago's
wife
:15 Cryptographer's
specialty
38 Rely
37 Wahine's
dance
38 SUnuner,
in Nantes
31 Tw-klsh

II

..".

Concerns &amp; Comments 10:

dummy, East plays low."
Jim : " An unthlnklna South
has to guess between the play
of the king or the jack. The
thinker doesn 't have to
guess."
Oswald· " West dealt and
passed. He has shown up with
the king 1nd queen or hearls
and ace of spades U he also
held the ace of diamonds he
would have opened the bidding
so thinker South plays his king
of diamonds."

w0

f y

RV0

YXDIY .

J I

RVD

MJ ZH

AVY

HO

MVGH

Yesterdly'a Cryplequote: AN EGOTIST IS A STUPID
PERSON WHO THINKS HE KNOWS AS MUCH AS YOU DO. CHINESE FORTUNE COOKIE

[]
I

t

"'

rnaM"
ZBCoarse

~LDSM05T

'I

I

.,

Hoff-

l'r-AH 15 MARRIED rr-

.,.
' .

6:•0---0unce of Prevention 10.
6 45--Mornlng Repor1 3.
6:50--Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6:S5--Chuck While Reports 10; Good Morntng, Trl
Slate 13. ·
7:00--Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, AmorlcU,131 CIS
News 8; Bugs Bunny end Frtendl 10.
1 : 30---Schoolles 10.
8 00--Lasste 6; Capleln Kangaroo 1. 10; Sesame Sh'wt
33.
'
8·30-Big Volley 6.
9 ·DO--Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahile 4,15; Luc~
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with 0 . J. 13,
'".
9.30---A.M. 3; One Life 1o Live 6 ; Ta11te1ales 81 Mille
.'
Douglas 13.
,
10 :00--Celebrlly Sw&amp;epstakes 3,4,1S; E&lt;!ge of Nlvhl 11,
Price ts Right &amp;,to .
10 ·30---High Rollero 3,4,15; Dinah! 6.
' 1\
"I
11 :DO--Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4: Gamlllk :
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Electr ic Company._ ,
11 :30--Hollywood Squares 3,4,151 Happy Oaya "' 1
Love of Life 1. 10; Sesame SlrMI 20.
, '-.
'
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
il ~ ,
12 :00--Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Mltlle .A Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6,8j , 10.
1 11
12 :30---Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,'b i'1'
Seorch For Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45--E ieclrlc Company 33.
12 ·55--NB C News 3,1 .~ .
.,'• .
1:00--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,131 Phil Donahue .,,
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women On tv II.
' '.
1:30---Deys Of Our Lives 3.4, 15; Rhyme end Re6, 13 ; As The World Turns 8,10.
'·
2 00--$20,000 Pyremld 6 ,13.
2:30--Doctors 3,4,15; Break The Bank 6,13; Guldlnt
Light 8,10.
3:00--Anolher World 3,4,15; Genera! Hospital 6,1J:
.::~
Dayllme Emmy Awards 8,10; Lilies, Yoga anti
' You 20
- j :
3:30---0ne Lite to Ltve 13; Mickey Mouse &lt;;lub 6; YO,.
Can Do II 20.
4:(}0-Mlster Car toon 3; Merv Grllllno4; Somenei ·ISI ·
Bewllched 6; Mister Rogers 20,3:f; Dinah! 13.
'
4: 30--Bewltched 3, Mod Squad 6; Beverly Hlllbllll"-' e1
Sesame Slreet 20,33; Movie "The Music Man" 1fl
'•
'1 "
Fllnlstones 15
5.00--Bonanza J ; Par1rldge Family 8; Minion ; lrft·
possible 15.
5:»--Adam -12 4, 13; News 6; Fart111y Affair 81 Electric
Company 20,33.
6:00--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC Newa 6; Zoom 20,JJ,
6:30---NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlmlh .
6: CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lod;le 20; Lilt..;
'·
Yoga and You 33.
·• "
7:00--Truth or Conaeq11ences 3; To Tell The Trut~ 41 :
Bowling For Dollars 6: News 10; Coun1ry Place~~
Name Thai Tune 13; Fam ily Affair 15: Uftl'; ,
derstandlng Africa 20; Wild, Wild World ot Anlm.,, ·1 II•
1
33
7:30-Hotlywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squll'ri ,f:
lei's Deal Wllh 116; Match Game PM I; Evtnllll'.l
"
Edlllon Wllh Marlin Agronoky 20; Price Is Rlgllt',.
10; To Tetl The Truth 13; High Schoo! T:V.'HOnl; '
Society 15; Family Theatre 33.
,
8:00--Wortd of Magic 3,4; Happy Days 6, 13; Baaeblil
15, Eagle Come Home 8, 10; Behind The Linea JJ1
International Animation Felstlvei 20.
8·»-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Consumtr Survtvtl Kll
20,33.
9 ·00--Pollce Woman 3,4; S.W.A.T. 13; Commandtrl 6:
M-A-S-H 8,10; Evening a1 Shymphony :ro; Opere
Theater 33,
·
'· '
9·JO---One Day At A Time 8.10.
10:00-Woman ... Her Winning Ways l; Marcus Welby,
••
M.D. 6: Cl1y ol Angels 4; Switch 8,10; EIICIIIII
Coverage 13; News 20
10:30---Eiecllon Coverage 3; To Be Announctd lSI
Black Perspective on 1he News 20.
11 :00--News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15
II :30---Eiecllon Coverage 3,13; Mystery ol1he Wlell 11
Johnny Corson 4,15; Nebraska-West Vlrg'"lil
Prlmarylesl; Movie "The Stripper" 10; ABC Newl
33 .
ll :45--Movle "Hawkins on Murder" 8.
,
12:00--Johnny Carson 3; tronolde 13; Janak! 33, · '
1:00--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13/
. -\ ~- '

28 .. __ of

)0' STRUCK aJT AEiiN,

'

TUESDAY, Mly 11, 1911
6·00--Publlc Altelrs 10.
6· 15-- Ferm Report 13 .
6:ro- Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13.
6:30---Columbus Today 4; N~ws 6; Bible Answers ill

a~re

stitch
9 Supple
13 Region
I« Narcotic
15 Kind of
cross
16 Stormy
bird
17 Made bold
20 .. Able was

Sales and lnslaltahon
R1 . 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone day or nigh!
614-992 -2206 l.H! '!!.• ,
REMODELING,· Plumb1ng heating
and all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 10 years ew:-

ACROSS
I Word wl111
guard or
conduct

., '

8:00--Home Journal
9:00---Muslc Connection
9:30--- Tes1lmony Time
10 00--700-Ciub

~~by THOMAS JOSEPH

CARPETING ;
estimates

Mondly-Chlnntf FIVI

'T'OO IT.1

~iLQAN'S
·· Free

North

.

3,• ; News 13.

7 :00--Speclat Edition

~ti~~

of hundred bridge hands
where common sense reason·
mg makes tt possible for a
thinking player 1o substitute a
sure thing or near sure thing
for a guess "
Jim : " The hands range
from simple to complex For
instance, let's look a1 his first
'example "
.
Oswald "South is in four
spades. Wes1 opens the king of
hearts and continues after
dummy ducks South wins that
trick and leads a trump to
West's ace. A third hear1 is
led and ruffed, !rumps are
drawn, a diamond is led from

7·2-23-48 .

110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0 .

F.A furnace, large mod ern

Need new roof or Old
repaired? House , roof,
barn, shtngtes, buttd up,
palntmg, etectncal work,
gutters &amp; downspou1S,
furnaces, water heaters,
Wllter sctrners, Install ed &amp;
repaired, Sewage.
Call us at 949-2882
or 949· 2203

•

AMC JEEP

$8500
MIDDLE PORT
12
rooms . 5 Brs .. 2 baths, gas

FOI1GOT A
FAC6-

PomeroY

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

mo

DON SMITH

On l y

Ph. 99'2 -2174

SAID H€ NEVER

Racine , Oh1o

R&amp;J
COINS
Rutland, Ohio

poml~ enl ~ 14 ) '!_"_''~?_-4_fl:_

room a nd extra lot

YJt05
tA108 74
.108 2

.....
ByOswald
oswald' "In
&amp; James
Jacoby
\\41A1 'D I TELL
'Bridge
Logic',
r;~~::,in~N;,f]~~~]~~~~i)r~--·--vuH, eovs? 1
H. W. Kelsey shows a couple

.

Buy, Sell or Trade

AL TROMM CONST.

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Bron Thomas

1 72 A cres Phqne 742·2359.

$15,000
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms ., 2
baths, nat. gas heal, and
large lol In good location
$27,500 or o"fter .
POMEROY - 3 Brs , bath.
ga s heatrng , large family

YKQ964
tQ 32
. 963

Opening le•d - Ky

Nathan B1ggs
Radt ator Spec1alist

Phone Anna Blackwood
985-3805

Ph. 949.2073 or 843-2667

,_.,

l

Ann's Bridal and
Anniversary Services

the old . All types of
building and remadeling
from the foundation up.
Addttions,
carpeting,
painting, siding, rooftng,
paneling, paper hangmg,
etc ...

~

From t h e l argest Truck or
Bul ldo zer Ra d ia tor to t h e
, smallest Heater Core

We build new and remodel

plus ftntshed baseme nt and lo t,
3 &amp; two ·lhtrd&amp; acres. For op-

bath , Pom wa te r , g as FA
f urnace, and sm a ll gard en

EAST

• &amp;2 .

West

Free Consultation

NeW shingle roof.

utility , ca rport . a nd 1 leve l

WEST I 0)

•A s ,

Neither vulnerable

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service

"Pl'~ c~ ~~"l~~--3~42:._ __ _
6 room hou5e tn Middlepo rt , ne)( t

acre $30,000.
RACINE - 3 Brs , bath ,
modern kitchen, natural
gas F.A. furnace. and level
lot $12.900.
MINERSVILLE - 3 Brs.,

10

NORTH

.A K4

D&amp;D

l : ~Tomorrow

WIN AT BRIDGE

• K J 93
y A73

Noble $ummi1 Rd ,
Middlepor1
PHONE 992-5724
5-3-1 mo.

4 10 1 ma

CONF55510N 7

MYAt:iENT!

Above and below ground
pool k1fs lor 1he do-if-

D. BUMGARDNER

Ph 992-3993

~OiJil-liR·PiJ~~!C

~I.,Hf.- 1'111 hPOSIN6
THE FULL TEAR·
JERKING FACT£&gt; OIJ
ALL THE SIIAMI!L£5'

I

too.

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse. Ohio

AHEAD WITH

J.P. .,A5 5-00 N
A5- 1 FI'-115-H
fALI(J'-16 TO

'·

GOIN6

....-

&amp;:»- Baseball 6: Your Candlda1es Speak JJ: ~
"north to Alaska " 13; Ourstory 20.
9:00--AII In The Family 8,10: Jerry 20 .
9:30---Maude 8,10; World Press 20.
10 .00--Joe Foores1er 3,4; Medic.! Center 1.101 ~
Political Talk 15; News 20.
,,
10 :30---Potlllcat Talk 15; Lock S1ock a. Barret 20.
II :00--News 3,4,6,1, 10. 13, 15; ABC News JJ.
1
11 :30---Johnny Carson 3,4,15: American B'andlllllf't 1
23rd Birthday Specie! 6, 13; Movie " ll 's Good to .. ,
Alive" I ; Movie " Bye Bye Birdie" 10; Jan1kl A .

'Thinking removes guesswork .

SWIMMING
POOLS

Blown
Insulation Services

~OU'RE

CEIZ.TAINL'i•

Phone 742-2409
Bo• 28A
Rutland, Oh.
4-16-1 mo

chain

CAPTAIN EASY

14 Hour Phone 5ervtce

Tractors.

Bolen's Mowers , Merry
Ti llers , MTD Mowers .
498 Locust St.
Middleport, Ohio

-

1973 CB 350 Hondo , excel lent con
dttton Lo ts of e.w:tros . Phone
142 221 1 otter 5 p m . call 742·

~· \&lt;!';,/

Shepa!d Contractors

I

$5500.00 Phone 9'12-7275.
--· ---·~-·'--- ·- .----MODERN HOUSE w•lh 1115 sq fl .,

rlir"Sale

•

TillersRiding

FREE ESTIMATES

3 or 4 bedrm . home on 1 acre
667 3519
ground , 1 mtl e south o f Chester
on Rl 7 Fomtly ond lrvtng 3 bedrm. home . Call992·7033
room , dtntng roo m , bu th-m ktt · HOUSE. 3 bedroom home, 59
chen, ell carpeted, full stze
acres, I mile f rom Rutland on
basement and garage ct ty
New L1ma Rood, phone 742·
wa ter , n(]luro l gas Seen by
29BB

lo schoo l

'

Licensed Installer

Mowen-

NEW : lawn Boy mowers,

lWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

25A2

AKC Regt s!ered Collte Stud Ser
vtce , Stardu st · Kmg
Phone
1970Chevell e SS396 , 4 speed , e)(
cel lenl condt tton Lol 5 of ex
tros Coli after 5 p m 992

' (('" •

by

Lawn

phone 992-3891

99()2

Coll 992 -1156

GARAGE Sol e Thur sday and
Frrday, 5 m1les off Rt 7 on 143
Mr sc ,

Phone 992-2181

lOCUST pos ts round o r
Phone 949.2774

FOr Rent

pard 356
dleporl .

ll1liil

'

Installed

m -3092

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

POMEROY LANDMARK

40 ~

Pioneer

Medica I Oxygen
and Supplies

"'P. _Jack W Caroey, Mgr.

~~1
· ·
;

Sell Qua lily
. 5-9-76

$163.95
73·340 Ouster , low mileage, 75
Dodge ptc kup
6 cylinder
Phone 992 5601

Rep1lr

. . ~- ( t &gt;"

Wmdows and Doors
Free Estimates
We recommend and

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'12 H. P., B&amp;S Eng .

Septic Systems

Eng .

'-;j&lt;:--; ~-; ~~::~

$89.95

BLIND ADS
1\ dd tlt ona l 1\c C hM ti C
per Advcrl tScm c n l
OFFI CE HOURS
A 10 J m to 'I oo p n t
Da il y.
10 an t to 11 00
Noon S;ll ur da y
P hone tQfl a y 99 7 ') I Sti

NOTICE S
ATTN ! !
ALL HOUSEWIVES

'"' -

Continuou s Gutter
Replacement

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng .

SmJII

Complete

Sates &amp; SerVIce
2013 101h Ave .
Parkersburg, W. Va .
304-485-0386
614-423-6474
Alumrnum -Vrnyi-Sieel

Oh•o Phone 9'12-3891 ,

Sport aboul Wagon , 6 c y l , au toma f tc trans , radio,
good ftres. whtf e ltn rsh , good economy

WILKINSON' S

Siding Center

COAl. limestone and all types of
sa lt and rock salt for tee and
snow removal Excelsior Salt
Works , Ea st Main St., Pomeroy ,

P . steenng , radto, clean

'

MONDA.Y, MAY 10, 1916
s 00 Bonanza 3: Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible 15.
s 25 - Pollllcat Talk 4.
s 30--- Adam 12 4,13; Family Affair 8; Elec Co. 20,JJ .
6 00- -News 3,4,8,10.13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
4·30---NB&lt;; News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.1 0; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Cor rascolendas JJ.
1 oo-Trulh or'Cons 3, ToTettthe :rrulh4 , Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News tO; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15: Teaching Children lo Read
20. Resourceful West \l!rg!nla 33.
7 30 Thai Good Ole Nashvi lle Music 3; Bobby VInton
4. Space : 1999 6 ; Prtcols Righi&amp; ; Evening Edit ion
with Martin Agronsky 20; High Road 1o Adven1ure
10. To Tell 'he Truth 13; Friends ot Man ,1S;
Kanawha Valley Cities ad Government 33 .
a.00- Mov le " Gemini Man" 3. ~a . 15: Gun smoke 8;
USA · People &amp; Pol tiles 2 20,33; America's Junior
Miss Pageant 10; Potltical Talk 13.

'

992-3965

mil es

KNOCKS

Business Services

VEGETABL E plants ol all ktnds 10
ditlerenf va rl ~t l e s of tomatoes .
tncludtng non actd while
tomato Very large $electi on of
bedding
planl5 . . Also
Geraniums and othe r potted
plants . Hongmg baskets
Cleland Forms and Green·
house
Gerold tne Cl4!:iond ,
RaCine

.'

Television log for easy viewing

BUTT OF A OEI:P-1

SEA ROO

L.I:Z::Z: C:OL.D ~

MODERN walnut console , AM FM
radto , 4 speed changer.
Balance S103.40 or lerms. Call

Cf' l) IS

Rcv.,J.'t-foward Shtveley of
the Racine Circ u1 t of Umted
Meti1w\ Churches recenll)
compt~"t'ed an eig~ l weeks
course ·'" marri age and
family ~' coun se lin g
and
co un si'JI ~ g persons wit!1
emotional illn ess Th ese f 'i l 3. 10 2tc
courses were taught by the
Chapl~in cy Department of
Athens Mental Health Center
Ftrsl Lt. and Mrs. Edward ~~~-~-fOr
ONE HALF a c r es, no
M. Brown· I Dottte Wtlcoxen I 101minera
ls, Su tl on Tw p $700
are paren ts of a ·son born
acre Phone 949 2630
Aprtl.;l5, 1976. Named Edward.Max.fi eld Brown , Jr , he
weighed 6,pounds, 15 ounces.
Patemal grandparents arc
Mr . and ,Mrs. Don Ohlinger of 1975 22 FT CAVALCADE
t rave l tr .:;nl er, sleep s6 F ull y
New H~~en ; W.Va. Maternal
se lf t on f at ne d , l t ke n ew ,
grand~are n ts are Mr and
on l y used 3 ftm es Phon e
(61d) 985 3356 aft er 6 30 p m
Mrs. M'artln Wilcoxen and
Mrs. raye Wilco•en is a
great grandmother.
Mr . and Mrs. Albert
Bodkins of Spl'l ~gltcld spent
Sunday guests of Mr . and
Mrs.
Ed Mtller were Helen
sever~~ ~~~,YS with Mr . and
Mrs, ~rman Wolfe and Mr Slack and Pearl Willis of
an~ l_
: 4 vv ~rd' Sayre. Mr Letart ralls and Mr and
Wo'Jff! :W~s a pn eumonra Mrs Robert Cor nwell of
patient fn Veterans Memonal Gallipolis
Hospital~~nd ·returned homeMrs. Mabel Brace and Mrs .
Jack Adams vtslled Mr . und
Fri~aH, ; .
Mr s. Roger Adams and
Mr ~i' 'anq • Mrs . Frank
Krau~~ ~Or ,Gallipolis spent famtly and Bobby Joe Adams
Sundar.·,
and · Stanley and Melant e, sunday
Houda!il1elt·of Dallas, Texas,
Mr . and Mt s. Elza Birch
spent Wednesday with Mrs. VJ ~ilcd ,,, Tm t'h MundCiy wit/1
Margaref Houda&lt;helt.
Mr "''d Mrs l•:arl Powell

,,,,,

Auto Sales

111. ,, ",

For Sale

RAT ES
F or Want Ad Sc r v tcc
'I ccn t5 prr w or d one
tnser t,on
'
M tnllnum ChMq c \ I 00
1.1 cen ts prr w o ro three
&lt;.O n Si' CUi tv e
tnser r to n ~
76 &lt;. cnn; pu w or d Stx
\Oil SC CUttV C'
lll f!C rlt O n ~
?li l' cr Cent Otsco unt on
Pil •d lHI'l ,l nd iHJs P U•d
wt l htn l(l d av s

For Sale

Sentinel, MiddJ~ port ~Yolllet'u) , u .. 1\'IUfall.a~ , 1\ta.\

TRACY

Ill'! o r ,.

D t~v

P uiJ i rCd 'r Oil
· MO il CiitV

~ - The Pomeroy

·l For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classi)fieds

IN:E~A~O~r!~~N

P M

,

I []

l'litllll - -...

.....

#'J

�8 - The Dally Senllnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mondlly , May 10, 1976

Carpenter
Personals

Df'a CIIrnt'

V

, , rl l

Cu n t t' i l iltton

Mr and Mrs Walter Swell
visited with Clemma Vale at
Cardmgton , Ohi o on Sw1day
Mrs. Wanda Turner spent a
few day s here wtth her
parents, Mr . and Mrs Dale
Stan sbury
and
oth er
relMives.
Robert Cordr ay and son-rnlaw, John Pam sh of
Westervtlle vtstled Ins mther,
Beulah Cordra y and brotherin-law ancf sister , Mr ami
Mrs . Redd Jeffers
Guests of Mr . and Mrs
Clay Jordan from a dtslan cc
who came for tho weddmg of
thetr daughter, Barbara Ann
to Tom Cassell, Ada, Ohio,
wt!re their son and daughteim-law , Mr e:tnd Mrs. Dale
J ordan and Kahe, her
brother and fanu ly. Mr . and
Mrs . Johnnte Dwelley and
children, all of An ruston ,
Alabama , and Mr and Mrs.
rrank Sclnmdl' CoiLmlbus
Mrs J ordan's brother-rnlaw and sister , Mr and Mt·s.
Granvtlle Stout and George
and nephews and fan uly, Mr
and Mrs . .Jimrm e Stout and
daughter , along wtth l11 s
nephew and fmm ly, Mr and
Mrs! Waller J ordan and son ,
also called at the .Jordan
home to ,bc wtlll'relaltves .
Mr and Mrs Dale Stan sbury and Mr and Mrs . Jerry
Stan sbury and family were
guests of Mr and Mrs
Warren r.
Turner 1n
Co lumbu s recen tl y Oth er
relattves JOllled them fur a
family gathenng
Mrs Carl Greenlees and
g r a nd da ug ht er, ll t!l a
Rhoades al'compt.m ied h ~ r
daug hter, Hose Hopper and
da ug hters. Athens. to Be lpre
where they called on Mrs
Greenlees bro lhe r-m -l~w and
stsler , Mr . and Mrs . Donald
Sm ith (\lrs Srnt lh had
surgery recently The)
retu rn ed by Barlow and
stopp ed a t the cemete r y
where Carl Greenlees was
burted recently.
Eltzabctl1 Jordan, Metgs
Cuunty Jumo1 Gnwgc
Matron . WfiS guest at a
moth er-dau ghter
dt nn er
planned by the lec turer , Mrs.
John Colwell , at Star Grange
on Monday evemng. A speeial

program and dinner were
enjoyed by the group
Mrs Vidor Perry, local,
an d Mrs Georgta Wri es ,
Wellston, were guests of their
brother-In -Ial\ and stster, Mr
and Mrs. Bob Jones and
famil y tn Dayton and were at
· the hosptlal to see Mrs . Wtles'
so n, Phillip Wil es, who
recently -underw en t ba ck
surgery
The benefi t auclton whtch
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Dolphus Burke on
Sat urday afternoon for Mrs
Car l Greenl ees was we ll
attended . Those m charge
expressed their apprectalton
for the support given to make
tl successful
Mr . and Mrs Larry
Stansbur y
and
so ns,
Reynoldsburg, Mr and Mrs
Clair D. Stansbur y and
family, Grov eport , and the
Jerr y Stansbury fanuly,
local, spent Sunday wt th their
parents, Mr and Mrs. Dale
Stansbury
Vtr gini a Townsend or
Colwnbus is spendtng a week
with l1cr uncle, Paul Peck
Her other uncle, Wtlham C
Peck, is still confined to
Holzer Hosptlal.

Rt\cine
.). ~ ·

By•*!'· Francis MorriS

Cor recr,on s wil l bf.' at
((&gt;pft: d vn t il Y t1 ., ,
r1(ty Ol P ub l,calt On

lor

REGULATION S

1 he P ub l 'S h n

r e scr v t' S

fh r rtq h t ro e&gt; d1l o r r ctc c l
'c1 t) y il d S d f' (' m(• d
ob

tCCIJOnal Thr pu b lt'.ii hc r
Ndl not be r cs pon srbl c tor
n1or c th an on r 'n corr cc,t
tn S(' r t,on

CAROOF TH ANKS

&amp; OBIT U ARY
'l&gt;~ O(J
t or
',U
w o rd
m tn m 1um
Ea c h c1 dd tl •o n al w or d J

foi'

~

Auto Sales

2s~~Ns Por~eroy

Mo·
~·or_Co.
QUALITY._
_
~

1971 CHEVELLE&lt; DOOR
6 c y l , au to ma t ic ,

P.

11895

sf e€ ring , ra d io , 1 owner, \6 ,000

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 OR .
302 V 8, a utomalt c tran s
rnt enor , b!ue fint sh

I

11895

1972 AMC HORNET

11995

a

All Yard Sa l es , Rummag e,
Por ch and Basem ent Po r ch
and Bas_emenf Sa l es, etc
mu st be pa id m advanc ~ :
Get your tn tn ear l v by
s tQ.pptn g by our olftce al
Th e Dally Sent inel. 111
Court Sl or wnttng Box
729 , Pom eroy , Oh to 45 769
Wtlh your r e mt!lan ce

Wanted to Buy
OLD fu rntlur e , tee bO )( CS , bra ss

1971 Dodge Charger 318 two
bed s old wal l telephone: s gp.d-- dOOJ:...'dov-l'top outomo tJ C, foe·
patl :s or complete h ou~ds
tory otr "?i~r brakes, mag
Wrt te M 0 Mill er , Rt 2
whee ls $1 ,725 , Phone (304)
Pome roy , Ohto Ca lf 992 7760
675·2651

liMBE ~

top prr ce for standrn g
limber Ca ll (614 ) 446 8570

1967 Couga r 289 engme . Call
onyltme 992·7768

CASH pard tor oil make5 and
models of mobt le homes
Phone area code 6 14 ·423 9531

1970 T B1rd . needs some body
work , p s
and p.b ., $450.
Phone 992 7258

Notice!

S5Cosh$$$ tor junked auto Frye 's
Truck Auto Ports , Rutland
Phone 742· 2081

}970 Chevelle SS 396 4 ::; peed e x ·
cellent cond rtton l ots of ex ·
Ires Co il off er 5 p.m CXI2

RACINE Ftr c Dcporlmcn t w•ll
hove a gu n 5hoot Saturday at
6 30 p m a t thet r nP.w buddmg
otf Bo shan Rood
'

USED car tn g ood runn tng condt
!ton Not more rhon 10 years
old Coll742 ·2581

For Memortol Day , beoutdul
selec l ton fl owe rs
baskets ,
spray s, loose fl ower s, vases
Faye s G tlt Shop, North '2nd Sl ,
Mtddlepbrt Open dot ly 9 am
ttl8 p m
LETART Fall s Cemete ry lot core
fee 15 payable now Cost ts
$7 50 per lot far one year
Money rs to be sent to Clorer1cg
I Nom s Route 2, Bo)( 114 ,
Roc me

wanted to Rent
WANTED TO RENT sma ll hou se or
trotler pr eferably 111 the cou ntry
and near Pomeroy Etther fur ·
ntshed or no ! Phone 949·2480
or (614) 985·4248
J bedrm hou se tn th e coun t ry
For reasonable rent Phone

Situations Wanted
WILL core lor el derly pe rson rn my
home Ph one 1 (6 14 \ 985·3849
or 992·34 10

Services Offere:d
CARPENTER w tl l do stdtng roof ·
1ng remodeling room addt ·
!tons
Also garages
Free
Esttmates Col l 992 2659

NOTI CE OF

A PPOINTMENT
C.ncNo 21796
E stil t c
of
H ARO LD
F
ER L EW IN E, De cea sed
Nol tcc tS her eby g tvc n tha t
Charlott e M ac Erl cwrn c of R
IJ D e)(t er , Oht O, ha s bee n duly
appotnted Adrntnt stra tr tx of
th e Estat e o t H aro tct r
E rl c wtn c, dece a se d , laic of
Mctg S County Ohro
Credttor s &lt;lr e r equ tr ed to
hi e lhetr c latm S w tth sat d
f tduc tary Wt l h rn thr ee month s
Dat ed lht s Sth dc1 Y of May
I Q] 6
Mann tn g Webst er
Judg e
( 5\ 10 17, :n Jtc

Lost and Found
LOS T- {t5hrn g tackle bo11 , loco·
tton Tonn er's Run , reward
Cal l 247 ·220 1
LO ST Eo5 1 of Metg5 Htgh School
on Coun ly Rd 25 blond and
'!N hrt e fe male Cocker Spantel
w tlh redd tsh freckl es on nose
Reword for return or tnformo
!ton leadtng to r etu rn Phon e

992-2264
LOST Thursday tn Rocme, f emale
Ba linese [(] t long hatred betge
w1 th dark g ra)' sea l potnt mark
tngs , oran ge color
wtl h
rhmestone Webb Atr Force
Bo se
va c e~no tton
l og
Ch tldren's pet Reward Phone
949 2375 or 949 2883

Help Wanted DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGER S IN OUR AREA.
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVESTMENT NO COllECTING OR
DEliVERINGS CAll COLLECT
CAROl DAY (SIBI 489-8395 o:
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE.,
AlBA NY. N Y 12205

NOT I CE OF
AP POINTMENT
ca s ~ N o 21798
GRill Cook and wot l ress wonted
Es t ilte a t V IR G INI A F
Apply rn person , Crows Stea k
H AWK Decea se d
House , Pomeroy
No tt ce tS h er eb y q tv cn thar
Les ter M
Ha wk o f Rt
'1 , BABYSITTER needed , 5 days per
Coo l vr llc, Oht o , h as l&gt;ecn du ly
wee k , 2 ch 1ldren , preferably stl
appotnt ed 1\ drnrn tstr &lt;t tor of
m my home Co ll247· 282 1
th e es tat e of Vt r qrn,u F
Hawk , de ce a se d , lai c of M ctg s PART TIME bar mmd 98 N Se·
County , Ohro
con d , M.(Njd l epor t ,
O h1 o
L r c&lt;Jrt or s ar c r cqu tr ea 10
Fhcnd ly Tavern
f tl ~
tll e tr c l a tm s wt!l1 satd
ftdu c rary wrlhtn to ur month s
Dat ed th ts 29th da y ot 11 prt1
1Y ! 6
RESPONSIBLE PERSON
MA NNIN G D WCI)S IC' r
Wanted to own and ope rat e
J uctge
ca ndy &amp; confe ct ton vendmg
15 1 ] , 10 17, ] I C
route
Pomeroy
a nd
surroundtng area . Plea sa nt
bu smess. Htgh proftt 1tem s
PUBLIC NOTICE
To be sold at Publ tc Auc l tO n
Call start part -tim e Age or
at C h e~t cr . Oh to . by Tru stee s
e)( pert ence not tmportant ,
o f C hc ~ tcr Twp , M e t ~s Co
Req ut res car and S960 cash
Mdy 11ncl al 10 o 'c loc k A M
tnv es tmcnt . For detatl s
Two Ford Dumo Tr uc ks a~
~~ w i th T d lcs
wnte &amp; me lude your phon e
On e 1961 Sert a l No F60 CH
SAl ,
20073 1
1012 San Jose Avenu e
On e 196/J Se r ta l No f- 61 C E
Burbank , Ca hfornia 91501
91177 18
One Horne Lrt e Rtdtng
Mow er .
') L awn P us h Mowers
All sat es wtll be c a sh
Cl erk . C he ~ t c r Tw p
F rcd ertck M Tut!l e

Sale

1967 VW, $400 Phon e 992·7727
1966 Ponlto c Co tcltn a, p .s , and
p b good work cor Also 1964
VW good condl tJOn, no rust

Coll 992 3884

992 5175
WILL DO odd tabs , rooting , potn
ltng, houltng , treework , and
mowtng Ph one 992.7409

5737

Yard.Sale

IF YO U have a serv rce to offer
won t to buy or sell some thtn g
ore look mg for wor k
or
whatever . . you 'll get re$ults
fasler wtlh a Sen!mel Wo nt Ad

1968 Ca mara 327 aulom al tc, new
E·T w hee ls Daytona IJres ,
sharp , $795 FJrsl come ftr st
s~rve Phone 949 2~60
1973 Dodge Poloro 4 dr hardt op ,
o c., power , $1390 Phone 843·

20'15

;:;
FURN ISH ED opt. , co uple only , oil
ultlr ll es pe 1d $130 per month ,
Phone 992·3975 or 992 ·2571
FURNI SH ED, 2 bedrm apartment,
adu l ts on ly, tn Mtddleport
Ph one 992 3874

3 AND 4 RM furntshed and un·
furn tshed opt s Ph one 992·

543•
COUNTR Y Mobtle Home Pork , Rt
33, l en mtles north of Pomeroy
large lots w1th concr et pottos
stdewalk s runners and off
stree t porktng Phone 992 H79

3 ROOM furm5hed opt
N

ultltt1es
Fourth , Mtd

2 bedrm !railer , a c , one mtle
from Hornsonv1lle on New l tmo
Rood Call bef ore noon and
alte r 6 p m 742 2997
TRAILER lo t Co Rd 17 Harmon
'.'t il e Phone 742 2577
2 bedrm trade r , real mce Phone

992-3324
ONE bedrm futm shed apartment
wtth washer ond dryer , adul ts
only Phone 992-3129 or 992·
5434

COAL, limestone and calc Ju m
chl onde and calc tutn bnne fo r
dus l con trol and all types of
sa lt E)(cel sto r Salt Works East
Mo1n Stree t , Pomeroy , O h1 o,
1953 Ford Jubrlee tractor (e)( celle nt ), $1 650, Ford 9N troc·
tor overhau led S1 000. New 5
fl 3 pi rota ry mower (slump
1umper) , $385, Four used ndmg
lawn mowers, 7 and 8 h.p $200
to $230. Lu ckett Form Equtp·
men t, West Woshtngton St ,

Albany Phone (6 14) 69B-3031
o:698 7881
BEAN POSTS Coll147-3077
MAKE spnng ·cleontng proft tobl e,
turn unwanted items into cos h.
Adverltse tn the Wont Ads
7 1·750 Norton (amanda. Con see
at Rutland Pennzo1l or coli 742·

6 It tru ck camper. Phone 992·
5983 offer 5 p m

spltt

-

GE pot scr ubber dt5 hwasher, par·
table Phone949-2890

1969 12x60 mobtle home , custom
Sc hult Good condJIJon . Call

742-3018

-

1972 Elcono mobr le home , un
furni shed, w 1th llp ·out, stove,
refrt geral or, dimng room se t
slays 3 bedrooms 1 'l l baths .
Phone992·7768.
1974 Htllcrest 60x12 lop of the
hne mode l, tota l el ec , ful ly lur·
ntshed , carpeted throughout ,
eye level O\len, surf ace uml ,
boy wmdow , one·f ourth old
world burch panel tng , front
dtmng room , 3 door model,
home •s ltke new Also 1975
Skyl ine 52x 12 total elec , all
new
fur n 1ture , co rpeled
lhroughoul , total
wrapped
Fom·Cor, fron t kitchen model.
We sold th1 s home new and ts
st tll m lt ke new condthon Can
be seen at Ktngsbury Mobt le
Hom e Sales. 1100 E. Matn ,
Pomeroy, 992 · 7~~ ~ _____ _
1969 Topper mobile home, ex·
ce llent cond Jti on . 12x60. In ·
qutre offer 5 p m (6 14) 985.

(61A) 985 42A8

5737
TWO femal e purebred German
Shep herd pups 7 weeks o ld
Call992 !379of~er 4 P·!!'__ .

1970 4 dr Mercury Morqua , good
runnmg co nd1tton , atr condi
honing, power brakes , power
steenng , stereo rod1o. Cal l

992 3850.

2201

STE REO ·radi o, modern destg n,
om -t m rodto , 8 track tape com·
bt natton . Balance $101 20 or
term s Co ll992·3q65
1971 Kowosok1 No. 175, $350 00
good
con d tl to n .
Phon e
1·614·985 4197
BEAU TY Shop equ tpmenl, one
new sha mpoo unrt , one
hydraulic chOJr
dryer and
chotr , one 27x8 ft
house
trotler Ph one 992·7669
702 Wheelhorse tractor

992 77A9

Phone

19b4 Ford 4000, selec tomolt c
shdt
fou r blade mower
FOUR Fom tl y Garage Sole, May 6,
undernea th
19b I lnterno 7 and 8 at 810 W. Mom St
lt onol, 340 uhl tty, all angle ,
Ne)(t to Shuler's
Pomeroy
hydrauli c cycle bar mower
Market from 9 a m . ttll 5 p m
Howard Say re 992 2560 or see
'Toys , formals , clo thmg end e tc
or Texaco Se-rviCe Station ,
ODDS and Ends So le start s 5.7.76
Syracuse Ohto,
to 5· 14·76. Log Cabm Twp Rd
FISHING
boat 50 h p Evmrude
261 between Keno and long
mo tor , troller Ph one 992 6154,
Bollom fol lo w signs off 248 ot
Keno or l ong Bottom Waches FOUR G 78· 14 Kelly Sprrngft eld
1ewelr y , purses
cl o th es ,
aufornobtle ltres hcell en t can .
d1shes . C-B rodto , f tshmg
dtlton Call 742 2301 after 4·30
tack le , Fou r 700x 16 8 ply hres ,
p m.
four 750)(16 ttres , one three
fourth 1968 Jeep truck , 36 tn, ONE Hereford cow wt th colt (half
Mu r ray .Grey ) one polled
caP bunks stove a ir horns . CB
hereford hetler to f reshen 1n
roche, ful ly equ1pped for tra iler
Sepfember . Phone (61 4) 985·
towtng
4248 in evenmgs or on
YARD SALE and ba sement 5ale.
weekends
Tuesday th roug h Thursday , 6
rn1les east of Chester on Rl 8 N tractor , brush hog, plow
S1400 00 See or ca lf R T.
2.4 8. Ho usehold furnrlu re ,
Stewart , 992 7894
glas sware
clo thmg , us ed
doo r s ond m1sc
Ron a l d TRUCKLOAD used window otr
Osborne,
con d t !t one r s,
lor
sole .
~

Guarant eed $50 and up. Phone

(614) 593-3595 AI hens .

120 locus t pos ts Ph one 742 2359.
YARD Sale, M onday , May 10 8 H.P. RIDING lawn mower . Elecrhrqugh 13th, 829 Sou th Third
lrlc start $125.00. Phone 94q.
Avenue , Middleport
2801 , G len Btssel'

saws,

Fmancmg Ava 1la bl e
Blown tnto Wall s &amp; Attics

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

17 Cole Str.. l
Pomeroy, Ohro 45769
Telephone (6141 992-3768
We Deliver

4-25-1 mo.

WAY!&gt; l'l'f'5WINI'l.fD

YCJJ 1!-LINDI

yourself man.
All pool supplies available,

t9 5
•QJ 7$
BORN LOSER

bCXXIH'll ~'-/ I
~s

~e; {00..[) Hk~ ,

(:(W! L~J.l.

TOO... MUHAMMAD
Al-l \IJA.? Olll.~
'7i:V(;IJ 'IEAAS OW.

2&amp;; '-JfM!6 /&gt;1:1:) ...

CONSTRUCTION

'

992 -2726 4-30-1 mo .

4-13· 1 mo .

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, GutteiS,
Paintilg and Repair

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
. METAL
DETECTORS

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

'

Rutland
742-2328
All Work Guaranteed

742-2331
Roger Wamsley

Free Estimates

5 6_: I

5-5-1 mo

LOVElY 2 story o lder · ho me m
Roctne 11x24 hvtng rm ., dming
room , new built· tn kt tc hen with
cherry cobme ts, den , bedrm
ond one·hall balh down w1th
oak hardwood fl oors. 3 bedr·
ms New full both , uttl1ty room
upslotrs ful l bas emen t, la rge
fron t and rear po rches, unat .
tached garage, 2 storage
buildings , all set upon large lot
wtth oddtlt onal lot O\loilabla
Must socnhce t or $21 ,OCO Cell

Congratulations
Graduates
Let DON ELLt 'S make 1he
pizza

--"----ROOMY 7 yr o ld one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
located be lween Coo lvtlf e and
Tuppers Pla in$ , One acre lo t,
two cor garage, ct ty water, gas
h eat ,
hardw ood
floors ,
carpeted
livtng room , ntce
vrew $21 ,000. Phone (614 )

for

your

after

graduation party. Call us at
992-6167 and we wilt make
your party something 1o
remember .
party rates.

Check

our

Donelll's Pizza
Middleport, Ohio
Open 4 p.m. darly ,
Closed all day Mondays

949-2883

BRADFORD, Au sttoneer. Com·
plete Service. Phone 949·2487
or 949·2000. Racine , Oh to , Crrtt

-~~~~~~---- -------~­

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers toasters, 1rons, all
sm all appliances . Lawn mower,
nex t to Slate Highway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·

3815

1976 JEEP
sso.oo

cash in hand if we
can not beat any deal you

brrng us on jeep or AMC
cars .

TEAFORD

441 4th Ave.
523-9407
Hun1inglon ; Vi-Va.

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
Phone 992-3325
POMEROY - 3 Brs , l'll
bath s, hoi water heat,
garage and high location
RT. 124 WEST - New
home. 3 Brs ., 2 life baths,

kitchen &amp; 2 lot s. $25.000
POMEROY - 4 acres.
Renovated , 2 BR home,
cen tra l air &amp; heat , J112

ba th s, S31,000
CHESHfqE Brs., 11 '

Modern 3

baths , ch a rmtng

kitchen.
patio.
full
basement , dbl garage and
3 lois 546.500 . This week .
RT. 33 - Arr. land and
ha ppinPSS , 70

acres

All

minerals . $16,500.
FOR INFORMATION ON
SE-LLING, BUYING AND
RESULTS CALL 992 -ll25.

SOUTH

•QI0874
• 82
t KJ 6

SUT WE'LL.

NEI'D SOME 01'

328\mo.

~IS

STUFF

on

IUYER$ DON'T
JUSt lUlGI IN

a lit _ , . 1'11 011 .,. •&lt;&gt;U•r ,.,
to -~ ,_ h..,,.. .1.~ 111 !ftftum•1ab!.
pf~ ,.... ,..• •
lie '"
1 IOltl

I

·••ttd
woitiCI• rouclr•" '-• +t....,.,"

It

1o IM'IIf Mll..nl thlll ""' y.•t of u
pe!ltro&lt;t. ~ .. ,_, (W . _ . . .
~ ,....., ~Ill. y.., -.!1 Nlll1 VI • I .,_

•!boW wlln ' " ha"H •

""'M !" lilt.

-L IST TODAYA CABIN OF YOUR OWN
- Forked Run Lake, 3
room s, 1 por ch es a nd

a

pa1h No utlli1ie s. Needs
some r epair 52,800 00

PRIVATE - 1'll Hilly
acres (grea1 lor . ba by
farm I. Close to Meigs H1. 5
BR, bath, own water wsol1ener. N.G hot water

NEW home for sale, 3 bed rms .,
sew tng room , 2 ceram1c baths,
persono lrz ed kitch en bui lt for
the hom@!!'aker Plenty of
garden space on th1s one , acre
lot . Appro)( , 2 one fourth miles
from Rt 7 on S.R. 1:2 4. Toward
Rutland on south side of rood.
Watch for &amp;tgn Al TROMM,

BUILDER, Rullond . Phone 742·
2328.
3 bedrm . hou se near Eastern H1gh
School , 2 baths, family room ,
laundry room , 2 cor gomge, f ull
basement on Iorge lot Phone

{6141985 3867. _,_

- -

--~-

-- -· --·

Ea~t

South

Pass

Pass

Pass

1•

Pass

3•

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

car·.

•petrng and insta llation .
We'll bring samples 1o your
H rome wtlh no obtiga1io•.
See how you can reallv .
save.
Mike Young , Manager r

-~~~~~~~h~~~~~~~~~-- D&amp;D TREE Trimmmg , 20 years expe r i ence .
Insured ,free
esttmc tes. Cal l 992-2384 or

- ~-'-~~~!~~-~~''.")'__ ____ _
SEWING MACHINE Repotrs , ser·
vice oil makes , 992·2284 The
Fabri c.
Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Stnger Soles and
_ Se~vice. ~~ ~~~e~~~~~~ - ­
E.XCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo -boys for htre ;, will haul
fill dirt , top so1l , It me&amp; tone and
gro .... el. Call Bob or Roger Jeff ers
day phone 992·7089 ,
night phone 992-3525 or 992-

5232.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonitat ton. 992-3954 or 992-

5968.

WILL do roofmg , construction ,
plumbing and healing. No fOb
too Iorge or too sma ll Phone

DOWN
I Tiff
%Pervading

5 Lamb
8 Knltling

3 Revealing
lapsus

linguae ·
( 2 wds.)
4 Old-time
note
5 Fled
to wed
6 Sponged
7 Exude
10 Confess;
reveal
I"
(3 wds.J
21 Languislled 11 Never
22 City on the
ending
Rhine
t% Have
23 Ship's
mercy
hoist
24 Original
Mr. Chips
Z5 Rockfish
26 List of
jurors
27 Onager

Tel
LJOUr

mama
lam
here
to
move
into

the

loft.
bo4!
LIL ABNER

-IF I

HAVE THE
BEALJTIRJL 61RLI'LLT.AJ&lt;E r&lt;.- ·rT'f'J

EXCAVATING, dozer , bockhoo
end d1tcher Chorle&amp; R. Hot ·
fteld , Bee~ Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohio Phone 742-2008.
WILL trtm or cui trees and shrub -

bery . Phone 949-2545 or 742·
3167
WILL DO e&gt;e terror pomtmg ,
hou ses and roofs . Phone 992·
5684 or 992.3374

WELL, Mt:&gt;eJON
ACCOMPUe HED!
nME FOR ME: 10
BE HEADING BACK!

GREG S CB SALES, located at Er ·
win 's Gulf Service, Mid dleport , Ohto. Phone 992-

2•38
EXCAVATING . BACKHOES AND
OOZER, LARGE AND SMAll,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . Sill
PULLINS, PHONE 9'12-2478. DAV
OR NIGHT.

r::-----~-----:---

(Do you hava a question
for the e•perts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care of this
nawspaper The Jacobys will
answer lndlvlduel questions
II stamped, self- addr~ssed
envelopes are anclosed The
most lnteresllng questions
w111 be used in this column
and will rece rve copies of
JACOBY MODERN J

.....

..
t

Y01terdlly'a Alllwer
18 King of
Siam's
friend
It Caddoan
Indian
Zl Jump to
conclUBions
22 Hubbard
cupboard
quest

Z3 Yearned lor
Z4 Pigeon pea
%6 Eaater
highlight
Z8 Defile
30 Merriment

.

:I!Otloae
33 Athletic
squad
:liOrlentallel

Uno&lt;romble the.. fourJumbleo,

form lour ordl narf wordo .

standard

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFELLOW

One lellrr simply stands lor enother. In this sample ,\ 11
u"'d for the three l's, X for the two O's, clr. Single letters.
lpoltrophel, the length and formotion of the words arc all
hints. Each day the code letters ore dlllerenl.
CRYPTOQUOTE

(; V Ll S 0

J UST ASKING $15,000.
A HONEY FOR THE
MONEY - 135acresat just
5123 oo per acre . Mos1

J

SHJXAHO

BALLS
O'FIRE!!

mine ra ls . Some ti mber .

Ideal lor spor1sman. CA LL
TODAY
STARTING OUT? OR
SLOWING DOWN? - (in

THAT'S

JEST

either case your needs are

limited 1 2 BR . balh . a ir

WHAT

cond , ow n &amp; c tt y water 11 1
acres .
Very
private .

I BEEN
LOOKIN'
'FER

$8.300 00
HENRY E. CLELANO,
" ~OKER

992-71\9 or 992-2568

...

;

MAW!! GUESS WHAT
I GOT FER 'IE !!

B X FHA 0
YV

'"

..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'R how to work II :

he at , storm s all over , small
ba sem ent , sto·rage bldgs

~I

..

ont lttler to tac:h square, to

tUX~'AQ

...

'.

r»WJ~~;~

YXHJY

"'

I

..

We keep getting questions
about whether or no1 It is
necessary to play a club openmg bid as forcing merely
because you may open a
three-card suit.
The answer to that one is
that every expert will open a
three-card club suit wl th a
hand he considers ap propriate, . but pracllcally no
expert plays the bid as forcing. It Is no tragedy to play
one club undoubted with a
three-card suit on the rare occasions when everyone does
pass.

31 Hold office
34 !ago's
wife
:15 Cryptographer's
specialty
38 Rely
37 Wahine's
dance
38 SUnuner,
in Nantes
31 Tw-klsh

II

..".

Concerns &amp; Comments 10:

dummy, East plays low."
Jim : " An unthlnklna South
has to guess between the play
of the king or the jack. The
thinker doesn 't have to
guess."
Oswald· " West dealt and
passed. He has shown up with
the king 1nd queen or hearls
and ace of spades U he also
held the ace of diamonds he
would have opened the bidding
so thinker South plays his king
of diamonds."

w0

f y

RV0

YXDIY .

J I

RVD

MJ ZH

AVY

HO

MVGH

Yesterdly'a Cryplequote: AN EGOTIST IS A STUPID
PERSON WHO THINKS HE KNOWS AS MUCH AS YOU DO. CHINESE FORTUNE COOKIE

[]
I

t

"'

rnaM"
ZBCoarse

~LDSM05T

'I

I

.,

Hoff-

l'r-AH 15 MARRIED rr-

.,.
' .

6:•0---0unce of Prevention 10.
6 45--Mornlng Repor1 3.
6:50--Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6:S5--Chuck While Reports 10; Good Morntng, Trl
Slate 13. ·
7:00--Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, AmorlcU,131 CIS
News 8; Bugs Bunny end Frtendl 10.
1 : 30---Schoolles 10.
8 00--Lasste 6; Capleln Kangaroo 1. 10; Sesame Sh'wt
33.
'
8·30-Big Volley 6.
9 ·DO--Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahile 4,15; Luc~
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with 0 . J. 13,
'".
9.30---A.M. 3; One Life 1o Live 6 ; Ta11te1ales 81 Mille
.'
Douglas 13.
,
10 :00--Celebrlly Sw&amp;epstakes 3,4,1S; E&lt;!ge of Nlvhl 11,
Price ts Right &amp;,to .
10 ·30---High Rollero 3,4,15; Dinah! 6.
' 1\
"I
11 :DO--Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4: Gamlllk :
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Electr ic Company._ ,
11 :30--Hollywood Squares 3,4,151 Happy Oaya "' 1
Love of Life 1. 10; Sesame SlrMI 20.
, '-.
'
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
il ~ ,
12 :00--Magnlllcenl Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Mltlle .A Deal 13; Bob Braun 4; News 6,8j , 10.
1 11
12 :30---Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,'b i'1'
Seorch For Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :45--E ieclrlc Company 33.
12 ·55--NB C News 3,1 .~ .
.,'• .
1:00--News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,131 Phil Donahue .,,
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women On tv II.
' '.
1:30---Deys Of Our Lives 3.4, 15; Rhyme end Re6, 13 ; As The World Turns 8,10.
'·
2 00--$20,000 Pyremld 6 ,13.
2:30--Doctors 3,4,15; Break The Bank 6,13; Guldlnt
Light 8,10.
3:00--Anolher World 3,4,15; Genera! Hospital 6,1J:
.::~
Dayllme Emmy Awards 8,10; Lilies, Yoga anti
' You 20
- j :
3:30---0ne Lite to Ltve 13; Mickey Mouse &lt;;lub 6; YO,.
Can Do II 20.
4:(}0-Mlster Car toon 3; Merv Grllllno4; Somenei ·ISI ·
Bewllched 6; Mister Rogers 20,3:f; Dinah! 13.
'
4: 30--Bewltched 3, Mod Squad 6; Beverly Hlllbllll"-' e1
Sesame Slreet 20,33; Movie "The Music Man" 1fl
'•
'1 "
Fllnlstones 15
5.00--Bonanza J ; Par1rldge Family 8; Minion ; lrft·
possible 15.
5:»--Adam -12 4, 13; News 6; Fart111y Affair 81 Electric
Company 20,33.
6:00--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC Newa 6; Zoom 20,JJ,
6:30---NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlmlh .
6: CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lod;le 20; Lilt..;
'·
Yoga and You 33.
·• "
7:00--Truth or Conaeq11ences 3; To Tell The Trut~ 41 :
Bowling For Dollars 6: News 10; Coun1ry Place~~
Name Thai Tune 13; Fam ily Affair 15: Uftl'; ,
derstandlng Africa 20; Wild, Wild World ot Anlm.,, ·1 II•
1
33
7:30-Hotlywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squll'ri ,f:
lei's Deal Wllh 116; Match Game PM I; Evtnllll'.l
"
Edlllon Wllh Marlin Agronoky 20; Price Is Rlgllt',.
10; To Tetl The Truth 13; High Schoo! T:V.'HOnl; '
Society 15; Family Theatre 33.
,
8:00--Wortd of Magic 3,4; Happy Days 6, 13; Baaeblil
15, Eagle Come Home 8, 10; Behind The Linea JJ1
International Animation Felstlvei 20.
8·»-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Consumtr Survtvtl Kll
20,33.
9 ·00--Pollce Woman 3,4; S.W.A.T. 13; Commandtrl 6:
M-A-S-H 8,10; Evening a1 Shymphony :ro; Opere
Theater 33,
·
'· '
9·JO---One Day At A Time 8.10.
10:00-Woman ... Her Winning Ways l; Marcus Welby,
••
M.D. 6: Cl1y ol Angels 4; Switch 8,10; EIICIIIII
Coverage 13; News 20
10:30---Eiecllon Coverage 3; To Be Announctd lSI
Black Perspective on 1he News 20.
11 :00--News 3,4,6.8,10,13,15
II :30---Eiecllon Coverage 3,13; Mystery ol1he Wlell 11
Johnny Corson 4,15; Nebraska-West Vlrg'"lil
Prlmarylesl; Movie "The Stripper" 10; ABC Newl
33 .
ll :45--Movle "Hawkins on Murder" 8.
,
12:00--Johnny Carson 3; tronolde 13; Janak! 33, · '
1:00--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13/
. -\ ~- '

28 .. __ of

)0' STRUCK aJT AEiiN,

'

TUESDAY, Mly 11, 1911
6·00--Publlc Altelrs 10.
6· 15-- Ferm Report 13 .
6:ro- Rev . Cleophus Robinson 13.
6:30---Columbus Today 4; N~ws 6; Bible Answers ill

a~re

stitch
9 Supple
13 Region
I« Narcotic
15 Kind of
cross
16 Stormy
bird
17 Made bold
20 .. Able was

Sales and lnslaltahon
R1 . 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone day or nigh!
614-992 -2206 l.H! '!!.• ,
REMODELING,· Plumb1ng heating
and all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 10 years ew:-

ACROSS
I Word wl111
guard or
conduct

., '

8:00--Home Journal
9:00---Muslc Connection
9:30--- Tes1lmony Time
10 00--700-Ciub

~~by THOMAS JOSEPH

CARPETING ;
estimates

Mondly-Chlnntf FIVI

'T'OO IT.1

~iLQAN'S
·· Free

North

.

3,• ; News 13.

7 :00--Speclat Edition

~ti~~

of hundred bridge hands
where common sense reason·
mg makes tt possible for a
thinking player 1o substitute a
sure thing or near sure thing
for a guess "
Jim : " The hands range
from simple to complex For
instance, let's look a1 his first
'example "
.
Oswald "South is in four
spades. Wes1 opens the king of
hearts and continues after
dummy ducks South wins that
trick and leads a trump to
West's ace. A third hear1 is
led and ruffed, !rumps are
drawn, a diamond is led from

7·2-23-48 .

110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0 .

F.A furnace, large mod ern

Need new roof or Old
repaired? House , roof,
barn, shtngtes, buttd up,
palntmg, etectncal work,
gutters &amp; downspou1S,
furnaces, water heaters,
Wllter sctrners, Install ed &amp;
repaired, Sewage.
Call us at 949-2882
or 949· 2203

•

AMC JEEP

$8500
MIDDLE PORT
12
rooms . 5 Brs .. 2 baths, gas

FOI1GOT A
FAC6-

PomeroY

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

mo

DON SMITH

On l y

Ph. 99'2 -2174

SAID H€ NEVER

Racine , Oh1o

R&amp;J
COINS
Rutland, Ohio

poml~ enl ~ 14 ) '!_"_''~?_-4_fl:_

room a nd extra lot

YJt05
tA108 74
.108 2

.....
ByOswald
oswald' "In
&amp; James
Jacoby
\\41A1 'D I TELL
'Bridge
Logic',
r;~~::,in~N;,f]~~~]~~~~i)r~--·--vuH, eovs? 1
H. W. Kelsey shows a couple

.

Buy, Sell or Trade

AL TROMM CONST.

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Bron Thomas

1 72 A cres Phqne 742·2359.

$15,000
MIDDLEPORT - 7 rms ., 2
baths, nat. gas heal, and
large lol In good location
$27,500 or o"fter .
POMEROY - 3 Brs , bath.
ga s heatrng , large family

YKQ964
tQ 32
. 963

Opening le•d - Ky

Nathan B1ggs
Radt ator Spec1alist

Phone Anna Blackwood
985-3805

Ph. 949.2073 or 843-2667

,_.,

l

Ann's Bridal and
Anniversary Services

the old . All types of
building and remadeling
from the foundation up.
Addttions,
carpeting,
painting, siding, rooftng,
paneling, paper hangmg,
etc ...

~

From t h e l argest Truck or
Bul ldo zer Ra d ia tor to t h e
, smallest Heater Core

We build new and remodel

plus ftntshed baseme nt and lo t,
3 &amp; two ·lhtrd&amp; acres. For op-

bath , Pom wa te r , g as FA
f urnace, and sm a ll gard en

EAST

• &amp;2 .

West

Free Consultation

NeW shingle roof.

utility , ca rport . a nd 1 leve l

WEST I 0)

•A s ,

Neither vulnerable

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service

"Pl'~ c~ ~~"l~~--3~42:._ __ _
6 room hou5e tn Middlepo rt , ne)( t

acre $30,000.
RACINE - 3 Brs , bath ,
modern kitchen, natural
gas F.A. furnace. and level
lot $12.900.
MINERSVILLE - 3 Brs.,

10

NORTH

.A K4

D&amp;D

l : ~Tomorrow

WIN AT BRIDGE

• K J 93
y A73

Noble $ummi1 Rd ,
Middlepor1
PHONE 992-5724
5-3-1 mo.

4 10 1 ma

CONF55510N 7

MYAt:iENT!

Above and below ground
pool k1fs lor 1he do-if-

D. BUMGARDNER

Ph 992-3993

~OiJil-liR·PiJ~~!C

~I.,Hf.- 1'111 hPOSIN6
THE FULL TEAR·
JERKING FACT£&gt; OIJ
ALL THE SIIAMI!L£5'

I

too.

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse. Ohio

AHEAD WITH

J.P. .,A5 5-00 N
A5- 1 FI'-115-H
fALI(J'-16 TO

'·

GOIN6

....-

&amp;:»- Baseball 6: Your Candlda1es Speak JJ: ~
"north to Alaska " 13; Ourstory 20.
9:00--AII In The Family 8,10: Jerry 20 .
9:30---Maude 8,10; World Press 20.
10 .00--Joe Foores1er 3,4; Medic.! Center 1.101 ~
Political Talk 15; News 20.
,,
10 :30---Potlllcat Talk 15; Lock S1ock a. Barret 20.
II :00--News 3,4,6,1, 10. 13, 15; ABC News JJ.
1
11 :30---Johnny Carson 3,4,15: American B'andlllllf't 1
23rd Birthday Specie! 6, 13; Movie " ll 's Good to .. ,
Alive" I ; Movie " Bye Bye Birdie" 10; Jan1kl A .

'Thinking removes guesswork .

SWIMMING
POOLS

Blown
Insulation Services

~OU'RE

CEIZ.TAINL'i•

Phone 742-2409
Bo• 28A
Rutland, Oh.
4-16-1 mo

chain

CAPTAIN EASY

14 Hour Phone 5ervtce

Tractors.

Bolen's Mowers , Merry
Ti llers , MTD Mowers .
498 Locust St.
Middleport, Ohio

-

1973 CB 350 Hondo , excel lent con
dttton Lo ts of e.w:tros . Phone
142 221 1 otter 5 p m . call 742·

~· \&lt;!';,/

Shepa!d Contractors

I

$5500.00 Phone 9'12-7275.
--· ---·~-·'--- ·- .----MODERN HOUSE w•lh 1115 sq fl .,

rlir"Sale

•

TillersRiding

FREE ESTIMATES

3 or 4 bedrm . home on 1 acre
667 3519
ground , 1 mtl e south o f Chester
on Rl 7 Fomtly ond lrvtng 3 bedrm. home . Call992·7033
room , dtntng roo m , bu th-m ktt · HOUSE. 3 bedroom home, 59
chen, ell carpeted, full stze
acres, I mile f rom Rutland on
basement and garage ct ty
New L1ma Rood, phone 742·
wa ter , n(]luro l gas Seen by
29BB

lo schoo l

'

Licensed Installer

Mowen-

NEW : lawn Boy mowers,

lWIN CITY
MACHINE SHOP

25A2

AKC Regt s!ered Collte Stud Ser
vtce , Stardu st · Kmg
Phone
1970Chevell e SS396 , 4 speed , e)(
cel lenl condt tton Lol 5 of ex
tros Coli after 5 p m 992

' (('" •

by

Lawn

phone 992-3891

99()2

Coll 992 -1156

GARAGE Sol e Thur sday and
Frrday, 5 m1les off Rt 7 on 143
Mr sc ,

Phone 992-2181

lOCUST pos ts round o r
Phone 949.2774

FOr Rent

pard 356
dleporl .

ll1liil

'

Installed

m -3092

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

POMEROY LANDMARK

40 ~

Pioneer

Medica I Oxygen
and Supplies

"'P. _Jack W Caroey, Mgr.

~~1
· ·
;

Sell Qua lily
. 5-9-76

$163.95
73·340 Ouster , low mileage, 75
Dodge ptc kup
6 cylinder
Phone 992 5601

Rep1lr

. . ~- ( t &gt;"

Wmdows and Doors
Free Estimates
We recommend and

TURF TILL
TILLERS
3'12 H. P., B&amp;S Eng .

Septic Systems

Eng .

'-;j&lt;:--; ~-; ~~::~

$89.95

BLIND ADS
1\ dd tlt ona l 1\c C hM ti C
per Advcrl tScm c n l
OFFI CE HOURS
A 10 J m to 'I oo p n t
Da il y.
10 an t to 11 00
Noon S;ll ur da y
P hone tQfl a y 99 7 ') I Sti

NOTICE S
ATTN ! !
ALL HOUSEWIVES

'"' -

Continuou s Gutter
Replacement

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS
30", 3 HP, B&amp;S Eng .

SmJII

Complete

Sates &amp; SerVIce
2013 101h Ave .
Parkersburg, W. Va .
304-485-0386
614-423-6474
Alumrnum -Vrnyi-Sieel

Oh•o Phone 9'12-3891 ,

Sport aboul Wagon , 6 c y l , au toma f tc trans , radio,
good ftres. whtf e ltn rsh , good economy

WILKINSON' S

Siding Center

COAl. limestone and all types of
sa lt and rock salt for tee and
snow removal Excelsior Salt
Works , Ea st Main St., Pomeroy ,

P . steenng , radto, clean

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MONDA.Y, MAY 10, 1916
s 00 Bonanza 3: Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible 15.
s 25 - Pollllcat Talk 4.
s 30--- Adam 12 4,13; Family Affair 8; Elec Co. 20,JJ .
6 00- -News 3,4,8,10.13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
4·30---NB&lt;; News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.1 0; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Cor rascolendas JJ.
1 oo-Trulh or'Cons 3, ToTettthe :rrulh4 , Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News tO; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15: Teaching Children lo Read
20. Resourceful West \l!rg!nla 33.
7 30 Thai Good Ole Nashvi lle Music 3; Bobby VInton
4. Space : 1999 6 ; Prtcols Righi&amp; ; Evening Edit ion
with Martin Agronsky 20; High Road 1o Adven1ure
10. To Tell 'he Truth 13; Friends ot Man ,1S;
Kanawha Valley Cities ad Government 33 .
a.00- Mov le " Gemini Man" 3. ~a . 15: Gun smoke 8;
USA · People &amp; Pol tiles 2 20,33; America's Junior
Miss Pageant 10; Potltical Talk 13.

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992-3965

mil es

KNOCKS

Business Services

VEGETABL E plants ol all ktnds 10
ditlerenf va rl ~t l e s of tomatoes .
tncludtng non actd while
tomato Very large $electi on of
bedding
planl5 . . Also
Geraniums and othe r potted
plants . Hongmg baskets
Cleland Forms and Green·
house
Gerold tne Cl4!:iond ,
RaCine

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Television log for easy viewing

BUTT OF A OEI:P-1

SEA ROO

L.I:Z::Z: C:OL.D ~

MODERN walnut console , AM FM
radto , 4 speed changer.
Balance S103.40 or lerms. Call

Cf' l) IS

Rcv.,J.'t-foward Shtveley of
the Racine Circ u1 t of Umted
Meti1w\ Churches recenll)
compt~"t'ed an eig~ l weeks
course ·'" marri age and
family ~' coun se lin g
and
co un si'JI ~ g persons wit!1
emotional illn ess Th ese f 'i l 3. 10 2tc
courses were taught by the
Chapl~in cy Department of
Athens Mental Health Center
Ftrsl Lt. and Mrs. Edward ~~~-~-fOr
ONE HALF a c r es, no
M. Brown· I Dottte Wtlcoxen I 101minera
ls, Su tl on Tw p $700
are paren ts of a ·son born
acre Phone 949 2630
Aprtl.;l5, 1976. Named Edward.Max.fi eld Brown , Jr , he
weighed 6,pounds, 15 ounces.
Patemal grandparents arc
Mr . and ,Mrs. Don Ohlinger of 1975 22 FT CAVALCADE
t rave l tr .:;nl er, sleep s6 F ull y
New H~~en ; W.Va. Maternal
se lf t on f at ne d , l t ke n ew ,
grand~are n ts are Mr and
on l y used 3 ftm es Phon e
(61d) 985 3356 aft er 6 30 p m
Mrs. M'artln Wilcoxen and
Mrs. raye Wilco•en is a
great grandmother.
Mr . and Mrs. Albert
Bodkins of Spl'l ~gltcld spent
Sunday guests of Mr . and
Mrs.
Ed Mtller were Helen
sever~~ ~~~,YS with Mr . and
Mrs, ~rman Wolfe and Mr Slack and Pearl Willis of
an~ l_
: 4 vv ~rd' Sayre. Mr Letart ralls and Mr and
Wo'Jff! :W~s a pn eumonra Mrs Robert Cor nwell of
patient fn Veterans Memonal Gallipolis
Hospital~~nd ·returned homeMrs. Mabel Brace and Mrs .
Jack Adams vtslled Mr . und
Fri~aH, ; .
Mr s. Roger Adams and
Mr ~i' 'anq • Mrs . Frank
Krau~~ ~Or ,Gallipolis spent famtly and Bobby Joe Adams
Sundar.·,
and · Stanley and Melant e, sunday
Houda!il1elt·of Dallas, Texas,
Mr . and Mt s. Elza Birch
spent Wednesday with Mrs. VJ ~ilcd ,,, Tm t'h MundCiy wit/1
Margaref Houda&lt;helt.
Mr "''d Mrs l•:arl Powell

,,,,,

Auto Sales

111. ,, ",

For Sale

RAT ES
F or Want Ad Sc r v tcc
'I ccn t5 prr w or d one
tnser t,on
'
M tnllnum ChMq c \ I 00
1.1 cen ts prr w o ro three
&lt;.O n Si' CUi tv e
tnser r to n ~
76 &lt;. cnn; pu w or d Stx
\Oil SC CUttV C'
lll f!C rlt O n ~
?li l' cr Cent Otsco unt on
Pil •d lHI'l ,l nd iHJs P U•d
wt l htn l(l d av s

For Sale

Sentinel, MiddJ~ port ~Yolllet'u) , u .. 1\'IUfall.a~ , 1\ta.\

TRACY

Ill'! o r ,.

D t~v

P uiJ i rCd 'r Oil
· MO il CiitV

~ - The Pomeroy

·l For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classi)fieds

IN:E~A~O~r!~~N

P M

,

I []

l'litllll - -...

.....

#'J

�'

10 - The Pomeroy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, May 10, 1976

HOSPITAL NEWS Local news,
Veteran• Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Harold Kmg, Pomeroy ,
Jack Sharpnack, Ra cme.
Bertha John son, Ra cme,
Marshall Roush. Racme
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
Leah
Rhodes, Herman Wolle,
Grace Rob er ts, Wtlham
Yfllllams, Harold Evans.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Tanya Cundtfl, Mason,
Vivian Johnson, Ractne ,
Clifford I ce nh ower,
Pomeroy; Karen Cremeans,
Utile Hockmg; Joan Mcl.am,
Racme ; Edgar Kindell ,
Pomeroy
SUNDAY DISCHARGES None.

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Holzer Medical Center
1Births, May lJ
Mr and Mrs Ga ry
Flemtng s , dau ghter,
Robertsburg, W Va
(Births, May 8)
Mr and Mrs. Wtlllam Case,
daughter, Wellston, Mr. and
Mrs
Warner
Roush,
daughi&lt;!r, Letart, W Va .; Mr.
and Mrs Ronald Evans, son,
Jackson
I Births, May 9)
Mr . and Mrs. Franklin
Jones, daughter, Po tn t
Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs Ron Powell, daughter,
Portland ; Mr and Mrs
Larr~ Walker, son, Pomeroy

Call!.; Mrs Charles Marklns,
Galltpolls; F:lizabeth Roush,
Mason ; Herbert .Jarrell ,
Pm~t PlcasanI, Mrs Clance
Ri ce, Cottagevill e, Mr s
Harl ey
Burns,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs Melvm flu sh,
Galltp oll s Ferry George
Mayes , Henderson; Melvm
Roush, West Colwnb1a, Mrs
John Carter, Phny, Mrs Roy
Allen , Potnt Pleasant
Btrth, May 8, a daughl&lt;!r to
Mr and Mrs. F'red Rtchards
Hunhngton, an d May 9, a
daughter to Mr and Mrs
Roge r Blankens hip , Pomt

Paul J. Bearhs

of Racine dies

Paul J Bea1hs, 75,
Ractn e, d1 ed Sat mday
even tng tn th e Vete1ans
Mcmortal Hospttal He was
born August 4, 1900, the son of
the late Fred and Chloe
Md'a dden Bea rhs He was
also preceded 111 death by a
brother, Lyman
Surv ivors tncludc ht s wt fe,
Ha ze l; a daughter, Mr s
Charles t Hosa!Jnd 1 l.mdsay,
Columbus, one son, Plnhp,
Racme; a grandson, Rtck
Curhs, Columbus; a brother,
Fred Bearhs, Clnlhcothe and
two sisters , .Jeanette Hysell ,
Havenna and Chloe Compton,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Urbana
Mrs . Jerry Harper ,
Funeral servtccs wtll be
Minersville, 0 ; Mrs. Gtfford held Tuesday at 2 p m at the
Egnor, Point Pleasant ; Mrs Ewmg Chapel wtth Larry
Norman Bland, Red House; Carnahan oHtcathng Buna l
Stephanie Sneed, Mt Alto; wtll be m the G 1 e n~&lt; ood
Ona Coon, l'omt Pleasant ; Cemetery. !lacme
Mrs . Ira Wellman , Kanauga,
0.; John Thabet, Mason ,
Robert Vermtlllon . Whtttter.
United Press lutcnMtwnal
Today Is Monday , May 10,

the !31st day of 1976 wtth 2.15
to follow. 'flus IS Confedera te
Memonal Day
The moon IS approaclung
Its fu II phase
Th e mornmg star s ate
Venus and Juptter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn
Those born on th ts da tc are
under the stgn of Taurus
Amen ca n actor-dancer
Fred Astatre was bol'n Ma v
10, 1899

MEIGS THEATRE
Tontghllhru Thursday
NOT OPEN

Fr1 , Sat , Sunday
May 14-15 16
"LUCKY LADY "

Llza

Minn elti.

Gene

Hackman, Burt Rey nolds

I PGl
Show Starts at 7 p m

.

- -- · ·- · -- ----,

FOR TN£ ··

PROTECT,.N
YOU NEED-

in briefs
SYRACUSE - A mother daughl&lt;!r banquet wtll be held
at the Syracuse F'trst Umted
Presbytenan Church Wednesday, Ma y 12, at 6· 30 p.m
for the lad1es of Ute church
Each IS to bnng a covered
dtsh The meat, rolls and
beverage wtll be provtded A
prog ram wtll be held m the
sa nctuary at 7 30 p m
followmg the ba nquet.

RAC INE - Clea nup day
here has been se t for WedThe White Falcons m a slug
nesday, May 12 Restdenl'
fest
swamped the Wmbeld
are asked to place thetr tra sh
Generals
Fnday 12-8 to end Ita
at the curb
regular season play
The slugfest included two
A MAHRIAGE hcense was
homers
belted by Falcon
ISSued to James Ntcholar
Gremer, 28, N01 folk , Va , and hitters Terry tucker and Tim
Myra Jeanne Rathburn, 25, Thompson.
Hl. I, Reeds.vtlle
It was Tuckers blast m the
bottom half of the ftrst game
XI GAMMA MU G1&gt;apter of whtch get thmgs off to a good
Beta Stgma Pht Sorort ty wtll start for hts team. As he drove
n1eet at 7 30 p m Tuesday at m an addthonal run.
the ho me of Caro l Me·
Thomoson later delivered a
Cullough, Mulberry Ave ,
Pomeroy, to mstall new offl eers

THE WOMEN'S Auxtllary
of Ve tera ns Memonal
Hospttal wtll hold a yard and
bake sale Fnd ay and
Saturday at the former EMS
bwldmg located at the rear of
the hospttal Donattons wtll
be apprectated and Will be
recetved at the sa le Jocatton
aft er noon on ThUI sday
Hours of the sa le wdl be from
9 30 a m to 4 p.m each day
Anyone wtshmg further mformatwn may call 992-7874
ur 992-2939
THF: POMEROY E-R umt
went to Silver Rtdge at 7·27
p m Sa turday .for Arthur
Koemg who was 111 He was
taken 'IO Pleasant Valley
Hos pital At 8 OJ p.m
Saturday the ftre department
went to U1e Durst home on
Cave St where an old
automobile had ·caught ftre

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f):l'~-~~~l
"'tH

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Let's Talk Saon

DAl£ C. WARNER
m

102 W. Main

lQJ_ _ -0 :

Pomeroy

LASVEGAS,Nev (UP! )The JUdge ass1gned to the
Howard Hughes case says
he's
re ceived
some
tn credJble mat I" from
persons who think the
btlhonarre meant to mention
them m hts wlil.
Judge Ketth Hayes, who
w1ll help deterrrune if tbe
handwntten will found last
month ISvalid, saj,d he's also
recetved one threatenmg call
warmng that "the JUdge ts
going to dte. "
Hayes satd he 'd been
contacted by friends he
hadn't heard from m 20 years
and ts sometunes stopped on
the street by people who
jokmgly suggest he cut them
m on a piece of the estate's
acllon.
" I've recetved some
mcredible mali, there ts no
other way to describe tt,"
Hayes , 44, a softspoken
former state legislator, satd
m an mtervtew.
"One letter from Japan
suggested the real Hughes
will was in the possession of a
servtceman in Korea .
"Another came from a
woman who sa1d she
11

RACINE
Mrs Rosemary McTurner
anddaughters, JeanandMrs
~o;., Teresa Buescher and son ,
U! Sean , or Well ston spent
0 7
-'
Sunday wtlh Mr . and Mrs

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I hi :-. ll!l,u n l \ IS il I Ill\ idl'd

ol Charles Wtlhams

::::::::::::::::::::~ha~p~p~Jt~,~··:vt~r~a~ft~c~r~~~~ son,DaleMrRoushand ISMrsvistbngDavtdh1s

Say Good-Bye to
Rubber Gloves, Caustic
Oven Cleaners and
Wasted Hours

.

solo beit In the stxth innmg.
In picking up the victory
Wahama belted 15 flits. Rick
Buzzard picked up the wm. He
allowed the Generals eight
hils 10 the s&gt;xth innings he
k d
wor e
Buzzard was relieved going
mto the seventh by teammate
Mark Smtth.
WAHAMA
2 3 0 2 2 3-12-Jf&gt;.l
WINFIELD
100302 ~2

Show of greed
ineredible

-~111!9:

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2143

Kmg was assassinated
April 4, 1968 10 MemphiS,
Tenn Ray, who pleaded
guilty to first degee murder
on March 10, 1969, is now
servtng a W.year sentence at
the Termeesee State PriSOn 10
Nashville.
Ever smce entering the
guilty plea, Ray has been
seeking to withdraw that plea
and to stand trw!.
Ray had based appeal on
the contention his gutlty plea
was not "voluntarily and
inteUtgently" made because

Falcons whip Winfield

LAFF . A - DAY
Play it eafe and mre
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated ,

Ray loses new appeal

CIN CINNATI I UPI ) James Earl Ray, the
confessed assassin of Dr
Martin Luther King Jr. who
now clauns he IS mnocent,
today lost his latest attempt
to change his gwlty plea and
stand trial
The U S Sixth Ctrcuit
Court of Appeals , 1n a
unarumous ~ruling , dectded
that Ray had intelligently and
THE MEIGS County voluntarily pleaded guilty to
Chapter
53
Dtsabled killing the CIVil rights leader
Amenca n Veterans wt ll meet and had rece1ved conopetent
at 7 JO p rn . Tuesday at the legal advice
DAVhome on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy

CINDY RAYNE Aetker ,
Rt 4 Pomeroy has hied for
d1 vorce agamst Lorrawe
Aetker. same address, m
Metgs County Common Pleas
Court

Roush and famtly m
Columbus
Mr. and Mrs. Don Jr
Walker and daughter,
Michelle of Swnmersvdle, W
Va., spent the weekend wtth
hts parents, Rev and 'Mrs
Don Walker.
Kenneth Swart of Akron
spent a few days wtth hts
mother, Mrs James Swart
and the Alfred Crow famtly

hitchhiked an atrplane nde
frono Hughes whtle she was
wearmg hot pants
"Some are pathetlc letters
frono persons wtth tormented
minds They are rambhng
and mcoh erent Every other
word ts 'consptracy,' 'plot' or
'Malta ' The wnter feels he ts
the one who ts sorely
oppressed because he has
been left out of the will "
Hayes satd persons who
really thmk they deserve a
share 10 the estate shouldn't
waste tune writmg to him or
contacting him m person.
The only way to stake thetr
claun, he satd, is to file legal
papers. He also plans to
remmd the letter wrtters and
others that making a false
claim against the estate ts a
felony
A Mormoo , Hayes satd he
felt no conflict of mterest
over the will's one-stxteenth
bequest, an estimated $125
million, to the church
"The role of the church IS to
preach the gospel and not to
make money, " he explamed,
saying the church would
probably renounce the mooey
tf he did something illegal
Hayes has been able to
keep up with hts other court
busmess so far, but said work
on the Hughes estate "could
be overwhelming" and
reqwre hiS lulltime attention.
"'nus matter wtU go on for
years," he sa1d '•How many,
no one knows ."

t

SPECIAL

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Say Hello to a
Gibson electric range .
with continuous cleaning oven
G tbson s con tmu ous cleanmg oven
c leans rtself e ve ry It
you ·u se 11
Eat s up spatt ers and sorlls as
they h t~ ppen so you can forget
about mes sy clean-u ps o'r br g
power dratns c~ nd was ted lime Just
wtpe upbtg sotll s wtth a damp clo th.

me

Vtstl Our Salad Bar
Franks and Sauerkraut
Macaroni and Cheese
•
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

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2 95

INGELS FURNITURF
Open Fri. til 8 - Sal til 5

992-2635

Ntghl Spot

THE MEIGS INN.
Phone 992-3629
Pomeroy, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT

•, Easements wanted back

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••••••••••••••

.

if)mttJlmftifon'Jipenin!$
From a Great American Bank

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YOUNG wELDERS - The Meigs High School Senior
Welding Class recently finished work on the new baseball
backstop at the high school field. Each student was given
the opportuntty to help weld part of his project. Dick

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1844: The world gets a message.

Our country IS still new. But we've become as sophisticated
as t he best of t hem. We have bright men workmg in back
rooms on ideas no one else ever thought of. We've even
established a Patent Office, to make sure those Ideas don't
get stolen. One of the bnghtest is Samuel F.B. Morse. He's a
pretty good painter. But he's also been busy smce 1832
working on an electric telegraph . It's a very clever way of
getting a message through without sending it person-toperson. Twelve years after he starts, he gets his patent and
sends hi s firs t message· "What hath God wrought." There's
an idea. It can tell the East about raids in the West . It can
tell the West about Congress in Washington. Without taking da)ls a nd weeks. Some say if Morse, mstead of that fellow
named Trumbull , had been commissiOned to paint the b1g
pictures in the Cap1tol, he would have forgotten about the
telegraph. We're glad he didn't lil
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Farttters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

. S40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
M~&gt;l'lber Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
j

en tine

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astde for the new ve hicle
A long dlscusston was held
on the status or an alley
behind Chestnut St. Few
conclusions were reached on
the matter, however. One
suggestion was that the alley
be extended , graded, and
graveled or limestoned
However , Grate satd there
appears to be no money for
any such kind of work. A
variety of suggestwns
foll owed , all di scarded.

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONJ\L_
WASHINGTON - SEN. HARRISON WILLIAMS, D-N J ,
called today for a major government effort to seek out and
treat women alcoholics.
In a speech prepared for the jomt annual convention of the
National Council on Alcoholism and the American Medical
Society on Alcohohsm, Williams satd at least one-third of the
nation's 10 million alcoholics are women, and perhaps more.
"II is my belief that there are as many alcoholic women as
men," he said, "but few of them receive treatment. A de"ree
"
of stigma is still attached to the term 'alcoholic' and for
. a doubl e stigma "
women 1't ts
•
·•
UDINE , ITALY - A PRE-DAWN TREMOR ripped
through quake shattered northeast Italy today, alarming
VIllages but causing no apparent damage.
The seismographic monitoring station at Trieste near the
Yugoslav frontier S81d the rmld tremor, an aftershock of last
Thursday's ·killer quake .. regjstere(i 3.8 on the open-ended
Richter scale. It was the latest in about 40 aftershocks hitting
the area Authorities In Udlne unofficially put the known dead
at 911 and the missing at about 400. Pollee said 849 bodies had
been recovered from t~e rubble of the region's 24 strtcken
towns and villages by mid-morning.

long ballot
By K,o\ \' CHRISTENSEN
CHAR LESTON, W. Va .
IUPI) - The Democra tie,
race for governor and Ronald
Reaga n's challenge of
President Ford highlighted a
lengthy ballot In the West
Vtrglnia primary today.
More than one million
voters were eligible to
participate In the primary,
which also featw-ed con tesls
for all other slate elected
posts - down to magistrate
Polls were open from 6:30

Celeste.dunned Q7,419 E£C~!k~~~~~:fr~~

DETROIT - PRESIDENT FORD PLANS to barnstorm
across southern Mlch1gan this weekend, hopmg to ward off the
threat of another primary defeat at the hands of Ronald
Reagan - thts time in Ford's 'home slate.
Ford will be makmg hiS first campaign trip to the state
Wednesday, when he is scheduled to address the prestigious
Economic Club of Detroit and hold an outdoor rally in
suburban Birmingham.

WOLFSBURG , WEST GERMANY - WHERE THE
VOLKSWAGEN company will put its ftrst U.S. assembly plant
has been narrowed to two cities, according to company
sources.
The sources said Monday the company had narrowed its
chotcesto Brook Park, Ohio, and New Stanton, Pa., and was no
longer constdermg Columbus, Ohio. But, Ekkeh&amp;rd Wesener, a
media spokesman for the auto-maker, said no site has been
ruled out for the $296 million U S assembly plant.

~

B LE EONARD
Y Stat
E Lh
UPI
R ort
e ouse ep er
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - • State
Auditor Tbomas E. Ferguson
'· d
· ed r· d'
1
w ay tssu
m mgs or
recovery totaling $7,419
g tL t
G
a ams teu enan1 overnor
R h d F Celest
d eh anh 1tve
sttct ar 1.
ed ,
a e emp oyes w o e1P
him move into his office
between November, 1974, an d
January, 1975.
Th !'10d'
f "'II
1 1
mgs or
ega
e
payroll payments" also were
d
rna e agamst directors oI the
ftve agencies under former
Gohvehrnor John . J. dGilligan
w IC
perrnttte
the
employes to work-fo r Celeste-

School bus,
automobile
sideswipe

Wage increase
given 1,000

Hike Bike routecset

Bicentennial
status ooming
to Otester

llile, Struble
will vote at
Heart meeting

Weather

li)ll

.r

television advertisements.
President Ford last visited
the state In November and
did not campaign 10 West
Virgmla thts spring.
• Neither Ford nor Reagan
fielded delegate slates so the
28delegate races listed on the
ballot Will yield uncommitted
representatives to the GOP
convention.
1
n
the
Democratic
presidential race, Sen.
Robert Byrd, assistant
majority leader, had the state
largely to hlmaelf and was
expected to command the

fl'l;

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Lucasville Twp scared to death
lights went on " when people learned
of prison breaks, Lmtz satd.
"There's a lot of widows who live
alone. They have a right to be afraid
and I know a lot of them have loaded
,guns in their homes," he satd.
Troubles at the prison are
bringmg six Ohio legtslators here to
to th
·
d hold
bl'
ur e pnson an
pu tc
hearings at the township hall
Details are still bemg worked out by
invesugators rrom the Legtslative
Service CommissiOn in Columbus.
Floyd Burton, 42, a barber and
another township trustee, says he
too has felt that "something is

~~:n~~~:~e~ett::S:sd~!n~:o~

populatton of more than 2,000.
Burton said the all-whtte
1 ti he 1
1 br k

:~~ "m~~lv:bla~~s!:~~ si~~e

ao per cent of the mmate poplalton is
black
"Titey'd be shot on stght and I
wouldn't want to see that ," Burton
satd. N group of concerned Citizens

met recently with Arnold Jago,
prison superintendent, for a louder
whistle to warn of trouble at the
prison.
"The wmd out of the southwest
drowns it opt and the sound can't be
heard in town," Burton said.
A corrections department
k
· Col b
spo esman m
urn us says the
prison plans lAJ install a louder
warning whiBtle.
John E. Collins, who'll be 79 in
October and a trustee for nearly 30
years, said he 'll welcome the
visiting legislators. "We've had a
d 11
thgreat ea o troudblehand maybe now
1
sa~.~: ~of~~ ere can have a
Legtslators, headed by Rep.
· Robert Jakulskl, Q.Cieveland, will
tour the prison Wednesday and
conduct hearings the balance of the
day and the following day, prompted
by the strike by guards and long~tandmg
problems at
the
overpo)iU!ated prison

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The delegates from Meigs
County will attend th e
Chapter assembly meeting to
vote on a slate of offtcers for
the coming year and policy
recommendatiOns.
Non-medical Heart Board
members from the Chapter's
47-count service area wJIJ
have the opportunity to heat
six fea tured speakers discuss
problems faced by many
heart patients and their
families and avenues of
assistance oi&gt;en to them In
their search for help. The
theme of the lay session Is
"When The Heart Patient
Calls for Help "

iN

·::::~~":!*··:···:·······:·························· ········.
~~.:':!!~~!·:·::~:~:::!::::::::::::~::: :;:::::::::::::·:·:;:: ::;::::::.:~::.::::::; : ::;:,;:::·: :::..:·::::=:·::::::~::: ::::: ::::::·: ::: :·::::.:;:;::::=::::::.:::~:::;.::::·:::::::*:~J:~::::=::~:::~:::~:::::::: ;:;:,:·::::::·=:::

•

allegiance of West Virginia's
33 convention delegation.
State GOP chairll18n Tom
Potter predicted Mooday the
rac e between Ford and
Reagan would be close but
"the President will win "
Despite tbe GOP neck-andneck contest between Ford
and the former California
governor, th e race for
governor has captured the
interest of many voters.
Of the eight Demmocratlc
gubernatorial cnndldates, the
competition boiled down to
John D Rockefeller IV,
former
West Virginia
secretary of state; James
Sprouse, a Iorm or state
Supreme Court justice who
carried strong labor ties ;
Rep. Ken Hedtler, a strip
mine abolitionist who served
18 years In Congress, Jtnd
Charleston Mayor John
Hutchinson , Who brought the
state's largest city out of debt
without raising taxes.
On the GOP side, an eightman contest focused on
fonn er
Gov.
Cecil
Underwood, who served frotn
1957 to 1961, and state
Co mmerce Commissioner
Ralph Albertazzle, a stand-In
for Gov. Arch Moore who was
ruled off the ballot by the
courts.

during the transttt'on pert'od Scht' mPf • d'tree tor of th e
"I t is once a~atn
after the November, 1974 Bureau of W k
'
election.
Co
t
Shor menJs drecommended that all state
Ferouson swd in his audit
mpensa ton;
erman · _epartments review their
o·
Shump, dtrector of industrial llmekeepmg records to
report that the employes relat1ons Jose h J So
were attached to state
;
P · mmer, ensure that aU employes
dtrector of admmistration personally record their time
payrolls m the other agencies se rvi s
E
p
f
·
ce ;
' ugene
o arnval and departure 11 a
while helpmg Celeste - a O'Grady ' d'·ector
of
high
t'
"
way line c1ock is not available."
practtce not authortzed by safety; and Gene R.
B
ld
state law
. rown sa in his legal
Abercrombte, dtrector of opmton
that the state
Release of t.he audit report agrtculture
1
followed an opmton Issued by
" Th fl d
'II b rece ved no benef1t frono the
e n tngs Wl
e wages paid to the five
state Attorney General mailed to the lieutenant employes for helping Celeste
Wilham J. Brown permittmg gove•nor as the whereabouts
int hi 11
• of the md1vldua!s are move o s o ice.
the audttor to take action
of some
" In accordance , With the not known ," the audit report
attorney general's opm1on said.
Ute findings are directed to
the lieutenant governor, the
employes
and
the
departmental dtrectors
involved," Ferguson's report
Some 200 riders are ex- and then will go north on that
said.
pected
to take part In route to CR 26, turning ea$t They will .also be available at
"The reason for naming all
Saturday's
" H1ke Bike" on the road lo go to Five tl)e starting point on May 15.
three on the fmdings Is the
These shee Is are to be turned
which begins at the former Points.
HUNTINGTON - Ap- fact 1t ts not possible to
In
at the starting point and a
None of the 58 passengers Pomeroy Junior High School
The fourth check point will check point record will be
proximately 1,000 federal measure the degree of blame
for the benefit of the Meigs
blue collar employes in parts or fault of each tndtvulual as ahoard an Eastern Local Association for Retarded be at the Flatwoods Church Issued. Riders must have this
all par1tc1ated tn the school bus were injured
and CR 26. Turning south on r~cord tn order to partlclpa te.
of West Virginia , Ohio and
Cltirens.
arrangements
''
Monday
evenmg
m
an
acRoute 7 at Five Points, the
Kentucky have recetved a
The rtders wtll travel west riders will travel back to
The
audit
report
said
an
cident
on
Sliver
Rtdge
Rd
,
wage mcrease of about eight investigation by the Ohio
four tenths of a mtle west of through Pomeroy and Pomeroy and the former
percent.
Middleport to Route 7, tur- junior high building, the ftfth
Htghway Patrol as well as the Rt 7 m Meigs County.
The mcrease resulted from exammatlon by the auditor's
The Gallia-Meigs Post ning east on Route 7. The first check point.
a survey conducted in the office showed the trans1tion
check point wtll be at the
All riders must have
West Virgmta Wage Area, a employes generally State Highway Patrol said intersection of Route 7 and
the
bus
driven
by
Chester
L.
sponsors
and sponsor sheets
part of the Federal Wage performed thetr duties "at
County Road 5.
Fredertck,
57,
Rt
2,
Coolville,
are
available
at the schools of
System, by the Army Corps of the lieutenant governor-elect
' Contmulng east on Route 7, the county or by calling 742and a car drtven by Keith E
Engtneers ' Huntington campaign headquarters."
Mtller, 23, Tuppers Plains, the riders wlll have their 3089, 992-3232 or 985-4112
Dtstrtct offtce.
Celeste has pledged to per- sideswiped on a blind curve. second check point at the
CHESTER - The village of
The area includes 41 sonally reunburse the state
beginning of the four lane
Chester
will officially be
There
was
minor
damage
to
counties in West Virginia, 12 for wages paid to help
highway. Riders wlll travel
recognized
as a Bicentennial
both
vehicles.
No
charges
in southeastern Ohto and II In establish hun in his offtce
north on Route 33 and the
community May 14 at I p m
were
fil
ed
eastern Kentu~ky The pay followmg the 1974 election .
at the elementary school
James Robert Evans, 50, thtrd check will be at the
htke was effective May 9.
The findings were Issued Galhpohs, was cited to mtersection of Route 33 and
when the Bicentennial Flag
Affected persons include lock agamst · Anne Bloomberg,
CR 19
and
certificate by the
Muntctpal
Court
for
failure
to
and dam employes of the state Bureau of Workmen's
The riders will travel east
Bicentennial
committee Is
stop
w1thm
the
assured
clear
Corps, ctvtlian mamtenance Compensation, $1 ,434;
on CR 19 to former Route 33
presented.
distance
followmg
an
acemployes or the Nattonal Janenne Allen, Deparlment
Joseph Struble and Sharon
The Chester Bicentennial
Guard, and blue collar em- of lndustnal Relations, cidentat7 35a.m. Monday on
lhle, R.N will represent
commtttee
chairman en·
Rt
141
at
the
junctton
to
ployes of the Veterans Ad- $1,334 , Gerald J. Austin,
Meigs County when three
courages
the
public, In
County
Road
25
mmtstration and General Department
separate sessions will be held
of
support
of
the
village, to
The patrol said Evans' car
Partly cloudy and cooler for lay members, nurses und
Serv1ces Administration
Admmistrative Services, struck the rear of an auto
uttend
the
presentation.
tonight and Wednesday wtth physicians at the Central
The survey, conducted m $2,571; Sylvta M. Cuhg,
The program will consist of
operated
by
James
Robert
lows
tomght in the low to m1d Ohio Heart Chapter's 28th
March, revtewed prevailing Department of Highway
the
invocutwn, presentation
wage rates 10 the areas of Safety, $1,310; and Kenneth Neal, 28, Rt. I, Galltpolis 40s and highs Wednesday m annual meeting May 19 at the
of
colors
by Daughters of the
manufacturtng, trans- R. Kay, Department of Neal was taken to the Holzer the upper 50s to the lower 60s. Marriott Inn, Interstate 70
American
Revolution, there
Medical Center by the Gallla Probability of rain 30 per cent and Hamilton Rd ., Columbus.
portation, public utilities and Agriculture, $769.
will
also
be
a guest speaker,
County Volunteer Squad for
mimng
The day-long agenda will
Also named were Ned A treatment of minor Injuries. today, 20 per cent tonight, 10
presentation
of the rlag
per cent Wednesday .
tnclude featured speakers,
certlftcate
and
music by the
educational exhibits, and an
•:..·:···:·:;·~·:..·:·:·:·:·!·:·:· •!•!•! !•!•'• ···: :· •'' •••••,. '•'•'• .·.•.• •••••••• ,• ••.•. ,• •• •.• ........• ••• ' •,• • ••••••••••••••••• • • •• • • • • • •••• •
grade
school
chorus.
The nag
:=:·:·~*:=:*:=:*:::::::::·::;:;:;:;:::;:;:,:,:;::·:·::.: ::.: .:: .:·:::::::: :·::::·: :' •!;': ;!;! :·:::. : :::: : :·:::::::·: :.::::::::::::: :·::::::::::=:::::::::~~:;:::::t.::::::::=:::~*l*l::::::::~:::::::~*~::::~:::::::~::::::::::~:=::·:·:::::::::::::::::::~~~::::~;'!· entertalntng luncheon with
:::::::
•••. ••• •••• .••• ' . . •••••. . ·•••••·•·•• ···························'"'· :.:.:.:;:o·.···· ·!·:.······ ••..••.·:·:;;·:·:·:•!•!•!•!•'•:O!•!•!•!•!·'·':·.·:·:·:·:::::·t::::::
wtlt
be
displayed
by
•••·•·•·
........ the host of WBNS.TV's "High representatives of the girl
::::::::
·:·:·:·:
Road to Adventure" Dan
and boy scouts
!mel as guest speaker.

WASHINGTON - TWO NEW AGRICULTURE
Department reports point to potential bumper grain supplies
and strong restraints on farm and food price mcreases in the
year ahead. In a thtrd report, department experts said Soviet
press dispatches have noted plans for a sharp increase in
wheat acreage in Kazakhstan,.one of the Soviet Union's chief
wheat growing areas.
The first of the three reports ISSued Monday came from the
Crop Reporting Board which estimated the 1976 winter wheat
harvest at 1.459 billion bushels, down 2 per cent from a
December forecast and 12 per cent below last year's record. ;:~;;;;; LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP!) The report showed, however, that losses due to a fall-winter ;:;::~:: Trustees of LucasYIYe Townsh1p say
dro1J8htln the Great Plains had been softened by rains which ;:;:;:;: that when a legislative committee
sharply Increased Kansas prospects during April and left ~;:;:;: comes here Wednesday and
prospects in a five-state southern Plams region up 4 per cent §!:::~ Thursday to look into security
lorn April
:;::::&lt; problems at the Southern Ohio
:;:~;:; Correctidnal Facility and hold
LONDON - JEREMY TIIORPE HAS RESIGNED as .iii~ii public hearings restdents finally get
:;:;:;:: a chance to be heard.
leader of B~ttain's small,but Influential Uberal part:v. cit~ a :;~:;:;
Ray Lintz, 68 , a retired state
"sustained witch hunt" m press over an alleged homollexual :~:;:; agriculture worker
and one of three
affair with a male model. In a b1tter Jetter of resignation ,.,,
Monday, Thorpe denied havmg had a sexual relationship in the ~;:;:; trustees of this Scioto County
i;i.i·ii community of 1,'!17, says, "people
early 1960s with model Norman Scott.
"I repeat categorically my denials of the charges," i~!~i! here are scared to death"
Thorpe wrote Davtd Steel, the party's acting chief whip. ·~;;:;: "There have only been two
mstances of prisoners escapmg but
During an obscure court case last January, Scott testified that ;:;:;:;
;:;:::; the recent guards' strtke and four
be had had homosexual relations with Thorpe. He has never
;::::::: other guards' strikes, along wtth
produced any evidence to support the allegation.
prison
is
Thorpe denied the accusation and said he had not seen ::;:;:;; knowledge_ the
Scott for 12 years. The testimony, however, sparked three :;::;;: overpopulated, shakes us all up,"
months of newspaper stories on the private life of the 47-year- :·:;::: Lintz srud
i!i :: : "There :S.ems to be tremendous
old party leader - twi~arrled and the father of one son.
·;:;.::: labor problems and guards say 1t is
SALT LAKE CITY - IF TilE OEATil penalty ever ;:;!;;: dangerous for them to work there,''
becomes legal again, Utah will have no trouble organizinR a ·;:;;;·_; Lintz said "People who live mthts
firmg squad. State Prison Warden Sam Smith ~atd he already ·;:;:;:; town are very concerned."
Twice within the past year ''a ll the '
IJ4sa file ofletterslrom volunteers, who want to ftre one of the
12)

Meeting wtth council on the
matter were Verner See who
had been promised access to
his garage via the alley, and
Mrs. Pat Ingels, Chestnut St.
property owner .
Prayer preceding the
meeting was by the Rev. Don
Cole. Attending were Mayor
Hoffman , Grate and Councilm en George Meinhart ,
Marvm Kelly, Allen King ,
Wilham Walters, Carl Horky
and James Brewer

W.Va. has

populartty
contest,
Reagan
rnade
a 20·ho
ur whir
Iwind

JNews. ··.in Briefsl

MOBILE, ALA. - A "STUNNED" and "very, very
surprised" Leone Jo Hallgren of Clarkston, Wash., has been
named America's Junior Mtss for 1976. The 5-foot-2, browneyed lrunette Is 18 years old and wtU graduate from high
school May 27.
MISS Hallgren was crowned Monday night in the nationally
- teleVIsed pageant at Mobile. She wUI rece1ve a $10 000
scholarship and said she hopes to attend Washington State ~d
eventually work with retarded children Kentucky's Junior
Miss, Mary Hall Surface of Bowling Green, was the first
rwmerup in the pageant and received a $6,000 scholarship.
Secood runnerup and winner of a $4,000 scholarship was
Martanne Weed of BoWJtiful, Utah

by pcrrn1 ssl on of THI llHTMA NN AKtHIVI

dlca tmg that rates will be
reduced 4 83 cents per 1,000
cubtc feet as of April 28 and
council approved the mayor's
report for Apnl The report
showed receipts of $1,969 20
including $1.791.20 10 fines
and fees and $178 In merchant
police collections.
Burning was aiscussed ·and
It appeared that residents can
burn waste paper but not
garbage. Residents also
cannot burn leaves.
- George Qutllen told colincll
he purchased a cemetery Jot
In 1948; In 1968 the lot was
sold lo someone else and one
burial has taken place on the
lot. Qwllen was told that •
cemetery trustee wtll be In
touch wtth him 10 regard to
the miKup Council dectded to
consider at a later date the
allocation of $5,963 m federal
revenue sharing funds expee ted by the village The
town has until JWJe 25 to
dectde how the money will be
spent The discussion brought
out that the·vtllage should be
planning for the purchase of a
new police cruiser At lhts
pomt, $1 ,700 has been set

:V:O:L:U:V_II_I~-N0_._1_7~_P_O_M_ER_OY_-M_I_OO_L_EP_O_~~·-OH_IO~~~~~~ru~E=S~M~Y,~M~A~Y~l~l,~1=97~6~~~~~~~~PR=IC=E~F~IIT~E~EN~C=E~NT~S a~to:~P~=~~IIal

(Continued on page
'

Mayor Fred Hoffman will
look 10to steps to reheve Page
St. restdents of easements
they gave to the state 10
anbctpatton the street wfll be
wtdened,
Thts was the dectslon
Monday night by Middleport
coun ctl 10 regular ses.•ion
after Councilman Jam es
Brewer satd resld~nts there
want th~ easements released
since apparen tly there is to
be no widening project. The
easements were given to the
:.- state over the past several
years when the street was
scheduled to be wtdened
·· using State Issue I fWlds.
However,
when
the
eng10eering work and the
·: easements were secured H
was found that funds were no
·· longer avatlable for the
wtdenlng of the street. Mayor
Hoffman satd last night he
wtll see what steps are to be
taken to relieve property
owners from the easement
'
commttm ents which they
~berry, welding Instructor, supervlaed the project
whtch took about two weeks to complete Pictured above made.
Clerk -Treasurer
Gene
from 1-r, are · Bob Ball, Bob Musser, Gene Hood, Steve
Gra
te
read
a
letter
from
Nease, Tim Bearhs, Jack Well and Mtck Lyons
Columbia Gas of Ohto 10-

•••••••
'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

""""-

•,

:.:;

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

plus tax

The Tn - Cou~ty ' s Most
Exciting

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

On thts day m htstory
In 1865, Confederate Prestdent Jefferson Davts was
ca ptured as he fled
Irwinville, Ga. He spent the
next two years in a Union
pnson

TUESDAY NIGHT

•

state's case, and U Foreman
his attorney, Percy Foreman, mto the case.
"But/' added Hayes, ~~he was to save his cUent's life, it
pressured him into pleading
found nothing to refute the required a guilty plea." •
guilty against his will
Ray contended Foreman
made him believe the judge
would not pennit hun to
change attorneys and unless
he pleaded guilty he had no
alternative but to go to trtal
wtth Foreman, whom he felt
he could not trust.
The appellate court
decided, however, "the plea
was entered voluntarily and
kriowtngly "
The appellate judges said
JQdge Preston Battle "very
carefully questioned Ray as
to the voluntariness of hiS
plea before 1t was accepted."
"Ray specifically demed at
that tune · that anyone had
pressured htm to plead
~tlty," noted the J~dges .
Hts responses and acttons in
court revealed that he was
fully aware of what was
occurrmg "
Ray aiso appealed on
grounds he was denm ed
"effective asista nce of
counsel "
Ray alleged Foreman wa~
interested in getting the case
closed m order to make
money from magazine, book
and movte rtghts to Ray's
story
Ray cited contractual arrangements among himself,
hts attorneys and auth or
Wtlllam Bradford Hme.
But after exammmg the
court record, the appellate
JUdgl!l&gt; concluded that Ray
dtd not show he was
prejudiced agamst because of
the contracts
Ray's prese nt attorney,
James H Lasar, had sa1d m
oral arguments before the
appellate court the case was
''unique and bizarre almost
beyond behef "
"Ray contends he did not
shoot Kmg," sa1d Lasar "He
claims he was framed. The
Sunny outlook. You can count on 1t •n V1cky Vaughn 's
fact ts Ray wanted a trial, but
clever
sundress1ng Fring ed patchwork b nghts turn
he was afratd fi'oreman was
up
as
an
emp1re top and patch pockets on crisp catculta
gomg to throw a l11al As Ray
colton
Cnss-cross
straps add to the luri. Machine
saw it, he took the only
wash-dry.
Natural
or
Navy. 5-15.
alternahve route he had "
However, Wtlham J
Free Customer Parking on Second Street
Haynes, Jr ., of the Tennessee
and at the Mechanic Street Warehouse.
attorney general's office had
argued that Ray should not
get a trial because Foreman
"did make an extensive and
exhausttve" mvesttgatlon \

'

THE INN PLACE .

'

·......

·.;:

AMBA~ADOR SLAIN
PARIS (UP!) - A gunman
today assassinated Bolivian
Ambassador Joquim Zenteno
Anaya, who commanded
Troops that hunted down and
kllled Cuban revolutionary
Ernesto "Che" Guevara In
the Bolivtan jun~les in JM7 .
~

An-est made in
junk violation
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach satd today he has
arrested Allan Crites, UtUe
Hocking, on charges of
operating and maintaining ,a
JUnk yard outside a
munlcipali ty In Tuppers
Plains , Orange Township,
without obtalmng a license In
vtolation of 4737.07 of the Ohio
Revised Code
Cri les pos led bond in the
amount of $500 and will appear in Meigs County Court
Friday.
Sheriff Hartenbach also .
reported that Larry Ashburn,
Wilkesville, was arrePted
Monday on charges of
brea:Ung and entering 01 the
Edwin Davts bus garage In
Salem Township on Nov . 21,
1975, and also for receiving
stolen property belonging to
Edwin Davis and Son Ashhur,n waq, rPlPP!W'rt nn honr\
.~

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