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'1'1~· lla ~J¥ S.ntir•·1, Middlel•&gt;rt·l'omeruy,

0 ., Wednesd&lt;l y, Jw1e 23, 1976

Whaley has Athens job:_____
~ Bill

,\1'HEI' S
Whaley, a
:~lr1r b•okctball performer for
/lttaer" lliKh Sc~ool h• the 50s
:t\dfur llhlo Unrverstly m the
!Jib uft.:t· a penod in the ar~
IIU d •~t• ·· ices, Monday night
was rr:uu~d head basketball
co'" hat Athens ~Ugh School
m ""'r·r lir g Charles McNee ,

board following the meeting
noted "In its desire to seek
the best person for th e
positron, the board !!elected
Whal ey In light of his
demonstrated head coaching
abi lity w motivate and to
e•cite yoWJg people through
hi s per.,onal enthusiasm for
ra ;i'"" 1
basketball."
1\'lr: rl')·. wl1o c·oachcd at
Meanwhile , at Wellston,
,'\1~,,,,1' and Alexander after Rick Perdue, a three-sport
''""lt•u'wn befur c retiring slMdout at Wellston High
f _.,, n "oaching to ente r School in the 60s, was named
pr r ' · '&lt;' rmployment, may tht school's new basketball
fw·• let!~l action by the coach Monday night Perdue
1\ltfl " '
J-:dueation Assn . a 1969 graduate, starred i~
In ·au"· or the appointment football, basketball and
1,, 1111 /\!hens City Board .of baseball and was a two-lime
l•.d11&lt; :.tron.
al l-league pick in football in
Til&lt; •;,.l&lt;•c tiun of Whaley for the SE0/11..
ttr, P''' t was made by the
Last year • Perdue, a
IJ&lt;,.n! "' education after an graduate of Bowling Green
il' tr;•. nomination of Fred State Un iversity , coached
li•IJ«" wa' made by Supt. three sports at the junior high
S:un :ll'nd.rson . Gibson has level in Wellston.
ll••t·n reserve basketball
ln anoth er development
~,,,,,It ond an assis tan t involving an SEOAL school,
&lt;':VRlly coach at the school the Logan Board of
i r ''"' past five years.
Education failed to act upon a
. lh•ndersmr then nominated recommendation for the

•

Vt~a.rl•'Y for the posi tions of

•high

sc ho ol

phy sical

t rlu ,,lwn teacher and head

IJ:r ,,ht·lhall coach afler his·
fi rs I tr&lt;&gt; llli na tion dr opped
b.·t :•USti uf the Iac k of a
sce,•rr&lt;l.
;i rell'"se issued by the

Fiw finerl in
I·,._.· de fend ants were
rin• rl, two others forfeited
l,,,,r,j~ and one was sentenced
~,,
~r

Jltil iu action taken by

.. 1.!l t•pu rt

Mayor Fred
Tuesda y

'l,dft n&lt;:l !l 's ~ ourt

ilrpl!t.

;. ,r~o'd 1\'C rc James U. Craft,
f;Hllipolis, im proper
IJ,w'Jog , $5 line plus costs;
('lu·;, Smi th , Middlepor t,
oi ·:lljl uing the peace, $25 fi ne
;n1d 1'1JS ls; .James R. Couch ,
Jlt:!ry tht'fl, $40 fine plus
, "r,; . Hobert Lee Blecher,
1!1 , New Haven, DWI, $150
Jlllt llfH.l CO'"lls and three days
!r: j'&lt; il; John P. Riley, 18,
~~~ Jdleport, failure to yield
rtt\ht !If w&lt;~ y , S5 and costs.
F11 dt-iU ng bonds were
Wtlli;u,, Heeves, 50, disordt•iy rrtan ner , $:lO bond; John
tl i'r ·whu•. 25, Long Bottom,
PW!. 1:100 bond . Jerry D.
W u·•!, 48,
Middleport,
r(' l dvetl &lt;1 fi ve day ja il
S l'llh.' llCt.'
for disorderly
.;·,

rea

:

ea s

:

By MICHAEL ROSS
llf:IHUT, Lebanon !UP!)
:-. A hert-e tank and artrllery
assault by Chnstran rrghtrsts
DEXTER - Mrs. Pauline Mrs. Edith Talbert, Sun City, on two Pa lestJnian refugee
Holliday, 66, De•ter, died Ariz .; a tirother, Rufus, San camps ~ade a shambles . or
Tuesday at the Holzer Diego, Calif., eight grand- Leba no~ s la~t cease-£r~e
Medical Center.
children, three great- and rmpenled today 5
Mrs . Holliday was born in grandchildren, a cousin, planned reopemng of Betrut
Columbia Township of Meigs Clemma Vale , Cardington, mrport .
.
..
County on March 15, 1909, the Ohio and several nieces,
The offenstve on the JISir
daugher of the late Earl H. nephews and cousins.
Alpasha and Tal Zaa.tar
and DorcasOgdin Strong. She
Mrs . Holliday was a camps 111 southeast Betrut
was also preceded in death by member of the Old DeJter began only hours after a bus
a brother , Howard Earl Church, and Star Grange 778 convoy of 200 foretgners Strong.
of which she was secretary mcludmg 20Amerrcans - left
Surviving are her husband, for many years.
Beirut
T~es&lt;)ay . for
John T. Holliday ; a daughter, . Funeral services will be Damascus m • . Brrtts h·
Mrs . Kenneth 1Norma Gall ) held at 2p.m. Thursday at the spon~o~ed eva.cuation. . .
Wil co•, Middleport; two Old Dexter Church with the
Brrtrsh ofhcra ls sard . rt
sons, Raymond of San Diego, Rev. Willard Dutcher of- could be the last e~acuatton
Calif.; Robert, Dexter ; two ficjating. Burial will be in the convoy from thrs wardaughters-in-law,
Marilyn Standish Cemetery . Friends ravaged city · Another 1,300
and Avanel Holliday; a son- may call at the Bigony- Amerrcans and about 700
in-law, Kenneth Wilcox, Jordan Funeral Home in Britons chose to take their
Middleport; two sisters, Mrs. Nbany at anytime .
chances. and sUlyed behind .
Alice Smith, Langsville, and
The nghlists clarmed m,a
ra~io broadcast they had
captured
Jisir ablaze
Alpashawith
anda
set
Tal ·ZaaUlr
'
downpour of shells falling "at
CHESHIRE - Leo E. of the Cheshire United the rate of 15 every minute."
awarding of supplementa l Swisher • 72, Route 2, Methodist Church and was a
A Palestinian Liberation
contracts for athletic director Cheshire, died Tuesday at school bus driver before his
and athle ti c buaincss Holzer Medr'cal Center.
retirement. He was an active
manager .
Mr . Swisher was born May member or the Cheshir e
Bi II Biggers, head football 3,1904, at Cheshire, the son of Township Trustees.
coac h serve d as athletic the late M. K. and Millle
director last year while Dick
Funeral services will be
Reese Swisher. He was also held at 2p.m. Thursday at the . Veterans Memorial Hospital
Erb was business manager. preceded·tn dea th bYhis
ADMISSIONS - James
. wt'fe, Rawlings-Coats
Funeral
Lena V. Scott Swisher in 1967 flome in Middleport with the Pooler, Middleport; Sidney
and by a sister .
Rev . Chesler Lemley ond the Durst, Portland; Catherine
K i ss in~c!r talk s
Surviving are two sons, Rev . William Beagle of- Ross , Racine; Glenda Hunt,
l.nwell and Robert, both of ficiating. Burial will be in Long Bottom; Heather
Cheshire;
eight grand- Gravel Hill Cemetery at Harless, Langsville; Elson
Africa 's Vorster
children and two great- Cheshire . Friends may call at Spencer, Racine.
l!'e fWJeral home at anytime .
DISCHARGES - Roger
BODENMALS, Wes t granddaughters.
Mr . Swisher was a rnem brr
Reynolds
.
Germany t UP!) - Secretary
of Stale Henry A. Kissinger
arrived today for a meeting
:.:-:::·:·:-:-:-:-:·:-:-:-:·:·:-::·:·:·:-:-:·:·:;:;:;:·:;:::·:·:::::·:::::·
with South Nrican Prime
PLEASANT VALLEY
Minister John Vorster urging
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Discharges - Jill Jeffers,
negotiation rather than force
Friday through Sunday,
Gallipolis;
Pat Icard,
to solve southern Africa 's
fair Friday and a chance oi
Pomeroy; Verna Birchfield,
racial problems .
showers
and
thunGallipolis; John Albright,
A hotel in this Bavarian
derstorms Saturday and
West Colwnbia; Mrs . Jack
Forest village, only a 15Swiday. Highs will be fn the
Teaford, Racine; Mrs. Lester
minute drive fr om the
80s lows will be In the 60s.
WASHINGTON (UP!) Bonecutter and daughter,
C'zcchoslovak border, served Two Public Health Service
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Clyde
as the si te for the first high advisory panels agree that
Hall and son, Point Pleasant;
level contact between Vorster adults should be urged to get
Tony
Lewis,
Racine;
DEGREE
GRANTED
and the American govern- swine flu vaccinations next
Chadwick Lewis, Racine;
Ricky
Werner,
son
of
Mr.
rnen t.
fall and winter but they aren't and Mrs . Paul Wern er, Mrs.
J~ck
Gardner,
sure whether children should Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy. Gallipolis ; Unda Wilkinson,
get them .
received a master 's degree in Mason ; Mrs. Joseph Forbes ,
Dr.·
David
Senser,
director
TO MEET FRIDAY
aeronautical
and Point ·Pleasant ; Robert
of
the
government's
Center
RACINE - Past Officers
astronautical engineering Crush, Point Pleasant; Mrs .
for
Disease
Control,
was
Club of Racine Chapter OES
from Ohio State University in Charles Staats, Point
asked
Tuesday
to
summarize
will meet Friday at 7:30p.m.
commence!llent exercises on Pleasant; Mrs. Daniel King,
what
scientists
will
advise
at the home of Mr . and Mrs.
June 11 . He has been em- Point Pleasant; Mrs. Gerald
mothers
on
whether
their
Richard Dugan . Potluck
ployed on a full-time basis by Young, Letart, and Mrs. Earl ,
children
should
be
refreshments will be served.
Ohio State in its Aeronautical Reynolds, Gallipolis.
vaccinated.
Research Laboratories.
"As scientis ts we don't
know what to tell them,"
Senser
said .
Recommenda
lions
on
ASK TOWED
GOING TO CII.URCH
whether
to
vaccinate
children
A marriage license was
RACINE - Members of
Racine Chapter 134 OES will are at least two months away . issued to James Marvin
The panels agreed to make Waggoner, 21, Rt. 2, San·
observe "go to Church
no
special provisions for dyville, W. Va., and Anita
Sunday" at Racine Methodist
pregnant
women but to Jean Ash, 18, Pomeroy .
Church Sunday, June '!/. All
recommend
their vaccination
members are urged to attend.
routinely along with other
adults.
DEMOTE COUP CHIEF
WASHINGTON, D. C.
They recommended adult
ATHENS (UP!) - Former I Special ) - Senator Robert
immWlization , Senser said, dictator George
because anticipated Papadopoulos and 17 other Taft testifying before the
mortality on a swine nu members or the military Senate Public Works SUboutbreak would be highest junta, which seized power in. Committee today on water
called
for
among person• aged 35 and April, 1961, hav e bee n resources,
improve ments
in
the
older.
demoted to the rank of
Gallipolis Locks 2nd Dam _
priva te, a government
He asked for immediate
spokesman said Tuesday.
authorization of $200,000 to
The former coup leaders cover the initial construction
MEETING DELA YEO
SYRACUSE - Mayor were convicted in August, phase or 1,200-footlock in the
Herman London announced 1975, on . charges of canal.
today village co uncil, overthrowing democracy in
According to Senator Taft,
scheduled to meet July 1, will Greece and are serving tenns replacement of the present
not meet Wllil Thursday, July ranging from life to five antiquated, inadequate and
year~' imprisonment
8, at ,7:30p.m.
dan ge rous Gallipolis
navigation locks is fully
justified at this time. The
congestion at the present
locks is already a problem
and will become extremely
se rious well before the
replacement of the new locks
ca n be completed.
Senator Taft concluded, the
current 600 root locks at
Gallipolis is the only
remaining bottleneck in the
SPRING
2,000 mile river distance between Pennsylvania and the
Gulf Coast. The economic
~~g~~[::_~:_ _;;;~~~:t_.:.:_!__;___ base of the Ohio Valley is
dependent upon an adequate
system .

Mrs. Holliday of Dexter dies

Leo E SWls
, h er died TUes day

·---------------~~~~~---

June 8 by Syrian troops.
Airport author ities said
they were technicallv able to

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

HOSPITAL NEWS

There's doubt
about who is
to get vaccine

MEET·MONDA Y
t{ ,\C INE - A spec ial
liH'e !itH! of Racine Chapler
1:14 O I·~S . will be held Monday,
""'" 2fl, at 8 p.m. at the
M:.&gt;unie
Temple
for
l'O

l n t l i~ti on.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, June 22)
Brent Argabright, Mary
Austin, Mrs. George Bales
and daughter, Audrey Bethel,
Ruthaiene Bobo, Janet
Caplinger, Noah Clark, Mrs .
Harold Crabtree and son,
Michael Dalton, Joyce Davis,
Cynthia Erler, Mrs. Jerry
Ferguson and son, Wanda
Fisher, Clay Halley, Mrs. Jon
Hendershott and daughter,
Helen Hill, Cecil Holley, Mrs.
Charles
Jeffers
and
daughter, Gay Jeffers,
Donald Keaton, Okie Kent,
Mrs. George Miller and
daughter, Shela Miller,
James Mitchell, Clifton
Prince , Patricia Rhodes ,
Eldon Ridgeway , Teresa
Riley, Minnie Rose, Bertha
Smith, Dean Smith, Brenda
Spaulding, Debra Sturgell,
Edgar Thomas, Willis White .
· (Births, June%2)
Mr . and Mrs . Charlie
Mathews, daugher ,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs .
Marvin Hill, daughter ,
Racine; Mr . and Mrs. Carl
Preece, son, Point Pleasant,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Foley, son, SyracuBe .

The Value ·of

Your Deposits
Cannot Be

Cut at

land planes but a tour of the
Paltstinlans said' leftist
facility showed there was . positions at the mountain
much work to be done. The town of Bharndoun along the
duty.free shops, most of the main Damascus-Beirut
warehouses and all the highway 'ftre shelled by
airline offices had been Syrian artillery and the
vandalized and the runway leftists retlU'ned fire.
was pockmarked with holes
The joint PalestlnlaiHeftist
from mortar shells.
command s,Jd its forces'
Tuesday 's shelling spread ambushed a· Syrian patrol
to other areas of Beirut as near Aintoura , 19 miles
LebaneBe leftists unleashed northeast of Beirut, killing a
rockets and mortars on Syrian major and capturing
Christian sectors in an two soldiers.
apparent effort to relieve
pressure on the besieged
camps.
Pro-Syrian forces at
(Continl!ed Ifom page 1)
Khalde, south of the airport,
shelled the Palestinian sta\ements of a panel of
camps of Chatilla and Sabra, representativeS of the key
near the route the British- industries affected or
organized evacuation convoy statements in their behalf.
took earlier in the day
TheBe Industries Included,
Fighting was also rePorted coal, chemicals, electric
between Syrian and leftist power, petroleum, iron and
forces in the mountains steel and vessel operators.
northeast of Beirut.

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
THEY'RE INSURED UP TO
*40,000

Your savin gs de posit is safe here . Plus you
get the hi ghest inter est a llowed ! Res t
assured .. . t he hig h price of inflation won' t
affecrtoday's depos its tomorrow! We 'l l see
to It!

sensational Value!
2.~" console Special
BARGAIN DAYS

_

1976 zenith 100% Solid-State

(III~I~IOM!(OllOl II
The ALHAMBRA
S2926P
Caste rs . Genu1ne
Pecan wood ve ne ers
and selec t hardwood
solids on top. Front.
end s and base o f
ma tchm g Simula ted
wood male11al

A Horne Bank
For
Meigs County

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
OHIO

JUDGMENT ASKED
Valley Lwnber and Supply,
Middleport, filed a suit for
judgment of $989.41 against
Clifford . Whittington ,
Pomeroy, In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
BOARD TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Local Board of Education will
meet in recessed Bession June
24, at UO p.m. at the high
school.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
June 23 tnru Ju'ne 24

NOT OPEN
• Brill iant Chroma co lo1 Plc tur~ Tube • 100% Solfd-Siate Chassis

Fri.-Sat.-Sun,

• Pa ten led Power Senlly Vollage Regulating System

June 2S-l6 -l7

ptrtt

THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON -

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

BANK RATE FINANCING
MIDDLE PORT

Walt Disney's
BLACK BEARD'S GHOST
Dean Jones , Peter Ustinov,

Susanne Pleshetle. Elsa
La nchest•r Joby Baker,
Ell iott Read.
IG I
Snow Start&gt; 1 p.m .

The Meigs County Courthouse wa s out of business
today following the overnight
breaking and entering of all
but one of its offices.
Janitors reporting to work
early today found all offices
with the ex~eption of that or
County Auditor Howard
Frank had been ransacked.
Entrance to the courthouse
was gained by breaking out a
windowpane from the office
of Common Pl eas Court

Old School Days
sale is Sat11rday

COMBINATION OFFER I POWERFUL
UPRIGHT WITH CLEANING TOOLS

\,

GIVES YOU A CHOICE
SO YOU CAN SET THE
CLEANER FOR THE,
CARPET. NAP.:'

$

:

•

..

4 ~! •.;
1417-B

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You have the knack today o f
tur n1ng unusual si tua tions to
you r advan tage. You r talent is
es p ec •a lly direc te d toward
making a buck .

~

GEMINI (M
'-June 20) This
co uld be a vc
'o r·tunate day
for you . pr ovided you don't
leave th ings up to othe, s. Lead
you r own pa rade.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) You 'll be equipped today
w1th l he co ur age and w isdom
to make a to ugh dec isi on
you ·ve been pull in g off Do it
now.

Cleans.
Shags!:·

SAVE

ADJUSTS TO DEEP·.
CLEAN ANY CARPET
FROM THE LOWEST:
.NAP TO THE'
HEADLIGHT
THICKE.ST SHAG. ~
•
Reg. 1711" UPRIGHT:
Reg. 11991 ATTACHMENTS
Total Value lg'gli .

CAPRICORN (Dtc . 22-Jan .
19) Ther e's so!l'et h1ng you're
ent itl ed to . workwi se . th at
you 've been d enied . Ca ll It to
the boss· att e ntion today.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
You·ve lo ng neglected an o ld
and vall1a ble co ntac t. M ake an
eff o r t to r ek in d ie the
fnen dsh1 p

CLEANS.
SHAGS!

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morcn 20)
Do n ' t g•vc up no w on .
something wor thwh1l e you 've
been pursutng . The results
you ve hop ed lor cou ld be

Juno 2•, 1976
This com 1ng year ha s some
pion sa nt surprises 111 store
One may be 1n 1t1e area where
your work or c ;~r oe r ISconce m
eel Ano th ~ r could lead to sam
short
pteit sure
tr ip

Shop Thursday 9:30 to 5,
friday til 8 p.m., Saturday til 5 p.m.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
..

considered it an adversary,
covered up FBI negligence in
investiga t ing Oswald,
requested
personal
information from FBI files on
Warren Co mmis s ion
members and staff, and
appar ently ca used some
derogatory Information to be
distributed about them .
Sen. Richard Schweiker, RPa., told a news conference
Wednesday " th ere is no
longer any reason to have
faith" in the Warren
Commission findin g that
Oswald acted alone . He
called for a reopening of the
investiga lion.
Sen. Gary Hart, D-Ollo.,
cochairman, said he foWJd
''no persuasive evidence" to

challenge the basic finding
but urged further study of the
p ossib l ·e "C uban

connection. ''
The 106-page report now
goes to the new !~ ember
(Continued on page 10)

11
GENE HAWKINS IS-PICTURED with one of some 50
Pomeroy High School band uniforms which will be offered
for sale at the Meigs Local School District's public auction
in Rutland Saturday.
well known auctioneer, has $100. This is far below the
volunteered to handle the amount Carnahan would
sale - with articles to be sold · have received had he taken
one by one - for a flat rate of
(Continued on page 10)

.,.

.,. scheduled at

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO SUPREME COURT ruled
Wednesday that a woman 's sexual activities after she is
divorced can be taken Into account in considering continuance
of alrmony payments. The court made the ruling in the case of
John W. Wolfe, Bexley, chairman fo the board of The Ohio
Company and his former wife, Mrs. JoAnn Wallace Wolfe.
Wolfe, In December, 1973, filed a suit In Franklin County
Cornrnon Pleas Court asking that alimony payments to his
fonner wife be stopped because she lived and traveled with
another man. The Common Pleas Court agreed with Wolfe but
the decision was reversed by the Franklin County Court of
Appeals. However , the Ohio Supreme Court upheld the
Common Pleas Court ruling.
CINCINNATI - RALPH C. PICKARD HAS been named
chairman of the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation
Commission. Pickard was named Wednesday as the new
chairman or the commission, an interstate agency involving
Dlinois, Indiana, KentuckY, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Virginia and West Virginia.
·

Rail Festival
Entertainment Saturday,
July 3 at the Railroad Days
Festival in Middleport will
include the first and perhaps
only Frog Olympics, complete with ceremonial tor·
ches and the playing of the
national anthems of all par·
ticipating countries.
.
The event is being staged
under the International Rules
for Competition as set down
by the Ohio Society for the
Promotion of Bullfrogs.
Events included will be
variations on many of the
traditional Olympic events.
However, two new events
have been added, including
the "Prince Charming
Marathon" which derives its
name from the clilldren's
story of the beautiful princess whose kiss turned the
frog Into a handsome prince.
Details of all events will be
announced later.

BOSTON - A THREE DAY D..LEGA.L strike by 20,000
Massachusetts stale employes ended today minutes before a 6
a.m. court deadline that would have cost the union $200,000 a
day in fines ifthe strike continued. "Because of the progress in
the talks, we are ordering all the workers back to work
immediately," union president Howard Doyle said emerging
from an overnight negotiating session with state officials and a
mediator.
"I'm optimistic at a time like this that they will go back to
work," Doyle said. Unable to Betlle a contract to get their first
payraise since 1969, th e workers walked out at 6 a.m. Monday.
TRIP SHORTENED
Late Wednesday Judge Thomas Morse gave the strikers the
The
Middleport
choice of continuing the strike which Beriously impaired state
Emergency Squsd answered
.
(Continued on page 10)
a call to Salem Center at 3:33
p.m. Wednesday where an
aijlo accident had taken
place. However, the squad
New officers were installed Struble, secretary-treasurer. was turned back at Langswh•n the Pomeroy· · The Rev. Wllllam Mid- ville when it was detennined
Middleport Lions Club met dleswarth, president, spoke its services were not needed . ·
for a noon luncheon Wed- on Llonlsm and its Jliii'P08eS.
nesday at the Meigs 1M.
It was announced that James
NOW YOU KNOW
InstaUed were N. W. Comp- C. Allen, governor elect for
By the mid 1700s, two thirds
ton, president; Bruce District 13-K, Beverly, will
Teaford, first vice president; make his official visit to the of all the tea drunk in
Bill Nease, second vice Pomeroy-Middleport Club on England was smuggled into
the country to avoid the hi~h
president;
Kar!Krautter tall July28.
.
import
tax .
twtster, and Clarence

-I
The Middleport Village federal ' funds."
Jeff Burt, associate plan·
Planning Commission Wednesday night heard the final ner with Buckeye Hills,
reading of the Middleport outlined the content of the 60
Cornprehelll!ive Plan Update page update. A preface ex·
In Middleport Council cham- plained the past history of the
bers. It predicted a area and physical makeup,
population growth in Mid-. lnfonnation that Burt said
could be used by an industry
dleport by 1880.
The Planning Commission plarutlngtolocate in the area.
worked joinUy with the . The update is divided Into
Buckeye Hills • Hocking five sectiolll!. They are
Valley Regional Develop- population and economy,
ment District in developing housing, transportation, land
the pian update , the firs1 use, and capital Imsince the original plan was provements. Some of the
set forth in 1964.
results of the update are :
Harry Bwngarner, deputy _ - A general upswing in
director . of planning for Middleport population Is seen
Buckeye Hlllll • Hocking by 1980, to 3,096.
- A nel out migration of
Valley Regional Development District, said com- yoWJg people from the comprehensive
planning munity due to lack of job op"d'llllonstrates to federal portunities, creating one of
a,uthorities that a village the highest percenla!!es of
does plan ahead." He added, elderly population in the en" It
would
help
the tire state.
-The possibility that AOR·
communities' application for

Babies will compete
There will be a pretty baby
contest at 10 a.m. Saturday,
July 3, · at the Middleport
Community Park as a part of
the Railroad Days Observance.
Entrants need not be
residents of Meigs CountyGroup One - Birth to three
months .
Group Two - Three
months to si• months.
Group Three - Six months
to one year.
Group Four - One year to
18 months .
Group Five - 16 months to
two years.

PRETTY BABY COriTEST
CHILD' S NAME - - - - -PARENT S

- - - -- - - - - 1

ADDRES S - - - -- - --

'

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Munday, showers · and
thundershowers during the
weekend and clearlog
Monday. Highs wlll be In
the 80s Saturday and tn the
middle 708 to lower 80s
Sunday and Monday. LoWll
wlll be In the 80s Saturday
morning, lowering to
middle and upper 50s
Monday mor~iog .

CH ILD '&gt; BIR r HDA TE - - - - -

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

GROUP ENTERED IN - - - - -

Weather

ENCLOSE
TO;

.

•i

Group Si• - Two years.
Group Seven - Three
years.
There will be an entry fee
of 50 cents. Entry fonna are
available (below) in thL:l
newspaper and at area
businesses beginning two
weeks before the featlval.
One girl and one boy will ~
s'elected as flrsl place winner
in each age group. Each child
will receive a ribbon for entering the contest.
For more lnfonnatlon, caD
(614) 992-2500 during the day
and 992-3189after 5:30p.m.

TA, a bus line service In
Athens, may expand its Ber·
vice into Meigs County to
offset the loss of bus service
between Pomeroy and
Athens.
- To guide location and
design of future development.
The update also proposed
to expand the increased
residential use of land along
FalrlaneAve. and Vine St., to
reduce' industrial acreage
between Mill St. and Palmer
st., and to e.tend the conBervation area to Cottage Dr.
at a minimum. The plan
proposed the zoning north of
PoweU St. be changed from
R-1, to R·2, wlilch would
allow for · more extensive
residential development.
A capital improvement list,
in order of decreasing
priority, includes construction of a water storage
tank, street repair, Bewage
plant
development,
recreational lmprovemenis,
the renovation of town haU,
and riverfront development
Burt said that funding from
the local, state, or federal .
level could be sought for
these projects.
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman, who WBB present at
the meeting , said "I think
COWICII will approve it. I
think it's Something we've
needed since the old plan was
outdated." He added that "It

50¢

EIHRY FEE AND MAI L

Cloudy tonight and Friday,
showers likely. Highs Friday
will be 80 to 85 and lows
tonight middle to u~r 60s.
Probability of rain 70 per cent
today and tonight, ar.d SO per
cent Friday.

~~~ .

No. 411

law is

that small amounts of mooey
were missing and a scanner
was taken from the Probate
Court.
The courthouse was locked
to the public and officials did
not go into their offices until
fing erprintin g could be
completed by Herman Henry
l.ngan of the Bureau of
t'timinal Investigation.
Sherif£ Rubert Hartenbach
is
co ndu cting
the
investigation.

voided

Bob Jacobs
dies today
Robe1·t !.. 1Bob) Jacobs ,
knuwn
Pomeroy
well
businessman , died
unexp ec tedly Thursday
morning after apparently
suffering a heart attack while
at his dulles at t~e Pomeroy
Ben Franklin Store which he
has operated for many years.
Mr . Jucobs was dead upon
arrival of the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad at 9:24
a.m .
Aroong survivors are his
wife, Katherine and two sons,
Bob and Chad , both of
Pomeroy.
~'uneral arrangements are
being made at the Ewing
.Funeral Home.

The Plan predicts more
Middleport poPulation

Compton installed by Lions

~~:··

~olr~

By BOB HOEFLICH
For years, unused and outdated equipment and books
have been collecting In school
buildings of the Meigs Local
School District.
Several months ago, Dan
Morris, assistant superintendent, decided it was lilgh
time that someone take the
bull by the horns and clear
out buildings where the many
items were doing nothing but
gathering dust. The equipment comes from Salem Center, Rutland, Bedford, Mid·
dleport, Pomeroy, Harrisonville, Bradbury and
Salisbury, most of it before
consolidation in 1967.
He planned a public sale,
got approval of the board of
education, and lined up
Harold Hubbard, Joe
Shavorinsky and Gene
Hawkins to get it all together.
And they did!
All of the items - and it is a
variety - have been taken to
the Rutland gymnasium next door to the old Rutland
High School - and the sale
will be staged at 10:30 a. m.
Saturday morning.
Jim Carnahan, Racine,

lfJV;::;:':::':': :':':' :':,:::':i;::,:::B;i;j;~ · Frog Olympics

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Heed your Instincts in bu siness
tod ay . You a re very perceptive
in spo tling poten t ial profit
situati ons not readily apparen t
to oth er s

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
This is a goo d da y to make a
change that can further you r
a1ms I! yo u feel you have all
the wnnk les ironed out , move!

By NICHOLAS DAND..OFF in the report of a special nineWASHINGTON I UP!) - month Senate investigation
Within days after John into the performance of U.S.
Kennedy was killed Nov . 22, intelligence agencies in the
1963, the CIA learned two investigation of Kennedy 's
suspicious travelers ned the death .
United Slates for Cuba - but
Other items in the report :
never told the Warren
On the day after Kennedy 's
Cummission.
death the FBI rescinded an
Nor did the CIA ever order sent the day before,
inform the commission of requesting all possible clues.
Kennedy administration Instead it limited FBI
schemes to assassinate investigations to a criminal
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro pro be of the background of
- although talk or such plots presumed assassin Lee
might have raised the Harvey Oswald.
possibility Kennedy's death
Shortly afterward, FBI su·
was engineered by Castro in periors ordered Dallas
retalia lion.
Special Agent James Hosty to
In addition the o££icial destroy a note which Oswald
invest igators never learned - under investigation by the
on the day Kennedy was FBI since earlier in the
killed a secret CIA emissary month - sent to Hosty,
mel a Cuban contact known warning him not to interview
as "AMLASH" to hand over a further his Sovietborn wife
poison pen device and offer Marina.
rifles and explosives for
FBI Director J. Edgar
killing Castro .
Hoover bucked the Warren
These examples turned up Commission from ·the start,

JOE SHAVORINSKY IS SHOWN with only a portion or the student desks which are a
part of the Meigs Local School District auction in Rutland Saturday.

For Tnurtlday, Juno 24, 197e
ARIES (Moren 21·Aprll19) No&lt;
onl y IS your thinking sharp today. but you have the ability to
sell you r ideas . Go out and
m ake you r ptich

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You
ca n reac h someone today who
you previous ly felt was co ld
an d dis tant to your proposals.
Don't wai t to be co nta cted.

Judge John C. Ba con at the
rear of the courthouse.
Two doors to other offi ces
were damaged when they
were forced open . Desk
drawers in all the offi ces
wHe ransacked and left
standing open . Contents of
the drawers were strewn
about floors of the offices.
It had not been determined
late this morning what had
been taken, but a couple of
the offices had determined

Fiflec n Ct&gt;nts

Vol.

'74 wage

BOB JACOBS

~

where your amb rtions are concerne d t oday . Cha lleng e
awa ke ns yo ur c ompetitive
spirit.

enttne

Warren Commission
kept in dark by CIA

REPEAT SALE!

Total Value '9411

VIRGO (Aug. 2~-Sopl. 22)

•

Courthouse hit

•

Reg. 74"' UPRIGHt:
Reg. 119,; ATTACHMENT$:

Darn be afr aid to go all out

at y

e

Polneroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, June 24, 1976

1

LEO (Julr 23- Aug. 22) Involve
yo urse lf wit h some type ol
organ1zat1onal ac tivity to da y.
You work well with groups and
yo u·u get a real charge ou t of it.

•

Urgency

locks job

at Eureka

.

Orgallization spokesman said
both camps, about four miles
nor~east of ~e airport, were
encrrcled by a force of about
4·000 , men and dozens of
~nks ,,but as of Tuesday
ru ght, all !herr al~cks have
been beaten back.
. .
The. new
Chr~sllan
offe~slve shattered a Ubyanmedratedcease.fJre arran~"?
Monda y and h~pered cml
avratlon authorrties, who had
planned . to reopen Beirut
International arrport to
commercial traffic today.
The fighting er:upted only
how;s after Synan troops,
statroned around the arrport,
wtthdrew to let a l,()(l().man
Libyan-Syrtan peace-keeping
force Ulke over the looted, .
shelled facility under terms
of the new cease.f1re.
A Red Cross DC6 carrying
food and medical supplies
from Larnaca , Cyprus,
arrived Tuesday, the first
civilian since
craft to
the
airport
it land
was at
seized

Taft pushes

H 1'1'11lt'l ,

•

A______ j)___t_h-.------ 1O.ristians bloody two refugee camps

will help our chance fur
federal funding tremen·
dously."

WASHINGTON (UP!) Th e Supreme Court today
overturned a 1974 federal law
extending minimum wage
and overtime provisions to
milllons of state and local
government employes.
In u iH decision written by
Justice
William
H.
Rehnquist, 'the court said
Congress exceeded Its powers
by uttempting (o displace Ute
powers of the state and local
gove rnments to structure
th eir
employer-employe
•·elationshlps.
The 1974 arnemdments to
the ~'air Labor Standards Act
would have required local
and slate govel'llments to
comply with minimum wage ,
overtime and reporting
requirements such as now
are applied to private
employes.
11•e National League of
Citi es,
the
National
novernors Conference and
several communities filed
sult, clulming the act was
unco nstitutional and un
infringement on the federnl
structure separating national
and local government.
A three-judge federul "'ru·t
dismissed the suit, but. today
the Supreme Court rc v~ rsed,
striking
down
the
amendments .
At the same time, the
justices overruled a 1968
decision upholding curlier
amendments extending
minimum wage and overtime
requirements to public
hospitals and other govern•
ment services which compete
with private Hgcncies.

THREE WIN HONORS
Three Meigs High SChool
students receiving bachelor's
degrees graduated with
honors from Ohio University.
They were Steven Stanley,
bachelor of science In
electr ical engineering;
Michael Struble, bachelor of
/lrts, and Irene Barnes,
bachelor of science In home
economics.

Regan digging
for delegates
By LEWIS WRD
Carter 'didn't name Henry
Urdted Preos International
Kissinger but it was clear he
Ronald Reagan Is spending wa s referring to the
the rest of this week in race· , secretary of state's missions
to-face
sessions
with of personal diplomacy .
Republicans in four states,
Carter sai d the United
hoping to nail down dozens of States should pursue a
additional delegates in his bid foreign policy keyed on
for the GOP presidential morality , openness and
nomination .
cooperatlon with other
Reaga n scheduled a flight democracies, and called for a
today to Jackson, Miss., to halt or the arms now Into
try to put all 30 of developing nations.
Mississippi 's delegates in his
In Washington later , Carter
column . He will meet later told reporters "there are 10 to
with
Republicans
in 12 persons in whom I have a
Minneso ta , Montana and great Interest as potential
Wyoming .
vice presldentlal nominees."
President Ford's only sche- He said it was "likely, but not
duled
session
with . necessary" that the eventual
Republican delegates the rest nominee
would
have
of this week is a Friday Washington experience.
meeting at the WhJte House
Carter said he will reveal
with 22 West Virginians, 20 or his choice only after getting
whom already are committed the nomination In New York
to him . Ford leaves Saturday next month .
for an economic summit
Rep . Lou Frey, R·Fia., who
conference in Puerto Rico . was Ford's state chalnnan in
With eight states still to Flo~lda,
said
many
choose 161 delegates, and Republicans may conclude
with 103 delegates still that a FordReagan ticket Is
uncommitted, UPI's latest needed to win the November
count showed Ford with 1,047 election.
delegates to Reagan's 948.
"A lot of people feellt's not
_ The nomination requires just a possibility," said Frey.
1,130 delegates.
"It's a necessity."
Reagan
strategists
Iowa Gov. Robert Ray,
predicted
the
former chamnan of the Republican
Caliornia governor will get at platform committee, said the
least 100 of the 161 delegates GOP may have to avoid
that haven't been picked, but politically sensitive issues In
Ford's managers insist he its platform for the sake of
.will ensure a first-ballot party unity .
nomination in advance of the
Ray predicted the platform
convention in August.
will have few controversial
Jimmy
Carter
the Items and may not figure
apparent Dem~cralic prominently In the election.
nominee, told the Foreign
VEHICLES COLUDE
Policy Association In a New
A truck driven by Lee
York speech Wednesday that Varney, 39, Rt. I McDennott ,
the · Nl•on an~ Ford went left of center to strike a
administrations pursued "a
car driven by John Bass, 211,
kind of secretive lone ranger
Dexter, Wednesday at 3:15 .
foreign policy - a one-man a.m. on SR 124 in Salem Twp.
policy of international advenThere were no injuries and
ture. "
dama~es were moderate.

�3- The Daily Senunel MtddJepart Pon1erov 0

Mass exodus of business really a Rhodes herring?
of 1975 l:leveland lost nearly
300 JObs when small plants
shut down or moved The
unemployment rate m that
year averaged 7 8 per cent m
Cleveland and then contmued
to drop to 6 5 per cent by last
Aprtl Statts!Lcs for last
month are not yet comptled
but stattsllctans expect
another unemployment drop
for Cleveland
Steehan satd Oils Elevator
Co?' left Cleveland but came
back the Ford Motor Co IS
expanding Its operatiOn to
mclude 1000 more workers
and that machme tool
mdustry m Cleveland IS much
health er
I n
C oI u m bu s
unemployment has dropped
J'
from a htgh of 8 4 per cent m
April\975 to 6 7 per cent last
lSU
Aprtl The May ftgure IS
expected to be even lower
COlUMBUS (UP!) - James C Yocum for Ohto for many mdustnes should not be
James Thomas VICe prest
professor ol busmess research at Ohto State overlooked
dent of research for the
Umverslly ts reurmg after spendmg 40
Many f rn s are decentrallzmg opemng
Columbus Chamber of
years study ng facts and f gores pertammg operations m the South Southwest and far
Commerce satd there has
to Ohto s economy
West but the mam mdustr al market wtll
been no mass exodus of
And Yocum who Will step down from the sttll he here satd Yocum
ndustry from Columbus and
OSU post June 30 says the states econom c
For man) years Yocum has wrttlen the
that he IS sattsfted that
ptcture IS not m as bad a shape as some nonthly analysts The Trend of Busmess
employment Is holdmg
other economtc spectahsts seem to th nk fea m ed n the Bulletm of Bus ness
well
Some of these tour vtews of 0110 trends Researd a monthly publ calton of the
t~clud~showge~~~rt~~~ubeg~
Columbus has a real
0
are somewhat JUSt fted the 70-year.()!d Center of Busmess and Economic Research
JO
a
advantage by not bemg a one
a OSU
ex pans ton or Industry
d
d Th
Yocum satd Wedn esday Rut some pomts
relocatmg 10 Ohto
n us1ry 1own sat
omas
There ts no mass exodus
are exaggerated Exaggerated to the po n
One basts for h s analysts of Ohio busmess
Chambers of commerce He satd the strength of the
of mdustry from Ohio In fact
that I have been threaten ng to wnte an rends IS the monthly OhiO retatl sales
offtctals satd the Department Columbus employment base
mdustry ts expandmg m some
on
Whats
Good
About
the
Oho
rdexes
Yocum
started
40
years
ago
of Development sent them s havmg many smaller
arttcle
• areas and new mdustry IS
•
Economy
Relatl sales are such an unportanl
forms asking them to tdenllly mdustrtes employmg from
mto the slate The
There s been a loss of 1 atural resources eleme nt Ill gaugmg the current trend of the
250 to :;oo workers
•• movmg
unemployment rate m some
or of natural resource based mdustry tn the c on011y sad Yocun The) are very
:~~~st~te~re~r~ ~~~ ~~~
He satd that 58 per cent of
areas of Ohto IS gomg down
stale perhaps but 01 o ts the center of the s gntftcant In makmg eshmales of Gross
longer m thetr areas and to all growth n Oh o has
fa ster than the nat onal aver
metal workmg mdustncscomplex sttll Natwnal Product Retail sales are a major
mclude how many JObs have occurred Ill Central Ohto
•• age wluch was 7 4per cent as great
largely concentrated m the Great Lakes pot !ton of personal consumptiOn
been lost
The stluat on m Cmcmnah
of last Aprtl
area satd Yocwn
expendttures wh ch account for nearly 70
s unusual to the rest of Ohto
mdustnal leaders
The Importan ce of the surrounding per ce II of GNP
The problem wtth this IS because
the
Greater
••• ate- While
talkmg about htgh
mdustnal market as a pus loca lton fact&lt; r
that you don 1 gel a real Ctr cmnalt Chamber of
corporate taxes they are also
picture
satd J Gerard Commerce coostders ts area
cont,rned about the lack and
Sheehan director of busmess to be three counhes m
•
expanSion for the Greater Northern Kentucky one
C I e v e I a n d G r o w I h county m Eastern Indtana
AsSQciatton
and three counttes m Ohw
The mformatton the
The chamber has few
Development
Department stallshcs m mdustry leaVIng
wants JUS! shows JObs lost unless tt has gone out of tis
ATHENS OhiO (UP!) Gov James A Rhodes carrted h s
lhts 1 ny memory has been the worst year m the history butt! doesn t reflect new Jobs servtce area Robert W
by
mdustnal Kepner the chamber s
attack on the Dernocratcontrolled General Assembly to of Oh o for your g people to obtam a JOb And the sm1ple reason created
expanston
It
does
however econom 1c' research manager
Buckeye Boys Stale Wednesday chargmg he was geltmg r
s that we do not have programs m the slate of Oh o that are
mdtcate
that
the
problem
of satd htsservtce area lost 1800
~
cooperation 111 htsattempts to create JObs lor Oluoan s
re evant to the sttua ton of thts great state
loss
of
manufacturmg
1s
not
a JObs smce 1974 by mdustry
Rhodes told the 1 3&amp;i delegates to the Oh o Amencan
Rhodes tmhcated he would conttm e Ius campaign for JObs
mmor
one
movmg out and 13 300 Jobs
LegiOns semmar n government the state needs prog ams to beyond hts recent speech before the General Assembly whtch
Sheehan
satd
that
Greater
have
been lost smce 1974 due
expand present mdusty and to attract new busmesses
he sa d upset some of he legtslators
Cleveland
ts
showmg
a
to
plant
reductwns
I m gettmg nocooperahon out of the majortty leadership m
Were gomg to go to the people of Ohio and tell them the
Yet
the
unemploythent rate
general
busmess
upturn
the OhiO General Assembly but I m shU trymg stU sell r g reason we cannot get JObs The stmple reason We do not have
Lother
Koberer
the
Growth
ts
down
1n
January 1t was 8 9
sttll persuadmg srud the Republican governor
a program satd Rhodes
Assoctatton
vtce
prestdent
lor
per
cent
It
fell shghtly to 8 6
Rhodes sad employment ts the No 1 tssuc n Ohio 1TI e mock gO\ernment program lor h gh school JUmors
terna t10na1 ac1tvt ttes satd per cent m February By
m
concermng young people
co I noes today "'th leg slallve sesstons
the Cleveland Port Author ly March 1t was 8 per cent and
for example should have last Apnltl was 7 4 per cent
foretgn trade zone status by
Thts compares to March
December and thts w II 1975 when the unemployment
create more JObs
rate 111 CmctMah was 9 7 per
Cleveland has lost nearly 60 cent and Apnl 1975 when 11
compames smce 1970 whtch was 9 4 per cent
By MICHAEL ROSS
employed
13800 persons
Alt hough Ctnctnnalt
resume
normal
flights
to
BEIRUT Lebanon (UP! I has been htl
a nd Syrtan troops began
Most
of
the
compames
went
ncludes
Nothern Kentucky m
European
and
Arab
capttals
I eft st forces trapped m
takmg
hold
Left st guMers n western
out
of
busmess
for
general
Its
servtce
area plants
today
desp
te
the
fact
every
two refugee can ps beat back Betru doused Clmst an
Under an agreement
u Chrtshan tank and arttllerv sectors w1th mor tat rutmds medtated bv I tbya Synan a rimes offtce 111 the terrrunal economtc reasons or lor a locatmg there are depnvtng
general detenoratwn of thetr Ohto of mcome from
assault Wednesday m a fierce and rockets m what the forces Withdrew from has been vandalized
In another development product market accordmg to corporate taxes
offenstve that touched off spokesman ca lled an effort southern Betrut under the
One report by the chamber
' cttywtde shellmg and rocket
to open up more fronts and supervt ston of a Synan the PLO demed a report m the Growth Assocta lton
Seven compames whtch shows that over the past few
attacks and a total power Uike some of the pressure off ltbyan peacekee pmg force the Fren ch newspaper
blackout
sent by the Arab Leag ue France S01r tt had k lled U S together employed less than years 11 compames have
he two camps
The {tghtmg around the Tal
Mortar rounds I tl the mam Sudanese and Saud Arabtan \mba ssador FranciS E 300 persons satd they left dectded to locate n Northern
Zaatar and Jtsr AI Pasha pylons supplymg the capttal contmgents were scheduled Meloy to pums/1 Washmgton Cleveland due to htgh Kentucky than 111 Cmcmnalt
for
support ng Synan corporate taxes or the high to take advantage of
camps m southeastern Betrut wtth electriCity and Betrut to arr ve shortly
costs of labor land and Kentucky s lower corporate
and mother sectors left more res tdenls accustomed to
The agreement also called mtervenllon 111 Lebanon
bu ldmg
tax structure
Meloy
Embassy
Econom
c
than 100 dead and 225 shortages of bread milk and for he Syrians to wtthdraw
Yet durmg thts pertod
The report says the 11
wounded 111 a 24-hour penod gasoline now fa ce a total from the outsktrts of Counselor Robert 0 Warmg
Cleveland
s
unemployment
compames
have mvested $35
and
thetr
Lebanese
dnver
A Palestme Ltberat on power blackout
Lebanon s h ee maJor port
Orgamza tton spokesman satd
Despite the f ght ng towns
Beirut Stdon and Zuhatr Mughrabt were am rate has gone down Durmg mtlllon 111 Northern Kentucky
forces m the two camps engulfing
and nto the bushed and slam n a leftts! 1971 and 1972 for example and have created 1145 JObs
Betrut
the Trtpoh
Never 1he 1e s s
the
remamed surrounded but had nternatwr al atrport opened northern ~kaa and southern controlled sector of Betrut Cleveland lost nearly 9 000
JObs through mdustr1al Cmcmnalt chamber says Its
drtven back the nghllst to commerctal trafftc Bekka Valley reg ons
June 16
A PLO commumque satd closmgs or leavmg the ctty local economy ts showmg
assault destroy ng three Wednesday for the first lime
11 e atrport reopened ~&lt;tth
tanks m the process
smce tl was setzed by Synan he arnval from Athens of a the orgamzalton was sttll yet unemployment rate more balance and tlsttllhas a
But casualues have been troops June 8
East
Atrlmes probmg the murders and dropped from 7 1 per cent to strong manufacturmg base
M ddle
heavy he satd Our camp
reports
of 56 per cent
As the tradit onal war passenger plane that landed d sm ssed
Durmg the hard recessiOn
commanders report that between Chrtshan rtght sis on a runway gua rded by comphctty by saytng
• nearly I 000 shells fell on Tal and Moslem lefltsts raged ~&lt;h te helmeted peace
The rumors are spread by
Zaa tar over the past 24 hours wtth full fury a lull m the keepmg troops
the Cen tral Intelligence
and nearly every house there ftghtmg between Palesttmans
MEA satd t planned to Agency

COLUMBUS (UP!) • There Is no evtdence of a
mass ex od us of 111 dustry from
Ohio to states wtth lower
corporate taxes Scrtpps
Howard Newspapers re
ported today
Tins ISm sharp contrast to
almost datly reports by Gov
James A Ithodes and State
Development Dtrector James
Duerk that wdustry ts raptdly
packmg up and movmg south
because taxes In Ohio are too
htgh
For the past 18 months
Rhodes has campaigned hard
to get tax relief for mdustry
He has warned that OhiO 1s
becommg an mdustnal was
teland because of corporate
taxes
But the governor has
declmed repeatedly to offer
slatisttcs to show Oh o IS
losmg Its mdustry He says he
has proof but s not ready to
make tl public
Scrtpps Howard News
papers conducted a survey of
chambers of commerce m
'" Ohto and mtervtewed state
• v government sta!tsltctans who
study mdustrtal growth
Here s what the survey
found

cost ol energy and the h gl
cost of labor n Olw
Olto s corporate tax
structure IS more ol a
negattve factor 1n attract ng
new mdustry to the state
rather than forcmg extst ng
mdustry out
They sad that In recent
n onths
the
Rhodes
Adn mt strallon has asked
them to comp le such hsts
but they have It !tie
meanmgful stattsttcs to
offer
But they do hav e
stgmftcant mdtcators whtcl
sl ow that unemployment ts

downm OhiO I&lt;IIICh In Itself
can be nterpreled to mean
ndustry Is growmg
!'he unportant hmg IS
employment ftgures satd
Wtlham R Papter
a
h
stallsttcan for t e Rureau of
Emplo yment Servtces
RES )
No one has collected
mcanmgful stat sites on
ndustry movmg away so we
look o the employment
ftgures Whetl they are up we
can e ther al!nbute this to a
better economy generally or
new mdustrv he satd A
dec1ease 111 employment can

nea I Cl her hard econrnmc
limes or mdustry leav\"g the
state
The RES reports that
Ohto s unemployment rate
I as dropped over the year so
far from 9 1pe r cent to 6 9 pe r
cent last month
and
proJecllons are that tl should
keep gong down wtth the
na twnal trends
Last month according to
BES there were 324 000 Oht
oans out of work compared
to the b g recesswn month of
Apnl 197&gt; when more than
461 000 Ohtoans were Without
Jobs

Old Q:SU hand savs Ohw' 's economy
really just

't all that bad

h w
llusmess IS also~~ mgtlan
10 ct es
upturn 10 maJor
hke
Cleveland
Columbus
C
t
dt and
1
~net;;;• f accor ng 10
c ~n rs 0 ~~erce
ey say 1 us Y IS no1
movmg fout or shu tung
be downd
111 SIJlflltcan 1 num rs an
pomt to cases where Industry
IS expandmg or movmg to
thetr ctlles
Tht fthodes A~~tmstraton
IS movmg qutc y now to
co:;e up ~~ ath hst ho~
In ustrtes w c et er s ll
down 111 Oh 0 or moved away
Burt Herron an analyst for
the Depardtment odrf Dev•lopment sat he 1s awmg up
the hst but regrets that he ts
unabte to determme
~~~
mdustry closed or e 1 t e
state
We Will have a county by
coun~ list bu~w~ll have o~ly
num rs 531 b erron
s
a difficult lis to compile
because no one keeps these
ftgures
He satd the list wtll mclude
not only mdustrtes which left
Ohto or closed but tl wtll
mclude the nulmber oflltobs
lost as a resu I It WI not

rry

..
....-

--..
..

-......

--

, Governor takes his pitch to Ohio's Boys staters

Christians tanks beaten hack

Iron
Mike
happy agam
•
UP! Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UP!)
Tempera menta I Mtke
Marshall an tron armed
rehefer who has been openly
cnttcal of hts teammates at
ltmes says he s lookmg
for~&lt;ard to JOmmg the Atlanta
Braves and a fresh
start
Marshall the 1974 Cy
Young
Award
wmner
acqutred by the Braves
Wednesday mght m a watver
deal that sent second
baseman Lee Lacy and
another relief p tcher Eltas
Sosa to the Los Angeles
Dodgers wtll be man Atlanta
untform tomght
When I talked to Mtke (by
telephone) m Houston I
ftgured he d want to take a
few days to go back to Los
Angeles and get thmgs
squared away satd Braves
General Manager John P
Alevtzos
But he told me he wanted
to get nght to work that he d
heard some good thmgs about
our ball club and was anxtous
to JOin us
I d heard some things
about Marshall that bothered
me satd Alev zos
But
alter talking wt th hun I must
say I m really tmpressed I
really like his attitude
Marshall appeared In 106
games hiS ftrst season wtth
the Dodgers 1974 wmmng 15
and savmg 21 others Hts
ERA was 2 42 He got off to a
fast start m 1975 but InJured
hts nb cage several limes He
wound up wtth a 9-14 record
13 saves and a 3 30 ERA m 57
appearances
Marshall now 33 years old
menhoned to Alevtzos
Wednesday mght that he
didn t feel that the Dodgers
had been usmg him thts
season as much as they could
I ave He satd he feels he s a
better relief pttcher wtth lots
of work
The nme-year maJor league
veteran appeared m 30 games
wtth the Dodgers thts season
a total of 62 2-3 mnmgs He
had been meffechve of late
gmng up 27 earned runs hts
last 11 2 3 mmngs and hts
ERA was up to 4 42 although
he had a 4-3 won lost record
and etght saves
Dodger manager Walter
Alston who apparently had
soured on h s former ace
mdtcated to Alevtzos that Los
Angeles was wtlllng to let
Marshall go because he had
created dtscord
Earlier thts month after
Marshall blasted Dodger
lteldmg publicly a group of
Dodgers players asked Los
Angeles General Manager AI
Campams to get nd of him for
the good of the team
Three years ago even
though he has appeared m 92
games wmmng 14 and sanng
31 others the Montreal Expos
traded him to the Dodgers for
outftelder Wtll e Davts for
much the same reason
You hear a lot of things
satd AleVIzos I had some
reservatiOns But after
talking wtth Mtke Marshall I
only regret we dtdn I get htm
sooner
Eddte Robmson former

DR. LAMB

Reader needs nutrition data
By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
one of your columns m whtch
you dtscussed lectthm You
satd m order to get results
from I llctthm should be
InJected mto the blood
stream You stated people
are wastmg money takmg
lecithin tablets as 11 does not
get into the blood stream but
IS dtgested m the stomach
If that ts true why do we
take any medtcme by mouth
if1tdoes not get nto the blood
stream'
When I went to school I
learned that food - whtch
would melude ptlls - we eat
IS converted by the acllon of
the gastnc JUices mto soluble
products so that tt can be
assimilated by the blood and
thus giVe nourishment to the
bodily organs
I can see lectthin does not
go Immediately mto the blood
stream when taken by mouth
as Injections would but 11
must get there through our
digestive system
II we get no good from ptlls
and Vllamms please tell me

what I should do for my htgh
blood pressure
DEAR READER - I can
see you have a few holes tn
your knowledge about
dtgeslwn Foods - and
medtcrnes are not food - are
broken down mto stmple
bmldmg blocks tnstde the
digestive system Most of thts
IS done m the small mtestme
All the carbohydrates you
eat regardless of what form
they are m lettuce potatoes
apples sugar honey bread
or pears are broken down mto
three smgle sugars glucose
fructose and galactose (from
m lk only) You cannot
absorb any carbohydrates
but smgle sugars through the
~&lt;all of the mteslme
Almost all protems except
some very small ooes are
broken down mto 20 to 25
ammo actds - the r bUilding
blocks Ordinary proteins are
too large also to gel through
the cells that make up the
wall of the small mtestme
Fals are broken down mto
ghcerol and a vanely of fa ty
actds bHore they can get

through he mtestmal wall
Thtnk of the mtestmal wall
as a net wtlh a very small
mesh Only the small ftsh can
ge t through Nature reduces
your food to smallltsh small
enough to get through that
tht ck tube hke wall The
breakdown ts accomplished
by enzymes Most of these
are ft om the pancreas and
act 111 the ftrst part of the
small mtestme
Lectthm s a fat It 1s
broken down mto glycerol
L glycerme)
and the fally
actds It al&lt;;o contatns choline
attached to one of the fatty
actds and this ts broken off so
11 can be absorbed II you
needed the chol ne that has
been broken off the cl ohne
would then be used bv the
liver to manufacture your
own lectthm However you
ge l chol ne from meat and
other foods m a normal well
balanced ntet
Some mMtcmes cannot be
effective Uiken by mouth
because they are macllvated
Tt ese then must be m)ected
lnsulm IS a good example and

mtlhons of dtabettcs take
msuhn by needle for that
reason Other medicmes are
small molecules not broken
down by enzymes and can be
absorbed That ts true of the
n edtc nes one takes for high
bluod pressure
not
Vttamms
are
destroyed by dtgestton
because they are not
protems
fals
or
ca rbohydrates
To help you understand
what you can do about your
blood pressure I am sending
the Health Letter number I
8 Blood Pressure Others
who want thiS mformatton
can send 50 cents wtth a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope lor matllng
Address your letter to me m
care of !hts newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Radio Ctty Statton
N• ' Y rk NY 10019
As wl at you can take for
ur htgh blood pressure if
v u can feel any fat under
vour skt around your watst
or excess amounts anywhere
the best thmg you can take ts
less food

ptlot Capt Carl Boyers
cnltcally - m the acctdent
Wednesday evenmg At least
16 were hospt!allzed
I m usually nervous when
I fly said Turner 25 of
Strafford Pa I thought I
had conquered tl thts tune
Now I II have to think twtce
about flymg agam
Pollee said the plane was
landmg m a ramstorm when
Boyers radioed he was going
, - - - - - - - - - , to
go around
agam
Olhctals satd the plane
The Da1~ Sentinel apparently was trytng to gam
DEVOTED TO THE
all tude when the tall hit the
INTEREST OF
runway and snapped
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEH Ll
The plane skidded on its
Exec Eel
commg to a halt on the
belly
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C ty Editor
grass Its nose and a wmg
Pub shed da y ~xcept
broke off but the fuselage
s a urday b&gt;t The Oh o
Valley Pub sh ng Com
remamed mtact and there
pany
11
Cour
S
was no ltre The engmes were
Pomeroy
01'1 o
45769
Bus ness Off ce Phone 992
strewn across the runway
2 56 Ed tor al Phone 991
I could see the plane
1 57
Secon d class postage
and knew we were
droppmg
pad at Pomeroy Oh o
gomg to htt Turner smd I
adve t s ng
Na ana
representa ve
Ward
was dazed but calm
Gr f h Company Inc
Another passenger Jtm
Bot nell &amp; Gallagher D v
757 Th rd Ave N-ew York
Hagarman
31 of Glenstde
N Y 00 7
Pa satd the ptlo trted to
Su bscr p on
rates
Oel \lered by Cllrr er where
pull up bul couldn t The tat!
va abe 75 cents ,per
broke off and the plane
week
By Moor Rou e
where carr er serv ce no
bounced around
ava ab e One mon h
Hagarman satd there was
SJ 25 By mall n Ohio and
N Va OMYeor S2200
no
one slttmg m the tall
S~)( mon hs S11 SO Three
non hs 57 oo E sewt1ere
sect1on
S26 00 ve"'r Six mon t1s
Allegheny
off c1als
!113 50 !,ree mon hs S7 so
ubscr P on pr Ee ncludes
confirmed the tat! broke
t~ unday T mes Sent ne
away but refused further
pendmg
an
comment

l

,

Braves general manager ana
now a consultant to Alevlzoa
satd there had been talks with
the Dodgers about Marshall
but that was put on a back
burner until alter we got
(first baseman Wtlhe)
San
Montanez
from
Franctsco
Lacy the Dodgers No 2
htlter last season when he
batted 314 had gone to the
Braves last wtnler along wtth
Jtm Wynn Jerry Royster and
Tom Pactorek 111 a trade for
Dusty Baker and Ed
Goodson Sosa )OIDed the
Braves last season from St
Louts m a deal lnvolvmg Ron
Reed now wt!h Phtladelplua
I m pretty upset right
now satd Lacy who IS
hittmg 275 I ve been happy
tn Atlanta Now they re
gmng to run me nght mto
thetr (the Dodgers) problems
and I ll probably be traded
agam
Lacy an mftelder Braves
Manager Dave BriStol says
he d hke to get back if a Ia ter
deal can be made sa1d he
was JUSt as upset last wmter
when he learned he d been
traded to Atlanta
I d had a good year wtth
the Dodgers and hated to
leave Thmgs are different
now
Sosa 4-4 with three saves
was one of the Braves best
rehelers this year Atlanta
traded Jts best 1975 relief
ptlcher Tom House to
Boston last wmler lor starter
Roger Moret (currently 2-2)
and the bullpen has been 011
the
Braves
btggest
problems
The Braves starters have
completed only 14 of 67 games
and the relief corps has saved
only 10 of the other 57
Marshall an oil season
professor at Mtch1gan State
where he ts working on hts
doctorate had to clear
watvers m the Natwnal
League as did Sosa and
Lacy smce the tradmg
deadlme was last week

Local
•

notices,
CHESTER - A tubercul n
sk n lest ng d n c w II be held
at the Chester F re House
Monday June 28 at 7 p m

Resu Is of the test ng w I be
g ven on Wednesday even ng
accord ng to Jane Brown
county TB nurse Everyone n
s urged to take

advantage of the cl n c

RAC NE - The Rae ne ER
Squad was cal ed Wednesday
at 6 50 a m for Luther
Fr end 48 Bashan who was
taken to Veterans Memor at
Hosp ta l
IT WAS RONN E M
19
Rt
P ckens
M dd lepo t
that
was
nvolved n an ace dent n
Syracuse on Sunday not
P ckens as
Bonn e M
reported

THE

MEIGS

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporn Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Char he Fmley could ve saved htmself
a lot of grtef and court costs had he only used h1s head a I ttle
more Same for the Yankees and Red Sox Neuber of them
emerge as mental g1ants m thts one etther Had only a couple
of mmor leaguers been mcluded 111 the two mulllmtlllon dollar
sales of Joe Rudi RoUte Fmgers and Vtda Blue had these
mmor leaguers gone the other way from the Red Sox and
Yankees over to the A s there wouldn t have been any fuss and
Bowte Kuhn probably never would ve felt compelled to step m
Perfect example was the Yankees purchase of JohMy Sam
a quarter-century ago from the Braves for $50 000 Tl e
Yankees bought Sam m August to hold off the onrushmg
lndtans and m 1951 when the sale was made and $50 000 meant
much more than ttdoes today the Braves mstsled the Yankees
throw m one of thetr mmor league pttchers That at least would
make the deal look better from the Braves pomt of vtew
The Yankees provtded the Braves wtlh a hst of some of then
pttchers 111 the minors Included on the hst was a skmny 24
year.()ld nghl-hander wl o had been wtth them that sprmg but
had developed a VIolent reactton to a pemctlhn shot was
rushed to a hospttal where he was placed on thecnt cal hst and
now was pttchmg for the Yanks Pactftc Coast League club m
San Franctsco
The ktd s name was Selva Burdette and although hts 14 12
won lost record and hts 3 21 earned run average weren I
knocking anybody s eyes out somebody w th the Bra\ es liked
him and they took htm n the sale for Sam Yup your
memory s sharp That s the same Lew Burdette who won 203
games before he was all through
Speaking of court costs where s the money commg from lor
the legal defense Bowte Kuhn and baseball are gomg to have to
make agamst Charhe Fmley ' SupposeF nley wms a JUdgment
for three four or ftve million Where s Bowte Kuhn gomg to
get that money ' Some Amencan League owners are begmrung
to persptre a little already worrytng tl may have to come out
of baseball s Central Fund whtch IS merely another way of
saymg t! would come out of thetr own pockets
The Central Fund mcludes all teleVIsiOn and radto money
which ordmarily IS dtvtded up among all24 clubs at the end of
the year U Fmley does wm a JUdgment agamst Kuhn and
baseball and the money ultmwtely must come out of the
Central Fund then Fmley wtll be cast m the perfectly absurd
posttion of havmg to cootnbute toward Kuhn s defense And tf
he wms hts sutt F nley may wmd up paymg himself Parttally
anyway
II Charlie Fmley wants to know anythmg about sellmg
ballplayers though he should check Btll DeWttt former
owner of the St Louts Browns and Cmcmnat Reds DeWt!t
was schooled by the old master htmself Branch R ckey so
when he needed ready cash to keep the Browns gmng 111 the
late 40s he sold Vern Stephens and Jack Kramer to the Red
Sox for $310 000 plus seven mmor leaguers Ellis Kmder and
Btlly Htlchcock to the Red Sox for $75 000 plus two players AI
Zartlla to the Red Sox also for $100 000 and Stan Spence and
Sam Zoldak to the Indtans and Gerry Prtddy to the Tigers for
$100 000 aptece
DeWttl also sold Wally Judmch Johnny Berat d no and Bob
Moncrief to the Indtans n other deals but his greatest sale of
all was sellmg catcher Les Moss to the Red Sox for $125 000
plus Matt Batts and then gelling Moss back for NOTHING two
years later
Now that s what you call a super salesman Charlie

Sports briefs

briefs

Chesler

Office runs string to 29 in row

By Uruted Press International
NEW CONCORD OHIO - THE MUSKINGUM College
basketball team returned here this week from a vtstt to
Poland where the Musktes split a stx game senes wtlh a
Polish nahonal team
Muskmgum basketball coach Jtm Burson satd the Polish
goverrunent whtch sponsored the trtp IS trymg to upgrade tis
level of compehtwn m var ous sports The 11 member team
VISited Warsaw Ludz Cracow and Auschwttz
CANTON OHIO - TliE US OLYMPIC MENS swtm
team began workouts here lh s week wtth less than a month
before the opemng of the games m Montreal The 27 member
team arrtved Tuesday mght to an airport greeting by :;oo fans
the mayor and a band
Head Coach James Doc Couns !man swtm coach at
Indtana Umverstly prrused the squad Wednesday at perhaps
the ltnest mternalwnal team ever assembled In any sport He
satd his IS the finest swunmmg team ever to be sent to the
Olymptcs by the Umted States and added tl ts posstble the
team could take gold medals m every swlmmmg event
The swtmmers wtll be tratmng at the C T Branm
Natatormm lor the next 2% weeks

County

Humane Soc ety has seven

k liens that need a home The
k ttens are free to those who

No one killed in air crash
By ELLEN L SLO'IT
PHILADELPHIA l UP! )
Moments
before
an
Allegheny Atrllnes DC9
)Climer crashed on the
runway at Phtladelphta
Internattonal
Atrporl
Rtchard Turner was thtnking
he had conquered his fear of
flymg
Nearly all 103 person,
aboard were tn)ured - the

!

mvest gatton
Brad Dunbar of he
Natwnal TransportatiOn
Safety
Board
satd
mvesltgators recovered the
cockpit votce recorder and
the fhght data recorder and
sent them to Washmgton for
mspecllon
The plane Fl ght 121 ongt
nated m Provtdence R I It
stopped at Hartford Conn
and was en route to MemphiS
Tenn alter a stop m Phlladel
phta
Ray Auletta 37 of Trenton
N J satd he was sttlmg 111 the
last seat near the tail
I ran to the back door he
satd The stewardess was
trymg to open 1! It was stuck
We got 11 open and I
JUmped out and another
person Jumped out behmd I
got out of there pretty last I
tell you
Most of the passengers
clunbed out through an emer
gency door above the wmg
We couldn t get out the
front door because the
stewardess was trapped
under an atr bag which had
blown open
satd John
Cooper of Rtverton N J I
pulled her free of the door and
got her outside
Douglas Langllos 25 of
West Hartford Conn said
Everyone was qu1te calm
The plane emptied out
qu ckly Most people I saw

would like one If nterested
ca II Dorothy J; sher at 992
5427 after 6 p m

BLAIR ON WALTERS
JACKSONVILLE
Fla
(UP!) - Frank Bla1r
Barbara Walters co-host on
NBC s Today show lor 12
years says she was rude
and mhospttable and NBC
offlctals were delighted
she left the network
Blatr said 'Today v1ewers
could not hear behmd-the
scene staff comments of
Oh shut up Barbara and let
htm speak
when Mtss
Walters mtervtewed guests
I can tell you, however
from ms1de sources that they
(NBC
offtctals)
are
delighted she has gone to
!\BC
walked off the plane
Boyers who had been
trapped tnSide the wreckage
was admttted to St Agnes
Hospltalm Critical condition
A hospttal spokesman satd he
had
suffered
broken
vertebrae
The two stewardesses
Marsha Morrtss and lzdiko
Tovllgyl and coptlot John
Spencer were listed m se 1ous
condtllon at Methodtst
ilospltal
Four
persons
were
admttted to St Agnes and
etght others to Methodist

'

By FRED DOWN
no~&lt; hnds h n self etght
UPJ Sports Writer
ga mes sl y • f a prized
Rowland Offtce wul now a Natwnall eague re&lt;;ord The
footnote o lustory as a late m rk uf httlmg m 37
1r n 1n~
d t f e n s 1 v e consecul l\ e games set by
replacemetl IS oul to make Tom ny Holmes of the Boston
the record book on hts own Braves m 1945
Some day I II gel my
Office went 3-for.:i m the
chance he d remark when ftrst game and 1 for-4 In the
the
ktddmg
became second Wednesday mght
annoymg Then I hope to extend ng hts htttmg streak to
pl'ove I m a maJor leaguer
29 games as the Braves
Off ce has done more thar scored 5-2 and 3-0 vtclones
that The btg surpnse of the over the Montreal Expos
Atlanta Braves last season
Ardy Messersmtth ptlched
"hen he balled 290 Office a hlle-htller and struck out

seven Ill the ftrst game to
ratse Its record to 7-:i Jerry
Hu1 stcr drove 111 the Braves
hrs two runs with smgles
md Offtc'e delivered a run
sc rmg double m a three-run
stxlh mnmg Stele Dunn ng
was the loser
Ptul Ntekro ptlched a four
httter and struck out 10 111 the
second game regtstermg hts
stxth wm and ftrst shutout of
the season Royster hit a ru 1
scormg double and Earl Wtl
I ams drove m a run 111 a two
run etghth mnmg whtch

Meigs Legion knocks
Parkersburg down 8-6
The Metgs Amencan routed Johnson when he
Legwn team bchtnd some walked three m a row and
superb relief pttching by then gave up a smgle double
Steve Batrd ratsed tts record and then another walk to let
to Hl-3 Wcdnesda) mght at acros~ stx runs gtvmg
Parkersburg dowmng the Parkersburg a 6-4lead But m
hosts 8-li
came Batrd who re!tred the
The local team Jumped stde and went the rest of the
nght on All-state pttcher game retirmg 10m a row and
Parnsh m the very ftrst allow ng only one other lut
tnnmg when they plated four whtle his teammates caught
btg runs Brent Johnson up
Metgs tied t m the fourth
smgled and Mtke Nesselroad
doubled htm home Mter w1th two when Smtih walked
Mtck Davenport reached on Wtlson smgled and both
an error and Greg James scored on an error by the
walked to load the bases lhtrd baseman They scored
young John Sa) re smashed a the wmmng runs m the s1xth
both unearned Wilson led off
double to clear the bases
But n the bottom of the wtth a walk Batrd sacrtftced
second th e home team htm to second
and
Nesselroad also walked Two

wtld pitches permlttetl both to
score
Htllers lor Metgs were
paced by Sayre who had a
double and smgle and W !son
and Johnson had thetr smgles
whtle Nesselroad had I s
double
Metgs travels to Athens
tomght and then on Sunday
entertams Portsmouth at
Syracuse
wtth
a
doubleheader Portsmouth ts
now 12 I on the season and 1!
should be a fme pair of
games
Me1gs
400 202 ~ 5
060 000 0--jJ &gt;
P sburg
Johnson Batrd (WP) and
Soulsby
Metzner (G)
Pamsh Dorseman ( I P)
Thorpe and Powell

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Wrtter
It looks as though the
Balllmore Ortoles lmally are
makmg a belated run for the
Amencan League East !ttle
Behmd the route gomg
pttchmg of Jtm Palmer the
Onoles scored thetr etghth
wm
m mne
games
Wednesdav mght when
Bobby Gnch usmg a bat
borrowed from Reggte
Jackson stroked a tw(H)ul
two-run homer n the bottom
of the lOth mmng to down the
Boston Red Sox 3-2
The vtctory pulled the
OriOles to the &gt;OO mark
seven games behmd the
divtswn lead ng New York
Yankees Boston meanwhile
slumped to 30 32- e ght
games back
Gnch s homer his stxth
came off rehever Jtm
Wtlloughby after J1m R1ce s
second homer of the game m
the lop of the lOth had g ven
Boston a short lived 2 I lead
Palmer now 9-7 scattered 10
hils mcludmg both the Rice
homers
Palmer could be 12 4
Instead of 9-7 the way he s
pitched for us
satd
Balhmore Manager Earl
Weaver He hasn I gotten
too many breaks
Elsewhere m the Amertcan
League the Yankees lost 4-1
to Cleveland Chtcago swept
Mmnesota 4-3 and 9-:i MU
waukee downed Detrott N
Texas put away Kansas City
7-:i and Oakland drubbed
Cahforma 11-2
Indians 4 Yankees I
Charlie Spikes singled
home two runs while Don
Hood tossed a siJ:-bltter for
his first vtctory since Aprtl 14
as the second place Indiana
beat the Yankees lor the
second straight mght llllll

Met~ 5 l:ards t

Jerry G ote Mor 23 as he
stood 11 t the plate homered In
then nth 101 ltg for the Mets
.,. 1111111 ~ run Ton Sealer
p tched a 1 eight Iutter and
struck out 11 h ratsmg Ius
record tu s..s Pete Falcone
went the distance for St
Louts and suffered hiS sixth
loss aga nst five vic tories

peewee baseball notes
In the Mlddlepott Pee Wee
League
Tuesday
the
Mtddleport Cubs got by the
host Mustangs 7-4 The game
went two extra mungs 1&lt;tlh
the wmmng three runs being
scored 111 the top of the
seventh
Ronny Dent l wen t SIX
lnnmgs and Eddte M ller
worked the la st one to ptck up
the wm Together they struck
out stx!een and walked stx
Big man for the Cubs was
Tony Welch wtth three RBI s
two of them corning n the btg
seventh M ller got mto a Ja n
111 the lust frame puttmg the
bases full wtth none out but
struck out two and got
another batter to tul mto a
ftelder s chmce M ller and
Welch eac h had two smgles
while Denny and Steve Crow
had one Mtke Thomas had a
double
Shawn Baker and Brtan
Wams ley shared n ound
dulles for ll e lose rs
combtmng to fan stxteen and
walkmg etght Baker and
Toby Ault had 2 htts aptece
while Wamsley and Charles

Baltimore reaches .500 mark
moved to wtthm stx games of !\angers 7 Royals 5
rookte Mtke Noms to his ltrst
the AL East leaders Ken
Steve Foucault pttched 4 1--3 VIctory stnce bemg recalled
Holtzman &gt; 5 was the mmngs of scoreless relief and from the rnmors Rando s
loser
Toby Harrah htt a three run homer wh1ch came after a
White Sox 4 9 Twins 3 5
homer as the Rangers moved smgle by Don Baylor started
Jack Brohamer belted a-- to wtthm three games of the the A s early attack whtch
solo homer to tngger a two slumpmg l1rst.place Royals featured stx runs m the f rst
run fourth mmng m the m the AL West It was the four mn ngs Norns 1 2
opener then cl maxed the ltlth stra ght loss for Kansas recalled from Tucson last
mghtcap wm 11 tth a two-run City Texas snapped a 5-:i lte week went seven lnmngs
double m the mnth Jorge m the stxth on smgles by Mike before g1vmg 11ay to Stan
Orta had a two-run homer m Hargrove and Harrah a wtld Bahnsen
the ltlth mmng of the second pttch and an RBI groundout
game hts mnth whtle Jtm by Tom Gneve
Esstan added a two run A s 8 Angels 2
PITTSBURGH ( UPI)
double durmg a three run
Sal Bando s two-run ftrst Delenstve hneman Bob
etghth
mnmg homer staked A s Barber and four 1976 draft
chmces were stgned by the
Pittsburg! Steelers the club
announced Wednesday
The
draft
stgmngs
mcluded Ron Coder an
offensive and defenstve
lmemen from PeM State
llnebac~er Rodney Norton of
Rtce ltght end and punter
Barry Burton of Vanderbilt
and Wide recetver Kelvm
Ktrk of Dayton

Knapp each hud one
II e ()tbs wer I 1nto the
game ncedmg awn to force a
t1 rc&gt;e WH) tte for first wtth
Ute Mustangs and Rutland
Argels all wtth two losses
The Mustangs have one game
left "tth the P• me roy Angels
Frtday a nd nl&gt;ed a win to
keep pace The Cubs and
Rutland w II face off with the
loser vtrtually droppmg Into
thtrd place Both those teams
have two ~an es left
Cubs
011 020 7 7 0
Mustangs
202 000 0-4 6 2
In Souther 1 Pee Wee
acllon Uc host Syt neuse B s
rmsed thet r&lt;&gt;cord to 54! by
dropptng the A team I I-Ii
Mark Salser won his fourUt
game and sockl~l two doubles
while fannmg 1 ine and
walkmg the swne number
Robert Willis I ad two smgles
Loser Mtke Chancey
teamed up wtth Greg Nease
to fan seven and walk stxteen
Nease cracked 1 double and
smgle to lead the A attack
As
20003--520
Bs
1242x- IJ 4 0
Chancey (! P) Nease ( 3)
a td Nease Cha tt'lly Salser
WP) and Wtllls

I sts 44 credtlo s mcluding
Starks Coach Bud Asher
Mary of the cn&gt;dttors were
former Sharks players
I lie Sharks folded after t1 e
1974 season Most players
wet e not patd New owners
bought tl e francht se In 1~75
but that venture went un~er
too when the league failed

Dudgers 1 Aslrus 0
Rtck Rhoden pitched a
titree-httter and seored the
games only run when he
st111Jied went to thtrd on Btll
Buckner s double and sc'llred
on fed Stzemorc s sacrifice
fly Rhoden now 6-0 didn t
allow a hit until Rob Andrews
doublc&gt;d 111 the sixth J R
Richard was the loser
Giants 7-8 Padres 8-7
Darrell Evans htl 8 grand
slam I omer and accounted
for stx RBls 10 powering the
Gmnts to thctr sweep of the
Padres In knocking San
Dtego out of a shot t liVed
set'OI d.place stay In the Nl
West the Giants slugged four
homers In Ute doubleheader
mcludmg a two-run shot by
Evans and a three-run blast
by Gary Thomasson 111 the
first game a td 11 nother Utree
run homer b) Bobby Murcer
In 11 e nigh cap

''9Peratioasaacl
hOspital rooms cost
a lot more
than you think~
BILL FlEltHER
1251

Powell St
Middleport
PH 99'l 7155

See me for Stale Farm
hosp1tal;surg1calrnsuranc:e

, coollczczs

10r man .

~

Pony baseball
'
action noted
T!tesday mght m Me1gs
Mason County Pooy League
acllon the Pomeroy Royals
handed VISiting Mason Its
ltrst loss of the year 6-2. That
raised the Royals record to 51 while Mason IS now 6-1
Mike Trtplett got the wm
allowmg just tine hits whtle
faMmg e1ght llld walking
none Todd RllwUngs led tbe
attack With two singles while
Tr1plett Tcm Hawley Chris
Woods and Chuch KeMedy
each gol 1 si111Jle
Marl! Smith took his f1rst
loss !Jiving up stx hits while
waiting four and fanning
four
Smith
Kenny
Hankmson and Donald
Russell each picked up a htt

Pomeroy A s ptck up their
ftrst wm with a 6-2 wm over
the host Ru\!and team
Pomeroy IS now 1-:i while
Rutland IS 1-4 Btlly Elkms
shone as he hurled a no-lutter
while faMmg a btg 18 hitters
and walking seven He also
chtpped m wtth a single
Chris McKtnncy
Ray
Stewart
and Richard
DeMoss each had three
stngles while Shane Smith
had two
Bob Wtlllams took the loss
and teamed up wtth D nk
Kennedy to yteld thirteen
hits

At Syracuse the Eastern
team kept pace and ratsed
thetr record to 0--1 wtlh a 13-7
Other action saw the victory over the hosts Rusty
Wtgal Greg Gwnther and
Dan Spencer shared the
mound chores Steve Ltttle
and Wigal each socked two
smgles while Joe Boyles
cracked a triple and smgle
Gettmg smgles were Spencer
Gwnther and Cliff Longenett
Syracuse pitcher Mark
Forbes socked a trtple and
at the Me1gs H1gh School Cafetena
two smgles but sttll ended up
SATURDAY, JUNE 26
taking the loss as hts
teammates got only two more
FROM 8:00 P.M. TO 12:00 A.M.
hits smgles by Jack Duffy
Pr1ce $4 00 per Alumnt and $2 00 per non
and Ronme Dav1s Thetr
alumn1 guest or 1976 graduate
record Is now 2-4

NOTICE

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
ALUMNI DANCE

\\\1

clmched the declston Woody
Fryman ~offered his ftfth loss
for Montreal
Phtladelphta
defeated
Clncmnatt 4 2 Chtcago
shadl&gt;d Pittsburgh 6-:i New
York edged St Louts 5-4 Los
Argeles beat Houston 1.0
md San F ranctsco topped
San Dtego 7~ and 8-7 m
other Nl games

ST LOUIS t UP!) - All Pro
runnmg back Terry Metcalf
of the St Louts Cardinals
agreed to pay a $500 ftll€
Wednesday for carrymg
firecrackers aboard an
atrcraft at Lambert Fteld
Jan 19
A consent JUdgment statmg
Metcalf would agree to the
fme was stgned Wednesday
by U S Dtstrtct Court Judge
H KeMet Wangelln The line
ts half the max unum penalty
There ts no unprtsonment for
the ctvtl offense
JACKSONVILLE
Fla
l UP!) - Fran Monaco
former owner of the defunct
Jacksonvtlle Sharks of the old
World Football League has
been declared bankrupt with
total debts of nearly $2 8
mtlllon
The bankruptcy petttton

Solids &amp; Strepes
S1zes S M L XL

KERM'S KORNER

New York Clothing House
Open Fn t1!8

Pomeroy

ROOF PAINT SALE

PARK RESERVED
G70X14
Plus

f E T $2 75

Heres the

70

A70 13
E70 14
F70 14
H70 14
G70 15
H70 15

ser es muscle tire o match any perform

ance your set of w de wt1eels can delver Features nclude
• Bold wh te ra sed el!e s I V• hlgh

mo ded nto s dewal
• Four fu I pt es of strong soft r d ng polyester cor~
• Extra w de tread tor tract on and m ieage

GENERAL TIRE SALES
N 2nd Ave

Mtddleport 0

SATURDAY, JUNE 26th

"EMPLOYEES' OUTING"
OF

KENTUCKYWEST VIRGINIA GAS CO
AND

KENTUCKY HYDROCARBON CO
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P M

CAMDEN PARK
U S ROUTE 60 WfST-HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
'9l3 S Th1rd St

992 2709

HOURS
7 00 to 5 00 Monday thru Frtday-7

Mtddleportr 0

oo to 4 00 Saturday

�3- The Daily Senunel MtddJepart Pon1erov 0

Mass exodus of business really a Rhodes herring?
of 1975 l:leveland lost nearly
300 JObs when small plants
shut down or moved The
unemployment rate m that
year averaged 7 8 per cent m
Cleveland and then contmued
to drop to 6 5 per cent by last
Aprtl Statts!Lcs for last
month are not yet comptled
but stattsllctans expect
another unemployment drop
for Cleveland
Steehan satd Oils Elevator
Co?' left Cleveland but came
back the Ford Motor Co IS
expanding Its operatiOn to
mclude 1000 more workers
and that machme tool
mdustry m Cleveland IS much
health er
I n
C oI u m bu s
unemployment has dropped
J'
from a htgh of 8 4 per cent m
April\975 to 6 7 per cent last
lSU
Aprtl The May ftgure IS
expected to be even lower
COlUMBUS (UP!) - James C Yocum for Ohto for many mdustnes should not be
James Thomas VICe prest
professor ol busmess research at Ohto State overlooked
dent of research for the
Umverslly ts reurmg after spendmg 40
Many f rn s are decentrallzmg opemng
Columbus Chamber of
years study ng facts and f gores pertammg operations m the South Southwest and far
Commerce satd there has
to Ohto s economy
West but the mam mdustr al market wtll
been no mass exodus of
And Yocum who Will step down from the sttll he here satd Yocum
ndustry from Columbus and
OSU post June 30 says the states econom c
For man) years Yocum has wrttlen the
that he IS sattsfted that
ptcture IS not m as bad a shape as some nonthly analysts The Trend of Busmess
employment Is holdmg
other economtc spectahsts seem to th nk fea m ed n the Bulletm of Bus ness
well
Some of these tour vtews of 0110 trends Researd a monthly publ calton of the
t~clud~showge~~~rt~~~ubeg~
Columbus has a real
0
are somewhat JUSt fted the 70-year.()!d Center of Busmess and Economic Research
JO
a
advantage by not bemg a one
a OSU
ex pans ton or Industry
d
d Th
Yocum satd Wedn esday Rut some pomts
relocatmg 10 Ohto
n us1ry 1own sat
omas
There ts no mass exodus
are exaggerated Exaggerated to the po n
One basts for h s analysts of Ohio busmess
Chambers of commerce He satd the strength of the
of mdustry from Ohio In fact
that I have been threaten ng to wnte an rends IS the monthly OhiO retatl sales
offtctals satd the Department Columbus employment base
mdustry ts expandmg m some
on
Whats
Good
About
the
Oho
rdexes
Yocum
started
40
years
ago
of Development sent them s havmg many smaller
arttcle
• areas and new mdustry IS
•
Economy
Relatl sales are such an unportanl
forms asking them to tdenllly mdustrtes employmg from
mto the slate The
There s been a loss of 1 atural resources eleme nt Ill gaugmg the current trend of the
250 to :;oo workers
•• movmg
unemployment rate m some
or of natural resource based mdustry tn the c on011y sad Yocun The) are very
:~~~st~te~re~r~ ~~~ ~~~
He satd that 58 per cent of
areas of Ohto IS gomg down
stale perhaps but 01 o ts the center of the s gntftcant In makmg eshmales of Gross
longer m thetr areas and to all growth n Oh o has
fa ster than the nat onal aver
metal workmg mdustncscomplex sttll Natwnal Product Retail sales are a major
mclude how many JObs have occurred Ill Central Ohto
•• age wluch was 7 4per cent as great
largely concentrated m the Great Lakes pot !ton of personal consumptiOn
been lost
The stluat on m Cmcmnah
of last Aprtl
area satd Yocwn
expendttures wh ch account for nearly 70
s unusual to the rest of Ohto
mdustnal leaders
The Importan ce of the surrounding per ce II of GNP
The problem wtth this IS because
the
Greater
••• ate- While
talkmg about htgh
mdustnal market as a pus loca lton fact&lt; r
that you don 1 gel a real Ctr cmnalt Chamber of
corporate taxes they are also
picture
satd J Gerard Commerce coostders ts area
cont,rned about the lack and
Sheehan director of busmess to be three counhes m
•
expanSion for the Greater Northern Kentucky one
C I e v e I a n d G r o w I h county m Eastern Indtana
AsSQciatton
and three counttes m Ohw
The mformatton the
The chamber has few
Development
Department stallshcs m mdustry leaVIng
wants JUS! shows JObs lost unless tt has gone out of tis
ATHENS OhiO (UP!) Gov James A Rhodes carrted h s
lhts 1 ny memory has been the worst year m the history butt! doesn t reflect new Jobs servtce area Robert W
by
mdustnal Kepner the chamber s
attack on the Dernocratcontrolled General Assembly to of Oh o for your g people to obtam a JOb And the sm1ple reason created
expanston
It
does
however econom 1c' research manager
Buckeye Boys Stale Wednesday chargmg he was geltmg r
s that we do not have programs m the slate of Oh o that are
mdtcate
that
the
problem
of satd htsservtce area lost 1800
~
cooperation 111 htsattempts to create JObs lor Oluoan s
re evant to the sttua ton of thts great state
loss
of
manufacturmg
1s
not
a JObs smce 1974 by mdustry
Rhodes told the 1 3&amp;i delegates to the Oh o Amencan
Rhodes tmhcated he would conttm e Ius campaign for JObs
mmor
one
movmg out and 13 300 Jobs
LegiOns semmar n government the state needs prog ams to beyond hts recent speech before the General Assembly whtch
Sheehan
satd
that
Greater
have
been lost smce 1974 due
expand present mdusty and to attract new busmesses
he sa d upset some of he legtslators
Cleveland
ts
showmg
a
to
plant
reductwns
I m gettmg nocooperahon out of the majortty leadership m
Were gomg to go to the people of Ohio and tell them the
Yet
the
unemploythent rate
general
busmess
upturn
the OhiO General Assembly but I m shU trymg stU sell r g reason we cannot get JObs The stmple reason We do not have
Lother
Koberer
the
Growth
ts
down
1n
January 1t was 8 9
sttll persuadmg srud the Republican governor
a program satd Rhodes
Assoctatton
vtce
prestdent
lor
per
cent
It
fell shghtly to 8 6
Rhodes sad employment ts the No 1 tssuc n Ohio 1TI e mock gO\ernment program lor h gh school JUmors
terna t10na1 ac1tvt ttes satd per cent m February By
m
concermng young people
co I noes today "'th leg slallve sesstons
the Cleveland Port Author ly March 1t was 8 per cent and
for example should have last Apnltl was 7 4 per cent
foretgn trade zone status by
Thts compares to March
December and thts w II 1975 when the unemployment
create more JObs
rate 111 CmctMah was 9 7 per
Cleveland has lost nearly 60 cent and Apnl 1975 when 11
compames smce 1970 whtch was 9 4 per cent
By MICHAEL ROSS
employed
13800 persons
Alt hough Ctnctnnalt
resume
normal
flights
to
BEIRUT Lebanon (UP! I has been htl
a nd Syrtan troops began
Most
of
the
compames
went
ncludes
Nothern Kentucky m
European
and
Arab
capttals
I eft st forces trapped m
takmg
hold
Left st guMers n western
out
of
busmess
for
general
Its
servtce
area plants
today
desp
te
the
fact
every
two refugee can ps beat back Betru doused Clmst an
Under an agreement
u Chrtshan tank and arttllerv sectors w1th mor tat rutmds medtated bv I tbya Synan a rimes offtce 111 the terrrunal economtc reasons or lor a locatmg there are depnvtng
general detenoratwn of thetr Ohto of mcome from
assault Wednesday m a fierce and rockets m what the forces Withdrew from has been vandalized
In another development product market accordmg to corporate taxes
offenstve that touched off spokesman ca lled an effort southern Betrut under the
One report by the chamber
' cttywtde shellmg and rocket
to open up more fronts and supervt ston of a Synan the PLO demed a report m the Growth Assocta lton
Seven compames whtch shows that over the past few
attacks and a total power Uike some of the pressure off ltbyan peacekee pmg force the Fren ch newspaper
blackout
sent by the Arab Leag ue France S01r tt had k lled U S together employed less than years 11 compames have
he two camps
The {tghtmg around the Tal
Mortar rounds I tl the mam Sudanese and Saud Arabtan \mba ssador FranciS E 300 persons satd they left dectded to locate n Northern
Zaatar and Jtsr AI Pasha pylons supplymg the capttal contmgents were scheduled Meloy to pums/1 Washmgton Cleveland due to htgh Kentucky than 111 Cmcmnalt
for
support ng Synan corporate taxes or the high to take advantage of
camps m southeastern Betrut wtth electriCity and Betrut to arr ve shortly
costs of labor land and Kentucky s lower corporate
and mother sectors left more res tdenls accustomed to
The agreement also called mtervenllon 111 Lebanon
bu ldmg
tax structure
Meloy
Embassy
Econom
c
than 100 dead and 225 shortages of bread milk and for he Syrians to wtthdraw
Yet durmg thts pertod
The report says the 11
wounded 111 a 24-hour penod gasoline now fa ce a total from the outsktrts of Counselor Robert 0 Warmg
Cleveland
s
unemployment
compames
have mvested $35
and
thetr
Lebanese
dnver
A Palestme Ltberat on power blackout
Lebanon s h ee maJor port
Orgamza tton spokesman satd
Despite the f ght ng towns
Beirut Stdon and Zuhatr Mughrabt were am rate has gone down Durmg mtlllon 111 Northern Kentucky
forces m the two camps engulfing
and nto the bushed and slam n a leftts! 1971 and 1972 for example and have created 1145 JObs
Betrut
the Trtpoh
Never 1he 1e s s
the
remamed surrounded but had nternatwr al atrport opened northern ~kaa and southern controlled sector of Betrut Cleveland lost nearly 9 000
JObs through mdustr1al Cmcmnalt chamber says Its
drtven back the nghllst to commerctal trafftc Bekka Valley reg ons
June 16
A PLO commumque satd closmgs or leavmg the ctty local economy ts showmg
assault destroy ng three Wednesday for the first lime
11 e atrport reopened ~&lt;tth
tanks m the process
smce tl was setzed by Synan he arnval from Athens of a the orgamzalton was sttll yet unemployment rate more balance and tlsttllhas a
But casualues have been troops June 8
East
Atrlmes probmg the murders and dropped from 7 1 per cent to strong manufacturmg base
M ddle
heavy he satd Our camp
reports
of 56 per cent
As the tradit onal war passenger plane that landed d sm ssed
Durmg the hard recessiOn
commanders report that between Chrtshan rtght sis on a runway gua rded by comphctty by saytng
• nearly I 000 shells fell on Tal and Moslem lefltsts raged ~&lt;h te helmeted peace
The rumors are spread by
Zaa tar over the past 24 hours wtth full fury a lull m the keepmg troops
the Cen tral Intelligence
and nearly every house there ftghtmg between Palesttmans
MEA satd t planned to Agency

COLUMBUS (UP!) • There Is no evtdence of a
mass ex od us of 111 dustry from
Ohio to states wtth lower
corporate taxes Scrtpps
Howard Newspapers re
ported today
Tins ISm sharp contrast to
almost datly reports by Gov
James A Ithodes and State
Development Dtrector James
Duerk that wdustry ts raptdly
packmg up and movmg south
because taxes In Ohio are too
htgh
For the past 18 months
Rhodes has campaigned hard
to get tax relief for mdustry
He has warned that OhiO 1s
becommg an mdustnal was
teland because of corporate
taxes
But the governor has
declmed repeatedly to offer
slatisttcs to show Oh o IS
losmg Its mdustry He says he
has proof but s not ready to
make tl public
Scrtpps Howard News
papers conducted a survey of
chambers of commerce m
'" Ohto and mtervtewed state
• v government sta!tsltctans who
study mdustrtal growth
Here s what the survey
found

cost ol energy and the h gl
cost of labor n Olw
Olto s corporate tax
structure IS more ol a
negattve factor 1n attract ng
new mdustry to the state
rather than forcmg extst ng
mdustry out
They sad that In recent
n onths
the
Rhodes
Adn mt strallon has asked
them to comp le such hsts
but they have It !tie
meanmgful stattsttcs to
offer
But they do hav e
stgmftcant mdtcators whtcl
sl ow that unemployment ts

downm OhiO I&lt;IIICh In Itself
can be nterpreled to mean
ndustry Is growmg
!'he unportant hmg IS
employment ftgures satd
Wtlham R Papter
a
h
stallsttcan for t e Rureau of
Emplo yment Servtces
RES )
No one has collected
mcanmgful stat sites on
ndustry movmg away so we
look o the employment
ftgures Whetl they are up we
can e ther al!nbute this to a
better economy generally or
new mdustrv he satd A
dec1ease 111 employment can

nea I Cl her hard econrnmc
limes or mdustry leav\"g the
state
The RES reports that
Ohto s unemployment rate
I as dropped over the year so
far from 9 1pe r cent to 6 9 pe r
cent last month
and
proJecllons are that tl should
keep gong down wtth the
na twnal trends
Last month according to
BES there were 324 000 Oht
oans out of work compared
to the b g recesswn month of
Apnl 197&gt; when more than
461 000 Ohtoans were Without
Jobs

Old Q:SU hand savs Ohw' 's economy
really just

't all that bad

h w
llusmess IS also~~ mgtlan
10 ct es
upturn 10 maJor
hke
Cleveland
Columbus
C
t
dt and
1
~net;;;• f accor ng 10
c ~n rs 0 ~~erce
ey say 1 us Y IS no1
movmg fout or shu tung
be downd
111 SIJlflltcan 1 num rs an
pomt to cases where Industry
IS expandmg or movmg to
thetr ctlles
Tht fthodes A~~tmstraton
IS movmg qutc y now to
co:;e up ~~ ath hst ho~
In ustrtes w c et er s ll
down 111 Oh 0 or moved away
Burt Herron an analyst for
the Depardtment odrf Dev•lopment sat he 1s awmg up
the hst but regrets that he ts
unabte to determme
~~~
mdustry closed or e 1 t e
state
We Will have a county by
coun~ list bu~w~ll have o~ly
num rs 531 b erron
s
a difficult lis to compile
because no one keeps these
ftgures
He satd the list wtll mclude
not only mdustrtes which left
Ohto or closed but tl wtll
mclude the nulmber oflltobs
lost as a resu I It WI not

rry

..
....-

--..
..

-......

--

, Governor takes his pitch to Ohio's Boys staters

Christians tanks beaten hack

Iron
Mike
happy agam
•
UP! Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UP!)
Tempera menta I Mtke
Marshall an tron armed
rehefer who has been openly
cnttcal of hts teammates at
ltmes says he s lookmg
for~&lt;ard to JOmmg the Atlanta
Braves and a fresh
start
Marshall the 1974 Cy
Young
Award
wmner
acqutred by the Braves
Wednesday mght m a watver
deal that sent second
baseman Lee Lacy and
another relief p tcher Eltas
Sosa to the Los Angeles
Dodgers wtll be man Atlanta
untform tomght
When I talked to Mtke (by
telephone) m Houston I
ftgured he d want to take a
few days to go back to Los
Angeles and get thmgs
squared away satd Braves
General Manager John P
Alevtzos
But he told me he wanted
to get nght to work that he d
heard some good thmgs about
our ball club and was anxtous
to JOin us
I d heard some things
about Marshall that bothered
me satd Alev zos
But
alter talking wt th hun I must
say I m really tmpressed I
really like his attitude
Marshall appeared In 106
games hiS ftrst season wtth
the Dodgers 1974 wmmng 15
and savmg 21 others Hts
ERA was 2 42 He got off to a
fast start m 1975 but InJured
hts nb cage several limes He
wound up wtth a 9-14 record
13 saves and a 3 30 ERA m 57
appearances
Marshall now 33 years old
menhoned to Alevtzos
Wednesday mght that he
didn t feel that the Dodgers
had been usmg him thts
season as much as they could
I ave He satd he feels he s a
better relief pttcher wtth lots
of work
The nme-year maJor league
veteran appeared m 30 games
wtth the Dodgers thts season
a total of 62 2-3 mnmgs He
had been meffechve of late
gmng up 27 earned runs hts
last 11 2 3 mmngs and hts
ERA was up to 4 42 although
he had a 4-3 won lost record
and etght saves
Dodger manager Walter
Alston who apparently had
soured on h s former ace
mdtcated to Alevtzos that Los
Angeles was wtlllng to let
Marshall go because he had
created dtscord
Earlier thts month after
Marshall blasted Dodger
lteldmg publicly a group of
Dodgers players asked Los
Angeles General Manager AI
Campams to get nd of him for
the good of the team
Three years ago even
though he has appeared m 92
games wmmng 14 and sanng
31 others the Montreal Expos
traded him to the Dodgers for
outftelder Wtll e Davts for
much the same reason
You hear a lot of things
satd AleVIzos I had some
reservatiOns But after
talking wtth Mtke Marshall I
only regret we dtdn I get htm
sooner
Eddte Robmson former

DR. LAMB

Reader needs nutrition data
By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
one of your columns m whtch
you dtscussed lectthm You
satd m order to get results
from I llctthm should be
InJected mto the blood
stream You stated people
are wastmg money takmg
lecithin tablets as 11 does not
get into the blood stream but
IS dtgested m the stomach
If that ts true why do we
take any medtcme by mouth
if1tdoes not get nto the blood
stream'
When I went to school I
learned that food - whtch
would melude ptlls - we eat
IS converted by the acllon of
the gastnc JUices mto soluble
products so that tt can be
assimilated by the blood and
thus giVe nourishment to the
bodily organs
I can see lectthin does not
go Immediately mto the blood
stream when taken by mouth
as Injections would but 11
must get there through our
digestive system
II we get no good from ptlls
and Vllamms please tell me

what I should do for my htgh
blood pressure
DEAR READER - I can
see you have a few holes tn
your knowledge about
dtgeslwn Foods - and
medtcrnes are not food - are
broken down mto stmple
bmldmg blocks tnstde the
digestive system Most of thts
IS done m the small mtestme
All the carbohydrates you
eat regardless of what form
they are m lettuce potatoes
apples sugar honey bread
or pears are broken down mto
three smgle sugars glucose
fructose and galactose (from
m lk only) You cannot
absorb any carbohydrates
but smgle sugars through the
~&lt;all of the mteslme
Almost all protems except
some very small ooes are
broken down mto 20 to 25
ammo actds - the r bUilding
blocks Ordinary proteins are
too large also to gel through
the cells that make up the
wall of the small mtestme
Fals are broken down mto
ghcerol and a vanely of fa ty
actds bHore they can get

through he mtestmal wall
Thtnk of the mtestmal wall
as a net wtlh a very small
mesh Only the small ftsh can
ge t through Nature reduces
your food to smallltsh small
enough to get through that
tht ck tube hke wall The
breakdown ts accomplished
by enzymes Most of these
are ft om the pancreas and
act 111 the ftrst part of the
small mtestme
Lectthm s a fat It 1s
broken down mto glycerol
L glycerme)
and the fally
actds It al&lt;;o contatns choline
attached to one of the fatty
actds and this ts broken off so
11 can be absorbed II you
needed the chol ne that has
been broken off the cl ohne
would then be used bv the
liver to manufacture your
own lectthm However you
ge l chol ne from meat and
other foods m a normal well
balanced ntet
Some mMtcmes cannot be
effective Uiken by mouth
because they are macllvated
Tt ese then must be m)ected
lnsulm IS a good example and

mtlhons of dtabettcs take
msuhn by needle for that
reason Other medicmes are
small molecules not broken
down by enzymes and can be
absorbed That ts true of the
n edtc nes one takes for high
bluod pressure
not
Vttamms
are
destroyed by dtgestton
because they are not
protems
fals
or
ca rbohydrates
To help you understand
what you can do about your
blood pressure I am sending
the Health Letter number I
8 Blood Pressure Others
who want thiS mformatton
can send 50 cents wtth a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope lor matllng
Address your letter to me m
care of !hts newspaper P 0
Box 1551 Radio Ctty Statton
N• ' Y rk NY 10019
As wl at you can take for
ur htgh blood pressure if
v u can feel any fat under
vour skt around your watst
or excess amounts anywhere
the best thmg you can take ts
less food

ptlot Capt Carl Boyers
cnltcally - m the acctdent
Wednesday evenmg At least
16 were hospt!allzed
I m usually nervous when
I fly said Turner 25 of
Strafford Pa I thought I
had conquered tl thts tune
Now I II have to think twtce
about flymg agam
Pollee said the plane was
landmg m a ramstorm when
Boyers radioed he was going
, - - - - - - - - - , to
go around
agam
Olhctals satd the plane
The Da1~ Sentinel apparently was trytng to gam
DEVOTED TO THE
all tude when the tall hit the
INTEREST OF
runway and snapped
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEH Ll
The plane skidded on its
Exec Eel
commg to a halt on the
belly
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C ty Editor
grass Its nose and a wmg
Pub shed da y ~xcept
broke off but the fuselage
s a urday b&gt;t The Oh o
Valley Pub sh ng Com
remamed mtact and there
pany
11
Cour
S
was no ltre The engmes were
Pomeroy
01'1 o
45769
Bus ness Off ce Phone 992
strewn across the runway
2 56 Ed tor al Phone 991
I could see the plane
1 57
Secon d class postage
and knew we were
droppmg
pad at Pomeroy Oh o
gomg to htt Turner smd I
adve t s ng
Na ana
representa ve
Ward
was dazed but calm
Gr f h Company Inc
Another passenger Jtm
Bot nell &amp; Gallagher D v
757 Th rd Ave N-ew York
Hagarman
31 of Glenstde
N Y 00 7
Pa satd the ptlo trted to
Su bscr p on
rates
Oel \lered by Cllrr er where
pull up bul couldn t The tat!
va abe 75 cents ,per
broke off and the plane
week
By Moor Rou e
where carr er serv ce no
bounced around
ava ab e One mon h
Hagarman satd there was
SJ 25 By mall n Ohio and
N Va OMYeor S2200
no
one slttmg m the tall
S~)( mon hs S11 SO Three
non hs 57 oo E sewt1ere
sect1on
S26 00 ve"'r Six mon t1s
Allegheny
off c1als
!113 50 !,ree mon hs S7 so
ubscr P on pr Ee ncludes
confirmed the tat! broke
t~ unday T mes Sent ne
away but refused further
pendmg
an
comment

l

,

Braves general manager ana
now a consultant to Alevlzoa
satd there had been talks with
the Dodgers about Marshall
but that was put on a back
burner until alter we got
(first baseman Wtlhe)
San
Montanez
from
Franctsco
Lacy the Dodgers No 2
htlter last season when he
batted 314 had gone to the
Braves last wtnler along wtth
Jtm Wynn Jerry Royster and
Tom Pactorek 111 a trade for
Dusty Baker and Ed
Goodson Sosa )OIDed the
Braves last season from St
Louts m a deal lnvolvmg Ron
Reed now wt!h Phtladelplua
I m pretty upset right
now satd Lacy who IS
hittmg 275 I ve been happy
tn Atlanta Now they re
gmng to run me nght mto
thetr (the Dodgers) problems
and I ll probably be traded
agam
Lacy an mftelder Braves
Manager Dave BriStol says
he d hke to get back if a Ia ter
deal can be made sa1d he
was JUSt as upset last wmter
when he learned he d been
traded to Atlanta
I d had a good year wtth
the Dodgers and hated to
leave Thmgs are different
now
Sosa 4-4 with three saves
was one of the Braves best
rehelers this year Atlanta
traded Jts best 1975 relief
ptlcher Tom House to
Boston last wmler lor starter
Roger Moret (currently 2-2)
and the bullpen has been 011
the
Braves
btggest
problems
The Braves starters have
completed only 14 of 67 games
and the relief corps has saved
only 10 of the other 57
Marshall an oil season
professor at Mtch1gan State
where he ts working on hts
doctorate had to clear
watvers m the Natwnal
League as did Sosa and
Lacy smce the tradmg
deadlme was last week

Local
•

notices,
CHESTER - A tubercul n
sk n lest ng d n c w II be held
at the Chester F re House
Monday June 28 at 7 p m

Resu Is of the test ng w I be
g ven on Wednesday even ng
accord ng to Jane Brown
county TB nurse Everyone n
s urged to take

advantage of the cl n c

RAC NE - The Rae ne ER
Squad was cal ed Wednesday
at 6 50 a m for Luther
Fr end 48 Bashan who was
taken to Veterans Memor at
Hosp ta l
IT WAS RONN E M
19
Rt
P ckens
M dd lepo t
that
was
nvolved n an ace dent n
Syracuse on Sunday not
P ckens as
Bonn e M
reported

THE

MEIGS

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporn Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Char he Fmley could ve saved htmself
a lot of grtef and court costs had he only used h1s head a I ttle
more Same for the Yankees and Red Sox Neuber of them
emerge as mental g1ants m thts one etther Had only a couple
of mmor leaguers been mcluded 111 the two mulllmtlllon dollar
sales of Joe Rudi RoUte Fmgers and Vtda Blue had these
mmor leaguers gone the other way from the Red Sox and
Yankees over to the A s there wouldn t have been any fuss and
Bowte Kuhn probably never would ve felt compelled to step m
Perfect example was the Yankees purchase of JohMy Sam
a quarter-century ago from the Braves for $50 000 Tl e
Yankees bought Sam m August to hold off the onrushmg
lndtans and m 1951 when the sale was made and $50 000 meant
much more than ttdoes today the Braves mstsled the Yankees
throw m one of thetr mmor league pttchers That at least would
make the deal look better from the Braves pomt of vtew
The Yankees provtded the Braves wtlh a hst of some of then
pttchers 111 the minors Included on the hst was a skmny 24
year.()ld nghl-hander wl o had been wtth them that sprmg but
had developed a VIolent reactton to a pemctlhn shot was
rushed to a hospttal where he was placed on thecnt cal hst and
now was pttchmg for the Yanks Pactftc Coast League club m
San Franctsco
The ktd s name was Selva Burdette and although hts 14 12
won lost record and hts 3 21 earned run average weren I
knocking anybody s eyes out somebody w th the Bra\ es liked
him and they took htm n the sale for Sam Yup your
memory s sharp That s the same Lew Burdette who won 203
games before he was all through
Speaking of court costs where s the money commg from lor
the legal defense Bowte Kuhn and baseball are gomg to have to
make agamst Charhe Fmley ' SupposeF nley wms a JUdgment
for three four or ftve million Where s Bowte Kuhn gomg to
get that money ' Some Amencan League owners are begmrung
to persptre a little already worrytng tl may have to come out
of baseball s Central Fund whtch IS merely another way of
saymg t! would come out of thetr own pockets
The Central Fund mcludes all teleVIsiOn and radto money
which ordmarily IS dtvtded up among all24 clubs at the end of
the year U Fmley does wm a JUdgment agamst Kuhn and
baseball and the money ultmwtely must come out of the
Central Fund then Fmley wtll be cast m the perfectly absurd
posttion of havmg to cootnbute toward Kuhn s defense And tf
he wms hts sutt F nley may wmd up paymg himself Parttally
anyway
II Charlie Fmley wants to know anythmg about sellmg
ballplayers though he should check Btll DeWttt former
owner of the St Louts Browns and Cmcmnat Reds DeWt!t
was schooled by the old master htmself Branch R ckey so
when he needed ready cash to keep the Browns gmng 111 the
late 40s he sold Vern Stephens and Jack Kramer to the Red
Sox for $310 000 plus seven mmor leaguers Ellis Kmder and
Btlly Htlchcock to the Red Sox for $75 000 plus two players AI
Zartlla to the Red Sox also for $100 000 and Stan Spence and
Sam Zoldak to the Indtans and Gerry Prtddy to the Tigers for
$100 000 aptece
DeWttl also sold Wally Judmch Johnny Berat d no and Bob
Moncrief to the Indtans n other deals but his greatest sale of
all was sellmg catcher Les Moss to the Red Sox for $125 000
plus Matt Batts and then gelling Moss back for NOTHING two
years later
Now that s what you call a super salesman Charlie

Sports briefs

briefs

Chesler

Office runs string to 29 in row

By Uruted Press International
NEW CONCORD OHIO - THE MUSKINGUM College
basketball team returned here this week from a vtstt to
Poland where the Musktes split a stx game senes wtlh a
Polish nahonal team
Muskmgum basketball coach Jtm Burson satd the Polish
goverrunent whtch sponsored the trtp IS trymg to upgrade tis
level of compehtwn m var ous sports The 11 member team
VISited Warsaw Ludz Cracow and Auschwttz
CANTON OHIO - TliE US OLYMPIC MENS swtm
team began workouts here lh s week wtth less than a month
before the opemng of the games m Montreal The 27 member
team arrtved Tuesday mght to an airport greeting by :;oo fans
the mayor and a band
Head Coach James Doc Couns !man swtm coach at
Indtana Umverstly prrused the squad Wednesday at perhaps
the ltnest mternalwnal team ever assembled In any sport He
satd his IS the finest swunmmg team ever to be sent to the
Olymptcs by the Umted States and added tl ts posstble the
team could take gold medals m every swlmmmg event
The swtmmers wtll be tratmng at the C T Branm
Natatormm lor the next 2% weeks

County

Humane Soc ety has seven

k liens that need a home The
k ttens are free to those who

No one killed in air crash
By ELLEN L SLO'IT
PHILADELPHIA l UP! )
Moments
before
an
Allegheny Atrllnes DC9
)Climer crashed on the
runway at Phtladelphta
Internattonal
Atrporl
Rtchard Turner was thtnking
he had conquered his fear of
flymg
Nearly all 103 person,
aboard were tn)ured - the

!

mvest gatton
Brad Dunbar of he
Natwnal TransportatiOn
Safety
Board
satd
mvesltgators recovered the
cockpit votce recorder and
the fhght data recorder and
sent them to Washmgton for
mspecllon
The plane Fl ght 121 ongt
nated m Provtdence R I It
stopped at Hartford Conn
and was en route to MemphiS
Tenn alter a stop m Phlladel
phta
Ray Auletta 37 of Trenton
N J satd he was sttlmg 111 the
last seat near the tail
I ran to the back door he
satd The stewardess was
trymg to open 1! It was stuck
We got 11 open and I
JUmped out and another
person Jumped out behmd I
got out of there pretty last I
tell you
Most of the passengers
clunbed out through an emer
gency door above the wmg
We couldn t get out the
front door because the
stewardess was trapped
under an atr bag which had
blown open
satd John
Cooper of Rtverton N J I
pulled her free of the door and
got her outside
Douglas Langllos 25 of
West Hartford Conn said
Everyone was qu1te calm
The plane emptied out
qu ckly Most people I saw

would like one If nterested
ca II Dorothy J; sher at 992
5427 after 6 p m

BLAIR ON WALTERS
JACKSONVILLE
Fla
(UP!) - Frank Bla1r
Barbara Walters co-host on
NBC s Today show lor 12
years says she was rude
and mhospttable and NBC
offlctals were delighted
she left the network
Blatr said 'Today v1ewers
could not hear behmd-the
scene staff comments of
Oh shut up Barbara and let
htm speak
when Mtss
Walters mtervtewed guests
I can tell you, however
from ms1de sources that they
(NBC
offtctals)
are
delighted she has gone to
!\BC
walked off the plane
Boyers who had been
trapped tnSide the wreckage
was admttted to St Agnes
Hospltalm Critical condition
A hospttal spokesman satd he
had
suffered
broken
vertebrae
The two stewardesses
Marsha Morrtss and lzdiko
Tovllgyl and coptlot John
Spencer were listed m se 1ous
condtllon at Methodtst
ilospltal
Four
persons
were
admttted to St Agnes and
etght others to Methodist

'

By FRED DOWN
no~&lt; hnds h n self etght
UPJ Sports Writer
ga mes sl y • f a prized
Rowland Offtce wul now a Natwnall eague re&lt;;ord The
footnote o lustory as a late m rk uf httlmg m 37
1r n 1n~
d t f e n s 1 v e consecul l\ e games set by
replacemetl IS oul to make Tom ny Holmes of the Boston
the record book on hts own Braves m 1945
Some day I II gel my
Office went 3-for.:i m the
chance he d remark when ftrst game and 1 for-4 In the
the
ktddmg
became second Wednesday mght
annoymg Then I hope to extend ng hts htttmg streak to
pl'ove I m a maJor leaguer
29 games as the Braves
Off ce has done more thar scored 5-2 and 3-0 vtclones
that The btg surpnse of the over the Montreal Expos
Atlanta Braves last season
Ardy Messersmtth ptlched
"hen he balled 290 Office a hlle-htller and struck out

seven Ill the ftrst game to
ratse Its record to 7-:i Jerry
Hu1 stcr drove 111 the Braves
hrs two runs with smgles
md Offtc'e delivered a run
sc rmg double m a three-run
stxlh mnmg Stele Dunn ng
was the loser
Ptul Ntekro ptlched a four
httter and struck out 10 111 the
second game regtstermg hts
stxth wm and ftrst shutout of
the season Royster hit a ru 1
scormg double and Earl Wtl
I ams drove m a run 111 a two
run etghth mnmg whtch

Meigs Legion knocks
Parkersburg down 8-6
The Metgs Amencan routed Johnson when he
Legwn team bchtnd some walked three m a row and
superb relief pttching by then gave up a smgle double
Steve Batrd ratsed tts record and then another walk to let
to Hl-3 Wcdnesda) mght at acros~ stx runs gtvmg
Parkersburg dowmng the Parkersburg a 6-4lead But m
hosts 8-li
came Batrd who re!tred the
The local team Jumped stde and went the rest of the
nght on All-state pttcher game retirmg 10m a row and
Parnsh m the very ftrst allow ng only one other lut
tnnmg when they plated four whtle his teammates caught
btg runs Brent Johnson up
Metgs tied t m the fourth
smgled and Mtke Nesselroad
doubled htm home Mter w1th two when Smtih walked
Mtck Davenport reached on Wtlson smgled and both
an error and Greg James scored on an error by the
walked to load the bases lhtrd baseman They scored
young John Sa) re smashed a the wmmng runs m the s1xth
both unearned Wilson led off
double to clear the bases
But n the bottom of the wtth a walk Batrd sacrtftced
second th e home team htm to second
and
Nesselroad also walked Two

wtld pitches permlttetl both to
score
Htllers lor Metgs were
paced by Sayre who had a
double and smgle and W !son
and Johnson had thetr smgles
whtle Nesselroad had I s
double
Metgs travels to Athens
tomght and then on Sunday
entertams Portsmouth at
Syracuse
wtth
a
doubleheader Portsmouth ts
now 12 I on the season and 1!
should be a fme pair of
games
Me1gs
400 202 ~ 5
060 000 0--jJ &gt;
P sburg
Johnson Batrd (WP) and
Soulsby
Metzner (G)
Pamsh Dorseman ( I P)
Thorpe and Powell

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Wrtter
It looks as though the
Balllmore Ortoles lmally are
makmg a belated run for the
Amencan League East !ttle
Behmd the route gomg
pttchmg of Jtm Palmer the
Onoles scored thetr etghth
wm
m mne
games
Wednesdav mght when
Bobby Gnch usmg a bat
borrowed from Reggte
Jackson stroked a tw(H)ul
two-run homer n the bottom
of the lOth mmng to down the
Boston Red Sox 3-2
The vtctory pulled the
OriOles to the &gt;OO mark
seven games behmd the
divtswn lead ng New York
Yankees Boston meanwhile
slumped to 30 32- e ght
games back
Gnch s homer his stxth
came off rehever Jtm
Wtlloughby after J1m R1ce s
second homer of the game m
the lop of the lOth had g ven
Boston a short lived 2 I lead
Palmer now 9-7 scattered 10
hils mcludmg both the Rice
homers
Palmer could be 12 4
Instead of 9-7 the way he s
pitched for us
satd
Balhmore Manager Earl
Weaver He hasn I gotten
too many breaks
Elsewhere m the Amertcan
League the Yankees lost 4-1
to Cleveland Chtcago swept
Mmnesota 4-3 and 9-:i MU
waukee downed Detrott N
Texas put away Kansas City
7-:i and Oakland drubbed
Cahforma 11-2
Indians 4 Yankees I
Charlie Spikes singled
home two runs while Don
Hood tossed a siJ:-bltter for
his first vtctory since Aprtl 14
as the second place Indiana
beat the Yankees lor the
second straight mght llllll

Met~ 5 l:ards t

Jerry G ote Mor 23 as he
stood 11 t the plate homered In
then nth 101 ltg for the Mets
.,. 1111111 ~ run Ton Sealer
p tched a 1 eight Iutter and
struck out 11 h ratsmg Ius
record tu s..s Pete Falcone
went the distance for St
Louts and suffered hiS sixth
loss aga nst five vic tories

peewee baseball notes
In the Mlddlepott Pee Wee
League
Tuesday
the
Mtddleport Cubs got by the
host Mustangs 7-4 The game
went two extra mungs 1&lt;tlh
the wmmng three runs being
scored 111 the top of the
seventh
Ronny Dent l wen t SIX
lnnmgs and Eddte M ller
worked the la st one to ptck up
the wm Together they struck
out stx!een and walked stx
Big man for the Cubs was
Tony Welch wtth three RBI s
two of them corning n the btg
seventh M ller got mto a Ja n
111 the lust frame puttmg the
bases full wtth none out but
struck out two and got
another batter to tul mto a
ftelder s chmce M ller and
Welch eac h had two smgles
while Denny and Steve Crow
had one Mtke Thomas had a
double
Shawn Baker and Brtan
Wams ley shared n ound
dulles for ll e lose rs
combtmng to fan stxteen and
walkmg etght Baker and
Toby Ault had 2 htts aptece
while Wamsley and Charles

Baltimore reaches .500 mark
moved to wtthm stx games of !\angers 7 Royals 5
rookte Mtke Noms to his ltrst
the AL East leaders Ken
Steve Foucault pttched 4 1--3 VIctory stnce bemg recalled
Holtzman &gt; 5 was the mmngs of scoreless relief and from the rnmors Rando s
loser
Toby Harrah htt a three run homer wh1ch came after a
White Sox 4 9 Twins 3 5
homer as the Rangers moved smgle by Don Baylor started
Jack Brohamer belted a-- to wtthm three games of the the A s early attack whtch
solo homer to tngger a two slumpmg l1rst.place Royals featured stx runs m the f rst
run fourth mmng m the m the AL West It was the four mn ngs Norns 1 2
opener then cl maxed the ltlth stra ght loss for Kansas recalled from Tucson last
mghtcap wm 11 tth a two-run City Texas snapped a 5-:i lte week went seven lnmngs
double m the mnth Jorge m the stxth on smgles by Mike before g1vmg 11ay to Stan
Orta had a two-run homer m Hargrove and Harrah a wtld Bahnsen
the ltlth mmng of the second pttch and an RBI groundout
game hts mnth whtle Jtm by Tom Gneve
Esstan added a two run A s 8 Angels 2
PITTSBURGH ( UPI)
double durmg a three run
Sal Bando s two-run ftrst Delenstve hneman Bob
etghth
mnmg homer staked A s Barber and four 1976 draft
chmces were stgned by the
Pittsburg! Steelers the club
announced Wednesday
The
draft
stgmngs
mcluded Ron Coder an
offensive and defenstve
lmemen from PeM State
llnebac~er Rodney Norton of
Rtce ltght end and punter
Barry Burton of Vanderbilt
and Wide recetver Kelvm
Ktrk of Dayton

Knapp each hud one
II e ()tbs wer I 1nto the
game ncedmg awn to force a
t1 rc&gt;e WH) tte for first wtth
Ute Mustangs and Rutland
Argels all wtth two losses
The Mustangs have one game
left "tth the P• me roy Angels
Frtday a nd nl&gt;ed a win to
keep pace The Cubs and
Rutland w II face off with the
loser vtrtually droppmg Into
thtrd place Both those teams
have two ~an es left
Cubs
011 020 7 7 0
Mustangs
202 000 0-4 6 2
In Souther 1 Pee Wee
acllon Uc host Syt neuse B s
rmsed thet r&lt;&gt;cord to 54! by
dropptng the A team I I-Ii
Mark Salser won his fourUt
game and sockl~l two doubles
while fannmg 1 ine and
walkmg the swne number
Robert Willis I ad two smgles
Loser Mtke Chancey
teamed up wtth Greg Nease
to fan seven and walk stxteen
Nease cracked 1 double and
smgle to lead the A attack
As
20003--520
Bs
1242x- IJ 4 0
Chancey (! P) Nease ( 3)
a td Nease Cha tt'lly Salser
WP) and Wtllls

I sts 44 credtlo s mcluding
Starks Coach Bud Asher
Mary of the cn&gt;dttors were
former Sharks players
I lie Sharks folded after t1 e
1974 season Most players
wet e not patd New owners
bought tl e francht se In 1~75
but that venture went un~er
too when the league failed

Dudgers 1 Aslrus 0
Rtck Rhoden pitched a
titree-httter and seored the
games only run when he
st111Jied went to thtrd on Btll
Buckner s double and sc'llred
on fed Stzemorc s sacrifice
fly Rhoden now 6-0 didn t
allow a hit until Rob Andrews
doublc&gt;d 111 the sixth J R
Richard was the loser
Giants 7-8 Padres 8-7
Darrell Evans htl 8 grand
slam I omer and accounted
for stx RBls 10 powering the
Gmnts to thctr sweep of the
Padres In knocking San
Dtego out of a shot t liVed
set'OI d.place stay In the Nl
West the Giants slugged four
homers In Ute doubleheader
mcludmg a two-run shot by
Evans and a three-run blast
by Gary Thomasson 111 the
first game a td 11 nother Utree
run homer b) Bobby Murcer
In 11 e nigh cap

''9Peratioasaacl
hOspital rooms cost
a lot more
than you think~
BILL FlEltHER
1251

Powell St
Middleport
PH 99'l 7155

See me for Stale Farm
hosp1tal;surg1calrnsuranc:e

, coollczczs

10r man .

~

Pony baseball
'
action noted
T!tesday mght m Me1gs
Mason County Pooy League
acllon the Pomeroy Royals
handed VISiting Mason Its
ltrst loss of the year 6-2. That
raised the Royals record to 51 while Mason IS now 6-1
Mike Trtplett got the wm
allowmg just tine hits whtle
faMmg e1ght llld walking
none Todd RllwUngs led tbe
attack With two singles while
Tr1plett Tcm Hawley Chris
Woods and Chuch KeMedy
each gol 1 si111Jle
Marl! Smith took his f1rst
loss !Jiving up stx hits while
waiting four and fanning
four
Smith
Kenny
Hankmson and Donald
Russell each picked up a htt

Pomeroy A s ptck up their
ftrst wm with a 6-2 wm over
the host Ru\!and team
Pomeroy IS now 1-:i while
Rutland IS 1-4 Btlly Elkms
shone as he hurled a no-lutter
while faMmg a btg 18 hitters
and walking seven He also
chtpped m wtth a single
Chris McKtnncy
Ray
Stewart
and Richard
DeMoss each had three
stngles while Shane Smith
had two
Bob Wtlllams took the loss
and teamed up wtth D nk
Kennedy to yteld thirteen
hits

At Syracuse the Eastern
team kept pace and ratsed
thetr record to 0--1 wtlh a 13-7
Other action saw the victory over the hosts Rusty
Wtgal Greg Gwnther and
Dan Spencer shared the
mound chores Steve Ltttle
and Wigal each socked two
smgles while Joe Boyles
cracked a triple and smgle
Gettmg smgles were Spencer
Gwnther and Cliff Longenett
Syracuse pitcher Mark
Forbes socked a trtple and
at the Me1gs H1gh School Cafetena
two smgles but sttll ended up
SATURDAY, JUNE 26
taking the loss as hts
teammates got only two more
FROM 8:00 P.M. TO 12:00 A.M.
hits smgles by Jack Duffy
Pr1ce $4 00 per Alumnt and $2 00 per non
and Ronme Dav1s Thetr
alumn1 guest or 1976 graduate
record Is now 2-4

NOTICE

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
ALUMNI DANCE

\\\1

clmched the declston Woody
Fryman ~offered his ftfth loss
for Montreal
Phtladelphta
defeated
Clncmnatt 4 2 Chtcago
shadl&gt;d Pittsburgh 6-:i New
York edged St Louts 5-4 Los
Argeles beat Houston 1.0
md San F ranctsco topped
San Dtego 7~ and 8-7 m
other Nl games

ST LOUIS t UP!) - All Pro
runnmg back Terry Metcalf
of the St Louts Cardinals
agreed to pay a $500 ftll€
Wednesday for carrymg
firecrackers aboard an
atrcraft at Lambert Fteld
Jan 19
A consent JUdgment statmg
Metcalf would agree to the
fme was stgned Wednesday
by U S Dtstrtct Court Judge
H KeMet Wangelln The line
ts half the max unum penalty
There ts no unprtsonment for
the ctvtl offense
JACKSONVILLE
Fla
l UP!) - Fran Monaco
former owner of the defunct
Jacksonvtlle Sharks of the old
World Football League has
been declared bankrupt with
total debts of nearly $2 8
mtlllon
The bankruptcy petttton

Solids &amp; Strepes
S1zes S M L XL

KERM'S KORNER

New York Clothing House
Open Fn t1!8

Pomeroy

ROOF PAINT SALE

PARK RESERVED
G70X14
Plus

f E T $2 75

Heres the

70

A70 13
E70 14
F70 14
H70 14
G70 15
H70 15

ser es muscle tire o match any perform

ance your set of w de wt1eels can delver Features nclude
• Bold wh te ra sed el!e s I V• hlgh

mo ded nto s dewal
• Four fu I pt es of strong soft r d ng polyester cor~
• Extra w de tread tor tract on and m ieage

GENERAL TIRE SALES
N 2nd Ave

Mtddleport 0

SATURDAY, JUNE 26th

"EMPLOYEES' OUTING"
OF

KENTUCKYWEST VIRGINIA GAS CO
AND

KENTUCKY HYDROCARBON CO
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P M

CAMDEN PARK
U S ROUTE 60 WfST-HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
'9l3 S Th1rd St

992 2709

HOURS
7 00 to 5 00 Monday thru Frtday-7

Mtddleportr 0

oo to 4 00 Saturday

�'i;;;~;·;;;;;;''''"""'""'F~~st ~un Connors advances to quarter finals
keepS ItS
. L '.l
d goo d
t
y
recor
P ,, I s VIC 0 r
1

I

On Monday in Juuinr
Girls Division softball, Forest
Run kept its record spotless
by beating Raci ne at
Minersville 9-2. Kellie Rought
picked up the win and was
ba cked by the hitting of Jena
Welker who socked two
singles and a double. Other
hitters for the winners were
J. Betzing , Judy Gruese r and
L. Roush, three singles each;
M. Dillard and A. Riggs, t\yo
singles; T. Smith, a triple ;
Rought , !.. Wi secup , T.
Grueser, J . Sisson, A. Warner
and V. Hood , a single each.
Leading Racine were C.
Warden and L. Wolfe with
three singles apiece. Other
hitters were L. Warden , D.
Johnson and K. Maynard, two
si ngles; M. Johnson and T.
Johnson, singles .

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Boone's ground baiL
Dick Allen says he has never
" No molter how much I've
had so much fun playing practiced I just don 'I have a
baseb~ll .
positive attitud e throwing
Normally, the Pbiladelphia from third," said a dejected
Phillies slugger's statement Rose.
would be echoed by tbe
"Maybe I've felt that bad
Cincinnati Reds' Pete Rose. throw coming beca use I've
Not Wednesday night, made a few bad ones during
though , because it ~;as Rose's the past week . Tllat's the first
two-out, ninth inning error time though that I ca n
which enabled AUen to score remember making a bad
the lie-br1111king run as the throw that let the winning run
score ," added Rose .
Pbils beat the Reds 4-2.
Allen's double off Pedro
Call it whatever you want,
but Rose said he had a feeling Borbon touched off the Phils
his throw was going to be wild ninth inning. An infield out
even before he made it after moved Allen to third . He
fielding pinch hitter Bob remained there when Oarry
Ma~dox flied
to Cesa r
Geronimo in centerfield with
the second out of the inning.
" U I had tried to score on
that fly ball the way
Middleport rolled over
COLUMBUS I UP! J
Geronimo
throws,"
sa
id
Letart
at the losers' field, 23Countess Nancy came on
Alleri
smiling,
"then
me
and
6,
April
King paced the
strong in the stretch to win
Johnny
Bench
would
of
had
to
winners
with
four doubles
the featured eighth race by
do
a
little
tangoing
at
home
and
two
singles.
Winning
one~nd-one-quarler lengths
one
of
us
plate
and
neither
Bangie
Hart.
pitcher
was
ove r Tarporl Worthy at •
has
ever
gone
to
any
Aruthur
Other
hitters
were
J
.
Horten
,
Scioto Downs Wednesday
Murray
schools
."
.
two
singles;
M.
Spencer
a
night.
Boone's ground ball came single and triple ; P. Crooks,
Legal Hill was third.
after
an intentional pass was three singles and a double; C.
Counlness Nancy, with
issued
to Ollie Brown by Crooks, two singles and a
Mark Ferguson in the sulky ,
leflhander
Will McEnaney. double ; M. Miller , si ngle,
paced the mile in 2:04 4-5 and
Dave
Cash
then
singled home double , triple; V. Boyles, two
returned $8 .60, $4.00 and
Brown
with
an
insurance
run singles; Hart, Horton ,
$2.80. Tarport Worthy paid
before
Larry
Bowa
Oied
out Custer, Ferguso n, Bacon,
$3.60 and $2.80 and Legal Hill
to
end
the
inning
.
Long , Stewart and Hart, a
returned $3.40.
"You
know,"
said
Allen,
each .
single
The 6-8 nightly double
"I've
had
a
reputation
for
a
Leading
Letart was R.
combination of Townhouse
being
a
pretty
good
drinker
.
.
Green
with
a
double and two
and Bohemian Time paid
But
I
don
't
know
which
is
singles.
Other
hitters were 11.
$65.80.
worse
letting
a
loss
like
the
·
Michaels
and
L. Roberts,
A cro~d of 4,820 wagered
Reds
took
tonight
keep
you
up
three
singles
;
T.
Hill, K.
$250,830.
till four or five in the morning Riffle , Mea ns and R.
or having a snoot full of good Bronum, two singles ; Adams,
Kentucky bourbon.
M. Morris and M. Muggrage,
Allen was remembering the a single
each,
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
.
1UP! 1 - Brass Ball ran the 1975 season.
lNG LEWOOD, Calif. !UP])
"Last year we lost games
six furlongs in I : 12 1-5
Bright Cross established a
Wednesday to win the we already had won, ... he
stakes
record of I :03 in
featured ninth race a t said. "That's wh y this year is
winning
the $28,700 Haggin
so much fun for 'me. We don 't
Thistledown.
Stakes
Wednesday
at
The winner, ridden by Les go out and beat ourselves
Hollywood
Park.
.Stiller , paid $11 .60, $7.00 and night after night ."
Fernando Toro guided
Mike Schmidt's 20th homer
$4.40. Racy Road was second
Bright
Cross to a four-length
and Son of Oscar was third. accounted for one of the
victory.
Bright Cross and
The U-2 tenth race lrifecta Phils' first two runs. A home
Curren!
Concept,
ridden by
of Kimbolton, Black Dance run by George Foster, his
Roberto
Gonzalez,
paid
and ~ty Mom was worth 16th of !he season boosting his
$17.00,
$16.00
and
$9.00,
while
$1,189.50 and the 1-5 daily league-leading RBI total to
double of Dusty Waltz and 61 , also accounted for one of Shipmate Sam, with Frank
Olivares in lhe irons,
'1uis Kabob returned $382.20. the Reds' first two runs .
returned $27:20 to show .

How they ran

International
League Standings
United Press lnterna~onal
W. L. Pet. GB
Syr•cuse
37 27 .57B
Rhode Island 39 31 .557 1
Rochester
34 28 .54B 2
Memphis
32 32 .500 5
Toledo
31 35 .470 7
JO 35

Minn .

Calif.

30 35

.462

9111

28 42 .400 14

Wednesday's Results

Chicago 4 Minnesota 3. lsi
Chicago 9 Minnesota 5, 2nd
Baltimore 3 Boston 2, 10 inns.

Cleveland 4 New York I
Milwaukee 9 DeVol l l
Texas 7 Kansas Ci ty 5

Los Ang .
000001 000- t 2 I
Houston
000 000 000- 0 3 I
Rhoden 16-0l and Yeager;
Rict1Md , Forsch (91 a nd
Hermann . LP- Ri cha rd 17 B) .
Phila .
000100 102- 4 7 0
ooo 10 1000- 2 5 1
Cinci.
Car lton , Reed 171. Garber
191 and McCarver; Alcala ,
Borbon (B ), McEnaney 191.

Oakland B California 2
· Charleston 29 34 .460 7'17 Today 's Probable Pitchers
Tldew•ter
27 37 .422 10
All Times EIT
Eastw ick ( 9) and Bench .
Wednesday 's Results
Chicago (Gossage 5-51 at WP- Reed (6-21. LP- Borbon
Rochester 6 Tidewater 5
Minnesota (Singer 5-3) , 2:15 0 - 1. HR s- Phil ade lphi a .
Syr•cuse 6 Memphis 3
p.m .
Sc hm idt ( 20 ) ; Cincinna t i,
Charleston B Rhode Island 2 Detroit (Fid rych 6-11 at Foster 116).
Toledo 10 Richmond 7
Boston !Wise 5-4), 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland IDobson B-51 at New York 004000001- 5 1 2
Ma[or League Standin~s
New York (Alexander 4 -AL 8 St. Louis
300001000- 4 81
By Un1ted Press International p.m .
Seaver (85 1 and Grote ;
National League
Kansas City ( Fitzmorr is a. Falcone (5-6) and Ferguson.
East
31 at Te &lt;as Hargan 1-21. 9:05 HR s- New York , Un ser (5).
W. L. Pet . GB p.m.
Grote (3) ; St. Loui s, Ferguson
Phila .
45 19 .703
Oakland (Abbott 1-11 al (7).
Pills.
36 27 .571 8'17 Calilornla IMonge 2-2). 10 :30
New York
34 37 .479 14'17 p.m .
American League
St. Louis
30 37 .448 16 117
Only games scheduled
1st game
. Chicago
29 37 .439 17
Friday 's Games
Ch ic.
200 200000- 4 50
Montre•l
23 38 .377 20 1/7 Chicago •t Te&lt;os. 2, tw l-nighl Minn .
100 000 020 - 3 5 0
West
Johnson , Forster (8) and
Detroit at Boston , night
W. l. Pet. GB Cleveland at Balt imore, night Downing ; De.cker , Burgm eier
Cincin .
42 26 .618
Milwaukee at New York , night 121. Atburv 161 and Wvneqar .
Los Angeles 38 31 .551 4'17 California at Kan City, night WP- Johnson (4 -71. LPS•n Diego
36 31 .537 5'!7 Minnesota at Oak land, night Decker 12-71. HRs- Chicago,
Houston
31 37 .456 11
Brohame r {4) ; M i nn esota ,
Atlanta
30 37 .448 ll'/2
Carew {J).
Major League Results
San Fran .
27 44 .3BO 16'17
United Press International 2nd game
Wednesday 's Results
Nationa I league
Chicago 6 Pittsburgh 5, 1st
Chic
020 020 032- 9 11 0
tst game
Pill at Chi , 2nd, ppd ., dark
Minn
002010 002- 5 11 2
Pittsburgh 000 lOt 120- 5 7 5
At lanta 5 Montreal 2. tst
Knapp. Vuckovich (5 1. Brett
Chicago
010 040001 --&lt;5 8 0 (7) and Essia n: Redl ern,
At lanta 3 Montreal o, 2nd
Rooker, Tekulve (7), Moose Can.pbell 171 and Wynega r.
San Fran 7 San Diego 6, 1st
S•n Fran B San Diego 7, 2nd 191 and Sangulllen ; R. WP- Vuckovl ch 15-2). LPReuschel, Knowles 171 , Suiter Redfern
Phi ladelphia 4 Cincinnati 2
I 2-41.
HR sIB) , Zamora (9) and Swisher . Minnesota , Randall Ill ;
New York 5 St. Louis 4
WP - Zamora (4-2) . LP- Chi cago. Or Ia l9i .
Los Angeles 1 Houston o
Moose
(3 -3) ·.
HRs Today's Probable Pitchers
Pitlsburgh , Stargell (9). Zi5k Kan City 1001 30 000- 5 10 0
All Times EIT
Pittsburgh !Candelaria 6-4) 181 .
Texas
320 002 00&lt;- 7 7 2
at Chic•go 1Burris 3-9). 2:30
Leonard (7.J) and Martinez,
p.m.
lnd game
Wathan
(7) ;
Umbarger,
San Diego (Foster 2-J) at Pills at Chi. , ppd ., darkness . Foucault 151 and Sundberg .
San Francisco 1Hal icki 5-10),
WP- Fou cau ll (6-3) . HR lsi game
4:05p.m.
Texas, Harrah IS ).
000 100 1oo--2 5 2
Montreal (Stanhouse 5-2) at Mont.
010 10300x- 5 11 1 10 innings
Atlanta I Ruthven B-6). 7:35 Atlanta
Dunning , Granger (61 , Lang Boston
p.m.
010000000 1- 2 7 1
Ph iladelphia I Kaal 7-21 at 171 and Foote; Messersmith Ball
1000000002- 3 10 o
Cinc innati (Nolan 7-3), B:05 17-51 ond Correll. LPJones, Willoughby 181 •nd
p.m.
Dunning 10-21 HR- Montreal , Fisk 4 Palmer (9 -7) and
Los Angeles !John HI at Mangual 13) .
Duncan . LP- WIIIoughby I 1Houston !Dierker 6-6); B:35
4) . HRs- Boston, Rice (2)'
lnd game
.
p.m.
112 1. B•ltimore. &lt;;;r ich 161 .
Mont .
ooo 000 ooo-o 4 2
Only ~ames scheduled
All .
10000002x- 3 6 1 Cle
Freday ' s Games
200 200 OO&lt;l-4 7 1
Fryman. Murray IBI and N. Y.
New York at Ch lcago
100000000- 1 6 0
St. Louis at Philadelphia, Foote ; Nelkro (6-4) and
Hood, La Roche I 9) and
night
Will iams. LP- Fryman (6-4). Fosse : Holtzman (5-51 and
Pittsburgh a at Montreal,
Munson . WP- Hood 12-41 .
1st game·
night
San Fran at Los Angeles, San Diego 010 010 002--&lt;1 16 1 Detroit
000 000 500-·5 13 I
San Fran . 040001 02x- 7 7 1 Milw
night
01031310-x- 9 13 0
Strom , Metzger (8) and
Atlanta at San Diego, night
MacCorma ck, Cra wf ord
Cincinnati at Houston, night Dav is ; Dressler, Heaverlo, (4 ), Lemanczyk (6) and
Moffitt I7J and Hill. WP- Freehan ; Colborn , Sadecki
Heaverlo 13-01. LP- Sirom (6- 17 I. Castro I 9) and Parler .
American league
71 . HRs - San Francis co. WP- Colborn 14-91. LP East
W. L. Pet. GB Thomasson 121 , Evans 111 .
Ma cCormack 10-31 HR sNew York
38 24 .613
LeF lore
12 1;
Delroil ,
lnd game
Cleveland
32 ,30 .516 6
Milwaukee. Scott (7) .
San Diego 000 200 032- 7 Is 0
Baltimore
J2 32 .500 7
Boston
30 32 .484 8
San Fran. 30500000x- S 10 I Oak
220200 200 - 815 0
Detroit
Tomlin , Folkers
(3) , Calif
29 34 .460 9'17
000100010 - 2 50
f.1ilwau .
Reynolds 141. Splllner 16),
25 35 .417 12
Norris, Bahnsen (8) and
West
Metzger lSI ond Kendall ; Haney: Hassler, Scoll (4) ,
Montelusco
(8 ) , Harlzelll71 and Elc hebarren .
W. L. Pet. GB Barr,
Kan . City
Heaverlo (9) and Sadek. WP- WP- Norrls ll -21 . LP 39 25 .609
Texas
Barr (6-5) . LP- Tom/Iii 10-11 . Hassler 10-5) . HR- Oakland,
35 27 .565 3
O.Skland
33 34 .493 7'17 HRs- San Franc isco, Murcer Bando (I IJ ; California, Briggs
Chicago
31 32 .492 7117 (6) . Evans (4) .
Ill.
Richmond

lly ROBERT MUSEL]
r.ngland
ili Pl l · ThC ·Sl't&lt;ledplayers
&lt;:ontinUl&lt;l to cha rge through
the draw in the sea ring heal
al Wimbledu11 Wednesday .
.Jimmy Connors led the
advanc'C into U1e quarterfinals as not a single seeded
player has been upset in the
lournamen t, an incredible
rarily. Hehadaneasy time in
bea ting Egypt 's Ismae l El
Shofei, 6-4, !Hl, 6-3, on the
center court.
Co nnors, trimmed down
w_!Mf!l J:rX&gt;N .

.462 ? 112

•

•

from 11!0 J&gt;uuntls last year to
less than 160, said he th. ought
his chances of winning the
ti tle, he lust to Arthur Ashe
last year, were good, if he got
a few breaks.
" ll11wever," he added, ."(
came to win."
The lOth-seeded John Newcum be advanced to the last 32
and survived 42 servit'e aces
by his opponent, John
Feaver, who is ranked on ly
seventh in his native Britain.
But on gross made oS
slippery as an ice rink by

d .western
r
73
d
play un erway
'

By ED SAINSBURY
we ill in a pro-am at Iowa Ci ty
UP! Spurts Writer
Monday and in practice at
OAK BROOK , Ill rUPI J Buller:
There have been siK firstBut he will have to beat off
time winners on the PGA tour the challenge of 10 entrants
this yea r and only two who among them have won 12
players have won back-to- tournaments thi s. year,
ba ck, so the odds favored a in c ludin g . def e ndin g
new face, and perhaps a little champion Hale Irwin, twice a
lower score , in the 73rd victor this year. Others in the
Wes tern Open beginning fi eld, who have won
today at Butler National Golf tournaments, included firstClub.
time winners Bob Gilder,
The only back-to-back win- Gary Koch, Mark Hayes,
ners so far have been Ben Tum Kite, and Joe .hunan.
Crenshaw with two straight
Tom Wa tson, the only other
and Hubert Green, with three winner of the event at Butler,
stra ight . But Green didn 't also was in the field.
enter th~ $200,000 Western,
The last player to win the
the only one of the top nine Western in successive years
finishers in the U.S. ~n who was Jack Nicklaus, . In 1!167
didn 't.
and 1968, who is not in the
Jerry Pate, the U.S. Open field this year . Lee Trevino
winner, could become the and Arnold Pa lmer also
third pla yer with a back-to- passed up the tournament,
hack win. It might happen, Trevino troubled by an
since he continued to play aching back.

Ali expecting

tlays without rain, Feaver 's
Evert plays old nemisis has given her several scares .
on ly weapon, his service, Australia's Lesley Hunt, who m past major tournaments.
IJ.e camca lethalwea pon. For
JL. hours, ·~ a s~ore of
spectators famted tn and
around the court under the
hot sun, and more than 500
people had to have first aid
treatment among tile crowd
of nearly 37,000, Newcombe
THURSDAY, JUNE 24 THRU
tried everything he knew to
slow down the torrent.
"! couldn't believe how
SATURDAY, JUNE 26
many times he hit the center
line," he said. "When a man
hits two aces in a tie break
and returns everythmg you
think : what next' He hit only
two shots in the whole match
he shouldn 't have and one of
them cost him his service in
the last set."
In the women's singles,
lop-seeded Chris Evert took
only 23 minutes to dispose of
Britain 's Annette Coe in love
sets. Second-seeded Evonne
Goolagong also had an easy
time in the first set, but had to .
overcome a 4-1 lead by
Sharon Walsh in the second to
pull out a 6~. 7'5 victory.
John Andrews seemed to be
on )lis way to upsetting 14thseeded Brian Gottfried,
leading two sets to one and 42, but lost a five-setter on his
own errors.
Among other seeds,
Guillermo Vilas , Roscoe
Tanner and Tom Okker each
won in straight sets. Stan
Smith , seeded 16th, beat
Gerald Baltrick of Britain in
four.
In Thursday's big matches
top seed and defending champion Arthur Ashe meets Mark
Edmondson, the Australian
open champion, in the first
big hurdle on the American's
road to a seco nd title .
Another match brings
together two of the most
explosive temperaments in
the game- second-seeded llie
Nastase of Romania and Kim
Warwick of Australia.

TOKYO 1UP!) - World
he• v ywe igh t boxing
cha mpi on Muhammad Ali
rested his voice Thursday
and
anti cipated
a
rnullimillion dollar payday
Saturday for whipping a lanlern-j a wed
Japan ese
wrestler.
Ali skipped rope and
worked out ori a heavy bag in
a tiny gym near his luxurv
hotel.
·
His opponent in what is
expected to be a bizarre
boxing-wrestling spectacle,
Antonio lnoki, continued to
work out in secret.
Promoters ,
who
unblushingly bill the bout
" th e super fight of the
century~" claim the winner's
paychec k could total $9
million .
" I promise you this sha ll be
no contest," Ali shouted in a
television appearance with
lnoki Wednesday night.
Cynics were inclined to
agree, but that is not what the
champion meant. Both he and
ln oki insist the fight will be
for rea l.
At an elaborately staged
and natio nall y televised
contract signing ceremony,
the fighters signed a winnertake~ll clause. Or, at least,
that is what the master of
ceremonies said they signed .
Final
rule
changes
evidently were designed to
protect the throat and adam's

apple of one of the most
verbal champions of all time.
Handlers agreed to rule out
karate-type chops to those
parts of the anatomy .
In
hi s
telev is ion
appearance Ali said Inoki
"should never fight a serious
boxer .''

Many boxing fa 11s here do
not
believe
that
a
heavyweight champion
should fight a professional

wrestler,

serious

or

otherwise. But as the
spectacle drew closer it was
evident that many Japanese
fans view the spectacle as an
entirely legitimate "World
Martial Art~ Championship,"
as it has been billed by the
promoters.
Among the true believers
are fans who shelled out
50,000 yen 1$161i.66) just to
attend the contract signing
and will pay a top ringside
ticket price of the equivalent
of $1,000.
As a thespian , the
champion puts lnoki , a rather
stolid fellow, in the shade.
Th e hulking Japanese remains imperturable as Ali
shouts " I'm going 'to destroy
you. l am the greatest."
Occasionally, Inoki permits
-llimself a slight grin in lbe
direction of the television
cameras, as though , perhaps,
he might himself be thinking
of payday:

I
j

NEW&amp;
EXCITING
STUDIO

on Racine

CREATIONS!

vi~it

In Little League actionTuesday, the Racine A' s
came from behind and
thumped
the
visiting
Pomeroy Tigers 16-9. The
nine runs all came in the
second inning . Winning
pitcher was Melanie Weese
who struck out five and
walked two and helped her
own cause by stroking two
singles and drawing two
walks . Jay Rees hit a home
run for the winners, and W.
Lyons socked two triples
while T. Roseberry got a
double.
J. Smith hit two doubles in
the losing cause, and A. Core
and B. Will each got one twobagger. No other slats were
available for pomeroy.
Tigers
090 ®-- 9 13
A's
600 55x- 16 18

Expressive
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All

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PT. PLEASANT. RIPLEY. ATHENS,
BELPRE
PHOTO HOURS:
DAILY 10-1, 2·5, 6-8; SAT. 10-1, 2-4:30

•

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INSTALLED - New officers of the American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39, installed Tuesday night
were, left to right, Miss Ernia Smith, historian ; Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart, chaplain ; Mrs. C,alherine Welsh,

Installation of officers by

Mlaa Erma Snllth,

Americanism; Mrs. Peggy

[188t

president, and a report from Harria, children and youth;
Paula Eichinger, delegate to Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, civil
Buckeye Girls' State, defense; Mrs. Veda Davis,
highllghted the Tllesday night jWllor activities; Mrs. Iva
meeting of the American Powell, national security;

Btef Post 39.
The officers for 197&amp;-T/ are
Mrs. Grace Pratt, president;
Mrs. Frankie HWUlel, first
vice president; Mts. Marjorie

Goett, second vice president;
Mrs. Gladys Cumings,
secretary; Mrs. Cathern
Welsh, treasurer; · Miss
Smith, historian; Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart,
chaplain, and Mrs. Fay
Wildermuth, sergeant at
arms. Soloist for the
installation was Mrs. Linda
Mayer. Mrs. Welsh was
pianist and Miss Cheryl
Lehew , sergeant at arms.
Coounittee cha~ appointed and recognlzed were
Mrs. Joan Vaughan,

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Mend socks with
embroidery floss .

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How can
colton socks be saved whe'n
they need mending 1 Darning
cot ton seems to be a thing of
the past so how can a hole be
mended. Is it just the stores
in Kansas City and New York
that do not have it? - MRS.
A.T.A.
DEAR MRS. A.T.A . . Many readers have written
from time to lime to say they
could not find darning cotton
in the cities where they live. I
suggest that you try using
embroidery floss. -POLLY.

YD.

Middleport
Ohio

For Longer Lasting
Paint Jobs ·Use Our

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is to be standing in line
at the bank or supermarket
and then all of a sudden
another line opens up and the
last one in my line is the first
in the newly opened one. It
seems the clerk could be fair
and break the line so no one
loses his turn. I have walked

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were Mrs. Knapp, Mrs.
Powell, and Mrs. Ruby Marshall. Other committees
named were Miss Smltlj, Mrs.
Jewell and Mrs. Davis,
budget, and Mrs. Davis, Mrs.
Reuter and Miss Smith, bylaws.
Miss Eichinger gave a
resume of her activiUeli at
Buckeye Girls' Stille where
she was elected president of
the school board, was a member of the 100 girl chorus and
played with the band. She
displayed various Items given
at Girls' State along with certificates and ribbons earned;
She spoke of the bus tour to
points of interest including
the State Capital, and of the
greetings brought by Gi&gt;v.
James A. Rhodes at one of the

Mrs . Gemma Casci,
rehabilitation and veterBIIll
affairs; Mrs. Isabelle Couch,
Bl:holarship and education;
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, foreign
relations; Mrs. Marjorie
Reuter, community service,
and Miss Lehew, field service.
Other collUilittee chalnnen
are Mrs. Hwmel, poppy and
membership, Mrs. Ca:ITie
Neutzllng; music; Mrs. Norma Jewell, legion activities;
Mrs. Ellen Couch, cards and
flowers, and Mrs. Mary Martin, legislation. Appointed to
the executive conunittee sessionil.

Legion Atmliary, Drew Web-

ROOF PAINT

GALVA-GUARD PAINTS

treasurer; Mrs. Gladys Cumings, sec retary ; Mrs .
Marjorie Goett, second vice president, and Mrs. Grace
Pratt , president . Officers not present were Mrs. Frankie
Hunnel, first vice president, and Mrs . Faye Wildermuth ,
sergeant at arms .

Auxiliary holds officer installation

\!l!iJIJ!J@OJ)!iJ[fl@

1

.

enerahon

R

Club organizes
ap , ' [~ Pride
All organizational m~J}gll. !tome of Mr . and
=~

~ !~

Uy llt"lt·n and Sue Uuttt·l

sett le dow n.

45"

eRED
.GREEN
eALUMINUM

G

Is It l.uve Or Sympathy!
H&gt;•t&gt; .
M.1 prob lem is litera lly " 11~1tler uf life and deMth : my
fulur c life ;u1d my boyfriend's dea th .
We've been dalin ~ lwo years. I'm not sun• I love Derick
"''""' everything in life. I'd like to be free to furth er nw
edue&lt;&lt;l iun and earloer . I want to travel and live a lot before ·,

LAST 3 DAYS

"SUPER

ACCURATELY
&amp; RAPIDLY

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:=::

HECK'S

Tigers thump ed

$9 million day.

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., T11ursday, June 24, 1976

POMIROY

''

out of stores leaving a
shopping cart filled with
meat and ice Cream, or
withdrawn my money from
banks that allow this to
happen
to customers .
Managers, take heed. GEORGE.
DEAR POLLY - Save the
cap and brush frol)l an empty
fingernail polish bottle. They
will come in handy for tiny
touchup paint jobs and can
then be thrown away. ROBIN. •
DEAR POLLY - Your
camper can be made noiseless and more livable if you
pad , pad, pad . I buy
remnants of washable carpet
or used rugs to pad all the
shelves and cupboards. Tack
in place U you plan to
vaccuum them, Use double
sticky tape if they are to be
washed. Squares of blanket
·pieces cut with the pinking
shears or pieces of thin foam
rubber are wonderful to use
BETWEEN pans and dishes.
We put some thin wood
dividers in one cupboard and
padded them for bottles. Line
that silverware container and
cover it with a piece of foam
or blanket to muffle rattles
ar.d keep road dirt out. Staple
thin foam or carpet Inside
each cupboard door. Padding
saves wear and tear on your
road weary nerves and also
seals cracks to keep out dirt.
I keep a clipboard with
tablet and pencil attached in
the same place ALWAYS .
When anyone wants or needs
anything from the store
TilEY put it on the list, and
especially if they use the last
of any Item or empty a
container. As I clip valuable
coupons I put that item on the
list followed by a C and add
the coupon under the list so it
goes to the store and I
remember to use it. This has
simplified my shopping and
saved dollars and trips. BELVA.
DEAR POLLY - To
quickly make an inexpensive
hanging basket, buy a large
plastic bowl and mark pla ces
for three holes equidistant
around it. Heat an ice pick
and punch the holes . Use
opened wire coat hangers
lhruugh the holes and fasten
together at the top .
Buy ~n e.lra ironing board
cover with elastic, and when
·puuing your board away put
this over the one you have
been using so it sta ys clean.
- HEI.F,N .

Miss Eichinger was high in
her praise of Mrs. Lester
MeiTit, director of Girls'
State. She e11pressed aJ}preciation to the Wllt for sponsoring her and also to Angle
Sissi&gt;n for the corsage sent to
her at the time of her
inauguration. She was
presented a gift by Mrs.
Goett.
The bulletin from the
Eighth District president was
read along with a letter from
Mrs. Joseph Fitzwater,
Department of Ohio
legislative chainnan, relative
to the Robert P. Griffin of
Michigan amendment to
exempt the American Legion
Auxiliary poppy program
from the minimum wage law.
She stated that the program is
one of therapy for veterans
and also assists veterBIIll'
families in local commWllties. Mrs. Pratt . urged
members to write their
legislators in Washington
asking support for the amend·
ment to exempt the poppy
program.
Mrs. Pratt e11pressed aJ}preciatlon to Mrs. Gerald
Wildennuth and her cornmlttee for the dinner served
to legionnaires on Memorial
Day,andalsotoEricHartfor
use of a truck. A report was
given on Poppy Day headed
by Mrs. Reuter, and Mrs.
Pratt thanked Mrs. Reuter
and Mrs. Davis for the poppy
display. Mrs. Reuter reported
on the canteen served at the
bloodmobile . She was

I told him that when 1he suggested marriage.
But this was before I learned he's got a slow-ncting disease
that will probably kill him in 15 years flr less 1if medicnl
scienc·e doesn't come up with u breakthrough before then).
A while back, his then fian ce left him and 1 don't want him
to be hurt again. He loves me VERY much. Wha t to do'' LIFE OR DEATH''
Dear I. or D
,
Before vou hea rd of De rick's illness, you made your
decision for 'the fr ee life. Don 't change it out of sympa thy. -HELEN
I. or D:
Derick needs a stronger love than you evidently feel fur
him. Don't ruin whaty ou hn ve with a marriage that probably
wouldn 't work . - SUE
Dear Helen and Sue :
I've been going with his boy for eight months. I'm 15 and
he's 16. My parents don' t approve because his father is Puerto
Rican and his mother is ll&lt;l lian like my Mom.
When his mother asks mine if I ca n go some place with.
them , Mom always makes some e•cuse like I'm too mouthy or
I haven't finished my work. Then his Mom tells me to shape up .
If I tell her the real reason, she wouldn't believe me becn use
my Morn puts up a big front and makes her think she's all for
me going with her son.
How can I make Mom and Dad see that it isn't a di sgrace ,
dating a half Puerto Rican ? - P.D.L.
Dear P .:
The best way ? Have your boyfriend visit your house often
to prove that judging people by their na tionality is as silly and
cruel as - well - those dumb Italian jokes . - HELEN
NOTE TOP'S MOTHER :
If you're ashamed to admi t your prejudice, shouldn't you
also be ashamed of your prejudice'' Give the guy a chance! - .
SUE
Dear Hap:
It began last August when I broke up with my girlfriend
and began seeing her friend . I really fell hard for her.
But my ex kept after me, and she finall y caught me in a
weak moment when my pre sent girl was out of town . Natw·ally
the story got around 1wiU1 a lot of help from my ex ) and now
th e girl I love won't see me. I've apologized, cried , pleaded,
and promised. No response.
.
I'm sorry for my mistake which l now rea lize was a trap.
Should r keep begging or what ' - JOHN

of the Easlern Pride Clu6 was
held rcocently at Eastern lligh
School. Officers elected were
Tamm y Fitc h, president ;
Ma rk Hawk, vice presicttnl',i
Vicky Epple , secre t J~ l·~
Brian Mat thews , ll'easurer;
Diana E pple , and Gary
Nelson, publicity.
The name Pride was
se lected and means "people
ready, interested und devoted
to Enstern ," The officers
were 'il ppointed to a
committee lo represent the
yo uth in the revenue sharing
program. •
Next meeting was set for
Juno 28 .at 7:30 p.m. ut the

Mrs .
~erschel Mt'Ciure. Adults are
invited to attend too. Plall!
will be completed for the
party 011 July 3.
· ·~
'
·

VISrrs COUPLE
TUPPERS PLAINS - Bea
Duuglas ; Tup~rs Plains, was
· the weekend guest of Dr. and
Mrs. Edward A. Sprague,
Athens. They attended the
Southeastern Ohio Golf
Association tournament and
banquet hosted by the Athens
Country Club .

MiJke 'Em
Cute For
Summur

•SUNSUITS
•SHORTS
•TANK TOPS
•HALTER TOPS

Dear John :
Tell your girl you' ll ask her one more time, and then that's
it! If she's so rigid she won 't forgive one mistake, perhaps
you't·e better of! without her . - HELEN AND SUE

assisted by "11110 . Pratt• Mrs •
Wildermuth, Mrs. Davis and
Miss Lehew. Comments on
the recent .Eighth District
. conference held In AtHens
were given by Mrs. Davis,
Miss Smith, Mrs. Goett and
Mrs. Welsh.
The auditing committee
report was given by Mrs.
Reuter. Mrs, Casci. spoke on
the community chorus to perfonn July 4 at Royal Oek and
a contribution was made
toward expenses of that. She
also asked for donations of
cookies, cakes and candles to
be taken to · the VeterBIIll
Hospital at Chillicothe on July
1. They are to be left at the
Pomeroy .Pastry Shop. Mrs.
Davis commented on the flag
raising at the Pomeroy Mini·
Park and thanked the Reuter
l'llllily for the flag donation.
The unit voted to purchase
six flags to be presented to ·
:;
sChools and ICOUt troops and
said that anyone desiring to
give a memorial flag should
contact either Mrs. Vaughan
or Mrs. Reuter.
THURSDAY
Refreshments were served
WOMEN'S Association,
by
Mlaa Smith and Mrs. Ruth
Middleport First United
Powers.
Presbyterian Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at ihe church.
Program,
"A
World
Hungry" . Devotions by Mrs .
Paul Haptonstall with Group
3 to be hostesses .
HEATH
UNITED
Methodist Church Women,
picnic, 6 p.m. on parsonage
lawn or in the event of rain at
the church. Hostesses to
furnish meat and beverage.
Members to lake their own
table service.
FREE Clothing Day,
Thursday, 10 a.m. until noon
at the Salvation Army,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. All
area residents needing
clothing are welcome.
RIVERSIDE Garden Club
Thursday at 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs . Claremont
Harri~; co-hostess, Mrs .
Herman Grossnickle; auction
of homemade articles.
MONTHLY ME ETING ,
Women's Fellowship of the
Churches of Christ, 7:30p.m.
Thursday a'l Middl eport
ChurcH of Christ; senior
citizens choir will present
i)rogram.
TWIN-CITY Shrinetle
Club, family picnic , 6:30p.m.
Thursday at the Racine
Shrine Park at Racine.

,,..

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Styles &amp; Sizes ·
SHOES·&amp; SANDALS l
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OF
PURSES

Calendar

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Open Friday Til8:00 - Saturday Til 5:00

ALL lADIES

pant
suits

MEN'S LEISURE SUITS
SUMMER SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS
REDUCED

~

I REDUCED-

FRIDAY
MEIGS Chapter Order of
DeMolay semi-annual in stallation Friday, 7:30p.m. at
the Middleport Mas onic
Temple .
PAST OFFICERS CLUB
Racine Chapter OES Friday
7:30p.m. at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Dugan.
Potluck refreshments.
LAST DAY to sign up to
participate in Kyger Utlle
League 'l'ournamenl is
Friday.

"

·I

SIZES 8
TO 20

20%ro 30%
MEN'S
SUMMER PANTS

LADIES
SUMMER
SLACKS

REDUCED

20%
'

REDUCED
.

Sale Prices Gopd
Friday &amp; Saturday

BAHR CLOfHIERS
"' ~ r

'"

"'

•

~i~,lfleport, &lt;O.

'·
Open Fri~~:v Evening Tills
Satu~day Till 5'

�'i;;;~;·;;;;;;''''"""'""'F~~st ~un Connors advances to quarter finals
keepS ItS
. L '.l
d goo d
t
y
recor
P ,, I s VIC 0 r
1

I

On Monday in Juuinr
Girls Division softball, Forest
Run kept its record spotless
by beating Raci ne at
Minersville 9-2. Kellie Rought
picked up the win and was
ba cked by the hitting of Jena
Welker who socked two
singles and a double. Other
hitters for the winners were
J. Betzing , Judy Gruese r and
L. Roush, three singles each;
M. Dillard and A. Riggs, t\yo
singles; T. Smith, a triple ;
Rought , !.. Wi secup , T.
Grueser, J . Sisson, A. Warner
and V. Hood , a single each.
Leading Racine were C.
Warden and L. Wolfe with
three singles apiece. Other
hitters were L. Warden , D.
Johnson and K. Maynard, two
si ngles; M. Johnson and T.
Johnson, singles .

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Boone's ground baiL
Dick Allen says he has never
" No molter how much I've
had so much fun playing practiced I just don 'I have a
baseb~ll .
positive attitud e throwing
Normally, the Pbiladelphia from third," said a dejected
Phillies slugger's statement Rose.
would be echoed by tbe
"Maybe I've felt that bad
Cincinnati Reds' Pete Rose. throw coming beca use I've
Not Wednesday night, made a few bad ones during
though , because it ~;as Rose's the past week . Tllat's the first
two-out, ninth inning error time though that I ca n
which enabled AUen to score remember making a bad
the lie-br1111king run as the throw that let the winning run
score ," added Rose .
Pbils beat the Reds 4-2.
Allen's double off Pedro
Call it whatever you want,
but Rose said he had a feeling Borbon touched off the Phils
his throw was going to be wild ninth inning. An infield out
even before he made it after moved Allen to third . He
fielding pinch hitter Bob remained there when Oarry
Ma~dox flied
to Cesa r
Geronimo in centerfield with
the second out of the inning.
" U I had tried to score on
that fly ball the way
Middleport rolled over
COLUMBUS I UP! J
Geronimo
throws,"
sa
id
Letart
at the losers' field, 23Countess Nancy came on
Alleri
smiling,
"then
me
and
6,
April
King paced the
strong in the stretch to win
Johnny
Bench
would
of
had
to
winners
with
four doubles
the featured eighth race by
do
a
little
tangoing
at
home
and
two
singles.
Winning
one~nd-one-quarler lengths
one
of
us
plate
and
neither
Bangie
Hart.
pitcher
was
ove r Tarporl Worthy at •
has
ever
gone
to
any
Aruthur
Other
hitters
were
J
.
Horten
,
Scioto Downs Wednesday
Murray
schools
."
.
two
singles;
M.
Spencer
a
night.
Boone's ground ball came single and triple ; P. Crooks,
Legal Hill was third.
after
an intentional pass was three singles and a double; C.
Counlness Nancy, with
issued
to Ollie Brown by Crooks, two singles and a
Mark Ferguson in the sulky ,
leflhander
Will McEnaney. double ; M. Miller , si ngle,
paced the mile in 2:04 4-5 and
Dave
Cash
then
singled home double , triple; V. Boyles, two
returned $8 .60, $4.00 and
Brown
with
an
insurance
run singles; Hart, Horton ,
$2.80. Tarport Worthy paid
before
Larry
Bowa
Oied
out Custer, Ferguso n, Bacon,
$3.60 and $2.80 and Legal Hill
to
end
the
inning
.
Long , Stewart and Hart, a
returned $3.40.
"You
know,"
said
Allen,
each .
single
The 6-8 nightly double
"I've
had
a
reputation
for
a
Leading
Letart was R.
combination of Townhouse
being
a
pretty
good
drinker
.
.
Green
with
a
double and two
and Bohemian Time paid
But
I
don
't
know
which
is
singles.
Other
hitters were 11.
$65.80.
worse
letting
a
loss
like
the
·
Michaels
and
L. Roberts,
A cro~d of 4,820 wagered
Reds
took
tonight
keep
you
up
three
singles
;
T.
Hill, K.
$250,830.
till four or five in the morning Riffle , Mea ns and R.
or having a snoot full of good Bronum, two singles ; Adams,
Kentucky bourbon.
M. Morris and M. Muggrage,
Allen was remembering the a single
each,
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
.
1UP! 1 - Brass Ball ran the 1975 season.
lNG LEWOOD, Calif. !UP])
"Last year we lost games
six furlongs in I : 12 1-5
Bright Cross established a
Wednesday to win the we already had won, ... he
stakes
record of I :03 in
featured ninth race a t said. "That's wh y this year is
winning
the $28,700 Haggin
so much fun for 'me. We don 't
Thistledown.
Stakes
Wednesday
at
The winner, ridden by Les go out and beat ourselves
Hollywood
Park.
.Stiller , paid $11 .60, $7.00 and night after night ."
Fernando Toro guided
Mike Schmidt's 20th homer
$4.40. Racy Road was second
Bright
Cross to a four-length
and Son of Oscar was third. accounted for one of the
victory.
Bright Cross and
The U-2 tenth race lrifecta Phils' first two runs. A home
Curren!
Concept,
ridden by
of Kimbolton, Black Dance run by George Foster, his
Roberto
Gonzalez,
paid
and ~ty Mom was worth 16th of !he season boosting his
$17.00,
$16.00
and
$9.00,
while
$1,189.50 and the 1-5 daily league-leading RBI total to
double of Dusty Waltz and 61 , also accounted for one of Shipmate Sam, with Frank
Olivares in lhe irons,
'1uis Kabob returned $382.20. the Reds' first two runs .
returned $27:20 to show .

How they ran

International
League Standings
United Press lnterna~onal
W. L. Pet. GB
Syr•cuse
37 27 .57B
Rhode Island 39 31 .557 1
Rochester
34 28 .54B 2
Memphis
32 32 .500 5
Toledo
31 35 .470 7
JO 35

Minn .

Calif.

30 35

.462

9111

28 42 .400 14

Wednesday's Results

Chicago 4 Minnesota 3. lsi
Chicago 9 Minnesota 5, 2nd
Baltimore 3 Boston 2, 10 inns.

Cleveland 4 New York I
Milwaukee 9 DeVol l l
Texas 7 Kansas Ci ty 5

Los Ang .
000001 000- t 2 I
Houston
000 000 000- 0 3 I
Rhoden 16-0l and Yeager;
Rict1Md , Forsch (91 a nd
Hermann . LP- Ri cha rd 17 B) .
Phila .
000100 102- 4 7 0
ooo 10 1000- 2 5 1
Cinci.
Car lton , Reed 171. Garber
191 and McCarver; Alcala ,
Borbon (B ), McEnaney 191.

Oakland B California 2
· Charleston 29 34 .460 7'17 Today 's Probable Pitchers
Tldew•ter
27 37 .422 10
All Times EIT
Eastw ick ( 9) and Bench .
Wednesday 's Results
Chicago (Gossage 5-51 at WP- Reed (6-21. LP- Borbon
Rochester 6 Tidewater 5
Minnesota (Singer 5-3) , 2:15 0 - 1. HR s- Phil ade lphi a .
Syr•cuse 6 Memphis 3
p.m .
Sc hm idt ( 20 ) ; Cincinna t i,
Charleston B Rhode Island 2 Detroit (Fid rych 6-11 at Foster 116).
Toledo 10 Richmond 7
Boston !Wise 5-4), 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland IDobson B-51 at New York 004000001- 5 1 2
Ma[or League Standin~s
New York (Alexander 4 -AL 8 St. Louis
300001000- 4 81
By Un1ted Press International p.m .
Seaver (85 1 and Grote ;
National League
Kansas City ( Fitzmorr is a. Falcone (5-6) and Ferguson.
East
31 at Te &lt;as Hargan 1-21. 9:05 HR s- New York , Un ser (5).
W. L. Pet . GB p.m.
Grote (3) ; St. Loui s, Ferguson
Phila .
45 19 .703
Oakland (Abbott 1-11 al (7).
Pills.
36 27 .571 8'17 Calilornla IMonge 2-2). 10 :30
New York
34 37 .479 14'17 p.m .
American League
St. Louis
30 37 .448 16 117
Only games scheduled
1st game
. Chicago
29 37 .439 17
Friday 's Games
Ch ic.
200 200000- 4 50
Montre•l
23 38 .377 20 1/7 Chicago •t Te&lt;os. 2, tw l-nighl Minn .
100 000 020 - 3 5 0
West
Johnson , Forster (8) and
Detroit at Boston , night
W. l. Pet. GB Cleveland at Balt imore, night Downing ; De.cker , Burgm eier
Cincin .
42 26 .618
Milwaukee at New York , night 121. Atburv 161 and Wvneqar .
Los Angeles 38 31 .551 4'17 California at Kan City, night WP- Johnson (4 -71. LPS•n Diego
36 31 .537 5'!7 Minnesota at Oak land, night Decker 12-71. HRs- Chicago,
Houston
31 37 .456 11
Brohame r {4) ; M i nn esota ,
Atlanta
30 37 .448 ll'/2
Carew {J).
Major League Results
San Fran .
27 44 .3BO 16'17
United Press International 2nd game
Wednesday 's Results
Nationa I league
Chicago 6 Pittsburgh 5, 1st
Chic
020 020 032- 9 11 0
tst game
Pill at Chi , 2nd, ppd ., dark
Minn
002010 002- 5 11 2
Pittsburgh 000 lOt 120- 5 7 5
At lanta 5 Montreal 2. tst
Knapp. Vuckovich (5 1. Brett
Chicago
010 040001 --&lt;5 8 0 (7) and Essia n: Redl ern,
At lanta 3 Montreal o, 2nd
Rooker, Tekulve (7), Moose Can.pbell 171 and Wynega r.
San Fran 7 San Diego 6, 1st
S•n Fran B San Diego 7, 2nd 191 and Sangulllen ; R. WP- Vuckovl ch 15-2). LPReuschel, Knowles 171 , Suiter Redfern
Phi ladelphia 4 Cincinnati 2
I 2-41.
HR sIB) , Zamora (9) and Swisher . Minnesota , Randall Ill ;
New York 5 St. Louis 4
WP - Zamora (4-2) . LP- Chi cago. Or Ia l9i .
Los Angeles 1 Houston o
Moose
(3 -3) ·.
HRs Today's Probable Pitchers
Pitlsburgh , Stargell (9). Zi5k Kan City 1001 30 000- 5 10 0
All Times EIT
Pittsburgh !Candelaria 6-4) 181 .
Texas
320 002 00&lt;- 7 7 2
at Chic•go 1Burris 3-9). 2:30
Leonard (7.J) and Martinez,
p.m.
lnd game
Wathan
(7) ;
Umbarger,
San Diego (Foster 2-J) at Pills at Chi. , ppd ., darkness . Foucault 151 and Sundberg .
San Francisco 1Hal icki 5-10),
WP- Fou cau ll (6-3) . HR lsi game
4:05p.m.
Texas, Harrah IS ).
000 100 1oo--2 5 2
Montreal (Stanhouse 5-2) at Mont.
010 10300x- 5 11 1 10 innings
Atlanta I Ruthven B-6). 7:35 Atlanta
Dunning , Granger (61 , Lang Boston
p.m.
010000000 1- 2 7 1
Ph iladelphia I Kaal 7-21 at 171 and Foote; Messersmith Ball
1000000002- 3 10 o
Cinc innati (Nolan 7-3), B:05 17-51 ond Correll. LPJones, Willoughby 181 •nd
p.m.
Dunning 10-21 HR- Montreal , Fisk 4 Palmer (9 -7) and
Los Angeles !John HI at Mangual 13) .
Duncan . LP- WIIIoughby I 1Houston !Dierker 6-6); B:35
4) . HRs- Boston, Rice (2)'
lnd game
.
p.m.
112 1. B•ltimore. &lt;;;r ich 161 .
Mont .
ooo 000 ooo-o 4 2
Only ~ames scheduled
All .
10000002x- 3 6 1 Cle
Freday ' s Games
200 200 OO&lt;l-4 7 1
Fryman. Murray IBI and N. Y.
New York at Ch lcago
100000000- 1 6 0
St. Louis at Philadelphia, Foote ; Nelkro (6-4) and
Hood, La Roche I 9) and
night
Will iams. LP- Fryman (6-4). Fosse : Holtzman (5-51 and
Pittsburgh a at Montreal,
Munson . WP- Hood 12-41 .
1st game·
night
San Fran at Los Angeles, San Diego 010 010 002--&lt;1 16 1 Detroit
000 000 500-·5 13 I
San Fran . 040001 02x- 7 7 1 Milw
night
01031310-x- 9 13 0
Strom , Metzger (8) and
Atlanta at San Diego, night
MacCorma ck, Cra wf ord
Cincinnati at Houston, night Dav is ; Dressler, Heaverlo, (4 ), Lemanczyk (6) and
Moffitt I7J and Hill. WP- Freehan ; Colborn , Sadecki
Heaverlo 13-01. LP- Sirom (6- 17 I. Castro I 9) and Parler .
American league
71 . HRs - San Francis co. WP- Colborn 14-91. LP East
W. L. Pet. GB Thomasson 121 , Evans 111 .
Ma cCormack 10-31 HR sNew York
38 24 .613
LeF lore
12 1;
Delroil ,
lnd game
Cleveland
32 ,30 .516 6
Milwaukee. Scott (7) .
San Diego 000 200 032- 7 Is 0
Baltimore
J2 32 .500 7
Boston
30 32 .484 8
San Fran. 30500000x- S 10 I Oak
220200 200 - 815 0
Detroit
Tomlin , Folkers
(3) , Calif
29 34 .460 9'17
000100010 - 2 50
f.1ilwau .
Reynolds 141. Splllner 16),
25 35 .417 12
Norris, Bahnsen (8) and
West
Metzger lSI ond Kendall ; Haney: Hassler, Scoll (4) ,
Montelusco
(8 ) , Harlzelll71 and Elc hebarren .
W. L. Pet. GB Barr,
Kan . City
Heaverlo (9) and Sadek. WP- WP- Norrls ll -21 . LP 39 25 .609
Texas
Barr (6-5) . LP- Tom/Iii 10-11 . Hassler 10-5) . HR- Oakland,
35 27 .565 3
O.Skland
33 34 .493 7'17 HRs- San Franc isco, Murcer Bando (I IJ ; California, Briggs
Chicago
31 32 .492 7117 (6) . Evans (4) .
Ill.
Richmond

lly ROBERT MUSEL]
r.ngland
ili Pl l · ThC ·Sl't&lt;ledplayers
&lt;:ontinUl&lt;l to cha rge through
the draw in the sea ring heal
al Wimbledu11 Wednesday .
.Jimmy Connors led the
advanc'C into U1e quarterfinals as not a single seeded
player has been upset in the
lournamen t, an incredible
rarily. Hehadaneasy time in
bea ting Egypt 's Ismae l El
Shofei, 6-4, !Hl, 6-3, on the
center court.
Co nnors, trimmed down
w_!Mf!l J:rX&gt;N .

.462 ? 112

•

•

from 11!0 J&gt;uuntls last year to
less than 160, said he th. ought
his chances of winning the
ti tle, he lust to Arthur Ashe
last year, were good, if he got
a few breaks.
" ll11wever," he added, ."(
came to win."
The lOth-seeded John Newcum be advanced to the last 32
and survived 42 servit'e aces
by his opponent, John
Feaver, who is ranked on ly
seventh in his native Britain.
But on gross made oS
slippery as an ice rink by

d .western
r
73
d
play un erway
'

By ED SAINSBURY
we ill in a pro-am at Iowa Ci ty
UP! Spurts Writer
Monday and in practice at
OAK BROOK , Ill rUPI J Buller:
There have been siK firstBut he will have to beat off
time winners on the PGA tour the challenge of 10 entrants
this yea r and only two who among them have won 12
players have won back-to- tournaments thi s. year,
ba ck, so the odds favored a in c ludin g . def e ndin g
new face, and perhaps a little champion Hale Irwin, twice a
lower score , in the 73rd victor this year. Others in the
Wes tern Open beginning fi eld, who have won
today at Butler National Golf tournaments, included firstClub.
time winners Bob Gilder,
The only back-to-back win- Gary Koch, Mark Hayes,
ners so far have been Ben Tum Kite, and Joe .hunan.
Crenshaw with two straight
Tom Wa tson, the only other
and Hubert Green, with three winner of the event at Butler,
stra ight . But Green didn 't also was in the field.
enter th~ $200,000 Western,
The last player to win the
the only one of the top nine Western in successive years
finishers in the U.S. ~n who was Jack Nicklaus, . In 1!167
didn 't.
and 1968, who is not in the
Jerry Pate, the U.S. Open field this year . Lee Trevino
winner, could become the and Arnold Pa lmer also
third pla yer with a back-to- passed up the tournament,
hack win. It might happen, Trevino troubled by an
since he continued to play aching back.

Ali expecting

tlays without rain, Feaver 's
Evert plays old nemisis has given her several scares .
on ly weapon, his service, Australia's Lesley Hunt, who m past major tournaments.
IJ.e camca lethalwea pon. For
JL. hours, ·~ a s~ore of
spectators famted tn and
around the court under the
hot sun, and more than 500
people had to have first aid
treatment among tile crowd
of nearly 37,000, Newcombe
THURSDAY, JUNE 24 THRU
tried everything he knew to
slow down the torrent.
"! couldn't believe how
SATURDAY, JUNE 26
many times he hit the center
line," he said. "When a man
hits two aces in a tie break
and returns everythmg you
think : what next' He hit only
two shots in the whole match
he shouldn 't have and one of
them cost him his service in
the last set."
In the women's singles,
lop-seeded Chris Evert took
only 23 minutes to dispose of
Britain 's Annette Coe in love
sets. Second-seeded Evonne
Goolagong also had an easy
time in the first set, but had to .
overcome a 4-1 lead by
Sharon Walsh in the second to
pull out a 6~. 7'5 victory.
John Andrews seemed to be
on )lis way to upsetting 14thseeded Brian Gottfried,
leading two sets to one and 42, but lost a five-setter on his
own errors.
Among other seeds,
Guillermo Vilas , Roscoe
Tanner and Tom Okker each
won in straight sets. Stan
Smith , seeded 16th, beat
Gerald Baltrick of Britain in
four.
In Thursday's big matches
top seed and defending champion Arthur Ashe meets Mark
Edmondson, the Australian
open champion, in the first
big hurdle on the American's
road to a seco nd title .
Another match brings
together two of the most
explosive temperaments in
the game- second-seeded llie
Nastase of Romania and Kim
Warwick of Australia.

TOKYO 1UP!) - World
he• v ywe igh t boxing
cha mpi on Muhammad Ali
rested his voice Thursday
and
anti cipated
a
rnullimillion dollar payday
Saturday for whipping a lanlern-j a wed
Japan ese
wrestler.
Ali skipped rope and
worked out ori a heavy bag in
a tiny gym near his luxurv
hotel.
·
His opponent in what is
expected to be a bizarre
boxing-wrestling spectacle,
Antonio lnoki, continued to
work out in secret.
Promoters ,
who
unblushingly bill the bout
" th e super fight of the
century~" claim the winner's
paychec k could total $9
million .
" I promise you this sha ll be
no contest," Ali shouted in a
television appearance with
lnoki Wednesday night.
Cynics were inclined to
agree, but that is not what the
champion meant. Both he and
ln oki insist the fight will be
for rea l.
At an elaborately staged
and natio nall y televised
contract signing ceremony,
the fighters signed a winnertake~ll clause. Or, at least,
that is what the master of
ceremonies said they signed .
Final
rule
changes
evidently were designed to
protect the throat and adam's

apple of one of the most
verbal champions of all time.
Handlers agreed to rule out
karate-type chops to those
parts of the anatomy .
In
hi s
telev is ion
appearance Ali said Inoki
"should never fight a serious
boxer .''

Many boxing fa 11s here do
not
believe
that
a
heavyweight champion
should fight a professional

wrestler,

serious

or

otherwise. But as the
spectacle drew closer it was
evident that many Japanese
fans view the spectacle as an
entirely legitimate "World
Martial Art~ Championship,"
as it has been billed by the
promoters.
Among the true believers
are fans who shelled out
50,000 yen 1$161i.66) just to
attend the contract signing
and will pay a top ringside
ticket price of the equivalent
of $1,000.
As a thespian , the
champion puts lnoki , a rather
stolid fellow, in the shade.
Th e hulking Japanese remains imperturable as Ali
shouts " I'm going 'to destroy
you. l am the greatest."
Occasionally, Inoki permits
-llimself a slight grin in lbe
direction of the television
cameras, as though , perhaps,
he might himself be thinking
of payday:

I
j

NEW&amp;
EXCITING
STUDIO

on Racine

CREATIONS!

vi~it

In Little League actionTuesday, the Racine A' s
came from behind and
thumped
the
visiting
Pomeroy Tigers 16-9. The
nine runs all came in the
second inning . Winning
pitcher was Melanie Weese
who struck out five and
walked two and helped her
own cause by stroking two
singles and drawing two
walks . Jay Rees hit a home
run for the winners, and W.
Lyons socked two triples
while T. Roseberry got a
double.
J. Smith hit two doubles in
the losing cause, and A. Core
and B. Will each got one twobagger. No other slats were
available for pomeroy.
Tigers
090 ®-- 9 13
A's
600 55x- 16 18

Expressive
8X10 Color Portrait
All

agto~ "'"'' ••ml' / l

mtll l

ll~'' ~ubw• r j loli &gt;IIIJ~ S I 2:i t'ttr h i'JJd iti.,n;,l oulljrr t

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',•

)

PT. PLEASANT. RIPLEY. ATHENS,
BELPRE
PHOTO HOURS:
DAILY 10-1, 2·5, 6-8; SAT. 10-1, 2-4:30

•

'·

\

'·

INSTALLED - New officers of the American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39, installed Tuesday night
were, left to right, Miss Ernia Smith, historian ; Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart, chaplain ; Mrs. C,alherine Welsh,

Installation of officers by

Mlaa Erma Snllth,

Americanism; Mrs. Peggy

[188t

president, and a report from Harria, children and youth;
Paula Eichinger, delegate to Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, civil
Buckeye Girls' State, defense; Mrs. Veda Davis,
highllghted the Tllesday night jWllor activities; Mrs. Iva
meeting of the American Powell, national security;

Btef Post 39.
The officers for 197&amp;-T/ are
Mrs. Grace Pratt, president;
Mrs. Frankie HWUlel, first
vice president; Mts. Marjorie

Goett, second vice president;
Mrs. Gladys Cumings,
secretary; Mrs. Cathern
Welsh, treasurer; · Miss
Smith, historian; Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart,
chaplain, and Mrs. Fay
Wildermuth, sergeant at
arms. Soloist for the
installation was Mrs. Linda
Mayer. Mrs. Welsh was
pianist and Miss Cheryl
Lehew , sergeant at arms.
Coounittee cha~ appointed and recognlzed were
Mrs. Joan Vaughan,

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Bv Polly Cramer

Mend socks with
embroidery floss .

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How can
colton socks be saved whe'n
they need mending 1 Darning
cot ton seems to be a thing of
the past so how can a hole be
mended. Is it just the stores
in Kansas City and New York
that do not have it? - MRS.
A.T.A.
DEAR MRS. A.T.A . . Many readers have written
from time to lime to say they
could not find darning cotton
in the cities where they live. I
suggest that you try using
embroidery floss. -POLLY.

YD.

Middleport
Ohio

For Longer Lasting
Paint Jobs ·Use Our

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is to be standing in line
at the bank or supermarket
and then all of a sudden
another line opens up and the
last one in my line is the first
in the newly opened one. It
seems the clerk could be fair
and break the line so no one
loses his turn. I have walked

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were Mrs. Knapp, Mrs.
Powell, and Mrs. Ruby Marshall. Other committees
named were Miss Smltlj, Mrs.
Jewell and Mrs. Davis,
budget, and Mrs. Davis, Mrs.
Reuter and Miss Smith, bylaws.
Miss Eichinger gave a
resume of her activiUeli at
Buckeye Girls' Stille where
she was elected president of
the school board, was a member of the 100 girl chorus and
played with the band. She
displayed various Items given
at Girls' State along with certificates and ribbons earned;
She spoke of the bus tour to
points of interest including
the State Capital, and of the
greetings brought by Gi&gt;v.
James A. Rhodes at one of the

Mrs . Gemma Casci,
rehabilitation and veterBIIll
affairs; Mrs. Isabelle Couch,
Bl:holarship and education;
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, foreign
relations; Mrs. Marjorie
Reuter, community service,
and Miss Lehew, field service.
Other collUilittee chalnnen
are Mrs. Hwmel, poppy and
membership, Mrs. Ca:ITie
Neutzllng; music; Mrs. Norma Jewell, legion activities;
Mrs. Ellen Couch, cards and
flowers, and Mrs. Mary Martin, legislation. Appointed to
the executive conunittee sessionil.

Legion Atmliary, Drew Web-

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treasurer; Mrs. Gladys Cumings, sec retary ; Mrs .
Marjorie Goett, second vice president, and Mrs. Grace
Pratt , president . Officers not present were Mrs. Frankie
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sergeant at arms .

Auxiliary holds officer installation

\!l!iJIJ!J@OJ)!iJ[fl@

1

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enerahon

R

Club organizes
ap , ' [~ Pride
All organizational m~J}gll. !tome of Mr . and
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45"

eRED
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Is It l.uve Or Sympathy!
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M.1 prob lem is litera lly " 11~1tler uf life and deMth : my
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We've been dalin ~ lwo years. I'm not sun• I love Derick
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:=::

HECK'S

Tigers thump ed

$9 million day.

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., T11ursday, June 24, 1976

POMIROY

''

out of stores leaving a
shopping cart filled with
meat and ice Cream, or
withdrawn my money from
banks that allow this to
happen
to customers .
Managers, take heed. GEORGE.
DEAR POLLY - Save the
cap and brush frol)l an empty
fingernail polish bottle. They
will come in handy for tiny
touchup paint jobs and can
then be thrown away. ROBIN. •
DEAR POLLY - Your
camper can be made noiseless and more livable if you
pad , pad, pad . I buy
remnants of washable carpet
or used rugs to pad all the
shelves and cupboards. Tack
in place U you plan to
vaccuum them, Use double
sticky tape if they are to be
washed. Squares of blanket
·pieces cut with the pinking
shears or pieces of thin foam
rubber are wonderful to use
BETWEEN pans and dishes.
We put some thin wood
dividers in one cupboard and
padded them for bottles. Line
that silverware container and
cover it with a piece of foam
or blanket to muffle rattles
ar.d keep road dirt out. Staple
thin foam or carpet Inside
each cupboard door. Padding
saves wear and tear on your
road weary nerves and also
seals cracks to keep out dirt.
I keep a clipboard with
tablet and pencil attached in
the same place ALWAYS .
When anyone wants or needs
anything from the store
TilEY put it on the list, and
especially if they use the last
of any Item or empty a
container. As I clip valuable
coupons I put that item on the
list followed by a C and add
the coupon under the list so it
goes to the store and I
remember to use it. This has
simplified my shopping and
saved dollars and trips. BELVA.
DEAR POLLY - To
quickly make an inexpensive
hanging basket, buy a large
plastic bowl and mark pla ces
for three holes equidistant
around it. Heat an ice pick
and punch the holes . Use
opened wire coat hangers
lhruugh the holes and fasten
together at the top .
Buy ~n e.lra ironing board
cover with elastic, and when
·puuing your board away put
this over the one you have
been using so it sta ys clean.
- HEI.F,N .

Miss Eichinger was high in
her praise of Mrs. Lester
MeiTit, director of Girls'
State. She e11pressed aJ}preciation to the Wllt for sponsoring her and also to Angle
Sissi&gt;n for the corsage sent to
her at the time of her
inauguration. She was
presented a gift by Mrs.
Goett.
The bulletin from the
Eighth District president was
read along with a letter from
Mrs. Joseph Fitzwater,
Department of Ohio
legislative chainnan, relative
to the Robert P. Griffin of
Michigan amendment to
exempt the American Legion
Auxiliary poppy program
from the minimum wage law.
She stated that the program is
one of therapy for veterans
and also assists veterBIIll'
families in local commWllties. Mrs. Pratt . urged
members to write their
legislators in Washington
asking support for the amend·
ment to exempt the poppy
program.
Mrs. Pratt e11pressed aJ}preciatlon to Mrs. Gerald
Wildennuth and her cornmlttee for the dinner served
to legionnaires on Memorial
Day,andalsotoEricHartfor
use of a truck. A report was
given on Poppy Day headed
by Mrs. Reuter, and Mrs.
Pratt thanked Mrs. Reuter
and Mrs. Davis for the poppy
display. Mrs. Reuter reported
on the canteen served at the
bloodmobile . She was

I told him that when 1he suggested marriage.
But this was before I learned he's got a slow-ncting disease
that will probably kill him in 15 years flr less 1if medicnl
scienc·e doesn't come up with u breakthrough before then).
A while back, his then fian ce left him and 1 don't want him
to be hurt again. He loves me VERY much. Wha t to do'' LIFE OR DEATH''
Dear I. or D
,
Before vou hea rd of De rick's illness, you made your
decision for 'the fr ee life. Don 't change it out of sympa thy. -HELEN
I. or D:
Derick needs a stronger love than you evidently feel fur
him. Don't ruin whaty ou hn ve with a marriage that probably
wouldn 't work . - SUE
Dear Helen and Sue :
I've been going with his boy for eight months. I'm 15 and
he's 16. My parents don' t approve because his father is Puerto
Rican and his mother is ll&lt;l lian like my Mom.
When his mother asks mine if I ca n go some place with.
them , Mom always makes some e•cuse like I'm too mouthy or
I haven't finished my work. Then his Mom tells me to shape up .
If I tell her the real reason, she wouldn't believe me becn use
my Morn puts up a big front and makes her think she's all for
me going with her son.
How can I make Mom and Dad see that it isn't a di sgrace ,
dating a half Puerto Rican ? - P.D.L.
Dear P .:
The best way ? Have your boyfriend visit your house often
to prove that judging people by their na tionality is as silly and
cruel as - well - those dumb Italian jokes . - HELEN
NOTE TOP'S MOTHER :
If you're ashamed to admi t your prejudice, shouldn't you
also be ashamed of your prejudice'' Give the guy a chance! - .
SUE
Dear Hap:
It began last August when I broke up with my girlfriend
and began seeing her friend . I really fell hard for her.
But my ex kept after me, and she finall y caught me in a
weak moment when my pre sent girl was out of town . Natw·ally
the story got around 1wiU1 a lot of help from my ex ) and now
th e girl I love won't see me. I've apologized, cried , pleaded,
and promised. No response.
.
I'm sorry for my mistake which l now rea lize was a trap.
Should r keep begging or what ' - JOHN

of the Easlern Pride Clu6 was
held rcocently at Eastern lligh
School. Officers elected were
Tamm y Fitc h, president ;
Ma rk Hawk, vice presicttnl',i
Vicky Epple , secre t J~ l·~
Brian Mat thews , ll'easurer;
Diana E pple , and Gary
Nelson, publicity.
The name Pride was
se lected and means "people
ready, interested und devoted
to Enstern ," The officers
were 'il ppointed to a
committee lo represent the
yo uth in the revenue sharing
program. •
Next meeting was set for
Juno 28 .at 7:30 p.m. ut the

Mrs .
~erschel Mt'Ciure. Adults are
invited to attend too. Plall!
will be completed for the
party 011 July 3.
· ·~
'
·

VISrrs COUPLE
TUPPERS PLAINS - Bea
Duuglas ; Tup~rs Plains, was
· the weekend guest of Dr. and
Mrs. Edward A. Sprague,
Athens. They attended the
Southeastern Ohio Golf
Association tournament and
banquet hosted by the Athens
Country Club .

MiJke 'Em
Cute For
Summur

•SUNSUITS
•SHORTS
•TANK TOPS
•HALTER TOPS

Dear John :
Tell your girl you' ll ask her one more time, and then that's
it! If she's so rigid she won 't forgive one mistake, perhaps
you't·e better of! without her . - HELEN AND SUE

assisted by "11110 . Pratt• Mrs •
Wildermuth, Mrs. Davis and
Miss Lehew. Comments on
the recent .Eighth District
. conference held In AtHens
were given by Mrs. Davis,
Miss Smith, Mrs. Goett and
Mrs. Welsh.
The auditing committee
report was given by Mrs.
Reuter. Mrs, Casci. spoke on
the community chorus to perfonn July 4 at Royal Oek and
a contribution was made
toward expenses of that. She
also asked for donations of
cookies, cakes and candles to
be taken to · the VeterBIIll
Hospital at Chillicothe on July
1. They are to be left at the
Pomeroy .Pastry Shop. Mrs.
Davis commented on the flag
raising at the Pomeroy Mini·
Park and thanked the Reuter
l'llllily for the flag donation.
The unit voted to purchase
six flags to be presented to ·
:;
sChools and ICOUt troops and
said that anyone desiring to
give a memorial flag should
contact either Mrs. Vaughan
or Mrs. Reuter.
THURSDAY
Refreshments were served
WOMEN'S Association,
by
Mlaa Smith and Mrs. Ruth
Middleport First United
Powers.
Presbyterian Church, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at ihe church.
Program,
"A
World
Hungry" . Devotions by Mrs .
Paul Haptonstall with Group
3 to be hostesses .
HEATH
UNITED
Methodist Church Women,
picnic, 6 p.m. on parsonage
lawn or in the event of rain at
the church. Hostesses to
furnish meat and beverage.
Members to lake their own
table service.
FREE Clothing Day,
Thursday, 10 a.m. until noon
at the Salvation Army,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. All
area residents needing
clothing are welcome.
RIVERSIDE Garden Club
Thursday at 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs . Claremont
Harri~; co-hostess, Mrs .
Herman Grossnickle; auction
of homemade articles.
MONTHLY ME ETING ,
Women's Fellowship of the
Churches of Christ, 7:30p.m.
Thursday a'l Middl eport
ChurcH of Christ; senior
citizens choir will present
i)rogram.
TWIN-CITY Shrinetle
Club, family picnic , 6:30p.m.
Thursday at the Racine
Shrine Park at Racine.

,,..

·.

...............,.
'U

·'~

I GROU.P

f "o: ,, 1 GROUP

,-. ~, GROUp

MEN'S SHOEs:;; 1 ,~~. ', :WOMEN'S ' I '
.
I,
Good Selection· '
Styles &amp; Sizes ·
SHOES·&amp; SANDALS l
j

·:·:
" ·'

OF
PURSES

Calendar

heritage house
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Open Friday Til8:00 - Saturday Til 5:00

ALL lADIES

pant
suits

MEN'S LEISURE SUITS
SUMMER SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS
REDUCED

~

I REDUCED-

FRIDAY
MEIGS Chapter Order of
DeMolay semi-annual in stallation Friday, 7:30p.m. at
the Middleport Mas onic
Temple .
PAST OFFICERS CLUB
Racine Chapter OES Friday
7:30p.m. at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Dugan.
Potluck refreshments.
LAST DAY to sign up to
participate in Kyger Utlle
League 'l'ournamenl is
Friday.

"

·I

SIZES 8
TO 20

20%ro 30%
MEN'S
SUMMER PANTS

LADIES
SUMMER
SLACKS

REDUCED

20%
'

REDUCED
.

Sale Prices Gopd
Friday &amp; Saturday

BAHR CLOfHIERS
"' ~ r

'"

"'

•

~i~,lfleport, &lt;O.

'·
Open Fri~~:v Evening Tills
Satu~day Till 5'

�fi - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, .June 24, 1976

it's a snapobrim, creased
crown type which !lite said
began with the actress Sarah
Bernhardt's role In an 1182
Paris hit play titled
''Fedora".

Theme announced
for flower show
RUTLAND - "Remember
When" will be the theme of
the nower show to be staged
July 3 and 4 in the Rutland
Gymnasium on Main Street.
The llhow is being' held
·through the cooperation of the
Rutland Garden Club, the
Ru~d Friendlf Gardeners
and the Rutland Bicentennial
committee in conjllllction
with the Rutland Firemen's
Annual Ox Roast.
It will feature IO classes, an
in artistic arrangements and
design and anyone may
exhibit. Memberstllpin a gar·
den Club is not required. The
rulesstatethatarrangements
are to be in place by noon on
July 3 and left there untll4 p.
m. on July 4. No artificial
plant material is pennitted
. although painted, dyed ,'
treated, or dried plant
. NEWOFFICERS insta~led by the Mothers Club of the Meigs Chapter Order uf DeMoiay
are, from the left, Ina B. Sibley, v1ce president; Mary J . Nea l president · Hilda Quickel
materials is pennitted in all
installing officer; Bess King, installing marshall.
'
'
'
classes, as are bases, mats,
backgroundsandaccessilries.
Plant materials are to be
listed on a 3 by 5 card which
will be furnished by the show
committee.
In lieu of a judge, the
arrangements
will be
The Mothers Club of the Gallipolis; treasUI'CI', Hilda
The DeMolay Mothers Club
Meig s Chapter Order of Quickel, Che sh ire. Absent is designed to assist the
DeMolay, Middleport held its wa s Rosemary Keller , chapter in its socia l
semi-annual in stallation Pomeroy, secretary, and act i vitie s, provide
Monday eve ning in a Barbara Scites, chaplain . refreshments
for
the
candleli ght ceremony.
The installation was closed meetings a nd help promote
Th e table wa s decorated by reading a poem "No the principles of DeMolay,
The Ohio Valley Summer
with a flora l center C:reater Friend ."
Theater (OVST) will open its
arrangement, hot pink
llemad&lt;.s given by the new
1976 season on July 2 with an
ca ndles and U1e open Holy president, Mr· s. Nea l
original play, "Heroes". A
Bible.
thank ed her inSIII I,Iin g
dinner-theater production, a
'fh e Installing Officer officers and encoul'aged each
murder mystery and a
Hilda Quickel, second vic~ one present to try to increase
musical comedy completes
president of the Ohio Sta te the interest of ail moms who
the 1976 four show season.
Federation of Mothers Clubs· have DcMoiay Roys .
OVST
comm is sio ned
assi~ted by Bess King, past
The junior past president,
Dennis Brown to write
pres1dent of Meigs Mothers Joyce Raban, was presented
Club, installed the following with a silver charm and
'1'/Je Ohio Coopera tive "Heroes" about the history of
office rs: president, Mary thanked for her· term of F.xlension Service and the this area for the Bicentennial
Jane Neal, Cheshire; vice service.
Oh io Extension Homemakers Ce lebration. The play is
president, Ina B. Sibley,
Council has planned a special about the men who were
bicentennial program for all involved in the Battle or Point
homemakers in the sla te, Pleasant, Lord Dunmore 's
John C. Rice, Meigs County War and the Fort Gower
Extension Agent, announc1.&gt;d Resolves. This production is
today.
done with the support of the
Theme is "Women '76" and Ohio
American
the program will be held July Revolutionary Bicentennial
20 in Mershon Auditorium at Advi sory Commissio n
Ohio State University . Cost, (OARBAC) and the Athens
which includes a iunc h~on, County Bice ntennial ComWill be $4.50. ReservatiOns mission . Performances will
are due July 9.
be at 8:30p.m. in the Forum
Registration and coff ee Theater on July 2-4, 9-11 , 16·
hour will be held preceding 18, 23-25, 3().31.
the 10 a. m. open in g
On July 9, a dinner-theater
ceremon ies. Dr. Betty Siegel,
University of Florida, will
speak on the topic ''Three
Faces of Eve", and that will
be followed by a musical
program by the Sweet
lowest
Adeiines. There will also be in

Mothers

~lub

installs officers

evaluated by the viewing
public. Visitors will be
presented a ballot on which to
indicate their ribbon choice.
Following a specific judging
period to be desiglwted by the
committee, the ballots will be
tallied and the ribbons placed
in each of the classes.
The 10 classes of the show
are:
"Covered Bridges", ll8ing
weathered wood and roadside
materials; "Bicycles Built
for Two", using two containers ;
" Rumbleseat
Romance,''
crescent
featuring warm colors;
" M~'s Apple Pie," includmg fruits and or
vegetables; " Bustles that
Rustled," hogarth design ;
" The
Little
Red
Schoolhouse," featuring
.reds; "The Country Store",
mass 8JTiliiRement; "The
Church in the WUdwood,"
suitable for church· "Hoola
Hoops", modern ' design
showing motion ; "The Bicen·
tennial
Celebration,"
exhibition table picture
featuring red, white and blue.

Program
scheduled

a

"La dies in

Retirement, ~~

a

psyc hol og ic al murder
mystery , will open on August
5 as the third llhow of the
season with a two week run .
This play, by Edward Percy
and Reginald Denham, is
about a retired actress living
in the country with three
other ladies and the
mvsterious disappearance of
the actress . The production
will play August 5-7; and 12-15

New rules are expected to stop sex scandals
..
:=.
.
...

THE

The Millinery Institute of
By GAY PAULEY
America,
the trade and
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - The promotion organization for
millinery industry offers up a the hatmakers, featured all
brimful of styles for fall and these in its semi-annual
''press
week"
show
winter 1976.
The biggest news is that ail Wednesday afternoon for the
those lavish fur hats of nation's visiting reporters.
The show, staged like a
previous seasons have gone
mini-musical,
featured Rita
into limbo; somehow they
.
Moreno
of
Broadway
~nd
don't seem rig ht with all the
Hollywood
as
mistress
of
wrapped-~p and bulky look of
cerel!lonies.
Hats
were
shown
many of the new clothes. The .
veiled hat is old hat, and the in five groups- knits,
hooded and wrapped look fedoras, brims with trims,
alongside the sharply caps stolen !~om the men,
tailored, simple silhouettes ahd the evening glitter.
About the biggest hat in the
are the major trends.
Watch for copies of the collection came from Mr .
BIG DIAMOND
hunter's visored cap, the John. It was a pale brown,
look
crushable
felt
with
brim
five
beame, the tam, beret and
to
six
inches
wide,
with
at small diamond prictrs
stocking cap, the closely
fitted knot, the bulky knit, the orange jersey band and worn
So popular as a ring, now also
cla ssic fedora sometimes atop an orange jersey scarf
available as a beautifully
swathing
the
throat.
grown to outsize proportions,
matched
earnng, pendan t
And, about the smallest
and for evening, the jeweled
and ring ensemble- and
caps, head-hugging, and to was the Juliet evening cap,
even a lie-lac for him .
Five-diamond total weight
show off the woman lucky hugging the head and hiding
Glow Tops available in
enough to have classic all the hair, done by Bob
V4, Y2, and one carat.
features as beautifully as if Green for Irene. It was all
Quality and style co mbine
pear Is and rhinestones strung
she were Juliet.
to give you the rig ht kind
on a siretch base of felt.
of jewelry atlhe nght kind
The fedoras must take their
or price
place as the number one hat
for the new season, simply
JEWELRY
because. they look exactly
rtght With all man-tailored
STORE
fabrics making their way into
Court Street
wardrobes. Miss Moreno had
in the Patio Theater.
POMEROY
A musical comedy spoof of traced the fedora's history a Presidential campaign and
election, "Of Thee I Sing,"
will be the final show of the
· season.
The
famous
American musical team of
George and Ira Gershwin
contributed some delightful
melodies and words to this :
:
show that was the first
musical to win the Pulitzer
Prize. "Of Thee I Sing" will
be performed in the Forum
Theater at 8:30p.m. on Aug.
19-21 and 26-29.
For ticket informatiOn call
COMING NEXT WffKl
64t-594-li010 from 2 p.m. to 6
p.m. Monday
through
Wednesday and 2 p.m. to 9
p.m. Thursday through
Swtday . The ticket office
opens Jun e 23.
POMEROY
.
. OHIO

....

""
w

GLOW

•••

..

TOP

••
•'

••'
•

.....••
,

...,lo

.

"•

The

••

.
•
•

'

, more than 134 teenagers
: from 22 counties to attend the
~ Fann Bureau Swruner Youth
: Conference JWle 13 through
, June 18, at Otterbein College
~ Westerville.
'
Tammy is Ute daughter of
Mr. and Mrs , Dallas
.DeBord, and Cheryl, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Lefebre; all of Route 4,
Pomeroy. BoUt girls will be
juniors at Meigs High School
this autwnn.
The summer conference
p~ovided the young people
With a working knowledge of
the democratic procedure
ll~cd in developing policy of
the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation.
The participants fonned a

FO~OUR

e

:
:•
e

•

:• Chapman's Shoes :

!

.....•....•••..•.•• :
e

•

LOOK OUT!
FOR YOUR FEET

e

I

STYLE
#1901

-

TWINS BORN - Harley "Rink " Unthicum of
Reedsville announces the bi rth of his twin grea tgra ndsons, Enc Joseph and Jeremy Michael, March 26 to
Joseph and Sherrie Rosen of Cincinnati. The babies are
the first great-grandchildren of Unthicum . They made
their first visit here over the Memorial Day weekend .

In the Area

It's

For Every Job.

BEND'.•

conforms to O.S.H.A. standards

TIRE CENTER
MaS&lt;&gt;n.
IJa .

DAN.'S

~.

·'Dealing with Anger" by
John J . Lambert.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. McElhinney and
Mrs. Haggerty. Mrs . Ervin
clos ed the meeting by
reading "Birth of the United
States.

MASON F.lj.IRNITURE

Special incentives from Ford to its
deal~rs make possible lower selling
pnceson any selected PINTO,
MAVERICK and MUSTANG U in stock.

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

LAWN HOSE

I{

10:1:\ FOIC( 'EJ)

G~~Hose
lt... w••.-..·ti

Mason. W.Va.

l(..,~ ...... .
~¥¥
,.., ~

.op•lll••••••••••••••lll!!!!!

proper voucher. from the
co nsolida ted acc ount noy
lllllOWJI , subject to the $37,500
limit. for any one of the
all owances, meaning the
and a ll•lepl,une tl lluwanL't!, entire limit tvuld be used for
wouh.l bt• wrappl"tl into one travel.
But no money would be left
expt&gt;nse atcou nl wor lh
$31.500 a year to eucl1 for the oU1er allowunces und
leftover money would be
nw 1nbt.)r .
Members could draw . upon returnc&lt;i to the House.

:-~ht tio rlt' ry

The stationery. ufrldai ex·
J)CmH'S
und nCws\et{ er
ull owances. plus travel
l'c imburscmcnt, distri ct
offi&lt;.'&lt;\ rent , equipment renllli

allowanec , $2,000 allowanLi'
for offi cial expt:nscs away
fnnn the C11pitol. and $2,400
nlluwunctJ for cons tituent

But th ey sai d the rest of the
pla n must be preserved "if
we ::1 re to rcu1ain t'rediblc."

nt.•wslett ers.

The pian wo~ld eliminate a
pra cti ce called "eash uuls,"

Also , lhc $!,all-a-year postage t~ ll o wa n cc would be
eliminated und the 2lkcnts..a·
111ilc for aut o tra vel would be
cut to 15 cents.

where members ca n lake

('ash for personal use , but
subject to lax as income wtspent funds from their

m~mbers. "

Two provisions or the pian
one stripping the
committee of its power to set
members' staff, travel and
office allowances, and the ,
other to create a commission
to study further reforms will be sent to the floor as
separate resolutions for a
vote by the full House.
Obey and his fellow lllsk
force members, who drafted
the reform plan - Reps.
Uoyd Meeds, D-Wash., and
Norman D'Amours, D-N.H.
- agreed to drop a provision
that would have given the
speaker power to name

SHDr

5k

PINTO

Thursday, Friday. Saturday
And Sunday, June 2~ to 27

SrECIALS
OPEN
TONITE

*

Ford on busing
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford summoned
congressional
Democratic
leaders to the White House
today to hear his proposal for
curbing th e authority of
federal courts to order busing
to desegregate schools.
He was said to be ready to
sign his message requesting
the bill and send it to
Congress
soon
after
discussing it with the
majority leadership . He
previously consulted the
Republican 1~ade rship on the
proposal.
His legislation would limit
the jurisdiction of federal
courts in school busing cases
to five years. It also would
limit their decisions to
specific areas of violation of
constitutional rights . • ·
House Republican leader
John.Rhodes told reP\!I;ters it
was a "good bill" but he
wanted to study it "more
carefully" before endorsing
it.
" It d-oesn't solve ali he
problems," Rhodes said.
He said the Presi dent's
formula for limiting federal

HOT SPRINGS, Ark . (UP!)
- Former Garland County
judge and major league baseball player, Lonnie Warneke,
67, died Wednesday at his
home apparently of a heart
attack.
Warne~e, a pitcher with the
,St. Louis Cardinals, was
named the " Arkansas
hummingbird" in the 1930s by
a St. Loui s sportswriter
because of his "sizzling last
and darling delivery."
He was a rna jor league
player from 1930 to 1945, later
playing with the Chicago
Cubs. He closed his baseball
career by umpiring for 10
yea~s in the National League .

court powers On busing would
"fill in some of the blanks"
left by Supr eme Co urt
deseg regation rulings:
Asked · if Ford was
politically motiva ted in
II)OVing against busing,
Rhodes sa id "not at ail. "
Attorney Genera l Edward
Levi last week said the
legislation would provide that

Right Reserved lo Limi l Quan titi es

SERGEANT'S
SENTRY IV

THERAGRAN M

courts- can " under certain

circumstances'' order busing
for up to three years, then
extend it another two years . .
Following that, Levi said,
"if the orders ... have been
carried out in good faith, the
assumptio~ is that busing will
. not any longer be required
unless
there
are
extraordinary circumstances."
Civil rights forces oppose
the proposa l on grow1ds it
might encourage defiance of
court orders an d renew
segregation efforts.
Jimmy
Carter,
th e
probabl e Demo cratic
pre s identi a l nomin ee,

cr iti cized Ford 's pian in
Boston this week. Carter said
it " would r equir e a
constitutional ·amendment
and I don't think th at's
feasible."
"I see a real need in this
country for strong leadership
from the president, th e
governots, the mayors, to
encourage free integration or
schools," Carter said.

LOSE UGLY FAT
Start lo5ing weight toda y or
money back . MONAOEX is a
tiny tablet and easy to tah .
MONADEX will help curb
your desire for excess food .
Eat less - W€!igfl less . Con tains no dangerous drug s and
Will not make you n(!rvou s. No
stref1uous exe rci se. Change

your

life . . . start

VISINE

Reg.

sus

EYE DROPS

ONLY

%oz.
Reg.

today.

MONADEX cost Sl.H for a 20
day supply. Large economy
site
is
u.so
Al so
try

AQUA TABS : they work gently

to ttelp you lose water-bloat .
AOUATASS - a "water pill'

treat works u .o o. Both
guaranteed and sold bv
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
112 E. Main , Pomeroy and
Dutton Drug Store, Mid -

ALLER EST
ALLERGY
TABLETS

KODACOLOR II

dleport.
MA ·9

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wllllhlo ~troQtl.l f'l·

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the
class
for
past
contributions. As a special I
project, the class decided to
recover four kitchen chairs.
Reported ill were Mrs. Mary.
Mei nh art, Darin Roach ,
Marilyn Bishop, Ann Barnitz,
Martha Searls and Audrey
Theobald. The birthday of
Marvin Kelly was observed
and a picnic was planned for
July. Mrs. Cathryn Ervin
presided.
Devotions were presented
by Mrs. Louise McElhinney
and Mrs. Mar)ha Haggerty.
Mrs. Haggerty read the 1st
Psalm and Mrs . McElhinney,
a poem, "Too Swift the Day.
Too Short the Way" . Mrs.
Martha Childs had an article,

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PHONE .

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Racine. o.

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992-3498

200·202 East Main Sr. ·
POME~OY ,

79~
BOX OF 88

inflated play balls.

Flowering Bulbs For Spring Planting
Metal&amp; Plastic Porch Boxes

AT

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sprinkling cans, swim tors.
nose and car plugs, goggle

Special Group (Val. to 39cl

ONLY

Q-TIPS

Sand pails, gar,den sets,

NOW

COLOR

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f'fllt.l(~ · DAit;S IN AN H::11JA, wt.TER~

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SUMMER

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Ornemeolal Wr(lugh1 uon style
tenet of higt1 .mpact plaslic.
Look·tial1t connectors.

MAVERICK

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CUSTOM COLOR SYSTEM

DEDICATION SET
HARRISONVIlLE - The
grand master of Masons of
Ohio will be at Harrisonville
' Lodge 411 F&amp;AM at 2 p.m.
Sunday, June 27, to preside
over the laying of thr corner
stone and dedication of the
new temple. All mn.&lt;ons are
urged lo a ttend .

HOSPITAUZED
RACINE - Miss Leda Mae
Krautter, Meigs High School
teacher. is a surgical patient
at Grant Hospital, :!09 E.
State St., Columbus, Ohio
43215. Cards may be sent to
Room 645.

IN
MIDDLEPORT

Mon .• Tues .• Wed . &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

$fi,500 u yea r

futur e members of the
mlministratiun rumnmtiUre .

Leaders to hear

SAFETY TOE FOOlWEAR

STORE HOURS

Class pledges support
to student fellowship
Continued support through
the summer or the Athens
Stude nt Fellowship wa s
pledged by the Local Bereans
Class of the Middleport
Church or Christ at a meeting
Tuesday night at the church.
Acommunication was read
from the Fellowship thanking

Tire Prices

bicentennial film entitled "A
Change of Worlds."
The afternoon program will
feature recognition of
outstanding Ohio women with
Tom Wetzel II, Cleveland,
speaking on the topic, "Silent
Eyes''. Following
adjournment at 3 p. m. there
wiJI. be a walking tour of the
campus.

used Advisory CoWlclls,
Public Affairs and Women's
Committees and a Fann
Bureau Board of Trustees to
simulate the policy-making
process of the Fann Bureau.
The program alao included
a mock House of Representatives aimed toward
teaching the youUt how state
govenunent operates. The
youUt introduced simulated
bills which Utey moved
thro11gh Ute committees and
Ute legislature to become
final laws.
The youth organized a
cooperative refreshment
store, elected a Board · of
Directors and bought stock in
the cooperative.
The training conference,
one of four held in the state
this summer, also featured
classes in group singing,
music appreciation, public
speaking, manners, first aid,
safety, square dance calling,
and group recreation.

ENJOY VISIT
Mrs . Nancy Keller and
family , Robin, Alice and
Charles of East Grand Forks,
Minn . were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. James YoWlg
and family of Apple Grove .
Also visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Young were Mr. and Mrs:
Wayne Roseberry of Apple
Grove, Mr . and Mrs. James
Heaton and family of
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Barton. and family of
Bash an, and David Kearns of
Clifton, W. Va.

For The

the morning progra m, a

Wednesda y, on a 295-4 vote, tu
SUCC&lt;,'(\d him.
Speak~r Cad Albert and
Democratic Leader. Thomas
O'Neill urged speedy p!l ssage
of the reform plan to signal to
the public that Democrats
were cleaning their own
house - although one critic,
Rep . Robert Giaimo , DConn ., ' said "this proposal
somehow is intended to curb
the sexual appetites uf some

. mock Farm Bureau. They

.~ Tammy
DeBord and
~ Cheryl Lefebre were two of

: Watch and Wait :

BIGGEST
SUMMER SALE

.

By GENE BERNHARDT
WASH!NGTON (UPI ) After seven hours of
argument, House Democrats
have adopted a set of reforms
they say will avoid future
Elizabeth Ray -type sex
scandals and improve the
election-year image of the
Democratic-controlled Con·
gress.
House majority leaders and
the prime author of the
reform _plans, Rep . David
Obey, IJ.Wis., succeeded, in
Wednesday'sparty caucus, in
keeping intact a resolution
that not onlY reforms the
House Administration
Committee but elimina tes
· some cash fringe benefits
now available to members.
Miss Ra y a lleged that
Wayne Hays, while chairman
of the committee, put her on
the panel's payroll at $14,000
a year to serve only as his
mistress - a claim he denied.

[Meigs represented at Fra
c:ar:m~~%~i/·~~;ed R~~~
nk Th ompson, D-N.J.,
~ummer youth meeting was eletted by the House

••••••••••••••••••••
•
•

:
:•

ATTEND CONFERENCE - Tammy DeBord and
Cheryl Lefebre attended the Ohio Farm Burea u Summer
Youth Conference June 13-18 at Otterbein College.

~
~-

Goessler's

Summer theater opening soon
production will open at the
Ohio University Inn for a 4
week end run. The show,
"Gershwin Tonight " will be
revue built ar~und .the
music of George Gershwin .
The dinner will start at 6:30
p.m. with curtain at 8:30p.m.
on July 9, 10, 16, 17, 22-24, 2931.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 24, 1976

OHIO

Use Our Convenient Lay-Away Plan
Open Friday Night Tit B- Sal. TitS

REG.
7Cf ONLY

4

/Ia
,

�fi - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, .June 24, 1976

it's a snapobrim, creased
crown type which !lite said
began with the actress Sarah
Bernhardt's role In an 1182
Paris hit play titled
''Fedora".

Theme announced
for flower show
RUTLAND - "Remember
When" will be the theme of
the nower show to be staged
July 3 and 4 in the Rutland
Gymnasium on Main Street.
The llhow is being' held
·through the cooperation of the
Rutland Garden Club, the
Ru~d Friendlf Gardeners
and the Rutland Bicentennial
committee in conjllllction
with the Rutland Firemen's
Annual Ox Roast.
It will feature IO classes, an
in artistic arrangements and
design and anyone may
exhibit. Memberstllpin a gar·
den Club is not required. The
rulesstatethatarrangements
are to be in place by noon on
July 3 and left there untll4 p.
m. on July 4. No artificial
plant material is pennitted
. although painted, dyed ,'
treated, or dried plant
. NEWOFFICERS insta~led by the Mothers Club of the Meigs Chapter Order uf DeMoiay
are, from the left, Ina B. Sibley, v1ce president; Mary J . Nea l president · Hilda Quickel
materials is pennitted in all
installing officer; Bess King, installing marshall.
'
'
'
classes, as are bases, mats,
backgroundsandaccessilries.
Plant materials are to be
listed on a 3 by 5 card which
will be furnished by the show
committee.
In lieu of a judge, the
arrangements
will be
The Mothers Club of the Gallipolis; treasUI'CI', Hilda
The DeMolay Mothers Club
Meig s Chapter Order of Quickel, Che sh ire. Absent is designed to assist the
DeMolay, Middleport held its wa s Rosemary Keller , chapter in its socia l
semi-annual in stallation Pomeroy, secretary, and act i vitie s, provide
Monday eve ning in a Barbara Scites, chaplain . refreshments
for
the
candleli ght ceremony.
The installation was closed meetings a nd help promote
Th e table wa s decorated by reading a poem "No the principles of DeMolay,
The Ohio Valley Summer
with a flora l center C:reater Friend ."
Theater (OVST) will open its
arrangement, hot pink
llemad&lt;.s given by the new
1976 season on July 2 with an
ca ndles and U1e open Holy president, Mr· s. Nea l
original play, "Heroes". A
Bible.
thank ed her inSIII I,Iin g
dinner-theater production, a
'fh e Installing Officer officers and encoul'aged each
murder mystery and a
Hilda Quickel, second vic~ one present to try to increase
musical comedy completes
president of the Ohio Sta te the interest of ail moms who
the 1976 four show season.
Federation of Mothers Clubs· have DcMoiay Roys .
OVST
comm is sio ned
assi~ted by Bess King, past
The junior past president,
Dennis Brown to write
pres1dent of Meigs Mothers Joyce Raban, was presented
Club, installed the following with a silver charm and
'1'/Je Ohio Coopera tive "Heroes" about the history of
office rs: president, Mary thanked for her· term of F.xlension Service and the this area for the Bicentennial
Jane Neal, Cheshire; vice service.
Oh io Extension Homemakers Ce lebration. The play is
president, Ina B. Sibley,
Council has planned a special about the men who were
bicentennial program for all involved in the Battle or Point
homemakers in the sla te, Pleasant, Lord Dunmore 's
John C. Rice, Meigs County War and the Fort Gower
Extension Agent, announc1.&gt;d Resolves. This production is
today.
done with the support of the
Theme is "Women '76" and Ohio
American
the program will be held July Revolutionary Bicentennial
20 in Mershon Auditorium at Advi sory Commissio n
Ohio State University . Cost, (OARBAC) and the Athens
which includes a iunc h~on, County Bice ntennial ComWill be $4.50. ReservatiOns mission . Performances will
are due July 9.
be at 8:30p.m. in the Forum
Registration and coff ee Theater on July 2-4, 9-11 , 16·
hour will be held preceding 18, 23-25, 3().31.
the 10 a. m. open in g
On July 9, a dinner-theater
ceremon ies. Dr. Betty Siegel,
University of Florida, will
speak on the topic ''Three
Faces of Eve", and that will
be followed by a musical
program by the Sweet
lowest
Adeiines. There will also be in

Mothers

~lub

installs officers

evaluated by the viewing
public. Visitors will be
presented a ballot on which to
indicate their ribbon choice.
Following a specific judging
period to be desiglwted by the
committee, the ballots will be
tallied and the ribbons placed
in each of the classes.
The 10 classes of the show
are:
"Covered Bridges", ll8ing
weathered wood and roadside
materials; "Bicycles Built
for Two", using two containers ;
" Rumbleseat
Romance,''
crescent
featuring warm colors;
" M~'s Apple Pie," includmg fruits and or
vegetables; " Bustles that
Rustled," hogarth design ;
" The
Little
Red
Schoolhouse," featuring
.reds; "The Country Store",
mass 8JTiliiRement; "The
Church in the WUdwood,"
suitable for church· "Hoola
Hoops", modern ' design
showing motion ; "The Bicen·
tennial
Celebration,"
exhibition table picture
featuring red, white and blue.

Program
scheduled

a

"La dies in

Retirement, ~~

a

psyc hol og ic al murder
mystery , will open on August
5 as the third llhow of the
season with a two week run .
This play, by Edward Percy
and Reginald Denham, is
about a retired actress living
in the country with three
other ladies and the
mvsterious disappearance of
the actress . The production
will play August 5-7; and 12-15

New rules are expected to stop sex scandals
..
:=.
.
...

THE

The Millinery Institute of
By GAY PAULEY
America,
the trade and
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - The promotion organization for
millinery industry offers up a the hatmakers, featured all
brimful of styles for fall and these in its semi-annual
''press
week"
show
winter 1976.
The biggest news is that ail Wednesday afternoon for the
those lavish fur hats of nation's visiting reporters.
The show, staged like a
previous seasons have gone
mini-musical,
featured Rita
into limbo; somehow they
.
Moreno
of
Broadway
~nd
don't seem rig ht with all the
Hollywood
as
mistress
of
wrapped-~p and bulky look of
cerel!lonies.
Hats
were
shown
many of the new clothes. The .
veiled hat is old hat, and the in five groups- knits,
hooded and wrapped look fedoras, brims with trims,
alongside the sharply caps stolen !~om the men,
tailored, simple silhouettes ahd the evening glitter.
About the biggest hat in the
are the major trends.
Watch for copies of the collection came from Mr .
BIG DIAMOND
hunter's visored cap, the John. It was a pale brown,
look
crushable
felt
with
brim
five
beame, the tam, beret and
to
six
inches
wide,
with
at small diamond prictrs
stocking cap, the closely
fitted knot, the bulky knit, the orange jersey band and worn
So popular as a ring, now also
cla ssic fedora sometimes atop an orange jersey scarf
available as a beautifully
swathing
the
throat.
grown to outsize proportions,
matched
earnng, pendan t
And, about the smallest
and for evening, the jeweled
and ring ensemble- and
caps, head-hugging, and to was the Juliet evening cap,
even a lie-lac for him .
Five-diamond total weight
show off the woman lucky hugging the head and hiding
Glow Tops available in
enough to have classic all the hair, done by Bob
V4, Y2, and one carat.
features as beautifully as if Green for Irene. It was all
Quality and style co mbine
pear Is and rhinestones strung
she were Juliet.
to give you the rig ht kind
on a siretch base of felt.
of jewelry atlhe nght kind
The fedoras must take their
or price
place as the number one hat
for the new season, simply
JEWELRY
because. they look exactly
rtght With all man-tailored
STORE
fabrics making their way into
Court Street
wardrobes. Miss Moreno had
in the Patio Theater.
POMEROY
A musical comedy spoof of traced the fedora's history a Presidential campaign and
election, "Of Thee I Sing,"
will be the final show of the
· season.
The
famous
American musical team of
George and Ira Gershwin
contributed some delightful
melodies and words to this :
:
show that was the first
musical to win the Pulitzer
Prize. "Of Thee I Sing" will
be performed in the Forum
Theater at 8:30p.m. on Aug.
19-21 and 26-29.
For ticket informatiOn call
COMING NEXT WffKl
64t-594-li010 from 2 p.m. to 6
p.m. Monday
through
Wednesday and 2 p.m. to 9
p.m. Thursday through
Swtday . The ticket office
opens Jun e 23.
POMEROY
.
. OHIO

....

""
w

GLOW

•••

..

TOP

••
•'

••'
•

.....••
,

...,lo

.

"•

The

••

.
•
•

'

, more than 134 teenagers
: from 22 counties to attend the
~ Fann Bureau Swruner Youth
: Conference JWle 13 through
, June 18, at Otterbein College
~ Westerville.
'
Tammy is Ute daughter of
Mr. and Mrs , Dallas
.DeBord, and Cheryl, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Lefebre; all of Route 4,
Pomeroy. BoUt girls will be
juniors at Meigs High School
this autwnn.
The summer conference
p~ovided the young people
With a working knowledge of
the democratic procedure
ll~cd in developing policy of
the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation.
The participants fonned a

FO~OUR

e

:
:•
e

•

:• Chapman's Shoes :

!

.....•....•••..•.•• :
e

•

LOOK OUT!
FOR YOUR FEET

e

I

STYLE
#1901

-

TWINS BORN - Harley "Rink " Unthicum of
Reedsville announces the bi rth of his twin grea tgra ndsons, Enc Joseph and Jeremy Michael, March 26 to
Joseph and Sherrie Rosen of Cincinnati. The babies are
the first great-grandchildren of Unthicum . They made
their first visit here over the Memorial Day weekend .

In the Area

It's

For Every Job.

BEND'.•

conforms to O.S.H.A. standards

TIRE CENTER
MaS&lt;&gt;n.
IJa .

DAN.'S

~.

·'Dealing with Anger" by
John J . Lambert.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. McElhinney and
Mrs. Haggerty. Mrs . Ervin
clos ed the meeting by
reading "Birth of the United
States.

MASON F.lj.IRNITURE

Special incentives from Ford to its
deal~rs make possible lower selling
pnceson any selected PINTO,
MAVERICK and MUSTANG U in stock.

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

LAWN HOSE

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.op•lll••••••••••••••lll!!!!!

proper voucher. from the
co nsolida ted acc ount noy
lllllOWJI , subject to the $37,500
limit. for any one of the
all owances, meaning the
and a ll•lepl,une tl lluwanL't!, entire limit tvuld be used for
wouh.l bt• wrappl"tl into one travel.
But no money would be left
expt&gt;nse atcou nl wor lh
$31.500 a year to eucl1 for the oU1er allowunces und
leftover money would be
nw 1nbt.)r .
Members could draw . upon returnc&lt;i to the House.

:-~ht tio rlt' ry

The stationery. ufrldai ex·
J)CmH'S
und nCws\et{ er
ull owances. plus travel
l'c imburscmcnt, distri ct
offi&lt;.'&lt;\ rent , equipment renllli

allowanec , $2,000 allowanLi'
for offi cial expt:nscs away
fnnn the C11pitol. and $2,400
nlluwunctJ for cons tituent

But th ey sai d the rest of the
pla n must be preserved "if
we ::1 re to rcu1ain t'rediblc."

nt.•wslett ers.

The pian wo~ld eliminate a
pra cti ce called "eash uuls,"

Also , lhc $!,all-a-year postage t~ ll o wa n cc would be
eliminated und the 2lkcnts..a·
111ilc for aut o tra vel would be
cut to 15 cents.

where members ca n lake

('ash for personal use , but
subject to lax as income wtspent funds from their

m~mbers. "

Two provisions or the pian
one stripping the
committee of its power to set
members' staff, travel and
office allowances, and the ,
other to create a commission
to study further reforms will be sent to the floor as
separate resolutions for a
vote by the full House.
Obey and his fellow lllsk
force members, who drafted
the reform plan - Reps.
Uoyd Meeds, D-Wash., and
Norman D'Amours, D-N.H.
- agreed to drop a provision
that would have given the
speaker power to name

SHDr

5k

PINTO

Thursday, Friday. Saturday
And Sunday, June 2~ to 27

SrECIALS
OPEN
TONITE

*

Ford on busing
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford summoned
congressional
Democratic
leaders to the White House
today to hear his proposal for
curbing th e authority of
federal courts to order busing
to desegregate schools.
He was said to be ready to
sign his message requesting
the bill and send it to
Congress
soon
after
discussing it with the
majority leadership . He
previously consulted the
Republican 1~ade rship on the
proposal.
His legislation would limit
the jurisdiction of federal
courts in school busing cases
to five years. It also would
limit their decisions to
specific areas of violation of
constitutional rights . • ·
House Republican leader
John.Rhodes told reP\!I;ters it
was a "good bill" but he
wanted to study it "more
carefully" before endorsing
it.
" It d-oesn't solve ali he
problems," Rhodes said.
He said the Presi dent's
formula for limiting federal

HOT SPRINGS, Ark . (UP!)
- Former Garland County
judge and major league baseball player, Lonnie Warneke,
67, died Wednesday at his
home apparently of a heart
attack.
Warne~e, a pitcher with the
,St. Louis Cardinals, was
named the " Arkansas
hummingbird" in the 1930s by
a St. Loui s sportswriter
because of his "sizzling last
and darling delivery."
He was a rna jor league
player from 1930 to 1945, later
playing with the Chicago
Cubs. He closed his baseball
career by umpiring for 10
yea~s in the National League .

court powers On busing would
"fill in some of the blanks"
left by Supr eme Co urt
deseg regation rulings:
Asked · if Ford was
politically motiva ted in
II)OVing against busing,
Rhodes sa id "not at ail. "
Attorney Genera l Edward
Levi last week said the
legislation would provide that

Right Reserved lo Limi l Quan titi es

SERGEANT'S
SENTRY IV

THERAGRAN M

courts- can " under certain

circumstances'' order busing
for up to three years, then
extend it another two years . .
Following that, Levi said,
"if the orders ... have been
carried out in good faith, the
assumptio~ is that busing will
. not any longer be required
unless
there
are
extraordinary circumstances."
Civil rights forces oppose
the proposa l on grow1ds it
might encourage defiance of
court orders an d renew
segregation efforts.
Jimmy
Carter,
th e
probabl e Demo cratic
pre s identi a l nomin ee,

cr iti cized Ford 's pian in
Boston this week. Carter said
it " would r equir e a
constitutional ·amendment
and I don't think th at's
feasible."
"I see a real need in this
country for strong leadership
from the president, th e
governots, the mayors, to
encourage free integration or
schools," Carter said.

LOSE UGLY FAT
Start lo5ing weight toda y or
money back . MONAOEX is a
tiny tablet and easy to tah .
MONADEX will help curb
your desire for excess food .
Eat less - W€!igfl less . Con tains no dangerous drug s and
Will not make you n(!rvou s. No
stref1uous exe rci se. Change

your

life . . . start

VISINE

Reg.

sus

EYE DROPS

ONLY

%oz.
Reg.

today.

MONADEX cost Sl.H for a 20
day supply. Large economy
site
is
u.so
Al so
try

AQUA TABS : they work gently

to ttelp you lose water-bloat .
AOUATASS - a "water pill'

treat works u .o o. Both
guaranteed and sold bv
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy,
112 E. Main , Pomeroy and
Dutton Drug Store, Mid -

ALLER EST
ALLERGY
TABLETS

KODACOLOR II

dleport.
MA ·9

.

wllllhlo ~troQtl.l f'l·

,..."'-Ill• 1\'1 ,.!111.1

~1..-. 1"'\ll'flo ~ PIYIN.'I'V

the
class
for
past
contributions. As a special I
project, the class decided to
recover four kitchen chairs.
Reported ill were Mrs. Mary.
Mei nh art, Darin Roach ,
Marilyn Bishop, Ann Barnitz,
Martha Searls and Audrey
Theobald. The birthday of
Marvin Kelly was observed
and a picnic was planned for
July. Mrs. Cathryn Ervin
presided.
Devotions were presented
by Mrs. Louise McElhinney
and Mrs. Mar)ha Haggerty.
Mrs. Haggerty read the 1st
Psalm and Mrs . McElhinney,
a poem, "Too Swift the Day.
Too Short the Way" . Mrs.
Martha Childs had an article,

SUMMER SPECIALTIES

50

24 TABLETS

ONLY

AWN
7'1 DECORATIONS

ITAAIGHI

......

REG.

SICTIDfl

Si2 .95

NOW

•

Lftll

...,... Ft•llll

~UCITI·

MUSTANG II

. ___

Durable LUCITE house paint
to provide long-lasting
protection for your home.
Choose from 1030 colors of The Good Stun.

masks, fins , wading pools,

ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS

FORD
See your local Ford Dealer.

8For 96c

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
MASON, W.. VA.

~-

•

.

.

Mak'e Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

BEN~FRANKLIN
PHONE .

STAR SUPPLY CO.
Racine. o.

949·2525

992-3498

200·202 East Main Sr. ·
POME~OY ,

79~
BOX OF 88

inflated play balls.

Flowering Bulbs For Spring Planting
Metal&amp; Plastic Porch Boxes

AT

&amp; Sat.

sprinkling cans, swim tors.
nose and car plugs, goggle

Special Group (Val. to 39cl

ONLY

Q-TIPS

Sand pails, gar,den sets,

NOW

COLOR

lhru

HOSE
NOZZLE
Reg .· $2.19

CU~TOM

REG.
11.49

TOYS

GILMOUR

f'fllt.l(~ · DAit;S IN AN H::11JA, wt.TER~

BIC LIGHTERS .

SUMMER

'·

. .~ se Pa1nf

'•

Ornemeolal Wr(lugh1 uon style
tenet of higt1 .mpact plaslic.
Look·tial1t connectors.

MAVERICK

• •. .

CUSTOM COLOR SYSTEM

DEDICATION SET
HARRISONVIlLE - The
grand master of Masons of
Ohio will be at Harrisonville
' Lodge 411 F&amp;AM at 2 p.m.
Sunday, June 27, to preside
over the laying of thr corner
stone and dedication of the
new temple. All mn.&lt;ons are
urged lo a ttend .

HOSPITAUZED
RACINE - Miss Leda Mae
Krautter, Meigs High School
teacher. is a surgical patient
at Grant Hospital, :!09 E.
State St., Columbus, Ohio
43215. Cards may be sent to
Room 645.

IN
MIDDLEPORT

Mon .• Tues .• Wed . &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

$fi,500 u yea r

futur e members of the
mlministratiun rumnmtiUre .

Leaders to hear

SAFETY TOE FOOlWEAR

STORE HOURS

Class pledges support
to student fellowship
Continued support through
the summer or the Athens
Stude nt Fellowship wa s
pledged by the Local Bereans
Class of the Middleport
Church or Christ at a meeting
Tuesday night at the church.
Acommunication was read
from the Fellowship thanking

Tire Prices

bicentennial film entitled "A
Change of Worlds."
The afternoon program will
feature recognition of
outstanding Ohio women with
Tom Wetzel II, Cleveland,
speaking on the topic, "Silent
Eyes''. Following
adjournment at 3 p. m. there
wiJI. be a walking tour of the
campus.

used Advisory CoWlclls,
Public Affairs and Women's
Committees and a Fann
Bureau Board of Trustees to
simulate the policy-making
process of the Fann Bureau.
The program alao included
a mock House of Representatives aimed toward
teaching the youUt how state
govenunent operates. The
youUt introduced simulated
bills which Utey moved
thro11gh Ute committees and
Ute legislature to become
final laws.
The youth organized a
cooperative refreshment
store, elected a Board · of
Directors and bought stock in
the cooperative.
The training conference,
one of four held in the state
this summer, also featured
classes in group singing,
music appreciation, public
speaking, manners, first aid,
safety, square dance calling,
and group recreation.

ENJOY VISIT
Mrs . Nancy Keller and
family , Robin, Alice and
Charles of East Grand Forks,
Minn . were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. James YoWlg
and family of Apple Grove .
Also visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Young were Mr. and Mrs:
Wayne Roseberry of Apple
Grove, Mr . and Mrs. James
Heaton and family of
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Barton. and family of
Bash an, and David Kearns of
Clifton, W. Va.

For The

the morning progra m, a

Wednesda y, on a 295-4 vote, tu
SUCC&lt;,'(\d him.
Speak~r Cad Albert and
Democratic Leader. Thomas
O'Neill urged speedy p!l ssage
of the reform plan to signal to
the public that Democrats
were cleaning their own
house - although one critic,
Rep . Robert Giaimo , DConn ., ' said "this proposal
somehow is intended to curb
the sexual appetites uf some

. mock Farm Bureau. They

.~ Tammy
DeBord and
~ Cheryl Lefebre were two of

: Watch and Wait :

BIGGEST
SUMMER SALE

.

By GENE BERNHARDT
WASH!NGTON (UPI ) After seven hours of
argument, House Democrats
have adopted a set of reforms
they say will avoid future
Elizabeth Ray -type sex
scandals and improve the
election-year image of the
Democratic-controlled Con·
gress.
House majority leaders and
the prime author of the
reform _plans, Rep . David
Obey, IJ.Wis., succeeded, in
Wednesday'sparty caucus, in
keeping intact a resolution
that not onlY reforms the
House Administration
Committee but elimina tes
· some cash fringe benefits
now available to members.
Miss Ra y a lleged that
Wayne Hays, while chairman
of the committee, put her on
the panel's payroll at $14,000
a year to serve only as his
mistress - a claim he denied.

[Meigs represented at Fra
c:ar:m~~%~i/·~~;ed R~~~
nk Th ompson, D-N.J.,
~ummer youth meeting was eletted by the House

••••••••••••••••••••
•
•

:
:•

ATTEND CONFERENCE - Tammy DeBord and
Cheryl Lefebre attended the Ohio Farm Burea u Summer
Youth Conference June 13-18 at Otterbein College.

~
~-

Goessler's

Summer theater opening soon
production will open at the
Ohio University Inn for a 4
week end run. The show,
"Gershwin Tonight " will be
revue built ar~und .the
music of George Gershwin .
The dinner will start at 6:30
p.m. with curtain at 8:30p.m.
on July 9, 10, 16, 17, 22-24, 2931.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 24, 1976

OHIO

Use Our Convenient Lay-Away Plan
Open Friday Night Tit B- Sal. TitS

REG.
7Cf ONLY

4

/Ia
,

�9-

"'~~~-: ~

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

S
P M
Dey
Publi cation

Before

Cancellations ,

corr ec

tlons accep te d ft rs l day ol

l:lubl lce tlon
REGULATIONS

The Publ l$htr r eser ve s

the r ioh t to edit or reiect
any ads dee me d ob
l ec tl onel T he pub i1 sher
will not be respon Sibl e fo r

more then on e •ncorrec 1
Insert ion

RATES
For Want Ad Ser vi ce

5 cen ts per word one
Insertion
M i nim um Charge $1 00
l.t ce nts per word t hr ee

con sec uti ve Insertions
2 ~ cen ts per word six

consec uti ve inserltons

25 Per Cent Dtsc ount on
ads

pa id

end

eds

patd

Wi th i n )0 dll'fS

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBI TUA RY
S2 00
for
80
wo r d
m in imum
Each ll dd ll•onal word J
4

cents

BLIND ADS
Add il •onal

25c

Ch ar ge

per Adver ttseme nt

OFFIC E HOU RS
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m

Da•t y , B JO a m

to 12 00

Noon Satu rda y
Ph on e toda y 992 2156

NOTICES
A TT N "
All HOUSEWI VES
A l l Yard Sal es, Rumm ag e,

Porch and Ba se ment Por ch
and Ba se ment Sal es , etc
m us t be pa 1d m advan ce
Ge t your s 1n early by
s topp mg by our ofli ce a t
Th e Datty Se nt 1ne t, 111
Cour t St or wr1t1ng Bo x
729, Pome roy , Oh10 45 769
Wllh your rem1 tt ance

AstraGraph
• Bem•ce Bede O sot
For Fuday , June 25, 2976
ARIE S (March 21-Apnl 19)
Your a l! ellii Oil span coul d
le&lt;Jve o tdtle to be des 1red tonay Try not to clutt er up• th e
house wllh lln!f f1n 1shed proreel s

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don t get m1xectup 1n any tt11ng
tul;:! nc1a t toda y thJ t you have
dOllbts abou t It JOU ha~Je serond thougllts heed them
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) II
you qet mto a s11ua t10n to day
that calls lor your pe rsonal
manage rwl touct1 be very
dPc•s•ve 111 any moves you
make
CAN CER (June 21-July 22)
Handle any l11gh pr10nty ma t!er
promptl y Tile rno re you daw dle the toss chance ~ou ha ve
a t set tt mg 11 ell ect1vely
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Whde
you d like to th1nk tha t w1shes
mnke 11 so today you know
bctl cr II vou wa nt somethtng to
hr.ppen you mus t ma ke II
happen

VIR GO • (Aug 23 -Sept 22)
You re llket&gt;y to only pa r1 1.:1lly
deve lop your ooss1bJitlies to d&lt;ly 11 you le t self aoub ts creep
111 Don I be afratd to err
LIBRA (Sepl 23-0cl 231 Don t
llesltrl te to state wha t you have
On your mmct t odt~y In d otng
so say exactl y wha t you mean
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22)
Don t b e pressured 1nto buy1ng
so meth1ng you don t wan t today Keep 111 m1 nd the money
co mes out of YOUR pocket
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21 ) In Si tu ations 1nvo lvmg
t e &lt;~mw o r k
don t leave
eve ryth1ng up to your pa rt ne r
The more hands the l1gh ter the
work
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan
19) You have a te ndency today
to unde res t1mate the value of
~ o ur work or SkillS Someone
wt1o knows the1 r true wort h
could take advantage
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
You re an 1tl tere st1ng perso n
lJSI Jil ll y others enjoy what you
have to say I hat s not an ex
cuse however to monop olize
every con versa t1on
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
You 11 be fortunate today 1n
neqohahons w!lh persons w1th
wh o m you have s tr ong
emOtiOnal IIOS Oeal1ng Wi th
strangers may no t turn o ut so
we ll

~your

.. ~ oirt:hClay
•

••

June 25, 1976
Th1ng s will be perk1ng up for
you on the socm t scene th 1s
com 1ng ye ar The 1n teres tmg
people you'll mee t w1111ead you
10 other new 1nends

1 WISH

to thank Or Jtldgw6y Or
Telle. nurses and n1.1rses old•• ·
all tha 1taff at th• IJeterana
Memorial Hospital for be1ng so
nlce to me while a pot1en t ol
the ho•pllol ond man)! thank1
to Rav Perrin the Sunday
School. Trlntty Ch urch and tht
members of my Sunday School
clou. my frtend• and relatives
lor the ir proyert. ond lo~Je ly
flowers and cords Moy God
bien everyone of you Gladys
Cuckler
-

Help Wanted
GUARANTEED
INCOME
'

"y

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDDERS
Seal ed b1 ds for !he con
s tr uc 110n of a br1dge ov er
Shad e R 1ve r lo cated on
Ches ter Tow ns h1p Road No T
11 1 wil l be r ece 1vcd by lhe
Board Of Counly Com
m1ss toners of Me 1gs County ,
Oh 1o, a! 1ts ofl tce m the Court
hou se , Pom eroy , Oh1o , untd
9 JO AM
Monday , June
18, 1976, and then at sa 1d off1 ce
publiCly opt:! ncd and r e ad
aloud ,
The Information for Btd
ders , Fo r m of Btd Form of
C·o n I r a c 1
P Ia n s ,
Speci ficatiOns and Forms of
Pe rforman ce and Payment
Bond and other con tra ct
do cuments mav be examrned
at !he follow ing Board of
Colln ty Comm tss ioners Off1ce ,
Collr thouse , Pomeroy , Oh 10
Co ptes ma y be ob ta1ned at
the off ic e of the County
Eng 1neer located at Collr l
Ho ll se or County H1g hwey
Ga rag e at Rock Sprm gs llpon
payment of SS 00 for each set
Any unsuccess flll btdder , upon
re turn1 ng su ch sel promrlly
and 1n good condil1on , wtl be
refunded hiS payment an d any
non btdder upon so relurn1ng
such a set will re cetve no
refund
Th e owner rese r ves the
r1ght to wa1v e any fo rmal11tes
or to relect any and all b1ds
No b1dder may Withdraw t11s
bid Wtlh 1n 10 days a fter the
actual dat e of the open1ng
ther eof

SNAPPER SALE
•

'

'100 OFF

~6J

'75 OFF
On any IIIIer.

''

'50 OFF
On 21" self propelled
mower w -grass bag .

Sale limited to items
now In stock .

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES
Pomeroy, Ohio

18 It Tag -A-long travel tra1ler
se lf.contomed Phone
949
2739

FURNISHED 2 bedrm oportmant.
odlllts only rn M1ddleport
Phone 992 387 4

3 AND 4 RM lurmshed and un·
furn1!hed opts Phone 992
5A3A
COUNTR't' Mob1le Home Pork Rt
33 ten miles norih of Pomeroy
Lorge lo ts w1th concret poltos,
stdewolks rl!nnen and off
street porktng Phone 992-7479
ONE bedroom apartments at
VIllAGE MANOR on Moddleporl
for $101 monthly plus elec or
$130 mcludmg aleclnc. LOWER
RATES WR S!NOK CITIZENS
ConventEtnl lo sho ppmg on
Th1 rd and M1ll Streets m M1d
dleport Brand new h1gh quoit tv apartments . See the
manager at Rt verslde Aport.
ments or call 992 J273 Fur
BOARD OF COU NTY
ntShed apartments also
COMMI SSIONER S
O'Jatloble
Me igs County , Ohto
Mertha Chambe rs , One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur
Clerk
n11hed apartments
Phone
992-3129 or 992-5A3A
17, 24 2tc

On any rid1ng mower.

..,,.

lARGE r Yard Sole tn Brodburl ,1
watch for 11gns Ho1.1seho d
11ems , Q1ou w0 re • a 11 SitOs ,
adults and chtldren s clothmg
prcture fromes m1sc Items
Held 1ns1de 1f ro1n Saturday ,
June26, 9am 11116pm
't' ARD Sola June 25 10om tttl 4
p m Syrocvse Mun1c 1po l
8u1ldtng In case of ram. 11 wlll
be at the Presbytenan Church
Annex

'

.

@ 2 SIGNS
QU~~TY

Junk Batter11s $1.25

Pomeroy
-Motor Co.

1975 CHEV BLAZER K-5
S52P5
4 wh d nve, like new mtenor, less than 12,000 mtles,
wh over sliver , 750 V e. autom a tic, power sleenng &amp;
bra kes, ch rom e mldgs , bumpet , ex tenor m lr ro rs,
rad lo See lt now

THURSDAY , JUNE 24, lt16
3; Partridge Family 8; Mission · lm
possible IS
5 31&gt;--Adam12 4,13. News&amp;, Family Affair 8; Elec
Co 20,33,
6 · ~ News 3,4,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33
6 31&gt;---NBC News 3.4, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Grlff l1h 6;
CBS News 8.10, Hodgepodge Lodgo 20, Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7 ~Truth or Cons . 3, To Telllhe Truth A, Bowling for
Dollars 6; Lawrence Wel k 8, News 10; Let' s Make
a Deal 13 , Family Affolr 15; Our story 20. Family
a1 War 33.
7·31&gt;---Holl ywood Squares 3,A; Ohio Stole Lo1terv 6;
Eve ning Edition wl1h Marlin .~ronsky 20; Wild
Ki ngdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13, Music Clly
U.S.A. 15
8· oo--Sear ch for the Shlnohara 3,A,15; Wel come
Back, Koller 6, 13, Waltons 8,10, My shk ln 2Q, Mark
ot Jazz 33
8 31&gt;--- Barney Miller 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembers

~

IIMn&lt;itJ Avtilab~

U.. ltWf . . . Pltlitd 1!111 Wlll.1111 ~-JWIIOII .,.._
AI pool ,.,.., Mildlo, llo.

D. Bumgardner

RIDERS SALVAGE
Sl RL 124

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
Insulation Servicn

SWIMMING
POOLS

Moto1 Clst Clean
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper 35c
Car Bodin
Scrap-Iron

IIMioS.•oollt,

PomorOJ. Oh•
Phone !!11461

1974 CHEV . CIO CHEYENNE
$3495
350 V 8, au tomat 1c, P Ste en ng &amp; brak es w w It res ,
wh covers, s te p bumper, c.h rome m ir ror s, mldg s AM
rad10, d ean sharp truck

·~

MillE 912-5724
~13- 1

ill 1M

mo

I if., i•IO Wilt l Attocs
$10111
WINDOW$ l DOORS

IEPLACI:IIEIIT
WINDOW$
AUJIIINUII
SIOING-SOifiTT
GUTTUS-AWNINGS

lARR1,"~~~DER •
Ph 192-3993

CAPTAIN EASY

4-1~1

mo

DO~'T PA~I C. 6POR T, •. IT 7

M~R~LY

YOUR OLD N16E I &amp;UDD Y!

I J UST K N OC K~ D O VER O I'JE OF
TH ESE MARBLE= BU STS-- BUf If
LOOK$ LIKE OUR HOS TES"&gt; CAI'J

SECRE CY t$
AND MAY
1 ADD-- FOR YOUR
ROLE IN THIS CAPE~,
YOU PIC KEr&gt; T ~E
PERFECT
CO§TUME!
W~ Y !

S PARE A F E W !

1974 FORD F100
S2995
8' Slyles tde, gree n fm1 sh good fires, R bumper ,
chrome grttl s &amp; ft ls bumper , 6 cyt , 8. std tr an s

WILKINSON'S
Complote Smoll En~

HALLS
SALVAGE

Repatr
Ch11n

s.....
llwn
MowersTtllenR1dm1

High pnces for smp 1utos,
motoiS and other metals.
Phone 992-2228 Monday th1u
Fnday 8-3, Saturday 8-12.
5 26 I mo
1961 GMC p 1ckup truck one-half
ton , 327 cu mch eng1ne, 4
speed Irons . good runnmg
cond ttton $550 Phone 9927580
19741 Ford Cou ner-4 speed II 000
mtles $200 and ass ume
payments 1974 Kowasak1 250
1966 Ntmrod compmg tro1ler
lor lost sale Phone 992 7066
1971 V W Super Beetle el(celent
cond11ton, low m1leoge, $1450
Phone 992 7797
1975 Ford Granado 302 V-8 p s
p b . o c $3695 Phone 992
JASI
1972 Ford •;, ton ptckup truck
$1350 00 Coll i 378 63-49
~-1970 LTD (9) Passenger stol1 0n
wagon ctr condtllon $1250
Phone Mtddleport 991. 3647

-----

MEIGS County Humane Soc1ety
fns ky ktflens for odoptt on
E1ght 10 weeks old Hove
dtslemper skos ond wormed
Phone 992 - ~27 af ter 6 p m
AKC Reg female Colhe pup, 6
months old Phone (614) 985·
4111 or 992-5621
POODLES, 6 weks old, $35 Phone
'1902 76? 1
KITTEN1S Both long hmr ond short
ha~r
Con ta ct
Freddte
Houdeshell , Middleport Ok1o

MAKE spr1ng deon1ng profitable ~
turn unwanted 1tems tnlo cask
Adve rtise tn the Wont Ads
LOCUST posts, round or spltl
Plv&gt;ne 9A9 277•
1973 450 Prototype Kawasok1
motoroross good cond1t1on
S6SO Phone 992-3643

1969 Plymouth Satellite, $1200
_ P.c_ho.:cnc.;ec:9_:.2
9:..·.:c
61c:3_1 __ - - - 1973 Monte Ca rl o 350 engtne
29,500 miles rall y wheels
$3-400 Phon• 992 2035 or 9922971
196a Chevy Von 1970motor, mag
whee ls, ca rpel , pon e lmg ,
stereo $995 Con be $8en at
Branham 's Goroge 1n Mid·
I
, or coll992 3710

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
located between Coolville and
Tuppers Ploms One acre lot,
two car ga rage etly water gas
heat ,
kardwood
floors ,
corpetd hvtng room, n1ce vtew,
$21 ,000 Phone (614) 667 -3519

74 Kowosakt $475 00 Pkone 742-

2980
COAL , l1mestono, and calctum
chlottde and cak1um brtne for
dvst control and spec1ol mixi ng
salt for fo rmers Mom Street ,
Pomeroy, Oh1o or phone 9923891
1973 25 ft
Yukon Delta
houseboat, aU sa lt conta1ned ,
wolh 1976 Chrysler lOS h p
engme Phone 992 5532
20

tn

YOUR HO TPO INT
APPL IANCE STORE
FREEZE~

SALE!

Save up to $100 on 20
cu . fl . Chest c r 16 cu .
11 . Upright.

Choic~

$26995

Appi iJ nce Depart rtl... 1d
POMEROY LANDMARK
'I'._Jack W. carsey , Mgr .
.-..t Phone 9'12-2181

NEW. lJwn Bor mowers, P10neer, »c
Cullouch chain sa.,, Bolen's Mowers,
MtrrJTtll!iS, MID Mowell.
498locusl St
Moddleporl, Ohw 991309Z

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.
8ol18!
Rullond, Oh• 45771
Ph (614) 7421409
We Dehwer
6-1J-76 1 mo

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Ractne, Ohto
new roof or olcl ·
repatred ? House, roof .
barn , sk1ngles, build up
pa1ntmg, electncat work ,
gutt e rs &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
water softners, rnstalled &amp;
repa1red, Sewage
Call us at 949-2882
or 949· 2203
3261mo .
Need

.

bedrms , modern k1tchen wall
to wall ca rpet H W floors full
basement new gas furnace
s.moll lot to mow , ldeol for
older couple or small fomtly m
good
neighborhood 1n
Pomeroy Call tor appOintment
Phone 992 3W7
HOUSE for sole rn Chester oreo
Three year old , four bedroom ,
br1ck ranch on f1ve acres of
land Has two baths large
rooms fm1sh ed basemen t w1th
ftreploce 1n fomtly room Phone
(614) 985 3938 or contac t Don
Roush
,~~---;-~~OuTDOOR pot1o for summer
cookouts plus a1r copd tt1onmg,
makes !his a home you r fomt1y
wtll en1oy Also features 3
bedrooms, 1 both, k1tchen ,
famdy room alec heal
sto rage bu1id1ngs and fully
carpeted
Prtced $25 ,500
Phone ~2 7808
42 one fo urth acres of real estate
more or less, Situated 1n Soc
l1on 26 Fraction 31 , 1n Ru tland
Townshtp, Me tgs County Ohto
For further mformotton, contact
Bernard V Fllltr: Pomeroy No
ftonol
Sa n k
Buddrng
Pomeroy , Ohto Telephone
992 21116
3 be~room bnck ranch style
home full basement with
rocreotton room ! 1/1 baths
carport located m Boum Ackh
t10n near Sto le Htghwoy
Goroge Co li (614) 985-35841or
appointment

N11RTII 1101

Tra\'el Tra tlers

• K .I Ill 9 :1

''

Racine, Ohio
ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

Aluminum Siding,

. AK

om

olo A-14

Days an d evemngs except Tues. and ••
Wed. or by toniJtltnl R Co41tfr1
owner.
~211

11 t:sr
• i 2

JUNE SPEC1AL

Rutland
742 -2328
All Work Guaran1eed • ·
Free Estimates
~1H mo.

l\ccord1nsly . I won th e
heart 111 dumm y, led dummy s
Ja&lt;'k of s pades and leL 11 nde
Tlus enabled me to ptck up
"ast"s qu ee n o f spa de s ,
collet'! 10 tricks and a top

sc.:ore s mce the rest ol th e

tfl 65 4

6 CANS OF RC

l1eld made e1lher lour spades
ot jusL three notrump

... 9 7 .12

Buth vulnt.•nJb lt·

•1,QQ +

\\ t•st

Tax
Woth any $4.00 purchase
and thiS ad. Good through
6-30-76

l'.tss
P.tss

~ urth

~:as t

I.

P,I SS

Sooth
I NT

.l N 'f

Pass

l'il ss

Opemn~

DONELli'S PIZZA

~~u~~
A Vermont reader \\ants to

lt•.1 d - (.J ¥

ll y Oswald &amp; Jumes Jucoby

Moddleport, Ohio
992 6167
6-1 76-1 mon lh

LI'f'l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-OVER

EXPERIENCED

HOf A BAD ROOM
RI6"T ACROSS THf

FRor.l HER PRISS'(

SHOP ··

WElL , TRUST M'l' E'lC - WIFE ··
T1tE PANTS Pi&gt;ESSER HAS

60NE , SliT NOW SHE'S GOT

THI&lt;J

BALD· HfADED OL D

GANDER H~ULIH' HfR 10
WORK IN HIS CAR ··

~IC~

THE

GOIH' - AH' ISN'T

l&gt;IAT CUTE 1 HE TIPS HIS

HAT! SHE lRtPS ACRO'i&gt;S
fHE WALK IHTO HfR SHOP WHO IS THAT 61RD?

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

Dav1d Parsons, Owner
949-2814
6-7-1 mo .

Sl'ore

• A H4
¥ K2

Painting and Repair

AL TROMM CONST

t:AST
•Qti 5

• 7 5 43
¥\i -110 6
t I !I I 2
• Q 10 7
.QH6
• 1\ Jtl ~
SUliTif

...

Roofing, Gutters,

'6.95

Square Yard Installed

card and four If t:ast held 1L
I a lso noled that tf t played
West ror the spade qu een I
would wmd up makmg one
t m k less Lhan th e spade
declarers a nd have a poo r

¥ h9K

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

W '" y
.,.
OH WELl · • HAVE A
lOoK AT THE PAPER -

SOlDtE~ 5 ON LEAVE · •
SUCKERS I

One lh1ng lhat I leurned
aboul match pomt pla y a1 u
very ea rly stage m my bndge
&lt;·arec r was Lo study both my
contrac t and posst ble other
cuntra&lt;'f s
Thus when dumm&gt; ht I th e
Lable I su w that aL least half
Lhe f1eld would be m rour
spades We rea ll y should have
been th ere also I should have
ra1sed mv partne r to Iwo
spad es 1ns1 ead of btddmg one
notrump
The normal pla y m spades
would be for declarer Lo ruff a
heurl und plav West for th e
que en of spades lie would
make ftve 1f West held 1hal

Ph. 992-2174

know our rebid Wllh
•K xx ¥ " .K.Jx4 A.J9xx
We have opened one club
a nd partner has respo nd ed one
spade
We have no problem We

We don t

reuse lwo spades

hk e th e 1dea of b1ddmg one
no11 ump w1Lh the worth less
doubl e ton tn hearts If partner
hus onlv tour spades and a
wea k ha nd tl Will be no
Lragedy to play two spades
w1th fo ur oppos1te three If he
has a good hand he IS not gomg
to b1d four spades un less he
has u good spade s u1t

(Fo r a copy or JACOBY
MODERN send $1 to " Wrn
af Brrdge . " clo thrs
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
RadiO Crty Station, New York,
N Y 1001g)

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

UNITED MethodiSt Chllrch proper·
ty at Junctton ot 7 and 681 1n
Tuppers Plorns Oh1o Phone
(614)667 3-497 or667-3AOO
SMAll form for sale 10~. down ,
owner ftnonced Monroe Coun'Y . W Vo Phone (JOA) n231 02 or (:lOA) 772 3227 .
FOR SALE 1S acres wtlh mea 8
rm and both , 3 bedrm home ,
newly remodeled , 2 car
garage rl!ral water. goss well
oil mineral rights , $34 ,000
Phone 742 2336

HOUSE fo r sole rn Ractne. Ohto .
D&amp;D TREE Trimming . 20 years ••·
St Rt 338 , lUSt Olll! lde town 8
perlence
Insured free
rooms, bath , porch palto, city TWELVE 8 w1de mobile komes, 1
estimates Call 992-2384 or
and 2 bedrooms , completely
water gas forced a1r furnace ,
(614) 698-7257 Albany.
furnished , Cassius Canaday,
good lot Coli owner onyt1me ,
SEWING
MACHINE Repotrs , ser-1
1900 Cenlrol Sl . Gallopolis.
Wrlltom Maynard , 949-2613
v1ce, all makes, 992-2284 . The·
Ohio Near Smtth Buack ~hone
OlDER, remodeled , ' 3 bedroom
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy ~
(61A) ..6-13'11
home oil eleclr tc on corner lot
Autliomed S1nger Sales a~
1n Pomeroy , S12,500 Phone 1'169 12x60 Schultz, 2 bedrooms.
Service. We sharpen Sc1ssors.
orr condttloner good cond1tlon
992-5011
EXCAVATING,
dozer . looder ancl
Phone eventngs 7~2 3018.
COUNTRY farm land w1th aedud·
backhoe work · dump truck•
ed woods, water and good acand lo-boys for htre; wtll houl1
cess tn Mon roe Cq1.1nty, W. Vo
fill dirt , top soil, li mestone anct '
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jaf.
$1 .000 down . coli (JOA) n23102 or (30AI772-3227
fers, day phone 992-7089,
ANTIQUE AUCTION, Soturdoy ,
nlghl phone 992 3525 or 992WHY RENT? Buy a new home w1th
June 26, 11 00 a.m. Chamber of
5232.
payments same or lower than
Commerce Bu1 lding, behind
rent 3 bedrooms den , 2 baths,
Howe's Gro"• Pork, Belpre, SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern:
carpet, r,tus all the el(tras a
Ohio Wash rngton Blvd, Walnut
Sanitation. 992 395-f or 992·
housewle wou ld wont. Shown
corner cupboord cherry corner
2428.
~·
by appointment , 742 2328
cupboard, china cabinet and ~W:::I:ll=d;-: o-roo
--;1;-ln-g-,_c_o_n-:,,~ru-c:::t,-"
on ,
s1deboard to match, secretory
plumbing and heating. No job
w1 th round g l en ~ walnut
too Iorge or too small. Phone
rockers , cherry rocker~ , .A VIc·
7A2·23A8
tonan cho1rs, Vtctorlon love
seat, Vtctorian Settee, stool EXCAVATING, dozer, back h..
cabinet , oil lamps Aladdin
and dltcher. Charles R Hal·
fleld , Bock Hoe Servrce ,
lamps, bros lamps, Gone with
the Wind lamps, 6 piece
Rutland Oh1o. Phone 742· 2008
V1rg1 l B Sr ., Realtor
bedroom suite walnut bed and GREG'S CB SALES, localod ol Er110 Mechamc Pomeroy, 0 .
drener, brass bell, brass
Phone 992-337&lt;
win 's Gulf Serv1ce, Mrdcandles, 4 gallon Donohue 1ar,
dleport, Oh1o . Phone 992·
several
hand
mode
qu
ilts
,
This
157 ACRES - 80 of tractor,
2A38.
rs only a partial llating there
woods a nd pasture Large
ore
over
300
items
including
SEPTIC
Systems rnstalled by
ol d er Broom home Most ly
over I 00 places of glass . No
licensed Installer
Shtpor~
fenced $60,000
junk Penny arcade machines IR
Controcton, Phone 742· 2409.
MINERSVILLE
6
workmg condition Duncan
flooring, coiling,
room s, 3 Brs , 1112 baths,
Phyfe dmmg room suite table, 6 cARPENTER.
P&lt;Jnellng
Phone
992-2759.
city water , gas F A.
choirs and sideboard. Term• of
furnac e on larg e lot
Sole
Cosh
or
check
with
trim
or
cut
trees
and shrub·
WILL
BRAND NEW &amp; MIGHTY
$15,000
bery phone 9A9-25A5 or 7•2positive 1.0 Not reaponslble
TEMPTING TOO - Thos 3
3167
lor occ1dents. Auctioneer Ottie
NEW LISTING - 3 Br s ,
BR home offenng dm e in
Opperman . Nelsonville, Ohio . SPRAY PAINTING. Al TROMM
eat
m kttchen,
n1ce
large
kolch e n w olh 27 It of
Phone (61A) 385-7195 or 374bath , enclosed fron t porch,
CONSTRUCTION PHONE 742beauf tf ul ca btnets, mo dern
«98
Sl
Drs
and
wmdows,
F
A
m8
·
ceram ic ba lh (vellow · l
furnace, and ot he r nt ce
utol1 fy
R ,
fiXIure sl.
fea tur es $19,500
carpeted lhroug houl. has
RIVER FRONT - Lot at
garage W wo rk areCI,
Letart
wt th water, sewage,
many othe r features
and e leclrtclly $4,000
Located on approx 1 acre,
NEW HOME - 3 Brs, 2
•s yours for 1ust $22,900
lull baths, mce kitchen.
MIDDLEPORT - Love on
d onong , lull basement ,
&amp; have ad d1ft onal1nco me 4
carport and 2 acres in the
N. MAIN STREET,
un1ts, all furni shed large
co untry $32,500
brick &amp; fr ame on cor ner
lot, wa lk to shop Thos you
NEW LEXINGTON, OHIO
must soe 528,000
FISHING COTTAGE OR
RESERVED
HOME - Located on the
FOR YOUR AD
Ohoo Rouer 3 BR , ba th ,
SATURDAY, JUNE 26 and SUNDAY, JUNE 27 at 11
own wa ter s yste m, nrce
O'
CLOCK AM EACH DAY
kitche n. carpeted , paneled ,
Reltnng alter ha ving been 1n business af lhts location
carport large por ch, two
s1nce 1945 will sell complete contents of building
follh s of an acre $8,900
MIDDLEPORT - 4 Brs.,
mcludtng all radio and TV repa1r equ ipment &amp; parts,
RETIRE HERE - 5 yea rs
)lot wa ter heal (gas Fored) ,
JUke boxes , radtos, TV's, thousands of 78 rpm records,
old - 3 BR bath , very nrce
lront farg e llvmgl large
ant scales, ca meras, and many other Ite ms dating
kll chen, ul1lol y R &amp; space,
drning ,
va rnished
back to th e 1940s Also hundreds of manuals for
c,1 rrete d ,
air
co nd ,
woodwork,
larg'
e fr. P&lt;Jrch
servicing radios &amp; TV's This Is one of t he last
~ l o rtlg C bldg N1 ce garden
and lol on good slreet Only
remaontng Inve ntories of Its kind to be offered lor sale
spa ce All loca ted on 1 2
$16,500.
In S E Ohio. lunch available Nothong s hown before
ac re ONL Y $16.900
MINERALS - 136 acres In
day of SBie Positive ID
CALL US TODAY FOR
Le banon Offer open
Terms- Cash 1\i!Ch day ol sale. Not responsible for
YOUR NFFDS IN, REAL
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
acctdent~
.
ESTAfE .
FROM US BEFORE THE
Owner- Elli s TV and Appllonce Co., ln c.
HENRY E CLELAND,
LOCATION
OF
Aud1onoer- B1II Janes, Phone 962 4377 or 5)7-3411
BROKER
INDUSTRY AND SAVE .
992 2259 or 992 2568

TEAFORD

39 Region

ACROSS
I Potato or
poker
5 Start

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER BRADFORD, Austroneer. Com·
VICE, Metgs-Athens County.
plate Serv1ce. Phone 9..9 ·2~87
Balers from $3995 up Merrill
or 949·2CUl Rocrne. Oh1o, Crltt
Chose , (61A)698-3021
Bradford.
ExPERIENCED house pointer. ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR PI-lone Arlhur Musser, 742Sweepers toasters, Irons. all
2180
small appliances lawn mow•! ·
next to State Highway Garage
BUtLDING and remodeling, ex·
on Route 7 Phone (61A) 9BScavohon , concrete work , elec·
38lji
tnco l work , plumbrng, rough
ond fmtshed carpentry and REMODELING, Plumbong heotln~
roofrng. Phone992·7481.
and all types. of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years eJI.
penance. Phone992-2409.

40 Distaff kin
41 Ridge on

skm
DOWN

(2 wds.)

10 Attraction

I Lumpkm
2 Mortal
3 Sultan's
decree
4 Confine
5 - naked
6 Clever
18 Sagacious
convict
21 Inner
( sl )
Hebrides
7 Calumniate
island
8 Instigated 22 Trattoria's
9 Considered
ice cream
a must
specialty
11 Fiery
23 Prepare
particle
24 Nucleus
t5 Kind of
25 Mlnunize
%6
- to

II Novelist
Laurence

12 Muscat
and -

13 Sumptuous
dwelling

14 Pater·

GASOLINE ALLEY

!amilias
IS Exclude
16 Performed
17 New Jersey
c1ty
19 Colorado
Indian
20 Cuttlefish's
concealing
agent
21 Refrig·
era ted

22 Put

a

r~======:J~~~fT,~~()~~~~~JI;j~~~in~~NV~~ifP,Jrr:~iliJ~M[~~~uHe~
AN ATrACK O''eLJRIAL
IN /5" MINUTb5 MORE,
!7 Blunder

!~i~§§§~~~~~:::~~~~~l.~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~

geometry

29 I said ttl

Artlsllc

need
34 "The Man
- Got
Away"
36 Nervous
twitch
37 Stomach

za Plagiarize
31 Subway
(abbr.)

:sz

~!YWIDM;!'f.,:::!:! -:c

Producer
Shubert
33 Opera
or top
35 Author,
SUBiln 37 Entangle

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

ILY CRYPTOI!liOTE
- llrr~'s
38IH
Locomotive
1-....1.....1-.L.....J..h

UnKromblt 1hoeo rour Jumbt...
one letter to each Hquare, to
form four ordinary words.

h'"'

AX\'01,8 ,\ ,\XR
I. 0 ~ G f E (, I, 0 W

2 DAY SALE

YOEZ
RNGB

LBMLRB
NV

ORMEB

ELLIS TV AND APPLIANCE CO.

BARNEY

'IE BEEN GLUED THAR
TH' LIVELONG DAY. PAW -'-IE OUGHT TO DO A
LEETLE EXERCISIN'

'IO'RE RIGHT
AS RAIN, MAW

15

6 oo--Summer Semester 10
6 · 15--Farm RePQrl 13.
6 21&gt;--- Biue Ridge Quar1el 13
6 ·31&gt;---Columbus Today 4; News 6, Summer Semester
8; Farmllme 10
6 : A5--Mornlng Report 3
6 :5C}-Good Morning , We s1 VIrgin ia 13
6 55-Chuck Wh ile Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl Slale
13
7 ~Today 3,4.15; Good Morning . Amerlca6 , 13; Bugs
Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 31&gt;---Schoolles 10.
8 ~La ss ie 6, Capt Kangaroo 8, 10. Sesam e Sf 33
a·31&gt;---Big Valley 6.
9 oo--A .M. 3: Phil Donahue 4.15 , Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10, Morning with D J . 13
9 .31&gt;---Cross-WIIs 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
10 oo--Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4.15; Edge of Night 6; Price Is
Right 8,10; Bit With Knit 33
10 '31&gt;---Celebrlty Sweepslakes 3,4, 15; Dinah 6, Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 ~Wheel of Fortune 3, IS; Weekday 4; Gambll
8, 10 , Farme r's Daughter 13
11 ·31&gt;---Hollywood Squares 3,A,15, Happy Days 13, Love
of Life 8,10
11 ·55--Take Kerr 8, Dan lmel 's World 10
12 : ~Fun Factory 3, 15, Let's Make a Deal 13, Bob
' Bruan 4; News 6.8 ,10 , Sesame Sf 33
12 31&gt;---Gong Show 3, 15, All My &lt;;hlldren 6, 13 , Search
lor lomonow 8, 10
12:55--NBC News 3, 15 .
1 oo--News 3: Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donohue 8,
Young &amp; lht Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15 ;
Elec Co 33 .
1.31&gt;---Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As The World Turns 8, 10; Book Beet 33.
2 ~$20,000 Pyromld 6,13; Val lanl Years 33
2. 31&gt;---Doctors 3,4,15; Breok the Bank 6, 13, Guiding
Light 8, 10. Olympiad 33.
3-oo--Another World 3, ~, 15 , General Hospltal6,13; All
In The Family 8, 10, Crockett's VIctory Garden 20
3 JO--One Life to Llve13; Mickey Mou•e Club 6: Match
Game 8, 10; Book Beat 20. Walsh' s Animals 33
4 ~Mi ster Car1oon 3, Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6, Mickey Mouse Club 8, Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "Scared Still" 10; Dinah 13 .
4 31&gt;---Bewllched 3, Mad Squad 6, Andy Griffith 8,
Sesame St . 20,33; Fllntstones 15
5 oo--Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission lm
P&lt;JUible 155:30
5 31&gt;---Adam-12 4,13; News 6, Fam ily Affair 8: Elec.
,Co. 20,33
6:0()--News 3.~.8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 31&gt;---NBC News3 . ~,15 , ABC News13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10 , Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ;
Carrascolenda• 33
7·0()--Basebalf 3.~ ; Bowling for Dollars 6; Space 1999
8; Aviation Wea1her 33; News 10; Presidents : 76
Years on Camera 13, Family Affair 15;
Ohio
Journal 20 .
7.31&gt;---Candld Camero 6, Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; $25,000 Pyramld 10, Pop Goes the
Country 15; Black Perspactlve on the News 33.
8 OD--Movle "TI\e Desperate Miles" 6, 13, Baseball15;
Sare 8.10; Washington Week In Review
20,33.8 31&gt;---Wall Street Week 20 33
9 oo--Movle "Macho Callahan" 8,10, Firing Line 20 ;
Masterpiece Theatre 33
9 31&gt;---Porter Wagoner 3; Movie " Panic on the 5 22"
6, 13; NFL A~tlon

I BEREM
RUJ/1S

FDV

OEH

RNTB

ORMEB

YMAV

MU

RMMG

NV

VXBY

OEH

1 still haven't
found Belle.

I

tTASSIDl

I

NO"T
ALLOWED IN A
NUDt5T COLONY.

Now .....,.e lhe clrdod lotte..
lo rorm the eurprloe anawor, u
•111r••toc1 by the obon cartoon.

RNTB

1Lt:III111J

PBHBVV

FDIPBAA
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE SEARCH FOR HAPPINESS
IS ONE OF TilE CHIEF SOURCES OF UNHAPPINESS.
ERIC HOFFER
((,) 1Yi6 Ktn&amp; t ' uhlrll'l Syn&lt;ll~ll~P, ll'lc)

Dear Roundheaded

I tJ I

KJ t)

("RYPTOQUOTES

803-805

3, ~.

soop

One lttt&lt;'r stmp l) !!land:oi ror anoth(•J In th1 s .. arnplt• ·\ is
used for Lhe thr&lt;e l: s. X lor the lwo 0 s, elc ~Ingle l•· ll~rs,
aposlrophes. thC' length and formation or lh r \\ flfl h ar (' all
htn l!l F.ach da\ lh(' rod~ lt•ltu!-: :u C' thffc•t t~nl

PUBLIC AUCTION

,.

10·0()--Pollce Story 3,4; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33 .
10.30-To Be Announced 15, Aviat ion Wealher 20 .
11 :oo--News 3.~,6.8 , 10,13,15; ABC News 33 .
......,~~~r::-"1 11 31&gt;---Johnny Car$0fl 3,•. 15 ; Rookies 6,13; Movie
"Gunflght af the 0 K. Corral" 8, Movie " AIIanlls.
the Lost Continent" 10; Janakl 33.
12 .41&gt;---Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Wrestling 13 .
1:~Midnight Special 3,., 15; Movle " Devil Bat"•
Daughter" 10
1 :41&gt;---News 13.
2·31&gt;---News 3.
3 -oo--Movle "The Appaloosa" 3
4: 15--Salnt :i
S 15--Movle "Klondike Annie" 3
CINinntl Five
9 a .m - 700 Club (c)
7 p .m . - Wrestling I c)
9 p .m. - Modern Sports-Tr(\vet (c)
10 p .m . - 700 Club (c)

strain
upon
2f Campus
belle
25 Traditional
facts

EURP'' TAKES EXACfLY 30MINUTE5. HE GiVES HIS FINAL
HE5 BIN BURPIN' FV' 15 MINUTES """r- •GAR-SPLIITIN' BURP!'r
~L"
r-A-- - - -- -1 THEN WE 8lJRJc=
HIM 'f! - -

28 Kind of
30

St 1 I
;
ree s o
· Son Franclsco6,13; Hawaii F lue 08; Olymplod 33;
Movie " The Bobo" 10, Classic Guitar of Guillermo
Flerens 20.
9 31&gt;---Dance for Camera 20
10· oo--Harry 0 6, 13, Julie &amp; Jackle· How Swee1 111s 8;
BIIIMoyers' Journal 33, News 20
n ·oo--News 3,A, 6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
.,
11.31&gt;---Johnny Car$0fl 3,4, 15: Mannix 6, 13; Movie Jay
House" 8; Movie " Tamahlne" 10; Janakl ;13.
12 A!&gt;-Maglclan 6, 13
1 ~Tomorrow 3,•
1·5C}-News 13.
Channel Five
9 am - 100 Club lei
7 p m , - Spe~la l Edition I c)
8 p .m - Rex Humbard Ic)
9 p m - Washington Deba1es i cl
10 p m ~ 700 Club (c)
9,33 ,

9 - ~Moule " The Young Savages

FRIDAV.JUNE25, 1976

Various bids determine play

n

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

WIN AT BRIDGE

SALES UENTAL

Tractors

~s
4-12 Pitch
24'-$17.28
26'-$18.72
28'-$20.16

CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RIDGE
(81S11on Aru)
LONG BOTTOM

6 room house, very we ll kept, 3

LOSE wtught wtth New Shape
Toblets and Hydre x Water P1Us
at Dutton Drug , M1ddleport and
Nelson Drugs
MoDERN stereo consol ~ -4--;~eed
&lt;hanger , om-fm radto Balance
$106 40 or terms Coll 992-3965
MODERN Walnut Stereo, AM FM
d
d h
8
k
ro 10, 4 spee c anger, 1roc
tope comb1nahon
Balance
4oor terms. Coll992-3965 HOMESITES fo r sole 1 acre and
51 02--'--'-'--'-:-:.:.......:.:..:.=
_,_
up Mtddlepor t near Rutland
LATEN paper , roller 2 trucks,
Coll992
748 1
reasonoble.Phone9927481
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths
23 channel C01.11er Cora11elle CB
oil elec I ac re, M1ddleport ,
&amp;o,e stot1on was coax and
close to Rut land Phone 992
anten na Used only 3 months ,
7481
asking $200 l1ke new portable
dtshwosher , whtte , $50 Phone 2 0 cr es fmtshd basement , hard
lop rood, c1ly water, dose to
7•2-2217
stores and schools Call (6U)
1975 Bultaco 360 fronll&amp;r motor985-4203 or see l orry Smtth,
cycle, Endl!ro model , many 81(
Chester .
tras , reasonably pnced Phone
WELL-matnlotned s1x rooms and
992-7291 after 8 p m
bath lull attic tkree lots m
ONE 36 mch gas range two
Pomeroy Call 992 5374 after 5
70,000 BTU ctrculoltng gas
p.m.
..
heater bedroom sutte ftve
ptece chrome breakfast set 9x 2 story frame house 2 bedrm ,
pou rbly 3 hvmg room , both ,
12 rllg. Phone m -3268
kt tc hen and uliltty room , newly
70 000 BTU gas heater w1th fan
carpeted , parltal basement and
end thermostat Phone 992carport , 2 story out-butldtng,
7A65
forced otr, natural gas heat,
lots of storage space S17.500
GUERNSEY hetfer 3 month old
Phone992-7360 after 5 p_ m~billy gooo Phone 9A9 2739

b1cycl, S15 00, 8 track
home outf1t w1th 2 speakers
$30 00 Phone 992-7551
19 tn ch portable Admtrol colored
T V , just ltke new. Call 9923AA2
ONE Mossey Ferguson Moer, 7ft
cu r, one New Holland Flat I
Chopper all m good condthon
Coii9A9 20'12
- - - - -c--:::-----:---::-50 to 60 lb ptgs also 30 to 40 lb
2 bedrm and 1 bedrm furmshed
p1gs Phone I 698 8896
apartment Phone 992 2288 or
992-23A8
GOOD 220 V elec drr,er $49 50
UNFURNISHED ~o-p-1""""'1o r rent 4
_!'~•ley s Store Mldd eport
rooms and both Phone 992 MENS us.ad work untform s, pants
5908
28 tnch 36 inch wo ts l shtrh
--:---,-----,---,---,---,-----,-S M·l . short and long sieve
HOUSE Troller 3 bedroom! , 12JC
$1 9e set Bodey s Store, Mtd
60 country setting extra large
dleport .
yord Phone (6 1A)696 -1283.

LEGAL NOTICE
Sea led btds will be re cetved
by lh e Vo llagc ol ModdleP&lt;Jrl.
Ohto, Me1gs Count y, at the
Vollage Ha ll In ModdleP&lt;Jrl,
Olloo unl ol 4 00 p m July 10,
1976 lor th e follo wo ng
' equtpment
1976 Model. 4 door Sedan,
Sma ll VB Engone
NICE 2 bltdrm otr cond1lloned
Hea vy Du ty Altern a tor and
house wtlh b1g yard Couple
Regulator
preferred, references Phone
Automat te
Tra nsm 1ss ton
992-2932
AorP S . PB
Two SP&lt;JI loghts (r lghl a nd ONE acre trotle r lot a ll focllthes
Ftve Pomts area Call collect
lei II
(618) 52A-5825
Spar T1re
Color ba src white
TRAILER lot In Chester , electr~c1 ' y
Del 1very wt thtn 30 days or
and ctty water Phone 992 6072
less
Wrthout trade -1n
The V&lt;ilage rese r ves th e
roghl1o re1ecl a ny a nd all bids
Vil lage of Middleporl 197A Suzuki motorcrou bike 1957
Gene Grale, 1 Chevy 3'11 , A speed tronsmls/1
Clerk Tr ~a s ure r; "orl. Will sell or lrade Call
Jun e 24 , July 1
~ 1
1
992-jiOS

Television log for easy viewing
5 - ~Bonanza

LOST horse, chestnut more
Phona992 5382
LOST Tvesday ntght , po11 olllght
blue pre1cr lpl lon gloue1
pou1bly lost on Pomeroy parkIng lot, Reword if found Call
9A9 231A

WILL DO odd robs rooftng, poln
ling hauling freework and
\
'
Ph ' 992 7409
mowmg ~_:_
WILL do boby11ttmg in my home
on Rulltc Htlls From 7 30om
till A 30 p m Age 26, mother of
a 4 yr old Phone m -7808
_
RACINE F~re Deportment wtll
ha 01 e 0 gvn shoot Saturd ay ot 1WOULD hke to do babyStttmg 1n
my homo wtth pre school
6 30 p m at the ir new bu1lding
.ch1ldren Ho11e uperlence and
off Boshan Road
references Phone 992 -60t2
ANNUAl F1sh Fry , Meigs County
F1sh and Game An n Sunday
June 27 1976 ot Rutland
Amencon Legi on Form
Rut land, Oh1o Gun shoot starts OLD furnllvre , 1ce bol(es , brau
bed1 old wall telepkones and
all p m
ports or complete households
Wnte M D Mtller Rt 2,
Pomeroy, Ohto Co11992 771:/J
.
Metgs Co Hll mane Soctety
CASH patd for all makes and
RABIES AND
models of mobde homes
DISTEMPER CLINIC
Phone area code b 14-423 9531
County Htghway Garage
SSCoshSSS for tu nked auto Frye s
Metgs Co Fa1rgrollnds
Truck Auto Ports Rutlond
SAT , J UNE 26
Phone 7-42 :108 1
2-S p M
CO IN S tokens any form gold or
Dr DanNotter ,
!otlv•r jewelry spoons rmgs
Vetennartan
dental W1ll trade Call Roger
Wamsley Rutland , Oht o 741 2
Rab res
SJ ,
Fet m e
23:11
Dls re mp er S4 , Can tn e
TWO or three acres on the nver
Tnple Shots ss
see Us About Neu termg
West V~rgm•a or Ohto Phone
Your ~ets
992 526&lt;
TJMBER Pomeroy Forest Products Top pnce tor slondmg
~ow t l mber Coli Kent Hanby
I 446 8570
BAB't'lomb
Phone (61 41 ) 9854111
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PlAN !X
PERIEN CE? FRIENDLY TO Y 'l Chest of drawers age not tm
PARTIES HAS OE NINGS FOR
porton t_ Ph~ ne 949-2421
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECA USE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MEN! NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CALL COLLECT TO IF YOU hove o servtce to offer
CAROl DAY 51B -A89-9395 OR
want to buy or sel l something,
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
ore looktng for work
or
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE ,
whote11er
you II get results
ALBANY N Y 12205
faster w1th a Senft net Wont Ad
Coll992 2156
HOUSEWIVES, open Hut door to
ell!lro earn1ngs Jo1n the Sllc 't'ARD Sole Wed
June 23
cenful women who ore mak
through Saturday , 26th from 9
mg good money 1n the1r spo re
t1ll6 p m across from WMPO
ltme
No el(perten c e
necessary no delt ve ry no col 4 Family Garage Sale June 24
25, 26th 9 o m !ill dark , baby
lectlng no cosh tn ves.tmen t
fu rn1 tvre , bdby, ch1ldren and
Call now and get ell!lro early
adults clothes drapes , Avon
benef1h Phone 9419 2803 or
bottles, mtsc 1tems 1/, m1le
9419 2786 Also book tng par
nor th of Eastern H1gh School on
ltes
Rt 7 Phone (614 ) 985 4276 or
(61A) 985 A202 _
3 Fom1ly Yard Sole on Church St
:t:~ tn Syracuse Ant1qu es dt s he~
ia."t: nice 'dolh1ng fu rniture and
&gt; othtr m1sc 1tems fhvrsdoy
' Ffitfov and Saturday
4 Fam,fy' Yord Sale lues , Wed
Thunday , Rt 141 3 nght post
Wolle Pen Rd Gloria Johnson
Whtle you tr!_ln, we pay
lOam ttll6pm
$360 per mo from ftrst day
We co ve r food , quart er s i.Vilb Sole. Frtdoy and Soturdo~
~une 25 and 26, 10 a mt tt ll 4
and health ca re, too Over
p m ~ 663 Cheslnul 51 Mod
7.0 ft e lds to choo se from and
dlepott'"'
_
a ll guarantees rn wrlftng
befor e you enlist For no
MULTI Fa
carport sole Frtdoy
and Sd'turdoy Ju ne 25 and
obltgalton 1nformatton see
26th lO o m till 6 p m
yo ur Navy Recru1ter at·
Clothtng
b1ke s , Evreko
221 Columbus Road
sweeper m1sc J1m Louks
Athens, Ohoo
fesrdanc::e State Rt 7 tl'ltrd
Ph 593 3566
hq.use below Easte rn H1gh
.l&lt;hool •

Business Services ·

I

-::.=

The Dally Senlme l, M1ddleporL-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Jun e t l, 19/ij
DICK TRACY

( - - - · " t..........

Y~llrr4•r'•

Jum•l•" ELOPE CYNIC HOM1NG PHYSJC

I

A•••~11 lf'7wll~tON might nnfl. fJitft.IV of in 1111

lA IIIlo/ Nod- YE!I-MEN

I am writmg this
Right now, a clerk
letter in a store that is eyeing me rather
sells typewriters.
suspiciously.

�9-

"'~~~-: ~

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES

S
P M
Dey
Publi cation

Before

Cancellations ,

corr ec

tlons accep te d ft rs l day ol

l:lubl lce tlon
REGULATIONS

The Publ l$htr r eser ve s

the r ioh t to edit or reiect
any ads dee me d ob
l ec tl onel T he pub i1 sher
will not be respon Sibl e fo r

more then on e •ncorrec 1
Insert ion

RATES
For Want Ad Ser vi ce

5 cen ts per word one
Insertion
M i nim um Charge $1 00
l.t ce nts per word t hr ee

con sec uti ve Insertions
2 ~ cen ts per word six

consec uti ve inserltons

25 Per Cent Dtsc ount on
ads

pa id

end

eds

patd

Wi th i n )0 dll'fS

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBI TUA RY
S2 00
for
80
wo r d
m in imum
Each ll dd ll•onal word J
4

cents

BLIND ADS
Add il •onal

25c

Ch ar ge

per Adver ttseme nt

OFFIC E HOU RS
8 JO a m to 5 00 p m

Da•t y , B JO a m

to 12 00

Noon Satu rda y
Ph on e toda y 992 2156

NOTICES
A TT N "
All HOUSEWI VES
A l l Yard Sal es, Rumm ag e,

Porch and Ba se ment Por ch
and Ba se ment Sal es , etc
m us t be pa 1d m advan ce
Ge t your s 1n early by
s topp mg by our ofli ce a t
Th e Datty Se nt 1ne t, 111
Cour t St or wr1t1ng Bo x
729, Pome roy , Oh10 45 769
Wllh your rem1 tt ance

AstraGraph
• Bem•ce Bede O sot
For Fuday , June 25, 2976
ARIE S (March 21-Apnl 19)
Your a l! ellii Oil span coul d
le&lt;Jve o tdtle to be des 1red tonay Try not to clutt er up• th e
house wllh lln!f f1n 1shed proreel s

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don t get m1xectup 1n any tt11ng
tul;:! nc1a t toda y thJ t you have
dOllbts abou t It JOU ha~Je serond thougllts heed them
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) II
you qet mto a s11ua t10n to day
that calls lor your pe rsonal
manage rwl touct1 be very
dPc•s•ve 111 any moves you
make
CAN CER (June 21-July 22)
Handle any l11gh pr10nty ma t!er
promptl y Tile rno re you daw dle the toss chance ~ou ha ve
a t set tt mg 11 ell ect1vely
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Whde
you d like to th1nk tha t w1shes
mnke 11 so today you know
bctl cr II vou wa nt somethtng to
hr.ppen you mus t ma ke II
happen

VIR GO • (Aug 23 -Sept 22)
You re llket&gt;y to only pa r1 1.:1lly
deve lop your ooss1bJitlies to d&lt;ly 11 you le t self aoub ts creep
111 Don I be afratd to err
LIBRA (Sepl 23-0cl 231 Don t
llesltrl te to state wha t you have
On your mmct t odt~y In d otng
so say exactl y wha t you mean
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22)
Don t b e pressured 1nto buy1ng
so meth1ng you don t wan t today Keep 111 m1 nd the money
co mes out of YOUR pocket
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21 ) In Si tu ations 1nvo lvmg
t e &lt;~mw o r k
don t leave
eve ryth1ng up to your pa rt ne r
The more hands the l1gh ter the
work
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan
19) You have a te ndency today
to unde res t1mate the value of
~ o ur work or SkillS Someone
wt1o knows the1 r true wort h
could take advantage
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
You re an 1tl tere st1ng perso n
lJSI Jil ll y others enjoy what you
have to say I hat s not an ex
cuse however to monop olize
every con versa t1on
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
You 11 be fortunate today 1n
neqohahons w!lh persons w1th
wh o m you have s tr ong
emOtiOnal IIOS Oeal1ng Wi th
strangers may no t turn o ut so
we ll

~your

.. ~ oirt:hClay
•

••

June 25, 1976
Th1ng s will be perk1ng up for
you on the socm t scene th 1s
com 1ng ye ar The 1n teres tmg
people you'll mee t w1111ead you
10 other new 1nends

1 WISH

to thank Or Jtldgw6y Or
Telle. nurses and n1.1rses old•• ·
all tha 1taff at th• IJeterana
Memorial Hospital for be1ng so
nlce to me while a pot1en t ol
the ho•pllol ond man)! thank1
to Rav Perrin the Sunday
School. Trlntty Ch urch and tht
members of my Sunday School
clou. my frtend• and relatives
lor the ir proyert. ond lo~Je ly
flowers and cords Moy God
bien everyone of you Gladys
Cuckler
-

Help Wanted
GUARANTEED
INCOME
'

"y

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDDERS
Seal ed b1 ds for !he con
s tr uc 110n of a br1dge ov er
Shad e R 1ve r lo cated on
Ches ter Tow ns h1p Road No T
11 1 wil l be r ece 1vcd by lhe
Board Of Counly Com
m1ss toners of Me 1gs County ,
Oh 1o, a! 1ts ofl tce m the Court
hou se , Pom eroy , Oh1o , untd
9 JO AM
Monday , June
18, 1976, and then at sa 1d off1 ce
publiCly opt:! ncd and r e ad
aloud ,
The Information for Btd
ders , Fo r m of Btd Form of
C·o n I r a c 1
P Ia n s ,
Speci ficatiOns and Forms of
Pe rforman ce and Payment
Bond and other con tra ct
do cuments mav be examrned
at !he follow ing Board of
Colln ty Comm tss ioners Off1ce ,
Collr thouse , Pomeroy , Oh 10
Co ptes ma y be ob ta1ned at
the off ic e of the County
Eng 1neer located at Collr l
Ho ll se or County H1g hwey
Ga rag e at Rock Sprm gs llpon
payment of SS 00 for each set
Any unsuccess flll btdder , upon
re turn1 ng su ch sel promrlly
and 1n good condil1on , wtl be
refunded hiS payment an d any
non btdder upon so relurn1ng
such a set will re cetve no
refund
Th e owner rese r ves the
r1ght to wa1v e any fo rmal11tes
or to relect any and all b1ds
No b1dder may Withdraw t11s
bid Wtlh 1n 10 days a fter the
actual dat e of the open1ng
ther eof

SNAPPER SALE
•

'

'100 OFF

~6J

'75 OFF
On any IIIIer.

''

'50 OFF
On 21" self propelled
mower w -grass bag .

Sale limited to items
now In stock .

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES
Pomeroy, Ohio

18 It Tag -A-long travel tra1ler
se lf.contomed Phone
949
2739

FURNISHED 2 bedrm oportmant.
odlllts only rn M1ddleport
Phone 992 387 4

3 AND 4 RM lurmshed and un·
furn1!hed opts Phone 992
5A3A
COUNTR't' Mob1le Home Pork Rt
33 ten miles norih of Pomeroy
Lorge lo ts w1th concret poltos,
stdewolks rl!nnen and off
street porktng Phone 992-7479
ONE bedroom apartments at
VIllAGE MANOR on Moddleporl
for $101 monthly plus elec or
$130 mcludmg aleclnc. LOWER
RATES WR S!NOK CITIZENS
ConventEtnl lo sho ppmg on
Th1 rd and M1ll Streets m M1d
dleport Brand new h1gh quoit tv apartments . See the
manager at Rt verslde Aport.
ments or call 992 J273 Fur
BOARD OF COU NTY
ntShed apartments also
COMMI SSIONER S
O'Jatloble
Me igs County , Ohto
Mertha Chambe rs , One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur
Clerk
n11hed apartments
Phone
992-3129 or 992-5A3A
17, 24 2tc

On any rid1ng mower.

..,,.

lARGE r Yard Sole tn Brodburl ,1
watch for 11gns Ho1.1seho d
11ems , Q1ou w0 re • a 11 SitOs ,
adults and chtldren s clothmg
prcture fromes m1sc Items
Held 1ns1de 1f ro1n Saturday ,
June26, 9am 11116pm
't' ARD Sola June 25 10om tttl 4
p m Syrocvse Mun1c 1po l
8u1ldtng In case of ram. 11 wlll
be at the Presbytenan Church
Annex

'

.

@ 2 SIGNS
QU~~TY

Junk Batter11s $1.25

Pomeroy
-Motor Co.

1975 CHEV BLAZER K-5
S52P5
4 wh d nve, like new mtenor, less than 12,000 mtles,
wh over sliver , 750 V e. autom a tic, power sleenng &amp;
bra kes, ch rom e mldgs , bumpet , ex tenor m lr ro rs,
rad lo See lt now

THURSDAY , JUNE 24, lt16
3; Partridge Family 8; Mission · lm
possible IS
5 31&gt;--Adam12 4,13. News&amp;, Family Affair 8; Elec
Co 20,33,
6 · ~ News 3,4,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33
6 31&gt;---NBC News 3.4, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Grlff l1h 6;
CBS News 8.10, Hodgepodge Lodgo 20, Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
7 ~Truth or Cons . 3, To Telllhe Truth A, Bowling for
Dollars 6; Lawrence Wel k 8, News 10; Let' s Make
a Deal 13 , Family Affolr 15; Our story 20. Family
a1 War 33.
7·31&gt;---Holl ywood Squares 3,A; Ohio Stole Lo1terv 6;
Eve ning Edition wl1h Marlin .~ronsky 20; Wild
Ki ngdom 10; To Tell the Truth 13, Music Clly
U.S.A. 15
8· oo--Sear ch for the Shlnohara 3,A,15; Wel come
Back, Koller 6, 13, Waltons 8,10, My shk ln 2Q, Mark
ot Jazz 33
8 31&gt;--- Barney Miller 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembers

~

IIMn&lt;itJ Avtilab~

U.. ltWf . . . Pltlitd 1!111 Wlll.1111 ~-JWIIOII .,.._
AI pool ,.,.., Mildlo, llo.

D. Bumgardner

RIDERS SALVAGE
Sl RL 124

FREE ESTIMATES
Blown
Insulation Servicn

SWIMMING
POOLS

Moto1 Clst Clean
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper 35c
Car Bodin
Scrap-Iron

IIMioS.•oollt,

PomorOJ. Oh•
Phone !!11461

1974 CHEV . CIO CHEYENNE
$3495
350 V 8, au tomat 1c, P Ste en ng &amp; brak es w w It res ,
wh covers, s te p bumper, c.h rome m ir ror s, mldg s AM
rad10, d ean sharp truck

·~

MillE 912-5724
~13- 1

ill 1M

mo

I if., i•IO Wilt l Attocs
$10111
WINDOW$ l DOORS

IEPLACI:IIEIIT
WINDOW$
AUJIIINUII
SIOING-SOifiTT
GUTTUS-AWNINGS

lARR1,"~~~DER •
Ph 192-3993

CAPTAIN EASY

4-1~1

mo

DO~'T PA~I C. 6POR T, •. IT 7

M~R~LY

YOUR OLD N16E I &amp;UDD Y!

I J UST K N OC K~ D O VER O I'JE OF
TH ESE MARBLE= BU STS-- BUf If
LOOK$ LIKE OUR HOS TES"&gt; CAI'J

SECRE CY t$
AND MAY
1 ADD-- FOR YOUR
ROLE IN THIS CAPE~,
YOU PIC KEr&gt; T ~E
PERFECT
CO§TUME!
W~ Y !

S PARE A F E W !

1974 FORD F100
S2995
8' Slyles tde, gree n fm1 sh good fires, R bumper ,
chrome grttl s &amp; ft ls bumper , 6 cyt , 8. std tr an s

WILKINSON'S
Complote Smoll En~

HALLS
SALVAGE

Repatr
Ch11n

s.....
llwn
MowersTtllenR1dm1

High pnces for smp 1utos,
motoiS and other metals.
Phone 992-2228 Monday th1u
Fnday 8-3, Saturday 8-12.
5 26 I mo
1961 GMC p 1ckup truck one-half
ton , 327 cu mch eng1ne, 4
speed Irons . good runnmg
cond ttton $550 Phone 9927580
19741 Ford Cou ner-4 speed II 000
mtles $200 and ass ume
payments 1974 Kowasak1 250
1966 Ntmrod compmg tro1ler
lor lost sale Phone 992 7066
1971 V W Super Beetle el(celent
cond11ton, low m1leoge, $1450
Phone 992 7797
1975 Ford Granado 302 V-8 p s
p b . o c $3695 Phone 992
JASI
1972 Ford •;, ton ptckup truck
$1350 00 Coll i 378 63-49
~-1970 LTD (9) Passenger stol1 0n
wagon ctr condtllon $1250
Phone Mtddleport 991. 3647

-----

MEIGS County Humane Soc1ety
fns ky ktflens for odoptt on
E1ght 10 weeks old Hove
dtslemper skos ond wormed
Phone 992 - ~27 af ter 6 p m
AKC Reg female Colhe pup, 6
months old Phone (614) 985·
4111 or 992-5621
POODLES, 6 weks old, $35 Phone
'1902 76? 1
KITTEN1S Both long hmr ond short
ha~r
Con ta ct
Freddte
Houdeshell , Middleport Ok1o

MAKE spr1ng deon1ng profitable ~
turn unwanted 1tems tnlo cask
Adve rtise tn the Wont Ads
LOCUST posts, round or spltl
Plv&gt;ne 9A9 277•
1973 450 Prototype Kawasok1
motoroross good cond1t1on
S6SO Phone 992-3643

1969 Plymouth Satellite, $1200
_ P.c_ho.:cnc.;ec:9_:.2
9:..·.:c
61c:3_1 __ - - - 1973 Monte Ca rl o 350 engtne
29,500 miles rall y wheels
$3-400 Phon• 992 2035 or 9922971
196a Chevy Von 1970motor, mag
whee ls, ca rpel , pon e lmg ,
stereo $995 Con be $8en at
Branham 's Goroge 1n Mid·
I
, or coll992 3710

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame , two bedrm
home
located between Coolville and
Tuppers Ploms One acre lot,
two car ga rage etly water gas
heat ,
kardwood
floors ,
corpetd hvtng room, n1ce vtew,
$21 ,000 Phone (614) 667 -3519

74 Kowosakt $475 00 Pkone 742-

2980
COAL , l1mestono, and calctum
chlottde and cak1um brtne for
dvst control and spec1ol mixi ng
salt for fo rmers Mom Street ,
Pomeroy, Oh1o or phone 9923891
1973 25 ft
Yukon Delta
houseboat, aU sa lt conta1ned ,
wolh 1976 Chrysler lOS h p
engme Phone 992 5532
20

tn

YOUR HO TPO INT
APPL IANCE STORE
FREEZE~

SALE!

Save up to $100 on 20
cu . fl . Chest c r 16 cu .
11 . Upright.

Choic~

$26995

Appi iJ nce Depart rtl... 1d
POMEROY LANDMARK
'I'._Jack W. carsey , Mgr .
.-..t Phone 9'12-2181

NEW. lJwn Bor mowers, P10neer, »c
Cullouch chain sa.,, Bolen's Mowers,
MtrrJTtll!iS, MID Mowell.
498locusl St
Moddleporl, Ohw 991309Z

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.
8ol18!
Rullond, Oh• 45771
Ph (614) 7421409
We Dehwer
6-1J-76 1 mo

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating
Ractne, Ohto
new roof or olcl ·
repatred ? House, roof .
barn , sk1ngles, build up
pa1ntmg, electncat work ,
gutt e rs &amp; downspouts,
furnaces, water heaters,
water softners, rnstalled &amp;
repa1red, Sewage
Call us at 949-2882
or 949· 2203
3261mo .
Need

.

bedrms , modern k1tchen wall
to wall ca rpet H W floors full
basement new gas furnace
s.moll lot to mow , ldeol for
older couple or small fomtly m
good
neighborhood 1n
Pomeroy Call tor appOintment
Phone 992 3W7
HOUSE for sole rn Chester oreo
Three year old , four bedroom ,
br1ck ranch on f1ve acres of
land Has two baths large
rooms fm1sh ed basemen t w1th
ftreploce 1n fomtly room Phone
(614) 985 3938 or contac t Don
Roush
,~~---;-~~OuTDOOR pot1o for summer
cookouts plus a1r copd tt1onmg,
makes !his a home you r fomt1y
wtll en1oy Also features 3
bedrooms, 1 both, k1tchen ,
famdy room alec heal
sto rage bu1id1ngs and fully
carpeted
Prtced $25 ,500
Phone ~2 7808
42 one fo urth acres of real estate
more or less, Situated 1n Soc
l1on 26 Fraction 31 , 1n Ru tland
Townshtp, Me tgs County Ohto
For further mformotton, contact
Bernard V Fllltr: Pomeroy No
ftonol
Sa n k
Buddrng
Pomeroy , Ohto Telephone
992 21116
3 be~room bnck ranch style
home full basement with
rocreotton room ! 1/1 baths
carport located m Boum Ackh
t10n near Sto le Htghwoy
Goroge Co li (614) 985-35841or
appointment

N11RTII 1101

Tra\'el Tra tlers

• K .I Ill 9 :1

''

Racine, Ohio
ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

Aluminum Siding,

. AK

om

olo A-14

Days an d evemngs except Tues. and ••
Wed. or by toniJtltnl R Co41tfr1
owner.
~211

11 t:sr
• i 2

JUNE SPEC1AL

Rutland
742 -2328
All Work Guaran1eed • ·
Free Estimates
~1H mo.

l\ccord1nsly . I won th e
heart 111 dumm y, led dummy s
Ja&lt;'k of s pades and leL 11 nde
Tlus enabled me to ptck up
"ast"s qu ee n o f spa de s ,
collet'! 10 tricks and a top

sc.:ore s mce the rest ol th e

tfl 65 4

6 CANS OF RC

l1eld made e1lher lour spades
ot jusL three notrump

... 9 7 .12

Buth vulnt.•nJb lt·

•1,QQ +

\\ t•st

Tax
Woth any $4.00 purchase
and thiS ad. Good through
6-30-76

l'.tss
P.tss

~ urth

~:as t

I.

P,I SS

Sooth
I NT

.l N 'f

Pass

l'il ss

Opemn~

DONELli'S PIZZA

~~u~~
A Vermont reader \\ants to

lt•.1 d - (.J ¥

ll y Oswald &amp; Jumes Jucoby

Moddleport, Ohio
992 6167
6-1 76-1 mon lh

LI'f'l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-OVER

EXPERIENCED

HOf A BAD ROOM
RI6"T ACROSS THf

FRor.l HER PRISS'(

SHOP ··

WElL , TRUST M'l' E'lC - WIFE ··
T1tE PANTS Pi&gt;ESSER HAS

60NE , SliT NOW SHE'S GOT

THI&lt;J

BALD· HfADED OL D

GANDER H~ULIH' HfR 10
WORK IN HIS CAR ··

~IC~

THE

GOIH' - AH' ISN'T

l&gt;IAT CUTE 1 HE TIPS HIS

HAT! SHE lRtPS ACRO'i&gt;S
fHE WALK IHTO HfR SHOP WHO IS THAT 61RD?

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

Dav1d Parsons, Owner
949-2814
6-7-1 mo .

Sl'ore

• A H4
¥ K2

Painting and Repair

AL TROMM CONST

t:AST
•Qti 5

• 7 5 43
¥\i -110 6
t I !I I 2
• Q 10 7
.QH6
• 1\ Jtl ~
SUliTif

...

Roofing, Gutters,

'6.95

Square Yard Installed

card and four If t:ast held 1L
I a lso noled that tf t played
West ror the spade qu een I
would wmd up makmg one
t m k less Lhan th e spade
declarers a nd have a poo r

¥ h9K

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

W '" y
.,.
OH WELl · • HAVE A
lOoK AT THE PAPER -

SOlDtE~ 5 ON LEAVE · •
SUCKERS I

One lh1ng lhat I leurned
aboul match pomt pla y a1 u
very ea rly stage m my bndge
&lt;·arec r was Lo study both my
contrac t and posst ble other
cuntra&lt;'f s
Thus when dumm&gt; ht I th e
Lable I su w that aL least half
Lhe f1eld would be m rour
spades We rea ll y should have
been th ere also I should have
ra1sed mv partne r to Iwo
spad es 1ns1 ead of btddmg one
notrump
The normal pla y m spades
would be for declarer Lo ruff a
heurl und plav West for th e
que en of spades lie would
make ftve 1f West held 1hal

Ph. 992-2174

know our rebid Wllh
•K xx ¥ " .K.Jx4 A.J9xx
We have opened one club
a nd partner has respo nd ed one
spade
We have no problem We

We don t

reuse lwo spades

hk e th e 1dea of b1ddmg one
no11 ump w1Lh the worth less
doubl e ton tn hearts If partner
hus onlv tour spades and a
wea k ha nd tl Will be no
Lragedy to play two spades
w1th fo ur oppos1te three If he
has a good hand he IS not gomg
to b1d four spades un less he
has u good spade s u1t

(Fo r a copy or JACOBY
MODERN send $1 to " Wrn
af Brrdge . " clo thrs
newspaper, P 0 Box 489,
RadiO Crty Station, New York,
N Y 1001g)

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

UNITED MethodiSt Chllrch proper·
ty at Junctton ot 7 and 681 1n
Tuppers Plorns Oh1o Phone
(614)667 3-497 or667-3AOO
SMAll form for sale 10~. down ,
owner ftnonced Monroe Coun'Y . W Vo Phone (JOA) n231 02 or (:lOA) 772 3227 .
FOR SALE 1S acres wtlh mea 8
rm and both , 3 bedrm home ,
newly remodeled , 2 car
garage rl!ral water. goss well
oil mineral rights , $34 ,000
Phone 742 2336

HOUSE fo r sole rn Ractne. Ohto .
D&amp;D TREE Trimming . 20 years ••·
St Rt 338 , lUSt Olll! lde town 8
perlence
Insured free
rooms, bath , porch palto, city TWELVE 8 w1de mobile komes, 1
estimates Call 992-2384 or
and 2 bedrooms , completely
water gas forced a1r furnace ,
(614) 698-7257 Albany.
furnished , Cassius Canaday,
good lot Coli owner onyt1me ,
SEWING
MACHINE Repotrs , ser-1
1900 Cenlrol Sl . Gallopolis.
Wrlltom Maynard , 949-2613
v1ce, all makes, 992-2284 . The·
Ohio Near Smtth Buack ~hone
OlDER, remodeled , ' 3 bedroom
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy ~
(61A) ..6-13'11
home oil eleclr tc on corner lot
Autliomed S1nger Sales a~
1n Pomeroy , S12,500 Phone 1'169 12x60 Schultz, 2 bedrooms.
Service. We sharpen Sc1ssors.
orr condttloner good cond1tlon
992-5011
EXCAVATING,
dozer . looder ancl
Phone eventngs 7~2 3018.
COUNTRY farm land w1th aedud·
backhoe work · dump truck•
ed woods, water and good acand lo-boys for htre; wtll houl1
cess tn Mon roe Cq1.1nty, W. Vo
fill dirt , top soil, li mestone anct '
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jaf.
$1 .000 down . coli (JOA) n23102 or (30AI772-3227
fers, day phone 992-7089,
ANTIQUE AUCTION, Soturdoy ,
nlghl phone 992 3525 or 992WHY RENT? Buy a new home w1th
June 26, 11 00 a.m. Chamber of
5232.
payments same or lower than
Commerce Bu1 lding, behind
rent 3 bedrooms den , 2 baths,
Howe's Gro"• Pork, Belpre, SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern:
carpet, r,tus all the el(tras a
Ohio Wash rngton Blvd, Walnut
Sanitation. 992 395-f or 992·
housewle wou ld wont. Shown
corner cupboord cherry corner
2428.
~·
by appointment , 742 2328
cupboard, china cabinet and ~W:::I:ll=d;-: o-roo
--;1;-ln-g-,_c_o_n-:,,~ru-c:::t,-"
on ,
s1deboard to match, secretory
plumbing and heating. No job
w1 th round g l en ~ walnut
too Iorge or too small. Phone
rockers , cherry rocker~ , .A VIc·
7A2·23A8
tonan cho1rs, Vtctorlon love
seat, Vtctorian Settee, stool EXCAVATING, dozer, back h..
cabinet , oil lamps Aladdin
and dltcher. Charles R Hal·
fleld , Bock Hoe Servrce ,
lamps, bros lamps, Gone with
the Wind lamps, 6 piece
Rutland Oh1o. Phone 742· 2008
V1rg1 l B Sr ., Realtor
bedroom suite walnut bed and GREG'S CB SALES, localod ol Er110 Mechamc Pomeroy, 0 .
drener, brass bell, brass
Phone 992-337&lt;
win 's Gulf Serv1ce, Mrdcandles, 4 gallon Donohue 1ar,
dleport, Oh1o . Phone 992·
several
hand
mode
qu
ilts
,
This
157 ACRES - 80 of tractor,
2A38.
rs only a partial llating there
woods a nd pasture Large
ore
over
300
items
including
SEPTIC
Systems rnstalled by
ol d er Broom home Most ly
over I 00 places of glass . No
licensed Installer
Shtpor~
fenced $60,000
junk Penny arcade machines IR
Controcton, Phone 742· 2409.
MINERSVILLE
6
workmg condition Duncan
flooring, coiling,
room s, 3 Brs , 1112 baths,
Phyfe dmmg room suite table, 6 cARPENTER.
P&lt;Jnellng
Phone
992-2759.
city water , gas F A.
choirs and sideboard. Term• of
furnac e on larg e lot
Sole
Cosh
or
check
with
trim
or
cut
trees
and shrub·
WILL
BRAND NEW &amp; MIGHTY
$15,000
bery phone 9A9-25A5 or 7•2positive 1.0 Not reaponslble
TEMPTING TOO - Thos 3
3167
lor occ1dents. Auctioneer Ottie
NEW LISTING - 3 Br s ,
BR home offenng dm e in
Opperman . Nelsonville, Ohio . SPRAY PAINTING. Al TROMM
eat
m kttchen,
n1ce
large
kolch e n w olh 27 It of
Phone (61A) 385-7195 or 374bath , enclosed fron t porch,
CONSTRUCTION PHONE 742beauf tf ul ca btnets, mo dern
«98
Sl
Drs
and
wmdows,
F
A
m8
·
ceram ic ba lh (vellow · l
furnace, and ot he r nt ce
utol1 fy
R ,
fiXIure sl.
fea tur es $19,500
carpeted lhroug houl. has
RIVER FRONT - Lot at
garage W wo rk areCI,
Letart
wt th water, sewage,
many othe r features
and e leclrtclly $4,000
Located on approx 1 acre,
NEW HOME - 3 Brs, 2
•s yours for 1ust $22,900
lull baths, mce kitchen.
MIDDLEPORT - Love on
d onong , lull basement ,
&amp; have ad d1ft onal1nco me 4
carport and 2 acres in the
N. MAIN STREET,
un1ts, all furni shed large
co untry $32,500
brick &amp; fr ame on cor ner
lot, wa lk to shop Thos you
NEW LEXINGTON, OHIO
must soe 528,000
FISHING COTTAGE OR
RESERVED
HOME - Located on the
FOR YOUR AD
Ohoo Rouer 3 BR , ba th ,
SATURDAY, JUNE 26 and SUNDAY, JUNE 27 at 11
own wa ter s yste m, nrce
O'
CLOCK AM EACH DAY
kitche n. carpeted , paneled ,
Reltnng alter ha ving been 1n business af lhts location
carport large por ch, two
s1nce 1945 will sell complete contents of building
follh s of an acre $8,900
MIDDLEPORT - 4 Brs.,
mcludtng all radio and TV repa1r equ ipment &amp; parts,
RETIRE HERE - 5 yea rs
)lot wa ter heal (gas Fored) ,
JUke boxes , radtos, TV's, thousands of 78 rpm records,
old - 3 BR bath , very nrce
lront farg e llvmgl large
ant scales, ca meras, and many other Ite ms dating
kll chen, ul1lol y R &amp; space,
drning ,
va rnished
back to th e 1940s Also hundreds of manuals for
c,1 rrete d ,
air
co nd ,
woodwork,
larg'
e fr. P&lt;Jrch
servicing radios &amp; TV's This Is one of t he last
~ l o rtlg C bldg N1 ce garden
and lol on good slreet Only
remaontng Inve ntories of Its kind to be offered lor sale
spa ce All loca ted on 1 2
$16,500.
In S E Ohio. lunch available Nothong s hown before
ac re ONL Y $16.900
MINERALS - 136 acres In
day of SBie Positive ID
CALL US TODAY FOR
Le banon Offer open
Terms- Cash 1\i!Ch day ol sale. Not responsible for
YOUR NFFDS IN, REAL
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
acctdent~
.
ESTAfE .
FROM US BEFORE THE
Owner- Elli s TV and Appllonce Co., ln c.
HENRY E CLELAND,
LOCATION
OF
Aud1onoer- B1II Janes, Phone 962 4377 or 5)7-3411
BROKER
INDUSTRY AND SAVE .
992 2259 or 992 2568

TEAFORD

39 Region

ACROSS
I Potato or
poker
5 Start

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER BRADFORD, Austroneer. Com·
VICE, Metgs-Athens County.
plate Serv1ce. Phone 9..9 ·2~87
Balers from $3995 up Merrill
or 949·2CUl Rocrne. Oh1o, Crltt
Chose , (61A)698-3021
Bradford.
ExPERIENCED house pointer. ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR PI-lone Arlhur Musser, 742Sweepers toasters, Irons. all
2180
small appliances lawn mow•! ·
next to State Highway Garage
BUtLDING and remodeling, ex·
on Route 7 Phone (61A) 9BScavohon , concrete work , elec·
38lji
tnco l work , plumbrng, rough
ond fmtshed carpentry and REMODELING, Plumbong heotln~
roofrng. Phone992·7481.
and all types. of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years eJI.
penance. Phone992-2409.

40 Distaff kin
41 Ridge on

skm
DOWN

(2 wds.)

10 Attraction

I Lumpkm
2 Mortal
3 Sultan's
decree
4 Confine
5 - naked
6 Clever
18 Sagacious
convict
21 Inner
( sl )
Hebrides
7 Calumniate
island
8 Instigated 22 Trattoria's
9 Considered
ice cream
a must
specialty
11 Fiery
23 Prepare
particle
24 Nucleus
t5 Kind of
25 Mlnunize
%6
- to

II Novelist
Laurence

12 Muscat
and -

13 Sumptuous
dwelling

14 Pater·

GASOLINE ALLEY

!amilias
IS Exclude
16 Performed
17 New Jersey
c1ty
19 Colorado
Indian
20 Cuttlefish's
concealing
agent
21 Refrig·
era ted

22 Put

a

r~======:J~~~fT,~~()~~~~~JI;j~~~in~~NV~~ifP,Jrr:~iliJ~M[~~~uHe~
AN ATrACK O''eLJRIAL
IN /5" MINUTb5 MORE,
!7 Blunder

!~i~§§§~~~~~:::~~~~~l.~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~

geometry

29 I said ttl

Artlsllc

need
34 "The Man
- Got
Away"
36 Nervous
twitch
37 Stomach

za Plagiarize
31 Subway
(abbr.)

:sz

~!YWIDM;!'f.,:::!:! -:c

Producer
Shubert
33 Opera
or top
35 Author,
SUBiln 37 Entangle

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

ILY CRYPTOI!liOTE
- llrr~'s
38IH
Locomotive
1-....1.....1-.L.....J..h

UnKromblt 1hoeo rour Jumbt...
one letter to each Hquare, to
form four ordinary words.

h'"'

AX\'01,8 ,\ ,\XR
I. 0 ~ G f E (, I, 0 W

2 DAY SALE

YOEZ
RNGB

LBMLRB
NV

ORMEB

ELLIS TV AND APPLIANCE CO.

BARNEY

'IE BEEN GLUED THAR
TH' LIVELONG DAY. PAW -'-IE OUGHT TO DO A
LEETLE EXERCISIN'

'IO'RE RIGHT
AS RAIN, MAW

15

6 oo--Summer Semester 10
6 · 15--Farm RePQrl 13.
6 21&gt;--- Biue Ridge Quar1el 13
6 ·31&gt;---Columbus Today 4; News 6, Summer Semester
8; Farmllme 10
6 : A5--Mornlng Report 3
6 :5C}-Good Morning , We s1 VIrgin ia 13
6 55-Chuck Wh ile Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl Slale
13
7 ~Today 3,4.15; Good Morning . Amerlca6 , 13; Bugs
Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 31&gt;---Schoolles 10.
8 ~La ss ie 6, Capt Kangaroo 8, 10. Sesam e Sf 33
a·31&gt;---Big Valley 6.
9 oo--A .M. 3: Phil Donahue 4.15 , Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10, Morning with D J . 13
9 .31&gt;---Cross-WIIs 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
10 oo--Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4.15; Edge of Night 6; Price Is
Right 8,10; Bit With Knit 33
10 '31&gt;---Celebrlty Sweepslakes 3,4, 15; Dinah 6, Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 ~Wheel of Fortune 3, IS; Weekday 4; Gambll
8, 10 , Farme r's Daughter 13
11 ·31&gt;---Hollywood Squares 3,A,15, Happy Days 13, Love
of Life 8,10
11 ·55--Take Kerr 8, Dan lmel 's World 10
12 : ~Fun Factory 3, 15, Let's Make a Deal 13, Bob
' Bruan 4; News 6.8 ,10 , Sesame Sf 33
12 31&gt;---Gong Show 3, 15, All My &lt;;hlldren 6, 13 , Search
lor lomonow 8, 10
12:55--NBC News 3, 15 .
1 oo--News 3: Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donohue 8,
Young &amp; lht Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15 ;
Elec Co 33 .
1.31&gt;---Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As The World Turns 8, 10; Book Beet 33.
2 ~$20,000 Pyromld 6,13; Val lanl Years 33
2. 31&gt;---Doctors 3,4,15; Breok the Bank 6, 13, Guiding
Light 8, 10. Olympiad 33.
3-oo--Another World 3, ~, 15 , General Hospltal6,13; All
In The Family 8, 10, Crockett's VIctory Garden 20
3 JO--One Life to Llve13; Mickey Mou•e Club 6: Match
Game 8, 10; Book Beat 20. Walsh' s Animals 33
4 ~Mi ster Car1oon 3, Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6, Mickey Mouse Club 8, Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "Scared Still" 10; Dinah 13 .
4 31&gt;---Bewllched 3, Mad Squad 6, Andy Griffith 8,
Sesame St . 20,33; Fllntstones 15
5 oo--Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission lm
P&lt;JUible 155:30
5 31&gt;---Adam-12 4,13; News 6, Fam ily Affair 8: Elec.
,Co. 20,33
6:0()--News 3.~.8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 31&gt;---NBC News3 . ~,15 , ABC News13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10 , Hodgepodge Lodge 20 ;
Carrascolenda• 33
7·0()--Basebalf 3.~ ; Bowling for Dollars 6; Space 1999
8; Aviation Wea1her 33; News 10; Presidents : 76
Years on Camera 13, Family Affair 15;
Ohio
Journal 20 .
7.31&gt;---Candld Camero 6, Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; $25,000 Pyramld 10, Pop Goes the
Country 15; Black Perspactlve on the News 33.
8 OD--Movle "TI\e Desperate Miles" 6, 13, Baseball15;
Sare 8.10; Washington Week In Review
20,33.8 31&gt;---Wall Street Week 20 33
9 oo--Movle "Macho Callahan" 8,10, Firing Line 20 ;
Masterpiece Theatre 33
9 31&gt;---Porter Wagoner 3; Movie " Panic on the 5 22"
6, 13; NFL A~tlon

I BEREM
RUJ/1S

FDV

OEH

RNTB

ORMEB

YMAV

MU

RMMG

NV

VXBY

OEH

1 still haven't
found Belle.

I

tTASSIDl

I

NO"T
ALLOWED IN A
NUDt5T COLONY.

Now .....,.e lhe clrdod lotte..
lo rorm the eurprloe anawor, u
•111r••toc1 by the obon cartoon.

RNTB

1Lt:III111J

PBHBVV

FDIPBAA
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE SEARCH FOR HAPPINESS
IS ONE OF TilE CHIEF SOURCES OF UNHAPPINESS.
ERIC HOFFER
((,) 1Yi6 Ktn&amp; t ' uhlrll'l Syn&lt;ll~ll~P, ll'lc)

Dear Roundheaded

I tJ I

KJ t)

("RYPTOQUOTES

803-805

3, ~.

soop

One lttt&lt;'r stmp l) !!land:oi ror anoth(•J In th1 s .. arnplt• ·\ is
used for Lhe thr&lt;e l: s. X lor the lwo 0 s, elc ~Ingle l•· ll~rs,
aposlrophes. thC' length and formation or lh r \\ flfl h ar (' all
htn l!l F.ach da\ lh(' rod~ lt•ltu!-: :u C' thffc•t t~nl

PUBLIC AUCTION

,.

10·0()--Pollce Story 3,4; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33 .
10.30-To Be Announced 15, Aviat ion Wealher 20 .
11 :oo--News 3.~,6.8 , 10,13,15; ABC News 33 .
......,~~~r::-"1 11 31&gt;---Johnny Car$0fl 3,•. 15 ; Rookies 6,13; Movie
"Gunflght af the 0 K. Corral" 8, Movie " AIIanlls.
the Lost Continent" 10; Janakl 33.
12 .41&gt;---Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Wrestling 13 .
1:~Midnight Special 3,., 15; Movle " Devil Bat"•
Daughter" 10
1 :41&gt;---News 13.
2·31&gt;---News 3.
3 -oo--Movle "The Appaloosa" 3
4: 15--Salnt :i
S 15--Movle "Klondike Annie" 3
CINinntl Five
9 a .m - 700 Club (c)
7 p .m . - Wrestling I c)
9 p .m. - Modern Sports-Tr(\vet (c)
10 p .m . - 700 Club (c)

strain
upon
2f Campus
belle
25 Traditional
facts

EURP'' TAKES EXACfLY 30MINUTE5. HE GiVES HIS FINAL
HE5 BIN BURPIN' FV' 15 MINUTES """r- •GAR-SPLIITIN' BURP!'r
~L"
r-A-- - - -- -1 THEN WE 8lJRJc=
HIM 'f! - -

28 Kind of
30

St 1 I
;
ree s o
· Son Franclsco6,13; Hawaii F lue 08; Olymplod 33;
Movie " The Bobo" 10, Classic Guitar of Guillermo
Flerens 20.
9 31&gt;---Dance for Camera 20
10· oo--Harry 0 6, 13, Julie &amp; Jackle· How Swee1 111s 8;
BIIIMoyers' Journal 33, News 20
n ·oo--News 3,A, 6,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 33
.,
11.31&gt;---Johnny Car$0fl 3,4, 15: Mannix 6, 13; Movie Jay
House" 8; Movie " Tamahlne" 10; Janakl ;13.
12 A!&gt;-Maglclan 6, 13
1 ~Tomorrow 3,•
1·5C}-News 13.
Channel Five
9 am - 100 Club lei
7 p m , - Spe~la l Edition I c)
8 p .m - Rex Humbard Ic)
9 p m - Washington Deba1es i cl
10 p m ~ 700 Club (c)
9,33 ,

9 - ~Moule " The Young Savages

FRIDAV.JUNE25, 1976

Various bids determine play

n

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

WIN AT BRIDGE

SALES UENTAL

Tractors

~s
4-12 Pitch
24'-$17.28
26'-$18.72
28'-$20.16

CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RIDGE
(81S11on Aru)
LONG BOTTOM

6 room house, very we ll kept, 3

LOSE wtught wtth New Shape
Toblets and Hydre x Water P1Us
at Dutton Drug , M1ddleport and
Nelson Drugs
MoDERN stereo consol ~ -4--;~eed
&lt;hanger , om-fm radto Balance
$106 40 or terms Coll 992-3965
MODERN Walnut Stereo, AM FM
d
d h
8
k
ro 10, 4 spee c anger, 1roc
tope comb1nahon
Balance
4oor terms. Coll992-3965 HOMESITES fo r sole 1 acre and
51 02--'--'-'--'-:-:.:.......:.:..:.=
_,_
up Mtddlepor t near Rutland
LATEN paper , roller 2 trucks,
Coll992
748 1
reasonoble.Phone9927481
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths
23 channel C01.11er Cora11elle CB
oil elec I ac re, M1ddleport ,
&amp;o,e stot1on was coax and
close to Rut land Phone 992
anten na Used only 3 months ,
7481
asking $200 l1ke new portable
dtshwosher , whtte , $50 Phone 2 0 cr es fmtshd basement , hard
lop rood, c1ly water, dose to
7•2-2217
stores and schools Call (6U)
1975 Bultaco 360 fronll&amp;r motor985-4203 or see l orry Smtth,
cycle, Endl!ro model , many 81(
Chester .
tras , reasonably pnced Phone
WELL-matnlotned s1x rooms and
992-7291 after 8 p m
bath lull attic tkree lots m
ONE 36 mch gas range two
Pomeroy Call 992 5374 after 5
70,000 BTU ctrculoltng gas
p.m.
..
heater bedroom sutte ftve
ptece chrome breakfast set 9x 2 story frame house 2 bedrm ,
pou rbly 3 hvmg room , both ,
12 rllg. Phone m -3268
kt tc hen and uliltty room , newly
70 000 BTU gas heater w1th fan
carpeted , parltal basement and
end thermostat Phone 992carport , 2 story out-butldtng,
7A65
forced otr, natural gas heat,
lots of storage space S17.500
GUERNSEY hetfer 3 month old
Phone992-7360 after 5 p_ m~billy gooo Phone 9A9 2739

b1cycl, S15 00, 8 track
home outf1t w1th 2 speakers
$30 00 Phone 992-7551
19 tn ch portable Admtrol colored
T V , just ltke new. Call 9923AA2
ONE Mossey Ferguson Moer, 7ft
cu r, one New Holland Flat I
Chopper all m good condthon
Coii9A9 20'12
- - - - -c--:::-----:---::-50 to 60 lb ptgs also 30 to 40 lb
2 bedrm and 1 bedrm furmshed
p1gs Phone I 698 8896
apartment Phone 992 2288 or
992-23A8
GOOD 220 V elec drr,er $49 50
UNFURNISHED ~o-p-1""""'1o r rent 4
_!'~•ley s Store Mldd eport
rooms and both Phone 992 MENS us.ad work untform s, pants
5908
28 tnch 36 inch wo ts l shtrh
--:---,-----,---,---,---,-----,-S M·l . short and long sieve
HOUSE Troller 3 bedroom! , 12JC
$1 9e set Bodey s Store, Mtd
60 country setting extra large
dleport .
yord Phone (6 1A)696 -1283.

LEGAL NOTICE
Sea led btds will be re cetved
by lh e Vo llagc ol ModdleP&lt;Jrl.
Ohto, Me1gs Count y, at the
Vollage Ha ll In ModdleP&lt;Jrl,
Olloo unl ol 4 00 p m July 10,
1976 lor th e follo wo ng
' equtpment
1976 Model. 4 door Sedan,
Sma ll VB Engone
NICE 2 bltdrm otr cond1lloned
Hea vy Du ty Altern a tor and
house wtlh b1g yard Couple
Regulator
preferred, references Phone
Automat te
Tra nsm 1ss ton
992-2932
AorP S . PB
Two SP&lt;JI loghts (r lghl a nd ONE acre trotle r lot a ll focllthes
Ftve Pomts area Call collect
lei II
(618) 52A-5825
Spar T1re
Color ba src white
TRAILER lot In Chester , electr~c1 ' y
Del 1very wt thtn 30 days or
and ctty water Phone 992 6072
less
Wrthout trade -1n
The V&lt;ilage rese r ves th e
roghl1o re1ecl a ny a nd all bids
Vil lage of Middleporl 197A Suzuki motorcrou bike 1957
Gene Grale, 1 Chevy 3'11 , A speed tronsmls/1
Clerk Tr ~a s ure r; "orl. Will sell or lrade Call
Jun e 24 , July 1
~ 1
1
992-jiOS

Television log for easy viewing
5 - ~Bonanza

LOST horse, chestnut more
Phona992 5382
LOST Tvesday ntght , po11 olllght
blue pre1cr lpl lon gloue1
pou1bly lost on Pomeroy parkIng lot, Reword if found Call
9A9 231A

WILL DO odd robs rooftng, poln
ling hauling freework and
\
'
Ph ' 992 7409
mowmg ~_:_
WILL do boby11ttmg in my home
on Rulltc Htlls From 7 30om
till A 30 p m Age 26, mother of
a 4 yr old Phone m -7808
_
RACINE F~re Deportment wtll
ha 01 e 0 gvn shoot Saturd ay ot 1WOULD hke to do babyStttmg 1n
my homo wtth pre school
6 30 p m at the ir new bu1lding
.ch1ldren Ho11e uperlence and
off Boshan Road
references Phone 992 -60t2
ANNUAl F1sh Fry , Meigs County
F1sh and Game An n Sunday
June 27 1976 ot Rutland
Amencon Legi on Form
Rut land, Oh1o Gun shoot starts OLD furnllvre , 1ce bol(es , brau
bed1 old wall telepkones and
all p m
ports or complete households
Wnte M D Mtller Rt 2,
Pomeroy, Ohto Co11992 771:/J
.
Metgs Co Hll mane Soctety
CASH patd for all makes and
RABIES AND
models of mobde homes
DISTEMPER CLINIC
Phone area code b 14-423 9531
County Htghway Garage
SSCoshSSS for tu nked auto Frye s
Metgs Co Fa1rgrollnds
Truck Auto Ports Rutlond
SAT , J UNE 26
Phone 7-42 :108 1
2-S p M
CO IN S tokens any form gold or
Dr DanNotter ,
!otlv•r jewelry spoons rmgs
Vetennartan
dental W1ll trade Call Roger
Wamsley Rutland , Oht o 741 2
Rab res
SJ ,
Fet m e
23:11
Dls re mp er S4 , Can tn e
TWO or three acres on the nver
Tnple Shots ss
see Us About Neu termg
West V~rgm•a or Ohto Phone
Your ~ets
992 526&lt;
TJMBER Pomeroy Forest Products Top pnce tor slondmg
~ow t l mber Coli Kent Hanby
I 446 8570
BAB't'lomb
Phone (61 41 ) 9854111
DO YOU HAVE PARTY PlAN !X
PERIEN CE? FRIENDLY TO Y 'l Chest of drawers age not tm
PARTIES HAS OE NINGS FOR
porton t_ Ph~ ne 949-2421
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECA USE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MEN! NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CALL COLLECT TO IF YOU hove o servtce to offer
CAROl DAY 51B -A89-9395 OR
want to buy or sel l something,
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
ore looktng for work
or
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE ,
whote11er
you II get results
ALBANY N Y 12205
faster w1th a Senft net Wont Ad
Coll992 2156
HOUSEWIVES, open Hut door to
ell!lro earn1ngs Jo1n the Sllc 't'ARD Sole Wed
June 23
cenful women who ore mak
through Saturday , 26th from 9
mg good money 1n the1r spo re
t1ll6 p m across from WMPO
ltme
No el(perten c e
necessary no delt ve ry no col 4 Family Garage Sale June 24
25, 26th 9 o m !ill dark , baby
lectlng no cosh tn ves.tmen t
fu rn1 tvre , bdby, ch1ldren and
Call now and get ell!lro early
adults clothes drapes , Avon
benef1h Phone 9419 2803 or
bottles, mtsc 1tems 1/, m1le
9419 2786 Also book tng par
nor th of Eastern H1gh School on
ltes
Rt 7 Phone (614 ) 985 4276 or
(61A) 985 A202 _
3 Fom1ly Yard Sole on Church St
:t:~ tn Syracuse Ant1qu es dt s he~
ia."t: nice 'dolh1ng fu rniture and
&gt; othtr m1sc 1tems fhvrsdoy
' Ffitfov and Saturday
4 Fam,fy' Yord Sale lues , Wed
Thunday , Rt 141 3 nght post
Wolle Pen Rd Gloria Johnson
Whtle you tr!_ln, we pay
lOam ttll6pm
$360 per mo from ftrst day
We co ve r food , quart er s i.Vilb Sole. Frtdoy and Soturdo~
~une 25 and 26, 10 a mt tt ll 4
and health ca re, too Over
p m ~ 663 Cheslnul 51 Mod
7.0 ft e lds to choo se from and
dlepott'"'
_
a ll guarantees rn wrlftng
befor e you enlist For no
MULTI Fa
carport sole Frtdoy
and Sd'turdoy Ju ne 25 and
obltgalton 1nformatton see
26th lO o m till 6 p m
yo ur Navy Recru1ter at·
Clothtng
b1ke s , Evreko
221 Columbus Road
sweeper m1sc J1m Louks
Athens, Ohoo
fesrdanc::e State Rt 7 tl'ltrd
Ph 593 3566
hq.use below Easte rn H1gh
.l&lt;hool •

Business Services ·

I

-::.=

The Dally Senlme l, M1ddleporL-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Jun e t l, 19/ij
DICK TRACY

( - - - · " t..........

Y~llrr4•r'•

Jum•l•" ELOPE CYNIC HOM1NG PHYSJC

I

A•••~11 lf'7wll~tON might nnfl. fJitft.IV of in 1111

lA IIIlo/ Nod- YE!I-MEN

I am writmg this
Right now, a clerk
letter in a store that is eyeing me rather
sells typewriters.
suspiciously.

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom&lt;'I'U)', 0., Tlmrsday, June ~4. W76

HOSPITAL
NEWS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I Warehouse On Mechanic Street I

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMn·mD - John wolfe,
Pomeroy ; Vivian Phel ps,
Hacine .
DISCHARGED - Deburha
Gillilan, John Parsons,
Evelena Pauley. Dottie
Turner, Emma Hayman,
Berth a Smith, Heather
Harless.

•
'

\•

•

.,.

.'

_/

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES - Gabrilla
Holcom b, Point Pleasa nt ;
Mrs. Joseph Cullen Ill, Point
Pleasant; Mr s. Arnold
Marcum, Poin t Pleasa nt; .
Mrs .. William Flora, Apple
Grove ; Mrs. Bernard
Wallace, Pomeroy; Wilma
McDaniel, Point Pleasant ;
Gertie Buck, Robertsburg ;
IAJri Haaf, Letart ; Cecil
Miller, Po int Pleasant ; Mrs.
Dona ld
Miller , Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Nelson
Click, Mt. Alio.

,.

'

THESE WORKERS PREPARING for the public auction of the Meigs Loca l School
District hold three of the large contour maps which will be sold individually at Satu rd ay :~
sa le. The maps are outdated and could be collector's items from that standpoint or perhaps,
buyers will be interested in the ca rved frames which hold the maps. From the left are Jerry
Matson , Kenneth Little, Carroll Nelson, Roger Co tterill and Earie Woods.

School days
(Continued from page I)
the sale on the traditional
percentage basis.
Undoubtedly, there are
collector's items to be moved
Saturday. As Morris puLs it,
"They even have their
original dust."
To be offered at the sale
will be more than 500 student
desks of various types- some
going way, 'way back. These
come complete with carved
initiaLs.
·
There will be some 50 pUrple and white band Wliforms
from the days of Pomeroy
High School ; many of these
have haLs decorated with
large metal eagle replicas.
There is a victrola, peddle
sewing machines and some
electric ones, typewriters,
many books including novels
and textbooks, four sinks, an
electric stove, old secretary
desks, adding machines,
record players, duplicators,
hall trees, chairs, and there
are even a couple of cars and
a pickup truck of 1963 and
1964 vintage - but still .running okay.
The sale will go as long as
necessary to move the items
and the auxiliary of the
Rutland Fire Department
will be at the gymnasium
with refrcshmenLs for the
large crowd anticipated.

REV IVAL SET
A rev ival wil l beg in
Saturday , June 26, at the
General Assembly of the
Body of Christ, Letart, W.
Va., with Damon Admns of
Marietta as eva ngeli st.
Se1·vices will start at 7:30 p.
m . '11•e church, observing its
14th anniversary. will hold a
gospel sing SWlday at 2 p, m.
Featured singers will include
'llle Davis Family, Leon, and
The Nu mbers Quartet,
Buffa lo. Tile church will also
celebrate the 39th weddin ~
anniversary of oversee rs
Harl ey
and
Lorena
Bonecutter. 'llle chlll'ch is
located on Sand Hill Rd .

MEIGS lHEATRE
TONIGHT
JUNE 24
NOT OPEN
Fri. - Sa1.-Sun.
June 25 -26 -27

WaIt Disney 's
BLA CK BEARD' S GHOST
Dea n Jones, Peter Ustinov.
Susanne Pleshette. Elsa
Lanehester . Joby Baker .
Ell ioll Re id.
I G)
Show Starts 7 p.m .

DATELINE 1776
PHll.ADELPHIA, June
~ongress resolved that
Mrs. Ne ll Middleswa rt, New Jersey Gt)V, Richard
Por tl an d, rece iv ed word Franklin be taken under
Wednesday of the dea th of guard to Comtccticut and
ht:! r niece, Miss K'Hhleen decided that if he refused to
Middleswart, Wedne•day, at give his parole, the son of
City Ho•pital in Columbia, . Benjamin Franklin should
Mo.
be treated as a prisoner by
Miss Middl eswart is authorities there.
sw·vived by two brot hers,
Kent and Rodger of Hamilton

Niece is dead

and several cousins. She

for merly resided at Portland
and served three years in the
WAVES of the U. S. Navy
during World War JI . She was
a teacher fo.- many years in
Stephenso n College at
Columbia. Burial is to be in
Memorial Park Cemetery at
Columbia.
CRUSADE IS GO
RACINE - The crusade at
th e Southern Loca l High
School StadiWl•, sponsored by
the Ra'cin e rirs t Baptist
Church, is in progress until
Sunda y. Don Walker is
speaker and specia l music is
being held each evening by
combined choirs and tonight
and rriday by the Gospel
Tones . In case of rain, the
~rvices which start at8 each

evening , are being held in the
school. The public is invited.
REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Fitch reunion
will be held Sunday at the
Portland Park . All relatives
are invited to attend and take
a picnic IWlch.

Warren

Sale! Summer
Lawn Furniture

FRIDAY
MEETING OF Rolling
Hills Chapter 838, Parents
Wi thout Partners Friday .
Orientation for prospective
members, 7:30 p. m.;
pro gram , 6 p, m, All
interested single pa rents are
welcome.
SATURDAY
ROCK Springs Grange will
vi sit
Laurel
Grange,
Saturday 8 p.m. Ladies to
wear long dresses and men to
wear either overalls or old
costumes .
MIDDLEPORT POLICE
auxiliary square dance
Saturday , 8 to II p.m. at
elementary sc hool in
Middleport.
HYMN SING Saturday al
Hazel CommWlity Church,
7: 30 p.m. Featured singers
are The Messengers from
Wellston. Public invited.

SUNDAY
WOMEN
'S AUXILIARY of '
(Continued from page I)
Middleport
Fire Department
Se nate Committee on
Sunday,
7
p.m.
at fire station.
Intellige nce Activiti es
MEMBERS
OF Ra cine
chai red by Sen . Daniel
Chapter
134
OES
will observe
Inouy e ol Hawaii. It is not
"Go
to
Church
Sunday"
at
expected to decide what to do
Racine
Methodist
'Church
for several mootl1s.
The report gave the Sunday . All members urged
fo ll owi ng de tails of the to attend.
MONDAY
mys ter ious tr avelers to
SPE
CIAL
MEETIN G
Cuba :
On the night of Kennedy's Racine Chapter 134 Monday
assassination it t win·engined at Masonic Temple at 8 p.m.
plane landed in Mexico City for purpose of initiation.
with
an
unid enlified
passenger, who boarded a
Hava na- bound Cubana
CORRECTION MADE
Airlines plane whose
DEXTER - Mrs. Alma
departure had been held up Smith, Langsville, is a sister
six hours.
to Mrs. Pauline Holliday
The traveler did not go rather than Mrs. Alice Smith.
through customs and rode in Mrs. Holliday died Tuesday
the cockpit rather than with at Holzer Medical Center.
the passengers, according to
CIA information.
VANS' DAUGHTER
A day later, a CubanSANTA MONICA , Ca lif.
American crossed the Texas- t UP!) - Entertainer Bobby
Mexican border and was the Van has a daughter.
only passenger on a flight to
Van 's wife, actress Elaine
Cuba four days later. He Joyce, gave birth Tuesday
carried an expired American night to their first child, a 7passpo rt with a Cuban pcWld, 12&lt;lunce girl, at St.
Hcourtesy visa." The CIA John's Hospital.
learned about this traveler in
Mother and daughter were
early December, 1!163.
reported doing well.

\

SAVE NOW ON REDWOOD, TELESCOPE FOLDING
FURNITURE, LAWNLITE ALUMINUM WITH CUSHIONS,
LLOYD SPRING BASE CHAIRS.

Shop Now While We Still
Have AGood Selection At. . .

CLUB TO MEET
The Southeastern Ohio
Garden Tractor Club will
meet al the residence of Dale
Kautz , Chester Road, at I :30
p.m. SWlday. All interested
persons are invited .

S-ALE PRICES

Also at Mechanic Street Warehouse sale prices on RCA Color
Televisions. Lloyd console stereos, Whirlpool washers and
dryers, Magic Chef and Caloric Ranges, Whirlpool
Refrigerators.

WHERE BUNTING?
RACINE - Eyes are
alerted here lor 20 yards of
bunting, II seen, please
notify the law.
The Racine ER Squad
purchased . 20 yards of
bunting which il had stored
at the Racine Fire Station.
It has disappeared.
They would like very
much to have it returned In
order to prepare a float for
the July 4 parade here.

furniture Department On The 3rd floor

1776 Kroehler Living R.oom
Save Up
00
and Family Room Specials ____To_.·_·_$_S__

:::::::::::::::::: : :::::::::::::: ::::::::::~=:=::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::

Main Store, Mechanic Street
Warehouse and Home Furnishings Annex

(Continued from page I)
services, or face fines of $10,000 a day .

LIVING ROOM SUITE

Nylon fr ieze fabr ic . Coil spring cons truction . Compare

at S350.00 .

'250
J Piece

SOFA BEDS
Good fabri cs, coi l spr ing
conslru cfion.

$98

BEDROOM
SUITES

$128

9x12 LINOLEUM RUGS
'9.95

by Miss America

\

-

•White

•Brown
•Blue

THE SHOE BOX

Judges get ·

to build addition to school

away from

:::: RACINE - The architectural firm of Eeesley, Lee, :;:;
;:;: Vargo and Cassady of Marietta was employed to design )
:;:; the new vocational a~iculture addition to Southern High ;: ;;
:::: School by the Southern Local School Board Thursday :;::
::: night.
.
:::
:::: Voters of the district approved a $420,000 bond Issue at ::::
:::: the June 8 election for the addition to the high school. . t
{ The board employed Jurl,ith Levine as a home )
: :: economics instructor and accepted tbe resigna lion of /
::;: Patricia Struble as title I rt.adlng instructor .
::;:
':': Given supplemental contracLs Were Deborah Wilson, ::::
{ girls assistant varsity basketball coach; John Dudding, '::
:::: varsity golf coach, and Michael Winebrenner, assistant ;:::
:::: football coach, It was announced that Connee Andrews,. :;::
-( - girLs athletic director, had donated a trophy case to the \
:::: school. The next meeting was set for 7:30p.m. on July 20. ::::
:::: Attending were board members Jack Bostick, Robert )
:::: Sayre, DeiUlie Evans, Roger Adams, and D~llas Htll; ;:;:
:::: Supt. . Bobb~ Ord, Clerk Jane Wagner and high school
:::: prmctpal Jun Adams.
:;::

t

ji~~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;:)il~

language of the law, its
· legislative history and the
dictum of the court in eases
decided about the time the
law was passed .
They said Congress since
. has banned private racial
discrimination in most of the

By Unlted Press rmtrnatlonal
OOLUMBUS - INITIAL CLAIMS FOR unemployed
benefiLs by jobless Ohioans were up last week whUe conlinued
claims for those unemployed one or more weeks were down
during the same seven~y period.
Albert G. Giles, administrallll' of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services said Thursc!ay 14,~39 jobless workers
filed initial claims under the Ohio Unemployment
Compensation Law for the week ending June 19, a 17.6 per cent
increase over the previous week's total of 12,365.

-

VOL XXVIII NO. 49

The investigation of the
break-in at the Pomeroy
courthouse sometime Wednesday night or Thursday
morning is continuing today,
The office of Meigs·County
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbac~ .
had no conunent on tlie investigation as of Friday morning.
Several offices were ransacked in the ry&gt;bbery as
thieves took slightly over $100
in cash and small change. A
total of $61 in cash and
change was taken from tbe
Probate Court office from
three separate aecounLs.
Desks and drawers were also

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT Ford's proposed
legislation curbing the power of federal judges to order school
busing for desegregation faces tough going in Congress. Sen.
Robert Dole, R-Kans., said Ford's proposal, offered to
Congress Thursday, has "as much chance of being enacted
this year as Harold Stassen has of winning the Republican
nomination."
One indica tioo of the lack of support came momenLs before
Ford sent his message to Congress. Ford had asked
Democratic congressional leaders to attend a White I:ouse
briefing oo the legislation, but he cancelled the meeting when
only one Democrat - Rep, Peter Rodino, D-N.J.- gave a firm
commitment to attend,

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8
SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM
1

598 2 pc. Flame Stitch Wear Dated Sale 1376
1
579 2 pc. Matelasse .......... ........ Sale 1376
1
479 2 pc. Gold Stripe Herculon ...... Sale 1317 ·
1
449 Sofa Matelasse ........... _.. __ .. Sale '317
'549 Sofa Velvet Antique Floral. ... .. Sale '376
1
798 2 pc. Matelasse ...... ........... Sale '476
1495 2 pc. Nylon Stripe .............. Sale 1317
'579 2 pc. Matelasse ..... _... ........ Sale 1376
1
559 Sofa Geometric Velvet... ....... Sale 1376
'389 Twin Size Sleep or Lounge ..... Sale 1276

COLUMBUS - -~ENDElJ DRIVERS who fail to
surrender licenses after receiving official notice may face
charges.in county and municipal courts, according to the Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
BMV 'Registrar Curtis Andrews sals a substantial number
of persons whose driving privileges have been suspended for
violating state laws have been ignoring written orders from
the bureau to mall in their licenses. Andrews said from now on
the BMV will give suspended drivers 30 days to mail in their
licenses, then file complaints with local courts. Violators will
be 8111111ilooed to answer charges and anyone who fails to
answer a surrunons will be subject to arrest, Andtews said.

1

539 Vinyl Sofa and Love Seat. ..... Sale 1376
1
439 2 pc. Plaid ............... ..... Sale 1317
1
1300 Naugahyde Sofa, Love Sea~
Chair &amp; Ottoman ... :................ Sale 1776
1
943 Maugahyde Sofa, Love Seat,
Chair &amp;Ottoman .................... Sale 1576
1
715 2 pc. '~ulti Color Nylon
Stripe ................................. Sale 1476
1845 Naugahyde Sofa, Love Seat
and Chair......... ........... ........ Sale '576
1
798 2 pc. Nylon Stripe .. ........... Sale 1576

ELBERFELDS I.N POMEROY

Keney remains unconscious
Oennis Keney, 32,
Pomeroy, a vice president at
the Pomeroy National Bank,
remains in serious condition
at St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg following a
motorcycle-vehicle accident

No girls allowed

in Pom,roy Tuesday night,
Aceot\dlng to word received
here Mr. Keney has not
regained consciousness. He
was riding a motorcycle and
was enroute to hl.s home in
the Bawn Addition on the
Chester Road when the accident occurred near the
Beacon Service St!ttion.

SALEM, Ore. (UPI) - Tbe
Oregon Supreme Court says
Boy SCouts do not have to admit girls.
The · court, in a split
,decision T)lursday, held that
Oregon's public accouunodatlons law does not
give nine-year-old Carla Schwenk the right to force the
Boy Scouts to admit her.

Showers likely today_ Higl\1!
in the lower ID!. Partial
clearing tooight, lows in the
lower ~. Cloudy, continued
Warth Saturday, highs to
lower 80!!. Probability of rain
70 per cent today, ?.0 per cent
tonight and Saturday_

I

Weather

job market and most of the
housing market, but has gone
no further .
"The judiciary should not
undertake the political task of
trying to decide what other
areas are. appropriate ones
for a similar rule," they said.

e

hooker case
SOUTHFIELD,

Mich..

1UPI) - Three Southfield
District Court judges
disqualified themselves •
Thursday from hearing a
prostitution case against a
wcman who claims as clienLs
GUITARISTS SANDI RODMAN and Joseph Potts entertained and then lnstructt.&gt;d
Michigan Attorney General
8everal beginners in the fundamentals of guitar picking and strununiQg.
Frank Kelley and other
public officials - including
some Southfield judges.
Norman W. Feder, chief
district judge, said he was
·
disqualifying the entire
Something new in the Meigs Libraries is the Zoo", ""i1t.e Clay Circus", and "Clay", were
Southfield District bench with surruner fun series .
shown and Joo Perrin displayed several
the concurrence of his two
Geared to encourage kids to come into the articles he had made from clay which he dug
fellow dislrict judges, S. library to see what's going on, the series Is
James
Clarkson
and diversified enough to attract a wide range of from the hillside In back of the Perrin home
on Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Clarence A. Reid Jr.
age groups.
And things to come:
They
disqualifi e d
Thursday afternoon guitarists Sa ndi
Storyteller
Linda Stow will be nt the
themselves in the case of Lois Rodman of near Pomeroy and Joseph Potts of
Pomeroy
Library
again on July 8.
Herman, 33, also knowr, as Tennessee cooducted a well attended guitar
An
afternoon
of
animal films is planned,
Terri C!Jle, who reportedly workshop in the Middleport Library
along
with
a
study
of reptiles with live ones
has told police she had sexual basement, Instead of under the trees as had
being
brought
In
by
the Forked Run Stale
relations with one or more of heen plaMed due to rain.
Park
manager.
The
dates
of both will be
the Southfield judges. She
Upstairs In the children's room 14 boys a!ld announced later.
(Continued on page 10)
girls modeled clay. Three films , "The ilron••

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO-

L l•brarzes
•

•
SUmmer flUn SerfeS

y

en tine

FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1976

...

opened

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Courthouse thefts probe continuing

COLUMBUS - UNEMPLOYMENT IN OHIO declined
from 7.4 per cent of the civilian labor force jn April to 6.9 per
cent in May, the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services
reported today_
The Bureau said 324,000 persons were without jobs in Ohio
in May compared to 344,000 in April. Increases in both farm
and non((!nn jobs ll.fted total employment 1.3 per cent to
4,383,000, an advance attributable largely to seasonal factors,
the bureau said.

SACRAMENTO, CALIF. - THE CALIFORNIA
legislature has asked President Ford to pardon and restore the
American citizenship of Iva Togurl d' Anqulno, World War II's
Tokyo Rose who was convicted of !reason.
"It is not too much to ask a President who found it in hl.s
heart to pardon Richard Nixon ID pardon thl.s woman,"
Assemblyman Ken Meade, D-Berkeley, said Thursday before
the Assembly adopted the resolution on a 60-0 vole, The Senate,
a few minutes later,~ the same measure on a~ vote.

News •• in Briefs

Deluxe 2 Piece

Marietta firm employed

OTTAWA - Am TRAVEL TO AND FROM Canada was
virtually at a standstill today and Air Canada, the nation's
largest carrier, said it has laid off about 12,000 ~mployes for an
indefinite period.
·
The U. S. Air Une Pilots Assocla lion, joining at least three
European airlines, Thursday declared a "safety quarantine"
on traffic in and out of Canada, starting at 12:01 a.m. tOday.
Halting an estimated 150 flights per day, the move came amid .
frantic efforts by government officials to end the crippling
dispute over the use of French in air communication.

TONY SENTENCED
DETROIT (UP! l
Repuled organized crime
figure Anthony "Tony Jack"
Giacalone, once implicated in
the disappearance of former
Teamsters President James
Hoffa, Wednesday was
sentenced to 10 years and
fined $30,000 for income tax
evasion.
Giacalone, 57, a key figure
early in the inve stigation of
the unsolved disappearance
of Hoffa last summer , was
sentenced by U.S. District
Jud ge
Damon
Keith .
Giacalone was fr eed on
$50,000 cash bond pending
appeal.

WASHINGTON - THE UNITED STATES is withdrawing
its military advisers from two small Nationalist Chinese
island- Quemoy and Matsu--()ff the Chinese mainland, the
State Department said today _
An official said the move was taken as one of a number of
steps ID implement the Shanghai communique marking the
end of President Richard M. Nixon's first visit to China in 1973.

.

.

WASIDNGTON (UPI)- The Su~eme Court ruled today
that a Recoostructioo Era federal law compels white private
schools to admit blacks.
Justice Potter Stewart wrote the court's opinion,
explaining the law's provision giving blacks the right to ll!llke
and enforce coolracts. He rejected tbe argwnent advanced by
private school.operators that the requirement violated their
right to free association and privacy and a. parent's right .to
educate his children as he sees fit.
The 7-2 ruling applies to state laws could pass muster
commercially operated under the ConstitutiQn. Tbe
private schools which have no blacks in today's ease used
church affiliation.
the law to challenge
Stewart
called
the discrimination by private
discrimination practiced by individuals, which the
llobbe's School in Arlington, Constitution does not reach.
Va ., and Fairf8l!-Brewster
The federal govenunent
School in Fairfax, Va. , "a sided with the blacks by filing
classic violation" of the law, a brief but did not argue the
"... ParenLs have a First case.
Amendment right to send
In
upholding
the
their children to educational constitutionality of· the law,
institutions that promote the Stewart said while Invidious
belief that racial segregation private discrimination may
Is desirable, and .. , children be characterized as a form of
have an equal right to attend exercising freedom of
such institutions," Stewart association, it never has been
said.
accorded "affirmative
"But it does not follow that constitutional protections."
U)e practice of excluding
Dissenters were Justices
racial minorities from such Byron R, White and William
institutions is aLso protected H. Rehnquist . They pointed
by the same principle."
out that the law has been oo
Other Supreme Court deci- the books since 1870. They
sions on discrimination in said to construe it as the court
education have dealt with now has dooe for tbe first
public schools and whether time is contrary to the

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Jw~e :e:l)
Mary Adkins, Virg inia
Arba ugh, Violet Berridge,
Phyllis Bickle, joyce Brewer,
Eve rett Brown. Flaudeen
Dickerson, Drema Edwards,
Bill Frye, Paulette Gibbs,
Ace Gordon , Heath Hoffman,
Ruth Meaige, Mrs. Jeffrey
Oiler and daughter, Judy
Ousley, Waller Reed, Opal
Ross, Mrs. Ronald Saunders
and son, Tony Shoemake r,
Harry Smith , Ric hard
Snyder, Thomas Stapleton,
James
Terry , Coe tta
Thomas, Clarence Walburn .
Birth, J1me Z3
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Shulaw ,
daughter, Gallipchs Ferry .
TRUCK HIT
Wednesday , al\ 2:30 p.m. in
Ches ler
Township on
Township Road 81 a car
driven by Pratt Crenson, 16,
Middl eport, went left of
centerto hit a truck driven by
William · Buckley,
25,
Pomeroy. There were no
injuries and moderate
damage was done lo both
vehicles.

Dixie private schools
must admit blacks now

damaged. The county
treasurer's office reported
$40.1!5 stolen.
The title office reported
ransacking, byt no titles
missing. Nothing was taken
from the coWlty recorder's
office, although it was broken
into. The county auditor's office was passed over by the
thieves.
Sm;ne of the most destructive ransacking occurred in
the clerk of court's office
wher~ papers and drawers
were strewn abput the room.
The thieves missed small
amounLs of cash that were
kept in some of the drawers,
however.

Pilot coal
plant·goes
to Caldwell

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
federal Energy Research and
Development ARency
Thursday selected a site near
Caldwell in Noble County for
coostruction of a $1.6~ million
pilot coal gasification
demonstration plant.
The announcement was
made by Sen. Robert Taft Jr.,
R-()hio, and Gov _ James A.
STEYENC.STANLEY
Rhodes.
· Nine companies, headed by
the Continental Oil Co. and
the Consolidated Gas Supply
Corp., will oversee the
project,
Rhodes said the consortium
•
•
will
receive $20 million for the
engm~nng
first phase of the project, to
HARRISONVILLE + help the C!Jnsolidated Coal
Steven Craig Stanley, of Co. drill a new coal mine to
Harrisonville, graduated produce 1.~ million tons a
June 12 from Ohio University year.
The entire project is
with a bachelor of science
degree in Electrical expected to cost $250 million .
Engineering with a 3.9 Rhodes said the project will
mean 1,400 construction jobs
cumulative average.
and
600 pennanent jobs in the
While at OU, Stanley was
area,
elected to Eta Kappa Nu, the .
"Gov- Rhodes and his staff
national
Electrical
Engineering honorary and Congressman Clarence
society; Tau Beta Pi, the Miller are to be commended
national Engineering for the excellent support they
honorary society, and the OU have given to this 'proposaL
student chapter of the In- We have worked closely
stitute of Electrical and Elec- together in monitoring the
propcsai every step of the
tronics Engineers.
Since his graduation way," said Taft.
Rhodes
termed
the
Stanley has been employed
as an assocWe engineer in announcement " the
charge of the analytical sec- beginning of a new era of
tion of Columbus and South- prosperity for southeastern
em Ohio Electric Company Ohio."
"It has taken hard work to
in Athens where he worked as
bring this award to Ohio,"
a student Intern since 1974.
A 1972 graduate of Meigs said Rhodes. ''We will
High School, he Is the son of continue to work. with Ohio's
Mr. and M~. Duane F. CQ!lgresslonal dele~a~tion rnr
(Continued on page 10)
Stanley, Harrisonville.

Stanley wins

ou degree in

..

Mrs. Meinhart dies
Mrs. Meinhart was an active
Mrs . Mary Wise Meinhart, 71,
Hudaon St., Middleport, a former Meigs member of the Middleport Church of
·County Deputy Clerk of Courts for 17 Christ a.nd taught a SWlday school clau
years, died early Friday morning at for 21 years. She belonged to the
Holzer Medical Center following a long Philathea Society of the church, She
was a member of Evangeline Chapter
illness.
Mrs. Meinhart Is survived by her 172, Order of Eastern Star.
husband, George, who served 16 years
Born oo Aug, 23, 1901, In Middleport
as Meigs County Clerk of Courts and
later as Meigs County's represenlalive Mrs. Meinhart was the daughter of the
to the Ohio General Assembly, and late William H. and Effie Jane Frazier
currently a Middleport Village Wise. She was also preceded In death by
a brother, Gerald Wise, six years ago.
Councilman.
Funeral services will be held at 2
Mrs, Meinhart is also survived by a
p.m.
SWlday at the Rawlings-Coats
· daughter , Mrs. John (Barbara) Mayer
of Grove City; a sister, Mrs. Flora Bell Funeral Home with Mr. George Glaze
Young of El Rino, Okla.; a grand- officiating, Burial will be in Riverview
daughter, Mrs. Perry (Cheri) Lee Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Smith, ChasseU,Mlch,,and a grandson, funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7lo 9 p.m.
Saturday .
John _J . Mayer, Jr., Columbus.
MRS. MEINHART

Polling ·place janitors'
fees of $298 protested
Resignations of five t!!3chers were accepted and a
·proposal to negotiate a charge of almost $300 for janitorial
services incurred In the use of five buildings for the June 8
prim!lry election were discussed by Meigs Local School
District Board of Education Thursday night.
Teacher resignations Included those of Ray Goodman, who
has served as vocational director, teacher and wrestling
coach; Margaret Goodman, a teacher at the high school;
~san Ornstein, a Bradrury School teacher ; Karen Mazian, a
learning disability Instructor, and Denise Gibson, who vas
been a teacher at the Pomeroy Elementary School.
E. A. Wingett, chairman of the Meigs County Board of
Electioos, discussed a bill for $298.13 for janitor services in the
use of five of the Meigs Local District buildings as voting
precinct polling places at the June 8 electlon. The amount was
for janitorial services from the time the polla opened at 6 a .m.
through the morning hours following the election when the
counting of ballots was done, minus the normal eight hour
period for the usual work day of the custodians.
The hours over the eight hour period were charged at the
rate oftime and a half for overtime in accordance with federal
regulations, Supt. Charles Dowler said.
Wingett said janltors had very little to do In service
involved with the electloo in the polling places which were
located at Salem Center, Pomeroy, Middleport, Bradbury and
Harrisonville, AU that was really needed was for someone to
open the buildings at 6 a.m. and cl011e tbem when the votes
were counted, Wingett said. He stated that the charge for
janitcr services in one Meigs Local school exceeded tbe
janitorial costs for aU of the other voting precincts of tbe
county ccmbined at the June 8 election.
Wingett stated that the board of elections Is fighting rising
costs constantly and that the charge ot $298.13 for janitorial
services to be paid Is taxpayers' money ''When the !a1payers
own the buildings In the first place."
Board pclicy, on the other hand, requires that a janitor be
oo hand when buildings are used by organizations.
Wingett said, however, that the lolig hours charged by
custodians for tbe electioo were not necessary.
However, Dowler pointed out that according to federal
,;

law, custodians would have to be paid for time spent wallins to
be called hack to close the buildings at the end of the election
even if they did not remain at the schools.
Wingett said the workers in the several polling places all
live close to the respective school in which they \YOrk and could
be trusted with a key to open and close the buildings at election
time. However, Dowler's opinion that keys should not be put
out lo individuals was firm, and member Dr, Keith Riggs was
in agreement.
Board member Mrs. Jennifer Sbeets said in her opinion
schools belong to the taxpayers and should be available to the
public as much as possible. Mrs. Sheets said she understood
that custodians should be paid for their time, butfelt that some
plan could be worked out whereby the custodia !II would f!Ot be ·
needed for the electlon days.
Dowler said that it was a case that either the board have
custodia111 or not have custodians at the school durlng such
times, but warned If they did, then the custodians would have
to be paid in accordance with federal regulations.
Mrl. Sheela stated that she felt more relaxed use of the
buildings would possibly provide an Improved community
Image and board member, Virgil King, also stated that he felt
an improved community Image Is Important.
Mrs. Gene Hawkins, a custodian at Bradbury, said that
llhe felt someone should be In the school when it Wllll being used
by the election board.
It was agreed to study the problem and it Wllll placed on the
July meeting agenda ,
Mrs. Sheets and board member, Robert Snowden, inquired
as to any action that might be taken to provide a vocal music
instructor for the high school. Snowden said that Dwight Goins
had agreed to be band ln!lructor and vocal music Instructor at
the high school and served In those capacities last year.
However, Snowden anc:t Mrs. Sheets said they believe a vocal
music teacher should be placed at the high school. Mrs. Sheets
said that students should not be deprived of good vocal music
training and Snowden said that be believes high school
students should have adequate instruction In vocal music and
that he does not feel that the present prQI!ram ls adequate.
·
(Continued on page 10)
•

•

f.

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