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Stref!t funds exhausted: $5 tag tax proposed

F,~u~

prom
at Sporn plant .

NEW HAVEN, W. Va.
Four men have been
promoted aI the Philip Sporn
Plant in New Haven, West'
Virginia effective July 1,
1976 ..S)scar L. Leonard, Unit
Foreman, was promoted to
Assistant Shift Opera ling
Engineer ; Larry C. Ueving
and George R. Moody,
Equipment Operators, were
both promoted to Unit
Foreman ; and John E,
Werry, Master Malnteruu1ce
Man, was promoted to
Maintenance Foreman.
Leonard was born in
Logan, Ohio and graduated
from Gallia Academy High
School in Gallipolis. He
served in the U. S. Air Fore~
untill945. His employment at
Sporn Plant began in 1951as a
laborer . In I952he moved into
the Operations Department
as an Auxiliary · Equipment
Operator. He was promoted
to Equipment Operator in
1959, and Unit Foreman in
1964, where he served until
his current promoti on to
Assistant Shift Operating
Engineer. The Leonards have
one son and one daughter and
reside in New t!aven , West
Virginia.
Uevlng, born at Graham
Station, W. Va, graduated
from Wahama High School in
Mason and served in the tJ. S.
Army until 1962. In i956
Ueving was employed at
Sporn Plant as a Laborer. In
1960 he joined the Operations
Department as a Utility
· Operator and was promoted
to Auxiliary Equipment
Operator the .same year. He
was promoted to Equipment
Operator in 1969 and served
there until his recent
promotion to Unit Foreman.
Ueving and his wile have one
son and make their home in
Letart,
West Virginia.
-··
'

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonlghllhru Thursday
July 6-July B
NOT OPEN

Fri.-Sai.-Sun.
July9-10·1l •
THE HINDENBURG

George C. Scott, Anne
Qancraf1 ,

William

Atherton. ·
Colorcar1Qons
Show Starts 1 p.m. ·

Moody was born in Zanesville and gradua1ed from the
Jefferson High School there.
He served in the U. S. Army
until 1946, He began his
employment with the AEP
System in 1948 at Ohio Power
Compa ny 's Philo Plant. In
1961 he came to Sporn phint
as a Laborer. ·In 1966 he
moved to the Ope rations
Department as a Utility
Operator, and tater the same
year , was promoted to
Auxiliary Equipment
Operator. He was promoted
to Equipment Operator in
1~71. and ser¥ed there until his
recent promolion to Unit
Foreman. The Moodys have
four children and live near
Cheshire, Ohio. ·
Werry Is a Meigs County
native who graduated from
Pomeroy High School. Alter
his discharge. from the U. s,
Army in 1953, he was employed at Sporn Plant as a
laborer . In 1954 he entered
the Maintenance Departrne.nt
as a helper. He was promoted
to Junior Maintenance Man
in 1960, Maintenance Man in
1962, arid Master Maintenance Man in 1970, where ~.
he served untii his current
promotion to .Maintenance
Foreman. Werry and his wife
have two sons and reside in
Hemlock Grove .

JOHN WERRY

By Kille Crow
'llle purse of Pomeroy's
VIllage Slfeet Department Is
rully llurllng.
Lou Oaborne, councilman , reported Tuesday
night that the street department hu S8,1162.42 In outlllanding billa. 'llle budget for
the street department fund
. was set at $24,000 for the year
and f21 ,000 of this figure
already has been ·spent!
Council agreed to-tranafer $2,000 from the
parking meter fund to the
ab'eet fund and pay $1,381.11
In .billa as of the end of May.
The reason given for the over-

LARRY LIEVING

~~~~~~
OSCAR LEONARD

GEORGE MOODY

Holzer Medical Center
i Births, July 2)
Dr. and Mrs. Khwaja Aziz,
son, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Malone, daughter;
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Price, son, Gallipolis. ·
1Births, July 3)
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Edwards
II, son, New Haven ; M£· and
Mrs. George J~cksOn ; son,
Point Pleasant; Mr. anct Mrs.
Robert Keelin, daugh ter,
.Rodney.
1Births, July 4)
Mr. and Mrs. Gary File,
daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Schuler, Jr ., son ,
Oleshire.
1Births, July 5)
Mr. and Mrs. James
Counts, son, Middleport ; Mr .
and Mrs. Robert Haislop, son ,
Oak Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Smith, son, Jackson .

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People

At Farmers Bank·

A

Free Checking Account For You
'

We invite you to use th is preferred service with no
seryice charge. All those 65 years and over are
welcome to open an account any time. Stop in and
see u·~ now.

tat A ' '

Bank

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$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each. Depositor
Mem~er · Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatiOI'I

I

The Middleport Blue
Streakers met recently with
the Wilkesville Merchants at·
Wilkesville lor a woman's
softball game with the hosts
coming out on top 7-4. Winning pitcher was L. Steele. B.
Dillon got a double while s.
Shepherd and N. Steele had
two siqgles apiece. B. Black,
L. Steele, and A. Collwell
each had one single.
For Middleport P. Dent and
W. Gilkey each had a double
and single while J. Edwards
and R. Spaun ea.ch had a
double. L. Lemley, s.
Johnson, D. Grueser, L ...
Fitch, and L. Rapp each had
a·singie.
The Merchants recently
tangled with the Portland
Bandits with Wiikesvtlle
again coming out on top 15-11.
The · only details available
were that Sis Shepherd
socked a home run and the
contest went nine innings.
Winning pitcher was L.
Steele.
Wilkesville is coached by p
Brown., Middleport by
Dent, and POrtland by Terry
Brewer.

a:

::::::tr:::::::::::;::::::::::rrm:fi?:i:::r::::::=:t

POMEROY, OHIO
&gt;

Sauvage, Clarice Kraeuter, Lots Burl and Paula Sayre, :
sopranos; Melanie Hackett, Phyllla Hackett, June Wamsley, Leota ~ng, !&gt;!aldie Mora, Sharon Wllson, seeond •
sopranos; 'iielen Wolf, Jane Ann Karr, '!'wila Buckley,
Betty Fult;.}and Frankie Hlinnel, altos; Gerald Powell,
Steve Powell, Harvey Van Vranken, Rodney Pullins,
Carol Ohlinger, and Bill Young, tenorsi Allen Downie,
Ben Philson, Kenny Wiggins, Phil Ohlinger, and Joe
Struble, basses.

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
Issued to William Arthur
P,arsons, Jr. , 25, Parkersburg, and Undalu Telle, 26,
Parkersburg.
'

SCENES OF THE RUTLAND Fourth of July celebration parade included these: Above,
·third place In the cyde division went to Eddle Holter on his !J!Oiorcycle with his dog, Bernie
In back; below, wln~rs for the"'best decorated bikes were, first and second place
. respectively, Moilica Hill and Jay Bostick. On the left is Kay Hill, Monica's mother, who
rode the bicycle. And at the bOttom, Mr. and Mrs.Roy Miller of tbe Chester area took a ride
llllbelr 1824 Studebaker wblch·runs like a finely tuned 'i"alcb,
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BIDWELL - Floyd B. Cheshire; three brothers,
Gardner, 71, Route 1, Bid- Mark, Bloomdale, Ohio;
(Continued from page I)
·
· u nd fl t I
lf th ·
• f
well, died Tuesday morning Wayne of Fostoria, and
E• ntebbe arrport
m ga a ew o srae or etr son s unera1 at !lotz·er Medi'cal Center.
Ge
f Ch hi
t
today. The soldier, 30-year-old Lt. Col. Yonathan Netanyahu,
orge 0 es re; an aun •
was the son or the chairman of Cornell University's
Mr. Gardner was born . Mrs. Don
Blackburn,
Department of Semltics,.Dr. Ben-Zion Netanyahu.
.Sept. 4, 1904 In Cheshire, ·the Bucyrus, and several nieces
Military authorities In Israel said the soldier would be son of the late George and and nephews.
•
buried with full military honors at Mt Herzl Military Florence Ralph Gardner. He . Funeral services wiU be
Cemetery. The lightning raid Sunday freed more than lOO~ ~a~ also preceded in deatlt by held at2p.m. Thursday at tbe
hostages held for a week by pro-Palestinian terrorists. a s1ster and three brothers. Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Netanyahu was the only Israeli soldier killed in the mission.
Mr. Gardner was a Home in Middleport with the
member of the Old Kyger Rev. Chester Lemley ofPHILADELPHIA - QUEEN ElJZABETH II of England Freewill Baptist Olurch and flclallng. Burial will be in the
Gravel
Hill
and her husband, Prince, Philip, lbe duke of Edinburgh, was a retired coal u\tner. He Cheshire
arrived in Philadelphia from Bermuda today to begin a !S sUfVlved by two sisters, Cemetery. Friends may call
Mrs . Henry (Ellen ) Car- at the funeral hom·e on
crowded seven-day visit to the eastern United States.
penler,
Middleport, and Mrs. Wednesday from 2 to 4 and
Philadelphia was hardly prepared for tbe arrival of the
Millard
( ~ulse) Gilmore of from 7 to 9 p:tn.
royal visitors after the weekend's celebration of America's
200th birthday. its main streets were still· Uttered with
thousands of tons of trash - empty beer bottles and cans,
sandwich ,bags and unending vistas of .paper dumped in the
streets by the week~nd's celebrants.
·
ALB·ANY - Elizabeth Cemetery. Friends may call
(Lizzie) Wooten, 86, Rt. 3, at the furieral home any ttrne
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTII AFRICA - SOUTH Afriea Albany died Monday night at after 2 p.in. Wednesday.
today withdrew a rule that sparked the nation's bloodiest race the Worthing ton Manor
riots this century - the compulsory use of Afrikaans as a Convalescent Center in
BISHOPS SUPPORT
mediwn of Instruction in black schools.
Parkersburg .
PI'ITSBURGH (UPI)
Banta African Affairs Minister Michial Botha said black
She was the .daughter of the The Right Rev. John H. Burt
schoolS could now choose Afrikaans, Ji:nglish or the pupils' late John and Harriet
of the Ep~copal Diocese of
mother tongue as the classroom language.
Dishong Van Horn. He was Ohio and 66 other bishops _
also preceded in death by her throughout the country are-:
TilE OIDO HIGHWAY PATROL CLOSED ITS books on husband, .Isaac and a supporting the ordination of •
traffic fatalities with 24 for the long 4th of July holiday daughter, Hazel.
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women to the . Episcopal
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weekend, twice 'the toll for the weekend in 1974 and one more
Surviving are Uuoee sons, priesihood.
·
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than had been estimated by state Highway ~partrnent Clifford and Anderson, Rt. 3,
The 67 .bishops will present :
statisticians. The .list included six motorcyclists, one bicyclist Albany; Donald, Rt . 4 their
· proposal at the •
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and three pedestrians.
•
Pomeroy; daughter, Mrs. denomination's September :
I
There also was only one multiple fatality accident, which Lucille Jordan, Huntington,
occurred in Bucyrus Sunday. Two young Tiffin men were W. Va·. Several grandchildren convention. The proposal, .:
which apparently has the :
killed in the car crash. The high number of deadly traffic and great
grand- support of a majority of the •
accidents was blamed on extra dense vehicle traffic on Ohio children survive.
bishops, must alao be passed ~
Funeral services will be by the House of Clerical and ·
held at2p.m. ThUrsday at the Lay Delegates.
•
Bigony-Jordan Funeral
"We wish to be given ·•
Home in Albany with the Rev. permission to confer holy ~
Olan Harvey officiating.
on
qualified •
· James A. Deeter, Sr., 54, who was killed in Vietnam in Burial will be in the Ogdin orders
candidates
without
:
The Plains, formerly of 1968, one brother, ·and two
discrimination as to sex," the :
Coolville, died unexpectedly sis!A!rs.
.bishops said in a statement, ·.
early Monday morning at
Surviving ate his wife, Couple notes their
Flora, Ill., while on a Mildred Shirkey Deeter; one
NOW YOU KNOW
,
business trip.
son, James A, Jr., Winter
Tbe
bald
eagle
builds
a
nest
.,
He
was
born
at Springs, Fla .; a daughter,. 53rd anniversary
for life, and through constant
Hockingport to the late Levi Mrs. David (Cindy) Daniel,
renovation an aerie can :
and Nora Wires Deeter. Mr. Albany ; one brother, Rev.
Mr. and !drs. Dahi weigh more than a ton.
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Deeter was a sales manager Roy Deeter, Coolville; live Kesterson of Pomeroy ivill
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at the Charley Moore Ford sisters, Mrs. Ada , Bibbee, celebrate their 53rd wedding
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Company in Athens. Jle was a Mrs. Gladys Webb, and Mrs. anniversary Wednesday.
ThoSe born on this date are •
prominent horse show judge Gertrude Ahart, all of They were married on July 7, under the sign of Cancer.
~
in he tri-state area:
Coolville; Mrs. Laura 1923.
John Paul Jones, founder of :
•
He was preceded in death Thelma Parsons, Columbus, . A family observance will be the United States Navy, was ~
by a son, Lt. Michael Deeter, and Mrs. Marjorie Scott, held with Mr. and Mrs. Earl born July 6, 1747. This is
Belpre, and four grand· Kesterson and sons, Kevin entertainer Merv Griffin'S •
children, Julie, Debra, and Dale Of Hamilton, Mr. 6!st birthday.
•
.
8JD Tammy and Michael, Jr.
•
and Mrs. Roy Kesterson of
Funeral services will be Langsville, and Terry Sayre
FALi.B TO DEATH
Thursday, I p.m. atthe White and Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
OWENSBORO,
Ky. (UP!)
Funeral Home , Coolville. Pomeroy, to attend. Due to
-James
Jackson,
Jr., 18, of
Burial will follow in the the couple's health, no open
Owensboro, was killed _
Orville Dale Graham, 70, Weatherby Cemetery near house will be held. Cards may Monday when he fell through
200 Spring Ave ., Pomeroj, Coolville. Friends may call be sent . to them at their a tin roof and plunged 10 feet
Pomeroy Rou!A! 3 address. into a clay grinding machine.
died Monday night at after 7 this evening.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. Graham was born Jan.
4, 1906, the son of the late
John and Amy Quivey
Graham. He was a veteran of
Wori War II, a member o!
Drew Webster Post · 39,
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Amencan LegiOO, and Meigs
Chapter
53
Disabled
Amencan Veterans. He was
.
also preceded in death. by a
son •. Elmer and a brother,
Save on men's sport shirts ·.dress shirts- western and lei~ure shirts.
William.
Surviving .are his wile , ·
All ~ens and boys summer 1ackets are sale priced-·mens and boys
Martha ; daughter, Esther
fash1on jeans- entire stock of low, low pricesGraham, Pomeroy; a sister ,
Mrs. Nadie Townsend,_Downtngton: two stepchildren ,
And on the 2nd floor - savings on womens Dresses Bl
JoaJln Wilson, Mogadore;
Co
d. 1 ·s· ·
.
·
ouses ..
or .tna e por1swear - Swim Wear - Girls Swim wear Red
d_
Mllry Workman, Sardis.
AU G1rls Dresses.
_,.
uce
Funeral services will be
held at 1p.m. Thursday at toe
Ewing F;uneral Home wtth ,
· Be sure to stop in the Home Furnishihgs Annex for special July
the Rev . William Middleswarth officiating. Budai will
Clearance Sale prices.
be tn Meigs Memor"ya Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home any ttrne after 7
.tonight.
Shop Wednesday and Thursday 9:30A.M. to 5 P.M.
•

Weather

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VOL XXVIII

PmLADELPHIA (UP1) Queen Elizabetb and her
busband, Prince Philip, today
ended a 24 hour visit to the
birthplace of this colD! try and
flew to Washington lor a
meeting with President
Ford.
The queen's party. left
Philadelphia International
Airport at !O::Ill a.m. EDT m
a VC!O ofJ he queen's Flight
group of the Royal Air Force.
The queen traveled by
motorcade to . the airport
lroli\ .Penn's. J,.andlng wben
she arrived abOard ihe Royal
· Yacht Brittania shortly after
10 a.m. Tuesday.
The queen shook hands
with Mayor Frank L. Rizzo
and other city officials at tbe
foot of the stairs leading up to
the airliner. The airliner had
two small flags on the
cockpit, the American flag
and the Royal Standard.
During her visit Tuesday,
the queen admitted her great-

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.

James Deeter Sr. dies

Orville Gr ah

•.

died Monday

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
July Clearance Sale;.

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy ,
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POMEROY,MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

F.o rd welcomes
British queen

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NO. 55

greatgreat~eat

grandfather, King George
nr, made a ~ke 200 years
ago.
Ford ordered . a tiuge
British Uilion Jack lmng from
the , nextdoor Executive
Office BuDding and had an
air-cmdltlmed banquet tent
ere~;ted over the entire White

GlobOkar said the Point
Pleuant National Gua~d will
be 'here Saturday as part of
Its weekend drill to cut d~wn
the trees, II of them at Beech
Grove Cemetery. Three men
from the street department
will assist in .removing the
trees.
·
CoWICil agreed to the
purch~ four new shocks lor
the police crwser
Ode! Jed Webster was
comniended on his report for
the month of June· In which
the department tnvest.iga ted
21 accidents; made 61
arrests; received $632 from
tickets; colle~;ted $2J7Hrom
the parking melers; issued
1,157 tickets; drove 4,318
miles; had the cruiser serviced twice, and repaired 12
new' parking meters and 6 old
meters .

employes who have uSec:t all throughout the·county. Board
of their sick leave, and (3), member Harold Roush was
closing of the county office on named delegate to the Ohio
Friday when ~ paid holiday School Board l\ssn. meeting
falls on Saturday.
·
in Columbus on Nov. 12, and
Mrs. Greta ~tUe, schoo.l ·· Gordon Collins was · name&lt;\
supervisor, was named · the alternate. Other bOard
Chance ·or showers tonight.
coordinator of a federai members preseni lor · last Lows in the 60s. Variable
program designed to identify night's meeting were Harold cloudiness Thursday. Highs
potential teaming problems . Lohse, George Perry anll~ in the low 80s. Olances of rain
30 per cent today and tonight
at the kindergarten level Robert. Burdette.
and 20 per cent Thursday.

ary

Wooten dies, Services set

MEETING SET
CIIESTER - A regular
meeting of Shade River
Lodge, F&amp;AM, will be held at
8 p.m. Thursday in Chester.
All Master Masons are Invited.

· Thr.ee policies In accordance wlth new state
regulallons were adopted
Tuesday night by the Meigs
Coilllly Board of Education in
a regular session.
, They are (1) Giving each
certified and non-certtlled
employe of lhe county bOard
three personal days a year:
( 2), permitting an advancement of live days for

Mr. Gardner died Tuesday·

News •• in Briefs

HOSPITAL ·NEWS

Fal'lllei'S

.
Slivers, Margaret Eichinger, Opal Kloes, Mary UJie, Ann :

.. ABICENTENNIAL PRESENTATION, "Ring All the
Bells of Freedom•: was presented to an estimaied 500
persons by some 40 Meigs County residents at Royal Oak
Park Sunday evening. Directed by June Van Vranken and
accompailied by Dorothy. Klirr, the singer stood on
elevated bales of hay and wore red and white checked ·
shirts and blue jeans. A fireworks display followe&lt;j ,
Makwg up the group were Ruth Karr, Marilyn Robinson,
Janet Koehler, Alice Wamsley, Paula Eichinger, Dolly
Rousey, Barbara Mullen, Gemma Casci, Norma· Jean

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs.
.......H , .. .H , .. ., .. ..,.,.. ..,..,.. . . ...,.,.,..,.,.,..,........,.., . John McDaniel, Mason ;
Larry Mohr, Pojnt Pleasant;
Ray Duncan, Gallipolis
Ferry; Bruce Click, MI. Alto;
Stanley Schenaver , Mrs.
William Hivnor , Cora
· Bonecutter, Mrs. Howard
Swan,"'\Mfs. Charles Craft,
WintalW Denny, Ellen. Long,
·Kenneth Ramey, Mrs. Paul
.Harrison , all of Point
Pleasant; Helen Cossin,
•
Leon; Audra Workm~n •
Eleanor: Mrs. Wiley King,
Arbuckle i Mrs . Randall
Blaine, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Timmy Gibbs, Mason:·
Thomas Anderson, Sr.,
Huntington; Mrs . Hollis
Bqunlield, Gallipolis; Mrs.
John Baker, Gallipolis;
Melissa Hoosier, Miami, W.
Va.

•

repairs.
On lhe reco111111endation
of Mayor Clarence Andrews,
CO\UlCll voted 4 to 2 to hire
Gary Q-emeans as an extra
pollee officer . Phil GlobOkar
abstained and Ralph Werry
voted no. The mayor pointed
out that one man in the
cruiser could npt control
incidents.
.The mayor reported that
the sewer on Hill Street has
been repaired, 100 feet ·of tile
laid, and warned the senior
high building will have to be
rewired and metal doors
upstairs InstaUed before it
can become the new city ball.

Board adopts 3 policies from new state laws

CLAIM PAID
The Meigs County Com- Veterans Memorial Hospital
missioners paid an animal
Saturday Admissions claim to James Stewart Rt. 3, Mary Haning, Albany; Hazel
Pomeroy, in the amount of Phillips , Wellston ; Bruce
$75 lor the loss or one sheep Hoffman, Pomeroy; Olarles
when they met in regular Jacobs , Pomeroy.
session today. Attending the
Saturday Discharges routi ne ~ession were Henry Kimberly Burke , Juanita
Wells and Bernard Gilkey, Abshire, Debora Drake ,
commissioners, and Martha Goldie Roberts , Homer
. Chambe~s. clerk.
Moodispaugh, Dwight Sayre ,
Roger Snyder, Paul Baer.
Sunday Admissions . SUITS FILED
Dwighl Sayre, New Haven ·
Ronald Shepard, dba Minnie Johnson , Athens:
Shepard· Contractors , Veletta Rowe, Racine: Alice
RuUand, has filed suit here Clark, Middleport.
against Cecil Roseberry, Rt.
Sunday Discharges 1, ·Vinton, tn the amount of Mark Markilam, Mary Park.
$855 .29 for negligence in
Monday Admissions repairing a truck. Walter R ·Robert Bowen , Pomeroy; ·
Crooks, Middleport, filed suit . Harold King , Pomeroy ; Paul
in the amount of $600.64 Hatfield, Dexter.
against Joe E.Bowland, and
Monday Discharges I'olly · Bowland, . Buckeye · Sandra Buchan ~ n . Orlene
Lake, for alleged money due Saylor . .
on rent of ~ building.

Beca~ We. Furnish

e:qJeDditure was "inflation"
and the fact that the winter
was more aevere than ll.!lual
so that the street equipment
was uaedmore and additional
repairs naturally followed ..
The fact that the street
department Ia in financial
difficulty prompted council to
agree to pass the $5 permiulve tu which will cost
lhe taxpayers an adWUonal
$5 lor auto license tags.
Residents will have the opportunity to voice their views
as it will take three readings
to pass the ordinance. The
money from the permissive
tax w.ould be ~d for street

WINNER WANTED
The Young Wives Club of
Chester is seeking tbe
wianer of ill bicentelllllal
baby contesL The club bas
one birth recorded at 11 :14
p.m. on July 4tb aad would
lllte to' lmow U a baby was
born (o aay Melp County
resident before that hotjr
. on July 4. Anyone know,iug
of an earlier birth on Jbe
bollday has until 10 a.m.
Friday to ooUfy the club.
To be notified are Karen
Young, 99%-7524, q_r Lila
Vu Meter, 18~!151. Tbe
bicentennial baby will
receive a number of gUts.

Jane Walton , clerk,
reported gas rates lor the
village will be increase!! 8.28
cents per 1,000 cubic feet
effective July )1. A letter •
from the Columbia Gas of
Ohio was received nottfytne
council of lhe increBM.
'
Attending were MAyor
Andrews, Werry, Osborne,
Harry Davis, GlobOkar, Dr.
Harold Brown, and Olarles
~tels, councllmen, Phyllis
Hennessy, treasurer, Mrs.
Walton, Olief Webster, and
Captal1\ HenryWerry.

Live lobsters
offered public
'

Beginning this week, the
Kroger Store in Pomeroy will
accept orders for live Maine
lobsters, which will be sold at
cost plus 10 perrent to cover
~ndling . Each week's cost
.will be pQsted In the store and
ord,ers will be filled Thursday
through Saturday of the
loiiowing week.

•

enttne

7
TUESDAY, JULY-I 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
-,

$250,000 school
matching money
COuld be lost

The Meigs County Board of approved, but that unless the funds for the year 197&amp;-77 has
Commissioners, reminded commission makes available been approved but that the
Tuesday by official letter of sufficient money to operate same is being help up until
obligations to the school matching money of the money Is either ap:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::
House rose garden.
.
. taw-mandated
provide
money
to operate a $250,000 to build the school propria ted or made available
First Lady Betty Ford
by you for the operation o! the
school
lor
the.
mentally will be lose ·
wanted the effect for
Judge We~ster's letter :
mentally retarded S&lt;;hool for ·
retar~ed. said today no action
tpnJilht's state dinneJ: to be a
' .
.·
"I have been advised by the balance olthls year and
has been .taken.
"garden party' ' featuring the ·
A spokesman for the telephone from the State for 1977.
color pink for ,the Qu~n. ·
commission, which met Department of Mental · "I aga in urge you· to
The Fords Dew In flowers
Tuesday and had read into its Retardation that the ap- · comply with the request of
from Hawaii and deeorators
record a letter from Manning plication that you made for the State by givi ~g assurance
from New York to replant the · ~
D. Webster, chairman of the asslstjlnce in the con- that there will be money for
rose garden for the feast.
of
the the operation of this school;
Meigs County Board of struction
Decorators James Goslee of
Mental
Retarded
trainotherwise, o.ur county may
Mental
Retardation
,
In:
the Fernery and Betty Sheritl
ing
facility
for
this
lose
the matching funds of
dicated
the
matter
would
be
of McMillen, Inc., said the
COLUMBUS- Gov. James taken up in its next meeting. county lias been approved by $250,000 for this facility.
torrid Fourth of July weather A. Rhodes has announced
advisory council.
"I also urge you to
Probate Court Judge the
had made the garden's approval· of an $8,000 grant
regular blooms unfit for a from the Appalacblan Webster's letter to the However, this approval is promptly make available and
commission pointed out state subject to the condition that appropriate sufficient funds .
queen.
Regional Commission (ARC) funds to help build a school you as County Com- for the operation of .this
for Meigs County's solid for the re.tarded applied for missioners give assurance scho9l for the year 197&amp;-77
waste expansion project.
by the,commission ha.ve been that there wiD be money which is your legal duty to do.
Ple project ivill expand the
''The retarded school
available from your funds for
· county's existing garbage
the operation of this training should begin September 1 and
collectlon system In rural
I!Y U!liled Press Jntematiooal
facility .
we have very little ttrne to
areas and ivill include the
HONG KONG - CHU TEH, F1RST COMMANDER of •
"Also, I have been advised prepare for our program.
purchase or 20 solid waste
China's Red Army, veteran of the epic Long March and 40-year
that the applica tion which Therefore, it is most urgent
ally of' Communist . party Chairman Mao Tse-tung, died
COLUMBUS-Gov. James staff, finding non-federal containers. Local sources will
has been made for the Title I thatpromptaclion be taken ."
. Tuesday in Peking. He was 90. Chu's death, attributed by A. Rhodes has announced sources of funding and contribute ,2,000.
The project was submitted
official media to "an illness," reduced Olina's rullhg politburo approval1&gt;1 a $08,276 grant establishing an association of
to 18 full members. In the. past 15 I_OOrtths, three politburo from the Appalachian chi I d de v e 1o p men I to the ARC for approval by
Paul Hatfield, 16, Dexter,
the Department of Economic
members have died, including Prerruer ChOu En-!11.
Regional Commission (ARC) operations.
who
was a passenger In a
After Mao and Chou, ~u was perhaps the best-known and • afar fifth and final year
Ohio's 1976 Appalachian and Community Developmost-widely respected Chmese leader .. He commanded ~he funding of Ohio Valley Development Plan and ment's Appalachian Develop- pickup truck driven by David
Communist armies during the Sino-Japanese war and the ctvll Regional Development Project Investment Package ment Office which ad- Call that was wrecked
war with the Nationalists during the late 1940s. ~s chairman of Commission (OVRDCJ Child contains approximately $9 ministers the ARC program Monday at 8:30p.m. in Scipio
rownship suffered a serious
the Standing Committee of the National Peoples Congr~ss, be Development Administration million In funding proposals in Ohio.
injury to his, right hand his
was de facto head of state after China abOltshed the presidency Project. LoCal sources will
Ohio's 28 Appalachian
fBIJ1ily
said today .
In January, 1975, and most new ambassadors to ,Peking contribute $20,843 to the 11-, counties In areas of health,
Gallia County's Local submitted to arbitratt.on
Hatfield
was · taken to
pre11ented their credentials to him.
county program.
child development, comCALL ANSWERED
Veterans Memorial Hospital Board of Education by a 4-1 within five days after the
The project was submitted . m unily development,
The Pomeroy Emergency by private car and later in the vote Tuesday night denied a board's dvcision. Board
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD and the to the ARC for approval by education, energy and
Squad answered a call to evening was taken to Holzer grievance filed by form er member James Blevins voted
Democratic majOrity in Congress u. ~ engaged in a new veto U•e Department of Economic natural resources.
Kyger Creek teacher William no on the deniaL
fight over public works jobs. Ford won the last battle on that and Community Develop's
ARC is a stale federal part- Route 124 near Pomeroy at Medical Center where he Bahr regarding the nonThe board, upon the
lasue. But the Democrats believe this lime they have the edge . Appalachian Development nershlp which promotes the 2:58p.m. Tuesday for James underwent surgery Tuesday ·
renewal
of·
his
teaching
recommendtion
of Assistant
Both llldes accuse each other of playing election-year politics Office which adrniilisters the economic and social develop- Biggs, a medical patient, who morning. It will be necessary
contractlor
the
1976-77
school
Prosecuting
Attorney
over America's seven million unemployed.
ARC program in Ohio.
me11t of the Appalachian was taken to Holzer Medical lor him to undergo two more year .
WiUiam N. Eachus, voted 4-1
operations, the family
The president Tuesday east his 52nd veto. against a $3.95
Priorities for the coming region of· the United States. .Center.
According
to
a
school
bOard
to retain the services of the
bllllon bill, which Democrats claim would create or preserve year include training local
reported.
spokesman,
the
grievance
law
firm of Porter, Stanley,
up to 350,000 jobs. It would p-ovide $2 billion for pubUc works •
Platt
w~s denied on two grounds :
and Arthur of Colum·
projects ready to start within 90 days, designed to create jobs
(1)
No
grounds
for
a
bus.
Blevins
again cast the
mainly In the construction industry.
'
dissenting
vote,
existed
since
the
grievance
It would give $1.25 billion In budget aid to local governaction was non-renewal of a . The firm will represent the
ments hard hit by recession to keep them from having to
teacher's contract, not a bOard in its $200,000 law suit
reduee services and lay off employes. And it would provide
terminaUon, and (2) -the filed two weeks ago in U. S.
established
by
the
college
Biblical
Education,
Business
A $500 annual, four year
flOO mUlion !or water treatment plants in 33 states, which feel
may
be
asked
to
withdraw:
jrlevance
was not filed on District Court by Bahr .
they were shortchanged in an earlier allocation of anti-" college scholarship has been Administration, Education,
time.
(It
should
have been · The former GAHS in.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Salley
expect
and
Physi~al
established In memory of the Health
pollutlm money.
a
student
may
begin
llled
within
15
days
of the structor sued the bOard for
late Barbara Jean Salley who Education, Language and
!
event
or
condition
upon
which $100,000 in compensatory
EUGENE, ORE. - SCIENTISTS IN BRITISH Colwnb!!' lost her life in an automobile Literature , . Music, receiving the $500 annual
: .the grievance was based.)
damages and $100,000 In
are launching another attempt to find Sasquatch, or Big Foot, accident on May 26, 1969, the Psychology, Science and scholarship this fall. If
Bahr's
contract
was
not
college-bound
student
from
punitive damages lor Its
Mathematics,
Sclal
Science,
the legendary ape-like animal which wall!s like a man.
night ·of het graduation from
renewed
ditring
an
April
23
'
the
Eastern
District
are
decision ill not renewing his
and Speech Communications.
Gene Cisler of North American Wildlife Research said Eastern High School.
meeting
,
not
May
17
,
already
located
in
schoola,
teaching contract. He also
Tuesday !hal the expedition's leader, Roy Lack, reported be
Establishing
the · The college lends itself to
then
the
award·
of
the
.
f
vUowing
·'the
bOard's
due
asked
that he be reinstated
and a group of researchers have set up a camp near scholarShip are her· parents, preparation for the ministry,
process
hearing.
scholarship
will
be
extended
with back pay and asked th~
·BeUacocila, a wllderness area In the Canadian province . The Mr. and Mrs. Russell R. pre-medicine, pre-dental,
Bahr filed his grievance court to enjoin the bOard from
area wu chosen because of reported sightings of Sasquatch Bailey, formerly of . the pre4aw and pre-pharmacy to the next fall . The money
with Kyger Creek Principal hiring a eplarement ..
·there and of a 1970 computer study which pinpointed Flat'woods area. of Meigs work. A Baptist college of lor the scholarship wlll be ·
Robert L. Lanning, who
Bahr charged that he was .•
Bellacoola u a likely place for the animal to live, Cisler said . County, now of Gallipolis and arts and sciences, Cedarville placed in a Gallipolis bank
which
will
forward
the
check
answered
and
denied
it.
He
not
renewed on the basis of
College
costs
lor
one
quar~r
Tarpon Springs, Fla .
each
year
to
the
student
who
lhen
sent
it
to
County
his
teacher association acLAPLACE, LA. - A 33-YEAR..QLD FORMER insuranre
The recipient of the lour including room and bOard
receives
the
scholarship.
Superintendent
C.
Comer
tivities.
agent wualmOII run down by a Jltpanese tanker, but says he year scholarship mll.!ll be a amount · to approximately
Selection of the scholarship
Bradbury, who likewise
The Board of Education
plana to complele hl8 I,mroile swim down the Mlsslasippi graduate of Eastern High $1135 for 16 quarter hours.
answered the grievance and April 23 gave six documented
River. The tanker narrowly missed Wayne Thompson of Port- School and attend Cedarville The college offers o\'her winner will be on the basis of
·denied it.
reasons for the non-renewal.
t.nd Ore.,
Tuesday. as he swam In the fog.j]hrouded river from . College, a liberal arts school scholarships and grants as character, scholastic stan·
'
Under Le\'el Five of the
Baton Rouge to Laplace.
.
at Cedarville, Ohio. The late well as student employment. ding :&amp;iKJ need .. Eastern High
Friday througb Sunday,
master contract between the
"I aaw this blg obJect and I knew it coUld only be one Miss Bailey had been ac- High standards of personal School graduates wishing .to
BARBARA BAILEY
chance
of sbowen Friday
board and Gallla County
thing," jlji'TbiWpson; w~o J.w:arry!ng out the swim wlt~t cepteia at that sch\)01 when conduct are maintained and be conslderated for the
and
Sunday,
but more lll&lt;ely _
1
who do not scholarship are to notify Reedsville, via a brief letter. Local Teachers' Association
111 ~'boat. ' 'tortunatelf,'Tt wa• going slow. Had It been she met her untimely death. students
Saturday.
Higbs
to the 80s.
fiOing nc:nnal speed it would have been curtains." He said he
Departments or instruction · cooperate in malniairiing the Eastern Supt. John Riebel, Those wishing to apply should Bahr has the alternative tO Lows In the 60s.
request that the Issue be
conduct Eastern High School, Route 1, do so at once.
at Cedarville College include standards ,of
(Continued em Pille 12)

$8 ()()() will
help buy 20

contam•ers

Orild project grant approved

Passenger .

by .Rhodes for eleven counties

is injured

Grievance by
Bahr is denied

for

Bailey scholarship ·announced
.
.

.

~

.

�..

.
2 -The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pooreroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 7, 11176

•
"

:veto hits teacher-valqation, hearing system
By LE~ LEONARD
service in a district.
Martin said the OSSA does cent of all n'ewly hired' and impcrtant" principle of develofled to ICCQI!liiiOdate
local need&amp; and the abillty to
UPI Statehouse Reporter
''This provlslm would com· not believe a referee's ,teachers in Ohio IIChoola were local centro! of edur;aUan.
1 COLUMBUS (UP! )- Gov. ple~y obviate the incentive decision should be made retained, 8nd that in the past · He also said It would cost pay lor them," Rbodel 'll'nlte.
James A. Rhodes has vetoed · for a teacher to obtain the binding upon elected "j)ubllc two yean, Jess than 0.2 per financially troubled achool
"Some of the llauree and
legislation . r equ iri ng required numher of houn of officials, such u school board cenl of all ~ure ccntracts districts about $2,000 per irtcrmatlan that he quolea
p-.rso nn el evaluation postgraduate continuing members. 1'We felt those were ~ted by boards of hearing, and that the number are not tbi lllllle as~
programs in public school! e&lt;lucatlon necessary for provisions would have been educatioo. '
of hearings would increase in testimony before th~
and mandating hearings for achieving tenured status," difficult to administer, 'and
The goVernor alao said that because of the new law.
legialative commilteea,
1 n-tenured teachers who are said Rhode s.
Although he said he replied Mrs. SCinrlli1 ol the
very expensive, too, with the between 1941, when Ohio's
personnel
d Clltlisse!l or let go, saying it
"This ~utomatlc grant of hearings 81\d ccurt appeals tenure taw was adopted, and ·supports
Ftna11 u · the govemcr said
would ccst 1oo much and not tenure r~gbt's to tbose woo by non-tenured teachen."_ 1973, only seven cases ol perlormance evaluatiOn, OEA.
1ecessarlly give schools the have not fully earned that
Sandra Schwartz, of the contract termination were such programs are developed the ~ty rule ill rehlriDg
der the bill •'completely
""st teachers.
status is unfair, and tctally Ohio Education AMociatlan, appealed to courts of to fit the needs of local achool
Ill'
ot
Rhodes called the bill, without pr~nce ." David representing public school common pleas.
districts.
ignores
one
of
the~
w· nch he vetoed Tuesday, a P. Martin, executive vice teachers,
The governor said 56 per
said
her - ''Such a record clearly does
"serious threat to our president of the Ohio School organization was dlllpleued not indicate · a pattern of cent of Ohio's IIChool boards !lfl'lllllnel evlluatlan,
tr dition and system of local Boards AMociation, said his with the veto, "but we were arbitrariness or unfalmesa in evaluate · first-year teachers : to~bl~te:'.!:
~The bill' tlltal
~n d
public control of organization agrees with the not surprl.!ed."
per9011nel decis[cils let either twice a year; 74 per cent
education."
governor.
Rhodes has often taken a ~ure or non-tenured tea· evaluate limited contract for the we\rare of ac:bOol
where more
teachers; and fl per cent clllkftn In
The Ohio School Boards
" We're in favor of view counter to the polides . chen," he wrote,
t thnon in this
Association hailed tile veto of mandatory evaluation and legislation favored by the
Rhodes said use of a evaluate tenured teachers.
a 1 senior
the controversial bill , programs," said Martin, 115,000-member OEA.
referee to make binding
"Although many ,of the apparen
adopted by the General "lx.tt to force a board o1
Rhodes said the record decision In nan-r.enewal and existing eval111tion programs :~sa'.r~ the most
Assembly 111 the last day of educati&lt;m to support a rron- shows teachers have oot been termination actions would may not be as extensive as
its session in June. But the tenured teacher seemed very treated arbitrarily In violate the "iont~stablis!!~ ,the ooe proposed in the bill, capable - teachen
Ohio Education Association stringent and very expensive personnel decisi011s.
they have nonetheless been ~~~'?:::~
'Q~
expressed displeasure.
to us."
He said last year, B7 per
Sponsors of the legislation
· will get a chance to override
the governor' s veto, perhaJIIi
next fall. On final passage,
th~
governor's tightness of the GOP race by
By EL!ZA11Em WHARTON from
theywerethreevotesshortof
WASHINGTON UPI - In forbidding trial courts from a United Prell IDteraatlomal
conference, Carter got telling reporters · some
the tw(Hbirds majority · to Its just-completed term. lhe
the news media not
Rooald Reagan took hil bid spruced up a hll for his lUg delegations pledged to Ford
override in the House andJwo Supreme Court handed down ordering
to publish Information a~t for Republican coovenUon week at the convention, might abstain 011 the flr1t
in the Senate.
some 150 lull opinions which criminal trial proceedings. delegates to the national
fended to favor constJmer
hi
- Held unconstitutional
.
d which.begins Monday ill New ccnventioo ballot so they
Rhodes, In
s veto · rights. uphold the power of patronage
laws allowing televlston screens, an -York 's Madison Square could legally v«e for their
message, said the measure government officials t0 dismissal ol nonpollcy - attacked
Garden. He got hil hair cut preference, Reagan, on
would force an "extremely dismiss employees, and making employes who are not Democratic probable
candidate
costly" system of per901lnel boraden the power of pollee "members of the ruling party, Jimmy Carter instead of hil and his famous teeth cleaned Sllbsequent roll caDs.
In WaS!ington, Ford li'IS
evaluation on Ohio's sChool and prosecutors to secure but also held that the ConGOP.
t and checked over.
evidence.
Nevada Sen. Paul Lualt, playing host to Queen
stltutlon
does
not
require
a
own
""
opponen
,
districts. He said it would
Here are the court's major government ' to afford an President Ford.
·
Reagan 's campaign chief, Eliubeth 111 her Blcentemlal
cost about $44 million a year, deCisions at a glance:
employe
a
hearing
before
he
He
said
you
dm't fu: had gave a good indication of the visit to the ca)Jital.
Of $430 per teacher.
- Upheld some forms of
fired.
policies by rearranging the
His spokesman, · Ron
He also said it would capital punishment where Is -Struck
slate laws '-··
· "d'""'nHjudges and juries are given barrl!l!l thedown
.
.
Nessen, told reporters the
advertising of ~eaucraC&gt;:, or .............~
reqwre boards of ooucallon lmlled discretion to apply prescription drug
prices.
an UTespOIISlble and wasteful
President
would be ''minding
to r~e teachers with the ' mercy to a defendant.
-Held
uncons-t
itutional
Congress
by
putting
an
the
store"
during the
most seniority and not
- Ruled states may not
of the 1974 Federal indulgent friend in the" White
DemoctirtiG cmventi011. and
necessarily the best ones in require a woman.to obtain the much
Law.
House "
consent·ol her husband or, In Election
plans no further political
Ruled
that
a
person's
·
11
cas~s where ento ment the case of minors, ·her private business papers c;an
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Jessie trips until he flies t.o
In Henhey, Pa., some 311
declines or money is not parents before gelilng an be usect -eoalnst him at tria l Democratic governors, a few S. Owens , liS, CoolviUe, died
Hartford, Cmn., July 17 in a
available.
abortion . .
without lnlrlngl!l!l his right of wh(ID had e~aged iii a unnpectedly Tuesday af· bid for delegates to that
The legislation would have
-Held lhat federal civil
selt-lncrlmlnatlon. last-ditch drive to stop ternoon at the home of her state's GOP convention.
· he --~ 1 board rights laws require private against
- Struck down a law
.
daughter.
required etl r """oo
schools 1o accept qualified requiTing
states
to
comply
Carter
,
Tuesday
chmbed
hearings or arbitration black appllcanls.
· with federal minimum w~ aboard the former Geor
Boni al Sandy;ville, W. Va.
hearings for noo-renewal or
- Upheld plans calling for
to
the late Thomas and Lucy
•-time requlremen • ia governor 's band-wagon
termination of ccntracts for busing across city-suburban and
but reaffirmed stales may
the
Burch Armstrong, Mrs .
all noo-tenured teachers wtth lines In order lo Integrate not discriminate on the basis and endorsed . man no~ Owens was a member of the
.
f thr
of schools.
o1 race or sex.
assured of hts party s
a min1mum o
ee years
~ Laid down strict rules
KissiinJnee Baptist Oturcb In
nomination .
Kissiirun&lt;!e, Fla., but had
Carta" had lreaklast wtth been a resident of the
the gOVeri¥X"S and said he Coolville area the past 40
was "very grateful" fcr the years with the exception of
backing. "Many ol them did seven years spent in FlOrida.
not support me during the
Survivors include her By DAV1D E. ANDI!'lUION
WASHINGTON (UPI) - law ind administration of White dissented separately, primaries, lx.tt that is a husband, Fred R., at home; UPI Relicloe Wrller
favoring a rel;x ~ rule an symbol, I think, of the one son, Joe ' and one
The Southern-baBed Pre&amp;The Supreme Court wound up justice."
·
eviJence
is strength of our party, the daughter, Mr$. Harry byterian Cblrch in the us.
its seventh term under Otiel
In addition, the court ruled what
Justice Warren E. Burger a defendant convicted of a inadmissible bUt voting to diversity of it,'' be told (Freda) Gibbs, both of haa taken !lie first step
with Its most far-reaching state crime may not obtain ~d fed eral court review reporters.
Coolville; a brother, Thomas toward approving a new,
Carter said he would meet
reversal of criminal rl&amp;hta federal· court review of his an the !sate.
Annstrong, Otarleston, W. 20th-century creedal
In cKber 4lh Ame&lt;ldment Thursday with Minnesota Va.; a .sister, Mrs. Paul statement which leaders rope
secured under the late Chief ccnviction on grounds
Justice Eari Warren.
evidence uaed against him cases decided Tueaday, the Sen. Waller Mondale t.o ( Helen ) Campbell, will provide a CCiltemporary
· In a major victory for was obtained through court maj(\rity favored discuss the party's second Kissimmee, Fla., aild four &lt;4* too of faith to litis
police, prosecutors and state "unreuonable aeardlee and tJjiUlded power of the pollee . spot. The Plains, Ga. , graodcbildren, 15 great· generatiCII .
meeting will be the second of
Afle" tlree bounof debate
courl$, the jlJtlces Tuesday seizures" which are barred in each caae. The court:
grandchildren llld one great,.
- Rllled police do Mt Deed several being ccnduct.ed.
at
the 900,000 member
barred federal tribunals from by the 4th Amendment.
In
Washington,
a great · grariddaghter.
denomination's
General
reviewing most state
Powell said state judges a warrant to search a car,
She was preceded in death
criminal convictions on are equipped to review 4111 which has been impounded spotesnu.l for Mondale said by one 9011, Robert, two Assemliy t ccmmissjmen, u
"obviolEiy he is interested"
grounds of illegal seizure of Amendment clllma an4 have for a lnlf!c vlolatlm.
brothers, two sisters and one the delegates are called,
- Upheld U.S. Border in the vice presidency and grea!ilrandchild.
voted overwbelmlnsly to
evidence by police.
a duty t.o follow SUprfme
approve
tlie new "A Dedara·
The decision al!o was the Court
restrictions on Patrol randcm quest~ of wOUld ''seriously ccmider"
FWieral services will be
joining
the
ticket
if
&amp;!.ked.
To
pasalng
motorlats
t.o
tion
of
Faith''
and send it to
closest the court has come to seardles, and if a state gives
conducted Friday, I pm. at
say
mor.
e
would
he
determine
if
they
are
the
60
presbyteriee
overturning a major right the defendant a full 8lld fair
the White Funeral lime,
"presumptuous,''
the
spOkes.
carrying
illegal
aliens.
afforded the acCUied by War· opportunity to pr-t hil
Coolville, with the Rev. Roy regimal ~ - for their
- Ruled evidence obtained man said.
approval.
'r en's court, which in 11161 Cllll8tltutiooal claim federal
The first Carter interview Deeter officiating. burial will
illegally and not used. inA
u three-fourths of the presruled a defendant has a court.1 may not intervene,
be in the Kent Cemetery,
byteries apprvve the new
constitutional right to
w'llllam J. Breman Jr .,In a state criminal trial can be of potential rumlng ·mates Odaville,
W. Va. Friends may
suppress iUegally seized . lengthy and biller dlllent, ·Uled in an Internal Revenue was with Sen. Edntund S. call at the funeral rome after statement II will come back
to a future General As8embly
evidence at hil trial.
, chllrged the majority "has Service civil llli1 to collect MUstle, D-Malne, "who said 2 p.m. Thursday.
Tuesday
that
Carter,
as
bad;
taxes.
for
a final vote and
JW1tice Lewis F. Powell did recently moved in the.,
president,
would
give
bis
vice
In
·a
follow
up
to
lut
enactment.
I
not
overturn
the direction of holding tbat the
president
some
of
the
duties.
Friday's
capital
puni.lbmenl
The new declaration is an
"e&amp;clusionary r11le," but 4th Amendment has no
attempt to express the
indicated the rule should not substantive content decillona, the court ordered now being performed by
state court.1 in North Carolina Secrellry of state Henry A.
-historic content of the faith of
he applied in too technical f wbatmever."
DIVORCE • .........
...,...,..,
the Reformed tradilioa in
fashion so that olhenriae
"To sanction disrespect and Louisiana t.o resentence Kissinger.
Doris J. Zeigler, Rt. I, I I
t
He told reporters that Langsville
reliable evidence is excluded and disregard for the 43 Death Row inmates. The
filed suit for s mp e, con emporary
and a clearly guilty Clmlitutlon In the name of ccurt lllnldt down mandatory Carter does not like divorce against Alfred B. lanpase and symbols that
can be easily llndent.ood by
defendant is freed.
protecting society from death lnl in those states last Kissinger's '~LA&gt;ne Ranger"
Zeigler, same address and all
members
of
a
style, and added:
. Powell said too'often pollee lawbreakers Ia to make the Friday.
.
Susan
EakinS,
Rt.
2,
Racine,
congregation.
On the same growtds, the · "In that conten, Governor
misconduct is punished by government Itself lawless
"If we use it wisely and
justice
overturned Carter wants his vice ~t William~dwa~d
:oxcluding evidence and the and to subvert those values
president
to
take
a
foreign
Oklahoma's
capital
guilty defendant receives the upon which our ultimate
Meigs
eo!noness~ wjdely, we may_ c~e to a
"windfall" of freedom. The freedom and Uberty depend," punilhment law Tueaday, but diplomacy role 110 that tile Court Filing f disaoi H
deeper apprectahon and
.
cr
u~on undentanding of 'the faith of
let stand deeth sentence8 for presidert would not have \0
i"esult, Powell added, may Breman Aid.
· have the effect "of
Thurgood Marlball jlined lflnmates in Ge&lt;rgla and put himself on the firing line were Francis L. Pickens, Rt. our Fathen,'" uya Feli1 B.
1,_ Portland, and John L. Gear, 8 former moderator of
gener~ W.eepect for the Brem&amp;n'a dlaaent. Byron R. F1orida, wboae laws wen in every cri.i.s."
the deilomlnation.
When he reaehed bane ll'ickens, Rt. ·l, Portland.
upheld lui ~·
The most uldque aspect of

direprd

o:;:!

""''

•

Court work summary Reagan's target is Carter

Mrs. Owens

rued Tuesday

Co=

0
i

Dairyman misses

many facts

doctors at Johna Hopkins day because of lactoae in· home made yogurt. Com·
M-''--' Center, 110 he could tolerance. I bope that Brink mercial yogurt kllla off the
"""""
. k that aingl
get up to dale on the problem. does not thin
•
e lactobactllus early in the
The Johns Hopldn.s doctors gia8a of mUk for those who process and the product is so
did their study on patlenla' cantolerateitmeelathedally thin that It is usually
reaponae to only one (llau of · calclUJI! needs. I told Brink thickened wtth non.fat dry
cerntng your remarka about actualmillt,notthe tell Brink that Inadequate calcium milk powder. The result Is
~~~~a,:ER _ Thank alluded to.
Intake wu the moat common that commercial yogurt Is
in aend· ·I pointed out to Brink that nutritional deficiency In the one of the highest sources of
You for your co·""'~ _,
the Jolma Hopkina doctors United States. The Recom· lactose available and would
U. me that article. Dr. M. J. found that "TWo hundred llld mended Dally Allowance be very bad for people with
Brink (not a physician) did fortymliiWtera (one (llau) of established by the Nati011al lactose intolerance. Yogurt's
write to me. Although I have low-fat milk produced Academy of SCienc,e, for high lactoae content Is the
reuon to believe Hoard'a gueousneas or criUJlllll in 59 adulla, is between 110 and reason it came under
Dairyman knew of my reply per cent ol 44 lactoae in· 1200 mllllgrama and a single suspicion as a cause of
to Brink, my remarkl were
1
t 1 onl 288 cataracta.
not included lilthe article. So tolerant men and 81 per cent g an con a ns
Y
were
symptomatic
with
an
mtlllpams.
Ul
were
a
dairy
I believe the dairy fanners
you got 1 blued report.
equivalent amount of lac- farmer I'd want people to be have a right to insist that the
BrlnllldenUiled himself as
to drink
l da
Council
get
._._with the National Dairy toae." And, "Refwlal to drink able
a quar a y, Dairy
_.,.
the 240 ml oflow.fat milk served not juat a (llau.
,
wholeheartedly behind .the
Counell. ,. indlcllted in
with · meals · correlated
If people limited their in· efforts to produce and market
~ ~tal= ! : t w~ llniflcantly with lactose· take of milk and mifk a low~actose product that all
,__..
intolerance." Note here that producla to the_equivalent of 'can 11110. Fortunately other
nat applicable becaUJe the people with Jactoae in· one glaaa of lilllk a day It segments of the Dairy
studla lll!l'e jl011t with IK· tolerance !Imply doo't 11110 would reaDy hurt the dalrv Council have laken the lead in
,dalr,r products and that farmer and Cllllle widelpread developing Lact-Aid which is
equal to what )'1111- find in a ;nari!h.ls IQII to the dairy nu=~=~ that) now available in sl&gt;me parts
of the United States and
qaart of
Brllik aboald . ~John HCJPidn.s study tell my iudera to eat yogurt Canada. · f trust these
I nplled
pro • that maw people 81 a low lactoee product for remarks will give you a more
relil lbe lrllell In 1111 New ~ tolerate and will not calcium Intake .· I was balanced view than the ~e­
~Jolnalof~ drlnk.aalngleilassofmDka astonished. Commerci.al slded article appearing in
May 21, It'll of 1111 ...,..,. UJ
1
yogurt is not the same as Hoard's Dairyman.
By Latn-e E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
thought you mlgbt be in·
teruted ill the arUde in
Hoard's Dairyman con-

:oun~ :::ro=te~

m:;t

Because of. ita 111e and
complelity; the Fedenl
Govenmlent).t a parllcular
target for crltlciam. A In
eumplea illllltrale only too
well the nature of the
-~lem
,.~
· For aumnJe
_,.,. ' 1ut
· ynr throush 11 Cabinet
deparlluenta, 44 aeenclea,
llld 1,200 aclvtaory aroups, a
bloated bureaucracy iaaued ·
10,246 new l'efulatlona, ad·
ding considerably to the
60,000 Pilei of ealatln&amp;
regulations. Furthermore,
today there are 228 Federal
health ~ama, 158 Income
security programa, and 83
housing pr.ograms, many
over-lapping one another.
Government did not reach
Its present level of In·
competence in .. day, and It
/'"will not be undone In a day,
but ills clearly time t.o begin
to make government work
better. It Ia no wander that
most people perceive sovernment as too larse and
urrespanstve, and feel that
they no longer get good value
for their tax dollar.
The question remains; How
do we achieve overslgbl and
scrutiny of the Federal
bureaucracy? How do we
look at the problem comp r e hens I v e I y a n d
S)'3tematlc:ally?
Mecbanlsms are needed to
force the Congress and the
President to review the
usefulness of elistlng
programs and agencies, and
to rtOrl!anize or abollah those
that are not working well.
The present " oversight
procedure Iii the Congress Is
the "sunset" ccncept. Under

Dodgers miJke it two in row over Phils; 5-1

tiU 1(1111'1*11 e1ch qeney
would fiCe 111 111lamallc
tetmlnallllll date- or ,_t
_ aceordlnl to a flaed
schedule, uy once f:VfJt1 four
yean, unlea the ~
apeclflcallv' approved the
ill
continued operatl011. IIJ
tetmlnatlllll date for a pll'·
ticular qency approacbed, •
mandatory congrenional
review of the qency'1 per·
formance In Jigbt of the
purpoees for which it was
establillhed would
~
lrlgered. UCongreu did no
renew the program, It ,.ould
go out of exl.ttence.
·The adVIniage othaftthlet
IIWIIet propoeal Is
eatabllaheu !l'ameworkfor 8
syatematic, periodic acrutiny
of all Federal qencles and
makes the aupporWirs of any
particullf 11ency juatify
continuing public lilY«~tment
in' it. Through ita use,
overlapping pnlii'IIDB could
be untangled, agencies
rejuvenated, and Jll'Oill'lllll
and acencies that no longer
serve a public p_lll]lO!! could
be eliminated. The objective
of this propoul Ia to do away
with the natural bureaucratic
Inertia
that
permits
procrpma and agenclea to
continue limply becaUJe they
are there.
.
There are other promiJJng
proposals directed toward
checking the tremendous
growth of discretionary
power within the Federal
bureaucracy. One of these
would give Congress the
ability to oversee ad·
mlnlStrative rule-making bt
(QIIlllinieil on page 12)

NASHVILLFJ, Tenn. (UP!)
- High 11ehool athletic
officials from acr01a the
naUon appealed to CCilgrell
Tueaday for aid in cootrolllng
the televising "! ·Prof~!
football games m competltioo
with local events.
Winding up their 57th
annual ccnventioo, the 1,0.10
delegates ·to the National
Federatioo of state High
Scho"ol Associations
convention unanimouly
adopted a reaolutlon aaldng ,
the House Interstate llld
Foreign Commerce
Committee to place the same
broadcast restrictions on
cable televlaian hookups that
are currenUy in effect for
noncable networkl .
Television netlfllrka C8Jilot
legally
broadcast
a
profesalonal football game
within ao mnes ol where a
high school or college game Is
played on Friday nights and

network broadcall ban.
Delegalel al!o appealed to
the Prelident'a Commlaalon
on Olympic aporia not to draft
rules
leading
to
governmental Interference
with high school a\Jlh!tlal.
A resolution was adopted

In Independent baseba11
action on the Fourth of July,
Syraeflle kept ita leCOild
place leque standing by
holding off boat PortlaDd 8-6,
Syrliclllt '1 Jim Hubbard llld
Jeff McKiMey of Portland
lftl"e loCked In a pllcblng duel
unW $yracuae IICOI'ed one.in
the seventh iming and then
liz in lha ninth to -.ingly
put the game any. But
PorUand came back to IICOI'e
Saturday afternoons. '
four limes in their lul at
Some state high school ba ta, rut the rally fell lthort.
athletic officials exp1 1d
'For the winners John
fears that National Football Arnott wu 4for 4at the plate
League
teams
were . with four RBI's, and Rudy
attempting to al'l'qe cable Stewart and Rick Alb had
television ccntracta wblch three hila each. Aa of lul
would circumvent the Sunday, Syracuae aa a team

has 114 hlta in 2fflat bata for a
:m team averqe. They are
&amp;,1 on the season.
No one for Portland had
more than one hit, rut Greg
Roush, Red Wallbrown, and
Jeff McKinney each had key
hila in that lut Inning rally,
McKinney atruck out four and
walked three in takinll the
1oaa wbilli Hubbard struck out
n1nt and walked three.
s
010 000 loa-. 18 2
p
010 000 004--6 7 4
Hubbard
and
Allh.
McKinney and Fitch.

-,
L

attack. Perk Ault got the win,
fanning four and walldng six,
tt1111e Boyd and Dunfee led
the bitters with two singlee
and·a double each. Ault had
three .,.., Van Maire,
Cooke, Tlylor, 8lld llenaler
had two - hila each, and
TaMebUl, Odlda, 'and Qoncb
each had one.
Yoq was charged wllb
.the lou, strlklnc out two llld
w8Iking four., but be chipped
In , wHh !hree alnllta:
McKinney and Blacuton
each had two Jlnglet, and R.
At Middleport, boat Mid· Abbott had lilt.
dleport Friendly Tavern R
101000180-1 13
came oo atroog in .the lite M
010 ot8 ib-lUO 2
Innings and defeated Rock

J

•

•

MONTREAL (UP! ) Cincinnati outfielder Ken
Griffey says he's heen having
difficulty getting hits lately
lx.tt against the Montreal
Ellpoll he made it look so
easy.
In six plate appearances,
Griffey reached base five
limes, lncluding-ibree hits, to
score two runs and" drive in
two more Tuesday night as
the Reds defeated the Expos
10-7.
"f've been finding II Iough
the last week-and-a-half but
I'm happy the way I came
through tonight," said
Gril!ey, the sixth leading
batter in the National League

•

going into the game.
"I was extremely happy to
get that two-run double down
the first baseline (in the
seventh inning) since we
were leading by only one run
at the lime.''
The 25-year-old Griffey had
46rbis last season'and his two
rbi Tuesday night helped him
surpass that total with 47.
"I'm not trying to set any
goals like 80 rbllx.tt J do want
to keep up the good pace,''
Griffey said. "This was our
fourth straight win' and we're
starting to get the hils
together with good pitching
and that's lhe important
tbing."

~

Cincinnati pushed across
five runs in the •seventh
inning lo lake a 10-4 lead . .
Besides Griffey, George
Foster and Dan Driessen also
drove In two runs apiece.
Larry Parrish hit a threerun, eighth-inning oomer for
Montreal,
Reds' reliever Rawly Eastwick pitched 4 2-3 innings til
gain his fifth win In eight
decisions. Don Gullett
unaccustilmly relieved -and
pitched the finai inning for his
first save of the year.
Former Red Clay Kirby,
wbo started for Montreal,
dropped his sixth game In
seven decisions, the victim of ·
five Expos' errors.

..

Los Angeles 005

0oo OQO- 5

Phlade1phla 100 000 OOQ- 1

SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI) Sparky Anderson says he is
going lo ·walt unUJ Sunday
before announ cing the
starting pitcher for the
National League in Tuesday's
All-Star
Game
in
Philadelphia.
Anderson picked Randy
Jones of the San Diego
Padres, who has won 15
gsmes already, Tom Seaver
and Jon Matlack of the New
York
Mels,
Andy
Messersmith of the Atlanta

Braves, Rick Rhoden of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, John
Montefu sco of lhe San
Francisco Giants, Woody
Fryman of the Montreal
Expos and"Ken Forsch of lhe
Houston Astros as h1 s
pitchers.
Naturally, how those
pitchers are used durmg thts
weekend will determine woo
will start and see the most
aclion on ·Tuesday.
The betting, of ccurse, 1s
Anderson will reward Jones

Browns open
Center Hospital, Cleveland,
accordmg to team physician
Dr. Vic lppolilo, who said
Poole's co ndition is not
serious and he should he
released In • couple days.
Pruhitl andh Logan! neither
0f
w om ave stgned a
~ontr~cl
WithWith
the Browns,
are
m Chtcago
the College
All Stars, who face the World

Hal ick i, Wil liams ( 1), Cald-

72

6 1 well (3). Hea&gt;Jerlc (5 ), O'AcYeager , Ruisto (1) and Rader : Forsch .

Lou1 s, Crawford (S).

delphla, Schmidt (221 ,
Cinci ilnat1

Montreal

'

012 200 soo-- 10 14 o (10 innings)
010 300 OJ~ 7 14
New York 000 000 000
0 82
Eastwtck (7) , Gullett Houston
000 000 000 1- 1 7 0
Plummer ;
Kirby,
Matlack , Lockwood ( 10) and
(S), Murray (7), · Grete, Hodges (I OJ; R tchard (8(9) and Foote WP9) and Jutze L P- Lockwood (5 -

s

'-,
Pfttsburgh
001 000 Olo- 2 7 1 (9)Borbon
and
Atlanta
200 110 GOx- &lt;1 1-4 o Carrithers
Rooker, Langford (8) and Scherman
Dyer : Messersm ith, Marshall EastWtck (5- 31 . LP- Kirby (1 .
(8) end Williams WP- Mes sersmlth (9-6). LP- Rooker (7- 6) HR- Montrea l, Parrish (3)

4! .

San Frncisco 002 010 OAQ- 7 11 2
s r louis
700 132 OOx- 13 18 2

o--

Jl.
Major- League Stand1ngs
By United Pren International
National League

E.ast

1

the

' ues.
li•tt~~· Ie·ag

1

1

Philadelphia

Pittsburgh
New York
St Lou is
Chicago

,

~i'
~.j · ~~:· ~B
.43 33 .566 9
43 40 518
34 44 436
33 46 .41 8
25 47 347

12 1h
19
2Q 1h
25

In utUe League action last dou_ble.
Earl Pickens took the loss Montreal
Saturday the Pomeroy Tigers
swept a double-header from as he teamed with Keith Cook
w~~· L.- Pet. GB
50 31 ,617
· the host Syracuse Reds by and r.)ark Salser to strike out Clnc :nnat i
scores of 22'3 and 23-0.
eight and walk seven ~en' All k~~ ~7~:~es ~~ ~~ ~f~ rl~
39 42 475 l lV2
In the first contest the three of the-losers ' h1ts were Atlanta
38 43 469 12
Tigers got a fine pitching singles one each by Salser • Houston
.
'
. ' San ~rancisco 33 SO .398 18
performance from Brian Brtan
Allen, and Denms
, Tuesday's Results
Chicago 4 san D1ego o
, Whaley as he tossed a no- Teaford.
p
4 Pittsburgh 2
576 5--23 14 Atlanta
hitter and walked only seven
Los Ang 5 Ph :!adelphia 1
while striking out· a like S
••
1100 II- 0 3 Clnc:nnati 10 Montreal. 7,
number . His teamma&amp;es ~ .. 'r .In ,Saturtlay!J;. L.P.P.R.S. ~tou;or·~~~ ~o~:~~~8'~n'~s7
backed him up wilh some fine UtUe League actwn, the host
Wednesday's Games .
·
W'll
Racme
B's
fell
twice
til
(All Timts
EDT) 6·31 at
defensive play. Brtan 1 , . . .
.
,
san Diego
(Frelsleben
paced the way with lwo VlSlllng Racme As. 13-4 and ChiCago IR. Reuschet 7 61. 2 30
singles and a double Terry 18-7. In the first .contest p.m.
· and wtnmng
· · hur.er
1 Za ne Beeg1e Montrea
Cincinnati
!Zachry2'61.7·318.05
at
Adkins had three singles,
l (Rogers
Jay Evans liad a triple and • struck oul etghl and walked p m.
·Los Angeles(Underwood
(Sutlon 7-8!
at
single. Tony Gilkey had a only
. two whtle socking a Phdadelphia
4·1or
triple while Brian Whaley triple. Jay Reese stroked a Reed 6 21 , 7.35 p m.
and Mark Friend had a single . homer, and Tom Rohseberry Bls:,nsir~~~:~cr~,Mc;':~\~~~s~o7j:
each Brian Allen look the and Kent Wolfe eac had a s,30 P m
· h f
df ' alk d double.
Pittsburgh !Reuss 7-51 at
loss as e anne our, w e
Ty
B.
t k lh At lan1a (Ruthven 10·71, 7,35
thirteen and hit two batter§_.
rone rmage oo
e Pm
:
p
247 9--222'1"5 loss, and Allen Pa~ got the
New York (K?osman B-61 at
s
030 0-- 3 0 only extra base hit, a doubl~. Houston &lt;~ndu,ar 4· 41 , 8,35
A
615 01- 13 I~ p,m Thursday's Games
100 311- 4 5 San D~ego ot Chicago
Jay Evans picked up the B
New York at At lanta. night
win in the·second contest as
Montreal at Houston , night
Melanie Weese picked up
(Onl y games scheduled )
he shut the Reds out on three
the
second
wm
of
the
day
by
hits while striking oul two,
American League
walking four and hitting one allowing jusl six hits while
Easl
batter . Mark Friend led the striking our four and walking
W. L . . Pet . GB
York
47 29 618 hitters as he hit for! the cir· six. Kent Wolfe slammed two New
Boston
38 37 so1 av,
cult, getting a homer, triple; home runs and,a triple wplle Cleveland
38 37 507 Blf?
36 39 .480 10 1h
double and single . John Smilh Wayne Lyons got a homer , Detro 1t
Baltimore
36 41 468 IJ1 '2
was 5 for 5 with a double and two triples, and double. Zane Milwa
ukee
29 43 .403 16
four singles, and Otis Core Beelge got a triple and two
West
. L. . Pel GB
had three singles and two doubles and Jay Rees got a Kansas Ci ty W
48 30 .615
triple
qnd
double
.
Weese
also
walks. Brlim WID socked a
Tex&amp;s
44 32 .579 3
40 40 .SOO 9
chipped in with a double. The Oakland
36 42 .462 12
A's are now 14-J on the Minnesota
Ch1cago
35 42 .4SS 12 V;~
season .

R. Lyons took the loss, and
Allen Pape furnished . the
!titling power for the B's wilh
a triple and double.
A
456 3-18 18
B
0341l-7R

(All Times EDT!

INTEREST

On Celtificates
Of Depoit

•l,OOO~um
1 Yr. Term

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
M!tGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER l. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFliCH

City Edllor
Published daily eKcepl
Saturday by The Ohto
1 Valley
Publishing Com
pany ,
1,11
Court
St .,
Ohio
~5169
· Pomeroy
Business 6ffice Phone 99 2
2156. Editorial Phone 992-

2157

Mei&amp;s Co. Brillch

_(£)
Tftt Athin&amp; County
S•vlngl&amp; Loan co.
2M Second 5I.
Pomeroy, Ohio

California
34 49 410 161/2
.
Tuesday's R.esu.tts
Kan City 3 New York 1, lSI
New York 7 Kan City 4, 2nd
8ostQn 4 Chicago o
Milwaukee 6 Minnesota 2
Texas 3 Oetro lt 1
Cle&gt;Jeland 7 Cal iforn ia 3
Oakland 2 Baltimore 0
Todav ' l Probable. Pitdters

Second class poStage
paid at Pomeroy , Ohio.
NaHonal
ad.vertlslng
representatJ&gt;Je
Ward Gr l frl th Company , Inc ..
Bottlnelll &amp; Gallagher 01v ,
151 fhlrCI Ave, New Yor k,

N.Y 10017

Su bscr iptio n
rates .
Delivered by car:rler where
olVlllleble 75 cents per
week
By Motor Route
Where car'rler ser&gt;Jice not
available , One " month,
S3 .2S ey matt In ot1Jo and
w Va , One Year, S22 00 ;,
Six months , Sl1 .S0 1 Three
monthS, S7 00 Elsewhere
526 00 year ; Six months

~~3b~~i~~~~~ ~r?~;~~·,f~d5~s
l)un~ay T1mes Sentinel

n

Chicago { Johnson 6
at
Boston { Pole 4 4&gt;. 2 p.m.
Kansas Cltv ( Hassler o 6) at
New York {Hunter I0 -7l , 8 p.m
Oetron !Lemanczvk 1-1 or
Bare 3 Sl at fe)l(as (Biyleven 6·
9J. 9 :05p.m .
~
M innesota. (Singer 6-3) at
Milwaukee (Augustine 2-SJ. 8·30

in two runs for the Cubs with
a single in the first inning and
a double in U!e third to help
hand Alan Fosler his fifth
setback. •
Cards 13, Glanls 7:
Two-run singles by Ted
Slnunons and Hector CrU2
were the.big blows of a scv•n·
run , fir st inn_ing, which
By RILL MADDEN
~1 , Texas edged Detroit, 3-2,
routed Ed Halicki and sent St.
UP!
Spo .. ts Writer
Milwaukee
pul away Min·
Louis on its way to victory
If, as Connie Mack said , nesota, 6-2, Oakland bl'!'l1&lt;ed
over San Francisco. Jerry
pitching
is 90 per cent of Baltimore, 2-G1 and Cleveland ·
Mumphrey had four hits and
basebaD,
then
the Bostiln Red clubbed Callforma, 7-J.
Don Kessinger three to lead
Sox
might
yet
be launching a Yankees 1, 7, Royals 3, 4:
an 18-hlt Cardinals attack .
serious
challenge
for lhe
Chris Chambliss' three-run
Bob Forsch went 71-J innings
American
League
peMant.
homer
climaxed a five-run
for his third win.
The Red Sox have been eighth Inning thal enabled
mired under . ~110 for most of New York to salvage the
this season by vanous nightcap after Kansas City
troubles, lx.tt a string of U!ree took the opener behind the
straight wins has at last pitching of Doug Bird. Prior
propelled them to their first to Chambliss' homer, Roy
with th e starting role winning mark since April White knocked In a pair of tiemasmuch as Randy is · the 27-and the key to that spurt breaking' runs with a basesleagoe's top winner for the has heen stando'ul pitching. loaded bloop single. Bird,
first half of the .season with
Rick Wise, Luis Tlant and now !1-1, allowed just three
his' 15-3 record and a 2.51 Ferguson Jenkins-counted hils in the first game and was
earned run average. It will be on to he the heart of Boston's staked to a 2-t lead in the
Jones ' second Ail-Star game. fr ontline pitching - put sixtll on run-scoring singles
The dean among . the together . three straight by John Mayberry and Hal
pitchers is Seaver, a lwo-time complete games,
and McRae. White homered for
Cy Young Award-winner, Tuesday night Jen kins ' the only Yankee run off Bird.
wbo will be making his ninth pitched a 4-0 shutout over lhe Rangers 3, Tigers 2:
All-Star appearance. But Chicago White Sox.
Joe Lahoud, who had conSeaver has been struggling,
"I had good control,'' said tributed only three hits since
at least for him, with an 11-5 Jenkins; who faced 30 Whtte- being purchased by Texas a
mark and a 2.92 earned run Sox batters. "And I didn 't month ago, doubled home the
average.
have to tax myself In a couple game-winning run in the
Anderson said he was of innings . They wenl out eighth inning after a walk to
pleased with the eight men he fast. That's always a help Toby Harrah. Steve Barr,
picked.
when you're pitching."
who came over , to lhe
"I know I had to be guided
Rick Burleson 's two-run Ranger~ in the Jenkins trade
by the fact that where no single capped a three-run, with Boston, snapped a
player was picked by thetans fourlh inning that gave personal four-game losmg
I had to selecl someone from Jenkins, now 1~. ali the runs streak with a route-going sixeach club to make the team he needed . The workhorse hiller.
representative," said right-hander who was ·Brewers 6, Twins 2:
Anderson . " In this case, acquired by the Red Sox from
Robin Yount homered ,
though , I think I picked the Texas last winter for three drove in a pair of rurL'I and
best ei~ll!lfers I cculd." players and a bundle of cash, scored twice lo spark
For Rhoden, Montefusco struck oul two and walked , Milwaukee to its third wln in
and Forsch it will be lheir none.
four games. Yount opened the
first AllStar Game . Fryffian
El.!ewhere in the American third with a single .lind scored
was named ·once before and League, New Y.ork tilppled the first of three runs m the
Messersmith wa s picked Kansas Ci ty, 7-4, after the mning and hit his second
three times previously.
RoYa1s .t.o?k th e opener of home run of lhe season in the
· .,
tbeU" twHu~h t doubleheader. sixth

Boston wins
third in row

Anderson names NL pitching staff

'76 training _

LP-Fost~ . (3 -5).

~ lf-6 with I ao,hit

I)

NL gsmes.
non's single provided the
Braves t, Pirates Z:
Astros with lhe only run of
Andy Messersmith, aided their game with New York,
by Mike Marshall's 1 l.J who left 15 runners stranded.
innings of shutout relief, J.R. Richard allowed eighl
scored his seventh victory In hits, walked 10 batters and
his last eight decisions and · twice pitched oul of. jams
raised his record 10 9-4i for after filling the bases on
Atlanta. Run-scOI'ing hits by · walks enroute til his eighth
Jim Wym and Tom Paciorek win for Houston . Jon Matlack
senl Messersmith off til a 2-G pitched nine scoreless innings
lead in the first inning. Jim for the Mets.
Rooker, who yielded all lour Cubs 4 Padres 0:
Braves' 'runs, was the loser.
Slev~ Stone and Bruce
Astros I, Mets 0:
Sutter cembined on a lhree·
Reliever Skip Lockwood's hiller for Chicago, which
thr.,..base error on Wllbu• scored 1ts second straight
Howard's bunt leading off lhe shutout. Bill Madlock drove
lOth inning and Jerry DeVa-

Griffey happy ..

(5), Tomlin (6) , Metzger (8)
and Kendall ; Stone , Sutter (7)
and Swisher. WP- Stone (l .Q) .

versa.
"We feel that the best
intereata of both BUN, Inc!
particularly the glrla, ..td
he better served with
separate teams In thoae
sport&amp;," said Jack Roberta,
an NFSHA oflldal.

Syra~use, Middleport win

The Dodgers still trail the scored five runs off Larry
first-place Cincinnati Reds by Christenson in the third
51&gt; games in the West but inning and went on to win
when you can beat the behind the six-bit pitching.of
Phillles two in a row you feel Doug Rau. Mlke,Schmldt hit
ready to hunt bear with a his 22nd homer in the first
switch.
. r
inning for the Phlllies' only
" Beating the J'!llllles has to run off Rau.
The
Reds
defeated
give us C(lllfldence,". said
Garvey, " because they have Montreal, 10-7, Atlanta beal
been the besl team in Pittsburgh, 4-2 , Houston
scored a 1~, I ()..Inning vict(ll"y
baseball this year."
Reggie Smith and Steve over New York, Chicago
Yfllger each tripled and Gar- whipped San Diego, 4-0, and
vev contrllx.tted a key hll· St. Louis outslugged San
and-&lt;un single as the Dodgers Francisco, 13-7,-ln the other

Rau
(7.6)
and
San Diego
000 000 OQO- 0 3 l
(8)
and
Simmons,
tenson, T w i t c he! 1 (6), Curt is
Chicago .
102 001 OOx- -4 9 0 Chr1s
Schuel er (9) and Boone . LP- Fergu son (9) . WP- Forsch (3 Foster , Splllner (3), Reynolds Chrlstenson
(8-4) , HR- Phlla - 3). LP - Hatlck i (7 -11), HR- St

the declaratlon, whlcb haa declaration says. "As
been in the wwka for some persons from all nations
seven years, is that it Ia joined them, they were
llnlclured to erpreaa the separated from the Jewlab
laltb, the expel'ieooes of the clrnmwlity" but "continued
petple of God, as a story.
to accept Israel's story u
"Jesus Ouiats stands at tbeir own" and therefore ''we
the center of a story,'' the can never lay exclusive claim ·
declaratlan says. "In the to being God's people ... "
liblical story God moves wtth
"We affirm that God has
Israel and the drurcb u not rejeded hil ~le the
Fak, San 8lld Holy S)Jirit, Jews," It says wbUe
to eatabllab hil juat 8l1d confesaing "we CbrlaUana
~ rule In the world.
have
rejected
Jews
"That story Ia still tbrougbout our 1Utory with
unfolding and in faith we shameful prejudice and
make It our own.lt forma our cruelty. God calla 111 to
memory and our bope. lt teUs dialogue and cooperation that
111 who we are llld wbat we · do not ignore our real
are to do. To retell It Is to · dlaqresnenla, yet proceed
declare that we believe."
In llllltual respect and love.
The declaration is divided
"We are bound together
ln!o 10 cbapten wbich cover with them in a alngle story of
111011 doclrinel of the church: thoee chosen to sene and
'rbe liviDC God, Tbe Maker of proclaim the Uving God." .
All (creation), God and the
The new declarati011 trill
people of :r.ael, God in not he uaed by the
&lt;llrllt, God the Holy ,s prit, Preabyterlan&amp; in laolatlan. It
tbe W~rd of God, the traa preaenteil t.o the church
Christian Church, the within tha ccntext of a "Book
Chrlatlan Miuion, the of Confeuiona," which
Chriatiaq Life and the includes the texta not only of
&lt;llriltlan Hope.
tboee key documents of the
One of lllOit significant Reformed tradition, the
and coatrovental - llfCII0111 Westmlnister Confession and
of the new creedal llatement the Geneva Catechlan, but
Is a pa••age lilthe chapter an the ancient Christian
theCirlatlanCIIIrch inttlllch confessions of faltli, the
those who affirm the Nicene and Apostlea creed as
declai'illim confeaa the past well 11 Luther's Large llld
sins of anHSernUlsm.
Small Calechlama 8lld the
''The followera of Jesus Barmen ·Canfesalon, Uled
nmained at first within the by German ChrisUana
people of Israel," the reslallrlg HIUer,

.tlng the Department of
Health, Education and
Welfare to cluilfy soccer
and baseball as contact
sports. The current noncmtact claulflcation, said
one omcial, allowa girls to iry
out for boye' teams and vice

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Remember the Sea bees' fa.
. moua World War II motto :
"TIMI, difficult we do im·
medllltely; the lmpossi~le
·takes a UtUe longer?"
Well, Steve Garvey feels
pretty much the same after
the Los Angeles Dodgers
defeated the Philadelphia
Phlllles, 5-l, Tuesday night
for their second straight
victory over the National
League's runaway leaders in
the Eastern Division .

Major League Results
By United Press International
National League

High school offic.ials appeal for a~d.

,

I

Washington
B ClaNace
Report YM•

Southern .Presbyterians
.
offered ·new creedal stand

Warren· court reversed

DR. LAMB

'

~t~:~:.ioi~ a~i;~~?;i~i~~New

KC champ assured

game July 23.
,
•
Gomg
int.o
this,
his
second
Major League Leaders
By United Pr ess 1nternat•onal
year as head coach~ Forrest
A new champion for lhe
M. Allen, W. Wood , T.
America.n league
BATTING
(1st game!
Gregg
is
"very
optimistic,
'Kyger
Creek
Ultle·
-League
"
Dixon
and
B,
Harold
had
two
( base" on 200 at bats I
Kansas Ci ty 000 002 001- 3 e 0
Tournament wa s' assured ·· or more hits.
NATIONAL LEAGUE · very enthustastic."
New York -1 00 000 ()()()..-.- I 3 1
.
G. AB R. M. Pet
"I'm really anxious to get Tuesday nighl, th~, opening
Three Red Sox ptlchers, T.
Bird, Mingor 1 (8) and Mar ·
Oli&gt;Jer , Pit
68 27 6 47 101 .366
!Inez ; F igueroa , Lyle (8 ) and
to
camp,''
he
said
Tuesday.
mght
of
the
1976
tournament
Armstrong,
M.
Allen
and
D
Crawfrd , Sr L 64 21Z 31 75 .346
Munson . WP - Bird !9 11 L PRose, C1n
81 328 12111 .338 " I believe we'll he improved as
Pomeroy Yankees Brown limtted pomeroy to Figueroa (9 6) HR. - New Yol"k,
Griffey , Cm
75 283 64 95 .336
just three hits. Gelling Tiger R. Wh 1f e {7)
Morgan·, Cln 66 209 60 70 .335 because of the new talent pius eliminated the defendmg
Foster , C1n
71 287 45 96 .334 the experience gained lasl champs, Poinl Pleasant 's
safeties were M. Friend, a t'lnd gamel
Montanez , Atl BJ 325 35 104 .320
season
by
some
of
the
Johnson
'
&amp;
Marke~l2·10.
ctouble; B. Will, a single and Kansas C1ly 000 010 012- 4 9 1
Cey, LA
71 257 38 82 .319
New York
010 000 15x. - 7 7 1
In the tourne s second 6. Core, a single.
.. ·
Maddox, Plljl 69 249 40 78 .313 younger players."
Busby, Hall (8 ) and St inson ;
Madlock, Ch~15 276 33 ~ 87 .312
Gregg said condition, disci- game, the Gailip is Red Sox
Tonighl, the Middleport T1drow , lyle (8) and Hen
Geron1 mo, Cn 72 234 34 73 .312
ick.s WP - Lyle (6 SJ, L Pplme
and
aggressive
football
dumped
Pomeroy
's
Tigers,
Braves
meel Green ; Point dr
AMERI ~N LEAGUE .
Busby [3 3) t1R s- New York ,
G AB R H Pet will be stressed
aga;n 16-6
Pleasant's Fruth Pharmac) Nettles (12), Chambliss (10) .
78 315 47 112 356
Brett, KC
because
"
those
are
what
I
Playing
in
a
steady
drtzzle,
Will
play Bidwell and Rae· Ch1 cago
McRae, KC
78 290 48 98 338
000 000 OQO- 0 4 1
LeFlore, Del 70 290 48 97 334 helieve in."
Pomeroy jumped into a 6-2 coon Valley meets Syracuse's Boston
000 310 00)( ~ 4 8 0
Munson, NY 72 291 37 94 323
"We may dOfewer things, lead afler three innings· then Reds.
Brett (3 4) and Down 1ng ,
Carew , M1n
76 JOO 47 96 320
Jenkins (7-8) and Fisk
but
":e'H
d~
.
th~m
be_lter,'
'
wrapped
it
up·
with
a
btg,
six
,
•·
R1vers , NY
68 lOS 52 97 318
Lynn , Bos
66 251 33 79 3 15 Gregg satil We re gomg to run fifth inning
Staub , De l
75 268 37 · 83 .310
R. Kovalchik , lhe winnfng
ChambiSS , NY 76 317 41 96 303 execute."
Ha~rO'Je , TK 71 267 51 81 303
Owner Arl Modell plans to p1tcher, had a double and
( .....,_ HOME RUNS. .
. he close til the scene.
single Harnson, Wamsley,
NATIONAL LEAGUE : K ing
" I'm optimistic, but Whiliach and Gtlmore had
man, N Y 27 , Schmid t. Ph il 22 ,
Foster, C1n 17. Monday , Chi , cautiously so," Modell said . · the other Yankee hits: PaCing
, • •
Mon .• Tues., Wed . ·
• •
Morgan . .Cin and Cedeno, Hou
"I believe we'll be better Pomt Pleasant were Sleve
14
.
8;00til5;00
••
AM E R t CAN LEAGUE , hecause of the draft, trades Wamslay, Tom Mullins," and • •
Banda , Oak 18, Hendrick , Clev
we
've
made
and
the
return
of
John
Oliver.
Mullins
had
two
15 ; .Vastrz emsk l,
Bos
14,
• e
. Thursday atil12 noon
•
the Injured.
doubles .
L.May , Bait an~~ ice, Bos 13.
RUNS B~~TEO IN.
"I expecl Improvement,
Gallipolis pounded oul 11
NATIONAL ~EAGUE , Fosel
ter , Cin 69 ,· K 1ngman, NY 65 ; substantial improvement. I hits 10 its 16-6 Win over
Morgan , Cin 60 . Schmtd l, Ph 1l was· hurt personally by our
Pomeroy's Ti~ers.
59 , Perez, Cin 55 .
record
lhe
past
two
years.
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Bur ,
It
• •
roughs, rex 56 , Mayberry . KC They somewhat dinuned the
"He has gained ccnfidence
a11d ChambliSS , NY 55 . Otis , great history of the team .. I
••
Close Sat. At 5 p.m . • •
KC so, Munson . NY 49 .
in
himself.'' ·Gregg said of
want
t.o
get
back,
but
I
STOLEN BASES.
• •
•
"
Phipps, in his seventh NFL It
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Cede - understand lhat you win
no , Hou 27. Brock , St L 25 , some and you lo~ some. One season. "We handed him the
Morgan , Cln 23 , Griffey, Cln ,
thing I can't accept is looking responsibility last season and
Lopes. LA and Ta &gt;Jeras, Pitt 21
~
AM E R I CAN LEAGUE , bad losing."
. told him the job was his. Mike
North , Oak 38 ; Patek, KC 37 ;
ARNOLDGRATE
RUTLAND t
Modell and Gregg believe responded. I have ccnfidence 1 742-2211
Baylor , Oak 35 , Carew, Minn
33 . LeFlore, Oet 28.
the key to this year's Browns in him."
PITCHING.
will be quarterba ck Mike
Most Victories
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jones, PhlpJIIi and - wide receiver
so 15-3i Matlack , NY 10 2. Paul Warfield,
Lonborg , Pt'!11 10 4, Ru!h &gt;Jen,
"You are go mg to see a
All 10-7, Messersm 1th , Atl 9-6
AMERICAN LEAGUE : T1ant. fuUy developed Mike Phipps ·
Bos, Tanana , Cal and Dobson ,
season,"
Modell
Cle11 10-5, Hunter , NY 10 7; thi s
Palmer , Bait 10-8.
declared . "Now he 'II have the
ovERHA
EARNED RUN AVERAGE . help of Warfield and a better
ENGINEERI!IIG
·
.
• 1based on 12 tnnings ptlch edl
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Frels- running game. We believe we
241NCHES
leben, SO 2.06, Slanhouse, Mil have a blue chip back in Mike
sERVICE
2. 17, Mess ersm1th , At I 2 38 ;
Matlack , NY 2.44 .- Jones, SO Pruitt t.o learn with Greg
2.51.
Pruitt ."
AMERICAN . LEAGUE · Fl
Gregg said be bas
drych, Oet 1.86 ; Travers , Mi l
1 96 , Garland , Ball ' I S; Brett , ccnfidence in Phipps, the
Chl2.68, Umbarg er , Tex 2 72
since t972 except for a
STRIKEOUTS . . starter
ccuple
games when he was
NATIONAL LEAGUE . Sea .
ver. NY 119 ; Messersmith, Atl benched durmg a Browns
and Ric hard, Hou 101 ; N1ekro ,
losin~ lostng slreak.
Al l 93 ; Lollch . NY R4.

•

•

•

•••

•••

~·

::. FRIDAY TIL 8
~

~

.: ...•••••.

~·

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lnternJflonal League
Standings ·
United Press lrtternational
Rochester
Syracuse
Rhode I sland

Richmond
Memph is

~~~er~~stbn

W. L. Pet. GB

46 28 6'12
42 JS 545 S1 1
43 39 524 7
38 42 .475 11
36 41 .468 111 1
36 t2 .462 12

34 40 459 12
34 42 447 13

Tidewater
Tuesday '' Results
Toledo 6 Syracuse 5, 10 \ inn .
Rochester 3 RhDde I sland 2
Tldewate S Memphis 3
charleston 4 Richmond 1, 7
inn .. ra1n

"
~

.................................
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Balt imore {Cuellar 4·9) at
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Thursday's Games
Baltimore at Oakland , n1Qht
M innesota at Boston , n ight
Chicago at New York , night
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.
2 -The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pooreroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 7, 11176

•
"

:veto hits teacher-valqation, hearing system
By LE~ LEONARD
service in a district.
Martin said the OSSA does cent of all n'ewly hired' and impcrtant" principle of develofled to ICCQI!liiiOdate
local need&amp; and the abillty to
UPI Statehouse Reporter
''This provlslm would com· not believe a referee's ,teachers in Ohio IIChoola were local centro! of edur;aUan.
1 COLUMBUS (UP! )- Gov. ple~y obviate the incentive decision should be made retained, 8nd that in the past · He also said It would cost pay lor them," Rbodel 'll'nlte.
James A. Rhodes has vetoed · for a teacher to obtain the binding upon elected "j)ubllc two yean, Jess than 0.2 per financially troubled achool
"Some of the llauree and
legislation . r equ iri ng required numher of houn of officials, such u school board cenl of all ~ure ccntracts districts about $2,000 per irtcrmatlan that he quolea
p-.rso nn el evaluation postgraduate continuing members. 1'We felt those were ~ted by boards of hearing, and that the number are not tbi lllllle as~
programs in public school! e&lt;lucatlon necessary for provisions would have been educatioo. '
of hearings would increase in testimony before th~
and mandating hearings for achieving tenured status," difficult to administer, 'and
The goVernor alao said that because of the new law.
legialative commilteea,
1 n-tenured teachers who are said Rhode s.
Although he said he replied Mrs. SCinrlli1 ol the
very expensive, too, with the between 1941, when Ohio's
personnel
d Clltlisse!l or let go, saying it
"This ~utomatlc grant of hearings 81\d ccurt appeals tenure taw was adopted, and ·supports
Ftna11 u · the govemcr said
would ccst 1oo much and not tenure r~gbt's to tbose woo by non-tenured teachen."_ 1973, only seven cases ol perlormance evaluatiOn, OEA.
1ecessarlly give schools the have not fully earned that
Sandra Schwartz, of the contract termination were such programs are developed the ~ty rule ill rehlriDg
der the bill •'completely
""st teachers.
status is unfair, and tctally Ohio Education AMociatlan, appealed to courts of to fit the needs of local achool
Ill'
ot
Rhodes called the bill, without pr~nce ." David representing public school common pleas.
districts.
ignores
one
of
the~
w· nch he vetoed Tuesday, a P. Martin, executive vice teachers,
The governor said 56 per
said
her - ''Such a record clearly does
"serious threat to our president of the Ohio School organization was dlllpleued not indicate · a pattern of cent of Ohio's IIChool boards !lfl'lllllnel evlluatlan,
tr dition and system of local Boards AMociation, said his with the veto, "but we were arbitrariness or unfalmesa in evaluate · first-year teachers : to~bl~te:'.!:
~The bill' tlltal
~n d
public control of organization agrees with the not surprl.!ed."
per9011nel decis[cils let either twice a year; 74 per cent
education."
governor.
Rhodes has often taken a ~ure or non-tenured tea· evaluate limited contract for the we\rare of ac:bOol
where more
teachers; and fl per cent clllkftn In
The Ohio School Boards
" We're in favor of view counter to the polides . chen," he wrote,
t thnon in this
Association hailed tile veto of mandatory evaluation and legislation favored by the
Rhodes said use of a evaluate tenured teachers.
a 1 senior
the controversial bill , programs," said Martin, 115,000-member OEA.
referee to make binding
"Although many ,of the apparen
adopted by the General "lx.tt to force a board o1
Rhodes said the record decision In nan-r.enewal and existing eval111tion programs :~sa'.r~ the most
Assembly 111 the last day of educati&lt;m to support a rron- shows teachers have oot been termination actions would may not be as extensive as
its session in June. But the tenured teacher seemed very treated arbitrarily In violate the "iont~stablis!!~ ,the ooe proposed in the bill, capable - teachen
Ohio Education Association stringent and very expensive personnel decisi011s.
they have nonetheless been ~~~'?:::~
'Q~
expressed displeasure.
to us."
He said last year, B7 per
Sponsors of the legislation
· will get a chance to override
the governor' s veto, perhaJIIi
next fall. On final passage,
th~
governor's tightness of the GOP race by
By EL!ZA11Em WHARTON from
theywerethreevotesshortof
WASHINGTON UPI - In forbidding trial courts from a United Prell IDteraatlomal
conference, Carter got telling reporters · some
the tw(Hbirds majority · to Its just-completed term. lhe
the news media not
Rooald Reagan took hil bid spruced up a hll for his lUg delegations pledged to Ford
override in the House andJwo Supreme Court handed down ordering
to publish Information a~t for Republican coovenUon week at the convention, might abstain 011 the flr1t
in the Senate.
some 150 lull opinions which criminal trial proceedings. delegates to the national
fended to favor constJmer
hi
- Held unconstitutional
.
d which.begins Monday ill New ccnventioo ballot so they
Rhodes, In
s veto · rights. uphold the power of patronage
laws allowing televlston screens, an -York 's Madison Square could legally v«e for their
message, said the measure government officials t0 dismissal ol nonpollcy - attacked
Garden. He got hil hair cut preference, Reagan, on
would force an "extremely dismiss employees, and making employes who are not Democratic probable
candidate
costly" system of per901lnel boraden the power of pollee "members of the ruling party, Jimmy Carter instead of hil and his famous teeth cleaned Sllbsequent roll caDs.
In WaS!ington, Ford li'IS
evaluation on Ohio's sChool and prosecutors to secure but also held that the ConGOP.
t and checked over.
evidence.
Nevada Sen. Paul Lualt, playing host to Queen
stltutlon
does
not
require
a
own
""
opponen
,
districts. He said it would
Here are the court's major government ' to afford an President Ford.
·
Reagan 's campaign chief, Eliubeth 111 her Blcentemlal
cost about $44 million a year, deCisions at a glance:
employe
a
hearing
before
he
He
said
you
dm't fu: had gave a good indication of the visit to the ca)Jital.
Of $430 per teacher.
- Upheld some forms of
fired.
policies by rearranging the
His spokesman, · Ron
He also said it would capital punishment where Is -Struck
slate laws '-··
· "d'""'nHjudges and juries are given barrl!l!l thedown
.
.
Nessen, told reporters the
advertising of ~eaucraC&gt;:, or .............~
reqwre boards of ooucallon lmlled discretion to apply prescription drug
prices.
an UTespOIISlble and wasteful
President
would be ''minding
to r~e teachers with the ' mercy to a defendant.
-Held
uncons-t
itutional
Congress
by
putting
an
the
store"
during the
most seniority and not
- Ruled states may not
of the 1974 Federal indulgent friend in the" White
DemoctirtiG cmventi011. and
necessarily the best ones in require a woman.to obtain the much
Law.
House "
consent·ol her husband or, In Election
plans no further political
Ruled
that
a
person's
·
11
cas~s where ento ment the case of minors, ·her private business papers c;an
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Jessie trips until he flies t.o
In Henhey, Pa., some 311
declines or money is not parents before gelilng an be usect -eoalnst him at tria l Democratic governors, a few S. Owens , liS, CoolviUe, died
Hartford, Cmn., July 17 in a
available.
abortion . .
without lnlrlngl!l!l his right of wh(ID had e~aged iii a unnpectedly Tuesday af· bid for delegates to that
The legislation would have
-Held lhat federal civil
selt-lncrlmlnatlon. last-ditch drive to stop ternoon at the home of her state's GOP convention.
· he --~ 1 board rights laws require private against
- Struck down a law
.
daughter.
required etl r """oo
schools 1o accept qualified requiTing
states
to
comply
Carter
,
Tuesday
chmbed
hearings or arbitration black appllcanls.
· with federal minimum w~ aboard the former Geor
Boni al Sandy;ville, W. Va.
hearings for noo-renewal or
- Upheld plans calling for
to
the late Thomas and Lucy
•-time requlremen • ia governor 's band-wagon
termination of ccntracts for busing across city-suburban and
but reaffirmed stales may
the
Burch Armstrong, Mrs .
all noo-tenured teachers wtth lines In order lo Integrate not discriminate on the basis and endorsed . man no~ Owens was a member of the
.
f thr
of schools.
o1 race or sex.
assured of hts party s
a min1mum o
ee years
~ Laid down strict rules
KissiinJnee Baptist Oturcb In
nomination .
Kissiirun&lt;!e, Fla., but had
Carta" had lreaklast wtth been a resident of the
the gOVeri¥X"S and said he Coolville area the past 40
was "very grateful" fcr the years with the exception of
backing. "Many ol them did seven years spent in FlOrida.
not support me during the
Survivors include her By DAV1D E. ANDI!'lUION
WASHINGTON (UPI) - law ind administration of White dissented separately, primaries, lx.tt that is a husband, Fred R., at home; UPI Relicloe Wrller
favoring a rel;x ~ rule an symbol, I think, of the one son, Joe ' and one
The Southern-baBed Pre&amp;The Supreme Court wound up justice."
·
eviJence
is strength of our party, the daughter, Mr$. Harry byterian Cblrch in the us.
its seventh term under Otiel
In addition, the court ruled what
Justice Warren E. Burger a defendant convicted of a inadmissible bUt voting to diversity of it,'' be told (Freda) Gibbs, both of haa taken !lie first step
with Its most far-reaching state crime may not obtain ~d fed eral court review reporters.
Coolville; a brother, Thomas toward approving a new,
Carter said he would meet
reversal of criminal rl&amp;hta federal· court review of his an the !sate.
Annstrong, Otarleston, W. 20th-century creedal
In cKber 4lh Ame&lt;ldment Thursday with Minnesota Va.; a .sister, Mrs. Paul statement which leaders rope
secured under the late Chief ccnviction on grounds
Justice Eari Warren.
evidence uaed against him cases decided Tueaday, the Sen. Waller Mondale t.o ( Helen ) Campbell, will provide a CCiltemporary
· In a major victory for was obtained through court maj(\rity favored discuss the party's second Kissimmee, Fla., aild four &lt;4* too of faith to litis
police, prosecutors and state "unreuonable aeardlee and tJjiUlded power of the pollee . spot. The Plains, Ga. , graodcbildren, 15 great· generatiCII .
meeting will be the second of
Afle" tlree bounof debate
courl$, the jlJtlces Tuesday seizures" which are barred in each caae. The court:
grandchildren llld one great,.
- Rllled police do Mt Deed several being ccnduct.ed.
at
the 900,000 member
barred federal tribunals from by the 4th Amendment.
In
Washington,
a great · grariddaghter.
denomination's
General
reviewing most state
Powell said state judges a warrant to search a car,
She was preceded in death
criminal convictions on are equipped to review 4111 which has been impounded spotesnu.l for Mondale said by one 9011, Robert, two Assemliy t ccmmissjmen, u
"obviolEiy he is interested"
grounds of illegal seizure of Amendment clllma an4 have for a lnlf!c vlolatlm.
brothers, two sisters and one the delegates are called,
- Upheld U.S. Border in the vice presidency and grea!ilrandchild.
voted overwbelmlnsly to
evidence by police.
a duty t.o follow SUprfme
approve
tlie new "A Dedara·
The decision al!o was the Court
restrictions on Patrol randcm quest~ of wOUld ''seriously ccmider"
FWieral services will be
joining
the
ticket
if
&amp;!.ked.
To
pasalng
motorlats
t.o
tion
of
Faith''
and send it to
closest the court has come to seardles, and if a state gives
conducted Friday, I pm. at
say
mor.
e
would
he
determine
if
they
are
the
60
presbyteriee
overturning a major right the defendant a full 8lld fair
the White Funeral lime,
"presumptuous,''
the
spOkes.
carrying
illegal
aliens.
afforded the acCUied by War· opportunity to pr-t hil
Coolville, with the Rev. Roy regimal ~ - for their
- Ruled evidence obtained man said.
approval.
'r en's court, which in 11161 Cllll8tltutiooal claim federal
The first Carter interview Deeter officiating. burial will
illegally and not used. inA
u three-fourths of the presruled a defendant has a court.1 may not intervene,
be in the Kent Cemetery,
byteries apprvve the new
constitutional right to
w'llllam J. Breman Jr .,In a state criminal trial can be of potential rumlng ·mates Odaville,
W. Va. Friends may
suppress iUegally seized . lengthy and biller dlllent, ·Uled in an Internal Revenue was with Sen. Edntund S. call at the funeral rome after statement II will come back
to a future General As8embly
evidence at hil trial.
, chllrged the majority "has Service civil llli1 to collect MUstle, D-Malne, "who said 2 p.m. Thursday.
Tuesday
that
Carter,
as
bad;
taxes.
for
a final vote and
JW1tice Lewis F. Powell did recently moved in the.,
president,
would
give
bis
vice
In
·a
follow
up
to
lut
enactment.
I
not
overturn
the direction of holding tbat the
president
some
of
the
duties.
Friday's
capital
puni.lbmenl
The new declaration is an
"e&amp;clusionary r11le," but 4th Amendment has no
attempt to express the
indicated the rule should not substantive content decillona, the court ordered now being performed by
state court.1 in North Carolina Secrellry of state Henry A.
-historic content of the faith of
he applied in too technical f wbatmever."
DIVORCE • .........
...,...,..,
the Reformed tradilioa in
fashion so that olhenriae
"To sanction disrespect and Louisiana t.o resentence Kissinger.
Doris J. Zeigler, Rt. I, I I
t
He told reporters that Langsville
reliable evidence is excluded and disregard for the 43 Death Row inmates. The
filed suit for s mp e, con emporary
and a clearly guilty Clmlitutlon In the name of ccurt lllnldt down mandatory Carter does not like divorce against Alfred B. lanpase and symbols that
can be easily llndent.ood by
defendant is freed.
protecting society from death lnl in those states last Kissinger's '~LA&gt;ne Ranger"
Zeigler, same address and all
members
of
a
style, and added:
. Powell said too'often pollee lawbreakers Ia to make the Friday.
.
Susan
EakinS,
Rt.
2,
Racine,
congregation.
On the same growtds, the · "In that conten, Governor
misconduct is punished by government Itself lawless
"If we use it wisely and
justice
overturned Carter wants his vice ~t William~dwa~d
:oxcluding evidence and the and to subvert those values
president
to
take
a
foreign
Oklahoma's
capital
guilty defendant receives the upon which our ultimate
Meigs
eo!noness~ wjdely, we may_ c~e to a
"windfall" of freedom. The freedom and Uberty depend," punilhment law Tueaday, but diplomacy role 110 that tile Court Filing f disaoi H
deeper apprectahon and
.
cr
u~on undentanding of 'the faith of
let stand deeth sentence8 for presidert would not have \0
i"esult, Powell added, may Breman Aid.
· have the effect "of
Thurgood Marlball jlined lflnmates in Ge&lt;rgla and put himself on the firing line were Francis L. Pickens, Rt. our Fathen,'" uya Feli1 B.
1,_ Portland, and John L. Gear, 8 former moderator of
gener~ W.eepect for the Brem&amp;n'a dlaaent. Byron R. F1orida, wboae laws wen in every cri.i.s."
the deilomlnation.
When he reaehed bane ll'ickens, Rt. ·l, Portland.
upheld lui ~·
The most uldque aspect of

direprd

o:;:!

""''

•

Court work summary Reagan's target is Carter

Mrs. Owens

rued Tuesday

Co=

0
i

Dairyman misses

many facts

doctors at Johna Hopkins day because of lactoae in· home made yogurt. Com·
M-''--' Center, 110 he could tolerance. I bope that Brink mercial yogurt kllla off the
"""""
. k that aingl
get up to dale on the problem. does not thin
•
e lactobactllus early in the
The Johns Hopldn.s doctors gia8a of mUk for those who process and the product is so
did their study on patlenla' cantolerateitmeelathedally thin that It is usually
reaponae to only one (llau of · calclUJI! needs. I told Brink thickened wtth non.fat dry
cerntng your remarka about actualmillt,notthe tell Brink that Inadequate calcium milk powder. The result Is
~~~~a,:ER _ Thank alluded to.
Intake wu the moat common that commercial yogurt Is
in aend· ·I pointed out to Brink that nutritional deficiency In the one of the highest sources of
You for your co·""'~ _,
the Jolma Hopkina doctors United States. The Recom· lactose available and would
U. me that article. Dr. M. J. found that "TWo hundred llld mended Dally Allowance be very bad for people with
Brink (not a physician) did fortymliiWtera (one (llau) of established by the Nati011al lactose intolerance. Yogurt's
write to me. Although I have low-fat milk produced Academy of SCienc,e, for high lactoae content Is the
reuon to believe Hoard'a gueousneas or criUJlllll in 59 adulla, is between 110 and reason it came under
Dairyman knew of my reply per cent ol 44 lactoae in· 1200 mllllgrama and a single suspicion as a cause of
to Brink, my remarkl were
1
t 1 onl 288 cataracta.
not included lilthe article. So tolerant men and 81 per cent g an con a ns
Y
were
symptomatic
with
an
mtlllpams.
Ul
were
a
dairy
I believe the dairy fanners
you got 1 blued report.
equivalent amount of lac- farmer I'd want people to be have a right to insist that the
BrlnllldenUiled himself as
to drink
l da
Council
get
._._with the National Dairy toae." And, "Refwlal to drink able
a quar a y, Dairy
_.,.
the 240 ml oflow.fat milk served not juat a (llau.
,
wholeheartedly behind .the
Counell. ,. indlcllted in
with · meals · correlated
If people limited their in· efforts to produce and market
~ ~tal= ! : t w~ llniflcantly with lactose· take of milk and mifk a low~actose product that all
,__..
intolerance." Note here that producla to the_equivalent of 'can 11110. Fortunately other
nat applicable becaUJe the people with Jactoae in· one glaaa of lilllk a day It segments of the Dairy
studla lll!l'e jl011t with IK· tolerance !Imply doo't 11110 would reaDy hurt the dalrv Council have laken the lead in
,dalr,r products and that farmer and Cllllle widelpread developing Lact-Aid which is
equal to what )'1111- find in a ;nari!h.ls IQII to the dairy nu=~=~ that) now available in sl&gt;me parts
of the United States and
qaart of
Brllik aboald . ~John HCJPidn.s study tell my iudera to eat yogurt Canada. · f trust these
I nplled
pro • that maw people 81 a low lactoee product for remarks will give you a more
relil lbe lrllell In 1111 New ~ tolerate and will not calcium Intake .· I was balanced view than the ~e­
~Jolnalof~ drlnk.aalngleilassofmDka astonished. Commerci.al slded article appearing in
May 21, It'll of 1111 ...,..,. UJ
1
yogurt is not the same as Hoard's Dairyman.
By Latn-e E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
thought you mlgbt be in·
teruted ill the arUde in
Hoard's Dairyman con-

:oun~ :::ro=te~

m:;t

Because of. ita 111e and
complelity; the Fedenl
Govenmlent).t a parllcular
target for crltlciam. A In
eumplea illllltrale only too
well the nature of the
-~lem
,.~
· For aumnJe
_,.,. ' 1ut
· ynr throush 11 Cabinet
deparlluenta, 44 aeenclea,
llld 1,200 aclvtaory aroups, a
bloated bureaucracy iaaued ·
10,246 new l'efulatlona, ad·
ding considerably to the
60,000 Pilei of ealatln&amp;
regulations. Furthermore,
today there are 228 Federal
health ~ama, 158 Income
security programa, and 83
housing pr.ograms, many
over-lapping one another.
Government did not reach
Its present level of In·
competence in .. day, and It
/'"will not be undone In a day,
but ills clearly time t.o begin
to make government work
better. It Ia no wander that
most people perceive sovernment as too larse and
urrespanstve, and feel that
they no longer get good value
for their tax dollar.
The question remains; How
do we achieve overslgbl and
scrutiny of the Federal
bureaucracy? How do we
look at the problem comp r e hens I v e I y a n d
S)'3tematlc:ally?
Mecbanlsms are needed to
force the Congress and the
President to review the
usefulness of elistlng
programs and agencies, and
to rtOrl!anize or abollah those
that are not working well.
The present " oversight
procedure Iii the Congress Is
the "sunset" ccncept. Under

Dodgers miJke it two in row over Phils; 5-1

tiU 1(1111'1*11 e1ch qeney
would fiCe 111 111lamallc
tetmlnallllll date- or ,_t
_ aceordlnl to a flaed
schedule, uy once f:VfJt1 four
yean, unlea the ~
apeclflcallv' approved the
ill
continued operatl011. IIJ
tetmlnatlllll date for a pll'·
ticular qency approacbed, •
mandatory congrenional
review of the qency'1 per·
formance In Jigbt of the
purpoees for which it was
establillhed would
~
lrlgered. UCongreu did no
renew the program, It ,.ould
go out of exl.ttence.
·The adVIniage othaftthlet
IIWIIet propoeal Is
eatabllaheu !l'ameworkfor 8
syatematic, periodic acrutiny
of all Federal qencles and
makes the aupporWirs of any
particullf 11ency juatify
continuing public lilY«~tment
in' it. Through ita use,
overlapping pnlii'IIDB could
be untangled, agencies
rejuvenated, and Jll'Oill'lllll
and acencies that no longer
serve a public p_lll]lO!! could
be eliminated. The objective
of this propoul Ia to do away
with the natural bureaucratic
Inertia
that
permits
procrpma and agenclea to
continue limply becaUJe they
are there.
.
There are other promiJJng
proposals directed toward
checking the tremendous
growth of discretionary
power within the Federal
bureaucracy. One of these
would give Congress the
ability to oversee ad·
mlnlStrative rule-making bt
(QIIlllinieil on page 12)

NASHVILLFJ, Tenn. (UP!)
- High 11ehool athletic
officials from acr01a the
naUon appealed to CCilgrell
Tueaday for aid in cootrolllng
the televising "! ·Prof~!
football games m competltioo
with local events.
Winding up their 57th
annual ccnventioo, the 1,0.10
delegates ·to the National
Federatioo of state High
Scho"ol Associations
convention unanimouly
adopted a reaolutlon aaldng ,
the House Interstate llld
Foreign Commerce
Committee to place the same
broadcast restrictions on
cable televlaian hookups that
are currenUy in effect for
noncable networkl .
Television netlfllrka C8Jilot
legally
broadcast
a
profesalonal football game
within ao mnes ol where a
high school or college game Is
played on Friday nights and

network broadcall ban.
Delegalel al!o appealed to
the Prelident'a Commlaalon
on Olympic aporia not to draft
rules
leading
to
governmental Interference
with high school a\Jlh!tlal.
A resolution was adopted

In Independent baseba11
action on the Fourth of July,
Syraeflle kept ita leCOild
place leque standing by
holding off boat PortlaDd 8-6,
Syrliclllt '1 Jim Hubbard llld
Jeff McKiMey of Portland
lftl"e loCked In a pllcblng duel
unW $yracuae IICOI'ed one.in
the seventh iming and then
liz in lha ninth to -.ingly
put the game any. But
PorUand came back to IICOI'e
Saturday afternoons. '
four limes in their lul at
Some state high school ba ta, rut the rally fell lthort.
athletic officials exp1 1d
'For the winners John
fears that National Football Arnott wu 4for 4at the plate
League
teams
were . with four RBI's, and Rudy
attempting to al'l'qe cable Stewart and Rick Alb had
television ccntracta wblch three hila each. Aa of lul
would circumvent the Sunday, Syracuae aa a team

has 114 hlta in 2fflat bata for a
:m team averqe. They are
&amp;,1 on the season.
No one for Portland had
more than one hit, rut Greg
Roush, Red Wallbrown, and
Jeff McKinney each had key
hila in that lut Inning rally,
McKinney atruck out four and
walked three in takinll the
1oaa wbilli Hubbard struck out
n1nt and walked three.
s
010 000 loa-. 18 2
p
010 000 004--6 7 4
Hubbard
and
Allh.
McKinney and Fitch.

-,
L

attack. Perk Ault got the win,
fanning four and walldng six,
tt1111e Boyd and Dunfee led
the bitters with two singlee
and·a double each. Ault had
three .,.., Van Maire,
Cooke, Tlylor, 8lld llenaler
had two - hila each, and
TaMebUl, Odlda, 'and Qoncb
each had one.
Yoq was charged wllb
.the lou, strlklnc out two llld
w8Iking four., but be chipped
In , wHh !hree alnllta:
McKinney and Blacuton
each had two Jlnglet, and R.
At Middleport, boat Mid· Abbott had lilt.
dleport Friendly Tavern R
101000180-1 13
came oo atroog in .the lite M
010 ot8 ib-lUO 2
Innings and defeated Rock

J

•

•

MONTREAL (UP! ) Cincinnati outfielder Ken
Griffey says he's heen having
difficulty getting hits lately
lx.tt against the Montreal
Ellpoll he made it look so
easy.
In six plate appearances,
Griffey reached base five
limes, lncluding-ibree hits, to
score two runs and" drive in
two more Tuesday night as
the Reds defeated the Expos
10-7.
"f've been finding II Iough
the last week-and-a-half but
I'm happy the way I came
through tonight," said
Gril!ey, the sixth leading
batter in the National League

•

going into the game.
"I was extremely happy to
get that two-run double down
the first baseline (in the
seventh inning) since we
were leading by only one run
at the lime.''
The 25-year-old Griffey had
46rbis last season'and his two
rbi Tuesday night helped him
surpass that total with 47.
"I'm not trying to set any
goals like 80 rbllx.tt J do want
to keep up the good pace,''
Griffey said. "This was our
fourth straight win' and we're
starting to get the hils
together with good pitching
and that's lhe important
tbing."

~

Cincinnati pushed across
five runs in the •seventh
inning lo lake a 10-4 lead . .
Besides Griffey, George
Foster and Dan Driessen also
drove In two runs apiece.
Larry Parrish hit a threerun, eighth-inning oomer for
Montreal,
Reds' reliever Rawly Eastwick pitched 4 2-3 innings til
gain his fifth win In eight
decisions. Don Gullett
unaccustilmly relieved -and
pitched the finai inning for his
first save of the year.
Former Red Clay Kirby,
wbo started for Montreal,
dropped his sixth game In
seven decisions, the victim of ·
five Expos' errors.

..

Los Angeles 005

0oo OQO- 5

Phlade1phla 100 000 OOQ- 1

SAN FRANCISCO ( UPI) Sparky Anderson says he is
going lo ·walt unUJ Sunday
before announ cing the
starting pitcher for the
National League in Tuesday's
All-Star
Game
in
Philadelphia.
Anderson picked Randy
Jones of the San Diego
Padres, who has won 15
gsmes already, Tom Seaver
and Jon Matlack of the New
York
Mels,
Andy
Messersmith of the Atlanta

Braves, Rick Rhoden of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, John
Montefu sco of lhe San
Francisco Giants, Woody
Fryman of the Montreal
Expos and"Ken Forsch of lhe
Houston Astros as h1 s
pitchers.
Naturally, how those
pitchers are used durmg thts
weekend will determine woo
will start and see the most
aclion on ·Tuesday.
The betting, of ccurse, 1s
Anderson will reward Jones

Browns open
Center Hospital, Cleveland,
accordmg to team physician
Dr. Vic lppolilo, who said
Poole's co ndition is not
serious and he should he
released In • couple days.
Pruhitl andh Logan! neither
0f
w om ave stgned a
~ontr~cl
WithWith
the Browns,
are
m Chtcago
the College
All Stars, who face the World

Hal ick i, Wil liams ( 1), Cald-

72

6 1 well (3). Hea&gt;Jerlc (5 ), O'AcYeager , Ruisto (1) and Rader : Forsch .

Lou1 s, Crawford (S).

delphla, Schmidt (221 ,
Cinci ilnat1

Montreal

'

012 200 soo-- 10 14 o (10 innings)
010 300 OJ~ 7 14
New York 000 000 000
0 82
Eastwtck (7) , Gullett Houston
000 000 000 1- 1 7 0
Plummer ;
Kirby,
Matlack , Lockwood ( 10) and
(S), Murray (7), · Grete, Hodges (I OJ; R tchard (8(9) and Foote WP9) and Jutze L P- Lockwood (5 -

s

'-,
Pfttsburgh
001 000 Olo- 2 7 1 (9)Borbon
and
Atlanta
200 110 GOx- &lt;1 1-4 o Carrithers
Rooker, Langford (8) and Scherman
Dyer : Messersm ith, Marshall EastWtck (5- 31 . LP- Kirby (1 .
(8) end Williams WP- Mes sersmlth (9-6). LP- Rooker (7- 6) HR- Montrea l, Parrish (3)

4! .

San Frncisco 002 010 OAQ- 7 11 2
s r louis
700 132 OOx- 13 18 2

o--

Jl.
Major- League Stand1ngs
By United Pren International
National League

E.ast

1

the

' ues.
li•tt~~· Ie·ag

1

1

Philadelphia

Pittsburgh
New York
St Lou is
Chicago

,

~i'
~.j · ~~:· ~B
.43 33 .566 9
43 40 518
34 44 436
33 46 .41 8
25 47 347

12 1h
19
2Q 1h
25

In utUe League action last dou_ble.
Earl Pickens took the loss Montreal
Saturday the Pomeroy Tigers
swept a double-header from as he teamed with Keith Cook
w~~· L.- Pet. GB
50 31 ,617
· the host Syracuse Reds by and r.)ark Salser to strike out Clnc :nnat i
scores of 22'3 and 23-0.
eight and walk seven ~en' All k~~ ~7~:~es ~~ ~~ ~f~ rl~
39 42 475 l lV2
In the first contest the three of the-losers ' h1ts were Atlanta
38 43 469 12
Tigers got a fine pitching singles one each by Salser • Houston
.
'
. ' San ~rancisco 33 SO .398 18
performance from Brian Brtan
Allen, and Denms
, Tuesday's Results
Chicago 4 san D1ego o
, Whaley as he tossed a no- Teaford.
p
4 Pittsburgh 2
576 5--23 14 Atlanta
hitter and walked only seven
Los Ang 5 Ph :!adelphia 1
while striking out· a like S
••
1100 II- 0 3 Clnc:nnati 10 Montreal. 7,
number . His teamma&amp;es ~ .. 'r .In ,Saturtlay!J;. L.P.P.R.S. ~tou;or·~~~ ~o~:~~~8'~n'~s7
backed him up wilh some fine UtUe League actwn, the host
Wednesday's Games .
·
W'll
Racme
B's
fell
twice
til
(All Timts
EDT) 6·31 at
defensive play. Brtan 1 , . . .
.
,
san Diego
(Frelsleben
paced the way with lwo VlSlllng Racme As. 13-4 and ChiCago IR. Reuschet 7 61. 2 30
singles and a double Terry 18-7. In the first .contest p.m.
· and wtnmng
· · hur.er
1 Za ne Beeg1e Montrea
Cincinnati
!Zachry2'61.7·318.05
at
Adkins had three singles,
l (Rogers
Jay Evans liad a triple and • struck oul etghl and walked p m.
·Los Angeles(Underwood
(Sutlon 7-8!
at
single. Tony Gilkey had a only
. two whtle socking a Phdadelphia
4·1or
triple while Brian Whaley triple. Jay Reese stroked a Reed 6 21 , 7.35 p m.
and Mark Friend had a single . homer, and Tom Rohseberry Bls:,nsir~~~:~cr~,Mc;':~\~~~s~o7j:
each Brian Allen look the and Kent Wolfe eac had a s,30 P m
· h f
df ' alk d double.
Pittsburgh !Reuss 7-51 at
loss as e anne our, w e
Ty
B.
t k lh At lan1a (Ruthven 10·71, 7,35
thirteen and hit two batter§_.
rone rmage oo
e Pm
:
p
247 9--222'1"5 loss, and Allen Pa~ got the
New York (K?osman B-61 at
s
030 0-- 3 0 only extra base hit, a doubl~. Houston &lt;~ndu,ar 4· 41 , 8,35
A
615 01- 13 I~ p,m Thursday's Games
100 311- 4 5 San D~ego ot Chicago
Jay Evans picked up the B
New York at At lanta. night
win in the·second contest as
Montreal at Houston , night
Melanie Weese picked up
(Onl y games scheduled )
he shut the Reds out on three
the
second
wm
of
the
day
by
hits while striking oul two,
American League
walking four and hitting one allowing jusl six hits while
Easl
batter . Mark Friend led the striking our four and walking
W. L . . Pet . GB
York
47 29 618 hitters as he hit for! the cir· six. Kent Wolfe slammed two New
Boston
38 37 so1 av,
cult, getting a homer, triple; home runs and,a triple wplle Cleveland
38 37 507 Blf?
36 39 .480 10 1h
double and single . John Smilh Wayne Lyons got a homer , Detro 1t
Baltimore
36 41 468 IJ1 '2
was 5 for 5 with a double and two triples, and double. Zane Milwa
ukee
29 43 .403 16
four singles, and Otis Core Beelge got a triple and two
West
. L. . Pel GB
had three singles and two doubles and Jay Rees got a Kansas Ci ty W
48 30 .615
triple
qnd
double
.
Weese
also
walks. Brlim WID socked a
Tex&amp;s
44 32 .579 3
40 40 .SOO 9
chipped in with a double. The Oakland
36 42 .462 12
A's are now 14-J on the Minnesota
Ch1cago
35 42 .4SS 12 V;~
season .

R. Lyons took the loss, and
Allen Pape furnished . the
!titling power for the B's wilh
a triple and double.
A
456 3-18 18
B
0341l-7R

(All Times EDT!

INTEREST

On Celtificates
Of Depoit

•l,OOO~um
1 Yr. Term

The

Dai~

Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
M!tGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER l. TANNEHILL
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFliCH

City Edllor
Published daily eKcepl
Saturday by The Ohto
1 Valley
Publishing Com
pany ,
1,11
Court
St .,
Ohio
~5169
· Pomeroy
Business 6ffice Phone 99 2
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_(£)
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California
34 49 410 161/2
.
Tuesday's R.esu.tts
Kan City 3 New York 1, lSI
New York 7 Kan City 4, 2nd
8ostQn 4 Chicago o
Milwaukee 6 Minnesota 2
Texas 3 Oetro lt 1
Cle&gt;Jeland 7 Cal iforn ia 3
Oakland 2 Baltimore 0
Todav ' l Probable. Pitdters

Second class poStage
paid at Pomeroy , Ohio.
NaHonal
ad.vertlslng
representatJ&gt;Je
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N.Y 10017

Su bscr iptio n
rates .
Delivered by car:rler where
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By Motor Route
Where car'rler ser&gt;Jice not
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~~3b~~i~~~~~ ~r?~;~~·,f~d5~s
l)un~ay T1mes Sentinel

n

Chicago { Johnson 6
at
Boston { Pole 4 4&gt;. 2 p.m.
Kansas Cltv ( Hassler o 6) at
New York {Hunter I0 -7l , 8 p.m
Oetron !Lemanczvk 1-1 or
Bare 3 Sl at fe)l(as (Biyleven 6·
9J. 9 :05p.m .
~
M innesota. (Singer 6-3) at
Milwaukee (Augustine 2-SJ. 8·30

in two runs for the Cubs with
a single in the first inning and
a double in U!e third to help
hand Alan Fosler his fifth
setback. •
Cards 13, Glanls 7:
Two-run singles by Ted
Slnunons and Hector CrU2
were the.big blows of a scv•n·
run , fir st inn_ing, which
By RILL MADDEN
~1 , Texas edged Detroit, 3-2,
routed Ed Halicki and sent St.
UP!
Spo .. ts Writer
Milwaukee
pul away Min·
Louis on its way to victory
If, as Connie Mack said , nesota, 6-2, Oakland bl'!'l1&lt;ed
over San Francisco. Jerry
pitching
is 90 per cent of Baltimore, 2-G1 and Cleveland ·
Mumphrey had four hits and
basebaD,
then
the Bostiln Red clubbed Callforma, 7-J.
Don Kessinger three to lead
Sox
might
yet
be launching a Yankees 1, 7, Royals 3, 4:
an 18-hlt Cardinals attack .
serious
challenge
for lhe
Chris Chambliss' three-run
Bob Forsch went 71-J innings
American
League
peMant.
homer
climaxed a five-run
for his third win.
The Red Sox have been eighth Inning thal enabled
mired under . ~110 for most of New York to salvage the
this season by vanous nightcap after Kansas City
troubles, lx.tt a string of U!ree took the opener behind the
straight wins has at last pitching of Doug Bird. Prior
propelled them to their first to Chambliss' homer, Roy
with th e starting role winning mark since April White knocked In a pair of tiemasmuch as Randy is · the 27-and the key to that spurt breaking' runs with a basesleagoe's top winner for the has heen stando'ul pitching. loaded bloop single. Bird,
first half of the .season with
Rick Wise, Luis Tlant and now !1-1, allowed just three
his' 15-3 record and a 2.51 Ferguson Jenkins-counted hils in the first game and was
earned run average. It will be on to he the heart of Boston's staked to a 2-t lead in the
Jones ' second Ail-Star game. fr ontline pitching - put sixtll on run-scoring singles
The dean among . the together . three straight by John Mayberry and Hal
pitchers is Seaver, a lwo-time complete games,
and McRae. White homered for
Cy Young Award-winner, Tuesday night Jen kins ' the only Yankee run off Bird.
wbo will be making his ninth pitched a 4-0 shutout over lhe Rangers 3, Tigers 2:
All-Star appearance. But Chicago White Sox.
Joe Lahoud, who had conSeaver has been struggling,
"I had good control,'' said tributed only three hits since
at least for him, with an 11-5 Jenkins; who faced 30 Whtte- being purchased by Texas a
mark and a 2.92 earned run Sox batters. "And I didn 't month ago, doubled home the
average.
have to tax myself In a couple game-winning run in the
Anderson said he was of innings . They wenl out eighth inning after a walk to
pleased with the eight men he fast. That's always a help Toby Harrah. Steve Barr,
picked.
when you're pitching."
who came over , to lhe
"I know I had to be guided
Rick Burleson 's two-run Ranger~ in the Jenkins trade
by the fact that where no single capped a three-run, with Boston, snapped a
player was picked by thetans fourlh inning that gave personal four-game losmg
I had to selecl someone from Jenkins, now 1~. ali the runs streak with a route-going sixeach club to make the team he needed . The workhorse hiller.
representative," said right-hander who was ·Brewers 6, Twins 2:
Anderson . " In this case, acquired by the Red Sox from
Robin Yount homered ,
though , I think I picked the Texas last winter for three drove in a pair of rurL'I and
best ei~ll!lfers I cculd." players and a bundle of cash, scored twice lo spark
For Rhoden, Montefusco struck oul two and walked , Milwaukee to its third wln in
and Forsch it will be lheir none.
four games. Yount opened the
first AllStar Game . Fryffian
El.!ewhere in the American third with a single .lind scored
was named ·once before and League, New Y.ork tilppled the first of three runs m the
Messersmith wa s picked Kansas Ci ty, 7-4, after the mning and hit his second
three times previously.
RoYa1s .t.o?k th e opener of home run of lhe season in the
· .,
tbeU" twHu~h t doubleheader. sixth

Boston wins
third in row

Anderson names NL pitching staff

'76 training _

LP-Fost~ . (3 -5).

~ lf-6 with I ao,hit

I)

NL gsmes.
non's single provided the
Braves t, Pirates Z:
Astros with lhe only run of
Andy Messersmith, aided their game with New York,
by Mike Marshall's 1 l.J who left 15 runners stranded.
innings of shutout relief, J.R. Richard allowed eighl
scored his seventh victory In hits, walked 10 batters and
his last eight decisions and · twice pitched oul of. jams
raised his record 10 9-4i for after filling the bases on
Atlanta. Run-scOI'ing hits by · walks enroute til his eighth
Jim Wym and Tom Paciorek win for Houston . Jon Matlack
senl Messersmith off til a 2-G pitched nine scoreless innings
lead in the first inning. Jim for the Mets.
Rooker, who yielded all lour Cubs 4 Padres 0:
Braves' 'runs, was the loser.
Slev~ Stone and Bruce
Astros I, Mets 0:
Sutter cembined on a lhree·
Reliever Skip Lockwood's hiller for Chicago, which
thr.,..base error on Wllbu• scored 1ts second straight
Howard's bunt leading off lhe shutout. Bill Madlock drove
lOth inning and Jerry DeVa-

Griffey happy ..

(5), Tomlin (6) , Metzger (8)
and Kendall ; Stone , Sutter (7)
and Swisher. WP- Stone (l .Q) .

versa.
"We feel that the best
intereata of both BUN, Inc!
particularly the glrla, ..td
he better served with
separate teams In thoae
sport&amp;," said Jack Roberta,
an NFSHA oflldal.

Syra~use, Middleport win

The Dodgers still trail the scored five runs off Larry
first-place Cincinnati Reds by Christenson in the third
51&gt; games in the West but inning and went on to win
when you can beat the behind the six-bit pitching.of
Phillles two in a row you feel Doug Rau. Mlke,Schmldt hit
ready to hunt bear with a his 22nd homer in the first
switch.
. r
inning for the Phlllies' only
" Beating the J'!llllles has to run off Rau.
The
Reds
defeated
give us C(lllfldence,". said
Garvey, " because they have Montreal, 10-7, Atlanta beal
been the besl team in Pittsburgh, 4-2 , Houston
scored a 1~, I ()..Inning vict(ll"y
baseball this year."
Reggie Smith and Steve over New York, Chicago
Yfllger each tripled and Gar- whipped San Diego, 4-0, and
vev contrllx.tted a key hll· St. Louis outslugged San
and-&lt;un single as the Dodgers Francisco, 13-7,-ln the other

Rau
(7.6)
and
San Diego
000 000 OQO- 0 3 l
(8)
and
Simmons,
tenson, T w i t c he! 1 (6), Curt is
Chicago .
102 001 OOx- -4 9 0 Chr1s
Schuel er (9) and Boone . LP- Fergu son (9) . WP- Forsch (3 Foster , Splllner (3), Reynolds Chrlstenson
(8-4) , HR- Phlla - 3). LP - Hatlck i (7 -11), HR- St

the declaratlon, whlcb haa declaration says. "As
been in the wwka for some persons from all nations
seven years, is that it Ia joined them, they were
llnlclured to erpreaa the separated from the Jewlab
laltb, the expel'ieooes of the clrnmwlity" but "continued
petple of God, as a story.
to accept Israel's story u
"Jesus Ouiats stands at tbeir own" and therefore ''we
the center of a story,'' the can never lay exclusive claim ·
declaratlan says. "In the to being God's people ... "
liblical story God moves wtth
"We affirm that God has
Israel and the drurcb u not rejeded hil ~le the
Fak, San 8lld Holy S)Jirit, Jews," It says wbUe
to eatabllab hil juat 8l1d confesaing "we CbrlaUana
~ rule In the world.
have
rejected
Jews
"That story Ia still tbrougbout our 1Utory with
unfolding and in faith we shameful prejudice and
make It our own.lt forma our cruelty. God calla 111 to
memory and our bope. lt teUs dialogue and cooperation that
111 who we are llld wbat we · do not ignore our real
are to do. To retell It Is to · dlaqresnenla, yet proceed
declare that we believe."
In llllltual respect and love.
The declaration is divided
"We are bound together
ln!o 10 cbapten wbich cover with them in a alngle story of
111011 doclrinel of the church: thoee chosen to sene and
'rbe liviDC God, Tbe Maker of proclaim the Uving God." .
All (creation), God and the
The new declarati011 trill
people of :r.ael, God in not he uaed by the
&lt;llrllt, God the Holy ,s prit, Preabyterlan&amp; in laolatlan. It
tbe W~rd of God, the traa preaenteil t.o the church
Christian Church, the within tha ccntext of a "Book
Chrlatlan Miuion, the of Confeuiona," which
Chriatiaq Life and the includes the texta not only of
&lt;llriltlan Hope.
tboee key documents of the
One of lllOit significant Reformed tradition, the
and coatrovental - llfCII0111 Westmlnister Confession and
of the new creedal llatement the Geneva Catechlan, but
Is a pa••age lilthe chapter an the ancient Christian
theCirlatlanCIIIrch inttlllch confessions of faltli, the
those who affirm the Nicene and Apostlea creed as
declai'illim confeaa the past well 11 Luther's Large llld
sins of anHSernUlsm.
Small Calechlama 8lld the
''The followera of Jesus Barmen ·Canfesalon, Uled
nmained at first within the by German ChrisUana
people of Israel," the reslallrlg HIUer,

.tlng the Department of
Health, Education and
Welfare to cluilfy soccer
and baseball as contact
sports. The current noncmtact claulflcation, said
one omcial, allowa girls to iry
out for boye' teams and vice

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Remember the Sea bees' fa.
. moua World War II motto :
"TIMI, difficult we do im·
medllltely; the lmpossi~le
·takes a UtUe longer?"
Well, Steve Garvey feels
pretty much the same after
the Los Angeles Dodgers
defeated the Philadelphia
Phlllles, 5-l, Tuesday night
for their second straight
victory over the National
League's runaway leaders in
the Eastern Division .

Major League Results
By United Press International
National League

High school offic.ials appeal for a~d.

,

I

Washington
B ClaNace
Report YM•

Southern .Presbyterians
.
offered ·new creedal stand

Warren· court reversed

DR. LAMB

'

~t~:~:.ioi~ a~i;~~?;i~i~~New

KC champ assured

game July 23.
,
•
Gomg
int.o
this,
his
second
Major League Leaders
By United Pr ess 1nternat•onal
year as head coach~ Forrest
A new champion for lhe
M. Allen, W. Wood , T.
America.n league
BATTING
(1st game!
Gregg
is
"very
optimistic,
'Kyger
Creek
Ultle·
-League
"
Dixon
and
B,
Harold
had
two
( base" on 200 at bats I
Kansas Ci ty 000 002 001- 3 e 0
Tournament wa s' assured ·· or more hits.
NATIONAL LEAGUE · very enthustastic."
New York -1 00 000 ()()()..-.- I 3 1
.
G. AB R. M. Pet
"I'm really anxious to get Tuesday nighl, th~, opening
Three Red Sox ptlchers, T.
Bird, Mingor 1 (8) and Mar ·
Oli&gt;Jer , Pit
68 27 6 47 101 .366
!Inez ; F igueroa , Lyle (8 ) and
to
camp,''
he
said
Tuesday.
mght
of
the
1976
tournament
Armstrong,
M.
Allen
and
D
Crawfrd , Sr L 64 21Z 31 75 .346
Munson . WP - Bird !9 11 L PRose, C1n
81 328 12111 .338 " I believe we'll he improved as
Pomeroy Yankees Brown limtted pomeroy to Figueroa (9 6) HR. - New Yol"k,
Griffey , Cm
75 283 64 95 .336
just three hits. Gelling Tiger R. Wh 1f e {7)
Morgan·, Cln 66 209 60 70 .335 because of the new talent pius eliminated the defendmg
Foster , C1n
71 287 45 96 .334 the experience gained lasl champs, Poinl Pleasant 's
safeties were M. Friend, a t'lnd gamel
Montanez , Atl BJ 325 35 104 .320
season
by
some
of
the
Johnson
'
&amp;
Marke~l2·10.
ctouble; B. Will, a single and Kansas C1ly 000 010 012- 4 9 1
Cey, LA
71 257 38 82 .319
New York
010 000 15x. - 7 7 1
In the tourne s second 6. Core, a single.
.. ·
Maddox, Plljl 69 249 40 78 .313 younger players."
Busby, Hall (8 ) and St inson ;
Madlock, Ch~15 276 33 ~ 87 .312
Gregg said condition, disci- game, the Gailip is Red Sox
Tonighl, the Middleport T1drow , lyle (8) and Hen
Geron1 mo, Cn 72 234 34 73 .312
ick.s WP - Lyle (6 SJ, L Pplme
and
aggressive
football
dumped
Pomeroy
's
Tigers,
Braves
meel Green ; Point dr
AMERI ~N LEAGUE .
Busby [3 3) t1R s- New York ,
G AB R H Pet will be stressed
aga;n 16-6
Pleasant's Fruth Pharmac) Nettles (12), Chambliss (10) .
78 315 47 112 356
Brett, KC
because
"
those
are
what
I
Playing
in
a
steady
drtzzle,
Will
play Bidwell and Rae· Ch1 cago
McRae, KC
78 290 48 98 338
000 000 OQO- 0 4 1
LeFlore, Del 70 290 48 97 334 helieve in."
Pomeroy jumped into a 6-2 coon Valley meets Syracuse's Boston
000 310 00)( ~ 4 8 0
Munson, NY 72 291 37 94 323
"We may dOfewer things, lead afler three innings· then Reds.
Brett (3 4) and Down 1ng ,
Carew , M1n
76 JOO 47 96 320
Jenkins (7-8) and Fisk
but
":e'H
d~
.
th~m
be_lter,'
'
wrapped
it
up·
with
a
btg,
six
,
•·
R1vers , NY
68 lOS 52 97 318
Lynn , Bos
66 251 33 79 3 15 Gregg satil We re gomg to run fifth inning
Staub , De l
75 268 37 · 83 .310
R. Kovalchik , lhe winnfng
ChambiSS , NY 76 317 41 96 303 execute."
Ha~rO'Je , TK 71 267 51 81 303
Owner Arl Modell plans to p1tcher, had a double and
( .....,_ HOME RUNS. .
. he close til the scene.
single Harnson, Wamsley,
NATIONAL LEAGUE : K ing
" I'm optimistic, but Whiliach and Gtlmore had
man, N Y 27 , Schmid t. Ph il 22 ,
Foster, C1n 17. Monday , Chi , cautiously so," Modell said . · the other Yankee hits: PaCing
, • •
Mon .• Tues., Wed . ·
• •
Morgan . .Cin and Cedeno, Hou
"I believe we'll be better Pomt Pleasant were Sleve
14
.
8;00til5;00
••
AM E R t CAN LEAGUE , hecause of the draft, trades Wamslay, Tom Mullins," and • •
Banda , Oak 18, Hendrick , Clev
we
've
made
and
the
return
of
John
Oliver.
Mullins
had
two
15 ; .Vastrz emsk l,
Bos
14,
• e
. Thursday atil12 noon
•
the Injured.
doubles .
L.May , Bait an~~ ice, Bos 13.
RUNS B~~TEO IN.
"I expecl Improvement,
Gallipolis pounded oul 11
NATIONAL ~EAGUE , Fosel
ter , Cin 69 ,· K 1ngman, NY 65 ; substantial improvement. I hits 10 its 16-6 Win over
Morgan , Cin 60 . Schmtd l, Ph 1l was· hurt personally by our
Pomeroy's Ti~ers.
59 , Perez, Cin 55 .
record
lhe
past
two
years.
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Bur ,
It
• •
roughs, rex 56 , Mayberry . KC They somewhat dinuned the
"He has gained ccnfidence
a11d ChambliSS , NY 55 . Otis , great history of the team .. I
••
Close Sat. At 5 p.m . • •
KC so, Munson . NY 49 .
in
himself.'' ·Gregg said of
want
t.o
get
back,
but
I
STOLEN BASES.
• •
•
"
Phipps, in his seventh NFL It
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Cede - understand lhat you win
no , Hou 27. Brock , St L 25 , some and you lo~ some. One season. "We handed him the
Morgan , Cln 23 , Griffey, Cln ,
thing I can't accept is looking responsibility last season and
Lopes. LA and Ta &gt;Jeras, Pitt 21
~
AM E R I CAN LEAGUE , bad losing."
. told him the job was his. Mike
North , Oak 38 ; Patek, KC 37 ;
ARNOLDGRATE
RUTLAND t
Modell and Gregg believe responded. I have ccnfidence 1 742-2211
Baylor , Oak 35 , Carew, Minn
33 . LeFlore, Oet 28.
the key to this year's Browns in him."
PITCHING.
will be quarterba ck Mike
Most Victories
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jones, PhlpJIIi and - wide receiver
so 15-3i Matlack , NY 10 2. Paul Warfield,
Lonborg , Pt'!11 10 4, Ru!h &gt;Jen,
"You are go mg to see a
All 10-7, Messersm 1th , Atl 9-6
AMERICAN LEAGUE : T1ant. fuUy developed Mike Phipps ·
Bos, Tanana , Cal and Dobson ,
season,"
Modell
Cle11 10-5, Hunter , NY 10 7; thi s
Palmer , Bait 10-8.
declared . "Now he 'II have the
ovERHA
EARNED RUN AVERAGE . help of Warfield and a better
ENGINEERI!IIG
·
.
• 1based on 12 tnnings ptlch edl
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Frels- running game. We believe we
241NCHES
leben, SO 2.06, Slanhouse, Mil have a blue chip back in Mike
sERVICE
2. 17, Mess ersm1th , At I 2 38 ;
Matlack , NY 2.44 .- Jones, SO Pruitt t.o learn with Greg
2.51.
Pruitt ."
AMERICAN . LEAGUE · Fl
Gregg said be bas
drych, Oet 1.86 ; Travers , Mi l
1 96 , Garland , Ball ' I S; Brett , ccnfidence in Phipps, the
Chl2.68, Umbarg er , Tex 2 72
since t972 except for a
STRIKEOUTS . . starter
ccuple
games when he was
NATIONAL LEAGUE . Sea .
ver. NY 119 ; Messersmith, Atl benched durmg a Browns
and Ric hard, Hou 101 ; N1ekro ,
losin~ lostng slreak.
Al l 93 ; Lollch . NY R4.

•

•

•

•••

•••

~·

::. FRIDAY TIL 8
~

~

.: ...•••••.

~·

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'""'·Available Now
For Your Job

BATTERIES

Goo d yea r FD rm Tractor
Batter ies are des1 gncJ
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lo"h8

lnternJflonal League
Standings ·
United Press lrtternational
Rochester
Syracuse
Rhode I sland

Richmond
Memph is

~~~er~~stbn

W. L. Pet. GB

46 28 6'12
42 JS 545 S1 1
43 39 524 7
38 42 .475 11
36 41 .468 111 1
36 t2 .462 12

34 40 459 12
34 42 447 13

Tidewater
Tuesday '' Results
Toledo 6 Syracuse 5, 10 \ inn .
Rochester 3 RhDde I sland 2
Tldewate S Memphis 3
charleston 4 Richmond 1, 7
inn .. ra1n

"
~

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

p.m.

c:eve land (Waits 2 3) at
. _California jOrego 2·6), 10 : 30
p.m
Balt imore {Cuellar 4·9) at
Oakland (MitChell 10-7), II p.m .
Thursday's Games
Baltimore at Oakland , n1Qht
M innesota at Boston , n ight
Chicago at New York , night
(Only games scheduled I

•
: 'fA

re~t

periods

Ampere-hou r capa ci ti es
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SITE

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. ' .·

"') 7 197b

Evangeline OES has meeting
The charter was draped in
me!llory of Mrs . Mary
Memhart ~t the Thursday
night meeting of Evangeline
Chapter 172, O.E.S. at the
Masontc Temple.
~ere was also a .moment
of Silent prayer for her, her
husband, George Met?hart,
and Denms Keney , serwusly
, mjured tn · an accident
recently.
Mrs. Sue · Floyd , worthy
matron, and Paul Darnell,
worthy patro~, presided at
the meeti ng wtth Mrs. Mane
. , Hawkins, as El~cta pro tern .
: ~ A communicalton was read
: ; tnvtll~g me~bers to a
• . recephon honormg the grand
: conductress, Coralee
: Holahan at the Dayton
'' .Chapter 125 on Sept. 18.
Thank you notes w~re read

SUMMER
CLEARANCE

SALE
THROUGH
THE MONTH

OF JU LY

heritage house
Middl eport, 0 . ·

\

· from Mrs. Norma Wilcox and Grand Chapter are still
George · Meinhart
lor available.
remembrances on the deaths
Mrs . Wilcox arid Mrs .
in their families. Plans were Kathy Miller served refreshmade for the annual Mason- ments.
Eastern Star picnic to be held
July 18 at 2 p.m. at Fort .
COOKOUT ENJOYED
Meigs. Mrs. Bessie King
Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Walker
re ported that ttie fried
celebrated
the Fourth of July
chicken, noodles and drink
holiday
at
their Union Ave .
&gt;~11) be furnished and asked
home with a cookout and
that everyone take either a
vegetable, salad, or dessert . games. Guests were Miss
Walker, Pomeroy ;
and their own table service. Gladys
Miss
Beatrice
Holmes ,
Mrs. Floyd noted that
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Troy
August will be. past matrons Ohlinger,
Pomeroy ; their
and past patron's night and
daughter'
Jennifer.
and her
also at that time a. do-your- guest, Terry Jewell, Rutland
.
own thing auction will be held
with the proceeds to go to the
TWOGRADUATE
district association . Mrs .
MASON,
W. Va. - Miss
Maryln Wilcox noted that
pre-registration forms for Guyla Roush and Vernon
Roush, Jr., son ~rd daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
BICENTENNIA:L BABY
Roush, Sr. of Mason, both
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Fife of graduated from Parkersburg
Pomeroy have a bicentennial Comm uniiy College in May.
baby. The eigh t pound girl Mr . Roush received an
named Tracy Loraine was associate degree in Nursing
borq on July 4 at II : !4 p.m. at and is employed as a male
Holzer Medical Center . nurse at St. Joseph liispital in
Maternal grandparents are . Parkersburg . Guyla received
Mr . and Mrs. Richard a certificate in Secretarial
DeMoss, 20 Anne St. , Science . Others graduating
Pomeroy, and the paternal from Community College are
grandparents are Mr. and Marty Yea?er, Yolanda King
Mrs. Clarence Fife Spring · and . Vtckt Burton . Mtss
Ave., Pomeroy .
'
"1lurton is employed at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

l,, ,.~~ii;};;·=·= :}i;}"··

~i

:.:;.

~

·

u

. .
S

t.?

•

·

·

By pc . lb.

•1.19

BOLOGNA ...... _........ _..__.............._...... ; ~-~~~~ ---~~:. •1.2s
. ARGO

•

· J-Ib.

CANNED HAMS .........................................~-~-~5 19
HOME MADE

.

•

HAM SALAD ···-- ····· ··-··--················-···-·· ·-·----~-~:.99'
DAIRY

PRODUCE

Borden's Individual Sliced

·

CALIFORNIA

AMERICAN 16 OL $},29
CHEESE pkg. - ·
GANTALOPES
'
TEEN QUEEN Hb.
CALIFORNIA
!A's 69~
MARGARINE 2-lb.
.ORANGES
-:r.r.::or!-r:rr

11 Ounce Size

•

eath49~
4-lb.

Bag

89~

MORTON'S TV DINNERS ............ - -- -~~ ..

TOMATO
·JUICE• .......................
,....................·... 59'
15'1, oz. Whitney
· ··
PINK SALMON ................ .'.............................. $159 ·
4 Roll Delsey

1

4
WHITE
TOILET
TISSUE
.........
:
........
:
.............
-J-9
Jumbo
4
VIVA
TOWELS··:----..........................................
99
10 oz:· lnstant
NESCAFE
COFFEE..................................... ------ $'»69
lb.
L
3

G~J~nc~~9n~IEN ING ..................................$149
CAKE
MIX ··· ····•····
Regular
···· • •· ••• •••••• ··· ••• •••.· · •• : •••• , •• •••• ••• 59'
17 ozs. Chef
'

PEPPERON I

s;

~.
""

Hy Hden Bottel

•

Legion at the Sheraton
Columbus Hotel. On Friday
night a reception for canconvention to be held in dictates for Department
Columl:ius, July 8-11 has been treasurer will be held ahd ·on
aM 0unt:ed by Mrs. Amold Saturday there will be
Richards, Eighth District election of Department of·
!ictlrs.
·
president. ·
The convention will be held
Memorial serYices will be
at the Neil House Motor Hotel conducted on Sunday morwith registration to begin at 2 ning and following that there
p.m. Thursday . Open In~ will be the election of
ceremonies will be held ' dcl•gates and alternates at
Friday morning and at noon large to th.c national conthat day there will be a joint vent ion and lnstallaUon of the
se~on with the America~
newly elected officers.

Dear Helen :
You told the ex-girl friend of a "card night" husP.nd not to
send home the clothes he left at her aparbnent, acrompanied
by a note to his wife..
Why protect the tw~Hilher? If the wife is like rne, she 'll
wekome proof so she can get a good divor~ settlement.
Should the "ex" Uve in South Orange, N. J., tell her l'Jf
even pay for that bundle of intimate menswear. - "CARD
NIGHT" WATCHER
' r
Dear CNW:
11
Sorry, wrong"ex . ·
And l still say a dumped paramour shouldn't take out her
vindictiveness on the wife. - H.

Anf!ual picnic enjoyed
The annual . picnic of the would be no meeting in
Pomeroy Garden Club was . August. A field trip to the
held recently at the home of Fent011 Glass Co. will be held ·
Mrs. Wal~r Grueser.
on Sept. 14.
Mrs. Sarah Gibbs wps a
gues! and others- at~nding
were
Mrs . . Margaret
Blaettnar, presfdent, Mrs.
BUSINESS MEETING
Agnes Brown, Mrs. Geneva
A business meeting will be
Nolan , "Mrs . June Van held at the Forest Run ·
Vranken and Mrs. J. 0 , Baptist Church at 2 p.m . .
Roedel. Mrs. -Nolan gave Saturday. All members of the
devotions lising a patriotic church are urged to be
theme. It was decided there · present.

++ +

Dear Helen :
I am iniD woodworking as a hobby. My picture frames,
sconces and scroll work decorate our house. When people
exlaim about tbem, my wife gets big-'*arted and promises l'U
come through with handmade gifts for them.
Every time she wants to repay a favor, I'm the one who
does the labor!
Would ypu please convince her (and wivll§ like her ) that a
husband 's hobby isn'ta wife's giveaway' -TIRED OF FREE
BACK ORDERS
Dear Tired :
My husband says yo~ came ID the wrong columnist. As a
maker of weathervanes and other metal sculpture, he is
coostantiy reminding me not to be so darn magnanimous with
ms time.
I try, really I do - and so does your wife - but somehow
those promises just slip out. It's because we're so proud of our
husbands' hobbywork. ·
When people exclaim over it, we can't help being
generous.
Sign me "Contrite," and let's hope your wife is likowise.-

......................~ ................. 974

lly Polly Cramer

choice 0f gold or silver .

AEROSOL .
~ Ql 1-'l~

l-rsl $,2 39

s1.52

•

·

.1

•

~

CREAM ""

Jo• $1 33

Mig llsr S2 29

s1.19

GIUETlE

.

I '

Mtg LIS! S2 09

•, ,-- BIC
LIGHTERS

[J "8'7c

age

"*"m. LUBRIDEAM LOTION
'"'!".':
~

oz'for Dry St..m.

Setn~d

L-.:.......J

ggc

!1'.10 L1s1 St 55

u ...

PLASTIC STRIPS
50s ; 20 FREE
Mi g lrst SI 29

'

11 ,

'

Dear Helen :
. Watching Jinuny Carter and Donny and Marie Osmond
perform on TV, I'd say they have about 24 terns in commonall teeth!
Are !bey related - Osmonds and Carter, that is? . .:_
SMILED OUT ·

USTEAMI~T
MOUTHWASH '

Dear S.O. :
No. - H.

53c

Dick' Harris surprised

·

Dick Harris of Syr~cuse
was surprised recently with a
birthday party hosted by his
wife and several friends at
the couple's fishing cabin at
Apple Grove .
The decorllted cake was
inscribed "Happy Birthday ,
Dick" and featured a fishing
scene replica. It was served
following a picnic dinner.
"Gifts were presented lo the
honored guest.

6 OZ Mig, liS! 99'

:){'''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ''' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' ';' ' ' '\'\ . Kings host
: [: Fifth birthday !): rehearsal dinner
..

{

COPPERTONE
SUNTAN LOTION

TRAC II
CARTRIDGE

+++

::::

i

color. Byj · .
C71114CII
ON~ Y $5.95

SKIN CARE

EXCEDRIN

DOAN'S PILLS

TAIII.ETS

40s Mig List $1 25

1005 Mtg liS! $1 97

'"-..,, , "" 75C

~s-t.23

::::

Mr. and Mrs. Robert King
hosted a dinner at the Meigs
;:::
;:;: 1nn Saturday night following
;:;
;:; rehearsal for the wedding of
·.·
.... Miss Edith Mees and Tim
Kris tin Allenswort h , Kinlt.
d;lughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Their guests were the
John Allensworth, Ml. honored couple and Mr. and
GUead, recently observed her Mrs. Malcolm Mees, the RA!v.
,fifth birthday with family William Middleswartl!, Mr.
dinner at the Middleport and Mrs. John Anderson,
home of her grandparents, Miss Wendy Ming , Miss Joan
Mr . and Mrs. Millard Wagstaff, Miss Carol King,
Wildermuth.
Miss Lori W'mans, Judi Mees,
Miss Mechelle Hals~ad. Jim
Boggs, Jim Sclunoll, Larry
Following the dinner, !Pe Mees, Ed Abbott, Robert
family went to the home of Winans, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mrs. Robert . Allensworth, Erwin and Mr. and Mrs.
Kristin 's grandmother, for Edward Hals~ad .
homemade ice cream and
cake. Others attending were
VlSii's PATIENT
Courtney LyMe, sister of
Miss
Erma Smith spent
Kristin , Mrs. Gra~ Hawley,
Mr . and Mrs . James Friday at f\lhens with her .
Wildermuth , :Mrs . Betty brother , Arthur Smith, Sr., a
O'Bleness
Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight patient at
Memorial Hospital.
CuUums, son, Ron.

} tS ObServed : :

51.39

•
NO SALES TO DEALERS
OUANJITY' RIGHTS RESERVED
I

USDA Choice

I

,

I

CHUCK ROASt ...... !~;.
USDA Choice

ARM ROASI ...........1~:•.
USDA Choice

·7-BONE ROASI .....1~·.
Superiors AU Meat

BULK WIENERS........lb. .
..

'

Attending were Mr. arid .
Mrs. Kennetb Matkins of
Racine ; Mr.- and Mrs. John
Dean, pomeroy; Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Rled and David,
Pataskala; Mr. and Mrs.
John Walter Dean and son,
Jeremy , Pomeroy; Mr s . .
\ielen Harris, the honored
guest, and Ed Cozart and
John. Walter Dean who
provided music for afternoon
singing .

.POMEROY, .OHIO
frices
Effective-.
.
Thru July 10, 1976

,.

Fresh, Pure Beef

GROUND CHUCK .... 1~:.
Old Fashioned
.
p~. $ 29
LONGHORN CHEESE ..'~; ... ~

L.

'

' "\

•

Mr . and Mrs . . James
Wildermuth ~ nlertalned
Sunday with an open house at
their new home In Darby
Estates, Columbus . The day
also included a birthday
dinner
honorin g
Mr .
Wildermuth with cake and ice
cream served later in the
day.
Out-of-town guests included
Mr. and Mrs. John . Allensworth, Kristin and Courtney,
Mt. Gilead ; Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Will, John and Joyce,

a

V05 HAIR SPRAY

LILT

Regulir or HarcHo·Hp!O

.

PERMANENTS

9 OZ Mt g !,lSI $1 79 e3Ctl

~eoal or Bod~ Wawe

• 97~

2

~S-&lt; A lSi.IC.G(STEO.o.O P'OC"tSoPfiONAl WlfHPA I CI~•I N'~OS~f(;)RE;S:.ili li~i: 1:l~OS~2·:~7~ch.
VILLAGE PHARMACY

------, ..

•
271 N. 2ND AVE.

,.

HOT DOG SAUCE
oz.

2 49
11

CANS

4

COOKIES
VANILlA-CHOCOLATE
11/z LB.

BOX

Hamden; · Mrs. Diana
Hawley; Ingrid Hawley ,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Robert
Allensworth, Mrs. James
Hawley, Mr . and Mrs.
Millard Wilde rmuth, Middleport.

Whole

Mrs. Smith

WATERMELON .......~~

returns home

Mrs. Zuelella Snit lli has
~~~~&gt;$1m~~~
· ·!ill· · · returned from WiliJlington
College, Wilmington, Ohio
where she attend~ the Ohio
Baptist Guild retreat, June 29
through July 2.
She was accompanied there
by Miss Yvonne Preston and
both served as counselors for
the 319 junior and senior
WEDNESDAY
, girls, and 150 children .
. POMEROY LODGE lti4, Numerous ministers and
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:.30p.m . .• guild workers were In atat temple; all Master Masons tendance.
invited.
Mrs. Smith sang "Amazing
THURSDAY
Grace" at 'a 5:30 morning
HARRISONVILLE SEN- watch. Speaker at the ThursIOR Citizens Club will day evening banquet was the
hold a birthday potluck Wilmington (; ollege
' supper at 6 p.m. Thursday at pr~sident .
fori Meigs on the New Lima
Road ; games will be played.
BACK AT WORK
, REGULAR MEETING,
Miss · Bernice Darst,
Shade River Masonic Lodge, Middleport, has returned to
&amp;p.m. Thursday, Chester; aU her employment after
Master Masons Invited.
recuperating from a recent MEIGS COUNTY Humane operation at the Holzer
Society meeting, 7:30 p.m. Medical Center.
Thursday at Thrift Shop
building, E. S~cond St.,
Pomeroy. ·
TO HOLD PICNIC
ROCK SPRINGS Grange
BURLINGHAM - The
lnspeetioh, 8 p.m. Thursday Burlingham Camp 7230,
at the haD. On Saturday night Modern Woodmen, will Mve
the Rock Springs grange will a picnic Sunday at the State
vlsl t Laurel.
. .Park on Rou~ 33, right going
FRIDAY
. north, with a potluck dinner
MARY SHRI~ 370rder of at noon. There will be games
the While ~ Shrtne of for aU , singing and other
Jerusalem rehe~pl Friday. entertainment. Prizes will be
8 p.m . at Pomeroy Masonic awarded to the oldest
Temple to prepare lor In- ' youngest
and
pt!rso~
specUon July 21 at Marietta. traveling the most distance to
Officers of Mary Shrine will attend. All members,
be In .Charge of the closing families and friends are
and· presenting.
Invited.

' 69~

Mon.·Sat. ~

Sun·. 10 to 5i
·Prices E,ffedive '

·Thumlay thru SundaY ·
")

.

I.

49

'

Social
Calenda·r

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FIRESIDE

I

.298 Second

·Wildermuths entertain·

VI Em

i

. Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat: 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-1Q pm

ex-

PADLOCK .
KEY HOLDER
Opehs easily, closes
tight. Solid brass in

blue jean puzzle

POll.Y'S PROBLEM
until they seemed to stop
DEAR POLLY - · !..list working. I found the stains
sununp- I was pa!Qting out of were almost completely
doors and spilled some
gone. I now repeat this every
lerior white paint on my blue two or three weeks to keep it
· • denim jeans. Even though bright. - MRS. J . B.
they ' have bee n washed DEAR POLLY - l had the
sevetal times, the paint spots same problem that Cecile has
remain. I would Uke some with stains in the toilet bowl,
suggestions for removing We drained the water out and
!hem. - FRAN. · .
used a rust and stain cleaner
• DEAR FRAN - The and the stains quickly
various washings hive ·no disappeared . (Polly'• note doubt helped ro set tbe paint Do follow dlreclions carefull y
spots on your jeans, but you for uoc on porcelain.) - ·
might try the following hints POLLY.
_,.
·
, lor oil paint removal. Rub
DEAR POLLY - Now that
- (ietnrleum jelly In the apot1 to the Una for fresh vegetables
. IIOften !he paint and then soak Is here, out comes the big
In turpentine. Waah In warm piece of nylon net that I use to
water and ooap and rinse ao line my . dish drainer. It
aaual. I am afraid your apots ·becomes a giant size colander
will require rather draodc ofor draining berries, leaf
· · treatnieat, 10 If the above lettuce, etc. Vegetables ca
falls you mlghiSoak the spots be tumbled In it to speed
In equal parts of tu.-pentine dratntng by gently pulling on
and ammonia. U you like . the side of the net and can be
your jeans to look as my carried to the culling board
gr.ndchlldren Uke theirs, or counter top by picking up
tesllng lor lading Is beside the corners hobo fashion. the point, since faded jeans MARY AUCE.
seem to be the thing. DEAR POLLY - This Is
POll. Y.
sort of an answer for Jean as
11 too, am a 11 refund&amp; ,"" I
"DEAR POLLY - I would often see offers on the
like to voice a Pet Peeve that groce r 's she lf with BIG ,
I am sure others have. It Is let~rs on the lwx staling a
the way the. carts In grocery dollar refund on this box ·and
Btores are shoved together so in very small print is the
tightly that it is almost im- expiration date. ·Sometimes
possible to get them apart. the offer has alre@.~Y expired
This is a real problem for or the coupon is inside the box
those having a baby along or ·saying It has expired, but I
some other reasons for send· it any way and have
having only one hand ALWAYS received the
available . Thanks for reiund . Just thought she
listening . - FERN. ' ·
might feel better knowing
DEAR POLLY ~ Cecile thi s.
.
ANOTHER
wanted to remove blue stains REFUNDER.
from her pink toilet bowl that
Polly will send you one of
were caused by one of those . her " peachy" lbaok-you
disinfecting canisters. I had cards, ldeal .for framing or
the same problem . Nothing placing 1 in your family
worked, until I tried a den· scrapbool&lt;; if" she uses your ·
ture cleaner. It is advertised lavorlle Pointer, Peeve or
' as taking stains off of pearls, Problem In her column. Write
so I put a haH dozen tablets in Polly's Pointers In care of
the bowl and let them stand this newspaper.

!,'"') ROSE MILK

Dear T.A.:
Those Social Security rules made ro clear lhe way for ·
younger workers whose livelillood might be affected if too
many elders re-entered the labor market.
.
. A_nother case where la~s appear unfair bUtare seemingly
· JUstified. The most we can expect here I predict, is a furt.ller
increase in allowable wages.:_ and I hoPe that comes soon.- .
.

SfiJined or faded:

From your neighborhood ASSOCIATED
JULY 7-13, 1976

+-t+

ntailv Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, July 7, m&amp;

Polly's Pointers

SAVI

Dear He~:
Social Security ls insurance, right? We pay into it, . we
should be entitled to draw·the desigDated retirement benefit,
. no matter what we earn.
Yet the law says if you find a retirement job which pays
more than a very limited amount (less than $3,000 I believe) a
year, your S. S. benefits will be lowered proportionately.
· (Unless you are 72 or over.)
At the same time, a person can draw any amount of money
,..from interest, other retirement funds, etc., and not ·be
penalized.
· , I haven't reched old age yet, but when I do, l'll,resent
bemg told I must -drastically. limit my will ro worll ·or be
"fined" for it. - THINKING AHEAD

H.

5 - '""'

of activ)Ues for
~~ theSched111e
Amerkan Legion
~ Auxiliary 1976 OepariJ}lent

5 _
g~

·

-~ Activities announced

WHe Wanta Bundle of Proof

H.

SUPERIOR

p

.
•

· _._ ,_._,

Large Heads

-17 oz. Cans

FLAVORITE

5

for

•

$}

48

W/C

"

'

"

KOSHER SPEARS ....

DOMINO

SHOWBOAT
.

99¢
·
.
S
W/C

ZEST A

.

5 $1·
for

:

COUPO N

PORK &amp; BEANS
141fl OL
cans

·.. . . .

e

· 24 w.. · ~r

COUPON

ib.
bag

I

./

COUPON

SUGAir.

BREAD

~~z. .

•

...

COUPON

1

Grade A Medium

Vlasic

oz.$ 09
GRAPE JELLl ..........~~... .
. .

.,•

EGGS................... ~ ....

ARGO PEAS.....:.......
- Welch's

LETTUCE .................

WC
I

CRACKERS

~:· 39~
.

W/C
-

Ltmit 1 Coupon Per Customer · ~ 111 , Limit 1 Coupon Per Custo.mi!r
Good Only At Powell's
Good Only At Powell's
; 7-10-76
Offer Expires : 7-10-76

~~~~~

•

�.

. ' .·

"') 7 197b

Evangeline OES has meeting
The charter was draped in
me!llory of Mrs . Mary
Memhart ~t the Thursday
night meeting of Evangeline
Chapter 172, O.E.S. at the
Masontc Temple.
~ere was also a .moment
of Silent prayer for her, her
husband, George Met?hart,
and Denms Keney , serwusly
, mjured tn · an accident
recently.
Mrs. Sue · Floyd , worthy
matron, and Paul Darnell,
worthy patro~, presided at
the meeti ng wtth Mrs. Mane
. , Hawkins, as El~cta pro tern .
: ~ A communicalton was read
: ; tnvtll~g me~bers to a
• . recephon honormg the grand
: conductress, Coralee
: Holahan at the Dayton
'' .Chapter 125 on Sept. 18.
Thank you notes w~re read

SUMMER
CLEARANCE

SALE
THROUGH
THE MONTH

OF JU LY

heritage house
Middl eport, 0 . ·

\

· from Mrs. Norma Wilcox and Grand Chapter are still
George · Meinhart
lor available.
remembrances on the deaths
Mrs . Wilcox arid Mrs .
in their families. Plans were Kathy Miller served refreshmade for the annual Mason- ments.
Eastern Star picnic to be held
July 18 at 2 p.m. at Fort .
COOKOUT ENJOYED
Meigs. Mrs. Bessie King
Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Walker
re ported that ttie fried
celebrated
the Fourth of July
chicken, noodles and drink
holiday
at
their Union Ave .
&gt;~11) be furnished and asked
home with a cookout and
that everyone take either a
vegetable, salad, or dessert . games. Guests were Miss
Walker, Pomeroy ;
and their own table service. Gladys
Miss
Beatrice
Holmes ,
Mrs. Floyd noted that
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Troy
August will be. past matrons Ohlinger,
Pomeroy ; their
and past patron's night and
daughter'
Jennifer.
and her
also at that time a. do-your- guest, Terry Jewell, Rutland
.
own thing auction will be held
with the proceeds to go to the
TWOGRADUATE
district association . Mrs .
MASON,
W. Va. - Miss
Maryln Wilcox noted that
pre-registration forms for Guyla Roush and Vernon
Roush, Jr., son ~rd daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Vernon
BICENTENNIA:L BABY
Roush, Sr. of Mason, both
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Fife of graduated from Parkersburg
Pomeroy have a bicentennial Comm uniiy College in May.
baby. The eigh t pound girl Mr . Roush received an
named Tracy Loraine was associate degree in Nursing
borq on July 4 at II : !4 p.m. at and is employed as a male
Holzer Medical Center . nurse at St. Joseph liispital in
Maternal grandparents are . Parkersburg . Guyla received
Mr . and Mrs. Richard a certificate in Secretarial
DeMoss, 20 Anne St. , Science . Others graduating
Pomeroy, and the paternal from Community College are
grandparents are Mr. and Marty Yea?er, Yolanda King
Mrs. Clarence Fife Spring · and . Vtckt Burton . Mtss
Ave., Pomeroy .
'
"1lurton is employed at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

l,, ,.~~ii;};;·=·= :}i;}"··

~i

:.:;.

~

·

u

. .
S

t.?

•

·

·

By pc . lb.

•1.19

BOLOGNA ...... _........ _..__.............._...... ; ~-~~~~ ---~~:. •1.2s
. ARGO

•

· J-Ib.

CANNED HAMS .........................................~-~-~5 19
HOME MADE

.

•

HAM SALAD ···-- ····· ··-··--················-···-·· ·-·----~-~:.99'
DAIRY

PRODUCE

Borden's Individual Sliced

·

CALIFORNIA

AMERICAN 16 OL $},29
CHEESE pkg. - ·
GANTALOPES
'
TEEN QUEEN Hb.
CALIFORNIA
!A's 69~
MARGARINE 2-lb.
.ORANGES
-:r.r.::or!-r:rr

11 Ounce Size

•

eath49~
4-lb.

Bag

89~

MORTON'S TV DINNERS ............ - -- -~~ ..

TOMATO
·JUICE• .......................
,....................·... 59'
15'1, oz. Whitney
· ··
PINK SALMON ................ .'.............................. $159 ·
4 Roll Delsey

1

4
WHITE
TOILET
TISSUE
.........
:
........
:
.............
-J-9
Jumbo
4
VIVA
TOWELS··:----..........................................
99
10 oz:· lnstant
NESCAFE
COFFEE..................................... ------ $'»69
lb.
L
3

G~J~nc~~9n~IEN ING ..................................$149
CAKE
MIX ··· ····•····
Regular
···· • •· ••• •••••• ··· ••• •••.· · •• : •••• , •• •••• ••• 59'
17 ozs. Chef
'

PEPPERON I

s;

~.
""

Hy Hden Bottel

•

Legion at the Sheraton
Columbus Hotel. On Friday
night a reception for canconvention to be held in dictates for Department
Columl:ius, July 8-11 has been treasurer will be held ahd ·on
aM 0unt:ed by Mrs. Amold Saturday there will be
Richards, Eighth District election of Department of·
!ictlrs.
·
president. ·
The convention will be held
Memorial serYices will be
at the Neil House Motor Hotel conducted on Sunday morwith registration to begin at 2 ning and following that there
p.m. Thursday . Open In~ will be the election of
ceremonies will be held ' dcl•gates and alternates at
Friday morning and at noon large to th.c national conthat day there will be a joint vent ion and lnstallaUon of the
se~on with the America~
newly elected officers.

Dear Helen :
You told the ex-girl friend of a "card night" husP.nd not to
send home the clothes he left at her aparbnent, acrompanied
by a note to his wife..
Why protect the tw~Hilher? If the wife is like rne, she 'll
wekome proof so she can get a good divor~ settlement.
Should the "ex" Uve in South Orange, N. J., tell her l'Jf
even pay for that bundle of intimate menswear. - "CARD
NIGHT" WATCHER
' r
Dear CNW:
11
Sorry, wrong"ex . ·
And l still say a dumped paramour shouldn't take out her
vindictiveness on the wife. - H.

Anf!ual picnic enjoyed
The annual . picnic of the would be no meeting in
Pomeroy Garden Club was . August. A field trip to the
held recently at the home of Fent011 Glass Co. will be held ·
Mrs. Wal~r Grueser.
on Sept. 14.
Mrs. Sarah Gibbs wps a
gues! and others- at~nding
were
Mrs . . Margaret
Blaettnar, presfdent, Mrs.
BUSINESS MEETING
Agnes Brown, Mrs. Geneva
A business meeting will be
Nolan , "Mrs . June Van held at the Forest Run ·
Vranken and Mrs. J. 0 , Baptist Church at 2 p.m . .
Roedel. Mrs. -Nolan gave Saturday. All members of the
devotions lising a patriotic church are urged to be
theme. It was decided there · present.

++ +

Dear Helen :
I am iniD woodworking as a hobby. My picture frames,
sconces and scroll work decorate our house. When people
exlaim about tbem, my wife gets big-'*arted and promises l'U
come through with handmade gifts for them.
Every time she wants to repay a favor, I'm the one who
does the labor!
Would ypu please convince her (and wivll§ like her ) that a
husband 's hobby isn'ta wife's giveaway' -TIRED OF FREE
BACK ORDERS
Dear Tired :
My husband says yo~ came ID the wrong columnist. As a
maker of weathervanes and other metal sculpture, he is
coostantiy reminding me not to be so darn magnanimous with
ms time.
I try, really I do - and so does your wife - but somehow
those promises just slip out. It's because we're so proud of our
husbands' hobbywork. ·
When people exclaim over it, we can't help being
generous.
Sign me "Contrite," and let's hope your wife is likowise.-

......................~ ................. 974

lly Polly Cramer

choice 0f gold or silver .

AEROSOL .
~ Ql 1-'l~

l-rsl $,2 39

s1.52

•

·

.1

•

~

CREAM ""

Jo• $1 33

Mig llsr S2 29

s1.19

GIUETlE

.

I '

Mtg LIS! S2 09

•, ,-- BIC
LIGHTERS

[J "8'7c

age

"*"m. LUBRIDEAM LOTION
'"'!".':
~

oz'for Dry St..m.

Setn~d

L-.:.......J

ggc

!1'.10 L1s1 St 55

u ...

PLASTIC STRIPS
50s ; 20 FREE
Mi g lrst SI 29

'

11 ,

'

Dear Helen :
. Watching Jinuny Carter and Donny and Marie Osmond
perform on TV, I'd say they have about 24 terns in commonall teeth!
Are !bey related - Osmonds and Carter, that is? . .:_
SMILED OUT ·

USTEAMI~T
MOUTHWASH '

Dear S.O. :
No. - H.

53c

Dick' Harris surprised

·

Dick Harris of Syr~cuse
was surprised recently with a
birthday party hosted by his
wife and several friends at
the couple's fishing cabin at
Apple Grove .
The decorllted cake was
inscribed "Happy Birthday ,
Dick" and featured a fishing
scene replica. It was served
following a picnic dinner.
"Gifts were presented lo the
honored guest.

6 OZ Mig, liS! 99'

:){'''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ''' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' ';' ' ' '\'\ . Kings host
: [: Fifth birthday !): rehearsal dinner
..

{

COPPERTONE
SUNTAN LOTION

TRAC II
CARTRIDGE

+++

::::

i

color. Byj · .
C71114CII
ON~ Y $5.95

SKIN CARE

EXCEDRIN

DOAN'S PILLS

TAIII.ETS

40s Mig List $1 25

1005 Mtg liS! $1 97

'"-..,, , "" 75C

~s-t.23

::::

Mr. and Mrs. Robert King
hosted a dinner at the Meigs
;:::
;:;: 1nn Saturday night following
;:;
;:; rehearsal for the wedding of
·.·
.... Miss Edith Mees and Tim
Kris tin Allenswort h , Kinlt.
d;lughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Their guests were the
John Allensworth, Ml. honored couple and Mr. and
GUead, recently observed her Mrs. Malcolm Mees, the RA!v.
,fifth birthday with family William Middleswartl!, Mr.
dinner at the Middleport and Mrs. John Anderson,
home of her grandparents, Miss Wendy Ming , Miss Joan
Mr . and Mrs. Millard Wagstaff, Miss Carol King,
Wildermuth.
Miss Lori W'mans, Judi Mees,
Miss Mechelle Hals~ad. Jim
Boggs, Jim Sclunoll, Larry
Following the dinner, !Pe Mees, Ed Abbott, Robert
family went to the home of Winans, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Mrs. Robert . Allensworth, Erwin and Mr. and Mrs.
Kristin 's grandmother, for Edward Hals~ad .
homemade ice cream and
cake. Others attending were
VlSii's PATIENT
Courtney LyMe, sister of
Miss
Erma Smith spent
Kristin , Mrs. Gra~ Hawley,
Mr . and Mrs . James Friday at f\lhens with her .
Wildermuth , :Mrs . Betty brother , Arthur Smith, Sr., a
O'Bleness
Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight patient at
Memorial Hospital.
CuUums, son, Ron.

} tS ObServed : :

51.39

•
NO SALES TO DEALERS
OUANJITY' RIGHTS RESERVED
I

USDA Choice

I

,

I

CHUCK ROASt ...... !~;.
USDA Choice

ARM ROASI ...........1~:•.
USDA Choice

·7-BONE ROASI .....1~·.
Superiors AU Meat

BULK WIENERS........lb. .
..

'

Attending were Mr. arid .
Mrs. Kennetb Matkins of
Racine ; Mr.- and Mrs. John
Dean, pomeroy; Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Rled and David,
Pataskala; Mr. and Mrs.
John Walter Dean and son,
Jeremy , Pomeroy; Mr s . .
\ielen Harris, the honored
guest, and Ed Cozart and
John. Walter Dean who
provided music for afternoon
singing .

.POMEROY, .OHIO
frices
Effective-.
.
Thru July 10, 1976

,.

Fresh, Pure Beef

GROUND CHUCK .... 1~:.
Old Fashioned
.
p~. $ 29
LONGHORN CHEESE ..'~; ... ~

L.

'

' "\

•

Mr . and Mrs . . James
Wildermuth ~ nlertalned
Sunday with an open house at
their new home In Darby
Estates, Columbus . The day
also included a birthday
dinner
honorin g
Mr .
Wildermuth with cake and ice
cream served later in the
day.
Out-of-town guests included
Mr. and Mrs. John . Allensworth, Kristin and Courtney,
Mt. Gilead ; Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Will, John and Joyce,

a

V05 HAIR SPRAY

LILT

Regulir or HarcHo·Hp!O

.

PERMANENTS

9 OZ Mt g !,lSI $1 79 e3Ctl

~eoal or Bod~ Wawe

• 97~

2

~S-&lt; A lSi.IC.G(STEO.o.O P'OC"tSoPfiONAl WlfHPA I CI~•I N'~OS~f(;)RE;S:.ili li~i: 1:l~OS~2·:~7~ch.
VILLAGE PHARMACY

------, ..

•
271 N. 2ND AVE.

,.

HOT DOG SAUCE
oz.

2 49
11

CANS

4

COOKIES
VANILlA-CHOCOLATE
11/z LB.

BOX

Hamden; · Mrs. Diana
Hawley; Ingrid Hawley ,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Robert
Allensworth, Mrs. James
Hawley, Mr . and Mrs.
Millard Wilde rmuth, Middleport.

Whole

Mrs. Smith

WATERMELON .......~~

returns home

Mrs. Zuelella Snit lli has
~~~~&gt;$1m~~~
· ·!ill· · · returned from WiliJlington
College, Wilmington, Ohio
where she attend~ the Ohio
Baptist Guild retreat, June 29
through July 2.
She was accompanied there
by Miss Yvonne Preston and
both served as counselors for
the 319 junior and senior
WEDNESDAY
, girls, and 150 children .
. POMEROY LODGE lti4, Numerous ministers and
F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:.30p.m . .• guild workers were In atat temple; all Master Masons tendance.
invited.
Mrs. Smith sang "Amazing
THURSDAY
Grace" at 'a 5:30 morning
HARRISONVILLE SEN- watch. Speaker at the ThursIOR Citizens Club will day evening banquet was the
hold a birthday potluck Wilmington (; ollege
' supper at 6 p.m. Thursday at pr~sident .
fori Meigs on the New Lima
Road ; games will be played.
BACK AT WORK
, REGULAR MEETING,
Miss · Bernice Darst,
Shade River Masonic Lodge, Middleport, has returned to
&amp;p.m. Thursday, Chester; aU her employment after
Master Masons Invited.
recuperating from a recent MEIGS COUNTY Humane operation at the Holzer
Society meeting, 7:30 p.m. Medical Center.
Thursday at Thrift Shop
building, E. S~cond St.,
Pomeroy. ·
TO HOLD PICNIC
ROCK SPRINGS Grange
BURLINGHAM - The
lnspeetioh, 8 p.m. Thursday Burlingham Camp 7230,
at the haD. On Saturday night Modern Woodmen, will Mve
the Rock Springs grange will a picnic Sunday at the State
vlsl t Laurel.
. .Park on Rou~ 33, right going
FRIDAY
. north, with a potluck dinner
MARY SHRI~ 370rder of at noon. There will be games
the While ~ Shrtne of for aU , singing and other
Jerusalem rehe~pl Friday. entertainment. Prizes will be
8 p.m . at Pomeroy Masonic awarded to the oldest
Temple to prepare lor In- ' youngest
and
pt!rso~
specUon July 21 at Marietta. traveling the most distance to
Officers of Mary Shrine will attend. All members,
be In .Charge of the closing families and friends are
and· presenting.
Invited.

' 69~

Mon.·Sat. ~

Sun·. 10 to 5i
·Prices E,ffedive '

·Thumlay thru SundaY ·
")

.

I.

49

'

Social
Calenda·r

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FIRESIDE

I

.298 Second

·Wildermuths entertain·

VI Em

i

. Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat: 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-1Q pm

ex-

PADLOCK .
KEY HOLDER
Opehs easily, closes
tight. Solid brass in

blue jean puzzle

POll.Y'S PROBLEM
until they seemed to stop
DEAR POLLY - · !..list working. I found the stains
sununp- I was pa!Qting out of were almost completely
doors and spilled some
gone. I now repeat this every
lerior white paint on my blue two or three weeks to keep it
· • denim jeans. Even though bright. - MRS. J . B.
they ' have bee n washed DEAR POLLY - l had the
sevetal times, the paint spots same problem that Cecile has
remain. I would Uke some with stains in the toilet bowl,
suggestions for removing We drained the water out and
!hem. - FRAN. · .
used a rust and stain cleaner
• DEAR FRAN - The and the stains quickly
various washings hive ·no disappeared . (Polly'• note doubt helped ro set tbe paint Do follow dlreclions carefull y
spots on your jeans, but you for uoc on porcelain.) - ·
might try the following hints POLLY.
_,.
·
, lor oil paint removal. Rub
DEAR POLLY - Now that
- (ietnrleum jelly In the apot1 to the Una for fresh vegetables
. IIOften !he paint and then soak Is here, out comes the big
In turpentine. Waah In warm piece of nylon net that I use to
water and ooap and rinse ao line my . dish drainer. It
aaual. I am afraid your apots ·becomes a giant size colander
will require rather draodc ofor draining berries, leaf
· · treatnieat, 10 If the above lettuce, etc. Vegetables ca
falls you mlghiSoak the spots be tumbled In it to speed
In equal parts of tu.-pentine dratntng by gently pulling on
and ammonia. U you like . the side of the net and can be
your jeans to look as my carried to the culling board
gr.ndchlldren Uke theirs, or counter top by picking up
tesllng lor lading Is beside the corners hobo fashion. the point, since faded jeans MARY AUCE.
seem to be the thing. DEAR POLLY - This Is
POll. Y.
sort of an answer for Jean as
11 too, am a 11 refund&amp; ,"" I
"DEAR POLLY - I would often see offers on the
like to voice a Pet Peeve that groce r 's she lf with BIG ,
I am sure others have. It Is let~rs on the lwx staling a
the way the. carts In grocery dollar refund on this box ·and
Btores are shoved together so in very small print is the
tightly that it is almost im- expiration date. ·Sometimes
possible to get them apart. the offer has alre@.~Y expired
This is a real problem for or the coupon is inside the box
those having a baby along or ·saying It has expired, but I
some other reasons for send· it any way and have
having only one hand ALWAYS received the
available . Thanks for reiund . Just thought she
listening . - FERN. ' ·
might feel better knowing
DEAR POLLY ~ Cecile thi s.
.
ANOTHER
wanted to remove blue stains REFUNDER.
from her pink toilet bowl that
Polly will send you one of
were caused by one of those . her " peachy" lbaok-you
disinfecting canisters. I had cards, ldeal .for framing or
the same problem . Nothing placing 1 in your family
worked, until I tried a den· scrapbool&lt;; if" she uses your ·
ture cleaner. It is advertised lavorlle Pointer, Peeve or
' as taking stains off of pearls, Problem In her column. Write
so I put a haH dozen tablets in Polly's Pointers In care of
the bowl and let them stand this newspaper.

!,'"') ROSE MILK

Dear T.A.:
Those Social Security rules made ro clear lhe way for ·
younger workers whose livelillood might be affected if too
many elders re-entered the labor market.
.
. A_nother case where la~s appear unfair bUtare seemingly
· JUstified. The most we can expect here I predict, is a furt.ller
increase in allowable wages.:_ and I hoPe that comes soon.- .
.

SfiJined or faded:

From your neighborhood ASSOCIATED
JULY 7-13, 1976

+-t+

ntailv Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, July 7, m&amp;

Polly's Pointers

SAVI

Dear He~:
Social Security ls insurance, right? We pay into it, . we
should be entitled to draw·the desigDated retirement benefit,
. no matter what we earn.
Yet the law says if you find a retirement job which pays
more than a very limited amount (less than $3,000 I believe) a
year, your S. S. benefits will be lowered proportionately.
· (Unless you are 72 or over.)
At the same time, a person can draw any amount of money
,..from interest, other retirement funds, etc., and not ·be
penalized.
· , I haven't reched old age yet, but when I do, l'll,resent
bemg told I must -drastically. limit my will ro worll ·or be
"fined" for it. - THINKING AHEAD

H.

5 - '""'

of activ)Ues for
~~ theSched111e
Amerkan Legion
~ Auxiliary 1976 OepariJ}lent

5 _
g~

·

-~ Activities announced

WHe Wanta Bundle of Proof

H.

SUPERIOR

p

.
•

· _._ ,_._,

Large Heads

-17 oz. Cans

FLAVORITE

5

for

•

$}

48

W/C

"

'

"

KOSHER SPEARS ....

DOMINO

SHOWBOAT
.

99¢
·
.
S
W/C

ZEST A

.

5 $1·
for

:

COUPO N

PORK &amp; BEANS
141fl OL
cans

·.. . . .

e

· 24 w.. · ~r

COUPON

ib.
bag

I

./

COUPON

SUGAir.

BREAD

~~z. .

•

...

COUPON

1

Grade A Medium

Vlasic

oz.$ 09
GRAPE JELLl ..........~~... .
. .

.,•

EGGS................... ~ ....

ARGO PEAS.....:.......
- Welch's

LETTUCE .................

WC
I

CRACKERS

~:· 39~
.

W/C
-

Ltmit 1 Coupon Per Customer · ~ 111 , Limit 1 Coupon Per Custo.mi!r
Good Only At Powell's
Good Only At Powell's
; 7-10-76
Offer Expires : 7-10-76

~~~~~

•

�- ·-- 8- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,

Bicentennial theme used
.by devotional leader
·A bicentennial t~jlle

Duffy and Miss Erma Smith
and the poem . "God Bless
You and Keep You." Mrs.
Duffy was pianist.
Repor ts were given ,on
visits to Mrs. Gladys CUckler
and Mrs- Eva Dessauer by
Mrs. Meinhart.
Mrs . .
Genevieve · Swartz was
welcomed as a new member
into the class •. Also given a
welcome was Mrs. Bunnie
Kuhl . Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs. Ada
Holter, Mrs. Dale Smith,
Mrs. Rose Ginther and Mrs.
Stella Kloes .

Wllll

used by Mrs . Phillip
Meinhart, devotional ·le!ider,
at the Happy Harvesters
Class of Trinity Church
meeting held Friday night at
the church.
A potluck dinner preceded
the meeting. '!be program
opened wilh singing.of "God
Ble~America" and "My
Country . 'Tis of Thee, "
followed by a. poem, "Our
Thanks" and !he Gettysburg
Address recited by Mrs.
Meinhart. There were also
readings by Mrs. Freda

Mason Area
News Notes
Mr. Fred Spencer, who has
been hospitalized -4t the
University Hospltill in
Columbus. and the Holzer
Medical Center was returned
from !he latter recently and
has improved. He has ex·
pressed appreciation for the
pr.ayers ,
cards
and
remembrances of his mapy
friends .
Specialist 4 Robbie Lam·
JOliN BUSH JR.
bert, stationed at Fort Head,
Texas, spent his leave during
!he month of ·June, visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Lambert in Mason .
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Lambert relumed home from
~y
Lakeland, Fla. where they
visited Mr. Lamb'erl's sister
and husbaod, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Barker. Other places
visited · included Disney
V
Whi
World, Busch Gardens, St.
MASON, W· a. 'le Augustine and Sunken
America ce~brated i.ts 200th Gardens. They' visited friends .
birthday, John Michael Bush,
Jr., celebrated his first birlh· at J l!cksonville, Florida and
day at !he home of his Sanford,.Fla: 011 !heir return
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. home !hey visited at Olat·
Roy Herdmman, Mason.
tanooga, Tenn. and weht to
Ice cr~am, cake and punch Ruby Falls. They also visited
were served to the following !heir parents, Mrs. Lucille
guests, his grlll)dfather, Eli Simms at Ashland, Ky . and
Bush of Hartford ; his Mr . and Mrs . Everette
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Lambert at Catlettsburg, Ky.
Bush, Sr., his uncle, Lonnie -. Thomas Roush and Todd
Herdman , Mason; Cheryl Kebler , both of Mason , atBennett
his
great.. tended a Youth Fellowshtp
grandm~lher, Ina Yoimg, Mr. Youth spon sored tour of
and ¥fs. Rupert Howard and Kings Island on Tuesday .
lamily, Hartford; Nannieand
ML and Mrs. Vernon
Wayne Casto
Mason· RoUSh,andson'l'hornas,John
Delford Bragg 'and Mabl~ Thabet, Mason' and Mr- Ted
Riley of Clifton spent Ule
Blankenship. The honoree , k nd 1 N th Bend State
received many gtfts.
wee e a or
Out of town guesls were Park near Parkersburg .
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Herdman
REHEARSAL SET
and boys of Elkhart, Indiana ;
Mary
Shrine 37 Order of the
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jeffers,
White Shrine of Jerusalem
Maron, Ohio; Lewis and
· Janet Bush of Olester, 0. A ·will hold a rehearsal Friday ,
July , 9, at 8 p.m. at the
telephone can was received Pomeroy Masonic Temple w
from his aunt, Patty Martin,
JX:epare fiW inspection July 28
of Elkhart, Indiana. Sending
to be held · in Marietta. Of.
gifts were Patty Estep and
family , . carlotta Boyer, ncers of Mary Slrine will be
in charge of the closing and
Arcell Boyer and Holly
presenting.
Boyer, aU of Mason.

c......,

Gunnoe's
Sausage
•·••·
II 2 .
Rel_l

b.
Pk•:

u•~a,

First birthda_y
celebrated

fohn Bush Jr..
The Klein famlly reunion
was held Sunday at lhe Route
33 . Roadside. Park near
· Pomeroy with lhe occasion
also being a surpriSe birthday
party for Margie Klein, 52.
Gifts were presented to
Mrs. Klein along wilh a red ,
white and blue cake with a
nag replica decorated by
Powell's Super-Valu.

iiBemlce Bede Oaol
FOf Thuroday, July 8, 1878
ARIEl (Morell 21·Ajlrll 181
Honor agreements today , even
though your second thoughts
Indicate you could have done
beHer had you b~rgalned more ·
shreWdly.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201
Render lull service tor what
you're paid to do today. ¥ou 'll
think more of yourself if you
resist the Impulse to cut cOr-

Rathburn
honors birthday

ners. ·

GEMINI (May 21-Jun.a 201
Don't go against your prudent
judgment on risky ventures.
Taking foolish coances could
lighten your , purse co n. slderably.
·

The fourth birthday of
Richard Eugene Rathburn, II
was observed July 4 at the
home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard E. Rathburn,
Middleport.
Richard's cake, baked by
Mrs. Michael Stewart, was
!he replica of an engine in
celebration of Rallroad Days.
Ice ~ream, potato chips,
drinks and cake were served.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Herschel Gilkey, Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Gilkey and
Wesley Shane, Frank Ralh·
bum, Mrs. Clara Gilkey, and
Rhonda Rathburn.

CANCER (June 21.July 221 If
you do something nice for lov·
ed ones today, don't make
them feet obligated. They'll resent It if they think you're
throwing It up to them.
LEO (July 23·A... 221 Treat
with strictest confidence that
~ which Ia meant for your ears
• alone. You could spill tho
; beans it you're not very careful,
• VIRGO (A... U·lept. '221
: Spend any small surplus

" you've- a'ccumulaJed on your
: family today. ll Will be tnuch
a more appreciated than If you
; blew it on passing fancies.

, LIIRA (lepl. 2l-Ocl. 2S) Don't
' malte conceasions under
• preaoure. If you think what's
~ being asked Is unfair, bllck off
• quiCkly. Stand up lor your
rights.

•; ICORPIO

(Oct. 24•Ncw. 22)
grateful today lor gains

" ~
: which come through others. '
' Though those might be loss
~ than you anticipated. , It's the
, best tt\oY cao after.

.

Attending were Mr . . and
Mrs. Charles H. Klein, Sr.,
Btu Klein, .David Klein, Paul
Klein, Kenny Klein, Tommy
Klein, Kate Klein . Edna
Kletn, Henry Ray Klein,
Trena Kay Klein, David
Leonard Klein ,. Donna Klein,
Tammy Klein, Connie Klein,
Myrtle Mae Klein, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles H. Klein, Jr .,
llreama Klein , Terry Klein,
Olarles H. Klein Ill, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Klein, Sr .. Gene
Klein, Jr., Michale Klein, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Pullin, Shelia
Pullin, Shelly Pullin, Tom
Sarver, Sr., Gloria PI!I'Uow,
Ephrlan Herdman , Billy
Mills, Roger ParUow, Jr.,
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Klein ,
Betty Lane, Christop~er
Lane, Crystal Lane, Tommy
Lane, Peggy Jeffers, Howard
Jeffers, Mike ,.Caton, . Ann
Klein and Edith Welch .

MINISTER TO SPEAK
The Rev. CecU Wise ·will be
guest speaker at !he Hysell
Run Free Metbodlst Oturch
Sunday, July II, at !he 10:30
a.m. and 7:30p.m. services.
The public is invited.

'

IAGITTAIIIUS (Na•. 21, Dec.
'· 211 Screen carefully
PISCES (Fell. 20·Mtrcll 20)
propositions. presented to you. , Your possibilities for success
Certain key parts may be un- · today look very promising.
clear. Don't act until sure ot the
However, steer clear of people ·
facts.
who have no real Interest or
contribution to make.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22· Jan.
11) Your Insights are sharp to· •
• day, but your methods leave
1 tr11 I(
much to be desired . Try to ••·
~'JO
acute your Ideas as c:teverly as . ·
. ~

.. you conceived them.

0
0

-...

, AQUARIUI (Jan. 20·FIII. Ill
• You know what you want done
today. but you may be fuzzy In
expreaslng your views .
Concentratt on com~
• munlcatlng clearly.

Then.

JutJ··I, 1171

Rewards In your work orcareer

will come through your own el~
torts. The size of the return will
be proportionate to your ~ffOrt
and expertise.

b

•

S9ck,

,...... u.s.u. IMpt&lt;ltd, 4- to 6411. ...

Baking

lens .•...... ~ ..
s. to 7 A... (Sii&lt;Od lb. H •I
s..ked ~II.

Picnics ...... .

...

lk

.

Sweep As They
'

Clean.

$1.·59
Ctn. .
Oaf.

I.·

I ,; ·
I'

In Kentucky

·yo

WITH

With Coupon

Unlit 1 Ctn. With Coupon &amp; $7.58 or More Pur&gt;cha•V

h . '..,S..i:&lt;! A"H:IO:• ,~•II ·::•1 Tom I
~89c ~-------··- .
• Vti• uter s•t. , Ju 1J 1,, 1115

..

A
PINK
TAG . .

It

P.RIOR
SALE
r

.. '

;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:'.

NO. 175 - Syracuse . New
all elec. 3 or 4 Br. spilt
level , carpeted throughout.
attached
gar .,
quiet
location for family; a nice
cOfner lot . 526.500.00.

ATTENTION

HUNTERS

- 28 acres wllh lofs of
woods. tOx50 mobile home.
32x40 metal garage, large
spring and city water .
Bounded by Forked Run
Stale Park. Price : 517.000.

DINNER, SALE SET
SYRACUSE The
Syracue Fire Department
and Its Ladles AuxtUary
will bold a chicken dlnaer ·
rummage
sale
and
beglanlag at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the fire alalloa.
All pr~ wlU go fer the
aew emergency squad
truck. Contributions wm be
appreciated. Tbose wllblag
lo contribute may call 9922239, 992·3125 or 992-5888.

location for retirement, or
close to Parkersburg Belpre area. clly water,

POMEROY
PASTRY SHOP

Pomeroy
992·2298
After ,Hours Call
992-7133
(ONTACT:
·Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

JULY5THRU

JULY 18
FOR VACATION

'

'

''
&lt;'1'

""''

Tally

1I

Avondale
Peas ... • •

.Itt.

•••

tunchoon Moot

I
24 /
Buns - \.

• •

..

\

Amour

'S REGULAR

Trectt •.

DISCOUNT -PRICE

Returnable iti1~~T
Regular or Sugar free

9
hi.
(tn.

·SevenUp·

eGIRLS' WEAR
eBOYS' WEAR
eLADIES'
WEAR
.
--•MEN'S WEAR

Higher In

Kentvcky

'

All Kroger Stores

ow Open
24 Hours a Day
{Except ~ Saturdar Midnight' 'til 9 a.m. Sundar)
(Exupt Ganaway, lllltoll, hnton (514 5. 3nl)

m Whlh Sulplatl')

WILL BE CLOSED •
804 W. Main

.

Magic
Bleach

Bas . . . '

LONG BOTTOM AREA - ·

MMSrp·rt, 0.

MARKED

Not Valid

'

Hu•bwg..-'

6 a., 1975 6Sxl4 all elec.
mo~lle home . Lived in 6
mo ., 2. car. gar .. with
workshop . beautiful

BAIER FURNITURE

'ITEMS
SUBJE

CLOTHING·
WILL BE

Clover Valley
Ice Cream

1
1

Joy Liquid
Detergent . . . . • . .

l .IHCO...OUftD

They beat as they

SUMMER

All-lflnon

NEWYORK (UPI ) -If tbere's a baby boom next spring ,
blame lite Democrats - or the Rep!blicans.
The American television audience is about wbe cut off from
its supply of regular programing, and it could turn to ahnost
anything - reading, talking, cr other inOOor S(iorts.
" All In The Family" will be replaced by fbe Democratic
versioo of togetherness, the bodies of various RepubliCans will
replace the wounded of ~·M·A-5-11," and "Jigsaw Jci)n" will' be
trying to fi&amp;ure out the vice presidential candidates before
they are voted upon, NBC canceled "Ellery Queen " for less. ·
Network aecutives display a touehing failh iii the
Democratic party's ability to get into a family fight, but it's
hard to figure out how they'D manage it.
Wilhwt a good domestic dmnybrooll, the audience is left ID ·
ask if Bella Alxug e8!1 replace "The Billlic W1111111"; if the
Democrat's credentials committee is livelier than reruns; if
the women's caucus is gutsier thaD "Police Woman."
Bolh CBS and NBC have !lOme gOO&lt;I-rooking women working
the conventions, including CoMie Olung aoo Catherine
Mackin; but tbey lack the folby quality of Livie Walton cr the
invincible youth of Marie Osmond.
NBC is planning gavel.togavel coverage, and CBS will give
the Democrat&amp; what it calls "comprehensive" coverage - a
vague tenn that apparently meaM the Democrats can have
prime time but the network won't give !hem a blank check.
'That leaves ABC fer !he television addict woo wants his
"fix" of regularly scheduled shows. But oo Monday ABC will 10' Olllaloat
show "Future C~ ," a pilot for a ielevi.&lt;ion series starring
EmestBorgnine as an old-line cop wilh rOOot for a rookie. At 10
p,m., Eastern time, ABC goes to !be coovention .
'!be big winners on Mooday night UBU8lly are the CBS
comedy sbows and !he Democratic, party roil eall and keynote ftNtir Hot Dot or
speakers woo'tcCIIIeup wthe MTI(l ("~ada " aoo "Phyllis" )
cr Norman Lear ("All In !he Family" and " Maude" ) gag
writing standards.
Tuesday ordinarily is ABC's big night, with "Happy Days"
and "Laverne and 9llrley," That would be fine, except ABC
will be siting basebaU 's AIIStar game Tuesday night, so Fonzl
and friends get scratched. ·
Wednesday Is when the Democrats will astOiind !he world by •
nominating Jimmy Carter in what threaiens to be television 's
all-time anti-climal.
, 'lbW'Sday Is vice presidential nominating day, and the
networks are praying Carter h11s the theatrical instinct to keep
everybody guessing.
.
ABC plans to give )he yormger generation a break by airing
Its regular reruns ot "Welcome Back, Kotter" and "Barney
Miller" before switching wthe conventioo at 9 p.m., Eastern
tblle.
-

Elbo~ Grease

housBUBI*

'

ALL

TV•• .in Review

You\ Needed

Now - Let tbJJer
be your

ALL

'
A'

lowfat Milk

I I

•

'
".'•

lr11er Welcom. ·

Ytur. Federal
Food Stamps

•

OUTFIT THE ENTIRE FAMILY FOR
A BIG 20% OFF HECK'S REGULAR PRICE
YOU ARE INVITED TO COME IN AND TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THIS MONEY .
1.• .
$AVING CLEARANCE.

•

''J
",.

.

�- ·-- 8- The D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,

Bicentennial theme used
.by devotional leader
·A bicentennial t~jlle

Duffy and Miss Erma Smith
and the poem . "God Bless
You and Keep You." Mrs.
Duffy was pianist.
Repor ts were given ,on
visits to Mrs. Gladys CUckler
and Mrs- Eva Dessauer by
Mrs. Meinhart.
Mrs . .
Genevieve · Swartz was
welcomed as a new member
into the class •. Also given a
welcome was Mrs. Bunnie
Kuhl . Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs. Ada
Holter, Mrs. Dale Smith,
Mrs. Rose Ginther and Mrs.
Stella Kloes .

Wllll

used by Mrs . Phillip
Meinhart, devotional ·le!ider,
at the Happy Harvesters
Class of Trinity Church
meeting held Friday night at
the church.
A potluck dinner preceded
the meeting. '!be program
opened wilh singing.of "God
Ble~America" and "My
Country . 'Tis of Thee, "
followed by a. poem, "Our
Thanks" and !he Gettysburg
Address recited by Mrs.
Meinhart. There were also
readings by Mrs. Freda

Mason Area
News Notes
Mr. Fred Spencer, who has
been hospitalized -4t the
University Hospltill in
Columbus. and the Holzer
Medical Center was returned
from !he latter recently and
has improved. He has ex·
pressed appreciation for the
pr.ayers ,
cards
and
remembrances of his mapy
friends .
Specialist 4 Robbie Lam·
JOliN BUSH JR.
bert, stationed at Fort Head,
Texas, spent his leave during
!he month of ·June, visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Lambert in Mason .
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Lambert relumed home from
~y
Lakeland, Fla. where they
visited Mr. Lamb'erl's sister
and husbaod, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Barker. Other places
visited · included Disney
V
Whi
World, Busch Gardens, St.
MASON, W· a. 'le Augustine and Sunken
America ce~brated i.ts 200th Gardens. They' visited friends .
birthday, John Michael Bush,
Jr., celebrated his first birlh· at J l!cksonville, Florida and
day at !he home of his Sanford,.Fla: 011 !heir return
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. home !hey visited at Olat·
Roy Herdmman, Mason.
tanooga, Tenn. and weht to
Ice cr~am, cake and punch Ruby Falls. They also visited
were served to the following !heir parents, Mrs. Lucille
guests, his grlll)dfather, Eli Simms at Ashland, Ky . and
Bush of Hartford ; his Mr . and Mrs . Everette
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Lambert at Catlettsburg, Ky.
Bush, Sr., his uncle, Lonnie -. Thomas Roush and Todd
Herdman , Mason; Cheryl Kebler , both of Mason , atBennett
his
great.. tended a Youth Fellowshtp
grandm~lher, Ina Yoimg, Mr. Youth spon sored tour of
and ¥fs. Rupert Howard and Kings Island on Tuesday .
lamily, Hartford; Nannieand
ML and Mrs. Vernon
Wayne Casto
Mason· RoUSh,andson'l'hornas,John
Delford Bragg 'and Mabl~ Thabet, Mason' and Mr- Ted
Riley of Clifton spent Ule
Blankenship. The honoree , k nd 1 N th Bend State
received many gtfts.
wee e a or
Out of town guesls were Park near Parkersburg .
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Herdman
REHEARSAL SET
and boys of Elkhart, Indiana ;
Mary
Shrine 37 Order of the
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jeffers,
White Shrine of Jerusalem
Maron, Ohio; Lewis and
· Janet Bush of Olester, 0. A ·will hold a rehearsal Friday ,
July , 9, at 8 p.m. at the
telephone can was received Pomeroy Masonic Temple w
from his aunt, Patty Martin,
JX:epare fiW inspection July 28
of Elkhart, Indiana. Sending
to be held · in Marietta. Of.
gifts were Patty Estep and
family , . carlotta Boyer, ncers of Mary Slrine will be
in charge of the closing and
Arcell Boyer and Holly
presenting.
Boyer, aU of Mason.

c......,

Gunnoe's
Sausage
•·••·
II 2 .
Rel_l

b.
Pk•:

u•~a,

First birthda_y
celebrated

fohn Bush Jr..
The Klein famlly reunion
was held Sunday at lhe Route
33 . Roadside. Park near
· Pomeroy with lhe occasion
also being a surpriSe birthday
party for Margie Klein, 52.
Gifts were presented to
Mrs. Klein along wilh a red ,
white and blue cake with a
nag replica decorated by
Powell's Super-Valu.

iiBemlce Bede Oaol
FOf Thuroday, July 8, 1878
ARIEl (Morell 21·Ajlrll 181
Honor agreements today , even
though your second thoughts
Indicate you could have done
beHer had you b~rgalned more ·
shreWdly.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201
Render lull service tor what
you're paid to do today. ¥ou 'll
think more of yourself if you
resist the Impulse to cut cOr-

Rathburn
honors birthday

ners. ·

GEMINI (May 21-Jun.a 201
Don't go against your prudent
judgment on risky ventures.
Taking foolish coances could
lighten your , purse co n. slderably.
·

The fourth birthday of
Richard Eugene Rathburn, II
was observed July 4 at the
home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard E. Rathburn,
Middleport.
Richard's cake, baked by
Mrs. Michael Stewart, was
!he replica of an engine in
celebration of Rallroad Days.
Ice ~ream, potato chips,
drinks and cake were served.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Herschel Gilkey, Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Gilkey and
Wesley Shane, Frank Ralh·
bum, Mrs. Clara Gilkey, and
Rhonda Rathburn.

CANCER (June 21.July 221 If
you do something nice for lov·
ed ones today, don't make
them feet obligated. They'll resent It if they think you're
throwing It up to them.
LEO (July 23·A... 221 Treat
with strictest confidence that
~ which Ia meant for your ears
• alone. You could spill tho
; beans it you're not very careful,
• VIRGO (A... U·lept. '221
: Spend any small surplus

" you've- a'ccumulaJed on your
: family today. ll Will be tnuch
a more appreciated than If you
; blew it on passing fancies.

, LIIRA (lepl. 2l-Ocl. 2S) Don't
' malte conceasions under
• preaoure. If you think what's
~ being asked Is unfair, bllck off
• quiCkly. Stand up lor your
rights.

•; ICORPIO

(Oct. 24•Ncw. 22)
grateful today lor gains

" ~
: which come through others. '
' Though those might be loss
~ than you anticipated. , It's the
, best tt\oY cao after.

.

Attending were Mr . . and
Mrs. Charles H. Klein, Sr.,
Btu Klein, .David Klein, Paul
Klein, Kenny Klein, Tommy
Klein, Kate Klein . Edna
Kletn, Henry Ray Klein,
Trena Kay Klein, David
Leonard Klein ,. Donna Klein,
Tammy Klein, Connie Klein,
Myrtle Mae Klein, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles H. Klein, Jr .,
llreama Klein , Terry Klein,
Olarles H. Klein Ill, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Klein, Sr .. Gene
Klein, Jr., Michale Klein, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Pullin, Shelia
Pullin, Shelly Pullin, Tom
Sarver, Sr., Gloria PI!I'Uow,
Ephrlan Herdman , Billy
Mills, Roger ParUow, Jr.,
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Klein ,
Betty Lane, Christop~er
Lane, Crystal Lane, Tommy
Lane, Peggy Jeffers, Howard
Jeffers, Mike ,.Caton, . Ann
Klein and Edith Welch .

MINISTER TO SPEAK
The Rev. CecU Wise ·will be
guest speaker at !he Hysell
Run Free Metbodlst Oturch
Sunday, July II, at !he 10:30
a.m. and 7:30p.m. services.
The public is invited.

'

IAGITTAIIIUS (Na•. 21, Dec.
'· 211 Screen carefully
PISCES (Fell. 20·Mtrcll 20)
propositions. presented to you. , Your possibilities for success
Certain key parts may be un- · today look very promising.
clear. Don't act until sure ot the
However, steer clear of people ·
facts.
who have no real Interest or
contribution to make.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22· Jan.
11) Your Insights are sharp to· •
• day, but your methods leave
1 tr11 I(
much to be desired . Try to ••·
~'JO
acute your Ideas as c:teverly as . ·
. ~

.. you conceived them.

0
0

-...

, AQUARIUI (Jan. 20·FIII. Ill
• You know what you want done
today. but you may be fuzzy In
expreaslng your views .
Concentratt on com~
• munlcatlng clearly.

Then.

JutJ··I, 1171

Rewards In your work orcareer

will come through your own el~
torts. The size of the return will
be proportionate to your ~ffOrt
and expertise.

b

•

S9ck,

,...... u.s.u. IMpt&lt;ltd, 4- to 6411. ...

Baking

lens .•...... ~ ..
s. to 7 A... (Sii&lt;Od lb. H •I
s..ked ~II.

Picnics ...... .

...

lk

.

Sweep As They
'

Clean.

$1.·59
Ctn. .
Oaf.

I.·

I ,; ·
I'

In Kentucky

·yo

WITH

With Coupon

Unlit 1 Ctn. With Coupon &amp; $7.58 or More Pur&gt;cha•V

h . '..,S..i:&lt;! A"H:IO:• ,~•II ·::•1 Tom I
~89c ~-------··- .
• Vti• uter s•t. , Ju 1J 1,, 1115

..

A
PINK
TAG . .

It

P.RIOR
SALE
r

.. '

;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:'.

NO. 175 - Syracuse . New
all elec. 3 or 4 Br. spilt
level , carpeted throughout.
attached
gar .,
quiet
location for family; a nice
cOfner lot . 526.500.00.

ATTENTION

HUNTERS

- 28 acres wllh lofs of
woods. tOx50 mobile home.
32x40 metal garage, large
spring and city water .
Bounded by Forked Run
Stale Park. Price : 517.000.

DINNER, SALE SET
SYRACUSE The
Syracue Fire Department
and Its Ladles AuxtUary
will bold a chicken dlnaer ·
rummage
sale
and
beglanlag at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the fire alalloa.
All pr~ wlU go fer the
aew emergency squad
truck. Contributions wm be
appreciated. Tbose wllblag
lo contribute may call 9922239, 992·3125 or 992-5888.

location for retirement, or
close to Parkersburg Belpre area. clly water,

POMEROY
PASTRY SHOP

Pomeroy
992·2298
After ,Hours Call
992-7133
(ONTACT:
·Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

JULY5THRU

JULY 18
FOR VACATION

'

'

''
&lt;'1'

""''

Tally

1I

Avondale
Peas ... • •

.Itt.

•••

tunchoon Moot

I
24 /
Buns - \.

• •

..

\

Amour

'S REGULAR

Trectt •.

DISCOUNT -PRICE

Returnable iti1~~T
Regular or Sugar free

9
hi.
(tn.

·SevenUp·

eGIRLS' WEAR
eBOYS' WEAR
eLADIES'
WEAR
.
--•MEN'S WEAR

Higher In

Kentvcky

'

All Kroger Stores

ow Open
24 Hours a Day
{Except ~ Saturdar Midnight' 'til 9 a.m. Sundar)
(Exupt Ganaway, lllltoll, hnton (514 5. 3nl)

m Whlh Sulplatl')

WILL BE CLOSED •
804 W. Main

.

Magic
Bleach

Bas . . . '

LONG BOTTOM AREA - ·

MMSrp·rt, 0.

MARKED

Not Valid

'

Hu•bwg..-'

6 a., 1975 6Sxl4 all elec.
mo~lle home . Lived in 6
mo ., 2. car. gar .. with
workshop . beautiful

BAIER FURNITURE

'ITEMS
SUBJE

CLOTHING·
WILL BE

Clover Valley
Ice Cream

1
1

Joy Liquid
Detergent . . . . • . .

l .IHCO...OUftD

They beat as they

SUMMER

All-lflnon

NEWYORK (UPI ) -If tbere's a baby boom next spring ,
blame lite Democrats - or the Rep!blicans.
The American television audience is about wbe cut off from
its supply of regular programing, and it could turn to ahnost
anything - reading, talking, cr other inOOor S(iorts.
" All In The Family" will be replaced by fbe Democratic
versioo of togetherness, the bodies of various RepubliCans will
replace the wounded of ~·M·A-5-11," and "Jigsaw Jci)n" will' be
trying to fi&amp;ure out the vice presidential candidates before
they are voted upon, NBC canceled "Ellery Queen " for less. ·
Network aecutives display a touehing failh iii the
Democratic party's ability to get into a family fight, but it's
hard to figure out how they'D manage it.
Wilhwt a good domestic dmnybrooll, the audience is left ID ·
ask if Bella Alxug e8!1 replace "The Billlic W1111111"; if the
Democrat's credentials committee is livelier than reruns; if
the women's caucus is gutsier thaD "Police Woman."
Bolh CBS and NBC have !lOme gOO&lt;I-rooking women working
the conventions, including CoMie Olung aoo Catherine
Mackin; but tbey lack the folby quality of Livie Walton cr the
invincible youth of Marie Osmond.
NBC is planning gavel.togavel coverage, and CBS will give
the Democrat&amp; what it calls "comprehensive" coverage - a
vague tenn that apparently meaM the Democrats can have
prime time but the network won't give !hem a blank check.
'That leaves ABC fer !he television addict woo wants his
"fix" of regularly scheduled shows. But oo Monday ABC will 10' Olllaloat
show "Future C~ ," a pilot for a ielevi.&lt;ion series starring
EmestBorgnine as an old-line cop wilh rOOot for a rookie. At 10
p,m., Eastern time, ABC goes to !be coovention .
'!be big winners on Mooday night UBU8lly are the CBS
comedy sbows and !he Democratic, party roil eall and keynote ftNtir Hot Dot or
speakers woo'tcCIIIeup wthe MTI(l ("~ada " aoo "Phyllis" )
cr Norman Lear ("All In !he Family" and " Maude" ) gag
writing standards.
Tuesday ordinarily is ABC's big night, with "Happy Days"
and "Laverne and 9llrley," That would be fine, except ABC
will be siting basebaU 's AIIStar game Tuesday night, so Fonzl
and friends get scratched. ·
Wednesday Is when the Democrats will astOiind !he world by •
nominating Jimmy Carter in what threaiens to be television 's
all-time anti-climal.
, 'lbW'Sday Is vice presidential nominating day, and the
networks are praying Carter h11s the theatrical instinct to keep
everybody guessing.
.
ABC plans to give )he yormger generation a break by airing
Its regular reruns ot "Welcome Back, Kotter" and "Barney
Miller" before switching wthe conventioo at 9 p.m., Eastern
tblle.
-

Elbo~ Grease

housBUBI*

'

ALL

TV•• .in Review

You\ Needed

Now - Let tbJJer
be your

ALL

'
A'

lowfat Milk

I I

•

'
".'•

lr11er Welcom. ·

Ytur. Federal
Food Stamps

•

OUTFIT THE ENTIRE FAMILY FOR
A BIG 20% OFF HECK'S REGULAR PRICE
YOU ARE INVITED TO COME IN AND TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THIS MONEY .
1.• .
$AVING CLEARANCE.

•

''J
",.

.

�..-

..

""

~

..

'

M

'e - The Daily Sentinel, Middl•port-Pomero), 0., Wednesday, July 7, 1976

'

'
"

.
.."
.:..

-

•"

10 TO 9

"

OPEIDAILY
10 TO 9

"

OF FREE

..'
~

'I

"&gt;

..
'

~

•

NATIONAL

.WILSON
JOHNNY MILLER

9x 12 .CABIN TENT

$3988
'49.88

GOLF

ASSORTED BRASS

UMBRELLA

.

PUTTERS

$]66

J"Jc

0~1 d

Do ubiPrl

•

I

.

HARDWARE DEPT.
HICK'S RIG.

....

. SPORTS DEPT.

TO 199.99 ·

...
I

"'

"
"'
'11
.,.

"'"',;,

KEUER MULTI.COLORtu

--.""''

Heck's Reg.

-"
,.,
...

CARl

SPOITS DEPT.
. ,,,

•399

5.99

1

"U

"''"

..'"..'
,

'

'

,",i

JONISOII .·

CALIFORNIA
. , FREE FORM

SKATEBOARD
.

.

$1.59 PIC.

HECK'S
_ REG .

'""V"...,

sse

HECK'S
REG.

M
h'l

...•!',

.

Oool i'l&gt;ultop le lt&gt;M drog flo&gt;h IM:Ud11,.d f .rmall or
QN&gt;r•
~"'~:.lot potl. up. O.uo!h.o..,. roto• Stalnlo,.
•'-'ol ~~ ~~ . Hooh hardo.n.d t! o"'lolt ""' 1,,..
o,t.,,..

PLASTIC·WORMS

1 \', " wide ·urethone slick s on front
end roar 24" in length 5 'h" wide

$1488

'"Stitt to

wa.

p,.Q~V"Ifd boonM bea•·~·

$10

PK.·

...'"'

'

66

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

HAISE
PAD
e

$422

$344

d

"..

\

HECK'S REG.
$5.99
IIAIIIJWAIE DEPT.

'
"'
'1'1
,,,'
•'
"'.!.:

'12,99

HARDWARE DEPT.

GARDEN. GLOVES

"

··COMBINATION KNIFE
$377

$1.59 PK.

$299·_

S/1011!/HPT.

LANTERN
. REFLECTOR

e

e

e

25

99

HECK'S REG. $36.99

·CHOW
SET

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

COMPACT
FIRST AID KIT

77tr

HECK'S REG. 99'
· SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 13.76
.

e

· HECK'S
REG.

24.99

1

SPOilT$

IHPT.

HECK'S REG. ~2.19

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPOm DEPT• .

.

.

"_,I'
""

..."
"

•200 . .
,•

.,"
••
•'

.'

HECK'S REG. •2.99

""

~

SPORTS

••
"•

DEPT~

3.89
SPoRTS r,EPT.

'15

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'~ REG.

.

88

.
·

'3.99
AUTO DEPT.

, Heck's Reg: •19.99

. •9·· ·.

·

•1711

HARDWARE DEPT.

•

HECK'S REG. 113.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

HI~DRI ­

·3

ROLLS

$

Heck's Reg.

100

49 ~

Roll ·

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

·

FLOWER CENTER

TOWELS

1101/SlWAIE III'T.

SPORTS DEPT.

.

$2. 66

13" SHRUB &amp; HEDCE
SHEAR

HECK'S REG. 57•

HECK'S REG. '22.99

.

VENTILATED WIRE Not Exactly As Pictured.
SEAT
IUSHION .
•

BLACK&amp;. OECKBl

3'7~

$ 44

88

•·122

FOLDING COT

CLEAR PLASTK
CUPS ·
9 oz.

CHEST

oz.

HARDWARE DEPT. ·

HARDWARE

(

"1.58

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

20COUNT

FOAM

.

Heck's Reg. •4.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

7
HECK'S Reg.

STANLEY
PRUNER
.
.
HECK'S REG. $266

'13

·. 6·12
INSECT REPELLENT

.

$118

-

Heck's
Reg . .
$I 8.99

oz.

HE~K'S REG.
1.56
.

WALLACE
FOLDING
BED

3601.
3''

12%

s3.55

HECK'S REG. S19.99

$688

HARDWARE DEPT.

FLYING INSECT SPRAY

e

. •3••

or.d p&lt;lrtc bihly makes lh i1 stove popu la r for th•

·-

:

RAID ·

3 PC. B-B-Q.
TOOL SET

l;oht-ll,.oUI"9 camper 2Y, pipt fue l coP&lt;J(ily .

PICNIC GRILL
Heck's Reg. '8.99 ·

HARDWARE DEPT •

HARDWARE DEPT.

COLEMAN .
2 BURNER STOVE

enomeltd colon

. '13.99

~

1

Mull ~l~ ore 7" doo me let, 2•"
1n t,,)e, hond lu . Bolls ore
d•omeh!f f,n,sh ~ 1n' br•ght

,

"'

HECK'S REG.

1cre•

HECK'S REG •

rt-' '

"

TRIMMER

99

.,.••

".,'

DEPT. .

HECK'S REG. . .
11.28

...

$2288

6 PLAYER
CROQUET S~

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

"'..

"'
""
"
"..

TORSO

'

$2 66
.

..,
..·'""
"

HARDWARE .,EPT•

STUCTO 18"

..

Heck's Reg. '1.49

12 OZ. RAIN
.
.
.
. ANT &amp; ROACH SPRAY

"'"'
..."'"

DELUXE
·2-BURNER
STOVE

.

BARRACKrS
.
. B.AGS
,..

'

-. .

$2199

He&lt;l'o Rog . $24.88

"

room for toll bot11e~ .

5

$255

$3.99
SI'OIISD•r.

ond 2 ~~~lotion

,_,"
~

13 1J gallon copoci l y ( 5 1 li ter\)
1ndvde rec es.~ed ha ndle~ ·.,.,qfh botde
opener5
leok · proo f dram
Deep ,
dry sto rage troy
15.3J " height

$2~6

~

"'

"'

. COOLER
p 1 ovid~

··2 ''

p.rlormafl&lt;e.

-...

SJINTS,.T. .

HARDWARE

Powerful: 'l»&gt;O stroluti ~ minute cutting

u

.

HECK'S REG.

HIDGISIIIAR
Cordless: no (ord to trip oY&amp;i, tangle or cui .

"''"

Pk,.

99~

coaDL•••

"'...,
....

. HECK'S REG. $3.99 .
.
SPOilT$

COLEMAN

s.r i~udn .. f9lolion

.."

...""

sse

.· H:~::s

KNIFE

.

SPORTS DEPT.

•

RED &amp;WHin SPOONS

... FISH&amp;GAME
•

HECK'SREG.

$4.88

"'"'"'

PACK OF 8

·'

'

'

.

Heck'S Reg. '5.99

HECK'S REG. '3.44

W·

12 BLADE

VINYL COVD

FOAM FILLED

"'

HECK'S REG.

. $19.99

HECk'S REG.
$4.99
IIAIIIJWAIE
/11111.

SHOVEL

•'

OuoloM ••-.••• o"&lt;&lt; " iho or ~.h kOI'dtl!l,..., ano~ 1 'i ll! i n~;~

20COUNT .

$322

ROUND POINT

..•

"
·••

CENtURY REEL

WEED WHIP

HECK'S REG.
$1.99
IIAIIWAIE DEPT.

NAIIIWAII IHPT.

.

DOUGLAS

$144

LAWN CHAIR

2666

520-112

TOMATO FOOD

1

.

•se for many years. ·

HO_FFMAN

~

$21.99

88

HARDWARE DEPT•

.....

GOLF

I:IECK'S REG.

'

$

Enjoy outdoo' m
. ing at its
best with 'this J · piece red~ood stained picnic table
set. Table co~foriobly
seats silt Durable :onstruc·
tion rnahs thi~ set one you' ll

HECK'S REG. SJ9.88

$

'$169.96

..."'••'

AJAY

.I

HECK'S REG .
2.99

•

,.,
w
"'
•••

\

'.

:•

sass

$4.99 .
SPORTS DEPT.

"'
..,••
""

~~gh tt"d

blod• .

HECK 'S
REG.

HECK'S

'62

.u

-

-

MOWER

..••

I·

BroH pu l1 e1 ~ mc l v~~ Open
f o(ed

""
.•..'

$5888 .

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$119.95

••'

CABIN
TENT

1000 _GRAPHITE DRIVER

HECK'S
REG .

"'

7'x7' ·

3-PC. PICNIC TABLE SET

SYCAMORE
20 INCH ROTARY

~

STAND
HEC~~R£G.

. .

•

'6 66

HOUSEWARES DEPT•

•
,.

I
f

•

y

••

'

1

�..-

..

""

~

..

'

M

'e - The Daily Sentinel, Middl•port-Pomero), 0., Wednesday, July 7, 1976

'

'
"

.
.."
.:..

-

•"

10 TO 9

"

OPEIDAILY
10 TO 9

"

OF FREE

..'
~

'I

"&gt;

..
'

~

•

NATIONAL

.WILSON
JOHNNY MILLER

9x 12 .CABIN TENT

$3988
'49.88

GOLF

ASSORTED BRASS

UMBRELLA

.

PUTTERS

$]66

J"Jc

0~1 d

Do ubiPrl

•

I

.

HARDWARE DEPT.
HICK'S RIG.

....

. SPORTS DEPT.

TO 199.99 ·

...
I

"'

"
"'
'11
.,.

"'"',;,

KEUER MULTI.COLORtu

--.""''

Heck's Reg.

-"
,.,
...

CARl

SPOITS DEPT.
. ,,,

•399

5.99

1

"U

"''"

..'"..'
,

'

'

,",i

JONISOII .·

CALIFORNIA
. , FREE FORM

SKATEBOARD
.

.

$1.59 PIC.

HECK'S
_ REG .

'""V"...,

sse

HECK'S
REG.

M
h'l

...•!',

.

Oool i'l&gt;ultop le lt&gt;M drog flo&gt;h IM:Ud11,.d f .rmall or
QN&gt;r•
~"'~:.lot potl. up. O.uo!h.o..,. roto• Stalnlo,.
•'-'ol ~~ ~~ . Hooh hardo.n.d t! o"'lolt ""' 1,,..
o,t.,,..

PLASTIC·WORMS

1 \', " wide ·urethone slick s on front
end roar 24" in length 5 'h" wide

$1488

'"Stitt to

wa.

p,.Q~V"Ifd boonM bea•·~·

$10

PK.·

...'"'

'

66

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

HAISE
PAD
e

$422

$344

d

"..

\

HECK'S REG.
$5.99
IIAIIIJWAIE DEPT.

'
"'
'1'1
,,,'
•'
"'.!.:

'12,99

HARDWARE DEPT.

GARDEN. GLOVES

"

··COMBINATION KNIFE
$377

$1.59 PK.

$299·_

S/1011!/HPT.

LANTERN
. REFLECTOR

e

e

e

25

99

HECK'S REG. $36.99

·CHOW
SET

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

COMPACT
FIRST AID KIT

77tr

HECK'S REG. 99'
· SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 13.76
.

e

· HECK'S
REG.

24.99

1

SPOilT$

IHPT.

HECK'S REG. ~2.19

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPOm DEPT• .

.

.

"_,I'
""

..."
"

•200 . .
,•

.,"
••
•'

.'

HECK'S REG. •2.99

""

~

SPORTS

••
"•

DEPT~

3.89
SPoRTS r,EPT.

'15

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'~ REG.

.

88

.
·

'3.99
AUTO DEPT.

, Heck's Reg: •19.99

. •9·· ·.

·

•1711

HARDWARE DEPT.

•

HECK'S REG. 113.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

HI~DRI ­

·3

ROLLS

$

Heck's Reg.

100

49 ~

Roll ·

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

·

FLOWER CENTER

TOWELS

1101/SlWAIE III'T.

SPORTS DEPT.

.

$2. 66

13" SHRUB &amp; HEDCE
SHEAR

HECK'S REG. 57•

HECK'S REG. '22.99

.

VENTILATED WIRE Not Exactly As Pictured.
SEAT
IUSHION .
•

BLACK&amp;. OECKBl

3'7~

$ 44

88

•·122

FOLDING COT

CLEAR PLASTK
CUPS ·
9 oz.

CHEST

oz.

HARDWARE DEPT. ·

HARDWARE

(

"1.58

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

20COUNT

FOAM

.

Heck's Reg. •4.99

HARDWARE DEPT.

7
HECK'S Reg.

STANLEY
PRUNER
.
.
HECK'S REG. $266

'13

·. 6·12
INSECT REPELLENT

.

$118

-

Heck's
Reg . .
$I 8.99

oz.

HE~K'S REG.
1.56
.

WALLACE
FOLDING
BED

3601.
3''

12%

s3.55

HECK'S REG. S19.99

$688

HARDWARE DEPT.

FLYING INSECT SPRAY

e

. •3••

or.d p&lt;lrtc bihly makes lh i1 stove popu la r for th•

·-

:

RAID ·

3 PC. B-B-Q.
TOOL SET

l;oht-ll,.oUI"9 camper 2Y, pipt fue l coP&lt;J(ily .

PICNIC GRILL
Heck's Reg. '8.99 ·

HARDWARE DEPT •

HARDWARE DEPT.

COLEMAN .
2 BURNER STOVE

enomeltd colon

. '13.99

~

1

Mull ~l~ ore 7" doo me let, 2•"
1n t,,)e, hond lu . Bolls ore
d•omeh!f f,n,sh ~ 1n' br•ght

,

"'

HECK'S REG.

1cre•

HECK'S REG •

rt-' '

"

TRIMMER

99

.,.••

".,'

DEPT. .

HECK'S REG. . .
11.28

...

$2288

6 PLAYER
CROQUET S~

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

"'..

"'
""
"
"..

TORSO

'

$2 66
.

..,
..·'""
"

HARDWARE .,EPT•

STUCTO 18"

..

Heck's Reg. '1.49

12 OZ. RAIN
.
.
.
. ANT &amp; ROACH SPRAY

"'"'
..."'"

DELUXE
·2-BURNER
STOVE

.

BARRACKrS
.
. B.AGS
,..

'

-. .

$2199

He&lt;l'o Rog . $24.88

"

room for toll bot11e~ .

5

$255

$3.99
SI'OIISD•r.

ond 2 ~~~lotion

,_,"
~

13 1J gallon copoci l y ( 5 1 li ter\)
1ndvde rec es.~ed ha ndle~ ·.,.,qfh botde
opener5
leok · proo f dram
Deep ,
dry sto rage troy
15.3J " height

$2~6

~

"'

"'

. COOLER
p 1 ovid~

··2 ''

p.rlormafl&lt;e.

-...

SJINTS,.T. .

HARDWARE

Powerful: 'l»&gt;O stroluti ~ minute cutting

u

.

HECK'S REG.

HIDGISIIIAR
Cordless: no (ord to trip oY&amp;i, tangle or cui .

"''"

Pk,.

99~

coaDL•••

"'...,
....

. HECK'S REG. $3.99 .
.
SPOilT$

COLEMAN

s.r i~udn .. f9lolion

.."

...""

sse

.· H:~::s

KNIFE

.

SPORTS DEPT.

•

RED &amp;WHin SPOONS

... FISH&amp;GAME
•

HECK'SREG.

$4.88

"'"'"'

PACK OF 8

·'

'

'

.

Heck'S Reg. '5.99

HECK'S REG. '3.44

W·

12 BLADE

VINYL COVD

FOAM FILLED

"'

HECK'S REG.

. $19.99

HECk'S REG.
$4.99
IIAIIIJWAIE
/11111.

SHOVEL

•'

OuoloM ••-.••• o"&lt;&lt; " iho or ~.h kOI'dtl!l,..., ano~ 1 'i ll! i n~;~

20COUNT .

$322

ROUND POINT

..•

"
·••

CENtURY REEL

WEED WHIP

HECK'S REG.
$1.99
IIAIIWAIE DEPT.

NAIIIWAII IHPT.

.

DOUGLAS

$144

LAWN CHAIR

2666

520-112

TOMATO FOOD

1

.

•se for many years. ·

HO_FFMAN

~

$21.99

88

HARDWARE DEPT•

.....

GOLF

I:IECK'S REG.

'

$

Enjoy outdoo' m
. ing at its
best with 'this J · piece red~ood stained picnic table
set. Table co~foriobly
seats silt Durable :onstruc·
tion rnahs thi~ set one you' ll

HECK'S REG. SJ9.88

$

'$169.96

..."'••'

AJAY

.I

HECK'S REG .
2.99

•

,.,
w
"'
•••

\

'.

:•

sass

$4.99 .
SPORTS DEPT.

"'
..,••
""

~~gh tt"d

blod• .

HECK 'S
REG.

HECK'S

'62

.u

-

-

MOWER

..••

I·

BroH pu l1 e1 ~ mc l v~~ Open
f o(ed

""
.•..'

$5888 .

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$119.95

••'

CABIN
TENT

1000 _GRAPHITE DRIVER

HECK'S
REG .

"'

7'x7' ·

3-PC. PICNIC TABLE SET

SYCAMORE
20 INCH ROTARY

~

STAND
HEC~~R£G.

. .

•

'6 66

HOUSEWARES DEPT•

•
,.

I
f

•

y

••

'

1

�,·
•I

Ortl inanu No. ~13

AN ORO I!'IANCE TO 'AMENO
ORDIN ANCE NO . 379. OR
DINAN CE NO . 401 , OR
DINAN CE NO . &lt;07 , 'OR
DINAN CE NO . &lt;31. OR
DINAN CE NO . 440. OR
DINAN CE ' NO . 45). OR
DINAN CE NO . 45 4 , AND
ORD INANCE NO 416 , TO
FIX SALARIE S AND WAGE S
OF TH E VIL~AGE OF
POMERO Y, OHIO .
BE IT OROAINEO , as
fol l ows by the Counc il of the
V illag e of Pomeroy , Ohio , two
th i rds or all members el ected
ther eto concurring . t hat
Ord i nan ce No . 379 , dated
February 6. 1969 , Ordmance
No . 401. dated J une L 1970,
Ordinan ce No . 407, dated
November I ; \970 , Ordinance
No . •31 , d~ted May 15, 1972,
Ordinance No . 440 , dated
Augus t 20 , 1973 , Ordinan ce No.
451 , dated July 1, 1974 , Or
d l nan c e No ,
454 , daled
November 18 , 1974 and Or
dman c~
No . .456 , dated
February 3, 1975 ° Is hereby
amended to the exten d that
Section 1, Paragraph A and
Section 1, Paragraph 8 ,
Paragraph C, Pa ragra ph o .
Paragraph
E
are
&amp;J1 d
changed as follows ·
' Section 1. That !h e follow i ng
scale of sa la ries and wages tor
emplc !es of the Vi l lage of
Pomeroy , Ohio . iS he r eby
adopted ;
A . ST R EET
DEPART ·

MENT AND CE METERY
DEPARTMENT :

Str ee t Su per\l lsor
On e to Thre e Months ser
vi ce, S525 00 per m onth
Three to Six Months service .
SS78 .00 per mon th
Si x to Nine Mon l.hs Service ,
$630 .00 pet month
N i ne t o Tw e l ve Mo nth s
se r vi c e, S656 00 per month
Street
and,
Cemetery
Maintenance
Assista nt Su pervisor
One I a Six Months service ,
$2_.0 per hou r
Six to Twel \le Mon ths ser
vice , S2 78 per hour
Laborers
L eu th an t hree month s
serv ice , S2 .JO per holJr
Th ree to ' N i ne Months
Service , S2.40 per hour
N 1ne to Tw e l ve Month s
ser\l lce, S2 ..52 per holJr

B. POL ICE ·DEPART ·
MENT ·
Chief of Police
Less lhan lhree month s

servic e, S4BB .OO per month
After t hr ee mon t hs service ,
S536.00 p er mon th

Coptoln
Les5 than t hr ee months
service·· 1462 .00 per monlh

After" t hree mon t hs serv1ce ,

-

lnMemOIJ
OlD R~ILS
Old rollrood rnen r1over reall y
die ,
The n:~· s a railroad rerminol in the

sky

••

Where thtty cor,g regn te and the

cin dctS IIy :

"

They ore a speCial br eed· thofs

tha

r eo~on why

twe l ve

months ' se:r

vrce , S2.i5 per hour
D. LABORER
'"
_
Off ice Clerk Bookkeeper,
S450.50 per month
Assistant . Off ice -Clerk
Bo~:s~ef~:~ 6 montM service,
ms.oo per month

•

After

6

months

service .

No ·hm •t to hours as there ~ h ould
have been ,
Until 1 ~ Sbo:teon hour low drd
win

A pret ty rough
dangerous too ,

l1 l e

and

Then some dreomed of sol et)l
lows c ome thr ough .

They dldr;'t work m hurd os they
used to do
And they liYed to pe r )~ion age·
tha t's true
Th ey wer e he" men workmg
nightond qoy,
Pleand co tfee ondlittlepoy
They hod to be rough to llve thot
way ,
Lrttle time to sleep or hit the hoy .
They were happiest when on
the go,
It mode no di fference rain or
snow ,
A hu ndred degrees above or ten
below , ,
When the coll ·boy came they hod
togo

l

Pres . of Council

"'

REGU~ATIONS

PubliSher reserves . ·
the r ight tc f' d lt or reject
any ads deemed ob
1ectlona t The publ i sher
wi ll not be r espo nsibl e for
more than on e incorrect
Insert Ion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 c ents per word cne
insertion
Minlmu.m Charljje SI.PO.
14 cen ts per word three
consecutl\le Inser t io ns .
26 (:ents per- word slw
consecu t ive insertions .
25 Per Cen t Oi scount on
pltld ads and ads paLCf
w ithin 10 days .

CARD OF

T HAN~S

&amp; OBITUARY
Sl .OO f or
80
word
minimum .
Each add itional word 3
cent s.

1974FORD F-100
sms
8' Slyleslde, green lin lsh, good tires, R bumper,
1973 CHEVROLET C-10
52895
8' Fiee tside. white over red , clean lnleilor, 350 V-8,
automati c, power:- steering a nd brake s, good tire s, step
bumper. radio , c_us1om trim and m irrors .

Phone 949-2814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

1971 GMC 4500 SERIES

99~ - 7320 evenings

Helen Simpson

attended funeral services for
•
their aunt, Mrs. Mae ·White
who was 89 years ~ld at the
Cullod@n Baptist Church,

Culloden, W. Va . •Thursday .
Mrs. Dale Hill of Moore

Haven, Fla., is spending an

on Tanners 'Run. Mr. and

$31195

14' Midwest gr ain and ca tl le ra ck body, 350, v .a eng ine,
power steering and brakes . O'lly 8,900 miles Clean ,
like new
•

Wanted to Buy

WILL DO odd ta bs roo fing pain·
l ing , hau ling . treework , and
mowing . Phone 992-7.&amp;09

llel)tWanted.
'

HO USEWIVES , open the door to
extro earnings . Join the sue·
cessful women whc ore mok-

.!1;,~o.od ~~ney ~: ~h:;r1 ;~o::

necessary. no delivery , no col·
lecting , no cask mvestment
Coli now and get extra early
' benefits . Phone 9A9·2803 or
9•q·2786. Also . book tng parties .
$25 .00 per Hundred stuff m.9
Enve lo pe s .
Send
self .
addres sed .
stamped
en\lelope: Edroy Mails . Sox
188 , VW, Al.bony .•Mo . b4402
WANTED; foj(T dnvers , good
dnvers' record required . Call
99'2 ·6010 or ipquire at b6 Mill
~~ r~e t , Middleport , Ohio.

GRILL cook for day shift Apply in
person. (row's Steak House,
Pomeroy , Ohio
$200 weekly stufftng envelppes
1nto already stomped and addressed envelopes . Stuffing
material provided free. send :
Se lf -addressed stomp ed
envelope : Olv&amp;rs!lled , Dept.
A .A . 1206 Cam den Or . Rid\·
mond , Virginia 23229.

.'

Opportun1ly l ot student , 14 to 17
yrs . old . Work opproxihiotely
1o41 hours , 2 days per week . year
around work . Apply Donnelli's
Pizzo , Middleport , Ohio ,
Experienced janitor wonted tor
service dept . Pomeroy Motor

Co.

1970 Camero Rall y Sport in ex ·
ce llent -:ondition . Ph one ~2 ·

•

For Rent
FURNISHED . 2 bedrm . apar tmen t,
adults only , In Midel leport .
Phone 992· 3874.
3 AND 4 ftM'~ ·furnished and unfu rnished opts. .Pho?e 992·
S-434, ..
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt.
33. ten miles nort h of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concret poflos ,
s•dewolks , runners and oft
street parking. Phon e 992) 479.
ONE . bedroom apartments at
VILLAGE M,A.NOR in M1ddleport
for S104 rrton thly .plus. &amp;l ee. or
$,130 Including electric . lOWER

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
Convenient to shopping on
lhlfd ond Mtll Streets in M1d·
dleport . Brand new high quali·
ly opartmenl s. See the
manoger at Rivers ide Apart ments of ccoll 992-3273 . Furnished
apa rtments
al so
avoiloble.
TRAILER space fo r ren t in Middleport . Phone 992-5434 .
3 room furn ished apar t.men t.
utilities poid. Inquire ot 356
North Fourth , Middlepdrt .
Ohio

2 bedroom house, central 01r .
n1ce yard . Phone 992-2832,
3 BEDROOM hoJse wtlh bt~lh in
Rutland . Phone992 ·5858.

19H 24 ft . motorhome. excellent
condition w ith absolu tely
evervthin g. Phone 9o4J9 .2770.

AL TROMM CONST
Rutland
742-2328
All Work Guoronteed

1968 Chevelie 2 d.r . hardtop . V-8,
nutom atic , $4 50 . Phone (614 )

Free Estimales

s.a1 mo.

. 985 -3596.
1974 Chevy Prckup , 6 cylinder ,
standa rd . perfect cond 1tion .
18,000 m1les. long wide bed
with delu xe topper $2900 Coil

'jq2.532&lt;.
1968 Rambler 6 cylinder , standard !.hlfl , good cond1 tion
$300. Phone 99'2-5301 or 992-

3682 .
IQ68 Chevelle Mol1bu . ou tomat1c.

Phoce 1(614)667·3653
1974 Comoro LT Phone.(bl4) 965 ·

4274.
1972 Grand Torino , p.s . p b . o ir.
Phone 949· 22 16

1101111
WINDOWS &amp; 11001$
IWAC!M!NI
WIIIIIOWS
!lUMINUM

'h.HUtt3

•1.00+ Tu
With •ny S4.00 purchase
and this ad. Good through
6-30-76.

DONELli'S ·PIZZA
Middleport, Ohio

992-6167
6-1·76·1 monlh

'h gal. Ice Cream .

EXPERIENCED

FREE,
With Every Cubic Foot of
Fr~ter

Space YoU

Buy.
EXAMPLE :
20 cu. It. 10 gal.l.ce Crum
.POMEROY lANDMARK
·~-Jack 'fl. Carsey, i&gt;'lgr.
...
Phone992-2181
COAL. limestone, ond colc 1um
chloride ond calcium bnne for
dus-t con trol and spec1ol mix1ng
i OII for fo rmers Ma in Street ,
Pomeroy , Oh1o or phone 992·

3891

23 chann el CB fits m
am·fm ·mpx i bdio,
stereo . Coli 'iJq2-J965.

a

dash,
track

CANNING peaches. now ready
th(U Aug ust . Several varieties.
by the bushel , *1, bushel or
peck. Please bring own con ·
tamer. 2 conven~ nl localrons .
M1dwoy Market, Pomeroy ,
992·2582: Bob's Market~ Mason

773-572L

lq61 Co,;odore boat , 17 It, 40
h.p. Johnson Sea horse motor
Good cond1tion . Call 949·2234
after S p.m
BEANS and potatoes , pick . your
own . Call843 ?353 after 7 p m .

cab. cook &amp; bake unit , 2 ca r
garage . Storm s, PQrches .

About .33 acre. ASK ING
$12,000.
RACINE - 1 story, 6 room
frame , J BR : bath ,
carpeling. N.G.. F.A.
furna ce · Porches , stora ge

bldg . ~ol SOx 177, lovely
garden space . 57,900.
POMEROY - 2 story
lrame WALK TO SHOP. 5
BR .,

H1

baths ,

n ice

ki tchen. full basement · W·
shower, storms . Coal or
N.G heal. $8.500.

WHY PAY RENT WHEN
YOU CAN BUY THE
A80VE
AT
THESE
PRI CES? BUY NOW AND
PA Y THE RENT TO
YOURSELF.
TUPPERS PlAINS BRAND NEW Ultra
modern J BR home,
ceramic tile bath !colored
fixtures ), utility R., lovely
kitchen . Large garage and

workshop .. 92 acre. $22.900 .
Where the a ir is clean and
livi ng Is easy.

SECURITY FOR
TOMORROW.
992-2259 or 992-2568

4

NORTil

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,_,

,h. 192-2174

• Q9S
WEST .

.,''

• 10 8 6 3

'

'

REMODEI!ING . Plumbing heating 1
ond all types of general repo 1r .
Work guaranteed 20 yeors experience. Phone 992-2409.
-

.-.,-

---

SEWING MAO-liNE Repair s. service, olt makes , 4Xl2-2284. The
Fa br1c Shop .
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We,shorpen Scissors
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
backhoe work , dUmp trucks
and lo boys for hire: will haul
fill dirt , top so1l , limestone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fers , day phone 992 ·7089.
ntgh t phone 992-3525 or 992-

5232.

'

'
••
•'

,. !&gt;!:

' ~ (·

"••'
'

I·

RIDERS SALVAGE
SL Rll14

Ul-.

-

~

--

2428.

I•

"' ''\

SOFA , brown tweed . Early
American alm os t new . Phone
(61o41)667 -3741.
TQMATO£S . Cleland Forms ond
Gre enho uses .
Gerald me
Cleland. Racine Ohio .

·

~9"1-2571

oc 991 -3975.

3 bedroom , new f urnace, window
air condtt ioni ng, aluminum
s1drng . neW corpel mg, loca ted
67b South Fou1th, Middleport.
Cumoct Fred lewis . SB46tsland
Dri ve .. Cleves , Oh1o. 45002 or

coll(513) 353-1990oltec5p.rn .

23 Cho!'Wlel C. B. Bose rodio. com· ~ 5 ·
·
plete · w1th ante 11 na. $200.
ROOM hou!.c , w1th both qr'ld
f'hune 992·5616.
lou nd• V room , moderrl lc,1 tchen ,
I I ur 1es with bm 11 om.J rnilk
lAPPAN Go!) cook stove , ovocad(r
lr o u ~e ltlcatcd at Mmcr sville
~HH.' !I o.xrollen t w ndlf1011 $75 .
Ol11o I&lt;IJIII •t: th W tlt ph r&gt;ne
PhntH•l 4 ~ 3 1 ~7
'Nf .J t06

Asking 120.000.
3 YEARS OlD - 3
bedroom modern home·
with 2 ceramic file b;Jihs.
Elec . baseboard heat,
wOod -burning
fireploce .
Full •basement. nice
kitchen and fam ily room .
534,000.
AVOID THE HEADACHES
OF , SELLING. LIST IT
WITH US AND lET THE
E)(,PERTS DO THE. JOB .

'

j

Pass

two .finesses.''
You shouldn 't try to see
your opponents ' cards, but
• some players hold their hands
so sloppUy that yoo can't help
seeing them . Once you have
seen them you can refuse losing finesses and just take win·
ning ones.

North glared at South and
said, " If there were such a
thing as a license to bid
notrump, I would try to. have
yours revoked."
" What could I have
done," replied South. " I could
not help losing the spade
finesse."
"No one was holding a gun
to your head and ordering you ·
to take it." continued North.
. "We were sure of game and
rubber, if yoo rose with the ace
and went after just nine l
tricks."
.' ' \C
The spade finesse had lost.

(Do you have a question
tor the e&gt;perts? Write "Ask
fhe Jacobys " care of this
newspaper The Ja cobys will
answer tndividual questions
if stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are encfo~ ed. T~e
most interesting ques'tio'ns
will bo •used in th1s column
and will receive copies of

JACOBY MOOEfiN.)

2180.
' "\
*-·-~--•
EXCAVATING. BACKHOES ANo·· '
OO~ER - .LARGE AND SMALl.~
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED, LOW · ~
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. Bill . :l
PULLINS. PHONE 992·2478 DAY.~{•
OR
NIGHT. .
"""
- - - - - · - - _ _ _ __: ... w

Yesterday's A111wer

BUILDI,NG , remodeling , cind\ ·~:
rep01rs. Quality work, efficient 1 1\
service. Jesse Rodman, phone 11•

Z1 BoUvifln
export
%3 ~gle

~- -·--·-·- II. ~ ~

SAVE ON·
CARPETING

33 Poker tenn
34 Sacted

iJnaCe

31 Conlumer
f1 - blockade

Beautiful colors. Do 11
yourself •nd save. Regular
sus ·sq . yd. •.

Sale $4"Sq. Yd.

1 : ~News

13.

(eluded)
(2

wdlf.)

31 Scrutinized

~ 1·

501·NYLON

'

•

·:..~

·4;

J?o II yourself, ' with
padding, $7.95 sq. yd .
Witll padding ln•tolled
S8.9Ssquore yard
,
CAll 742·2211
r • •1 •
TAll( TO
.
" 'I
WENDEll
GRATE
~
1 CA.RPET CONSULTANT

, "Where were you on the nleht of
Ile&lt;:ember 24th7"

conunent
(2

RUTLAND

"'.,

drunk
t3 HawaU's
stale bird
44 It fits the

..

LBfPE

mortise

-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

_,
_,
I

YOU'RE NOT" GOING TO
FIND OUT UN"TlL MY
PIECE APPEARS IN

'~ ··

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" I,.

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'

Is

FAIJlJLOVS/'EM!

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UBUnd

L.;7.;.;4·~.2;~;.;.;1 R N_•_r_u.::~;;;t:;;nd~~l

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

SIPOU

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. elc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formahon of the 11nrds are all
hints. Each,day the code letlers are different

#\
I

CRVPTOQUOTES

r \

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.., !I ,
I \J/ \
"

CGY

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UVG

ZESJW

FSB

BY U E·

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ASXD

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ENCG

VG C X F Y A

•
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•

'IE CAN GO
IN NOW

HANDS ON
.THt WAL.L .!!

for Service call at

XFY

GCZJYGYBB

N Y A B C G. -

CR

H S J J V

~~~;:-r~~ri::-::IJ

Lewis Smith's, Rt. 143

I::·: :1~K;-:1~1.-:...L.I_,1

!

"&amp; Rt. 7

'

FO"L.OWINe I'Y HAL.F.

......,..the.,,..,.. 1ttten

I~-===1===1==-~=l==~t~J~~~~~~Mm~~~J~~~
TARIPE

I

~~~~---

I

f

Now

..

l I I XJ-"

(.u.wert .._.....)

UVXF YA
•
Jumblet&gt; MEROE SPURN UPROAR KIDNAP
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : HAPPINEss IS BENEFICIAL FOR y.,.., ....,.,
· .
THE BODY BUT IT IS GRIEF THAT DEVEWPS THE
An,• .,, 11'11 -t&lt;llobehol, hiii'IM•ollM
. POWERS OF THE MIND. - MARCE'-' !'ROUST
•er.llfd col&lt;f aflh• faW.- PEPPER

.

'

••

li

ScHoot.
HouSE

LAIGS!!

'I •'

7· 7

If ·

THEM

••

··

GRAITEj

SPREAD
•

992-3183

• 1:oo-Tomorrow 3,,..

-·-

'

Green , gold, red, blue, rust

I

· 9:oo-MQvle "Goodbye Again" 3,4,15; StrHts'ot San
Francisco 6, 13; Hawaii Ftve-0 8; Olv,mplad XI;
M!&gt;vle "Under the Yum Yum Tree" 10.
10:01)-Harry 0 6,1J; Bar.naby Jones 8; News 20; Bill
Moyers' Journal ~3 .
·
11 ; 110-News 3,4,6.8, 10. 13, 15; ABC News 33.
1] :1s11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6,13; Movie
· "'w'i'Itlard" 8; Movie "T~e Sf~~~ qf San Francisco"
10;" ~anakl 33 .
'"
12:~Maglclan 6,13.

- ,..

12 or 15 Ft.

\

6:DO-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Patterns for Living 13.
6:»-Cotumbus Today 4; News '6; Summer Semelltr
8; Urban 'League 10.
6:AS-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West 1/lrgtnla 13.
6:5S-Chuck White Reports 10; Good ~nlng, Trl
Stale 13.
7:oo-Today 3,A,15: Good Morning. America 6,13; ·cas
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30--Schooltes 10.
8:0C1-Lossle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame St. 33.
8:30--Big Volley 6.
9:0C1-A.M. 3; Phil Donohue ol,15; Lucy Show I ; Mllw
Douglas 10; Morning wlfh D.J . 13.
9:»-Cross-WIIs 3: One life to .Live 6; TafflttiiH 1:
Mike Douglas 13.
10:0C1-Sanlord &amp; Son 3.~. 15: Edge of Nigh! 6; Prlc. Is
Right 8, 10.
10:JD-Celebrlly Sweepslak,s 3,4,15; Dinah 6: Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 3J.
n :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :JD-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life B, 10.
11 :ss-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel 's World 10.
12 :0C1-Fun Factory 3,15: Lei's Make a Deal 13; Bob
Braun 4; News 6,8,10; Sesame St. 33.
12:3D-Gong Show. 3, 15; All My Chlldr&lt;HJ 6, 13; SHrch
lor tomorrow a. 10.
12 :5s-NBC News 3, 15.
1:0C1-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Don.ohtMI; Not
for Women Only 15; Elec. Co. 33.
1:30-Days of Our Llves3,4.15; Rhyme&amp; Rnson 6,13;
As The World Turns 8, 10; Tourlsfl Are Coming 33.
2:()0-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Burglar-Proofing 33.
2:30-0octors 3,~.15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
light 8,10; Car Care 33.
3\0C1-Another World 3,4,1$; G-ral Hospllal6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Antiques 20; Disco- Flying
33.
3: 30-QneLIIetoLive 13; MlckeyMouseCiub6; ~ch
Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Weether33.
4:110-Misler Cartoon 3; MefV Griffin 4; Somtnef15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; M111tr Rogers
20,33; Movk! "My Foolish Heart" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlffltll 8;
Sesame St. 20.33; Fllnlstones 15.
· S:OC1-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family I; MissiOn : lm·
possible 15.
5:30-Adam.12 4,13; News~ ~ Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. ·20,33.
,
6:0C1-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ,ABC News 61 Zoom 20,33. ·
6:30-NBC News 3,~.15; ABC News 13; A~dy Grlfflfh 6;
·' CBS News 8,10; Lilias, Yoga &amp;'You ·33.
7:0C1-Trluth or Cons.J ; To Tell !he Truth 4; BoWling IW
Dollars6; LawrenceWelkS; News 10; 1,.ol's Make a
Deal13; Family Affair 15; Ourslory 20; Family •
War 33.
7:30-Hollyviood Squares l3,4; Ohio Stale Lottery 6;
.,; Wlld 1!(1ngcl0m 10; To T~lthe Trufh 14; Music City
. · 15;. Robert MacNeil R1P9rt 20.
B:OC1-Secrels of the African Baobab 3.,4, 15; Wel&lt;lOmll
Back, Kotter 6. 13; Waltons B, 10; Upstalrt,
Downstairs 33; Movie "Sanluro" 20.
8:J9-Barney Miller 6, 13.

3i P\ttsburgb 411 Pitch ..:.
of the Rilbr hitter (2 wds.)

Candy Stripe

__

32 Trial nm

tbe ball
%4 Poem
2$ Troops
'!I Evening,
in !lalla
Zl J'p

~

rr .

'I
I

l
I

•

(

I

~--------------~--------------------J __;

'
('

3 NT. Pass

Pass
Opening lead - 2 "'

~'1.

---ceiling,

,

Pass

•

A Cani!_dian reader wants to
know· the meaning "of the ex·
pression "One peek is worth

by THOMAS' JOSEPH_

r---------~~--------~ ~~~
~J

do 100. Phoce (614)367 0424 .

Soulh
1 N.T.

EX PERIENCED house painter. ' '.
P~one Arthur Musser , 7~:l;;,..~·

WILL do roofing , construction
plumbin g on,d healing . No job
too lOrge or too small. Phone

742·2348.

North Eut

- ~;,

--·-

"'\'

Welt

ti~,a• ~ •a/.

~

I
'I

GREG 'S CB SALES , located ot Er
win 's Gulf Serv ice, Mid·
. dleport , Ohio. Phone 992-

-

"'
'

Phone 9!2·5468

EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe ·
and dilcher. Charles R. Hotf ield . Back Hoe Service
Ru_t land, Ohio . Ph~ne_7o412·2~~

SEPTIC TANKS cleoned . Modern
Sanitation 992.3954 or 992·

....J

Pomtray, Dllil

992-5960.

SEPTIC Sys tems installed by
licensed installer
Shepard
Contractors . Phone 742-2409,

WI!U., l'lL
ItT IT'S
EHTEIIEP
IIER M1NO~

"·

Junk Batteries $1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Ptf Hundftd
Copper 35t
' Car Bodin
Scrap-Iron
'

~~~~

vulnerable

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

t:

-

-- --

-

7-7

't
&amp;

(614)698·7257 Albocy.

2438 .

~

Need new roof or old·~
roof-:.
. repaired? House
barn , shin;les, b~Ud u
Pltntfng, electrical wore' .I
gutters &amp; downspout '
furnaces, water heater:·
wate,r softners, installed ~
repa•red, Sewage.
,
. Call us at 94P-2112'
~(
or 9o419· 220J
,.'
3·28 . Jmo .

D&amp;D T~EE Tr im~ing , 20 years expe rien CE!. Ins u red free
est imates . Coli 992-2384 or
-

North~ South

•I

'! '

6·1·1 mo .

~

t K J 53
•AK J

1

Racine,

6.95

-

¥A2

~----------------_J 1

Racine Plumbing ~
&amp; Heating r~
Ohio
::

1
Squ.-e Yord Installed
David Parsons, Owner
949-2814

.

.• 10642
SOUTH (O J

~~~ ~mo.

.

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'

¥ 10 14
tAl

'

J

PIIDII!tt1·!7Z4

Racine, Ohio

EAST
•K &gt;I
¥ K QJ 8 3
t 94
. 873

•J 972

IIW.,port

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

East had shifted to a heart
and South had come up two
tricks short. Of course, if the
spade fine~se had sqcceeded
South would have made four
notrump, nbt just three.
A match-point play~r might
well have considered that
spade finesse . Even at that
game he would have noted
that he had been lucky to get a
spade lead , not a heart , and
gone up with the ace of spades
to insure his contract.

7

• 96~
• Q 10 8 6 2

~SrtMKit,

THURSDAY, JULY I, 1976

Take advantage
of lead
.
. ... Q

D. Bumgardner

9:»-Chtco &amp; the Man 3.
10:0C1-Hawk ~.15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 13; Blue Knight
8, 10; News 20.
10:30--NFL Action '76 ol; AlmaMC 20.
11 :00-News 3,A,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
.
11 :30--Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Movie "The' GrHt Ice
Rip-Off" 6, 13; Movie "The Singing Nun" I ; Movie
" The Joker Is Wild" JO.
12 :011-ABC News 33,
12 ::JO.:o-Janakl 33.
1:0C1-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE

All pool . , . . . . .IJio. .... I'

Registered Duroc Male Hog

MP!llorial Hospilfll

MI 5TAKE

•'·

SERVICE FOR SALE

Jean Ashley employed at
Kaiser Aluminun Plant at
RavellJWOOd, spent two
weeks with her father . Ralph
Ashley.
Mrs. Vivian Phelps Is a
medical patient at Veterans

litH

TA LKI&gt;JG~

AMi ............"',.., 1111 ,.

Real Estate®r Sale

--

Fla.

GREAT 5COTT...

I DID MAt&lt;E A

log for easy viewi~g

WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1976
5:0C1-Bonar1Za l ; Partridge Family ,8; Mission : lm·
possible 15.
5:30--Adom-12 4; , 13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec,
Co. 20.33.
6:0C1-News 3,4.1,10,13,15; What Will We Soy To A.
Hungry Worldl 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30--NBC Newl3.~.15; ABC News 13: CBS NeW$ 8, 10;
, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; VIlla Alegre 33.
7:0C1-Trufh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth A; Popl Goes
the Country 8; News 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Wild
Kingdom 1S: Book Beat 20; Tourists are Coming 33.
7:30--Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Bastball
15: $25,000 Pyramid I; The Judge 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Robert MacNeil Report 20; Book Btal 33
8:0C1-Liftle House on the Prairie 3; Bionic Woman 13;
Baseball 4; Jacksons 8,10: State Dinner for Queen
Ell1abelh II 33; Nova 20.
'8:30--Kelly MontOlth 8.10.
9:bo-Gien Campbell 3; Baretta 13; Cannon 8,10;
Olympiad 20.

11M •lt·JtMOII-

M'OtillrHOtnesJotsi{
~-- ·--·

-

.

.,

SWIMMING
POOLS

3825.

RUTLANO - 1'•&gt; story, 7
room lrame, 4 jlR, bath,
nrce kitchen about 25 ft.

L ATe ,...

SOPEitSE~ ITIV!;
E~t;MV !U£&gt;5,

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

Sweepers , toasters , irons . all
srnall appliances . lowh mower ,
next to Stole Highwov Goroge
' on Route 7 Phpne (614) 985·

FREE ICE CREAM

'
1.\EANWHilfi
.. , THAT Cl'i:YPTANAL~H
FOR 5 .U.&amp;.·IijTElLII;E&gt;J C6 15 1'/0RK-

, ,

Wt Dlliwtr

---ElWOOD ..BOWERS REP ... IR -

·

M655A6ES

l5AVVY... TO
AVOID Bel'lrS
HEARD BY ANY

L---------~6~-~~~7~6~1~m~o.-J·· '~

BRADFORD. Aust1oneer. Co,.. ·
plete Service. Phone 9-49 ~487
or 949·2000. Racine , Ohto . Critt
Bradford

1'il73 450 Prototype Kowosok1
motorcross , good condition

W~ITE

f'&gt;A CJ&lt; A&gt;JD FORTH··

~

'~ IU4!741·140t

..

loCUST posts, round or split .
Phone 949·2774 .

MSN T. ROSIE,CAIIJ
l"l5TI!AD OF

lollatr4, Oltlo 4517!

4-10·1 mo.

SO YOU AND OUR.

..

Truss Rafter Co.
.. zu

CARPENTER . flooring ,
LOCUST posts for sole , cut your
paneling. Phone 992-2-759.
HOUSE , n1ce lot tn l etart. Also,
own
cheop
Phone
992·2b46.
INTERNATIONAL Mo'del 6A com fur nish'ed and 4 tons of coot Wil l trim or. cut trees and shrub·
brne. excel lent condil ton. lots
bery , phone 949-2545 or 742Cont act Todd Rhodes . Racine.
of extra ports. Lorge tandem
3167.
Ohio
fertliz er s-preader, good cond1 ·
VERMEER BAlER SALES AND SER·
Coll992-2156.
lion . Tractor belt dnven wood
VICE , Meigs-Athen s County.
sow . 1959 Chevrolet l ton with t-IOMES ITES for sale, 1 acre and , - - - - - - - - - YARD Sale 1 July 5, 6. 7. 8.
Baler
&amp; from $3995 up Merrill
\1-p.
M;ddlepocl
eeoc
Rutlocd
.
TEAfORD
alum . von body and power
clothmg. misc. items . dishes .
Coll992·7481.
Chose. l614)6qB·3021.
toilgote, good condition Phone
55 Ct.~ s ter St ., M iddleport , Ohio .
Virgtl B. Sr .. Realtor
949-2770.
NEW J bedroom house. 2 baths .
110 Mechanic • Pomeroy, 0.
BIG YARD Sole, Riversi de Or .,
oil
elec.
I
acre
,
Middleport
,
TRAILER for rent or sole . 2
Phone 992-337&lt;
·
Chesh1re, Wed,, T~u rs .. Fri. Kit --- ·- close to Rutland Phone 992bedrooms . 2 chi ldren only .
chen utens i ls, furnit ur e,
1974 12x60 2 bedroOm tro1ler ,
7481.
Phone
742-312'2.
liKE NEW - 5 bedrooms,
dishes , 367-7285 .
completely carpeted , half fur ·
APPR.OXIMAt£LY iO ocres all carpeted and electric
nished. Toke ovtr pCiyments.
VARD Sole. Wed ., Thursday cmd
beou tifr building site, on goad
home in good sub-div ision.
Phone (614) 667·3507 oltec 5
Fndoy . 10•1 one·half South Se·
road Chester water , will l ake . Dining room , central air &amp;
p.m.
cond St .
trades and help finonce if
heat , sun deck and 2 car
necessary . Phone 949·2770
~1974 Mo'nte Ct~rlo in good shape,
garage . Bette r see th is
,..fif~Saft~ ~ ~;-:_ ~. ~sl de by side
refrigerator SMALL fo rm for sole , 10% down ,
now . 545.000. '
- .
/
,. freezer ; doub~ e oven elec ,
owner finonco::d. Monroe Coun- . NEW
liSTING
3
· stt~ve ; Notion al check out
ty . W_ Vo Phoce (304) 772·
A .K. C. Registered Vi:ulo puppies
Bedroom
all
elec
home
.
register, Coca·Colo pay cooler ;
3102oc(304) 7]2.3227.
(Hungarian Pom te~). proven
Ca
rport,
2
PQrches,
city
11 room brick home , 3 ba th s
grouse dogs , champton blood
water, and large level lot .
full basement , 1 acre lot John e,OUNTRY farm land wllh seclud·
lines Phone992.S400
ed woods, water pnd good acSheets, · 3 miles &amp;oulti Mid·
Space for garden . .Only
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo .
AKC Reg ister ed Old Engl1sh
dleport , Rt. 7.
112.000.
51 000 dowc , call (3().4) 772·
Sheepdog puppies tor sole . Call
lARGE OlDER HOME 5 room house, 1 acre . h6t and .
3102oc(304)772.3227.
qq2·2395.
Has 5 nice sized bedroom s,
col d water, no both , $9,b00 .
ONE mole neutekJslames; Cot
New J bedroom total elec.. WH '( RENT? Buy a new hom e with
2 baths, lireplaces. lovely
paymen ts some or lower than
housebroken , '$10. Call 949:
1.130 acres , four ·fifth miles
kitchen with lots of
ren t. 3 bt;tdrooms. den, 2 baths,
2574.
from Langsville oft Co Rd . 10,
cu pboards. Natural gas.
carpet
.
plus
.oil
the
e~tras a
$23,800. Call Raymond Hof AKC Registered lrls k Setter male .
F.A. furnace, large front
housewif e would wont . Shown
f&gt;eld
, 742-2819.
6 weeks old . Phone 949·'2'2 16
wrap around porch and 2
by appointment , 742-2326 .
level lots lor only S25.000.
J year old Collie dog. Phone {614 ) 12 Ft . Sears Super Game fisher 3 bedroom hou ~e for sale in Midboot , 9.9 h p Sears and
COUNTRY STORE - All
985-\392().
cUeport . Phone 992 .3578 or
ROebuck motor , trll lrotler .
stock, some fi x tures, and
'jq2.7667
ENGLISH Shepard Pups , for sole .
Phone 9'il2·2121.
real estale: Gaod 'chance to
Phone 94q .2576.
In dash 23 channel CB, cm .fm - THREE bedroom bnck ranch stylt
work for yourself . Only
horne. full basement with
mpx , rodio , 8 track tope
518,000.
1
' finisbed recreation room 1 /,
stereo. Phone 992·3965 . ..
4 BEDROOMS - lovely
botks , carpor t In Bourn Addi ·
1948 Harley Davidson Chopper
older home. Has steam
tion near Sla te Highway
1972 Tog,A·Long Travel Trailer. , motorcycle , needs some work ,
Garage . Prrce reduced. Phone
heat (gas fired!. large
18 h . self-con tained. mirror s,
$750 Phone 992-3259.
(614)•985·3584 fo r appoin tment .
dining , 2 living rooms , l/4
and Rees e 'hitch 1ncluded . Price
basem ent with garage ,
mlrn!iipecllon . Phone9o4q-2739.
2 motorcycles. Ont:r ·1974 YZ J Bedroom , oll ele&lt; . home, five
Yohomo 80, One . 1971 Sl Hon
large attractive yard .
Points , b room house. Phone
IF VOU hove o service to offer .
wont to buy or sell something .
ore looking f or work . . , or
wha tever , , . you-'ll get results
taster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .

.'

Southeastern O~io

lARRZ.~.~~DER

6CANS OF RC

MAKE spring cleomng profitable,
turn unwonted items mto cosh,
Adve rtrse in the Won! Ad s.

Unico

26'- S19.SO
28'- $21 .00

GUO!I~WIIIN~S

JUNESPECUL

For Sale

5650 Phoce 992-31143.

.., For Sate, :Rent or Ttate

Yard Sale

l'n4 Dus ter . Phone 247-2821 .

7()&lt;19

24'- Sli.OO

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

l97A Ford von , E300 series .
owner Phone 99'2·73'20 .

OLD l urn1t ure. ice boxes . brass
bed s.
wall telephones and
port s, or complete households
Wote M . D. Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy . Oh10. Ca119Cf2 .7701J.

4-12Pilch

Blufln into Will I AHies.

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

OFFICE HOURS

3183.

1-lol Alllilaillo

6-17 ·16

Addilional 25c CfHHge
per Advertisemen r.

NOTICES
ATTN .: II
AU HOUSEWIVES

Blown

lnsulltiGI Senices .

SIOING-SOifiO

I

BLIND ADS

8 30 a.m . ·to 5· 00 p .m .
Dei t y, 8: 30 am . to 12 : 00
Noon S~ turdav .
Phone today 992 2156.

GUTTER SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

Continuou s onl!
piece
gutters. We hang it. or do II
yourself. Special prices to
builders.
, -

chrome gr ille . and fron t bumper , 6 c yl. and standard
trans.

Apple Grove
Ne'-ws NoteS

Mrs.

Telev~ion

'

Motor Co.

Notices

APPROVED : . Mrs. Herbert Roush spent
1
Clarence Andrews Sunday afternoon wtth them .
\ '
MAYOR
Chester Van Meter of
Morning Star spent Sunday
17 1 7 14 , 2,.
afternoon with his sister,
NOTIC:E OF APPOINTMENT Mrs. Erma Wilson.
·
' CO$e No. 2115'
Elllle of
FERNE
L. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph (Peck)
8RAD:IfUAY, Deceased.
Brinker of Wheeling, W. Va .,
Notice is hereby qiVen lh•l
Cecil P . eredburv of 272 South caUed on friends Saturday.
A'er;'IUe, ~ i ddleport, Oh io, has
Mr. ' and Mrs. Herbert
bTen dulY. appointed E)leuctor
Roush,
Mrs. Iva Orr were
o the Estate of Ferne L .
!tfadbl,lry , deceased , late of shopping at the Silver Bridge
"'l~rgs. County , Ohio .
Plaza Satur~ay evening.
Creditors are requ ired to
Mr. and \Mrs. Clarence
ti lt their cla ims w ith said
f iduciary within t hr'ee months Roush of Winfield, W. Va.
D•ted this Jrd day of Ju l y
lt76 ,, ••
spent the weekend with Mrs.
~
. '.
TiU Webb and visited Mr. and
• Manning 0 1Webster
.
Judge Mrs. Roy Pearson and called
Court of Common Pleas; on otber relaUves.
'
Probate Oi\f iSion
Debbie Fife of Cheshire
spent a week with her
ell 7, u,' 21, 31'c
gra'n dmother, Mrs. Till
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Webb.
;~ Case No . 21.15•
lstott of Robert L. Jacobs
Mr . and Mrs . George
Decnsed.
. .
McClintock of Pt. Pleasaot
Ro~~fe ~'. h~~·c~bs~,v~~ - ~h~) sP.ent Sunday,. with Mrs.
Pomeroy , Meigs County, Ohio, . Vashti Grimm. Mrs. Grimm
hil teen duly oppolnted
led th
to Bel
Admlnlsfrolor Wilh fht Wilt acco~pan
.em
pre
Annexed of fhe Estole ol to vistt Mr. and Mrs. Mont
Aobfrf L. Jocobs. deceosed , QuiUen.
ltft. of Pomeroy , Melg•
Mr and M
Herb 1
county, Ohio.
.
rs.
er
Creditors oro rtCiuirtd to Miller spent a few days with
tilt 'lhtlr (!tim I with sold thel d hie Mr nd Mr
llduc ory "'""'~ threo months
r aug r,
·a
s.
D''-d·f~lsl.lftll day of June David Uadley and children at
1976
•
, Onclnna~. 0.
, Menning o Wf b51er
Mrs. Gladys Shields spent
~udga two weeks with Mr ,, Gene
·
171 7, 11, )1, 31c .'
'
Hagen and rhllrlren al L~trg• l ,

.

~_Sales

Now at sor~re term •nol rn the
All Yard Sa l es , Rummage ,
sky.
Por ch and Basemen t Porch
Reserved for Old Rt:~ ils when they
and Basemen t Sales , et c .
CASH pa id for oil makes and
must be pa id tn advance .
die ,
models ol mobile homes
They got her around ond often try, • Get .yours in ea rl y by
Phone oreo code 614 ·413.q531
stoppmg
by
our
offi
ce
at
To tell to ll ta les· they never dre
SSCoshSSS l or junked auto. F rye ·~
Sad ly mrssed by daughter , Neva, Th e Dai ty S et"~t l net. 111
Court St or wr it in g Box
Truck Auto Ports. Rutland .
g ro ndchddn~n and great grond ·
729, Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
PhQne 7.42 -2081 .
children . Also, m memory of w ith your remitta nce .
my brother . Donald R. Manley ' - - --------...J , CQINS . token s. ony form gold or
wh o passed away Marth 17.
sliver 1ewelr~ spoons , ri ngs ,
1973
dental Will !rode Call Roger
Wams ley , Rutland . Oh1o , 742 ·
RACIN E F1re Deportmenl w ill
2331
have a gun shoo t Sol vrdoy ol
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro
6:30 p.m. at th ei r new buildmg
duc ts. Top price for stondmg
off Boskon Rood .
sawhmber. Call KenT Hanby ,
Will core for elderly women rn
1 44b-8570.
my home trained and e11 ·
PLAVER p1 cno. need not be in
By Mrs. HerbertRousb
penenced Phone 992·7314
work ing con dition Coli 742·
The youth of the Racine JOE 'S Corry Out , 56A Locust , Mrd2143 .
M th di 1 Ch
h ld
dleporl. Ohio . New hours ,
e 0 s
arge e
a
WANTED to buy used piano in
'il :OO td1 11 ·00. Friday and Sotur·
Blke -a-t hon Saturday
good condition . Baldwin or
dey ,- 9 00 till 12·00 Phone
sponsored by different in·
ot he r compor oble brand .
'jq2-3152
Phon~ 949-2425.
dividualslnthecommunity to
Ouroc mole hog for
raise money so they could go REGISTERED
service Coil ot Lew1s Smiths .
to Youth Camp tllis sununer.
Rt 143 and Rt 7. Phone 992·

Hill,

"

5
P M
Ot~y
Befor e
Publlca11on
Cance l lat ions ,
cor rec
nons accepte&lt;l flrsr dav o f
publ ication .

J

$157.50 per month
. d f' 'te
"
'th be
Clerk of Board of Public m e !nl vaca.on WI
r
Affairs, 129.00 per mfi?I!'J .. {'!"other, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and
E. MISCELLANEOUS EM · other relatives. Her husband,
Dale Hill, will be coming this
P~OYEES Secretar'y to
Mayor
week to spend the sununer
Less than 6' months service,
with relatives.
S2SO.OO per monrh
After 6 month! service,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
S262 SO per month
spent
Sunday with Mr . and
Sec11on 2 : That Ordinance
No . 379, dated February 6, Mrs. D. G. Thomas and
1969, Ordinance No . 40l , ctated
June t, 1970, Ordinance No. Henry at Lanham, W. Va .
Enjoying a picnic at Port.
407 , dated November l, 1970,
Ordioance No All, dft1ed May land Park Sunday were Mrs.
15, 1972, Ordinance No. 440,
dated August 20, 1973, or . Alice Balser 1 Mr. and Mrs.
dinance No . o45l. dllted Julv L Lawrence Balser and Roger,
1974 , Ordinance No . 4.5•, dated
November 1B, 1974 and Or . Tuppers Plains, Ronnie
o4S6, dated Ables, Canal Winchester,
d lnance No .
February 3, 1975 and all other Mrs. Shirley Ahles, Mr. and
Ordinances In conflict with the
provisions of this Ordinance Mrs. Keith Miller and Paul
· shall be and are hereby Ables.
repealed . ..
Mr. and Mrs. Everette .
Section 3· Tha t this Or
dlnance shatl take effect and Parsons, daughters, Ruth,
be In tor'ce lrom and after the
earlldt perlod•altowed by law . Kay, Karen and Cathy, of
Negley, 0., are spending a
PASSED
:
6·1.76
·
wee k' svacationa t thetrfann
AJTEST : Rolph H. Werry
,;

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES ·•

Th~

Then outomahc couplers qnd air
brak es come in

'

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifi'et4)
Auto Sales
Business
Services
Pomeroy

F• orn the days ol hood brakes
Qnd the cou pliijg p rn ,

mo.oo per month
· P·a trolmen
Less lhan three monthS
service , 1446 oo per mon th
After t hr ee mon t hs ser\1 1ce,
5488.00 per mon lh
Meterman
Thirty-one children rode a
Less 1than thr ee m onth s blk be · ·
t th 1 1
service, S420 oo per monlh
~
gmmng a
e oca .
Afler three monlhs serv ice, Methodist . Church into
sm.. oo per month , ' .,.
', Middleport. Bi"eakfast was
Drspatcher
. f&lt; ,.. .
•
d b · th
U .
Less than lhree monlhs se, ve
y
e
mted
service . 1394.00 per ,monlh
Methodist Women of the local
After three months •ervlce, church at' . the Letart Co
U20 00 per month
m. Exira
Patrolman
or munity Hall.
Metermon, S2 30 per hour
J
Extra Disp atcher s2 30 oer
oey Hile of Rogers, 0 .,
hour •' ,
' : · oil, Spent the weeke11d at the
C. WATER AND" SEWEM·' oome ofMr and Mrs 'Dallas
DEPARTMENT
•
•
"
.
Woler
a nd
Sewer' Hill and attended the Hill
Distr ibution Syslem
Reunion at Portland Park .
ho~~perlnlefldent , 13.70 per Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bigelow
Asslslon l Paln1 Super ln and children of New
lendent. 13.15 per hour
Waterford 0' camped at the
Utility
Tra1nee
and
• ••
Operator in training
',
t)ome of Mr . and Mrs. Don
Leu lhon 3 months wv;ce , Richard Hill. And also at·
\$2:\JO per hour
te d d th H'll
.
Three to Nine months · n e
e 1 reuruon
.
service. 1~. 50 per .hOur
Mr. and Mrs. DaUas Hill
Nine to Twel v e mo n t hs
·
'
service, 12 60 per hour
'
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Dale
. After

"---"'

l'

I '

'

�,·
•I

Ortl inanu No. ~13

AN ORO I!'IANCE TO 'AMENO
ORDIN ANCE NO . 379. OR
DINAN CE NO . 401 , OR
DINAN CE NO . &lt;07 , 'OR
DINAN CE NO . &lt;31. OR
DINAN CE NO . 440. OR
DINAN CE ' NO . 45). OR
DINAN CE NO . 45 4 , AND
ORD INANCE NO 416 , TO
FIX SALARIE S AND WAGE S
OF TH E VIL~AGE OF
POMERO Y, OHIO .
BE IT OROAINEO , as
fol l ows by the Counc il of the
V illag e of Pomeroy , Ohio , two
th i rds or all members el ected
ther eto concurring . t hat
Ord i nan ce No . 379 , dated
February 6. 1969 , Ordmance
No . 401. dated J une L 1970,
Ordinan ce No . 407, dated
November I ; \970 , Ordinance
No . •31 , d~ted May 15, 1972,
Ordinance No . 440 , dated
Augus t 20 , 1973 , Ordinan ce No.
451 , dated July 1, 1974 , Or
d l nan c e No ,
454 , daled
November 18 , 1974 and Or
dman c~
No . .456 , dated
February 3, 1975 ° Is hereby
amended to the exten d that
Section 1, Paragraph A and
Section 1, Paragraph 8 ,
Paragraph C, Pa ragra ph o .
Paragraph
E
are
&amp;J1 d
changed as follows ·
' Section 1. That !h e follow i ng
scale of sa la ries and wages tor
emplc !es of the Vi l lage of
Pomeroy , Ohio . iS he r eby
adopted ;
A . ST R EET
DEPART ·

MENT AND CE METERY
DEPARTMENT :

Str ee t Su per\l lsor
On e to Thre e Months ser
vi ce, S525 00 per m onth
Three to Six Months service .
SS78 .00 per mon th
Si x to Nine Mon l.hs Service ,
$630 .00 pet month
N i ne t o Tw e l ve Mo nth s
se r vi c e, S656 00 per month
Street
and,
Cemetery
Maintenance
Assista nt Su pervisor
One I a Six Months service ,
$2_.0 per hou r
Six to Twel \le Mon ths ser
vice , S2 78 per hour
Laborers
L eu th an t hree month s
serv ice , S2 .JO per holJr
Th ree to ' N i ne Months
Service , S2.40 per hour
N 1ne to Tw e l ve Month s
ser\l lce, S2 ..52 per holJr

B. POL ICE ·DEPART ·
MENT ·
Chief of Police
Less lhan lhree month s

servic e, S4BB .OO per month
After t hr ee mon t hs service ,
S536.00 p er mon th

Coptoln
Les5 than t hr ee months
service·· 1462 .00 per monlh

After" t hree mon t hs serv1ce ,

-

lnMemOIJ
OlD R~ILS
Old rollrood rnen r1over reall y
die ,
The n:~· s a railroad rerminol in the

sky

••

Where thtty cor,g regn te and the

cin dctS IIy :

"

They ore a speCial br eed· thofs

tha

r eo~on why

twe l ve

months ' se:r

vrce , S2.i5 per hour
D. LABORER
'"
_
Off ice Clerk Bookkeeper,
S450.50 per month
Assistant . Off ice -Clerk
Bo~:s~ef~:~ 6 montM service,
ms.oo per month

•

After

6

months

service .

No ·hm •t to hours as there ~ h ould
have been ,
Until 1 ~ Sbo:teon hour low drd
win

A pret ty rough
dangerous too ,

l1 l e

and

Then some dreomed of sol et)l
lows c ome thr ough .

They dldr;'t work m hurd os they
used to do
And they liYed to pe r )~ion age·
tha t's true
Th ey wer e he" men workmg
nightond qoy,
Pleand co tfee ondlittlepoy
They hod to be rough to llve thot
way ,
Lrttle time to sleep or hit the hoy .
They were happiest when on
the go,
It mode no di fference rain or
snow ,
A hu ndred degrees above or ten
below , ,
When the coll ·boy came they hod
togo

l

Pres . of Council

"'

REGU~ATIONS

PubliSher reserves . ·
the r ight tc f' d lt or reject
any ads deemed ob
1ectlona t The publ i sher
wi ll not be r espo nsibl e for
more than on e incorrect
Insert Ion .
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 c ents per word cne
insertion
Minlmu.m Charljje SI.PO.
14 cen ts per word three
consecutl\le Inser t io ns .
26 (:ents per- word slw
consecu t ive insertions .
25 Per Cen t Oi scount on
pltld ads and ads paLCf
w ithin 10 days .

CARD OF

T HAN~S

&amp; OBITUARY
Sl .OO f or
80
word
minimum .
Each add itional word 3
cent s.

1974FORD F-100
sms
8' Slyleslde, green lin lsh, good tires, R bumper,
1973 CHEVROLET C-10
52895
8' Fiee tside. white over red , clean lnleilor, 350 V-8,
automati c, power:- steering a nd brake s, good tire s, step
bumper. radio , c_us1om trim and m irrors .

Phone 949-2814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

1971 GMC 4500 SERIES

99~ - 7320 evenings

Helen Simpson

attended funeral services for
•
their aunt, Mrs. Mae ·White
who was 89 years ~ld at the
Cullod@n Baptist Church,

Culloden, W. Va . •Thursday .
Mrs. Dale Hill of Moore

Haven, Fla., is spending an

on Tanners 'Run. Mr. and

$31195

14' Midwest gr ain and ca tl le ra ck body, 350, v .a eng ine,
power steering and brakes . O'lly 8,900 miles Clean ,
like new
•

Wanted to Buy

WILL DO odd ta bs roo fing pain·
l ing , hau ling . treework , and
mowing . Phone 992-7.&amp;09

llel)tWanted.
'

HO USEWIVES , open the door to
extro earnings . Join the sue·
cessful women whc ore mok-

.!1;,~o.od ~~ney ~: ~h:;r1 ;~o::

necessary. no delivery , no col·
lecting , no cask mvestment
Coli now and get extra early
' benefits . Phone 9A9·2803 or
9•q·2786. Also . book tng parties .
$25 .00 per Hundred stuff m.9
Enve lo pe s .
Send
self .
addres sed .
stamped
en\lelope: Edroy Mails . Sox
188 , VW, Al.bony .•Mo . b4402
WANTED; foj(T dnvers , good
dnvers' record required . Call
99'2 ·6010 or ipquire at b6 Mill
~~ r~e t , Middleport , Ohio.

GRILL cook for day shift Apply in
person. (row's Steak House,
Pomeroy , Ohio
$200 weekly stufftng envelppes
1nto already stomped and addressed envelopes . Stuffing
material provided free. send :
Se lf -addressed stomp ed
envelope : Olv&amp;rs!lled , Dept.
A .A . 1206 Cam den Or . Rid\·
mond , Virginia 23229.

.'

Opportun1ly l ot student , 14 to 17
yrs . old . Work opproxihiotely
1o41 hours , 2 days per week . year
around work . Apply Donnelli's
Pizzo , Middleport , Ohio ,
Experienced janitor wonted tor
service dept . Pomeroy Motor

Co.

1970 Camero Rall y Sport in ex ·
ce llent -:ondition . Ph one ~2 ·

•

For Rent
FURNISHED . 2 bedrm . apar tmen t,
adults only , In Midel leport .
Phone 992· 3874.
3 AND 4 ftM'~ ·furnished and unfu rnished opts. .Pho?e 992·
S-434, ..
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt.
33. ten miles nort h of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots with concret poflos ,
s•dewolks , runners and oft
street parking. Phon e 992) 479.
ONE . bedroom apartments at
VILLAGE M,A.NOR in M1ddleport
for S104 rrton thly .plus. &amp;l ee. or
$,130 Including electric . lOWER

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
Convenient to shopping on
lhlfd ond Mtll Streets in M1d·
dleport . Brand new high quali·
ly opartmenl s. See the
manoger at Rivers ide Apart ments of ccoll 992-3273 . Furnished
apa rtments
al so
avoiloble.
TRAILER space fo r ren t in Middleport . Phone 992-5434 .
3 room furn ished apar t.men t.
utilities poid. Inquire ot 356
North Fourth , Middlepdrt .
Ohio

2 bedroom house, central 01r .
n1ce yard . Phone 992-2832,
3 BEDROOM hoJse wtlh bt~lh in
Rutland . Phone992 ·5858.

19H 24 ft . motorhome. excellent
condition w ith absolu tely
evervthin g. Phone 9o4J9 .2770.

AL TROMM CONST
Rutland
742-2328
All Work Guoronteed

1968 Chevelie 2 d.r . hardtop . V-8,
nutom atic , $4 50 . Phone (614 )

Free Estimales

s.a1 mo.

. 985 -3596.
1974 Chevy Prckup , 6 cylinder ,
standa rd . perfect cond 1tion .
18,000 m1les. long wide bed
with delu xe topper $2900 Coil

'jq2.532&lt;.
1968 Rambler 6 cylinder , standard !.hlfl , good cond1 tion
$300. Phone 99'2-5301 or 992-

3682 .
IQ68 Chevelle Mol1bu . ou tomat1c.

Phoce 1(614)667·3653
1974 Comoro LT Phone.(bl4) 965 ·

4274.
1972 Grand Torino , p.s . p b . o ir.
Phone 949· 22 16

1101111
WINDOWS &amp; 11001$
IWAC!M!NI
WIIIIIOWS
!lUMINUM

'h.HUtt3

•1.00+ Tu
With •ny S4.00 purchase
and this ad. Good through
6-30-76.

DONELli'S ·PIZZA
Middleport, Ohio

992-6167
6-1·76·1 monlh

'h gal. Ice Cream .

EXPERIENCED

FREE,
With Every Cubic Foot of
Fr~ter

Space YoU

Buy.
EXAMPLE :
20 cu. It. 10 gal.l.ce Crum
.POMEROY lANDMARK
·~-Jack 'fl. Carsey, i&gt;'lgr.
...
Phone992-2181
COAL. limestone, ond colc 1um
chloride ond calcium bnne for
dus-t con trol and spec1ol mix1ng
i OII for fo rmers Ma in Street ,
Pomeroy , Oh1o or phone 992·

3891

23 chann el CB fits m
am·fm ·mpx i bdio,
stereo . Coli 'iJq2-J965.

a

dash,
track

CANNING peaches. now ready
th(U Aug ust . Several varieties.
by the bushel , *1, bushel or
peck. Please bring own con ·
tamer. 2 conven~ nl localrons .
M1dwoy Market, Pomeroy ,
992·2582: Bob's Market~ Mason

773-572L

lq61 Co,;odore boat , 17 It, 40
h.p. Johnson Sea horse motor
Good cond1tion . Call 949·2234
after S p.m
BEANS and potatoes , pick . your
own . Call843 ?353 after 7 p m .

cab. cook &amp; bake unit , 2 ca r
garage . Storm s, PQrches .

About .33 acre. ASK ING
$12,000.
RACINE - 1 story, 6 room
frame , J BR : bath ,
carpeling. N.G.. F.A.
furna ce · Porches , stora ge

bldg . ~ol SOx 177, lovely
garden space . 57,900.
POMEROY - 2 story
lrame WALK TO SHOP. 5
BR .,

H1

baths ,

n ice

ki tchen. full basement · W·
shower, storms . Coal or
N.G heal. $8.500.

WHY PAY RENT WHEN
YOU CAN BUY THE
A80VE
AT
THESE
PRI CES? BUY NOW AND
PA Y THE RENT TO
YOURSELF.
TUPPERS PlAINS BRAND NEW Ultra
modern J BR home,
ceramic tile bath !colored
fixtures ), utility R., lovely
kitchen . Large garage and

workshop .. 92 acre. $22.900 .
Where the a ir is clean and
livi ng Is easy.

SECURITY FOR
TOMORROW.
992-2259 or 992-2568

4

NORTil

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,_,

,h. 192-2174

• Q9S
WEST .

.,''

• 10 8 6 3

'

'

REMODEI!ING . Plumbing heating 1
ond all types of general repo 1r .
Work guaranteed 20 yeors experience. Phone 992-2409.
-

.-.,-

---

SEWING MAO-liNE Repair s. service, olt makes , 4Xl2-2284. The
Fa br1c Shop .
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We,shorpen Scissors
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
backhoe work , dUmp trucks
and lo boys for hire: will haul
fill dirt , top so1l , limestone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fers , day phone 992 ·7089.
ntgh t phone 992-3525 or 992-

5232.

'

'
••
•'

,. !&gt;!:

' ~ (·

"••'
'

I·

RIDERS SALVAGE
SL Rll14

Ul-.

-

~

--

2428.

I•

"' ''\

SOFA , brown tweed . Early
American alm os t new . Phone
(61o41)667 -3741.
TQMATO£S . Cleland Forms ond
Gre enho uses .
Gerald me
Cleland. Racine Ohio .

·

~9"1-2571

oc 991 -3975.

3 bedroom , new f urnace, window
air condtt ioni ng, aluminum
s1drng . neW corpel mg, loca ted
67b South Fou1th, Middleport.
Cumoct Fred lewis . SB46tsland
Dri ve .. Cleves , Oh1o. 45002 or

coll(513) 353-1990oltec5p.rn .

23 Cho!'Wlel C. B. Bose rodio. com· ~ 5 ·
·
plete · w1th ante 11 na. $200.
ROOM hou!.c , w1th both qr'ld
f'hune 992·5616.
lou nd• V room , moderrl lc,1 tchen ,
I I ur 1es with bm 11 om.J rnilk
lAPPAN Go!) cook stove , ovocad(r
lr o u ~e ltlcatcd at Mmcr sville
~HH.' !I o.xrollen t w ndlf1011 $75 .
Ol11o I&lt;IJIII •t: th W tlt ph r&gt;ne
PhntH•l 4 ~ 3 1 ~7
'Nf .J t06

Asking 120.000.
3 YEARS OlD - 3
bedroom modern home·
with 2 ceramic file b;Jihs.
Elec . baseboard heat,
wOod -burning
fireploce .
Full •basement. nice
kitchen and fam ily room .
534,000.
AVOID THE HEADACHES
OF , SELLING. LIST IT
WITH US AND lET THE
E)(,PERTS DO THE. JOB .

'

j

Pass

two .finesses.''
You shouldn 't try to see
your opponents ' cards, but
• some players hold their hands
so sloppUy that yoo can't help
seeing them . Once you have
seen them you can refuse losing finesses and just take win·
ning ones.

North glared at South and
said, " If there were such a
thing as a license to bid
notrump, I would try to. have
yours revoked."
" What could I have
done," replied South. " I could
not help losing the spade
finesse."
"No one was holding a gun
to your head and ordering you ·
to take it." continued North.
. "We were sure of game and
rubber, if yoo rose with the ace
and went after just nine l
tricks."
.' ' \C
The spade finesse had lost.

(Do you have a question
tor the e&gt;perts? Write "Ask
fhe Jacobys " care of this
newspaper The Ja cobys will
answer tndividual questions
if stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are encfo~ ed. T~e
most interesting ques'tio'ns
will bo •used in th1s column
and will receive copies of

JACOBY MOOEfiN.)

2180.
' "\
*-·-~--•
EXCAVATING. BACKHOES ANo·· '
OO~ER - .LARGE AND SMALl.~
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED, LOW · ~
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. Bill . :l
PULLINS. PHONE 992·2478 DAY.~{•
OR
NIGHT. .
"""
- - - - - · - - _ _ _ __: ... w

Yesterday's A111wer

BUILDI,NG , remodeling , cind\ ·~:
rep01rs. Quality work, efficient 1 1\
service. Jesse Rodman, phone 11•

Z1 BoUvifln
export
%3 ~gle

~- -·--·-·- II. ~ ~

SAVE ON·
CARPETING

33 Poker tenn
34 Sacted

iJnaCe

31 Conlumer
f1 - blockade

Beautiful colors. Do 11
yourself •nd save. Regular
sus ·sq . yd. •.

Sale $4"Sq. Yd.

1 : ~News

13.

(eluded)
(2

wdlf.)

31 Scrutinized

~ 1·

501·NYLON

'

•

·:..~

·4;

J?o II yourself, ' with
padding, $7.95 sq. yd .
Witll padding ln•tolled
S8.9Ssquore yard
,
CAll 742·2211
r • •1 •
TAll( TO
.
" 'I
WENDEll
GRATE
~
1 CA.RPET CONSULTANT

, "Where were you on the nleht of
Ile&lt;:ember 24th7"

conunent
(2

RUTLAND

"'.,

drunk
t3 HawaU's
stale bird
44 It fits the

..

LBfPE

mortise

-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

_,
_,
I

YOU'RE NOT" GOING TO
FIND OUT UN"TlL MY
PIECE APPEARS IN

'~ ··

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" I,.

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'

Is

FAIJlJLOVS/'EM!

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UBUnd

L.;7.;.;4·~.2;~;.;.;1 R N_•_r_u.::~;;;t:;;nd~~l

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

SIPOU

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. elc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formahon of the 11nrds are all
hints. Each,day the code letlers are different

#\
I

CRVPTOQUOTES

r \

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.., !I ,
I \J/ \
"

CGY

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UVG

ZESJW

FSB

BY U E·

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ASXD

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ENCG

VG C X F Y A

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•

'IE CAN GO
IN NOW

HANDS ON
.THt WAL.L .!!

for Service call at

XFY

GCZJYGYBB

N Y A B C G. -

CR

H S J J V

~~~;:-r~~ri::-::IJ

Lewis Smith's, Rt. 143

I::·: :1~K;-:1~1.-:...L.I_,1

!

"&amp; Rt. 7

'

FO"L.OWINe I'Y HAL.F.

......,..the.,,..,.. 1ttten

I~-===1===1==-~=l==~t~J~~~~~~Mm~~~J~~~
TARIPE

I

~~~~---

I

f

Now

..

l I I XJ-"

(.u.wert .._.....)

UVXF YA
•
Jumblet&gt; MEROE SPURN UPROAR KIDNAP
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : HAPPINEss IS BENEFICIAL FOR y.,.., ....,.,
· .
THE BODY BUT IT IS GRIEF THAT DEVEWPS THE
An,• .,, 11'11 -t&lt;llobehol, hiii'IM•ollM
. POWERS OF THE MIND. - MARCE'-' !'ROUST
•er.llfd col&lt;f aflh• faW.- PEPPER

.

'

••

li

ScHoot.
HouSE

LAIGS!!

'I •'

7· 7

If ·

THEM

••

··

GRAITEj

SPREAD
•

992-3183

• 1:oo-Tomorrow 3,,..

-·-

'

Green , gold, red, blue, rust

I

· 9:oo-MQvle "Goodbye Again" 3,4,15; StrHts'ot San
Francisco 6, 13; Hawaii Ftve-0 8; Olv,mplad XI;
M!&gt;vle "Under the Yum Yum Tree" 10.
10:01)-Harry 0 6,1J; Bar.naby Jones 8; News 20; Bill
Moyers' Journal ~3 .
·
11 ; 110-News 3,4,6.8, 10. 13, 15; ABC News 33.
1] :1s11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6,13; Movie
· "'w'i'Itlard" 8; Movie "T~e Sf~~~ qf San Francisco"
10;" ~anakl 33 .
'"
12:~Maglclan 6,13.

- ,..

12 or 15 Ft.

\

6:DO-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Patterns for Living 13.
6:»-Cotumbus Today 4; News '6; Summer Semelltr
8; Urban 'League 10.
6:AS-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West 1/lrgtnla 13.
6:5S-Chuck White Reports 10; Good ~nlng, Trl
Stale 13.
7:oo-Today 3,A,15: Good Morning. America 6,13; ·cas
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30--Schooltes 10.
8:0C1-Lossle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame St. 33.
8:30--Big Volley 6.
9:0C1-A.M. 3; Phil Donohue ol,15; Lucy Show I ; Mllw
Douglas 10; Morning wlfh D.J . 13.
9:»-Cross-WIIs 3: One life to .Live 6; TafflttiiH 1:
Mike Douglas 13.
10:0C1-Sanlord &amp; Son 3.~. 15: Edge of Nigh! 6; Prlc. Is
Right 8, 10.
10:JD-Celebrlly Sweepslak,s 3,4,15; Dinah 6: Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 3J.
n :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambit
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :JD-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life B, 10.
11 :ss-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel 's World 10.
12 :0C1-Fun Factory 3,15: Lei's Make a Deal 13; Bob
Braun 4; News 6,8,10; Sesame St. 33.
12:3D-Gong Show. 3, 15; All My Chlldr&lt;HJ 6, 13; SHrch
lor tomorrow a. 10.
12 :5s-NBC News 3, 15.
1:0C1-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Don.ohtMI; Not
for Women Only 15; Elec. Co. 33.
1:30-Days of Our Llves3,4.15; Rhyme&amp; Rnson 6,13;
As The World Turns 8, 10; Tourlsfl Are Coming 33.
2:()0-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Burglar-Proofing 33.
2:30-0octors 3,~.15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
light 8,10; Car Care 33.
3\0C1-Another World 3,4,1$; G-ral Hospllal6,13; All
In The Family 8,10; Antiques 20; Disco- Flying
33.
3: 30-QneLIIetoLive 13; MlckeyMouseCiub6; ~ch
Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Weether33.
4:110-Misler Cartoon 3; MefV Griffin 4; Somtnef15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; M111tr Rogers
20,33; Movk! "My Foolish Heart" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlffltll 8;
Sesame St. 20.33; Fllnlstones 15.
· S:OC1-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family I; MissiOn : lm·
possible 15.
5:30-Adam.12 4,13; News~ ~ Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. ·20,33.
,
6:0C1-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ,ABC News 61 Zoom 20,33. ·
6:30-NBC News 3,~.15; ABC News 13; A~dy Grlfflfh 6;
·' CBS News 8,10; Lilias, Yoga &amp;'You ·33.
7:0C1-Trluth or Cons.J ; To Tell !he Truth 4; BoWling IW
Dollars6; LawrenceWelkS; News 10; 1,.ol's Make a
Deal13; Family Affair 15; Ourslory 20; Family •
War 33.
7:30-Hollyviood Squares l3,4; Ohio Stale Lottery 6;
.,; Wlld 1!(1ngcl0m 10; To T~lthe Trufh 14; Music City
. · 15;. Robert MacNeil R1P9rt 20.
B:OC1-Secrels of the African Baobab 3.,4, 15; Wel&lt;lOmll
Back, Kotter 6. 13; Waltons B, 10; Upstalrt,
Downstairs 33; Movie "Sanluro" 20.
8:J9-Barney Miller 6, 13.

3i P\ttsburgb 411 Pitch ..:.
of the Rilbr hitter (2 wds.)

Candy Stripe

__

32 Trial nm

tbe ball
%4 Poem
2$ Troops
'!I Evening,
in !lalla
Zl J'p

~

rr .

'I
I

l
I

•

(

I

~--------------~--------------------J __;

'
('

3 NT. Pass

Pass
Opening lead - 2 "'

~'1.

---ceiling,

,

Pass

•

A Cani!_dian reader wants to
know· the meaning "of the ex·
pression "One peek is worth

by THOMAS' JOSEPH_

r---------~~--------~ ~~~
~J

do 100. Phoce (614)367 0424 .

Soulh
1 N.T.

EX PERIENCED house painter. ' '.
P~one Arthur Musser , 7~:l;;,..~·

WILL do roofing , construction
plumbin g on,d healing . No job
too lOrge or too small. Phone

742·2348.

North Eut

- ~;,

--·-

"'\'

Welt

ti~,a• ~ •a/.

~

I
'I

GREG 'S CB SALES , located ot Er
win 's Gulf Serv ice, Mid·
. dleport , Ohio. Phone 992-

-

"'
'

Phone 9!2·5468

EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe ·
and dilcher. Charles R. Hotf ield . Back Hoe Service
Ru_t land, Ohio . Ph~ne_7o412·2~~

SEPTIC TANKS cleoned . Modern
Sanitation 992.3954 or 992·

....J

Pomtray, Dllil

992-5960.

SEPTIC Sys tems installed by
licensed installer
Shepard
Contractors . Phone 742-2409,

WI!U., l'lL
ItT IT'S
EHTEIIEP
IIER M1NO~

"·

Junk Batteries $1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Ptf Hundftd
Copper 35t
' Car Bodin
Scrap-Iron
'

~~~~

vulnerable

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

t:

-

-- --

-

7-7

't
&amp;

(614)698·7257 Albocy.

2438 .

~

Need new roof or old·~
roof-:.
. repaired? House
barn , shin;les, b~Ud u
Pltntfng, electrical wore' .I
gutters &amp; downspout '
furnaces, water heater:·
wate,r softners, installed ~
repa•red, Sewage.
,
. Call us at 94P-2112'
~(
or 9o419· 220J
,.'
3·28 . Jmo .

D&amp;D T~EE Tr im~ing , 20 years expe rien CE!. Ins u red free
est imates . Coli 992-2384 or
-

North~ South

•I

'! '

6·1·1 mo .

~

t K J 53
•AK J

1

Racine,

6.95

-

¥A2

~----------------_J 1

Racine Plumbing ~
&amp; Heating r~
Ohio
::

1
Squ.-e Yord Installed
David Parsons, Owner
949-2814

.

.• 10642
SOUTH (O J

~~~ ~mo.

.

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'

¥ 10 14
tAl

'

J

PIIDII!tt1·!7Z4

Racine, Ohio

EAST
•K &gt;I
¥ K QJ 8 3
t 94
. 873

•J 972

IIW.,port

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

East had shifted to a heart
and South had come up two
tricks short. Of course, if the
spade fine~se had sqcceeded
South would have made four
notrump, nbt just three.
A match-point play~r might
well have considered that
spade finesse . Even at that
game he would have noted
that he had been lucky to get a
spade lead , not a heart , and
gone up with the ace of spades
to insure his contract.

7

• 96~
• Q 10 8 6 2

~SrtMKit,

THURSDAY, JULY I, 1976

Take advantage
of lead
.
. ... Q

D. Bumgardner

9:»-Chtco &amp; the Man 3.
10:0C1-Hawk ~.15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 13; Blue Knight
8, 10; News 20.
10:30--NFL Action '76 ol; AlmaMC 20.
11 :00-News 3,A,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
.
11 :30--Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Movie "The' GrHt Ice
Rip-Off" 6, 13; Movie "The Singing Nun" I ; Movie
" The Joker Is Wild" JO.
12 :011-ABC News 33,
12 ::JO.:o-Janakl 33.
1:0C1-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE

All pool . , . . . . .IJio. .... I'

Registered Duroc Male Hog

MP!llorial Hospilfll

MI 5TAKE

•'·

SERVICE FOR SALE

Jean Ashley employed at
Kaiser Aluminun Plant at
RavellJWOOd, spent two
weeks with her father . Ralph
Ashley.
Mrs. Vivian Phelps Is a
medical patient at Veterans

litH

TA LKI&gt;JG~

AMi ............"',.., 1111 ,.

Real Estate®r Sale

--

Fla.

GREAT 5COTT...

I DID MAt&lt;E A

log for easy viewi~g

WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1976
5:0C1-Bonar1Za l ; Partridge Family ,8; Mission : lm·
possible 15.
5:30--Adom-12 4; , 13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec,
Co. 20.33.
6:0C1-News 3,4.1,10,13,15; What Will We Soy To A.
Hungry Worldl 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30--NBC Newl3.~.15; ABC News 13: CBS NeW$ 8, 10;
, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; VIlla Alegre 33.
7:0C1-Trufh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth A; Popl Goes
the Country 8; News 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Wild
Kingdom 1S: Book Beat 20; Tourists are Coming 33.
7:30--Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Bastball
15: $25,000 Pyramid I; The Judge 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Robert MacNeil Report 20; Book Btal 33
8:0C1-Liftle House on the Prairie 3; Bionic Woman 13;
Baseball 4; Jacksons 8,10: State Dinner for Queen
Ell1abelh II 33; Nova 20.
'8:30--Kelly MontOlth 8.10.
9:bo-Gien Campbell 3; Baretta 13; Cannon 8,10;
Olympiad 20.

11M •lt·JtMOII-

M'OtillrHOtnesJotsi{
~-- ·--·

-

.

.,

SWIMMING
POOLS

3825.

RUTLANO - 1'•&gt; story, 7
room lrame, 4 jlR, bath,
nrce kitchen about 25 ft.

L ATe ,...

SOPEitSE~ ITIV!;
E~t;MV !U£&gt;5,

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

Sweepers , toasters , irons . all
srnall appliances . lowh mower ,
next to Stole Highwov Goroge
' on Route 7 Phpne (614) 985·

FREE ICE CREAM

'
1.\EANWHilfi
.. , THAT Cl'i:YPTANAL~H
FOR 5 .U.&amp;.·IijTElLII;E&gt;J C6 15 1'/0RK-

, ,

Wt Dlliwtr

---ElWOOD ..BOWERS REP ... IR -

·

M655A6ES

l5AVVY... TO
AVOID Bel'lrS
HEARD BY ANY

L---------~6~-~~~7~6~1~m~o.-J·· '~

BRADFORD. Aust1oneer. Co,.. ·
plete Service. Phone 9-49 ~487
or 949·2000. Racine , Ohto . Critt
Bradford

1'il73 450 Prototype Kowosok1
motorcross , good condition

W~ITE

f'&gt;A CJ&lt; A&gt;JD FORTH··

~

'~ IU4!741·140t

..

loCUST posts, round or split .
Phone 949·2774 .

MSN T. ROSIE,CAIIJ
l"l5TI!AD OF

lollatr4, Oltlo 4517!

4-10·1 mo.

SO YOU AND OUR.

..

Truss Rafter Co.
.. zu

CARPENTER . flooring ,
LOCUST posts for sole , cut your
paneling. Phone 992-2-759.
HOUSE , n1ce lot tn l etart. Also,
own
cheop
Phone
992·2b46.
INTERNATIONAL Mo'del 6A com fur nish'ed and 4 tons of coot Wil l trim or. cut trees and shrub·
brne. excel lent condil ton. lots
bery , phone 949-2545 or 742Cont act Todd Rhodes . Racine.
of extra ports. Lorge tandem
3167.
Ohio
fertliz er s-preader, good cond1 ·
VERMEER BAlER SALES AND SER·
Coll992-2156.
lion . Tractor belt dnven wood
VICE , Meigs-Athen s County.
sow . 1959 Chevrolet l ton with t-IOMES ITES for sale, 1 acre and , - - - - - - - - - YARD Sale 1 July 5, 6. 7. 8.
Baler
&amp; from $3995 up Merrill
\1-p.
M;ddlepocl
eeoc
Rutlocd
.
TEAfORD
alum . von body and power
clothmg. misc. items . dishes .
Coll992·7481.
Chose. l614)6qB·3021.
toilgote, good condition Phone
55 Ct.~ s ter St ., M iddleport , Ohio .
Virgtl B. Sr .. Realtor
949-2770.
NEW J bedroom house. 2 baths .
110 Mechanic • Pomeroy, 0.
BIG YARD Sole, Riversi de Or .,
oil
elec.
I
acre
,
Middleport
,
TRAILER for rent or sole . 2
Phone 992-337&lt;
·
Chesh1re, Wed,, T~u rs .. Fri. Kit --- ·- close to Rutland Phone 992bedrooms . 2 chi ldren only .
chen utens i ls, furnit ur e,
1974 12x60 2 bedroOm tro1ler ,
7481.
Phone
742-312'2.
liKE NEW - 5 bedrooms,
dishes , 367-7285 .
completely carpeted , half fur ·
APPR.OXIMAt£LY iO ocres all carpeted and electric
nished. Toke ovtr pCiyments.
VARD Sole. Wed ., Thursday cmd
beou tifr building site, on goad
home in good sub-div ision.
Phone (614) 667·3507 oltec 5
Fndoy . 10•1 one·half South Se·
road Chester water , will l ake . Dining room , central air &amp;
p.m.
cond St .
trades and help finonce if
heat , sun deck and 2 car
necessary . Phone 949·2770
~1974 Mo'nte Ct~rlo in good shape,
garage . Bette r see th is
,..fif~Saft~ ~ ~;-:_ ~. ~sl de by side
refrigerator SMALL fo rm for sole , 10% down ,
now . 545.000. '
- .
/
,. freezer ; doub~ e oven elec ,
owner finonco::d. Monroe Coun- . NEW
liSTING
3
· stt~ve ; Notion al check out
ty . W_ Vo Phoce (304) 772·
A .K. C. Registered Vi:ulo puppies
Bedroom
all
elec
home
.
register, Coca·Colo pay cooler ;
3102oc(304) 7]2.3227.
(Hungarian Pom te~). proven
Ca
rport,
2
PQrches,
city
11 room brick home , 3 ba th s
grouse dogs , champton blood
water, and large level lot .
full basement , 1 acre lot John e,OUNTRY farm land wllh seclud·
lines Phone992.S400
ed woods, water pnd good acSheets, · 3 miles &amp;oulti Mid·
Space for garden . .Only
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo .
AKC Reg ister ed Old Engl1sh
dleport , Rt. 7.
112.000.
51 000 dowc , call (3().4) 772·
Sheepdog puppies tor sole . Call
lARGE OlDER HOME 5 room house, 1 acre . h6t and .
3102oc(304)772.3227.
qq2·2395.
Has 5 nice sized bedroom s,
col d water, no both , $9,b00 .
ONE mole neutekJslames; Cot
New J bedroom total elec.. WH '( RENT? Buy a new hom e with
2 baths, lireplaces. lovely
paymen ts some or lower than
housebroken , '$10. Call 949:
1.130 acres , four ·fifth miles
kitchen with lots of
ren t. 3 bt;tdrooms. den, 2 baths,
2574.
from Langsville oft Co Rd . 10,
cu pboards. Natural gas.
carpet
.
plus
.oil
the
e~tras a
$23,800. Call Raymond Hof AKC Registered lrls k Setter male .
F.A. furnace, large front
housewif e would wont . Shown
f&gt;eld
, 742-2819.
6 weeks old . Phone 949·'2'2 16
wrap around porch and 2
by appointment , 742-2326 .
level lots lor only S25.000.
J year old Collie dog. Phone {614 ) 12 Ft . Sears Super Game fisher 3 bedroom hou ~e for sale in Midboot , 9.9 h p Sears and
COUNTRY STORE - All
985-\392().
cUeport . Phone 992 .3578 or
ROebuck motor , trll lrotler .
stock, some fi x tures, and
'jq2.7667
ENGLISH Shepard Pups , for sole .
Phone 9'il2·2121.
real estale: Gaod 'chance to
Phone 94q .2576.
In dash 23 channel CB, cm .fm - THREE bedroom bnck ranch stylt
work for yourself . Only
horne. full basement with
mpx , rodio , 8 track tope
518,000.
1
' finisbed recreation room 1 /,
stereo. Phone 992·3965 . ..
4 BEDROOMS - lovely
botks , carpor t In Bourn Addi ·
1948 Harley Davidson Chopper
older home. Has steam
tion near Sla te Highway
1972 Tog,A·Long Travel Trailer. , motorcycle , needs some work ,
Garage . Prrce reduced. Phone
heat (gas fired!. large
18 h . self-con tained. mirror s,
$750 Phone 992-3259.
(614)•985·3584 fo r appoin tment .
dining , 2 living rooms , l/4
and Rees e 'hitch 1ncluded . Price
basem ent with garage ,
mlrn!iipecllon . Phone9o4q-2739.
2 motorcycles. Ont:r ·1974 YZ J Bedroom , oll ele&lt; . home, five
Yohomo 80, One . 1971 Sl Hon
large attractive yard .
Points , b room house. Phone
IF VOU hove o service to offer .
wont to buy or sell something .
ore looking f or work . . , or
wha tever , , . you-'ll get results
taster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .

.'

Southeastern O~io

lARRZ.~.~~DER

6CANS OF RC

MAKE spring cleomng profitable,
turn unwonted items mto cosh,
Adve rtrse in the Won! Ad s.

Unico

26'- S19.SO
28'- $21 .00

GUO!I~WIIIN~S

JUNESPECUL

For Sale

5650 Phoce 992-31143.

.., For Sate, :Rent or Ttate

Yard Sale

l'n4 Dus ter . Phone 247-2821 .

7()&lt;19

24'- Sli.OO

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

l97A Ford von , E300 series .
owner Phone 99'2·73'20 .

OLD l urn1t ure. ice boxes . brass
bed s.
wall telephones and
port s, or complete households
Wote M . D. Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy . Oh10. Ca119Cf2 .7701J.

4-12Pilch

Blufln into Will I AHies.

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

OFFICE HOURS

3183.

1-lol Alllilaillo

6-17 ·16

Addilional 25c CfHHge
per Advertisemen r.

NOTICES
ATTN .: II
AU HOUSEWIVES

Blown

lnsulltiGI Senices .

SIOING-SOifiO

I

BLIND ADS

8 30 a.m . ·to 5· 00 p .m .
Dei t y, 8: 30 am . to 12 : 00
Noon S~ turdav .
Phone today 992 2156.

GUTTER SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

Continuou s onl!
piece
gutters. We hang it. or do II
yourself. Special prices to
builders.
, -

chrome gr ille . and fron t bumper , 6 c yl. and standard
trans.

Apple Grove
Ne'-ws NoteS

Mrs.

Telev~ion

'

Motor Co.

Notices

APPROVED : . Mrs. Herbert Roush spent
1
Clarence Andrews Sunday afternoon wtth them .
\ '
MAYOR
Chester Van Meter of
Morning Star spent Sunday
17 1 7 14 , 2,.
afternoon with his sister,
NOTIC:E OF APPOINTMENT Mrs. Erma Wilson.
·
' CO$e No. 2115'
Elllle of
FERNE
L. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph (Peck)
8RAD:IfUAY, Deceased.
Brinker of Wheeling, W. Va .,
Notice is hereby qiVen lh•l
Cecil P . eredburv of 272 South caUed on friends Saturday.
A'er;'IUe, ~ i ddleport, Oh io, has
Mr. ' and Mrs. Herbert
bTen dulY. appointed E)leuctor
Roush,
Mrs. Iva Orr were
o the Estate of Ferne L .
!tfadbl,lry , deceased , late of shopping at the Silver Bridge
"'l~rgs. County , Ohio .
Plaza Satur~ay evening.
Creditors are requ ired to
Mr. and \Mrs. Clarence
ti lt their cla ims w ith said
f iduciary within t hr'ee months Roush of Winfield, W. Va.
D•ted this Jrd day of Ju l y
lt76 ,, ••
spent the weekend with Mrs.
~
. '.
TiU Webb and visited Mr. and
• Manning 0 1Webster
.
Judge Mrs. Roy Pearson and called
Court of Common Pleas; on otber relaUves.
'
Probate Oi\f iSion
Debbie Fife of Cheshire
spent a week with her
ell 7, u,' 21, 31'c
gra'n dmother, Mrs. Till
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Webb.
;~ Case No . 21.15•
lstott of Robert L. Jacobs
Mr . and Mrs . George
Decnsed.
. .
McClintock of Pt. Pleasaot
Ro~~fe ~'. h~~·c~bs~,v~~ - ~h~) sP.ent Sunday,. with Mrs.
Pomeroy , Meigs County, Ohio, . Vashti Grimm. Mrs. Grimm
hil teen duly oppolnted
led th
to Bel
Admlnlsfrolor Wilh fht Wilt acco~pan
.em
pre
Annexed of fhe Estole ol to vistt Mr. and Mrs. Mont
Aobfrf L. Jocobs. deceosed , QuiUen.
ltft. of Pomeroy , Melg•
Mr and M
Herb 1
county, Ohio.
.
rs.
er
Creditors oro rtCiuirtd to Miller spent a few days with
tilt 'lhtlr (!tim I with sold thel d hie Mr nd Mr
llduc ory "'""'~ threo months
r aug r,
·a
s.
D''-d·f~lsl.lftll day of June David Uadley and children at
1976
•
, Onclnna~. 0.
, Menning o Wf b51er
Mrs. Gladys Shields spent
~udga two weeks with Mr ,, Gene
·
171 7, 11, )1, 31c .'
'
Hagen and rhllrlren al L~trg• l ,

.

~_Sales

Now at sor~re term •nol rn the
All Yard Sa l es , Rummage ,
sky.
Por ch and Basemen t Porch
Reserved for Old Rt:~ ils when they
and Basemen t Sales , et c .
CASH pa id for oil makes and
must be pa id tn advance .
die ,
models ol mobile homes
They got her around ond often try, • Get .yours in ea rl y by
Phone oreo code 614 ·413.q531
stoppmg
by
our
offi
ce
at
To tell to ll ta les· they never dre
SSCoshSSS l or junked auto. F rye ·~
Sad ly mrssed by daughter , Neva, Th e Dai ty S et"~t l net. 111
Court St or wr it in g Box
Truck Auto Ports. Rutland .
g ro ndchddn~n and great grond ·
729, Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
PhQne 7.42 -2081 .
children . Also, m memory of w ith your remitta nce .
my brother . Donald R. Manley ' - - --------...J , CQINS . token s. ony form gold or
wh o passed away Marth 17.
sliver 1ewelr~ spoons , ri ngs ,
1973
dental Will !rode Call Roger
Wams ley , Rutland . Oh1o , 742 ·
RACIN E F1re Deportmenl w ill
2331
have a gun shoo t Sol vrdoy ol
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro
6:30 p.m. at th ei r new buildmg
duc ts. Top price for stondmg
off Boskon Rood .
sawhmber. Call KenT Hanby ,
Will core for elderly women rn
1 44b-8570.
my home trained and e11 ·
PLAVER p1 cno. need not be in
By Mrs. HerbertRousb
penenced Phone 992·7314
work ing con dition Coli 742·
The youth of the Racine JOE 'S Corry Out , 56A Locust , Mrd2143 .
M th di 1 Ch
h ld
dleporl. Ohio . New hours ,
e 0 s
arge e
a
WANTED to buy used piano in
'il :OO td1 11 ·00. Friday and Sotur·
Blke -a-t hon Saturday
good condition . Baldwin or
dey ,- 9 00 till 12·00 Phone
sponsored by different in·
ot he r compor oble brand .
'jq2-3152
Phon~ 949-2425.
dividualslnthecommunity to
Ouroc mole hog for
raise money so they could go REGISTERED
service Coil ot Lew1s Smiths .
to Youth Camp tllis sununer.
Rt 143 and Rt 7. Phone 992·

Hill,

"

5
P M
Ot~y
Befor e
Publlca11on
Cance l lat ions ,
cor rec
nons accepte&lt;l flrsr dav o f
publ ication .

J

$157.50 per month
. d f' 'te
"
'th be
Clerk of Board of Public m e !nl vaca.on WI
r
Affairs, 129.00 per mfi?I!'J .. {'!"other, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and
E. MISCELLANEOUS EM · other relatives. Her husband,
Dale Hill, will be coming this
P~OYEES Secretar'y to
Mayor
week to spend the sununer
Less than 6' months service,
with relatives.
S2SO.OO per monrh
After 6 month! service,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
S262 SO per month
spent
Sunday with Mr . and
Sec11on 2 : That Ordinance
No . 379, dated February 6, Mrs. D. G. Thomas and
1969, Ordinance No . 40l , ctated
June t, 1970, Ordinance No. Henry at Lanham, W. Va .
Enjoying a picnic at Port.
407 , dated November l, 1970,
Ordioance No All, dft1ed May land Park Sunday were Mrs.
15, 1972, Ordinance No. 440,
dated August 20, 1973, or . Alice Balser 1 Mr. and Mrs.
dinance No . o45l. dllted Julv L Lawrence Balser and Roger,
1974 , Ordinance No . 4.5•, dated
November 1B, 1974 and Or . Tuppers Plains, Ronnie
o4S6, dated Ables, Canal Winchester,
d lnance No .
February 3, 1975 and all other Mrs. Shirley Ahles, Mr. and
Ordinances In conflict with the
provisions of this Ordinance Mrs. Keith Miller and Paul
· shall be and are hereby Ables.
repealed . ..
Mr. and Mrs. Everette .
Section 3· Tha t this Or
dlnance shatl take effect and Parsons, daughters, Ruth,
be In tor'ce lrom and after the
earlldt perlod•altowed by law . Kay, Karen and Cathy, of
Negley, 0., are spending a
PASSED
:
6·1.76
·
wee k' svacationa t thetrfann
AJTEST : Rolph H. Werry
,;

WANT ADS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES ·•

Th~

Then outomahc couplers qnd air
brak es come in

'

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifi'et4)
Auto Sales
Business
Services
Pomeroy

F• orn the days ol hood brakes
Qnd the cou pliijg p rn ,

mo.oo per month
· P·a trolmen
Less lhan three monthS
service , 1446 oo per mon th
After t hr ee mon t hs ser\1 1ce,
5488.00 per mon lh
Meterman
Thirty-one children rode a
Less 1than thr ee m onth s blk be · ·
t th 1 1
service, S420 oo per monlh
~
gmmng a
e oca .
Afler three monlhs serv ice, Methodist . Church into
sm.. oo per month , ' .,.
', Middleport. Bi"eakfast was
Drspatcher
. f&lt; ,.. .
•
d b · th
U .
Less than lhree monlhs se, ve
y
e
mted
service . 1394.00 per ,monlh
Methodist Women of the local
After three months •ervlce, church at' . the Letart Co
U20 00 per month
m. Exira
Patrolman
or munity Hall.
Metermon, S2 30 per hour
J
Extra Disp atcher s2 30 oer
oey Hile of Rogers, 0 .,
hour •' ,
' : · oil, Spent the weeke11d at the
C. WATER AND" SEWEM·' oome ofMr and Mrs 'Dallas
DEPARTMENT
•
•
"
.
Woler
a nd
Sewer' Hill and attended the Hill
Distr ibution Syslem
Reunion at Portland Park .
ho~~perlnlefldent , 13.70 per Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bigelow
Asslslon l Paln1 Super ln and children of New
lendent. 13.15 per hour
Waterford 0' camped at the
Utility
Tra1nee
and
• ••
Operator in training
',
t)ome of Mr . and Mrs. Don
Leu lhon 3 months wv;ce , Richard Hill. And also at·
\$2:\JO per hour
te d d th H'll
.
Three to Nine months · n e
e 1 reuruon
.
service. 1~. 50 per .hOur
Mr. and Mrs. DaUas Hill
Nine to Twel v e mo n t hs
·
'
service, 12 60 per hour
'
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Dale
. After

"---"'

l'

I '

'

�,
12- the O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 7, 1976

Ernest H. Davis
died on Monday

Hospital News
· Velerau Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Burdell
McKinney, Middleport ;
Grace Hysell, Pomeroy;
Gladys BosworUt, Dexter ;
Avanell Alshlre, Pomeroy ;
Harvey Rockhold , Re~d ­
sville ; John
Hunnell ,
Pomeroy ; Beverly RI&gt;UBh ,
Pomeroy ; Lucy McCune ,
Middleport ; Car ol Hall ,
Cheshire; Samuel Pickens,
Syracuse; Florence Ballman,
Dayton ; Inzy Newell ,
Chester; Linda Bailey ,
. RuUand; Marie Roy, Racine;
Usa Capehart, Shade ; Jonnie
Meadows, Columbus. · ·
Discharged - Clarence
Adams, Edna Swick, Charles
Bissell, Inez Windland, Paul
Hatfield, Inez Pooler, Bessie
Douglas, Veieeta Rowe.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, July 6)
Mrs. Michael Callahan and
son, Susan Canter, Kristin
Davis, Lewis Fox , Cindy
Ghearlng, Mrs. George
Jackson and son , Carol
Keaton, Edward ·Kell, Daisy
Patterson, RebeCca Profitt,
Dessie Riffle, Regina
RusseU, Levi Wicklin.e.
(Births, July 6)
Mr . .and Mrs. Roger
Nickels, son , Oak Hill; Mr.
and Mrs . Robert Neville,
daughter, Gallipolis.
Pleasant Valley
Discharges- Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Harrison,
Point
Pleasant; ·Mrs. James
Duncan, daughter, Gallipblis
Ferry; Wavie Stone, Leon ;
Henry Bowe, Point Ple~ant;
Lucille Baldridge, , Waverly,
· Ohio; Mrs. James Hartley,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Brady
Duncan, Apple Grove, and
Hysell Infant, daughter of
Randy and Kimali, of
RuUand.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru-Thursday
July 6-July &amp;
~PT OPE~

Fri.·Sai.-Sun.
July 9·1 0.11
THE HINDENBU!IG

George C. Scott, Anne

Bancroft,
Atherton.

William

Colorcartoons
Show St1rts 7 p.m.

u nest H. t:J,avis, 63. a
resident of the Addison
community, died unexpectedly at 4:45p.m . Monday
while mowing his grass.
He had been in faUing
health Ute past year .
Mr . Davis was bom in
Langsville on March 7, 1908,
son of the late Orlando S. and
Uddie K. Sheline Davis. He
was a retired electrician wiUt
the Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Co., Apple Grove, W. Va.
He married Esther Painter
in Wellston on -April 17, .1938.
She survives, along with two
sons, Phillip, Kanauga and
James. of Stamping Ground ,
Ky .; one daughter , Mrs .
Richard (Susie ) Travers, ,
Wilkesville ; six grand·
children ; one sister, Mrs.
Chester Hougland,
Chillicothe and "one broUter ,
Worley Davis, Dexter.
Funeral services will be
held Friday, 1 p.m . at Ute
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
With the Rev . Chester Lemley
ofljciaUng . Burial wiD be in
the Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may caD at Ute"
funeral home Thursday from
2-4 and 7·9 p.m.

Boa constrictor will
be in library display
&lt;

'! .

VIsits from live sna~ea; a
guinea pig Md ' rabbit wUI
be part of the Pomeroy
Library's " Animals "
program this Thur_sday.: .
Doyle &amp;nales, manager uf
the Forked Run State Park,
will bring Ute snakes.and talk
about them Wid other animal
life. His collection of snakes
includes a sll·foot boa
constrictor.
·

Linda Stow, summer
storyteller, will be on hand
too. She will tell stories about
animals hi legend and '
folklore . This animal
program is me oUhe Lilrary
Swnmer Fun· programs lor
kids . All children aJ'e
. welcome at · 3 p.m. on
Thursday, July 8th, to get ·
better acquainted with
animals.

Mrs. Campbell died Tuesday

·Dateline 1776
PHILADELPHIA, July 4 The delegates to the Coallnenttl c.aacress - Dumbering less than 50 - adopted
tbo.mu Jeflersu ' s
Declaration of Independence
alter eUmlnathlg his coademnaUoa of slavery. John
Haacoek as president of the
Congrels ud Charles
'Thompson as non·vollng
secretary
signed
the
document and sent II to the
printer's so thot copies could
be rushed throughout the
colonies, for the first time
Identified ali the United
Slates of America.

Five forfeit,
three fined

T. H. (Harri') Campbell , 87, Friends will be received at
Mason , died Tuesday In the funeral home from 2 to 4
Ricmond, Va. He was born in and 7 to 9 p.m . Friday.
Mason August 28, 1888, a son
Survivors Include one
of James and Carolin_!' Young · daughter ,
Mrs.
Bill
Five defendants forfeited
Campbell. His wife , Grace (Caroline) Robinson, Richbonds
and three others were
Larimer Campbell, died in mood, Va.; one niece, Mrs.
fined
in
.· the court of ·Mid·
1958. For many years he was Pearl Hereford, Southside ;
dleport
Mayor
Fred Hoffman
employed as a hotel clerk in · one nephew, Karl Bletner,
Cohnnbus Ohio. He was a Knoxville, Tenn .. and three Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds· were
member of·' the Mason U. M. · grandchildren .
Dennis
L. Collins, address not
. Church.
listed,
$25 posted on a
Funeral services will be
OFFTOSCHOOL
disorderly
manner charge ;
runducted Saturday at 10:30 Carl Hysell, Meigs County
Franklin
D.
Asbury, 42 ,
a.m. from the , Foglesong Juvenille-JlrobaUon Officer,
Huntington,
$25
, assured
Funeral Home, Mason, with removed an unidentified 17·
clear
distance;
Mark A.
. the Rev. Robert Maring of- year old youUt to Fairfield
~Con
Tillis,
26,
Rutland
, $50,
. ficiating . Burial will follow in School for Boys Tuesday
•
the Suncrest Memorial Park . morning to begin serving_ a disorderly manner ;
Lawrence Fields, 60, Midsentence of not less than five dleport, $50 disorderly
months. The youth was manner; Rex L. Carter,
•
arrested early In June for Gallipolis, $25, running a stop
FORCEPS FORGOTIEN
. Con artists are operating in
CATANIA, Sicily UP!~ selling marijuana .
sign . Fined $25 and posts each
this area again.
Docton p-ealing 77·yeal'
were Pansy Ohlinger, 18,
(i!J&amp;P,ELSING
It was reported this. old widow Fllippa Mirabile
Pomeroy, no operator's
A GosPel ~lng' wQl be held license; Tina 'Voss, 18,
morning by 'Don Robinson,
for a lung · dlsea.se
office mru~ager of Buckeye
discovered li "foreign Saturday at 7:30 pm, at the Pomeroy, permitting
U.M. Union Campground unlicensed driver to liSe her
Rural E;lectric co ., that
object" in her abdomen.
per!l&gt;nS are calling on local
Examination of aa X·ray back of New Haven. Featured license; Dorsey . Qhlinget,
residents pretending to .be
showed an elght.-luch pair · will be Ute Reynolds family, 21, Middleport, assault and
News Trio and battery.
Buckeye Rural Electric
of lorceps, apparently Good
Trio. The sing will
Travelers
employees repairing
forgotten when she ~~~&gt;refrigerators. ·
derwent stomach surgery be sponsored by the Mason
County Senior Citizens Home, .
Robinson said this practice
eight yean ago.
NOW YOU KNOW.
is not aut•· ·ized by ·Buckeye - :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Inc. All are welcome.
Townsend Speakman of
Rural.
Philadelphia
invented soda
TWO
,FINED
"We
o not solicit
HOMECOMING SET
water
in
1807.
Later
he added
SYRACUSE
Syracuse
business. · Robinson added.
The
53rd
annual fruit juices as flavoring ,
Mayor
Hermon
London
He continued, "All Buckeye
homecoming and rally of the
Rural Electric Co. employees Tuesday night fined Voshel L. Forest Run Baptist Church
Donahue, Portland, $1~ and,
have ID cards."
cost
with .three days con· will be held Sunday. The
Robinson conclude~: "If a
morning seS$ion will be by
PERCY ABROAD
.
stranger comes to your door finement for operatiog a the Rev. Eddie Buffington,
RABAT,
Morocco
UPI
and says he's representing motor vehicle under the in· former pastor. The afternoon Sen. Charles Percy, D-ID.,
our finn, ask him (or her) to fluence of alcohol, and Phillip program and rally will be left Casablanca airport
produce WI ID card. If they F. Bearhs, Racine, $10 and held from 1:30 to 3 p.m. and Tuesday en route to Tunisia
can't, ihen call us or the costs for stop sign violation . all members are asked to · where he will have a reunion
Both were cited to court by
sheriff."
wiUt his daughter who is
Police Chief Milton Varian. attend ..
working on an American
hospital ship. During his
FEARS LONG WAR
IJlree.&lt;lay slay in Morocco,
WINNER CORRECTED
SAN DIEGO UP!
It was Racine Brownie Assistant Navy Secretary Percy paid courtesy visits
Troop that took fir.st place Jack Bowers says lhe U.S. . with King Hassan and ?rime
honors as the best marching military . Is not prepared to Minister Ahmed Osman. In
\lllit in the July 4 parade wage a 'conventional war of Tunis he will ~ government
Sunday at Racine instead of "sustained duration." He officials and meet with his
Syracuse as was previously said, however, the mllilary daughter aboard the hospital
aMounced. Marching with would correct the readiness ship SS Hope.
the Racine unit was Brownie situation if the nation seemed
Mlcbele Lott from Alanos, to be approaching a conNew Mexico.
ventional w'ar sltuatibn .
(cOntinue&lt;J from page 2
creating procedure lor
congressional review of·
regulations issued by Federal
departments and agencies.
Under . this
propos~ I,
proposed regulations could be
disapproved by concurrent
resolution of Ute Congress,
and existing or proposed
regulations could be directed
for reconsideration by a
resolution of either House of
Congress. S~ review and
monitoring by Congress
would place limits upon Ute
·discretionary authority of
agencies. The aim of Ute
legislation .would be to
elimihate excessive
discretion which has resulted
in unnecessary and burdensome bureuicratic
regulation.
Another proposal would
impose a rigid timetable on
the President and the
Congress to consider an act
on ..£!.11pOsals to refo':_m
Federal regulatory ac·
tivities . Over a four
year
period
- the
President would send
each
year
to
the
CongresS
major
regulatory
· Square
reform proposals covering
Yard ,
.specific· sectors of Industry,
for example, transportation,
. .. Financially, that isl How? Just
or finance, or construction.
park your.money where It can do the
'lbese proposals would be
most tor you ... In one of our high
reviewed by Ute Congress. If
Interest earning savings accounts!
the
Congress did not act by
It's 'to your advantage. Find out.
November llf each year Ute
President's proposal would
become Ute pending business
A Home Bank in each House of Congress for
inunediale ·consideration. A
For
variation of this proposal
would require Utat Ute plan go
Meigs County Into
effect the following year
unless Ute Congress disap·
People:
prove the plan. ,
'!be mechaniSm&amp; that these
proposals would create would
help solve the problems
created by Government that
has gr.own too large, too
powerful, too costly, too
remote, and too deeply involved in the daily lives of the
American people. If Congress
has the will to conduct
meaningful oversight Utete
proposals could result In
OHIO
MIDDLEPORT
RACINE
governin~t which Is more
reSponsible to Ute people.

Meigs
Propet:ty
Transfers
'

Lucille Jesse dec. to
Richard Michael Youn~,
Edward Allen Young, Cert. 01
trans. ·
Vivian Maxey dec, to Bulah
Fay Maxey, Olive.
Carl Davis, GleMa !.Iavis
to Harold H. Hanun, Mildred,
I. Hamm, Lot, Syracuse.
Denzil L. Proctor, Bonnie
M. ProCtor to Robert V.
Hites, Mildred R. Hites, Lot S,
Middleport. .
.
Esta RoliBh to Daniel
RoliBh 1.45 acres, Leb!lnoo.
· Clyde J. Morlan, Ethel
Marie Morlan to Dooald Lee
Headley,
Mary
Jane
Headley, 0.79 acres, Orange.
William D. McKnight,
Violet G. McKnight to Gary
McKnight, Nancy McKnlghl,
1.4 a., Rutland.·
Pomeroy; Ohio
Congregation of Jehovah':
Witnesses
to
Arthur
Rumf!eld, Mary Rwnlield,
Parcels, Sallabury.
Roxie Oller to Carl Gardner
Jr., Katherine M. Gardner,
Middleport.

artists.

operattng
zn area

Miller

too

RESCUE FILM
HOLLYWOOD UPI
Oscar-winning director
·George Roy Hili Will make a
film version of Ute reScue of
103 hijacked hostages by
cy.aeli ·troops front Entebbe
Airport in Uganda last
weekend .
"Rescue at Entebbe" will
be filmed as a Pan Arts
presentation for Universal
Pictures, it was announced
Tuesday.

NEW INCOME sCALE
· COLUMBUS (UP!)
Martin . W. Essex, state
superintende~t of public
instrucUon, said Tuesday a
new i'.~ome scale for
determining which children
are eligible ·for free or
reduced price school lqncbes
has been established for the
1976-77 school year.
The scale is modified
annually by the Department
of Agriculture, which
sponsors ' the school lunch,
school breakfast and speciill
milk programs.
.
Eligibility is . based on
famlly Income as it
corresponds to family size.
Children from a family of
four, for example, wiUt an
income at or below $7,130 a
vear would qualify for free
.neals and ·milk.
Those from a family of the
same size with an annual
incrme between $7,130 and
$11110 would qualify for
red~ed priced meals.
Other factors niay be taken
into consideration Essex
said, such as a ranilly with
exceptionally high medical
bills or sj&gt;ecial . educatioo
expenses. ,
Applications for the
subsidy can be obtained
through individual school
districts
'

can be sitting pretty

Seton Colors
and

Designs

The National Governors' ·
Conference kept ill 6.ah
annual ineetlna both polite
and bipartisan, but the
wounds of the prilldenlill
race showed tlrough the
facade of both Democratic
and Republlcan.unlty'
'
'!be govemora ended their
meeting
Tuesday
by
~ndorslng wellare reform
and then going to visit
Britain's Queen Elizabeth in
, PhUadelphla.
b
Jimmy Carter, all but
certain to get the DelliOCnllic
presidential n&lt;minatlan nest ·
week, visited the governors
and won the unanimous
endoreeml!llt of 1101lle 30 who
bad breakfast with him.'
But not all Democrats at
Ute conference attended the
Carter get-together. Gov.
Ecttrin Edwards of Loul.llana,
one who did not go, continued
~ support Ca!Uomla Gov.
Edmund G. Brown Jr., who
dld not even attend the
conference.
Ji;dwardll said Carle~ : Is
'unclear on !lome Issues · uf
interest to Louisiana SU!)h, as
offshore development and
energy policy.
Two of the 13 Repub~
state governors held firm for
Rooald Reagan for president
and contended some of President Ford's support from 11
GOP governors is "soft." .
Gov. James Edwards of
South Carolina told UPI, ''My
choice Is Reagan. His proven
ability to get elected was
shown in California, where
the registration was 3-2
against him."
.
Gov. Meldrim Thomson of
New Hampshire, also a ·
Reagan man, said be had
heard Defense Secretary
Donald Rumafeld is a
possible Reagan running
mate. He called the Idea
"polson" al)d said that If
Reagan chose Rumsfeld "he
can forget about winning."
Gov. Arch Moore of West
Virginia said Republican
chances of keeping the White

~ "are aC'IJen&amp; If r~
- IMIIJl(Mt,ed, 'Jbe pabJic Ji
...kllq Jimmy ~.

We ClmOt have a hllltei!IW
Jnll(dent."
'
'lbe aovemori eadorM ~
11 I welfll't propoulfor the
federal pvemment to pay ·
Ill minlmllm bued an
poverty Une, with ' ~
requirement that welfa~,
reclpilllll aCCfllt reuunabW'
'
job uuen.
~
'!be CCIIfererlct voted ~
to ~q~pcrt remimll of prici:
controls
from
newlj
~•luralaas .
;
A .,.,Jutlon_IIJW(II'tlnll ~ .
propoted Equal Rl&amp;hli:
Amendment for worn••
ca!Tied on a voice vote.
~

..

....

•

O..arles Jacobs
died

.

Charles (Chad) Jacobi, 28,~
died Wednesday m01'11in&amp; at"
Veterans Memorial Holpl~
1111 a result of apjlll'ent &amp;elf·
inflicted gunshot woundll. ' .; .
Mr. Jacobe wu taken to the••
hOSpital late Saturday at!
ternoon from hll home oh';.
Uncoln Hill Rd., Pomeroy by.
the Pomeroy E·R Squad. He,.
had a head injury cauaed by a
.26 celiber plslol, pollee said.:
Mr. Jacobe wu auocla~
With hll lather, the late~
Robert L. Jacobe, at ·the Ben •
Franklin Store in Pomeroy. .
The elder Mr' Jacobe died
June 24, l9.76,
:
Among the sw'vlvors 111'11'
his mother, Katherine and a
brother, Robert. F11neral
arrangementa are being :
made at Ute Ewing Funeral;
Home.
·

on.

·l

ASKS TOWED
A marriage license was
Issued to Brian Duane Knapp, .
19, Syracuse and Deanna
Christine Baker, 17, Rt. 2,
Coolville . .
' \.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued fralll .... 1)
was able to swim out of the tanker's way although the ship's
wake sucked him backwards into the middle uf the chlinnel.
NEW YORK -SOME 40,000 NON-MEDICAL employes at
34 ~rivate nmproflt hospitals in the metropolita~ area went.1'.1
strike today alter marathon negotiation&amp; laUed to realifl
agreement on a new contract before a 8 a.m. strike deariiini. ·
The talks at the Biltmore_Hotel broke off about 4:30a.m.
and no new session&amp; were scheduled, The 34 hospitals hate
21,115 beds, or tw&lt;Khlrds of the voluntary bed capacity in the
metropolitan area. 'lblrteen njll'S)ng homes also are involved
but employes at the h0111es will stay on the job at least unQJ
Saturday to aUow time to relocate elderly inmates.
~
.~

CINCINNATI- A FOUR MON1lf JAIL SENTENCE anil
a $5,000fine have been-imposed on suspended Cincinnati Pd lca
Chief Carl V. Goodin for jury convictions of perjury an4
tampering wiUt evidenct&gt; l'be 43-year-old former chief Wl!l
sentenced Tuesday afternoon by Hamiltbn County Co~
Pleas Court Judge Gilbert Bettman.
~
The ju~e meted out a 1~10 yea~ Ohio Penitentiary ternl :
to Goodin, but then suspended the sentence on condition that
Goodin l!pend four months in the cOIUI!y jail and pay a f2.SG!I
fine oo each of the two eolints. Dettman also handed down a 1·
to-10 year prison term to suapended Pollee Lt. Richard IG
Beyer, the vice squad chief under Goodin, but Ukewl.le;
suspended that sentence on condition that Beyer spend 30 dayi '
In jail and pay a total of $1,000 In fines.
,
'

MEN'S SHIRTS

.••

.

Western shirts ·
famous
m11ke
mens
dress
shirts - leisure
shirts
knit
shirts and . tank
. tops .

Sizes 14112 to
- a good
~lection.
The
savings
11re
terrific.
17112

Ready For Delivery
-and lnstallatlonl

Buy Now and Savel

lr.~els
912·2635

Furniture

·RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK

SALE
PRICES

ELBERFELDS-IN. POMEROY.

Solomon, Ute legendery problem solver, maybe
couldn't have done much
better, everything considered.
That's how Ute decision of
Administrative Law Judge
William .L O'Brien ol the
Interstate Commer ce
Commiasion 'has impressed
some observers on aban·
donment ol the Chessie
System Logan to Pomeroy

attempts to balance the needs tinue· in operation.
of rail users and the railroad
The Utird sel!ment, (,rom
company by dividing the 83.84 Dundas to Kerr In Vinton' and
mile line into [our segments. Gallia Cou.nties , will be
The first segment, from abandoned.
Logan to Creola in Hocking
'!be fourth'segment, from
and Vinton Counties, will he Kerr to the end of Ute line a1
abandoned.
· Pomeroy in Galli a and Meigs
The sec ond segment, Counties, will be served by
[rom Creola to Dundas In ConRail.
Vin'ton Cow ty, will be lea~
The only major rail users
to the Baltimore and Ohio to lose service under the plan
Railroad (also · a unit of will be the WestVaco
Chessie System ) and co11: . Woodyard at Bidwell in

line •via McArthur and
GaUipoll$ .
Business and industrial
Interests in Meigs and Gallia
County came ' o'ul slighlly
ahead in O' Brien's adjudicati on
ba sed
on
testimony taken at a public
healing In Gallipolis April 7
Utrough 9 and on information
obtained before a nd af~r the
hearing.
The O'Brien decisio n

Bell given
rate boost
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utliltiea .Commission
of Ohio ( PUCO) ioday
unanimously .granted a $200
miiUon annusl rate hike to.
Ohio Bell Telephone Co.,
which will mean a $3 a month
Increase on residential
telephones for the utl!JUes 2.3
million 'customers in Ohio.
The rate hike is the largest
ever approved by the three
member conunlsslon. Ohio
Bell, the state's biggest
utility, orlginaUy sought a
f216 million increase when lt
filed its request in November
1974.
PUCO Cbainnan C; Luther
Heckman said · seven
ilepatate meetings were held
by he and his colleagues to
dlllcuss the company's
•equest. Heckman and
·ommlssloners Sally W.
lloqmfleld and David C.
lweet said very little before
1igning the order.
BoUt Heckman and Sweet
l!ldicated they would file
opinion&amp; objecting to certain
sections of the order. '!bey
did not elaborate.
The order includes these
provisions:
.
.
~ a month increase on
residential phones.
-20 cents or twice the
current amount to use a
public telephone.
-Limited, free directory
'assistance calls. A residenUal
· user will be permitted Utree
free information calls per
monUt. Each additional call
will cost 20 cents.
· -oPtional measured ·tele'
Phoo'l"lel'\&gt;lce for realdentlal
customers. Those who select
the · service · would pay
between $5.50 and $11 a
10onth, depending on where
they Uve in Ohio, for 30 calls.
Each additiooal call will cost

Gallia County . However ,
service will be lost to an area
wiUt large coal reserves and
excell ent deveropm ent
potential. The plan will afso
destroy a direct rou~ between Coii!Jllbus and the Ohio
River .
TIJe Chessie System is
required by Ute decision to
continue poosen t service. hetween Dundas and Pomeroy
for one year after the
issuance of an abandonment

.

'

serttfica te ; Ute certilica te yet
to be iasued. This was done to
enforce an agreement be·
tween Chessie System . and
the·American Electric Power
System, and also to provide
time for Chessie System and
ConRail 1o reach a transfer
agreement on the Kerrs to
Pon,eroy segment without
service interruplion. Should
.ConRail he unwilling to serve
the Kerrs to Pomeroy
segment of Ute line, then

•

•

enttne

at y
VOL XXVIII

nine cents. Ohio Bell asked
for higher basic monthly
charges for 15 calls.
- Mandatory measured
telephone service lor
business · customers. . A
business will be allOwed 80
calls for each line in the
office. Each additional call
will cost nine cents.
Measured telephone ser\&gt;ice
Is in operation only in the
Cleveland'area at Ute present
time.
The increases will not take
effect for at least li month.
The company will be asked to
file with the PUCO a
complete new schedule of
rates based on the lower
·amoupt of the annual
increase. The new rates wiD
begln . 30 days after the
commission's approval of the
new schedule.
The company, which has
2.S million customers, will be
granted a rate of return of
8.03 per cent. The company
had sought a rate of 10;75 per
cent, and the commission's
staff argued for 6.45Jjier cent.
The staff's recommendation
would have . produced $147
million more a year for Ohio
Bell. ,
A recent decision by the
Ohio Supreme Court had a
dramatic upward ,effect on
the commissioners' final
decision. '!be court said the
PiJco could no longer reduce
~ utility's rate of return to
counter'balance what it
considered an inflated rate
base, which is the total value
of a Clll!lpany's bllifdings a~d
equipment.
As a result of the court
ruling, the commissioners did
not accept the staff's lower
rate of return and decided to
go with the higher figure .

NO. 57

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

e .

.

Chessie System will be ldcArUtur and a majority of
required ' t9
continue the
line's customers .
operation of Ute entire Logan Everyone Interested In
to Pomeroy line.
providing subeidy fundi to
The Meigs cOunty Rail keep any portion of the line ·
Service Committee is e1· scheduled for abandonment
ploring what steps can be in operatio.n or desiring more
taken 'to insure Ute continued · information on the aban·
operation of the entire Logan donment situallon should
John
Arnott,
to Pomeroy line a.i a part of contact
chairman, Meigs .County Rail
Cl~essie. System.
, Howevet, this decision Service Committee, 480
insures continued rail service Broadway Street, Mid·
to-&gt; P,omeroy, Gallipolis, and dleport, Ohio 45760 (99U794).

PRICE

THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1976

}

•

'I

.
...

FIFTE~N .CENTS

I

at1on toasts
Ford Presidency puts
on brilliant show· at
state dinner, 'dance

~~...~::;m:::::;;;:::::::::~8:::::~::~:c:::::::;:;:;:::::;:::,::~::::::~:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~

~News. . . in Briefsl

By United Press International
BOSTON- "WHO CARES?" said Darrell Johnson when
asked about mounting complaints over his selection of
American League pitchers for next week's AU-Star game. "I
don't intend on ~etting into ahy oontroversy : T-he All-Star
game is the thing that counts," the Boston Red Sox and AL
manager said Wednesday.
Since announcing his nine-member pitching staff would
Include four relievers with uninspiring records, Johnson has
· born Ute brunt of nasty words from a pair of pitchers left off the
ataff:l
Jiin Palmer of Baltimore called Johnson "an idiot."
Gaylord Perry of Texas said the league office "should
disqualify that manager."
·

WASHINGTON (UP!) - l:)leen El!zabeUt II, calling
President Ford's invitation to visit the United States "a
generous gesture,' ' was treated -to the most brilliant social
evening of the Ford . preside~~ Wednesday night, before
startmg the Utlrd day of her VISit.
Entertained by British-born comedian Bob Hope, the
.Queen and her husband, Prince Philip, danced and chatted
with their hosts iiU midnight, with a full scale of events
awaiting them today.
.
· , The queen, who arrived in Washington Wednesday
morning , visited Arlington National cemetery andJ~ Lincoln
Memorial before attending a state dinner ·of lobster · an~ a
saddle of veal served In the White House Rose Garden under a
candle-lighted white tent ..
She was to visit the things that matter," she said,
National Cathedral and other adding that Anglo-American
spots of interest today before friendship "has ·brought with
departing Friday for New it benefits beyond measure to
our peoples.
York.
"May it long continue to
Ford and the queen exchanged toastp during dinner flourish ... "
With all Ute glitter and
at the mansion, burned by the
glamor on hand, the dinner
invading British in 1814.
The President said Eliza- was clearly the Fords' most .
beUt's visit . w11s, 'ltl'l!ly a brilliant l!pCial evening in the
reaifiimation •• of friendship White House - and tl1ey
and ~omised that during the made the most of it, daricing
next century, the United cheek to cheek untill:40 a.m.
States ''will be on Ute side of EDT.
At 'the reception, many of
the United Kingdom .. ."
the
women curtsied and the
Dressed in a yellow sequin·
men,
in- white tie, gave the
encrusted gown, a diamond
tiara, diamond necklace and l:)leen low bows as she stood
dsngling diamond earrings, by the President's side,
with the bluwashed Order of smiling and shaking hands.
The President did the
the Garter across her chest,
the Queen said Ford's honors later in introducing
invitation ·was " a generous the entertainers, Hope and
the prizewinning pop group
gesture and apposite.
"Time and again, in the "Captain and Tennille."
Giving a command perfortesting days of war and the
mance,
Hope quipped, "I:ve
constructive years of peace ,
(Continued on page 8)
we have stood together on

Carter unawed
ALBANY, Ga . (UP!) Jinuny Carter sees his rise to
a certain Democratic
presidential nomination nel';t
week as "a 'kind of steady
evolution," but fear of losing
in Noveml)er "is something

that is constantly on my
mind."

.

Carter, in an expansive
mood aboard his chartered
MOSOOW - SAFE IN AN ORBITING LABORATORY.
jet flying home from his final
two Soviet cosmonauts busied themselves today with a lengthy
· fund-raising dmner 10
. teries of experiments that could keep them circling earth for
Hollywood , Fla., · said
several months. Boris Volynov al)d '\'Italy Zholobox climbed
Wednesday night he might
into the roomy research station Wednesday night after piloting
have been awed by the
their Soyuz 21 capsule to a docking more than 150 mlles above
enormity of his. frontrunner
earth.
status (f it had come like a
Yolynov, 41, a veteran rusmonaut, ami Zholobov , 39, a spsce
thunderclap.
rookie, were rocketed into space 25 hours before the linkup Instead, Carter has been
the Soviet' Union's first manned space mission since last
campaigning and organizing
aummer's joint Apollo:S.yuz spectacular. In the most detailed
at the precinct and county
account of ihe Soyuz 21 yet released, the Tass news agency
levels for three years&amp;aid the men would study earth's surface and atmosphere,
waging a sometimes lonely
space and the effects of weighUessness, as well as carry out
door-to-door effort since
medical and biological research.
.
· .
leaving
the
Georgia
governor's office in January,
SAN FRANCISOO - PATRICIA HEAR.S} 'S sentencing
1974, and winning Jq
for robbing a San FranciSco bank with the Symbioneae
primaries along Ute way.
Liberation Ann)' is now off until0ct.11 at the earliest.
.
· He shared a bit of his 30th
U. S. District Court Judge WiUiam Orrick Jr. Wednesday
wedding anniversary
extended the period fpr her psychiatric evaluation for 90 days
celebration with traveling
at the request of the Jlureau of Prisons. The bureau asked for
reporters, strolling to thll
m9l'e time to study the ·22-yeaHld newspaper heiress at the
back of his campaign plane
federal correctional facility in Sail Diego, where she is being
with his wife Rosalynn.
Airline hoste$Ses uncorked
held.
champagne bottles and
HOUSTON - TEXAS HEART INSTITirrE doctors say
passed out pieces of an
•!hey hope a mechanical pwnping device successfully
anniversary cake .
implanted in a 44-year-old woman this week eventually will
MICHAEL MAGNOTIA
"I honestly don't feel any
lead to development of a totally mechanical hwnan heart.
. ATHENS - MIChael J. different; I might think of,
The device kept the woman alive for slx days before it was Magnotta, son of Jose()_~~ something cu,le to say, but_ I
rilmoved the Institute reported Wednesday. The patient, who
Magnotta, 58( Lincoln St., ,., honest!,~ don t feel .MY dif.
was not tdentified, was reported in "stable" condition at St . Mlddlepor\, and the late · ferent, · ~rter sa1d ~h~n
Luke's Hospital. The patient was believed to be the fifth person Marilrtha P. Magnotta, has 'asked how llfeels to be w1thm
to have an abdominal left ventricular 'assist device Implanted · been awarded the Eleanor . ~uch easy reach of the
at the hospital since November.
GIll ord
Memo ria i nomination.
.
Scholarship at Ohio
"It's been such a kind of
CINCINNATI - "I'LL BE VINDICATED.'' says University for the 1976-77 ~dy evolution toward the
~dec! Cincinnati Pollee Chief Carl V. Goodin, who ill academic year. Magnotta victory that I think I have
preparing to appeal the perjury and tampering wlth evidence attended Meigs · High assured now," said Carter.
convictions that ha'le landed him a Jour month jail sentence School, where he was "There hasn't been any
and a $5,000 fine.
·
·
senior class president and abrupt change - but as f~ ~s
"I Intend to fight the verdict of the jury and the senlencing a member of National my hometown, my falllily IS
declslan uf the jUdge until I have my last day in court, when
Honor Society. He plans to ·Concerned, you know, I have
1'111 sure I'll be vindicated," the 43-year old former chief said
major in mathematics a.t already
had
that
Wednesday 1n his first public statement since the day after he
ou
·
homecoming and I really
·
don't feel that different." .
· (Continued on page 8)
·

ONE OF THREE UNITS making up a housing
rumpiex in Pomeroy on ~ulberry Ave., ill well underway

by Prime Builders Co., Colwnbus. Forty-eil!ht two-

bedroom apartments wiD be located in the three
buildings.

:::::::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::;;:.:;:::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::

Drug mo~t .
abused is
alcohol

Dateline 1776
PHILADELPHIA, July 8
- The Declaration of Jn.
dependence
was
proclaimed publicly for the
first time _In the · State
House yard. It was. read by
Col. John Nixon at noon
before an assemblage of
several thousand
Philadelphians summoned
by the pealing of the
Uberty Bell. The response
was "three repeated
huzzahs."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

WASH!j'GTON (UP! ) Alcohol, when used with other
drugs, tops Ute list of leading
drugs of abuse lor the first
time in four years of
measurements by a national
Drug
Abuse
Warning
Network, the governmen~
said today.
The latest DAWN report
says that as of last April
Cloudy tonight and Friday,
alcohol in combination wiUt chance of showers. Lows
oUter .drugs was the most tonight in the mid 60s. Highs
fr~_uen~y reported drug m Friday in the mid 80s.
criSIS Slluahons m wh!Ch a . Probability of rain 60 per cent
dru~ user sought help or died. today, 30 per cent tonight and
Since the DAWN began m 40 per cent Friday.
1972 for use by federal·
narcotics enforcement and
treatment agencies, the
UNIT CALLED
tranqillizer Valium has · The Middleport E-R Squad
topped the list as Ute leading was summoned Weqnesday
drug reported by emergency at .2: 20p.m. to assist Homer
rooms, medical examiners, Bradshaw of Cole St. in
crisis centers , hotlines, free Pomeroy . He was taken to
clinics and hospital inpatieht Veterans HospitaL
units. In April it was second.
Although officials of the
National Institute on Drqg
MEETING AT JACK'S
Abuse gave no explanation
The SouUtern Ohio Chapter
for alcohol moving from
second to first on the chart, of the Black Lung Assn. of
·the report noted 'Utat DAWN Pomeroy will meet Sunday at
does not . gather data on I p.m. at Jack's Club, in• alcohol used alone, only tersection of State Routes 7
alcohOl when used with and 143. All members and
another drug for nonmedical their wives are urged to atpurposes.
tend. There will be a speaker.
Others in _the top ten Women
interested
in
reported were heroin, becoming members are in·
marijllana, aspirin, LSD, vited .
·secobarbital and methadone .

Weather

:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:,:,:,:::·

HORSE SHOW SET
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Bar 30 Horsemen will stage a
Mostly lair with the horse show beginning at 5
chance of a few afternoon p.m. Saturday at the Bar 30
or evening thundershowers show grounds near here . .
Saturday and Sunday, Judge for the 19 halter and 28
Partly cloudy )'II~ a performance '1:lasses will be
chance of thundershowers Jim Dodson, St. Albans, W.
Monday; Highs In the upper · Va. Admission is $1. Refresh80s and low 90s. Lows In the ments wili he served on the
mid and upper 60s.
~rounds .

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

COFC TO MEET
The Pomeroy Chamber of
BAND TO MEET
Commerce wili have an cplm
Meigs Band students are to meeting Monday, July 12, at
·meet at the high school to the Meigs Inn at noon . Guest
pr ~c tice IJl!nd camp music speaker will be Mike Gerlach
Thursday · and Friday at 7 who wiil speak on U1e history
p.m.
of Pomeroy.

\City.rocked by
wave of crime·
..

Gallia County lawmen have
been busy the past 24 hours
investigating a rash of
breaking and enlerings and
serious vandalism .
Sheriff's deputies late
We.dnesday completed investigation of two break-ins
at the Silver Bridge Shopping
Plaza while city police early
this morning Investigated
seven complaints of van·
In v o I vI n g
d a I ism
automobiles .
Approximately $2,100
worth of merchandise was
taken Tuesday night in a'B&amp;!E
at Ute "Radio Shack located at
the Silver · Bridge Shopping
Plaza.
Mike Fetherolf, store
manager, said entry was
made by throwing a rock
1hrough a large plate glass
window on the west side of the
building.
Missing was a 16 channel
scaMer, a three'l!hannel CB
radio, a six-channel CB;
three other CB radios, a
turntable, and · various
mounts used to install
equipment.
The Sears Store, loca~d in
the shopping plaza, was also
entered by prying the back
dooropen,...Missing were five
used color television sets
which were in the shop for

I

\,

repairs; a hair dryer, a
sewing · machine and relay
control for an air condiitoner.
·Deputies ·aid three sets of
shocks were found in a
cornfield behind the store. A
crowbar was also found .
It is believe at least three
persons were involved -in Ute
burglary.
City police were bUSY Utis
morning investigating car
vandalism.
While cri routine patrol,
officers found seven cars had
been vandalized by throwing
bricks through windshields,
windows or to damage paint. ·
The vehicles were :
A 1969 Oldsmobile owned
by · Kenneth McLaughlin,
Pomeroy, parked in the 5oo
· block of First Ave. A brick
was thrown through Ute rear
widow ,
A '72 Dodg!i owned by
Arthur W. Wroblewski, 818
First Ave. had a large hole in
its trunk.
A car owned by Arne!
Myers, 1063 Second Ave. had
a broken side mirror and
broken post between Ute wing
glass and window. It was
· parked in the 100 block of
· Second Ave.
The windshield on a
car owned by Harold
(Continued on page 8)

Publ.ic ·offered
tickets
to
.
fair
.
'

Membership tickets for the Spencer 's Markel, · Mid ·
1976 Meigs County Fair, to be dleport; New York Clothing
held Aug. 17-21, have been House, Green Lantern, Sugar
placed on sale in local · Run Flour Mill, Swisherbusiness houses.
Lohse Drug Store, Five
Tickets, offered only to Points Grill and Gloeckner's
. individuals, admit pur- in Pomeroy ; the Middleport
chasers to the fair and Department Sto~e; Dave's
parking space ali five days of Market on Old Rou~ 33;
the fair. Tickets lor this II 3th Ruth 's Market, Syracuse;
fair remain $4 each, the same Miller Brothers Grocery,
as last year. There -is no Rutland; Waid Cross Sons,
charge for any grandstand Racine, and Nita Ritchie,
event at the fair . ·
Tuppers Plains.
Tickets are available at

•••

•,

!

Otessie line will service Meigs, Gallia area
King

. July Clearance Sale

In Stock
Reducel'!

Save $2 To

•

HER.SHEY, Pa. (UPI) -

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY-

All

ROLLS

Cuts showed up

.·

I.

••

,,

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