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                  <text>Witness .fingers abductors

• -Tbe Sundly Times- Sentinei,SWKiay, July 18,1976

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CHOWCHILLA , Calif.
'.(UPI ) - A qaystery man has
'provided authorities with
lrtcnaatlan that could lead to
ldentlftcatloo of two of the
ll'llled pntnen who kidnaped
28 acbool ehildren and their
but $1ver.
.
Alameda County Sheriff's ·
Ueutenant Ed Volpe said
Sunday night that names and
photographa of the two
IUIJIICII could be obtained
within 41 hours baled oo
lnfOITIII!tlon slven. detecti'!U
by a Soncra, caiif,, man.
The information, Volpe
Aid, pinpoint.! where the
~U~p~Ctl were "on speclflc
dates within the lui year,''
In the hunt for the
· kldna pers, au thorl Ilea
c:lllcovered the t!'o vans used
to haul the victims to their
, •underground cavern prison
: were purchased at a mUitary
,surplus finn.

THE JACKsON BROTHERS of Chesapeake, in "OperaUm EvallgeUze" will be
featured at youthr.Vlvai at the Bradbury Church of Chrtat, July 18 through 23 at 7:30p.m.
nightly. The revival is sponsored by the youth of the church. There will be apecial singlng
each evening.

a

Humans

COUNTRY MUSIC STAR - Country music superstar
'Bill Anderson and his all-star Bill Anderson Show will
appear at the Mason County Fair in Point Pleasant, W.
Va., on Wednesday, Aug. 4. Appearing with Anderson will
be country music stars Jimmy Gateley, Mary Lou Turner
(above with Anderson) and the famous Po' Boys Band.

Tra~e

cut through Gallia
·to Chillicothe by Hannan

Action filed for $1,368
POM !':ROY - A suit for
money in lhe amount of $\,366
has been filed ·by the
Pomeroy Nat ional Bank
against Am y K. Jones ,
Ja ckson , and Ron ald
Thomas, dba till Weather
Hardware , Middleport, in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Co uri.
Anotice of appeal was filed
by Kendall E. Dunfee,
Middlep ort, agai nst the
Board of Review , Oh io
Bureau of Employmen t
Service , Co lumbus , and
Southern Ohio Coal Co. ·

Cannady.
In 1803, Thomas Hannan
erected a grist mill on Swan
Creek so it was this man for
whom the Hanran Trace was
named.
In 1786 he was the only
settler on the West Virginia
side of the Ohio from Point
Pleasant to Greenupsburgh ,
Ky. Daniel Boone was his
closes t neighbor in that
direction!
...
Gran ted di vorc(&gt;s we re
His log cabin was located
almost directly across the Elmer John son, ,Jr., fr om
river from the mouith of Marjorie J. Johnson, and
Swan Creek. As more people
moved into the area, roads
and ferries soon became a
necessity.
NEW YORK (UPI) _Turned off by poli!.lcal conventions?
In response to this demand,
'l1red of r8nlll? Sa.-.by sports, even the summer Olympics? Thomas Hannan, because of
There'• always the networks' special summer schedules, his thorough knowledge of the
wblchmaytuyow-patlence but neveryoormind. , .
colin try, was chosen the man
A cood miJIY of the programs seen in the sununer are best fitted lor this duty. In tt&gt;e
llunked-out pilots deemed unsuitable for~ steady prime time sununer of 1600 he began
llol, uua11y fiJI' good rea1011s. others showcase new talent. blazing a trail starting at the
'ftle idell Ia to audlencetest shows that might make second mouth of Coal River on the
..,an repllcementa in January - or to use up pilots already Kanawha , continu ing to
111ft1 r
Green Bottoms on the Ohio.
Tbe :~lcime of alight aummer nlght could be summed up by After crossing the river, the
'l'atlday, Aug. 10 00 ABC.
trace took up again at a point
Tbe evening starts off with rer:uns of "Happy Days" ~d just below the mouth of Swan
"Laftme and lltlrley," then moves into special programmg. Creek and continued via
J'ram 9-8:30 p.m., Eastern time, there will be a music, Jackson I Jackson County) to
caec1y and variety special starring Lore!!ZO Music. That, at Cbillicothe. Alter completing
11ut, mlgbl11tlafy aome audience curlousity about wllllt the
trace,
Hannan
MUIIc loobllke. When Lorenzo Music Isn't being hlmBelf, he ill established a ferry across the
lbe dllembodled voice of "Carleton, your doorman" on CBS' Ohio at the mouth of Swan
Rlloda.
·
Creek . It was started in 1802
Lanmo Music Ia acheduled to lead into a half hour situation and he continued to run it
NDiid¥ ~ ·.,Coullns" about two young girls, roommates, until about 1832, when he
wt. WGrk ln. a N\!11' York advertlalng agency. One Is a . turned it over to his son
_.lcatedNew Yorbr, according to ABC, which described Henry, who had located upon
._ I'OCIIJU!IIIe u "a hometown girl from Denver, Colo." Swan Creek in 1819.
"C t•" ml&amp;bt make mire ~e~~~elf It didn't come from the
At the ti[lle Hardesty's
that presenll "Laverne and Shirley"- and on Hand Atlas of 1862 was
· lbe- niP&amp;, too.
written,
the
authors
Ntd com11 ''Rear Guard," a comedy about a fouled-up Civil remarked, "Much of the old
Dl' PM unit durlntl World War D. If that half-hour doesn't trace 1s now a well-traveled
llllb the ludlence wmder how we won the war, It will he road ... Along some of the
laiiDnd by 10111et111n11 called "Zero Inlelllgence," a title that high ridges, where the timber
IIWIIea dleap lbots. "Zero" deals with a group of soldiers· still remains undisturbed,
.ltJtlr«Md In A1ub during the 111501 and who are billed as can be seen the marks of the
protlding 111imor0111h line of defe~ for this Countr)'.
ax in the trees, cut 82 years
_,.. wliat ldnd of WIII'III-Up thai makes for the Republicans since. The ferr y was
.I le!w11 Cit)' the follOlrinll week Ia difficult to decide.
discontinued man y ye ars
Oilier ABC apeclal JIIVIlrarnlng now Cll the books Includes: ago.
- . 1- "It's Tough To Make It In This League," an hourThis information a bout
laac look at wbat pes Into &amp;hap~ a profesalonal football Ohio Township was taken
- · lcl!Qded at 10 p.m., Eastern lime, Immediately from Hardesty's Hand Atlas
fo11o1rq the clollng ceremonies of the XXI Olympic Games in of Gallia County, 1882. The
Mmlnll.
township map is found in the
All· 1 - "What's Happening," a four-episode hslf h0\!1' Gallia Coun ty Atlas of 1874.
Niiidy lll'ies about tll'ee high school boys in a middle class Both books have been·
Iliad! urban nelghborOOod. "Wbat's Happening" will occur reprinted and may be purl:aM p.m., Eastern lime.
chased by contacting Sue
Allg~ 7-Mooty Hall's Variety Hour, with the star of "Let's Moulton 446-9655, Hen ny
M*a Deal" hoeting a variety hour that wllllnclude guests Evans 446-1775, or Ann
Ooril Leaclman and Edward A$ler.
·
Jenkins, 446-4926.
damiDI up lhll IUIIIIIIer for CBS:
. .
Ale. 14 - Dlaham Carroll's llllllic-varlety show runs for
fodt weeks In carolrunett'slG-11 p.m., Eastern time slot.
AUg. 21 - "Ivan the Terrible," starring Lou Jacobi as the
lind Ill 1 family of nine living In a fouro('oom Moscow
...,anent will be a live-week comedy series running from
11... p.m., Eastern time, replacing "Doc" reruns.
All•- Frankie Avalon will fill the U:30 p.m., EBBtern
.... lllot lllth 1 variety allow, following by Bert Coovy in an
i:.. p.m., Vlrlel)' venlon, both oo for four week stints.
All· 211 - Johnny Cub will enertaln both city and country
. . . lllln in IIi hour-thow from ~ashville, TeM.,'in the S-9
p.m., ''Salllly and Cber" lime spot for four weeks.
'ftll NBC IUIIIIIllr schedule has these dates to remember:
If yo~· r e shopping, lind out
.MJ 22 - ''Tile Gnat Mlgratlm: year of the Wildebeeste," il l can save you money.
nunltd by Richard Wldmark, 8-8 p.m., Eastern time, Is one
Come in. or give me a call.
II 11 Mrill ol Survival Anglia productlona. Others include
otiOIIWIIItiGDwllaleatn'.'MalnlllcentMonatersoftheDeep"
CARROL K SNOWDEN
. (Mr a); ''Cae Into My Parlor'' on spiders (Aug. 12) and
'
. •1riaii)'WIIdernes•;'' with lormer BBirooaut Neil Armstrong 24 Stole St.
Gallipolis
•J'&amp;q bDw 1 group of yoq pe~le are trained to survive
~':'.::! ::::::~
. . . wild (Sept. 2).
111f • - Badl~ck half hbur cooaedy specials begin a
nm with "Ace", about a detective, and "The
IJke a aood '""' ,..
?' au," flllllll the flnt Sf p.m., spot.
ndlhbor.
Ml •- A..,edal will eumine two high school graduating Starehnn
ts -lbe e._ of '13 and the claA of '78 - at 10.11 p.m., ' illh ~.
INJ II IAM (~
P·745'.
r
'ua lime.
.:&gt;'TATE FARM FIRE
llpt. 1 - An NBC News apectal eumlning food additives
AN
D
CASUALTY COMPANY
IIIII 11111r e!eetl Cll llllnan health iJ scheduled for the 11-11
p.m•• laNm time, .slot.
.
By Sue Moulton
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
Township was organized
November 8, 1004, and the
first meeting was held at the
home of Captain Joseph
Miller, February 1il, 1805, for
election purposes. By the
cenaus of 1850 the tqtal
population was 504 ; thirty
yeara later the population
lllld risen to 1,429.
This township has the
loogest river frontage of any
In the county, nearly llmiles.
Most Important of Its small

streams is Swan Creek which
rises in the northwest part of
the township, in the north
part of sec tion five. Its length
is about eight miles.
· In 1800; George and John
· Waugh first came and settled
at the mouth of Swan Creek.
'I'imolhy Hob~ . E. Belomy,
Da vid Blake and Dani el
Campbell, were other early
settlers. The first house of
any note ·was built by John
Sloan . The first marriage was
that of Jane, a daughter ot
George Waugh, to Corn elius

.Patrici a Barley from Ernest
William B~ rl ey .

FIVE KILLED
CHICAGO tUPI)- An extra alarm fire burned
through a four story bri~k
apartment house today,
killing at least five persons,
authorities said. A nurse in
the emergency ward of St.
Mary's of Nazareth Hpspital
said the five dead were on
arrival at the hospital. She
said "more were coming'!
but did.not know if they were
alive or dead.

Continued from page 25 .
multiply to .Its limit. Uke
most living things, insects
are susceptible to baclerial
and fungns · disenses, along
with other perils of life . .
lwtl•er than mankind, the
most successful enemies of
insects are other insects.
Throughout their lives from egg to death - most insects are surrounded.by oiher
insects trying to eat them,
laying eggs in or on them, or
to seize and carry them off as
food for their young.
Insects have survived for
250 million yea rs endowed
with marvelous' mechanisms
which should permit them to
survive lor many more. We
know that no species of insects has disappeared from
the earth because of human
activities, as have the dodo,
the passenger pigeon, ahd
several other a~irnals.
We benefit from insects in
endless ways. Thousands of
insects species assist in
pollinating our entire flora or
insecl-pollinated plants. ·We
could exist without these
pollinating insects; tomatoes
and potatoes for example,
are wind pollinatr1. but it
wmlid be difficult to fmd substitutes for much insect-

. pollinated crops as clover,
alfalfa, and fruit. Without in. sects, a variety of crops
ranging from almonds to zucchini would yield . consi der a bly less . And
springtime would be bleak
without gaily colo red
flowers.
Bees accomplish most ·of
their work with some help
from wasps, butterflies and ·
moths, flies, beetles, and
evenminute thrips.
Some insects Improve our
soil by providing holes for air
penetration. others hasten
the decay of animal bodies.
Thus insects participate In
the endless cycles that in- ·
volve all life.
.
Of the approximately
1,500,000 insects that entomologists have managed to
describe and name, only
10,000 are considered harmful to humans and their f~
and fiber supply. It ill upon
these "harmful" insects that
agricultural research must
concentrate - seeking
techniques that will hold only
these enduring insects at
hay.
Effective July 19, 1976 the
agencies in the Agriculture
Service Center located on the
second floor of the Farmers
Bank Building in Pomeroy
will have newtelephone nwnbers. Soil Conservation Ser·
vice (SCS) will be 99U647;
Agricultural Stabilization

and Conservation (ASCS)
will be 992-6646 ; and Farm
Home
Administration
(FmliA ) will be992-8644.

ROUND

ro GANO

LOS ANGE;LES' (IJPI)
Richard Gano of Anaheim,
cousin of HOward Hughes,
won a round Friday In the
complicated legal struggle
over the late bllllonaire's $2.5
billion fortune .
·· A judge reaffirmed and
expanded hls earlier order
gl ving Gano power to
administer California :
properties held in Huahea' .
name, a small part of the
estate, most of which iJ In the
name of the Summa Corp.
The order was a setback to
the county public admlnls- '
trator, and to Noah Dietrich,
former Hughes aide, · who,
petitioned to be named ,
administrator on the strength
of the "Mormon will" that
named him executoc of the
estate.

TOO OLD TOW AIT
WALLA WALLA, Wash.
(UPI) -Newlyweds William
and Leah PeMer don't care
wllllt people think, they got .
married ·anyway . after
knowing each other tor just •
four weeks. Mrs. Penner is 81
and her husband is 85.

coming along fast," IIBld Coach Nessetroad. Anchor man Oil the team's pitching s~ff Is
righthander Steve Baird of Cheshire,- Another vastly Improved hurler has been Randy .
? Huffman of Racine,a ccordlng to the coach. Meigs has completed its regular season with an
~ ~-~.

.

.

The President drew Ill within 32 votes of the 1,130 needed for
nomination In Kansas City by sweeping all35 of Coonecticut's
delegates. But the windfall was tempered by Reagan 's 20-0
shutout of Fordamoog Utah delegates on the same day .
While the Republicans were jockeying for positioo, Carter,
the Democratic nominee, had a quiet time at !)orne in Plains,
Ga., stopping to teach a Sunday school class, and relaxing for
the most part.
·
·
The 51-year-&lt;Jld .former Georgia governor hBB no public
appearances set ll!ltil Thursday when he goes to New York for
the day.
At the·~~~~~: Carter repeated his theme of love

l

Reg. S92S .OO

Reg. $579.00
- Ear ly Amer .
.Maple fi nish
- Acc ucolor 19 " ·
dlag. pit:lure
- Ac cumat lc IV
color control

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'825

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ROll
Xl.:-100

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- Automatic · itne

against C&amp;SOE

tuning

·Sale

Your Home.
OTHER MODELS ALSO Al SALE PRICES

ON SALE AT THE MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
. I

ELBERF.ELDS IN POMEROY
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Oppo'Sition opens

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·;:· COLUMBUS (UPI) ~ Opposition will be Pl'esen.':': today wben the Public Utilities Commlssloo of Ohio opens
·llearlnp on the Collonbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
·request ror a ~.7 millloo annual rate Increase.
· ()ppolltlon ta expected to come from the attorney sene. '':'ral's!pe!:lal Utlgatloo Section, the clUes of Columbul and
• Athena, General Motors Corp., the OhiQ Council of Retail
Merchants •and .the Colqmbwi CoaUtlon of Coocetned
· Uwtty users.
·
Tbeuwttyrued fcrtbe IncreaselnNovembel'of 1974 and
in March of 11175 woo approval frcm the PUCO for an
immediate t per cent surcharge u emergency relief
pendln&amp; a declaioo·on the permanent la(nase.
In the flnl ysar, the emergency surcharge raised $22.5
mOUe~~ , The temp0111ry relief wu to be rolled Into
• wbatevvr perman!l't ra.le increase might be authmized
by the PUOO.
,·
The C(llllpiiiY .~ to vary Its ra~ depending on
the MUIII, charging more In summer when !lir
conditioning Btrainl the ayste!ll and less In winter when
eleclrdty iJ uaed for heaUng. ··

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 64

'

spokesmen.
o
Inaction is a pleasure unavailable to .the Republicans.
While both Ford and Reagan relaxed Sunday, both men's
staffs were mapping plans to woo the uncomrnitteds.
Ford has a series of meetings with uncommitted delegates
from New York and New Jersey later In the week and a trip to.
Mississippi to meet thai state's officially uncOllimltted slate
also is being considered.
Reagan arrived back in california to tell reporters, "I don't
think anybody will really know" who the GOP winner Is "until
the first ballot is counted."
He said he expected to arrive at Kansas City within 10 to 25
delegates of the nomination.
•

Dateline 1776
· lfear.YClin!OifWbOIJ.~ ,.

·X·rays

THE TREAT Is famlllar
to ~;nerlcans and so Is the
lady. Av~ Gardner ~kes a
break during filming of a
new movie, " The Sen·
tlnel", on location In
Brooklyn.

Industry_'s
ga~ deficit

estimated
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
state's deficit for industrial
nstural gas will be about 136
billion cubic feet for the 19767'1 heating seBBOn, Robert
Ryan, director of the Ohio
Energy and · Resource
Development Agency said
today.
Ryan, In remarks prepared
for the agency's monthly
board meeting , said the
nstural gas shortfall will not
affect resldenUal customers,
but "may affect jobs, unless
there Is an adequate shift to
other fuels. n
"The industrial and
commericai sectors must
shift to alternate fuels, "
Ryan said, calllng fer natural
gas conservatioo and the
extended use of coal and oil
DB heaUng alternates.
"Ohio is still in a crisis," he
added.
·

WASHINGTON (UPI) Some leaders of the
nationwide effort ·to detect
breBBt cancer as early as
possible are having ~CI)lld
thoughts about routinely
using low dosage X rays to
check women under SO.
· They were meeting at the
National Cancer Institute
today to decide whether to
dlscootinue theJI'esent policy
of using the X rays called
mammograms In women
between the ages of 35 and SO
in the 'tl ·medical centers
sponsored by NCI and the
American cancer Society.
An independent study prepared lor today's meeting
recommended stopping the
use of X rays In tests of
wooaen under SO who have no
signs of developing breast
cancer because the small
·amounts of radiatloo used
might eventually increase a
woman's risk of developing
breast cancer. It would he
small, but the question Is
whether the added risk is
worth the earlier cancer
detection capability provided
by mammography .
Breast cancer is the
leadlflg cause of cancer death
among women today with
88,000 new ~ses expected to
be discovered this year in the
Unlted States. At the present
rate, one of every 15
American women wlll
develop .cancer some time in
her life.
The joint breast cancer
pro)ect screens 270,000
women a year, trying to show
that early detection of the
disease on a widespread basis
can reduce mortality from
breast cancer. It Is known
that the earlier the twnor Is
spotted, the better are tbe
chances of survival.

~

if

laDed 16 get any foothold on
the unsuccessful assault on
Charleston the month
pre.vlous, left with a contingent of Redcoats to join
Gen. William Howe on
Staten Island. He and his
men were convoyed by the
op1y frigate of the
Charleston Invasion fleet
. that was fit to go to sea.

Weather

SHAKING UP "anything
I see that needs shaking
up" is Shirley Temple
Black's view of her new
dulles as State Department
· chiel of protocol. The
lonper child movie star
previously has served as
ambassador to Ghana and
a delegate to the United
Nations.

Clear tonight with lows
from 60 to 65. Mostly suMy
and
continued warm
Tuesday. Highs from the
upper 80s to low 90s .
Probability of rain near zero
today and tonight, 10 per cent
Tuesday.

T yphoon Therese

kills 2 persons

TOKYO (UPI) - Typhoon
Therese hit Japan's southern
island of Kyu shu with
·
torren ts of rain aqd 93 mileS an-hour winds today then
gradually lost strength.
Police said the storm killed
two persons and caused
heavy damage .
Police said the storm
destroyed or damaged more
At 6:15 a.m. Monday the tha n 70 houses, sank three
Middlepor t Emer gency ships and nooded nearly 800
Squad was called for leonard homes, leaving 866 persons
Gilmore on Roush Rd. in 'homeless..
Cheshire. He was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.

E-R squad
stay busy

The Pomeroy E-R squad,
called at 6:48 p.m. Saturday
to SR 124 beyond RuUand for
Ada Ohlinger, who was taken
w the Holzer Medical Center,
was summoned again for
Patricia Cleland of Langsville' at 5: 15 p.m. on Sunday.
She was taken to VMH. The
squad answered another call
at 8:35 on Sunday for James
Braley of 126 State St. in
Pomeroy who was taken to
VMH.

A1,..9:25 p.m. Sunday, the
Pomeroy Fire Dept. was
called to the Ralph Cundiff
home bn Rose Hill near SR 33
where a fire started apparently from an overloaded
electrical circuit, according
to Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles
Legar . He said there
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Meigs Local Band Boosters was approxima tely $1 ,000
will meet this evening at 7:30 damage to the structure,
which was insured.
in the ba!IAi"'room.

FFATOMEET
The Eastern High School
FFAwillmeetat lhe home of
Teressa Benedam, Tupp,ers
Plains, Tuesday, July 20, at 8
p.m.

~

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the overflowing class. "But love, if applied to other people, can
change their lives for the better, through wllll t I describe as
'simple justice' -;- fairness, equality, concern, compasston,
·redressing of grievances, elimination of Inequality,
recognizing the poor are the ones who suffer mll,5l, even In ,our
society which Is supposed to be fair."
carter's campaign treasurer, Robert Upshutz, sald the
campaign would live within the $21.8 milllon In federal funds
allocated to him.
carter and his running mate, Sen: Walter Mondale of Minnesota, also are expected to meet soon; although no date has
heen set. The Democratic campaign will remain pliblicly
inactive through much ol August, according to Carter ·

OFF CHARLESTON, S.
· C., July 19 - British Gen.

.

·.coLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. James A. Rhodes' executive
asaJstant said Sli!lday that the crisis in the state's Medicaid
]lfOgram will virtually force the governor to call a special
114isslon of the General Assembly to aJSW'e tllllt Ohio does not
kHie the program because of a lack of matching funds ..
· "When the General Assembly recessed In June," Thomas J .
' , Moyer said, "no one diJRuted the fact that there Is an ·
estimated shortage of $127 million in the Medicaid program for
·. the current fiscal year.
. "If this problem Is not solved, untold thousands of welfare
recipients will suffer the lou of vital medical services. And
IInce there Is a good chance that cuts in other state programs,
· Including the Aid to Dependent Childl'en program, will have to
be made to lliake up the deficit, each day brings with It the
threat of .harsber cuts.
·
" Putting olf a solution until after the November elections, or
even until September, allows time for the problem to become
Incurably bad," the governor's assistant IIBld.
"And It nothing Is done," said Moyer, ''we may lose the
Medicaid progtam entirely because of the lack of federal
matching funds."

Sale

•·

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Danger

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- Advanced color irack system
- Accuflller 25" dlag. picture tube
- Country American pine finish

•

doesn't mean anything ," carter told

;·special ·session sure

lube·25" diag.

Appliances for

PITCHING PROSPECT- The pitching form and s'iliong right arm of Greg Smith is one
of the rea10ns Coach George Nesselroad of the Meigs Legion team Is optimistic about the
club's chances In the District Legion playoffs that begin July 25 in Athens. "He's been

:Medicaid mess makes

cabinet

On Whirlpool

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wa lnut

- Aut omatic
ti ri e
tu ning
-- Accucolor picture

Sale Prices

I

.

By Ulllted Preas JntemaUonal
,
PI:r'J;~~r~Hl.,.-:. Aal~~Lt:~"QF ;~~Uonal .
'. Bctltherhuuu- o ·1!. ecti'lc .. or.n:rs vote'd today to accept the
18test wage conlract offer from the Westinghouse Electric
CIJrp. and return to work, the first local to agree to terms In a
nationwide strike against the firm.
A Westinghouse spokeii!Jl8n announced eatly today that
Local201, which·representsabout 2,180workers at its Beaver,
Pa., plant voted to end Its walkout which began last Monday.
The plant manufactures electrical control equipment.
...
MIDDLETOWN, OHIO - THE 350 MEMBERS of the
Jriternational Associatioo of Machinists, employed at the
· Aerooca Inc., accepted a three-year conlract Sunday from the
~ny, ending a strike whicb began last April.
The contract proposal was halliffieJ'ed out during a
(Contbtued on p~~e I)

Reg. S7JS .00

Special

:~:

ews. . . in Brief~

"

Xl.:-100

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: United Pn!ll Intel'lllltleaal
. During the ne:d four 'reeks, Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford
• will search for that elusive flashpoint of suppOrt that could end
their Increasingly bitter struggle Jor .the Republican
· Pl'esidenllal nomination and allow the fulltlme pursuit of
Jimmy Carter and his unified DemocraUc party.
· With the Aug. 16 GOP convention nearing, UPI's count
showed President Ford has 1,098 delegates pledged or leaning
to him while 1,062 were committed or leaning to Reagan. There
are 99 uncmunltted voles.
It Is Wlquestionably from that pile of delegates that a victory
for Ford or Reagan will emerge. Both men could .boast of
produciive·delegate harvests during last weekend as a wedge
for mote support.

JULY CLEARANCE SALE!

- AII .wood

for 25 minutes. Bates said,
"We didn't want to keep him
Wider too lmg because this
WBB an emotiooal thing that
happened."
The sheriff said hypnosis
WBB not used on the children
because only Ray made a
"deliberate effort" to notice
details during the two-day
ordeal.
Composite pictures of two.
of the suspe cts were
distributed to ali law
enforcement agencies In
(Ccnllnutd on page 8)

at y

~IIPMIIRIIIIIIPMIIfMimii*f:!&lt;::::,&lt;::c&gt;.:~~w;;,.--;:~:~

- Ron ·

"

deputies were trying to .
contact the salesman who
handled
. all
three
transactions.
The youngsters were ~ken

'

RCA Xl-100 and CO.LORTRAK TELEVISION~

A

:'J ~:==~t!:er~~:
1

gurunen talked little and gave
no inkling why they staged
the kidnap. No ransom
demands were made.
Ray himself underwen t
hypnosis
Sunday
as
investigators tried to obtain
more details.' Bates IIBld he
gave them the license
number for one van - this
lllld been obtained earlier in
questloolng. And, the sheriff
sald, he provided some digits
for the secood.
A Los Angeles physicians
placed Ray under hypnosis

:Reagan-Ford feud . heating up for 4-week ·run

CONTINUING OUR STOREWIDE

• ••*

=~~!~~~~?::

hosta ge by thr ee men
Thurlday as Ray was driving
them home from sUnimer
school: The bus was bidden In
a remote, dry creekbed.
The victims were placed in
a buried tractor-trailer van in
a rock quarry ne ar
Uvermore, 100 miles north of
here. After 16 hours, they
. managed to dig themselves
out.
The victims said they saw
only three men and their
heads were covered with.
stockings. They said the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~donday, July 19, 1976

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

-•lwwk

Madera County Sheriff Ed
Bites lllld Sunday night the
vans were fiUI'Chued by the
111111e man, using a ficti tious
name, in November at tbe
Alameda County llrm. A
third ooe, he IIBld, was boUght
at the same time by another
using a phony na!lle.
All three were reslstered .
with the state Dep&amp;rtment of
Motor Vehicles at Loa Gallls
last Wednesday, the sheriff
said.
Bates said the lnformatloo
resulted from a license
number noted by the bus

•

Television

1

Identification close

..

CO .

Viking systems
'go' for Mars
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI )
- Viking l's lander passed Its
last test in Martian orbit
today and appeared ready to
land Tuesday morning in a
desert basin on the northern
fa ce of Mars.
T he thr ee- le gged
spacecraft was awakened
from months of hibernation in
its proteCtive aluminum
capsule and put throUghf a
five-hour series of checks to
make sure all was set for
America 's first attempt · to
land instruments on the red
planet.
Although complete analysis
of all test results was not
expect,ed until later today,
Dr. Albert Hibbs said from
Jet Propulsion Laboratory's
control center the checks

Is to start taking the first
photograph from the surface
of Mars 25 seconds after
touchdown.
Except for its twin
computers and a tape
record er, the lander's
electronic parts had been
· dorma nl since Novem.ber
when they were checked
following ·Jaunch from Cape
Canaveral, Fla.
Engineers also ran through
the instrumenis designed to
conduct the first search for
life on Mars, examine lis soil,
monitor its weather and
listen foi marsQ\Iakes.
Viking 1 was sent its
landing orders Sunday, but
· wlll not begin the three-hour
2!Hninute descent sequence
until its computers receive a

"went by tile book" with

"go" command an hour

Viking performing as
expected.
·
' "Every th i n g lo oks
excelle nt and we're all
looking forward to quite an
exciting time .in the next 30
hours." he said.
One system afte r another
was turned on, tested and
then turned off · by radio
signals sent 214 million miles
from earth to Mars.
Thelestingwent sofaras to
order both cameras aboard
th e lander to take a picture of
a tiny ligbtbulb in its dark
capsule to make sure they
were operating. One camera

before the sterilized lander Is
to separate from its orbiting
mothership.Thisis scheduled
for 4:52a.m. I':DT Tuesday .
Eight small braking
rockets will start the descent
from a 93().mile hi~h orbit.
The landing eng~nes are
needed because Mars' atmosphere is too thin to allow the
parachute to ease the craft to
a soft landing.
Touchdown is expected
about 8:12a.m. Tuesday In a
13G-by4JO mile area near the
western slopes of what seems
to be a vast, now-dry
(ConUnued on page 8)

Deer runs into car's path

No one was seriously in- Iefl uf center.
jured in . four weekend acThe Salls vehicle went off
cidents the Galiia-Meigs the right side of the road, slid
Post, State Highway Pa trol down the berm , crossed the
said today.
road and struck an embank. The palrol repor!ed an auto ment. There was slight
driven eastb&lt;1und on Rt . damage to the vehicle. The
124 in · Meigs Co un - driver was taken to Holzer
ty
by
Ern est
G. ,Medical Center for treatWrJ.~ht, 46, Rt. 1. Langs- . ment. There was no citation.
ville, struck a deer around ' The other ~ehicle did not stop
9:45 a.m. Saturday. The deer and was unidentified.
ran into the path of·ihe au to,
Two wrecks were
causing moderate damage to reported in Gallia County
the vehicle. .
Sunday .
At 1:10 p.m. Saturday on
At 6:55 p.m. on Rt. 218, ·
Rt. 554 at the junction of Philllp S. Unroe, 20, Rt. 2,
Fairview Rd ., irl Ga lli a Crown City, was charged
County, Vanessa M. Salls, 20, wi th reckless operation .
Rt. 1, Bidwell, showed visible Unroe was headed north on
signs of injury after an ac- Rt. 218 following a vehicle .
· Another vehicle was coming
ciden t.
Patrol said the driver was south in the. opposite lane .
· headed west ori Rt. 554 when The auto in (ront of Unroe
she met an eastbound vehicle slowed ..down. Unroe was
•

unable to slow down. His
vehicle wen t off the right side
of the roadway and struck an
embankment and ditch
causing moderate damage to
his auto. There were no injuries.

·"'

Final accident Sunday took
place at 12:05 p.m. on Rt. 35,
at th• junction of Rt. 160.
According to palrol, Naomi
G: Gooderham , '\2, Crown
City, and Harry D. Mason, 41,
of 359 Debby Drive pulled
across the eastbound lane
and stopped to permit westbound lane traffic lo clear .
Both vehicles moved forward. The Mason vehicle
slowed down and the
Gooderham car hit the Mason
vehicle in the rear. There wa~
slighr damage to both
vehicles. There were no injuries or citations.

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday,July 19, 1976

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 19, 1976

·c ongressman's trap trial opens today in Utah
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)
- Congressman Allan Howe
claims he was the victim of
''some trap or setup." Two
p;Jlicvwomen who p;JSed as
prostitutes
say
he
rx op;Jsitloned them.
TI1e charge against him
was a misdemeanor r uegedly soliciting sex from
!liP policewomen. B~t for the
4~ . ye ar-old
freshman
llemocrat seeking election to
a second term, his political
ca reer was at stake.
Today was set as Hawe's
!b y in City Court, to answer
the· h(ghly publicized
charges . First up was
~elec tion of a jury.
Defense attorney Dean
Mitchell said effort.'! in three
courts to avoid the trial had
failed and Howe, father of
fi ve, would appear before
Judge Raymond Uno.
Maintaining he IS Innocent
and not "a quitter," Howe is a

•

candidate for re-election in
Utah's 2nd Congressional
District despite pressure
!rom fellow Democrats, the
state's two inajor .daily
newspapers and his church.
, His arrest June 12 in the
city's red light district was
expected to result In "a most
difficult campaign ."
Sen , Frank Moss, a
Democrat and the senior
member
of
. Utah 's
congressional delegation,
called Howe "unelectable "
beca11se of the morals
arrest.
"I don 't think there Is a
prayer that he could be. re·
elected in Utah even if he
could beat Ule charge Itself.
Alter all, he was down there
and he does not deny that,"
Moss.said.
Rep. GUM McKay, !).Utah,
and Gov. Calvin Ramptoo,
also a Democrat, have urged
Howe to drop his candidacy.

Spencer Kimball, president
of the Church of Jesus Clrlst

of
Latter-Day Saints
(Mormon ) to which Howe
belongs, said Howe "ought w
give very serioliS thought w
resigning."
Howe Issued a statement
promising tD ''teU my !lide
fully at the appropriate time,
In Court, or through a public
forum II necessary."
Howe claims he was lured
tO the red Ugh! districl .
"I was obviously the ~&lt;~rget
of 99me trap or setup," he
said.
" I was lured wUle scene of
the incident under the false
pretenses.of .an invitation to a
political gathering.
"There was a car. I did
s"top. I did have a
conversation. But I did not
have the conversation
reported. It was a most
foolish mistake. But the
conversation as reported was

Tom Paine:s long lost gravel marker~ found
TIVOLI, N.Y. (UP! ) - A
sta te worker says he
uncovered the long lost
graveslle of Revolutionary
War firebrand Thomas Paine
whi)e digging a septic system
on his Dutchess County
property.
~ack McNeil, a 311-year-old
equipment operator lor the

state Highway Department
said he discovered a seven:
foot marble marker under
three feet of dirt on his four.
acre lot.
The tombstone, McNeil
said, reads, "In memory ol
Thomas Paine, who was born
In Thetford, England, JBII. 29,
1737, died at New York June
8, 1809. 72 years old, 4 mooths,
9 days."

Paine, a corset maker from
England, penned the treatise
'~ common Sens·e," which
many historians believe was
the single greatest Influence
on the American Revolutioo .
He later wrote the "Crisis
Papers, " credited with
bolstering the spirits of
American soldiers and
civilians during the war.
After the Revolution the

not be compelled 10 dilmlal
the charge.
The justicea voted 3-1
against Intervening.
Mitchell then 1urned to the
U.S. District Court for Utah,
filing a petition late Friday
lor a writ of habeas corpus,
seeking I hearing 00 the
petitilin and polilponement of
the City Court trial.
·
The writ sought dilmlssal
m the basis lha t preli'lal
publicity
Including
statements by Kimball - had
made a lair trial in Utah
Impossible,
Slatements by the 81-yaar·
old Mormon leader "have
been · adverse to lhe
presumption of innocence,",
because
Utah
Is
predominantly Monnoo, he
sal d.
O!lef Judge Willis Ritter,
vacationing in Idaho, was
assigned the case.
.
Mitchell Indicated the
fede,ral court action had
· laUed but refused to say ·
wliether Ritter declined to
enter the case or had denied
the petition.

falae ." ·
asking that the charge be
Pollee deny they set up dlsmlued because the
Howe. They said seven other ordinance tinder which the
persons were arrested that arrest was made Is
night on the same street for IUlconstltutional, flie arrest
soliciting
sex
from was the rMult at entrapment,
policewomen posing as statementa made by City
Attorney Roger Cutler
prostitutes.
Howe was arrested alter amounted to prosecutorlal
allegedly offering $20 for misconduct, pretrial
sexual
favors .
The publicity made a lair trial
pollcewomen testified at a ' impoasible and the formal
pretrial hearing that Howe crlminlll c&lt;mplalnt against
Initiated· the
sexual Howe contained technical er·
bargaining, that he said he rors.
was "just looking lor some
Uno denied the motions on
July 12. He said statements
fun."
~
Although the congressman by the prosecution and
has maintained he is pretrial publicity would be
confident a jury will acquit considered during jury ·
him and that he prefers selectioo.
exoneration In open court, his
Mitchell wept to the state
attorney has shuli\ed Supreme Court Thursday,
frultessly through three asking for a "writ of
court.'! hoping to avoid the extraordinaty relief." He
trial.
asked the court to order Uno
MitcheU filed five dismissal ·W show cauie why he should
motions In Uno's court,

.

State of New York gave Paine
a farm In New RocheUe,
N.Y., about 100 miles !rom
the M!!Nell property.
McNeil said that as he dug
out the tablet and cleaned it
off, the name rang a bell, A
search by his wile and two
children In the World Book
Encyclopedia disclosed that
Paine had died on a farm in
New Rochelle but that

RAY CROMLEY

recorda of his burial site.!Vere
lost after an unsucce5sful
attempt to return his body to
EngiJind, .
"When we moved in about
WASHINGTON (UP!) 15 years ago, some neighbors
Rep.
Robert L. Leggett, !).
told us about some graves out
Calli.,
told the Washingtm
back ..., but we never thought
l'llst
that
he forged. his wife's
about it much until we fuund
name
when
he bought his
them near the hemlock tree,
putting In the septic system," mistress a bouse and,
because of another affair, Is
McNeil saic!.
He said talks with ]lllder lnvesticatlon for
· neighbors convinced him that ltevealing cl~ssified lnforma·
the tombstones were pushed lion.
The disclosure of the
over about 50 years ago by a
forgery
was ooe of a number
farmer named
Jesse
of
revelations
about 49-yearRockefeller, whose wife
old
Leggett's
private
life that
wouldn't move onto the
he
volunteered
in
aeyeral
llfOperty with the graves
Interviews,
the
Post
said
there.
The 1iming of the discoVery &amp;lnday.
The newspaper said
. d~ring
the country 's
·Bicentennial year is "quite a Leggett had 81! affair with a
nice coincidence," McNeil Capitol Hill secretary Slortiy
alter he was elected · to
said.
COngress
13 years ago. She
His plans for the wmbstone
became
pregnant,
refused to
include moving it to safety.
have an abortim; and he

bundredl! of tllousands at rates higher than much of private
Industry could afford for unskilled and semislriUed labor. Even
research by sympathetic scholars indicates thereswt would be
double-digit inflatim worse then we've just gone through.
, Junmy Carter has come up with the thought.that private
industry could somehow be encouraged to provide more jobs,
bat has off~ no IllQre ,than patchwcrk thoughts on !he
· subject. that is; a temporary government subsidy on wages of
thQSe about to be let go. He does suggest an end to double
.taxation.
·On trust busting, the Dem~ats are in complete disarray.
The word bas spread through the ranks of the Democratic
leadership hat me way or another the oil ccmpanies have
joined in a conspiracy. And that they must be broken up · vertica'·~. horizontally, or crossways. Pick YOUf Democratic
New York hospital workers jobs today, althOugh some
d&gt;igwig '"'re and take your choice. Carter leans toward a look returned to work today to end some began filtering back to
.at horizontal busting, taking the e&lt;mpanies out of coal, 3 two-week walkout agaimt work Sunday.
uranimn, geothermal energy_ and presumably JIOiar p&lt;!Wer. 57 hospitals and nursing
The union agreed to end the
The Republicans are just as ronfw.ed, but lor different homes, but~ a burgeoning strike after the hosPital manreasons. They haven't the foggiest idea what they want to do strike brought Labor agement group Salurday proabout the big Qi! !Inns. The Jittle operators seem to be beUiog Secretary W.J · Usery into mised to submit the salary
\'II Reagan.
.
contract talks at Westing· dispute to arbitration. A
Democratic and Repulilican leaders are earnestly too"•n house Electric Corp.
i)anel of arbitora will
-...
Some
28
000
members
of determine if the workers
increases in U. S. energy production. And plans flow like MYI!rs the Inlerni.tional Union of
Oilt of.every doonoay. But there's no agreement on any of the Electri-' Wor'"ers and ,,__ should get a 7per cent cost-of.
proposals
""'
a
""' living pay like recommended
communicatioos job,
VIJ:gually none Or the plans are based on souni e~ineering ~~~~ec~ th~or~.:: lastfa""'~,?'pane
. byl. a federal
Last Friday, U. S. District and geological studies. So that we have no assurance tllose
,...._..,
Judge Dennis Knapp Imposed being seriously coosidered would be anytlang more lhail giant Westinghouse wage Offer,
Strikebound Cincinnati
a S50,000 fine against UMW boondoggles, ~en more costly and·counterproductive than walked
out
against hotlpi.tals. began increasing
Local 1759. Knapp said be 'IOI'ile m the hasty' ill-cooceived anti-pollutim regulatiCIIS, !~~~nlg3h,000oumemsebersSun~athey' patient loads SUnday despite
would add $20,000 to the fine designed with the best mintentiCIIS to meet real needs, but so ,.--., .
"'
a waJitout br nmmedical
each day that his back-to- poorly researched they end up doing more harm than good.
lnte~tional Brotherhood of employes. Patient loads were
work U'der !lffectlng Cedar
Tax refomi is in a class by itself. AU Democrats and ~ Workers already · reduced after the strike
Coal's aeven mines is Republicans want wcloae tax loopboles - all loopholes, that , U
. d
. began last week.
ignored.
is, except these which benefit them and their constituents.
. sery
amve
. m But officials at General
In 8 related hearing, the Democrat Carter, interestingly enough, has proposed a plan so Pittsburgh to help mediate Hollpital, largest of the two
judge ftred two coal miners similar to that of Republican Treasury Secretary W'illialll the talks Sunday' hours after strikebound facilities, said
S50 apiece after finding them Simon you would think they had worked it out together -the ~ . WEW ~ the UEW &amp;mday staff members and
guilty or criminal contempt. gene nil elirninaUoo of deductions and a strong reduction in JOllied the strike·
volunteers had picked up the
One speaker said the UMW rates, But Carter has already been forced wback away from
The strike. bas shut dO!RI ~ slack and patient loads were
local took the matter tlrough Ibis approach, and ~on has ~o support fo speak of for his ~cturing planls and 41 relllmed to normal. Officials
the proper grievance proposal wher'e it counts.
repatr shops. .Only 14 said the emergency room at
cbannela and a federal
On government reform, neither Democrats nor company operations were Ga1era1 aiJo was back to
arbitraU!r .ruled In favor m Republicans, speak with one voice. Carter, President Fotd and still open.
. .
normal operation.
the miners; " but tile Rauild Reagan want to eliminate bureaus, rejicger the
Some, 40,00~ striltlng
Some progreu were
COIDJliUlY refused to abide by regulatory agencies and wipe out outdated P"OgrBms. Not so ~cal hospttal workers reported in negollatlona to
his decision."
Democrats and Republicans in Congress. in the end, in these m New York returned to their 11ettle the walkout by 1.~
"We tried to take the case matters, Congress makea the decisions, not the president.
•
through the system, bat the
Some
administrations
back,
a
prestigious
rommls!lion
o
system only works for the
under the chairmanship of former President Herbert Hoolll!r, .
00!'1 ccmpaniM," the miner was
set lip with these same ends in view, DeSPite stroog
• ~'
said.
bipartisan support, the commission Blld its works faded away. ·
m".
A seriM or other commissions followed . All were applaused;
little aclion was taken.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Disgruntled coal
miners attempted to shut
down coal mines In southern
West Virginia today In
protest to a $50,000 line .
slapped on a United Mine
Workers unioo In a recent
labor dispute.
Nearly 100 malcontents
slaged a rally Sunday and
vowed to send pkkets to
mines In Kanawha, Logan,
Boone and Raleigh counties.
" All we're asking lor is that
the federal courts give ua the
same comideratioo .as the
coal axnpanles," declared
ooe miner, who refused to
identify himself w a news
reporter.
" All we want Is a fighting
chance."
Troub~ erupted .June ~ ·
when minen struck the
Cedar Coal Co. in Kanawha
County in a dispute involving
the )IOitlng m an oulllde

killing"' SIX..

Use of spices can cut calories
sjlice world. The non-spice
worJd has relied on lats, such
as b.utter to season
vegetables and other dishes.
This converts lnany of
nature's low !at foods into
rela Uvely high fat·foods and
that is'a major facior In why
.some people have so much fat
in 'their diet.
Let me give you an
example. When you bay a
package of frozen peas they
contain litUe or no fat, but
when .you cook the package ·
youwiUIIkelypulin at least a
tablespoon or butter or
margarine. Then about hall
or more of the calories in the
cooked peas come from lat. If
you
had used a nonfat
aeasonlng that would not
have happened. So both to
lii1Ut sodium·, and limit fat
(and hence calories that lead
to being overweight) I think
the use or gplces should be
encouraged. .
I am sending you The
Health Letter nuni~r 1-8,

July, 1776:

.

A New York newspaper, the to...titutiunal Gazettf,
carries this dispatch !rom Rhode Island : The Rhode island
legislature has resolved that ·:u any penon within that
state shall, under prete- of preacbin&amp; or prayln1. or In
any other way or manner whatever, acknowledge or
declare their late Kllll to . be their rightful lord or ·
sovereign, or shall pray lor the sliccessolhls arms, or thai
he may vanquish or overcome all hl1 enemies.[such persoi\1
shall be deemed guilty ol hl&amp;h misdemeanor .. , , Upon conviction thereof,[such person] shall forfeit &amp;lid pay • .. tile
sum of '100,()()() lawful money, and pay all tottl of ..
pms~utioq , and shall stand committed to the gaol until the
· same be satisfied."

bought a hcme for her oo
Capitol Hill. It said· Leggett
bought a more \!l[penstve
house after she had a second
child.
When his mistress inallled
the home be in her name·, the
paper said, Leggett forged
his wife Ba.rbara's signature
so that she would not find out
about his second family.
Leggett continued to llve with
his wife and three children
and bfoke with his milltress .
before ...she became really
rightwing."
The Post said Leggett also
had an affair with Sook Nal
Park 'fhomaon, an aide to
~er Carl Albert,
Leggett has been under
investigation by the FBI and
lntemal Revenue Service as

Blood Pressure. Otllers who liquid it is creamed with, high
want this issue cari send a in !Julterlat and lower in
long,
stamped,
sell· sodium than the dry curd.
addressed envelope with 50 Hence the uncreamed dry
cents lor II. Just send your weight of the cottage curds
letter to me in care of this contains the most sodium.
ne.wspaper, P. 0. ·Box \551, For most people that is not a '
·Radio City Station, New valid argument lor the use or
York, NY 10019.
creamed versus uncreamed
DEAR DR. LAMB - !have cottage cheese. The unyour book, "Metabol!'cs." In creamed vartel y Is an ex.
it you say lhree-and-a...Oalf cellent low.fat source of
ounces of creamed cottage protein and calcium;
che~se
contai~s
229 . A cup of whole milk (245·
milligrams of sodium; un- grams)
contains · 122
creamed 290 milligrams.
milligrams or sodium and a
Do~s . powdered milk cup of skim milk 127
conium less sodhun than milligrams - not an im·
whole or 2 per cent butterfat portant difference Milk
milk? Please explain how fortified with 2 ~r cent
creamed collage cheese has nonfat solids has a little more
.so much less !!odium than (149 milligrams per cup). A
uncreamed ,
cup of liquid inilk made With
DEAR READER - Bu~ nonfat dry milk powder (one
terlai!B very low in sodium. and .one-third cup of powder
Unsalted butter contains less . per quart) will contain only 86
~n 10 milligrams m 100 milligrams or sodium. 'fheae
grams (3.5 oz.) Part of the values are derived from data
weight :&gt;f creamed cottage !rom the U. s. Department or
cheese IS from the cream.v Agriculture.

a result of allegations he :
received bl'lbes from the
South Korean govel'lllilent
and may have provided
classified government ;
Information to the South Ko-...:

..

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family

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.

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Bruner, who had his head Kareem Abdui.Jabbar's high
shaved
six hours befoce his school coach in N.ew York,
1lalll head beaming under the
race,
led
a U.S. aweep in the "They are so intlmldaling.
:brlllht, artificial lights ,
200-meter
butterfly \vlth bis That was the most aggressive
)lwtmmer Mike ·Bruner
world
record
time of one I've ever seen them play .
~ynded the rallying ay lor
minute,
59.23
seconds.
'fhls They forCed the play on Italy ,
;(he United States,
.
came just 15 minutes alter 6-6 They scare you,"
: ''We•re the best. n he screaJohn Naber, with a lull head
All but one of the 12 players
;med. "Hey, hey, USA, allthe
of blond hair, set a world · oo the U.S. roster scored,
;way. This Is the greatest
mark of 56.19 seconds in with AdriBII DanUey notching
•thing . that could have
qualllying for tonight's finals 20 points, Mitch Kupchak 19
:happened to liS. We're gonna
of the IO&lt;kneter backstroke . and Scott May 16. The
~get everyone psyched and gel
Before he .got dressed, Americans, who next play
::rnpre medals than anyone
Naber
watched the award Puerto Rico Tuesday, led by win .
· ;gave us credit roc."
ceremony
for Bruner, silver as many as 30 points.
Tom Hawley got the only
• li·was that !lind of day lor
medalist
Steve
Gregg and
There were three other gold extra base hit for the win·
:tlii".Americans when politics
bronze
medalist
8111 medals awarded Sunday. ners, a double, and Chris
:aliUost gave way to sport.'!,
Forrester,
and
then
yelled
to East Germany gained a Taylor, Jeff Grueser, Troy
~and matching each of their
a friend, "Hey, go ask Bruner second gold as Uwe Potteck Griffith, and Chuck Kennedy
•herolc deeds wltll words to
II that made the hair stand up set a world Shooting record each got a single lor the only
: match, the United States has
on hl8 head."
with 573 of a possible 600 Pomeroy hits.
·:gotten off to a running,
'For
his
own
accompoints, and the Russians also
Mason managed to tie it in
·:boastful start In U1e Olympic
pllshme~t ,
the
out· picked up a pair of golds. the bottom of the seventh to
::!~.~!!pes.
.
.
going Naber ·said, "I feel They won the 100-kilometer · send the game . into extra
reaDy good, but I'm not cycling race in 2 hours, 8 innings , but the Rovals
fooling myself. I haven't won minutes and :i3 secooda and plated one In the lop of lhe
a gold medal yet. The record Alexander Voronln equaled ninth to win it. ' ·
wiU go tomorrow (Moodsy) his Own combined total world
Mason's bats were hot ·as
night,"
record of 533-'&gt;2 p;lUnds to win they cracked out six doubles,
The swimming successes the flyl"eighl title In one each by David Camp,
also included a silver medal welghllllting.
Don Russell , Chris Davis,
for tile women's 40&lt;kneter B. C. COUNT WINS
Mark Johnson, Chuck Stanley
relay team, and a perfect 6COLUMBUS (UPI) - B. C. ·a.nd Mark Smith , Dav1s and
for.jl advance by Americans Count edged out Starred by Stanley also each got a single.
into two final events tonight, Brei by one nose Saturday Johnson and Smith teamed
· By MILTON RIClfMAN
the
men's
JOI).meter · night in the featured race at up to strike out fifteen, but
UPI Spol'tl Edltot
backstroke
and
the
women's Scioto Downs.
..
walked seven , with Smith
-i!.IONTREAL (UPI) - These Olympic Games have. been IO&lt;kneter freestyle ,
Brad FarringU!n drove B. getting tagged with the loss.
dUiited already like no others before Blld the possibility keeps
"This was a super start for C. Count over the mile pace in Pomeroy is now 8-4.
growing they may be watered down more before the closing us," said Jack Nelson, coach 1:58 3-0. He returned $7.80, p
040 000 001- 5 5
ceremony two weeks from now, so much, that they cou)d I!J&amp;l of the women's team. "After $3.80 and $.280. Skipper Jim · M
010 200 i00-4 8
lhe poor start we had In 1972 was third.
mOst of the ir meBIIing,
The organizers like to pretend there Is no problem here and (at Munich), I'm reaUy very
tile' departure of nearly two dozen nations Is nothing sig· happy our girla have done as
ntflcant, but if they think that way, they're dead wrong and well as they have."
There were only two llnala
sbiiply have their heads in the sand.
~ What is happening now, with nations packing up and leaving
on the opening night
6\i'et political issues having nothing to do with sports, could swimming program, ,and both · PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - tllem," Anderson said.
atllsh the Olympics quicker than any Qther destructive fOI'ce. resulted in world recocds. The Pltt.'lburgh Pirates, 10 Jack Blllingham, who took
A-etually, the p;Jlltical events of the past lew·days have struck Shortly alter Bruner set his, games
behind
the over lor starter Don Gullett in
~ihe foundation of the Games like nothing ever has before.
the powerful East German Philadelphia Phillies In the the fifth and picked up the
It is entirely possible they could mean this XXI Olympiad women broke their own mark National League East, still victory to even his record at
might be the last one ever staged, At leas! in its present form, lor the 40&lt;kneter medley have a chance to repeat as 7-7, pitched 3 1-3 scoreless
relay by more than six division champions, Innings before the Pirates
a.gyway .
•&lt;Jne group here is called the South AlricBII Non-Racial seconds In 4:07.95.
according . to · Cincinnati . rallied lor two runs in the
Olympic Committee. The head man is asking all Arab,
manager Sparky Anderson. eighth. Will McEnaney and .
()rtbbean, Latin American and eastern bloc countries to join
It was the first of what
"They're still not out of it," East wick finished.
ltl;'e Black African nations and withdraw !rom the Games could be a bumper crop of Anderson said Sunday after
"My curve ball was my out
because Nelj' ~aland is competing in them.
gold medals for 17-year-old the Reds edged the Pirates 9- pitch and it was real effective
,: Dennis Brutl1s, leader·of the African committee, says he can Kornelia Ender, and the 8 in the first game ol a two· until they got some ground·
see other nations withdrawing daily right until the games end, lithsome blonde is favored to game series. "The Phillles ball hits in the eighth,"
and he could be right.
pick up her second in are starting to show signs, Billingham said. "I knew he
The athletes who were instructed wpack their bags and U!night's lO&lt;kneter freestyle. that they're lalling ·off."
(Anderson) was coming out
leave alsO were directed .not to talk with reporters. One This race also could be the
However, the east division- w gel me, soon as (Willie)
Kepyan conveyed some of his feelings to me, though.
occasion for another blonde, leading Phiilies defeated Los Stargell grabbed a bat to
.:~I worked so hard to gel here, I would do anything to atay Shirley B&amp;baaho(f., to earn Angeles 2-1 Sunday to extend pinch-hit . But It was a
am! compete~" he said. "I think I had a good chance io win a her 5econd medal in as many their lead over Pittsburgh . satisfying performance,
~.Jd medal, but that is aU over with 'now ... .If we are to keep . nights after she received a
Cincinnati pinch hitter considering the way I've been
speaking, though, you must go to my coach first and get silver in the medley relay.
Mike Lum's tw!H'Ull triple going."
permission to speak with me,"
. · The other swimming finals keyed a six-run filth inning
Billingham has started 17
.. SD I went to the Kenyan coach. He was watching one of the tonight are the men's 100. which gave the Reds a 7-3 games and completed only
boxing bouts on television and pretended he didn't understand meter bll~kstroke, in which lead. The Pirates rallied late three. He had an ERA of 4.94
· my question. When I repeated It, he considered the request a Naber is favored over East in the game and Bob going into the game.
moment or so, then said no. I asked him II there was some Gennany's Roland Matthes, Robertson homered with two
Lum, who batted for Gullett
relison he didn't wish his athletes U!lldng with rep;Jrters,
Ender's fiance and the on and two out in the ninth In the. filth and tMpied off
·~ ·Because I said so !" was his answer.
former world record holder; ·before Rawly East wick losing pitcher George Medich
End of conversation.
the women's 201).meter retired Manny Sanguillen lor ( ~) .said he hit "a last hall,
....communica.tion between athletes is much better than that butterfly, which should go to the game's final out .
up and away.
between some coaches Blld reporters.
East Germany; and the
"It was a tough loss for
· ' If a diRtnnce runner in Ethiopia discovers a beneflciallll!.W men's 21lt).meter freestyle,
tralnin~ we thod, before the week is out anolilllr distance where tl)e U.S. could
runner will get word of it in California. How? Through the accJ)mplish another 1·2·3
i!rapevinc. '
sweep with Naber, Steve .
~.Before arriving here, U.S. athletes had advance word that Furniss
and
Jim
.ttfrjcan nations like Chad, Congo, Ghana, Ethiopia, Kenya, · Montgomery,
Nigeria and Gambia were puUing out of the Olympics, They
In addition to the four in
heard that a week ago while they were training in Plattsburg, swimming, !here were three
N.¥ ., and all of them, the·wh!tes as weU ,as the blacks, had an other gold medal events sche· . DAYTON, Ohlo (UPI) - as the "Pay 'N Pak" and
Informal meeting and decided they didn't wish to be part of duled for today, two in Shaking off a heavy dose of gained status under the
any boycott.
shooting and one in competition !rom Billy ownership
of
Dave
. · • "l just corne hereto run," said Ed Moses &amp;mday.
weightllfllng.
Schumacher, Bill Muncey of Heerensperger and crew
,. ·Ed Moses is a 21).year-old hurdler from Dayton, Ohio,
Although the U.S. has La Mesa, Calli., Sunday woo chief Jim Lucero.
cbrilpetlng In his first Olympics. He won the Olympic trials in played only one game in his 37th career unlimited
Muncey's newest records
.43:3, an American record, and no~ that Ugand~'s world basketball, the concessions hydroplane victory, piloting are 114,650 m.p.h. for a twocha(llpion 400.meU!r hurdler John Akil Bbua is out, hts chances came trickling in foUowlng "Atlas Van Unes" to three mile qualilying lap, 111.283
of wfnning a gold medal are much better. Moses is black. Even the awesome destruction of solid · Hy.droglobe heat m.p.h.""' for · a two·mile
'Ei!jr.g an American, he can equate with those African athletes Italy, which beal defending victories and lour speed competition lap, 105.01 2
not competing here. The Africans are protesting because a Olympic champion Russia · records.
IJI .p.h. lor an 11-rnile heat and
,New Zealand rugby team Is touring South Africa which three weeks IIIlO and was
Schumacher's Rolls Royce· 103.970 m.p.h. for a 33-rnile
vuctlces race separation and New ~aland is In the Olympics. considered to have a good 'powered "Olympia Beer," race on a two-mile course.
• "Being a black person myself, I have to agree with what the chance lor a medal.
"Miss U.S." of Detroit,
making a com~back after
..Udcan nations are doing," sold Ed Moses. "Still, It wouldn't
"!think only one team.here crashing on lhe Detroit River driven by Tom D'Eath and
mllke 81\Y sense lor me to get involved In politics. I've talked to has a Shot at the gold medal," tllree weeks ago, fizzled into owned· by industrialist
'the other athletes on our team and they were disappointed over commented ,Yugoslavian second pia!" within 10 yards George Simon, was second in
what happened, but there was notlling they could do. If we Goach Mirko Novosel, "and of the finiSh line In the final th e winner -take-all finale .
walked out, It would've made things that much worse, that team is 'the United heat.
The turbocharged, Allison:N•turally, this will downgrade the quality of· the games, States. I have not seen the
Sunday's was Muncey's p;Jwered hull had to come
:eapeciaUy in track and field. It sort of cheapens the whole Idea USA team, but 1 have seen fourth victory of the seagpn from behind in the second
~ , Ule Olympics."
their players and that ~ and .third consecutive on the row of a staggered start on
·Ed Moses ls ,right. He could've gone further, though. What enough for me."
MidWest circuit. It was the the light, two-mile Hyliiis happened not only cheapens the Olympics, It serlou!liy
Added Canadian Coach 20th win lor the hull, which .drobowl course.
A substitute hull driven by
Imperils them, too.
Jack Donohue, who was began itA thunderboat career
Tom
Marlin of Mercer
~·
Island, Wash., lor owner
Bernie
Liille,
" Miss
Budweiser" wound ~P third
lor the day despite a one-lap
penalty lor jumping the gun
, DUBLIN, Ohio (UP!)- Ho Bradley.
sank a 254'ooter on the third kin's putting prowess and at the start.
:· hum, Judy Rankin has won
·The 31-year.old Texan, who and a seven looter on the concentration on the course.
·• Bllother golf tournament.
pocketed another $10,000 lor fourth , Rankin had started
:: "I'm very happy about It," the win, had started the day the day Six-under par and
:: said Rankin after sewing up In a lie with Stacy, but ran off that spurt put her out front by
•' her filth victory of the year three stralgh( birdies on the three and it was never less
:: ,liundsy, the $70,000 Borden second, third and fourth holes than two the rest of the wa~.
BILL FL£TCHER
: ·t,asslc, "but l'mlo!llng some and it was, for the most part,
Bradley, who was three off
12H
· .olthe elation. It's becoming.&amp; all over.
the pace to start the day,
"-1151.
:, .!Jusiness. I'm still thrilled,
"l had a pretty good lead · turned In three under 33, but
Mlddltporl
·• but It comes out different." most or the day," said played the back side In n1ne
PH.m.7155
:, ....Rankin, the first member Rankin, "but I never did feel straight pars, not good
:: :ll.. the Ladies Professional real good until there were enough to ca)ch the streaking
·:· Golf Association to win . only a couple of holes to play. Rankin.
:: ;$100,000 in one year, Shot a There are so many good
"It's reaUy amazing to
:: ·flve-und~-par, 67 oo the 6,200- players out there."
have it three under and not be
., :Y,!rd Riviera Country Club
Rankin had five birdies in a able to pick up at least one
~ .liiiurse Sunday lor a 54-hole .frontsldeoffourunder32, but bird m the back !lide," said
""" ,_.,.
: ·~e of 205, 11 shots under It was the three quick ones at long.hltllng Bradley, who
Like a good neighbor.
Sltlt f•m l1!r I n~ Coift!leny
·: JltU'. That was good fm· • ~ivc - the star~ whkh got h@f going. was looking lor her ·~~ond
Horne Of!ICI ~- l~moit
Stale Farm is there.
;. stroke !Dar gin over Lrun She ro•. •.ir
/ ~u ll 35-- victory of the year.
p 7511-C
·: nersup Hollis Stacy ana Pat looter on the-seCond nole.
lli'adley marvelled at Ran·
.The first day of activity
began for the U.S. with a
devastating 106·86 victory
. over: European champion
Italy in bMketball, which
Immediately brought words
of concession from every
rival ooach except RIISIIIa 's.
Then, in the space of 15
minutes during the evening,
·tile Yanks reasserted !belt
clatm to world supremacy in
swimming by setting two
world records Blld earning
three medal!i. And the sky·
high Bruner, anlicljlating a
telephone call from President
Ford IQr being the first
American gold medal winner,
proclaimed, "We have a
chance to gel every gold In
every men'sevent. The whole
th.lng just freaked me out ,"

Sport Parade

White Sox, Reds gain
•
berths in KC semzs
The Gallipolis Whl te Sol
and New Haven Reds captured quarterfinal trlumpps
In the 18th annual Kyger
Cre.ek Little League basebaU

toum8JTI4lnl Saturday night.
In semifinal action tonigh\,
the Gallipolis Red Sox battle
the Middleport Braves at 7
o'clock. In the nightcap, the
GaUipolls White Sox w1li look

Tanner oops
Western title
1
.
CINCINNATI (UPI) . Roscoe Tanner, never before
a pro tour winner a~ clay
courts, surprised hlrhself by
winning the $100,000 Western
Tennis Championships on a
synthetic clay-type surface
Sunday.
"I'll · be puShing myself
harder at tourneys. on clay
after todilY," the 25-year old
southpaw said after whipping
top-seeded Eddie Dibba, 7~.
6-3, in a match that went
nearly two hours under a
broiling sun.
"Dibhs Is one of the best
clay court players there is,''
added
Tanner,
the
tournamenl 'sNo. 2seed. "If I
can beat him on clay, that
tells me something about
myself."
Tanner, a native of Lookout
Mountain, Tenn., who now
lives on Kiawah Island, S.C.,
picked up $16,000 lor winning
the 89th edition of the
Western, a 64-ffian, week-long
tournament played on the
grounds of Old Coney Island,
a former amusement park.
Dibhs was a double loser
Sunday, as he and partner
Harold Solomon lost the
doubles championships to

Stan Smith and Erik Van
DiUen, 6-l,S.l. Smith and Van
Dillen received a U!tal of
$6,000 for their win.
Dibbs, who reUes heavily
upon a \wQ-handed backhand
stroke in the style of Jimmy
Connors, blew golden
opportunities to win both sets
of his singles match.
"I had a lo~ of chaliCes, but
I just couldn't make the
shots,'' conceded the 25-year
old Miami Beach, Fla .,
resident who collected $8,000
for second place,
In the first set tie-breaker,
Dibbs went ahead 6 p;Jints to
4, a double set point
opportunity, but TaMer then
took charge and won six of
the final eight points to
capture the long, tedious tiebreaker, 10 points to 8.
"That first set was a big
factor in the match beeause I
had more set points than he
did, rut couldn't win It," said
Dibbs.
Then In the second set,
Dibbs broke put to a 3-1 game
advantage, only w lose the
next five games In a row and
suffer a 6-3 loss that gave
Tanner the match going
away.

horns with the New Haven
Reds, starting at 8:15.
Championship game is 7
p.m. Tuesday .
Saturday, the .Gallipolis
While Sox bombed Letart, II).
2. Phil King was credited with
the victory. Olris Hupp was
charged with the loss.
The Sox wrapped it up with
three runs in ·the first inn'lng
and added insurance runs in
the third.and fourth rungs.
King' led the winners with a '
single, triple and home run.
Kev Pullins single was the
winners only other hit.
Hupp's two·fll1\ bonier in
the first alter Tony Ri!He's
single was the losers' only
safe blows.
New Haven pia ted single
runs in the fourth · and fifth
innings to edge Powell 's
Giants, 6-4.
K. Weaver started for New
Haven. Tom Haymaker came
on. in the second and Dave
Sisk in the sixth lor the
winners.
Chris Allen started for
Powell. He was_relieved by
Randy Stewart who came on
in the third and Jerry Fields
in the lour til.
Weaver's third innin v
single and a :kun homer by
T. Haymaker iii- the lsi were
the only safeties by the
winners.
Powell had six hits, two by
John Beaver, a home run and
single .· by Jerry Fields, a
single by Jtm Sheets and a
· single by Allen Young.

Sparky likes Pirates' chance in East

Social
Calendar..

.

MASON , W. Va . Saturday here In a Pony
League game, the league·
leading and host Mason team
was upset by the visiting
Pomeroy Royals 5-4. Mason
captured first place in the
Meigs-Mason County Pony
League with a 12-2 record,
both losses · coming at the
hands of the Royals.
In Saturday's game, fine
pitching and II lour-run
second inning told the story.
Mike Triplett and Raymond
Andrews of the Royals
teamed to strike out 11 Mason
batters and walk just three
while giving up eight hits.
Andrews got credit for the

-

Leggett, a member of thli"
House Armed Services '
Committee, told the Post lle'
took classified dOc:umenta.
horne with him, sometimes·
leaving them ln an '
unattended car while he,
visited Miss Thomaon.
The newspaper salciLeggett volunteered theinformation, although he.
acknowledged it would end
his political career, after,
learning that reporters were·
looking into his private life,
·He was unavailable for.
cmunent Sunday.
.,

MONDAY
. BusI N E S S
'&amp;
PROFESSIONAL Women
.picriic Monday 6 p.m. ·at'
Forest Acres Park, RuUand.
Bring covered diSh and table
service. Beverage to ·~e
provided.
RACINE~. BASEBAl.L
Association Monday 7:30
p.m. home or Bob Fisher.

.

upset 54 by
pony Royals

Today's

lr

'•

workers against the hospital
and the University of
Cincinnati, which operates
the medical 'facilities, But li
unioo spokesman said the two
sides remained '1ar apart."
There was Uttle Sign of
progress toward breaking a
stalemate in a week-old
nurses' strike against.. 15;
Seattle,
Wash.,
area
hospitals. No talks were
scheduled bat there were
indications a , fede~al
medlatl!r planned to try to get
both sides back to the
bargaining table this week.
Negotiators for 250
members of the Tennessee
Nurses Association in
Mellipbts told federal
medlatml they would begin
discussions preliminary to
resuming talks with the
Mempbls..Shelby County
Hospital Authority. The
nursea were set to strike
Frlday but at the last minute
agreed to stay on the job.
Unlonemployesa!Carolina
Telephme and Telegraph Co.
rejected the linn's latest
C&lt;lntract- offer. Federal
mediator&amp; plamed to meet
with neg~tiators for the
company ·
and
the
C«nnwnncatlons Workers of
America today. The c001pany
serves 380,000 cu.stomera In 38
eastern North Carolina
counties.

-••

: MONTREAL (UP!) - His

"',;

reans ~

••
;
•

- By RQS5 ~ackenzle &amp;-Jeff MacNellytfl976. tlniled Fe~~t~o~_re Syndicate ,

_..,.....

;u.
S.
off
to
good
.
.
~start
In
Olympics
.
•

. '

TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 Tuesday 7:30 p.m. 'at·
Masonic Temple.
DREW WEBSTER Posl39,
American Legion Juniors
dinner Tuesday 6:30 p.m. ai
Meigs Inn.
ELECTA CIRCLE picnic
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. home of
Mrs. Te.xanna Well. Bring
covered dish and table service. Meat and beverage to be
provided by the hostesses,
Mrs. Gwinna White. co,
hostess.
WEDNESDAY •
YOUTH REVIVAL .· at
Bradbury Church of Christ
now In progress through July
23, 7:30 p.m. nlghlly1
Evangelists the Jackson
Brothers. Special singing,
THE .· BAPTIST CHURCH
affiliated with Southern
Baptist Convention revival
now In progress through July
25 at Middleport Elementary
DETROIT (UPI) - A fire. thai one breath of It would
School. Rev. Clifford B.
bomb transformed
a coUapae a lung and kill you In
Coleman evangelist. PasU!r
southwest Detroit home into a matter of aeconds,'' said UDALL SUED
Bobby Elkins Invites the
ALEXANDRIA,
Va.
(UP!)
an Inferno Sunday, killing six homicide Lt. Robert Hislop. ·
public.
-Rep.
Morrie
Udall,
!).Ariz,,
members of Mrs. Mary
Patti Broome, 16, who eeBroome's family
and caped wltll her two alsters by who ran up a fl23,170 credit
SOUTHERN LOCAL B8l)d
seriously injuring two others cllmbl.nfl out a second story card bill . during hie Boosters Wednesday, Flrial
In what police said may have window and down a ladder unsucceuful campalcn 'for
the Democratic presidential
been a neighborhood feud.
IUPPlied by a neighbor, uld nomination, Is being 1IUed by plans for band camp. AU
- Police Wday were holding two men in the neighborhood American EJpress Co. for the parents and band students
urged to attend.
nine pel'son8 in connection had threatened to "blow up" money.
with the lireb!mbl.nfl.
· her family'• bouae.
PICNIC
Rmald Greene, the finn's . ANNUAL
PoUce said they had not
Homicide Lt. Fred Davia attorney,
Pomeroy
WCTU
at
Pomeroy.
said tbe IIIII! wu
established a motive for the said the nine persons - aU filed in u.s. District Court United Methodist Chu~ch
slayiogs but officers and adults and all netshborl of
Friday because Udall paid Wednesday at noon.
nelghbola
said ·
a the Broomes - were beld for ooly
a fraction mthe charlfs
neighborhood feud could have queatlonlng In connection made on the card &amp;tring a
been responsible.
wlt.ll the lire. He said i1o one
rHI DAIL r Jl""fHit.
"'
period. '
The dead were ldenlifiecr as waa charged in the slaylngs.· six~onth
llfYOra ro '"'
.~•·
A epotesman confirmed
IMI•ror
,,
Mra, Broome's eon8, Kemy,
One neighbor said. Mrs.
MlleJ.MAJOH AliA
Udall
had obtained an
:In, David, 14, Tommy, 13 and ·Broome told her a week ago
DfllriiL. fAHNIHNJ.
American E1preu credit
Richard, 9, and . her she ''was afraid she was card In his own name last fltU. ·
lOI01' HOIIIJCH
,.
,
grandsons, Eddie, 4, and going to have some
The
IJPOkesman
iald
UdaU
a•••••
PvltlhiiM ...., .........., . , . , '
Michael, 3.
problems."
plana to pay an m hla ,.. OhiD v.... , ,....._ c:..p.,,
· Mrs. Broome and another
None of the nel&amp;hbors campaign debta, which now 111 ~ .... .....,..,, ow. ....
lullft... Offlte ,..... ....,, ...
of her sot18, Edward, 22, would say what atarted the total appronnately
..................
,.7,
Suffered burna over nearly feud but !leYeral said the
a-..4 _. . ,...... ....... ~
within
iill
to
eight
weeka.
.
·
half of their bodlell and were Broome chlldren often fought
........ ,.ot,te,
•
hospitalized in serious with other children and
W.-4 • Ortfflth Cu p W, "-c., Jet.
condition.
haruaed adults.
li,..tll .... 0.1 ........ Dhl., " ' ntW
AM.o..._,..._N.Y,1M1J;
Five oU!er family members
"They
were
just
IN ENCAMPMENT
and a friend, wbo also lived In gan(llllerl," me woman said.
RUTLAND - Cadet Mark .m.r ............. JJ ..... ,.,
the
houae,
escaped · "Sooner or later 11 was,bound A. Morris, whose parents are , -...
unharmed.
to happen."
Mr. and Mr1. Carl Morrls of
e.a.u..,..,,.,..,....,w.ve.,o...
A firebomb was hurled . Pollee aald !leYeralfamWea RuUand, reeenUy completed YMr, IIUfr ltl 1M1MM. 111.111...._
through the kitchen window had moved oul of the a U. S. Air Force Re~ MDftthe,tJM......... IIUI~
of the home before dawn neJihborhood, partly becaaae · Officers Training Corps field. IIIIIMMithi11Uitltww ......the.tJ.It.
&amp;mday.
of troub~ with the Broomes. training encampment at n....e........... .
"The heat was so inteCharleston AFB, S. C.

FeUd lrt age.r s

DR. ·LAMB

By Lawrettce lill.amb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - In
some parts of Asia, especialiy
parts Of India, curry powder
is used as a seasoning instead
Of salt. Curry tastes very
different and II Is somewhat
of an adj1111iment lor those or
liS wbo have grown up wi~
traditional American
cooking:
Is curry powder a viable
alternativ~ lor a young,
borderline hypertensive . wbo
would like to restrict the
Intake of sodium?"
DEAR READER - Curry
powder and other gplces are
exceptionally useful In
cooking without salt or In
limiting the fat In food . ! think
we would all be better off II
we learned to seuon food
with SPice• and 111e less salt
and fat for flavor.
You may be lnleresU!d to
know that the gplce world has
a much lOft!' r1te or heart
and vucular dlaeaae calllld
by fatty chotesterol deposlla
in the arterlea than the non-

'

Hospital strike is ended

Angry miners m~~e
to shut down ~oal pits
(UPl) -

A Chronicle of America

Sexual escapades admitted 1 .

Bipartisan economic confusion reigns .
By Rly Cromley
NEWYORK - Like the Republicans, the Democrats are
, In erratic search of an economic program.
There is no problem with pious generalities - less
unemployment, tax reform, graater export.'!, trust busting,
getting the able-bodied off welfare, stashing golll!rnment
W11Sie, bringing the bureaucracy into line.
· In this, Democratic high-sounding rhetoric is as like
Republican pronouncements as tw6 peas in a pod.,
It's in getting down to details that aU are like blind men
walking down a foggy Iilley with no exits.
On unemployment, the Democrats have only a government.:tinanced employment biti so ellpellBive and so disruptive
of the economy that some of its most influential endorsers are
ba.cking away, There is . good .reason to believe that the
proposal was introduced only with the certainty Ftesidenl
~·ord would veto.
·
In essence, the bill would guarantee a government jojl to

We Hold These Truths ...

•
e WBJDer

I

l

Californian sets
four new records

.

..~Judy RanlQn is Borden champion
·-·

"ltwasexactlywhatlwas
"Iguesshe(Anderson)had Concepcion's runt one run
looking for," Lumsaid. "If he to lift me, but II just turned ' scored·, Lum then laced his
(Medich) comes inside, I'm out bad when Robertson triple lor two runs, and pinch
dead. It felt real good to be connected (off Eastwick) . runner Ed Armbrister, came
able to come off tile bench It's just a good thing we had home on a fielder's choice
and contribute."
one more run to play with." before Joe Morgan hit a twoMcEnaney, lifted in the
The Reds trailed 3-1 going run homer, his 17th."
•
ninth In favor of Eastwick, into the fifth. Tony Perez and
The Reds send Gary Nolan
said, "There's no use trying Cesar Geronimo opened the (8-4 ) to the mound tonight
w hide the fact that I'm inning with singles, and when against John Candelatla ( !!having a lollSy season."
Medlch .threw wildly oil Dave 4) ,

FINE FIXINS TO EAT
FOR ALL AGES
WE USE ONLY 100% FRESH GROUND BEEF

TRIPLE TREAT ... . , ........ : .. .... . ... $ .80
2 pu re beef patti es, cheese, lettuce,
pickles with· the Cou sins' specia l sauce

DOUBLE HAMBURGER .. ... .. ....... ... $ .63
2 pure beef patt ies. p ickles . catsu p .
m ustard

DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER . ..• . . . . , ... . $ .70
2 pure bee f patties. 2 s lices american
cheese, p ickles, catsu p , mustard

HAMBURGER .. .. . .... ..... . .. .. . .. ... $ .33
Pure beef patty wit h pickles, ca tsup ,
mustard

CHEESEBURGER .. .. . . ... . . . . .. ... . ... $ .39
Pure bee f patt y, ameriCiJn cheese, w ith
pickle s, catsup , mu s tard

ALL MEAT HOT DOGS
slaw

coney

$ .40

$ .50

$ .50

e..-eryt hing

$ .55

FISH FILET SANDWICH . . .... . , . . .. . .. . $
GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES .... . . . $
HOT DOWNHOME CHILl .. .. ........ . .. . $
SALAD BAR .. . ... ....... ... . .. .. ... ... $
Fi&gt; il yo urself the way you like It

.65
.33
.65
.49

COLESLAW ..... .... ...... . .. .. ... : .. $ .39

TWO COMPLETE MEALS
for your inside dining pleasure

BIG BEEF PLATTER

FISH FILET PLATTER

A VJ pound 100% fresh ground beef steak

2 pieces of dee p fried fi le! with fre nch

with french fries, hot buttered bread and
salad bar.
Sl.65

fries. hot bu ttered bread and cole slaw.

sus

DRINKS:
COKE
ORANGE
LEMONADE
ROOT BEER
DIET SPRITE
ICED TEA
COFFEE ... . . . . . .. . ... ... $ .20
HOTTEA , . , . , , .. , .. . , .. .. S .20
MILK SHAKE . ...... .. .... $ .SO
Vani lla, Chocolate , Strawberry
MILK . ... . ... . .... .... . . , $ .20

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
too! Call me for details~

LARGE
$ .35

REGULAR
$ .25

DESSERTS:
APPLE TURNOVER . . .. . .. . . $
CHERRY TURNOVER . , , . . , . $
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE . $
BOSTON CREAM PIE . . . . . , , $

OPEN
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY
10:00 AM TO 10:00 PM

A

~

plain

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

I

I

I

I .

.25
.25
.45
.45

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday,July 19, 1976

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 19, 1976

·c ongressman's trap trial opens today in Utah
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)
- Congressman Allan Howe
claims he was the victim of
''some trap or setup." Two
p;Jlicvwomen who p;JSed as
prostitutes
say
he
rx op;Jsitloned them.
TI1e charge against him
was a misdemeanor r uegedly soliciting sex from
!liP policewomen. B~t for the
4~ . ye ar-old
freshman
llemocrat seeking election to
a second term, his political
ca reer was at stake.
Today was set as Hawe's
!b y in City Court, to answer
the· h(ghly publicized
charges . First up was
~elec tion of a jury.
Defense attorney Dean
Mitchell said effort.'! in three
courts to avoid the trial had
failed and Howe, father of
fi ve, would appear before
Judge Raymond Uno.
Maintaining he IS Innocent
and not "a quitter," Howe is a

•

candidate for re-election in
Utah's 2nd Congressional
District despite pressure
!rom fellow Democrats, the
state's two inajor .daily
newspapers and his church.
, His arrest June 12 in the
city's red light district was
expected to result In "a most
difficult campaign ."
Sen , Frank Moss, a
Democrat and the senior
member
of
. Utah 's
congressional delegation,
called Howe "unelectable "
beca11se of the morals
arrest.
"I don 't think there Is a
prayer that he could be. re·
elected in Utah even if he
could beat Ule charge Itself.
Alter all, he was down there
and he does not deny that,"
Moss.said.
Rep. GUM McKay, !).Utah,
and Gov. Calvin Ramptoo,
also a Democrat, have urged
Howe to drop his candidacy.

Spencer Kimball, president
of the Church of Jesus Clrlst

of
Latter-Day Saints
(Mormon ) to which Howe
belongs, said Howe "ought w
give very serioliS thought w
resigning."
Howe Issued a statement
promising tD ''teU my !lide
fully at the appropriate time,
In Court, or through a public
forum II necessary."
Howe claims he was lured
tO the red Ugh! districl .
"I was obviously the ~&lt;~rget
of 99me trap or setup," he
said.
" I was lured wUle scene of
the incident under the false
pretenses.of .an invitation to a
political gathering.
"There was a car. I did
s"top. I did have a
conversation. But I did not
have the conversation
reported. It was a most
foolish mistake. But the
conversation as reported was

Tom Paine:s long lost gravel marker~ found
TIVOLI, N.Y. (UP! ) - A
sta te worker says he
uncovered the long lost
graveslle of Revolutionary
War firebrand Thomas Paine
whi)e digging a septic system
on his Dutchess County
property.
~ack McNeil, a 311-year-old
equipment operator lor the

state Highway Department
said he discovered a seven:
foot marble marker under
three feet of dirt on his four.
acre lot.
The tombstone, McNeil
said, reads, "In memory ol
Thomas Paine, who was born
In Thetford, England, JBII. 29,
1737, died at New York June
8, 1809. 72 years old, 4 mooths,
9 days."

Paine, a corset maker from
England, penned the treatise
'~ common Sens·e," which
many historians believe was
the single greatest Influence
on the American Revolutioo .
He later wrote the "Crisis
Papers, " credited with
bolstering the spirits of
American soldiers and
civilians during the war.
After the Revolution the

not be compelled 10 dilmlal
the charge.
The justicea voted 3-1
against Intervening.
Mitchell then 1urned to the
U.S. District Court for Utah,
filing a petition late Friday
lor a writ of habeas corpus,
seeking I hearing 00 the
petitilin and polilponement of
the City Court trial.
·
The writ sought dilmlssal
m the basis lha t preli'lal
publicity
Including
statements by Kimball - had
made a lair trial in Utah
Impossible,
Slatements by the 81-yaar·
old Mormon leader "have
been · adverse to lhe
presumption of innocence,",
because
Utah
Is
predominantly Monnoo, he
sal d.
O!lef Judge Willis Ritter,
vacationing in Idaho, was
assigned the case.
.
Mitchell Indicated the
fede,ral court action had
· laUed but refused to say ·
wliether Ritter declined to
enter the case or had denied
the petition.

falae ." ·
asking that the charge be
Pollee deny they set up dlsmlued because the
Howe. They said seven other ordinance tinder which the
persons were arrested that arrest was made Is
night on the same street for IUlconstltutional, flie arrest
soliciting
sex
from was the rMult at entrapment,
policewomen posing as statementa made by City
Attorney Roger Cutler
prostitutes.
Howe was arrested alter amounted to prosecutorlal
allegedly offering $20 for misconduct, pretrial
sexual
favors .
The publicity made a lair trial
pollcewomen testified at a ' impoasible and the formal
pretrial hearing that Howe crlminlll c&lt;mplalnt against
Initiated· the
sexual Howe contained technical er·
bargaining, that he said he rors.
was "just looking lor some
Uno denied the motions on
July 12. He said statements
fun."
~
Although the congressman by the prosecution and
has maintained he is pretrial publicity would be
confident a jury will acquit considered during jury ·
him and that he prefers selectioo.
exoneration In open court, his
Mitchell wept to the state
attorney has shuli\ed Supreme Court Thursday,
frultessly through three asking for a "writ of
court.'! hoping to avoid the extraordinaty relief." He
trial.
asked the court to order Uno
MitcheU filed five dismissal ·W show cauie why he should
motions In Uno's court,

.

State of New York gave Paine
a farm In New RocheUe,
N.Y., about 100 miles !rom
the M!!Nell property.
McNeil said that as he dug
out the tablet and cleaned it
off, the name rang a bell, A
search by his wile and two
children In the World Book
Encyclopedia disclosed that
Paine had died on a farm in
New Rochelle but that

RAY CROMLEY

recorda of his burial site.!Vere
lost after an unsucce5sful
attempt to return his body to
EngiJind, .
"When we moved in about
WASHINGTON (UP!) 15 years ago, some neighbors
Rep.
Robert L. Leggett, !).
told us about some graves out
Calli.,
told the Washingtm
back ..., but we never thought
l'llst
that
he forged. his wife's
about it much until we fuund
name
when
he bought his
them near the hemlock tree,
putting In the septic system," mistress a bouse and,
because of another affair, Is
McNeil saic!.
He said talks with ]lllder lnvesticatlon for
· neighbors convinced him that ltevealing cl~ssified lnforma·
the tombstones were pushed lion.
The disclosure of the
over about 50 years ago by a
forgery
was ooe of a number
farmer named
Jesse
of
revelations
about 49-yearRockefeller, whose wife
old
Leggett's
private
life that
wouldn't move onto the
he
volunteered
in
aeyeral
llfOperty with the graves
Interviews,
the
Post
said
there.
The 1iming of the discoVery &amp;lnday.
The newspaper said
. d~ring
the country 's
·Bicentennial year is "quite a Leggett had 81! affair with a
nice coincidence," McNeil Capitol Hill secretary Slortiy
alter he was elected · to
said.
COngress
13 years ago. She
His plans for the wmbstone
became
pregnant,
refused to
include moving it to safety.
have an abortim; and he

bundredl! of tllousands at rates higher than much of private
Industry could afford for unskilled and semislriUed labor. Even
research by sympathetic scholars indicates thereswt would be
double-digit inflatim worse then we've just gone through.
, Junmy Carter has come up with the thought.that private
industry could somehow be encouraged to provide more jobs,
bat has off~ no IllQre ,than patchwcrk thoughts on !he
· subject. that is; a temporary government subsidy on wages of
thQSe about to be let go. He does suggest an end to double
.taxation.
·On trust busting, the Dem~ats are in complete disarray.
The word bas spread through the ranks of the Democratic
leadership hat me way or another the oil ccmpanies have
joined in a conspiracy. And that they must be broken up · vertica'·~. horizontally, or crossways. Pick YOUf Democratic
New York hospital workers jobs today, althOugh some
d&gt;igwig '"'re and take your choice. Carter leans toward a look returned to work today to end some began filtering back to
.at horizontal busting, taking the e&lt;mpanies out of coal, 3 two-week walkout agaimt work Sunday.
uranimn, geothermal energy_ and presumably JIOiar p&lt;!Wer. 57 hospitals and nursing
The union agreed to end the
The Republicans are just as ronfw.ed, but lor different homes, but~ a burgeoning strike after the hosPital manreasons. They haven't the foggiest idea what they want to do strike brought Labor agement group Salurday proabout the big Qi! !Inns. The Jittle operators seem to be beUiog Secretary W.J · Usery into mised to submit the salary
\'II Reagan.
.
contract talks at Westing· dispute to arbitration. A
Democratic and Repulilican leaders are earnestly too"•n house Electric Corp.
i)anel of arbitora will
-...
Some
28
000
members
of determine if the workers
increases in U. S. energy production. And plans flow like MYI!rs the Inlerni.tional Union of
Oilt of.every doonoay. But there's no agreement on any of the Electri-' Wor'"ers and ,,__ should get a 7per cent cost-of.
proposals
""'
a
""' living pay like recommended
communicatioos job,
VIJ:gually none Or the plans are based on souni e~ineering ~~~~ec~ th~or~.:: lastfa""'~,?'pane
. byl. a federal
Last Friday, U. S. District and geological studies. So that we have no assurance tllose
,...._..,
Judge Dennis Knapp Imposed being seriously coosidered would be anytlang more lhail giant Westinghouse wage Offer,
Strikebound Cincinnati
a S50,000 fine against UMW boondoggles, ~en more costly and·counterproductive than walked
out
against hotlpi.tals. began increasing
Local 1759. Knapp said be 'IOI'ile m the hasty' ill-cooceived anti-pollutim regulatiCIIS, !~~~nlg3h,000oumemsebersSun~athey' patient loads SUnday despite
would add $20,000 to the fine designed with the best mintentiCIIS to meet real needs, but so ,.--., .
"'
a waJitout br nmmedical
each day that his back-to- poorly researched they end up doing more harm than good.
lnte~tional Brotherhood of employes. Patient loads were
work U'der !lffectlng Cedar
Tax refomi is in a class by itself. AU Democrats and ~ Workers already · reduced after the strike
Coal's aeven mines is Republicans want wcloae tax loopboles - all loopholes, that , U
. d
. began last week.
ignored.
is, except these which benefit them and their constituents.
. sery
amve
. m But officials at General
In 8 related hearing, the Democrat Carter, interestingly enough, has proposed a plan so Pittsburgh to help mediate Hollpital, largest of the two
judge ftred two coal miners similar to that of Republican Treasury Secretary W'illialll the talks Sunday' hours after strikebound facilities, said
S50 apiece after finding them Simon you would think they had worked it out together -the ~ . WEW ~ the UEW &amp;mday staff members and
guilty or criminal contempt. gene nil elirninaUoo of deductions and a strong reduction in JOllied the strike·
volunteers had picked up the
One speaker said the UMW rates, But Carter has already been forced wback away from
The strike. bas shut dO!RI ~ slack and patient loads were
local took the matter tlrough Ibis approach, and ~on has ~o support fo speak of for his ~cturing planls and 41 relllmed to normal. Officials
the proper grievance proposal wher'e it counts.
repatr shops. .Only 14 said the emergency room at
cbannela and a federal
On government reform, neither Democrats nor company operations were Ga1era1 aiJo was back to
arbitraU!r .ruled In favor m Republicans, speak with one voice. Carter, President Fotd and still open.
. .
normal operation.
the miners; " but tile Rauild Reagan want to eliminate bureaus, rejicger the
Some, 40,00~ striltlng
Some progreu were
COIDJliUlY refused to abide by regulatory agencies and wipe out outdated P"OgrBms. Not so ~cal hospttal workers reported in negollatlona to
his decision."
Democrats and Republicans in Congress. in the end, in these m New York returned to their 11ettle the walkout by 1.~
"We tried to take the case matters, Congress makea the decisions, not the president.
•
through the system, bat the
Some
administrations
back,
a
prestigious
rommls!lion
o
system only works for the
under the chairmanship of former President Herbert Hoolll!r, .
00!'1 ccmpaniM," the miner was
set lip with these same ends in view, DeSPite stroog
• ~'
said.
bipartisan support, the commission Blld its works faded away. ·
m".
A seriM or other commissions followed . All were applaused;
little aclion was taken.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Disgruntled coal
miners attempted to shut
down coal mines In southern
West Virginia today In
protest to a $50,000 line .
slapped on a United Mine
Workers unioo In a recent
labor dispute.
Nearly 100 malcontents
slaged a rally Sunday and
vowed to send pkkets to
mines In Kanawha, Logan,
Boone and Raleigh counties.
" All we're asking lor is that
the federal courts give ua the
same comideratioo .as the
coal axnpanles," declared
ooe miner, who refused to
identify himself w a news
reporter.
" All we want Is a fighting
chance."
Troub~ erupted .June ~ ·
when minen struck the
Cedar Coal Co. in Kanawha
County in a dispute involving
the )IOitlng m an oulllde

killing"' SIX..

Use of spices can cut calories
sjlice world. The non-spice
worJd has relied on lats, such
as b.utter to season
vegetables and other dishes.
This converts lnany of
nature's low !at foods into
rela Uvely high fat·foods and
that is'a major facior In why
.some people have so much fat
in 'their diet.
Let me give you an
example. When you bay a
package of frozen peas they
contain litUe or no fat, but
when .you cook the package ·
youwiUIIkelypulin at least a
tablespoon or butter or
margarine. Then about hall
or more of the calories in the
cooked peas come from lat. If
you
had used a nonfat
aeasonlng that would not
have happened. So both to
lii1Ut sodium·, and limit fat
(and hence calories that lead
to being overweight) I think
the use or gplces should be
encouraged. .
I am sending you The
Health Letter nuni~r 1-8,

July, 1776:

.

A New York newspaper, the to...titutiunal Gazettf,
carries this dispatch !rom Rhode Island : The Rhode island
legislature has resolved that ·:u any penon within that
state shall, under prete- of preacbin&amp; or prayln1. or In
any other way or manner whatever, acknowledge or
declare their late Kllll to . be their rightful lord or ·
sovereign, or shall pray lor the sliccessolhls arms, or thai
he may vanquish or overcome all hl1 enemies.[such persoi\1
shall be deemed guilty ol hl&amp;h misdemeanor .. , , Upon conviction thereof,[such person] shall forfeit &amp;lid pay • .. tile
sum of '100,()()() lawful money, and pay all tottl of ..
pms~utioq , and shall stand committed to the gaol until the
· same be satisfied."

bought a hcme for her oo
Capitol Hill. It said· Leggett
bought a more \!l[penstve
house after she had a second
child.
When his mistress inallled
the home be in her name·, the
paper said, Leggett forged
his wife Ba.rbara's signature
so that she would not find out
about his second family.
Leggett continued to llve with
his wife and three children
and bfoke with his milltress .
before ...she became really
rightwing."
The Post said Leggett also
had an affair with Sook Nal
Park 'fhomaon, an aide to
~er Carl Albert,
Leggett has been under
investigation by the FBI and
lntemal Revenue Service as

Blood Pressure. Otllers who liquid it is creamed with, high
want this issue cari send a in !Julterlat and lower in
long,
stamped,
sell· sodium than the dry curd.
addressed envelope with 50 Hence the uncreamed dry
cents lor II. Just send your weight of the cottage curds
letter to me in care of this contains the most sodium.
ne.wspaper, P. 0. ·Box \551, For most people that is not a '
·Radio City Station, New valid argument lor the use or
York, NY 10019.
creamed versus uncreamed
DEAR DR. LAMB - !have cottage cheese. The unyour book, "Metabol!'cs." In creamed vartel y Is an ex.
it you say lhree-and-a...Oalf cellent low.fat source of
ounces of creamed cottage protein and calcium;
che~se
contai~s
229 . A cup of whole milk (245·
milligrams of sodium; un- grams)
contains · 122
creamed 290 milligrams.
milligrams or sodium and a
Do~s . powdered milk cup of skim milk 127
conium less sodhun than milligrams - not an im·
whole or 2 per cent butterfat portant difference Milk
milk? Please explain how fortified with 2 ~r cent
creamed collage cheese has nonfat solids has a little more
.so much less !!odium than (149 milligrams per cup). A
uncreamed ,
cup of liquid inilk made With
DEAR READER - Bu~ nonfat dry milk powder (one
terlai!B very low in sodium. and .one-third cup of powder
Unsalted butter contains less . per quart) will contain only 86
~n 10 milligrams m 100 milligrams or sodium. 'fheae
grams (3.5 oz.) Part of the values are derived from data
weight :&gt;f creamed cottage !rom the U. s. Department or
cheese IS from the cream.v Agriculture.

a result of allegations he :
received bl'lbes from the
South Korean govel'lllilent
and may have provided
classified government ;
Information to the South Ko-...:

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Bruner, who had his head Kareem Abdui.Jabbar's high
shaved
six hours befoce his school coach in N.ew York,
1lalll head beaming under the
race,
led
a U.S. aweep in the "They are so intlmldaling.
:brlllht, artificial lights ,
200-meter
butterfly \vlth bis That was the most aggressive
)lwtmmer Mike ·Bruner
world
record
time of one I've ever seen them play .
~ynded the rallying ay lor
minute,
59.23
seconds.
'fhls They forCed the play on Italy ,
;(he United States,
.
came just 15 minutes alter 6-6 They scare you,"
: ''We•re the best. n he screaJohn Naber, with a lull head
All but one of the 12 players
;med. "Hey, hey, USA, allthe
of blond hair, set a world · oo the U.S. roster scored,
;way. This Is the greatest
mark of 56.19 seconds in with AdriBII DanUey notching
•thing . that could have
qualllying for tonight's finals 20 points, Mitch Kupchak 19
:happened to liS. We're gonna
of the IO&lt;kneter backstroke . and Scott May 16. The
~get everyone psyched and gel
Before he .got dressed, Americans, who next play
::rnpre medals than anyone
Naber
watched the award Puerto Rico Tuesday, led by win .
· ;gave us credit roc."
ceremony
for Bruner, silver as many as 30 points.
Tom Hawley got the only
• li·was that !lind of day lor
medalist
Steve
Gregg and
There were three other gold extra base hit for the win·
:tlii".Americans when politics
bronze
medalist
8111 medals awarded Sunday. ners, a double, and Chris
:aliUost gave way to sport.'!,
Forrester,
and
then
yelled
to East Germany gained a Taylor, Jeff Grueser, Troy
~and matching each of their
a friend, "Hey, go ask Bruner second gold as Uwe Potteck Griffith, and Chuck Kennedy
•herolc deeds wltll words to
II that made the hair stand up set a world Shooting record each got a single lor the only
: match, the United States has
on hl8 head."
with 573 of a possible 600 Pomeroy hits.
·:gotten off to a running,
'For
his
own
accompoints, and the Russians also
Mason managed to tie it in
·:boastful start In U1e Olympic
pllshme~t ,
the
out· picked up a pair of golds. the bottom of the seventh to
::!~.~!!pes.
.
.
going Naber ·said, "I feel They won the 100-kilometer · send the game . into extra
reaDy good, but I'm not cycling race in 2 hours, 8 innings , but the Rovals
fooling myself. I haven't won minutes and :i3 secooda and plated one In the lop of lhe
a gold medal yet. The record Alexander Voronln equaled ninth to win it. ' ·
wiU go tomorrow (Moodsy) his Own combined total world
Mason's bats were hot ·as
night,"
record of 533-'&gt;2 p;lUnds to win they cracked out six doubles,
The swimming successes the flyl"eighl title In one each by David Camp,
also included a silver medal welghllllting.
Don Russell , Chris Davis,
for tile women's 40&lt;kneter B. C. COUNT WINS
Mark Johnson, Chuck Stanley
relay team, and a perfect 6COLUMBUS (UPI) - B. C. ·a.nd Mark Smith , Dav1s and
for.jl advance by Americans Count edged out Starred by Stanley also each got a single.
into two final events tonight, Brei by one nose Saturday Johnson and Smith teamed
· By MILTON RIClfMAN
the
men's
JOI).meter · night in the featured race at up to strike out fifteen, but
UPI Spol'tl Edltot
backstroke
and
the
women's Scioto Downs.
..
walked seven , with Smith
-i!.IONTREAL (UPI) - These Olympic Games have. been IO&lt;kneter freestyle ,
Brad FarringU!n drove B. getting tagged with the loss.
dUiited already like no others before Blld the possibility keeps
"This was a super start for C. Count over the mile pace in Pomeroy is now 8-4.
growing they may be watered down more before the closing us," said Jack Nelson, coach 1:58 3-0. He returned $7.80, p
040 000 001- 5 5
ceremony two weeks from now, so much, that they cou)d I!J&amp;l of the women's team. "After $3.80 and $.280. Skipper Jim · M
010 200 i00-4 8
lhe poor start we had In 1972 was third.
mOst of the ir meBIIing,
The organizers like to pretend there Is no problem here and (at Munich), I'm reaUy very
tile' departure of nearly two dozen nations Is nothing sig· happy our girla have done as
ntflcant, but if they think that way, they're dead wrong and well as they have."
There were only two llnala
sbiiply have their heads in the sand.
~ What is happening now, with nations packing up and leaving
on the opening night
6\i'et political issues having nothing to do with sports, could swimming program, ,and both · PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - tllem," Anderson said.
atllsh the Olympics quicker than any Qther destructive fOI'ce. resulted in world recocds. The Pltt.'lburgh Pirates, 10 Jack Blllingham, who took
A-etually, the p;Jlltical events of the past lew·days have struck Shortly alter Bruner set his, games
behind
the over lor starter Don Gullett in
~ihe foundation of the Games like nothing ever has before.
the powerful East German Philadelphia Phillies In the the fifth and picked up the
It is entirely possible they could mean this XXI Olympiad women broke their own mark National League East, still victory to even his record at
might be the last one ever staged, At leas! in its present form, lor the 40&lt;kneter medley have a chance to repeat as 7-7, pitched 3 1-3 scoreless
relay by more than six division champions, Innings before the Pirates
a.gyway .
•&lt;Jne group here is called the South AlricBII Non-Racial seconds In 4:07.95.
according . to · Cincinnati . rallied lor two runs in the
Olympic Committee. The head man is asking all Arab,
manager Sparky Anderson. eighth. Will McEnaney and .
()rtbbean, Latin American and eastern bloc countries to join
It was the first of what
"They're still not out of it," East wick finished.
ltl;'e Black African nations and withdraw !rom the Games could be a bumper crop of Anderson said Sunday after
"My curve ball was my out
because Nelj' ~aland is competing in them.
gold medals for 17-year-old the Reds edged the Pirates 9- pitch and it was real effective
,: Dennis Brutl1s, leader·of the African committee, says he can Kornelia Ender, and the 8 in the first game ol a two· until they got some ground·
see other nations withdrawing daily right until the games end, lithsome blonde is favored to game series. "The Phillles ball hits in the eighth,"
and he could be right.
pick up her second in are starting to show signs, Billingham said. "I knew he
The athletes who were instructed wpack their bags and U!night's lO&lt;kneter freestyle. that they're lalling ·off."
(Anderson) was coming out
leave alsO were directed .not to talk with reporters. One This race also could be the
However, the east division- w gel me, soon as (Willie)
Kepyan conveyed some of his feelings to me, though.
occasion for another blonde, leading Phiilies defeated Los Stargell grabbed a bat to
.:~I worked so hard to gel here, I would do anything to atay Shirley B&amp;baaho(f., to earn Angeles 2-1 Sunday to extend pinch-hit . But It was a
am! compete~" he said. "I think I had a good chance io win a her 5econd medal in as many their lead over Pittsburgh . satisfying performance,
~.Jd medal, but that is aU over with 'now ... .If we are to keep . nights after she received a
Cincinnati pinch hitter considering the way I've been
speaking, though, you must go to my coach first and get silver in the medley relay.
Mike Lum's tw!H'Ull triple going."
permission to speak with me,"
. · The other swimming finals keyed a six-run filth inning
Billingham has started 17
.. SD I went to the Kenyan coach. He was watching one of the tonight are the men's 100. which gave the Reds a 7-3 games and completed only
boxing bouts on television and pretended he didn't understand meter bll~kstroke, in which lead. The Pirates rallied late three. He had an ERA of 4.94
· my question. When I repeated It, he considered the request a Naber is favored over East in the game and Bob going into the game.
moment or so, then said no. I asked him II there was some Gennany's Roland Matthes, Robertson homered with two
Lum, who batted for Gullett
relison he didn't wish his athletes U!lldng with rep;Jrters,
Ender's fiance and the on and two out in the ninth In the. filth and tMpied off
·~ ·Because I said so !" was his answer.
former world record holder; ·before Rawly East wick losing pitcher George Medich
End of conversation.
the women's 201).meter retired Manny Sanguillen lor ( ~) .said he hit "a last hall,
....communica.tion between athletes is much better than that butterfly, which should go to the game's final out .
up and away.
between some coaches Blld reporters.
East Germany; and the
"It was a tough loss for
· ' If a diRtnnce runner in Ethiopia discovers a beneflciallll!.W men's 21lt).meter freestyle,
tralnin~ we thod, before the week is out anolilllr distance where tl)e U.S. could
runner will get word of it in California. How? Through the accJ)mplish another 1·2·3
i!rapevinc. '
sweep with Naber, Steve .
~.Before arriving here, U.S. athletes had advance word that Furniss
and
Jim
.ttfrjcan nations like Chad, Congo, Ghana, Ethiopia, Kenya, · Montgomery,
Nigeria and Gambia were puUing out of the Olympics, They
In addition to the four in
heard that a week ago while they were training in Plattsburg, swimming, !here were three
N.¥ ., and all of them, the·wh!tes as weU ,as the blacks, had an other gold medal events sche· . DAYTON, Ohlo (UPI) - as the "Pay 'N Pak" and
Informal meeting and decided they didn't wish to be part of duled for today, two in Shaking off a heavy dose of gained status under the
any boycott.
shooting and one in competition !rom Billy ownership
of
Dave
. · • "l just corne hereto run," said Ed Moses &amp;mday.
weightllfllng.
Schumacher, Bill Muncey of Heerensperger and crew
,. ·Ed Moses is a 21).year-old hurdler from Dayton, Ohio,
Although the U.S. has La Mesa, Calli., Sunday woo chief Jim Lucero.
cbrilpetlng In his first Olympics. He won the Olympic trials in played only one game in his 37th career unlimited
Muncey's newest records
.43:3, an American record, and no~ that Ugand~'s world basketball, the concessions hydroplane victory, piloting are 114,650 m.p.h. for a twocha(llpion 400.meU!r hurdler John Akil Bbua is out, hts chances came trickling in foUowlng "Atlas Van Unes" to three mile qualilying lap, 111.283
of wfnning a gold medal are much better. Moses is black. Even the awesome destruction of solid · Hy.droglobe heat m.p.h.""' for · a two·mile
'Ei!jr.g an American, he can equate with those African athletes Italy, which beal defending victories and lour speed competition lap, 105.01 2
not competing here. The Africans are protesting because a Olympic champion Russia · records.
IJI .p.h. lor an 11-rnile heat and
,New Zealand rugby team Is touring South Africa which three weeks IIIlO and was
Schumacher's Rolls Royce· 103.970 m.p.h. for a 33-rnile
vuctlces race separation and New ~aland is In the Olympics. considered to have a good 'powered "Olympia Beer," race on a two-mile course.
• "Being a black person myself, I have to agree with what the chance lor a medal.
"Miss U.S." of Detroit,
making a com~back after
..Udcan nations are doing," sold Ed Moses. "Still, It wouldn't
"!think only one team.here crashing on lhe Detroit River driven by Tom D'Eath and
mllke 81\Y sense lor me to get involved In politics. I've talked to has a Shot at the gold medal," tllree weeks ago, fizzled into owned· by industrialist
'the other athletes on our team and they were disappointed over commented ,Yugoslavian second pia!" within 10 yards George Simon, was second in
what happened, but there was notlling they could do. If we Goach Mirko Novosel, "and of the finiSh line In the final th e winner -take-all finale .
walked out, It would've made things that much worse, that team is 'the United heat.
The turbocharged, Allison:N•turally, this will downgrade the quality of· the games, States. I have not seen the
Sunday's was Muncey's p;Jwered hull had to come
:eapeciaUy in track and field. It sort of cheapens the whole Idea USA team, but 1 have seen fourth victory of the seagpn from behind in the second
~ , Ule Olympics."
their players and that ~ and .third consecutive on the row of a staggered start on
·Ed Moses ls ,right. He could've gone further, though. What enough for me."
MidWest circuit. It was the the light, two-mile Hyliiis happened not only cheapens the Olympics, It serlou!liy
Added Canadian Coach 20th win lor the hull, which .drobowl course.
A substitute hull driven by
Imperils them, too.
Jack Donohue, who was began itA thunderboat career
Tom
Marlin of Mercer
~·
Island, Wash., lor owner
Bernie
Liille,
" Miss
Budweiser" wound ~P third
lor the day despite a one-lap
penalty lor jumping the gun
, DUBLIN, Ohio (UP!)- Ho Bradley.
sank a 254'ooter on the third kin's putting prowess and at the start.
:· hum, Judy Rankin has won
·The 31-year.old Texan, who and a seven looter on the concentration on the course.
·• Bllother golf tournament.
pocketed another $10,000 lor fourth , Rankin had started
:: "I'm very happy about It," the win, had started the day the day Six-under par and
:: said Rankin after sewing up In a lie with Stacy, but ran off that spurt put her out front by
•' her filth victory of the year three stralgh( birdies on the three and it was never less
:: ,liundsy, the $70,000 Borden second, third and fourth holes than two the rest of the wa~.
BILL FL£TCHER
: ·t,asslc, "but l'mlo!llng some and it was, for the most part,
Bradley, who was three off
12H
· .olthe elation. It's becoming.&amp; all over.
the pace to start the day,
"-1151.
:, .!Jusiness. I'm still thrilled,
"l had a pretty good lead · turned In three under 33, but
Mlddltporl
·• but It comes out different." most or the day," said played the back side In n1ne
PH.m.7155
:, ....Rankin, the first member Rankin, "but I never did feel straight pars, not good
:: :ll.. the Ladies Professional real good until there were enough to ca)ch the streaking
·:· Golf Association to win . only a couple of holes to play. Rankin.
:: ;$100,000 in one year, Shot a There are so many good
"It's reaUy amazing to
:: ·flve-und~-par, 67 oo the 6,200- players out there."
have it three under and not be
., :Y,!rd Riviera Country Club
Rankin had five birdies in a able to pick up at least one
~ .liiiurse Sunday lor a 54-hole .frontsldeoffourunder32, but bird m the back !lide," said
""" ,_.,.
: ·~e of 205, 11 shots under It was the three quick ones at long.hltllng Bradley, who
Like a good neighbor.
Sltlt f•m l1!r I n~ Coift!leny
·: JltU'. That was good fm· • ~ivc - the star~ whkh got h@f going. was looking lor her ·~~ond
Horne Of!ICI ~- l~moit
Stale Farm is there.
;. stroke !Dar gin over Lrun She ro•. •.ir
/ ~u ll 35-- victory of the year.
p 7511-C
·: nersup Hollis Stacy ana Pat looter on the-seCond nole.
lli'adley marvelled at Ran·
.The first day of activity
began for the U.S. with a
devastating 106·86 victory
. over: European champion
Italy in bMketball, which
Immediately brought words
of concession from every
rival ooach except RIISIIIa 's.
Then, in the space of 15
minutes during the evening,
·tile Yanks reasserted !belt
clatm to world supremacy in
swimming by setting two
world records Blld earning
three medal!i. And the sky·
high Bruner, anlicljlating a
telephone call from President
Ford IQr being the first
American gold medal winner,
proclaimed, "We have a
chance to gel every gold In
every men'sevent. The whole
th.lng just freaked me out ,"

Sport Parade

White Sox, Reds gain
•
berths in KC semzs
The Gallipolis Whl te Sol
and New Haven Reds captured quarterfinal trlumpps
In the 18th annual Kyger
Cre.ek Little League basebaU

toum8JTI4lnl Saturday night.
In semifinal action tonigh\,
the Gallipolis Red Sox battle
the Middleport Braves at 7
o'clock. In the nightcap, the
GaUipolls White Sox w1li look

Tanner oops
Western title
1
.
CINCINNATI (UPI) . Roscoe Tanner, never before
a pro tour winner a~ clay
courts, surprised hlrhself by
winning the $100,000 Western
Tennis Championships on a
synthetic clay-type surface
Sunday.
"I'll · be puShing myself
harder at tourneys. on clay
after todilY," the 25-year old
southpaw said after whipping
top-seeded Eddie Dibba, 7~.
6-3, in a match that went
nearly two hours under a
broiling sun.
"Dibhs Is one of the best
clay court players there is,''
added
Tanner,
the
tournamenl 'sNo. 2seed. "If I
can beat him on clay, that
tells me something about
myself."
Tanner, a native of Lookout
Mountain, Tenn., who now
lives on Kiawah Island, S.C.,
picked up $16,000 lor winning
the 89th edition of the
Western, a 64-ffian, week-long
tournament played on the
grounds of Old Coney Island,
a former amusement park.
Dibhs was a double loser
Sunday, as he and partner
Harold Solomon lost the
doubles championships to

Stan Smith and Erik Van
DiUen, 6-l,S.l. Smith and Van
Dillen received a U!tal of
$6,000 for their win.
Dibbs, who reUes heavily
upon a \wQ-handed backhand
stroke in the style of Jimmy
Connors, blew golden
opportunities to win both sets
of his singles match.
"I had a lo~ of chaliCes, but
I just couldn't make the
shots,'' conceded the 25-year
old Miami Beach, Fla .,
resident who collected $8,000
for second place,
In the first set tie-breaker,
Dibbs went ahead 6 p;Jints to
4, a double set point
opportunity, but TaMer then
took charge and won six of
the final eight points to
capture the long, tedious tiebreaker, 10 points to 8.
"That first set was a big
factor in the match beeause I
had more set points than he
did, rut couldn't win It," said
Dibbs.
Then In the second set,
Dibbs broke put to a 3-1 game
advantage, only w lose the
next five games In a row and
suffer a 6-3 loss that gave
Tanner the match going
away.

horns with the New Haven
Reds, starting at 8:15.
Championship game is 7
p.m. Tuesday .
Saturday, the .Gallipolis
While Sox bombed Letart, II).
2. Phil King was credited with
the victory. Olris Hupp was
charged with the loss.
The Sox wrapped it up with
three runs in ·the first inn'lng
and added insurance runs in
the third.and fourth rungs.
King' led the winners with a '
single, triple and home run.
Kev Pullins single was the
winners only other hit.
Hupp's two·fll1\ bonier in
the first alter Tony Ri!He's
single was the losers' only
safe blows.
New Haven pia ted single
runs in the fourth · and fifth
innings to edge Powell 's
Giants, 6-4.
K. Weaver started for New
Haven. Tom Haymaker came
on. in the second and Dave
Sisk in the sixth lor the
winners.
Chris Allen started for
Powell. He was_relieved by
Randy Stewart who came on
in the third and Jerry Fields
in the lour til.
Weaver's third innin v
single and a :kun homer by
T. Haymaker iii- the lsi were
the only safeties by the
winners.
Powell had six hits, two by
John Beaver, a home run and
single .· by Jerry Fields, a
single by Jtm Sheets and a
· single by Allen Young.

Sparky likes Pirates' chance in East

Social
Calendar..

.

MASON , W. Va . Saturday here In a Pony
League game, the league·
leading and host Mason team
was upset by the visiting
Pomeroy Royals 5-4. Mason
captured first place in the
Meigs-Mason County Pony
League with a 12-2 record,
both losses · coming at the
hands of the Royals.
In Saturday's game, fine
pitching and II lour-run
second inning told the story.
Mike Triplett and Raymond
Andrews of the Royals
teamed to strike out 11 Mason
batters and walk just three
while giving up eight hits.
Andrews got credit for the

-

Leggett, a member of thli"
House Armed Services '
Committee, told the Post lle'
took classified dOc:umenta.
horne with him, sometimes·
leaving them ln an '
unattended car while he,
visited Miss Thomaon.
The newspaper salciLeggett volunteered theinformation, although he.
acknowledged it would end
his political career, after,
learning that reporters were·
looking into his private life,
·He was unavailable for.
cmunent Sunday.
.,

MONDAY
. BusI N E S S
'&amp;
PROFESSIONAL Women
.picriic Monday 6 p.m. ·at'
Forest Acres Park, RuUand.
Bring covered diSh and table
service. Beverage to ·~e
provided.
RACINE~. BASEBAl.L
Association Monday 7:30
p.m. home or Bob Fisher.

.

upset 54 by
pony Royals

Today's

lr

'•

workers against the hospital
and the University of
Cincinnati, which operates
the medical 'facilities, But li
unioo spokesman said the two
sides remained '1ar apart."
There was Uttle Sign of
progress toward breaking a
stalemate in a week-old
nurses' strike against.. 15;
Seattle,
Wash.,
area
hospitals. No talks were
scheduled bat there were
indications a , fede~al
medlatl!r planned to try to get
both sides back to the
bargaining table this week.
Negotiators for 250
members of the Tennessee
Nurses Association in
Mellipbts told federal
medlatml they would begin
discussions preliminary to
resuming talks with the
Mempbls..Shelby County
Hospital Authority. The
nursea were set to strike
Frlday but at the last minute
agreed to stay on the job.
Unlonemployesa!Carolina
Telephme and Telegraph Co.
rejected the linn's latest
C&lt;lntract- offer. Federal
mediator&amp; plamed to meet
with neg~tiators for the
company ·
and
the
C«nnwnncatlons Workers of
America today. The c001pany
serves 380,000 cu.stomera In 38
eastern North Carolina
counties.

-••

: MONTREAL (UP!) - His

"',;

reans ~

••
;
•

- By RQS5 ~ackenzle &amp;-Jeff MacNellytfl976. tlniled Fe~~t~o~_re Syndicate ,

_..,.....

;u.
S.
off
to
good
.
.
~start
In
Olympics
.
•

. '

TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 Tuesday 7:30 p.m. 'at·
Masonic Temple.
DREW WEBSTER Posl39,
American Legion Juniors
dinner Tuesday 6:30 p.m. ai
Meigs Inn.
ELECTA CIRCLE picnic
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. home of
Mrs. Te.xanna Well. Bring
covered dish and table service. Meat and beverage to be
provided by the hostesses,
Mrs. Gwinna White. co,
hostess.
WEDNESDAY •
YOUTH REVIVAL .· at
Bradbury Church of Christ
now In progress through July
23, 7:30 p.m. nlghlly1
Evangelists the Jackson
Brothers. Special singing,
THE .· BAPTIST CHURCH
affiliated with Southern
Baptist Convention revival
now In progress through July
25 at Middleport Elementary
DETROIT (UPI) - A fire. thai one breath of It would
School. Rev. Clifford B.
bomb transformed
a coUapae a lung and kill you In
Coleman evangelist. PasU!r
southwest Detroit home into a matter of aeconds,'' said UDALL SUED
Bobby Elkins Invites the
ALEXANDRIA,
Va.
(UP!)
an Inferno Sunday, killing six homicide Lt. Robert Hislop. ·
public.
-Rep.
Morrie
Udall,
!).Ariz,,
members of Mrs. Mary
Patti Broome, 16, who eeBroome's family
and caped wltll her two alsters by who ran up a fl23,170 credit
SOUTHERN LOCAL B8l)d
seriously injuring two others cllmbl.nfl out a second story card bill . during hie Boosters Wednesday, Flrial
In what police said may have window and down a ladder unsucceuful campalcn 'for
the Democratic presidential
been a neighborhood feud.
IUPPlied by a neighbor, uld nomination, Is being 1IUed by plans for band camp. AU
- Police Wday were holding two men in the neighborhood American EJpress Co. for the parents and band students
urged to attend.
nine pel'son8 in connection had threatened to "blow up" money.
with the lireb!mbl.nfl.
· her family'• bouae.
PICNIC
Rmald Greene, the finn's . ANNUAL
PoUce said they had not
Homicide Lt. Fred Davia attorney,
Pomeroy
WCTU
at
Pomeroy.
said tbe IIIII! wu
established a motive for the said the nine persons - aU filed in u.s. District Court United Methodist Chu~ch
slayiogs but officers and adults and all netshborl of
Friday because Udall paid Wednesday at noon.
nelghbola
said ·
a the Broomes - were beld for ooly
a fraction mthe charlfs
neighborhood feud could have queatlonlng In connection made on the card &amp;tring a
been responsible.
wlt.ll the lire. He said i1o one
rHI DAIL r Jl""fHit.
"'
period. '
The dead were ldenlifiecr as waa charged in the slaylngs.· six~onth
llfYOra ro '"'
.~•·
A epotesman confirmed
IMI•ror
,,
Mra, Broome's eon8, Kemy,
One neighbor said. Mrs.
MlleJ.MAJOH AliA
Udall
had obtained an
:In, David, 14, Tommy, 13 and ·Broome told her a week ago
DfllriiL. fAHNIHNJ.
American E1preu credit
Richard, 9, and . her she ''was afraid she was card In his own name last fltU. ·
lOI01' HOIIIJCH
,.
,
grandsons, Eddie, 4, and going to have some
The
IJPOkesman
iald
UdaU
a•••••
PvltlhiiM ...., .........., . , . , '
Michael, 3.
problems."
plana to pay an m hla ,.. OhiD v.... , ,....._ c:..p.,,
· Mrs. Broome and another
None of the nel&amp;hbors campaign debta, which now 111 ~ .... .....,..,, ow. ....
lullft... Offlte ,..... ....,, ...
of her sot18, Edward, 22, would say what atarted the total appronnately
..................
,.7,
Suffered burna over nearly feud but !leYeral said the
a-..4 _. . ,...... ....... ~
within
iill
to
eight
weeka.
.
·
half of their bodlell and were Broome chlldren often fought
........ ,.ot,te,
•
hospitalized in serious with other children and
W.-4 • Ortfflth Cu p W, "-c., Jet.
condition.
haruaed adults.
li,..tll .... 0.1 ........ Dhl., " ' ntW
AM.o..._,..._N.Y,1M1J;
Five oU!er family members
"They
were
just
IN ENCAMPMENT
and a friend, wbo also lived In gan(llllerl," me woman said.
RUTLAND - Cadet Mark .m.r ............. JJ ..... ,.,
the
houae,
escaped · "Sooner or later 11 was,bound A. Morris, whose parents are , -...
unharmed.
to happen."
Mr. and Mr1. Carl Morrls of
e.a.u..,..,,.,..,....,w.ve.,o...
A firebomb was hurled . Pollee aald !leYeralfamWea RuUand, reeenUy completed YMr, IIUfr ltl 1M1MM. 111.111...._
through the kitchen window had moved oul of the a U. S. Air Force Re~ MDftthe,tJM......... IIUI~
of the home before dawn neJihborhood, partly becaaae · Officers Training Corps field. IIIIIMMithi11Uitltww ......the.tJ.It.
&amp;mday.
of troub~ with the Broomes. training encampment at n....e........... .
"The heat was so inteCharleston AFB, S. C.

FeUd lrt age.r s

DR. ·LAMB

By Lawrettce lill.amb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - In
some parts of Asia, especialiy
parts Of India, curry powder
is used as a seasoning instead
Of salt. Curry tastes very
different and II Is somewhat
of an adj1111iment lor those or
liS wbo have grown up wi~
traditional American
cooking:
Is curry powder a viable
alternativ~ lor a young,
borderline hypertensive . wbo
would like to restrict the
Intake of sodium?"
DEAR READER - Curry
powder and other gplces are
exceptionally useful In
cooking without salt or In
limiting the fat In food . ! think
we would all be better off II
we learned to seuon food
with SPice• and 111e less salt
and fat for flavor.
You may be lnleresU!d to
know that the gplce world has
a much lOft!' r1te or heart
and vucular dlaeaae calllld
by fatty chotesterol deposlla
in the arterlea than the non-

'

Hospital strike is ended

Angry miners m~~e
to shut down ~oal pits
(UPl) -

A Chronicle of America

Sexual escapades admitted 1 .

Bipartisan economic confusion reigns .
By Rly Cromley
NEWYORK - Like the Republicans, the Democrats are
, In erratic search of an economic program.
There is no problem with pious generalities - less
unemployment, tax reform, graater export.'!, trust busting,
getting the able-bodied off welfare, stashing golll!rnment
W11Sie, bringing the bureaucracy into line.
· In this, Democratic high-sounding rhetoric is as like
Republican pronouncements as tw6 peas in a pod.,
It's in getting down to details that aU are like blind men
walking down a foggy Iilley with no exits.
On unemployment, the Democrats have only a government.:tinanced employment biti so ellpellBive and so disruptive
of the economy that some of its most influential endorsers are
ba.cking away, There is . good .reason to believe that the
proposal was introduced only with the certainty Ftesidenl
~·ord would veto.
·
In essence, the bill would guarantee a government jojl to

We Hold These Truths ...

•
e WBJDer

I

l

Californian sets
four new records

.

..~Judy RanlQn is Borden champion
·-·

"ltwasexactlywhatlwas
"Iguesshe(Anderson)had Concepcion's runt one run
looking for," Lumsaid. "If he to lift me, but II just turned ' scored·, Lum then laced his
(Medich) comes inside, I'm out bad when Robertson triple lor two runs, and pinch
dead. It felt real good to be connected (off Eastwick) . runner Ed Armbrister, came
able to come off tile bench It's just a good thing we had home on a fielder's choice
and contribute."
one more run to play with." before Joe Morgan hit a twoMcEnaney, lifted in the
The Reds trailed 3-1 going run homer, his 17th."
•
ninth In favor of Eastwick, into the fifth. Tony Perez and
The Reds send Gary Nolan
said, "There's no use trying Cesar Geronimo opened the (8-4 ) to the mound tonight
w hide the fact that I'm inning with singles, and when against John Candelatla ( !!having a lollSy season."
Medlch .threw wildly oil Dave 4) ,

FINE FIXINS TO EAT
FOR ALL AGES
WE USE ONLY 100% FRESH GROUND BEEF

TRIPLE TREAT ... . , ........ : .. .... . ... $ .80
2 pu re beef patti es, cheese, lettuce,
pickles with· the Cou sins' specia l sauce

DOUBLE HAMBURGER .. ... .. ....... ... $ .63
2 pure beef patt ies. p ickles . catsu p .
m ustard

DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER . ..• . . . . , ... . $ .70
2 pure bee f patties. 2 s lices american
cheese, p ickles, catsu p , mustard

HAMBURGER .. .. . .... ..... . .. .. . .. ... $ .33
Pure beef patty wit h pickles, ca tsup ,
mustard

CHEESEBURGER .. .. . . ... . . . . .. ... . ... $ .39
Pure bee f patt y, ameriCiJn cheese, w ith
pickle s, catsup , mu s tard

ALL MEAT HOT DOGS
slaw

coney

$ .40

$ .50

$ .50

e..-eryt hing

$ .55

FISH FILET SANDWICH . . .... . , . . .. . .. . $
GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES .... . . . $
HOT DOWNHOME CHILl .. .. ........ . .. . $
SALAD BAR .. . ... ....... ... . .. .. ... ... $
Fi&gt; il yo urself the way you like It

.65
.33
.65
.49

COLESLAW ..... .... ...... . .. .. ... : .. $ .39

TWO COMPLETE MEALS
for your inside dining pleasure

BIG BEEF PLATTER

FISH FILET PLATTER

A VJ pound 100% fresh ground beef steak

2 pieces of dee p fried fi le! with fre nch

with french fries, hot buttered bread and
salad bar.
Sl.65

fries. hot bu ttered bread and cole slaw.

sus

DRINKS:
COKE
ORANGE
LEMONADE
ROOT BEER
DIET SPRITE
ICED TEA
COFFEE ... . . . . . .. . ... ... $ .20
HOTTEA , . , . , , .. , .. . , .. .. S .20
MILK SHAKE . ...... .. .... $ .SO
Vani lla, Chocolate , Strawberry
MILK . ... . ... . .... .... . . , $ .20

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
too! Call me for details~

LARGE
$ .35

REGULAR
$ .25

DESSERTS:
APPLE TURNOVER . . .. . .. . . $
CHERRY TURNOVER . , , . . , . $
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE . $
BOSTON CREAM PIE . . . . . , , $

OPEN
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY
10:00 AM TO 10:00 PM

A

~

plain

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

I

I

I

I .

.25
.25
.45
.45

�-'

•~- The Dally SenUnel,Middleport.p&lt;IIJlerOy, 0 .. Morulav. Julv 19. !976

ha~d

Royals

Phils nip

AL

'

champs 6-3 loss

LETART FARMERS PEE WEESQUAD - Front,l-r, Cindy Allen, Scott Kaiser, Jarrod
Hill, Eric MUllron, Larry Powell, Bill Hupp, Keith Allen ; second row, Heath Hill, Richard
Gillbrlde, Timmy GiUbride, Joey Roush, Ken Brown, Mark Jarrell ; third row, Rick Crow,
coach; Scott Wickline and ShaW)! Stobart. The team tied for.second place in league play and
ended the seascn with a~~ record. Picture by Jim Hamm.,
I

Browns look
•
aggressive
KENT, Ohio (UPI))

Coach Forrest Gregg of the
Cleveland .Browns said the
highlight {If his team's
latest intra-squad scrimmage
was the aggressiveness of the
entire squad.
It shows.
Rookie guard Doug Kleber
of the Cleveland Browns, who
tcre ligaments in his knee
during a drill at camp
Saturday, underwent surgery
today at Shaker Medical
Center Hospital in Cleveland.
Fullback Hugb McKinnis
dislocated his right elbow
during the scrllruda&amp;e
following the drills and will
be lost for at least two weeki!
and fulllllck Henry Hynoski
dislocated bi$ shoulder
during the head-bumping and
'
wiD be sldelloed for at least 10
days.
"When I hit him my whole
llhoulder was nwnb," safety
Van Green said of McKinnla,
Iii roommate. "I thought my
ann was gone, but then the
feelilllf started to come back.
· I didn't mean 10 burt him, but
: /. · that's part of the job. 'lbat's
· what's upectecl of us."
Other victlma of the ~
battle were defensive Ron
Eut (IPI'Bined ankle) and
lilleblcker Dtve Graf (pulled
groin muscle). Each,
however, is not expected to be
out of C(ll!lml-tm long.
Gregg lakes an adamant
allnd
regarding
the
Injuries.
"You can't get ready for
lhe regular without
IM:Ihmi!.tge," he said. ''Ibere
Is noway of geU~ around it.
• There usually are some
Injuries In the first rugged

homers. Milwaukee 's AllStar pitcher Bill Travers ·
went 1 2-3 Innings and wllli
slapped around for seven hits
and seven earned runs before
departing.
llllllaDI I, TwiDJ 1
Cleveland's lUco Carty
blut.ed a pair of two-run
homers and rookie Stan
Thomas, primal'Uy a relief
pitcher, allowed MlMesota
eight hits to hike hjs record to

BY NED. HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The Philadelphia PhilUes
are not only winning by doing
thlnga right, they are also
winning by doing things dlf.
ferently.
The PhUlles edged Los
Angeles 2-1 Sunday on a
controversial play that had
Dodger first baseman Stcove
GarVey
·still steaming in the
~I.
clubllouse.
Oriole&amp; B, Angela I
Mike Schmidt 8(.'(lred the
Recently acquired Tony
winning
run from third base
Solalta hit his first h(lller of
with
two
outa In the ninth
the year and also drove In two
inning
on
an
unusual play in
runs with a first-inning single
to pace Baltimore's victory which teammate Jerry
Marlin was trapped In a run
over Ca llfornla .
down between first and
Raugers 3, Yankees %
.
Juan Beniquez lined a 12th· second base.
The
blzzare
rally
began
inning single into center field
when
Schmidt
Willi
hit
by a
to score Jim Sundberg an\i
A's 10, Tigers l
pitch
by
loser
Charlie
Hough,
give Texas its victory over
oakland ran the Tigers into New York to halt. a !!).game 7-4. Greg Luzlnski followed
the ground as they pilfered Texas losing sltesk.
with a single, sending
four bases and pulled off two ·
Schmidt to third. Martin
double steals after running up LEFTY MCKINZIE WINS
came in !0 run for· Luzlnski
COLUMBUS (UPI) - lroo- before Tommy Hutton
nine stolen bases in three
previous games. Sal Bando ton.'s Jim McKinzie shot a grounded !0 Garvey, who
lroke and Mor-16 streak by one-under-par 71 Sunday for a tagged first and began to run
driving in three runs with a 36-llole 1&lt;\tal of 147 and a two- Martin toward second .
fiftMnning double and two- stroke victory . in the OJ1io Schmidt broke for the plate
run, sixth-inning single . . State Left-Handed Amateur while Garvey was trying to
Tournament.
Wblte Sox 13, Brewers 3
tag Martin, who evaded the
Second was John Campbell tag and 'returned to first
Chicago rapped oct a
season high 16 hits, of Columbus who had a 73 safely as Schmidt 8(.'(lred.
suburban Garvey protested in vain that
highlighted by Lamar Sunday . at
·
Groveport
Golf
Club.
Johnson'slirsttwo home runs
Martin had run . out of the
Earl Pllilllps of Akron was . baseline. ·
of the season, golld I~ lour
"I still think he was out of
runs. Kevin Bell and Sill third with 153. Dan NiGOlet of
Stein each stroked three-mn Canton and Ed Annstrong of the baseline," said Garvey.
Ashtabula tied for fourth at "When he went out he went
155.
out at least three or four feet,

P ORTL&gt;AND INDEPENDENT BASE- ~::;;:::~::::::::::;::::~:::::~~::!::':~:;;::::::::x~:~::::::::::::~:::;::::::::~:;~:::;:~::::: :::;~::;:;::::5::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::~==~=::::;:;:;::::::: ::::::»::::~:!:~::::~:::.:-:-t.}
SAL~
TEAM - Front,
1-r , Ron Bachtel, Bill 11·
Knapp, Ray Proffitt, Greg :::
.
Results
==~
Roush and Jim Hanun ; &lt;:::
-~
back row , Pete Sayre ,
Clev·eland 6 M 1rmesota I
Ch icago
000 OlD OOCI--1 9

the SCOREBOARD. ~~:~~~~

Keith Fitch, Tom Theiss,

Graham -captures
Westchester title
HARiusoN, N.Y. (uPI) David Graham was supposed

to fold.
He was expected to shrivel
up and collapse In frmt of a
national tell!vl5im audience
while the golfing "Gollaths"
like Johnny Miller, Tom
Wataon and Ben Q-ensbaw
stomped him Into the ground
down the stretch and dividedthe loot.

. .GOO.
Grabam'a final round of
even par 71 was his worst of
tbe four-day \o!1f118111ent, but
It waa all be needed because
tbe guys who were suppo8ed
to malle 1 run at him never
got golns.
Miller' the British Open
clulmpion whom many
lbought would apply lhe moat
preuure, played himself out
of contention on the front nine
while Crenshaw didn't make
Iii move until It Willi too late.
Wataon shot a good iast
round, a 611, but middle
rounds of 72 and 73 killed his ·
chaliCe••
AI the bill names faded In
the distance, It became
apparent that the lilly way
Graham could lole was !0
blow It blmaelf. And that
- ' t to be beceuleGraham
1M told hlmlelf that he wu
. as good as anyone out there,
. 10 why not prove It? .
"Last night I theught aboat
lite tension," the -.,ear-old

•

batters before walking Amos
Otis in the eighth. The
mistake proved costly when
Brett followed with his sll:th
homer.
It marked the second day In
a row that Brett had beaten
the · defending American
League champion Red Sox.
,On Saturday he stroked a
nlnth..jnning homer to give
Royals a victory, In meetings
·between the two clube this
season, Kansas City has now
beaten BOston seven out ot
eight times.
In other American League
games, California downed
Baltimore 8-6, Cleveland beat
Minnesota 0.1, Ollcago pummelled · Milwaukee 13-3,
oakland ripped Detroit 10-1
and Texas edged New York 32 In 12 innings.

Aussi.e admitted. "I said to
myself 'Why should I feel
tension? Why should I feel
nervous? Why should I feel
scarEd'?,.

"I said tO Il)yself 'You're
doing what you're supposed
to be do~. • I said 'you came
to play golf just like everyone
else. You came with as good a
chance as anybody. So why
should you be apprehensive ?~~

Rather
than
play
cautiously, Graham attacked
the course early and it paid
off with birdies on the fourth
alld fifth holes. He bogeyed
the sll:th and eighth holes !0
finish the front nine In even·
par 36, but he knew that be
matched par the rest of the
way he would be hard to
catch.
. "I didn't know if I could get
(the lead) ln!O the clubhouse
but nobody really made a run
at me. I thought if I could get
through 11 and 12 I'd be able
to finish all right. Fortunately
it was windy again today and
that kept the scores down,"
said Graham.
As it turned out, the most
serious challenges to Graham
were made 'by two other
relative unknowns, Mike
Wynn and Fuzzy Zoeller.

if

Nat ional league Standings

Chi cago l l M itWaukee 3
San Diego
000 100 001- 2 4 2
Kansas Ci ty 6 Boston· 3
Burr is (4. 11 ) and M i tterwald ;
Texas 3 New York 2, ll Spi l\ner , Menger
(9 ) .and
inn ings
Kend all . WP-Metzger (6·01.
Toda v· s· Gimes
( All Times ·EOn
Philadelphia 010 000 001-2 5 2
Oakland ( BJue 7·8 and BoS· Los Angeles
000 001 ~ 1 81
man 2 OJ at Cleveland ( Hood 2-5 Lon borg , Reed ( BJ and Boone ;
and Eckersley 4.8), 2, 5:30 p.m. John , Hougn (8 1 and Yeager.
California (Hartzell 0-2 ~nd WP.'Reed (7.J l . LP-Hough {7 -4).
Kir kwood 2 7) at Milwa ukee HR -Philadel ph ia . Allen il 2l.
( Sl aton 10.7 aM Travers 10-61.
2. 7:00p.m.
.
nst game )
Ball imore ( Pal mer 12-8) at (10 inni ngs)
Kansas Cit y ( L.eonard 10-JL Houston
010 010 JIO 1- 7 17 1
8: 30 p m
Montreal
100 100 004 o-6 8 0
New York ( Figueroa l\ .6) at
Niekro,
Forsch
(7)
and
Ch1cago IJ etterson 2· 3). 9 p.m .
Herrmann ; Kirby , Kerrigan
De tr oit ( Roberts 8-8) at (7) , Lang (8). Murray ( 10) and
M innesota ( Bane 2·2), 9 p.m .
Foote. WP . Forscn (3.2). LP ·
Bos ton ( Jones. 3..0) at Te)(as Murray
(Q. J }.
HRs -Houst on ,
Herrm a n n (2) ; Montreat .
(U mbarger ). 1 .05 p.m .
Tuesday' s Games
Morales {3 }, Foote (6).
'Boston at Texas~ night
. -Balt imor e a~ Ka11sas Ci1Y 1 , '{2nd gamel
ni 9h·f
·
'
Houston
301 413 02()--.14 22 0
Oet·r Oit at Minnesota , .n ignt
Montreal ·I 000 001 OOQ-1 S 3
New YDrk a.t Chicago., nig ht
. Larsen (1 .QJ and 11errmann.
San Fra n~i sco 5 :St. Lou is .4,
Californ ia at. M ·i 'I wa u kee., ·. Julze (8 1; Dunning , Warlhen
. 1S1
( .4 ), Kerrig an {6 ) Murray (9)
St. L ouis ·s San Franc isco " · n ight
Oaktane~ at Cleve1a·nd, n igh1
and L JohnSon . LP -Dunning (0·
2nd ,
41.
.
San O.i ego 2 Chicago I
Phi ladelphi a 2 L os Ange les 1
HoiJsJon 7.Mon1n!JJ 6, ls~
Major League S.seball
American League
Houston 14, Moo'tieal 1. 21'\d
By United Press 1nter.n11i onal
Clevel and
012 120 OO'J--6 10 o
Tocft y's Games
Nitfional League
·
M innesota
000 010 000-1 8 1
'( All nmes EDTI
Atl anta
000 IXK'J ·OOD-O 20
Tn·omas (2-11 and Ashby ;
S1, Lou is ,tFOt"seh ~ - • l ilt f San New York
001 100 OOx-1 9 1 Hughes , Surgmeier (4) and
F.ranc~ sco (D'A.cqu isto0·5) • .t ~ O.s
Mor1on, MarShaH { 8} and Wynegar . LP.Hughes (4.101.
p.m .
WHiiams ; Lotich (5·10) and HR s.Cievefand , Carty 2 (10) .
· CJnc,i nnat i {N-Olan .S-41 at HOdgtj. LP .MOrto" (O.Jt . HR ·
PiUsbuf"gh { Canc.telarJa 9·.t l, New York, Kingman {321 .
Oak land'"
001 0.-3 llD-'10 13 0
7: 35 :P"m .
Detroit
001 000 OOQ- 1 7 2
Houston l Ri ch ard 9.10) at C inc inna ti
100061 1D0-9 11 1
Mitchell , Li ndblad [9} and
Montr.eol ! Rogers J-! 1, a,05 · Pi!lsburgh
111000 023-8 u 1 Haney , Lindbl od (91; MocCorp.m .
,Gu lle)t , Billingham tS &gt;. Mc·E· m_ack • .Bare (5) , Cra~ford (7 },
AUa nt a (N4ekr o ·9·S or 'Moret n aney {8}. Eastwick (9l and H1ller (9) ancl K imtn . WP 3 3) a ~ New Yor,llj Jlo·Jich 4·10), BMCh ; . Med.i ch, Tekulv e U l, Mitchell (6-Sl. LP ·Maccormack
8:VS p .m .
Moose (7), Giust i (9) and (0-4). HR. -Oakland, Tenace (9).
Chicago {Sortha m 6·7) at Saf'l Sangv illen .. WP .BIIIingham {7··
000 100 OlQ-3 7 0
Oipgo ( $,rom 8-10,, 10;00 p .tr.l.
7}. LP -Medich
(5.81.
HR · Bo$1on
010 300 10X- 6 8 0
Ph Hacl elphia J Chr i s~ ensoo
·Ci nci nnati , Morgan ( 17): Pit ts· Kansas City
Cleveland, Lee
(S )
and
at Los Anoetes ( Hooton 6-9L burgh , Robertson (2).
Montgomery : Pattin, M ingori
10 o30p .m .
{81 and Mar ti~ez . WP.Pattin (3 .
TuesGay 's Gamts
(ht gJmeJ
Atl anta at Mon treat , ni9ht
St . Louis
010 012 CK'I0--4 9 2 81. LP .Cieveland (3·81. HR New Yor k at Cinc innat i, night Si!ln Francisco 200 071 OOx- 5 8 0 Kansat City , Brett ( 6 ).
Houston at Pit tsburgh , ;t, tw i
F al cone , Greif
(7 )
and
night
Simmons ; safr. Lavelle ( H Mi lwaukee 000 000 Joo- 3 9 0
340 300 DJx- 13 16 o
St. Louis at Los Anoeles, aod Hill , Sadek (7L WP.Barr Chicago
Tr avers, Broberg (2) and
night
·
(1 6). LP ·Falcone {6·9). HRs-St .
Phil adelphia a t San Diego, Lou is, Tyson {2): San Fran cis· Porter . Ku.snyer (7) ; Barrios
12·3) and Esslan . LP -Travers
night
co . Murc.er (1 3 }.
(10-7J. HR s.cnlca go, L. Johnson
New York. a t Houston , night
2121 , Ste in Ill. Bell lSI.
cZDd pme&gt;
·
( 10 i nnings)
Americ~n League St1nding1
St . Louis
000 011 020 1- 5 13 1 Ca lifor nia
310 002 011- e 9 2
By United Press Internati onal
san Frncsc 001 100 no ()..--4 1 2 Baltimore
002 030 Olo-6 7 1
East
Rasmussen) Curtis (5 ), Hr a.
Monge, Crago (S) arid Hum W l Pet . GB bOSk.V ( 7) , Greif (9). Wallace phrey , Etchebarren (9) ; Pagan, .
New York
s• l2 ,628 {10~ and Ferguson ; Dressier, Cuellar &lt;1), M iller (61, Mar41 ol7 .49. 11112 Caldwtll
Cleveland
{6),
Lavelle
{8}, tinez (9') and Dempsey . WP·
42 •• .
12
Balli more
Moffitt {8], Heaverlo &lt;10 ) and Drago (3-1 ). LP -Cuellor (4.11 ).
.4.0 •3 .182 121f1 Sadek, WP ·Wallace "(2·1) , LP · Hrs-Calitornia, Sola ita
Detro it
c1) ;
Boston
•1 •s
13
Heaver to (3. 1). HR .San Fran · Baltimore. Re. J eckson &lt;lll,
35 47 .427 17
M ilwaukee
Gri ch (8) .
cisco, Evans (7L
West
W L Pel . GB
Kansas Cit~
56 32 .636
Oakland
• 46 ~3 .517 10 112
Act now during our •..
TeKaS
45 -42 .517 101h ..,.
Chicago
40 46 .465 IS
~
Mi""esota
40 47 .• 60 15!12 it
California
37 Sol .407 20112 ..
. Uturday'l Results
..
.Kansas City 2 Boston 1
California 7 Baltimore 3
Oakland 3 Detroll 0
Cleveland 4 Minnesota o
M il waukee 9 ChiCJgO 2
·New York 7 Texas 5
·
Sunday'J Re1ult1
Oekland 10 Detroit 1
California 8 Baltimore 6

(JJ

LIJ

a:

...z

::J
LIJ

0

ot. A. J, iT-'IHII Dt. PillMAN MAIIZ
[

01 . K. H. CHUNG
FOR PRICES CAU COUECTJ

252·3181

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,
)(-Rays, Cleaning

:'!~~~~~

i!:t ~:;,~.go

l i..man
(~::.~~~~:~~:if~
.
at third broke, we could

By Vnited fl reu lnterftiltioni I
up a fumble and raced 30 Snodgrass.-Jim Hanlr(l
Eost
yards. Brian Duncan of the
brown, John Salser, Dave
w L Pe t. GB
offensive unit scored late in
~n1i adelpn i o 58 27 .•68 2
. Snodgrass. - jim ilamm Pl .,sbur~h
48 37 .565 10
the game from the one,yard picture.
N•w York
48 •• .m n••
·line.
Ch icago
36 52 .409 23' '
A record crowd of more
Mon tr eal
1 6 56 .317 31
Weit
than15,000fansatKeniState
w L Pet . GB
watched the scrimmage.
RIVER RESULTS
Cine lnnatl
56 3-1 .m
Fumbles halted two
CINCINNATI (UPI )
.~~~~eles ~~ :~ : l5~ ~~',
promising offensive marches Fleeting North, next to last sao o;ego
•• 47 .48&lt; 12' &gt;
·
rd
lin
bou
half
d
the
Atlan t a
4 1 A8 . 46 1 u 1,
Within the 10-ya
e. An a t
way aroun ·
San Francisco 38 s• .m 19
interception stGpped another track, went wide out of the
Saturdor' • Re•ulh
drive close to the goal.
final turn and came up on the
Atl anta 10 P lt!Sb~ron 2
51. L ~ou i s 7 San D iego 1
WW Cureton was the~ of outside in the stretcb to win HousH&gt;' 1 New ' York o
three veteran quarla'backs by a nose .over Blonde Spy In
Sa n Francisco 4 Ph ll •delphl•
1
with five completions in tlje featured $4,500 ninth
Cincinna t i , Montreal 1
seven attempts. Mike Phipps allowance race Sunday at
Lo• Anoeles 5 Ch i cago •
'- 11~ ..,Ri•
D
S d'
Sunct•r·s R,sun~
and
• .Brian Slpe a .... . ca .,.. , •.,_ver o":ns . un erjin ~e
New ;Yorl&lt; 2,1\ttanto o
mgnals.
...~ ..JiOwed .
Clncinnati1 9 P ~ ttsbiJrgh :a

Aile!' aD, who was David
Graham anyway? And what
business did he have leading
!be $300,000 Westchester
Classic for three rounds?
Well, David Graham, who
had won only one tournament
on the PGA circuit In six
years, showed them all
&amp;lllday that when It came
work."
down to "nitty gritty" time he
In that iCi bwuage, (barlie could handle the pressure
Hall of the defl!lllive unit better than any of them.
II.Wed first when he IJl'OCI9ed
Using his putter as .a
sllngshcit, little Dtvld slew
the big Gollaths In the final
round of the tournament by
flni8hlng with a 12-under-par
2'12 to win by three strokes
and take home the blgg~
paycheck of his career,

~

By JOE FROHLINGER ·
UPI Sports Wrltcor
George Brett doesn 'I mJnd
keeping an open mind and
that's the rea11011 why he
doesn't get cheated very
often.
Brett kept a clean slate
upstairs and belted a two-run
homer in the seventh inning
while Marty Pattin and Steve
Mingorl ~d a CQI!lbined
even-hitter Sunday to lead
the Kansas City Royals to a 0.
3 victory .over the Boston Red
Sox.
The American League's
leading · hitter with a
spiralling .365 average, Brett
says he's much improved
despite lacking a master
.plan.
"I have to go up there with
an open frame of mind. What
happens if I go up there
thinking that 1'm going to hit
a home run and they pitch me
outside?" Brett asked. "I'm
not going !0 start thinking
home runs., either, because
that would just mess me up."
The.Royals touched Boston
starter and loser Reggie
Cleveland for a secood~nning
run, scored three more runs
in the fourth and finished by
roughing up Boston reliever
Bill Lee.
Lee, who injured his
pitching arm in a fracas with
. New York's Graig Nettles
earlier this year, made ·his
second appearance since that
accident alld retired eight

LA, 2-1 -

get him at the plate," Garvey
added. " I still think he
(Martin) was out."
' The Phillies, with the best
won,Jost percentage In
baseball, of eourse saw things
differently.
.
"It was a once~n;~-year
play," said Schmidt. "Give
Martin credit for hanging In
there. Steve Yeager had the
plate blocked well. You woo't
make it 99 out of a 100 times In
that situation."
In other games New York
blanked Atlanta, 2-0,
Cincinnati outslugged
Pittsburgh 9-3, San Diego
shaded Chicago 2-1, San
Francisco edged St. Louis 5-t
before losing 5-t in 10 innings,
and Houston swept a doubleheader from Montreal, 7~ in
10 innings and 14-1.

. '

'

z.

Mell BraYel •
Mickey Lollch's two-hit
pitching and Dave !Qnlman'•·
32DI h&lt;1111l run of the :
in the fourth Inning helped the ~
Meta edge Atlanta.
Lolich retired 16 batten In
a row after Jimmy Wynn
singled with one out In the
fourth before Rod Gilbreath
reached base on Mille
..
PhiWpa' error with two out In
the ninth Inning. Darryl
Chaney singled I'! the third
with one out for the mly other
Atlanta hit.
Padres Z, Cubl 1
Rookie Jerry Turner looped
a two-out ninth Inning single
Into short leftfield to score
pinchrunner Bob Dtvta from
second base to lead the ' ' .
Padres over Chicago.
Glanll 5,4 Card• 4,5
Joe Ferguson's two-out
••
single in the lOth Inning otf
reliever Dave Hellverlo pve' ' ....
St. Louis Its vlct"'y over the
Giants In the nightcap after·
San .Francisco won the:
... &gt;'
.opener on pinchhltter Ouil'
Arnold's sixt~-lnnlng:
sacrifice fly.
'
• .••'
Astros 7,14 Expotl 8,1
•''
Ed HemnaM drove In ·
three runs in the second game
to lead Houston Its'
doubleheader sweep
•

...

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nidite

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,OU t~ COlli. . . for
rour .,.._, ~btaw a ft._,

.

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·· ~na,,lfttt ~..-. \10. I
Na1-·-·~
O"M*'t poficy ll¥11

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we glw ttMce
fill, When.

Na1-...,.
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rou netd H mOIL All•

ibout.

P. J. PMJlfY
804W. Main

Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2318

.NAT10NWIJi

U!N~~C!

H-=(II:.'!F---:::t. c..' ,

'

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2 to s (CLO.SE

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...R 'iglL'atre

8(aiof

be§tbu~

Look lor our Stars lor big savings

Uke This
17 cu. ft.
Frost-Proof

Us •••

Polly's Pointers

heritage house ·

Stuff gift drawer
With sale good~s

Woo't

•·•t

.a
.m

Helen Help

may

.,_

AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT

A Put;ic Service ol TNs Newspaper &amp; The Adverti~ng Council

if

if

ool14 -11oft "" ....

. .N.
OFFICE

how pageant won

They piled mattresaes and
For the next '!I hours, the heard the clink of cane but
had put on a play called "The the road with the door opeil;•
children and Ray never saw knew the' stops were not at· "started digging," said the
Dec I a r a t I on
o f Ray said.
'
service stations because driver.
Independence.''
''I slowed up to go around day Ugh! again.
Mostly
it
was
Ray
and
the
there
was
oo
conversaUon.
Jeff Bfown portrayed him, and out jumped a man
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI) Janice Cooley, 20, itt Pcrta-bigger
boya,
Mike
MarshaD
It
was
another
tipoff
to
the
Chowchilla, In the fertile
Samuel Mama in the play. with two guns. He ordered me
- Complaints that R. mouth, who was the wtnner
Robert Rodriguet. But Dennleon Keller · of Ripley, ·li the Mill Ohio Valley
One li his Unes was:
to open my door. Another two San Joaquin Valley, Is a town planning ol the operation and
In
Keller's
"I just came from guys jumped out of the where people leave their back noted by Alameda COUnty even the small children lent veteran producer of the pageant
their weight In the desperate annual Miss Ohio Pageant, hometown, and then captured
Lexington where I narrowly van."
doors unlocked alld fil: lunch Sheriff Tom Houchins.
.
"Everyone kept saying we PJsh upward for freedcm.
escaped arrest."
All three - white males for passing strangers.
gave preferential treallnent the state tiUe. She a1ao wu
"We poured wa(fr over our Including personal coaching the w!Mer of the pr~UmJnary
At 3:50 p.m., the older klda, ranging in age !ram about '!I
But when the 26 children were going around in
and
talent
IIUCh as Mille Marshall. and !0 40 - wore stocking masks. did not slart showing up_at circles," said Jennifer . heads to try to cool ourselves to this year's winner were to swimsuit
off
so
we
wouldn't
faint,''
said
"They
kept
saying,
'We
made
competlilons
here,
making
their
hcmes
shortly
after
One told Ray to get out ol
be dlscus8ed today by Keller
Robert RodrigUez, both 14,
Ray. ''Then we'd go back and and an internal commlttcoe of her the crown favorite.
this turn before •.
plied into a bus with the hta seat, pointed his gun .up school, partie set ln.
·
"AU the kids said, •r hope c!ig some more."
"I gave no preferential
Phooe calls flooded the
the · pageant board of
younger ones, some of whom the aisle and told the driver
"Mike
Marshall
saved
us,
they
run
out
of
gas.
I
hope
treabnent to the winner that I
were wearing mly bikinis. and three small boys in front school and sheriff's offiee.
really," said Jennifer, "Mr. dlrec!Ors.
The driver was their old to get to the back of the bus. Then the bus ·Was found In the they run out of gas' ."
Keller was suspended did not give to nwnerous
But the kidnapers kne~ Ray was laying down and pending a decision In the other girls in this year's
pal, Frank Edward Ray' 55, . The boys ran to back seats, ditch.
praying. Mike opened the Ud matter. II was reported the (state) pageant," he said.
where
they were going.
Everyone seemed to know
implicitly truated by the followed by Ray. ·
1\lfwey.
Mr. Ray came oyer hoard had been contacted by
They
had
prepared
an
exHe acknowledged that
pqpulatlon of ~.500 in his 28
''There were no screams," Instinctively there had been a
and
he
helped
alld they finally more than · half Qf the twice during the last year he
traordinary
prison
for
their
years of chauffeuring school said Ray, a •, short, slow- mass kidnap.
got It open."
·
·
By this time, the children captives.
directors of the 2ll local had worked with Miss Cooley,
children of thl1 farming moving, stocky man with a
Ray
said,
"We're
all
gonna
And
finally,
they
headed
pageants, held to qualify going over various aspects of\
community In the e1act leathery face worn by the sun wer.e·on the road, where they
stick
together."
there.
It
was
100
miles
and a brown crewcut !Ouched would be driven around for 11
entries to the state her performance including
It had been a. perfect center of California.
Then
they
bolted
for
northwest
of
diowchllla,just
hours,'Unlil 3 a.m. Friday.
competition, to voice their her wardrobe and Interview
summer day for the klda,
He set off down the road by gray.
freedom,
with
Mike
leaving
a
two-hour
drive
you
go
techniques.
·
"Bot I knew they meant
Some of them, stifling in
aged oto u,
away from the rural school
objections.
first to pull the other kids out,
He said he also advised fOI!I'
Keller denied he had given
the dark, hot vans and there direct.
· TlleadaYI and Thllrtldays SIIITounded by dairy pastures busibess. ''
It was on the edge ·of and Ray exiting last.
any fonn of favortiam !Oward other contestants, adding,
As the children sat frozen uncomfortable In their
are swim · days for the and cotton fields, and
It was 7 p.m. Friday, and.
Livermore,
Calif., in the
"The only reason I didn't tallt
· smallest tots who atiend dropped off five youngsters at with fear, one of the · lllthlng suits, lost hope and
to the others was I was not
abductors drove the bus feared IIley would be killed. rolling hills .45 miles east of ll)ere was sunlight.
summer
sesaions
at three stope.
''We took off and never
appl,'o&amp;ched."
Jennifer Brown recalls San Francisco.
Dalryland Union School.
There were 19 girls and about a mile down the road
looked
back," said Rliy.
It
was
an
underground
·As pageant producer,
and
Into
a
drainage
ditch
children
saying,
.
"We
are
They had splashed around !!even boys left.
They
ran
200
yards
and
·
.
srOI\M
LOSSES
prison.
In
a
rock
querry.
Keller
was responsible for
·
where
it
was
found
later.
going to die."
ille outdoor pool at the county
Then It happened.
Amid
the
1'\llns
of
old
cars
and
found
an
employe
of
a
rock
·
·NEW
YORK
(UPI)
Instaging
and directing the
The 12 bigger kidS were . Up front, from time to time,
On a country road nine
fairground&amp;, theil returned by
trucks
duniped
there
overthe
and
quarry
company,
and
sured
losses
caused·
by
performances
of contestants
bus !0 the school to be driven miles west of town, "there ordered in!O the light van. they hea.rd what seemed to be
Ray
told
him:
thunderstorms,
torrential
years.
and other entertainers for the
home with the older kids, who was a light van parked down The 14 smaller ones and Ray cans popping - as though the
"Hey! We need help. We've rains, high winds and mid-June production at a
were hUstled into a dark kidnapers were drinking beer
When they got there at 3 been buried."
tornadoes July 10-12 in local high school. It has been
green one.
or sods.
•·.· ..·..·. . ·.·.·.·.·.··.····.· ····:·..... .....
a.m.
Friday,
one
of
the
northeastern Ohio and held here the last two years,
It was a tipoff as !0 !0 how
The kids were given
kidnapers yelled, "Where Is
western Pennsylvania have and previously was staged at
well-planned the operation · nothing .
been estimated at $5 mUllon Sandusky and Cedar Point.
Yet lhe abductors were the bus driver? We want you
was .
·
Ray and the kids were by tile American Insurance
Miss Cooley, a senior at the
Jeff Brown was with the strangely solicitous from ou1 first."
~ Ray got out, and they taken by sheriff's deputies to Association.
Cincinnati
Conservatory of
~ bigger kids. Jennifer was time to time.
made
.him
take
his
pants
tile
Santa
Rita
Rehabilitation
Association
Property
Music,
who
could not be
"Are
you
all
right
.
back
the smaller ones and
By Helen Hottel !§~. with
off.
Center
In
nheearby
Pleafedsantond
.
Claim
Services
Vice
reached
for
comment,
was
began crying because she there?" one shouted through·
They
removed
a
canvas
There
t
y
were
an
President
W;D.
Swift
said
quoted
by
the
Mansfield
the partitioning.
··
I wanted her older brother.
And fans were provided for that camouflaged a piece of checked over by doctors who . damage was concentrated in Nfi'S Journal June ·19 as
Then the smaller children
Wbat CaD Her PareDII Do?
around her started to cry, and what comfort there was. But the ground. And tl)ere was a found them In excellent the area of Akron, Ohio, and saying Keller had assisted In
shape.
De;~r Helen:
· ,__
Wesimoreland. County, Pa. her pageant preparations.
she stopped so she ·could dust kepi coming up through .three-foot hole. .
.
They
asked
Ed
Ray
's
name
The children were given
Our 111-year~ld daughter left home nine montha ago to live comfort. them.
Damaged property
the
cracks
in
the
bottom
of
1
and age. Then they gave him oversized white coveralls Included homes, schools,
a nlghbnare.
.
· It was pitch black inside the vans.
Why she Stays With this sadist we can't understand. He luis both v~ns. The wiJidows were
The vehicles stopped four a flashlight and some extra· usually assigned to. new churches and a few large
a Pollee record for assa\llt, breaking and entering, rape, but so cover~d by cardboard and times - and each time the batteries and told him to get Inmates at the center, and industrial buildinss.
down in the·hole.
looked like little clowns as
far, he has never ·done time, why we don't know. His own wood.
~ds smelled gasoline. They
"I
had
to
help
the
kids
they romped about.
nlother Ia scared to death of him.
down,"
he
said.
"Down
Into
l)y 1:45a.m.Saturday, they
He continually beata her up. The last time he loosened her
Values to $19.99
this old building. An old truck were ready for the ride home . CHICAGOAN KILLED
front teeth, split her face open, knocked her uncoii8Cious, and
body 1 guess it was. Eight by
Deputies took head counts
then tried !0 choke her but luckily someone pulled him off. For
CLEVELAND (UPI)
. $51111 Pair
.
.
I
NOW
16 feet. It wasn't aU the way several times to make sure Jerry Evans, 46, Waukegan,
tltat, lie appeared before a judge but was released on ball. She ·
below (ground) level, but a · they were all there.
m., was found shot to death
won't prea charges; so that's tbat.
.
bunch
of it was."
"Is everybody nice and Sunday on the. city's East
In spltco of lnhu!nan lreatment, our daughter won't leave
· As each boy and girl went warm?" a male deputy asked Side.
him. $he had a good job, but· was forced to qult (due to
down
the hole, the ki~pers as they snuggled into their
ttulleil), and !lOw ihey Uve on unemployment insurance. Her
Homicide detectil'l!s said
asked their name and age . · seats.
he was dead on arrival at
banlt account Is gone, her good clothes bllve disappeared. He
Middleport; o:
T.hey also took personal ."Yeah," they shouted.
has dragged her Into the gutter. Somehow he has taken
Lakeside Hospital.
possessions such as sneakers
Then they waved golldbye
pbsseislon of her Si&gt; that she can't think straight. Once, after a
and little purses..
•
to FBI agents and deJll!ties
terrible beating, we rescued her and kept her home for a week, Ily Polly Cramer
It seemed a logical thing to and, escorted by the
oot she ran away to be with him again.
·
do
you wanted to ask a California Highway Patrol,
I am sure he is mentally unbalanced, and I'm afraid our
Now I have a nice round cloth
INFLATION FIGHTER
ransom
and prove to parents rode home In a red-white-and·
daughter has becqme so too. If not, why can't she walk away?
DEAR POLLY - Many for a drum !able. - IRENE
that
you
had their children. blue Greyhound bus.
-DESPERATE PARENTS
Urnes when I am invited to a L
But
at
the
moment, Ray's
There was giggling and
DEAR POLLY - I buy
bridal shower, or someone is
chief
concern
was
protecting
laughter
aboard the bus, but
Dear Parents:
in the hospital I am short of boys' sneakers for myself,
the
kids
of
his
friends
and
one
litUe
girl
had a nightmare
Has it occurred to you that the "possesaion" you speak of cash. I .decided to start a gift since they are comfortable,
neighbors.
and
woke
up
screaming,
be drugs? U your daughter Is hooked, she'll stay with the drawer . Whenever I see durable • and
more
He and they were amazed "Please leave me alone.
provider, no matter what his treatment.
. . .
attractive little things on sale economicaL They are sized
YoU[ only bope II' to find 11 counselor who Will UIBI'U'e .her 1 buy . them \o put in this larger than those made for . at the q-applngs of the old Please leilVe me alone."
van in whiCh
Others wet their parita. ,
trust' Perh&amp;p8 he or she can break the spell.
·
drawer . I . am always women, ·SO allowance has to underground
they
found
themselves.
Back home, parents
· For further advice, Call AWAIC (Abused Women's Aid in prepared
(or
such be made for that difference.
·
T
here
were
mattresses,
joyfully
greeted their SOM
Crlsls), P. 0. Box 431, Cathedral Station, New York, 10025. - emergencies and really save The boys' sneakers are often
mesh
wire
around
the
sides,
and
daUghters.
·
on sale. :... LEILA.
H.
money .~ CATHERINE.
an
improvised
toilet,
folld
and
Some,
Uke
John
Brolm,
DEAR POLLY - When
father of Jeff and Jennifer,
Dear Helen: . I
lemons
are bought on sale, water. ,
DEAR POLLY - When any
"Cileerios
and
'tater
chips,
did not speak bitterly .
I hear that ~essers as well as bartenders are being of my towels slart to get thin they can be kept for quite a
plenty
of
water,
couple
of
"I never felt angry. I just
!rained in counselq. 'I'!M! course Is given by psychologists, in the center, but are still time by putting into sterilized
and teaches beauty shop workers the art of "educated golld otherwise, I cut them canning jars and covering loaves of bread," said Ray. felt helpless," he said .
"Then they threw down a
others felt vengeance was
Uatealng.'' They're learning about referral services; they have into napkin size pieces to use with cold water. Screw lid on
roll
of
toilet
paper
before
due
.
numbers to call for emergency help, such as threatened when on a picnic or having a tighlly and they slay fresh
closing
the
tid.
I
didn't
know
"People
who do this type of
suicides; etc.
cookout. They wash easily and yield more juice than what was going on."
thing
need
to be prosecuted
This sotinda Ulte ~great idea, and I wish it were offered in and when dampened are ideal when first bought. He
found
out
soon.
The
hole
and
hung
on
national TV,''
our town. People sometimes tell hairdressers more than they for finger style eating. Very MARGARET.
was
sealed
with
lumber,
said
Tom
Van
Hoff, \\'hose
ret~ their own familles, and we're in a position to be of real handy around the barbecue,
DEAR POLLY .- I sew a
help if we know what to say (and what not to say).
lot. When I baste' gathers or met.Bl and old batteries. The daughter Cindy, 7, was
too . - D.A.R.
you please p.~bliclze this new Idea in your colunm, . DEAR POLLY - Perhaps sleeves in a garment, I pull kidnapers told them they among the victims.
get out the next cjay.
Said Ray: "I wouldn't let
10 that more night schoola and community agencies will other new mothers have
oul these threats after the would
"We
begged
them
to
lei
us
'em
live if I could get a hold of
provide "layperson psychology" for those whose jobs make discovered that diaper liners final sewing and Wind on a
·
'em."
now," said Ray.
ihem amateur counselors? - COSMETOLOOIST
are great but expensive. I cut thread spool to reuse for a outBut
they were trapped in
Amid the joy and anger,
them in half alld then have . hem or sewing on buttons. their !Omb-like prison for 16 however, no one - not
Dear Cosnetologist:
· , two boxes for the price of one. This saves some money when
hours before their ingenuity towrispeople or law enforceDone and done. "How to be an Amateur Psychologist
Also, I fold cloth diapers one does a lot of sewing since
ment officials - · GOuld pin
would be a highly pop.llar course at night schools all over the together into squares alld sew thread is now quite ex- and tenacity led them to down
a definite motive for the
freedom .
counlry. Alld I'~ sure attendance wouldn't be limited to lllem together to make great pensive. - SHELLEY.
elusive kidnapers.
bartenders and Hairdressers. - H.
DEAR POLLY - An
"burp" pads. They are also
But the Rev. Ray TeeI, of
Down mtne hOle, Ule older
.•
+++
wonderful to use under baby inexpensive container for
the First Jesus Name
Dear Helen : '
when changing diap~ts, earrings can he made with a kids gave their shirts to the
Church, was
What do you think of a woman who says every time she wiping chins and spills or for, candy box that has individual smaller ones who were Pentecostal
happy. Members of his flock
aees a highway "Yield" sign, she feels sexually threatened? - dusting and even ~axing the sections for the candy pieces. . wearing only bathing suits. met Inside the church Friday
~~
..
The first thing the ~ids all night and, he said, "We asked
These in mine are about one
car. - LINDA L.
wanted
was water. Some ate . the Lord that he would return
DEAR POLLY - I cut the and a half by two inches and
Others
went to the the children by midnight."
Dear D.:
d tops off old socks and crochet one and a hall Inches deep.
I'd think she caught the LUy Tomlin stage show an around the edges alld use There are twenty one sec- bathrOOm.
When they left the church
Suddenly the ceiling they learned the children had
borrowed one of Lily's best lines. - H.
these pieces to make tions. I put thin foam rubber started
to cave in, apparenUy
blankets . I use odd colors of · in the bottom of each section
from
the
dirt the abductors been freed .
(velvet would be elegant) and
yarn I happen to have. KAY .
' have a perfect place to keep piled atop the underground
DEAR POLLY - I had a my earrings separate and prison.
Kids started to scream for
beautiful umbrella that could handy. - M.P.M.
On their return home
their
mothers. ·
Polly will send you one of
no longer be used since some
before
dawn Saturday,
"Thought we were going to
of the ribs were broken. I her "peachy" tbank-you have it right then," said Ray. Jennifer Brown snuggled into
hated to throw it away cards, Ideal for framing or
But the roof held. Then bed with her mother and went
because the covering was S!l placing In your family scrap- everyone waited for the !0 sleep. And. Jeff slept with
pretty. I removed this cover book, If she uses your favorite kidnapers abcoe \II&lt; go away, his father.
Jennifer got up early the
with a gay pattern of roses Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
Finally, they cOilldn't be
her
column.
Write
Polly's
fr om the broken frame,
heard. And Ray and the kids same morning to watch carsewed .the center hole and Polplers In care of this news- . made their move.
toons oil television.
henuned the outer edges. paper.

By Gl!lORGE JI'RANit
CHOWCHILLA, Calif.
· (t!Pil - Joan Brown
returm!d home frzl worlt at
5:1~ p.m. lui 'lbanday and
looked for her two childrelt.
Sometimes they olaved .
~de-and«eel with her.
"But 1111111 I 18W tbat the
peanut butter wu·not out and
the chairl were not In front It
the TV, I kMw something
was wrong," abe rec:alll.
She didn't know the half of
lt.
Her chUdren, Jeffrey, .10,
Bl)d Jennifer' 9; along with 24.
other younisters and their
school bus driver, were
already In their flrlt holD' ol
'"""'"

SHOES

'

Mob'lti hOIMI art

Something wrong: peanut jar not out; TV una.ttenqed (;omplaints raised in

WOMEN'S

home
a solid

foundation

5- 111t Dally Sentlllel, Mldclleport-Pameroy, 0., Monday, July li, 1976

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•~- The Dally SenUnel,Middleport.p&lt;IIJlerOy, 0 .. Morulav. Julv 19. !976

ha~d

Royals

Phils nip

AL

'

champs 6-3 loss

LETART FARMERS PEE WEESQUAD - Front,l-r, Cindy Allen, Scott Kaiser, Jarrod
Hill, Eric MUllron, Larry Powell, Bill Hupp, Keith Allen ; second row, Heath Hill, Richard
Gillbrlde, Timmy GiUbride, Joey Roush, Ken Brown, Mark Jarrell ; third row, Rick Crow,
coach; Scott Wickline and ShaW)! Stobart. The team tied for.second place in league play and
ended the seascn with a~~ record. Picture by Jim Hamm.,
I

Browns look
•
aggressive
KENT, Ohio (UPI))

Coach Forrest Gregg of the
Cleveland .Browns said the
highlight {If his team's
latest intra-squad scrimmage
was the aggressiveness of the
entire squad.
It shows.
Rookie guard Doug Kleber
of the Cleveland Browns, who
tcre ligaments in his knee
during a drill at camp
Saturday, underwent surgery
today at Shaker Medical
Center Hospital in Cleveland.
Fullback Hugb McKinnis
dislocated his right elbow
during the scrllruda&amp;e
following the drills and will
be lost for at least two weeki!
and fulllllck Henry Hynoski
dislocated bi$ shoulder
during the head-bumping and
'
wiD be sldelloed for at least 10
days.
"When I hit him my whole
llhoulder was nwnb," safety
Van Green said of McKinnla,
Iii roommate. "I thought my
ann was gone, but then the
feelilllf started to come back.
· I didn't mean 10 burt him, but
: /. · that's part of the job. 'lbat's
· what's upectecl of us."
Other victlma of the ~
battle were defensive Ron
Eut (IPI'Bined ankle) and
lilleblcker Dtve Graf (pulled
groin muscle). Each,
however, is not expected to be
out of C(ll!lml-tm long.
Gregg lakes an adamant
allnd
regarding
the
Injuries.
"You can't get ready for
lhe regular without
IM:Ihmi!.tge," he said. ''Ibere
Is noway of geU~ around it.
• There usually are some
Injuries In the first rugged

homers. Milwaukee 's AllStar pitcher Bill Travers ·
went 1 2-3 Innings and wllli
slapped around for seven hits
and seven earned runs before
departing.
llllllaDI I, TwiDJ 1
Cleveland's lUco Carty
blut.ed a pair of two-run
homers and rookie Stan
Thomas, primal'Uy a relief
pitcher, allowed MlMesota
eight hits to hike hjs record to

BY NED. HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
The Philadelphia PhilUes
are not only winning by doing
thlnga right, they are also
winning by doing things dlf.
ferently.
The PhUlles edged Los
Angeles 2-1 Sunday on a
controversial play that had
Dodger first baseman Stcove
GarVey
·still steaming in the
~I.
clubllouse.
Oriole&amp; B, Angela I
Mike Schmidt 8(.'(lred the
Recently acquired Tony
winning
run from third base
Solalta hit his first h(lller of
with
two
outa In the ninth
the year and also drove In two
inning
on
an
unusual play in
runs with a first-inning single
to pace Baltimore's victory which teammate Jerry
Marlin was trapped In a run
over Ca llfornla .
down between first and
Raugers 3, Yankees %
.
Juan Beniquez lined a 12th· second base.
The
blzzare
rally
began
inning single into center field
when
Schmidt
Willi
hit
by a
to score Jim Sundberg an\i
A's 10, Tigers l
pitch
by
loser
Charlie
Hough,
give Texas its victory over
oakland ran the Tigers into New York to halt. a !!).game 7-4. Greg Luzlnski followed
the ground as they pilfered Texas losing sltesk.
with a single, sending
four bases and pulled off two ·
Schmidt to third. Martin
double steals after running up LEFTY MCKINZIE WINS
came in !0 run for· Luzlnski
COLUMBUS (UPI) - lroo- before Tommy Hutton
nine stolen bases in three
previous games. Sal Bando ton.'s Jim McKinzie shot a grounded !0 Garvey, who
lroke and Mor-16 streak by one-under-par 71 Sunday for a tagged first and began to run
driving in three runs with a 36-llole 1&lt;\tal of 147 and a two- Martin toward second .
fiftMnning double and two- stroke victory . in the OJ1io Schmidt broke for the plate
run, sixth-inning single . . State Left-Handed Amateur while Garvey was trying to
Tournament.
Wblte Sox 13, Brewers 3
tag Martin, who evaded the
Second was John Campbell tag and 'returned to first
Chicago rapped oct a
season high 16 hits, of Columbus who had a 73 safely as Schmidt 8(.'(lred.
suburban Garvey protested in vain that
highlighted by Lamar Sunday . at
·
Groveport
Golf
Club.
Johnson'slirsttwo home runs
Martin had run . out of the
Earl Pllilllps of Akron was . baseline. ·
of the season, golld I~ lour
"I still think he was out of
runs. Kevin Bell and Sill third with 153. Dan NiGOlet of
Stein each stroked three-mn Canton and Ed Annstrong of the baseline," said Garvey.
Ashtabula tied for fourth at "When he went out he went
155.
out at least three or four feet,

P ORTL&gt;AND INDEPENDENT BASE- ~::;;:::~::::::::::;::::~:::::~~::!::':~:;;::::::::x~:~::::::::::::~:::;::::::::~:;~:::;:~::::: :::;~::;:;::::5::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::~==~=::::;:;:;::::::: ::::::»::::~:!:~::::~:::.:-:-t.}
SAL~
TEAM - Front,
1-r , Ron Bachtel, Bill 11·
Knapp, Ray Proffitt, Greg :::
.
Results
==~
Roush and Jim Hanun ; &lt;:::
-~
back row , Pete Sayre ,
Clev·eland 6 M 1rmesota I
Ch icago
000 OlD OOCI--1 9

the SCOREBOARD. ~~:~~~~

Keith Fitch, Tom Theiss,

Graham -captures
Westchester title
HARiusoN, N.Y. (uPI) David Graham was supposed

to fold.
He was expected to shrivel
up and collapse In frmt of a
national tell!vl5im audience
while the golfing "Gollaths"
like Johnny Miller, Tom
Wataon and Ben Q-ensbaw
stomped him Into the ground
down the stretch and dividedthe loot.

. .GOO.
Grabam'a final round of
even par 71 was his worst of
tbe four-day \o!1f118111ent, but
It waa all be needed because
tbe guys who were suppo8ed
to malle 1 run at him never
got golns.
Miller' the British Open
clulmpion whom many
lbought would apply lhe moat
preuure, played himself out
of contention on the front nine
while Crenshaw didn't make
Iii move until It Willi too late.
Wataon shot a good iast
round, a 611, but middle
rounds of 72 and 73 killed his ·
chaliCe••
AI the bill names faded In
the distance, It became
apparent that the lilly way
Graham could lole was !0
blow It blmaelf. And that
- ' t to be beceuleGraham
1M told hlmlelf that he wu
. as good as anyone out there,
. 10 why not prove It? .
"Last night I theught aboat
lite tension," the -.,ear-old

•

batters before walking Amos
Otis in the eighth. The
mistake proved costly when
Brett followed with his sll:th
homer.
It marked the second day In
a row that Brett had beaten
the · defending American
League champion Red Sox.
,On Saturday he stroked a
nlnth..jnning homer to give
Royals a victory, In meetings
·between the two clube this
season, Kansas City has now
beaten BOston seven out ot
eight times.
In other American League
games, California downed
Baltimore 8-6, Cleveland beat
Minnesota 0.1, Ollcago pummelled · Milwaukee 13-3,
oakland ripped Detroit 10-1
and Texas edged New York 32 In 12 innings.

Aussi.e admitted. "I said to
myself 'Why should I feel
tension? Why should I feel
nervous? Why should I feel
scarEd'?,.

"I said tO Il)yself 'You're
doing what you're supposed
to be do~. • I said 'you came
to play golf just like everyone
else. You came with as good a
chance as anybody. So why
should you be apprehensive ?~~

Rather
than
play
cautiously, Graham attacked
the course early and it paid
off with birdies on the fourth
alld fifth holes. He bogeyed
the sll:th and eighth holes !0
finish the front nine In even·
par 36, but he knew that be
matched par the rest of the
way he would be hard to
catch.
. "I didn't know if I could get
(the lead) ln!O the clubhouse
but nobody really made a run
at me. I thought if I could get
through 11 and 12 I'd be able
to finish all right. Fortunately
it was windy again today and
that kept the scores down,"
said Graham.
As it turned out, the most
serious challenges to Graham
were made 'by two other
relative unknowns, Mike
Wynn and Fuzzy Zoeller.

if

Nat ional league Standings

Chi cago l l M itWaukee 3
San Diego
000 100 001- 2 4 2
Kansas Ci ty 6 Boston· 3
Burr is (4. 11 ) and M i tterwald ;
Texas 3 New York 2, ll Spi l\ner , Menger
(9 ) .and
inn ings
Kend all . WP-Metzger (6·01.
Toda v· s· Gimes
( All Times ·EOn
Philadelphia 010 000 001-2 5 2
Oakland ( BJue 7·8 and BoS· Los Angeles
000 001 ~ 1 81
man 2 OJ at Cleveland ( Hood 2-5 Lon borg , Reed ( BJ and Boone ;
and Eckersley 4.8), 2, 5:30 p.m. John , Hougn (8 1 and Yeager.
California (Hartzell 0-2 ~nd WP.'Reed (7.J l . LP-Hough {7 -4).
Kir kwood 2 7) at Milwa ukee HR -Philadel ph ia . Allen il 2l.
( Sl aton 10.7 aM Travers 10-61.
2. 7:00p.m.
.
nst game )
Ball imore ( Pal mer 12-8) at (10 inni ngs)
Kansas Cit y ( L.eonard 10-JL Houston
010 010 JIO 1- 7 17 1
8: 30 p m
Montreal
100 100 004 o-6 8 0
New York ( Figueroa l\ .6) at
Niekro,
Forsch
(7)
and
Ch1cago IJ etterson 2· 3). 9 p.m .
Herrmann ; Kirby , Kerrigan
De tr oit ( Roberts 8-8) at (7) , Lang (8). Murray ( 10) and
M innesota ( Bane 2·2), 9 p.m .
Foote. WP . Forscn (3.2). LP ·
Bos ton ( Jones. 3..0) at Te)(as Murray
(Q. J }.
HRs -Houst on ,
Herrm a n n (2) ; Montreat .
(U mbarger ). 1 .05 p.m .
Tuesday' s Games
Morales {3 }, Foote (6).
'Boston at Texas~ night
. -Balt imor e a~ Ka11sas Ci1Y 1 , '{2nd gamel
ni 9h·f
·
'
Houston
301 413 02()--.14 22 0
Oet·r Oit at Minnesota , .n ignt
Montreal ·I 000 001 OOQ-1 S 3
New YDrk a.t Chicago., nig ht
. Larsen (1 .QJ and 11errmann.
San Fra n~i sco 5 :St. Lou is .4,
Californ ia at. M ·i 'I wa u kee., ·. Julze (8 1; Dunning , Warlhen
. 1S1
( .4 ), Kerrig an {6 ) Murray (9)
St. L ouis ·s San Franc isco " · n ight
Oaktane~ at Cleve1a·nd, n igh1
and L JohnSon . LP -Dunning (0·
2nd ,
41.
.
San O.i ego 2 Chicago I
Phi ladelphi a 2 L os Ange les 1
HoiJsJon 7.Mon1n!JJ 6, ls~
Major League S.seball
American League
Houston 14, Moo'tieal 1. 21'\d
By United Press 1nter.n11i onal
Clevel and
012 120 OO'J--6 10 o
Tocft y's Games
Nitfional League
·
M innesota
000 010 000-1 8 1
'( All nmes EDTI
Atl anta
000 IXK'J ·OOD-O 20
Tn·omas (2-11 and Ashby ;
S1, Lou is ,tFOt"seh ~ - • l ilt f San New York
001 100 OOx-1 9 1 Hughes , Surgmeier (4) and
F.ranc~ sco (D'A.cqu isto0·5) • .t ~ O.s
Mor1on, MarShaH { 8} and Wynegar . LP.Hughes (4.101.
p.m .
WHiiams ; Lotich (5·10) and HR s.Cievefand , Carty 2 (10) .
· CJnc,i nnat i {N-Olan .S-41 at HOdgtj. LP .MOrto" (O.Jt . HR ·
PiUsbuf"gh { Canc.telarJa 9·.t l, New York, Kingman {321 .
Oak land'"
001 0.-3 llD-'10 13 0
7: 35 :P"m .
Detroit
001 000 OOQ- 1 7 2
Houston l Ri ch ard 9.10) at C inc inna ti
100061 1D0-9 11 1
Mitchell , Li ndblad [9} and
Montr.eol ! Rogers J-! 1, a,05 · Pi!lsburgh
111000 023-8 u 1 Haney , Lindbl od (91; MocCorp.m .
,Gu lle)t , Billingham tS &gt;. Mc·E· m_ack • .Bare (5) , Cra~ford (7 },
AUa nt a (N4ekr o ·9·S or 'Moret n aney {8}. Eastwick (9l and H1ller (9) ancl K imtn . WP 3 3) a ~ New Yor,llj Jlo·Jich 4·10), BMCh ; . Med.i ch, Tekulv e U l, Mitchell (6-Sl. LP ·Maccormack
8:VS p .m .
Moose (7), Giust i (9) and (0-4). HR. -Oakland, Tenace (9).
Chicago {Sortha m 6·7) at Saf'l Sangv illen .. WP .BIIIingham {7··
000 100 OlQ-3 7 0
Oipgo ( $,rom 8-10,, 10;00 p .tr.l.
7}. LP -Medich
(5.81.
HR · Bo$1on
010 300 10X- 6 8 0
Ph Hacl elphia J Chr i s~ ensoo
·Ci nci nnati , Morgan ( 17): Pit ts· Kansas City
Cleveland, Lee
(S )
and
at Los Anoetes ( Hooton 6-9L burgh , Robertson (2).
Montgomery : Pattin, M ingori
10 o30p .m .
{81 and Mar ti~ez . WP.Pattin (3 .
TuesGay 's Gamts
(ht gJmeJ
Atl anta at Mon treat , ni9ht
St . Louis
010 012 CK'I0--4 9 2 81. LP .Cieveland (3·81. HR New Yor k at Cinc innat i, night Si!ln Francisco 200 071 OOx- 5 8 0 Kansat City , Brett ( 6 ).
Houston at Pit tsburgh , ;t, tw i
F al cone , Greif
(7 )
and
night
Simmons ; safr. Lavelle ( H Mi lwaukee 000 000 Joo- 3 9 0
340 300 DJx- 13 16 o
St. Louis at Los Anoeles, aod Hill , Sadek (7L WP.Barr Chicago
Tr avers, Broberg (2) and
night
·
(1 6). LP ·Falcone {6·9). HRs-St .
Phil adelphia a t San Diego, Lou is, Tyson {2): San Fran cis· Porter . Ku.snyer (7) ; Barrios
12·3) and Esslan . LP -Travers
night
co . Murc.er (1 3 }.
(10-7J. HR s.cnlca go, L. Johnson
New York. a t Houston , night
2121 , Ste in Ill. Bell lSI.
cZDd pme&gt;
·
( 10 i nnings)
Americ~n League St1nding1
St . Louis
000 011 020 1- 5 13 1 Ca lifor nia
310 002 011- e 9 2
By United Press Internati onal
san Frncsc 001 100 no ()..--4 1 2 Baltimore
002 030 Olo-6 7 1
East
Rasmussen) Curtis (5 ), Hr a.
Monge, Crago (S) arid Hum W l Pet . GB bOSk.V ( 7) , Greif (9). Wallace phrey , Etchebarren (9) ; Pagan, .
New York
s• l2 ,628 {10~ and Ferguson ; Dressier, Cuellar &lt;1), M iller (61, Mar41 ol7 .49. 11112 Caldwtll
Cleveland
{6),
Lavelle
{8}, tinez (9') and Dempsey . WP·
42 •• .
12
Balli more
Moffitt {8], Heaverlo &lt;10 ) and Drago (3-1 ). LP -Cuellor (4.11 ).
.4.0 •3 .182 121f1 Sadek, WP ·Wallace "(2·1) , LP · Hrs-Calitornia, Sola ita
Detro it
c1) ;
Boston
•1 •s
13
Heaver to (3. 1). HR .San Fran · Baltimore. Re. J eckson &lt;lll,
35 47 .427 17
M ilwaukee
Gri ch (8) .
cisco, Evans (7L
West
W L Pel . GB
Kansas Cit~
56 32 .636
Oakland
• 46 ~3 .517 10 112
Act now during our •..
TeKaS
45 -42 .517 101h ..,.
Chicago
40 46 .465 IS
~
Mi""esota
40 47 .• 60 15!12 it
California
37 Sol .407 20112 ..
. Uturday'l Results
..
.Kansas City 2 Boston 1
California 7 Baltimore 3
Oakland 3 Detroll 0
Cleveland 4 Minnesota o
M il waukee 9 ChiCJgO 2
·New York 7 Texas 5
·
Sunday'J Re1ult1
Oekland 10 Detroit 1
California 8 Baltimore 6

(JJ

LIJ

a:

...z

::J
LIJ

0

ot. A. J, iT-'IHII Dt. PillMAN MAIIZ
[

01 . K. H. CHUNG
FOR PRICES CAU COUECTJ

252·3181

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,
)(-Rays, Cleaning

:'!~~~~~

i!:t ~:;,~.go

l i..man
(~::.~~~~:~~:if~
.
at third broke, we could

By Vnited fl reu lnterftiltioni I
up a fumble and raced 30 Snodgrass.-Jim Hanlr(l
Eost
yards. Brian Duncan of the
brown, John Salser, Dave
w L Pe t. GB
offensive unit scored late in
~n1i adelpn i o 58 27 .•68 2
. Snodgrass. - jim ilamm Pl .,sbur~h
48 37 .565 10
the game from the one,yard picture.
N•w York
48 •• .m n••
·line.
Ch icago
36 52 .409 23' '
A record crowd of more
Mon tr eal
1 6 56 .317 31
Weit
than15,000fansatKeniState
w L Pet . GB
watched the scrimmage.
RIVER RESULTS
Cine lnnatl
56 3-1 .m
Fumbles halted two
CINCINNATI (UPI )
.~~~~eles ~~ :~ : l5~ ~~',
promising offensive marches Fleeting North, next to last sao o;ego
•• 47 .48&lt; 12' &gt;
·
rd
lin
bou
half
d
the
Atlan t a
4 1 A8 . 46 1 u 1,
Within the 10-ya
e. An a t
way aroun ·
San Francisco 38 s• .m 19
interception stGpped another track, went wide out of the
Saturdor' • Re•ulh
drive close to the goal.
final turn and came up on the
Atl anta 10 P lt!Sb~ron 2
51. L ~ou i s 7 San D iego 1
WW Cureton was the~ of outside in the stretcb to win HousH&gt;' 1 New ' York o
three veteran quarla'backs by a nose .over Blonde Spy In
Sa n Francisco 4 Ph ll •delphl•
1
with five completions in tlje featured $4,500 ninth
Cincinna t i , Montreal 1
seven attempts. Mike Phipps allowance race Sunday at
Lo• Anoeles 5 Ch i cago •
'- 11~ ..,Ri•
D
S d'
Sunct•r·s R,sun~
and
• .Brian Slpe a .... . ca .,.. , •.,_ver o":ns . un erjin ~e
New ;Yorl&lt; 2,1\ttanto o
mgnals.
...~ ..JiOwed .
Clncinnati1 9 P ~ ttsbiJrgh :a

Aile!' aD, who was David
Graham anyway? And what
business did he have leading
!be $300,000 Westchester
Classic for three rounds?
Well, David Graham, who
had won only one tournament
on the PGA circuit In six
years, showed them all
&amp;lllday that when It came
work."
down to "nitty gritty" time he
In that iCi bwuage, (barlie could handle the pressure
Hall of the defl!lllive unit better than any of them.
II.Wed first when he IJl'OCI9ed
Using his putter as .a
sllngshcit, little Dtvld slew
the big Gollaths In the final
round of the tournament by
flni8hlng with a 12-under-par
2'12 to win by three strokes
and take home the blgg~
paycheck of his career,

~

By JOE FROHLINGER ·
UPI Sports Wrltcor
George Brett doesn 'I mJnd
keeping an open mind and
that's the rea11011 why he
doesn't get cheated very
often.
Brett kept a clean slate
upstairs and belted a two-run
homer in the seventh inning
while Marty Pattin and Steve
Mingorl ~d a CQI!lbined
even-hitter Sunday to lead
the Kansas City Royals to a 0.
3 victory .over the Boston Red
Sox.
The American League's
leading · hitter with a
spiralling .365 average, Brett
says he's much improved
despite lacking a master
.plan.
"I have to go up there with
an open frame of mind. What
happens if I go up there
thinking that 1'm going to hit
a home run and they pitch me
outside?" Brett asked. "I'm
not going !0 start thinking
home runs., either, because
that would just mess me up."
The.Royals touched Boston
starter and loser Reggie
Cleveland for a secood~nning
run, scored three more runs
in the fourth and finished by
roughing up Boston reliever
Bill Lee.
Lee, who injured his
pitching arm in a fracas with
. New York's Graig Nettles
earlier this year, made ·his
second appearance since that
accident alld retired eight

LA, 2-1 -

get him at the plate," Garvey
added. " I still think he
(Martin) was out."
' The Phillies, with the best
won,Jost percentage In
baseball, of eourse saw things
differently.
.
"It was a once~n;~-year
play," said Schmidt. "Give
Martin credit for hanging In
there. Steve Yeager had the
plate blocked well. You woo't
make it 99 out of a 100 times In
that situation."
In other games New York
blanked Atlanta, 2-0,
Cincinnati outslugged
Pittsburgh 9-3, San Diego
shaded Chicago 2-1, San
Francisco edged St. Louis 5-t
before losing 5-t in 10 innings,
and Houston swept a doubleheader from Montreal, 7~ in
10 innings and 14-1.

. '

'

z.

Mell BraYel •
Mickey Lollch's two-hit
pitching and Dave !Qnlman'•·
32DI h&lt;1111l run of the :
in the fourth Inning helped the ~
Meta edge Atlanta.
Lolich retired 16 batten In
a row after Jimmy Wynn
singled with one out In the
fourth before Rod Gilbreath
reached base on Mille
..
PhiWpa' error with two out In
the ninth Inning. Darryl
Chaney singled I'! the third
with one out for the mly other
Atlanta hit.
Padres Z, Cubl 1
Rookie Jerry Turner looped
a two-out ninth Inning single
Into short leftfield to score
pinchrunner Bob Dtvta from
second base to lead the ' ' .
Padres over Chicago.
Glanll 5,4 Card• 4,5
Joe Ferguson's two-out
••
single in the lOth Inning otf
reliever Dave Hellverlo pve' ' ....
St. Louis Its vlct"'y over the
Giants In the nightcap after·
San .Francisco won the:
... &gt;'
.opener on pinchhltter Ouil'
Arnold's sixt~-lnnlng:
sacrifice fly.
'
• .••'
Astros 7,14 Expotl 8,1
•''
Ed HemnaM drove In ·
three runs in the second game
to lead Houston Its'
doubleheader sweep
•

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P. J. PMJlfY
804W. Main

Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2318

.NAT10NWIJi

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Look lor our Stars lor big savings

Uke This
17 cu. ft.
Frost-Proof

Us •••

Polly's Pointers

heritage house ·

Stuff gift drawer
With sale good~s

Woo't

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Helen Help

may

.,_

AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT

A Put;ic Service ol TNs Newspaper &amp; The Adverti~ng Council

if

if

ool14 -11oft "" ....

. .N.
OFFICE

how pageant won

They piled mattresaes and
For the next '!I hours, the heard the clink of cane but
had put on a play called "The the road with the door opeil;•
children and Ray never saw knew the' stops were not at· "started digging," said the
Dec I a r a t I on
o f Ray said.
'
service stations because driver.
Independence.''
''I slowed up to go around day Ugh! again.
Mostly
it
was
Ray
and
the
there
was
oo
conversaUon.
Jeff Bfown portrayed him, and out jumped a man
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI) Janice Cooley, 20, itt Pcrta-bigger
boya,
Mike
MarshaD
It
was
another
tipoff
to
the
Chowchilla, In the fertile
Samuel Mama in the play. with two guns. He ordered me
- Complaints that R. mouth, who was the wtnner
Robert Rodriguet. But Dennleon Keller · of Ripley, ·li the Mill Ohio Valley
One li his Unes was:
to open my door. Another two San Joaquin Valley, Is a town planning ol the operation and
In
Keller's
"I just came from guys jumped out of the where people leave their back noted by Alameda COUnty even the small children lent veteran producer of the pageant
their weight In the desperate annual Miss Ohio Pageant, hometown, and then captured
Lexington where I narrowly van."
doors unlocked alld fil: lunch Sheriff Tom Houchins.
.
"Everyone kept saying we PJsh upward for freedcm.
escaped arrest."
All three - white males for passing strangers.
gave preferential treallnent the state tiUe. She a1ao wu
"We poured wa(fr over our Including personal coaching the w!Mer of the pr~UmJnary
At 3:50 p.m., the older klda, ranging in age !ram about '!I
But when the 26 children were going around in
and
talent
IIUCh as Mille Marshall. and !0 40 - wore stocking masks. did not slart showing up_at circles," said Jennifer . heads to try to cool ourselves to this year's winner were to swimsuit
off
so
we
wouldn't
faint,''
said
"They
kept
saying,
'We
made
competlilons
here,
making
their
hcmes
shortly
after
One told Ray to get out ol
be dlscus8ed today by Keller
Robert RodrigUez, both 14,
Ray. ''Then we'd go back and and an internal commlttcoe of her the crown favorite.
this turn before •.
plied into a bus with the hta seat, pointed his gun .up school, partie set ln.
·
"AU the kids said, •r hope c!ig some more."
"I gave no preferential
Phooe calls flooded the
the · pageant board of
younger ones, some of whom the aisle and told the driver
"Mike
Marshall
saved
us,
they
run
out
of
gas.
I
hope
treabnent to the winner that I
were wearing mly bikinis. and three small boys in front school and sheriff's offiee.
really," said Jennifer, "Mr. dlrec!Ors.
The driver was their old to get to the back of the bus. Then the bus ·Was found In the they run out of gas' ."
Keller was suspended did not give to nwnerous
But the kidnapers kne~ Ray was laying down and pending a decision In the other girls in this year's
pal, Frank Edward Ray' 55, . The boys ran to back seats, ditch.
praying. Mike opened the Ud matter. II was reported the (state) pageant," he said.
where
they were going.
Everyone seemed to know
implicitly truated by the followed by Ray. ·
1\lfwey.
Mr. Ray came oyer hoard had been contacted by
They
had
prepared
an
exHe acknowledged that
pqpulatlon of ~.500 in his 28
''There were no screams," Instinctively there had been a
and
he
helped
alld they finally more than · half Qf the twice during the last year he
traordinary
prison
for
their
years of chauffeuring school said Ray, a •, short, slow- mass kidnap.
got It open."
·
·
By this time, the children captives.
directors of the 2ll local had worked with Miss Cooley,
children of thl1 farming moving, stocky man with a
Ray
said,
"We're
all
gonna
And
finally,
they
headed
pageants, held to qualify going over various aspects of\
community In the e1act leathery face worn by the sun wer.e·on the road, where they
stick
together."
there.
It
was
100
miles
and a brown crewcut !Ouched would be driven around for 11
entries to the state her performance including
It had been a. perfect center of California.
Then
they
bolted
for
northwest
of
diowchllla,just
hours,'Unlil 3 a.m. Friday.
competition, to voice their her wardrobe and Interview
summer day for the klda,
He set off down the road by gray.
freedom,
with
Mike
leaving
a
two-hour
drive
you
go
techniques.
·
"Bot I knew they meant
Some of them, stifling in
aged oto u,
away from the rural school
objections.
first to pull the other kids out,
He said he also advised fOI!I'
Keller denied he had given
the dark, hot vans and there direct.
· TlleadaYI and Thllrtldays SIIITounded by dairy pastures busibess. ''
It was on the edge ·of and Ray exiting last.
any fonn of favortiam !Oward other contestants, adding,
As the children sat frozen uncomfortable In their
are swim · days for the and cotton fields, and
It was 7 p.m. Friday, and.
Livermore,
Calif., in the
"The only reason I didn't tallt
· smallest tots who atiend dropped off five youngsters at with fear, one of the · lllthlng suits, lost hope and
to the others was I was not
abductors drove the bus feared IIley would be killed. rolling hills .45 miles east of ll)ere was sunlight.
summer
sesaions
at three stope.
''We took off and never
appl,'o&amp;ched."
Jennifer Brown recalls San Francisco.
Dalryland Union School.
There were 19 girls and about a mile down the road
looked
back," said Rliy.
It
was
an
underground
·As pageant producer,
and
Into
a
drainage
ditch
children
saying,
.
"We
are
They had splashed around !!even boys left.
They
ran
200
yards
and
·
.
srOI\M
LOSSES
prison.
In
a
rock
querry.
Keller
was responsible for
·
where
it
was
found
later.
going to die."
ille outdoor pool at the county
Then It happened.
Amid
the
1'\llns
of
old
cars
and
found
an
employe
of
a
rock
·
·NEW
YORK
(UPI)
Instaging
and directing the
The 12 bigger kidS were . Up front, from time to time,
On a country road nine
fairground&amp;, theil returned by
trucks
duniped
there
overthe
and
quarry
company,
and
sured
losses
caused·
by
performances
of contestants
bus !0 the school to be driven miles west of town, "there ordered in!O the light van. they hea.rd what seemed to be
Ray
told
him:
thunderstorms,
torrential
years.
and other entertainers for the
home with the older kids, who was a light van parked down The 14 smaller ones and Ray cans popping - as though the
"Hey! We need help. We've rains, high winds and mid-June production at a
were hUstled into a dark kidnapers were drinking beer
When they got there at 3 been buried."
tornadoes July 10-12 in local high school. It has been
green one.
or sods.
•·.· ..·..·. . ·.·.·.·.·.··.····.· ····:·..... .....
a.m.
Friday,
one
of
the
northeastern Ohio and held here the last two years,
It was a tipoff as !0 !0 how
The kids were given
kidnapers yelled, "Where Is
western Pennsylvania have and previously was staged at
well-planned the operation · nothing .
been estimated at $5 mUllon Sandusky and Cedar Point.
Yet lhe abductors were the bus driver? We want you
was .
·
Ray and the kids were by tile American Insurance
Miss Cooley, a senior at the
Jeff Brown was with the strangely solicitous from ou1 first."
~ Ray got out, and they taken by sheriff's deputies to Association.
Cincinnati
Conservatory of
~ bigger kids. Jennifer was time to time.
made
.him
take
his
pants
tile
Santa
Rita
Rehabilitation
Association
Property
Music,
who
could not be
"Are
you
all
right
.
back
the smaller ones and
By Helen Hottel !§~. with
off.
Center
In
nheearby
Pleafedsantond
.
Claim
Services
Vice
reached
for
comment,
was
began crying because she there?" one shouted through·
They
removed
a
canvas
There
t
y
were
an
President
W;D.
Swift
said
quoted
by
the
Mansfield
the partitioning.
··
I wanted her older brother.
And fans were provided for that camouflaged a piece of checked over by doctors who . damage was concentrated in Nfi'S Journal June ·19 as
Then the smaller children
Wbat CaD Her PareDII Do?
around her started to cry, and what comfort there was. But the ground. And tl)ere was a found them In excellent the area of Akron, Ohio, and saying Keller had assisted In
shape.
De;~r Helen:
· ,__
Wesimoreland. County, Pa. her pageant preparations.
she stopped so she ·could dust kepi coming up through .three-foot hole. .
.
They
asked
Ed
Ray
's
name
The children were given
Our 111-year~ld daughter left home nine montha ago to live comfort. them.
Damaged property
the
cracks
in
the
bottom
of
1
and age. Then they gave him oversized white coveralls Included homes, schools,
a nlghbnare.
.
· It was pitch black inside the vans.
Why she Stays With this sadist we can't understand. He luis both v~ns. The wiJidows were
The vehicles stopped four a flashlight and some extra· usually assigned to. new churches and a few large
a Pollee record for assa\llt, breaking and entering, rape, but so cover~d by cardboard and times - and each time the batteries and told him to get Inmates at the center, and industrial buildinss.
down in the·hole.
looked like little clowns as
far, he has never ·done time, why we don't know. His own wood.
~ds smelled gasoline. They
"I
had
to
help
the
kids
they romped about.
nlother Ia scared to death of him.
down,"
he
said.
"Down
Into
l)y 1:45a.m.Saturday, they
He continually beata her up. The last time he loosened her
Values to $19.99
this old building. An old truck were ready for the ride home . CHICAGOAN KILLED
front teeth, split her face open, knocked her uncoii8Cious, and
body 1 guess it was. Eight by
Deputies took head counts
then tried !0 choke her but luckily someone pulled him off. For
CLEVELAND (UPI)
. $51111 Pair
.
.
I
NOW
16 feet. It wasn't aU the way several times to make sure Jerry Evans, 46, Waukegan,
tltat, lie appeared before a judge but was released on ball. She ·
below (ground) level, but a · they were all there.
m., was found shot to death
won't prea charges; so that's tbat.
.
bunch
of it was."
"Is everybody nice and Sunday on the. city's East
In spltco of lnhu!nan lreatment, our daughter won't leave
· As each boy and girl went warm?" a male deputy asked Side.
him. $he had a good job, but· was forced to qult (due to
down
the hole, the ki~pers as they snuggled into their
ttulleil), and !lOw ihey Uve on unemployment insurance. Her
Homicide detectil'l!s said
asked their name and age . · seats.
he was dead on arrival at
banlt account Is gone, her good clothes bllve disappeared. He
Middleport; o:
T.hey also took personal ."Yeah," they shouted.
has dragged her Into the gutter. Somehow he has taken
Lakeside Hospital.
possessions such as sneakers
Then they waved golldbye
pbsseislon of her Si&gt; that she can't think straight. Once, after a
and little purses..
•
to FBI agents and deJll!ties
terrible beating, we rescued her and kept her home for a week, Ily Polly Cramer
It seemed a logical thing to and, escorted by the
oot she ran away to be with him again.
·
do
you wanted to ask a California Highway Patrol,
I am sure he is mentally unbalanced, and I'm afraid our
Now I have a nice round cloth
INFLATION FIGHTER
ransom
and prove to parents rode home In a red-white-and·
daughter has becqme so too. If not, why can't she walk away?
DEAR POLLY - Many for a drum !able. - IRENE
that
you
had their children. blue Greyhound bus.
-DESPERATE PARENTS
Urnes when I am invited to a L
But
at
the
moment, Ray's
There was giggling and
DEAR POLLY - I buy
bridal shower, or someone is
chief
concern
was
protecting
laughter
aboard the bus, but
Dear Parents:
in the hospital I am short of boys' sneakers for myself,
the
kids
of
his
friends
and
one
litUe
girl
had a nightmare
Has it occurred to you that the "possesaion" you speak of cash. I .decided to start a gift since they are comfortable,
neighbors.
and
woke
up
screaming,
be drugs? U your daughter Is hooked, she'll stay with the drawer . Whenever I see durable • and
more
He and they were amazed "Please leave me alone.
provider, no matter what his treatment.
. . .
attractive little things on sale economicaL They are sized
YoU[ only bope II' to find 11 counselor who Will UIBI'U'e .her 1 buy . them \o put in this larger than those made for . at the q-applngs of the old Please leilVe me alone."
van in whiCh
Others wet their parita. ,
trust' Perh&amp;p8 he or she can break the spell.
·
drawer . I . am always women, ·SO allowance has to underground
they
found
themselves.
Back home, parents
· For further advice, Call AWAIC (Abused Women's Aid in prepared
(or
such be made for that difference.
·
T
here
were
mattresses,
joyfully
greeted their SOM
Crlsls), P. 0. Box 431, Cathedral Station, New York, 10025. - emergencies and really save The boys' sneakers are often
mesh
wire
around
the
sides,
and
daUghters.
·
on sale. :... LEILA.
H.
money .~ CATHERINE.
an
improvised
toilet,
folld
and
Some,
Uke
John
Brolm,
DEAR POLLY - When
father of Jeff and Jennifer,
Dear Helen: . I
lemons
are bought on sale, water. ,
DEAR POLLY - When any
"Cileerios
and
'tater
chips,
did not speak bitterly .
I hear that ~essers as well as bartenders are being of my towels slart to get thin they can be kept for quite a
plenty
of
water,
couple
of
"I never felt angry. I just
!rained in counselq. 'I'!M! course Is given by psychologists, in the center, but are still time by putting into sterilized
and teaches beauty shop workers the art of "educated golld otherwise, I cut them canning jars and covering loaves of bread," said Ray. felt helpless," he said .
"Then they threw down a
others felt vengeance was
Uatealng.'' They're learning about referral services; they have into napkin size pieces to use with cold water. Screw lid on
roll
of
toilet
paper
before
due
.
numbers to call for emergency help, such as threatened when on a picnic or having a tighlly and they slay fresh
closing
the
tid.
I
didn't
know
"People
who do this type of
suicides; etc.
cookout. They wash easily and yield more juice than what was going on."
thing
need
to be prosecuted
This sotinda Ulte ~great idea, and I wish it were offered in and when dampened are ideal when first bought. He
found
out
soon.
The
hole
and
hung
on
national TV,''
our town. People sometimes tell hairdressers more than they for finger style eating. Very MARGARET.
was
sealed
with
lumber,
said
Tom
Van
Hoff, \\'hose
ret~ their own familles, and we're in a position to be of real handy around the barbecue,
DEAR POLLY .- I sew a
help if we know what to say (and what not to say).
lot. When I baste' gathers or met.Bl and old batteries. The daughter Cindy, 7, was
too . - D.A.R.
you please p.~bliclze this new Idea in your colunm, . DEAR POLLY - Perhaps sleeves in a garment, I pull kidnapers told them they among the victims.
get out the next cjay.
Said Ray: "I wouldn't let
10 that more night schoola and community agencies will other new mothers have
oul these threats after the would
"We
begged
them
to
lei
us
'em
live if I could get a hold of
provide "layperson psychology" for those whose jobs make discovered that diaper liners final sewing and Wind on a
·
'em."
now," said Ray.
ihem amateur counselors? - COSMETOLOOIST
are great but expensive. I cut thread spool to reuse for a outBut
they were trapped in
Amid the joy and anger,
them in half alld then have . hem or sewing on buttons. their !Omb-like prison for 16 however, no one - not
Dear Cosnetologist:
· , two boxes for the price of one. This saves some money when
hours before their ingenuity towrispeople or law enforceDone and done. "How to be an Amateur Psychologist
Also, I fold cloth diapers one does a lot of sewing since
ment officials - · GOuld pin
would be a highly pop.llar course at night schools all over the together into squares alld sew thread is now quite ex- and tenacity led them to down
a definite motive for the
freedom .
counlry. Alld I'~ sure attendance wouldn't be limited to lllem together to make great pensive. - SHELLEY.
elusive kidnapers.
bartenders and Hairdressers. - H.
DEAR POLLY - An
"burp" pads. They are also
But the Rev. Ray TeeI, of
Down mtne hOle, Ule older
.•
+++
wonderful to use under baby inexpensive container for
the First Jesus Name
Dear Helen : '
when changing diap~ts, earrings can he made with a kids gave their shirts to the
Church, was
What do you think of a woman who says every time she wiping chins and spills or for, candy box that has individual smaller ones who were Pentecostal
happy. Members of his flock
aees a highway "Yield" sign, she feels sexually threatened? - dusting and even ~axing the sections for the candy pieces. . wearing only bathing suits. met Inside the church Friday
~~
..
The first thing the ~ids all night and, he said, "We asked
These in mine are about one
car. - LINDA L.
wanted
was water. Some ate . the Lord that he would return
DEAR POLLY - I cut the and a half by two inches and
Others
went to the the children by midnight."
Dear D.:
d tops off old socks and crochet one and a hall Inches deep.
I'd think she caught the LUy Tomlin stage show an around the edges alld use There are twenty one sec- bathrOOm.
When they left the church
Suddenly the ceiling they learned the children had
borrowed one of Lily's best lines. - H.
these pieces to make tions. I put thin foam rubber started
to cave in, apparenUy
blankets . I use odd colors of · in the bottom of each section
from
the
dirt the abductors been freed .
(velvet would be elegant) and
yarn I happen to have. KAY .
' have a perfect place to keep piled atop the underground
DEAR POLLY - I had a my earrings separate and prison.
Kids started to scream for
beautiful umbrella that could handy. - M.P.M.
On their return home
their
mothers. ·
Polly will send you one of
no longer be used since some
before
dawn Saturday,
"Thought we were going to
of the ribs were broken. I her "peachy" tbank-you have it right then," said Ray. Jennifer Brown snuggled into
hated to throw it away cards, Ideal for framing or
But the roof held. Then bed with her mother and went
because the covering was S!l placing In your family scrap- everyone waited for the !0 sleep. And. Jeff slept with
pretty. I removed this cover book, If she uses your favorite kidnapers abcoe \II&lt; go away, his father.
Jennifer got up early the
with a gay pattern of roses Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
Finally, they cOilldn't be
her
column.
Write
Polly's
fr om the broken frame,
heard. And Ray and the kids same morning to watch carsewed .the center hole and Polplers In care of this news- . made their move.
toons oil television.
henuned the outer edges. paper.

By Gl!lORGE JI'RANit
CHOWCHILLA, Calif.
· (t!Pil - Joan Brown
returm!d home frzl worlt at
5:1~ p.m. lui 'lbanday and
looked for her two childrelt.
Sometimes they olaved .
~de-and«eel with her.
"But 1111111 I 18W tbat the
peanut butter wu·not out and
the chairl were not In front It
the TV, I kMw something
was wrong," abe rec:alll.
She didn't know the half of
lt.
Her chUdren, Jeffrey, .10,
Bl)d Jennifer' 9; along with 24.
other younisters and their
school bus driver, were
already In their flrlt holD' ol
'"""'"

SHOES

'

Mob'lti hOIMI art

Something wrong: peanut jar not out; TV una.ttenqed (;omplaints raised in

WOMEN'S

home
a solid

foundation

5- 111t Dally Sentlllel, Mldclleport-Pameroy, 0., Monday, July li, 1976

Brot
'
can
you
re
some
time?

' '
••

·'

'

I .

\

1
...
•r"·

..-,
.,.
.•· ..
..
'\

"
",

-·-•

..

REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER

-

&amp;
(Only 3514 "Wide)

FRENCH
FRIES

.THAT'S RIGHT! '100 OFF WHEN YOU TRADE
US AMY WORKING REFRIGERATOR !

•
•

Red Cross.

1heCoocl

Neigh~.Ot

..
·.•.

Play it 88fe ancli!Ufe
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated •

Phone

...

let's Talk Soon

While .Supply lastsf
Ingels Furnitur:e

DAI.£ ·C. WARNER

..

992-2143
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

Ban~ ~.ate

992-2635

Financing
Middleport

;•'

,..

.,

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..

7- ~ Dal1f ~~Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 19, 19'16
WCK TRACY

, e- The Dally Sentinel, MlddleD"rt-Pameroy, 0 .. Mondav . •Julv JQ. 1976

Reed~ville News N~tes For Fast Results Use The Sentinel -Classifieds
By Mil. L. Baldei'IOil

_.

Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Mundry Sr. have retUmef)
home after visiting relatives '
in Massachusetts:
·
Recent ' visitors of Mrs.
Virginia Walton and Susie
~ were Mr . and Mis. Gary
• Landon, Mike ~ Wes and
;.._ • Mr . a nd Mrs. ~Jones and
· , Heather of Celana, Mr~ and
•
Mrs. John Calaway, I.&lt;Jrl, Kib
and Bob of Marion.
Mr. a nd Mrs. William
Thomas and family of
Spril•gfield and Mr. and Mrs.
Samcineto of Washington, W.
va .. visited with Mr. anrl
Mr s. Walter Brown and
David.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Arvil Holte•·, Mary Kathryn
Holter to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio £lee. Co., Ease.,
Chester.
James J . Proffitt, Margie
A. Proff itt tAl Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Elec. Co.,
Ease., Bedford.
Charles E. Sayre, Clara L.
Sayre to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Elec. Co., Ease.,
Sa lisbury.
Phyllis D. Fultz, Leslie F.
Fultz to Florence L. Smith,
I.&lt;Jts, Pomeroy.
Jerry L. Brogan, Judith A.
Broga n to Gilbert J ,
Celedonia , 'Diane
T.
Celedonla. l.~t. Chester.
Harold L. Adams, Garcia
L: Ada ms to Ernest E .
Harris , Phuoc T. Harris,
•

DIMer guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernsst Whitehead and
-~~terswere Mr.~ Mrs.
1erry Hoffman and dau£11ter
of Morehead, Ky.; an\! Mr.
and Mrs. Joon Hetzer.
Mrs. Helen Archer viaited
with Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Tuttle on Texas Road.
Mrs. Hazel Barton soent a
day with Mr . and Mrs.
Charl es Oonaldson and
family at I.&lt;Jgan.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Safi\S of
Jane Lu, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Smith
attended the Mall Carriers
ConvenUon at Columws last
week .
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Arnold of Beaver Falls, Pa.,
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
George Arnold this weekend.
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Bess Larkins were Mr. and
Mrs. James Carruthers and
Penny of L&lt;lulsvWe, and Mrs.
Doris Marks of Chester.
Mrs. Opal Randolph and
Steve Hauber visited with
Ricky Hauber at Virginia
Beach, Va., recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Sleven Needs
visited with his mother at
Columbus.

AstraGraph
Bernice Bade Osol
For Tuudoy, July 27, tt18
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11) 11
you musl make a choice today
between an old friend end a
new one , Irs to your advanlage
to stand by the one you've
known the longest.
TAURUS (April 2D·Moy 20) It
things are running smoolhly on
th ~

Prudent management ol your

Jeanne Morgan, dec'd., to resources will put you in lhe
Roger Morgan, Mli4vlt.
plus column today . Spend only
Farmers Home Adm. to ., tor Immediate. essenllal needs.
Jimmy R. Lee, Sr., Nora E. L~P (July 23-Aug. 22) You are
u,e 56 60 56 A Sutton apt to be a far better manager
' · • · ' ·

.,

·

than your spouse today Try to

Mayme Mallory, d~. , _to tactfully run the shOw. withOut
Lmda W. H1ll, Affidavit, hurting her feel ings
Racine.
.
VI AGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22)
Rachael Dowme, Willlam Operale Blong logical proven
Downie, Barbara Lytle, lines today Attempting ln Lytle,
Martin' novations will create problems
Rop,el'l
Elberfeld,
Clarisse that could otherwise be easily
Elbe~fe).~. Katheril}e x E. · ' ~';?lded.
',.
Slage.[,illiiblirt Slagle •.J4~ ~lJlRA (BopL 23;Q,!:!-,23) Have
E. ~ll, L Eilfl j:~~lp~ J~n .with your p8ls 'loday but
lma E Keller Allan K ~on t get mixed u~ In anything
calfs tor a t~n~rleja\ ~sk . It
K 11 ·~J b 'Elberfel~·
~

er•r 1 a:co

"~

REGULATIONS

The Publl1her reserves
tht right to tdlt or relect
any
ads deemed ob .
l tct lonad . The publ i sher
wil l not be responsible for
more t han one Incorrect
inser tion ,

RATES

For Wlnt Ad Strvlce
5 c ents per word on~
insert ion
Minimum Charge SLOO,
1A cents per word three
consecutive Insert ions .
26 cents r,er word she
consecut lve nsert Ions .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and ads paid
w ithin 10 days .

tl\li1

~won't work out.

·

E~zabeth El~rfeld~ Ma;;f' ',-itcoRPIO (Oct. •24-NoY. 22)
Elizabeth MopriS, G ge ·, Once_you set your sights. don't

Photography

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 a m. to 5 · 00 p.m .

Dolly , 8:30 o.m. to 12:00.
Noon Saturday ,

Phone lodey 992-2156

A~L

LOST· 3 mo5 . old pig , red w1lh
black spats . Rocine-Bashon Ad
area. If whereabouts ore
known, lease coil q49-2344

All Yard Sale~ . R:umm19e ,
Porch and Basement Porcn
and Basement Sa les , etc .
must be pa 1d In advance
Get yours in earl't' bV
stopping by our off•ce at
The Dan., Sen tinel , 11 1
Court St or writing Box
129, Pomero., , Oh io .t5769
will'\ your rem i tfence .

FOUND. Doberman P•ncher .
female , about 1 ~ear old, ol !he
Leonard
Bou r es idence,
Syracuse. Phonem -5006

1973 Corvette, T· tQp. blue, 350
aul omotic and utros , $5595 .
Call992-?ll 4 alle_c 4 ~~--~- _

69 VWS600.0C. Phone 9A9-2636.
1973 Che vy 1mpC11o. 2 dr ., P S..
P B.. oir. eJC cellenl condi tion .

Phone 992-S9?S.

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

AI. TROMM (X)NST
Rufland
742-2321
AII Work Guaranteed
Free Esllmoles

1971 Dodge Cart , 8 cyl. ,
automatiC ~ ro nsmiu ion . h ·
cetlent condit ion, $1450.00

6-13-Z

REGISTERED Ouroc mole hog for
servtee . Coif at Lewts Sm11hs .
Rt. U3 and Rt. 7. Phone 992-

31]1;1.

.NOTICE
THE MIDDlEPORT

Coii 2A7 -2193.
BRADFORD, Austioneer . Com·
found 1ke b!ue
plete Service. Phone 9~9 -2-487
w~ee lborrow between Mid
1 97 ~ Volkswagen , excellen t con or 949-2000 Racine , Ohio , Critt
dleport anq, Hobson , please
$2200 .00 .
Phone
di tion .
Br adford .
return to Bob W1lson, 338 S. Sth
t-30A-773-5867.
Ave., Middleport , Ohio .
ElWQOD
BOWERS REPAIR 9 Passenger Stol1on Wagon f ord
Sweepers . toasters . irons. oil
REWARD $.500.00 lor Blue T1ck
lTD. 9'12 -3647 or992-3859
small oppliances.. lQwn mower .
female coon hound w1fh scar on
neJCI to State Highway Garage
ngh t front foot. Stolen from 1%7 Ponttoc F•reb1rd •28. high
performance enginl'l , crdme
on Route 7. Phone {61~) 985·
V1rg1l Price res idence on Keno·
three -fourth roc~! com , Elrbook
Boshon Rd . Phone9B5-3806.
38~-- --.....-,.,-.,---,high riJ'e mon1fold w ith 900 AFB
t"orburetor, Douglas headers, REMODEliNG . Plumbing healing
and all types of general repotr .
~ rom lubes, Mune~ e '2 10 ~speed
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
with Hurst sh1fter , power pock
_pe~ce. Phone ~2- 2409 .
dvtch and pressure plate .
$200 weekly stuffing envelopes
Polnell Jones l -60 on Mogs. A 0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 years exinto olreody stomped ond adDoug los trocti on bor , .CS6 rear
dressed envelopes . Stuffing
p e r i ence . In sured ' free
gear, twm electrtc fuel pumps.
material provtded free Send:
estimates . Coli 992·238A or
Hurst 250 lb air shoc.ks , super
Self -addressed stamped
16")698-7257 Albany
sun toe street legaL Con be
envelope Diversified , Dept .
seen at lawrence Hysells on SEWING MACHINE Repoin, serA.A . 1206 Camden Dr. , Rich ·
vice. aU makes 1 992-2284 . The
Happy Holl9w Rd.. or phone
mond, Vtrgima 23229
Fabric Sh o p , Pomeroy .
742·2991 . First SI ,OOOtokes it . 1
Author ized Smger Soles and
1"97 1 Chevrolet Novo . 6 (yl. ,
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
auto., very good cond!t ion,
EXCAVATING , doter, loader and
$1500 00. Phone 992_..__,.
3366.
W1ll DO odd jobs , roofing, po1n ·
backhoe work; dump trucks
ting, hauling , treework , and 1972 P1nto S W , good cond1tlon.
and lo-boys for htre, will haul
$1150 00 1970 Hondo 350 ct ,
mowmg. Phonem - ?~(Jq .
fill d1ft . top soil , l1mestoM and
good shope. $350.00. Coli 992grCl vel. Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers , day phone 992-7089,
n1ght phone 992-3525 or 9921%6Muslong. 6 cyl .. -4 spd •. good
2·_ _
gas mileage. See at 570 Pe&lt;:~rt ~ S23.:.:
St .• Middleport

--· -

m.

----

--,.-

is
in
no
way
connected with Twin
City Cab Co. We also
offer 24 hour AAA
emergency
road
service. ·

~

-------

~~

PHOlfE 992-6010

A·~~~;;::~ puppies, sire and
for good 1emperment
ond protect1on , chomp ion line$,
b moles. 2 females. reasonably
pr1ced. Walter Evef"ell 7A2·

Owner

Louis D. Lee

JOSA .

MAKE spring cleaning profttoble,
turn unwonted 1tems 1nto cosh.
Advert1se in the Wont Ads .

~

~

3 bedrooms with nice-bath

and equipped kitchen.
Dining rdOC'l o~f large
living. Want only $18,000.
MIDDLEPORT -9 room
house with natural gas (hot
water) heat. Large living
and large dining. Natural
oak finish and oak floors.
Would you buy this at only
SIUCIG.
YOUR PROPERTY
AD HERE

~Your

'fff!~Birthday

FUNNY BUSINESS

HEJ.lROD, ~~uE oor A

1-4A6-8570.
10 to 20 acres with or without
older house In Me1g1 or Athens
County . Pleo1e write Cheryl
Boyd. 44.&amp;3lowestane Dr. , Col umbus, Ohio 43220.

MARVELOUS AITITODE
•

.

•'

COINS. currency, tok~~ns , gold
and silver tewelry. Wf! ned 1964
and older U.S. coins . Call for
other 7A2·233l or come out to
our coin shop on Rutland orid
leading Creek Rd. Roger
Wamsley.

'

TRAILER spoce for rent in Middleport. Phone992-5434 .
3 room furnished apartment,
utilities paid . Inquire at 356
North Fourth , Middleport ,
Ohio.
1 bedroom mobile home. adults

only. Phanem-5535.
TWO bedroom mobile home ,
Brown's Trailer Park, phone

..

IF YOU hove a service to offer,
wont to buy or sell something,
are looking for work .. . or
whatever .. you 'll ge.t results
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
~

Coll992-2151&gt;.

-

YARD

--------~-

Sole,

Wednesday

and

Thursday. July 21 -?1 oil doy.
Miscellaneous electrical op·
pliances, furniture , clothes,
books , " free table" and
refreshments .. 1020 Bunker H1ll

Rd

'm-332A.
3 room furnished apartment,
utilities furnished . PhOne 992-

3129.or'192-5A34

HOOAKE Motorcycle franchise
ovpllobla. lew initial Invest·
mant. Contoct Wtleels of Time.
island Rt. , Box 7A, Lock MClven,

Po. 17745.

- ....

4 roam furnished aportment.
close to Powell's Super ,y .. ~~et .

Phone 9'12-3658.
--~ ~~-~ - ---

-"1:-

~-

NEW LISTING ..:. 9 room
home. 3 plus bedrooms, 2
baths, full basement, 2 car
gar age with 2 rooms. NIce
large lawn In Rutland,
Equipped kitchen .
GOOD RENTALS ARE
SCARCE. BUY PAINT UP
AND
RENT
FOR
ADDITIONAL INCOME.

Phone 1-667-3737 .
OLD k1tchen cabinets, oak w1th
flour b1n and sugar jar, oak
chino cabinet , pie safe , mixed
wood, dresser·wolnut (solid) :
chest of drowen·maple. All old
oil profess1onallv refmilhed.
The Furniture Fixer, Portland,

1

Ohio.
22 .3 cu . ft . freeter , Sears Col·
dspot , excellent condition .

Phone 992-5867 o' 992-2683.

POMEROY, Iorge kitchen, den ,
Iorge util i ty room , two
bedrooms, living room , bath attached
ttorage
room ;
- 9'!2_·7~~~30:::·:.__--,---,'----::-:- Mparote woodworking shop.
3 bike motorcycle troller. Call
On 3 porcelt. Phone 992·537o4
992-7110.
after 5 p .m

RABBITS. pony saddle , mole
mule, ontiCJue ic.e box. Phone

-

.

~

·-:--~:----

WM,ITE leghorn loyers • .75 eClch . 2 bedrooms, Iorge modern kit·
Freeland Norris. Racine. Phone
chen, forced . 01r furncice , lin·

9•9-20-43

coin Hgts .. 992-S737 .

-- ..__,_........._

--=----::~

sewing CLARK Realty, Amesville, O,hio,
$40.00. 614·4~8 · 4444, lb9 A. Cline Fruit
Phono BAJ-2645.
Farm, 2500, good trees, 10 a.
lanced pasture, pond, \15 a.
2 regi1tered black Ang~s cows
woods , mineral rights , 24xo40
with ealves - ·t purebred Suf,
new solei roOm and 1toroge
folk rom , I rear ol~ 992.71~ .
building, cider press, 2 tractors
ond other equipment, good 4
bedroom home with city water
and free gas ; 2100 toot fron ·
tag'P on SR 7 S. 'of Tuppers
14CJ ocr• form- 2 house•, boms ,
Plains, $139,000.00. 38 A. dHp
1hed, several buildings, city
woods sUrrounded by state
woter, mineral rights , timber ,
lorest near Forked Run Pork ,
100 acres tillable. good
owner w i t~ :inonce, $13,500.00
posture , 8 mile1 'North of
MOBILE ~orne for sale or. tent . 3
Pomeroy, O~lo, off Route 33bedroomms, all ut•liVes pgid.
Hemlock Grove , Ohio. 992·
Phone m-7751 .
_,_
5014 evenings after S p~m .
rABLE model electric
machine, like new,

Continuous oni! pltce
gutters. We hang it. or do II
yourself . Special pricel to
builders .

BORN LOSER

~~~ 1\t-lD :r. ~"~e

Phone 949-2814
9 A. M. to5 P.M.
992-7320 evenings
6-27 -76

"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

,h. H2-!174

EXCAVATING , dot er , backhoe BUILDING , remodeling , and
repons . Qual ltv work , efficient
and dltcher . Char les R. Hotservice . Jeue Rodman , phone
Held , Bock Hoe Service,
992-5980.
Rutland , Oh1o. Phone 742-2008 .
GREG S CB SAlES , locoled ol Er· WANT to go Into bus~ness bv
y o urse l f?
Almost
new
win 's Gulf Serv ice, Midautomatic Insulating motchine,
dleport , Oh1o Phone 992~

$850 .00., Phone

2438.
SEPTIC Sy,. tems Installed by
licensed installer . Shepard
. Controc. tors. Phone 742-2409.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation 992 -3954 or 992-

2428,
WILl do roofmg, constrvction ,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone

742-2348.
CARPENTER . floor ing , ceiling ,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.

VERMEER BALER SAlES AND SER·
VICE. Meigs-Athens Covnty .
Balers from $3995 up. Merrill

Chose, (614)698-3021. "
EXPERIENCED house painter.
Phone Arthur Musser, 7-42 ·

2180.
EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND
DOZER -- lARGE AND SMAll,
SEPTIC T,\NKS INSTALlED, lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. Cllt
PUlliNS. PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.

ANTIQUE restorations, reproduc·
t1ons , cabmet makiOg and fur·
nlfure repair . 131 1/• 3rd, Mid·

dleporl, 992-5735 day · and
evening.

1971 Elcono Mob1le Home, 6())112
on Iorge lot in Mtddleport .

Phone 992-5867 or 992-2683.
1968 Fleetwood Troihtr 12 ft. by 52
It., portly furnished , porch
underpinning. Phone 1-3?8-

6319.
MASTER C,afl ]0&lt;55 1965 mobile
home . Two bedroom furn1shed .
corporf, good steps Phone

992-3077.
TRAILER, adults only . Phone
7639 or 992-3181.

992-

~

~ANKS

FOil. F'I')&lt;.\N'

~IS FIS\4 FOR ME!

l'T Wlo45 DELICIOUS!

NOTICE OF SALE

other equipment .
a nice business.
- Large
(corner lot).
Live In and have additional
Income. 4 units all
furnished.
Clos~
to
shopping. A GOOD BUY
S28,000.
A NEAT PLACE- 5 yrs.
old. 'h acre, metal storage
bldg., -large garden. 3
bedrooms, bath, eat-In
kitchen, carpeted, utility
R. Carp,crt. JUST $16.100.
BUYING .OR SELLING,
CALL US- T""N START
PACKING. HENRY E.
r• '!LAND,
BROKER,
APP!U'SER,
CONSULTANT.
"2·2259 or 992-2568

~

work fer

work fer

July

•
HCM5" OF

CHICI&lt;Ie
FOAMINGHAM
-TH5M0Sf
DAZZUN6
DEOC'7"AN1E'
of' cro.IDSES

ANNOUNCEMENT
OF INTENT TO
PERFORM FLOOD
ELEVATION STUDY

machine, cash register,

The Federal Insurance
Administration of the U . S.
Department of Housing and
Urblln Development, under
author i ty of the National
Flood Insurance Act of 1968,
as !mended , ( P .L . 90-44B) and
the Flood Disaster Protection
/ICI Of 1973, (P .L . 93 -234), Is
fundin9 a detai l ed s,t udy of the
flood hazard areas In Mid dleport, Ohio
The study Is being per formed for the Federal In ·
surance Adnllnlstratlon by
Burgeu &amp; ~ Nlple, Limited,
Consulting Engineers and'"
Planners, 5085 Reed Roed,

Jena

ill!YMID~;-,il..i !=!!:! •r:~

350usted
(2 wds.J
36 Saucy
37 Box

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
IIJS THAT REPORTER fROM

FA8Ul.OU() FEM

STILL
srmJ&gt;ING- AROUND?

HEGIVE5 ME1HE
'toll LLIES WITH ALL
1HE QUE5110NB ,
HE'S A&amp;KiNG-...

HE WENT BACK
IDNEW'rORK
lABT NIGHT!

YMH

V~SR

LH

SFKFY
V. B

fEJYFVA

vox

YV

•

U.

VB

VDX

XHJSGF SS

v v_o JR.-

WHO'S THAT STIRRINr'~ ....OL' BULLET,
'ROUND OUT INTH'
PAW : -''

AND I CANNOT DREAM THAT TIUS WATCH EXISTS ANI' ·
liAS NO WATCHMAKER. -VOLTAIRE
SIR, THE KID 6EHlND

'-/RRD, MAW ?

ME CAL.LED ME A NAME ...

man. Mayor, Middleport, 237
Re~e Streol, Middleport, Ohio

7

fTIEp

19

POLiilCIA!'I•.

'J
j

to

rorm tht ourprtM - · BR

oullft(ed br the ~ cutoon.

~I~Prill=.:;:
.. ~.~.~-~
..
~~ "(I] t I l )"
'·

("-twen .w-rro")

J"mbl•"

f

Yeslerday's Cryptoquote: THE WORLD EMBARRASSES ME,

HE'S GITTIN ' HISSELF
A MIDNIGHT SNACK

I ·I I

" C:.IFT' FORA

N'aw ~ lht dn:Wtott•ro

·PERREF [

XVVJHZHSY
.•

!&gt;AIt:' "TT t5E .4

II J II

YVKVXXVG

OVDLYI ·

BXJAWSFA

have an .opportunity to bring
any • relevant fadts and
technical date concerning
local flood huardt to the
attentiQn of Mr. Fred Hoff .

July 12, 19, 26, Jtc

an

CRYPTOQUOTES

IT'S JEST

tJ I

One letter simply slands for another. In lhi! sample A Is ·
used for the three L's. X for the two o ·s. et c. Single letters,
hints Enrh day the rode letters are different

applicable for n'w buildings

45760, for fQrW&amp;rdlng to the
appropriate rf;!presentetlves
of the Federal tnaurance
Admin ls1 ration .

Is

A X Y D L B A·A X R
I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

apostroph es, the 1ength and formation of the words are

The purpose of th is study
Is to examine and evaluate the
flood hazard ereas In the
community
which
lire
developed or Wh iCh are likely
to be developed and to
determ1ne flood elevations tor
those areas . Flood elevations
will be used by tl'\e community
to carry . out I he flood pla(n
management oblectlves of the
National Flood Insurance
Prol!V'am They wilt also be
usect as the basis for deter .
mining the appropriate flood
Insurance premium rates

of tl\ls.study so thet they mev

m~::::&amp;~l C~lt, :.::~~

OUI.'T

AlA'r\INSTRAlTON-

Columbus, Ohio 43220.

and their contents, as well as
determining the rates to be
used for the second layer of
Insurance
on
existing
buildings and contents .
This announcement Is In .
tepded to notify all Interested
persons of the commencement

•

V. ..

·17:'..

Makes 'em

Phone 992 - 71 _c;26:;.·--~-

LOVELY spilt entry home
with large living Rm .,
formal dlnl~g Rm., very
modern buill-In kllehe", 4
e. Rm .. 2 full baths, ullllly
Rm ., larg~ family Rm.,
wooded picnic area, over 1
acre. $3!,000.00.
GRACIOUS 2 story older
formal dining Rm ., ~
moder" bath, nice
l&lt;kltchen, part basement,
carpeting,. paneling. 6 fruit
trees, .69 acre. 511,100.
RECREATION CENTER
- Included Five pool
tables, pop machine, candy

TUESDAY.JULY20,1~6

~~~~

Gollipollo,

1-446-4782.

TEAFORD

Paint

Convenient to shopp1ng on
Third and Mill Streets in Mid·
dleport. Brand new high quali·
ty apartments . See the
manager ot Riverside Apartments or coli 992..-3273 . Fur.
nlshe,d
apartment&amp; · also
available.

·GUITER SERVICE

t•

6:DO-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.•
8~1\ Z. E $! L ~T - 5
6:20-Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13.
HOPI' l CMJ
6:»-Columlws Today 4: News 6; Summer Semesr.r
~ E M E MB ER: THE
8; Concerns &amp; ~ommenls 10.
f
PA % 'fiOg~ PHRASE
6:45-Morntng Report 3.
J U5T- Rt,. HT OR
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
S H11 MAY NOT
6 : ~s-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
T~U ~;r ME!
7:DO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CIS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
•
7:05-Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
! :DO-Jeff's Collie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8,10; S-IM
Street 33.
queen-len . As it was Ely
NORTH ID I
19
8:30-Big
Valley 6.
scored that first trick with his
... K J 3
9:oo-A.M.. J; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Shq,w I; MU..
ten . When Jo got in with the
117
Douglas 10: Morning With D.J. 13.
ace
of clubs she underled her
t A QH
9:»-Cross-Wits 3; One Lite to live 6; Tattletales ill
ace a second lime and Hal
... KQ942
Mike Douglas 13.
guessed wrong . played dum·
10;DO-Sanford'and Son 3,4, 15; Edge Off Nlghl6; Prlc.
AI-!D 1 WIJT
my's jack and was down one."
EAST
!. ~·T 1R4 TO
WEST
Is Right 8,10; Bit With Knit 33.
Jim : ''If Hal had played the
...
Q
10
7
6
•A
54
10
:
~elebr'lly
Sweepstakes 3,~,15; Dlpahl 6; Llll.., 't
TORUIJMI~B
RUtJ ~l'iR t.IFI'i ...
., 10 5
jack at lnck one. Ely would
¥!432
Yoga and You 33.
,
•tJ IOfi 32 have taken h•s queen . It would
t K 96
11 :00-Wheel or Fortune 3, IS; Weekday -4; Gamltll
... 6 3
then have been difficult, but
"'A 10 7
8,1.0; Farmer's Da1111hter 13.
SOUTII
not Impossible for Jo to un·
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13; Loft
. 9 62
derlead her ace a second time .
of Life 8, tO .
!1AKQJ9 6
lf'she h;td done so South could
11 : ~5--Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
.
tB
and probably would still have
12-ll&lt;f- Fun Factory 3, 1~; Hot Seal 13; Bob Braun A1
... J 8 5
gone wrong "
News 6,8, 10; Sesame Street 33.
•
Both vulnerable
12 :3D-Gong Show 3,15; Ali My Children 6,13; Seardt
, Oswald "The point of the
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
whole hand is that when you
West North East South
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
,
give
a
player
a
chance
to
I ...
Pa ss I II
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hopa 6,13; Phil Donahue I;
guess
wrong
he
may
do
so."
Pass 2 t
Pa ss 3 11
Young and fhe Restlen 10; Nbt For Women Only
Pass 3 N.T Pass 411
15; Electric Company 33.
Pass Pa ss Pass
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,.4, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; AI
Opening lead -· 4 •
An Ontario reader wants to
The World Turns _8,)0; Family Theatre 33.
know what we b1d in response
2:DO-S20,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Bf-Ways 33.
·
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
to partner 's one-club opening
· 2:30-Doclors 3,4115; Break The Bank 6,13; Guiding
light 8,10: Unto the Hills 33.
Oswald . " Our Aphl th1rd with :
•Ax:o.:x•l\x •AQxXX4X ?
J:DO-Another
World 3.-4.15; General Hospilal6,11; All ·
article
has
caused
so
much
HE HAD A BIG
HOW C'AH
In
The
Family
B, 10; Consumer Survival Kit •1
We
make
the
standard
reader comment, that we
ROtL 0' h10 MEY- YOU KN OW
PEELf.D OFF A
IT WASH' T
of
one
spade
intenCatch-33
33.
response
reprint it here with further
lft.lliDRED OOI.tl¥&lt; JUST A f l~ E
3:3D--One Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 61
dmg to take strong action at
discussion."
BIL L ~ OR TEN?
Match Game 8,10; Llllas. Yoga and You 20; Tille II
Jim : " That was the hand our ne•t turn .
33.
(Do
you
have
a
question
that Jo Culbertson defended
4:DO-MisterCartoon 3; Merv Grlllln 4; Someroei6,1SI
successfully by underleading for !he experts? Write "Ask
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Roget;~
her ac e of spades twice. the Jacobys" care of. this
20,33;
Movie "The Best Years of Our Ll'lft 10;
newspaper. The Jacobys will
wasn't it?"
Dinah!
13.
.
,
Oswald : " Most ol our answer indiwdual quesfions
4:3D-Bewltc:hed
3;
Mod
Squad
6;
Andy
Grlffllll
l1
re0ders have criticized Hal 's if stamped, self-addressed
Sesame
Street
20,33;
Fllnlstones
15.
.
'
play o! a low spade at trick envelopes are enclosed. The
5:&lt;10--'Bonanra 3: Partridge Family B; Mluloo: lm·
one. He only made that play most mreresring questions
possible 15.
··
.
because he held the mne. It wtll be used in this column
5:30-Adam-12'4.13; News 6; Family Afalr 8; Elec:trlc
would have given him an eKtra and will receive copips of
.
Company 20,33;
spade trick if Jo had led from JACOBY MODERN. )
6·DO-News 3,4.8,10.13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllll 61
Y'MEAN ~E!IE AltE YES,"TOO MAIN
'THEN I 'M
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Y•
MORE JASPEJC:S LIKE 10 F'IGI-Ii.. . AND
WI'TH 'IOU!
and You 33.
'1!-IESE A~ND ?
'THEY COME BACK
LET'S
SOON !
VAMOOSE!
7:00-Truth orConl!llluences 3; To Tell Tho Truth 4;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Bowling for Dollars 6; Let's Go To The Races I;
News 10: Name That Tune 13; Family Affair IJ;
38 lrisb river
ACROSS
Romagnolls' Table 20: Strauss Family 33.
3t Become·
7:30-Hollywood Squar-es 3; XXI Olympic Games 6,1J;
1 Expense
Hollywood Squares 4; Match Game Pm 8; Prtc. Is
5 Classify
furious
!Ugllt 10: Nasi\VIIIa On The _Road 15; a..rl
(2 wds.)
11 Palm leaf
,
MacNeil Report 20. ·
41 Chilling
1% Personal
8:00--Movln'
On 3.4,1~; Popl 8,10; Lowell tt.orgroolillng
loclk
Remembers 33; At The Tllf&gt; 20.
.
DOWN
Item
8:3()--GOOd Times 8, 10; Graveyard of the, Gull 33.
1 Space
13 Distance
9:00-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15;. M-A-S-H 8,10; Ev4lfllng II
traveler
14 Montana
Pops 33; Men Who'Ma&lt;k! The Movies 20.
Yesterday's Auwer
% -drab
city
9.JO-One Day At A Time 8, 10.
"':
25 Portions
10·GO-City of Angels 3,-4,15; Va~devllle 8; Switch 10;
15 ·'The Three 3 Witch-trial 10 Bartered
%8 "Waisted"
16 Peck's
r-.~~~~--~:----~--,
Faces
News 20; School for .Wives 33.
•
site
• partner
wn:~"T:
of - "
I alwaLJs plants
10 :3D-Biack Perspective on the News 20; Woman 33.
away.
4 Nautical
li :GO-News 3,43,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
18 Stem deck 28 Entertain
i--l1~aters ouqhta' 1&amp; Hit a long
chain
m'taters in th'
11
:3D-Johnny Carson 3.4.1~: XXI Olympic Gamet
29
French
river
qrow
biq·!
21
Orient
5 Off ship
dark o'th'
ball
6,13; Movie "Sayonara" B; Movie "You're a Big
3G
French
river
22
Watery
"
6 Jewish
17
Boy Now" 10; Janakl 33.
moonr
people!
;:~ese
31 Register
route
benediction
11 :45 -Mystery ol the Week "Who Kllled Lamb?"
(2 wds.)
33 Bellow
19 Wonder·
7 Store event
6,13.
23 Sacrament 36 Fencing
ment
· 8 Too old
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4 ..
dumrny
ZO United
9 Resumption 24 Encircle
1: 15----'News 13.
21 Old oath
22 "Out,
Today is Mmday,
19,
damned
"
the :allst day of 19'16 w,lth 161i firearms, was bml Jull ·t9,
(Macbeth)
111 f&amp;low.
· 1814.
%4 Scottish
The moon Is in its last On this day In biltorJ:
ijigh·
Ql!llrler.
In 1848, "bloomen," a
lander
The morning star is radical departure In w-'s
Z5 Ooze
Jupiter.
tDiderwur, '"re hlllodatd
%1 Prefix for
The evening stars are Mer- to the deleplel of till lint
I MUST PLAY MY
11--1~ THATCf-. =.AP SCX:IAL
charge or
cury, Mars, Venus and wCl11811'8 rights cmtatlilnln
credit
TRUMP CM.J) !!
Saturn.
SenecaFalli,N.Y. TbeJwa-e
CLIMBER
Th01e born oo this date are ·named afla' tbelr tnnntor .
Z7 Chinese
dynasty
under\ the sign of Cancer.
Mrs. Alpella
Bioflmer:
zs Radio ad
purcbase
(2 wds.)
'' ~' '""""" ""-"'''
" l l lCF,
3% Terrified
Unscramble these four Jumbleo,
34 - Remo,
one letter to e&amp;ch .quart, to
Italy
form four ordinary word1.

WIN AT ·BRIDGE
Hal guessed wrong on replay

Notice is tlereby given that
526,000 I acre; $28,000.00 3
the fOllowing- three parcels of
a nd two -thirds acres. Phone HOMESITES for sale , 1 acre and real e~tate will be offered tor
61A -949-2748.
up. Middleport near Rutland . sate by the undersigned on
· Saturday, July 3l$t , 1976, at
Coll992·7481 .
10· oo A.M . at the former home
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths , of Leota Lynch, Deceased
all elec. 1 acre , Middleport, Said parcels of real estate are
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
close to Rutland . Phone 992· br iefly de~cribed as follows :
.20 of an acre known as the
11011\echanlc Pomeroy, 0 . ·
7481.
Leota Lynch property ap Phone 992-331~
SMALL form for sole, 10"!. down , praised at S2,200.00
.52 of an acre known as the
157 A-CRES- Beef farm
owner financed . Monroe CounArthur and Marg,!lret Lynch
with 70 acres of tractor
ty. W. Vo . Phone (3041 712- property
appraised at $800.00
land. Good older home,
3102 0' (304) 772-3227.
1.33 acres, Vacant lo1, ap
fences , ponds, near mines.
COUNTRY farmland w1th seclud· praisect at S2,000 00
NEW LISTING- 44 acres
The above parcels are
ed woods. water and good oc· appra
ised as indicated above
on Rt. 143 near Carpenter.
cess in Monroe Counfv , W Va . and cannot be sold for less
1971 Flarhlngo 12x60
SI,OOO dawn , call (3041 772- t han the appral!ed value .
trailer. Good drilled well.
3102 or (304) 772-3227.
Property to be sold to the
20 ACRES - In Berne
highest bidder . SlOO.OD deposit
5
ROOM
house
with
both
and
Township on Road 202,
to be pa1d by successful bi dder
laundry room , modern kitchen , on each property to blncl sale .
Athens County.
11 acres with born and milk
Bidders wltl be given a
COUNTRY AIR - 3 BR
house located at Minenvilte, reasonable time within Which
house with modern kitchen
Ohio Kenneth Wilt , phone to borrow money from a
and bath. Good screened-in
lending lnstltutiQn and to
m -3105.
lrool wch. Basement a~d
check title. Sale . will be con HOUSE for sole , 7 rooms , bose· ducted at each property site .
nice )lard with garden
ment in Middleport . Price First sale to be held at the
spa_ses.·
Leota Lynch property , Sale Is
reduced . Phone 992 -2265.
TODAY'S SPECIAL - In
subject to the approval of the
HOUSE for sole , 2 Iorge Probate Court .
the country wlfh new 3
•
Also , one 2 door 1965 Dodge
bedrooms, large living room,
bedroom home . Full
carpeted , modern kitchen , din· to be sold to the highest bid ·
basement, nice kitchen, 2
ing room and bath in Harrison- der . Appraised at Sl25 .00.
lull baths, carpeting &amp;
JamesE Simpson,
ville. Phone 742 -27%.
tllrport with storage. 2
Adm lnistr&amp;tor of the
Estate of Arthur Lynch,
acres . Reduced for quick
3 bedroom b'hu.1e. basement, Deceased
sale for only $31,000.00.
forced air gaS heal, 2 cor
16,
18,
19.
20.
21.
22
garage , Iorge fenced yard . (7)
RACINE ARFA - Modern

Mortis, Helen Frances let outside lntuences dislract
Rovere, Frank Rovere, __,¥OU . 11 you get off-target, It wtlf
do{
Richard B. Elberfeld, be hard to get fined up again
Specials
Mildred Elberfeld, Robeft 8AGITTAAIUI (Now. 23·Dec.
Elberfeld,
Charlotte Jl1Pheijmlng Is notthebestto
Elberfeld tAl Elberfeld Farm, spnng a change of plans on
Reg.lt0.61 gal.
Inc., I.&lt;Jts, Pomeroy.
. your usoclates. Your l~eas GOlDEN WEDDING Anniversary.
'PreServe th1s wonderful day
Alva GleM Haning, dec., to . n)&amp;y be great. but they wont be
NOW$8.29 GAL
1with photographs at the family
Elizabeth Haning, Affidavit, ,'~cllned to buy.
together, with your tnends and
Scipio.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.
of, course the cake! Call Ken
fled No. 315. Reg. 18.79
.
M
d
E
11)
By
all
means
keep
those
Grover Photography , Chester. SlAR&lt;RAFT inventory reduction
1
Will •am aynar • ve yn not directly Involved out of your
on
mini·motors
,
travel
trailer
Ohio. Phone985-C155.
NOW $6.79 GAL.
ond fold downs for 19n
Maynard to Herman L. personal affairs. The wrong 1
tqSE
w8ig~t sofe. fast . easy with
models
.
Don't
m1n
these
great
Willis, Rosa Lee Willis, 5 A., kiM of kibitzer could create
POMEROY LANDMARK
the Oiad'o)l plan. A.educe fluids
savings . Comp Conley Starcroft
Sutton.
havoc.
·
with Fluldu, Nel5on Drugs .
-9.- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Soles, Rt. 62, North Pt. Plea ~
~ Nicholas Ihle, Diane Ihle to AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 11) GRAPEFRUIT Pill wilh Dodo•. eot
M
Phone 992· 2181
san! , W. Vo .
·,William Maynard, Evelyn Though It may temporarily be a
satisfying meals and lose 1973 Yellowstone camper . 23ft .•
· Maynard, R·W, Sutton.
disadvantage, honor your
weight. now elCtra strength forsleeps six , self -contai ned . CANNING peaches now ready
promises today . Don't let
mula. Nelson Drugs .
Phone 949-201A
thru Augu~t. Several varieties ,
William E. Pickens, friends think you'd back down
NOW selling handmade clothes
b)'
the bushel , '/ 2 bushel or
: Claudette J . Pickens to Ohio on your word.
for mos kind of dolls . Surprise
peck . Please brmg own con"Power Co., Eaae., Lebanon. PISCES (Ftb. 20-Morch 20)
your favorite little girl w1th a
tamer, 2 convenient locations :
new outfit for her doll . Phone
" NermanHarbrecht,dec., to This can be a very productive
Midway Market , Pomeroy,
992-5866.
FURNISHED. 2 bedrm . apartment,
992-2582. Bobs Market , Mason.
•·a·arnet Harbrecht, Dorothy day, provided you're not
bdulf5 only, in M1ddleport
773-S721.
v[lebra Ellis, Aff. , for Trans. hampered by an erratic
-- --~~
coworker. Be discriminating In
Phone 992· 3874 .
TOMATOES, Cleland Forms and
; Sandra S. Munn, formerly your choice of associates
Greenhouses ,
Geraldine
3 AND -4 RM. furnished and un."Sandra Harming to Ronald J.
furnished opts. Phone 991· _.C_Ie_lo_n_d,~2.'_ne , ~O:_h::lo::_._ __
OLD
furniture,
ice
boxes,
br!JSS
·Hanning, Parcels, Scipio.
5434.
beds,
wall telephones and
700 boles hay fo.r sale . Phone
· Robert D. Williams,
ports, or complete households. 1 COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rl
992 -77St. ·-~--~­
..... Paifi.cia Williams to laley
Wnte M. 0 Miller , At . 4,
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
CONSOLE stereo , AM-FM rod1o, "
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call992·77f:JJ. ~
. ;:zR. ,.)bbs, Sheryl E. Gibbs, I
large lots with concret patiOS ,
speed changer .
Balance
Jutr 27, 11re
sidewalks, runners and off
, A., Rutland.
CASH paid for oil makes and
$103.60orlerms. Call992-3965.
strnt parking. Phone 992-7479
models of mobile homes .
:
Earl W. Cleek, Patricia A. Try to give ttme this coming
2 motorcycles
1- 1974 zy
Phone
oreo
code
61
..
·423-9531
.
'
yea·
r
to
things
of
a
creative
ONE bedroom oportments at
• Cleek to Columbus &amp;
Yamaha 80, 1- 1971 Sl Hondo
nature.
Your
brain
children
VIllAGE MANOR in Middiepo'l
$$Cosh$$$ for junked auto. Frye's
: Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
100. Phono614-367-0A2A.
could help you develop a
lor $1Q.4 monthly plus elec . or
Truck
Auto
Ports
,
Rutland
" Parcels, Lebanon.
targer bank account.
$130 includmg electric. LOWER BElSAW planer, model 910. like
Phone 742· 2081 .
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
new , 3 power tools m one.
TIMBER , Pomeroy For est Products . Top price for standing
sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby,

6-7-1 mo .

RURAl . modern, electric. 3
bedroom , k itchen, living room ,
bClth , flfll shed basement, laundry , re creation , storage .

VACATION ~ le . all live mven - LOCUST posts, round · or split.
tory must go Prices cut
.
.
Phone 9•9-2n4.
drCs'iicolly til Fttdov , July 23
'PHOTOGRAHY - hove
COAL
, limestone , and calc1um
~~~;, P.e~ 1Shop , 2\!J ,miles n e .
:a,-rJ.9( Motos of your con,frocchloride
and calcium bnne for
1
of
Chester
on
Rl.
248
.
_
t tlon-~ , ..., business , coo\ 'ond
dust control and special miKmg
QOs leases of your form . Ken :A.KC German Sheppard puppies. ,
salt for lormers . Mom Streel.
Grove, photographer , Chester.
e)lcellent blood hne. Phone
Pomeroy. Ohio or phooe 992Ohto . Phone 985·•1 55.
992-5623.
3891.
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY- AKC reg i stered Poodles . 1
Remember tke
forever!
female. 2 mole, block. Also
The comlete story a your wed
Ju~
stud servke by cipncot poodle.
di'19;i n a beautiful album . Call
Phone 001·882·3205.
Ken Grover, Photographer ,
Wetheramic White Super
Chester, Oh1o. Phone 985-4155.
Latex HO&lt;I5e Paint-No. 301.

''"""
Jii00

949-2114

m•

WHOEVER

RACINE Fire Deporlment wtll
hove a gun shoot Satvrdoy ot
6.00 p.m . ot their new bulldmg
off Bas han Road.

CAB

•6.95

5quort Yard tnst•lltd

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters.
Painting and Repair

BLIND ADS

Add itional 25c Charge
per Advert isemen t.

Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK_ CARPETING

Chesler, Ohio
7-14-1 mo.

min imum
Each additiona l word 3
cents .

7:DO-Truth or Consequences 3 ; Probe: The World
Arou.nd Us4; Bowling lor Dollars6; Buck ~s 8;.
News 10; Candid Camera 13; Family Altair 15;
Lo-ll Thomas Remembers 20; Resourceful West
VIrginia 33.
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; XXI Olympic
Games6,13; Bobby Vinton 4; Price Is Right B; High
Road to Adventure 10; Friends of Man 15; Robert
MacNeil Report 20.33.
8:00-Bobb,y Vlnlon 3; Rich Little 4,15; Gunsmoke 8;
Nordlamb 33; Rhoda 10 Since The American Way ol
Death 20.
8:»-.We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.

David Parsons' Owner

915-41-55

trans.

NOTICES
ATTN .: II
HOUS'EWIVES

Racine.

KEN GROVER

1974FORD F-tOO
S2"5
8' Slyleslde, green fin ish. good tires, R. bumper,
chrome grille, and front bumper. 6 cyl., and standard

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 .00 tor 80 word

R)£1NE
CARPET SIU

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
-Aerlal-lnduslrl•l
Construction Progrns
- Complete kllool Sorvltt
Undertrtdutlt &amp;
Elementary
School Pack..t Plcturn
Sonlon &amp; Yttrbook
-Weddings-

1972GMC4500SERIES
$3895
14' Midwest grain and callle ra&lt;k body, 350, V-8 engine,
power steering and brakes. Only 8,900 miles: Clean,
like new.

f

~ : oo-Bon111ua

Business Servi~es

Pomeroy
Motor Co~

1973CHEVROLETC-1D
12195
B' Fleetslde, wh ile over red. clean Interior, 350 V-8.
automalfc. power steering and brakes. good tires . step
bumper, radio. &lt;us tom trim and mirrors.

home front. don't be the

Lots, Tuppers Plains.
one who derails them. Maintain
I\oy Proffitt, Lillian the status quo.
( Proffitt to William Maynard, GEMINI (Moy 21-Junt 201
Evelyn Ma ynard, 5 A., Your schedule should move
Sulton .
ltke a well-oiled clock today,
Ernest E. Harrls, Phuoc ', prov ided you don't make lastThi Harris to Albert S. minute changes
Harmon, April L. Harmon,' 11 CANCER (June 21-July 22)
A . 1 Sutton.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Cancellations,
torrec .
tl ons accepted f irst dar of
publication .

t :DO-Joe Forrester 3.4.15; All ln_.The Family 1.101
Movie "Oylng" 20; M.n Who l'layed Spock 33.
~ : 30-Mtltlde 8, 10.
ID:DO-Jfgsaw John 3.4,15; Medical Cenlw 1,101
•
Ways 33.
10:»-Catch-33 33.
1
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC Newt 3.
1) :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; XXI Ol~plc Gam.
6,13; Movie "A Brand New Life" 8; ,.,It :•o.Chrlsllnal' 10; Jan•kl 33. ·
11 :45-Lale, Great1968 6,13.
!:DO-Tomorrow 3.4.
t : 15-News 13,

MONDAY. JULY "· tm
3; Partridge Family 8; Mission &gt; Impossible 15.
~ : 30-Adlm- 12 4.13; Newu; Family Affair 8; Electrl.
Company 20,33;
6·DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carroscolendas 33.

. '

Auto Sales .

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINU
s
P /fl ., Day
Before
Publication .

Television log for easy viewing

S•turd•y'•

I

GAUGE PANIC Olll\I&amp;E -IIID

An•w•rl Yo• m•r p for II eMtllerJt'• rri tr

1""••1-CAIIIACIE

TELL HIM TO SHUT UP,

OR I'LL CRACK

HIS

61NDIN6 AND DIM
HIS OUT.LOOI&lt;!

�.'

..

7- ~ Dal1f ~~Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 19, 19'16
WCK TRACY

, e- The Dally Sentinel, MlddleD"rt-Pameroy, 0 .. Mondav . •Julv JQ. 1976

Reed~ville News N~tes For Fast Results Use The Sentinel -Classifieds
By Mil. L. Baldei'IOil

_.

Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Mundry Sr. have retUmef)
home after visiting relatives '
in Massachusetts:
·
Recent ' visitors of Mrs.
Virginia Walton and Susie
~ were Mr . and Mis. Gary
• Landon, Mike ~ Wes and
;.._ • Mr . a nd Mrs. ~Jones and
· , Heather of Celana, Mr~ and
•
Mrs. John Calaway, I.&lt;Jrl, Kib
and Bob of Marion.
Mr. a nd Mrs. William
Thomas and family of
Spril•gfield and Mr. and Mrs.
Samcineto of Washington, W.
va .. visited with Mr. anrl
Mr s. Walter Brown and
David.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Arvil Holte•·, Mary Kathryn
Holter to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio £lee. Co., Ease.,
Chester.
James J . Proffitt, Margie
A. Proff itt tAl Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Elec. Co.,
Ease., Bedford.
Charles E. Sayre, Clara L.
Sayre to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Elec. Co., Ease.,
Sa lisbury.
Phyllis D. Fultz, Leslie F.
Fultz to Florence L. Smith,
I.&lt;Jts, Pomeroy.
Jerry L. Brogan, Judith A.
Broga n to Gilbert J ,
Celedonia , 'Diane
T.
Celedonla. l.~t. Chester.
Harold L. Adams, Garcia
L: Ada ms to Ernest E .
Harris , Phuoc T. Harris,
•

DIMer guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernsst Whitehead and
-~~terswere Mr.~ Mrs.
1erry Hoffman and dau£11ter
of Morehead, Ky.; an\! Mr.
and Mrs. Joon Hetzer.
Mrs. Helen Archer viaited
with Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Tuttle on Texas Road.
Mrs. Hazel Barton soent a
day with Mr . and Mrs.
Charl es Oonaldson and
family at I.&lt;Jgan.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Safi\S of
Jane Lu, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Smith
attended the Mall Carriers
ConvenUon at Columws last
week .
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Arnold of Beaver Falls, Pa.,
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
George Arnold this weekend.
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Bess Larkins were Mr. and
Mrs. James Carruthers and
Penny of L&lt;lulsvWe, and Mrs.
Doris Marks of Chester.
Mrs. Opal Randolph and
Steve Hauber visited with
Ricky Hauber at Virginia
Beach, Va., recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Sleven Needs
visited with his mother at
Columbus.

AstraGraph
Bernice Bade Osol
For Tuudoy, July 27, tt18
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11) 11
you musl make a choice today
between an old friend end a
new one , Irs to your advanlage
to stand by the one you've
known the longest.
TAURUS (April 2D·Moy 20) It
things are running smoolhly on
th ~

Prudent management ol your

Jeanne Morgan, dec'd., to resources will put you in lhe
Roger Morgan, Mli4vlt.
plus column today . Spend only
Farmers Home Adm. to ., tor Immediate. essenllal needs.
Jimmy R. Lee, Sr., Nora E. L~P (July 23-Aug. 22) You are
u,e 56 60 56 A Sutton apt to be a far better manager
' · • · ' ·

.,

·

than your spouse today Try to

Mayme Mallory, d~. , _to tactfully run the shOw. withOut
Lmda W. H1ll, Affidavit, hurting her feel ings
Racine.
.
VI AGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22)
Rachael Dowme, Willlam Operale Blong logical proven
Downie, Barbara Lytle, lines today Attempting ln Lytle,
Martin' novations will create problems
Rop,el'l
Elberfeld,
Clarisse that could otherwise be easily
Elbe~fe).~. Katheril}e x E. · ' ~';?lded.
',.
Slage.[,illiiblirt Slagle •.J4~ ~lJlRA (BopL 23;Q,!:!-,23) Have
E. ~ll, L Eilfl j:~~lp~ J~n .with your p8ls 'loday but
lma E Keller Allan K ~on t get mixed u~ In anything
calfs tor a t~n~rleja\ ~sk . It
K 11 ·~J b 'Elberfel~·
~

er•r 1 a:co

"~

REGULATIONS

The Publl1her reserves
tht right to tdlt or relect
any
ads deemed ob .
l tct lonad . The publ i sher
wil l not be responsible for
more t han one Incorrect
inser tion ,

RATES

For Wlnt Ad Strvlce
5 c ents per word on~
insert ion
Minimum Charge SLOO,
1A cents per word three
consecutive Insert ions .
26 cents r,er word she
consecut lve nsert Ions .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and ads paid
w ithin 10 days .

tl\li1

~won't work out.

·

E~zabeth El~rfeld~ Ma;;f' ',-itcoRPIO (Oct. •24-NoY. 22)
Elizabeth MopriS, G ge ·, Once_you set your sights. don't

Photography

OFFICE HOURS

8 30 a m. to 5 · 00 p.m .

Dolly , 8:30 o.m. to 12:00.
Noon Saturday ,

Phone lodey 992-2156

A~L

LOST· 3 mo5 . old pig , red w1lh
black spats . Rocine-Bashon Ad
area. If whereabouts ore
known, lease coil q49-2344

All Yard Sale~ . R:umm19e ,
Porch and Basement Porcn
and Basement Sa les , etc .
must be pa 1d In advance
Get yours in earl't' bV
stopping by our off•ce at
The Dan., Sen tinel , 11 1
Court St or writing Box
129, Pomero., , Oh io .t5769
will'\ your rem i tfence .

FOUND. Doberman P•ncher .
female , about 1 ~ear old, ol !he
Leonard
Bou r es idence,
Syracuse. Phonem -5006

1973 Corvette, T· tQp. blue, 350
aul omotic and utros , $5595 .
Call992-?ll 4 alle_c 4 ~~--~- _

69 VWS600.0C. Phone 9A9-2636.
1973 Che vy 1mpC11o. 2 dr ., P S..
P B.. oir. eJC cellenl condi tion .

Phone 992-S9?S.

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

AI. TROMM (X)NST
Rufland
742-2321
AII Work Guaranteed
Free Esllmoles

1971 Dodge Cart , 8 cyl. ,
automatiC ~ ro nsmiu ion . h ·
cetlent condit ion, $1450.00

6-13-Z

REGISTERED Ouroc mole hog for
servtee . Coif at Lewts Sm11hs .
Rt. U3 and Rt. 7. Phone 992-

31]1;1.

.NOTICE
THE MIDDlEPORT

Coii 2A7 -2193.
BRADFORD, Austioneer . Com·
found 1ke b!ue
plete Service. Phone 9~9 -2-487
w~ee lborrow between Mid
1 97 ~ Volkswagen , excellen t con or 949-2000 Racine , Ohio , Critt
dleport anq, Hobson , please
$2200 .00 .
Phone
di tion .
Br adford .
return to Bob W1lson, 338 S. Sth
t-30A-773-5867.
Ave., Middleport , Ohio .
ElWQOD
BOWERS REPAIR 9 Passenger Stol1on Wagon f ord
Sweepers . toasters . irons. oil
REWARD $.500.00 lor Blue T1ck
lTD. 9'12 -3647 or992-3859
small oppliances.. lQwn mower .
female coon hound w1fh scar on
neJCI to State Highway Garage
ngh t front foot. Stolen from 1%7 Ponttoc F•reb1rd •28. high
performance enginl'l , crdme
on Route 7. Phone {61~) 985·
V1rg1l Price res idence on Keno·
three -fourth roc~! com , Elrbook
Boshon Rd . Phone9B5-3806.
38~-- --.....-,.,-.,---,high riJ'e mon1fold w ith 900 AFB
t"orburetor, Douglas headers, REMODEliNG . Plumbing healing
and all types of general repotr .
~ rom lubes, Mune~ e '2 10 ~speed
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
with Hurst sh1fter , power pock
_pe~ce. Phone ~2- 2409 .
dvtch and pressure plate .
$200 weekly stuffing envelopes
Polnell Jones l -60 on Mogs. A 0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 years exinto olreody stomped ond adDoug los trocti on bor , .CS6 rear
dressed envelopes . Stuffing
p e r i ence . In sured ' free
gear, twm electrtc fuel pumps.
material provtded free Send:
estimates . Coli 992·238A or
Hurst 250 lb air shoc.ks , super
Self -addressed stamped
16")698-7257 Albany
sun toe street legaL Con be
envelope Diversified , Dept .
seen at lawrence Hysells on SEWING MACHINE Repoin, serA.A . 1206 Camden Dr. , Rich ·
vice. aU makes 1 992-2284 . The
Happy Holl9w Rd.. or phone
mond, Vtrgima 23229
Fabric Sh o p , Pomeroy .
742·2991 . First SI ,OOOtokes it . 1
Author ized Smger Soles and
1"97 1 Chevrolet Novo . 6 (yl. ,
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
auto., very good cond!t ion,
EXCAVATING , doter, loader and
$1500 00. Phone 992_..__,.
3366.
W1ll DO odd jobs , roofing, po1n ·
backhoe work; dump trucks
ting, hauling , treework , and 1972 P1nto S W , good cond1tlon.
and lo-boys for htre, will haul
$1150 00 1970 Hondo 350 ct ,
mowmg. Phonem - ?~(Jq .
fill d1ft . top soil , l1mestoM and
good shope. $350.00. Coli 992grCl vel. Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers , day phone 992-7089,
n1ght phone 992-3525 or 9921%6Muslong. 6 cyl .. -4 spd •. good
2·_ _
gas mileage. See at 570 Pe&lt;:~rt ~ S23.:.:
St .• Middleport

--· -

m.

----

--,.-

is
in
no
way
connected with Twin
City Cab Co. We also
offer 24 hour AAA
emergency
road
service. ·

~

-------

~~

PHOlfE 992-6010

A·~~~;;::~ puppies, sire and
for good 1emperment
ond protect1on , chomp ion line$,
b moles. 2 females. reasonably
pr1ced. Walter Evef"ell 7A2·

Owner

Louis D. Lee

JOSA .

MAKE spring cleaning profttoble,
turn unwonted 1tems 1nto cosh.
Advert1se in the Wont Ads .

~

~

3 bedrooms with nice-bath

and equipped kitchen.
Dining rdOC'l o~f large
living. Want only $18,000.
MIDDLEPORT -9 room
house with natural gas (hot
water) heat. Large living
and large dining. Natural
oak finish and oak floors.
Would you buy this at only
SIUCIG.
YOUR PROPERTY
AD HERE

~Your

'fff!~Birthday

FUNNY BUSINESS

HEJ.lROD, ~~uE oor A

1-4A6-8570.
10 to 20 acres with or without
older house In Me1g1 or Athens
County . Pleo1e write Cheryl
Boyd. 44.&amp;3lowestane Dr. , Col umbus, Ohio 43220.

MARVELOUS AITITODE
•

.

•'

COINS. currency, tok~~ns , gold
and silver tewelry. Wf! ned 1964
and older U.S. coins . Call for
other 7A2·233l or come out to
our coin shop on Rutland orid
leading Creek Rd. Roger
Wamsley.

'

TRAILER spoce for rent in Middleport. Phone992-5434 .
3 room furnished apartment,
utilities paid . Inquire at 356
North Fourth , Middleport ,
Ohio.
1 bedroom mobile home. adults

only. Phanem-5535.
TWO bedroom mobile home ,
Brown's Trailer Park, phone

..

IF YOU hove a service to offer,
wont to buy or sell something,
are looking for work .. . or
whatever .. you 'll ge.t results
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
~

Coll992-2151&gt;.

-

YARD

--------~-

Sole,

Wednesday

and

Thursday. July 21 -?1 oil doy.
Miscellaneous electrical op·
pliances, furniture , clothes,
books , " free table" and
refreshments .. 1020 Bunker H1ll

Rd

'm-332A.
3 room furnished apartment,
utilities furnished . PhOne 992-

3129.or'192-5A34

HOOAKE Motorcycle franchise
ovpllobla. lew initial Invest·
mant. Contoct Wtleels of Time.
island Rt. , Box 7A, Lock MClven,

Po. 17745.

- ....

4 roam furnished aportment.
close to Powell's Super ,y .. ~~et .

Phone 9'12-3658.
--~ ~~-~ - ---

-"1:-

~-

NEW LISTING ..:. 9 room
home. 3 plus bedrooms, 2
baths, full basement, 2 car
gar age with 2 rooms. NIce
large lawn In Rutland,
Equipped kitchen .
GOOD RENTALS ARE
SCARCE. BUY PAINT UP
AND
RENT
FOR
ADDITIONAL INCOME.

Phone 1-667-3737 .
OLD k1tchen cabinets, oak w1th
flour b1n and sugar jar, oak
chino cabinet , pie safe , mixed
wood, dresser·wolnut (solid) :
chest of drowen·maple. All old
oil profess1onallv refmilhed.
The Furniture Fixer, Portland,

1

Ohio.
22 .3 cu . ft . freeter , Sears Col·
dspot , excellent condition .

Phone 992-5867 o' 992-2683.

POMEROY, Iorge kitchen, den ,
Iorge util i ty room , two
bedrooms, living room , bath attached
ttorage
room ;
- 9'!2_·7~~~30:::·:.__--,---,'----::-:- Mparote woodworking shop.
3 bike motorcycle troller. Call
On 3 porcelt. Phone 992·537o4
992-7110.
after 5 p .m

RABBITS. pony saddle , mole
mule, ontiCJue ic.e box. Phone

-

.

~

·-:--~:----

WM,ITE leghorn loyers • .75 eClch . 2 bedrooms, Iorge modern kit·
Freeland Norris. Racine. Phone
chen, forced . 01r furncice , lin·

9•9-20-43

coin Hgts .. 992-S737 .

-- ..__,_........._

--=----::~

sewing CLARK Realty, Amesville, O,hio,
$40.00. 614·4~8 · 4444, lb9 A. Cline Fruit
Phono BAJ-2645.
Farm, 2500, good trees, 10 a.
lanced pasture, pond, \15 a.
2 regi1tered black Ang~s cows
woods , mineral rights , 24xo40
with ealves - ·t purebred Suf,
new solei roOm and 1toroge
folk rom , I rear ol~ 992.71~ .
building, cider press, 2 tractors
ond other equipment, good 4
bedroom home with city water
and free gas ; 2100 toot fron ·
tag'P on SR 7 S. 'of Tuppers
14CJ ocr• form- 2 house•, boms ,
Plains, $139,000.00. 38 A. dHp
1hed, several buildings, city
woods sUrrounded by state
woter, mineral rights , timber ,
lorest near Forked Run Pork ,
100 acres tillable. good
owner w i t~ :inonce, $13,500.00
posture , 8 mile1 'North of
MOBILE ~orne for sale or. tent . 3
Pomeroy, O~lo, off Route 33bedroomms, all ut•liVes pgid.
Hemlock Grove , Ohio. 992·
Phone m-7751 .
_,_
5014 evenings after S p~m .
rABLE model electric
machine, like new,

Continuous oni! pltce
gutters. We hang it. or do II
yourself . Special pricel to
builders .

BORN LOSER

~~~ 1\t-lD :r. ~"~e

Phone 949-2814
9 A. M. to5 P.M.
992-7320 evenings
6-27 -76

"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

,h. H2-!174

EXCAVATING , dot er , backhoe BUILDING , remodeling , and
repons . Qual ltv work , efficient
and dltcher . Char les R. Hotservice . Jeue Rodman , phone
Held , Bock Hoe Service,
992-5980.
Rutland , Oh1o. Phone 742-2008 .
GREG S CB SAlES , locoled ol Er· WANT to go Into bus~ness bv
y o urse l f?
Almost
new
win 's Gulf Serv ice, Midautomatic Insulating motchine,
dleport , Oh1o Phone 992~

$850 .00., Phone

2438.
SEPTIC Sy,. tems Installed by
licensed installer . Shepard
. Controc. tors. Phone 742-2409.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Sanitation 992 -3954 or 992-

2428,
WILl do roofmg, constrvction ,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone

742-2348.
CARPENTER . floor ing , ceiling ,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.

VERMEER BALER SAlES AND SER·
VICE. Meigs-Athens Covnty .
Balers from $3995 up. Merrill

Chose, (614)698-3021. "
EXPERIENCED house painter.
Phone Arthur Musser, 7-42 ·

2180.
EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND
DOZER -- lARGE AND SMAll,
SEPTIC T,\NKS INSTALlED, lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. Cllt
PUlliNS. PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.

ANTIQUE restorations, reproduc·
t1ons , cabmet makiOg and fur·
nlfure repair . 131 1/• 3rd, Mid·

dleporl, 992-5735 day · and
evening.

1971 Elcono Mob1le Home, 6())112
on Iorge lot in Mtddleport .

Phone 992-5867 or 992-2683.
1968 Fleetwood Troihtr 12 ft. by 52
It., portly furnished , porch
underpinning. Phone 1-3?8-

6319.
MASTER C,afl ]0&lt;55 1965 mobile
home . Two bedroom furn1shed .
corporf, good steps Phone

992-3077.
TRAILER, adults only . Phone
7639 or 992-3181.

992-

~

~ANKS

FOil. F'I')&lt;.\N'

~IS FIS\4 FOR ME!

l'T Wlo45 DELICIOUS!

NOTICE OF SALE

other equipment .
a nice business.
- Large
(corner lot).
Live In and have additional
Income. 4 units all
furnished.
Clos~
to
shopping. A GOOD BUY
S28,000.
A NEAT PLACE- 5 yrs.
old. 'h acre, metal storage
bldg., -large garden. 3
bedrooms, bath, eat-In
kitchen, carpeted, utility
R. Carp,crt. JUST $16.100.
BUYING .OR SELLING,
CALL US- T""N START
PACKING. HENRY E.
r• '!LAND,
BROKER,
APP!U'SER,
CONSULTANT.
"2·2259 or 992-2568

~

work fer

work fer

July

•
HCM5" OF

CHICI&lt;Ie
FOAMINGHAM
-TH5M0Sf
DAZZUN6
DEOC'7"AN1E'
of' cro.IDSES

ANNOUNCEMENT
OF INTENT TO
PERFORM FLOOD
ELEVATION STUDY

machine, cash register,

The Federal Insurance
Administration of the U . S.
Department of Housing and
Urblln Development, under
author i ty of the National
Flood Insurance Act of 1968,
as !mended , ( P .L . 90-44B) and
the Flood Disaster Protection
/ICI Of 1973, (P .L . 93 -234), Is
fundin9 a detai l ed s,t udy of the
flood hazard areas In Mid dleport, Ohio
The study Is being per formed for the Federal In ·
surance Adnllnlstratlon by
Burgeu &amp; ~ Nlple, Limited,
Consulting Engineers and'"
Planners, 5085 Reed Roed,

Jena

ill!YMID~;-,il..i !=!!:! •r:~

350usted
(2 wds.J
36 Saucy
37 Box

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
IIJS THAT REPORTER fROM

FA8Ul.OU() FEM

STILL
srmJ&gt;ING- AROUND?

HEGIVE5 ME1HE
'toll LLIES WITH ALL
1HE QUE5110NB ,
HE'S A&amp;KiNG-...

HE WENT BACK
IDNEW'rORK
lABT NIGHT!

YMH

V~SR

LH

SFKFY
V. B

fEJYFVA

vox

YV

•

U.

VB

VDX

XHJSGF SS

v v_o JR.-

WHO'S THAT STIRRINr'~ ....OL' BULLET,
'ROUND OUT INTH'
PAW : -''

AND I CANNOT DREAM THAT TIUS WATCH EXISTS ANI' ·
liAS NO WATCHMAKER. -VOLTAIRE
SIR, THE KID 6EHlND

'-/RRD, MAW ?

ME CAL.LED ME A NAME ...

man. Mayor, Middleport, 237
Re~e Streol, Middleport, Ohio

7

fTIEp

19

POLiilCIA!'I•.

'J
j

to

rorm tht ourprtM - · BR

oullft(ed br the ~ cutoon.

~I~Prill=.:;:
.. ~.~.~-~
..
~~ "(I] t I l )"
'·

("-twen .w-rro")

J"mbl•"

f

Yeslerday's Cryptoquote: THE WORLD EMBARRASSES ME,

HE'S GITTIN ' HISSELF
A MIDNIGHT SNACK

I ·I I

" C:.IFT' FORA

N'aw ~ lht dn:Wtott•ro

·PERREF [

XVVJHZHSY
.•

!&gt;AIt:' "TT t5E .4

II J II

YVKVXXVG

OVDLYI ·

BXJAWSFA

have an .opportunity to bring
any • relevant fadts and
technical date concerning
local flood huardt to the
attentiQn of Mr. Fred Hoff .

July 12, 19, 26, Jtc

an

CRYPTOQUOTES

IT'S JEST

tJ I

One letter simply slands for another. In lhi! sample A Is ·
used for the three L's. X for the two o ·s. et c. Single letters,
hints Enrh day the rode letters are different

applicable for n'w buildings

45760, for fQrW&amp;rdlng to the
appropriate rf;!presentetlves
of the Federal tnaurance
Admin ls1 ration .

Is

A X Y D L B A·A X R
I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

apostroph es, the 1ength and formation of the words are

The purpose of th is study
Is to examine and evaluate the
flood hazard ereas In the
community
which
lire
developed or Wh iCh are likely
to be developed and to
determ1ne flood elevations tor
those areas . Flood elevations
will be used by tl'\e community
to carry . out I he flood pla(n
management oblectlves of the
National Flood Insurance
Prol!V'am They wilt also be
usect as the basis for deter .
mining the appropriate flood
Insurance premium rates

of tl\ls.study so thet they mev

m~::::&amp;~l C~lt, :.::~~

OUI.'T

AlA'r\INSTRAlTON-

Columbus, Ohio 43220.

and their contents, as well as
determining the rates to be
used for the second layer of
Insurance
on
existing
buildings and contents .
This announcement Is In .
tepded to notify all Interested
persons of the commencement

•

V. ..

·17:'..

Makes 'em

Phone 992 - 71 _c;26:;.·--~-

LOVELY spilt entry home
with large living Rm .,
formal dlnl~g Rm., very
modern buill-In kllehe", 4
e. Rm .. 2 full baths, ullllly
Rm ., larg~ family Rm.,
wooded picnic area, over 1
acre. $3!,000.00.
GRACIOUS 2 story older
formal dining Rm ., ~
moder" bath, nice
l&lt;kltchen, part basement,
carpeting,. paneling. 6 fruit
trees, .69 acre. 511,100.
RECREATION CENTER
- Included Five pool
tables, pop machine, candy

TUESDAY.JULY20,1~6

~~~~

Gollipollo,

1-446-4782.

TEAFORD

Paint

Convenient to shopp1ng on
Third and Mill Streets in Mid·
dleport. Brand new high quali·
ty apartments . See the
manager ot Riverside Apartments or coli 992..-3273 . Fur.
nlshe,d
apartment&amp; · also
available.

·GUITER SERVICE

t•

6:DO-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Farm Report 13.•
8~1\ Z. E $! L ~T - 5
6:20-Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13.
HOPI' l CMJ
6:»-Columlws Today 4: News 6; Summer Semesr.r
~ E M E MB ER: THE
8; Concerns &amp; ~ommenls 10.
f
PA % 'fiOg~ PHRASE
6:45-Morntng Report 3.
J U5T- Rt,. HT OR
6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
S H11 MAY NOT
6 : ~s-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
T~U ~;r ME!
7:DO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CIS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
•
7:05-Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
! :DO-Jeff's Collie 6; Captain Kangaroo 8,10; S-IM
Street 33.
queen-len . As it was Ely
NORTH ID I
19
8:30-Big
Valley 6.
scored that first trick with his
... K J 3
9:oo-A.M.. J; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Shq,w I; MU..
ten . When Jo got in with the
117
Douglas 10: Morning With D.J. 13.
ace
of clubs she underled her
t A QH
9:»-Cross-Wits 3; One Lite to live 6; Tattletales ill
ace a second lime and Hal
... KQ942
Mike Douglas 13.
guessed wrong . played dum·
10;DO-Sanford'and Son 3,4, 15; Edge Off Nlghl6; Prlc.
AI-!D 1 WIJT
my's jack and was down one."
EAST
!. ~·T 1R4 TO
WEST
Is Right 8,10; Bit With Knit 33.
Jim : ''If Hal had played the
...
Q
10
7
6
•A
54
10
:
~elebr'lly
Sweepstakes 3,~,15; Dlpahl 6; Llll.., 't
TORUIJMI~B
RUtJ ~l'iR t.IFI'i ...
., 10 5
jack at lnck one. Ely would
¥!432
Yoga and You 33.
,
•tJ IOfi 32 have taken h•s queen . It would
t K 96
11 :00-Wheel or Fortune 3, IS; Weekday -4; Gamltll
... 6 3
then have been difficult, but
"'A 10 7
8,1.0; Farmer's Da1111hter 13.
SOUTII
not Impossible for Jo to un·
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13; Loft
. 9 62
derlead her ace a second time .
of Life 8, tO .
!1AKQJ9 6
lf'she h;td done so South could
11 : ~5--Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
.
tB
and probably would still have
12-ll&lt;f- Fun Factory 3, 1~; Hot Seal 13; Bob Braun A1
... J 8 5
gone wrong "
News 6,8, 10; Sesame Street 33.
•
Both vulnerable
12 :3D-Gong Show 3,15; Ali My Children 6,13; Seardt
, Oswald "The point of the
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
whole hand is that when you
West North East South
12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
,
give
a
player
a
chance
to
I ...
Pa ss I II
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hopa 6,13; Phil Donahue I;
guess
wrong
he
may
do
so."
Pass 2 t
Pa ss 3 11
Young and fhe Restlen 10; Nbt For Women Only
Pass 3 N.T Pass 411
15; Electric Company 33.
Pass Pa ss Pass
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,.4, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; AI
Opening lead -· 4 •
An Ontario reader wants to
The World Turns _8,)0; Family Theatre 33.
know what we b1d in response
2:DO-S20,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Bf-Ways 33.
·
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
to partner 's one-club opening
· 2:30-Doclors 3,4115; Break The Bank 6,13; Guiding
light 8,10: Unto the Hills 33.
Oswald . " Our Aphl th1rd with :
•Ax:o.:x•l\x •AQxXX4X ?
J:DO-Another
World 3.-4.15; General Hospilal6,11; All ·
article
has
caused
so
much
HE HAD A BIG
HOW C'AH
In
The
Family
B, 10; Consumer Survival Kit •1
We
make
the
standard
reader comment, that we
ROtL 0' h10 MEY- YOU KN OW
PEELf.D OFF A
IT WASH' T
of
one
spade
intenCatch-33
33.
response
reprint it here with further
lft.lliDRED OOI.tl¥&lt; JUST A f l~ E
3:3D--One Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 61
dmg to take strong action at
discussion."
BIL L ~ OR TEN?
Match Game 8,10; Llllas. Yoga and You 20; Tille II
Jim : " That was the hand our ne•t turn .
33.
(Do
you
have
a
question
that Jo Culbertson defended
4:DO-MisterCartoon 3; Merv Grlllln 4; Someroei6,1SI
successfully by underleading for !he experts? Write "Ask
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Roget;~
her ac e of spades twice. the Jacobys" care of. this
20,33;
Movie "The Best Years of Our Ll'lft 10;
newspaper. The Jacobys will
wasn't it?"
Dinah!
13.
.
,
Oswald : " Most ol our answer indiwdual quesfions
4:3D-Bewltc:hed
3;
Mod
Squad
6;
Andy
Grlffllll
l1
re0ders have criticized Hal 's if stamped, self-addressed
Sesame
Street
20,33;
Fllnlstones
15.
.
'
play o! a low spade at trick envelopes are enclosed. The
5:&lt;10--'Bonanra 3: Partridge Family B; Mluloo: lm·
one. He only made that play most mreresring questions
possible 15.
··
.
because he held the mne. It wtll be used in this column
5:30-Adam-12'4.13; News 6; Family Afalr 8; Elec:trlc
would have given him an eKtra and will receive copips of
.
Company 20,33;
spade trick if Jo had led from JACOBY MODERN. )
6·DO-News 3,4.8,10.13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllll 61
Y'MEAN ~E!IE AltE YES,"TOO MAIN
'THEN I 'M
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Y•
MORE JASPEJC:S LIKE 10 F'IGI-Ii.. . AND
WI'TH 'IOU!
and You 33.
'1!-IESE A~ND ?
'THEY COME BACK
LET'S
SOON !
VAMOOSE!
7:00-Truth orConl!llluences 3; To Tell Tho Truth 4;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Bowling for Dollars 6; Let's Go To The Races I;
News 10: Name That Tune 13; Family Affair IJ;
38 lrisb river
ACROSS
Romagnolls' Table 20: Strauss Family 33.
3t Become·
7:30-Hollywood Squar-es 3; XXI Olympic Games 6,1J;
1 Expense
Hollywood Squares 4; Match Game Pm 8; Prtc. Is
5 Classify
furious
!Ugllt 10: Nasi\VIIIa On The _Road 15; a..rl
(2 wds.)
11 Palm leaf
,
MacNeil Report 20. ·
41 Chilling
1% Personal
8:00--Movln'
On 3.4,1~; Popl 8,10; Lowell tt.orgroolillng
loclk
Remembers 33; At The Tllf&gt; 20.
.
DOWN
Item
8:3()--GOOd Times 8, 10; Graveyard of the, Gull 33.
1 Space
13 Distance
9:00-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15;. M-A-S-H 8,10; Ev4lfllng II
traveler
14 Montana
Pops 33; Men Who'Ma&lt;k! The Movies 20.
Yesterday's Auwer
% -drab
city
9.JO-One Day At A Time 8, 10.
"':
25 Portions
10·GO-City of Angels 3,-4,15; Va~devllle 8; Switch 10;
15 ·'The Three 3 Witch-trial 10 Bartered
%8 "Waisted"
16 Peck's
r-.~~~~--~:----~--,
Faces
News 20; School for .Wives 33.
•
site
• partner
wn:~"T:
of - "
I alwaLJs plants
10 :3D-Biack Perspective on the News 20; Woman 33.
away.
4 Nautical
li :GO-News 3,43,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
18 Stem deck 28 Entertain
i--l1~aters ouqhta' 1&amp; Hit a long
chain
m'taters in th'
11
:3D-Johnny Carson 3.4.1~: XXI Olympic Gamet
29
French
river
qrow
biq·!
21
Orient
5 Off ship
dark o'th'
ball
6,13; Movie "Sayonara" B; Movie "You're a Big
3G
French
river
22
Watery
"
6 Jewish
17
Boy Now" 10; Janakl 33.
moonr
people!
;:~ese
31 Register
route
benediction
11 :45 -Mystery ol the Week "Who Kllled Lamb?"
(2 wds.)
33 Bellow
19 Wonder·
7 Store event
6,13.
23 Sacrament 36 Fencing
ment
· 8 Too old
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4 ..
dumrny
ZO United
9 Resumption 24 Encircle
1: 15----'News 13.
21 Old oath
22 "Out,
Today is Mmday,
19,
damned
"
the :allst day of 19'16 w,lth 161i firearms, was bml Jull ·t9,
(Macbeth)
111 f&amp;low.
· 1814.
%4 Scottish
The moon Is in its last On this day In biltorJ:
ijigh·
Ql!llrler.
In 1848, "bloomen," a
lander
The morning star is radical departure In w-'s
Z5 Ooze
Jupiter.
tDiderwur, '"re hlllodatd
%1 Prefix for
The evening stars are Mer- to the deleplel of till lint
I MUST PLAY MY
11--1~ THATCf-. =.AP SCX:IAL
charge or
cury, Mars, Venus and wCl11811'8 rights cmtatlilnln
credit
TRUMP CM.J) !!
Saturn.
SenecaFalli,N.Y. TbeJwa-e
CLIMBER
Th01e born oo this date are ·named afla' tbelr tnnntor .
Z7 Chinese
dynasty
under\ the sign of Cancer.
Mrs. Alpella
Bioflmer:
zs Radio ad
purcbase
(2 wds.)
'' ~' '""""" ""-"'''
" l l lCF,
3% Terrified
Unscramble these four Jumbleo,
34 - Remo,
one letter to e&amp;ch .quart, to
Italy
form four ordinary word1.

WIN AT ·BRIDGE
Hal guessed wrong on replay

Notice is tlereby given that
526,000 I acre; $28,000.00 3
the fOllowing- three parcels of
a nd two -thirds acres. Phone HOMESITES for sale , 1 acre and real e~tate will be offered tor
61A -949-2748.
up. Middleport near Rutland . sate by the undersigned on
· Saturday, July 3l$t , 1976, at
Coll992·7481 .
10· oo A.M . at the former home
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths , of Leota Lynch, Deceased
all elec. 1 acre , Middleport, Said parcels of real estate are
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
close to Rutland . Phone 992· br iefly de~cribed as follows :
.20 of an acre known as the
11011\echanlc Pomeroy, 0 . ·
7481.
Leota Lynch property ap Phone 992-331~
SMALL form for sole, 10"!. down , praised at S2,200.00
.52 of an acre known as the
157 A-CRES- Beef farm
owner financed . Monroe CounArthur and Marg,!lret Lynch
with 70 acres of tractor
ty. W. Vo . Phone (3041 712- property
appraised at $800.00
land. Good older home,
3102 0' (304) 772-3227.
1.33 acres, Vacant lo1, ap
fences , ponds, near mines.
COUNTRY farmland w1th seclud· praisect at S2,000 00
NEW LISTING- 44 acres
The above parcels are
ed woods. water and good oc· appra
ised as indicated above
on Rt. 143 near Carpenter.
cess in Monroe Counfv , W Va . and cannot be sold for less
1971 Flarhlngo 12x60
SI,OOO dawn , call (3041 772- t han the appral!ed value .
trailer. Good drilled well.
3102 or (304) 772-3227.
Property to be sold to the
20 ACRES - In Berne
highest bidder . SlOO.OD deposit
5
ROOM
house
with
both
and
Township on Road 202,
to be pa1d by successful bi dder
laundry room , modern kitchen , on each property to blncl sale .
Athens County.
11 acres with born and milk
Bidders wltl be given a
COUNTRY AIR - 3 BR
house located at Minenvilte, reasonable time within Which
house with modern kitchen
Ohio Kenneth Wilt , phone to borrow money from a
and bath. Good screened-in
lending lnstltutiQn and to
m -3105.
lrool wch. Basement a~d
check title. Sale . will be con HOUSE for sole , 7 rooms , bose· ducted at each property site .
nice )lard with garden
ment in Middleport . Price First sale to be held at the
spa_ses.·
Leota Lynch property , Sale Is
reduced . Phone 992 -2265.
TODAY'S SPECIAL - In
subject to the approval of the
HOUSE for sole , 2 Iorge Probate Court .
the country wlfh new 3
•
Also , one 2 door 1965 Dodge
bedrooms, large living room,
bedroom home . Full
carpeted , modern kitchen , din· to be sold to the highest bid ·
basement, nice kitchen, 2
ing room and bath in Harrison- der . Appraised at Sl25 .00.
lull baths, carpeting &amp;
JamesE Simpson,
ville. Phone 742 -27%.
tllrport with storage. 2
Adm lnistr&amp;tor of the
Estate of Arthur Lynch,
acres . Reduced for quick
3 bedroom b'hu.1e. basement, Deceased
sale for only $31,000.00.
forced air gaS heal, 2 cor
16,
18,
19.
20.
21.
22
garage , Iorge fenced yard . (7)
RACINE ARFA - Modern

Mortis, Helen Frances let outside lntuences dislract
Rovere, Frank Rovere, __,¥OU . 11 you get off-target, It wtlf
do{
Richard B. Elberfeld, be hard to get fined up again
Specials
Mildred Elberfeld, Robeft 8AGITTAAIUI (Now. 23·Dec.
Elberfeld,
Charlotte Jl1Pheijmlng Is notthebestto
Elberfeld tAl Elberfeld Farm, spnng a change of plans on
Reg.lt0.61 gal.
Inc., I.&lt;Jts, Pomeroy.
. your usoclates. Your l~eas GOlDEN WEDDING Anniversary.
'PreServe th1s wonderful day
Alva GleM Haning, dec., to . n)&amp;y be great. but they wont be
NOW$8.29 GAL
1with photographs at the family
Elizabeth Haning, Affidavit, ,'~cllned to buy.
together, with your tnends and
Scipio.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.
of, course the cake! Call Ken
fled No. 315. Reg. 18.79
.
M
d
E
11)
By
all
means
keep
those
Grover Photography , Chester. SlAR&lt;RAFT inventory reduction
1
Will •am aynar • ve yn not directly Involved out of your
on
mini·motors
,
travel
trailer
Ohio. Phone985-C155.
NOW $6.79 GAL.
ond fold downs for 19n
Maynard to Herman L. personal affairs. The wrong 1
tqSE
w8ig~t sofe. fast . easy with
models
.
Don't
m1n
these
great
Willis, Rosa Lee Willis, 5 A., kiM of kibitzer could create
POMEROY LANDMARK
the Oiad'o)l plan. A.educe fluids
savings . Comp Conley Starcroft
Sutton.
havoc.
·
with Fluldu, Nel5on Drugs .
-9.- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Soles, Rt. 62, North Pt. Plea ~
~ Nicholas Ihle, Diane Ihle to AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 11) GRAPEFRUIT Pill wilh Dodo•. eot
M
Phone 992· 2181
san! , W. Vo .
·,William Maynard, Evelyn Though It may temporarily be a
satisfying meals and lose 1973 Yellowstone camper . 23ft .•
· Maynard, R·W, Sutton.
disadvantage, honor your
weight. now elCtra strength forsleeps six , self -contai ned . CANNING peaches now ready
promises today . Don't let
mula. Nelson Drugs .
Phone 949-201A
thru Augu~t. Several varieties ,
William E. Pickens, friends think you'd back down
NOW selling handmade clothes
b)'
the bushel , '/ 2 bushel or
: Claudette J . Pickens to Ohio on your word.
for mos kind of dolls . Surprise
peck . Please brmg own con"Power Co., Eaae., Lebanon. PISCES (Ftb. 20-Morch 20)
your favorite little girl w1th a
tamer, 2 convenient locations :
new outfit for her doll . Phone
" NermanHarbrecht,dec., to This can be a very productive
Midway Market , Pomeroy,
992-5866.
FURNISHED. 2 bedrm . apartment,
992-2582. Bobs Market , Mason.
•·a·arnet Harbrecht, Dorothy day, provided you're not
bdulf5 only, in M1ddleport
773-S721.
v[lebra Ellis, Aff. , for Trans. hampered by an erratic
-- --~~
coworker. Be discriminating In
Phone 992· 3874 .
TOMATOES, Cleland Forms and
; Sandra S. Munn, formerly your choice of associates
Greenhouses ,
Geraldine
3 AND -4 RM. furnished and un."Sandra Harming to Ronald J.
furnished opts. Phone 991· _.C_Ie_lo_n_d,~2.'_ne , ~O:_h::lo::_._ __
OLD
furniture,
ice
boxes,
br!JSS
·Hanning, Parcels, Scipio.
5434.
beds,
wall telephones and
700 boles hay fo.r sale . Phone
· Robert D. Williams,
ports, or complete households. 1 COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rl
992 -77St. ·-~--~­
..... Paifi.cia Williams to laley
Wnte M. 0 Miller , At . 4,
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
CONSOLE stereo , AM-FM rod1o, "
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call992·77f:JJ. ~
. ;:zR. ,.)bbs, Sheryl E. Gibbs, I
large lots with concret patiOS ,
speed changer .
Balance
Jutr 27, 11re
sidewalks, runners and off
, A., Rutland.
CASH paid for oil makes and
$103.60orlerms. Call992-3965.
strnt parking. Phone 992-7479
models of mobile homes .
:
Earl W. Cleek, Patricia A. Try to give ttme this coming
2 motorcycles
1- 1974 zy
Phone
oreo
code
61
..
·423-9531
.
'
yea·
r
to
things
of
a
creative
ONE bedroom oportments at
• Cleek to Columbus &amp;
Yamaha 80, 1- 1971 Sl Hondo
nature.
Your
brain
children
VIllAGE MANOR in Middiepo'l
$$Cosh$$$ for junked auto. Frye's
: Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
100. Phono614-367-0A2A.
could help you develop a
lor $1Q.4 monthly plus elec . or
Truck
Auto
Ports
,
Rutland
" Parcels, Lebanon.
targer bank account.
$130 includmg electric. LOWER BElSAW planer, model 910. like
Phone 742· 2081 .
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS.
new , 3 power tools m one.
TIMBER , Pomeroy For est Products . Top price for standing
sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby,

6-7-1 mo .

RURAl . modern, electric. 3
bedroom , k itchen, living room ,
bClth , flfll shed basement, laundry , re creation , storage .

VACATION ~ le . all live mven - LOCUST posts, round · or split.
tory must go Prices cut
.
.
Phone 9•9-2n4.
drCs'iicolly til Fttdov , July 23
'PHOTOGRAHY - hove
COAL
, limestone , and calc1um
~~~;, P.e~ 1Shop , 2\!J ,miles n e .
:a,-rJ.9( Motos of your con,frocchloride
and calcium bnne for
1
of
Chester
on
Rl.
248
.
_
t tlon-~ , ..., business , coo\ 'ond
dust control and special miKmg
QOs leases of your form . Ken :A.KC German Sheppard puppies. ,
salt for lormers . Mom Streel.
Grove, photographer , Chester.
e)lcellent blood hne. Phone
Pomeroy. Ohio or phooe 992Ohto . Phone 985·•1 55.
992-5623.
3891.
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY- AKC reg i stered Poodles . 1
Remember tke
forever!
female. 2 mole, block. Also
The comlete story a your wed
Ju~
stud servke by cipncot poodle.
di'19;i n a beautiful album . Call
Phone 001·882·3205.
Ken Grover, Photographer ,
Wetheramic White Super
Chester, Oh1o. Phone 985-4155.
Latex HO&lt;I5e Paint-No. 301.

''"""
Jii00

949-2114

m•

WHOEVER

RACINE Fire Deporlment wtll
hove a gun shoot Satvrdoy ot
6.00 p.m . ot their new bulldmg
off Bas han Road.

CAB

•6.95

5quort Yard tnst•lltd

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters.
Painting and Repair

BLIND ADS

Add itional 25c Charge
per Advert isemen t.

Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK_ CARPETING

Chesler, Ohio
7-14-1 mo.

min imum
Each additiona l word 3
cents .

7:DO-Truth or Consequences 3 ; Probe: The World
Arou.nd Us4; Bowling lor Dollars6; Buck ~s 8;.
News 10; Candid Camera 13; Family Altair 15;
Lo-ll Thomas Remembers 20; Resourceful West
VIrginia 33.
7:30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; XXI Olympic
Games6,13; Bobby Vinton 4; Price Is Right B; High
Road to Adventure 10; Friends of Man 15; Robert
MacNeil Report 20.33.
8:00-Bobb,y Vlnlon 3; Rich Little 4,15; Gunsmoke 8;
Nordlamb 33; Rhoda 10 Since The American Way ol
Death 20.
8:»-.We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.

David Parsons' Owner

915-41-55

trans.

NOTICES
ATTN .: II
HOUS'EWIVES

Racine.

KEN GROVER

1974FORD F-tOO
S2"5
8' Slyleslde, green fin ish. good tires, R. bumper,
chrome grille, and front bumper. 6 cyl., and standard

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
S2 .00 tor 80 word

R)£1NE
CARPET SIU

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
-Aerlal-lnduslrl•l
Construction Progrns
- Complete kllool Sorvltt
Undertrtdutlt &amp;
Elementary
School Pack..t Plcturn
Sonlon &amp; Yttrbook
-Weddings-

1972GMC4500SERIES
$3895
14' Midwest grain and callle ra&lt;k body, 350, V-8 engine,
power steering and brakes. Only 8,900 miles: Clean,
like new.

f

~ : oo-Bon111ua

Business Servi~es

Pomeroy
Motor Co~

1973CHEVROLETC-1D
12195
B' Fleetslde, wh ile over red. clean Interior, 350 V-8.
automalfc. power steering and brakes. good tires . step
bumper, radio. &lt;us tom trim and mirrors.

home front. don't be the

Lots, Tuppers Plains.
one who derails them. Maintain
I\oy Proffitt, Lillian the status quo.
( Proffitt to William Maynard, GEMINI (Moy 21-Junt 201
Evelyn Ma ynard, 5 A., Your schedule should move
Sulton .
ltke a well-oiled clock today,
Ernest E. Harrls, Phuoc ', prov ided you don't make lastThi Harris to Albert S. minute changes
Harmon, April L. Harmon,' 11 CANCER (June 21-July 22)
A . 1 Sutton.

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

Cancellations,
torrec .
tl ons accepted f irst dar of
publication .

t :DO-Joe Forrester 3.4.15; All ln_.The Family 1.101
Movie "Oylng" 20; M.n Who l'layed Spock 33.
~ : 30-Mtltlde 8, 10.
ID:DO-Jfgsaw John 3.4,15; Medical Cenlw 1,101
•
Ways 33.
10:»-Catch-33 33.
1
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC Newt 3.
1) :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; XXI Ol~plc Gam.
6,13; Movie "A Brand New Life" 8; ,.,It :•o.Chrlsllnal' 10; Jan•kl 33. ·
11 :45-Lale, Great1968 6,13.
!:DO-Tomorrow 3.4.
t : 15-News 13,

MONDAY. JULY "· tm
3; Partridge Family 8; Mission &gt; Impossible 15.
~ : 30-Adlm- 12 4.13; Newu; Family Affair 8; Electrl.
Company 20,33;
6·DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Carroscolendas 33.

. '

Auto Sales .

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINU
s
P /fl ., Day
Before
Publication .

Television log for easy viewing

S•turd•y'•

I

GAUGE PANIC Olll\I&amp;E -IIID

An•w•rl Yo• m•r p for II eMtllerJt'• rri tr

1""••1-CAIIIACIE

TELL HIM TO SHUT UP,

OR I'LL CRACK

HIS

61NDIN6 AND DIM
HIS OUT.LOOI&lt;!

�,

I- The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-P0111eroy, 0., Monday, July 19, 1976

•

TOM TIEDE

Qpiimism marks
contract talks
DETROIT (UPI) - The
United Auto Workers and
General Motors Corp. opened
contract talks today with both
sidell fairly cdt(ildent the
680,000 workers will not
repeat walkouts that hit t(le
Industry In the past three
blrplnlng years.
UAW President Leonard
Woodcock and ~ge B.
M&lt;ll'rls Jr., GM's top labor
negotiator, reached across an
a.loot-wlde bargaining table
for the traditional handshake
eight weeks before contracts
expire.

Woodcock will repeat the
performance Tuesday at
Ford and on su&lt;eeedlng days
at Chrysler and American
Motors.
" Are you ready to
volunteer anything ?'' a jovial
Woodcock asked as he shook
hands wlih Morris. Morris
smiled.
'
In a year when labor
contracts.cover!ng 4.5 million
workers
are
being
negotiated, the auto industry
tallaJ are the largest and

only

RIVERSIDE MEDICAL
GROUP ·

Ghost town on the Potomac

perhaps wUI be the most
peaceful, observers said.
''There just dOOsn 't seem to
be the mood lor any major
walkout,"· one veteran labor
observer noted. "But all that
could change by the tbne the
strike deadUne of midnight,
Sept. 14, approaches."
. Bargainers had to cross the
l!ne of about 700 UAW
reUrees who marched In front
of \he world headquarters of
the giant auto company. They
were asking that company
and union officlaiB not forge~
them In this year's taiks.
They complained that
inflation is eating up their
pensions. Some carried signs
saying "Dignity - Not
Dogfood. Cost of Living for
Pensions."
.
With job security a \op
concern for the union,
pensions are one Item not
expected to be a major 15sue
because the union signed an
agreement three years · ago
that pension plana would not
be reopened until 1979.

casket will be opened at
Foglesong's.
The deceased was a
member of the Masonic
Lodge 172, F&amp;AM, Vienna; of
the Scottish Rite, and of the
Shrine and Shrine Exhibiton
Motor Corps. He was an
employe of the E. I. Dupont
company for 28 years.
Survivors include his wife,
l'l)axine Stewart Kirby ; two
sons, Mrs. Robert (Sharon)
Ball, Vienna ; four brothers,
Leland and Lenford, New
Haven ; Herman , West
Columbia, and Harold of
Vienna, anrl seven grandchildren.
CHAPTER TO MEET
The Meigs-Gallia Chapter ·
of · the Ohio Civil Service
Employees' Assn . wUI .meet
at 8 this evening at the
Guiding Hand School in
Cheshire.

Adjacentto
Veterams
Memorial Hospital
R. A. AVER ION, M.D.
REUNION SET
A. G. SOLA, M.D.
The
13th annual Douglas
JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
reunion
wiD be held Sunday,
C. W. THOMPSON, M.D.
July
25at
the state park on U.
Office Hours: 10· 12 a.m.
Mon .·S.I., 2-4 p.m. Mon.·
S. Rt. 33, southbound lane.
Fri., 7-1 p.m. Mon., Wid., · Basket lunch will be. at 12:30
• f•l.
p.m. All friends and relatives

PHOl'f£ 992-3331.

Invited.

By Tom Tiede
WASffiNGTON - Now that
the country is 200 years old
the things that go bump in the
night in this town llliiY be
other than Jerry Ford faUing
on his bean or callgirls en·
tertaining the legislators.
Legend has tt that historic
figures normally make their
reappearance on earth two
centuries after their deaths,
and so : the nation generally
and the · capital specifically
may be In for spooky futures .
You know, like boo. Ben
Franklin In bedsheets.
Silly' Not in superstitious
Washington, where senators
can be observed &amp;·voiding the
13th step to the Capitol and
where the best-read features
in the newspapers, other than
the ads for massage parlors,
are the astrology ·charts.
Indeed, American politicians
have been occupied with the
supernatural from the
beginning . there Is evidence

Flossie On~rch
dies in Marion
MARION, Ohio - F'lossie
Church , 71, died Sunday
morning at her residence
here.
·
Born May 27, 1905 in Meigs
County , the da ughler of
Samuel and Arminta Pounds
'Norris, she was also preceded
in death by her husband,
Walter ; three brothers 1 and
one sister.
She is surviv-ed by a son.
James, of MarysviUe, four
daughters,
Mrs . Ben
Douglas, Columbus; Mrs .
Carroll Poland, Milford
Center ; Mrs. Lowell Taylor,
and Mrs. Vernon Donahue,
both of Radnor ; two brothers,
Fern Norris, and Freeland
Norris, both of Racine, Ohio ;
two sisters, Florence Adams,
Racine, and Fr,anees Cady ,
West Jefferson; 21 grand·
children. and ·nine great.grandchildren. .
Mrs. Church was a retired
practical nurse. Services will
he Wednesday at I p.m. in the
Ewing Chapel with burial lo
be in !he Letart Falls
Cemetery. The family will
receive friends on Tuesday
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

SENIOR CITIZENS

.

•

Are Preferred Poople

At Farmers.Bank

Becaiae We Furnish A
Free Checking Account For You
We Invite you to use this preferred service with no
service charge. All those 65 years and over are
welcome to open an account any time. Stop in and
see us now.

:111·
.. _.:~::...:.:::.
Lw

~:;
_

(QI!Ib•+l , . _

•

Otarles Kirby died Saturday
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Charles L. Kirby, 54, of 1106
39th St., Vienna, W. Va., was
dead on arrival Saturday at
camden-Clarke Hospital . in
Parkersburg. Born in New
Haven, June 1,1922, he was.a
son of the Ia te George and
MiMie Illggs Kirby.
' Funeral services will be .
conducted Wednesday at 11
a.m. from the Wesley U. M.
Church In Vienna of which he
was a member, and at 3 p.m.
from the FoglesonR Funeral
Home In Mason. The Rex, J.
D. Shaeffer wiD officiate at
both. Burial will follow in the
Graham Station cemetery.
Friends will be received at
7 p.m. ai the Leavitt Funeral
Home in Parkersburg. The

News •• in Briefs

I

Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor ·
Mlinllel'f.-rJI Deposit Insurance Corporation

that many founding fathers
were guided to some degree
by the occult arts. George
Washington, for one, was
'almost regularly visited 'by
visions, apparitions and other
chilling interlogers.
So accustomed to the eerie
has Washington ti'ecome,
actually, that the Bicen·
tennial ghosts will hardly be
noticed for the crowd by
specters already here. G.
WasiJington , for example, has
already been seen -numerous ·
tin1es, riding his mare across
the lawn of Mount Vernon.
Judge Advocate Joseph Hart ,
who sentenced the lincoln
assassins to death , takes
regular strolls down F'irst
Street searching for public
assurance that his decision
was just. There is even a nude
ghost, naturally; she is
altogether' in the altogether
.. and employes at the Indonesian embassy say they
can 't wait to be scared by her
again.
The Capitol .building is a
favorite of ghosts here. There
is reportedly a Demon Cat
who roams the corridors,
particularly in the basement,
and whq has been seen so
many times by so many truly
frightened people that some
employes refuse to walk the
· halls alone at night. It's
remored the demon caused
one guard to die of a heart
ati&lt;Jck.
Al]d then there is the spirit
of
the
unfortunate
stonemason, said to have
been trapped in the Capitol
waUs when it was built ; he
can be seen walking about
with his trowel in his hand, no
doubl looking for back pay.
Or he may be looking for the
"chicken ghost", whose
presence was revealed by
fo rmer co ngressi onal
doorkeeper William Miller,
who swore he could hear the
damned thing clucking at all
hours.
There seems to be only one
former member of Congress
haunting the Capitol. He is
William Taulbee, who in the
late 1800s was shot and killed

during an argument with a
reporter. Adrr)lltedly, that
was carrying freedom of the
press too far, and many
believe that Taulbee has
made certain the scribes
know it. There are stains on
the steps leading to the House
press room which .1re said to
be the remains of Taulbee's
blood. They cannot be washed
away nor scraped off by
decades of wear. And .every
nciw and U1en some unseen
foroo reaches out of U1o steps
to knotk a journalisl on his
duff.
But the most popular place
for Washington'sghosts is the
Whi~ House. There Is said to
be a BriUsh soldier (from the
War of 1812) who wanders
about with. a torch trying to
burn ttie place down again.
Some visitors have sworn
they could smell soap suds
and wet clothes in the E~st
Room, where Abigail Adams
used to hang her laundry.
And Lillian Rogers Park, a
housekeeper for 30 years,
says !bat once when she was
sewing a bedspread in the
Rose Room she fell an icy
breeze and a hand on her
chair; it was Andy Jackson,
whose ribald laughter has
been heard by others in the
hOuse as well .
S&lt;lme say that Jackson is
laughing at the naivete of
those who believe in the
notion of returning dead . Yet,
some very sophisticated
people
have
becon1e
believers in Washington .
Teddy Roosevelt $8idM saw
the ghost of Abe Lincoln ,
"m any times ." Winston
Olurchill was offered the
lincoln bed one evening, but
decided to sl&lt;!y across the
hall instead. Harry Truman
believed , in the ghosts so
n1uch he told his daugh~r
that to lock the doors against
them would [le futile .
Only one thing troijbled
Harry about the spooks. Why,
he wondered dryly, would
any self-respecting spirit
want to co01e · back to
Was1J.ingt.on?

Measured service
could· cost more
OOLUMBUS ( UP! ~ - The
liinited use telephone service
which you thought might save
you money, might In the long
run cost you mooey.
That is according to the
Ohio Bell Telephone Co.,
which recently won approval
for a $203 million rate
Increase package . Included
in that increase was a
provision for measured
service where customers can
pay a flat rate for monthly
service and a small charge
for each caU after 30 that
month.
The measured serlice, in
Columbus for instance, will
cost ~e customer $7:50 for 30
outgOtng calls and mne cents
for each call after 30.
After Aug. 13, unlimited
service will cost private line
residentialcustomers$10.70a
mooth.
Customers can switch to
the measured service at oo
cost through Oct. I, 1978, but
after that date, the
switchover will cost them

$18.25.
The company says if a
customer wishes to return to
unlimited service, it will cost
$18.25 for the switch, no
matter when it Is lllllde.
A customer would have to
make 65 phooe calls a month
on limited service before
hitting the $10.70 figure
customers will pay for
unlimited service . .
All outgoing caU. will be
. charged against the JG&lt;:aU
limit, including those to
recorded services such as
time and temperahJre. There
will be an additions! cha~
for long-distance calls.
Ohio BeU sought the limited
service for customers on
fixed Incomes.
The company said the ·
average phone customer
makes eight calls a day, but
the business phones are
Included In that figure .

weekentl negotiating session. Aerooca manufacture. alrtralt
components.

Viking

ELBERFELDS 1N POMEROY
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, 3rd FLOOR

Witness

deputy with the aid of two of
the children, Jeffrey Brown,
10, and his ~year-old sister,
Jennifer.
One showed a white man
with short, dark hair, thick
eyebrows, puffy eyelids and
pbnples. "He has kind of a
pug nose that's wide -sort of
flaUened out as though broke!\" the Alameda County
Sheriff's Department said.
The suspect in the second
sketch wore a hat. Jeffrey
said he was "a scrawny lltUe
fellow with a pillow stuffed in ·
his shirt to make hbn look
fat."
There was no composite on
ihe third suspect. Bates said
there posaibly could ~ a
fourth one.
U.S. Attorney General Edward Lev;y ordered the FBI
out of the case Saturday on
grounds It was not in federal
jurisdiction because the
victims had not been
transported across state lines
and there was no ransom
demand.

The 'Departmenl Slore

Clearance Sale
KRO~HLER

LIVING ROOM SUITES
Big selection o1 styles. fabrics and colors all at special saving ,

!G)

THE STRONGEST MAN
IN THE WORLD
Kurt Russell, Joe Flynn .

Eve Arden , Cesar Romero,
Phil Silvers.

Show starts 7 p.m.

!GI

CLUB TO MEET
The Rose Garden Club will
meet Wednesday, July 21, at 8
p.m. at lhe home of Mrs.
Harold Massar.

Planners hear results of GROW

•

PLANNING . CO~ION MEETS - The Meigs
County Regions! Planning Comml.sslon met Monday
afternoon. to ~nslder business matters. Left to right are

aty

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, July 20, 197~

KRO,WI£R

1//nliw

•
· • Bne

~-~~fllll:lom::.fW"~ ·· · · · · ··

e••'S.

IN . •

•

~n
• 1-

.

~~
.

Bv United Prelalotematlonal
;' WASHINGTON-THE NATION'S ECONOMY expanded
00!y U percent In the second quarter, less than haH the
;,growth rate of the first quarter, the government reported
today. The Commerce Department said the "real" Gross
· National Prnduct - the nation's total output of goods and
• aervicesstrlppedoflnflatlon - rose '13.4billion between April
and June. According to a revised estimate, the GNP soared 9.2
, per cent In the first quarter. ,
• At tbe same Ume, the deparbnent reported that the Inflation
·rate, as measured by the GNP bnplicit price deflator, grew
• fl'om 4.3percentin the first quarter to 5 per cent In the second.
' The departmeilt allll said personal lncllllle - all Income

•

enttne

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 65 .

.

By AL ROSSITER JR.
UPI ScleDCe Editor
PASADEN.A., CaUl.. (UPI)
- America's Viking 1 space
robot landed gently on ~rs
today and radioed back the
first pictures taken from the
planet's
surface
"incredible" ~otos showing
a sandy, rocky Martian
desert with a gently roUing
borizon .
The three -I egged
.spacecraft rode a cwhion of
rocket exhaust to a gentle
touchdown in · a lowland

considered .one of the best started cmnlng In ·at the
places for Its instruments til control center ai 8::&gt;5 a.m.
conduct the first seatch for EDT. The shot looked down ,
life on the red planet.
and . show,d one of the
The landing on the. planet VIking's footpads.
niore than 200 m.UIIon miles
It was readUy apparent
from earth opened a new that the Martian soil was
frontier In man's exploration littered with rocks. It
of the solar S}'lllem. President appeared the soU had been
Ford said In a telephone ~ll blownbywindorthrustfrom
to space agency officials the VIking's landing rockets.
flight was "just wmderful
A few minutes later, after
and a most remarkable the camera ralled its lens oo
success."
command from a computer, a
The Initial image from one !road panoramic view of the
of VIking's twin cameras landscape appeared Une by

line on control center
monitors. It was !aile
a.fternoon the~e and- the
setting sun appeared to
brightly Illuminate the
distant sky.
There was no evidence of
any Ufe forms In the Initial
pictures. But scientists did
not eapect to see any.
Unlike pictures taken from
the moon, the Martian
surface did not appear
pocked marked wlih sharp
craters. This apparently-was
a result of wind erosim m

Mars . T~e planet has waldled the bnage fonn on
occasional dust stonns and television monitors. "The
VIking was coated with a detail Is Incredible."
gray resilient paint to protect
Viking's descent til Mars
was flawles~ . Engineers
It from sand blast effecta.
"This Ia Just an Incredible called out the various landing
scene ' ", said Dr • ....
operations as they learned of
UJOJUI8
Mutch, geologist In charge of them by radio reports from
the photographic erperbnent, Mars and there was no
" It looks safe and very hesitation when Viking
Interesting."
landed,
"The resolution Is just
" We have touchdown •"'
fantastic, " Mutch said as he exclaimed a Viking control
and hundreds of others at the spokesman at 8:12a.m. EDT.
Jet Prbpallion Laboratoey

)4'

• ·

, · June, the smallest One'month increase In the past five months.
NICE, FRANCE - A BAND OF NONCHALANT thieves
who dfank wine and munched l:l'ead as they tunneled Into an
:unguarded bank vault escaped with as much as $10 million In
· cash, jewelry and seclD'Itles, police said today , The French
.press called It "the caper of the century."
•·, Pollee said six to eight robbers worked abour 48 hours over
-· the weekend digging the 2$-foot tunnel, shored up coal-mine
. style, from a sewer Into the undergroiD!d vault of the Societe
·Generate br~h blnk In Nice Tlllr.lYalde!l U. v81111 door llhll\
!roo! the. Inside to delay Investigation and used acetylene
torches~ open eight safes Inside the vault and rifle 200 safety
deposit bozes.
KANSAS CITY, MO. - BLAMING IN PART high wages

lind restrictive union work rules, Ktoger Food StorM
annOWICtld Monday It would sell its 24 grocery stores In the
Kansas City area.
. Leaders of two unions with contracts at Ktoger denied the
company's chiirge that It could not compete effectively with
Qlber chains In the lll'ea because of the union wages and work
rules. The RetaU Store Employes and the Amalgamated Meat
Cutters and Butcher Workmen signed two-year agreements
earner ihls year with Kroger and thr-ee other grocery chains.
CHOWCHilLA, CAUF. 7 INVESTIGATORS PUTTING
together a jigsaw of clues believe they "are not far away "
from Identifying the gunmen- motivated perhaps by revenge
-,. who kidnapped 26 school children and their bus driver last

week.

.

OOLUMBUS - ASTATE AUDIT OF TiiE Ohio Bw-eau of
Motor Vehicles released today concludes the present method
llllasulng motor vehicle license plates Is so Irregular that only
a11etaUed audit of each deputy registrar could pin down actual
!\~use· within the arstem.
, Theaudit,coverlngfroml970tll1973, turned up only $6,903
Iii callh llhortagea, but reserved Its heaviest criUclsm for the
''Inadequate'' m~hod of accounting for the amual$165 mUllon
b),, motor vehicle Ucenae plate sales.

I

' .
.Bicentennial
Day will be
Observed on July 25 at the
Middleport swbnmlng pool.
'FesUvlttes will include two
races for children and 50, 100,
·160, and 200 meter races lor
tliose 12 years of age and
o9er. Diving competiUon will
lrii:lude the gainer, plain, can9Jer, fancy, and the filp.
Bicentennial prizes wiU be
given the winners. Persons
~til enter may do ao by
~ the pool or by signing
1!11 there. There will be 15
entries In each class' The
~ogram wiU get underway at
3p.m.
Swinllner and Intermediate
'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BEHAVIORSTUDY
Cary Hysell, Melga County
Juvenile • f&gt;robation officer,
today took a youth to
Children's Study Cen ter,
Columbus for sir to eight
weeks of behavior study. The
boy was implicated In a
breaking and entering of a
house In Sutton Township on
June 21. He was given a
temporary commilment.

a letter from Middleport
Village urging the commission to lend Ita approval tt•
Middleport's appUcallon, to
the Ohio Oapt. of Natural
Resources for funds to help
construct a tennis court. The
commission did so. It was felt
that such approval would
help Middleport's charices of
receiving the fllnds.
' Bill Young reported on the
sta Ius of the Pomeroy mini·
park. He said It Ia 60 pet.
complete, but money Ia
needed to erect a fence
around the tennis cow-t and to
corrt:et ·drainage probleJI)!I.
Amotion by C. E. Blakeslee
to write to Gov. James A.
Rhodes requesting · an e:rplanaUon as to the absence of
Meigs County from state tour
guide listings was approved .

h
•1d
• recelvedbyaUAIIlerlcans-advan~only0.4percentln ·lr.JIe1ns C l
ren may ·•I"e.
tu·rn *o
.
'"'e '
'
&amp;.I
.
.
.
Cheshire Guiding l{attd Scho'ol

Pool to have
· tiicentennial
day activities

Take advantage of the Special July
Clearance Sale Prices on men's and boys' .
Wjlar - womens and childrens ready-towear.

•

were · underway on two
bridges in the county and Ilia t
the "amount of progress we
make depends on the amount
of money we get."
Planning Commlaslon
Secretary Edlaon Baker read

Earthlings see first incredible Mars pictures

OOLUMBUS - RATE HEARINGS IN . Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.'s $50.5 million rate incr.eaae
request opened Monday before the Public UtUIUes
,Commlsalon of Ohio. Only two witnesses were heard - both
· oppolled to the proposed 26 per cent rate boost - as attorneys ·
de.lared. further testbnony til work out points of agreement on
tile two cases pending before the PUOO.
':'" Nineteen months ago, the PUCO approved an emergency 9
per cent rate IJ!crease for the uUllty. The current hearings are
to detennlne whether the uUllty will be allowed to continue
!bat ILD'charge, bnpleJT\ent the full 28 per cent Increase or
refund aU or a portion of the emergency rate relief.

l

Archie Stepll, Edison Baker, seer~· Theron
Johnson, chairman; Profes8or JOhn SUtzlein, ~m C. E.
Blakeslee. Picture by Bob Titus.

Prof. John Slltzleln CrOni
According til the study, the
the Jackson Area Extension mQI!t Important concern to
office reported the results of resldent.l of Meiga County are
a study conducted on jobs and industrial exdevelopment priorities of pansion. The !leCOnd most
Meigs County and the bnportant concern wu drug
10utheastern Ohio area at a abuse. On a regional level,
meeting of the Meigs County jobs and lndustclal expansion
Regional Planning Com- ranked highest, followed by
mlaalon Monday,
crbne.
The
GROW
study
Under priorities for the
(Generating Rural Ohio industrial development
Wealth) was conducted In a category, Meigs County
representative cross~tion resldent.l on a first choice
of 1,500 homes In the five .basis Jelt that heavy_
manufacturing was the
~ty area· of southeastern
Ohiq. Counties studied were highest priority, followed by
Athens, Gallla, Jackson, resource lndusirles such as
Meigs and Vinton. The survey · coal mining. On a regional
attempted to establish what basis, the first clinic results
the citizens of the area felt to were identical.
In other business Melas
be the most important
County
Engineer 'wesley
developmept priorities and
Buehl
reported
that repairs
community concerns.

•

They fo111d clotHing, notebooks, the bus driver's wallet and
the shoes of the victims near a remote road In the Santa Cruz
Mountains In Santa Clara County Monday. Sheriff's deputies In
Alameda CoiDity, where the victims dug their way to freedom
from a bw-led van, provided CaUfornla and Nevada law
enforcement agencies with better descriptions of the three
men. The lnvestlptors have not ruled out that there may have
been others Involved In last week 's kidnap.

MEIGS THEATRE

Plus

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK

Ju~

(Contlnuad frllll pqe 1)
CaUfornia and Nevada. They
were drawn by a sheriff's

.

'

Velerall!l Memor181 Hoeplllll
SATURDAY ADMlSSIONI
- Pamela Pennington,
Rutland ; Nellie Ham! on,
Letart, W. Va.
DISCHARGES - Herbert
Clarke, Ruby Conco, Alleynl
Rees, Tamara Stewart, Mar1
Haning, Margaret ParceU,
Oarence McDaniel, Georc•
Gwb, Helen Leifheit, Sarah
Brown, Elizabeth Olase.

DENVER- MORTIJARY OWNERS 1liROUGHOUT the
metropolitan area say they lll'e holdlnil unclaimed urna of
human ashes frQrJI cremaUons, ~e datln8 blclt 40 ye~~n,
because the next of ldn either forgot or limply decided not to
pick them up. Morticians at eight area mortuaries aurveyed,
sald they thought about throwing out the 111111, but felll'ed legal
rroblems.
. But Crist, of the Crist Mortuary In Boulder, aald he had a
''couple of dooen" unclabned urns stored at the mortuary and
that the posslbiUty of throwing some away was dlJcusaed.
"While we were thinking about It, a guy caUed frQrJI CaUfornla
and said his mother died 25 or 30 yell's ago," Crist said. "Jle
wanted til know If we stlll had the aahes. He wanted to come by - . Ho!Jer Medical Center
and take them for b~rlal In Nebraska."
·
(Birtbl, July 11)
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
OOLUMBI.JS - TilE ffi&lt;:lHER PRICES at the state parks Engle, son, Middleport; Mr.
this year apparenUy didn't 11ca1 e away any vlalton. The Ohio and Mrs . Ja ck Beckley,
Department of Natural Resources says attendance at the state daughter,' Albany; Mr:. and
parks continues to lie high, and that more pel'80118 are staying Mts . Robert Allen, · son,
at lodges this year than last Cabin use Ia !"lllllllng about the Ironton: Mr. and Mrs. Larry
same as last year.
.
Souders, daugbter, Oak Hll1;
The Department also says the campgrounds and beaches Mr. and Mrs. GUbert HarUey,
are crowded on weekdays, much Uke they ·~ on weellends, son, Wellston .
when the weather Is right. Fees at the parks were ral!ed thill
(Births, July 17}
year and are scheduled to go up again In January. Department
Mr. and Mrs. John Fugett,
officials say prices for the state lacillUes are COOlparable to son, Jackson; Mr. and Mra:
rrlvate fadlitles.
.
Michael Eblin, daughter,
GaUlpolis.
COLUMBUS - TIRE DEAl 1S IN THE CAPITAL city
(Births, July 18)
are feeling the pinch of United Rubber Workers strike which · Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Dennis,
began Aprll21, but auto dealers say the strike hasn't hurt new daughter, GaUipolls; Mr. and
car sales.
'
Mrs. Herbert Wallace, son,
1\{ost tire officials here say they have no Idea when the Apple Grove; Mr . and Mrs.
strike wiD end. One dealer, David Jackson, said he heard It Charles Greenlee, daughter,
might be October before the union setUes, "and If It goes that Point Pleasant.
long, it'll be almost Impossible to find a tire In the city." The
Goodyear warehouse here stockplked nearly 12,000 passenger
tires and 6,000 !J'uck tires before the strike. It Is now down to
PLEA~ANT VALLEY
about 3,000 passenger Urea and 2,500 truck tires.
Discharges : Mrs. Risden
Auto dealer George Byers said he has sold cars for the past Miller, Lakin; Jeffery Willet,
seven weeks without spare tires .
Henderson; Mrs. Donald
Gabritsch, Point Pleasant;
John Hill, New Haven ; Mrs.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through Ira Potts, Henderson;
(Continuld from pqe 1)
Friday, chance of showers Randall Stover, Leon; Mrs.
drainage basin for great
or thundershowers Wed- ·Eugene Moore, Cheshire,
rivers that apparently flowed
nesday. Clearing Thurs- Evelyn Hartl~y , tinl:..ro~:....,.-.1
over much of Mars millions
day. Fair Friday. Highs In Pleasant ; Mrs. Blake Noror perhaps billions of years
the 80s Wednesday and thup, son, Gallipolis; Mrs.
ngo.
from the mid to low 80s Bernard Barker, Glenwood ;
The basin Is named 01ryse,
Friday. Lows In the 80s Larry Vance, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
which means land of gold. By
early Wednesday and from Rick Smith, daughter,
chance, Viking geo logist
the mid 50s to low 80s et~rly Middleport; Joy Patterson,
GaUipolis; Jeffery Hudaon,
Harold Masursky said
Friday.
Henderson ; Voyd Clifton,
&amp;mday there Is a possibility
Point Pleasant; Christine
the lander may find gold,
KerwoOd, West Columbia;
diamonds, platinum and
Mrs
. Gerald Donhue,
other exotic minerals on the
SPEAKER
NOTED
Pomeroy.
sur!ace.
Middleport • Pomeroy
He $Bid this possibility
exists because of th(lllleologic area members of the
makeup o! the area .•. The American Association of ·
ASK TOWED
basin Is crisscrossed by what University Women branch
Marriage
licenses have
appear to be volcanic ridges. have been invited to a noon
been
issued
to
Alan Lee Pugh,
Pictures suggest higblands to luncheon of the Ja ckson
22,
Minersville,
and Jill
the west have dried up river Branch Thursday, July 22,
Marie
Warner,
19,
Minerswhere Mrs. I aura Smiley
beds leading downslope.
The reasoning is that the Miller, state pr~sident, will ville; Wayne Allan Hubbard,
highlands consist of igneous be guest speaker at Saddler's 29, Syracuse, and Shirley Ann
rock with a large variety of Restaurant at 12:30 p.m. Hubbard, 28, Pomeroy;
minerals. If great floods of Reservations must be made Michael Glenn Caton, 23,
water cut through those by Tuesday by calling 1-384- Vinton, and Marjorie Louise
Jeffers, 28, Middleport.
uplams·, tben some of these 3992,
minerals would have been
was hed downstream and
trapped by the ridges.
If Viking !landed upstream
1
of such a ridge, it might
discover gold.

MARION, Ohio (UP! )
Residential telephone ra~s
will soon Increase an average
of $2.35 monthly for
customers of the forrqer
Northern Ohio Telephone Co.,
now part of the General
Telephone Co. of Ohio.
The rate hike , effective
Aug. 13, was approved last
week by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. General
officials said it will affect
152,800 customers served by
69 exchanges in parts of 24
northern and central Ohio
counties.
MISS
TEENAGER
,......,,... Major communities in the CROWNED
area include Delaware,
COLUMBUS (UPIJ Galion, Norwalk, Medina and -Linda Marie Mueller, 17,
Port Clinton. Northern was Elyria, wiU carry the title of
merged into the General Miss Ohio Teenager lntll the
Telephone Co. in May of 1974. natl~nal compeUUon Aug. 1:114 at BoUngbrook, IU.
She won the Ohio title
Saturday night In compeUtlon
here.
".Friendship is the one
Mon. thru Thurs.--,
The pageant ·was held In
cement lhal can hold the
July
19·22
conjuncUon wiih the Little
world together."
NOT OPEN
Miss Ohio talent contest
Depehd on QUICKRE TE
Fri., Sat., Sun. ·
Friday
which
Dawn
for all your small rep!llr
July 23-24-25
Japuncha, 11, Watren, \Von . .,
and do-lt-yourself jobs. You
WaH Disney's
She, too, wiU compete for
can gel any of the many
True ltfe.Advenlure
the
national title at the same
QUIKRETE PRODUCTS
POWERFUL PRIMITIVE
•._....._ the " FRIEND LY
time
.
UNTAMED

.,

Jllll 1)

HOSPITAL
NEWS

.....

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday; a chance ol
abowen Thursday and fair
Friday aod Saturday.
Highs wiU be Ia the middle
10s to .lower 80s aod lows
will he In the middle 50s to
lower 60s.
:~:&gt;:m::::::::::;:::;::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.

classes for July 28 session are
stlll open . All beginner
classesareclosed.Juniorand
senior lifesaving courses
start Aug. 9. Those wh,o wish
to sign up are asked to call
992-9990. Price for lifesaving
Ia t12.25 which Includes a
.book.

Plllil Reibel in the June 28
session 'of the swimming
lessons, passed the Iniermedlate level.
11

Henry Wells of the Meigs matching funds. Tne county
County board of County also would have tO provide
commissioners said Monday local operating funds for the
Gallipolis' Guiding Hand school.
School, contrary to previous
This action was necessary,
rep&lt;ll'lo, baa never elooed its• it ..,... . hold , - . . lbe
doors to the children of Meigs Guidlnil Hand School had
County. .
refuse~ .to acce pt Meigs
This was what Wells told student.l this year as it had
Manning Webster, chairman last year.
of the Meigs County Board of
Meigs Coun ty ComMental Retardation, in- missioners agreed to send the
terested prents, and citizens students to GaUipolis next
Monday !n a meeting.)'lith the school year if finances can be
commission.
worked out. Cost to the
Wells said Albert Durose of county last year for the ap·
the GaUipolls Mental Health proximately 30 student.l was
Board informed him Guiding $47,000.
Hand School at Cheshire will
Webster, spokesman lor
a&lt;X!ept Meigs student.l this the group, expressed his
fall.
appreciation to the comIt has been the contention missioner on their decision
of the Mental Retardation and was pleased that the
Board that Meigs County problem was solved.
would have to proceed with
The commissioners, asked
construction of ·a half-million about the construction funds,
dollar school in Syracuse $250,000, with the state to
using money already voted provide matching funds, as to
( $250,000$ and $250,000 state ·

'

whether they had ·made a CETA.
decision to go ahead with the
In other business the
building of a building, an· commissioners were
swered they had not.
· presented with a budget·for
State fundsl.ftetop~:~~~ ~P!'alion of Sli'.QEMi IIi _
Ruf18n(l • tn the ainiiilii'I"''f"
...hbdl ""'
Wf
applied for have been $19,364. No action wu taken.
a~.-• oved, but unless the
The co~Dmisslon which
commissioners make earlier · asked the Ohio
available sufficient money to · Department of Highways to
operate the building, the take over Success Road In
$250,000 to build the school Olive Township, got their
will be lost. The com· reply Monday from Glenn •
missioners have until the end Smith, Division 10 directllr
of the year to make a who said a change of this
decision.
nature is hard to a&lt;X!omplish.
According to an operation The letter stated, " It is not to
report submitted to the be interpreted that it is bn·
commissioners by Judge possible, but it would be very
Webster , it would cost difficult."
$185,036.95 to operate the
Wesley Buehl, county
school for one year. The tol&lt;!l engineer, reported that work
may be reduced by an· is In progresS on CR I In
ticipated state and county · Salem Center, Attending
tuition anticipated of $15,000, were Wells, Warden Ours, ·
and salaries of persons that and Bernard Gilkey, com·
may be paid by sl&lt;!te or missioners, and Martha
federal programs such as Chambers, clerk.
THOMAS J. QUICK

City hall could cost $150,000 Quick guiding
Gallia college

Pomeroy Council Monday
night heard figures totalling
approximately $150,000 being
what It will cost to do the
work on the senior high
sch9ol building which council
plans to convert into a city
hall building.
Before thev were ~lven the
figures by R. C. Glasgow
speaking for the architect
Councibnan Charles BarUes
questioned if council would be
able to keep up with the
maintenance cost.l of the
building.
&lt;..ouncuman ur. Harold
Brown also stated that they
would have to have some·
ballpark figures as to what It
Is golnd to·cost.
Louis Osborne, · coun- ·
cilman, said he thougpt the

present city hall is lousy, that can be done Ia ter as well as
it is going to cost council, but other work on the building.
" We are definitely going to
Glasgow told council the
have to look toward the . senior high b.uilding iB a very
future."
so,1.d building and an asset to
Glasgow told council to the community. He also
replace the large windows in commented that working
the building, and doors, to plans should be available in
meet state specifications, the two weeks . The building
estimated cost is. $43,950 and committee will mee't with
to replace the 52 smaller Glasgow and the architects
windows the estimated cost is Friday .
$14,243.
Brown commented that it
The addi tiona! work on the looks as if the repair , when all
building would be done completed, will cost in the
gradually . The building will neighborhood of $150,000.
also require a new furnace
In other business council
and electrical wiring ,
accepted the following bids :
To gel into the building the
For the vacant lot at the
large windows will hav~ to be corner of Kerr and East Main
replaced, furnace installed Street,
$2,205
from
and. electrical wiring com- Wilhelmina Roedell; firs t
pleted. The smaller windows ward lotated on Nye Ave.,
$50 from George Hicks ;
second ward located on
Condor Street, $4,110, from
Richard Finlaw, a bid on the
city hall . building In the

amount of $11,000 from the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, which was tabled.
· Council learned Monday'
night that Osborne St. which
is on property owned by
Prime Builders will be
widened five feet an'd paved.
Prbne Builders are building
an apartment complex In the
area .
Meeting with council was
Olan Boothe about loitering
and littering In front of his
residence and the building
nex t to his home that he also
own1.
·
•
He reported that four out of
five windows llave been
broken and beer bottles are

RIO GRANDE - Thomas
J.
Quick ,
assistant
superintendent for school
administration with the Ohio
Department of Education
sin~e 1967, has been named
acting president of Ri o
Grande College , and Rio
Grande Community College.
Quick, son of the late Mr .
and Mrs. Jan1es S. Quick of
Syracuse in Meigs County,
graduated from Pomeroy
High School in 1929.
(Contlou«! on Pl8e 12)
Quick, whose educational
career spans 42 years as a
teacher, principal and
UNION TO MEET
superintendent, will serve as
Members of URW Lllcal 797 acting president for an in·
are to meet at Carpenters terlm period until a perHall in Point Pleasant manent president is secured,
Wednesday, July 21.
according to information
released today by the
trustees of both colleges.
As acting president, Quick
assumed his duties on July 19.
He resigned his posi lion with
secretary; Mamie Headley, the Ohio Department .of
cook, and Duane Wolfe, Education effective July 16.
As assistant superintendent
assistant football coach. ·
The school board waa to for school administration in
submit its budget for Ohio for nine years, Quick
calendar 1977 today with was charged with the ad·
Meigs County Auditor ministration of county board
finances, the slate school
Howard E. Frank.
Parents were present til building assistance program,
discu ss •the transfer of requests for transfer of
children from the Chester territory, special needs bond
Elementary School to the issue requests, and approval
Riverview Elementary of emergency S!!hool closings.
School. The next regular Other responsibitities have
meeting of the school board Is included assisting local
in
meeting
scheduled Aug, 10 at 7 p.m. distri cts
'1.
educa lions;1 needs lftrough

Man held for
·.$25,000 bond Coaches.hired

Wayne
Peyton ,
24,
Harrisonville, was arrested
by Meigs County Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach, his
deputies, Middleport Chief of
Police J. J. Cremeans, and
his department in a raid last
week at Peyton's home .
Peyton was charged with
cultivation of marijuana and
with possession of and
receiving stolen property .
Placed under $25,000 bond, he
Is in Meigs County jail. He
was to appear before County
Court Judge Robert E. Buck
today.
Sheriff Hartenbach Sund~y

at 7 p.m . at the roadside park
on U. S. 33 arrested Phil Mark
The Eastern Local School
Schirtzinger of Somerset, 'Board hired Robert (Ed)
Ohio. Schlrzlnger was ob- Wilson and Alan Holter as
served breaking the right new assistant football
rear window of a 1968 car coaches in its regular
own~d by Donald Taylor with
meeting Monday night.
a rock and removing an eight
Also hired was a rtew Intrack I&lt;Jpe and a 23 channel strumental music Instructor,
CB radio.
~ames L. Wilhelm, Jr. The
He ran up . through woods board combined the positions
but Hartenbach pursued hbn of baseball and track coach
and was waiting for him on under Ed Wilson and Larry
Rt. 33 where Schirtztnger had Hines.
parked his car. He will have a • The board a&lt;X!epted the
hearing Friday In Common resign a Uons of Charles Will,
Pleas Court.
Instrumental music in-'
structor; Kay Bailey,

reorganization, and overseeing the Ohio Sl&lt;!te School
for the lJIInd and the Ohio
School for the Deaf.
Quick has represented Ohio
on the boards of directors of
the Appalachian Educational
Laborator·y and the consortium of education depart·
men\S of Appalachian states,
and has served on the Ohio
Board of School and College
Regis Ira tion.
His leadership has ~J!!en
further recognized through
,elections to the presidencies
of the Buckeye' (formerly
Ohio ) Association of School
ADministrators, the NaUonal
Rural Education Association,
and lhe National County
Superintendents Association.
Prior to his association
wi th the Department of
Education, Quick was
superintendent of the Franklin County :;chools where he
had previously served as
assistant superintendent. His
career inc! udes services as
principal of Sarrett Junior
High School in Columbus and
the super in tendency of the '
Marion Township Schools in
Franklii'l County, which is
now part of the Columbus
district.
Quick was a principal of
Granville High School and
executive head of the
Alexandria and Utica
districts in Licking County
before they wer&amp; reorganized;.
(ConUnued it page 12)

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