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                  <text>Reagan raiding
Ohio delegates
.

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
nationwide courtship of
Republican National
Canventiarl delegates baa all
tile Jlllltlnp of a delegate
raid In Ohio, It wu reported
• today.
Scrlppi-Howard
Newa..pen aald moat of the raids
are being conducted by
aupportera of Ronald
Relpn, largely becaUie the
farmer California governor
hu tbe most to pin In Ohio.
. Of the alate's 97 GOP

.

delegates, 91 are pledged to
President Gerald R. Ford.
''lbefe are al8o signa that
the Ford camp may be going
after Ohio's ai:l Reagan
delegates. Reagan delegate
Joe Guatln of Weal Unloo said
he baa received a call from
Ford's national headquarters
urging him '"without
success"
to
awl tch
candidates because " the
president has a better chane~:
of beating Democrat Jinuny
Carter In November."

The raiding
is a
perrnldble political tactic
becau~e delegate pledges
amount to little more than
moral commitments. Unlike
1101t1e atatea, Ohio law does
not bind delegates to vote for
the candidate under whoae
name they were on the ballot .
Organizing the effort for
Reagan Ia Jeff Bell, a Reagan
Washington ataff member
who had been sent to
Columbus to make the
conta~ .

Bell says he Ia telling Ford vote for what they think will been "very encouraging."
delegates "there Ia nothing In be best for the party and the
"Several definitely want to
vote for Reagan on the flrat
Ohio law that says delegates country."
cannot change their minds.
Bell said his conversations ballot. but thev are concerned
(Continued on page 10) ·
Th~y are completely free tc? _with Ford delegates have

•

at y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo
'lbunday, July 22, 1976

BACK IN OPERATION - The tug Robllee Ia back In
operation ferrying traffic acroaa the Ohio River between
the Pomeroy and Mason levies. The tug haa ~n Idled
recently with clutch problem' .

en tine

Fiftet:n Cents
Vol. 28, No. 67

•

.Police hunt thrill-seeker kidnapers
.

.

By JAMES 0. CLIFFORD
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (UPI) - A pollee task force today
· combed a too.acre estate In the wealthy San Mateo County
., lllburbl south of San Francisco In pursuit of thrlll«eklnS
anned kidnapers who last week hijacked a bus load of school
children.
The search was launched In the wake of 1'4!porta the suspects
were the sons of prominent famllles In the area. Law
enforcement sources said the young men may have joined In a
"cult-type" group, and that the motive for the kidnaping, not
yet esq.bllahed, might have been "thrllls."
One source described the suspecla as "a collective of kids
from well-to-do famllles." He Indicated both drugs and guns
might be Involved.
Using a search warrant, pollee officers, Including SWAT

teams In full battle gear, moved onto the family estate of Fred

Newhall Woods III. His son, Fred Newhall Woods, 25, has been
mentioned In several news reports as a possible suspect in the
case.
.
Authorities described him as a "sUbjeCt" in their investigation, but have not Issued a warrantfor hiS arrest.
Young Woods apparently was not on lhe grounds and the
officers representing three counties and the FBI were
"graciously" met by his father and mother, a grandmother
and her three attendants.
The Woods family owns the California Rock and Gravel Co.,
the quarry near Livermore on the east side of San Francisco
Bay,·where the 26 children and their driver were entombed for
16 hours last week after three gunmen lu) acked their bus near

the central California town of Chowchilla.
Sheriffs John R. McDonald of San Mateo County, Ed Bates of
Madera County and Tom Houchins of Alameda County,
Wednesday night set up a joint pollee command post here
Inside a 4Moot trailer as the manhunt spread.
The sheriffs and Charles Bates, .chief of the San Francll!co
FBI office, held a brief press conference lifter the task force
moved onto the Woods estate.
Houchins said they were "graciously received" by the
Woods family which cooperated fully. But he described them
as "upset and concerned."
Houchins said his men were especially Interested In a trucktractor - the type used to pull truck traUers similar to the one
buried at the quarry to serve as the underground priSon.
Deputies planned to go over everything on the property in a

thorough search for posalble clues that could take more than a
day.
.
Shortly after the officers set up their joint command post on
Wednesday they held a brief meeting with newsmen at which
Houclns .ailgrUy accused the media of "senaatlonallam."
The flurry of pollee activity followed publication of newapa·
per repOrts that at least seven sons of wealthy peraons living In
San Mateo county may have been the kidnapers. ¥t the
Sacramento Bee and the Fresno Bee, slater newspapers,
reported Wednesday that young members of wealthy famllles
were being sought as suspects.
· One of them was reported to have been the purchaser of a
moving van from a firm In nearby Palo Alto that wu
converted Into a dungeon for the kidnap vlctlma.
·

Challenger. Dateline 1776 Candidates wanted for·
Jr.
Fair
king,
queen
asks ehate

By United Press International
ClEVELAND - FIVE MEN FROM Ashtabula and
Tnimbull counties were Indicted Wednesday by a .federal
grand jury for posaesaion of $13,000 In stolen toilet bowl
cleaner, rust and stain remover and garden tools. Kenneth
Klmey, 29 and Edward Lafferty, 30, both of Ashtabula, Gary S.
WASIDNGTON (UPI)
1Jpani,211, Jefferson, David Swiger, 20 and Orlln R. Swiger, 46,
eni:es between us, and there
both of West Farmlng!OO, are charged with possession of the Declaring he has enough is one logical way to settle
tooll and all but David Swiger are charged with possession of strength for a first-ballot this- and particularly for the
victory, · Ronald Reagan legitimately, sin perely
the other Items.
If qonvlcted, the f!len each face a ma:dmllf!l sentence of 10 today challeJ!i!ld Preeldent IUicommittedll wbo Jl'e trytns
·· year. In prlion illld a Sli,COO Cli~e. 'I1~ I&lt;' BI salil th~ men' had Ford to. a · ae'bate at the to make up their minds.
Na Uonal
1,175 cases of Sani-Fiush and 400 cases of Zud, which had been Republican
"I think both of us should
taken from a Canton truck destined for Lawrence, Mass., and Convention in KaiiSIIS· 'City
'
get up and settle once a1J(I for
425 bollll!s of garden tools which had been taken In .Ashtaliula next month.
Reagan reiterated he was all where do we stand on the
· from ·. a truck bound for I111no~, Minnesota, Iowli and
Wlaccmaln.
.
not Interested In being Ford's · matters of foreign policy,
running mate.
·
where do we stand on. the
CLEVELAND - WIUTE-WESTINGHOUSE Corp. was . "I would not under any matters of inllation, domestic
ordel ed Wednesday by a federal judge to bargain promptly on circumstances accept the policy ... and find out whether
a national level with strlltlng members of the International vice presidency, " Reagan we're identical on our viewUnion of EleCtrical, Radio and Machine Workers.
said in a interview on the points-and I don't think we
The National Labor Relations Board, which requested the NBC-'IV Today program.
are."
order from Qllef Judge Frank J. Battisti, maintained WhiteThe former California
He discounted Ford's
Westlnghouae violated federal labor laws by refusing to governor conceded Ford has claims of being close to
negotiate a single contract for employes at Its five plants.
more to offer uncoounltted victory.
The plants are located at Columbua, Mansfield, Newark, In delegates who hold the key to
"It's part of the same thing
Ohio, and Miami, Fla., and Metsuchen, N. J. The union was . the nomination, and accused they pulled In the North
told by the company It would only negotiate contracts on a Ford aides of being "heavy- Carolina primary when they
local basis, according to the NLRB, which said about 2,800 handed" In efforts to win over said I should drop out,"
workers went on strike July 12 over the Issue.
those who have not made up Reagan said. "I won North
their minds.
Carolina. It didn 'I work then
"Yes, the presidency has and it won't work now. lt's an
DUBLIN, IRELAND - TIIOUSANDS OF TROOPS and
police today hunted the killers of Britain's newly arrived lot more to offer and I'm attempt to snowball the
amNuador to Ireland, slain In ,what could be the start of a afraid that's one of the uncommitteds to jump on the
new Irllh Republic'Army offensive against British officials. tactics," Reagan said. bandwagon."
Brltllh newspapers called the search for the assassins of "Sometimes I do believe
Reagan said he has been
~or ·Chrlstopher Ewart-Biggs the biggest manhwlt in some of his campaigners telephoning the uncommitted
have been a little heavy- delegates from his Southern
Irlab hlltclry.
The colorful ambassador, who wore a black monocle over handed with some of the California rarich and telling
111e eye and~ detective novels under a pen name, arrived powers that are attendant them he has a better chance
· than Ford to beat Democratic
In Dublin only two weeks ago. He died Wednesday morning upon the Incumbency."
Reagan
said
he
Issued
his
nominee Jimmy Carter.
when an estimated 200 pounds of explOsives went off under his
"I have a broader appeal to
~aguar sedan about 150 yards from his Gothic-style residence challenge for a debate on the
convention floor , because Democrats
and
on the outaldrta of Dublin.
"the Ford peopl,e have been independents, I
have
WASHINGTON ..,.. A WOMAN WHO RESIGNED from the campaigning on an Idea that amassed almost half a
U.s. Merchant Marine Academy because she was found In bed he and I have no differences million more votes t)\an
with a man has been readmitted to the school, Sen. J. Glenn between us.
Ford," Reagan said. "In lhe
"Now this Is not true. There crossover states, Democrats
Beall Jr., R-Md., announced Wednesday. Beall said Nancy
Donnelly, 20, of Oxon Hll1, Md., was readmitted after he asked are very fundamental differ- .have voted for me."
for an Investigation of her resignation last May.
, "It Is gratifying that the academy has been able to weigh
my objectlona In this matter and overturn Its questionable
deciston," Beall said In a statement Wednesday. "This case
IJIIIIt serve as a guideline for the necessity of fair and equal
dlaclpllne which must be admlnls~red In all Instances wlhtout
regard to a student's sex."
... .
When she resigned, Cadet Donnelly said mQSt of the 25
women at·the academy slept with their cadet boyfriends on
campus and that she wu pressured to quit.
.
'
.Plans for a $1.5 million and direct communica lion to
LANCASl'ER, OIDO - ANCHOR HOCKING OORP. board skilled nursing facility near nursing
stations .
A
chalnnan John L. Guahman says record high sales, earnings Holzer Medical Center were sophisticated smoke
llld earnings per share In both the second quarter and first half announced today by four detection and sprinkler
l'elulted from "a broader product line and stronger demand In Gallipolis physicians.
system will assure patient
~ all customer areu."
,
Drs. Gene H. Abels, James safety and security.
Anchor Hocking a11o announced Wednesday Its second A. Kemp, Mel P. Simon and
The new health care center
911rter earn1nga and firlt half earnlnga more than doubled Gerald E. Vallee, owners of will offer physical and · oc!be. periods In 19'75. Guahman said Improvement In after tax the new center, said the cupational theraby, lab, xrnar11na to 5.9 per cent In ,the second quarter compared with three-story 120-bed facility is ray and pharmacy services
3.1 per cent a year earlier also reflected Anchor Hocking's the first of ill! kind In the area and a beauty and barber
lncrealled empllula on growth In areas of greater profltablllty. and will be the only shop. Meals will be prepared
.
'
Medicare-approved skilled to meet patients' special
CHICAGO - TWELVE E~CUTIVES OF 10 different nursing center within 50 dietary needs and family and
container companies have pleaded no contest to charges they miles. Construction on the friends may join patients for
COIIIPlred to fb: prices In tile Industry for five years starting In center, located at 555 Jackson meals In the Pinecrest dining
1•. Ollef U. S. District Court Judge James B. Parsons Pike, will begin this month room.
accepted the pleas Wednesday from the men who earlier had with completion scheduled in
Architects ' for the F.H.A·
pleat'ed not guilty.
May, 1977.
approved facility are TouchPlnonl aa1d be would consider more requests tod8y. The
Pinecrest Care Center will man-Frost Associates,
12 were IIDOIIIIO eliiBCUtives and 23 corporatlona Indicted laa.t serve patients of all ages Columbus . General conreb. 11 111 cbarges they conspired to fb: prices on cardboard providing convalescent as tractor for Pinecrest Care
eartana. 'lbey face mulmum sentences of one year In prl80n well as long-term nursing Center is Wallick Conand ""'a fines.
care. The new facility wlll s'truction Co ., also of
twenty of the corporations charged 1il the alleRed scheme offer private and semiColumbus.
private rooms, all with baths
(Continued 011 pap 10)

Skilled nursing
unit is planned

•

OFF CHARLESTON
BAY, S. C., July 22 British Gen. Henry Clinton
sent his American counterpart, Ge!L Charles Lee,
a gift of porter and English
cheese In reciprocity for a
similar
present
of
"refreshments" from Lee
accompanying an earlier
request for Information as
I• the wbereallol!tl of
,,.mertcan prisoners such
as Col. Ethan Allen.

Young folks wanting to
taste royalty are advised to
pick up application forms at
the Meigs County extension ·
office in Pomeroy.
The "king" and "queen"
'3C!I~ted ~won't be Uving In
Buckingham Palace, but they
will receive the bows and best
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::: wishes of everyone and then
some attending the Meigs
County Fair next month.
That's whar the-Junior Fair

kin'

Boosters
selling Emissions order
jackets draws criticism
The
Meigs Athletic
Boosters are selling jackets,
nylon and fully lined, that
come in maroon with gold
lettering or gold with maroon
lettering reading " Meigs
Marauders."
The jackets, which sell for
$15, may be seen at the
Athens County Savings and
Loan and may be ordered or
purchased there. They are
being sold to build school
spirit.
The boosters Monday night
in a regular meeting
reviewed . plans for football
programs and selling advertising in them. They
transferred $750 to the Meigs
Athletic Department to help
pay expenses incurred by
track and baseball. The next
meeting will be Aug. 10 at
7: 30 p.m. at the high school.

CHARLESTON, W. Va
(UPI) - The legislative
leadership has criticized Gov.
Arch Moore for issuing an
executive order prohibiting
the state from enforcing
sulfur dioxide emission
standards highet; than the
federal minimum level.
"I'm upset that the
goverilor would go beyond the
orderly processes of the
administrative work of
agencies In this regard," said
Senate President William
Brotherton, D-Kanawha.
Noting that a hearing was
held on the matter Tuesday,
Brotherton said the West
VIrginia Air Pollution Control
Commission might as well
"be abolished" if the
governor "Is going to run the
air pollution standards."
House Speaker Lewis
McManus,
0-Raleigb, said he
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
was " shocked by the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
governor's executive order.
Saturday through . It apparently is aimed at
Monday, a chance of protecting nprthern West
showers each day. Highs . VIrginia coal jobs, but my
will be in the 80s to the theory is it will backfire."
lower 90s Saturday,
McManus reasoned that the
dropping Into the upper 70s southern West VIrginia coal
to the 80s Monday. Lows fields could be adversely
will be In the 60s.
affected if the three power
plants in the Kanwaha Valley
::;::::::::::::: ::::::::~::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.

stop using less expensive low
sulfur mined In the south and
started using high sulfur coal
from the north.
"The governor
has
exhibited a total lack of
confidence In his Air
Pollution Control Commission," McManus said. "Many
of the members were
appointed by Gov. Moore."
McManus said he had been
"proud" of the clean air
standards achieved In the
Kanawha Valley and was
afraid this could deteriorate
due to the governor's order.
Benjamin Linsky,
professor of environmental
engineering at West VIrginia
University, said he was
"astounded"
by
the
governor's ·action.
"He's shown where his
sentiments are," Linsky safd,
"but I don 'I believe that he
has given adequate weight to
the fact that West VIrginia
makes a lot of its own air
pollution which affects its
own people. "
Moore told a news
conference Wednesday that
any person who dldn 'I comply
with his executive order
would be dismissed.

Self-defense is redefined
. COLUMBUS (UPI) - The with killing his nephew. The
Ohio Supreme Court has Franklin County Common
handed down a new Pleas Court found him guUty
lnterpertation of Ohio law of voluntary manslaughter, a
that overrules a principle ruling which the county court
that has been followed In tlie of appeals reversed.
The Supreme Court upheld
state since 1871.
The court ruled Wednesday the court of appeals.
that a defendant claiming
The court noted that since
seJ.t ilifense need not provide 1871 a defendant had to
the court with a great deal of supply the "burden of proof"
evidence to back up the · that he was acting in self
claim. Such overwhelming 4 defense.
evidence has been considered
But the high court said the
mandatory since 1871.
term "burden of proof" is
The ruling came in tbe case confusing and ambiguous.
of George Robinson, Jr.,
The judges said the
Columbus, who was charged defendant must only
. supply
.

1...

•

Board decided at a recent
meeting. It confirmed the
requirements of 16 years old
or over by January, 1976 for
candidates for the honor of
re~ u
and queen
over the 1976 Junior Fair.
Judges for the king and
·queen will be from out of the
county and voting will be
made by closed ballot.
Judges will meet August 9 at

evidence of a nature and
quality sufficient to raise the
Issue of self defense.
Robinson's case was sent
back to common pleas court
for a new trial.
In a s1millar case Wednesday, the court said Elijah
Matthews, Columbus ,
convicted of killing a
Columbus man at a bar here,
must also get a new trial
because the Franklin County
Common Pleas Court erred In
instructing the jury that
Matthews had to supply
evidence of self .defense.

1 p.m.

•
Each group on the Junior
Fair Board will have 15
minutes on Junior Fair night
to present a skit, and give an
award to an outstanding
member of their group (for
example, Girl Scout, FFA,
FHA, and 4-H).
Everyone on the Junior
Fair Board will have a booth
in the Junior Fair Building
with the exception of the Girl
Scouts who will exhibit In the
Senior Fair building due to
space problems.

Roush engaged
as advisor to

Sen. Bartlett
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford (Pat)
Roush , Racine, received
word that their son, Michael
0 . Roush,.has been employed
as an economics advisor for
U. S. Senator Dewey F.
Barti~tt of Oklahoma. Roush
received his B. A. degree
from Ohio State University
and his masters from the
University of Oklahoma.
His wife, Jeannie Glenn, of
Buffalo, N. Y. is an anthropologist major who
graduated
from
the
University of Oklahoma. At
present Mrs. Roush is on an
expedition In search of the
famous Big Foot in British
Columbia . Mike Is the
grandson of Dillon Cross of
Racine.

Trailer
ltweled
by stonn
One trailer home was ·
completely destroyed and
another lifted off Its foundation during a severe
thunderstorm In Jackson
County , near the Galli a
County border around 7 p.m.
Wednesday.
The Tonnie Fortner trailer
was completely demolished
by the storm. The Terrance
FOrtner trailer home nearby
was lifted off its foundation .
Scene of the storm was on
Jackon County Rd. 3, be.~
tween Thurman of Gallia
County and Centerpoint, off
Rt. 279 on the way to Oak mu.
It was reported there was .
storm damage to the Glen
Arrowood property, also In
Jackson County.
No one was home at the
tlm.e the Fortner homes were
struck.

,

�.·

'

---

2:.. The DaUv SentinPJ. Mirltllenbrt-Pcmerov. 0 .. Thtll'ldav. Julv ~. 1976

·..•·

Carter in strategy lneetings
President Ford, working
Ualted Prest Iatemallollll
Jlnuny Carter, ending a from the 'White House, and
stay of several days at hia Ronald Reagan, busy oo hill
Plalna, Ga ., home, planned to · Callfornla ranch, kept up
return to New York, the scene their search for delegatea in
ol hill trlum(il at Ialit week's the GOP presidential race.
Democratic National Aldea to both candidates 1!8id
they would have more
Conventloo.
delegates
to aMounce before
The
Democratic
Ute
end
of
the week .
·
presidential nominee
The
latest
UPI
count
·
scheduled a private luncheoo
today In New York with ~ showed 1,114 delegates .
pledged rir leaning to Ford - ·
group ol businessmen.
Meanwhile hill staff assem· 16 short of the nomination bled at HUlon Head Island, and 1,062 . in ·Reagan's
S.C., lor three days of •column . Eighty ~ three
strategy sessions. Sen. delegates were
Walter Moodsle, his running uncommitted.
Peter Kaye, a spokesman
mate, will join the group
·
for
the Ford campaign
Friday before he and Carter
committee,
said
"a
get together Saturday nlght
subst;mtlal
number"
of
new
at Plains.

TV. • .in Review
NEW YORK (UPI) -Television in the future will depend
less on formal seaSons while devoting more time to longform
entertainment, and :wJU depend · Increasingly ·on · madefortelevlslon fibns instead of made-for-theater movies.
It's been.fashionable ever since George OrweU wrote "1984"
to use that date as a peg for predicting the future, bytthe seers
at NBC are looking beyood to 1985 with their projections of
television trends.
Apresentatioo made recently to the NBC affiliates had this
to say about the future:
"We expect with some confidence that the notion of 'seasons' ·
wiU gradually fade away. lnatead, shows wiU prernlere at
varying Urnes, scattered throughout the year.
"By 1985, we expect that halt of the entertainment schedule
wiH corudst of long-form programs - specials, major sports,
fewer movies bUt of blocllbuster proportioos and more madefor-TV films, mlniset!es and special even~.''
The em(ilasls Oil made.fortele~lon moviea is a ·must
becalise the Inventory of old movies that could be shown on
television without bringing a blusb to the censor's cheek has
about run out. They aren't making feature films fast enough
these days, nor is the subject matter necessarily what the
audience wants to contemplate in its living room.
The NBC projections of what the American way of life will
beCII!le by 19115 indicate other changes, with the possibilities
for daytime and Saturday lritriguing.
" In 1960," according to NBC, "311 per cent of all women over
16 were in the labor force. In 1975, this had climbed to' 46 per
cent. The p-oportioo will contirwe to rise, and in the mid-'in!
wiU reach 50 per cent, a total of 45milllon working women. ·
"While many of them will not be available to television on
weekdays, IIley will lMi at home 00 weekends by the millions ~
particularly Saturday mrirnlng. With the tela live decline in the
number of children in the populetion, this may offer new
directions in Saturday and Sunday morning programing.'' ·
To the parent of today; tomorrow might sowld like a utopian
Saturday morning without "The Flintstones." DM 't be too
sure - after all, "The Fllntstones" and an incredible number
of other p-ograms with grade«hool mentality orlginaUy were
intended u adult entertainment. Would so~ operas and game
lhows be an Improvement on "Pink Panther" and "Land of the
u.t.?tt
As one affiliate e:recutive put it during a break in the
meetlnga, "We'd like notl!lng better than to do Shakespeare
and O'Neill and to be really proud of the line shows we were
(alttill(! on the air. But that isl'l what wr audience wants to
watdl. We do the best we can."
·

delegates supporting the
President are e:a:pected to be
announced by the middle of
nelt week.
Ford schedul.ed a White
House meeting today with
New York delegates, most of
whom already are committed
to him. Five of New York's
delegates are uncommitted.
Maine Gov .
James
Longley, a former Democrat
who won. election as an
independent, visited Ford at
the While House arid later
spoke out for the President
and against Reagan.
"I can't think. of anything
that would bring a third party
into being quicker than for
the Republican Party to

•'

•: .

...

commlt
suicide
by Reagan camp. Spencer aaid
nominating someone other he had found four "soft"
than President Ford," Religan backers he hopes wiU
Longley 1!8id.
switch to Ford.
The
Reagan
camp
Ford directed CIA Director
announced , tha t
two George Bush to give Carter a
uneommmitted Virginia background briefing on
delegates
Richard intelligence and foreign
Obershain and George· policy situations - a
McMath - ·had switched to customary procedure In
Reagan. However, both had presidential elections. Carter
been counted lor some time wiU be briefed In Plains ntlt
by UPI as leanlng to Reagan. Wednesday.
James ·Baker, Ford's chief
delegate hunter, said the
TIME CHANGED
announc~~ent came as ''no
The wedding of Neva
· surpriSe.
. Bailey and Denver Curtis will
Stuart Spencer, Ford 's takeplaceat4p.m. July3lat
campa1gn chief, returned the Chester Methodist
from Oklahoma, where _all36 Church , instead of 2 p.m . as
delegates are counted Ill the announced earlier.

Glenn said that more !ban jill!
unemployed s~J~nd to gain trom the
since It containS 1 feature
GleM and Sen. Edmund Muskle,
which provides direct assistance
CCllllmunltles suffering trom hllh """''·
ployment (over six per cent).
·
"Many Olllo munictpallUes have had
· to resort 1o major, aoo ill aoane cuet
dangerous, cuts to balance lhel\' budaeta,"
dienn said. "The health and safety of theae
communi Ues have surrered'becaue of the
recession, which strikes hardest .at In·
dustrlai states !!Uch as ours.''
;,

By AL R(}&amp;'ilTER Jr.
UPI Sclenee Editor
PASAD.ENA, CaUl. (UPI)
- Mars really has ·a pink sky
and not the Ught blue color
displayed in the first color
photograph sent to Earth
from the Viking 1 Martian
robot, scientists said today.
They also reported a
problem has developed in the
otherwise spectacularly
successful e:rploratory
project
Viking's
seismometer has jammed. It
was designed to detect matsqu.akes aoo in turn giVe
scientists a geojlhysical look
into Mars' interior.
Viking I today was adding
to the rapidly increasing
storeoouse of knowledge it is
building. Today's activities
included the transmission of
five more black and white
photos from the surface.
In the first weather report
radioed back from the threelegged observatocy, Viking 1
found light easterly winds in
the afternoon shifting to
southwesterly after midnlght
with
a
maximum
temperature of 22 degrees
below zero Fahrenheit.
Dr. James Pollack said the
discovery that Mars has a
pink instead of blue sky was
made after a careful analysis
of the color balance of the
red, green and blue Images
radioed back from Viking. He
said a slight ground
calibration error was
respoosible for an unnatural
bluish tint ID the final pictw:e.

·
. ace of M.ars
. · , howe·
Th e surl
ver, is. rus.IY· hued . Pollack
'said, in fact, that it~ reddish
color of tiny dust particles in
the "air" that gives the sky
the pink color·
Dr. Seymour Hess of
Florida St.&lt;lte Unlversity said
the first Martian weather
report was based on ·data
gathered during Vlk;n•'s
first
-'D
day on the planet.
"Light winds from the east
in the late afternoon
. d f changing
th
to 1ig~t wm s rom e
.S:Outhwest after midrilght,"
T~perature ranged from
minus 122 degrees F. just
after dawn, to minus 22

the winds
fluctuatin g and " that's
exactly Lwha t winds are
supposed to do in any sensible
airnosphere."
Lou Kingsland, deputy
.V'~ing mission director, 1!8id
· ther.e were a number of
possibilities · for
the
seiSmometer problem ,
ranging from a com)lllter
mixup to OCI&gt;ken electrical

wiring&gt;

l

.

He said he was hopeful
engineers would be able to
pinpoint the difficulty and
send radio commands to
Viking that might correct it.
In another development,
project officials decided
Wednesday to target the
Viking 2 spacecraft, now
about 2 million miles from
Mars, toward a Iandini! in a'

I

111

COOKER.fMNERS

Cold Pack Canners
Foley Food Mills

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Jar Wrenches

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LIK~ THE ZEORS
PITI'SBURGH UPI Larry Demery says he was .
aware he bad a nQohitter
«olng against ·the HoiiBton
Astros. " I was aware of It
(the nQohlt bid} · from the
lirst inning w~en I got them
out 1·2·3," said the Plttor
burgh
rlghlhaader
Wednesday night after the
Pirates had swept a
doubleheader from the
Astros by scores of 5-I and
1-1 . Outfielder Jose Cruz
spoiled Demery's bid for
fame with a clean single
with two oul in the seventh
IMing ol the nightcap.
Demery, making iili ·- ·
fourth start of the seaSGn,
said visions 'of a nQohltter
dance ill his head when he
approaches the pitcher's
mound. " When you go out
there, all zeros are up on
the scoreboard and you just
try to k~ep 11 tblit way as ,

lung us you can, " he said.
The young Pirate
tlghthunder, now 6•3 ,
ii•lrled 8 nifty %-hitter
·
through 8 2·3 illnlngs. But
the Astros scored a run and .
hmded the bases wllh two
out In the ninth and Dave
Giusti was summoned from
the bullpen to put out the
lire.

und Com'nover showed.
Don Adams and Faithful
Margie returned $18.20 on the
1-1 dally double ~nd there
were 159 winnlng tickets on
the 2-6-5 combination of
Rysville, Base Fiddle and
Five And Cost in the loth race
trifecta, each of them worth
$33:i.40.
Attendance was 4,402. The
handle was $464,660.

Welfai-e programs get
CPI rated increases ·
CHICAGO- School lunch,
breakfast, milk and day care
programs will receive
payments in line with the
change in the Consumer
Price Index (CPI), the U. S.
Department of Agriculture
has annoWJCed.
~'
.
The adjustments, effective
July 1, reflect the 3.125
percent increase in the CPI
for the 6 month period,
December through May, 19'16.
The increased payments
assist schools and institutions
which participate in the
National School Lunch ,
School Breakfast, Special
Milk, and Child Care Food
Programs. The national
minimum average value of
commodities donated for the'
National School . Lunch
Program was alsO increased.
In .the National School
·Lunch Program, the national
average payment to StaU!s,
used in turn by schools ar.d
institutions to help defray
food costs for each lunch
served, wiU be increased
from 12.5 cents to 13 cents.

Within that average, States commodities - per lunch to
are authorized to vary the be made available under the
rate of reimbursement up to a National School Lunch
maximum of 19 cents a lunch. Program and the Ollld Care
Previously, the ceiling wu Food Program for tlie period'
18.5 cents.
July 1, 1976, to September 30,
The additional average 1977, wiU be 11.75 cents.. This
payment to States for lunches is a 6.9 percent increase over
served to needy children wiU ' the value of commodities for
be increased ,by 1.75 cen\s to fiscal year 1976. It is based on
48.5 cents for a reduced1JI'ice the percent increase in the
lunch and 58.5 cents (or a free food away from home series
lunch.
of the CPI during the period,
Th~ maximum reim- June 1975 to May 1976.
bursement Slates may pay
The adjusted rate of
schools and institutions lor a reimbursement per half pint
reduced-price lunch is 76.5 . of milk served under the
cents aoo for a free lunch is Special Milk Program will be
86.5 cents.
6 cents for paying children in
Under the School Break- fiscal year 1917, an Increase
fast Program, the national of 6.9 percent over fiscal year
average payinent will be 1976. The paymen~ to schools
increased by .50 cents to 10.5 and Institutions for milk
cents.The additional average served to needy children will
payment fot each reduceq- remain at the purchase price
price breakfast, which has of the milk.
been 19 cents, will be inThe . rates of pay'"ent
creased to 19.5 cents. The amounced are scheduled to
additional average payment appear in the Federal
lor a free breakfast, which IU!gister of Tuesday, July 20
has heen 25.25 cents, wiU be and became effective July 1.
increased to 26 cents.
Maximum rates of reim,,. ••., """"n
. bursement States may pay
..vonororHr
schools and institutions
~::,:::;:..,.
remain at &lt;10 cents for each
CHISm,, ••-•&amp;•
1 reduced-price breakfut and
..... ••·
45 cents for each free break_,""''"c"
r
(hy lrlltw
ast .
MllthH •n, ••..,. ~eturll.,. • .,. '
States earn payments ln the
'""
"""'
••
,
..
,
,...,.,..
'
•
·
Child
Care Foo d Prograrn at
m ec-, ,,., ,...,.1, Ohio 417... .
au.ln•H Offlc• Phone "1·11H.
the same levels 88 they dO
••••'"'-·
"'·'"'·
Wider
the school lunch and
a.c.M ,... .-..... ,.w ..
- . , . ""'"·
school breakfast programs.
· _,_,....,. _..,,,. Payment.l for mldofllornillg
w...o ....... . _ , , .........
,,...m.,.. ......,._ ...,., ,., ,.,,,.. an d' ml d·a f ternoon anac ks

r--------- .

We're ofterlng this watch
&lt;
two ways. It's an excellent . ~
value, Precision jeweled .
1
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A
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sweep second, full numeral ~
dial end unbreakable
mainspring. Water and
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MAIN STREET

1258

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Middleport

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••
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:"~.:!t:i~...!..":.:;: cents.

BILL FlETCHER

•

GOESSl£R'S

POMEROY

Norma ~

made his fifth start
of the s~ason after hill ill·
fated venture ID the mound
. against .the Mets that first
week in May.
Norm an celebrated his
return to the starting rotation
by blanking the St. Louis Cardinals, W .
"Do you think Norman.
might have been calling me a
few nasty names behind
closed doors during the lime
between those two starts?"
asked Anderson.
"It's really great to be a
genius," added the Reds'
manager, his grin widening.
Outside of that game
against the Mets in May
Norman's only other Joss this
season has he en to Houston,
3-2.
Norman 's vi c tory
Wednesday night gave him a
30-7 lifetime mark at
River!ron t Stadium.
"See, I've won my 30
games before Randy Jones

~

. ~' .
'

h·f
. . :' ,
.
I .: .:' ~

(of San Diego ) only It tool me
four years ," cracked
Norman.
NaturaUy Norman wasn 'I
happy about the.lenghty span
between starts earlier this
season.
"But," said the Reds' lefty
charitably', "I have been
terrible on occa,iOI!S so I
can't say Sparky hasn't given
me a chance ... overall fair to
me."
" But,' '
he
added,
meanlngfully, "sometimes I
don't Ul)derstand things he
does. I'mhappy here, though,
so I'm not gonna ask
questions~ II

..

,ui

.·

'

.

'

:

.

'·

$12.50
AND

RECAPPABL£
CASING

•

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

In Wednesday's game, Joe
Morgan rapped out a single
and a double, scored oilerun,
drove home another and stole
three bases to lead the
offense as the Reds tagged
Met lefty Jon Matlack with
hill fourth loss against 10
victories.

992-7161
Middleport; 0.

Kaat records 245th
•
career wzn, 5 to 1
Larry Bowa had two. Garber

earned his eighth save.
Cincinnati defeated New
York, 4-0, Los Angeles scored
a 7-li, 10-innlng triumph over
St. Louis, Pittsburgh swept
Houston, 5-l and 4-1, San
Francisco edged Chicago, 2-1,
and Montreal nipped Atlanta,
4-3, in the other National
League games.
Dodgers 7, Cards 6:
Pinch-hitter Ted Sizemore
singled home Bill Russell
with one out in the lOth ·
inn!Jtg, giving Los Angeles its
victory over St. Louis. The
Cardinals had lied the score
in the seventh on a runscoring triple by ex-Dodger
Joe Ferguson. Charlie
Hough, .who worked two
shutout innings in. relief,
received credit for his eighth
. win against four losses.
Pirates 5-4, Astros H :
BiU Robinson hit a two-run
homer and Jerry . Reuss
pitched a nine-hitter to earn

his lOth win for Pittsburgh in
its ojlener with Houston. Then
Larry Demery pitched a nohitter for 6 2-3 innlngs and a
two-hitter lor 6 2-3 )Jefore
yielding to Dave Giusti as the
Pirates completed the sweep.
Richie Zisk homered for the
Pirates.
Giants 2, Cubs 1:
Bobby Murcer drove in the
tying run with a " bunt
double" and Chris Speier
knocked in the winning tally
with a sacrifice fly in the
ninth inning as San Francisco
rallied lor its victory over
Chicago . John Montefusco
pitched a threH1itter and
struck out six, raising his
record to 9-8 while Bruce
Sutter was lhe loser.
Expo&amp; 4, sravea 3: '
Del Unser scored the
winning run on Larry
Parrish's infield out in the
seventh inning to give
Montreal its triu,mph. Run·
scoring hits by pinch-!litters
Jose ,Morales and Tim Foli
enabled the Expos to Ue the
score in the sixth inning. Jim
Wynn .homered for Atlanta.

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Hours: 7:00 to 5:00 Monday thru Friday
·
7:00io4:00 Saturda

..

Visitors rout Reedsville team
Harris, and Danny Leonard .
Gelling singles were : Roush,
Beeler, Clay, Davis, Eason ,
Grant, Harris, Keith Kar·
schnik , Leonard, Billy
McLaughlin, M. Randolph ,
and Eric Sim .
For the losers, Mi tch
Barringer socked two triples
while Charles Jones, Jeff
Johnson and Burl Putnam
each got two doubles . Mike
Marlin got a double , and
Johnson, Barringer, Jeremy
Barber, Pu tnam, Marlin ,
Travis N., Orville Randolph,
Tren t Upton, and Ronnie
Putnam each got singles.
c
457 61"-25
R
50S 02- 12

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, JULY24th

ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;
K. V. COMPUTING DEPT.
OF
UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER

OPEN TO PUBLI

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Huntington

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'

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II wasn't until June 13 that

RETREADS

DAN'S

Band ::

JULY

remalnat5.25cents. Reduced
priced
... will be' bn
111acowo
re •
bursed an aOdiUooal 10.75
cen ts' a'nd ,__,
u ~mac ka -'"
ww be
reirnburled an addltionll 16

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - victory over the Mets
Johnny Bench has a Wednesday night.
nickname for
Fredle
"Aren't you exaggerating a
Norman.
little ?" Anderson was
"I call him 'Fredie Fill· asked . 1
in'," said Bench Wednesday
"The way we were hitting
night alter Norman blanked and scortng runs .when
the New York Mets, 4-0, while Norman wasn't starting ,"
yielding only four hits.
eJclalmed Anderson. "He'd
· ·That's because it's usuaUy won six of nine starts easy.''
only after Oncinnati Reds'
Anderson grinned.
manager Sparky Anderson
"Someone's been wrong on
becomes disenchanted wilh Norman," said the Reds'
every other possible starter manager. "I don't want to
on 'the swff that Norman mention the dwnb qleep's
becomes a member of the name, but he ·probably wears
regular rotation.
a No. 10 on his uniform."
"I don 't think that
That's right, Anderson's
nickname is so funny," said number is 10.
Anderson.
Anderson placed Norman
"While Norman was . out on the shelf after the Red
there pitching tonight," 1!8id · lefty's fourth start of the
Anderson, "I was thinking season. That was against the
that 11 I'd just run him out . New Yotk Mets. May 4.
there on the mound nine more Norman didn't give up any
limes than I have, he'd have hits in the two !Mings he
at least 14 victories now.''
pitched, but he did Issue 'five
That 's six more than walks. It was Norman's first
Norman owned alter his loss of the season after three
victories.

Yanks settle in third place

Continuing Our ••• ..

..... - ,...·"·'·'""·
.......ion ,.te.: .... _ . . ~
_,.. - . ,. - · ,_
- · . , ...... - ....... ••'· _,
_,..
u. 11,.,
. . .. . . .·
. _.-w. "•··
can.
•-· ,....., " " - ..,..., .....

Norma'n .blanks Mets
4-0 on four-hitter

UPI Sports Writer
Quick now, what pitcher is
likely to become the major
leagues ' next 300-game
winner ljlld thus earn a
virtually automatic ticket to
the Hall of Fame?
It's Jim Kaat of the
CINCINNATI (UPI )
Pl!iladelphia
Phillies, and asTerronsa, with Richard
sorted
points
West, in a
Morgan up, covered the. six
furlongs in the leatw-ed ninth career that began back in
race at . River Downs 1959.
Kaat, 37, won his loth game
Wednesday in 1:11 to win by a
length over Cornlsh Flower. of the season and the 245th of
Terronsa paid $5.110, $2.80 his career Wednesday when
end $2.60. Cornlsh Flower the Phillles scored . a 5-1
paid $2.40 and $2.20 aoo the triumph over the San Diego
show horse, Liberated Ms., Padres.
Kaat aUowed seven hits
paia $3.20. The 1-11 daily
end
one run in eight innlngs
double of Les Jambes and
Wednesday,
raising his
Restless Melissa paid $41!.
record
to
10-4,
with
the nlnthA crowd of 5, 740 bet
inning
closeout
reljef.of
Gene
$449,334.
Garber. ))ave Freisleben was
San Diego's loser.
Tommy Hutton's three-run
COLUMBUS (UPI)
homer ' in the third · inning
Steady Shadow came on gave the Phillles a 5-1 lead
strong down the stretch to and was the big blow of their
win the featured eighth race attack. Jay Johnstone added
by a nose over Frisky C. three hits to the offense and
Robby at Scioto Downs
Wednesday night.
"J:he winner, driven by
Michael Zeller to a 2:02 4-5
. mile, paid $4.80, $4.00 and
In recent Tee-Ball aciion,
NORTHFIELD, Ohio and paid $16.40, $7 and $7.40. $3.60. Frisky C. Robby visiting Chester routed
(UPI)- Owner William LaUi Cold Box showed and favored returned $6.60 and $4.60 and Reedsville 25-12. Hitters lor
the show horse, Way Chuck ,
guided True G.B. to an upset, Gaylord HiU was fourth.
the winners · were Brian
paid
$5.20.
· ;;; tlu'eequarter-length victory
A near-record perfecta
The
nightly
qouble Beeler with a home run,
· ~&lt;• over Holly Ahilahurat in
payoff was recorded in the
Mitkey Randolph and Jeff
:': ..Wednesday nlght's featured · seventh race when Fashion combination of Mona Blaze Roush wi th trip les, and
:: '$3,000slxth race at Northfield . T., a 45-1 shot, and Tree (9) and Pestee (3) waS worth double-hillers were Beeler,
•),Park.
Time, a 19-1 shot, kicked off a . $156.40.
A crowd of 4,168 wagered Todd Clay, Kyle Davis, Huey
~ The live-year-old mare
1-li combination that returned $234,698.
Eason , Michael Grant , Ma tt
covered the mile in 2:06 1-li $1,304.00- secood only to a
over a rain-soaked, good oval $2,442.40 payoff registered
this past spring. '
. . , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ In tjle loth race trlfect.&lt;l , the
4·10-7 cqmbination paid ·
Genuine
$124.20.
Attendance was 2,952. The
Leather Belts
handle was 130'1 ,906.
In a final game of the home run and two singles
"
L.P tP.R.S. Little League, the while Roger Kovalchik
WORK SHOES
Pomeroy Yankees ended up socked a homer and Mike
.
NORTH
RANDALL,
Ohio
in third place )ly romping Whitl atch three doubles.
, By Shebbygan
' (UPI) - Larry Antus guided over the visiting Syracuse Scott Harrison and Shawn
R.C. Krickit to victory in Reds 14-2.
•WESTERN BOOTS
Gilmore each got two singles
.
Wednesday's featured $4,700
Pitchers J. R. Wamsley to round out the hitting.
By . Texas &amp; Justin
ninth race at Thistledown .
Teaford and Salser shared
and Scott Harrison limited
The wlMer covered the the Reds to just three hits the losing mound duties while
mile and 40 yards In 1:42 4-5 while striking out eleven . Salser also got one of the hits,
In Middleport ,
and paid $6.20, $3.60 and $2.60. Ronnie Richards led the a triple. Brian Allen got the
Waitinglnthewlngs placed Yankees at the plate with a other two both singles.

How they ran

.

a nonnal amount of sexual mone. Having demonstrated
activity helps to prevent this the accumulation of this
problem.
fraction of tlie hormone in the
The acuU! infections have gland itself there is now hope
nothing to do with chronic that it 1\iU be possible to
prostate trouble that is more block its action or storage
common in middle;~ged and and in this way correct or
older men. The chronic in- prevent pro'state
flammalion
'may
be enlargement. This might be
associated with a variety of done without affecting the
organisms bur'oRen the real function of the other fractipns
cause of the inRammation is of male hormone. At present
not known. It is doubtful that no medicine is available that
sexual activity either harms will do this. .
or helps such a condition.
1 am sending you The
There is now evidence that Health Letter 1-', Prostate
the enlargement of the • Gland to give you more in·
prostate that causes ob- formation · on this subject.
structlon of the bladder IS Others who desire more ·in·
reluted to the accumulation formation on the prostate can
of one chemical type of send a long, stamped, self·
testosterone, the male hor· addressed envelope with' '50
cents in it. Address your
letter to me in care of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1want
to know if a vasectomy
causes prostate gland
trouble? And once a man has
had prostate surgery does
that mean no more sex?
DEAR READER - No, a
vasectomy · will not cause
prostate gland trouble. In
fact vasectomies were
originally done when the
prostate was operated upon
to try to prevent inDa~ation of the testicles as
a complication of the
procedure. All a vasectomy
will do is prevent sperm cells
from reaching the prostate.
The gland will continue lj&gt;
function as it always did or
will have without the
vasectomy.
Most men can return to
normal sexual function after
proalate surgery. The type of
surgery dOes make some
difference. The problem is
that many men who have·
sur11ery are already at an age
or have enough other
medical problems that they
may be near the end of their
acUve ~~e:lllalllfe anyway. In
which cue the many may
incorrectly
think that 'lapPOMEROY
potence after surgery wu
because of the operaUon.

.CANNERS

MIRROUTIC
PRESSURE

By MILTON RlatMAN
UPI Sporu Editor

' • I

..

~·

MD

••

Nadia Comaneci steals spotlight

$35

What causes. prostate trouble?

PRESm

Sport Parade

MONTREAL (UPI) .... and a little child shsil lead them.
She hu here already.
Single.handedly, this 14-yearold, figurine-like Romanian
marvel has sprinkled these politically troubled Olympic
Games with her own unique brand of stardust, adding a sorely
.
needed extra dimension to them with such an · lncr~dibly
::::~-=:~:::::::::::~::::::.:::::::~:::::::::;::&lt;:=:~::::::::~:::::::::::::~:::::::::;::~:=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::: :::::::::::::;:::::::::::;;:i:!;:;:;::::::::.:;:;::::~:::::::::~:::::;:;::::::::.spectacular performance that it has,to be ranked among the
mQII remarkable in athletic history, amateur or profession~!.
Now that she has scaled the MI. Everest of all gymnasts,
winning a gold medal aoo making her name a household word
.,
the world over with five perfect scores inside 72 hours, where .
By MARTIN LADER
gold medal ill the Olympics
Asked if she'd ever ,been ·
nobody elle in the Olympics ever was able to achieve even one ,
UPI Sports Writer
when she swept to the , nervous in her life, Nadia
. \,. there may be no other place for blue-eyed, pony-tailed Nadia
MONTREAL (UPI)
women ' s allaround admltted,''Once,whenhru
Coma nee! to go but to some higher league.
SmaU and skinny, nerveless gymnastics championship fighting with my brother I
Nobody can possibly stay with her in this one.
and nonchalant, she's barely Wednesday night. In the was nervoWI."
•
. "She's a level above all the other gymnasts In the world right
.• JlQW," eaya Bart Conner of Morton Grove, IU., a member of the
men's gymnastics team. "She's something else, man.''
.:"' '" Bart Conner trains 12 months a year and is ga-ga about
orlh
1 u d- in and hill' sentencea consist of three days of competition
on their senses and the record
.,':• gymnastics, so maybe he isn't completely objective, Those
more ~-n tembe
ern a tu e
.
.
short,
c.
l
lpped
words.
Russia's
Olga
Korbut;
the
books, is 11\e continued
ly
.•
:~ who serve as judges in thegymastic competition are. They call
ear""'e .,.,p
r.
Let be w
· hatever may be in Nadia .Comanecl of 1972, s~cessolthemen lwln)plers
~rthern land•~· site
:
:
....:emu they see 'em, and Annelise Bottcher of West Germany,
»&lt;&gt; , N
Q"'
the next 11 days, there's only
and the U.S. basketball learn.
who has been judging nearly 10 years, says she has never seen .
.was selected because one super star as far as these =din~::~~~=~ place
The swimmers llllde" It 7,"'
1he
likes of Nadia Comanect before.
scienti:lts believe there is a · 01
.
· ifl Uy
t 8
nt
ymp1c
Games
are · Until this week, no one ever lor-7, ss weU as.lS of the 21
81
~
"She's
the best," 1!8YS the veteran judge, who awarded her a
orgn tcanthe greatheer 1mouol concerned. You'll have to had received a single perfect total medals awarded 'thus
,
.
perfect
10.0
Wednesday on the balance beam. ''It was the first
· wa er re Ill
orm
1ook twice.to believe it, but at mark in the Olympt'cs, and far, when Matt Voce! Jed a I·' '
r
t
th
t
, time I had ever voted a 10 for unybody on the beam. She
perma ros
an . a an fi r
..
ve eel and 88 pounds, Nadia the scoreboard at the Forum, 2-3 sweep in the IOOorneter
equatorl·a1 Sl·te that a•deserved it. Her performance was perfect. As perfect as
..... was Comanecl has '---e in the
erO • ..o~. whl-"'
considered for Viking 2.
""""""
wasn 'I even geared to buU Y, ,ouo"u"' ''" the I ;'.' Jlumanly possible. She's also a nice girl. She wprks very hard
The
space of a few )lays the most register a 10.0.To•'•ht,it will .BOO-meter freestyle relay
0r
"· llnd she's unpretentious."
'
presence
about athlete in aU of be center stage'""
even in th
form of i water,
wJd •·!ked
again for teem ·brok e the world record
.- The extraordinarily gifted Roaruinian girl had scored
g 11 :
ceV?kwi , America, if not the world.
Nadia Wl'th an opportun1'ty to ii had set d""'"" the mornlng
another perfect 10.0 some moments before on the uneven
rea y mcrease 1 ng s
w u"'
'"the
Nadia,
14,
became
the
·
pick
up four more gold trials with a time .of 7 .
chances of findlng "'" on
parallel bars where her dazzling dlsmoimt was such an eyered planet
youngest }!i!rson ever to win a medals In individual evants. 'minutes, 23. ~ seconds.:·.
lllillker thet the capacity crowd of 16,000 in the Forum stood up
·
..
on its feet as one and gave her a thundering ovation which she
~
ackno'Wledged with II happy .smile and an appreciative wave or
her arms. .
; How do you score a perfect lO,Oin gymnastics? The rule book
!lays you have' to "stir the judges' souls" to do that. Nadia
Comanecl did that.
a
a
'
a
.
When the all-around competition was over and she had been
awarded her gold medal, Nadia accepted the whole thing with
almost professional composure.
Her feeUngs?
"Same as every day," she said, in a tiny, squeaky voice.
By DANIEL P. HOSE
stricter than necessary by controversy between • the "Our air is ex ceDent."
"Nothing
special."
CIJARLESTON, W. Va . law would have on West . public and private sectors on
The air quaUty In the
"' Wu she sure. of winning?
(UPI) - Gov. Arch Moore Virginia.
air quality standards. He said Northern Panhandle Is ques" , "Yes, I was sure. I knew if I worked hard, I would win."
disclosed Wednesday he has
'i'be governor cited ''not he felt it incumbent on him to tionable, Moore said, dUng
_. 'Mist about Olga Korbut? Had Nadia been inspired by what
issued an aecutiw order only the impact on families," act as governor when debate the high sulfur content of the
• the Soviet girl had done in the last Olympics at Munich?
directing \hat air quality · oot ~n counties which now between public and private roal in that pari of the state. ·
,,.,,· Nadia Comaneci waited patiently for the int~rpreter tO
standards in !he st.a\1! not . receive revenue under a new · sectors reaches the point
The governor said West .
;, .repeat the question in Romanian. Then her left eyebrow went
exceed
the
national coal tax revenue-sharilig which it has in this case.
V'll'ginia was among the first
I
s~andards so that West PJa n.
·
... .' lip a b't1 •
At a public hearing states to move aggressively
'::
·
"No,
I
was
not
illspired
by
her,"
she repUed evenly.
V'll'ginia coal will be useable.
"The total revenue flow of Tuesday, the commission · ,m air quaUty control, and
:·
·
But
she
did
keep
an
eye
on
her
Russian
opponent to see how
Moore said he was acting the state would suffer," heard arguments on wbelher claimed the establishment of
..
the
21-year-old
Korbut
made
out
on
the
beam.
Nadia was clear
under a recently enacted Moore said, if more stringent it
should
approve the 10 air quality regions in
:4 on the other side of the arena at the time, still practicing
state Jaw which says no stste air quality standards are modificiltlons in the present the state was a pioneer step in
:·' cartwheels after her perfect score on the uneven hars.
&lt;'ffilmiSSI'1Jn or agency can imposed in the state.
the nation.
air standards.
. Without heing obvious about it, she peeked'every so often to
prescribe rules or regulations
Already, Moore said, the
H the stricter air standards
see what score the judges were going to award Kbrbut.
that eltceed the national stan- four-day work week has been were imposed, Moore said, it
FinaUy, the score was flashed on the electric laDy board-9.5.
dard.
ordered in some coaJ regioos would have the effect of
Nadia had to be comforted somewhat by that, but she gave no
"Challenge me if you want as a result of stringent air removing "all of the coal
outward sign that she was.
.
to," the governor told a news standards.
production in West Virginia"
In
the
end,
the
Soviet's
Nelli
Kim
wound
up
with
the silver
...,...,__,but this is the law . Any West Virginia Air u an energy source in West
medal
and
tudmlla
Tourischevar
ariother
Russian
girl who
;;jij"l ~ oj:h~, he Po II uti on Con lro I V'll'ginia and In all places in
was
the.
defending
gold
medalist,
had
to
settle
for
the
bronie.
declared.
Commission , member or the nation have that heve
Olga
Korbut,
who
came
out
of
Munich
everybody's
sweetheart
Moore prefaced the employe not carrying out the West Virginia standards.
·
four years ago, carile out only fifth this time.
disclosure of his ezecutive ezecutive order would be in
Referring to a recent report
Now some promoters are taking about bringing Nadia to the
order by commenting at "a position ol suspension or by the Environmental
United States. They know a good thing when they see one.
length on the possible dismissal," Moore stated.
Protection Agency, the
economic effect
that
The governor said he wu governor said in nlne of the
imposition of standards moved to act in the wake of state's 10 air quality regions,

k
l
J
d
"
'
~sai~;~:xim:win~~~~ 1r100re · znvo .· es equa -stanua~ , ·. ·
l
JY/ · TJ'.•
de~;~
~ere ru e or w est ·r zr!Y' n UJ s a~r
e .,

.

secretions and when it is
stimulated frequently it
forms more secretions.
Young men at the peak of
their sex drive tend to form
the most secretions. When the
secretions accumulate, the
gland becomes boggy or
swoUen from dlstentioo. In
this condition it is ripe for
bacteria to · set up
housekeeping and cause an
acute infection. The infection
'11rouble1
'J• DEAR. READER -'. There in this instance ts'l something
like an abscess. It may cause
: is a lot of confusion abo11t the chiiiJ and fever. When the
; role of ae:xual activity ill bacteria are ellmlnated by
.prostate gland trouble. That nature's owh defense
' is partly because "prostate mechanisms or by . proper
gland trouble" Covers a Jot of antibiotic treatment the
dllferent problema.
infecUon and its symptoms
The prostate gland forms disappear. It would seem that

Today's

Mars' sky really pink ~~=!~~~~= ~~~~~~~t~~~ ~~~:ii.SE~s

DR~ LAMB

, llylM•aew:e.E.Lamb,M.D.
' DEAR DR. LAMB- I read
your column on prostate
- gland trouble, but it did not
answer one question. H a
per11011 (who has been a
' diabetic Iince 1965 and is now
16) quit seJt would he increase
, Iii prostate gland trouble,
, which is nearly nothing now?
· I go to the doctor once a year.
; In other words does lack of
• 11e1 cauae prostate gland

'

3- fioe O.Dy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thunday, JUly 22, 1976

Glenn certJJin ovenide action uu right
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Sen. John H.
CleM Jr., 1).()1\lo, praised the Senate's
override of President Ford's veto of the
Public Works Bill Wednesday, saying the
bill Is "important stop-gap legialalion."
"The overwhelming margin of
Wednesday 's override vote fudicat.es that
the Senate is firmly on record in favor of
helping jobless men and women get back
oo their feet, thereby helping the enUre
economy, " Glenn said. The Senate
overrode Ford's veto of the $3.95 billion
Pu\)llc Works Bill by a 73 to 24 vote.
Democrats said the blil would create more
than 300,000 jobs.

..

~ "Seemefor
! Homeowners
•

:,Insurance from
:State Farm- the
·world\ largest~
•
'
•
•
••

,,at. ,. ••

A•

Pony hall action
•

Eastern hung onto second
place i~ Meigs-Mason County
Pony League action by
squeaking by' host Middleport
3-2 Tuesday night. Winning
pitcher Danny Spencer paved
the way by fanning 13 and
walking just four while
socking three singles to lead
the hitters . Cliff Longenett
got two singles,. and Brljin
Bissell, Jeff Goebel, Ru!lly
Wigal, and Greg Wiga~ each
got one single. Their record is
now 10-3.
Mike Hilidy pitched a fine
game ln a losing cause,
striking out six and walking
just one. Roy Bareswilt
cracked two singles for
Middleport, and Terry
Gardner, Greg Becker, and
Hindy each got' one single .
Their record is 3-4.

In another Pony League
game, host Racine blanked
• -l.illt•RUOCI aeidlbor,
Rutland l:Z.O behind a fine
' Slate nrmislbere.
pitching performance by
~ s1111 Fn ' " " CmaiiY ~
Mike HuddJeston who fanned
: .,.,. ~~~~u:·-•goo. '""'" p 7570 ten and walked only unc .
· Danny Dudding crashed -.u
IIUUUNU

double to lead the hitters
while John Rees, Dave
Robinson, Tom Allen, Terry
Clark, Huddleston, and John
Pape each got one single.
That raised their record to 4-7
while RuUand dropped to 4-8 .
Van Wilford took the loss
and teamed · with Dink
Kennedy to fan ·seven but
issue eleven walks. Kennedy
smashed a triple, but the only
other hits were singles by
Kim
Dewhurst, Mike ·
Wayland, und Todd Showden.

BELKNAP

DIGGING

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.~

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You oan avoid costly damage and utility
service interruptions by calling 800-362·
2764, toll-free, 48 hours before you dig. If
necessary, our .people will be glad to locate
our cable and mark the location for you.

'•
Columbia Gas, Columbus Southern; Ohio
Bell and AT&amp;T Long Lines ar11 all member•
. of the Ohio Utllltle9 Protection Service.
this means you only have to make one call
to notily the utiliti~s of your digging plant•
I

-In the Area
It's

BEFORE

Fiber Aluminum
Roofing Paint

MASON, W. VA.
HOURS:
Man., Thuri. &amp; Sit.
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.

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\

�.·

'

---

2:.. The DaUv SentinPJ. Mirltllenbrt-Pcmerov. 0 .. Thtll'ldav. Julv ~. 1976

·..•·

Carter in strategy lneetings
President Ford, working
Ualted Prest Iatemallollll
Jlnuny Carter, ending a from the 'White House, and
stay of several days at hia Ronald Reagan, busy oo hill
Plalna, Ga ., home, planned to · Callfornla ranch, kept up
return to New York, the scene their search for delegatea in
ol hill trlum(il at Ialit week's the GOP presidential race.
Democratic National Aldea to both candidates 1!8id
they would have more
Conventloo.
delegates
to aMounce before
The
Democratic
Ute
end
of
the week .
·
presidential nominee
The
latest
UPI
count
·
scheduled a private luncheoo
today In New York with ~ showed 1,114 delegates .
pledged rir leaning to Ford - ·
group ol businessmen.
Meanwhile hill staff assem· 16 short of the nomination bled at HUlon Head Island, and 1,062 . in ·Reagan's
S.C., lor three days of •column . Eighty ~ three
strategy sessions. Sen. delegates were
Walter Moodsle, his running uncommitted.
Peter Kaye, a spokesman
mate, will join the group
·
for
the Ford campaign
Friday before he and Carter
committee,
said
"a
get together Saturday nlght
subst;mtlal
number"
of
new
at Plains.

TV. • .in Review
NEW YORK (UPI) -Television in the future will depend
less on formal seaSons while devoting more time to longform
entertainment, and :wJU depend · Increasingly ·on · madefortelevlslon fibns instead of made-for-theater movies.
It's been.fashionable ever since George OrweU wrote "1984"
to use that date as a peg for predicting the future, bytthe seers
at NBC are looking beyood to 1985 with their projections of
television trends.
Apresentatioo made recently to the NBC affiliates had this
to say about the future:
"We expect with some confidence that the notion of 'seasons' ·
wiU gradually fade away. lnatead, shows wiU prernlere at
varying Urnes, scattered throughout the year.
"By 1985, we expect that halt of the entertainment schedule
wiH corudst of long-form programs - specials, major sports,
fewer movies bUt of blocllbuster proportioos and more madefor-TV films, mlniset!es and special even~.''
The em(ilasls Oil made.fortele~lon moviea is a ·must
becalise the Inventory of old movies that could be shown on
television without bringing a blusb to the censor's cheek has
about run out. They aren't making feature films fast enough
these days, nor is the subject matter necessarily what the
audience wants to contemplate in its living room.
The NBC projections of what the American way of life will
beCII!le by 19115 indicate other changes, with the possibilities
for daytime and Saturday lritriguing.
" In 1960," according to NBC, "311 per cent of all women over
16 were in the labor force. In 1975, this had climbed to' 46 per
cent. The p-oportioo will contirwe to rise, and in the mid-'in!
wiU reach 50 per cent, a total of 45milllon working women. ·
"While many of them will not be available to television on
weekdays, IIley will lMi at home 00 weekends by the millions ~
particularly Saturday mrirnlng. With the tela live decline in the
number of children in the populetion, this may offer new
directions in Saturday and Sunday morning programing.'' ·
To the parent of today; tomorrow might sowld like a utopian
Saturday morning without "The Flintstones." DM 't be too
sure - after all, "The Fllntstones" and an incredible number
of other p-ograms with grade«hool mentality orlginaUy were
intended u adult entertainment. Would so~ operas and game
lhows be an Improvement on "Pink Panther" and "Land of the
u.t.?tt
As one affiliate e:recutive put it during a break in the
meetlnga, "We'd like notl!lng better than to do Shakespeare
and O'Neill and to be really proud of the line shows we were
(alttill(! on the air. But that isl'l what wr audience wants to
watdl. We do the best we can."
·

delegates supporting the
President are e:a:pected to be
announced by the middle of
nelt week.
Ford schedul.ed a White
House meeting today with
New York delegates, most of
whom already are committed
to him. Five of New York's
delegates are uncommitted.
Maine Gov .
James
Longley, a former Democrat
who won. election as an
independent, visited Ford at
the While House arid later
spoke out for the President
and against Reagan.
"I can't think. of anything
that would bring a third party
into being quicker than for
the Republican Party to

•'

•: .

...

commlt
suicide
by Reagan camp. Spencer aaid
nominating someone other he had found four "soft"
than President Ford," Religan backers he hopes wiU
Longley 1!8id.
switch to Ford.
The
Reagan
camp
Ford directed CIA Director
announced , tha t
two George Bush to give Carter a
uneommmitted Virginia background briefing on
delegates
Richard intelligence and foreign
Obershain and George· policy situations - a
McMath - ·had switched to customary procedure In
Reagan. However, both had presidential elections. Carter
been counted lor some time wiU be briefed In Plains ntlt
by UPI as leanlng to Reagan. Wednesday.
James ·Baker, Ford's chief
delegate hunter, said the
TIME CHANGED
announc~~ent came as ''no
The wedding of Neva
· surpriSe.
. Bailey and Denver Curtis will
Stuart Spencer, Ford 's takeplaceat4p.m. July3lat
campa1gn chief, returned the Chester Methodist
from Oklahoma, where _all36 Church , instead of 2 p.m . as
delegates are counted Ill the announced earlier.

Glenn said that more !ban jill!
unemployed s~J~nd to gain trom the
since It containS 1 feature
GleM and Sen. Edmund Muskle,
which provides direct assistance
CCllllmunltles suffering trom hllh """''·
ployment (over six per cent).
·
"Many Olllo munictpallUes have had
· to resort 1o major, aoo ill aoane cuet
dangerous, cuts to balance lhel\' budaeta,"
dienn said. "The health and safety of theae
communi Ues have surrered'becaue of the
recession, which strikes hardest .at In·
dustrlai states !!Uch as ours.''
;,

By AL R(}&amp;'ilTER Jr.
UPI Sclenee Editor
PASAD.ENA, CaUl. (UPI)
- Mars really has ·a pink sky
and not the Ught blue color
displayed in the first color
photograph sent to Earth
from the Viking 1 Martian
robot, scientists said today.
They also reported a
problem has developed in the
otherwise spectacularly
successful e:rploratory
project
Viking's
seismometer has jammed. It
was designed to detect matsqu.akes aoo in turn giVe
scientists a geojlhysical look
into Mars' interior.
Viking I today was adding
to the rapidly increasing
storeoouse of knowledge it is
building. Today's activities
included the transmission of
five more black and white
photos from the surface.
In the first weather report
radioed back from the threelegged observatocy, Viking 1
found light easterly winds in
the afternoon shifting to
southwesterly after midnlght
with
a
maximum
temperature of 22 degrees
below zero Fahrenheit.
Dr. James Pollack said the
discovery that Mars has a
pink instead of blue sky was
made after a careful analysis
of the color balance of the
red, green and blue Images
radioed back from Viking. He
said a slight ground
calibration error was
respoosible for an unnatural
bluish tint ID the final pictw:e.

·
. ace of M.ars
. · , howe·
Th e surl
ver, is. rus.IY· hued . Pollack
'said, in fact, that it~ reddish
color of tiny dust particles in
the "air" that gives the sky
the pink color·
Dr. Seymour Hess of
Florida St.&lt;lte Unlversity said
the first Martian weather
report was based on ·data
gathered during Vlk;n•'s
first
-'D
day on the planet.
"Light winds from the east
in the late afternoon
. d f changing
th
to 1ig~t wm s rom e
.S:Outhwest after midrilght,"
T~perature ranged from
minus 122 degrees F. just
after dawn, to minus 22

the winds
fluctuatin g and " that's
exactly Lwha t winds are
supposed to do in any sensible
airnosphere."
Lou Kingsland, deputy
.V'~ing mission director, 1!8id
· ther.e were a number of
possibilities · for
the
seiSmometer problem ,
ranging from a com)lllter
mixup to OCI&gt;ken electrical

wiring&gt;

l

.

He said he was hopeful
engineers would be able to
pinpoint the difficulty and
send radio commands to
Viking that might correct it.
In another development,
project officials decided
Wednesday to target the
Viking 2 spacecraft, now
about 2 million miles from
Mars, toward a Iandini! in a'

I

111

COOKER.fMNERS

Cold Pack Canners
Foley Food Mills

..

· •

.

f

i

•

GIFT' ·
PRICED ·

UNDER :.:~

Jar Lifters
Jar Wrenches

CH HARDWARE

LIK~ THE ZEORS
PITI'SBURGH UPI Larry Demery says he was .
aware he bad a nQohitter
«olng against ·the HoiiBton
Astros. " I was aware of It
(the nQohlt bid} · from the
lirst inning w~en I got them
out 1·2·3," said the Plttor
burgh
rlghlhaader
Wednesday night after the
Pirates had swept a
doubleheader from the
Astros by scores of 5-I and
1-1 . Outfielder Jose Cruz
spoiled Demery's bid for
fame with a clean single
with two oul in the seventh
IMing ol the nightcap.
Demery, making iili ·- ·
fourth start of the seaSGn,
said visions 'of a nQohltter
dance ill his head when he
approaches the pitcher's
mound. " When you go out
there, all zeros are up on
the scoreboard and you just
try to k~ep 11 tblit way as ,

lung us you can, " he said.
The young Pirate
tlghthunder, now 6•3 ,
ii•lrled 8 nifty %-hitter
·
through 8 2·3 illnlngs. But
the Astros scored a run and .
hmded the bases wllh two
out In the ninth and Dave
Giusti was summoned from
the bullpen to put out the
lire.

und Com'nover showed.
Don Adams and Faithful
Margie returned $18.20 on the
1-1 dally double ~nd there
were 159 winnlng tickets on
the 2-6-5 combination of
Rysville, Base Fiddle and
Five And Cost in the loth race
trifecta, each of them worth
$33:i.40.
Attendance was 4,402. The
handle was $464,660.

Welfai-e programs get
CPI rated increases ·
CHICAGO- School lunch,
breakfast, milk and day care
programs will receive
payments in line with the
change in the Consumer
Price Index (CPI), the U. S.
Department of Agriculture
has annoWJCed.
~'
.
The adjustments, effective
July 1, reflect the 3.125
percent increase in the CPI
for the 6 month period,
December through May, 19'16.
The increased payments
assist schools and institutions
which participate in the
National School Lunch ,
School Breakfast, Special
Milk, and Child Care Food
Programs. The national
minimum average value of
commodities donated for the'
National School . Lunch
Program was alsO increased.
In .the National School
·Lunch Program, the national
average payment to StaU!s,
used in turn by schools ar.d
institutions to help defray
food costs for each lunch
served, wiU be increased
from 12.5 cents to 13 cents.

Within that average, States commodities - per lunch to
are authorized to vary the be made available under the
rate of reimbursement up to a National School Lunch
maximum of 19 cents a lunch. Program and the Ollld Care
Previously, the ceiling wu Food Program for tlie period'
18.5 cents.
July 1, 1976, to September 30,
The additional average 1977, wiU be 11.75 cents.. This
payment to States for lunches is a 6.9 percent increase over
served to needy children wiU ' the value of commodities for
be increased ,by 1.75 cen\s to fiscal year 1976. It is based on
48.5 cents for a reduced1JI'ice the percent increase in the
lunch and 58.5 cents (or a free food away from home series
lunch.
of the CPI during the period,
Th~ maximum reim- June 1975 to May 1976.
bursement Slates may pay
The adjusted rate of
schools and institutions lor a reimbursement per half pint
reduced-price lunch is 76.5 . of milk served under the
cents aoo for a free lunch is Special Milk Program will be
86.5 cents.
6 cents for paying children in
Under the School Break- fiscal year 1917, an Increase
fast Program, the national of 6.9 percent over fiscal year
average payinent will be 1976. The paymen~ to schools
increased by .50 cents to 10.5 and Institutions for milk
cents.The additional average served to needy children will
payment fot each reduceq- remain at the purchase price
price breakfast, which has of the milk.
been 19 cents, will be inThe . rates of pay'"ent
creased to 19.5 cents. The amounced are scheduled to
additional average payment appear in the Federal
lor a free breakfast, which IU!gister of Tuesday, July 20
has heen 25.25 cents, wiU be and became effective July 1.
increased to 26 cents.
Maximum rates of reim,,. ••., """"n
. bursement States may pay
..vonororHr
schools and institutions
~::,:::;:..,.
remain at &lt;10 cents for each
CHISm,, ••-•&amp;•
1 reduced-price breakfut and
..... ••·
45 cents for each free break_,""''"c"
r
(hy lrlltw
ast .
MllthH •n, ••..,. ~eturll.,. • .,. '
States earn payments ln the
'""
"""'
••
,
..
,
,...,.,..
'
•
·
Child
Care Foo d Prograrn at
m ec-, ,,., ,...,.1, Ohio 417... .
au.ln•H Offlc• Phone "1·11H.
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•

GOESSl£R'S

POMEROY

Norma ~

made his fifth start
of the s~ason after hill ill·
fated venture ID the mound
. against .the Mets that first
week in May.
Norm an celebrated his
return to the starting rotation
by blanking the St. Louis Cardinals, W .
"Do you think Norman.
might have been calling me a
few nasty names behind
closed doors during the lime
between those two starts?"
asked Anderson.
"It's really great to be a
genius," added the Reds'
manager, his grin widening.
Outside of that game
against the Mets in May
Norman's only other Joss this
season has he en to Houston,
3-2.
Norman 's vi c tory
Wednesday night gave him a
30-7 lifetime mark at
River!ron t Stadium.
"See, I've won my 30
games before Randy Jones

~

. ~' .
'

h·f
. . :' ,
.
I .: .:' ~

(of San Diego ) only It tool me
four years ," cracked
Norman.
NaturaUy Norman wasn 'I
happy about the.lenghty span
between starts earlier this
season.
"But," said the Reds' lefty
charitably', "I have been
terrible on occa,iOI!S so I
can't say Sparky hasn't given
me a chance ... overall fair to
me."
" But,' '
he
added,
meanlngfully, "sometimes I
don't Ul)derstand things he
does. I'mhappy here, though,
so I'm not gonna ask
questions~ II

..

,ui

.·

'

.

'

:

.

'·

$12.50
AND

RECAPPABL£
CASING

•

GENERAL
TIRE SALES

In Wednesday's game, Joe
Morgan rapped out a single
and a double, scored oilerun,
drove home another and stole
three bases to lead the
offense as the Reds tagged
Met lefty Jon Matlack with
hill fourth loss against 10
victories.

992-7161
Middleport; 0.

Kaat records 245th
•
career wzn, 5 to 1
Larry Bowa had two. Garber

earned his eighth save.
Cincinnati defeated New
York, 4-0, Los Angeles scored
a 7-li, 10-innlng triumph over
St. Louis, Pittsburgh swept
Houston, 5-l and 4-1, San
Francisco edged Chicago, 2-1,
and Montreal nipped Atlanta,
4-3, in the other National
League games.
Dodgers 7, Cards 6:
Pinch-hitter Ted Sizemore
singled home Bill Russell
with one out in the lOth ·
inn!Jtg, giving Los Angeles its
victory over St. Louis. The
Cardinals had lied the score
in the seventh on a runscoring triple by ex-Dodger
Joe Ferguson. Charlie
Hough, .who worked two
shutout innings in. relief,
received credit for his eighth
. win against four losses.
Pirates 5-4, Astros H :
BiU Robinson hit a two-run
homer and Jerry . Reuss
pitched a nine-hitter to earn

his lOth win for Pittsburgh in
its ojlener with Houston. Then
Larry Demery pitched a nohitter for 6 2-3 innlngs and a
two-hitter lor 6 2-3 )Jefore
yielding to Dave Giusti as the
Pirates completed the sweep.
Richie Zisk homered for the
Pirates.
Giants 2, Cubs 1:
Bobby Murcer drove in the
tying run with a " bunt
double" and Chris Speier
knocked in the winning tally
with a sacrifice fly in the
ninth inning as San Francisco
rallied lor its victory over
Chicago . John Montefusco
pitched a threH1itter and
struck out six, raising his
record to 9-8 while Bruce
Sutter was lhe loser.
Expo&amp; 4, sravea 3: '
Del Unser scored the
winning run on Larry
Parrish's infield out in the
seventh inning to give
Montreal its triu,mph. Run·
scoring hits by pinch-!litters
Jose ,Morales and Tim Foli
enabled the Expos to Ue the
score in the sixth inning. Jim
Wynn .homered for Atlanta.

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..

Visitors rout Reedsville team
Harris, and Danny Leonard .
Gelling singles were : Roush,
Beeler, Clay, Davis, Eason ,
Grant, Harris, Keith Kar·
schnik , Leonard, Billy
McLaughlin, M. Randolph ,
and Eric Sim .
For the losers, Mi tch
Barringer socked two triples
while Charles Jones, Jeff
Johnson and Burl Putnam
each got two doubles . Mike
Marlin got a double , and
Johnson, Barringer, Jeremy
Barber, Pu tnam, Marlin ,
Travis N., Orville Randolph,
Tren t Upton, and Ronnie
Putnam each got singles.
c
457 61"-25
R
50S 02- 12

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, JULY24th

ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;
K. V. COMPUTING DEPT.
OF
UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER

OPEN TO PUBLI

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'

""•

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II wasn't until June 13 that

RETREADS

DAN'S

Band ::

JULY

remalnat5.25cents. Reduced
priced
... will be' bn
111acowo
re •
bursed an aOdiUooal 10.75
cen ts' a'nd ,__,
u ~mac ka -'"
ww be
reirnburled an addltionll 16

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - victory over the Mets
Johnny Bench has a Wednesday night.
nickname for
Fredle
"Aren't you exaggerating a
Norman.
little ?" Anderson was
"I call him 'Fredie Fill· asked . 1
in'," said Bench Wednesday
"The way we were hitting
night alter Norman blanked and scortng runs .when
the New York Mets, 4-0, while Norman wasn't starting ,"
yielding only four hits.
eJclalmed Anderson. "He'd
· ·That's because it's usuaUy won six of nine starts easy.''
only after Oncinnati Reds'
Anderson grinned.
manager Sparky Anderson
"Someone's been wrong on
becomes disenchanted wilh Norman," said the Reds'
every other possible starter manager. "I don't want to
on 'the swff that Norman mention the dwnb qleep's
becomes a member of the name, but he ·probably wears
regular rotation.
a No. 10 on his uniform."
"I don 't think that
That's right, Anderson's
nickname is so funny," said number is 10.
Anderson.
Anderson placed Norman
"While Norman was . out on the shelf after the Red
there pitching tonight," 1!8id · lefty's fourth start of the
Anderson, "I was thinking season. That was against the
that 11 I'd just run him out . New Yotk Mets. May 4.
there on the mound nine more Norman didn't give up any
limes than I have, he'd have hits in the two !Mings he
at least 14 victories now.''
pitched, but he did Issue 'five
That 's six more than walks. It was Norman's first
Norman owned alter his loss of the season after three
victories.

Yanks settle in third place

Continuing Our ••• ..

..... - ,...·"·'·'""·
.......ion ,.te.: .... _ . . ~
_,.. - . ,. - · ,_
- · . , ...... - ....... ••'· _,
_,..
u. 11,.,
. . .. . . .·
. _.-w. "•··
can.
•-· ,....., " " - ..,..., .....

Norma'n .blanks Mets
4-0 on four-hitter

UPI Sports Writer
Quick now, what pitcher is
likely to become the major
leagues ' next 300-game
winner ljlld thus earn a
virtually automatic ticket to
the Hall of Fame?
It's Jim Kaat of the
CINCINNATI (UPI )
Pl!iladelphia
Phillies, and asTerronsa, with Richard
sorted
points
West, in a
Morgan up, covered the. six
furlongs in the leatw-ed ninth career that began back in
race at . River Downs 1959.
Kaat, 37, won his loth game
Wednesday in 1:11 to win by a
length over Cornlsh Flower. of the season and the 245th of
Terronsa paid $5.110, $2.80 his career Wednesday when
end $2.60. Cornlsh Flower the Phillles scored . a 5-1
paid $2.40 and $2.20 aoo the triumph over the San Diego
show horse, Liberated Ms., Padres.
Kaat aUowed seven hits
paia $3.20. The 1-11 daily
end
one run in eight innlngs
double of Les Jambes and
Wednesday,
raising his
Restless Melissa paid $41!.
record
to
10-4,
with
the nlnthA crowd of 5, 740 bet
inning
closeout
reljef.of
Gene
$449,334.
Garber. ))ave Freisleben was
San Diego's loser.
Tommy Hutton's three-run
COLUMBUS (UPI)
homer ' in the third · inning
Steady Shadow came on gave the Phillles a 5-1 lead
strong down the stretch to and was the big blow of their
win the featured eighth race attack. Jay Johnstone added
by a nose over Frisky C. three hits to the offense and
Robby at Scioto Downs
Wednesday night.
"J:he winner, driven by
Michael Zeller to a 2:02 4-5
. mile, paid $4.80, $4.00 and
In recent Tee-Ball aciion,
NORTHFIELD, Ohio and paid $16.40, $7 and $7.40. $3.60. Frisky C. Robby visiting Chester routed
(UPI)- Owner William LaUi Cold Box showed and favored returned $6.60 and $4.60 and Reedsville 25-12. Hitters lor
the show horse, Way Chuck ,
guided True G.B. to an upset, Gaylord HiU was fourth.
the winners · were Brian
paid
$5.20.
· ;;; tlu'eequarter-length victory
A near-record perfecta
The
nightly
qouble Beeler with a home run,
· ~&lt;• over Holly Ahilahurat in
payoff was recorded in the
Mitkey Randolph and Jeff
:': ..Wednesday nlght's featured · seventh race when Fashion combination of Mona Blaze Roush wi th trip les, and
:: '$3,000slxth race at Northfield . T., a 45-1 shot, and Tree (9) and Pestee (3) waS worth double-hillers were Beeler,
•),Park.
Time, a 19-1 shot, kicked off a . $156.40.
A crowd of 4,168 wagered Todd Clay, Kyle Davis, Huey
~ The live-year-old mare
1-li combination that returned $234,698.
Eason , Michael Grant , Ma tt
covered the mile in 2:06 1-li $1,304.00- secood only to a
over a rain-soaked, good oval $2,442.40 payoff registered
this past spring. '
. . , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ In tjle loth race trlfect.&lt;l , the
4·10-7 cqmbination paid ·
Genuine
$124.20.
Attendance was 2,952. The
Leather Belts
handle was 130'1 ,906.
In a final game of the home run and two singles
"
L.P tP.R.S. Little League, the while Roger Kovalchik
WORK SHOES
Pomeroy Yankees ended up socked a homer and Mike
.
NORTH
RANDALL,
Ohio
in third place )ly romping Whitl atch three doubles.
, By Shebbygan
' (UPI) - Larry Antus guided over the visiting Syracuse Scott Harrison and Shawn
R.C. Krickit to victory in Reds 14-2.
•WESTERN BOOTS
Gilmore each got two singles
.
Wednesday's featured $4,700
Pitchers J. R. Wamsley to round out the hitting.
By . Texas &amp; Justin
ninth race at Thistledown .
Teaford and Salser shared
and Scott Harrison limited
The wlMer covered the the Reds to just three hits the losing mound duties while
mile and 40 yards In 1:42 4-5 while striking out eleven . Salser also got one of the hits,
In Middleport ,
and paid $6.20, $3.60 and $2.60. Ronnie Richards led the a triple. Brian Allen got the
Waitinglnthewlngs placed Yankees at the plate with a other two both singles.

How they ran

.

a nonnal amount of sexual mone. Having demonstrated
activity helps to prevent this the accumulation of this
problem.
fraction of tlie hormone in the
The acuU! infections have gland itself there is now hope
nothing to do with chronic that it 1\iU be possible to
prostate trouble that is more block its action or storage
common in middle;~ged and and in this way correct or
older men. The chronic in- prevent pro'state
flammalion
'may
be enlargement. This might be
associated with a variety of done without affecting the
organisms bur'oRen the real function of the other fractipns
cause of the inRammation is of male hormone. At present
not known. It is doubtful that no medicine is available that
sexual activity either harms will do this. .
or helps such a condition.
1 am sending you The
There is now evidence that Health Letter 1-', Prostate
the enlargement of the • Gland to give you more in·
prostate that causes ob- formation · on this subject.
structlon of the bladder IS Others who desire more ·in·
reluted to the accumulation formation on the prostate can
of one chemical type of send a long, stamped, self·
testosterone, the male hor· addressed envelope with' '50
cents in it. Address your
letter to me in care of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1want
to know if a vasectomy
causes prostate gland
trouble? And once a man has
had prostate surgery does
that mean no more sex?
DEAR READER - No, a
vasectomy · will not cause
prostate gland trouble. In
fact vasectomies were
originally done when the
prostate was operated upon
to try to prevent inDa~ation of the testicles as
a complication of the
procedure. All a vasectomy
will do is prevent sperm cells
from reaching the prostate.
The gland will continue lj&gt;
function as it always did or
will have without the
vasectomy.
Most men can return to
normal sexual function after
proalate surgery. The type of
surgery dOes make some
difference. The problem is
that many men who have·
sur11ery are already at an age
or have enough other
medical problems that they
may be near the end of their
acUve ~~e:lllalllfe anyway. In
which cue the many may
incorrectly
think that 'lapPOMEROY
potence after surgery wu
because of the operaUon.

.CANNERS

MIRROUTIC
PRESSURE

By MILTON RlatMAN
UPI Sporu Editor

' • I

..

~·

MD

••

Nadia Comaneci steals spotlight

$35

What causes. prostate trouble?

PRESm

Sport Parade

MONTREAL (UPI) .... and a little child shsil lead them.
She hu here already.
Single.handedly, this 14-yearold, figurine-like Romanian
marvel has sprinkled these politically troubled Olympic
Games with her own unique brand of stardust, adding a sorely
.
needed extra dimension to them with such an · lncr~dibly
::::~-=:~:::::::::::~::::::.:::::::~:::::::::;::&lt;:=:~::::::::~:::::::::::::~:::::::::;::~:=:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::: :::::::::::::;:::::::::::;;:i:!;:;:;::::::::.:;:;::::~:::::::::~:::::;:;::::::::.spectacular performance that it has,to be ranked among the
mQII remarkable in athletic history, amateur or profession~!.
Now that she has scaled the MI. Everest of all gymnasts,
winning a gold medal aoo making her name a household word
.,
the world over with five perfect scores inside 72 hours, where .
By MARTIN LADER
gold medal ill the Olympics
Asked if she'd ever ,been ·
nobody elle in the Olympics ever was able to achieve even one ,
UPI Sports Writer
when she swept to the , nervous in her life, Nadia
. \,. there may be no other place for blue-eyed, pony-tailed Nadia
MONTREAL (UPI)
women ' s allaround admltted,''Once,whenhru
Coma nee! to go but to some higher league.
SmaU and skinny, nerveless gymnastics championship fighting with my brother I
Nobody can possibly stay with her in this one.
and nonchalant, she's barely Wednesday night. In the was nervoWI."
•
. "She's a level above all the other gymnasts In the world right
.• JlQW," eaya Bart Conner of Morton Grove, IU., a member of the
men's gymnastics team. "She's something else, man.''
.:"' '" Bart Conner trains 12 months a year and is ga-ga about
orlh
1 u d- in and hill' sentencea consist of three days of competition
on their senses and the record
.,':• gymnastics, so maybe he isn't completely objective, Those
more ~-n tembe
ern a tu e
.
.
short,
c.
l
lpped
words.
Russia's
Olga
Korbut;
the
books, is 11\e continued
ly
.•
:~ who serve as judges in thegymastic competition are. They call
ear""'e .,.,p
r.
Let be w
· hatever may be in Nadia .Comanecl of 1972, s~cessolthemen lwln)plers
~rthern land•~· site
:
:
....:emu they see 'em, and Annelise Bottcher of West Germany,
»&lt;&gt; , N
Q"'
the next 11 days, there's only
and the U.S. basketball learn.
who has been judging nearly 10 years, says she has never seen .
.was selected because one super star as far as these =din~::~~~=~ place
The swimmers llllde" It 7,"'
1he
likes of Nadia Comanect before.
scienti:lts believe there is a · 01
.
· ifl Uy
t 8
nt
ymp1c
Games
are · Until this week, no one ever lor-7, ss weU as.lS of the 21
81
~
"She's
the best," 1!8YS the veteran judge, who awarded her a
orgn tcanthe greatheer 1mouol concerned. You'll have to had received a single perfect total medals awarded 'thus
,
.
perfect
10.0
Wednesday on the balance beam. ''It was the first
· wa er re Ill
orm
1ook twice.to believe it, but at mark in the Olympt'cs, and far, when Matt Voce! Jed a I·' '
r
t
th
t
, time I had ever voted a 10 for unybody on the beam. She
perma ros
an . a an fi r
..
ve eel and 88 pounds, Nadia the scoreboard at the Forum, 2-3 sweep in the IOOorneter
equatorl·a1 Sl·te that a•deserved it. Her performance was perfect. As perfect as
..... was Comanecl has '---e in the
erO • ..o~. whl-"'
considered for Viking 2.
""""""
wasn 'I even geared to buU Y, ,ouo"u"' ''" the I ;'.' Jlumanly possible. She's also a nice girl. She wprks very hard
The
space of a few )lays the most register a 10.0.To•'•ht,it will .BOO-meter freestyle relay
0r
"· llnd she's unpretentious."
'
presence
about athlete in aU of be center stage'""
even in th
form of i water,
wJd •·!ked
again for teem ·brok e the world record
.- The extraordinarily gifted Roaruinian girl had scored
g 11 :
ceV?kwi , America, if not the world.
Nadia Wl'th an opportun1'ty to ii had set d""'"" the mornlng
another perfect 10.0 some moments before on the uneven
rea y mcrease 1 ng s
w u"'
'"the
Nadia,
14,
became
the
·
pick
up four more gold trials with a time .of 7 .
chances of findlng "'" on
parallel bars where her dazzling dlsmoimt was such an eyered planet
youngest }!i!rson ever to win a medals In individual evants. 'minutes, 23. ~ seconds.:·.
lllillker thet the capacity crowd of 16,000 in the Forum stood up
·
..
on its feet as one and gave her a thundering ovation which she
~
ackno'Wledged with II happy .smile and an appreciative wave or
her arms. .
; How do you score a perfect lO,Oin gymnastics? The rule book
!lays you have' to "stir the judges' souls" to do that. Nadia
Comanecl did that.
a
a
'
a
.
When the all-around competition was over and she had been
awarded her gold medal, Nadia accepted the whole thing with
almost professional composure.
Her feeUngs?
"Same as every day," she said, in a tiny, squeaky voice.
By DANIEL P. HOSE
stricter than necessary by controversy between • the "Our air is ex ceDent."
"Nothing
special."
CIJARLESTON, W. Va . law would have on West . public and private sectors on
The air quaUty In the
"' Wu she sure. of winning?
(UPI) - Gov. Arch Moore Virginia.
air quality standards. He said Northern Panhandle Is ques" , "Yes, I was sure. I knew if I worked hard, I would win."
disclosed Wednesday he has
'i'be governor cited ''not he felt it incumbent on him to tionable, Moore said, dUng
_. 'Mist about Olga Korbut? Had Nadia been inspired by what
issued an aecutiw order only the impact on families," act as governor when debate the high sulfur content of the
• the Soviet girl had done in the last Olympics at Munich?
directing \hat air quality · oot ~n counties which now between public and private roal in that pari of the state. ·
,,.,,· Nadia Comaneci waited patiently for the int~rpreter tO
standards in !he st.a\1! not . receive revenue under a new · sectors reaches the point
The governor said West .
;, .repeat the question in Romanian. Then her left eyebrow went
exceed
the
national coal tax revenue-sharilig which it has in this case.
V'll'ginia was among the first
I
s~andards so that West PJa n.
·
... .' lip a b't1 •
At a public hearing states to move aggressively
'::
·
"No,
I
was
not
illspired
by
her,"
she repUed evenly.
V'll'ginia coal will be useable.
"The total revenue flow of Tuesday, the commission · ,m air quaUty control, and
:·
·
But
she
did
keep
an
eye
on
her
Russian
opponent to see how
Moore said he was acting the state would suffer," heard arguments on wbelher claimed the establishment of
..
the
21-year-old
Korbut
made
out
on
the
beam.
Nadia was clear
under a recently enacted Moore said, if more stringent it
should
approve the 10 air quality regions in
:4 on the other side of the arena at the time, still practicing
state Jaw which says no stste air quality standards are modificiltlons in the present the state was a pioneer step in
:·' cartwheels after her perfect score on the uneven hars.
&lt;'ffilmiSSI'1Jn or agency can imposed in the state.
the nation.
air standards.
. Without heing obvious about it, she peeked'every so often to
prescribe rules or regulations
Already, Moore said, the
H the stricter air standards
see what score the judges were going to award Kbrbut.
that eltceed the national stan- four-day work week has been were imposed, Moore said, it
FinaUy, the score was flashed on the electric laDy board-9.5.
dard.
ordered in some coaJ regioos would have the effect of
Nadia had to be comforted somewhat by that, but she gave no
"Challenge me if you want as a result of stringent air removing "all of the coal
outward sign that she was.
.
to," the governor told a news standards.
production in West Virginia"
In
the
end,
the
Soviet's
Nelli
Kim
wound
up
with
the silver
...,...,__,but this is the law . Any West Virginia Air u an energy source in West
medal
and
tudmlla
Tourischevar
ariother
Russian
girl who
;;jij"l ~ oj:h~, he Po II uti on Con lro I V'll'ginia and In all places in
was
the.
defending
gold
medalist,
had
to
settle
for
the
bronie.
declared.
Commission , member or the nation have that heve
Olga
Korbut,
who
came
out
of
Munich
everybody's
sweetheart
Moore prefaced the employe not carrying out the West Virginia standards.
·
four years ago, carile out only fifth this time.
disclosure of his ezecutive ezecutive order would be in
Referring to a recent report
Now some promoters are taking about bringing Nadia to the
order by commenting at "a position ol suspension or by the Environmental
United States. They know a good thing when they see one.
length on the possible dismissal," Moore stated.
Protection Agency, the
economic effect
that
The governor said he wu governor said in nlne of the
imposition of standards moved to act in the wake of state's 10 air quality regions,

k
l
J
d
"
'
~sai~;~:xim:win~~~~ 1r100re · znvo .· es equa -stanua~ , ·. ·
l
JY/ · TJ'.•
de~;~
~ere ru e or w est ·r zr!Y' n UJ s a~r
e .,

.

secretions and when it is
stimulated frequently it
forms more secretions.
Young men at the peak of
their sex drive tend to form
the most secretions. When the
secretions accumulate, the
gland becomes boggy or
swoUen from dlstentioo. In
this condition it is ripe for
bacteria to · set up
housekeeping and cause an
acute infection. The infection
'11rouble1
'J• DEAR. READER -'. There in this instance ts'l something
like an abscess. It may cause
: is a lot of confusion abo11t the chiiiJ and fever. When the
; role of ae:xual activity ill bacteria are ellmlnated by
.prostate gland trouble. That nature's owh defense
' is partly because "prostate mechanisms or by . proper
gland trouble" Covers a Jot of antibiotic treatment the
dllferent problema.
infecUon and its symptoms
The prostate gland forms disappear. It would seem that

Today's

Mars' sky really pink ~~=!~~~~= ~~~~~~~t~~~ ~~~:ii.SE~s

DR~ LAMB

, llylM•aew:e.E.Lamb,M.D.
' DEAR DR. LAMB- I read
your column on prostate
- gland trouble, but it did not
answer one question. H a
per11011 (who has been a
' diabetic Iince 1965 and is now
16) quit seJt would he increase
, Iii prostate gland trouble,
, which is nearly nothing now?
· I go to the doctor once a year.
; In other words does lack of
• 11e1 cauae prostate gland

'

3- fioe O.Dy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thunday, JUly 22, 1976

Glenn certJJin ovenide action uu right
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Sen. John H.
CleM Jr., 1).()1\lo, praised the Senate's
override of President Ford's veto of the
Public Works Bill Wednesday, saying the
bill Is "important stop-gap legialalion."
"The overwhelming margin of
Wednesday 's override vote fudicat.es that
the Senate is firmly on record in favor of
helping jobless men and women get back
oo their feet, thereby helping the enUre
economy, " Glenn said. The Senate
overrode Ford's veto of the $3.95 billion
Pu\)llc Works Bill by a 73 to 24 vote.
Democrats said the blil would create more
than 300,000 jobs.

..

~ "Seemefor
! Homeowners
•

:,Insurance from
:State Farm- the
·world\ largest~
•
'
•
•
••

,,at. ,. ••

A•

Pony hall action
•

Eastern hung onto second
place i~ Meigs-Mason County
Pony League action by
squeaking by' host Middleport
3-2 Tuesday night. Winning
pitcher Danny Spencer paved
the way by fanning 13 and
walking just four while
socking three singles to lead
the hitters . Cliff Longenett
got two singles,. and Brljin
Bissell, Jeff Goebel, Ru!lly
Wigal, and Greg Wiga~ each
got one single. Their record is
now 10-3.
Mike Hilidy pitched a fine
game ln a losing cause,
striking out six and walking
just one. Roy Bareswilt
cracked two singles for
Middleport, and Terry
Gardner, Greg Becker, and
Hindy each got' one single .
Their record is 3-4.

In another Pony League
game, host Racine blanked
• -l.illt•RUOCI aeidlbor,
Rutland l:Z.O behind a fine
' Slate nrmislbere.
pitching performance by
~ s1111 Fn ' " " CmaiiY ~
Mike HuddJeston who fanned
: .,.,. ~~~~u:·-•goo. '""'" p 7570 ten and walked only unc .
· Danny Dudding crashed -.u
IIUUUNU

double to lead the hitters
while John Rees, Dave
Robinson, Tom Allen, Terry
Clark, Huddleston, and John
Pape each got one single.
That raised their record to 4-7
while RuUand dropped to 4-8 .
Van Wilford took the loss
and teamed · with Dink
Kennedy to fan ·seven but
issue eleven walks. Kennedy
smashed a triple, but the only
other hits were singles by
Kim
Dewhurst, Mike ·
Wayland, und Todd Showden.

BELKNAP

DIGGING

call toH-free,

800-362l2764
.~

5 GAllON CAN
for T1le Lowest

rn Prices

You oan avoid costly damage and utility
service interruptions by calling 800-362·
2764, toll-free, 48 hours before you dig. If
necessary, our .people will be glad to locate
our cable and mark the location for you.

'•
Columbia Gas, Columbus Southern; Ohio
Bell and AT&amp;T Long Lines ar11 all member•
. of the Ohio Utllltle9 Protection Service.
this means you only have to make one call
to notily the utiliti~s of your digging plant•
I

-In the Area
It's

BEFORE

Fiber Aluminum
Roofing Paint

MASON, W. VA.
HOURS:
Man., Thuri. &amp; Sit.
I:OO.S:JD

.

Frtdloyi: .... :OO

@AT&amp;T long Lines

\

�.·

Stri.kes .rotting fruit

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., ThW'sday, July 22,1976

Merchants' .Moonlight Sales starting at 6 p.m. r
All-Stars eye victory over champion Steelers
By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Wriler
EYI\NSTON, Ill. (UP!) The College AU Stars could
open with a "bull" backfield
against the National Football
League champion PittsbW'gh
Steelers Friday night, but it's
a good bet that tile game

breaker might be some lltUe
fellow - Uke Arehie Griffin
oc Joe WashinH(oil.
Ar&amp; Parseghlan, coaching
the AU Stars fer the first
time, won ' t reveal his .
starting lineup for the game
until Friday. Then, it's Ukely
tllat such bruisers as Otuck

Muncie, 223 pounds, Tony
Galbreath, 232 pounds, Jim
Jensen, 223 pounds, and Mike
Pruitt, 212 pounds, could fill
the two running back slots.
But some time or another
Griffin, who weighs. a mere
188 pounds, Of Washington, at
178, will see some action, and

~~:,:;::::::::::::i:::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::~:&lt;:::~::::::&lt;':':':':':':':':':::::::::&lt;':':':':':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::l::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::'?,

it mlght be difficult to get
them out. aoth were game
breakers in college, Griffin at
Ohio Stale and Washington at
Oklahoma, and as Griffin put
it, "llley 're not any bigger
than they were in · coUege."
Griffin might feel that he
has something to prove since
23 players were drafted
ahead of him In the NaUonal

1~.!1 the SCOREBOARD. . Results
;~~~:;;s : ~ ~: pra~~rslora:k m~

..

:i~ likely to succeed in pro

' :,.,
••••

.::: · ~r Liagui Stihdln~~
By un 1'fed. Press lnfernaflonol
Na11onal League

eost •
Ph lilldelphla
LiB p~2 GB
PI ttsburgh . 51 39 · .567 10
New York
•• " .516 "''
Sl. Louis
• 0 :~ •,." 2\
Chicago
37 ~
07 2" tn
Montreal
28 57 .319 30 1 '
WeSI
. GB
W.. L•. Pel.
Cincinnati
SB Js .6241
Los Ang eles
52 .tl .559 6
Houston
48 48 .500 11 1 '
San Diego
d .. 8 .-489 1217
Aflan ra
.. 2 .SO .-457 151'
Sii n Ffanclsco 40 55 ..a21 .19
Wednt!id•Y'S R!sulh
Los Ang 1St. Lou is 6, 10 in ns
Ph llactei phla 5 San Diego )
San Francisco 2Chicago 1
P ittsbu rgh s Houston 1, lst
Pittsburgh A Houston 1, 2nd
Cincinnati A New York o
Moiltreai .A AtJanfe 3
Today•s. Probaltte Pitchers
· I All Times .EOT)
Pittsburgh (Medich S-fU at
·;
d
1 h' (U
·
' Ph 1 a e P 1a
nde1WOOd 5-2) ,
7:35p .m.
·
· Atlanta
fMorton 0-7) at

WW

:&gt;: football. This was despite the

~ fact lhat he is the only player
CSL Wan ace to1. ureir . ~7L ever l w1c·
. e to w1n
•
By United BATT
Press·Hlntrrnafional HrabOsky
th e
{81 and Ferguson ; .
. 1 ~.,.d on 2215 :, ,..;, 1
~~~~; ~~.l~ou~~uft,\9t:."! Heisman1 Troblplly,sym
boiflcof
11
NATIONAL LEAGUE .
Hrabosky ($.6) , HRs- Lcis An mosl va ua em CO ege ool· .
· . • • G. A8. Jt H. Ptt etes R S '1th 7 (Ill L
S ball
Olive(, 'P it
8.2 333 53 t18 .35-' 9
' · m
ope
· ·
.
·
'
Robin son, Pit 68 247 , 2 81 .m m .
___
It also was despite his
Rose , Cln
93 377 80 126 :l:l&lt; ·
·
recor.d of runru'ng
for more·
Cra wfrd St L ,. lSS ~ as · ll' ·Pt1ladelph1a ?Ol 000 000- 5 11 1
.
Mo;or L•oguo Ltoders

7
3
3
Gri ftey,
85 322 ·; 2 101 :332
Mc Br ide, SI.L 61 21• l• 76 .llS
FOSler. Cin
BJJJJ 50 101 321
Morgan . Cin -71 253 68 &amp;l ":no
Montanez . Afl 95 lJt. 42 118 ·3 1.t
Garvey , LA
•3 37-4 u 111 :313
Gernimo. Cin 84 211 -'0 87 .3l3
AMEIUCAN LEAGUE .
. • .
G A.a. R H p 1
c
Brell , ~C
91. 367 s~ 134 .36S
M cRae. Kt
•lA 307 53107 _349
Munson. NY &amp;S l-4S 4S 116 .l.U
l...eFiore, Oer IP lJA 55111 _3.37
SOsto&lt;.'k. M in 6.- ~~ 30 15 _319
car~ . Min ._. 3-IS '5.4 109 _316
Lynn, Bo$
79 300 39 96 _314
Chambtss . NY:f\1 )71 51 114 .307
Staub~ Oet
17lH 38 .,! .30S
Carty Cl
1&lt; !95
• e.·
.
.eo 90 .305
HOME RUNS .
.
.

Cin'

4

•

s.a~a~~~~garb~~ t':r ~-s!o.~eo

Oam t31. FreiSieben ReynoldS
'·
'
(.tL Tom ltn ('S} , John son (7 1.
M~1lger (9) and Ken~ail. WP Kaat (1~4 ). _LP-Fr~,sleben {6
1}
HR Philadelphia , Hutton
(l) .

000 000 001- ~ 3 '0
·sa" Frncisco 000 OC1Cl ·OO'- 1 7 ·o
Renko, Sutler (8 }, Knowles

than 100 yards in . 31
coosecutive college games, a
record, and the (act that he is
the only college player ever
to rush mOfe than 5,000 yards
in a college career.
Pro scouts have said the
reason he · wasn 't drafted
higher was because he was
"too small," but.lt proved no
handicap in college. Griffin
buUt his career on his ablllty
to break tackles, bounce
away from the defense and
outsprint. the secondary . ·
"I've never let size be a
factor.'' he said. " I've played
at this size all my life."
Washington has a similar
unconcern about
the
difference in size.. " 1 think
I'm smart enough to run

around people, " he said.
Parseghian plll!lMd to use
this ability by assigning
W&amp;'jhlngtoo t.i&gt; run back .both
~Nnts and kickoffs, and the
steeiers co\lld find out agility
means as lnuch as size.
Once the Ali Stars had an
even smaller ruming back,
Buddy Young from Illinois.
He showed tile pro's that size
meant litUe, running from
scrlnunage as well as with
passes to spark the collegians
to one of their nine victories.
The AU Stars enter the
game Friday with an 11 game
losing streak, their last
victory coming in 1963. aut
the two smaller. backs might
tum it around.
·

" "'

By

Wednesday to protest a
cannery
strike
that
threatened rlpenlnc crops.
Oregon farmen Slid Utey
feared their 1raln crops
would . rot dW'Ing 1 grain
lnspec!Qrs' strike that shut
down docks.
The two strikes threatened

aemard I'Ecuyer, director
·of Ule Anna PavUIIon1t Min
and His World oo the lite rA

the 1967 World'a Fair,
Wednesday aMOliiiCed tb6,!
cap was stolen from
mannequin of de Couberlirl
some Ume within the IIIII 411
hours.
.,
L'Ecuyer llld the Blrut!
looks "embarrullngly bare"
without his favorite hit 111d •
gum,
The overweight light went offered a $50 reWII'd for Ita
off ~nd Farina passed the return "no questions uted."
weight test:
I
MONTR£AL, July 21
MONTREAL ( UPI) - (UP!)
Organlnn..
SQmC!Xle may be attending confirmed Wedneadaf !Ill(
the Olympics wearing a . Utesemlflnalsofthewomen'a
stolen hat that once belonged Olympic rowlns events have • ·
to aaron Pierre de Coubertln, beeri canceled because there
.founder of the modern are not enoUgh crews to make .
games.
Utem neceuary,.
..

settIement under study

QUEEN AND CANDIDATES HONORED - The~ Cwnty Bank
Of New Haven IPCJIIIOI'ed a reception for the' 19'15 Mason Cwnty Fair
~een, Lou Ellen Roulh, and eight hopeful candidates for thla year's title.
Approximately 100 peoplll turned out for the event which ldcks off the

n.

[4
Coleman (9) and SwisMr ;
Ml)nlefvs:co t 9-8) and Rader .
LP,..... Sutt~ ( 1 21. H.R- Ch'icago ,
wams Ol .

( ht g•me)

HousRm

NEW YORK - National a&amp;sketball
Assllciation officials today will study a
proposed settlement of a controversial
lawsuit ·that has blocked the merger of l.he
NBA with the American Basketba ll •
Assllciation. NBA Commissioner Larry
O'Brien declined to discuss detailS of this
plan but said in a ·'Statement "We have a
proposed solution, which will promptly be
presented to lile NBA Board of Governors
for approval." He said board members
would consider lile proposal today.
I'he NBA Players Association has ac·
cused the~ners of violating the spirit &lt;Jf the
setUement of tile Oscar Robertson claSs
action lawsuit. The Robertson lawsuit, filed
in 1970and tentatively settled last February,
claimed the option clause in standard
profesSional basketball contracts and the
common draft . viola led antitrust IBws:
Pending, final settlement of the Robertson
case, the ·players obtathed an injunction
. against an NBA·ABA merger.

· 010 000 '000~ 1 9 1
· 000 201 lOX- S 9 0
'Di erker, Sllmbito (7), Nir-kr o
NATIONAL LEAGUE : KiM · (18') and Jut2 e- ; Reus.s ( 10 · S~ ahd
man. NV u •. Schmldt. P.hit ,... ; S.angu.Hien . 'L P- Dier'ker 19 9).
Fosler , e-n .and R:OI)jn$Q(l , Pitt
~llre&amp; l (Fryman 8-7), 8:05
\8 ; Monday , Ch~ and Morgan, t;R: --.Pi ttsburgh , Robinson {18};
p.m. ·
CiA 11
Chicago I Stone 1-2) at St.
AM. E R 1 C A H LEAGUE · ( 2ttd g•me ~
Houston
000 000 001 - 1 2 0
MOREHEAD, KY. - Thirteen women
Louis IF~Icone 6-~J . 8:30p .m . . Bando, Oatc. 19; L.May , Bali PiUsburgh
101 100 Ob.- 4 9 1
San D1f!QO (Sptllner 1-9! at and Hendr ~ Ck . C4ev t7 ; vast athletes, 12 of whom are from out of slate;
Andujar, N i ~k.ro
(-t l ancs
Los Angeles {Rhoden 9-0), lO : JO rzemski, 6os 16; JaCk$00 , BaH Herrmann ; De-mery , Gi ust i (91
have been Signed to scholarships at
p .m .
1-t
ana Oyer. WP - Demerv (6 J l.
(On ly game.s scMduled l
.
RUNS BATTED IN .
Morehead
State University , according to the
L'P- ,A.ndul ar (6 4 ) . HR -.Pitts
Friday's Games
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Fos- bUrgn. 2 isk U 2).
school's
Athletic
Director Sonny Moran.
New York at Montreal, night
ter; Cin 14 ; Kingm a n . -NY 72 ;
Coach Sue Lucke bas recruiled Paula Dean
Pittsburgh at Phlla, night
Morgan , c~n 10 ; Sdlm i dt, ~hil
Chicago at St . LOU IS, night
New Yor"k
000 QOO 000- 0 4 3
61 , Penz.. C ln 60.
Jones, from Somerset, England, aeth aoyd
San Diego at LD$ Ang. night
~MEA tC:AN LEAGUE : May. Cin~nnat i 000 H 1 '01 X- -4 10 0
Cincinnati et Allanta , night
berry, KC 63 i Munsorn, NY ~l ;
.MI!I tlact., Apodaca ( 6 )~ San[j.
of PortsmouUJ , Ohio, and Sally Ann Hock·
San Fran at Houston , _
n ight ,
, Surrovghs, TeJt: 60; Chambliss, ·e r$ (18) and Groft ; Norm an {8wall, Dayton, Ohio.
NY 59 ; LMay , Bait .51 _ .
2'l an.d eenCh . II.,. P--'Ma tt ack (10Vo.lleyball Coach Laradean Brown
1
STOLEN 'B ioSES.
.
." •
A meri c~n League
added three sl8ndouls to her volleyball team
East
NATIQNAL LEAGUE : Tave. A1'1 a nfa
00·1 002 OCIO- 3 10 0
. W.. L .. Pet. G8 r.as, :Pit! 32; C~MO . 'Hou ·'3 1; Mon't'rea l
ooo 003 10:.:- 4 a o
~ Susan Caulkins, Macedonia, N. Y., Susan
New York ·
57 32: . ~
Morgan , C in 28 ; L~s ,·L A. and
Ruttwen, [)at canton (.6),
Dunn.
, Evergreen Pari!, ill., and Jaoe
, Baltimore
.AS 44 .506 i2
Brock , SI.L 26.
••· h 11 {i/1
d p
A M E a • C It, N L•E AGUE : u~\CIIrs a
an
ocoroba ;
Cleveland
0 " -~-4 13
Stimmel,
Columbus, Ohio. Joining Coaeh A.
North. Oak , 5, eay~or . Oa:k 41 ; St anhouse , M urrey ,(71 an[j
I!Osloo
u
1S
Pale!&lt;,
!
KC":18
;
e
arN&lt;.
Mino
lS
,
·
Foc1e.
WP~Murr
ay
I
H
I.
LPWINDSOR,
CANADA
TOM
L.
Dawson
's track squad will be : Wanda
Detro fl
•• "6 .o(JI IS
•
Da l Ca nton (J-2} .
WEISKOPF has promis·ed to le.ave
Mil waukee
3"1 ol9 •.a30 ]8!, leFlore, Oet 32.
Coo k, Franklin Cou nty; Karen . Ross,
west
PITCHING,
T
the! ocker room and send
'
AUanta, and Lawanna Stanley, Portage,
Amenun League
'' errible Tom'!.j n
W.. L .. Pet. G8 . . , . Most Victeries
NATIONAl LEAGUE ; Jones,
O•t gome l
" 1'om Ter·rific" outl:his week to defend the
lrd.
Kansas City
S6 JS .615
l eJ~;as
.46 .._.. .Sl1 91-"t ·so
Lonborg , Phil 11 f ; Det,oi1
100 ooo ooo- 1 • 1 Canadian Open Golf Championshi p
Receiving gymnastics team scholar·
Koos.ma.n, ' NY H-16; Ruthven , Ch it:a9c
~DB ~1 0 OOK- 4 U 1
Oakland
48 -45 .516 9
RUhle, Luton l 61 and •Kimm ; beginning today. The unpr.edicta'ble
ships will be Toni Yudt, Indiana state
Chi&lt;.:ago
42 41 .-467 13', All u .a; e ig hl pilch.,.s t ied
Minntt.ole
42 .. .141 l)t J with tOvic., orlies .
:«.napp l~- 1) and !)owning . LPW"''""'""'"' ho hasn't on '
.+,.. lti
....
dlampion from Porlage ; Deborah Wellsby,
AME'R$C.a.M LEAGUE: l"al - R.U:h' l~ t 5·1) .
aM.~"' W
W
smce ua ng ' ~.a.K":
c.amorn!a
19 S6 .41\ ,,
4
.,_,
e.n
IU;
~11
Canadian
Open
in
a
play&lt;Jff
With
Jack
~ . Ohi9, city champion, and Judith Ann
•fllnnlllay•, W: ewhs
~2- 1 ; f"iglileroa. N !'r' - 12~6 :. U ndg.mtJ
Nidklaus in 'Royal Montreal a year 'a,gtt, .
Chicago ~ Detroit t. 1sr
Me
Yean, rated in the lqJ ·10 in Ohio from
Hu nter , NY U.il ; seven p Htihers Iletro it
1000 •000 oop- o .6 11
d
Chicago 3 Delrolt 2nd
Rocky
Rivet High SchooL
·
ll.,.;l"iln
~~~iclof
les
.
·
O
hicaoo
:
Q
Oo
,
_
J
.
~
_.
a
mitlal
Wednesday
litlat
he
'·
s
allowed
the
·
300100
0
Clev-eland~ C81il0rnia' 2
EARNED RUN AVERAGE
'Lemanc,&gt;tk 11 ·21 ond Fr~e- . IWI~, fruslniting , dry spell to ·get ille better
New Y"'k 10 Oakland l'
.( tu:s~ on ., . .;nnings pltdteco
han; ·e. Johi"JSOf'l ( 9 -8 ~ lana d :mm.:
MilWaukee S Kansas Ciry o
KENT, OIDO- RlrnNINGaACK-KICK
fitATIONA'L \.EAGUE ~ Jones, Essian .
·
MiMeso.ta Boston 1
" f'm fnustrated and •too impatient," he
return specialist Kerry Marbury was
SD '2A .; S1.1Mouse, Mtl 2...58 ;
Sallimore- 6 Teras ' · 12 inns
IGnO 000 00!)- 1 '91(1
Pitclwm
Normo~n. C in '2.-61; Za ctlcy ~ ·Cin :BOS10r.l
said. "I'm snapping at people and giving
acquired Wednesday on waivers by the
M'innesotil
003 020 ·oo.J(- 5 t9 1
2.. &amp;2; Kaa $ Ph il 2.-63.
tAll nmu eon
everybody
a hard time. But most Of all I'm
Cleveland Browns from the NFL expansion
IW&gt;i ~ . Pole
fA). Lee 1'5),
AMERlCAN LEAGUE : . F iOakland !Mitchell 6 Sl al
dryeh , De: J .11 ; Travers,. M iJ 'HQ:u5e fJ J ar.u:f F isk ; Goltz ,
getting down on myself." A reversal really
New York ( Ellis 11--Ail ~ 2 .p.m .
Sea tUe Seahawks,
Gar(and, .8111 1.57; Bvngmeie:r {B) , Cempbtll (8) appears in order this week since at last ·
O.lroil CN\acCormack O·• and 1.25 ;
Marbury, a f&gt;.lO, !~under from West
• Bare 1-SJ at Chic BOO ( Barrios z. P•1mer . 8aU 2..84; Umbar ger. and W:rneg:ar. WP -.Go:Jtz {S-ifJL
LP-.Wise (HI)
week's tournament, the Westchester Classic
Tex tl7.
· laold Odom 0.01. 2• • ,311 o.m.
Vll'ginia, played in the Canadian•Football
STRIKEOUTS.
.
• Cllifornia (Tanana H -6) ,at
in New Yerk, Weiskopf shot a 74 tile first day
League the past three seasons. He ·was
002 000
2 12
NATIONAL .LEAGUE , SEa ~ Cati fornil!l
Cl••eland tTtoomas 2-1!. 7, 30
1
and
stormed
off
the
&lt;'
O
utse
midway
through
C~e~and
001
!
10
02•.6
9
1
picked
by Seattle from New England in Ule
, p.m .
vet". NY tll : Mess.ersmilttl. AU
lRo/a t;~ . Verhoevet"l (1) , Sco1t
Milwauk~ (Cofborn 6"10) 11 and ~ ichard . Kou I U ; N ie-kro,
llle second round of tile deslgnaled PGA
recent expansion draft. Marbury, who left
(11) a.rnd HumPhr ey ; Wadts (.A-4J
KllflSOS City (Splifl...... 10·61, All 103 ; Ma&gt;tehlsro, SF 99.
event. That ac.tion currenUy is under in·
Cl&gt;llege following his junior year in 1972, led
AMERICtoN LEAGUE, Ryan, a.nd A.Shb&gt;-; , f'toue {J L UP8:30p .m.
vesligaUon by PGA Commissioner Dean
' .los1on Client 10·11 ar Min- Cal 117;· "Birle~en . rex us ~· Ry,an 11 Ill.
the nation in rushing untU an ankle injUry in
Tanana , C.1 ll6; Jenk1ns_. Bos
t nesote (R edfer-n 2-61. 9 p·.m.
·
Beaman
.
•·the next to the last game l.he season put
O.i5k1ilnd .
lOChOOO'DOO- ·1 '9 3
• 8allimore {Grimsley 2-• J a• 106 o Hun~ef' • .NY IO:S .
.New'Yor~
2100i0 ' 2~X -~ O ~ 51
t P~ry t .n, 9, 05 p.m .
him out of COIIII!llssion, according tO the
NorrMs, .LJirnblad ( Sa. Todd ~1)
~
Friday's Gemt-s
RICHMOND, KY.- HALL OF FAMER
. Browns .
M~jor L••tue Rn.ults
and T·enaot , ,Newman U~;
, K.ans4!S City at Oakl and~ nivht
By
URJted
Press
lnlernational
Earle
·
Combs,
the
quiet
"Country
Gen·
W~ter
U
2-81
and
Mo.
1
1son
.
LP
Minnesota at Chicago. night
National League
--lNorr.is ("l-.lt ~ HR-New York.
~tra il at Clft"eland, night
Mtm'iM ( 9 L
' Milwaukee at Baltimore. nffjtlt ( 11 inn·ings,t
Sf.
Louis
100
003
100
o6
1
1
I
Boston at .New Yor". nigh1
Los
Angels
301
on
0011
11
IJ
1
Milwaukee
1~ o 102 ooo- s 9 o
(Only games scheduled )
Denny. Curlls {4). Solomon K.ansas City !OOO(IOCHJOO'- 0 4..4
peddle three star
A's
Traven . Sadec~ ( 7}4 Frisella
fer
$U
million
In
such
terms
(7) .&amp;nd Ku~rer ; Fitzmorris
as "economic insanity" and
01 -6J and Wanta.n . WP Travtrs (11 -1L
"that's no way to treat a
P i .ttsbt.m~ h

Especial~
for','Jri~,
,..

in Newberry family of Letart

July' 23 ·

. LETART, W. Va. - The
!Wbert . J• . Newberry farm
family. In Letart hu been
designated the Mason County
Fllrm Family of the Year by .
the MQuntailleers for RW'al. ·
Pnlgress CounciL
Winning recognition as a
fahn famliy of the year Is
·hothing too new to the
Newberry famUy. Last yeat
they received the deSignation
twice, once from Ule SoU
Conservation District and
another from the Farmers
Home Administration

'

ALL LADIES' SHOES
Spring &amp;Summer ·

.Regrouped and
Repriced
Now!

(FmHA).

c .•n

\7.,,

Nationally
Adv. Brands.
Values to $26.00

•500

&lt;&gt;•"-·

o.

-

Baseball
hearing

FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9

·~
316

326

Mason ~

.

-New Fall Shoes Arriving Daily-

354

381

RUBY-AMBER-.

OLIVE GRttN-BWE-

PRICE

CRYSTAI. ,

OOSRIIE JEWElRY
ONE GROUP ON SALE

h

1

PRICE

~

PRICE

Mens Canvas Shoes

Hartley 's· Shoes

'2.00

Pomeroy,o.
Open All Day Thursdiy
Friday Night Til8 .
$aturday 9 TiiS ·
'·

.-

' '

FABRIC SPECIALS
FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9 ONLY!

SELECTED GROUP

FABRICS lL . PRICE .
72

--------~-------------·

lfl OFF SALE

• NICE,Fr111ce (UPI)- Tite
thieves who pul)ed ofl ·a
liPectacular '10 million bank
· heist made their getaway
lbrough the city's sewer
lystem in a pickup van and
jnay have swlfcbed to stolen
high-speed motorb'oa\s,
llollce IIBld today.
._The gq, which tunneled
;;g feet from a - • Into the
vault of the Societe Generale
bank branclt; escaped In
. habber b9&amp;11 thraugh the
~!ewer syllleln · on the first
~ge ' of their escape, police
·

bank's main vault that was
not protected by an alarm.
Working ~t their leisure
during the weekend, they
munched bread and sipped
wine wblle rallll8cking 400
safe-deposit bolreS.
"We've found rubber hip
boots, acetylene bottles, a
rubber boat and other equipment wblch we hope will turn
liP a clue, that will belp to
Identify the thieves," Police
Commhsloner Ja~;ques
Bresson said at a news
Cjlllference.

l,OOO's of Yards On Sale

Wd.

They theorized the thieves ·
ir81W!ferred their loot Into a
!Xckup truck fer a h&amp;lf.mlle
!lrlve along the underground
banks Of the Pailloo River,
which flows beneath the city.
1 •
But Ute final staae Of their
· getaway may hive been by
jJower boat, pollee Slid. Four
liafll before the bank theft,
three .Italian-made "Riva"
ilpeedboata were stolen from
itearby harbors on the French
luviera, police llld.
'
. The Riva, which retails for
~t&gt; fiO,OOO, Is equipped
"ith twin 350·horsepower
fmcines and Clll travel at
~ ilp to 45 \mota. From
Nice, IIUch boall could easUy
l'each any port m the French

':-Richlrd Nlmn geta at leut

THE

m ·w. SecOnd
Pomeroy.O.

·

Ph. 992-2214

McCall'$.

Kwick-Sew,
Simplicity
'

I

flattems

and sought something more
out of life.
I
In those intervening years,
he has made his farm self·
sufficient for his family,
producing all the food they
need.
. aesides the 242 acres used
primarily for the business
Mrs. Newberry and her
children tiave tilled a one
acre family garden to
·produce vegetables for
themselves. Roasting com ;
beans, cucwnbers and not to
mention a patch of pumpkins
which are already massive iii
size are contained in this
garden .
Last year, Mrs. Newberry
canned approximately 250
quarts of different foods they
had grown,
In extending their live~ ·
beyond lhe farm, the entire
family is active in 4·H with
Mr. and Mrs. Newberry as
advisers and Darla, Karen
·and Sharon, all members of
the Hillbilly 4-H Club.
The family attends the
Krebs Chapel Church.

WOMENS SANDALS

BOAT SHOES
(White &amp; Navy)

Values to $12.99

Sale r'
5

REG. 56.50

CHILDRENS

All

CANDLES
SUMMER .PURSES &amp;

•
•

!

~ break becauae .of
aterpte -Ute toes m his
mWion San Clemente
eute wiD barely rise at aU
frhUe bla neighbors pay

btble mc:r.-.
._ Btca111e Of tbe funr over

n•••
flnancel and tuu,
lbt estate already waa
lenlllnlsed 8IICI tued to the

l!mit.llld tbe cnnge Cwnty
411 · , 'I af!lce, eiplainlng
the 1 11111"1 value Of
piGp&amp;l) 1'0118 only 1
jler cent wblle Cllherl In the
Ire&amp; \ver11ed 2S percent.

1!tlf

It•··

OFF

1 GROUP OF

~u
·• cl•M•
R&amp;Glne A•a
l'o•troy hnlltill
jJ"n.D uSO Tndl ...a

LUtr!

¥,

j

"l1 l
)

"'"
, u
k_...,, rl,itu
Plrat..
"'
!ll
hrtlu4

Table of Irregular Items

~"r:oJ

...1111" •• •
S1NG\.III rjt&lt;ll

55 PD'
I'll•·

gr Me•••e 9""
rw ... 1 • I'll•·

Ph•te:- lo
. ~·· !l'l.ftrl I - ~~.

P1r•'n 7

~~ SJ!"!OU! hd1 2

I'll!, ltnk!lt

GREAnY REDUCED
MIDDLEPoRT BOOK STORE

""•· fl .. ... 19 Sjrir.auu Indlano 1

Middleport, 0.

h Price

Sale $500
FREE Ill

One pair of tube sociis with each purchase of a pair of converse
·
·
·
tennis shoes.

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport, 0.

STARTS FRIDAY AT 6 PM

"ADMIRAL' QUALITY APPUANCES

W00DST00L5
30" •7.49

18" '5.99 24" '6.99

'="~~s~~~---! 1~5 75
.

I

,

'5 aoo .

12' Wide Foam Backed

Store

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25
8
KITCHEN OfAIRS-~------

·9112 FOAM BACK
lWEED RUGS-------- .

Great Values Throughout The

,.........~...- -«•UI:ZiJ~I-=-------,
.
I

,

·=
Shop Our Bargain Rocks

Refrigerators, Freezers, Ran·ges. Air
Conditioners, Dehumidifiers. Col'or T.V.,
B.&amp;W T.V 's, Stereo Sets, Radios .

·RECLINING CHAIRS ____ !68
5X8 PORCH RUGS_____ ~r

9xl2 LINOLEUM RUG __sgea
~=S~-----~58 00

~·

Values to $19.99

1

I

sALE

A

WOMEN'S SHOES
and SANDALS

.

SLAT SEAT WOOD .

WTHER BELTS '

Sale $399

DRESS SHOES
·
.
and SANDALS

.
:0
=~~~---·__ :__~21
% PLATFORM ROCKERS--~58

RECORDS

NixON GETS BREAK
~~ ANA, Cllllf. (UP!) .

57.00 Retail or Mote

MEN AND WOMENS

99
.16X48
DOOR
MIRROR
__
$4
Complete with mounting. clips.

In what is be~ called the
l•caper of the century," the
~Jan ~eled Into the

'2 OFF ANY PAIR
OF SCISSORS

.

Officials 111id the lllrike wu
C&lt;llllng 11riaaltural ownen,
wocken and clllliiiUIIItlel ~
million 1 day. A long lllrlke
would cauae the layoff rA
100,000 pickers and then
spread to allied indlllll'* ~
· C&lt;llling as much u $2 biDI«l
if It lasts through Augult.

1 GROUP OF

99
BOOKCASE
----·------!14
K. D.
32" H, 32" W, 9". D.

. · FRIDAY 6 to 9 PM

b.. Italian Rivler-..

CONTINUES

!With This Coupon)
Friday, July 23,6 to 9 p.m.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy, o.

the elevator," · says Mrs . ·harvested an .average of 60 10,000 feet of drainage tile
and a diversion ditch. ·
Newberry in reference to how bales of hay per acre.
Mr. Newberry who quit
the members of her family . In 1975, they were awarded
(arming
for a time to try
work together · to make the Farm Family of the Year for
brban
living
in Columbus.
farm a suocess.
their soil conserva tlon efforts
.Ohio,
returned
·to Mason
The 243 acre ·farm located · which includes strip cropping
County
and
began
builillng
near the Hidden Valley qnd crop rotation ss well as
Country Club has; as its main
business, the raising of
Charolais cross feeder
calves. At present there are
approximately 130 head on
the farm.
Excellence has stayed with
the Newberrys in their
breeding practices which is
evidenced by two Grand
Champions in ' 1974, ~nd 1975
at the Mason County Fair in
the Baby Bee£ Show. Darla
won the title in 073, while her
younger sister Sharon came
away with the honors in 1974.
Three fl'Ore steers weighing
between 800 and 1,000 pounds
will be enterell in the Baby
Bee£ show this year.
·
They've had a calf in the
fair ever since they were old
enough, Mrs. Newberry said.
While 100 acres of the farm
is used primarly to pasiW'e
the liveslliCk, another 143
acres has approximately 40 in
corn, seven in oats, and 531n
llay,
·
So far, In thls lean year for
hay, the Newberrys have
IN THE PUMPKIN PATCH - Sharon Newberry
grahs one of many large pumpkins she has grown ill the
family garden. The Newberry family hopes to exhibit one
or more of these !Nffipkins in the fair.

through sewers

Middle Of Upper Block ·

FABRIC.
'
SHOP

contract.

hJs farm in 1958. He noted,
that he found city life hofing

Thieves got away

FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9

BE HERE AT 6

'I

"Darla bails the hay ,I load
the hay and Robert puts it on

underwav

Ladies &amp; Giits Summer Shoes

347

Oaklanii

franchise."
At the opening hearing of a
special House Committee on
Profes·s ional Sports
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Wednesday, finley Charged
The kindesllh)ng Charlt'Ji 0 .
Kuhl)'s nullification of
fil1leY managed 1.o say about tllat
tile sale of JO. Rudi, !Wille
Baseball Commissioner Fingers and. VIda Blue was
ChiJrleslon
~1 so .aSJ 15', .Bowie
Kuhn
at
a
part of an effort to drive him
Tidewater
,.0 51 .A-AO 16'-' 2 &lt;XJngressional hearing was:
Wednnda, •s Aesutts
out
of baseball,
Syra cuse 9 Tld~wa ter 'l
· " I just don't think oo likes
Kuhn,
the opening witness
Richm ond 1 Rhoae - lstand 3 me."
R'?ctiester 7 Charleston 6, 1st.
befoce
the
HoUse group, said
On the other hand, three of
1 mn.
he
barred
the
deal to prevent
R:ochesrer a t Char let ton, 1nd, Finley's fellow ownera de·
"public
confidence
in the
ppd., ra in after .41 in n .
scribed his recent atien}JJI to
Totedo 8 Memph i$ 1
integrity Of baseball from
being Wldermined."
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . federal
Finley,
whosuit
has lrought a
oourt
to overrule
the commlSSioner, was asked
if he tboll@ht Kuhn's actim
was an attempt to foree him
out of the g~ .
"Yell, sir. I definitely do,"
Finley replied. He cited four
flnesllevied against him · by
the COITUIIiMioner, asaerting
FRIDAY FROM 6 TO 9 PM
each was "grosrdy unfslr"
and the lut costing SI,OOO for
dropping Infielder Mike
Andrews from the Oakland
roster ill tile 19'12 World
Series "was tile most idiotic
fine in the history of sports.
"Somehow,! doo 't think he
•
likes me," the Oakland owner
BUIIU!l8rized.
· ·
But Allen H. Selig, head of
, the Milwaukee Brewers, was
1 TABLE
· just as unsparing of Finley's
thwarted trade. "I CBMOt
believe that was in the beat
interests of baseball, even for
the New York Yankees or
Boston Red Sox," he told the
conunlttee wiUt Finley silting
alongside al the witness
table.
"The Jong·term effects
were very, very danleroua.lt
was economic inaanlty and
not in the best Interests of the
aame, the · fans or the
players." t
I ntern•tionill
LUIUf St•ndings
Unif1td Pren lnternationaJ
W. L. Pet . GB
Roc.he-ster
56 l'-A .622
·s yracuse51 41 .548 61''
Rhode hland .At •.a .sos 10''1
R ichmond
47 A8 . ~95 H * 1
Memphis
~~ A8 .478 ta
Toledo
43 so .•62 141 a

FOSTORIA COIN GLASS

199

or

A PAIR '

.

What is new about this
year's deslj~nation is that this
is the first time MRP has
designated a Farm FamUy of
the Year and this particular
designation is for general all
!IJ'Ound excellence in farm·
lng, Jobn Cooper of the U.
S. SQU Conservation Service
in Mason County.
Excellence in family
farming was not only
achieved
by
Robert
Newberry but Mao by his
)fife, Delores and four
·!!Sughters: Darla, Sharon,
)Caren and Unda Casto, who
is married and·. lives In

PEN Tll9 P.M. FOR THIS. SPECIAL SALE

oro.:-

•r-...

•

ALLSHOES DISPLAYEOON 'RACKS:. .

s

T.....,-. ..,....,..

•

Farming excellence r~cognized

Friday Night . &amp; to 9

Ueman " from Kentucky, often over·
shadowed by his more colorful teammates
mUle powerful New York Yankee teams of
the 19Z&lt;ls and early 1930s, died Wednesday.
Combs, 77, had his best year at baf in
1927, the same year a&amp;b!! Ruth :was hitting
60 home runs. And Rulli's much discussed
"called shot" home run in the WOfld Series
was duplicated in a manner by COmbs
without the resultant publicity.

called both aides to
Wuhlngtoo to meet .,nt11 him .
in 111 effort to agree a

Mason County Fair Season. Left to right are Lynn Giacomo, Sherri
Wbllnu!n, Marilyn Denise McDaniel, Julie Jean Campbell, Lou Ellen
!Wush, Julie Sue Sommer, Julie Dawn Sunmer, and Marcia HyaU. Tara
Lynn Keams was absent.

.

Chicago

By United Press International

to ruln tons . of fruit,
vegetables and grain forcing food prices up
nationwide.
Repreeentalives of strlklng
northen\ California cannery
werkers and 28 canning firms
were to meet with tbe
· nation's top federal medlator
in In Washlniton today.
James, F. Searce, director
Ill the Federal Medlcatlm
and Conciliation Service,

I

"

Bn'ef,ed reports

Prell

IDte,..liol!lll
California fanners blasted
llorm and gave away peaches

Olympics briefs -••
MONTREAL ( UPI) American paperweight
Greco·Roman wrestler Mike
Farina of Elmhurst, 111.,
stepped on the scale
Wednesday to meet the ~
kilogram weig!lt limit for his
Olympic . boUt.
The
overweight light blinked off
and on weakly,
·
Farina spat out his chewing

Ualled

.

TWEED CARPET---~q~i:~~3 99
I

.

12=' Wide Cushioned Back Vinyl

FLOOR COVERING_~.-~d~!r'
4 DRAWER CHESTS----!37

NIGHT STANDS.--------s25
3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE s121

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A fine, colorful. commemorative memento of lhe 200th
birthday of this great, lree
country of ours.. and at a

priCe you'll remember.·

WITH COUPON

FRIDAY

NIGHTONLY- 6to8 P . M.

L--~~':E~~~R!:2~R-=~~D~:"~~T.;..,____ ...

�.·

Stri.kes .rotting fruit

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., ThW'sday, July 22,1976

Merchants' .Moonlight Sales starting at 6 p.m. r
All-Stars eye victory over champion Steelers
By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Wriler
EYI\NSTON, Ill. (UP!) The College AU Stars could
open with a "bull" backfield
against the National Football
League champion PittsbW'gh
Steelers Friday night, but it's
a good bet that tile game

breaker might be some lltUe
fellow - Uke Arehie Griffin
oc Joe WashinH(oil.
Ar&amp; Parseghlan, coaching
the AU Stars fer the first
time, won ' t reveal his .
starting lineup for the game
until Friday. Then, it's Ukely
tllat such bruisers as Otuck

Muncie, 223 pounds, Tony
Galbreath, 232 pounds, Jim
Jensen, 223 pounds, and Mike
Pruitt, 212 pounds, could fill
the two running back slots.
But some time or another
Griffin, who weighs. a mere
188 pounds, Of Washington, at
178, will see some action, and

~~:,:;::::::::::::i:::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::~:&lt;:::~::::::&lt;':':':':':':':':':::::::::&lt;':':':':':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::l::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::'?,

it mlght be difficult to get
them out. aoth were game
breakers in college, Griffin at
Ohio Stale and Washington at
Oklahoma, and as Griffin put
it, "llley 're not any bigger
than they were in · coUege."
Griffin might feel that he
has something to prove since
23 players were drafted
ahead of him In the NaUonal

1~.!1 the SCOREBOARD. . Results
;~~~:;;s : ~ ~: pra~~rslora:k m~

..

:i~ likely to succeed in pro

' :,.,
••••

.::: · ~r Liagui Stihdln~~
By un 1'fed. Press lnfernaflonol
Na11onal League

eost •
Ph lilldelphla
LiB p~2 GB
PI ttsburgh . 51 39 · .567 10
New York
•• " .516 "''
Sl. Louis
• 0 :~ •,." 2\
Chicago
37 ~
07 2" tn
Montreal
28 57 .319 30 1 '
WeSI
. GB
W.. L•. Pel.
Cincinnati
SB Js .6241
Los Ang eles
52 .tl .559 6
Houston
48 48 .500 11 1 '
San Diego
d .. 8 .-489 1217
Aflan ra
.. 2 .SO .-457 151'
Sii n Ffanclsco 40 55 ..a21 .19
Wednt!id•Y'S R!sulh
Los Ang 1St. Lou is 6, 10 in ns
Ph llactei phla 5 San Diego )
San Francisco 2Chicago 1
P ittsbu rgh s Houston 1, lst
Pittsburgh A Houston 1, 2nd
Cincinnati A New York o
Moiltreai .A AtJanfe 3
Today•s. Probaltte Pitchers
· I All Times .EOT)
Pittsburgh (Medich S-fU at
·;
d
1 h' (U
·
' Ph 1 a e P 1a
nde1WOOd 5-2) ,
7:35p .m.
·
· Atlanta
fMorton 0-7) at

WW

:&gt;: football. This was despite the

~ fact lhat he is the only player
CSL Wan ace to1. ureir . ~7L ever l w1c·
. e to w1n
•
By United BATT
Press·Hlntrrnafional HrabOsky
th e
{81 and Ferguson ; .
. 1 ~.,.d on 2215 :, ,..;, 1
~~~~; ~~.l~ou~~uft,\9t:."! Heisman1 Troblplly,sym
boiflcof
11
NATIONAL LEAGUE .
Hrabosky ($.6) , HRs- Lcis An mosl va ua em CO ege ool· .
· . • • G. A8. Jt H. Ptt etes R S '1th 7 (Ill L
S ball
Olive(, 'P it
8.2 333 53 t18 .35-' 9
' · m
ope
· ·
.
·
'
Robin son, Pit 68 247 , 2 81 .m m .
___
It also was despite his
Rose , Cln
93 377 80 126 :l:l&lt; ·
·
recor.d of runru'ng
for more·
Cra wfrd St L ,. lSS ~ as · ll' ·Pt1ladelph1a ?Ol 000 000- 5 11 1
.
Mo;or L•oguo Ltoders

7
3
3
Gri ftey,
85 322 ·; 2 101 :332
Mc Br ide, SI.L 61 21• l• 76 .llS
FOSler. Cin
BJJJJ 50 101 321
Morgan . Cin -71 253 68 &amp;l ":no
Montanez . Afl 95 lJt. 42 118 ·3 1.t
Garvey , LA
•3 37-4 u 111 :313
Gernimo. Cin 84 211 -'0 87 .3l3
AMEIUCAN LEAGUE .
. • .
G A.a. R H p 1
c
Brell , ~C
91. 367 s~ 134 .36S
M cRae. Kt
•lA 307 53107 _349
Munson. NY &amp;S l-4S 4S 116 .l.U
l...eFiore, Oer IP lJA 55111 _3.37
SOsto&lt;.'k. M in 6.- ~~ 30 15 _319
car~ . Min ._. 3-IS '5.4 109 _316
Lynn, Bo$
79 300 39 96 _314
Chambtss . NY:f\1 )71 51 114 .307
Staub~ Oet
17lH 38 .,! .30S
Carty Cl
1&lt; !95
• e.·
.
.eo 90 .305
HOME RUNS .
.
.

Cin'

4

•

s.a~a~~~~garb~~ t':r ~-s!o.~eo

Oam t31. FreiSieben ReynoldS
'·
'
(.tL Tom ltn ('S} , John son (7 1.
M~1lger (9) and Ken~ail. WP Kaat (1~4 ). _LP-Fr~,sleben {6
1}
HR Philadelphia , Hutton
(l) .

000 000 001- ~ 3 '0
·sa" Frncisco 000 OC1Cl ·OO'- 1 7 ·o
Renko, Sutler (8 }, Knowles

than 100 yards in . 31
coosecutive college games, a
record, and the (act that he is
the only college player ever
to rush mOfe than 5,000 yards
in a college career.
Pro scouts have said the
reason he · wasn 't drafted
higher was because he was
"too small," but.lt proved no
handicap in college. Griffin
buUt his career on his ablllty
to break tackles, bounce
away from the defense and
outsprint. the secondary . ·
"I've never let size be a
factor.'' he said. " I've played
at this size all my life."
Washington has a similar
unconcern about
the
difference in size.. " 1 think
I'm smart enough to run

around people, " he said.
Parseghian plll!lMd to use
this ability by assigning
W&amp;'jhlngtoo t.i&gt; run back .both
~Nnts and kickoffs, and the
steeiers co\lld find out agility
means as lnuch as size.
Once the Ali Stars had an
even smaller ruming back,
Buddy Young from Illinois.
He showed tile pro's that size
meant litUe, running from
scrlnunage as well as with
passes to spark the collegians
to one of their nine victories.
The AU Stars enter the
game Friday with an 11 game
losing streak, their last
victory coming in 1963. aut
the two smaller. backs might
tum it around.
·

" "'

By

Wednesday to protest a
cannery
strike
that
threatened rlpenlnc crops.
Oregon farmen Slid Utey
feared their 1raln crops
would . rot dW'Ing 1 grain
lnspec!Qrs' strike that shut
down docks.
The two strikes threatened

aemard I'Ecuyer, director
·of Ule Anna PavUIIon1t Min
and His World oo the lite rA

the 1967 World'a Fair,
Wednesday aMOliiiCed tb6,!
cap was stolen from
mannequin of de Couberlirl
some Ume within the IIIII 411
hours.
.,
L'Ecuyer llld the Blrut!
looks "embarrullngly bare"
without his favorite hit 111d •
gum,
The overweight light went offered a $50 reWII'd for Ita
off ~nd Farina passed the return "no questions uted."
weight test:
I
MONTR£AL, July 21
MONTREAL ( UPI) - (UP!)
Organlnn..
SQmC!Xle may be attending confirmed Wedneadaf !Ill(
the Olympics wearing a . Utesemlflnalsofthewomen'a
stolen hat that once belonged Olympic rowlns events have • ·
to aaron Pierre de Coubertln, beeri canceled because there
.founder of the modern are not enoUgh crews to make .
games.
Utem neceuary,.
..

settIement under study

QUEEN AND CANDIDATES HONORED - The~ Cwnty Bank
Of New Haven IPCJIIIOI'ed a reception for the' 19'15 Mason Cwnty Fair
~een, Lou Ellen Roulh, and eight hopeful candidates for thla year's title.
Approximately 100 peoplll turned out for the event which ldcks off the

n.

[4
Coleman (9) and SwisMr ;
Ml)nlefvs:co t 9-8) and Rader .
LP,..... Sutt~ ( 1 21. H.R- Ch'icago ,
wams Ol .

( ht g•me)

HousRm

NEW YORK - National a&amp;sketball
Assllciation officials today will study a
proposed settlement of a controversial
lawsuit ·that has blocked the merger of l.he
NBA with the American Basketba ll •
Assllciation. NBA Commissioner Larry
O'Brien declined to discuss detailS of this
plan but said in a ·'Statement "We have a
proposed solution, which will promptly be
presented to lile NBA Board of Governors
for approval." He said board members
would consider lile proposal today.
I'he NBA Players Association has ac·
cused the~ners of violating the spirit &lt;Jf the
setUement of tile Oscar Robertson claSs
action lawsuit. The Robertson lawsuit, filed
in 1970and tentatively settled last February,
claimed the option clause in standard
profesSional basketball contracts and the
common draft . viola led antitrust IBws:
Pending, final settlement of the Robertson
case, the ·players obtathed an injunction
. against an NBA·ABA merger.

· 010 000 '000~ 1 9 1
· 000 201 lOX- S 9 0
'Di erker, Sllmbito (7), Nir-kr o
NATIONAL LEAGUE : KiM · (18') and Jut2 e- ; Reus.s ( 10 · S~ ahd
man. NV u •. Schmldt. P.hit ,... ; S.angu.Hien . 'L P- Dier'ker 19 9).
Fosler , e-n .and R:OI)jn$Q(l , Pitt
~llre&amp; l (Fryman 8-7), 8:05
\8 ; Monday , Ch~ and Morgan, t;R: --.Pi ttsburgh , Robinson {18};
p.m. ·
CiA 11
Chicago I Stone 1-2) at St.
AM. E R 1 C A H LEAGUE · ( 2ttd g•me ~
Houston
000 000 001 - 1 2 0
MOREHEAD, KY. - Thirteen women
Louis IF~Icone 6-~J . 8:30p .m . . Bando, Oatc. 19; L.May , Bali PiUsburgh
101 100 Ob.- 4 9 1
San D1f!QO (Sptllner 1-9! at and Hendr ~ Ck . C4ev t7 ; vast athletes, 12 of whom are from out of slate;
Andujar, N i ~k.ro
(-t l ancs
Los Angeles {Rhoden 9-0), lO : JO rzemski, 6os 16; JaCk$00 , BaH Herrmann ; De-mery , Gi ust i (91
have been Signed to scholarships at
p .m .
1-t
ana Oyer. WP - Demerv (6 J l.
(On ly game.s scMduled l
.
RUNS BATTED IN .
Morehead
State University , according to the
L'P- ,A.ndul ar (6 4 ) . HR -.Pitts
Friday's Games
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Fos- bUrgn. 2 isk U 2).
school's
Athletic
Director Sonny Moran.
New York at Montreal, night
ter; Cin 14 ; Kingm a n . -NY 72 ;
Coach Sue Lucke bas recruiled Paula Dean
Pittsburgh at Phlla, night
Morgan , c~n 10 ; Sdlm i dt, ~hil
Chicago at St . LOU IS, night
New Yor"k
000 QOO 000- 0 4 3
61 , Penz.. C ln 60.
Jones, from Somerset, England, aeth aoyd
San Diego at LD$ Ang. night
~MEA tC:AN LEAGUE : May. Cin~nnat i 000 H 1 '01 X- -4 10 0
Cincinnati et Allanta , night
berry, KC 63 i Munsorn, NY ~l ;
.MI!I tlact., Apodaca ( 6 )~ San[j.
of PortsmouUJ , Ohio, and Sally Ann Hock·
San Fran at Houston , _
n ight ,
, Surrovghs, TeJt: 60; Chambliss, ·e r$ (18) and Groft ; Norm an {8wall, Dayton, Ohio.
NY 59 ; LMay , Bait .51 _ .
2'l an.d eenCh . II.,. P--'Ma tt ack (10Vo.lleyball Coach Laradean Brown
1
STOLEN 'B ioSES.
.
." •
A meri c~n League
added three sl8ndouls to her volleyball team
East
NATIQNAL LEAGUE : Tave. A1'1 a nfa
00·1 002 OCIO- 3 10 0
. W.. L .. Pet. G8 r.as, :Pit! 32; C~MO . 'Hou ·'3 1; Mon't'rea l
ooo 003 10:.:- 4 a o
~ Susan Caulkins, Macedonia, N. Y., Susan
New York ·
57 32: . ~
Morgan , C in 28 ; L~s ,·L A. and
Ruttwen, [)at canton (.6),
Dunn.
, Evergreen Pari!, ill., and Jaoe
, Baltimore
.AS 44 .506 i2
Brock , SI.L 26.
••· h 11 {i/1
d p
A M E a • C It, N L•E AGUE : u~\CIIrs a
an
ocoroba ;
Cleveland
0 " -~-4 13
Stimmel,
Columbus, Ohio. Joining Coaeh A.
North. Oak , 5, eay~or . Oa:k 41 ; St anhouse , M urrey ,(71 an[j
I!Osloo
u
1S
Pale!&lt;,
!
KC":18
;
e
arN&lt;.
Mino
lS
,
·
Foc1e.
WP~Murr
ay
I
H
I.
LPWINDSOR,
CANADA
TOM
L.
Dawson
's track squad will be : Wanda
Detro fl
•• "6 .o(JI IS
•
Da l Ca nton (J-2} .
WEISKOPF has promis·ed to le.ave
Mil waukee
3"1 ol9 •.a30 ]8!, leFlore, Oet 32.
Coo k, Franklin Cou nty; Karen . Ross,
west
PITCHING,
T
the! ocker room and send
'
AUanta, and Lawanna Stanley, Portage,
Amenun League
'' errible Tom'!.j n
W.. L .. Pet. G8 . . , . Most Victeries
NATIONAl LEAGUE ; Jones,
O•t gome l
" 1'om Ter·rific" outl:his week to defend the
lrd.
Kansas City
S6 JS .615
l eJ~;as
.46 .._.. .Sl1 91-"t ·so
Lonborg , Phil 11 f ; Det,oi1
100 ooo ooo- 1 • 1 Canadian Open Golf Championshi p
Receiving gymnastics team scholar·
Koos.ma.n, ' NY H-16; Ruthven , Ch it:a9c
~DB ~1 0 OOK- 4 U 1
Oakland
48 -45 .516 9
RUhle, Luton l 61 and •Kimm ; beginning today. The unpr.edicta'ble
ships will be Toni Yudt, Indiana state
Chi&lt;.:ago
42 41 .-467 13', All u .a; e ig hl pilch.,.s t ied
Minntt.ole
42 .. .141 l)t J with tOvic., orlies .
:«.napp l~- 1) and !)owning . LPW"''""'""'"' ho hasn't on '
.+,.. lti
....
dlampion from Porlage ; Deborah Wellsby,
AME'R$C.a.M LEAGUE: l"al - R.U:h' l~ t 5·1) .
aM.~"' W
W
smce ua ng ' ~.a.K":
c.amorn!a
19 S6 .41\ ,,
4
.,_,
e.n
IU;
~11
Canadian
Open
in
a
play&lt;Jff
With
Jack
~ . Ohi9, city champion, and Judith Ann
•fllnnlllay•, W: ewhs
~2- 1 ; f"iglileroa. N !'r' - 12~6 :. U ndg.mtJ
Nidklaus in 'Royal Montreal a year 'a,gtt, .
Chicago ~ Detroit t. 1sr
Me
Yean, rated in the lqJ ·10 in Ohio from
Hu nter , NY U.il ; seven p Htihers Iletro it
1000 •000 oop- o .6 11
d
Chicago 3 Delrolt 2nd
Rocky
Rivet High SchooL
·
ll.,.;l"iln
~~~iclof
les
.
·
O
hicaoo
:
Q
Oo
,
_
J
.
~
_.
a
mitlal
Wednesday
litlat
he
'·
s
allowed
the
·
300100
0
Clev-eland~ C81il0rnia' 2
EARNED RUN AVERAGE
'Lemanc,&gt;tk 11 ·21 ond Fr~e- . IWI~, fruslniting , dry spell to ·get ille better
New Y"'k 10 Oakland l'
.( tu:s~ on ., . .;nnings pltdteco
han; ·e. Johi"JSOf'l ( 9 -8 ~ lana d :mm.:
MilWaukee S Kansas Ciry o
KENT, OIDO- RlrnNINGaACK-KICK
fitATIONA'L \.EAGUE ~ Jones, Essian .
·
MiMeso.ta Boston 1
" f'm fnustrated and •too impatient," he
return specialist Kerry Marbury was
SD '2A .; S1.1Mouse, Mtl 2...58 ;
Sallimore- 6 Teras ' · 12 inns
IGnO 000 00!)- 1 '91(1
Pitclwm
Normo~n. C in '2.-61; Za ctlcy ~ ·Cin :BOS10r.l
said. "I'm snapping at people and giving
acquired Wednesday on waivers by the
M'innesotil
003 020 ·oo.J(- 5 t9 1
2.. &amp;2; Kaa $ Ph il 2.-63.
tAll nmu eon
everybody
a hard time. But most Of all I'm
Cleveland Browns from the NFL expansion
IW&gt;i ~ . Pole
fA). Lee 1'5),
AMERlCAN LEAGUE : . F iOakland !Mitchell 6 Sl al
dryeh , De: J .11 ; Travers,. M iJ 'HQ:u5e fJ J ar.u:f F isk ; Goltz ,
getting down on myself." A reversal really
New York ( Ellis 11--Ail ~ 2 .p.m .
Sea tUe Seahawks,
Gar(and, .8111 1.57; Bvngmeie:r {B) , Cempbtll (8) appears in order this week since at last ·
O.lroil CN\acCormack O·• and 1.25 ;
Marbury, a f&gt;.lO, !~under from West
• Bare 1-SJ at Chic BOO ( Barrios z. P•1mer . 8aU 2..84; Umbar ger. and W:rneg:ar. WP -.Go:Jtz {S-ifJL
LP-.Wise (HI)
week's tournament, the Westchester Classic
Tex tl7.
· laold Odom 0.01. 2• • ,311 o.m.
Vll'ginia, played in the Canadian•Football
STRIKEOUTS.
.
• Cllifornia (Tanana H -6) ,at
in New Yerk, Weiskopf shot a 74 tile first day
League the past three seasons. He ·was
002 000
2 12
NATIONAL .LEAGUE , SEa ~ Cati fornil!l
Cl••eland tTtoomas 2-1!. 7, 30
1
and
stormed
off
the
&lt;'
O
utse
midway
through
C~e~and
001
!
10
02•.6
9
1
picked
by Seattle from New England in Ule
, p.m .
vet". NY tll : Mess.ersmilttl. AU
lRo/a t;~ . Verhoevet"l (1) , Sco1t
Milwauk~ (Cofborn 6"10) 11 and ~ ichard . Kou I U ; N ie-kro,
llle second round of tile deslgnaled PGA
recent expansion draft. Marbury, who left
(11) a.rnd HumPhr ey ; Wadts (.A-4J
KllflSOS City (Splifl...... 10·61, All 103 ; Ma&gt;tehlsro, SF 99.
event. That ac.tion currenUy is under in·
Cl&gt;llege following his junior year in 1972, led
AMERICtoN LEAGUE, Ryan, a.nd A.Shb&gt;-; , f'toue {J L UP8:30p .m.
vesligaUon by PGA Commissioner Dean
' .los1on Client 10·11 ar Min- Cal 117;· "Birle~en . rex us ~· Ry,an 11 Ill.
the nation in rushing untU an ankle injUry in
Tanana , C.1 ll6; Jenk1ns_. Bos
t nesote (R edfer-n 2-61. 9 p·.m.
·
Beaman
.
•·the next to the last game l.he season put
O.i5k1ilnd .
lOChOOO'DOO- ·1 '9 3
• 8allimore {Grimsley 2-• J a• 106 o Hun~ef' • .NY IO:S .
.New'Yor~
2100i0 ' 2~X -~ O ~ 51
t P~ry t .n, 9, 05 p.m .
him out of COIIII!llssion, according tO the
NorrMs, .LJirnblad ( Sa. Todd ~1)
~
Friday's Gemt-s
RICHMOND, KY.- HALL OF FAMER
. Browns .
M~jor L••tue Rn.ults
and T·enaot , ,Newman U~;
, K.ans4!S City at Oakl and~ nivht
By
URJted
Press
lnlernational
Earle
·
Combs,
the
quiet
"Country
Gen·
W~ter
U
2-81
and
Mo.
1
1son
.
LP
Minnesota at Chicago. night
National League
--lNorr.is ("l-.lt ~ HR-New York.
~tra il at Clft"eland, night
Mtm'iM ( 9 L
' Milwaukee at Baltimore. nffjtlt ( 11 inn·ings,t
Sf.
Louis
100
003
100
o6
1
1
I
Boston at .New Yor". nigh1
Los
Angels
301
on
0011
11
IJ
1
Milwaukee
1~ o 102 ooo- s 9 o
(Only games scheduled )
Denny. Curlls {4). Solomon K.ansas City !OOO(IOCHJOO'- 0 4..4
peddle three star
A's
Traven . Sadec~ ( 7}4 Frisella
fer
$U
million
In
such
terms
(7) .&amp;nd Ku~rer ; Fitzmorris
as "economic insanity" and
01 -6J and Wanta.n . WP Travtrs (11 -1L
"that's no way to treat a
P i .ttsbt.m~ h

Especial~
for','Jri~,
,..

in Newberry family of Letart

July' 23 ·

. LETART, W. Va. - The
!Wbert . J• . Newberry farm
family. In Letart hu been
designated the Mason County
Fllrm Family of the Year by .
the MQuntailleers for RW'al. ·
Pnlgress CounciL
Winning recognition as a
fahn famliy of the year Is
·hothing too new to the
Newberry famUy. Last yeat
they received the deSignation
twice, once from Ule SoU
Conservation District and
another from the Farmers
Home Administration

'

ALL LADIES' SHOES
Spring &amp;Summer ·

.Regrouped and
Repriced
Now!

(FmHA).

c .•n

\7.,,

Nationally
Adv. Brands.
Values to $26.00

•500

&lt;&gt;•"-·

o.

-

Baseball
hearing

FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9

·~
316

326

Mason ~

.

-New Fall Shoes Arriving Daily-

354

381

RUBY-AMBER-.

OLIVE GRttN-BWE-

PRICE

CRYSTAI. ,

OOSRIIE JEWElRY
ONE GROUP ON SALE

h

1

PRICE

~

PRICE

Mens Canvas Shoes

Hartley 's· Shoes

'2.00

Pomeroy,o.
Open All Day Thursdiy
Friday Night Til8 .
$aturday 9 TiiS ·
'·

.-

' '

FABRIC SPECIALS
FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9 ONLY!

SELECTED GROUP

FABRICS lL . PRICE .
72

--------~-------------·

lfl OFF SALE

• NICE,Fr111ce (UPI)- Tite
thieves who pul)ed ofl ·a
liPectacular '10 million bank
· heist made their getaway
lbrough the city's sewer
lystem in a pickup van and
jnay have swlfcbed to stolen
high-speed motorb'oa\s,
llollce IIBld today.
._The gq, which tunneled
;;g feet from a - • Into the
vault of the Societe Generale
bank branclt; escaped In
. habber b9&amp;11 thraugh the
~!ewer syllleln · on the first
~ge ' of their escape, police
·

bank's main vault that was
not protected by an alarm.
Working ~t their leisure
during the weekend, they
munched bread and sipped
wine wblle rallll8cking 400
safe-deposit bolreS.
"We've found rubber hip
boots, acetylene bottles, a
rubber boat and other equipment wblch we hope will turn
liP a clue, that will belp to
Identify the thieves," Police
Commhsloner Ja~;ques
Bresson said at a news
Cjlllference.

l,OOO's of Yards On Sale

Wd.

They theorized the thieves ·
ir81W!ferred their loot Into a
!Xckup truck fer a h&amp;lf.mlle
!lrlve along the underground
banks Of the Pailloo River,
which flows beneath the city.
1 •
But Ute final staae Of their
· getaway may hive been by
jJower boat, pollee Slid. Four
liafll before the bank theft,
three .Italian-made "Riva"
ilpeedboata were stolen from
itearby harbors on the French
luviera, police llld.
'
. The Riva, which retails for
~t&gt; fiO,OOO, Is equipped
"ith twin 350·horsepower
fmcines and Clll travel at
~ ilp to 45 \mota. From
Nice, IIUch boall could easUy
l'each any port m the French

':-Richlrd Nlmn geta at leut

THE

m ·w. SecOnd
Pomeroy.O.

·

Ph. 992-2214

McCall'$.

Kwick-Sew,
Simplicity
'

I

flattems

and sought something more
out of life.
I
In those intervening years,
he has made his farm self·
sufficient for his family,
producing all the food they
need.
. aesides the 242 acres used
primarily for the business
Mrs. Newberry and her
children tiave tilled a one
acre family garden to
·produce vegetables for
themselves. Roasting com ;
beans, cucwnbers and not to
mention a patch of pumpkins
which are already massive iii
size are contained in this
garden .
Last year, Mrs. Newberry
canned approximately 250
quarts of different foods they
had grown,
In extending their live~ ·
beyond lhe farm, the entire
family is active in 4·H with
Mr. and Mrs. Newberry as
advisers and Darla, Karen
·and Sharon, all members of
the Hillbilly 4-H Club.
The family attends the
Krebs Chapel Church.

WOMENS SANDALS

BOAT SHOES
(White &amp; Navy)

Values to $12.99

Sale r'
5

REG. 56.50

CHILDRENS

All

CANDLES
SUMMER .PURSES &amp;

•
•

!

~ break becauae .of
aterpte -Ute toes m his
mWion San Clemente
eute wiD barely rise at aU
frhUe bla neighbors pay

btble mc:r.-.
._ Btca111e Of tbe funr over

n•••
flnancel and tuu,
lbt estate already waa
lenlllnlsed 8IICI tued to the

l!mit.llld tbe cnnge Cwnty
411 · , 'I af!lce, eiplainlng
the 1 11111"1 value Of
piGp&amp;l) 1'0118 only 1
jler cent wblle Cllherl In the
Ire&amp; \ver11ed 2S percent.

1!tlf

It•··

OFF

1 GROUP OF

~u
·• cl•M•
R&amp;Glne A•a
l'o•troy hnlltill
jJ"n.D uSO Tndl ...a

LUtr!

¥,

j

"l1 l
)

"'"
, u
k_...,, rl,itu
Plrat..
"'
!ll
hrtlu4

Table of Irregular Items

~"r:oJ

...1111" •• •
S1NG\.III rjt&lt;ll

55 PD'
I'll•·

gr Me•••e 9""
rw ... 1 • I'll•·

Ph•te:- lo
. ~·· !l'l.ftrl I - ~~.

P1r•'n 7

~~ SJ!"!OU! hd1 2

I'll!, ltnk!lt

GREAnY REDUCED
MIDDLEPoRT BOOK STORE

""•· fl .. ... 19 Sjrir.auu Indlano 1

Middleport, 0.

h Price

Sale $500
FREE Ill

One pair of tube sociis with each purchase of a pair of converse
·
·
·
tennis shoes.

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Middleport, 0.

STARTS FRIDAY AT 6 PM

"ADMIRAL' QUALITY APPUANCES

W00DST00L5
30" •7.49

18" '5.99 24" '6.99

'="~~s~~~---! 1~5 75
.

I

,

'5 aoo .

12' Wide Foam Backed

Store

I
I
.I
I
,I
I
I
I .
I
I .
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

.
25
8
KITCHEN OfAIRS-~------

·9112 FOAM BACK
lWEED RUGS-------- .

Great Values Throughout The

,.........~...- -«•UI:ZiJ~I-=-------,
.
I

,

·=
Shop Our Bargain Rocks

Refrigerators, Freezers, Ran·ges. Air
Conditioners, Dehumidifiers. Col'or T.V.,
B.&amp;W T.V 's, Stereo Sets, Radios .

·RECLINING CHAIRS ____ !68
5X8 PORCH RUGS_____ ~r

9xl2 LINOLEUM RUG __sgea
~=S~-----~58 00

~·

Values to $19.99

1

I

sALE

A

WOMEN'S SHOES
and SANDALS

.

SLAT SEAT WOOD .

WTHER BELTS '

Sale $399

DRESS SHOES
·
.
and SANDALS

.
:0
=~~~---·__ :__~21
% PLATFORM ROCKERS--~58

RECORDS

NixON GETS BREAK
~~ ANA, Cllllf. (UP!) .

57.00 Retail or Mote

MEN AND WOMENS

99
.16X48
DOOR
MIRROR
__
$4
Complete with mounting. clips.

In what is be~ called the
l•caper of the century," the
~Jan ~eled Into the

'2 OFF ANY PAIR
OF SCISSORS

.

Officials 111id the lllrike wu
C&lt;llllng 11riaaltural ownen,
wocken and clllliiiUIIItlel ~
million 1 day. A long lllrlke
would cauae the layoff rA
100,000 pickers and then
spread to allied indlllll'* ~
· C&lt;llling as much u $2 biDI«l
if It lasts through Augult.

1 GROUP OF

99
BOOKCASE
----·------!14
K. D.
32" H, 32" W, 9". D.

. · FRIDAY 6 to 9 PM

b.. Italian Rivler-..

CONTINUES

!With This Coupon)
Friday, July 23,6 to 9 p.m.
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy, o.

the elevator," · says Mrs . ·harvested an .average of 60 10,000 feet of drainage tile
and a diversion ditch. ·
Newberry in reference to how bales of hay per acre.
Mr. Newberry who quit
the members of her family . In 1975, they were awarded
(arming
for a time to try
work together · to make the Farm Family of the Year for
brban
living
in Columbus.
farm a suocess.
their soil conserva tlon efforts
.Ohio,
returned
·to Mason
The 243 acre ·farm located · which includes strip cropping
County
and
began
builillng
near the Hidden Valley qnd crop rotation ss well as
Country Club has; as its main
business, the raising of
Charolais cross feeder
calves. At present there are
approximately 130 head on
the farm.
Excellence has stayed with
the Newberrys in their
breeding practices which is
evidenced by two Grand
Champions in ' 1974, ~nd 1975
at the Mason County Fair in
the Baby Bee£ Show. Darla
won the title in 073, while her
younger sister Sharon came
away with the honors in 1974.
Three fl'Ore steers weighing
between 800 and 1,000 pounds
will be enterell in the Baby
Bee£ show this year.
·
They've had a calf in the
fair ever since they were old
enough, Mrs. Newberry said.
While 100 acres of the farm
is used primarly to pasiW'e
the liveslliCk, another 143
acres has approximately 40 in
corn, seven in oats, and 531n
llay,
·
So far, In thls lean year for
hay, the Newberrys have
IN THE PUMPKIN PATCH - Sharon Newberry
grahs one of many large pumpkins she has grown ill the
family garden. The Newberry family hopes to exhibit one
or more of these !Nffipkins in the fair.

through sewers

Middle Of Upper Block ·

FABRIC.
'
SHOP

contract.

hJs farm in 1958. He noted,
that he found city life hofing

Thieves got away

FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9

BE HERE AT 6

'I

"Darla bails the hay ,I load
the hay and Robert puts it on

underwav

Ladies &amp; Giits Summer Shoes

347

Oaklanii

franchise."
At the opening hearing of a
special House Committee on
Profes·s ional Sports
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Wednesday, finley Charged
The kindesllh)ng Charlt'Ji 0 .
Kuhl)'s nullification of
fil1leY managed 1.o say about tllat
tile sale of JO. Rudi, !Wille
Baseball Commissioner Fingers and. VIda Blue was
ChiJrleslon
~1 so .aSJ 15', .Bowie
Kuhn
at
a
part of an effort to drive him
Tidewater
,.0 51 .A-AO 16'-' 2 &lt;XJngressional hearing was:
Wednnda, •s Aesutts
out
of baseball,
Syra cuse 9 Tld~wa ter 'l
· " I just don't think oo likes
Kuhn,
the opening witness
Richm ond 1 Rhoae - lstand 3 me."
R'?ctiester 7 Charleston 6, 1st.
befoce
the
HoUse group, said
On the other hand, three of
1 mn.
he
barred
the
deal to prevent
R:ochesrer a t Char let ton, 1nd, Finley's fellow ownera de·
"public
confidence
in the
ppd., ra in after .41 in n .
scribed his recent atien}JJI to
Totedo 8 Memph i$ 1
integrity Of baseball from
being Wldermined."
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . federal
Finley,
whosuit
has lrought a
oourt
to overrule
the commlSSioner, was asked
if he tboll@ht Kuhn's actim
was an attempt to foree him
out of the g~ .
"Yell, sir. I definitely do,"
Finley replied. He cited four
flnesllevied against him · by
the COITUIIiMioner, asaerting
FRIDAY FROM 6 TO 9 PM
each was "grosrdy unfslr"
and the lut costing SI,OOO for
dropping Infielder Mike
Andrews from the Oakland
roster ill tile 19'12 World
Series "was tile most idiotic
fine in the history of sports.
"Somehow,! doo 't think he
•
likes me," the Oakland owner
BUIIU!l8rized.
· ·
But Allen H. Selig, head of
, the Milwaukee Brewers, was
1 TABLE
· just as unsparing of Finley's
thwarted trade. "I CBMOt
believe that was in the beat
interests of baseball, even for
the New York Yankees or
Boston Red Sox," he told the
conunlttee wiUt Finley silting
alongside al the witness
table.
"The Jong·term effects
were very, very danleroua.lt
was economic inaanlty and
not in the best Interests of the
aame, the · fans or the
players." t
I ntern•tionill
LUIUf St•ndings
Unif1td Pren lnternationaJ
W. L. Pet . GB
Roc.he-ster
56 l'-A .622
·s yracuse51 41 .548 61''
Rhode hland .At •.a .sos 10''1
R ichmond
47 A8 . ~95 H * 1
Memphis
~~ A8 .478 ta
Toledo
43 so .•62 141 a

FOSTORIA COIN GLASS

199

or

A PAIR '

.

What is new about this
year's deslj~nation is that this
is the first time MRP has
designated a Farm FamUy of
the Year and this particular
designation is for general all
!IJ'Ound excellence in farm·
lng, Jobn Cooper of the U.
S. SQU Conservation Service
in Mason County.
Excellence in family
farming was not only
achieved
by
Robert
Newberry but Mao by his
)fife, Delores and four
·!!Sughters: Darla, Sharon,
)Caren and Unda Casto, who
is married and·. lives In

PEN Tll9 P.M. FOR THIS. SPECIAL SALE

oro.:-

•r-...

•

ALLSHOES DISPLAYEOON 'RACKS:. .

s

T.....,-. ..,....,..

•

Farming excellence r~cognized

Friday Night . &amp; to 9

Ueman " from Kentucky, often over·
shadowed by his more colorful teammates
mUle powerful New York Yankee teams of
the 19Z&lt;ls and early 1930s, died Wednesday.
Combs, 77, had his best year at baf in
1927, the same year a&amp;b!! Ruth :was hitting
60 home runs. And Rulli's much discussed
"called shot" home run in the WOfld Series
was duplicated in a manner by COmbs
without the resultant publicity.

called both aides to
Wuhlngtoo to meet .,nt11 him .
in 111 effort to agree a

Mason County Fair Season. Left to right are Lynn Giacomo, Sherri
Wbllnu!n, Marilyn Denise McDaniel, Julie Jean Campbell, Lou Ellen
!Wush, Julie Sue Sommer, Julie Dawn Sunmer, and Marcia HyaU. Tara
Lynn Keams was absent.

.

Chicago

By United Press International

to ruln tons . of fruit,
vegetables and grain forcing food prices up
nationwide.
Repreeentalives of strlklng
northen\ California cannery
werkers and 28 canning firms
were to meet with tbe
· nation's top federal medlator
in In Washlniton today.
James, F. Searce, director
Ill the Federal Medlcatlm
and Conciliation Service,

I

"

Bn'ef,ed reports

Prell

IDte,..liol!lll
California fanners blasted
llorm and gave away peaches

Olympics briefs -••
MONTREAL ( UPI) American paperweight
Greco·Roman wrestler Mike
Farina of Elmhurst, 111.,
stepped on the scale
Wednesday to meet the ~
kilogram weig!lt limit for his
Olympic . boUt.
The
overweight light blinked off
and on weakly,
·
Farina spat out his chewing

Ualled

.

TWEED CARPET---~q~i:~~3 99
I

.

12=' Wide Cushioned Back Vinyl

FLOOR COVERING_~.-~d~!r'
4 DRAWER CHESTS----!37

NIGHT STANDS.--------s25
3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE s121

I

I
I

1I

I
I
I
I

I
I

I
I
I

I
I
I

I

I
I
I

I
I
I
II

A fine, colorful. commemorative memento of lhe 200th
birthday of this great, lree
country of ours.. and at a

priCe you'll remember.·

WITH COUPON

FRIDAY

NIGHTONLY- 6to8 P . M.

L--~~':E~~~R!:2~R-=~~D~:"~~T.;..,____ ...

�1

f

6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P001eroy, 0., Thursday, July 22, 11171
0l ~ .
•
!WJOIOJ!Sm-&gt;"P.':':':':·:;:·:::~j

·I

-Women's club enjoys recent picnic

Generation Rap · 1
By Helen and Sue Bottcl

1..

The Middleport Business

and Professional Women's
· Club held a.plcnlc recently at
Fotest Acres Park. Fifteen
members and four guests
attended.
Guests were JoAnn WOOd,
district director , Lucy
EarwOOd, dislrict legislation
chairman, Madge Neal ,

Let'• Hear ltfor Amerlct
RAP:
I don't understand why 10 many are complaining about the
Bicentennial sales promotions. Last year we were in trouble
bealuse peqlle weren't spending. Now we're coming out of our
economic gloom. Hour 200ih birthday can help this along, I'm
for thole Buycentennlal ads.
I thlnt It's great that people are getting tJP on America,
showing pride again. It's a welcome change. Those who say
we're overdo1M patrlotlsn don't understand this emotional
·outburst of our history.
· i.s for other I:OU!ltrlea who cater to our celebta lion by
making Bicentennial iterils for sale, why not? After aU, they've
supplied milny of our Christmas and Easter gifts, and most of
our July 4th fireworks for man~ years.
Yea, we're flooded with America-this and America-that
and 1776-1976 on ahnost everything we see, but enjoy 'em! I
wmder how many of these things will be around when
American celebrates 300 years of independence? - P.L.J.
Your good letter leads to a question we asked ourselves
thiBweek - and had a lot of fun with ourall!Wera: •
What will America and II.! people be like in 2076?
We won't tell you Oil' guellll!ll, unW YOU share yours with
IL'I. So how about it? Project Iilio the future, readers, and tell us
what you think iB in store for our country- and the world- in
the next 100 years. I'!!thaps we'll p~t your (and our)
cootrlbutions in a time capaule mar"ked ·~Do not operi until
~6" and allow our deacendant.s to see how right - or wrorig we were. - HELEN AND SUE

,I

Van Meters 'gather

MUSING FROM HELEN: I wonder If by then they'll have
invented a guaranteed nonfattening slrawberry, cream
cheese, sour cream blintz?

+++

•.. And In 2076 will Great Grandma Bell's brood still be
putting your "on hold"? - SUE

+++

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:'
I'm a 15-year-old girl who has had a pretty bad life. Mom
divorcedmf father when·I was 10, with good re&amp;SO!l8. He was a
dnink and he tried to rape me when I was 8. Mom didn't know
about thla last unW two years later (kids usually keep quiet '
abou\ what their parents do to them, out of fear, or not .
linderstanding or BOil)e kind of "loyalty," 1 guess). That's
when Mom and I left.
I haven't seen my father for three years and have no desire
to: But I can't get over being afraid of men and boys. I dated a
nice guy, but the minute he made advances, I started to shake.
I'm aiJqlly afraid to be touched. Now I'm going with another
wonderful fella who hasn't tried anything, but I'm still scared.
Ia thla a natural reaction becauae of what my father did to me,
and shouldn't it go away soon? - UNTOUCHABLE
'
DEAR UNTOUCHABLE :
Afew sessions with a coUIL'Ielor should de-fuse your fear of
men. Tell your mother how you feel, and ask her to make an
appointmen~. - SUE

+++

NOTE FROM ifELEN: When you realize what happened to
yoU may not have ·been u bad as your remembfance of it, I
tblnt your fear of being touched will dlllaipate.
Perhapa it might' help to know, In talking With your
counseloc, that many girls have had the sameellpel'iences with
members of their families. , Rationally discussing their
lrawnaa usually cures lhem. - HELEN

Sue Rue entertained
A bridal shower was held
recenUy for SUe Rue, bride·
elect of William Spell, at the
home of Mrs. Ed Baer in
Middleport. Hastesses were
Mrs. Baer and Mrs. John
Blalr:e.
The guest Ust included Mrs.
-non Hanning, Mrs. Tom
Woods, Mrs. Ron Logan, Mrs.
Earle WOOd, Mrs. John Hood,

. Mrs. Emerson Heighton,
Mrs. Dale Sounders, Mrs.
Eleanor Burke, Miss Janice
Schmoll, Mrs. Steve Henderson , Mrs. Michael
Gerlach, Mrs. Steve Little, ·
Mrs. Robert Meier, Mrs.
David Baher, Mrs. Don
Pullin, Mrs. Tom Rue, the
honored guests mother:· the
hostesses and Miss Rue.

FRIDAYj_to.9 PM

~~-SJIIII'·SALE
A TABLE OF

40%(ff
40%0FF

GIRLS PANTS
SIZES 5-14
A TABLE OF

BOYS PANTS
SIZES 5-14

BoYS-AND GIRLS

SHORrs·Sizes 2-14

and SLACK SUITS
SIZES 2-6x
BOYS &amp;

RLS

BAlHING SUilS
1 STYLE OF GIRLS
'

AU. WEAlHER COATS
SIZES 7-14

40%0FF
50% 0FF
.50% 0FF

. FAMlLY NIGHT will be observed foc the r~ining
two weekend presentations of "Gallia Country" at the
natural amphitheatre on the Bob Evans Farms in Rio
Grande. Special priCI!s will be offered. Pictw-ed here are
Judy Samples porlraying Catherine Cameron and Tim
Heaton, Col. John Safford.

Groups are sponsoring
horse show Saturday

Special prices offered
for 'Gallia Country '
"Family Night" will be
observed each Sunday for the
remaining two weekends of
·~Gallia Country " , wHh
special prices. A family of
four will be admitted for $8.,
and each additional family
·member, $2, each .
Six performances remain
for this year's production,
July 23-25 and July JO.August
1, at the amphitheatre on Bob
Eva!l8 Farms in Rio Grande.
Crowds have come from
many distant areas to see
this, the fourth season for
"Gallia Country", presented
with many new additions to
compliment the nat ural ,
beauty of the amphithealre.
Under lhe direction of Greg
Miller, of Jackson, a lively
and different interpretation
of the founding and
development of "Gallia

HARVEST AGROUP OF
FRIDAY FROM 6 1U 9 PM
AT OUR

11

1 GROUP OF SANDALS

112 PRICE
WOMENS CANVAS OXFORDS

'2" 1
1--1111!'!'!'!-------------"'
(BLUE &amp; WHITE)

t------------------1
1

l-----------------1
'1

GROUP CHILDRENS KEDS

SHOES

.

3.98 to 4.98

son and children of
Baltimore, 0 ., visited this
past weekend with ,his
mother, Mr's. Helen Simpson,
also with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Badgley,
Visiting also with the Badleys
were their son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Badgley of Fairfax, Virginia.
Other visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Badgley were their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Badgley of
Fairfax, Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Pickens of Cambridge, Ohio,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Pickens
and son ·John an4 a niece,
Miss Wilma Rose and Mrs.
Walter Cutshall, all of
Colwnbus were here for lhe
funeral of Mr. Herman Wolfe.
Miss Rose remained here for
a few days.
Several from Racine attended the wedding Sunday

afternoon in Gallipolis of
Charles Pyles Jr. and Miss
Karen l..&lt;!mley.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ervine
celebrated their JIX.h wedding
anniversary with a cookout.
Those present were Mr. and
Mrs . .Ralph Shain 3)ld Mr.
and Mrs. David Shain and son
Jason of Antiquity.
Mr. aQd Mrs. Frank
Cleland
visited their
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Young
in Gallipolis. Accompanying
them were a daughter, Mrs.
Carolyn Powell, grand·
daughters Lori and Ivana
Powell and grandson J. T.
Young.

1

FABRIC VALUES

REDUCED TO

.

WOMENS ANGEL TREADS

CANVAS &amp; CHILDRENS SANDALS
'

00

WOMEN$ KEDEmS

$2.49

Y2 .PRICE

T·Shirt Material

For those i.vomen who have trouble finding
·
wide shoes. AAA

Polyester &amp; Cotton

RACINE - Sunday. July · Addi e Wolf Pull ins,
18, five of the six children of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
the late George and Mary Pullins Jr . and daughter
Pooler Wolf and their Rhonda, Ubrary, Pa.; Mr.
families were reunited at lhe and Mrs. Rollin Pullins and
home of Addie Wolf Pullins, son, Richard , TI1urston : Mr.
1liURSDAY
Texas Community, Rt. 3, and Mrs. Robert Pullins and
MEIGS OOUNTY Women's Pomeroy.
\
son, Cl1ad, Baltimore ; Mr.
Fellowship
Thursday at
. lly Polly Cram••
Bertha
Wolf
Sayre,
anolher
and Mrs. Donald Pullins,
Pomeroy Church of Christ, child, is deceased.
Columbus,
and grand DEAR POLLY - I ha•e always rub a little butter or Carry-in diMer.
Present w~e Mr. and Mrs. children, Jeff and Ali ci a
FRIDAY
some or that popular pl~sllc margarine on the threads of
Charles
Sayre,
RD ,
GENERAL MEETING of Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs . Reed, l.£banon ; Mr. and Mrs.
ware !hat Is sold only at home the bottle and cap. When
Bill (Debbie) Tound as and
parties. It has become sticky. baking and greasing baking Rollin&amp; Hills Chapter 838, Darrell (Jean ) Drenner and daul\!!_ler, Amy, Colum bus;
Is there anything that will pans every now and then, I Parents Without' Partners, daughter, Janine , N. Fort Mrs. Kenneth !Doroth y)
clean It so it will lose this grease the vanilla bottle CJIP Friday, 7:30 p.m. ·at Grace Myers, Fla .; Mr. and Mrs. Chaney, Shade ; Dr. and Mrs.
and never hav~ a problem United Methodist Church in Ernest Wolf and Mr . and Mrs. Louis ( Dora ) Rei!, Robert
stickiness ? - PEGGY
DEAR PEGGY - Perhaps with removing it. ~ BETTY. Gallipolis. Special "feature Steven Wolf and children, Reif and Dr . and Mrs. Louis
t your plastic ware has been D)':AR POLLY - Whell J will be a panel discussion on Steven, Jeff and Cathy ,. E. Rei! Jr. and children,
• near too much heat. Ac- used .to let out the hem in a the topic, "~and the Single Westeryille ; Clarence Wolfe libby Lou and David, Grove
polyester or jersey garmet it Parent." Public invited. AU and Mr. and Mrs. George City .
1 cording to lnfonnallou I have
1
frQI!I a representative of this always showed a crease . To single parents urged to Wolf, Chester ; Mr. and Mrs .
Ira. Wolf, Rutland, Mr and
coinpany the product "was . remove this I now lay a dry attend.
Paul (Ruth ) Karr and son, Mrs. Lynn (Darlene) Kt·euzer
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona David, Mr. and Mrs. Partick and children, Michelle and
made for the refrigerator and cloth against the fabric and
Grange
Friday 8 p.m. with !Nancy ) Morrissey and Sonja, Mitch Tirtnal ary,
pots and pans for the stove. wet one on top and then use·
Rock
Springs
Grange as host. children, Tommie and Cnrey, Gahanna, and Sheryl Wolf,
, Do not get mixed up and put . my steam iron. This works
pots and pans In the great and the kids can wear Inspection and fi[th degree to Long Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs . Westerville.
be conierred .
refrigerator and our product their clothes longer. Clarence Wolf Jr. and son ,
Visiting in the afternoon
on the stove." U any readers UNOA S.
David,
Chester
;
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
was
Sam Michael, MfnersSUNDAY
DEAR POLLY - We do a
have had a similar exTim
Wolf
and
daughter
,
ville.
OOZART FAMILY reunion
perience to Peggy's we would 'Jot of fishing in sununer. Our
Sherrie, Coolville.
will
be
held
at
the
Shrine
park
like to hear what Was done two daughters, ages five and
seven, also like to fish. My in Racine sunday. Potluck
about II. :.... POLl, Y
DEAR POLLY -' My Pet husband thought of buying will be served at I p.m. All
Peeve concerns those people them each art Ice fishing pole relatives and friends invited
Par~ on southbound lane.
who leave circulars or and two .small plastic spin- to attend.
Basl!et
lunch al 12:30. All
samples in plastic bags ning reels that were attached
DOlJGLAS REUNION friends and relatives invited.
hanging over one's door to the poles with screws. They Sunday at U.S. Rt. 33 Slate
TAYLOR - HARPER
knob. This is just great for were inexpensive and now
reunion
Sunday at Forest
thieves who will know for each girl hasp short pole lhat
Acres
Park,
Rutland. Basket
bottle.
Put
the
spools
inside,
sure one is out. It is positively is easy for her to handle. - ,
The Wilkesville Temple or
dinner
al
1
p.m.
Bring own
the
caps
on
and
they
are
neal
dangerous for vacationers. I MRS. M.T.
Pythian
~1sters met at 8
table
service.
Beverage
will
DEAR POLLY - Save and handy . I use large
do wish something could be
p.m.
Friday
, July 16 in
be
provided
.
done about this. It is an in- plastic pill bottles and use inexpensive plactic storage
regular
sess
ion w:th t6
HOMECOMING of Long
vitation to br~ak ins we can them for storing your spools cases to hold my spool filled
members
present.
Bottom Community Church
do without. ~ : ROSE . .
of thread. The ditferent size pill bottles. - .OLIVINE.
Regul ar business was
DEAR POLLY ~ Marilyn Sunday at Long Bottom
DEAR POLLY - The top of bottles will fit different ·size
transacted
aft er whi ch
wrote
abOut
her
problem
with
Methodist Church. Basket
my vanilla bottle used to get' sj)Ools, and the thread will not
preparations
were
made lor a
a
sinelly
garbage
disposal.
I
dinner at noon. Program, 1
very hard to get off. Now unwind . You can see at a
buffet
supper
to
be held
when I open .a new bottle, I glance what color is In a want to tell her that my in- p.m . Special singing. Public AUgust 14th. ·A commi ttee
structions were to grind a cut- invited.
was named to take care of
up lemon in the disposal. this
arrangements.
Serving will
MONDAY
should make it smell nice and
be
from
4:30
p.m.
to 8 p.m.
SPECIAL MEETING of
lem ony and fresh .
Meigs eyand Boosters Mon. with all you ca n eat for $2.50
MADALYN
day, 7:30 p.m. in the band for adul ts and $1.50 for
room . Final plans for children. The funds ra ised
working booth at fair, menus, will be used to pay for thei r
prices, and pie baking . All building. After the meeting
band parents and other in- was closed, a social hour was
terested persons urged to held with refreshments.
Mr. and Mrs. Rohert Mills attend .
and their son, David have
returned from a two week
IF YOU'RE STILL lOOKING
vacation with their daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
FOR THAT SPECIAL HOME
FRIDAY
Michael Boring, of Del Rio,
Texas.
6 to 9 PM
We hiiVe two double wide homes on display
While in Del Rio the Mills
for yo.ur inspection. These homes can be
family visited many places of
interest in nearby Mexico.
purchased for much less than a comparable
They were met at the airport
site built home. Construction is basicly lhe
good
by
Mary Mills and Jeff Riley.
same, so why pay more. Se~ the 24x56
'
penthouse comp,lete with uniq11e island
Bradford Church or Christ
kitchen. This home ·is available 11nly at .•
__.._
~··
to Harry W. Hendricks,
Kiri!fSb'Ory, also·1ook "at -our .24x48 Skyline
MONEY DUE
Tressie Hendricks, Parcel ,
home built by the niltion's leading
The Middleport-Pomeroy Salisbury.
·
area branch of , AAUW ' George V, Angelette, dec.
manufacturers .
members are reminded their· to Un\on Commerce Bank,
annual dues, $13.50, must be Treas ., Cert. . of trans.,
sent to Mrs. Earl Knight, Pomeroy.
Beech Street, Middleport,
Union Commerce Bank to
Cntherine R. Angelette, Lot,
45760 by July 31.
Pomeroy.
James Crisp, Sr., Nellie
Carroll Crisp to Jack Crisp,
Glenna Ru,th Crisp, Parcel,
now you know
K%400 SPECIAL
· In the Centennial election Salem.
Clarence S. F'rank, afof 1876, Rutherford B, Hayes
Street Bike
"QUALITY.ALWAYS'
. lost by more than 250;000 fidavit, Syracuse.
• Owet louf stroKe
l..&lt;!ttie A. Spencer , dec. to
votes to Samuel T. Tilden in
OHC 398cc ongone
Pomeroy
992-7034
Ohio
the pOpular balloting, but won Clarence S. to'rank, cert. of
Poarl Ash 992·2323 , Roger Davis, m .767J
• Tu!led 2 ·!nlo· l exhaust
the U. S. presidency by a trans ., Syracuse .
system booSts mrteage
fllargin of one electoral vote.

Polly's Pointers
Keep plastic ware
away from heat

SPECIAL BONUS

$1.98 yd.

· FRIDAY FROM 6 to 9 PM

-

Property

Transfers

. $109

jar

W/C

ON ALl lAWN

FURNITURE, ROTO
TILLERS &amp; LAWN
MOWERS IN STOCK

WESTERN AUTO
o.

GROUND BEEF
31bL or more

liMIT

8 !: ggc-

10 lBS.

49~.

W/C

Powell's S11per Valu

W/C

TOILO TISSUE

9(.'SICI.l l~:i! !VICe r · c~ ..ln)
lreognt lJI·,t""' t!'..'P N~ ~ta:r
1M O:.al la.. t&gt;S Pnu SuOI(";I
to c1'1311Qc v.!lnQut 1\JttCe

1 G.ROUP

LADIES' ·DRESS SHOES
'

AND SANDALS

•soo

W/C

.'1 O~AIR

wo

ES

DRESS SH0

~ftO SAMOM.S

20% Off

OPEN FRIDAY ·TIL 9

DRESS SHOES

In Cooperation With

'

\

Merchants'
'
Moonlight Sale!

'

Pair

Marguerite's
SHOES

(Shop Our
Catalog Values)
•
•

,~ ~(

o

,,o~ ~~ ~ ~ o4
ri~ ~~ ,~
~~ ..!..e
cP

Belty Ohlinger
102 E. Main
Pomeroy

Friday,

Ju~

~l;

"

23-6 to 9 p.m.

,
~(

T"'

.
5

- MOONLIGHT SALE' ladies' Stretch Nylon

PANTY HOSE

KNEE-HI HOSE'

Seamless stretch nylon panty hose in
, th e season~ best shades . One size fits
all .
·

One ~iz.e tits illh to l1. Regular 49 ~e11t
va l u~'. Seasons best shades . Save.
I

19e
- MOONLIGHT SALEPoly and Pol y Blend

SKIRT LENGTHS
Ski rt lengths ol po lyester and polyester
blend fabr ics. Take your choi ce ;

BATH TOWELS

I

Slight irregulari,ies save you mon~y ,
won 't affect looks or wear . Gr ea t buys!

so~ EACH

3 3 e .EACH
-MOONLIGHT SALEClose -out Assortment

- MOONLIGHTSALE27"x45" Bolo Woven

~BABY BLANKETS
Special

RAINBOW RUGS

Moonlight close out sale

Always a favorit e[ 27K d5 inch si ze bolo
woven rainbow ar ea r ugs.

assortm en t of sol id color baby blanke ts.

'100

EACH

MCIONLIGHTSALEMen ' s Poly ester Knit

BLANKETS

LEISURE SUITS
Tw o p1ece pol yester doubl eknit leisure

out fll s. Brown on ly! Moon li ght Sale .

'300 '

'1000

EACH

EACH

CIALAssorted Fabric

. - SPECIAL13x1 8 Broadloom

- SPECIALCotton Terry

REMNANTS

RUG BLOCKS

TOWEL ENDS

•' to 1 yard leng lh s ol

Assorted plain and fan cy
br oadloo m rug blocks.

L~rge size hemmed cotton
terry towels ends.

better fabrics.

- STIFFLER'S BIG MOONLIGHT SALESpec ial Mill Length Assortment
60 Inch Wide F'olyester

.

DOUBLEKNIT
FABRICS
A gr eat select ion of 60
inch Wide po l yes fer
do ubl e kn il fabrics in
fas h io n c olors a nd
pa tt erns . Stiffle r 's help
yo u stre) ch the buying
powe r of yo ur dollar .
St iffler 's
Moonlight
Sale .

YOUR CHOICE!

...

Good Friday, July 23,6-10 p.m.

.•

e•

I

PAIR :

- MOONLIGHT'SALE.20"x40" Cotton Terry

992·2184

Pair

PAIRS •
FOR

-MOONLIGHT SALELadie s' Stretch Nylon

Po eroy,Qhio

1 GROUP
MEN'S WEYENBERG

.,••

MEN'S !iUf'/IMER

2

J&amp;R Sport Shop

CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
Pomeroy, vmo
PH. 992-2178 .
Owned &amp; Operated
Lou Osborne

in

· your choke of colors or patterns .

Sale lot o f soli d col·or needlewoven
blankels _in your choice of colors.

Values to $30.00

PR.

M isses pol yest~r d oub l ~k n lt sl ae,ks

Sa le group of m is ses polyester
doubleknit. short s in assorted fashion
color s.
I

'8a~I'IJl"&lt;111l..I("' I Jc:hJf("' ~flo')

t--~--~---------·-+--------·------1

ALL

CHARMIN
Pile.

pcrlorrnance

KNIT SLACKS

KNIT SHORTS

v

•3·oo

, ( li)PI ' N

sgc
'.

S ll e,

-MOONLIGHT SALEOne Lot - Misses Polyester

-MOONLIGHT SALEOne Lot - Misses Polyester

- M09NLIGHT SALESolid Color Nee dl ewov en ,

lADIES' DRESS SHOES
AND SANDALS

SHOES
.96~ pa.ir

Powell's Super Valu
Good Friday, ,luly23,6-10p.m.

4rol

ol

ano econom~

1 GROUP

1 GROUP
LADIES' &amp; CHILDREN'S

c ouPrJN

Royal Crown Cola

1

• A bt.::aut 1lul blena

--·--~·----~-·-11--·----

Friday 'Night

C OLJ ~I lN

KAWASAKI
lets the
deals rolll

Sensational a·uys!!

·298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

1

Powell's Su,ler Val!l
Good Friday, July 23, • -10p.m.

. STARTS FRIDAY AT 5 PM

YOUNGSTER KILLED
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UPI)
- Three-year-old Mary
Palmer of Cambridge was
killed Wednesday evening
when she was struck by a car
on a city street here.
Pollee said the girl
apparently ran in front of the
auto. No charges were filed .

~IOC:X:IOC:XXIOCXIOC:::ICI~:XIO&lt;:X:IODCIODCIODCXIOCXIOCXI....

1

NESTE A

3
HOURS
ONLY!

whtle 11 cuts cos ts

MOONLIGHT SALE 6 TO 10 PM
INSTANT TEA

POMEROY ONLY

~­

Meigs

FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9

P0 WELL'S

3oz.

Mills family
home from trip

.....

Y2 PRICE

1

· Social ·Wolf family reunites
Calendar

Pythian
Sisters meet

M)MENS WHITE SANDALS

Racine Social Events
Visitors last week of Mrs.
Grjtta Simpson were Mr. and
Mrs. l..&lt;!onard Lawson, Bill
Lawson and Rudolph Compton of Columbus and Mr.
Edward Howe of Flushing,
Ohio, Mr. Howe visited also
with Mrs. Mae Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gold of
Marietta visited with Mrs.
Gold's father, Mr. Francis
Morris. Her mother, Mrs.
Ur a Morris . Is recovering
from sw-gery at the home of
her daughter 1 Mrs. Merle
Shroeder in ·Columbus. 1The
address is 1283 Westphal
Ave., Columbus, Ohio ·43227.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Miller were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush of East Letart.
Mr. Warren Kunz of
Lantana, Florida spent the
weekend with his daughter
and son-in4aw, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simp-

SUMMER BARGAINS

BOYS CANVAS TRACK SHOES

SUITS

IOID FRS WEAR

•

The Southern Athletic · Dairy Isle, Quality Print
Boosters and .M.eigs County Shop, Landmark, Mullens
ME
Riding Club will sponsor a Insurance, V. D. Edwards
PEDWIN
horse show on Sa turdlly, ~uly Insuran~, Sugar Run Mill,
·
31 at G p.m. at the Rock Meigs Tire Center, Adolph
Springs Fairgrounds.
Dairy Isle, nutton Drugs, I""7"GiwU'P~F"-Enlry fee is $2 and ribbons New York Clothing House,
1
OF
and money, $8, $6, $4 and $2 David In'surance, Ewing
will be awarded. In Funeral Home, Racine
registered classes, proof of Garage , Pomeroy Flower
'
00
registration must be shown at
Sentinel,
Eber's
Counlry" ·is being offered entry. Proof of age for youlh ·Shop,
Gulf, Daily
Wagner
Hardware,
with enlhlisiasic reception . may.be requested. All ponies Roseberry
Pennzoi),
Tickets are available in must have measurement Pomeroy Nation.al Bank,
area Chambers·or Commerce cards. All enlries are final Ridenour TV, Waid Cross and
Sizes B'l:i to 6
00
offices as well as Haskins· and exhitiitors not registered
Tanner, Bernadines and PJ's in a class wiU be excused. Sons,
Star Goeglein
Supply, Brother
VIllage
Phannacy,
in Gallipolis; L'Unique Gate donation, · $1 and and G&amp;J Auto Parts.
Beauty Shop in Rio Grande, childi'en under 12 admitted
and from individual cast free. Food will be served on
'100
members. In addition to lhe the grounds. Herb Crabtree
family night special prices on will be the judge. Twenty;;ix
Sunday, regular ticket rates classes will be offered.
GROUP OF VAw•c'"~
for Friday and Saturday are :
Making donations toward
CANVAS
$3. in advance ($4 at lhe lhe event were R. C. Cola,
gate); $2 for children under ,. Valley Lumber, Jay.Mar
• 00
18 years of age and n. each Coal, Elberfeld's in Pomeroy,
for groups of 20 or more. Fanners Bank and savings, ·
'
Fw-ther infotmation may be Teaford Real ty , Racine
.
Obtained by calling the Gallia Home National Bank, Trl·
Dramatic Arts Society, State Materials, D&amp;o Meats,
Chamber of Commerce of- Dale C. Warner Insurance, ·
FRIDAY
fice, phone 446-2200. Light Racine Food Market,
SMALL GROUP
wraps are suggested for those Ashland Bulk Plant, Dan
6 to 9 PM
attending "Gallia Country". Thompson Ford, McClure's

LEISURE

SELECrED
PAJAMAS
INFANT &amp;

jl

The VanMeter reunion was Newell, Jeff, Scotty and
held at Portland park on July Misty, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
18.
Neweil, Mrs. Shelia Billie Jo
Those a!tending were Long, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Esther Dailey, Ada M. Curtis, Tammy, Timmy,
VanMeter, Mrs. Mike Evans, Terrl and Tobby, and Mary
Alicia, Cindy and Ryan, Mrs. Pierce, all of Long Botlolfi;
Iva Lawrence, Brenda and Mr . and Mrs. James Cooley,
Byron, and Mr. and Mrs. Michael, Charlie and
Russell VanMeter, all of Smathers, Susie Cooley and '
Portland ; Mr . and Mrs . Anna Mae Caldwell all of
Melvin Lawrence and son, Steubenville; Denver Curtis;
Mr . · and Mrs . . James · Beckley, w. Va. Mr: amj Mrs.
Lawrence, Chester .Van- Keith Curtis; Mrs. Neva .
Meter, Enna Wilson, Forrest Bailey, and David Koblenti,
VanMeter, Joan ·Crisp and of Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Lee, all of Racine; Millard VanMeter, Pomeroy
Melvin VanMeter and son of and
Tony
VanMeter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. John Colwnbus.

+++

.

El•

WD.on,
lllld 9. Membera who ate ill •prtzea won lly
Erna
.
Jesse
and
Karen
are Julia McComu, Dorlha
Sutherland.
The
traveling
Salser lllld Janet Korn.
Gift.! were pretented to prlie donated by Karen
JoAnn Wood and Lucy Su!l!erland wu won by Erna
Earwood by Elolle Wilaon, J~.
On August 16. the club wUl
vice president. The hoslel.t
committee chairman was hold a wiener roaat ·for
Eva Roblon and eo&lt;halrman mem'berr and their famlllea
at the roadside park on U.S.
was Wanda Eblin.
Games were played and 33.

dlllltlct secretary-lreuurer,
and Mrs. Eille Sulherllllld .
Nellie Vale gave the In·
vocation . JoAnn Wood IIPOke
briefly and read a poem to
Alwllda Werner, club
president. She reminded the
club of the fall meeting at
Burr Oak on Sept, 26 and a
management school to he
held at Cincinnati on Oct. 8

.

~ ~UySentlnel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., 1lnnday, July 22~, 11116~1111¥1~-----;

(

·i

'•

'.

�1

f

6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P001eroy, 0., Thursday, July 22, 11171
0l ~ .
•
!WJOIOJ!Sm-&gt;"P.':':':':·:;:·:::~j

·I

-Women's club enjoys recent picnic

Generation Rap · 1
By Helen and Sue Bottcl

1..

The Middleport Business

and Professional Women's
· Club held a.plcnlc recently at
Fotest Acres Park. Fifteen
members and four guests
attended.
Guests were JoAnn WOOd,
district director , Lucy
EarwOOd, dislrict legislation
chairman, Madge Neal ,

Let'• Hear ltfor Amerlct
RAP:
I don't understand why 10 many are complaining about the
Bicentennial sales promotions. Last year we were in trouble
bealuse peqlle weren't spending. Now we're coming out of our
economic gloom. Hour 200ih birthday can help this along, I'm
for thole Buycentennlal ads.
I thlnt It's great that people are getting tJP on America,
showing pride again. It's a welcome change. Those who say
we're overdo1M patrlotlsn don't understand this emotional
·outburst of our history.
· i.s for other I:OU!ltrlea who cater to our celebta lion by
making Bicentennial iterils for sale, why not? After aU, they've
supplied milny of our Christmas and Easter gifts, and most of
our July 4th fireworks for man~ years.
Yea, we're flooded with America-this and America-that
and 1776-1976 on ahnost everything we see, but enjoy 'em! I
wmder how many of these things will be around when
American celebrates 300 years of independence? - P.L.J.
Your good letter leads to a question we asked ourselves
thiBweek - and had a lot of fun with ourall!Wera: •
What will America and II.! people be like in 2076?
We won't tell you Oil' guellll!ll, unW YOU share yours with
IL'I. So how about it? Project Iilio the future, readers, and tell us
what you think iB in store for our country- and the world- in
the next 100 years. I'!!thaps we'll p~t your (and our)
cootrlbutions in a time capaule mar"ked ·~Do not operi until
~6" and allow our deacendant.s to see how right - or wrorig we were. - HELEN AND SUE

,I

Van Meters 'gather

MUSING FROM HELEN: I wonder If by then they'll have
invented a guaranteed nonfattening slrawberry, cream
cheese, sour cream blintz?

+++

•.. And In 2076 will Great Grandma Bell's brood still be
putting your "on hold"? - SUE

+++

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:'
I'm a 15-year-old girl who has had a pretty bad life. Mom
divorcedmf father when·I was 10, with good re&amp;SO!l8. He was a
dnink and he tried to rape me when I was 8. Mom didn't know
about thla last unW two years later (kids usually keep quiet '
abou\ what their parents do to them, out of fear, or not .
linderstanding or BOil)e kind of "loyalty," 1 guess). That's
when Mom and I left.
I haven't seen my father for three years and have no desire
to: But I can't get over being afraid of men and boys. I dated a
nice guy, but the minute he made advances, I started to shake.
I'm aiJqlly afraid to be touched. Now I'm going with another
wonderful fella who hasn't tried anything, but I'm still scared.
Ia thla a natural reaction becauae of what my father did to me,
and shouldn't it go away soon? - UNTOUCHABLE
'
DEAR UNTOUCHABLE :
Afew sessions with a coUIL'Ielor should de-fuse your fear of
men. Tell your mother how you feel, and ask her to make an
appointmen~. - SUE

+++

NOTE FROM ifELEN: When you realize what happened to
yoU may not have ·been u bad as your remembfance of it, I
tblnt your fear of being touched will dlllaipate.
Perhapa it might' help to know, In talking With your
counseloc, that many girls have had the sameellpel'iences with
members of their families. , Rationally discussing their
lrawnaa usually cures lhem. - HELEN

Sue Rue entertained
A bridal shower was held
recenUy for SUe Rue, bride·
elect of William Spell, at the
home of Mrs. Ed Baer in
Middleport. Hastesses were
Mrs. Baer and Mrs. John
Blalr:e.
The guest Ust included Mrs.
-non Hanning, Mrs. Tom
Woods, Mrs. Ron Logan, Mrs.
Earle WOOd, Mrs. John Hood,

. Mrs. Emerson Heighton,
Mrs. Dale Sounders, Mrs.
Eleanor Burke, Miss Janice
Schmoll, Mrs. Steve Henderson , Mrs. Michael
Gerlach, Mrs. Steve Little, ·
Mrs. Robert Meier, Mrs.
David Baher, Mrs. Don
Pullin, Mrs. Tom Rue, the
honored guests mother:· the
hostesses and Miss Rue.

FRIDAYj_to.9 PM

~~-SJIIII'·SALE
A TABLE OF

40%(ff
40%0FF

GIRLS PANTS
SIZES 5-14
A TABLE OF

BOYS PANTS
SIZES 5-14

BoYS-AND GIRLS

SHORrs·Sizes 2-14

and SLACK SUITS
SIZES 2-6x
BOYS &amp;

RLS

BAlHING SUilS
1 STYLE OF GIRLS
'

AU. WEAlHER COATS
SIZES 7-14

40%0FF
50% 0FF
.50% 0FF

. FAMlLY NIGHT will be observed foc the r~ining
two weekend presentations of "Gallia Country" at the
natural amphitheatre on the Bob Evans Farms in Rio
Grande. Special priCI!s will be offered. Pictw-ed here are
Judy Samples porlraying Catherine Cameron and Tim
Heaton, Col. John Safford.

Groups are sponsoring
horse show Saturday

Special prices offered
for 'Gallia Country '
"Family Night" will be
observed each Sunday for the
remaining two weekends of
·~Gallia Country " , wHh
special prices. A family of
four will be admitted for $8.,
and each additional family
·member, $2, each .
Six performances remain
for this year's production,
July 23-25 and July JO.August
1, at the amphitheatre on Bob
Eva!l8 Farms in Rio Grande.
Crowds have come from
many distant areas to see
this, the fourth season for
"Gallia Country", presented
with many new additions to
compliment the nat ural ,
beauty of the amphithealre.
Under lhe direction of Greg
Miller, of Jackson, a lively
and different interpretation
of the founding and
development of "Gallia

HARVEST AGROUP OF
FRIDAY FROM 6 1U 9 PM
AT OUR

11

1 GROUP OF SANDALS

112 PRICE
WOMENS CANVAS OXFORDS

'2" 1
1--1111!'!'!'!-------------"'
(BLUE &amp; WHITE)

t------------------1
1

l-----------------1
'1

GROUP CHILDRENS KEDS

SHOES

.

3.98 to 4.98

son and children of
Baltimore, 0 ., visited this
past weekend with ,his
mother, Mr's. Helen Simpson,
also with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Badgley,
Visiting also with the Badleys
were their son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Badgley of Fairfax, Virginia.
Other visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Badgley were their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Badgley of
Fairfax, Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Pickens of Cambridge, Ohio,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Pickens
and son ·John an4 a niece,
Miss Wilma Rose and Mrs.
Walter Cutshall, all of
Colwnbus were here for lhe
funeral of Mr. Herman Wolfe.
Miss Rose remained here for
a few days.
Several from Racine attended the wedding Sunday

afternoon in Gallipolis of
Charles Pyles Jr. and Miss
Karen l..&lt;!mley.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ervine
celebrated their JIX.h wedding
anniversary with a cookout.
Those present were Mr. and
Mrs . .Ralph Shain 3)ld Mr.
and Mrs. David Shain and son
Jason of Antiquity.
Mr. aQd Mrs. Frank
Cleland
visited their
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Young
in Gallipolis. Accompanying
them were a daughter, Mrs.
Carolyn Powell, grand·
daughters Lori and Ivana
Powell and grandson J. T.
Young.

1

FABRIC VALUES

REDUCED TO

.

WOMENS ANGEL TREADS

CANVAS &amp; CHILDRENS SANDALS
'

00

WOMEN$ KEDEmS

$2.49

Y2 .PRICE

T·Shirt Material

For those i.vomen who have trouble finding
·
wide shoes. AAA

Polyester &amp; Cotton

RACINE - Sunday. July · Addi e Wolf Pull ins,
18, five of the six children of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
the late George and Mary Pullins Jr . and daughter
Pooler Wolf and their Rhonda, Ubrary, Pa.; Mr.
families were reunited at lhe and Mrs. Rollin Pullins and
home of Addie Wolf Pullins, son, Richard , TI1urston : Mr.
1liURSDAY
Texas Community, Rt. 3, and Mrs. Robert Pullins and
MEIGS OOUNTY Women's Pomeroy.
\
son, Cl1ad, Baltimore ; Mr.
Fellowship
Thursday at
. lly Polly Cram••
Bertha
Wolf
Sayre,
anolher
and Mrs. Donald Pullins,
Pomeroy Church of Christ, child, is deceased.
Columbus,
and grand DEAR POLLY - I ha•e always rub a little butter or Carry-in diMer.
Present w~e Mr. and Mrs. children, Jeff and Ali ci a
FRIDAY
some or that popular pl~sllc margarine on the threads of
Charles
Sayre,
RD ,
GENERAL MEETING of Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs . Reed, l.£banon ; Mr. and Mrs.
ware !hat Is sold only at home the bottle and cap. When
Bill (Debbie) Tound as and
parties. It has become sticky. baking and greasing baking Rollin&amp; Hills Chapter 838, Darrell (Jean ) Drenner and daul\!!_ler, Amy, Colum bus;
Is there anything that will pans every now and then, I Parents Without' Partners, daughter, Janine , N. Fort Mrs. Kenneth !Doroth y)
clean It so it will lose this grease the vanilla bottle CJIP Friday, 7:30 p.m. ·at Grace Myers, Fla .; Mr. and Mrs. Chaney, Shade ; Dr. and Mrs.
and never hav~ a problem United Methodist Church in Ernest Wolf and Mr . and Mrs. Louis ( Dora ) Rei!, Robert
stickiness ? - PEGGY
DEAR PEGGY - Perhaps with removing it. ~ BETTY. Gallipolis. Special "feature Steven Wolf and children, Reif and Dr . and Mrs. Louis
t your plastic ware has been D)':AR POLLY - Whell J will be a panel discussion on Steven, Jeff and Cathy ,. E. Rei! Jr. and children,
• near too much heat. Ac- used .to let out the hem in a the topic, "~and the Single Westeryille ; Clarence Wolfe libby Lou and David, Grove
polyester or jersey garmet it Parent." Public invited. AU and Mr. and Mrs. George City .
1 cording to lnfonnallou I have
1
frQI!I a representative of this always showed a crease . To single parents urged to Wolf, Chester ; Mr. and Mrs .
Ira. Wolf, Rutland, Mr and
coinpany the product "was . remove this I now lay a dry attend.
Paul (Ruth ) Karr and son, Mrs. Lynn (Darlene) Kt·euzer
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona David, Mr. and Mrs. Partick and children, Michelle and
made for the refrigerator and cloth against the fabric and
Grange
Friday 8 p.m. with !Nancy ) Morrissey and Sonja, Mitch Tirtnal ary,
pots and pans for the stove. wet one on top and then use·
Rock
Springs
Grange as host. children, Tommie and Cnrey, Gahanna, and Sheryl Wolf,
, Do not get mixed up and put . my steam iron. This works
pots and pans In the great and the kids can wear Inspection and fi[th degree to Long Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs . Westerville.
be conierred .
refrigerator and our product their clothes longer. Clarence Wolf Jr. and son ,
Visiting in the afternoon
on the stove." U any readers UNOA S.
David,
Chester
;
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
was
Sam Michael, MfnersSUNDAY
DEAR POLLY - We do a
have had a similar exTim
Wolf
and
daughter
,
ville.
OOZART FAMILY reunion
perience to Peggy's we would 'Jot of fishing in sununer. Our
Sherrie, Coolville.
will
be
held
at
the
Shrine
park
like to hear what Was done two daughters, ages five and
seven, also like to fish. My in Racine sunday. Potluck
about II. :.... POLl, Y
DEAR POLLY -' My Pet husband thought of buying will be served at I p.m. All
Peeve concerns those people them each art Ice fishing pole relatives and friends invited
Par~ on southbound lane.
who leave circulars or and two .small plastic spin- to attend.
Basl!et
lunch al 12:30. All
samples in plastic bags ning reels that were attached
DOlJGLAS REUNION friends and relatives invited.
hanging over one's door to the poles with screws. They Sunday at U.S. Rt. 33 Slate
TAYLOR - HARPER
knob. This is just great for were inexpensive and now
reunion
Sunday at Forest
thieves who will know for each girl hasp short pole lhat
Acres
Park,
Rutland. Basket
bottle.
Put
the
spools
inside,
sure one is out. It is positively is easy for her to handle. - ,
The Wilkesville Temple or
dinner
al
1
p.m.
Bring own
the
caps
on
and
they
are
neal
dangerous for vacationers. I MRS. M.T.
Pythian
~1sters met at 8
table
service.
Beverage
will
DEAR POLLY - Save and handy . I use large
do wish something could be
p.m.
Friday
, July 16 in
be
provided
.
done about this. It is an in- plastic pill bottles and use inexpensive plactic storage
regular
sess
ion w:th t6
HOMECOMING of Long
vitation to br~ak ins we can them for storing your spools cases to hold my spool filled
members
present.
Bottom Community Church
do without. ~ : ROSE . .
of thread. The ditferent size pill bottles. - .OLIVINE.
Regul ar business was
DEAR POLLY ~ Marilyn Sunday at Long Bottom
DEAR POLLY - The top of bottles will fit different ·size
transacted
aft er whi ch
wrote
abOut
her
problem
with
Methodist Church. Basket
my vanilla bottle used to get' sj)Ools, and the thread will not
preparations
were
made lor a
a
sinelly
garbage
disposal.
I
dinner at noon. Program, 1
very hard to get off. Now unwind . You can see at a
buffet
supper
to
be held
when I open .a new bottle, I glance what color is In a want to tell her that my in- p.m . Special singing. Public AUgust 14th. ·A commi ttee
structions were to grind a cut- invited.
was named to take care of
up lemon in the disposal. this
arrangements.
Serving will
MONDAY
should make it smell nice and
be
from
4:30
p.m.
to 8 p.m.
SPECIAL MEETING of
lem ony and fresh .
Meigs eyand Boosters Mon. with all you ca n eat for $2.50
MADALYN
day, 7:30 p.m. in the band for adul ts and $1.50 for
room . Final plans for children. The funds ra ised
working booth at fair, menus, will be used to pay for thei r
prices, and pie baking . All building. After the meeting
band parents and other in- was closed, a social hour was
terested persons urged to held with refreshments.
Mr. and Mrs. Rohert Mills attend .
and their son, David have
returned from a two week
IF YOU'RE STILL lOOKING
vacation with their daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
FOR THAT SPECIAL HOME
FRIDAY
Michael Boring, of Del Rio,
Texas.
6 to 9 PM
We hiiVe two double wide homes on display
While in Del Rio the Mills
for yo.ur inspection. These homes can be
family visited many places of
interest in nearby Mexico.
purchased for much less than a comparable
They were met at the airport
site built home. Construction is basicly lhe
good
by
Mary Mills and Jeff Riley.
same, so why pay more. Se~ the 24x56
'
penthouse comp,lete with uniq11e island
Bradford Church or Christ
kitchen. This home ·is available 11nly at .•
__.._
~··
to Harry W. Hendricks,
Kiri!fSb'Ory, also·1ook "at -our .24x48 Skyline
MONEY DUE
Tressie Hendricks, Parcel ,
home built by the niltion's leading
The Middleport-Pomeroy Salisbury.
·
area branch of , AAUW ' George V, Angelette, dec.
manufacturers .
members are reminded their· to Un\on Commerce Bank,
annual dues, $13.50, must be Treas ., Cert. . of trans.,
sent to Mrs. Earl Knight, Pomeroy.
Beech Street, Middleport,
Union Commerce Bank to
Cntherine R. Angelette, Lot,
45760 by July 31.
Pomeroy.
James Crisp, Sr., Nellie
Carroll Crisp to Jack Crisp,
Glenna Ru,th Crisp, Parcel,
now you know
K%400 SPECIAL
· In the Centennial election Salem.
Clarence S. F'rank, afof 1876, Rutherford B, Hayes
Street Bike
"QUALITY.ALWAYS'
. lost by more than 250;000 fidavit, Syracuse.
• Owet louf stroKe
l..&lt;!ttie A. Spencer , dec. to
votes to Samuel T. Tilden in
OHC 398cc ongone
Pomeroy
992-7034
Ohio
the pOpular balloting, but won Clarence S. to'rank, cert. of
Poarl Ash 992·2323 , Roger Davis, m .767J
• Tu!led 2 ·!nlo· l exhaust
the U. S. presidency by a trans ., Syracuse .
system booSts mrteage
fllargin of one electoral vote.

Polly's Pointers
Keep plastic ware
away from heat

SPECIAL BONUS

$1.98 yd.

· FRIDAY FROM 6 to 9 PM

-

Property

Transfers

. $109

jar

W/C

ON ALl lAWN

FURNITURE, ROTO
TILLERS &amp; LAWN
MOWERS IN STOCK

WESTERN AUTO
o.

GROUND BEEF
31bL or more

liMIT

8 !: ggc-

10 lBS.

49~.

W/C

Powell's S11per Valu

W/C

TOILO TISSUE

9(.'SICI.l l~:i! !VICe r · c~ ..ln)
lreognt lJI·,t""' t!'..'P N~ ~ta:r
1M O:.al la.. t&gt;S Pnu SuOI(";I
to c1'1311Qc v.!lnQut 1\JttCe

1 G.ROUP

LADIES' ·DRESS SHOES
'

AND SANDALS

•soo

W/C

.'1 O~AIR

wo

ES

DRESS SH0

~ftO SAMOM.S

20% Off

OPEN FRIDAY ·TIL 9

DRESS SHOES

In Cooperation With

'

\

Merchants'
'
Moonlight Sale!

'

Pair

Marguerite's
SHOES

(Shop Our
Catalog Values)
•
•

,~ ~(

o

,,o~ ~~ ~ ~ o4
ri~ ~~ ,~
~~ ..!..e
cP

Belty Ohlinger
102 E. Main
Pomeroy

Friday,

Ju~

~l;

"

23-6 to 9 p.m.

,
~(

T"'

.
5

- MOONLIGHT SALE' ladies' Stretch Nylon

PANTY HOSE

KNEE-HI HOSE'

Seamless stretch nylon panty hose in
, th e season~ best shades . One size fits
all .
·

One ~iz.e tits illh to l1. Regular 49 ~e11t
va l u~'. Seasons best shades . Save.
I

19e
- MOONLIGHT SALEPoly and Pol y Blend

SKIRT LENGTHS
Ski rt lengths ol po lyester and polyester
blend fabr ics. Take your choi ce ;

BATH TOWELS

I

Slight irregulari,ies save you mon~y ,
won 't affect looks or wear . Gr ea t buys!

so~ EACH

3 3 e .EACH
-MOONLIGHT SALEClose -out Assortment

- MOONLIGHTSALE27"x45" Bolo Woven

~BABY BLANKETS
Special

RAINBOW RUGS

Moonlight close out sale

Always a favorit e[ 27K d5 inch si ze bolo
woven rainbow ar ea r ugs.

assortm en t of sol id color baby blanke ts.

'100

EACH

MCIONLIGHTSALEMen ' s Poly ester Knit

BLANKETS

LEISURE SUITS
Tw o p1ece pol yester doubl eknit leisure

out fll s. Brown on ly! Moon li ght Sale .

'300 '

'1000

EACH

EACH

CIALAssorted Fabric

. - SPECIAL13x1 8 Broadloom

- SPECIALCotton Terry

REMNANTS

RUG BLOCKS

TOWEL ENDS

•' to 1 yard leng lh s ol

Assorted plain and fan cy
br oadloo m rug blocks.

L~rge size hemmed cotton
terry towels ends.

better fabrics.

- STIFFLER'S BIG MOONLIGHT SALESpec ial Mill Length Assortment
60 Inch Wide F'olyester

.

DOUBLEKNIT
FABRICS
A gr eat select ion of 60
inch Wide po l yes fer
do ubl e kn il fabrics in
fas h io n c olors a nd
pa tt erns . Stiffle r 's help
yo u stre) ch the buying
powe r of yo ur dollar .
St iffler 's
Moonlight
Sale .

YOUR CHOICE!

...

Good Friday, July 23,6-10 p.m.

.•

e•

I

PAIR :

- MOONLIGHT'SALE.20"x40" Cotton Terry

992·2184

Pair

PAIRS •
FOR

-MOONLIGHT SALELadie s' Stretch Nylon

Po eroy,Qhio

1 GROUP
MEN'S WEYENBERG

.,••

MEN'S !iUf'/IMER

2

J&amp;R Sport Shop

CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
Pomeroy, vmo
PH. 992-2178 .
Owned &amp; Operated
Lou Osborne

in

· your choke of colors or patterns .

Sale lot o f soli d col·or needlewoven
blankels _in your choice of colors.

Values to $30.00

PR.

M isses pol yest~r d oub l ~k n lt sl ae,ks

Sa le group of m is ses polyester
doubleknit. short s in assorted fashion
color s.
I

'8a~I'IJl"&lt;111l..I("' I Jc:hJf("' ~flo')

t--~--~---------·-+--------·------1

ALL

CHARMIN
Pile.

pcrlorrnance

KNIT SLACKS

KNIT SHORTS

v

•3·oo

, ( li)PI ' N

sgc
'.

S ll e,

-MOONLIGHT SALEOne Lot - Misses Polyester

-MOONLIGHT SALEOne Lot - Misses Polyester

- M09NLIGHT SALESolid Color Nee dl ewov en ,

lADIES' DRESS SHOES
AND SANDALS

SHOES
.96~ pa.ir

Powell's Super Valu
Good Friday, ,luly23,6-10p.m.

4rol

ol

ano econom~

1 GROUP

1 GROUP
LADIES' &amp; CHILDREN'S

c ouPrJN

Royal Crown Cola

1

• A bt.::aut 1lul blena

--·--~·----~-·-11--·----

Friday 'Night

C OLJ ~I lN

KAWASAKI
lets the
deals rolll

Sensational a·uys!!

·298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

1

Powell's Su,ler Val!l
Good Friday, July 23, • -10p.m.

. STARTS FRIDAY AT 5 PM

YOUNGSTER KILLED
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UPI)
- Three-year-old Mary
Palmer of Cambridge was
killed Wednesday evening
when she was struck by a car
on a city street here.
Pollee said the girl
apparently ran in front of the
auto. No charges were filed .

~IOC:X:IOC:XXIOCXIOC:::ICI~:XIO&lt;:X:IODCIODCIODCXIOCXIOCXI....

1

NESTE A

3
HOURS
ONLY!

whtle 11 cuts cos ts

MOONLIGHT SALE 6 TO 10 PM
INSTANT TEA

POMEROY ONLY

~­

Meigs

FRIDAY NIGHT 6 to 9

P0 WELL'S

3oz.

Mills family
home from trip

.....

Y2 PRICE

1

· Social ·Wolf family reunites
Calendar

Pythian
Sisters meet

M)MENS WHITE SANDALS

Racine Social Events
Visitors last week of Mrs.
Grjtta Simpson were Mr. and
Mrs. l..&lt;!onard Lawson, Bill
Lawson and Rudolph Compton of Columbus and Mr.
Edward Howe of Flushing,
Ohio, Mr. Howe visited also
with Mrs. Mae Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gold of
Marietta visited with Mrs.
Gold's father, Mr. Francis
Morris. Her mother, Mrs.
Ur a Morris . Is recovering
from sw-gery at the home of
her daughter 1 Mrs. Merle
Shroeder in ·Columbus. 1The
address is 1283 Westphal
Ave., Columbus, Ohio ·43227.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Miller were Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Bush of East Letart.
Mr. Warren Kunz of
Lantana, Florida spent the
weekend with his daughter
and son-in4aw, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simp-

SUMMER BARGAINS

BOYS CANVAS TRACK SHOES

SUITS

IOID FRS WEAR

•

The Southern Athletic · Dairy Isle, Quality Print
Boosters and .M.eigs County Shop, Landmark, Mullens
ME
Riding Club will sponsor a Insurance, V. D. Edwards
PEDWIN
horse show on Sa turdlly, ~uly Insuran~, Sugar Run Mill,
·
31 at G p.m. at the Rock Meigs Tire Center, Adolph
Springs Fairgrounds.
Dairy Isle, nutton Drugs, I""7"GiwU'P~F"-Enlry fee is $2 and ribbons New York Clothing House,
1
OF
and money, $8, $6, $4 and $2 David In'surance, Ewing
will be awarded. In Funeral Home, Racine
registered classes, proof of Garage , Pomeroy Flower
'
00
registration must be shown at
Sentinel,
Eber's
Counlry" ·is being offered entry. Proof of age for youlh ·Shop,
Gulf, Daily
Wagner
Hardware,
with enlhlisiasic reception . may.be requested. All ponies Roseberry
Pennzoi),
Tickets are available in must have measurement Pomeroy Nation.al Bank,
area Chambers·or Commerce cards. All enlries are final Ridenour TV, Waid Cross and
Sizes B'l:i to 6
00
offices as well as Haskins· and exhitiitors not registered
Tanner, Bernadines and PJ's in a class wiU be excused. Sons,
Star Goeglein
Supply, Brother
VIllage
Phannacy,
in Gallipolis; L'Unique Gate donation, · $1 and and G&amp;J Auto Parts.
Beauty Shop in Rio Grande, childi'en under 12 admitted
and from individual cast free. Food will be served on
'100
members. In addition to lhe the grounds. Herb Crabtree
family night special prices on will be the judge. Twenty;;ix
Sunday, regular ticket rates classes will be offered.
GROUP OF VAw•c'"~
for Friday and Saturday are :
Making donations toward
CANVAS
$3. in advance ($4 at lhe lhe event were R. C. Cola,
gate); $2 for children under ,. Valley Lumber, Jay.Mar
• 00
18 years of age and n. each Coal, Elberfeld's in Pomeroy,
for groups of 20 or more. Fanners Bank and savings, ·
'
Fw-ther infotmation may be Teaford Real ty , Racine
.
Obtained by calling the Gallia Home National Bank, Trl·
Dramatic Arts Society, State Materials, D&amp;o Meats,
Chamber of Commerce of- Dale C. Warner Insurance, ·
FRIDAY
fice, phone 446-2200. Light Racine Food Market,
SMALL GROUP
wraps are suggested for those Ashland Bulk Plant, Dan
6 to 9 PM
attending "Gallia Country". Thompson Ford, McClure's

LEISURE

SELECrED
PAJAMAS
INFANT &amp;

jl

The VanMeter reunion was Newell, Jeff, Scotty and
held at Portland park on July Misty, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
18.
Neweil, Mrs. Shelia Billie Jo
Those a!tending were Long, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Esther Dailey, Ada M. Curtis, Tammy, Timmy,
VanMeter, Mrs. Mike Evans, Terrl and Tobby, and Mary
Alicia, Cindy and Ryan, Mrs. Pierce, all of Long Botlolfi;
Iva Lawrence, Brenda and Mr . and Mrs. James Cooley,
Byron, and Mr. and Mrs. Michael, Charlie and
Russell VanMeter, all of Smathers, Susie Cooley and '
Portland ; Mr . and Mrs . Anna Mae Caldwell all of
Melvin Lawrence and son, Steubenville; Denver Curtis;
Mr . · and Mrs . . James · Beckley, w. Va. Mr: amj Mrs.
Lawrence, Chester .Van- Keith Curtis; Mrs. Neva .
Meter, Enna Wilson, Forrest Bailey, and David Koblenti,
VanMeter, Joan ·Crisp and of Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Lee, all of Racine; Millard VanMeter, Pomeroy
Melvin VanMeter and son of and
Tony
VanMeter,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. John Colwnbus.

+++

.

El•

WD.on,
lllld 9. Membera who ate ill •prtzea won lly
Erna
.
Jesse
and
Karen
are Julia McComu, Dorlha
Sutherland.
The
traveling
Salser lllld Janet Korn.
Gift.! were pretented to prlie donated by Karen
JoAnn Wood and Lucy Su!l!erland wu won by Erna
Earwood by Elolle Wilaon, J~.
On August 16. the club wUl
vice president. The hoslel.t
committee chairman was hold a wiener roaat ·for
Eva Roblon and eo&lt;halrman mem'berr and their famlllea
at the roadside park on U.S.
was Wanda Eblin.
Games were played and 33.

dlllltlct secretary-lreuurer,
and Mrs. Eille Sulherllllld .
Nellie Vale gave the In·
vocation . JoAnn Wood IIPOke
briefly and read a poem to
Alwllda Werner, club
president. She reminded the
club of the fall meeting at
Burr Oak on Sept, 26 and a
management school to he
held at Cincinnati on Oct. 8

.

~ ~UySentlnel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., 1lnnday, July 22~, 11116~1111¥1~-----;

(

·i

'•

'.

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July ·22, 1976

Notice .

Legal

-IIAHT ADS
INFORMATION
OfAOLINES
F' M .
oa ., Befon

NOT ICE OF SAl E

.S
Pu bl icat ion
Can cell at ion s.
cor r r.c
lions a cc ep te d firs t dey ot
publi ctl ron .

No ! Icc Is hereby g1vc n tht)l
tot tow ing thrCt' parc.cls of

ltH~

real esttt1E1 will be oHcred tor

sal e by th f' unacrstpned on
Sa turday , Ju lv Jist , 1976, "'

REGULATIONS

Th~ Publ ish er reser v ~!o
!he r1gh r to ed it or rej ect
anv ad s d eem ed ob
lect l on .,t T h e publish er
w ill not be ru pon slbl t for
more than o n ~ tncor rtcl
ln!er t 1on
RATES
For Want Ad hrvl(e
5 cen Is pe r wore one
1nsert ton
· Mmi m um Cha r ge 11 .00
t.&amp; cen t ! per wo rd thr ee
: onsecu t ive In sertions
26 ctn ts per word s1t&lt;
cons ecut ive Inser tion s
25 Per Cent D iscount on
paid ad s ~nd ads pa ra
w lth 1n 10 dll ys

10 00 AM althc tor mer home

of

Leota

Lynch . Deceased

S.1 1d parcels ot real t:-st a tc ar e

brlejly describe d as tottows ·
10 of an acre known as the
Ll;'o ta Lynch property ap
prais ed at t1 ,100 00
52 Of

an a cre

kno wn as th e

Arthur and MargarC!t L yn ch
pr operly appratSCd at $800 00
J JJ acres . Vacant lot. a p

pra.seCJ ar S-'1 .000 00
Th e

above

par ce l s

are

ilppr.ltScd as lnd tcated abov('

and ca nno t be sold for tess
than

appratsed

thC'

value

Prope rty to be sold to the
lliQ I1es t btdde r SlOO 00 dcpo sd

to be PiJ 1d by ~ucce ss t u t b1ddcr
on each property to btnd sale .
Btdder.s W1ll be grv en a .
roason nbte t ime wrthrn which
to borrow mone y from a
tendrng JllSii t ut ion and to
check lilte Sale will be con
d u ~tcct ar cacti property st te
r1 r st sate to be held at the
Let!tra Lynch property S ~lc is
su bj ect to the approval of the
Probate Court
,Also . one 2 door 1965 Dodge
to be sold to the htghf.'St bid
dcr Appra1sed at S115 00
James E Srm pson,
Adm 1n1S trator o t the
E st a te of Ar thur Lync h,
Deceas('d
111 16 18, 19, 10, 11, 22

REA L ES TAT E
F O R SA LE

Real Esta te owned by the
late Dame! Rces and Cla ra
Rees lo ca t ed at 306 west Ma m
Street . Pomeroy , Ohlo . con
s1sting of a garage and ho use
1S now bemg offered for sale
by the und ers1gned to the
highest b 1dder Please submtl
vovr bids to the und er s1gned
Property
ap pr a1se d
at
52 ,500 00, Sale SUbJ('CI to the
ap prova l ot the Probate Co ur t
Joseph w Cook
Adm rnls lrator of
I he E st at e of
Cla r a R ees, Dece t' Sed

171 11 , 21 ,

23. 26 . 21 , 28 ,

PUBLIC NOTICE

Me1gs Local Sc hool
Dist r ict Board of Education is
acceptmg sea ted b1ds t or on e
sch oo l bu s , name l y, 1964
l nt er na t rona t 66 passenger •
345 engine l703A FD 76361 F .
Brd s wi l! be r eceived un t il ,
12. 00 0 1Ciock noon on Sep
te m ber 7, 1976 The Board of
Educallon r eser ves the r 1Q hl
to rejec t a ny and att bids The
b1ds wil l be opened on Sep
tem ber 13 , 1976. at 7 . 30 PM
Sea led b td s sho uld be ad
dr essed to : John Tr iplet t.
Clerk , M erg s Local Sch ool
0 1~ tr ic t , Mtddlepo r t , Oh 10

45760

John Tr tplett ,
Clerk ,
Me1 gs Loca l
Sc hool Distr ict
M1dd lepor t , Oh10 A5160
&lt;I C

Don 't be swayed by one whose
methods are not ot the same
h1gh caliber as yours Hee.d•Og
thrs person s ad v1ce will c ause
you problems

&lt;

TAURUS (April 20·Moy20)
Know " ' abou t persons or
firms y&amp;, contrac t work w1t h
today An uninformed cho1ce
w1t1 cause you a pam m the
checkb9ok

so meone may not be all
appears to be Don t tell
1oo much She could do
dtrl later

sleepmg dogs l{e today It's to
no one's advantage to rehash
;m old !am1ty problem even
lhOul,'fh 1t's on your mmd

LEO (July 23·AUl(. 22) You
coul d tudg£! your budd tes a Itttie too harshly today Show that
krn d compassionate nature
you re noted for

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
may not qarn exar.Uy what you
hope for tod ay, bu t don t be
di SCO •r r age d Th e re a re
res•d.ui"'l benefil s to more lh8f1
.. adequately compensa te.

II

eJitrt~ltWiv s ·lr·chve of
com pamon.:; furl, 1 t \l'lHrS w1ll
j~1(1qe

t Oday

t~ nw0f k(!l ~ COlli!\: 1 ~Ht ~e some

I"

' .._

-

•
reverses Jury
•

JULY

AU LIVESTOCK

.

... ...

45614.
NOW ' ~cll inQ handmade clo th es
lor mos kind ol dol ls Surpri se
your fovorlte httle 91rl wilh o
now o'Utf it for he r doll. Phone

992 5S06.

1

FREE stond1ng hay, you cut Phone

•

•

OPEN EVES. 8: 00P.M.
PO~E,OY, OHIO

@
:~.,

uP:,

'··-----"-;;;l.-------------~ .

-. Auto Sales

Auto Sales
\ q7ot Wht l e Gremli n .
mileage S1985 Phone

low
992

7206

1966 Ford S200 Phone (614) 985
ot lol6
1 ~68

Dodge Coronet p s oulo ..
air . 4 dr Good work car. $300.
Phone 2·H-2204

742· 2154.

Wanted

' Yard Sale
IF YOU have o service ro offer.
wont to bu~ or ~e ll somethmg,
CH4!1 Jook.ing fOt worh
or
whatever .
you II get result s
las fer with a S~n t tnel Want Ad

to Buy

1971 Che11rolet Novo 6 cyl ,
auto. , very good condii!On ,

$1SOO 00 . ~ hone 992·3366
1971 Prn to S.W , good cond1t10il,

SIISO 00. mo Hondo 3SO c&lt;,
good shape, $3SO 00 Call

m-

1008.

For Sale
lOCUST pos l s, round or- split
Phone 9ot9 .271ott

19, 1976

RECEIVED

4 Family Yard Sole . end of John

Street at Syracuse . behind
grade school Thursday and
Fridoy , 10o.m till3p .m ,
GARAGE Sole, Fr~day. . 9 a,m till4
p.m. _Movmg must se ll HyseU
Run , t •,m,leoffRI. l24.

AT THE

PREVIOUSLY SCHEDULED

WITH THE

LIVESTOCK PROCUREMENT DEPARTMENT.

PHONE 614 446-3472 '
(HOMER OR TOMBO)
WE APPRECIATE YOUR COOPERATION
IN $CHEOUkiNG LIVESTOCK TO OUR
PLANT.
.

CHOICE Ttmothy
Phone 742 2359

baled

hoy

do pnyth1ng Good pa1nter . e •
penenced m nur.sery work, COMFORT -AIR atr condtt1oner by
Howe cools 6 rooms excellent
w1U mow lowns , trim shrubs.
condr tron asking $200 Phone
odd jobs. Coll i I) 361·7196 bel ·
[614)985·3877.
ween 6 ond 8 p. m Cecil
1
'
Russell, Sidwell , Ohio .
1975 Hondo 360 motorcycle . ex
cellen l condtlioo . S850. Phone
1 to 3 people ovotfoble for haul
m .3566
1ng. demohhon , construc11on ,
smol1 , controc tmg, clean -up. 1975 Dod9e Dar t Sw inger . Phone
Equipped, hove trucks, tools
949·2463.
torches and reasonable rates
STEREO-Rad1o.
8 track tape comWdl barter Phone 742·2581 ,
brnation ,
om fm
rad io,
evemngs
automatic changer. Balance
$102.56 or terms Phone m
3'165.

Camping Equipment

·•
STARCRAFT in'W'enlory reductro n
on mini-motors, traYel !railer
and fold downs lor 1Cf17
models Don't mrss these great
so11ings Camp Conley Ston:: rolt

Sole&gt;, Rl. 62. Nor lh Pt , Ploo

Frtday Roc~ Streel PGmeroy ,
fourth right turn off Spring
Avenue. ~
"" ,

son! . W Vo.

1973 Camero LT. excellent &lt;:ondi
l too, 10 It~ f 1shing boot . also
some guns ood fumtlure, 1973
2-4x60 modular home for sole.
Phone 7-42-2898 .
REGENCY Base C.B. rodio wllh 0 1().4 power m1ke . $200. l1ke
new .Phone 949 2322.
IS II Crestlme w1th "0 h p .
Ev to r ude
motor .
Ide
preservers !ill !railer , $675.

For Rent
FURNISHED. 2 bedrm. apartment ,
adults only. 1n Midc;Heport .
Phone 992-3874

Coli [614) 592·3410 or (61&lt;)
593·6278, Athen s, Oh10.

RECliNER wtth vibrator and
3 AND ~ RM fur01shed arld unheot 1ng
und ,
recently
furnished opts Phonv 992·
uphols tered, $35. Coli 9.C9-

5.134

GIGANTIC Yard Sole , Fndoy and
Sot,Y-rdoy, July 23, 2~ from 9.00
om 1111 4 p .m. Clothes , op·
pltonces . furn1lure , mt5C Two
m1les north o, Chester on Rt . 7,
Willard Ebersboch res1dence . In
case of rain , will be held
followmg week .

21&gt;61

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt . FOUR cemetery /.lots , Metgs
33. len miles north of Pomeroy,
Memonol Gor ens . Phone
Lorge lots w1th concrel pohos1
)b14 ) 985·4146
stdewoltcs runners and off
street pork1ng Pho11e 992-7479. ONE w1 cker ~ofo opens mto dou. ble bed Phone 992·5786.
ONE be~room Oportmen1s ot
VILLAGE MANOR m Middleport REMINGTON model 1100 trap
gro~e . $275; onllque cholse
YARD Sole . July 22, 23, 2" ot the
for S104 mor).thly plus elec, or
lounge feather trek cushion ,
Loyne re11dence behind Baptist
Sl30 including) electric LOWER
new upholstery, $100. new
Church m Chesh~te , Oh1o w11h
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS
(c ompact) 110cuum cleane r',
all kmds of 11em~ , some old and
ConVenient
5hoppmg on
must
socnf•ce . S325 f~rm
some new
Third and Mil Streets tn Mid·
Phone 992-7805.
dleport.
Brond
new
high
,quollYARD SAle . Thursdoy , Fndoy onp ,
ty apartments
See the ONE solo b~ end chatr, $35: cofSaturday below Middleport C1ty
mopager at Riverside Apartfee table and two end tables.
Ltm1 ts. old iron bed , 2 babY
ments or call 992·3273 Fur·
S25: d1nette tob1e ond 6 choirs .
beds, old bottles., clothes. .
apartments
also
ni shed
$35; red leather ottoman ,
lamps snack trays . saddle,
avqilable,
S2.00. Iorge ptcture, $5 00,
wheels Mtsc 1tems Phone
Phone 992.5SS1 .
992-6 173
TRAILER 5poce lor rent in M1d

'f

y(&lt;RD Sole

dleport. Phone 992 - S.~ .

I mile off s,R 7.

County Rood, 25. Vena Mar- 3 room furn ished apartment,
cinko restdence Friday and
ulth tl e~ paid. Inquire at 356
Saturday . July , 23 and 2-4 ,
North Fourth
Middleport,
clothmg furniture , misc .
OhiO,
YARC Sale . Saturday and Sunday .
Gerold Michael residence. Cor ·
ner of Church and Hubbard St.
m Syracuse

1 bedroom mobile home, adults
only . Phone 992-5535
TWO .bedroom mobile home,
Brown's Troiler Pork . phone

2 Famjly Yard Sate, Thursday ,
m ·332&lt;.
Friday and Saturday July 22.
23, ond 24 at Bob Louks tra1ler 3 room furnt5hed apartment ,
utihtres furn15hed Phone 992
park , Syracuse . Ohio. lots of
3129or992·5434.
ch1ldren s clothing , saxophone
and chord organ . 2 b'tkes , m1sc . HOOAKE ' Motorcycle franchise
II ems 9 a.m. till dark . wat ch
avoJioble. Low mHiol mYest
for stgns.
men! . Contact Wheels of Ttme
Island Rt., Box .7A, Lock Hoven
Po 177.. 5.

Pets for Sale

French City Meat Plant
MUST BE

Parachute Center open every
day 11eor Gallipolis For lurther
•nformoii Ort , coli (6 1.C) 2-45-9339
or P.O Bo• 91. B1dwell . Ohio

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The , •
Ohio supreme Court today
ordered a new 1rial for Elijah
Call m ·ill56
Matthews of Colwnbus who
GARAGE
JSale, men 's. lod1es'
was
convicted ' of
ch ddre'n.. s good used clothing,
manslaughter in the June 9,
maternity wear mise items .
1974 shooting death of Olarles
Weds through Frrda,-, second
Jackson Jr., Columlxls, at the
house above UA Beauty Solon ,
Racine Ohio .
Oasis Bar here.
The court upheld part of a YARD " sate l .CS Mulberry ,
Pomeroy . Ohio . Saturday , July
Court of Appeals decision
24
which
reversed
the
conviction that was hailded 3 Fom1ly 'ford Sole. Thursday and

NOTICEI

AFTER

POM ER0y MQ~QR CQ
1

o..ing. Gree ne Co unly Sporl

•,
n

IHQh Rl .lll cf!lrd S

~ heche pr obiNn!. '' ,our Ideas

"••.

automat ic, power steer ing and brakes. good tires, step

AKC Doberman puppies( sire and
dam bred for gopd ternpormenl
and protection Champion llnel ,
6 moles , 2 females reasonably
priced Wolter Everett 'l-42

3054.
VACATION Sole oil l111e rnve11
tory must go. Prrces c;ut
drosllt. olly hi Frldoy , July 23
Hun! s Pet Shop 2 , nulc~ n eel Chestet on RL 248
AKC .registered P()Qdlcs
l
l c1nale. '1 rno lf.', block . Also
-'ud ~ervin• by op11c; ol pt•odlr.o
IJII, ne 304 682 ;j2QS .

4 rOom furmshed opartmen1
close to Powell's Super Markel
Phone 992' 3658,
TRAill:R, ddulls only. Phqno q9'J

7639ot992-JI8 1

"

1975 3 bedroom iltObilt.• /IOI !l l.' 111
Mason W Vo Phone 1614 )
HOUSE l ot tenl., tcutnlg Au~u ~ l I
locoled 111 kullond Coli !614 )
5~1 J410 ci' (614) ~93-6218 ,
' Athens . Oluo .
~All 2 bedroom double w1de

Mobile Holnes for Sale _
196912x60 Schull , 2 bedroom air
tondttiomng, good condit'1011
Phone 742-3018 .

'

I

'.

___J

.......

EVERYrHIN6 LOOK~ P E A C~ FLJL

. . . . .111-:--

•

ON THE' OUTSIDE ... WH Y'!
AtN MOI'If DETAILS ~

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

992-7320 evenl,ngs
'

~· 27 · 76

CAPTAIN EASY
RIGHT! WE' VE FOUN D THEPLACE .. 1}2 BI:ACO N ?T P:EH,

"f

THS DAME WHO LIVE?
WHICH
THERf JU?T CA"LoD:
&lt;SO RIL" A
THS INTIW Do ~ 11&gt;1 THE' '" FREA K 1&gt;'
APE ? UIT GOT HER
HE ~ •• THE?
TRAP PED lfoJ THf
5-ECOND ·
BACK BEDROOM:
STO RY

&lt;

TMI? DUDE MUS T BE-THE FLAKY
ONS: APPAI'( ENTLY HI" KE?EP.S
I\A66llll6 ASOUT A "MOON /MAN')

WIN AT BRIDGE

MAN OR.
THf
LOOIJ Y

"-1tH174

Bridge dummy plays well

~

•

NORTH

~INE

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
-Atrlal-lndullrlal
~structlon Pngms
- Compltta School Service
Undergr841UIItl
Et.mentary
School Pockege Pldur,js ·
Seniors I YNrllook
- Woddl..l-

KEN GROVER
PhologrlQihy
98Ht55
Chtslor, Olllo
7-14·1 mo.

CMPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

1968 Fleetwood Tro1ler 12ft b~ 52
ft ., porlly furn iS.htd, porch
underpmn1ng Phone 1 37863 19. ,

MA STER Croft lOxSS 1965 mob1le
fl ome. Two bedroom forh tshed
f orporl , good s.te'ps. Phon~

992-3027.

Allove and below ground
jlool kits fOr tht do·llyoursell man .
All pool supplies available,
too.

ASSORTED RUBBER ·

BACK

CARPETING
'

I

' '6.95
Square Y1rd Installed

D. Bumgardner

··~

'

7481

m

~

West

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

. LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-THE
HAll
THE RIG&gt;rT

lARRl,r!:'~~~DER

STUFFIH
YOU -

BRADFORD, Austioneer. Com·
plete ServiCe . Phone 9.C9·2487
or 949-2000. Racme , Oh1o, Cnll
Bradford.

-·

.__ -

-·--~--J..

_____

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

I

•

,l

Norlh.IEaSI
14

' ·~ Sweepers , toasters , 1rons, oil
HOUSE l or sol e. 2 ~orge 2 bedrooms , Iorge modern kitsmall appliances . Lawn mower ,
bedrooms, Iorge living room .
chen. fbrced a~r furnace , linneJ~t Ia Stole Highway Garage
car pe)ed, modern kit ct:;en , din
coln Hgts , 992·5737.
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) 985·
mg room and both in Hor
3825
n sonvllli, $9,000. Phone 742- l ol\9 acre form - 2 houses , barns,
~ hed, several build1ngs, ctly
2796.
water mmerol nghts , trmber, REMODELING, Plumbtng heohng
100 acres tillable
good
and oil types of general repotr
LARGE bull9mg lot, suitable for
1
posture, 8 m11es North of
Work guaranteed 20 years e~~: ·
several hbmes. Also. 15 to 20
Pomeroy. Ohio , off Roule 33_
pertence . Phone992-2409
acr es . both has sontlory
sewage and ullhltes , con be
Hemlock. Grove, Ohio.
o&amp;b TRE-ET;;;;ming, 20 ~~.;; e;.
por holly fmonced Phone 992
5014even,•ngsofter5p:".' _
per1ence
Insured free
5766.
2 Bedroom home, front room, kll·
est1motes . Coli 992·2384 or
15 acres w1th newly remodeled B
chen and barh, good drolled .(~~4 1 6.~~?257 !'~~:....._....
room and both home, 2 car
well , 2 cor block garage on · SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
1
goroge, rura l woter, gosl well
one-half acre off Rtr 7 by-pass.
vrce, all makes, 992- 22~ The
and all mtn erol rtght~. $32,000
$9.000.Phone992-7597.
Fabr.1c ' Shop, Pomeroy
1
Phone 7"2-2336.
3 Bedroom hou; e 01
SrcoO:."ore
Authorized Siriger Sales and
3 bedroom home. hordwO:,d
St .• in Middleport A good buy
Se ~IIIC!_ lf!f!. sharp~ Scrss~~ floors , fult basement, storm
at S8,000_ Ptlone ll92·7(&gt;67 or EXCAVATING , doler , loader and
windows, opprox , 3 acres. ot
992 3578.
backhoe work ; dump trucks
ground I', mile below Gov1n
20 AGre farm-with 2 story ho~se,
and lo-boys for hire: w•ll haul
Plonl Phone (614)367-7371
pond, smoke house, barn and
' fill dirt . top sot I, limestone and
RUf!e'L, modern , eleclnc , 3
cellar Also . 2 yeor old double
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jefw ii:fe troller with many
fers . day phone 992 7089,
bedroom s. kitchen . h vmg
room , both. fin1shed basement
-features, all for just $29,000 or
ntght phone 992-3525 or m .
laundry, recreoti,on. $26 900, i
jUSt double wide olarie
5232 _______ --·
acre; $28 .900. 3 and two th trds
$13.000. Coll992-7590.
EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
acre&gt; Phon• (614) 949.2748
'"
and ditcher Charles R Halfield , Back Hoe Service,
INVESTMENT property for sole , 3
Rutland, Oh1o. Phone 742-2008.
furn t ~hed opar1ments home ,
_..__
-·
good renters, doy 992-5131 ,
GREG'S CB SALES, localed al Er·
nrghts 992 3173
,wins Gulf Servrce
M1d·
dleporl, Ohto Phon'e 992·
49 Acre form w1lh 2 bedroom
2438.
house bath . bqsement, carport
and oiJibutlding, plenty of
SEPTIC Systems installed by
water . Phone 992-5282 .
hcansed
Installer
Shepard
Contractors Phone 742· 2409,
HOUSE. 5 rooms and boih, fenced

46

Pa ss

Pass

Pass
Pass

s.

6•

Pass

P l SS

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here is another hand from
the ABTA quarterly . AccorCRANCE
. . - - - - - - - - d i n g to Betty Lind . her
JUST FIVE MINUTE'S ALONE daughter sitting East opened
IN liiAT ROOM WITH Tile With a psychiC bid of one
BOMB SIGHT PLAJIS-lHAl'S
d
ALL THE 'CHA'iCE"I'lL'*'ED spa e
·
Betty b1d two .ispades and
West gotmto the acL by trymg
four spades. For some reason

'???.?

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

1 One of life's
necesailles

z Split

3 Goose
genus
C Sandra or

52o

Frances
5 In a wicked
way
Yestenllly's AD1wer
I G']""18.
.
II Numerous Z1 C&amp;Wke
ouward
19 Instance
31 Drawing
7 AD81o-Suon Z2 Knowledge
room
letter
Z3 Tammany 31 Judge's
8 Lease, as
boss
attentionan airplane Z4 Took
getter
t Amelia
a dtq
:11 Redolence
Earhart, e. g. Z5 lnlertlle
3:1 lrbh export
1Z Be of
Zl China or 38 Old note
concern
meal
38 Conunotlon

. ·- ----__,.,..--

N!iddlep ort ,

Ohio,

$5 ,500

Phone949·2163
MOBilE home for sate or rent 3
bedroomms . all ulllttles paid

Phone9'12·7751.

TEAFORD'
Virlil B. Sr., Rtaltir
no Methanic Pomeroy, q:
Pltone 992-331~
,
1S7 ACRES - Beef farm
wlfh 70 acres of tractcr
land. Good oldet home,
fences, ponds, near mines.

·,I

YOUR PROI'E~'tY'
ADHERE
NEW LISTING - 9 roOr!!
home. 3 plus bedrooms. 2
bafhs, full basement, 2 car
gerege with 2 rooms. Nice
large lawn In llull•nd.
Equipped kitchen.
·
GOOD R£NTAI.f~, ARE
SCARCE. BUY PAU,t UP
'AND
UNT • ii'OR
ADDITIONAL t~toME.

means.

~tUIMSOW

..

LOVIL Y split entry ho,;,~
with lar~e living Rm .•
formal dining Rm., very
modern bUilt-In kltcnen, 4
B. Rm .. 2 lull baths, utility
Rm ., large family Rm.,
wooded Picnic areo, over I
acre. 123,(100.00.
GRACIOUS 2 story older
home, f,ormal dining Rm ., 4
BR, modern bath, nice
kitchen, 'part basement,
carJ1011ng, paneling, 6 fruit
trees, .69 acre, $18,800.
RECREATION CENTER
- Included Five pool
tables, pop machine, candy
machine, cash register,
and other equipment.
Doing a nice business.
$3,800.
MIDDLEPORT - Large
brlck&amp;freme (corner lot) .
Live In and have additional
4 units
all
to
Close
A GOOD BUY

A Maine reader wanls to
know what a " Free" double

YESSII&lt;: , I , ....

m.

yard. SO •120 55 tustord St .

Sou1h
24

..

4-10.1 mo.

Ph.lt2.39!3

I

It IS a term misapplied to a
double of a game bid. The Idea
is that it doesn't cost you
anyth1ng if your opponent
makes his contract and this is
entirely correct Although it
-·
· . or other North didn 't double, doesn 't cost you as much as
buL when Belly bid f1ve hearts does an unsuccessful double of
North raised her to six
a part-score contract or two
Belly ruffed the spade lead hearts or h1gher
h1gh and counted II easy
(For a copy or JACOBY
trick s She dec1ded to try for
the 12th by means of a trump MOOERN, senrl $1 to: "Win
at Bridge, " olo this
~coup
~ At trick two Belly led a low newspaper, P 0 Bo• 489,
.....r _ _ _ _ - trump to dummy' s e1ght to Rad1o C1ty Stat1on, New York,
guard agamst a 4.0 trump N. Y. 10019)

I KNEW

~ou

GUTTERS-A!INI~

THE Rosenboum home at 295
Wn ght St . Pomeroy . 2 story
colonial. -4 bedrooms, 21/•
3I02 or ! ~)772-3227 .
baths. lormot dinrng room
large living room, family room HOUSE for sale, 7 rooms , basement in M1ddleport. Price
w1th fireplace, paneled basereduced. Phone 992-2265.
ment with two extro rooms
afl tc ond 2 cor garoge. Movrng 3 bedroom house, basemen!,
to Cahforn1a , rpany e•tras stay .
fo(ced on gas ·heal, 2 cor
Asking SSS,OOO. Coli lor op·
goro~e. Iorge fenced yord.
pointment,
3166,
Phone 992-7126

. ---

• 712

SIDIIIIi-SIJifln

COUNTRY farmland wtlh secluded woods, wa1er and good access m Monroe Cou nty , W. Va .
$1 ,000 down , call (304) 772-

· ¥AKQI076 '
tAK83

'.

AlUMINUM

ly , W. Vo. Phone [304) 77231 Ol o' 1304) 772·3227.

·-

.

Neither vulnerable

WINDOWS

SMALL form for sale, 10% down.
owner financed . Monroe Coun -

Real Estate for sale

CITED AS A GAUSB FOf&lt;.
DIIJORGB. ,____.

·~
• J 10 9 4

• QHBJ
410 G
' SOUTH

break which would spoil the
potential dummy reversal.
Once both opponents followed
the rest was easy. She ruffed a
second spade hi'h , entered
dummy with the kmg of clubs,
ruffed a third. spade high,
entered dummy with the
queen of diamonds . ruffed' the
last spade. led her last trump
to overtake in dummy , discarded one club on dummy 's
last trump and was held to six
when East kept a diamond
stopper.
A nice hand but to forestall
some of our ' scientific
readers , we will mention that
the hand can also be made by
lettmg the defense hold one
spade trick and developing a
squeeze

Opening lead - K •

Fmtn&lt;lna A11U.~~
Blown inlo Wll~ l AHks
STOIIM
WINDOWS I GOONS
REPI.AC(.[NT

-~

4AI09e~%

t72

...THAT'S AUWEO'V6 WT lf.l
C.OMMOtJ .

O'F COURSE: , IRRISCOIJLI~ABI..E

Blown
Insulation SIIYites

NEW 3 bedJoom housa 1 2 baths .,
all ~lee . 1 acre, Middleport : I
cfo~e to Rutland. Phone 992-

EAST ID•

¥432

.-::::===__,
FREE ESTIMATES

HOMESITE$ for sola . 1 acre and
up Mlddlepor1 near Rutland .

Cofl 992·7481 .

WEST
4 KQJ

Dlf'FE'Rc~S f\RBOFT6N

N41blt Summit Rd .,
Middleport
PHONE 992-5724
7-21 ·1 mo.

David Parsons, Owner
949-2114
6-7-1 mo .

22

4760
¥J98
tQ65
• A K5

SWIMMING
POOLS ,

Mobile Homes for Sale _ Real Estlte10rSi!C:.
~....,;:~
,'---=·='

$16,500.

Sale
ntne
US@d '
ncar Pomeroy . N'.l chtldren or FOR
one ond 2
pets Phone 991.7660 or m . ' housetraile;s
bedrooml Completely furnish·
2318
ONE AKC Rei1stered &amp;engle
ed Conodoy s Trailer Court
h01111d mole 10 month!&gt; nld, All ~l cc lnt op01 tmPnt, phorle
1900 Central St .. Gallipolis
991 2£)q4 F1ottH't ' Y ltnt ~t e 01 1(1
t\Q':&gt; oil !ohnh and alreudy tUIIII
Oh1o Phono (61~) -446·1391
Autn..._,
lll!.j . S50 Pt i{I IHl' 'Wi
l l l~ fH )nu th ~Buick

nn

Phone 949-~814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

Rulltnd
742 -2321
All Work GuaranfHd
Fre' Estl11111lts
&amp;-2H m&lt;

NEW LISTING- 44 acres
on Rl. 143 neer Carpenter.
1971 Flamingo 12x60
trailer . Good drill~ well.
20 ACRES - IIi Berne
Township on ROIId 202,
Athens County, .
CLR 2. C8 Antenna . w1th ISO ft .
COUNTRY
AIR - 3 BR
COA~ . Phone 992·5616
house wl'h modern kl,tchen
1973 Plymouth Ouuer in good
and ball(. Good screened-In
condltlon . $1900 Also, Eweond
front po~th. Basement and
lomb Ph,one(614)9853965.
nlee ~ard with garden
spaces.
FREE Spiril 10 speed bika,
onginally $t36 On Sole ISO
TODAY'S SPECIAL - In
P~one 992 S055.
the country with new 3
bedroom home. Full
basement, nice kitchen, 2
lull
baths, carpeting &amp;
Ju~ Pairt Specials
.
I
carport with slora11 , 2
acres. Reduced for quick
Wtfheramlc Whlta Super
sale for only $31,000.00.
lAtex House Paint-No. 301.
Reg. S1UI111RACINE ARFA - MOdern
3 bedrooms with nice bath
NOW$8.29 GAL.
and equlppe~- kftch•n.
Dining roor;, o!t large
living, Want only IIIMO.
Red No. 315. Reg. $8)9
MIDDLEPORT -f room
hOuse wit~ naturalgaa (hot
NOW S6.79 GAL
water) heaJ. Large living
POMEROY LANDMARK
ahd large dining ,• Natural '
9._ JackW.Cusey.Mgr. oak finish and oak ,floors.
Would you buy lh\s -t only
Ail. Phona992-2181

698m2

5:01&gt;-Bonanza 3; Partridge Fam ily B; Minion : lm·
possible 15.
5:30-Adam·1H,I3; News6 ; Family Affllrt; Electric
Company 20.33.
6:01&gt;-News 3,-18,10,13,15; ABC: News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3.~.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh
6; CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias,
Yoga and You 33.
1·01&gt;-Trulh or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bow II.. for Dollars 6: Lawrence Welk B; News 10;
Let's Make A Deal 13; Family Affair IS; Ourslory
20; Family At War 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; XXI Olympic Games13;

or

AL TROMM CONST

197l CHEVROLET C.10
$2895
8' Fleetside, wh ite over re&lt;l , clean in terior, 350 V.8,

GRAPEFRU IT P~ l l w1 th Dodo• . eat
sollsfvmg meals ond lose
wetghl . now e•tro str ength for·
rnulo , Nelson Drugs .

Continuous ont piece
guHers. We hang it, do II
yourstll. Specltl prices to
builder I.

Painting
The Compttte
Remodeling Strvlce
For Your Home

Ohio State Lolltry 6; Baseball 15: Wild Kingdom
tO; Robert MacNeil Report 20.
8:0()-(ireat Migration: Year of the Wlldebusta 3A;
XII Olympic Games 6; Waltona 1,10; Upttaln,
Downstairs 33; Movie "Harp of Burm11" 20.
9:00-Movle "Wiclow'' 3,4, 15; H1waU Flve-0 I. Min
Who Made The Movies 33; Movie "The Dudly
AHalr" 10. '
tO : ~To Be Announced 6; Movlt "Widow'' 15; Ber·
naby JOOH 8; Bill Moyers' Journal 33-f
10:30-News 20.
11 : ~News 3,4,6,1,10, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Joltnny Car1011 3,4,15; XXL otymplc Gimes
6.13; Movie "Boys' Night Out" I; Movie "Period of
Aclluslmt!nf" 10; Janak! 33.
•
11 : 4~nnl• 6.13. ,
1:Ill&gt;-Tomorrow 3,4.
2 : 0~News 13.

THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1974

IXPIRIINaD
Radiator

GUTTER SERVICE

Gutflls,
and .Repair

trans

bumper . radio, custom trim and mirrors

e_s_·__

Roofing,

1974 FORD F-100
$2995
8' Styleslde. green finish, good tires. R. bumper,
chrome grille. and front bumper, 6 cyl. and slandard

GOLDEN WEDDING An ntversary. 1
f'r eserie this wonderful day :
w1th pl'iotogt ophs of the famil y ,
toge th er wilh your fnends and
of course the coke t Coli Ken
Gro11er Photography', Chester ,
Oh1o Phorle 985 41 55

SKY

tires .

WANitOlOOO: Handy man, con

Yo u w1 11 f or m se ver al rn IPrestfnq M W· AS$0CIA!tOnS lhlS
V~'"' J11!'l hfl sur(' th e pmsons
you .lil y vo ~ lrF.elf w1t h h;we your

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·~en .

'

Romttmber the day l orever 1
The comlete story of rour weddmg til a beaut 1ful album Colt
Ken Grover
Pho tographer
Che11ter, Ohio. Phone 985 ·-4 1S5

$1095

V8, a utomatiC, P. steering, extra good radial
Needs some body work

Semces Offered

July 23, 1976

• • 18) Shun Jyppr wh o ar en I
llLI ( f'f;

PHOl OG RAPH Y

1970 CAMARO CPE.

70

e~

SrGITTARIUS (Nov 23·0_.,.

I QA01

WEDDING

--~--------~--------~--------~~·

Aluminum Siding,

.

Help Wanted

anhclpntP. defeats today. '
A negat1ve attitude lessens
yo ur abilit y to face 1ssues
squar ely

b lq q er

Qf'\() (1

hove
pholos of you! cons tfu(
t1on site, business cool and
gas leases ol yc.ur fo rm. Ken
Gt ave photogra pher , Chc\ ter
Ohto Phone 985 ~ 155.
00"11(1 1

LOST Red lodres' b1llfold con1a in
1WANT to thank Or Telle and Dr
1ng dr 111er ' ~ license and OLD furni tu re. •ce boxes bro s~ COAL , limestone. onr4 ral cium
beds.
wall telephon es ond
Pickens . th e R N ·s. LPN s and
valuable papers. Please return
chlo~ td e ond calcJUm brine for
parts or comple te h ou~eholds
atdes l or the good care that 1
billl old. may keep money
dust control and spet tol mu:mg
rece1ved whil e~ I wa s o po tl~nt
Wri te M 0 . Miller Rt . "
Re turn to Ruby Jones Rt. 1, B o~~:
sol! ~or fo rmer s. Main Stree1,
Pomeroy Ohio Colt 992 -1760
at Ve terans M e mor~al Thontc s
133 long Bottom. Ohio ~S 7 4 3
Pomeroy Ohio or phone 992
to the mmi sters wh o coiled on
01 p ho n~ her ol 9"9·:1053 ,
CASH po td for all makes and
3891 .
me, to all who qlfered prayer
models o f mobtl e homes
LOST
.
live
r
and
wh11
e
Sprl
nget
CANNING
peaches now ready
for me to the v 1 s~l o rs ond th os@
PhQne or eo code
9S3 L
Spaniel wearing r&amp;d collar. Lost
who sent fl owep and cards_
thru A ugu st . Several vorr et1es .
tn Pomeroy Tue$doy rnorntng SSCashSSS for 1unlo. ed auto Frye s
by the bushel, 1 , bushel or
Also thanks to tti e court house
Rewo rd Phone 992 3589. Po t
Truck Au to Ports , Rutla nd
staff and emplo yees Rolph W
peck Please br mg own con
0 Bnen or phone 9!iJ2.J I32.
Ph one 7 ~ 2 '2081
tolner , 2 conven 1en1 locatrons .
Ours
M1dwoy
Market , Pomeroy .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fore st Pro
IN Memory ol our dear Mother
992 2S8'1: Bob's Market. Meson ,
ducts
Top
prtce
for
standing
Ka tie lt'o ung. who passed oway
773·572 1.
sawt1mber Call Ken! Honb.,. ,
2 y ea ~ ag o. July 22
l.1.10
8570
Down a rood calm and peo&lt;el ul
lOMATOES, Cleland For ms and
S200 weekly stuff1ng en velopes
Guided by God's lov1ng hand,
Green house s,
Gera l dine
' mto olreod y stomped and ad COINS currency tokens . gold
She hos gone upon o rour{ley .
Cleland, Racme. Oh10
dressed en'llelopes Stuffmg
ond Silver rewelry We ned 1964
Too d1s tanl br lgh te r lond
materrol prov1ded free Send
and older U S coms Co)l for 700 bole!i hoy l or sole Phone
She wtshed no one o lost
Se l f addres sed
st omped
oll'ler 7ol 2 233 1 or come ou t lo
992 7751
farewell ,
en velope· Oi11ersthed. Dept
our com shop on Rutland and
Or even satd goodbye
3
b11t e motor cycle frorler CoH
A. A 1206 Camden Or ., R1c hLeod1ng Creelt Rd . Roger
992
711 0
She was gone before we knew 1t,
mand. V1rgima 23229
Wamsley
And only God know s why
A GREAT OPPORTUNITY! SMAll bachelor type cottage w11h Y\'HITE leghorn Ioyer~ 75 each
Sadly missed by her chtldren
Freeland Noms , Roc10e Phone
Un l 1m tfed
eo rnt ng s ,
Iorge lot on some grotJnd
l WISH to thonk eoch one lor the
949·2043
Demonstrate Toys and Gifts a
With1n 15 miles of Chesh.re
cords, prayers, and Eag le Rtdge
few eventngs a week NO ex Oh1o Write P. W O'Morrow
LOSE we1ght wtlh New Shope
Sunday School l or the g1fts,
penence , NO paperwork , NO
N. Second Ave .. Apl 7 MtdTablets ond H~r e • Water Pills
wh1l e I was o pot 1ent 1n Holzer
GIMMI CKS I
Go so l1ne
dleporl . Oh1o ,
ol Dutton Drugs, M1ddleporl
Med1 cal Center Jean .(Young)
allowance Earn FREE Sample
ond Nelson Drug Pomeroy
Roush
Ktt Call 742-2377 Wnte TOY USED Belsaw in good cond 11ton
Phone
(614)
378
6387
1975
Hondo C8 125, 500 m1les , e x·
LADIES PAR TY PLAN .
Johnstown Po 15904
cellen1 cond1110n Phone (614 )
985-3501 after 3 p m

O o r~ l

''

'

Card of Thanks

Of
QUAUTY

A~RIAL PHOTOG RAHY

Lost and Found

, PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

you catcl"' ;myoflC' 1n ,t comall
tiP.ce ptlon today r•' h •'iH to d9at
hfrthcr Cha ncf'B .n , th eY re
tryrnq to covflr IHI ~orno thmg

you IJY thr• ·,om pa ny yo u
:• 1-. ecp You Ill) •~ n1nnwl'i •or your
: • cuhor ts· ~hOrtf.(lln~t' QS

~~

'--c-------..-...J

You rf! 1101 tov flCIOd nt'dt!iguls.r
1Jl9 your lei' lings when persons
you 'rp, not lond ol are around
Thrs 1.1ck ol ta Gt m ay turn off
otht&gt;r ft~ ends

• 21) BE."
•

ATTN .: I !
ALL HOUSEWIVES
1-1. 11 Yar d Sal es, Rumma~;~e .
Por ch and Ba se ment Porch
and Basem en t S ales ~ etc
m ust be pa td i n advance
Get your s in early by
slop ping by our 0ff1ce at
The Dail y SentineL 111
Cou r t St. or wr1ling Box
7'2 9, Pomer oy , Ohio 45769
• w ith your re m 1t tan ce

AQU,lRIUS !Jan 20-Ftb. 19)

early par t 91 the day your out·
loe) k rs apt to be a brt too
1 • negat tve As thmgs prog ress.
' " you II real1ze you wm e foolrsh
I I • '
, 1 • to take thin11s so ser•ously
1

r.:•

NOTICES

·~

.;- : LIBRA (Sttpl. 23-0ct. 23) The

~

Dai l y, 8 .30 am to 12 ·00
Noon Sat ur day
Phon e toda y 992 2156

and methurl :; dr •~ not m har J
n)Oiiy
' •

ffW

;. t:~I

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a.m , to s.oo p m

Coriunon Pleas Court.
The Appeals Court and the.
Supreme Court both ruled
that the lower cou~l
committed a prejudicial.
error in its inslructiooslo the
jury .concerning a claim by
Matthews that the shootlrig
was ·in self defense.
The Supreme Court,
however, reversed the
,&gt;,ppellate Court's ·aecisidl
which ruled that certain
testimooy by a police office
should have been inadmissable.
·

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) lei

t'~
~'
._•

BLIND ADS

Add itional 25c CM rg e
per Ad vert iseme nt.

down ur Franklin County

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) To-

,t.,

$2.00
tor 80 wor d
min tmum
E ach addi tion al word 3
cents .

"'

For Friday, July 23, 1978
•••
ARIES (Moren 21-Aprll 1,)

...

&amp; OBITUARY

L.
__
B__us.. ___i_n-;--e_s_s_S_e.,..._rv
__z_·c__
Motor Co.
Auto Sales

R1~R£:t:~~il·;~:~~~~~~~c~ ·,_
@
_,.;,~-t--2-s-IG_N_s___P_o~m-e_t_o_v__,.

Court finds
technicality

.• Bernice Bede Osol

:.- SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-No¥. 22)

THANKS

Auto Sales

Notices

·'

I

ASt.raGrapM

day
she
her
you

OF

,For Fast Results USe - Th~ Senttnel .Classifieds

bl-4·"2T

29. lie

Th e

11 ) 15 , 11, 19 18) 5,

CA~D

Television log for easy viewing

. ·---------~- --SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern

•

Sanita tion . 992·395-4 ' or

' 2428.~

..

-

~

~~---

992·

~~

WILL do rogf1ng , constructron
plumbrng and heating . No rob
too Iorge or too small . Phone

742-2348.

iTS &gt;CUR 87~
FACE-LIFPCNCE IT

, CARPENTER , flooring, ceil1ng
paneling Phone 992-2759

·-·-----I

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·

CCX..lAPSES-

VICE. Meigs·Athens County
Balers from $.1995 up . Merrill

(614) 698·3021.
~
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND '
DOZER - LARGE AND SMAll
SEI'TIC TANKS INSTALLED , LOW
89Y ANO DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
PUlliNS, PHONE m.2.78 DAY
OR NIGHT .
BUILDING . remodeling , and
C~ose ,

-----

PLASTIC SIJR6EF&lt;Y CPN ro NO
MOREr-:SOM/J.J&lt;E HAY, MRS,

..!I

33,

I

8:30-Big Valley 6.
1
9:01&gt;-A.M. 3; PM Donahue ~.1~ Lucy Show I; Mike
DoUl(las 10: Morning with DiJ. 13.
9:30--Cross-Wtts 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales I;
Mike Douglas 13.
10 :GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,.,15; Edge ol Night 6: Price 11
Right 1, 10; Kiln Krall 33.
10:30--Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,A,15; Dinah 6: Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :GO-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday ~; Gamblf
8,10; Farmer' s Daughter 13.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,A,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10.
,
11:5S....Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:01&gt;-Fun Fectorv 3.15: Hot Seat '13; Bob Braun •:
News 6,8, 10; Sesame Sf. 33.
12:31&gt;-Gong Snow 3,15; All MY 1-nlldren 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10. ·
12:5S:..NBC News 3,15.
'1:01&gt;-Ryan's Hope6,13; Phil Donahue B; ; Young I. the
Restless 10; Not for Women On&lt;y 15; Etec: Co. 33.
1:30-Day• of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6.13; As
The World Turns 8, 10; Upstairs, Downstairs 9;
Book Beat 33.
2:01&gt;-120.000 Pyramlcl 6, 13; Valiant Years 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
· Llght8.10; Olympled 33.
3 · ~Anolher World 3,.,15; General Hospital •.6.13:
All In The Family 8, 10; Crockett' I VIctory Garden
20.
3:3o--&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6: Match
Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Walsh's Animals
33.
4:01&gt;-Misler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; SomerMI15;.
Bewitched 6; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "Swordsman of Siena" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlfllth I;
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllnlslones 15.
•
5:01&gt;-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible 15.
5:»-Adam·12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8: Elec. C...
20,33: Aclam-12 13.
6:00 HIWs 3 •••e.te,1J,l5; AIIC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News3,4, 1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8. tO;
Hodgepodge Lodge . 20;
Carrascolendas 33,
7:GO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth •: Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 B; News 10; Don Adams
Screen Tesl13; Family Affair 1S; Woman 20; Black
Perspective on the News 33.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Baseball 4; Candid Camera
6; $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Tell the Trufh 13; Popl
Goes the Country IS; Robert MacNeil Report20,33.
8 : ~Sanfcrd &amp; Son 3; XXI Olympic Games 6.13;
Baseball 15; Sara 8, 10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33.
8:30-The Practice 6,12; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:~Rockforcl Flies 3; Movie" Aloha Means Good ye"
8, 10; U.S.A. : People &amp; Politics 20,33; Movie "Wh"l
of Fortune" 9.
·
9:30-College Football All -~tar Game 6,13; lsfahal! ol
Shah' Abbas 20,33.
..
10 :GO-Pollce Story 3; Treasure Hunt 4; News20; Paul
Nuchlms 33.
10:3~NFL Action '76 4; Pollee Story 15; Farm Digest
20.
'
'
11 :GO-News 3.4.8.10, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,A,15; Movie "Splnoul" 8;
Movie "Robinson Crusoe on Mars" 10; Janak! 33.
12:3&lt;1-News 6,13.
1:Oo-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15; FBI 6; Movie
"Sfrangler of the Swamp" 10; Wrestling 13.
2:GO-News 13.
2:30-News J.
3:01&gt;-Movle "Dante's lnlerno" 3.
5 · 01&gt;-Movl~ .f 'Moon over Miami" 3.

FOAMIN6HAM, Bt:FORG THE:
SUN SETSrr

~lYlOOJJJ~;-~.::!! '~=

i

lJ

FRIDAY, JULY2J, 1976
6:01&gt;-Summer Semester 10.
6 : 1~Farm Report 13.
6:20-Biue Ridge ~riel 13.
6:3C&gt;-columbus Today 4; News6 ; Summer Stmttttt
8; Two-Way Street 10.
6:4~1ng Report 3.
6:~ Morn!.., West VIrgin" 13.
6:55--Good Morning, Trl Stale 13.
7:01&gt;-Toclay 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS·
News 8; Chuck While Report1 10.
7 : 0~Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:01&gt;-JeH's Collie 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; StNme St .

0

Unocnmbl•lh..e r..., Jumblu,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary word1.

'

repairs. Quoli1y wortc , eff1crent
serYice. Jesse Rodman phone

992·5980.

'

WANT to go ~ into buslne;, --by
yourself?
Almost
new
' automatiC lnsulotlng matchme,

$850.00. Phone Gall ipolis
A
PLAC~ - 5 yrs.
1 -~46·4782 .
old. v, acre, metal storage '
bldg., large garden. 3 .P,N!IQUE restorotio~s , re~roduc·
!tons , cabinet moklng and fur·
bedrooms, bath, eaf-ln
nlture repair. 131 11, 3rd, Mid·
kitchen. carpeted, utlllly
dlep~rt
, 992.5?35 day ond
R. Carport. JUST $16,100.
evenrng.
BUYING 0!1 SELLING,
CALL US- THEN START
PACKING. HENRY E.
CLELAND,
BROKER,
APPRAISER,
WILL DO odd 1obs, roofing, poln
CONSULTANT.

... THII&gt;JGS 1!\RE OONCr GOOO!TilEN IMYBE
YCJU HAVE ENOUGH
PRETTY WELL AT
ENEreY
10 TALK TO
OONNAZ1 R:RA
THAT SON OF
CHANGE!

YCJURS!

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
.\XYDLBAAXR
J, 0 N G F E L L 0 W

II
.
One letter Simply stands for another

In this sample A Ia

u sed for thr three I .'s, X f or the two O's . c•t r . Srnglc }('tiers.

apostrophes, the length ond formati on of lhr 11 nrrls ore aU
hints Earh day the rode lellers are different .
I'RVPTOQUOTJ!S

PG

hng,. hauling, lreework. and
mowma. Pha.nP 9Q?.7.tlf'lCI

GEWA

BAEUK,

P

PU
EW

UF
PI

OFWA
If'

FIHZ

KQTTZ

Mon., Tues., Wid.&amp; S.t.-t:30tll5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRill¥ UNnL 8 PM

MASON
FURNITURE
.,. .
n3·5S92 · Harman Grlte

Maaon,W. Va.

NUSS ··TAKE MY 0~
JALOPY DOWN AN' RUN
IT THRU TH' HOOTIN' HOLLI:R
CAR WASH

I'M SUSPRISED THE
Ol PILL PEDDLER
DIDN'T AST FER
A HOT WAX

JOB

THE LAKE ...
THE TREES•.
THE SKI(...

I [J

IPOOSUR! I tJ

EGUAT
GFT

PU.

- WETUPEH
Yeslerday's Cryploquote: A MAN CAN FAIL MANY TIMES
BUT HE ISN'T A FAILURE UNTIL HE BEGINS TO BLAME
SOMEBODY ElSE. - JOHN BURROUGHS
fC 19'16 KJnl F~•lur•• Syndical~. In c 1

I EAZUG

,.-......,. t

l

lo...W..o

l'nlel'd•J'•

UNCLE CURIO PATTER GUTTER

Annen Mail Hltkt"IDurm.igAtiUU

,.._"NEUROTIC"

:04)

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July ·22, 1976

Notice .

Legal

-IIAHT ADS
INFORMATION
OfAOLINES
F' M .
oa ., Befon

NOT ICE OF SAl E

.S
Pu bl icat ion
Can cell at ion s.
cor r r.c
lions a cc ep te d firs t dey ot
publi ctl ron .

No ! Icc Is hereby g1vc n tht)l
tot tow ing thrCt' parc.cls of

ltH~

real esttt1E1 will be oHcred tor

sal e by th f' unacrstpned on
Sa turday , Ju lv Jist , 1976, "'

REGULATIONS

Th~ Publ ish er reser v ~!o
!he r1gh r to ed it or rej ect
anv ad s d eem ed ob
lect l on .,t T h e publish er
w ill not be ru pon slbl t for
more than o n ~ tncor rtcl
ln!er t 1on
RATES
For Want Ad hrvl(e
5 cen Is pe r wore one
1nsert ton
· Mmi m um Cha r ge 11 .00
t.&amp; cen t ! per wo rd thr ee
: onsecu t ive In sertions
26 ctn ts per word s1t&lt;
cons ecut ive Inser tion s
25 Per Cent D iscount on
paid ad s ~nd ads pa ra
w lth 1n 10 dll ys

10 00 AM althc tor mer home

of

Leota

Lynch . Deceased

S.1 1d parcels ot real t:-st a tc ar e

brlejly describe d as tottows ·
10 of an acre known as the
Ll;'o ta Lynch property ap
prais ed at t1 ,100 00
52 Of

an a cre

kno wn as th e

Arthur and MargarC!t L yn ch
pr operly appratSCd at $800 00
J JJ acres . Vacant lot. a p

pra.seCJ ar S-'1 .000 00
Th e

above

par ce l s

are

ilppr.ltScd as lnd tcated abov('

and ca nno t be sold for tess
than

appratsed

thC'

value

Prope rty to be sold to the
lliQ I1es t btdde r SlOO 00 dcpo sd

to be PiJ 1d by ~ucce ss t u t b1ddcr
on each property to btnd sale .
Btdder.s W1ll be grv en a .
roason nbte t ime wrthrn which
to borrow mone y from a
tendrng JllSii t ut ion and to
check lilte Sale will be con
d u ~tcct ar cacti property st te
r1 r st sate to be held at the
Let!tra Lynch property S ~lc is
su bj ect to the approval of the
Probate Court
,Also . one 2 door 1965 Dodge
to be sold to the htghf.'St bid
dcr Appra1sed at S115 00
James E Srm pson,
Adm 1n1S trator o t the
E st a te of Ar thur Lync h,
Deceas('d
111 16 18, 19, 10, 11, 22

REA L ES TAT E
F O R SA LE

Real Esta te owned by the
late Dame! Rces and Cla ra
Rees lo ca t ed at 306 west Ma m
Street . Pomeroy , Ohlo . con
s1sting of a garage and ho use
1S now bemg offered for sale
by the und ers1gned to the
highest b 1dder Please submtl
vovr bids to the und er s1gned
Property
ap pr a1se d
at
52 ,500 00, Sale SUbJ('CI to the
ap prova l ot the Probate Co ur t
Joseph w Cook
Adm rnls lrator of
I he E st at e of
Cla r a R ees, Dece t' Sed

171 11 , 21 ,

23. 26 . 21 , 28 ,

PUBLIC NOTICE

Me1gs Local Sc hool
Dist r ict Board of Education is
acceptmg sea ted b1ds t or on e
sch oo l bu s , name l y, 1964
l nt er na t rona t 66 passenger •
345 engine l703A FD 76361 F .
Brd s wi l! be r eceived un t il ,
12. 00 0 1Ciock noon on Sep
te m ber 7, 1976 The Board of
Educallon r eser ves the r 1Q hl
to rejec t a ny and att bids The
b1ds wil l be opened on Sep
tem ber 13 , 1976. at 7 . 30 PM
Sea led b td s sho uld be ad
dr essed to : John Tr iplet t.
Clerk , M erg s Local Sch ool
0 1~ tr ic t , Mtddlepo r t , Oh 10

45760

John Tr tplett ,
Clerk ,
Me1 gs Loca l
Sc hool Distr ict
M1dd lepor t , Oh10 A5160
&lt;I C

Don 't be swayed by one whose
methods are not ot the same
h1gh caliber as yours Hee.d•Og
thrs person s ad v1ce will c ause
you problems

&lt;

TAURUS (April 20·Moy20)
Know " ' abou t persons or
firms y&amp;, contrac t work w1t h
today An uninformed cho1ce
w1t1 cause you a pam m the
checkb9ok

so meone may not be all
appears to be Don t tell
1oo much She could do
dtrl later

sleepmg dogs l{e today It's to
no one's advantage to rehash
;m old !am1ty problem even
lhOul,'fh 1t's on your mmd

LEO (July 23·AUl(. 22) You
coul d tudg£! your budd tes a Itttie too harshly today Show that
krn d compassionate nature
you re noted for

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
may not qarn exar.Uy what you
hope for tod ay, bu t don t be
di SCO •r r age d Th e re a re
res•d.ui"'l benefil s to more lh8f1
.. adequately compensa te.

II

eJitrt~ltWiv s ·lr·chve of
com pamon.:; furl, 1 t \l'lHrS w1ll
j~1(1qe

t Oday

t~ nw0f k(!l ~ COlli!\: 1 ~Ht ~e some

I"

' .._

-

•
reverses Jury
•

JULY

AU LIVESTOCK

.

... ...

45614.
NOW ' ~cll inQ handmade clo th es
lor mos kind ol dol ls Surpri se
your fovorlte httle 91rl wilh o
now o'Utf it for he r doll. Phone

992 5S06.

1

FREE stond1ng hay, you cut Phone

•

•

OPEN EVES. 8: 00P.M.
PO~E,OY, OHIO

@
:~.,

uP:,

'··-----"-;;;l.-------------~ .

-. Auto Sales

Auto Sales
\ q7ot Wht l e Gremli n .
mileage S1985 Phone

low
992

7206

1966 Ford S200 Phone (614) 985
ot lol6
1 ~68

Dodge Coronet p s oulo ..
air . 4 dr Good work car. $300.
Phone 2·H-2204

742· 2154.

Wanted

' Yard Sale
IF YOU have o service ro offer.
wont to bu~ or ~e ll somethmg,
CH4!1 Jook.ing fOt worh
or
whatever .
you II get result s
las fer with a S~n t tnel Want Ad

to Buy

1971 Che11rolet Novo 6 cyl ,
auto. , very good condii!On ,

$1SOO 00 . ~ hone 992·3366
1971 Prn to S.W , good cond1t10il,

SIISO 00. mo Hondo 3SO c&lt;,
good shape, $3SO 00 Call

m-

1008.

For Sale
lOCUST pos l s, round or- split
Phone 9ot9 .271ott

19, 1976

RECEIVED

4 Family Yard Sole . end of John

Street at Syracuse . behind
grade school Thursday and
Fridoy , 10o.m till3p .m ,
GARAGE Sole, Fr~day. . 9 a,m till4
p.m. _Movmg must se ll HyseU
Run , t •,m,leoffRI. l24.

AT THE

PREVIOUSLY SCHEDULED

WITH THE

LIVESTOCK PROCUREMENT DEPARTMENT.

PHONE 614 446-3472 '
(HOMER OR TOMBO)
WE APPRECIATE YOUR COOPERATION
IN $CHEOUkiNG LIVESTOCK TO OUR
PLANT.
.

CHOICE Ttmothy
Phone 742 2359

baled

hoy

do pnyth1ng Good pa1nter . e •
penenced m nur.sery work, COMFORT -AIR atr condtt1oner by
Howe cools 6 rooms excellent
w1U mow lowns , trim shrubs.
condr tron asking $200 Phone
odd jobs. Coll i I) 361·7196 bel ·
[614)985·3877.
ween 6 ond 8 p. m Cecil
1
'
Russell, Sidwell , Ohio .
1975 Hondo 360 motorcycle . ex
cellen l condtlioo . S850. Phone
1 to 3 people ovotfoble for haul
m .3566
1ng. demohhon , construc11on ,
smol1 , controc tmg, clean -up. 1975 Dod9e Dar t Sw inger . Phone
Equipped, hove trucks, tools
949·2463.
torches and reasonable rates
STEREO-Rad1o.
8 track tape comWdl barter Phone 742·2581 ,
brnation ,
om fm
rad io,
evemngs
automatic changer. Balance
$102.56 or terms Phone m
3'165.

Camping Equipment

·•
STARCRAFT in'W'enlory reductro n
on mini-motors, traYel !railer
and fold downs lor 1Cf17
models Don't mrss these great
so11ings Camp Conley Ston:: rolt

Sole&gt;, Rl. 62. Nor lh Pt , Ploo

Frtday Roc~ Streel PGmeroy ,
fourth right turn off Spring
Avenue. ~
"" ,

son! . W Vo.

1973 Camero LT. excellent &lt;:ondi
l too, 10 It~ f 1shing boot . also
some guns ood fumtlure, 1973
2-4x60 modular home for sole.
Phone 7-42-2898 .
REGENCY Base C.B. rodio wllh 0 1().4 power m1ke . $200. l1ke
new .Phone 949 2322.
IS II Crestlme w1th "0 h p .
Ev to r ude
motor .
Ide
preservers !ill !railer , $675.

For Rent
FURNISHED. 2 bedrm. apartment ,
adults only. 1n Midc;Heport .
Phone 992-3874

Coli [614) 592·3410 or (61&lt;)
593·6278, Athen s, Oh10.

RECliNER wtth vibrator and
3 AND ~ RM fur01shed arld unheot 1ng
und ,
recently
furnished opts Phonv 992·
uphols tered, $35. Coli 9.C9-

5.134

GIGANTIC Yard Sole , Fndoy and
Sot,Y-rdoy, July 23, 2~ from 9.00
om 1111 4 p .m. Clothes , op·
pltonces . furn1lure , mt5C Two
m1les north o, Chester on Rt . 7,
Willard Ebersboch res1dence . In
case of rain , will be held
followmg week .

21&gt;61

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt . FOUR cemetery /.lots , Metgs
33. len miles north of Pomeroy,
Memonol Gor ens . Phone
Lorge lots w1th concrel pohos1
)b14 ) 985·4146
stdewoltcs runners and off
street pork1ng Pho11e 992-7479. ONE w1 cker ~ofo opens mto dou. ble bed Phone 992·5786.
ONE be~room Oportmen1s ot
VILLAGE MANOR m Middleport REMINGTON model 1100 trap
gro~e . $275; onllque cholse
YARD Sole . July 22, 23, 2" ot the
for S104 mor).thly plus elec, or
lounge feather trek cushion ,
Loyne re11dence behind Baptist
Sl30 including) electric LOWER
new upholstery, $100. new
Church m Chesh~te , Oh1o w11h
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS
(c ompact) 110cuum cleane r',
all kmds of 11em~ , some old and
ConVenient
5hoppmg on
must
socnf•ce . S325 f~rm
some new
Third and Mil Streets tn Mid·
Phone 992-7805.
dleport.
Brond
new
high
,quollYARD SAle . Thursdoy , Fndoy onp ,
ty apartments
See the ONE solo b~ end chatr, $35: cofSaturday below Middleport C1ty
mopager at Riverside Apartfee table and two end tables.
Ltm1 ts. old iron bed , 2 babY
ments or call 992·3273 Fur·
S25: d1nette tob1e ond 6 choirs .
beds, old bottles., clothes. .
apartments
also
ni shed
$35; red leather ottoman ,
lamps snack trays . saddle,
avqilable,
S2.00. Iorge ptcture, $5 00,
wheels Mtsc 1tems Phone
Phone 992.5SS1 .
992-6 173
TRAILER 5poce lor rent in M1d

'f

y(&lt;RD Sole

dleport. Phone 992 - S.~ .

I mile off s,R 7.

County Rood, 25. Vena Mar- 3 room furn ished apartment,
cinko restdence Friday and
ulth tl e~ paid. Inquire at 356
Saturday . July , 23 and 2-4 ,
North Fourth
Middleport,
clothmg furniture , misc .
OhiO,
YARC Sale . Saturday and Sunday .
Gerold Michael residence. Cor ·
ner of Church and Hubbard St.
m Syracuse

1 bedroom mobile home, adults
only . Phone 992-5535
TWO .bedroom mobile home,
Brown's Troiler Pork . phone

2 Famjly Yard Sate, Thursday ,
m ·332&lt;.
Friday and Saturday July 22.
23, ond 24 at Bob Louks tra1ler 3 room furnt5hed apartment ,
utihtres furn15hed Phone 992
park , Syracuse . Ohio. lots of
3129or992·5434.
ch1ldren s clothing , saxophone
and chord organ . 2 b'tkes , m1sc . HOOAKE ' Motorcycle franchise
II ems 9 a.m. till dark . wat ch
avoJioble. Low mHiol mYest
for stgns.
men! . Contact Wheels of Ttme
Island Rt., Box .7A, Lock Hoven
Po 177.. 5.

Pets for Sale

French City Meat Plant
MUST BE

Parachute Center open every
day 11eor Gallipolis For lurther
•nformoii Ort , coli (6 1.C) 2-45-9339
or P.O Bo• 91. B1dwell . Ohio

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The , •
Ohio supreme Court today
ordered a new 1rial for Elijah
Call m ·ill56
Matthews of Colwnbus who
GARAGE
JSale, men 's. lod1es'
was
convicted ' of
ch ddre'n.. s good used clothing,
manslaughter in the June 9,
maternity wear mise items .
1974 shooting death of Olarles
Weds through Frrda,-, second
Jackson Jr., Columlxls, at the
house above UA Beauty Solon ,
Racine Ohio .
Oasis Bar here.
The court upheld part of a YARD " sate l .CS Mulberry ,
Pomeroy . Ohio . Saturday , July
Court of Appeals decision
24
which
reversed
the
conviction that was hailded 3 Fom1ly 'ford Sole. Thursday and

NOTICEI

AFTER

POM ER0y MQ~QR CQ
1

o..ing. Gree ne Co unly Sporl

•,
n

IHQh Rl .lll cf!lrd S

~ heche pr obiNn!. '' ,our Ideas

"••.

automat ic, power steer ing and brakes. good tires, step

AKC Doberman puppies( sire and
dam bred for gopd ternpormenl
and protection Champion llnel ,
6 moles , 2 females reasonably
priced Wolter Everett 'l-42

3054.
VACATION Sole oil l111e rnve11
tory must go. Prrces c;ut
drosllt. olly hi Frldoy , July 23
Hun! s Pet Shop 2 , nulc~ n eel Chestet on RL 248
AKC .registered P()Qdlcs
l
l c1nale. '1 rno lf.', block . Also
-'ud ~ervin• by op11c; ol pt•odlr.o
IJII, ne 304 682 ;j2QS .

4 rOom furmshed opartmen1
close to Powell's Super Markel
Phone 992' 3658,
TRAill:R, ddulls only. Phqno q9'J

7639ot992-JI8 1

"

1975 3 bedroom iltObilt.• /IOI !l l.' 111
Mason W Vo Phone 1614 )
HOUSE l ot tenl., tcutnlg Au~u ~ l I
locoled 111 kullond Coli !614 )
5~1 J410 ci' (614) ~93-6218 ,
' Athens . Oluo .
~All 2 bedroom double w1de

Mobile Holnes for Sale _
196912x60 Schull , 2 bedroom air
tondttiomng, good condit'1011
Phone 742-3018 .

'

I

'.

___J

.......

EVERYrHIN6 LOOK~ P E A C~ FLJL

. . . . .111-:--

•

ON THE' OUTSIDE ... WH Y'!
AtN MOI'If DETAILS ~

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

992-7320 evenl,ngs
'

~· 27 · 76

CAPTAIN EASY
RIGHT! WE' VE FOUN D THEPLACE .. 1}2 BI:ACO N ?T P:EH,

"f

THS DAME WHO LIVE?
WHICH
THERf JU?T CA"LoD:
&lt;SO RIL" A
THS INTIW Do ~ 11&gt;1 THE' '" FREA K 1&gt;'
APE ? UIT GOT HER
HE ~ •• THE?
TRAP PED lfoJ THf
5-ECOND ·
BACK BEDROOM:
STO RY

&lt;

TMI? DUDE MUS T BE-THE FLAKY
ONS: APPAI'( ENTLY HI" KE?EP.S
I\A66llll6 ASOUT A "MOON /MAN')

WIN AT BRIDGE

MAN OR.
THf
LOOIJ Y

"-1tH174

Bridge dummy plays well

~

•

NORTH

~INE

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
-Atrlal-lndullrlal
~structlon Pngms
- Compltta School Service
Undergr841UIItl
Et.mentary
School Pockege Pldur,js ·
Seniors I YNrllook
- Woddl..l-

KEN GROVER
PhologrlQihy
98Ht55
Chtslor, Olllo
7-14·1 mo.

CMPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

1968 Fleetwood Tro1ler 12ft b~ 52
ft ., porlly furn iS.htd, porch
underpmn1ng Phone 1 37863 19. ,

MA STER Croft lOxSS 1965 mob1le
fl ome. Two bedroom forh tshed
f orporl , good s.te'ps. Phon~

992-3027.

Allove and below ground
jlool kits fOr tht do·llyoursell man .
All pool supplies available,
too.

ASSORTED RUBBER ·

BACK

CARPETING
'

I

' '6.95
Square Y1rd Installed

D. Bumgardner

··~

'

7481

m

~

West

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

. LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-THE
HAll
THE RIG&gt;rT

lARRl,r!:'~~~DER

STUFFIH
YOU -

BRADFORD, Austioneer. Com·
plete ServiCe . Phone 9.C9·2487
or 949-2000. Racme , Oh1o, Cnll
Bradford.

-·

.__ -

-·--~--J..

_____

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

I

•

,l

Norlh.IEaSI
14

' ·~ Sweepers , toasters , 1rons, oil
HOUSE l or sol e. 2 ~orge 2 bedrooms , Iorge modern kitsmall appliances . Lawn mower ,
bedrooms, Iorge living room .
chen. fbrced a~r furnace , linneJ~t Ia Stole Highway Garage
car pe)ed, modern kit ct:;en , din
coln Hgts , 992·5737.
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) 985·
mg room and both in Hor
3825
n sonvllli, $9,000. Phone 742- l ol\9 acre form - 2 houses , barns,
~ hed, several build1ngs, ctly
2796.
water mmerol nghts , trmber, REMODELING, Plumbtng heohng
100 acres tillable
good
and oil types of general repotr
LARGE bull9mg lot, suitable for
1
posture, 8 m11es North of
Work guaranteed 20 years e~~: ·
several hbmes. Also. 15 to 20
Pomeroy. Ohio , off Roule 33_
pertence . Phone992-2409
acr es . both has sontlory
sewage and ullhltes , con be
Hemlock. Grove, Ohio.
o&amp;b TRE-ET;;;;ming, 20 ~~.;; e;.
por holly fmonced Phone 992
5014even,•ngsofter5p:".' _
per1ence
Insured free
5766.
2 Bedroom home, front room, kll·
est1motes . Coli 992·2384 or
15 acres w1th newly remodeled B
chen and barh, good drolled .(~~4 1 6.~~?257 !'~~:....._....
room and both home, 2 car
well , 2 cor block garage on · SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
1
goroge, rura l woter, gosl well
one-half acre off Rtr 7 by-pass.
vrce, all makes, 992- 22~ The
and all mtn erol rtght~. $32,000
$9.000.Phone992-7597.
Fabr.1c ' Shop, Pomeroy
1
Phone 7"2-2336.
3 Bedroom hou; e 01
SrcoO:."ore
Authorized Siriger Sales and
3 bedroom home. hordwO:,d
St .• in Middleport A good buy
Se ~IIIC!_ lf!f!. sharp~ Scrss~~ floors , fult basement, storm
at S8,000_ Ptlone ll92·7(&gt;67 or EXCAVATING , doler , loader and
windows, opprox , 3 acres. ot
992 3578.
backhoe work ; dump trucks
ground I', mile below Gov1n
20 AGre farm-with 2 story ho~se,
and lo-boys for hire: w•ll haul
Plonl Phone (614)367-7371
pond, smoke house, barn and
' fill dirt . top sot I, limestone and
RUf!e'L, modern , eleclnc , 3
cellar Also . 2 yeor old double
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jefw ii:fe troller with many
fers . day phone 992 7089,
bedroom s. kitchen . h vmg
room , both. fin1shed basement
-features, all for just $29,000 or
ntght phone 992-3525 or m .
laundry, recreoti,on. $26 900, i
jUSt double wide olarie
5232 _______ --·
acre; $28 .900. 3 and two th trds
$13.000. Coll992-7590.
EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
acre&gt; Phon• (614) 949.2748
'"
and ditcher Charles R Halfield , Back Hoe Service,
INVESTMENT property for sole , 3
Rutland, Oh1o. Phone 742-2008.
furn t ~hed opar1ments home ,
_..__
-·
good renters, doy 992-5131 ,
GREG'S CB SALES, localed al Er·
nrghts 992 3173
,wins Gulf Servrce
M1d·
dleporl, Ohto Phon'e 992·
49 Acre form w1lh 2 bedroom
2438.
house bath . bqsement, carport
and oiJibutlding, plenty of
SEPTIC Systems installed by
water . Phone 992-5282 .
hcansed
Installer
Shepard
Contractors Phone 742· 2409,
HOUSE. 5 rooms and boih, fenced

46

Pa ss

Pass

Pass
Pass

s.

6•

Pass

P l SS

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Here is another hand from
the ABTA quarterly . AccorCRANCE
. . - - - - - - - - d i n g to Betty Lind . her
JUST FIVE MINUTE'S ALONE daughter sitting East opened
IN liiAT ROOM WITH Tile With a psychiC bid of one
BOMB SIGHT PLAJIS-lHAl'S
d
ALL THE 'CHA'iCE"I'lL'*'ED spa e
·
Betty b1d two .ispades and
West gotmto the acL by trymg
four spades. For some reason

'???.?

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

1 One of life's
necesailles

z Split

3 Goose
genus
C Sandra or

52o

Frances
5 In a wicked
way
Yestenllly's AD1wer
I G']""18.
.
II Numerous Z1 C&amp;Wke
ouward
19 Instance
31 Drawing
7 AD81o-Suon Z2 Knowledge
room
letter
Z3 Tammany 31 Judge's
8 Lease, as
boss
attentionan airplane Z4 Took
getter
t Amelia
a dtq
:11 Redolence
Earhart, e. g. Z5 lnlertlle
3:1 lrbh export
1Z Be of
Zl China or 38 Old note
concern
meal
38 Conunotlon

. ·- ----__,.,..--

N!iddlep ort ,

Ohio,

$5 ,500

Phone949·2163
MOBilE home for sate or rent 3
bedroomms . all ulllttles paid

Phone9'12·7751.

TEAFORD'
Virlil B. Sr., Rtaltir
no Methanic Pomeroy, q:
Pltone 992-331~
,
1S7 ACRES - Beef farm
wlfh 70 acres of tractcr
land. Good oldet home,
fences, ponds, near mines.

·,I

YOUR PROI'E~'tY'
ADHERE
NEW LISTING - 9 roOr!!
home. 3 plus bedrooms. 2
bafhs, full basement, 2 car
gerege with 2 rooms. Nice
large lawn In llull•nd.
Equipped kitchen.
·
GOOD R£NTAI.f~, ARE
SCARCE. BUY PAU,t UP
'AND
UNT • ii'OR
ADDITIONAL t~toME.

means.

~tUIMSOW

..

LOVIL Y split entry ho,;,~
with lar~e living Rm .•
formal dining Rm., very
modern bUilt-In kltcnen, 4
B. Rm .. 2 lull baths, utility
Rm ., large family Rm.,
wooded Picnic areo, over I
acre. 123,(100.00.
GRACIOUS 2 story older
home, f,ormal dining Rm ., 4
BR, modern bath, nice
kitchen, 'part basement,
carJ1011ng, paneling, 6 fruit
trees, .69 acre, $18,800.
RECREATION CENTER
- Included Five pool
tables, pop machine, candy
machine, cash register,
and other equipment.
Doing a nice business.
$3,800.
MIDDLEPORT - Large
brlck&amp;freme (corner lot) .
Live In and have additional
4 units
all
to
Close
A GOOD BUY

A Maine reader wanls to
know what a " Free" double

YESSII&lt;: , I , ....

m.

yard. SO •120 55 tustord St .

Sou1h
24

..

4-10.1 mo.

Ph.lt2.39!3

I

It IS a term misapplied to a
double of a game bid. The Idea
is that it doesn't cost you
anyth1ng if your opponent
makes his contract and this is
entirely correct Although it
-·
· . or other North didn 't double, doesn 't cost you as much as
buL when Belly bid f1ve hearts does an unsuccessful double of
North raised her to six
a part-score contract or two
Belly ruffed the spade lead hearts or h1gher
h1gh and counted II easy
(For a copy or JACOBY
trick s She dec1ded to try for
the 12th by means of a trump MOOERN, senrl $1 to: "Win
at Bridge, " olo this
~coup
~ At trick two Belly led a low newspaper, P 0 Bo• 489,
.....r _ _ _ _ - trump to dummy' s e1ght to Rad1o C1ty Stat1on, New York,
guard agamst a 4.0 trump N. Y. 10019)

I KNEW

~ou

GUTTERS-A!INI~

THE Rosenboum home at 295
Wn ght St . Pomeroy . 2 story
colonial. -4 bedrooms, 21/•
3I02 or ! ~)772-3227 .
baths. lormot dinrng room
large living room, family room HOUSE for sale, 7 rooms , basement in M1ddleport. Price
w1th fireplace, paneled basereduced. Phone 992-2265.
ment with two extro rooms
afl tc ond 2 cor garoge. Movrng 3 bedroom house, basemen!,
to Cahforn1a , rpany e•tras stay .
fo(ced on gas ·heal, 2 cor
Asking SSS,OOO. Coli lor op·
goro~e. Iorge fenced yord.
pointment,
3166,
Phone 992-7126

. ---

• 712

SIDIIIIi-SIJifln

COUNTRY farmland wtlh secluded woods, wa1er and good access m Monroe Cou nty , W. Va .
$1 ,000 down , call (304) 772-

· ¥AKQI076 '
tAK83

'.

AlUMINUM

ly , W. Vo. Phone [304) 77231 Ol o' 1304) 772·3227.

·-

.

Neither vulnerable

WINDOWS

SMALL form for sale, 10% down.
owner financed . Monroe Coun -

Real Estate for sale

CITED AS A GAUSB FOf&lt;.
DIIJORGB. ,____.

·~
• J 10 9 4

• QHBJ
410 G
' SOUTH

break which would spoil the
potential dummy reversal.
Once both opponents followed
the rest was easy. She ruffed a
second spade hi'h , entered
dummy with the kmg of clubs,
ruffed a third. spade high,
entered dummy with the
queen of diamonds . ruffed' the
last spade. led her last trump
to overtake in dummy , discarded one club on dummy 's
last trump and was held to six
when East kept a diamond
stopper.
A nice hand but to forestall
some of our ' scientific
readers , we will mention that
the hand can also be made by
lettmg the defense hold one
spade trick and developing a
squeeze

Opening lead - K •

Fmtn&lt;lna A11U.~~
Blown inlo Wll~ l AHks
STOIIM
WINDOWS I GOONS
REPI.AC(.[NT

-~

4AI09e~%

t72

...THAT'S AUWEO'V6 WT lf.l
C.OMMOtJ .

O'F COURSE: , IRRISCOIJLI~ABI..E

Blown
Insulation SIIYites

NEW 3 bedJoom housa 1 2 baths .,
all ~lee . 1 acre, Middleport : I
cfo~e to Rutland. Phone 992-

EAST ID•

¥432

.-::::===__,
FREE ESTIMATES

HOMESITE$ for sola . 1 acre and
up Mlddlepor1 near Rutland .

Cofl 992·7481 .

WEST
4 KQJ

Dlf'FE'Rc~S f\RBOFT6N

N41blt Summit Rd .,
Middleport
PHONE 992-5724
7-21 ·1 mo.

David Parsons, Owner
949-2114
6-7-1 mo .

22

4760
¥J98
tQ65
• A K5

SWIMMING
POOLS ,

Mobile Homes for Sale _ Real Estlte10rSi!C:.
~....,;:~
,'---=·='

$16,500.

Sale
ntne
US@d '
ncar Pomeroy . N'.l chtldren or FOR
one ond 2
pets Phone 991.7660 or m . ' housetraile;s
bedrooml Completely furnish·
2318
ONE AKC Rei1stered &amp;engle
ed Conodoy s Trailer Court
h01111d mole 10 month!&gt; nld, All ~l cc lnt op01 tmPnt, phorle
1900 Central St .. Gallipolis
991 2£)q4 F1ottH't ' Y ltnt ~t e 01 1(1
t\Q':&gt; oil !ohnh and alreudy tUIIII
Oh1o Phono (61~) -446·1391
Autn..._,
lll!.j . S50 Pt i{I IHl' 'Wi
l l l~ fH )nu th ~Buick

nn

Phone 949-~814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

Rulltnd
742 -2321
All Work GuaranfHd
Fre' Estl11111lts
&amp;-2H m&lt;

NEW LISTING- 44 acres
on Rl. 143 neer Carpenter.
1971 Flamingo 12x60
trailer . Good drill~ well.
20 ACRES - IIi Berne
Township on ROIId 202,
Athens County, .
CLR 2. C8 Antenna . w1th ISO ft .
COUNTRY
AIR - 3 BR
COA~ . Phone 992·5616
house wl'h modern kl,tchen
1973 Plymouth Ouuer in good
and ball(. Good screened-In
condltlon . $1900 Also, Eweond
front po~th. Basement and
lomb Ph,one(614)9853965.
nlee ~ard with garden
spaces.
FREE Spiril 10 speed bika,
onginally $t36 On Sole ISO
TODAY'S SPECIAL - In
P~one 992 S055.
the country with new 3
bedroom home. Full
basement, nice kitchen, 2
lull
baths, carpeting &amp;
Ju~ Pairt Specials
.
I
carport with slora11 , 2
acres. Reduced for quick
Wtfheramlc Whlta Super
sale for only $31,000.00.
lAtex House Paint-No. 301.
Reg. S1UI111RACINE ARFA - MOdern
3 bedrooms with nice bath
NOW$8.29 GAL.
and equlppe~- kftch•n.
Dining roor;, o!t large
living, Want only IIIMO.
Red No. 315. Reg. $8)9
MIDDLEPORT -f room
hOuse wit~ naturalgaa (hot
NOW S6.79 GAL
water) heaJ. Large living
POMEROY LANDMARK
ahd large dining ,• Natural '
9._ JackW.Cusey.Mgr. oak finish and oak ,floors.
Would you buy lh\s -t only
Ail. Phona992-2181

698m2

5:01&gt;-Bonanza 3; Partridge Fam ily B; Minion : lm·
possible 15.
5:30-Adam·1H,I3; News6 ; Family Affllrt; Electric
Company 20.33.
6:01&gt;-News 3,-18,10,13,15; ABC: News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News 3.~.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh
6; CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias,
Yoga and You 33.
1·01&gt;-Trulh or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bow II.. for Dollars 6: Lawrence Welk B; News 10;
Let's Make A Deal 13; Family Affair IS; Ourslory
20; Family At War 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; XXI Olympic Games13;

or

AL TROMM CONST

197l CHEVROLET C.10
$2895
8' Fleetside, wh ite over re&lt;l , clean in terior, 350 V.8,

GRAPEFRU IT P~ l l w1 th Dodo• . eat
sollsfvmg meals ond lose
wetghl . now e•tro str ength for·
rnulo , Nelson Drugs .

Continuous ont piece
guHers. We hang it, do II
yourstll. Specltl prices to
builder I.

Painting
The Compttte
Remodeling Strvlce
For Your Home

Ohio State Lolltry 6; Baseball 15: Wild Kingdom
tO; Robert MacNeil Report 20.
8:0()-(ireat Migration: Year of the Wlldebusta 3A;
XII Olympic Games 6; Waltona 1,10; Upttaln,
Downstairs 33; Movie "Harp of Burm11" 20.
9:00-Movle "Wiclow'' 3,4, 15; H1waU Flve-0 I. Min
Who Made The Movies 33; Movie "The Dudly
AHalr" 10. '
tO : ~To Be Announced 6; Movlt "Widow'' 15; Ber·
naby JOOH 8; Bill Moyers' Journal 33-f
10:30-News 20.
11 : ~News 3,4,6,1,10, 13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Joltnny Car1011 3,4,15; XXL otymplc Gimes
6.13; Movie "Boys' Night Out" I; Movie "Period of
Aclluslmt!nf" 10; Janak! 33.
•
11 : 4~nnl• 6.13. ,
1:Ill&gt;-Tomorrow 3,4.
2 : 0~News 13.

THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1974

IXPIRIINaD
Radiator

GUTTER SERVICE

Gutflls,
and .Repair

trans

bumper . radio, custom trim and mirrors

e_s_·__

Roofing,

1974 FORD F-100
$2995
8' Styleslde. green finish, good tires. R. bumper,
chrome grille. and front bumper, 6 cyl. and slandard

GOLDEN WEDDING An ntversary. 1
f'r eserie this wonderful day :
w1th pl'iotogt ophs of the famil y ,
toge th er wilh your fnends and
of course the coke t Coli Ken
Gro11er Photography', Chester ,
Oh1o Phorle 985 41 55

SKY

tires .

WANitOlOOO: Handy man, con

Yo u w1 11 f or m se ver al rn IPrestfnq M W· AS$0CIA!tOnS lhlS
V~'"' J11!'l hfl sur(' th e pmsons
you .lil y vo ~ lrF.elf w1t h h;we your

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·~en .

'

Romttmber the day l orever 1
The comlete story of rour weddmg til a beaut 1ful album Colt
Ken Grover
Pho tographer
Che11ter, Ohio. Phone 985 ·-4 1S5

$1095

V8, a utomatiC, P. steering, extra good radial
Needs some body work

Semces Offered

July 23, 1976

• • 18) Shun Jyppr wh o ar en I
llLI ( f'f;

PHOl OG RAPH Y

1970 CAMARO CPE.

70

e~

SrGITTARIUS (Nov 23·0_.,.

I QA01

WEDDING

--~--------~--------~--------~~·

Aluminum Siding,

.

Help Wanted

anhclpntP. defeats today. '
A negat1ve attitude lessens
yo ur abilit y to face 1ssues
squar ely

b lq q er

Qf'\() (1

hove
pholos of you! cons tfu(
t1on site, business cool and
gas leases ol yc.ur fo rm. Ken
Gt ave photogra pher , Chc\ ter
Ohto Phone 985 ~ 155.
00"11(1 1

LOST Red lodres' b1llfold con1a in
1WANT to thank Or Telle and Dr
1ng dr 111er ' ~ license and OLD furni tu re. •ce boxes bro s~ COAL , limestone. onr4 ral cium
beds.
wall telephon es ond
Pickens . th e R N ·s. LPN s and
valuable papers. Please return
chlo~ td e ond calcJUm brine for
parts or comple te h ou~eholds
atdes l or the good care that 1
billl old. may keep money
dust control and spet tol mu:mg
rece1ved whil e~ I wa s o po tl~nt
Wri te M 0 . Miller Rt . "
Re turn to Ruby Jones Rt. 1, B o~~:
sol! ~or fo rmer s. Main Stree1,
Pomeroy Ohio Colt 992 -1760
at Ve terans M e mor~al Thontc s
133 long Bottom. Ohio ~S 7 4 3
Pomeroy Ohio or phone 992
to the mmi sters wh o coiled on
01 p ho n~ her ol 9"9·:1053 ,
CASH po td for all makes and
3891 .
me, to all who qlfered prayer
models o f mobtl e homes
LOST
.
live
r
and
wh11
e
Sprl
nget
CANNING
peaches now ready
for me to the v 1 s~l o rs ond th os@
PhQne or eo code
9S3 L
Spaniel wearing r&amp;d collar. Lost
who sent fl owep and cards_
thru A ugu st . Several vorr et1es .
tn Pomeroy Tue$doy rnorntng SSCashSSS for 1unlo. ed auto Frye s
by the bushel, 1 , bushel or
Also thanks to tti e court house
Rewo rd Phone 992 3589. Po t
Truck Au to Ports , Rutla nd
staff and emplo yees Rolph W
peck Please br mg own con
0 Bnen or phone 9!iJ2.J I32.
Ph one 7 ~ 2 '2081
tolner , 2 conven 1en1 locatrons .
Ours
M1dwoy
Market , Pomeroy .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fore st Pro
IN Memory ol our dear Mother
992 2S8'1: Bob's Market. Meson ,
ducts
Top
prtce
for
standing
Ka tie lt'o ung. who passed oway
773·572 1.
sawt1mber Call Ken! Honb.,. ,
2 y ea ~ ag o. July 22
l.1.10
8570
Down a rood calm and peo&lt;el ul
lOMATOES, Cleland For ms and
S200 weekly stuff1ng en velopes
Guided by God's lov1ng hand,
Green house s,
Gera l dine
' mto olreod y stomped and ad COINS currency tokens . gold
She hos gone upon o rour{ley .
Cleland, Racme. Oh10
dressed en'llelopes Stuffmg
ond Silver rewelry We ned 1964
Too d1s tanl br lgh te r lond
materrol prov1ded free Send
and older U S coms Co)l for 700 bole!i hoy l or sole Phone
She wtshed no one o lost
Se l f addres sed
st omped
oll'ler 7ol 2 233 1 or come ou t lo
992 7751
farewell ,
en velope· Oi11ersthed. Dept
our com shop on Rutland and
Or even satd goodbye
3
b11t e motor cycle frorler CoH
A. A 1206 Camden Or ., R1c hLeod1ng Creelt Rd . Roger
992
711 0
She was gone before we knew 1t,
mand. V1rgima 23229
Wamsley
And only God know s why
A GREAT OPPORTUNITY! SMAll bachelor type cottage w11h Y\'HITE leghorn Ioyer~ 75 each
Sadly missed by her chtldren
Freeland Noms , Roc10e Phone
Un l 1m tfed
eo rnt ng s ,
Iorge lot on some grotJnd
l WISH to thonk eoch one lor the
949·2043
Demonstrate Toys and Gifts a
With1n 15 miles of Chesh.re
cords, prayers, and Eag le Rtdge
few eventngs a week NO ex Oh1o Write P. W O'Morrow
LOSE we1ght wtlh New Shope
Sunday School l or the g1fts,
penence , NO paperwork , NO
N. Second Ave .. Apl 7 MtdTablets ond H~r e • Water Pills
wh1l e I was o pot 1ent 1n Holzer
GIMMI CKS I
Go so l1ne
dleporl . Oh1o ,
ol Dutton Drugs, M1ddleporl
Med1 cal Center Jean .(Young)
allowance Earn FREE Sample
ond Nelson Drug Pomeroy
Roush
Ktt Call 742-2377 Wnte TOY USED Belsaw in good cond 11ton
Phone
(614)
378
6387
1975
Hondo C8 125, 500 m1les , e x·
LADIES PAR TY PLAN .
Johnstown Po 15904
cellen1 cond1110n Phone (614 )
985-3501 after 3 p m

O o r~ l

''

'

Card of Thanks

Of
QUAUTY

A~RIAL PHOTOG RAHY

Lost and Found

, PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

you catcl"' ;myoflC' 1n ,t comall
tiP.ce ptlon today r•' h •'iH to d9at
hfrthcr Cha ncf'B .n , th eY re
tryrnq to covflr IHI ~orno thmg

you IJY thr• ·,om pa ny yo u
:• 1-. ecp You Ill) •~ n1nnwl'i •or your
: • cuhor ts· ~hOrtf.(lln~t' QS

~~

'--c-------..-...J

You rf! 1101 tov flCIOd nt'dt!iguls.r
1Jl9 your lei' lings when persons
you 'rp, not lond ol are around
Thrs 1.1ck ol ta Gt m ay turn off
otht&gt;r ft~ ends

• 21) BE."
•

ATTN .: I !
ALL HOUSEWIVES
1-1. 11 Yar d Sal es, Rumma~;~e .
Por ch and Ba se ment Porch
and Basem en t S ales ~ etc
m ust be pa td i n advance
Get your s in early by
slop ping by our 0ff1ce at
The Dail y SentineL 111
Cou r t St. or wr1ling Box
7'2 9, Pomer oy , Ohio 45769
• w ith your re m 1t tan ce

AQU,lRIUS !Jan 20-Ftb. 19)

early par t 91 the day your out·
loe) k rs apt to be a brt too
1 • negat tve As thmgs prog ress.
' " you II real1ze you wm e foolrsh
I I • '
, 1 • to take thin11s so ser•ously
1

r.:•

NOTICES

·~

.;- : LIBRA (Sttpl. 23-0ct. 23) The

~

Dai l y, 8 .30 am to 12 ·00
Noon Sat ur day
Phon e toda y 992 2156

and methurl :; dr •~ not m har J
n)Oiiy
' •

ffW

;. t:~I

OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a.m , to s.oo p m

Coriunon Pleas Court.
The Appeals Court and the.
Supreme Court both ruled
that the lower cou~l
committed a prejudicial.
error in its inslructiooslo the
jury .concerning a claim by
Matthews that the shootlrig
was ·in self defense.
The Supreme Court,
however, reversed the
,&gt;,ppellate Court's ·aecisidl
which ruled that certain
testimooy by a police office
should have been inadmissable.
·

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) lei

t'~
~'
._•

BLIND ADS

Add itional 25c CM rg e
per Ad vert iseme nt.

down ur Franklin County

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) To-

,t.,

$2.00
tor 80 wor d
min tmum
E ach addi tion al word 3
cents .

"'

For Friday, July 23, 1978
•••
ARIES (Moren 21-Aprll 1,)

...

&amp; OBITUARY

L.
__
B__us.. ___i_n-;--e_s_s_S_e.,..._rv
__z_·c__
Motor Co.
Auto Sales

R1~R£:t:~~il·;~:~~~~~~~c~ ·,_
@
_,.;,~-t--2-s-IG_N_s___P_o~m-e_t_o_v__,.

Court finds
technicality

.• Bernice Bede Osol

:.- SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-No¥. 22)

THANKS

Auto Sales

Notices

·'

I

ASt.raGrapM

day
she
her
you

OF

,For Fast Results USe - Th~ Senttnel .Classifieds

bl-4·"2T

29. lie

Th e

11 ) 15 , 11, 19 18) 5,

CA~D

Television log for easy viewing

. ·---------~- --SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern

•

Sanita tion . 992·395-4 ' or

' 2428.~

..

-

~

~~---

992·

~~

WILL do rogf1ng , constructron
plumbrng and heating . No rob
too Iorge or too small . Phone

742-2348.

iTS &gt;CUR 87~
FACE-LIFPCNCE IT

, CARPENTER , flooring, ceil1ng
paneling Phone 992-2759

·-·-----I

VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·

CCX..lAPSES-

VICE. Meigs·Athens County
Balers from $.1995 up . Merrill

(614) 698·3021.
~
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND '
DOZER - LARGE AND SMAll
SEI'TIC TANKS INSTALLED , LOW
89Y ANO DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
PUlliNS, PHONE m.2.78 DAY
OR NIGHT .
BUILDING . remodeling , and
C~ose ,

-----

PLASTIC SIJR6EF&lt;Y CPN ro NO
MOREr-:SOM/J.J&lt;E HAY, MRS,

..!I

33,

I

8:30-Big Valley 6.
1
9:01&gt;-A.M. 3; PM Donahue ~.1~ Lucy Show I; Mike
DoUl(las 10: Morning with DiJ. 13.
9:30--Cross-Wtts 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattletales I;
Mike Douglas 13.
10 :GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,.,15; Edge ol Night 6: Price 11
Right 1, 10; Kiln Krall 33.
10:30--Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,A,15; Dinah 6: Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :GO-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday ~; Gamblf
8,10; Farmer' s Daughter 13.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,A,15; Happy Days 13; Love
of Life 8, 10.
,
11:5S....Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:01&gt;-Fun Fectorv 3.15: Hot Seat '13; Bob Braun •:
News 6,8, 10; Sesame Sf. 33.
12:31&gt;-Gong Snow 3,15; All MY 1-nlldren 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10. ·
12:5S:..NBC News 3,15.
'1:01&gt;-Ryan's Hope6,13; Phil Donahue B; ; Young I. the
Restless 10; Not for Women On&lt;y 15; Etec: Co. 33.
1:30-Day• of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6.13; As
The World Turns 8, 10; Upstairs, Downstairs 9;
Book Beat 33.
2:01&gt;-120.000 Pyramlcl 6, 13; Valiant Years 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
· Llght8.10; Olympled 33.
3 · ~Anolher World 3,.,15; General Hospital •.6.13:
All In The Family 8, 10; Crockett' I VIctory Garden
20.
3:3o--&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6: Match
Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Walsh's Animals
33.
4:01&gt;-Misler Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; SomerMI15;.
Bewitched 6; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "Swordsman of Siena" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlfllth I;
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllnlslones 15.
•
5:01&gt;-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible 15.
5:»-Adam·12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8: Elec. C...
20,33: Aclam-12 13.
6:00 HIWs 3 •••e.te,1J,l5; AIIC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News3,4, 1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8. tO;
Hodgepodge Lodge . 20;
Carrascolendas 33,
7:GO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth •: Bowling for
Dollars 6; Space: 1999 B; News 10; Don Adams
Screen Tesl13; Family Affair 1S; Woman 20; Black
Perspective on the News 33.
7:30-Porter Wagoner 3; Baseball 4; Candid Camera
6; $25,000 Pyramid 10; To Tell the Trufh 13; Popl
Goes the Country IS; Robert MacNeil Report20,33.
8 : ~Sanfcrd &amp; Son 3; XXI Olympic Games 6.13;
Baseball 15; Sara 8, 10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33.
8:30-The Practice 6,12; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:~Rockforcl Flies 3; Movie" Aloha Means Good ye"
8, 10; U.S.A. : People &amp; Politics 20,33; Movie "Wh"l
of Fortune" 9.
·
9:30-College Football All -~tar Game 6,13; lsfahal! ol
Shah' Abbas 20,33.
..
10 :GO-Pollce Story 3; Treasure Hunt 4; News20; Paul
Nuchlms 33.
10:3~NFL Action '76 4; Pollee Story 15; Farm Digest
20.
'
'
11 :GO-News 3.4.8.10, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,A,15; Movie "Splnoul" 8;
Movie "Robinson Crusoe on Mars" 10; Janak! 33.
12:3&lt;1-News 6,13.
1:Oo-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15; FBI 6; Movie
"Sfrangler of the Swamp" 10; Wrestling 13.
2:GO-News 13.
2:30-News J.
3:01&gt;-Movle "Dante's lnlerno" 3.
5 · 01&gt;-Movl~ .f 'Moon over Miami" 3.

FOAMIN6HAM, Bt:FORG THE:
SUN SETSrr

~lYlOOJJJ~;-~.::!! '~=

i

lJ

FRIDAY, JULY2J, 1976
6:01&gt;-Summer Semester 10.
6 : 1~Farm Report 13.
6:20-Biue Ridge ~riel 13.
6:3C&gt;-columbus Today 4; News6 ; Summer Stmttttt
8; Two-Way Street 10.
6:4~1ng Report 3.
6:~ Morn!.., West VIrgin" 13.
6:55--Good Morning, Trl Stale 13.
7:01&gt;-Toclay 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS·
News 8; Chuck While Report1 10.
7 : 0~Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:01&gt;-JeH's Collie 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; StNme St .

0

Unocnmbl•lh..e r..., Jumblu,
one letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary word1.

'

repairs. Quoli1y wortc , eff1crent
serYice. Jesse Rodman phone

992·5980.

'

WANT to go ~ into buslne;, --by
yourself?
Almost
new
' automatiC lnsulotlng matchme,

$850.00. Phone Gall ipolis
A
PLAC~ - 5 yrs.
1 -~46·4782 .
old. v, acre, metal storage '
bldg., large garden. 3 .P,N!IQUE restorotio~s , re~roduc·
!tons , cabinet moklng and fur·
bedrooms, bath, eaf-ln
nlture repair. 131 11, 3rd, Mid·
kitchen. carpeted, utlllly
dlep~rt
, 992.5?35 day ond
R. Carport. JUST $16,100.
evenrng.
BUYING 0!1 SELLING,
CALL US- THEN START
PACKING. HENRY E.
CLELAND,
BROKER,
APPRAISER,
WILL DO odd 1obs, roofing, poln
CONSULTANT.

... THII&gt;JGS 1!\RE OONCr GOOO!TilEN IMYBE
YCJU HAVE ENOUGH
PRETTY WELL AT
ENEreY
10 TALK TO
OONNAZ1 R:RA
THAT SON OF
CHANGE!

YCJURS!

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
.\XYDLBAAXR
J, 0 N G F E L L 0 W

II
.
One letter Simply stands for another

In this sample A Ia

u sed for thr three I .'s, X f or the two O's . c•t r . Srnglc }('tiers.

apostrophes, the length ond formati on of lhr 11 nrrls ore aU
hints Earh day the rode lellers are different .
I'RVPTOQUOTJ!S

PG

hng,. hauling, lreework. and
mowma. Pha.nP 9Q?.7.tlf'lCI

GEWA

BAEUK,

P

PU
EW

UF
PI

OFWA
If'

FIHZ

KQTTZ

Mon., Tues., Wid.&amp; S.t.-t:30tll5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRill¥ UNnL 8 PM

MASON
FURNITURE
.,. .
n3·5S92 · Harman Grlte

Maaon,W. Va.

NUSS ··TAKE MY 0~
JALOPY DOWN AN' RUN
IT THRU TH' HOOTIN' HOLLI:R
CAR WASH

I'M SUSPRISED THE
Ol PILL PEDDLER
DIDN'T AST FER
A HOT WAX

JOB

THE LAKE ...
THE TREES•.
THE SKI(...

I [J

IPOOSUR! I tJ

EGUAT
GFT

PU.

- WETUPEH
Yeslerday's Cryploquote: A MAN CAN FAIL MANY TIMES
BUT HE ISN'T A FAILURE UNTIL HE BEGINS TO BLAME
SOMEBODY ElSE. - JOHN BURROUGHS
fC 19'16 KJnl F~•lur•• Syndical~. In c 1

I EAZUG

,.-......,. t

l

lo...W..o

l'nlel'd•J'•

UNCLE CURIO PATTER GUTTER

Annen Mail Hltkt"IDurm.igAtiUU

,.._"NEUROTIC"

:04)

�10 - 'lbt IJelly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July '!2, 1976

PATIENT MOVED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracll8e E-R Squad Wednesday transported George
Grueser from ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital tc Holzer
Medical Center , Hollie
Stewart reported.

MEIGS
Tlllln., .lvlr22
NOT OPEN

Ct.

Fri.,
Sun.
July 23·24·25
Walt Disney'• ·

True llfo.Adventvrt
POWERFUL PRIMITIVE
UNTAMED
Plus
. IG)
THE STRONGEST MAN
Iff THE WORLD
Russell, Joe Ftvnn,
Arden, Cesar Romero,

II

,Slivers.

(G)

Sllow starts 7 p.m.

MORE, LOTS MORE
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews reported receipts
for the month of June to
Pomeroy Council Monday
night in the amoun.t of
$4,079.05 not l4'i9 as was
reported.

CORRECTION

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
Yelterday's Ad_Should
Have Read

.

KNEE HIGH HOSE
3 lor '129
and PANTY HOSE
2for '100
Have a ·Healthy
Summer...

Reagan

The Rev. Edward J .
Veteraus Memorial Hospital
Griffilll,
76, RD, Long Bot.
ADMISSIONS - Mary .
(ConUnued fram paae 1) Cooper, Athens; Ida White, lorn , died at University
over whether they have a RuUand ; Fred Hill, Al~ny ; Hospital this morning. Born
moral corrunltment" he con- Nma Rupe, Cheshire ; Linda in Minersville Aug. 7, 1899 to
linued.
'
·"Stewa_rt, Proctorville; Lena the late John and Nellie
· Bell said. he would not Cooper, . Belpre ; Paul Griffith , he was also
release the names of any Laudermd t, Pomeroy; Pearl preceded in death by his wife,
Ford delegates who might KQ&lt;!hl_er , Reedsville ; Elmer Helen in 196S; a son, Kenneth,
make the switch to Reagan Whlthngton, Rutland; Clolst in 1940; two brothers,
Michael and Daniel, and two
until the delegates are ready Badgley, Racine.
sisters,
Vina Soulsby and
to go public
DISCHARGES - Crystal
Lena
Mathews.
Despite his optimism a McCourt, Vicki Lee, George
Rev . Griffith spent most of
Scrlpps.Howard NewspaPerS Grueser, ~ovie Watson ,
his
life as a foreman and
sampling of 25 delegates ~ Lawrence Stewart, Emily
superintendent
of Ohio coal
most from rural areas and Lewis.
. companies. Near retirement,
small cities where Reagan Is·
llolzer Medical Center
he was ordained a minister
believed to be more popular,
(Discharges, July21)
and
served as pastor of the
~ does not reveal any
Charlene . Black, Mrs.
widespread eagerness to Larry Blevins and daughter;
desert the President.
Kenneth Bloomer, Margaret
Typical is Slaron Stotz of Camden, Mrs. Evan Clark
Montpelier, a delegate from and twin sons; Lana Clark,
the 5th Congressional Georgia Davis, Mrs. Kevin
District. Mrs. Stotz said she Dennis and daughter; Brenda
has received two calls from Drummond , Mrs . Michael
Columbus urging her to Eblin and daughter, Uoyd
switch her support to Finl~y, Louis Gable, Wilford AT H ~NS - - The Ohio
Reagan.
Gilliland, III, Virginia University College of
"I could have gone either Grinstead, Doris Holderby, Os teopa thlc M.edicine has
way had Reagan come llito Dorothy Howard, . Linda aMounced the granting of a
Ohio when he should have," Johnson, Doris Lilly, Dreama scholarship made possible by
she said. "But I feel Long, Helen McCaUister, Jan a contribution from Pomeroy
corrunltted to Ford now and Parker, Luther Pittenger , surgeonLewisD.Telle,M.D.,
that's the way I'm going to Roney Ramsey, Janice and Mrs. Telie , 230 Lincoln
stay."
Reynolds , Mary Roberts, Hill.
· Other Ford delegates sur- Edna Rogers, Herbert Sayre,
Dr. Telle is a member of
veyedwereevenr_norermn in Pearl Seymours, Beth the staff of Veteran 's
th_elr determination to stick Sheward, Carolyn Spurlock, Memoria I Ho spit a I ,
With the President.
Steve n Stewart, William Pomeroy, one of II hospitals
~neen. Miksch of BeUefon- Walters, Shari Wedemryer, affiliated with the new'
tame saJd she was called by Huey While, Eliza Woods, medical school.
Reagan raiders last weekend. Delsa Wray.
A Columbus woman .
Her a111wer was "flat no."
!Births July2H
Margaret · Fank~auser,
"I ran pledged to Ford, and
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth became the seventh recipient
myword,is as legal as any Wheeler, daughter, Dexter ; of a full-tuition scholarship
contract, she "Said. Mrs. Mr.lind Mrs. Arlllur Tursley, · for the 1976-77 school year. A
Miksch Is a delegate from the daughter, Rav.enswood, W. · student in pre-medicine at
7th Congressional District. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Ohio State University, Miss
Still, there is 8 strong McFadd en daughter Fankhauser graduated from
possibili~y th.at Reagan wiU Wellston; Mr . and Mrs~ Wilmington College ,
make slight 111roads Into the Wil)iam
Casey, ' son, Wilmington, in 1972 with a
Ohio delegation.
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. bachelar's degree in political
Bell will keep up the . Larry Terry, son, Vinton; science.
!l'e&amp;sure on such delega!A)s Mt. and Mrs. Donald Case,
and said he wollld't rule out son, McArlllur .
the possibiUty that Reagon
personally will caD some of
Ohio's Ford delegates.
AID UNit CALLED
FIREMEN CALLED
The Pomeroy E·R Squad
The Pomeroy Fire Dept
W8$Called Wednesday at 3:19 ' was called today at 1:09 a.111.
p.m. for Linda Perkins, 11, to the Randy Mills residence
CORRECI'ION
old
Chester Road, w~o was on CR 2:i just beyond Meigs
A charge of disorderly
taken
to Veterans Memorial High School. Fire Chief
conduct against Dana L.
Charles Legar said f&gt;l,ills was •
9eofge, 18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Hospital.
asleep on a rna !tress when a
was dismissed upon t·he
burning candle fell, catching
UNIT CALLED
motion of Assistant City
At 8:56a.m. Thursday the the mattress on fire. Damage
Solicitor BW Eachus, and not
City SoUcitor Dean Evans as Middleport Emergency was estimated at $25, Mills
stated In Wednesday 's Squad was summoned to 892 was uninjured.
S. Second St. in Middleport
Tribune.
'
for Thomas Justice, who was
transported to the Holzer
Medical Center .

Telles give.
scholars.hl'p

/
BROTHER DIES
TAYLOR PROMOTED
Edna Reibel of Pomeroy
Douglas B. Taylor, 18, has
has received word or the been promoted to the rank of
death of her brother, Howard Private 1st Class while
Logan of Springfield. He wu serving on duty with the 34th
the brother of Wilbur and Jnfantry at Fort Stewart in
Earl Logan- and Erma J(ltorgia. The son Of Mrs.
Brlldford. Ftmeral services Roselynn Tucker at Tuppers
will be held Saturday in Plains, .he is a 1975 graduate
Springfield.
of Eastern ijigh School.

Stock up Now on vitamins and sundries
We carry the quality vitamins you need for
energy and •·itality along ,.;ilh anti-acids,
ana18e•ics, cold tablets, cough syrups, feminine
hy8iene products, handage., ointments and
anlioeptics.

WE FILL ALL
PQCTORS' PRESCRIPTIONS

ON DUTY SOON
Cl;IESHIRE - William
Metzner, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. WWiam Metzner, St.,
Route I, Cheshire, enlisted in
the United States Air Force
Delayed Enlistment
Program in February and
will go on ectlve duty on Aug.
19 aL Lackland Air Force
Base, San Antonlo .

· SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
'

•

S.nrice

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•
•
•
••

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111E.MAIN

REUNION SET
The Singer reunion wiU be
held Sunday at Royal Oak
Park witl1 potluck dinner at
12:30. Friends and relatives
are invited.

PICNIC PLANNED
Carletcn Church will
hold its annual picnic Sunday
at the Bedford Youth Center
beginning at 10 a.m, with
Sunday School followed by a
PICNIC CANCELLED
The picnic of the Past basket lunch at noon . All
Matrons of Evangeline . members and friends are
Chapter 172 has been can- invited to attend.
celled for Friday night.
ASK TOWED

K....... McCullougll, R. PIJ. Chrlos RIHio, R. I'll.
Roneld HIRftiJII, R. I'll.
Mon. thru Sot. I:OOe.m. Ill.tp.m.
SunUr te:30to 12:30end s"'' p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. m.ms
POMEAOY,O.

The

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . Wehe
.DanaTerrace,
Allen Snouffer,
23,121
Pomeroy,
to
Jan
Ellen
Sidwell,
19,
68
E.
'
Jefferson St., McConnels·
ville, and Richard Lawrence
Conway, 31), Rt. 2, Raci.ne, to
I·
Myrta Ann Rose, 29, Rt. 2,
Racine.

The Rampart Fiberglass Shingle

1he lowest·Priced ClaSs A Fire Resistant Shingle ·
\

You Can Buy
Rampart is built with an
Inorganic tiber gll!ss mat
[rather than organic tell }

Prescription
&amp;
Surqical Support
Center

Ramparts Seat·O:Matlc
Rampart's ceramic-coated
granules are embedded in
asphalt to give the shingles

''

Halmark

Water

Fountain
.,.

· Rampart's selt-allgmng taos ·
help make installation easy. last.

Rampart's
i
random -cut edge sweeps
boldly across your root,
makes your home look
longer and morf! contemo·
rFtry.

Wt will be open
Until 9 p.m. Friday

Ladies &amp;
ChUdrens

Bald Knob Freedom ~I
Mission several years. He
wu active in church work
throughout the community.
He is survived by two sons,
Charles and Gary ; two
grandchildren, Karen Lynn
Griffith. and David Alan
Griffith; a brother, Roland,
Columbus, and his mother-Inlaw, Mrs. Mae Pearson ,
Racine.
Funeral services will be
held Sunday at I p.m. at the
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Cecil Wise officiating .
Friends lnay call ai the
funeral home after 7 this
evening.

eonlelt

(Cw'l

SciOns of wealth
hunted by· police ·

in Briefs
«....... 1)

-

plellded 110
-u.r llda ,... 1111 ... 111111 ...each. Another 22 of the corp~~~ atto.~Mf tl cllllt
have filed reqtllllll ~ tbelt piNI frGIIllarot • to 110

contest.

Will••

.lllllllm

CLEVELAND - MORE 'lllAN
wwlll cl tilta
have '-t eold a1ooe the lniWII 0111o IDalr7 ..-- • liP
four weeki .... to sceed apectiiiGDI. ''(¥ - . . . bel
exceeded 011' own Initial pro.JeeU- IIIII at~:'* ...,... IIIII
without ca• • nollouble efleet oa..- for 1111 •• Pb ·•
cent game," 14tery Cclmmilllon Encullw Oll'lldar OenJd ·
J. Patroolte Aid WecJnew!IJ.
"We believe tile..- cl tiU 111J111 lltmllram IIIIIDO«
chance a p11ytr 1111 ot 1llnnlng and the f•tun olltDolrJat
lnitantly whether cr not the tldlilt II 1 wbltlr." Man tltU
flU mW1on hu been liven to 10111e lllill!llln lllllnt lotta7 .
game pla1'!1, W'blle ~ tbe lllatl
fllnd with
more than $11 miWon In revenue. ·

••

involves armed irio of

dangerous, you'!-g men

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

•

'

Three Aoors ·In the Main Store, Home

Ohio has 1,200 fanns
in same family 100 years

'

Furnishings Annex and Mechanic
Street Warehouse.
Womens Coats • Sportswear • Jeans.· Girls Stu !swear
sieepwear • Mens Jackets · Walk Shorts • Paiamas

'

furniture Department.

SHOP FRIDAY 9:30 TO &amp;-SATURDAY .9:30 TO 5

fNews. • . in Brief~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

REPORT OF CONDITION

l

the

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.,.

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on Jime 30, 1978 publllhed In response to can
made by Comptroller of the CUrrency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 181.
Charter number 11441
National ~nk Region Number 4

ThOUIIInds
Cash and due from banks ... .. . .... . ....... .... .... .... . .. .... . .... .... ... , ...... 8!11
,2.,.S. Treasury securities ... ... .. ............ .... , .• ••. . .. ..... ~ ........ . ...••.• 2,901
· Obligations of States and political subdivisiotlS ................ .. .. , .. . ... ........ I,IU
Federal Reservestockandcorporatestock ............ .... . . .... ...... .. . , .... , .... 21
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to reseU .. . . . ...... ... ..... ... ................ ... . ' ........ 1,250
Loans, Total (excl~ · ~unearned income) ........ . , .•. , ......... ' .... 5,178
Less: Reserve for paso. Jleloanlosses.' ... . . ... . ...... ,, .• , .............. 72
J..,oans, Net ........•••.................• .•• • , ••• .•••••.•. , .. , ••...•.••.••••• 5,108
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
·
·
other assets represenUng bank premises ...... . ....... ! .. .............. ......... 100
Real estate owned other than bank premilleB .... .. , . , ... . ........... .. ..... ; ......... I~
OUler assets ... .. . .. ... .... .. ........... . ... , , ....•.. , ...•....... •. ...••• ·••.•..•• I
--+.,..-- TOTAL ASSE1'S ........... . ..... . .• • •.......••••••••••......•••..•..• •....•. 12,308
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshpll., and corps ..... .. . .. . ............... , ... 2,813
Ill
Time
and savings deposits of individuals,
.
Ill
prtnshps,, 'and corps.
a,aot
Deposits of United States Government ........ .... ........... : . ..•••...... , •..•...• 18
!:
Deposii:s of States and political subdivisions , , . , ..., ....... .. . ....... , . .... . .. ...... 474
... , ••••• ••••• ·~. ,. . .... ,'' ·
,
liD
Depos1·ts of corrunercw
· I banks . . .. .. .. ................
' ! •• ~ • • .,,
'· ·"
1
Cer\ifiedandofficers' checks ............... , ........ . , .... .. , ... . .... ... .. ... .. ..
~
TIYrALDOMESTICDEPOSITS .... ,, ,,, ....... .. ,., ... . .....•...... ,,, ....... 11,150
Total demand deposits......... ..... . ... , , , .. , ................ ... . . . 2,81!6
Totaltime and savings deposits ..... , . , ...... .... . ' , ............. , . , . 8,214
Other liabilities ..... ......... ..... , ......................................... ..... 3
-+--- TIYrAL LIABIUTIES (excluding subordlnaied notes and debentures .............. 11,163
CoiiUilon stock
a. No. shares authorized 2,1100
b. No. shares~utstanding 2,1100
(par value) : ............. .. . ................ , 100
Surplll'l .......... . ... . . .... ..... , ................... , ... .. .. . ... . .... · ........ 800
Undividedprofils .......... ....... . ,, · ........ · ............. .. · .. · ............. ~
TIYrAL EQUITY CAPITAL . , , , , .. , . , . ................. . ........ .'.............. 1,153
AL LIABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ........ , ...... . ................. 12,118

-....
-....

in Cincinnati

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o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 I o o o o o 0 0 0 o o o o o 0 o o o o o o o ', 0 0

g'

,,,

,
•

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-+---ror

,.. ....

!:~

:::::J-

oD.
... ~
u

Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with can date:
Cash and due from banks ... . ... .•. ...•••• •••• ••••••••..• . . , .•••.•••••••••••• 1,113 . .
Fed. funds sold and securities purcllased

,.

Total loans .. : .....•.... .... ........••• , .•.•.
.l,lM
Time deposits of $100,000 or more in domeaticofflces ........ ..... ....... .. ........ 378

'.

ilnder agree~ts to resell . . ... , .. ,_.................... ~· ....... •. .. .. . .... •.. 1,250
o •• o ••• o • ••••• • •• o o o • • • • • • • • o • •

Total deposits . ,,. : .,, .. ................ ....... , . . .. .. ... ... . .... •......... •11,281
Time deposita of$100,000 or more In domestic offices:
Time certificates of deposltln denomlnatona of •100,1100 or more ......•....•.....••. 222
Other time deposits In amounts of fiOO,OOO or more •. , , ...•.. . .. . ...... ...... . . .•.. 153

I, Manning Kloes, VIce Prelldent and Cashier of tbe ·1bove- - - named bank do hereby declare tbet thla Report ol Condition
is !rue and correct to the belt of my bowledae and belltf.

~

a

~Kloel

z
c1111

0
IIll
I

Rest R•

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July18,18'11

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctneu of UW. llatemtnt bt resource~ 'nd
liabilities. We declare that It has been e:r.amlned by Ul, 111d to the beat ol our launrledt!e and
belief is true and correct.
•

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Dale M. Dutton

Peyton
bound
by court

'

Middleport

112-3748

Ohio
t

Weather

Carter, in blue jeans,
takes stroll in Plains

t

Rose S. Reynolds - Directors

••• 2nd

starm, two M the 800 block of First Ave., and another on the
entrance road at the top of the hill leading onto the GaiUpolis ·
State Institute grounds.
Workers spent hours pumping water from basements of
home owners and stores in downtcwn Gallipolis. Home
swinuning pools were flowing over as was the Gallipolis tank.
Memorial Field, which received extensive repair .work
earlier this year by the mue Devil Bo&lt;isters Club, held up well
under the onslaught. Only visible water after the storm was on
the blacktop playground beyond the band, boosters booth.
However, aU summer activities, swirrunlng, tennis and
baseball games, were rained out.
Several oldtimers said it was the most rain they'd ever
seen in such a short period of time. Gorden Kemper, of the
East Gallipolis Weather Observance Station, said this morning
it was the most rain that station had recorded in that period of
time in at least seven years.
The 4.41 inches of rain pushed the July monthly rainfall
total to a record 10.94 inches in G8111a County. Gallla now has
28.45 inches of rain for the year.
According to the Ohio Cl(matologlcal SUmmary Sheet,
most rainfall ever recorded In July In Gallia County was 8.12
inches in 1973. That mark fell after last night's outburst.
Hundreds of sightseers flocked from their shelters after
the stonn to witness damage throughout the community.
Meanwhile, some communities surrounding GaUipolls
reported little or no rain during the evening.

Roving pickets idle 20,000 miners

Accord reached

-+---Sta"'tement of Resources and Liabilities

PRICf FIFTEEN CENTS

City hit by cloudburst
tti

Leisure Shirts • Western Shirts • Kn~ Shirts
..

t

n

• I.

Nlany Outstanding Values In the Third Floor

progress. The booth will be ready by the time the !13th
Meigs County Fair opens.

en tine

at y

CONTINUING OUR JULY CLEARANCE SALE
Bargains In Every Department on .All

sonsofDr.JohnSchQenfeld,a
Because of a jUdge's gag
podiatrist with offices in order - to last 10 days . Menlo . Park In San Mateo results of the search were not
County.
disclosed.
Law enforcement officers
Sierra County Sheriff's
from Madera, Alameda and deputies Thurlday conducted
San Mateo counties swooped. a four-hour search of mining
down on the Woods estate clailm along the North Fork .
Wednesday night armed with of the Yuba River near
a search warrant and Downieville, A spokesman
COMING ALONG - Work on the new Meigs Band
conducted an extensive said patrols were being.
SAN LEANDRO, Calif. (UP!) - Three young men from search of the JI'Opetty.
Booster booth at the Fairgrounds Is making good
"sharpened" for the trio.
wealthy famllies, described by pollee u armed and
dangeroUJ, were oonted Wday In connection with the
kidnaping of 28 children and their driver from a school bus In
Chowchilla,
An allopointa bulletin was flashed to law enforcement
agencies acrosa the country Thursday night; ordering &lt;he
arrest of the lrlo "on probable cau!!e" for lasl week's
abduction In the small San Joaquin Valley town of Chowchilla.
Though warrants were not yet issued, Alameda County
Sheriff Tom Houchins Sllid "I will seek arrests (warrants)
Immediately," adding be would go to court for the warrants
VOL. XXVIII NO. 68
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
this morning.
.
FRIDAY, JULY
1976
The three suspects identified as Fred Newhall the suspects. One county was
Woods, 26, · James L. identified as Santa Clara
Schoenfeld, alao 2:i, and his where clothing of the victims
brother, Richard, 22 - were was found off a lonely
described as armed and mountain road.
dangerous.
Another county was Sierra,
Houchins, whose north of Sacramento, where
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The Ohio Farm Bureau
Gallipolis and some of its suburbs were drenched with 4.41
department issued the the trio was arrested in
Federation
has
offically
recognized
1,200
family
farms
in
inches
of rain in a two-bour period Wednesday evening ( a:05 to
buUetin at Its substation in ~Iober, 1974, for joy riding
Ohiowhich are IOOyears old or older, some dating hack to
7:05) and the result, for the second time in less than two weeks,
· San Leandro af!A)r a search of and petty theft. Authorities
the 18th Century.
were all but devastaling for hundreds of residents. and
\lie Woods' family · estate said
all
successfully
"We
had
no
idea
of
the
tremendous
response
we'd
get
to
businessmen. Yesterday evening's thunderstcnn was followed
across San Francisco Bay in compleled probation there,
the
program,"
S
.C.
Cash~n.
tbe
Fann
Bureau
's
vice
by an electrical storm between 2 and 3 a.m. today, causing
the fashionable community of
Houchins, asked the motive
presidenl
for
information
and
commodity
relations
said
·
power failures thr&lt;tughout Gallia County.
·
Portola Valley, said the alert of the bizarre kidnap, .told
' ThurSdar. "We were expecting to register perhaps 400
Thursday evening's .rain Oooded all intersections along
was a result of " late newsmen, "I have no Idea."
farms but the final count ran to 1,291 fanns."
Second Ave., The 800 block of Fourth Ave., was inundaied, and
developments
this He also said it was not known
To be recognized, Cashman said, a fann must he owned · · fpr the first time in the Gallipolis Golf Course's 50-plus year
afternoon." He also said the when the three SWlpects were
by members of the same family for at least 100 years and
history, some two to three feet of water covered the course
search was "accelerating." last seen - by friends or
at
least
80
ecres
of
the
original
farm
must
still
be"
in
around
its entire edge .
Woods' father owns the parents.
ownership.
·
Basements
were flooded once again hroughout the
quarry in nearby Livermore
The APB said Woods is six
"Even
though
it
deprived
some
farms
Of
recognition,
community.
Back
yards and gardens in th Old French City
where the . kidnap victims feet taU, weighs 145 pounda,
the
80-acre
limitation
allowed
us
tc
honor
those
·families
resembled
small
lakes.
were held in a burled truck. has brQ\Vn hair and blue eyes.
who have held on to a substantial portion of their origillal
At the Jones Boys store on Pine Slreet, some observers
The kidnaping occurred The elder Schoenfeld also is
family
homestead from generation to generation," . said water was approximately four feet deep near the store
Thursday, and the victims six feet tall, weighs m
Cashman said. "What our program really shows is the
and railroad tracks.
• diJg their way tc safety Pounds and has red hair and
tremendous stability that still abounds In rural America.
Water gushing off Orchard HiD rushed through homes at
Friday night.
blue eyes. His younger
This is worth preserving."
·
the foot of Orchard HiD, down Rt. 588 ontc Hinkle Ave. call'ling
.Houchins also said law brother is 5-feet·ll-inches
Ivan Cooper, the fann bureau's director of livestock ·.extensive property damage in that area.
..
enforcement officers in two tall, weighs 150 pounds, and
programs
who
administered
the
Centry
Farm
Program,
Huge
semi
lrucks
were
stalled
in
high
water
in
front
of the
. counties, "and possibl{ has brown hair anct blue eyes.
said
many
of
the
farms
are
historically
interesting.
·
Gallipolis
water:works.
Other
vehicles
were
stslled
in
high
. three," were searching for
The 1 Schoenfelda are toe
He said for exa!llple, a land title dated 1799 notes that
water at various intersections during the storm.
the ancestor of present owner James Smjley acquirJ!(I the
~::x~ =g• um:::::;::~:::::;:::;:~:~:~~:;~~:~~==:~:.~:s:::~~:~:::~:::~!~:::::~:~:::::::::::::::::::~
The Ohio Valley Livestock Yards on Vinton Ave., also had
Adams County farm from King George III in IC72. 1
around four feel of water .
In TWlcarawas County, the John Moffet fann has a
At least three cave~ns were reported shortly afler the
stone survey marker placed by George Washingtcn to
mark the western edge of the Steubenville Land Survey.
By United Press International
Cooper said many of the farms are owned by the sixth,
BRIG SWITZERI..AND- THE "RIVIERA
EXPRESS
"
seventh
or eighth generation of the homesteading family.
"
'
crowded with sleeping vacationers, jum~ its trecks in the
"These people worked on the farm when their dads
early morning hours today, killing six persons and injuring 34.
fanned with horses; they helped put In drainage ditches,
By ANDREW GALLAGHER job until they receive better
The trans. European \rllin derailed as it left the Simplon tunnel
built barns and improved the fertility of the soil," said
CHARLESTON, W. Va. treatment from the courts.
beneath the Alps, the world's longest railroad tunnel. Sixteen
Cooper, "It's hard to give up something when you've got
·
(UP!)
- Roving United Mine &amp;me of that helter treatment
of the injuries were serious.
1
all that work and family heritage in it."
Worker
pickets who have came Thursday when a
"It appears e8tablished that the train.was going too fast,"
idled
more
than t1u1n 20,000 · federal appeals ·court
said Andre Brochard, dlreciPI:.I!f the southern section of the
miners
and
cut coal rejected a company reqUest
'
Swiss railroad system. "The engll'leer, who was among those
production
by
50
per
cent in fo~ an injunction.
killed, was apparently going faster than permitted on leaving
five days, fanned out across
"Everybody's ratsing hell
the tUIUiel and approaching Brig station," he said.
the southern West Virginia about these injunctioos," said
coal fields for the !i(th con- John Tackett of Smithers, a
BEIRUT, LEBANON - PEACEKEEPING TROOPS
secutive
day . today .
miner with 26 year's
sought tc move deeper into Christian territory today and an
Many
vowed
to
stay
off
the
experience.
"We're going to
Arab League spokesman said they would soon take up
stay
off
tiU
this thing is
positions along the entire Jinjl separating Moslem and
settled."
Christian aetrut.
''We're tired of federal
Lefllst leaders took their first step toward formalizing a
jupges interfering, ' ' said
Moslem-Christian partition of Lebanon. Talks in Damascus,
CINCINNATI
(UP!)Dis·
on
July
13
in
a
contract
Joseph
Tuemier of Local 2236
meanwhile, held out the possibility of an end to the war beMostly cloudy, chance of at Winifrede .
trict
C::ouncil
51
of
the
dispute.
tween the Palestinians and Syrian invaders. Arab League
Union Business Agent Stan heavy lllunderstorms tonight.
"The companies go to
envoy Hassan Sabry Kholi said two key rightist chieftains American Federation of
J.,ows tonight in the mid 60s. federal court instead of
State,
County
and
Municipal
Harmon
said
the
agreemenl
would allow the League's white-helmeted peacekeeping troops
Chance of thundershowers
now stationed along an 800-yard stretch of the "green line" Employes union today was reached in a bargaining Saturday morning, becoming bargaining in good faith.
dividing Beirut to move 600 yards deeper lntc Christian . announced a tentative session whi~ hegan at 9:30 cloudy Saturday afternoon, They define lis as criminals
agreement had been reached a.m. Thursday and ended
and there is not a criminal act
territory sometime today.
highs in the mid 80s . .here."
in
a
strike
against
the
early
today.
"We are going to have a step-by~tep policy to ensure
University of Cincinnati ~d
He said the plan inclu~s an Probability of rain 50 per cent
Hardest hit by the mine
respect for the cease-fire," Kholi said.
two hospitals operated by 'the economic package, no today, 40 per cent tonight, 30 closings were UMW District
reprisals against strikers and per cent Saturday.
17, where an es timated
WASHINGTON - THE FEDERAL ELECTION school.
The
I
,800
employes
of
the
a
board
of
review
to
resolve
18,1100 miners were off the
Commisaion has certified more than $2 million to six I
;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;::::::::::::::::::!· job. An additional 2,500'
union
struck
General
further
pay
differences.
.,presidential candidates with the biggest portion, nearly 11.4
Harmon said· picket lines
miners were idle in District
million, going to Ronald Reagan. This brought to nearly 12.'1 Hospital and Hobnes Hospital
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
would
be
taken
down
at
noon
29.
mWion the amount of money provided by the FEC to this
S unday through
and
a
meeting
of
the
union
's
Edwin K. Willes, president
year's preslctential hopefuls. Some of the money certified
Tuesday, fair Sunday and
to
ratify
the
members
of
the West Virginia Coal
Thursday went to inactive Ile!11ocratic candidates who are
Monday and a chance of
con!ract
wollld
be
held
later
ASsociation,
said the strike
paying off campaign debts.
showers . Tuesday. Highs
today.
has
cost
the
state
450,000 tons
,
Reagan's certification of 11,38.'1,912.70 brought his total for
will· be In the 80s and lows
Dr.
Stanley
B.
Troup,
of
coal
at
an
estimated
cost of
·, the year to $4,664,72.'1 - the highest of any candidate. President
will be ln the 80s.
senior
vice
president
at
UC,
about
$13.5
million
and
about
· Ford received an additional $171,030, for a new Ictal of
said
critical
services
at
the
$4,504,530. Jimmy Carter received an additional $244,575, tc
hospital had continued
put his total juat over 13 million ..
uninterruRted .
Others receiving funds were Edmund G. Brown Jr., $42,931
Generalllospital closed its
for a total of $416,509; Frank Church, $9,782 for a total of
outpatient clinics that usuaUy
$609,473; and Morris Udall, $159,836 for a t,otal of 11 ,746,939.
serviced 600 persons a day
also temporarily
County Court Judge Robert and
WASHINGTON -GOVERNMENT FORECASTS of corn
cancelled
noemergency
~ports fer the year ending Sept. 30 are already at a record E. Buck Thursday bound over
surgery.
Peyton,
24,
.level, but admltjistratlon analysts may be (orced to raise their Wayne
Billy Carter said his
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!} Doctors a.nd nurses, not
Harrisonville, to the county
. eatlmates even further, officials say.
brother
went downtown so
Jimmy Carter, dressed in
Experts said In a weekly report on export contracts Thurs. grand jury on one count of membes of the striking union, blue jeans, took an early early.,...about 7 a.m.-be'caU'le
,Jiay that the apparent ovemas sale conunitment for the 197~ cultiva ling marijuana .and have con~nued working. · morning stroll in downtown it had become impossible to
.76 season rOBe by 608,400 melrlc tons during the week ending one count of possession and
Plains today with Secret walk around later in the day
July 11 . That brought the total apparen! commitment for the receiving stolen property.
Service agents trailing his due to crowds of visitors In
Peytcn wsa relea~ed after
season so far to 41.9 million metric tons. The "apparent
the streets.
every step.
MARRIAGES END
corrunltment" figure ln~ludes corn which has already been he provided $20,000 ·bond.
After
leaving
the
The
Democratic
Meigs County Common
. exported plus future deliveries expected under sales contracts
Peytcn was arrested by Pleas
warehouse,
Carter
stopped
in
presidential
nominee
stopped
Court has granted a·
reported to the department by exporters.
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
at
the
post
office
and
talked
in at the Carter warehoWle
C. Hartenbach, his deputies, . dissolution of marriage to and talked tc his brother, for a few minutes with J.R.
Roger
Ziegler
and
Cathy
Jo
LONDON - EUROPE'S DROUGHT OF THE century Middleport Chief of Police J.
Billy. Billy Carter told McGarah, who has been
collapled Thurlday In spectacular tornadoes over Italy, anow J. ' Cremeans and his Ziegler. Gary F. Hysell, Rt. 4. reporters later the two men Plains' poslmaster for' three
In the German Alps, wintry rain in France and traditional department, in a raid last Pomeroy, has filed for briefly discussed the family years.
divorce fr om Rose Ann
gentle showers and drizzle in Britain.
week of Peyton's home.
Carter perched on a
business.
Ronald Dale Thomas, 26, Hysell. Wellston.
But In most of the wched continent, the cooler
"We just had a little chat," counter and discussed with
.lemperatures and moisture came too late tc save cropa, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, who was also
he sal d. "Jimmy talked about McGarah the large amount of
llve~k and wa~r supplies depleted by months of bone-dry arre~ted on charges · of
.PICN1CSET
a newspaper article on him, n\ail-'8,000 to 10,000 letters a
weather. In southern Germany, 12,1100 head of cattie were cultivation of marijuana a~d
The Big Bend CB Club, and he said he thought it was day-eoming in since he won
slaughtered Wsdnelday because the drought had gurned up receiving stolen property, Pomeroy, will hold a picnic at pretty good."
his party's presidential
the fodder to feed them. Local farmers predicted the worst also appeared before Judge Forked Run Lake Sunday,
Carter was accompanied nomination in New York.
· harvest .In abnost 30 years.
Buck Thursday mornjng . July 2:i, beginning atll a.m. by two Secret Service men,
Then Carter returned
Warren Sheets, attorney for Each member is to br•ng a supported by three carloads home, where he planned .to
'
.;
' THE DAY THAT VIKING 1 landed on the Thomas, asked that Thomas'
MARS, PA.covered dish and table ser- of other agents who followed spend a quiet day reading,
hearing be continued .
(Continued oa p~ge 12)
and answering the mail.
a short dilltance behind.
vice .

Abduction of children

,_.1

Consolidaling domestic sub!Jidlarl's of

Russell Stover
Candy

•

News~.

Hospital News Rev. Griffith died Thursday

. .

$500,000 in

taxe~ .

'l'he · strike began last
MQ11dsy after UMW )iical
1759 in Kanawha County was
fine!l$50,1100 in feperal. court
becaU'le of~ work stoppage at
the Cedar Coal Co mine.
Roving pickets then spread

out across District 17 and .
closed all mines In four days.
U.S. 4th Circuit Court of
Appeals JUdge H.E. Wydner.
Jr . Thursday upheld an
earlier U.S. District Court
decision which turned down
Cedar Coal's request for an
injunction and ruled it was
legal I or miners to strike in
"sympathy." Wydner made
the ruling in Abington, Va .
"There is little doubt there
will be future legal action
with the union's insistence
that it has the right to strike
and arbitrate al the same

New rUles
•
govemmg
.
food stamps timc:;;~:vy~r ~~-said
COLUMBUS (UP!) _
.
. .
Social secunty recipients
who lost food stamps benefits
this month should ask their
county welfare department if
they may be restored under
new federal standards, 'said
Tom McDoweU, chief of the
Uureau of Food Stamps in the
Department of Public
Welfare.
Old standards were arplied
during the early part of the
month because of a delay in
receiving federal instructions
concerning the. 6.4 per cent
increase on July I in the food
stamp maximum income
eligibility standards for one
and two-person households.
"With higher social
security benefits received but
the new food stamp income
standards not . used to
determine food stamp
eligibility, conceivably some
social security recipients
may have been denied food
stamps or terminated from
the program during July,'!
McDowell said Thursday.
The maximum allowable
Income standard for a oneperson household increased
from $215 tc $245 per month,
and for a two-person
holl8ehold from 130'1 to $322.
The food stamp eligible levels
aiso increased becaU:Se the
U.S. Department of Agriculture poverty guidelines in·
creased
for .
thosP.
ho~holds .

ASK TOWED
Willard Lee Reed, 38, Box
103, Reedsville, and Sue Ann
Eagle, 30, Rt. . I Reedsville.

it
would ~ppeal the decisio~ tc a
three-Judge
panel
at
KnOJtville Term
•'
·

Pettmg"ers

are inJ' ured .

in accident
Lester A. Pettinger 47, and
his wife , Susan, 44, of Belpre,
were seriously injured in an
automobile accident Friday
morning on Route · 618 near
the Redwood Restaurant in
Belpre .
The driver of the car that
struck the Pettinger vehicle
was killed. His name was
Phillip Dwaine Foutty, 24, of
Little Hocking .
Mrs. Pettinger, the
daughter of Charles Gaskill,
of Middleport and Wellston,
was first taken to Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital ,
there fl own later by
he licopter to Riverside
Methodist Hospital ,
Columbus. She is in critical
condition. Her husband is in
Uni versity
Hospit a l ,
Columbus. ·

TRYOUTS SET
. RACINE - There will be
majorette ) tryouts for the
Southern Local High School
Band Saturday, July 24 at 3
p.m. at the high school . Any
member with two or more
years experience willl the
marching band is eligible .

Merchants' Moonlight Sales tonight starting at 6

Harold E. Hubbard

'

' •.

t'
J

v'
•

•

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