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                  <text>Lea ..n ·to-swim

8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 26, 1976

Orchard owners
beg for relief

Productivity in business is off
By ANDREW NJBLEY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Productivity In the bU!lness
sector of the American
economy slowed
substantially In the spring
quarter, rising only 3.6 per
cent, the government said
today. .
The Labor Department
snld the-moderate advance In

I
l

productivity - output per
worker-bour - was leas than
half the first quarter rise of
7.5 per cent. Nevertheless,
the productivity Increase was
still a v!IS!Improvement over
the 1.6 per cent decline
registered In the fourth
quarter of last year.
The
slowdown
in
productivity came as no
surprise following iast week's
Commerce Department
report on Gross National
Product.
Productivity
usually slows when the
overaU rate of output In the
economy eases.
Last week's GNP figures
showed that the nation's total
output of goods and services ·
- stripped of inflallm - rose .
only Uper cent during April,
May and June, a conalderable .
dropoff lrom the first
quarter's 9.2 per cent surge.
The productivity • figures

deal ezcluslvely with the
private er business sectnr of
the economy. Statistics lor
govenunent employes are not
included since the Labor
Department feels there ill no
accurate way to measure
their output.
The small 'increase in
productivity came as a result ·
of a 5.4 ~ cent Increase In
output and a 1.8 per cent rise
in hours, the department
said. In the first quarter,
output was up 10.2 per cent

and hours rose 2.5 per cent.
Compensation per hour
rose 7.3per cent in the second
quarter, not quite as much as
the 10.9 per cent Increase
recorded in the first quarter.
In breaking down the
manufacturing portion of the
business
·sector,
the
government said productivity
fared a UtUe better, rising 7.8
per cent in the second quarter
compared to a 5.1 per cent il)
the fir!!! quarter.

United Press lntematl~nsl

Ronald Reagan called on
President Ford Sunday to
lnvo.ke ·the Taft-Hartley Act
as California orchard owners
complained of losing 15,1100
tons of ripe peaches a day
under the canneries strike.
Meanwhile, the weekend
Mon. thru Thurs
saw the continuation-of other
July 16·29
labor disputes, ipcluding
NOTOPEN .
wildcat walkouts by West
Virginia
miners and the
Fri., Sat., Sunday
COOLVILLE - Madeline In lhe mid 19SOs she came to longest strike
by United
July !0-!1, Aug. 1
M. Kenny, 69, Rt. 2, Coolville, the Coolville area to make .
Rubber
Workers.
TljREE DAYSQF
died Sunday evening at Sf. her horne with her mother
Joseph's Hospital. Parker- and brother, William H.
tHE CONDOR
"The strike by CaUfornla
sburg, following a brief Goebel . She worked at St. cannery workers at the peak
Robert Redfor d, Faye
Illness.
Joseph' s
Hospital
In
Dunaway, Michael Kane.Mrs . Kenney was a Parkersburg, and Mount St. of fruit harvest. season
CI iff Tobertson, Max
registered nurse having Mary's
Hospital
and threatens to bring disaster to
· Von Sydow.
· ' ( Rl
worked
In
a
number
of
Soulheallern
Ohio
Tuber
- California agriculture and
Showstarfs7 p.m.
h0$pltals over the yeors. She culosis Hospital, both at fuel a new round of Inflated
was born at Port Arthur, Nelsonville, Sheltering Arms
Ontario, Canada , to the late Hospital, .Athens, and before food prices," Reagan said In
Frank A. and Evelyn Baldwin her re tirement, Kimes caUing for the action.
Goebel. She Sfl'!nf her early Convalescent Center. Athens.
Negotiations in the dispute
childhOOd In Canada before
She is survived by two were adjourned late Sunday
This Week AI Ingels
moving lo Erie County, N. Y., brothers, Frederick B.•
graduating from Sacred Tuppers Plains, and William night In the nation's capital
Hearl Academy In Buffalo, N. H., Coolville; two nepl)ews, without a settlement.
Y. In 1924; taking nursing two nieces, and 12 grand· Norman Walker, a public
training at Our Ladr ot n.phews and nieces. In ad- relations man with the
Victory Hosp l al. dillon to her parents , she was · Federal Mediation and
Lackawanna, N. Y.. and preceded In deafh by her
doing post-graduate work at husband, Albert A. and a Conciliation ser.vlce, said,
the Polyclinic In New York brother, Frank, who died In "We don't have any further
Clfy.
1971.
comment. We' re doing
Mrs. Kenney worked In a
Mass of the Resurrection everything we can to get a
Columbus hospital, Veterans will be celebrated Wednesday
Hospital at Lyons. N. J., at 10 a. m. at the Sacred settlement at the earliest
Cleveland General and Hearl Catholic Churd&gt;, possible time."
hospitals In Los Angeles, Pomeroy. Her nephews arid
The stumbUng b!ock In
.California and Tucson, Ariz. grand-nephews will serve as negotiations, which were to
pallbearers.
·
Friends may call at the reswneat10a.m. EDT today,
White
Funeral
Home ; apparently involves
U!L
Coolville , after 2 p. m.. economic issues.
lUJ.It.e
enviJl 0
Tuesdal'_. The rosary will be
James F. Searce, national
reel led Tuesday evening, 8 p. director of the federal Mediam. at the funeral home with
S e eS Fr. ?aul Welton of Sacr~ tion and Conciliation service,
Heart Church officiating . had said earlier that
REEDSVILLE - Mike Burial will be in the family agreement was reached oo
Regular $499.95
Kerwin, 80. Rt. I. Reedsville , cemetery near Coolville.
several issues, but not in the
died at his residence
economi£: area.
Saturday afternoon following
A three-man federal panel
an extended Illness. He -was
THIS WEEK:
born at Reedsville to lhe late
in Sacramento said orchard
Ja.mes and Magg ie Galleger Veterans Memorial Hospital owners were reporting losses
Kerwin.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS ·of 15,000 tons of ripe peaches
Mr . Kerwin, a member of
the Eden United Brethren - Ruth McKinney, Long a day , and t)le panel's
Church, was a farmer most of Bottom ; Hollie Sayre, New findings would he reported to
his life.
Survivors include his wife, Haven ; Warren Reeves, President Ford tate today or
Model CS30C8
early Tuesday. ·
Susie Reed Kerwin, at home ; Albany.
Modern, smooth ceramic
a sister, Mrs. Susie Cook,
SATURDAY DISCHARBut In WeSt Virginia the
glass CQ9king surface cooks
Wooster, artd several nieces GES Patricia Cle- issue was coal. Officials of
and nephews. He was land, Shona Harris, Marand cleans beautifully,
more than 100 locals of the
preceded in· death by lhree
w1th a work saving contin·
tha
Gilkey,
Winifred
United Mine Workers met
sisters. Katie Hicks, Mam ie
Green
uous cleaning oven that
ROOd
and
Allee
Bailey.
Naas,
Audrey
Ours,
Ruth
Saturday
to discuss the
White
cleans itself every time you
Funeral services will be Boyd, Nellie Hamlon, James wildcat walkouts mat saw
· use it.
Tu.Way, 2 p. m. at the Eden Hamlon.
20,000 miners halt work. The
United Brell1ren Church with
SUNDAY
ADMISSIONS
acti&lt;il
in the state's mines
the Rev. Elden Blake of. ·
flclallng.
Burial
wllllollow
in
Tllomas Junior lljCKay ,· came in. a (rOtest over a
INGE~ F,..~ITURE.
the church cemetery. Friends Colwnbus; LQwell Carper, f5(),1100 federal · court fine
.
.
may calf anytime at lhe
Bank Rate Financing
. White Funeral . Home In Pomeroy ; Janet Neal, against a IDlion local for
Coolville. The bOdy will lie in Middleport; Cathy Carleton, disregarding a ba.ck-to-work
992-2635
Middleport
state at the church one hour Hacine; Albert R. Frank, order In an earUer walkout.
prior to services. ·
The West Vu-ginia Coal
Pomeroy; Eunice Halsey ,
, ...............~~........l+Hl+Hl+Hl+H. .H . .Hi+H... Tuppers Plains.
SUNDAY DISCHARGE Cora Fetty.

MEIGS THEATRE ..

Retired nurse died on Sunday ·

sonf

smooth top electric range
.
with continuous
,. _=:::!!
cleaning oven

K . .

f

Reed viii di

Hospital News

. ·

.

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are PrefeiTed .People

At Farmers Bank

Association, owners and em·
ployers group, said tlie walk·
outs had cost $13.5 tnlllion In
coal production In the past
week.
'
Meanwhile, ·the United
Rubber Workers -strike
against Firestone, Goodrich,
Goodyear and Uniroyal
moved Into its 15th week.
Talks are not scheduled to
resume until Tuesday in
Washington.
But In New York Sunday,
Olief State Mediator Vincent
McDooneU said he will meet
today with both sides In the
long-standing contract
dispute between the city
Board of Education and the
United Federat(on . ofTeachers.
There has been litUe moVe·
ment in the ·talks since last
September, when a tentative ·
contract was rejected by the
Eme.rgen cy Financial
ConlrOl Board .
111REE FIRSTS
ROSSFORD, Ohio (UPI)Fred Linder of Fremont was
the fastest qualifier at 16.92
seconds, winner of the first
heat and victor In the 25-iap
sprint ·feature at Eldora
SpeedWay Saturday night
Noel
Witcher
of
Greenwood, Ind., Was the .
fastest qualifier at 19.732 and
won the 2ll-lap late model car
feature In a 76 Camero.
Ron Baker of Arcanum set
a track record of 21.02 in the
qualifying for stock cars, but
only took secood In the 2ll-lap
feature behind Dick KeUy of
Ridgeway, In a 64 OleveUe.

News •• in Brie(s
outweigh its poulble rl.tb. One oldie main polallln fa-rw ol
the pill, the bulletin
11 that the death rate fr'om tbe pW Ia
lower than
precnancy lllelt.

rrom

•r•,

.

WASHING1QN- A NEW REPORT SAYS put~
grain purcbuel hive had a ~ elfec:t In the UniWd
States becauae of lbelr wldllly VW)'Inc aile and the .u t1eJ
with l'hldl Soviet buyen hllw IAJI'Oached lblm. Tbe
congnulonal Ofrioe of TeclmolOCY .- n
nolltt uld the
United States COUld reap econmuc liedelita and achltve lower
food prlcea if IIUCh 11111!1 were !Bide CJt a replar_ and
[ll'edlctable basis.
·
During the past seven years Japan hu been alarpr buyer
of U. S. grain than has the SOviet Union, the report !111&lt;1, but
Japanese purchuea have been regular and predictable tllld·
have caused no market dlaruptlon. Rullta bought Ul million
tons In 1972 and followed that In tm by contactq U. S. grain
cc:mpanies separately and aecraUy, putting In ~for 12.88
mUllon tms.
ThOll! purchases clused a major market dlnptlon Utat,
was blamed for c011tributlng to the U. S.lnflallonlr)' lipltal.
NAIROBI, KENYA - A roUP ATTEMPT agau.t
Ethiopia's mU!tary rulen has been cruabed and ita Hngleeden
executed, Etltiopla Rldlo aald. It wu the aecond plot againllt
the mUitary goverrunentlllicovered In two weeb. ·
'lbe radio broadcast monltGted Sunday Ill Nairobi •ld the
latest coup attempt was engineered by offlcen of the 25\11
Brigade of the 1st Division, the fermer Imperial boclyguai"4_,0f
the late Emperor HaUe Selusle.

Weather.

Transfers·

...........
.
...............................................
•

Holzer Medical Center
( Blrlhs, JulyZ3)
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
· Massie, son, Hamden; Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Stout, son,
Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs. Danny
. Mitchell, son, MiDwood, W.
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. leonard
Lyons, son, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Roy McCarty, son,
Ashton, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin McGuire, son, Crown
City; Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Atha, daughter, Northup;
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Adkins,
daughter, Oak Hill.
(Births, July2f)
Mr. and Mrs. Buster
· Clonch, daughter, Gallipolis ;
Mr. and Mrs . George Casto,
son, Pomeroy.
( Bh1hs, July 25)
Mr. and Mrs. William
Smith, son, Thurman; Mr.
and Mrs. Dwane Giles, son,
Ravenswood, . W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Hill,
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va.

•

f ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
--- ... - -·
••
•••
i•
CARPETS
•
.-..._...._,..,.

:
i

I
I

FA.

'GjJ)

i

'"""

r&gt;/it\was made for
that kind of wear

•

Colora: Sea U lal, Sweet Orange, Linen Delat Sllvtry Grty
Golden Ra~. Petslen Mo11 , Touted OrlnCHI; 81ui Fro11, Sltnni
Gold , Crurn Bl1q ue, Deep Water Bron!t Mf1t, Deeps.., Etru1cen
8 ron:re, Ro11ttd Chnlnut, Blue Gitter, Alpine Green let
Cepeda, Copptrware, Frollad Lime, Ctrnl¥11 ,..d Aqu 1 Stone
Sunthlne, Sylvan Green, Tiffany Gold, Perrot Or•n; Ttngertne. '

•

~

I

J .

' j

'stop iri at our'"carpetdept. on the third
floor. See the large seiad ion of LHs
carpets available for your home, office
or church. All cafpet Is lnstalltcl by our
own carpet mechlrilcs at your
conv111lence.

We Invite you to use this preferr'ed service with no
service charge. All those 65 years and over are

welcome to open an account any time. Stop In and

-us now.

"you've got to have "Pu!lh.'"l
to get anywhere
especially If you want

" clean

POMEROY, OHIO
'

~,eoo.oo MIJ!Imum Insurance For Each. DePOsitor

dWa:llar F*al Deposit Insurance Corporation

RED CROSS SWIMMING Instructor Uz Blaettnar
gives pool side Instruction on the technique of treading

e
·VOL XXVIII: · . NO. 70

up"

and

be

successful" ...
From pushbrooms to you.
name-It, the "FRIENDLY
ONES" have II for you. We
catalogue over 35,000 Items
In order to get what you
need .

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK·

Main Sb'e Annex 111d Wnhouse Open ·

.

WeekclaJs and Slturc!aJs 9':30 to 5, Fridays 9:33 Fricllys 9:30 to 8.

.

--~-~.~~~FELDS IN POMEROY

•

coal pits

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

':-:"----=---'c..:..::::..:...:...::-.-~:...,.._._~----_.:.....;....:...;.._ _ _ ___,...-;.;;;;.;.;.;;,;.:.;..:.:.;...;;:.:..:~:....&amp;--------------

~;iri~

By United Press lntemat!onal
CHICAGO - DESTRUCf!ON OF BRAIN TISSUE Ia
jl'evalent among chronic aicohollcs, Including those midcDe
aged and younger, according to two studies at a Chicago
mooical center.
The studies, recently completed at Rush-Presbyterian-St.
Luke'sMedi&lt;;al Center, covered two setS of aleo~9lic patients,
· rll)glng In a_ge from 34 to 74 and from 31 to 69.. Both showed
"brain atrophy, a poSsible irreversible loss of brain tissue
often associated with old age," among the patients, the
Institution aald.

CHARLESTON, W.Va .
(UP!) - Half of the nation's
soft coal miners stayed out
again today In a strike ihat
has ballooned outside West
Virginia's borders, amid a
coal leader's. wal'llil)g that
wildcatters are staging
"industrial anarchy."
Close to 60,000 bituminous
miners In West Virginia, Ohio

!~~:~
~r
~~.:~
'OOUflty
.

streets
Middleport Council Mon·
day night accepted the bid ol
the SheUy Construction Co.
for ttie resurfacing of aever..
streets.
·
Council voted unanimously
to purchase 647. tons of
asphalt from the flr:m to be
applied to Olesinut, Plum
and Brownell and a portion ol·
·Beech St. Cost ol the resur·
facing project will be
$12,895.50.
The street committee will
survey the town to detennlne
another location where
reslllfaclng would be moat
beneficial, since Olily one
block of Beech St. is planned
for resurfacing at present,
and some ful)ds of the total
will remain for the resurfacing of part of another
street. Councilmen Marvin
Kelly, Allen Lee King and
James Brewer are the street
committee.
Council agreed to advertise
lor sealed bids on the old
pollee' cruiser which waa not
used as a trade-in on the new
vehicle purchased recently
for the pollee department.
Council gave a second
reading to an ordinance to
brirtg village regulations In
accord with stale · laws on •
dru ~ abuse.
Council voted to Install a
traffic signal at the corner of
Sycamore and Locust St.
Councilman Carl Horky
abstained from voting. He is
an employe of Ule light
company.
Weeds along the rl ver
hank, the alleged need for
more discipline at the Mid·
dleport pool, grass growing
along the curbs In downtown
Middleport, better markings
on ·Mill St. since riwnerous
cars are gong south on
Second (wrong way). the
possibility of moving the
placement of stop signs •t the .
corner of Locust and Third
Ave., and the request of one
resident to purchase asphalt
from the Shelly Co. for repair
work near his home were
discussed at length.
1.1\(len!llng the meeting were
Mayor Fred Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer Gene Gr.ate,·
Councilmen William Walters,
George Meinhart, Horky,
King, Brewer and Kelly .
Prayer before the meeting
was by the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner.

the Raceland, Ky., coal car
shop and _a
.
locomotive repair outlet tn
~ The Meigs County com. Huntington, reported a
missioners
up on the spokesman for the Olll!ISie
recoll)1llenda tion of County Sy~m. the country's largest
~udge Robert E. Buck coal-baullng network. ·
· Monday appointed carl · Chessie said its furloughs
Hysell, juvenile probation would
begin
Friday,
officer, as deputy clerk of Uie involving 875 workers at
county court of Meigs County Raee!&amp;nd and 175 others In
fer the sole purpose of taking Huntington.
NEW YORK- NORFOLK &amp; WESTERN RAILWAY Co.
recognizance bonds for the
Joseph Brennan, president
posted record earnings during the first half of this year but ill
county court of Meigs County. of the Bltumlnou~ Coal
losing money every day the strike by coal•mlners in West
In other bu'siness the Operators Assoctatlon ,
Virginia continues. N&amp;W spokesman Bill Martin said Monday
commissioners agree d to blamed the strike on an
that 57 mines served by the railroad were shut down, causing
advertise bids for the pur- minortty _of miners .~ ho
the company to lose about $1135,000 daily. Joseph Brerinan,
chase of a pickup truck. Bids tgnore therr contract and
president of the Bituminous.Coal Operators AsSociation, told a
~J.o he submitted l!JilOAJII. bring, about_.lndustrial ~Cherlestoo, W..Va., neJYs conference that roving strikers hid
on Aug. 9. .. ·
chy."
establlahed pickets In Southwestern Virginia's, UMW District
Eail c. Hayes, Jr:, Port.sBrennan.said the union and
28 and in Meigs County, Ohio.
.
.
mouth, of Hayes, Donaldson, the _ sta~ of West Virginia
A union spokesman in . the Southern West Virginia
Wltlenmizer &amp; Partners met share responsibility for
coa1.fields said miners began seeking food stamps in his area
with the board to Inform ihem permitting the strike to spill
today. He said they expected to receive an affirmative answer
of the services they offer as Into another week, with no
from state authorities to their inQuiries about the food
architects in case the multi- settlement In sight.
llllj)plements sometime to&lt;!ay or Wednesday.
purpose building (senior
"Everyone is• the victim,
dtizens center J is built.
but,!he sha~eless wildcats go
. WASHINGTON - TilE HOUSE ETHIC&amp; COMMITTEE
Thelma Dill Liz Culler and on, he Slid at a special
says Rep. Robert L. F. Sikes, D-Fla., "has violated standards
Jane· Brown r~quested Uiat a Olarleston news conference
of conduct appUcable to aU members of Congress," and should
TB tax renewal levy be Monday.
on-ina
be reprimanded but not punished .
placed on the November
"The shamef~ thing is that
P!l""The panel's formal report on the Si11es case was published
ballot. The levy is presen Uy a handful of wi!!ful men can
.Monday and con!inned earlier UP! reports that it would ·
.65 of a mill, and if passed in sa.crlfice thet~ broth~r to
recommend a reprimand on two of ihree complaints againllt
November will he reduced to ~rs, the penstoners, thell'
him and was withholding a rebuke on the third only because It
.fO mill. The commissioners mdustry, their state and their
· took place too long ago.lt was the first time the committee has
approved the request.
nation to try to ~.dvance their
acted against any member of Congress since it was create&lt;i in
Attending were Henry own objectives.
1968 after the late Adam Clayton Powell was expelled from the
Wells, Warden Ours, and
Trouble erupted inltia~y
House for misuse of committee funds.
Bernard Gilkey
com- July 16 in Cedar Coal Co. s . Lt. E. W. Wlggleswarth of
TRAFFIC ~REAMED BETWEEN Porner9y and Mason, W. Va., Monday evening
missioners, Marth~ Cham- seven Kanawha County the Gallla-Metgs Post of the
when the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge opened fer traffic for the first lime since last March after
bers, clerk, and Wesley . mines, and spread rapidly · State Highway Patrol has
IDldergolng extensive repair work by the Conn Construction Co.
Buehl county engineer
· last wee~
throughout jfisclosed that Col. A. G. Retss
'
·
southern West Virginia. This has transfered Ptl. Bruce D.
week pickets roamed Into Wallace from the local post to
Ohio' and southwestern the Patrol Academy in
Virginia and recruited more Columbus where he will be
Michael (Mike) Zirkle, three vehicles were headed •.
miners.
assisting the academy staff
Middleport, Is confined to toward the Pomeroy business
In
U.S.
District
Court,
with instruction of tJJe up
Veterans Memorial Hospital section ~ The Zirkle vehicle
Judge
K.K.
Hall
told
tile
coming
class this fall .
as the result of back and neck was forced in to the rear of the
United
Mine
Workers'
Pti.
Wallace
is very happy .
Injuries suffered in a traffic Weaver car. There were
general
counsel,
Harrison
with
this
challenge
and
accident on West Main St. at moderate damages to all
The Bend Area, it.s Ohio
Last year other repair and Mason County residents the Ohio River.
Combs,
that
he
wouldn't
rule
wishes
all
his
friends
who
1:25 p.m. Monday.
three vehicles and Zirkle was and West Virginia com· work was carried out. This who have tolerated the
Phil Roberts, a native of on a $700,1100 award he made wished him well through his
Pomeroy PoUce Chief Jed taken to Veterans Memorial munities estranged since year a new floor was poured : hardship of getting"b8ck and Racine, has been project
Webster said cars driven by Hospital by the Pomeroy Mar. 31 while the PomeroyThe completion da le for the forth between the two engineer on the job which the Kanawha Coal Operations · recent tragedy at Point
ThOJWIS E. Weaver and Emergency Squad. Sterrett is Mason Bridge was closed for latest wor k, even though the counties lor several months. cost about $2,000,000 for . Association In a strike that Plesasnt to know of his
Zirkle were stopped in the twi n~ chllrged with assured repairs , was reuninted : 'schedule was speeded up in A ferry service has been phases of the work in 1975 and idled 80,000 miners last transfer and thank them for
September, until the current their concern and prayers.
ll!ne of traffic near the Dairy clear distance.
Monday at 6:40 p.m.
an agreement between the operating in Pomeroy but 1976.
walkout
ends.
1be transfer was effective
Queen when the Zirkle
The bridge reopened to State of Ohio and the Conn there have been periods when
::::
:
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::
:
;:::::;:::::::::
"
T)Ie
angels
will
quit
Monday, July 26th. Wallace ,
E-RCALLED
vehicle was struck from the
traffic well over a month Construction Co., was to have the ferry could not run due to
singing
before
I
say
In
,
a
native of Middleport, is
The
Middleport ahead of the scheduled been on or l)efore Labor Day,
USE CAUTION
rear by a third car driven by
heavy
rains
or
mechanical
advance
how
I'll
decide
the
married
to the former Gloria
The Pomeroy·Mason
Marc Sterrett, Gallipolis. All Emergency Squad was called reopening.
Sept. 6.
difficulties leaving motorists
to 393 Park St. at 10:20 p.m.
Bridge area Is still a case," Hall said, explaining Buck.
Announcing the Monday
The reopening of the bridge with the long drive to Gallia
'
that a decison now tnlght
construction
area and
for Mrs . Jessie Houchins who night opening earlier on came as good news for Meigs Couniy
in order to get across
Inflame miners and worsen
was ilL She was taken to Monday was Sen. Oakley
motorists should drive with
the situation.
Program planned
Holzer Medical Center.
caution. Phil Roberts,
Co1llns who also said that a
Chance of thunderstorms
But
HaU
minced
no
words
project engineer for the
formal ribbon cutting
NOW YOU KNOW
tonight. Lows tonight In the ·
ASK TOWED
.
Ohio
Department of High- in berating the . UM.W
.
ceremony
scheduled
at
10
GRIDDERS
TO
MEET
. Mars was · originally the
mid to upper 60s. ThunA marriage license was
A meeting of aU Meigs Rot;npn god of agriculture, ways, warned today. attorney over remarks by just for kids
derstorma likely Wednesday. issued to Robert Hughes a.m. Friday on the West
Trucks will be on the ap- some miners that some
Probability of rain 30 per cent Bratton, 24, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, VIrginia side of the river. still varsity football athletes will but became the god of war by
proacbes and the bridge federal jurists had become
SYRACUSE - When the
today, fO per cent tonight, 60 and Ramona Lynne Baker, wUl be held as planned, even be held Thursday July 29 at .being identified as the Roman
taking
care of last minute paid lackeys for coal
though the bridge was opened 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs High equivalent of Ares, the Greek
bookmobile
stops here July
per cent Wednesday.
21, Syracuse.
details for a time.
last illght.
School.
god of war.
(Continued on· page 12)
29th, it will host an extra
program for children in that
area.
The
summer
· storyteller, Linda Stow, will
be at the bookmobile slOp at
the Syracuse elementary
school on Thursday, the 29tl)
at l p.m. All children are
Invited to join her free
program of stodes and
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach
Sheriff Hartenbach stated
games.
reporta the arrest of Keith that the Albany marshall for
Earlier In the summer
Freddie Pickens, 20, Route 1, the local sheriff's department
Linda
held a slmllar program
Racine, on a petty· theft also arrested Don L. ·
at
the
bookmobile stop In
charge of stealing a 10-speed Swearingen, 18; and Craig H.
Tuppers
Plains, where over
bicycle from the home of HaMing, 22, on July 23 in
30
children
heard her.
Lowell McNickle, Route I, Albany. The pair were
The bookmobile staff will
Racine, on July 7. He will be returned to Meigs County and
also
give out free red, white
arr~ In Meigs County then sent on to Houston, Tex.,
' then marched double !Ue from the school to the
and
blue
reading certificates
High
School
(above),
IMPRESSIVE
UNE
State
Highway
Patrolmen
from
all
over
the
Court, Sheriff Hartenbach where they were wanted by
to
all
children
here. These
Rawlings-Coats
Funeral
Home
where
services
were
held.
The
patrolmen
State
of
Ohio
were
In
Middleport
Monday
to
attend
the
funeral
of
fellow
said.
,
officials of Harrla County in
traveled
to
CircleviUe
and
were
joined
by
other
patrolmen
there
for
the
certificates
Ust
the books
officer
Edward
G.
Moore
who
was
killed
last
Friday
afternoon
in
a
Pickens wlll also be that State on charges of
burial
services.
Sgt.
Moore
was
piloting
a
Patrol
aircraft
that
crashed
read
by
a
child
during
the
helicopter crash whlle on ~uty. The accident occurred about two mil~
charged with possession of credit card al)use, tho sheriff
during
a
thunderstonn.
bicentennial summer.
north of Mt. Vernon. The patrolmen assembled back of the Meigs Junior
marijuana, the sheriff said. · concluded.

CO. UI1 construction

Wallace

academy as

teaching staff

Weather

Marijuana possession,

Free .Chtcking
Account
For You
.
'

••

gnppmg

Driver injured

you might see this carpet
in your local bank ..•
OPENING NIGHT

.,

•

Meigs
Property

TRUS1'EES TO MEET
Trustees of the Meigs
Granvll V. Wmael~y,
County
Pioneer
and ·Juanlta B. WllffiS)ey to John
Historical Society will meet T. Skidmore, Margie J .
at 7 p. m. Tuesday at the Skidmore, 1 acre, RuUand.
county museum, Butternut
Oris E. Harris, Affidavit,
Ave., Pomeroy. The meeting Sulton.
will be followed by a twoSam Lewis to Mlt:zlaM
screen slide presentation Lewis, Pt. Lot 37, Wolf's
which will include pictures of · Add., Racine.
local structures.
Clyde Sanders, Helen
Sanders to Kathryn Sanders,
GRIDDER8TOMEET
7.6 acres, Olive.
HILOT.EMPS
EAST MEIGS - Eastern
Max E. Folmer to George
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The High School footbaU players
highest lempt)rature reported , will meet at 6 p. m. Wed· Folmer Jr., Sharon Folmer;
Sunday to the National nesday at the high school. All 1.2 acres, Sall!bury.
Hosmer L. Roush, af·
Weather Service, excluding players are to be fitted for
fidavlt,
Melfls.
Alaska and Hawaii, was 111 their helmets at this time.
Dale
W.
Welsh, Marjorie E.
degrees at Red Bluff, Calif.
Welsh
to
Wayne Vanhoose,
T&lt;Jday's low was 34 degrees in
ASK
TOWED
1.44
acre,
Orange.
both Bradford and PhillipsA marriage license was
burg, Pa.
issued to Billy Junior
Somerville, 50, Follansbee,
FU.MS VIEWED
ANKLE INJURED
A group of 35 persons saw W. Va., and Drusilla Inez
.
Cobb,
58,
Follansbee,
W.
Va.
The
Middleport
the program of four films at
Emergency
Squad was called
the Middlepor t Library
. to 6f4 Nerth Second Ave. at
Thursday including many
DIVORCEGRANTED . 7:57 a. m. Monday for Mrs,,
proteges and advocates in·
Cindy Rayne Ael~ was Nellie Price who suffered an
volved in the county's Pergranted
a divorce from imide lnjupr ill a fall . She was
sonal Advocacy Program. It
Lorraine
Aelker in Meigs taken ·to Veterans Memorial
was a Library Summer Fun
County Common Pleas Court. Hospital.
Program.

By Charlene HoeDicb ,
swimming take the tiny lot
Learn-l&lt;H!wlm programs from the first beginner
are In full swing at the session where he can earn the
Middleport Pool with In· turtle patch, to tadpole, then
struclllr Liz Btaettnar doing frog and minnow.
her best toward advancing
A seahorse patch is
the American Red Cross •goal awarded to the advanced
of "Every American ·a beginner who completes the
Swimmer, Every Swimmer a requirements, while the
.·
Intermediate swimmer's
Ufesaver."
With nearly 100 girls ~nd patch Is the pOrPoise.
boys and several adults
In addition to the beginner .
enrolled In this third session and Intermediate swimmer
this summer, Liz Is currently classes for children, Liz is
JOEY POl!LIN AND KATIIY ARNO'l'r practice with kick boards itu'rtng their
teaching six classes a day also teaching advanced
swimming
lesson. 1be boards are used to strengthen ihe legs so that the swimmer can
ranging from 30 to 45 minutes swimmer, junior and senior
travel
farther
and go laster.
each.
life saving, and an adult
Another session Is planned swimming program.
for the second and third
A senior at Ohio University
weeks In August and where she Is majoring in
She took her first swim· ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;
registrations are currently biological sciences, Liz hopes
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
being taken at the pooL
to teach in a high school ming lessons at the Mid·
Thur•day lbr~ugb
While Red Cross cards are where she can also he a dleport Pool and for several Saturday, sbowers and
issue(! by the Meigs County swimming
coach .
In summers now has been a life
warm Thuriday and a little
Chapter to those of the in- .preparation for this. she has guard there.
cooler Friday and SaturIn, on or about the water,
termediate and above levels, completed a cotirse in water
day with · a cbance of
· the Middleport-Pomeroy safety and ime In first aid at be it . in community pools,
showers·Frlday. Hlgbs wut
Rotary Club for many years Ohio. As a freshman at fann ponds or lakes, Liz
be In the uppers 70 to the
has provided colorful patches Musklngum College, Liz believes that not only is 80s and lows )fill be In the
for the beginners.
swam with the water ballet swimming fun but real 60s.
protection against drowning. :;:;:::;:;:~;:;;::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::~~::;~;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:i;:
The progressive courses in ensemble.

Anarchy

water.
Cloudy tonight, lows 65-70;
cloudy Tuesday, chance of
thunderstorms. Highs mid to
upper 80s. Chance of . rain
~~ear zero today, 10 per cent ·
tonight, 30 per cent Tuesday.

to fix

in full swing

ot Gtll CGIItriCepdlift I'M

OP,Onlng Night has been the largest selling carpet In the
Lees line since the day It was Introduced, seven years
ago, '"d It Isat Ill number one.
I No other carpet made can give better performance In .
keeping It~ original beauty under rugged wear and
tear In your home. The fiber Is 100'!' nylon face,
I The styling has universal appeal, more textured and
pebbly !han a twist. more civilized than a conventional
shag.
I Use It In a strong, vibrant color with modern . .. or
a muted, understated lone with traditional rooms.

Because We Furnish A

•

(Continued fND J1llt 1)
110111e recent controveny ,lbe bltllllllll

Bid let

cycle theft charged

We're .one again

..

�--

2- The Dilly Sentlnel , Mlddleport-P&lt;m~eroy, O., Tuesday, Jul)' Z7,1976 .

~=- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., TU!IIday, July '11,1976

Navy craft evacuates over 300 Americans from Beirut
By MICHAEL ROSS

BEIRUT, lebanm (UPI )
- An unanned U.S. Navy
~ craft evacuated some
300 Americans and other
foreigners !rom Beirut today
In a smooth, one-hour
operation guarded by the
Palestine Liberation Organ.
ilallon• and other leftlat
groups.
U.S. Ambassador Talcott
Seelye was among about 20
lJ .S. Embassy staff to Join

9

~ \.

what was probably last
organized evacuation of
foreigners fr&lt;m~ the strife·
torn city. His last WQI'da
before stepping aboard were,
"Doo't worry, I'll be back."
But neacly two.fijths of the
500 persons, who regis!e ed
'for the evacuation, failed to
show up. "I guess !bey just
didn 't want to leave,"
shrugged an embassy
official.
·
· The exact number (){

Americana tn the boardlnl
party wu not lnunedlately
known bUt about 200 of the
1,500 Americans left In
lebanon had signed up for
the ~ur trip to Athena.
(In WashingtQn, President
Ford followed the operatioo
In the OffiCil of National
S,ecurity Affairs adviser
Brent Scowcroft. The
President also was in contact
with Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld .)

(P re sidential Pre sa a.m. (1 :30 a.m. EIYI' ) and,
Sea-etary Ron Nessen said aiter aome difficulty In the
Ford wu "pleased" with the heavy swells, put down its
results and he thanked thQI!e landing ramp five minutes
responsible, Including the 'later.
Dozens of troops from the
PLO. The United States
Palestine
Uberation Army,
maintains no official cootact
the
main
Palestinian
with
the
guerrilla
guerrilla
group
AI
Fatah and
OJ'ganization).
Flying the American flag the lebanese Arab Anny set
and carrying an unanned up checkpoints on all
crew Qf 30, the landing craft approaches to the assembling
steamed in from Its mother point at the nearby Riviera
ship, the SS Ccronatlo, at 8:30 Hotel.

"

Many of the flO guards
sported red and white flowers
stuck Into the barrels of their
machine guns.
"We thought It would be a
nice touch. We dido •t want to
scare
anybody.
The
America111 are nice people,"
the PLO commander in
charge of dockside security
explained.
This evacuation wu
smoother and was more
relaxed than the pr~vious 11e1

·r:~~ri~tri=
waved to all as he boarded ..

eagan's blockbuster po.ssihly. could backfire on him

EUlABE'111 WHARTON
United Pretl IDtenuotloul
Rmald Reagan's choice of
llberal Pennsylvania Sen.
Richard Schwelker · was a
calculated .blockbuster. aut
so far it hasn't busted any
blocs of delegates.
An
edenslve
but
Incomplete recheck by UPJ. of
Pennsylvania's 103-per5on
delegation shows the only
finn switch to Reagan is
Schwelker himself - and
there Ia some indlcatloo of
possible movement the other
way.
An uncommitted
conservative college student
previously leaning toward
Reagan was offended by the
choice : "My gut reactioo 1:! to
jump lrilmedlately to the
Ford team," said James
By

Stein, 21.
press conference foUowina
But most Pennsylvanians the ann ouncement ,
wanted to wait until afrer the acknowledged differences of
entire delegation talked to viewpoint but said he and
Ford Th111'811ay in a meeting Reagan could form a new
that has been scheduled for coalition that would revive
some time.
the for tunes of the
Meanwhile in Plains, Ga.,

=~~=:~~::~: · Plea ·of

running mate,' Walter
Moodale; finished intensive
defense briefings and begin
i!onsulting economic.advlaers
on campaign Issues of
employment and inflation.
Reagan ' s dramatic
announcement at midday
Mooday belled his repeated
statements that he wanted a
running mate
whose
philoeophy was "compatible"
. with his own.
Schwelker, at a Washlngtoo

Republican party. He said ·stUlllled dlabelief to pleased
Reagan ' s de cisi on wonderment to bitterness.
Ford himself had no
demonstrates "boldness and
immediate
cotnment, but his
caOOor."
campaign
manager Rogers
Reactions were fast and
furious, and ranged from C.B. Morton called the tick~

poverty spoofed

DETROIT (UPI ) ~ The Fraser's attitude was evident
announcement of record se. as UAW officials told
cond.quarter earnings by Olrysler and General Motors
Chrysler Corp. Monday they want the new contract to
apparently ended any chance include improved cost-offor the firm to plead poverty living protection, plus an
in the current contract talks increase in ._se w1111es that
with the United Auto exceeds the 3 per cent figure
Workers.
in effect for the past si:t
With General Motors and years.
Olrysler, ·the first of the
Ford expected to announce
record level earnings .larer Big Three to report quarterly
this week, the Big Three earnings, Sllid profits hit
automakers would be hard $155.1 miWm In the period,
pressed to explain why compared to a ~.~ m!Ulon
workers should not get a loss a year ago.
jump In wages, cost of living
"'The company is in solid
protectioo and Qther benefits. f.i nanc ial condit ion ,"
As early as last week when Olatrman John Riccardo and
talks began, UAW Viee Pres!· President E. A. Cafiero said
dent Douglas Fraser, woo
Pomeroy Bowli ng Center
'!be surface Ia stained an heads the union negotiating
Wedne-sday Afte r noon
even deeper rust-red than team at Chrysler, said
LtligUe
J uly 21 , 1tl6
first beileved.
• earnings would be a factor In
St and in gs
'The report showed the thin the unioto's deinands.
Team
W. L.
Mars air has 96 per cent
" Had we met in 1974 ilr 1975 Dev ilS 3
BO 24
carbondiollide,2to3percent to work out an agreement," Ed 's 'c r ossra adsGroc . 67 37
DruQs
~9 .as
nitrogen and I to 2 per cent Fraser said, " I'm sure ,out1on
Tea m 1
SO 54
32 72
,argon; Ill comparison, Eartll.- finances would have been a Tea m 6
m5
2-l 80
has 78 per cent nitrogen, 21 major question. There sure TeaH.igh
s ingle gatne - Betty
per cent oxygen, 1 per cent won'tbe any grounds to plead Wr itesel 165, 158 , 15 7.
High se r ies Betty
argoo and a tiny amount of poverty this year.''
Wr itesel dO ; P earl Russe ll
carbon diollide.'
In contrart talks Mooday, 439; Delm a Ka rr 418.
Vildng earlier discoVered
·nitrogen in Mars' upper
atmosphere,
but
the
measurements at the surface
were not conclusive. Dr .
Gerald Soften, a biologist and
cbief aclentill of 1be , ...billion
projecl, was ecstatic.
· "People ._ve always tried
·to find the reasons we could
not have iile 011 Mars," he
said. "It was .alwaystoo cold,
it was always too dry, it was
always too
of oxygen,
it was always too barren of
'!lllro(!en.
. "I think we've got all tbe
elements necelllllll'Y (for life ).
The question is, did It
happen?"
The first results from VI.
ldng'S three biology ·lnstru·
menta are expected Aug. 9.
Owen, of tbe State
University of New York, lald
the makeup of the Mlrtlan
almolphere qgesta Mars
hu enough water, poulbly in
tbe fonn of permafrost, to
cover the planet with a layer
86 to 75 feet deep. Earth hu
enouch water to form a two
mile deep blai*et.
The new Martian color
analysis corrected the
impression le'ft by the ·
C&gt;1976by•U.Jnc ~~
orlglnal rendition of Viking's
first color photograph last
"If there is a mother nature. there should be a
Wednesday wblch llhowed a
lather nature, but you never hear of !Jim. Did he
llglit blue sky over a red
bug out?"
surface.

Signs oflife on
Mars surmised
By AL ROSSITER Jr.
UPI Sdeaee Ci!Jtilr
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)
- Encou~aged by the
existence of nitrogen and
evidence of water, scientists
believe life oo Mars could be
discovered by Viking 1,
starting Its secood week of
exploration today.
Scientists today will ,try
ooce more to fix VUdtlg's
crippled seismometer and
make the final course
tiiiiectiOOS for Viking 2'8
approach to Mars.
The exploring robot's
formal hunt for life on the.
planet begins Wednesday ,
and the presence of nitrotlen
near the planet's ·' l!lll'fiice
llleaJII . life could exist Cl1

Man. .

'

"If you just ina"eaaed the
ozygen abundance oo Mars,
we could breathe that aliJlos.
phere," Dr. Toblu Owen
Slid. ''We're breathing all
thole tblngis DOW." • ~
Owen Slid it and other
gues Ia the almolphere abo
qgest the planet had - and
may Btlll have - enough
Wiler In tbe form of ice to
s11bmerge a six-story
building. • - '
"'lbe conciUsfon Ia that
Mara represents a sort of
lntermedllte ca.se between
Elrtb and the moon," he
Slid. "There's quite a bit of
water ll'IIUIId, wbk:h may
111111 be there."
A eecond color photo was
rele11ed Monday showed a
lfiY portiiJn of the VIking
spacecraft, Including an
~e cable, tn addition to
the surface and lky.
"" "The sky Ia Indeed a pink to
aldnd of cream orange,'' said
Dr. 'l1lamas Mutch, Chief of
Vlktnc's · picture analysts.

.Berrys World

._rren

DR. LAMB

Sex after heart surgery
~

BJLI'Wftace E. Lamb. M.D. with her but I have remained
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am faithful to my wife, the
writing In relatioo to my wife mother of our children. I
and me. She had an believe In my marriage vows,
operation · for a heart con· In sickness or In health. That
cltioo caused In part by high hu been my loyalty to my
blood preasure. The acrtlc wife. She has never been a
olve had become lldn and demonstrative person, nor
lhevalvewsareplaced with a agreasive. , But we had a
p1ut1c mve. The operaUoo good We and reared our
... perfonned three and a clllldren. She is 63 and I am
half y..a 110.
81. Would It be all right for us
Slle has made good to havuex or would It be beat
PfOIII'alllld 11 getting alone fGr me to contin!Je as I have
llne.lllekei!pa~checkoo her · been fortheput three years?
blood preuure and heart by
DEAR READER - Both
....,. her doctor but abe hu you and your llrlfe should talk
l&amp;opped tUJnc ~ dally rat to your doctor about II. He
and In my.judgment abe Ia too won't be lllocked- I hope. It
actm
·~a well known that older
I ba~ 1 problem llrlth her. people IUD enjoy llell and the
11lal II our llll We. I have Interest In liS lhould be no
bllli atnld to haft 11!11 will! ' aurprill! to him.
my
fGr fear \bat my
As a rule of thwnb a penon
poundl) would who can walk 15 minutes at a
II Gillie 111111 that valve fairly normal clip hu enough
a»1;' 11e her belrt ar the eurclll! tolerance to 111818e
··IIII•IIIIY-herheart In normai1U1181 activity.
11 IJial falter. ·
'Ibis Ia particularly true be'lllll'elfon, , alnce her tween man and wife. Ex·
p 111M: , bml not had 11!1 . tramsrltal affairs seem to be

..u.
,....... cue

atiendanl with greater ex·
cttementandmorestresslind
are more dangerous to the
heart patient.
Remember that many of
your wife's dally activities
alao increue her heart rate
and blood presaure. Your
body weight need not be a
factor and the stresa she may
have may be no greater than
that slie imposes on heraelf
by other activities. Her
doctor will lmow about how
much work she can do with
ber particular condition and
can advise you properly.
Recovery from heart
surgery in thla regard is
much like recovering from a
heart attack. I am aending
you The Health Letter
number 2-12, After the Hearl
Attack. Others who want this
information can send a long,
stamped, self..ddresaed
envelope llrllb 10 centa fGr it.
Send your letrer to me in care
of this newapaper, P. 0 . Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.

DEAR DR. LAMB _ I
would like to know your
opinion ·on low blood
pressure . Is there a.nv .
medication or diet tllat wiD
~:.~.up to a normal
DEAR ·READER _ Thls
. questioo comes up fairly
regularly. Unless you have
symptoms _ specifically a
tendency to faint or become
light hellded on standing -II
is not important. I.Aiw blood
preuure caused by di~ease
such as in tuberculosis, or
with impending shock or
hemorrhage Ia Important
only because of the medical
condition that causes. it.
LDwer readlnga in otbentllle
normal people are liSilally
aasoclated llrlth long We with
less tendency to develop
heart atlacb or strokes. So I
stW think the best thing for
people to ilo who find out they
have low blood pressure on a
routine examination, Ia to go
home get down on their
tmees' and thank God they
have II.

in a joint statement.
The executive said a major
factor in Cllrysler's rapid
recovery was the continued
stroog sales performance of
the compact Dodge Aspen
and Plymouth Volare.
Chrysler's profit, which
was well above the $128
mi)lion prediction of industry
analysts, indicates GM and
Ford also will reveal
whopp i ng earnings
We_dnesday and Thursday.
GM could set corporate
history w.lth Its report.
Analysts h11ve said the
world's· largest car~ker 's
earnings might exceed $9ro
Qtillion for the . quarter,
approaching Ame~ican
Telephone &amp; Telegraph's
$939.&amp; million in second
quarter earnings. ATT's
rep&lt;rt was the highest ever
rep&lt;rted lor a corporatioo:
Ford is expected to have
earnings of J430 million, com·,
pared to $1116 million in the
Second quarla' last year.

a "mismatch,,. and said "It
..u_. to
be
appears to
an
"'""'
exchange the seconclhl&amp;best
olflcelnthelandforahandful
of delegates."
From all across the land
the comments poured in; but
there wu no indication of any
early avalsnche of either
approval or (!laapprovallrom
Republicans
In Geo~gla
Carter
expressed surprise at . the
announcement but had little
else to say about it. The
Democratic candidate lii'08e
early, took a long walk
shortly after 8 a m. and then
settled in with M~dale for a
full day of briefings by his
Issues advisors
In lni~oon ~ told
reporters he rejects Reagan's
contention the United Stares
is secood to the Soviet Union
In anned strength. He said
the United States hu milre
accurate weapons and is "far
superior 1n manned bomber
forces ..
But he declared · "We need
to maintain a strong defenae·
we can never penni! 0 ~
nation to be vulnerable to
attack or blsclanall ... "
Carla' coofinned reports
that his 29-year.old nephew,
William Carter !;pann, is In
prison in CaWornia for two
anned robberies ..He said the
young man had been In
trouble most of hi:! life.

'

·Miss Hearst's
trial postponed

operatim.
'Ibe only tenae mcment
came when the PI.O guarda
fired two sholl into the air to
warn Jlhotographera to stay
clear just as the first
evacuee, a lebanese·
American bualnelltllll8ll, wu
struggling up the slippery .
ramp with hla two sultcuea
and a set of golf clubs.
He was followed by a
parade of families pWihing
bsby carriages incl wrestling .
with bulging suitcases, tennla
rackell ~d ulnbrellu.
· Seelye, in a tan suit and

.LOS ANGELES (UPl) thatlhe ·loobmorerela:ted ...
Patricia Hearst's second trial 9le looks quite a deal !letter
has been poStponed until nrit than she looked · sever ~I
year, with her lawyer mootha ago."
arguing that it should not be
Drawing the legal battle
held at all.
linea now, Johnson told the
"I do not think it is poulble judge it was "inconceivable
to find jurors any placl! in the that even in• January there
United States - probably in will be a single juror, who is
the world - who have not · unaware of tbe convictloo In
read or beard of her prior · San Francisco, and I regiird
conviction," attorney Albert that as a complete bar to a
Johnson said Monday.
juror sitting."
"For that reasoo abe could
District Attorney John Van
not get a fait trial!'
de KJimp told reporters
m•de
hia Johnson js wrong, that .
Johnson
argument wben the ~year- ·~ledge of her conviction
old newiiJiij)l!r heiress, ashen Is not an absolute bar - there
pale and down to 93 'pounda, · has to be an actual bias
was brought by U.S. shown. 'Ibis Is a different
marshala for a brief appear- case."
ance in Superior Court;
The hearing Interrupted the
Johnson and Prosecutor trial of Miss Hearst's former
Samuel Mayeraon, uraed by Symbiooese Liberation Anny
Judge W'illlam Rltzi to set a comrades,. William and
"realistic date" for her trial Emlly· Harris,' on the same
on 11 st8te charges - already charges, stemming from an
postponed twice - agreed on alleged SLA - crime spree
Jan. 10.
tosether.
The trial was postponed
because Miia Hearst is In
custody of the federal prison
system , undergoing ·
psychiatric examinatioo for
review of her tentative ~
year sentence for a federal
NEW YORK (UP! ) bank robbery coovlction.
While
Gulf Oil and several
Jolmaon told the court the
other
major
oil companies
evaluatioo would end Oct. 8,
reported
llib8tantlal
gains In
and he would need three
aecond
quarter
and
first
half
months to prepare for trial.
·Mise Hearst was driven the Mooday, Standard Oil Co. of
100 miles from the San Diego Obio (Sohio) reported lower
Metropolitan Correctional proflta.
Gulf had a profit of fD
Center in an umnarked van,
mi1Uon
or $1.06 a share for the
escorted by umnarked can
lleCOI1d quarter m revenues
carrying U.S. marshals. She
of ...3 billion against
a~~::;tchpalethlnner,llhe'i thin earningl of $180 mllllDn or 82
and ahe bas 1011 weight," centa a lhare a year earlier
Johnion told reporters. But on revenuee of ~.116 bUlion.
For the flnt half, Gulf
he said "her mental attitude
earned $401 million or $2.08 a
.has improved . to the .extent
lhare on sales and revenues
• of $8.&amp;lillion, up mm prollta
,.. .... ,lltrft'lllfll
of $356 mllllon or $1.112 a lhare
•YOfUror,.
,_,,.
lut year when firlt half
MIJDI.MAION -*IU
reven1111 were $7.116 bUlion.
CH1'111•L r.t. ..... t
Olalrman Jerry McAfee
..... w.
said mQI'e than Ulree-fourtha
,,,
of tbe gaina were from
....
,
...
••'
Y
............
,..,.
n. owe v.u.,. ....,......_ c..-r. operation,~ II)alde tbe United
m..,.c..rt
,.,...,...,
"'"·
states. Bul tbe return on
._,
... ''"
ONk•
Nteuawo
Ml·ll
...
,,.,,
llocldlolden eqlilty dropped
to 11.6 per emt frlm W per
cent
and return on Illes 1'011!
....... d . .... --'"!"'\J
wn . .....,... ~. -.. .... only to U per emt from 5 per
_. 0.1 ............. U1 Thtnl
•,._IN
..._,...,_.,
..,,.,.n,
cent.
......... ,.,.. hn..r-4 ....
One major . company,
,... Standard
Q11 of Oblo, had
lower eamlnp of 115 centa a
len'k• ftllt •••Its .... OM ...........
U .IJ. ltp .... MON...., W. ¥•., 0,..
,..,, ,....., • ftlllftt...
.,.,_ lbare In the IIIICCIId quarter
.....,.tM. OM.•........._ ..... ,_.,
apinlt •l.IM a year ago In
lbMOfttt.•1Uit"flwMMOitftll,lf.ll.
lpite of a rise Ill salel to $'13U
mDllon fnlll tal.5 mUlion,
Tlftt. .I ...Hn.l.
net lllcume llhrank to $Sll.8
mDllon from $38.1 million.

-

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

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

__ _
•no~~~

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

•

t ......

•Thus, It will be the United
States vs. Yugoslavia for the
aold medal toolght In a •arne
starting at 9 pm. EDT.
"'"Maybe we were looking
forward to playing the Russlan.a," iald center Mitch
Kupchak of North Carolina,
"but that's over now. They
klet and Yugoalavla played a
great game .!'in just happy to
be in the final."
It was a banner day aD,
around · for the V.S.
basketball troops Monday
since the women's team
came away With a aurprlaing
sUver medal by beating
Czechoslovakia, Jl3.87, behind
&lt;11poinll from Lulaa Harris.
'This was the first time
' w&lt;m~en's basketball hu been

.

~

.~

.. .

~

""

...'

~the
little
leagues.
••
...

.,'"

.

BAKER PROMOTED ''
James
R.
Baker1

Mldhmd, Tex., SOD of

Mrt;

and Mrs. Paul Bakerr
Syracuse, has beed'
promoted · to dlslrlc\:
mi!DBger wlth the Western'
Petroleum Co. and wW be'
moving to Brighton, Colo.;:
along with his wife, Beckf
Graeser Baker aaH'
chUdren,. Jeff, Lisa and'
~
Andy.
'"
0
,..,

••
.n
•r

SEARS POINT, Calif.
(UPI) - Jim Busby, l..agunQ
Beach, Calif., driving a
Porsche CaiTera SUnday won
the 1()0..mlle Camel GT Ser~
race, his second victory of t!Jil
year.
Second place went to
George Dyer, Woodside,
P.!lif., Qlso !lflvlng a Porsc~
P\~rera. ,.F,Iorlda 's Peter
Gregg, driving a BMW, was
third.
•
"
.,

,t

,..

.... . .

.

profits:: ·up:~.

The profit per share was
reduced by an ina"esae of 1.9
m!Won shares outstanding.
For the half, ~ earned
$60.9 mBUon or $1.58 a llhare
on sales of $1.45 billion
CQI'Dpared with 160.~ mlllioo
or $1.114 a share a year earlier
on sales of $1.19 bUlioo.
Union Oil of CaWornla
earned $1.49 a share In the
second quarter, up from $1.~
a.year ago. Revenues rose to
$U1 billion from $1.29 bUlioo
and net Income rose tQ $53.2
mi1JkJii from $42.1 million.
Firat half proftt wu $119
million or ~.39 a share m
revenue• of $2.116 bUlion com·
pared with $82.1 m!Ulon or
$2.34 a share last year on
revenues of $2.58 bUiion.
The C&lt;IIIIPIIIY said blgher
natural gu prices helped
earnings but profit was
reduced by weak prices ani[ ·
demand for !ann chemlcail.
Atlantic Rlcblleld Co. bad a
t3 per cent gain in second
quarter profit to $UIIa llhare
from $1.2S a year ago.
Net Income 1'011! to t13Ut
mlllim m revenues of $2.114
bWion from $7t1.38 miDion In
reven• of tt.a bUlion.
Arco'aflnt half proBt was
f28e.37 million ar ft.73 a
sbare on salel of $4.21 bUlioo
lll!ainlt $137.1&amp; mOllon or
$2.4hllhare a year earlier on
revenuee of ~.8'1 bUlion.

~
.I

'T'/.

-

Included m the Olympic pro- University of Florida medical
gram.
·
· atudent, who had to setUe for
'nle Soviet Unim won the . the bronze medal behind
gold medal.
winner Tedeusz Sllll8l'lkl of
Tralling»-&amp;2wlth 11 : 18.left Poland, who had a leap of IJI.
in the game, the U.S. scored 0\1. "I figured I could go 5.60
15 coosecutive points and meters (18-lli) just as easily
went on to win for the third as I could do 5,55 (1a.2J,Ia ). I
time In five outings.
didn't know it was going to
"We were eo high in the rain, though."
second half I thought we were
The only other medals
goin« to fly through the roof," taken by the U.S. on ·the track
said Mary Anne O'Connor. came in the 200 meters,
Drawing added attention to where Don Quarrle of
today's men's championahip Jamaica beat out American
is the fact that there II no youripters Mlllard Hampton
activity In track and field and and Dwayne Evana. Quarrie
little cOO!petltlon In other won tn 20.23 second&amp; whlle
· sports. . ·.
·
Hampton and Evans were
After thefirslfour days and timed In 20.29 .ahd ~.43
15 e'ienll, 10 of them in the respectively.
.men's competition, the
"I thOUght I had a chance,"
United States has just two said Hampton, the CaWornia
golcla. This Ia as good a junior
college
sprint
reason as any why the 1 champion from San Jose City
Americans are only third in College. "But Don was just
the gold medal standing with too stroog oo the turn."
21. Both the Soviet Union and
In the other track finail,
East Germany have ?:i each. Hungary'sMiklosNemethset
OVerall, Russia has a total a world record?' 310 feet. 41,&gt;
of 73 medals, the U.S. 61 and Inches In winning the men's
East Gennany 58.
javelin; newlywed Lasse
T h e
b I g g e a t Vireo ol Finland successfully
disappointment Monday was · defended his 10,000 meter
the faUure of Dave Roberta, championship in '!/ minutes,
the world record holder at 18 40.38 seconds; ' Tatiaria
feet, 8\i inches, to win the Kazankl of Russia won the
pole vault, and he just may wOOlen's 800 meters In a
have outguessed himself out world record time of 1:54.94,
of the gold when he paased up and East Germany's Siegrun
111-21,&gt; to try for 18-ll'l.
Siegl won the women's
"I'm really not that dlaapo pentathlon with 4,7~ points.
pointed," said Roberts, a
The United Ststes qualified
nine boxers for the quarter-

::' In the UtUe le~gue All,

MARIETTA,Ohlo(UPI)BackiJily setUements Friday
will he sent to 22 state
Department of
Transportation Central
Office and district emplpyes
who wete laid 'off and then
ordered reinstated by the
Supreine Court of Obio.
Mooday, Transportation
Director Richard D. Jackson
announced the first group of
settlements at a meeting of
the executive stafl, diatrlct
deputy directors' and
adminiatative assistants.
The 22 will be paid for the
pay period ending July 17th,
said Jackson . Their adjUBled
grosa payments range from
$109.60 to $12,296.40.
Jackson said the back pay
is baaed on the difference
between what the 22 would
have earned witfi the
department and what they
actually earned from other
jobs or received in unemploy·
men! compensation.
He said 318 of 341 employes
In question have Wed the
necessary ri!DOrl forms to
obtain "blic~;rpj~;" .iactl§bn
would not estimate bow IOiig
It will take to procesa all
applications.
"

Mo.st oil

....,...

JAMI!:I MOUIB
AF Cadet Jamew B.
Morrls, IOD of Mr. aid Mn.
carl E. Morris of Rutlud,
baa completed the ~
bone Tralillll Sebool at
Fort Beublg, Gl. with tbe
15th Compaay of the till
Studeilt Battalion. An Ali'
Force Cadet uader Col;
Drexel B. Cocbraa It
Detacbmeut 850, Obit
Ualverslty, Morris made .
live j11111ps from the Cl%3
aad CW Alr Force llreratt
aad was awarded the Sliver
Wines of tbe Airborne
Paratrooper. He will be;j
seaior at tbe OlllA
Ulllvenlty tbls fall lid will
be commilsloned a 2Dd
Lleute"-at · in· the UDited
~·· Statesu\lr · Force in JUDi;.
1977• He pla111 to enter tJie
Atr Force Special Fore~;
the USAF Combat Coatrol
'feam.
"

settlements .
being made

'

.

~-

_ .. MONTREAL (UPI) r wu auppoaed to be the
the United States
avenged lta natim~ honor,
:: the day It got Ita revenge llrlth
Rualla.
For four lone years, ever
Iince that dllputed 51-60 deci·
lion In Munich, the
Americana talked about,
planned fGr and reveled in the
triumph that would be theirs.
.., Well, the long..walted
cnam of a rematch between
the U.S. and Rusala got
tlUnctured Mmday when the
&amp;ovlet Union dropped an 89-84
declalon to Yugoalavla, In an
afternoon semifinal, before
the YlinltB went out at night to
overwhelm hOlt Canada, 96-

F • t baCk pay
· ··
. ll"S

'

.R
, ussia upset;
:- agers gain ·finals
-

Embassy presa attache
ChristopherRosswuthelast
to board and ooe milllte later
the captain shook the PLO
connmander's hand, gave the
thumba up sign and steamed
Qflto the mother ship a mile
offshore.
. It was,an emotional parting
for the foreigners, who had
stuck · it out through the
grueling 16 montl)s of bloody
civil war.
Fa mIlle s I ear fully
embraced each other In
farewell.
'The evacuation left the ~.S.
Embaasy with a skeletm
staff of 15, Including 12
Marine guard&amp;.
· ''
The warfront In western
Beirut was quiet during. the
evacuation . An embassy
source said the Christiana .
had given , assuranc;e' ,·they ·
would not shell lbe r.fosleiJl· •' '
held secllf.,unUI -afles; the I I
evacuation was over.
Fighting had raged
Monday along the entire
length of the "no man's land"
dividing Moslem . and
Christian Beirut and at the
Palestinian refugee camp of
Tal Zaatar, under siege by
Otrlatlans for more than a
month.

••

__...

..,

"'

cu;,

,. ,

Robert 0. Anderson, chal,i,
man, said the sharp impro~
men! In earnings Is prlmar
' result of a substan
investment tax credit. · ::
Marathon Oil Co. Rl
Findlay, Ohio, earned $1.2( a
share in the second quarter1
up from $1.16 a year ago ii
sales rose to $888.07 millloli
from fl71.83 mllllon. N~
inconie climbed t'o $3'1.~
million from ~.63 nilllloii.
First half profit wu f/2.~
million or $2.42 a share ._

sales of h.805 billiqn
compared with t$2.85llllllk!ll
or $1.77 a share a year J1C0 on
revenues of $1.53% bUlion . •:. ·
Aabland ou Co. eamf4
$1.12 a lhare In tbe JUI)l!
quarter, the third of Ill f. .
year, up from $1 a year ago IlL
revenuea rose to $1.1 blDI~
from f933 mllllon. N~ Income
climbed to $30.8 mllllon from
$2'1.4 mlllloo. Albiand'l nine
mmths net wu'$91.2 mWlm
or ~.34 a lhare on revenuv
of ~.1 bWim, up from ta!J
million Ql' $2.98 a lhare a )'Ill'
earlier on revenues If $2.8
lilllon.
01airman Orin E. Alkilll
said big gasoline deillll}!l1
fueled the pins.
7
M• Petrol~, me of tJ!;
smaller oil firms, earned :1:
cents a llhlre In the ~
quarter against rr cenll • ,

yur aco.

•.

""
'

Norman baffles Giants

c.

o

000 000-ll 3
In the semi.final game of
203 IJOx-{i 6 o that Eastern Tournament,

tar Tournament at Wellston, P
~the Pomeroy All..Star Squad
Johnson (LP) , McKnight Chester II blasted visiting
:;emtlnued to show that they and Allen: Fields and Jewell, Chester I 1~ behind the one·
oare a major contender by Boyd (6) .
hit hll!')lng of David Wolfe
:'downing Coal Grove 5·0
and Charlie Ritchie who
Sunday behind another fine
Last week Chester I ad- combined to strike out seven
pitching performance by vanced in the Eastern LitUe and walk just one. Johnnie
Jerry Fields.
League Tournament by Riebel was the big stick for
Fields tossed a three-hit blasting visiting Reedsville II the winners as he cracked
. shutout In going the route, 11..(). Eddie Werry faced only two homers and a big double.
fanning 1~ of.'the 18 outs and 17 batters in picking up the Tom Crow .and Wolfe each got
'talking only one batter. J. win while fanning five and a triple, and Rogie Gaul and
.Beaver carried the big walking none. Keith Brogan, Ritchie each cracked two
firepower for Pomeroy as he Todd Norton, and Roger doubles while Gaul, Ritchie,
crashed a home run and a Bissell led the hitting with Wolfe and Terry Sayre each
qouble, but Flelda also added two singles apiece while got one single. Tbe game was
. some bal-iJOwer by socking Virgil Taylor, Werry and Bill called after fout Innings due
tWo doubles to help his own Cali each had one hit.
to the ten-run rule.
cause. J. R. Wamsley alao got
For Reedsville, J. Jones,
a double, and R. Kovalchick Van Meter, and K. Kimes ·. Todd Norton got the only hit
got a single to rount out walked nine and fanned only for Chester. 1. Keith Brogan,
Pomeroy's hitting.
two for the loss. M. Hauber Brigil Taylor, and Eddie
J. Freeman, P. Cralger, had a double and single to Werry combined to strike out
and L. McKnight got the only lead the losing . cause, J. six; but they walked a big
Coal Grove hits, all singles. Jones had two singles, and twelve batters.
Loser M. Johnson teamed Kimes .had one hit.
.
000 ~ 0 Cl
with McKnight to strike out R
000~011
5114 x- 19 13 0
i!x and walk two.
C
083 x- 11 CII

"

CINCIN NATI (UPI ) . Nooe of the trio is making any
predictions. In fact, all deny
they're giving the SUbject any
serious thouaht. But the
betting here is that If they
wereputtoaliedetectortest,
they'd aU flunk.
Pete Rose, Ken Griffey and
George Foster are the three
pia ers And the subject is
th/National leagu e batting
title
· burgh's AI OUver cur·
Pitts
renuy· Is leading the batling

Maj or League Stand in's
By United Press tnternahonat
Notional
LUgue
· · East
w.. L.. Pet. oa
Philodelphio s5 29 .691
43 .w 13'1&gt;
52
Pitt&lt;buroh
New York
5(1 49 .505 1Jih
st. Lout&lt;
42 52 .447 23
Chlcogo
39
58 ·407 27'"
finals with three more
59 352 3
Montreat
w!!t
·
1'1&gt;
victories Monday night . . . . '
w.. L.. Pet. Gl
Heavyweight John Tate of Cincinnati
62 36 .533 Knoxville, Tenn., and light Los ~~noe l es 55 •3 .5st 1
Houston
51 50 .505 12'h
heavyweight !.em Spinks of .son
Diego
48 51 .485 l&lt;V.
de
44 5" ,-449 18
para ·
St. Louis registeted decisions Attan tn
But Rose, Griffey and
while Spinks' brother. san FranciSco 42 58 .420 21
Michael, a middleweight, ad· Pltlsbg~:~dN:~o~ ~s~u~~d .. rain Foster, who collected eight
Montrea t 2 ChiCIOO 1, 1S1
hits amoog them Monday
vanced on a forfeit .
Montreat 3 Chlcooo I , 2nd
night as Fredie Norman
Los Angeles 6 Afl a" ta 2
. hed the Cinclnn ll Reds
Phllodei phlo • New York 1
pttc
a
Cincin na ti 9 Son Fran 3
to a S-3 victory over the San
BILLIONTH FAN
tioust on 1 San Diego 0
Franc1sco G'la nts are
NEW YORK (UPI) Todoy't Problble Pil&lt;hers
(All Timet EDT)
narrowing the gap.
Major leaaue baseball Is
Montreal (Rogels 3·91 al "I'll start thinking about
celebrating 011 two fronlll.
(Burris 5·111 , 2:JO ·p.m. the tiUe if I'm stU! near the
.Already one aDd a half Chicago
LOS Angeles (R hOden 9-0) a.t
million fBDI ahead of 1111 ~&gt;.1tan 1a INiekro 10·61 . 7:.35 p.m. top in September and we've
New Yor k (Sw an S·B&gt; at
comf
bl I d In the
1975 pace, the major Philadelph
ia (Underwood 6·21. got a'
Orla e ea
western division," said Rose,
leagues are looklilg foi"' 7:35 p.m.
san Froncl&lt;co !Barr ~· 6 1 at who already owns three loop
ward:.to another milestone &lt;ioc
lnnati (Aica l~ 9-2&gt;. s; os
.
when they expect their · p.m.
·
• batting a-owns.
Pittsburgh IKison J.sJ al Sl . Rose's two hitS Monday
bUtionth fan to be Ia al- Louis
(Falcone 5·10 ), 8:30 p.m.
·
d hi
teadance at a game later
san Diego (Johnson o.oJ al night booste
s season
Houston !Richard 10-111 , 8:35 average to .336. The first of
this week.
Since 1901 when the p.m. ·wedne•day'• Games
the tw~ hits was a leadoff
Montreal al Chicago
homer m the first inning, one
American League was
Los Angeles at A ll ant~ , nighl of three such blows Rose has
fonned and record-keeping
New York al Ph •lade lph la.
. .
Red , last
night
hit m the
s
seven
WBI
Updated In the
Fran at Cl nc innafi , r;'lght
games. It also WBS Rose 's
National League , San
Pill al st. Lou I!, 2, twl·noght
.
f the
999,077,415 laos have
San Diego at HOUSIOn, nig ht
runth homer 0
season.
The second of his hits was a
passed through stadium
double, that touched off a
• turnstiles to watcb major
Ameri can l e·a t ue
threerun fourth Inning during
leaaue action. With only
East
99%,585 laos need to. Qleet
W.. L,_. Pet. 0 8 which the Reds lashed Mike
60 . 34 .638
Caldwell, a ,successor to
New York
the bUUon mark, ~jor
47 48 ..495 13 112 Giant
Balt
imor
e
starter · John
league officials are
46 47 .495 13 1h
Cleveland
projecting Stiturday, July · Detroit
46 48 .489 U lh MOiitefusco. for five straight
Boston
42 52 .w 18 hits.
31 , as the date of this
41 51 .A46 18
M i lw aukee
Singles by Gr!Hey. Joe
baseball milestone.
West
W•• L .. Pet. G B Morgan, Foster and Danny
Kansas City
59 37 .615
Driessen followed Rose 's
Oak land
52 46 .531 8
T exas
47 48 .495 tw, double. And when CaldweU
M innesota
46 50 .484 12v. then plunked Cesar Geronimo
Chicago
-44 53 .-454
with a pitch Charlie WililalllB
· Cali f ornia
42 58 .420
Monday's Result s
followed the Giant lefty to the
Cleveland 9 Bos ton 4
mound.
Ba ltimor e 3 New Y ork 1

Trotters
search

for new

if;,

Detr oit 4 Mi iw 3! 13 inns
Texas 3 Minneso ta 0
Kansas Cit y 4 Ca lifornia 0 ·
Oakland 3 Chicago 1
Today •s Probable Pitche.rs
I All Times EDTI
Cleveland 1Bibby 6-2) at
Boston !Jenki ns B-8L 7:30 p.m .
N ew · York (El lis 11·4) at
Ba ltimore ( Pa lmer 13 -8), 7; 30

Grllfey's two bit night
boosted hi8 average to .333 .
Foster, after rapplnfl out four
hlta in the four official trips to
the plate, WI!S ._tiling .330. ·
Driessen also had a four-bit
night, upping his aeason
1iiBrk to .313.
"Grllley has power to go
with his speed," pointed out
1\0ee. "That's why I think ·
he's got a good shot at the
batting title. And, I wu
telling him this toolght."
Griffey dlaplayed both his
speed and Ills power Monday
night when he legged out his
22nd infield hit of the season
In the fourth Inning and then
doubled in the eighth when
the Reds bunched five of their
16 hits for their final three
runs of the night.
Even if Rose doesn't win
hla fourlh loop batting title be
still figures to have ooe of the
best seasons of hla Wustrious
career
in' all·around
statistics.
" We've ·only played 98.
games and I've already
scored tf1 runs," pointed out
Rose, who's well ahead of the
record pace set by Frank
RAlbinson, who a-oeaed the
plate 134 times in 1962 for the
club record.
Barring a serious Injury
that'll put him on the
sidelines, Rose is a cinch to
top the 200 hit mark. With 133
today, he's running ahead of
his record pace when he
rapped out 230 in 1973.
· ·"Think of how many more
bits I'd have If I weren't
. walking so much," said Rose.
. His 62 walks are only eight
shy of Morgan's club leading
total.
Atwo-out error by Driessen
in the ninth Inning spoiled
Norman's bid for his. fourth
shutout as the Red lefty
notched his ninth victory in 11
decisions.
Naturally Norman wanted

the llbutoUt, but he had one
conaolatlon . The · ruDJ
cltarged against him were
WIIII1Md. So, at game'a end,
Norman owned a 2.38 earned
run average, the best in the
league.
In
other
gamea,
Philadetplla beat New York,
4·1, Montreal swept a
doublebeAider from Cblcago,
2-1 and 3.-1, Los Angeles
stopped Atlanta, 11-2. and
Houston beilt San Diego, 7..().
Plttsbui-gh at St. Loula was
rained out.
I'll lis 4, Mell I:
Dave Cash laced a triple to
lead off the sixth and raced
home on Larry Bowa •s ·
sacrifice fly u PhlladetpUa
turned back New York for ita
13th Win tn 17 decllioos.
Larry Christenson hurled the
first si:J: inninga to record hla
ninth victory in 15 deciaiooa
but needed three lnninga
relief help from Tug
McGraw.
,Dodllel'!l 8, Braves 2: . . '
Steve Gatvlly banged out
four hits and Don Suttoo
pitched ·a five-hitter, struck
out nine and walked four for
his 11th win lit 19 declaims as
Los Angeles beat Atlanta.
Asll'OI 7,

p..-.,. 1:

Houstoo's Larry Dierker
pitched a masterful two·
hitter 88 he posted hla third
shutout of the ~n and 24th
of biB career to Improve hla
record to !o.il. Bob Wataoo
drove in three runs· and
smacked his lith homer, a
solo shot in the fifth.

ExPos w, Cllblll·l :

.

Eill:! Valentine a-acked a
two-run homer in the sixth
Inning of the opener to give
Montreal ita opening game
victory and Steve Dunning
andDaleMWT~teamedfor

a combined three-bitter In the
nightcap. · Larry Parrish
ripped two doubles to pace
the offense.

Orioles refuse to give up

By FRED DOWN
twohitter and Toby Harrah Rollie Fingers finishing up.
UPI
Sports
Writer
bomllfed,for Texas. Blyleven 'Sal Bando bit hla 20th homer
Detroit (B are 4·Sl at M il .
waukee (Sla ton 11 ·8), 8:30p .m .
The New York Yankees, struck out nine and walked for the A's.
Texas (Perr y 9-8) at M in- with their 13~-g ame lead in one, allowing a scratch single
Tigers 4, Brewers 3:
nesota (Redfern 3-6), 9 p .m .
Kansas City (Spliltor ff 11-6) the American league East, to· Steve Braun in the fourth
jlen Ogilvie's fourlh single
a t Cai it oroi a (Tanana 11-11 , appear to be a shoo-in, but the and a single to Craig Kuslck of the game scored Rusty
10 : 30 p.m.
Stuab with the winning run In
Chicego (Gossage 5-9) ~t Baltimore Orioles refuse to in the seventh. The homer
By GEORGE BOOSEY
Oa k lanD I Bl ue 8·9L 1l p .m .
give up.
was Harrsh's ninth.
. the 13th inning for Detroit as
WedneJday ' s Games
TULSA, Okla. (UP!)
The Orioles' veterans ROyall 4, Ani~ 0:
· reliever
John . Hiller
Cl ev eland at Boston , n"ight
Seventeen basketball players New
York at Baltimore , night
remember, for one thing, that . AI Fitzmorris pitched a sii- . registered his lOth triumph.
from across the nation are De tr oit a t M i lwaukee , night
only two years ago tbey nuide -bitter' for his second shutout Staub gave the Tigers a 3-2
s at Minn esota , night
exercising and sharpening KTexa
up a 7'hgame deficit after . of the season and Amos Otis lead in the top of the 11th but
City at Ca lifor nia, night
their shooting skills this , an
Ch ic: ago at Oak la nd , night
Labor Day and won the hit a two-run double, Milwaukee tied the SCOfl! in
week, hoping to be. selected
division title.
sparking Kansas City to. its the bottom of the Inning on
for an opening on the
"Naturally. it's going to victory over Nolan Ryan and Hank Aaron's run-storing hit.
legendar y Harlem
take a big streak on our part California. It was the 12th win
Globetrotters.
to cut into their lead," said for FitzmoiTis, who struck
Major Leagu e Results
"A lot of people think we
Thi• Week·s Spec1ot
By Un ited Press Inter national Manager Earl Weaver. "But out seven. Ryan also struck
look for a clown on the floor,"
National Lea gue
we play them 12 more times out seven. increasing his
said Stan Greeson, president Pi tts bgh at St . L ou is, ppd ., ra in and we should feel confident major league-leading total to
of
the
Globetrotters . (1 st game)
should we do well in those 184, but lost his 13th decision.
000 002 ooo- 2 3 1
"Nothing could be further Mon tr eal
A's 3, White Sox 1:
Ch ica go
100 000 ooo- 1 7 0 games."
from the truth . We are
'
Stanhouse ( 7•.4 ) and Foote ;
Ross Grimsley pitched a
Bill North singled, stole his
looking for the fine athlete." Slone, Co leman (8 ) and Sw l · sixhitter for his third victory, 49th and 50th bases and
USED .CARS
Sher . LP- Stone (2-J ), HRGreeson said the young · Montre
AI Bumbry hit his fourth scored the go-ahead run for
ai, v alentine ( 3 ) .
oopefuls, who gathered in
homer and Reggie Jackson Oakland on a single by Bert
3 80 hit a tworun double as the Campaneris. Paul . Mitchell
Tulsa Monday, are from all Montreal
lOO
OO
t
oto72 PINTO
000 000 001- 1' 3 1
over the United States- Chicago,
Dunning, Murray 191 Md Orioles banded Hunter his went 7 2.;j innings for his
"anywhere from a tiny town Foote; Renko. P. Reuschet (7), ninth loss against 12 wins. fourth straight victory with
WAGON
German {9) and M itterwaid .
in Mississippi tp New York WPDunn ing 11·41. LP- Renko Fred Stanley singled In the
City ."
Red wagon. auto. trans., 4
IJ.7 J.
Yankees' run in the fifth
He stipulated that all Los Angeles 012100 002- 513 1 Inning.
cyl
.. radio, new rad ial
MONTICELLO , N.Y.
candidates must either have Alla nIa
tires.
200 ooo ooo- 2 5 1 Cleveland defeated Boston, , {UPI) - Oil Burner, the 4-5
graduated college or been Rodriguez
Su1fon ( li ·Bl an d Yeager , o A T
beat M'l.Dil esota ' :J... c hOlce,
· was the easy Wll111
. er
(6) ; M orton , Dev ine .,..., exas
got a chance lO.groove It."
members of a cisss that has 151. Leon 181. seord 191 aM 0, Kansas City topped of the richest race In harness
Booble and ·the Bengais graduated.
Pocoroba . LP- Morton I1-8J.
California, 4-0, Oakland racing, the $300,000 "Race
play their first pre..season
"H a kid comes out in his New Yo rk ooo 001ooo- 1 6 1· shaded Chicago, 3-1, and For The Gold" SUnday at
game of the year at Green third year, we won't allow Phladelph i oao 002 o2x - 4 9 o Detroit edged Milwaukee, 4-3, Monticello Raceway.
Bay Saturday night. \
Utat." he said. 11 We won't Grote;
Ma llack,
Lockwood, M
(7) and · 13 · ·
· oth er AL
Oil Burner woo In 1·....
'"1"'&lt;
.
Christenson
cG raw m
mrungs, m
raid."
\
111 and Dales. wP- Chrlslenson games.
for the mile. He paid $3,60,
Greeson said the team - 19-51. LP- Ma tlack 110.51 .
In the National league, it 3.20, 2.60 across the board in . You'll Like Our Quality .
Way of Doing Business.
would take an aspiring and san Frncisco ooo ooo 003...: 3 7 o was Philadelphia 4New York beatingAtashy, driven by Del
GMAC FINANCING
talented high school graduste Cincinnali '201 300 OJ&gt;~ • 1s ' 1, Cincinnati 9 San Fr
. ancisco Insko, by 1\!, lengths. 'Third 992.534~ •.
Pomeroy
Cal dwell
(4),
0
· 'II'I6:00
- but scouts for the team did WMonlefusco
ill iams 141. , He"'erto
tal and
3 Montreal over Chicago, 21
· was Mandate, gu1'ded by
pen Eventf19S
not find any this year.
Hill I Norman (9-2) and Plum· aitd 3-1, Houston 7 San Diego Merrit Dokey . who was - l..._--Ti-1._'~_._m_.s_._~._ _.J
'The athlete chosen for one mer . LP- Mon tefusco (9.91 . HR 0 and Los Angeles 6 Atlanta another four lenlrths back. 2'. PI'ttsburgh atSt . Louis was
of the Globetrotters' two - Cincinnati. Rose (9 1.
teams can look forward to a San Diego 000 000 001)- 0 20
· ed out
•
71 0
At the Meigh High School $15,000 salary and plenty of H~~~1::';'er, F~~~~~~ 0
R ~y ~~aas 9, ·Red Sox 4:
:
TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS.
Field Sunday In Independent fringe benefits, such as travel notds 181 , Toml in 181 and
Rico
Carty
drove
in
four
MEA
__ J GROUND fRESH DAILY.
· ,..
~
K enda l l; Dier ke r ( 10·91 and
d bl
d
Baseball action, Syracuse expenses, hotel expenses, $241 Herrmann
. LP- Splllner 12,101. runs with two OU es an
•
was handed only its second a day for food, We insurance,, HR- Houston . Watson 111 1
Rick Manning homered for :
FRESH PEACH SHAKES ANI) SUNDAES.
loss of the season by host dependent insurance and a
Cleveland, which dealt •
~'@~)
~~~
·•
Rock Springs, 7·6. The pension.
Boston
its
seventh
loss
in ~
ll:,Wli/fvh'
~~atW~
:
winners led by the score of 7-4
'lbe Globetrotters say the
eight games sj nce Don .,..
American Leagu e
in the fifth, but lleld off a training camp is "one of the ctevel,and 230 ooo 301- 9 11 o Zimmer replaced Darrell
Syracuse rally in the · late toughest weeks a basketball Boslon
100 200 001- 4 10 0
,,
T,-,omas, Bu ~ke y (5) and
gh
thr
Innings to gain the winn.
player can go ou ·
Fosse; Tlanl. Cleveland 12 1.
Winning hurler, Chester
The players drW twice Willoughby (71 and Fisk. WPBuskey (J.3). LP- Tianl 110·?1 .
Wigal, gave up four walks daily. They start with free ' HR
s---cteveland , M anning (5) ; of one-run relief. The loss was · ~ Hrs .: 10 :00 A, M. Tilll : 00 P.M. tun.: Thurs.
while striking out seven shooting, then exercise, eoslon, Eva ns 1101.
Lois Tlant's ninth against 10
10:00 A. M. Till2 :00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat .
Syracuse batters, but he gave followed by shooting drills New Yor k ooo 010 ooo-. t 6 o
wins.
992·2556
up nine hits. Eddie Young and and finally a scrimmage. Tbe Baltimore 201 ooo oox- 3 6 o
Rangers
3,
Twlas
0:
W.
MAIN
, POMEROY, O. :
BarryMarshalleachhadtwo camp lasts si:t days. One of . Hunter 112.9) and Munson ;
msley IJ.4l and Duncan. HR Bert Blyleven pitched a
IJ[nglesto lead the attack, and the two Globetrotter trainers -GriBaltimore
, Bu mbrey .
Charlie MarshaU had the only and a referee also are
attending the training (1 3 inn ings)
other hit, also a single.
Oelroit
Although outhlttlng the sessions.
010 100 ooo 010 1- • "o
..
- . -hosts ~. some cosUy errors
Why do basketball players M il wauk~&amp;
_
000 000 010 0 3 50
paved the way for the losing of the caliber wanted by the
MacCormlck, Crawford 11 1.
INSURAI\cr. QHI WELL
cause . Bob Cunningham Globetrotters organization Hiller I111 and Freemon ; ·
OU NEED TO SEE 1&gt;/'1 •
Y
· Colborn. Frisella ( 121 and
I · 10
started on the mound for the : pass up a chance to Pay
INSURANCE PRO A·
Porter. WP- HIIIer no.4) . LP'BOVT THAT" SON. 11E
losers and took his first loss of theNBA?
'
Frisella (2.1).' HRs- Delroil,
~NO W5 ~I&gt; INSUR.«E
"There are some kids who Thompson 1151, Staub 181 .
the year after being relieved
in the fifth by Jeff Hubbard. maybe have dreamed of: Texas
· 010 100 001- 3 10 o
Together they fanned only becoming a Globetrotter aU Mlnnesola 000 000 ooo- 0 2 1 ~
two batters while giving up ' the irlives, "Greesonsaid · "A berg
Bty;leven
·121
-~i::.&gt;
-,r~,.
Goltz, (7
Bur
gmeiand
er (9)Sund·
and
\\ ' Cl~
..,
\(1'&gt;=-..
ten costly walka, a big dif· ballplayer has an opportunity Wynego1 . LP- Goltz 18·91. HR
ference in · the game. Jim for a longer career with us - Texas, Harrah .
( _j
Hubbard and Jeff Hubbard than with the NBA and be Chicago
100 ooo ooo- 1 9 o
each went 2-4 to lead the gets to travel to a Jot of places DaJ~~~~~on
:dol~;w~l~g~ - \:.
winners, Jim getting a homer he would never visit with the · Esslon 131.19 Mitchell, Fingers ___j
aixi single while Jeff cracked
(7-5 )and
. HROokland
Tenace
. WP-, M Sando
itch eii U=:;:~~~~~~:=:===.:~:::=::=~===~:::==:~===·~=.J
This ma'r'"· the 50th vear (8)
a double and alngle. Arnott, NBA."
fGr
theGlo.;trotters.
oUr~
1101
.
. Seti • ILL\.tULUS,atDOWNiNG.CHtLDS,ntKNOWS~!!_tnsurance.
Clark, and Hemiley each got
a double In the IOIIttg cause. the half century· they have ~:n:~~~·y ~:l~~ t~·
N1ida;:;~2.,hlo
s
100 210 011--6 9 3
about
Fitzmorris
(12.61
and Stinson ; ~-~iiiiiiiiii-----------w.-----------_.
losing only
411 12,~es,
of
. · Ryan
11-131 and
Humphrey.
;-: '
012 040 Q00..--7 5 ~ played
p.m.

talent

~~~~~:i

I

.

Clark wants big year
"',, WILMINGTON,

Ohio
.( UPI) - He had a great
rookie year, but is still
looking for a solid showing as
a veteran.
And, big "Boobie" Clark
figures 1976 just might be the
year he rediscovers the
success he bad •u a rookie ...
Mter two per101111Jiy dlsapo
poinUng aeaa0ns, the
Cincinnati Bencals' running
beck seems to have bounced
tiack to hla old self in training
~!amp - to his 1973 rookie
Meason when he was full of
~thuala8111 and churning out
yards

"I plan to have a better
· year than last year, and we'll
llilprove u a 1e11m and be in
\lle flnail," wws the 6-2, 2f5.
pi)urid fullbsck: "! guarantee
· If I just want to run the ball
~stay healthy."
'
~AJ a rookie, the 12th round
draft choice out of Florida's ·
l!ethuae-Cookman (where he
Was a tight end and
rrnebacker) surprised
tyeryone by making the team
at fullback and piling UP 088
nillhlnc yardl. He was voted
lll'e Bengali' mOlt valua!lle
p!ayer and the American
Pootball Conference's rookie

of tl)e year . .
But Clark was injured
inuch of 1974 and netted only
312 rushing yards. Last year
Clark was disappointed tha~
the Bengals, foresaldng the
running ganje for pusing,
gave him the ball only an
avenge of a dozen times a
game, which left him with the
leaa-lhan-boped.for total of
594 yards.
.
,
But this seuon, Bengals
coaches are trying to get
better passing-rushing
"balance" and that pleases
Boobie.
"Balance Ia the sign of a
very good team and we're ·
goin« to have that,~· says the
25-year old native of
Jacksonville, F1a.
_
Booble alao acknowlqes
that "great runners have ·
great lines In front of them."
"It's aU up front that
counts," he'!iays. "You didn't
hear of Larry Csonka untU
Miami got a great line In
!root of him and the same
was true of O.J. Simpaon."
Clark figures Cincinnati
haagood blockinl for the run,
"but with so much pusing
last. year the !lnemen never

"'

••

OlYmpics
briefs
••
·MONTREAL (UPI)- Star
Cinadlan forward Phil
Tollestrup 11811 he wiD be
l',l!ldy for hill team's match
lf.l!h Rllllll Tuelday, wblch
illl decide the bronze medal
ll the Olympic baakelbiU
competition
"[t'1!111 ~the IIIII game of

my career so I sure don't
want to mesa it up," he said.
· When asked why he was
q u It II n g , T o11 est r u p
responded, "Becauae after
thlllla over I'll go beet hcmle
to Raymood, Alberta, and
there just Isn't much
basketball going on th'!!'e -1,'

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Rock Springs
7-6 winner
over Syracuse

'***********•*******************
*
•*

1:;:-

*

*

i~~~:~rc::?:E~~; ~ Adolph's Dai~ Valley

:

i!
*
*

*

**

.:*****************************

HE KNOWS HIS INSURANCE!

\ g

W

l lfl.

(51. . -0

I

IXMNINGatllDS AGENCY INC.

�--

2- The Dilly Sentlnel , Mlddleport-P&lt;m~eroy, O., Tuesday, Jul)' Z7,1976 .

~=- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., TU!IIday, July '11,1976

Navy craft evacuates over 300 Americans from Beirut
By MICHAEL ROSS

BEIRUT, lebanm (UPI )
- An unanned U.S. Navy
~ craft evacuated some
300 Americans and other
foreigners !rom Beirut today
In a smooth, one-hour
operation guarded by the
Palestine Liberation Organ.
ilallon• and other leftlat
groups.
U.S. Ambassador Talcott
Seelye was among about 20
lJ .S. Embassy staff to Join

9

~ \.

what was probably last
organized evacuation of
foreigners fr&lt;m~ the strife·
torn city. His last WQI'da
before stepping aboard were,
"Doo't worry, I'll be back."
But neacly two.fijths of the
500 persons, who regis!e ed
'for the evacuation, failed to
show up. "I guess !bey just
didn 't want to leave,"
shrugged an embassy
official.
·
· The exact number (){

Americana tn the boardlnl
party wu not lnunedlately
known bUt about 200 of the
1,500 Americans left In
lebanon had signed up for
the ~ur trip to Athena.
(In WashingtQn, President
Ford followed the operatioo
In the OffiCil of National
S,ecurity Affairs adviser
Brent Scowcroft. The
President also was in contact
with Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld .)

(P re sidential Pre sa a.m. (1 :30 a.m. EIYI' ) and,
Sea-etary Ron Nessen said aiter aome difficulty In the
Ford wu "pleased" with the heavy swells, put down its
results and he thanked thQI!e landing ramp five minutes
responsible, Including the 'later.
Dozens of troops from the
PLO. The United States
Palestine
Uberation Army,
maintains no official cootact
the
main
Palestinian
with
the
guerrilla
guerrilla
group
AI
Fatah and
OJ'ganization).
Flying the American flag the lebanese Arab Anny set
and carrying an unanned up checkpoints on all
crew Qf 30, the landing craft approaches to the assembling
steamed in from Its mother point at the nearby Riviera
ship, the SS Ccronatlo, at 8:30 Hotel.

"

Many of the flO guards
sported red and white flowers
stuck Into the barrels of their
machine guns.
"We thought It would be a
nice touch. We dido •t want to
scare
anybody.
The
America111 are nice people,"
the PLO commander in
charge of dockside security
explained.
This evacuation wu
smoother and was more
relaxed than the pr~vious 11e1

·r:~~ri~tri=
waved to all as he boarded ..

eagan's blockbuster po.ssihly. could backfire on him

EUlABE'111 WHARTON
United Pretl IDtenuotloul
Rmald Reagan's choice of
llberal Pennsylvania Sen.
Richard Schwelker · was a
calculated .blockbuster. aut
so far it hasn't busted any
blocs of delegates.
An
edenslve
but
Incomplete recheck by UPJ. of
Pennsylvania's 103-per5on
delegation shows the only
finn switch to Reagan is
Schwelker himself - and
there Ia some indlcatloo of
possible movement the other
way.
An uncommitted
conservative college student
previously leaning toward
Reagan was offended by the
choice : "My gut reactioo 1:! to
jump lrilmedlately to the
Ford team," said James
By

Stein, 21.
press conference foUowina
But most Pennsylvanians the ann ouncement ,
wanted to wait until afrer the acknowledged differences of
entire delegation talked to viewpoint but said he and
Ford Th111'811ay in a meeting Reagan could form a new
that has been scheduled for coalition that would revive
some time.
the for tunes of the
Meanwhile in Plains, Ga.,

=~~=:~~::~: · Plea ·of

running mate,' Walter
Moodale; finished intensive
defense briefings and begin
i!onsulting economic.advlaers
on campaign Issues of
employment and inflation.
Reagan ' s dramatic
announcement at midday
Mooday belled his repeated
statements that he wanted a
running mate
whose
philoeophy was "compatible"
. with his own.
Schwelker, at a Washlngtoo

Republican party. He said ·stUlllled dlabelief to pleased
Reagan ' s de cisi on wonderment to bitterness.
Ford himself had no
demonstrates "boldness and
immediate
cotnment, but his
caOOor."
campaign
manager Rogers
Reactions were fast and
furious, and ranged from C.B. Morton called the tick~

poverty spoofed

DETROIT (UPI ) ~ The Fraser's attitude was evident
announcement of record se. as UAW officials told
cond.quarter earnings by Olrysler and General Motors
Chrysler Corp. Monday they want the new contract to
apparently ended any chance include improved cost-offor the firm to plead poverty living protection, plus an
in the current contract talks increase in ._se w1111es that
with the United Auto exceeds the 3 per cent figure
Workers.
in effect for the past si:t
With General Motors and years.
Olrysler, ·the first of the
Ford expected to announce
record level earnings .larer Big Three to report quarterly
this week, the Big Three earnings, Sllid profits hit
automakers would be hard $155.1 miWm In the period,
pressed to explain why compared to a ~.~ m!Ulon
workers should not get a loss a year ago.
jump In wages, cost of living
"'The company is in solid
protectioo and Qther benefits. f.i nanc ial condit ion ,"
As early as last week when Olatrman John Riccardo and
talks began, UAW Viee Pres!· President E. A. Cafiero said
dent Douglas Fraser, woo
Pomeroy Bowli ng Center
'!be surface Ia stained an heads the union negotiating
Wedne-sday Afte r noon
even deeper rust-red than team at Chrysler, said
LtligUe
J uly 21 , 1tl6
first beileved.
• earnings would be a factor In
St and in gs
'The report showed the thin the unioto's deinands.
Team
W. L.
Mars air has 96 per cent
" Had we met in 1974 ilr 1975 Dev ilS 3
BO 24
carbondiollide,2to3percent to work out an agreement," Ed 's 'c r ossra adsGroc . 67 37
DruQs
~9 .as
nitrogen and I to 2 per cent Fraser said, " I'm sure ,out1on
Tea m 1
SO 54
32 72
,argon; Ill comparison, Eartll.- finances would have been a Tea m 6
m5
2-l 80
has 78 per cent nitrogen, 21 major question. There sure TeaH.igh
s ingle gatne - Betty
per cent oxygen, 1 per cent won'tbe any grounds to plead Wr itesel 165, 158 , 15 7.
High se r ies Betty
argoo and a tiny amount of poverty this year.''
Wr itesel dO ; P earl Russe ll
carbon diollide.'
In contrart talks Mooday, 439; Delm a Ka rr 418.
Vildng earlier discoVered
·nitrogen in Mars' upper
atmosphere,
but
the
measurements at the surface
were not conclusive. Dr .
Gerald Soften, a biologist and
cbief aclentill of 1be , ...billion
projecl, was ecstatic.
· "People ._ve always tried
·to find the reasons we could
not have iile 011 Mars," he
said. "It was .alwaystoo cold,
it was always too dry, it was
always too
of oxygen,
it was always too barren of
'!lllro(!en.
. "I think we've got all tbe
elements necelllllll'Y (for life ).
The question is, did It
happen?"
The first results from VI.
ldng'S three biology ·lnstru·
menta are expected Aug. 9.
Owen, of tbe State
University of New York, lald
the makeup of the Mlrtlan
almolphere qgesta Mars
hu enough water, poulbly in
tbe fonn of permafrost, to
cover the planet with a layer
86 to 75 feet deep. Earth hu
enouch water to form a two
mile deep blai*et.
The new Martian color
analysis corrected the
impression le'ft by the ·
C&gt;1976by•U.Jnc ~~
orlglnal rendition of Viking's
first color photograph last
"If there is a mother nature. there should be a
Wednesday wblch llhowed a
lather nature, but you never hear of !Jim. Did he
llglit blue sky over a red
bug out?"
surface.

Signs oflife on
Mars surmised
By AL ROSSITER Jr.
UPI Sdeaee Ci!Jtilr
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)
- Encou~aged by the
existence of nitrogen and
evidence of water, scientists
believe life oo Mars could be
discovered by Viking 1,
starting Its secood week of
exploration today.
Scientists today will ,try
ooce more to fix VUdtlg's
crippled seismometer and
make the final course
tiiiiectiOOS for Viking 2'8
approach to Mars.
The exploring robot's
formal hunt for life on the.
planet begins Wednesday ,
and the presence of nitrotlen
near the planet's ·' l!lll'fiice
llleaJII . life could exist Cl1

Man. .

'

"If you just ina"eaaed the
ozygen abundance oo Mars,
we could breathe that aliJlos.
phere," Dr. Toblu Owen
Slid. ''We're breathing all
thole tblngis DOW." • ~
Owen Slid it and other
gues Ia the almolphere abo
qgest the planet had - and
may Btlll have - enough
Wiler In tbe form of ice to
s11bmerge a six-story
building. • - '
"'lbe conciUsfon Ia that
Mara represents a sort of
lntermedllte ca.se between
Elrtb and the moon," he
Slid. "There's quite a bit of
water ll'IIUIId, wbk:h may
111111 be there."
A eecond color photo was
rele11ed Monday showed a
lfiY portiiJn of the VIking
spacecraft, Including an
~e cable, tn addition to
the surface and lky.
"" "The sky Ia Indeed a pink to
aldnd of cream orange,'' said
Dr. 'l1lamas Mutch, Chief of
Vlktnc's · picture analysts.

.Berrys World

._rren

DR. LAMB

Sex after heart surgery
~

BJLI'Wftace E. Lamb. M.D. with her but I have remained
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am faithful to my wife, the
writing In relatioo to my wife mother of our children. I
and me. She had an believe In my marriage vows,
operation · for a heart con· In sickness or In health. That
cltioo caused In part by high hu been my loyalty to my
blood preasure. The acrtlc wife. She has never been a
olve had become lldn and demonstrative person, nor
lhevalvewsareplaced with a agreasive. , But we had a
p1ut1c mve. The operaUoo good We and reared our
... perfonned three and a clllldren. She is 63 and I am
half y..a 110.
81. Would It be all right for us
Slle has made good to havuex or would It be beat
PfOIII'alllld 11 getting alone fGr me to contin!Je as I have
llne.lllekei!pa~checkoo her · been fortheput three years?
blood preuure and heart by
DEAR READER - Both
....,. her doctor but abe hu you and your llrlfe should talk
l&amp;opped tUJnc ~ dally rat to your doctor about II. He
and In my.judgment abe Ia too won't be lllocked- I hope. It
actm
·~a well known that older
I ba~ 1 problem llrlth her. people IUD enjoy llell and the
11lal II our llll We. I have Interest In liS lhould be no
bllli atnld to haft 11!11 will! ' aurprill! to him.
my
fGr fear \bat my
As a rule of thwnb a penon
poundl) would who can walk 15 minutes at a
II Gillie 111111 that valve fairly normal clip hu enough
a»1;' 11e her belrt ar the eurclll! tolerance to 111818e
··IIII•IIIIY-herheart In normai1U1181 activity.
11 IJial falter. ·
'Ibis Ia particularly true be'lllll'elfon, , alnce her tween man and wife. Ex·
p 111M: , bml not had 11!1 . tramsrltal affairs seem to be

..u.
,....... cue

atiendanl with greater ex·
cttementandmorestresslind
are more dangerous to the
heart patient.
Remember that many of
your wife's dally activities
alao increue her heart rate
and blood presaure. Your
body weight need not be a
factor and the stresa she may
have may be no greater than
that slie imposes on heraelf
by other activities. Her
doctor will lmow about how
much work she can do with
ber particular condition and
can advise you properly.
Recovery from heart
surgery in thla regard is
much like recovering from a
heart attack. I am aending
you The Health Letter
number 2-12, After the Hearl
Attack. Others who want this
information can send a long,
stamped, self..ddresaed
envelope llrllb 10 centa fGr it.
Send your letrer to me in care
of this newapaper, P. 0 . Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.

DEAR DR. LAMB _ I
would like to know your
opinion ·on low blood
pressure . Is there a.nv .
medication or diet tllat wiD
~:.~.up to a normal
DEAR ·READER _ Thls
. questioo comes up fairly
regularly. Unless you have
symptoms _ specifically a
tendency to faint or become
light hellded on standing -II
is not important. I.Aiw blood
preuure caused by di~ease
such as in tuberculosis, or
with impending shock or
hemorrhage Ia Important
only because of the medical
condition that causes. it.
LDwer readlnga in otbentllle
normal people are liSilally
aasoclated llrlth long We with
less tendency to develop
heart atlacb or strokes. So I
stW think the best thing for
people to ilo who find out they
have low blood pressure on a
routine examination, Ia to go
home get down on their
tmees' and thank God they
have II.

in a joint statement.
The executive said a major
factor in Cllrysler's rapid
recovery was the continued
stroog sales performance of
the compact Dodge Aspen
and Plymouth Volare.
Chrysler's profit, which
was well above the $128
mi)lion prediction of industry
analysts, indicates GM and
Ford also will reveal
whopp i ng earnings
We_dnesday and Thursday.
GM could set corporate
history w.lth Its report.
Analysts h11ve said the
world's· largest car~ker 's
earnings might exceed $9ro
Qtillion for the . quarter,
approaching Ame~ican
Telephone &amp; Telegraph's
$939.&amp; million in second
quarter earnings. ATT's
rep&lt;rt was the highest ever
rep&lt;rted lor a corporatioo:
Ford is expected to have
earnings of J430 million, com·,
pared to $1116 million in the
Second quarla' last year.

a "mismatch,,. and said "It
..u_. to
be
appears to
an
"'""'
exchange the seconclhl&amp;best
olflcelnthelandforahandful
of delegates."
From all across the land
the comments poured in; but
there wu no indication of any
early avalsnche of either
approval or (!laapprovallrom
Republicans
In Geo~gla
Carter
expressed surprise at . the
announcement but had little
else to say about it. The
Democratic candidate lii'08e
early, took a long walk
shortly after 8 a m. and then
settled in with M~dale for a
full day of briefings by his
Issues advisors
In lni~oon ~ told
reporters he rejects Reagan's
contention the United Stares
is secood to the Soviet Union
In anned strength. He said
the United States hu milre
accurate weapons and is "far
superior 1n manned bomber
forces ..
But he declared · "We need
to maintain a strong defenae·
we can never penni! 0 ~
nation to be vulnerable to
attack or blsclanall ... "
Carla' coofinned reports
that his 29-year.old nephew,
William Carter !;pann, is In
prison in CaWornia for two
anned robberies ..He said the
young man had been In
trouble most of hi:! life.

'

·Miss Hearst's
trial postponed

operatim.
'Ibe only tenae mcment
came when the PI.O guarda
fired two sholl into the air to
warn Jlhotographera to stay
clear just as the first
evacuee, a lebanese·
American bualnelltllll8ll, wu
struggling up the slippery .
ramp with hla two sultcuea
and a set of golf clubs.
He was followed by a
parade of families pWihing
bsby carriages incl wrestling .
with bulging suitcases, tennla
rackell ~d ulnbrellu.
· Seelye, in a tan suit and

.LOS ANGELES (UPl) thatlhe ·loobmorerela:ted ...
Patricia Hearst's second trial 9le looks quite a deal !letter
has been poStponed until nrit than she looked · sever ~I
year, with her lawyer mootha ago."
arguing that it should not be
Drawing the legal battle
held at all.
linea now, Johnson told the
"I do not think it is poulble judge it was "inconceivable
to find jurors any placl! in the that even in• January there
United States - probably in will be a single juror, who is
the world - who have not · unaware of tbe convictloo In
read or beard of her prior · San Francisco, and I regiird
conviction," attorney Albert that as a complete bar to a
Johnson said Monday.
juror sitting."
"For that reasoo abe could
District Attorney John Van
not get a fait trial!'
de KJimp told reporters
m•de
hia Johnson js wrong, that .
Johnson
argument wben the ~year- ·~ledge of her conviction
old newiiJiij)l!r heiress, ashen Is not an absolute bar - there
pale and down to 93 'pounda, · has to be an actual bias
was brought by U.S. shown. 'Ibis Is a different
marshala for a brief appear- case."
ance in Superior Court;
The hearing Interrupted the
Johnson and Prosecutor trial of Miss Hearst's former
Samuel Mayeraon, uraed by Symbiooese Liberation Anny
Judge W'illlam Rltzi to set a comrades,. William and
"realistic date" for her trial Emlly· Harris,' on the same
on 11 st8te charges - already charges, stemming from an
postponed twice - agreed on alleged SLA - crime spree
Jan. 10.
tosether.
The trial was postponed
because Miia Hearst is In
custody of the federal prison
system , undergoing ·
psychiatric examinatioo for
review of her tentative ~
year sentence for a federal
NEW YORK (UP! ) bank robbery coovlction.
While
Gulf Oil and several
Jolmaon told the court the
other
major
oil companies
evaluatioo would end Oct. 8,
reported
llib8tantlal
gains In
and he would need three
aecond
quarter
and
first
half
months to prepare for trial.
·Mise Hearst was driven the Mooday, Standard Oil Co. of
100 miles from the San Diego Obio (Sohio) reported lower
Metropolitan Correctional proflta.
Gulf had a profit of fD
Center in an umnarked van,
mi1Uon
or $1.06 a share for the
escorted by umnarked can
lleCOI1d quarter m revenues
carrying U.S. marshals. She
of ...3 billion against
a~~::;tchpalethlnner,llhe'i thin earningl of $180 mllllDn or 82
and ahe bas 1011 weight," centa a lhare a year earlier
Johnion told reporters. But on revenuee of ~.116 bUlion.
For the flnt half, Gulf
he said "her mental attitude
earned $401 million or $2.08 a
.has improved . to the .extent
lhare on sales and revenues
• of $8.&amp;lillion, up mm prollta
,.. .... ,lltrft'lllfll
of $356 mllllon or $1.112 a lhare
•YOfUror,.
,_,,.
lut year when firlt half
MIJDI.MAION -*IU
reven1111 were $7.116 bUlion.
CH1'111•L r.t. ..... t
Olalrman Jerry McAfee
..... w.
said mQI'e than Ulree-fourtha
,,,
of tbe gaina were from
....
,
...
••'
Y
............
,..,.
n. owe v.u.,. ....,......_ c..-r. operation,~ II)alde tbe United
m..,.c..rt
,.,...,...,
"'"·
states. Bul tbe return on
._,
... ''"
ONk•
Nteuawo
Ml·ll
...
,,.,,
llocldlolden eqlilty dropped
to 11.6 per emt frlm W per
cent
and return on Illes 1'011!
....... d . .... --'"!"'\J
wn . .....,... ~. -.. .... only to U per emt from 5 per
_. 0.1 ............. U1 Thtnl
•,._IN
..._,...,_.,
..,,.,.n,
cent.
......... ,.,.. hn..r-4 ....
One major . company,
,... Standard
Q11 of Oblo, had
lower eamlnp of 115 centa a
len'k• ftllt •••Its .... OM ...........
U .IJ. ltp .... MON...., W. ¥•., 0,..
,..,, ,....., • ftlllftt...
.,.,_ lbare In the IIIICCIId quarter
.....,.tM. OM.•........._ ..... ,_.,
apinlt •l.IM a year ago In
lbMOfttt.•1Uit"flwMMOitftll,lf.ll.
lpite of a rise Ill salel to $'13U
mDllon fnlll tal.5 mUlion,
Tlftt. .I ...Hn.l.
net lllcume llhrank to $Sll.8
mDllon from $38.1 million.

-

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

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

__ _
•no~~~

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

•

t ......

•Thus, It will be the United
States vs. Yugoslavia for the
aold medal toolght In a •arne
starting at 9 pm. EDT.
"'"Maybe we were looking
forward to playing the Russlan.a," iald center Mitch
Kupchak of North Carolina,
"but that's over now. They
klet and Yugoalavla played a
great game .!'in just happy to
be in the final."
It was a banner day aD,
around · for the V.S.
basketball troops Monday
since the women's team
came away With a aurprlaing
sUver medal by beating
Czechoslovakia, Jl3.87, behind
&lt;11poinll from Lulaa Harris.
'This was the first time
' w&lt;m~en's basketball hu been

.

~

.~

.. .

~

""

...'

~the
little
leagues.
••
...

.,'"

.

BAKER PROMOTED ''
James
R.
Baker1

Mldhmd, Tex., SOD of

Mrt;

and Mrs. Paul Bakerr
Syracuse, has beed'
promoted · to dlslrlc\:
mi!DBger wlth the Western'
Petroleum Co. and wW be'
moving to Brighton, Colo.;:
along with his wife, Beckf
Graeser Baker aaH'
chUdren,. Jeff, Lisa and'
~
Andy.
'"
0
,..,

••
.n
•r

SEARS POINT, Calif.
(UPI) - Jim Busby, l..agunQ
Beach, Calif., driving a
Porsche CaiTera SUnday won
the 1()0..mlle Camel GT Ser~
race, his second victory of t!Jil
year.
Second place went to
George Dyer, Woodside,
P.!lif., Qlso !lflvlng a Porsc~
P\~rera. ,.F,Iorlda 's Peter
Gregg, driving a BMW, was
third.
•
"
.,

,t

,..

.... . .

.

profits:: ·up:~.

The profit per share was
reduced by an ina"esae of 1.9
m!Won shares outstanding.
For the half, ~ earned
$60.9 mBUon or $1.58 a llhare
on sales of $1.45 billion
CQI'Dpared with 160.~ mlllioo
or $1.114 a share a year earlier
on sales of $1.19 bUlioo.
Union Oil of CaWornla
earned $1.49 a share In the
second quarter, up from $1.~
a.year ago. Revenues rose to
$U1 billion from $1.29 bUlioo
and net Income rose tQ $53.2
mi1JkJii from $42.1 million.
Firat half proftt wu $119
million or ~.39 a share m
revenue• of $2.116 bUlion com·
pared with $82.1 m!Ulon or
$2.34 a share last year on
revenues of $2.58 bUiion.
The C&lt;IIIIPIIIY said blgher
natural gu prices helped
earnings but profit was
reduced by weak prices ani[ ·
demand for !ann chemlcail.
Atlantic Rlcblleld Co. bad a
t3 per cent gain in second
quarter profit to $UIIa llhare
from $1.2S a year ago.
Net Income 1'011! to t13Ut
mlllim m revenues of $2.114
bWion from $7t1.38 miDion In
reven• of tt.a bUlion.
Arco'aflnt half proBt was
f28e.37 million ar ft.73 a
sbare on salel of $4.21 bUlioo
lll!ainlt $137.1&amp; mOllon or
$2.4hllhare a year earlier on
revenuee of ~.8'1 bUlion.

~
.I

'T'/.

-

Included m the Olympic pro- University of Florida medical
gram.
·
· atudent, who had to setUe for
'nle Soviet Unim won the . the bronze medal behind
gold medal.
winner Tedeusz Sllll8l'lkl of
Tralling»-&amp;2wlth 11 : 18.left Poland, who had a leap of IJI.
in the game, the U.S. scored 0\1. "I figured I could go 5.60
15 coosecutive points and meters (18-lli) just as easily
went on to win for the third as I could do 5,55 (1a.2J,Ia ). I
time In five outings.
didn't know it was going to
"We were eo high in the rain, though."
second half I thought we were
The only other medals
goin« to fly through the roof," taken by the U.S. on ·the track
said Mary Anne O'Connor. came in the 200 meters,
Drawing added attention to where Don Quarrle of
today's men's championahip Jamaica beat out American
is the fact that there II no youripters Mlllard Hampton
activity In track and field and and Dwayne Evana. Quarrie
little cOO!petltlon In other won tn 20.23 second&amp; whlle
· sports. . ·.
·
Hampton and Evans were
After thefirslfour days and timed In 20.29 .ahd ~.43
15 e'ienll, 10 of them in the respectively.
.men's competition, the
"I thOUght I had a chance,"
United States has just two said Hampton, the CaWornia
golcla. This Ia as good a junior
college
sprint
reason as any why the 1 champion from San Jose City
Americans are only third in College. "But Don was just
the gold medal standing with too stroog oo the turn."
21. Both the Soviet Union and
In the other track finail,
East Germany have ?:i each. Hungary'sMiklosNemethset
OVerall, Russia has a total a world record?' 310 feet. 41,&gt;
of 73 medals, the U.S. 61 and Inches In winning the men's
East Gennany 58.
javelin; newlywed Lasse
T h e
b I g g e a t Vireo ol Finland successfully
disappointment Monday was · defended his 10,000 meter
the faUure of Dave Roberta, championship in '!/ minutes,
the world record holder at 18 40.38 seconds; ' Tatiaria
feet, 8\i inches, to win the Kazankl of Russia won the
pole vault, and he just may wOOlen's 800 meters In a
have outguessed himself out world record time of 1:54.94,
of the gold when he paased up and East Germany's Siegrun
111-21,&gt; to try for 18-ll'l.
Siegl won the women's
"I'm really not that dlaapo pentathlon with 4,7~ points.
pointed," said Roberts, a
The United Ststes qualified
nine boxers for the quarter-

::' In the UtUe le~gue All,

MARIETTA,Ohlo(UPI)BackiJily setUements Friday
will he sent to 22 state
Department of
Transportation Central
Office and district emplpyes
who wete laid 'off and then
ordered reinstated by the
Supreine Court of Obio.
Mooday, Transportation
Director Richard D. Jackson
announced the first group of
settlements at a meeting of
the executive stafl, diatrlct
deputy directors' and
adminiatative assistants.
The 22 will be paid for the
pay period ending July 17th,
said Jackson . Their adjUBled
grosa payments range from
$109.60 to $12,296.40.
Jackson said the back pay
is baaed on the difference
between what the 22 would
have earned witfi the
department and what they
actually earned from other
jobs or received in unemploy·
men! compensation.
He said 318 of 341 employes
In question have Wed the
necessary ri!DOrl forms to
obtain "blic~;rpj~;" .iactl§bn
would not estimate bow IOiig
It will take to procesa all
applications.
"

Mo.st oil

....,...

JAMI!:I MOUIB
AF Cadet Jamew B.
Morrls, IOD of Mr. aid Mn.
carl E. Morris of Rutlud,
baa completed the ~
bone Tralillll Sebool at
Fort Beublg, Gl. with tbe
15th Compaay of the till
Studeilt Battalion. An Ali'
Force Cadet uader Col;
Drexel B. Cocbraa It
Detacbmeut 850, Obit
Ualverslty, Morris made .
live j11111ps from the Cl%3
aad CW Alr Force llreratt
aad was awarded the Sliver
Wines of tbe Airborne
Paratrooper. He will be;j
seaior at tbe OlllA
Ulllvenlty tbls fall lid will
be commilsloned a 2Dd
Lleute"-at · in· the UDited
~·· Statesu\lr · Force in JUDi;.
1977• He pla111 to enter tJie
Atr Force Special Fore~;
the USAF Combat Coatrol
'feam.
"

settlements .
being made

'

.

~-

_ .. MONTREAL (UPI) r wu auppoaed to be the
the United States
avenged lta natim~ honor,
:: the day It got Ita revenge llrlth
Rualla.
For four lone years, ever
Iince that dllputed 51-60 deci·
lion In Munich, the
Americana talked about,
planned fGr and reveled in the
triumph that would be theirs.
.., Well, the long..walted
cnam of a rematch between
the U.S. and Rusala got
tlUnctured Mmday when the
&amp;ovlet Union dropped an 89-84
declalon to Yugoalavla, In an
afternoon semifinal, before
the YlinltB went out at night to
overwhelm hOlt Canada, 96-

F • t baCk pay
· ··
. ll"S

'

.R
, ussia upset;
:- agers gain ·finals
-

Embassy presa attache
ChristopherRosswuthelast
to board and ooe milllte later
the captain shook the PLO
connmander's hand, gave the
thumba up sign and steamed
Qflto the mother ship a mile
offshore.
. It was,an emotional parting
for the foreigners, who had
stuck · it out through the
grueling 16 montl)s of bloody
civil war.
Fa mIlle s I ear fully
embraced each other In
farewell.
'The evacuation left the ~.S.
Embaasy with a skeletm
staff of 15, Including 12
Marine guard&amp;.
· ''
The warfront In western
Beirut was quiet during. the
evacuation . An embassy
source said the Christiana .
had given , assuranc;e' ,·they ·
would not shell lbe r.fosleiJl· •' '
held secllf.,unUI -afles; the I I
evacuation was over.
Fighting had raged
Monday along the entire
length of the "no man's land"
dividing Moslem . and
Christian Beirut and at the
Palestinian refugee camp of
Tal Zaatar, under siege by
Otrlatlans for more than a
month.

••

__...

..,

"'

cu;,

,. ,

Robert 0. Anderson, chal,i,
man, said the sharp impro~
men! In earnings Is prlmar
' result of a substan
investment tax credit. · ::
Marathon Oil Co. Rl
Findlay, Ohio, earned $1.2( a
share in the second quarter1
up from $1.16 a year ago ii
sales rose to $888.07 millloli
from fl71.83 mllllon. N~
inconie climbed t'o $3'1.~
million from ~.63 nilllloii.
First half profit wu f/2.~
million or $2.42 a share ._

sales of h.805 billiqn
compared with t$2.85llllllk!ll
or $1.77 a share a year J1C0 on
revenues of $1.53% bUlion . •:. ·
Aabland ou Co. eamf4
$1.12 a lhare In tbe JUI)l!
quarter, the third of Ill f. .
year, up from $1 a year ago IlL
revenuea rose to $1.1 blDI~
from f933 mllllon. N~ Income
climbed to $30.8 mllllon from
$2'1.4 mlllloo. Albiand'l nine
mmths net wu'$91.2 mWlm
or ~.34 a lhare on revenuv
of ~.1 bWim, up from ta!J
million Ql' $2.98 a lhare a )'Ill'
earlier on revenues If $2.8
lilllon.
01airman Orin E. Alkilll
said big gasoline deillll}!l1
fueled the pins.
7
M• Petrol~, me of tJ!;
smaller oil firms, earned :1:
cents a llhlre In the ~
quarter against rr cenll • ,

yur aco.

•.

""
'

Norman baffles Giants

c.

o

000 000-ll 3
In the semi.final game of
203 IJOx-{i 6 o that Eastern Tournament,

tar Tournament at Wellston, P
~the Pomeroy All..Star Squad
Johnson (LP) , McKnight Chester II blasted visiting
:;emtlnued to show that they and Allen: Fields and Jewell, Chester I 1~ behind the one·
oare a major contender by Boyd (6) .
hit hll!')lng of David Wolfe
:'downing Coal Grove 5·0
and Charlie Ritchie who
Sunday behind another fine
Last week Chester I ad- combined to strike out seven
pitching performance by vanced in the Eastern LitUe and walk just one. Johnnie
Jerry Fields.
League Tournament by Riebel was the big stick for
Fields tossed a three-hit blasting visiting Reedsville II the winners as he cracked
. shutout In going the route, 11..(). Eddie Werry faced only two homers and a big double.
fanning 1~ of.'the 18 outs and 17 batters in picking up the Tom Crow .and Wolfe each got
'talking only one batter. J. win while fanning five and a triple, and Rogie Gaul and
.Beaver carried the big walking none. Keith Brogan, Ritchie each cracked two
firepower for Pomeroy as he Todd Norton, and Roger doubles while Gaul, Ritchie,
crashed a home run and a Bissell led the hitting with Wolfe and Terry Sayre each
qouble, but Flelda also added two singles apiece while got one single. Tbe game was
. some bal-iJOwer by socking Virgil Taylor, Werry and Bill called after fout Innings due
tWo doubles to help his own Cali each had one hit.
to the ten-run rule.
cause. J. R. Wamsley alao got
For Reedsville, J. Jones,
a double, and R. Kovalchick Van Meter, and K. Kimes ·. Todd Norton got the only hit
got a single to rount out walked nine and fanned only for Chester. 1. Keith Brogan,
Pomeroy's hitting.
two for the loss. M. Hauber Brigil Taylor, and Eddie
J. Freeman, P. Cralger, had a double and single to Werry combined to strike out
and L. McKnight got the only lead the losing . cause, J. six; but they walked a big
Coal Grove hits, all singles. Jones had two singles, and twelve batters.
Loser M. Johnson teamed Kimes .had one hit.
.
000 ~ 0 Cl
with McKnight to strike out R
000~011
5114 x- 19 13 0
i!x and walk two.
C
083 x- 11 CII

"

CINCIN NATI (UPI ) . Nooe of the trio is making any
predictions. In fact, all deny
they're giving the SUbject any
serious thouaht. But the
betting here is that If they
wereputtoaliedetectortest,
they'd aU flunk.
Pete Rose, Ken Griffey and
George Foster are the three
pia ers And the subject is
th/National leagu e batting
title
· burgh's AI OUver cur·
Pitts
renuy· Is leading the batling

Maj or League Stand in's
By United Press tnternahonat
Notional
LUgue
· · East
w.. L.. Pet. oa
Philodelphio s5 29 .691
43 .w 13'1&gt;
52
Pitt&lt;buroh
New York
5(1 49 .505 1Jih
st. Lout&lt;
42 52 .447 23
Chlcogo
39
58 ·407 27'"
finals with three more
59 352 3
Montreat
w!!t
·
1'1&gt;
victories Monday night . . . . '
w.. L.. Pet. Gl
Heavyweight John Tate of Cincinnati
62 36 .533 Knoxville, Tenn., and light Los ~~noe l es 55 •3 .5st 1
Houston
51 50 .505 12'h
heavyweight !.em Spinks of .son
Diego
48 51 .485 l&lt;V.
de
44 5" ,-449 18
para ·
St. Louis registeted decisions Attan tn
But Rose, Griffey and
while Spinks' brother. san FranciSco 42 58 .420 21
Michael, a middleweight, ad· Pltlsbg~:~dN:~o~ ~s~u~~d .. rain Foster, who collected eight
Montrea t 2 ChiCIOO 1, 1S1
hits amoog them Monday
vanced on a forfeit .
Montreat 3 Chlcooo I , 2nd
night as Fredie Norman
Los Angeles 6 Afl a" ta 2
. hed the Cinclnn ll Reds
Phllodei phlo • New York 1
pttc
a
Cincin na ti 9 Son Fran 3
to a S-3 victory over the San
BILLIONTH FAN
tioust on 1 San Diego 0
Franc1sco G'la nts are
NEW YORK (UPI) Todoy't Problble Pil&lt;hers
(All Timet EDT)
narrowing the gap.
Major leaaue baseball Is
Montreal (Rogels 3·91 al "I'll start thinking about
celebrating 011 two fronlll.
(Burris 5·111 , 2:JO ·p.m. the tiUe if I'm stU! near the
.Already one aDd a half Chicago
LOS Angeles (R hOden 9-0) a.t
million fBDI ahead of 1111 ~&gt;.1tan 1a INiekro 10·61 . 7:.35 p.m. top in September and we've
New Yor k (Sw an S·B&gt; at
comf
bl I d In the
1975 pace, the major Philadelph
ia (Underwood 6·21. got a'
Orla e ea
western division," said Rose,
leagues are looklilg foi"' 7:35 p.m.
san Froncl&lt;co !Barr ~· 6 1 at who already owns three loop
ward:.to another milestone &lt;ioc
lnnati (Aica l~ 9-2&gt;. s; os
.
when they expect their · p.m.
·
• batting a-owns.
Pittsburgh IKison J.sJ al Sl . Rose's two hitS Monday
bUtionth fan to be Ia al- Louis
(Falcone 5·10 ), 8:30 p.m.
·
d hi
teadance at a game later
san Diego (Johnson o.oJ al night booste
s season
Houston !Richard 10-111 , 8:35 average to .336. The first of
this week.
Since 1901 when the p.m. ·wedne•day'• Games
the tw~ hits was a leadoff
Montreal al Chicago
homer m the first inning, one
American League was
Los Angeles at A ll ant~ , nighl of three such blows Rose has
fonned and record-keeping
New York al Ph •lade lph la.
. .
Red , last
night
hit m the
s
seven
WBI
Updated In the
Fran at Cl nc innafi , r;'lght
games. It also WBS Rose 's
National League , San
Pill al st. Lou I!, 2, twl·noght
.
f the
999,077,415 laos have
San Diego at HOUSIOn, nig ht
runth homer 0
season.
The second of his hits was a
passed through stadium
double, that touched off a
• turnstiles to watcb major
Ameri can l e·a t ue
threerun fourth Inning during
leaaue action. With only
East
99%,585 laos need to. Qleet
W.. L,_. Pet. 0 8 which the Reds lashed Mike
60 . 34 .638
Caldwell, a ,successor to
New York
the bUUon mark, ~jor
47 48 ..495 13 112 Giant
Balt
imor
e
starter · John
league officials are
46 47 .495 13 1h
Cleveland
projecting Stiturday, July · Detroit
46 48 .489 U lh MOiitefusco. for five straight
Boston
42 52 .w 18 hits.
31 , as the date of this
41 51 .A46 18
M i lw aukee
Singles by Gr!Hey. Joe
baseball milestone.
West
W•• L .. Pet. G B Morgan, Foster and Danny
Kansas City
59 37 .615
Driessen followed Rose 's
Oak land
52 46 .531 8
T exas
47 48 .495 tw, double. And when CaldweU
M innesota
46 50 .484 12v. then plunked Cesar Geronimo
Chicago
-44 53 .-454
with a pitch Charlie WililalllB
· Cali f ornia
42 58 .420
Monday's Result s
followed the Giant lefty to the
Cleveland 9 Bos ton 4
mound.
Ba ltimor e 3 New Y ork 1

Trotters
search

for new

if;,

Detr oit 4 Mi iw 3! 13 inns
Texas 3 Minneso ta 0
Kansas Cit y 4 Ca lifornia 0 ·
Oakland 3 Chicago 1
Today •s Probable Pitche.rs
I All Times EDTI
Cleveland 1Bibby 6-2) at
Boston !Jenki ns B-8L 7:30 p.m .
N ew · York (El lis 11·4) at
Ba ltimore ( Pa lmer 13 -8), 7; 30

Grllfey's two bit night
boosted hi8 average to .333 .
Foster, after rapplnfl out four
hlta in the four official trips to
the plate, WI!S ._tiling .330. ·
Driessen also had a four-bit
night, upping his aeason
1iiBrk to .313.
"Grllley has power to go
with his speed," pointed out
1\0ee. "That's why I think ·
he's got a good shot at the
batting title. And, I wu
telling him this toolght."
Griffey dlaplayed both his
speed and Ills power Monday
night when he legged out his
22nd infield hit of the season
In the fourth Inning and then
doubled in the eighth when
the Reds bunched five of their
16 hits for their final three
runs of the night.
Even if Rose doesn't win
hla fourlh loop batting title be
still figures to have ooe of the
best seasons of hla Wustrious
career
in' all·around
statistics.
" We've ·only played 98.
games and I've already
scored tf1 runs," pointed out
Rose, who's well ahead of the
record pace set by Frank
RAlbinson, who a-oeaed the
plate 134 times in 1962 for the
club record.
Barring a serious Injury
that'll put him on the
sidelines, Rose is a cinch to
top the 200 hit mark. With 133
today, he's running ahead of
his record pace when he
rapped out 230 in 1973.
· ·"Think of how many more
bits I'd have If I weren't
. walking so much," said Rose.
. His 62 walks are only eight
shy of Morgan's club leading
total.
Atwo-out error by Driessen
in the ninth Inning spoiled
Norman's bid for his. fourth
shutout as the Red lefty
notched his ninth victory in 11
decisions.
Naturally Norman wanted

the llbutoUt, but he had one
conaolatlon . The · ruDJ
cltarged against him were
WIIII1Md. So, at game'a end,
Norman owned a 2.38 earned
run average, the best in the
league.
In
other
gamea,
Philadetplla beat New York,
4·1, Montreal swept a
doublebeAider from Cblcago,
2-1 and 3.-1, Los Angeles
stopped Atlanta, 11-2. and
Houston beilt San Diego, 7..().
Plttsbui-gh at St. Loula was
rained out.
I'll lis 4, Mell I:
Dave Cash laced a triple to
lead off the sixth and raced
home on Larry Bowa •s ·
sacrifice fly u PhlladetpUa
turned back New York for ita
13th Win tn 17 decllioos.
Larry Christenson hurled the
first si:J: inninga to record hla
ninth victory in 15 deciaiooa
but needed three lnninga
relief help from Tug
McGraw.
,Dodllel'!l 8, Braves 2: . . '
Steve Gatvlly banged out
four hits and Don Suttoo
pitched ·a five-hitter, struck
out nine and walked four for
his 11th win lit 19 declaims as
Los Angeles beat Atlanta.
Asll'OI 7,

p..-.,. 1:

Houstoo's Larry Dierker
pitched a masterful two·
hitter 88 he posted hla third
shutout of the ~n and 24th
of biB career to Improve hla
record to !o.il. Bob Wataoo
drove in three runs· and
smacked his lith homer, a
solo shot in the fifth.

ExPos w, Cllblll·l :

.

Eill:! Valentine a-acked a
two-run homer in the sixth
Inning of the opener to give
Montreal ita opening game
victory and Steve Dunning
andDaleMWT~teamedfor

a combined three-bitter In the
nightcap. · Larry Parrish
ripped two doubles to pace
the offense.

Orioles refuse to give up

By FRED DOWN
twohitter and Toby Harrah Rollie Fingers finishing up.
UPI
Sports
Writer
bomllfed,for Texas. Blyleven 'Sal Bando bit hla 20th homer
Detroit (B are 4·Sl at M il .
waukee (Sla ton 11 ·8), 8:30p .m .
The New York Yankees, struck out nine and walked for the A's.
Texas (Perr y 9-8) at M in- with their 13~-g ame lead in one, allowing a scratch single
Tigers 4, Brewers 3:
nesota (Redfern 3-6), 9 p .m .
Kansas City (Spliltor ff 11-6) the American league East, to· Steve Braun in the fourth
jlen Ogilvie's fourlh single
a t Cai it oroi a (Tanana 11-11 , appear to be a shoo-in, but the and a single to Craig Kuslck of the game scored Rusty
10 : 30 p.m.
Stuab with the winning run In
Chicego (Gossage 5-9) ~t Baltimore Orioles refuse to in the seventh. The homer
By GEORGE BOOSEY
Oa k lanD I Bl ue 8·9L 1l p .m .
give up.
was Harrsh's ninth.
. the 13th inning for Detroit as
WedneJday ' s Games
TULSA, Okla. (UP!)
The Orioles' veterans ROyall 4, Ani~ 0:
· reliever
John . Hiller
Cl ev eland at Boston , n"ight
Seventeen basketball players New
York at Baltimore , night
remember, for one thing, that . AI Fitzmorris pitched a sii- . registered his lOth triumph.
from across the nation are De tr oit a t M i lwaukee , night
only two years ago tbey nuide -bitter' for his second shutout Staub gave the Tigers a 3-2
s at Minn esota , night
exercising and sharpening KTexa
up a 7'hgame deficit after . of the season and Amos Otis lead in the top of the 11th but
City at Ca lifor nia, night
their shooting skills this , an
Ch ic: ago at Oak la nd , night
Labor Day and won the hit a two-run double, Milwaukee tied the SCOfl! in
week, hoping to be. selected
division title.
sparking Kansas City to. its the bottom of the Inning on
for an opening on the
"Naturally. it's going to victory over Nolan Ryan and Hank Aaron's run-storing hit.
legendar y Harlem
take a big streak on our part California. It was the 12th win
Globetrotters.
to cut into their lead," said for FitzmoiTis, who struck
Major Leagu e Results
"A lot of people think we
Thi• Week·s Spec1ot
By Un ited Press Inter national Manager Earl Weaver. "But out seven. Ryan also struck
look for a clown on the floor,"
National Lea gue
we play them 12 more times out seven. increasing his
said Stan Greeson, president Pi tts bgh at St . L ou is, ppd ., ra in and we should feel confident major league-leading total to
of
the
Globetrotters . (1 st game)
should we do well in those 184, but lost his 13th decision.
000 002 ooo- 2 3 1
"Nothing could be further Mon tr eal
A's 3, White Sox 1:
Ch ica go
100 000 ooo- 1 7 0 games."
from the truth . We are
'
Stanhouse ( 7•.4 ) and Foote ;
Ross Grimsley pitched a
Bill North singled, stole his
looking for the fine athlete." Slone, Co leman (8 ) and Sw l · sixhitter for his third victory, 49th and 50th bases and
USED .CARS
Sher . LP- Stone (2-J ), HRGreeson said the young · Montre
AI Bumbry hit his fourth scored the go-ahead run for
ai, v alentine ( 3 ) .
oopefuls, who gathered in
homer and Reggie Jackson Oakland on a single by Bert
3 80 hit a tworun double as the Campaneris. Paul . Mitchell
Tulsa Monday, are from all Montreal
lOO
OO
t
oto72 PINTO
000 000 001- 1' 3 1
over the United States- Chicago,
Dunning, Murray 191 Md Orioles banded Hunter his went 7 2.;j innings for his
"anywhere from a tiny town Foote; Renko. P. Reuschet (7), ninth loss against 12 wins. fourth straight victory with
WAGON
German {9) and M itterwaid .
in Mississippi tp New York WPDunn ing 11·41. LP- Renko Fred Stanley singled In the
City ."
Red wagon. auto. trans., 4
IJ.7 J.
Yankees' run in the fifth
He stipulated that all Los Angeles 012100 002- 513 1 Inning.
cyl
.. radio, new rad ial
MONTICELLO , N.Y.
candidates must either have Alla nIa
tires.
200 ooo ooo- 2 5 1 Cleveland defeated Boston, , {UPI) - Oil Burner, the 4-5
graduated college or been Rodriguez
Su1fon ( li ·Bl an d Yeager , o A T
beat M'l.Dil esota ' :J... c hOlce,
· was the easy Wll111
. er
(6) ; M orton , Dev ine .,..., exas
got a chance lO.groove It."
members of a cisss that has 151. Leon 181. seord 191 aM 0, Kansas City topped of the richest race In harness
Booble and ·the Bengais graduated.
Pocoroba . LP- Morton I1-8J.
California, 4-0, Oakland racing, the $300,000 "Race
play their first pre..season
"H a kid comes out in his New Yo rk ooo 001ooo- 1 6 1· shaded Chicago, 3-1, and For The Gold" SUnday at
game of the year at Green third year, we won't allow Phladelph i oao 002 o2x - 4 9 o Detroit edged Milwaukee, 4-3, Monticello Raceway.
Bay Saturday night. \
Utat." he said. 11 We won't Grote;
Ma llack,
Lockwood, M
(7) and · 13 · ·
· oth er AL
Oil Burner woo In 1·....
'"1"'&lt;
.
Christenson
cG raw m
mrungs, m
raid."
\
111 and Dales. wP- Chrlslenson games.
for the mile. He paid $3,60,
Greeson said the team - 19-51. LP- Ma tlack 110.51 .
In the National league, it 3.20, 2.60 across the board in . You'll Like Our Quality .
Way of Doing Business.
would take an aspiring and san Frncisco ooo ooo 003...: 3 7 o was Philadelphia 4New York beatingAtashy, driven by Del
GMAC FINANCING
talented high school graduste Cincinnali '201 300 OJ&gt;~ • 1s ' 1, Cincinnati 9 San Fr
. ancisco Insko, by 1\!, lengths. 'Third 992.534~ •.
Pomeroy
Cal dwell
(4),
0
· 'II'I6:00
- but scouts for the team did WMonlefusco
ill iams 141. , He"'erto
tal and
3 Montreal over Chicago, 21
· was Mandate, gu1'ded by
pen Eventf19S
not find any this year.
Hill I Norman (9-2) and Plum· aitd 3-1, Houston 7 San Diego Merrit Dokey . who was - l..._--Ti-1._'~_._m_.s_._~._ _.J
'The athlete chosen for one mer . LP- Mon tefusco (9.91 . HR 0 and Los Angeles 6 Atlanta another four lenlrths back. 2'. PI'ttsburgh atSt . Louis was
of the Globetrotters' two - Cincinnati. Rose (9 1.
teams can look forward to a San Diego 000 000 001)- 0 20
· ed out
•
71 0
At the Meigh High School $15,000 salary and plenty of H~~~1::';'er, F~~~~~~ 0
R ~y ~~aas 9, ·Red Sox 4:
:
TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS.
Field Sunday In Independent fringe benefits, such as travel notds 181 , Toml in 181 and
Rico
Carty
drove
in
four
MEA
__ J GROUND fRESH DAILY.
· ,..
~
K enda l l; Dier ke r ( 10·91 and
d bl
d
Baseball action, Syracuse expenses, hotel expenses, $241 Herrmann
. LP- Splllner 12,101. runs with two OU es an
•
was handed only its second a day for food, We insurance,, HR- Houston . Watson 111 1
Rick Manning homered for :
FRESH PEACH SHAKES ANI) SUNDAES.
loss of the season by host dependent insurance and a
Cleveland, which dealt •
~'@~)
~~~
·•
Rock Springs, 7·6. The pension.
Boston
its
seventh
loss
in ~
ll:,Wli/fvh'
~~atW~
:
winners led by the score of 7-4
'lbe Globetrotters say the
eight games sj nce Don .,..
American Leagu e
in the fifth, but lleld off a training camp is "one of the ctevel,and 230 ooo 301- 9 11 o Zimmer replaced Darrell
Syracuse rally in the · late toughest weeks a basketball Boslon
100 200 001- 4 10 0
,,
T,-,omas, Bu ~ke y (5) and
gh
thr
Innings to gain the winn.
player can go ou ·
Fosse; Tlanl. Cleveland 12 1.
Winning hurler, Chester
The players drW twice Willoughby (71 and Fisk. WPBuskey (J.3). LP- Tianl 110·?1 .
Wigal, gave up four walks daily. They start with free ' HR
s---cteveland , M anning (5) ; of one-run relief. The loss was · ~ Hrs .: 10 :00 A, M. Tilll : 00 P.M. tun.: Thurs.
while striking out seven shooting, then exercise, eoslon, Eva ns 1101.
Lois Tlant's ninth against 10
10:00 A. M. Till2 :00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat .
Syracuse batters, but he gave followed by shooting drills New Yor k ooo 010 ooo-. t 6 o
wins.
992·2556
up nine hits. Eddie Young and and finally a scrimmage. Tbe Baltimore 201 ooo oox- 3 6 o
Rangers
3,
Twlas
0:
W.
MAIN
, POMEROY, O. :
BarryMarshalleachhadtwo camp lasts si:t days. One of . Hunter 112.9) and Munson ;
msley IJ.4l and Duncan. HR Bert Blyleven pitched a
IJ[nglesto lead the attack, and the two Globetrotter trainers -GriBaltimore
, Bu mbrey .
Charlie MarshaU had the only and a referee also are
attending the training (1 3 inn ings)
other hit, also a single.
Oelroit
Although outhlttlng the sessions.
010 100 ooo 010 1- • "o
..
- . -hosts ~. some cosUy errors
Why do basketball players M il wauk~&amp;
_
000 000 010 0 3 50
paved the way for the losing of the caliber wanted by the
MacCormlck, Crawford 11 1.
INSURAI\cr. QHI WELL
cause . Bob Cunningham Globetrotters organization Hiller I111 and Freemon ; ·
OU NEED TO SEE 1&gt;/'1 •
Y
· Colborn. Frisella ( 121 and
I · 10
started on the mound for the : pass up a chance to Pay
INSURANCE PRO A·
Porter. WP- HIIIer no.4) . LP'BOVT THAT" SON. 11E
losers and took his first loss of theNBA?
'
Frisella (2.1).' HRs- Delroil,
~NO W5 ~I&gt; INSUR.«E
"There are some kids who Thompson 1151, Staub 181 .
the year after being relieved
in the fifth by Jeff Hubbard. maybe have dreamed of: Texas
· 010 100 001- 3 10 o
Together they fanned only becoming a Globetrotter aU Mlnnesola 000 000 ooo- 0 2 1 ~
two batters while giving up ' the irlives, "Greesonsaid · "A berg
Bty;leven
·121
-~i::.&gt;
-,r~,.
Goltz, (7
Bur
gmeiand
er (9)Sund·
and
\\ ' Cl~
..,
\(1'&gt;=-..
ten costly walka, a big dif· ballplayer has an opportunity Wynego1 . LP- Goltz 18·91. HR
ference in · the game. Jim for a longer career with us - Texas, Harrah .
( _j
Hubbard and Jeff Hubbard than with the NBA and be Chicago
100 ooo ooo- 1 9 o
each went 2-4 to lead the gets to travel to a Jot of places DaJ~~~~~on
:dol~;w~l~g~ - \:.
winners, Jim getting a homer he would never visit with the · Esslon 131.19 Mitchell, Fingers ___j
aixi single while Jeff cracked
(7-5 )and
. HROokland
Tenace
. WP-, M Sando
itch eii U=:;:~~~~~~:=:===.:~:::=::=~===~:::==:~===·~=.J
This ma'r'"· the 50th vear (8)
a double and alngle. Arnott, NBA."
fGr
theGlo.;trotters.
oUr~
1101
.
. Seti • ILL\.tULUS,atDOWNiNG.CHtLDS,ntKNOWS~!!_tnsurance.
Clark, and Hemiley each got
a double In the IOIIttg cause. the half century· they have ~:n:~~~·y ~:l~~ t~·
N1ida;:;~2.,hlo
s
100 210 011--6 9 3
about
Fitzmorris
(12.61
and Stinson ; ~-~iiiiiiiiii-----------w.-----------_.
losing only
411 12,~es,
of
. · Ryan
11-131 and
Humphrey.
;-: '
012 040 Q00..--7 5 ~ played
p.m.

talent

~~~~~:i

I

.

Clark wants big year
"',, WILMINGTON,

Ohio
.( UPI) - He had a great
rookie year, but is still
looking for a solid showing as
a veteran.
And, big "Boobie" Clark
figures 1976 just might be the
year he rediscovers the
success he bad •u a rookie ...
Mter two per101111Jiy dlsapo
poinUng aeaa0ns, the
Cincinnati Bencals' running
beck seems to have bounced
tiack to hla old self in training
~!amp - to his 1973 rookie
Meason when he was full of
~thuala8111 and churning out
yards

"I plan to have a better
· year than last year, and we'll
llilprove u a 1e11m and be in
\lle flnail," wws the 6-2, 2f5.
pi)urid fullbsck: "! guarantee
· If I just want to run the ball
~stay healthy."
'
~AJ a rookie, the 12th round
draft choice out of Florida's ·
l!ethuae-Cookman (where he
Was a tight end and
rrnebacker) surprised
tyeryone by making the team
at fullback and piling UP 088
nillhlnc yardl. He was voted
lll'e Bengali' mOlt valua!lle
p!ayer and the American
Pootball Conference's rookie

of tl)e year . .
But Clark was injured
inuch of 1974 and netted only
312 rushing yards. Last year
Clark was disappointed tha~
the Bengals, foresaldng the
running ganje for pusing,
gave him the ball only an
avenge of a dozen times a
game, which left him with the
leaa-lhan-boped.for total of
594 yards.
.
,
But this seuon, Bengals
coaches are trying to get
better passing-rushing
"balance" and that pleases
Boobie.
"Balance Ia the sign of a
very good team and we're ·
goin« to have that,~· says the
25-year old native of
Jacksonville, F1a.
_
Booble alao acknowlqes
that "great runners have ·
great lines In front of them."
"It's aU up front that
counts," he'!iays. "You didn't
hear of Larry Csonka untU
Miami got a great line In
!root of him and the same
was true of O.J. Simpaon."
Clark figures Cincinnati
haagood blockinl for the run,
"but with so much pusing
last. year the !lnemen never

"'

••

OlYmpics
briefs
••
·MONTREAL (UPI)- Star
Cinadlan forward Phil
Tollestrup 11811 he wiD be
l',l!ldy for hill team's match
lf.l!h Rllllll Tuelday, wblch
illl decide the bronze medal
ll the Olympic baakelbiU
competition
"[t'1!111 ~the IIIII game of

my career so I sure don't
want to mesa it up," he said.
· When asked why he was
q u It II n g , T o11 est r u p
responded, "Becauae after
thlllla over I'll go beet hcmle
to Raymood, Alberta, and
there just Isn't much
basketball going on th'!!'e -1,'

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Rock Springs
7-6 winner
over Syracuse

'***********•*******************
*
•*

1:;:-

*

*

i~~~:~rc::?:E~~; ~ Adolph's Dai~ Valley

:

i!
*
*

*

**

.:*****************************

HE KNOWS HIS INSURANCE!

\ g

W

l lfl.

(51. . -0

I

IXMNINGatllDS AGENCY INC.

�.

.
.$-The Da_Dy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., na.tay' July 27,lt'lll

,,

Standings

I'll support him down the
Une," " If Ford got out of the
ra~e
that'a. . another
bajlgame."
He addeil, "I'm sotng to
Medicare that year was
reserve
my opUons on W'hat
"proof positive I was a real
I'm
going
to do If Reagan Is
renegade."
After beating Clark by the nominee" but added, at
200,000 votes to win the that time, he considered
Senate seat, Schweilter won Reagan " probably more
pragmalfc and
more
r~lection In 1974 with 53 per
articulate
than
Golmrater."
cent of the vote.
Back
In
February,
"They weren't out to lynch
Schwelker
W'is
not
making
Schweiker although I called
many
vice
presidential
llsts;
on Ntl&lt;on to resign," he said.
"I
think
anybody
W'Ould
be
In a UPI interview last
interested
If
he
was
.asked,"
February, Schweiker said he
Schwetker said " ... But I
was supporting Ford.
"It's Ford vs. Reagan and probably wouldn't be asked."

Schweiker most li~eral of all Republicans in senate
By
United
Preu Republican.
lnlei'DIItlooal
In addition, he topped MinIn picking Sen. Richard S, nesota Sen. Walter F.
Schweilter as his potential Mondale, the Democrat's
·unning
mate,
GOP ·1976 vice presidential
residential contender candidate, in tW'o other
.tonald Reagan traveled all liberal-oriented ratings last
the way to the other side of year - the Nader conswnet
the political spectrum.
ratings and-the COPE ratings
Reagan is a down-the-line on labor issues.
eonservative.
Schweiker, now 49, made
Schweilter is so liberal the · his first major political
AmericaJIS for Democratic decision in 1952 as an
Action last year gave him the alternative delegate to - the
htghe~~t rating of an~ Senate Republlcan
National.

Convention.
Pressured from all sides,
he came out in favor of
Dwight D. Eisenhower, tbe
liberal-backed candidate who
beat Ohio's Sen. Robert Taft,
then known as "Mr .
Conservative."
Schweilter has been with
the liberals ever since and
was the first GOP senator
eyer endorsed by the
Pemsylvanla AFL-CJO.
Hjs stands against the anti·
baliisttc .misslle system and

his votes against Supreme
Court nominees Clement
Haynsworth and G. Harrold
Carswell got him on the
Nixon administration's
"enemies list ...
Schweiker served four
terms in the House before he
was elected to the Senate In
1968. He was r~lected two
years ago.
Ironically, Schwetker
defeated Sen. Joseph' S,
Clark. a !ormer presideni of
the ADA, In his first Senate

race.
In his first political race 1960 - Schweilter defeated

Rep. Jack Lafore ·in the GOP
primary. In a recent
intervieW', Schweiker
de~ribed Lalore as "prelty
much Goldwater In his
thlnklng,"
Conservatives, disenchanted with his voting
rerord, tried to turn him out
In 1966 with Lafpre bUt failed .
Scbwellter .Wd he feels hls
vote for enactment of

By Helen and Sue Bottel

lnttrntiiOnll
LIIIUI Standlftll

Unjttd Prtntnttrftlllonol
W. L. Pet. Gl
Rochuttr
61 35 .635
·
S';'racuse
s• ._. .551 1
RhOdt llltnd 52 50 .510 12
Mtmphll
•a lO .•90 1•
Richmond
•• 52 .45 I•V.
Charleston •• 51 .~7• lSV.
Toltdo
43 57 · .430 20
Tldtwattr
•t lS .•21 20
Mondty'l Ruullt

Rap:

SUPEit MARKET • Open Daily 9 to
Sun. 10 to 10

)j. ~

.

.w e Accept ·Federal Food Stamp"~ ):}. ~·
PHONE 992·3480
tjorne~ Mill and Second Sts. we r~e the riihi to limit quan&amp;ilies. MlDDLEPORT, 0.

Memphis 16 Rhode Island •
Rod1e1ter 9 Richmond' 0, 1st,
1 Innings

Rochelftr 5 R lchmond 3. 2nd,

1 innings

Charleston 5 Toltdo 4, tsl. 7
Innings
Charleston 5 Toledo •· 2nd, ,ll
Innings
,
Syracuse c T ldowattr 2

'

a·

'

USDA Choice Beef .

Dear Helen and Sue:
My· friend has been going with this guy fQr about three
months. She r~n1. llltea him a lot.
·But he h,IS •liltarded s.tster, and I've heard from friends of
the family tl\at wHen he W'as little he could have (Cite either
way. He goes to a private ~hool now, but won't tell u.s anything
about it. We think It's ~ause it'sa "speclal" school.
. .· He does act strange sometimes, anct has a terrible temper.
He put a dent in his door with hil fist, so he's awfully s!nlng.
Should W'ew..nmy ldendm;not?- WORRIED (AGE 14)

.

.

'

Dear Worried:
Before.you "warn your girl friend why not find out for sure
howmuchofthis talk iS vicious rumor? -HELEN

'

lb.

Special
Meft ~'

+++

. CENTER CUT
CHUCK ROAST ................ ~:.

bn Request

Worried:
And the best way to do this is to ask the help of an adult
who knows the family well. - SUE

79 ~

Rap:

------------------~ ·

lb

lb.

•

-: USDA Chuck Beef

.

Choice

·

s Lbs . or More

+++

Graded
o
I
I

ARM R'OAST.......................................lb:. 9~
ENGLISH ROAST. ...........~::::~.... ~..~;.99~
BONELESS ROAST........ !5~~~ .......~~.99e
GROUND BEEf···············~···············~ 69e
.
sg· ~
GROUND CHUCK••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
·$}09
GROUND ROUND·~·············~··········~·
Superlor.s USDA Beef

Gov't 1nspected

CHUCK ,ROAST

I

Sale! Rath's All Meat

Sale! Rath's All Beef

WIENERS

WIENERS

lb

12 oz. Pki

59C

12 oz. pkg.

69C

· I'm a 1!)-year-old female and I have sexual fantasies about
not a. Les and could never he. I have very

satisfymg. relalionshipe with guys:
Should I get ·professional help or are these fantasies
normal? -DREAMER

,

.

Dear Dreamer:
.
AC~rdlng to psychologists, Cosmopolitan magazine and
most honest women, sexual fantasies, no matter how farfetched, are normal, helpful turn-ons. Not to worry! -HELEN

'

,,

AND SUE

p·olly's Poin,ers

INSTANT
•

AlASKIAN

15% oz.

.

MACKEREL.•....•..•............~~...

49

,.

.

.

2 lb.

~

MORTON POT PIES

~

4

. 9~

10 ct.

FOR

"
,_

•1.00

'"

,,
,,

SCOT lAD

TRASH CAN LINERS .•..••. ~...7
SCOT LAD

EACH 49~

MEAT LOAF ••••...••••••••••••• :••••••

APPLE JELLY...••.•............ !~~.. 5 9 ::
OLD. VIRGINIA

••
'

LEMONADE ...............&amp;~~~ $1

,.'"

.

'"
. .'"
'"
:

,,

,.

"

••

Pesta Hamburger

DILL
PICKLES
pint

Del Monte

PUDDING
CUPS
4 pak

.JaJS

....

DAIRY BUYS

HI

-

BROUGRTON'S

.

DIET RITE

HOMO 'MILK
,.

lh gallon

59~

.

8

79$

PAK

'119

. ,,

· BROUGHTON'S

gallon plastic

IVORY

LIQUID
_Bi&amp;
48oz.

Sill

"Bubble Yum"

25e

"l
..,,
....,

"'

'139

"'
·•·

'"
'"

"'

.J

EGGS. ..:. . ~..... ~ . 69~.

••
•

·~

All WEEI&lt; SALE

BUBBLE
GUM
2 Pk&amp;s.

"'.
'

"'

GRADE 'B' lARGE .
Family Size

••
"'

·~

2% MILK
·'

"'

"'

RC COLA
·16 ar. bois.

POTATOES

u.s.
NO. 1

10 89'
lb.
Bag

·aPM

.....••

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- How can
I remove the odor of dog
urine from my polyester rug?
The rug is only three years
old and I do not want to.have
to replace it. Thanks for the
many helpful hints. SONJA.
DEAR SONJA - The
National Institute of Rug
Cleaning suggest. covering
such a damp spot with table
salt as much·as one-half Inch
thick. Leave on until spot Is
thoroughly dry, perhaps a
day or two, and then sweep up
salt and stain. The odor
should leave with it. U the
vacuum Is wed to pick up the
salt, empty bag Immediately
aud wjpe olfcaoy pa'rto tbat
bave been .l!ludled by · Ill~
salt. - POLLY. "'
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
Peeve concerns the imposslblltty of
buying
discontinued patterns. I have
been told the stores have ten
days to discard or destroy
them, but I do not see why
such patterns could not be put
in a box and sold as discontinued patterns for a di~oiUlt
price during this ten days
period. Many people could
use them for their original
purpoSe, and others would
llke to buy them to .use as
packing or wrapping paper.
-KAY.
.
DEAR POLLY - I need
three odd size throw rugs for
our motor home en trance and
aisle, but could not find the
right sizes and colors. I
bought one of those rubber
backed washable bathroom
carpets (6 feet by 8 feet) at a
disc91U1t store, On the back, I
drew with a fell pen the exact
·Bizes needed, before doing
any cutting. They were then
laid down and trimmed
arounll the corners and
notches were made for an
exact fit. We can shake Ql'
vacuwn our new ruga while
camping and then easily
launder them when we get
·home. The leftover piiCtl
went ·Into drawera and
cupboarda aa padding to slap
road ra!Ues.
·
After ten years· of hard
wear and tear, our camper

Mrs. Hampton reports
on recent convention

SON BORN
REEDSVILLE
- Mr. and
A report on tlie recent congressmen were noted,'and
Mrs.
Greg
Batley,
Reedsville,
Departm~nt
of Ohio, annualdues\Verecollected.ll
announce
the
birth
of a son, .
American Legion Auxtllary, was decided to invite Susie
Gregory
Lee,
Jr.,
July
19, at
convention in Columbus was Samuels and her mother to
Holzer
Medical
Center.
The
given by Mrs. Lula Hampton the September meeilng · so
infant
wejghed
eight
pounds
at a meeting Of Lewis Manley t~t Miss Samuels can give a
Unit 263 at the home of Mrs. report on her experiences at and siJ: and one-half ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Charles Saunders.
·
Buckeye Girls' State.
Mr
. and Mrs. Darwyn
Mrs. Hampton also
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith and
Enevoldsen,
Reedsville,
displayed a citation of merit Mrs . Naomi BenUey were
Mrs.
Patricia
Fultz,
paternal,
awarded to the ·unit, Mrs. reported Ill. Reports of
Apopka,
Fla.,
and
Jim
Arnold Richards reported on chairmen were presented,
Balley,
Reedsville.
the recent birthday party at and Mrs. Nellie Winaton gave
the Chillicothe Veterans the closing prayer for peace.
Hospital. Several responses · Mrs. Saunders served a
SWIMPARTYSET
to letters written to luncheon to those attfnding.
Members of Beta Beta
Preeeplor" Chapter of Beta
·Sigma Phi Sorority aM their
husbands will be guests at a
swimming party 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the home of Dr.
and Mrs. R. R. Pickens.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Skate-A-Way Rink.
Refreshments will be
Brownie Troop 1120 and Scout
Brownies going were Kim potluck.
Troop 1204 members held a Adams, Christina Arnold
skating party recently at the Cindy Arnold, Becky Amott,
Julie Houdashelt, Melissa
Hubbard, Tracie Hubbard,
SOCIAL PLANNF.D
Regina Nance, Jill Nease,
TUPPERS PLAINS - An ·
Ka\hy Pickens, Veronica ice cream SOjlial will he held
Provo, Sherry Ritcljie, Becky Saturday, Ju)y·3I, ~t St. Paul.
Roush, Sherri Sisson, AliCia Methodist Church here at. I '
Van
Meter,
Paula p.m. ·Cake, pie, coffee and
Winebrenner and Mandy other beverages will he sold.
REEDSVILLE- Members Hubbard· with leaders and
of the Big Bend Citizens Band helpers, Carol Adams, Pat
Radio Club held a picnic Houdashelt, Janet Pickens,
Sunday at Forked Run State Donna Nease and Joyce
Park. The afternoon was Sisson.
Scouts in the group were '
spent playing games,
Jackie
Zerkle,
Mary
swimming and fishing .
Winebrenner,
Patty
Jeffers,'
Attending were Mr. and
For the whole family
Susan
Jell,
Kim
Morrow,
Mrs. Clarence Jordan, Mr.
'at
and Mrs. Randall Gibbs and Alice Riffle, Vicki Arnold,
daughters, Mrs. Cindy Aeiker Tracie McGraw, Janie
SALE PRICES
and
daughter,
Terry Amberger , Lisa Willis, Julie
Willis,
Penny
Wolfe,
Becky
Seidenable, Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred White, Mrs. Nettie · Winebrenner and Susan
Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Winebrenner.
Middleport, 0.
Jeffers and children, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Roush and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Christy, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Will and son, Jim, Robert
NOW SHOWING
Lemley, Mr. and Mrs.
William Jones and sons, Mrs.
New Fall Une
Simon
Johnson
and
daughters, Shelly .Lemley.

Troop enjoys skating

SUMMER
SANDALS

Mon ·• TuH., Wed. I Sat.-t: 30 til 5: 00
tiL 12 NOON .

FRillY UNTIL 8 PM

FURNITURE
m-ssn

Mason. W. Va.

214

~.Main

POMEROY

"QUALITY lnd
SERVICE"

HAMPSHIRE

SOLID AIR FRESHENER

POLY POOL

ASSORTED
SCENTE

'

33~
STURDY CONSTRUCTION
NELSON'S

NELSON'S.
REG. 59c

R

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON .

BAN BASIC

1 111 BABY
·~ SHAMPOO,......_,~.........
11

3 oz.

oz.

Cepacol

-·-· .

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

MOUTH WASH

99~
NELSON'S.
REG. Sl.69

NELSON'S
REG. $1.82

COSTUME

WET
ONES

JEWELRY

SERGEANT'S

88~
P~ka

.S hell

Necklaces,

Nolhlng

Necklaces,

Wooden
Cbpper

Bracelets,
Bracelets.

Plaled

Gold

Bracelets,

Pierced
Earrings,
Post and Hoops
Earrings.

COLlAR

Kills Fleas
For Four Months

NELSON'S
REG. $1,33

OUAKER
INDUSTRIAL TYPE
NUT &amp; BOLT

NELSON 'S
REG. $2.48

6-12 PLUS

LIQUID
INSECT REPEu.ENT

SHELVING UNIT
And
Up

Goessler's
JEWELRY
STORE
Courl Street
Pomeroy

SENTRY II

NELSON'S
REG. $1.69

70 CT.

$2

- •l,

•

·. RENUZIT

heritage house

*·

STORE HOURS

..

Mrs. MyrUe Walker, R!lclne
Unit 602.
Attending fr.om Meigs
County were Mrs. Richards
and Mrs. Hlmpton, Unit 283;
Mrs.
Kessinger
and
daughters, Kim · and Lol.a,
Mrs. Velsla Roush, Mrs.
Bonnie Dalley, Middleport
Unit 128; and Miss Smith,
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Marjorie
Goett, and Mrs. Veda Davis,
Pomeroy Unit 39.

"The Insurance Store"
Complete
Insurance Service

Ahouaewannlng was given Cockrell, El"l'nor, w .. Va.;
saturday for Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Richard
David Buakirk, Rustic Hills, . Hawley, Columbus ; Mr. and
·Syracuse ~ Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Randy Smith, Marietta;
Steve ,Haillead and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Hobba,
Mrs. Chest,.' Young.
· . Mason, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Ccnnle Gllland of steve Halstead, Letart, IN.
MaltOn decor11ted cakes for . Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Chester
· the occasion.
.
Young, Middleport ; Mr. and
Everyone enjoyed a Mrs. Gary Slaven, Syracuse
cookout and ·presented lhe and the honored COllPle.
Bualdrks with many gifts.
Sending gifts were Miss
Attending W'ere Mr. and Connie Gllland of Maaon, W.
Mrs. Donald Hartley, New Va. and Bill Roush of
Haven. W. Va.; Miss Dymple Cheshire.

ANNTVERSARYNEAR- 'nle Rev. and Mrs. Paul E.
Taylor of Belpre, Utah former relidenta of Meigs CoiUlty,
wtll celebrate their 3001 wedding anniversary on Aug . 2.
They are the parenta of six daughters, all married, and
one aon1 at horne, and have 10 grandaona and one
granddaughter. The Rev. and Mrs. Taylor have been In
ChrlstiaQ work for the past 27 years. For the pasi five
years they bave resided in Utah.

drawers, cupboard and
refrigerator doors were
chipped and peeling . We
bought good cloth backed
vinyl and a staple · gun and
covered them all to match
our other · decor. Remove
handles, put drawer or door
upside down on the cloth side
of the vinyl and draw around
it with a markiJll pen. Cut
one Inch larger than drawn,
fold vinyl to back of wood and
staple pleating neatly at the
corners. Glue was IISed on the
refrigerator and freezer
doors, and then metal trim
replaced over the edges. We
also cut matching sttlps with
the pinking shears, and with
decorative upholstery tacks
,.(staggered) we trimmed
PICNIC PLANNED
arotlnd all dodr.s ancl wtndows
RUTLAND - Eastern
to· hide any peeling .and Star members and their
weathered marks from old families will · meet at
leaks. Our camper now has a Forest Acres Park on New
bright custom-made look that Un\a Road near bere at 2
we can be proud to show off In p.m. Sunday, Aug. I, for a
camp grounds. - BELVA. picnic. Those attendlug are
DEAR POLLY - Jmay be lo take a covered dish,
only twelve years
but I their own table service and
have a great way to lvld fitted beverage.
'sheets. It is easy II you put
The picnic, lo honor the
one end over a chair and then grand pages and aides of
fold !he other end over the Dlslrict!S, Is betac held In
same chair. Take hold of it place ol separate recepand fold like a rj,gular sheet. tions. In the group to be
It . should be stra!~ht. honored are Marie ·CUrd,
GAIL.
.Louis . Paules, Myrtle
PoUy will send you one of Pierce, Florence Malll1nc,
her "peachy" tbank·you Ellen BrokaW', Fauna
card11, Ideal lor lramiac or ~ombs, Howard Kehl and
placing In your famUy scraP: Harvey Wagener.
book, If she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
her column.

THU~SDAY

Peoples, first ·vice president;
Mrs. Lyell Roush, second
vice president; Miss Ann
Eshelman, secretary, and
Mrs. Lawrence Hartline,
treasurer . Mrs. Arnold
Richards, Eighth District
president, Middleport,
participated In the in·
stallaUon ceremonies for the
new officers .
R~eiviac a three year
appointment on the junior
activities committee was

Lula Hampton, Middleport
Unit 263, and Mrs. Mabel
Brown and Mrs. Dorothy
Hecker of the Gallipolis Unit.
Mrs . Gerri Kessinger of
Middleport Unit 128, served
as a teller for the Eighth
District.
New officers for the
Department of Ohio el~ted
at the Sunday session were
Mrs. Henry Patro, Toledo,
president ; Mrs. Billy

Housewarming fetes
Buskirks Saturday

Radio club
______. . ,. . ___ holds picnic,

BANQUET WESTERNS
SALISBURY
CHOPPm BEEF

+++

worn~•.I'm

FROZEN FOOD BUYS
SCOT LAD

Do Mea ute llltdly Wom•T

But in ttro former long-term relationsblptllld a one-year
lllll'liage (IIIII going strong) I've found that tbe blldliar I get
thenreeter, kinder, more generoua II my partner,l'm treated
like a quetn during prel1ll!nltrual crabblea, ex8JMJeek naltles
or )lilt plaiD leav~ne cranka.
I~ve eve,~ noted that If the houae II nifty, walb lk11e, every.
thing llllooth, no passionate exclamations of my female
COII!petence. BUT lf.housework piles up (I'm a rollege student
who IIIIo W'orka lull time, ao It doeal) then it's "We're going
. out for dinner,luv, and I'll clean this place tomorrow," fr!im
my ever-lovln' man.
01 rourse,ldon'tputon an act or overdo -l'mjust honeat
whan thU.S get me down. But doesn't thislhoQt holes In the
"totally fucinattng" Womanhood phlloaophy lhlt you should
treat your guy lllte a king even If you !eel like IICI't8llling? JANE
P. s: I even had weeping hysterics onee when Jim was
home for a W'eek, on layoff, and completely Ignored the obvioua
work to be done. He halll't neglected his end of boulekeeplng
since, though I'm still ashamed of my female outburst, and
I!Wear I won't &lt;k! it again.
Jane:
The key phrase here II, "I'm just honest when things get
me down.'' U you were constantly bitchy, or If you put on an
act to get your way, Jln\ would aoon stop listening .. or stop
coming home at night. ·
·
We all have the right to blow our tQps when explosions are .
justified, but don't let success go to your head. Jim jumps
when you holler ~ause you don't holler often - right? HELEN AND SUE

-BLADE CUTe

J:i..

Members of Meigs County
unita of the American Legion
Auxtllary were in Columbus
recenUy for the 511th annual
convention at the Neil House.
Auxtliary members joined
the Legionnaires, also in
convention, lor a session on
Friday and a memorial
service
on
Sunday.
Representing the Eighth
District at pre-convention
meetings were Miss Erma
Smith, Pomeroy Unit 39, Mrs.

Gltla learn at their mothere' knees that tbq lhould be
ntet, kind, "givlntty fudge" types In order to bold their men.

Superiors Beef
Superiols USDA Choice U.1

Representatives attend.conventiop

Generation Rap

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 27,1976

NELSON'S
REG. $11.39

NELSON'S
REG. $1.17

�.

.
.$-The Da_Dy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., na.tay' July 27,lt'lll

,,

Standings

I'll support him down the
Une," " If Ford got out of the
ra~e
that'a. . another
bajlgame."
He addeil, "I'm sotng to
Medicare that year was
reserve
my opUons on W'hat
"proof positive I was a real
I'm
going
to do If Reagan Is
renegade."
After beating Clark by the nominee" but added, at
200,000 votes to win the that time, he considered
Senate seat, Schweilter won Reagan " probably more
pragmalfc and
more
r~lection In 1974 with 53 per
articulate
than
Golmrater."
cent of the vote.
Back
In
February,
"They weren't out to lynch
Schwelker
W'is
not
making
Schweiker although I called
many
vice
presidential
llsts;
on Ntl&lt;on to resign," he said.
"I
think
anybody
W'Ould
be
In a UPI interview last
interested
If
he
was
.asked,"
February, Schweiker said he
Schwetker said " ... But I
was supporting Ford.
"It's Ford vs. Reagan and probably wouldn't be asked."

Schweiker most li~eral of all Republicans in senate
By
United
Preu Republican.
lnlei'DIItlooal
In addition, he topped MinIn picking Sen. Richard S, nesota Sen. Walter F.
Schweilter as his potential Mondale, the Democrat's
·unning
mate,
GOP ·1976 vice presidential
residential contender candidate, in tW'o other
.tonald Reagan traveled all liberal-oriented ratings last
the way to the other side of year - the Nader conswnet
the political spectrum.
ratings and-the COPE ratings
Reagan is a down-the-line on labor issues.
eonservative.
Schweiker, now 49, made
Schweilter is so liberal the · his first major political
AmericaJIS for Democratic decision in 1952 as an
Action last year gave him the alternative delegate to - the
htghe~~t rating of an~ Senate Republlcan
National.

Convention.
Pressured from all sides,
he came out in favor of
Dwight D. Eisenhower, tbe
liberal-backed candidate who
beat Ohio's Sen. Robert Taft,
then known as "Mr .
Conservative."
Schweilter has been with
the liberals ever since and
was the first GOP senator
eyer endorsed by the
Pemsylvanla AFL-CJO.
Hjs stands against the anti·
baliisttc .misslle system and

his votes against Supreme
Court nominees Clement
Haynsworth and G. Harrold
Carswell got him on the
Nixon administration's
"enemies list ...
Schweiker served four
terms in the House before he
was elected to the Senate In
1968. He was r~lected two
years ago.
Ironically, Schwetker
defeated Sen. Joseph' S,
Clark. a !ormer presideni of
the ADA, In his first Senate

race.
In his first political race 1960 - Schweilter defeated

Rep. Jack Lafore ·in the GOP
primary. In a recent
intervieW', Schweiker
de~ribed Lalore as "prelty
much Goldwater In his
thlnklng,"
Conservatives, disenchanted with his voting
rerord, tried to turn him out
In 1966 with Lafpre bUt failed .
Scbwellter .Wd he feels hls
vote for enactment of

By Helen and Sue Bottel

lnttrntiiOnll
LIIIUI Standlftll

Unjttd Prtntnttrftlllonol
W. L. Pet. Gl
Rochuttr
61 35 .635
·
S';'racuse
s• ._. .551 1
RhOdt llltnd 52 50 .510 12
Mtmphll
•a lO .•90 1•
Richmond
•• 52 .45 I•V.
Charleston •• 51 .~7• lSV.
Toltdo
43 57 · .430 20
Tldtwattr
•t lS .•21 20
Mondty'l Ruullt

Rap:

SUPEit MARKET • Open Daily 9 to
Sun. 10 to 10

)j. ~

.

.w e Accept ·Federal Food Stamp"~ ):}. ~·
PHONE 992·3480
tjorne~ Mill and Second Sts. we r~e the riihi to limit quan&amp;ilies. MlDDLEPORT, 0.

Memphis 16 Rhode Island •
Rod1e1ter 9 Richmond' 0, 1st,
1 Innings

Rochelftr 5 R lchmond 3. 2nd,

1 innings

Charleston 5 Toltdo 4, tsl. 7
Innings
Charleston 5 Toledo •· 2nd, ,ll
Innings
,
Syracuse c T ldowattr 2

'

a·

'

USDA Choice Beef .

Dear Helen and Sue:
My· friend has been going with this guy fQr about three
months. She r~n1. llltea him a lot.
·But he h,IS •liltarded s.tster, and I've heard from friends of
the family tl\at wHen he W'as little he could have (Cite either
way. He goes to a private ~hool now, but won't tell u.s anything
about it. We think It's ~ause it'sa "speclal" school.
. .· He does act strange sometimes, anct has a terrible temper.
He put a dent in his door with hil fist, so he's awfully s!nlng.
Should W'ew..nmy ldendm;not?- WORRIED (AGE 14)

.

.

'

Dear Worried:
Before.you "warn your girl friend why not find out for sure
howmuchofthis talk iS vicious rumor? -HELEN

'

lb.

Special
Meft ~'

+++

. CENTER CUT
CHUCK ROAST ................ ~:.

bn Request

Worried:
And the best way to do this is to ask the help of an adult
who knows the family well. - SUE

79 ~

Rap:

------------------~ ·

lb

lb.

•

-: USDA Chuck Beef

.

Choice

·

s Lbs . or More

+++

Graded
o
I
I

ARM R'OAST.......................................lb:. 9~
ENGLISH ROAST. ...........~::::~.... ~..~;.99~
BONELESS ROAST........ !5~~~ .......~~.99e
GROUND BEEf···············~···············~ 69e
.
sg· ~
GROUND CHUCK••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
·$}09
GROUND ROUND·~·············~··········~·
Superlor.s USDA Beef

Gov't 1nspected

CHUCK ,ROAST

I

Sale! Rath's All Meat

Sale! Rath's All Beef

WIENERS

WIENERS

lb

12 oz. Pki

59C

12 oz. pkg.

69C

· I'm a 1!)-year-old female and I have sexual fantasies about
not a. Les and could never he. I have very

satisfymg. relalionshipe with guys:
Should I get ·professional help or are these fantasies
normal? -DREAMER

,

.

Dear Dreamer:
.
AC~rdlng to psychologists, Cosmopolitan magazine and
most honest women, sexual fantasies, no matter how farfetched, are normal, helpful turn-ons. Not to worry! -HELEN

'

,,

AND SUE

p·olly's Poin,ers

INSTANT
•

AlASKIAN

15% oz.

.

MACKEREL.•....•..•............~~...

49

,.

.

.

2 lb.

~

MORTON POT PIES

~

4

. 9~

10 ct.

FOR

"
,_

•1.00

'"

,,
,,

SCOT lAD

TRASH CAN LINERS .•..••. ~...7
SCOT LAD

EACH 49~

MEAT LOAF ••••...••••••••••••• :••••••

APPLE JELLY...••.•............ !~~.. 5 9 ::
OLD. VIRGINIA

••
'

LEMONADE ...............&amp;~~~ $1

,.'"

.

'"
. .'"
'"
:

,,

,.

"

••

Pesta Hamburger

DILL
PICKLES
pint

Del Monte

PUDDING
CUPS
4 pak

.JaJS

....

DAIRY BUYS

HI

-

BROUGRTON'S

.

DIET RITE

HOMO 'MILK
,.

lh gallon

59~

.

8

79$

PAK

'119

. ,,

· BROUGHTON'S

gallon plastic

IVORY

LIQUID
_Bi&amp;
48oz.

Sill

"Bubble Yum"

25e

"l
..,,
....,

"'

'139

"'
·•·

'"
'"

"'

.J

EGGS. ..:. . ~..... ~ . 69~.

••
•

·~

All WEEI&lt; SALE

BUBBLE
GUM
2 Pk&amp;s.

"'.
'

"'

GRADE 'B' lARGE .
Family Size

••
"'

·~

2% MILK
·'

"'

"'

RC COLA
·16 ar. bois.

POTATOES

u.s.
NO. 1

10 89'
lb.
Bag

·aPM

.....••

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- How can
I remove the odor of dog
urine from my polyester rug?
The rug is only three years
old and I do not want to.have
to replace it. Thanks for the
many helpful hints. SONJA.
DEAR SONJA - The
National Institute of Rug
Cleaning suggest. covering
such a damp spot with table
salt as much·as one-half Inch
thick. Leave on until spot Is
thoroughly dry, perhaps a
day or two, and then sweep up
salt and stain. The odor
should leave with it. U the
vacuum Is wed to pick up the
salt, empty bag Immediately
aud wjpe olfcaoy pa'rto tbat
bave been .l!ludled by · Ill~
salt. - POLLY. "'
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
Peeve concerns the imposslblltty of
buying
discontinued patterns. I have
been told the stores have ten
days to discard or destroy
them, but I do not see why
such patterns could not be put
in a box and sold as discontinued patterns for a di~oiUlt
price during this ten days
period. Many people could
use them for their original
purpoSe, and others would
llke to buy them to .use as
packing or wrapping paper.
-KAY.
.
DEAR POLLY - I need
three odd size throw rugs for
our motor home en trance and
aisle, but could not find the
right sizes and colors. I
bought one of those rubber
backed washable bathroom
carpets (6 feet by 8 feet) at a
disc91U1t store, On the back, I
drew with a fell pen the exact
·Bizes needed, before doing
any cutting. They were then
laid down and trimmed
arounll the corners and
notches were made for an
exact fit. We can shake Ql'
vacuwn our new ruga while
camping and then easily
launder them when we get
·home. The leftover piiCtl
went ·Into drawera and
cupboarda aa padding to slap
road ra!Ues.
·
After ten years· of hard
wear and tear, our camper

Mrs. Hampton reports
on recent convention

SON BORN
REEDSVILLE
- Mr. and
A report on tlie recent congressmen were noted,'and
Mrs.
Greg
Batley,
Reedsville,
Departm~nt
of Ohio, annualdues\Verecollected.ll
announce
the
birth
of a son, .
American Legion Auxtllary, was decided to invite Susie
Gregory
Lee,
Jr.,
July
19, at
convention in Columbus was Samuels and her mother to
Holzer
Medical
Center.
The
given by Mrs. Lula Hampton the September meeilng · so
infant
wejghed
eight
pounds
at a meeting Of Lewis Manley t~t Miss Samuels can give a
Unit 263 at the home of Mrs. report on her experiences at and siJ: and one-half ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Charles Saunders.
·
Buckeye Girls' State.
Mr
. and Mrs. Darwyn
Mrs. Hampton also
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith and
Enevoldsen,
Reedsville,
displayed a citation of merit Mrs . Naomi BenUey were
Mrs.
Patricia
Fultz,
paternal,
awarded to the ·unit, Mrs. reported Ill. Reports of
Apopka,
Fla.,
and
Jim
Arnold Richards reported on chairmen were presented,
Balley,
Reedsville.
the recent birthday party at and Mrs. Nellie Winaton gave
the Chillicothe Veterans the closing prayer for peace.
Hospital. Several responses · Mrs. Saunders served a
SWIMPARTYSET
to letters written to luncheon to those attfnding.
Members of Beta Beta
Preeeplor" Chapter of Beta
·Sigma Phi Sorority aM their
husbands will be guests at a
swimming party 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the home of Dr.
and Mrs. R. R. Pickens.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Skate-A-Way Rink.
Refreshments will be
Brownie Troop 1120 and Scout
Brownies going were Kim potluck.
Troop 1204 members held a Adams, Christina Arnold
skating party recently at the Cindy Arnold, Becky Amott,
Julie Houdashelt, Melissa
Hubbard, Tracie Hubbard,
SOCIAL PLANNF.D
Regina Nance, Jill Nease,
TUPPERS PLAINS - An ·
Ka\hy Pickens, Veronica ice cream SOjlial will he held
Provo, Sherry Ritcljie, Becky Saturday, Ju)y·3I, ~t St. Paul.
Roush, Sherri Sisson, AliCia Methodist Church here at. I '
Van
Meter,
Paula p.m. ·Cake, pie, coffee and
Winebrenner and Mandy other beverages will he sold.
REEDSVILLE- Members Hubbard· with leaders and
of the Big Bend Citizens Band helpers, Carol Adams, Pat
Radio Club held a picnic Houdashelt, Janet Pickens,
Sunday at Forked Run State Donna Nease and Joyce
Park. The afternoon was Sisson.
Scouts in the group were '
spent playing games,
Jackie
Zerkle,
Mary
swimming and fishing .
Winebrenner,
Patty
Jeffers,'
Attending were Mr. and
For the whole family
Susan
Jell,
Kim
Morrow,
Mrs. Clarence Jordan, Mr.
'at
and Mrs. Randall Gibbs and Alice Riffle, Vicki Arnold,
daughters, Mrs. Cindy Aeiker Tracie McGraw, Janie
SALE PRICES
and
daughter,
Terry Amberger , Lisa Willis, Julie
Willis,
Penny
Wolfe,
Becky
Seidenable, Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred White, Mrs. Nettie · Winebrenner and Susan
Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Winebrenner.
Middleport, 0.
Jeffers and children, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Roush and
children, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Christy, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Will and son, Jim, Robert
NOW SHOWING
Lemley, Mr. and Mrs.
William Jones and sons, Mrs.
New Fall Une
Simon
Johnson
and
daughters, Shelly .Lemley.

Troop enjoys skating

SUMMER
SANDALS

Mon ·• TuH., Wed. I Sat.-t: 30 til 5: 00
tiL 12 NOON .

FRillY UNTIL 8 PM

FURNITURE
m-ssn

Mason. W. Va.

214

~.Main

POMEROY

"QUALITY lnd
SERVICE"

HAMPSHIRE

SOLID AIR FRESHENER

POLY POOL

ASSORTED
SCENTE

'

33~
STURDY CONSTRUCTION
NELSON'S

NELSON'S.
REG. 59c

R

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON .

BAN BASIC

1 111 BABY
·~ SHAMPOO,......_,~.........
11

3 oz.

oz.

Cepacol

-·-· .

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

MOUTH WASH

99~
NELSON'S.
REG. Sl.69

NELSON'S
REG. $1.82

COSTUME

WET
ONES

JEWELRY

SERGEANT'S

88~
P~ka

.S hell

Necklaces,

Nolhlng

Necklaces,

Wooden
Cbpper

Bracelets,
Bracelets.

Plaled

Gold

Bracelets,

Pierced
Earrings,
Post and Hoops
Earrings.

COLlAR

Kills Fleas
For Four Months

NELSON'S
REG. $1,33

OUAKER
INDUSTRIAL TYPE
NUT &amp; BOLT

NELSON 'S
REG. $2.48

6-12 PLUS

LIQUID
INSECT REPEu.ENT

SHELVING UNIT
And
Up

Goessler's
JEWELRY
STORE
Courl Street
Pomeroy

SENTRY II

NELSON'S
REG. $1.69

70 CT.

$2

- •l,

•

·. RENUZIT

heritage house

*·

STORE HOURS

..

Mrs. MyrUe Walker, R!lclne
Unit 602.
Attending fr.om Meigs
County were Mrs. Richards
and Mrs. Hlmpton, Unit 283;
Mrs.
Kessinger
and
daughters, Kim · and Lol.a,
Mrs. Velsla Roush, Mrs.
Bonnie Dalley, Middleport
Unit 128; and Miss Smith,
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Marjorie
Goett, and Mrs. Veda Davis,
Pomeroy Unit 39.

"The Insurance Store"
Complete
Insurance Service

Ahouaewannlng was given Cockrell, El"l'nor, w .. Va.;
saturday for Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Richard
David Buakirk, Rustic Hills, . Hawley, Columbus ; Mr. and
·Syracuse ~ Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Randy Smith, Marietta;
Steve ,Haillead and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Hobba,
Mrs. Chest,.' Young.
· . Mason, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Ccnnle Gllland of steve Halstead, Letart, IN.
MaltOn decor11ted cakes for . Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Chester
· the occasion.
.
Young, Middleport ; Mr. and
Everyone enjoyed a Mrs. Gary Slaven, Syracuse
cookout and ·presented lhe and the honored COllPle.
Bualdrks with many gifts.
Sending gifts were Miss
Attending W'ere Mr. and Connie Gllland of Maaon, W.
Mrs. Donald Hartley, New Va. and Bill Roush of
Haven. W. Va.; Miss Dymple Cheshire.

ANNTVERSARYNEAR- 'nle Rev. and Mrs. Paul E.
Taylor of Belpre, Utah former relidenta of Meigs CoiUlty,
wtll celebrate their 3001 wedding anniversary on Aug . 2.
They are the parenta of six daughters, all married, and
one aon1 at horne, and have 10 grandaona and one
granddaughter. The Rev. and Mrs. Taylor have been In
ChrlstiaQ work for the past 27 years. For the pasi five
years they bave resided in Utah.

drawers, cupboard and
refrigerator doors were
chipped and peeling . We
bought good cloth backed
vinyl and a staple · gun and
covered them all to match
our other · decor. Remove
handles, put drawer or door
upside down on the cloth side
of the vinyl and draw around
it with a markiJll pen. Cut
one Inch larger than drawn,
fold vinyl to back of wood and
staple pleating neatly at the
corners. Glue was IISed on the
refrigerator and freezer
doors, and then metal trim
replaced over the edges. We
also cut matching sttlps with
the pinking shears, and with
decorative upholstery tacks
,.(staggered) we trimmed
PICNIC PLANNED
arotlnd all dodr.s ancl wtndows
RUTLAND - Eastern
to· hide any peeling .and Star members and their
weathered marks from old families will · meet at
leaks. Our camper now has a Forest Acres Park on New
bright custom-made look that Un\a Road near bere at 2
we can be proud to show off In p.m. Sunday, Aug. I, for a
camp grounds. - BELVA. picnic. Those attendlug are
DEAR POLLY - Jmay be lo take a covered dish,
only twelve years
but I their own table service and
have a great way to lvld fitted beverage.
'sheets. It is easy II you put
The picnic, lo honor the
one end over a chair and then grand pages and aides of
fold !he other end over the Dlslrict!S, Is betac held In
same chair. Take hold of it place ol separate recepand fold like a rj,gular sheet. tions. In the group to be
It . should be stra!~ht. honored are Marie ·CUrd,
GAIL.
.Louis . Paules, Myrtle
PoUy will send you one of Pierce, Florence Malll1nc,
her "peachy" tbank·you Ellen BrokaW', Fauna
card11, Ideal lor lramiac or ~ombs, Howard Kehl and
placing In your famUy scraP: Harvey Wagener.
book, If she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
her column.

THU~SDAY

Peoples, first ·vice president;
Mrs. Lyell Roush, second
vice president; Miss Ann
Eshelman, secretary, and
Mrs. Lawrence Hartline,
treasurer . Mrs. Arnold
Richards, Eighth District
president, Middleport,
participated In the in·
stallaUon ceremonies for the
new officers .
R~eiviac a three year
appointment on the junior
activities committee was

Lula Hampton, Middleport
Unit 263, and Mrs. Mabel
Brown and Mrs. Dorothy
Hecker of the Gallipolis Unit.
Mrs . Gerri Kessinger of
Middleport Unit 128, served
as a teller for the Eighth
District.
New officers for the
Department of Ohio el~ted
at the Sunday session were
Mrs. Henry Patro, Toledo,
president ; Mrs. Billy

Housewarming fetes
Buskirks Saturday

Radio club
______. . ,. . ___ holds picnic,

BANQUET WESTERNS
SALISBURY
CHOPPm BEEF

+++

worn~•.I'm

FROZEN FOOD BUYS
SCOT LAD

Do Mea ute llltdly Wom•T

But in ttro former long-term relationsblptllld a one-year
lllll'liage (IIIII going strong) I've found that tbe blldliar I get
thenreeter, kinder, more generoua II my partner,l'm treated
like a quetn during prel1ll!nltrual crabblea, ex8JMJeek naltles
or )lilt plaiD leav~ne cranka.
I~ve eve,~ noted that If the houae II nifty, walb lk11e, every.
thing llllooth, no passionate exclamations of my female
COII!petence. BUT lf.housework piles up (I'm a rollege student
who IIIIo W'orka lull time, ao It doeal) then it's "We're going
. out for dinner,luv, and I'll clean this place tomorrow," fr!im
my ever-lovln' man.
01 rourse,ldon'tputon an act or overdo -l'mjust honeat
whan thU.S get me down. But doesn't thislhoQt holes In the
"totally fucinattng" Womanhood phlloaophy lhlt you should
treat your guy lllte a king even If you !eel like IICI't8llling? JANE
P. s: I even had weeping hysterics onee when Jim was
home for a W'eek, on layoff, and completely Ignored the obvioua
work to be done. He halll't neglected his end of boulekeeplng
since, though I'm still ashamed of my female outburst, and
I!Wear I won't &lt;k! it again.
Jane:
The key phrase here II, "I'm just honest when things get
me down.'' U you were constantly bitchy, or If you put on an
act to get your way, Jln\ would aoon stop listening .. or stop
coming home at night. ·
·
We all have the right to blow our tQps when explosions are .
justified, but don't let success go to your head. Jim jumps
when you holler ~ause you don't holler often - right? HELEN AND SUE

-BLADE CUTe

J:i..

Members of Meigs County
unita of the American Legion
Auxtllary were in Columbus
recenUy for the 511th annual
convention at the Neil House.
Auxtliary members joined
the Legionnaires, also in
convention, lor a session on
Friday and a memorial
service
on
Sunday.
Representing the Eighth
District at pre-convention
meetings were Miss Erma
Smith, Pomeroy Unit 39, Mrs.

Gltla learn at their mothere' knees that tbq lhould be
ntet, kind, "givlntty fudge" types In order to bold their men.

Superiors Beef
Superiols USDA Choice U.1

Representatives attend.conventiop

Generation Rap

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 27,1976

NELSON'S
REG. $11.39

NELSON'S
REG. $1.17

�e...._ The DeilY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July ~, 1976

Store lfotus:

Monday.friday 9-8
Saturday~

.

Closed SUndays So Our Employees
Can Spend It for Family and Church.
· .We WISh Other Stores Would Do
The Same

STANDING

·.RIB
ROAST

IM' ·

BONELESS

SLICED ·

PORK
ROAST ·

POR.K·

PORK
_SAUSAGE

LB.

I
SUPERIOR

U.S. NO. 1 ·

. LB.
LB.

COUNTRY

WHITE OR RED
' 1/

DELI~HAM

USDA CHOICE

.

· NEW YORK

,

CHIPPED

STRIP STEAK

10
.
LB.
. . BAG

LB.

$ 89
.

LB•

·. DELl-HAM

HOMEGROWN

.

'

SUPERIORS
FIRST QUALITY

· SLICED

4 LB.
BASKET

1.

89¢

SPARE 'RIBS

STYLE

POTATOES

LB.

. 12 oz.
PKG.

SLICED
BACON

LB. ·

.

'
· COnONELLE ·

. BATHROOM TISSUE
I

~

.

23+

. .

cononelle. ~ ·.
@!
., .... ~,

•

~.

.IE. TYPE
·t Cl BASE STATION

"'· '·-

!

4 ROLL

••

PACKS .

I

'

.

•

5 WATT 23 CHANNEL SOLID STATE MOBILE
SET INCLUDES
REG. $17999
WEATHER PROOF
PA SPEAKER -

NOW ONLY

2-WAY BASE
LOADED CB ANTENNA
FOR ROOF OR TRUNK
MOUNT

DOMINO.
.

SUGAR-..~

POWER CORD AND COAX
ANTENNA CABLE
MIKE CLIP AND HARDWARE

5 LB. BAG

•

CB BOOK .

:IE&amp;. 'a9.99

.

,.,

..,.

TEMPORARY CB PERMIT

RICH &amp; READY

CB BURGLAR ALARM

·:NDWl

LICENSE FORM

·'. --_·,=···

.. .....

'

I

.
=iOft~Y

GAL

MASON ·

••

MOTOROLA ·

'

:

$ 95
TAPE PLA~Y!~E~~R-~!_•~·~-IJ!II·IIII~·~--·

8 TRACK

~~~--· ..s-AV-E-'9.-..o...
oo ............_,-._.j

ONLY

'

IOOEXTRA TOP VALUE SOEXTRATOP VALU
.: .
STAMPS · ·
·
. STAMPS

6 PACK 12 Ol CANS .

$

·. WHEN -~ou BUY •7.50 GROCERY .
ORDER OR MORE .

w· IT-. H 2 LIS

o
·
•
LEO

EXPIRES 7·31-76

'

'

.

.

..

'

'

.

\
.

&gt;

'

.•

• ...,

,

~d

·-.~

�e...._ The DeilY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July ~, 1976

Store lfotus:

Monday.friday 9-8
Saturday~

.

Closed SUndays So Our Employees
Can Spend It for Family and Church.
· .We WISh Other Stores Would Do
The Same

STANDING

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IM' ·

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.

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FIRST QUALITY

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STYLE

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TAPE PLA~Y!~E~~R-~!_•~·~-IJ!II·IIII~·~--·

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�8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July %7,1976

.

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-

Forest Run ·UMW gathers · Director announces Complete school records
•
•
cast for mystery
open tfJ parent lnspectJnn

The United Methodist
Women of the Forest Run
Methodist church held Its
regular monthly meeting
Tuesday evemng with Mrs.
Edith Sisson, Mrs. Ray
Thomas, Mrs. Para Yabya
and Mrs. Henry Thomas as
hostesses.
The meeting began with a
song, "Oh .~od Our Hope in
Ages Past foUowed by a
responsive reading by ~e
group .. Mrs. Harry Wyatt s
devotions were taken from
· Hebrew~ and.,the meditatio~
was enhtled Faith m God .
followed by prayer.
Mrs. John Scott, program
leader,chose "Our Heritage"
lor her topic. Several talks
•

were given . on the blcentennlal and the leader cited
quotations from Churchill,
Webster and Mc~uley on
things contributing to the
greatness of a country.
Re~dings were given
pertammg to the settlement
of Meigs County. The main
part of the program consisted
on each member naming
their grandparents, parents,
their religious affiliations,
why they came to Meigs
County and traits Inherited
from them. Mrs. Erma Roush
had the special featw:e entitled "Physician Supreme."
The. program concluded with
prayer by Mrs . Richard
Jarvis.

The society voted to pay
one-half of the pledge and to
contribute UO toward .a
canopy at the church. Thirtyfive sick and shut,.in calls
were made during the month
and plans for the next
meeting were announced.
The hostesses served a
dessert course in the social
rooms of the church. Attending in addition to those
named were Mrs . Olan
Genheimer , Mrs . Edison
Hollon Mrs Denver Holter
Mrs. Lawre~ce Napper, Mrs:
Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Uswln,
Nease, Mrs. Erma Roush ,
Mrs Fred Nease Mrs Kerns
Ro~h. Mrs. H~nry ·Salser,
Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. Harry
Wya tt, Mrs. Richard Jarvis
and Mrs. Russ Watson.

Alvin
S. Kaufman,
producer for tile Ohio Valley
Summer Theater (OVST),
has announced the cast for
" Ladies In Retirement"
which Kaufman will direct.
This mystery includes a
cast of six women and one
man. · Rebecca Erwin portrays . Leonra Fiske. the

(lass has
Sunday picnic

Social
Calendar

MatT jaihily
is reunited

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS- 9 AM TO 6 PM

PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 28 THRU 31

.•

'

owner or the rwlic English
You think your son's third· in your achooi hU~'I got~ helleve llhe overlooted ~
country home wherein the grade teacher may have the word (or pre~da not to fact that n.lph baa a hlab IQ;
action of the play is set, and unjusQy marked him as a know), you can tell her lhal and wu bored moat ril the'
Cheryl Kempe accepts the troublemaker and caused your right of inlpecUon 11 Ume In her ciiu. The l'equelt.
challenge of playing Ellen other teachers to treat him given by the Family .OOuld he in· writing. Slllte:
Creed, the mysterious unfairly.
Educational Rlghlt and . what recorda you queaUon ..-.
•
housekeeper and comwnion
. How do you lnd out II you're Privacy Act or 1974. (The 11- objacl kl and how you Ibid.
to Miss Fiske. Both ' Miss right? How do you correct the year-old student can looi at they should he chanled. Keep;
Erwin and Miss K~pe are Injustice (If one has been his own recorda.) .
a copy of the reqtlell.
• '::
from Cleveland.
Here are Important pointa
6. School officials arr'
committed) 1
May Kay Dunlap of
The National Committee to ·remember about your required to re&amp;llOnd kl your :
Granville and Sara Bartlett for Citizens In Education sa,s rights under the Act:
requeet within "a reuonable ,
•t,
of Chatham, New Jersey your son 's complete school
1. Your school Is required til .time·"
•
..
share the tole of Lucy, a recorda are available for advise you annuaUy what · ·. 7. If you are dilulllfte¢;
cockney maid . innocently your inspection . If the clerk records are being kept on with their. decision, you may
caught in the middle of the
your child, the tiUe of thoee request • formal hearing. Atl
suspense.
persons maintaining the this hearing, you may lie.':
Edwin Hardesty from
records, and the offices represented by anyone yo!C
MRS. MARSH ILL
Chillicothe,
is Albert
where the recorda are kept. cboole.
:
Mrs. Marie 1Jrooman
Feather, the only male
2. Although a parent is not
If you sWI have question..
. character in the cast. Joan Marsh, formerly of Mid. requlred to write a request ot about your rights or what yOu:
Krause will play Sister dleport, · is conlin~ to the see his or her chlld'srecorda, should do; you can get
Theresa, a Nun from the . Chillicothe medical Center, it's a good Idea to do 10. Be swers - free :_ from tile:
convent next door to the Room 28-47. She expects to sure to make a copy lor your National Committee l~r :
Fiske home. Krause is from be there lor an indefinite · recorda. The request should C!Uzena in Edu~:~~Uon (NC.:
ColumbusandwiUbeajunior period .
be dated. State that you are CE). The telephone comparly ...
at Ohio University this !aU ..
the parent or legal guardian .will not charge you for cllllril:
Rounding out the players
ollhe chUd (give lhe child's NCCEifyoudlalthenwnbers::
are two women from Athens,
name) and that you want to 84-0andthenlhelettersN-E·!:
SUFFERED ATTACK .
Bunny Baldwin and Lori
see
the child's complete T-W.Q-R-K.
:
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Hayes,
Organ, who have cast as Middleport, received word achool recorda.
'"'
Louisa and Emily Creed, Sunday night that their son,
3. After you make the
.• •
sisters to the housekeeper. Charles Eugene, had suffered
request, school officials have
You can wve hundred; ~
B. J. Rardin an Ohio
~
a heart a!tack. He is confined up to 4S days to produce the
University student, is un- to St. James Hospital in recorda for your inspection.
oven thousands ol dotlar( i"'
derstudy lor the roles of Pontiac, IU.
4. You have the right to see with aluminum or vlny t ~
Louisa and Emily Creed.
all the recorda.
siding.
: 1:,
Designers who will control
~. u you have good reason
FREE ESTI~ATES! ;
the technical aspects of the
to think the recorda are
production are set designer
MORE STEEL ·
inaccurate or unfair in any
CONTACT
Jim Jenkins, lighting
NEW YORK UP!
way and need correction, you
GL£
;:
designer Jim Glendinning, Dt.· otamledes tt c .stelllel protdtuction may request such 8
· · N R. BISSELL
;.
2.6 m1 onne ons 1or correction . For example,
arid coshuner designer Uz o
·'·
AI
; •
Marlin.
the week. ended July 24, a 0.6 · your son's third-grade .
t49,%8.01
~ :
Loann Zimmer is lhe per cen~ increase over the teacher wrote, "Ralph Is a
0
••
assistant to the director ; previous week, according to troublemaker and frequently ·
R
• :
Michael Menken is stage lhe American Iron and Steel disrupts the class." You '-----'4_9. :·2;.:.86;.:0_ _.-~ :
manager and Rlck Lee is Institute.
••' ..••
properties master for the
show.
The murder mystery opens
Thursday Aug. 5 and runs
through Aug . 6 and reopens
Aug.12 through Augl15 at the
Pa~o Theater, Athens, with
•
curtain at 8;,30 p.m.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Rock Springs Junior Sunday
Class enjoyed a picnic at
Forked Run Lake on July 18.
Attending were the Rev.
and Mrs. James Corbitt, Jim,
Kay, Gail, Shelly and Mark,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Eblin,
Dixie, Kim, Tammie and
·Tracy,
Mr . and Mrs. Benton
By AiJNE MOSBY
Cardin's favonte sleeve,
Eblin,
Doug
and Mandy, Mr.
PARIS (UP!) - Pierre the
batwing, flapped
and
Mrs.
James
Evans, Pam,
Cardin, knOwn as the fashion throughout the collection.
Christy and. Jay; Jimmy
designer with a million ideas, Egg-llhaped costa with fox
TUESDAY
came up with the onHided collars and cuffs hsd such
SHOWER for Dick Hayman Jeffers; . Mr . and Mrs.
look today in the Paris winter enormous batwing armholes family Tuesday in the Richard Jeffers, Valerie and
high fashion showings.
that there were literally 110 basement of the Long Bottom Shawn, Mr. and Mrs. George
One-sided jersey leisure sleeves. His main cocktall Methodist Church at 8 p.m. Sisson, Brent and Krista!.
outfits were half skirt and dress Idea was a skinny silk, The couple lost all their
halfmid-calfpan!ll. Countless hitting just below the knee, possessiogs in a recent fire .
dresses wafted by with one with batwing sleeves adding
RACINE AMERICAN
bare shoulder and one sleeve. even more softness to a Legion Auxiliary Tuesday,
Felt cloche hats had only draped top.
7:30 p.m. Potluck refreshhalf a brim. One slender dark
Batwing evening gowns ments. Girls State report will
gray coat hsd half a ruffled floated around in beaded he given.
coll.ar. A muddy green coat clJiffons and silks. One
REEDSVILLE - The Marr
hl!d one sleeve and the other smashing , outfit was pale
CANCER CLINIC at Fam)ly RetmiGn was held
arm showed the long sleeve of gray lace trousers topped Veterans Memorial Hospital Suriday, July 18, at Forked
the black dress underneath. with 8 helow.tbe-knee silver now taking app.ointments for Run Lake here.
,How does that work on a cold lace dress with those batwing month of August . Few apAttending were Mr. and
day?
sleeves.
pomtments open for July 30 i\lrs. Wayland Marr, Mr. and
Another Cardin theme was
Cardin showed lots of clinic. For appointment call Mrs. Larry Marr, Lancaster;
the "strait jacket" -a cape evening trousers plus his 992-7531 or 992-M32, evenings Mr.andMrs. Lepnard (Ruth )
that had no opening except. fantasy halftrouser leisure and weekends phone 992-5832. Lewis, and two grandthe hole for the head and outfits and skintight after&gt;'lki
WEDNESDAY
children, Sharon and Amiee
hugged the arms, ~ tights. Otherwise there were
WILDWOOD GARDEN. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. John
1111ed the Idea for. daytime only a couple of ankle-length Club Picnic Wednesday, 6:30 Kohmann , Jimmy , Jeff,
tweed suits with the ann- trouser outfits for street p.m. at Ft. Meigs, Rutland. Johnny and Laurie and
blndlni! capelet ending at the wear. The thrust of the All members to meet at friend, Canton; Mrs. Lewis
waist. How lhe mannequin Cardin collection was the . Forest Run Church at 6 p.m. (Ruby; · Miller, Tuppers
could hold ·an umbrella or · suit. In the midst of frivolous Bring covered dish and table Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
open her handbag was ~ numbers were pleniy of sober service.
Marr, Mr. and Mrs. George
mystery to the amused audi- suits with narrow &amp;Oft skirts
GALLI A-MEIGS Com- (Beulah) Neigler, , all of
, ence cif buyers and press at mid-calf a~d blousy munity Action Agency will Racine.
from around th~ world.
jackets.
· hold free clothing day for low
Some of the "strait ja.cket"
The Cardin clothes fit in income persons Wednesday
capes feU to mid hlp. Others with the "superwoman" at the old high school building
were so short they turned in.to !berne that Paris seems to be. in Cheshire from 9 a.m. to 2 EVER BACKWARD
off-thHboulder wide collars emphasizing for winter· in a p.m.
SAN FRANCISOO(UPI) ..::.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry
in IOIId colors for printed silk drive to abolish lhe blue jean
POMEROY Lions Club, The world's backward Flowers, Colwnbus, spent the
long evenin~ dresses.
habit.
Wednesday, noon, Meigs Inn . walking champion has weekend here visiting Mr.
AMERICAN LEGION, clainped !be mirrors back on and Mrs. Albert Roush and
family . .
Feeney - Bennett Post 1211, his eyeglasses.
Plennie
Wingo,
81,
is
off
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoefiich
Middleport, 6:30p.m. dinner
,again,
this
time 1111 a two-to. · _and. daughter, Jayne, have
with delegates to Buckeye
CHESTER - The annual Mrs: Sara Bailey, Mrs. Boys' State and their fathers, ~onth backWard trek returned from vacation. They
picnic of the Young Wives Brenda LaDeuax and Mrs. aitd the Eighth 1 District from San Francisco's Fisher- visited in .Bieinheim, Ont.,
Club of Chester was set for Jane Coates.
Commander as guests . man's Wharf via lhe coast Canada witb Mr.' and Mrs.
Aug. !4at6p.m.atRoyal Oak
Meeting at 7: 30 p.m. N&lt;r highway to the Santa Monica, Harvey Nicholson and
family, in Amherstburg, Oot.
Park durin8 a recent meeting
meeting of the Auxiliary this CaUl., pier.
During
the
Great
with John Nicholson, and in
·at lhe home of Mrs. Susie
month.
Depressioo
of
the
':!IE,
W'mgo
Columbus
with Mr. and Mrs.
Beeler.
THURSDAY
gained
pubUdty
by
walking
Mike
Hammer
and daughter,
During · the meeting
FREE CLOTHING Day at
HOMECOMING SLATED
backwards
from
Santa
Kimberly,
and
Mr. and Mrs.
presided over by Mrs . Wa
1be annual homecoming of The Salvation Army, But,. Monica to Texas and lhen on Dallas Jones and infant
Van Meter, several fund the Carmel Church nea r ternut Ave., Pomeroy, ThursdaQghter, Christal.
raising projects were Racine will be held Sunday, day, 10 a.m. to 12 noon . All to tbe the East Coast.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred White
discusied. Mrs. Norma Aug. 8. Sunday school will be area residents welcome.
Hawthorne reported on the held at 9:30a.m. followed by
of
Route 4, Pomeroy, had as
MEIGS VARSITY football NISEI VALOR
their
recent guests, Mr. and
swine nu vaccine which she morning worship at 10:30. A squad members Thursday
CJUCAGO (UP!) - U.S.
1111d will be available through basket dinner will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the high school. Secretary of Defense Donald Mrs. Walter Barrick of North
lhe Meigs County Health .12 ,noon. The afternoon serSUNDAY .
Rumsfeld S11nday night Canton,
Department.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
EASTERN STAR family . praised ·Japanese-American
vice will begin at 1:30 p.m.
Lochary
and family of near
Arepcirl on the bicentennial The public is invi ted .
World
War
U
veterans
for
picnic at Forest Acres Park,
Chicago
are
here visiting Mr.
baby contest was given by
fighting
for
freedom
while
near Rutland at 2 p.m.
and
Mrs.
Leo
Story and Mr.
Mrs. Karen Young. It was
their
families
sat
in
Sunday. Grand pages and
and
Mrs.
Patrick
Lochary.
decided that a boy's outfit,
aides of District 25 to be coocentratim camps in the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ophs
Offutt
one of the bicentennial baby
United Slates.
honored.
hsve
returned
from
a
two
contest prizes, will go to lhe
The executive order that
SING SCHEDULED
Infant son or a club member
created the camps was "a week vacation in Ontario,
A hymn sing will he held
Iince lhe bicentennial baby Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
terrible emtradlction of our Canada.
VISIT HERE
was a girl.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack WhitUe·
Freedom Gospel Mission.
Mrs. Myrtle Watkins and basic principles," Rumafeld
Refreshments were served. Singers will include the Ann -Christy of Akron were said during a speech before of Worthington spent the
Mrl. Norma Hawthorne won Bissell Brothers Quartet and recent visitors of Mrs. Beulah the Nisei Veterans Reunion of weekend here visiting her
the door prize. Others at- other local singers. The White and Mrs. Florence Japanese-American war mother, Mrs. Margaret
Neuman.
tending were Unda Well, public is invited.
veterans.
Harmay.

Pierre Cardin shows
'one-sided look ' today

"•

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!976

MEAT
WE SELL ONLY
USDA CHOICE- BEEF
.

QUAtronES .RIGHTs RESERVED
.We.Aceept Federal Food StamPS

'

33 oz.
VAN CAMP
N0.2%
CAN

EANS

i

.....

3

2
KRAn

~---------------- =

_Annual picnic scheduled.

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PtEASE SEND FULL INFORMATION

GOLDEN ISLE

-AMERICAN
..

~•

KRAFT

..-•

--------- 1FOR INFORMATION CUT &amp; MAIL)---------·

M.ACARONI
&amp;
CHEESE DINNERS

i

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ON YOUR COURSES: .

~

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NAME------'---'---------'ADDRESS _ _~---....:·_ _ _ _ __:_

''

•••

....•

•
•••

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-Associ~le Degrees in Business Administration or Executive!

...•.
•

Secretanal.
- Nine ~nd Twelve Month Diploma Courses in Jr. Accounting,
Secretanal or General Office. - Courses approved for Veterans
Monthly Benefits C!f $270 or 5321 plus $22. far each dependent. School Loans available. - Job placement assistance.
·

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....•••
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•

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
.

2nd Av~. &amp; Locust

..

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HAMs ·

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WHOLE OR HALF. ••••••••••••••••••••L! ••• ~ 1 29
69
CENTER CUT .HAM SLICES••••• '•••~.!

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1

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Plione 446-43417

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•
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You're Always Welcome at Phebe's! ••

French City USDA
Choice Beef
PHEBE'S STORE

-

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JUly 27:31

to

Riili't Reserved lfinllQuaiillties'.
We Gllldly Acctpl Ftcl. FOOd !ltamPS

~""'·

Monday lhru Friday
9:001o7:00
Sal1.rdoov 91o 9

19

•'

LIBBY'S WHOLE KERNEL

$1.•. :i•.
.•. .•
.
4
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GR. BEANS............... ~n, . ..
,.,..
$1
'
49. ..
PEANUT BUTTER ..... ~~:..... ~ ~
LIBBY'S CUT

.. :

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20

$}29

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..........................
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5 ·$1
18

SLICED

NECTARINES
lb. 39•

FAMILY SIZE

•

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:Moz.·

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.
Fabric Soft
:.~·· 89$ .:..." :~
. ener... .. ...........
• ••
DowNY
.

TIDE

.

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ORANGE DRINK......~': .... 69 . .~ ·

10 lb.

~· ·

.

.....••

FIRESIDE SAL TINE

CRACKERS .................~~: .. 49$~~s
........

-

L- COUPON J

KEEBLER

v~ Bel Buttermilk.. ...............~-~!·..79'
1

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.COOK IES

fltcan Sandin
Rich ' N Chips

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f&gt;kg.

79' :; :

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DRINK MIX
280~CAN .$Jl9

COUPON c

AJAX LIQUID
FOR DISHES

NO. 185

W/C

22 OZ. BTL

Expires: 7-31-76
Twin City Gateway .

59~

W/C

•

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•

•

AJAX

.-SOAP POWDER
W/C

•

. NO. 105

.GIANT BOX
·'

99~

.
-·
·' Expires: 7-31-76
Twin City Gateway

•

W/C

~~:· 69~

GOLDEN ISLE .

· WHITE CLOUD

BLEACH

TOILET TISSUE
ROLL 69~

49~

.
4

W/C

, PKG.

Expires : 7-31-76

VIVA TOWELS

2· R~~ 99~
Expires: 7-31 -76
Twin City Gateway

W/C.

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COUPON

•

COUPON

69~

Expires: 7-31 -76 .
Twin City Gateway

•

Twin Citv Gateway

\ __ 1_ ULJPON

NO. 125
9 OZ. BTL

GAL

="" •

Expi~e~ 7-31-76

Expires: 7-31.76
Twin City Gateway

VANISI+ :SOLID

CANS

POT A TOES

COUPON

HAWAIIAN PUNCH

oz.

CRINKLE CUT OR FRENCH FRIED

PRICE GOOD ALL WEEK

'I • .

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REIGEL ,

BACON ................1~:.~1 59

• •

~

SLICED HAM ........ ,., ......... :.. ~~·..~! 59
HAM .DELICACY............ ., .. !~;-~1 59
REIGEL

•

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~lh lb.

WAGNER'S

DUBUQUE CHOPPED

BANANAS

~

PAL BRANO

FRENCH CITY

.

$1: ~

lb.

SIRLOIN
•

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CORN....................;....4 ~;ns

CHOPPED
-

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16

ORE-IDA
FROZEN

•

8 PK. CARTON

s:

2

"

.09

PT. BOffiES

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FROZEN ORANGE JUICE

DIET RITE COLA

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:

BEANS..... ~~~:~~ ......... 3 ~~~; $1

GOLDEN ISLE

OR

....

STOCK UP ON LUCK'S

FROZEN FOOD

ROYAL CROWN COLA

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State Reg. No. 71 -02-0032B

71A oz.
BOXES
.

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ACT NOW

SUPERIOR
SEMI BONELESS

'1
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99~

200Z. .
· somEs .

.

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59~

Cream
Cheese :K~~49~
.

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EVENING CLASSES
DAY CLASSED
ALTERNATING CLASSES

$ 49

CAN

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CHUCK .ROAST. ..... ~ ...~.69$

COUNTRY TIME

Qpen E_ves. Til9:00.

all-:

ENROLL NOW FOR FALL
QUARTER AT GBC

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�8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July %7,1976

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Forest Run ·UMW gathers · Director announces Complete school records
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cast for mystery
open tfJ parent lnspectJnn

The United Methodist
Women of the Forest Run
Methodist church held Its
regular monthly meeting
Tuesday evemng with Mrs.
Edith Sisson, Mrs. Ray
Thomas, Mrs. Para Yabya
and Mrs. Henry Thomas as
hostesses.
The meeting began with a
song, "Oh .~od Our Hope in
Ages Past foUowed by a
responsive reading by ~e
group .. Mrs. Harry Wyatt s
devotions were taken from
· Hebrew~ and.,the meditatio~
was enhtled Faith m God .
followed by prayer.
Mrs. John Scott, program
leader,chose "Our Heritage"
lor her topic. Several talks
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were given . on the blcentennlal and the leader cited
quotations from Churchill,
Webster and Mc~uley on
things contributing to the
greatness of a country.
Re~dings were given
pertammg to the settlement
of Meigs County. The main
part of the program consisted
on each member naming
their grandparents, parents,
their religious affiliations,
why they came to Meigs
County and traits Inherited
from them. Mrs. Erma Roush
had the special featw:e entitled "Physician Supreme."
The. program concluded with
prayer by Mrs . Richard
Jarvis.

The society voted to pay
one-half of the pledge and to
contribute UO toward .a
canopy at the church. Thirtyfive sick and shut,.in calls
were made during the month
and plans for the next
meeting were announced.
The hostesses served a
dessert course in the social
rooms of the church. Attending in addition to those
named were Mrs . Olan
Genheimer , Mrs . Edison
Hollon Mrs Denver Holter
Mrs. Lawre~ce Napper, Mrs:
Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Uswln,
Nease, Mrs. Erma Roush ,
Mrs Fred Nease Mrs Kerns
Ro~h. Mrs. H~nry ·Salser,
Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. Harry
Wya tt, Mrs. Richard Jarvis
and Mrs. Russ Watson.

Alvin
S. Kaufman,
producer for tile Ohio Valley
Summer Theater (OVST),
has announced the cast for
" Ladies In Retirement"
which Kaufman will direct.
This mystery includes a
cast of six women and one
man. · Rebecca Erwin portrays . Leonra Fiske. the

(lass has
Sunday picnic

Social
Calendar

MatT jaihily
is reunited

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS- 9 AM TO 6 PM

PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 28 THRU 31

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owner or the rwlic English
You think your son's third· in your achooi hU~'I got~ helleve llhe overlooted ~
country home wherein the grade teacher may have the word (or pre~da not to fact that n.lph baa a hlab IQ;
action of the play is set, and unjusQy marked him as a know), you can tell her lhal and wu bored moat ril the'
Cheryl Kempe accepts the troublemaker and caused your right of inlpecUon 11 Ume In her ciiu. The l'equelt.
challenge of playing Ellen other teachers to treat him given by the Family .OOuld he in· writing. Slllte:
Creed, the mysterious unfairly.
Educational Rlghlt and . what recorda you queaUon ..-.
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housekeeper and comwnion
. How do you lnd out II you're Privacy Act or 1974. (The 11- objacl kl and how you Ibid.
to Miss Fiske. Both ' Miss right? How do you correct the year-old student can looi at they should he chanled. Keep;
Erwin and Miss K~pe are Injustice (If one has been his own recorda.) .
a copy of the reqtlell.
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from Cleveland.
Here are Important pointa
6. School officials arr'
committed) 1
May Kay Dunlap of
The National Committee to ·remember about your required to re&amp;llOnd kl your :
Granville and Sara Bartlett for Citizens In Education sa,s rights under the Act:
requeet within "a reuonable ,
•t,
of Chatham, New Jersey your son 's complete school
1. Your school Is required til .time·"
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share the tole of Lucy, a recorda are available for advise you annuaUy what · ·. 7. If you are dilulllfte¢;
cockney maid . innocently your inspection . If the clerk records are being kept on with their. decision, you may
caught in the middle of the
your child, the tiUe of thoee request • formal hearing. Atl
suspense.
persons maintaining the this hearing, you may lie.':
Edwin Hardesty from
records, and the offices represented by anyone yo!C
MRS. MARSH ILL
Chillicothe,
is Albert
where the recorda are kept. cboole.
:
Mrs. Marie 1Jrooman
Feather, the only male
2. Although a parent is not
If you sWI have question..
. character in the cast. Joan Marsh, formerly of Mid. requlred to write a request ot about your rights or what yOu:
Krause will play Sister dleport, · is conlin~ to the see his or her chlld'srecorda, should do; you can get
Theresa, a Nun from the . Chillicothe medical Center, it's a good Idea to do 10. Be swers - free :_ from tile:
convent next door to the Room 28-47. She expects to sure to make a copy lor your National Committee l~r :
Fiske home. Krause is from be there lor an indefinite · recorda. The request should C!Uzena in Edu~:~~Uon (NC.:
ColumbusandwiUbeajunior period .
be dated. State that you are CE). The telephone comparly ...
at Ohio University this !aU ..
the parent or legal guardian .will not charge you for cllllril:
Rounding out the players
ollhe chUd (give lhe child's NCCEifyoudlalthenwnbers::
are two women from Athens,
name) and that you want to 84-0andthenlhelettersN-E·!:
SUFFERED ATTACK .
Bunny Baldwin and Lori
see
the child's complete T-W.Q-R-K.
:
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Hayes,
Organ, who have cast as Middleport, received word achool recorda.
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Louisa and Emily Creed, Sunday night that their son,
3. After you make the
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sisters to the housekeeper. Charles Eugene, had suffered
request, school officials have
You can wve hundred; ~
B. J. Rardin an Ohio
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a heart a!tack. He is confined up to 4S days to produce the
University student, is un- to St. James Hospital in recorda for your inspection.
oven thousands ol dotlar( i"'
derstudy lor the roles of Pontiac, IU.
4. You have the right to see with aluminum or vlny t ~
Louisa and Emily Creed.
all the recorda.
siding.
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Designers who will control
~. u you have good reason
FREE ESTI~ATES! ;
the technical aspects of the
to think the recorda are
production are set designer
MORE STEEL ·
inaccurate or unfair in any
CONTACT
Jim Jenkins, lighting
NEW YORK UP!
way and need correction, you
GL£
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designer Jim Glendinning, Dt.· otamledes tt c .stelllel protdtuction may request such 8
· · N R. BISSELL
;.
2.6 m1 onne ons 1or correction . For example,
arid coshuner designer Uz o
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Marlin.
the week. ended July 24, a 0.6 · your son's third-grade .
t49,%8.01
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Loann Zimmer is lhe per cen~ increase over the teacher wrote, "Ralph Is a
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assistant to the director ; previous week, according to troublemaker and frequently ·
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Michael Menken is stage lhe American Iron and Steel disrupts the class." You '-----'4_9. :·2;.:.86;.:0_ _.-~ :
manager and Rlck Lee is Institute.
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properties master for the
show.
The murder mystery opens
Thursday Aug. 5 and runs
through Aug . 6 and reopens
Aug.12 through Augl15 at the
Pa~o Theater, Athens, with
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curtain at 8;,30 p.m.

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Rock Springs Junior Sunday
Class enjoyed a picnic at
Forked Run Lake on July 18.
Attending were the Rev.
and Mrs. James Corbitt, Jim,
Kay, Gail, Shelly and Mark,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Eblin,
Dixie, Kim, Tammie and
·Tracy,
Mr . and Mrs. Benton
By AiJNE MOSBY
Cardin's favonte sleeve,
Eblin,
Doug
and Mandy, Mr.
PARIS (UP!) - Pierre the
batwing, flapped
and
Mrs.
James
Evans, Pam,
Cardin, knOwn as the fashion throughout the collection.
Christy and. Jay; Jimmy
designer with a million ideas, Egg-llhaped costa with fox
TUESDAY
came up with the onHided collars and cuffs hsd such
SHOWER for Dick Hayman Jeffers; . Mr . and Mrs.
look today in the Paris winter enormous batwing armholes family Tuesday in the Richard Jeffers, Valerie and
high fashion showings.
that there were literally 110 basement of the Long Bottom Shawn, Mr. and Mrs. George
One-sided jersey leisure sleeves. His main cocktall Methodist Church at 8 p.m. Sisson, Brent and Krista!.
outfits were half skirt and dress Idea was a skinny silk, The couple lost all their
halfmid-calfpan!ll. Countless hitting just below the knee, possessiogs in a recent fire .
dresses wafted by with one with batwing sleeves adding
RACINE AMERICAN
bare shoulder and one sleeve. even more softness to a Legion Auxiliary Tuesday,
Felt cloche hats had only draped top.
7:30 p.m. Potluck refreshhalf a brim. One slender dark
Batwing evening gowns ments. Girls State report will
gray coat hsd half a ruffled floated around in beaded he given.
coll.ar. A muddy green coat clJiffons and silks. One
REEDSVILLE - The Marr
hl!d one sleeve and the other smashing , outfit was pale
CANCER CLINIC at Fam)ly RetmiGn was held
arm showed the long sleeve of gray lace trousers topped Veterans Memorial Hospital Suriday, July 18, at Forked
the black dress underneath. with 8 helow.tbe-knee silver now taking app.ointments for Run Lake here.
,How does that work on a cold lace dress with those batwing month of August . Few apAttending were Mr. and
day?
sleeves.
pomtments open for July 30 i\lrs. Wayland Marr, Mr. and
Another Cardin theme was
Cardin showed lots of clinic. For appointment call Mrs. Larry Marr, Lancaster;
the "strait jacket" -a cape evening trousers plus his 992-7531 or 992-M32, evenings Mr.andMrs. Lepnard (Ruth )
that had no opening except. fantasy halftrouser leisure and weekends phone 992-5832. Lewis, and two grandthe hole for the head and outfits and skintight after&gt;'lki
WEDNESDAY
children, Sharon and Amiee
hugged the arms, ~ tights. Otherwise there were
WILDWOOD GARDEN. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. John
1111ed the Idea for. daytime only a couple of ankle-length Club Picnic Wednesday, 6:30 Kohmann , Jimmy , Jeff,
tweed suits with the ann- trouser outfits for street p.m. at Ft. Meigs, Rutland. Johnny and Laurie and
blndlni! capelet ending at the wear. The thrust of the All members to meet at friend, Canton; Mrs. Lewis
waist. How lhe mannequin Cardin collection was the . Forest Run Church at 6 p.m. (Ruby; · Miller, Tuppers
could hold ·an umbrella or · suit. In the midst of frivolous Bring covered dish and table Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
open her handbag was ~ numbers were pleniy of sober service.
Marr, Mr. and Mrs. George
mystery to the amused audi- suits with narrow &amp;Oft skirts
GALLI A-MEIGS Com- (Beulah) Neigler, , all of
, ence cif buyers and press at mid-calf a~d blousy munity Action Agency will Racine.
from around th~ world.
jackets.
· hold free clothing day for low
Some of the "strait ja.cket"
The Cardin clothes fit in income persons Wednesday
capes feU to mid hlp. Others with the "superwoman" at the old high school building
were so short they turned in.to !berne that Paris seems to be. in Cheshire from 9 a.m. to 2 EVER BACKWARD
off-thHboulder wide collars emphasizing for winter· in a p.m.
SAN FRANCISOO(UPI) ..::.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry
in IOIId colors for printed silk drive to abolish lhe blue jean
POMEROY Lions Club, The world's backward Flowers, Colwnbus, spent the
long evenin~ dresses.
habit.
Wednesday, noon, Meigs Inn . walking champion has weekend here visiting Mr.
AMERICAN LEGION, clainped !be mirrors back on and Mrs. Albert Roush and
family . .
Feeney - Bennett Post 1211, his eyeglasses.
Plennie
Wingo,
81,
is
off
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoefiich
Middleport, 6:30p.m. dinner
,again,
this
time 1111 a two-to. · _and. daughter, Jayne, have
with delegates to Buckeye
CHESTER - The annual Mrs: Sara Bailey, Mrs. Boys' State and their fathers, ~onth backWard trek returned from vacation. They
picnic of the Young Wives Brenda LaDeuax and Mrs. aitd the Eighth 1 District from San Francisco's Fisher- visited in .Bieinheim, Ont.,
Club of Chester was set for Jane Coates.
Commander as guests . man's Wharf via lhe coast Canada witb Mr.' and Mrs.
Aug. !4at6p.m.atRoyal Oak
Meeting at 7: 30 p.m. N&lt;r highway to the Santa Monica, Harvey Nicholson and
family, in Amherstburg, Oot.
Park durin8 a recent meeting
meeting of the Auxiliary this CaUl., pier.
During
the
Great
with John Nicholson, and in
·at lhe home of Mrs. Susie
month.
Depressioo
of
the
':!IE,
W'mgo
Columbus
with Mr. and Mrs.
Beeler.
THURSDAY
gained
pubUdty
by
walking
Mike
Hammer
and daughter,
During · the meeting
FREE CLOTHING Day at
HOMECOMING SLATED
backwards
from
Santa
Kimberly,
and
Mr. and Mrs.
presided over by Mrs . Wa
1be annual homecoming of The Salvation Army, But,. Monica to Texas and lhen on Dallas Jones and infant
Van Meter, several fund the Carmel Church nea r ternut Ave., Pomeroy, ThursdaQghter, Christal.
raising projects were Racine will be held Sunday, day, 10 a.m. to 12 noon . All to tbe the East Coast.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred White
discusied. Mrs. Norma Aug. 8. Sunday school will be area residents welcome.
Hawthorne reported on the held at 9:30a.m. followed by
of
Route 4, Pomeroy, had as
MEIGS VARSITY football NISEI VALOR
their
recent guests, Mr. and
swine nu vaccine which she morning worship at 10:30. A squad members Thursday
CJUCAGO (UP!) - U.S.
1111d will be available through basket dinner will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the high school. Secretary of Defense Donald Mrs. Walter Barrick of North
lhe Meigs County Health .12 ,noon. The afternoon serSUNDAY .
Rumsfeld S11nday night Canton,
Department.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
EASTERN STAR family . praised ·Japanese-American
vice will begin at 1:30 p.m.
Lochary
and family of near
Arepcirl on the bicentennial The public is invi ted .
World
War
U
veterans
for
picnic at Forest Acres Park,
Chicago
are
here visiting Mr.
baby contest was given by
fighting
for
freedom
while
near Rutland at 2 p.m.
and
Mrs.
Leo
Story and Mr.
Mrs. Karen Young. It was
their
families
sat
in
Sunday. Grand pages and
and
Mrs.
Patrick
Lochary.
decided that a boy's outfit,
aides of District 25 to be coocentratim camps in the
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ophs
Offutt
one of the bicentennial baby
United Slates.
honored.
hsve
returned
from
a
two
contest prizes, will go to lhe
The executive order that
SING SCHEDULED
Infant son or a club member
created the camps was "a week vacation in Ontario,
A hymn sing will he held
Iince lhe bicentennial baby Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
terrible emtradlction of our Canada.
VISIT HERE
was a girl.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack WhitUe·
Freedom Gospel Mission.
Mrs. Myrtle Watkins and basic principles," Rumafeld
Refreshments were served. Singers will include the Ann -Christy of Akron were said during a speech before of Worthington spent the
Mrl. Norma Hawthorne won Bissell Brothers Quartet and recent visitors of Mrs. Beulah the Nisei Veterans Reunion of weekend here visiting her
the door prize. Others at- other local singers. The White and Mrs. Florence Japanese-American war mother, Mrs. Margaret
Neuman.
tending were Unda Well, public is invited.
veterans.
Harmay.

Pierre Cardin shows
'one-sided look ' today

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!976

MEAT
WE SELL ONLY
USDA CHOICE- BEEF
.

QUAtronES .RIGHTs RESERVED
.We.Aceept Federal Food StamPS

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33 oz.
VAN CAMP
N0.2%
CAN

EANS

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3

2
KRAn

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_Annual picnic scheduled.

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PtEASE SEND FULL INFORMATION

GOLDEN ISLE

-AMERICAN
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KRAFT

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--------- 1FOR INFORMATION CUT &amp; MAIL)---------·

M.ACARONI
&amp;
CHEESE DINNERS

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ON YOUR COURSES: .

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NAME------'---'---------'ADDRESS _ _~---....:·_ _ _ _ __:_

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-Associ~le Degrees in Business Administration or Executive!

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Secretanal.
- Nine ~nd Twelve Month Diploma Courses in Jr. Accounting,
Secretanal or General Office. - Courses approved for Veterans
Monthly Benefits C!f $270 or 5321 plus $22. far each dependent. School Loans available. - Job placement assistance.
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GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
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2nd Av~. &amp; Locust

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HAMs ·

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WHOLE OR HALF. ••••••••••••••••••••L! ••• ~ 1 29
69
CENTER CUT .HAM SLICES••••• '•••~.!

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Plione 446-43417

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You're Always Welcome at Phebe's! ••

French City USDA
Choice Beef
PHEBE'S STORE

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JUly 27:31

to

Riili't Reserved lfinllQuaiillties'.
We Gllldly Acctpl Ftcl. FOOd !ltamPS

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Monday lhru Friday
9:001o7:00
Sal1.rdoov 91o 9

19

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LIBBY'S WHOLE KERNEL

$1.•. :i•.
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4
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GR. BEANS............... ~n, . ..
,.,..
$1
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49. ..
PEANUT BUTTER ..... ~~:..... ~ ~
LIBBY'S CUT

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20

$}29

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WI ENERS
..........................
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5 ·$1
18

SLICED

NECTARINES
lb. 39•

FAMILY SIZE

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:Moz.·

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Fabric Soft
:.~·· 89$ .:..." :~
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DowNY
.

TIDE

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ORANGE DRINK......~': .... 69 . .~ ·

10 lb.

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FIRESIDE SAL TINE

CRACKERS .................~~: .. 49$~~s
........

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L- COUPON J

KEEBLER

v~ Bel Buttermilk.. ...............~-~!·..79'
1

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fltcan Sandin
Rich ' N Chips

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f&gt;kg.

79' :; :

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DRINK MIX
280~CAN .$Jl9

COUPON c

AJAX LIQUID
FOR DISHES

NO. 185

W/C

22 OZ. BTL

Expires: 7-31-76
Twin City Gateway .

59~

W/C

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AJAX

.-SOAP POWDER
W/C

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. NO. 105

.GIANT BOX
·'

99~

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·' Expires: 7-31-76
Twin City Gateway

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~~:· 69~

GOLDEN ISLE .

· WHITE CLOUD

BLEACH

TOILET TISSUE
ROLL 69~

49~

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4

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Expires : 7-31-76

VIVA TOWELS

2· R~~ 99~
Expires: 7-31 -76
Twin City Gateway

W/C.

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COUPON

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COUPON

69~

Expires: 7-31 -76 .
Twin City Gateway

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Twin Citv Gateway

\ __ 1_ ULJPON

NO. 125
9 OZ. BTL

GAL

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Expi~e~ 7-31-76

Expires: 7-31.76
Twin City Gateway

VANISI+ :SOLID

CANS

POT A TOES

COUPON

HAWAIIAN PUNCH

oz.

CRINKLE CUT OR FRENCH FRIED

PRICE GOOD ALL WEEK

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REIGEL ,

BACON ................1~:.~1 59

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SLICED HAM ........ ,., ......... :.. ~~·..~! 59
HAM .DELICACY............ ., .. !~;-~1 59
REIGEL

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~lh lb.

WAGNER'S

DUBUQUE CHOPPED

BANANAS

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PAL BRANO

FRENCH CITY

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$1: ~

lb.

SIRLOIN
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CORN....................;....4 ~;ns

CHOPPED
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ORE-IDA
FROZEN

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PT. BOffiES

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FROZEN ORANGE JUICE

DIET RITE COLA

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BEANS..... ~~~:~~ ......... 3 ~~~; $1

GOLDEN ISLE

OR

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STOCK UP ON LUCK'S

FROZEN FOOD

ROYAL CROWN COLA

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State Reg. No. 71 -02-0032B

71A oz.
BOXES
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ACT NOW

SUPERIOR
SEMI BONELESS

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99~

200Z. .
· somEs .

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59~

Cream
Cheese :K~~49~
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EVENING CLASSES
DAY CLASSED
ALTERNATING CLASSES

$ 49

CAN

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CHUCK .ROAST. ..... ~ ...~.69$

COUNTRY TIME

Qpen E_ves. Til9:00.

all-:

ENROLL NOW FOR FALL
QUARTER AT GBC

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Dally Sentinel. Mlddleoort.Pomeroy, 0 .. TUesday, Julv 'r/. 19'/C
10- Till n.ltu '
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. .,..,Sentlnei,Micldleport.P&lt;mer,O:, TUeeday,July 27;11176

p

. TOM TIEDE -

Is America

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Before

correc -

2 SIGNS

tions ecce_pted first day or
PUblicat ion .

ATLANTA- The Supreme disappointment.
Court's decision to ratify
Well, I'm guessing about • TheRIOULATION$
PubliShtr n$trves
capital punishment In the disapp&lt;Jintm~nt. I am
the right to edit or reject
ads detmed obt.
Georgia and some other biased as to the •tUtudes of 1 .Jny
lectlon a l. The publisher
states ral!Je$ an lntereaUng those who were there. It was • will
not be responsible for
mort than one h1correct
qu~tlon for modern Jour· In an open air courtyard and
Insertion .
· ·
nallsm :howtocoverthefirst the publlc was Invited.
RATES .
For Want Ad S.rvlct
guy to fry ? Given today's Perhaps 200 were present.
5 . cents 'ptr word one
media resources, not to They were quiet and I supInsertion.
·
mehUon Ita gall, one suspects pose
as
expectantly
Minimum ChtrQt Sl .OO.
1~ cents per word t~ree
· Walter Cronkite will bring the frightened as I, yet they were
consecutive insertions . ·
special Into the living room there by choice and not by
26 c:ents per word six
consecut ive Insertions .
while the New York Times accident and Ills not unfair to
~ 25 Per Cent Discount on
prints the fuU text of the Judge fllat they were tempted
pa id ads and ads paid
condemned's last words.
by the anticipation of
Within 10 di)'S ,
CARD OF THANKS
• For reasons rooted in anqulsh.
&amp; OBITUARY
historic suspicion, the Uiw
The prisoner was taken to a
52.00 for 80 word
m inimum .
demands there must be wall of the yard by several
Etch lddlllonal word 3
witnesses to state executions. officers dressed In the
c&amp;nts.
I LIND ADS
Then why not everybody? uniforms of authority and
Additional 2$c Charge
.The . !elevlslon mig hi be caps with black bills pushed
per Advertisement.
.
OFFICE HO\IRS
IJIOIISored by Con solidi! ted over the . eyes. There was
1:30 a.m. lo S·OO p m
Edison, the detaUs 1n ·the some. conlusion ·at first.
Dally, B:Jo a.m . ';0 Ji:oo
prints should appropriately of,,the officers had the man . Noon Saturday.
P~o~e toda v 992·2156.
Jump to the obituary pages, loieel before the wall, but it
and millions of viewers and was decided that the wall (or
NOTICES
readers throughout the world the chopping block ) was too
ATTN.: II
could be certain justice 18 high. He was lifted to a
A~L HOUSEWIVES
All Vard SaltS, Rummage
done
under
properly standing position, then asked
POrch and BISement Porch
~ytng circumstances.
to bend over so that his and
Basement sate&amp; etc
must be Pl ld In edv'ance .
. I say terrifying because 1 foreann and hand rested
Get yours In early bY
have some eJperlence In the Dally on the cement.
stopping by our office ilt
llusinesB of witnessing pious
One officer stood behind
Tht Dally Sentinel. 111
Court St. or writing Box
slaughter. Once In Saigon 1 him. Another held his free
72.9, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
·saw Olinese bwlinessman ann, It appeared as If his
~1th your rtmlttanu .
shot by a Vietnamese firing othe'r appendage was tied In ·
aiJuad - In the market place · place somehow. Then It was
while the fresh fruit was dooe with a weapon . ~ coUld:
..-riving. Anothet time •In, • not see. And without ,a word
Cambodia I was present fl'dm the thief ~ nor lhe AERIA~ PHOTOGRAPHY _ hove
wllen a free Ji&lt;il'ld ally hit an ~r.~ wd fOr that !palter,
Oet i~l _Pholol Of yoUr COnslru&lt;·
enemy soldier ' much to hard
Quickly the man was cut
hon sote, bus;non , cool ond
-'th
~
'
loose and
U
901 leases of your fo rm. Ken
~
arlflebu .. lnthetemple.
'
apparen Y at.
Grove, phorogmpher Chester
And also, I've seen corporal !ended to. ":e had passed out,
Ohio. Phone 985'•155:
·
~ punishment apparently. bring or perhaps It was more than WEO\)ING PHOTOGRAPHY _
aD and to the life of a thief in
The rumtr afterward , Remember rho doy loreverl
SUdl Arabia. Terrifying Is a Was that he had died of a
The comploire srory of you~
mild adjective for 81DCtloned heart attack; it's said that . wedd•ng •n 0 beout;ful olbvm.
''""""
happens someUmes.
Ccrlt
Ken Chesler,
Gro'&lt;~er
~..
· Phorogropher,
Qh;o:
., Of the three, the Arab
llmaybethemanllved.lf
Phone985.. 15S.
·
pbnlahment W8S the 11108t ~d ~ =andsurely never GOlDEN WEDDING Ann;versory.
tntereetlng. As I remembel- .
WI
.
agaln: He
Preserve this wonderlul doy
the viCtim had been I!OIIviCted 'Jil'Ould never work with the
wllh p~togropho ofrhe lom•ly
dt' some sort of serious hand again, either. and o'ogo, rher, wh;th youkrlnends ond
.,, ..,.~,
·
mlghl b ---•
course t e co el Coli ~en
- . - , , and .vera! 0~ ,
• Y ·~ly, take
Grover P~tography, Chesler,
C!'ID*· Saudi Arabia ·lst!l},-r"'IG)tleJ!Ung with the other lOr' Ohio. Pho0Jo985-m5 .
f6llowa the ancient notloo'OI! . :•. 1~~1 -but I can' t say. I t; &lt;;RAPEFRUIT PJII wilh Dodow eot
·tooth for a tooth and, at leaal ' CI,Q ~stlfy Only to theo;~t!sly;ng m;olo and 'lose
up IG the Ume of my visit ... llflltalily of the moment and . ·-rght. n~w ••Ira otrengrh lorlome years back, the nation my feeling this klnd of mulo , Nelson Drugs.

Pomeroy
OF
r Co.
QUAun Moto_

·1970 RENAULT 4 Dr.
Good tires. ~le~n Interior, grey finish.

'that.

.

radio, ~ sp~o

1971 GMC 4SOO StriH

v8

13891

.

POwer steering and brakes On I 8 900. • - eng ine,
like new.
'
Y •
miles
. . Clean,

POMEROY MOTOR ·co~
·

OPEN

EVE~ii:OO P. M..

, POMERQ1!.

•

RACrNE
CARPEl SHOP

SWIMMING
POOLS

ASSORTED RUBBER

Al!av• Mtd belaw gn~und
pool kill for tht clo~l- 1
YoiWMII !Mn.
All pooiiUPPIIft IVIIilbla,

Ra~i ne.

Ohio

BACK..CARPETING

C)ttiO _

.

·

..
12\
~

94t-28i4

6-7·1 mo.

GREI&lt;T,

3 AND

G"'S station operator with tune-

4

RM. furnished and unopts . Phone 992•

furn ished

5434.

and broke exp&amp;rience .
Mobile Hqme Pork,i;,
Have own tools. Must be COUNTRY
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
reliable. no booze. Write Bo~e
large lots with concrete patios
129fJ, % The Daily S"ntinel,
sidewalks,
runners and off
Pomeroy, Oh.io ,.5769.
street parking, Phone 992-7Al9 . ·
up

Aluminum Siding,
.Roofing, .Gutters,
Painting and Repar

WILL DO .odd jobs, rooJ;ng, po;n.
. tmg. houling; free work, ond
mow;ng . Phone 992-7•09.

$130

Rullond
742:ma
All Wo rk Guaranleed
Free Esllmatts

~~~

RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS

;·z~~t.;~:

iiii·~~22i.iii~i~

..............-..JJ
SMITH Nil SON
MOIORS,INC.

992-7320 evenings
6-27 -76

t

RURAL, modern, electric, 3
bedrooms , kitche n, living
room, both, fin ished basement
laundry, recreation; S26,90o, j
acre: $28,900, 3 and two·thirds

ocres. Phone (6")9•9·2748.

HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport, near Rutland.

Call 992-7481.

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,

2 b.drooms, large modern kit·
chen, forced oir furnace. lin·

Chltster, 011to
7:_1.._1 mo.

Auctioneer, · Com-

plole Servlce .. Phone 949-24B7
or 949·2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR _
Sweepers, toasters, irons, all

Shop,

SO WE SI01" 'Tl&lt;ADING '

Soles and

' ,

' 10
GASOL11-4E

clpiM1,

Rufus!
You'll

starve.
up

ther'!

r~LIL~~~====~rrr.:~&lt;U:~~Ui~~~~~--l:~i~~~~~~~~~~----~~--~~--~~~
'

maid

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
II
IT'S JUSTTHAT I
HAVE AN IMPORTANT
Df:CI610'J 10 MAKE ...

=
·

co:.o,

,AYour

Con

-~~lm:v~u_A 'Q~Birthday
a

r:ll

/llfrte

.,.,.. ,...,...,.,
··,"'·

.,,;,oo varve '2t9

ON

,.., lltould.

---~·--,

.

IDDEA
work i1 :

·AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Odn~ letter simply ~lands for another. In this sample A is

use

or the three L s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter
words are ali
· ··

hf;;roE~~ehad,
thethlengtdh and formation of the
·
ay e co e 1etters are different

ORL, ZL
BTOR

VUS' 0

TO

SUORTSE

AIWTSE
ZLDGUSv

- UZTETS

BZUSE

ATDOI WLD ;
B T•O R

PHDO

LSNUZLD.

THINK

I'Ll GO UP ON TH
FRONT PORCH
)) AN' REST

A SPELL

'LEHBED~

I

....

II ] II

JELING

!

HSWSUBS

~ASYT's Cryptoquote: IF EVERYBODY REMEMBERED

WHEW!! I

I [J

, NOBODY WOULD EVER FORGIVE ANYBODY
-ROBERT LYND
.
•
(I' i 97t Kln1 FtlhlHt S~ftdleate, Inc,)

Y.....U

··IJ.Uiao GLAND

J

'

CREEK MANAGE ':::'..:
.

i!r•l
L

"""""" an. ollhoN ...llctti ................ARHACI.&amp;.,.,.
'

I UKE
TliiNK

~!UNO... !
SHE'S .CUTE, 51~!

WMPO AM..fM

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWDSTS AT

. • A.M., The Noon Report,'

ancl5 P.M.

Aug. 'rl.

...AND I'M AFRAID
NO ONE CAN 'HELP
ME MAKf: IT ElUT
MYSELF!

t~

CRYPTOQUOTES

=::

HEAR NEWS FIRST

as punish·
mertt
. (3 wds.)
3&amp; "Astolat"

3'1 Wavy
(ber.)

Dllirtet

?'!.

sr-

34Dis~.

~soil

""-'A·,

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2t, lf76
6:00-Summtr Stmasttr 10.
·
6:15-Farm RtpOrt 13.
6:20-The Story 13.
•
.6 :»-Columbus Tpctay 4: News 6; Summer SemHftl!
· 8; Christopher Closeyp 10.
:
6:6-Mornlng Report 3.
.
6:50--Good Morning,' Wnl VIrginia 13.
6:5s-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:00-Taday 3,4,15: Good Morning, America 6,13; cas,
News 8; Chuck Whitt Rpeorts 10.•
l:o.s-&amp;augs Bumy and Friends 10.
7:»-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Jelf's Collie 6; Captain Kangarao 1,10; StlltM
Street 33.
,
8:»-Big Valley 6.
'
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
11 Mllte
Douglas 10: Morning With o. J. 13
9:»-Cross-WIIa 3; One Life to Live 6/ TaltlelaiH.II .
Mike Douglas 13.
·
10:0G-Sanford end Son 3,4, 15; Price Is Rlghii,IO; in,'
With Knit 33. ·
·
)O : l~al HOSJ1llal 6.
·
.
•
IO : ~~Iebrlty S~stekts3~,15; Lilias, Yoge ~ .

11 :oo-wheel .of F'ortune 3.15: Wttkdey 4; EdQ4 of • 1
Nlgbt 6; Gambit 1,10; Farmer'• Daughler 13.
•
11 :»-Hollywood Squartl 3,4,15; Happy Oayt 6131 •
Love of Life 1,10.
·
· . ' · ~
11:55:-Tekt Kerr I ; Ms. Flxlt 10.
(For a copy ol JACOBY
12:00-Fim Factory 3,15; Hot s.•t 13; llab Braun 4;'
MODERN, send $1 lo: "Win
, News 6.8,10; Stllme Street 33.
·
at Bridge ," cto this ,• 12 :30-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; Seerdl far '
newspaper, P. 0. Box 489,
Tomorrow 8,10.
"'
Radio City Slat/on. /Jew York,
'
N. Y. 10019)
12 :55:-NBC News 3,15.
.
. ,.
1:00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue IJ
. Young end the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 1·
•
15; Electric Company 33.
1:30-Deys Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Family FIIUII 6,13; 1&gt;4
· lhe World Turns 1,10; Evenii!O al POJII 33.
'
.2:110-$20,000 Pyral!'lld 13; · Olntlhl 6.
,. 2:.»-0oclors 3,~,1,~; .,0na 1 Lila to Live 13; Guldinti '
llr THOMAS JOSEPH
,•
Light 8,10; Sfraus Femlly•33.
· •
3:00-Anolhtr Worlll' ~.4,15; All In the Family 1,10; '·
ACROSS
3&amp; Feel
Romagnolls' Table 20.
•
1 Symbol of
31 Gaze
3:1s--General Hospital 13.
·
.
innocence
DOWN
3:»-MickeyMouseCiub6; Matchl Gamei,IO; Llllat, ~
5 Aspect
1 Rugged guy
Yoga and You 20; Ourstory 33.
:.
4:00--Misfer Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4· Somenet 151 '
10 First
(l!yph. wd. )
Bewltchi&gt;d 6; Ml,lley MOUN Club Miller R...i •\
place
Z "Die F1eder·
20,33;
Movie "The Treasure of Pancho VIII•" 101 !
name
maus" maid
Dinah
I
13.
'" t• ·
';
11 End .
3 Hire
~ : 30-Bewltchad ~~ Mod !Squad 6; Anay Grlffllh II'·
12 Butcher's
,4 Wise about
· Sesem.e Str"t 20,33; F.llntstones 15.
·
·,
5 Dev111sh .
standby •
5:00-BOI'lanze 3; ParlrldgeFemlly 8; Mlulon: lm- ~
Yeslerday's Answer
(2 wda. )
feUow
possible 15 . • .
14 Just another 'Anecdotal
19 Bronze or 25 Poem
, 5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; jFemlly Affair I; Electric : candidate
collection
•
Company 20,33~ Adam· 2 13.
··
Golden
. 27 Locale
(hyph. wd.)
6:00-News 3,4,8,JO,I3, 5; AI!C News 6· Zoom 2033 •'
7 Alley Oop
zo Scottish .. 28 Famed
6:»-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC tJews 13; Anay Grlfflih 1
15 Uncle
and friends
frontlersriver .
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Villa Alegrf :
(dial.)
a Out of
Zl lnunature;
man
33
.
.
Born (Fr.)
one's ~ Baffle
juvenile
7:oo-:..Truth or c oilsequences 3; To Tell The Truth
Shrew·
9 Cylindrical · Z2 Craftsman 30 PreBowling lor Dollars 6; Popl Goes the Country 11 ! •
11 Signaling
23 Siegfried's
vent
News 10; Wild Klng..,m 13; Far~~lty Affair 151 ,
device
33 Cessation
charger
Consumer Survival Kil20; Tourists are Coming 33
13 Minoan's
Z4 Earth
35 Towel
7:30-lasl of the Wild 3; XXI Olympic Games 6,13; :
home
movers
word
Name That Tune 4; 525,000 Pyrlmld 8: The Judge ·
10; Wild Kingdom 15; Robert MacNeil Report 20;
Baok Beat 33.
8:0G-LIItle 1-iouseOn The Pralrle3,4; Movie "Woman
of the Yeer" 8.10; Nova 20.33: Baseball15.
!
9:00-Sanlord and Son 3; Bob Braun's Hawalltlft
Memories 4: Great Performances 33 Upstal1'1. •
Downstairs 20.
:
9:30-Chlco and the Men 3.
10:00-NBC News Special 3.~; Blue Knight 8, 10; Life of '
Leonardo Da VInci 33; News 20
~0:31):-To Be Announced 1~; Alme~ac 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6.1,10,13, 15; ABC News 33.
.
21 Fowtdation
11 :30-Johnny. ~arson 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Gamel •
31 Late
Uone
~.13; Movie Live a Little. Love a Little" B; Movie
yachts·
, To Have ~!'d Have Not'' 10; Janakl 33.
man
Ius-Movie Starsky lt'ld Hutch" 6-;; 3.
32 TV set
.1,:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
style
·1:15-News 13.
·

Cycl~

~~~.

.

~·

4;;

Come

TEAFORD

protectlo~ampi;;;;

1 N.T.
Pw

9:00-Pollce Woman 3,4; M·A·S·H 1,101 E~lng 1 t .'
Pdp$ 33; Men Who Madl Tht Movies 20
9:30-PIIot 8, 10.
'
lO:OG-City of Angels 3,4; Switch 1 10· News 20t
OlvmDiad.33.
' '
JO·l!):-B!ack_Ptnpectlve on tht Ntwl 20.
11 :00-News 3.4,6,8,10.13,15; Allt'liewa 33 11 ;30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Gemw
6, 13; Movie "Go Ask Allee" 1: Movl• "Bad~ freni
Eltrnlty" 10: Janakl 33.
11 :6-Movle "The Nlght Stalker" 6,13,
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
1: 15-News 13.

6;

ALL!!;~

OJu...p.

"\~n~s~~~!~~ ~:

3N.T. Pau

1:»-!!aseball lS; Good Timet 1,10; Consumer Sur·
vi val Kit 33.
.
'
.
.

a/

Pom•roy.

!')

~1;,:_
~.._
i!p'l~~-~.....,..

_.

ALL S!;ADS, RINGS,
AND SELLS '11-IEY WANT. ..

VICe, all makes, 992·2284. The

~1 .

.......

~.

... SOON NA.TIVES HAVE

small oppi ionc;es , Lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage

Fabric

Pas1

"''o

Bowling For Dollers 6; Let's Go
The R -· It
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Famllr Aftllr 111
Romagnoli'' Table 201 Strauu Family S3 · ·
I ::IO-Hollywood Squaras 3.4: XXI Olympic' g 1.,.. •·
6,13; Match Gama PM I; Prlt:e Is Right 101 Nelllvllle on the Road 15; Robert Mec:Ntll Rtpart.
l :oo-Movln' On 3,4,15; Popl 1,101 ~II T1tOm..
:~ambtrs33; To Be Announctd .15; At The Top

~ur•~•ttf

Bradford.

Aut~ori zed Singer

SHill

We continue to cet questions
about whether honora only .
count If held by declarer.
The answer Ia that If 8
defender hold.l honora bli aide
gets credit. If dummy or
declarer bold.l bonora bla side
gets credit.

Pltorogra'lly
915-4155

all elec., 1 acre, Middleport,
on Route 7 , Phone (614) 985close to Rutland . Phone 992·
~25 .
74BI.
RE/yiOIJELING, Plumbing, heoUng
SMALL farm for sole, 10% down,
qnd oil types of 9eneral repair.
ow~er financed. Monroe CounWo~k guaranteed 20 years exty , W, Vo . Phone (304) m .
perience . Phone 99'2·:2.409.
3102 or (m) 772-3227 . .
~&amp;0 T~EE T'rimmi,g, 20 yean ex.'
COUNTRY farmland With secludper1ence . Insur ed free
ed woods. wQter and good OC ·
estimates. Call 992-2384 or
ceu in Monroe County, w. Va .
(614) 698-72571&lt;lbony.
$1 ,000 down, coli (m) 772SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser3102or (m)772-3227.

Ntr* Eul

Pass

KEN GROVER

BR~DFORO,

. Wetl

Openilll! ie.od - 3 •

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Atrial-Industrial
COnstruction Pn~~~rtta
:;-foma"'- 5cltDnl Strvlc•
•
·
Und.,..riCiulfe 8
ElemMttory
School P1cklli Ptclvm
Stnlors I YNrllaak
-w.ddltllt-

lArwu

l::

• Q 10 .1
• AQ5

........

Phone 949·2814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

~-:;;~~y.

wl!h

•76U
SOUTH iDl

• At84
Both vulnerable

coin Hgl•. 992-5737.
$erv1ce. We sharpen Scissors.
HOUSE lor sole, 20 minutes ·from EXCAVATING, dozer, loodor ond
Pomeroy, 1 acre level lot. 2
backhoe work; dump trucks
bedrooms, 2 cor garage, city
~nd lo -boys for hire; will haul
. water. gas heat, perfect for
fdl dirt, to soil, limestone and
young family starting out or
gravel. Coli Bob or ROger Jef.
older couple, slowing down.
fers, day phone 992-7()89
~edu&lt;ed
!rom $21 000 to
night phone ' 992·3525 or 992~
$19,900.
Phone
(614)
667-3519.
5232.
bedroo,ms
,
al
utilities
pOid.
You tend to overindulge those ,
PomerO)'' Ohio or phone W'J.
Phone 992-n51 .
1,001(200 lot for sole, Five Points EXCAVATING, dozer, bockhoe
oreo. Coll'l'/'l-3576.
.
o,nd dltcher. Charles R, Hat1970
beroiter
2
bedroom
,
$4500
:INNOCBNT P' ••
mi~take t~at won't help ~nyone
IF YOU hove o service to oHer CANNING peQch~s now ready
....:..a
In Jhe long run.
wont to buv pr sell s~mething'
thru August. Several varieties
fntld , ~ock Hoe Service ,
• ~ ·LOST:~Red lodies' billiold containfor quick sole, Can be seen at
1
Aut land, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
~FINDLAY, ~ (UPl) - . oEM Nl
l
ing driver'~ license- and
oe looking fot wOrk ' .. 0;
by the bushel, '6 bushel or
570 P&amp;Qrl St. , in Middleport .
Patrick M. , GiUeapie of
Yoluobl• pqpers. Please return
whatever ... you 'll get results
~k. Please bring own con1 (MI' 21·June'20)Yo.u
GREG'.S CB SI&lt;LES, locoted ot Er·
ru.tarla IWillined free IDdll
may be templed today to
bUIIold, nioy keep money
foster w;rh o Senr;nel Wonll&lt;d
to~ner, 2 convenienr locations:
wins Gulf Service, MidY embellish the facts a bit rather
Return to Ruby Jones Rt 1 8o ·
Cal1992-2156.
·
Mtdway Market, Pomeroy,
dleport, Ohio. Phone 992·
Cll I ~gwl . . . . bond
lhan lo tell llll~e Ills. No one
133, Long BoHom, oh;~ 4574; 3
992 -2582: Bob's Morket, Moson
2438.
aftlrp.
11f"C&lt;IIO&amp;piltJtoa
believe
yourlalltate,s.
I
orphonohorot949·2053.
FomUy
Yord
Sate,
July
29rh.
773-5721.
'
cbar
of
·
30th. 9 a .m. till dark rain or STEREO-Radio,
8 track tope com·
SEPTIC Systems ;nslolled by
IB
marder Iii CANCIR ( I - 21-.IUIJ
LOST: Hvor ond whUe Springer
oh;ne. Same th;ngs 'tor oil •
binotion ,
om ~ fm
radio
l1censed installer. Shepard
I" • I !om
tbe llla'bling • You'" wind up dlaappolnled 1 . ... i· Spqrdol woar;ng red collor. lo•t
Alber I Schull% residence·.
automatic changer . &amp;lone~
Contractors. Phone 7,.2-2409.
clellb ~Ida \fife.
', day If you expect too , mu
. tn Pom.oy· Tuesday morning.
Cherry Ridge Road. follow sings
$102 .56 or •terms. Phone 992SEPTIC TAN~S clooned, Modern
H-II"Ddt Olanty CcmD1011 · from friends, Don't putthem on I R~word. Phone W2·3589, Pot from Sumner Road, Rt . 681 or 3%5.
Son~totlon , 992-3954 or 992.
JlleM Court uld Friday It Ihe spot by being overly
0 Bnon or phone 9'12·3132.
Hemlock Grove. Phone 9'12· FOUR ~ emetery .plots . Meigs 7 room house and both. 4 acres
WE OFFER YOU this n)ce
242B.
.
more or less, with born, on Rt .
wllllldvlle llttorDe7i when
demanding .
,
LOST: Mole neutered German
779~.
place.
2
story
frame.
3
Memorial Gardens. Phone
~ · on~· ~olf rnile from Pomeroy
large Br., formal dining R. WILL do roofing, construcllon ·
Jlftill~il liJ I a LEO lluiJ 23-A... 22) Your Shepherd, whUe lloo collor, YARD SALE. Mondoy. July 26th;;; (6" ) 985·•1•6.
~ 11 Y L•m•h . Furnace heat Ond
NEW siding, carpeti ng , ; pi&amp;Jmblng and hooting. No job
Patricia G It l!ldiUd. . Impulsive generosity could
(l~~r)l n96AIIre&lt;j oreo. Coli collect Fn. July 30. 12:00 noon 11115:00. ONE wir:ker sofa op~ns into dou· ctty water. Phone 992-2504 .
paneling and furnace, full : too Iorge or too small. PhOne
esp e waa causa you remorse later on.
• 6 ·1082.
295
Wright
Sl
..
Pomeroy
,
992ble bed. PhOI)e 992-5186.
· NEW 3bedroom, total elec. , 1.113
31
742
8
baMment, 2 car gar,e ge. ~;;;o·~~;-·""CT;:;--:--c----.,...., to duth at her bcme Keep within limits you can at. ·
66.
'
'
acres, four ·fifth mile from
REMINGT.ON
model
1100
orop
CI&lt;RPENTER, ' lloorlng, calling,
~ 28.
•. lord, no! whal you think Is ex~ :" YARD Sole o Ro•p~ ldvender grade . $275: antique chaise langsville off Co. Rood 10 518,500.00.
aaJd
22, i 'Pe&lt;:led.
REAL ESTATE
,
' res;den~e. S racu&gt;l;:"f undoy
Rt.
143
CLOSE
1
N'Mobile
ponollng. Phone 992-2759.
carpe l, atfocht'd goroge, utilitY
lounge, feothe'r tic:k cushion
room.
Coli
742-2619
Raymond
with
additional
rooms
and
VERMEER
BALER SALES AND SER~. -- llllm
11111111
Ida
'wife
VIRGO (Aug. 23·811PI· 221
FOR SALE
·· ond Wed•. , Good clothing,
new upholstery, $100; ne..;
·~•"
u
Real Estate owned by the
diShes, Avon , misc.- Rain or
Hatfield, Rutland . '
gerlge.
1'12
acres
of.
VICE.
Mol~~t·Aihens
County.
(compar:t)
"Jacuum
deaner
-~- -'---'..:.:.:...~-- • - ( when lhe
su.tly you're aware of ~etalls.
late Daniel Rees and Clara
•h;ne,
'
ground,
own
and
city
Bofors
from
$3995
up
.
Merrill
musr
sacrific:e.
$325
firm
'
....tlnad 1m! wltb a pa1r of Today, you'll see only !he big Rees loca ted al 306 West Ma in ;;YA-;R;;;D::-:'-:---:cc:'---....._-'--Phone 992-7805.
·
water, air. cond.
Chose, (614) 698·3021.
~.lle llld be tried to piclurt. Re-check alltacls and -Street, Pomeroy , Ohio , con .
· Sole 517 North Third ond
tbe ....,_ and .......,. Hgures.
slsllng of a garage and hOuse
Rutland Slreets, Middleport.
MODERN I FLOOR PLAN EXCAVATING. BACKHOES I&lt;ND
~·
-...
IS now being offered for sale
Weds .. Thur5doy. Friday. 9 1973 Plymouth Ouster in good
- Lovely kitchen with cook
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
bll wife· waa U8RA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) To· by the underslgnod 10 Ihe :;;:&gt;h·."" 4 p.m. July 28. 29'ond · cond;Uon , $1900. 1&lt;1so , Ewe ond
units and ref., 3 bedrooms. . SEPTIC TI&lt;N~S INSTALLED. LOW
llirgil
B.
Sr.,
Realtor
.........
accor ""'
..·-· ·to ... daylenolasgainfulas
_llcoul~
. Pleosesubmll
Iam b· Ph one (614 I 9B5-3965.
bath, full basement, F. A.
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
have been, because you'll
use hlgheotbldder
your bids to the
underOigned . .. ~·
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, o.
...laulty business judgment.
Property
appraised
at
LAND for sale near Meigs Mine
heat,
ntw
sl,tel
sldlnn,
2.77
PULLINS,
PHONE 992-2~7B DAY
1~
Phon.• 992-337!
$2,500.00. Sale sublet! to the
No. I. Phone 7~2 - 27•6 .
•
ORNIGHT.
acres. large garage and
RENOVATED - _ . :.
SCORPIO (Oct. · u.~y:"i12) approvalotthe Probale Courl.
worklhop, carparl.
: BUILDING, remodeling, ond
Be watchful to~ay tha\ you're
AI&lt;C DOberman pupleo, slro ond 1975. Yomoho IOOCC Enduro, 1300
bedroom home. paneling,
WE HAVE 2 NEW 3
ropalrs . Quolllywork , e(f;ci,nt
not careles$ or wasteful with
t
AJdoseph W. Cook
dam brad for ----'ternMrmenr
mllel. Ext:!ellent condition very
carpeting, nice ~lichen,
bedroom homes just
.• ;;;~~~~ella Rodman , phone
..
." '"'"
.' things that balong to others. It
. and
lines.
e&lt;onom
ond
1 jcol machine.
modern balh. gas F. A.
could coat you a friendship. . ·
' Clara Rees, Deceased
6 males , 2 lemales, reosonobly
hefmet. SSOO. Phone 992·
completed
.
Both
furnaee, bam and 12 acres.
garage anc;t work area, , l WANT to go ·Into butlnesl for
$29,500.
l~ch Ben Franklin fireplace:
~· Fla, (UP!) - SAGITTARIUS (Nav. 23·Dtc. (7) 21 , 22, 23, 26, 21 , 28, 29, ltt ~ed. Waltor Everett 742- !24 patr
baths.
utility
rms., ·· . yourull? Almost new
of baby scales. PI-lone
l ACRES OUT - On hard
ca
rpeted,
about
1
acre
of , automatic inaulatlng machln~
"""pi&amp;IIID&amp;Itmaydr!lplts 21).Usuelly you'rea fairly lucky
·
992-5258.
road with drilled well and 2
ground . S22,900.00.
PhoneGolllpollo, 1-446·4782 . .
• CUt
IIIIDit
former person. but to~ay you'd bolter
ONE AKC Reg;otered Beagle
mobile homes. Buy both
• Pql U:wn Sen. Edwlrd J,, rely mora on your abilities.
hound, mole, 10 montho old l.Oh\ATOES, cobboge, squosh,
TO SELL CALL US _
ANTIQUE ,...lorotlons, roproduc·
sweet corn, cucumbers phone
and rent one. $13,500.
1111"
Dame FOrtune's allcklo ladyl
PUBLIC NOTICE
shota and already runn:
THEN - CALL THE
"?ns, cabinet making and fur., of ~...... ameJI,..LIIr
,.
In compllante
No . 5705 .27 ,
;ng.$SO.·Phone9•9,2322.
' 843· 2~95 ,
.
RIVER FRONT LOT MOVING
VAN
.
HENRY
E.
ndure
repoir, 131 V, 3rd, MldAI&lt;C
Irish
Setter
Puppies,
6
week
s
leaate WJterpte CAPRICORN lDec. 22·11n . . the Meigs County Budget
Water. elec. and sewage,
t974 Storcroft Galaxie, 8 camper .
CLELANO.
BROKER
dloport, 992·5735 doy ond
old. Phooe 949-2726.
,.
1t) In an attempt to Impress Commission will meet at the
lot 77xl19 Only 53,000.
reasonably priced . Phone 742:
APPRAISER,
' ;oie;ve;;On;;ln~g;.;.;;;::;-;-.....,- - - - Court ""'- · others today, you may take on offlee of the County Auditor at AI&lt;C German Shepherd puppies
2595,
2
BEDROOM BUNGALOW
"=.!"dt projects beyond your Pomeroy on August 2, 1976.
CONSULTANT,
REFRIGERATION ond olr condl.
good blood line, gentle disposi:
- Nice oak floors, natyral
1971
Kawasaki
175,
Enduro
$250
992-2259or
9'12,2568
t•onlng service. Phone Roger
P C• YOUDI ,.,.. capabilities. You have nolhlng m 21, (81 1, 21c
lion. Phone 992-56:23.
l&lt;lk;ro, 992·5&lt;135.
gas F, A. furnace,
Set of motorcycle corriei~. $13:
~'!_lit IICIIIII Important to gain but emberrassment.
basement and large lot.
Phone 992-5523.
~;iii;{:,:
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-FIII. 11) lNCIUWE APPROVEJl
Only
$8500.
C: AN.NING tomatoes , Carol
MIDDLETOWN • Ohio
~~~' Iaiii!
It you take allyertoday, do It on
2
FAMILY
HOME - In
__Whllo, 2•7-:2175.
1"~and• your own rather thon on lhe ad· ( UPI) - Tile bOard of
••
*I
Middleport, 12 rooms. 2
vice ot caauolacquolntanceo. A directors of Armco Steel 35 h.p. outboc:ird motorboat with CANNING tofnoton and sweep
'•• ", ,.
baths. natural gas heel.
trailer. Phone992•57-41 .
peppe~ s.
Cleland Fo rms.
IJIDI t1 1 IJ'IIIII jlrJ,
wrong move coul~ coat you ~- Friday approved an
Rent one for 1ncome. Good
Gerald1ne Cleland. Roc:ine
· Jutlce Departmeat aoma bucka.
·
entrance and nice yard.
~ of five cenll per
Ohio.
'
Vblealt Alto llfd ba I PI8CI!8 .,.... 20-M- 201 ·lbare of CmuDCII stock bi the
Asking $19,000.
.1
- --~-~ctlllult wltll hilt Be lair wllh olhera today, but company's quarterly
PORTLAND - 9 room
REMEDYYOUR WATER'
hoYse, modern kitchen,
11l11'far1
nat ~on'l lhort youretll tor In· dlridend rate, aald chllrman
.... till
IIIII dlvlduels who ~on't reolly
PROBLEMS AND SAVE
beth, parch and modern
MONEY, TOO, WITH
............. JU.
, deserve n. They wouldn't do It Wllllam Verily.
garage with furnace.
'Die lint dlridend at the
I'
_ . . , . --r .,... tor you.
NEW LISTING- 29 acrn
A .. •
new l1lle of 41 Clllll wUl be .
of forrest with place lo
payable
Sept.
7 to
build a lake. T. P. water,
Automat'_IC
111ate
lblreboldera of record ....
elec. and 3 bedroom mobile
"'
r
.~:.:..-..
I.
""'e•
,
UJIMI8r
home l4x70 on good
ON~ b~room apartment ot
Model
UC-XXX,
210,000
road . near Racine.
country
'Die dlrectGn • declared
Rl¥erside. Phone 992-3273 .
W."f!k_IY Grain Capacity
'I
...... . .
~- . . 1171
SPAC~
I rtplar qllll'llriJ dilldlad TRAILER space clote to ~~ I
R..u!Ar
Ulll IJIJt • ._ IIIP tilt U1U11 lhare of of
FOr.
~OUR AD.
IU C11111 I*' llban of
Mlno&gt;. Complete hookup
.00
CllrfJ&amp;oplllr '"""""IIIII WIR bt IVIIIabte
.iOOD MODERN HOMES
742-2166.
.
~
:PoMEROY LANDMARK'
11)11 wo:l ,. . to YIIJ/ lhla yur. ~ar, you cumalaUve COli- tlble proWE NEED. LEAVE YOUR
01o111·
to· - a hi...Jengy to coast. You ferred ltock payable Seot. IJO ;-;:;;;_;turnlth.d apt. clos~ to .• .J•cr.:· Clney, Mlr.
SELLING . PROBLEM~
' Super Valu s!lll
fiii!.IIIJ fGl'llarlll. . fillY not mak4 ot them what to lhareboldm of r·ricord Po1&lt;1oll's
WITH US AT 992·3125.
. ~992·2111
_. a~ 1 t'!~"· Phone 992-3658.

I"'"

.2

5786.

Convenien t to' shopPing 0 ~
Third and Mill Streets in Middleport . Brand new high quali-

t K Q lOt

tAU

homes. Also, 15 1g 20
acres, both hove sanitary
sewage and· utilities, con be
partially finan ced. Phone 992-

apartments. See the
manager at Riverside Aporl- WANTED To Rent ; Clean, furnished 2 beclr~ trailer or apart·
ments or call 992-n21. Furment, outs1de ot- city limits.
nis hed
apartments also
Pomeroy or Middleport area.
available.
For two working adults one
TRAILER spoce for rent in . Mid ch;ld, Coli collect, I (614 ) 69B·
dleport. Phone 992-Sd4 .
2920 after 5:30p .m .

~-~~-~...

U2

• J875

RcHIIator ,............,

several

ty

=::--;;

·.

4-10-1

EXPIRIINCID

lARGE building lot , suitable for

contractiO~.

r

.7S2
• K 10 73
t84
• K QJ 10
WEST
EAST
..... 1
• KJt!

1\. lti.Zt74

....

Askmg $55,000. Coli for op·
pointmenl, 992-3166.

three dlamondJ.
Now South IIOtlld calli bll ace

NORTH

.. WRL,~~DER

TOPPER-Camper lor BII , bed lri- THE Rosenbaum home at 295
sulaf&amp;d .. pon~Jied and wired for
Wright St ., PomerQy. 2 story
electricity. Slide,· in sections ' colonial, 4 bedrooms, 21AI
containing two single bunk~ or
batl'ls , . formal dining raorn ,
one Iorge b&amp;d. Tobie, stove
la~ge l.wlng. room, family roOm
(LP. ), sink , ice box . curtains,
w1th ftreplate , paneled bose"
carpeting , li ke new . Coli 992·
me.nt with two extra rooms,
5666 or see Herbert GilkeY , Rt.
ott1c ond 2 cor garage. Moving
33 at Darwin.
to C~llfornia , many extras stay.

electric. LOWER

Ast 0 . .

Old·falhloned logic work1
and queen of hearts and
'flnene for West's jack In
order to score nine trlclu and
win Ute rubber.
Tbe author would ezplaln
that the lineae wu a 1ure
thine. U West ~ beld a livecard diamond suit be would
have opened it. In auction you
led your longest iUlt apinlt
notrump . Woe. betide any
Iconoclast wbo violated that
rule. Hence, when West show·
ed out on the leCODd club lead
he wu lllll'ked wltli 4-4+1
distribution .
A contract declarer would.
probably make the 11me play
but it would not be a ~
thing. Contract playera don't
always lead their 101111est ault.

coannwus olft pltct
guners. W. hltng lto.or do 11
yourself. S(itclll prices ta
bulld~rs.
.

SU2 mo.

bedra'om

1n clud~ng

IN CON·

CIJT1tB4IIIIIIU

GUMR SERV.ICE

~ TROMM OONst :

apartments ~~
VILLAGE MANOR ;n M;ddleporr
fo r S!04 monthly plus elec. or

ONE

YOU'~E

WIN AT BRIDGE

•Je&amp;4 ·

OlD fUrniture , ke ' box.,, broso .
beds. woll telephones ond
porrs. or complee house~lds.
madness Is •-·
NOW
II
Write M . 0 . Miller , Rt. ...
puplibes Its thugs ac· ·
-..... .
•• ;~ homemade clothes
Pome•oy, Ohio. Coii992.7760. TWO bedroom mobile home
cordlngly.
The
fellow
There
are
582
people
1n
to.lflOII k•oo of dolls.- Surpr;oe
Brown's Trailer Pork, phon~
,_U
your fovont• little gtrl With a CASH paid for oil makes and
1n America sentenced to di
992-3324.
.
oor011
WU
condemned
to
.
e:
l'\IIW outfit for her doll Phone
models
of
mobile
homes
1
.~VI hie larcenous band: , ~"': ~lly prepared to ki111; · t9'12~. ' ~ · · .,. Phone ore&lt;&gt;code61H23-9531. ·
~
off. He WU a young
·
. . _ ~8R1CSA~AII_ material in shop -'. SSCa~SS for junk*&lt;i auto. frye 's 3 room fur'nished Opohment
man.
All over the world the
... ~ solo, Qfl, week only. Mon·
Truck . Auto Porto. Rutlond.
utnitles lurn;shed. Phone 992: 1 to 3 people dvoiloble for houl·
crimina1a are YOUIIC perbaps
day,, Jufy,,2(.-thru Sotu~doy. Ju-Pho'p b 7-42-2081. .
3119or992·5.434.
ing, demolifion, constr~clion
becauae they see _:.._t
II .
Fi
.
ly 31. OUr new hours ekcept TIM,BER. Porilerou Fores1 Pro- TRAilER , odults .only. Phone 992smo,U
clean·up :
wua.
is
f~soleweeksoreMondoythru d
T
'
7639or992·2181.
Equ!ppeod, hove truckS, J®ls,
like to lfOW ~ without tbe
Fndoy, 9 o.,n. ti117 p.m., closed
ucts. op price for standii1g
----torches and reasonable rates
.t!dnp tblevery ....,,... He
Saturdays. CoroHno Fobrk• on
Call . Kent Hanby. ' 1975 3 bed_coom mob He home ;n ' wm borler. Phone 742-2581:
bldaahaftdhead but a
I ~oute 7, one-~11 mile norlh of
Mooon,
w.. Ito. Phone (614) i~e~ve~n~in~g~··;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~;:;;:
6 98
...,.....• ...._ tbe Ia
._ lChester, Ohio. Henry and Mary COINS, currency . tokens, gold
tier
Bernice Bedt Osol
Hunter, owners.
ond silver jewelry. We need
,_IIJII .ooand
,,-~
1964 ond older U.S. co;no. Coli
FOR
SALE ,
ni ne
used
an appropriately
.luiJ 21' 1t71 LOW
~~T5H
Saltboll Tournament
lor olhe• 142-2331 or come out
housetroilers , one and 2
at Re.usvdle, Ohio Weekend
1
bedrooms. Completely furnishpout. He wore Western ARIU lMordl 21·April 1t)
of July 31 ond Aug~st I. Also,
oourcoinshoponRutloooaoo LOCUST POSTS, round or spl;t
ed. Conodcr,• s Trailer Court.
' llo 1 1, a Middle East robe
L""" shots are nollikely to pay
Auguot 7 ond 8th. for lnlormoCreek Rd. Roger
Phone9•9-27R
·
1900 Central St., Gallipolis
no s-. 'lbr1Jt18)tout ~ oH today, but har~ work will.
I&gt;On coli Junior Sorber ,
COAl , Umestone, ond colc;um
Oh;o, P~ne (61•) 446-139i
matterbeaald•"''"'""
.
Bank on !he muscles in your
Reedsville . Phone (61•) 378- USED 8elsow ;n good condition.
chlo•;de ond colc;um brine lor
near
Smith's Buick .
to
·-"'•• which arJ" , not !he spots on the ~Ice.
6383. $.!0 per room ond 2 bollo.
Phone (614)37B-6387. .
duor conrrol o~d opeciol m;x;ng
. many- something of 8 TAURU.
20·MIJ 20)
Class B. Teom.
oolt lor formers. Mo;n Slreet, MOBILE hom9 for sole or rent !J

Grap~

IAJ 211111
-....
IIIIIINIII1IT

DIIH"'onstrote

Johnstown, Po. 15904,

\

YOUR PARTNER.,
HUH? OFF THE
SAME UFO~
· STA!oJT RADIO
COMTtiUNICATrON.
1 PRESUMEf

IEPUallllll

OPPORlUNIT'II

GIMMICKS 1
Goool'l ne · FURNISHED, 2 bedrm. ·apo.~ tmeot ,
a~~wanc.e . Earn FREE Sample
adults only, in Middleport .
K1t . Coli 742-23n . Write TOY ~~neW~
2·~~~.7~·~·~------LADIES PI&lt;RTY PLAN

EVERYTHING&gt;:

WIIIOIIIS

Unlim i ted

e-ornin'gs
Toys and Gifts ~
few evenings a w&amp;&amp;k . NO ex·
perie,nce. NO paperwork. 'NO

HAN6 IT ALL,
MY PARTNER
CA ioJ VERIP Y

WERE NeVER
SPOKEd

Noble Summit Rd.,
Mlddltpart
PHONE 992-5724
7-21-1 mo.

David Parsons, Owner

Remodeling Service
For Your Home

A

T~UERWOI~D5

D. Bumprdner

Squ~rt Yard lnstoll«&lt;

The Complete
$200 weekly 5luffln.g envelopes 1966 Ford. $200. Phone (614) 985·
4146.
into olreody stamped and ad dressed envelopes. Stuffing 1967 1nternotio;i pickup in good
material prqvided frM. Send:
.!ond~ti ~. Phone 7-t2-2U6.
Self-ctddreued stomped
1966
Muslong , $325 . See at 570
envelope: Diversified , Dept ,
Pearl St., M iddleport , Ohio.
J');l&lt; . 120(,.CofJ'den Dr Rkh·
mond, \iir!Jinto 23229. v

•

tao.

•6.95

1 ~' Midwest grain and cattle rack body 350

·

Business SenJices

'.

.

1970 CAMARO CPE.
.
.
V-8, automatic p st I
. 51095
N~s some body .wor~~ ng. extra good radial tires.

one ·

.w•

__ TUESDAY, JULY 27. 1976
5:0G-8onanze 3; Partrldg4Famlly
Million: lm·
poulb!n 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4. 13; News 6; Family Affair I ; Elet·
_ tri~CO!!JP!nr 20,33.
_ ._ _
6:oo-" ews 3,4,1,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:»-NBC News3.4.15: ABC News13; Anay Griffith 6;
CBS Newsl,lO; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
._! :119--Trulh 9r Con~ces 3; Ta Tell The Truth 4;

ei

··i~~~~~~N

P .M .

Publico lion .
_canctiletions.

By Tom TieR

-fillet

CONTRACTS ,._
.THEIR

readr.cor Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

take 592 lives?

Television log for ·easy view.i~g

WELL·"'·NOT R£AU.Y•
l· •· ONLY
THE -•~ •

l

�.

.
•

Dally Sentinel. Mlddleoort.Pomeroy, 0 .. TUesday, Julv 'r/. 19'/C
10- Till n.ltu '
.
. .,..,Sentlnei,Micldleport.P&lt;mer,O:, TUeeday,July 27;11176

p

. TOM TIEDE -

Is America

.

-

·

5

Dey

I

Before

correc -

2 SIGNS

tions ecce_pted first day or
PUblicat ion .

ATLANTA- The Supreme disappointment.
Court's decision to ratify
Well, I'm guessing about • TheRIOULATION$
PubliShtr n$trves
capital punishment In the disapp&lt;Jintm~nt. I am
the right to edit or reject
ads detmed obt.
Georgia and some other biased as to the •tUtudes of 1 .Jny
lectlon a l. The publisher
states ral!Je$ an lntereaUng those who were there. It was • will
not be responsible for
mort than one h1correct
qu~tlon for modern Jour· In an open air courtyard and
Insertion .
· ·
nallsm :howtocoverthefirst the publlc was Invited.
RATES .
For Want Ad S.rvlct
guy to fry ? Given today's Perhaps 200 were present.
5 . cents 'ptr word one
media resources, not to They were quiet and I supInsertion.
·
mehUon Ita gall, one suspects pose
as
expectantly
Minimum ChtrQt Sl .OO.
1~ cents per word t~ree
· Walter Cronkite will bring the frightened as I, yet they were
consecutive insertions . ·
special Into the living room there by choice and not by
26 c:ents per word six
consecut ive Insertions .
while the New York Times accident and Ills not unfair to
~ 25 Per Cent Discount on
prints the fuU text of the Judge fllat they were tempted
pa id ads and ads paid
condemned's last words.
by the anticipation of
Within 10 di)'S ,
CARD OF THANKS
• For reasons rooted in anqulsh.
&amp; OBITUARY
historic suspicion, the Uiw
The prisoner was taken to a
52.00 for 80 word
m inimum .
demands there must be wall of the yard by several
Etch lddlllonal word 3
witnesses to state executions. officers dressed In the
c&amp;nts.
I LIND ADS
Then why not everybody? uniforms of authority and
Additional 2$c Charge
.The . !elevlslon mig hi be caps with black bills pushed
per Advertisement.
.
OFFICE HO\IRS
IJIOIISored by Con solidi! ted over the . eyes. There was
1:30 a.m. lo S·OO p m
Edison, the detaUs 1n ·the some. conlusion ·at first.
Dally, B:Jo a.m . ';0 Ji:oo
prints should appropriately of,,the officers had the man . Noon Saturday.
P~o~e toda v 992·2156.
Jump to the obituary pages, loieel before the wall, but it
and millions of viewers and was decided that the wall (or
NOTICES
readers throughout the world the chopping block ) was too
ATTN.: II
could be certain justice 18 high. He was lifted to a
A~L HOUSEWIVES
All Vard SaltS, Rummage
done
under
properly standing position, then asked
POrch and BISement Porch
~ytng circumstances.
to bend over so that his and
Basement sate&amp; etc
must be Pl ld In edv'ance .
. I say terrifying because 1 foreann and hand rested
Get yours In early bY
have some eJperlence In the Dally on the cement.
stopping by our office ilt
llusinesB of witnessing pious
One officer stood behind
Tht Dally Sentinel. 111
Court St. or writing Box
slaughter. Once In Saigon 1 him. Another held his free
72.9, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
·saw Olinese bwlinessman ann, It appeared as If his
~1th your rtmlttanu .
shot by a Vietnamese firing othe'r appendage was tied In ·
aiJuad - In the market place · place somehow. Then It was
while the fresh fruit was dooe with a weapon . ~ coUld:
..-riving. Anothet time •In, • not see. And without ,a word
Cambodia I was present fl'dm the thief ~ nor lhe AERIA~ PHOTOGRAPHY _ hove
wllen a free Ji&lt;il'ld ally hit an ~r.~ wd fOr that !palter,
Oet i~l _Pholol Of yoUr COnslru&lt;·
enemy soldier ' much to hard
Quickly the man was cut
hon sote, bus;non , cool ond
-'th
~
'
loose and
U
901 leases of your fo rm. Ken
~
arlflebu .. lnthetemple.
'
apparen Y at.
Grove, phorogmpher Chester
And also, I've seen corporal !ended to. ":e had passed out,
Ohio. Phone 985'•155:
·
~ punishment apparently. bring or perhaps It was more than WEO\)ING PHOTOGRAPHY _
aD and to the life of a thief in
The rumtr afterward , Remember rho doy loreverl
SUdl Arabia. Terrifying Is a Was that he had died of a
The comploire srory of you~
mild adjective for 81DCtloned heart attack; it's said that . wedd•ng •n 0 beout;ful olbvm.
''""""
happens someUmes.
Ccrlt
Ken Chesler,
Gro'&lt;~er
~..
· Phorogropher,
Qh;o:
., Of the three, the Arab
llmaybethemanllved.lf
Phone985.. 15S.
·
pbnlahment W8S the 11108t ~d ~ =andsurely never GOlDEN WEDDING Ann;versory.
tntereetlng. As I remembel- .
WI
.
agaln: He
Preserve this wonderlul doy
the viCtim had been I!OIIviCted 'Jil'Ould never work with the
wllh p~togropho ofrhe lom•ly
dt' some sort of serious hand again, either. and o'ogo, rher, wh;th youkrlnends ond
.,, ..,.~,
·
mlghl b ---•
course t e co el Coli ~en
- . - , , and .vera! 0~ ,
• Y ·~ly, take
Grover P~tography, Chesler,
C!'ID*· Saudi Arabia ·lst!l},-r"'IG)tleJ!Ung with the other lOr' Ohio. Pho0Jo985-m5 .
f6llowa the ancient notloo'OI! . :•. 1~~1 -but I can' t say. I t; &lt;;RAPEFRUIT PJII wilh Dodow eot
·tooth for a tooth and, at leaal ' CI,Q ~stlfy Only to theo;~t!sly;ng m;olo and 'lose
up IG the Ume of my visit ... llflltalily of the moment and . ·-rght. n~w ••Ira otrengrh lorlome years back, the nation my feeling this klnd of mulo , Nelson Drugs.

Pomeroy
OF
r Co.
QUAun Moto_

·1970 RENAULT 4 Dr.
Good tires. ~le~n Interior, grey finish.

'that.

.

radio, ~ sp~o

1971 GMC 4SOO StriH

v8

13891

.

POwer steering and brakes On I 8 900. • - eng ine,
like new.
'
Y •
miles
. . Clean,

POMEROY MOTOR ·co~
·

OPEN

EVE~ii:OO P. M..

, POMERQ1!.

•

RACrNE
CARPEl SHOP

SWIMMING
POOLS

ASSORTED RUBBER

Al!av• Mtd belaw gn~und
pool kill for tht clo~l- 1
YoiWMII !Mn.
All pooiiUPPIIft IVIIilbla,

Ra~i ne.

Ohio

BACK..CARPETING

C)ttiO _

.

·

..
12\
~

94t-28i4

6-7·1 mo.

GREI&lt;T,

3 AND

G"'S station operator with tune-

4

RM. furnished and unopts . Phone 992•

furn ished

5434.

and broke exp&amp;rience .
Mobile Hqme Pork,i;,
Have own tools. Must be COUNTRY
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
reliable. no booze. Write Bo~e
large lots with concrete patios
129fJ, % The Daily S"ntinel,
sidewalks,
runners and off
Pomeroy, Oh.io ,.5769.
street parking, Phone 992-7Al9 . ·
up

Aluminum Siding,
.Roofing, .Gutters,
Painting and Repar

WILL DO .odd jobs, rooJ;ng, po;n.
. tmg. houling; free work, ond
mow;ng . Phone 992-7•09.

$130

Rullond
742:ma
All Wo rk Guaranleed
Free Esllmatts

~~~

RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS

;·z~~t.;~:

iiii·~~22i.iii~i~

..............-..JJ
SMITH Nil SON
MOIORS,INC.

992-7320 evenings
6-27 -76

t

RURAL, modern, electric, 3
bedrooms , kitche n, living
room, both, fin ished basement
laundry, recreation; S26,90o, j
acre: $28,900, 3 and two·thirds

ocres. Phone (6")9•9·2748.

HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport, near Rutland.

Call 992-7481.

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,

2 b.drooms, large modern kit·
chen, forced oir furnace. lin·

Chltster, 011to
7:_1.._1 mo.

Auctioneer, · Com-

plole Servlce .. Phone 949-24B7
or 949·2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR _
Sweepers, toasters, irons, all

Shop,

SO WE SI01" 'Tl&lt;ADING '

Soles and

' ,

' 10
GASOL11-4E

clpiM1,

Rufus!
You'll

starve.
up

ther'!

r~LIL~~~====~rrr.:~&lt;U:~~Ui~~~~~--l:~i~~~~~~~~~~----~~--~~--~~~
'

maid

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
II
IT'S JUSTTHAT I
HAVE AN IMPORTANT
Df:CI610'J 10 MAKE ...

=
·

co:.o,

,AYour

Con

-~~lm:v~u_A 'Q~Birthday
a

r:ll

/llfrte

.,.,.. ,...,...,.,
··,"'·

.,,;,oo varve '2t9

ON

,.., lltould.

---~·--,

.

IDDEA
work i1 :

·AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Odn~ letter simply ~lands for another. In this sample A is

use

or the three L s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter
words are ali
· ··

hf;;roE~~ehad,
thethlengtdh and formation of the
·
ay e co e 1etters are different

ORL, ZL
BTOR

VUS' 0

TO

SUORTSE

AIWTSE
ZLDGUSv

- UZTETS

BZUSE

ATDOI WLD ;
B T•O R

PHDO

LSNUZLD.

THINK

I'Ll GO UP ON TH
FRONT PORCH
)) AN' REST

A SPELL

'LEHBED~

I

....

II ] II

JELING

!

HSWSUBS

~ASYT's Cryptoquote: IF EVERYBODY REMEMBERED

WHEW!! I

I [J

, NOBODY WOULD EVER FORGIVE ANYBODY
-ROBERT LYND
.
•
(I' i 97t Kln1 FtlhlHt S~ftdleate, Inc,)

Y.....U

··IJ.Uiao GLAND

J

'

CREEK MANAGE ':::'..:
.

i!r•l
L

"""""" an. ollhoN ...llctti ................ARHACI.&amp;.,.,.
'

I UKE
TliiNK

~!UNO... !
SHE'S .CUTE, 51~!

WMPO AM..fM

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWDSTS AT

. • A.M., The Noon Report,'

ancl5 P.M.

Aug. 'rl.

...AND I'M AFRAID
NO ONE CAN 'HELP
ME MAKf: IT ElUT
MYSELF!

t~

CRYPTOQUOTES

=::

HEAR NEWS FIRST

as punish·
mertt
. (3 wds.)
3&amp; "Astolat"

3'1 Wavy
(ber.)

Dllirtet

?'!.

sr-

34Dis~.

~soil

""-'A·,

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2t, lf76
6:00-Summtr Stmasttr 10.
·
6:15-Farm RtpOrt 13.
6:20-The Story 13.
•
.6 :»-Columbus Tpctay 4: News 6; Summer SemHftl!
· 8; Christopher Closeyp 10.
:
6:6-Mornlng Report 3.
.
6:50--Good Morning,' Wnl VIrginia 13.
6:5s-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:00-Taday 3,4,15: Good Morning, America 6,13; cas,
News 8; Chuck Whitt Rpeorts 10.•
l:o.s-&amp;augs Bumy and Friends 10.
7:»-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Jelf's Collie 6; Captain Kangarao 1,10; StlltM
Street 33.
,
8:»-Big Valley 6.
'
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
11 Mllte
Douglas 10: Morning With o. J. 13
9:»-Cross-WIIa 3; One Life to Live 6/ TaltlelaiH.II .
Mike Douglas 13.
·
10:0G-Sanford end Son 3,4, 15; Price Is Rlghii,IO; in,'
With Knit 33. ·
·
)O : l~al HOSJ1llal 6.
·
.
•
IO : ~~Iebrlty S~stekts3~,15; Lilias, Yoge ~ .

11 :oo-wheel .of F'ortune 3.15: Wttkdey 4; EdQ4 of • 1
Nlgbt 6; Gambit 1,10; Farmer'• Daughler 13.
•
11 :»-Hollywood Squartl 3,4,15; Happy Oayt 6131 •
Love of Life 1,10.
·
· . ' · ~
11:55:-Tekt Kerr I ; Ms. Flxlt 10.
(For a copy ol JACOBY
12:00-Fim Factory 3,15; Hot s.•t 13; llab Braun 4;'
MODERN, send $1 lo: "Win
, News 6.8,10; Stllme Street 33.
·
at Bridge ," cto this ,• 12 :30-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; Seerdl far '
newspaper, P. 0. Box 489,
Tomorrow 8,10.
"'
Radio City Slat/on. /Jew York,
'
N. Y. 10019)
12 :55:-NBC News 3,15.
.
. ,.
1:00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue IJ
. Young end the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 1·
•
15; Electric Company 33.
1:30-Deys Of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Family FIIUII 6,13; 1&gt;4
· lhe World Turns 1,10; Evenii!O al POJII 33.
'
.2:110-$20,000 Pyral!'lld 13; · Olntlhl 6.
,. 2:.»-0oclors 3,~,1,~; .,0na 1 Lila to Live 13; Guldinti '
llr THOMAS JOSEPH
,•
Light 8,10; Sfraus Femlly•33.
· •
3:00-Anolhtr Worlll' ~.4,15; All In the Family 1,10; '·
ACROSS
3&amp; Feel
Romagnolls' Table 20.
•
1 Symbol of
31 Gaze
3:1s--General Hospital 13.
·
.
innocence
DOWN
3:»-MickeyMouseCiub6; Matchl Gamei,IO; Llllat, ~
5 Aspect
1 Rugged guy
Yoga and You 20; Ourstory 33.
:.
4:00--Misfer Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4· Somenet 151 '
10 First
(l!yph. wd. )
Bewltchi&gt;d 6; Ml,lley MOUN Club Miller R...i •\
place
Z "Die F1eder·
20,33;
Movie "The Treasure of Pancho VIII•" 101 !
name
maus" maid
Dinah
I
13.
'" t• ·
';
11 End .
3 Hire
~ : 30-Bewltchad ~~ Mod !Squad 6; Anay Grlffllh II'·
12 Butcher's
,4 Wise about
· Sesem.e Str"t 20,33; F.llntstones 15.
·
·,
5 Dev111sh .
standby •
5:00-BOI'lanze 3; ParlrldgeFemlly 8; Mlulon: lm- ~
Yeslerday's Answer
(2 wda. )
feUow
possible 15 . • .
14 Just another 'Anecdotal
19 Bronze or 25 Poem
, 5:30-Adam-12 4; News 6; jFemlly Affair I; Electric : candidate
collection
•
Company 20,33~ Adam· 2 13.
··
Golden
. 27 Locale
(hyph. wd.)
6:00-News 3,4,8,JO,I3, 5; AI!C News 6· Zoom 2033 •'
7 Alley Oop
zo Scottish .. 28 Famed
6:»-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC tJews 13; Anay Grlfflih 1
15 Uncle
and friends
frontlersriver .
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Villa Alegrf :
(dial.)
a Out of
Zl lnunature;
man
33
.
.
Born (Fr.)
one's ~ Baffle
juvenile
7:oo-:..Truth or c oilsequences 3; To Tell The Truth
Shrew·
9 Cylindrical · Z2 Craftsman 30 PreBowling lor Dollars 6; Popl Goes the Country 11 ! •
11 Signaling
23 Siegfried's
vent
News 10; Wild Klng..,m 13; Far~~lty Affair 151 ,
device
33 Cessation
charger
Consumer Survival Kil20; Tourists are Coming 33
13 Minoan's
Z4 Earth
35 Towel
7:30-lasl of the Wild 3; XXI Olympic Games 6,13; :
home
movers
word
Name That Tune 4; 525,000 Pyrlmld 8: The Judge ·
10; Wild Kingdom 15; Robert MacNeil Report 20;
Baok Beat 33.
8:0G-LIItle 1-iouseOn The Pralrle3,4; Movie "Woman
of the Yeer" 8.10; Nova 20.33: Baseball15.
!
9:00-Sanlord and Son 3; Bob Braun's Hawalltlft
Memories 4: Great Performances 33 Upstal1'1. •
Downstairs 20.
:
9:30-Chlco and the Men 3.
10:00-NBC News Special 3.~; Blue Knight 8, 10; Life of '
Leonardo Da VInci 33; News 20
~0:31):-To Be Announced 1~; Alme~ac 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6.1,10,13, 15; ABC News 33.
.
21 Fowtdation
11 :30-Johnny. ~arson 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Gamel •
31 Late
Uone
~.13; Movie Live a Little. Love a Little" B; Movie
yachts·
, To Have ~!'d Have Not'' 10; Janakl 33.
man
Ius-Movie Starsky lt'ld Hutch" 6-;; 3.
32 TV set
.1,:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
style
·1:15-News 13.
·

Cycl~

~~~.

.

~·

4;;

Come

TEAFORD

protectlo~ampi;;;;

1 N.T.
Pw

9:00-Pollce Woman 3,4; M·A·S·H 1,101 E~lng 1 t .'
Pdp$ 33; Men Who Madl Tht Movies 20
9:30-PIIot 8, 10.
'
lO:OG-City of Angels 3,4; Switch 1 10· News 20t
OlvmDiad.33.
' '
JO·l!):-B!ack_Ptnpectlve on tht Ntwl 20.
11 :00-News 3.4,6,8,10.13,15; Allt'liewa 33 11 ;30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Gemw
6, 13; Movie "Go Ask Allee" 1: Movl• "Bad~ freni
Eltrnlty" 10: Janakl 33.
11 :6-Movle "The Nlght Stalker" 6,13,
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4.
1: 15-News 13.

6;

ALL!!;~

OJu...p.

"\~n~s~~~!~~ ~:

3N.T. Pau

1:»-!!aseball lS; Good Timet 1,10; Consumer Sur·
vi val Kit 33.
.
'
.
.

a/

Pom•roy.

!')

~1;,:_
~.._
i!p'l~~-~.....,..

_.

ALL S!;ADS, RINGS,
AND SELLS '11-IEY WANT. ..

VICe, all makes, 992·2284. The

~1 .

.......

~.

... SOON NA.TIVES HAVE

small oppi ionc;es , Lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage

Fabric

Pas1

"''o

Bowling For Dollers 6; Let's Go
The R -· It
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Famllr Aftllr 111
Romagnoli'' Table 201 Strauu Family S3 · ·
I ::IO-Hollywood Squaras 3.4: XXI Olympic' g 1.,.. •·
6,13; Match Gama PM I; Prlt:e Is Right 101 Nelllvllle on the Road 15; Robert Mec:Ntll Rtpart.
l :oo-Movln' On 3,4,15; Popl 1,101 ~II T1tOm..
:~ambtrs33; To Be Announctd .15; At The Top

~ur•~•ttf

Bradford.

Aut~ori zed Singer

SHill

We continue to cet questions
about whether honora only .
count If held by declarer.
The answer Ia that If 8
defender hold.l honora bli aide
gets credit. If dummy or
declarer bold.l bonora bla side
gets credit.

Pltorogra'lly
915-4155

all elec., 1 acre, Middleport,
on Route 7 , Phone (614) 985close to Rutland . Phone 992·
~25 .
74BI.
RE/yiOIJELING, Plumbing, heoUng
SMALL farm for sole, 10% down,
qnd oil types of 9eneral repair.
ow~er financed. Monroe CounWo~k guaranteed 20 years exty , W, Vo . Phone (304) m .
perience . Phone 99'2·:2.409.
3102 or (m) 772-3227 . .
~&amp;0 T~EE T'rimmi,g, 20 yean ex.'
COUNTRY farmland With secludper1ence . Insur ed free
ed woods. wQter and good OC ·
estimates. Call 992-2384 or
ceu in Monroe County, w. Va .
(614) 698-72571&lt;lbony.
$1 ,000 down, coli (m) 772SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser3102or (m)772-3227.

Ntr* Eul

Pass

KEN GROVER

BR~DFORO,

. Wetl

Openilll! ie.od - 3 •

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Atrial-Industrial
COnstruction Pn~~~rtta
:;-foma"'- 5cltDnl Strvlc•
•
·
Und.,..riCiulfe 8
ElemMttory
School P1cklli Ptclvm
Stnlors I YNrllaak
-w.ddltllt-

lArwu

l::

• Q 10 .1
• AQ5

........

Phone 949·2814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

~-:;;~~y.

wl!h

•76U
SOUTH iDl

• At84
Both vulnerable

coin Hgl•. 992-5737.
$erv1ce. We sharpen Scissors.
HOUSE lor sole, 20 minutes ·from EXCAVATING, dozer, loodor ond
Pomeroy, 1 acre level lot. 2
backhoe work; dump trucks
bedrooms, 2 cor garage, city
~nd lo -boys for hire; will haul
. water. gas heat, perfect for
fdl dirt, to soil, limestone and
young family starting out or
gravel. Coli Bob or ROger Jef.
older couple, slowing down.
fers, day phone 992-7()89
~edu&lt;ed
!rom $21 000 to
night phone ' 992·3525 or 992~
$19,900.
Phone
(614)
667-3519.
5232.
bedroo,ms
,
al
utilities
pOid.
You tend to overindulge those ,
PomerO)'' Ohio or phone W'J.
Phone 992-n51 .
1,001(200 lot for sole, Five Points EXCAVATING, dozer, bockhoe
oreo. Coll'l'/'l-3576.
.
o,nd dltcher. Charles R, Hat1970
beroiter
2
bedroom
,
$4500
:INNOCBNT P' ••
mi~take t~at won't help ~nyone
IF YOU hove o service to oHer CANNING peQch~s now ready
....:..a
In Jhe long run.
wont to buv pr sell s~mething'
thru August. Several varieties
fntld , ~ock Hoe Service ,
• ~ ·LOST:~Red lodies' billiold containfor quick sole, Can be seen at
1
Aut land, Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
~FINDLAY, ~ (UPl) - . oEM Nl
l
ing driver'~ license- and
oe looking fot wOrk ' .. 0;
by the bushel, '6 bushel or
570 P&amp;Qrl St. , in Middleport .
Patrick M. , GiUeapie of
Yoluobl• pqpers. Please return
whatever ... you 'll get results
~k. Please bring own con1 (MI' 21·June'20)Yo.u
GREG'.S CB SI&lt;LES, locoted ot Er·
ru.tarla IWillined free IDdll
may be templed today to
bUIIold, nioy keep money
foster w;rh o Senr;nel Wonll&lt;d
to~ner, 2 convenienr locations:
wins Gulf Service, MidY embellish the facts a bit rather
Return to Ruby Jones Rt 1 8o ·
Cal1992-2156.
·
Mtdway Market, Pomeroy,
dleport, Ohio. Phone 992·
Cll I ~gwl . . . . bond
lhan lo tell llll~e Ills. No one
133, Long BoHom, oh;~ 4574; 3
992 -2582: Bob's Morket, Moson
2438.
aftlrp.
11f"C&lt;IIO&amp;piltJtoa
believe
yourlalltate,s.
I
orphonohorot949·2053.
FomUy
Yord
Sate,
July
29rh.
773-5721.
'
cbar
of
·
30th. 9 a .m. till dark rain or STEREO-Radio,
8 track tope com·
SEPTIC Systems ;nslolled by
IB
marder Iii CANCIR ( I - 21-.IUIJ
LOST: Hvor ond whUe Springer
oh;ne. Same th;ngs 'tor oil •
binotion ,
om ~ fm
radio
l1censed installer. Shepard
I" • I !om
tbe llla'bling • You'" wind up dlaappolnled 1 . ... i· Spqrdol woar;ng red collor. lo•t
Alber I Schull% residence·.
automatic changer . &amp;lone~
Contractors. Phone 7,.2-2409.
clellb ~Ida \fife.
', day If you expect too , mu
. tn Pom.oy· Tuesday morning.
Cherry Ridge Road. follow sings
$102 .56 or •terms. Phone 992SEPTIC TAN~S clooned, Modern
H-II"Ddt Olanty CcmD1011 · from friends, Don't putthem on I R~word. Phone W2·3589, Pot from Sumner Road, Rt . 681 or 3%5.
Son~totlon , 992-3954 or 992.
JlleM Court uld Friday It Ihe spot by being overly
0 Bnon or phone 9'12·3132.
Hemlock Grove. Phone 9'12· FOUR ~ emetery .plots . Meigs 7 room house and both. 4 acres
WE OFFER YOU this n)ce
242B.
.
more or less, with born, on Rt .
wllllldvlle llttorDe7i when
demanding .
,
LOST: Mole neutered German
779~.
place.
2
story
frame.
3
Memorial Gardens. Phone
~ · on~· ~olf rnile from Pomeroy
large Br., formal dining R. WILL do roofing, construcllon ·
Jlftill~il liJ I a LEO lluiJ 23-A... 22) Your Shepherd, whUe lloo collor, YARD SALE. Mondoy. July 26th;;; (6" ) 985·•1•6.
~ 11 Y L•m•h . Furnace heat Ond
NEW siding, carpeti ng , ; pi&amp;Jmblng and hooting. No job
Patricia G It l!ldiUd. . Impulsive generosity could
(l~~r)l n96AIIre&lt;j oreo. Coli collect Fn. July 30. 12:00 noon 11115:00. ONE wir:ker sofa op~ns into dou· ctty water. Phone 992-2504 .
paneling and furnace, full : too Iorge or too small. PhOne
esp e waa causa you remorse later on.
• 6 ·1082.
295
Wright
Sl
..
Pomeroy
,
992ble bed. PhOI)e 992-5186.
· NEW 3bedroom, total elec. , 1.113
31
742
8
baMment, 2 car gar,e ge. ~;;;o·~~;-·""CT;:;--:--c----.,...., to duth at her bcme Keep within limits you can at. ·
66.
'
'
acres, four ·fifth mile from
REMINGT.ON
model
1100
orop
CI&lt;RPENTER, ' lloorlng, calling,
~ 28.
•. lord, no! whal you think Is ex~ :" YARD Sole o Ro•p~ ldvender grade . $275: antique chaise langsville off Co. Rood 10 518,500.00.
aaJd
22, i 'Pe&lt;:led.
REAL ESTATE
,
' res;den~e. S racu&gt;l;:"f undoy
Rt.
143
CLOSE
1
N'Mobile
ponollng. Phone 992-2759.
carpe l, atfocht'd goroge, utilitY
lounge, feothe'r tic:k cushion
room.
Coli
742-2619
Raymond
with
additional
rooms
and
VERMEER
BALER SALES AND SER~. -- llllm
11111111
Ida
'wife
VIRGO (Aug. 23·811PI· 221
FOR SALE
·· ond Wed•. , Good clothing,
new upholstery, $100; ne..;
·~•"
u
Real Estate owned by the
diShes, Avon , misc.- Rain or
Hatfield, Rutland . '
gerlge.
1'12
acres
of.
VICE.
Mol~~t·Aihens
County.
(compar:t)
"Jacuum
deaner
-~- -'---'..:.:.:...~-- • - ( when lhe
su.tly you're aware of ~etalls.
late Daniel Rees and Clara
•h;ne,
'
ground,
own
and
city
Bofors
from
$3995
up
.
Merrill
musr
sacrific:e.
$325
firm
'
....tlnad 1m! wltb a pa1r of Today, you'll see only !he big Rees loca ted al 306 West Ma in ;;YA-;R;;;D::-:'-:---:cc:'---....._-'--Phone 992-7805.
·
water, air. cond.
Chose, (614) 698·3021.
~.lle llld be tried to piclurt. Re-check alltacls and -Street, Pomeroy , Ohio , con .
· Sole 517 North Third ond
tbe ....,_ and .......,. Hgures.
slsllng of a garage and hOuse
Rutland Slreets, Middleport.
MODERN I FLOOR PLAN EXCAVATING. BACKHOES I&lt;ND
~·
-...
IS now being offered for sale
Weds .. Thur5doy. Friday. 9 1973 Plymouth Ouster in good
- Lovely kitchen with cook
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL
bll wife· waa U8RA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) To· by the underslgnod 10 Ihe :;;:&gt;h·."" 4 p.m. July 28. 29'ond · cond;Uon , $1900. 1&lt;1so , Ewe ond
units and ref., 3 bedrooms. . SEPTIC TI&lt;N~S INSTALLED. LOW
llirgil
B.
Sr.,
Realtor
.........
accor ""'
..·-· ·to ... daylenolasgainfulas
_llcoul~
. Pleosesubmll
Iam b· Ph one (614 I 9B5-3965.
bath, full basement, F. A.
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
have been, because you'll
use hlgheotbldder
your bids to the
underOigned . .. ~·
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, o.
...laulty business judgment.
Property
appraised
at
LAND for sale near Meigs Mine
heat,
ntw
sl,tel
sldlnn,
2.77
PULLINS,
PHONE 992-2~7B DAY
1~
Phon.• 992-337!
$2,500.00. Sale sublet! to the
No. I. Phone 7~2 - 27•6 .
•
ORNIGHT.
acres. large garage and
RENOVATED - _ . :.
SCORPIO (Oct. · u.~y:"i12) approvalotthe Probale Courl.
worklhop, carparl.
: BUILDING, remodeling, ond
Be watchful to~ay tha\ you're
AI&lt;C DOberman pupleo, slro ond 1975. Yomoho IOOCC Enduro, 1300
bedroom home. paneling,
WE HAVE 2 NEW 3
ropalrs . Quolllywork , e(f;ci,nt
not careles$ or wasteful with
t
AJdoseph W. Cook
dam brad for ----'ternMrmenr
mllel. Ext:!ellent condition very
carpeting, nice ~lichen,
bedroom homes just
.• ;;;~~~~ella Rodman , phone
..
." '"'"
.' things that balong to others. It
. and
lines.
e&lt;onom
ond
1 jcol machine.
modern balh. gas F. A.
could coat you a friendship. . ·
' Clara Rees, Deceased
6 males , 2 lemales, reosonobly
hefmet. SSOO. Phone 992·
completed
.
Both
furnaee, bam and 12 acres.
garage anc;t work area, , l WANT to go ·Into butlnesl for
$29,500.
l~ch Ben Franklin fireplace:
~· Fla, (UP!) - SAGITTARIUS (Nav. 23·Dtc. (7) 21 , 22, 23, 26, 21 , 28, 29, ltt ~ed. Waltor Everett 742- !24 patr
baths.
utility
rms., ·· . yourull? Almost new
of baby scales. PI-lone
l ACRES OUT - On hard
ca
rpeted,
about
1
acre
of , automatic inaulatlng machln~
"""pi&amp;IIID&amp;Itmaydr!lplts 21).Usuelly you'rea fairly lucky
·
992-5258.
road with drilled well and 2
ground . S22,900.00.
PhoneGolllpollo, 1-446·4782 . .
• CUt
IIIIDit
former person. but to~ay you'd bolter
ONE AKC Reg;otered Beagle
mobile homes. Buy both
• Pql U:wn Sen. Edwlrd J,, rely mora on your abilities.
hound, mole, 10 montho old l.Oh\ATOES, cobboge, squosh,
TO SELL CALL US _
ANTIQUE ,...lorotlons, roproduc·
sweet corn, cucumbers phone
and rent one. $13,500.
1111"
Dame FOrtune's allcklo ladyl
PUBLIC NOTICE
shota and already runn:
THEN - CALL THE
"?ns, cabinet making and fur., of ~...... ameJI,..LIIr
,.
In compllante
No . 5705 .27 ,
;ng.$SO.·Phone9•9,2322.
' 843· 2~95 ,
.
RIVER FRONT LOT MOVING
VAN
.
HENRY
E.
ndure
repoir, 131 V, 3rd, MldAI&lt;C
Irish
Setter
Puppies,
6
week
s
leaate WJterpte CAPRICORN lDec. 22·11n . . the Meigs County Budget
Water. elec. and sewage,
t974 Storcroft Galaxie, 8 camper .
CLELANO.
BROKER
dloport, 992·5735 doy ond
old. Phooe 949-2726.
,.
1t) In an attempt to Impress Commission will meet at the
lot 77xl19 Only 53,000.
reasonably priced . Phone 742:
APPRAISER,
' ;oie;ve;;On;;ln~g;.;.;;;::;-;-.....,- - - - Court ""'- · others today, you may take on offlee of the County Auditor at AI&lt;C German Shepherd puppies
2595,
2
BEDROOM BUNGALOW
"=.!"dt projects beyond your Pomeroy on August 2, 1976.
CONSULTANT,
REFRIGERATION ond olr condl.
good blood line, gentle disposi:
- Nice oak floors, natyral
1971
Kawasaki
175,
Enduro
$250
992-2259or
9'12,2568
t•onlng service. Phone Roger
P C• YOUDI ,.,.. capabilities. You have nolhlng m 21, (81 1, 21c
lion. Phone 992-56:23.
l&lt;lk;ro, 992·5&lt;135.
gas F, A. furnace,
Set of motorcycle corriei~. $13:
~'!_lit IICIIIII Important to gain but emberrassment.
basement and large lot.
Phone 992-5523.
~;iii;{:,:
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-FIII. 11) lNCIUWE APPROVEJl
Only
$8500.
C: AN.NING tomatoes , Carol
MIDDLETOWN • Ohio
~~~' Iaiii!
It you take allyertoday, do It on
2
FAMILY
HOME - In
__Whllo, 2•7-:2175.
1"~and• your own rather thon on lhe ad· ( UPI) - Tile bOard of
••
*I
Middleport, 12 rooms. 2
vice ot caauolacquolntanceo. A directors of Armco Steel 35 h.p. outboc:ird motorboat with CANNING tofnoton and sweep
'•• ", ,.
baths. natural gas heel.
trailer. Phone992•57-41 .
peppe~ s.
Cleland Fo rms.
IJIDI t1 1 IJ'IIIII jlrJ,
wrong move coul~ coat you ~- Friday approved an
Rent one for 1ncome. Good
Gerald1ne Cleland. Roc:ine
· Jutlce Departmeat aoma bucka.
·
entrance and nice yard.
~ of five cenll per
Ohio.
'
Vblealt Alto llfd ba I PI8CI!8 .,.... 20-M- 201 ·lbare of CmuDCII stock bi the
Asking $19,000.
.1
- --~-~ctlllult wltll hilt Be lair wllh olhera today, but company's quarterly
PORTLAND - 9 room
REMEDYYOUR WATER'
hoYse, modern kitchen,
11l11'far1
nat ~on'l lhort youretll tor In· dlridend rate, aald chllrman
.... till
IIIII dlvlduels who ~on't reolly
PROBLEMS AND SAVE
beth, parch and modern
MONEY, TOO, WITH
............. JU.
, deserve n. They wouldn't do It Wllllam Verily.
garage with furnace.
'Die lint dlridend at the
I'
_ . . , . --r .,... tor you.
NEW LISTING- 29 acrn
A .. •
new l1lle of 41 Clllll wUl be .
of forrest with place lo
payable
Sept.
7 to
build a lake. T. P. water,
Automat'_IC
111ate
lblreboldera of record ....
elec. and 3 bedroom mobile
"'
r
.~:.:..-..
I.
""'e•
,
UJIMI8r
home l4x70 on good
ON~ b~room apartment ot
Model
UC-XXX,
210,000
road . near Racine.
country
'Die dlrectGn • declared
Rl¥erside. Phone 992-3273 .
W."f!k_IY Grain Capacity
'I
...... . .
~- . . 1171
SPAC~
I rtplar qllll'llriJ dilldlad TRAILER space clote to ~~ I
R..u!Ar
Ulll IJIJt • ._ IIIP tilt U1U11 lhare of of
FOr.
~OUR AD.
IU C11111 I*' llban of
Mlno&gt;. Complete hookup
.00
CllrfJ&amp;oplllr '"""""IIIII WIR bt IVIIIabte
.iOOD MODERN HOMES
742-2166.
.
~
:PoMEROY LANDMARK'
11)11 wo:l ,. . to YIIJ/ lhla yur. ~ar, you cumalaUve COli- tlble proWE NEED. LEAVE YOUR
01o111·
to· - a hi...Jengy to coast. You ferred ltock payable Seot. IJO ;-;:;;;_;turnlth.d apt. clos~ to .• .J•cr.:· Clney, Mlr.
SELLING . PROBLEM~
' Super Valu s!lll
fiii!.IIIJ fGl'llarlll. . fillY not mak4 ot them what to lhareboldm of r·ricord Po1&lt;1oll's
WITH US AT 992·3125.
. ~992·2111
_. a~ 1 t'!~"· Phone 992-3658.

I"'"

.2

5786.

Convenien t to' shopPing 0 ~
Third and Mill Streets in Middleport . Brand new high quali-

t K Q lOt

tAU

homes. Also, 15 1g 20
acres, both hove sanitary
sewage and· utilities, con be
partially finan ced. Phone 992-

apartments. See the
manager at Riverside Aporl- WANTED To Rent ; Clean, furnished 2 beclr~ trailer or apart·
ments or call 992-n21. Furment, outs1de ot- city limits.
nis hed
apartments also
Pomeroy or Middleport area.
available.
For two working adults one
TRAILER spoce for rent in . Mid ch;ld, Coli collect, I (614 ) 69B·
dleport. Phone 992-Sd4 .
2920 after 5:30p .m .

~-~~-~...

U2

• J875

RcHIIator ,............,

several

ty

=::--;;

·.

4-10-1

EXPIRIINCID

lARGE building lot , suitable for

contractiO~.

r

.7S2
• K 10 73
t84
• K QJ 10
WEST
EAST
..... 1
• KJt!

1\. lti.Zt74

....

Askmg $55,000. Coli for op·
pointmenl, 992-3166.

three dlamondJ.
Now South IIOtlld calli bll ace

NORTH

.. WRL,~~DER

TOPPER-Camper lor BII , bed lri- THE Rosenbaum home at 295
sulaf&amp;d .. pon~Jied and wired for
Wright St ., PomerQy. 2 story
electricity. Slide,· in sections ' colonial, 4 bedrooms, 21AI
containing two single bunk~ or
batl'ls , . formal dining raorn ,
one Iorge b&amp;d. Tobie, stove
la~ge l.wlng. room, family roOm
(LP. ), sink , ice box . curtains,
w1th ftreplate , paneled bose"
carpeting , li ke new . Coli 992·
me.nt with two extra rooms,
5666 or see Herbert GilkeY , Rt.
ott1c ond 2 cor garage. Moving
33 at Darwin.
to C~llfornia , many extras stay.

electric. LOWER

Ast 0 . .

Old·falhloned logic work1
and queen of hearts and
'flnene for West's jack In
order to score nine trlclu and
win Ute rubber.
Tbe author would ezplaln
that the lineae wu a 1ure
thine. U West ~ beld a livecard diamond suit be would
have opened it. In auction you
led your longest iUlt apinlt
notrump . Woe. betide any
Iconoclast wbo violated that
rule. Hence, when West show·
ed out on the leCODd club lead
he wu lllll'ked wltli 4-4+1
distribution .
A contract declarer would.
probably make the 11me play
but it would not be a ~
thing. Contract playera don't
always lead their 101111est ault.

coannwus olft pltct
guners. W. hltng lto.or do 11
yourself. S(itclll prices ta
bulld~rs.
.

SU2 mo.

bedra'om

1n clud~ng

IN CON·

CIJT1tB4IIIIIIU

GUMR SERV.ICE

~ TROMM OONst :

apartments ~~
VILLAGE MANOR ;n M;ddleporr
fo r S!04 monthly plus elec. or

ONE

YOU'~E

WIN AT BRIDGE

•Je&amp;4 ·

OlD fUrniture , ke ' box.,, broso .
beds. woll telephones ond
porrs. or complee house~lds.
madness Is •-·
NOW
II
Write M . 0 . Miller , Rt. ...
puplibes Its thugs ac· ·
-..... .
•• ;~ homemade clothes
Pome•oy, Ohio. Coii992.7760. TWO bedroom mobile home
cordlngly.
The
fellow
There
are
582
people
1n
to.lflOII k•oo of dolls.- Surpr;oe
Brown's Trailer Pork, phon~
,_U
your fovont• little gtrl With a CASH paid for oil makes and
1n America sentenced to di
992-3324.
.
oor011
WU
condemned
to
.
e:
l'\IIW outfit for her doll Phone
models
of
mobile
homes
1
.~VI hie larcenous band: , ~"': ~lly prepared to ki111; · t9'12~. ' ~ · · .,. Phone ore&lt;&gt;code61H23-9531. ·
~
off. He WU a young
·
. . _ ~8R1CSA~AII_ material in shop -'. SSCa~SS for junk*&lt;i auto. frye 's 3 room fur'nished Opohment
man.
All over the world the
... ~ solo, Qfl, week only. Mon·
Truck . Auto Porto. Rutlond.
utnitles lurn;shed. Phone 992: 1 to 3 people dvoiloble for houl·
crimina1a are YOUIIC perbaps
day,, Jufy,,2(.-thru Sotu~doy. Ju-Pho'p b 7-42-2081. .
3119or992·5.434.
ing, demolifion, constr~clion
becauae they see _:.._t
II .
Fi
.
ly 31. OUr new hours ekcept TIM,BER. Porilerou Fores1 Pro- TRAilER , odults .only. Phone 992smo,U
clean·up :
wua.
is
f~soleweeksoreMondoythru d
T
'
7639or992·2181.
Equ!ppeod, hove truckS, J®ls,
like to lfOW ~ without tbe
Fndoy, 9 o.,n. ti117 p.m., closed
ucts. op price for standii1g
----torches and reasonable rates
.t!dnp tblevery ....,,... He
Saturdays. CoroHno Fobrk• on
Call . Kent Hanby. ' 1975 3 bed_coom mob He home ;n ' wm borler. Phone 742-2581:
bldaahaftdhead but a
I ~oute 7, one-~11 mile norlh of
Mooon,
w.. Ito. Phone (614) i~e~ve~n~in~g~··;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~;:;;:
6 98
...,.....• ...._ tbe Ia
._ lChester, Ohio. Henry and Mary COINS, currency . tokens, gold
tier
Bernice Bedt Osol
Hunter, owners.
ond silver jewelry. We need
,_IIJII .ooand
,,-~
1964 ond older U.S. co;no. Coli
FOR
SALE ,
ni ne
used
an appropriately
.luiJ 21' 1t71 LOW
~~T5H
Saltboll Tournament
lor olhe• 142-2331 or come out
housetroilers , one and 2
at Re.usvdle, Ohio Weekend
1
bedrooms. Completely furnishpout. He wore Western ARIU lMordl 21·April 1t)
of July 31 ond Aug~st I. Also,
oourcoinshoponRutloooaoo LOCUST POSTS, round or spl;t
ed. Conodcr,• s Trailer Court.
' llo 1 1, a Middle East robe
L""" shots are nollikely to pay
Auguot 7 ond 8th. for lnlormoCreek Rd. Roger
Phone9•9-27R
·
1900 Central St., Gallipolis
no s-. 'lbr1Jt18)tout ~ oH today, but har~ work will.
I&gt;On coli Junior Sorber ,
COAl , Umestone, ond colc;um
Oh;o, P~ne (61•) 446-139i
matterbeaald•"''"'""
.
Bank on !he muscles in your
Reedsville . Phone (61•) 378- USED 8elsow ;n good condition.
chlo•;de ond colc;um brine lor
near
Smith's Buick .
to
·-"'•• which arJ" , not !he spots on the ~Ice.
6383. $.!0 per room ond 2 bollo.
Phone (614)37B-6387. .
duor conrrol o~d opeciol m;x;ng
. many- something of 8 TAURU.
20·MIJ 20)
Class B. Teom.
oolt lor formers. Mo;n Slreet, MOBILE hom9 for sole or rent !J

Grap~

IAJ 211111
-....
IIIIIINIII1IT

DIIH"'onstrote

Johnstown, Po. 15904,

\

YOUR PARTNER.,
HUH? OFF THE
SAME UFO~
· STA!oJT RADIO
COMTtiUNICATrON.
1 PRESUMEf

IEPUallllll

OPPORlUNIT'II

GIMMICKS 1
Goool'l ne · FURNISHED, 2 bedrm. ·apo.~ tmeot ,
a~~wanc.e . Earn FREE Sample
adults only, in Middleport .
K1t . Coli 742-23n . Write TOY ~~neW~
2·~~~.7~·~·~------LADIES PI&lt;RTY PLAN

EVERYTHING&gt;:

WIIIOIIIS

Unlim i ted

e-ornin'gs
Toys and Gifts ~
few evenings a w&amp;&amp;k . NO ex·
perie,nce. NO paperwork. 'NO

HAN6 IT ALL,
MY PARTNER
CA ioJ VERIP Y

WERE NeVER
SPOKEd

Noble Summit Rd.,
Mlddltpart
PHONE 992-5724
7-21-1 mo.

David Parsons, Owner

Remodeling Service
For Your Home

A

T~UERWOI~D5

D. Bumprdner

Squ~rt Yard lnstoll«&lt;

The Complete
$200 weekly 5luffln.g envelopes 1966 Ford. $200. Phone (614) 985·
4146.
into olreody stamped and ad dressed envelopes. Stuffing 1967 1nternotio;i pickup in good
material prqvided frM. Send:
.!ond~ti ~. Phone 7-t2-2U6.
Self-ctddreued stomped
1966
Muslong , $325 . See at 570
envelope: Diversified , Dept ,
Pearl St., M iddleport , Ohio.
J');l&lt; . 120(,.CofJ'den Dr Rkh·
mond, \iir!Jinto 23229. v

•

tao.

•6.95

1 ~' Midwest grain and cattle rack body 350

·

Business SenJices

'.

.

1970 CAMARO CPE.
.
.
V-8, automatic p st I
. 51095
N~s some body .wor~~ ng. extra good radial tires.

one ·

.w•

__ TUESDAY, JULY 27. 1976
5:0G-8onanze 3; Partrldg4Famlly
Million: lm·
poulb!n 15.
5:30-Adam-12 4. 13; News 6; Family Affair I ; Elet·
_ tri~CO!!JP!nr 20,33.
_ ._ _
6:oo-" ews 3,4,1,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:»-NBC News3.4.15: ABC News13; Anay Griffith 6;
CBS Newsl,lO; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
._! :119--Trulh 9r Con~ces 3; Ta Tell The Truth 4;

ei

··i~~~~~~N

P .M .

Publico lion .
_canctiletions.

By Tom TieR

-fillet

CONTRACTS ,._
.THEIR

readr.cor Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

take 592 lives?

Television log for ·easy view.i~g

WELL·"'·NOT R£AU.Y•
l· •· ONLY
THE -•~ •

l

�12 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-PIImeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 27, 1976

Court approves Dayton desegregation plans
By RICK VAN SANT
assignment.''
.
fol'mula."
''AppUcatlon of the district
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
But the appellate court
u.s. SIJ:th Circuit Court Ql ruled today that ''ratller than court's requirement that
Appeala today approved a establishing
a
flud each school's ratiQ be within
CGUrt-order.ed Deyton, Ohio, mathematical requirement plus or rnirJua 15 per cent of
school de1egregatlon plan as the (school) board claims the racial makeup of the·
that calla for the busing ol it does, this formula provides system wlll pennlt black
12,000 elemenlary lludents a llelllble basis of pupU enrollments at particular
thla cOOling achool year.
The appellate cot!11 upheld
the desegregation plan
ordered last March by u.s.
District Court Judge Carl B.
Rubin ln. Dayton, and
rejected the Dayton Board of
' Edllcatlon's attempt to get
the plan tossed out or
modified.
The appellate judges, In a
Ohid Bridge Crop. Cam· $78,000 for the operation of
~manimous 3-0declslon, today
bridge was awarded a con- SEOEMS in 1977. The request
praised the ''flezltallty" of tract Monday to build a new · was taken under advisement.
Rubin's desegregatioo plan span. over Blesslr!'g Rd. at a
Archie Lee, a developer on
and termed It "a uaeful cost of ~9,177. 20.
Fairfield-Centenary Rd .
starting point in shaping a
Aspokesman for the Gallia complained about a tar
remedy
for
past County Commission said the problem on that road. County
dlscrbnlnaUon."
project will be paid by two Engineer Paul Stull said the
-The "Rubin Plan" achieves separate checks, one the last problem would be solved.
desegregation of Dayton's half of 1976, the other In 1977.
In fina·l action , comschoo!J by a so-called
A: public hearing was /leld missioners C. E. Johnson, Joe
"pulrlng" method.
on the environmental impact Stewart and John Belville,
fu "pairing," one sehoolls . !Of Mill Cr~k and Uncoln approved departmental
m&lt;~tched with another , and
Pike Roads, No one appeared budgets for 1977. Action on
students are Intermingled. to on behalf or against the the budgets will be taken at
achieve racial balance - ' lmproveqtents.
next week's meeting .
some pupils lnltlaUy staying
Bill Taylor, executive
Frank Mills, treasurer·
at U1elr local school, aome director or the Southeastern elect, was granted pet·
being bused to the other Ohio Emergency Medical mission to attend a
school.
Service, (SEOEMS) treasurer's meeting July 28
The students then swap requested allocation of at Chillicothe .
school:~ the nellt year and
t'QJIUnue to rotate annually meaning that students wW be
at their local school ooce
every two years aJid bUsed to
the "paired" school the other BY ARNOLD SAWISLAK
appearance of unity was.
year.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In Anyone w~ had seen at close
• TI1e "pairing" 1s llllpeC!ed · the category of flnill obsei'VB· quarters the depth of eQ~otion
IQ include 44 of Dayton's 53 tlons
about the 1976 expended by the Democrats
elementary schools and Democratic national who sUced and chopped at
Involve about 12,000 grade convention :
each other for 12 years had to
school students 1n busing. .
I. It was said by some that go to this convention
Only four of Dayton's 10 nothing of Interest reaDy skeptical about the chances
highschoolshappened at Madison Square of keeping the peace..
pndomlnantly black Roth Garden.
· This convention was
and Dunbar and predomi·
2.ltwassaldbyothersthat conducted on a civil plane,
nantly white Belmont and the reason nothing happened bllt not because the feuding
Wilbur Wright _ wW be was that Jimmy Carter Democrats have become
"pulred,"meaningonlysome
tired of arguing about
2,000 of the city's 14,161 Jj)gh
I
doctrine.
The · same
school students wW be bused. .
contending ideologies that
The Deyton school diltrlct
·
had r,ipped up previous party
presently Is 46 per cent black strongarmed all opposition meetmgs were represented at
and 52 per cent white, IIICI Into silence.
New York and still exiSt in
·Rubin ordered that ever).
Not so 00 both couni:B.
the party as it moves toward
school's enrollment be with~!! , .. the first count, It 18-true tile 1976 campaign.
l5
c t f that tlo ..;.. lll!lt there were no fights of
The difference was the
.
per
en
O
ra
'"!! 'Of COO Sequence On lt1.he -'"'-~ess of the OppoSlll
' g
thiS September.
"~ .....
The Dayton School Boalil cmventlm floor· . That !'I 'camps to accept defeat
had appealed on IJ'Ounds that .Jtaelf Ia of some mterest ~ without walking out or to gain
the desegrqatlon plan view ,of the D':ffiocrattc victory without feeling a need
''remedy nceec!S the IICIIpe of Party s record m recent to.destroy the &lt;Xber side. The
the
violations"
and cq~ventlms.
difference was the realizatioo
complained about the 15 ~r ...But the absence of coofilct that the ~mocratlc PartY
cent ''fixed percentage ~~~ not the ~ews. T~~ C&lt;J!!)d IJ.ol. win the presi~ency

Request·is taken
'
under advisement

schools to range between 33
T$y marked the third
per cent and 63 per cent," , time the appellate court bas
said the judges.
.
heard an appeal in the long
In further pointing out the and involved 011yton school
''flexiblllty" of Rubin's plan, desegregatloo case alld the
the judges noted there Is a judges prevloualy Indicated
provision for variations from they were Irritated by the
the plus or minus 15 per cent slowness In desegregating
requirement "In exceptional Dayton school:~.
circumstances."

Four marriages in court aclion
Two suits for divorces and
two
applications . for
dissolution of marriage have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Mary A. Cruikshanks,
Cheshire, filed for divorce
against
Ralph
(;.
Cruikshanks, Belle Valley,
Ohio, and Carol Will, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, against James A.
Will, same address. Edwina
Scott, Middleport · and

FFATOMEET
RACINE - The Racine
FFA will meet Wednesday at
7:30p.m. at the high school.
All members are urged to
attend. The officers will meet
prior to the regular meeting
at 6:30p.m.

Charles F. Scott, Pomeroy,
and Teresa D. Schwab,
Pomeroy, and Thomas E.
Schwab, . Pomeroy, flied for
dissolu lion.

Supporters of
miners to meet
United Mine Workers
supporters wlll meet Friday,
July 30 at 10 a.m. at Forest
Acres park outside of RuUand
at the No . I sllelter, Paulette
Butcher said today.
Guest speaker'will be James
Kidd, president of the District
6 Black Lung Assn. A special
guest will be Bernice Mold,
secretary of the BLA. The
public is welcome.

What ·. didn 't happen at the Garden

Co

nunentary

.on

'

.
-

'

Tuesday t.oru Tllunclay

NOT OPEN
July 31-31, Aug. 1

t

·"c

THREE DAYS OF
THE CONDOR
Robert Redford, Faye
Dunaway, Michael Kane,'
Cllfl Tob.,rlton, Max
VonSydow.
CRI
Show Sflrls7 p.m.

ou..,.._en on arguments.
' off'-lal
bas bla med · tbe
Tha t lS
· the senliment of
"'
faUure of the federal court to David Fonns of Smithers,
recotlllize the rights of miners financial secretary of local
fGr the current strike that has 1159, Untied Mine Workers
.........,..,. If
~- ha of the natim's union, at Cedar Coal Co.'s
~cUm.
.
Kanawha County operations,
The miner llld the unrest where the first walkout
IJIUihroomed .Into an open occurred.
rebelllm when U.S. District
F9r!lls, a 28-year-old
miner, said tile local went to
court June 22, but Knapp
preferred to tske up the
matter "in chambers, off the
record."
"When we wanted it In open
court, be said be didn't have
to hear It," be said.
.' t1Ii1e
"The nert day It wasn't held.
June 24, we struck. There
were two men dlJcharged at
the same time.
"We went to the district
(UMW DIBtrlct 17) 14 appeal
to the International union to
allow UB to strike and keep
this thing cmflned. We didn't
hear anything from the
district or the international."
The original dispute
resulted from an arbitrator's
decision· that a com.

Take Advantage of
the Bargains
You. See '
WITH
A

ClnZENS
NAnQNI.
BANK
LOAN

.

ilyOH~Tg~~
:r!i~~g~ea~ !:~:. :uni~~tio~st. j~e"":!~: be.:saln,~he· past they ha,ven't
(UP!) An ,...., un1
'

•

Fri., SAt., Sund•y tli l•

it presented at leaSt did not go to that convention
the image of unity to the with enough ·. votes or
voters. ·
influence to gag · any
Which brings up Carter's determined bloc of delegates
role in keeping the convention who wanted to make trouble.
~uiet. There is no doubt that
In plain fact, the delegates
,the candidate-apparent, as rolled over, accepting
aware as .anyone else that compromises and finesses
shrill and bitter controversy that would have been junked
could hurt his chances in with little ceremony when the
November, wanted a feuding frenzy was at its
peaceful ciJnvention.
height. There was some
And it is also true that publicly stated unhappiness
Carter used his· strength in about some of the Carter
the preconvention period 14 proposals, but there was .no
defuse a number of potential revolt beca.use the delegates
conflicts oo the platform and did oot want one.
on convention and party
This; of course, lll!lde for a
rules. The success of this · "dull'.' convention in tenns of
effort, however, did not turn what happened at Chicago in
on Carter's ability to choke 1968and Miami Beach in 1972.
off dissent.
No riots, no walkouts, no
Carter had the nominatim shouting matches, no high
in hand before the convention drama. But also no open
because tbe opposition, still wounds, and for the first time
strong enough to make a loud since the early 1960s, agree·
fight, decided after the last ment within \he party that the
prlmsries to go with the main chance is winnjng the
Georgian instead of battling election
to the bitter end. But Carter

Slowly but steadily, the
Nation Is moving toward
economic recovery as the
mid-year approaches. The
following economic
Indicators provide the basla
for this cautious but
optimistic outlook. The
national output of goods and
services, commonly referred
14 as the GNP was revised
upward 11galn to a 1.8 trillion
dollar annual rate.
·
This Is up 8.7 percent
annually ·over the fourth
quarter rate. The May Index
of Industrial Productlm rose ·
0.7 percent, contlnulng a 14
mont!) climb. Th!J particular
Index measures growth in
output of the Nation's mines,
utilities, and factories.
Business equipment and
Industrial materials showed
major gains, continuing their
recent upward trend. U. S.
f\CW car sales gained strongly
In June, exceeding Industry
expectations and rising
nearly 41 percent over the
level measured In the first
part of June of last year. The
bouslng Industry Is .looking up
also. Housing starts turned
upward 2 percent In May to
an annual rate about 30
percent above a year earUer.
New building permits rose to
their highest rate in 2 years
for both apartments and
single family houses.
Briefly all of this mcreases
production and economic
· activity leads to more jobs
and less unemployment in the
private
sector.
Tbe
employment figures confirm
this analaysis. Both total and
non..,gricultural employment
reached all time highs
recently, according to the U.
S. Census household survey.
Total employment rose by 1
'million jobs over the 2 month ·
AprU-May period. Job gains
occurred in 60 percent of 172
reporting indus.tries. Nonagricultural employment
rose by 386,000 jobs in·May to
an 8U million record peak.
Key u~~ployment rates
show the following April to
May changes In seasonally
adjusted tenns: All workers,
down from 7.5 to 7.3 pet.;
Adult men, up from 5.4 pet. to
5.6 pet.; Adult women, down
from 7.3 pet. to 6.8 pet.;
Household heads, uilchang~ .

why pass up a good buy? Y2U can
toke advantage of them ... with ready
cash. See us about a Personal Loan.
W...Up Teller Wiiclow and Auto Teller Win~
Open Frida, Ewninp 5 to 1 P.M.

"The Friendly Barak"

MIODL£PORT, (1110
••~• fNer..tl Olpalil IMUrance Corporatior.
1"1T• INSUltED TO '40,00r .

gpbeld the company nnoition,
rS8l'd F~•.
~"w The men sought
relief in federal court aJid
were denied a hearing, be
·S8l·d.
When !bey struck foDowing
their two-week vacation
period, Cedar took them w.
court· and won a temporary
restraining order from
Knapp. Fll'lll8 quoted Knapp
as again saying he didn't
have time to hear the local's
side.
"!feel if Knapp had at least
heard us and then come down
with that ~.000 fine and
$25,001kHiay fine we would
have gone back to work. He
treated us like ignorant coal
miners. I told him if that 's
justice I'm disgusted."
Fonns said the men want a
meeting with the coal
industry now to explain their
needs and .settle matlera at
the mine site without always
resorting to the· courts. "We
would like to set up
something with the coal
operators and sit down across
.a table and discuss things,"

tried to make an ernest
a tt empt to · reso1veo the
probleiTIS and tbey've been
able to resort to court
•
system,'' said Forms.
"Hopefully wUh this show of

Sports Briefs ,
Press
By
United
International
MIAMI (UPI) - A
vacationing Venezuelan won
$31,171.40 Monday by
successfully picking the 11·1-ll
trifecta at Calder Race
Track.
The payoff was the second
largest in Calder's sill-year
history.
The man, who did not
identify himself to the press,
received a check for almost
with more than $9,000
being withheld . for the
Internal Revenue Service.

force they'll see the light. n
they wW handle these griev·
·
ances properly we can get ..,.
along but until they d0 I do 't
:.:e us having any type "or
· bl
amtca e relationship at
all."

The coach made an
exception of veteran safety
Blll Br~dley, however,
staling he · was elltremely
Impressed
with . his
performance,

OHfOIAN KILLED
WILIJAMSBURG, Ky. UP!
- Donald Kimberlin 29
Cincinnati, was kllled
Monday nl8ht when his car
overturned near the Ten·
nessee border.

team.',

,.,_

Lyles here for Taylor

Hospital News . ~~~8and

Irresponsible
statell!ents have been
made," the judge said, ,
.~ be didn't app~\e
bearing.. of "veiled threats
and insinuations" involving
the court's i:onduct In coal
cases.
"Why IS there not a public
oulcry and strong pressure In
West Virginia to end thete
recurrent and senseleu
wildcat strikes?" BrenJIIII
said. "Why can miners from
one mine shut down other
mines which have no disPute
8lid no Involvement in the
dispute?"
..
Brennan recounted past
trOubles In West Virginia's
pitS, including, since 1974,
unauthorized walkouts over
gasoline sales, studded
snowtlres, school books,
· REUNION SET
:'hundreds of arblt.rable local
PORTW f) _ McElroy . ISSues, and, yes, the right to
clan and friends reunion Aug. slrf!te."
2 at Portland Park. Basket Since then, miners have
dinner at 1 p.m.
wa\Ched mllll~n In wages go
down the dram, along with
f30 mUI!on In the union's
health aJid retirement funds,
and 20 million tons of coal.
'VeteraD8 Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Charles
Frazier, . Middleport; · Della ·
Curtis Pomeroy ; Nellie
Price ' Middlepor't· Opal
Tyree', .Middleport; Carl
Moodispaugh, Middleport;
Delmar Grady, Racine;
Bernice Grueser, Mid·
dleport; Virginia Riffle,
Racine ; James Fisher,
Middleport; Fred Tucker·
man, Pbmeroy; Roy Glad·
man, Gallipolis; Michael
Zirkle, Middleport; Ronald
Miller, Racine·, .Harold R.
King, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED _ Charles
Lewis, Paul Laudermilt,
Alberta Spaun, Esta Roberts,
Lena Cooper, Ruth Ann
McKinney.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
VISIT OUR MUSIC DEPARTMENT
ON. THE FIRST FLOOR

Weather

•

Gultors, Guilor, Violin, BanJo · ~!rings, Picks,
MlcrophantJ, . Instruction Books, CB's, Scanners.
Radios, T1pe Players, T1pe Cons, Hormonlcas,
RHCis, Components, Blink Cassell and 1 track t1pe,
Drumsticks 1nd many other music occessorln.

'

RECORDS and TAPES
A big ulectlon of records both singles
and olbums, 8 track 111111 111 1rr1ngtd 1
lor your HIY ntectlon. New nlecllons
or rive wukty.

SHED MUSIC
Religious ud popular shttt music,
1110 books such u choir books,
hymn111, pjltrlotic books. JOhn W.
Sch1wm ond ~ohn Thompsons
CourHs lor lht pl1no.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

l

foreign sUJiplles.
"Over the longer run, we
e~pect conswners will benefit
as a result of · reduced
reliance on e:~pensive
alternate ·ruels, '' the FPC
opinion said.
The declslon is not easy; the
FPC said.
"The commlasion faces a
formidable task : estab)lshlng
rates high enough to
stimulate additional new gas
supplies, but not so high as to
burden consumers with
prices In excess of those
needed to elicit such
supplles.''

the rate. The impact Is
a dozen · other groups, time.
Including the Slate of Mlil·
Only where elllstlng excessive," he said.
nesota, the United Auto Wor- contracts signed during thoae. But the m~jority
kers, the U.S. Cooference of periods have . reo,penlng Chairman Richard L.
Mayors, the National clauaes lot reconsideration of Dunham alld Commissioners
Farmers Union, and others. , rates, could those ·contracts Jobn H. Holloman Ill 'and
The . previous national come to the new high price. James G. Watt - said the
ceiling lor gas destined for All new contracts from now Increases ''will make more
interstate sales was 52 cents on can be at the new rates. gas available for residences
per thousand cubic feet.
A spoke.smait lor Energy . (and) wW help IQJelleve the
The FPC ruled Tuesday a Action called the increase pressure of shortages on
producer can charge $1.01 per "the largest In history .:. an business and industrial
· thousand cubic feet for gas astronomical Increase."
custorpers.'' _
dedicated to Interstate sales
Commissioner Don S.
They said previous rate
between Jan. I, 1973, and Jan. Smith dissented with the FPC Increases had failed to spur
1,1975,and$1.42per tllousand majority, saying the Increase producers to the addltlooal
cubic feet for gas committed "is too high."
production the nation needs
to Interstate sales after that
"The costs. do not support to avoid over dependence on
:;:;:::::::::;:::::;:;:::::::::;:;:::;:;:::::::::::;::::::::;:::;::;::;:::::::·

Ohio: $90 per family·o,f 4

CLOSING TIME
Closlag time lor all open
class entries of the 1131h
annual Meigs Couaty Fatr
CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
Is 4 p.m. on Aug, 13. Ex·
decision
by the Federal
ceptlons are the horse sbow
rower
Commission
to nearly
with a closing lime of 7
!rlple
the
price
of
new
natural
p.m. on Aug. 18 and the
horse and pony pulling gas wW cosl Ohioans about
contests wblch bave no $225 mllUon, or about t90 for a
family of four the first year,
closing time.
The fair board secretary according to former Sen.
Howard M. Metzenbawn, !).
wm be at the fair board· Ohio,
.
office on the Rock Springs
"ThiS decision· approaches
Fairgrounds · lo accept
dereguls
tion and will result
entries froll! 10 a.m. to 4
in
a
cosl
to the American
p.m. on Aug. 12 and 13 only. ·people of $4.5
billion in the
first
year
alone,"
:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:::;::j;-:·:::·:_-:·:·:: :·;:4.:·:·~':,.;..:·:·:·

at y

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio
· Wednesday, July 28, 1!116

Metzenbaurn said Tuesday.
"Ohioans wW pay for today's
(Tuesday's) FPC decision to
the tune of some $225 million,
or about t90 for a family of
four the first year."
Efforts to deregulate
·natural gas prices were
defeated earlier this year in
Congress,
despite
an
Intensive lobbying effort by
the oil and gas Industry,
according to Metzenbaum,
. wbo calls the FPC's decision

en tine

"a deliberate effort ... to
circumvent tbe will of the
Congress.''
Metzenbaum, who Is
running for tbe U.S. Senate
against Sen. Robert Taft Jr.,
R.Ohio, in November, says
the latest gas price hike ''wiD
also have a major impact on
the nation's employment
picture. and .will add to the
already deplorable nwnber of
Americans walking the
streets seeking work.''

Fl!leea Cents
Vol. 28, No. 71

.

Miners ignore ·Miller, federal judge
.

B •
.zn . . rze

.

·;:;::::~::::::::&gt;.::.::::::;::::::::~:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:,:;:,:;:::,:;:;:;:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;::;;

CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!) -Miners protesting the judi·
"This strike will not serve bound Cedar Coal Co., whose
i:= 7\. T
•
~ ;~ cial system in southern West Virginia today ignored orders . the oals the miners seek, seven mines were af:lected by
the initial flareup, told Local
a strike that has
1759 members they could not
· ;~:
.
.
~ Spokesmen for the three United Mine Workers Districts ordering the miners back to strike over two specific issues
.· based In West Virginia satd !heir members had continued the · work.
-job posting and suspension ·
· By Uulted Press llltemaUonal
strike
into
its
ninth
day.
"!
can
see
no change whatsoeVer,"
Hours
later,
in
Abbingdon,
of two workers.
. WASHINGTON - FORMJ:;R GULF OIL LOBBYIST
Said
one
spokesman.
·
v
th
u
s
F
urth
Cir
uit
a.
,
e
..
o
c
Weider als!J slapped an
Cla_ude C. Wild Jr., acquitted of making an !!legal ~.ooo
Cedar
Coal
Co.,
in
Kanawha
County,
where
the
labor
dispute
Court
of
Appeals
enjoined
injunction
on
the
campaign contribution of Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, O.Hawaii,
began,
reported
no
miners
showed
up
for
the
7
a.m.
shift.
.UMW
Local
1759
members,
iriternalional union, barring
says he plans now to "see what I can do with the rest of my
Though mainly keeping workers off the job in West Virginia, whose strike July 16 touched it from encouraging the
life.,
·
the strike spread this week to Ohio, Virginia and Kentucky, off the mushrooming work
U. S. District Court Judge Joseph C. Waddy found Wild not crippling coal prodtiction and causing furloughs in the rail stoppage, from continuing strike. ·
The job posting dispute
guilty because It had not been proved he was indicted before a
industry.
their
walkout.
intially
was taken up by a
three-year statute .oflimitations ran out. Wild admitted he had
While
sympathetic
to
their
gripes
about
the
federal
court,
Judge
Emory
Weidner,
federal
arbitrator
who ruled
made the illegal corporate contribution but claimed it was
UMW
President
Arnold
Miller
told
striking
miners
Tuesday
·
acting
on
a
request
by
strikemade In January, 1973. The indictment came on March 2, 1976. they only stood to lose by keeping the wildcat strike going.
Henry Giugni, Inouye's administrative assistant, testified
as a government witness that Wild handed him the money~and $100 bills In a plain white envelope - after March 15,
. 1913.

f.!l lBWS • •

8\\jldr~~~r~~~: ~~oee~ta~on ~oend

.PITTSBURGH - U.S. STEEL CORP., the nation's largest
steel producer, Tuesday reported Its second-quarter profit
dropped by $9 million from the same period last year to $119.6
milllon, despite a sizeable increase .in revenues.
The Income of $119.6 mUiion, equal to $1.47 a share, came
on revenues of $2.4 billion. This comapred with income of
$128.6 ml11lon, or $1.58 a share, on sales and revenues of $2.07
bllllon lor the second quarter of 1975. However, second-quarter
Income Increased 22 per cent from the first quarter.

m.ooo,

POST TO MEET
There wiD be a special
meeting Thursday, July 29 at
8 p.m. of Racine American
legion Post 602.

By WIWAM E. CLAY'l'ON.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
coalition
of consumer, labor
•
.and local government groups
matshaled strength tQday to
oppose the proposed new
'higher ceiling for natural gai
that wW cost the average
bouaeh91d an e~tra $15.60 a
year.
In an effort to spur new
production, the Federal
Power Commission
announced Tuesday It wW
allow producers to charge
nearly triple the previous
national ceiling for gas
committed to Interstate
sales.
The COIJU!l).sslon estimated
NEW GAME PROTElCTOR- Andy Lyles, left, Is Meigs County's new game protector. the average boll'\e's natural
With him Is Greg Taylor who has served In the capacity the pus! year and wiD be going .to gas bUI wiD increase $15.60 a
Monroe County in August.
year.
.
A1 group of organizations
headed by Energy Action
asked the FPC to delay tbe
declslon, and also drew up
court papers for a suit
challenging the new rates. A
Andy Lyles, 24, a native of wife, Diana; will be going to tunate in being assigned 10 spokesman for Energy Action
Groveport, Ohio, has been Monroe County and will Meigs County," Lyles said. said it Is joined liy more than
He will be residing in the
appointed Meigs County's reside near Woodsfield. They
new game protector.
have resided a! Long Bottom home now occupied by Mr.
and Mrs. Taylor. His phone
A former teacher and Route I.
Lyles has hunted. often in · number, toll free, is 985-3947,
football coach .at Groveport
Thunderstorms tod8y and
High School, Lyles replace,s · VInton and Meigs County. His and anyone having any !Qnighl. Lows tonight will be
Greg Taylor who has been mother is the former Doris questions or matters per• 65 to 70. Partly cloudy Thurs·
serving as game protector Lash of Vinton County, and he taining to wildlife to discuss day with a chance of thunwith the Division of Wildlife has relatives in Albany and can phone him at any time at derstorms. Highs Thursday
·the past year. Taylor and his McArthur. "I feel very for- the designated number.
in the low to mid 80s.

Anarchy

News Notes

CHESTER, Pa. (UPI) The Philadelphia Eagles
waltzed through a workout
Monday and Coach Dick
Verinell was not pleased.
"It wasn't good enough;''
Vermeil said following a
morning practice. "The only
way you can win lllfYing like
tha't Is to play a college

FPC's higher gas ceiling
,opposed by consumer groups

CINCINNATI (UP!)- at U pet.; Married men, up Some of the 500 pqencen
3.~pct. to 4.0pct.; Teenagers who
board the new
(16-lB),downfrom 19.2pct. to "Mlnlsslppl Queen"
11.5 pet.; Fulklme worlren, lleemboat lonlcblm paytnc
downfrom7.0pct.toUpct., $2,03 a ticket fer the 11-nlcht
It 1J alao encouraging to malden VO)'lll!' roundtrip to
note that personal Income. New Orleans.
rose 11.1 biWon dollars In
'The least ellpellllve
May to a 1.3 Jrlllloo dollar roundtrip fare 1J ,1,010. One,
annual rate, up 9.8 pet. way fares - el&amp;bt nig1lll ..,.
annuaUy. Farm income went range frGm ~ to ,1,880.
up for tile second stral8ht · Prices vary according to llire
montll.
and fl!mllhlncs.of the eight
One of our major concerns types of staterooma. Tile
Is to promote an economic · pice of a ticket lnclu•
pollcy that provides . for three goutmet mea!J a day. ·
steady but reasonable IJ'Owth
A slJter ship to the lllllller
so 11 not to rekindle another and 50-year old "Delta
unacceptable outburst of Queen;• the $23.5 mllUm
Inflation which would not "Mlsslaslppl Queen" was
benefit anyone. In this cornmlasloned for salUng In
regard,governmentspendlng elaborate ceremonl• here
must be restrained. We must Sunday afternoon as she
allow the new economic arrived at her Ohio River
growth to lake place In the home port fi'OOI a downriver
private sector In order to COIII!ructlon site.
nrovlde a more )Jfllductlve
Following the malden
.ond longlastlng economlq voyage, the seven-deck, sn.
recovery. This Is what I am loot veuel has a crowded
working for, Immediate Itinerary, Jncludlllg St. Louiieconomic recovery and the New Orle1111, St. Paul.at.
lmg range goal that wW Louis and ClnclnnaUbenefit not only ourselves but Plttsburgh tripe.
·
our griiiCichlldren as weD.
I know that we have muCh
work to do in sustaining
economic recovery and I do
'
not Intend to avoid the task.
(Cmtlnued from page 1)

Laurel Oiff

Bertba Parker
Attendance at Sunday
school and the morning
service July 25 at the Free
Methodist Qlurch was 104.
Rev . an~ Mrs . · Gene
Musser, Hysell Run called on
·Georgia Diehl recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell,
Mr. and Mrs. Lary Walker
was in Canton over the
weekend and attended the
60th wedding anniversary of
Mr. Howell's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon HoweD.
FULLERTON, Calif. (UPI)
Mrs. Charles Karr,
- The Los Angeles Rams (Leona ) who Is a patient in
Monday asked waivers on a V.M.H. Is somewhat 1m15th-round draft choice and proved from her operation
six free agents, reducing but still no vlsit.ors are
their NFL squad to 81 players allowed . .
at their camp in Cal State . Mrs . Charles Haley,
FuDerton.
Cooksville and Mrs. Frella
The Rams asked waivers Mae Whittenington and
on Mal CampbeiJ, a wide daughter RevaMa called on
receiver from Cal State-los Georgia Diehl recently.
Angeles, and free agents Glen
Mrs. Edna Howell returned
Cotton, wide receiver from to her home In Coliunbus
Fresno State; Jerry Dyer, after spending two weeks
quarterback from Southern with her mother Nancy
Utah; Joe Fabian, wide Walker and her brother
receiver from Cal State Frank Dill.
Fullerton; Don Herrold,
Mrs. P~tty Bauer, returned
linebacker
from
the to her home in Cleveland
University of Hawaii; Dave after staying with her father
Ottmar, punter
from Charles Karr while her
Stanford, and Phil Wroblcky, mother was In UMH.
.tight end from Oregm State.

.

82,430 apiece

~--------------~

.

Another $1.30 per month, average

Some excursion
tickets cost

Federal courts blamed for. crippling ·strike in mmes

MEIGs IHEATRE
July27·29

~mless

Washington
By Clarence
Report MiJler

..

HONG KONG - THE WORlD'S MOST powerful
earthquake In a dozen years struck China early today near
Peking and Tientsin, the nation's second and third largest
cities. Damage appeared slight In the capital but casualties
were feared in Tientsin, which was almost astride the quake's
· epicenter.
·
There was no official word from Chinese authorities on the
quake, which measured 8.2 on the Richter Scale. It struck just
before 4 a.m. local time, sending thousands fleeing inl4 the
streets in their nightclothes. Foreign residents In Peking,
contacted by telepJJone from Hong Kong, said aftershocks
cmtlnued for hours. They reported numerous broken windows
and cracked or collapsed waDs In buUdlngs, but no major
damage or casualties.

~A~e~ ~~~~y ~~d~m~

in the local's favor, but in a
subsequent .clarification
rullng the company was
favored. A walkout foDowed,
and a federal judge in
Charleston fined the men
~.ooo.

Angered by the fine, the
miners carried their protest
throughout West Virginia and
into Ohio and Virginia.
From ))is Washington
office, Miller blamed the
current troubles on the
"consistent and continued
failure by coal operators to

Fourteen winners promised \(f'' ' ' ' ~::'' =::=' ~:~:~::::::,, , , , , , , , !,! Middleport
in little people contests
\:\ basis wttil April, 1977 : : court has
.·.·

The Middleport Business contests at the ·113th annual
and Professional Women's Meigs County Fair.
Fourteen winners - seven
Club under the direction of
Mrs . Eloise Wilson will bOys and seven girls- will be
conduct the second aMual selected in the various age
pretty baby and Uttle Mister categories of the pretty baby
and Miss Meigs County contest with winners to
..--------------------,
Pretty Baby·--- Little Mr. or Miss,---

Child's Name~----------

Sex

--------------------

Parents' N a m e - - - - - - - - - - Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Child's Age _ _ __ Birth Date--CLEVELAND - LARRY C. FLYNT, EDITOR and
publisher of Hustler Magazine; Althea Leasure, associate
Please send entry no later than Aug. 12 to
publisher and executive editor, and Jilluny R. Flynt, co·
publisher, all charged with pandering obscenity, wlll go on
Mrs. Eloise Wilson, 338 S. Fifth Ave ..
trial Aug. 21, Municipal Judge Edward Feighan said Tuesday.
Middleport, Ohio. Entries not accompanied by
Arrest warrants against the three were issued earlier this
the.50 cent entry fee will not be accepted.
mooth after Judge Salvatore Calandra viewed copies of the
July and August Issues of the BeliUally explicit magazine,
published in Colurnblls.
The judge determined the Issues were obscene on three
counts- catering wprurient Interest, being patently offensive
and lacking any literary or artbtlc value. Tuesday the Flynts
and Ms. l.Alasure each pleaded Innocent to two counts of
hacking of Reagan.
pandering obscenity. Larry Flynt was released on $2,000 bond United Press International
John
Connally's
The biggest test comes
·
(Continued on page 2)
endorsement of President · today when the 11J3.member
·
Ford is only one indication . Pennsylvania delegation
that Ronald Reagan's choice meets first on Capitol hW
of Sen. Richard Schweiker of with Schweiker and then goes
·
·
Pennsylvania to be his to the White House for a
Meigs County Engineer State Route 248. Southbound potential running mate may reception with the President.
Wesley Buehl said today traffic can go through . turn out to be the bombshell
The delegation was elected
- county R6ad ·C·28 (Keno. Chester to Route 7 and Eagle that backfired.
uncommitted, but the latest
Bashan Road) will be closed Ridge C-32 to Bashan. .
In the 24 hours following UP! count · shows 79
to through traffic for several
Ohio Bridge Company of Reagan's surprise aMoun- supporting Ford, nine for
weeks beginning Thursday, Cambridge is doing the cement, two delegates Reagan and 15 uncommitted.
July 28, while the county is repairs, which will be fonnally switched aDegiance UPI has been unable to detect
repairing the Keno bridge completed by September I so from the Californian, others any change in the delegation
over Shade River just south that thr~ugh traffic can be stated strong opposition to since Reagan picked
of,SR 246.
resumed in time for school. Schweiker,
Connally Schweiker on Monday.
Northbound traffic may use .The bridge on TR·112 will also endorsed . Ford and Gov.
In Plains, Ga., if
Eagle Ridge Road C·32 to be open then .
Meldrim Thomson of New Democratic candidates
Rou~ 7 through Chester and
Hampshire withdrew his J~y Carter and Walter

receive $5 gift certificates
provided by Elberfeld's.
There will be one boy and one
girl selected as winners of the
Little Mister and Miss Meigs
County contest and each of
· these winners will receive $50
gift certificates, also
pro,.ded by the Elberfeld
Department Store. All par·
ticipants in both contests will
be presented ribbons from
the women's club.
Entries are now being
accepted and each entry
must he accompanied by a SGcent entry fee. If the fee does
not accompany the entry, the
application cannot be ac·
cepted. Ali participants must
be residents of Meigs County
and judging will be by an out.
of-rounty panel of judges. ;
Age ca tegories for the·
pretty baby contest include:
Birth to three months;
(Continued on page 2)

~

::.: COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio Budget Director William r:.:
;:;: WUklns said the state Tuesday used the last of its cash :;:;
cushion and will have to live hand-tOmouth on current ::::
:::: income until April of next year. He said the state Is some ;::
:;:: $33 mUI!on sllort of the mooey It needs through July.
· ;::;
} Wilkins said be projects a deficit of about~ million by {
:::: the end of September, "deepening to a $160 million deficit :;:;
;::: by the end of November.'' He said the state's accounts will ;:;:
;::: gradlli!Uy swing back into the black by April, 1977.
::::
''' Wilkins foresees a need to postpone public school :;::
::: sUbsidies In October and November, "but .even if we do ::::
;:: thiS, we '\vlll have some delays In making other ::::
;':: payments," he said.
:::;

:=:

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

Eight bonds are forfeited
Eight defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
.
They are James Grueser,
Point Pleasant, $35, posted on
a speeding charge; Melvin
Howard, Pomeroy, $30,
speeding; Emmer Welch,
Bidwell, $30, speeding ; Marc
Sarrett, Gallipolis , $30,

assured clear distance;
Rodney Reeves, Pomeroy,
$300, on a driving while in·
toxicaled charge ; Trina
Ferrell, Syracuse, $30,
speeding; Alice Russell,
Pomeroy , $30, speeding ;
John Wiles, Pomeroy, $28
speeding .
Fined in the court were Olin
(Continued on page 2)
1

Republicans shook up by Schweiker for Veep

CoUDt Y R Oad 2.8 clos· ed

.\

resolve coalfield disputes at
the mine site level.''
The walkout has Jed
Chessle System to plan
furloughs
Friday
ln
Raceland, Ky. ; and at
Huntington.
The UMW Health and
Retirement Fund, fed by
royalties paid by coal
operators on each ton of coal
mined, was losing $500,000
each day of the work
stoppage, according to the
fund chalnnan, Harry Huge.

f
)

Mondale were entertained by ·
the GOP warfare they didn't
let on. They spent most of
Tuesday closeted with
economic experts being
briefed on various issues
related to the economy.
.Carter's only-comment on
Connally was that he
expected It would belp Ford.
On the GOP side, In a rash
of events there were these·
developments that did not
bode weD for the Reagan
camp:
- Cmnally, the big fence
sitter often mentioned as
Ford's running mate,
endorsed !he President,
saying the Sch\Veiker

announcement convinced
lUm Ford "clearly" was the
better choice.
- Thomson, one of
Reagan's earliest and
strongest supporters said he
could no longer support tbe
Californian because of his
liberal running mate. He
suggested a thlr.d presidential
candida!~ might be proposed
at Kansas City.
- Rep. Philip M. Crane, R·
Ill., chairman of Illinois
citizens for Reagan, said he
will work for the defeat of
Schweiker as vice president
at the GOP convention In
Kansas City.
- Jack Wilson, a Reagan

delegate hi Colorado,
switched to an uncommitted
status because he found
Schwelker "wildly liberal.''
In Columbia, S.C.,_ Innez
Eddings, an uncommitted
delegate, said she Is now for
Ford because of Schwe(ker.
- Ford announced he
would fly -to Jackson, Miss.,
Friday to woo a J(}.member
uncommitted delegation that
· once had been considered
strongly pro-Reagan. There
were reports of heavy
dissatisfaction with
Schweiker there, and several
delegates said thPy would like
to see a Ford-Reagan
(Continued on page 2)

12 cases
Eleven defendants have
been fined and a 12th has
forfeited a bond in the court
of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman.
Fined were Terry G. Me· .
Carty, 24; Cheshire, $15 and
costs, speeding ; Daniel R.
Spaulding, 23, Coshocton, $5
and costs, running a red
light; Bill Reeves, 50,
Pomer oy, $50 and costs,
indecent exposure, and $50
and costs, disorderly man·
ner ; Kenneth Mitchell, 22,
LangsviUe, $15 and costs,
speeding ; WiUiam E. Elias,
. 65, Clifton, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner ;· Wilma
Barnhart, 43, Middleport, $25
and cos ts, no operator 's
license; Dano R. King, 19,
Rutland , $20 and costs,
speeding.
·
Also, Allen J . Hillard, 24,
Athens, $150 and costs and
three days in jail, driving
while intoxicated ; Daniel J .
Morris, 18, Gallipolis , $40 and
cos ts, di sorderly manner;
Thomas W. Young , 20,
Cheshire, $150 and costs,
three days in jail, driving
while intoxicated, and Brian
K. French, 20, Middleport,
$10 and costs, stop sign
violaljon.
Elias was also fined $25 and
costs on a second disorderly
maMer charge and Elmer
Van Meter, no age or address
listed , forfeited a $50 bond
posted on a disturbing the
peace charge .

ON22ND, NOT 2ND
The McElroy reunion wiD
be held Aug. 22, not Aug. ~. as
was reported.

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