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                  <text>16-:t'lle DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-eorneroy, 0., Wednesday, July 28, 1976

BE MA·RT
BE AFE!!!
. . . . .A

!

Keep your money in a savings ·
account at THE RACINE
HOME ·NATIONAL BANK

Don't put your sa vings in the old sugar
bowl or und er a mattress! Put you r extra
money in a passbook savings account
where it is insured and earning interest
for you that is compounded daily. . .

•

A Home Bank
For
Meigs County

People •

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
OHIO

RACINE

School board
taking busing to highest court
.
.

.

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! )- Debate has erupted over
another attempt to halt
Ohio's first court-ilrdered
school busing desegregation
plan.
The U.S. Sixth Circuit
Court of J\ppeals Tuesday
approved the busing of 12,000
elementary school students
this fall in Dayton and angry
Dayton sc hool
board
members immediately
decided to appeal to the U.S.
Supreme Co!U't w try w stop
the forced busing.
The appellate co'urt here
upheld the desegregation
plan ordered last March by
U.S. District Court Judge
Carl B. Rubin in Dayton, and
rejected the Daykin Board of
Education's attempt to get
the plan tossed ·.out or
modified.
"There's little doubt about
going wthe Supreme Court,"
sald Dayton school board
attorney i.&lt;!o Krebs, acknowledging that an appeal would
be forthcoming. " The
(school ) board has indicated
they want to go all the way on
the case."
Robert T. Doug lass, a
leading conservative school
board member, said he
anticipated the Cincinnati
court decision approving
busing.
"We fi gured it would
merely be a step on our way
· w the Supreme Court:" he
sald .
But countered Dayton
NAACP lawy·er Richard
Austin, "I just wish the school
board would now quit wasting
the taxpayers' money and not
go on the Supreme Court."
Liberal school board
member
Leo
Lucas
complained it was a
"charade " for majority
conservative members to go
w the Supreme Court, also

$65
.ICE
MAKER
00

ONLY

$8.88

Wit.h Any of These Refrigerators
Top Mounts
• 16. 18.20. 23
Cubic Fl. Sizes

' here, bl
The appellate court

figuring they were "wasting ·
taxpayers' money."
a unaninnous 3-4J decision,
"Meanwhile," added praised the "flexibility" of
Lucas, "we're still lingering Rubin's desegregation plan
and not concentrating our full for Daykin and termed it "a
efforts on quality education useful starting point in
along with the desegregation sha ping a remedy for past
discriminBtion.''
plan."
· Conservative school board
The "Rubin Plan" achieves
members, who enjoy a 7-2 school desgregation by a somajority' earlier made an called "pairing" method.
In "pairing," one school is
el"'tion campaign promise to
matched with another and
fight forced busing.
Despite the appeal w the students are int..1mingled w.
Supreme Court, Tuesday's achieve racial balance decision here means there some·pupils initially staying
will be busing in Dayton in · at their local school, some
September unless the being bused to the other
Supreme Court makes an school.
.unexpected quick decision w The students then swap
schools the ned year and
stop it.

United Press Interna tional
A tentative se ttlement
raised hopes today that 55,000
California cannery workers
will be back at work and in
the fields by the •"II of .the
week, ending tbe most costly
strike in the history of the
state's food ' industry.
The head of the United
Mine Workers ordered 60,000
wildcat strikers to end their
walkout.
The twin developments
Tuesday led other ooss!ble
break:throug:hs in national
labor disputes.
labor Secretrary W. J.
Usery Jr. , shuttling in
Washington from the cannery
negotiations, joined in
bargaining sessions in the 98day strike of United Rubber
Workers against four tiremaking companies.
UMW President Arnold
Miller told wildcat strik·
ers to go back to
the pits In Wes t Vi rginia, Ohio and Virginia.
There was no immediate
indica tion whether the
~rs would obey. They
were striking in protest of a
federal court's back-to-work
order against strikers at one
coal mine in West Virginia.
In Oregon, a federal court
judge ordered striking state
grain inspectors to stop a
· walkout, which growers and ·
shippers said could endanger
a 60-million bushel wheat
crop ·just at harvest time.
Port officials in Oregon
said longshoremen would
begin loading grain bound for
the Far East Thursday or
early Fl'ida)' as a result of the
order.
Fresh labor troubles sprouted.
.
In Detroit, General Motors
Corp. and Ford Motor Co.
presented their outlines of
bargaining issues to the
United Aukl Workers and
were greeted with scorn.
The proposals had no
specifics on wages and fringe
benefits. UAW Vice President
Irving Bluestone said he had
never seen "a set of demands
as far reaching and turn-theclock-back as these are."
Negotiations were afoot in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., w
settle on a new contract
between Western Union and
8,000 members of the United
Telegraph Workers. The old
contract ran out at midnight,
but no strike deadline had

been se t.
A threatened strike by the
Transport Workers Union
against Trans World Airlines
could disrupt travel in to Kansas, Mo., for the Republican
Na tional Convention . The
union told the National
Mediation Board fli ght
attendants were reaJy to go
out at 4 p.m. Friday.
The nation's chief federal
mediator , James F. Scearce,
announced the breakthrough
in the eight.&lt;Jay California
strike. lie called it "a rather
unusual settlement," since
negotiators between the
canners and the California
Council of Cannery Workers
agreed on the over all cost of
a three-year contract without
working out the specifics.
The strike had left ripe fruit
and vegetables rotting on the
trees and in the fields.
A few ·hours before the
settlement, Kern County,
Calif., farmers drove a 13-ton
truckload of rotting tomawes
through Washington . Their
leader, Fred Starrh, held up a
fistful of dripping · tomawes
before a news conference and
said , 11 This is what we are

SAVE $50.
r

On 18,000 BTU
A"'ana
.
Reg. Price '399.00

...... .
Ill
Ill

c

--+--

..--.......
...~
Ill

-----+---

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

OD.

... uc

,

•

c

Cl

z

c

Ill:

0

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Thousands

a. No. shares authorized 8,000

.
b. No. shares outstanding 8,000 (par value)... , ..... . ..... ..... .. ... .... .... .. . 200
Surplus . .... , , , ..... ... ........ . .. , ........ . ....... . . ................. :•.... .. 1,200
Undlylded profits .... ....... . . ... .. . ....................... .................. . . 447
Resei'Ve forcontinge_ncies and other capital reserves ............. . ..... .. .. : ...... .. 36
TOT.ALEQUITY CAPITAL~.
1 883
. '
TOTALLIABIUTIESANDEQUITYCAPITAL . ................ ; .... .... .. .... 22,956
6 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • I . . . . . . . . . . . . I .

·'

AveragC'for 15 or 30 caJendar days ending w.ith call date:
·
.
Cashandduefrom bimks .......................... ............... .. . .. ...... 1,300
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ............. , .............. ..... ... , .. ... .......... 597
Totalloans . .... .... . .......... .......... ..... ....... .. .. . ......• , ... .. , .... 9,242
Time deposits of $100,000 or more in domestic offices ...... ...... .. , . ........ . . ..... 317
Total deposits ........... ... ..... : . .. .. , .. . .......... ...................... 'IJJ, 7(11
Time deposits of$100,000 or more in domestic offices:
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of
$100,000ormore ...... . .... ... ..... .... ....... . . , . , .. . ....... , , .. .... . .. ..... . 450

...

\'

Maxine Griffith
July~. 19'16
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by' us, and to the best of our knowledge
and belief is true and correct.
·
Edison Hobstetter

Dunaway, Michael Kane,
Cliff
Toberl son ,
Ma x

R. E. Boice - Directors

VonSyoow. .

Warren Pickens

( R)

National Bank Region Nwnber 4

Cash and due from banks . . ............................. ·......... .. ... . .... .... 1,335
U.S. Treasury securities ... .... . . ........ .......... : ... ... .. , .. .. .. . .... ....... 9,272
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't. agencies and corps .. ... ............ . . ..... , , ...... . 133
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ...... , . . .. . . . .. .. . .. . .. , , ...... , 1,913 .
Other bonds, notes and debentures ... ... ........ ... ....... . : ..... .. , .. , ... ... , . .... 2
Federal Reserve stock and ~orporate sloe~ .. . ..... ... .. . : , , , , ... ....... . ........... 39
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ........ . ... .......... , ... , . . .......... .... , . . .. : ... 725
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ... ... , ............... ... . 9,271 ·
Less: Reserve for possible loan losses .... ... ......... . ........... ..... 68
Loans, Net. . ......... , . ... . ...... .............. ... ........ . ...... ......... , 9,203
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
.
other assets representing bank premises ............. . , . , •• , ......... ... . .. .... . 329 .
Other assets ... .... ... ...... . ........................ ... ........ , ... . , .. . .... .. .. 5
TOTAL ASSETS . . ....... ... . . ..... .. .... ...... .. .. .. . . , , . ... ... .... . . ... . ... 22,956
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps...... ....... ..... ....... . ... , 4;460
Time and savings depo~its of individuals,
·
prtnshps., and corps. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .... .. .... . .... ..... ....... . ... ... i 4,6&amp;
Deposits of United States Government . .. ......... .. ......... . . . ... .. , . , . , ....... , , 35
Deposits of States and po lit'lea I subdJ VISions
. · .................. ...... , .... .......... 1 727
Certified and officers' checks ...... .. . .. . ....................................... .', 82
TOTALOOMESTICDEPQSITS .. . ....... .. ..... ... ... .............. . .. ..... :, 'IJJ,990
Total demand deposits ............ , .. . . . .... .. ... .... , ... .. , ..... . 5,486
Total Iinne and savings deposits . ...... ............................ 15,504
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOo\ffiSTIC AND
.
FOREIGN OFFICES . . ....... .... ...... , .. .... ... .... . ............ ,, .. .... , 20,990
Other liabilities .... ................ .. .......................... .. ......... .. ... . 83
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentiU'es) .. ... ...•.. . . , 21,(113

I
!

'

Redford , Faye

Show .s tarts 7 P·l1'·

t

-----+---

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
July l8-l9
NOT OPEN

Robert

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Thutsday 9:30 to 5 p.m.

Common stock:

)oo ...

.

~~News.
REG. $3.10 .

Kidnap : :
suspect i i .
::;;:
t aken

for Ute vaccine . All of the
vaccine against swine flu and
the victorian strain for high
risk petsons wl1l he reeelved
by the health department B1ld
distributed to local doctors
and hospitals for those who
will prefer to receive the
lnnoculatlons through other
routes than public clinics .
. Dr. Salem · J . Blazewicz,
acting llealth commission ,
said the local department has
plans for four free local
cllnJcs with the times and
places to be announced. He
emphasized the vaccine will
· be given on a voluntary basis.
Jet injecwr guns will be used
to administer the vaccine at
the public clinics .

~::

.

:;:;
::::

;:=:
By DONALD B. THACKREY ~;;
MENLO PARK, Calif. ::;:

~!led bus ~= ~

...-

I

j

--·~· I

MRS. GENE LYONS, NEW ADMINISI'RATIVE
assistant of the ~eigs County Health Department, makes
plans for a mass immunization of residents against swine
flu in August and September. Mrs. Lyons has succeeded
Mrs. Beulah StraUBS (retired) in the administrative
assistant post of t.he health department.

•

James Schoenfeld, ending an
. all-night search on the San
Francisco Peninsula .
He was arrested in an old
van wilh Idaho license plates
just after daybreak In an
Industrial area near Highway
101, pc'ice said.
"fie offered no resistence
and was calm and peaceful,"
a police spokesman said. The
van was followed north along
highway 101 from MoWltain
View, but . patrolmen lost
. track of it farther north in ·

at y
VOL XXVIII

NO. 72

::::

POMEROlMIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~
;.~

.

West Virginia coal strike r:
spread into Pennsylvania.

I~

PITTSBURGH (\IPI) - The West Vlri,lnia coal strike ij
spread today to Pennsylvania, where pckels dosed down ~i
a Jmes &amp;Laughlin Steel Corp. mine In the southwestern t,~
Up of the state.
;,:
J&amp;L sald pickets closed the company's Shannopln '~i
Mine, idJir!g C30 workers at the Greene County portal.
!::
"The stranger pckets Identified themselY~:s as mine i;;
workers from West Virginia," J&amp;L said
.:;:;

:t.:::::;:::·:·:':·:':·:·::&lt;:·:·:·:::::::::·:::::::::::::::;.,:,:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:::::::::::::;:::::::::&gt;:::::::::::&lt;:::;::::::)i!.i

Palo Alto. It was sighted
again in Menlo Park.
Officer Glirry lAckman of
the Menl o Park police
department made the arrest.
Schoenfeld was WJarmed and
it was not known whether he
had any weapons In the van,
lhe spokesman said.
He was taken to the San
Mateo County jaU in nearby
Redwood City for booking oo
charges relating to the bus
hijack . .

,
1

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
issl!ed to !)avid Lawrence
Adams, !8, Rt, I, Reedsville,
and Jenny Lynn Sprague, 17,
Tuppers Plains; Denver 0.
Curtis, 54, Mt. Hope, W.Va.,
and Neva E. Batley, S5,
Chester and w Terry Scott
Brown, 22, Athens, and
Pamela Jean Shockey, 18, Rt.
1, Shade .

en tine
THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

--~----~------~--------~----------~--~----~----------------~~~~~"-~.. ·~-z~--~--------------~~~~::~~~

Natural gas rate increase postponed
•

Statemen' 1f Resources and Liabilities

In

The Meigs County Health recruited to help with the
Oepartment wUI join the program.
nationwide swine flu tmMrs. Ly~ said schools
mllflizaUon program, Mrs. will be visited and evening
Gene Lyons, departmen t cllnlcs wUI be set up In
administrative assistant, various areas .to provide
said today.
immunization for adulta. The
In conjunction wtth the vaccine will be free at these
·national prosram, the lOcal clinics. Permission will be
health department will at required for school children
first provide immunization. · and adults will receive the
· for high risk groups, the first vaccine on a voluntary basis.
The first phase of the
part ·of Aug11.1t, these people
including persons 65 and over program for high risk perand thoee who have chronic sons wilt be carried out
heart, lung , diabetes, through a clinic possibly at
mellltus
and
other the senior citizens center and
methabollc lllnesses. The through local docklrs.
lmmunJzation for this people
For this phase or the
will be a dual vaccine which program there will be the
will protect against swine flu office charge for · those
and also the victorian straln. visiting their doctor for the
The second phase of the innoculatlon but .no charge
local health department
program witl be a mass effort
FREE SKIN TESTS
. to· innoculate the public
Free
TB skin tests will be
against swine influenza and
given
by
Mrs. Jane Brown on
will Include school children
Aug.
2
at
the Tuppers Plains
as well as adul!s. This phase
Community
Club and Orange
is expected to take part Sept.
Fire
Department
Building
13-16. Volunteer nurses ,
doctors and others associated rrom 7to 8p.m. Thetests wm
with health care wlll be beread on Aug. 4.

.

I Pound Fancg Pastels

*

Meigs swine flu
plans announced

'(..::o;~w..-:::~~~:*:::::::.~::::::::•:o:::::•:o:•:•:•:;:.:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;::::::~~ ·

Charter number 1980

TRE

THREEDAYSOF
THE CONDOR

.

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1976 published in response to call
made by Comptroller ofthe Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.

The hearing was postponed
from Tuesday w Aug. 27
because of the Ulness of
District Court Judge Keith
Hay~s . The "Mormon will,"
so called because it turned up
mysteriously in Mormon
church headquarters, was the ,
first of some 32 docwnents
purporting wbe the last will
and testament of the late btl·
lionaire.
·
·

Fri ., Sat., Sunday
July 30-31. Aug . 1

.

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
OF POMEROY .

I ll

MEIGS

Festival

Consolidating dorrlllstic subsidiaries of tile

wiU."

gi.,. extra

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

REPORT OF CONDITION

HUGHES JUDGE IU..
LAS VEGAS,Nev. (UP!)The Probate Court judge
charged with straightening
out the many "wills" of
Howard
Hughes
was
hospitalized Tuesday for a
kidney ailn\ent, postponing a
bearing on the "Mormon

~B

8Choollludenta wW be bwled.
nit DayiDn achool diJtrict
preaently Ia 41 per cent blacll:
and 52 per cent white, and
Rubin ordered that every
8Chool'1 enrollment be within
15 per cent of that ratio by
lhll September.

looking at every day."

• 19 • 22 • 25
CubiC Ft, Sizes

...age copacily.

(QOO or the city's 14,111 high

involve about 12,000 grade
scbool students In bull.ng.
Only foiU' of Dayloo's 10
high schools
predominantly black Roth
imd Dunbar am predoml·
nanUy white Belmoot and
Wilbur Wright - will be
."paired," meaning ooly aome

End of cannery
strike expected.

Side BySidn

.The Amana Stor·Mor•
Convertible proves
oefrigeroton can be
txtro convenient.
Famouo STOR-MOR

continue to rotate annually - ·
meaning that students will be
at their local school once
every two years and bused w
the "paired" school the other
year.
The "pairing" is expected
w Include 44 of Daykin's 53
elementary schools and

:~::::!::::;::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::·:::::::~::::~:::::::~:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:-:·;·:~-:::-:·~~

···· ····

... in

.

.

a

Brief~

By Un(ted PresslnternaUonal
" I-lONG KONG - CHINESE OFFICIAlS today reported
great losses wpeople's life and property" in what may have
been one oflhenation 'sworstearthquakes this century. Heavy
.casuaiUes were feared in the city of Tangshan, described as
"almost flattened. "
·
The quake, the world's strongest in a dozen years, rumbled.
through northeast China before dawn Wednesday. It was
centered about 100 miles southeast of Peking and 63 miles
no~east of Tientsin, the nation's second and third largest

By WILLIAM E. CLAYTON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - New natural gas rates, which
would have' cost the average American household $15.60 more
a year, have been postponed at least temporarily by a federal
court.
The federal Circuit Court ·of Appeals for the District of
Columbia agreed late Wednesday w grant a stay pending
further order, ·which could come next week.
Acoalition of consumer, labor, and government gro~ps sued
for an indefiplte stay of the new rates, which were announced
Tuesday by tile Federal Power Commission.
The,coalition also asked the FPC formally for a delay and a
reheariilg of the matter on its merits.
·
A few hours after the suit was filed, clerks for J~dges

~~~:ir:a~&amp;u!l~a~~~a~:::'a~:1~ll~n:angshan, an ~ede~al

A second powerful quake struck the same area about 15
hours later.
NEGOTIATORS FOR WESTERN UNION and the United
Telegraph Workers have reached an "agreement in principle"
CHARLESTON, w. va.
at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on a three-year contract replacilig ,UP! ) _ Striking West
one that expired at midnight Tuesday, ,TIJe tentative Virginia coal miners,
agri!Cment, roughed out in a 30-hour bar~lning session, ignoring a federal court
averted il possible strike by"B,OOO Western Union employes.
injunctioo , said today they
At TWA, representatives of th~ flight attendants agreed to will continue ·th'eir wUdcat
cancel a Sunday strike deadline and put the latest company walkout until demands,
proposal to the membership.It was expected wtake two weeks including one that federal
for :.he ballots to be returned and tabulated.
judges stay out of coal mine
Talka w end the 99-day-i&gt;ld strike against four major disputes, are met.
tlremakers were going oo in Washingkln. Labor Secretary W.
Pickets have idled 59,000
J. Usery Jr. held a breakfast meeting with management. workers in West Virginia and
negotiators Wednesday. Federal mediators sat down with several thousand others in
United Rubber Workers bargainers.
southeast Ohio and southwest
Fred Sanchez, head of the California Council of Cannery Virginia.
Workers, said he hoped detaUs of the tentative contract with 47
United Mine Workers
canneries could be completed and the pact ratified so that President Arnold Miller
strikers could return w processing endangered fruit nd earlier this week ordered the
vegetable CI'QPS.
miners back to work, but his
Striking plumbers and pipefi tters lifted picket lines on the or4er has also been ignored. •
Hanford, Wash.; atomic reservation, allowing members of
"Whai we want is for
other unions to reswne work on two nuclear projocts. Officials · federal judges to stay out of
of a plwnbers local sald the move was made w encourage Wlion .affairs and we want
negotiations to end the tw~onth4ong strike which, with a companies to bargain in good
strike by metal trades workers, has idled more than 6,000 faith," sald Haynes Holstein,
workers.
president of UMW Local 1759
WASHINGTON - THERE'S AMOVE afoot in Congress to at Cedar Coal Co.
promote George Washingron to general of the Armies "H the courts had stayed
something President Jolm Adams refused to do in out, this matter at Cedar Coal
Washlngton'sllfetime - so he won 't be outranked by so many could have been settled
officers. But sponsors admitted their action won't add much without a strike·, " said
luster to the reputation of the man known as the father of his Holstein.
country.
Members of Local 1759
A House . Armed Services subcommittee voted ignited the walkout 11 days
unanimollllly Wednesday wpromote Washington, who held the ago at Cedar Coal when they
rank of lieutenant general at lhe time .of his death. The action
was taken with Pentagon approval after Rep. M!ll"iO Blaggi, DN.Y., author of the bffi, sald "scores of military men outrank Men charged for
George Washlngron, a fact of history, which at long last must
be corrected."
late swimming
WASIDNGTON - SOME MEDICAL RESEARCHERS
Four young men were
now beUeve cancer twnors thrive o" ~lgh fat diets am it may
charged
with criminal
be possible to treat them by "starving" them out. Gio B. Gori
of the National Cancer Institute said Wednesday recent treaspassing early this
ezperiments raised the intriguing possibility of using nutrition morning by Gallia County
as a direct form of cancer therapy. He sald tumors compete for sheriff 's deputies for
nutrients In the body and their nutritiooal needs differ frqm swimming at the Kyger
· lhose of the "host."
t "' · Creek High SChool pool .
Booked at 2:14 a.m. were
Other witnesses at a Senate Select Committee on Nutrition
and HWTIIIl Needsln'{estigation of the effects of diet on cancer Da~id Rife, 20, Rt. I,
and heart disease generally agreed that hoth nutritional Gallipolis : Mike Rife, 19,
deficienciea and ·excesses play a key role in cancer, Point Pleasant : Keith
particularly by tumors of the colon, stomach 811d breast. " It Clarence Brown, 18, Rt. 2,
appears thatit may be possible to adjust available nutrients in Gallipolis, and Orland
the host 10 ihat the ·host may be fed am the tumor may be Cremeans, 20, Cheshire. They
starved," said Gorl, deputy dlrecklr of the institute's division will be in Municipal Court
Friday.
o( cancer cause and prevention.

Charles Fahy and Spottswood Robinson Ill notified lawyers in
the suit that the court would grant a brief stay.
The suit was filed hy the Energy Action Committee, the ·
Consumer Federation of America, the state or Minnesota and
its Public Service Commission, the United Auw Workers, the
U.S. Conference of Mayors, and several other organizations
and government entities.
·
They contended if the new rates were allowed to be in effect
while an appeal is pursued, American consumers would pay
more than $100 millJon a month in higher rates that could turn
out to be disal)owed.
The FPC announcement Tuesday set a new national ceiling
of $1.01 per thousand cubic (eel lot gas dedicated to interstate
sales between Jan . 1,1973 aod Jan. I, 1975, 811d $1.42 per

c'ourts helpless' l·n .st•rl·ke

struck to protest a federal
court injunction that grew out
of a labor dispute over an
outside communications job .
strike leaders have drawn
up list of demands they say
must be met before the men
will return to work. The
demands include the end of
the use of federal COIU't
Injunctions in mine strikes,

a

amri'esty for all miners
Earlier this week, U.S. 4th
involved in the work sropage Circuit Court of Appeals
and an investigation of the Judge H.E . Widener Jr .
economic · lnterests of all . ordered Local 1759 and other
coalfield judges.
participants in the strike
"We have a situation where back to work at the request Of
a man can't file a grievance Cedar Coal.
at the place of work without a
In federal COIU't at Charlesfederal judge te liing him that ron, Judge Dennis Knapp,
he had bettter go back w who's $50,000 fine against
wock," a striker said.
Local 1759 resultf!l In the
initial walkout, denied a
temporary restraining order
sought by U.S. Steel Corp,,
whose mines are being
picketed.
U.S. Steel said its mines in
McDowell, Mingo and
Wyoming counties have been
shut down, costing the
company $300,000 In lost
White House to meet with production .
.The company said the
Ford in late afternoon.
strike
was "political in
Meanwhile, in Plains, Ga.,
Jimmy Carter and his Demo- nature ... and directed at the
cratic running mate Sen. federal judiciary in a blatant
Walter Mondale got a foreign attempt to discourage federal
policy briefing from CIA courts from discharging their
Director George Bush, and responsibility. "
Knapp, as he has done in
scheduled an em .today w
their four days of intensive earlier situations, denied the
issues s tudies in various restraining order request. At
previous hearings, he said
fields.
After c_ompleting . the such a ruling would be
economic se h1on lnflamarory. ·
Dave Baker , spokesman
Wednesday , Carter outlined
some of his goals, which for the Southern Ohio Coal
include reducing inflation to 4 Co., said there were no
per cent a year and pickets at the company's
stabilizing the economic mines in Meigs CoWJty but
growth rate at 4 w 6 per cent the miners were not working.
annually.
Aboutl,500 miners are off the
Schwelker
claimed job in Meigs County.
Wednesday he has converted
Two West Virginia l)'liners
six Ford delegates w Rea~an attended meetings · Wedin Pennsylvania and " in nesday in Pomeroy between
excess" of 13 others have union and company officiis to
moved from Ford w the explain their position.
uncommitted column.
Drew Lewis, Ford's
Pennsylvania chairman,
LOITERING BANNED
discounted the claim and
· Stringent enforcement of
asked Schwelker to name the
Pomeroy Vlllage Or·
delegates to back op· his
dinance ·405 wltl begin at
statements.
once Pomeroy Mayor
UP! shows 80 votes for
Clarence Andrews warned
(Continued on page 12)
today. The ordinance
provides that there shall be
no loitering on the parking
lot along the river from 10
p.m. to 8 a.m. and that any
person or persons found
guilt
of violating the orfactions, including the most
dinance
·shall be fined not
extreme right-wing
less
that
$50 for each ofChristians.
fense.
That truce will be policed
by troops from the 2,300-man · .,,,,,,,,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::
Arab League force now in
Beirut and reportedly also by
COUNCIL TO MEET
some of the 15,000 Syrian
RACINE - Racine Village
troops now controlling much Council wiU meet on Aug. 2at
of Lebanon.
which time new members
This was a . major . will be appointed to the water
concession
by
the board. All members of the
Palestinians, who had been group resigned recently when
demanding the withdrawal of the water maintenance
the Syrians. In return, the worker quit hls post to accept
PLO was reported to have a higher paying job. Council
received oral assurances of will also ?iscuss employment
partial Syrian pullbacks.
of a new ~intenance man,

Both camps claim
delegate switch
By CLAY F. RICHARDS
United Press International
President Ford may pick
up most of Mississippi's 30
convention votes as a result
of· the delegation leader's
switch w hinn from Ronald
Reagan. But Reagan's forces
counter with claims they
have eroded Ford's strength
In Pennsylvania .
The two states currently
are center stage in the battle
for
the
Republican
presidential nomination. In
both cases, Reagan's
announcement that he wants
Sen. Richard Schweiker, RPa ., as his running mate ·
makes the difference.
Reagan has lost at least
four delegates since picking
Schweiker, and may lose
more in the conservative
South. But surveys in the Far
West
showed
the
Californian's support holding
firm despite open unhappineSs over Schweiker by many
of the delegates.
A better picture of the
Pennsylvania situation
emerges today when the 1tl.&gt;member delegation caucuses
on Capiro! Hill, talks w
Schweiker, and visits the

· Truce expected in Lebanese fighting
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) · The camp, under siege for Syrian troops inw Lebanon w
- Syria and the Palestine. · 38 days, has been the symbOl save lhe Christians from
Uberation Organization have of the loog am bitter struggle military defeat.
agreed to end their fighting in between the Syrlan-hacked
The mediawr of the accord,
Lebanon In a negotiations Christians and the Moslem Ubyan Premier Abdealam
breakthrough that could leftists and their Palestinian Jalloud, said the agreement
, bring about a truce of all a!Ues.
wiU go inkl effect when PLO
parties In the country's 18Sporadic clashes continued chief Vasser Arafat arrives
month civil war.
In the e&amp;!lem and BOUthern in Damascus, probably
FIBhtlnc IUbllded In Beirut suburill overnight, but the within the next few days, to
today amid reports of the capital 'a warfronts were sign it aloog with Syrian
peace Initiative and Red generally quiet following the President Hafez Assad.
Croll workers said they We d n e s d a y n i g h t
Jalloud said detaUs of the
would make a sixth attempt announcement in Damascus agreement would
be
to evacuate about 1,000 of the aceord between Syria announced shortly.
wounded· fmn the Pales- and the PLO.
Newspapers, reported they
tlniln refugee camp of Tal
The two have been :11 odds included a general ceasefire
'Zaatar.
since the recent invasion of to be followed by a gradual

\

\

thousand cubic feet for gas committed wsuch sales after that
time.
That is a fl .5 blllion increase the first full year, the FPC
estinnated. The current celllng Is 52 cents per thousand cubic
feet.
"This astronomical Increase in the price producers will
receive for gas, hy far the largest price rise In regulatory
history, will ... cost interstate consumers at least $367 mlllion .
during the mininnwn 61klay period between the Issuance of
(the order) and the time when the FPC must issue some order
oo rehearing,".the suit said.
~·The innpact ... will be devastating and Irreparable," it
added.

withdrawal of Palestinian
forces from . their front
Jines.
The pullback . would be
SUpervised hy a four-man
committee composed of representatives of Syria, the
PLO, their Lebanese leftist
allies and the Lebanese rightists.
The
negotiators. in
Damascus were apparently
in close wuch with Arab
League mediator Hassan
Sabri el-Kholy, who said
Wednesday he was close \0
agreement on a cease-fire the 54th of the war t- by all
. .

l

'I

:;::::;:;:;:::;:;: ;:;:::;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:; :::::;: ;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;::::::::::::::::::.::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;: ;::::::::::::::::: ~~~

~\

Doctors talk over how
!!i! to cheat Medicare, Medicaid

;.;.

:::: WASIDNGTON (UP!) - Two doctors are talking:
:::: "The trick is never wput down or to charge for a patient
:::: you didn't see. When I billed for a Sed (sedinnentation
:;:; test) rate or a CBC (complete blood count), or whatever, I
:::: always drew blood. Where the blood went, I did not know
;:;: ... If they ask you did you ever put down for a patient you
;::; didn't see, you say, 'I don 't recall.' If they ask you, 'Would
;~;~ you do that?' You say, 'No, that is dishonest.'"
:;:; The other docwr says, "What ahout kickbacks?"
? The first replies, "to million guys a year ask me 'for
;::: kickbacks. They can't prove it."
;:;: Sen. Frank E. Moss, ·D-Utah, gave a Senate finance
:~~ subcommittee on health a partial transcript Wednesday of
:;:;the taped words of two New York doctors suspected of
:;:: defrauding Medicare.
i'i' One doctor was "caught indulging in massive fraud"
:::: and agreed to let investigators fit hinn with a recorder so
;::: he could talk with another fraud suspect, Moss said.
t Emphasizing the number of America's docklrs who rip
::~;
(Continued on page12)

·11·

:1::
:~:. ___;..

:;:;

r

:;:;
::::
:;::
;:~;

:;:;
}
:';:
:;:;
:::;
';';
::::
;::;
::;:
::::

r
:;:;
r
;:::

~~~~;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;::::: : : : :::: :::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;: :::::::::::::::::::: :;: :::;:}~~

Man

Governor

charged

addresses

for damage Lions Ouh
James C. Allen, governor of
to property gues
Uons Club District 13-K, was
t speaker Wednesday
Meigs County Sheriff
.Robert C. Hartenbach
reported today Paul Clinton
Reynolds, Rt. I, Cheshire,
was arrested on July 3 on
a charge of causing physical
harm · to the properly . of
~verett Hol comb, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy.
On June 13, the sheriff's
department received a report
that the farm house of
Holcomb had been damaged.
Most of the windows in the
house had been broken out, a
gas tine had been destroyed,
and gas released from a large
bottle gas tank.
Reynolds posted bond in !he
amount of $200 and will ap·
pear in county court Friday
the sheriff said.
The . sheriff also reported
Freddie Ke1th Pickens, Rt. I,
Racine , appearing before
County Court Judge Robert
E. Buck, was fined $100 and
costs on conviction of
possession of marijuana and
for'stealing a I!H!peed bicycle
from the home of Lowell
McNickle, Rt. I, Racine, on
July 7, the sum of $100 and
costs,given90dayslnjall (60
4ays suspended) and placed
oo probation o~e ~ear .

when
the
Pomeroy.
Middleport Uons Club met
for lunch and business at the
Meigs Inn. •
· Allen related detaUs of the
Lions International Con"
vention which he attended in
!-Iawaii. He stated that Lions
Clubs are growing consistently in the Far East but
that new clubs are needed In
the United States. He said
tha t U.S. clubs should serve
the needs of thei r own
communities first and
discribed the student exchange program in which
Uons Clubs in many COWl·
tries are partiCipating.
· N. W. Conipton, local club
presi dent, presided and
Albert Hill, Jr., was accepted
as a new member with .Gov.
Allen, _Beverly, performinl!.
the lmtiation . The Rev .
William Middleswarth was
presented a past president's
pin by Gov. ~n .
The Rev . . htiddleswarth
chairman, reporlf'd on plan~
being made for the annual
golflng hole-in-ilne proj"'t.
Other guests were Walter J.
Robb, a guest of Bill Nease,
and John Shreve, Beverly,
District 13-H
cabihet
secretary-t~J"urer. . ,.,.

••

-·•

�'

.
S-Tile IlallyS Urwl,Midcll4pon.POIII&amp;O), O.,Thuraday, July2t,ll'/l

--

'- - The I~Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Porneroy, 0 ., Thuraday, July 29, 1976
~!~!~l~if:l~I;I~~;~~l~~i~~!~~i~~~~~f:~~~;~ijf;~~l~i~~~l~~i~i~tt~~~~~i~~t;~t~~:~;;iH:~jj;~:~:~:~:~tl:~:~~~:~~*~

GM profits

Tax refonn votes rated

Senators Glenn, Taft

involve talks

WASHINGTON (UP! )
Tuation With
Representation, a group that rates lawmakers based on
·
lax reform voles, says Sen. Robert A. Tan Jr., R.Ohlo,
.DETROIT (UPI) - The
"'lbe UAW contends that in
could dobeller, 8Jfd Sen. J!ful H. GleM, D.()hio , is doing
United Auto Workers Union · these negoUaUons (the worvery well.
says the record 1909 mWlon kers) will receive thelr falr
TWR JAg!slative Director tom Reese said Wedllesday
prollt General Motors and equitable share of P!'Ofits
th t th
tin
based
bills aimed c1 ·
a era gs are
on
at 061118 I.U
recorded in the seeond that -GM Is harvesting,"
loopholes for the wealthy.
quarter ls a sure sign lhat the Bluestone said, underscoring
· He said Glenn got a score of 63 per cent while Taft
auto industry has little rea!jOII the union 's hardening stand
scored 11 per cent.
to balk at this year's crotract on its contract denlJIIIds.
. The ratings are based on 21 votes cast this year.
demands.
GM Chairman , Thomas
DemocratsintheSenaleaveraged54percent, while GOP
GM's ear nings report Murphy and President Elliott · members averaged 16.5 per cenl
·
Wednesday nearly tripled its ~ conceded ·they were
Glenn vtited fer what TRW considen; to be las reform 17
three-month profit of $333 · worried about the impact of
times while the group said Taft voted in !aver or 1aJ
million a year ago and the profits on the conll:act
reform ·only three times.
provided the best proof yet
that the autc Industry is
optimistic outlook ... ·
rocketing out of its two-year ls clouded by the uncertainty
regarding the outcome of our
recession.
Earnings
for
the current negotiations with the
automaklng giant · also unions," they said. " It is
that
any
shattered the industrial imperative
record of $840 mWlon set by settlement avoid CQntributing
Euon In the 'last three to the dangerous potential for
mlliths of 1974 .. GM also further inflation."
wasn't far from American
UAW President 4lonard
Telephone and Telegraph's '.Woodcock
said
the
record second quarter profit ''incredibly hefty profit
of $939.6 million - a gains" by the Big Three
milestone for any company in automakers indicate · the
WASHINGTON (UPI)- A · can be worked out, thel1 it Is
histocy.
union
should
make member of the Bouse my judgment the- Naliooal
Reaction from the UAW, significant gains in wages, committee on professional League
wUI
go
to
currently bargaininc on a benefits and job security for sports recanmended today Wa.shingt(ll.
new contract for 680,000 auto its members.
that baseball impose fS,OOO
''Rather than saying I guaworkers, was immediate.
Cllrysler repcrted a $1::.5.1 fines and 3l:klay suspensioos rantee it, I can ooly sa.y I'll do
Vice President Irving million (l'ofit Monday, com- to
stop
deliberate everything in my power to
Bluestone, the union 's chief pared to its $58 mWlon loss a beanballing.
bring it about. That's a better
negotiator at GM, said the year earlier during the indusRep. Ronald Mottl, l).()hio, qy than 'trying ~o do it 'by
earnings figure •'ovenrhelm.s lry's worst recession since said he favwed the harm fiat."
even the most crusted World War II. Ford was penalties in the aftennath of
.About .the beani11g of
imagination" and will have a expected to announce Its an •epitOOe Tuesday in which JaCkson by Yankee pitcher
" powerful impact" on earnings today.
Baltimore's Reggie Jacbon Ellis and the ~etaliatory
contract talkS.
·
was hit in the lace with a bitting ,of New Yll'k's Mickey
pitch by New York 's Dock Rivers by Baltimore's
Ellis and Jim Pahner of the Palmer, Kuhn said ·he had
Orioles retaliated by hitting instructed
the
Rules
Mickey Rivers.
Ommittee 10 look at the
"I tllint the penalty for problem when there was a
throwing at .somebody with a flareup of simUar incidtnts
beseball at 95 miles per hour earlier in the season said
sbould be made so prohilitive he thought some recom·
lhat it would be a real mendations would he for·
deterrent," MotU said after thcoming sh&lt;li'Uy.
Qmmlssioner Bowie Kuhn
Earlier, ,Eld Garvey., ·execu·
·indicated ,ID the House group live director of the NFt.
By ROBf:RT !CAYLOR
tougher Aayers Association, .testified
well ~ the Soviet Union arid .that possible
PLAINS, G~ . (UPI )
penalties
are
being
studild
to that the 11'0 rooobaU owners
China. No details were
J"unmy Carter has gotten his disclosed, but Bush did curb headhunting.
had 'rejected a . no-st.rike
flnt ~o~He=t lriefing from respond when asked if
Kuhn said he wanled "to pledge by the players this
CIA director George Bush - Carter's request to get his make it clear I don'! em done se11son in return for a
and in the process boosted the information fnm the CIA had intentional violence in
tarnished image of the intelli- given agency morale a lift. beoebaD and if, as it is
gence agency.
"I don't look at it com- possible, we need to
~ was IICheduled to
petitively," Busb said. "But slrengtlu o the rules, that will
wind up fow daya of intensive we're delig!Ud to be doing it. be done:'
lludy of campaign issues I am backed up by tllis
Aoot..!Jer willless befoce the
today in an a1terooon seai&lt;11 wonderful organiutioo of House group, Ron Roberts,
with foreicn affain adviJen excellent intelligence. We're executive director of the
that was to follow a luncbeon prepared - that's our job." play'"' ,unloo for the World
with Tens Gn. Dolph , CIM's·d loicewuseenas Hockey .•siOciatiOO, !old the
Brilcoe, wbcm Carter . has a boolt to the CIA's sagging . c&lt;mmittee lhat tbe WHA
described • "my best friend image · becauae lhe. agency players have retOIIIIIImdetta
11110111 the governors."
bas been bellet with crilicisn tDagb set of rules to ,CIII'b
There
was
some following congressional e~:cessive violmce on tbe ice.
apecalatial the Democratic revelations 1lf = · •nati(ll One reccmmendalion would
SYRACUSE - ln In!!!'C!!M was llll!ding witb plots agaimC f«eicn leaders caD fer a llltliiiOII's swpensi(ll
dependent
Baseball aclioo at
Brllcoe to diaCua strategy lmd «her intellicenoe abuses. for any tbird&amp;le instigator
Syracuse,
the otlost Minersfar ol&amp;etting the impact in
of slick fighting.
ville
learn
fell to RacineTellis of Iarmer Gov. Jobn
. Kuhn also forecu t an
Por.Uand
19-1~ when the
Qmally's endorsemeut of
eltplllllion of the National
Pmident Ford.
League lo matdl tlJe new 14- winners ap!Oded for 10 ·runs ·
Carter aides Slid, boweV!'r,
team formal ol the American in the top of the •ninth inning,
that ailcoe's trip to Plains r - - - - - - - - - 1' League, with the likelibood of leading only 9-7. The winners
bad been arranged .before tbe
baseball returnj.ng to were led by Dave Snodgrass
,.
....
_
.
W·"";ft"'~ .
•IW&lt;l went :s-5 "" the afOllllally amouncement In
-~f01Hf
~-·
ternoon, and · lhe winning
Wllllini!Gn 'l'ueliday.
·- " '
Allied about tile prospeds
lllllb arrived in Carter's
••• "*SON uu
of ,a team in the natioo's hurlers were Pete Sa)Te and
CHn'NILf.A~
bometown Wednesday
,,... u.
capital in the near future, the Gary George. Ramie Bachtel
_
_....
collllllilaioner replied, "If and Keitb Fit.cb each had two
llllc.r'd • Army beHmpter
wllb two bulky satdlels ol
~~=.s.......,..,. , youmeaninlm,Iwouldsay singles and a triple while Red
HeUJcerr material be and n. ow. v~~~er r t r , · 1 c...-r. it is diffirull for me tD say Wallbrown hit two singles
"' '-' "0Mu
· - -......
.. - ttl-11M.
...... lhat lhlt ls the year. But and a double. Harris had a
aides Uled to brief the ........_
Democratic presidential - - " " ' " '·
·baseball is funny and single and double, and
George and Greg Roush each
....,Jnee Ia allix.O.O Jleii!CII.
,.... "' anytlling can happen."
·"!'
"
&lt;carter aabd that Iii brief.
...-. • ••••• .,. .... ,..
Klim. .sded, howevt!l', 'tn got two singles. Getting me
qa 111 foreign affairs ocme - · """"" - ·· ""- .... ls only a matter of lime" Srlgle, each were Roldl ,
_. w· ,, ; ..... .m"""' bef"'- Na"--'
T-nue Haming, Theiss, and Knapp.
frD the CIA ratber than the .,...
• .,. .. .... , .... ... Y. ltllr.
_._. tHe
wawu ~
Ronnie Clonch took the loas
......_.,....,: ........._.. .., adds two teams.
Stale ()eplrtment, • ls CQSo
and
chipped in with two
tomary lor presldeJIIial - . " " ...,._..
" - ,...
.... He declined to flatly
singles.
Other leading .bitters
.
.
.
.
.
...
•
,,,
OM
...........
guarmteeanespansiao~
~en. because of bis
fOr
the
losers were Hanley
criticism of Secretary of "·"'·
., _,, '"""'" _. • · v. .. o.. fer the city but
. told tbe Holllll!
,..,., 111M; 14:1 .......... 111..11; nw..
wiill
a
single
and Haggy with
State Henry Killincer's .,... , _ , _ ,_, group: ...If !he National
.,._
...
...,...__lf.M.
I..eaooo.
~•""•and
the~
is
a
double.
Nell
week Radne·
''lme ruger" llnlgn policy.
e - ~The tnllnp cM.ered Cll - the quality of ownership Portland travels to Rock
available that I lbint is here Springs , and Minersville
and a suitable stadium leaR tangles with Pomeroy.

ta~

By HORTENSE MYERS
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.
(UPI)
Midwestern
governors told ~ and
the federal admlniJtratlon
!hey no longer w1nt to
subsidize states In other
areas of the counlly.
The policy, one of aeveral
lldopted (ll tile final day
Wednesday, SI)'J "the entire
Midwest has becmle a donor
region with lhe states in the
Southeast, Southwest and
West receiving the beneftt
from this condition."
Administrator Frank G.
~b of the Federal Energy
Administration, a final day
speall:tr, said "as impolitic u

.~~:~:~t:~:~:!:~:~ ~:~:?:~:~:~:i:~:~:~:~:t:~:~:~:i:~:~:~t:~:jf~~i~I~;l:{:~:~:~~:~:~:~:~:t:~:1:~:~:;:~~~~f~~S~~:~:~~

Beanballing draws proposal

to invoke fine, suspension

Carter receives

top secret talk

10-nm rally

in ninth won
baseball game

.... ,

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

I

.......

,.,_

........

......,

=='trw':~=!~
DR. LAMB

all give

Governors object to

resumption of payments into
the pension fund and
reinstitutlon of a dues
checkoff for' members.
" As matters notv stand, the
players are free to strike," he
said. "Whether there will be
one, I don'! ·know."
Garvey also told the
tro11n1ttee that !he "horror
stOCies" predicted by the
oll'll!!rS when,the Rozelle ~e
was 'strilck doWn and 24
,~yers became free agents
had been proven false.
He recalled llilllagem¢
claims that the rid1 owners
such IS Lamar Hunt, Clint
MurchiJon and Bud Adams,
r:i the glamor cities such IS
Los Angeles and New Yerk,
would land all the free
agents.
Instead,
the
union
spokesman said, Hunt didn't
Sign a single free agent for
~nsas City, Murchison's
Dallas Cow.boys 'l ost two
~yers and signed only one
and Adams' Hol&amp;OI! Oilers
only aUnlcled one.
In additioo, Garvey noted,
such cold weather cities as
Cleveland and Minnesota
were able to sign ap free
agent stars.

It may aeem and unpnpd•r
as it has to be, we have to
~ lhat we have to
produce American energy
and American jobl and lllop
giving oor wealth to tile
Arabs." He said thil will
mean bllber coats for oll and
other larml of enersY·
Zlrhsaldlhatlntheareaol
gas
consumption
by
automobiles, the energy
picture Is trighter. "t haw
looked •t tile plana for Detroit
belwe!en now and 11111) and tile
C!XIIbination of smaUer ~rs
and lighter .cars and
improved IA!chnology should
have • 50 per cent
improvement, uslntPrlhs a
base," he said.

IIGIKI, In hil 1~
lpHCh, ClUed far a ~bare.
the-knowledge procram
llllOnc atates. He lllld u an
enmple, two OODCepll Ill
regional bieber education
presented at thla )'tar'•
conference . The
new
chairman · deQned -.,,
agriculture ancl haa1tb care
aa priority areu~,cllainl hia
~allon.
,
Of.health care he llllld 11
appears .that the lederlliO¥·
l!l'llllleDI hu 1101 .......-mpled
the field of preventive
medicine In health ca~
progarns and that may be
thebeltnenforusln that on
Clll do aometlilg .~lthout
federal Interference.

Lucey, 11JWtber final day
!!pUller, Slid "the Idea that
~ dollata are lllnted
may llllll ma'ke nice eratory
at election time builD point ol
fact, 1m1sa you cet 11 from
the federal govemmenl, you
ll'e gWII!to ralae 11 locally
from your tupayera."
.
Thegoverneraelected Mt.
~ . Gov . Oll'iltopber s.
Bond
as
~halnnan,
s11cceedlng South Dakota
· 'Gov.RichardF. Kneip. North
Dakota Gov. Artbur A. Link
was elected as vicechairman . The governors,who last year selected
Oklahoma for their 1977
conference, Wednesday
picked Kentucky fer 1978.

Wiacoosin Gov. Patridt J.

harmful to a mlner'a health.
Mine operators, could
appeal anY llndlng olllfely
and health vlolatlona but tina!
conviction could reault In
penalliea of up to t1,000 for
first lime vlolallonund up to
$10,000 for wilfuJ or repeated
violations. Failure to correct
a vlolaUm within 1 lime iel
by the Inspector could also
reault in a dally penal\)' ol up
to ti,OOO.
Rep. Albert Qule, R·Minn.,
who led the effort to block the ·
transfer tc the Labor Depart.' ment said the only reason lor
the move "ls that erpnlzed
'labor favors sucb a transfer."
He said 01\gress never ·gave
Interior Effective mine safely
authority untll19'70 and since
then deaths and lnjurlea In
the mines have dlrn!nlllhed.

BENNETT TAPPED
EASTLAKE, Ohio (UPI) Jen:me Bennett, e~:ecl"'ve
vice president and Chief
financial officer of White
Molor Corp., Wednesday Wll8
elected to the board of
directors; replacing J!ful E.
Sheehan, former White
president, who resigJied laat
May.

'

REPORT OF CONDRION
Qmaolidaq d&lt;meslil: IIUblidiaries of tile

f'OMEROY NATIONAL BANK
OF POMEROY
in the state of Ohio, at the close oilv•siness on June 30, 1976 published in response to call
made byQmptrolleroftheCurrenCy, under title 12, United States Code, SecUon 161 :..~

,

&lt;llarter nwnber 1!1110

.

Statement of Resources and Liabilities

'·

National Bank Region Number 4

~

•

'

Thousands

- - . , - - Casb and due from.banks .. " .... ..... .... . ..... . . ............................. 1,335 - - U.S: Treasury securities .. .... . . . .. ....... .. . ... .. . ...... , ....... . ..... , ....... .. 9,272
Obligations,of other U.S. Gov't. agencies and corps .. . .. ... ... . .. .. . ................. 133
Obligations of States and political subdivisions .... .. ... . ... .. . .......... " .....•. 1,913
.other booda, llCites and debentures . .. . ... . .............. .... ...... .. ... ......... .... 2

...
=
Ill
Ill

c

F~ Reserve stock andCOilJOI'Bte stock ... . . .. . . ......... . . ........... ..... '..... 39

Federal fuDds IIOid and securities purchased
·
,
W)(ler~ to reseD ..••• .••...• •.•. .. •. ..•.••••.• , •••• ••••••..• . .• .•.. •725
Loans, Total (e&amp;cluding !D1e&amp;l1led income) ..... . ....... . ............ 9,2'11
Less: Reserve fer possible loan IOIIBeS ...... .. . .. .. . ............ .. . . ... 68
Loans, Net .•••. .. •. . .... .•.. .... . . . .' .. . . . .. , ...... . .. ... ... . ....... . ....... 9,203
Bank pmni-, furniture and fixtum!, and
otl1er allets representing bank preiili.ses . . . . . . . . .. ....... •.••.••• •• •••.. •. ... .. . 329
'
.cJibler aseets . ..... . ........ ...... . .. . . ' .... ... .... . .... . ' . ... .
5
~~~·of"indi"·:viduals·:
...... ;.;~.:.:.:.: ..and
..................... .. ..... . .. ---:.2%,95&amp; - -"'
~-~·
, p....~.,
corps . . .. . . ...... .. ... . . . . ..... ...... 4,480
u
Time and aavtn&amp;sdepollita of individuals, ·
·
prtnalp.,.andcorpa....... ... .... .. ..... .. .................. . .......... ... . 14686
Deposi.tsof.UoitedSiatesGovermneot . ........... . .. . . ....... . .................. .'. 35
"
DeposttaofStat.esandpoliticahubdivisions . ... .. . .. .. ...... . ......... . . . ....... . 1,'127
"'
catified and officers' checks ' . .. ..•...... .·.......• ~ •. .. ... •• ' •••..•. ; ••.. •• . •• . .• 12
TOTALDOMESTICDEPO!ITS
·
. .. . . .. ......... . . . .. ..... ..... . ............ : ... 20,910
Total demand deposita ... ... ....... . . . ..... . ... ... ......... , ..• •.. S,481l
"
Total time and IIVIJIIII......,l"'
' , _.,_ . .. . ... ............ . ...... . , , .. ... . 15,504
TOTALDEPUliTil IN DOMESTIC AND
FOREIGN OFFICES ....... .. .. .. ... . ..... .. ........... ....... ....... ... ... 20 910
Otberliatilities
, ' 113
~~
.............. ..... . . ...... .. ....... .. . ........... . .. . . .. ... ...................
TOTALUABIIJTIFS (exc(udlngsubordinatednotesanddebentures) .. ,. .. .
21,aT3 - - -•1
0

--+--

...-....
Ill

.-..

•.--c..
--+--

•

0

••••••••• 0

••••••

.

Commoo stock:

Gout: the ·disease of kings
ByLaw•e-E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR Dl,{. LAMB - A
.couple of weeks ago my
husband awlkened during
tile night wltb emre pain in
Iii big toe. He started to get
ap but could hardlylland, bls
toe wu so badly 111011en. He
lll,ed bome frGm work on
tbe nat day lhlnklnc II would
flO nay but it dldn '1.
He 1n!lll to tile doctor who
X-nyed It and gave him a
~.and told him he
bad ~GUt and to come back
tbe lollowinc week. . •
I 11m! heard lhat people
with fiOIIlhlve to give up or at
leut cut down on certain
foodl and Uqalds. The
IIMiip&amp;n he wu liven did
1111p anc1 he - ok'd far work

of aomething In the syatem or

Interestingly, the gout and
lack of something. Hope you high uric acid levels are
can enligliten me.
Common in active, Intelligent
DEAR READER - The . people. Ita tendency to occur
popular image of the person in sucb people led to it being
with gout Ia • mldd!Hged, caUed tile ktng of diae•aes
OYerweighl man silting in hil and tbe dlaeaae of ktngB.
overstuffed cbalr with hia
I 1111 sending you 'lbe
painful loot on a son pillow 01\ Health lAtter number W,
a atoOI, while he i.s eating a Gout, Uric Acid, willch will
loeg of lamb with one hand and give you a more complete
boldlng a glua of wine in the resume of wbat the'" rse ls
other hand. 'lbal is a COIICelll and how it ls treated. Others
of antiquity and deaervea to who want thil information
ill\ relegaled to the arcblvea can send a long, st•mped,
of medical folklore.
aelf..ddresaed envelope and
Gout i.s cauaed by an excess 50 cenla for II. Juat send your
prodactlon of uric acid. 'lbe letter to me In care of this
urle IICid ill byproduct of the newspaper, P.O. Boa: 1551,
cell regener11ionlha11oes on Radio City Station, New
conatanlly In yow body. It i.s York, NY UIOie.
UteraDy spun aft frD nucleic
Before we had the effective
IICidll lhal ... In lhe IUicleus medicines '" have loday the
.. allaat • - ' .
Tllil doctor aatlld my of lbe celll. 'l'bllaberraUonln only lllinl the docton could
I I 'If Ill)' -ber of 1111 tarmallan o f - uric add offer tbe gout paUent was a
doellelld to om~' In families. diet and medicine to abort the
,..,., llad pt. I bad II_. of II being an Tile - ·... In the lamUy tend acute alllck. 'lbe dlela were
lllndiCary aliment. I have to hPe blch uric acid butlesa low purine dleta - literally
low In !bale tocids with lots of
llelrd II - f!ltber lao much aft4ll get JIGUI.
~

·~

nuclei in them. Thil ' meant
giving up the organ meats in
particular and limiting the
meats. However, even .the
str;ctest diet will only lower
the uric acid level a little bit
because the euess does not
come from the food but from
the ueesa production by the
person's own body cella.
'lbe newer medicines can
block tile production of ercess uric acid 'by the body
cells. That way .the bloOd
level or uric acid never gela
eleva ted and the harm
callled by the excea uric
add never occurs.
It Ia important for people
with gout to be foUowed
regularly. Most will have to
take medicine for Ufe to avoid
couty arthritis, acute attackl
u your hlllband had and
more ltriOUI problems. 'lbe
medlclnea avaUable loday,
though, make It possible for a
person to lead a normal life
otherwise.

--+--

c
z
ctill:
A

i

a. No. shansautborized 8,«10
b. No. shans outstanding 8,000 (par value) . ...... . .. ... : .... . ........ . ....... , 200
$urp.ua.. . . . .... •.......... .. ••.. ; ... . ........ ... . . .. .. . '.' ..• ~ ..... ~ ........ 1,200
Undivided profita ••.... . ..... .. ...... ..•. . . . • . .. ... . .• . •• , , , •• .• . .•..• -. .•. .• ••• 447
Reserve for cont.lngencies and other capital resei'Ves ......... .. ..... .... .... : ....... 38
'I.UrllEQUITYCAPITAL •• •~·········:·····:..:_~································· 1,883
i
roi'ALUABIIJTIFSANDEQUITYCAPITAL . ....... 'I....... .... :~: ...
22,966 - - - '·
Average for J.j or30calmdlir days endinc with caUdate:
' '
Casll and d:ue frooJ. bal*a ..... . .•............... .. ....... . .... . ......•.. . ,,, •• 1 300
Fed..llllda IIOid and securities purdJued
·
' ·
under llgl"ee!!Jleel to re~eU . . . . . . . .... . ... , , , .... , .. . . • • ... . .. ......... , , ...... 597.
Total Joens •••• ~ •.. •••••...••.• •••••.•••••• , ••••••• ••••...•. •• .•••• •.• ; ••• ••9,242
. Thuedepaeitact'IGO,OOOormore In ckmestlcolflcea ............... . .............. 317
ToCaldetl-81ta •.••••.••• •....•.•.• . . . . . .••. . •••.••..• ..... . •. .....•.. ..... . 'JIJ,?rYl
Time depoltta ct flOO,OGO or more In donlestlc offices:
nme certlfiC81es of deposit in denominations of
·
f!GO,OIIO a; more •.•....... .•. . ••... .. .. . .... ... : . . . . . . . . . . ...................• 450

I, Maxine Griflltb, CUhler Of the above-named baiJii do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition la true and cor-

Ill

rect to tile best of my lmowledge and belief.

I

Mulne Grlfllth
July22,1t'18
We, tbe undenlgned dlrectorll attest the couecb
of tblllta!emeut ol !'eiiOiircea anc1
llabilitlea. We declare that it hal been ewnlned by 111, and to the best olow tno.ledge
IJICI belief is true and Uklecl. .

R. E. Boice- Dlrecton
- - L - -,

WarrenPictena

AM E R I C A N LI!AoOUE:
By TOM WIIJTFIELD
lllndo, Oak 20; L.Mty, Bolt
UPI!II*t!Wrlter .
"
ond H-ick, Clov 111 Jock .
~! · .
10&lt;1, Bolt end YlttriiMIIII. 801
Jalin
"Biiilloon" Odom la
14.
o•
...
Ill
• •Jcr leagllell
.
RUNS IATTID flf,
ou
NATIONAL LIAOUio Fos.
...
ltr, Cln U ; MOrGan, Cin 73o
•,
Kingman, NY 72 1 Schmidt, Phil ""' kJ 11lght he and
rookie Franelaeo Barrios
69 ; Lulinlkl, Phll64.
• •
••• _,,,.. i
. 33 10 ,355 JOV.
AMI!IUCAN LIAOUI: Mty . plldled onlr the lourth comberry, t&lt;C 67 ; Bur rOUihl , Ttx
-. : ;._..: • Well
W•• L.. Pet. Ga 64: Chambliss
Munson, NY lnd no-1nw In big league
• " Clnclnnoll.
62 J1 .620 63; L.Mtv, Bill oriG Tallrtem . IWiiGr)' for lilt &lt;:~*ago White
• • LOIIInQIIH 55 44 .556 611 ski. 801 !9.
.
Soll!ld illapplll the Oakland
_,. Howton
52 11 ,505 1111
ITOLIN lAIII- .
Sin Diego
49 52 .485 ll\1
NATIONAL t:IAOUi o Tove. ,.••• 1-1.
"" Attonto
45 54 .455 16V. rot Pill 35 1 MOI'Gin, Cln tM Wlite Sox Mwcer Paul
&gt;.11 S.rl FrlntiiCO 44 5I .431 19
CedenoLHOU 321 Brock, SI.L 30:
Rlchll'lll ltUdl with Odom
:
WectnlldiY 'I Rttuih
· Lopes, A 29,
AM I R I C A N LIAOUI: until the Ulh lmlng, when
~- · M0ntrlai3 51, LOll II 0, 1st
. .. Mil St . Louts, 2nd, Dlld ., rain
N9rtn, Ook 51; &amp;or,ror, Oak ~1;
• ' Atlllllt 7 LOI l'ongtl~ 2
. Petek. KC 39: LeF ore. Dfl and the riptblnder ialued hia.
.. , Chlcovo 5 Pnlla 2, 11 Inns .
C1rew, Mlnn 36,
nlnlb walk, lhtn went 1.0 to
PITCHING, .
'" ' Pitt 1 fo!IW York 0, 13 lnn1.
Sal
Sando. Barrloll came in
. . Most 1/lctorlli
Son Franc11co 7 Cincinnati o
and
cm~pltled the walk but
NATIONA~ LIAOUI: Jontl,
'" Sin Dii!IO 2 HOUI 1, 10 Inns:
;.,,
TDdlly's Prolllllllt Pltchtn
SO 18.4; LOIU&gt;org, Phil 12·51 didn't
allow another
carlton, Phil 11·4; Nllkro, All
I All TlmH I DTI
Chicago IR . RtUIChel 9·8) II 11 .6; KOOiman, NY 11 -7; buerunner until Claudell
Ph ltUolpnla ICtrllon 11 ·41, Ruthven , All and sutton, LA 11 · Washington walked on a ~2
12:35 p.m .
8; R:tcnard, Hou 11-11.
Pilllburgn CROOker 8-ll at AMERICA'N LEAGUE : Pll ·
Now York CLolich 6·10 ), 2:05 mer, Bait l.C-1: Ftuu•raa, NY
p.m.
lJ.6 : Gorlond, Ball 12·2:
..-..:· Son Df1119. (Strom 9. n or f:ltzmqrrlt, KC - 12-6; T1nana ,
, • Frtisl- HI at' Clnclnnali Cal and Trtv'e n, Mil 12-7:
Slaton, Mil 12-8; Hunter , ~Y 12·
• IZachry 1·31, 8:05p.m.
"" !Only g•mttsthequled l
~. EARNED RUN AVE RAG~ .
ltrl.d l)'.' l G1mes
.1bosid on 'lo innings pitched)
~~~~ . st. ~~~~··• Chlcaro I":
NAT1IONAL ·LIEAGUI: Nor .
~~t.~0.f',T/~~~;g~~~i~~rt · mon , Cln ,1,31• Stonhouse, Mil
:.,. Philo'' New Vork , 'nigh I
2,45 ; Seov"·' NV 2.53: Jones,
SD 2.54; Richard, Hou 2.611.
., Atlanta or Houston. night
·- Los Angeles at San Fran, night
AMER!CAN . LEAGUI : . Fl .
drych, Det 1.93; Travers, Mil
""'
WILMINGTON, Ohio
2.17 ; Blue, Oak 2.69; Palmer ,
HI •
AtntriCin LettUI
Bait
2.70;
Garland,
Ball
2.71.
(UP!)
- Two newcomers
Eatt
STRIKEOUTS. . . hope to cet thelr klm W.. L.. Pet. GB
NATIONAL LEAGUE: Sea ·
. ...... New York
6(1 36 .625 ver , NY 156 ; Richard~ Hou 123; some good CIIHII - In the
!;" Baltimore
..9 48 .505 11112 Messe:rsml th, At I 117; Nltkro,
Cincinnati Bengals' (Irs!
ow. Cleveland
47 .. .495 12V:! All liS; Montefusco, SF 102.
47 ., .490 13
Detroit
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Ryan , prHea80J1 game of the year
uu Boston
43 53 .448 11
Cal 18,.; Tanana , C11l . and Saturday m,bt at Green Bay.
Milwaukee
42 52 .447 11
Blvteven, Tex U6 ; Jenkins, Bo$
Wtlt
Banpla' head coach Bill
,,..
W.. -L. .• Pet. GB and Hunter, NY 109.
Johnson aays he will use
~~ Kansas City
60 38 .612 ., Oakland
Sl 47 .530 e
Maior Ltlgue Result.• '
placekicker Mlrro Roder and
" 1 )Minnesota
48 50 .490 12
By Unlfed Press·lnteri'lltlonal punter Greg Coleman - both
JU Texas
47 so ...as 12112 fJ~ _ Natl.onal Leatue
.
fighting against odds to make
' Chicago
45 54 .455 15'12 I1St Gamt)
~"~ California
.43 59 .422 19
Montreal
000 000. 102- 3 10 1 the roster - against the
.
Wtclnndoy'l RIIUIIS
St . Lou is
000 000 GOO- 0 10 2
~r Minnesota 8 Texas 5, 1st
Fryman, Murrh (1) and Pactera.
. ,.Minnesota 1 Texas o, 2nd
Foote ; Rasmussen , Grtlf (7 ),
Roder, a native of Czechos, Cleveland 7 Boston 6
Wallace (9), Solomon (9) and
lovakia
wbo will beuime a
~J Balt imore,. New York 3
Ferguson. WP-Frvmen (9.8).
' Oetrqlt 1 Milwaukee o
LP- Resmussen (3-9} .
U.S. citizen 18ter this year, ls
·: Kan Clfv· 3 Calif 2, 15 Inns .
Mtlat St. Louis, 2nd, p~ .• rain a 32-year old free agent who
Chicago 2 Oakland 1
,...
TOdly's Probable Pitchers
San
Frnclsco
302
200
ooo7 15 0 waa cut by ll1f Chicago
I All Times EDT) .
Bears.
Cleveland cDobson 11 ·81 at Cincinna ti 000 000 ooo- 0 5 1 Roder figures to have a
Boston (Wise 7·8), 2 p .m .
D' Acq.ulsto, Lavelle (1) and
Texas . (Umbarger 7.7) at Rader; Alcala, BorbOn 13), hard lime making !he team
Minnesota {Bane 3·21, 2:15 p..m . Hinton (6), Eastwlck (8) and
Baltimore IMay 6·7l at Plummer . WP- O' Acqulsto (3· because Bengals coaches
. Detroit (Fidrych 11 ·21, 8 p.m.
Sl. LP- Aicola 19·3) .
have !*en 10 high on rookie
!Only games scheduled)
placeldcker Chris Bahr of
Fri~ay's Games
Los Angeles 200 000 ooo- 2 7 0
Penn
State, nine ·years
"'Cleve at Milw, 2, twl .nlght
Atlanto
000 21:i Olx- 7 13 0
~.,.New York 111 Boston, night
John, Hough {6), Sosi (7) and
•• Baltlmort at Detroit. night
Rodrigue" Nlekro 111-6) and

•nd

House advances mme
1

-

Miler LAIIIH llonoUn11
ly Uolllll "'"' lntornotlooll
NtiilftiiLHI!Iil
• •••
~•
W.. L. . Pet. Gl
Phll-pllit 65 ,, .617 Pit~
54 4 .557 11'11
Now York
51 fO .505 1611
51 . LOUIS
42 54 .431 23
Chlcovo
41 5I .414 m;

" '

•

WASJ{INGTON (UPI ) - ·miner$' lives."
The Ho~ has v&lt;ted to
'' An agency Uke the
strengthen mine safety laws Interier Depar1ment, which
and to ,give eftercement to ill cbarled with developlnll
the Labor Department Ibis
nation's
energy
because
the
Interior ~sources, , cannot also
Department has failed to Effectively enforce federal
adequ~~tely enforce current •
safety laws at the same
regul.aUons.
time," Miller said In a
Backers of the measure, s t a I e m e n t . " T h e
wbicb passed on a 3IN8 vote ovenrhelmlng vote In favor
Wednesday. and was sent to of tbe transfer ... signals
the Senate, cited the Scotia 01\gress' determination to
coal mine di••sfer in Marcb eliminate this basic conflict
near Partridge, Ky., in whicb of IntereSt and to get on !\'!th
explosions over a two day the important job of making
period killed 26 persons. .
Americas's .coal mines
"The Inter:loc Department sale."
.
has dtm(llstraled tbJt It is
The measure requires the
the wrong agency for secretary of labor to come up
enllrclng OlD' mine safety with tighter safety standards
and health laws," said Rep. which would be subject to a
.1o1m Dent, 0-Pa. "Recent congressional veto by either
..,of of what I say can be the House or Senate. II
summed up in one tragic mandates a .minimum of four
wtrd-Scltia."
inspections a year of each
The major provisioo of tlJe underground mine and two a
bill was transfer of regulation year of surface mine and
setting' and enforcement milling operations.
power to the Labor . Any miner would be
Department. A Republican- permitted to accompany the
led attempt to block tbe inspection team to pcint out
transfer lost on a llll3-119 vote. hazards and could not be
The Senate Labor and docked his pay during the
Public Welfare Ccmmlttee is inspection time or be the
considering a similar tarcet of retribution by the
measure.
employer. Hazards, in the
United Mine Workers measure, would be eqllnded
Presi.dtnt Arnold Miller said to include toric substances in
the bUI ''would help saw the air thai are proven

Oiom, Barrios share no-hitter
....... .

,,

and I dldn 't know where my
pitches were golnl," said
Od0111. "It all worked out for
the best, though, didn't II?"
Barrlos, a 23-year-old
righthander from
Hermosillo, Me:dco, said
through an Interpreter that
he wam't aware he was
.working on a no-hitter ''UnW I
looked at the scoceboerd as l
walked out to the mound at
the start of the ninth Inning."
Chicago's Jim Spencer,
who scored in the aeCI&gt;IId on
Bucky Dent's single, t.'oke a
1·1 tie with a eolohomerin the
sixth inning off loser
Undblad. The A's lone run

Bengals will
test kickers

,, .

.....

"~ TeKIIS at Kansas City, nigh t

Correll. LP- John (6-7) . HR-

?"'a~lando1Minnesota.nlghl
m' Chicago at CalifOrnia, n lghr1

.

Atlanla,Niekroll).

( 11 innings,

.•. ,

Millar League Leaders
...; By United Press tnternatio~al
•~
BATTING. . ...,r .

Chicago
110 00()'000 03- 5 7 2
Phil a
200 000 000 oo- 2 10 1
Bonham, Knowles (9], Sutter

·-. :(based on 250 at batsl
1101 and Millerwald: Lonborg.
Reed (10) and Oates , McCarver
NATIONAL LEAGUE
. . .
G. AB. If. H,· Pet· 1101· WP- sul1er · 12 ·11. LPOIIver , Pll 89 359 55123 .343 Reed 18·41 . HR - Chicago, Tr illO
Rose. Cin
100 406 S8 135 .333 141·
- -Griffey, Cln 92 349 82 116 .332
: McBride,' SI.L 67 255 37 84 .329 I 13 innings)
; Crawlrd, SI .L 80 275 38 90 .327 Plllsburgh
··
• Foster, Cin 90 358 54 116 .324
000 000 000 000 1- 1 10 o
~ Maddox, Phil 89 314 48 101 .322 New York
.
: Robinson . Pit 7064 44 84 .318
000 000 000 000 o- 0 6 0
• Geronimo, Cn 89 293 40 93 .317
Medl,h, Giusti (11) and
• MOI1flnl &gt;All 102 406 47 128 ,315 Songuillen : Seaver, Sanders
•
AMER ICAN LEAGUE . . 1111 and Grote. WP- Giusli 11•• · · · · ·- G. AB · R. H, pct 21. LP- Sanders 11-2). HR • Broil, KC
98 396 62 140 .354 Pittsburgh , Hebner 141.
• Bostock, Min 12 256 ·•o 90 .352
KC 87 312 51108 .346 (10 Innings! ooo ooo ooo 2- 2 9 o
••o McRee,
Munson, NY 92 374 &lt;i8 123 .329 . son or~o
'W~
• LeFlore , Oet 90 365 62 120 .329 Houston
000 000 000 1- 1 7 1
• Carty , ere
92 329 47105 .319
Jones 118-4) and Kendall :
• Carew, Min
96 373 63 118 .316 Andu jar {6.7) and Herrmann .
: Lynn , Bos
86 333 45 104 .312
.
Amer&lt;can League
• Staub, Dot 96 352 44 109 .310 (1st game)
• Gerr, Chi
83 m 39 102 .307 T•••s
002 002 1oo- 5 13 0
•
HOME RUNS. ·
Ml
: - NATIONAL LEAGUE : . King .
nnesota OOO 503 OOX - 8 12 2
Ill, man , NY 32; Schmidt, Ph il 26;
Hargan, Bacslk (4 ), Hoerner
• Foster, Cln 20 : Robinson. Pill (6) , Foucault m and Sund·
" 18; Monday , Chi and Morgan, berg ; Hughes, Campbell 161
0
and Wynegar . WP- Hugnes (5·
• Cln 17.
·101 . LP- Hargon 1•·31.
~

younger than ltoder and a
high draft selection.
Coleman ls a rookie out of
Flordla A&amp;M but he was only
a 14th roUnd draft choice and
is competing against veteran
punter Dave Green and Pat
Mcinally for the punting job.
Mcinally, however, will
miss Saturday's game
because th~ Injury he
suffered · In last · weekend's .
scrinunage has him sld~lined
for 10 to 14 days.
Saturday's Bengals·
Packers game also will mark
!he pro debut of Cincinnati's
two top draft cbolces - tWotime Heisman TrOPhy winner
Archie Grillin of Ohio State
and receiver Billy Brooks of
Oklahoma.
Johnson acknowledged that
both would play, but added,
"not extensively."

came in the tourtb on two
walks, a stolen hlae by
Washington and • throwing
error by catcher Jim E8alan :
In other American League
games, llaltimore completed
a three.game sweep over
Eastern Division-leading
New York, 4-3; Kansas City
topped California' 3-2, In 15
Innings; Mlnneaota swept a
doubleheader from Texas, 8-5
and S.O; Cleveland edged
Boston, 7-6; and Detroit
blanked MUwaukee, 1.0.
. Orlolea 4, Y~es 3:
Ken Sinaleton and Mark
Belanger delivered runscoring singles In a three-run,
seventh inning as Baltimore
rallied from a :J.O deficit to
cut New York's lead to II 'h
games. Former Yankee
Tippy Martinez got the win In
relief of Oriole starter Wayne
Garland. Loser Doyle
•

flekl off his fermer Brewer
Alexander pitched five Tilers l, Bi'ewen t:
PedroGarcla'saac:rlflce Ry teammate scored Alex
perfect Innings, but allowed a
run-11corlng triple to AI In the ninth Inning broke up a Jobnaon, who led off with a
scoreless duel between single, wu aacrlficed to
Bumbry in the mth.
Detroit's Dave Roberts and second and went to third on
Royall S, Aagell 2:
Dave Nelson bunled Tom Milwaukee's Jerry Blll Freehln's single.
Poquette home from third Augustine. Garcia's Ry to left
with one out In the 15th Inning
to put Kansas City eight
games ahead of Oakland In
the AL West. Royala' reliever
Larry Gl).l'a picked liP his
flrst victory.
Twinl 8-8, Rangers 5-ll: ·
Lyman Bostock slammed
out five hits, raising lils
average to .352; as Minnesota .
swept Texas. The Twins
By GIL PETERS
considered the chief competl·
strung together seven singles
UPI Sportl Writer
lim . Crenshaw, the U.yearand a fielder's choice to score
SUTIUN, Mass. (UPI) old fermer NCAA champloo,
five runs In the fourth Inning Roger Maltbie doesn't look 1eada the PGA tour with
and clinch the first game. In the part but the 25-year-old $190,401 In earnln8s.
the nightcap, Steve Luebber golfer was raled as one of the
Hubert Green, whole three
pit.cbed 6 1-3 innings to notch favorites as the $200,000 straight tour wins early In the
his flrst major league win Pleasant Valley Classic year helped mate him the
since Aug .ta, 1971.
began today.
second leading money maker
The f&gt;.foot-10, 175-pound na- with $188,979, •nd Lee Elder,
live of Modesto, Cal., enters · who has twice flnllbed second
the tournament . as the ' here, are also Biven good
defending champion· and a chances to win.
well-respected player on the
Five other former wlnnera
PGA tour.
Including Btuce Devlin, Dave
Just a year ago Maltbie Stockton, Lanny Wadkins,
was unknown. Then he wm Vic Regalado and T0111 Shaw
!he Quad Cities Open and also will be In the field lhat
· staged a final-round rush to will be cut to about 75playera
win Pleaaant Valley's first. after the second round
place prize the following
But if the tournament goes
guiDed a 5-3 edge Ill the week.
true to past form, a littleseaS&gt;n series.
His reputation aa a blythe known golfer will bolt from
"We're 6-3 for the season splrit also surfaced after he· the pack (ll the final day to
against the Dodgers;" said losthis$40,000wlnner'schect mak.e the win.·
Rigney. "Yet we can't beat in a Worcester bar.
clubs like Montreal and
The mustachioed and
Chicago."
bespectacled Maltbie, who
Chicago and Montreal rank had another check isslled to
fifth and sixth in the National replace the lost money, has
League East.
been one of the tour's most
The Giants tagged Santo consistent performers this
Alcala for eight hits and five season. He has .:won one
runs before be departed in the tournament and has ccmpiled
third inning with his third loss $115,946 in earnings, thanks to
against nine victories.
clutdl shobnaldng~
"San Francisco Is a fastball
"There are two baBic fears
hitting club and that's all which keep some players
Santo threw tonight. He from winning out here,"
couldn't get a l)reaklng pitch Maltbie said this week as he ·
over," said Reds' matlager surveyed the par-71, 7,119Sparky Anderson.
yard course, "Flrst, the fear
D'Acquisto, now 3-6, was of succeeding and being
reliev.ed by Lavelle in the ·forced Into the limelight; and
seventh after developing a
fear of failure.
blister oo the thumb of his the''One
thing about m'l.i I'm
pitching hand . The two not afraid to fall flat on my
limited the Reds to five hits. taU, I've been brought up In a ·
"~t's the third straight
win-oriented society."
~._,te
good game in a row for
Among
the
165 .;,ua
D'Acquisto," pointed out Rig· professionals trying to •
ney,
prevent Maltbie from become IS
. - - - -"The kid 's got a good arrn the flrst two-time wlilner in
on · him, " commented the IO.year history ~f the
For halp with all your
Anderson. ''In fact, the tournament. Ben Crenshaw ls
family insurance ..-Is,
Giants have four starters who
see:
are as good as any lour that
you'll find oo any club in the ·
Bill FUTCHER
For 11tt Llwlll
league, including the New
York Mets."
1258 Powell St.
The
three
besides
Tn
Pricls
Middleport,
o.
D'Acquisto ?
Ph. 992-7155
"Jim Barr, Ed Halicki and
In
the
Alii
John Montefusco," said
Anderson .
It's
Maybe Anderson 's right,
but the quartet's record
'"'" ,
doesn't offer supporting
lestimony.

Pleasant Valley

Classic underway

Giants blank
Cincy, 7-0
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
t-1ncinnati lU!ds and the Los
Angele9 Dodgers rank onetwo In the National League 's
western division, but that
doellli't intimidate' the lowly
San Francisco Giants.
"We're in last place, 19
games back and guess which
clube are the only ooes we
can beat ?" asked Bill
Rigney , manager of the
Giants.
"The Reds and Dodgers,"
said Rigney before a guy
could answer.
John D'Acquisto and Gary
I.aveUe teamed up to blank
the Reds, 7.0, Wednesday
night in the finale of a \hreegame series as the Giants

19 teams en' ter tournament

Like a

good

One of the largest and
strongest
fields
ever
assembled In Southeastern
Ohi be ·
1
g1l1 Pay Saturday
July 31 in Gallipolis. Games
wiD be played on M
·1
.
emor1a
Field and the UtUe IAague
·Field.
.
The T
. ournamenl' ls ASA
sa nctioned and iS double
elimlna~on J Mar Tr bi
~ · 0.
Op es
of Gallipolis IS the host team
.
aDd a 1so the tournament

°

sponsor.

Included . the to
In
urney
field are the first and second
place· finishers
in lhe Wes t
.
Virginia Slate Tournament
and the top five teams in the
Southe tern 0
as
lllo, District.
Games begin It 9:30a.m.
h
on bot Saturday and Sunday .

First and second rowld · Hartley (Ravenswood) vs
games on Saturday are : Beverly Stroh's winner 2:30.
Matthews and Edelblute
Leagle Beagles (Pt.
(Gallipolis ) vs Union Work· Pleasant) vs Bombers. Point
man 1Gallipolis) 9:30.
Pleasant softball league
Tansky's (Logan) vs winner 2:30 McDonalds
Citizen's Bank (Pt. Pleasant) (Athens) vs 'Jo-Mar·Eiston
9:30.
winner 3:45 . .
Beverly (Ohio ) vs Stroh's
There will be five more
(Athens ) 10:45 Bombers winner 's bracket games and
(Ravenswood ) vs Point four loser's bracket games
Pleasant Softball League played on Sat.
10:45.
A total of 17 or 18 games
Jo-Mar (Gallipolis) vs will be played on Sunday.
Elston (Waterford) 12:00 J &amp;
The public is invited to
M (Gallipolis ) vs Fruth's a tlend as there is no ad·
Pharmacy (Pt. Pleasant) mission charge. The con12:00.
cession stand will be open all
Seamen 's (Athens) vs week-end offering hot dogs,
Indy's (Huntington ) 1:15 potato chips, pop corn, candy,
Golddiggers (Kanawha ) vs
pop and ice cream
Hu5Uer's (Marietta ) 1:15.

F:ann

there

-

BEID

nRE CEITER

W. VI.

•

~Holmes
••
:

AMARIU.O, Tex. (UPI)attorney lor Ernie Holmes
the Plttsburgb Steelers
• aays he will request the
: defensive tacltle's trial on
~ cocaine poaaesalon charges
: be postponed until after the
: football season .
• Judge George Dowlen said
: wednesday he . would
: consider such a motion !rom
•defense attorney Charles
:Rittenberr)' to delay Holmes'
: ~rial, scheduled far Oct. 4.

:An
:or
0

•
~

attorney-seeks postponement
"My policy is to call tlJe District Attorney Tom Curtis. trial date bed just been set.
Rittenberry has said Curtis He said, however, now that
cases first of the people wbo
are already In jail awaiting . is trying to gain publicity by the case was on the docket,
trial," Dowlen said. "Then, I asltinl fer the trial in the motions would be filed by
call the ooes of the people middle of the football season. both the defense and the
who are out on bond. Mr. But CUrtis aays Clses slmUar state.
Holmes was arrested Jan.
Holmes ls out on bond, and I to the one lacing Holmes
do not feel another two usually tate a day or two, and 31 by three agents of
months or so Is going to make the Holmes trial would be 'Amarillo's Metro Intelligence
treated "the same as any 1 Unit. He was accused of
that much difference."
buying 250 milligrams of
"We would naturally other Clse In thil county."
Curtis said no pre-trial cocaine In the restroom of a
oppose such a motion beCiuse
we are ready to go to trial motions had been med with hotel while attending a
now," said Potter County the district clerk because the wedding . He was arraigned
Feb. 2 and released on $1,000
.

Pruitt
signs long-term deal
•
•• KENt,

Ohio (UP!) ~d nmninll baclt Greg
~. only the

thlrd Bl'owna'
,Oyer ever 1o l!l'ank out 1,000
:1arda In • aeason, baa signed
.a l111gterm contract with the
:National Fool~all League
ttub deligned to have ·him
1lnlab hill proleaalonal career
iW!th Art Modell's team.
; In three seaaons with
J:leveland, Pruitt his rushed

:••

·

r&lt;!OL:.~r~)

'

pitch In !he ninth.
"I felt It waa lime he took
me out. I had 1011 my rhythm

amboCCW took the lead a\
e lbrle.quarlet' pole and
ld Cilfar a oae-ha1f length
tJctory O¥er Luxury Item In
:fie featured eilhth race at
~loto Downs .Wednesday

E

iilbt.
: Rio Bnw Hamwr waa
Jili'd.
• Jamho«&lt;B•, driven by WU-

lam Herman to a 2:03 mlle,

i-,!d tli.:ll, tUO and tUO.
• Tbe 5-3 nightly double
of WI!Jitw and
..... .... ' worth

·

'

" A II'OWd of 3,'784 wagered
P l9,210.
.

•

~ '?

Peeters rcr an ~loeed;
future draft choice, and
releaaed five playersamong
them
veteran
defensive back Joon Pitts and
third-year quarterback Will

for 1,976 yards. tall seuoo
he gained 1,067 yards,
Jim Brown and Leroy l{elly
are the only oth.er Cleveland
players who have achieved
more than 1,000 yards In a
•
season.
Tbe Browns Wednesday
a1ao traded rookie defenalve
tackle Steve Caaaldy, the
club's seventiH'O'und draft
choice, to the Green Bay

Cureton.

Alio placed iln waivers
were three rookies quarterback Gale Swick of
Toledo, running back James
Reed of Miaalaaippi and
' guard CUrtis Wester of East
Te~:as State.

STARTER

,~fTH:C~rtz!:

fired Wednelday 11 the
~tarter at Thlltledown race
track,, according to · tract
Vice President Thomas s.
Sweeney, who named Harry
T. Palmer Jr. to replace
Pertl.
•.
''It wu done to ·lll'llil·aa
objective evaluation to , Ulll'
s t a r 11 n g 0 per 1 11 0 n ,
particularly In establlahlnl
conlliltency in olf-time in aU
· race~," Sweeney llid.
Pertl had been . . . . •

NORTHFIELD

'lblllledowl! . . . li'Tt .....

· P1btler liad llittn bUll '

VACATION TIME

SPECIALS...
4 PLY, POLYESTER, WHITEWALL

078-15 .................'25.95

a l'&gt;t leng\fi""VIctcry over
Claaay
Heritage
ln
Wedlletday night's featured
~open trot at Northfield
•
. -'--,'1111.....,.~4ld
wumer,
with Mel Tlftdte In the
sulky, covered the mlle In
2:0f 3-6 and paid $8.80, $4.60
and .3.60. Gaylord Hlll
abcnnld.
.,.,~ta, the

H78-15 ................ .'26.95

a.

· : .,

returned

Jlllillant starter for the New
Attendlnce • 4,138. The
York Racing Association. , i111ndle was $325,1119.

MOUNTED &amp; BALANCED

FREE
Ex. Tax Included
Prices good Friday and Saturday only, July
30th and 31st.

GENERAL TIRE SALES

I JUUU.Nct

•

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NORTHF~IiLD,

(UP!)- D1t11 Rlldney scored

•

bond.
Possession of that small
amount of cocaine is a felony
in Texas, although many first
offenders
are
given
probation.
Holmes previo~y pleaded
guilty to wounding an Ohio
state police helicpoter pilot in
1\'!arch, 1973. The incident
occurred Wlien Holmes
suffered a nervous break·
down. He was placed on
probation at the recommendati on of a psychiatrist .

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•

I)

�'

.
S-Tile IlallyS Urwl,Midcll4pon.POIII&amp;O), O.,Thuraday, July2t,ll'/l

--

'- - The I~Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Porneroy, 0 ., Thuraday, July 29, 1976
~!~!~l~if:l~I;I~~;~~l~~i~~!~~i~~~~~f:~~~;~ijf;~~l~i~~~l~~i~i~tt~~~~~i~~t;~t~~:~;;iH:~jj;~:~:~:~:~tl:~:~~~:~~*~

GM profits

Tax refonn votes rated

Senators Glenn, Taft

involve talks

WASHINGTON (UP! )
Tuation With
Representation, a group that rates lawmakers based on
·
lax reform voles, says Sen. Robert A. Tan Jr., R.Ohlo,
.DETROIT (UPI) - The
"'lbe UAW contends that in
could dobeller, 8Jfd Sen. J!ful H. GleM, D.()hio , is doing
United Auto Workers Union · these negoUaUons (the worvery well.
says the record 1909 mWlon kers) will receive thelr falr
TWR JAg!slative Director tom Reese said Wedllesday
prollt General Motors and equitable share of P!'Ofits
th t th
tin
based
bills aimed c1 ·
a era gs are
on
at 061118 I.U
recorded in the seeond that -GM Is harvesting,"
loopholes for the wealthy.
quarter ls a sure sign lhat the Bluestone said, underscoring
· He said Glenn got a score of 63 per cent while Taft
auto industry has little rea!jOII the union 's hardening stand
scored 11 per cent.
to balk at this year's crotract on its contract denlJIIIds.
. The ratings are based on 21 votes cast this year.
demands.
GM Chairman , Thomas
DemocratsintheSenaleaveraged54percent, while GOP
GM's ear nings report Murphy and President Elliott · members averaged 16.5 per cenl
·
Wednesday nearly tripled its ~ conceded ·they were
Glenn vtited fer what TRW considen; to be las reform 17
three-month profit of $333 · worried about the impact of
times while the group said Taft voted in !aver or 1aJ
million a year ago and the profits on the conll:act
reform ·only three times.
provided the best proof yet
that the autc Industry is
optimistic outlook ... ·
rocketing out of its two-year ls clouded by the uncertainty
regarding the outcome of our
recession.
Earnings
for
the current negotiations with the
automaklng giant · also unions," they said. " It is
that
any
shattered the industrial imperative
record of $840 mWlon set by settlement avoid CQntributing
Euon In the 'last three to the dangerous potential for
mlliths of 1974 .. GM also further inflation."
wasn't far from American
UAW President 4lonard
Telephone and Telegraph's '.Woodcock
said
the
record second quarter profit ''incredibly hefty profit
of $939.6 million - a gains" by the Big Three
milestone for any company in automakers indicate · the
WASHINGTON (UPI)- A · can be worked out, thel1 it Is
histocy.
union
should
make member of the Bouse my judgment the- Naliooal
Reaction from the UAW, significant gains in wages, committee on professional League
wUI
go
to
currently bargaininc on a benefits and job security for sports recanmended today Wa.shingt(ll.
new contract for 680,000 auto its members.
that baseball impose fS,OOO
''Rather than saying I guaworkers, was immediate.
Cllrysler repcrted a $1::.5.1 fines and 3l:klay suspensioos rantee it, I can ooly sa.y I'll do
Vice President Irving million (l'ofit Monday, com- to
stop
deliberate everything in my power to
Bluestone, the union 's chief pared to its $58 mWlon loss a beanballing.
bring it about. That's a better
negotiator at GM, said the year earlier during the indusRep. Ronald Mottl, l).()hio, qy than 'trying ~o do it 'by
earnings figure •'ovenrhelm.s lry's worst recession since said he favwed the harm fiat."
even the most crusted World War II. Ford was penalties in the aftennath of
.About .the beani11g of
imagination" and will have a expected to announce Its an •epitOOe Tuesday in which JaCkson by Yankee pitcher
" powerful impact" on earnings today.
Baltimore's Reggie Jacbon Ellis and the ~etaliatory
contract talkS.
·
was hit in the lace with a bitting ,of New Yll'k's Mickey
pitch by New York 's Dock Rivers by Baltimore's
Ellis and Jim Pahner of the Palmer, Kuhn said ·he had
Orioles retaliated by hitting instructed
the
Rules
Mickey Rivers.
Ommittee 10 look at the
"I tllint the penalty for problem when there was a
throwing at .somebody with a flareup of simUar incidtnts
beseball at 95 miles per hour earlier in the season said
sbould be made so prohilitive he thought some recom·
lhat it would be a real mendations would he for·
deterrent," MotU said after thcoming sh&lt;li'Uy.
Qmmlssioner Bowie Kuhn
Earlier, ,Eld Garvey., ·execu·
·indicated ,ID the House group live director of the NFt.
By ROBf:RT !CAYLOR
tougher Aayers Association, .testified
well ~ the Soviet Union arid .that possible
PLAINS, G~ . (UPI )
penalties
are
being
studild
to that the 11'0 rooobaU owners
China. No details were
J"unmy Carter has gotten his disclosed, but Bush did curb headhunting.
had 'rejected a . no-st.rike
flnt ~o~He=t lriefing from respond when asked if
Kuhn said he wanled "to pledge by the players this
CIA director George Bush - Carter's request to get his make it clear I don'! em done se11son in return for a
and in the process boosted the information fnm the CIA had intentional violence in
tarnished image of the intelli- given agency morale a lift. beoebaD and if, as it is
gence agency.
"I don't look at it com- possible, we need to
~ was IICheduled to
petitively," Busb said. "But slrengtlu o the rules, that will
wind up fow daya of intensive we're delig!Ud to be doing it. be done:'
lludy of campaign issues I am backed up by tllis
Aoot..!Jer willless befoce the
today in an a1terooon seai&lt;11 wonderful organiutioo of House group, Ron Roberts,
with foreicn affain adviJen excellent intelligence. We're executive director of the
that was to follow a luncbeon prepared - that's our job." play'"' ,unloo for the World
with Tens Gn. Dolph , CIM's·d loicewuseenas Hockey .•siOciatiOO, !old the
Brilcoe, wbcm Carter . has a boolt to the CIA's sagging . c&lt;mmittee lhat tbe WHA
described • "my best friend image · becauae lhe. agency players have retOIIIIIImdetta
11110111 the governors."
bas been bellet with crilicisn tDagb set of rules to ,CIII'b
There
was
some following congressional e~:cessive violmce on tbe ice.
apecalatial the Democratic revelations 1lf = · •nati(ll One reccmmendalion would
SYRACUSE - ln In!!!'C!!M was llll!ding witb plots agaimC f«eicn leaders caD fer a llltliiiOII's swpensi(ll
dependent
Baseball aclioo at
Brllcoe to diaCua strategy lmd «her intellicenoe abuses. for any tbird&amp;le instigator
Syracuse,
the otlost Minersfar ol&amp;etting the impact in
of slick fighting.
ville
learn
fell to RacineTellis of Iarmer Gov. Jobn
. Kuhn also forecu t an
Por.Uand
19-1~ when the
Qmally's endorsemeut of
eltplllllion of the National
Pmident Ford.
League lo matdl tlJe new 14- winners ap!Oded for 10 ·runs ·
Carter aides Slid, boweV!'r,
team formal ol the American in the top of the •ninth inning,
that ailcoe's trip to Plains r - - - - - - - - - 1' League, with the likelibood of leading only 9-7. The winners
bad been arranged .before tbe
baseball returnj.ng to were led by Dave Snodgrass
,.
....
_
.
W·"";ft"'~ .
•IW&lt;l went :s-5 "" the afOllllally amouncement In
-~f01Hf
~-·
ternoon, and · lhe winning
Wllllini!Gn 'l'ueliday.
·- " '
Allied about tile prospeds
lllllb arrived in Carter's
••• "*SON uu
of ,a team in the natioo's hurlers were Pete Sa)Te and
CHn'NILf.A~
bometown Wednesday
,,... u.
capital in the near future, the Gary George. Ramie Bachtel
_
_....
collllllilaioner replied, "If and Keitb Fit.cb each had two
llllc.r'd • Army beHmpter
wllb two bulky satdlels ol
~~=.s.......,..,. , youmeaninlm,Iwouldsay singles and a triple while Red
HeUJcerr material be and n. ow. v~~~er r t r , · 1 c...-r. it is diffirull for me tD say Wallbrown hit two singles
"' '-' "0Mu
· - -......
.. - ttl-11M.
...... lhat lhlt ls the year. But and a double. Harris had a
aides Uled to brief the ........_
Democratic presidential - - " " ' " '·
·baseball is funny and single and double, and
George and Greg Roush each
....,Jnee Ia allix.O.O Jleii!CII.
,.... "' anytlling can happen."
·"!'
"
&lt;carter aabd that Iii brief.
...-. • ••••• .,. .... ,..
Klim. .sded, howevt!l', 'tn got two singles. Getting me
qa 111 foreign affairs ocme - · """"" - ·· ""- .... ls only a matter of lime" Srlgle, each were Roldl ,
_. w· ,, ; ..... .m"""' bef"'- Na"--'
T-nue Haming, Theiss, and Knapp.
frD the CIA ratber than the .,...
• .,. .. .... , .... ... Y. ltllr.
_._. tHe
wawu ~
Ronnie Clonch took the loas
......_.,....,: ........._.. .., adds two teams.
Stale ()eplrtment, • ls CQSo
and
chipped in with two
tomary lor presldeJIIial - . " " ...,._..
" - ,...
.... He declined to flatly
singles.
Other leading .bitters
.
.
.
.
.
...
•
,,,
OM
...........
guarmteeanespansiao~
~en. because of bis
fOr
the
losers were Hanley
criticism of Secretary of "·"'·
., _,, '"""'" _. • · v. .. o.. fer the city but
. told tbe Holllll!
,..,., 111M; 14:1 .......... 111..11; nw..
wiill
a
single
and Haggy with
State Henry Killincer's .,... , _ , _ ,_, group: ...If !he National
.,._
...
...,...__lf.M.
I..eaooo.
~•""•and
the~
is
a
double.
Nell
week Radne·
''lme ruger" llnlgn policy.
e - ~The tnllnp cM.ered Cll - the quality of ownership Portland travels to Rock
available that I lbint is here Springs , and Minersville
and a suitable stadium leaR tangles with Pomeroy.

ta~

By HORTENSE MYERS
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.
(UPI)
Midwestern
governors told ~ and
the federal admlniJtratlon
!hey no longer w1nt to
subsidize states In other
areas of the counlly.
The policy, one of aeveral
lldopted (ll tile final day
Wednesday, SI)'J "the entire
Midwest has becmle a donor
region with lhe states in the
Southeast, Southwest and
West receiving the beneftt
from this condition."
Administrator Frank G.
~b of the Federal Energy
Administration, a final day
speall:tr, said "as impolitic u

.~~:~:~t:~:~:!:~:~ ~:~:?:~:~:~:i:~:~:~:~:t:~:~:~:i:~:~:~t:~:jf~~i~I~;l:{:~:~:~~:~:~:~:~:t:~:1:~:~:;:~~~~f~~S~~:~:~~

Beanballing draws proposal

to invoke fine, suspension

Carter receives

top secret talk

10-nm rally

in ninth won
baseball game

.... ,

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

I

.......

,.,_

........

......,

=='trw':~=!~
DR. LAMB

all give

Governors object to

resumption of payments into
the pension fund and
reinstitutlon of a dues
checkoff for' members.
" As matters notv stand, the
players are free to strike," he
said. "Whether there will be
one, I don'! ·know."
Garvey also told the
tro11n1ttee that !he "horror
stOCies" predicted by the
oll'll!!rS when,the Rozelle ~e
was 'strilck doWn and 24
,~yers became free agents
had been proven false.
He recalled llilllagem¢
claims that the rid1 owners
such IS Lamar Hunt, Clint
MurchiJon and Bud Adams,
r:i the glamor cities such IS
Los Angeles and New Yerk,
would land all the free
agents.
Instead,
the
union
spokesman said, Hunt didn't
Sign a single free agent for
~nsas City, Murchison's
Dallas Cow.boys 'l ost two
~yers and signed only one
and Adams' Hol&amp;OI! Oilers
only aUnlcled one.
In additioo, Garvey noted,
such cold weather cities as
Cleveland and Minnesota
were able to sign ap free
agent stars.

It may aeem and unpnpd•r
as it has to be, we have to
~ lhat we have to
produce American energy
and American jobl and lllop
giving oor wealth to tile
Arabs." He said thil will
mean bllber coats for oll and
other larml of enersY·
Zlrhsaldlhatlntheareaol
gas
consumption
by
automobiles, the energy
picture Is trighter. "t haw
looked •t tile plana for Detroit
belwe!en now and 11111) and tile
C!XIIbination of smaUer ~rs
and lighter .cars and
improved IA!chnology should
have • 50 per cent
improvement, uslntPrlhs a
base," he said.

IIGIKI, In hil 1~
lpHCh, ClUed far a ~bare.
the-knowledge procram
llllOnc atates. He lllld u an
enmple, two OODCepll Ill
regional bieber education
presented at thla )'tar'•
conference . The
new
chairman · deQned -.,,
agriculture ancl haa1tb care
aa priority areu~,cllainl hia
~allon.
,
Of.health care he llllld 11
appears .that the lederlliO¥·
l!l'llllleDI hu 1101 .......-mpled
the field of preventive
medicine In health ca~
progarns and that may be
thebeltnenforusln that on
Clll do aometlilg .~lthout
federal Interference.

Lucey, 11JWtber final day
!!pUller, Slid "the Idea that
~ dollata are lllnted
may llllll ma'ke nice eratory
at election time builD point ol
fact, 1m1sa you cet 11 from
the federal govemmenl, you
ll'e gWII!to ralae 11 locally
from your tupayera."
.
Thegoverneraelected Mt.
~ . Gov . Oll'iltopber s.
Bond
as
~halnnan,
s11cceedlng South Dakota
· 'Gov.RichardF. Kneip. North
Dakota Gov. Artbur A. Link
was elected as vicechairman . The governors,who last year selected
Oklahoma for their 1977
conference, Wednesday
picked Kentucky fer 1978.

Wiacoosin Gov. Patridt J.

harmful to a mlner'a health.
Mine operators, could
appeal anY llndlng olllfely
and health vlolatlona but tina!
conviction could reault In
penalliea of up to t1,000 for
first lime vlolallonund up to
$10,000 for wilfuJ or repeated
violations. Failure to correct
a vlolaUm within 1 lime iel
by the Inspector could also
reault in a dally penal\)' ol up
to ti,OOO.
Rep. Albert Qule, R·Minn.,
who led the effort to block the ·
transfer tc the Labor Depart.' ment said the only reason lor
the move "ls that erpnlzed
'labor favors sucb a transfer."
He said 01\gress never ·gave
Interior Effective mine safely
authority untll19'70 and since
then deaths and lnjurlea In
the mines have dlrn!nlllhed.

BENNETT TAPPED
EASTLAKE, Ohio (UPI) Jen:me Bennett, e~:ecl"'ve
vice president and Chief
financial officer of White
Molor Corp., Wednesday Wll8
elected to the board of
directors; replacing J!ful E.
Sheehan, former White
president, who resigJied laat
May.

'

REPORT OF CONDRION
Qmaolidaq d&lt;meslil: IIUblidiaries of tile

f'OMEROY NATIONAL BANK
OF POMEROY
in the state of Ohio, at the close oilv•siness on June 30, 1976 published in response to call
made byQmptrolleroftheCurrenCy, under title 12, United States Code, SecUon 161 :..~

,

&lt;llarter nwnber 1!1110

.

Statement of Resources and Liabilities

'·

National Bank Region Number 4

~

•

'

Thousands

- - . , - - Casb and due from.banks .. " .... ..... .... . ..... . . ............................. 1,335 - - U.S: Treasury securities .. .... . . . .. ....... .. . ... .. . ...... , ....... . ..... , ....... .. 9,272
Obligations,of other U.S. Gov't. agencies and corps .. . .. ... ... . .. .. . ................. 133
Obligations of States and political subdivisions .... .. ... . ... .. . .......... " .....•. 1,913
.other booda, llCites and debentures . .. . ... . .............. .... ...... .. ... ......... .... 2

...
=
Ill
Ill

c

F~ Reserve stock andCOilJOI'Bte stock ... . . .. . . ......... . . ........... ..... '..... 39

Federal fuDds IIOid and securities purchased
·
,
W)(ler~ to reseD ..••• .••...• •.•. .. •. ..•.••••.• , •••• ••••••..• . .• .•.. •725
Loans, Total (e&amp;cluding !D1e&amp;l1led income) ..... . ....... . ............ 9,2'11
Less: Reserve fer possible loan IOIIBeS ...... .. . .. .. . ............ .. . . ... 68
Loans, Net .•••. .. •. . .... .•.. .... . . . .' .. . . . .. , ...... . .. ... ... . ....... . ....... 9,203
Bank pmni-, furniture and fixtum!, and
otl1er allets representing bank preiili.ses . . . . . . . . .. ....... •.••.••• •• •••.. •. ... .. . 329
'
.cJibler aseets . ..... . ........ ...... . .. . . ' .... ... .... . .... . ' . ... .
5
~~~·of"indi"·:viduals·:
...... ;.;~.:.:.:.: ..and
..................... .. ..... . .. ---:.2%,95&amp; - -"'
~-~·
, p....~.,
corps . . .. . . ...... .. ... . . . . ..... ...... 4,480
u
Time and aavtn&amp;sdepollita of individuals, ·
·
prtnalp.,.andcorpa....... ... .... .. ..... .. .................. . .......... ... . 14686
Deposi.tsof.UoitedSiatesGovermneot . ........... . .. . . ....... . .................. .'. 35
"
DeposttaofStat.esandpoliticahubdivisions . ... .. . .. .. ...... . ......... . . . ....... . 1,'127
"'
catified and officers' checks ' . .. ..•...... .·.......• ~ •. .. ... •• ' •••..•. ; ••.. •• . •• . .• 12
TOTALDOMESTICDEPO!ITS
·
. .. . . .. ......... . . . .. ..... ..... . ............ : ... 20,910
Total demand deposita ... ... ....... . . . ..... . ... ... ......... , ..• •.. S,481l
"
Total time and IIVIJIIII......,l"'
' , _.,_ . .. . ... ............ . ...... . , , .. ... . 15,504
TOTALDEPUliTil IN DOMESTIC AND
FOREIGN OFFICES ....... .. .. .. ... . ..... .. ........... ....... ....... ... ... 20 910
Otberliatilities
, ' 113
~~
.............. ..... . . ...... .. ....... .. . ........... . .. . . .. ... ...................
TOTALUABIIJTIFS (exc(udlngsubordinatednotesanddebentures) .. ,. .. .
21,aT3 - - -•1
0

--+--

...-....
Ill

.-..

•.--c..
--+--

•

0

••••••••• 0

••••••

.

Commoo stock:

Gout: the ·disease of kings
ByLaw•e-E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR Dl,{. LAMB - A
.couple of weeks ago my
husband awlkened during
tile night wltb emre pain in
Iii big toe. He started to get
ap but could hardlylland, bls
toe wu so badly 111011en. He
lll,ed bome frGm work on
tbe nat day lhlnklnc II would
flO nay but it dldn '1.
He 1n!lll to tile doctor who
X-nyed It and gave him a
~.and told him he
bad ~GUt and to come back
tbe lollowinc week. . •
I 11m! heard lhat people
with fiOIIlhlve to give up or at
leut cut down on certain
foodl and Uqalds. The
IIMiip&amp;n he wu liven did
1111p anc1 he - ok'd far work

of aomething In the syatem or

Interestingly, the gout and
lack of something. Hope you high uric acid levels are
can enligliten me.
Common in active, Intelligent
DEAR READER - The . people. Ita tendency to occur
popular image of the person in sucb people led to it being
with gout Ia • mldd!Hged, caUed tile ktng of diae•aes
OYerweighl man silting in hil and tbe dlaeaae of ktngB.
overstuffed cbalr with hia
I 1111 sending you 'lbe
painful loot on a son pillow 01\ Health lAtter number W,
a atoOI, while he i.s eating a Gout, Uric Acid, willch will
loeg of lamb with one hand and give you a more complete
boldlng a glua of wine in the resume of wbat the'" rse ls
other hand. 'lbal is a COIICelll and how it ls treated. Others
of antiquity and deaervea to who want thil information
ill\ relegaled to the arcblvea can send a long, st•mped,
of medical folklore.
aelf..ddresaed envelope and
Gout i.s cauaed by an excess 50 cenla for II. Juat send your
prodactlon of uric acid. 'lbe letter to me In care of this
urle IICid ill byproduct of the newspaper, P.O. Boa: 1551,
cell regener11ionlha11oes on Radio City Station, New
conatanlly In yow body. It i.s York, NY UIOie.
UteraDy spun aft frD nucleic
Before we had the effective
IICidll lhal ... In lhe IUicleus medicines '" have loday the
.. allaat • - ' .
Tllil doctor aatlld my of lbe celll. 'l'bllaberraUonln only lllinl the docton could
I I 'If Ill)' -ber of 1111 tarmallan o f - uric add offer tbe gout paUent was a
doellelld to om~' In families. diet and medicine to abort the
,..,., llad pt. I bad II_. of II being an Tile - ·... In the lamUy tend acute alllck. 'lbe dlela were
lllndiCary aliment. I have to hPe blch uric acid butlesa low purine dleta - literally
low In !bale tocids with lots of
llelrd II - f!ltber lao much aft4ll get JIGUI.
~

·~

nuclei in them. Thil ' meant
giving up the organ meats in
particular and limiting the
meats. However, even .the
str;ctest diet will only lower
the uric acid level a little bit
because the euess does not
come from the food but from
the ueesa production by the
person's own body cella.
'lbe newer medicines can
block tile production of ercess uric acid 'by the body
cells. That way .the bloOd
level or uric acid never gela
eleva ted and the harm
callled by the excea uric
add never occurs.
It Ia important for people
with gout to be foUowed
regularly. Most will have to
take medicine for Ufe to avoid
couty arthritis, acute attackl
u your hlllband had and
more ltriOUI problems. 'lbe
medlclnea avaUable loday,
though, make It possible for a
person to lead a normal life
otherwise.

--+--

c
z
ctill:
A

i

a. No. shansautborized 8,«10
b. No. shans outstanding 8,000 (par value) . ...... . .. ... : .... . ........ . ....... , 200
$urp.ua.. . . . .... •.......... .. ••.. ; ... . ........ ... . . .. .. . '.' ..• ~ ..... ~ ........ 1,200
Undivided profita ••.... . ..... .. ...... ..•. . . . • . .. ... . .• . •• , , , •• .• . .•..• -. .•. .• ••• 447
Reserve for cont.lngencies and other capital resei'Ves ......... .. ..... .... .... : ....... 38
'I.UrllEQUITYCAPITAL •• •~·········:·····:..:_~································· 1,883
i
roi'ALUABIIJTIFSANDEQUITYCAPITAL . ....... 'I....... .... :~: ...
22,966 - - - '·
Average for J.j or30calmdlir days endinc with caUdate:
' '
Casll and d:ue frooJ. bal*a ..... . .•............... .. ....... . .... . ......•.. . ,,, •• 1 300
Fed..llllda IIOid and securities purdJued
·
' ·
under llgl"ee!!Jleel to re~eU . . . . . . . .... . ... , , , .... , .. . . • • ... . .. ......... , , ...... 597.
Total Joens •••• ~ •.. •••••...••.• •••••.•••••• , ••••••• ••••...•. •• .•••• •.• ; ••• ••9,242
. Thuedepaeitact'IGO,OOOormore In ckmestlcolflcea ............... . .............. 317
ToCaldetl-81ta •.••••.••• •....•.•.• . . . . . .••. . •••.••..• ..... . •. .....•.. ..... . 'JIJ,?rYl
Time depoltta ct flOO,OGO or more In donlestlc offices:
nme certlfiC81es of deposit in denominations of
·
f!GO,OIIO a; more •.•....... .•. . ••... .. .. . .... ... : . . . . . . . . . . ...................• 450

I, Maxine Griflltb, CUhler Of the above-named baiJii do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition la true and cor-

Ill

rect to tile best of my lmowledge and belief.

I

Mulne Grlfllth
July22,1t'18
We, tbe undenlgned dlrectorll attest the couecb
of tblllta!emeut ol !'eiiOiircea anc1
llabilitlea. We declare that it hal been ewnlned by 111, and to the best olow tno.ledge
IJICI belief is true and Uklecl. .

R. E. Boice- Dlrecton
- - L - -,

WarrenPictena

AM E R I C A N LI!AoOUE:
By TOM WIIJTFIELD
lllndo, Oak 20; L.Mty, Bolt
UPI!II*t!Wrlter .
"
ond H-ick, Clov 111 Jock .
~! · .
10&lt;1, Bolt end YlttriiMIIII. 801
Jalin
"Biiilloon" Odom la
14.
o•
...
Ill
• •Jcr leagllell
.
RUNS IATTID flf,
ou
NATIONAL LIAOUio Fos.
...
ltr, Cln U ; MOrGan, Cin 73o
•,
Kingman, NY 72 1 Schmidt, Phil ""' kJ 11lght he and
rookie Franelaeo Barrios
69 ; Lulinlkl, Phll64.
• •
••• _,,,.. i
. 33 10 ,355 JOV.
AMI!IUCAN LIAOUI: Mty . plldled onlr the lourth comberry, t&lt;C 67 ; Bur rOUihl , Ttx
-. : ;._..: • Well
W•• L.. Pet. Ga 64: Chambliss
Munson, NY lnd no-1nw In big league
• " Clnclnnoll.
62 J1 .620 63; L.Mtv, Bill oriG Tallrtem . IWiiGr)' for lilt &lt;:~*ago White
• • LOIIInQIIH 55 44 .556 611 ski. 801 !9.
.
Soll!ld illapplll the Oakland
_,. Howton
52 11 ,505 1111
ITOLIN lAIII- .
Sin Diego
49 52 .485 ll\1
NATIONAL t:IAOUi o Tove. ,.••• 1-1.
"" Attonto
45 54 .455 16V. rot Pill 35 1 MOI'Gin, Cln tM Wlite Sox Mwcer Paul
&gt;.11 S.rl FrlntiiCO 44 5I .431 19
CedenoLHOU 321 Brock, SI.L 30:
Rlchll'lll ltUdl with Odom
:
WectnlldiY 'I Rttuih
· Lopes, A 29,
AM I R I C A N LIAOUI: until the Ulh lmlng, when
~- · M0ntrlai3 51, LOll II 0, 1st
. .. Mil St . Louts, 2nd, Dlld ., rain
N9rtn, Ook 51; &amp;or,ror, Oak ~1;
• ' Atlllllt 7 LOI l'ongtl~ 2
. Petek. KC 39: LeF ore. Dfl and the riptblnder ialued hia.
.. , Chlcovo 5 Pnlla 2, 11 Inns .
C1rew, Mlnn 36,
nlnlb walk, lhtn went 1.0 to
PITCHING, .
'" ' Pitt 1 fo!IW York 0, 13 lnn1.
Sal
Sando. Barrloll came in
. . Most 1/lctorlli
Son Franc11co 7 Cincinnati o
and
cm~pltled the walk but
NATIONA~ LIAOUI: Jontl,
'" Sin Dii!IO 2 HOUI 1, 10 Inns:
;.,,
TDdlly's Prolllllllt Pltchtn
SO 18.4; LOIU&gt;org, Phil 12·51 didn't
allow another
carlton, Phil 11·4; Nllkro, All
I All TlmH I DTI
Chicago IR . RtUIChel 9·8) II 11 .6; KOOiman, NY 11 -7; buerunner until Claudell
Ph ltUolpnla ICtrllon 11 ·41, Ruthven , All and sutton, LA 11 · Washington walked on a ~2
12:35 p.m .
8; R:tcnard, Hou 11-11.
Pilllburgn CROOker 8-ll at AMERICA'N LEAGUE : Pll ·
Now York CLolich 6·10 ), 2:05 mer, Bait l.C-1: Ftuu•raa, NY
p.m.
lJ.6 : Gorlond, Ball 12·2:
..-..:· Son Df1119. (Strom 9. n or f:ltzmqrrlt, KC - 12-6; T1nana ,
, • Frtisl- HI at' Clnclnnali Cal and Trtv'e n, Mil 12-7:
Slaton, Mil 12-8; Hunter , ~Y 12·
• IZachry 1·31, 8:05p.m.
"" !Only g•mttsthequled l
~. EARNED RUN AVE RAG~ .
ltrl.d l)'.' l G1mes
.1bosid on 'lo innings pitched)
~~~~ . st. ~~~~··• Chlcaro I":
NAT1IONAL ·LIEAGUI: Nor .
~~t.~0.f',T/~~~;g~~~i~~rt · mon , Cln ,1,31• Stonhouse, Mil
:.,. Philo'' New Vork , 'nigh I
2,45 ; Seov"·' NV 2.53: Jones,
SD 2.54; Richard, Hou 2.611.
., Atlanta or Houston. night
·- Los Angeles at San Fran, night
AMER!CAN . LEAGUI : . Fl .
drych, Det 1.93; Travers, Mil
""'
WILMINGTON, Ohio
2.17 ; Blue, Oak 2.69; Palmer ,
HI •
AtntriCin LettUI
Bait
2.70;
Garland,
Ball
2.71.
(UP!)
- Two newcomers
Eatt
STRIKEOUTS. . . hope to cet thelr klm W.. L.. Pet. GB
NATIONAL LEAGUE: Sea ·
. ...... New York
6(1 36 .625 ver , NY 156 ; Richard~ Hou 123; some good CIIHII - In the
!;" Baltimore
..9 48 .505 11112 Messe:rsml th, At I 117; Nltkro,
Cincinnati Bengals' (Irs!
ow. Cleveland
47 .. .495 12V:! All liS; Montefusco, SF 102.
47 ., .490 13
Detroit
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Ryan , prHea80J1 game of the year
uu Boston
43 53 .448 11
Cal 18,.; Tanana , C11l . and Saturday m,bt at Green Bay.
Milwaukee
42 52 .447 11
Blvteven, Tex U6 ; Jenkins, Bo$
Wtlt
Banpla' head coach Bill
,,..
W.. -L. .• Pet. GB and Hunter, NY 109.
Johnson aays he will use
~~ Kansas City
60 38 .612 ., Oakland
Sl 47 .530 e
Maior Ltlgue Result.• '
placekicker Mlrro Roder and
" 1 )Minnesota
48 50 .490 12
By Unlfed Press·lnteri'lltlonal punter Greg Coleman - both
JU Texas
47 so ...as 12112 fJ~ _ Natl.onal Leatue
.
fighting against odds to make
' Chicago
45 54 .455 15'12 I1St Gamt)
~"~ California
.43 59 .422 19
Montreal
000 000. 102- 3 10 1 the roster - against the
.
Wtclnndoy'l RIIUIIS
St . Lou is
000 000 GOO- 0 10 2
~r Minnesota 8 Texas 5, 1st
Fryman, Murrh (1) and Pactera.
. ,.Minnesota 1 Texas o, 2nd
Foote ; Rasmussen , Grtlf (7 ),
Roder, a native of Czechos, Cleveland 7 Boston 6
Wallace (9), Solomon (9) and
lovakia
wbo will beuime a
~J Balt imore,. New York 3
Ferguson. WP-Frvmen (9.8).
' Oetrqlt 1 Milwaukee o
LP- Resmussen (3-9} .
U.S. citizen 18ter this year, ls
·: Kan Clfv· 3 Calif 2, 15 Inns .
Mtlat St. Louis, 2nd, p~ .• rain a 32-year old free agent who
Chicago 2 Oakland 1
,...
TOdly's Probable Pitchers
San
Frnclsco
302
200
ooo7 15 0 waa cut by ll1f Chicago
I All Times EDT) .
Bears.
Cleveland cDobson 11 ·81 at Cincinna ti 000 000 ooo- 0 5 1 Roder figures to have a
Boston (Wise 7·8), 2 p .m .
D' Acq.ulsto, Lavelle (1) and
Texas . (Umbarger 7.7) at Rader; Alcala, BorbOn 13), hard lime making !he team
Minnesota {Bane 3·21, 2:15 p..m . Hinton (6), Eastwlck (8) and
Baltimore IMay 6·7l at Plummer . WP- O' Acqulsto (3· because Bengals coaches
. Detroit (Fidrych 11 ·21, 8 p.m.
Sl. LP- Aicola 19·3) .
have !*en 10 high on rookie
!Only games scheduled)
placeldcker Chris Bahr of
Fri~ay's Games
Los Angeles 200 000 ooo- 2 7 0
Penn
State, nine ·years
"'Cleve at Milw, 2, twl .nlght
Atlanto
000 21:i Olx- 7 13 0
~.,.New York 111 Boston, night
John, Hough {6), Sosi (7) and
•• Baltlmort at Detroit. night
Rodrigue" Nlekro 111-6) and

•nd

House advances mme
1

-

Miler LAIIIH llonoUn11
ly Uolllll "'"' lntornotlooll
NtiilftiiLHI!Iil
• •••
~•
W.. L. . Pet. Gl
Phll-pllit 65 ,, .617 Pit~
54 4 .557 11'11
Now York
51 fO .505 1611
51 . LOUIS
42 54 .431 23
Chlcovo
41 5I .414 m;

" '

•

WASJ{INGTON (UPI ) - ·miner$' lives."
The Ho~ has v&lt;ted to
'' An agency Uke the
strengthen mine safety laws Interier Depar1ment, which
and to ,give eftercement to ill cbarled with developlnll
the Labor Department Ibis
nation's
energy
because
the
Interior ~sources, , cannot also
Department has failed to Effectively enforce federal
adequ~~tely enforce current •
safety laws at the same
regul.aUons.
time," Miller said In a
Backers of the measure, s t a I e m e n t . " T h e
wbicb passed on a 3IN8 vote ovenrhelmlng vote In favor
Wednesday. and was sent to of tbe transfer ... signals
the Senate, cited the Scotia 01\gress' determination to
coal mine di••sfer in Marcb eliminate this basic conflict
near Partridge, Ky., in whicb of IntereSt and to get on !\'!th
explosions over a two day the important job of making
period killed 26 persons. .
Americas's .coal mines
"The Inter:loc Department sale."
.
has dtm(llstraled tbJt It is
The measure requires the
the wrong agency for secretary of labor to come up
enllrclng OlD' mine safety with tighter safety standards
and health laws," said Rep. which would be subject to a
.1o1m Dent, 0-Pa. "Recent congressional veto by either
..,of of what I say can be the House or Senate. II
summed up in one tragic mandates a .minimum of four
wtrd-Scltia."
inspections a year of each
The major provisioo of tlJe underground mine and two a
bill was transfer of regulation year of surface mine and
setting' and enforcement milling operations.
power to the Labor . Any miner would be
Department. A Republican- permitted to accompany the
led attempt to block tbe inspection team to pcint out
transfer lost on a llll3-119 vote. hazards and could not be
The Senate Labor and docked his pay during the
Public Welfare Ccmmlttee is inspection time or be the
considering a similar tarcet of retribution by the
measure.
employer. Hazards, in the
United Mine Workers measure, would be eqllnded
Presi.dtnt Arnold Miller said to include toric substances in
the bUI ''would help saw the air thai are proven

Oiom, Barrios share no-hitter
....... .

,,

and I dldn 't know where my
pitches were golnl," said
Od0111. "It all worked out for
the best, though, didn't II?"
Barrlos, a 23-year-old
righthander from
Hermosillo, Me:dco, said
through an Interpreter that
he wam't aware he was
.working on a no-hitter ''UnW I
looked at the scoceboerd as l
walked out to the mound at
the start of the ninth Inning."
Chicago's Jim Spencer,
who scored in the aeCI&gt;IId on
Bucky Dent's single, t.'oke a
1·1 tie with a eolohomerin the
sixth inning off loser
Undblad. The A's lone run

Bengals will
test kickers

,, .

.....

"~ TeKIIS at Kansas City, nigh t

Correll. LP- John (6-7) . HR-

?"'a~lando1Minnesota.nlghl
m' Chicago at CalifOrnia, n lghr1

.

Atlanla,Niekroll).

( 11 innings,

.•. ,

Millar League Leaders
...; By United Press tnternatio~al
•~
BATTING. . ...,r .

Chicago
110 00()'000 03- 5 7 2
Phil a
200 000 000 oo- 2 10 1
Bonham, Knowles (9], Sutter

·-. :(based on 250 at batsl
1101 and Millerwald: Lonborg.
Reed (10) and Oates , McCarver
NATIONAL LEAGUE
. . .
G. AB. If. H,· Pet· 1101· WP- sul1er · 12 ·11. LPOIIver , Pll 89 359 55123 .343 Reed 18·41 . HR - Chicago, Tr illO
Rose. Cin
100 406 S8 135 .333 141·
- -Griffey, Cln 92 349 82 116 .332
: McBride,' SI.L 67 255 37 84 .329 I 13 innings)
; Crawlrd, SI .L 80 275 38 90 .327 Plllsburgh
··
• Foster, Cin 90 358 54 116 .324
000 000 000 000 1- 1 10 o
~ Maddox, Phil 89 314 48 101 .322 New York
.
: Robinson . Pit 7064 44 84 .318
000 000 000 000 o- 0 6 0
• Geronimo, Cn 89 293 40 93 .317
Medl,h, Giusti (11) and
• MOI1flnl &gt;All 102 406 47 128 ,315 Songuillen : Seaver, Sanders
•
AMER ICAN LEAGUE . . 1111 and Grote. WP- Giusli 11•• · · · · ·- G. AB · R. H, pct 21. LP- Sanders 11-2). HR • Broil, KC
98 396 62 140 .354 Pittsburgh , Hebner 141.
• Bostock, Min 12 256 ·•o 90 .352
KC 87 312 51108 .346 (10 Innings! ooo ooo ooo 2- 2 9 o
••o McRee,
Munson, NY 92 374 &lt;i8 123 .329 . son or~o
'W~
• LeFlore , Oet 90 365 62 120 .329 Houston
000 000 000 1- 1 7 1
• Carty , ere
92 329 47105 .319
Jones 118-4) and Kendall :
• Carew, Min
96 373 63 118 .316 Andu jar {6.7) and Herrmann .
: Lynn , Bos
86 333 45 104 .312
.
Amer&lt;can League
• Staub, Dot 96 352 44 109 .310 (1st game)
• Gerr, Chi
83 m 39 102 .307 T•••s
002 002 1oo- 5 13 0
•
HOME RUNS. ·
Ml
: - NATIONAL LEAGUE : . King .
nnesota OOO 503 OOX - 8 12 2
Ill, man , NY 32; Schmidt, Ph il 26;
Hargan, Bacslk (4 ), Hoerner
• Foster, Cln 20 : Robinson. Pill (6) , Foucault m and Sund·
" 18; Monday , Chi and Morgan, berg ; Hughes, Campbell 161
0
and Wynegar . WP- Hugnes (5·
• Cln 17.
·101 . LP- Hargon 1•·31.
~

younger than ltoder and a
high draft selection.
Coleman ls a rookie out of
Flordla A&amp;M but he was only
a 14th roUnd draft choice and
is competing against veteran
punter Dave Green and Pat
Mcinally for the punting job.
Mcinally, however, will
miss Saturday's game
because th~ Injury he
suffered · In last · weekend's .
scrinunage has him sld~lined
for 10 to 14 days.
Saturday's Bengals·
Packers game also will mark
!he pro debut of Cincinnati's
two top draft cbolces - tWotime Heisman TrOPhy winner
Archie Grillin of Ohio State
and receiver Billy Brooks of
Oklahoma.
Johnson acknowledged that
both would play, but added,
"not extensively."

came in the tourtb on two
walks, a stolen hlae by
Washington and • throwing
error by catcher Jim E8alan :
In other American League
games, llaltimore completed
a three.game sweep over
Eastern Division-leading
New York, 4-3; Kansas City
topped California' 3-2, In 15
Innings; Mlnneaota swept a
doubleheader from Texas, 8-5
and S.O; Cleveland edged
Boston, 7-6; and Detroit
blanked MUwaukee, 1.0.
. Orlolea 4, Y~es 3:
Ken Sinaleton and Mark
Belanger delivered runscoring singles In a three-run,
seventh inning as Baltimore
rallied from a :J.O deficit to
cut New York's lead to II 'h
games. Former Yankee
Tippy Martinez got the win In
relief of Oriole starter Wayne
Garland. Loser Doyle
•

flekl off his fermer Brewer
Alexander pitched five Tilers l, Bi'ewen t:
PedroGarcla'saac:rlflce Ry teammate scored Alex
perfect Innings, but allowed a
run-11corlng triple to AI In the ninth Inning broke up a Jobnaon, who led off with a
scoreless duel between single, wu aacrlficed to
Bumbry in the mth.
Detroit's Dave Roberts and second and went to third on
Royall S, Aagell 2:
Dave Nelson bunled Tom Milwaukee's Jerry Blll Freehln's single.
Poquette home from third Augustine. Garcia's Ry to left
with one out In the 15th Inning
to put Kansas City eight
games ahead of Oakland In
the AL West. Royala' reliever
Larry Gl).l'a picked liP his
flrst victory.
Twinl 8-8, Rangers 5-ll: ·
Lyman Bostock slammed
out five hits, raising lils
average to .352; as Minnesota .
swept Texas. The Twins
By GIL PETERS
considered the chief competl·
strung together seven singles
UPI Sportl Writer
lim . Crenshaw, the U.yearand a fielder's choice to score
SUTIUN, Mass. (UPI) old fermer NCAA champloo,
five runs In the fourth Inning Roger Maltbie doesn't look 1eada the PGA tour with
and clinch the first game. In the part but the 25-year-old $190,401 In earnln8s.
the nightcap, Steve Luebber golfer was raled as one of the
Hubert Green, whole three
pit.cbed 6 1-3 innings to notch favorites as the $200,000 straight tour wins early In the
his flrst major league win Pleasant Valley Classic year helped mate him the
since Aug .ta, 1971.
began today.
second leading money maker
The f&gt;.foot-10, 175-pound na- with $188,979, •nd Lee Elder,
live of Modesto, Cal., enters · who has twice flnllbed second
the tournament . as the ' here, are also Biven good
defending champion· and a chances to win.
well-respected player on the
Five other former wlnnera
PGA tour.
Including Btuce Devlin, Dave
Just a year ago Maltbie Stockton, Lanny Wadkins,
was unknown. Then he wm Vic Regalado and T0111 Shaw
!he Quad Cities Open and also will be In the field lhat
· staged a final-round rush to will be cut to about 75playera
win Pleaaant Valley's first. after the second round
place prize the following
But if the tournament goes
guiDed a 5-3 edge Ill the week.
true to past form, a littleseaS&gt;n series.
His reputation aa a blythe known golfer will bolt from
"We're 6-3 for the season splrit also surfaced after he· the pack (ll the final day to
against the Dodgers;" said losthis$40,000wlnner'schect mak.e the win.·
Rigney. "Yet we can't beat in a Worcester bar.
clubs like Montreal and
The mustachioed and
Chicago."
bespectacled Maltbie, who
Chicago and Montreal rank had another check isslled to
fifth and sixth in the National replace the lost money, has
League East.
been one of the tour's most
The Giants tagged Santo consistent performers this
Alcala for eight hits and five season. He has .:won one
runs before be departed in the tournament and has ccmpiled
third inning with his third loss $115,946 in earnings, thanks to
against nine victories.
clutdl shobnaldng~
"San Francisco Is a fastball
"There are two baBic fears
hitting club and that's all which keep some players
Santo threw tonight. He from winning out here,"
couldn't get a l)reaklng pitch Maltbie said this week as he ·
over," said Reds' matlager surveyed the par-71, 7,119Sparky Anderson.
yard course, "Flrst, the fear
D'Acquisto, now 3-6, was of succeeding and being
reliev.ed by Lavelle in the ·forced Into the limelight; and
seventh after developing a
fear of failure.
blister oo the thumb of his the''One
thing about m'l.i I'm
pitching hand . The two not afraid to fall flat on my
limited the Reds to five hits. taU, I've been brought up In a ·
"~t's the third straight
win-oriented society."
~._,te
good game in a row for
Among
the
165 .;,ua
D'Acquisto," pointed out Rig· professionals trying to •
ney,
prevent Maltbie from become IS
. - - - -"The kid 's got a good arrn the flrst two-time wlilner in
on · him, " commented the IO.year history ~f the
For halp with all your
Anderson. ''In fact, the tournament. Ben Crenshaw ls
family insurance ..-Is,
Giants have four starters who
see:
are as good as any lour that
you'll find oo any club in the ·
Bill FUTCHER
For 11tt Llwlll
league, including the New
York Mets."
1258 Powell St.
The
three
besides
Tn
Pricls
Middleport,
o.
D'Acquisto ?
Ph. 992-7155
"Jim Barr, Ed Halicki and
In
the
Alii
John Montefusco," said
Anderson .
It's
Maybe Anderson 's right,
but the quartet's record
'"'" ,
doesn't offer supporting
lestimony.

Pleasant Valley

Classic underway

Giants blank
Cincy, 7-0
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
t-1ncinnati lU!ds and the Los
Angele9 Dodgers rank onetwo In the National League 's
western division, but that
doellli't intimidate' the lowly
San Francisco Giants.
"We're in last place, 19
games back and guess which
clube are the only ooes we
can beat ?" asked Bill
Rigney , manager of the
Giants.
"The Reds and Dodgers,"
said Rigney before a guy
could answer.
John D'Acquisto and Gary
I.aveUe teamed up to blank
the Reds, 7.0, Wednesday
night in the finale of a \hreegame series as the Giants

19 teams en' ter tournament

Like a

good

One of the largest and
strongest
fields
ever
assembled In Southeastern
Ohi be ·
1
g1l1 Pay Saturday
July 31 in Gallipolis. Games
wiD be played on M
·1
.
emor1a
Field and the UtUe IAague
·Field.
.
The T
. ournamenl' ls ASA
sa nctioned and iS double
elimlna~on J Mar Tr bi
~ · 0.
Op es
of Gallipolis IS the host team
.
aDd a 1so the tournament

°

sponsor.

Included . the to
In
urney
field are the first and second
place· finishers
in lhe Wes t
.
Virginia Slate Tournament
and the top five teams in the
Southe tern 0
as
lllo, District.
Games begin It 9:30a.m.
h
on bot Saturday and Sunday .

First and second rowld · Hartley (Ravenswood) vs
games on Saturday are : Beverly Stroh's winner 2:30.
Matthews and Edelblute
Leagle Beagles (Pt.
(Gallipolis ) vs Union Work· Pleasant) vs Bombers. Point
man 1Gallipolis) 9:30.
Pleasant softball league
Tansky's (Logan) vs winner 2:30 McDonalds
Citizen's Bank (Pt. Pleasant) (Athens) vs 'Jo-Mar·Eiston
9:30.
winner 3:45 . .
Beverly (Ohio ) vs Stroh's
There will be five more
(Athens ) 10:45 Bombers winner 's bracket games and
(Ravenswood ) vs Point four loser's bracket games
Pleasant Softball League played on Sat.
10:45.
A total of 17 or 18 games
Jo-Mar (Gallipolis) vs will be played on Sunday.
Elston (Waterford) 12:00 J &amp;
The public is invited to
M (Gallipolis ) vs Fruth's a tlend as there is no ad·
Pharmacy (Pt. Pleasant) mission charge. The con12:00.
cession stand will be open all
Seamen 's (Athens) vs week-end offering hot dogs,
Indy's (Huntington ) 1:15 potato chips, pop corn, candy,
Golddiggers (Kanawha ) vs
pop and ice cream
Hu5Uer's (Marietta ) 1:15.

F:ann

there

-

BEID

nRE CEITER

W. VI.

•

~Holmes
••
:

AMARIU.O, Tex. (UPI)attorney lor Ernie Holmes
the Plttsburgb Steelers
• aays he will request the
: defensive tacltle's trial on
~ cocaine poaaesalon charges
: be postponed until after the
: football season .
• Judge George Dowlen said
: wednesday he . would
: consider such a motion !rom
•defense attorney Charles
:Rittenberr)' to delay Holmes'
: ~rial, scheduled far Oct. 4.

:An
:or
0

•
~

attorney-seeks postponement
"My policy is to call tlJe District Attorney Tom Curtis. trial date bed just been set.
Rittenberry has said Curtis He said, however, now that
cases first of the people wbo
are already In jail awaiting . is trying to gain publicity by the case was on the docket,
trial," Dowlen said. "Then, I asltinl fer the trial in the motions would be filed by
call the ooes of the people middle of the football season. both the defense and the
who are out on bond. Mr. But CUrtis aays Clses slmUar state.
Holmes was arrested Jan.
Holmes ls out on bond, and I to the one lacing Holmes
do not feel another two usually tate a day or two, and 31 by three agents of
months or so Is going to make the Holmes trial would be 'Amarillo's Metro Intelligence
treated "the same as any 1 Unit. He was accused of
that much difference."
buying 250 milligrams of
"We would naturally other Clse In thil county."
Curtis said no pre-trial cocaine In the restroom of a
oppose such a motion beCiuse
we are ready to go to trial motions had been med with hotel while attending a
now," said Potter County the district clerk because the wedding . He was arraigned
Feb. 2 and released on $1,000
.

Pruitt
signs long-term deal
•
•• KENt,

Ohio (UP!) ~d nmninll baclt Greg
~. only the

thlrd Bl'owna'
,Oyer ever 1o l!l'ank out 1,000
:1arda In • aeason, baa signed
.a l111gterm contract with the
:National Fool~all League
ttub deligned to have ·him
1lnlab hill proleaalonal career
iW!th Art Modell's team.
; In three seaaons with
J:leveland, Pruitt his rushed

:••

·

r&lt;!OL:.~r~)

'

pitch In !he ninth.
"I felt It waa lime he took
me out. I had 1011 my rhythm

amboCCW took the lead a\
e lbrle.quarlet' pole and
ld Cilfar a oae-ha1f length
tJctory O¥er Luxury Item In
:fie featured eilhth race at
~loto Downs .Wednesday

E

iilbt.
: Rio Bnw Hamwr waa
Jili'd.
• Jamho«&lt;B•, driven by WU-

lam Herman to a 2:03 mlle,

i-,!d tli.:ll, tUO and tUO.
• Tbe 5-3 nightly double
of WI!Jitw and
..... .... ' worth

·

'

" A II'OWd of 3,'784 wagered
P l9,210.
.

•

~ '?

Peeters rcr an ~loeed;
future draft choice, and
releaaed five playersamong
them
veteran
defensive back Joon Pitts and
third-year quarterback Will

for 1,976 yards. tall seuoo
he gained 1,067 yards,
Jim Brown and Leroy l{elly
are the only oth.er Cleveland
players who have achieved
more than 1,000 yards In a
•
season.
Tbe Browns Wednesday
a1ao traded rookie defenalve
tackle Steve Caaaldy, the
club's seventiH'O'und draft
choice, to the Green Bay

Cureton.

Alio placed iln waivers
were three rookies quarterback Gale Swick of
Toledo, running back James
Reed of Miaalaaippi and
' guard CUrtis Wester of East
Te~:as State.

STARTER

,~fTH:C~rtz!:

fired Wednelday 11 the
~tarter at Thlltledown race
track,, according to · tract
Vice President Thomas s.
Sweeney, who named Harry
T. Palmer Jr. to replace
Pertl.
•.
''It wu done to ·lll'llil·aa
objective evaluation to , Ulll'
s t a r 11 n g 0 per 1 11 0 n ,
particularly In establlahlnl
conlliltency in olf-time in aU
· race~," Sweeney llid.
Pertl had been . . . . •

NORTHFIELD

'lblllledowl! . . . li'Tt .....

· P1btler liad llittn bUll '

VACATION TIME

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ln
Wedlletday night's featured
~open trot at Northfield
•
. -'--,'1111.....,.~4ld
wumer,
with Mel Tlftdte In the
sulky, covered the mlle In
2:0f 3-6 and paid $8.80, $4.60
and .3.60. Gaylord Hlll
abcnnld.
.,.,~ta, the

H78-15 ................ .'26.95

a.

· : .,

returned

Jlllillant starter for the New
Attendlnce • 4,138. The
York Racing Association. , i111ndle was $325,1119.

MOUNTED &amp; BALANCED

FREE
Ex. Tax Included
Prices good Friday and Saturday only, July
30th and 31st.

GENERAL TIRE SALES

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•

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NORTHF~IiLD,

(UP!)- D1t11 Rlldney scored

•

bond.
Possession of that small
amount of cocaine is a felony
in Texas, although many first
offenders
are
given
probation.
Holmes previo~y pleaded
guilty to wounding an Ohio
state police helicpoter pilot in
1\'!arch, 1973. The incident
occurred Wlien Holmes
suffered a nervous break·
down. He was placed on
probation at the recommendati on of a psychiatrist .

.,...

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I)

�.

4 _ Tile Daily Senllnel, Mlddlei;JOI'l-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tllurlday, July 29, 1976

5- The Daily Senllnel, MlddlepoJ'l.PIIDeroy, 0., 11unday, July a,lm

Rand Jones records 18th victory
By CHRIS TURKEL
UP! Sports Writer
·~~r~~~~tii!i~1tt~~ttt~Ji~~~~~~~~?i~~!~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~ft:fi~~ ~j~;~~t~~~~?:$jf:~~;~j;rt,~*~f~lim • Randy
Jones is already
::;:;::
:::::::
tired of tallling aboot the
prospect of winning 30
games, but his chances
should keep baseball fans
speculating for quite some
lime.
. By Gret Balley
•
The 26-year.old left-bander
For the next week..-so I'm going to be submitting special
lightened
hi&amp; hold on the Cy
articles cooceming the antl:trapping petitions being circulated
by the "antl'1 people.
• .
.
.
These articles and comments will in no way rftlect the
olllcial opinion of this newspaper, but the contents will (or at
least should !) reveal the opinions of the true sportsman of U)IS
atea. · •
I'm going to be tromping on some toes, and my conunen1s
will be blunt and straight to the point. Some things you may ,"ill
llOSTON (UPI ) - Larvell
like, but then again, I'm not coocerned that you like tbem! jUSt Bllrnks hasn't seen many
that they stir you to silme action. Lots of my CIXIIIDIIIta will be righthanders this sea90ll. But
facts taken straight from some ~blicatiolll from. the Ohio that didn 1 seem to faze him.
Department of Natural Resources, so you'd better Jlllen and
Bllrnks singled home the
stop talring a back seat to aU of this anti stuff, or yOII're liable winning run in the eighth
to end up with lots .of egg on your face, no gups, no hunting inning Wedne8day, night as
Jrivilel!es, and even Iota of endangered wildlife.
.the Cleveland Indians
Remember, these articles are going to be fatl, 10 you can't defea!A!d the Red Sox 7-' and
tum your hack and just say that's Bailey llaslljng the same old kept Boston · tied with
stuff again. Read your new~ carefully I« the Jllltt week .Milwal!kee for last place in
oc so, and you just migbt be in lor a few SUJ'lll'ises. (You might the American league East .
even get a lit11e angry.)
Blanks got his hit off right·
Ashort explanation of what these petitions are Ill about: handed relief pitcher Tom
1be anti groups tried unsuccessfully to get somi trapping Murphy, afrer pinch-bitter
and gun cootrol tills through the legislature, 10 111111' they've John Low~ was walked
cbanged their strategy~hey're teying (and I 111Ft say intentionally.
succesWlly) to get their sponsored lilllenllmentl. to han
" I haven' been playing
trapping, on the November ballot. J1l.informed -.ranites much against right-banders,
just might be hood-winked into voting for this measure.
mostly agains t lefties,"
1be bad part.thelrultimategoalistobanall outdoor~ Blanks said after the game.
· as we know them - lmnting, trapp~. fiShing, etc. The
"I was just tryiQg to .hit the
trappers are a minlrity, so what betl.er group to pick on first? haD hard someplace," Blahks
Next it will be the bowbunters, next the ~lilr'S, nelrt said:
tile ....
Cleveland manager F'!:ank
OK, here~s a starter. 'l'be Ohio Division of W'rld!ife is going IW!)inson, who has been pia·
to have two meetings to explain recent development&amp; on these tooning Blanks for most of the
matters and to try tO ge!)'ou ~and .clubs arpnized.
' AD sportsmen or anyone wbo IS the least bit mlel'e!!Md should
attend one of these meetings.
·
The meetings are on August 10, 7:30 p.m. atlllj Jackson
City Building in Jackson, Ohio ; the secmd meetin&amp; MciiSil?-at 7:30 p.m. at the Washington County ·Coalt &amp;.ue m
Marielta. Now hear this- if past a:perience me&amp;Dipyt.hi.Dg,
r111ay O&lt;kls that you looalillfS and clubs woo't showfllr either
By MAR'I'IN uom
ol these meetiqgs. It'D pi'Ol'e just bow little ambilioll JGU have,
UPI Sports ·'Wnter
and it'llllhowyllW' apatby.for thiap ol thislllllft.
!MONTREAL (UPI )
. That's it, get a little Iliad - you'·re right if you lilink l'm JilirsUt was the ·Russians who
caDiJ!g you lazy. So talte that, maul it over, aad ~.just ~ealongand destlloyed 'the
· mayre, it'll make you mad eDOIIIh to 1cilually .._ IIIIIIIe myth
o'f
American
aclim.
inVincibility. Hand as it was
to .accept, at least 'there was
1
&gt;the consolation that the
Soviet Uriion is a bigger

I =,:.::~~ I

Young Award Wednesday
night by winning his 111tb
gap~e with a 1o.tnnlng sevenhitter as the San Diego
Padres edged the Housloo
Astros. 1-1.
Wocklng, as he does, with
three da)'! rest, Jones !!ltould
get at least 15 more sW1.s in
San Diego's remalning 61
games. If he maintains Ills

p-eaent winning pero!lltage
ar)d stays injury-free, Jones
slloukl 1tln 31.
•
"If 1 geliD 29 and have any
starta left, I've got a good
chance," Jones concedes.
Rookie Joaquin Andujar, S.
7, went the dlslance lor lhe
Astrol, allowing nine hits and
striltinll out seven.
Doug Rader's tw().()Ul, two-

run E1Je Ia the IOih scored Oncinnati, 7.0, Ollcago heat aea11011, an.cked hla fourth
Wllllt Olvll, n11111111 (or Philadelphia, ~-2, In 11 holner over the right field
John Grubb, llld Mille lvie,
who bad doubled: The Astrol
spoiled Jonea' attempt lor Ills
fifth lhutout with a run in tht,
lOth on dDublea by Leon
Roberts and pinclHiitter C11lf
-'---,.
J .......
In other games, San
Francisco sbocked
·.
·

innlnp, Atlanta dumped Los

Angeles, 7-2, Pittsburgh
nipped New York, 1.0, ln 13
Innings, and Montreal
blanked St. Louis, 3-11, ln the .
first game of a scheduled
doubleheader. Tile second
game was rained out.
Cul!l s, PblWell 2:
'
Manny Trillo hit his fourth
. homer with two on in the top
'ol the 11th off reliever Ron
Reed,&amp;-4, to make a winner of
Bruce Sutter, the third
Chicago pitcher. BIU Madlock

·
Indian rally tops B0 SOx =
season, said be is a good man worried about him.
tohaveattheplate~a

hit

Is needed.
'·He's certainly done lhe
job when be's in lbft-e., "
Robinson said. "I don 1 mean
to belit11e &amp;f1Yooe else, but he
!las been the beSt guy on the
ballc,lub In a clutch
situatjoo.''
.
It was Blank 's eighth
game··winning hit ol the
season. Robinson said "I wish
there'wasa place for him" in
the regular lineup, but "be
hasn't complained all
9ea$0n.''
Red Sox manager Don
Zimmer said he was worried
about Lowenstein, so Lowenstein was given a fourth baD
interitionaUy after :three halls
'!"ere thrown unintentionally.
Although Blanks bad
homered in t he fifth inning,
Zimmer ~adn't been .as

·"I'd rath« pitch to Blanks
than haw him throw a 3-0
fastball to Lowenstein," Zim·
mer said.
The RedSoxtqok.a W lead
after two inning$. Cecil
Cooper ilneled ill two runs in .
the f5."!it iMlng and two more
in the $1!t'U!d inring.
Carl YIStnemSki knoclted
ln the first Red Sox run with a
single. It was the 1,300th RBI
of his career. run. Rice
wallted wilh the bases loaded
in the 1econd Inning to
account for the other Bostoo

nm.

BllddY Bell h&lt;mered for
in the

t'IVc Qeveland nms
second iming.

Cleveland chiPped :~way at
the &lt;lead. Rico cartr lied it at
s.an with a twCH'Un h&lt;mer in
1he siXth imiJig following a
leadoff double ·~ Blanks.

Jim Kern (7-!) and Dave
LaRoche contblned f« 7 1-!
lnnlnp of sbulollt relltf. Jim
Wllloqbby (2-7) was the

loler ·

K«11, 7-3, gave up fl~ hits
and two nlb w_ltle atriking
011t five In Silt ll!nlngs .
LaRodte struck. out · ~
l,rm 1ID end the eighth Inning
and ~ out the side in the

~ lnmng.

..

We got enough runs early
and lhffl we couldn't get
· """"· 011 t," Zimmer "d

~'""""·

·•

S8l •

Kern
He has
--'did • great Job.
__ .....,..,
as-ananDas.""""' Ul
baaebaU. I tllought sis runs
would get the job dooe, and
we made some good plays
too."
'l'be two teams play again
this afternoon. Pitching for
aeveland is Pat Dobson (118). Rick Wise (7.a) goes for
Bostm.

wi~~sin~~ S:~

fence with one out in the 13th
to give J'ltllburgb a triumph
over Ntlir Y«k. ReUever Ken
SaJJden, 1-2, wu Hebner's
victim alter Tom Seaver and
Doc Medlch battled each
other through 10 scoreless
iMtnga.
.
Expol J, Clnbala t:
Barry Foote IC(II'ed the
wlnnlng run on Ellis
Valentine's sacrifice fly In
the seventh inning to glve
Montr-eal a r.aln-delayed
victory over St. Louis. Woody
Fryman, 9-8, won, u Dale
Murray earned hla 11th save..

walked Intentionally and
Trillo hit a 3-2 pitch Qver the
left field fence.
In Middleport
Bnvea 1, Dod&amp;en t:
Phil Nlekro pitched a
seven-bitter and drove in four
runs with a three~un homer
0
· and a single to lead AUanl.!l
O SHEBOYGAN
· over Los Angeles left-bander
Tommy John. Jerry Roysler
T
JUSnN
tripled and scored the winning run in the fifth on Jinuny
S
KNAPP
,
• 8 kl
11
WyM s sacrifice y.
Belts- ut es
Pirates 1, Met• 0:
Western Shirts
Richie Hebner, bothered by
· 5 Mo n.· Sat .
9to
a bad back most of the , L_.;...;;;___ _ _ __.

DAN'S

OiY,pic briefs.
MONTREAL (UP!) - Tl!hirts with a n age are the
lllell crue at the Olympic

Games.
~in the last few days
'tll!l'fl the clopns ''Fn!e the

UkraiDe," "It's bani to be

.

emer~ed,

.and 'IVhen the
currenHllympic Games end
Sunday, 1he tikelibood is ·that
the United /States woo''t even
be .second best. And what is
worse •East .Gerniany is' just
about the •size of (J)hio with a
population of less than 11

·•

unfounded.

!MONTREAL (twn
i\mon,g Yis~tors to the
Olympics Is I.D6 U'acS :star
Jeue Owens. 'fte ;black
Americbslld ~t'at..Wig a
helluva time."
·

Sport.Parade

bumble when you . tnow
you're ·so gre~~t, " and - one
. the llleallity men do not fiDd - MONTRIW. ( t!Pij - 'The
fumy - "ID, I'm Oarios." IIIOil adi?e :I •• a· rei !Enoo·

million people.
U anytbing can save the
U.'S . from falling down
.another notch ·on the
. ternati
m
. ooal ladder, it, will
ooly come ·u •the result of a
superb effort by the .boxers.
Seven ol itbem advanced to
today's semifinals in .\he
Maurice Richard Arena,
assuring America of ' seven
mere medals.
In what iibould be the most
""citing matchup of the day,
Big John Tate goes against
Cuba's ''l'eofi~o Stevenson,
who js 81! bng to become the
first man .to win a:he Olympic
heavyweight title tWice. Tate,
a brulSinc &amp;-«, ZZ5-powlder
b:om Knoxville, Tem., pnUed

East Gennany hack into
second place ill the medal
standingnith 68 to ~ for the

U.'S. '1be Soviet Union is a
runaway leader :wilb 87
medals. The same order
prevaili in gold medals with
Russi• having
East
Gennany 30 and the us. 22.
Led by Tate, the U.S. will
have a llhot at advancing
seven men into Saturday's

».

By .MILT(JN RIQIM.\N
:out a !!!)lit decision owr &amp;.S,
l.JPl Spai'IIEdiler
: '238-:POUnd .Pe:ter Bussing o!
MON111RW:.L ('UPl1) -Antigua, i!'OU could .say, is .bere .on a West Germally Wednesday
stnkrs at tile . . - have
!light.
'
MONTREAL (UPII - A beerJ UkniJIIaD ida Six of pass.
Despite the baul d boxing
The friendly 'little Wild of ~.ooo iil ·the ·Caribbean ·probably
total 1,176,431 spectators eight public pt 1 ts, to
medall,
it will be .difficult tO
nldled Olympic emts ill which pollee ha-re .been never ·would've made it to the &lt;(!)!ympics; lts ·finll .ever, had it ove!IOO[De what bu lumed
the lint niDe dllys. Biggest called, ancemed demands 'oat been foc &lt;lOiltribulillls .by ·private companies. ·
•into a debacle for Ule U.'S.
Antigua reminds )'011 of that tine.Pe!f Rolle uses. As.a lrid, he
day 'lllU Sunday when the Ukraine ••• •4 de .as an
forces in lrad&lt; and fidd.
anrimnliq! and track and iol? del 1tate, lilt as a says his .family ,.as so poor thaU:is sister was made m.lapan.
Typeal d the American
~ &gt;1t11ng witll Antigua. U doesn't even have its ,own
&amp;ld ewolll ftftt on llimul- SeMel rop+lic
ineptitude was Wedrewlay'a
Olympic pin. I! w.ollldn 't bave .uniforms either if &lt;not for .the
laneouly. Attendance at
perflrmance. They managed
.•mooey pu1. up by those COI1'1pallits.
.
• a Bingle bru\u: medal in five
mare u.. 11 difftoem sites
M01i'TREAL (1JP1 ~
Oosesl Antigua 's 10 atbletes have t'lme ,to a ·medal 111
lde!led m.a.
~ Eli......h and 'her
'evenl1.. 'That .came ·Wben
an)'lime ·liOIIje ,of the lther countries' iWiDilers &lt;have let them
·tlulee Dl5 have A!tumed
Willie Da~. a 33-year- ·
You can save hundreds
llclme .art a kit Ill ...._ look :at me, y11t if it wasn't {« Mtigua, these Olympic Oames dd marvel .appearing in his
even .,.....nels of ......
could'w
easily
«me
aPI!i.
royalty JtW . are qjible·~.
·fourth 01~ 11'85 third
A*theOlympicatble!.es. '[bey'll gire iUO}W sll'aiCht.
'Willi al-inum or vinyl
Maltreal.. '11le.7 ; 0 k the
be!Bnd.(Wy
olhance in
roiclirlf.
What
4hey'll1ell
f()U
is
~bat mor:e lhan.anytllll! die, one man
Gnnd Dl*e IIIII D ¢
ol
iept them competing here, prevented them in many cues !he 110-meler hunllel.
I"""""""l, die PltD and frun dropping out of ithe games, am the man they mean is · Meanwbile, East Gennan
ESTIMATES!
Princess of LiedlteasteiD,
ornmen 1IJOD two more golds
CONTACT
Prince BertU of Sweden, Antigua's learn doc!«.
Wedneeday with a-marie
Hewes no contraptions, oo witd!'s brew, no drugs, Ill he
AckerinaD
·
t
aking
the
high
Prince TaRda of - - and wes .is his two ,good hands mi BOJDe CO!!UJial - · and the
GlfN R. BISSEll
PriDce G' I
olJ:llirawlous results Dr. Leroy .Perry of Pasadena, Calif., jump trilh a leap ol I leet, 4
· MONTREAL, Jfliy U
aDd Baerbel ECkert
· AT
achievJes with them cann&lt;t poiiSi.bly be believ.ed oritboul being ioches
( UPI) - PGilce recards . _
' meten in .22.38
·110l'ITRI:AL (i;JI
the ·ZOO
949-2801
12 bomb scarea were Bad!: in tbe
Wlage seen.
If you're woodering what a Calif()!'$ docla' is do~ with aecoodl. 1'be Germans alao
OR
recorded cmiDg the flnt and in tnining for lllrlr ey!Onl
picked up two bronz.e.rnedala.
Antigua
and
oat
the
UJ
.'S.
team,
the
amwer·
i
s
that
Leroy
PfliTJ
949-2860
-* olthe games aod IeVeii Saturday are American mgh
Thil enough to purb
dNth thrall received. One jumpers Dwi.ght Stees and · lan't a medical doc1!Jr, be's a dtiropradic doctor with apecial·
ol lhe IIUir 1181 directed l!iU Jankilnil. W"db almcst traioirlgln applied kinesiology, and as such, the U.S. Olympc
.
agaiJJit Queen Elizabeth, the entire lq1h ol tbe games. Canmittee doesn't ..ant any part ol him.
Before the Olympics got .w der way, u.s. atbletel ,got up .a
a!M!Uier against Caroliine to wait for their ljg day, the
lCtsDed,' the late Amlrlcan tttu went to their ..,.-ate pelilion lo have Perry included llll the medical staff that would
prepolei~·s daughter, wbo Is
homes to wait out 1111! III!I'Y)I lake care of them here becw1ae ma.oy are his private patients
in Califtmia and know bow much be can help them.
working lor a televlaion I:WG weeks.
Tile athletes (elt so stroogly, they went to Sen . John Tunney
aetwork.
All
proved
(ltCal.) aslring his help, but in the end, Perry didn't make It
with the U.'S. tam.
Mal&amp; USOC officials are lllrait-laced.'J'hey ~U.S.
alblela from being tuated by Perry here 011 the p
t
be
· wam't a medical doc!«, but the athleia plid no llfwtlbl.
They went to be treated by the :»-year-del PfliTJ enrydllr.
In the dileus throw alone, all three U.S. entrantt, gold
inedalid Mac Wilkins, broaze medilllt John Powell lnd
veteran Jay Silvester, came to lim for help. PoweD aaid he
wouldn't have been able to compete ln Sunday's final had It not
been for Perry, who worked on him I« DIOI'e than two bours
that same morning.
After Wllklnll won hla gold medal, he appreciated what
.
Perry had done lor him so much, he gave him his dlacua. Sam
Colsongavehimhiljavelin,and when is the lui time you ever
heard of an an athlete giving anybody ANYTHINm
• Perry Is the Pled Piper of the Olympics. He paid hla awn way
over here, received nothing for ll'ealing any ol the a~ and
fQR All YOUR BUILDING NEEDS
aaid he was happy to do lt. Athletes f!'Oill%1 counlriea llDcked to
his room to be treated by him every day.
.
An athlete would cmne hobbling into hla room with a tad
You otn · avoid costly damag• tnd utlllly
back, a pulled hamstring Or maybe a neck problem, and It
, Mrvlee Interruptions by calling 100-362.wouldn't be long before be oc she would !fillk out again, good as
2714, toll·fr.., 41 hour• before you dig. II
new, ready to c&lt;mpele.
nec....ry, our peopl• will be gild to loct.te
"To make It short, I never would've been~le to run II not lor
, our cablt and mark 1111 location for JOU.
Doc," llll)'ll Antigua aprinter Fred SowerJIY. "John AJdi.Bua
said the same thing before be left here. Doc Perry bu done
more than any one man to keep118 athletes COIIIjlttq In the
' '
Olympics. We caD him 'Doctor Magic Fingers.'"
Of all lhoae here, Tracy Sundlun, head coach of Antigua's
l!"ack and field team, knows Perry best.
.
v 992-2709
"He's not God," says Sundlun. "What he knows can be
f23 S. 3rd Avt.
by anyune-.to a degree. But bla
ll1tl tlllderUJldln8. H&lt;llimp)J . . . . .
1bli.
He llelleve~ In them. I nner lui4
· 16
7:10
chiroP.ractnrs but I've seen what he can do. I had
· and t
let him treat me. He ,:&lt;ared it up In one evening. I've become
his b~est advocate."

- ·

-·
Otywce
n

WMBER, HARDWARE &amp;
BUILDING SUPPLIES

MOORE'S .

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tt·•

'"'
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I
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POMEROY ALL-STARS - Competlnc In the Southeastern Ohio Boys League Tournament at Wellston are,
front, 1-r, Randy Mui,Tay, Gregg Thomas, Todd Fife,
Ramie RichardS, Mike WhlUa~h. Roger Kovalchik and

Scott Harria and J. R. Wamsley; aecmd row, Roger
Stewart, coach; Tony JeweU, Mark Boyct, John Beaver,
Randy Stewart, Otis Colt, John Smith arxl Mark Friend; tn ·
back are Harlan Whitlatch, coach, right; Jerry Flelda,
.. center left, ,alKI ~er Kovalchik, coach.

I'

'
'

RU'I'LAND PONY LEAGUE (RANGERS)- Front, 1r, Guy Shuler, Craig Nicinsky, Dave Watkins, M~e
Musser Bobby Williams, Matt Weaver, John Moms,
John J~obs, Herb Noel; second row, coach, Carl Kauff,

Cannel News,
:.. . By the. l)ay

-

.

David Davis, Van Wilford, Kim Dewhurst, Roger
Wamsley , Mike Weyland, Todd Snowden, Andy
Pocklington, and Coach Jim Morrla. Abaent were Brent
Bolin, Dink Kennedy and Steve Lambert.

'

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By Mrs. Herbet1 Roush
.·"r.
: Mrs. Don Manuel and
:&lt;
: daughter Donnita attended a
: rehearsal at the Grace United
• Methodist Church Saturday.
: evening at Gallipolls where
: Donnita was flower girl
: sunday for the wedding of
: Charles Pyles Jr. and Miss
• Karen Lemley. They also
· : attended a dinner following
: rehearsal at the Meigs Inn
:honor-Ing \he.couple Saturday
'
. evemng.
• Sharon, Cindy and Edward
~sited Mr. and Mrs. Roger
:Roush Friday evening.
: Herbert Sayre returned
:pome Wednesday after
:!laving surgery at Holzer
:Medical Center. !drs. Sayre
1-islted Mr . and Mrs. James
:=;eyre at Gallipolis Tuesday
TIJPPERS PLAINS (PEE WEE) - Front, 1-r, Rltndy Fryar, Jimmy Caldwe~. Kevin
:_\vhile Mr . Sayre was
Barber Sean Clemson Tim Eynon, Tonya Fortney, Tara Guthrie, Bobby Brooks; second
:Jlospltalized.
row JJin Caldwell co~ch Tim DOrst, Terri Stout, Kristi Gaddis, Jay Carpenter, Mark
• Mr. and Mrs. Danny Sayre
Srhivers, Paul
Job~ Rice, Bryan Bauman and Howie Caldwell, Coach.
:~if Columbus spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
,_Sayre.
• Mr. and Mrs . Hom~
i Warner moved a new mob~~e
: home to their farm here . .
: They have sold their
•I residence and plan to move
.. soon.
: Mr . and Mrs . Edward
: Lawson and baby , Mr. and
: Mrs. Harold Lawson and son
• of Letart, W. Va ., Mr. and
: Mrs. Bob Lawson and (amUy
: visited Mr . and Mrs. Charles
: Lawson and Wilda . Mr, and
'Mrs. Gary Miller and
:daughter of Bellville were
:recent guests of the Lawsons .
: Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
;Sayre were dinner guests
•Sunday of Mr . and Mrs.
:David Sayre at Antiquity.
:They also visited Mrs.
'
.
:Frances Philson
who
CHESTER (T-BAIL) - F!'Oilt, 1-r, Eric Sim, Todd Clay, Danny Leonard, ~ickey
•returned home recently
Raridolph, Scott Newell; secood row, Bob Davis, cO.ch ; Jeff Roush, Mike Grant, Huey
:accompanied
by
her
Eason, Kyle Davia, Brian Beeler, Billy McLaughlin, Coach RoMle ~Y . Othe~ coaches
:daughter, Virginia, from
were Paul Hirria and John Karachnik. Absent were Mat Harris and Ke1th Karschn1ll:.
:aeveland.
;

.t

.

]69

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AMERICAN HARDW ARE
992-28'18

.

••

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CHESTER PEE WEE -Front (1-r) Lee Keney, Jilp Wilson, Max Eichinger, Jr., John
Miller, Mike Sima and Dave McLaughlin; second rdw, Dave Edwards, Kenny Ray Riggs,
Keith Stout, Paul Hilrrls, D. J. Randolph, John Edwardll, Todd Tripp, and Coach Max
Eichinger. Absent was Coach Tim Baurn.

iNews
Notes ·
•

Reg .

M1 ddlep o rt

eonins,

5"-

"

'
.,

BEFORE

DIGGING
call toll-free,
800-362-2764
'

Columbia Gas, Columbus Southern, Ohio
Belland AT&amp;T Long Lines are all memb•r•
of the Ohio Utlllllec Protection Servlc•.
Thl1 mean• you only have to mak• one ctll
to notify tht utilities of your dlttlng p!IM.

ily Clarice Allen
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
MaUack, Lake Worth, Fla.
and Miss Donna Kaye
MaUack, Washington, IJ,
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Olristy.
Jerry Cleland, Klaus,
Dianne and Debbie; Fort SID,
Okla. , spent a week with Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Wickham, Richmond, were
overnight guests of Mr. and
Mrs. B. K. Ridenour.
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgO Wood,
RUTLAND DODGERS (LI'ITLE LEAGUE) - Front, 1-r, Tommy Sinunons, Steve
Springfield, were weekend
Patterson Brad Alexander, Ricky Edward, Marty Spangler; back row, Asst. Coach
guests of Mrs. Letha Wood.
Tommy Shrun(l)s, Mike Edwards, Troy Brooks, Paul Michaels, Robbie Berger, Coach Gene
Mr. and Mrs. WIUiam
Wise. Absent were Chad Williams, Jinuny ~illen, Duane Jones, Todd Eads, and Shawn
McCulloch, ColumbUA, !pellt
Eads.
Wednesday with her llialer,
Mrs. Audrey Woode.
.
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Hartung and daughters·,
Louisville, Ky ., were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Nice .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Columbus, were weekend
guests of Mrs. Opal Eichinger
and family .
Mr. and Mrs. George .
Celani, Utica, Mich., were '
recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Keller.
Garrett Worthen, Canton,
was a recent visitor o( Mr.
' ,''i
and Mrs. Ralph Keller.
• l""'!&lt;
. '
Mrs. Oma Allen, Leesburg,
Fla ., visited Thursday
evening will! Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton ADen.
Mrs. Erma Hellman spent
a week with her grandson,
Billy Hellman and family, in
Naples, Fla.
TUPPERS PLAINS (T-BALL)- Front, 1-r, Bryan Chadwell, Edla Bail~y , Dana Eynoo, .
Mr . and Mrs. Edgar
Joey Young Eddie Collins David Rice, Jeff Caldwell, Jamie Myers, DaVId Abbott; hack
Hartung and son Jed of Texas
row, Amy Connally, Brya~ Durst; Larry Spencer, Kri&amp;tl Hawk, Brian Fryar, Jeff Sayre, · spent several days with Mr.
Allen Tripp, Kenny Ritchie. In back, Coaches Charles Collins and Duane Wolfe.
. and Mrs . Tom Nice.
Mr. ADen Weber, Akron ,
spent a few days with Mr. and
Mrs . Ralph Keller.
The Chester high school
......·-, ,. I~~
class of 31 had their aMual
'. ·
·.
picnic at the fire house,
;
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Arthur
DeTray visited in Goldsboro,
N.C. with Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Peacock and family . Robyn
and Todd returned home wilb
their grandparents lor a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Peacock are
aMounclng the birth of a
daughler on July 20.

c:

.:Fairview
•

Dries quickly .

•

••

Gallon

Goes On
Easily.

Otester
News Notes

.

••...

....
~

~
~

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r

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SYRACUSE PEE WEE - (CHAMPS SOUTHERN PEE WEE) - Front, I tor, Shawn

CumIngham, Timmy Willis, Barry McCoy, Mike Kloes, Scott Me Phail; second row, Randy

I
I

Arms J Mark Salser I Darlan
Roush J Richie Davis, Robert Richie, Deroo Stafford, Robert
•

Pantasote wanls
. activity curbed
'

greelelt!l!his

rI

•..
"'

·Mrs. Evelyn Ingram, Mrs .
Jane O'Neil and sons of
Columbus, 0 . spent a few
days here at the Lee home,·
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Grueser
and fanilly of Logan,
.
OhiO and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
OrrofChester,O.visitedwith
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee and
family on Sunday.
Jenny Jo Grueser is
spending a few days with the
~ Robert Lee famlly.
·: Mr . and Mrs. Arnold
: Thordson of Cedarville, 0.
: visited with Mr . and Mrs.
: Homer Circle and other
• relatives.
: Miss Francine Perry of
: Holland, Ohio spent a few
: days with her gr andn!other,
· : Mary Circle. Mr . and Mrs.
• James Circle o( New Haven
: were at the Circle home on
: Sunday.
: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur. E.
• Johnson spent Sunday af·
: ternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
: Uoyd Johnson and daughter
: of MiddlePOrt.

NOW AT

VAllEY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

rI

...,

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:
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•
:
:
:
:
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r.:ut

fltt

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·~

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boJ.ing finals, matching the
best lhowing for the country
in modern limes.
Joining Tate in victory

Wednesday were brothers
LeaD and Michael Spinks of
St. Louis, both 011 unanimous
decisions. Leon, a light
heavyweight, mauled
Ottomar Sachse of East
Germaay and Michael, a
middleweight, won over
Polanil's Pya.ard Puiewiz
after kDoeking him down with
a crunching right to the head
in the .!lleCOOd round.
Howl!: a, the perfect day in
the ~ was nlined. wben
Tellml!igbt Oint Jacboo,
•the Pin Am cbampim from
Nasbvli!e, Term., lost a 3-2
decisioolo Pedro Gamarro of
Venezuela.

••

a

U. S. boxers advance
country.
Now East Gennaey has

.•.

"

Willis·, in back, Coaches Barry McCoy
and Paul Kloes.
\

..

.

•,· POINT PLEASANT _ A
(our-week long strike at the
fanlasote Company took a
new tum Tuesday when the
dompany filed a formal
domplalnt qalnlt the union.
r;t names the lntern11tonal
Wnlted Rubber Workers,
'-ocal 797, and Its prealdent
Wade Randolph and 15'others
Q

objects to puncture tires ;
excessive
numbers of pickets
Pantasote Ia&gt;aeeklnll an
ocder of the coit lbal would , at the main gate; and
prevent bloc"'w• . of a West threatening the sarety,
-•
Virginia Public Highway; welfare llld personal lives of
personnel
besides
threatening damage to the
on
property of the perSOIIIlel.
geslllll'llll
Approximately 79 union
employes walked off their
jobs midnight July 2 afler

as defendants . .j .

Grange, made their
annual visit to Laurel Grange
Point Rock News N0 t eS Stale
Saturday night for the pur,

falling to accept a new three
year contract.
A bea~ing on the complaint
By Waaetta Radekto
was held before Judge James
Mrs. Henry ·Turner has
Lee Thompson at 7 p.m.
returned home alter having
Wednesday.
A federal mediatQr is ex- undergone tests at the Holzer
pected to meet with Medical Center .
management and union of- · Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Holliday, Judy, Gary and
ficials Friday.
Itloyd, enjoyed a short

\

vacation trip through Kentucky. They visited Jenny
Wiley Park, Natural Bridge,
Wave Land Shrine and other
points of interest around
Prestonsburg and Lexington.
Mr . and Mrs. Mendel
Jordan, Dep~es of the Ohio

pose
of
inspection.
Everything went precisely as
planned except for one small
difficulty, the failure of the
eieclricity . The Deputies and
offlcers of the grange
proceeded with the business
at hand by the ai~ of an oil

lamp and several flash Ughts.
The setting made the
historical part of the program
very realistic.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Holliday, Judy, Gary and
Floyd, Mr . and Mrs. Don
Bums, Mr .. and Mrs. G. A.
Radekln 'and granddaughter,
Amy J o, a tlended "Gallla
Co untry " , a
musical
production on the Bob Evans
Fann .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Morris
visited her mother, Mrs .
Erma Nelson and her nephew
Jo Nelson. Mrs . Nelson
returned home with them and
enlered a.. hospital ln San
Bernardino, Calli.
Mrs. Edward Coen llld son
John
David ·attended
Christian Church Camp at
Darwin last yeek. · ~

�.

4 _ Tile Daily Senllnel, Mlddlei;JOI'l-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tllurlday, July 29, 1976

5- The Daily Senllnel, MlddlepoJ'l.PIIDeroy, 0., 11unday, July a,lm

Rand Jones records 18th victory
By CHRIS TURKEL
UP! Sports Writer
·~~r~~~~tii!i~1tt~~ttt~Ji~~~~~~~~?i~~!~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~ft:fi~~ ~j~;~~t~~~~?:$jf:~~;~j;rt,~*~f~lim • Randy
Jones is already
::;:;::
:::::::
tired of tallling aboot the
prospect of winning 30
games, but his chances
should keep baseball fans
speculating for quite some
lime.
. By Gret Balley
•
The 26-year.old left-bander
For the next week..-so I'm going to be submitting special
lightened
hi&amp; hold on the Cy
articles cooceming the antl:trapping petitions being circulated
by the "antl'1 people.
• .
.
.
These articles and comments will in no way rftlect the
olllcial opinion of this newspaper, but the contents will (or at
least should !) reveal the opinions of the true sportsman of U)IS
atea. · •
I'm going to be tromping on some toes, and my conunen1s
will be blunt and straight to the point. Some things you may ,"ill
llOSTON (UPI ) - Larvell
like, but then again, I'm not coocerned that you like tbem! jUSt Bllrnks hasn't seen many
that they stir you to silme action. Lots of my CIXIIIDIIIta will be righthanders this sea90ll. But
facts taken straight from some ~blicatiolll from. the Ohio that didn 1 seem to faze him.
Department of Natural Resources, so you'd better Jlllen and
Bllrnks singled home the
stop talring a back seat to aU of this anti stuff, or yOII're liable winning run in the eighth
to end up with lots .of egg on your face, no gups, no hunting inning Wedne8day, night as
Jrivilel!es, and even Iota of endangered wildlife.
.the Cleveland Indians
Remember, these articles are going to be fatl, 10 you can't defea!A!d the Red Sox 7-' and
tum your hack and just say that's Bailey llaslljng the same old kept Boston · tied with
stuff again. Read your new~ carefully I« the Jllltt week .Milwal!kee for last place in
oc so, and you just migbt be in lor a few SUJ'lll'ises. (You might the American league East .
even get a lit11e angry.)
Blanks got his hit off right·
Ashort explanation of what these petitions are Ill about: handed relief pitcher Tom
1be anti groups tried unsuccessfully to get somi trapping Murphy, afrer pinch-bitter
and gun cootrol tills through the legislature, 10 111111' they've John Low~ was walked
cbanged their strategy~hey're teying (and I 111Ft say intentionally.
succesWlly) to get their sponsored lilllenllmentl. to han
" I haven' been playing
trapping, on the November ballot. J1l.informed -.ranites much against right-banders,
just might be hood-winked into voting for this measure.
mostly agains t lefties,"
1be bad part.thelrultimategoalistobanall outdoor~ Blanks said after the game.
· as we know them - lmnting, trapp~. fiShing, etc. The
"I was just tryiQg to .hit the
trappers are a minlrity, so what betl.er group to pick on first? haD hard someplace," Blahks
Next it will be the bowbunters, next the ~lilr'S, nelrt said:
tile ....
Cleveland manager F'!:ank
OK, here~s a starter. 'l'be Ohio Division of W'rld!ife is going IW!)inson, who has been pia·
to have two meetings to explain recent development&amp; on these tooning Blanks for most of the
matters and to try tO ge!)'ou ~and .clubs arpnized.
' AD sportsmen or anyone wbo IS the least bit mlel'e!!Md should
attend one of these meetings.
·
The meetings are on August 10, 7:30 p.m. atlllj Jackson
City Building in Jackson, Ohio ; the secmd meetin&amp; MciiSil?-at 7:30 p.m. at the Washington County ·Coalt &amp;.ue m
Marielta. Now hear this- if past a:perience me&amp;Dipyt.hi.Dg,
r111ay O&lt;kls that you looalillfS and clubs woo't showfllr either
By MAR'I'IN uom
ol these meetiqgs. It'D pi'Ol'e just bow little ambilioll JGU have,
UPI Sports ·'Wnter
and it'llllhowyllW' apatby.for thiap ol thislllllft.
!MONTREAL (UPI )
. That's it, get a little Iliad - you'·re right if you lilink l'm JilirsUt was the ·Russians who
caDiJ!g you lazy. So talte that, maul it over, aad ~.just ~ealongand destlloyed 'the
· mayre, it'll make you mad eDOIIIh to 1cilually .._ IIIIIIIe myth
o'f
American
aclim.
inVincibility. Hand as it was
to .accept, at least 'there was
1
&gt;the consolation that the
Soviet Uriion is a bigger

I =,:.::~~ I

Young Award Wednesday
night by winning his 111tb
gap~e with a 1o.tnnlng sevenhitter as the San Diego
Padres edged the Housloo
Astros. 1-1.
Wocklng, as he does, with
three da)'! rest, Jones !!ltould
get at least 15 more sW1.s in
San Diego's remalning 61
games. If he maintains Ills

p-eaent winning pero!lltage
ar)d stays injury-free, Jones
slloukl 1tln 31.
•
"If 1 geliD 29 and have any
starta left, I've got a good
chance," Jones concedes.
Rookie Joaquin Andujar, S.
7, went the dlslance lor lhe
Astrol, allowing nine hits and
striltinll out seven.
Doug Rader's tw().()Ul, two-

run E1Je Ia the IOih scored Oncinnati, 7.0, Ollcago heat aea11011, an.cked hla fourth
Wllllt Olvll, n11111111 (or Philadelphia, ~-2, In 11 holner over the right field
John Grubb, llld Mille lvie,
who bad doubled: The Astrol
spoiled Jonea' attempt lor Ills
fifth lhutout with a run in tht,
lOth on dDublea by Leon
Roberts and pinclHiitter C11lf
-'---,.
J .......
In other games, San
Francisco sbocked
·.
·

innlnp, Atlanta dumped Los

Angeles, 7-2, Pittsburgh
nipped New York, 1.0, ln 13
Innings, and Montreal
blanked St. Louis, 3-11, ln the .
first game of a scheduled
doubleheader. Tile second
game was rained out.
Cul!l s, PblWell 2:
'
Manny Trillo hit his fourth
. homer with two on in the top
'ol the 11th off reliever Ron
Reed,&amp;-4, to make a winner of
Bruce Sutter, the third
Chicago pitcher. BIU Madlock

·
Indian rally tops B0 SOx =
season, said be is a good man worried about him.
tohaveattheplate~a

hit

Is needed.
'·He's certainly done lhe
job when be's in lbft-e., "
Robinson said. "I don 1 mean
to belit11e &amp;f1Yooe else, but he
!las been the beSt guy on the
ballc,lub In a clutch
situatjoo.''
.
It was Blank 's eighth
game··winning hit ol the
season. Robinson said "I wish
there'wasa place for him" in
the regular lineup, but "be
hasn't complained all
9ea$0n.''
Red Sox manager Don
Zimmer said he was worried
about Lowenstein, so Lowenstein was given a fourth baD
interitionaUy after :three halls
'!"ere thrown unintentionally.
Although Blanks bad
homered in t he fifth inning,
Zimmer ~adn't been .as

·"I'd rath« pitch to Blanks
than haw him throw a 3-0
fastball to Lowenstein," Zim·
mer said.
The RedSoxtqok.a W lead
after two inning$. Cecil
Cooper ilneled ill two runs in .
the f5."!it iMlng and two more
in the $1!t'U!d inring.
Carl YIStnemSki knoclted
ln the first Red Sox run with a
single. It was the 1,300th RBI
of his career. run. Rice
wallted wilh the bases loaded
in the 1econd Inning to
account for the other Bostoo

nm.

BllddY Bell h&lt;mered for
in the

t'IVc Qeveland nms
second iming.

Cleveland chiPped :~way at
the &lt;lead. Rico cartr lied it at
s.an with a twCH'Un h&lt;mer in
1he siXth imiJig following a
leadoff double ·~ Blanks.

Jim Kern (7-!) and Dave
LaRoche contblned f« 7 1-!
lnnlnp of sbulollt relltf. Jim
Wllloqbby (2-7) was the

loler ·

K«11, 7-3, gave up fl~ hits
and two nlb w_ltle atriking
011t five In Silt ll!nlngs .
LaRodte struck. out · ~
l,rm 1ID end the eighth Inning
and ~ out the side in the

~ lnmng.

..

We got enough runs early
and lhffl we couldn't get
· """"· 011 t," Zimmer "d

~'""""·

·•

S8l •

Kern
He has
--'did • great Job.
__ .....,..,
as-ananDas.""""' Ul
baaebaU. I tllought sis runs
would get the job dooe, and
we made some good plays
too."
'l'be two teams play again
this afternoon. Pitching for
aeveland is Pat Dobson (118). Rick Wise (7.a) goes for
Bostm.

wi~~sin~~ S:~

fence with one out in the 13th
to give J'ltllburgb a triumph
over Ntlir Y«k. ReUever Ken
SaJJden, 1-2, wu Hebner's
victim alter Tom Seaver and
Doc Medlch battled each
other through 10 scoreless
iMtnga.
.
Expol J, Clnbala t:
Barry Foote IC(II'ed the
wlnnlng run on Ellis
Valentine's sacrifice fly In
the seventh inning to glve
Montr-eal a r.aln-delayed
victory over St. Louis. Woody
Fryman, 9-8, won, u Dale
Murray earned hla 11th save..

walked Intentionally and
Trillo hit a 3-2 pitch Qver the
left field fence.
In Middleport
Bnvea 1, Dod&amp;en t:
Phil Nlekro pitched a
seven-bitter and drove in four
runs with a three~un homer
0
· and a single to lead AUanl.!l
O SHEBOYGAN
· over Los Angeles left-bander
Tommy John. Jerry Roysler
T
JUSnN
tripled and scored the winning run in the fifth on Jinuny
S
KNAPP
,
• 8 kl
11
WyM s sacrifice y.
Belts- ut es
Pirates 1, Met• 0:
Western Shirts
Richie Hebner, bothered by
· 5 Mo n.· Sat .
9to
a bad back most of the , L_.;...;;;___ _ _ __.

DAN'S

OiY,pic briefs.
MONTREAL (UP!) - Tl!hirts with a n age are the
lllell crue at the Olympic

Games.
~in the last few days
'tll!l'fl the clopns ''Fn!e the

UkraiDe," "It's bani to be

.

emer~ed,

.and 'IVhen the
currenHllympic Games end
Sunday, 1he tikelibood is ·that
the United /States woo''t even
be .second best. And what is
worse •East .Gerniany is' just
about the •size of (J)hio with a
population of less than 11

·•

unfounded.

!MONTREAL (twn
i\mon,g Yis~tors to the
Olympics Is I.D6 U'acS :star
Jeue Owens. 'fte ;black
Americbslld ~t'at..Wig a
helluva time."
·

Sport.Parade

bumble when you . tnow
you're ·so gre~~t, " and - one
. the llleallity men do not fiDd - MONTRIW. ( t!Pij - 'The
fumy - "ID, I'm Oarios." IIIOil adi?e :I •• a· rei !Enoo·

million people.
U anytbing can save the
U.'S . from falling down
.another notch ·on the
. ternati
m
. ooal ladder, it, will
ooly come ·u •the result of a
superb effort by the .boxers.
Seven ol itbem advanced to
today's semifinals in .\he
Maurice Richard Arena,
assuring America of ' seven
mere medals.
In what iibould be the most
""citing matchup of the day,
Big John Tate goes against
Cuba's ''l'eofi~o Stevenson,
who js 81! bng to become the
first man .to win a:he Olympic
heavyweight title tWice. Tate,
a brulSinc &amp;-«, ZZ5-powlder
b:om Knoxville, Tem., pnUed

East Gennany hack into
second place ill the medal
standingnith 68 to ~ for the

U.'S. '1be Soviet Union is a
runaway leader :wilb 87
medals. The same order
prevaili in gold medals with
Russi• having
East
Gennany 30 and the us. 22.
Led by Tate, the U.S. will
have a llhot at advancing
seven men into Saturday's

».

By .MILT(JN RIQIM.\N
:out a !!!)lit decision owr &amp;.S,
l.JPl Spai'IIEdiler
: '238-:POUnd .Pe:ter Bussing o!
MON111RW:.L ('UPl1) -Antigua, i!'OU could .say, is .bere .on a West Germally Wednesday
stnkrs at tile . . - have
!light.
'
MONTREAL (UPII - A beerJ UkniJIIaD ida Six of pass.
Despite the baul d boxing
The friendly 'little Wild of ~.ooo iil ·the ·Caribbean ·probably
total 1,176,431 spectators eight public pt 1 ts, to
medall,
it will be .difficult tO
nldled Olympic emts ill which pollee ha-re .been never ·would've made it to the &lt;(!)!ympics; lts ·finll .ever, had it ove!IOO[De what bu lumed
the lint niDe dllys. Biggest called, ancemed demands 'oat been foc &lt;lOiltribulillls .by ·private companies. ·
•into a debacle for Ule U.'S.
Antigua reminds )'011 of that tine.Pe!f Rolle uses. As.a lrid, he
day 'lllU Sunday when the Ukraine ••• •4 de .as an
forces in lrad&lt; and fidd.
anrimnliq! and track and iol? del 1tate, lilt as a says his .family ,.as so poor thaU:is sister was made m.lapan.
Typeal d the American
~ &gt;1t11ng witll Antigua. U doesn't even have its ,own
&amp;ld ewolll ftftt on llimul- SeMel rop+lic
ineptitude was Wedrewlay'a
Olympic pin. I! w.ollldn 't bave .uniforms either if &lt;not for .the
laneouly. Attendance at
perflrmance. They managed
.•mooey pu1. up by those COI1'1pallits.
.
• a Bingle bru\u: medal in five
mare u.. 11 difftoem sites
M01i'TREAL (1JP1 ~
Oosesl Antigua 's 10 atbletes have t'lme ,to a ·medal 111
lde!led m.a.
~ Eli......h and 'her
'evenl1.. 'That .came ·Wben
an)'lime ·liOIIje ,of the lther countries' iWiDilers &lt;have let them
·tlulee Dl5 have A!tumed
Willie Da~. a 33-year- ·
You can save hundreds
llclme .art a kit Ill ...._ look :at me, y11t if it wasn't {« Mtigua, these Olympic Oames dd marvel .appearing in his
even .,.....nels of ......
could'w
easily
«me
aPI!i.
royalty JtW . are qjible·~.
·fourth 01~ 11'85 third
A*theOlympicatble!.es. '[bey'll gire iUO}W sll'aiCht.
'Willi al-inum or vinyl
Maltreal.. '11le.7 ; 0 k the
be!Bnd.(Wy
olhance in
roiclirlf.
What
4hey'll1ell
f()U
is
~bat mor:e lhan.anytllll! die, one man
Gnnd Dl*e IIIII D ¢
ol
iept them competing here, prevented them in many cues !he 110-meler hunllel.
I"""""""l, die PltD and frun dropping out of ithe games, am the man they mean is · Meanwbile, East Gennan
ESTIMATES!
Princess of LiedlteasteiD,
ornmen 1IJOD two more golds
CONTACT
Prince BertU of Sweden, Antigua's learn doc!«.
Wedneeday with a-marie
Hewes no contraptions, oo witd!'s brew, no drugs, Ill he
AckerinaD
·
t
aking
the
high
Prince TaRda of - - and wes .is his two ,good hands mi BOJDe CO!!UJial - · and the
GlfN R. BISSEll
PriDce G' I
olJ:llirawlous results Dr. Leroy .Perry of Pasadena, Calif., jump trilh a leap ol I leet, 4
· MONTREAL, Jfliy U
aDd Baerbel ECkert
· AT
achievJes with them cann&lt;t poiiSi.bly be believ.ed oritboul being ioches
( UPI) - PGilce recards . _
' meten in .22.38
·110l'ITRI:AL (i;JI
the ·ZOO
949-2801
12 bomb scarea were Bad!: in tbe
Wlage seen.
If you're woodering what a Calif()!'$ docla' is do~ with aecoodl. 1'be Germans alao
OR
recorded cmiDg the flnt and in tnining for lllrlr ey!Onl
picked up two bronz.e.rnedala.
Antigua
and
oat
the
UJ
.'S.
team,
the
amwer·
i
s
that
Leroy
PfliTJ
949-2860
-* olthe games aod IeVeii Saturday are American mgh
Thil enough to purb
dNth thrall received. One jumpers Dwi.ght Stees and · lan't a medical doc1!Jr, be's a dtiropradic doctor with apecial·
ol lhe IIUir 1181 directed l!iU Jankilnil. W"db almcst traioirlgln applied kinesiology, and as such, the U.S. Olympc
.
agaiJJit Queen Elizabeth, the entire lq1h ol tbe games. Canmittee doesn't ..ant any part ol him.
Before the Olympics got .w der way, u.s. atbletel ,got up .a
a!M!Uier against Caroliine to wait for their ljg day, the
lCtsDed,' the late Amlrlcan tttu went to their ..,.-ate pelilion lo have Perry included llll the medical staff that would
prepolei~·s daughter, wbo Is
homes to wait out 1111! III!I'Y)I lake care of them here becw1ae ma.oy are his private patients
in Califtmia and know bow much be can help them.
working lor a televlaion I:WG weeks.
Tile athletes (elt so stroogly, they went to Sen . John Tunney
aetwork.
All
proved
(ltCal.) aslring his help, but in the end, Perry didn't make It
with the U.'S. tam.
Mal&amp; USOC officials are lllrait-laced.'J'hey ~U.S.
alblela from being tuated by Perry here 011 the p
t
be
· wam't a medical doc!«, but the athleia plid no llfwtlbl.
They went to be treated by the :»-year-del PfliTJ enrydllr.
In the dileus throw alone, all three U.S. entrantt, gold
inedalid Mac Wilkins, broaze medilllt John Powell lnd
veteran Jay Silvester, came to lim for help. PoweD aaid he
wouldn't have been able to compete ln Sunday's final had It not
been for Perry, who worked on him I« DIOI'e than two bours
that same morning.
After Wllklnll won hla gold medal, he appreciated what
.
Perry had done lor him so much, he gave him his dlacua. Sam
Colsongavehimhiljavelin,and when is the lui time you ever
heard of an an athlete giving anybody ANYTHINm
• Perry Is the Pled Piper of the Olympics. He paid hla awn way
over here, received nothing for ll'ealing any ol the a~ and
fQR All YOUR BUILDING NEEDS
aaid he was happy to do lt. Athletes f!'Oill%1 counlriea llDcked to
his room to be treated by him every day.
.
An athlete would cmne hobbling into hla room with a tad
You otn · avoid costly damag• tnd utlllly
back, a pulled hamstring Or maybe a neck problem, and It
, Mrvlee Interruptions by calling 100-362.wouldn't be long before be oc she would !fillk out again, good as
2714, toll·fr.., 41 hour• before you dig. II
new, ready to c&lt;mpele.
nec....ry, our peopl• will be gild to loct.te
"To make It short, I never would've been~le to run II not lor
, our cablt and mark 1111 location for JOU.
Doc," llll)'ll Antigua aprinter Fred SowerJIY. "John AJdi.Bua
said the same thing before be left here. Doc Perry bu done
more than any one man to keep118 athletes COIIIjlttq In the
' '
Olympics. We caD him 'Doctor Magic Fingers.'"
Of all lhoae here, Tracy Sundlun, head coach of Antigua's
l!"ack and field team, knows Perry best.
.
v 992-2709
"He's not God," says Sundlun. "What he knows can be
f23 S. 3rd Avt.
by anyune-.to a degree. But bla
ll1tl tlllderUJldln8. H&lt;llimp)J . . . . .
1bli.
He llelleve~ In them. I nner lui4
· 16
7:10
chiroP.ractnrs but I've seen what he can do. I had
· and t
let him treat me. He ,:&lt;ared it up In one evening. I've become
his b~est advocate."

- ·

-·
Otywce
n

WMBER, HARDWARE &amp;
BUILDING SUPPLIES

MOORE'S .

.

""
tt·•

'"'
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I

POMEROY ALL-STARS - Competlnc In the Southeastern Ohio Boys League Tournament at Wellston are,
front, 1-r, Randy Mui,Tay, Gregg Thomas, Todd Fife,
Ramie RichardS, Mike WhlUa~h. Roger Kovalchik and

Scott Harria and J. R. Wamsley; aecmd row, Roger
Stewart, coach; Tony JeweU, Mark Boyct, John Beaver,
Randy Stewart, Otis Colt, John Smith arxl Mark Friend; tn ·
back are Harlan Whitlatch, coach, right; Jerry Flelda,
.. center left, ,alKI ~er Kovalchik, coach.

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RU'I'LAND PONY LEAGUE (RANGERS)- Front, 1r, Guy Shuler, Craig Nicinsky, Dave Watkins, M~e
Musser Bobby Williams, Matt Weaver, John Moms,
John J~obs, Herb Noel; second row, coach, Carl Kauff,

Cannel News,
:.. . By the. l)ay

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David Davis, Van Wilford, Kim Dewhurst, Roger
Wamsley , Mike Weyland, Todd Snowden, Andy
Pocklington, and Coach Jim Morrla. Abaent were Brent
Bolin, Dink Kennedy and Steve Lambert.

'

Complete Closeout of
All Star Paint
All Star Latex
Reg.

$4.99

.

Quarts

1.35

All Star Satin Enamel
Gallons

4"

Reg. $2 ,29

Quarts

By Mrs. Herbet1 Roush
.·"r.
: Mrs. Don Manuel and
:&lt;
: daughter Donnita attended a
: rehearsal at the Grace United
• Methodist Church Saturday.
: evening at Gallipolls where
: Donnita was flower girl
: sunday for the wedding of
: Charles Pyles Jr. and Miss
• Karen Lemley. They also
· : attended a dinner following
: rehearsal at the Meigs Inn
:honor-Ing \he.couple Saturday
'
. evemng.
• Sharon, Cindy and Edward
~sited Mr. and Mrs. Roger
:Roush Friday evening.
: Herbert Sayre returned
:pome Wednesday after
:!laving surgery at Holzer
:Medical Center. !drs. Sayre
1-islted Mr . and Mrs. James
:=;eyre at Gallipolis Tuesday
TIJPPERS PLAINS (PEE WEE) - Front, 1-r, Rltndy Fryar, Jimmy Caldwe~. Kevin
:_\vhile Mr . Sayre was
Barber Sean Clemson Tim Eynon, Tonya Fortney, Tara Guthrie, Bobby Brooks; second
:Jlospltalized.
row JJin Caldwell co~ch Tim DOrst, Terri Stout, Kristi Gaddis, Jay Carpenter, Mark
• Mr. and Mrs. Danny Sayre
Srhivers, Paul
Job~ Rice, Bryan Bauman and Howie Caldwell, Coach.
:~if Columbus spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
,_Sayre.
• Mr. and Mrs . Hom~
i Warner moved a new mob~~e
: home to their farm here . .
: They have sold their
•I residence and plan to move
.. soon.
: Mr . and Mrs . Edward
: Lawson and baby , Mr. and
: Mrs. Harold Lawson and son
• of Letart, W. Va ., Mr. and
: Mrs. Bob Lawson and (amUy
: visited Mr . and Mrs. Charles
: Lawson and Wilda . Mr, and
'Mrs. Gary Miller and
:daughter of Bellville were
:recent guests of the Lawsons .
: Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
;Sayre were dinner guests
•Sunday of Mr . and Mrs.
:David Sayre at Antiquity.
:They also visited Mrs.
'
.
:Frances Philson
who
CHESTER (T-BAIL) - F!'Oilt, 1-r, Eric Sim, Todd Clay, Danny Leonard, ~ickey
•returned home recently
Raridolph, Scott Newell; secood row, Bob Davis, cO.ch ; Jeff Roush, Mike Grant, Huey
:accompanied
by
her
Eason, Kyle Davia, Brian Beeler, Billy McLaughlin, Coach RoMle ~Y . Othe~ coaches
:daughter, Virginia, from
were Paul Hirria and John Karachnik. Absent were Mat Harris and Ke1th Karschn1ll:.
:aeveland.
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MOORE'S
AMERICAN HARDW ARE
992-28'18

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$1.79

Reg. $5.99

CHESTER PEE WEE -Front (1-r) Lee Keney, Jilp Wilson, Max Eichinger, Jr., John
Miller, Mike Sima and Dave McLaughlin; second rdw, Dave Edwards, Kenny Ray Riggs,
Keith Stout, Paul Hilrrls, D. J. Randolph, John Edwardll, Todd Tripp, and Coach Max
Eichinger. Absent was Coach Tim Baurn.

iNews
Notes ·
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Reg .

M1 ddlep o rt

eonins,

5"-

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BEFORE

DIGGING
call toll-free,
800-362-2764
'

Columbia Gas, Columbus Southern, Ohio
Belland AT&amp;T Long Lines are all memb•r•
of the Ohio Utlllllec Protection Servlc•.
Thl1 mean• you only have to mak• one ctll
to notify tht utilities of your dlttlng p!IM.

ily Clarice Allen
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
MaUack, Lake Worth, Fla.
and Miss Donna Kaye
MaUack, Washington, IJ,
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Olristy.
Jerry Cleland, Klaus,
Dianne and Debbie; Fort SID,
Okla. , spent a week with Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Wickham, Richmond, were
overnight guests of Mr. and
Mrs. B. K. Ridenour.
Mr. and Mrs. VIrgO Wood,
RUTLAND DODGERS (LI'ITLE LEAGUE) - Front, 1-r, Tommy Sinunons, Steve
Springfield, were weekend
Patterson Brad Alexander, Ricky Edward, Marty Spangler; back row, Asst. Coach
guests of Mrs. Letha Wood.
Tommy Shrun(l)s, Mike Edwards, Troy Brooks, Paul Michaels, Robbie Berger, Coach Gene
Mr. and Mrs. WIUiam
Wise. Absent were Chad Williams, Jinuny ~illen, Duane Jones, Todd Eads, and Shawn
McCulloch, ColumbUA, !pellt
Eads.
Wednesday with her llialer,
Mrs. Audrey Woode.
.
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Hartung and daughters·,
Louisville, Ky ., were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Nice .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Columbus, were weekend
guests of Mrs. Opal Eichinger
and family .
Mr. and Mrs. George .
Celani, Utica, Mich., were '
recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Keller.
Garrett Worthen, Canton,
was a recent visitor o( Mr.
' ,''i
and Mrs. Ralph Keller.
• l""'!&lt;
. '
Mrs. Oma Allen, Leesburg,
Fla ., visited Thursday
evening will! Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton ADen.
Mrs. Erma Hellman spent
a week with her grandson,
Billy Hellman and family, in
Naples, Fla.
TUPPERS PLAINS (T-BALL)- Front, 1-r, Bryan Chadwell, Edla Bail~y , Dana Eynoo, .
Mr . and Mrs. Edgar
Joey Young Eddie Collins David Rice, Jeff Caldwell, Jamie Myers, DaVId Abbott; hack
Hartung and son Jed of Texas
row, Amy Connally, Brya~ Durst; Larry Spencer, Kri&amp;tl Hawk, Brian Fryar, Jeff Sayre, · spent several days with Mr.
Allen Tripp, Kenny Ritchie. In back, Coaches Charles Collins and Duane Wolfe.
. and Mrs . Tom Nice.
Mr. ADen Weber, Akron ,
spent a few days with Mr. and
Mrs . Ralph Keller.
The Chester high school
......·-, ,. I~~
class of 31 had their aMual
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picnic at the fire house,
;
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Arthur
DeTray visited in Goldsboro,
N.C. with Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Peacock and family . Robyn
and Todd returned home wilb
their grandparents lor a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Peacock are
aMounclng the birth of a
daughler on July 20.

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.:Fairview
•

Dries quickly .

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Gallon

Goes On
Easily.

Otester
News Notes

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SYRACUSE PEE WEE - (CHAMPS SOUTHERN PEE WEE) - Front, I tor, Shawn

CumIngham, Timmy Willis, Barry McCoy, Mike Kloes, Scott Me Phail; second row, Randy

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Arms J Mark Salser I Darlan
Roush J Richie Davis, Robert Richie, Deroo Stafford, Robert
•

Pantasote wanls
. activity curbed
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greelelt!l!his

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·Mrs. Evelyn Ingram, Mrs .
Jane O'Neil and sons of
Columbus, 0 . spent a few
days here at the Lee home,·
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Grueser
and fanilly of Logan,
.
OhiO and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
OrrofChester,O.visitedwith
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee and
family on Sunday.
Jenny Jo Grueser is
spending a few days with the
~ Robert Lee famlly.
·: Mr . and Mrs. Arnold
: Thordson of Cedarville, 0.
: visited with Mr . and Mrs.
: Homer Circle and other
• relatives.
: Miss Francine Perry of
: Holland, Ohio spent a few
: days with her gr andn!other,
· : Mary Circle. Mr . and Mrs.
• James Circle o( New Haven
: were at the Circle home on
: Sunday.
: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur. E.
• Johnson spent Sunday af·
: ternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
: Uoyd Johnson and daughter
: of MiddlePOrt.

NOW AT

VAllEY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

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boJ.ing finals, matching the
best lhowing for the country
in modern limes.
Joining Tate in victory

Wednesday were brothers
LeaD and Michael Spinks of
St. Louis, both 011 unanimous
decisions. Leon, a light
heavyweight, mauled
Ottomar Sachse of East
Germaay and Michael, a
middleweight, won over
Polanil's Pya.ard Puiewiz
after kDoeking him down with
a crunching right to the head
in the .!lleCOOd round.
Howl!: a, the perfect day in
the ~ was nlined. wben
Tellml!igbt Oint Jacboo,
•the Pin Am cbampim from
Nasbvli!e, Term., lost a 3-2
decisioolo Pedro Gamarro of
Venezuela.

••

a

U. S. boxers advance
country.
Now East Gennaey has

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Willis·, in back, Coaches Barry McCoy
and Paul Kloes.
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•,· POINT PLEASANT _ A
(our-week long strike at the
fanlasote Company took a
new tum Tuesday when the
dompany filed a formal
domplalnt qalnlt the union.
r;t names the lntern11tonal
Wnlted Rubber Workers,
'-ocal 797, and Its prealdent
Wade Randolph and 15'others
Q

objects to puncture tires ;
excessive
numbers of pickets
Pantasote Ia&gt;aeeklnll an
ocder of the coit lbal would , at the main gate; and
prevent bloc"'w• . of a West threatening the sarety,
-•
Virginia Public Highway; welfare llld personal lives of
personnel
besides
threatening damage to the
on
property of the perSOIIIlel.
geslllll'llll
Approximately 79 union
employes walked off their
jobs midnight July 2 afler

as defendants . .j .

Grange, made their
annual visit to Laurel Grange
Point Rock News N0 t eS Stale
Saturday night for the pur,

falling to accept a new three
year contract.
A bea~ing on the complaint
By Waaetta Radekto
was held before Judge James
Mrs. Henry ·Turner has
Lee Thompson at 7 p.m.
returned home alter having
Wednesday.
A federal mediatQr is ex- undergone tests at the Holzer
pected to meet with Medical Center .
management and union of- · Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Holliday, Judy, Gary and
ficials Friday.
Itloyd, enjoyed a short

\

vacation trip through Kentucky. They visited Jenny
Wiley Park, Natural Bridge,
Wave Land Shrine and other
points of interest around
Prestonsburg and Lexington.
Mr . and Mrs. Mendel
Jordan, Dep~es of the Ohio

pose
of
inspection.
Everything went precisely as
planned except for one small
difficulty, the failure of the
eieclricity . The Deputies and
offlcers of the grange
proceeded with the business
at hand by the ai~ of an oil

lamp and several flash Ughts.
The setting made the
historical part of the program
very realistic.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Holliday, Judy, Gary and
Floyd, Mr . and Mrs. Don
Bums, Mr .. and Mrs. G. A.
Radekln 'and granddaughter,
Amy J o, a tlended "Gallla
Co untry " , a
musical
production on the Bob Evans
Fann .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Morris
visited her mother, Mrs .
Erma Nelson and her nephew
Jo Nelson. Mrs . Nelson
returned home with them and
enlered a.. hospital ln San
Bernardino, Calli.
Mrs. Edward Coen llld son
John
David ·attended
Christian Church Camp at
Darwin last yeek. · ~

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SUMMER SALE
CONTINUES

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DJSPLAY PLAQUE - Mrs. Betty McGinness, Gallipolis, .left, and Mrs. Nancy Reed ,
Pllmtroy, are piciiD'ed with a memorial plaque which ha$ been1placed at the Meigs County
M111tum In P&lt;meroy IJliiTklng the location of the museum's mini-thea~. The theater was
provided by Mrs. McGinnessapdMrs. Ree!(lnmemory of lheirl)lOther,lhe llte Julia Baker
Bean, Gallipolis. The plllque features a brief sketch of Mr$. Bean's life as weUas her
photograph In color. The theater, the most outstanding feature of the musewn, was first
lllled during the o!Bervance of Heritage Swlday on Jlme 23, 1974. Howewr, the memorial
plaque was placed mly this week.

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BOGOTA, Colll!ribia (UP! )
When the priCj! of
Colombian coffee m the New
York manet came down
alighUy from the record
levela of Mly and June, it
bn)Uiht • si8h ci relief lo .u.e
Colombian government and
the state-controlled exporters

pi~ Were seen as more of a
threat than a benefit to the
Colombian ecmomy, which
relies m aflee for half its
es:port earnings.
President Alfmao lopez
Michelsen said Colombia
feared "cha!npqniratlon" -

orpniatiolls,
«AA July 21, tbe beans l'rom
tbe ColomhiJD Andes slopes,

on the American and
European markets people
migbt as well drink
champagne instead.
.
Industry eq&gt;erts also
watched with crowfnl
cmcern marltel!ng studies
sbo~ 1111111Y yoq adults
now prefer to drink cala or
otbel' soft &amp;inks insleld of
coffee. 1bey feared coffee
might become an &lt;Md people 's
d.rinlr. wit·b a sbrinlr.ing
&lt;XIISIIIIJer public.
The colfee bonanza li1so
troqgbt • ~er~es ct1 int.omal
pro ·b i·e ms . Feufu l
Colombia's gr.owers, with

tbe 1110111 aolllbt-atter "sol\"
coffee ln the world, 1fl!re
•ed at $1.45 a poUnd in

New York. That ns IIIOI'e
lllln dwble tbe 65 oed:s a
poiDI

prk.i a

;e. earlier,

coffee beixming·so espensive

but 'ftll below · tbe reccrd
$1.•• of early J~a~e.
The coffee lmanra ns
ca~ by a severe frost ill
Brazil durin1 the 1975
S. tl 1ws D Hemifll\hete winter
tbe dvll war in Aripa and
the
eanbq1111lr.e
In
Gatemala, wtacb destroyed
mad! of that country's lbeir lriDdfal1 inc&lt;me, mig~¢
itnabctwe:
stan buyin&amp; e~ In
l)!knHe lboald ba-ve been sicht and lime inflatial skylbe DIU! beoefidary of the high. tbe government set
coffee ' - as lbe !leaXid anificiaU.r In domestic
. . . . ~ill the w.rld coffee prices.
.,.. Brm1.
The !blambial '&amp;roWel'. the
lroaicelly, tbe record \yjJical J11111 Valdes of telm-

sion and movie commercial
fame, receives only about 60
cents a pound for his •coffee.
The rest of the foreign lnoome
is kept outside the country
and bas pushed Colombia's
gold reserves to all-time

!Mhs.

Hut the growers were
reluctant tD offer their beans
.at the artifidaUy low export
prices and either held them
back wai~ for .a more
fawrable price or sold tD
smuggl~n who tried with
increasing success to get
coffee out of the country
outside the offici81 export
quotas.
llijackings of big trucks
loaded with coffee became a
common occurence and
coffee smuggling became an
OCCUJlltiOn almost as
lucratin
as cocaine
trafficking.
To ·Induce Juan Vaides and
his mates to sell their coffee
at official 'export prices, the
go\rernment established a
special Coffee Savings Bond
wltth about .$30 and .offered

. Balance sheet notes

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BETBlEHAM, Pa. (UP!) - Bethlehem Steel Corp.
Wedl..my nprtet~ ·1Jl8ber results for libe lleCald quarter of
the year but said eamlngsf&lt;r tbe first Bix moo t:bs wer.e sharply
lowe- Chan 197$ levels.
The cnnpany, the nation's $tCmd largest II'Qducer,
l'qlOIUd net ioome f&lt;r tbe eeoond quarter of SSU mi!lim, or
$1.2$ per !bare, compared with net ioome of 149.7 million, or
$1.14 per !bare, a year ago.
Net inca:De for !be first balf of 1916 was $8%.8 million, or
$1..!10 per ,!bare, down fnm $131 millim, or sue per share,
eilmed in !be first llix mootha last year.

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wcfre*l asts longer.

wcm HDvM .,.... ptow.dls ilcwlgi!!J.a.t~ng "'C~teC:Jo~C~n _ . . _
..,.... ,-. - .._ --. leW ,.._ " •
Ida antJ. on --.... f1l
...... ~0. 'b Ulilnlr)' P Oore

lillldirlf NIIOUil ibra'td5.

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OF OHIO

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(ACROSS FROM HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER)

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NOW OPEN

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9 AM · 9 PM DAILY AND 12-8 PM SUNDAY

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WE FILL ALL DOCTORS

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PRESCRIPTIONS

_,

2 REGISTERED PHARMACISTS
TO SERVE YOU
DON PUWN - DAN MEADOWS ·

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lUaJ£ ~ Sclnger 1\M alber
Mel LVCITE II 6Dr' 1D '1M • - . . a builf.ill
TCGb ·dun ... WI )WI 1011P "Wlllr. G.l

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li.OTE .• ~ --~ !'sOu,..,.!

PICKENS HARIMARE
MASON. W.VA.
HOuRS:
Monday ttlru Thursday &amp; Saturday 1:00 to
5:31, Fridu 1:00 to 1: 00.

S:. WUIS (UP! ) - """"'- BuJcb, tbe lrewing giant ,
had lbarply lower eamlngs far Ole MC(Dd CJ1I8IW and first
ball of Ibis year, llllinly as a raalt of the fhl&gt;ee.mmtll
1'raJUen ~ aplnst t:be mnpany.
Netinccmeforthe.~was•.flmillioo, or2%ce!lts a
!bare, on sales ofP59.116 miDion,COIDpared lo~ million, or
SOceuta e !bare, last year oo Aiel of $5ZI.ll2million.
Fint-balf profit tmnbJed to $!.Uti million, ..- 4.3 cents a
bre, on aalel of f745.33 milllm frvmPJ.Jt million, or86 cents
I !bare, on sales of
million.

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Stiversville News Notes

•·

Mrs. Ada Fox and son Bill,
, Belmont, Ohio, Mrs. Lucille
Allen, Newa~k. Mrs. Bill
Mlddleswart, and Mr. and
:':' Mrs. Jim Mlddleawart and
• Janet, local, caDed on Mrs .
... NeU Mlddleawart during llle
past week.
;
Mrs. Ruth Blackwell and
, Marshallene Parsons,
,. Olarleston, W. Va., Mrs.
• Lucille Southall, Staat's
• · Mllla, W. Va., Mrs. Ullian
Deem, Parlr.ersburl, W. Va.,
1\frs. Lottie Whited, Belpre,
1\fr. and Mn. ThOmpson, T.
R. Hart, and Jack Simms,
GaWplll and Mrs. Richard
Abels, Long Bottom, Yisited
at !be home of Mr. and Mrs.
Louis A. DeLuz, recently .
1\fr. and 1\fra. Gene (Jauger,
Mt. Vernon, Ohio, spent
Thursday afternoon with llfr .
and Mrs. Gene Carpenter and
Mn. Sy!Yia Carpenter.
Thomu Lewis, Nitro, W.
Va., Brenda Lewis, Red
House, W. Va., 1\frs. Gladys
Bryan! and Marshall,
Olarleaton, W. Va., Mn.

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NEW YOIIK (UPI ) - Uniropl Inc., tbe rubber and
plastics maker, said 1111 ileCCI1d quarter net income fell 1o f1 .3
million from
a yeat earlier as a te11111t d the etrrent
Illite by the IJJited Rllbber Workers.

"million

ACTUAL USE REPORT

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AtJS'l11lUTY PROGRAM
WARREN, Olio (UPI ) All 8U!Iertty prognm tbat
lllUle city olfldala belieoe
1lill bead olf a S'100,0ll0 budget
deficit is scheduled lo begin

MIDDL£1'011T VILLAGE IN
YILLA8£ CLERK
MIODUI'OIIT, OHIO m ..

Mmday.
Mayor Arthur Richards
Wedoelday IIIIIOiliiCed that
police, fire and service
wwken 1lill begin a foor-day
wort ftek dejgned tD 18111!
an estimated pXI,OliO by !be
end of !be year.
Several city councilmen
llid aD city workers paid out
of the general fund !bould go
on the four-day week, Dot jlllt
lboae in the aafety and
eervlce departmenta.
Earlier tbil ,.-, the city

bad lo lly o l f - pallce and
firemen and dole down a fire
staUon because of a
mmelary crllla.

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to answer

by Nls Penelope·

Ben Franklin Store
Announces A Gigantic•• •

Starting Friday, Ju.ly 30
.

Clint · Birch and daughter
Leota attended ihe Singer
Raunion at Royal Oak Park
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Wilkinson
and
sons,
Columbus, were weekend
guests of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ruda Durst.
Nicki Dawn VanMeter
visited Elaine Lehew on
Mmday afternoon .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
VanMeter, Columbus, and
Mrs. Mike Evans, Alica,
Cindy and Ryan, · local,
visited Mrs. Ada VanMeter
recently.
Mrs. Mildred Circle, Mrs.
Zetta " ' yd, Mrs . Reva

THURSDAY tiL 12 NOON
'

FRillY .UNnL 8 PM
.

MASON
FURNITURE
•
Herman wart

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Up To $3,000.00
Worth of Stock Reduced
•

%

UP TO

OFF

SAVINGS

-WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.- · ·
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~noon ,

Mon., Tllft., Wed. &amp; S.t.-1:30t115:00

77:1-5592

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At 9:30A.M •.'

Mrs. Powell dies in Oxford

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All Baseball Gloves
'
and Ia lis, 20% ·o H
Women's
Ha Iter Tops, 20% OH

c00ksh.o''"
~4't FIXINS 10 t~

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Children's Sun Dresses
and Sportswear, Y2 Price

OPEN

Sunday _thru Thursday
10:00 am lo 10 pm
Friday and Saturday
10:00·am 1o 12:00 am

CANDY SPECIAL
Reg. 98' to $1.19 lb., Now 60e

WHILE VISITING

'

POMEROY

J

MacGilliwty

"They've been using
WASHINGTON - In answer to a reporter's question as tD
microbial degradation how he felt about William Shakespear's, "It is better to ha ve
proceaaes at the nearby loved and lost than never 1o have loved at all", Representative
Hyperlon sewage treatment Hayes replled, "To Hell with Wllliam Shakespear!"
plant for years. They dispose
of waste, rather than rna ke FROM OUR MAR. BAG
fuel, but the basics are the
Big Mac : You are the only person I can turn to In my
same."
. bourDear
of grief. ' As you know, I didn't get the Democratic
Unlike the !l'oduction of nomination for president. I falllo understand why the voters
methane In garbage dumps, dld not give me this n0111ination In view of my answers o~ the
which takes about Ove yeari llsues. I also was turned down as a vice president. There IS no
.lo get under way aild allows ooe mtre deserving of llle honor ,than I am. Could you teU me
recovery of mly about 25 w50 tlle rellll0118 why 1 didn't get the nomination for president or
per cent of tile available vice ll'esident?
methane, the proposed plant
Signed: Scoop Jackson
could fire . up inunediately
Dear Scoop: There Is no question of your quaUfications for
and recover close to 100 per office, however, you leave a little bit wdesire in the charisma
cent of .the gas, Brown said. · department .
A plant of the type being
First. of au,. you don't smile enough. That Ia the most ·
planned would produce no Important qualification a person can have. Perha~ you should
amelly odors to annoy Ita see a surgeon and have him perform an operation on your
neighbors, Brown said. He mouth so !bat you could have a continuous smUe. Better still,
aald the g1111 !l'oduced by .the you may bave tD get a smile tattooed on your face. The second
pllnl1'oilld iriltlaDy have the thing you did not do IS run on a program supported by the
amen of rOtten egSJI, but peanut industry. Since you lire from the State of Washington, I
could be "cleaned up" 119 that would suggest in the fuiure that you adopt !be salmon as your
odor would be replaced with a ride 1o fame. You coUld tell the public how much you like
less obno:doua one required salmon and perhaps even carry a salmon when you discuss the
for aU natural gas.
issues. This helps.
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Initial studies by Southern
1 don't think that it amounts to a unker's damn how you
Callfornllr Edllon and UCLA
stand
on the issues. You did make one mistake in that you want
Indicate the heat value of
tD
give
all of the money In tile U. S. Treasury tD the State of
waste In Southern California
New
York.
Also, when you indicated that you wanted Israel tD
- a sub8tance that does
own
the
State
of New Jersey, it did not help you with the voters
nothing more today than fill
up canyons in tlle area's In New Jersey. The popullr feeling now is that everybody ·
mountain ranges - could should have something, but don'.t give a state to a foreign
equal 50 per cent of the country,
energy that part of the state · U you will make these changes and forget about such
now gets from burning things as women:s lib, balancing the budget, etc., you will w.in
tile next time around.
natural gas and oil.
Signed : Big Mac
Brown said Southern
Dear ilig Mac: Why didn 't you list Karl Krautter as
CaUfornia, with its stable
looking
like Tal'281l?
cUmate that avoids seasonal
Signed : Edna.
changes
In · garbage
Dear Big Mac : You miled to point out that Bob Bowen
composition, is more suited to
resemples
U. S. Grant. I believe that you made 'a rriistake in
the proeess tllan most other
not
Including
Bob on your list.
·
areas of the United States.
Signed
:
Chuck
.
On a nationwide basis, he
said, solid waste from ·all
urban areas probably could Dear Big Mac:
Here is my list of matched names for your contest. They
!l'oduce no more than 6 per
couldn't
pOssibly be rigl)t because I don't know all of the names
cent of U.S. natural gas
on here. I know the names but not·the faces. But it's been fun
needs;
anyway, also enjoy aU the articles.
Snow White
Margaret Fullrod
Cary Grant
Fred Crow
Jimmy Carter
William Downey
Martha Washlnglon
Goldie Clendenin
Ernie Pyle
Roger paniels
:Sitting Bull
Ted Reed
Martin L. King
· Lightning Boyd
·Edison Hobstetter
Julius Caeser
$1,000 in sales numbered 96 in Thomas Jeffe!'SJn
Vernon Weber
Archie McKinney
1974. The value of all Santa Claus
Archie Stegal
agricultural products sold by Omar Sliarilf
Dave Cummings
these lanns totaled $27,000. Henry Kissinger
Phil Kelly
Figures for farms with . Ronald Reagan
sales of $2 500 or more are·' The Lone Ranger
Dale Warner.
shown for' 1974 and 1969.
Sincerely, Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore, 1648 Lincoln Hgts.,
These farms accounted for Pcmeroy.
$6,698,000 of all agricultural
products sold in 1974 and
$4,760,000 in 1969.
She was employed at Ox·
They numbered 254 in 1974
Norma Louise . Wayland
and 276 in 1969. They average Powell, 52, of Oxford, for- ford University. During
size decreased from 216 to 269 merly of Middleport, died World War II, Mrs. Powell ·
acres during the five years. Wednesday morning at an served in the WAVES. She is
The value per acre climbed Oxford hospital follo~~?ng a a member of the American
Legion, Feeney·Bennett Post
from $209 w$378, raising the brief illness.
128, and the Auxiliary of that
average value per !ann from
$59,932 to $101,579.
The market value of Taylor, Mrs . Ruth Sereno, 1 ~~iving are her husband,
livestock and their products Mr. and Mrs. Rober: Harten- Robert Powell; a daughter,
on these farms was $4,629,1100 bach, Mrs. Elva Dailey, Mr. Gloria, and two sons, David
In 1974; poultry and their and Mrs. R. R. Durst, Mrs. and Ricky, all at home ; her
Mrs .
Emma
products, $762,000; and crop Ruby Bryant, Debra and mother'
Dav~,
Brenda
and
Thomas
Wayland,
and
a
brother,
sales, including nursery
products and hay, $1,288,000, U!w1s, Mrs. Mary Gree~' Olarles Wayland of Mid·
and forest products, $19,000. Launa and Leah , Loms dleport and several uncles
DeLuz, Ruda Durst, Mrs. Pat and auntS. She was preceded
Lemay Hauge~ and Paul in death by her father,
Dean Evans vlslled Mrs. Iva Norman .
·
Carpenter and daQ~hter last
Funeral services will be
week.
.
held
Friday , time to be an·
VIolet Ritchie, Mrs. Freda
Mr. and Mrs . Charles nounced, at the Marshall
Middleawart, Bobbi and Brett Cozart and family, Colwn- Smith Funeral Home in
Price, Stacy and Tanuny bus, visited her motller' Mrs, . Oxford. Burial will he in a
Proffitt and Donnette Goldie .Clendenin , over the ColUIJlbus cemetery.
Talbott, local, visited Mr. and past weekend.
Mrs. Bill Bryant and family
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst
made a business trip to
Belpre· on Wednesday af.

POINT PLEASANT - The
niarket value of all
agricultural products sold by
tlje 748 farms Iii .Mason
County lrl 1974 amounted to
$7,441,000, aecording to a
preliminary report of 1974
Census of Agriculture
released today by the U. S.
Department of Commerce's
Bureau of the Census.
The farmeri are for farms
·qualifying
under. the
definiUon first used for the
1959 Census of Agriculture :
Places of less than 10 acres
were counted as farms il
sales of agricultural products
amounted to, or normally
would amount to, at least
$250. Places of. 10 acres or
or . mtfre ,were counted
as farms If sales of
agricultural products for the
year amounted to, or normally would amount lo, at
least $SO.
Famls reporUng less than

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Almost impossible

· Fann products wQrth
nearly .$7¥2 millions

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FRUTH'S PHARMACY

rerord Aug. i .

'PIIISBURGH (UPI I - Copperweld Oorp. Wednesday
repartee! llecmd quar1A!r prOiits of $3:7' millillll, or 11.34 per
~Due, a ~of !per ct'llt from recitrd profits of ~;a million, or
U.48 per lilare, dUring lhe same period last year.
Net .sales fw the lleCIIIId ..,ur were f77.6 millioo, an
iDcreue of2 per ~owr last year's sales of f76.4millioo.

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~p:efau!d.

Beauty

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"We are going 1o take ,the
organic wute from Southern
California and tum It into
aornethinl llllll'e uaefu.l than
ordinlry landfUI," Brown
said. ''We're reaDy maklnl
advanced appUcaUon of old
and ~ t.echr!oJoly."
Brown «nd U1i! other TRW,
Inc., cbemllle Clll hla team at
Redmdo Beach, CaUl., are
workln8 with Southern Call·
'nrnla Edlaon 'a research and
development bloloiY section
and the school of publlc
healtll at the Unlvenlty of
California at Loa Angeles.
They hope to win an EneriY
Rl!leltch and Development
Admlniatration contract that
could lead within three years
or ao to a pilot plant turning
!Otona of waste Into 1!)0,000 tD
120,000 cubic feet of methane
ps each day.
The ll'oce811 Brown's team
Ia workfnl with Ia called
anerobic digestion. It uaes
microbes In a sealed tank to
"digest" tile waste and turn It
Into gas.
·~we believe we can gather
different wastes and mix
them ao tbe micro-orpnisms
that make methane gas
efficiently .wlll
ihink
(prbage) Ia tasty stuff,"'
Brown said.

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RUTLAND - 1'1\-elve of !he · Nicholson. Middleport: Mary
28membersofthegradualing Kathryn ( Davis) Holter, Rl.
class oll941 of Rutland High l , Long Bottom; Bette
School att~nded a 3Sth I Dunfee ) Biggs, R.F.D.,
reunion atthunnuai banquet PornetO)'; Maxine (Ogdin J
held at the RuUand Grade Griffith, Roule 3. Pomeroy;
School Saturday nigh\ May Dorothy (Wise ) Rllthburn ,
221\d.
Columbus . Top
row,
Atlending wert!, front, 1 to La wren c e Snowden,
r.
Dorothy (Molden ) Columbus; Thunnan Carsey,
R.F.D., Middlep&lt;Jrt; Glenna
(Oarlt ) G riffilh , Columbus;
me for each 275;pound, two- Don Morgan, Daylon; Donald
:sack ''load." The bonds ne1l8 Shrader ,. Philo and teacher T.
.per cent .intereSt every six c. Porter, The Plains.
Mr. ,and Mrs. Porter joined ..
months, but despite a
nationwide public relations the class l&lt;lr their class
campaign oo radio to sell reunion . Mr . Porter ta-ught
fanners m the idea, initial ·Agriculture at Rutland High
interest has 'been lukewarm. and now is and has been
The wide ,gap between the . superintendent for several
windfall coffee earnings 011 years at the Tni County '
- foreign markets and the low Vocati o nal Col lege ,
domestic prices caused Nelsonville. ,lie headed the
political JrOblems f(r the planning, constructi on and
Lopez g&lt;&gt;vernment when qperabon of the vocational
:leftist peasant 'organizations school from its beginning in
. grumbled
about
the 1964.
wooklngman ,no! reaping the
Oassmales attending but
full benefits of the coffee not pictured were Helen
boom.
(Locke) Atkins, London, and
fli8 8J'OWeTS grumbled that Kathleen (Donahue) Fink,
pickers had heard of .the RuUand.
.fanf:Bstir·coffee !rices abroad
Another · teacher present
and demanded · more wages was Carl Denison, Rutland,
which could drive them out of who taught \:hemistry,
business if llhe market Scienoe and Math .and was
sudden!!' dropped again.
the football eoach.
"The "'hole so-ealled coffee
bonanza is oothing but a
great
bill
disaster,"
commented the owner of a
radio chain with .rura l
contacts. " People don 'I
reaiir.e the hidden dangers."

PI iiSBORGH {UP I) - '!be directin of Westingbouse
Electric C«'p. Wetlnesdlry declared quanterly l!ividends of 2U
Cfllts ·per !bare on the cmun~m st:ooi: and 9S cents on the

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Twelve of 28 attend 1941 reunion

Booming coffee prices no

Brus

t

EDWARD I . DeWNG '
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~
Dr. Fred Brown baa turned
hlllllhta from the eearch for
life m Man to the creative
. . of prbqe llll Earth.
Brown , who spent five
yean headlnc the team that
.buUt the 1 life detection
lnlltrumentl for the VIking 1
M111'1 lander, recently took
cblrle of a group of chemlats
workln8 011 ways to turn
terre1trlal wastes Into a
lllbltltute for scarce natural
By

SALE SHOES ..
TO
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Garbage on Earth may ·
become energy source.

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Science today

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7-'!'be DlllySerXJnel,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Ju.ly

There IIJ'e f- deceued Wogan , Columbua; Ellene
clusmates. HObart Nelaon, (Darst) Ward, Collllll~ ;
Dexter, and Lawrence Biker• Cecil Hewitt, W!lllamt~e.u, ~·
Seiem Center, both killed In N. J.; Carl Moore, M.._., ,
World Will' II, and Mabel Micl\igan ; Leanna ( RiinJ, I'
Russell and Thelma Michael. field ) Jacka, LaniiYWe:
Unable to · attend were Homer Ruuell, Col~: •.
Catherine (Morris) Pausha, I.ucille (Spauldlnc) ~ • '
Bloomington, Ind.; Margaret Columbus: Reva (Wilemia) ,.
(Fink ) Siichuk, Rittman i Woodruff, Columbua, «nd :• .
Darrell
Burson , New EVelyn (Goff) Dalila, ~ •· .
Carlisle: Ca ~rine (BoUn ) viDe .

MIIOft, W.Va.

Country Cousins Cooksboppe
Don't forget to register for a FREE
10-speed bicycle to be given away at
1:30 Saturday, July 31st .. No
purchase necessary. WMPO wtll be
broadcasting at 1:00 live from
Country Cousins Cookshoppe
Saturday, July 31st. so stop in and
say hello.

lb.

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
ilt~t&lt;tr•••••······················

BEN-.-FRAN KLIIN
PHONE
992-3498

200-202 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRI_pAY
TIL 8 PM
SAT. TIL 5

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SUMMER SALE
CONTINUES

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DJSPLAY PLAQUE - Mrs. Betty McGinness, Gallipolis, .left, and Mrs. Nancy Reed ,
Pllmtroy, are piciiD'ed with a memorial plaque which ha$ been1placed at the Meigs County
M111tum In P&lt;meroy IJliiTklng the location of the museum's mini-thea~. The theater was
provided by Mrs. McGinnessapdMrs. Ree!(lnmemory of lheirl)lOther,lhe llte Julia Baker
Bean, Gallipolis. The plllque features a brief sketch of Mr$. Bean's life as weUas her
photograph In color. The theater, the most outstanding feature of the musewn, was first
lllled during the o!Bervance of Heritage Swlday on Jlme 23, 1974. Howewr, the memorial
plaque was placed mly this week.

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BOGOTA, Colll!ribia (UP! )
When the priCj! of
Colombian coffee m the New
York manet came down
alighUy from the record
levela of Mly and June, it
bn)Uiht • si8h ci relief lo .u.e
Colombian government and
the state-controlled exporters

pi~ Were seen as more of a
threat than a benefit to the
Colombian ecmomy, which
relies m aflee for half its
es:port earnings.
President Alfmao lopez
Michelsen said Colombia
feared "cha!npqniratlon" -

orpniatiolls,
«AA July 21, tbe beans l'rom
tbe ColomhiJD Andes slopes,

on the American and
European markets people
migbt as well drink
champagne instead.
.
Industry eq&gt;erts also
watched with crowfnl
cmcern marltel!ng studies
sbo~ 1111111Y yoq adults
now prefer to drink cala or
otbel' soft &amp;inks insleld of
coffee. 1bey feared coffee
might become an &lt;Md people 's
d.rinlr. wit·b a sbrinlr.ing
&lt;XIISIIIIJer public.
The colfee bonanza li1so
troqgbt • ~er~es ct1 int.omal
pro ·b i·e ms . Feufu l
Colombia's gr.owers, with

tbe 1110111 aolllbt-atter "sol\"
coffee ln the world, 1fl!re
•ed at $1.45 a poUnd in

New York. That ns IIIOI'e
lllln dwble tbe 65 oed:s a
poiDI

prk.i a

;e. earlier,

coffee beixming·so espensive

but 'ftll below · tbe reccrd
$1.•• of early J~a~e.
The coffee lmanra ns
ca~ by a severe frost ill
Brazil durin1 the 1975
S. tl 1ws D Hemifll\hete winter
tbe dvll war in Aripa and
the
eanbq1111lr.e
In
Gatemala, wtacb destroyed
mad! of that country's lbeir lriDdfal1 inc&lt;me, mig~¢
itnabctwe:
stan buyin&amp; e~ In
l)!knHe lboald ba-ve been sicht and lime inflatial skylbe DIU! beoefidary of the high. tbe government set
coffee ' - as lbe !leaXid anificiaU.r In domestic
. . . . ~ill the w.rld coffee prices.
.,.. Brm1.
The !blambial '&amp;roWel'. the
lroaicelly, tbe record \yjJical J11111 Valdes of telm-

sion and movie commercial
fame, receives only about 60
cents a pound for his •coffee.
The rest of the foreign lnoome
is kept outside the country
and bas pushed Colombia's
gold reserves to all-time

!Mhs.

Hut the growers were
reluctant tD offer their beans
.at the artifidaUy low export
prices and either held them
back wai~ for .a more
fawrable price or sold tD
smuggl~n who tried with
increasing success to get
coffee out of the country
outside the offici81 export
quotas.
llijackings of big trucks
loaded with coffee became a
common occurence and
coffee smuggling became an
OCCUJlltiOn almost as
lucratin
as cocaine
trafficking.
To ·Induce Juan Vaides and
his mates to sell their coffee
at official 'export prices, the
go\rernment established a
special Coffee Savings Bond
wltth about .$30 and .offered

. Balance sheet notes

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BETBlEHAM, Pa. (UP!) - Bethlehem Steel Corp.
Wedl..my nprtet~ ·1Jl8ber results for libe lleCald quarter of
the year but said eamlngsf&lt;r tbe first Bix moo t:bs wer.e sharply
lowe- Chan 197$ levels.
The cnnpany, the nation's $tCmd largest II'Qducer,
l'qlOIUd net ioome f&lt;r tbe eeoond quarter of SSU mi!lim, or
$1.2$ per !bare, compared with net ioome of 149.7 million, or
$1.14 per !bare, a year ago.
Net inca:De for !be first balf of 1916 was $8%.8 million, or
$1..!10 per ,!bare, down fnm $131 millim, or sue per share,
eilmed in !be first llix mootha last year.

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wcfre*l asts longer.

wcm HDvM .,.... ptow.dls ilcwlgi!!J.a.t~ng "'C~teC:Jo~C~n _ . . _
..,.... ,-. - .._ --. leW ,.._ " •
Ida antJ. on --.... f1l
...... ~0. 'b Ulilnlr)' P Oore

lillldirlf NIIOUil ibra'td5.

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OF OHIO

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(ACROSS FROM HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER)

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NOW OPEN

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9 AM · 9 PM DAILY AND 12-8 PM SUNDAY

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WE FILL ALL DOCTORS

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PRESCRIPTIONS

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2 REGISTERED PHARMACISTS
TO SERVE YOU
DON PUWN - DAN MEADOWS ·

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lUaJ£ ~ Sclnger 1\M alber
Mel LVCITE II 6Dr' 1D '1M • - . . a builf.ill
TCGb ·dun ... WI )WI 1011P "Wlllr. G.l

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li.OTE .• ~ --~ !'sOu,..,.!

PICKENS HARIMARE
MASON. W.VA.
HOuRS:
Monday ttlru Thursday &amp; Saturday 1:00 to
5:31, Fridu 1:00 to 1: 00.

S:. WUIS (UP! ) - """"'- BuJcb, tbe lrewing giant ,
had lbarply lower eamlngs far Ole MC(Dd CJ1I8IW and first
ball of Ibis year, llllinly as a raalt of the fhl&gt;ee.mmtll
1'raJUen ~ aplnst t:be mnpany.
Netinccmeforthe.~was•.flmillioo, or2%ce!lts a
!bare, on sales ofP59.116 miDion,COIDpared lo~ million, or
SOceuta e !bare, last year oo Aiel of $5ZI.ll2million.
Fint-balf profit tmnbJed to $!.Uti million, ..- 4.3 cents a
bre, on aalel of f745.33 milllm frvmPJ.Jt million, or86 cents
I !bare, on sales of
million.

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Stiversville News Notes

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Mrs. Ada Fox and son Bill,
, Belmont, Ohio, Mrs. Lucille
Allen, Newa~k. Mrs. Bill
Mlddleswart, and Mr. and
:':' Mrs. Jim Mlddleawart and
• Janet, local, caDed on Mrs .
... NeU Mlddleawart during llle
past week.
;
Mrs. Ruth Blackwell and
, Marshallene Parsons,
,. Olarleston, W. Va., Mrs.
• Lucille Southall, Staat's
• · Mllla, W. Va., Mrs. Ullian
Deem, Parlr.ersburl, W. Va.,
1\frs. Lottie Whited, Belpre,
1\fr. and Mn. ThOmpson, T.
R. Hart, and Jack Simms,
GaWplll and Mrs. Richard
Abels, Long Bottom, Yisited
at !be home of Mr. and Mrs.
Louis A. DeLuz, recently .
1\fr. and 1\fra. Gene (Jauger,
Mt. Vernon, Ohio, spent
Thursday afternoon with llfr .
and Mrs. Gene Carpenter and
Mn. Sy!Yia Carpenter.
Thomu Lewis, Nitro, W.
Va., Brenda Lewis, Red
House, W. Va., 1\frs. Gladys
Bryan! and Marshall,
Olarleaton, W. Va., Mn.

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NEW YOIIK (UPI ) - Uniropl Inc., tbe rubber and
plastics maker, said 1111 ileCCI1d quarter net income fell 1o f1 .3
million from
a yeat earlier as a te11111t d the etrrent
Illite by the IJJited Rllbber Workers.

"million

ACTUAL USE REPORT

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AtJS'l11lUTY PROGRAM
WARREN, Olio (UPI ) All 8U!Iertty prognm tbat
lllUle city olfldala belieoe
1lill bead olf a S'100,0ll0 budget
deficit is scheduled lo begin

MIDDL£1'011T VILLAGE IN
YILLA8£ CLERK
MIODUI'OIIT, OHIO m ..

Mmday.
Mayor Arthur Richards
Wedoelday IIIIIOiliiCed that
police, fire and service
wwken 1lill begin a foor-day
wort ftek dejgned tD 18111!
an estimated pXI,OliO by !be
end of !be year.
Several city councilmen
llid aD city workers paid out
of the general fund !bould go
on the four-day week, Dot jlllt
lboae in the aafety and
eervlce departmenta.
Earlier tbil ,.-, the city

bad lo lly o l f - pallce and
firemen and dole down a fire
staUon because of a
mmelary crllla.

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to answer

by Nls Penelope·

Ben Franklin Store
Announces A Gigantic•• •

Starting Friday, Ju.ly 30
.

Clint · Birch and daughter
Leota attended ihe Singer
Raunion at Royal Oak Park
on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Wilkinson
and
sons,
Columbus, were weekend
guests of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ruda Durst.
Nicki Dawn VanMeter
visited Elaine Lehew on
Mmday afternoon .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
VanMeter, Columbus, and
Mrs. Mike Evans, Alica,
Cindy and Ryan, · local,
visited Mrs. Ada VanMeter
recently.
Mrs. Mildred Circle, Mrs.
Zetta " ' yd, Mrs . Reva

THURSDAY tiL 12 NOON
'

FRillY .UNnL 8 PM
.

MASON
FURNITURE
•
Herman wart

. .....

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Up To $3,000.00
Worth of Stock Reduced
•

%

UP TO

OFF

SAVINGS

-WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.- · ·
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~noon ,

Mon., Tllft., Wed. &amp; S.t.-1:30t115:00

77:1-5592

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At 9:30A.M •.'

Mrs. Powell dies in Oxford

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All Baseball Gloves
'
and Ia lis, 20% ·o H
Women's
Ha Iter Tops, 20% OH

c00ksh.o''"
~4't FIXINS 10 t~

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Children's Sun Dresses
and Sportswear, Y2 Price

OPEN

Sunday _thru Thursday
10:00 am lo 10 pm
Friday and Saturday
10:00·am 1o 12:00 am

CANDY SPECIAL
Reg. 98' to $1.19 lb., Now 60e

WHILE VISITING

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POMEROY

J

MacGilliwty

"They've been using
WASHINGTON - In answer to a reporter's question as tD
microbial degradation how he felt about William Shakespear's, "It is better to ha ve
proceaaes at the nearby loved and lost than never 1o have loved at all", Representative
Hyperlon sewage treatment Hayes replled, "To Hell with Wllliam Shakespear!"
plant for years. They dispose
of waste, rather than rna ke FROM OUR MAR. BAG
fuel, but the basics are the
Big Mac : You are the only person I can turn to In my
same."
. bourDear
of grief. ' As you know, I didn't get the Democratic
Unlike the !l'oduction of nomination for president. I falllo understand why the voters
methane In garbage dumps, dld not give me this n0111ination In view of my answers o~ the
which takes about Ove yeari llsues. I also was turned down as a vice president. There IS no
.lo get under way aild allows ooe mtre deserving of llle honor ,than I am. Could you teU me
recovery of mly about 25 w50 tlle rellll0118 why 1 didn't get the nomination for president or
per cent of tile available vice ll'esident?
methane, the proposed plant
Signed: Scoop Jackson
could fire . up inunediately
Dear Scoop: There Is no question of your quaUfications for
and recover close to 100 per office, however, you leave a little bit wdesire in the charisma
cent of .the gas, Brown said. · department .
A plant of the type being
First. of au,. you don't smile enough. That Ia the most ·
planned would produce no Important qualification a person can have. Perha~ you should
amelly odors to annoy Ita see a surgeon and have him perform an operation on your
neighbors, Brown said. He mouth so !bat you could have a continuous smUe. Better still,
aald the g1111 !l'oduced by .the you may bave tD get a smile tattooed on your face. The second
pllnl1'oilld iriltlaDy have the thing you did not do IS run on a program supported by the
amen of rOtten egSJI, but peanut industry. Since you lire from the State of Washington, I
could be "cleaned up" 119 that would suggest in the fuiure that you adopt !be salmon as your
odor would be replaced with a ride 1o fame. You coUld tell the public how much you like
less obno:doua one required salmon and perhaps even carry a salmon when you discuss the
for aU natural gas.
issues. This helps.
'
Initial studies by Southern
1 don't think that it amounts to a unker's damn how you
Callfornllr Edllon and UCLA
stand
on the issues. You did make one mistake in that you want
Indicate the heat value of
tD
give
all of the money In tile U. S. Treasury tD the State of
waste In Southern California
New
York.
Also, when you indicated that you wanted Israel tD
- a sub8tance that does
own
the
State
of New Jersey, it did not help you with the voters
nothing more today than fill
up canyons in tlle area's In New Jersey. The popullr feeling now is that everybody ·
mountain ranges - could should have something, but don'.t give a state to a foreign
equal 50 per cent of the country,
energy that part of the state · U you will make these changes and forget about such
now gets from burning things as women:s lib, balancing the budget, etc., you will w.in
tile next time around.
natural gas and oil.
Signed : Big Mac
Brown said Southern
Dear ilig Mac: Why didn 't you list Karl Krautter as
CaUfornia, with its stable
looking
like Tal'281l?
cUmate that avoids seasonal
Signed : Edna.
changes
In · garbage
Dear Big Mac : You miled to point out that Bob Bowen
composition, is more suited to
resemples
U. S. Grant. I believe that you made 'a rriistake in
the proeess tllan most other
not
Including
Bob on your list.
·
areas of the United States.
Signed
:
Chuck
.
On a nationwide basis, he
said, solid waste from ·all
urban areas probably could Dear Big Mac:
Here is my list of matched names for your contest. They
!l'oduce no more than 6 per
couldn't
pOssibly be rigl)t because I don't know all of the names
cent of U.S. natural gas
on here. I know the names but not·the faces. But it's been fun
needs;
anyway, also enjoy aU the articles.
Snow White
Margaret Fullrod
Cary Grant
Fred Crow
Jimmy Carter
William Downey
Martha Washlnglon
Goldie Clendenin
Ernie Pyle
Roger paniels
:Sitting Bull
Ted Reed
Martin L. King
· Lightning Boyd
·Edison Hobstetter
Julius Caeser
$1,000 in sales numbered 96 in Thomas Jeffe!'SJn
Vernon Weber
Archie McKinney
1974. The value of all Santa Claus
Archie Stegal
agricultural products sold by Omar Sliarilf
Dave Cummings
these lanns totaled $27,000. Henry Kissinger
Phil Kelly
Figures for farms with . Ronald Reagan
sales of $2 500 or more are·' The Lone Ranger
Dale Warner.
shown for' 1974 and 1969.
Sincerely, Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore, 1648 Lincoln Hgts.,
These farms accounted for Pcmeroy.
$6,698,000 of all agricultural
products sold in 1974 and
$4,760,000 in 1969.
She was employed at Ox·
They numbered 254 in 1974
Norma Louise . Wayland
and 276 in 1969. They average Powell, 52, of Oxford, for- ford University. During
size decreased from 216 to 269 merly of Middleport, died World War II, Mrs. Powell ·
acres during the five years. Wednesday morning at an served in the WAVES. She is
The value per acre climbed Oxford hospital follo~~?ng a a member of the American
Legion, Feeney·Bennett Post
from $209 w$378, raising the brief illness.
128, and the Auxiliary of that
average value per !ann from
$59,932 to $101,579.
The market value of Taylor, Mrs . Ruth Sereno, 1 ~~iving are her husband,
livestock and their products Mr. and Mrs. Rober: Harten- Robert Powell; a daughter,
on these farms was $4,629,1100 bach, Mrs. Elva Dailey, Mr. Gloria, and two sons, David
In 1974; poultry and their and Mrs. R. R. Durst, Mrs. and Ricky, all at home ; her
Mrs .
Emma
products, $762,000; and crop Ruby Bryant, Debra and mother'
Dav~,
Brenda
and
Thomas
Wayland,
and
a
brother,
sales, including nursery
products and hay, $1,288,000, U!w1s, Mrs. Mary Gree~' Olarles Wayland of Mid·
and forest products, $19,000. Launa and Leah , Loms dleport and several uncles
DeLuz, Ruda Durst, Mrs. Pat and auntS. She was preceded
Lemay Hauge~ and Paul in death by her father,
Dean Evans vlslled Mrs. Iva Norman .
·
Carpenter and daQ~hter last
Funeral services will be
week.
.
held
Friday , time to be an·
VIolet Ritchie, Mrs. Freda
Mr. and Mrs . Charles nounced, at the Marshall
Middleawart, Bobbi and Brett Cozart and family, Colwn- Smith Funeral Home in
Price, Stacy and Tanuny bus, visited her motller' Mrs, . Oxford. Burial will he in a
Proffitt and Donnette Goldie .Clendenin , over the ColUIJlbus cemetery.
Talbott, local, visited Mr. and past weekend.
Mrs. Bill Bryant and family
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst
made a business trip to
Belpre· on Wednesday af.

POINT PLEASANT - The
niarket value of all
agricultural products sold by
tlje 748 farms Iii .Mason
County lrl 1974 amounted to
$7,441,000, aecording to a
preliminary report of 1974
Census of Agriculture
released today by the U. S.
Department of Commerce's
Bureau of the Census.
The farmeri are for farms
·qualifying
under. the
definiUon first used for the
1959 Census of Agriculture :
Places of less than 10 acres
were counted as farms il
sales of agricultural products
amounted to, or normally
would amount to, at least
$250. Places of. 10 acres or
or . mtfre ,were counted
as farms If sales of
agricultural products for the
year amounted to, or normally would amount lo, at
least $SO.
Famls reporUng less than

~

SALE

Almost impossible

· Fann products wQrth
nearly .$7¥2 millions

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Bot:b payments will be made Se!*. I to stockrolders of

' ·~iSs Prove

...

FRUTH'S PHARMACY

rerord Aug. i .

'PIIISBURGH (UPI I - Copperweld Oorp. Wednesday
repartee! llecmd quar1A!r prOiits of $3:7' millillll, or 11.34 per
~Due, a ~of !per ct'llt from recitrd profits of ~;a million, or
U.48 per lilare, dUring lhe same period last year.
Net .sales fw the lleCIIIId ..,ur were f77.6 millioo, an
iDcreue of2 per ~owr last year's sales of f76.4millioo.

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~p:efau!d.

Beauty

~••

"We are going 1o take ,the
organic wute from Southern
California and tum It into
aornethinl llllll'e uaefu.l than
ordinlry landfUI," Brown
said. ''We're reaDy maklnl
advanced appUcaUon of old
and ~ t.echr!oJoly."
Brown «nd U1i! other TRW,
Inc., cbemllle Clll hla team at
Redmdo Beach, CaUl., are
workln8 with Southern Call·
'nrnla Edlaon 'a research and
development bloloiY section
and the school of publlc
healtll at the Unlvenlty of
California at Loa Angeles.
They hope to win an EneriY
Rl!leltch and Development
Admlniatration contract that
could lead within three years
or ao to a pilot plant turning
!Otona of waste Into 1!)0,000 tD
120,000 cubic feet of methane
ps each day.
The ll'oce811 Brown's team
Ia workfnl with Ia called
anerobic digestion. It uaes
microbes In a sealed tank to
"digest" tile waste and turn It
Into gas.
·~we believe we can gather
different wastes and mix
them ao tbe micro-orpnisms
that make methane gas
efficiently .wlll
ihink
(prbage) Ia tasty stuff,"'
Brown said.

.

RUTLAND - 1'1\-elve of !he · Nicholson. Middleport: Mary
28membersofthegradualing Kathryn ( Davis) Holter, Rl.
class oll941 of Rutland High l , Long Bottom; Bette
School att~nded a 3Sth I Dunfee ) Biggs, R.F.D.,
reunion atthunnuai banquet PornetO)'; Maxine (Ogdin J
held at the RuUand Grade Griffith, Roule 3. Pomeroy;
School Saturday nigh\ May Dorothy (Wise ) Rllthburn ,
221\d.
Columbus . Top
row,
Atlending wert!, front, 1 to La wren c e Snowden,
r.
Dorothy (Molden ) Columbus; Thunnan Carsey,
R.F.D., Middlep&lt;Jrt; Glenna
(Oarlt ) G riffilh , Columbus;
me for each 275;pound, two- Don Morgan, Daylon; Donald
:sack ''load." The bonds ne1l8 Shrader ,. Philo and teacher T.
.per cent .intereSt every six c. Porter, The Plains.
Mr. ,and Mrs. Porter joined ..
months, but despite a
nationwide public relations the class l&lt;lr their class
campaign oo radio to sell reunion . Mr . Porter ta-ught
fanners m the idea, initial ·Agriculture at Rutland High
interest has 'been lukewarm. and now is and has been
The wide ,gap between the . superintendent for several
windfall coffee earnings 011 years at the Tni County '
- foreign markets and the low Vocati o nal Col lege ,
domestic prices caused Nelsonville. ,lie headed the
political JrOblems f(r the planning, constructi on and
Lopez g&lt;&gt;vernment when qperabon of the vocational
:leftist peasant 'organizations school from its beginning in
. grumbled
about
the 1964.
wooklngman ,no! reaping the
Oassmales attending but
full benefits of the coffee not pictured were Helen
boom.
(Locke) Atkins, London, and
fli8 8J'OWeTS grumbled that Kathleen (Donahue) Fink,
pickers had heard of .the RuUand.
.fanf:Bstir·coffee !rices abroad
Another · teacher present
and demanded · more wages was Carl Denison, Rutland,
which could drive them out of who taught \:hemistry,
business if llhe market Scienoe and Math .and was
sudden!!' dropped again.
the football eoach.
"The "'hole so-ealled coffee
bonanza is oothing but a
great
bill
disaster,"
commented the owner of a
radio chain with .rura l
contacts. " People don 'I
reaiir.e the hidden dangers."

PI iiSBORGH {UP I) - '!be directin of Westingbouse
Electric C«'p. Wetlnesdlry declared quanterly l!ividends of 2U
Cfllts ·per !bare on the cmun~m st:ooi: and 9S cents on the

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benefit to poor growers
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Twelve of 28 attend 1941 reunion

Booming coffee prices no

Brus

t

EDWARD I . DeWNG '
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~
Dr. Fred Brown baa turned
hlllllhta from the eearch for
life m Man to the creative
. . of prbqe llll Earth.
Brown , who spent five
yean headlnc the team that
.buUt the 1 life detection
lnlltrumentl for the VIking 1
M111'1 lander, recently took
cblrle of a group of chemlats
workln8 011 ways to turn
terre1trlal wastes Into a
lllbltltute for scarce natural
By

SALE SHOES ..
TO
•4 PR•

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Garbage on Earth may ·
become energy source.

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Science today

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7-'!'be DlllySerXJnel,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Ju.ly

There IIJ'e f- deceued Wogan , Columbua; Ellene
clusmates. HObart Nelaon, (Darst) Ward, Collllll~ ;
Dexter, and Lawrence Biker• Cecil Hewitt, W!lllamt~e.u, ~·
Seiem Center, both killed In N. J.; Carl Moore, M.._., ,
World Will' II, and Mabel Micl\igan ; Leanna ( RiinJ, I'
Russell and Thelma Michael. field ) Jacka, LaniiYWe:
Unable to · attend were Homer Ruuell, Col~: •.
Catherine (Morris) Pausha, I.ucille (Spauldlnc) ~ • '
Bloomington, Ind.; Margaret Columbus: Reva (Wilemia) ,.
(Fink ) Siichuk, Rittman i Woodruff, Columbua, «nd :• .
Darrell
Burson , New EVelyn (Goff) Dalila, ~ •· .
Carlisle: Ca ~rine (BoUn ) viDe .

MIIOft, W.Va.

Country Cousins Cooksboppe
Don't forget to register for a FREE
10-speed bicycle to be given away at
1:30 Saturday, July 31st .. No
purchase necessary. WMPO wtll be
broadcasting at 1:00 live from
Country Cousins Cookshoppe
Saturday, July 31st. so stop in and
say hello.

lb.

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
ilt~t&lt;tr•••••······················

BEN-.-FRAN KLIIN
PHONE
992-3498

200-202 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRI_pAY
TIL 8 PM
SAT. TIL 5

�r.

t-The

8- The Da!Jy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 29, 1976

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'G=;;;;;;i~;,~=,ii;;== =·:':·=·=·=·=·=: lf Salon
My Jl d••u

fl ~ 1-H' Bottd

.receives five

awa~ds

;;;;

Meigs County· Salon 710, line and Hazel Elliott. Mrs.
::~ F:1r&gt;hl and F1&gt;rly, · ~ceived Brady presented a book of
·· ltve trophy ~wards for out. prayer to Mrs. Huston and
Is My Fink Brother Listening?
standing project and service noted that books of prayers
Rap :
work during the past year at had been sent to Children 's
Almost every lime I get interested in a boy, my brother the Departementa l 'd Ohio's Hospitals and the Xenia
tells Dad, confidentially, ti)at he's o~t to score. Then Dad tells ~t b annual marche hel~ home.
Mom, and Mom says I can't go with him.
reccnll~ at !he Neil House in
}o open the convention,
Since my brother is the biggest (hopeful i scorer around, .Columbus.
Mrs . Heacock gave a
he thinks all the other guys·are too. I tell my folks that what
The Salon, ~rganized 11 welcome with the response by
guy~ brag about in the gym showers isn't what they do years ago , again thts year Mrs . Elizabeth Horva c.
unless the girl is a pushover - but they only Ii8ten to my flnky maintained its ~ecord _of Greetings were brought by
brother. For me, "making It" on a date is with personality, not receivmg four to siX trophies distinguished guests, Mrs .
sex!
·
each y~ar.
Jane Balzhlser , retttlng
How do you convince them 7 - OVERPROTECTED SIS
Rece~ved were_ the Ger- American Legion Auxiliary
trud e Moore Trophy for Department
of
Ohio
Dear Sis :
having spent the most money president· Dean School
Since your brother is the big talker here, work on in cyslic fibrosis work in the American' Legion Depart:
convincing HIM that you're smart enough to protect yourself category of salons with I to 35 ment of Ohio commander;
against hopeful scorers.
partners; the Arree Marshall Paul Southers, grand chef de
Why not have a ftEAL conversation with him ? He might Trophy for the. most out. gare, Forty el Eight; George
learn a lot he needs to know about girls, as well as boys. - standmg cystic fibrosis Glaub, grand correspondent,
HEI$N
project : the Rose DeCker Forty el Eight: Mrs. Henry
+++
Trophy f or sc holarship Patro, new American Legion
Sis :
contribu tions; the Ella Auxiliary
Department
While you're at it, why not get a bunch of guys and girls McDonald Trophy for the president. Glaub reported on
together and talk this "scoring" thing out?
best _history , and the Mary the progress of the swimming
Maybe you could put it across to your brother and others Marttn Trophy for the best pool project at the Xenia
. llke him that bragging in the showers is as old-fashioned as publicity scrapbook.
Orphans Home .
four-letter words on bathroom walls. - SUE
Officers elected for the
Myrtle Walker ,
.
++t
. 1976-77 year and installed by RaMrs.
cine , chairman of the
NarE ·TO SIS'S PARENTS: You've got more to worry Mrs . Mary Martin of children and youth comabout in your son than in your daughter. Start listening to HER Pomeroy at a banquet were mittee, reported that Ohio
for a change. - HELEN
Mrs . Marcella Huston , this year endowed the 26th
+++
naUonal pourvior member ; bed at the National Jewish
Rap :
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Mrs. Audrey Glaub, depar- Hospital at $1 ,000 along with
. You u~ed for COIIj1llellts on allowmg smoking areas at Iemen tal chapeau ; Mrs . contributing
$300
for
high schools. II the school board feels it would be san.ctioning Belly Horvath, first derni memorial plaques. She said
"illegal" smoking by this, then !t$1iouldn't do so, but polluted · chapeau; Mrs. Dorothy tha t this year $8,309 had been
rest room air_Is still a problem.
Brade, second demi chapeau; given in the children and
Therefore I suggest that the student council choose one Mrs . Catherine Baker , youth work. This includes
rest room for each sex to be used by smokers, leaving the l ' aumoni er ; J oycely n $2,489.25 spent in Ohio for
others for nonsm~kers. Then, the school board needn't Bowman, Ia archiviste; Mrs. special projects ; $1,634 for
approve, and the prmcipai can look tbe other way. And every- Shirley Davis, Ia concierge; Tuberculosis work ; $1.14 for
one will be happier. - M.
.
Mrs . Viole t Aichholz, Ia tuberculosis research, $103
secre tar~, and Mrs. Mary for cystic fibrosis research ,
Dear Helen and Sue :
Lou Gibhn, Ia casstere. The $41.i0 for ·memorials and
About smoking areas on hj_gh school campuses. We have installation included a court $62.74for respiratory dfsease
one, but it really doesn't mil!&lt;e much difference. Our of honor composed of part- research thr ough
the
bathrooms are always smoly because people don't want to go ners of Salon 333 who la ter Am erican Legion Child
outside. Between periods, it takes too long, and it makes them hosted a reception honoring Welfare Foundation. She also
late for classes. - NO SOJ.;{jTIO~
.
"
Mrs . Glau,b. There was noted that 1,409 volunteer
special music under the hours had been recorded and
Rap:
•
direction of Myrtle Breat. 1,826 children served.
·
"Righteous" for family living courses in high school ! And wail, chorus director, who is
The nurses scholarsh ip
that means singles living as well as how to manage marriage. now 88 and retiring .
fund contribution for the year
I think seniors should be required to stndy nutrition,
Elected delegates to the was $1,500with Meigs County
budgeting, health (inclu~ sex education), the paychol~ of n~tionai convention were Salon giving 'roo of that
living with someone ~lse, cliild~!,. aU those thing! liie may Mrs. Huston, Mrs. Glaub, amount.
lhrowatyoulnaddltion~Qel!l;~apving. ·
· · Mrs . . Dorotny Brady, Mrs.
11 was reported that partWe're adults at 18·~"f.!UMI ·ttlaily of us will be out on our Marlm, Mrs. Eleanor- Hart• . nership fell short of reaching
own usoon u we graduate lrom high school. People who say
these counes are "unnec-..y friU. to waste the taxpayers'
money" don't reallze that unwanted kids, poor health, divorce
and child abuse cost taJ: money too- in welfare payments. F.F.C.
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goal. Goal was 1.849and'paid
partnerships total 1,787.
The premarche pouvior
opened with a dulch supper In
the Town and Cou.ntry Room
at the Neil House, with Mrs.
Huston, Cincin nati, the
depar lemental chapeau ,
presiding. Introduced were
Mrs . Aicliholt, national
scholarship chairman ; Mrs.
Martin, third member of
l!Jilional !inance committee;
Mrs. Doris Stanriff, national
pouvior member, chapeau
passes and all departemental
chairmen . The budget for
1976-77waspresentedby Mrs.
Martin .
Parody winners were
O"awford County 389., first;
Summit County 165, second ;
Sandusky Salon 597, third.
Mrs. Hartline and Ronnie
Horvath . were chairmen for
the fun and fellowship which
was followed by a reception
honoring Mrs. Huston,
outgoing chapeau .
For the departemental
chapeaux passes breakfast a
bicentennial theme was
carried out. The centerpiece
was a large musical bell and
favors were small glass beh
banks. Name tags were red,
white and blue. Memorial
prayer· was beld for Helen
Kilworth on October 12, 1975
and Esther C. Edgar, Dec. 16,
1975.
Chapeaux passPS in·
troduced at the breakfast
were Violet Aichho1z, Mrs.
Elliott, Mrs. IreneMier, Mrs.
Angie
McElroy, Mrs .
Virginia Rahe, Mrs. Louise
Kranerbuhl , Mrs. Martin ,
Mrs, Doris Stanriff, Mrs.
Hust on. Notes of regret were
read from Susie Sonnenstine,
who will be JOi on Oct. 3,
Bernice Christerson and
Evalina Berkley.
It was reported that the
special project of the year
had brought in $132 . A
donation of $10 will be sent to
the National Jewish Hospital
in memory of Mrs. Esther
Edgar and Mrs. Helen
Killworth . To
nurses
scholarship fund , the
chapeaux passes donated »5.
Mrs. Ita he will serve as
chairman of the 197&amp;-77 year
with Mrs. Slanriff to serve as
Ia secretaire-cassiere. Mrs.
Louise Goodall,. breakfast
chairman·, presented a door
prize w:on by Mrs. Martin.

.P0 II y' s p' 0 'I nte rs .

Second reunion enjoyed_
\

Time is money
for home labor

The second aMual reunion ville; Ralph and Ida Mae _a~ Polly Cramer
ol the Laura and Marion Ours Ours, New Brighton, Pa.; - POLLY'S PROBLEM
and wait to have a one pound
family was held · recently at Isabel, Tom, Kim and Shawn
DEAR
POLLY
Can
package
up .special.
Forked Run State Park with Edwards of Kettering; Jeff, anyone tell me how to go This seemsmade
to
me
to be a ruse
56 attending.
Becky, Rlan and Michael about putting prices on to gel us to buy more meat.-,:. :. ·Recognized and presented Donohew, Belpre ; Eugene,
handmade items like HELEN.
~ were Roy Donohew, the Evelyn and Anita Webster
crocheted shawls and so on
DEAR POLLY - 1 am
«deal man present; Ruth Garfield Heights; Wayne,' that one makes for someone . answering the reader whose
OUn, the oldest woman.; Kevin, Lori and Brian Ours, else ? - ETHEL.
plastic curtains were torn in
Violet Preston, traveling the East Liverpool ; Virgil, ·
DEAR
ETHEL
Thai
iS
a
the
washer. I have had good
farthest; Nancy Yoacham, Delores, Teresa, Vernon
good . questioo. but hard to luck washing mine in the
the youngest mother, and Mike and Pal Ours of New' onswer. When making · an bathtub. I use warm water
Michael Donobew. The lm Philadelphia; and William,
llem
for
someone and mild soap, let the curreuni111 was set for July 2 at Virginia, Diana and Louie specifically, do come to aa tains soak a while and then
Forked Run.
Huffman, Salem .
a~ment on price before work them around with my
Attending were Audrey and
IIJe
work is started. oiten a hands . Alter draining out tile
WUey Ours, Mark, Nancy and
warm lrleodsbip can cool off soapy water, put in clean
Mala Yoacham, Roy ; ,11~·· ....
' when ibe · pi-Ice - is quoted warm water and rinse twice.
Mildred Donobew, Lewis and
,_.,.' ' afterwards. Some seem to Hang on the showeri curtain
Rulli Ours, Racine; Jac(
figure one's time Is wortb · pole to drip dry and the water
Violet and Jaclde PrestOn,
• UHle. Look around In shops drips into the tub. Mine looks
l'aladena, CaHf.; Bill, Pat, ,
-~·
'
seJIJng handmade items and like new after washing this
Billy and Ryan Ours ~ ~
RUMMAGESALESE'i'
at bazaars and see wbai they way. -MRS. R. L.
Columbus, Miss.; Willy,
T~e· HaPPY Harvesters
charge. One's tilDe is money.
DEAR POLLY - We
Katby Mike Bob and' W8 Class of Trinity Church will
'lbougb
Ute
charges
could
not
thought
we had tried everyOun, i.evt~. Pa.; Mike, • have a rwrunage sale in the
karen, Tony , and Danny church basement starting be made according to ALL thing to get rid of neas in our
the hours speat oo the job and carpel, until we finally
urn......
"-e~
., ...,uu, Miami 1 Fla .,· "~
:a, . Monday at 9 a.m. and conai
a going hourly rate, there bought several boxes of flea
Amy and Randy Ours, Wells- tinuing through Wednesday.
certaioly should be lair powder,
sprinkled
it
compeasation lor II. - generously on aU carpeted
POLLY.
areas and left the house for a
few hours . Later we
DEAR POLLY - My Pet vacuumed thoroughly. While
··PeeYe is with the way this was a lol of work, it was
supermarkeis package cheaper than having an
ground meat. It is almost exterminator and really did
'
possible to fmd a one pound the job. - ELLEN.
package of hamburger meat
DEAR POLLY ..., I dye·my
or ground pork as invariably own hair and have a ~rrific
it will be several ounces over way to get at those faded out
and
have to ring a bell roots and the dye job comes
out very evenly. I use a
Prescription
regular toothbrush with even
bristles. Pour some or the
&amp;
already mixed dye in the
Surqical Support palm of your hand anctdip the
toothbrush into this mixture.
Center
Then proceed to put on your
dry hair, starting at the worst
spots first. Then even if your
. hair ends do not need it you
have the roots covered nicely. Also good for those
BUTTERSCOTCH SQUARES .. . soft marsh·
~ard·to~over . hairs on the
mallow and a layer of butterscotch dipped
temples. - FLO.
·
in yellow pastel coaling
DEAR POLLY - If your
MINT SQUARES ... soft marshmallow with a
car reeks of cigarette smoke,
layer or mint jelly, dipped in smooth green
leave an apple in the closed
pastel coating
·
car overnight. It will coim1
teracl the smoke odors. a box
CORA.
DEAR POLLY - Sew a
small magnet inside one
thickness of the nylon net in
your pretty nylon scrubber. It
will really stay on the top
corner of the bathtub. ·MARGARET.
Polly wiD send you one ol
her " peachy" thaok-you
cards, Ideal for framing or
placing in your family
serapbaol, U 1be usn your
lavort~t Pointer, Peeve or
Problem
Ia your column.
POMEROY .O.
Wrlle Polly's Poinlers in care
of this newspaper.

~E~~e~

.,

· Cool and Refreshing

Hallmark

RISell Stover
Candy

1.50

Water

&gt;.

Convention reports are heard.
Reports of the 58th aMual
American Legion Auxiliary
convenUon held recenUy in
Columbus was given by Mrs.
Grace Pratt, delegate, at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy,
Mrs . Pratt displayed
awards received by the unit
including a ci taU on of merit
for submitting all required
reports. Certificates for
~ommuni ty service and for
clvH . defense · programs
carried out by the unl t under
the direction of Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett were also displayed.
Miss Erma Smith reported
on. the history compiled for
the year's work which took a
third place award In the
Department of Ohio and then
she presented it to Mrs.
Pratt. Reports were given on
the various activities of the
convention including the
community service caucas.
Mrs. Harry Davis presented
a detailed account of the
junior activities caucas
which she attended at the
convention, a~ both she and
Miss Smith expressed ap·
predation to the unit for the
privilege of serving as
, delegates.
Mrs. Prall presided at the
ritualistic opening of the
meeting and extended a
welcome to Mrs. Edith Sauer
who has been absent due to
hospitalization . Mr·s, Sauer
thanked the unit .for cards
,and· flowers . ·A· com·
munication was read !rom
the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospita l expressing ap·
preciation for the par·

UcipaUon in the July birthday
party. Mrs. Gemma CaiiCi,
veterans
affairs
and
rehabilitation chairman,
reported that potato chips,
candy, cookies, ditty bags,
bibs, oranges and monetary
gifts were ,taken to the
hospital.
The unlt received an in·.
vitatlon to a reception to be
held Oct. 9 at the Yorkshire
Hotel, Toledo, for Mrs. Henry
Patro, . newly
elected
Department
of
Ohio
president. '
The first reading of the
1976-71 budget was given by
Mrs. Davis. Miss smith has
named chairman for the
annual sale of pecans. Mrs.
Davis thanked !.he members
for assisting with the junior
Auxiliary installaUon held
recently at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Roy Reuter and Mrs.
Gerald Wildermut.h reported
on community service work
Including serving the canteen
at tbe bloodmobile, and the
dedication of the flag at the
mini-park.
A sympathy card was sent
to Mrs. Kathy Cummings on
the death of her brother. Mrs.
Prall reported a need for
ditty bags, toothpaste, and
deodorant at all veterans
hospitals and noted donations
are being accepted.
Members were reminded
that dues are payable now.
They are now » a year. The
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Davis was won by Mrs.

Wildermuth. Hostesses for
the Alll!ust meeting will be
Mrs. Hackett and Mrs. Pearl
Knapp. The meeunc closed in
ritualistic form with refresh·
ments being served by Mrs.
Reuter and Mrs. Wlldermuth.

Carawlle
IY IULOYA

A prtclslon·lewelid.
Bulovt-~ed watch

Caravelle.
rert•tant arld
magntll!::

by

s"*"
.:m.,.

An outdoor hymn sing will
be held Monday night at 7:30
on -the lawn at the Deneil Yost
home, located on the Bill
George Road off of the .Eno
and Vinton Road near
Morgan Center.
Old fashioned day will be
observed with the women to
wear long dresses and bonnets. Those attending are
asked to take lawn chairs.
Some of the special groups to
sing will be The Joyful Tones
of Fairplay Chapel; the
Midway Trio and the Pine
Grove Youths of )he Pine
Grove Church; the Morgan
Center Youth of the Morgan
.Center
Mission ;
the
Miracleaires of Fairview.
Other groups will be
singing and all groups and
individuals are welcome to
attend to either sing or listen.
Further inlorma lion on the
sing can be obtained by
, calling 388-8896 or 992-7173.

Forest Acres is scene. of reunion

Reference guide
donated.to library

''

The eighth annual reunion
of the Taylor-Harper families
was· held Sunday at Forest
Acres Park beginning with a
basket dinner at noon. Ben
Rife gave grace.
Mrs. Ruby Rife presided at
the business meeting with
officers for the 1977 reunion
being elected. They are Mrs.
. Rife, president; Donald

..

Picnic held
Tuesday night

Birthday
celebrated

Personal Notes

GOISS'ER

J•·• Stare

c-t, p;, '-m~y

DOAAL ltwo·tone smooth)

MEN'S
CLEARANCE

DREss ·&amp;CASUALS
SALE.
PRICES!
MAIN STREET

'f2

lj3 - ~OFF

Chapman's Shoes

~

SALE
.ON ALL
SUMMER

KNITS .

FINAL

SAVE

40%

* * Celebration * *
PRICE AND MORE

50%
o Boys Ponl•
o Boys &amp; Girts Shortl
• Leisure Suits
• S.ltcttd Po lomas

oSAVE ON
MANY OTHERS

_

..... ...

'-

ESALE
CONTINUES
SAVINGS 20% TO 50%
ON MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

Fine
Wearing Apparel

-CHECK OUR
Sl TABLE

Pre-Washed Jeans
SIZES 7-14

ON THE MAIN FLOOR
·• Visor Caps
• Girls Slacks

• Udies Shorts
• Halters

KING SIZE

CHILDREN'S

BRIDGE OPENING
~

and Jimmy and Mrl.
Werner.

POMEROY

'
TRINA REEVES
The ninth birthday of Trina
Gale Reeves was celebrated
recenUy aI the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Reeves, Pomeroy.
A bicentennial theme was
carried out with red, white
and blue streamers. The
cake , inscribed " Happy
Birthday, Trina, 9 years old"
and decorated in the patrioli.~.
colors, featured a Iirecracker
replica. ·
Cake, ice cream, chips and
pop were served to Tammy,
Kim and Dixie Eblin, Mrs.

'

Taylor, vice president; Mr. and Mn. Merrill Ta••lnr.
Alwilda Werner, secretary, Mr. and .Mrs.
and Mrs. Opal Harper ,
treasurer. The reunion will be
held at the park on the last
Sunday of July next year.
Recognized were Joe
Taylor, Grove City, the oldest
man attending; Mrs. Madge
Taylor, Grove City, the oldest
woman attending; Erin.
Annette Harper, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy W. Harper,.
Middleport, the youngest
a !tending, and Mr. and Mrs.
David Taylor and family of
Fostoria, the lamily traveling
the farthest.
·
Door prizes were awarded
to Mrs. Grace Lemley, Mrs.
Kathryn Werner, Mrs .
TO
Lucille Lemley and Mrs. May
Taylor . .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Rife, Carla and
Becky; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
• Girls Pants
Taylor, Mrs . Virginia Colllns
• Slack S4JIIs
and son, Todd, Mrs. Lydia
• Bathing Sulls
o All Weolhtr Coats
DeLong, Mrs. Reva Beach,
• Infant &amp;
·
Miss Harriet Thompson, Mrs.
Toddler
Grace Lemley, Mr. and. Mrs.
Wear
Bill Boyce, Mr. and Mrs.
Johit Werner, Mr. aod Mrs.
John Lemley, Mr: and Mrs.
Guy W. Harper Ryan and
Erin, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Harper, Mr. and Mrs. David
Taylor, Crystal and Julie, .

THURSDAY
" FREE CLOTHING Day at
The SalvaUon Army, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, ThursMrs. James Jl!cklon, well-Down hortlcullllrlll aad
day, 10 a.m. to 12 noon. All.
Dower arranger who has taugbl~eV«~l Dower arnDgblg
area residen Is welCome .
clasllts iD Melp Cowlty, has dtliUiied a copy of HOI'iulaaa,
•
Mji:IGS VARSJTY football
the Reference Guide of ihe Gardea Club of Ohio, to !be
squad members Thursday
Pomeroy Ubrary, lor the use of the pubUc.
7:30p.m. at the high school.
Mra. Jacklon helped revillt Ibis clrectory in 1971 whea
RACINE AMERICAN
JANE ANN WltLIAMS
she wu Horticulture Chairman for ibe Gardea Clubs ol
[..eglon Post 602 special
Ohio. This guide, which IIIII plallis, Is u~tlallor anyoae
TUCKER WILLIAMS
partlclpatlnl iD Dower shows. II complemenlt the
, meeting Thursday, 8 p.m.
A picnic was held Tuesday
Handbooll
for Flower Sllows which -Ia already in tbe
: •
FRIDAY
night at the Kyger Creek
Pomeroy Library and can be borrowed by the pubUc. ·
: .• UMWA SUPPORTERS
Recreation Park by the Loyal
Prlaied
by
the
National
Council
of
Slate
Garden
' Friday, 10 a.m. at Forest
Bereans Class of the Mid·
Clubs,
it
11111
deilllled
siandardl
lor
growing,
siagbg,
• Acres Park near Rutland.
dleport
Church of Christ.
exhlblling
and
judging
plant•
and
Dowers
lor
COillpeiiUon
;. Jame~ Kidd, president of
Attending
were Cynthia
and
11
especially
aseful
for
Dower
1how
contestants
who
:::" Black Lunc of District Six,
Go
tiring,
Eula
Rice, Sylvia
wani to nndmtand how points will be awarded to them
:·. guest speaker.
Rice,
Ruth
Karr,
Mr. and
; .~ SOtJ'I!IERN LOCAL Band
John Tucker Williams, son · during judglng.li dilcu1ses the dlllereni.IChools of Dower
Mrs.
Robert
McElhinny,
Mr.·
. shows, the 111e of.coior In arr~gemen11; quallflcail-lor
: ~ pracUce session, grades , 7 of Mr. and Mrs . Jack
and
Mrs.
Dana
Swift,
Grace
judges aDd principles ·of artistic design.
, lhrough12Frldayat6p.m. at Williams, Syracuse,
Hawley, ·
Ella
Mae
These iwo handbooks and other books on Dower
:. high school. Former mem- celebrated his first birthday
Daughterly, Etoilla Cassell,
arranging allbe Pomeroy and Middleport Libraries are
:: 'bers or anyone desiring to be with a party on the lawn of his
Clyda
Allensworth, Gertrude
for
the
use
of
any
Interested
penoUI.
: a member should report at home, Sunday. Tucker is.
MilJet,
Rosemary Smith and
• same time.. Any seventh shown here with his three and ·
son,
David,
Mr. and MrS.
:~. grader desiring to .' atte~d ·.one half-year-old sister, Jane ::::::=::::;:;;;:;::::=::::::~:;:~::;:;;;:;:;:;:::::;,::;:;:;:;?fi:!i:;:i:::::n::::::;,;:;:::;:;:::;'::::;:;: ::t:!!:){=l:"i!'':::J
George
Glaze,
· Trey and
~ band camp can 949-2219 or Ann.
Clinton,
Clarence
McNeal, ·
• "247-2401.
A "Skipper " theme in red , » .W-«
Viola Edwards and Mr. and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marvin
Kelly,
Mrs. Herbert Parker,
SATURDAY
white and blue was used.
Martha Haggerty, Martha
Pomerrt~
HORSE SHOW Saturday at Tllree cakes highlighted the
Syracuse.
Childs,
George Meinhart and
Mrs. Carl Kennedy and
Rock Springs Fairgrounds 6 refreshment table . The
Lena
McKinley.
children, Glenn, Sue, Randy
, p.m. sponsored by Southern middle sheet cake carried out
' Athletic Boosters aod Meigs the birthday theme with ~
and DaMy, have returned
Mr , and Mrs . James horne after a vacation in
County Riding Club.
little boy In blue jean
..
Soulsby
and children, Cindy, Hohenwald, Tenn . where they
ICE CREAM Social overalls, carrying a ball bat
RALLY SLATED
Saturday, I p.m. at St. Paul and a glove, and was in- Pat and Jirnmer, Mrs. Susie were guests of her sister ,
A youth rally has been
Methodist Church, Tuppers scribed with "Happy Bir• Abbott, Denise Marshall, and Mrs. E. Lambert and family. scheduled for Aug . I~ at 7:30
Mrs. Sandra Harris and p.m. at the Fairplay Chapel
Plains.
lhday Tucker ," The two Becky Fry have returned
• MIDDLEPORT FIRE smaller cakes , replicas of from vacation. They visited children, &amp;ott, Tina, and located on Meigs County
'" Department fish fry, baseball hats with the Mackinac City , Mackina&lt;~ .. Chad of Fort L:luderdale, Road I off State Route 325 or·
' Saturday, starling at 11 a.m. number ''1" on them, com- Island, and then went to Fla. arehere visiting Mr. and 124. Everyone Is invited by
at the firehouse.
plimented each side of the Island View Resort In Mrs . Russell Little . Carl
tt.e pastor, the Rev. Theron
Harris will join his family Durham. On Aug. 14 at the
..... SWIMMING PARTY for larger cake. Tucker received Michigan for a week.
! mernbers of Preceptor many nice gifts and cards. · ' 1Thomas E. Hysell of Route here for a visit later.
Chapel a hymn sing will be
• Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Cake and ice cream were 2, Pomeroy is recuperating
held. Special singers will be
. : Sorority, and husbands, 6:30 served to Kristen Jo Kibbee, from two surgeries at the
the Messengers of Wellston.
DINNER GUESTS
: p.m. Saturday at the home of D. J. Harden, Tammy Holzer Medical Center where
The public is invi~.
RACINE - Dinner guests
~ Dr. and Mrs; !!_, R. Pickens.
Buckley, Archie and Amy he has been confined to the
•
Moore, Wendy Fry, Mike intensive care unit following of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
~
SUNDAY
KJoes, Angela Clifford, Jane a collapsed lung and com- Russell, Rt. 2, Racine, Friday
REHEARSAL PLANNED
" EASTERN STAR family Ann Williams, and the plication.
were Mrs. Karl Russell, the
A rehearsal for the Voices
: picnic at Forest Acres Park, honored guest.
Edgar Thomas ofNye Ave. former
Linda
Smith , of Uberty Chorus has been
• near Rutland at 2 p.m .
Also present were Mr. and is a surgical patient at the children, Metlssa and Ken· schedUled by Mrs. Harvey
: &gt;unday. Grand pages and Mrs. c. H. Williall)s, Tucker 's Holzer Medical Center.
neth Roy, Camp LeJeune, Van Vranken, director, lor 8
: tides of District 25 to be great-grandparents, John P.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cleland N.C.; Mr . and Mrs. Roy p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
: ·onored.
Williams and Mr. and Mrs . and Ronnie, of Parkersburg, · Smith ·and son, Mike, United Metllodist Church.
~ l:lA YES-YOUNG • HOL· ' Clarence Baxter, all grand- W. Va.; ·Allen Cleland , New Pomeroy, Route 3, Mrs. The Chorus will present the
: LIDAY school reunum parents; Vince and Mary Jo Cumberland, W. Va. and Dorothy Dandakis, Athens. bicentennial musical "Ring
• S11nday at the home of Mr. Kibbee Eileen and Harry' Dave qeland and children of Lt. Karl Russell has been on Out All the Bells of Freedom"
• and Mrs. Gerald Hayes; Rt. 1, uarK, 'Jean KJoes , Eleanor Belpre were weekend visitors sea duty for several days. at the Meigs County Fair
: Shade. Picnic lunch at noon. Robson, Vera Mae Tannehill, of their mother, Mrs. Mae Mrs. Russell and the children Ministerial Association
returned to North Carolina opening program on the
; WEBER · REUNION DennisandCathyMoore,Don Cleland, Racine.
• Sunday, noon ~t Royal Oak and Angie Harden, l!etty · Mr . and Mrs. Earl Cleland this week.
evening of Aug. 16 . .
• Park recrea l10n ·buildmg. Spencer, Jeannie and Kenny and sons , Mrs. Mae Cleland
~ Basket dinner. Bring small Buckley, Kathy Fry, Faye and grandson, Brian, Racine,
• prize for games.
Clifford, and Jack and Judy took a sightseeing trip last
week tllrough West Virginia
: WEAVER REUNION and Williams.
. picnic Sunday at Krodel
Sending gifts were Pearl · and Virginia;· Brian is
" Park, Point Pleasant, located ,Newman; · Clyde and Mary recuperati"ng from a lead
• onSR2and62. Luncl)atnoon. Cozart,
all
great- lacera'lion received in a
: HYMN SING, Sunday, 2 g:andparents; Dee Simms, . swimming accident. The .cut
•
m at "Freedom Gospel Jim Clifford, Carl, Hilda and took 18 sti!(:hes to close.
Mrs. Emma McBride and
~ ~is~ion, Bald Knob with Brian Weaver, Stacy Fry and
LADIES
ALL SWIMWEAR
son,
Walter of St. Louis,
~ Bissell Brothers and other Gladys Robson.
Mich.; Mrs. Louise Siemer of
PANT SUITS &amp; ORESSES
REDUCED
• local singers; public invited.
Corning, and Miss Loretta
Franz of South Bend, Ind.
' MARTIN &amp; Emma Sayre"
.
1j3 TO
OFF
were guests of friends in
" reunion Sunday at Shrine .
TO
.
TO REUNITE
~ Park in Racine.
The annual Carr School Pomeroy Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard K.
,' TEAFORD reunion Sunday Reunion has been set for
Parker
and son , Howard, Jr .
~ at Forked Run State Park.
Sunday, .Aug. 8, at the Wood
of
Morgan
City, La. are
Basket lunch at I p.m.
Grove in Alfred.
visiting their parents, Mrs.

'"' . .
r

. Hymn
sinR
•
set Monday

Jessie Reeves, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Lee and son, Thomas
Oliver. Sending gifts were
Lawrence Dilcher, Jeff Nash,
Usa Ferrell, Joy LyMelte,
Kenneth Black and Suzan
Thoma.

Fountain

Ladies&amp;
Childrens
Rest Room

Social·
Calendar

Sale

MEN'S SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS •••••••••••• -~ PRICE
MEN'S l£1SURE SUITS •••••• ••• ••• •• ••• •• ~ PRICE
BOYS' TANK TOPS·················~·····:~ PRICE
BOYS' SOORT SLEEVE AND
-LONG SLEEVE SPORT
SHIRTS
••••• ••••••• ~ PRICE
.
.
.
ODD lDT BOYS' lDNG SLEEVE
SHIRTS, Values to 6.98 ~ ••••••• ••••••••••••••• 2.00
ODD lDT MEN'S lDNG SLEEVE
'
SPORT SHIRTS, large size only
Values to 10.98 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3.00
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS .... ·.~ PRICE
MEN'S &amp;BOYS' DRESS SlACKS .......... lh PRICE
MEN'S SHORTY PAJAMAS ••••••••••••••••• lh PRICE.
MEN'S DENIM JDElS ••••• •••••••• •••••• lh PRICE

ACTIVITY BOOKS

BATH TOWELS
Slightly lrre9ular
Reg . $2.49

Reg . 69.c

3

••
'

If E
could have,
she
would have!

. SUMMER SPORT WEAR
Sizes 4-6x
7-14

SHORT SETS
TANK TOPS
SALE PRICED

NATU~ESUL

.. byconn1e

ONE GROUP GIRLS

BATHING SUITS

feet and a lot more comfortable!

·l 'l

Perftop In navy

1.

blue suede ·

lf3.TO
YOUR THOM MeAN STORE
"•
!

~

lh

OPEN FRIDAY
TIL

8
'

\/

Off

Dacron

LEISURE SUITS
Values to $39.95

SAL£ 125.00
4 Ply
4 Oz.

MEN'S

TANK TOPS

100 Pel . ACRYLIC

SALE 77«

Values to $3.49

IT

Reg. $3.98

SALE
SLEEVELESS

Sti&gt;RT SETS
CUTOFF JEANS
TANK TOPS

BED PILLOWS

YARN

'COOL. COMFY

BOYS'

\::::}

heritage house

• Sleeveless Dusters

,,2.
1: PRICE

What Eve didn't know didn't hurt her (or maybe it did!) , but she probably
would have been much happier in Nature Soles .. . shoes shaped JUSt ltke

IN LADIES READYTO-WEAR DEPT.
; Jr. Size Pants
• Tops
• Slips

•Gowns

FOR . ,
MENS

GIRLS''

s2 RACK .

BLOUSES
SALE

PRICED

sps
TO

CAREFREE

CHECK THIS ONE!
116 PAIRS

TANKS,
SHORTS,
HALTERS
.
SAL£
PRICED

MEN'S
•

Values to S13.9S

· .. SALE

ONE GROUP

SHORTS
$588

2.00

1

2/'5

r

ss.oo

l

�r.

t-The

8- The Da!Jy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 29, 1976

l~-

I ,

I
'J

'G=;;;;;;i~;,~=,ii;;== =·:':·=·=·=·=·=: lf Salon
My Jl d••u

fl ~ 1-H' Bottd

.receives five

awa~ds

;;;;

Meigs County· Salon 710, line and Hazel Elliott. Mrs.
::~ F:1r&gt;hl and F1&gt;rly, · ~ceived Brady presented a book of
·· ltve trophy ~wards for out. prayer to Mrs. Huston and
Is My Fink Brother Listening?
standing project and service noted that books of prayers
Rap :
work during the past year at had been sent to Children 's
Almost every lime I get interested in a boy, my brother the Departementa l 'd Ohio's Hospitals and the Xenia
tells Dad, confidentially, ti)at he's o~t to score. Then Dad tells ~t b annual marche hel~ home.
Mom, and Mom says I can't go with him.
reccnll~ at !he Neil House in
}o open the convention,
Since my brother is the biggest (hopeful i scorer around, .Columbus.
Mrs . Heacock gave a
he thinks all the other guys·are too. I tell my folks that what
The Salon, ~rganized 11 welcome with the response by
guy~ brag about in the gym showers isn't what they do years ago , again thts year Mrs . Elizabeth Horva c.
unless the girl is a pushover - but they only Ii8ten to my flnky maintained its ~ecord _of Greetings were brought by
brother. For me, "making It" on a date is with personality, not receivmg four to siX trophies distinguished guests, Mrs .
sex!
·
each y~ar.
Jane Balzhlser , retttlng
How do you convince them 7 - OVERPROTECTED SIS
Rece~ved were_ the Ger- American Legion Auxiliary
trud e Moore Trophy for Department
of
Ohio
Dear Sis :
having spent the most money president· Dean School
Since your brother is the big talker here, work on in cyslic fibrosis work in the American' Legion Depart:
convincing HIM that you're smart enough to protect yourself category of salons with I to 35 ment of Ohio commander;
against hopeful scorers.
partners; the Arree Marshall Paul Southers, grand chef de
Why not have a ftEAL conversation with him ? He might Trophy for the. most out. gare, Forty el Eight; George
learn a lot he needs to know about girls, as well as boys. - standmg cystic fibrosis Glaub, grand correspondent,
HEI$N
project : the Rose DeCker Forty el Eight: Mrs. Henry
+++
Trophy f or sc holarship Patro, new American Legion
Sis :
contribu tions; the Ella Auxiliary
Department
While you're at it, why not get a bunch of guys and girls McDonald Trophy for the president. Glaub reported on
together and talk this "scoring" thing out?
best _history , and the Mary the progress of the swimming
Maybe you could put it across to your brother and others Marttn Trophy for the best pool project at the Xenia
. llke him that bragging in the showers is as old-fashioned as publicity scrapbook.
Orphans Home .
four-letter words on bathroom walls. - SUE
Officers elected for the
Myrtle Walker ,
.
++t
. 1976-77 year and installed by RaMrs.
cine , chairman of the
NarE ·TO SIS'S PARENTS: You've got more to worry Mrs . Mary Martin of children and youth comabout in your son than in your daughter. Start listening to HER Pomeroy at a banquet were mittee, reported that Ohio
for a change. - HELEN
Mrs . Marcella Huston , this year endowed the 26th
+++
naUonal pourvior member ; bed at the National Jewish
Rap :
··
..
Mrs. Audrey Glaub, depar- Hospital at $1 ,000 along with
. You u~ed for COIIj1llellts on allowmg smoking areas at Iemen tal chapeau ; Mrs . contributing
$300
for
high schools. II the school board feels it would be san.ctioning Belly Horvath, first derni memorial plaques. She said
"illegal" smoking by this, then !t$1iouldn't do so, but polluted · chapeau; Mrs. Dorothy tha t this year $8,309 had been
rest room air_Is still a problem.
Brade, second demi chapeau; given in the children and
Therefore I suggest that the student council choose one Mrs . Catherine Baker , youth work. This includes
rest room for each sex to be used by smokers, leaving the l ' aumoni er ; J oycely n $2,489.25 spent in Ohio for
others for nonsm~kers. Then, the school board needn't Bowman, Ia archiviste; Mrs. special projects ; $1,634 for
approve, and the prmcipai can look tbe other way. And every- Shirley Davis, Ia concierge; Tuberculosis work ; $1.14 for
one will be happier. - M.
.
Mrs . Viole t Aichholz, Ia tuberculosis research, $103
secre tar~, and Mrs. Mary for cystic fibrosis research ,
Dear Helen and Sue :
Lou Gibhn, Ia casstere. The $41.i0 for ·memorials and
About smoking areas on hj_gh school campuses. We have installation included a court $62.74for respiratory dfsease
one, but it really doesn't mil!&lt;e much difference. Our of honor composed of part- research thr ough
the
bathrooms are always smoly because people don't want to go ners of Salon 333 who la ter Am erican Legion Child
outside. Between periods, it takes too long, and it makes them hosted a reception honoring Welfare Foundation. She also
late for classes. - NO SOJ.;{jTIO~
.
"
Mrs . Glau,b. There was noted that 1,409 volunteer
special music under the hours had been recorded and
Rap:
•
direction of Myrtle Breat. 1,826 children served.
·
"Righteous" for family living courses in high school ! And wail, chorus director, who is
The nurses scholarsh ip
that means singles living as well as how to manage marriage. now 88 and retiring .
fund contribution for the year
I think seniors should be required to stndy nutrition,
Elected delegates to the was $1,500with Meigs County
budgeting, health (inclu~ sex education), the paychol~ of n~tionai convention were Salon giving 'roo of that
living with someone ~lse, cliild~!,. aU those thing! liie may Mrs. Huston, Mrs. Glaub, amount.
lhrowatyoulnaddltion~Qel!l;~apving. ·
· · Mrs . . Dorotny Brady, Mrs.
11 was reported that partWe're adults at 18·~"f.!UMI ·ttlaily of us will be out on our Marlm, Mrs. Eleanor- Hart• . nership fell short of reaching
own usoon u we graduate lrom high school. People who say
these counes are "unnec-..y friU. to waste the taxpayers'
money" don't reallze that unwanted kids, poor health, divorce
and child abuse cost taJ: money too- in welfare payments. F.F.C.
- - - ---'-'- - - -- - - ; - - - -

'

U!

goal. Goal was 1.849and'paid
partnerships total 1,787.
The premarche pouvior
opened with a dulch supper In
the Town and Cou.ntry Room
at the Neil House, with Mrs.
Huston, Cincin nati, the
depar lemental chapeau ,
presiding. Introduced were
Mrs . Aicliholt, national
scholarship chairman ; Mrs.
Martin, third member of
l!Jilional !inance committee;
Mrs. Doris Stanriff, national
pouvior member, chapeau
passes and all departemental
chairmen . The budget for
1976-77waspresentedby Mrs.
Martin .
Parody winners were
O"awford County 389., first;
Summit County 165, second ;
Sandusky Salon 597, third.
Mrs. Hartline and Ronnie
Horvath . were chairmen for
the fun and fellowship which
was followed by a reception
honoring Mrs. Huston,
outgoing chapeau .
For the departemental
chapeaux passes breakfast a
bicentennial theme was
carried out. The centerpiece
was a large musical bell and
favors were small glass beh
banks. Name tags were red,
white and blue. Memorial
prayer· was beld for Helen
Kilworth on October 12, 1975
and Esther C. Edgar, Dec. 16,
1975.
Chapeaux passPS in·
troduced at the breakfast
were Violet Aichho1z, Mrs.
Elliott, Mrs. IreneMier, Mrs.
Angie
McElroy, Mrs .
Virginia Rahe, Mrs. Louise
Kranerbuhl , Mrs. Martin ,
Mrs, Doris Stanriff, Mrs.
Hust on. Notes of regret were
read from Susie Sonnenstine,
who will be JOi on Oct. 3,
Bernice Christerson and
Evalina Berkley.
It was reported that the
special project of the year
had brought in $132 . A
donation of $10 will be sent to
the National Jewish Hospital
in memory of Mrs. Esther
Edgar and Mrs. Helen
Killworth . To
nurses
scholarship fund , the
chapeaux passes donated »5.
Mrs. Ita he will serve as
chairman of the 197&amp;-77 year
with Mrs. Slanriff to serve as
Ia secretaire-cassiere. Mrs.
Louise Goodall,. breakfast
chairman·, presented a door
prize w:on by Mrs. Martin.

.P0 II y' s p' 0 'I nte rs .

Second reunion enjoyed_
\

Time is money
for home labor

The second aMual reunion ville; Ralph and Ida Mae _a~ Polly Cramer
ol the Laura and Marion Ours Ours, New Brighton, Pa.; - POLLY'S PROBLEM
and wait to have a one pound
family was held · recently at Isabel, Tom, Kim and Shawn
DEAR
POLLY
Can
package
up .special.
Forked Run State Park with Edwards of Kettering; Jeff, anyone tell me how to go This seemsmade
to
me
to be a ruse
56 attending.
Becky, Rlan and Michael about putting prices on to gel us to buy more meat.-,:. :. ·Recognized and presented Donohew, Belpre ; Eugene,
handmade items like HELEN.
~ were Roy Donohew, the Evelyn and Anita Webster
crocheted shawls and so on
DEAR POLLY - 1 am
«deal man present; Ruth Garfield Heights; Wayne,' that one makes for someone . answering the reader whose
OUn, the oldest woman.; Kevin, Lori and Brian Ours, else ? - ETHEL.
plastic curtains were torn in
Violet Preston, traveling the East Liverpool ; Virgil, ·
DEAR
ETHEL
Thai
iS
a
the
washer. I have had good
farthest; Nancy Yoacham, Delores, Teresa, Vernon
good . questioo. but hard to luck washing mine in the
the youngest mother, and Mike and Pal Ours of New' onswer. When making · an bathtub. I use warm water
Michael Donobew. The lm Philadelphia; and William,
llem
for
someone and mild soap, let the curreuni111 was set for July 2 at Virginia, Diana and Louie specifically, do come to aa tains soak a while and then
Forked Run.
Huffman, Salem .
a~ment on price before work them around with my
Attending were Audrey and
IIJe
work is started. oiten a hands . Alter draining out tile
WUey Ours, Mark, Nancy and
warm lrleodsbip can cool off soapy water, put in clean
Mala Yoacham, Roy ; ,11~·· ....
' when ibe · pi-Ice - is quoted warm water and rinse twice.
Mildred Donobew, Lewis and
,_.,.' ' afterwards. Some seem to Hang on the showeri curtain
Rulli Ours, Racine; Jac(
figure one's time Is wortb · pole to drip dry and the water
Violet and Jaclde PrestOn,
• UHle. Look around In shops drips into the tub. Mine looks
l'aladena, CaHf.; Bill, Pat, ,
-~·
'
seJIJng handmade items and like new after washing this
Billy and Ryan Ours ~ ~
RUMMAGESALESE'i'
at bazaars and see wbai they way. -MRS. R. L.
Columbus, Miss.; Willy,
T~e· HaPPY Harvesters
charge. One's tilDe is money.
DEAR POLLY - We
Katby Mike Bob and' W8 Class of Trinity Church will
'lbougb
Ute
charges
could
not
thought
we had tried everyOun, i.evt~. Pa.; Mike, • have a rwrunage sale in the
karen, Tony , and Danny church basement starting be made according to ALL thing to get rid of neas in our
the hours speat oo the job and carpel, until we finally
urn......
"-e~
., ...,uu, Miami 1 Fla .,· "~
:a, . Monday at 9 a.m. and conai
a going hourly rate, there bought several boxes of flea
Amy and Randy Ours, Wells- tinuing through Wednesday.
certaioly should be lair powder,
sprinkled
it
compeasation lor II. - generously on aU carpeted
POLLY.
areas and left the house for a
few hours . Later we
DEAR POLLY - My Pet vacuumed thoroughly. While
··PeeYe is with the way this was a lol of work, it was
supermarkeis package cheaper than having an
ground meat. It is almost exterminator and really did
'
possible to fmd a one pound the job. - ELLEN.
package of hamburger meat
DEAR POLLY ..., I dye·my
or ground pork as invariably own hair and have a ~rrific
it will be several ounces over way to get at those faded out
and
have to ring a bell roots and the dye job comes
out very evenly. I use a
Prescription
regular toothbrush with even
bristles. Pour some or the
&amp;
already mixed dye in the
Surqical Support palm of your hand anctdip the
toothbrush into this mixture.
Center
Then proceed to put on your
dry hair, starting at the worst
spots first. Then even if your
. hair ends do not need it you
have the roots covered nicely. Also good for those
BUTTERSCOTCH SQUARES .. . soft marsh·
~ard·to~over . hairs on the
mallow and a layer of butterscotch dipped
temples. - FLO.
·
in yellow pastel coaling
DEAR POLLY - If your
MINT SQUARES ... soft marshmallow with a
car reeks of cigarette smoke,
layer or mint jelly, dipped in smooth green
leave an apple in the closed
pastel coating
·
car overnight. It will coim1
teracl the smoke odors. a box
CORA.
DEAR POLLY - Sew a
small magnet inside one
thickness of the nylon net in
your pretty nylon scrubber. It
will really stay on the top
corner of the bathtub. ·MARGARET.
Polly wiD send you one ol
her " peachy" thaok-you
cards, Ideal for framing or
placing in your family
serapbaol, U 1be usn your
lavort~t Pointer, Peeve or
Problem
Ia your column.
POMEROY .O.
Wrlle Polly's Poinlers in care
of this newspaper.

~E~~e~

.,

· Cool and Refreshing

Hallmark

RISell Stover
Candy

1.50

Water

&gt;.

Convention reports are heard.
Reports of the 58th aMual
American Legion Auxiliary
convenUon held recenUy in
Columbus was given by Mrs.
Grace Pratt, delegate, at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy,
Mrs . Pratt displayed
awards received by the unit
including a ci taU on of merit
for submitting all required
reports. Certificates for
~ommuni ty service and for
clvH . defense · programs
carried out by the unl t under
the direction of Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett were also displayed.
Miss Erma Smith reported
on. the history compiled for
the year's work which took a
third place award In the
Department of Ohio and then
she presented it to Mrs.
Pratt. Reports were given on
the various activities of the
convention including the
community service caucas.
Mrs. Harry Davis presented
a detailed account of the
junior activities caucas
which she attended at the
convention, a~ both she and
Miss Smith expressed ap·
predation to the unit for the
privilege of serving as
, delegates.
Mrs. Prall presided at the
ritualistic opening of the
meeting and extended a
welcome to Mrs. Edith Sauer
who has been absent due to
hospitalization . Mr·s, Sauer
thanked the unit .for cards
,and· flowers . ·A· com·
munication was read !rom
the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospita l expressing ap·
preciation for the par·

UcipaUon in the July birthday
party. Mrs. Gemma CaiiCi,
veterans
affairs
and
rehabilitation chairman,
reported that potato chips,
candy, cookies, ditty bags,
bibs, oranges and monetary
gifts were ,taken to the
hospital.
The unlt received an in·.
vitatlon to a reception to be
held Oct. 9 at the Yorkshire
Hotel, Toledo, for Mrs. Henry
Patro, . newly
elected
Department
of
Ohio
president. '
The first reading of the
1976-71 budget was given by
Mrs. Davis. Miss smith has
named chairman for the
annual sale of pecans. Mrs.
Davis thanked !.he members
for assisting with the junior
Auxiliary installaUon held
recently at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Roy Reuter and Mrs.
Gerald Wildermut.h reported
on community service work
Including serving the canteen
at tbe bloodmobile, and the
dedication of the flag at the
mini-park.
A sympathy card was sent
to Mrs. Kathy Cummings on
the death of her brother. Mrs.
Prall reported a need for
ditty bags, toothpaste, and
deodorant at all veterans
hospitals and noted donations
are being accepted.
Members were reminded
that dues are payable now.
They are now » a year. The
traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Davis was won by Mrs.

Wildermuth. Hostesses for
the Alll!ust meeting will be
Mrs. Hackett and Mrs. Pearl
Knapp. The meeunc closed in
ritualistic form with refresh·
ments being served by Mrs.
Reuter and Mrs. Wlldermuth.

Carawlle
IY IULOYA

A prtclslon·lewelid.
Bulovt-~ed watch

Caravelle.
rert•tant arld
magntll!::

by

s"*"
.:m.,.

An outdoor hymn sing will
be held Monday night at 7:30
on -the lawn at the Deneil Yost
home, located on the Bill
George Road off of the .Eno
and Vinton Road near
Morgan Center.
Old fashioned day will be
observed with the women to
wear long dresses and bonnets. Those attending are
asked to take lawn chairs.
Some of the special groups to
sing will be The Joyful Tones
of Fairplay Chapel; the
Midway Trio and the Pine
Grove Youths of )he Pine
Grove Church; the Morgan
Center Youth of the Morgan
.Center
Mission ;
the
Miracleaires of Fairview.
Other groups will be
singing and all groups and
individuals are welcome to
attend to either sing or listen.
Further inlorma lion on the
sing can be obtained by
, calling 388-8896 or 992-7173.

Forest Acres is scene. of reunion

Reference guide
donated.to library

''

The eighth annual reunion
of the Taylor-Harper families
was· held Sunday at Forest
Acres Park beginning with a
basket dinner at noon. Ben
Rife gave grace.
Mrs. Ruby Rife presided at
the business meeting with
officers for the 1977 reunion
being elected. They are Mrs.
. Rife, president; Donald

..

Picnic held
Tuesday night

Birthday
celebrated

Personal Notes

GOISS'ER

J•·• Stare

c-t, p;, '-m~y

DOAAL ltwo·tone smooth)

MEN'S
CLEARANCE

DREss ·&amp;CASUALS
SALE.
PRICES!
MAIN STREET

'f2

lj3 - ~OFF

Chapman's Shoes

~

SALE
.ON ALL
SUMMER

KNITS .

FINAL

SAVE

40%

* * Celebration * *
PRICE AND MORE

50%
o Boys Ponl•
o Boys &amp; Girts Shortl
• Leisure Suits
• S.ltcttd Po lomas

oSAVE ON
MANY OTHERS

_

..... ...

'-

ESALE
CONTINUES
SAVINGS 20% TO 50%
ON MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

Fine
Wearing Apparel

-CHECK OUR
Sl TABLE

Pre-Washed Jeans
SIZES 7-14

ON THE MAIN FLOOR
·• Visor Caps
• Girls Slacks

• Udies Shorts
• Halters

KING SIZE

CHILDREN'S

BRIDGE OPENING
~

and Jimmy and Mrl.
Werner.

POMEROY

'
TRINA REEVES
The ninth birthday of Trina
Gale Reeves was celebrated
recenUy aI the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Reeves, Pomeroy.
A bicentennial theme was
carried out with red, white
and blue streamers. The
cake , inscribed " Happy
Birthday, Trina, 9 years old"
and decorated in the patrioli.~.
colors, featured a Iirecracker
replica. ·
Cake, ice cream, chips and
pop were served to Tammy,
Kim and Dixie Eblin, Mrs.

'

Taylor, vice president; Mr. and Mn. Merrill Ta••lnr.
Alwilda Werner, secretary, Mr. and .Mrs.
and Mrs. Opal Harper ,
treasurer. The reunion will be
held at the park on the last
Sunday of July next year.
Recognized were Joe
Taylor, Grove City, the oldest
man attending; Mrs. Madge
Taylor, Grove City, the oldest
woman attending; Erin.
Annette Harper, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy W. Harper,.
Middleport, the youngest
a !tending, and Mr. and Mrs.
David Taylor and family of
Fostoria, the lamily traveling
the farthest.
·
Door prizes were awarded
to Mrs. Grace Lemley, Mrs.
Kathryn Werner, Mrs .
TO
Lucille Lemley and Mrs. May
Taylor . .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Rife, Carla and
Becky; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
• Girls Pants
Taylor, Mrs . Virginia Colllns
• Slack S4JIIs
and son, Todd, Mrs. Lydia
• Bathing Sulls
o All Weolhtr Coats
DeLong, Mrs. Reva Beach,
• Infant &amp;
·
Miss Harriet Thompson, Mrs.
Toddler
Grace Lemley, Mr. and. Mrs.
Wear
Bill Boyce, Mr. and Mrs.
Johit Werner, Mr. aod Mrs.
John Lemley, Mr: and Mrs.
Guy W. Harper Ryan and
Erin, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Harper, Mr. and Mrs. David
Taylor, Crystal and Julie, .

THURSDAY
" FREE CLOTHING Day at
The SalvaUon Army, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, ThursMrs. James Jl!cklon, well-Down hortlcullllrlll aad
day, 10 a.m. to 12 noon. All.
Dower arranger who has taugbl~eV«~l Dower arnDgblg
area residen Is welCome .
clasllts iD Melp Cowlty, has dtliUiied a copy of HOI'iulaaa,
•
Mji:IGS VARSJTY football
the Reference Guide of ihe Gardea Club of Ohio, to !be
squad members Thursday
Pomeroy Ubrary, lor the use of the pubUc.
7:30p.m. at the high school.
Mra. Jacklon helped revillt Ibis clrectory in 1971 whea
RACINE AMERICAN
JANE ANN WltLIAMS
she wu Horticulture Chairman for ibe Gardea Clubs ol
[..eglon Post 602 special
Ohio. This guide, which IIIII plallis, Is u~tlallor anyoae
TUCKER WILLIAMS
partlclpatlnl iD Dower shows. II complemenlt the
, meeting Thursday, 8 p.m.
A picnic was held Tuesday
Handbooll
for Flower Sllows which -Ia already in tbe
: •
FRIDAY
night at the Kyger Creek
Pomeroy Library and can be borrowed by the pubUc. ·
: .• UMWA SUPPORTERS
Recreation Park by the Loyal
Prlaied
by
the
National
Council
of
Slate
Garden
' Friday, 10 a.m. at Forest
Bereans Class of the Mid·
Clubs,
it
11111
deilllled
siandardl
lor
growing,
siagbg,
• Acres Park near Rutland.
dleport
Church of Christ.
exhlblling
and
judging
plant•
and
Dowers
lor
COillpeiiUon
;. Jame~ Kidd, president of
Attending
were Cynthia
and
11
especially
aseful
for
Dower
1how
contestants
who
:::" Black Lunc of District Six,
Go
tiring,
Eula
Rice, Sylvia
wani to nndmtand how points will be awarded to them
:·. guest speaker.
Rice,
Ruth
Karr,
Mr. and
; .~ SOtJ'I!IERN LOCAL Band
John Tucker Williams, son · during judglng.li dilcu1ses the dlllereni.IChools of Dower
Mrs.
Robert
McElhinny,
Mr.·
. shows, the 111e of.coior In arr~gemen11; quallflcail-lor
: ~ pracUce session, grades , 7 of Mr. and Mrs . Jack
and
Mrs.
Dana
Swift,
Grace
judges aDd principles ·of artistic design.
, lhrough12Frldayat6p.m. at Williams, Syracuse,
Hawley, ·
Ella
Mae
These iwo handbooks and other books on Dower
:. high school. Former mem- celebrated his first birthday
Daughterly, Etoilla Cassell,
arranging allbe Pomeroy and Middleport Libraries are
:: 'bers or anyone desiring to be with a party on the lawn of his
Clyda
Allensworth, Gertrude
for
the
use
of
any
Interested
penoUI.
: a member should report at home, Sunday. Tucker is.
MilJet,
Rosemary Smith and
• same time.. Any seventh shown here with his three and ·
son,
David,
Mr. and MrS.
:~. grader desiring to .' atte~d ·.one half-year-old sister, Jane ::::::=::::;:;;;:;::::=::::::~:;:~::;:;;;:;:;:;:::::;,::;:;:;:;?fi:!i:;:i:::::n::::::;,;:;:::;:;:::;'::::;:;: ::t:!!:){=l:"i!'':::J
George
Glaze,
· Trey and
~ band camp can 949-2219 or Ann.
Clinton,
Clarence
McNeal, ·
• "247-2401.
A "Skipper " theme in red , » .W-«
Viola Edwards and Mr. and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marvin
Kelly,
Mrs. Herbert Parker,
SATURDAY
white and blue was used.
Martha Haggerty, Martha
Pomerrt~
HORSE SHOW Saturday at Tllree cakes highlighted the
Syracuse.
Childs,
George Meinhart and
Mrs. Carl Kennedy and
Rock Springs Fairgrounds 6 refreshment table . The
Lena
McKinley.
children, Glenn, Sue, Randy
, p.m. sponsored by Southern middle sheet cake carried out
' Athletic Boosters aod Meigs the birthday theme with ~
and DaMy, have returned
Mr , and Mrs . James horne after a vacation in
County Riding Club.
little boy In blue jean
..
Soulsby
and children, Cindy, Hohenwald, Tenn . where they
ICE CREAM Social overalls, carrying a ball bat
RALLY SLATED
Saturday, I p.m. at St. Paul and a glove, and was in- Pat and Jirnmer, Mrs. Susie were guests of her sister ,
A youth rally has been
Methodist Church, Tuppers scribed with "Happy Bir• Abbott, Denise Marshall, and Mrs. E. Lambert and family. scheduled for Aug . I~ at 7:30
Mrs. Sandra Harris and p.m. at the Fairplay Chapel
Plains.
lhday Tucker ," The two Becky Fry have returned
• MIDDLEPORT FIRE smaller cakes , replicas of from vacation. They visited children, &amp;ott, Tina, and located on Meigs County
'" Department fish fry, baseball hats with the Mackinac City , Mackina&lt;~ .. Chad of Fort L:luderdale, Road I off State Route 325 or·
' Saturday, starling at 11 a.m. number ''1" on them, com- Island, and then went to Fla. arehere visiting Mr. and 124. Everyone Is invited by
at the firehouse.
plimented each side of the Island View Resort In Mrs . Russell Little . Carl
tt.e pastor, the Rev. Theron
Harris will join his family Durham. On Aug. 14 at the
..... SWIMMING PARTY for larger cake. Tucker received Michigan for a week.
! mernbers of Preceptor many nice gifts and cards. · ' 1Thomas E. Hysell of Route here for a visit later.
Chapel a hymn sing will be
• Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Cake and ice cream were 2, Pomeroy is recuperating
held. Special singers will be
. : Sorority, and husbands, 6:30 served to Kristen Jo Kibbee, from two surgeries at the
the Messengers of Wellston.
DINNER GUESTS
: p.m. Saturday at the home of D. J. Harden, Tammy Holzer Medical Center where
The public is invi~.
RACINE - Dinner guests
~ Dr. and Mrs; !!_, R. Pickens.
Buckley, Archie and Amy he has been confined to the
•
Moore, Wendy Fry, Mike intensive care unit following of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
~
SUNDAY
KJoes, Angela Clifford, Jane a collapsed lung and com- Russell, Rt. 2, Racine, Friday
REHEARSAL PLANNED
" EASTERN STAR family Ann Williams, and the plication.
were Mrs. Karl Russell, the
A rehearsal for the Voices
: picnic at Forest Acres Park, honored guest.
Edgar Thomas ofNye Ave. former
Linda
Smith , of Uberty Chorus has been
• near Rutland at 2 p.m .
Also present were Mr. and is a surgical patient at the children, Metlssa and Ken· schedUled by Mrs. Harvey
: &gt;unday. Grand pages and Mrs. c. H. Williall)s, Tucker 's Holzer Medical Center.
neth Roy, Camp LeJeune, Van Vranken, director, lor 8
: tides of District 25 to be great-grandparents, John P.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cleland N.C.; Mr . and Mrs. Roy p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
: ·onored.
Williams and Mr. and Mrs . and Ronnie, of Parkersburg, · Smith ·and son, Mike, United Metllodist Church.
~ l:lA YES-YOUNG • HOL· ' Clarence Baxter, all grand- W. Va.; ·Allen Cleland , New Pomeroy, Route 3, Mrs. The Chorus will present the
: LIDAY school reunum parents; Vince and Mary Jo Cumberland, W. Va. and Dorothy Dandakis, Athens. bicentennial musical "Ring
• S11nday at the home of Mr. Kibbee Eileen and Harry' Dave qeland and children of Lt. Karl Russell has been on Out All the Bells of Freedom"
• and Mrs. Gerald Hayes; Rt. 1, uarK, 'Jean KJoes , Eleanor Belpre were weekend visitors sea duty for several days. at the Meigs County Fair
: Shade. Picnic lunch at noon. Robson, Vera Mae Tannehill, of their mother, Mrs. Mae Mrs. Russell and the children Ministerial Association
returned to North Carolina opening program on the
; WEBER · REUNION DennisandCathyMoore,Don Cleland, Racine.
• Sunday, noon ~t Royal Oak and Angie Harden, l!etty · Mr . and Mrs. Earl Cleland this week.
evening of Aug. 16 . .
• Park recrea l10n ·buildmg. Spencer, Jeannie and Kenny and sons , Mrs. Mae Cleland
~ Basket dinner. Bring small Buckley, Kathy Fry, Faye and grandson, Brian, Racine,
• prize for games.
Clifford, and Jack and Judy took a sightseeing trip last
week tllrough West Virginia
: WEAVER REUNION and Williams.
. picnic Sunday at Krodel
Sending gifts were Pearl · and Virginia;· Brian is
" Park, Point Pleasant, located ,Newman; · Clyde and Mary recuperati"ng from a lead
• onSR2and62. Luncl)atnoon. Cozart,
all
great- lacera'lion received in a
: HYMN SING, Sunday, 2 g:andparents; Dee Simms, . swimming accident. The .cut
•
m at "Freedom Gospel Jim Clifford, Carl, Hilda and took 18 sti!(:hes to close.
Mrs. Emma McBride and
~ ~is~ion, Bald Knob with Brian Weaver, Stacy Fry and
LADIES
ALL SWIMWEAR
son,
Walter of St. Louis,
~ Bissell Brothers and other Gladys Robson.
Mich.; Mrs. Louise Siemer of
PANT SUITS &amp; ORESSES
REDUCED
• local singers; public invited.
Corning, and Miss Loretta
Franz of South Bend, Ind.
' MARTIN &amp; Emma Sayre"
.
1j3 TO
OFF
were guests of friends in
" reunion Sunday at Shrine .
TO
.
TO REUNITE
~ Park in Racine.
The annual Carr School Pomeroy Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard K.
,' TEAFORD reunion Sunday Reunion has been set for
Parker
and son , Howard, Jr .
~ at Forked Run State Park.
Sunday, .Aug. 8, at the Wood
of
Morgan
City, La. are
Basket lunch at I p.m.
Grove in Alfred.
visiting their parents, Mrs.

'"' . .
r

. Hymn
sinR
•
set Monday

Jessie Reeves, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Lee and son, Thomas
Oliver. Sending gifts were
Lawrence Dilcher, Jeff Nash,
Usa Ferrell, Joy LyMelte,
Kenneth Black and Suzan
Thoma.

Fountain

Ladies&amp;
Childrens
Rest Room

Social·
Calendar

Sale

MEN'S SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS •••••••••••• -~ PRICE
MEN'S l£1SURE SUITS •••••• ••• ••• •• ••• •• ~ PRICE
BOYS' TANK TOPS·················~·····:~ PRICE
BOYS' SOORT SLEEVE AND
-LONG SLEEVE SPORT
SHIRTS
••••• ••••••• ~ PRICE
.
.
.
ODD lDT BOYS' lDNG SLEEVE
SHIRTS, Values to 6.98 ~ ••••••• ••••••••••••••• 2.00
ODD lDT MEN'S lDNG SLEEVE
'
SPORT SHIRTS, large size only
Values to 10.98 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3.00
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS .... ·.~ PRICE
MEN'S &amp;BOYS' DRESS SlACKS .......... lh PRICE
MEN'S SHORTY PAJAMAS ••••••••••••••••• lh PRICE.
MEN'S DENIM JDElS ••••• •••••••• •••••• lh PRICE

ACTIVITY BOOKS

BATH TOWELS
Slightly lrre9ular
Reg . $2.49

Reg . 69.c

3

••
'

If E
could have,
she
would have!

. SUMMER SPORT WEAR
Sizes 4-6x
7-14

SHORT SETS
TANK TOPS
SALE PRICED

NATU~ESUL

.. byconn1e

ONE GROUP GIRLS

BATHING SUITS

feet and a lot more comfortable!

·l 'l

Perftop In navy

1.

blue suede ·

lf3.TO
YOUR THOM MeAN STORE
"•
!

~

lh

OPEN FRIDAY
TIL

8
'

\/

Off

Dacron

LEISURE SUITS
Values to $39.95

SAL£ 125.00
4 Ply
4 Oz.

MEN'S

TANK TOPS

100 Pel . ACRYLIC

SALE 77«

Values to $3.49

IT

Reg. $3.98

SALE
SLEEVELESS

Sti&gt;RT SETS
CUTOFF JEANS
TANK TOPS

BED PILLOWS

YARN

'COOL. COMFY

BOYS'

\::::}

heritage house

• Sleeveless Dusters

,,2.
1: PRICE

What Eve didn't know didn't hurt her (or maybe it did!) , but she probably
would have been much happier in Nature Soles .. . shoes shaped JUSt ltke

IN LADIES READYTO-WEAR DEPT.
; Jr. Size Pants
• Tops
• Slips

•Gowns

FOR . ,
MENS

GIRLS''

s2 RACK .

BLOUSES
SALE

PRICED

sps
TO

CAREFREE

CHECK THIS ONE!
116 PAIRS

TANKS,
SHORTS,
HALTERS
.
SAL£
PRICED

MEN'S
•

Values to S13.9S

· .. SALE

ONE GROUP

SHORTS
$588

2.00

1

2/'5

r

ss.oo

l

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepori-Pill!le'oy, 0 ., 'lbunday, July 29, 19.76

Astra- For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
GrapM
.
·
.

AppteGrove
News Notes

·
Berntce Bedl Oaol
For Frldor, Julr 30, 1171
AAIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 1t)

WANT ADS
INP'ORMATION
DEADLINES
P.M. Day Before

'

Business Services

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
5
Publleauon .
•
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
~-----Ctnctlllf Ions.
correc .
Think
m
terms
of
being
of
serCasper of Columbus spent a
ttons accepted flrsr Clay of
vice 10 others today, Tills is publication
.
weekend with Mrs . Dolly
how you'll lind the greatest
REGULATIONS
Wolfe and famUy .
rewards .
The Publisher reserves
FR.~t_ lltlrl
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hill
the right to edit or reJect
TAURUS (April 20,-Moy 20) any
IdS
dttmed
ob
.
returned to their home at
Others w1U lind you an ins piring
lectlonel. The publisher
llllllltltll Senlcts
Moore Haven, Fla. after
person to be aroun d today. wltl not be rtSROnl fble for
floooocilc . . .
more then one Incorrect
Your optimlslic outlook will
sp~nding
their summer
lnsrr·tlon .
. . . loll I* &amp; Altia
buoy
th
eir
spirits.
vacation with Mr. and Mrs.
RATES
1'72 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR.
SI"S
ST1IIII
For Want Ad Service
Mike Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juilo 20)
Good
tires,
clean
Interior,
radio,
red
finish
,
gOOd
WIU.&amp;DOOIS
5 cents per word one
Pac ing Is your ace in the hole
Marvin Hill , Mrs . Dolly
economy.
lt(I'UCfi(IIIIT
lnserflon.
1
.today Let th ings ·happen In
Wolfe.
Min imum Charge Sl.OO.
WlflDIMS
their own good ume. Don't try
14 cents per word three
·1970RENAULT4
Dr.
S7SO
Arthur Hale spent a
IWIIII!UII
to hasten im portant matters.
consecutive Insertions .
Good
!Ires,
clean
Interior,
grey
finish
,
radio,
•
speed.
monlh 's vacation with hjs
SIOIIUifiTl
26 cents r,•r word six
CANCER !June 21-Jiily 22) consecutive nsertlons . .
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Dallas
Th JS is a most oppor tune day to
25 Per Cent Piscount on
mo CAMARO CPE.
Slot!
Hill. Art is li'ving In Fort
paid ads and ads paid
do somet11ing other than vour
v.e,
autc&gt;motlc.
p,
steering,
extra
gOOd
.radial
tires.
within 10 dayo,
Lauderdale, Fla.
u sual rou tine , lfke gett ing
Needs some body work .
'~ HZ.ml . &lt;1-10.1 mo.
CAID OF THANKS
toge th er with a pal you've
Mrs. Dale Hill, M!'s . Dolly
&amp; OBITUARY
neglected lately.
$2 .00
tor 80 word
Wolfe visited Mr . and Mrs.
minimum
.
Dick Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) The
Each additional word 3
bQss may be In n receptive
Bob Taylor and families at
cents.
·
ILIND ADS
mood today. If you reel you 're
Gallipolis Thursday.
Addlllonal 2SC Charge
dtJe for a raise or even a pat on
Friends were sorry lo hear
per Advertisement.
the, back, talk things over!
OFFICE HOURS
of lhe dea th of f\ev. Edward
POMEROl', C)t.fiO
1:30 a .m . to 5:00 ·p .m .
VIRGO
(Aug
.
.
23·Sopl.
22)
Griffith, who was a former
Dallv.
8:30
a.m.
to
12
:00
Somewhere far removed from · Noon Siturday .
paslor of the Fairview and
wh.ere you Sre, good things are
PhOne todav 9n21S6.
Plapts churches. .
happening in your beh alf. You
Mr , Haymond Bell was
could learn of them today .
NOTICES
.-s,.dollll--honored by· his family with a
LIBRA tSopl. 23·0cl. 23.) This
ATTN .:it
THE undersigned will sell ot
LADY
shoe
clerk
,
2
days
per
party on his 8:lrd birthday
A~L HOUSEWIVES
co wld be a red·leller day
public sale for cash the follow ·
week . 'Phone 992•2571 or 992All Yard Sales , Rummage 1
Sunday. Attending were Mr.
because of someth ing nice
mg motor vehicle to be taken
3830.
Porch
and
Basement
Porch
you've done in the past. You
from Michael E, Crites , Hartand Mrs. Don Bell, Mr. and
and Basemenr Sales , etc .
co uld be repaid in even greater
ford , West Virginia. 1971 Ford IUIZ.Z174
must be paid In advance .
Mrs. Paul Ervin, Mrs .
,_
measure
Thunderbird
Serial
No.
Get
yours
in
tarty
l:ly
Dorothy Chaney, Roger and
by our office at
1&amp;84N124130. 2 d, , h.t .. 211
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nav. 22). stopping
Edward . We wish Mr. Belle
The Dally Sentinel , 111
We$1 Second Street , Pomeroy,
Embark on an adventure In a
Court St. or writing 8ox
Ohto, ot '10:00 a.m. on the 2nd
many more' happy birthdays.
sea of new fa ce s today .
729', ,omeroy , Ohio .t5169
WILL DO odd jobs, roofing, pain ·
day of August, 1976. The under·
Mr . and 111rs. Butch Ables
with your remittance.
ting, hauling , tre• work , ond
Valuable contacts can be made
signed. reserves the right to
of Canal Winchester spent a
~
tn large gatherings persons '---------~---" I mowing. Phone 992-7ol09.
bid. The Farmer5 Bonk and Sov·
week's vacation with their
you haven 't met before.
ings Company , Pomeroy ,
ANY PITCH
Ohio.
parents, Mr . and Mrs, Jack
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doe.
ANY SIZE
Ables, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
21 ~ You 're more ambitious . io196:8 Comon;, ports , front end,
Congo.
hood , doors , rriOny other pQrls.
doy than In the past You know
ciLO furniture, ic• boxes . bran
1. M
'
Also fit · f967 Cpmoi'o. $ee ·at
what you want and you 'll knOw
Visiting Mr . and Mrs .
beds,
wall
telephone'
and
Of
A
t-r1ene1
111 Pearl St., Middleport, Ohio
how to go after it.
pails , Of complee householdl .
Robert Smith Sr. during the
•5760
.
Eliza
Sue Ellis
Truss Rafter Co.
Write
M..
0
.
Miller
,
Rt.
4,
.~
:.:.:.::.:_~---week were Mr . and Mrs. CAPRICORN !Doc. 22-Jon.
Po~~oy
,
Ohio.
Call
997.·776/J,
11)
Projects
that
once
frlgl'lte'nWha PISsed •VNY 2 YHrs
Box 21·A
Jimmy Freeman, Irwin, Pa.,
e&lt;l you with tl'leir size will not
190 !odloy, July 29, lf74.
CASH paid for all mokes and
Rutlond. Oltlo 45775
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Smith and ' intimidat
models of mobile l'lomes.
e: you today. You 're up
Ph. "14) 742-24ot
five children , Mr. and Mrs.
Phone oreo code 61.C.· 423·9531 .
to cu ll i ng th em dow n to
Wt Deliver
Billy Smith , all of Millville,
manageable proportions.·
$$Cosh$$ for junked auto. Frye's
7·28·4 mos.
Pa., Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Truck Auto Ports. Rutland. 'LOST: Male n~tered Germon
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
Johnson and children , · Ybu 're up to making the most
Phone 742-2081.
Shepherd , white fleo collor.
los-t in Alfred area. Call collect
Racine;
Mrs.
Smith's o r your opportunities today .
nMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro.
(614)696-1082.
Don
't
be
dissuaded
by
others.
ducts . Top price for standing
brother , Carl Manges and
Pursue what loolo;s good to you :
sawtimber. ( 'all K'ent Hanby , MEDIUM sized block curlr. haired lOCUST POSTS, round · or split ,
three grandchildren Tirnn\y,
Phone9~9-277.t .
poodle type dog, femo e , nom·
1-••6-8570.
Tammy and Tommy Kloes. PISCES (Feb. 20·M•rch 20)
ed Je$$,. lost In the vicinity of
COINS, currency , tokens, ·gold
COAL, limestone , and colch,1m
On Saturday Mr. and Mrs: Y~~. have a knack 01 getting InCounty RoOd 19 and Bunk&amp;r
ond silver jewelry. We need
chloride and colc:iUm brine for
volved
wit
h
th
e
right
partners
Hill . Reward. Phone 992-5735.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. j~rry
1964 and .older U.S. coins . Col!
dust control ond special mixing
today . II· a go.getter invites you
Johnson . and children, Mr. th on a deal, go along lor the
salt for formers . Moin Street,
for other 742-2331 or come out
Pomeroy', Ohio or phone 9'il2·
to our coin shop on Rutland and
and Mrs. Bob Smith and five
~de .
3891.
leading
Creek
Rd
.
Roger
children enjoyed the day at·
Wamsley.
CANNING peaches now reody
Forked Run Lake.
thru August . Several varieties
USED
Belsow
in
good
condition
.
Mr . and Mrs. Webster
by the bushel . v; bushel or
Phone
(614
)378-6387
.
FURNISHED.
2
bedrm. apartment,
Skeins, Parkersburg, Mr. and
peck . Please' bring own c:onodults only, in Middleport.
GOOD used retrigerotor unO...
Mrs . Wilbur Rowley and
Phooe'l'l2·3874.
toiner, 2 convenient locations:
Jutr 30, 1976
$50. Coli (6141.985·3582 alterS
Midway Morket , Pomeroy,
granddaughter of Minnesota
3
AND
4
RM
.
furnished
and
unYour matenal prospects look
of Masonoc
992-2582: Bob'• Market, Mo1on,
visited Mrs. Margie Hunt.
furnished opts. Phone 992·
773-S721.
very nopelul lhls )lear. esGale
5&gt;134.
Mrs . Georgia Wheeler pecially where your career is
Chagrin
I
1975 Yamaha 100CC Enduro, 1300
Wolfe returned to her home concerned . Advancements
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt.
missed by a n """'·
miles. Excellent condition, very
33, ten miles nortll of Pomeroy.
after a month's vacation With tong due may finally
IF You · have a servk;e lo offer ,
econom1cal·mochine. Cycle ond
Lorge lots with concrete patior.,
materialize.
her biOther, Mr, and Mrs.
want to ~y ·or sell something ~
1 bell helmet. $500. Phone 992,
sidewalks,
runners
ond
oH
oe lOoking for wor::k . . . qr
n•o.
Alex Wheeler.
street parking, Phone 9'92·7~79.
whatever ... you.'ll .9 -t results
Mr. and Mrs . Carroll ·
faster with o Sentinel Wont Ad . ciNE' bedroom apartments at TOMATOES, cabbage, squash,
sweet corn , cucumbers, phone
Balser of Mansfie\ 1 spent the
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
Call992·2156.
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
IWJ-2495.
weekend with the former's - The New Orleans Saints' "-ERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY - hove Y"-RO Sole 517 NO&lt;th Third ond
for Sl~ rnonthl)l plus elec . or
S130 includirig electric:. lOWER 1971 KoWo1aki 175, Enduro. $250.
mother, Mrs. Alice Balser. No. 1 draft choice, Oiuck
aedol photo• of vour cpnst,ucRutlarld Streets, Middleport .
tlon site, business, cool and
Set of motorcycle carriers. $13 .
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
Weds ., Thursday , Friday, 9
Visiting Mr . and Mrs . Mimcie, arrived in training
gas leo••• af you 1 lo,m . Ken
Phone 992·SS23.
Convenient
to
shopping
on
a.m. till .a p.m: July 28, 29 and ·
Herbert Roush over the camp Monday a day late and
G&lt;o•e. phooog,apher. Che,ter,
Third and Mill Streets in Mid· CANNING tomatoes, Corol
301h .
weekend were Mrs. Gladys Coach Hank Stram scheduled
Ohio. Phone 985·4135.
dleport. Brand new high qualiWhite, 2.a7-Zl75.
ty Qpartments . See .fhe
Shields, Mrs. Edna Roush, a meeting·II ; :JI him to discuss WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY - YARD Sole. July 29 ond 30.
Thursday and Friday at 389
manager at Riverside 'Apart- CANNING tomatoes and· lwHp
Racine, Mrs .
Randall possible .penalties for his late
Remembe' the day forever!
Beech St., Middleport . TOys .
peppers . Cleland Forms .
ments or toll 992-ml. FurRoberts, Mr . and Mrs. qurival.
The complete story of your
books , clothing, etc .
Geraldine Cleland. Ro~ine-,
niihed apartments also
Howard Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Muncie, who was rained •ut
wedding in o beo~tilul album .
Ohio.
available .
.,
Coli
Ken
Grover, GARAGE Sole, Friday , July 30,
Russell Roush, Mr. and Mrs,' , of 11 chaQCe to play in the
Photographet. Chestor , Ohio.
Portland, Ohio, Township Rood TRAILER 1poce for rent in Mid· IN DASH 23 channel CB, am-fm
103 (lovell) Rood . Coots,
William Wicklin~ and }\y)e, . Cqll~ge All-Star G!IIOO Satur·
Phone98S-•ISS.
rodio, 8 track stereo. Coil 99'2·
dlepo&lt;t. Phone992·5434 .
clothing,
dishe
s.
also
pool
table
396S.
Mrs.• Kathryn Hunt, Mrs. ,day, .told the coach he Sl'!l!lt GOlDEN WEDDING Anniversary.
pnd ·accessories . Magnus chord 3 room furnished apartment,
·Margie Hunt, Randall t~ the weekend in Chicago with
Preser'• this wondo,ful dov
utilifhrts furnished. Phone 992· POOl table, regulation size, very
organ. 196.4 Ford Golo~~:lt. reol
good condition. Phone m -22:J.C
l\oberts and Leslie.
'I · his family.
wiih phoiog&lt;aphs of tho fomijy
3129or'l'l2-54,.,
t:heop.
Kenneth
Rizer
or
'992·3A67. Con be seen acroSs
Mrs. Flossie Norris Cburch
togetlter, with your friend• and
residence .
fRAilER . odult• onlv. PhOne 992.
fromW . ~. P .O.
·
of course the coke ! Coli Ken
7639or'l'l2·2181.
(a fom1er resident) now of
Grover Photography, Chester, Y"-RO Sole. J~ly 30 and 31. Girls'
bock to school clothing, sizes 3 Room furnished house wilh 19'71 Kawasaki 125 for $150; 1973
Marion, 0. was laid to rest..at
,
..
Ohio. Phone 9BS·415S.
Kowosoki 90 lor $200. Phone
6X
and 10, men's a· ladi•s'
bath. iO.dult, only. Phone 992.
Letart Falls Cemetery. Sbe ',NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT ·. GRAPEFRUIT Pill with Dodox eat
Jock
Pa,kor, (6") 985·3861.
clothing, toys, dlshes, paper5535.
.
passed away at her home jlt . · ·
cueNo. 2l ,ll2
satisfying meal• ond 'lose
bock
books,
many
e~etras.
Cor·
2 piece living room suite, one
Marion due to a heart att.Bek: ' g!~~~se:~ 0 · w, Wise"" an
weighr . now extra strength forner lot Hutchison Subdivision , ONE bedroom apartment of
chino closet , ·One swivel choir,
Rivers
ide.
Phont
99'1·3273.
She was born and reared in . Notice is hereby given that
mulo, Nelson D,rugs .
Rutland. Shirley Wi150n, 7.a2one di1hwosher , Hoover
.
'' Sy'&amp;ll Ebersbach Of 166 SKY o· · G
Co
S
259S.
washer and dryer. Phone 992·
TRAILER spoce close to Meiu•
this commumty.
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy,
rvmg. reene
unty port
5688. Ellis Ward.
OhiO, has been dUly appOinted
Parachute Center, open every YARD Sale at 675 Sycamore St ..
Mines. Complete hookup. Call
Adm lnlstratrlx of the Estate
doy near Gallipolis. For further
7•2·2166.
Middleport , Friday, Saturday .
Of 0 . w. WIseman , deceased ,
information, coli (6U) 2,.5-9339
tate of Scipio Township , Meigs
or P.O. Box 91 , Bidwell. Ohio HUGE Yard Sole , Friday , Satur· 4 room furni1hed opf. d9se to
Powell's Super Volu still
county , Oh io .
45614.
doy, Sunday at Raymond
available.
Phone 992·3658.
Cred ltors are required to =-:-:=:-::-c-,..,.--;-::---,---,-,SMALL farm for sale, 10~. down,
Pierce restdeoce, Rt. 388, Anti ~
file their clalms w i th said FABRIC SALE , All'moteriol in shOp
OWfler financed . Monroe Coun·
quUy, Sump Pump, bicycles , 2 Bedroom trailer, $28 wMk, all
"' fiduciary wlthir;J three months.
on sole, one week only. Mon·
tv . W. Va. Phone (3041 772·
tools,
dishes,
clothet, books ,
utilities
paid
.
PJ,one
992·3324.
D!ted thiS 26th day ot July
doy, Jul)l 26 thru Saturday, Ju 3102 or (304)772-3227.
cameras and equipment. Anti1976 .
ly 31. Our new hours except
3 Rooms ond botk, furhished ;::
que bed and ohar items.
CO;::U;::N;::T;;R;:V";Ior"-m-;lo~n-;d-w-;1;1;-h-,-ec-;l~
ud:
for
sole weeki ore Monday thru
oportm,nt, all utilities furnish·
Manning 0 . Webster
ed
woods,
water
~nd
good
ac·
YARD Sole, Monday and Tuesday,
Friday,
9
o
.m.
till7
p.m.,
closed
ed. Inquire ot 356 North Four·
Judge
cess in Monroe County , W, Vo.
Julv
2
and
3
oo
J,j0
Page
St.,
Fabrics
on
Saturdbys
.
Carolina
th,
Mlddlepo".
Court of Common P.leas.
$1 ,000 down. call (304) 772.
Middleport. Aight on this side
Roule 7, one·holf mile north of
Probafe Division
3102 0&lt; (304) 772·3227.
of the marino, something for
Chester, Ohio. Henry and Mary
171 29 181 5, 12. 31c •·
Sunday School attendance
evorybody.
Hunter, owners.
2 bedrooms. large modern kiton July 25 was 48, the offering
chen, forced air furnace . lin SPECIAl Auction Sole at The Auc· YARD Sole, Fridoy, Saturday ot
~.90, Worship services were
111 Pearl Street, Middleport. 35 h.p. outboQrd motorboot with - coin Hgto. 992·5737.
tion House, Horton St., Mason,
trailer. Phone 99'1·57-41.
Baby clothes, high choir , and
W. Vo. under new manage·
held at 10:45 With the Rev.
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOUSE tor tole, 20 minute• from
other
things.
ment. Lorge truckload ol new
·k.
'The Meigs Local School
Pomeroy, I acre level lot. 2
Richard ..l
fiiOmas spea tng Ololr lct Board of Education is
mercJ,ondlse and door prize.
bedrooms, 2 cor garage, city
from Psalm 30 :4 "Rejoice Ill accepting sealed bids tor one
7:00p.m. Soturdoy, July 31.
water, gas heat, perfect for
the Lord Always" AI school bus; namely/ 1964
·
• International . 66 pabenger ..
3 bike motorcyc:le trailer, $85.
young family starting out or
lendancc W8S 23.
3&lt;5 engine 1703A FD76361F.
Phone 992·7110.
otdtr couple, slowing dawn.
AKC Irish Satter Puppies, 6 wvelu
A reception for the Rev.
Bids will be received until
Reduced from $21 ,000 to
old. Phone 9•9-2726.
RA8BITS und white guinea pigs,
$19.900. Phono (614)667·3519.
Thomas was held here in the 12:00 o'c!o,ck noon an, Septer.nber 7, 1976. The· Board of
AKC G~trma" Shepherd puppies,
phone 992·2513.
·
100l!C200 lot for 1ale, Five Points
church basement on Friday Education reserves the right
goad blood lino, genrle dltposl· 16ft. fl!&gt;orglon boot with 60 h.p.
aroo. Call 992·3576.
evening, July , 23, with · a to re(ect anv and all blds:' The
tion . Phone992·5623.
Johnson mol or, other extras. :;---'-'c..;-:::...:...:..-'7~:--­
bids will be opened on Sep .
potIuck supper at 7, followed tember 13. 1976, at 7130 P.M.
Phone 992·~ .
1 room house ond both , 4 acres
more or leu , wUh born, on Rt.
by a .visiting period and
Sealed bids should be ~d -

@) 2s:;Ns

Pomeroy
QUI.ITY Mo.tor Co.

LAQIOE•·
EXPERIENCED

POM~~!v~~!o'lp~~ CO.I{i:)

~

,._

.

Aluminum Sidin&amp;.
Roofina, Guttars,
Plintina • • •

·~

Sauthea$tem Ohio

~Your
l!f@!J Birthday

·Alfred

m

1 Social Notes ,

:

r.

I

rf

{
\

.

dressed

to :

John

Tnplett,

n. presen~lton of a glftfrom lhe • Cl~rR. Meigs Local School
te&gt;
.ih

f"

~

•••

~

'

church. Attendancewas32.11
concluded with a songfestled
by Charlea D. Woode, witjl
theRev .Thomasatthe'plano.
Mr . and Mrs . Wllber
Parker have reeelved w&lt;1rd.'
that their son-ln-law aqd
!Iaugher, Mr. and Mrs. Joe .
Pooie and grandson WW are
helng moved from the state of .
Utah to Albuquerque, New
Mexico this coming week.
Mrs. Osle Henderson
returned to her home here
recen Uy
after
being
hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial Hospital several
days,
Clara Follrod and Nina
Rob1Jwon learned thai Jack
Fclllroit hal alao been
rttwnld to his hGme ' Ill
Pllmltoy from ·;~:eraml

Memorlll H01pllal.

District . Middleport, Ohio

CAMPER trailer for sole or trode .
Phono Earl Hunt (614) 9S5.4J71 .

&lt;57 60.

John Triplet!,
Clerk
/,\elgs ~ocal
School District
Middleport, Ohio 45760
17l ,1$. 22. 29 111 5, ~tc

1969 Bonanza 19 ft .,

tion, set up at Royal Oak Park
with $100 olraody ·' paid on
season, porch and outside
refriparotor, gas refrtg.rofor
inside, siMps 8,
canopy,

bathroom. Phone 992·3927.

REAL ESTATE ,
FOR SALE

Real EState owned by Jhe

late Der\lel Rees end Clara

Reesloc:ated at 306 West Main
Strett, Pomeroy, Ohio. con -

sisting of • garage and house
Is now being oHtrtd ror sale
by the undersigned to the
~•DMSI bidder . Pitate s~bmlt
your bids tO the undersiGned .
Property
apprals·ect
at

$2,500.00. Sale subhtct to the
appro vat of tht Probite Court.
Jouph w. Coo~
Admlnlstrltar ot
tho Estoloof
Clara Ren. Deuased
(71 21 , 22. 23, 26, 27, 28, i9. 7tc

. 197.C Storcrcift Golo,de, 8 camper,

::.~;~~by,

992 ' 5965 or (6"1

5 piece drum set, txceUent condi -

flon . Will sell cheap or will
toke a bos1 omphlifier on
trode. O'dell Manley. '1'12-7276.
1'TI• Suzuki 750 CC, goad condl·
lion . Mull tell. Phono 7•2·
2550.

raqsonobly priced. Phone 7..2.
2595.
REMEDY YOUR WATER
STARCR:,.,:::::
FTr-.~u::,ed7-:I:::
'T7=2:-:c1 ec-::lt .
PROBLEMS AND SAVE
trailor,. oiii'T76 models roduc· MONEY, TOO, WITH
ad. tm modols, mini·motoro. A· · ·
CQ~p
· rrailers, campers In stock.
Camp Conley Starcroft Soles,
CARHOPS and waitress wanted.
Rt. 62 N. n Ploo•ant, w. v..
Water
Apply in person, (row's Ste-ak
House.
APACHE fold·up type tent trailer.
IUUII
--- --.·---·--·
Need• tomo ropolr wo,k, $100,
~~ Ut:-XAA, 210,000
lnqui&lt;O at 256 South Fo~rth . W~l~ Grain Capacity .
·"-vo., Middlopo" .
RegUior .
CODNER'S Campors, Soleo ond
.PO~M·EOO~~Yiut•.L•, N"~•RIC.
Rental. OEN HOUSE SAtE.
'"'
,. """"
,; lloglno July 30. Drawlngo,
•• _ J k w Ca · ·
· rofrMhmtntl, toko Molgo 28 or
ltC
'
rttJ, Mgr.
· _"""
_ _.ne_'"-·-2-11-1-..J
,. ., .' .' ,'32 to Q~S~N-an~ fol~aw oig!'.!: .'-·--operptor with tuneup and brOke txperlence.
Hove own tools. Must be
reliable, no booze. Write Bo~
7290, Y. The Doi!r Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio ,.5769.

GAS

station

Autamdic

Conda:..:;;;er

·'299.00 •

Ml•

'

I

vood condi·

LOGS, Ponleroy Forest Producfsls
now buying grade hardwood
1awloga. For specifications, call

'

I
I

~Z:I-2""'

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
i
-Aerlol-lndudrlol
Construction ,.,... ....,
-COft!!ltlt Scltool Service
·ondiriridullt&amp; .
~lemtnlarY

Sclloi!l P,ock..i

Plcturea
Seniors &amp; YMrbook
-Wed!ll..t-

KEN GROVER
l'llotoir•pfw
fiMISS
CI1Hitr, Oltlo
7-14·1 mo.

SWIMMING
POOLS
Above •nd bolow ·graund
pool kits fOr ·!lie do-ltyo..-self mlln.
AU pool suppliH avalloblt;

taa.
.

.D. Bum.prdner
Nable Summit Rd.,
Mltldltport
PHONE 99'1-5724
7-21 -1 mo.

•

GIIJttR SERVICE_
caatinWI!s otft pltct
gutters. ~flint neor do II
yourMH. Stitt._. prlcH Ia
builders.

'
CAPT~ EASY

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

AI. TROMM OONSl ,'
..

.

•

Tilt Complttt
Rtmocltling Strvlct
For Your Homt

f!utllnd
742-2HI
AU Work O...rttllted
Fr.. Estlmotn

" MOON ltiAN": •.'5UB·
INTH~ IGBNCI?t~ ..

Y'MEAN LIK6 6ETTIIJ&lt;'i BU5TEO FOR

lnl~&lt;·~

GRR· R·R:

'

WeLL. WELL.~

''~IN I!! KONG VI!.,
THE MOON MEN "...

GOT HeRe~
HALLOWEEN

FOR THE !&gt;MALL
SCREEN:

... worrA we

PLAYIN 6 PEEPIN6

TO M IN A &gt;.\ON KEY

192:7320 evenings

;

5UIH

WIN AT BRIDGE

Game comes clean In Bath

6·27·76

..

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

NORTH IDI
.QU
'AJU
• AQ 104
•J96

..

ASSORTED RUBBER

'6.,,

•Q85432
•

CO~REALIZE

Squore nra lnstelltd
vld Parsons, Owner
,4,·2114
6-7·1 mo. .

SOUTH
• A K J 10 75
• 7.3 z
H532

f\AlF OF US ARE
MI NDI~b OOF!

1KAT·

,. ·- 11!6 VXJRL.D DX?~'T

OWl&gt;!

KNOW HOW .
ll\E: orH6R

American
Auto Sales

Wetl

LIVf"SZ

'
Wlnshllld Rtpllcemtnl
Fr.. Estlmttn
OnlodyWark
Expert Ptltlllng
lnsuronct Wark
Wtlceine
51. Rt. 7
Coolville, Oltlo
647-3127
7·2f-1 mo.

Nortb E111
I+
DbL

Soalb

1.

Pass ••
Pass Pasi Pass
Opening lead - J +

. LIT .T LE ORPHAN

"'

z•

By
Oswald &amp;. James Jacoby
.
The student went rlght up
with dummy's ace of
diamonds . T.hen be drew
trumps with two leadlt and.
ANMIE-IAC:RIFICE
played ·a second diamond to
17:':::;::'7.:;;:;0::;;::;;;:::-;;;:;- dummy's queen and Ea11's
king. The nine of diamonds
came back. Now the student
rulfed a club before throwing
East in with the last diamond.
· East got out wilh a club and
lhe game boat bad salled
away. The student bad to lose
two heart tricks and his contract.
"Tough luck , wasn't it~"

· ~~~
A Maine reader wanll to
know what the ebance Is that
If you hold etcbt lnlmPI, the
opponents five trumptl wlll
spUI 3-2.
The answer to thai oae Is
that they aplil3-2 aboul88 per
cent or just over two thirds of
the llme.
(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
af Bridge, " clo this
newspaper, P. 0 . Bo• 489,
Radio City Slat/on, New Y9rk,
N. Y. 10019)

Kingdon 10; Mu&amp;lc City U.S.A, 15; Robert Mec:Nelr'
Report 20.
8:00 M..nlflcent Monsters of 1111 Deep 3,~.15; XXI
Olympic Games 6; Woltons I, 10; Uptltlrs.
·
Downstolrs 33; Movie "Double Suicide" 20.
' :oo-Movle "Perilous Voyage" 3,A,15; Hawaii Flve.O
I; Men Who Mldi· The Movies 33; Movlo "How to
Seve A Marriage- .,.d Ruin Y04Jr Llr." 10.
IO:OG-Veudevlllt 8; News 20; Soundstage 33.
II :OG-News 3.4,6.1,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Car- 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Ga+.
6.13; Movie "The Oaring Dobermans" I; Movie
" Cotter" 10; Janekl 33.
n :•s-Mannl• 6.13.
i2:55-Maglclan 6,13.
.
1: &lt;»-Tomorrow 3,4.
2 : &lt;»-News 13.

•

.

FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1t76
6 :0G-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Ferm Report 13.
6:21)-Biue Ridge Quartet 13.
6:30-Columbus Today~~ News6; Summer Semester
B; Two.Way Street 10.
6:&lt;15-Mornlng Report 3.
6 : ~ Morning, We&amp;t VIrginia .13.
6:5s-Good Morning, Trl Stott 13.
7:0G-Today 3,4,15; GQOd Morning, Amerlce 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck While R18P0rls 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny Bunny and Frlendlt 10.
7:30-Schoollios 10.
. 8:0G-Jeff's Collie 6; Capleln Kangaroo 8,10; Se!llime
Street 33.
,
.
8:»--Big Valley 6.
':OG-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue ~.15; Lucy Show 8; Mlkt
Douglas 10; Morning With D.J. 13.
9:»-Cross·WIIt 3; Qrle Life to Live 6; T1ttleteles 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:0G-Senford and Son 3,4,15; Price 11 Right 8.10; Big
With Knit 33,
.
10 : Is-General Hospllel 6.
10:»-Celtbrlty Sweepstakes 3,A,I5; Lilias, Yoga and
You 33.
11 :00'-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gamblf 8,10; Fermer's Daughter 13.
11 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4,151 Happy Days 6,13;
Love. qf Life 8,10.
.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
.
12:&lt;»-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 131 Bob Braun ~~
Noiws 6,8, 10; Sesame Street 33.
12:3G-Gong Show 3.15; All My Children 6.13; Setrch
For. Tomorrow 8, 10.

12:55-NBC News 3,15.
I :OG-News 3; Ryan'• Hopo 6.13; Phil Donahue I;
Young and the Restless 10; Not Far Women Only
15; Electric Complll'ty 33.
1:30-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
the Worl!f Turns 8,10; Book Beet 33.
2:0G-S20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah I 6; Valiant Yeer&amp;33.
2: »-Ooctols 3,4, 15; One Life to live 13; Guiding Light
1,10; Olympiad 33.
3:&lt;»-Another World 3,~,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crockelt's Vldory Gardltn 20.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3:3G-Mickey Mouse Club 6:Malch Game 8,10; Lilies,
Yoga and .You 20; Walsh's Animals 33.
4:110-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4: Somentt 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20.33; Movie "CinderFella" 10; Olnahl 13.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
4: »--Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
Sesame- ~reet 20,33; Fllntttones IS.
ACROSS
4Z Suburb of
5:0G-Bonenzit 3; Partridge Family" 8; Mission:
. 1 First-rite
Paris
Impossible 15.
S Amllnsler,
DOWN
5:31)-Adam-124,13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric
e.g.
1 llallan poet
Company 20,33.
. .
·
U Swiss river · %Ho~JC opera
6:0G-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
J! Loath
3 The Kelly
6:»-NBC News 3,~,15; ABCNews 13; Andy Griffith
13 .Cookbook
girl (2 wds.J
6; CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
·
4 Evening
verb
CarrascoJendas 33 . .
14 LitUe
in Rome
7:0G-truth or ConHquences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
· 15 Legislator
5 "Scarface" ·
Bowling For0ollars6; Space: 19998; ~&gt;jews 10; Don
Yesterday's Amtwer
Adams Screen Test 13; Family Affair 15; Women
17 Love set's
&amp; County in
20; Black Perspective on lhe News 33.
barrier
North
16 Elephant's- 27 Hauled
7:3G-Porter Wagoner 3; XXI Olympic GamH 6,13;
18 Klller
Carolina
ear
29 Cubic meter
Treasure Hunt 4; Popl Goes The Counfry 15;
whale
7 On pension 2% Do lacework 31 Olympic ·
Rober! MacNeil Report 20.33.
19 Some
(abbr. )
%3 Beersheba's
memento
8:0G-Sanford and Son 3,4,15; Sara 8,10; Washington
zt SHe grade 8 3 Down's
partner
-3% ·Arctic
·
Week In Review 20,33.
21 Raison d'consort
24 Earthly
explorer
8:00'-The Practice 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
%3 Greek
(2 wds.)
9:&lt;»-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Movie "The Wild Bunch"
25 Adele of
3$ Olhello's
8,10; U.S.A. : People and Politics 20,33.
township
9 Admires
the late
ensign
A Country Mile 20,33.
9:3G-Walk
U Old Chinese 1D Squirrel
show
f7 Mwlcal
10:
00'-Pollce
Story 3,~.15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
state
monkey
note
Zl Wobble
10:3G-Farm Digest 20.
ZS Saucer
11:0G-News 3,4,13,15; ABC. News 33.
. aource?
11:3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Games
zt Schoolboy's
6,13; Janak! 33.
ordeal
11 : 35-News 8,10.
Z7 Miracle
11 :45--Rookles 6,13.
site
12:05-Movle "Fort Utah" 8; Movie "The Hound of
!I Work unit
the Baskervllles" 10.
UAmerlcan
12:55-0on Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Wresfllng 13.
Revolution t.w-r-t1:00'-Midnlght Special 3.~.15.
I :35-Movle "The Vulture" 10.
org.
I
:55-News 13.
• Wee devil
2:30-News
3.
Go wrong
3:00'-Movle " Springtime In the Rockies" 3.
:W One in
4:3G-Movle "Night After Night" 3.
boot
6:00'-Movle "International House" 3.
camp
Sideboard

""

~~tM'HJII

•. ALLEY OOP
HI:Y, WE'RE ON ~ ·

BEACH AGAIN !

TEAfORD

I

z•

. lF.
LI...,;, "' ORPHAN ANN

........

·-

Bolh vulnerable

HAI..F

..

+K987
•AKI07

+.J

BACK.CARPETING

asked lhe student.
"Yes, but good play would
have saved you. AI Irick two
you should have rulfed a club,
then a spade lead to dunimy,
rulf of another club, a III!COI1d
spade lead to ruff the lui club
and then you coold have 1one
after the diamonds.
"Eut would c:OIIeet his two
diamond tricks, but then he
would be stuck. If he led a
club, South would get a ruff
and a heart aluff to hold his
heart loeers to one. If he I~
lhe klnR of hearts, South
would let it hold and be would
eilher have to give that ruff
and sluff or lead a second
heart to dummy's ace, jack."
So uto forestall letters, the
hand can also be lilade again&amp;!
a heart openlnc lead.

211

EAST
.42
•KQtO

WEST
U3
•8a&amp;4

Racine, Ohio

RURAL, mod.rn, electric , 3 BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com·
bedrooms , kitchen, living'
plete Service . Phone 9.C9·24a7
room, both , finished basement,
or 949·2000. ~acine , Ohio, Crltl
laundry, recreation; $26,900 1 1
Brodford.
acre; ·$28 ,900, 3 and two· thirds
ElWOOD SOWERS REPAIR acres. Phone {614) 9..9·27-48.
Sweepers, toasfers, Irons, all
HOMESITE$ for sOle, 1 acre and
small appliances . lawn mower,
up. Mlddleport, near Rutland.
· next to Stote Highwoy Goroge
Coll992·7•81 .
on Route 7. Phon~ (614) 985·
3825.
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
all elec., 1 ocre, Middleport, REMODEliNG, Plumbing, heating
close IO · Rutland. Phone 99'1·
and oil types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·::7=4=81=.=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=J
perience. Phone 992-2.co9.
r
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 yearo ex·
perience . Insured free
estimates. Call 992-238.4 or
Virgil B. Sr., Reoltor
(614) 698·7257 "-lbony.
110 Mechanic Pllmeroy, 0 . ·
Pltan~ 99'1-331~
SEWING MACHINE Repol,., M&lt;·
.vice, oil niakes, 992·2284. The
RENOVATED
~
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy.
bedroom home, panellrig,
Authorized Singer Sales and
carpeting , nice kitchen.
Service. We shoi-p•n Scissors.
modern bath, gas F. A.
EXCAVATING,
dozer, loader and
furnace, barn and 12 acres.
backhoe work;. dump trucks
. $29.500.
and lo·boys for hire; will haul
3 ACRES OUT- On hard
fill dirt., to soil , limestone and
road wllh drilled v.•ll and 2
grovel . Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
mobile homes. Bw both
fers, doy phone 9'12·7089,
and rent one. $13,500.
.night phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232.
RIVER FRONT LOT Wafer. elec. and sewage,
EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
lot 77xl19 Only 53,000.
and ditcher. Charla• R. Hot2 BEDROOM BUNGALOW
fie,d, Bacftl Hoe Service,
- Nice oak floors, natural
Rutland, Ohio. Phoho7•2·2008.
gin F.
A.
furnace,
GREG'S CB SALES, located ot Er·
basement and large lot.
win's Gulf Service, .Mid·
Only 58500.
.
dleport, Ohio. Phone 992•
1438.
2 FAMILY HOME - In
Mlddleporf, 12 rooms, 2
SEPTIC Svstemo lnotollod by
baths, natural gas heat.
. licensed inttoller. Shepard
Rent one for lnc'ome. Good
Controctors. Phone 7o42·2.C09.
entrance and nice yard.
SEPTIC T"-NKS dooned. Modern
Asking $19,000.
Sanitation, 992·3954 or 992·
PORTLAND - 9· room
2•28.
house, modern kllchen, ·
WILl do roofing, construction,
balh, porch and modern
plumbing and heating. No lob
garage wllh furnace.
too large or too imoll. Phone
NEW LISTING- 2Q acres .
7•2·2348.
of forrest wllh place to
CARPENTER, flooring, coiling,
build a lake. T. P. wafer,
paneling. Phane 992·2759,
elec. and 3 bedroom mobile
VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·
home 14x70 on good
VICE. ,Meigs-Athens County ,
country road near Racine.
Balero
from $3995 up. Morrill
SPACE
Chose, (6")698·3021.
FOR YOUR AD.
EXcAVATING, 8ACKHOES "-ND
GOOD MODERN HOMES
QOZER - lARGE AND SMAlL,
WE NEED, LEAVE YOUR.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. lOW
SELLING PROBLEMS'
BOY "-ND DUMP TRUCKS. Bill
WITH US AT 99'1-3325.
PUlliNS, PHONE 992·2~78 DAY
OR NIGHT.
8UilDING. remodeling , and
repairs. Quality wor,}t, efficient
service. Jesse Rodmon, phone
992·5980.
WANT to go int(l business for .
yourself? Almost new
automatic Insulating mochlne ,
Phone Golllpollo, 1·..6-4782.
, AN.TIOUE restorations, reproductions, cabinet mokll')g and fur·
niture repair. 131'h 3rd, Mid·
WE OFFER YOU fhis nic'e
dlopcort, 992·5733 day und
place, 2 story frame: 3
evening.
largo Br .. formal dining R.
NEW siding, carpeting, ; REFRIGERATION ond air condl·
33, one.tlolf milt from Pomeroy
paneling end .furl)lce. full · tlonlng service. Phone Rouer
Alkire, 992-5435.
City Limlt1 . Furnace heat and
baselhenl, 2 car garage.
city water. Phone 992·2504.
SIB,SOO.OO.
NEW 3 bedroom, toto! eiO&lt; ., 1.113
Rf.l43 CLOSE IN- Mobile
acres, .four-fifth mile from
with additional rooms and
Langsville ofl Co. Road 1O,
garage, l'h acres of
carpal, attached garage, utility
ground, own and city
room. Coli 7.42·2819 Raymond
water, air. cond.
WANTEO: Will do towing In my
Hatflold, Rutlond.
MODERN 1 FLOOR PLAN
homo. Phono Shirlov Wlloan,
3 bedroom hoUoo r., oolo at 520
742-25~.
-Lovely kitchen with cook
Sycamore 51., Mlddlopurt, goad
urtltt and rtf., 3 bedrooms,
Will do babvslttlng In my homo
buy for $8,000. Phono 992·3578,
full
baMmeni
.F.
A.
bath,
0
dav or night, '1'12·3255.
or 992-7667.
heel, new sfeel siding, 2,77
FARM far sole, 35 acr~s. lcirge
acres, large g~~rege and
house, all ufilltles, Other
workshop, carport.
building•. On block tap · road
WE HAVE 2 NEW 3
near Medina ex.it, $35,000.
bedroom homH lust being
Phone 273.4722,
completed. Both have
9 room hau1e, bath ond hall, dou·
garage 1nd work aree., M08tlE home for oalo or ront, 3
ble garage. $12,000 firm ,
bodraomo, al ulllitl" pold.
baths,
utility
rms.,
Phone 992·5213.
Phono 992·n51.
carpeted, about 1 acre of
TUPPERS PlAINS-Ea;·,-.-,n- o_r_oa- .-=2
ground. 522.900.00.
1'TIO Doroltor 2 bedroom, f.ISOO
yr. old bl-level home loco ted on · TQ SELL CALL US lor quick oolo. Can bo aeon at
l'/1 acres Rt . 7, Riggs C• es l
570 Poorl St., In Mlddlopcort.
T~EN "6LL THE
Man nor, 3 or o4 Loidrooms, 2
MOVING VAN. HINRY E. 8x13 Yellowstone complng
baths, llvlflll, dining roam; and
CLELAND,
IROKER,
trailer, ox~llont condition,
kitchen, with rolrlgorato' and
APPRAISIII,
$950. Can bo _ , at Ki"'!!bury
range, · family room, laundry
~omo Sol.., 1100 E. Main St.,
CONSULTANT.
and garage, good garden area,
Pomotoy, Ohla '1'12·7034.
S:U,QOO. Phono (6") 985·4254.
992·2219 or w.t-2N.e
I

I

THURSDAY, JULY 2'1, 197.
5:0G-BO!Ninll 3; Partridge Family I; Mission: fm .
possible IS.
5:»-Adam.l2 •.13; News6; Family Affair t; Electric
Complll'ty 2U3.
6:0G-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:»-NBC News3..C,l5; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBSNews8,10; Hodgepodgtlodge20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7:&lt;»-Truth or Consequences 3; To 1)11 Tile Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6; Lawrence Welk I; News 10;
Lei's Make a Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Our Story
20; Family at War 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; XXI Olympic Games 13;
Hollywood Squares •• Ohio State Lottery 6; Wild

I

__L

. SMITH NELSON
MoTORS, INC.

..

Television log for easy viewing

SIS CANOES THAT1WAY...
AIWLJNP SENP ·

LOOK 11-1E~ ,
AME:~ i

D''IOI.I SEE
WHA'T l SEE?!

'THAT 'S EXACTLY
VES! MAKUM
600V PI&lt;E:SENT Wi-IA'T ! WAS )H1Nl(tNG ! LET'S GET 'IM !
FOR BIG
CH IE:F OF

SH IPS !

Corne up, bu-t

.
com1n
.

I don't
allow
smokin'!

Joel's
.

w·tth
th'

trr-t--t-i-

rope,

'·

Rufus!
Don't

worr4!

:a

display
(2 wds.)

• Radaniea'
beloved
• Repeat
rendition

Equipment h--HH-+-t-1~~~~~·41 Whirled
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is
~ •• A BIRD WULDN1T
t.IVEON OU~

BAlARYI

TOGCFCOFFEE R::R.

PEOPLE;.:rAKE PIECES
Of: COPY FROM ONE
DE&amp;K 10 ANOTHER???

WHAT DO 'lOJ L\1'\NT

FRCMMEf I

.

~HERE
REMEM6ER'? 1

One letler simply slands lor another. In lhis '"'lPie A ii
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all
hints. Each day the code letlen; are dll!erenl.
CRYPTOQUOTES

ZM

SLOM

DI

DVP

ALJGDC

NP

WID

Z R GG . -

NP

Dl

UJVM

LDDMWDRIW
C REI W M

fC 1916 Kin1 FtltUrH Synd.lcale, lnc.)

BRLLS o' FIRE!!
HERE COMES TH'

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SHERIFF!!

tRUHLOY!

T·tf

1 () (]

WHERE A '~Y'MieHT
FEEL ,(1' HOME.

IJV
LWF

ZMRG

Yesterday'a Cryplotjuote:· IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SU&lt;J.
CEED, YOU'RE DOING ABOUT AVERAGE. - LEONARD

UIUIS LEVINSON

I IIJ

Yet~m~.r••

I

J....W... KNOWN I'ISHY

lto•o

&lt;-...

POUNCE

tat- ' " " " ' " ' '

.U.wm Wloot IAat '11N tolF.'o" ..bolor-,
.

d•ln'•l1l-M8tfOCKINQ,.

HANDS DOWN!! ·
RE UNDER ARREST,
SNUFFY .

IF SOMEONE CALLS '100

'LAN.BCNl. •illfH '100 001
IOJ'a: Nt1T' A"LAMecM£'
THAT'S SMrASM! '

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepori-Pill!le'oy, 0 ., 'lbunday, July 29, 19.76

Astra- For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
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AppteGrove
News Notes

·
Berntce Bedl Oaol
For Frldor, Julr 30, 1171
AAIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 1t)

WANT ADS
INP'ORMATION
DEADLINES
P.M. Day Before

'

Business Services

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
5
Publleauon .
•
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
~-----Ctnctlllf Ions.
correc .
Think
m
terms
of
being
of
serCasper of Columbus spent a
ttons accepted flrsr Clay of
vice 10 others today, Tills is publication
.
weekend with Mrs . Dolly
how you'll lind the greatest
REGULATIONS
Wolfe and famUy .
rewards .
The Publisher reserves
FR.~t_ lltlrl
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hill
the right to edit or reJect
TAURUS (April 20,-Moy 20) any
IdS
dttmed
ob
.
returned to their home at
Others w1U lind you an ins piring
lectlonel. The publisher
llllllltltll Senlcts
Moore Haven, Fla. after
person to be aroun d today. wltl not be rtSROnl fble for
floooocilc . . .
more then one Incorrect
Your optimlslic outlook will
sp~nding
their summer
lnsrr·tlon .
. . . loll I* &amp; Altia
buoy
th
eir
spirits.
vacation with Mr. and Mrs.
RATES
1'72 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR.
SI"S
ST1IIII
For Want Ad Service
Mike Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juilo 20)
Good
tires,
clean
Interior,
radio,
red
finish
,
gOOd
WIU.&amp;DOOIS
5 cents per word one
Pac ing Is your ace in the hole
Marvin Hill , Mrs . Dolly
economy.
lt(I'UCfi(IIIIT
lnserflon.
1
.today Let th ings ·happen In
Wolfe.
Min imum Charge Sl.OO.
WlflDIMS
their own good ume. Don't try
14 cents per word three
·1970RENAULT4
Dr.
S7SO
Arthur Hale spent a
IWIIII!UII
to hasten im portant matters.
consecutive Insertions .
Good
!Ires,
clean
Interior,
grey
finish
,
radio,
•
speed.
monlh 's vacation with hjs
SIOIIUifiTl
26 cents r,•r word six
CANCER !June 21-Jiily 22) consecutive nsertlons . .
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Dallas
Th JS is a most oppor tune day to
25 Per Cent Piscount on
mo CAMARO CPE.
Slot!
Hill. Art is li'ving In Fort
paid ads and ads paid
do somet11ing other than vour
v.e,
autc&gt;motlc.
p,
steering,
extra
gOOd
.radial
tires.
within 10 dayo,
Lauderdale, Fla.
u sual rou tine , lfke gett ing
Needs some body work .
'~ HZ.ml . &lt;1-10.1 mo.
CAID OF THANKS
toge th er with a pal you've
Mrs. Dale Hill, M!'s . Dolly
&amp; OBITUARY
neglected lately.
$2 .00
tor 80 word
Wolfe visited Mr . and Mrs.
minimum
.
Dick Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) The
Each additional word 3
bQss may be In n receptive
Bob Taylor and families at
cents.
·
ILIND ADS
mood today. If you reel you 're
Gallipolis Thursday.
Addlllonal 2SC Charge
dtJe for a raise or even a pat on
Friends were sorry lo hear
per Advertisement.
the, back, talk things over!
OFFICE HOURS
of lhe dea th of f\ev. Edward
POMEROl', C)t.fiO
1:30 a .m . to 5:00 ·p .m .
VIRGO
(Aug
.
.
23·Sopl.
22)
Griffith, who was a former
Dallv.
8:30
a.m.
to
12
:00
Somewhere far removed from · Noon Siturday .
paslor of the Fairview and
wh.ere you Sre, good things are
PhOne todav 9n21S6.
Plapts churches. .
happening in your beh alf. You
Mr , Haymond Bell was
could learn of them today .
NOTICES
.-s,.dollll--honored by· his family with a
LIBRA tSopl. 23·0cl. 23.) This
ATTN .:it
THE undersigned will sell ot
LADY
shoe
clerk
,
2
days
per
party on his 8:lrd birthday
A~L HOUSEWIVES
co wld be a red·leller day
public sale for cash the follow ·
week . 'Phone 992•2571 or 992All Yard Sales , Rummage 1
Sunday. Attending were Mr.
because of someth ing nice
mg motor vehicle to be taken
3830.
Porch
and
Basement
Porch
you've done in the past. You
from Michael E, Crites , Hartand Mrs. Don Bell, Mr. and
and Basemenr Sales , etc .
co uld be repaid in even greater
ford , West Virginia. 1971 Ford IUIZ.Z174
must be paid In advance .
Mrs. Paul Ervin, Mrs .
,_
measure
Thunderbird
Serial
No.
Get
yours
in
tarty
l:ly
Dorothy Chaney, Roger and
by our office at
1&amp;84N124130. 2 d, , h.t .. 211
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nav. 22). stopping
Edward . We wish Mr. Belle
The Dally Sentinel , 111
We$1 Second Street , Pomeroy,
Embark on an adventure In a
Court St. or writing 8ox
Ohto, ot '10:00 a.m. on the 2nd
many more' happy birthdays.
sea of new fa ce s today .
729', ,omeroy , Ohio .t5169
WILL DO odd jobs, roofing, pain ·
day of August, 1976. The under·
Mr . and 111rs. Butch Ables
with your remittance.
ting, hauling , tre• work , ond
Valuable contacts can be made
signed. reserves the right to
of Canal Winchester spent a
~
tn large gatherings persons '---------~---" I mowing. Phone 992-7ol09.
bid. The Farmer5 Bonk and Sov·
week's vacation with their
you haven 't met before.
ings Company , Pomeroy ,
ANY PITCH
Ohio.
parents, Mr . and Mrs, Jack
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doe.
ANY SIZE
Ables, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
21 ~ You 're more ambitious . io196:8 Comon;, ports , front end,
Congo.
hood , doors , rriOny other pQrls.
doy than In the past You know
ciLO furniture, ic• boxes . bran
1. M
'
Also fit · f967 Cpmoi'o. $ee ·at
what you want and you 'll knOw
Visiting Mr . and Mrs .
beds,
wall
telephone'
and
Of
A
t-r1ene1
111 Pearl St., Middleport, Ohio
how to go after it.
pails , Of complee householdl .
Robert Smith Sr. during the
•5760
.
Eliza
Sue Ellis
Truss Rafter Co.
Write
M..
0
.
Miller
,
Rt.
4,
.~
:.:.:.::.:_~---week were Mr . and Mrs. CAPRICORN !Doc. 22-Jon.
Po~~oy
,
Ohio.
Call
997.·776/J,
11)
Projects
that
once
frlgl'lte'nWha PISsed •VNY 2 YHrs
Box 21·A
Jimmy Freeman, Irwin, Pa.,
e&lt;l you with tl'leir size will not
190 !odloy, July 29, lf74.
CASH paid for all mokes and
Rutlond. Oltlo 45775
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Smith and ' intimidat
models of mobile l'lomes.
e: you today. You 're up
Ph. "14) 742-24ot
five children , Mr. and Mrs.
Phone oreo code 61.C.· 423·9531 .
to cu ll i ng th em dow n to
Wt Deliver
Billy Smith , all of Millville,
manageable proportions.·
$$Cosh$$ for junked auto. Frye's
7·28·4 mos.
Pa., Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Truck Auto Ports. Rutland. 'LOST: Male n~tered Germon
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
Johnson and children , · Ybu 're up to making the most
Phone 742-2081.
Shepherd , white fleo collor.
los-t in Alfred area. Call collect
Racine;
Mrs.
Smith's o r your opportunities today .
nMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro.
(614)696-1082.
Don
't
be
dissuaded
by
others.
ducts . Top price for standing
brother , Carl Manges and
Pursue what loolo;s good to you :
sawtimber. ( 'all K'ent Hanby , MEDIUM sized block curlr. haired lOCUST POSTS, round · or split ,
three grandchildren Tirnn\y,
Phone9~9-277.t .
poodle type dog, femo e , nom·
1-••6-8570.
Tammy and Tommy Kloes. PISCES (Feb. 20·M•rch 20)
ed Je$$,. lost In the vicinity of
COINS, currency , tokens, ·gold
COAL, limestone , and colch,1m
On Saturday Mr. and Mrs: Y~~. have a knack 01 getting InCounty RoOd 19 and Bunk&amp;r
ond silver jewelry. We need
chloride and colc:iUm brine for
volved
wit
h
th
e
right
partners
Hill . Reward. Phone 992-5735.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. j~rry
1964 and .older U.S. coins . Col!
dust control ond special mixing
today . II· a go.getter invites you
Johnson . and children, Mr. th on a deal, go along lor the
salt for formers . Moin Street,
for other 742-2331 or come out
Pomeroy', Ohio or phone 9'il2·
to our coin shop on Rutland and
and Mrs. Bob Smith and five
~de .
3891.
leading
Creek
Rd
.
Roger
children enjoyed the day at·
Wamsley.
CANNING peaches now reody
Forked Run Lake.
thru August . Several varieties
USED
Belsow
in
good
condition
.
Mr . and Mrs. Webster
by the bushel . v; bushel or
Phone
(614
)378-6387
.
FURNISHED.
2
bedrm. apartment,
Skeins, Parkersburg, Mr. and
peck . Please' bring own c:onodults only, in Middleport.
GOOD used retrigerotor unO...
Mrs . Wilbur Rowley and
Phooe'l'l2·3874.
toiner, 2 convenient locations:
Jutr 30, 1976
$50. Coli (6141.985·3582 alterS
Midway Morket , Pomeroy,
granddaughter of Minnesota
3
AND
4
RM
.
furnished
and
unYour matenal prospects look
of Masonoc
992-2582: Bob'• Market, Mo1on,
visited Mrs. Margie Hunt.
furnished opts. Phone 992·
773-S721.
very nopelul lhls )lear. esGale
5&gt;134.
Mrs . Georgia Wheeler pecially where your career is
Chagrin
I
1975 Yamaha 100CC Enduro, 1300
Wolfe returned to her home concerned . Advancements
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt.
missed by a n """'·
miles. Excellent condition, very
33, ten miles nortll of Pomeroy.
after a month's vacation With tong due may finally
IF You · have a servk;e lo offer ,
econom1cal·mochine. Cycle ond
Lorge lots with concrete patior.,
materialize.
her biOther, Mr, and Mrs.
want to ~y ·or sell something ~
1 bell helmet. $500. Phone 992,
sidewalks,
runners
ond
oH
oe lOoking for wor::k . . . qr
n•o.
Alex Wheeler.
street parking, Phone 9'92·7~79.
whatever ... you.'ll .9 -t results
Mr. and Mrs . Carroll ·
faster with o Sentinel Wont Ad . ciNE' bedroom apartments at TOMATOES, cabbage, squash,
sweet corn , cucumbers, phone
Balser of Mansfie\ 1 spent the
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
Call992·2156.
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
IWJ-2495.
weekend with the former's - The New Orleans Saints' "-ERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY - hove Y"-RO Sole 517 NO&lt;th Third ond
for Sl~ rnonthl)l plus elec . or
S130 includirig electric:. lOWER 1971 KoWo1aki 175, Enduro. $250.
mother, Mrs. Alice Balser. No. 1 draft choice, Oiuck
aedol photo• of vour cpnst,ucRutlarld Streets, Middleport .
tlon site, business, cool and
Set of motorcycle carriers. $13 .
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
Weds ., Thursday , Friday, 9
Visiting Mr . and Mrs . Mimcie, arrived in training
gas leo••• af you 1 lo,m . Ken
Phone 992·SS23.
Convenient
to
shopping
on
a.m. till .a p.m: July 28, 29 and ·
Herbert Roush over the camp Monday a day late and
G&lt;o•e. phooog,apher. Che,ter,
Third and Mill Streets in Mid· CANNING tomatoes, Corol
301h .
weekend were Mrs. Gladys Coach Hank Stram scheduled
Ohio. Phone 985·4135.
dleport. Brand new high qualiWhite, 2.a7-Zl75.
ty Qpartments . See .fhe
Shields, Mrs. Edna Roush, a meeting·II ; :JI him to discuss WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY - YARD Sole. July 29 ond 30.
Thursday and Friday at 389
manager at Riverside 'Apart- CANNING tomatoes and· lwHp
Racine, Mrs .
Randall possible .penalties for his late
Remembe' the day forever!
Beech St., Middleport . TOys .
peppers . Cleland Forms .
ments or toll 992-ml. FurRoberts, Mr . and Mrs. qurival.
The complete story of your
books , clothing, etc .
Geraldine Cleland. Ro~ine-,
niihed apartments also
Howard Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Muncie, who was rained •ut
wedding in o beo~tilul album .
Ohio.
available .
.,
Coli
Ken
Grover, GARAGE Sole, Friday , July 30,
Russell Roush, Mr. and Mrs,' , of 11 chaQCe to play in the
Photographet. Chestor , Ohio.
Portland, Ohio, Township Rood TRAILER 1poce for rent in Mid· IN DASH 23 channel CB, am-fm
103 (lovell) Rood . Coots,
William Wicklin~ and }\y)e, . Cqll~ge All-Star G!IIOO Satur·
Phone98S-•ISS.
rodio, 8 track stereo. Coil 99'2·
dlepo&lt;t. Phone992·5434 .
clothing,
dishe
s.
also
pool
table
396S.
Mrs.• Kathryn Hunt, Mrs. ,day, .told the coach he Sl'!l!lt GOlDEN WEDDING Anniversary.
pnd ·accessories . Magnus chord 3 room furnished apartment,
·Margie Hunt, Randall t~ the weekend in Chicago with
Preser'• this wondo,ful dov
utilifhrts furnished. Phone 992· POOl table, regulation size, very
organ. 196.4 Ford Golo~~:lt. reol
good condition. Phone m -22:J.C
l\oberts and Leslie.
'I · his family.
wiih phoiog&lt;aphs of tho fomijy
3129or'l'l2-54,.,
t:heop.
Kenneth
Rizer
or
'992·3A67. Con be seen acroSs
Mrs. Flossie Norris Cburch
togetlter, with your friend• and
residence .
fRAilER . odult• onlv. PhOne 992.
fromW . ~. P .O.
·
of course the coke ! Coli Ken
7639or'l'l2·2181.
(a fom1er resident) now of
Grover Photography, Chester, Y"-RO Sole. J~ly 30 and 31. Girls'
bock to school clothing, sizes 3 Room furnished house wilh 19'71 Kawasaki 125 for $150; 1973
Marion, 0. was laid to rest..at
,
..
Ohio. Phone 9BS·415S.
Kowosoki 90 lor $200. Phone
6X
and 10, men's a· ladi•s'
bath. iO.dult, only. Phone 992.
Letart Falls Cemetery. Sbe ',NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT ·. GRAPEFRUIT Pill with Dodox eat
Jock
Pa,kor, (6") 985·3861.
clothing, toys, dlshes, paper5535.
.
passed away at her home jlt . · ·
cueNo. 2l ,ll2
satisfying meal• ond 'lose
bock
books,
many
e~etras.
Cor·
2 piece living room suite, one
Marion due to a heart att.Bek: ' g!~~~se:~ 0 · w, Wise"" an
weighr . now extra strength forner lot Hutchison Subdivision , ONE bedroom apartment of
chino closet , ·One swivel choir,
Rivers
ide.
Phont
99'1·3273.
She was born and reared in . Notice is hereby given that
mulo, Nelson D,rugs .
Rutland. Shirley Wi150n, 7.a2one di1hwosher , Hoover
.
'' Sy'&amp;ll Ebersbach Of 166 SKY o· · G
Co
S
259S.
washer and dryer. Phone 992·
TRAILER spoce close to Meiu•
this commumty.
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy,
rvmg. reene
unty port
5688. Ellis Ward.
OhiO, has been dUly appOinted
Parachute Center, open every YARD Sale at 675 Sycamore St ..
Mines. Complete hookup. Call
Adm lnlstratrlx of the Estate
doy near Gallipolis. For further
7•2·2166.
Middleport , Friday, Saturday .
Of 0 . w. WIseman , deceased ,
information, coli (6U) 2,.5-9339
tate of Scipio Township , Meigs
or P.O. Box 91 , Bidwell. Ohio HUGE Yard Sole , Friday , Satur· 4 room furni1hed opf. d9se to
Powell's Super Volu still
county , Oh io .
45614.
doy, Sunday at Raymond
available.
Phone 992·3658.
Cred ltors are required to =-:-:=:-::-c-,..,.--;-::---,---,-,SMALL farm for sale, 10~. down,
Pierce restdeoce, Rt. 388, Anti ~
file their clalms w i th said FABRIC SALE , All'moteriol in shOp
OWfler financed . Monroe Coun·
quUy, Sump Pump, bicycles , 2 Bedroom trailer, $28 wMk, all
"' fiduciary wlthir;J three months.
on sole, one week only. Mon·
tv . W. Va. Phone (3041 772·
tools,
dishes,
clothet, books ,
utilities
paid
.
PJ,one
992·3324.
D!ted thiS 26th day ot July
doy, Jul)l 26 thru Saturday, Ju 3102 or (304)772-3227.
cameras and equipment. Anti1976 .
ly 31. Our new hours except
3 Rooms ond botk, furhished ;::
que bed and ohar items.
CO;::U;::N;::T;;R;:V";Ior"-m-;lo~n-;d-w-;1;1;-h-,-ec-;l~
ud:
for
sole weeki ore Monday thru
oportm,nt, all utilities furnish·
Manning 0 . Webster
ed
woods,
water
~nd
good
ac·
YARD Sole, Monday and Tuesday,
Friday,
9
o
.m.
till7
p.m.,
closed
ed. Inquire ot 356 North Four·
Judge
cess in Monroe County , W, Vo.
Julv
2
and
3
oo
J,j0
Page
St.,
Fabrics
on
Saturdbys
.
Carolina
th,
Mlddlepo".
Court of Common P.leas.
$1 ,000 down. call (304) 772.
Middleport. Aight on this side
Roule 7, one·holf mile north of
Probafe Division
3102 0&lt; (304) 772·3227.
of the marino, something for
Chester, Ohio. Henry and Mary
171 29 181 5, 12. 31c •·
Sunday School attendance
evorybody.
Hunter, owners.
2 bedrooms. large modern kiton July 25 was 48, the offering
chen, forced air furnace . lin SPECIAl Auction Sole at The Auc· YARD Sole, Fridoy, Saturday ot
~.90, Worship services were
111 Pearl Street, Middleport. 35 h.p. outboQrd motorboot with - coin Hgto. 992·5737.
tion House, Horton St., Mason,
trailer. Phone 99'1·57-41.
Baby clothes, high choir , and
W. Vo. under new manage·
held at 10:45 With the Rev.
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOUSE tor tole, 20 minute• from
other
things.
ment. Lorge truckload ol new
·k.
'The Meigs Local School
Pomeroy, I acre level lot. 2
Richard ..l
fiiOmas spea tng Ololr lct Board of Education is
mercJ,ondlse and door prize.
bedrooms, 2 cor garage, city
from Psalm 30 :4 "Rejoice Ill accepting sealed bids tor one
7:00p.m. Soturdoy, July 31.
water, gas heat, perfect for
the Lord Always" AI school bus; namely/ 1964
·
• International . 66 pabenger ..
3 bike motorcyc:le trailer, $85.
young family starting out or
lendancc W8S 23.
3&lt;5 engine 1703A FD76361F.
Phone 992·7110.
otdtr couple, slowing dawn.
AKC Irish Satter Puppies, 6 wvelu
A reception for the Rev.
Bids will be received until
Reduced from $21 ,000 to
old. Phone 9•9-2726.
RA8BITS und white guinea pigs,
$19.900. Phono (614)667·3519.
Thomas was held here in the 12:00 o'c!o,ck noon an, Septer.nber 7, 1976. The· Board of
AKC G~trma" Shepherd puppies,
phone 992·2513.
·
100l!C200 lot for 1ale, Five Points
church basement on Friday Education reserves the right
goad blood lino, genrle dltposl· 16ft. fl!&gt;orglon boot with 60 h.p.
aroo. Call 992·3576.
evening, July , 23, with · a to re(ect anv and all blds:' The
tion . Phone992·5623.
Johnson mol or, other extras. :;---'-'c..;-:::...:...:..-'7~:--­
bids will be opened on Sep .
potIuck supper at 7, followed tember 13. 1976, at 7130 P.M.
Phone 992·~ .
1 room house ond both , 4 acres
more or leu , wUh born, on Rt.
by a .visiting period and
Sealed bids should be ~d -

@) 2s:;Ns

Pomeroy
QUI.ITY Mo.tor Co.

LAQIOE•·
EXPERIENCED

POM~~!v~~!o'lp~~ CO.I{i:)

~

,._

.

Aluminum Sidin&amp;.
Roofina, Guttars,
Plintina • • •

·~

Sauthea$tem Ohio

~Your
l!f@!J Birthday

·Alfred

m

1 Social Notes ,

:

r.

I

rf

{
\

.

dressed

to :

John

Tnplett,

n. presen~lton of a glftfrom lhe • Cl~rR. Meigs Local School
te&gt;
.ih

f"

~

•••

~

'

church. Attendancewas32.11
concluded with a songfestled
by Charlea D. Woode, witjl
theRev .Thomasatthe'plano.
Mr . and Mrs . Wllber
Parker have reeelved w&lt;1rd.'
that their son-ln-law aqd
!Iaugher, Mr. and Mrs. Joe .
Pooie and grandson WW are
helng moved from the state of .
Utah to Albuquerque, New
Mexico this coming week.
Mrs. Osle Henderson
returned to her home here
recen Uy
after
being
hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial Hospital several
days,
Clara Follrod and Nina
Rob1Jwon learned thai Jack
Fclllroit hal alao been
rttwnld to his hGme ' Ill
Pllmltoy from ·;~:eraml

Memorlll H01pllal.

District . Middleport, Ohio

CAMPER trailer for sole or trode .
Phono Earl Hunt (614) 9S5.4J71 .

&lt;57 60.

John Triplet!,
Clerk
/,\elgs ~ocal
School District
Middleport, Ohio 45760
17l ,1$. 22. 29 111 5, ~tc

1969 Bonanza 19 ft .,

tion, set up at Royal Oak Park
with $100 olraody ·' paid on
season, porch and outside
refriparotor, gas refrtg.rofor
inside, siMps 8,
canopy,

bathroom. Phone 992·3927.

REAL ESTATE ,
FOR SALE

Real EState owned by Jhe

late Der\lel Rees end Clara

Reesloc:ated at 306 West Main
Strett, Pomeroy, Ohio. con -

sisting of • garage and house
Is now being oHtrtd ror sale
by the undersigned to the
~•DMSI bidder . Pitate s~bmlt
your bids tO the undersiGned .
Property
apprals·ect
at

$2,500.00. Sale subhtct to the
appro vat of tht Probite Court.
Jouph w. Coo~
Admlnlstrltar ot
tho Estoloof
Clara Ren. Deuased
(71 21 , 22. 23, 26, 27, 28, i9. 7tc

. 197.C Storcrcift Golo,de, 8 camper,

::.~;~~by,

992 ' 5965 or (6"1

5 piece drum set, txceUent condi -

flon . Will sell cheap or will
toke a bos1 omphlifier on
trode. O'dell Manley. '1'12-7276.
1'TI• Suzuki 750 CC, goad condl·
lion . Mull tell. Phono 7•2·
2550.

raqsonobly priced. Phone 7..2.
2595.
REMEDY YOUR WATER
STARCR:,.,:::::
FTr-.~u::,ed7-:I:::
'T7=2:-:c1 ec-::lt .
PROBLEMS AND SAVE
trailor,. oiii'T76 models roduc· MONEY, TOO, WITH
ad. tm modols, mini·motoro. A· · ·
CQ~p
· rrailers, campers In stock.
Camp Conley Starcroft Soles,
CARHOPS and waitress wanted.
Rt. 62 N. n Ploo•ant, w. v..
Water
Apply in person, (row's Ste-ak
House.
APACHE fold·up type tent trailer.
IUUII
--- --.·---·--·
Need• tomo ropolr wo,k, $100,
~~ Ut:-XAA, 210,000
lnqui&lt;O at 256 South Fo~rth . W~l~ Grain Capacity .
·"-vo., Middlopo" .
RegUior .
CODNER'S Campors, Soleo ond
.PO~M·EOO~~Yiut•.L•, N"~•RIC.
Rental. OEN HOUSE SAtE.
'"'
,. """"
,; lloglno July 30. Drawlngo,
•• _ J k w Ca · ·
· rofrMhmtntl, toko Molgo 28 or
ltC
'
rttJ, Mgr.
· _"""
_ _.ne_'"-·-2-11-1-..J
,. ., .' .' ,'32 to Q~S~N-an~ fol~aw oig!'.!: .'-·--operptor with tuneup and brOke txperlence.
Hove own tools. Must be
reliable, no booze. Write Bo~
7290, Y. The Doi!r Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio ,.5769.

GAS

station

Autamdic

Conda:..:;;;er

·'299.00 •

Ml•

'

I

vood condi·

LOGS, Ponleroy Forest Producfsls
now buying grade hardwood
1awloga. For specifications, call

'

I
I

~Z:I-2""'

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
i
-Aerlol-lndudrlol
Construction ,.,... ....,
-COft!!ltlt Scltool Service
·ondiriridullt&amp; .
~lemtnlarY

Sclloi!l P,ock..i

Plcturea
Seniors &amp; YMrbook
-Wed!ll..t-

KEN GROVER
l'llotoir•pfw
fiMISS
CI1Hitr, Oltlo
7-14·1 mo.

SWIMMING
POOLS
Above •nd bolow ·graund
pool kits fOr ·!lie do-ltyo..-self mlln.
AU pool suppliH avalloblt;

taa.
.

.D. Bum.prdner
Nable Summit Rd.,
Mltldltport
PHONE 99'1-5724
7-21 -1 mo.

•

GIIJttR SERVICE_
caatinWI!s otft pltct
gutters. ~flint neor do II
yourMH. Stitt._. prlcH Ia
builders.

'
CAPT~ EASY

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

AI. TROMM OONSl ,'
..

.

•

Tilt Complttt
Rtmocltling Strvlct
For Your Homt

f!utllnd
742-2HI
AU Work O...rttllted
Fr.. Estlmotn

" MOON ltiAN": •.'5UB·
INTH~ IGBNCI?t~ ..

Y'MEAN LIK6 6ETTIIJ&lt;'i BU5TEO FOR

lnl~&lt;·~

GRR· R·R:

'

WeLL. WELL.~

''~IN I!! KONG VI!.,
THE MOON MEN "...

GOT HeRe~
HALLOWEEN

FOR THE !&gt;MALL
SCREEN:

... worrA we

PLAYIN 6 PEEPIN6

TO M IN A &gt;.\ON KEY

192:7320 evenings

;

5UIH

WIN AT BRIDGE

Game comes clean In Bath

6·27·76

..

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

NORTH IDI
.QU
'AJU
• AQ 104
•J96

..

ASSORTED RUBBER

'6.,,

•Q85432
•

CO~REALIZE

Squore nra lnstelltd
vld Parsons, Owner
,4,·2114
6-7·1 mo. .

SOUTH
• A K J 10 75
• 7.3 z
H532

f\AlF OF US ARE
MI NDI~b OOF!

1KAT·

,. ·- 11!6 VXJRL.D DX?~'T

OWl&gt;!

KNOW HOW .
ll\E: orH6R

American
Auto Sales

Wetl

LIVf"SZ

'
Wlnshllld Rtpllcemtnl
Fr.. Estlmttn
OnlodyWark
Expert Ptltlllng
lnsuronct Wark
Wtlceine
51. Rt. 7
Coolville, Oltlo
647-3127
7·2f-1 mo.

Nortb E111
I+
DbL

Soalb

1.

Pass ••
Pass Pasi Pass
Opening lead - J +

. LIT .T LE ORPHAN

"'

z•

By
Oswald &amp;. James Jacoby
.
The student went rlght up
with dummy's ace of
diamonds . T.hen be drew
trumps with two leadlt and.
ANMIE-IAC:RIFICE
played ·a second diamond to
17:':::;::'7.:;;:;0::;;::;;;:::-;;;:;- dummy's queen and Ea11's
king. The nine of diamonds
came back. Now the student
rulfed a club before throwing
East in with the last diamond.
· East got out wilh a club and
lhe game boat bad salled
away. The student bad to lose
two heart tricks and his contract.
"Tough luck , wasn't it~"

· ~~~
A Maine reader wanll to
know what the ebance Is that
If you hold etcbt lnlmPI, the
opponents five trumptl wlll
spUI 3-2.
The answer to thai oae Is
that they aplil3-2 aboul88 per
cent or just over two thirds of
the llme.
(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
af Bridge, " clo this
newspaper, P. 0 . Bo• 489,
Radio City Slat/on, New Y9rk,
N. Y. 10019)

Kingdon 10; Mu&amp;lc City U.S.A, 15; Robert Mec:Nelr'
Report 20.
8:00 M..nlflcent Monsters of 1111 Deep 3,~.15; XXI
Olympic Games 6; Woltons I, 10; Uptltlrs.
·
Downstolrs 33; Movie "Double Suicide" 20.
' :oo-Movle "Perilous Voyage" 3,A,15; Hawaii Flve.O
I; Men Who Mldi· The Movies 33; Movlo "How to
Seve A Marriage- .,.d Ruin Y04Jr Llr." 10.
IO:OG-Veudevlllt 8; News 20; Soundstage 33.
II :OG-News 3.4,6.1,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Car- 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Ga+.
6.13; Movie "The Oaring Dobermans" I; Movie
" Cotter" 10; Janekl 33.
n :•s-Mannl• 6.13.
i2:55-Maglclan 6,13.
.
1: &lt;»-Tomorrow 3,4.
2 : &lt;»-News 13.

•

.

FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1t76
6 :0G-Summer Semester 10.
6:15-Ferm Report 13.
6:21)-Biue Ridge Quartet 13.
6:30-Columbus Today~~ News6; Summer Semester
B; Two.Way Street 10.
6:&lt;15-Mornlng Report 3.
6 : ~ Morning, We&amp;t VIrginia .13.
6:5s-Good Morning, Trl Stott 13.
7:0G-Today 3,4,15; GQOd Morning, Amerlce 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck While R18P0rls 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny Bunny and Frlendlt 10.
7:30-Schoollios 10.
. 8:0G-Jeff's Collie 6; Capleln Kangaroo 8,10; Se!llime
Street 33.
,
.
8:»--Big Valley 6.
':OG-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue ~.15; Lucy Show 8; Mlkt
Douglas 10; Morning With D.J. 13.
9:»-Cross·WIIt 3; Qrle Life to Live 6; T1ttleteles 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:0G-Senford and Son 3,4,15; Price 11 Right 8.10; Big
With Knit 33,
.
10 : Is-General Hospllel 6.
10:»-Celtbrlty Sweepstakes 3,A,I5; Lilias, Yoga and
You 33.
11 :00'-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gamblf 8,10; Fermer's Daughter 13.
11 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4,151 Happy Days 6,13;
Love. qf Life 8,10.
.
11:55-Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
.
12:&lt;»-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 131 Bob Braun ~~
Noiws 6,8, 10; Sesame Street 33.
12:3G-Gong Show 3.15; All My Children 6.13; Setrch
For. Tomorrow 8, 10.

12:55-NBC News 3,15.
I :OG-News 3; Ryan'• Hopo 6.13; Phil Donahue I;
Young and the Restless 10; Not Far Women Only
15; Electric Complll'ty 33.
1:30-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
the Worl!f Turns 8,10; Book Beet 33.
2:0G-S20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah I 6; Valiant Yeer&amp;33.
2: »-Ooctols 3,4, 15; One Life to live 13; Guiding Light
1,10; Olympiad 33.
3:&lt;»-Another World 3,~,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crockelt's Vldory Gardltn 20.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3:3G-Mickey Mouse Club 6:Malch Game 8,10; Lilies,
Yoga and .You 20; Walsh's Animals 33.
4:110-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4: Somentt 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20.33; Movie "CinderFella" 10; Olnahl 13.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
4: »--Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
Sesame- ~reet 20,33; Fllntttones IS.
ACROSS
4Z Suburb of
5:0G-Bonenzit 3; Partridge Family" 8; Mission:
. 1 First-rite
Paris
Impossible 15.
S Amllnsler,
DOWN
5:31)-Adam-124,13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric
e.g.
1 llallan poet
Company 20,33.
. .
·
U Swiss river · %Ho~JC opera
6:0G-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
J! Loath
3 The Kelly
6:»-NBC News 3,~,15; ABCNews 13; Andy Griffith
13 .Cookbook
girl (2 wds.J
6; CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
·
4 Evening
verb
CarrascoJendas 33 . .
14 LitUe
in Rome
7:0G-truth or ConHquences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
· 15 Legislator
5 "Scarface" ·
Bowling For0ollars6; Space: 19998; ~&gt;jews 10; Don
Yesterday's Amtwer
Adams Screen Test 13; Family Affair 15; Women
17 Love set's
&amp; County in
20; Black Perspective on lhe News 33.
barrier
North
16 Elephant's- 27 Hauled
7:3G-Porter Wagoner 3; XXI Olympic GamH 6,13;
18 Klller
Carolina
ear
29 Cubic meter
Treasure Hunt 4; Popl Goes The Counfry 15;
whale
7 On pension 2% Do lacework 31 Olympic ·
Rober! MacNeil Report 20.33.
19 Some
(abbr. )
%3 Beersheba's
memento
8:0G-Sanford and Son 3,4,15; Sara 8,10; Washington
zt SHe grade 8 3 Down's
partner
-3% ·Arctic
·
Week In Review 20,33.
21 Raison d'consort
24 Earthly
explorer
8:00'-The Practice 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
%3 Greek
(2 wds.)
9:&lt;»-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Movie "The Wild Bunch"
25 Adele of
3$ Olhello's
8,10; U.S.A. : People and Politics 20,33.
township
9 Admires
the late
ensign
A Country Mile 20,33.
9:3G-Walk
U Old Chinese 1D Squirrel
show
f7 Mwlcal
10:
00'-Pollce
Story 3,~.15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
state
monkey
note
Zl Wobble
10:3G-Farm Digest 20.
ZS Saucer
11:0G-News 3,4,13,15; ABC. News 33.
. aource?
11:3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; XXI Olympic Games
zt Schoolboy's
6,13; Janak! 33.
ordeal
11 : 35-News 8,10.
Z7 Miracle
11 :45--Rookles 6,13.
site
12:05-Movle "Fort Utah" 8; Movie "The Hound of
!I Work unit
the Baskervllles" 10.
UAmerlcan
12:55-0on Kirshner's Rock Concert 6; Wresfllng 13.
Revolution t.w-r-t1:00'-Midnlght Special 3.~.15.
I :35-Movle "The Vulture" 10.
org.
I
:55-News 13.
• Wee devil
2:30-News
3.
Go wrong
3:00'-Movle " Springtime In the Rockies" 3.
:W One in
4:3G-Movle "Night After Night" 3.
boot
6:00'-Movle "International House" 3.
camp
Sideboard

""

~~tM'HJII

•. ALLEY OOP
HI:Y, WE'RE ON ~ ·

BEACH AGAIN !

TEAfORD

I

z•

. lF.
LI...,;, "' ORPHAN ANN

........

·-

Bolh vulnerable

HAI..F

..

+K987
•AKI07

+.J

BACK.CARPETING

asked lhe student.
"Yes, but good play would
have saved you. AI Irick two
you should have rulfed a club,
then a spade lead to dunimy,
rulf of another club, a III!COI1d
spade lead to ruff the lui club
and then you coold have 1one
after the diamonds.
"Eut would c:OIIeet his two
diamond tricks, but then he
would be stuck. If he led a
club, South would get a ruff
and a heart aluff to hold his
heart loeers to one. If he I~
lhe klnR of hearts, South
would let it hold and be would
eilher have to give that ruff
and sluff or lead a second
heart to dummy's ace, jack."
So uto forestall letters, the
hand can also be lilade again&amp;!
a heart openlnc lead.

211

EAST
.42
•KQtO

WEST
U3
•8a&amp;4

Racine, Ohio

RURAL, mod.rn, electric , 3 BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com·
bedrooms , kitchen, living'
plete Service . Phone 9.C9·24a7
room, both , finished basement,
or 949·2000. ~acine , Ohio, Crltl
laundry, recreation; $26,900 1 1
Brodford.
acre; ·$28 ,900, 3 and two· thirds
ElWOOD SOWERS REPAIR acres. Phone {614) 9..9·27-48.
Sweepers, toasfers, Irons, all
HOMESITE$ for sOle, 1 acre and
small appliances . lawn mower,
up. Mlddleport, near Rutland.
· next to Stote Highwoy Goroge
Coll992·7•81 .
on Route 7. Phon~ (614) 985·
3825.
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
all elec., 1 ocre, Middleport, REMODEliNG, Plumbing, heating
close IO · Rutland. Phone 99'1·
and oil types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·::7=4=81=.=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=J
perience. Phone 992-2.co9.
r
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 yearo ex·
perience . Insured free
estimates. Call 992-238.4 or
Virgil B. Sr., Reoltor
(614) 698·7257 "-lbony.
110 Mechanic Pllmeroy, 0 . ·
Pltan~ 99'1-331~
SEWING MACHINE Repol,., M&lt;·
.vice, oil niakes, 992·2284. The
RENOVATED
~
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy.
bedroom home, panellrig,
Authorized Singer Sales and
carpeting , nice kitchen.
Service. We shoi-p•n Scissors.
modern bath, gas F. A.
EXCAVATING,
dozer, loader and
furnace, barn and 12 acres.
backhoe work;. dump trucks
. $29.500.
and lo·boys for hire; will haul
3 ACRES OUT- On hard
fill dirt., to soil , limestone and
road wllh drilled v.•ll and 2
grovel . Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
mobile homes. Bw both
fers, doy phone 9'12·7089,
and rent one. $13,500.
.night phone 992-3525 or 992·
5232.
RIVER FRONT LOT Wafer. elec. and sewage,
EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
lot 77xl19 Only 53,000.
and ditcher. Charla• R. Hot2 BEDROOM BUNGALOW
fie,d, Bacftl Hoe Service,
- Nice oak floors, natural
Rutland, Ohio. Phoho7•2·2008.
gin F.
A.
furnace,
GREG'S CB SALES, located ot Er·
basement and large lot.
win's Gulf Service, .Mid·
Only 58500.
.
dleport, Ohio. Phone 992•
1438.
2 FAMILY HOME - In
Mlddleporf, 12 rooms, 2
SEPTIC Svstemo lnotollod by
baths, natural gas heat.
. licensed inttoller. Shepard
Rent one for lnc'ome. Good
Controctors. Phone 7o42·2.C09.
entrance and nice yard.
SEPTIC T"-NKS dooned. Modern
Asking $19,000.
Sanitation, 992·3954 or 992·
PORTLAND - 9· room
2•28.
house, modern kllchen, ·
WILl do roofing, construction,
balh, porch and modern
plumbing and heating. No lob
garage wllh furnace.
too large or too imoll. Phone
NEW LISTING- 2Q acres .
7•2·2348.
of forrest wllh place to
CARPENTER, flooring, coiling,
build a lake. T. P. wafer,
paneling. Phane 992·2759,
elec. and 3 bedroom mobile
VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·
home 14x70 on good
VICE. ,Meigs-Athens County ,
country road near Racine.
Balero
from $3995 up. Morrill
SPACE
Chose, (6")698·3021.
FOR YOUR AD.
EXcAVATING, 8ACKHOES "-ND
GOOD MODERN HOMES
QOZER - lARGE AND SMAlL,
WE NEED, LEAVE YOUR.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. lOW
SELLING PROBLEMS'
BOY "-ND DUMP TRUCKS. Bill
WITH US AT 99'1-3325.
PUlliNS, PHONE 992·2~78 DAY
OR NIGHT.
8UilDING. remodeling , and
repairs. Quality wor,}t, efficient
service. Jesse Rodmon, phone
992·5980.
WANT to go int(l business for .
yourself? Almost new
automatic Insulating mochlne ,
Phone Golllpollo, 1·..6-4782.
, AN.TIOUE restorations, reproductions, cabinet mokll')g and fur·
niture repair. 131'h 3rd, Mid·
WE OFFER YOU fhis nic'e
dlopcort, 992·5733 day und
place, 2 story frame: 3
evening.
largo Br .. formal dining R.
NEW siding, carpeting, ; REFRIGERATION ond air condl·
33, one.tlolf milt from Pomeroy
paneling end .furl)lce. full · tlonlng service. Phone Rouer
Alkire, 992-5435.
City Limlt1 . Furnace heat and
baselhenl, 2 car garage.
city water. Phone 992·2504.
SIB,SOO.OO.
NEW 3 bedroom, toto! eiO&lt; ., 1.113
Rf.l43 CLOSE IN- Mobile
acres, .four-fifth mile from
with additional rooms and
Langsville ofl Co. Road 1O,
garage, l'h acres of
carpal, attached garage, utility
ground, own and city
room. Coli 7.42·2819 Raymond
water, air. cond.
WANTEO: Will do towing In my
Hatflold, Rutlond.
MODERN 1 FLOOR PLAN
homo. Phono Shirlov Wlloan,
3 bedroom hoUoo r., oolo at 520
742-25~.
-Lovely kitchen with cook
Sycamore 51., Mlddlopurt, goad
urtltt and rtf., 3 bedrooms,
Will do babvslttlng In my homo
buy for $8,000. Phono 992·3578,
full
baMmeni
.F.
A.
bath,
0
dav or night, '1'12·3255.
or 992-7667.
heel, new sfeel siding, 2,77
FARM far sole, 35 acr~s. lcirge
acres, large g~~rege and
house, all ufilltles, Other
workshop, carport.
building•. On block tap · road
WE HAVE 2 NEW 3
near Medina ex.it, $35,000.
bedroom homH lust being
Phone 273.4722,
completed. Both have
9 room hau1e, bath ond hall, dou·
garage 1nd work aree., M08tlE home for oalo or ront, 3
ble garage. $12,000 firm ,
bodraomo, al ulllitl" pold.
baths,
utility
rms.,
Phone 992·5213.
Phono 992·n51.
carpeted, about 1 acre of
TUPPERS PlAINS-Ea;·,-.-,n- o_r_oa- .-=2
ground. 522.900.00.
1'TIO Doroltor 2 bedroom, f.ISOO
yr. old bl-level home loco ted on · TQ SELL CALL US lor quick oolo. Can bo aeon at
l'/1 acres Rt . 7, Riggs C• es l
570 Poorl St., In Mlddlopcort.
T~EN "6LL THE
Man nor, 3 or o4 Loidrooms, 2
MOVING VAN. HINRY E. 8x13 Yellowstone complng
baths, llvlflll, dining roam; and
CLELAND,
IROKER,
trailer, ox~llont condition,
kitchen, with rolrlgorato' and
APPRAISIII,
$950. Can bo _ , at Ki"'!!bury
range, · family room, laundry
~omo Sol.., 1100 E. Main St.,
CONSULTANT.
and garage, good garden area,
Pomotoy, Ohla '1'12·7034.
S:U,QOO. Phono (6") 985·4254.
992·2219 or w.t-2N.e
I

I

THURSDAY, JULY 2'1, 197.
5:0G-BO!Ninll 3; Partridge Family I; Mission: fm .
possible IS.
5:»-Adam.l2 •.13; News6; Family Affair t; Electric
Complll'ty 2U3.
6:0G-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:»-NBC News3..C,l5; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBSNews8,10; Hodgepodgtlodge20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7:&lt;»-Truth or Consequences 3; To 1)11 Tile Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6; Lawrence Welk I; News 10;
Lei's Make a Deal 13; Family Affair 15; Our Story
20; Family at War 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; XXI Olympic Games 13;
Hollywood Squares •• Ohio State Lottery 6; Wild

I

__L

. SMITH NELSON
MoTORS, INC.

..

Television log for easy viewing

SIS CANOES THAT1WAY...
AIWLJNP SENP ·

LOOK 11-1E~ ,
AME:~ i

D''IOI.I SEE
WHA'T l SEE?!

'THAT 'S EXACTLY
VES! MAKUM
600V PI&lt;E:SENT Wi-IA'T ! WAS )H1Nl(tNG ! LET'S GET 'IM !
FOR BIG
CH IE:F OF

SH IPS !

Corne up, bu-t

.
com1n
.

I don't
allow
smokin'!

Joel's
.

w·tth
th'

trr-t--t-i-

rope,

'·

Rufus!
Don't

worr4!

:a

display
(2 wds.)

• Radaniea'
beloved
• Repeat
rendition

Equipment h--HH-+-t-1~~~~~·41 Whirled
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is
~ •• A BIRD WULDN1T
t.IVEON OU~

BAlARYI

TOGCFCOFFEE R::R.

PEOPLE;.:rAKE PIECES
Of: COPY FROM ONE
DE&amp;K 10 ANOTHER???

WHAT DO 'lOJ L\1'\NT

FRCMMEf I

.

~HERE
REMEM6ER'? 1

One letler simply slands lor another. In lhis '"'lPie A ii
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all
hints. Each day the code letlen; are dll!erenl.
CRYPTOQUOTES

ZM

SLOM

DI

DVP

ALJGDC

NP

WID

Z R GG . -

NP

Dl

UJVM

LDDMWDRIW
C REI W M

fC 1916 Kin1 FtltUrH Synd.lcale, lnc.)

BRLLS o' FIRE!!
HERE COMES TH'

'

'~

SHERIFF!!

tRUHLOY!

T·tf

1 () (]

WHERE A '~Y'MieHT
FEEL ,(1' HOME.

IJV
LWF

ZMRG

Yesterday'a Cryplotjuote:· IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SU&lt;J.
CEED, YOU'RE DOING ABOUT AVERAGE. - LEONARD

UIUIS LEVINSON

I IIJ

Yet~m~.r••

I

J....W... KNOWN I'ISHY

lto•o

&lt;-...

POUNCE

tat- ' " " " ' " ' '

.U.wm Wloot IAat '11N tolF.'o" ..bolor-,
.

d•ln'•l1l-M8tfOCKINQ,.

HANDS DOWN!! ·
RE UNDER ARREST,
SNUFFY .

IF SOMEONE CALLS '100

'LAN.BCNl. •illfH '100 001
IOJ'a: Nt1T' A"LAMecM£'
THAT'S SMrASM! '

�•

lZ-The O.Uy SeniiDII, MlddltporW'llllleroy, 0 .• ntunday, July 29,1978

.I

-.d.
. -OSPITAL
~

NEWS

.

Holter Medleal Center
Vfterlu Memorial Hospital
(Dllebarges, July,%8)
Admi tted
Marvin
Euva
Barnett, Hazel Bush,
Scaggs, Middleport; Erma A.
Parmle
Carter, Mrs. ~uster
Hollon Cheshire; Marvin
Conch
and
daughter, Naomi
McFarland, ._New Haven ;
Colvin,
Sandra
Craft, Eliza
Patricia Celand, Langsv!Ue;
Downey,
Eugene
Fisher,
Shirley Roush, Middleport;
Michael
Grant,
Rick
Hesson,
George Molden, Middleport; •
Mrs.
Larry
Hill
and
Robin Lynn
Howard,
-daughter, Sonja Israel, Jane ,
Coltilnbus.
Plscharged Kathy Jones, Wilma Lewis, Michael
Cnrreton, Thomas Junior Marcum, Wylodlne Me·
McKay, Dorothy Greathouse, Cormick, Nancy Mlller,
Beatrice Bush, Marty Richard Nelson, Hattie
North, Gerald Osborne,
Celom.
Arnold Reynolds, Cynthia
Rice, Mrs. William Smith and
son, Audrey Theobald.
(Births, July 28)
Mr, am Mrs. Gary Waugh,
C oudy tonight, chance or son, BldweU; Mr. and Mrs.
showers. Lows bl the mid 60s .. Jimmy Massie, son, Bidwell;
Sunny Friday, highs in the Mr. and Mrs. Robert
upper 80s. Probability of rain ' Thomas, son, Letart, W. Va.;
GO per cent today, 30 per cent Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Grant,
tonight, 10 per cent Friday. daughter, Wellston; Mr. and
Mrs. Ricky Higgins, son,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs . Danny Lewis,
·daughter, WeUston.

Weather

Special troop
.proposed
for
-- local
·
8 COUt 8

.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::-

'.

~

~
/':•

'~' Doctors talk over tf.
(Cootlnued rr- Jl8lf l)

::::

f;:;; olfprofession,"
-Medicare ie ~'mly 4 per cent of the medici!-!ij!
Moss said the New Y«ri: example polnll up :;:;

:!:! 90111e of the attitudes and prol!fema In fraud c-a.
!:!:
;:;: "The Department of Juatlce and the vart0111 U.S. :;:;
:!:! at!Drneya' olflcea (with the esceptlon of the Southern !:!!
;:;: Dla1rlcl of New York and the Middle Dlatrlct of 1:::
!iii Pennaylvanla) have given Medicare c~ abllolutely the '\!
;:;: lowest priority," M0811 contended.
.
:;:;
:~: He supports a bill for a central fraud alii a bulle office; :;:;
;!:i lull exchange' of lnfcrmatlon between the Medicaid am '::::·
r:;: Medicare plana; alii conaolldaUo_n of admlnlstration of •::;
:;:; the plans.
:::
:;:: Moss heads the subcommittee oo long.wm care of the :;::
i'i' Senate Committee orl Aging. 'lbe staff Investigation 1';:;
;:;: concentrated ftrsl on cllnlcal laboratories abuse of i;';
!iii Medicaid, and then on fraud by ptrysldans,
!ii
;';! "Fraud and abuse are rampant In the Medicaid ~;;
;:;: program," Moea said. "Both the states and the ftcleral :;:;
ii'i government are looklnl! to each other to prevent fraud and :;:;
:;:; abuae. Teclmlcally, the states are reaponslble ... Die ;;:
!:&gt;; problem Is that m1)81 states have abdicated this respoll· :l!
:::: slblllty ..
:;:;

:;~: ::::;:::::::: !::::~::::: ::::::::: : :: ::::::::: : : ::: ::::::: ::: :::·:::::::::::: : : : :: : : ::::::':::: : : :::~:::: : : : : :::::: : : : : ::t:

End of the Month Sale

STILL IN PROGRESS

Check Our
_
Sale Groups

...

,

en ·atat&amp;

Sal_
e ~Price

I

•

'

·Er_ad of the Month §a(e,

DRAPERIES

WO~Et&lt;!S

- ··

•

Discontinued patterns In thermal Hned and
unlined styles. 63", 84" and 90" length~ .

SUMMER DRESSES

Sale •5.99

Still a nice selection of misses, lunlors and
half sizes .

.
HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

Sale

End o[ the Month Sale

Throw Pillows

End of the Month

~~--~~~~~~~~~--~ .
End of the Month Sale

HOME
FURNISHINGS
ANNEX
- -

GIRLS

- SUMMER DRESSES

End of the Month Sale

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

Save Over 50%

FINAL CLEARANCE SALE

. ·· ·-··-

,SUMMER PORat, lAWN AND
PAnO FU_RNilURE

End of the Month Sale

GIRLS SUMMER ·
SPORTSWEAR

Rema ining stock ol summer furniture
chairs, chaise lounges , gi iders , some
redwood.
YOU'LL REALLY SAVE
Shop early for best selection

0

-

.JCJ~ye Over

Sale Prices

-

~--..

End of the Month Sale

End of the Month Sale,

0

-

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

.WOMEN'S SUMMER

LAWN MOWERS

SPORTSWEAR·.

S12(95 20" cut3 H. P. B&amp;'fimg1ne sale $84.95
$199.95 18" cut3 H. P. B&amp;Sengine Sale $79.95

GIRLS SUMMER

and Hats

Save Over 50%
-

Baseball caps, denim caps and hats,
novelties, includes our entire stoc.k.
Mens$1.95 capsand hats .. ... ........... $1.45
Mens $2.49 caps and hats ................. $1.75
Mens $2.95 capsand hats ................ $2.00
Mens$3.95 caps and hats ................ $2.50

-

-

.

Sale! 1-oo~ -s329.50 Kodalt ·
.Sound Mcwie Projector Model ~45.
-

-

:SALE '230.00

End of the Month Sale

Sale! 1 onJJ $219.95 _Model 130 _
Kodak Extauna and MOllie Outfit

MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS
Size 30 to 38 waist, good style and color 1
selection.

SALE '160.00 ·

,....- - - - ·."""'!'-::'-:-"~-~-----1
E~d

Mens-$4.95 swim trunks .................. $3.00
Mens $5.95 swim trunks .......... .... .... $4.00
Mens 56.95 $Wim trunks .................. $5.00

WINJUK KNITTING YARN -

.

•;

MEN'S.SHORTS

Solid colors, varegated and sparkle, 4 ounce
-skeins for this sale. · ·
·

. Cutoffs In :prewasiied and regular denims.
Sizes 27 to 34 waist. Entire stock Included .

'

Mens $5.1'5 cut on snorrs ............ ,; ••_. $4.18

-

...

'

•1_..09
--End of the Month Sale

SALE I -POL Y_E_STE~

-~---.....- - - - - " " " '

·. End of the Month Sale

16, gOOd

YARD GOODS

Boys $4.95 swim trunks .................. $3.00

I

·'
.•

-Solid colors and patterns, 100 percenT
double knit polyester, 60 Inches wide •.

selection of styles and
l.

Alameda County Sheriff's
Office . ''The search for
known SUBpeCts Is over (but)
'le are pursuing other
investigative lea.da."
Baugh said that the leads
could result In other arrests,
but added "the primary suspecta are In cuatody."
While Baugh refused to
· elaborate, various published
reporll In recent days said
autllorltes were also looldng
for older men and, according
to one report, three women.
With the Schoenfeld
brothers and Woods In
custody on $1 mUllon ball
each, residents of Chowchilla
relaxed for the first time '
since the empty school bus,
that was returning the 19 girls,
and seven boys from a
sununer outing was found in
an abandoned drainage ditch.
"We all feel better," said

w~;;;·~··--~HHj~- - Brief~

.~

~

.
By United Preaolnternalional
HONG KONG-POUCE SET' off sirens In Peking today
and warned residents to evacuate homes and office buUdings
because of possible new quakes in the same area hit
Wednesday by the world's most powerful temblor in 12 years.
As more than a million relief workers spread through the
densely populated Hopeh province searching for dead and
injured, there still was · no official word from the Chinese
government on the estent of casualties from the first quake or
a strong aftershock 15 hours later .

waitress Ruth Stewart, on~ of
250 townspeople who turned
out for Thursday's IM!llnute
arraignment of the younger
Schoenfeld.
•
'lb~ older Schoenfeld was
picked up by Menlo Park
PQlice near his home after a
tip from an alert motorist. Ar
attDrney lor the Schoenfeld
family said the son was on his
way to surrender when be
was captured.
About five hours later,
shortly
before
noon,
Canadian police captured
Woods as he was leaving the
main post office In
Vancouver. He was deported
after it was determined he
had overstayed his flve-&lt;fay
visitors status granted when
he arrived from Reno, Nev.,
on a United Air Unes flight
July 17, two days after the
kldnapings.

Martian soil
has puzzle

PASADENA, Calif. (UP!) have a consistency like wet
--'- Viking I scientists are sand. But Scott emphasized
puzzled by the physical that did not Indicate there
makeup of Martian soli, was water in the soil.
which IRBY have been too
Lou Klngland, · deputy
thick to filter into the opening mission director, said the
COLUMBUS - FORTY-THREE PERSONS w~re of a biology instnnnent.
sand, which may have
convicted of fraud In obtaining food stamps between April and
Dr. Ronald Scott of the clogged the instrument,
June of tills year, the Ohio Department of Public Welfare said -physical properties team said 1 caUed a gas chromatograph
Thursday.
'lbursday the sampling arm mass spectrometer, could he
The department said it was the largest number of fraud scoop dug a smaU trench in "extremely cohesive."
cases reported in one quarter since the first report was the surface and dumped soil
"I -don't like this comsubmitted to the U.S. Department of Agriculture for the same in three instruments for three parison," he said, "but someperiod last year.
experiments to see If there is thing like wet clay would
some form of life on Mars. appear to be what it's like.
WASHINGTON -A PUBUC HEARING will be scheduled
But one of the instrwnents We woulc) expect if it were
soon on proposals to cliJse what administration farm officials Indicated it did not have a loose sand it would not stick."
and cattlemen contend is a loophole in the government's sufficient sample.
But the possibility of the
voluntary beef import control program, officials announced
Scott
compared
the
soil
to
material
being too thick was
Thursday.
.
lunar dust, which he said only one of four possibilities
Spokesmen for the Commerce. Department's F.oreign would act like Martian soil if for a negative report from the
Trade Zones Board said a meat priJCellSing firm in Puerto Rico it had more moisture.
instrument to mission
which would be affected by the proPQsai has been told it can
"'Ibis material has a little control.
·
request a hearing on a board order diteeting it to show cause bit of cohesion," he said. "It's
Failure of a grinder motor_,
wiry the alleged loophouse should not be closed.
quite different from dry sand. too small a sample to register
"But there certainly are on the equipment's indicator,
PITI'SBURGH - A UNITY COMMI'ITEE comprised of fine grains everywhere, and and failure of the indicator
district directors has announced that it will back United certainly something must itself
were
other
Steelworkers VIce President John S. Johns, for the union have gotten through."
possibilities.
presidency when Incumbent President I. W. Abel retires in
He said sample trenches
Kinglam said, however, he
1977.
were dll8 at Jet Propulsion was sure engineers would be
, The committee, headed by USW District 27 Director Harry Laboratory 'With the sampler able to get the Instrument to
Mayfield of Canton, Ohio, said WiiUam Moran of Bethlehem, !Inn .from a VIking lander operate within four days.
Pa., director of USW District 9, will run with Johns as a exactly like the one on Mars.
He said two other biology
· candidate for secretary-tr~surer of the union which has
Samples were compared instruments were operating
· 1,400,000 members.
with sam, with lunar dust normally in their tests to see
and with sand particles · if metabolism of any microLEXINGTON, KY.- THE RECOVERY effort to retrieve containjng some moisture. organisms can be detected.
the bodies of lllljen entombed inside tile Scotia mine for more
'lbe Martian soli appeared
Viking I was to send back a
than four months is on schedule and officlals believe it can be from photographS sent back close-up picture of a rock
completed by the tllklay timetable originally planned.
from Viking and from outcropping today for study
Kentucky Mfnes Commi8sloner H. N. Kirkpatrick, after laboratory experiments to by project geologists.
reviewing the scene of tile operation Thursday, said both
Mlillng Enforcement Safety Administration personnel and
members of his department were extremely pleased with the
latest reports on the progress of the four recovery crews,

Reg.$3.49 Yard ••• ~ ••••••••••••••••• S.It$2.39
Reg. $4.49 Yard •••••••..••••.•••••••• Sale S2.".

Reg. S4.99
Yard .....................
Ult 13.39
I
.

-·

Mlin Stan, Anna and Warehouse Open FridaJ Untl 8 P.M. Shap Saturday 9:30 wSPll.

. ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

PARKEIUlBURG, W. Va. - JOHN CALVIN Bayles, a
former Ohio high school football star, hlis he en granted a 9().
day delay In commencing a life prison term for his conviction
of the murder of a Parkersburg Community College coed.
The motion by Bayles, who has no chance of parole under
the sentence, for a new trial was 'lenied by Wood County
Circuit Court Judge Donald F. Black, who granted the !)().day
stay of execution to allow time for filing an appeal.
MOSOOW - SOVIET LEADER Leonid I. Brezhnev todsy
accused President Ford and other Western leaders of
meddling In Italian affairs.to block a Communist role in that
country's government.
Brezhnev charged that "democracy is cheap" in the ey,es
of Western poUticlan8 and said such interference by the 11111jor
lnduatrlal powers "contrasts sharply" with last year's
European security accord.
·
BEIRUT, LEBANON · - SYRIA and the Palestine
Uberation Organization agreed to end their bitter fighting in
Lebanon and announced a landmark pace plan to dismantle aU
armed stronghold&amp; lh the country within 10 days.
An ultrH:lghtlst Christian leader, whose militiamen have
sabotaged previous fighting halts In the 16-month civil war,
espreaaed ''room for optimism" that the proposed truce would
take hold.

-

Mens $6.95 cut offshorts ................. $4.88
Mens $7.95 cut off shorts ... .............. $5.58
I

of the Month Sale

SALE! REDHEART $1.49

End of the Month Sale

II

-----·

-End of the Month Sale
-

ralgned Thursday on 43
SAN FRANCISOO (UPI) - counts of kidnaping and
With the three "primary robbery. He pleaded
suapecll" In the Chowchilla innocent.
bua kidnap caae In jaU,
The arrests of the elder
. C81Uornla authorities today Schoenfeld and Woods came
Jlllrsued other leads they say two weeks to the day after the
may lead to additional school bus with 26 children
arreata,
and _their driver was !!l!ized
'lbe FBI, however, said as by masked gunmen. Some 29
far as It was concerned, lis hours later the driver and
Investigation Into the alleged children .dug their way to
$5 million ransom. plot was safety from a burled moving
closed with the apprehension van in a quarry owned by
of the last known suspects. Woods' millionaire father.
Fred Woods, 24, was
"The suspects are in
captured Thursday by Royal custody. We have other
Canadian Mounted Pollee In crbnlnals to chase," FBI
Vancouver, His friend, agent Frank Perrone said
James Schoenfeld, also 24, Thursday night. "It's Ill the
was seized by pollee 1,000 hands of local authorities
J!)lles to the south, near his now."
• home In the San F'l'ancisco
"The case is not closed as
Bay Area,
. far as we're concerned," said
Schoenfeld's brother, I'U- Jack W. Baugh, chief of the
chard, 22, who surrendered to criminal division .of the
- authorities earlier, was ar-

0

SLE[PWEAR

MENS SUMMER

-

'

End of the Month Sale

End of the Month Sale

-

I '·

Save Over% .

ONE ONLY
$264.95- 3'12 H.P. Roto Tiller
Sale $179.95
ALSO ON.:: ONLY
Sale
Utton Microwave OVen Reg. $299.95
$199.95

Fifteen Ceuta
.Vol. 28, No. 73

·-=·~· n • "); •• ::.~~~·:-:v;·:·:·:·;·;:::::::~~:•:•:•:•:;~:·:;:;:•:~;:-:-:·:·::::::::::::;::::::;:::::::i.::~::z:::;s

Save Over 50%

Sale •1.88

.........

Sal~i

-

SUMMER SPORlSWEAR

Plaid pattern in red, gold or green.

~ps

'.

Y2 Price

PRETEEN

Boys $2.'1Hwim trunks .................. $2.00

. Pomeroy

-

End of th~ Month Sale

~· ·

BeHy Ohlinger

•

Boys S4.95cut offshorts ............ Slit S3.18
Boys $5.95 cut oflshorts ............ Slit $4.18
Boys S6.95cut offshor_ts .. ~ .. :-·:"~ Slit $4,88

HOME FURNISHINGS ANiiEX

Sizes 7 to
colors . .

102 E. Main

By DONALD .B. THACKREY

Cut-offs In sizes 8 to 16, regular denims and
prewashed denims . Entire stock Included.

BOYS SWIM TRUNKS

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

'

_BOYS SHORTS

Discontinued patterns and colors from our
regular _stock.

SUMMER CLEARANCE

SALE

0

en tine

Seek other leads
in kidnap ordeal

End_of the Month Sale

TABLECOVERS

Both camps

0HEST·FREEZERS.

STARTS· FRIDAY ~T 9:30 A.M.

'

.rep&lt;rter
NEW YORK (UPI) _: Telly s8valas, who greeted a woman
with a kles on the ham and later blew a respectable

SLIMUNF

Pomeroy-Middleport, OIJlo
Friday, July 30, 1976

End-of•the-Month Sale

TV•••in Review

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday tbrougb
Mouday, a cbauee -o1
showers during tbe
weekeud aad lair Monday.
Lillie cbiDCe lu lem·
peraturea with blgbs 8G to
85 and lows 60 to 65.

l

.ELBERFELDS·· IN POMEROY

!!!!

slud bubble of pink bubble gum, inalsta hie popularity lles in
tile dubious fact that he looks like eve-"""'"'S
Uncle Harry.
''"""'
ial Boy 8cou t Tr oop
A
spec
"I'm
.,,.,
a
tid
fJUn
New
York
who
looks
like
everybody
- M 1 eo t h bee
,~.
m nie gs
un Y as
n
e'-,"
. an interview, hie tinted glasses
""' the actor said d".,""
~~,,.
ed tha t. will serve
orga
z
~··hed
back
on
Jia
forehead.
Savalaa was re'-'M
between
.,...... 1 b
f
,......,
~ ...
.....a'fi doys o any t age
takIn
his
air«~tdltloned
trailer
on
location
in
Manhattan,
11
••
c1assl•·de Jas menMla htY
............a eJtarlors and Dne interior acenes for nert aeaaon's
~~
re ta r..,.
ess1e
g
"Kojak" on CBS.
reported.
"Everybody's always teiUng me they have an Uncle Harry
J
Eric Chambers, Mid- ::::::::::::::::&lt;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: who looks just like me, That's 90per cent of my.appeal."
dleport, will serve as scout .
AJot of fans may argue.with Savalas' description ol hlmaelf,
master, Ai't Skinner and
,
.
but there's no arsu1n11 hie popularity, as fans tbronced around
: Clarence Might, assistant
hlmafteraacenewasshotandheslgnedautographswhllehis
scout milllter~ and Je8sle
two bodyguards watched,
·
Might will be tile institutional
_
"rm not that aophlltlcated that I don't understand how they
representative to tile Meigs
(Continued frool page I)
feel," he said of hie fana. "I can resnember when I couldn't
Association for Retarded
catch my breath In the presence of Burt Lancaster,"
' Citizens, the sponsoring Ford, eight for Reagan and 15
It was Lancaater who launched Savalaa toward stardom
0
1
1
1
organizaUon.
unc m m
ed
i n when he signed the former televisloo news esecutlve for a role
Rea Roush will be the Pennsylvania.
in "Birdman of Alcatraz." Lancaster remains among Savalas'
·
Mississippi was once favorite pa fonioers.
Commit! ee cha1rman
wlth
. Hank Cleland, David considered strong Reagan
"rm always dllllppolnted when a screen per!Oil8llty
Gloeckner and Kathy Celana territory but a survey by UPI contradicts hlmaelf off screen -there should be continuity of
committee members..
of 54 of the 60 delegatee, who cloaracter. Take Lancaster or Frank Sinatra- I'm lmpressed
The parents of potenual will cast ~~If votes at the with them beCause they are what you see."
scoul,ll are asked to contact conventio! lowed a surge of
The same aoes for the Savalas-Kojak personality, wblch is
Cha be 5 SkiM
Mi h Ford stre h there.
"
The ~ir~ 'meeuri; ~Ill gth~
Ford h!.u ooly 3 of the 30 golnglntoltafourthseasononlllealr.Savalasstillhasfunwilh
membership will be held Mississippi votes In an earlier it. "When you do a TV show every week, you play the character
Wednesday, Aug. 18 at 6:30 UPI survey, bUt jumped to prettycloaeto yo~nelf. Tellyand Kojak are one alii the same.
p.m. at the Meigs County - 1212 In the latest tally, His 1 can't lmaglne myself wanting to be a law enfor'cement
Community Mental Health 1iutal could go higher 81 a offlcer,butlflwereone,Kojllklswhatrdbelike,
.
Center.
reaultof the Wednesday night
"People are starting to wonder about 'Ko]ak' - wby you ·
The troop will be similar to. announcement by leader never see him 'lrith a chick," he said, hinting that romance
other troope 'lrith the ex- Clarke Reed that he has may enter the detective'slife nest sea10n- although nothing
l'l!ption of physical, mental decided to support Ford permanent Uke a wife.
and emotional Illness. lmtead of Reagan. .
''Of courae, the ro.racter changes as we go alnog. If It
Members and adults of
Reagan, who had 24 m the dldn't,I'dgetboredallll'dqulttenmillltesafterthat."
Paneroy Troop 249 have earlier count, now showed up
Directing Is probably wbere be'd go if be quit - already he
volunteered to assist. with only 9• There were 512 has directed a number of "Kojak" eplaodes, along with a
6 heavy schedule of night clUb datea and a movie, ".Theo Mlti,"
Every me wishing to help uncommitted • and
with the troop Is asked to delegatea ~epresenting 3 of which he Ia writer, dlrector and star.
contact Chambers. The gOal votes couldn t be reached.
·''It's about the devil." be said. "My deYil Is a ~U.yearw!U be to have a me to one
Both Ford and Reagan old girl who's always gorgeclUS on the screen. That's m)' ,
scou~dult relationship. ' have scheduled trips to oontrtbutlm to wcmen's Ub."
Mlulsslppl in personal
At tnat prutt Savalas Willi called back for hie next acene,
efforll
to woo the delegates, which called ·for the star to run down tile street near a ll'll'ank
GRIDDERSTO MEET
Ford Friday and Relgan nell Part Avenue hotel.
•
RACINE - All Southern
"rm not a runner I'm a lover " said evlll)'body's Uncle
High School football players Wednesday·
In Its nationwide delegate Hairy to nobody In 'parttcular. •:Doean't anyone tell llleae
will meet at 6
Friday at &amp;DW~t, UPI showed Ford at directors that?"
1,119, , or 11 abort ol the
number · needed
for
nomination. Reagan had 1,028
lnttrnltJon•t
and there were 112
SUITS FILED
Lugue Standings
uncommitted.
United Preu tntern1tlona1
Debbie _A, Cheesebrew, Rt.
W. L. Pet. GB
~ppl's votea were
4, Plllli~Of has filed suit for
ROchester
63 JS .643
counted as all lDICmunitted Syracuse
5.5
-46
.545
9V
,
divorce in Meigs County
Fri., Sit., Sunday
by UPI since neltl!er Rhodelslond 53 51 .510 13
Common
Pleas Court againSt
July 30-JI, Aug. I
•• 51 .490 15
candidate had a majority ol Memphis
Charleston
48 51 .A8S lSlh Donald Michael Cheesebrew,
THA!:EDAYSOF
the delegates: A majority ie Richmond
49 S4 .-476 16'h Point Pleasant.
THE CONDOR
Tidewater
43 56 .A34 20112
needed
to
invoke
the
state's
Robert Redford , Faye
Dorothy V, Harden,
Toledo
o 59 .422 22
Dunaway, Ml&lt;~ael Kane, unit rule - under whlcb the
Wtdnetdly's RIIUits
Syracuse,
flied suit to quiet
delegates have agreed to cast Memphla 9 Rhode Island 3 Utle against
Tobert•cn, ~x
Donald Harden
Rochester 2 Richmond 1, 11
Yon:Svdo•w.
( Rl
their wtes as a bloc for one innings
et al. The property is located
candidate.
Charleston 9 Toledo 5
in
Syracuse. Thelma V.
Tidewater 7 Syracuse "'
Ruuell, Minersville and
- ~·-· - - ·
Harold Ruuell, Rt. 3,
' CRAN!IrONII SEPARATE
SANTA MONICA, Calif, Pomeroy filed for dluolutlon
(UPI) - Geneva Cranston, of marriage.
wife olSen. Alan Crllllton, 0.
SQUAD CALLED
Calif., rued • petltioo In
&amp;lperlor Court Wednesday
The Middleport •
for a legal lieparation from Emergency Squad was
t..::::r..::Ll
the aenator after 36 years ol called to 363 North Fourth
ma-rriage, on grounds of Ave.,at3 :13p.m, Wednesday
lrreconcllable dllferences. for Florence Reynolds, 1
Mrs. Cranston, 84, Is medical patient, who was
~,
I
\
'
~
parUally paralyzed frcm a taken to Holzer Medical
stroke suffered more than sii 'Center.
years ago.

·'

at y

j~:.:::::::~::::::c=:=:===~==:::::=:::=====:=::::::==========::::==~==::x==&gt;.~==:;;:=:::=:::::::::=:::::::::=:::::=::=====~=:=:====:=~~::::::-.:::~

,

WASH1NG'OON- AGRIC,:ULTURE SECRETARY EarlL.
lutz today urged Congress to keep current farm policy
basically lDIChanged because It kept farmers' income high and
prices relatively stable. .
Butz stated hie position In a letter to Sen. Herman E.
Talniadf~e, ~ ., whose AgrlcultlD'e Committee ie drawing up
a bill for debate nest year and will take effect In 1978. ·
WORTHINGTON- RETAIL BEEF PRICES are at their
lowest levels In monlh!l and consumers are seeing remarkable
buying opportunities at their meat counters, according to the
Ohio Beef Marketing Program.
'lbe organization Thursday ssld beef prices at the store
level have fallen20 cents per pound and more, compared to
la8t year.
David Stround, president of the National Uve Stock and
Meat Board said the 20 cent per pound figure was an average
· based on ~J~~Uooal statistics.
:~

RE-DEDICATION of the Pomeroy-Mason bridge ·
which has undergone $2 mUllon In repair work over the
past two years was held at the bridge on the Mason side
this morning. Pictured at the ribbon cutting ceremony
which followed a speaking program are, left to right, Rep.
Ron James, Ramooa Compton, Paul Reed and Sen.

Ceremony marks official
reopening of Bend bridge
Today marked ll)e completion of a $2 million dollar
project when ribbon cutting
ceremonies were held on the
West Virginia side of the
. Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
officiaUy opening the bridge
to traffic . The bridge was
closed for repair for several
months in 1975 and again
closed to traffic on March 31

Weather

with Mason County.
of this year.
Abig moment in history on
. The bridge was dedicated
Nov. 11, 1928 and on that day Oct. 31, 1946 two minutes
W. F. Reed, W. A. Compton, after 3 p.m. when Theodore
Judge A. P. Miller, Reed, Jr., son of the late
Superintendent A. W. McKay , Theodore T. Reed, grandson
Judge C. E. Peoples, Loff of the late W. F. Reed and
Jacobs, Judge J . E. Carleton, Norbert Compton, son of the
and I. B. Weed, and others late W. 1( Compton cut the
saw a dream come true .- the white ribb on stretched
great bridge linking Meigs across the West Virginia side

of the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge.
This is an account of what
appeared in The Sentinel on
Thursday , Nov. 7, J!Mfi.
"A white ribbon stretched
across the entrance to the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge on
the Mason side, where the loU
island used to be, cut by
·(Continued on page 10)

Miller vows he will
not call for strike

By MICHAEL WILLARD
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - United Mine
Workers President Arnold
Miller 'lbursday told a group
of militant miners - some of
whom walked out on him "1'11! not going to get on
national news and caD a
strike. This union would go
down the drain if I took that
action."
He planned a second
meeting today with miners,
who have led 65,000 · coal
miners off work in a twoweek-long work stoppage
protesting federal court
involvement
in labor
Time has a way of flying by period ends on Feb. 25. The grievances.
and those "lazy, hazy, crazy fifth six weeks will have a
Miller, who made his first
days of summer" for Meigs shorter spring break this appearance
'J'!!ursday since
County school students really - year to be observed on Thursthe
strike
began
in his home
aren 't going to be around day and Friday, April 7 and 8,
UMW
district,
17,
called the
much longer.
for a long weekend. The walkout, "the most
serious
According to the new school period ends on April 15.
problem
we
have
been
faced
calendar, students will trek
The final six weeks appears . with in 10 years."
hack to classes on Tuesday; to be "all work and no play."
After ·Miller told the men .
Au.g. 31, with teachers There are no holidays during they would have to return to
meeting on the preceding the peri()(j which starts April work before there could be '
day.
18 and ends May 27.
· negotiations with the coal
However, students wiD get'
operators, about30 of the 200 ·
a quick break in the new year
miners present stalked out of
on Sept. 6 when Labor Day is
the room.
to be observed. The first six
"I can't utter one word of
Partly cloudy tonight with
weeks grading period will end
support
what you are
Oct. 8.
lows 60 to 65. Partly cloudy doing, " for said
Miller ,
The second six weeks will Saturday with a chance of explaining that his hands
get underway on Oct. 11 and a showers or thundershowers. were tied by a federal
teachers meeting has ten- Highs will be in low to ·mid appeals court's injunction
tatively been set lor Nov. 1 80s. Probability of rain 20 per preventing the international
with students to have a cent today and tonight and 30 union from encouraging the
holiday. The second · six per cent Saturday.
strike.
weeks will close Nov-. 19.
He also warned workers at
The third six weeks hold a
Local 1759, where the strike
brighter picture . It gets · EXTENDED OUTLOOK
began With Cedar Coal Co.,
underway on Nov. 22 but
Sunday ' through that their fellow workers ·
' classes will be dismissed on Tuesday, fair weather with outside District 17 would not
Nov. 25 and Nov. 26 for a long highs in the upper 70s north continue to blindly follow
Thanksgiving weekend. Then and in the lower 80s soulb- them. "Sooner or later the
on December 23, schools wiU ern sections. Lows wlll he memberahip in those other
close again for the Christmas In the upper 50s to the lower areas Is going to want to know
holiday which extends to Jan. 60s.
what is going on," he said.
3. The six weeks ends on Jan.
After the volatile closed
14.
NOW YOU KNOW
door meeting, the union
The fourth six weeks start
The world's smaUest plant chieftan· told reporters his
with a holiday, ihe ob· seeds are those of the harsh assessment of the
servance of fdarlin Luther Epiphytic orchid, which situation may have been too
King Day ~n Jan . 17. The come 35,000,000 to the ounce. strong, "It's too early to tell

Classes to be resumed
by pupils on Aug. 31

Oakley Collins. 'lbe fathers of Miss Compton and Reed, N.
W. Compton and Ted Reed, Jr. cut the_rlbboo when the
bridge was freed from tqllln 1946. N. W. Compton's father,
Walter and Ted Reed's gramfather, William F. Reed,
were key men in getting the bridge built across the Ohio
River In 1928.

yet," he said.
The union leader, who said
the strike was caused by a
few miners "who~ut together

don 't have the experience I
do," told the miners they had
forced him into a corner.
"What kind of position does

this put me in?" he asked.
"They (the coal operators)
will say I don't have control
(Continued on page iO)

Sikes is reprimanded
by ·colleagues, 381-3
get the whole body," Sikes
WASIUNGTON (UPI ) - told reporters.
"The action of the House is
Olairman John Flynt, !).{la.,
disappointing
and in my
of the House ethics
committee says a member opinion and In the opinion of
asked him If F1orida Rep. others it is unjustified," said
Robert L.F. Sikes weren't Sikes, who was present
"getting off easy" with a
reprimand for unethical
conduct.
·
"I told him 'You wouldn't
think so If It was you,"' said
F1ynt.
Sheriff
R?bert
C.
Sikes, who is 70 and serving Hartenbach todily reported
hie 36th year In Congress, that Phil Mark Schirtzinger,
stoically voted "present" as 21, So;nerset, Ohi~ wa~ tak~n
he watched the members to Oh10 State Pe~tentiary m
tally a 381 to 3 vote against Columbus to begm serving a
him on the electronic roll call sentence of not less than six
score board in the House months or more than five
chamber Thursday.
years.
''The House has spoken and . Schirtzinger on a bill . of
I accept it," he told reporters mformat10n charging him
afterwards.
• with grand theft, ap~red
Reprimand carries no before Common Pleas Judge
punishment , but Speaker Jooo C: Bacon last Saturday.
Carl Albert told reporters SchirtZinger on the July 19
before the start of the session took a radio and tape player
'lbursday : "lt'spretty severe from a parked car.
to have a reprimand from
The sheriff also reported
your colleagues on your that his department arrested
record,''
Mathew Undsey Taylor, 'tl,
The vote came on adoption Rt. 2, Racine on a warrant
of a report of the ethics panel, stating that he dld cause
whi c h recommended serious harm to Wilbert
reprimand on two of three McClain.
complaints filed by Common
Sheriff Hartenbach also
Cause, the citizens advocacy reported that his department
group, that clalmed Sikes is going to Columbus to pick
used his office lor personal up Dave Darst, 22, Pomero~,
gain.
on a bench warrant. Darst lS
"Common Cause has its being held by Franklin
pound of flesh, but they didn 't County authorities.
By GENE BERNHAR!Yf

Man taken to
Ohio Pen today

throughout the brief debate,
Common cause praised the
vote in a statement which
also said "the public record
of his misconduct is now clear
and we would expect the
(Democratic) caucus to take
away his chainnanshlp.''
It marked the first time the
ethics panel recommended
disciplining a. memhe~ since
ots creatiOn m 1968 m the
wake of a vote a year earlier
to exclude Adam Caytm
Powell •from the 90th
Congress for · abusing his
committee chairmanship.
The committee said Sikes
chairman of the Hous~
Appr opriations su bcommittee on mili tary
construction, was wrong In
failing to disclose he held
stock in Fairchild Industries,
a major defense contractor,
and in not revealing hls
interest in a bank on
Pensacola Naval Air Station
when he helped get federal
and state approval for its
founding.
The committee said it was
more concerned about the
third complaint that Sikes
failed to disclose' his interests
in
a
Florida
land
development project at the
time that he pushed
legislation beneficial to the
project. But it decided that _
since the incident occurred 15
year~ ago it would not
recommend punishment.
/

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