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-

10-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleplrt-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 3,1876

er virus sought

Name of
By SIIARON SEXTON

HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)
- State and federal health
offlcera today sought to
Identify a baflllng viral-type
disease that has killed
BeVeral person who attended
a Pennsylvania American
legloo cooventloo two weeks
ago In Phlladelphla.
The death toll roae to 18
today with the report another
victim. At least 70 others
ha11e been hospitaUzed serosa
the state.
All experienced similar .
symptoms-bad headaches,
nausea, h1ah fever and chillB.
State health omcers said the
painful disease resembles
pneumonia and is believed
caused by a virus.
The dead ranged in' age
from 39 to 82 and ill! bUt one
were men. The first death
occurred July 'll.
State Health Secretary Dr.
leonard Bachman Monday
ordered
a
statewide
investigation to Identify the
disease and determine If It is '
contagious.
"We can aee no cause for
any panic of any sort at this
time," Bachman said. "We
don't know what we 're
deallntl with. It certainly
resembles a virus rather than
any other cause."
Altho11gh Bachman
. admitted "swine .flu Is a
possibility," he said It was too
early to speculate.
The National Center 101'
Disease Control in AUanta
sent three epidemiologists doctors trained In tracking
down the causes of
contagious diseases and the
manner in which they are
transmitted - to Pennsylvania.
'l'ls8ue and blood samples
from the 'vlcllms were flown
to PhUadelphla for analysis.
Bachman said It would take
three days to identify the
virus.
.
Health Department
officials have been calling
hospitals aci'OIII the state for
autopsy
results
and
information
on
new
adml.uiOIII.
State lleld Investigators
also coota~ lamllles of the
victims to determine If the
diseal!ll
had · spread.
Bachman llid preliminary
caliB Indicated It had not.
Edward T. Hoak; Pennsyl-

MEIGS THEATRE
Tutsdoy thru Thursd.y

Autusll-5
.NOT OPEN
Fri., Sot., Sun.
Autut! 6-7"
FIGHTING MAD
Peter Fonda. Gino Franco,
5 yr. old Lynn Lowry, John

Coucette.

.

Show Storts 1 p.m.

( RI

Pit~lain ~

Tuition
up 81~

vania American Le8fon ad·
jutant, said he began
receiving reports of deaths
during the weekend from
various Legion district
offices.
"The ooe ~ they all had
in CGIJII1IOII wu that they
went to the coovenUon in
l'lllladelpwi," Hoak said.
The. 10,000 per10111, who
attended the convention,
included 2,000 delegates, plus
alternates and wives an()
chil()ren. Hoak .said they
stayed in six different
l'lllladelpbla hotels.
Hoak said the illness
started with symptoms
·similar to a cOIIUliOII cold, .
then progressed to severe
headaches
and
high
temperatures. He said a
number of victims were .
packed In Ice . and given
oxygen in a fuille attempt to
revive them.
Elmer Hafer of Lewisburg
became W a week ago. He
dl.ed Sunday night.
"He started ~laining
about a week ago about chillB
and a fever. We took him to
the hospital last Wednesday
night and he died lui night ,
They said "it Wl!S viral
pneumonill . No one knows
why. No one knows why,"
Mrs. Haler said.
The symptoms .were the.
same for two other victims
lrom Williamstown, John

Doland and John B. Ralph.
"They had a horrible
death," said Mrs. Mercy
Yerskl, Ralph's aunt.
"!
think
John's

temperature l'tlllcbed 107 at
one point. Tbe doctora
performed a pollmGrlem. I
can ooly say that from the
autopsy l'ep(l'l given, it was

that their looked like
BrUlo peds. There Memed to
be alhleld lcrmed over them
that the antlbloUca would not
!)enetrate."

.

A public meelin8 will be
sponsored by Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation
on August 25, 1976, 7 p.m., at
the Ramada Inn, Route 7,
Marietta.
The purpose of the meeting
Is to provide an opportunity
for public expression of views
on the . qualifications,
proposed governing body
composition, and proposed
.work programs of Ohio
Valley Health Services
Foundation, Inc., under the
name of Southeastern Ohio
Health Systems foundation,
lm:., to serve as tbe Health
Systems Agency for Health
Service Area 6 in Ohio.
Members of the public may

.

.

express their views both In
wrllin8 and at the pubUc
meeting.
Views expressed will be
considered In the preparation
of the final application to be
submitted ID the Department
of Health, Education, and
Welfare. This application Is
being resubmitted·due to the
disapproval of the com·
· pelltive applications
previously fUed lrom Health
Service Area 6.
H additional Information
regarding the proposed
Health Systems Agency Is
desired, ciU (614) ~7,
the telephone nwnber of Ohio
Valley Health Services
Foundation.

cut prices

..

•

.
VOL XXVIII

Take our bait - mortgage INns at klw
rates! Come In and talk to one of our loan
officers today.

-·-

wu

"THE
1\b.FRIE./\'DLY
TRUSTEES TO MEET
The amual meellnt! of the
trustees of Carleton College
will be held at the Syracuse
Grade School Wednesday,
Aug. 4, at a p.m.

BANK"

MEN'S

SUMMER
ME$.t IllS
MIDII.EPORT, OHIO
..... federal Deposit IIISIIIIIIU Corporatior.

'*'0•11'1 INSUIID TO •.to,oor·
'

I

'

Nouellred. H_.,, Noue
had left the wwpon In the
stolen car• abandooed along
E. Dlh St.

Black and Bont

Rlf.IU9

,.. ...
Sale

•3,50

Mldllltport,().-

=

............... I. . . . . lltl*llll

The'balrll..-tDadllrtilllba "AppiiQoall" ntolllle
tllllllllld by the lltlplAeal fwh!• Car(ll IGr iii. Iince the
JII'04II'IIII bu abandoned llllllba ..... 'fG&amp;ad Ill IIIII! tha
·line binD oltlltdillrk:tudtpollttdl for fwldl.
,IM!tlt"BI (111'111111111 ~ a jlllllar hlgb school
prlndpll'lllllbe Jired Illite Aq, 13r«IJUdmeetlng. .
I

would wipe out the Intent ol
the 1974 coal contract with the
UMW.
"To do so, by meeting with
strike leaders, would lend
credence to the false idea that
any single group of miners
can, in deflsnce of the Ia",
their own union and the
coAiract, hold the coal
Industry hostage to gain their
own selfish ends,'' Brennan
said,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, .AUGUST 4, 1976

Laboratories expected

Hospital News.
Veterans Memorial Hoseltal
ADMITTED - Robert
Knapp, Syracuse; Juanita
Wamsley, Middleport; Eloise
Drenner, pomeroy; · Ruby
Sexson , Pomeroy ; Pearl
Koehler, ReedsviDe; Patrick
Wolfe, Portland; Lena Lenz,
COolville; Ronnie Anderson,
Pomeroy ; Dorinda Cun·
ningham, MlnersviUe.
DISCHARGED - Cora
See, Phyllis Davis, Sarah
Dunn, Donald Hupp, Errunett
Smalley .
Hoher Medical Ceater
(Dillcharges, Aug.!)
Gertrude Baker, · Samuel
Burns, Charles Butcher,
Lucille Canaday, Vonda
Cottrell, Stella Dewitt,
Mildred Franklin, John Fry,
Timothy Hammack, Mamie
Houck, Alan Jividen, Mrs.
Danny Le..,U and daUghter,
Donald Love, Ruth Montgomery, Mildred Nay,
Forrest ltobinson, Carl
Rouish , Felon Thacker ,
Cindy Waddell, Mary Wilbur.
( Blrlbs, Aug. ! )
. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Chandler, son, Jackson; Mr.
and · Mrs. Steriinil Neville,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and .
Mrs. sammy Maynard,
daughter, Wilkesville.

News •• in Briefs
·
(COntinued frml pal' I)
New Testament name meaning "prince Ill tbe devlla." The
Freano, Calif., Bee said. Monday that II wu lnf«med by
inveslelflalora 110111e documents contained ''lll'ange references
to Satan" and others were coded In SIJUrlt.
'lbe documents were found on the 10km elial1! of the
!arni11 of Fred N. Wooda, 24, obe of the tine lllllpeCiilln the
July 15 kidnap of 26 school children .00 lbelr baa driver here.
The victimS were placed In truck van burled Ill a quarry owned
by Wooda' father near Uvermore In Alameda County. They
eut their way to lreedom.

AUTOSCOWDE

A twa&lt;ar collision was
investigated by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
Monday at 10 a.m. In
Salisbury.SUtton Township at
the Intersection of SR 124 and
county road 345. No personal
injuries or arrest were
reported. Sheila Pierce, 22,
Point Pleasant, traveling
west on 124, turned her right
signal light on, changed her
mind, tumed, her left signal
light on where a car driven by
·Timothy
Cundiff,
18,
Syracuse, already had begun
to paas. There was slight
property damage In teh
collision.

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
issued to Paul Franklin
Thomas, 25, Rt. I, Mid·
dlrport, and Frances
Minerva Wells, 24, Rt. I; Long
Bottom; Harry A. Miller, $4,
Pomeroy, and Helen lAlulse
Marlow, 33, Middleport, and
Phillip F. Bearhs, 39, Racine, .
and Barbara C. Brown, 23,
Syracuse. ·
·,

CLUB TO MEET
The Southeastern Ohio
Garden Tractor Club wlll
meet at 8 p.m. Wedneaday at
the h&lt;me of , Dale Kautz,

·CJ:Ies!«.

Make a daV of It with
Buster Brown clOthes

to Unmask killers ,soon
By AL ROSSITER JR.
UPI Scleoce Editor
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP!)
- Federal and state·
scientists working In sealed
laboratories today tried to
isolate the agent responsible
. for. the swift-acting disease
that hss killed at least 21
'• ' '
persons and hospitalized
scores of others In the wake of
,.
an American Legion convention.
·
The first break In the
'"
aroundthe-clock effort to
'..
l
solve the medical mystery
was expected Thursday when
I
test tube. analyses of ttaaue
specimens taken from
· victims
should
start
.l
producing results at state
a..; l!lbs
in Philadelphia and the
federal Center for Disease
Control in Atlanta.
Scientists said the scanty
evidence avaUable suggested
a virus of some kind was
responsible, but they emphaMlllll GALW COlll'fi'Y
l
'
1Vl8 is Lymdlll Newberry,
' daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Newberry,
Patriot. Miu Newberry
was crowaed during · a
pageant Tuesday evening
at the Gauta County Junior
, Fair. A graduate elf Southwestern High School, she
was chosen on the basis of
Seruor ci liz ens over 60
her activities, poise,
years of age who enjoy
peraoaallty and personal
working with other older
appearaace.
people, are willing to be

..

sized that no possible cause
had been ruled out.
Besldee trying to pin down
the cause of . the ailment,
doctors were watching
anxiously for possible spread
of "the IUness to thoee who
were not among the 10,000
people, who attended the
state ·American Legion
convention in Philadelphia
July 21-24.
·"We are praying right now
that we don't have secondary
developmerita,'' said Dr. William E. Parkin, chief of the
epidemiology sectioo of the
staie's communicable
disease control office. "If this
is going to be something new
and exotic, we 'd just as well
not see It again:"
The
state
Health
· Department said 20 deaths
had been confirmed and 115
other cases had been
reported. In addition,
Allegheny County Coroner

Senlor friends

places offered

supervised, and will follow
instructions· can supplement
their incomes by becoming
~~Senior Friends."
The project is a model
program to help geriatric
·::::.~.a:...~:::::;:;~:::::::::~:~:!:::::i:!:!::::::::::::::~8~8::::::::~:~:::::::::::::::::::&gt;.:!:::::.-::.~~ patients adjust to living in
society after retirement.
Each Senior Friend wUI
meet patients in the Athens
Geria !ric Center , The Gallla·
Jackson • Meigs Men tal
By Ualted Preas Intemalloaal
WASHINGTON - THE FEDERAL TRAPE Commission Health Center. and the
· says It will investigate the "'economic structure" of the U. S. Syracuse Nursing Home. The
auto Industry, including pricing policies and met bods of friend may lake the patient
shppplng, to the movies, to ·
competition.
But Ita amouncement, issued Tuesday, emphllsized that It senior citizens centers and
did not wish to Imply violations of law and two of the auto will assist in daily aspects of
giants, Ford and General Motors, who promptly dubbed the life which may prove
troublesome to him and will
·probe an e~pe~~~lve waste ·oHime.
also help to acquaint him with
HARRIS, KAN. - AU'llJORITIES TODAY searched lor community resot~rces.
two teen-age gitla missing from a farmhouse where one of the
The friends will serve for a
girls; fathers was shot to death in hill slup."Oflicers said there 12 week period, 20 hours a
was no evidence to Indicate the girls had been kidnaped. Ralph week and will receive $2 an
Blevlna, eo, was shot several times early last night apparently hour for their services plus
with a small caliber gun.
transportation.
Ailderaon County Attorney Terry Jay Solander said no
Anyone over 60 and inwarrant&amp; bed been issued In the case, but the daughter, Pemy teres ted Is urged to apply.
Blevlna, 18, and her friend, Sheila Morrison, 17, were wanted Applications may be picked
I« queatlonlng. Apickup order was issued for the missinggirls up at the Pomeroy Senior
and the missing family car. The Kansas Bureau ot . citizens Center (992-7884) and
Investigation said at first there were indications the two girls returned by Aug. 9, or ap·mtgbl have been abducted.
pllcants may apply In person
'
at the Jackson-GaWa · Meigs
r
WASHINGTON - SECRETARY OF STATE
A: Community Menial Health
•KI.uinger left today on what could behlslastforelgn mlaslon, a Center, Gallipolis for an
weak-long trip to promote peace prospects in the Persian Gulf interview Aug. 10, at 9 a.111.
Slid Indian subcontinent.
' ,KlBIInger•s pJane took off from nearby Andrews Air Force
. Base lor Iran, AfghaniB!an, and Pakistan, with a first stopover
· ~ l.ondpn. He returns Aug. II with stops in Deauvllle, France,
iru! The Hague, Netherlands on the way. The secretary Ia
.scheduled to confer Thursday morning with British Prima
Minister James Callaghan before !lying to Teheran, where ha
·Ia to be chairman of the third meeting of the u. s.-Iranlan Joint
funmlalon.

fNews. . •in Brief~

New teachers

(Contlriued frml page I)
..
employed Connie Laming who baa been working aa junior high
achool secretary, to wen in the clerk'• ofllce at a salary of
t8,5110 811111111y. The board a1ao granted a request fer a salary
locreaae from $10,000 to $15,1100 a year to Triplett. It wu the
~bdon of the board .and admtntmtora, Dowler and Din
Mcrrla, that the $10,000 alary wu not adequate for the wen
required of the clerk.
Repr rDI&amp;Uvea of the Big Bend Warrlon lootbaD team
met with the board and lbelr ~ for tiling the Rutllnd
foolbaD lield for practice and tile junior h1ah field II
M!ddlepcrt Ill' gamea on Oct. 2, 18 and 30 wu granted. The
team will pay a fee for • ot the lleld and other facllllles and
will be rSponllble for cleanup ot the field.
The~ dlsn.ed a letter ol COIIlplalnt from Mn. Reva
llmml In l'l!P1'd to probleml ol Uttle league game1 at the
Salisbury School aear the llome of Mrs. Simms. Dowler will
confer with league leaden oo the matter. A letter frml Capt.
R. C. WUaon, Jscbon, of the Ohio State Hlghwly PatJ;Ol, was
read~ the dillrk:t lor IIIII! of the &amp;roanda near the junior
!igh IChool for the • 1 nNing of the patrol here to attend the
funeral of Set. E. G. Moare in Middleport rect~~Uy.
The board approved the attendance of Jolin W. Blaettnar
to a dlalrlbutJve educaUon conference on AIJI. ll-18in Canton;
Ronald P. LDpn to an occupatloaal work experience
coordinators' worklbop at Keat State, ~ug. e-13, and Karen
Walker attending two women's volleyball coachlrw cllnlca this
IIICIIth.
Plana were made for board members to conductlnapectlon
II the wrioua lchoola the - k befcn cluae&amp; begin and a
cbclllllon wu beldeldttderprten with the pr•nt plan to be
b a onMalf day ltllltlqa1eD at Harrlaoavllle thll year
b
1 oltllll.qe .-vn-.tln the dlltrict. There will be
111!1 en.- lllllona at Rullantl, Pomeroy and
t«l b ddll Ill mHwlf U, at lllrrllonvllle to

strike leaders, saying to do ao

..

Arouad
For A Ho111e Loaa7

·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 76

operating today providing put food on their tables.
roving pickets did not show
Dally rallies In Kanawha
up.
County have fallen ofl .In
"Picke.ts are growing tired, · attendance since the strike
and when they quit, the men . was trl&amp;gered by UMW Local
will return," the source said. 1769's protest against a
There also was the pree.dng federal ju(lge's heavy fine .
matter of money. Miners hard ~e strike advocates of
recently came beck from a · the local agreed Tuesday to
summer vacatioo ID flnd stay out, but the margin was
pickets in front of the portals. too close for a clear mandate.
With three weeks' pay denied
Joseph Brennan, president
them, many are turning to of the Bituminous Coal
the ~overnment for relief to Operators Association,
Tuesda~ refused to meet with

en tine

at y

.

-e

Stacey
Harris,
30,
Cleveland, wu shot Ia the
haad and killed by Patrolman
Leonard Nosse during a
pollee cliMe Sunday night
that ended 011 a dead-end
lllraet when Harris jumped
fronJ the car and 1'111.
N - said he earlier had
seen Harris with a gun.
Be"-'ftft Harris
armed

Illinois, Indiana, Virginia and per cent ol Illinois' miners
Kentucky-were off the job in remain Idle.
protest of federal court
One coal source in
interference in mine labor Kanawha County, where the
disputes. ·
strike began, predicted the
Strike lev"" was fueled in walkout may he making Ita
Illinois Tuesday when two linal gasp for life this week.
coal miners were fired by the · The source cited lack of
Peabody Coal Co. for attendance at d&amp;Uy rallies as
allegedly picketing a mine . evidence the miners are
"That'D throw a little fat In losing interest.
the fire," said Michael
In Meigs County Southern
Bunton, a board member of Ohio Coal Co. Mines Nos. 1, 2
UMW District 12. About 70 and 3 operated Tuesday and
were expected to be

WASHINGTON (UPI) -

Service
response
is light

lnnbardo.

on whether to return Iii work
lrom Weal Vlrglnla.
"We're a UtUe better than
we were yesterday," said
John Guzek, preald~t .of
Dillrlct 6, which covert aU of
Ohio and the northern
panhandle of West VIrginia .
"'lbere's about half the men
back on the job, but work
appears to be picking up."
At the helgbt of the nearly
three-week old strike, Ml,OOO
miners In silt statea-West
VIrginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania ,

U.S . Clralt Court of
Appeals Judge Emory
Widener Tuesday ordered
Looal 1'151 In District 17, to
show callll! wily the miners
should not be held in crlminel
and civil contempt of court
for refusing to return to work.
Although miners W!!fe still
out by the thouaanda, back·
towork movements were seen
in Ohio .and Virginia: Union
olllclala in other states said
the miners would take the cue

Rep. James O'Hara, )).Mich.,

aenttelegrldJJI '!OIIIi}'' to the
llW three automakera urging
'lllat in view ol big prolltalor
the put quarter, car prim
be cut to stimulate jobs.
"The all•time record
profits IMOWICed this 'ftek
by General Motors, Fcrd and
Chrysler amounting to more
than $1.5 billion fur the Aprll
to June quarter offers a oncefn.ellletlme opport1111lty for
these
companies
to
demonstrate
their
Cllllllllltment to our American
economic system In Ita. time
of great need," (}'Hara said
In the telegrams.
The telegrams went to
E.M. Estes of GM, Lee
· Criminal cost
· Iacocca of Fcrd anci John J.
Riccardo of Chrysler. GM
announced spring quarter
subsidy paid
proftta of $91» millioo, Fcrd
Criminal cost subsidy $442 mUllan and Chrysler $155
payments amounting to mUIIon.
By making "significant
$204,74Ul were distributed
price
cuts in their 1977 model
to 70 county clerks of court
year
cars," O'Hara said,
during July, Slate Auditor
millions
of potential car
Thomas E. Ferguson
buyers
who
deferred ·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - reported Monday . The purcbases because of "yearThe Ohio Bell Telephone Co. payment$ ranged from $66.9S after-year price ~s"
rep(rts today Ill resldenttal to the Huron County clerk of may choose to buy them now.
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
private line limited service, court to $37,718.61 ID the
That, O'Hara Slid, would
(UPI) - Ualted Miae
or measured service, is Hamilton County clerk of result
"in
Increased
Workers Presltleal Arnold
drawing a light response even court; Ferguson said.
production
and
many
Miller today ordered hlgbThe state paid for the
though It goes Into effect In 10
additional
jobs
in
the
auto
rauklng anion .oHiciall to
su=ssful prosecution and
days.
companies,
plus
.
those
try to end a wildcat
Charles ~ Day, district imprisonment of- indigent generated by parts firms and
walkout wblch has C1l1"
information manager, persons coovicted of felonies . the thousands of suppliers
laDed much of the aalloa's
elllmatea about 6,1)() of the For fiscal1977, $2,226,1100 was who rely oo a healthy auto
coal mine prodaclloo.
by
the
utWtY's 622,1100 resldenttal appropriated
industry for their lifeblood."
Miller Hill teiecraau
customers in Greater legislature to the Auditor's
to UMW dillrlel prealdellta
Cleveland,,bave signed up or office for this purpose. Gallia
aad international board
FINES ToTAL$411
the new service, part of the received $187,80, Meigs
~~~embers saying lbey were
$560.70
.
.
SYRACUSE
One
$200 mlllloo rate lncreaae
"hereby iastruoted and · approved
defendant
was
fined
and
lut montb by the
directed to see that , all
another
forfei
led
bond
in
Public Utilities Commialllon
.members of the UMW
Syracuse
Mayor
flerman
FUNDS RECEIVED
eqaged ·ill lbele work of Oblo. II allows residential
L,ondon's Court Monday
c:ustomers
to
save
$3.20
per
State
Auditor Thomas E. night.
IIIGppages retllnl to 'work."
Roger B. Hill, Racine,
month if they make 30 caliB or Ferguson . distributed
'I'IIe UMW prealdeat
was
flned
$15 and costs for
less.
$12,855,916.49 in state motor left of center
last week ordered lllinors
and Donald
· The measured service, vehicle registration fees
to elld lbe protest over lbe
which will be 50-centa-a- Monday to local govern· Stobart, Racine, forfeited. his
lalerferuce of federal
$25 cash bond for speeding,
month cheaper than. 'the ments.
The
amount
jadgu Ia local aaloa
current . $9.25-amonth represents ~he 1974 Ucense both d led by Police &lt;llief
clllputes. 'I'Ut OrMr wu
residential private line rate, year wralHJP payment and a Milton VariJin.
igaered 10 MU1er today
111ar1a Aug. 13, the ume ~ final adjusbnent on the 19'13
directed uloa leaders' to
the new unlimited rate IDd license year. Of the total
MEETING SET
try to ead tile strilre.
other c~ludlng 1). Gallia County · received . HARRISONVILLE - A
The walkout, aew.ID Ita
cent pay phone cbar&amp;a- $76,050 and Meigs County meeting of the Southeastern
tldrd week, abut doWD an
fake effect.
Ohio Black lAing Assn., has
received $14,066.
coal mlaes Ia West
ACOlt of $11.25 to cmvert to
been set for I p.m. on Sunday,
Virginia. On MHII!Iy,
measured aervlce will take
Aug. Bin the recreation room
J111DU Ia the Nort~era effect Oct. I, 1978, aCCOI'IIng
of Jack's Club at the inPlllbaadle part of the state
to' Day, who said Ohio BeU
tersection of Route 143 and
bed reopened.
estlmatee up to 35 per cent of
Route 7. Doors will open atl2
Ita customen will sign up for PRISONER ESCAPES
noon before the meeting.
measured service.
Anyone from West VIrginia
CLEVELAND (UPI)
or
Ohio Is Invited to attend.
James Boooe, 26, aervlng an
armed robbery senteoce at
the Markin Correctional
Iaatltute, tiCiped from a
NOTE TO snJDENTS
guard
Mond&amp;y
whUe
Studenfa who are new in ine
attending a funeral oo the
PAROlEE SliM
city's Ealt Side, acCOI'IIq to area and plan to attend Meigs
EUCLii&gt;, Ohio (UPI)
High School are asked to preauthorltlea.
The shooting death by pollee
Police llid Boone fled In a register at the high school
of an Ohio Penitentiary car, which. was last seen any day, Monday through
parolee who robbed Mrs, traveling nCJijl oo E. 14'/lh Sl. Friday, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Joaephine Grugel, Euclid, in
her driveway and fled in her
car was ruled juallflable
Mooclay by Proaecutor Dlvld

Union bosses
ordered to ·
stop strike

CHARLESTON, W. Va.
(UPI) - Minen in Ohio
bepn to alowly return to
tl!elr jobl today, but mlnera
In Well Virginia, the catalyst
lor the Illite which hu cut
•lharply Into the nation 'a coal
productloo, remained out.
"I don't know where the
111111er lies, but somebody
better come up with
llimething quick," said Paul
Miller, president of United
Mine Workers Dlatrlcl 17 in
IOUtbarn Well Vlrllnla.

Opinions invited
on health agency

Ohio coal min_ers returning to wor:k

Heney

·'

Striped Ribbed Tank Top. Premium
Cotton. Assorted Colors. Sizes : 7 to t4.
$4.75 .
Band Front Shorts with Fake Watch
Pocket. Polyeater/Cotton Brushed
Twill. Assorted Colors. Sizes: 7 to 14.
$4.50

P11tel Floral Print Shirt wllh Roi~Up
Sleeve. Premium Cotton. Multlcolor
Print. Sl'*: 7to 14. A.IO
Band Front Pants with Fake Watch
Pocket. Polyelttr/Cotton Brulhed
Twill. Assorted Colors. Sizes: 7 to 14.
$7.00

~1\llst.er~
_

luoter Brown conon knllt are modo ol100% Promlum ........
Butttr Brown ~nkltll, tocki and kn"·"lght to gO wflh allenllmbln, 111 to N.po.

Main Store, Annex and Wl!lrthoUII open weekdays and Saturtlays
f:30to 5 1nd Fridays 9:30to I p.m.
.'

ELBERFELD$ IN

EROY

CyrU Wecht said an elderly release of toxic agents.

There was some concern
Legionalre died at 3&lt;15 a.m.
the
ailment. might be the
today at Presbyterian·
beginn,
ing outbreak of a long· ·
University Hospital in
feared
swine flu epidemic.
Pittsburgh. James Sikes, 78,
Virologists
, however,. said
had attended the coovention
there
was
no evidence to
and Wechl said the symptoms
support
such
a theory
of the disease "fits the
although
the
illness
did have
picture · completely'' ol
symptoms
of
a
viral
previous deaths in the
infection.
strange case.
In Washington, a House
Physicians said most of
subcommittee
reacted to the
those who died had high
myste.ry
by
approving
fevers and died in shock with
\eglslation
to
end
the legal
extensive pneumonia.
tangle, which has stalled the
The outbreak mushroomed
nationwide swine
flu
Monday and health officials inoculation program.
were puzzled by the severity
" II the situation in
of the symptoms.
Pennsylvania turns out to be
Dr. Jay E. 5all:, director of swine flu, we want to be able
the division of virology at the to act rapidly because of the
Philadelphia Bureau of quick spreading that can and
Laboratories, said he bed already hes deyeloped;" said
never seen anything like this Rep. Paul Rogers, D-Fla.,
before. He said the rapid chairman· of the health
series of developments was
subcommittee.
"new and frightening."
Dr .. Michael Gregg, chief
"l;m absolutely stumped,"
epidemiologist .at the CDC,
~rkin said. "I can't even
said in an advisory to state
make an educated f!\le8S on health officers Tuesday there
what It is we're dealing with. was no evidence that the
We are testing materials for disease had spread to other
vlrtuaUy everything we can."
Although the first throat, people.
"There is no evidence of
blood and· fecal specimens
increase
respiratory
were
delivered
to disease in in
the l'lllladelphia
laboratories Monday, area at this time nor has
scientists S&amp;ld it took three there been any reported
days to grow viruses on secondary spread to family
human cells· in nutrient contacts,'' Gregg said. The
solutions in glass tubes.
only cases reported Tuesday
The laboratories were high involved those who attended
security types designed to
prevent the accidental' the convention.

Passenger hurt
Two accidents were investigated by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department,
one resulting in one person
being treated and released at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for abrasions and contusions.
At 5:38 p.m. Tuesday in
Salisbury Township Jennie
M. Whittington, 36, RuUand,
traveling north on SR 7, made
a left turn onto CR 5 when
Stanley F. Folden, 29, New
Marshfield, following behind,
tllought she was going to
turn right, and passed aI an
interse ction . The vehicles
collided broadside.
A passenger in the Whit·
ling ton car, Grace ,Gould,
sustained abrasions and
contusions and was taken to
the hosjlltal by the Mid·
dleport Ji;R Squad. Folden
wsa cited to court for passing

SALEM, ORE. - IUGHWAY CONSTRUCTION crewa at
·'Work on an lnterchaJwe along Interstate 5 have unearthed
•what may be the remains of an 8,0IJO.ye8ro()Jd campsite.
Jllmainl of hearths, cooking utenalla and spear points have
bien UDell'lhed and a guard was f!O'Ied at the site Tuesday to
)nWnt pJumerlng.
.
An, archeoldglcal leain from the University of Oregon
Muaeum of Nllural Hillary has been working alonRside
Jqhway COIIIIructlatt ·crna at the site unearthing artifacll.
"It may well prove to be the oldest archeolo&amp;lcal site weal of
the Cucade Mot11tal111, dating back poaalbly 8,000 yean,"
olllclall said.

, , ,,,, , , , , ,,,, , , , , ,,, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,,, , , , , , Fi
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
a chance of showers Friday
and Saturday and lair
Sunday. Highs will be in the
upper 70s to lower IIOs and
lows will. be In the 60s.
::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::

fitted b Hoffman

ve
Two detendants forfeited
bonds .and five others were
fined in the court of Mid· ·
d].eport Mayor Fred Hoffman.
,
Forfeiting bonds were
Eddie Gillespie, 19, Point
Pleasant, $150, posted for
petty theft and disorder ly
manner, and Sarah A. Ingels,
27, Athens, $33,70, speeding
charge.
Fined were Bill Reeves , 50,
Middleport, $50 and. costs and

•

"

l

FAIR ROYALTY - Denlae McDaniel was crowned
queen during opening night ol the 1976 Mason County Fair
in competition Tuesday eveni,ng. Pictured, len to ~hi,

y
30 days in jail, di'sorderly
manner; Clarence M. Hall,
23, Leon, W. Va., $15 and
costs, spinning tires; Elmer
Johnson , Jr., 60, Wheeling,
w. Va .; $150 and costs and
three days in jail, driving
while intoxicated; Calvin W.
Mayle, 23, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs, speeding, and Walter
B. Penrod, 33, New Marsh·
field, $150 and costs and three
days in jail , driving while
intoxicated .

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
U~it went to W. Maln St., at
1:45 p.m . Tuesday for Fred
Birlcher, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted. At 8:54 p.m.
Tuesday, the squad picked ur
Kenneth White~ :"'ho ha1
gotten an arm InJury m •
motorcycle accident and was
brought to the Pomeroy
business section where the
Five defendants were fined
squad was caUed. He was
and
three others forfeited
taken to Veterans Memorial
bonds
Tuesday night in the
Hospital for trealment.
NAMES OMITTED
co urt of Pomeroy Mayor
CARPENTER The
Clarence Andrews.
names of Mrs. William
Premiums totaling $900 will
Fined were
Cli nton
Cheadle, Mrs. Mella Fisher,
MEETING CANCELLED
be
awarded winners in the
Donovan, Pomeroy, $50 and
The August meeting of the costs, disorderly conduct; annua l horse pulling contest
Mrs. Rex Cheadle and Kathy
were omitted from the list of Middleport Chamber of Donald Ervin, Racine , $30 to be staged as the grandguests who attended the 25th Commerce has been can- and costs, assured clear stand event at II. p.m. on
wedding anniversary celled. The next regular' distance ; Barbara Pierce, Friday, Aug. 20.
celebration of Mr. and Mrs. meeting wilt be held on the Ra cine, $200 and costs,
This year only two weight
Dorsey Jordan recently.
first Thursday in September. shoplifting ; Loraine Aeiker, classes will he included .
These are heavyweigh t
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
teams,
3,201 and over , and
inloxica tion, and $50 and
middleweight
teams , 3,200
costs, disorderly conduct ;
and
under.
WiUiam Camp, Mason, $30
Premiums in both classes
and costs, intoxication .
will
be $90, $80, $70, $60, $50,
Forfeiting bonds were John
Fiber, Charleston, W. Va., $40, $30, $20 and '10, for first
$100, posted on a public in- through ninth place with
decency charge, and William rosettes also to be awarded
Roush, Mason, W. Va., $250, the winners.
There will be $540 awarded
posted on a charge of driving
in
the pony pulling contest at
while intoxicated .
8 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 18 as
the grandstand event with
$40, $35, $30, $25, $20, _$15, $10
Cloudy tonight and Thurs- ana~ to oe pato me top eight
day; lows tonight 60 to 65 and teams in three wei·ght classes
hi ghs Thursday in the mid to which includes ponies under
upper 80s . Probability of rain 1,050 pounds ; ponies, 1,050 to
near zero per cent today, 10 I ,350 pounds, and ponies 1,350
per cent tonight, 20 per cent to ),650.
Both events are open to
Thursday .
· world competition .
AIDMEN CALLED
The Middleport
SALEATCHURCH
Emergency Squad was called
A yard sale wm·be held at ·
to Turkey Run Road all0:17 the MI. Moriah Church of God
p.m. Tuesday for Charles parsonage on Mile Hill, In
are .iulle Sonuner, Mlsa Congeniality; Julie Campbell,
Scott, a medical patient, who , back of Racine, during the
second runner-up; Queen Denise and Sherr! Whitman,
was tllken to Holzer Medical daylight hours on· Thurs~ay
8rst runner-up. ·
•
·
through Sat,....day.
&lt;:1
center.
'"

on yellow line. There was
moderate damage to both
vehicles.
,
Tuesday at 11 :15 p.m. in
RuUand Township at the
intersection of county road 5
and 165 Robert Junior
Lemaster , 17, Circleville ran
a slop sign and struck a car
driven by Robert S. Shaffer,
27, Rt. 4, Pomeroy. The ac·
cident is s till under in·
vestigalion.

EIg
• ht cases
.

p lJ 11 )fig
•

go to court

•
pnzes
are $900

Weather

.

. SHOPPERS ARE TAKING MUCH MORE than their
grocery llltl to the Juper11181'ket tbeae daya. They are armed
with poclret calculators and cenllooff coupons u they try to
aave lllGIIey on their food budget.
And aupermarket offtclala are aeeing an Increase in the
uae of tbe coupana. Even clerU ask, "Do you have any
coupons?" before they atar1 rinlln8 up the purchaaes. Nancy
Pew, an employe In the coupon room.of Cardinal Food Stores
. (COntinued on page lZ)

HE'S THE 1,605TH- CecU Bradbury, right, sealed, Middleport, became the 1,605th
Meigs County senior citizen to register for a Buckeye Golden Age Card Tuesday afternoon.
Taking the application, left, is Marvin W. McDargh, area cOordinator of the Olilo Council' .
and Aging. At the rear are left, Doug Lizon, director of the Meigs RSVP program, and Tom
Milligan, Athens, area coordinator for the commission, who is moving to New Jersey. The
goal of each county in Ohio is a 60 pet. minimum signup of senior ciUzens for t~ Golden
Cards, and Bradbury made the 60 per cent quota . Some nineteen business house ~ are
participating in the program which offers senior citizens discounts on purchases and
services. Any senior citizen, 65 or over, wishing to receive a card may contllcl Lizon at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center. Senior citizens who are disabled may contact Lizon at 992-7686
and arrangements wiD be made for them also to receive a golden card. .

�..

..

Reds one of greatest ieams··RigneY

'
•'
"•
••...

•. l .l

TOM TIEDE
.

'

Editorial comment,
opinion, feature~

Diplomats abandon our first obligation

......'

.......

.....

than for ita traveling dtbena:~
In some cuea; U.S. offtdalao
aclually conspire with other

electric
shock),
the
By Tom Tiedt
caught wilh Mary Jane have sldered by tbe Bratilian missionary was rel~ased
WASHINGTON - Suppo!;e been larfured . The siluaUon- ·government to be a radical, lhrouglllhe efforts of the new
Paleslinian ter rorists is an international scandal, and when he got word of his Clillll'!el. M&lt;rris says the ~ naUons against Amerlcalllilo •
imminent arrest be visited a
JSo-c&gt;-&lt;&gt;oe&gt;&lt;&gt;n-"'Oo.o&gt;o"""::..C::N""'?'&lt;',._..&gt;-r""&lt;:~&gt;.o""'"&lt;:.....,..,....O"oQ..,C..P hijacked a planeload of · dirty delails ha&gt;-e becUne
trouble. The wlllppers Ia the
counsel lllUlled Carl Scbutl. man saved his life, hut adds
cars,
people.
woiiiii
be
unable
to
puwiase
Americans
and
diverled
it
to
legend,
yet
U.S.
aulhorilies
prisons oflell get
Installment hu.xmg ,...,. becOme such an
'"What will you do if they try that his good f..-tune was Bra!illan
other
prOducts.
Still
others
condemned
the
Uganda
will\
threats,
have
done
virlually
nothing.
their
"law
enforcement"..:
accepted way of economic life for
to arrest me!" he asked the mere happenstance : "I was
practice
from
a
moral
standpoint.
humiliation
and
tribute•
ActuaDy,
the
gO\~!
training
from
jOlly U~:
AmericallS that many may lind it difficult to
diplomat. The reply: not saved by U.S. poUcy, I
"Ins~ent
buying
..urging
lhe
poor
Would
lhe
Uniled
Slates,
as
·
has
been
worse
than
Smn.
~
believe the extent of the controVersy that
" ottlng," Manis was a was saved only by .the
into
debt
is
lhe
vilest
system
yet
devised
to
&lt;lid
Israel.
risk
its
blood
and
negligent
in
Melico.
In
sane
What
if
Americans
--.,
raged over the queslion in lhe early decade!
goodness of one U.S.
create trouble, discontent and unhappiness foreign relations to sa\-e its instances, 8cCClrding to Slate man without a country.
of Ule century, especially in lhe area of
dipl..-nal
Left to lhe poUcy, I hijacked to Uganda? UnlestJ
Eventually the United
among
the
po..-,"
said
one
corporation
people'
Department
officer
Andy
auloolobile financing .
think I would have been we could buy tbem blct !bey
president.
l1!ose who trunk Sll may go An lip pas, it bas been States did help Morris. dead ."
would most Ukely be tilled·•
The story is told in a recent book, "FUll
" When deferred payment schemes to the rear of ·lhe e~ and inhuman:"We know of cases Before he was ai'!'tSied the
Faith and Credit," by William L. Wilson, a
That policy , in essence, ts with weapons made _ID''
· U.S. counsel Was changed . So
encourage
extravaganct
and
excessive
weep
lor
days
gone
by.
wbereoureounselshavebetn
corporate biography of C.I.T.' .Financial
after 1111 hoW's of torture thai lbe government cares Oklahoma. Money we have;
m..-tgaging
of
future
inCome
for
immediate
~
it
was
an
article
of
tn
the
neat
room
while
Corp., one of the nation's lea&lt;ling finar.cial
(o;pikes M lhe bad&lt;, beating, more for its foreign rela_Uons what we don't have ii.
satisfaclions
thai
are
neither
necessary
nor
faith
in
the
nation
that
A!nericans
rete
being
larwhatever else It takes.
••
services ..-ganilations.
important
to
prope.Uving,
lhey
are
a
social
citilens
mattered
above
lUred.
In
me
case.
and
I
Installment buying was not a new Idea
as well as an economic dang&lt;:",'' said acytlling elSe. The thinking won't say ~. OW' man
when C.I.T. and its eompeUtors began .
'" '
another critic.
was that QOne of us Is inn- could hear a beating laking
JI'OIDOting the time-purchase of private
Despite such outcries installment portant if one of us i.sn"l. Place m tbe -oth« side of an
' ...·~ .
molar cars after World War I. C.I.:r. had
buying
found
growing
~lance
and
·
When
~Jrt&gt;ary.
pirates
open
dOiir.
A
guard
was
lhere
been founded by Henry ltUeson in 1908 and
popularity among the pubUc throughout the. shelled Americans dvilian witll a l"fli*d smile, and our
people had long been accu.larned to paying
..,.,
19215. Interestingly enough, one of its out- . stlips, '!'om Jefferson sent lbe guy was Jfnid to do
lor such things as encyclopedias, furniture
standing supporters was President Calvin navy to Tripoli to retaliate, a11Yihinll·"
and vacuum cleaners oo the installment
Coolidi!e. that epila:ne of conservatism and 'll'her1 sa:ne fe_w sail&lt;n ~e
Fear is not the usual
plan.
ftugatily.whocaUedita
'"sound"
practice.
roughed
up
m
a
Mex~ean
elemeflt
behind the reliX'But when it came to autmnobiles, lbe
"EJ~on
of
a-edit
to
the
indi'~dual
~aport
,
Woodrow
Wilson
lance
of
the
~ovemment to
aroused strenuous opposition from 8
'''"
wx1er
proper
safeguards
is
just
as
;shelled
Vera
Cruz
until
the
aid
its
citizens
abroat'l. Ollen
host of adversaries, W'tlsoo notes - from ·
""
legilirriate as extension of credit IDa ror- residents ~ IKBsled tbe itisamatteroflegalities. For
economists, editorial writers, CO!ISlllller
'"'
poration ," argued IUleson . "'The iri- American !lag and ext'I'Cised instance there are laws
spollesmen and, swt&gt;risingly, fr\lm the
staDment plan has Ml · only taught the. further
peni.ten~ . by forbidding government
majOrity of automanulaci\D'ei'S themselves.
• l
'
American
tbrift,
but
has
gi\"e!l
blm
a
new
Vlg&lt;rously
saluting
I~ Then, representatives from '
••Before I pennll one of my automobiles
. ~.. '. . I
interest in his persooaJ ~ppearance and in there was Teddy Roosevelt. providing even small
to be sold on installment credit, I will see
his home, lie has beulnre, in-sbort., lbe best Wilen a Moroccan bandit amountS of financial belp to
••
this company in receivership!" wwed
cus1aner
in
the
....,.Jd."
Illlmed
RaiSuli
kidtlapped
an
Yants
in
need.
A
few
Olarles W. Nash. fowxler of Nasb MoiDrs.
Americans continue w be lhe best AmeMean traveler named privileged Yanks can gel
"Debt has become a naliorUII industry ,"
custiJiilers
iD lhe world if the growt11 of the Perdicarl s, T. R. had an help. ~ is a flm! in most
Henry Ford complained in 1926. "That is
finance
uidustry
is a ~ .. C.l.T. reter!liy ·immediate solutlonc "Per· embassies 1o assist trareling
'
bad business f..- lhe debt« and bad business
celebraled
.lbe
openl11g
of Its l,OOOib Nrrlb dicarisalh•e," be roared , "or rcongressm&lt;!ll throw 0\'e!'Se&amp;S
for the credit« also." HiHOIDpaDf, be said,
Americanlranchof'liceinPainesville, Obio. Raisuti dead~" You can be pa~es. FUr everyqne else,
woUld slick to a stricUy cash poUcy. ( Only
The warnings of tile wiy "'l'PPO"'lts of ·sure the victinn '!l'as released lbough, the &lt;:'nltcb is not ,
tWo yean later, however, F...-d eslabl.islled
installment bu)ing aboQt the danger to the soan after .
anilable. Some.. ~
its own automobile financing subsi&lt;liary .1
moral
fiber
&lt;11:
Americans
or
rof
a
'\day
of
Today?
mericans
abrload
have been sent from emSome car makers foresaw a tidal wave of
reckaniilg"
did
not
0001e
true,
even
dW'ing
h.a
-.e
become
Americans
.
bassies
ID go ~ in tile
defaults if "every Tom, Diek and !!arTy"
Ule
~on
.
Ainer1cans
have
learned
to
alooe.
When
they
get
rntn
streets
to
survive .
.was allowed ID buy a car, !llllicb would
manage
lli!I
ID
usoq•er,S&lt;mal
delihrisely,
and
trouble
.tl'lejr
,g
overmnent
is
E\1
en
.
wrse
than the
Wmp enonDOUS nUmbers . of diStressed
in
so
doing
ba~e
crea'led
falbemseh-es
the
~
'l'iibotit
pl
ty.
In
Mexico,
streets,
is
being
,
s
ent
fr&lt;ln an
vehicles on the market ID be resold in
higbest
standard
of
living
ln
i11Je
w&lt;rld
a
f(l'
instance,
more
1han
'
6
00
embassies
1o
foreign
prisons.
competition with new carJ. Other
testament
tn
lhe
Visioo
of
credit
pioneers
Americans
ar&lt;e
being
held
in
Fred
M..-ris,
a
Methodist
b u s i - feared that will! so much
like Henry It:tleson.
·
&lt;lungeCI!IS and prisons liDder missitllat)• 'IIOW worling iD
CllllSWI'Ier income commitled to paying for
some of the m0$1 'barbaric Wasbington, says he once

..

mea

..

.

,.

..

Q '"

oonditions &lt;If this century in
this hemisphere. Peqple

Veterans of Ohio '37th' plan reunion
Veterans of WW I, WW ll
and the Korean Olnflict oflhe
famous 37th " jluckeye"
Divilim of the Slate of Obio,
~rill (Gille

togeth« for lhe
51111 year !OliO to relwll ilheir

arrested for lriffic •Dffenses
have been beaten. &lt;Kids

forml!r war ezperiences.
Ibis }'e8t' s &lt;ant!ual reunion
These vel&lt;!rans are as dose will be In y oungstaa'n, 'Lab&lt;l'or doser Ulan many families. day Weekend, September S
Old soldiers never di~ tbey throug·h Ute ~th, wilb

just

keep

going

'ID

" REUNI.ONS.H

beadqu,aJi&lt;r~ # t

spent lour days in a ·llral:ilian
l ockup ·because lhe U. S.
COUl1!llil thmo refused to in-

len'ene. M&lt;rris was ron-

Meigs 4-H Club News

lhdl.ohclliy

Inn Nirlll ~ · otel, located at
Ute inl&lt;!r.section of l-«1 and

The Rulland I..ucg Stars 4H club .me1 on July %1 ai 1he
Weber ·borne. 'The •number ,of

in .attendance and ten club
-members. Tbe i terns -of
S.it 111:1. For mo~e
business dis(,ussed 'Wete
· ·advisorS in attendanoe was 'booth dec&lt;raboos, a hayride
forffialioo Clllltacl lhe
Division
Vetcera.n s two aDd l.he number· of and projects. A demon- : - - - - : . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - Association, .~;:; S. Front members Sx. Volleyball was stratim •as ,giW!Il by IIRnda
Street, 8llWI W , Colwnbus, played lOr rcecreation. Calawaym acrylie painting.
Ohio U21.5, l'!lorle: Colum- RefreSbments wen! P"'"ilied Recl'e.ation ns played and
bus, Ohio 2:28-3188.
'!If lhe whole club and oao- n'beSinnellt5"'""' 'sen&gt;edby
sisled &lt;Of root beer lioats. Lori Robinson. - Lori
Araka Grate, Reporler _
R&lt;tlinson, Reporler.
The Uberty Belles HI club
The Su&lt;Wams 4-8 club
met oo Jtme 30 at lhe bwne of beld a meeting oo July i5 at
Mrs. 8utdler. There was ooe ihebomeofBeUIRildlie.Ooe
allvis!lr in .attendanee and adviJor was in attenda,.,..
elgllt club members. A iind eigb1 club mrmbers. A
discussiOD of tile ~ raffle discussion of clothing

,
World
·
r
y
s
Ber

rn-

m

Torch nmners
stopping at .

Krodel Park
I'OIIIiT P!EA.SMI''T - A
total of 183 runner:s, 63
marines and 40 d.tlians,
carrying the Olympic torcb
!ram M.oolreal to an

~

oame in the National Track &amp;

"It gets so hot here in Wuhington during the
summer you'd think the congressman would
have air-conditioning."

DR. LAMB

wsa held lll!l ins1ructiODs (I[J

filling wt pn~jeet boots '11'e!'e
given. IlfmoostraliGOS were
gJ\'e!! bj• Sbeila Hooky and
Pbyllis [)avis on bow lo make

jambalaya. RefreJ:bments
were served by Shiela Hlrky
and l'byllis Davis. - andy
Crooks, Repllrter.

The Harrisomille Hooor
Boys held a meeting oo July
19 at Forest Aires Park.. Tiro

Field Beadqua.rters in
Olarleston, will pass tlJrough
advisors were in allendanoe
here Friday.
Rwlnen aie eipeCI8I Lo and eleven club members. A
arrive in Point Pleasant at discussioo o{ king and queen
Krodel Park to talk brielll' can&lt;lida tes and judging ns
with the runners or to run held. Bwt.an and yard ~!arts
along with lbem. They will ftf'1! played for •reaeatim.
arrive here frml Ravens- Tte members and tlleir
wood enroute to Huntington. families eoJol'ed a pialic
There will be refresiUOo!llts supper witll each bringillg
lor the sii rumefll wllen they covered dishes. The next
arrive. The public is ID'ged to meeting will be beld on
be 011 band to welcoore lbem. August 2 at 7:30 p.m. Danny Riggs, Repor~.
The Alfred Angels f.H club
· held a meeting 011 July 'l1 at
tbe borne of Dorothy
Calaway. Two advis..-5 were

She's guilty about eating
11J Law• me E. LaliJII, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am a
n.,.ear.&lt;Jid girl with an eatq
problem. I am ao wel&amp;ht
COIIIci11111 I t'all'l
eat a
.-1 without feeling guilty.
About two yean ago I
~ fclrclng my.lf lo
'IIIDit .lfta" I'd onreaten.
N01r 1111 a recuJar bablt, but
- I dm't have to force it.
Beea• ofllil I either 10
111 a llanation diet or eat

...-nr

almGit CCilllinaally and then
lbrolr up. I feel ike I have a

dattiJie pil'lililllllJ - 111e that
~ ...t I bed llinll'm
dalitc toiiiJ'body and one that
Ia c•plelely ~enaelea,
'IP""•'IJ wbere foocl Ia
II.
Sow I bave -.,lllil frllin
- . - . Bat I redle I - '
tiD • ll!lic - · I hope J'GU
wllbelllltlold me or_.
... ....._ tohllp. 1'111 nat
,.. a 'Jit' •• llll!ll llbly
t •.• 'I I.
DEAl RIADP
You
. 1ttn11 llllliPilll )Oiiielf lnlo a
Cllllldltlll ..

.

'*' -w

'

nervoilus. This, or a variant
of 1be problem, is common in
YOUIIC girls who become
ot
aed with the idea' of
being slim, or downright
emaciated. That is a
refleciion of our limes and
Ideas about beauty. Venus
was a iuU bo&lt;lied woman, not
a Twiggy, according to
mythology.
'
Vllllillng after eating is not
new. Tile Romans did It after
overeating - durlnl a
Roman orgy. They then
returned to lhe banquet to
gorge themleJYI!I further .
There are two main
qen in the ..-actlce. You
can lear Ule lower ,.n of the
eaophagus with rorcelul
vomiting, caulng ~evere
bemorrbage that may
-nqulruu11ery. And you can
dnelop malnutrition. Tbe
119ere repeated Instances of
starvation or v01111Ung
._t~q Ia e&amp;C
ht welghl
1G1a II .-ala ...., ,,..,
Once lbe •lluallon 111&amp;

control o( a person it is dlf.
ficult to correct it. You wiD
need profl!llllional help. By
lhall mean Ule guidance of a
!IIYcbiatrist. The e;motional
factors ill your eating and
vlllliting hablta are very
important and are no doubt
the key to your problem. I
would like for you to know
bow ID diet properly ao you
can establish a well balanced
diet for yourself and eat lbe
amount of calories you need
to maintaiD a JIMIIIf!l" weight.
F'll' tl!at pui"JJIR I am aending you Tile Health Leiter
llllll!ber 4-7, Weight lAsing
Diet. Others who want basic
iltorma1i011 on bow ID lsoe
weight safely can send a long,
atam peel, self-addressed
envelope willl 50 cents for it.
Send your letter tome in 'care
of u\is roewspaper, P. 0. Box
1561, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Starvation diets, crash
dieta and hablls such as you
have developed can lead lu
aeriOUI ~ell ill, Ute body.

•

Tbere may be a significan\
11168 of vital muscle mass
from the body. Growth and
feeling of well being can be
adversely affected. Crab
diels can also lead to lOSl! of
h8ir. The hair on the head
· may faU out in large amounts
leading to temp..-~ beldness. It may take several
months to start regrowing a
n..-mal bead of hair af~ Ule
diet problems are corrected . .
Such dieting practices can
aerlously aHectlhe endocrine
!uncU111.1 of lhe body . Y~
women may lose their normal
menstrual cycles. Men may
become impOtent or loae their
normal sex drive. Personallly changes are common. The 10011e llidn, personality changes, loaa of hair
and strengtll aU reaemble
premature aging. That Ia a
high cost to pay beca- a
persoo will now foll01r a slow
sure sensible way of
eliminating ubesity · or
preventing it

,. ,,
''Whaddya mean -am 1 pledged to Ford, Reagan or still ~~·:
· uncommitted?"
.
-:-

the Collins letter
COLUMBUS - Sena'I.Dr
Oatley c. Collins ( R-lrmtoo)
today praised tbe llltb
General Assembly's adlons
in .passing m..-e legislation ID
belp Ohio's elderly citizens
Ulan during any other

Aging.

nt O

-

"'"

.,,;.

In its attempt to deal with;:
those acute problems of
1,0011;000 fplus) senior
everyday Uving, lhe lllth
citir.ens face are acute,"
General Assembly enacled _.
jRjecls IIF85 beld. Members Senator Collins stated. "We
into law bills that will: ,.:'l
p(-epared ltaliall dimes from must mow our seniors the
(op~onal)
••
their loternaaonal Foocb kind o{ potallial IIIey QiU aperienre."
Prohibit
wage
boob. Swat was played for ha\"e .and help them utilir.e
During the ISTh-76 bien· discrimination on the Pasis of
rea-eaUoo and llle 1lle1llberi thi.s potential. ·Goyermneut niwn, the · Ohio General age and will eliminate ,. made tbeir own refresh- can play a part by enacting Assembly allocated more rnandalory retirement.
~=
meats. - Betll Ritchie, legislation lba( wiU belp slate lwlda for the aging
Eliminate
age ~
Reporter.
lll!lli~ dlizens will! financial program in the biennial
discrimination in granting of
Tbe LibertJ Belles 4-8 club problems and prol'ide lbem budget, with an additional $1 credit
held a oieeting on July '11 at witll opportunities to remain million lo be used lor
- Prohibit the tennlnaUon
the bonae of Yrs. Butdwr. ad.ive."
assistance to independent of converted group health
Tiro ad"-s and nine club
Problems confronting living programs for the insw:ance policies on the •\•
:c-:1.
membenwereinallendance. Ohio'uenilll" cilizerui (those eldelly,theOhioCommisslon basis of age
llems of "'Kin r diiCUSSed ~yearsofageandolder) are on Aging (OCOA) reported.
- Establish a nursing :~ll
awe judging, steer raffle not new. Senator Collins
Senal« Collins attributes homeadvisorycolllllliSsion to '"~
tickets, projects and filling identifies ·the most crud.al the legislators' increased study the operation and '' '"'
out project boob. Demon- problema facing Ohio's activity In senior citizens regulation of nursing homes ; ~rl
stralillns w~e give~~ by Bulb elderly as being: income, aHair! to tile establislunent and to make annual :;;:.;
AnnlliakeandLynnF.wJeon bowing, bealdt ~e. em· of the OCOA which was recommendations to the '""'
preparing JICI'ambled egg, ployment , nutrition and crealed by the legislature In legislature about nursing ''."?
and 'baeoo, Hot potato 1Jas. tr311Sp(lt1ation.
1973 to oversee the ad· home needs and problems. " •;
played for recre11tiun.
"Retirement generales a ministraliOII of Benior citizen · - Require 2+11oiD' food ..•~b
Reireshmenla' _.., -aerved diminisiled '.ncome," said programs and lo specifically stamp certification under ".~
by Rnlll Ann Blake and Lynn Cplllns. "Inflation and identify those problem areas certain emergency conditions '"'"
Epple . - Cindy Crooks, catastrpphic illnesses for the legislature. The llllh
-Allow school boards to ' •
~lei-.
trequmUy destroy savings. General Assembly also provide meals at cost to ,.v:l
The Me~ County Beller
c1 tlzens
• : ~:
n..•- •u Oub met W/////////////////////$$//#///..;W///////##$//17/W//&amp;?'A senior
U _,.:_,
·--•..,.... 1 ...,
- Reduce fees lor eldelly ·~·~
oo July 211 at the blme of
at state recreaUons
'""I
~~~Tiler]'
meme
wberass-m
'
Mason
_ . County' N'
-Allow senior 'cltiiiens to '
.......... ..,., •
obtain permanent hunting ,:U
attendance. The members
and trappiDg licenses for a f4 ·~-=
dilcuaaed judging Holstein
lee
·••'
- Allow boards of '"""
cattle and going to Wooster to
judge cattle on AllgUil 13.
educaUon to lease I!Cbool ·;,:·.
Refreslu:nenls were terVed
MASON - The BWy Grabam lilm, "His Land," will be buses for transporting of by Mrs. Burt. The next ibown &amp;lnday e\'elllng. Aug. a at Muon Uniled Methodist senior citizens.
meeting wiD be August 3 at Ouclutlp.m.'lbeRev.RobertMarin&amp;pastoroftheehurcb
- Require stale unlver·
the. Philip Radf...-d Farm. ~ Slid, "U you have alwaya wanled to take a trip to the Holy silies and colleges to aUow
Kathy Parker, Reporter.
LandthlawillbeacbancetodoBO!noneevenlng."
senior citizens to attend ••~a
"j
classes on a non-tuition,
1be Maml Umted Metbodllt Women will have a potluck nocredit basis
.,
diJmer cm Mllnday, August 8 at Muon's Park.
- Extend the filing dale ( ' 1
and adjust income levels for
'
1M ..... ' . . , . .
1be
Rev.
Mrand
~- Robert Maring of Muon United the homestead exemption !or ' •
.nora ro n11
Methndlat Olurcb, Mn. Murl Megee, Mrs. Cedi Smith, and the. elderly
,.,,;(}
. . . . .,Of
•IIMAIIW;t,._.
Mn. Llndm Smltll, memben of the cburcll, attended a
- PrOvide property lax ,; ""
Olll'fR' L fA
ocmeri!IICe raUy at lluckbannon, Wednelday.
.... I 141
credits lor home lm· ::'.'1
_ , a UDd ··
provements
" :'~
Mr. and Mn. Ou1ll Mcilullel spent Friday and Saturday
- Exempt Social Security • "~
- ow. • ...,. • a a c...,r.,. tn Colqmbo• eariJ11 far their IPiir'.rlt!Jdren ir1111e their increases from Income for i-T
111 ' - " ............ ow. .....
jJII'I!i!tl, Mr. and Mn. J - LD,.t, Mr. and Mn. Stan homestead exemption pur· ,• ..1
......
OfHuo
.....
""'""·
Saanden
altended the Redl' game bt ClodlJI!Itl.
poses
!:;::.c
.....w ..... WJ..111J.
From C'Mtmb1•, the McDinlela and the Loyds weat to the
- Provide property tu "!
lalter'a ~ at Ni!llbpoot. On Sunday, Mr. and Mn. CUrtis relief for the aenlor citiZens to '' -1
......... , , , , .....
Ia
.... . ....... c.-,-,. 1M.. .... McDaniel, Mrs. J - Lo)od, 1011 Kevin, vlllled Roscoe help ~m retain owneralllp of "":3
,....._. • .,, . .....
VIllage itt ColllociCII, Oblo.
,
their homes alter retirement ., a
,
I '
..... ,.._ •lua;a4
- Reform the probate code .:.:.:1
_,._
Mrs. Harold Sclnran bas returned~ after vlsltiDg her dealing with estates and C!
"'',
_..._ dal!flhter and 1011-ln-ln, Mr. and Mn. Danny Strother and surviving SJlOIISell
" " ')
.us. ., .... "'oe. ..... 'le., 0.. 1011, Todd at Lcuilvllle, Ky•
Authorize
counties
and
'
'•
· -· l t l - ... - - . 111..11: . . .
_..... ....... ' ..... .-r.
townships
to
contribute
""'i
... _.. ...... ..,......._.u•. Mn. se.aley Saundn IIIII cblltha of l»lumbua will monies to local aenlor citizen 1c:
,,
arrive ben m rue.Jiy to auend the MaiOi! County Fair. Her programs
. '"'·" ~ "
.-._ Marilyn Oenlae McDaniel, Pt. Fte.aat, II a candidate
- Allow cqunUea to !leil,
' - - - - , . . - - - - - - ' far MaiOi! Counly Fair Qaeea.
(Ca!Unued Cll pap 51 ~
legislative biennium.
''The p-001ems that Ohill's

r·I

I

""'0

0

I

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

-·-

..

m~

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

.........

--•

,..
~

.....,.~

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

afterwards . "He came out
and reminded ooce during tbe
fifth inning and It reaDy
helped me."
The Giants got two on In the
fifth, but Billingham got out
of trouble and was never

Archie to start
against Buffalo

again thratened.
Giants pilot Bill Rigney
called lhe Reds "one of tbe
fines! teams I have ever
seen" after they pasted his
team for 15 hits to make 1131
in two games.
"They are solid right
through tile order. They take
out lefthanded batters and
the rlghthanded batters lhey
put in are even better."
He referred In part to the
Cincinnati shorblop spot
where southpaw Doug Flynn
gave way 1\tesday ·night to
righthander Dave
Concepcion, who collected
lhree hits.
Ken Griffey also collected
three hits, scored two runs
and drove In two others.
Starter Mike Caldwell, still
winless this season,. gave up
the first five Cincinnati runs
on nine hits In four innings.
Dave Heaverlo tossed two
good ' innings, but Charlie
. Williams .came on and the
Reds resumed their heayy
stickwork .

AIR CONDmONER
VAlUE!

FEDDERS

Hinton sent to
Indianapolis

~

Bosox holdouts signed

ICEN TEIUi iAl AU,jAo.JioC

ews Notes

By Alma Marshall

"~

I

S?

~

@•&lt; ""'rOo! Sr.'&lt;'&lt; tl '" '""""
l&gt;f"""'''"IO-~~~~~·~
,,..,.··.•oo~'
bl;~­

1,.,.., pt&lt;C ...... ~""'

miH!Dt;.omo" '"'' lur ' ""

16

G~UI

W~UIHIU

I&gt;.&lt;L •&lt;C""" '"" '""''

1

Bench asking

o'"lplo.
'*1'0

I

"''"'""'"''

.- luo• ~..,~ ~
. """"""'

~-,..,

~'

for divorce

-r-~--

_

..... «
~

&lt;00 .... , ,.....,,.

.•

•

•

~·

~

. . . . . ...

OP~'hl

•

-- McRae hot m

.

._
____ ..

handed San Franctaco its
fourth loes ill a row iD a ~
thumpillg Tueaday night.
"Pitching CGich tarry She·
pard baa helped me by telling
me to relax," said Billingham

l'•n't-.&lt;~rob·•

a-eated two new committees,,.,
to deal specifically witll the.,,
problems of the eldeliy: lhe •••
Sena.te Committee on Health :,;,~
and Retirement and . the '""
House Sub-Committee on,,R,

physical and · financial bur·
den. Many of these individuals were never poor
unlil .IIley were forced .to
retire.
"Therefore, it is necessary
for Ule General Assembly ID
review lhe erilical needs of
its seni..- citizens and lo
enact legislation that will
help their retirement years
become a more positive

SAN FRANCISOO (UPil-,
Jack B~ ~ a
three-hit shutout and !hen
lhanked lila pltcblng coacb.
BIIUngbam breezed t.o tbe
wjn as mighty Clncil)nati

I

"

TransportaUon becomes a

3, Los Angeles blanked singled Davey LDpes home
Houston, 2-(1, Chicago spill a from second base twice and
double h e ad e r wIth Burt Hooton pitched a twO:
Philadelphia, winning the hitter to down Houston.
first, ~. and losing the Hooton rabed his record to 7By MILTON RlatMAN
second, 11-6, and Pltlsborgh II wltllhislirst win since July
UPI SporU Editor
split two. with St. Louis. fl. He allowed only two first·
winning the opener, 2-1, inning hits.
NEW YORK (UPi) - For a change, the Russians are telling
before dropping lhe nightcap, Cubl 4-5, Pblllles 0-1:
•
lite truth.
.
'
44.
'
Chicago's Rick Reuschel,
Only up to a point, though.
,,
12·8, pitched a nine-hit
-Alter that, they're lying in their teeth about Sergei NemtMell 9, ExpOs 8:
shutout and Wayne Tyrone
l!lllov, the 17-year-old Soviet diver who caused a much bigger
Ed Kranepool's eighth· hit his first major league
aplash out !If the pool than In It by defecting ill Montreal shortly
inning, two-run homer- the homer off Jim -Kaat, 10&lt;6, to
before !be Olympics ended.
100111
of 'his career-lifted give the Cubs their ftfth
Anatoly Kol{!80v, deputy chief of the Soviet Olympic delega.
New York over Montreal. straight win in the opener. In
tlan, aays "We always knew Sergei as a lively, happy person,".
Kranepool, tbe all-time Mets' the nightcap, Garry Maddox'
Heel! tile Ruasians are telling the truth because their affallle
home-run leader, blasted his giand-slam homer-&lt;~ recoroltden.aged diver Ia 110 friendly, he was on~ of the m011l popular
homer following a Felix tying seventh for Phllacompetitors ill the Olympics.
Millan stilgle.
delphia-supported the com·
He has an euy1relaxed way about him and isn't u)l!IJdlt at
Bra.ves 7, Padres 3:
blned six-lilt pitching of Steve
au among Amencana as other Russian athletes ane IIO!Tie· WILMINGTON, Ohio Johnson, who bas taken over complained, "It's too .quiet."
Cito Gaston, a former Carlton al!d Ron Reed as the
~. 'Jbe U. S. men and women divers all know young
"There's no crowd noise,''
(UPI) - After a sucee81hil for the retired Paul Brown.
Padre
who bad been to bat Phlllles,eamed a split.
Nemtaanov. He competed In thls country twice and beillg 110 pro debut, rookie Archie . · Burly tackle Rufus Mayes he lamented. "You don 't feel
only
40
times !or AUanta this Pirates Z.Z, Cardloals 1-4:
outgoing, be made friends eaally.
Griffin has won a starting hugged Johnson and lUted a part of things."
year, batted home five rullS _ Duffy Dyer stroked a
So when Soviet officials characterize him a~ lively and assignment for tile Cincinnati him off his feet after the final
The Bengals didn't "feel a
with home runs on each of his homer with two outs In the
happy, they're telling the truth. ·
.
gun.
part
of things" initially
Bensals' next preseason
first two at bats to give Andy bottom of the ninth inning to
From that point on, though, !be Russians' version of what game.
"It was his first head against the Packers Messersmith 11-9 and the give Pittsburgh a lirst.game
happened to Ne!Iltsanov in Montreal is composed of pure whole
The two-time Heisnan Tro- coachiDg assignment and I trailing 14-3 ·at halftime.
Braves ·a victory' over San victory and help Jim Rooker,
cloth, the fabric of which Is so thick, you can alm011t feel it with phy winner frOII) Ohio State just wanted him to Win,'' said
"We started slow but were
Diego.
who scatter~ six hill!, ralae
yoW' fingers.
will open at running back Mayes. "I know what it able to pick up the
Dodgers 2, Aslros 0:
h1s _record to 9-5, Don
What embarraasea the Russians 110 much is that Netsmanov, against the Buffalo Bills meant to blm."
mllJIIentum as we went along
Los An~eles' Bill Buckner Kessmger drove home four
u an Olympian, Is supposed to represent one of their model Saturday night in Cincinnati,
On a team so pre-eminent
Beamed guard Dave and 1 thought our final drive
runs wllll a double in the
youngsters and willl the glare of the world spotlight on him, says new head coach BID Lapham, "This game was was excellent,'' said JOhnson. the players must compete ,.,:;::·:·:·:-:::.:-:·:':·:·:·:-::::;.;.;.::::::::::::;:,:;:,:;.;:;:,.;.:.;. eighth and a single in the
what does be do but say ln effect he'd much rather be In "Tiger" Johnson."
ninth to give the Cardinals a
something special. 'Tiger' "We exercised good ball among themselves to reach
another country Ulan the U.S.S.R.
new
heights,
Ken
Griffey
Is
spilt
and enable reliever AI
runs
a
training
camp
that's
control
in
that
last
drive
and
TOMEET'U&gt;AM
Although not a starter in
That hurts.
currently
lea&lt;ling
tile
pack.
Hrabosky
to even his record
honest
and
straight..forward
that's
something
we're
EAST
MEIGS
"Meet
last weekend's :13-17 victory
From the Soviets' point of view, the best thing that possibly over lhe Green Bay Packers, and the guys like it.
The 28-year~ld Cincinnati
looking for ."
the Team" will be held at~could be done would be to pretend tile whole thing never Griffin came in and piled up
"He tells It like it Is on all
The Bengals scored the Reds' outfielder is lea&lt;ling the
Friday, Aug. &amp; at 8 p.m. at
happened. Sillce that waBII'I posalble because the defection 49 yarda rushing in 12 carries, iss~~ts, " continued Lapham. winning touchdown with just National League in batting
Eastern High Gym. The
was Immediately pub)lclzed by all the world's media, IIO!Tie scored a touchdolm, caught a "That's tile. kind of guy you 15 seconds remaining, with a .341 average.
11116 Eastern Eagle Varslty i
·other story had 1o be propagated.
Griffey showed San
and Reserve Football
couple oi passes and ran a like to work for, you know capping a ~yard, Ill-play
The RUSBians went lor an old one.
where you stand. I reaDy marl!h that consumed nine Francisco why is he one of the
teams under new coach 'Joe
kickoff baclt; 12 yarda.
"It Ia our opinion that Nemtsanov has been psychologically
brightest stars Tuesday
minutes.
Mitchum will be In·
"Actually we didn't plan on respect him."
braillwasb~ by highly trained specia~,'' proclainned
Chimed In defensive end · "Now we have to get ready hight. He stroked three hits,
traduced. Parents and
Archie playing so· much,"
Anatoly Kolesov.
·
said Johnson. "But he was K4m Johnson, '"The change In for BuHalo,'' said Johnson. scored two rt!llS and drove in friends of all players are
The Russians claimed their young diver was "kidnapped" doing so well we bated lo take coaching put pre8Sl!I"e on "The Bills have two fine two others to power
urged to attend.
Cincinnati
to
a
~
victory
by "gangsters."
everyone
to
make
us
look
quarterbacks
in
Joe
Refreshments will be
a guy's momentum away."
The Canadians ssid this was a crock of cold borscht, absolute · Said Griffin of his pro good. There's been a lot of Ferguson and Gary' Marangi over the Giants.
served by the cheerleaders
"The reason I'm bitting and athletic boosters.
nonsense, which, of course, It Is.
·
Bicentennial Special
debut, "I'm bappy, butlfeeii controversial things said and a couple of line runners
In my opinion, tile Canadian government exercised perfect .made a few too many about how the team would be ill Vic Wasbingtory and Jim well is because I get pitches ;
room air condilloner
judgement In refusing to tul'll over Nemtsanov to the Soviets . mistakes. I didn't expect to Paul Brown's first year Braxton and we'll have to battiDg between Rose and ·.;.:::::.:;::::::::::;.;::::::.:::::::;.:r::::::::::::;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;.;::·:·· 1
after the youngster said he &lt;lidn 't wish lo return to Russia. In pl8y that long."
Morgan ts a good place to
away . We're proving · it to find ways to stop tbetn."
this regard, tile Cana&lt;lians certaiDly come oH looking better
The Bills, who lost their be," Griffey said modestly.
Although the win over tbe . ourselves and to people.."
Griffey had two singles and
than we did ill that episode a few years ago where we turned Packers was only an
Brown, who contillues as first pre-season game 2()-17 to
back a would-be Soviet defector after he had scrambled exhibition victory, Griffin general ·manager alter · . the Detroit Lions, are without a triple. He scored one run
aboard one·of .our ships and asked for asylum.
runner
0 .J . and drove in another in the
and his teammates still coaching the Bengals through vaunted
Canada's Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau doesn't always looked at It as a successful their first eight seasons, Simpson, who Is not playing fifth inning, when Cincinnati
18,000 BTU's
win me over with all the things be says and does but I head coaching debut for watched his first . Bengals while demanding to be scored three runs and then
. CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
l1J17IJII'tifS·lH;Jr~·HfEA
tripled in the eighth, when the Cincinnati Reds have.
commend him wholeheartedly for his position with regard to
game from lhe press box and traded.
Reds scored four more.
returning Sergei Nemtsanov to the Soviets.
optioned relief pitcher Rich
only
Trudeau·says the teen-aged diver will not be turned over to
But Griffey was not the Hinton to their Indianapolis
&lt;...,_..;,..\ , • ..., .... _ ... , ,. ...
· only star for the Reda. Dave . farm team after Hinton, who
the Russians and lila\ he wiD be given six montha' grace to
- FREE Concepcion had three singles was waived last week, was
decide whether or not he wishes to stay in Canada. Wisely,
BEST SILLER
. •..£':..
Trudeau says be would not want Nemtsanov to grow homesick
and drove in three runs and not claimed by any other
..
.....................
.
.
In a few months and find out he burn!!(i aU his bridges behind
Jack Billingham evened his major league team Tuesday.
-·"'"""""'...............
......
..........""
.. "'"' ..... ' ,.. ·....""''"'"'·""I'
.,,, ........
Hinton, a&lt;;&lt;~uiredln an off·
"We expect that Fred Lynn have ~&gt;!?come disillusioned record at 9-9 with a three-.
. blm.
.
' ,• '
DETROIT .. (UPI) - Rick
These stories abuut him defecting because he's in love with Burleson and Carlton Fisk ' will !~~so agree to terms this year. II the fans were hitter.
season trade from the
,,..._tt&lt;l&lt;ll'..
lo&lt;lfttl ..
,,.,.. 1&gt;'11 ,._.,.,.. '""
In other games, New York Chicago While , Sox, had
an American millionaire's daughter are nonsense also.
finally agreed to new within the next few days," booing me because of my
"''""'"""."""'"'l
!I"''"' ll.&lt;f""""'"fl"'''l«lyOIO"""'d
)..-.. t•"""'"-""'•
Sergei Nemlsanov loves life and loves to be free. He wants to contracts and the Boston Red O'Connell said.
play, it probably wouldn't outlasted Montreal, 9-8, compiled a 1-2 record In 12
h""k••
.,...,,O&lt;J ..,.,,..,.
move around, go where he like!! and See wbatever he cbooS~;s. . Sox hope Fred Lynn will be · LyM, Burleson and Fisk bother me, But they're on us Atlanta downed San Diego, 7- appearances with the Reds.
T'IOC O
HIIOlRI , lll.i.
That's why he did what he did: He bas nothing against tbe next
He had a 7. 50 earned run
stalwarts in Boston's.drive to because of the contract.......
'"''".'""'~- ··~··" ...
'~~
... eo--... ,..
Russians. He merely wants to try the other system, that's all.
Bo'ston GenerBI Manager the American League cbam- dispute."
_ .. , ... r...&gt;I•O'OUI-/'"''"""
..
average.
.
tEO
~[~I
AOTA!\Y
CO
IOirA~,
~Oft
Hinton
was
replaced
on
the
"He's a super kid," line U.S. girl diver told me on tile way to Dick O'Connell announced pionshlp last year- had been
"I'm glad it's over with ,'
(
'ro
Reds' roster by righthanded
Dorval Airport ou.tslde Montreal. "We aU know him and tile two agreements Tuesday playing without contracts Fisk said of his contract
......... '".
. ... . • • ,,
everybody likes him. 'He's lull of life and he enjoyed being and tl)ey were confii'llled by since the current season negotiations.
reliever Manny Sarmiento,
.....
......
" ..... ............ ......
around the girls (during the Olympics), but he didn 't spend all Jerry Kapstein attorney for began. Various trade rumors
•:.or..• __.,.
Burleson said be was satis22, a native of Aragua,
HUU! ,,.:,..,.-,.,._ ; , ,,...,,,_..,
Venezuela, who had an 11-6
hla tiD!e wltll any on,e ~leular chick. I don't believe be ~ three pla;ers. Neither developed as the . season fied. "At least I know where
CINCII\'NATI l UPI) - A record with six saves and a
defected beca- ol any one glti. He did It because he had a would disclose terms, saying progressed and the Red Sox I'm going to be for a couple of
INGElS FURNITURE
FA!. Till
taste of this kind of life and be wants to see If be likes it. Is only they were "multiyear slumped badly.
years. I'd ra\ber play for the divorce suit bas been filed by 2.8S ERA In 42 games, aU in
Middleport
relief, with Indianapolis this
All three - but especially Red Sox than any other team Johnny Bench , who disciosed
there anything wron~ willt' that?"
., , ,
contracts." .
before the start of the season.
Not at all.
,
· . "
However, catcher Fisk's Fislt - became the target of . In baseball."
baseball season that his
Manager
Don
Zimmer
said
contract was expected to be booillg by fans in Boston's
marriage to Vickie Chesser
he
was
"
happy
for
for five years, averaging Fenway Park: Lynn said it
was breaking up after one
$150,000 a year. Shortstop bas bothered him and he was everybody."
NOW AT
"It will help the club right year.
· Burleson's was for an not as definite as O'Connell
Attorneys
for
the
about whether he was close to now on the field,'' Zimmer
estimated $80,000 a year.
said, "ll has to help the front Cincinnati Reds catcher filed
The actual signlngs were signing.
office
In formulating plans a four paragraph suit in
"Money-wise
we're
pretty
set f..- today in Detroit,,
for
next
winter's meetings Hamilton County Common
close,"
Lynn
said
of,
his
where the Red Sox play the
Pleas Court complaining of
con tract negotiations, "but I and tbe expansion draft."
Tigers tonight.
"gross neglect of duty" on the
part of Vickie, a native of Mt.
Pleasant, S.C. and now a New
By FRED DOWN
hits to the Royals' 16-hit
York City model. ·
UPI Sports Writer
attack and raised his leagueBesil\es seeking a divorce
Despite the fact that Hal lea&lt;ling average to .354.
LEXINGTON, Ohio (UPI) have a chance to defend his gels under way on the decree, the suit also asks the
McRae, the Kansas City
winding, 2. 4-ntile course.
New York defealed Detroit, -England's Brian Redman, crown.
court to make a ruling on
Royals' designated hitter, 4-3, California beat Teus, 4- knowing all to well that he's
Mid-Ohio wiD also feature property rights.
"The situation is serious
bas been suffering wilh a 0,
Milwaukee topped In one of tile most ·crucial with only three races left," the Bosch VW Gold Cup and
The two were married here
variety of injuries all season, Baltimore, 4-2, and Oakland situations of his Fonnula &amp;000 the defending Mld.Qhlo VW Sirocco Cup. Finals In all Feb: 21, 1975, less than two
be Is hitting .351 and Tuesday do~med Chicago, 7-3, iD tbe career, faces the grim champion said after practice three races will be Sunday . months after they met, with
night sparked lhe Royals' to other American League prospect of losing his F-5000 Tuesday. "We're going to
Others enteted include two- 1,000 persons Invited to the
their biggest r~n-scoring gam~s.
time
Indianapolis 500 wedding at huge Christ
have
to
run
as
hard
as
we
can
tiUe if he doesn't will his next
·outburst since July 18, Yankee~~ 4, Tigers 3:
champion
AI Unser, corrent Church and an elaborate
to win this race.
three races.
driving in two runs with a
series
leader
Alan Jones of reception at the swank
"There are no tactics this
Acrowd of 44,909at Yankee
Redman bas dominated the
double and a homer to lead Stadium saw two-run homers Formula 5000 auto-racing time. We'D be running lor a Australia , former Can-Am Netherland Hilton hotel.
Kaitsas City to a 7-1 victory by Roy White and Oscar ·series but ·now finda himself strong finiSh, and all we can champion Jackie Oliver of Bench revealed the breakup
over the Minnesota Twins. Gamble give New York its ill fourth place going into do Is our very best to win the England and former drag of the marriage at the start of
· The victory gave the victory over rookie sensation Mid-Ohio Sports Car Cow-se race," he said.
racer Danny Ongais of spring training this year.
Royals a 91&gt;-game lead over Mark Fidrych (11-4) and competition this weekend. He
Redman
has
been Hawaii.
the second.place Twins in the Detroit. White's homer lied must gatD three victories in practicing with the old Lola
American League's Western the score at 2-2 in the third the final tllree races to even T332C and his new Lola T430.
Reg .
Divlllon.
Which car he drives may not
inning and Gamble's gave the
$4.99
"Getting McRae back ln Yankees their victory margin
be
determined
until
NEW SUPER
G;~llon
the lineup really seems to in the seventh.
Saturday's qualifying.
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio
lllilke us go," commented Indians I, Red Sox 0:
"We've done very little
POLYESTER CORD-78 SERIES
Marty Pattill, who went eight
Dennis Eckersley pitched a (UPI) - Jack P. Taylor, who preliminary testing on the
Innings 1o earn his fo~ tllree,hitter for his sevenlll Tuesday was named.superin- 430," said Redman. "ll's
FULL 4 PLY
tendent
of
the
Shaker
Heights
victory.
shown
a
certain
degree
of
win and got the game's only
~ -- 1 '
George Brett added lhree run in tbe bottom of tile lOth school system, will be paid promise, but we're stlll
WHITEWALL TUBELESS
Reg .
~
when pinch-hitter Tommy $44,000 aMually, accor&lt;ling to having some 'new car'
$1.79
\IALL PAINT
Smith's sacrifice fly drove in Ute school board.
problems.
Quarts
For nine years, Taylor, 45,
Goes On
"The 430 handles very
I IIIII I 111 111 1f!ll11'1' '
Ron Pruitt. Luis Tiant shut
·Easily .
out Cleveland for tile first has been superintendent of well,'' be said, "and it's more
nine innings but was not Saginaw, Mich., schools. He forgiving than the 332, but
Involved iD the decision which succeeds Jolul Lawson, who stiU, tlle332 Is a proven car
Dries quickly .
went against reliever Tom resigned to b.ead the and I really like it."
Lexington, Mass., school
Redman won the series
Plus F.E.T. From
Murphy.
system.
opener
b'!t
managed
only
an
The Pomeroy Youth Allgels f, RaQgen ''
12.39 to 12.55
Rookie Paul Hartzell
eighth-place liilisiJ In tbe
BasebaU League will have a
second event and a third in
-8Wirnrnillg party and picnic pitched a four-hitter and
&amp;Old Casing
Wednesday, Augast 11, at Tommy Davis drove in two fifth loss against lour tile next.
' Reg. $5.99
Reg . $2.29
His record at Mid.(lhio has •
~al Oak,Park at 6 p.m. for runs lor California, which triumphs for Baltimore.
F78x14
G78x14
.
Gallons
A's
7,
White
Sox
3:
been
one
of
the
most
handed
Texas'
Jim
·
Quarts
au mambers of lhe League,
The A's Btlapped a live- outstan&lt;ling of any driver. He
T-Ball, Pee Wee Lillie Umblrger lila ninth losa.
Mounted &amp; Balanced
game
losing streak as Bill finished second ill 1978 and
Rusty
Ta-res
added
~
solo
League, and Pony League,
homer to the Angels' ll·hi\ North went 3-for-6 and scored won in 1974 and 1975.
and their famllles.
"Some tracks we always do
Hot dop and beverage will attack. The victory raiaed three runs to lead a 13-bit
attack
which
dealt
exwell at, like Mid-Ohio," said
be fumllhecJ by lhe League. Hartzell's record to 3-2.
Oakland pitcher John Odom Redman. "It's · a difficult
Each f8111ily Is asked to bring Ill ewers 4, Orioles Z:
George Scott hit two run· . his first loss for the White track with 15 turns, but for
a covered disll and Its o1m
scoring
singles, Including one Sox. Dick Bo11111an allowed some reason, I seem to be
table lei"Vlce. There wiD be a
that
drove
In the go-ahead three runs and five hits in live able to get inlo the rhythm of
50 centa lee to swim.
run
in
tile
fifth
Inning, u MU· innings but received credit It and do well."
UnlfOfiiUI are to be turned 1~
John F. Fullz, Manager
He and .23 other drivers wiD
1t tile picnic, and •· short waukee's Ed Rodriguez went for his fourth win without a
10111
with
the
relief
help
of
Ohio
be oo hand lor quallflers
992-2101
Pomeroy
bullnel8 meeting wiD be held the &lt;listance with a nine-hitter
Paul
Lindblad
and
Rollle
Saturday when Valvollne
for a financial report and for his fourth win. n~ss
Fingers.
Grlmsiey
was
tagged
with
his
Buckeye Cup competition
election or officers.

Sport Parade

"'

MOORE'S

•

KC's 7-1 wm

Redman ·close to losing

Complete Closeout of
All Star Paint
All Star Latex

GOODYEAR

r-

Picnic planned
by youth loop

$2495

1.35

All Star Satin Enamel
4"

FREE

Meigs Tire Center Inc.

1"

�..

..

Reds one of greatest ieams··RigneY

'
•'
"•
••...

•. l .l

TOM TIEDE
.

'

Editorial comment,
opinion, feature~

Diplomats abandon our first obligation

......'

.......

.....

than for ita traveling dtbena:~
In some cuea; U.S. offtdalao
aclually conspire with other

electric
shock),
the
By Tom Tiedt
caught wilh Mary Jane have sldered by tbe Bratilian missionary was rel~ased
WASHINGTON - Suppo!;e been larfured . The siluaUon- ·government to be a radical, lhrouglllhe efforts of the new
Paleslinian ter rorists is an international scandal, and when he got word of his Clillll'!el. M&lt;rris says the ~ naUons against Amerlcalllilo •
imminent arrest be visited a
JSo-c&gt;-&lt;&gt;oe&gt;&lt;&gt;n-"'Oo.o&gt;o"""::..C::N""'?'&lt;',._..&gt;-r""&lt;:~&gt;.o""'"&lt;:.....,..,....O"oQ..,C..P hijacked a planeload of · dirty delails ha&gt;-e becUne
trouble. The wlllppers Ia the
counsel lllUlled Carl Scbutl. man saved his life, hut adds
cars,
people.
woiiiii
be
unable
to
puwiase
Americans
and
diverled
it
to
legend,
yet
U.S.
aulhorilies
prisons oflell get
Installment hu.xmg ,...,. becOme such an
'"What will you do if they try that his good f..-tune was Bra!illan
other
prOducts.
Still
others
condemned
the
Uganda
will\
threats,
have
done
virlually
nothing.
their
"law
enforcement"..:
accepted way of economic life for
to arrest me!" he asked the mere happenstance : "I was
practice
from
a
moral
standpoint.
humiliation
and
tribute•
ActuaDy,
the
gO\~!
training
from
jOlly U~:
AmericallS that many may lind it difficult to
diplomat. The reply: not saved by U.S. poUcy, I
"Ins~ent
buying
..urging
lhe
poor
Would
lhe
Uniled
Slates,
as
·
has
been
worse
than
Smn.
~
believe the extent of the controVersy that
" ottlng," Manis was a was saved only by .the
into
debt
is
lhe
vilest
system
yet
devised
to
&lt;lid
Israel.
risk
its
blood
and
negligent
in
Melico.
In
sane
What
if
Americans
--.,
raged over the queslion in lhe early decade!
goodness of one U.S.
create trouble, discontent and unhappiness foreign relations to sa\-e its instances, 8cCClrding to Slate man without a country.
of Ule century, especially in lhe area of
dipl..-nal
Left to lhe poUcy, I hijacked to Uganda? UnlestJ
Eventually the United
among
the
po..-,"
said
one
corporation
people'
Department
officer
Andy
auloolobile financing .
think I would have been we could buy tbem blct !bey
president.
l1!ose who trunk Sll may go An lip pas, it bas been States did help Morris. dead ."
would most Ukely be tilled·•
The story is told in a recent book, "FUll
" When deferred payment schemes to the rear of ·lhe e~ and inhuman:"We know of cases Before he was ai'!'tSied the
Faith and Credit," by William L. Wilson, a
That policy , in essence, ts with weapons made _ID''
· U.S. counsel Was changed . So
encourage
extravaganct
and
excessive
weep
lor
days
gone
by.
wbereoureounselshavebetn
corporate biography of C.I.T.' .Financial
after 1111 hoW's of torture thai lbe government cares Oklahoma. Money we have;
m..-tgaging
of
future
inCome
for
immediate
~
it
was
an
article
of
tn
the
neat
room
while
Corp., one of the nation's lea&lt;ling finar.cial
(o;pikes M lhe bad&lt;, beating, more for its foreign rela_Uons what we don't have ii.
satisfaclions
thai
are
neither
necessary
nor
faith
in
the
nation
that
A!nericans
rete
being
larwhatever else It takes.
••
services ..-ganilations.
important
to
prope.Uving,
lhey
are
a
social
citilens
mattered
above
lUred.
In
me
case.
and
I
Installment buying was not a new Idea
as well as an economic dang&lt;:",'' said acytlling elSe. The thinking won't say ~. OW' man
when C.I.T. and its eompeUtors began .
'" '
another critic.
was that QOne of us Is inn- could hear a beating laking
JI'OIDOting the time-purchase of private
Despite such outcries installment portant if one of us i.sn"l. Place m tbe -oth« side of an
' ...·~ .
molar cars after World War I. C.I.:r. had
buying
found
growing
~lance
and
·
When
~Jrt&gt;ary.
pirates
open
dOiir.
A
guard
was
lhere
been founded by Henry ltUeson in 1908 and
popularity among the pubUc throughout the. shelled Americans dvilian witll a l"fli*d smile, and our
people had long been accu.larned to paying
..,.,
19215. Interestingly enough, one of its out- . stlips, '!'om Jefferson sent lbe guy was Jfnid to do
lor such things as encyclopedias, furniture
standing supporters was President Calvin navy to Tripoli to retaliate, a11Yihinll·"
and vacuum cleaners oo the installment
Coolidi!e. that epila:ne of conservatism and 'll'her1 sa:ne fe_w sail&lt;n ~e
Fear is not the usual
plan.
ftugatily.whocaUedita
'"sound"
practice.
roughed
up
m
a
Mex~ean
elemeflt
behind the reliX'But when it came to autmnobiles, lbe
"EJ~on
of
a-edit
to
the
indi'~dual
~aport
,
Woodrow
Wilson
lance
of
the
~ovemment to
aroused strenuous opposition from 8
'''"
wx1er
proper
safeguards
is
just
as
;shelled
Vera
Cruz
until
the
aid
its
citizens
abroat'l. Ollen
host of adversaries, W'tlsoo notes - from ·
""
legilirriate as extension of credit IDa ror- residents ~ IKBsled tbe itisamatteroflegalities. For
economists, editorial writers, CO!ISlllller
'"'
poration ," argued IUleson . "'The iri- American !lag and ext'I'Cised instance there are laws
spollesmen and, swt&gt;risingly, fr\lm the
staDment plan has Ml · only taught the. further
peni.ten~ . by forbidding government
majOrity of automanulaci\D'ei'S themselves.
• l
'
American
tbrift,
but
has
gi\"e!l
blm
a
new
Vlg&lt;rously
saluting
I~ Then, representatives from '
••Before I pennll one of my automobiles
. ~.. '. . I
interest in his persooaJ ~ppearance and in there was Teddy Roosevelt. providing even small
to be sold on installment credit, I will see
his home, lie has beulnre, in-sbort., lbe best Wilen a Moroccan bandit amountS of financial belp to
••
this company in receivership!" wwed
cus1aner
in
the
....,.Jd."
Illlmed
RaiSuli
kidtlapped
an
Yants
in
need.
A
few
Olarles W. Nash. fowxler of Nasb MoiDrs.
Americans continue w be lhe best AmeMean traveler named privileged Yanks can gel
"Debt has become a naliorUII industry ,"
custiJiilers
iD lhe world if the growt11 of the Perdicarl s, T. R. had an help. ~ is a flm! in most
Henry Ford complained in 1926. "That is
finance
uidustry
is a ~ .. C.l.T. reter!liy ·immediate solutlonc "Per· embassies 1o assist trareling
'
bad business f..- lhe debt« and bad business
celebraled
.lbe
openl11g
of Its l,OOOib Nrrlb dicarisalh•e," be roared , "or rcongressm&lt;!ll throw 0\'e!'Se&amp;S
for the credit« also." HiHOIDpaDf, be said,
Americanlranchof'liceinPainesville, Obio. Raisuti dead~" You can be pa~es. FUr everyqne else,
woUld slick to a stricUy cash poUcy. ( Only
The warnings of tile wiy "'l'PPO"'lts of ·sure the victinn '!l'as released lbough, the &lt;:'nltcb is not ,
tWo yean later, however, F...-d eslabl.islled
installment bu)ing aboQt the danger to the soan after .
anilable. Some.. ~
its own automobile financing subsi&lt;liary .1
moral
fiber
&lt;11:
Americans
or
rof
a
'\day
of
Today?
mericans
abrload
have been sent from emSome car makers foresaw a tidal wave of
reckaniilg"
did
not
0001e
true,
even
dW'ing
h.a
-.e
become
Americans
.
bassies
ID go ~ in tile
defaults if "every Tom, Diek and !!arTy"
Ule
~on
.
Ainer1cans
have
learned
to
alooe.
When
they
get
rntn
streets
to
survive .
.was allowed ID buy a car, !llllicb would
manage
lli!I
ID
usoq•er,S&lt;mal
delihrisely,
and
trouble
.tl'lejr
,g
overmnent
is
E\1
en
.
wrse
than the
Wmp enonDOUS nUmbers . of diStressed
in
so
doing
ba~e
crea'led
falbemseh-es
the
~
'l'iibotit
pl
ty.
In
Mexico,
streets,
is
being
,
s
ent
fr&lt;ln an
vehicles on the market ID be resold in
higbest
standard
of
living
ln
i11Je
w&lt;rld
a
f(l'
instance,
more
1han
'
6
00
embassies
1o
foreign
prisons.
competition with new carJ. Other
testament
tn
lhe
Visioo
of
credit
pioneers
Americans
ar&lt;e
being
held
in
Fred
M..-ris,
a
Methodist
b u s i - feared that will! so much
like Henry It:tleson.
·
&lt;lungeCI!IS and prisons liDder missitllat)• 'IIOW worling iD
CllllSWI'Ier income commitled to paying for
some of the m0$1 'barbaric Wasbington, says he once

..

mea

..

.

,.

..

Q '"

oonditions &lt;If this century in
this hemisphere. Peqple

Veterans of Ohio '37th' plan reunion
Veterans of WW I, WW ll
and the Korean Olnflict oflhe
famous 37th " jluckeye"
Divilim of the Slate of Obio,
~rill (Gille

togeth« for lhe
51111 year !OliO to relwll ilheir

arrested for lriffic •Dffenses
have been beaten. &lt;Kids

forml!r war ezperiences.
Ibis }'e8t' s &lt;ant!ual reunion
These vel&lt;!rans are as dose will be In y oungstaa'n, 'Lab&lt;l'or doser Ulan many families. day Weekend, September S
Old soldiers never di~ tbey throug·h Ute ~th, wilb

just

keep

going

'ID

" REUNI.ONS.H

beadqu,aJi&lt;r~ # t

spent lour days in a ·llral:ilian
l ockup ·because lhe U. S.
COUl1!llil thmo refused to in-

len'ene. M&lt;rris was ron-

Meigs 4-H Club News

lhdl.ohclliy

Inn Nirlll ~ · otel, located at
Ute inl&lt;!r.section of l-«1 and

The Rulland I..ucg Stars 4H club .me1 on July %1 ai 1he
Weber ·borne. 'The •number ,of

in .attendance and ten club
-members. Tbe i terns -of
S.it 111:1. For mo~e
business dis(,ussed 'Wete
· ·advisorS in attendanoe was 'booth dec&lt;raboos, a hayride
forffialioo Clllltacl lhe
Division
Vetcera.n s two aDd l.he number· of and projects. A demon- : - - - - : . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - Association, .~;:; S. Front members Sx. Volleyball was stratim •as ,giW!Il by IIRnda
Street, 8llWI W , Colwnbus, played lOr rcecreation. Calawaym acrylie painting.
Ohio U21.5, l'!lorle: Colum- RefreSbments wen! P"'"ilied Recl'e.ation ns played and
bus, Ohio 2:28-3188.
'!If lhe whole club and oao- n'beSinnellt5"'""' 'sen&gt;edby
sisled &lt;Of root beer lioats. Lori Robinson. - Lori
Araka Grate, Reporler _
R&lt;tlinson, Reporler.
The Uberty Belles HI club
The Su&lt;Wams 4-8 club
met oo Jtme 30 at lhe bwne of beld a meeting oo July i5 at
Mrs. 8utdler. There was ooe ihebomeofBeUIRildlie.Ooe
allvis!lr in .attendanee and adviJor was in attenda,.,..
elgllt club members. A iind eigb1 club mrmbers. A
discussiOD of tile ~ raffle discussion of clothing

,
World
·
r
y
s
Ber

rn-

m

Torch nmners
stopping at .

Krodel Park
I'OIIIiT P!EA.SMI''T - A
total of 183 runner:s, 63
marines and 40 d.tlians,
carrying the Olympic torcb
!ram M.oolreal to an

~

oame in the National Track &amp;

"It gets so hot here in Wuhington during the
summer you'd think the congressman would
have air-conditioning."

DR. LAMB

wsa held lll!l ins1ructiODs (I[J

filling wt pn~jeet boots '11'e!'e
given. IlfmoostraliGOS were
gJ\'e!! bj• Sbeila Hooky and
Pbyllis [)avis on bow lo make

jambalaya. RefreJ:bments
were served by Shiela Hlrky
and l'byllis Davis. - andy
Crooks, Repllrter.

The Harrisomille Hooor
Boys held a meeting oo July
19 at Forest Aires Park.. Tiro

Field Beadqua.rters in
Olarleston, will pass tlJrough
advisors were in allendanoe
here Friday.
Rwlnen aie eipeCI8I Lo and eleven club members. A
arrive in Point Pleasant at discussioo o{ king and queen
Krodel Park to talk brielll' can&lt;lida tes and judging ns
with the runners or to run held. Bwt.an and yard ~!arts
along with lbem. They will ftf'1! played for •reaeatim.
arrive here frml Ravens- Tte members and tlleir
wood enroute to Huntington. families eoJol'ed a pialic
There will be refresiUOo!llts supper witll each bringillg
lor the sii rumefll wllen they covered dishes. The next
arrive. The public is ID'ged to meeting will be beld on
be 011 band to welcoore lbem. August 2 at 7:30 p.m. Danny Riggs, Repor~.
The Alfred Angels f.H club
· held a meeting 011 July 'l1 at
tbe borne of Dorothy
Calaway. Two advis..-5 were

She's guilty about eating
11J Law• me E. LaliJII, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am a
n.,.ear.&lt;Jid girl with an eatq
problem. I am ao wel&amp;ht
COIIIci11111 I t'all'l
eat a
.-1 without feeling guilty.
About two yean ago I
~ fclrclng my.lf lo
'IIIDit .lfta" I'd onreaten.
N01r 1111 a recuJar bablt, but
- I dm't have to force it.
Beea• ofllil I either 10
111 a llanation diet or eat

...-nr

almGit CCilllinaally and then
lbrolr up. I feel ike I have a

dattiJie pil'lililllllJ - 111e that
~ ...t I bed llinll'm
dalitc toiiiJ'body and one that
Ia c•plelely ~enaelea,
'IP""•'IJ wbere foocl Ia
II.
Sow I bave -.,lllil frllin
- . - . Bat I redle I - '
tiD • ll!lic - · I hope J'GU
wllbelllltlold me or_.
... ....._ tohllp. 1'111 nat
,.. a 'Jit' •• llll!ll llbly
t •.• 'I I.
DEAl RIADP
You
. 1ttn11 llllliPilll )Oiiielf lnlo a
Cllllldltlll ..

.

'*' -w

'

nervoilus. This, or a variant
of 1be problem, is common in
YOUIIC girls who become
ot
aed with the idea' of
being slim, or downright
emaciated. That is a
refleciion of our limes and
Ideas about beauty. Venus
was a iuU bo&lt;lied woman, not
a Twiggy, according to
mythology.
'
Vllllillng after eating is not
new. Tile Romans did It after
overeating - durlnl a
Roman orgy. They then
returned to lhe banquet to
gorge themleJYI!I further .
There are two main
qen in the ..-actlce. You
can lear Ule lower ,.n of the
eaophagus with rorcelul
vomiting, caulng ~evere
bemorrbage that may
-nqulruu11ery. And you can
dnelop malnutrition. Tbe
119ere repeated Instances of
starvation or v01111Ung
._t~q Ia e&amp;C
ht welghl
1G1a II .-ala ...., ,,..,
Once lbe •lluallon 111&amp;

control o( a person it is dlf.
ficult to correct it. You wiD
need profl!llllional help. By
lhall mean Ule guidance of a
!IIYcbiatrist. The e;motional
factors ill your eating and
vlllliting hablta are very
important and are no doubt
the key to your problem. I
would like for you to know
bow ID diet properly ao you
can establish a well balanced
diet for yourself and eat lbe
amount of calories you need
to maintaiD a JIMIIIf!l" weight.
F'll' tl!at pui"JJIR I am aending you Tile Health Leiter
llllll!ber 4-7, Weight lAsing
Diet. Others who want basic
iltorma1i011 on bow ID lsoe
weight safely can send a long,
atam peel, self-addressed
envelope willl 50 cents for it.
Send your letter tome in 'care
of u\is roewspaper, P. 0. Box
1561, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Starvation diets, crash
dieta and hablls such as you
have developed can lead lu
aeriOUI ~ell ill, Ute body.

•

Tbere may be a significan\
11168 of vital muscle mass
from the body. Growth and
feeling of well being can be
adversely affected. Crab
diels can also lead to lOSl! of
h8ir. The hair on the head
· may faU out in large amounts
leading to temp..-~ beldness. It may take several
months to start regrowing a
n..-mal bead of hair af~ Ule
diet problems are corrected . .
Such dieting practices can
aerlously aHectlhe endocrine
!uncU111.1 of lhe body . Y~
women may lose their normal
menstrual cycles. Men may
become impOtent or loae their
normal sex drive. Personallly changes are common. The 10011e llidn, personality changes, loaa of hair
and strengtll aU reaemble
premature aging. That Ia a
high cost to pay beca- a
persoo will now foll01r a slow
sure sensible way of
eliminating ubesity · or
preventing it

,. ,,
''Whaddya mean -am 1 pledged to Ford, Reagan or still ~~·:
· uncommitted?"
.
-:-

the Collins letter
COLUMBUS - Sena'I.Dr
Oatley c. Collins ( R-lrmtoo)
today praised tbe llltb
General Assembly's adlons
in .passing m..-e legislation ID
belp Ohio's elderly citizens
Ulan during any other

Aging.

nt O

-

"'"

.,,;.

In its attempt to deal with;:
those acute problems of
1,0011;000 fplus) senior
everyday Uving, lhe lllth
citir.ens face are acute,"
General Assembly enacled _.
jRjecls IIF85 beld. Members Senator Collins stated. "We
into law bills that will: ,.:'l
p(-epared ltaliall dimes from must mow our seniors the
(op~onal)
••
their loternaaonal Foocb kind o{ potallial IIIey QiU aperienre."
Prohibit
wage
boob. Swat was played for ha\"e .and help them utilir.e
During the ISTh-76 bien· discrimination on the Pasis of
rea-eaUoo and llle 1lle1llberi thi.s potential. ·Goyermneut niwn, the · Ohio General age and will eliminate ,. made tbeir own refresh- can play a part by enacting Assembly allocated more rnandalory retirement.
~=
meats. - Betll Ritchie, legislation lba( wiU belp slate lwlda for the aging
Eliminate
age ~
Reporter.
lll!lli~ dlizens will! financial program in the biennial
discrimination in granting of
Tbe LibertJ Belles 4-8 club problems and prol'ide lbem budget, with an additional $1 credit
held a oieeting on July '11 at witll opportunities to remain million lo be used lor
- Prohibit the tennlnaUon
the bonae of Yrs. Butdwr. ad.ive."
assistance to independent of converted group health
Tiro ad"-s and nine club
Problems confronting living programs for the insw:ance policies on the •\•
:c-:1.
membenwereinallendance. Ohio'uenilll" cilizerui (those eldelly,theOhioCommisslon basis of age
llems of "'Kin r diiCUSSed ~yearsofageandolder) are on Aging (OCOA) reported.
- Establish a nursing :~ll
awe judging, steer raffle not new. Senator Collins
Senal« Collins attributes homeadvisorycolllllliSsion to '"~
tickets, projects and filling identifies ·the most crud.al the legislators' increased study the operation and '' '"'
out project boob. Demon- problema facing Ohio's activity In senior citizens regulation of nursing homes ; ~rl
stralillns w~e give~~ by Bulb elderly as being: income, aHair! to tile establislunent and to make annual :;;:.;
AnnlliakeandLynnF.wJeon bowing, bealdt ~e. em· of the OCOA which was recommendations to the '""'
preparing JICI'ambled egg, ployment , nutrition and crealed by the legislature In legislature about nursing ''."?
and 'baeoo, Hot potato 1Jas. tr311Sp(lt1ation.
1973 to oversee the ad· home needs and problems. " •;
played for recre11tiun.
"Retirement generales a ministraliOII of Benior citizen · - Require 2+11oiD' food ..•~b
Reireshmenla' _.., -aerved diminisiled '.ncome," said programs and lo specifically stamp certification under ".~
by Rnlll Ann Blake and Lynn Cplllns. "Inflation and identify those problem areas certain emergency conditions '"'"
Epple . - Cindy Crooks, catastrpphic illnesses for the legislature. The llllh
-Allow school boards to ' •
~lei-.
trequmUy destroy savings. General Assembly also provide meals at cost to ,.v:l
The Me~ County Beller
c1 tlzens
• : ~:
n..•- •u Oub met W/////////////////////$$//#///..;W///////##$//17/W//&amp;?'A senior
U _,.:_,
·--•..,.... 1 ...,
- Reduce fees lor eldelly ·~·~
oo July 211 at the blme of
at state recreaUons
'""I
~~~Tiler]'
meme
wberass-m
'
Mason
_ . County' N'
-Allow senior 'cltiiiens to '
.......... ..,., •
obtain permanent hunting ,:U
attendance. The members
and trappiDg licenses for a f4 ·~-=
dilcuaaed judging Holstein
lee
·••'
- Allow boards of '"""
cattle and going to Wooster to
judge cattle on AllgUil 13.
educaUon to lease I!Cbool ·;,:·.
Refreslu:nenls were terVed
MASON - The BWy Grabam lilm, "His Land," will be buses for transporting of by Mrs. Burt. The next ibown &amp;lnday e\'elllng. Aug. a at Muon Uniled Methodist senior citizens.
meeting wiD be August 3 at Ouclutlp.m.'lbeRev.RobertMarin&amp;pastoroftheehurcb
- Require stale unlver·
the. Philip Radf...-d Farm. ~ Slid, "U you have alwaya wanled to take a trip to the Holy silies and colleges to aUow
Kathy Parker, Reporter.
LandthlawillbeacbancetodoBO!noneevenlng."
senior citizens to attend ••~a
"j
classes on a non-tuition,
1be Maml Umted Metbodllt Women will have a potluck nocredit basis
.,
diJmer cm Mllnday, August 8 at Muon's Park.
- Extend the filing dale ( ' 1
and adjust income levels for
'
1M ..... ' . . , . .
1be
Rev.
Mrand
~- Robert Maring of Muon United the homestead exemption !or ' •
.nora ro n11
Methndlat Olurcb, Mn. Murl Megee, Mrs. Cedi Smith, and the. elderly
,.,,;(}
. . . . .,Of
•IIMAIIW;t,._.
Mn. Llndm Smltll, memben of the cburcll, attended a
- PrOvide property lax ,; ""
Olll'fR' L fA
ocmeri!IICe raUy at lluckbannon, Wednelday.
.... I 141
credits lor home lm· ::'.'1
_ , a UDd ··
provements
" :'~
Mr. and Mn. Ou1ll Mcilullel spent Friday and Saturday
- Exempt Social Security • "~
- ow. • ...,. • a a c...,r.,. tn Colqmbo• eariJ11 far their IPiir'.rlt!Jdren ir1111e their increases from Income for i-T
111 ' - " ............ ow. .....
jJII'I!i!tl, Mr. and Mn. J - LD,.t, Mr. and Mn. Stan homestead exemption pur· ,• ..1
......
OfHuo
.....
""'""·
Saanden
altended the Redl' game bt ClodlJI!Itl.
poses
!:;::.c
.....w ..... WJ..111J.
From C'Mtmb1•, the McDinlela and the Loyds weat to the
- Provide property tu "!
lalter'a ~ at Ni!llbpoot. On Sunday, Mr. and Mn. CUrtis relief for the aenlor citiZens to '' -1
......... , , , , .....
Ia
.... . ....... c.-,-,. 1M.. .... McDaniel, Mrs. J - Lo)od, 1011 Kevin, vlllled Roscoe help ~m retain owneralllp of "":3
,....._. • .,, . .....
VIllage itt ColllociCII, Oblo.
,
their homes alter retirement ., a
,
I '
..... ,.._ •lua;a4
- Reform the probate code .:.:.:1
_,._
Mrs. Harold Sclnran bas returned~ after vlsltiDg her dealing with estates and C!
"'',
_..._ dal!flhter and 1011-ln-ln, Mr. and Mn. Danny Strother and surviving SJlOIISell
" " ')
.us. ., .... "'oe. ..... 'le., 0.. 1011, Todd at Lcuilvllle, Ky•
Authorize
counties
and
'
'•
· -· l t l - ... - - . 111..11: . . .
_..... ....... ' ..... .-r.
townships
to
contribute
""'i
... _.. ...... ..,......._.u•. Mn. se.aley Saundn IIIII cblltha of l»lumbua will monies to local aenlor citizen 1c:
,,
arrive ben m rue.Jiy to auend the MaiOi! County Fair. Her programs
. '"'·" ~ "
.-._ Marilyn Oenlae McDaniel, Pt. Fte.aat, II a candidate
- Allow cqunUea to !leil,
' - - - - , . . - - - - - - ' far MaiOi! Counly Fair Qaeea.
(Ca!Unued Cll pap 51 ~
legislative biennium.
''The p-001ems that Ohill's

r·I

I

""'0

0

I

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

-·-

..

m~

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

.........

--•

,..
~

.....,.~

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

afterwards . "He came out
and reminded ooce during tbe
fifth inning and It reaDy
helped me."
The Giants got two on In the
fifth, but Billingham got out
of trouble and was never

Archie to start
against Buffalo

again thratened.
Giants pilot Bill Rigney
called lhe Reds "one of tbe
fines! teams I have ever
seen" after they pasted his
team for 15 hits to make 1131
in two games.
"They are solid right
through tile order. They take
out lefthanded batters and
the rlghthanded batters lhey
put in are even better."
He referred In part to the
Cincinnati shorblop spot
where southpaw Doug Flynn
gave way 1\tesday ·night to
righthander Dave
Concepcion, who collected
lhree hits.
Ken Griffey also collected
three hits, scored two runs
and drove In two others.
Starter Mike Caldwell, still
winless this season,. gave up
the first five Cincinnati runs
on nine hits In four innings.
Dave Heaverlo tossed two
good ' innings, but Charlie
. Williams .came on and the
Reds resumed their heayy
stickwork .

AIR CONDmONER
VAlUE!

FEDDERS

Hinton sent to
Indianapolis

~

Bosox holdouts signed

ICEN TEIUi iAl AU,jAo.JioC

ews Notes

By Alma Marshall

"~

I

S?

~

@•&lt; ""'rOo! Sr.'&lt;'&lt; tl '" '""""
l&gt;f"""'''"IO-~~~~~·~
,,..,.··.•oo~'
bl;~­

1,.,.., pt&lt;C ...... ~""'

miH!Dt;.omo" '"'' lur ' ""

16

G~UI

W~UIHIU

I&gt;.&lt;L •&lt;C""" '"" '""''

1

Bench asking

o'"lplo.
'*1'0

I

"''"'""'"''

.- luo• ~..,~ ~
. """"""'

~-,..,

~'

for divorce

-r-~--

_

..... «
~

&lt;00 .... , ,.....,,.

.•

•

•

~·

~

. . . . . ...

OP~'hl

•

-- McRae hot m

.

._
____ ..

handed San Franctaco its
fourth loes ill a row iD a ~
thumpillg Tueaday night.
"Pitching CGich tarry She·
pard baa helped me by telling
me to relax," said Billingham

l'•n't-.&lt;~rob·•

a-eated two new committees,,.,
to deal specifically witll the.,,
problems of the eldeliy: lhe •••
Sena.te Committee on Health :,;,~
and Retirement and . the '""
House Sub-Committee on,,R,

physical and · financial bur·
den. Many of these individuals were never poor
unlil .IIley were forced .to
retire.
"Therefore, it is necessary
for Ule General Assembly ID
review lhe erilical needs of
its seni..- citizens and lo
enact legislation that will
help their retirement years
become a more positive

SAN FRANCISOO (UPil-,
Jack B~ ~ a
three-hit shutout and !hen
lhanked lila pltcblng coacb.
BIIUngbam breezed t.o tbe
wjn as mighty Clncil)nati

I

"

TransportaUon becomes a

3, Los Angeles blanked singled Davey LDpes home
Houston, 2-(1, Chicago spill a from second base twice and
double h e ad e r wIth Burt Hooton pitched a twO:
Philadelphia, winning the hitter to down Houston.
first, ~. and losing the Hooton rabed his record to 7By MILTON RlatMAN
second, 11-6, and Pltlsborgh II wltllhislirst win since July
UPI SporU Editor
split two. with St. Louis. fl. He allowed only two first·
winning the opener, 2-1, inning hits.
NEW YORK (UPi) - For a change, the Russians are telling
before dropping lhe nightcap, Cubl 4-5, Pblllles 0-1:
•
lite truth.
.
'
44.
'
Chicago's Rick Reuschel,
Only up to a point, though.
,,
12·8, pitched a nine-hit
-Alter that, they're lying in their teeth about Sergei NemtMell 9, ExpOs 8:
shutout and Wayne Tyrone
l!lllov, the 17-year-old Soviet diver who caused a much bigger
Ed Kranepool's eighth· hit his first major league
aplash out !If the pool than In It by defecting ill Montreal shortly
inning, two-run homer- the homer off Jim -Kaat, 10&lt;6, to
before !be Olympics ended.
100111
of 'his career-lifted give the Cubs their ftfth
Anatoly Kol{!80v, deputy chief of the Soviet Olympic delega.
New York over Montreal. straight win in the opener. In
tlan, aays "We always knew Sergei as a lively, happy person,".
Kranepool, tbe all-time Mets' the nightcap, Garry Maddox'
Heel! tile Ruasians are telling the truth because their affallle
home-run leader, blasted his giand-slam homer-&lt;~ recoroltden.aged diver Ia 110 friendly, he was on~ of the m011l popular
homer following a Felix tying seventh for Phllacompetitors ill the Olympics.
Millan stilgle.
delphia-supported the com·
He has an euy1relaxed way about him and isn't u)l!IJdlt at
Bra.ves 7, Padres 3:
blned six-lilt pitching of Steve
au among Amencana as other Russian athletes ane IIO!Tie· WILMINGTON, Ohio Johnson, who bas taken over complained, "It's too .quiet."
Cito Gaston, a former Carlton al!d Ron Reed as the
~. 'Jbe U. S. men and women divers all know young
"There's no crowd noise,''
(UPI) - After a sucee81hil for the retired Paul Brown.
Padre
who bad been to bat Phlllles,eamed a split.
Nemtaanov. He competed In thls country twice and beillg 110 pro debut, rookie Archie . · Burly tackle Rufus Mayes he lamented. "You don 't feel
only
40
times !or AUanta this Pirates Z.Z, Cardloals 1-4:
outgoing, be made friends eaally.
Griffin has won a starting hugged Johnson and lUted a part of things."
year, batted home five rullS _ Duffy Dyer stroked a
So when Soviet officials characterize him a~ lively and assignment for tile Cincinnati him off his feet after the final
The Bengals didn't "feel a
with home runs on each of his homer with two outs In the
happy, they're telling the truth. ·
.
gun.
part
of things" initially
Bensals' next preseason
first two at bats to give Andy bottom of the ninth inning to
From that point on, though, !be Russians' version of what game.
"It was his first head against the Packers Messersmith 11-9 and the give Pittsburgh a lirst.game
happened to Ne!Iltsanov in Montreal is composed of pure whole
The two-time Heisnan Tro- coachiDg assignment and I trailing 14-3 ·at halftime.
Braves ·a victory' over San victory and help Jim Rooker,
cloth, the fabric of which Is so thick, you can alm011t feel it with phy winner frOII) Ohio State just wanted him to Win,'' said
"We started slow but were
Diego.
who scatter~ six hill!, ralae
yoW' fingers.
will open at running back Mayes. "I know what it able to pick up the
Dodgers 2, Aslros 0:
h1s _record to 9-5, Don
What embarraasea the Russians 110 much is that Netsmanov, against the Buffalo Bills meant to blm."
mllJIIentum as we went along
Los An~eles' Bill Buckner Kessmger drove home four
u an Olympian, Is supposed to represent one of their model Saturday night in Cincinnati,
On a team so pre-eminent
Beamed guard Dave and 1 thought our final drive
runs wllll a double in the
youngsters and willl the glare of the world spotlight on him, says new head coach BID Lapham, "This game was was excellent,'' said JOhnson. the players must compete ,.,:;::·:·:·:-:::.:-:·:':·:·:·:-::::;.;.;.::::::::::::;:,:;:,:;.;:;:,.;.:.;. eighth and a single in the
what does be do but say ln effect he'd much rather be In "Tiger" Johnson."
ninth to give the Cardinals a
something special. 'Tiger' "We exercised good ball among themselves to reach
another country Ulan the U.S.S.R.
new
heights,
Ken
Griffey
Is
spilt
and enable reliever AI
runs
a
training
camp
that's
control
in
that
last
drive
and
TOMEET'U&gt;AM
Although not a starter in
That hurts.
currently
lea&lt;ling
tile
pack.
Hrabosky
to even his record
honest
and
straight..forward
that's
something
we're
EAST
MEIGS
"Meet
last weekend's :13-17 victory
From the Soviets' point of view, the best thing that possibly over lhe Green Bay Packers, and the guys like it.
The 28-year~ld Cincinnati
looking for ."
the Team" will be held at~could be done would be to pretend tile whole thing never Griffin came in and piled up
"He tells It like it Is on all
The Bengals scored the Reds' outfielder is lea&lt;ling the
Friday, Aug. &amp; at 8 p.m. at
happened. Sillce that waBII'I posalble because the defection 49 yarda rushing in 12 carries, iss~~ts, " continued Lapham. winning touchdown with just National League in batting
Eastern High Gym. The
was Immediately pub)lclzed by all the world's media, IIO!Tie scored a touchdolm, caught a "That's tile. kind of guy you 15 seconds remaining, with a .341 average.
11116 Eastern Eagle Varslty i
·other story had 1o be propagated.
Griffey showed San
and Reserve Football
couple oi passes and ran a like to work for, you know capping a ~yard, Ill-play
The RUSBians went lor an old one.
where you stand. I reaDy marl!h that consumed nine Francisco why is he one of the
teams under new coach 'Joe
kickoff baclt; 12 yarda.
"It Ia our opinion that Nemtsanov has been psychologically
brightest stars Tuesday
minutes.
Mitchum will be In·
"Actually we didn't plan on respect him."
braillwasb~ by highly trained specia~,'' proclainned
Chimed In defensive end · "Now we have to get ready hight. He stroked three hits,
traduced. Parents and
Archie playing so· much,"
Anatoly Kolesov.
·
said Johnson. "But he was K4m Johnson, '"The change In for BuHalo,'' said Johnson. scored two rt!llS and drove in friends of all players are
The Russians claimed their young diver was "kidnapped" doing so well we bated lo take coaching put pre8Sl!I"e on "The Bills have two fine two others to power
urged to attend.
Cincinnati
to
a
~
victory
by "gangsters."
everyone
to
make
us
look
quarterbacks
in
Joe
Refreshments will be
a guy's momentum away."
The Canadians ssid this was a crock of cold borscht, absolute · Said Griffin of his pro good. There's been a lot of Ferguson and Gary' Marangi over the Giants.
served by the cheerleaders
"The reason I'm bitting and athletic boosters.
nonsense, which, of course, It Is.
·
Bicentennial Special
debut, "I'm bappy, butlfeeii controversial things said and a couple of line runners
In my opinion, tile Canadian government exercised perfect .made a few too many about how the team would be ill Vic Wasbingtory and Jim well is because I get pitches ;
room air condilloner
judgement In refusing to tul'll over Nemtsanov to the Soviets . mistakes. I didn't expect to Paul Brown's first year Braxton and we'll have to battiDg between Rose and ·.;.:::::.:;::::::::::;.;::::::.:::::::;.:r::::::::::::;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;.;::·:·· 1
after the youngster said he &lt;lidn 't wish lo return to Russia. In pl8y that long."
Morgan ts a good place to
away . We're proving · it to find ways to stop tbetn."
this regard, tile Cana&lt;lians certaiDly come oH looking better
The Bills, who lost their be," Griffey said modestly.
Although the win over tbe . ourselves and to people.."
Griffey had two singles and
than we did ill that episode a few years ago where we turned Packers was only an
Brown, who contillues as first pre-season game 2()-17 to
back a would-be Soviet defector after he had scrambled exhibition victory, Griffin general ·manager alter · . the Detroit Lions, are without a triple. He scored one run
aboard one·of .our ships and asked for asylum.
runner
0 .J . and drove in another in the
and his teammates still coaching the Bengals through vaunted
Canada's Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau doesn't always looked at It as a successful their first eight seasons, Simpson, who Is not playing fifth inning, when Cincinnati
18,000 BTU's
win me over with all the things be says and does but I head coaching debut for watched his first . Bengals while demanding to be scored three runs and then
. CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
l1J17IJII'tifS·lH;Jr~·HfEA
tripled in the eighth, when the Cincinnati Reds have.
commend him wholeheartedly for his position with regard to
game from lhe press box and traded.
Reds scored four more.
returning Sergei Nemtsanov to the Soviets.
optioned relief pitcher Rich
only
Trudeau·says the teen-aged diver will not be turned over to
But Griffey was not the Hinton to their Indianapolis
&lt;...,_..;,..\ , • ..., .... _ ... , ,. ...
· only star for the Reda. Dave . farm team after Hinton, who
the Russians and lila\ he wiD be given six montha' grace to
- FREE Concepcion had three singles was waived last week, was
decide whether or not he wishes to stay in Canada. Wisely,
BEST SILLER
. •..£':..
Trudeau says be would not want Nemtsanov to grow homesick
and drove in three runs and not claimed by any other
..
.....................
.
.
In a few months and find out he burn!!(i aU his bridges behind
Jack Billingham evened his major league team Tuesday.
-·"'"""""'...............
......
..........""
.. "'"' ..... ' ,.. ·....""''"'"'·""I'
.,,, ........
Hinton, a&lt;;&lt;~uiredln an off·
"We expect that Fred Lynn have ~&gt;!?come disillusioned record at 9-9 with a three-.
. blm.
.
' ,• '
DETROIT .. (UPI) - Rick
These stories abuut him defecting because he's in love with Burleson and Carlton Fisk ' will !~~so agree to terms this year. II the fans were hitter.
season trade from the
,,..._tt&lt;l&lt;ll'..
lo&lt;lfttl ..
,,.,.. 1&gt;'11 ,._.,.,.. '""
In other games, New York Chicago While , Sox, had
an American millionaire's daughter are nonsense also.
finally agreed to new within the next few days," booing me because of my
"''""'"""."""'"'l
!I"''"' ll.&lt;f""""'"fl"'''l«lyOIO"""'d
)..-.. t•"""'"-""'•
Sergei Nemlsanov loves life and loves to be free. He wants to contracts and the Boston Red O'Connell said.
play, it probably wouldn't outlasted Montreal, 9-8, compiled a 1-2 record In 12
h""k••
.,...,,O&lt;J ..,.,,..,.
move around, go where he like!! and See wbatever he cbooS~;s. . Sox hope Fred Lynn will be · LyM, Burleson and Fisk bother me, But they're on us Atlanta downed San Diego, 7- appearances with the Reds.
T'IOC O
HIIOlRI , lll.i.
That's why he did what he did: He bas nothing against tbe next
He had a 7. 50 earned run
stalwarts in Boston's.drive to because of the contract.......
'"''".'""'~- ··~··" ...
'~~
... eo--... ,..
Russians. He merely wants to try the other system, that's all.
Bo'ston GenerBI Manager the American League cbam- dispute."
_ .. , ... r...&gt;I•O'OUI-/'"''"""
..
average.
.
tEO
~[~I
AOTA!\Y
CO
IOirA~,
~Oft
Hinton
was
replaced
on
the
"He's a super kid," line U.S. girl diver told me on tile way to Dick O'Connell announced pionshlp last year- had been
"I'm glad it's over with ,'
(
'ro
Reds' roster by righthanded
Dorval Airport ou.tslde Montreal. "We aU know him and tile two agreements Tuesday playing without contracts Fisk said of his contract
......... '".
. ... . • • ,,
everybody likes him. 'He's lull of life and he enjoyed being and tl)ey were confii'llled by since the current season negotiations.
reliever Manny Sarmiento,
.....
......
" ..... ............ ......
around the girls (during the Olympics), but he didn 't spend all Jerry Kapstein attorney for began. Various trade rumors
•:.or..• __.,.
Burleson said be was satis22, a native of Aragua,
HUU! ,,.:,..,.-,.,._ ; , ,,...,,,_..,
Venezuela, who had an 11-6
hla tiD!e wltll any on,e ~leular chick. I don't believe be ~ three pla;ers. Neither developed as the . season fied. "At least I know where
CINCII\'NATI l UPI) - A record with six saves and a
defected beca- ol any one glti. He did It because he had a would disclose terms, saying progressed and the Red Sox I'm going to be for a couple of
INGElS FURNITURE
FA!. Till
taste of this kind of life and be wants to see If be likes it. Is only they were "multiyear slumped badly.
years. I'd ra\ber play for the divorce suit bas been filed by 2.8S ERA In 42 games, aU in
Middleport
relief, with Indianapolis this
All three - but especially Red Sox than any other team Johnny Bench , who disciosed
there anything wron~ willt' that?"
., , ,
contracts." .
before the start of the season.
Not at all.
,
· . "
However, catcher Fisk's Fislt - became the target of . In baseball."
baseball season that his
Manager
Don
Zimmer
said
contract was expected to be booillg by fans in Boston's
marriage to Vickie Chesser
he
was
"
happy
for
for five years, averaging Fenway Park: Lynn said it
was breaking up after one
$150,000 a year. Shortstop bas bothered him and he was everybody."
NOW AT
"It will help the club right year.
· Burleson's was for an not as definite as O'Connell
Attorneys
for
the
about whether he was close to now on the field,'' Zimmer
estimated $80,000 a year.
said, "ll has to help the front Cincinnati Reds catcher filed
The actual signlngs were signing.
office
In formulating plans a four paragraph suit in
"Money-wise
we're
pretty
set f..- today in Detroit,,
for
next
winter's meetings Hamilton County Common
close,"
Lynn
said
of,
his
where the Red Sox play the
Pleas Court complaining of
con tract negotiations, "but I and tbe expansion draft."
Tigers tonight.
"gross neglect of duty" on the
part of Vickie, a native of Mt.
Pleasant, S.C. and now a New
By FRED DOWN
hits to the Royals' 16-hit
York City model. ·
UPI Sports Writer
attack and raised his leagueBesil\es seeking a divorce
Despite the fact that Hal lea&lt;ling average to .354.
LEXINGTON, Ohio (UPI) have a chance to defend his gels under way on the decree, the suit also asks the
McRae, the Kansas City
winding, 2. 4-ntile course.
New York defealed Detroit, -England's Brian Redman, crown.
court to make a ruling on
Royals' designated hitter, 4-3, California beat Teus, 4- knowing all to well that he's
Mid-Ohio wiD also feature property rights.
"The situation is serious
bas been suffering wilh a 0,
Milwaukee topped In one of tile most ·crucial with only three races left," the Bosch VW Gold Cup and
The two were married here
variety of injuries all season, Baltimore, 4-2, and Oakland situations of his Fonnula &amp;000 the defending Mld.Qhlo VW Sirocco Cup. Finals In all Feb: 21, 1975, less than two
be Is hitting .351 and Tuesday do~med Chicago, 7-3, iD tbe career, faces the grim champion said after practice three races will be Sunday . months after they met, with
night sparked lhe Royals' to other American League prospect of losing his F-5000 Tuesday. "We're going to
Others enteted include two- 1,000 persons Invited to the
their biggest r~n-scoring gam~s.
time
Indianapolis 500 wedding at huge Christ
have
to
run
as
hard
as
we
can
tiUe if he doesn't will his next
·outburst since July 18, Yankee~~ 4, Tigers 3:
champion
AI Unser, corrent Church and an elaborate
to win this race.
three races.
driving in two runs with a
series
leader
Alan Jones of reception at the swank
"There are no tactics this
Acrowd of 44,909at Yankee
Redman bas dominated the
double and a homer to lead Stadium saw two-run homers Formula 5000 auto-racing time. We'D be running lor a Australia , former Can-Am Netherland Hilton hotel.
Kaitsas City to a 7-1 victory by Roy White and Oscar ·series but ·now finda himself strong finiSh, and all we can champion Jackie Oliver of Bench revealed the breakup
over the Minnesota Twins. Gamble give New York its ill fourth place going into do Is our very best to win the England and former drag of the marriage at the start of
· The victory gave the victory over rookie sensation Mid-Ohio Sports Car Cow-se race," he said.
racer Danny Ongais of spring training this year.
Royals a 91&gt;-game lead over Mark Fidrych (11-4) and competition this weekend. He
Redman
has
been Hawaii.
the second.place Twins in the Detroit. White's homer lied must gatD three victories in practicing with the old Lola
American League's Western the score at 2-2 in the third the final tllree races to even T332C and his new Lola T430.
Reg .
Divlllon.
Which car he drives may not
inning and Gamble's gave the
$4.99
"Getting McRae back ln Yankees their victory margin
be
determined
until
NEW SUPER
G;~llon
the lineup really seems to in the seventh.
Saturday's qualifying.
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio
lllilke us go," commented Indians I, Red Sox 0:
"We've done very little
POLYESTER CORD-78 SERIES
Marty Pattill, who went eight
Dennis Eckersley pitched a (UPI) - Jack P. Taylor, who preliminary testing on the
Innings 1o earn his fo~ tllree,hitter for his sevenlll Tuesday was named.superin- 430," said Redman. "ll's
FULL 4 PLY
tendent
of
the
Shaker
Heights
victory.
shown
a
certain
degree
of
win and got the game's only
~ -- 1 '
George Brett added lhree run in tbe bottom of tile lOth school system, will be paid promise, but we're stlll
WHITEWALL TUBELESS
Reg .
~
when pinch-hitter Tommy $44,000 aMually, accor&lt;ling to having some 'new car'
$1.79
\IALL PAINT
Smith's sacrifice fly drove in Ute school board.
problems.
Quarts
For nine years, Taylor, 45,
Goes On
"The 430 handles very
I IIIII I 111 111 1f!ll11'1' '
Ron Pruitt. Luis Tiant shut
·Easily .
out Cleveland for tile first has been superintendent of well,'' be said, "and it's more
nine innings but was not Saginaw, Mich., schools. He forgiving than the 332, but
Involved iD the decision which succeeds Jolul Lawson, who stiU, tlle332 Is a proven car
Dries quickly .
went against reliever Tom resigned to b.ead the and I really like it."
Lexington, Mass., school
Redman won the series
Plus F.E.T. From
Murphy.
system.
opener
b'!t
managed
only
an
The Pomeroy Youth Allgels f, RaQgen ''
12.39 to 12.55
Rookie Paul Hartzell
eighth-place liilisiJ In tbe
BasebaU League will have a
second event and a third in
-8Wirnrnillg party and picnic pitched a four-hitter and
&amp;Old Casing
Wednesday, Augast 11, at Tommy Davis drove in two fifth loss against lour tile next.
' Reg. $5.99
Reg . $2.29
His record at Mid.(lhio has •
~al Oak,Park at 6 p.m. for runs lor California, which triumphs for Baltimore.
F78x14
G78x14
.
Gallons
A's
7,
White
Sox
3:
been
one
of
the
most
handed
Texas'
Jim
·
Quarts
au mambers of lhe League,
The A's Btlapped a live- outstan&lt;ling of any driver. He
T-Ball, Pee Wee Lillie Umblrger lila ninth losa.
Mounted &amp; Balanced
game
losing streak as Bill finished second ill 1978 and
Rusty
Ta-res
added
~
solo
League, and Pony League,
homer to the Angels' ll·hi\ North went 3-for-6 and scored won in 1974 and 1975.
and their famllles.
"Some tracks we always do
Hot dop and beverage will attack. The victory raiaed three runs to lead a 13-bit
attack
which
dealt
exwell at, like Mid-Ohio," said
be fumllhecJ by lhe League. Hartzell's record to 3-2.
Oakland pitcher John Odom Redman. "It's · a difficult
Each f8111ily Is asked to bring Ill ewers 4, Orioles Z:
George Scott hit two run· . his first loss for the White track with 15 turns, but for
a covered disll and Its o1m
scoring
singles, Including one Sox. Dick Bo11111an allowed some reason, I seem to be
table lei"Vlce. There wiD be a
that
drove
In the go-ahead three runs and five hits in live able to get inlo the rhythm of
50 centa lee to swim.
run
in
tile
fifth
Inning, u MU· innings but received credit It and do well."
UnlfOfiiUI are to be turned 1~
John F. Fullz, Manager
He and .23 other drivers wiD
1t tile picnic, and •· short waukee's Ed Rodriguez went for his fourth win without a
10111
with
the
relief
help
of
Ohio
be oo hand lor quallflers
992-2101
Pomeroy
bullnel8 meeting wiD be held the &lt;listance with a nine-hitter
Paul
Lindblad
and
Rollle
Saturday when Valvollne
for a financial report and for his fourth win. n~ss
Fingers.
Grlmsiey
was
tagged
with
his
Buckeye Cup competition
election or officers.

Sport Parade

"'

MOORE'S

•

KC's 7-1 wm

Redman ·close to losing

Complete Closeout of
All Star Paint
All Star Latex

GOODYEAR

r-

Picnic planned
by youth loop

$2495

1.35

All Star Satin Enamel
4"

FREE

Meigs Tire Center Inc.

1"

�.

'

- Tbe Deily Sentinel, Mlddlepon-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wtdnesday, Aug. 4, 1976

U!ility urges payment plan

Lottery's Patronite·Iaughing at Coney Island air charges
CXJLUMBUS (UP!) - The
ecutive director of the Ohio
•"ery Canmiss!on saya al·
criminal records and
~ !Ctions of 17 collllllWion
n ployes have 'about as
•uch effect on the Integrity
the state lottery as if they
rked "for the Bureau of
ISeCt !Jrunigration."
Gerald J. Patronite scoffed
'Uesday at what he called
·preposterous" charges
nade in a "Coney Island
,tmospbere" by Miami
::ounty Prosecutor Robert J .
luffman
and
four
~epubllcan state legisla!Alrs.
Patronite, in a telephone
:onversation from his Cle..,.
. and
office · at
the
~eadquarters of the Lottery

C«nmms.slon, said he had the
"complete confidence" of
David F. Leahy, coll1JJII8sion
chairman, and that be
"shouldn't lose a moment's
sleep" over the charges.
Nevertheless, P.atronite
said
lottery security
personnel will continue their
investigation and furnish him
with information to be
prese~~led to the commissioners · at their ne~t
scheduled meeting Aug. 9,
The meeting will be closed·
to the ~blic under the terms
of Ohio's "SUMhlne Law,"
Pstronite said, because it
involves employment
matters, a legal aemption.
Huffman and the lour ·
legislators said Monday a

"siJperficial" screening of 300 milllon tickets ago," the
the backgrounds of 63 direc!Alr continued. "! have
commission ,employes met with lhoae making the
revealed that seven lia ve charges, and I am confident
"seriDWI criminal records" that all ~nderstand that
and 12 have ties with lottery li'ckets cannot be
successfully counterfeited.
organized criffle.
Huffman said he has " It is simply beyood the
concluded that the employes realm of possibility."
could be counterfeiting losing
Patronite said it was
tickets, controlling agents ''preposterous" a!.! "truly
who sell tickets or ~iving humorous to those of us here"
pay lor no work.
to believe that ticket agents
"These emi&gt;loyes, whoever were making kickbacks IAl
they are, may as well be . racketeers.
working lor the Bureau of
He made a similar denW of
Insect Inunjgra lion as far as the charges ot •'phantom"
their past af!ects lottery coinmlssion employes.
tickets," said Patronite,
"I can assure that since
"II the lottery could be Aug. 18, 1975, there hasn't
tampered with, the public been ooe hour's incidence of a
would have found out about it phantom employe," said
Pa)l'onite, who began his job
oo that date. "I . have no
evidence even alter an
exhaustive in\'estlgatioo last
year that any existed at any

M~jor League Rnun s
Major Lu9ue Standinps
BV Uni ied Prtu lnttrnatian.Jtl
By United Press lnternat•ona l
N'a tionat League
N.Jtion•l League
East
(lit gamJI ·
W .. L . . Pet. GB Phladelph ia 000 000 ooo- o 9 o
Phil ade lphia 70 JA .673
Chicago
100 000 2b.- 4 9 1
Pit tsbu rgh
Kaa t ( 10·61 and Oates ; R .
51 47 .5•8 13
New York
Reus:chel (1 0-8 1 and Mil terwald .
53 55 .A9 J 19
Ch icago
HRs :- c;hicago, Tyrone (1),
46 60 .A3A 25
St. Louis
Mora les (12 1.
44 58 .til l 25
Mon trea l
)6 62 .367 31
Ond giilmt)
Wesl
W,. L.. Pet. G 8 Phladelphia -400 400 ooo- 8 13 1
Cincin'n ati
69 38 .645
Cnicago
20() 002 I'IOD- s 6 1
Los Angeles
59 46 .562 9
Carllon, Reed ta) and McCar
H6uslon
55 SA .505 15
ver , St®e , P, Reuse-tiel (A•.
San Oiega
51 SB 468 19 . Zamora I6J. Sutter (8 ) and
Al!anta.
~7 59 .CtiJ 111 , . Sw isher. WP-carlton ( 12-.d ) ,
St~n Frt~Oc i sc;:o 46 62 .426 23' '7 LP- Sione 0 -41. HRS- Ct'l icago,
.
Tuesday's Results
Wa lfls -~ ( tiJ,
Mad)ock t 11 1;
Chicago 4 P'hlladelphla 0, 1st
Ph iladelph ia . Maddox 161.
Phi1aelelphla 8 Chicago 5. 2nd
nstgamet ·
Pittsburgh 2 S1. Lo1JiS 1, 1st
s t. lou is
000 000 Qlo- 1 6 1
St. Louis A Pi ttsburgh 2, 2nd
Pi11sburoh 000 DOO 101- 2 1 1
New York 9 Montreal 8
· Rassmus.sen , .Hrab()!.ky (U ,
Allanta 1 San Djego l
Gre if 19) and Ferguson ;~ Rooker
Los Ange les 2 Houston 0
G
Cincinnati 9 Sen Franc isco 0
(9·S) a nd over. LP- reif t2·11.
Tod ay•s P.roba ble Pitc hers
HR - P ittsburgh , Dyer IJ ).
I All Times E DT)
.
Montr~al (Carrithers S·6) at ODd g1 me)
Sl . t.ou is
000 000 il2?- 4 .6 o
New York (Koosman 11-7)
Pitts.bur9 h
100 100 ()00- 2 8 0
Los Angeles 2 Houston 0
Cinci nneti 9 San Francisco 0
Cur tis , Hrabosky 18J. Wallace
Tod ~v · s Pr obabl e Pitthen
(9) anc:s ·Simmons ; Demery,
Hernandez fB I, Giu5o1 i {8 ),
( All Tim es EDTl
'Montreat (Casco (Mon tefusco Moose ·19l Sangu i1 len : wPP G'
~~
10-9) . IO: lS p.m • .
HrabOSky ( 6·6 l · L IUSti
.
San Diego CStrom 9.12 ) at U .
Atlanta tRuthven 11-9 ), 5 p .m .
101 ooo no- 8 11 1
St . Louis {Forsch 5-6) at Montrea l
301 002 l b - 9 9,
P ittsburgh (Candelaria 10 ...- 1, New York
Kirby. Taytor '16 1~ Leno 0) ,
7: 35p.m.
Houston (Richard 12-l H at tcerrlgan (8 } and Will iams ;
Los Angeles CRau 10·7L 10: 30 LoUJ;h, Sanders H t. Myritlr. (8).
p.m .
Apodaca (8 ) anti Hoctgts. WP,A.podac.a U -S). LP-·~ .errigan
.
T h u r s d~ y·s Gil ft'l tS
(0.2L HR5--Montrea1 , TLht&gt;rnton
.Chi at Montreal. 2. twi.night
(10 ) ; New York., Kranepool ·o t.
New York a1 Pitf1ibu.r gh , n igh t
Phila at St. louis. n ight
SanDieQO
002001®0- .3 90
San Fren at Atlanta, night
Atlanta
205 000 OOX -:- 7 8 o
CindMati at Los Ang , n igh t
Folker'S, Tomlin {3 ), ;onnson
Houston at San Diego, nigbt
{S ). Foster 0 1 and Kendall ;
,M euersmith tll ·9) and CDr·r el t
LP - Folkers {2-3). HRS- San
Dif!90 . Turner ( 21; A11anfa .•
Ame r ican Lea g ue
Gaston 2 (J L
Ei1Sf
•
001130 •0'" 916 1
1·
1
W,;. L•• P ct · G B Clnc ·nnat
6j 39 .618
san Frncisco 000 000 ,O•uOG- 0 3 l
New York.
51 S' •.SO.S 11 '&lt;?
Bill ingham {8 -8} and Bench ;
Baltimore
Cleveland
51 51 .500 12
Catdwefl. Heaverto (5), Wi'·
Iiams 171 a~
R.acer. LP48 5•• .''1 15
Detroit
"'v
15' 1 Cal ..u weU (".71.
.8 55 •••&gt;•
Boston
._
u
M-I lwaukee
.es SS ,t150 17
west
Houston
000 000 oooo 21
~
2 80
I
000 100 1 ••W .• L. Pel. GB LOS Angees
KansasCil'f
62 AO 608
t..ar:wn. Pentz U l and Hert" Mi nnesota
54 51 51.1 917 mahn , Jutze ~I ) ; Hoot~ (7.111
Oakland
Sot 51 .509 10
aM Rodriguez . l.P--Larson n.Texas
..9 53 ,48(1 13
lL
Chicago
.ol6 57 ·'"7 16•·,
California
46 60 .43A 18
Tuu dar•s Games
Amer iu n League
California • Texas 0
CaJifornie
000 001 11~ - .1 11 o
Kat1saSCify7Mionesota I
.Texas
0000ooO(li)--O
•l
1
c•'
3
oa .. a 00 ,, ,cago
Hartzell C3-21 a"d Ekhebar Milwaukee A &amp;aUimore 2
ren : Umbarger, Terp'&lt;o (II."
Cleve 1 Boston 0. 10 inns.
Hoerner fl ) and Sundber9. LP
New York -4 Oetroil 3
- Umbargrr 17-9L HR-&lt;..J~Hfor
ToUy's Prots.ble Pitchers
nla , Torr" (AL

( All Times EOT·

•

California ( Ryan 1-13) at
Texas (Bri les 1.1), 9:05p.m ,
Minnesota (Singer 1-lt a t
Kansas City ( Leonard 12-.e ),
8 ~ 30 p.m.
Oakland CMHchell .7-5) a t
Chicevo (JOhnson 9-'9l. '9 :05

p.m .

New York CHunter 12· 10 and
Holtzman 8-7l at Milwaukee
{Slaton 17-Barwt Travers 1'2-8),
2, 7:05p.m.
Boston (Jenkins 10-8 ) at
()eotroit CRutlle ll·81, 8 p.m .
Baltimore · ( Palmer 14.9) al
_
Clt&gt;Veland l8.ibby 7·3J. 7 : ~

p .m . Thursd•y's Gt mes
California al Texas. niotit
Minn at Kansas City, nl9ht
••
~ " t M 'l
"
.f"''ew t&lt;w ... a
'weu"'ee
Boston af Detroit, njght
Baltimore at Cleve , night

(Only oames scheduled )

time."
'"''be allegations made still
(10 inning~,
lack
names and specifics, and
SOSlon
000 oOo 000 0- o J 0
000 000 000 1- 1 50

Cleve land

J i ant, Murpt'ly
( 101 and
Montgomtry ; Eckerslty 0 ~8 )
and A5oh:bv . LP~M u rp h y ~ 2 5).

Detrolf
100 100 oro-- J 7 0
New York
002 000 20x- 4 8 3
Fil1rvc;h ,
H i U~r
(8) and
k i mm ,: F igueroa , York ( 3).
Jackson (4) and Munson . WP -Jackson 0 1) . LP - F idr ych { ll ·
4). HR:s ~ NPW York , Wh He

l . ),

some of the cllarges are
obviously .groundless IAl
anyooe who knows how a
modern day· Slate lottery is
operated," said Patronite.
" In my tmn as director, I
have never recommended
employment
to
tbe

commissioners of anyone
who has bad a criminal
record, and I doobt that in the
period
bel ore
my
appointment,
the
commissioners had wind Of
any employes with less than
ble!!Wh-less records.'·
Pstronite said he welcomes
any outside Investigations,
"though I believe that such

Mlior League LutSen
Pren International

U~ite-d

BATTING
. ( bl it'd Of' 27 S It biU J
NATIONAL LEAGUE .

·
G'r iffey ( Cin
Oliver , Pi1

G. AB .R.. H. Pet
98 369 88 126 .34,1
•6 389 S7 1l0 .334

RO!oe . Cin

107 .435 96 144 .331

Fosler, Cin
'7
Crawfrd , S.l .l 84
Geronmo , Cin
Maddo~t , .Ph il 9"
Robinson . P it 8;
Mad!oc:k , Chi 100

's

Mor~a n , C·in

387 65 U7 .328
2!11 40 93--32•
J h .,, 101 .32'
3•0 5 11 ~ .318
289 4o1 ;; .l UI

360 .1191 14 .317

8~ 798 !12 9• .315

AMERiCAN L EAGUE.
Brett, 'KC . .1 ~· A~~- ~ · ~6 -~~!
McRae, 'KC • 91 :H 9 '53 lHl .35,
Bostock... M in 16 2?8 -'3 93 .335
LeF lore , Det 96 3'i l ~ 128 .327
C11rew , 1Min ~ 02 19-5 66 127 .32'
Munson , NY 98 ·397 .S~ 126 .J R7
C.artv . Cle
99 357 48 113 .311
Garr , Chi
87 350 43 110 .311
Lyn~ , ·s~
BB 343 '.48 106 .309
Staub , Oet
102 374 .47 114 .305

By CL.AY F. RICHARDS
Ulllt.ed Prtsi lateratJoaal

Democratic presidential
nominee Jimmy Carter
predicts that Republicans,
"desperate" to keep control
of the White Hoilse, will
launch · " an
almost
unprecedented, vicious
personal attack" on the
Democratic ticket.
Returning
to
New
Hampslijre where he won his
ffrst primary victory last
February , Carter said
Tuesdl\y : "There is going to
be an almost unprecedented,
vicious personal attack on
me, Sen. (Walter ) Mondale,
and other Democratic
candidates."

Two upsets
•
•
m tennis

6 1

GROV)': C!TY, Ohio (UPI ) · In. a ·battle between two
Two major upsets ,promising young Americans,
highlighted the secood day's Jim Delaney rallied irom 2-5
play in the $87 ,SOO Buckeye ·in ,the third set to defeat John
Tennis Championships Whililinger 7-4i, 3&lt;!, i-5.
Tuesday.
Whitlinger held three
Jilirst •to ·fall was eighth· match points in the .·ninth
NATtO~~~~:~:~£ : t&lt;Jno·· seeded Mike Cahill oi the U.S. game but could not COilvert to
man , NY 32 ; ~c:hm idt , Ph tl 21 ; who '!l'tnt down before the victory.
F-osler , Ci n 23 ; Morgan , Cin smooth strokes of Alvaro
In &lt;Other matches '1\ueJday,
and Robinson , P itt ,8.
Fillol
of
Olile,
6-4,
6-4.
Colin
Dibley of Australia
AM E R I C A N LE AGUE ,
B!ndo, OI!lk10; L .M!'&gt;~ , ,B&amp; I 119 ;
.Fiillol, who 1l'aS I replace- . defeated Herve Gauvain m
Jack.son , 1Ba'11 and .Hendr ick_, ment in .the 4knan draw France (&gt;.2, 6-4, Hank Pfister
C1ev 18 ; Yastne-mSk!, 805 116.
when West Germany's of the U.S, stopped Frank
RUNS B ATTED IN .
NATI ONAL LEAGUE : F~ - Jur'gen
Fassbender Gebert of West GermaQy IHJ,
ter, Cln '92 ; MMgan, Cin 18 ;
S.tn.mldt . iPnil 73 ; ·K lngman , NY 'll'ithdre'll', faced fellow Soutil '&amp;.3.. Brian 'reacher ofl\lle U.S.
72 ; Luzinsk i. ;P ,h il 71 .
American Lito Alvarez of •beat Marcelo Lara ct Mexioo
AM E R1CAN LEAGU E; May .
;berry , KC 69 ; Munson , NY 67 ; Ar:gentina in a ~d roW!d &amp;-1, 6-4, Peter FleQ!ing of tile
Vntrze-mslro i, ·8no:: o.nd .s ur - match !Alday,
U.S. whiwed Rick Fisher of
...,
.roughs , Te)!: 65 ; Chambl iss , NY
Another
Cbillan,
veteran
1be
U.S. 6-3, 7-5, Keith
64
•
STOLE N 8 AS E S. .
Patricio Cornejo, longtime Richardson of ~be U.S.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.· T.a"e ·
r.as. , PH1 37; .Cedeno, HGu ' •36; &lt;klubles partner of Fillol's defeated Jean Haillet of
Mornen, C in 34 ; Lo.-.&amp;.s; , LA 33 ; &lt;ider Jaime, accounted for Fran ce 6-i, 6·3, David
'Sroc-k, St .LJ l ,
AM E R lC A N L EAGU E , the &lt;(her major upset When Sclmeider of South Africa
h
c
-.
·
he easily disposed .of .sixilh· .downed Km Hirai of Japan 7nort ' 0 a" 54~ '~&amp;y:to_r , Oak 43.;
.teF4ore, Oe1 and Pa1ek, KC 39 ; seeded Sherw.ood Stewart of 6, 6-1 .and T&lt;m G1dlikson of
Carew, Minn 38
the U.S., 6-2, &amp;-%, m II 'the U.S, topped Bill Brown ol
.PITC.H·ING.
. Most Victories
oumtes.
· the U.S. ~ 6-3.
NATI ONA L L EAGUE : .!Iones ,
Clrnejo,
playing
a
beady
In key matches lDday, rop.
so 18-5:; Carlton" Pt\it 12 .4 ;
L00
. b
~ ·11 12
.game,
kept
the
lwd-bitting
seeded
Roscoe Tanner of the
A. 'NY
· or.g
, ""'
~6 ; !Koosman,
U ,7; ·sut~on , L·A 12·1~ Stewart frustrated with a U.S. met lsmail El ,b fei of
Richard. Hou 12-ll.
·
A ·M ER ICA N LE AG UE : clever wnbinatioo of' 50ft. Egypt, and Bijay Amritaj of
F igueroa. NY lA-6; .P almer.. ~oofch sh~ and ~urts India,
tbe
defending
Sal1 ~.t -'9 ; Garland, BaU and
campbe ll , M inn 12-2; LeOnard , miled 'll'ltb OCCBSlonal deep champion and secontkeed
KC 12-A; F itzmorris, KC l1·7; fault drives. 1be Clilean was laced Naegelen.
Mi11nesota
000 000 DlQ-- 1 6 1 Tanana. CaL S1aion anlf Tra Kanies City JOl 000 Olx-7100 vers , Mil 12 ·8 ; Hunt«. NY l2 · oevet in trouble and said
Sane. JOhn!.Otl .(J J, Albury 10.
,
afterward the comparatively
(I) , Hughes (8 ) and Wynegar ;
E A-RNED R:U N AVERAGE
..,.. IIIMM"* ol 4llllen
slow Sllface helped him to
Pattin~ Mingori {9) and Mar . . ( b.l sed on" inning 5 pitche&lt;U
wltll ......
line:. WP - PaUin (tl -91 . lPNAT IONAL L EAGUE : ,N or · victory.
Bane U -3) . HA: - kanus C ity , man, Cin 2.2? ; Rldlard , Hou
Elsewhere, fifth-seeded
McRae (6) .
and seaver , NY 1..41; Jones, SO
T&lt;m
Gorman or the u.s. had
2.61; Masersm i ttl , AU and
FREE ESTIMATES!
Qatdaocl
202 000 120--7 J3 0 Matlack , f'fY 2.72.
no trouble advancing to the
·C hiCigo
000201®--3 .s o
AME RIC·AN . L EAGUE : . Fi second
round
with
an
easy
&amp;CONTACT
· Bosman, lindbled (6) , Fin - dr vc-h, Det 1.96; T-ravers, MiJ
ge.rs (U and Newman, Haney 2 n G 1 nc1 8 u 270 81
1,
6-4 victory over South
H, ; Odom, Vuckovich (3). · : a r a • a
· ;
ue,
African John Yuill but
Gl£11 I. BISSFJ!
carroll (8l ano Ession. WP - Oak 2.77 ;STR
Pafmer.
8aU . 2£15.
I KEOUTS
Bosman (4-0) . LP-odom (2-1).
NATIONAL LEAGUE: sea . Francis G!m.a1ez of Puerto
AT
.
ver. NY 164; Richard. Hou 130; Rico, current Big Ten singles
8 a 11 Jmore
00 I 100 ooo- 2 9 0 Messersmith.
AtJ 125; Nlekro,
949-2101
cbampioo from Ohio State
Milwaukee 000 120 lOX- t 1 1 At/ 117 M 1 ~
SF 1~
Grimsley, Miller ~5) , ' ... .......
; on .:;::ousco,
OR
and
a favorite here, fell IAl
·~·
AMERICAN LEAGUE, Ryan,
linez (8 - ancs Dempsey ; Ro - ~~ 194 ; Tanana, Cal 1S.I ;
Dennis
N~~egelen
of
France,
drigue.z {... 7) anrJ Moore. lP Slyleven , rex lSO; Hunter, NY
, Grimsltv (4.5) .
ll4; Jenkins. 8os 112.
u . &amp;-2, &amp;-1.
-

1

7

lloJ

with whatever information he
comes up with lor their
meeting ne:rt week .
"The whole incident is
unfortunate, and !resent the
Coney Island atmosphere
developed by some of those
involved, but I shouldn't lose
a m(Illent's sleep over it/'
said Pjltronite.

" Malfunctioning •.@lr
cooditloners or summer Du II
a bigger concern, beeauae
that relates to ticket
production, whlle theae other
incidents, I'm co!lfldent, do
not. The final word ls that no
one can legitimately attack
the honesty and tAltal
irltegrity of the systems up

here.

11

Vicious personal attacks predi~ted

Gamb le CHl.
By

Investigations would point
cmclusively to the fact that
OIII hOWie is in fine order."
The director said the inhouse investigation ol the
employes would go as far as
the law and federal equal
employment standards
pe~t. !lnd tllat M would
furnish the commi8sioners

In the continuing shifting ol
"The Republicans are
Mor!Aln claimed Ford had
delegates,
Ford and Reagan
going to be desperatl','' he 1,134 votes - lour more Ulan
eaCh
lost
a
supporter
in South
told a rally in Bedford. "The the number needed. His counvoters have learned about the terpart in the Reagan camp, Carotlna tAl the unconunitted
abSence of leadership, the · John Sears, says his column Tues.day and an
suffering
that
we 've candtdate has 1,140, or 10 uncommitted delegate ln
Pennsylvania said he now
e:rperienced from the more than needed.
•
supports
Ford,
.
mistakes in foreign policy,
~ la~est count in UPI 's
Reagan begins a three-day
from the mismanagement of nat1onwtde survey shows
. tl)e White House in dealing Ford at 1,121, nine short of delegate hunt today In four
with our problems." ·
nomination. Reagan has critical states - Mississippi,
Carter
repeatedly has 1,030, 100 short, and there are Pennsylvania, New Jersey
and West Virginia, The trip
said he~ n(X intend to use 108 stiU uncommitted .
'"
Watergate as an issue in the
UPI's count included the starts in Misslsslppi, whose
campaign, mentioned it in shift IAl uncommitted of a 3Q.rnemher delegation wls
reciting his list of delegate in Maine that the oni:e strongly behind him, but
administration misbehavior. wire service had by mlstake is now alniost evenly divided,
"It's a very rare occasion ~t In the Ford column.
... when a candidate for r---~--"'"!~~~~~~~~~~-,
president can leam direclly
from those who feel the
adverse affect from an unfair
tax law, inflation pressures,
no energy policy, the
problems of a foreign policy
that makes us ashamed, the
disgrace of Watergatl' , the
embarrassment of the CIA
WE WILL CLOSE
revelations, the loss of the
war in Vietnam.'~
AT12:00
Meanwhile in Washington,
Ford's campaign manager
IAlld reporters neither Ford
nor Ronald Reagan will go to
See You At The Fair
the Republican National
Coovention in Kansas City
Aug : 16 with the GOP
••.o. w
presidential nomination
locked up.
"There's no lockup availa·
,,."'
ble," said Rogets Mortm.

......,

who

THURSDAY, AUGUST 5

.,.

..

ENGINEERING
SERVICE

For Your Job

•'
• I

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...",,

;:

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....

-

"

1

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.....

26FT.

28FT.

sz470

$26

(4/12)
r

60

PJTCH

"'
""' '

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...

DELIVERED TO JOB
SITE

WI

...

l

ld
'

'"r&lt;

,.,

·\ IY .

"
,.,

.

..
A LOT .OF FISH - Charles E. Stevena, Columbus, landed thla 38 pound catftsh at
Forked Rllll Lake recenUy on a bank llne:
·

Primary winner killed
By DEAN REYNOLDS
mittee wlll have to choose a
UDII!!d Press Intematlooal
la
f u
Rep. Jerrv Utton died in a rep cement or tton for the
'
ge~rill election.
fie r y plane cra sh late
In
the . Republican
Tuesday on his way to an senatorial race., Attorney
election party, without General. John c. Danforth
knowing he was the upset waa an easy winrll!r to face
win ne r of
Missouri's the eventual Democratic
Democratic primary lor a nominee.
Senate seal.
In the race for governor,
His death occurred only incumbent Christopher Bond
hours before his victory over· .won easily over token opposl·
two other contestants was lion, and Kansas City
confirmed. His wife; Sharon, attorn ey Joseph Teasdale
36., two of the couple's will be his Democratic
children, pllot Paul Rupp and opponent.
Rupp's son also died In the
Wltlle the tragedy cast a
crash, which occurred as the pall over tl)e MiBsourl race, a
pla ne took . off from major upset occurred in a
Chillicothe to Kansas City. senatorial primary In
A 39-year.old mlllionalre Michigan, where Rep, Donald
cattle rancher and two-term W. Riegle bested three
congressman, Utton was the Democratic opponents.·
upset winner over former . Riegle will lace Republican
Gov. Warren E.. Hearnes and Re p. "•-·in
man
L. Esch, who
the pre-e Iectwn. favorite, emerged from a four-way
.Rep. James W. S~gton, : race. The two sought to gain
son of Sen. Stuart Syrmngton · the seat of retiring Sen. Philip
who ls retiril)g.
.
A. Hart.
The state Democratic Com·
Riegle's win surprised preprimary favorite Secretary of
State Richard H. Austin,
attempting to becom.e the
first black Democratic U.S.
senator.
(Continued from !iage 2)
"When it's white against
lease or transfer property to black, white wins," an Austin
nonprofit se nior citizens aide said alter the returns
organi zations.
became conclusive.
Many more pieces of
Running third and fourth to
legislation were Introduced Riegle, a Republican turned
but are waiting action by the Democrat, and Austin were
legislature.
Rep. James O'Hara and Bir·
Senator Collins also noted mlngham attorney James
that Governor Jaines A. Eisman.
Rhodes introduced
a
Esch, like Riegle a !!).year
ld
veteran
of CapitAl! Hlll, was a
program ~all e.d the ...G0 en relatively easy' victor over
Buckeye Card," lor senior
citizens. The program , which former slate Supreme Court ·
went into effect March I, Justice Thomas Brennan,
entitles them to discounts at former Congressman Robert
state recreational facilities Huber and University of
and private retaUand service Michigan regent Deane
esta blishments, such as Baker.
grocery stores department
In other primar1es:
'
.
- Kansans retained Rep .
s!ores, pharma: ies, trans1t · Joe Slrubttz as their GOP
programs, bankmg faclltbes, nominee ln the 5th District,
res t~uran ts
.and
en· but
his
Democratic
tertamm~nt lactlitles . . The challenger had stlU not been
cards stgmfy membersh1p m determined early today. In
the largest state p~ogram. for the 4th District Rep. Garner
senior citizens tn Oh1 o's
history.
"Ohio is making a continued effort to help its senior
citizens," said Collins. "The
mere fact th at our projected
population increase is 350,000
more for senior citizens in
1990 than in 1970, is a warning
that we must plan for the
future needs of our seniors.
Our goal is to make growing
old a mor e comfortable

Shriver, R·Kan. will face Dan
Glickman of Wichita. The 3rd.
Distric.t features a race
between Rep. Larry Wlnn, R·
Kan., .and challenger Philip
Riloads of Kansas City.
In the 2nd District,
Republican Ross Freeman of
Topeka was nomlpatl'd to
challe~e Rep. Martha Keys,
O.Kan., and In the 1st Dlalrlct
Randy Yowell ol Hays wiU
face incumbent Republican
Keith G, Sebelius.
- In Idaho, Rep. George
Hansen· won a chance for a
fourth term in Congress from
the 2nd District against state
Sen. Stan J(ress. ln the 1st
District, Rep. Steve Symms
won the GOP· nomination to
face Boise attorney, Ken

'

'"

"'

Columbia Gas customers service each month regardwho had dllllculty paying less of his usage, the
higher hea Ung bllla last manager said. This spreads
winter can forestall slmllar the cost of winter heating
problema thla year by joining evenly o..,r the entire year.
the company's Budget
Some 550,000 Columbia
Payment Plan when they pay eusumers use the budget
lllelr gu bllls this month, J. plan today, Koebel said.
M. .Koebel, manager for the They're ln the habit of
.gu COI!Iplny In the GaUla· · budgeting, and they budget
their payments lor gas
Melga ar•, aald !Alday.
The ~et cuatomer pays service, just as they do their
!be same amount lor gas house payments and any
other bUls they owe.
" It simply doesn't make
REUNION HELD
se nse ilny more lor p
ALFRED - The 15th an· customer IAl JliiY two-thirds of
nual Carr School teunloo was his annual gas bill during four
he ld here in Woode grove on winter months. Budgeting's
Sunday, Aug. 1, with 8 basket the answer, and that's what
dinner at 12:30, and a shoft the Bullget Payment Plan
the gas heating cus!Almer
Pro•D ram and business lets
do ."
meeting in the afternoon. All
former teachers and pupils
Participation in the Budget
and their families were in· Psyment Plan is completely
vi led as were any friends and optional, Koebel said.
neighbors.
· Columbia simply offers the
plan as a free service for any
residential or comrilercial
customer who wishes to take
'
advantage a! it.
Pursley.
To become a b~d get
Hansen, 45, who served two customer, the customer
terms in the 1960's and hla simply pays the budget
thi rd begi nn ing In 1974, amount shown on his next gas
overcame an electloo scandal biU and the same amount
of .the last campaign to each month thereafter. In
trounce Dr. Glen Wegner, '!1, this way, he avoids peak
Boise , and businessman winter heating bills at a tim!Y
George Forschler, 44, Burley. when o!J!er bills are high, too,
He pleade&lt;l guilty In 1975 tAl according to the manager.
two mlademeanor violations
The budget amount for
of the federal ca mpaign· each customer is based on ~is
reporting act. At first he got past 12-rnonth history of gas
60 days in jail but the judge usage, adjusted for current
later relented and changed gas rates and norm al
the penalty IAl a $2,000 fine,

2% MILK

GROUND BEEF
79~

GNJ.OM

lB.

BROUGHTON'S DAIRY LANE

ICE CREAM

CUBE STEAK
t139

.,19

%GAL

89~

3 LB. BAG

5.75 per cent · paid · on
90 day Certificates of
Oeposit . $1.000 .00
Minimum . Interest
Payable

~arterly .

A sUbstantial penalty 1
lnv·oked on al l cerl l flcO!I t

Meigsr4Branch

_.@'.

3

9~ EACH

LB.

POTATO CHIPS

Open

TWIN PACK

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BABY fOOD....~ .......~.~~~·-······ 7/'1

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Mon.·Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5

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Mon ., Wed.,

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The.A!hens County
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PHON E 992-3331

y e a r's

sandals at g r eat ·half. pr ice
savinbs . Former Values !o
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SQUAR E SI ZE

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·
~f/6
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HANDY
LANTERN

LARGE SELECTION

Polyester Knits - Pre. Free Broad rl,•thl
1-·Je,rsev!
- Denim
Swiss
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lovely

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51.69 Value

CHILDREN'S PLAY

5
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HOLDERS·

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~NGER MACHINES
CONTINUES TIL AUG. 7
11

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MASON - SILVER BRIDG
.&gt;

'

Y2 PRICE

THERMOS

Ph. 992-2284

,~,.

40W-60W-75W-100W
SAVE 32c

PRICE

GIRLS SANDALS 1h PRICE

The·Fabnc Shop

v

UGHT
BULBS

TOWELS
Cann o n t er r v seco nds.

y.our nex t

Pomeroy . Ohio

Westing House

BATH
White. pin k , bl ue, gold .

2'6 Second 51.

Simplicity PaHerns
115 W. Second
Pomeroy

"'

'

Saturday 9 Til5

WOMEN'S
SANDALS

as window or floor

Co,;,e, see Ihe wonderful·
iy sc ulp tured de tail s of
these most pop ul ar of all
medals. Choice of round ·
or ova l style s. Fin e gifl
fo r men and wo me n.

FLOOR, WALL.
CUMEI, 16 OZ. PKG.

Open All Day Thursd1y
Friday Night Till

CANNON

PANTY HOSE

proposi tion."

BREAD

SPIC AND SPAN

'llOmeroy, 0.

WOMEN'S SHEER

FABRIC CLEARANCE

(]''

Thursday thru Sunday

Mlcklle of Upper Block

Values
to Sl.OO

-

Prices Effective

"

STAINLESS STEEL

•

9 til 7

Hartley 's' Shoes

&gt;

32 oz.
BOTILES

PRINGLE$ NEWFANGLED

'

SUMMER SHOE
CLEARANCE

1st

3 SHADES

DRINK

CUCUMBERS

IRED ~NG h~P.'I

ac counts withdrawn prlo
to the da t e of maturity

AND GRAPEFRUIT

HOME GROWN

Fr i., 7-8 p.m .

Certificates

ORANGE

49~

work in. Come try on a pair.

fff ice Hoursj 10-12 a .m.
Mon ..
2-4 p. m. M&lt;&gt;n.·

rri.

•.

shop or service area a more pleasant plaCe to

R. A. AV ERION , M. D.
A. G. SO LA, M.D.
JOHN RIDGW AY. D.O.
C. W. THOMPSON, M.D.

sat..

•·

Here's a shoe jusl built to be shopworn in oolid
comfort. Safety Steel toes, and cushion crepe
soles. You'll find they can make your plant,

Dog-ti red? This will pep you up!
We're having a hot mid-Summer sale
to cool over-heated budge•s. See .. ,

WAGNER
'

Complete Selection Of
Shoes &amp; Boots

Adjacent to
Veterams
Memorial Ho spit a l

On 90-Day

~

YEU.OW ONIONS

SAFETY

RIVERSIDE MEDICAL
GROUP

5.75%

.8

BROUGHTON'S

weather conditions, the
manager Indicated . Major
changes In any of these
factors can result in budget
amount· adjustments when
the accounts are reviewed in
April, he pointed out.
Even though a customer
joins the Budget Payment
Plan
and
pays
a
predetermined amount each
·month, the actual amount of
the bill will be shown on the
biU, along with the Budget
Payment amount, and the
status of his Budget Payment
account. This is made
possible, according to the
manager, since the gas
meters of all Budget
Payment customers continue
. IAl be read throughout the
year on the same basis as
thilse of any other customer.
Customers wishing
. additional information on the
Budget Payment Plan can
call or stop by their local gas
company offices, Koebel
said. "We will be happy 1o

Our Interest is
.Greater For You

Collins

AvallabJ.- Now ovERHA
241NCHU

answer any questions or
provide
a~y
further
lnf&lt;rnlatlon oo the Budget
Paf!11tnt Plan."

"

,,

'"

�.

'

- Tbe Deily Sentinel, Mlddlepon-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wtdnesday, Aug. 4, 1976

U!ility urges payment plan

Lottery's Patronite·Iaughing at Coney Island air charges
CXJLUMBUS (UP!) - The
ecutive director of the Ohio
•"ery Canmiss!on saya al·
criminal records and
~ !Ctions of 17 collllllWion
n ployes have 'about as
•uch effect on the Integrity
the state lottery as if they
rked "for the Bureau of
ISeCt !Jrunigration."
Gerald J. Patronite scoffed
'Uesday at what he called
·preposterous" charges
nade in a "Coney Island
,tmospbere" by Miami
::ounty Prosecutor Robert J .
luffman
and
four
~epubllcan state legisla!Alrs.
Patronite, in a telephone
:onversation from his Cle..,.
. and
office · at
the
~eadquarters of the Lottery

C«nmms.slon, said he had the
"complete confidence" of
David F. Leahy, coll1JJII8sion
chairman, and that be
"shouldn't lose a moment's
sleep" over the charges.
Nevertheless, P.atronite
said
lottery security
personnel will continue their
investigation and furnish him
with information to be
prese~~led to the commissioners · at their ne~t
scheduled meeting Aug. 9,
The meeting will be closed·
to the ~blic under the terms
of Ohio's "SUMhlne Law,"
Pstronite said, because it
involves employment
matters, a legal aemption.
Huffman and the lour ·
legislators said Monday a

"siJperficial" screening of 300 milllon tickets ago," the
the backgrounds of 63 direc!Alr continued. "! have
commission ,employes met with lhoae making the
revealed that seven lia ve charges, and I am confident
"seriDWI criminal records" that all ~nderstand that
and 12 have ties with lottery li'ckets cannot be
successfully counterfeited.
organized criffle.
Huffman said he has " It is simply beyood the
concluded that the employes realm of possibility."
could be counterfeiting losing
Patronite said it was
tickets, controlling agents ''preposterous" a!.! "truly
who sell tickets or ~iving humorous to those of us here"
pay lor no work.
to believe that ticket agents
"These emi&gt;loyes, whoever were making kickbacks IAl
they are, may as well be . racketeers.
working lor the Bureau of
He made a similar denW of
Insect Inunjgra lion as far as the charges ot •'phantom"
their past af!ects lottery coinmlssion employes.
tickets," said Patronite,
"I can assure that since
"II the lottery could be Aug. 18, 1975, there hasn't
tampered with, the public been ooe hour's incidence of a
would have found out about it phantom employe," said
Pa)l'onite, who began his job
oo that date. "I . have no
evidence even alter an
exhaustive in\'estlgatioo last
year that any existed at any

M~jor League Rnun s
Major Lu9ue Standinps
BV Uni ied Prtu lnttrnatian.Jtl
By United Press lnternat•ona l
N'a tionat League
N.Jtion•l League
East
(lit gamJI ·
W .. L . . Pet. GB Phladelph ia 000 000 ooo- o 9 o
Phil ade lphia 70 JA .673
Chicago
100 000 2b.- 4 9 1
Pit tsbu rgh
Kaa t ( 10·61 and Oates ; R .
51 47 .5•8 13
New York
Reus:chel (1 0-8 1 and Mil terwald .
53 55 .A9 J 19
Ch icago
HRs :- c;hicago, Tyrone (1),
46 60 .A3A 25
St. Louis
Mora les (12 1.
44 58 .til l 25
Mon trea l
)6 62 .367 31
Ond giilmt)
Wesl
W,. L.. Pet. G 8 Phladelphia -400 400 ooo- 8 13 1
Cincin'n ati
69 38 .645
Cnicago
20() 002 I'IOD- s 6 1
Los Angeles
59 46 .562 9
Carllon, Reed ta) and McCar
H6uslon
55 SA .505 15
ver , St®e , P, Reuse-tiel (A•.
San Oiega
51 SB 468 19 . Zamora I6J. Sutter (8 ) and
Al!anta.
~7 59 .CtiJ 111 , . Sw isher. WP-carlton ( 12-.d ) ,
St~n Frt~Oc i sc;:o 46 62 .426 23' '7 LP- Sione 0 -41. HRS- Ct'l icago,
.
Tuesday's Results
Wa lfls -~ ( tiJ,
Mad)ock t 11 1;
Chicago 4 P'hlladelphla 0, 1st
Ph iladelph ia . Maddox 161.
Phi1aelelphla 8 Chicago 5. 2nd
nstgamet ·
Pittsburgh 2 S1. Lo1JiS 1, 1st
s t. lou is
000 000 Qlo- 1 6 1
St. Louis A Pi ttsburgh 2, 2nd
Pi11sburoh 000 DOO 101- 2 1 1
New York 9 Montreal 8
· Rassmus.sen , .Hrab()!.ky (U ,
Allanta 1 San Djego l
Gre if 19) and Ferguson ;~ Rooker
Los Ange les 2 Houston 0
G
Cincinnati 9 Sen Franc isco 0
(9·S) a nd over. LP- reif t2·11.
Tod ay•s P.roba ble Pitc hers
HR - P ittsburgh , Dyer IJ ).
I All Times E DT)
.
Montr~al (Carrithers S·6) at ODd g1 me)
Sl . t.ou is
000 000 il2?- 4 .6 o
New York (Koosman 11-7)
Pitts.bur9 h
100 100 ()00- 2 8 0
Los Angeles 2 Houston 0
Cinci nneti 9 San Francisco 0
Cur tis , Hrabosky 18J. Wallace
Tod ~v · s Pr obabl e Pitthen
(9) anc:s ·Simmons ; Demery,
Hernandez fB I, Giu5o1 i {8 ),
( All Tim es EDTl
'Montreat (Casco (Mon tefusco Moose ·19l Sangu i1 len : wPP G'
~~
10-9) . IO: lS p.m • .
HrabOSky ( 6·6 l · L IUSti
.
San Diego CStrom 9.12 ) at U .
Atlanta tRuthven 11-9 ), 5 p .m .
101 ooo no- 8 11 1
St . Louis {Forsch 5-6) at Montrea l
301 002 l b - 9 9,
P ittsburgh (Candelaria 10 ...- 1, New York
Kirby. Taytor '16 1~ Leno 0) ,
7: 35p.m.
Houston (Richard 12-l H at tcerrlgan (8 } and Will iams ;
Los Angeles CRau 10·7L 10: 30 LoUJ;h, Sanders H t. Myritlr. (8).
p.m .
Apodaca (8 ) anti Hoctgts. WP,A.podac.a U -S). LP-·~ .errigan
.
T h u r s d~ y·s Gil ft'l tS
(0.2L HR5--Montrea1 , TLht&gt;rnton
.Chi at Montreal. 2. twi.night
(10 ) ; New York., Kranepool ·o t.
New York a1 Pitf1ibu.r gh , n igh t
Phila at St. louis. n ight
SanDieQO
002001®0- .3 90
San Fren at Atlanta, night
Atlanta
205 000 OOX -:- 7 8 o
CindMati at Los Ang , n igh t
Folker'S, Tomlin {3 ), ;onnson
Houston at San Diego, nigbt
{S ). Foster 0 1 and Kendall ;
,M euersmith tll ·9) and CDr·r el t
LP - Folkers {2-3). HRS- San
Dif!90 . Turner ( 21; A11anfa .•
Ame r ican Lea g ue
Gaston 2 (J L
Ei1Sf
•
001130 •0'" 916 1
1·
1
W,;. L•• P ct · G B Clnc ·nnat
6j 39 .618
san Frncisco 000 000 ,O•uOG- 0 3 l
New York.
51 S' •.SO.S 11 '&lt;?
Bill ingham {8 -8} and Bench ;
Baltimore
Cleveland
51 51 .500 12
Catdwefl. Heaverto (5), Wi'·
Iiams 171 a~
R.acer. LP48 5•• .''1 15
Detroit
"'v
15' 1 Cal ..u weU (".71.
.8 55 •••&gt;•
Boston
._
u
M-I lwaukee
.es SS ,t150 17
west
Houston
000 000 oooo 21
~
2 80
I
000 100 1 ••W .• L. Pel. GB LOS Angees
KansasCil'f
62 AO 608
t..ar:wn. Pentz U l and Hert" Mi nnesota
54 51 51.1 917 mahn , Jutze ~I ) ; Hoot~ (7.111
Oakland
Sot 51 .509 10
aM Rodriguez . l.P--Larson n.Texas
..9 53 ,48(1 13
lL
Chicago
.ol6 57 ·'"7 16•·,
California
46 60 .43A 18
Tuu dar•s Games
Amer iu n League
California • Texas 0
CaJifornie
000 001 11~ - .1 11 o
Kat1saSCify7Mionesota I
.Texas
0000ooO(li)--O
•l
1
c•'
3
oa .. a 00 ,, ,cago
Hartzell C3-21 a"d Ekhebar Milwaukee A &amp;aUimore 2
ren : Umbarger, Terp'&lt;o (II."
Cleve 1 Boston 0. 10 inns.
Hoerner fl ) and Sundber9. LP
New York -4 Oetroil 3
- Umbargrr 17-9L HR-&lt;..J~Hfor
ToUy's Prots.ble Pitchers
nla , Torr" (AL

( All Times EOT·

•

California ( Ryan 1-13) at
Texas (Bri les 1.1), 9:05p.m ,
Minnesota (Singer 1-lt a t
Kansas City ( Leonard 12-.e ),
8 ~ 30 p.m.
Oakland CMHchell .7-5) a t
Chicevo (JOhnson 9-'9l. '9 :05

p.m .

New York CHunter 12· 10 and
Holtzman 8-7l at Milwaukee
{Slaton 17-Barwt Travers 1'2-8),
2, 7:05p.m.
Boston (Jenkins 10-8 ) at
()eotroit CRutlle ll·81, 8 p.m .
Baltimore · ( Palmer 14.9) al
_
Clt&gt;Veland l8.ibby 7·3J. 7 : ~

p .m . Thursd•y's Gt mes
California al Texas. niotit
Minn at Kansas City, nl9ht
••
~ " t M 'l
"
.f"''ew t&lt;w ... a
'weu"'ee
Boston af Detroit, njght
Baltimore at Cleve , night

(Only oames scheduled )

time."
'"''be allegations made still
(10 inning~,
lack
names and specifics, and
SOSlon
000 oOo 000 0- o J 0
000 000 000 1- 1 50

Cleve land

J i ant, Murpt'ly
( 101 and
Montgomtry ; Eckerslty 0 ~8 )
and A5oh:bv . LP~M u rp h y ~ 2 5).

Detrolf
100 100 oro-- J 7 0
New York
002 000 20x- 4 8 3
Fil1rvc;h ,
H i U~r
(8) and
k i mm ,: F igueroa , York ( 3).
Jackson (4) and Munson . WP -Jackson 0 1) . LP - F idr ych { ll ·
4). HR:s ~ NPW York , Wh He

l . ),

some of the cllarges are
obviously .groundless IAl
anyooe who knows how a
modern day· Slate lottery is
operated," said Patronite.
" In my tmn as director, I
have never recommended
employment
to
tbe

commissioners of anyone
who has bad a criminal
record, and I doobt that in the
period
bel ore
my
appointment,
the
commissioners had wind Of
any employes with less than
ble!!Wh-less records.'·
Pstronite said he welcomes
any outside Investigations,
"though I believe that such

Mlior League LutSen
Pren International

U~ite-d

BATTING
. ( bl it'd Of' 27 S It biU J
NATIONAL LEAGUE .

·
G'r iffey ( Cin
Oliver , Pi1

G. AB .R.. H. Pet
98 369 88 126 .34,1
•6 389 S7 1l0 .334

RO!oe . Cin

107 .435 96 144 .331

Fosler, Cin
'7
Crawfrd , S.l .l 84
Geronmo , Cin
Maddo~t , .Ph il 9"
Robinson . P it 8;
Mad!oc:k , Chi 100

's

Mor~a n , C·in

387 65 U7 .328
2!11 40 93--32•
J h .,, 101 .32'
3•0 5 11 ~ .318
289 4o1 ;; .l UI

360 .1191 14 .317

8~ 798 !12 9• .315

AMERiCAN L EAGUE.
Brett, 'KC . .1 ~· A~~- ~ · ~6 -~~!
McRae, 'KC • 91 :H 9 '53 lHl .35,
Bostock... M in 16 2?8 -'3 93 .335
LeF lore , Det 96 3'i l ~ 128 .327
C11rew , 1Min ~ 02 19-5 66 127 .32'
Munson , NY 98 ·397 .S~ 126 .J R7
C.artv . Cle
99 357 48 113 .311
Garr , Chi
87 350 43 110 .311
Lyn~ , ·s~
BB 343 '.48 106 .309
Staub , Oet
102 374 .47 114 .305

By CL.AY F. RICHARDS
Ulllt.ed Prtsi lateratJoaal

Democratic presidential
nominee Jimmy Carter
predicts that Republicans,
"desperate" to keep control
of the White Hoilse, will
launch · " an
almost
unprecedented, vicious
personal attack" on the
Democratic ticket.
Returning
to
New
Hampslijre where he won his
ffrst primary victory last
February , Carter said
Tuesdl\y : "There is going to
be an almost unprecedented,
vicious personal attack on
me, Sen. (Walter ) Mondale,
and other Democratic
candidates."

Two upsets
•
•
m tennis

6 1

GROV)': C!TY, Ohio (UPI ) · In. a ·battle between two
Two major upsets ,promising young Americans,
highlighted the secood day's Jim Delaney rallied irom 2-5
play in the $87 ,SOO Buckeye ·in ,the third set to defeat John
Tennis Championships Whililinger 7-4i, 3&lt;!, i-5.
Tuesday.
Whitlinger held three
Jilirst •to ·fall was eighth· match points in the .·ninth
NATtO~~~~:~:~£ : t&lt;Jno·· seeded Mike Cahill oi the U.S. game but could not COilvert to
man , NY 32 ; ~c:hm idt , Ph tl 21 ; who '!l'tnt down before the victory.
F-osler , Ci n 23 ; Morgan , Cin smooth strokes of Alvaro
In &lt;Other matches '1\ueJday,
and Robinson , P itt ,8.
Fillol
of
Olile,
6-4,
6-4.
Colin
Dibley of Australia
AM E R I C A N LE AGUE ,
B!ndo, OI!lk10; L .M!'&gt;~ , ,B&amp; I 119 ;
.Fiillol, who 1l'aS I replace- . defeated Herve Gauvain m
Jack.son , 1Ba'11 and .Hendr ick_, ment in .the 4knan draw France (&gt;.2, 6-4, Hank Pfister
C1ev 18 ; Yastne-mSk!, 805 116.
when West Germany's of the U.S, stopped Frank
RUNS B ATTED IN .
NATI ONAL LEAGUE : F~ - Jur'gen
Fassbender Gebert of West GermaQy IHJ,
ter, Cln '92 ; MMgan, Cin 18 ;
S.tn.mldt . iPnil 73 ; ·K lngman , NY 'll'ithdre'll', faced fellow Soutil '&amp;.3.. Brian 'reacher ofl\lle U.S.
72 ; Luzinsk i. ;P ,h il 71 .
American Lito Alvarez of •beat Marcelo Lara ct Mexioo
AM E R1CAN LEAGU E; May .
;berry , KC 69 ; Munson , NY 67 ; Ar:gentina in a ~d roW!d &amp;-1, 6-4, Peter FleQ!ing of tile
Vntrze-mslro i, ·8no:: o.nd .s ur - match !Alday,
U.S. whiwed Rick Fisher of
...,
.roughs , Te)!: 65 ; Chambl iss , NY
Another
Cbillan,
veteran
1be
U.S. 6-3, 7-5, Keith
64
•
STOLE N 8 AS E S. .
Patricio Cornejo, longtime Richardson of ~be U.S.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.· T.a"e ·
r.as. , PH1 37; .Cedeno, HGu ' •36; &lt;klubles partner of Fillol's defeated Jean Haillet of
Mornen, C in 34 ; Lo.-.&amp;.s; , LA 33 ; &lt;ider Jaime, accounted for Fran ce 6-i, 6·3, David
'Sroc-k, St .LJ l ,
AM E R lC A N L EAGU E , the &lt;(her major upset When Sclmeider of South Africa
h
c
-.
·
he easily disposed .of .sixilh· .downed Km Hirai of Japan 7nort ' 0 a" 54~ '~&amp;y:to_r , Oak 43.;
.teF4ore, Oe1 and Pa1ek, KC 39 ; seeded Sherw.ood Stewart of 6, 6-1 .and T&lt;m G1dlikson of
Carew, Minn 38
the U.S., 6-2, &amp;-%, m II 'the U.S, topped Bill Brown ol
.PITC.H·ING.
. Most Victories
oumtes.
· the U.S. ~ 6-3.
NATI ONA L L EAGUE : .!Iones ,
Clrnejo,
playing
a
beady
In key matches lDday, rop.
so 18-5:; Carlton" Pt\it 12 .4 ;
L00
. b
~ ·11 12
.game,
kept
the
lwd-bitting
seeded
Roscoe Tanner of the
A. 'NY
· or.g
, ""'
~6 ; !Koosman,
U ,7; ·sut~on , L·A 12·1~ Stewart frustrated with a U.S. met lsmail El ,b fei of
Richard. Hou 12-ll.
·
A ·M ER ICA N LE AG UE : clever wnbinatioo of' 50ft. Egypt, and Bijay Amritaj of
F igueroa. NY lA-6; .P almer.. ~oofch sh~ and ~urts India,
tbe
defending
Sal1 ~.t -'9 ; Garland, BaU and
campbe ll , M inn 12-2; LeOnard , miled 'll'ltb OCCBSlonal deep champion and secontkeed
KC 12-A; F itzmorris, KC l1·7; fault drives. 1be Clilean was laced Naegelen.
Mi11nesota
000 000 DlQ-- 1 6 1 Tanana. CaL S1aion anlf Tra Kanies City JOl 000 Olx-7100 vers , Mil 12 ·8 ; Hunt«. NY l2 · oevet in trouble and said
Sane. JOhn!.Otl .(J J, Albury 10.
,
afterward the comparatively
(I) , Hughes (8 ) and Wynegar ;
E A-RNED R:U N AVERAGE
..,.. IIIMM"* ol 4llllen
slow Sllface helped him to
Pattin~ Mingori {9) and Mar . . ( b.l sed on" inning 5 pitche&lt;U
wltll ......
line:. WP - PaUin (tl -91 . lPNAT IONAL L EAGUE : ,N or · victory.
Bane U -3) . HA: - kanus C ity , man, Cin 2.2? ; Rldlard , Hou
Elsewhere, fifth-seeded
McRae (6) .
and seaver , NY 1..41; Jones, SO
T&lt;m
Gorman or the u.s. had
2.61; Masersm i ttl , AU and
FREE ESTIMATES!
Qatdaocl
202 000 120--7 J3 0 Matlack , f'fY 2.72.
no trouble advancing to the
·C hiCigo
000201®--3 .s o
AME RIC·AN . L EAGUE : . Fi second
round
with
an
easy
&amp;CONTACT
· Bosman, lindbled (6) , Fin - dr vc-h, Det 1.96; T-ravers, MiJ
ge.rs (U and Newman, Haney 2 n G 1 nc1 8 u 270 81
1,
6-4 victory over South
H, ; Odom, Vuckovich (3). · : a r a • a
· ;
ue,
African John Yuill but
Gl£11 I. BISSFJ!
carroll (8l ano Ession. WP - Oak 2.77 ;STR
Pafmer.
8aU . 2£15.
I KEOUTS
Bosman (4-0) . LP-odom (2-1).
NATIONAL LEAGUE: sea . Francis G!m.a1ez of Puerto
AT
.
ver. NY 164; Richard. Hou 130; Rico, current Big Ten singles
8 a 11 Jmore
00 I 100 ooo- 2 9 0 Messersmith.
AtJ 125; Nlekro,
949-2101
cbampioo from Ohio State
Milwaukee 000 120 lOX- t 1 1 At/ 117 M 1 ~
SF 1~
Grimsley, Miller ~5) , ' ... .......
; on .:;::ousco,
OR
and
a favorite here, fell IAl
·~·
AMERICAN LEAGUE, Ryan,
linez (8 - ancs Dempsey ; Ro - ~~ 194 ; Tanana, Cal 1S.I ;
Dennis
N~~egelen
of
France,
drigue.z {... 7) anrJ Moore. lP Slyleven , rex lSO; Hunter, NY
, Grimsltv (4.5) .
ll4; Jenkins. 8os 112.
u . &amp;-2, &amp;-1.
-

1

7

lloJ

with whatever information he
comes up with lor their
meeting ne:rt week .
"The whole incident is
unfortunate, and !resent the
Coney Island atmosphere
developed by some of those
involved, but I shouldn't lose
a m(Illent's sleep over it/'
said Pjltronite.

" Malfunctioning •.@lr
cooditloners or summer Du II
a bigger concern, beeauae
that relates to ticket
production, whlle theae other
incidents, I'm co!lfldent, do
not. The final word ls that no
one can legitimately attack
the honesty and tAltal
irltegrity of the systems up

here.

11

Vicious personal attacks predi~ted

Gamb le CHl.
By

Investigations would point
cmclusively to the fact that
OIII hOWie is in fine order."
The director said the inhouse investigation ol the
employes would go as far as
the law and federal equal
employment standards
pe~t. !lnd tllat M would
furnish the commi8sioners

In the continuing shifting ol
"The Republicans are
Mor!Aln claimed Ford had
delegates,
Ford and Reagan
going to be desperatl','' he 1,134 votes - lour more Ulan
eaCh
lost
a
supporter
in South
told a rally in Bedford. "The the number needed. His counvoters have learned about the terpart in the Reagan camp, Carotlna tAl the unconunitted
abSence of leadership, the · John Sears, says his column Tues.day and an
suffering
that
we 've candtdate has 1,140, or 10 uncommitted delegate ln
Pennsylvania said he now
e:rperienced from the more than needed.
•
supports
Ford,
.
mistakes in foreign policy,
~ la~est count in UPI 's
Reagan begins a three-day
from the mismanagement of nat1onwtde survey shows
. tl)e White House in dealing Ford at 1,121, nine short of delegate hunt today In four
with our problems." ·
nomination. Reagan has critical states - Mississippi,
Carter
repeatedly has 1,030, 100 short, and there are Pennsylvania, New Jersey
and West Virginia, The trip
said he~ n(X intend to use 108 stiU uncommitted .
'"
Watergate as an issue in the
UPI's count included the starts in Misslsslppi, whose
campaign, mentioned it in shift IAl uncommitted of a 3Q.rnemher delegation wls
reciting his list of delegate in Maine that the oni:e strongly behind him, but
administration misbehavior. wire service had by mlstake is now alniost evenly divided,
"It's a very rare occasion ~t In the Ford column.
... when a candidate for r---~--"'"!~~~~~~~~~~-,
president can leam direclly
from those who feel the
adverse affect from an unfair
tax law, inflation pressures,
no energy policy, the
problems of a foreign policy
that makes us ashamed, the
disgrace of Watergatl' , the
embarrassment of the CIA
WE WILL CLOSE
revelations, the loss of the
war in Vietnam.'~
AT12:00
Meanwhile in Washington,
Ford's campaign manager
IAlld reporters neither Ford
nor Ronald Reagan will go to
See You At The Fair
the Republican National
Coovention in Kansas City
Aug : 16 with the GOP
••.o. w
presidential nomination
locked up.
"There's no lockup availa·
,,."'
ble," said Rogets Mortm.

......,

who

THURSDAY, AUGUST 5

.,.

..

ENGINEERING
SERVICE

For Your Job

•'
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.

...",,

;:

..
....

-

"

1

''

..",
,

..... -"
....
ft.. .. •..,,

,

.....

26FT.

28FT.

sz470

$26

(4/12)
r

60

PJTCH

"'
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; ,.

...

DELIVERED TO JOB
SITE

WI

...

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ld
'

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"
,.,

.

..
A LOT .OF FISH - Charles E. Stevena, Columbus, landed thla 38 pound catftsh at
Forked Rllll Lake recenUy on a bank llne:
·

Primary winner killed
By DEAN REYNOLDS
mittee wlll have to choose a
UDII!!d Press Intematlooal
la
f u
Rep. Jerrv Utton died in a rep cement or tton for the
'
ge~rill election.
fie r y plane cra sh late
In
the . Republican
Tuesday on his way to an senatorial race., Attorney
election party, without General. John c. Danforth
knowing he was the upset waa an easy winrll!r to face
win ne r of
Missouri's the eventual Democratic
Democratic primary lor a nominee.
Senate seal.
In the race for governor,
His death occurred only incumbent Christopher Bond
hours before his victory over· .won easily over token opposl·
two other contestants was lion, and Kansas City
confirmed. His wife; Sharon, attorn ey Joseph Teasdale
36., two of the couple's will be his Democratic
children, pllot Paul Rupp and opponent.
Rupp's son also died In the
Wltlle the tragedy cast a
crash, which occurred as the pall over tl)e MiBsourl race, a
pla ne took . off from major upset occurred in a
Chillicothe to Kansas City. senatorial primary In
A 39-year.old mlllionalre Michigan, where Rep, Donald
cattle rancher and two-term W. Riegle bested three
congressman, Utton was the Democratic opponents.·
upset winner over former . Riegle will lace Republican
Gov. Warren E.. Hearnes and Re p. "•-·in
man
L. Esch, who
the pre-e Iectwn. favorite, emerged from a four-way
.Rep. James W. S~gton, : race. The two sought to gain
son of Sen. Stuart Syrmngton · the seat of retiring Sen. Philip
who ls retiril)g.
.
A. Hart.
The state Democratic Com·
Riegle's win surprised preprimary favorite Secretary of
State Richard H. Austin,
attempting to becom.e the
first black Democratic U.S.
senator.
(Continued from !iage 2)
"When it's white against
lease or transfer property to black, white wins," an Austin
nonprofit se nior citizens aide said alter the returns
organi zations.
became conclusive.
Many more pieces of
Running third and fourth to
legislation were Introduced Riegle, a Republican turned
but are waiting action by the Democrat, and Austin were
legislature.
Rep. James O'Hara and Bir·
Senator Collins also noted mlngham attorney James
that Governor Jaines A. Eisman.
Rhodes introduced
a
Esch, like Riegle a !!).year
ld
veteran
of CapitAl! Hlll, was a
program ~all e.d the ...G0 en relatively easy' victor over
Buckeye Card," lor senior
citizens. The program , which former slate Supreme Court ·
went into effect March I, Justice Thomas Brennan,
entitles them to discounts at former Congressman Robert
state recreational facilities Huber and University of
and private retaUand service Michigan regent Deane
esta blishments, such as Baker.
grocery stores department
In other primar1es:
'
.
- Kansans retained Rep .
s!ores, pharma: ies, trans1t · Joe Slrubttz as their GOP
programs, bankmg faclltbes, nominee ln the 5th District,
res t~uran ts
.and
en· but
his
Democratic
tertamm~nt lactlitles . . The challenger had stlU not been
cards stgmfy membersh1p m determined early today. In
the largest state p~ogram. for the 4th District Rep. Garner
senior citizens tn Oh1 o's
history.
"Ohio is making a continued effort to help its senior
citizens," said Collins. "The
mere fact th at our projected
population increase is 350,000
more for senior citizens in
1990 than in 1970, is a warning
that we must plan for the
future needs of our seniors.
Our goal is to make growing
old a mor e comfortable

Shriver, R·Kan. will face Dan
Glickman of Wichita. The 3rd.
Distric.t features a race
between Rep. Larry Wlnn, R·
Kan., .and challenger Philip
Riloads of Kansas City.
In the 2nd District,
Republican Ross Freeman of
Topeka was nomlpatl'd to
challe~e Rep. Martha Keys,
O.Kan., and In the 1st Dlalrlct
Randy Yowell ol Hays wiU
face incumbent Republican
Keith G, Sebelius.
- In Idaho, Rep. George
Hansen· won a chance for a
fourth term in Congress from
the 2nd District against state
Sen. Stan J(ress. ln the 1st
District, Rep. Steve Symms
won the GOP· nomination to
face Boise attorney, Ken

'

'"

"'

Columbia Gas customers service each month regardwho had dllllculty paying less of his usage, the
higher hea Ung bllla last manager said. This spreads
winter can forestall slmllar the cost of winter heating
problema thla year by joining evenly o..,r the entire year.
the company's Budget
Some 550,000 Columbia
Payment Plan when they pay eusumers use the budget
lllelr gu bllls this month, J. plan today, Koebel said.
M. .Koebel, manager for the They're ln the habit of
.gu COI!Iplny In the GaUla· · budgeting, and they budget
their payments lor gas
Melga ar•, aald !Alday.
The ~et cuatomer pays service, just as they do their
!be same amount lor gas house payments and any
other bUls they owe.
" It simply doesn't make
REUNION HELD
se nse ilny more lor p
ALFRED - The 15th an· customer IAl JliiY two-thirds of
nual Carr School teunloo was his annual gas bill during four
he ld here in Woode grove on winter months. Budgeting's
Sunday, Aug. 1, with 8 basket the answer, and that's what
dinner at 12:30, and a shoft the Bullget Payment Plan
the gas heating cus!Almer
Pro•D ram and business lets
do ."
meeting in the afternoon. All
former teachers and pupils
Participation in the Budget
and their families were in· Psyment Plan is completely
vi led as were any friends and optional, Koebel said.
neighbors.
· Columbia simply offers the
plan as a free service for any
residential or comrilercial
customer who wishes to take
'
advantage a! it.
Pursley.
To become a b~d get
Hansen, 45, who served two customer, the customer
terms in the 1960's and hla simply pays the budget
thi rd begi nn ing In 1974, amount shown on his next gas
overcame an electloo scandal biU and the same amount
of .the last campaign to each month thereafter. In
trounce Dr. Glen Wegner, '!1, this way, he avoids peak
Boise , and businessman winter heating bills at a tim!Y
George Forschler, 44, Burley. when o!J!er bills are high, too,
He pleade&lt;l guilty In 1975 tAl according to the manager.
two mlademeanor violations
The budget amount for
of the federal ca mpaign· each customer is based on ~is
reporting act. At first he got past 12-rnonth history of gas
60 days in jail but the judge usage, adjusted for current
later relented and changed gas rates and norm al
the penalty IAl a $2,000 fine,

2% MILK

GROUND BEEF
79~

GNJ.OM

lB.

BROUGHTON'S DAIRY LANE

ICE CREAM

CUBE STEAK
t139

.,19

%GAL

89~

3 LB. BAG

5.75 per cent · paid · on
90 day Certificates of
Oeposit . $1.000 .00
Minimum . Interest
Payable

~arterly .

A sUbstantial penalty 1
lnv·oked on al l cerl l flcO!I t

Meigsr4Branch

_.@'.

3

9~ EACH

LB.

POTATO CHIPS

Open

TWIN PACK

FRENCH ~ITY WIENERS
20 cr.

BALL MASON
DOME LIDS .

HHB.

12 CT.

2/59~

PHASE Ill DEODORANT
BAR SOAP

BABY fOOD....~ .......~.~~~·-······ 7/'1

00

BATH SIZE

Mon.·Sat.
Sun. 10 to 5

QUALITY

Mon ., Wed.,

3PAIR~$~

The.A!hens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

PHON E 992-3331

y e a r's

sandals at g r eat ·half. pr ice
savinbs . Former Values !o
51 3.99 , Sizes 5 lo 10.

1~

2

88~

EGRET SET

3 SPEED

TWO PIECES

20 INCH

White - 27" High
For Your Lawn

BREEZE BOX
FAN

SIZE 19x33 REVERSIBLE

Regular

$18.99 Push
button control . Three

BRAIDED RUG

powerful speeds. Use

MULTI STRIPE

fan.

1.39 VALUE

1

$}600

99~

S399SET

FISHING TACKLE
PI . Pleasant and

Mason Stores
SQUAR E SI ZE

IT FLOATS

$100

·~~~

.

.· ~~~~"~o~
·
~f/6
.i.."f

HANDY
LANTERN

LARGE SELECTION

Polyester Knits - Pre. Free Broad rl,•thl
1-·Je,rsev!
- Denim
Swiss
- Pillow Cloth
lovely

.

pendants with
·Stainless chains

51.69 Value

CHILDREN'S PLAY

5
Year

POT

Guaranlee

HOLDERS·

SUN

SECON DS

GLASSES

SMALLER FIGURE SALE''
~NGER MACHINES
CONTINUES TIL AUG. 7
11

GOOD SElfCTION OF
USED MACHINES

$2995

McCall's, Kwick-Sew,

up.

We're
conditioned!
• Ple~.a~;,·•
of free

PRICES

ARE IN EFFECT
NOW
SHOP YOUR
NEAREST STORE

MASON - SILVER BRIDG
.&gt;

'

Y2 PRICE

THERMOS

Ph. 992-2284

,~,.

40W-60W-75W-100W
SAVE 32c

PRICE

GIRLS SANDALS 1h PRICE

The·Fabnc Shop

v

UGHT
BULBS

TOWELS
Cann o n t er r v seco nds.

y.our nex t

Pomeroy . Ohio

Westing House

BATH
White. pin k , bl ue, gold .

2'6 Second 51.

Simplicity PaHerns
115 W. Second
Pomeroy

"'

'

Saturday 9 Til5

WOMEN'S
SANDALS

as window or floor

Co,;,e, see Ihe wonderful·
iy sc ulp tured de tail s of
these most pop ul ar of all
medals. Choice of round ·
or ova l style s. Fin e gifl
fo r men and wo me n.

FLOOR, WALL.
CUMEI, 16 OZ. PKG.

Open All Day Thursd1y
Friday Night Till

CANNON

PANTY HOSE

proposi tion."

BREAD

SPIC AND SPAN

'llOmeroy, 0.

WOMEN'S SHEER

FABRIC CLEARANCE

(]''

Thursday thru Sunday

Mlcklle of Upper Block

Values
to Sl.OO

-

Prices Effective

"

STAINLESS STEEL

•

9 til 7

Hartley 's' Shoes

&gt;

32 oz.
BOTILES

PRINGLE$ NEWFANGLED

'

SUMMER SHOE
CLEARANCE

1st

3 SHADES

DRINK

CUCUMBERS

IRED ~NG h~P.'I

ac counts withdrawn prlo
to the da t e of maturity

AND GRAPEFRUIT

HOME GROWN

Fr i., 7-8 p.m .

Certificates

ORANGE

49~

work in. Come try on a pair.

fff ice Hoursj 10-12 a .m.
Mon ..
2-4 p. m. M&lt;&gt;n.·

rri.

•.

shop or service area a more pleasant plaCe to

R. A. AV ERION , M. D.
A. G. SO LA, M.D.
JOHN RIDGW AY. D.O.
C. W. THOMPSON, M.D.

sat..

•·

Here's a shoe jusl built to be shopworn in oolid
comfort. Safety Steel toes, and cushion crepe
soles. You'll find they can make your plant,

Dog-ti red? This will pep you up!
We're having a hot mid-Summer sale
to cool over-heated budge•s. See .. ,

WAGNER
'

Complete Selection Of
Shoes &amp; Boots

Adjacent to
Veterams
Memorial Ho spit a l

On 90-Day

~

YEU.OW ONIONS

SAFETY

RIVERSIDE MEDICAL
GROUP

5.75%

.8

BROUGHTON'S

weather conditions, the
manager Indicated . Major
changes In any of these
factors can result in budget
amount· adjustments when
the accounts are reviewed in
April, he pointed out.
Even though a customer
joins the Budget Payment
Plan
and
pays
a
predetermined amount each
·month, the actual amount of
the bill will be shown on the
biU, along with the Budget
Payment amount, and the
status of his Budget Payment
account. This is made
possible, according to the
manager, since the gas
meters of all Budget
Payment customers continue
. IAl be read throughout the
year on the same basis as
thilse of any other customer.
Customers wishing
. additional information on the
Budget Payment Plan can
call or stop by their local gas
company offices, Koebel
said. "We will be happy 1o

Our Interest is
.Greater For You

Collins

AvallabJ.- Now ovERHA
241NCHU

answer any questions or
provide
a~y
further
lnf&lt;rnlatlon oo the Budget
Paf!11tnt Plan."

"

,,

'"

�.6- Thei~Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1976

7- '!be Dilly SenUael, llllcidl~p~

Killer illness may he typhoid
·
.

Another

•

!f
a~

HCOLUMBUS ( UPI) - Ohio
ealth Director Dr-. John
Aclre~ ~ Tuesday be
was informed by lhe U.S.
center for Disease Control in
AUanla .there is a strong
posslblhty the mysterious
tllness that has struck
Pennsylvania may be typhoid
and not some type of
respiratory virus. •···
Ackerman said U.at if it
were a respiratory illness, it
wu:.
3Ve surfaced in the
gen•
population and
spt . .
to members of
f&amp;li&gt;W' of trose already
strtck.,.,, which it has nlil .
Meanwhi le,
Ohio
Department of Health
SjMlkesman Jon Christensen
satd tbe state could fight 8
swine n~ epidemic. but~· ~he
illness ts an Untdenll(led
strain of nu, lh8-e IS little
that can be. done to CIIIlbat it.
~ensen SBld ~at even
if It IS swme nu, Ohio would

,.
~

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1:

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firsth.avetogetthevaccine

from the federal govtnvnent
before a mass Immunization
program could begin
AI least 19 PMylvania
residents who attended an
American Legion convenlioo
in Philadelphia have died
from the illness H lth
officials h.ave nlil ~ a6~e to
determine the
of the
deaths.
cause
.....ere 18
• oth'
do
'"
n
mgwecan
U it is a new strain of tl "
Ou'i.stensen said '"!be ~
IJ'l!ventioo Is v~e
must llavt vaccine. y~ can't
l&lt;tke antibiotics or other
medicilles "
HesaidiJhiobasneverhad
a situation simillar to
Pemyslvania's but ''every
state has bad insta
of
mini-epidemics. ~e
typically involve foo~
poisoning Outbreaks of
typhoid ~ . also Often traced
10 water or food. There have
been simlliar outbreaks al n

vc!

butnolhingwithsoman~

!l· r":r::·;~;::;;:'l

1'

:: ,,,

~ !~ back through time ~·[

· tlms "

off.,
VIC

•

He ~d we Ohio beal!b
!.n Penmylvama
at .
. . of~ cent~ to
help 1
~disease. .
~Ohio American Legtoo
wd tt knew of po Obio
member who attended the
convention.
. Christensen sa!d if the
illness Is a nu stram it .cwld
ea 5il Y betrI.IISDUI. ted to other
~~· .
F1u.JS :e of the fastest
spreading -se·~s there Is.
~-fplaast ~~ usuaUy .
......,. ce m the Wllller and
the dis~se Is usually
dormant tn the sununer," he
liWd.
. .
. Christensen satd tf the
disease turns Ol!t to be swine
~! Ohio ~ld probably. be
. dy to giVe VBCCU18Ums .
Within a few ~ if the
vaccmecan be obtained from

•

s

tbe federal govtnunent.
"We have the cllqics pretty
much set up and plans are
made lor scheduling use a1
vaccine guns. We are
scheduled to get the vaccine
in mid-5eptember," he said.
'!be ooly thi!lg stoppi!lg
delivtry of the vaccine, he
said, is the argument goi!lg
on over 1nsura~ fer the
·~·
oompanles makin
g U.e
vaccine. He said they do n01
want to be held liable for any
law$Uits Ulat may be filed
over use .of the drug .
" U that can be settled 1
believe we can get the
programgoi!lgina verysbort
lime,"hesaid. ·•rr thedeaUis
in Pennsylvania are from the
·swine nu it would be a very
persuasive_ although tra~c
- Brgtlllle!ll for gni!lg ahead
with the program right
away."

"·

~

•

•

lrElecta.Circle has potluck

••
,
l

¥mba's ·of ·the Electa
Orde of ibe B. H. .'iallboro

another effort

.

~ Swimming ·

WASHINGTON (UP!) - .
.Cmcnu Ia one step I Wiy
from overriding President
Ford'l veto of federal coal
lea•lnc reforms deapl te
arpmenta It l'ould hinder
the
nation's
energy
Independence goals.
The Senate began the
...-u Tuesday, voting 7~ to
18 ro reject auertlons by the
Pre!lldent that the measure
would lllow domestic coal
production.
'!be lfouae acheduled its
vote on override for late
today.
Ford vetoed the leglalation
July 3, saying It provided
"admlniltratlve roadblocks"
to productloo of the nation's
coal reserves and did not sivt
the Interior Department .
enough flexlblllty In leasing
the lands.
Jl'ord also contended It
l'Ould probably raise prices
foe COil8Wilers and delay
achievement of energy
independence for the United
states.
Rep. Teno Roncallo, 0.
Wyo.,
charged
the
administration was
deliberately trying ro
mlarepresent provisions In
the bill.
"Not one of the President's
•guments against the bill is
mnvlnclng," Roncallo aald.
"Some are complete - and
baaed oo the number of times
llley're repeated, It would
l)lpear deUberate - mlsrepresentatlona of the legislation."
During the Senate debate
· ~esday , Sen. Lee Metcalf,
O,Mont, ftoor · manager for
lite moUoo to ovenide the
..eto, said Ford was "Illadvised and misinformed" on
the bill.
"This bill will stabilize the
IJiinlng Industry," Metcalf
said.
Metcalf got support f!lr the
override
from
20
RepubUcans, Including Sen.
Cllflord P. Hansen, R-Wyo.,
wbo represents an area U.at
would be greatly affected by
the legislation. ·
Hansen, usually aligned
with the' administration's
positions oo energy matters,
said the bill would not
Increase coal prices for
consumers.

lftiudiced ~emllllb 'before ,

IOf.OifiAW

, .. " 174. . ... Wloolt

s......... ....... ~ ~,.
s.l...neless

llotlr ,, _ IU.U ,

'"'""'wt

,

Mlxetl
Frrer Parts • . • • . . ._

4ft.
.,-,

letular er Chub Pcok--Any Size

100%

Kroger

.

2%

.Ground !Beef

Lowfat Milk
hi.

Ct..

.

.
.
.
Harns Jurors m
fifth day of talk

Well, Route 3 By lACI: V. FOX
PDmervy, for a pol:1uck
LOS ANGElES (:UP!) picnlc. Mrs. Gwinrlie White Sequestered jam-s ·in the
was co-llos!ess.
1riai al William a1X1 Emily
Mrs_ Alwilda 'Werner bad Hams enter their flfftl ~ llf
·cl:tar!le of tbe meeting witb deliberatilm .today wtJik iwll
M.rs. Sara Owen ,giving "'cmell 'IIIIo lllked of ·possible
devo1iOilS from the book juror .prejudice ICCIII!d the
"Thirteen Men Who Changed judge ol mati,gniqg them \ID
the Wori&lt;l" Plans •ere made protect 11Unoelf
to OP.Od 8 belated birthday gift
1be .sere~~-woman, fire'to Miss Emma Mathews. ll8l jury hid deliber&amp;ed 1J
Mrs. Beulah Wbile had !be !Join and iO uiinul,s 'Iince
program en tiUed " LilUe lulll)iday iD t:br trial of the
·Kno,.n Facts About Baptist Symloimm Libenotion Army
n.m~~·couple, accuaed ol II ooun1s
Others a!tending wer,e Mrs. of kicb!ap, robbery and
Louise Davis, Mrs. Isabelle assault.
The cbarges against (be
Winebrenner, Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs. Janice Gibbs
lfanUe&amp;,
accuaed ebducton;
. '
ol
'
l
lf'WIIPIP!t
beireas and
"" •· Belen llodimer, and
guests, .Judy Owen and Trina convicted bank robber
Gibbs.
Patricia Heara, stem fnm a
May, 1974, incident at .an
Inglewood, Calif., S{l&lt;l1lpg
goods store in wbicb Miss
lfeoara opEiled fire 10ith 8D
.,tnmllic carbine 'to reacue
litem from arrest.
'hlo JliUipective j~ren, DOl
c:blan Ill' the final paael,
have cbarged tbat juror
The Middleport Business Ronald
Pruyn
made
and Professional Women's

'•ty

Countrr
-Ice

Alfred
Social Notes

·

I•Iaure

Mi:rgarlne

r party held
•
; by Brownies -""'-'&amp;·-"

,
.
.
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ltnpr

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11 1gp . . . . . . ..

....

•

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I

'

.

•

•

Pretty baby
contest planned

again at fair

.·-·
!

••J.

I

•,

.... .

Z';.

BIG SAVINGS AT MASON FURNITURE
BIG SAVINGS ON LIVING ROOM SUITS

trouble

Cheer Detergent

'being ·impaneled and llhat ·
• Milliaoary Society or lbe
Superior
Court Mark
• Middleport Fi rst Baptist
Brandler
imew
of the
; OlunJb met l'ecelltly at the
l'elllllrb,
but
1lid
nothing.
:• bllllle of .Mr. and Mrs.
''liul!!lday the women said
••
llraodler was now attaclting
their a-edibility l.o protect
him!oelf.
.
Jeannie Barton., who
•'
•testffied that Pruyn tallted
about . a
' 'l:oregone
OODclusion"
in
•
t
he
rendict'
...
&lt;nticized llraod1er fa: sayi!lg
her &lt;redibility •as doulitful
llmiUBe sbedid ll&lt;t report the
ioliident.Ill' 80IIle ..e,u_
•
In a letter w Brandler
;
A mmrning party was
&lt;Copies
ci whidl were ~
: held 'lbwmay oighl at tbe
out
to
r.t;&gt;&lt;,rters.
Mn. Bar1ton
, M'""'loprt Pool by S)'TIICUse
·
s
ailt,
"U
fOil
•er;Ho
rule Ulat
: Bruwme TrOop 11.28.
the
statement
we
beard
was
• Attending were Becky
not
prejudicial
...
that
•
W
ould
~ Adkins, Cllristioa Arnold,
be
wUhin
your
right£ul
: Ondy An!Gid, Becky Arnott,
bounds as a judge.
: Heidi Cobb, Kim Cogar,
"But w skirt the issue by
• AlP Donis, Meljm Bublabeling
.us untratbful is
: bard, .........,.lfnbblnl, ~
beneath
,
_ dignity and is
; 'NaDcy, .ftD NeaR, Verortice
abloliitely
fahte."
, Prulto, Laura RDuan, Becky
Mr&amp;. Bar1Aln alao wrote to
; Rcllllll, SbsTi &amp;slon, Paula
,
p
rosecutor
Samuel
~ Winebrenner , . Mary
MayerD~, Who called ber
•.. W'..U dJlti • 1\.a
"'-thy .nu&amp;UD,
• ..._,_
"ao bysterical woman.''
; V'ldi ~ Nellie Arnold,
" lf you were quoted
~ K. c _AmoU, MiDdy Hubbard,
Cub will again Ibis year
aJita..iJy,"
me, wrote, "[am
: Roger Hubbard, Travis conduct t~ pretty baby · Shultz will help
h•mi1ialed that as a private
: Neue, Usa IIDusb, Oristy contest a I the Meigs County
citizen with absolutely ·
r Roalb, Pmty Webb, Darin Fair.
kq!p 'em O.ying
mthlng to gain and foi!Oiring
; RoasiJ, Rita Arnold, Sue The contest wili be held on
my amcience you sbould
: Cumingham, .Ttnna Amott, Saturday.Aug. 2Iat I p.m. in
RACINE - Paul Sbultz, dloo.e to besmirch my name •
s-ly Cobb, Wtlliam Cogar, the new show ri!lg oo the hill. son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl in such a manner ,
: MaDeJ Hubbard, Donna ~ to the rules ol lite Shultz ?I Route 2, who ''I think ~ llrandler
f ~. Sue MUI')lhy, Sbaron con lest, aU partictpants must ~isted tn the Umted Stales ll'ould say 80~ ai this
• Kalm, Jud}' Roalh,and Joyre be Meigs Countians and must Air F!l'ce 00 July 26 Is a point to aave his own neck""-recister by newspaper graduate of Southern lligb including slander,"
•
coupon with Mrs. Eloise School and will recetve Air IWiinented C«inne Hansen
Wtlsoo, Middleport Ilullness
lrairungBase
.
at Lactland who also testified about
PlANS COMI'L£l'E
and Professional W&lt;lilen's
orce
, San Antonio, pon;!Jie juror prejudice,
I
Plana ..Ye bee~ completed . Oltb, 3311 South Fiflb Ave.,
Botb
Brandler
and
: far tbe open dlardt wedding Middleport, by not later Ulan ~-· Upc!ll complelioll of
•n
weeb of basic training, Mayei'IOn declined to
t of IIIII · Debra Janey, Auc. 12. '!be registration lee Paul will be assigned to one ol · OCillib~lll.
Wtstsw., ,... ., l l •
I . . . . . . . . llf Jlr. and Mrs.
of liO cents Is to be sent with the Air Force's technical
: Dlllll laney. Lqnille, to the coupon to Mrs. wu.on. traloing schools for training
: Dmd O.UUan, 11011 of Mr. There will be no registratioo I!' Ainraft Maintenance the
• .... Mn. Holllrt Oriltian, the m~ of the contest. guaranCeed job of his ~ice.
' o.boclon. Tile nclding will
t)le boy and one girl will be
II EXECUTED
: be ID eftllt ol Salanlay at selected as first place winKHARTOUM,
Sudan (UPH
• 1:31 p.lll. with I hall bolr of ners in the snen age groups
. TOTAL
Eigbty-Q~e persOns were
LOCAL
TO
MEET
r ... ,,.•• ,.,.,. llvr •
: IIIUic preceding
tbe frmn birth to three years.
ltetw il . . .. illic4.....
POINT PLEASANT _ A executed today lor their pllrt
: U!IWl) to biiiD at ~ pm_ Abo a Utile Mr. Meigs
,.... ,..., . . . tt•
.. ... ~a.m. The Cuanty and- a Ultle Mia special meeting of URW in a recent eoup attempt
;-;.-':'."..:·..:::."·
! a.; &amp;blrt E. II_. 1rill Melp c-.ty Will be selected Local 79'1 will be held at against the regime of
President
Jaafar
Nllllllliry,.
Carpenters'
hall
in
Paint
. alllctalt at fbe doallle riiW frGm !be age ll"lUP of four
•
Pleasant at 7 this evening to the Sudan news agency
ca
tlrGalf! ~n .
I
diacuss fu lw'e union action reported.

•

, ••

Red Cross makes

Ho•al'd

FOR

veto.in

•

I· : :;

: ::'t":·:·:~!~oJ-:::::;~&lt;:::!:.o.::;:::-,:;:::::::::;:l::~::;:~:;:::;:;.;.;~,;:.;:~;.;:;_.,.~:;.:J;.:.:.:,:·:·:~..;-;.~-:·:·:·:·:·;.;.;;;.:+:;P-·~:1-...~;,;.~.:);:

CROSS OVER THE BRIDGE
BEDROOM FURNITURE SALE

lly DllEW VON BERGEN

ByMICHAEL RO&amp;s
evaCUAtion but Red fross
rl } NEW ORlEANS (UPI ) _ ll•as a lary voyage baek ~ii . BElRUT, Lebanon (UP! ) officials resolved those snags
I• li' through time for most ol the 410 ~ers aboard the i! ' - '!be Red Cross entered tbe in meetings with Christian
:: :::! II\Blden voyage a1 the Mississippi Queen.
!i besieged Palestinian refugee leaders outside the camp.
:: !=i; '!be vessel steamed into pert 'l'uellday, ..,o;M an .;.,ht- :;;
camp of Tal Zaatar for the
A Red Cross spokesman
:: ;:;: day Cl'1ll8e down tile Mississl~i River ~Cinc;;;;tl, ;~ second straight day today u, said only that "a few p&lt;Jints"
,• ~i flanked by the sltmwheeler Naidlel ahd tile slcie..heeler ::: evacuat~ more of an were 1being "cleared up "'th
:~ :,:: President.
;:: estimated 4,000 wounded the Jlllr'ties ocncerned." One
•Z i;i; ':'!be river reaDy hasn't &amp;a~ed in the last 30 years " ;:; ca~~gh! in biller fighting {or 45 of the matters under
reported veteran river traveler Robert c. Voigt, 'a ;:; days .and dYing of thirst.
·discussion appanontly was
'!•; :;~ cmsulting engineer from Qocinnatl
;~
Heavy fighting overnight the Christians' refUSHI to
~:;: "There Is a lot ol industrial development below Natchet :;;. forced a team of Red Cross allow medicine and water
:: ;:; that. was never there before. but .between St. !Auis and ~: workers to delay its &lt;tttempt into ·the camp.
•: :;:: Natchez the river is pretty mucb the way it al,...ys has :': to cross through Christian
The Christians launched a
:0 :;:: been."
;~. hnes into the d&amp;ll'\p in full~le lJink and .artillery
;: ;::· 'lbe.new Queen is a blend of the Mart Twain ·era trith ;:; southeast Beirut for about atlJick on the camp from four
.~ ;;~: ~tempor.-y teclmology and hotel Canfms, The styling ~~: tw&lt;J !lours.
directions at the end of the
!~' IS 19th century, but the .steel vessel bouaes five bars a •;:
.Reports fmrn the camp Tuesday operation and heavy
:: ;;l ·saun~ ~. movie !belter and even a ~ ~~ said the convoy of 15 trucks fighting raged throughout the
,! !:; pool ID 111 seveo dec:ts. 'lbe boat and .Us up 1o 500 ''' and ambulances flying the night, 'ttle reports said.
,. ;:: pas!ll!flge.ll are pampered by 139 crewmen
ii Red Cross baMers BITived
Red Cross and Arab
~ :~ A~ wide red padcDemet j,rop.Js ~~~~vessel at 25 :!:: inside the camp ahd had mediators said attempts
:: :;:; miles per hour,
·
·;;:; statted to evacUBie between would be made every day
,, :,; "lile's the faStest ship I know of Gl ,u.e river," said ii: 125 and 200 persbns.
until all tbe estimated 4,000
~ ;:;: ~Ernest E . Wagner. "She can ·turn m a dime :;::
There were no immediate wounded were out.
, ::( and she bandies lite a dream. Sbe carries twice as many :::: reports or fighting in U.e area
Tilt! success of Tuesday's '
• ;;~ people as lite Delta Queen, and sbe draws the same ;;:: when the Red Clloss m&lt;~Ved ''test-run " raised hopes :for a
: :::; !JIIllOW!t rl. water.
.
;:;; inside the camp .
na tionwid~ truc-e 'that could
: !::: "I Just Cllll't l!'ait ro race ber against the Natchez ·next ':;: 'The •team or 40 .doctors and end .i£banon 's 16-month civil '
• :~: falL"
;:; nu~ses brought o~t 9! war . But Arab League
: ~; The Natchez Is the champioo of tbe Greet Missi'l'iippi ;:;: 'WOunded men, women and mediator Sabry Kholy said
~ ~~ Sleamlnaf Race, havq defeated the Delta Quoeo twice. ~~~ children 1r om bhe .camp there were still some ""details
• :::: ADorted (UCs, Coat Guard veue1s and ~ lll'llter- :;:: Tuesday, under a truce ap- to setUe" &lt;in arranging a
~ ::~ IJ!B)'ipg~tjoinedtbeesartBotiDa intbefinalfe!l' ) proved by rightiSt Olristian cease-fire.
• :::: miles:. A ~ band act •the •Queen oOOI!lpeled fa: ;':: militiamen 'SUI't'OWJdlr\g tbe
ll'uesady's operation was
' ;~~ alistuaa ·with tbe alliope •ltboard tbe llllitcbez.
;~: ·camp. ·
· the seventh atternptto,"escue
~ ;~ Abou.t lliO 1pectlttln niled at the stllkmder- :;::
Last minute disagreement.. wounded from the camp 'but .
t ;~ ~ctilll Poydru Street 1lbazf •tenninal. inclu"'n• ;:~ with Olristian leaders ~~""
• ,, &lt;nlC and bl .
- ..... __;
.
-... ..
·,--- tbe only one that suoceeded.
{ i:.l
· ''IIIPSS .....,.,. who made. speeches about a ~c; had stalled &lt;tbe seo.ond
, &gt;;: DeW er:a ol vacatian h\ti_
·
;;;:
• ~ "'The ri\W is u pretty as tbe Rhine. all ~re need are the {
i ~ ""Ides," said Myrtle Smith of ~ Ohio.
:~:

•e

-

8 •J

(ucullllaers or
lnen Peppers ..

...3 ..
Callfernla 2~·· ,...;· .......
c........... . .
.

·I

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

.

c.....

Pean

"

•

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.

I.

SATISFACTION
GUARANTEE
w . . . .....

ctifu

.

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

:..:':'"':!;'.ttl ............

............ . . .......
. .........._
..........
' ,...........
,...... _, ............... .....

/j~
~ .. .::....::.-=::.-.:::.w.
.
~
.
u

~ ......

.... ....................... a.cr .... ......

,.. ,......

lr111r Wllce 1 11
""

,.... Stl fT

'

,

Sunday School attendance
on Aug. I was 39, the offering
was $19.35. Worship services
were held at 10:45 with the
Rev. Richard Thomas
speaking from Luke 19:1·10,
"Jesus Accepts Us Just as We
Are." Communion services
were held after the sermon .
Attendance was 25.
The church received a new
roof on Tuesday and Wednesday or last week.
rtte Albert Young family
held their annual reunion in
the Woode grove here Sunday, Aug. I with local
relatives, Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Henderson and
David and Unda Williams
anciAaron, and Mr. and Mrs .
Clair E. Follrod, Stevie and
Kathy and others from
Tuppers Plains and various
other places In the county .as
well as some from Columbus
and Zanesville and other
places in the stale attending.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D.
Woode' attended the HayesYoung family and HoU!day
School Reunion at the Gerald
Hayes home on Shade Route
in Bedford Township, Sunday, Aug. I. This is a very old
family reunion having had Its
beginning In 1924, at the
Susan and Jim Youn g
homestead, meeting In
various places down through
the years and at the present
location .from 25 to 30 years.
Attending the Northeast
Cluster Hymn Sing at Joppa
on Saturday evening, July 31
from here were Nina
. Robinson and Charles and
Helen Woode.
The Wednesday evening
prayer meeting here was well
attended last week with
aeveral attending also from
Tuppers Plains.
Diana and Debbie
Atherton of Long Bottom
recently spent several days
with their grandparents here,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
AthertOn.
Mary Carr recently visited
Mr. and Mrs. Sid O'Brien In
Columbua.
Genevieve Guthrie recently
visited In Columbus and
Sugar Grove, 0.

1-2 PC. NORWALK GOLD NYLON LIVING ROOM SUITE

NOW '550.00

REG. '699.95

2-2 PC

li~ING ROOM SUITES;

SAVE '149.95

1 GREEN. SOLID PINE ARMS. EARLY AMERICAN,

EXTRA NICE.
REG. '699.95

NOW '499.95 .

SAVE '200.00

1- 3 PC. PECAN BEDROOM SUITE WITH TRIPLE DRESSER.
REG. 1459.95.
NOW '375.00.

. SAVE •1 00.00

1- 3 PC. BASSm CHEERY 18TH CENTURY SUITE.
REG. '659.95,
NOW '550.00

1:-2 PC. BROWN PlAID LIVING ROOM SUITE.

NOW '299.95

REG. '399.95 .

1-2 PC. GREEN, 1- 2 P'C. GOLD NORWALK LIVING ROOM SUITES, GOOD NYLON COVER.
REG. '599.95
NOW '525.00
1..:2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE. GOLD FLORAL (SCHWEIGER)
REG. '550.00
NOW '450.00

1- 2 PC EARLY AMERICAN GOLD PLAID LIVING ROOM SUITE
REG. '549.95
NOW '499.95
1-2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE, GREEN FLORAL
REG. '549.95
NOW '499.95
·1-2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITE, GREEN VELVET.
REG. 1499.95
NOW •399.95
1-2 PC. EARLY AMERICAN LR SUITE NORWALK. PATCHWORK COLOR.
REG. '599.95

~:M~~~T.IS NOW '499.95

SAVE '75.00
SAVE •100.00

SAVE '50.00

·NOW ONLY

'199.95

SAVE •100.00

l-3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE. REG. 1249.95

NOW ONLY

, '375.00

ON SALE AT ONLY '199.95

1 -3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE. RED FRONT VELVET.
REG. '349.95.
NOWONLY'299.95
I-COMPLETE SET BUNK BEDS.

NOW '149.95

ONE SET TO SELL AT THIS PRICE.

BIG SAVINGS ON DINETTE
AND DINING ROOM FURNITURE

ALSO WE HAVE TMIS SAME SUITE IN GREEN PLAID.
1-2 PC PINE EARLY AMERICAN lR SUITE, RED AND BLUE FLORAL
REG. '549.95
NOW '450.00
1-2 PC BROWN AND WHITE PlAID WITM PILLOW ARMS, NICE SUITE.
SAVE 1100.00

REG. 1499.95
NOW '399.95
SAVE •100.00
1-2 PC. TRADITIONALLR SUITE, NORWALK GREEN AND GOLD:
REG. '699.95
NOW •599.95
SAVE ·~00.00
1-2 PC. MODERN LR SUITE SOLID DARK BLUE VELVET.
SAVE '100.0_0
REG. '599.95
NOW '499.95
· 2- 3 PC SUITE, SOFA, CHAIR AND LOVESEAT, GREEN AND GOLD.
REG. 1499.95
NOW '399.95
SAVE ' 100.00
FOR ALL THREE PIECES •. SAVE 1100 AND ~ET _A 3 PC. SUITE.
1- GOLD VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE. SOLID WALNUT AROUND FRONT, 8" SOLID FOAM
SAVE •100.00
· SAVE •100

MANY OTHER SUITES TO CHOOSE FROM NOT LISTED, ALL MARKED
DOWN.

SAVE '50.00

1-3 PC. BASSffi FRENCH BEDROOM SUITE. REG •.'439.95

1-2 PC BROWN AND GOLD PlAID EARLY AMERICAN LIVING ROOM SUITE.
REG; '599.95
NOW '450.00
SAVE '149.95

NOW '199.95

'399.95

SAVE '100.00

·
MATCHING LOVESEAT SAVE
~OW '499.95 ONLY 1299.95 ~100.00

NOW '599.95

NOW ONLY

1- 3 PC. WALNUT BEDROOM SUITE. REG. 1249.95

1-2 PC BROWN PLAID SUITE SOLID OAK. FOUR LEGS ACROSS FRONT.

REG. '699.95
1-2 PC BWE NYLON lR SUITE.
REG. 1299.95

1-3 PC. WHITE CANOPY BEOROOM SUITE. COMPLETE WITH SPREAD
AND TOP. REGULAR 1449.95 SAVE '50.00

SAVE '50.00

1 -~ PC NORWALK LR SUITE, SOLID OAK FRAME ALL WAY AROUND THE BOITOM. NEEDLE
POINT NYLON COVER.
· REG. '895.00
NOW. '695.00
SAVE '200.00

REG. '599.95
NOW '499.95
l-2 PC. EARLY AMERICAN LR SUITE. SOLID GREEN.

1-3 PC. RIVERSIDE BEDROOM SUITE WITH lWIN MIRRQRS. THIS
SUITE IS IN OUR WINDOW DISPlAY. REG. 1750.00 SAVE 1125.00
NOW ONLY '625.00

1-2 PC LR SUITE, BW~ AND WHITE VELVET WITM PILLOWS. .
REG. '599.95
NOW 1499.95
SAVE •100.00.
1-3 PC. GOLD &amp; GREEN PlAID SOFA, CHAIR AND LOVESEAT. ALL 3 PIECES.
REG. '499.95
NOW •399.95
SAVE •100.00

REG. '599.95

1- 3 PC. BASSm WALNUT BEDROOM SUITE WITH lWIN MIRRORS
REG. 1459.95
NOW '399.95

ALL ABOVE SUITES ARE WITH TRADE IN.

1-7 PC BROWN DINffiE SET.
REG. 1179.95

NOW ONLY '143.95

1-7 PC. DINEITE SET ROUND TABLE STEEL BOITOM SEATS, WITH
1WO LEAVES. REG. '329.95
NOW ONLY '269.95
1-7 PC DINffiE. TAN VINn
REG. 1l99_q5
NOW ONLY '169.95
LOOK ON TABLE TOP.
NOW ONLY '249.95
1- 7 PC DINffiE, two tone table top. CANE BACK CHAIRS.
REG. '239.95
NOW ONLY '199.95
1- 7 PC DINEITE, BROWN AN.D GOLD FLORAL
REG. '169.95
NOW ONLY '139.95
1- 7 PC. DINffiE. CHROMECRAFT. STEEL BOlTOM CHAIRS. DARK
BROWN. TABLE HAS 2 LEAVES.
NOW ONLY •239.95
REG. '279.95
1-7 PC. GREEN DINffiE.
REG. 1169.95

NOW ONLY '139.95

1-7 PC. TAN DINETIE SET.
REG. '169.95

NOW ONLY .'139.95

1- 7 PC. GREEN VINYL DINEm, 2 LEAVES.
.
REG. 1219.95
NOW ONLY '189.95
2- BASSffi DINING ROOM sum:s.
.
.
REG. '699.95
NOW ONLY '599.95
•

MASON FURNITURE CO.
·HERMAN GRATE, OWNER
2ND STREET

773-5592

.

MASON, W.VA.
•

�.6- Thei~Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1976

7- '!be Dilly SenUael, llllcidl~p~

Killer illness may he typhoid
·
.

Another

•

!f
a~

HCOLUMBUS ( UPI) - Ohio
ealth Director Dr-. John
Aclre~ ~ Tuesday be
was informed by lhe U.S.
center for Disease Control in
AUanla .there is a strong
posslblhty the mysterious
tllness that has struck
Pennsylvania may be typhoid
and not some type of
respiratory virus. •···
Ackerman said U.at if it
were a respiratory illness, it
wu:.
3Ve surfaced in the
gen•
population and
spt . .
to members of
f&amp;li&gt;W' of trose already
strtck.,.,, which it has nlil .
Meanwhi le,
Ohio
Department of Health
SjMlkesman Jon Christensen
satd tbe state could fight 8
swine n~ epidemic. but~· ~he
illness ts an Untdenll(led
strain of nu, lh8-e IS little
that can be. done to CIIIlbat it.
~ensen SBld ~at even
if It IS swme nu, Ohio would

,.
~

'I ;

1,

•!
~·
•:

t;
~

!' ;••'
:!

:;
;.
';

I'•:
1:

I!
1,

r:

b
:•

r:

t: .
,

.~

firsth.avetogetthevaccine

from the federal govtnvnent
before a mass Immunization
program could begin
AI least 19 PMylvania
residents who attended an
American Legion convenlioo
in Philadelphia have died
from the illness H lth
officials h.ave nlil ~ a6~e to
determine the
of the
deaths.
cause
.....ere 18
• oth'
do
'"
n
mgwecan
U it is a new strain of tl "
Ou'i.stensen said '"!be ~
IJ'l!ventioo Is v~e
must llavt vaccine. y~ can't
l&lt;tke antibiotics or other
medicilles "
HesaidiJhiobasneverhad
a situation simillar to
Pemyslvania's but ''every
state has bad insta
of
mini-epidemics. ~e
typically involve foo~
poisoning Outbreaks of
typhoid ~ . also Often traced
10 water or food. There have
been simlliar outbreaks al n

vc!

butnolhingwithsoman~

!l· r":r::·;~;::;;:'l

1'

:: ,,,

~ !~ back through time ~·[

· tlms "

off.,
VIC

•

He ~d we Ohio beal!b
!.n Penmylvama
at .
. . of~ cent~ to
help 1
~disease. .
~Ohio American Legtoo
wd tt knew of po Obio
member who attended the
convention.
. Christensen sa!d if the
illness Is a nu stram it .cwld
ea 5il Y betrI.IISDUI. ted to other
~~· .
F1u.JS :e of the fastest
spreading -se·~s there Is.
~-fplaast ~~ usuaUy .
......,. ce m the Wllller and
the dis~se Is usually
dormant tn the sununer," he
liWd.
. .
. Christensen satd tf the
disease turns Ol!t to be swine
~! Ohio ~ld probably. be
. dy to giVe VBCCU18Ums .
Within a few ~ if the
vaccmecan be obtained from

•

s

tbe federal govtnunent.
"We have the cllqics pretty
much set up and plans are
made lor scheduling use a1
vaccine guns. We are
scheduled to get the vaccine
in mid-5eptember," he said.
'!be ooly thi!lg stoppi!lg
delivtry of the vaccine, he
said, is the argument goi!lg
on over 1nsura~ fer the
·~·
oompanles makin
g U.e
vaccine. He said they do n01
want to be held liable for any
law$Uits Ulat may be filed
over use .of the drug .
" U that can be settled 1
believe we can get the
programgoi!lgina verysbort
lime,"hesaid. ·•rr thedeaUis
in Pennsylvania are from the
·swine nu it would be a very
persuasive_ although tra~c
- Brgtlllle!ll for gni!lg ahead
with the program right
away."

"·

~

•

•

lrElecta.Circle has potluck

••
,
l

¥mba's ·of ·the Electa
Orde of ibe B. H. .'iallboro

another effort

.

~ Swimming ·

WASHINGTON (UP!) - .
.Cmcnu Ia one step I Wiy
from overriding President
Ford'l veto of federal coal
lea•lnc reforms deapl te
arpmenta It l'ould hinder
the
nation's
energy
Independence goals.
The Senate began the
...-u Tuesday, voting 7~ to
18 ro reject auertlons by the
Pre!lldent that the measure
would lllow domestic coal
production.
'!be lfouae acheduled its
vote on override for late
today.
Ford vetoed the leglalation
July 3, saying It provided
"admlniltratlve roadblocks"
to productloo of the nation's
coal reserves and did not sivt
the Interior Department .
enough flexlblllty In leasing
the lands.
Jl'ord also contended It
l'Ould probably raise prices
foe COil8Wilers and delay
achievement of energy
independence for the United
states.
Rep. Teno Roncallo, 0.
Wyo.,
charged
the
administration was
deliberately trying ro
mlarepresent provisions In
the bill.
"Not one of the President's
•guments against the bill is
mnvlnclng," Roncallo aald.
"Some are complete - and
baaed oo the number of times
llley're repeated, It would
l)lpear deUberate - mlsrepresentatlona of the legislation."
During the Senate debate
· ~esday , Sen. Lee Metcalf,
O,Mont, ftoor · manager for
lite moUoo to ovenide the
..eto, said Ford was "Illadvised and misinformed" on
the bill.
"This bill will stabilize the
IJiinlng Industry," Metcalf
said.
Metcalf got support f!lr the
override
from
20
RepubUcans, Including Sen.
Cllflord P. Hansen, R-Wyo.,
wbo represents an area U.at
would be greatly affected by
the legislation. ·
Hansen, usually aligned
with the' administration's
positions oo energy matters,
said the bill would not
Increase coal prices for
consumers.

lftiudiced ~emllllb 'before ,

IOf.OifiAW

, .. " 174. . ... Wloolt

s......... ....... ~ ~,.
s.l...neless

llotlr ,, _ IU.U ,

'"'""'wt

,

Mlxetl
Frrer Parts • . • • . . ._

4ft.
.,-,

letular er Chub Pcok--Any Size

100%

Kroger

.

2%

.Ground !Beef

Lowfat Milk
hi.

Ct..

.

.
.
.
Harns Jurors m
fifth day of talk

Well, Route 3 By lACI: V. FOX
PDmervy, for a pol:1uck
LOS ANGElES (:UP!) picnlc. Mrs. Gwinrlie White Sequestered jam-s ·in the
was co-llos!ess.
1riai al William a1X1 Emily
Mrs_ Alwilda 'Werner bad Hams enter their flfftl ~ llf
·cl:tar!le of tbe meeting witb deliberatilm .today wtJik iwll
M.rs. Sara Owen ,giving "'cmell 'IIIIo lllked of ·possible
devo1iOilS from the book juror .prejudice ICCIII!d the
"Thirteen Men Who Changed judge ol mati,gniqg them \ID
the Wori&lt;l" Plans •ere made protect 11Unoelf
to OP.Od 8 belated birthday gift
1be .sere~~-woman, fire'to Miss Emma Mathews. ll8l jury hid deliber&amp;ed 1J
Mrs. Beulah Wbile had !be !Join and iO uiinul,s 'Iince
program en tiUed " LilUe lulll)iday iD t:br trial of the
·Kno,.n Facts About Baptist Symloimm Libenotion Army
n.m~~·couple, accuaed ol II ooun1s
Others a!tending wer,e Mrs. of kicb!ap, robbery and
Louise Davis, Mrs. Isabelle assault.
The cbarges against (be
Winebrenner, Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Mrs. Janice Gibbs
lfanUe&amp;,
accuaed ebducton;
. '
ol
'
l
lf'WIIPIP!t
beireas and
"" •· Belen llodimer, and
guests, .Judy Owen and Trina convicted bank robber
Gibbs.
Patricia Heara, stem fnm a
May, 1974, incident at .an
Inglewood, Calif., S{l&lt;l1lpg
goods store in wbicb Miss
lfeoara opEiled fire 10ith 8D
.,tnmllic carbine 'to reacue
litem from arrest.
'hlo JliUipective j~ren, DOl
c:blan Ill' the final paael,
have cbarged tbat juror
The Middleport Business Ronald
Pruyn
made
and Professional Women's

'•ty

Countrr
-Ice

Alfred
Social Notes

·

I•Iaure

Mi:rgarlne

r party held
•
; by Brownies -""'-'&amp;·-"

,
.
.
*I
j.;~
88
.;.....'4 .... u...... .........:.·
c

~:

2 lJ.

:69c
...
••A
· ·. . . .. . .
s...
ltnpr

; ·'· .. •

11 1gp . . . . . . ..

....

•

.._

I

'

.

•

•

Pretty baby
contest planned

again at fair

.·-·
!

••J.

I

•,

.... .

Z';.

BIG SAVINGS AT MASON FURNITURE
BIG SAVINGS ON LIVING ROOM SUITS

trouble

Cheer Detergent

'being ·impaneled and llhat ·
• Milliaoary Society or lbe
Superior
Court Mark
• Middleport Fi rst Baptist
Brandler
imew
of the
; OlunJb met l'ecelltly at the
l'elllllrb,
but
1lid
nothing.
:• bllllle of .Mr. and Mrs.
''liul!!lday the women said
••
llraodler was now attaclting
their a-edibility l.o protect
him!oelf.
.
Jeannie Barton., who
•'
•testffied that Pruyn tallted
about . a
' 'l:oregone
OODclusion"
in
•
t
he
rendict'
...
&lt;nticized llraod1er fa: sayi!lg
her &lt;redibility •as doulitful
llmiUBe sbedid ll&lt;t report the
ioliident.Ill' 80IIle ..e,u_
•
In a letter w Brandler
;
A mmrning party was
&lt;Copies
ci whidl were ~
: held 'lbwmay oighl at tbe
out
to
r.t;&gt;&lt;,rters.
Mn. Bar1ton
, M'""'loprt Pool by S)'TIICUse
·
s
ailt,
"U
fOil
•er;Ho
rule Ulat
: Bruwme TrOop 11.28.
the
statement
we
beard
was
• Attending were Becky
not
prejudicial
...
that
•
W
ould
~ Adkins, Cllristioa Arnold,
be
wUhin
your
right£ul
: Ondy An!Gid, Becky Arnott,
bounds as a judge.
: Heidi Cobb, Kim Cogar,
"But w skirt the issue by
• AlP Donis, Meljm Bublabeling
.us untratbful is
: bard, .........,.lfnbblnl, ~
beneath
,
_ dignity and is
; 'NaDcy, .ftD NeaR, Verortice
abloliitely
fahte."
, Prulto, Laura RDuan, Becky
Mr&amp;. Bar1Aln alao wrote to
; Rcllllll, SbsTi &amp;slon, Paula
,
p
rosecutor
Samuel
~ Winebrenner , . Mary
MayerD~, Who called ber
•.. W'..U dJlti • 1\.a
"'-thy .nu&amp;UD,
• ..._,_
"ao bysterical woman.''
; V'ldi ~ Nellie Arnold,
" lf you were quoted
~ K. c _AmoU, MiDdy Hubbard,
Cub will again Ibis year
aJita..iJy,"
me, wrote, "[am
: Roger Hubbard, Travis conduct t~ pretty baby · Shultz will help
h•mi1ialed that as a private
: Neue, Usa IIDusb, Oristy contest a I the Meigs County
citizen with absolutely ·
r Roalb, Pmty Webb, Darin Fair.
kq!p 'em O.ying
mthlng to gain and foi!Oiring
; RoasiJ, Rita Arnold, Sue The contest wili be held on
my amcience you sbould
: Cumingham, .Ttnna Amott, Saturday.Aug. 2Iat I p.m. in
RACINE - Paul Sbultz, dloo.e to besmirch my name •
s-ly Cobb, Wtlliam Cogar, the new show ri!lg oo the hill. son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl in such a manner ,
: MaDeJ Hubbard, Donna ~ to the rules ol lite Shultz ?I Route 2, who ''I think ~ llrandler
f ~. Sue MUI')lhy, Sbaron con lest, aU partictpants must ~isted tn the Umted Stales ll'ould say 80~ ai this
• Kalm, Jud}' Roalh,and Joyre be Meigs Countians and must Air F!l'ce 00 July 26 Is a point to aave his own neck""-recister by newspaper graduate of Southern lligb including slander,"
•
coupon with Mrs. Eloise School and will recetve Air IWiinented C«inne Hansen
Wtlsoo, Middleport Ilullness
lrairungBase
.
at Lactland who also testified about
PlANS COMI'L£l'E
and Professional W&lt;lilen's
orce
, San Antonio, pon;!Jie juror prejudice,
I
Plana ..Ye bee~ completed . Oltb, 3311 South Fiflb Ave.,
Botb
Brandler
and
: far tbe open dlardt wedding Middleport, by not later Ulan ~-· Upc!ll complelioll of
•n
weeb of basic training, Mayei'IOn declined to
t of IIIII · Debra Janey, Auc. 12. '!be registration lee Paul will be assigned to one ol · OCillib~lll.
Wtstsw., ,... ., l l •
I . . . . . . . . llf Jlr. and Mrs.
of liO cents Is to be sent with the Air Force's technical
: Dlllll laney. Lqnille, to the coupon to Mrs. wu.on. traloing schools for training
: Dmd O.UUan, 11011 of Mr. There will be no registratioo I!' Ainraft Maintenance the
• .... Mn. Holllrt Oriltian, the m~ of the contest. guaranCeed job of his ~ice.
' o.boclon. Tile nclding will
t)le boy and one girl will be
II EXECUTED
: be ID eftllt ol Salanlay at selected as first place winKHARTOUM,
Sudan (UPH
• 1:31 p.lll. with I hall bolr of ners in the snen age groups
. TOTAL
Eigbty-Q~e persOns were
LOCAL
TO
MEET
r ... ,,.•• ,.,.,. llvr •
: IIIUic preceding
tbe frmn birth to three years.
ltetw il . . .. illic4.....
POINT PLEASANT _ A executed today lor their pllrt
: U!IWl) to biiiD at ~ pm_ Abo a Utile Mr. Meigs
,.... ,..., . . . tt•
.. ... ~a.m. The Cuanty and- a Ultle Mia special meeting of URW in a recent eoup attempt
;-;.-':'."..:·..:::."·
! a.; &amp;blrt E. II_. 1rill Melp c-.ty Will be selected Local 79'1 will be held at against the regime of
President
Jaafar
Nllllllliry,.
Carpenters'
hall
in
Paint
. alllctalt at fbe doallle riiW frGm !be age ll"lUP of four
•
Pleasant at 7 this evening to the Sudan news agency
ca
tlrGalf! ~n .
I
diacuss fu lw'e union action reported.

•

, ••

Red Cross makes

Ho•al'd

FOR

veto.in

•

I· : :;

: ::'t":·:·:~!~oJ-:::::;~&lt;:::!:.o.::;:::-,:;:::::::::;:l::~::;:~:;:::;:;.;.;~,;:.;:~;.;:;_.,.~:;.:J;.:.:.:,:·:·:~..;-;.~-:·:·:·:·:·;.;.;;;.:+:;P-·~:1-...~;,;.~.:);:

CROSS OVER THE BRIDGE
BEDROOM FURNITURE SALE

lly DllEW VON BERGEN

ByMICHAEL RO&amp;s
evaCUAtion but Red fross
rl } NEW ORlEANS (UPI ) _ ll•as a lary voyage baek ~ii . BElRUT, Lebanon (UP! ) officials resolved those snags
I• li' through time for most ol the 410 ~ers aboard the i! ' - '!be Red Cross entered tbe in meetings with Christian
:: :::! II\Blden voyage a1 the Mississippi Queen.
!i besieged Palestinian refugee leaders outside the camp.
:: !=i; '!be vessel steamed into pert 'l'uellday, ..,o;M an .;.,ht- :;;
camp of Tal Zaatar for the
A Red Cross spokesman
:: ;:;: day Cl'1ll8e down tile Mississl~i River ~Cinc;;;;tl, ;~ second straight day today u, said only that "a few p&lt;Jints"
,• ~i flanked by the sltmwheeler Naidlel ahd tile slcie..heeler ::: evacuat~ more of an were 1being "cleared up "'th
:~ :,:: President.
;:: estimated 4,000 wounded the Jlllr'ties ocncerned." One
•Z i;i; ':'!be river reaDy hasn't &amp;a~ed in the last 30 years " ;:; ca~~gh! in biller fighting {or 45 of the matters under
reported veteran river traveler Robert c. Voigt, 'a ;:; days .and dYing of thirst.
·discussion appanontly was
'!•; :;~ cmsulting engineer from Qocinnatl
;~
Heavy fighting overnight the Christians' refUSHI to
~:;: "There Is a lot ol industrial development below Natchet :;;. forced a team of Red Cross allow medicine and water
:: ;:; that. was never there before. but .between St. !Auis and ~: workers to delay its &lt;tttempt into ·the camp.
•: :;:: Natchez the river is pretty mucb the way it al,...ys has :': to cross through Christian
The Christians launched a
:0 :;:: been."
;~. hnes into the d&amp;ll'\p in full~le lJink and .artillery
;: ;::· 'lbe.new Queen is a blend of the Mart Twain ·era trith ;:; southeast Beirut for about atlJick on the camp from four
.~ ;;~: ~tempor.-y teclmology and hotel Canfms, The styling ~~: tw&lt;J !lours.
directions at the end of the
!~' IS 19th century, but the .steel vessel bouaes five bars a •;:
.Reports fmrn the camp Tuesday operation and heavy
:: ;;l ·saun~ ~. movie !belter and even a ~ ~~ said the convoy of 15 trucks fighting raged throughout the
,! !:; pool ID 111 seveo dec:ts. 'lbe boat and .Us up 1o 500 ''' and ambulances flying the night, 'ttle reports said.
,. ;:: pas!ll!flge.ll are pampered by 139 crewmen
ii Red Cross baMers BITived
Red Cross and Arab
~ :~ A~ wide red padcDemet j,rop.Js ~~~~vessel at 25 :!:: inside the camp ahd had mediators said attempts
:: :;:; miles per hour,
·
·;;:; statted to evacUBie between would be made every day
,, :,; "lile's the faStest ship I know of Gl ,u.e river," said ii: 125 and 200 persbns.
until all tbe estimated 4,000
~ ;:;: ~Ernest E . Wagner. "She can ·turn m a dime :;::
There were no immediate wounded were out.
, ::( and she bandies lite a dream. Sbe carries twice as many :::: reports or fighting in U.e area
Tilt! success of Tuesday's '
• ;;~ people as lite Delta Queen, and sbe draws the same ;;:: when the Red Clloss m&lt;~Ved ''test-run " raised hopes :for a
: :::; !JIIllOW!t rl. water.
.
;:;; inside the camp .
na tionwid~ truc-e 'that could
: !::: "I Just Cllll't l!'ait ro race ber against the Natchez ·next ':;: 'The •team or 40 .doctors and end .i£banon 's 16-month civil '
• :~: falL"
;:; nu~ses brought o~t 9! war . But Arab League
: ~; The Natchez Is the champioo of tbe Greet Missi'l'iippi ;:;: 'WOunded men, women and mediator Sabry Kholy said
~ ~~ Sleamlnaf Race, havq defeated the Delta Quoeo twice. ~~~ children 1r om bhe .camp there were still some ""details
• :::: ADorted (UCs, Coat Guard veue1s and ~ lll'llter- :;:: Tuesday, under a truce ap- to setUe" &lt;in arranging a
~ ::~ IJ!B)'ipg~tjoinedtbeesartBotiDa intbefinalfe!l' ) proved by rightiSt Olristian cease-fire.
• :::: miles:. A ~ band act •the •Queen oOOI!lpeled fa: ;':: militiamen 'SUI't'OWJdlr\g tbe
ll'uesady's operation was
' ;~~ alistuaa ·with tbe alliope •ltboard tbe llllitcbez.
;~: ·camp. ·
· the seventh atternptto,"escue
~ ;~ Abou.t lliO 1pectlttln niled at the stllkmder- :;::
Last minute disagreement.. wounded from the camp 'but .
t ;~ ~ctilll Poydru Street 1lbazf •tenninal. inclu"'n• ;:~ with Olristian leaders ~~""
• ,, &lt;nlC and bl .
- ..... __;
.
-... ..
·,--- tbe only one that suoceeded.
{ i:.l
· ''IIIPSS .....,.,. who made. speeches about a ~c; had stalled &lt;tbe seo.ond
, &gt;;: DeW er:a ol vacatian h\ti_
·
;;;:
• ~ "'The ri\W is u pretty as tbe Rhine. all ~re need are the {
i ~ ""Ides," said Myrtle Smith of ~ Ohio.
:~:

•e

-

8 •J

(ucullllaers or
lnen Peppers ..

...3 ..
Callfernla 2~·· ,...;· .......
c........... . .
.

·I

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

.

c.....

Pean

"

•

.

.

I.

SATISFACTION
GUARANTEE
w . . . .....

ctifu

.

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

:..:':'"':!;'.ttl ............

............ . . .......
. .........._
..........
' ,...........
,...... _, ............... .....

/j~
~ .. .::....::.-=::.-.:::.w.
.
~
.
u

~ ......

.... ....................... a.cr .... ......

,.. ,......

lr111r Wllce 1 11
""

,.... Stl fT

'

,

Sunday School attendance
on Aug. I was 39, the offering
was $19.35. Worship services
were held at 10:45 with the
Rev. Richard Thomas
speaking from Luke 19:1·10,
"Jesus Accepts Us Just as We
Are." Communion services
were held after the sermon .
Attendance was 25.
The church received a new
roof on Tuesday and Wednesday or last week.
rtte Albert Young family
held their annual reunion in
the Woode grove here Sunday, Aug. I with local
relatives, Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Henderson and
David and Unda Williams
anciAaron, and Mr. and Mrs .
Clair E. Follrod, Stevie and
Kathy and others from
Tuppers Plains and various
other places In the county .as
well as some from Columbus
and Zanesville and other
places in the stale attending.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. D.
Woode' attended the HayesYoung family and HoU!day
School Reunion at the Gerald
Hayes home on Shade Route
in Bedford Township, Sunday, Aug. I. This is a very old
family reunion having had Its
beginning In 1924, at the
Susan and Jim Youn g
homestead, meeting In
various places down through
the years and at the present
location .from 25 to 30 years.
Attending the Northeast
Cluster Hymn Sing at Joppa
on Saturday evening, July 31
from here were Nina
. Robinson and Charles and
Helen Woode.
The Wednesday evening
prayer meeting here was well
attended last week with
aeveral attending also from
Tuppers Plains.
Diana and Debbie
Atherton of Long Bottom
recently spent several days
with their grandparents here,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
AthertOn.
Mary Carr recently visited
Mr. and Mrs. Sid O'Brien In
Columbua.
Genevieve Guthrie recently
visited In Columbus and
Sugar Grove, 0.

1-2 PC. NORWALK GOLD NYLON LIVING ROOM SUITE

NOW '550.00

REG. '699.95

2-2 PC

li~ING ROOM SUITES;

SAVE '149.95

1 GREEN. SOLID PINE ARMS. EARLY AMERICAN,

EXTRA NICE.
REG. '699.95

NOW '499.95 .

SAVE '200.00

1- 3 PC. PECAN BEDROOM SUITE WITH TRIPLE DRESSER.
REG. 1459.95.
NOW '375.00.

. SAVE •1 00.00

1- 3 PC. BASSm CHEERY 18TH CENTURY SUITE.
REG. '659.95,
NOW '550.00

1:-2 PC. BROWN PlAID LIVING ROOM SUITE.

NOW '299.95

REG. '399.95 .

1-2 PC. GREEN, 1- 2 P'C. GOLD NORWALK LIVING ROOM SUITES, GOOD NYLON COVER.
REG. '599.95
NOW '525.00
1..:2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE. GOLD FLORAL (SCHWEIGER)
REG. '550.00
NOW '450.00

1- 2 PC EARLY AMERICAN GOLD PLAID LIVING ROOM SUITE
REG. '549.95
NOW '499.95
1-2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE, GREEN FLORAL
REG. '549.95
NOW '499.95
·1-2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITE, GREEN VELVET.
REG. 1499.95
NOW •399.95
1-2 PC. EARLY AMERICAN LR SUITE NORWALK. PATCHWORK COLOR.
REG. '599.95

~:M~~~T.IS NOW '499.95

SAVE '75.00
SAVE •100.00

SAVE '50.00

·NOW ONLY

'199.95

SAVE •100.00

l-3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE. REG. 1249.95

NOW ONLY

, '375.00

ON SALE AT ONLY '199.95

1 -3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE. RED FRONT VELVET.
REG. '349.95.
NOWONLY'299.95
I-COMPLETE SET BUNK BEDS.

NOW '149.95

ONE SET TO SELL AT THIS PRICE.

BIG SAVINGS ON DINETTE
AND DINING ROOM FURNITURE

ALSO WE HAVE TMIS SAME SUITE IN GREEN PLAID.
1-2 PC PINE EARLY AMERICAN lR SUITE, RED AND BLUE FLORAL
REG. '549.95
NOW '450.00
1-2 PC BROWN AND WHITE PlAID WITM PILLOW ARMS, NICE SUITE.
SAVE 1100.00

REG. 1499.95
NOW '399.95
SAVE •100.00
1-2 PC. TRADITIONALLR SUITE, NORWALK GREEN AND GOLD:
REG. '699.95
NOW •599.95
SAVE ·~00.00
1-2 PC. MODERN LR SUITE SOLID DARK BLUE VELVET.
SAVE '100.0_0
REG. '599.95
NOW '499.95
· 2- 3 PC SUITE, SOFA, CHAIR AND LOVESEAT, GREEN AND GOLD.
REG. 1499.95
NOW '399.95
SAVE ' 100.00
FOR ALL THREE PIECES •. SAVE 1100 AND ~ET _A 3 PC. SUITE.
1- GOLD VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE. SOLID WALNUT AROUND FRONT, 8" SOLID FOAM
SAVE •100.00
· SAVE •100

MANY OTHER SUITES TO CHOOSE FROM NOT LISTED, ALL MARKED
DOWN.

SAVE '50.00

1-3 PC. BASSffi FRENCH BEDROOM SUITE. REG •.'439.95

1-2 PC BROWN AND GOLD PlAID EARLY AMERICAN LIVING ROOM SUITE.
REG; '599.95
NOW '450.00
SAVE '149.95

NOW '199.95

'399.95

SAVE '100.00

·
MATCHING LOVESEAT SAVE
~OW '499.95 ONLY 1299.95 ~100.00

NOW '599.95

NOW ONLY

1- 3 PC. WALNUT BEDROOM SUITE. REG. 1249.95

1-2 PC BROWN PLAID SUITE SOLID OAK. FOUR LEGS ACROSS FRONT.

REG. '699.95
1-2 PC BWE NYLON lR SUITE.
REG. 1299.95

1-3 PC. WHITE CANOPY BEOROOM SUITE. COMPLETE WITH SPREAD
AND TOP. REGULAR 1449.95 SAVE '50.00

SAVE '50.00

1 -~ PC NORWALK LR SUITE, SOLID OAK FRAME ALL WAY AROUND THE BOITOM. NEEDLE
POINT NYLON COVER.
· REG. '895.00
NOW. '695.00
SAVE '200.00

REG. '599.95
NOW '499.95
l-2 PC. EARLY AMERICAN LR SUITE. SOLID GREEN.

1-3 PC. RIVERSIDE BEDROOM SUITE WITH lWIN MIRRQRS. THIS
SUITE IS IN OUR WINDOW DISPlAY. REG. 1750.00 SAVE 1125.00
NOW ONLY '625.00

1-2 PC LR SUITE, BW~ AND WHITE VELVET WITM PILLOWS. .
REG. '599.95
NOW 1499.95
SAVE •100.00.
1-3 PC. GOLD &amp; GREEN PlAID SOFA, CHAIR AND LOVESEAT. ALL 3 PIECES.
REG. '499.95
NOW •399.95
SAVE •100.00

REG. '599.95

1- 3 PC. BASSm WALNUT BEDROOM SUITE WITH lWIN MIRRORS
REG. 1459.95
NOW '399.95

ALL ABOVE SUITES ARE WITH TRADE IN.

1-7 PC BROWN DINffiE SET.
REG. 1179.95

NOW ONLY '143.95

1-7 PC. DINEITE SET ROUND TABLE STEEL BOITOM SEATS, WITH
1WO LEAVES. REG. '329.95
NOW ONLY '269.95
1-7 PC DINffiE. TAN VINn
REG. 1l99_q5
NOW ONLY '169.95
LOOK ON TABLE TOP.
NOW ONLY '249.95
1- 7 PC DINffiE, two tone table top. CANE BACK CHAIRS.
REG. '239.95
NOW ONLY '199.95
1- 7 PC DINEITE, BROWN AN.D GOLD FLORAL
REG. '169.95
NOW ONLY '139.95
1- 7 PC. DINffiE. CHROMECRAFT. STEEL BOlTOM CHAIRS. DARK
BROWN. TABLE HAS 2 LEAVES.
NOW ONLY •239.95
REG. '279.95
1-7 PC. GREEN DINffiE.
REG. 1169.95

NOW ONLY '139.95

1-7 PC. TAN DINETIE SET.
REG. '169.95

NOW ONLY .'139.95

1- 7 PC. GREEN VINYL DINEm, 2 LEAVES.
.
REG. 1219.95
NOW ONLY '189.95
2- BASSffi DINING ROOM sum:s.
.
.
REG. '699.95
NOW ONLY '599.95
•

MASON FURNITURE CO.
·HERMAN GRATE, OWNER
2ND STREET

773-5592

.

MASON, W.VA.
•

�•

1- The Dally Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Wedneldlly, Aug. 4,1976

junior
gardener to
be picked

.

Us-• ••

A junior gardener wjll be
selected from exhibitors in
each of the Meigs County
Fair flower shows to be held
Aug. 18 and 20 ·on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
The title and the rosette
and cash award which goes .
with it wiU be awarded
following each show to the
. exhibitor under .12 years of
age who accumulates the
most points ·In the . artistic
arrangement classes and the
specimen classes.
According to Mrs. James
Carpenter, chairman of the
show, points will be awarded
.
,,
j
for each ribbon, either blue,
red or white, won in each
l..- . ~
--'
class and then the points will
MRS. MARY MARTIN, peift Ia archivlste ofMeigs County Salon 710, Eight and Forty,
be totaled and the junior
left, presented the awarding winning history and publicity books of the Salon to Mrs. Lola
gardener award made.
Hampton, 1975--76 chapeau, at the lith anniversary dinner of the Salon Monday night at the·
In the Wednesday show the
Meigs Inn.
artistic arrangement class
for juniors is '''Though Little
Hands Were Busy; There was E~
AlwaysTimeforPiay"which .
calls for the exhibitor's
J
I Ct
favorite arrangement. That
.
•
same show has classes for

near Helen :

I
-

DISTINGUISHED GUESTS and officers of Meigs
County Salon 710 honored at the lith BMiversary dinner of
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and Forty, included, 1-f',
sealed, Mrs. Ruby Marshall, Meigs O.unty Salon 710 pept
chapeau 1976-'n;. Mrs. Audrey G~ub, Columbus, Ohio
departemental chapeau; . Mrs. I.!!la Hampton, Meigs
O.u.nty Salon, outgoing chapeau; Mrs. Arree Marshall,
Lancaster, depal'temental chapeau passe and past
Central Division chapeau; standing, Mrs. Florence

0

Ill~ '

.., ,. .....

Social

.

BOILED HAM ..........................':~.~-~:-~1.29

lb. '1.39
•1.49

SLAB BACON
COOKIES .

Sale69~

LEMONS

$109

CHEESE

oz.

lARGE BLUE
PWMS

MRS. PAULS FISH STICKS .................~~~. -~1

49

2/99'

highlight the individual's
fears of the future and
regr'ets of the past. Events
happening loo quickly toward
the latter years of an
uneventful life prove to be too
IIIli I.
much. And murder is the
"Lidlel in Retirement," is
result.
a ~'plycholofical thriller"
Becky Erwin wtu play tbe
perfect lor 1 nearly all·
elderly retired actress
rtmale cut, according to
Leonora Fiske, a lady with a
dlreetor Alvin Kaufman.
fiery past that has left her
let In late Victorian real. "
with a lot of money and
~nd. the Edward Percy
The cultural, religious and memories, but little else. Her
llld Reginald Denham familial pressures that life has been one of supercreaUon Ia an excellent . surface )n the three acts ficialiU~, from friendship to
Jove to religion.

Le onore 's fru strated . 'Kaufman, director of the
housekeeper • companion, School of Theater at Ohio U.,
Ellen Creed, will be por- is sa tisfied that today 's
trayed by Cheryl Kempe. audience will see the
Ellen's stifled sisters, Louisa timelessness of the forces
and Emily, are Bunny which grab hold of these
Baldwin and Lori Organ, both Victorian dames . The
of Athens.
dialogue is crisp, "and the
Edwin Hardesty wiU fill the pace is swift. This play is
only male role, tha t of Albert · very ti ght and not exFeather, petty thief and cessive," he says.
carefree relative of the
"Ladies in Retiremenl"
Creeds, who pieces together' can be seen this Thursday
the crime and blackmails the through Saturday, Aug. 5-7
guilty. Mary K. Dunlap, and nex t week, Thursday
Sarah Bartlett and Joan throu gh Sunday, Aug. 12-15.
Krause complete the cast.
Curtain lime is 8: 30p.m . .

298 Second
POMEROY, OHIO
NO SALES TO DEALERS
RIGHTS RESERvED

Prices Effective
Thru Aug. 7,- 1976

46 OL Welchade Grape Drink................ .. 59•

100 Count Lipton Tea Bags ... .".................•1.59
,
I
16 oz. CoHee Mate......_. ..................... :........ •1.19

"

7% oz. Kraft
Macaroni and Cheese Dlnner.................2f69•
2 Roll White Delsey Tissue ....................... 49•
16 oz. Van Camp Pork and Beans ....... 2/65•
Hunt's Tomato Sauce....................;............... 3,. ·
,.

$ 59
J-BONE STEAK•••• ~; ••
.USDA Choice

USDA Choice

PORTERHOUSE . •· $. 69
·STEAK ••••••••••••••••••

'

,

$ 49

USDA Choice

.

•'

.

SIRLOIN STEAK •• ~b~ •••

•

,

Dear Helen:
For the husband who thinks he has a cold fish for a wile, he
should ask himself "Have I told her I still love her recently?"
' her?" "Have I called her a pet name?"
"Have I complimented
"Have I said how much I need her?"
· A man gets his priinary thrills through the eye-gate. The
woman gets her primary thrills through the ear-gate. Many
times while he is feasting his eyes, her ~rs are starving. I'll
het the divorce rate would go way down if men realized this,
and tried as hard to keep their wives as they tried to win them.
- FOR MORE HARMONY
.

' .

·calendar

Social

Sunday 10 am-10 pm .

Dear Helen:
As a high school counselor and father.of two boys, I would
like to expreaa Illy owoettion to the mother who thinks high
school should be chiefly a·vocationai training institution. She
seems to feel that if schools teach a trade, not much. more Is
rieces,98ry.
.
· Education •must be more than the nuts and bolts of job
training - juat as life must be more thlin a constant effort to
make ·a buck - if we are to continue to operate a democracy
and achieve spare--tbne fulfillment.
·
The moat obvious objection to vocationaUy C)l'ienled high
schools becomes evident when you study the many swift
changes occurring in our world today.
No one can predict what jobs will be available five or ten
years from now, and no one can guarantee what his or her
physical abilltles wiD be, even next week. Highly specific
training for 16- or 17-year-()!ds "fences them In" and limits the
types of jobs they can obtain and hold In the future. In their
rush to be financl.ny self-supporting, they may mortgage
·. their own futures.
.
, .
Aweek contains approximately 112 nonsleeping hours. The
average worker spenda only 40 using the "vocational training"
he receives ii) school. Can he fully enjoy the other 72 hours if he
has had only onwlmenslonal training? What about the arts,
politics, reading, educated listening, discussion, friends?
Each week I hear students complain "high school is
stupid" and "the sluff we have to do here won't do us any
good." This seems to me an obvious indication .of the
materialistic trend within our !!ociety.
Avocation rieed not be tlbechiefhook on which we hang our
hats of identity. When we learn to make wise use of our spare
lime, our accomplishments therein will become great enough
to overshadow our "on the job" achievements. - BOB M.,
HIGH SCHOOL .COUNSELQR

.

Calendar

period piece that retains In its
plot and dialogue all the insights into the human nature
and psyche that makes this .
play a joy to the audience,
according to Kaufman.
"!tis not a melndrarna with
stereotyped characters most modern American
audiences wouldn 't go for
that," the director points out.
"They will see this play as

Store Hours:
Man.·Sat. 8 am·lO pm

+++

Richards, Eighth District president, American Legion
Auxiliary ; Mrs. Myrtle Walker, third member, junior
activities committee, American .Legion Auxlllary; Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, departemimtal chairman of trophies
. and awards, and Mary Martin, third member nationale
finance committee. Picturetl with the group also is Sllerri
MarshaU, Meigs County's cystic fibr011ts child and the
special service project of the Meigs O.unty Salon,

....

Intriguing murder mystery to be performed by theater
An old-fashioned murder
mystery with a plot still fresh
and lnlriluing, for the Ohio
Valley Summer Theater will
lake tbe ltage , of the patio
Theater this weekend and

... .

~""""""-~ ---

organization. Tributes were Health Club. A project which
given to Mrs . Florence netted $19, for nurses
Richards in her se.cond year scholarship was also carried
as Districi 8 president of the out during the .evening .
American Legion Auxiliary ;
Mrs. Knapp gave a resume
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, who has of the organization aijd work
served as departemental Ia or Eight and Forty. She noted
secretaite and children and that the first Annual Marche
youth chairman, and is now li•as held in New Orleans in
the American
Legion 1922 and that 10 years later
Auxiliary's third member of the organization was given
junior activities ; Mrs. Mary juvenile tub ercul osis
Martin, departemental prevention as a field of
chapeau passe as well as a service by the American
chapeau passe of the Central Legion Auxiliary of whi ch it
Division, and this year ser- is a subsidiary. In the early
ving as third member of the 1960s the work changed to
nationale finance committee; cystic fibrosis, and in the
Ca therine Welsh, depar- early 1975s \0 aU respiratory
temental chairman of diseases.
trophies and awards with
Special project through Uw
three years on Ule nurses years has been support of the
Scholarship committee ; Mrs. National Jewish Hospital in
Rhoda Hackett, depar- Denver, Colo . with the
ternental parody committee hospital being credited with
member. Recognition was pioneering drug therapy for
SERVICE AWARDS - These members of Meigs
auxiliary, are shown here lrilllilwarll.i the Salon won at a
also given to Mrs. Lula tuberculosis as well as new
Salon 710, 8 and 40, an American Legion women's
recent convention. They are 1\lfs, ;LuiJI~ampton and Mrs.
Hampton for having taken a methods of treatment and
Marie Boyd.
·
" •
·
second place state award in rehabilitation in other
"
I
'
the Ohioans Library and respiratory diseases.
NEW ARRIVAL
daughter, Amber Lee. grandW~rents
are Mr. and
Division of Aged essay
Trophies won for the 1965-66 .
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Well Malernal grandparents are Mrs'. . , Emerson
Well,
contest for her entry, "! work were on display during
of Rt. 3, Pomeroy are an- Mr. and Mrs. Charles White, Pomeroy. Mrs.' Maude Ross,
Remember, I Remember." the evening . Mrs. Martin
nouncing the arrival of a Middleport, and the paternal
Syracuse, is a paternal great- ,
.
Mrs. Glaub, .assisted .by presented the first place stale ·
grandmother:·
Mrs ..' Marie Boyd, installing wiMing history and publicity
l;aurnonier, and Mrs. Pearl . scrapbook tn Mrs. Hampton .
Knapp, Installing Ia con- Mrs. Glaub talked on partcierge, ins talled the new nership and urged the partofficers of the Meigs Salon, ners to work toward goal.
WEDNESDAY
Mrs. Ruby
Marshall,
Garnes were played with
SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO
chapeau; Mrs . Richards, priles going to Gaynelle
Pomeroy, and the paternal first
Garden
Tractor
Club
demi chapeau; . Mrs.
grandparents are Kennie See, Eileen Searls, second demi McKinstry, Ruth Poppen- meeting, B p.m. tonight at
hagen and Mrs. Boyd. A gift Dale Kautz home. Chester.
Middleport and Mrs. Laura
chapeau;
Mrs.
Hampton
,
Garlinger, Columbus. pouvtor member ; Mrs. was presented by the Salon to REGULAR MEETING,
Maternal great-grandparents Martin, Ia secretaire- Mrs. Hampton who thanked Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
the officers who had served Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; aU
are
Emerson
Spires,
cassiere;
Mrs.
Vada
Davis,
with
her during the past year. Master Masons invited .
Cheshire, and Mrs. Helen l'aumonier; Mrs . Mary
Tables for tile dinner carried
Carpenter, Middleport.
Roush, Ia archivisle, and outthe red and white colors of THURSDAY
Mrs. Eunle · Brinker, Ia the Salon.
· GALLIA COUNTY Salon,
concierge.
Eight and For.ty, wiU hold a
Mrs. Hampton, retiring
picnic at the home of Mrs.
chapeau, introduced the
Ines Marchi, Rl. 35,
distinguished guests, Mrs.
SUPERIOR
Gallipolis, Thursday , 5:30
Glaub and her husband,
'
p.m. Mrs. Audrey Glaub,
George, grand correspondent
departementai chapeau, will
Falls; Allen Weber , Akron ; of the Forty and Eight; Mrs.
install officers for the 1976-77
Oma Allen, Leesburg, Fla.; Richards, Eigbth District
year .
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Weber, president, American Legion
SUPERIOR 10 to 12 lb. ave. No rind whole or hail.
DEMOCRAT
COMJohn Weber, McKees Rock, Auxiliary ; Mrs. Martin, third
MITTEE Thursday at
Pa. ; Mrs. Elsie Hawk and member nationale finance
·
FRIDAY
Episcopal Parish . House, 8
Kenneth, Shelby ; Mr. and committee, and Mrs. Arree
Sliced
BAKE SALE in front of ·p.m. Plans to be made for
Mrs. Donald Koenig, LitUe Marshall, Central Division
Hocking ; Mrs. Doris Koenig, · chapeau passe, Each brought Kroger's, Pomeroy, begin· display at fair ·
16 oz. Opera
Norman Weber, Mrs. Cecilia greetings.
nlng at 9 a.m. Friday by
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
PRODUCE
Murphy and Pam all of
Glaub spoke briefly and HarrisonviDeOES; members 172, Order of the Eastern
Tuppers ' Plains; Mr. and commended Mrs. Walker for have baked goods in by 6:30 Sl;lr, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Mrs. Clayton Allen and Mrs. the .Ohio Eight and Forty a.m.; if unable to do so call the Middleport Masonic
Reg ·
Reg. 85'
Barbara Sargent, Chester; • ·project of raising funds for Joan Kaldor, 992--7751.
Temple. Past matrons and
Mrs. Olive Weber, Mrs . the swimming pool at the
FREE CANCER clinic for past patrons to be honored. A
Thelma Farnsworth, Long Xenia Orphans home. Cor· women, Friday at Veterans "do your own thing" auction
Bottom R.D. ; Mr. and Mrs. sages and gifts were Memorial Hospital. For will be held.
12 oz. Kraft Pimento
"'
Frank Case, Josephine Clark, presented to the honored appointment call 992-7531, 1-4 · CATHOLIC ·woMEN'S
Sliced Singles
·
''
Gienora Swatzel , Dorothy guests. ·
p.m., Tuesday or Thursday ; CLub, Sacred Heart Church,
Pkg
.
Kimes, Norma Chapman,
Announced during the 992-3382, daily, or 99~2 Thursday, with hostesses
Jeff Smith, au· Pomeroy, and business meeting was a evenings.
Mary Morrow, Mary Kunze!·
FROZEN
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Keller, school of instruction set for
SUNDAY
man, Helene Brickles and
'"
14
Randy, ROdney and Russell, Dec. 4 and the pouvior for
M E E T I N G 0 F Ann Blackwood. Meeting will
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keller, Dec. 5 at .Fort Hayes, Southeastern Ohio Black be held following the · 7:30
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frank, Columbus. Mrs . Richards Lung Assn., I p.m: Sunday at p.m. Mass.·
Mr.- and Mrs. Roger Gaul; also announced a· school of recreation room of Jack's
FRIDAY
Rogie and Lea Ann, Leonard instruction for the Auxiliary Club, intersection of Roules
MEET THE TEAM Friday
Koenig, Sheila Koenig,
to be held on Sept. 4. Two f5 143 and 7. Election of Officers 8 p.m. at Eas tern High .
Bonnie Koenig and Chrisy donations for cystic fibrosis and room will be open one School. New coach and
5 oz. Armour Vienna Sausage............ 2/69•
Koenig, all of Pomeroy R.D. work were acknowledged, hour before meeting hour. players will be introduced.
- Clarice Allen.
with one of these coming Anyone from Ohio or West All parents and friends are
6% oz. Star Kist Light Tuna..................
from the Laurel Cliff Better Virginia is invited to attend. urged to ' atlend. Refresh.
.
ments.

Weber family gathers
at Royal Oak Park
CHESTER - The aMual
Weber Family reunion was
held Sunday, Aug. I, at Royal
()all Park recreation building
wltb 44 present.
A basket dinner was
preceded by the blessing
given by Summers Haught.
Gifta were presented to the
eldeat, Dorothy Kimes, and to
the one traveling the longest
distance, Oma Allen. Others
preanted gilta were Ralph
Keller, El.lle Hawk, Clarice
Allen, Ralph Frank, Barbara
Sergent, Josephine Clark,
Rodney Keller, Rogie Gaul,
Kenneth Hawk and Sheila
Koenig. Games were enjoyed
durinl the afternoon.
Donald Koenig was elected
president for 1977 and
JOIIephlne Clark, secretaryltealurer. The 19'11 reunion
wW be held on the first
Sandlly in August. Marcia
KaUer wsa the president this
year and Clarice Allen,
lecrttary-treasurer.
~nt were Mr. and Mrs.
Simmers Haught, Cuyalloga

Dear Real :
Everybody'uuer-minded these days ! - On your husband, ·
that's apelled "aewer.")
While explicit sex in books and movies may inspire soine
men (and women) tD exira-curricular action, there's always
the question: which came first - the chicken or the egg?
In other words, does a porn flbn give a satisfied man
ideBll, or does a dissatisfied man see a pOrn !Ibn to GET Ideas.
-H.

\

kind, one each, marigolds,
J '
one large type, and gladiolus,
one stalk of any color. There
A review of 11 years of
Is also a class for handcrafted activities and project work
Items made of natural and installation of officers for
material with the exhibit to the 1976-77 year by Mrs.
Include plant material.
Audrey Glaub, Columbus,
, In the Friday ~ow, the newly elected Ohio Deparartistic arrangement class Is temental chapeau Eight and
"From McGuffey's Readers Forty, highlighted the anto Sesame Street" and calls niversary ~inner party
for bright colors. The staged Monday night at the
specimen classes are the .Meigs Inn by Meigs County
same as for the Wednesday Salon 7IO.
show. There is also a class for
Organized on Aug. 10, 1965,
a potted plant, either with 12 partners, the Salon
flowering or foliage .
now has 23 and through the
For those under 12 entering years has been repeatedly
the junior division classes, recognized and rewarded
there is no entry fee. with ll'ophies for outstanding
However, if they want to contributions to the Eight and
enter other classes of the Forty program in respiratory
show, then a membership disease work aDd nurses
ticket purchase is required as scholarship program. Two
the entry fee. Deadline. for cystic fibrosis children, Brian
making entries with the Fair MarshaU, now deceased, and
jloard Secretary is • p.m. on Sherri MarshaU, children of
Aug. 13 and these must be Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marmade either. in person at the shaD, Hemlock Grove, have
Fair Board office or by mail. received financial assistance
Telephone entries will not be through the years from the
accepted.
Meigs County Salon.
In the specimen classes,
At Monday night's anentries must be grown by the niversary dinner, Sherri was
exhibitor. Judging on both a special guest. It was noted
days will begin at 2 p.m. by a during reflections on the
quaUfied Ohio Association .of years of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs; judge. In all Salon , that four to six .
classes
ribbons
and · trophies have been awarded
premiums wiU be awarded in each year by the state
three places.

TWINS BORN .
Mr. and Mrs. David See,
Pomeroy, ..-e aMouncing the
birth of twins, a son, Stephen
Matthew, and a daughter,
Stephanie Ann, on July 24.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. ,and Mrs. Sam Fry,

Mlrrlage?

that - except hll wife.
He wanta llx months' "leave of ablence" from marriage
so he can lind out wlilt he's mlaa!ng.
U wives would gang uP and start suing pOrn producers for
alienation of affection, maybe we coold cloee a lot of them
down. How can we compete with their fantasies? - A REAL
woMAN
.

• d
eve·n year.•(' ·,../)vzewe

at "alon dt'nner part~1'
'J

1

My husband went to a couple of X-f'ated movies, started
re~dinlsuper-eex booU, and now thinks all women are like

•

:~i~~~ ~:~~g~=:~=

Caa PIII'D Breu Up

,,.

Polly's Pointers
~

Polly Cramer

Hunter in need
offeather treatment

POIJ.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - The
hu[\ling season will soon be
here and I would llke to·know
~onw one treats feathers to
u;;e in a ptuow.
My Pet Peeve concerns
manicure scissors. They have
such smaU openings for· the
fingers. Men do use them,
too. - GRAMPS:
DEAR GRAMPS - I am
sure the readers will send us
some Information concemlng
the treatment of feathers
before they . are put into
plUows. I have to admit I do
not know and can find no one
who does. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - When
parking your car downtown
between two parked cars, and
there is a store window ·
direclly to the right of you, it
is a good idea to look In the
window at the reflection of
your car and the cars in front
and back. You can easily see
how close you are getting to
them. I find such a store
window serves as a great
mirror. - ETHEL.
.
DEAR POLLY - To strain
crumbs and other bits frOIII

REUNION PLANNED •
The 69th aMUal Curtis
family reunion wlll 'be held
Aug. IS at the Firemen's
Park on State Route 37 at the
eastern edge of Alexandria;
Ohio, or In case of bad
weather at the Alexandria
Service Club on Mill St.
Friends and relatives are
invited.

HOSPITALIZED
Ryan Sinclair, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair is
a surgical patient at
Children's Hospital. Carda
may be sent to Ryan at
Children's Hospital, M1 Soul!)
17th Sl., Room 412, 4th Floor,
Columbus, Ohio 43205.

cooking oil after deep fat
frying, place a coffee filter in .
your luMel. Pour the oil
through and, it will be free of
any sediment. - MRS. R. J.
DEAR POLLY - It used to
be that when I made pies I
would use the leftover dough
to make jelly tarts. Now we
are more weight conscious,
so I freeze those leftover bits
until I have enough for
another pie. Then I just thaw
and roll out another crust.
Our kitchen chairs made
marks on the tile floor, until I
cut smaU circles from a
sample piece of indooroutdoor carpeting and glued
to the botiol)l of the legs. Now
we have no marks and no
streaks. - MRS. R.B.C.
DEAR POLLY - I find
leaving the oven door open a
minute or two, while preheating it for baking, dries
the oven out and will prevent
moisture from forming on the
oven waDs. A dry oven heals .
faster . ·
To keep my sponges sweet.
I wash them every now and
then in warm water to which I
have added a few drops of
lemon juice. (Polly's note - I
put mine down in one section
of the washer where they
cannot faD out.) - MABEL._
DEAR POLLY - MY
plastic handled bath brush
used to slip and slide when it
became soapy. I tried several
things that did not help, until
1 tried those pieces of
adhesive-like fabric that are
used to hold clothing together
inslead of snaps.' After putting some on the front and
back of the brush handle I
have had no more slipping .
The handle stays in my
grasp, so the problem is
solved . ..., HELEN,
DEAR POLLY -!find that
the containers the new
fangled potato chips come in
make great cracker keepers.
Aller opening a box of
cracke~;s a paper wrapped
package slips into one of
these containers perfectly.
Good to use for stacking
cookieS, too. - LILLIAN .
\

f

'·
¥

Home Grown

,.,

YELLOW CORN ..~~

...
''

California

-!

•I

BARTLETT
PEARS •••••••
Country Time

33 oz.

$_ 39

LEMONADE ••••• P~ ••••

.I

.
.''

138

-.

•

.'

SIZe

.'

luck's

PINTO

17

BE·ANS~:· .

oz.$

.

cans

~

,_ I
.I

Valvoline

MOTOR OIL ...... .
COUPON

j

COUPON

MIRACLE WHIP
32 oz.

69~

$
qts.

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Of.fer Expire~ 8-7-76

•

oz.$

Ph
cans

POTATO STICKS

_j

ROYAL CROWN
COLA
,16 !:~1es 99~ W!C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's
Offer Expires 8·7-7(1

Butterfield

COUPON

COUPON

TENDER LEAF .

SUP.EB VALU

TEA BAGS

GRAPE JELLY

100 ct. 99~

3

W/C

~~· 59~

•'' .
'

~

-~

.,,

W/C

•
Limit 1 Per Customer
·Good Only At Powell's
tOffer Expires 8-7-76

Limill Per Custome-r ·
:Good Only AI Powell's
Offer Elt:pires 8-7-76

'I

\

I.

�•

1- The Dally Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Wedneldlly, Aug. 4,1976

junior
gardener to
be picked

.

Us-• ••

A junior gardener wjll be
selected from exhibitors in
each of the Meigs County
Fair flower shows to be held
Aug. 18 and 20 ·on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
The title and the rosette
and cash award which goes .
with it wiU be awarded
following each show to the
. exhibitor under .12 years of
age who accumulates the
most points ·In the . artistic
arrangement classes and the
specimen classes.
According to Mrs. James
Carpenter, chairman of the
show, points will be awarded
.
,,
j
for each ribbon, either blue,
red or white, won in each
l..- . ~
--'
class and then the points will
MRS. MARY MARTIN, peift Ia archivlste ofMeigs County Salon 710, Eight and Forty,
be totaled and the junior
left, presented the awarding winning history and publicity books of the Salon to Mrs. Lola
gardener award made.
Hampton, 1975--76 chapeau, at the lith anniversary dinner of the Salon Monday night at the·
In the Wednesday show the
Meigs Inn.
artistic arrangement class
for juniors is '''Though Little
Hands Were Busy; There was E~
AlwaysTimeforPiay"which .
calls for the exhibitor's
J
I Ct
favorite arrangement. That
.
•
same show has classes for

near Helen :

I
-

DISTINGUISHED GUESTS and officers of Meigs
County Salon 710 honored at the lith BMiversary dinner of
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and Forty, included, 1-f',
sealed, Mrs. Ruby Marshall, Meigs O.unty Salon 710 pept
chapeau 1976-'n;. Mrs. Audrey G~ub, Columbus, Ohio
departemental chapeau; . Mrs. I.!!la Hampton, Meigs
O.u.nty Salon, outgoing chapeau; Mrs. Arree Marshall,
Lancaster, depal'temental chapeau passe and past
Central Division chapeau; standing, Mrs. Florence

0

Ill~ '

.., ,. .....

Social

.

BOILED HAM ..........................':~.~-~:-~1.29

lb. '1.39
•1.49

SLAB BACON
COOKIES .

Sale69~

LEMONS

$109

CHEESE

oz.

lARGE BLUE
PWMS

MRS. PAULS FISH STICKS .................~~~. -~1

49

2/99'

highlight the individual's
fears of the future and
regr'ets of the past. Events
happening loo quickly toward
the latter years of an
uneventful life prove to be too
IIIli I.
much. And murder is the
"Lidlel in Retirement," is
result.
a ~'plycholofical thriller"
Becky Erwin wtu play tbe
perfect lor 1 nearly all·
elderly retired actress
rtmale cut, according to
Leonora Fiske, a lady with a
dlreetor Alvin Kaufman.
fiery past that has left her
let In late Victorian real. "
with a lot of money and
~nd. the Edward Percy
The cultural, religious and memories, but little else. Her
llld Reginald Denham familial pressures that life has been one of supercreaUon Ia an excellent . surface )n the three acts ficialiU~, from friendship to
Jove to religion.

Le onore 's fru strated . 'Kaufman, director of the
housekeeper • companion, School of Theater at Ohio U.,
Ellen Creed, will be por- is sa tisfied that today 's
trayed by Cheryl Kempe. audience will see the
Ellen's stifled sisters, Louisa timelessness of the forces
and Emily, are Bunny which grab hold of these
Baldwin and Lori Organ, both Victorian dames . The
of Athens.
dialogue is crisp, "and the
Edwin Hardesty wiU fill the pace is swift. This play is
only male role, tha t of Albert · very ti ght and not exFeather, petty thief and cessive," he says.
carefree relative of the
"Ladies in Retiremenl"
Creeds, who pieces together' can be seen this Thursday
the crime and blackmails the through Saturday, Aug. 5-7
guilty. Mary K. Dunlap, and nex t week, Thursday
Sarah Bartlett and Joan throu gh Sunday, Aug. 12-15.
Krause complete the cast.
Curtain lime is 8: 30p.m . .

298 Second
POMEROY, OHIO
NO SALES TO DEALERS
RIGHTS RESERvED

Prices Effective
Thru Aug. 7,- 1976

46 OL Welchade Grape Drink................ .. 59•

100 Count Lipton Tea Bags ... .".................•1.59
,
I
16 oz. CoHee Mate......_. ..................... :........ •1.19

"

7% oz. Kraft
Macaroni and Cheese Dlnner.................2f69•
2 Roll White Delsey Tissue ....................... 49•
16 oz. Van Camp Pork and Beans ....... 2/65•
Hunt's Tomato Sauce....................;............... 3,. ·
,.

$ 59
J-BONE STEAK•••• ~; ••
.USDA Choice

USDA Choice

PORTERHOUSE . •· $. 69
·STEAK ••••••••••••••••••

'

,

$ 49

USDA Choice

.

•'

.

SIRLOIN STEAK •• ~b~ •••

•

,

Dear Helen:
For the husband who thinks he has a cold fish for a wile, he
should ask himself "Have I told her I still love her recently?"
' her?" "Have I called her a pet name?"
"Have I complimented
"Have I said how much I need her?"
· A man gets his priinary thrills through the eye-gate. The
woman gets her primary thrills through the ear-gate. Many
times while he is feasting his eyes, her ~rs are starving. I'll
het the divorce rate would go way down if men realized this,
and tried as hard to keep their wives as they tried to win them.
- FOR MORE HARMONY
.

' .

·calendar

Social

Sunday 10 am-10 pm .

Dear Helen:
As a high school counselor and father.of two boys, I would
like to expreaa Illy owoettion to the mother who thinks high
school should be chiefly a·vocationai training institution. She
seems to feel that if schools teach a trade, not much. more Is
rieces,98ry.
.
· Education •must be more than the nuts and bolts of job
training - juat as life must be more thlin a constant effort to
make ·a buck - if we are to continue to operate a democracy
and achieve spare--tbne fulfillment.
·
The moat obvious objection to vocationaUy C)l'ienled high
schools becomes evident when you study the many swift
changes occurring in our world today.
No one can predict what jobs will be available five or ten
years from now, and no one can guarantee what his or her
physical abilltles wiD be, even next week. Highly specific
training for 16- or 17-year-()!ds "fences them In" and limits the
types of jobs they can obtain and hold In the future. In their
rush to be financl.ny self-supporting, they may mortgage
·. their own futures.
.
, .
Aweek contains approximately 112 nonsleeping hours. The
average worker spenda only 40 using the "vocational training"
he receives ii) school. Can he fully enjoy the other 72 hours if he
has had only onwlmenslonal training? What about the arts,
politics, reading, educated listening, discussion, friends?
Each week I hear students complain "high school is
stupid" and "the sluff we have to do here won't do us any
good." This seems to me an obvious indication .of the
materialistic trend within our !!ociety.
Avocation rieed not be tlbechiefhook on which we hang our
hats of identity. When we learn to make wise use of our spare
lime, our accomplishments therein will become great enough
to overshadow our "on the job" achievements. - BOB M.,
HIGH SCHOOL .COUNSELQR

.

Calendar

period piece that retains In its
plot and dialogue all the insights into the human nature
and psyche that makes this .
play a joy to the audience,
according to Kaufman.
"!tis not a melndrarna with
stereotyped characters most modern American
audiences wouldn 't go for
that," the director points out.
"They will see this play as

Store Hours:
Man.·Sat. 8 am·lO pm

+++

Richards, Eighth District president, American Legion
Auxiliary ; Mrs. Myrtle Walker, third member, junior
activities committee, American .Legion Auxlllary; Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, departemimtal chairman of trophies
. and awards, and Mary Martin, third member nationale
finance committee. Picturetl with the group also is Sllerri
MarshaU, Meigs County's cystic fibr011ts child and the
special service project of the Meigs O.unty Salon,

....

Intriguing murder mystery to be performed by theater
An old-fashioned murder
mystery with a plot still fresh
and lnlriluing, for the Ohio
Valley Summer Theater will
lake tbe ltage , of the patio
Theater this weekend and

... .

~""""""-~ ---

organization. Tributes were Health Club. A project which
given to Mrs . Florence netted $19, for nurses
Richards in her se.cond year scholarship was also carried
as Districi 8 president of the out during the .evening .
American Legion Auxiliary ;
Mrs. Knapp gave a resume
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, who has of the organization aijd work
served as departemental Ia or Eight and Forty. She noted
secretaite and children and that the first Annual Marche
youth chairman, and is now li•as held in New Orleans in
the American
Legion 1922 and that 10 years later
Auxiliary's third member of the organization was given
junior activities ; Mrs. Mary juvenile tub ercul osis
Martin, departemental prevention as a field of
chapeau passe as well as a service by the American
chapeau passe of the Central Legion Auxiliary of whi ch it
Division, and this year ser- is a subsidiary. In the early
ving as third member of the 1960s the work changed to
nationale finance committee; cystic fibrosis, and in the
Ca therine Welsh, depar- early 1975s \0 aU respiratory
temental chairman of diseases.
trophies and awards with
Special project through Uw
three years on Ule nurses years has been support of the
Scholarship committee ; Mrs. National Jewish Hospital in
Rhoda Hackett, depar- Denver, Colo . with the
ternental parody committee hospital being credited with
member. Recognition was pioneering drug therapy for
SERVICE AWARDS - These members of Meigs
auxiliary, are shown here lrilllilwarll.i the Salon won at a
also given to Mrs. Lula tuberculosis as well as new
Salon 710, 8 and 40, an American Legion women's
recent convention. They are 1\lfs, ;LuiJI~ampton and Mrs.
Hampton for having taken a methods of treatment and
Marie Boyd.
·
" •
·
second place state award in rehabilitation in other
"
I
'
the Ohioans Library and respiratory diseases.
NEW ARRIVAL
daughter, Amber Lee. grandW~rents
are Mr. and
Division of Aged essay
Trophies won for the 1965-66 .
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Well Malernal grandparents are Mrs'. . , Emerson
Well,
contest for her entry, "! work were on display during
of Rt. 3, Pomeroy are an- Mr. and Mrs. Charles White, Pomeroy. Mrs.' Maude Ross,
Remember, I Remember." the evening . Mrs. Martin
nouncing the arrival of a Middleport, and the paternal
Syracuse, is a paternal great- ,
.
Mrs. Glaub, .assisted .by presented the first place stale ·
grandmother:·
Mrs ..' Marie Boyd, installing wiMing history and publicity
l;aurnonier, and Mrs. Pearl . scrapbook tn Mrs. Hampton .
Knapp, Installing Ia con- Mrs. Glaub talked on partcierge, ins talled the new nership and urged the partofficers of the Meigs Salon, ners to work toward goal.
WEDNESDAY
Mrs. Ruby
Marshall,
Garnes were played with
SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO
chapeau; Mrs . Richards, priles going to Gaynelle
Pomeroy, and the paternal first
Garden
Tractor
Club
demi chapeau; . Mrs.
grandparents are Kennie See, Eileen Searls, second demi McKinstry, Ruth Poppen- meeting, B p.m. tonight at
hagen and Mrs. Boyd. A gift Dale Kautz home. Chester.
Middleport and Mrs. Laura
chapeau;
Mrs.
Hampton
,
Garlinger, Columbus. pouvtor member ; Mrs. was presented by the Salon to REGULAR MEETING,
Maternal great-grandparents Martin, Ia secretaire- Mrs. Hampton who thanked Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
the officers who had served Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; aU
are
Emerson
Spires,
cassiere;
Mrs.
Vada
Davis,
with
her during the past year. Master Masons invited .
Cheshire, and Mrs. Helen l'aumonier; Mrs . Mary
Tables for tile dinner carried
Carpenter, Middleport.
Roush, Ia archivisle, and outthe red and white colors of THURSDAY
Mrs. Eunle · Brinker, Ia the Salon.
· GALLIA COUNTY Salon,
concierge.
Eight and For.ty, wiU hold a
Mrs. Hampton, retiring
picnic at the home of Mrs.
chapeau, introduced the
Ines Marchi, Rl. 35,
distinguished guests, Mrs.
SUPERIOR
Gallipolis, Thursday , 5:30
Glaub and her husband,
'
p.m. Mrs. Audrey Glaub,
George, grand correspondent
departementai chapeau, will
Falls; Allen Weber , Akron ; of the Forty and Eight; Mrs.
install officers for the 1976-77
Oma Allen, Leesburg, Fla.; Richards, Eigbth District
year .
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Weber, president, American Legion
SUPERIOR 10 to 12 lb. ave. No rind whole or hail.
DEMOCRAT
COMJohn Weber, McKees Rock, Auxiliary ; Mrs. Martin, third
MITTEE Thursday at
Pa. ; Mrs. Elsie Hawk and member nationale finance
·
FRIDAY
Episcopal Parish . House, 8
Kenneth, Shelby ; Mr. and committee, and Mrs. Arree
Sliced
BAKE SALE in front of ·p.m. Plans to be made for
Mrs. Donald Koenig, LitUe Marshall, Central Division
Hocking ; Mrs. Doris Koenig, · chapeau passe, Each brought Kroger's, Pomeroy, begin· display at fair ·
16 oz. Opera
Norman Weber, Mrs. Cecilia greetings.
nlng at 9 a.m. Friday by
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
PRODUCE
Murphy and Pam all of
Glaub spoke briefly and HarrisonviDeOES; members 172, Order of the Eastern
Tuppers ' Plains; Mr. and commended Mrs. Walker for have baked goods in by 6:30 Sl;lr, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Mrs. Clayton Allen and Mrs. the .Ohio Eight and Forty a.m.; if unable to do so call the Middleport Masonic
Reg ·
Reg. 85'
Barbara Sargent, Chester; • ·project of raising funds for Joan Kaldor, 992--7751.
Temple. Past matrons and
Mrs. Olive Weber, Mrs . the swimming pool at the
FREE CANCER clinic for past patrons to be honored. A
Thelma Farnsworth, Long Xenia Orphans home. Cor· women, Friday at Veterans "do your own thing" auction
Bottom R.D. ; Mr. and Mrs. sages and gifts were Memorial Hospital. For will be held.
12 oz. Kraft Pimento
"'
Frank Case, Josephine Clark, presented to the honored appointment call 992-7531, 1-4 · CATHOLIC ·woMEN'S
Sliced Singles
·
''
Gienora Swatzel , Dorothy guests. ·
p.m., Tuesday or Thursday ; CLub, Sacred Heart Church,
Pkg
.
Kimes, Norma Chapman,
Announced during the 992-3382, daily, or 99~2 Thursday, with hostesses
Jeff Smith, au· Pomeroy, and business meeting was a evenings.
Mary Morrow, Mary Kunze!·
FROZEN
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Keller, school of instruction set for
SUNDAY
man, Helene Brickles and
'"
14
Randy, ROdney and Russell, Dec. 4 and the pouvior for
M E E T I N G 0 F Ann Blackwood. Meeting will
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keller, Dec. 5 at .Fort Hayes, Southeastern Ohio Black be held following the · 7:30
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frank, Columbus. Mrs . Richards Lung Assn., I p.m: Sunday at p.m. Mass.·
Mr.- and Mrs. Roger Gaul; also announced a· school of recreation room of Jack's
FRIDAY
Rogie and Lea Ann, Leonard instruction for the Auxiliary Club, intersection of Roules
MEET THE TEAM Friday
Koenig, Sheila Koenig,
to be held on Sept. 4. Two f5 143 and 7. Election of Officers 8 p.m. at Eas tern High .
Bonnie Koenig and Chrisy donations for cystic fibrosis and room will be open one School. New coach and
5 oz. Armour Vienna Sausage............ 2/69•
Koenig, all of Pomeroy R.D. work were acknowledged, hour before meeting hour. players will be introduced.
- Clarice Allen.
with one of these coming Anyone from Ohio or West All parents and friends are
6% oz. Star Kist Light Tuna..................
from the Laurel Cliff Better Virginia is invited to attend. urged to ' atlend. Refresh.
.
ments.

Weber family gathers
at Royal Oak Park
CHESTER - The aMual
Weber Family reunion was
held Sunday, Aug. I, at Royal
()all Park recreation building
wltb 44 present.
A basket dinner was
preceded by the blessing
given by Summers Haught.
Gifta were presented to the
eldeat, Dorothy Kimes, and to
the one traveling the longest
distance, Oma Allen. Others
preanted gilta were Ralph
Keller, El.lle Hawk, Clarice
Allen, Ralph Frank, Barbara
Sergent, Josephine Clark,
Rodney Keller, Rogie Gaul,
Kenneth Hawk and Sheila
Koenig. Games were enjoyed
durinl the afternoon.
Donald Koenig was elected
president for 1977 and
JOIIephlne Clark, secretaryltealurer. The 19'11 reunion
wW be held on the first
Sandlly in August. Marcia
KaUer wsa the president this
year and Clarice Allen,
lecrttary-treasurer.
~nt were Mr. and Mrs.
Simmers Haught, Cuyalloga

Dear Real :
Everybody'uuer-minded these days ! - On your husband, ·
that's apelled "aewer.")
While explicit sex in books and movies may inspire soine
men (and women) tD exira-curricular action, there's always
the question: which came first - the chicken or the egg?
In other words, does a porn flbn give a satisfied man
ideBll, or does a dissatisfied man see a pOrn !Ibn to GET Ideas.
-H.

\

kind, one each, marigolds,
J '
one large type, and gladiolus,
one stalk of any color. There
A review of 11 years of
Is also a class for handcrafted activities and project work
Items made of natural and installation of officers for
material with the exhibit to the 1976-77 year by Mrs.
Include plant material.
Audrey Glaub, Columbus,
, In the Friday ~ow, the newly elected Ohio Deparartistic arrangement class Is temental chapeau Eight and
"From McGuffey's Readers Forty, highlighted the anto Sesame Street" and calls niversary ~inner party
for bright colors. The staged Monday night at the
specimen classes are the .Meigs Inn by Meigs County
same as for the Wednesday Salon 7IO.
show. There is also a class for
Organized on Aug. 10, 1965,
a potted plant, either with 12 partners, the Salon
flowering or foliage .
now has 23 and through the
For those under 12 entering years has been repeatedly
the junior division classes, recognized and rewarded
there is no entry fee. with ll'ophies for outstanding
However, if they want to contributions to the Eight and
enter other classes of the Forty program in respiratory
show, then a membership disease work aDd nurses
ticket purchase is required as scholarship program. Two
the entry fee. Deadline. for cystic fibrosis children, Brian
making entries with the Fair MarshaU, now deceased, and
jloard Secretary is • p.m. on Sherri MarshaU, children of
Aug. 13 and these must be Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marmade either. in person at the shaD, Hemlock Grove, have
Fair Board office or by mail. received financial assistance
Telephone entries will not be through the years from the
accepted.
Meigs County Salon.
In the specimen classes,
At Monday night's anentries must be grown by the niversary dinner, Sherri was
exhibitor. Judging on both a special guest. It was noted
days will begin at 2 p.m. by a during reflections on the
quaUfied Ohio Association .of years of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs; judge. In all Salon , that four to six .
classes
ribbons
and · trophies have been awarded
premiums wiU be awarded in each year by the state
three places.

TWINS BORN .
Mr. and Mrs. David See,
Pomeroy, ..-e aMouncing the
birth of twins, a son, Stephen
Matthew, and a daughter,
Stephanie Ann, on July 24.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. ,and Mrs. Sam Fry,

Mlrrlage?

that - except hll wife.
He wanta llx months' "leave of ablence" from marriage
so he can lind out wlilt he's mlaa!ng.
U wives would gang uP and start suing pOrn producers for
alienation of affection, maybe we coold cloee a lot of them
down. How can we compete with their fantasies? - A REAL
woMAN
.

• d
eve·n year.•(' ·,../)vzewe

at "alon dt'nner part~1'
'J

1

My husband went to a couple of X-f'ated movies, started
re~dinlsuper-eex booU, and now thinks all women are like

•

:~i~~~ ~:~~g~=:~=

Caa PIII'D Breu Up

,,.

Polly's Pointers
~

Polly Cramer

Hunter in need
offeather treatment

POIJ.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - The
hu[\ling season will soon be
here and I would llke to·know
~onw one treats feathers to
u;;e in a ptuow.
My Pet Peeve concerns
manicure scissors. They have
such smaU openings for· the
fingers. Men do use them,
too. - GRAMPS:
DEAR GRAMPS - I am
sure the readers will send us
some Information concemlng
the treatment of feathers
before they . are put into
plUows. I have to admit I do
not know and can find no one
who does. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - When
parking your car downtown
between two parked cars, and
there is a store window ·
direclly to the right of you, it
is a good idea to look In the
window at the reflection of
your car and the cars in front
and back. You can easily see
how close you are getting to
them. I find such a store
window serves as a great
mirror. - ETHEL.
.
DEAR POLLY - To strain
crumbs and other bits frOIII

REUNION PLANNED •
The 69th aMUal Curtis
family reunion wlll 'be held
Aug. IS at the Firemen's
Park on State Route 37 at the
eastern edge of Alexandria;
Ohio, or In case of bad
weather at the Alexandria
Service Club on Mill St.
Friends and relatives are
invited.

HOSPITALIZED
Ryan Sinclair, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Sinclair is
a surgical patient at
Children's Hospital. Carda
may be sent to Ryan at
Children's Hospital, M1 Soul!)
17th Sl., Room 412, 4th Floor,
Columbus, Ohio 43205.

cooking oil after deep fat
frying, place a coffee filter in .
your luMel. Pour the oil
through and, it will be free of
any sediment. - MRS. R. J.
DEAR POLLY - It used to
be that when I made pies I
would use the leftover dough
to make jelly tarts. Now we
are more weight conscious,
so I freeze those leftover bits
until I have enough for
another pie. Then I just thaw
and roll out another crust.
Our kitchen chairs made
marks on the tile floor, until I
cut smaU circles from a
sample piece of indooroutdoor carpeting and glued
to the botiol)l of the legs. Now
we have no marks and no
streaks. - MRS. R.B.C.
DEAR POLLY - I find
leaving the oven door open a
minute or two, while preheating it for baking, dries
the oven out and will prevent
moisture from forming on the
oven waDs. A dry oven heals .
faster . ·
To keep my sponges sweet.
I wash them every now and
then in warm water to which I
have added a few drops of
lemon juice. (Polly's note - I
put mine down in one section
of the washer where they
cannot faD out.) - MABEL._
DEAR POLLY - MY
plastic handled bath brush
used to slip and slide when it
became soapy. I tried several
things that did not help, until
1 tried those pieces of
adhesive-like fabric that are
used to hold clothing together
inslead of snaps.' After putting some on the front and
back of the brush handle I
have had no more slipping .
The handle stays in my
grasp, so the problem is
solved . ..., HELEN,
DEAR POLLY -!find that
the containers the new
fangled potato chips come in
make great cracker keepers.
Aller opening a box of
cracke~;s a paper wrapped
package slips into one of
these containers perfectly.
Good to use for stacking
cookieS, too. - LILLIAN .
\

f

'·
¥

Home Grown

,.,

YELLOW CORN ..~~

...
''

California

-!

•I

BARTLETT
PEARS •••••••
Country Time

33 oz.

$_ 39

LEMONADE ••••• P~ ••••

.I

.
.''

138

-.

•

.'

SIZe

.'

luck's

PINTO

17

BE·ANS~:· .

oz.$

.

cans

~

,_ I
.I

Valvoline

MOTOR OIL ...... .
COUPON

j

COUPON

MIRACLE WHIP
32 oz.

69~

$
qts.

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Of.fer Expire~ 8-7-76

•

oz.$

Ph
cans

POTATO STICKS

_j

ROYAL CROWN
COLA
,16 !:~1es 99~ W!C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's
Offer Expires 8·7-7(1

Butterfield

COUPON

COUPON

TENDER LEAF .

SUP.EB VALU

TEA BAGS

GRAPE JELLY

100 ct. 99~

3

W/C

~~· 59~

•'' .
'

~

-~

.,,

W/C

•
Limit 1 Per Customer
·Good Only At Powell's
tOffer Expires 8-7-76

Limill Per Custome-r ·
:Good Only AI Powell's
Offer Elt:pires 8-7-76

'I

\

I.

�.1 0- The Dally Sentlnei,Middleport.Pameroy, 0., Wedneldly, Alic. 4, 1t76

' s P.I~~ADD~:~~eetore.
'"'~=~::'.~N ?·~~E~A~~1:'o;T~~.:;,\
For
oornl~t' · l.
~
Publlcotlol\.

U.nloi mltod
O.monotrate T"''s and Olft•

, ·

o~

Canctllltlons, , · correc; .
ftw evtn lnvs o w"k, NO ••·
Uons I!':Ctpttd firs t dl"r of
p4trlence. NO paperworil . NO
pubiiCiflon .
. 1 • GHt\MICKS 1
G'atol l nt
· laOULATtONS
· olowonce Eorn FRU SampJe
Tho Publlohtr resorv••
lht right to tdlt or teio ~t

•nv ldl cltemed ob ·
ltctlonll. The publi sher

f"'o

Johnstown, Pa. 1!'904.

more than one Incorrect

Apply in person, Crow'1 Sreok

RATIS

TWO Family Yord Solo. lhundoy,
FridfV and Soturday, 9 till 5

sc;~ltl obHillet. Taklnr, "10&lt;·
· ~-.

t~ opplicotions, hg1• .1in·

~

' CQ.m t poteotlof. no e xperienc:e
ne&lt;Hssary. Cor ' reau ired.
~nel ·614 · 221 ·0100 ,

•l

dl1hes , flowers , misc. Items.
from Blue Tartan, Augutt 3, 4,
!.

o.m. til 7 p,m. Avons, crafts,
tome depr.lli0f1 elot• and
lf•m• too numerou1 to mention. Wilma H. Casto , State
Aout•12•. 'ortlond. -1:___,

white femole beagle lo1t In
vklnity of Chesler. Phone (61-4)

POliCH SAlt, •16 Spring ;love ..
Tuo~ thru Saturday, 8:30 till
8p.m.
Y4~D Solo, Thursday , Frldoy and
· !otur~ on Old Rt. 7. 4 housos

1

5:00.

open a new stare every 30
days . Joi n a company on
the grow!
Send ruume to : Don

wv

of

nlc• khool

clothes, boyo O(ld girls and

26111 .

AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY - '-e

Remember the day for• ...er!
· The complete $tory of ~our
wed4iiing In a beautifUl olbum ..
C.oll
Ken
Grover ,
Photogr.aph~r . Ch.st•r. Ohio.

Phone 985·4155.
GOLDEN WEDDING Annlvor&amp;ory .
Preaerve this wonderft,tl day

with photogroplls of tho family

together. with your friends and
of course the cake! Call Ken
Grover Photography, Chester ,

Ddi:hsttunoj, roa

MOillE homo 101' sole or ront , 3
bedrooms . al utilities paid.

to our coin shop on RvHond ond

Ohio. Phone 985·•15!.

Rd. R...r

wit~

··Horblo". ·loot In lho
BoUey Run Road area. Reward.
Phono992·7114,

$100 REWARD for · information
leodlng to the recovery of liVer

2 Family Yard Solo, Aug~~st. 3, 4
ond · 5. Chariot Mclallle's
residence. 51. Rt. I:M;'&lt;J'ihiles
out of Racine. lodln' clotl&gt;os,

and white •prlngor 5Poniol
weoring red collar. Phone 992·

3589 or 992·3132.

one·holf 1i1", and IMtll,
mtn'l clothing, oppllancos. fur·
niture. Phone 9.19·2220.
YARD:Sole, 829 South Third Ave:,

M;ddioport, Aug. 2·5.
YARD SAle Aug. 3, 9 a.m. to 5
Will DO odd jol&gt;l 1 roofing, pain· · .p.m. Clothing, miKollon....,,
ling, hauling, trH wort., and
Items at 1661 Lln&lt;oin Hoighlt,
mowing. Phon•992·7o409.

.

Pomeroy.

PUBLIC SALE
tHURSDAY, AUGUSJ 5, 1976
10:00 A.M• .
The 'personal property will be sold at lhls
location 3 miles west of RoutB33 in Derwin,
Ohio on 681, go to Haney Rd. tflen .north '14
mile. Watch for sale signs.
I

LOCATED AT HOME OF
•'""·t:;·.,
~:~ LORETTA E. KIZER
... ...
~

67 DODGE VAN

1

JEEP STATION WAGOII

'· : ·.,•.'•CARMIAN AUCTION 00. ·
'

J. Carnahan
949-2708

3 bedroom house for tole at 520
Sycamore St., Middleport, good

buy lor $8 ,000. Phone 992·3!78,
or992·7667.
FARM for sol•, 3S ocres, large ' ·
all utilities , other
buildings. On blacktop rood
ntcr Medina exit, $35,0Xi.

hoY••·

Phone 273·•732.
9 rOQm hou ... both and half, dou· ,
bit garage, · $12 ,0011 · firm .

Virgil I . s..., R.. ltor
llO~INtnic Pomerov.D.
Phon~m·W'

4 BEDROOMS - Nice
Older home with 1'.'2 .belns.
hot water heal, natural gas
&amp;city water. Walk to work.
Garage &amp; Shop in !he
besement Asking $20,0011.
J YEARS OLO- 2 ceramic

baths, 6 rooms, l bedrooms
with closets. family room.
wood.burnlng
fireplace.
full basement. copper
plumbing and 2 car garage.

CENTRAL REALlY CO.

'

T. Donohlltl
742-3041

wtth or without whttls and
motor. Phone 2-47·2238.

5,0QO ITU, ••·
coiienl condition. Con bo lftn
· 01 304 Sprlog Ave. Pomeroy,

· AUCTION SALE .

1969 Cullom Pontiac. Phone 992·
59•8.
1973 Hondo 5170, ••colltnt candl·

.

tlon. $250. Phone992·5213.
1971 Yotiloho, 125. IICIOd cO(ldl·
, tion. Phone 992·31M.
KENMOIIE •rer, excellent condl·
, lion, whllo, oloctrlc, 195. Coil
' (614)1167·3252, T•-tPiatno'.
~
LIVING room , tulle,

'
-··'
.£
'
'
llii1Dt1'.. Don
.. n liicllurn
Wnt
onto lUll and ..
5&gt;
•
' 1 1
,
.
~1
,

1

·.- -

Sl AU IS Fit II OAS-Madtm 1\l:t IIOry tioule, 3 br.,
dfnlne room, fin p11~; full IMt-t. nice porch"
and out bulidlnga. Llrtt ec..lc like with III'MII gran
and PIM tr- 11'0111111 II. Witch the 1..... l!lla twlm
along In the clew wllw, l'rttly 11 1 plclurt. Pric»cc to.
Mil 137.5011.00.

Closeout

AIR COtlDITIOttERS
C61 All Rtmllnlno lttck.
Jllrl- cut to•lilt flint. An
ibt.lule Ctn.utt lv...,
model reduced, first come,

JUC!IIi-Mc*rn Wutory home, 3 IMtdrooint ;.,1111
flrtpllta and biMmtnl. Apple, cherry and othtr lrult
lrMt. Mottly t.nced wllll fllllu,., tcimt firm lind;
to Dlnvlilt. Price l'aductcl to t21,100.

a-

Hnt MrYtd.

.

...

~

.

....

.

.

,
~

.•.li

ASSORTED RUBBER

BACK..r.AIIPETING · •

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

'6.95
Squere vinl inotllitcl

992-7320 evenings

David Parsons, Owner

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

,._

NEW 3 bedroom hou&amp;e , 2 baths,
all elet .. I acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland. Phone 992·

74B1 .

10~.

down.
owner financed . MonrOe Coun·
ty . W. Vo. Phone (3041 m.

3102 or (3041 n2·3227.

COUNTRY farmland with seclud·
ed woods, water ond good OC·
tiKS In Monroe County, W. Vo.

P'~OU'flt lfl\1 BESTFRI!;~D.. .
I nllf.\1&lt;- I'MIN WVF'
~ITH I{QU ...

P'... HOw~ AI!Ctlr
A Bib, FAT
KISS"?

lion

Opening lead - 6 •

llowR iltlo M Utfict

WIMhl•kl Rtplocem•nl
Fr.. Ellimtlts
Onlody-k
EKport P•lnllng
lnsur•nce Work
Welcoine
St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Olllo
667-1127
7·29·1 mo.

.

ALIIIIINUI

SIMK-SilfFin

~~~riDER
Pl MZ-lttl 4-10.1 mo.

~

'"'

2 bedrooms, Iorge modern kit ·

or 9•9·20011. Racine, Ohio, Crill
' Brodlord,
$26,900. I aero, $28,9011, 3 ond ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ,.two.third&amp; . Phone (614) 949· ·' sw,..,er$, tqosters, lr~tnl , oil
small appliances. Lawn mower,
2708.

7 room house and bafM, _. acres
more or leu. With born, on Rt.

w.showers.

1,Ecslatic

Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7•2·20Q8.
'
GREG'S C8 ,SALES, iocatad at Er· ·-r

SEPTIC
·

Syatems

Installed by

llcvr11ed installer. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7-42·2409.

to

stores",

furn .

742·23-48.
CARPENTER , flooring,

No. 171 - 2 BR. older.
home, alum. siding, parllal
base., needs some repair,
16,000.00.

Rutiltnd

'":7.'=-:-i"'--:~,....-------.::---' ·

VERMEER BALER SALES 4ND SER·
VICE. Melgs·Aihont County.
Bolero from $3'19! up . Morrill
Chose, (61 4I69B·3021.
EXCAVATING, BACKHOES Ai'ID
DOZER - LARGE AND· SMAll,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. Bill
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.

Sherman 39 Prayer

....

~rd,

~ay

Mid·
ond

evening.

••••

e.

8:00tii·S:OO

.

• •• Thursday I 11112 noon
•• FRIDAY TIL 8
••e Close Sat; At 5 p.m.

•• ~

...........••
•

,

%3 Fonner
(hyph. wd.)

24

~~Have

text

Gun;

36 "Will be
back - "
Will Travel"
37 Statute
name

'.
'

"Harakiri" ,2Q,

8:30-What's Happening! 6,13:
9:011-Movle "Cancel My Reservation" 3.4.15; Streets
or San Francisco 6; Hawaii Flve·O 8; Men Who
Made the ·Movies 33; Movie "Before Winter
Comes" 10; Jack Van lmpre Crusade 13.

I

'l
l

'

'I

r.
'

6, 13.
1:011-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:50-News 13 .

t::,..+-++-

•

,t

bc+-1-+-1--t--

DAILY CRYI'TOIIll OTE - Herr's how lo work il:

..

HU5H ,PAWhOUVE:

1 ....f17...I QUIT
MY Joe AT "THE

••

13EEN /lAYING 1!1AT
FORTHEPA5T
FIFTY YEAR&amp;! ·

GAZE7TE

.."••

'TOD'IY!

I&lt;

,\XYOLB ,i'AXR
I. 0 S G f' E I. I. II W

One leltl'l' sirnpl)' .~Ia tid~ fo r.~ ;Jnolbt•r. In thi s _liampl e A is
used for the th rrc L's, X for th e&gt; twn O's, etc. Smgle ll'tters.

apo!\trophe,s. th e ll·ngth and fo.rmat~on of tht' Wtll'cl!i are all
hint ~ . Each d ii ~· t hr codC' h• l)rr~ nr ~·

{lltT,•n•nt .

rR YPTOQUOTES

.

·,

mountains

6:011-News 3,U,i0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20:33.
6:31)-NSC.News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias '(oga
&amp; You 33.
7;00..:truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
•· ··Dollars 6; Lawrence Weik I; News 10; Let's Make a
'Deai13; Family Affair IS; lnntr Tennis 20; Family
at War 33.
7:30-Hoilywood Squares 3,4; Ohio State LoHery 6;
Book Beat 9; Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth
13; Music City U.S.A. 15; Robert MacNeil Report
20.
&amp;:DO-Beach Boys 3,(, 15; Welcome Back, KoHer 6, 13;
Waitons 8, 10; Upstairs,. Downstairs 33; Movie

12 : 4~agtcian

~

••

...•
•••

•

2% Greek

2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; One Lift to Live 13; Guidl.ne
Light 8, 10; Woman 33.
3:DO-Another World ·3,4,15; All In The Family 8.10;
Antiques 20; Discover Flying 33.
3: ls-{;enerai Hospital 13.
3:il0-Bewllclted 6, Match Game 1,10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
•.• " You 20; Weather 33.
4: DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv GriHin 4; Somerset IS;
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33: Movie "Red HOI and Blue" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewllched 3; Mod ~quad 6; Andy Grifflln I;
Sesame .St. 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
•
S:DO-B0111nza 3; Partridge Family 8; Minion: lm.
possible 15.
.,· ··
5:30-Adam. l2 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Eiec. Co.
20,33; Adam· 12 13.

10:Oil-Harry 0 6, 13; Barnaby Jones e.
10:30-News 201 Mark of Jazz 33.
11: Oil-News 3,4.. 6.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11: 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; ManniK 6, 13; Movie
"Riot" 8; Movie "That Man In Istanbul" 10; Janak!
33.

•

•

li Moon (Lat.)
19 Pastry item

25 African
river
Z7 Placid
29 Drive
30 Judge's
symbol
31 Correct a

'.

ending

. I

'Mort,, TlltlS.·r Wed.

thfees

jl·

tbought

WANT to go Into business f~r ",..
yourself?
Almost
new .,,:
automatic ln1ulating machine . r.a

niMo repair. 131 Vo
, dloport, 99:1·!735

10 Grouped in

·

6:DO-Summer Sttllfller 10. ·
6 : ~~~arm Rtf)Ort 13.
6 :20-PaHerns for Living 13.
6:»-Columbut Tod4ty 4; News 6; Summer Stmesltr
8; Farmtlme 10.
6 : 4~nlng Repod 3.
6:50-Good Morning., Weal Virginlo 13.
6:5~ Morning, Tri State 13. ·
7:DO-Toclty 3,4,15; GoOd Mornlne. America 6,13; CBS
NeW1 8; Chuck While Reportt 10.
7:05-,Bugs llumy &amp; Friends 10.
7: 30-Schoolies 10.
8LDO-JeH's Coliie 6; Capt. Kangaroo a, 10; Sesame St.
33.
·8:30-Big Valley 6.
9 :DO-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show I; MikJ
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13; Phil Donahue 15.
9:»-Crott·Wils 3; One Life to Live 6; Talflelales I;
Mike Douglao 13.
.
10 :011-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,1S; Price Is Right 1,10; 811
with Knit 33.
IO:l~ral Hospital 6.
.
10:3G-Ceiebrlty Swei!pslakes 3,4;15; Lilias Yoga t.
You 33.
11:011-Wh~l of Fortune 3,15; WHkday 4; Edge of
· Night 6; Gambit 8. 10; Farmer's Doughier 13.
II :30-Hoilywood SquarH 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Love ol Lift 8.10.
II : 5~Take Kerr.t; Ms. Fixlt 10.
12 :DO-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
12 :30-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8,10.
12 : 5~NBC News 3,15.
1:011-Ntws 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil D0111hue I;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Elac, Co. 33.
1:»-Days of Ovr Lilies 3,4,15; Family Fe.ud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10; Tourists Ae Coming 33.
2:D0-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6; Burgiar-PrOCiflne

37 Not on
tape
38 American
jurist,

·-:.

ANT(QUE restorotlon1, reproduc·
tlons, ud:ilnet making •and fur.

.THURSDAY, AUGUSTS, 1t7• .

34 Cap •
35 Form a

BUILDING, remodeling , and ,:..;
repclrs. Quality work, efficient AI
servlc•. Jeue Rodman , phone •-ta.

Phone Galllpollo, 1·446·•782.

Yestenlar's Auwer

Leaguer
29 Potpourri

32 Youngster
33 Mining find

"
~~~~- ..............., . . . ,.................1 - ·
, •'
8I

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

~'

20~

9:»-Chlco &amp; the Mat\ 3,15; Probe •·
IO :ilo-Hawk 3..4,15; ~l•nky &amp; Hutch 6. 13; Lift of
•;·' L.Cnardo Da Vinci 33; News :io.
'I~ ~Jl):_,.lmanac 20.
11 :Oil-News 3,4.6,1, 10. 13.15.
11 :»-JohMy Carsan 3,4;15; Movie "411 the Kind
· Sir angers" 6, 13; Mavlt "The Dirty Dozen" 11
Movie " The Last Winter" 10; Janak! 33.
1:011-TQmorrow 3; N.WS· 13.

·

..·;·

ceiling, ,

992·5980.

.

, · province
· 3 Hannibal

.,. , ,- %1 Tanunany
tiger
cartoonist
Z7 - horse
(2 wds.)
28 Ivy

paneling. Phone 992-2159.

No. 151-36 acres, 3 BR,
. fireplace, modern kitchen,
carpeting, hat barn,
poultry house. work shop,
same timber, $32,000.00.
No. 172 - 1110 acres, large

• .fllntl.,..

2 Spanish

••A
IS•=

'1

242B.

,.

Do It youraelf, with
padding. $7.95 aq. yd.
Withpoddlrittlnsllilod
IUhquere y1rd
CALL 742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

as las· time. Rufus!

'

Sanitation , 992·395.4 or 992.

Hl-1.0 'SHAG

501 NYLON
Green, gold, reel, blue, rust.

We qits down

m.

CONTACT:
lois P•ulty
Branch MAnaner

.

----........:.~·· .

Mid· ....

WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbing and heating . No job
too lar91 or too small. Phone

DOWN • ·

t4 ,Synagilgue • ~ .J
sing~r
•.
, was .pne .
15 Tav@rn tall .. (2 :W~J . ,
16 Tel Aviv
4 Nf&amp;eiian •
. airport
city
17 Attila ,
~ PopUlar
for one
newspaper
;, 18 Ecstatic joy
name
Y, 20 Pitcher's . .. i Circumvent
statistic
7 One is
21 Famed fan
original
dancer
8 Ad interim
22 Hebrew
(3 wds .)
measure
9 Cleansed
23 Soap or
horse
25 lmpover-

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992·2298
~fter Hours Ca II
992·7133

Sq : Yd.
Everydty montY IIVtr.
Good chalet colors.

\

m. '"'

2438.

J

lH.as \!egas
' itable items

and ditcher. Char"• R. Hot.
'1
field , Back Hoe Service , ' 1

win's . · Gulf _ Servlc:e,

.

12 Show

5232.
•I
EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe

No, 179- Chester area, 28
a., 10~50 2 BR . mobile
home, small barn, good
fishing and hunllng ,
$11.7011.00.

INSTALLED
Rotuiltr 114.15

11 ' Eager ,

gi-ovol. Call Bob or Roger Jof. ,
fors, ' day phone 992·7089, .

dleporl, Ohio. Phone

41 TueSday -

5;Wi\h5~q ,,,. . , ~ ji:~~~~c

"

backhoe ,.work: dump trucks
o~ lo:l)bys for hire: will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone pnd ' '
night phone 992-352!1 or

40 Whole

revlew

EXCAV;f.TING, dozer, loader ond

$30.000. Phone (6141985-4245.

close to new mine arM
120.000.00.

SAVE ON
CARPntNG

ACROSS

perience . insured free
estlmotes. Call 992-2384 or

1

barn, corn crib, no i'louse,

famliv R.. utility
workshop. Over 1
133,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS
NEWER HOMES - LE
US SELL YOURS.
HENRY E. CLEL4ND,
BROKER

o&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ...

... ice, 'o11 mci:kes.,. 992-2284 . th'
Fabric $.,op , . Pomeroy .
Authori!ed Singer Salts and
Service. We sharpen. Scissr.rs. '

TUpPERS Plains·Eastern are0. 2
yr. old bi-level horne ·tocated on
l 1h (teres, Rt, 7, Riggscrest
Manor, 3 or -4 bedrooms, 2
baths, living, dining room and
kitchen, with refrtgerator ond
rang•, family room, l laundry ,
and garage, good garden area .

Included, $10,500.00:

tDo you have a quesrion
lr&gt;r the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " care of this
newspaper. The Jscobys will
answer ii!dividusl quesrions
il sfsmp!ld, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosad. The
most inreresting quesrions
will be us11d ·In this cr&gt;lumn
and will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

by THOMAS JOSEf~ ;

(6141698·7257 41bony.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, sior·

.

close

We open one diamond.
There Is a temptation to open
one ·notrump, but we void
notrump openings with 5-4·2·2
distribuUon.

.

ond all types of general repair.
Work gucronteed 20 Years ex·
perlence. Phone 992-24109.

sell or trade. Owner will help

No. 174 - 2 story 3 BR.,
alum. siding, new roof.

• K &lt;"- K xt A .Q 9 76. A Q 84.

REMODELING, Plumbing, hooting

City limits . Furnace heat and
city woter. Phone 992·2S&lt;W.

No. 175 - Syracuse area,
new 3 BR .. spill lf'fei. all
eiec ., carpellhroughoul, on
90 x 124 lot. quiet
neighborhood, $26,500.00.

to

on Route 7. Phone (6141 985·

3825.

33. one. half mile from Pomeroy

2796.

••

next to State Highwoy GoraQe

finance .
chen , forced oir furnace. lin·
coin Hgts. 992-5'737 .
"" HOUSE for solo, 2 Iorge
bedrooms, large living room,
kitchen , dining , carpetd, $9,000
in Harrisonville. Phona 7•2-

.33 ACRE
1'h story
frame, 4 bedrooms, beth,
nice kitchen with cook unit,
garage, other lealures .
112.000.00.
LEVEL LO'I' - 50x177 -1
story frame. 7 rooms, N.G.
forced air heat . New
. siding , excellent
neighborhood.
$7,9011.00.
GROCERY STORE &amp;
BUILDINGS - A very
good buy. Doing a nice
business . Ideal for a
couple.
.
WE H4VE 5 BUSINESS
PLACES FOR S4LE DROP IN AND ASK
AIOUT
THEM
IF
INTERESTED.
CLOSE TO RIVER - 3
bedrooms. beth. carpeted.
liled &amp; paneled. Porches,
storago building and cellar.
18,900.110.
~ .....~,"
LOVELY SPLIT ~•
HOME - NEW - Larjl•l
II•Jng R., formal dining
house wife
cook
bake units,
dishwasher, many
features . ol Brms., 2

"'

BRADFORD, AucllonHt, Com ·
plete Service. Phone 949· '2487

RURAL, modern, el.c:trlc, 3
bedrooms , kitchen, 11 ... 1ng
room , both, finished basement,
laundry , recreation, storage,

An Ohio reader wants
. know what we open with :

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
All today 's three-notrump
contra~l requires is a little
care. Without this modicum of
care, declarer will make just
eight tricks and will be en·
titled to. just a little bit of
complaint about bad luck .
With a little care in the play
he will take his nine tricks and
be ready for the next rubber .
suPPOSING A
South ducks the first heart,
tiiAIMED SlJ~GfON · but wins !be hearl conlinua·
lion. Then he starts happily
after the nice diamond suit. If
he is careless he leads to dum·
my' s king and back to his
queen. East shows out and our
careless hero has (allen. He
'

. S'IORM
IIIIIDOIIS I 11001$
IEPIACEIIJEIIT

IIINODIS

~~~~

Pass

.......

,•

7:»-Last of the Wild 3; Nanw That Tune A; Match
Game PM 6; $25.000 l"yrl(nid I ; The Judge 10; To
,Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Robert
Mat~ll RtpOii 20,33.
8:011-L!Hie HouMon the Prtirlt 3,4,15; Bionic: Woman
6113; Geor111 Ml I, IOf' Nova 20,33.
9:0o-Sanlord t. Son 3.4.15; Bare«• 6,13; To America
Great PerformaricM331
Uptlllrt, Downstalrt
1,101
.
I

4

I.

IIIStlllllott Stmce

$1 ,0011 down , caW (:JO.II n2.
3102 or (:JO.II77'2·3227.
HOUSE lor sole in Middleport, will

741·2211

. BORN LOSER

6·T·1 mo.

Service

'

W! ARIULLING PROPERTY
AND NUD YOU.R LISTING
CALL JIMMY DIIMMf·2*

must now take the third dla•
mond
with dummy 's ace and
.H7
the fourth diamond traps hlm
.7632
in his hand with no way to get
tAK632
to dummy 's fifth diamond .
44
The suit blocks. He can't
score live diamond tricks and
WEST
EAST
has to fall back on a spade
• 106S42
• K 83
•Q9864
finesse
. The finesse loses and
• KJ
• J 104
t 5 .
I . West cashes three more heart
4Qi0782
4J9
tricks .
SQUTH 101
A careful declam plays his
•AQ
queen of diamonds lirst and
• A 10
continues with a diamond to
t QP87
dummy's king. East shows out
4AK853
whereupoo. South simply leads
Both vulnerable
one of dummy's hearts and
chucks a diamond. West takes
Wett North Eut Soulb
his heart tricks, but that ooly
gives
lhe defense four tricks
Pass 1 t
Pass 2N .T.
and
South.
Dick• up the rest.
Pass J N.T. Pass Pass

'

Racinf, Ohio

~

$10,95

·WIN AT BRIDGE
Blockage can prove fatal , · ,,

FREE STIM T

12 or 15 Fl.

Complete

CARPET SHOP

6·27 ·76

rm ..

5 ~o0m1, 2 batht, e)(!. lg. flv.
porches, gar., not. gas furnaC., cbnl .. hdwd firs., Joe.
Scout Rd. In Chetttr.

ti2,MO -

t6$.

FRIDAY EVENING,
AUG. 6, 5:30 P.M.

"

Cand!tl9~er.

Ail!

'

··ps~ 50 NA LITIE5··~

949·2114

filM tilt ....

baths,

' .SET THE FUn FL AVOR
WHAT Mlc;HT LOOSELY
BE CALLED YOUI'!.

.'

.,.

HOW JUH A MINUTE!
LET '~ NOT LEAP TO ANY
HA.STY C0 NCLU5t0N.$!

•

UE

Racllator ,........~

SMALl far"m for s-ole ,

VO U HEARD HIM.
FH• A5'! 'HE WANT:$

NORTH

EXPERIENQD

.... ttl.ZI74

YOU WOULD ~ I NDLY
P ~T ON 'IO URER· TOP:$!

Micldltpor1
PHONE 992·5114
7·21·1 mo.

ont pltct
gutters. Wt hong it, or do II
yoursell. Speclol prices Ia
builders.

Phone 992·5213.

FURNISHED, 2 bodrm. apartment,
oduils _only, in Middleport, $34,000.
5 IEDROOMS - Fa(nliy
Phono992.3874.
room. 21f• balns. central air
3 AND 4 RM. lurnishoa and un· ·&amp; ·heat. Nearly ali
iurntillid ' apts. Phone 992·
.carpeted, sun deck, 2 car
5&lt;34. ,. '·
gara91and nl&lt;e located lot
J971 K-okl175, f ...... ~· COUNTRY Mobile Homo Pari&lt;, Rt. near grade and high
33. ten mUn r~Qrth of PomerD'(.
S.l.. of lf!l!torc:yc~ -rlors, $13.
545,000.
Phone 992.5523.
· largo lqto wilh concreto pallos, school•.
LOT- 3 bedroom
LEVEL
sidewalks. rvnners aiMI off
older
home.
Bath, 2
CANNING t-loes and • otr"' llbllil)ll. Phone 992·7479.
popporo. Cleland Forms .
porches, storm windows. &amp;
Geraldine Clelond. Racine, TRAILER,''Odulls 90iy. Phone !1'12· doors. plus carport. You
7639 or 99:1·3181 ,
Ohio.
c:an walk to work. Only
::IN:._:D:::ASHT.-::23:rthan
:--noi
~CI
=--.--:.
. fm
- 3 Room furnished houae with 112,000.
rodlo, 1 trCKk ater.o. Cau 992bolh. Adults only. Phone 992: MIDDLE PORT - 2 level
~ 3965.
5!3!.
lots on the corner. s
·..,c·;:=:;:....--;-;--;--::;--;:-:16 It, Fiborglaso boot with 60 h.p. TJA.ILEI apace close to Meigs bedroom older home, 2 nice
Johnton motor, other extrcn.
Ml1101. Complete hookup. Call baths,
wood . burnlng
Phono992·3311.
742·2166.
II replaces. gas
F. A.
LOOKiNG lor ....,..,.iblo " · room furntthtd apt . close to furnace , large modern
Powell's Super . Valu 1tlll
~ty tO DIIUtne Nf baionce,
kitchen &amp; dlning . . A
ovolloblo. Phone 992·3658.
$594.50 cin Spinet plctno In ••·
wonderful family home for
collont condition, Coil · (6141 21tdroom tra;lor, $28 wook, oil only 125.000.
.
m-5638 or .¥!irite 'Foctory
COUNTRY STORE - Plus
utilities
paid.
Phone
992·332•.
·Outlot, 272 Eaot Main St ..
3 Roomo and batlj, furnished stock most of the
Chillltotho, Ohio 45601.
furnishing&amp;, lncludH pool
apartment, oil ulllitift furni•h·
1971 HONDA CL·450, . 12,0011
oa. Inquire ol 356 North Four· lable, pop, Ice, ice crNm
miles, lilly bar, cro1h bar1,
dispensers, 2 refrl,.ratars,
th, Middleport.
pull bock handle bon, new tiro
cash register. 2 display
and MOll, Scrambler side
c:ases, juke box. efc. Real
. plpos, $650. Call949·2480.
Hlate &amp; lf2 acre. Reduced
cANNING tomatoes, leiter
for quick sale at 115,500.
R011sh. Phone 247·2541 .
SIOrcroft Goio•.lo. I camper, NEW LISTING - 6 room
1974 SUZUKI G.T.: f85 orcollent 1974
roooonobly prlcoa. Phone 7•2· hoUH. T.P. water. natural
condition, 2 holmoto, $350.
1111. modern kitchen, barn ·
2595.
Phone day, (6141 4.16·1830,
arid 5112 acres . Some fenced
•••nlngo (6141 4•6·4572 , CODNER'S c _ . ,, Solos and for cow . Good garden .
Oollipolls.
Rental. OEN HOUSI! SALE.
hglno July 30. Drawings, Want $16,500.
4CIIi lot an hard rood, rural
SYRACUSE DRIVE.JN rwfrnhmlfUS, toke Melp 28 or
water available, Leading CrHk
Includes equipment
32
to
IASH4N
and
fallow
ilgno.
Rood about 3 mlloo lr6m b)'·
neceuary
to run the
pan. Look for signs. Phone 1975 Apa&lt;ho camping trailer .
business
with
building and
742·3101.
r-ever u1ed. SAVE. Pomeroy
!he land. Only $10,500.
Motor
Co.
Phone
992·2126.
t'5inch toddle, buckokln otltchod ,
ooddod soot, 175. Also, 2 1971 Staraoft e ol-r, told· IF · YOU WANT TO GET
AHUD, NOW IS THE
hor10o, boy more 13 yeoro,
down co.._, pi•• canopy.
TIME TO IUY.
._., gentle, 3 year old black
Phone 247·2166 .
coil, groon broke. Phone 992·
3219.
GENTLE Jorsoy cow, 4 tollans dol·
IJ .. Phono 992·3462 or 742·
:1581 .
GOOil Factory built to·corl frGrnt

anawers to th•

nome

·

NOW THEN .. IF

IN ''$UIHNTSLLIGE NCE" CA 5E$
LIKE YOUR$!

Noll it Suonmlt Rd.,

Continuous

Pholotraphy
"5·41$5
Cllester, Olllo
7·14·1 mo.

CAPT AI~ EASY
T~tS t$ DR. WOWI6 .ACK WlfZ··
¥0U MI@~T ~~ HE $PEC IALt Z65

D. BumpdrB

loU.. A
Rutland, Ollltt 45171
Ph, (.14) 742·2409
Wt Dtliver
7·2•·4 mos.

GUITER SERVICE

KEN GROVER

.

•

RAFORD

Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli m.n60 . . LOCUST POSTS, rO..nd or opfit.
Phone 992.ns1.
Phone 909·2774. ·
CASH . paid for all makes on&lt;!
LAST new unit leh before model
models of mobi~ homes . COAL. limntOne, and caklurft
chango dol•••. Ail Tho Woy , 1•
Phone area code 61•·•23·9531 .
chlorkle and cokium brine tor
ft: wid•. 3 bedroom, totolelet..
dust
control
and
1peclal
mldng
by
Elcono diocaunt price, Si.395
$$Co&amp;h$$ for ·iunkoa auto. Frye'•
salt for tor men. Molri Strftt,
HI up and dallvery Included.
Truck Auto Partl. Rutlond.
Serve HUNOIEOS! on thi1 one.
Pomtr"'', Ohio or phone 992·
PhonO 7•2·2011.
3191.
kingsbury Homo Solos. I 1011 E.
COINS, currency. tokens, ' '90id
Main St.. P~, 992·7034 . ..
and silver jewelry. Wo MOd
~+ - ...,.~ · .
~·
1964 and oidor U.S. colno. Coli
for other 7•2·2331 Of como 0111
l-ng Creel&lt;
Wamoloy.

Coll992·7•81.

3 ·ledroqm brick · rOMh style
homo, full boHi,.nt, IV. both,
1971 Chevrolet (Aprkr,. e.-cellent
corpott located in Baum A.ddi·
condl ~on. $17011. Phone 992·
tion, near State Highway

clOthing, elec . stove. mise:

aerial phptos of your construe· OlD furniture. lee boxM, broil
tlon tite, business , cool and
bods, wall .. lop~ and
gas leases of your form. Ken
parts, or compiH households.
Grove, photographer, Chester ,
Write M. D. Millet, 'II . .. .

Ohio. Phone 985·4155.
WEDDING PHOToGRAPHY -

HOMESITES for tole, l ocre and
up . Middleport , near Rutland.

miiC . lrla Poyne, 660 leech S.t ..
5213.
Garage. Phone (6141 985·:1584
Middleport.
after6p.m.
CHEVY Nova 350, :i s.pood on tho
YARD Solo off Rt . 7 by·pots.
floor , v•ry goad condition. May HOUSf: far sale with large garage
lollaw olgno , Thoortdoy and
bo ...., at 15 South Fourth
off Rt. 7 ~&gt;)' · pan. $8500. Phone
Friday, Saturday, 9 a.m. till •
A..,uo, Middleport or phone
992·7!97.
p.m. Toofa. Avon bottles,
992·3560 or W ·2624.

Wilson. liZ lhorclwoocl.
Williamstown,

lots

COMMERCI4L
PHOTOGRAPHY
'
- 4triol - lndustriol
Construction Progrtll
- CIJII!pioto School Strvlct
Undtrflraclulltl
Eltment,ry
School Pldlllt Plcturn
Senlon&amp; YN....,k
-Wtddlnea-

1

985·3574. REWARD.
DO YOU H4VE P;t.RTY PLAN EX·
NOTICES
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
ATTN .d l
4LL HOUSEWIVES
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
A'l Yarli Sales, Aum m IQe,
MANAGERS IN YOUR ;f.REA.
up frOm King's Armes. O.pr•• ·
Pore, h and Basement Porcl'l
RECRUITING IS E;t.SY BEC4USE
sian gloss, ontlques and
and , Basement Sales, etc .
OEMS HAVE NO C;t.SH INfST' , ~inette
t•t .
must be pa id In advance .
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR
•968 Camara parts , front end,
Get yours ir; early by
.
DELIV!~ING
:
CALL
COLLECT
TO
POliCH SAio. m Looioy St. ,
stopp ing by our office at
hood, doort, ·manY ather parts .
CAROL DAY 51B·•8H395 OR
Pomeroy, Wed,. and Tkurtdoy .
The Dally Sentinel, 111
Al1o fit 1967 Camara, S.. ot
WRITE FRIENDlY HOME PAR·
A to 9 p.m. For. more lnforma.
Cour t St. or ~rltln.i Box
II I Poorl St. , Middleport , Ohio
7~9 . Pomeroy , Dhlo -45769 '
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE.,
lion, call992·3097.
45760.
With your remittance .
ALBANY, N,y, 12105.·
Y;t.RD Solo, Frldcty and Salllrdoy, 1971 Dodge Chorgor,, $1300, ••·
10 till 5 p.m. Syracuse, double
cellet1t condition, Phone (304)
RETAIL
wide '*1. pent Louk'a Troller
675·2651.
M4NA~IMINT
Park on rl9ht. Many baby
u Lumber's Manager
items, girls' 5·1 mines, 5-12, 1972 'Yego, run1 good, Mike
Trainee Program often
Roberto. Phone ~49·2626 or
THE Family of George C.rueser
oloc. tkillot, loyo. dishes. All
rapid advancement - over
247·2641 .
wish to express 1helr thanks to
excell.nt.
150 managers and co the staff ond nunes at
maMgtrs dtvtloped from
YARD Solo, Aufuot 5, 'a.m. till 1965 G.M.C. ono·holf ton pickup
Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
this prooram . First full
wtth 283 chevy engine, lfondart. , ochoo dotflos, baby
the staff an~ nurses at Holr..,
eelepdar year .,rnlngs
dord shllt, $395. Pho~ (:JO.I I
dothoo
,
big
cloJIIII
ond
mOJo,
•xcood $!0.000 plua bonolltl
Hospital , Svrae:uM· EmergeriC'f
n3·5!07.
.
On Cherry Ridge at tho Albert
and a manager's earnings
Squ~d . Rey., Bass o~d Rev .
S&lt;:hultt
homo
.
Phone
992.n
...
can
exceed
UO,OOO
per
.
1973 V.W. Super ~tie . Phone
Zavltz, tl"u~ · Syracuse Ladie1
year,. We have stores
992-7054 .
Au~elllary . Our thanks to all the_
YARD
Solo,
August
5,
6,
7,
9;011till
throughOut 27 states end
neighbors for all the beautiful
flowers , food . proyers. wards
can never e~epress our thanks.
Your kindne11. will never be
forgotten .

Rull•nd
742-2J21
All Work Gutr•nt..,t
Frtt EstlmotH
6-!~2 mo.

-

WEDMESDAY,AUOUST 4,1m
5: 011-Partr~mlly 8; Mission: Impossible 15.
S:»-News.-t•'Mily Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
'
6:DO-News 8, ,l'f.IS: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33. ,
6:30-NBC News 3,15; A-BC News 13; News 4; ,f.ndy
· Griffith 6; CBS News 1.10; Hodgepodge L~ lOi
B90k !!eat 33.
· ~~~ d
7:DO-Tru!norCons. 3; ToTelllneTruth4; 8~ nvlor
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; Ne"''~ J ,; .Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair 15; ConsUttlii'•$Mrvivllli
Kit 20; Tourists are Coming 33.
.•nJ\i' •;"'

""'.

TlliD Rafter Co.

,·

ev~ion fJg..for easy viewing

THAT GIDDY
IN A CONSPIRACY
A MURDER?

••

Abovt llld btiOW tround
pool ~~~~ lor !lit •~t.
yourMif onan.
All peal suppliH avlillttllt,

Southtlltem Ohio

AL TROMM OONST

1974 DATSUN
Oniy SU95.
210 2 door. local car, 4 speed trans .. «.200 miles, good
llrH, dark green llnish , real oconomy .

lARGE Garage Solo, Friday and '
Soturdo,. Auguot 6 and 7, 10

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

$4195
lf74CHEV. MONTE CARLO .
Lar!dau, local owner, blk., blk. vinyl top, blk. bucket
&amp;wl\lel seats, radio &amp;tape, alrt P. steering &amp; brakes, till
wheel. powir windows, nice. nl~ .

830 South Third Str. .t, ocrosl

55026.
S;t.TURD;t.Y, July 31 , block and

&lt;

Aluminum Sidin£
Roofin£ Gutllls,
Plintin&amp;lnd Repar

lf7l AMC HORNET
lm5
Sportabout, 6 cyl., automatic, pawtr steering, deluxe
equipment. whitewall tlrH, luggege rack, dark green
finish , IHs !nan 9,000 mliH, shpwroom clean.

Ohio.
2 Family Yard Solo, clothh\g,

LY t Work at home, no •• ·
perlence neceuary •• ·
cellent pay , Write American
S.rvlce , 6950 Wayzata llvd ..
Suiltl !32 , Minneapoll1, MN

8:30 e .m . to 5 :00 p.m.
Dally . B: JO a.m. to 12 ' 00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992 -2156.

.

~-"
•omen 1, unu

. b.l ~ monlfofd, furniture and
mla~. -412 Lir\Coln Hill, Porrieroy.

'.I

(6141667·3!07 alter 5p.m.
ADDRESSERS wantoaiMMEDIATE·

12 .00
for
80
word
minimum .
Etch additional word J
cents.
I LIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Cl'l arge
per Adver tisement .

,.7:;:,I,

uriY
ar ' lito clothing, dual 4

•
NEED ci bobyaltter In my home ot
Tupper• Plaln1 . Monday 1hr~
Friday starting Auguat :,10. Call

C4R D OF THANK!
I OBITUARY

•·m .·

~omeroy

EITHER THEY'RE MPDt-Y
L.OVE OR INIMA IS IN
RECORD CONSPIRACY

WITH HIM • .

Business Services

~ QUAI.In
OF .Motor
'
' Co;

--~--r"---·----

PERFECT for houtewivM wllh

Min imum Charge $1.00. ,
l.C ctnta per ward thre(
conucut l ve Insertions . •
26 centa per word s ix
consecutive Insertions .
25 Per Cent Dlscount ·on
peld ads and ' IdS p8 1cr
within 10 days .

t:l\,2 SIGNS

·dishes, etc. ·

" ·- - - - - - . , . . , -

For W•nt Ad Strvlu
s df'lts per word one
lnlfrtlon .
1

.'

~ E.•!f!thi."!!'~ ~-· .. __
3 Family Ya&lt;d Sole, olo.loti'Y St.,
A.uguot 5, 6, 7, baby noodo ,

~Ho'iJ

Insertion .

OFFICE HOURS

_

CARHOPS and woltren want~.

wiU not bt rtsponslblt 'for

NOW 1 RFMEMBI:R! J ASKED

'

corner of Fifth Strut. S~rocuse .

•

I('

.llentinel, Mlddlepori·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 4, ~976

Fast Results Use The Sentinel .Classifieds

YARD Solo, Thur~ , ;t.uguot 5th,
9:30 till? Joan Stout '"!donee,

" Kit. Coli 7•M3n. wrioo TOY
" L•DtE! PAR TY PLAN

•

• •

•

IJWUP

IJU

W U 1\ F I

CI ;

sUn: WU IH' I

'

.

,

ME AN' MY MAN SNUFFY
ARE HELPIN1 TH' PA.RSON
PUTON A BODACIOUS
CATFISH

'IEP .. I'M INVITIN'TH 1 FOLKS,
AN' PAW'S ,INVITIN'IH'
CATFISH

[) J I . I

WHAT AN AC1~6
~AL.~ CHECK
M16HT ~~6ENT.
NOW' \UI'IIIP the dreW Ioden ,

to,_ the ....... - · • •

1\lllllltd b7 the abaft Cll'tiO*i'"..:.

i

�.1 0- The Dally Sentlnei,Middleport.Pameroy, 0., Wedneldly, Alic. 4, 1t76

' s P.I~~ADD~:~~eetore.
'"'~=~::'.~N ?·~~E~A~~1:'o;T~~.:;,\
For
oornl~t' · l.
~
Publlcotlol\.

U.nloi mltod
O.monotrate T"''s and Olft•

, ·

o~

Canctllltlons, , · correc; .
ftw evtn lnvs o w"k, NO ••·
Uons I!':Ctpttd firs t dl"r of
p4trlence. NO paperworil . NO
pubiiCiflon .
. 1 • GHt\MICKS 1
G'atol l nt
· laOULATtONS
· olowonce Eorn FRU SampJe
Tho Publlohtr resorv••
lht right to tdlt or teio ~t

•nv ldl cltemed ob ·
ltctlonll. The publi sher

f"'o

Johnstown, Pa. 1!'904.

more than one Incorrect

Apply in person, Crow'1 Sreok

RATIS

TWO Family Yord Solo. lhundoy,
FridfV and Soturday, 9 till 5

sc;~ltl obHillet. Taklnr, "10&lt;·
· ~-.

t~ opplicotions, hg1• .1in·

~

' CQ.m t poteotlof. no e xperienc:e
ne&lt;Hssary. Cor ' reau ired.
~nel ·614 · 221 ·0100 ,

•l

dl1hes , flowers , misc. Items.
from Blue Tartan, Augutt 3, 4,
!.

o.m. til 7 p,m. Avons, crafts,
tome depr.lli0f1 elot• and
lf•m• too numerou1 to mention. Wilma H. Casto , State
Aout•12•. 'ortlond. -1:___,

white femole beagle lo1t In
vklnity of Chesler. Phone (61-4)

POliCH SAlt, •16 Spring ;love ..
Tuo~ thru Saturday, 8:30 till
8p.m.
Y4~D Solo, Thursday , Frldoy and
· !otur~ on Old Rt. 7. 4 housos

1

5:00.

open a new stare every 30
days . Joi n a company on
the grow!
Send ruume to : Don

wv

of

nlc• khool

clothes, boyo O(ld girls and

26111 .

AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY - '-e

Remember the day for• ...er!
· The complete $tory of ~our
wed4iiing In a beautifUl olbum ..
C.oll
Ken
Grover ,
Photogr.aph~r . Ch.st•r. Ohio.

Phone 985·4155.
GOLDEN WEDDING Annlvor&amp;ory .
Preaerve this wonderft,tl day

with photogroplls of tho family

together. with your friends and
of course the cake! Call Ken
Grover Photography, Chester ,

Ddi:hsttunoj, roa

MOillE homo 101' sole or ront , 3
bedrooms . al utilities paid.

to our coin shop on RvHond ond

Ohio. Phone 985·•15!.

Rd. R...r

wit~

··Horblo". ·loot In lho
BoUey Run Road area. Reward.
Phono992·7114,

$100 REWARD for · information
leodlng to the recovery of liVer

2 Family Yard Solo, Aug~~st. 3, 4
ond · 5. Chariot Mclallle's
residence. 51. Rt. I:M;'&lt;J'ihiles
out of Racine. lodln' clotl&gt;os,

and white •prlngor 5Poniol
weoring red collar. Phone 992·

3589 or 992·3132.

one·holf 1i1", and IMtll,
mtn'l clothing, oppllancos. fur·
niture. Phone 9.19·2220.
YARD:Sole, 829 South Third Ave:,

M;ddioport, Aug. 2·5.
YARD SAle Aug. 3, 9 a.m. to 5
Will DO odd jol&gt;l 1 roofing, pain· · .p.m. Clothing, miKollon....,,
ling, hauling, trH wort., and
Items at 1661 Lln&lt;oin Hoighlt,
mowing. Phon•992·7o409.

.

Pomeroy.

PUBLIC SALE
tHURSDAY, AUGUSJ 5, 1976
10:00 A.M• .
The 'personal property will be sold at lhls
location 3 miles west of RoutB33 in Derwin,
Ohio on 681, go to Haney Rd. tflen .north '14
mile. Watch for sale signs.
I

LOCATED AT HOME OF
•'""·t:;·.,
~:~ LORETTA E. KIZER
... ...
~

67 DODGE VAN

1

JEEP STATION WAGOII

'· : ·.,•.'•CARMIAN AUCTION 00. ·
'

J. Carnahan
949-2708

3 bedroom house for tole at 520
Sycamore St., Middleport, good

buy lor $8 ,000. Phone 992·3!78,
or992·7667.
FARM for sol•, 3S ocres, large ' ·
all utilities , other
buildings. On blacktop rood
ntcr Medina exit, $35,0Xi.

hoY••·

Phone 273·•732.
9 rOQm hou ... both and half, dou· ,
bit garage, · $12 ,0011 · firm .

Virgil I . s..., R.. ltor
llO~INtnic Pomerov.D.
Phon~m·W'

4 BEDROOMS - Nice
Older home with 1'.'2 .belns.
hot water heal, natural gas
&amp;city water. Walk to work.
Garage &amp; Shop in !he
besement Asking $20,0011.
J YEARS OLO- 2 ceramic

baths, 6 rooms, l bedrooms
with closets. family room.
wood.burnlng
fireplace.
full basement. copper
plumbing and 2 car garage.

CENTRAL REALlY CO.

'

T. Donohlltl
742-3041

wtth or without whttls and
motor. Phone 2-47·2238.

5,0QO ITU, ••·
coiienl condition. Con bo lftn
· 01 304 Sprlog Ave. Pomeroy,

· AUCTION SALE .

1969 Cullom Pontiac. Phone 992·
59•8.
1973 Hondo 5170, ••colltnt candl·

.

tlon. $250. Phone992·5213.
1971 Yotiloho, 125. IICIOd cO(ldl·
, tion. Phone 992·31M.
KENMOIIE •rer, excellent condl·
, lion, whllo, oloctrlc, 195. Coil
' (614)1167·3252, T•-tPiatno'.
~
LIVING room , tulle,

'
-··'
.£
'
'
llii1Dt1'.. Don
.. n liicllurn
Wnt
onto lUll and ..
5&gt;
•
' 1 1
,
.
~1
,

1

·.- -

Sl AU IS Fit II OAS-Madtm 1\l:t IIOry tioule, 3 br.,
dfnlne room, fin p11~; full IMt-t. nice porch"
and out bulidlnga. Llrtt ec..lc like with III'MII gran
and PIM tr- 11'0111111 II. Witch the 1..... l!lla twlm
along In the clew wllw, l'rttly 11 1 plclurt. Pric»cc to.
Mil 137.5011.00.

Closeout

AIR COtlDITIOttERS
C61 All Rtmllnlno lttck.
Jllrl- cut to•lilt flint. An
ibt.lule Ctn.utt lv...,
model reduced, first come,

JUC!IIi-Mc*rn Wutory home, 3 IMtdrooint ;.,1111
flrtpllta and biMmtnl. Apple, cherry and othtr lrult
lrMt. Mottly t.nced wllll fllllu,., tcimt firm lind;
to Dlnvlilt. Price l'aductcl to t21,100.

a-

Hnt MrYtd.

.

...

~

.

....

.

.

,
~

.•.li

ASSORTED RUBBER

BACK..r.AIIPETING · •

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

'6.95
Squere vinl inotllitcl

992-7320 evenings

David Parsons, Owner

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

,._

NEW 3 bedroom hou&amp;e , 2 baths,
all elet .. I acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland. Phone 992·

74B1 .

10~.

down.
owner financed . MonrOe Coun·
ty . W. Vo. Phone (3041 m.

3102 or (3041 n2·3227.

COUNTRY farmland with seclud·
ed woods, water ond good OC·
tiKS In Monroe County, W. Vo.

P'~OU'flt lfl\1 BESTFRI!;~D.. .
I nllf.\1&lt;- I'MIN WVF'
~ITH I{QU ...

P'... HOw~ AI!Ctlr
A Bib, FAT
KISS"?

lion

Opening lead - 6 •

llowR iltlo M Utfict

WIMhl•kl Rtplocem•nl
Fr.. Ellimtlts
Onlody-k
EKport P•lnllng
lnsur•nce Work
Welcoine
St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Olllo
667-1127
7·29·1 mo.

.

ALIIIIINUI

SIMK-SilfFin

~~~riDER
Pl MZ-lttl 4-10.1 mo.

~

'"'

2 bedrooms, Iorge modern kit ·

or 9•9·20011. Racine, Ohio, Crill
' Brodlord,
$26,900. I aero, $28,9011, 3 ond ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ,.two.third&amp; . Phone (614) 949· ·' sw,..,er$, tqosters, lr~tnl , oil
small appliances. Lawn mower,
2708.

7 room house and bafM, _. acres
more or leu. With born, on Rt.

w.showers.

1,Ecslatic

Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7•2·20Q8.
'
GREG'S C8 ,SALES, iocatad at Er· ·-r

SEPTIC
·

Syatems

Installed by

llcvr11ed installer. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7-42·2409.

to

stores",

furn .

742·23-48.
CARPENTER , flooring,

No. 171 - 2 BR. older.
home, alum. siding, parllal
base., needs some repair,
16,000.00.

Rutiltnd

'":7.'=-:-i"'--:~,....-------.::---' ·

VERMEER BALER SALES 4ND SER·
VICE. Melgs·Aihont County.
Bolero from $3'19! up . Morrill
Chose, (61 4I69B·3021.
EXCAVATING, BACKHOES Ai'ID
DOZER - LARGE AND· SMAll,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED. lOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. Bill
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.

Sherman 39 Prayer

....

~rd,

~ay

Mid·
ond

evening.

••••

e.

8:00tii·S:OO

.

• •• Thursday I 11112 noon
•• FRIDAY TIL 8
••e Close Sat; At 5 p.m.

•• ~

...........••
•

,

%3 Fonner
(hyph. wd.)

24

~~Have

text

Gun;

36 "Will be
back - "
Will Travel"
37 Statute
name

'.
'

"Harakiri" ,2Q,

8:30-What's Happening! 6,13:
9:011-Movle "Cancel My Reservation" 3.4.15; Streets
or San Francisco 6; Hawaii Flve·O 8; Men Who
Made the ·Movies 33; Movie "Before Winter
Comes" 10; Jack Van lmpre Crusade 13.

I

'l
l

'

'I

r.
'

6, 13.
1:011-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:50-News 13 .

t::,..+-++-

•

,t

bc+-1-+-1--t--

DAILY CRYI'TOIIll OTE - Herr's how lo work il:

..

HU5H ,PAWhOUVE:

1 ....f17...I QUIT
MY Joe AT "THE

••

13EEN /lAYING 1!1AT
FORTHEPA5T
FIFTY YEAR&amp;! ·

GAZE7TE

.."••

'TOD'IY!

I&lt;

,\XYOLB ,i'AXR
I. 0 S G f' E I. I. II W

One leltl'l' sirnpl)' .~Ia tid~ fo r.~ ;Jnolbt•r. In thi s _liampl e A is
used for the th rrc L's, X for th e&gt; twn O's, etc. Smgle ll'tters.

apo!\trophe,s. th e ll·ngth and fo.rmat~on of tht' Wtll'cl!i are all
hint ~ . Each d ii ~· t hr codC' h• l)rr~ nr ~·

{lltT,•n•nt .

rR YPTOQUOTES

.

·,

mountains

6:011-News 3,U,i0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20:33.
6:31)-NSC.News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias '(oga
&amp; You 33.
7;00..:truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
•· ··Dollars 6; Lawrence Weik I; News 10; Let's Make a
'Deai13; Family Affair IS; lnntr Tennis 20; Family
at War 33.
7:30-Hoilywood Squares 3,4; Ohio State LoHery 6;
Book Beat 9; Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the Truth
13; Music City U.S.A. 15; Robert MacNeil Report
20.
&amp;:DO-Beach Boys 3,(, 15; Welcome Back, KoHer 6, 13;
Waitons 8, 10; Upstairs,. Downstairs 33; Movie

12 : 4~agtcian

~

••

...•
•••

•

2% Greek

2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; One Lift to Live 13; Guidl.ne
Light 8, 10; Woman 33.
3:DO-Another World ·3,4,15; All In The Family 8.10;
Antiques 20; Discover Flying 33.
3: ls-{;enerai Hospital 13.
3:il0-Bewllclted 6, Match Game 1,10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
•.• " You 20; Weather 33.
4: DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv GriHin 4; Somerset IS;
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33: Movie "Red HOI and Blue" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewllched 3; Mod ~quad 6; Andy Grifflln I;
Sesame .St. 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
•
S:DO-B0111nza 3; Partridge Family 8; Minion: lm.
possible 15.
.,· ··
5:30-Adam. l2 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Eiec. Co.
20,33; Adam· 12 13.

10:Oil-Harry 0 6, 13; Barnaby Jones e.
10:30-News 201 Mark of Jazz 33.
11: Oil-News 3,4.. 6.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11: 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; ManniK 6, 13; Movie
"Riot" 8; Movie "That Man In Istanbul" 10; Janak!
33.

•

•

li Moon (Lat.)
19 Pastry item

25 African
river
Z7 Placid
29 Drive
30 Judge's
symbol
31 Correct a

'.

ending

. I

'Mort,, TlltlS.·r Wed.

thfees

jl·

tbought

WANT to go Into business f~r ",..
yourself?
Almost
new .,,:
automatic ln1ulating machine . r.a

niMo repair. 131 Vo
, dloport, 99:1·!735

10 Grouped in

·

6:DO-Summer Sttllfller 10. ·
6 : ~~~arm Rtf)Ort 13.
6 :20-PaHerns for Living 13.
6:»-Columbut Tod4ty 4; News 6; Summer Stmesltr
8; Farmtlme 10.
6 : 4~nlng Repod 3.
6:50-Good Morning., Weal Virginlo 13.
6:5~ Morning, Tri State 13. ·
7:DO-Toclty 3,4,15; GoOd Mornlne. America 6,13; CBS
NeW1 8; Chuck While Reportt 10.
7:05-,Bugs llumy &amp; Friends 10.
7: 30-Schoolies 10.
8LDO-JeH's Coliie 6; Capt. Kangaroo a, 10; Sesame St.
33.
·8:30-Big Valley 6.
9 :DO-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Lucy Show I; MikJ
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13; Phil Donahue 15.
9:»-Crott·Wils 3; One Life to Live 6; Talflelales I;
Mike Douglao 13.
.
10 :011-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,1S; Price Is Right 1,10; 811
with Knit 33.
IO:l~ral Hospital 6.
.
10:3G-Ceiebrlty Swei!pslakes 3,4;15; Lilias Yoga t.
You 33.
11:011-Wh~l of Fortune 3,15; WHkday 4; Edge of
· Night 6; Gambit 8. 10; Farmer's Doughier 13.
II :30-Hoilywood SquarH 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Love ol Lift 8.10.
II : 5~Take Kerr.t; Ms. Fixlt 10.
12 :DO-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
12 :30-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8,10.
12 : 5~NBC News 3,15.
1:011-Ntws 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil D0111hue I;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Elac, Co. 33.
1:»-Days of Ovr Lilies 3,4,15; Family Fe.ud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10; Tourists Ae Coming 33.
2:D0-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6; Burgiar-PrOCiflne

37 Not on
tape
38 American
jurist,

·-:.

ANT(QUE restorotlon1, reproduc·
tlons, ud:ilnet making •and fur.

.THURSDAY, AUGUSTS, 1t7• .

34 Cap •
35 Form a

BUILDING, remodeling , and ,:..;
repclrs. Quality work, efficient AI
servlc•. Jeue Rodman , phone •-ta.

Phone Galllpollo, 1·446·•782.

Yestenlar's Auwer

Leaguer
29 Potpourri

32 Youngster
33 Mining find

"
~~~~- ..............., . . . ,.................1 - ·
, •'
8I

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

~'

20~

9:»-Chlco &amp; the Mat\ 3,15; Probe •·
IO :ilo-Hawk 3..4,15; ~l•nky &amp; Hutch 6. 13; Lift of
•;·' L.Cnardo Da Vinci 33; News :io.
'I~ ~Jl):_,.lmanac 20.
11 :Oil-News 3,4.6,1, 10. 13.15.
11 :»-JohMy Carsan 3,4;15; Movie "411 the Kind
· Sir angers" 6, 13; Mavlt "The Dirty Dozen" 11
Movie " The Last Winter" 10; Janak! 33.
1:011-TQmorrow 3; N.WS· 13.

·

..·;·

ceiling, ,

992·5980.

.

, · province
· 3 Hannibal

.,. , ,- %1 Tanunany
tiger
cartoonist
Z7 - horse
(2 wds.)
28 Ivy

paneling. Phone 992-2159.

No. 151-36 acres, 3 BR,
. fireplace, modern kitchen,
carpeting, hat barn,
poultry house. work shop,
same timber, $32,000.00.
No. 172 - 1110 acres, large

• .fllntl.,..

2 Spanish

••A
IS•=

'1

242B.

,.

Do It youraelf, with
padding. $7.95 aq. yd.
Withpoddlrittlnsllilod
IUhquere y1rd
CALL 742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

as las· time. Rufus!

'

Sanitation , 992·395.4 or 992.

Hl-1.0 'SHAG

501 NYLON
Green, gold, reel, blue, rust.

We qits down

m.

CONTACT:
lois P•ulty
Branch MAnaner

.

----........:.~·· .

Mid· ....

WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbing and heating . No job
too lar91 or too small. Phone

DOWN • ·

t4 ,Synagilgue • ~ .J
sing~r
•.
, was .pne .
15 Tav@rn tall .. (2 :W~J . ,
16 Tel Aviv
4 Nf&amp;eiian •
. airport
city
17 Attila ,
~ PopUlar
for one
newspaper
;, 18 Ecstatic joy
name
Y, 20 Pitcher's . .. i Circumvent
statistic
7 One is
21 Famed fan
original
dancer
8 Ad interim
22 Hebrew
(3 wds .)
measure
9 Cleansed
23 Soap or
horse
25 lmpover-

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992·2298
~fter Hours Ca II
992·7133

Sq : Yd.
Everydty montY IIVtr.
Good chalet colors.

\

m. '"'

2438.

J

lH.as \!egas
' itable items

and ditcher. Char"• R. Hot.
'1
field , Back Hoe Service , ' 1

win's . · Gulf _ Servlc:e,

.

12 Show

5232.
•I
EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe

No, 179- Chester area, 28
a., 10~50 2 BR . mobile
home, small barn, good
fishing and hunllng ,
$11.7011.00.

INSTALLED
Rotuiltr 114.15

11 ' Eager ,

gi-ovol. Call Bob or Roger Jof. ,
fors, ' day phone 992·7089, .

dleporl, Ohio. Phone

41 TueSday -

5;Wi\h5~q ,,,. . , ~ ji:~~~~c

"

backhoe ,.work: dump trucks
o~ lo:l)bys for hire: will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone pnd ' '
night phone 992-352!1 or

40 Whole

revlew

EXCAV;f.TING, dozer, loader ond

$30.000. Phone (6141985-4245.

close to new mine arM
120.000.00.

SAVE ON
CARPntNG

ACROSS

perience . insured free
estlmotes. Call 992-2384 or

1

barn, corn crib, no i'louse,

famliv R.. utility
workshop. Over 1
133,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS
NEWER HOMES - LE
US SELL YOURS.
HENRY E. CLEL4ND,
BROKER

o&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ...

... ice, 'o11 mci:kes.,. 992-2284 . th'
Fabric $.,op , . Pomeroy .
Authori!ed Singer Salts and
Service. We sharpen. Scissr.rs. '

TUpPERS Plains·Eastern are0. 2
yr. old bi-level horne ·tocated on
l 1h (teres, Rt, 7, Riggscrest
Manor, 3 or -4 bedrooms, 2
baths, living, dining room and
kitchen, with refrtgerator ond
rang•, family room, l laundry ,
and garage, good garden area .

Included, $10,500.00:

tDo you have a quesrion
lr&gt;r the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " care of this
newspaper. The Jscobys will
answer ii!dividusl quesrions
il sfsmp!ld, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosad. The
most inreresting quesrions
will be us11d ·In this cr&gt;lumn
and will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

by THOMAS JOSEf~ ;

(6141698·7257 41bony.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, sior·

.

close

We open one diamond.
There Is a temptation to open
one ·notrump, but we void
notrump openings with 5-4·2·2
distribuUon.

.

ond all types of general repair.
Work gucronteed 20 Years ex·
perlence. Phone 992-24109.

sell or trade. Owner will help

No. 174 - 2 story 3 BR.,
alum. siding, new roof.

• K &lt;"- K xt A .Q 9 76. A Q 84.

REMODELING, Plumbing, hooting

City limits . Furnace heat and
city woter. Phone 992·2S&lt;W.

No. 175 - Syracuse area,
new 3 BR .. spill lf'fei. all
eiec ., carpellhroughoul, on
90 x 124 lot. quiet
neighborhood, $26,500.00.

to

on Route 7. Phone (6141 985·

3825.

33. one. half mile from Pomeroy

2796.

••

next to State Highwoy GoraQe

finance .
chen , forced oir furnace. lin·
coin Hgts. 992-5'737 .
"" HOUSE for solo, 2 Iorge
bedrooms, large living room,
kitchen , dining , carpetd, $9,000
in Harrisonville. Phona 7•2-

.33 ACRE
1'h story
frame, 4 bedrooms, beth,
nice kitchen with cook unit,
garage, other lealures .
112.000.00.
LEVEL LO'I' - 50x177 -1
story frame. 7 rooms, N.G.
forced air heat . New
. siding , excellent
neighborhood.
$7,9011.00.
GROCERY STORE &amp;
BUILDINGS - A very
good buy. Doing a nice
business . Ideal for a
couple.
.
WE H4VE 5 BUSINESS
PLACES FOR S4LE DROP IN AND ASK
AIOUT
THEM
IF
INTERESTED.
CLOSE TO RIVER - 3
bedrooms. beth. carpeted.
liled &amp; paneled. Porches,
storago building and cellar.
18,900.110.
~ .....~,"
LOVELY SPLIT ~•
HOME - NEW - Larjl•l
II•Jng R., formal dining
house wife
cook
bake units,
dishwasher, many
features . ol Brms., 2

"'

BRADFORD, AucllonHt, Com ·
plete Service. Phone 949· '2487

RURAL, modern, el.c:trlc, 3
bedrooms , kitchen, 11 ... 1ng
room , both, finished basement,
laundry , recreation, storage,

An Ohio reader wants
. know what we open with :

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
All today 's three-notrump
contra~l requires is a little
care. Without this modicum of
care, declarer will make just
eight tricks and will be en·
titled to. just a little bit of
complaint about bad luck .
With a little care in the play
he will take his nine tricks and
be ready for the next rubber .
suPPOSING A
South ducks the first heart,
tiiAIMED SlJ~GfON · but wins !be hearl conlinua·
lion. Then he starts happily
after the nice diamond suit. If
he is careless he leads to dum·
my' s king and back to his
queen. East shows out and our
careless hero has (allen. He
'

. S'IORM
IIIIIDOIIS I 11001$
IEPIACEIIJEIIT

IIINODIS

~~~~

Pass

.......

,•

7:»-Last of the Wild 3; Nanw That Tune A; Match
Game PM 6; $25.000 l"yrl(nid I ; The Judge 10; To
,Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Robert
Mat~ll RtpOii 20,33.
8:011-L!Hie HouMon the Prtirlt 3,4,15; Bionic: Woman
6113; Geor111 Ml I, IOf' Nova 20,33.
9:0o-Sanlord t. Son 3.4.15; Bare«• 6,13; To America
Great PerformaricM331
Uptlllrt, Downstalrt
1,101
.
I

4

I.

IIIStlllllott Stmce

$1 ,0011 down , caW (:JO.II n2.
3102 or (:JO.II77'2·3227.
HOUSE lor sole in Middleport, will

741·2211

. BORN LOSER

6·T·1 mo.

Service

'

W! ARIULLING PROPERTY
AND NUD YOU.R LISTING
CALL JIMMY DIIMMf·2*

must now take the third dla•
mond
with dummy 's ace and
.H7
the fourth diamond traps hlm
.7632
in his hand with no way to get
tAK632
to dummy 's fifth diamond .
44
The suit blocks. He can't
score live diamond tricks and
WEST
EAST
has to fall back on a spade
• 106S42
• K 83
•Q9864
finesse
. The finesse loses and
• KJ
• J 104
t 5 .
I . West cashes three more heart
4Qi0782
4J9
tricks .
SQUTH 101
A careful declam plays his
•AQ
queen of diamonds lirst and
• A 10
continues with a diamond to
t QP87
dummy's king. East shows out
4AK853
whereupoo. South simply leads
Both vulnerable
one of dummy's hearts and
chucks a diamond. West takes
Wett North Eut Soulb
his heart tricks, but that ooly
gives
lhe defense four tricks
Pass 1 t
Pass 2N .T.
and
South.
Dick• up the rest.
Pass J N.T. Pass Pass

'

Racinf, Ohio

~

$10,95

·WIN AT BRIDGE
Blockage can prove fatal , · ,,

FREE STIM T

12 or 15 Fl.

Complete

CARPET SHOP

6·27 ·76

rm ..

5 ~o0m1, 2 batht, e)(!. lg. flv.
porches, gar., not. gas furnaC., cbnl .. hdwd firs., Joe.
Scout Rd. In Chetttr.

ti2,MO -

t6$.

FRIDAY EVENING,
AUG. 6, 5:30 P.M.

"

Cand!tl9~er.

Ail!

'

··ps~ 50 NA LITIE5··~

949·2114

filM tilt ....

baths,

' .SET THE FUn FL AVOR
WHAT Mlc;HT LOOSELY
BE CALLED YOUI'!.

.'

.,.

HOW JUH A MINUTE!
LET '~ NOT LEAP TO ANY
HA.STY C0 NCLU5t0N.$!

•

UE

Racllator ,........~

SMALl far"m for s-ole ,

VO U HEARD HIM.
FH• A5'! 'HE WANT:$

NORTH

EXPERIENQD

.... ttl.ZI74

YOU WOULD ~ I NDLY
P ~T ON 'IO URER· TOP:$!

Micldltpor1
PHONE 992·5114
7·21·1 mo.

ont pltct
gutters. Wt hong it, or do II
yoursell. Speclol prices Ia
builders.

Phone 992·5213.

FURNISHED, 2 bodrm. apartment,
oduils _only, in Middleport, $34,000.
5 IEDROOMS - Fa(nliy
Phono992.3874.
room. 21f• balns. central air
3 AND 4 RM. lurnishoa and un· ·&amp; ·heat. Nearly ali
iurntillid ' apts. Phone 992·
.carpeted, sun deck, 2 car
5&lt;34. ,. '·
gara91and nl&lt;e located lot
J971 K-okl175, f ...... ~· COUNTRY Mobile Homo Pari&lt;, Rt. near grade and high
33. ten mUn r~Qrth of PomerD'(.
S.l.. of lf!l!torc:yc~ -rlors, $13.
545,000.
Phone 992.5523.
· largo lqto wilh concreto pallos, school•.
LOT- 3 bedroom
LEVEL
sidewalks. rvnners aiMI off
older
home.
Bath, 2
CANNING t-loes and • otr"' llbllil)ll. Phone 992·7479.
popporo. Cleland Forms .
porches, storm windows. &amp;
Geraldine Clelond. Racine, TRAILER,''Odulls 90iy. Phone !1'12· doors. plus carport. You
7639 or 99:1·3181 ,
Ohio.
c:an walk to work. Only
::IN:._:D:::ASHT.-::23:rthan
:--noi
~CI
=--.--:.
. fm
- 3 Room furnished houae with 112,000.
rodlo, 1 trCKk ater.o. Cau 992bolh. Adults only. Phone 992: MIDDLE PORT - 2 level
~ 3965.
5!3!.
lots on the corner. s
·..,c·;:=:;:....--;-;--;--::;--;:-:16 It, Fiborglaso boot with 60 h.p. TJA.ILEI apace close to Meigs bedroom older home, 2 nice
Johnton motor, other extrcn.
Ml1101. Complete hookup. Call baths,
wood . burnlng
Phono992·3311.
742·2166.
II replaces. gas
F. A.
LOOKiNG lor ....,..,.iblo " · room furntthtd apt . close to furnace , large modern
Powell's Super . Valu 1tlll
~ty tO DIIUtne Nf baionce,
kitchen &amp; dlning . . A
ovolloblo. Phone 992·3658.
$594.50 cin Spinet plctno In ••·
wonderful family home for
collont condition, Coil · (6141 21tdroom tra;lor, $28 wook, oil only 125.000.
.
m-5638 or .¥!irite 'Foctory
COUNTRY STORE - Plus
utilities
paid.
Phone
992·332•.
·Outlot, 272 Eaot Main St ..
3 Roomo and batlj, furnished stock most of the
Chillltotho, Ohio 45601.
furnishing&amp;, lncludH pool
apartment, oil ulllitift furni•h·
1971 HONDA CL·450, . 12,0011
oa. Inquire ol 356 North Four· lable, pop, Ice, ice crNm
miles, lilly bar, cro1h bar1,
dispensers, 2 refrl,.ratars,
th, Middleport.
pull bock handle bon, new tiro
cash register. 2 display
and MOll, Scrambler side
c:ases, juke box. efc. Real
. plpos, $650. Call949·2480.
Hlate &amp; lf2 acre. Reduced
cANNING tomatoes, leiter
for quick sale at 115,500.
R011sh. Phone 247·2541 .
SIOrcroft Goio•.lo. I camper, NEW LISTING - 6 room
1974 SUZUKI G.T.: f85 orcollent 1974
roooonobly prlcoa. Phone 7•2· hoUH. T.P. water. natural
condition, 2 holmoto, $350.
1111. modern kitchen, barn ·
2595.
Phone day, (6141 4.16·1830,
arid 5112 acres . Some fenced
•••nlngo (6141 4•6·4572 , CODNER'S c _ . ,, Solos and for cow . Good garden .
Oollipolls.
Rental. OEN HOUSI! SALE.
hglno July 30. Drawings, Want $16,500.
4CIIi lot an hard rood, rural
SYRACUSE DRIVE.JN rwfrnhmlfUS, toke Melp 28 or
water available, Leading CrHk
Includes equipment
32
to
IASH4N
and
fallow
ilgno.
Rood about 3 mlloo lr6m b)'·
neceuary
to run the
pan. Look for signs. Phone 1975 Apa&lt;ho camping trailer .
business
with
building and
742·3101.
r-ever u1ed. SAVE. Pomeroy
!he land. Only $10,500.
Motor
Co.
Phone
992·2126.
t'5inch toddle, buckokln otltchod ,
ooddod soot, 175. Also, 2 1971 Staraoft e ol-r, told· IF · YOU WANT TO GET
AHUD, NOW IS THE
hor10o, boy more 13 yeoro,
down co.._, pi•• canopy.
TIME TO IUY.
._., gentle, 3 year old black
Phone 247·2166 .
coil, groon broke. Phone 992·
3219.
GENTLE Jorsoy cow, 4 tollans dol·
IJ .. Phono 992·3462 or 742·
:1581 .
GOOil Factory built to·corl frGrnt

anawers to th•

nome

·

NOW THEN .. IF

IN ''$UIHNTSLLIGE NCE" CA 5E$
LIKE YOUR$!

Noll it Suonmlt Rd.,

Continuous

Pholotraphy
"5·41$5
Cllester, Olllo
7·14·1 mo.

CAPT AI~ EASY
T~tS t$ DR. WOWI6 .ACK WlfZ··
¥0U MI@~T ~~ HE $PEC IALt Z65

D. BumpdrB

loU.. A
Rutland, Ollltt 45171
Ph, (.14) 742·2409
Wt Dtliver
7·2•·4 mos.

GUITER SERVICE

KEN GROVER

.

•

RAFORD

Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli m.n60 . . LOCUST POSTS, rO..nd or opfit.
Phone 992.ns1.
Phone 909·2774. ·
CASH . paid for all makes on&lt;!
LAST new unit leh before model
models of mobi~ homes . COAL. limntOne, and caklurft
chango dol•••. Ail Tho Woy , 1•
Phone area code 61•·•23·9531 .
chlorkle and cokium brine tor
ft: wid•. 3 bedroom, totolelet..
dust
control
and
1peclal
mldng
by
Elcono diocaunt price, Si.395
$$Co&amp;h$$ for ·iunkoa auto. Frye'•
salt for tor men. Molri Strftt,
HI up and dallvery Included.
Truck Auto Partl. Rutlond.
Serve HUNOIEOS! on thi1 one.
Pomtr"'', Ohio or phone 992·
PhonO 7•2·2011.
3191.
kingsbury Homo Solos. I 1011 E.
COINS, currency. tokens, ' '90id
Main St.. P~, 992·7034 . ..
and silver jewelry. Wo MOd
~+ - ...,.~ · .
~·
1964 and oidor U.S. colno. Coli
for other 7•2·2331 Of como 0111
l-ng Creel&lt;
Wamoloy.

Coll992·7•81.

3 ·ledroqm brick · rOMh style
homo, full boHi,.nt, IV. both,
1971 Chevrolet (Aprkr,. e.-cellent
corpott located in Baum A.ddi·
condl ~on. $17011. Phone 992·
tion, near State Highway

clOthing, elec . stove. mise:

aerial phptos of your construe· OlD furniture. lee boxM, broil
tlon tite, business , cool and
bods, wall .. lop~ and
gas leases of your form. Ken
parts, or compiH households.
Grove, photographer, Chester ,
Write M. D. Millet, 'II . .. .

Ohio. Phone 985·4155.
WEDDING PHOToGRAPHY -

HOMESITES for tole, l ocre and
up . Middleport , near Rutland.

miiC . lrla Poyne, 660 leech S.t ..
5213.
Garage. Phone (6141 985·:1584
Middleport.
after6p.m.
CHEVY Nova 350, :i s.pood on tho
YARD Solo off Rt . 7 by·pots.
floor , v•ry goad condition. May HOUSf: far sale with large garage
lollaw olgno , Thoortdoy and
bo ...., at 15 South Fourth
off Rt. 7 ~&gt;)' · pan. $8500. Phone
Friday, Saturday, 9 a.m. till •
A..,uo, Middleport or phone
992·7!97.
p.m. Toofa. Avon bottles,
992·3560 or W ·2624.

Wilson. liZ lhorclwoocl.
Williamstown,

lots

COMMERCI4L
PHOTOGRAPHY
'
- 4triol - lndustriol
Construction Progrtll
- CIJII!pioto School Strvlct
Undtrflraclulltl
Eltment,ry
School Pldlllt Plcturn
Senlon&amp; YN....,k
-Wtddlnea-

1

985·3574. REWARD.
DO YOU H4VE P;t.RTY PLAN EX·
NOTICES
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
ATTN .d l
4LL HOUSEWIVES
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
A'l Yarli Sales, Aum m IQe,
MANAGERS IN YOUR ;f.REA.
up frOm King's Armes. O.pr•• ·
Pore, h and Basement Porcl'l
RECRUITING IS E;t.SY BEC4USE
sian gloss, ontlques and
and , Basement Sales, etc .
OEMS HAVE NO C;t.SH INfST' , ~inette
t•t .
must be pa id In advance .
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR
•968 Camara parts , front end,
Get yours ir; early by
.
DELIV!~ING
:
CALL
COLLECT
TO
POliCH SAio. m Looioy St. ,
stopp ing by our office at
hood, doort, ·manY ather parts .
CAROL DAY 51B·•8H395 OR
Pomeroy, Wed,. and Tkurtdoy .
The Dally Sentinel, 111
Al1o fit 1967 Camara, S.. ot
WRITE FRIENDlY HOME PAR·
A to 9 p.m. For. more lnforma.
Cour t St. or ~rltln.i Box
II I Poorl St. , Middleport , Ohio
7~9 . Pomeroy , Dhlo -45769 '
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE.,
lion, call992·3097.
45760.
With your remittance .
ALBANY, N,y, 12105.·
Y;t.RD Solo, Frldcty and Salllrdoy, 1971 Dodge Chorgor,, $1300, ••·
10 till 5 p.m. Syracuse, double
cellet1t condition, Phone (304)
RETAIL
wide '*1. pent Louk'a Troller
675·2651.
M4NA~IMINT
Park on rl9ht. Many baby
u Lumber's Manager
items, girls' 5·1 mines, 5-12, 1972 'Yego, run1 good, Mike
Trainee Program often
Roberto. Phone ~49·2626 or
THE Family of George C.rueser
oloc. tkillot, loyo. dishes. All
rapid advancement - over
247·2641 .
wish to express 1helr thanks to
excell.nt.
150 managers and co the staff ond nunes at
maMgtrs dtvtloped from
YARD Solo, Aufuot 5, 'a.m. till 1965 G.M.C. ono·holf ton pickup
Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
this prooram . First full
wtth 283 chevy engine, lfondart. , ochoo dotflos, baby
the staff an~ nurses at Holr..,
eelepdar year .,rnlngs
dord shllt, $395. Pho~ (:JO.I I
dothoo
,
big
cloJIIII
ond
mOJo,
•xcood $!0.000 plua bonolltl
Hospital , Svrae:uM· EmergeriC'f
n3·5!07.
.
On Cherry Ridge at tho Albert
and a manager's earnings
Squ~d . Rey., Bass o~d Rev .
S&lt;:hultt
homo
.
Phone
992.n
...
can
exceed
UO,OOO
per
.
1973 V.W. Super ~tie . Phone
Zavltz, tl"u~ · Syracuse Ladie1
year,. We have stores
992-7054 .
Au~elllary . Our thanks to all the_
YARD
Solo,
August
5,
6,
7,
9;011till
throughOut 27 states end
neighbors for all the beautiful
flowers , food . proyers. wards
can never e~epress our thanks.
Your kindne11. will never be
forgotten .

Rull•nd
742-2J21
All Work Gutr•nt..,t
Frtt EstlmotH
6-!~2 mo.

-

WEDMESDAY,AUOUST 4,1m
5: 011-Partr~mlly 8; Mission: Impossible 15.
S:»-News.-t•'Mily Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
'
6:DO-News 8, ,l'f.IS: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33. ,
6:30-NBC News 3,15; A-BC News 13; News 4; ,f.ndy
· Griffith 6; CBS News 1.10; Hodgepodge L~ lOi
B90k !!eat 33.
· ~~~ d
7:DO-Tru!norCons. 3; ToTelllneTruth4; 8~ nvlor
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; Ne"''~ J ,; .Wild
Kingdom 13; Family Affair 15; ConsUttlii'•$Mrvivllli
Kit 20; Tourists are Coming 33.
.•nJ\i' •;"'

""'.

TlliD Rafter Co.

,·

ev~ion fJg..for easy viewing

THAT GIDDY
IN A CONSPIRACY
A MURDER?

••

Abovt llld btiOW tround
pool ~~~~ lor !lit •~t.
yourMif onan.
All peal suppliH avlillttllt,

Southtlltem Ohio

AL TROMM OONST

1974 DATSUN
Oniy SU95.
210 2 door. local car, 4 speed trans .. «.200 miles, good
llrH, dark green llnish , real oconomy .

lARGE Garage Solo, Friday and '
Soturdo,. Auguot 6 and 7, 10

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

$4195
lf74CHEV. MONTE CARLO .
Lar!dau, local owner, blk., blk. vinyl top, blk. bucket
&amp;wl\lel seats, radio &amp;tape, alrt P. steering &amp; brakes, till
wheel. powir windows, nice. nl~ .

830 South Third Str. .t, ocrosl

55026.
S;t.TURD;t.Y, July 31 , block and

&lt;

Aluminum Sidin£
Roofin£ Gutllls,
Plintin&amp;lnd Repar

lf7l AMC HORNET
lm5
Sportabout, 6 cyl., automatic, pawtr steering, deluxe
equipment. whitewall tlrH, luggege rack, dark green
finish , IHs !nan 9,000 mliH, shpwroom clean.

Ohio.
2 Family Yard Solo, clothh\g,

LY t Work at home, no •• ·
perlence neceuary •• ·
cellent pay , Write American
S.rvlce , 6950 Wayzata llvd ..
Suiltl !32 , Minneapoll1, MN

8:30 e .m . to 5 :00 p.m.
Dally . B: JO a.m. to 12 ' 00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992 -2156.

.

~-"
•omen 1, unu

. b.l ~ monlfofd, furniture and
mla~. -412 Lir\Coln Hill, Porrieroy.

'.I

(6141667·3!07 alter 5p.m.
ADDRESSERS wantoaiMMEDIATE·

12 .00
for
80
word
minimum .
Etch additional word J
cents.
I LIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Cl'l arge
per Adver tisement .

,.7:;:,I,

uriY
ar ' lito clothing, dual 4

•
NEED ci bobyaltter In my home ot
Tupper• Plaln1 . Monday 1hr~
Friday starting Auguat :,10. Call

C4R D OF THANK!
I OBITUARY

•·m .·

~omeroy

EITHER THEY'RE MPDt-Y
L.OVE OR INIMA IS IN
RECORD CONSPIRACY

WITH HIM • .

Business Services

~ QUAI.In
OF .Motor
'
' Co;

--~--r"---·----

PERFECT for houtewivM wllh

Min imum Charge $1.00. ,
l.C ctnta per ward thre(
conucut l ve Insertions . •
26 centa per word s ix
consecutive Insertions .
25 Per Cent Dlscount ·on
peld ads and ' IdS p8 1cr
within 10 days .

t:l\,2 SIGNS

·dishes, etc. ·

" ·- - - - - - . , . . , -

For W•nt Ad Strvlu
s df'lts per word one
lnlfrtlon .
1

.'

~ E.•!f!thi."!!'~ ~-· .. __
3 Family Ya&lt;d Sole, olo.loti'Y St.,
A.uguot 5, 6, 7, baby noodo ,

~Ho'iJ

Insertion .

OFFICE HOURS

_

CARHOPS and woltren want~.

wiU not bt rtsponslblt 'for

NOW 1 RFMEMBI:R! J ASKED

'

corner of Fifth Strut. S~rocuse .

•

I('

.llentinel, Mlddlepori·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 4, ~976

Fast Results Use The Sentinel .Classifieds

YARD Solo, Thur~ , ;t.uguot 5th,
9:30 till? Joan Stout '"!donee,

" Kit. Coli 7•M3n. wrioo TOY
" L•DtE! PAR TY PLAN

•

• •

•

IJWUP

IJU

W U 1\ F I

CI ;

sUn: WU IH' I

'

.

,

ME AN' MY MAN SNUFFY
ARE HELPIN1 TH' PA.RSON
PUTON A BODACIOUS
CATFISH

'IEP .. I'M INVITIN'TH 1 FOLKS,
AN' PAW'S ,INVITIN'IH'
CATFISH

[) J I . I

WHAT AN AC1~6
~AL.~ CHECK
M16HT ~~6ENT.
NOW' \UI'IIIP the dreW Ioden ,

to,_ the ....... - · • •

1\lllllltd b7 the abaft Cll'tiO*i'"..:.

i

�ear

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1976

Key parts to puzzle of ,fatal illness ·killing 21 remain hidden
By CliARLES M. MADIGAN

epidemiologist. "I can't even
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI) make an educated guess.
- It could have been as We've conre up with things
Innocent as drinks passed out tllat just don't seem to fit."
In a hoapltallty suite ..- a
Epidemiologists are
round of coughs and sneezes trained to pinpoint the
In a crowded room.
occurrence .of dlllease and the
Investigators are not ruling way it Is transmitted, The job
out any posslblllty in tbe Is ccmpllcated In tills •case
~~earch for the trail a killer
because tile specialists are
dlllease took In attacking dealing with a kU!er tlley
American Legion members cannot idenWy .
Parkin's job is like assem.or their wives or friends after
they returned from a bling a puzzle.
Mter tile field workers
Ph!l8de!phla con}fntlon.
As tbe toil of lltmd and Ill collect all of the pieces, the
. mounts, a team of state and state specialists, assisted by
federal health officials, led by nine epidemiologists from the
disease detectives called ' Center for Disease Control in
epldemio.loglsts , is Atlanta, will try to put It
desperately searching f« a together.
clue.
But the key parts are
"~lie truthfully, I am
missing, according to Parkin,
absolutely stumped," said or are well hidden by a series
Dr. William E. Parkin, the of seemingly innocent events
Pennsylvania Health that took place at tile Legion
Department's chief convention in Philadelphia
July 21-24. ·
parkin has seen the
auoopsy reports.
Time and again tlley llat
viral
pneumonia - art upper
PUULIC NOTICE
To the creditors of Cardinal
respiratory ailment, as the
enterprises; ln,c .:
cause of death. But what
You are hereby not if ied that
the unders igned has been duty
brought on the pneumonia ?
appointed as Receivrr ol
Why
don't the symptoms
Card inal Enterprises , Inc .
identify thls diSease?
You are further notified tha t
all cre ditors must submI t thei r
"If It's hepatitis, you have
cla ims to 1. Car$on Crow .

jaundiced people popping up
all over the place," Parkin
said. "If it's measles, you
have a rash. But the
symptoms in this case are
rather general. There Is
nothing to hang you~ hat on ."

Why has the disease hit
only the people who attended
the convention, or whose Uves
touched on some aspect uf the
coovention?
Those are questioos the
federal and state health offi-

ctala hav.e yet to 811.'jWer, and
each answer will play a part
in compleUng the puzzle.
Parkin said hill division h811
had its hands full since
Monday Identifying the
possible cases that ~ave

More bodies are found

LOVELAND, Colo. (UPI ) reached 99 Tuesday and survivors. The 11ats were
- Bulldozer crews followed disaster oilicials said more drawn from missing person
specially trained "$Differ" bodie$ had been left in the reports and interviews with
dogs through Big Thompson ca nyon overnight. Sheriff evacuees.
Many of the missing could
Canyon today to retrieve Bob Watson, who said the toll
have
left the canyon before
could
run
as
high
811
200,
said
more bodies from waist-deep
the
.
flood
struck saturday
he
was
cerlain
more
bodies
mire and tangled debris
night,
or
left afterward
either
were
burled
in
the
along the river.
without
notifying
anyone, the
Sqrvivors tried to find muck and debris or washed
Red
Cross
said.
loved ones missing since the downstream.
"Dog teams and bulldozers
A teen-ager plowing a
weekend flash flood In the
are
going up the stream bed
Rocky Mountain vacation flooded vegetable garden
and
we'll see if the dogs can
spot.
Some
searched unearthed three bodies
llliff
them (bodies) out lind
aimlessly along the river bed Tuesday. .
then
dig tllem up with the
'The Red Cross compiled
and others walled at two
lists showing 860 persons bulldozers," State Patrol Si!t.
makesbift morgues.
missing and more than. 2,000 John Kelly said.
· The o(ftclal death toll
· Permi!s tAl return to their
homes were issued to
residents of tile .area and
roadblocks were manned by
the $tate Patrol to prevent
looting . Some residents
returned to what was left of
their homes and cabins to
begin cleaning up, Kelly said ..
. COLUMBUS (UPI) - Peti- cootained more thun 350,000
Receive r of Ca rd inal En A road was being
terprises , Inc. , Pos t Off ice
tions to place a series of four signatures to place the reconstructed into tbe clinyon
Box 486, Pomeroy , Oh.lo , 45769 ,
constltutiooal amendments package on the Nov. 2 ballot. from the west. Crews, using
by September 1s t. 1976 , or be
BO.ARD OF MEIGS
involving utility reform on
Deadline for submitting dynamite to blast the Clinyon
for ever barred from asserting
COUNTY
any cla im against said COr
COMMISSIONERS
the
November
ballot
were
petitions
for November ballot · walls. into the flood plain,·
~:~oration .
Not ice to M~tor Vetlicle presented to Ohio Secretary issues
was 4:30 p.m . pushed the road · nine miles
Dealeu.:
·'_
I. CAR SON CROW ,
In !ccordance with Sec . of State Ted W. Brown Tuesday. At least 307,201 into the canyon.
Receiver Of
307 .86 of The Ohio Rev ised
C.!!rdina l Enterp rises , Inc . Code , sealed bids Will be Tuesday by a coaUtlon of signatures are needed, and
Searcbers swept into .the
Brown's office must now canyon Tuesday when the
received by The 'Meigs County consumer groups.
(7) '28 , (8) 4, 11, 18, 25, 5tc
Comm iss ioners in· the ir off ice
Representing Ohioans for assure that the group has the clouds finally broke and
In the Courthouse , Pom eroy. Utility
Reform (OUR). required number of valid foqnd mud~aked bodies,
Oh j o 45769, unt il 10:00 A .M .
Edward
Harter
of Columbus signatures .
Aug . 9 . 1976, at which time and
most uf them women and
PUBLIC NOTICE
pla ce the bids w i ll be opened and Robert Loitz of Akron
Cmstitutional
amendments
children,
lodged in the debris
Sealed bids w ill be r eceived and read aloud for a pickup
said their 1S boxes of petitions proposed by OUR would :
by the Vil lage of Sy racus~ . truck .
and halfburied in the mire.
.Ohio , Meigs County ,_ at the
The follow ing spec if icat ions
- Call for "lifellne" ,utility
May or·~ Off ice ol the V ill llge
to be cons idered as minimum
rates tAl assure the poor and
Hall. Third StreeL unti l 12 req"-'.lrements for the pickup ,
noon August 25 , 1976 , for the tr uck :
elderly a minimUm amo\Uit of
.
fol lowing :
On e 19 76 'h ton Model
gas and electricity at tbe
300 tons , more or less·, 404
Pickup Tq l ".'
state .speci fl cati on Asphaltic
JSOcu . in / -8 ges .eng lne or
lowest possible rates.
Contrete In place and ro l led . larger .
·
- Establish a residential
The Village ~ reserves d'he
Heavy dut y front arid rear
utility consumer group to Veterans Memorial Hospital
r ig ht to re.ject a~y or all bids . · spr ings .
Jo=1eavy. duty power brakes .
contest rate hikes before the
Admitted - Naomi Hayes,
Mary A . Chantey ,
Power s t~ering .
Public U\ilities Commission Syracuse; Christine
CLERK
AM radio .
(7) 18 , (8) 4, II , 31C
of Ohio:
Branham, Pomeroy ; Ardelia
Full depth foam seat .
H 78 X IS tire s . Mud or Snow
Furnish
stricter
controls
Herdman,
Pomeroy; Fred
Gr i p for rear .
!
for
the
construction
aild
Birkher,
Pomeroy;
Dores
Co mb inati on rea r &amp; front
Don Roush, Cheryl Roush
directiona l signa l lights .
operation
of
nuclear
power
Arnold,
Pomeroy;
Joyce
to Denzil L. Proctor, Bonnie
Too late to Classlly
Traff ic hazard switch .
Grady, Racine.
Duel electr ic horns .
M. Proctor, Lot 342, HortAln's plan!s in Ohio.
L .H . and R .H . Jr . West Div., Middleport.
- Make it easier for
losI
Discharged - Bessie
TWO English Setters lost near Coast Mirrors .
citizens
to
place
initiative
and
Moodispaugh,
Michael
Jack L. Frederick, Gloria
Hea ter. &amp; defroster .
Rl. 33 roadside park and
2.speed windshield wipers &amp; K. Frederick to Pat E. referendum Issues on the • Salser, Ellen Diane Hawley,
Kingsbury Creek. C\ole male washer s.
Mary Cooper, Dorinda
MilcheU, Marcella S. Mit.- statewide ballot.
and one female , ·both
Huvv duty shocks .
~own's office Is expected . Cunningham, John Ohlinger,
wearing collars. Phone 992Rear step bumper .
chell, 4S.266 acres, Chester.
7283 .
Auto transmission .
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to to take about three weeks to Marvin Scaggs, David Price,
Front stablllur bar.
Mina Mae Swisher, I acre, certify signatures on the Roy Gladman, Bernice
l31.5" wheer base .
Ornaha orange color .
petitions, which must come Grueser, Celesta ·BuSh, Dana
Chester.
from
at least half Ohio's 88 McCain, Cloist Badgley.
.
.
Bidder
to
furnish
their
own
•
Doris E. Well to Roger D. .
bid forms .
The · front of the envelope Shultz, Barbara Shultz, counties.
enclosing the bid must be
The utilities probably will
Holzer Medical Center
Parcels, Bedford.
marked '' PickUP TrUck ."
resist,
Loitz
told
a
ne..s
Wednesday thru Thursday
(Discharges, Aug. 3)
ue1 1very musr be made by
Boarcl of County Com, August 4-5
the succe~stul bidder twenty
conference.
Mrs.
Rodney Alderman and
days after bids are opened or missioners of Meigs County,
NOJ OPEN
"They
will
use
every
trick
son, Thelma Blankenship,
bid is vo ided .
0 . to Helen M. Williams, 3.10
in the book to fight us," he Margaret Blazer, Charles
The County Comm lssioners acres, Salisbury.
·Fri., Sat., Sun.
m ay accept the lowest bid or
August 6· 7-8
Clara H. Stanley to Geo. V. said. "They are not going to Carroll, Rebecca Coffey,
select the best bid for the
Donna Conlin, Mrs. Donald
Intended purpose ; and reserve Stone, Doris W. Stone, 45 take this lying down."
FIGHTING MAD
the right to re j ect any or all
Cox
and son, Shirley Davis,
acres, Olive.
Peter Fonda, Gino Franco, bids , or any part thereof .
AUTOPSY
SCHEDULED
Debra
Dela.ney , Charles
Harold W. Brinker, Penny
Syr . old Lynn lowry, Jonn
Martha Chamber
BEACHWOOD,
Ohio
(UPI)
Dickess
,
Geraldine Ennis,
L. Brinker to Joi!e Delgado,
Cler.k
CouceHe.
Meigs coun ty Board
Maria Delgato, Lot, Mid- .- An autopsy will be Thomas Gaspers, An11a Hall,
(R)
of Commissioners
performed
today
to Orville Hillman, Karen Hurt,
dleport.
Show storls 7 p.m.
determine
the
cause
of
death
Janet Johnson , Theresa
Robert
A.
Mattox,
Betty
R.
171 28 18! 4, 21c
of
veteran
Cleveland
·Jones,
Carolyn Kennedy ,
Mattox to I.e Ax Dist. Corp.,
television
newscaster
Mrs.
James
McClellan and
Ease., Columbia.
Murray
Stewart,
who
was
son,
Phyllis
Mink,
Beatrice
Paul Gaston to I.e Ax Water
found
doiud
Tuesday,
In
a
Mulhern,
Roy
Nickrell,
Dist. Corp., Ease., Colombie.
Clifford Plantz, Lola Proffitt,
Gary Duff, Susan Duff tAl Le fourtll-floor motel room.
40,
Shaker
Stewart,
ARE YOUR DOLLARS LONELY
Ida Putney, Jeffrey Roush,
Ax Wiler Dlst. Corp., Ease.,
Heights,
was
found
in
Room
Bertha Simpson , Carl
Columbia.
FOR COMPANY? .
William Culwell, Hazel m at the Holiday Inn- Stewart, LuciUe Williamson.
Culwell to I.e Ax Water Dlst. Beachwood. He wu dead oo
arrival at the Cuyahoga
Corp., Ease., Columbia. ·
Harold R. Setty, Betty J . County coroner's office In
Setty to I.e As Water Dist. Cleveland at 4:30p.m.
Stewart worlted at WJWCorp., Ease., Columbia.
TV, owned by Storer
Broadcasting, since May,

Four amendments to
refonn utilities filed

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Meigs
Property
Transfers

MEIGS THEATRE

erupted across Pennsylvania.
The search for solid
connections begins today 811
.field workers Interview
cases.
"What did you eat? When
did you eat it? What meeUngs

did you attend? Where did sOUc, we would ju.lt u well
you stay? Did you have not aee It apln."
breakfast at such and such a
For now, Parkin eM oni!'
restaurant? Did you eat the hope that the dlleue will
eggs? Those are the kinds ol dluppear after It runa Ita
questions we have to ask," coune through Ita lint round
Parkin said.
ol vlcilrnl.
"We will be asltlng the
Plltln ukl the puale will
New volunteer8 patients whether any be .-nbled, but not befGn
members of their families days of queationlnl and
are
ill, and if 110, what the lepork are completed. ·
given training . symptoms
ure. We·have not
"If It's like 111011 other
found
any
cases
of
secondary
puQI.Ing
th~a, wbeli we get
Twelve volunteers for
Infection
yet,
and
we
are
.
the
answer,
we'D probably
CiUzens Advocacy meeting
praying.
that
we
do
not.
kick
ourselvea
and wonder
recently et the Meigs Com"If
this
dlllease
Is
going
to
why
we
didn't
know It aU
munity Mental H.ealth Center
held a training session · lor be something strange · and along," he uld.
four new volunteers. Citizens
Advocacy holds a training
•
session twice a year. The
Citizens Advocacy and Drug
(Continued from p81t 1)
Abuse Program is also
putting out a newsletter in Columbus, sorts coupons redeemed In the Cardinal chain
which will be published once stores.
a month by ~ary Skinner and
Steve Dawson, This will be . CJ.,i';VELAND - TWENTY.ONE PEOPLE, including four
called "i'ADAN" for Citizen doooors and. two attorneys, were indicted Tueadly by a
Advocacy and Drug Abuse Cuyahoga County grand jury for allegedly filing with lhe state
Newsletter .
165,000 in false workmen's compensation claims. &lt;lulrges
Anyone
wishing
to 111clude grand theft, forgery aild uttering.
volunteer for eitller program
Besides the doctors and attorneys, allo indicted were 13
should call 992-2 192 lor in· claimants and two others for aiding and abetting for a nonexlatent firm, the A&amp;ll Vending Co. Doctors Indicted for grand
formation.
theft, forgery and uttering are Gary Katz, George Zarzor,
Gary Decker and J. M. Kahan and attorneys Indicted for grand
theft are Leonard Seizer and Larry Weiser.

-

BOAT SHOES
Reg. $6.50

SALE s3.99
THEY CAN FEEL AT HOME IN A
SAVINGS ACCOUNT AT

lHE RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK ·
Help your dollars to earn interest while they .
join other dollars in a special ' passbook
savings , account at the Racine Home
National bank. You can withdraw funds
from the account at any time and your
Interest Is compounded quarterly.

heritage house
Middleport, 0.

1966.

.

Statton officials said
Stewart reported for work
Monday, but did not go on the
air because he W811 Ill. He
failed to show Tuesday at t~
station.

valuations up

46.8% since '70
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Public Expenditure
' Council said Tuesday real
estate valuatl,on in Ohio for
property tax purposes h~s
increased 46.8 per cent since
1970.
The council said the 1976
value for tax purposes is $34.8
billion, a $4.8 billion increase
over last year. oiJ'he 16.2 per
17nt rlae .was th~ larg~t
Slllgleyear mcrease m the SIX·
year period, the council said.
Inflation, property tax
reappraisals and normal
growth were reasons given by
the council for the rapid
increase. The report includes
all residential, agriculutrual,
mineral.. industrial and
commercial land.
The Columbus·based
council said Delaware
County's 152 per cent
increase since 1970 was the
largest in tbe state. Property
there was valued at $253.7
n¥J.llon this year, compared
with to $153.1 ·million in
1970.

MOTHER VISITED
';!INERSVJ.LLE - Mrs:
Pete Vanica and son,
Jonathan, of Mexico City
arrived Sunday to 'visit her
mother,
Mrs.
Olan
Genheimer.
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
Issued tAl Harrison Rood, Jr.,
53, Reedsville, and Helen
Marie Teaford, 25, Racine; '
Charles Alfred Cremeana, 30,
Coolville, and Dottie Marie
Capetuirt, 25, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

WASmNGTON - '!liE VOTES OF SENS. John Glenn, 0.
Ohio, and Rober! Taft Jr., R.Ohio, were cast with the mujorlty
Tuesday when the Senate approved a provlalon to Impose
str0 ingent new antipollution standards for areas uf the natim
that enjoy clean air.
The Senate rejected 63 to 31 a proposal to delay tbe
standards, pending a study tAl determine their impact on
growth, the ec&lt;&gt;nomy and prospects for new energy sources.
WASHINGTON - SENS. JOHN GLENN, D-Ohlo, and
Robert Taft Jr., R.()hio, Tuesday cast tllelr ballots With the
majority in a 70-18 vote by which tbe Senate overrode
President Ford's veto of leglalatioo to reform leasing
standards for federal coal lands.
The Senate reJected arguments it would hinder domestic
coal production, The vote was 13 more than the required twothirds margin. The House was scheduled to vote on the Issue
today.

Comm~n

pleas court

is busy docket shows
Cases filed in Meigs County
Common -Pleas Court Monday included Donna J.
Guinther, for divorce from
Malcolm E. Guinther,
Syracuse, and Lewis F: White
LONGSHOT WINS
COLUMBUS (UP! j
Longshot Pacific Ree put on a
strong ·Stretch drive Tuesday
night to win the featured
eighth race at Scioto Downs
by one-half· length over
People's Choice.
The winner, driven by dale
Hileman to a 2:03 .:0 mile,
paid $41.00, $14.00 and $8.00.
Twinstoner finished third.
The 6-5 nightly double
combination of Countess
Zomba and March Go was
wortll $200.80.
A crowd ·of 5,172 wagere
$284,194.
REUNION SLATED
The 41st annual Parker
reunion wiU be held Sunday
Aug. 8, at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School. A basket
dinner will be served at 12:30
p.m.

and Josephine 0 . White, Rt.
1, Reedsville, for an injunction against Ezra Sheets,
Rt. 1, Reedsville, et al; the
plainWfs say the defendants,
Ezra and Frances Sheets,
have blocked a roadway with
logs . and threatened the
plalutilf, j..ewis White, with
p(Jysical harm If he attempled ·to remove tllem.
· Also, ., Catherine Faye
Young, Middleport, for
divorce 11galnst Gaylord
Laine. ·Young, Pagetown;
Dav~d and Doris Nolan,
G.a\lipolls, · for money from
Carl Smitll McFall, Point
Pleasant, charging that on
Feb. 20, 1976 the defendant
· did wantonly, maliciously,
recklessly and Intentionally.
hurl a roek through a wind('W
of a truck near the Southern
Ohio Coal Co., Mine No. I on
SR 124, asking $1,718.34 for
actual damages and $5,000 for
punitive damages; Racine
Home National Bank,
Racine, for $7,347.14 against
George W. and Rita Sue
Cundiff, Racine, and Gloria
Jean Peavley, Rt. 1, Rutl.!!nd,
and Jack Peavley, SyraCWie,
for ·dlasolutlon of marriage,.

. SEE OUR. EXCELLENT NEW SELECTION

KIMBALL PIANOS
. -,

NOW YOU KNOW
Thousands of one-figer
piano pieces were written
during the 19th century and
served as parlor enterteinment, but only
Chopsticks remains popular
today.

ANOTHER

GOOD BUY
FROM BAKER'S

'

People:

RACINE
tiJME NAnONAL
BANK
OHIO

RACINE
I

'

BUDGET SHOP

9x12 RUG

YOUNGSTOWN, N.Y. (UPI) - Grandmother Barbara
Loreno, amid 110bs and exhaustioo, gave up her attempt to
swim across Lake Ontario Wednesday, with two thirds of
the way completed.
Mrs. l.preno, a 46-year old Caeiadlan, was trying to
beC(me the oldest woman and the first grandmotller to
swim across the lake.
.
libe gave up the efforl.after spending neatly 20 hours in
the cold water. She was about 11 miles southeast uf her
goal- the shore at TorontAI's Ontario Place-or two-thirds
the dlatance.
"I'm all rlght,I'm really all right, 'Mrs. Loreno said to
those.gatbered around her 811 sbe left the water at 4:26
p.m. Wednesday.
"I was making no headway for two h.ours," she said.
Mrs. Lareno's husband was In the water with her at tile
end of the effort. Observers on tile scene said that just
before giving up, she hud stopPed swinuning for a few
lrilnutea, and was just floaUng in the warer.
·
She then threw her arms up in a gesture of resignation,
and ·boarded the main boil! that had. accompanied her
since she plunged Into the water at Youngstown; N.Y.,
shortly after 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Mrs. Lareno was Laken 19 .St. Josephs Hospital in
Toronto for examination, and was released Wednesday
evening. A hospital spokesman said the longdisiance
swinuner was "in excellent condition."

/

NOW ON
- ·DISPLAY IN
'

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT- 3RD FLOOR

Elberfelds ·In·Pomero
J

He said did not know when the local presidents would again
"Threata have been made, saying homes would be burnt
·
•
down, cars would be tom up and somebody might get shot," meet.
"We'Djust have to wait and 11ee," he add.ed.
Guzek uld. ''The men just couldn't k~ on working under
West Virginia miners have been conducting a wildcat strike
those lhreata."
for
more than two weeks in prorest of federal court
Gtaek said an estimated 16,000 Ohio min~rs would stay out
Intervention
in what tbe UMW considers to be union and
until at least Monday.
company
affairs.
"We hope they have thlssettied In West VIrginia by then," he
The strike first spread to Ohio July 26 when West VIrginia
said. "I talked to Arnold Miller (UMW president) yesterday
· miners put up picket llnes at Peabody Coal Co.'s SUnnyhlll
and he said he hoped to get something done by then."
Wednetday's meeting was held in dlatrlct six headquarters mine, located near New Lexington in Perry County.
'l1le strike spread throughout Ohio and most mines were
at Bellaire. Guzek said, "Almost all uf the men hud received,
or heard uf, lhreata from West VIrginia miners If we went back closed the greater part of last week.
Some miners returned tAl the coal fields Monday and most
to work ."

•

•

enttne

at y
VOL XXVIII

NO. 77

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

were worldng by Wednesday. Guzek, at that Ume, ilf"' m J d
oplirnllm that the wllck:at walkout would be over by the end. of
the week.
One t'lrm, the Southern Ohio Coal Co., went to court In an
attempt to obtain an Injunction forcing 1,500 men to return to
Its three Meigs County mines.
But the court refuaed to intervene, saying It h8d no
jurladictioo in a sympathy strike cauaed by ·grievances
elsewhere.
Guzek said most Ohio coal miners want to return to work,
but refuse to cross pickets llnes established by Welt Virgnlna
miners.
·

THURSDAY. AUGUST 5, 1976

!News. . .-in Briefi
~

.·

By United PreiiiJ Internadonal
RONAW REAGAN FLEW INTO MISSISSIPPI and New
Jersey searching for delegates, but President Ford found he
had better luck staying home at the White Houae and playing
host to .VIrginla Republicans. The delegate-by-delegate battle
for the GOP presidential nomination saw Ford gain a delegate
each in Soutll Carolina aDd Virginia and losing two in North
Dukota Wednesday .
The biggest question mark In the Republican battle
remained just that. Despite the perso~l courtship of both
candidates, ~isslppl's :jO uncommitted delegates were still
seen evenly divided between Ford and Reagan and it was
IUiknown iftbe delegation would follow i!s tradition and vote by
the unit rule- tllrowlng all the votes to either Ford or Reagan.
.While tile GOP nomination was up in the air, Democratic
candidate Jimmy Carter said the Republicans were digging up
dlrl to use against him: He said the GoP national committee
already was senQ!ng out "every adverse cominent tl)at's been
made, tllat's IUiconfirrned or that's been published." .

BEIRUT, LEBANON - AN ARAB LEAGUE-!iponsored
truce touk hold across most of Lebanon today !Jut flghUng
ruged on in parts of the capital.
The cease-fire, announced by Maj. Gen. Hassan Ghoneim,
conunander of tile 2,300-man Arab League peacekeeping force
in Beirut, followed one of the heaviest nights of flghUng in the
16-mootll civil war.
WASHINGTON - THE ¥eYrE BY WHICH THE House, on
a 31~ roll call, Wednesday overrode President Ford's veto of
the coal leasing bill. Voting for were 249 Democrats and 67
Republlcans. Voting ugainst were 16 Democrats and 69
Republlcans, as fQllows :
·
Ohio, 8 Democrats, 15 Republicans ...: Democrats for :
Ashley, Carney, Mottl, Seiberling, James Stanton, Stokes,
Vanlk; Democrats not voting: Hays.
Republicans for : Clancy, Devine, Gradlaon, Harsha,
Mosher, Regulu, Whalen, Wylie; RepubUcans against:
Ashbrook, Brown, Guyer, Kindness, Latta, Miller, J. William
Stanton.
·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Mystery is
deepening

~:w.~~m:::::::::::::::~:::=:::~•:o:·:·:~:·~:·::-:·:::·:::·8:::;::::::::::!:::::~::::::::~:::::::::::~::-:::z~,~

FIRE AT '!liE NEW APARTMENT OOMPLEX on
Mulberry Ave., conUnued to smoulder today. At 11:21
p.m. Wednesday the Pomeroy Fire Department was
called to the three-building complex where fire had
broken out in one section of one building. Six apartments,
two on each floor of the !!lructure which Is three stories
high, were destroyed. Besides the 1065 of the six
apartments which will run into thousands of dollars,
losses also include all of the windows for the other two

large buUdlngs which make up tbe projec\ as all were
stored in the section which burned. Cause of the blaze is
unknown. The 48 apartments are being built by Prime
BuilderS', Columbus. A fire wall between tile section that
burned and adjoining sections kept the fire from
spreading. Middleporl firemen were on the scene at II :34
p.m. and stood by to assist P(Jmeroy if needed. Meantime,
Thursday morning, workers employed on the apartments
were on their joba on the other structures.

Twilight rac-ing
planned 3 days
Three evenings of twilight
racing beginning at 4 p.m. on
Aug. 18, 19 and 20 will make
up tile annual harness horse
racing program at tile 113th
annual Miegs County Fair.
The first day's program
will be for two year old lilly
pacers ; three year old
trotters and two year old
pacers. The second day race
program will be for three
year old filly pacers ; two
year old trotters and tllree
year old pacers. The final
racing ,program will be lor
pacers which have not won
$1500 in their lifetime;
trotters who are non-winners
of $10,000 and the third two
he aIs will be the Ohillco Pace
for non-winners of $15,000 in
lifetime as of Jan. I this year.
Pony and horse running
races also are on the agenda
for thjs year's fair at I p.m.

on Friday, Aug. 20. Classes
wlil include 46 inches and
under. premium, $0. $3. $2
and $1; over 46 to 46, prizes
$10, $0, $3 and $2; over 48 to
52, prizes $10, $7, $5, $3 and
$2 ; over 52 to 56, $10, $7, $5, $3,
and $2, and over 56 inches,
prizes $15, $10, $7, $5, and $3.
The annual horse show will
be on Wednesday at 8 p.m.
with cash premiums to include $10, $8, $6, $4 and $2 plus
rosette eKcept for tile lead-in
pony class with each entry in
that class to receive a trophy.
Classes for the show include lead-in pony; Western
pleasure horse; Western
pleasure pony; English
pleasure horse; roads ter ·
pony , under 56 inches ;
· Wes tern pleasure horse ;
Western pleasure pony ,
under 48 inches; trail horse ;
trail pony; barrel race, horse

or pony; flag race; egg and
spoon; dash for money and
the stake race. Conformation
judging of horses and ponies
will be held at 10 a.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 18 with
premiums of $0, $3, S2 and $1
io be awarded.

Birth, death
costing niore
Beginning Aug. &amp;, the fee
lor certified copies of
births,
deaths
and
stillbirths will he increased
from $1 to $2, the Meigs
County Department of
Health announced tuday.
Amen~ed House Blll 877,
enacted by the 111\h
General Assembly, Increases the lees and
changes the disposition of
fees.

-

;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

School bus

GLASS CHIPPED
The Gallia -Meigs Post
State Highwa y Patrol
reported a minor traffi c.
accident occurred at 10:30
a.m. Wednesday on Rt. 338 in 0
Meigs County, one tenth of a·
DETROIT- THE U. S. AUTO INDUSTRY, showing a
.
mile east of township road 98
steady recovery from its worst slump since the Depression ,
when an unidentified vehicle
Sixty-.,ightmen and women.
posted a 19 per cent increase in new car sales during the final
m
n
2d
a
stone
that
chipped
have been approved as school
10 days July and a 16 per cent jump for the entire month.
the windshield of a car bus drivers by the Meigs
General Motors led tile pack, reporting Wednesday a 45
operated by George A. Hill,
Coun ty Board of Education.
per cent' increase in new car sales for the late July period
37, Racine .
C(mpared with year~o figures. Chrysler sales were up 3 per
They are , Paul . Baer,
cent during the period while Ford sales remained virtuaily
Francis Benedum, Hellen
\Uichanged. The only grim note in the otherwise bright sales
Blake, Sandra Cowery , Roger
Dillon , Shlela Fields, Chester
picture was small~ar specialist American Motors, which
Frederick, William Hannum,
suffered a 40per cent decline in late July new car sales.
Milchell Holley, Otto MarCHARLESTON, W.VA.- STRIKING COAL miners may
cinko , Creston Newland,
apply for food stamps, but are not eligible to receive tllem for
Oscar Pennington, Theodore
the duration of the current wildcat walkout, according to stale
PUllins, Darlene Reed, John
Riebel , Archie Rose, Mary K.
Welfare Commissioner Thllll8s Tinder.
Tinder said the U. S. Department of Agriculture had
Rose , Violet Satterfield,
advised his department the strike h811 been deemed Illegal by
James
Williams, George
.
the courts, prohibiting miners from receiving food stamps. But
Wolle, all Eastern Local;
when the walkout ends, the department can then process
Linda Bailey, Donald Barminers' awUcations and Issue food stamp coupons to tide
nett, Esther Black, Virgil
them over until their next paychC(lks arrive, he said. "We're In
Carl, Teresa Cremeans,
the same situation as we were last September," Tinder said,
Donna Daniels, Junior Darst,
Charlotte Dillard, Naomi
referring to a four-week Illegal work stoppage about a year
Floyd, Alice GlobOkar, Laura
ago.
Harrison, Linda Jell, · Mary
LOVELAND, COLO. - SEARCHERS used bloodhounds to
D. King, Annette Knight,
locate vitbna burled under tile muck along the trewtrewn Big
Cora Loftis.
Also, Delores Lynch, Ralph
Thcmpeon Canyon Boor Wedneadly and asked for rnllitary
Macomber, Faye Manley,
lnfra-t'ed cameru to ,._" bodies through the debris.
Illaela officials, who have counted m91'" than 100 victims
Leo Morris, Linda Morris,
already, said a large number of bodies were believed to be
Retha Owens, Harry Parker,
burled In the mud. Only 25 of the victims were Identified ·
William Ratliff, Viola
Shoemaker , Pauline
Wednesday. Larimer County Sheriff Bob Watson .said tt&gt;e toll
would run from 150 to 200, but admitted it was "only a guess."
Snowden, Bill Smith, Minnie
And, he sa)d, 1101ne bodiea might never be {ound.
Thornton , William Thorn ton,
Dalles Weber, Vetnon Weber,
Harold Whi te, Bea Wood,
Ernest Wood, Jean Wood,l.ee
Wood, Norman Wood, Meigs
Local District; Marshall
Adams , Ha rold Circle ,
Three cash prizes will be and older only and judging ·
JUNIOR MEMBERS OF THE MEIGS COUNTY Htllllllle Society 1 being responsible pe~
Charles Cornell, Earl Cross,
awarded to Meigs County will be on authenticity and
owners, are laiDichlnS a drive uf their own to raise money to apply to the shelter building
Romaine Frederick, Charles
women wearing the best attractiveness. Participants
fund, to aid the current pet neutering pJ'OI!ram, tAl give emergency medical treatment to
Lawrence, Clarence.. Proffitt,
bicentennial costumes at a are to repOrt tAl the stage area
animals and for public education of the society. Pictured with two of the current cat.
contest to be held Saturday, near the grandstand to
Ray Proffitt, ~a~llers,
register
and
receive
their
"adoptables" through the society are VIcki Morrison , left, and Jayne Hoeflich. Saturday
Aug. 21, at6p.m. at the Meigs
Delbert Smith, ~Smith,
contestant numbers. Prizes
morning the juniors will be conducting a balloon sale distributing balloons in the business
County Fair.
and Charles W~ Southsection In exchange for contributions to the society .. ,
ern I &lt;JCal DisttR:~ ·
The contest is for women.l8 wlll be $25, $20 and $1D.

Best costumes worth prizes

$995

•
JO S

eeps mmers o

Grandmother had to
give up lake swim

Real estate

A Home Bank
For
-·
Meigs County .

Ulllled Preu 1111--'loaal
All Ohio coal mlnea were closed today u the result ol threats
of violence, allegedly being made by striking Well VIrginia
mlnera.
John Guzek, president of United Mine Workers Dlltrict Six,
covertnc Ohio and the northern West VIrginia panhandle, said
the clollnp were agreed to during a meeting ol UMW ctficlals.
"We had a meeting of aU mine local presldenll Wem.e,day ,"
Guzek said, "and they voted to cease wor~. due to threats
beinc made. We want to walt until this thine cools off."
MOlt Ohio miners retW'IIect tAl work Wedne!day, following a
week of sporadic wildcat strikes.
·

News •• in Briefs

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Men's &amp; Women's

By TlMMlUER

•

•

•

J~

driver list

Is approved

By AL ROSSITER Jr.
UPI Science Editor
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UP!)
- The medical mys\efY over
tile American . Legion kliler
disease deepened today ..
Dreaded .swine flu has
become less llk.e ly and
bacteria was eliminated from
the list uf possible causes of
the Illness that killed 22
persons and hospitalized
acotes more.
Sclentlats zeroed in on viral
diseases, fungus -type
ailments and toxic chemicals
as potential sources of the
outbreak
that
struck
convention-goers
with
alarming .stiddenn~ after
the meeting in Philadelphia
two weeks ago.
There was hope the first
'laboratory tests to detect
viruses in tissue samples
from patients might produce
some results today at the
federal Center for Disease
Control in Atlanta or state
laboratories in Philadelphia.
But Dr. David Sencer,
director of tile CDC, said It
may take scientists a week or
more to firi'd the agent
respoosible. And even then
they might come up emptyhanded.
"It Is possible we will never
fmd out what caused it," he
said. "It may be one of tllose
ooe-time illnesses that strike
occasionally."
Doctors-turned-detectives
were interviewing all those U1
with the dlllease in an effort to
come up with clues tllat
might unlock the secret of the
mystery.
The symptoms were those
of severe lnf)uenza, but
. doctors said flu viruses are
highly contagious and as of

Wednesday there had been m
evidence the ailment had
spreud beyood tholle linked
With tbe convention.
Health authorities w~re
particularly concerned_about
a possible outbr.eak uf tbe
swine Influenza that struck
Ft. DiJ: in New Jersey In
February.
" As each day passes
without further spread, It will
make us rest a little easier
that It Ia not swine influenza,"
Sencer 'said.
Sencer said laboratory
technicians working around
the clock found nothing uf a
bacterial nature, · He also
rtlleli out dllleases cal'l'ied by
food and water.
·
Among the diseases
eliminated from the mystery
were bubonic plague, typhoid
fever, lassa fever, whooping
cough, chorio-meningitis,
tularemia imd psittacosis ,
commonly known as parrot
fever .
The outbreak was having
ramifications across the
COU!ltry. Reports uf illne&amp;SI!S
with similar symptoms
popped up in New Jersey,
Delaware and California but
authorities said there wss no
evidence they were linked tAl
the Pennsylvania case.
As a re8ult of the Illness,
children's groups in Berlin,
N.H., and Indianapolis
canceled plans to visit
Philadelphia.
But ' presidential press
secretary Ron Nessen said In
Washington President Ford
still planned to go to
Philadelphia Sun\ll!y for the
closing · ceremonies of a
Roman Catholic . World
Eucharlatlc CongreSs.

Ford veto dies

By DREW VON BERGEN

WASHINGTON (UPI) Sixty-seven House
Republicans helped
Democrats in Congress score
their· tenth override of a
President Ford veto.
The aciion Wednesday
enacted into law over Ford's
objections legislation
reforming federal coal
leasing laws. The bill was
vetoed July 3 on grounds it
would hinder domestic coal
production and deter the goal
of energy Independence. It
was Ford's 54th veto since
taking office almost two
years· ago.
The vote, 316 tAl 85, wasn't
even close. Proponents of the
legislation, sought by
environmenlallsts for several
.years, hud 48 votes more than
the twothirds required for an
override.
"Our congressional leadership continues to win against
the negativism and donothing policies of the
administration," said House
Democratic leader Thomas
P. O'Neill afrer the vote.
It was the sixth time in
seven attempts this year that
the House· has mustered the
necessary votes to override
Ford. But on two of those
occasions, the effort died In
the Senate.
House Democratic Whip
John J. McFall noted that the
94tll Coogress was the first in
28 years, and only the second
in the century, tAl override as
many as six vetoes. The other
came during the 80th
Congress against vetoes of
Harry S. Truman.
Democrats were successful

Wednesday In arguing away
Ford's contentions that the
measure would provide "administrative roadblocks'' to
coal production and would not
(ConUnued on page 10)

Students give

reports on
Boys' State
Commander Clarence
Schmucker presided at the
regular meeting of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion Tuesday evening,
Students who attended
Boys' State this summer
sponsor ed by the post
rep'orted their activities. New
members_., introduced were
Danny Spurlock and Gordon
Rayburn, veterans of the
Vietnam War.
Membership as of Tuesday
was 184. It was reported that
volunteers are needed to park
cars at the Meigs County
Fair. Members who would
like to assist are to call
Charles Swatzel or Paul
Casci. Refreshments were
served by Charles Hayes.
TWO .WINBIG
Two members of the Sou tileastern Ohio Tractor Pullers
Associa lion took top honors at
the Selby County Fair at
Sidney Wednesday evening. .
They were Huck Wagner, ' .
driving his Huckster in tile .
7,000 lb. out of field class, and •
Grover Salser, Jr., driving :
"The Wild Thing" in the 9,000 •
lb . out of field cia"" .

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